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The Exeter Times, 1884-11-20, Page 6• LN'aQINEl11 M1S'k'Ettt 1 ...it mna shadow o1 ao)aQ trees at Band, tell; nu t' thou one day lior husbe a, • e .At last, when her pessioa had worn acme tO Iter And told hoe that Gere tt 11 stet. itself out, oho rase: ace turned in the , and Xiviau wore going to bo privately chime and brightness; and foe one of direction where the man stood; but he married two days later; • !hese two it a e a new light. " • a t `e • . her, n".gle lfet ie its en"rtt!sh. y- liglet d rkuess ler liar face grew paler as he reached '° "It calumet iaci it cited trot bel" ahe. had held 1 ht that eased quickly thro>.tett the areas,and Be wets 1c l her faoe while he told I alit the air! beside him was n red minutes cam up behind her. 1 a her face was fleshed with Anger, mine her side, though he only made some ' erred. "'Oh, God!. the heavens would ;led with shame and desappendinent, commonplace remark. as he overtook { fall. 1 will prevent it at any cost!" 'tifhile the man's was full of passionate her; and though be noticed her white ! il:•r ltu, heed ,:sttghtel, appeal, I taee end glowing (tees, Ale voice was You %eight to try." he said. fltese two, Justine Latimer and Ger- pleasant. '"I will `!tot try, but succeed," she aid Franklin, stood faciae each outer; "I have kept my promise," she said, writ. !geese tiwo who only the !`lay before. in ignoring Ms greeting completely, ""I lltvt e days later Gerald Franklin the little Filiaere church, hast been pro• hese parted for ever from Gerald stood Weide the altar, a slender girlish neueeed one by an aced minister of Franklin, leeeteeu your protu a to me. futln, whh aoltlen ewes escaping front God, "You /lave parted forever from Ger- under x hmive veil, by his side, The: sky above them was a canopy of old Franklin, you say; but you leave '"Wilt von t. kc ;itis women to be purest blue, the ground around them R not given me the other promise spoken your weeek i es 'tt ?" *wangled bed of *ewers; and yet: they «l 'f.': beAaou eeatnst fate in the : rle heart Not that, he said slowly. Ianj 1 hiottg 1 Jn "u)is memory rang g the 11e next his:aril, white and breath - stood facing each other; the stormy re- 1 will uariyyon? Olno, no!" i less. Justine 4tuod before there - bald= b} her Strength of will, as her content that you shall_promise to wed words of Ger.44 FrauLlin that never - ed secried out they must part forever, ua other pian but we, , to -be -forgotten day. "1 will never Acknowledge our mar- .A $tragi a limit came into her eyes, "roil will yet claim me fur your hese riage-••that marriage of freed and de- ��I promise," she said, ""that I will band-o;alnt me in bitter huwilietion, eon!" sue cried. '`I am net your wife marry no, other roan, if that satisfies Perhaps then I will refuse to scleuowl- --I will serer consent to be known as you,' edge the marriage." such. I will still be Justine Latimer --Ah, ( 1' thee day had conte; she Justine Letinnor till I die,""This is yours, then'" he saint. '4 I mutt n,�t u ely slain! hire to sago Iter ""You are Justine Franklin," he said, know }on iweu,tl not break a promise; :Aster, out stand before the world tiis- • A teea Pett• } !syr been ehown your paper t:la in rrhiq'f i you Pay you'll pup I Three dollars for tee poorest p eat sent tilt, •the ft ceatb;cl.e . ' 'Of April. Now ties got uppoot•Fzoetry' 1vl:tb Lust as ldtle trouble as th q -. ere:a go tap A tete. , . When Wider Jehssoa'a bene was burnt {Some think 'twits sot aftre e'rcm sperhe horn over tier. lot, avlene the; !cele Betting tire.) The thee see 1,44 her Int a tier, wbotu Cruel' tl,e did swot bee, The eti eeeetre"kind:y Let :eau. to help her Wawa esiotl*tr, bey made her a donation call er.4 made me ala the epee+etiese. The, Arita were tiOkied, and dneetred 'twist ;. ed eh tie geed Its prcren..eg; And ween we (meg tho recce I wrote, tett Verses, oen»w.n fester. ,And wb:eh 1 gave out Bee by faro -said notbing could be sora t . I As like sPs not this poetry w:.1 be ton good by half, ,As conte you Fet In,"y e 4 it would MOO the horses ,auSh lint never mind: 1 shall feel p,oesed when ever g.o.l;utak pioehee. ltennvmbtring• the Goo'l beolt ewe. rut net tbr• tru.t to richest." (Jo -h $•sten, la uocklsud tonrier !ewe ,eweeme_asenesons