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The Exeter Advocate, 1893-4-20, Page 3A, BEFOGGED SCIENCE. yellettisin and IleeMeriem Overlaid by the Peg of Oharlatallieta. NOW nun HINDERS INQUIR • 1.8 (dear that M mane ie &vague, ticientifio term, wh has tee fixed mean • tho popular mi Hypnotism is la line° if any bett Odyllio potency entirely too scienti 11 and animal magneti a phrase ooveri ape much oround. We miglet call it t t" snake charm," but it is not confined amakee or even to people of snaky dive Ilona, What, then, shall we call this oce and eityaterious power jilat now attract to :much attention ? A. once popular mesmerist would ma Teeple pick grapes from phantom yin 1unbfrmitically up the ;sides of a door window case to eecape the rising tide of t viewless ocean, and Would, by a fOW patina make a man so rigid that he would 1 ate:etched like a log between two chair leper/ which his head and feet alone rest welo rigid indeed that two men could atan nu his unsupported stomach or back wit emt handing it. This power is now au loosed•to have been the eeoret of tho extraordinary peeformanoes by.the Gant wende and coneitheonnairee Of France. mibilatophio historian noted for his (alai nnoords that he saw one woman in a than and "rigid as seationed oak" reoeive 'blows of an iron bar wielded with all t aitzength of a stalwart soldier. Can t aciind conceive of a more pitiable spots° ---ambramunity mad with religious ferv and a military governor striving to cure with stripes and bruising and death! ASTONISHING H/NDOO FEATS. India furnishes scrams of enaoaples. Eve mate bas heard of the wonderful trio done by her native conjurere, which are no :supposed to be mere hypnotic delusio Here is a familiar cats° as related by Dr Vie Dill, of Boston : "It teas on the street in Madame and th lack -wee a tall, Isronzed native. He gaze around the circle until his piercing blue eyes met those of each att,entive spectate When he uncoiled a slender rope and thre it am in the air. It caught on some invis bile book and hung down. Next the Incli laid a liandkerchief on the reed, an =liking motions over it something unde meat& began to move. The handkerchi woe taken off, and selrant LAY A TINT lemma: Y. es - lob. ing nd. ut er. is fie, am ng he to si- ult fag ke or he ie ed p. 80 is - A on 1:10 50 he he le or it ry n. ks C. r. an r- ef 331wering gently upon its face, the fak <made it grow, and in a few moments th babe WO en, its feet, EI baby no longer, be an agile and bright-feced lad. The Indian motioned upward, and th limy began to climb the rope. Soon he eva nut of sighte though the rope continued t sway with his struggles of ascent. Th magician then ahook it and pulled it side weeps, and we could hear a faint scream o manteat from the cloud. Then there wa *be sound of a falling body, and the chit elay,cruslaed at our feet. l'heIndianquickl made o pass, and the lad was alive an Mita to go skyward again." Wonderftal, wondertul indeed! And th complauation is seemly less so. Next tim Mlle doctor took with bira a quick penc :seetiest and a photographer. The artist ea Vas miracle, as did all the others, an eleeteleed it, but when the photographi elewative was developed it allowed ONLY TEM IrABIR AND TKO CROWD —no boy, no rope ! The fakir ha Impuotized the crowd and made them thin tbey SSW a marvel, but he could no byesnotir.e the camera. The ever faibhfu Mame of light recorded only what tsotuall illoquestionably, if human testimony i of any valne whatever in relation to th =ravenous or semi-mirsionlous there is tmoerberieuis force of awful potency whio =MO people can exerb on some others. Th teatchnony may be called universal, for sine 'history began there basnever been a people .savage or civilized, but testified to man mega inetancee. The people's religion ha atetel little to do with it. Ancient Israelites and modern Hindoos, the lard headed Olooteh of the highlands and the voletil rereeke and Sicilians, have agreed to th letter, and now the Scientific men of Eng itand arid America after standing out lon against the alleged' " superatitione of th =learned," concede far more than the an learned ever claimed. . A 3IECIIANICAL HYPNOTIZES, If there ever was a "backwoods notion" talon/led without mercy, it was the belief %bait era -penis have