HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1899-11-9, Page 6EXTER TIMES
1 SON Sr, CARLING,
larsrristers, Solicitors. Notaxies, Couveyaneers,
Coeueiesiem De,
Itioney to Leen 4 per colt. and 5 per Isere t.
OFFICE e-FANSON'a BLOOla, EXETER.
CAMINO, DiCiTSON.
, me:fiber or the arm ee at afensell n
Toureaes ot eaeb. week,
Re,a OOLLINB,.
Barrister „Solicitor, Boavoyamer, Etc.
Tawrim, ONT. .
OFFWE ()vas, Bank.
ELLIOT & GLADitAN,
Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Fabric,
• onvey e ors ow, Szo.
!Money to Dieu.
OFFICE, - HAIN BTREET, EX.HTER,
IL, V. melee. a. W. outomeNt
LIIIIISMONSWIMBOSOCOMMING
ei.EDICAL
IR j. H. RIVERS, X, B. TORONTO -UM
VEBSITY, M. D. 0. 1V, TtinitY TIolver
ty. office—Croditon, Ont..
D 11.S.ROLLINSSe AOS.
eeparate Offices. Residence sante its forme&
Ay, Andrew st. -0111oest. Spaoltinan'e
Mn at; Dr Rollins' smite as formerly, north
item; Dn Amos' same building, sou.th. door,
O,.&.11.0L111NS. IYLD.. T3.. AIVIOS, M.
Exeter, Oat
.w.BROWNING
El P. S, Graduate Vloteela Ueiversity
Office and use iden oe. Dominion Labratory, Exeter.
RYNDUAN, coroner for the
County of 'Huron. °aloe, opposite
parting Brea. s tor e, sitter.,
AUCTIONEERS.
BUSSENBERItY, G�neratLi
'oenaga Auctioneer, Sales oetiduoted
In slip arts; Batisfaetionguarauteed. Charges
Moderate. Henson? 0, Ont;
110ITENRY IiIILBER Licensed LUG*
ti °neer for the counties of Eltiroo
tird Itliadlefiez; Sales oon dilated at med-
itate rata. °aloe, at Pest:office fired.
tclit Ont,
,meotabwzmaxamewit
V LUER1NARY.
Tennent & Tennent
2:XliITISILL, OT.
•
Graduate Of the Ontario Veterinary Col-
lege.
Office—One door south of Town Han.
WATERLOO MUTUAL
FIRE INS URA N ci It 0 0 .
Established in 1.863.
fiEAD OFFICE - WATERLOO, ONT
'Ibis Company hes been over Twenty-eigh
ears in suceessful opor Won in Western
titari 0, an 1.1 con Unties to insuren gains t loss or
image by Fire. Buildings, Merchandise
Mannfactones and all other descriptions of
insmable property. In tending insurers b are
the option of insuring on the Preiniutn Note or
Cash System.
During the.past ten years this company has
issued 57,090 Policies, covering property to the
amount of 540,872,038; and pitid in losses alone
$70e,752.00.
Asset s, 6176,100.00, consisting ef Cash
in Bank Government Deposititnd th tehhasses-
red Premium, Nqtes on band ;ad in force.
3.W ;WA LDIC.24 President 1 U"M. TavLoa
secretary; J. 13. II deem, Inspector . CHAS.
HELL, Agent for Exeter and. vicinity.
THE EXETER TIMES.
Is published every Thursday morning at
Times Steam Priutatini House
Main street, nearly oppoeite Fitton'sjewelry
store, Exeter, Ont., by
JOHN WHITE & SONS, Proprietors.
ITATEe011';ATYVICTITISING:
First insertion, per line .... . .. . - . .10 cents
Elgela litibsequent insertion, per 'line:. 3 cent
TO insure insertion, advertisements dhould
be sent in not later than Wednesday morning,
Our JOB PRINTING DEPARTIIENTis one
of the largest and best equippedin the County
of Huron. All work en .rustedto us willr e-
mir° our prompt attenton.
• Deeis lone Re,garding Newepapers.
I—Any person who takes a paper regularly
from the post oftIce, whether directed in his
name or another's.cnowhother he bas subscrib-
ed or not, is responsible for payment.
2—If S. person orders his paper disoontinued
he must pay all arrears or the publisher may
continue to send it until the payment is made,
and then collect the whote amount, whether
the paper is taken from the office or not.