Dir. Irving ing Tells a: Good Story. TM TOUR BAKING POWDER TO -BEE= "though sou say you will never ac- anal he handed. her it paper as he . huuttr' ,i herself, • The q t.en, as he who wishes may ` knowiedie the marriage; but, Justine" , spike. Without a moment's hesitation she east, has atteu made visits both of *;y ins n streak calmer though his She gtaneed at it, her taco, if posse- I spr;tng to Ger:till's side and looked up pleasure and polite-, to her estates in voice trentflled---"'reueewu'er yon were ale, ;row.inp still paler; then she tore ahs minister's feee. Scotland, being at such times snore ! equally eats -equally runty In the de- it in many prates and scattered it to "Lee canner marry her," she cried, than heartily• welcomed, by the candy 1 caption." the wind. ,, 1 ""fur 1 'ant hie wife. tie is my bus- Sects, who, almost without exception, 1 "1 was cot. There Is a great differ- ""I bane ssvetl hie honor: at !oast, t band," highly roverent'e her :'t indorse all encu in Poslihr fur leas than what you she said,. "ii 1 !gave V"."3""VV"."3""William 7. is heart 1 Willia"ur e: east frit.! eutcree the Olt seta does. are than in claiming Whet does not be- in the, doing;' thee Ale turne:l to tho i altttroh nt the setae !gement asJua,int„ On one Dee:Iglu%, Slit t `ler a 'sit t " long to you." man at her 'dd,e; 414'tIW me now.') i and a cry of rage telt his lipe, teat died to her castle in tate oat ... s of little 1 "Justine, the Univ dlllbrenee is flee She said; 9ett" i t,.i: at you ie more than 1 away, however, es Geral!. faced him- moral, (blessed apteese), 3fi'- Trving, i -that 1 prove thea love you for your. . I can boar at t recent." i facet! Bile for a euonlent before he whet was tt'nvl:'sin for .retry i self alone, while you married moo he. Withoat a a..td, Wil.t:uu Fortescue teeelea to alinatino, met an old Sc,)tsrf►wontan witnwhoni°be you, ght I was my uncle'et turned and left her, but his face was • ••yen slain me as your husband," spoke of her Idajesty. !:ruse thou', my heir. I lle:leTetl you a eimlile, pennie dark with suppress•l mere. i he said, "you acknowledge yourself my "The (tteett's a good Welnan," aald less governess, and as such I wooed Four years hat's paced, and avail it 1 wife?.t he. t, � ,,... ,r• � i a ". , e twI alit/pow )o,u aIle ""Wuued we. leavin nee to believe the one on whielt Justine Franklin had ,you, Out tat what a cast!" there are things I cannctaear. "' ROTA' NCT CONTAIN AMMONIA. you George, instead of Gerald Frank- parted from her.husband-the day she . The next moment the woman beside "What do you mean?' asked. Mr. „ea nr;l.Tntria -1 rias NEVER aux ga•1 Tiossp. lin! put baapnne'.s from her for ever -the . (,Gerald throw her veil aside, and a , Irvin„ you. is summer time -again a day as a r s l Ytl:, ye4, Oh, Vivian. I have saved. t/ 's pule enough, but 1 !♦taunts wirer:40d **absolutely pure Coli: W.Ea-II*r weer! 'iON7r.ese THE TEST;. Piece a see top down on a Lotsteve agar heated.thee y e•vve. the cover end wtwli. A eberehit will not rte r . galeal! to detect the presence of ammonia. ""!lad I thoug,Ilt,"" he Said, ,"had 1 dayshe had )rt,m!sed to wed no man g „ �• dna ti' 1 h f i a iivartSr of a century iF has beautiful face lucked straight at thelia, "Well, I Hunt. there . >> that r•tG4N a n, : ae e"t e,• tc.r, dreamed you were the high-born heir.. hut William Forteeene and to -day she I It wa$ not Vivian Latimer. 1 even the Quern bas n • - to do i ess of James Latimer, I would, never is William Fortesetuds wife 1:Villiant Forteeentt'a face grew pal- For only thine, she got• on the TRE ; ` i`t` OVEN. have dune so." All that hail mune to her *in the four . lid; then Germ!! Franklux committed, ; lak on St)ontV"sy-41141 ;t s tee. ;,.'Areas- P'RTf't B-i4.i 1, IWi` ER CO.,, "You let the believe—" years that lead pasae'd slued that day still lueneeaing Jnetinen lean thing to dol" "I loved. you, Justine. At fiirat I did l canoe to her now, standing there in the ea said perltitpe I would then doily ""But you�know the bible tells ue " 1 nn p..1,02a ; f., flee?r'nlwpPlinth not willingly' lendyou. nor even wish i garden lool;infr up at the stoney luau- he marriage and refuse to eel:nowt- ""I knew." she interrueteed angrily. ,,,:,., ,,;a , ;.:...".,tat.i,,,.rs ..I,,,.ai , tt i „, " „ von. to