~:!§0~1 II~.::._~ M .t· g(.i ~ lltHl«tilU or;' ill ttsmau. I . ~~~&d&i&iL&Ulllil!~"~~~~~~~~~~~~-~22~~~~~~~Mi~~~~!!4~4Zi~~ . !!!!!!~~~~!!!~~~!!!!!!~~~~~~!!!!~ . ~~~~~~~llB'~~-~~-~~~~~!!!~!!!~~~~~~~ll!lltl~ l>a~l!illl!l~~!H!l3~S!~~ ·_ . · HEALTH. CAUSES OF SUDDEN DEATH. Imovement but the effects upon the powern of voluntary i The second child of ~he Queen is the Princo and _upon the intel~· t; are very of Wales who came of age in 1863. As soon 111 i the brain, life may be prolong11·l for years, i The Prince of Wal@s' P ortion. WEDNESDAY · ·TULY 18, 1888 It Is lJsuaUy Great Vessels or Brain. j death ~ay not r esult , but t~o c?nditio~ of and Duke of Cornwall and entitled to the' Due to Disease or the Jreart, ' paral!sis, and perhaps ?f 1 ~1 1·attd mmd r evenues of the Duchy of Cornwall. The . sure to be decidedly delet eru·I s. ?~dden as he was born he became Prince of Wales I 0 IHarn es s . * CREAM eAIKlt\6 POWDER PUREST,STRONCEST,BEST, CONTAINS NO ALUM, AMMONIA, LI ME, PHOSPHATES, or any injurious materials. TORONTO, ONT. E . W. GILLETT, . CHICAGO , JLT.11 Jifan'f'r oftllc C ELllllllATEDMY.AL!EAS'l'CAl!:Ell. CAUSE AND EFFECT. Many persons wonder at the tired, worn and weary feeling that oppresses them with-gut any apparent cause. It may be poverty {, "..· the blood or a disordered stoma.ch ; in -either case the stomach, blood and liver 11re not performing their regnlar fnnctions. 1tnd, with many persons, there will follow a dull, heavy headache. nausea and many other sYWPtoms that precede a well developed oaee cf Dyspepsia. Purify the blood. cleanse ~he system of the cloggcd secret.ions by using MElACHAI\f S MAN DR.AKE MIXTURE, a chemist of nineteen years' <:>xperience. Sold prepAred by J'. B. Meacham. 133 Young street, n Dowmanville by Higginbotham & Son. FREEMAN'S WORM PO'\VDERS, Are pleasant to tu.kc. Cont11iu t heir own Purgative. I s a er.fc, s;1rc, ttud <Jffoctual ·stroyer o f 1v01·r:;B 1" C:)'Jiclr~n or A du1t9 VETERINARY SURGEON. Graduate of the Ontario Veterinary College, .Registered member of the Ontario Veterinury Medical Aesociation. WOffice and Residence. Newtonville, Ont. Will visit Orono every Tuesday nnd;Sa tnrctay Office hours rr m 10 a. m., t.o 4 p. m., at CouJters' Hotel . Calls by Telegraph r eceive imr. ediate attention. CH.AI.GES MODER.a.TE. WILL CURE OR RELIEVE BILIOUSNESS, DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION, JAUNDICE, ERYSIPELAS, SALT RHEUM, HEARTBURN, 11£ADACHE. DIZZINESS, THE STOiv1ACH, DRYNESS OF THE SKIN, OF THE HEART, ACIDITY OF .1" FLUTTERING Dl~ OPSY, _ And every species c~ dises,sg a.r ising t:rem diSO:l'de:red Ll'VER, KIDN EYS, 's S N B0U ALL UJLBURN & CO T' Jll ·1 STOMA CB., BOWELS OR BLOOD. Proprietors, 'l'OR ON'l'O. - Marble and Granite Works, BOW1UA11 VILLE, Ont. ESTADL18HED, I857, A LL KINDS OF · EMETERY C --,. ORK W done in tho latest styles and materials. SCOTCH , ENGL ISH, G ERMAN AND NEW BRUNSWICK CRAN ITE M0N U M ENTS I N STOCK . Call and see our d esigns and get our estimates before purch~iDg - Why the sudden occurrence of death I have been the most sudden of fa.ta.I re · r enta an roy .. t.ies excee ."' ' should be deemed an evil of great maiinitude t suits. ' per annum. Coal, tm and lead m~ne· ai:e is a mystery The opposite--the long-con-1' worked upon the property. During h1~ tinned si~kn~ss, ending in complete exhausSUDDENLY 1"ATAL PNEUMONIA. minority the r evenue of the duchy accumuo- - - tion and gradual wearing away of every Pneumonia may p rove suddenly fatal, but late~ to ~2,008,605, .and wh en ~e came <~f · . . energy--seems much ru.ther to be deplored this is in a roundo.bout way. In this dise .. ae age m 1863 he came into pos~ession of this Havrng purchased the busmess formerl y earned o n b y llUMPJ;lREY & and the favor of the Diety implored in the the blood undergoes a curious change, be- sum.t . Ab~ut $l,l~O,OOO /f:hi~ am;~nt;as · MA YER, I have moved it across t he street to the premises lately way of protection coming much more disposed to coagulate spen m t e pure a.se 0 t e 'an rmg am' occupied b Sh & T ] h · · "th T" d S T he different methods by which life may (clot ) than in hea.lth. It sometimes happens 1est~te in Norfolk, and portions ?f . the re· . 3'.' aw O e~ w ~re in conne ction wi. my I ll an t ove be suddenly brougl'.tt to a close may occupy that from debility the hearb is unable to mam~er were expended on bud<lio.i;:. t he Bus mess wi~l b~ f~und a f ull lme of Heavy and L ight Har n ess, and a u our at tention for a few momenta, perhaps drive the vital fluid through the lungs with / m~~?