3—J n suits for subscriptions, the snit may be
instituted in the place where the paper is pub-
lished, although the subsoriber may reside
bun treds of miles away.
• 4—The courts have decided that refusing to
ake newspapers or periodicals from the post
oftleel or removing and leaving them uncalled
f r, is prima facie evidence of intentional
fraud.
rCARTEKS
TTLE
1VER
PHIS,
Sick Headache and relieve all the troubles incl.
dent to &bilious state of the system, such as
Dizziness, Nausea. Drowshiess, Distrese after
eating, Pain in the Side, &c, While their most
remarkable SUCCeS8 has been hown in riming
Headache, yet °lama's; TATUM Lwsit PrLtEl
are equally valuable in Constipation, curing
and preventing this annoying complaint, while
they also correct all disorders of the stomach,
etimulate the liver and regulate the bowels.
Even if taw only cured '
.tohe they would be tamest piteeleaci te thee&
who suffer from this distressing complaint;
but fortunately their goodnegs does not end
here, and those who once try them will find
these little tills Valuable in so many ways that
they will not be vvilling to do without them
Hut after all elek hentl
ite Mebane of to nutty lives that here hi orhere
Ite make otir great boast. Our pills cure it
While others do not.
CARTER'S LITTLE LIVED. PliiIGS art Vert sanall
Ovidveil (Asir to take, One or two pine malre
a dose, ,Tbey are strictly vegetable and d6
hot gripe or purge, but by theit gentie action
please alttrho Sae them. In viela at 28mefiteI
five for $1, Sold everywhere, or sent by ins&
12Zb101$131 00,,Oct %
...124„ra • "till Piml
*ow
Mystery of Shaft No. 13.
:4Eitift
CHAPTER 1
ing-deors, that would be.rdly open far
1 enough to admit thera, pausing. itt 1,he
setiond room ae in, the auditorium of
al theatre, the last Tunas of all a'F-
pearing a 6tagie,4 with kis two in-
itiates posed in a ilent and terrible
tableau.
Outside it, stood the husband, white,
•rigid, lais arms folded. on his breast,
Viaarently a, s incapable of moveraent
or ot speech, ats what was laying at
his feet.
"0, long, long, is the winter nicht,
And ow1 dawns the day,
There is it elain knight in my bower,
And I wish he Were awoVI
The light greW stronoer, and crept
beneath the lowered blinds that hid
the gery flowers ea the balcony, yet
suffered their sweet smell to enter
through the open windows, epreed it -
!self softly over the rpet, and show-
ed a woroan's gold tiainable leing there
—theitatale toward the shut folding-
cloore from the other tilde of which,
not a, sound or movement had eoixte
for aours. Here it seemed to pause
awhile, as if afraid, then stealthily
passed underneath them, and travers-
ed an oddly -shaped apartment that
ended in a place not much bigger than
a large recess, and partly hidden by
soft, pink muslin drapery, now push-
ed roughly on one side and held there
by something that had fallen heavily
between them.
ln pity seemed the light to touch
it.
There it lay, a strong figure lying
foot: dow-owa.rd, with sunny crown
abased and brows pressed to the coy-
,
eraia of &wide couch, upon which se
woman was lying in a dee rt sleela her
head pill/eared On her outstretched arm,
e picture of perfect innocence and
rest.
With the smooth coverlid drawn to
her chin, and her air of happy dreams'
as ehe securely slept, she looked as;
if she had not stirred since she laid
her down—as if, indeed, 'she would not
stia DOW, did not some one come
• to wake her, though the light kept
on ever widening, and growing, till
the pink,' hung room was full of it soft,
rosy a;tnaosphere fit for such aprin-
cese ap she, yet was strong enough
surely to rouse the mart who lay with
arm doubled up beneath him in eta-.
tucle unnatural and strange.
Serenely the dock,' ticked away the
moments and the minutes to hours, the
Dresden china, shepherds and shep-
herdesses on the ma,ntel-piece had long
ago nodded each other good -morrow,
the pletu.res on the wall exchanged
glances, finst of amaze, then of in-
quiry, as to who was the new -comer
who distributed their privacy', and
come, alas, in such woeful and uncourt-
ly •guise I
The white mouse, looking perchance
for his absent little master, popped
his pink nose out of the ca,ge that
was never very far from the prin-
cess, and, aghast at what he saw, went
in again.