power to charm. But the feet is now conceded. It is set forth in Vat latest works on ophiology, and the method of it is explainen by Clearoot Sums fttilla Other thaliStS in Paris. And finally, rai if to surfeit us with marvels, Dr. Soya bate actually invented a charming machine, If one 131a7 call it 'snob, a sort of double act - Ing votary hypnotizer, which, he thinks, operates on the same principle as the ser - Foote eyes. • It is a little piece of clockwork which .reanstes two mirrore or brighb disks of irtetel to revolve rapidly in opposit,e directions. !This device, says a recent eyewitness, was 'placed before the patients phere they could elegant it steadily. They were bidnen to rid heir anode of engrossing thoughts and flx them on the game. of the whirling glees. st. ehorttbne all of them succumbed to the Mine spell thab a bird fano under when teenbeg into the diamond blaze of a ser- orrstio eye. They were completely hypno- Mzed and were ready to respond to the verbalelireetione of the operator. Murree AND BYTNoTISM. It should be added that all these patients were siasce,ptible and had previously been hypnotized. Otherwise, the dectore thick mot more than a third of them would have ouccumbed to the influence. Everybody bas beard or read queer old stories of the tofteebe of mirrors on animals, and there is MO longer reason to doubt their truth, etimobberftectis equally certain—that for every rraR hypnotizer or mesmerizer there are ablesob ton amateure or pretenders. And thee it he which has created so widespread a Treindice againnt mesmerism, so called. '40(1 The faits who travel through the coma - SO, giv " eho we " at "one night stands," It berth,' t,t) 0£4 that 19 out of 20 are "fhts." And yet. they give a men the worth of hie ;money, for their performances are, RS a male, very amusing. .etemolig the moat noted of these is Mme. eltreteteshe but, on seeond thoughts, it le not well to advertise her by bailee One • 'of her great tricks is sewing man to - gather." Of °earth the "gentlemen from the atidienee " who " volunteer to COMO for - toned," etc., are her own employees pro - rely dieguised and known in the futilities/I len "homes." If, as often happens, a real Volunteer gotta forward, why, there in the litigglita COMO off, "Many people are nob sue- neptibleni• eto. For her great trick she has anhjeet " whose mere hevebeen "pierced,' sa tho &adios nay, at the point Where thkre Is very e eon/am and which its ordinarily "pierced" for earrings. TIM lineup nertieniene "nonslite," Tile needle and white tinned are put through this and then throegh the 'cote shin on the "horee's " Mien then through his other ear, ete.'and through it all he feels about as muoh pain an a pin et/retch would produce in o thesitive part. Then 1VItne. Anaste.sie de ----, etc., lays her hand upon her heart and oells upon any and all phyaioiaim preeent to say if---eto. So much for the madame. But the master in this line, a genius who really deserves praise and has been "on the road " for 20 yeers, is a weildreown New Yorker whom it is ;safe to call Dr, Jay. He has at least 20 "horses" in his em- ploy, and some of them have been his " homes " for a dozen years. Of course they have some other baldness, for Dr. Jay only employs them for an hoer or two at night. Ile not only putts pine through the ear, as Mme. Anastasia, dean but runs a needle through the tongue and does many other Wonderful things. Duthie chief talent con - Wats in amusing the audience. He is an artiet in that line. He waits till preceding performers home lefts all in good humor. Then his " subjects " are got into the "hypnotic trance" and told that the tide is coming in to where they set on the rooks. They climb up on their chain, then throw off their coats, veste eheee and socks, and sprawl all over the ;toga as they (suppos- edly) swim ashore, Nvhile the audience goes into convulsions of laughter. . WARMS PRZYNNT HONEST menthe; And such is mesmerism "aa she ia prac- ticed." It simply requiree good " homes " to make it a firenclass burletque, and, using the accepted slang, it is on the whole "horse /slay." The subjects dance about, break chain, pound each other and cavort around in all sorts of wild ways. The "mesmeric medium" might as well be off the atage. And it is a point