think that; but when I saw you "aeon that was leer home, edge it; but PO. You are t y wife. 1, vt: read the bible 'sin tI ,has so it e $ li elieved it. 1 was coward enough to Her months' of passionate pals and ,inti I elenn you asmy husband, high, an'1 k.uai erre Word, int, I ,it prlve S Lupulin least Gem let you contemn% in the betel. but I ant longing for the love site had sent from Wiln ..... Fortescue," said tete str.uaer. I knew Minot th Sunday robin& and a or light, !featly Rrol 1 Thr first /try n, p well punieheil. for my 'deceit;" then her -the love that could never be hers, i •'I hale all the proofs in toy pussesslon ; the other allege the good Lnrdl did, `, � iv,t tea the Wo,,,A suddenly changing his manner and 'then the story of Gerald Franklin's , at bet," lute 1 !sleet, ye to know, too, that I FO BY O f3Ct;R " holding out his "arm to her, "'Oh lily death, the day that, with t►ching heart, ' "''IIIA g.uue i• up!'" he er ee, loo -sine don't think any th mart" e'en of flim.. G1rtGAGU- - ar, !cilia darling! met darling) will you not spar- she knew she was free -We front the at her with a sneer; "but I had It for adult' of iL01-. Bust'..n (Ian £ Z don me? 1)o not wreck my life,. my 1 marriage that lay,eeeret in her soul. ; strong hand, if I only had known how happiness. my every !.thee of joy. i The old clergyman was dead, the ; to play them right." will make env way a the world for • certificate destroyed; no one would ever 1 "Not only that porno" said Gerald Your sake. 1 will m .uses the husband of an ice" :et:is, no wife. doutut you could do se." Then the tindiing of the new will of -Not as your husband. Justine. I the eccentric old maul, who had left will not ask to elaim you till then. Iter flue liar sister Vtv an all Isis vast , however, and if you make a full cou- OuIv give No hope -the Hope. thet he Wealth -a will that left not onir her fosaion you will net two Clays to make the fu".urn• 1 we will come to neo as my penniless, but her idolized young sister good year a etepe; if not, you must take wife, remembering only that I love as well. if she, Justine, did not become the frill etttle,'qunne•e ofY your crime. you. Wilt you give me this hope, Jus- 11Yilliam h'ortese.te s wife. Make your choice quickly. tine?" Ah, women are proverbially weak, I will confess, "Never!" she cried passionately-- and beautiful Justine, though she had Ten minutes later, leaving his signed "never! 1natinc Latimer 1 will live onceproved herself strong, married confession behind, /tint, William Fortes- and die,. sooner than acknowledge my- William Fortesotle. ono left the church, without a glance Belt the wife of nnvthlnS so utterly Standing this day, thinking. of all, of compassion even fromthe girl who despicable as a forttille-hunter!" she thinks a13 well of Viwian s later. had, ?mealtime hersoIf his wife. "A fortune-hunter!" his handsome wonderingwill silts like him whoa she Then Gerald turned away, but Jus- tine sprang to his side. "Gerald, what ever else you think, you must know I believed you dead when I became his wife." "1 know that. Vivian was in the oke a name—" •know she heti !neon Gerald h'r:ntl:lin'a Frauk'yin, ..but every other; for 1 can prove titan the will purporting to be the last will of James Latimer is a lever forgery. I have a lawyer here. meets hail --trout/, ring is he worthy of her bright y!rung eister. Vivian had been away on a visit, and it was then she had mut her lover; but face darkening at Inst, all the pleading look of passion and pain fading from it beneath the scorn of her words, "Justine, you do not think -you do not believe that!" when Justine itati asked his name, site "1 both think and believe it, You bad blushed shyly, and said site had knew I was Justine Latimer, the heir- promised not to tell for a while -not ess," I till he came to Justine him:elf, "Stop!" he said. "You need go noJustine had been out for some time, further." 