In the street without in the houee
within, the cheerful noises of every-
day life began, and swelled each mo-
ment louder, so that when a footstep
in the next room caused a vibration
ce the floor, she opened her eyes, and
couch voles so low that what lay at so unnatnral to the onlookers seemed
again. Their faces told nothing ; infest,
lay listening and broad awake. The
its foot did not come within her range their stony acceptance of the situa-
of vision, as she fixed her glance on tion, without any of <that display of
the folding -doors, watching for them amazement and horror which might
to open, and her maid with the tea have been naturally expected, that the
come in; and as she looked, one swung conviction gained ground that both
bask, and through it came Rose, er- were " in the swim," and knew all
set, pienpa,nte, cap and about the night's work, and each oth-
in her smart
apron stalling too, as if she had some WS Share in it.
especial catese for satisfaction that To Elizabeth St. George it seemed
moaning. But as she came forward, afterward that she sat for hours in
something—something between her that alcove, facing the mouthing,
mistress and her, arrested Rose's at- staring multitude; but she could not
tention; the sops on tray in her remember what any one had said, or
hand rattled violently with the tre- what •answer she had given to the
mor that shook her, and shuddering, question put to her, for at her heart's
gasping she backed away, with star- tribunal was standing the man, once
ing eyes fixed on that—backed till her lover, now her husband, who thus
she came to the door, and escaping openly by his glom° and his deser-
through it, shrieked --such a, shriek as tion, accused her. .
clove through walls and window, and All things have an end, and at last
made the passers-by stand still in the
street, with tha,t heart -quake which
men know when traigedy stalks red-
handed through their mist. .
• Rose, the mmd, recovered herself
first, Pushing her way through the
thrcsig, and casting a look of con-
tempt on her, master, she stepped over
the dead body of the man with a shud-
der, then snattched up a silk dressing -
gown theft bung over the back of a
chair, which, with a small table and
the couch, completed the furniture of
the recess, and threw it round thee
lonely figure that crouched on • the
bed,
lier mistress did not move while be-
ing wrapped in it, nor when she felt
the slippers put on her naked feet;
but when Rose tried to raise her, she
thinks liad better sleep down tairel
the same,"
fair Sieet iinagine thwe above is
"The ,i'04)31$ 0,139)70 are not ours,"
Old Jack atruptly, "They belong to
Kr• Barra' Itoes—whe is dead."
"Re was your lodger ?" said Skew -
ton. ,
" IVfy lodger," said Jac*, Proudly,
" why not ?"'
He had proposed that he should come 3,1'°ba'1313r 4° man le°ked le"
like a lodging -house keeper than :Took
down, too, but this she would not al -
St, George did then, but then nobody'
low. • „ disliking suably war; ever so little like a traitor
She knew it was all faney
hex room et the top of the bOUSS so
and a hound as Barry Roes, and
to -eight, do yoo nand If" and then she
had rang fox' her maid, and Rose had
made up the Chesterfield couell lie
the reeeeta off the s000nd drawing, -
mom,. and 8110 had said in joke how
easy it Would. be for any one to come
W, and ronnder ber, walking over the
leads of the great library built out
muoll, but he should uot be allowed to
suffer for it, and then she had gone
gayly up stales to Andress, coming
fieWn, PresentlY her dressing -gown,
and with Rose in attendance, who
placed on the table beside her bed the
11110A -cap Mrs t St, George usually'
took Me last then,g at: night. aeok al-
ways laughed at ber for taking it—
but take it she did, with Om utmost
kreotaiterelo. t, vont:erect et tea-
spoonful of Jamaica ginger in hot
water, with. sugar, and on that par-
ticular evening there wee barely
enough for her Usual dose in the bot-
tle, and sb.e told Rose to be sure and
get some more next day. When the
girl 'had gone to bed. Elizabeth had
done some dancing steps in her flow-.
ing robe before a long glass, had
To be Continued.
FRENCH FINANCES.
Tito Governinent lifits Gone Into the Ad.
vertisong Rumness to nap Its Tye:wail+.