worth noting that in private convereation every " hypao- deer " and every " horae " of this class de- clares that there is nothing in mesmerism. To a " horse " who hell forth at a New York city resort a reporter cited the fad that there was a real man named Mesmer who practiced a real art. " Oh, come off 1" was the response. "We know all about that. The man it was named for was a fakir, and he introduced it in a dime museum, and if you'll go to my room I'll give you the year and date." And this is the curse of science. Each step in advance must be on disputed ground, and for one . honest, earnest in- quirer there are many "fakirs" and ino postern while the great army of the queer and crazy rush in and try to make this mysterious power sustain their theories about attendant spirits, the return of the dead, witchcraft' and second sight. But hypnotism is now beyond all that Men of science declare that it is a reality, but moat of them deny that a man can be in- duced to commit a crime epilog his will or do any other of the queer things alleged in court. In short, they say a man's nature cannot be changed by it, and if he commits a crime when hypnotized it is because his instincts are criminal. And (such would seem to be the common sense view of it. TIRE WOBLill •PREACHEE. In Fifty Tears wrom Now She Will ze at ellonte In the Pulpit. There seems to be no objection whatever to woman taking control of Sunday schools, benevolent institutions, church faira, festi- vals and all other mums of carbag for the, flocks and filling tbe ecclesiastical ex- che.quer, but when it comes to women in the pulpit, there is trouble at once. This is only another of the relics of barbariern, ac- cording to a writer in the New York Ledger. In old times if the church could get control of the women and little children, they felt pretty sure of their ability to manage the rest of the human family. Half a century agh a woman doothr was scarcely recognized in reputable circles, and a woman lecturer was a monetrosity. Contrasting that date with the present and telling note of the change in senti- ment from one decade to another, it is scarcely too ranch to expect that by another 50 years we shall see a most wonderful revolution in matters of this sort. It is safe to predict thab before the end of the first decade of the next century the woman preacher will be no more of a novelty than the woman dootor now is. WOMEIn la specially fitted for such work, and even were she not so, it would be only the strictest kind of justice to give her tome of the honor as well as most of the hard work of the Church. When once it dawns fully upon the minds of the people of this gener- ation that there is no sex in intellect or moral achievement, tho firat and most dif- ficult part of this knotty p oblem will hove been solved. By all means, open the pulpit doors to women as well as those of the Sun- day school room, the hospital and the exe- cutive committee. Men 'With Crank Notions. A Jersey City man devotes hinaself to the collection of door -knobs, old and new, and claims a museum numbering over 3,000 samples. Nebraska boasts proudly of a collector who gathers locks of the hair shaved from the heads of noted criminals, when they enter the penitentiaryelabeling and indexing them with great care. Philadelphia is the abiding place of a col- lector of cast-off horseshoes, who will rick his neck to secure a prize in the greet, and whose house is decorated with thorn in all sizes, shapes and degrees of dilapidation. Boston ean produce a collector whose specialty is old bricks, each having been secured from some historical local edifice while it was being demolished, and beteg tagged with a ratting of the history ot the building from which it was obbained. • A New Orleans person is a collector of sugar samplers, and is believed to have a flask of the. granulated product of every plantation an the State, some being of aotual historical interest. A Louisville collector has several hun- dred sample phials of the whiskey produced within the borders of his Commonwealth, but wben he experiences the necessity for O bracer, takes 11 from an ordinary demi- john. Woll entormed, II Not Educated. A pretty young sohoolma'am in Klamath county, Ore., puzzled the powers pronun- ciation of her Ohms