1 but she knew that Vivian's lover had "Then you will not claims au unwill come an hour before, if he had come fngwife? by the train by which he was expected. '" No.. Were you the simple govern. ess I believed you, I would claim you despite yourself, even if I had deceived you, for you would at least know I did not marry you for your wealth or position, and I would trust to my future love and devotion to win. your pardon at last. But, oh, Justine, I loved you so dearly-•--" She turned her head aside at his words, and though he noticed the ac- tion, he continued: "I will finish all I have to say now, for it may be years before we meet again. It was for love of you I wronged you in deceiving you, whether you be- lieve it or not; but since you refuse to acknowledge our marriage, 1 give you my premise never to proclaim it till you do." "That I will never do." "That you will do. Mark my words. in bitter humiliation you will yet cry .out, 'He is my busbandl' and I may then do as you have done now -refuse to acknowledge it," "It will never be," she said again. He smiled. "We will see," he answered. During all the time the girl's beauti- ful haughty face had been singularly pale; but if she were suffering sitedid it well, and Gerald Franklin never dreamed that in trampling on his heart she was lereakinv her own -wrecking She went up the balcony, wondering had ho oouee, and felled with a strange longing she could not account for, to see this lover tvhom Vivian seemed to worship. Suddenly she stood still, all the blood leaving her heart, all the calor fading from her face, a. sudden dizziness that almost blinded her coming over her. "Oh, Heavenly Father, it could not be!" she cried, as the mad thought swept through her brain. The next moment she went over to a window that opened on the balcony and glanced in. Vivian sat on the sofa, and beside her a man whose arm en- circled her waist, on whose shoulder her golden head rested. Ah, heavent she head not been mistaken; the man was Gerald Franklin. The next moment she stood before them, and Vivian sprang to her side with a low cry, frightened by the awful whiteness of her face. Justine clasped her in her arms as if toshield her from some menacing danger, and glancing over her golden head, at the haughty self-possessed man, whoso handsome face was per- fectly unmoved. "Why have you come here?" she cried; "what do you want?" "Why have I come here?" he said; "because Vivian is here. What do I want? . Your sanction to our marriage. her own life as completely as his: She has already promised to become Re turned away and left tier stand- my wile." • ing there, in all her haughty pride- "No-no-nol iteannot be. Oh, my left her with the heart almost dead God, am I going Made" within bine. a The next moment she had fallen .f Shestood watching him till he was senseless. at, tkspii , eet., soo out of sight, then all the hauteur, all . Thedogr was suddenly opened, and the pride, died out of her face, all her Wldliain Fortescue Mitered the room. The first'gianee he -took showed him forced composure gave way. "Oh, my love, my love, my darling!" she cried. "I Wive saved your name. your honor, and your pride at the sac- rifice of ac-rifice.of my own heart as well as yours. 0:1, Gerald, my love, my love!" She sank downon the grass, all white and trembling, and raised her aponized eyes to heaven, then buret into a... passion of bitter tears -tears that,teneeen ,uithe, inmost recesses of (;'tine, e.seionatdly, but since she did not ti 1.f . -fi; , ., love him- %nee•:. `the very sight of his her aull'tt tn.Heart. 4 Whim she icneit therein her passion- rival caused her to fall' senseless, as if ken fr` oii1. his iiife,'lying :•.senseless alt the feet of, Vivian and Gerald Franklin, her old- time lover. slumber- ed demon of jealousy had slum ed longgi�tt his• bosom, and now it awoke to 111113fe as he saw aNettee to torture his wife, to make her. suffer as ho felt she was capable of suffering, In his own selfish way he loved •Jus - n r , a came:.: been, stric i,i t! , 10.314 t i • e i> 'f �' a '. `, e/ r er ;for 11 eget . if if iii on nuc girl's sneselin„ form, a owth• 'e. , „ eel; passed •+peed .it moment, thew drew boricea gating, only, herself and God cotild , ;t .. plot to expose bim, for I told her all," he said. He turned away again, but she clasped his arm and rased her white face to his. "You must listen now and hear all," she cried. "If I had only been brave for you and me four years ago, whet misery would have been savedl Ger- ald, he could have branded your father as a forger, and the note was in his possession, and he swore he would publish it if I did not give