France, wbase national debt has been
growing every aay ranee it paid its
milliards of redemption money to Ger-
many, after !exhausting apparently
every conceivable meens of taxation,
leas, lately taken to advertising as a
means of money making This method
•
had already been seized upon by num-
erous manicipalitie,s which bave sold
got up with a quick, defiant move- .fealleaed eecand generally, eut some the space on certain piano buildings
ment, and sat clown with the wide' jokes, reviewed the eventa of the day, to advertiser As the railwey sta-
foals of silk, draping her loyally, look- and finally, after kissing Jack, had fleas e s'
ing past ber huabancl at the rout be- drunk her nightcap and retired to t-rcsiaott:, nbdaaril,reacegems,nedusutuomm -bromie oa,theen;
yond, as Marie Antoinette may have bed.
done at the crowd that surroanded "I shall come down in the night and public building.s, as well as the pack -
her tumbril. see how you are, he had said, as he ogee in which several kinds of mono -
Yet her lips quivered—not forthat lucked her up, and then she bad asked poly goods are sold, are entirely under
poor dead raan—her 'heart was hard him to leave the window e open in the
as a stone toward him, and she had second room, and the room beyond, the control of the Government, it is
no thought of the suddenly arrested and to close the folding -doors between. evident that it has advertising facili-
life or of the pity of it. but bemuse This he had done, returning to his ties at its command which entirely
he had let •the sin of bloodegueltinees books, but going in again to look' at
hold him back from clasping her in her later, and by the glimmer of the
his arms—because he coald see her light, under the snow-white silk shade,
there alone, nor move one step to take he saw her lying there, lovely in her
his rightful plane beside her. , leep, framed in the delicate pink with
"Let bearit together 1" was the with which the recess was hung, and
anguished cry of her heart ;• then the hehad kneeleelt down to kiss her pretty
pain passed and a cold feeling of tine. hair, and bless her with all his heart. "letlre romances," or advertising post-
er tat in her breast If she could and then—he still 'Waned to see her paid letter sheet. One half the sheet,
eclipse in extent and value anything
that private advertisers can offer, The
value of thew may be greatly enhanc-
ed by legal restrictions upon the own-
ers of private property, preventing the
sale of spaoe "for similar purposes.
The latest device of this sort is the
forgive him, what quarrel had he then lying there, the house hushed in
sil-
with her 7 In that moment she de- ence, andpresently the stealthy sound
spised him—as a woman despises a of it xnen's step on the stair. He saw
man who does not rise to the owe.- ' the outer door open, seemed to feel the
sin, as she herself has done, a.y, and pause before the folding -doors yield -
higher yet, fer however magnificent ed to the midnight intruder's touch—
a woman's plunk may be, a man's saw Barry Ross standing there on the
should always be able to soar above threshold, bis sunny looks gone, his
it. , likeness changed from the man of hon -
One of the policeraen kneeled down or to the renegade against his friend,
and turned that quiet figure at the and the brute in inteniotn, he saw -
0 God! what more did he see as he
foot of the bed over, revealing a calm
turned away Ws eyes, shuddering?
and handsome face, marred only by a
Presently he came nearer to the bed,
sinall hole in the forehead, through
which a bullet had passed, and out of now tossed and disordered, that had
been so smooth when Elizabeth awoke
which the life -blood had ebbed quietly
away during the night. that morning. He stooped over it—
what business had he with it, and why
Barry Rose bad been a good-looking
did his hand steal to his breast as he
enough fellow in life, but in dea,th his
face took on a sweetness and majes- arse again, starting violently at sight
ty that brought tears to the eyes of 1.,:th the man who at that moment came
8.1rough the folding -door with swift,
many who looked down on him that ent tread, and eyes that said, "You,
day, bitterly resenting the foul injus-
tice that had robbed him of his re mine—you have done murder, and
aon here to prove it."
birthright—life. Rose, who stood with
her back to the walls, glanced swiftly
with a vengeance. He sat down, or
Jack's calm had broken at last, and
from mistress to master, and back
Meanwhile her mistress guided by
the woman's eyes, had raised herself,
and by some dreadful instinct born of
courage, felt herself drawn toward in-
stead of away fromait—so that on
hands and knees she crawled toward
the still figure, which dumbly spoke
its own eloquent message of eternal
separation from her and all living
things.
A hand's' -breadth away from it she
paueed, looking down at the tossed,
Bilker, fair hair set in a wide halo of
blood—blood that had soaked and well-
ed and ebbed for many an hour
through the long slimmer nigbt into
the coverlid itt leer feet.