recently with tbe word " hoebaed "chalked on the bleekbearrl, To holp them out she asked': ".What ehould I have if I should get married ?" " Beblea, neOure," shouted the atm in unison. "Fred," said the school teecher to a little boy Who was behind ei hie olanees, " you ,are always behind ; you should have more peek" How can I push," retorted Fred, "111 am net behind?" Frederick Jackeon Ilogllehmen, will dart; for the North Pole someeime next bummer, and will be a rival of Lieut. Peary in the search for fame, Bide eIlere Is a Weems= from memo G-oorneeWhat doe e he tlay f Bride (reads)e-Do nob rotors and all Will be for- given: Row Then Have Abutted the nen Me All Adore, Piron—Fortune and women are partiel to bole. Jerrold—Never auk a womanher age; ask it of some other woman. Spanish proverb—For whom does the blind man's wife adorn herself Thomas Fuller—He knows little who Will tell his wife all he knows. Victor Hugo --Women detest the serpent through a professional jealousy. Fleming—He wall trusts woman drawls water from pitchers hill of holm Rivaroi—It l saidthatfriendeltip between women is only a suspension of hostilities. Victor Hugo—Women are affirmed by trifles.; but they are Mao consoled by Wiese_ Anon—Three things never trust out of your hands; your horae, your gun and your wife. Scarron--13rilliants of the &et water are theme given to stay the wile's first flood of tottro Haliburbon--Women will acenetirnee COD - fess their sins, but I never knew one to confees her faults. Voltaire --Ideas are like beards—men never have any until they grow up, and women none at all. Belmo—Woman la a moot charming crea- ture, who changes her hearb as easily as she does her gloves. Goethe—Woman is a mistress of the arb of completely embittering the life of the persons on whom she depends. Heine—The music at a marriage prona- sion always reminds me of the music of soldiers metering upon a battle: Voltaire—Some women have hearts brittle as glass ; he that would ergrave his name on them meat uee diamond's. Bulwer Lytton—A woman too often rea- sons from her heart ; hence two-thirds of her mistakes and troubles. Durivage—If you tell a woman she is beautiful, whisper it softly; for if the devil hears it, he will echo it many times. Swift—The love of flattery in most men proceeds from the znean opinion they have of themselves ; in women from the contrary. Whately—Women never reason, or if they do, they draw incorrect inferences from correet premises, and they always poke the fire from the top. Scarron—To be married, women will en- dure much. Though they be caged up like %parrot, still they complain not if they have the ring to play with. Mary Queen of Scots.—Talk not to me of the wisdom of women—I know my own sex well; the wisest of us all are but little less foolish than the rest. Le Bruyere—If a beautiful woman speaks favorably of the beauty of another woman, we may be mire thas she pommels more of the kind of beauty she is praising. Anon—The voice of the virgin is as soft se the 000ing of the wood -pigeon on Se. Valentine's Day. But no sooner has she Meted wedding cake than she grows bold as he tiger that has eaten raw food. Thackeray—Who has not seen how women bully women? What torture have men to endure compared to these daily re- peated shafts of scorn and cruelty with which poor women are riddled by the tyrants of their sex? Plautus—Leta man who wants to find abundance of employment procure a woman and a ship for no two things produce more trouble if you begin to equip them; neither are these two things ever equipped enough. Lord Chesterfield—He who flatters women moon pleases them best; and they are most in toys with him who they think is most in love with them. No adulation is too strong for them, no assiduity too great; as, on the other band, the least word or action that can possibly be construed into a eliget or contempt; IS unpardonable and never forgotten, About Allspice, The Island of Jamaica produces about all the allspice that is used. 1118 known also as pimento or Jamaica pepper. The tree on whioh the berriesgrow is evergreen, and the ilowers grow in dense clusters; these develop into small, green aromatio the size of black pepper. If allowed to ripen they become pulpy and lose some of their pungency. For commercial pur- poses