yeti up for ever. I won the paper from him, and saved your hone" Gerald smiled. "Not my father," he said, "but a man of the same name, but not even a relation." "Me sacci jice was all for nothing, then!" she cried. The next moment he had caught her hand, and looked questioningry into her eyes. "Justine! Justine! did you Iove me then? Oh, my love,' did you sacrifice your own love and mine for that? Nay, not our love," he said, as he read the truth in her eyes, "but four years of our happiness.. Dr. Henry Leiftnan, a chemical ex- pert. lectured in Philadelphia a few evenings ago, to .a semi-professional audience, on what he called Euthanasia,.o' or the property of putt.certain use- less individuals comfortably out of the way. His idea was thus 'expressed: "The evolution of ••'humanity to a higher form cannot be accomplished without some method of preserving and propagating the best of the species. Had we, as human beings with all our present powers, been placed on this world in association with a race as much . above us in capacity and power as we are above the lower animals, .a systens:of seleetjon woelly,ave been applied whieh fit a few hi to ed genera- • tions would have produced h "much bet- ter humanity." Having laid these foundations, the . lecturer •asked to what extent the law might control; life "in cases where ao'the certainty of . a fatal disease is added intense physical misery," and in the cases of tho birth *nd;•idiots. John C. Eno, the late New York bank President who made way with some four millions of the banks money, is described ; as, a very young man, who prides himself on his fuzz little Mine:taclie lett his good looks. fuzzy evidently paid more attention to his mustache and his looks than to -bis batik. graphic. Meats in this Po' castle. The manner of servnee meals in rho forecastle is as simple as the system of cookery in vogue int the galley. The :EIaIL' Vigor . or A R''S cook rgires out th + made dishes in the pima 1r! whieh they have been prepared. One man in cinch /watch is appointed to go to the galley for the food. Replaces it on the deek in the middle of the fore- castle, and the lawn We* their shares one by one. The man who takes more than his just settee is net re"''nrdetl with fayor by his shipluates. 12 he persists J in his piggish method of helping his/. self, his ship.wattee will not Only remon- strate svitl 4:111, Inst Will go to the 0 t - tont of reducing his share to the proper limits; and if he protests against this treatment, a committee of one or more, according to hie size, is appointed to thresh him. The sai.ors sit on their chests while at their meals. No tables are provided for them. The elTollow Square" in Battle. The "hollow square" formation that won the battle of El Teb is undoubted- ly a formidable one in these days of long-range rifles, when. the assa.11ants can be exterminated long before they ever reach the bayonet points. But that infantry squares have been broken by cavalry on more than one occasion is now matter of history. Authorities are still divided as to whether Victor Hugo was right in affirming or Siuorne in denying that the French heavy bri- gade drove; in the face of a British square at Waterloo. But Mountbrnn's cuirassiers broke a Russian square at Borodino in 1812, and Colonel Caulain- court's horse, iu the same battle, ac- tually charged into an intrenched re- doubt. In the course of the Anglo- Arabian war that followed England's annexation of Aden, in 1839, an En- glish, square was attacked in the open plain by a mass of Abdali horsemen. The Arabs forced their way in so far as to kill several men in thethirdrank, and were then beaten off with bayonets and clubbed muskets, an occurrence utilized by James Grant in one of his military novels. The Irish Brigade, had a similar experience at Talavera. "So, my Connaught boys," said Geu eral Pictou to them after the battle, "you let the Frenchman get into yowl square to -day, did you?" "Well, Your Honor," answered a brawny Irish gre- nadier with stern significance, blackguards got on, sure • enough, but, restores, with tba gloss and frostiness of youth, fatted or gray hair to a natal -el, rich brown color, or deep black, asnl a deitred. By Rs we ligator red hair may betbtre'iud, thin hair thicket;ell, And hes often, thau0h 2101 always, cured. It cheeks tAlfie+ of the hair, ant Stilson• Wes a we;lk cull ale2ty grmsth to 1.'i. !t prevents mrd cures surf • o ,I don I ate, ft! heals u'orly every tliu.l,e p'o";l°.tt to rh•t ,. scalp. As a Coelia' flair Dr,•,t:s„ t•,e V;COR Is unequalled; It coutah:s !welter o.l nor dye, residers the Isair soft, g t,:at, a:.1 silken In appearance, and imparts a agreeable, and lasting perfume. Mn 0. P. Buren to writes from Kirby, O. Jtt',y 3,1/.63: "Last fall my hair cenunteeetvi falling out. at111 tit a Mort time 1 became nearly bale. I used part of a 1, ltee 01 Avl;a's tient Vwon, sthith stn! q .l the fa.'