One arm was doubled beneath his
chest just as be had fallen, the oth-
er lay stretched out to its full length
pale palm uppermost—a hand that
would never sew Sr reap any more,
never help or hurt any one any more,
never be filled with those gifts that
the prime of a. man's Efe Well -spent
may reasonably be hoped to bring.
Steps were coming, people were com-
ing, with a thundering, rushing sound,
all hastening madly to that horror
in the house, that smell of blood in
the air that we call "murder!" and
that we stand agapa to look on, even
while our flesh recoils at it.
The master of the house came first
on that terrified wave of struggling
humanity—came in to see the naur-
dered man lying there, and his wife
on her knees beside him—across the
body their eyes met, and oh 1 what a
look was there!
The glance 'of horror, wonder, and
pity with whieh she ha,d firet gazed
dowa at the murdered men, had been
swiftly followed by one of dawning
comprehension, changing into one of
passionate loathing and contempt,
This, too, was gone, when her husband
came, and their eyes leaped togath-
ble thought me guilty, and he kill-
ed that hound—and he did well," she
thought, with a wild sense of exul-
tation -that brought a strange ligjett
to leer eyes, and a heave to her_ bfeest,
and in that moment 11-4 sa.* her not
as the Eli:zebra's:II knew, but—
Brea,thleels they gazed, in one light-
ning moment engraviog on each soul
the likeness of its fellow's guilt, then,
without a sound, the woman shrank
down, hiding her fees and shudder-
ing, away from him, and from life,
alone, as it were, with herself and
the dead.
'Up they eanie, those people, eurg-
ing up from without, who had eet the
house -door wide? beating the officers
of the law with them into the dainty
drawing -room, and through the fold.
he must have fallen from excessive
agitation, and if ever a man wore the
livery of guilt, he wore it then. •
The quiet, keen -eyed man laid his
hand on Jack's trembling one, hidden
in the breast pocket of his coat, and
drew it out, with what it held.
was a toy pistol of beautiful
make and. quality, and looked innocent
as a child's plaything, lying in the de-
tective's hand.
The shiver ha Jack's limbs had pass-
ed, Inc looked afraid of nothing as he
said: •
"I don't deny it. I shot the mao
with that. Now do your duty."
Mr. Skewton's eyes narrowed.
Be felt that be would: have cheer-
fully paid a good deal to have entered
the reom three seconds.sooner than be
had One. • • ' ,
"Is this pistol yours'?" be asked.
the moment came when Rose was free "See for yourself,". said Jack, and
to take her mistress away. ktr.Skewton looked, and found a name
Gathering her robes around her, and date inscribed on the barrel of
Elizabeth, rose and swerving a little to the pistol, and the krone was Jack St.
George an,d the data over a year old.
The sooner you take me away the
better," said Jack eartly, and turned
on his heel and went into tho outer
TOM.
one side lest they should step on the
body, and the crowd dividing for
them, the two women passed through
the rooms, and up the staircase, and
oat of sight,
CHAPTER 11.
"Whaur shall I gae, whaur shall I
run,
'Whaler shall I gae to lay me?
For I hoe killed a gallant squire,
And his friends they seek to slay
It was Rose who locked her mistress
into her bedroom, who got the house
cleared of its uninvited guests, the
body of poor Berry lai1 upon the bed
that had not been slept in that night,
and who, then, leaving her master still
stupefied and alone in the place where
he had. stood throughout, returned to
her mistress, and shut herself in with
her. •
Apparently he bad. not moved yet,
when Mr. Skewton, who bad been tele-
gyaphed for from Scotland Yard, ar-
rived, a,nd found him there, aged and
lined in the space of one hour to such
it niceness as his ONVI1 mother would
have found it hard to recognize.
Was it only last night tlaat Eliza-
beth had said to him, "It is so close
and hot up stairs, Jack, that Rose
Mr. Skewton, left alone, Shook his
head. There was a good deal more in
this business than met the eye. He
had naturally only an imperfect know-
ledge of the eircumstances of the case,
and the account of the enterprising
constable who had sent for him, had
pointed to a woman in the caw, whose
absence from the scene puzzled him.
He followed Jack into the other
room, where he stood looking out on
the balcony with the sweet breath of
stooks and mignonette in his nostrils,
so that ever after the sight of those
homely flowers turned him faint and
sick.