the berries are gathered when green. carefully driod in the sun and afterwards packed in bags holding from 160 to 180 pounds and shipped. Pimento trees grow ID many parts of tropical America, but nowhere do they thrive as in jamaica. The trees are never planted by man and receive no cultivation worthy of the name. The seeds are dropped by the birds, and the rains and the tropical sun do the rest Surplus trees are out down and become walk- ing sticks and umbrella handles. This spice is more mild and innocent than met other spices. Servant—Step this way, Mr. Whizz. Caller—Mr. What? My name is Jones. Servant—Your, pardon, sir, when I handed your card to Mies Mollie, she said : " Whizz! Showlim in." What fills the housewife with delight, And makes her biscuit crisp and light, tier bread so tempt the appetite? COTTOLENE What is it makes her pastry such \ treat, her husband eats so much, Though pies he never used to touch? COTTO LE Pa E What is it shortens cake sonice &Ater than lard, while less in price, And does the cook ng in a trice ? COTTO LE IN E What is it that fries oysters, fish, Croquettes, or eggs, or such like dish, As nice and quickly as you'd wish? COTTO LEN E What is it saves the time and care And patience of our women fair, And helps them tnake their cake so rale? COTTOLENE Who is it earns the gratitude Of every lover of pure food By making " COTTOLE N " sogood? Made only by' N. K. FAIREANK & CO., Wellington and Ann Streets, MONTRZAL. $(72.7,3Halthe dark the nokwtohuunec10wuls:06teaLer,bwolw°nene tune to Dr, Pierce's Fay- odroiwt:prhyosoriweanteaptionh. truoubhie: life is made gloomy by the Chronic weaknesses, deli- cate derangements, and nful disorders that °I- nt her sex, they are com- pletely cured. If she's overworked, nervous, or e 1. "run-down," she has new life and strength. "Favorite Prescription° is a powerful, hivigoratieg tonic and a sootlung and etrengthening nervine, purely vegetable, perfectly harmless. It regulates and promotee all the proper functions of wornanhoocl, improves dioestion, enriches the blood, dispels aches and poins, brings refreshing sleep, and re- atores health and vigor. For every "female complaint" and disturbance, it Is the only remedy BO sure and unfailing that lb can be guaranteed. e (/)) Ib it doesn't benefit or cure, you have your mower back. mentommeemmesesetessee The society Ida. (By Solomon Scriliblequiek, in Onward.") The society girl is almost always a tenor - made girl. he depends more largely on how tom appears than on what eha is. Many of them are very charming girls, but veiled ID the malting. She often scents sorry that she is not a boy. She wears garments approximating to her brother's me closely as possible—a mannish jacket, a boyish het and a dudish collar and cravat, and some- times has quite unwomanly ways. She is apt to indulge, too in a little bit of slang, or in hyperbole of language. Everything is awfully nice," or hor- ribly," the reverse. She exhausts the power of language on trivial things and has none left for deeper emotions. She just. " loves " ice cream, and can't say anything stronger about her mother. She reminds me often of that saying of the wise man, "As a jewel of gold in a swine's snout, Bo ID a fair woman without dieeretion." If she could only see heraeif as others see her, she would lay aside her silly airs, and be, what at heart she really wants to be, and often is—the making of a splendid woman. Ot course, she is fond of company. Life must be an incessant) round of pinnies or parties, and of all company in the world the poorest is herself—a truly unfortunate state of affairs, since we have to be so much alone with ourselves; and in the great and solemn issues of life no human soul or angelic being can come between ourselves and God. How much better the sentiment, although it does sound rather conceited, of the man who, asked why he was alwaya talking to himself, replied: "Poi two reasons ; first, I like to talk to a sensible man; second, I like to hear a sensible man talkbeTsociety girl of course has her visit- ing book, in which she keeps a debit and credit accountof her social debts, a record of the receiving dap of her friends, and oredit-marks every call returned. If hap- pily the visitee is nob at home, the visitor congratulates