• lug of the hair, null ata to .1 a. Pa..,' 5t e i at 1 nava now a full heart of 'hair g1e 1145 vitior- onsly and am. couvinitd th:a. 1.11 ter we use of your preparation 1 should have beau entirely bald." .T. W. Bower, proprietor of the i!.•.b•r1,ur ((Cele) F:nqufr,r, ens 1 "Avvit's N Al11 t' leen to a most excellent preparation for the hair. 1 spealc of it from, my own ess tit sero. 1t:+ use prometee the growth of new leer, a1..1 makes it glossy anti soft. Tho t 1 s'a 1s a 44 a sure euro for dandruff. Net. Within lily knowledge has the preparation over fulled to give cubed satisfac1tou." Na.• ANDES FArnuAllm, leader of tlsa celebrated "Ilairbairu Family" of Scottish 'Vocalists., !mites front Boston,:11.1.., ,Fib. e, 1010: " uer since my hair began to ;;Ivo sil- very evidence of the change which deeding time procureth, I have used Aveda 111.11'. Vaunt, and so have been able to maintain an appearance of youthfulness -a matter of oonstderable consequence to Ministers, ora- tors, 4101019, and In fact every ono who lives in the oyes of the public." buts. 0. A. reescoSr, writing from 18 Bins 81. Marlestown, ,!tetra April 14, 1881, says; "" Two years ago about two-thirds of my batt earns off. It thinned very rapidly, and 1 was fast growing bald. On uailla it i ail s 1LUtt V1o131t thef !11111^4 stopped and a new growth commenced, and in about a month any head was air. It has continued edtto grow, ane! 18110483 letely covered with lgood as before it fell. I regularly used but ottu bottle of the VIGOR, but now use it occasioually as a dressiug." Wehave hundreds of similar testimonials to tho efficacy of Armes 'tantalums. Ii needs but atrial to convince the groat skepti- cal of its value, ' PREPARED BY Dr.tl.C. Ayer &Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by altDrnggists,' . bedadi the never got out again."- Health is real . N. Y Times. The Japanese women advertise the number of theiryears by die. ''arrange - in ent arrange-inent of their hair. Girlsfrotti,ninetone. teen Wear their hairinterlecedwiith red crape, describing h half eirple its onnd the head, the forehead,being. leftfree, with a celel on each side. From ;;fifteen to thirty the, hair is dressed very high on the forehead, and put up at time baok•in the shape of a fan or butterfly, with ins' ;terlacingsofsilver �cord and it '"fecors tion of Colored bails. Boyand thirty it Woman' twists her hair around a shell pin, placed horiaontelly at' the back of the heed.' WI:lowsealso deeignate,'them,, selves, and whether they wish to marry again. Y;fie;latest new, son ;.has. for a. title, "The Coming Ilan Will happier Be," Mr. Samuel Mackey, of New South Wales. has a farm of 5,000,000 acres. ', • yr 7'R EAT M E NT BO.% 0. Wnse'a NERVE AND BRAIN TREAT .5!5101, a guaranteed specific for Rvateria, Dia rinesx convulsions, Fite Nervous Neuralgia Headnab o,NorvpumProstration caused by the note of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental Depression, Softening of tbe-»rain„resulting in Insanity :and 1earlin to misery, decay and •leatb, i r mature OldAge, Barrenness, Lose of Power in eithet sex,Involuntary Losses and, 1permatorrhma, caused by over-exertion of the ,rate , selt•ebeso and overin4uTgenee. One box Will out's recent`eases. Each • oz oontaine tete morates treatment. One• dollgr• a box, or ?sicborteeto,•r Ave doil ere•1-seistbyma1iprepaid ori i.4icSipt of price. .We guarantee sit boxes to cure a«4y case. 'With each order' received for .ti 5050,, s ccompauied with', five dollars, we will send the purehaeor if tour written g arannot to refund the moneydoes refect t cure. ttuaruntueo issued only t►y J. ' BROWNING, Sole &nonetor liTseter,