"There is a lady in the case?" said
Mr, Skewton.
"My wife," said Jack, briefly.
Mr. Skewton paused, and before the
pause, had' grown wearying, Jack fill.
ed it up.
"My wife sometimes sleeps down
stairs," he said, his face calm, and
resolute, "the weather has been
very hot lately, and she was brought
up in the country, and feels the poor
accommodation upstairs very ,much."
"Why poen'?" said Mr. Skewton,
looking round, "these rooms are a very
ot ordinary letter size paper and rath-
er pool' quality, is devoted to advertis-
ing, except a space about 41-4 by 5
1-2 inches, reserved for the address, on
which is printed a fifteen -centime post-
age stamp. The letter is written on
the ottter half of the sheet, wince is
then ingeniously folded and bald by
• gunateed flap. The whole thing is
sold for 10 centimes; that is, two thirds
of the price of single letter postage,
or exactly the same as a postal
card.
By this means the publisher saves
ohe third the postage and gets his pap-
er and envelope for nothing. Nomin-
ally the scheme is worked by a corpor-
ation, Societe Anonyme; -but, as it sails
postage at one third off and. ha* its
ware d for sale at the postoffices a.nd
Government tobacco shops, it is prac-
tically a Goiveroment enterprise. The
new system 'will evidently take •the
place of the postal card; it -svill de-
crease the sale of postage stamps, but
the receipts from the advertising will
enable the Government to make it sub-
stantial profit out of the project. •
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The fie-
eignattite
ef
Oa
1,244,e ovary
alma
'• BADLY TIM -RD.
Didn't you feel drea,dfully when you
knew you were going to faint, Miss
Gunny? •
Ye,s Iliad on a pair of old shoes.
TYPEWRITER TACTICS,
Miss Spellum wears all her best
clothes( down, to the office.
Is she. in love with anybody
there?
NO, but she says it scares her em-
ployer so he doesn't give her much
work to do, •
eases Thousands of LAMS.
Pour years ago Jacob Develtta, of Hay
Island, was dragged to the verge of
death by dreadful heart disease. He was
given up to die. From vlgoroue manhood
he had gone to a broken despendent wreck.
Fre procursod Dr. Agnew% Cure for the
Heart, used it faithftilly, and to -day
vvelghs 218 pounds, and lines to 'bless the
day the great remedy was recomMended
to him. . It relieves le HO nonutes.-4i.
Sold by C. Lutz, Exeter.
HOW THE BRITISH OFFICERS GET KILLED IN WAR.
The extraordinary fatality atnong th,e leaders of the British soldiers in action at Smith Hill and Elands-
.
laagte is clearly explained in this picture.' While the men in the rushes up the kopjes took advantage of every
cover, the officers esteemed it their duty to stand erect. In this position they became conspicuous quarry for
Boer marksmen,
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IfiiiVreact, Norm
e+.
A
• Aperfect Remedy for Constipa-
doll, Sour Stomach.Diarrhgea.
Worms ,Convutsions,Feverish-
aess and Loss OF SLEEP.
TaCSintile Signature of
ilte-ifer-4t04-
. .
NEW TORX.
i, - 4 . istA),.1., , *;* -- 4.., '
fi
r.XA&T COPY OF WRAPPER.
fr
THAT THE
FAC—SIMILE
SIGNATURE
1114.1..... 0 F—' -
Is ON THE
WRAPPER
OF EVERY
BOTTLE Or
Castor's. Is put np in one-sho 'bottles only. 1*
Is not sold In bulk, Dona allow anyone to roll
you anything else on the. plea Or promise that it
Is "just as good" and "will COMM every pare
pose." air See that you get
Tho W-
aimea
rignatnro
oi
TO CURE INSOMNIA.
opinion. or Dr. Edward Iferonor, a Cele
bratted rhystotan of WeIshaden, Ger-
many.
Not one of the newt narcotic drugs
advertised as "absolutely harmless"
is so, 8,nd therefore it is far wiser to
overcome insomnia Without drugs,,than
with them, even though it
a little more time and tron
Habit and will power ha
do with the act of; going t
feel sleepy at our usual ho
ing, just as we wake usual
the sante time. Insomnia
from irxegularity more tha
else, and once the fear\ of
well has been aroused tha
prevents natural rest. .