herself thereon and marks that debt as paid anyway. Lite such a mechanical treadmill round does fashionable visiting degenerate. Our *moiety girl has all the accomplish meats. She can rday brilliantly, she can dance exquisitely, she can paint (I do not mean her cheeks, but china) charmingly, and hen, perhaps, a smattering of half a dozen 'elegies. But she has not done much real seedy, OEM namely read a serious book, and wastes her tirne and brain-116mm on silly and frivolous novels. She is apt to be a bit of a flirt, and possi- bly an arrant coquette; has often two or three strings to her bow, or rather two or three beaux to her string, and orders them about like puppies—which they often are. I saw one in a crowded street oar the other day. She came in with a couple of young gentlemen, both of whom sat down to her lefb. With an imperious gesture she beck- oned one to her right and stud, "Lot Tom sit here; that's what he wants." Yet sometimes them society girls with all their train of admirers get badly lefb after all, and pine in solitude like an un. plucked flower upon its stalk ; whereas the demure, domestic little mouse is songht and won by the sensible man who is simply amused by the fashionable beauty. Yet our society girl is °Man gifted with splendid poatibilities, ancl only needs the converting grace of God to make of her a, splendid woman. Her heart often pines amid the vapidities and vacuities of fashion- able life for some noble career, for some worthy object in life. Amid her brilliant success she feels within "an aching void the world can never fill." She realizes the truth of the soripture, "She that liveth in pleasure IS dead while she livetb." Be- neath the smiling surface of society there are often patty jealousies, littlenesses, and meannesses that corrode and canker every good and noble quality. Our society girl is often BO sweet and effusive in public that she has a decidedly sub -acid flee -or in private. After a brilliant social victory in which she was "all nods and becks and wreathed smiles," and wit and repartee, she wakes up late in the morning with a headache and cross temper. She snubs her good old father, who is proudly fond of his daughter, till he menus the truth of old King Leare word, "How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is to have a thankless child.' She enema at her little brothers and sisters, who retort by saying that she is just real hateful. .And, worst of all, by hasty word or unkind look she plants a thorn in the head of her loving mother, who feels all the bitterness expressed in the scripture, "I have nourished and brought up children and they have rebelled against But not all society girls are spoiled daugh- ters of fashion, some reign as true andnoble queens. In their imolai realm they are true themes of opinion, in whose presence any- thing low or mean shrivels into ashes like tow in a flatus of fire, or like Satan, touched by Ithuriele spear, is revealed in all its loathsomenese, "squat like a toad at the ear of Eve." They are the true leaders of the beat society. "King's Daughters" in very truth, "all glorious within," living for the glory of God and welfare of mitt, carry- ing, like St. Philomela, light into dark Elam; brightness into sad homes and earts. You will find her portrait in the description of the "virtuous woman," in the thirty-first ohapter of Proverbe. Of her it may be said, "many daughters havedone virtuously, but thou excelleth them all." " A perfet woman noble planned. To warn, to comfort, to command. And yet a spirit still and bright With something of an angel light." Cremate now Garbage in the Range. If you live in the city and have no pig, don't keep a swill pail. 16 attractsretie roaches and other vermin and tends to Make a servant careless. Open your range dampers end cremate your . garbage. " Cleanliness is next to godliness," and When the bell -ringing Swill contractor, for reaSene best known to himself, fails to come some day to your Buffeting naighbore, your comfort, peace of mind and &eateries will be at resta—Broelelyo Oltrostiele. If you Ileire both .ttdvioe and a ditIner to give a Iturtgryneatt, ot bin) have the dinner web. t lls fOastoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's preseription ibr Infants SAnd