The patient must be
much as possible that he di
the night before and will
to -night. And if he, stil
of the coming darkness,
harmless powder in a glee
give it to him, and Inc is
under the impression that h
narcotic. It is a fact that
think they have not slept a
actually had quite an amou
absolute wakefulness being
In the case of nervous pat
and patience will do muc
them the required rest. T
ed labor is often the cause e
ness, and when this is the
turn to a regular hour f
will help to re-establish .
habit, especially if the brains has been
rested for some time before retirng.
Where it is evident ethat the sleep-
lessness is due to congestionl in the
brain the use of cold hip and footbaths
is wise., If it is found that the proper
reaction does not fpliow the cold
too -Oath give the patient a hot foot,
bath, before the cold one, and then put
a hot-water bottle to the feet in bed.
The feet must be warm for any one to
sleep well. •
It is a grave error to try to compens-
MERV 4
BEANS
Attu, is on,
.57
/mom,
..manionelmonmernmea
NERVE BBANs are a new des-
covery that cure the worst eases ot
Nervous Debility, Lost Vigor att4
Failing Nio400d; restores the,
weakness of bode or inkut «mew
by over -work, or the errors mese)
ceases of youth. This.Remedy Mal
solutely ours the most obstinate oases when all other/
TREATMENTS hove failed even to relieve. Sold hydrate
gists at Sipes paokage, or six for $5, or scot by imams
• 'CorOnto:Out. vo. ,
'eseipt of lake by addressiug TilB JAMES MBDICIer
Sold at Brownino's Drug Store Exeter
a
any
d
e la ex
cut the
mlly
e one
emer-
E BIPED.
ite a hur-.
e—Where
nd 'corner
tile colt
the north,
ve the girt'
e pen last:
A. another,
t j. i sen over to Mrs. Makeshift's
and see if she has one. She is always
borrowing mine. -
Hub I Any one might think no one
!in this house ever wrote a letter. ;
Nonsense 1 There isn't a more vol-
uminous correspondent anywhere than`
I ann. You men can never wait a
minute for anything. I'll warrant aft.
ter I've half killed myself getting all
the things together ,you won't write
a dozen hnes.
ate for the loss of sleep at night by
Chld
taking a nap in the, daytime, for this ren Cry for
only aids in continuing the trouble. If
the insomnia is treated promptly, by T
FOR BRIDES-TO-BE.
Not long ago a young lady avale:
in a small town was about to be mar.
ried.. About two weeks before the Limit
the wedding was to take place ihig
young lady visited the various atom(
in the place. At eacb of the jewelry,
shops she called the proprietor aside
and tord him. of her approaching mars
nage and then said:
"Now, it is very probable that some
.of my friends may come in here end
select me a present. It's horrid to get
something you don't like, so I want
you to look out for me, and, if you..eon,
present is
me heducell
hing I wi
e nothing
request,
.snaudi tnt:hame hbaeesr!
that can
ed well,
ascertaining its cause,
a little commonsense in avoidingA continuance of the
exciting agency and a return to the
most regular possible life will gener-
ally effect a permanent cure • of far
greater value than, that offered by the
use of drugs, Give nature a chance
t.
and she will reasser, herself, but of
course if you continue to do teo
ranch work, to smoke, drink or eat to
excess, not even drugs can give you
that calm, peaceful sleep so necessary
-to the economy of) the human system
and the building up of waste.
Children Cry for
CA T
R 1
ON THE BRINY D
• There is one good thin
ocean voyage, rat:barked
treitere
What is that? queri
p,araoh.
• Wily, a man can get a
pleases every day 'and ev
ehink he is only seasick. a
traveler.
zore. Aft"' WilOrS Ph
, The Great Elul
Sold and recce)
druggiste in elan,
lible medicine a
• forms oi SexiiaralraelekcnsofissuL41a'alnl
orexciess, ItIeu8o,1 Worry, F,xces
bloc°, Opium 6r Stimulatits. Ma
f
131XPWrilite (381°14.rana
e PaclurehletS1 2afrxese8880. any addrese. •My &tugter
Selgxlipldice.the'
The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont. mother, has been a great
Wood's Phospborlitte is sold in Exetee Indeed ? returned the guest. Some:
by 3. W. Browning, druggist. neighbour sued pita I suppose
at woman,
dy, tasted
vhout you
edieines ?
eta nip, got
e directory{
1