ChildrenI1contains neither OPiunt9 Ilierphine nor ether Narcotic substance. It 23 a harmless substitute for Pareg,oric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and. Castor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its t..,maranttle is thirty years' u.se by Nillions of NotIters. Castoria destroys Wornand allays feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Son.31,.. Curd, cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves teething troubles, csrE•es ee:p.tip:Ltion, rand flatulency. Castoria assimi/ates the food, rraulates the stomach and bowels, giving TkealtIv; and natural sleep. Case teem is the Claildren's Pe.:1acea—t3se Mother's Friend. " CaStOria is an omelette, medicine for chg.- dren. Mothers linen repeateilly told me Ole its good effect upon their children." 3.)a. G. C. Osecoo, 117ass. "Castorla is the best remedy for children c which,' am. acquainted. I hope the dyti 1,er. far distant -when moth= will conetdc.rthe real interest of their children, and -use Cestoria in- stead a the varionsnuack nostrums's:Mina are destroying their loved once, by forcing opium, morphine, soothing syrup and other hert rut szw.ats down their thror-ts, t,hereby sending. thom to premature graves." Dr. J. Knrcnzton, Conway, The Centeno Castoria. "Cuatoria is so well adepted to children dim 1 roccaranend it- az superior to any prescription known to tic." n. A. Aecoun, M. D,t 111 00. Oxford Drool:Lyn, N. Y. Our physicians in the children's deperte niant hcxo spoken hir,hly of their expert once in their outside practice with castoria, and although ws only have among our medical sup,lies what is known es molar products, yet we are free to confess that the raerits of CantOria h43 won US to look with favor upon it." UNITED EasilTAL IND DISPItNsinr, Boston, Mass, Ar.t.me C. MOTU, Pres., CoraTeaaten P.T.-nmezety SM.ent, NO= Yenic Mem tdeltttre.M117 Oat MOW e " .3n1,E.STR=Ediell-v4101 • UARANTEED =gglib,i63.,..., . APP,L1CATIONS THOROUGHLY REMOVES • DANDRUFF Toonto, TnaVelling Saysi Anti•DandrultIo a pertectxezmoves Otila 1 droll...its action is marver -4*ONT21 Cap Keep th S pole n. a few applications not oat Ulm 101ABS014 excessive dandlma areemulatidn at stopped e ir anadelt sort and pliabl Wand pi.sai4s.1.1:ta. cntAc7INE.: Restores Fading hair to original calor. sStopes familling sea hair. Makes hair soil and Mble Promotes Crowlii. FACTS ABOUT Bifirsmaxo. The Results or a Scientist's Studies of an Interesting subject. In a recent work on criminology, the learned investigator rays that out of 98 young men criminals 44 por °ea. did not blush when exsanined. Of 122 female crimi- nals 81 per centdid not blush. If our novels are to keep up with science they must change their indicia of emotion. It must be the men who blush and the other sex whose sensitiveness must not be a regu- lar feature. Leander blushes as he declares hiraself or is suddenly browtht up against a sentimental outcrop. But Hero takes lb calmly. The scientist ease notices that women blush about the ears rather than on the oheek. TiliS also requiree a change in the novels. It is a pointer, too, for the ladies' man who is watching for signs that ID is making an impression. If he fastens his gaze upon the left ear he may see some- thing that will tell him he may consider himself happy. Science is gradually getting there, and we shall soon know it all. -- Kansas City Times. ON TRiAL FtIR 90 DAYS. Th completest and latest line of Elec- trical aptiii.tnecs in the word They- have never failed to cu re. 'X' c aro so pcsitive of it that we will back our belief and seed you any Electrical, Appliance now in the market and you can try it for Three No ethos. Largest list of testimonals on 4earth. Send for book and journal Free. W. T. Ba.cr & Co., Windsor, Ont. An Army of Bachelors. There are in the United States 3,000,000 men over thirty years old who have never been married. If women ever get the power they will tax these fellows roundly and force them to double up or pay um—Spring- field Union. The scriptural text in the New York Mail and Express which announced the death of its proprietor, Colonel Shepard, Was: "We bring our years to an end as a tale that is told." CARTER'S OTTLE 1VER PILLS. Baked Beans and Opera. 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