\thereh aldd a~~utfi: for t~e P~1 fhe other furmsbrngs u s ually fo unrl in a first- class harness shop. with i:irofit- for if it be no grea.t disadvan- i ts usual force a.nd velocity. The easily an. is ouse 0 · e ne r eceipts o ,e 1861 188 tagefor one to die suddenly; it may . be coagula.ted blood,movinglazily through the , P tince from the duchy from to 6 decidedly of advantage to regulate to some great cav ities of the heart finds time and avera.ged $306,160 yearly, and up t o the th" b t 't t f l t ' h' h fill t h llatterdatehehaddrawn t herefrom $6,041,· . · . h 8 18 may d i;gree t h e age a t w h ic e per- oppor .um Y 0 · orm a. c 0 · w w e 655 T h t' $81 084 t will r eceive the most careful atte ntion hav inCJ' s ecured the servi c e s o f m1tted to take place. gr eat artery gomg t o uhe lungs. The conse- i · e na ,10n pays . · a. yea.y . 0 ,, · · · · · Li.fe begins in t he heart and its last signs quence of t his is, no blood goes to the lungs /the duch_v as 00!11pensatron for t~e abo!it ion MR. W. HUMPHREY, whose skill m this branch is SO well kno wn are to be observed in that organ. That , is to be submitted to the action of t he air- ~~ ~ertaf. anCLen; dues t.on t m comtahge t hrough out this district a s to n eed no further c omment. to say, the visible, the ta.ngible signs of bre.. thing is useless-and the sufferer per· 1 . a p ar ia.~ent a one Im~ gave au O· · · ' · life t<!l the eye or to the senses generally are i&hes as if shut up in an apartment from I rit y to be imposed. The m vested and All my work lS fimshed by experie n ced workmen none other employed. · d b y some movements or appearances w h" · h a& been ex h.a.use t d · A cc1· jb · cash balances of tt he duchy · a n rnspect10n · · o f m y s t ock and you will '. b e con v mced . b $ on Decemevmce ich t h.e air. B All I ats k JS that 31'.1886 · amoun .ed t 0 a. dents of this kmd are very rare but are not er . out , 792' 500 · . Y ·it is the Jara t t h f b t k h" d · ll about the hes.rt. In order that the heart sha.11 continue its always fatal wh en they occur. T he "heart authority of~ vot~ m parliament the Pnn~e i oes O C o ose r om, . es wor mans ip, an pri~es rea y action many conditions must be fulfilled. clog " may be but small and fill but one of took possession m 186'.J of. M~rlborough l ower than any other place Ill t own . My expenses bemO' lower 1 · · t o the l ungs. The oth er Rouse, to until I! I give · my cus t o m ers t h e b e nefit · goo d ord er, th ear t eries The nervous supp ly must b e in gomg th t 0 f h ' holdh the same T bl" his death d"t or therewre Gentlemen p la ce ~ m your' 18 its blood must be furnished in a regular a.nd lung being free vo perform its duty, t he a _ne pu tc expen 1 ure orders at on , · . ." . : · · mo! er. systematic manner, its valves must open clot deposited is taken up by a.bsorption l upon this resi~e.nce smce then and up to ce au~ d o n t m 1ss this oppo~·tumty. R e p a1nng pro mptly and shut with a fair degree of completion a fter a time, and all is again well. But if 18 6 h b done. D on t forget the place, Quick's B l ock , Bowmanville. t ~hs been f223 · 25~· 1 0 and certainty, while its muscular wells the great artery should become clogged . e age seven een e eca.me a co · A~ must preserve their hea.lthy condition. Con· completely at some point before it divides oncl m t he army, a~ twe~ty·one a full· blown ~ 12JJ. till Trl?Jf ~~ sidering the many circumstances that may into one each for the right and left lung, gener al, and at thir~Y:·frve a. field ma.rah.al, e ~j~ ~ ~ (I) interfere with the proper workiu,g of this then death must necessarily be sudden and ~e holds several ~mhtary smecur~s, ~1th Bowmanville, May 15 th , 1888. 20 great force-pump it is really su rprising that very painful. big pay? and yet if he wante~ to go rnto there should be so little disease affecting it There is another wa.y in which pneumonia battle ~ith the army he couldn t, as the law and bringing life to a sudden close. Space may p rove suddenly fatal. This i s by pa.ra. makes it out that is lacking to give a complete sketch of t he lysis of the heart. When a large proporms BODY rs TOO PRECIOUS consequences of valvular disease of the tion of a lung is filled with the prod ucts of to be placed wher e there is any risk of beinf{ heart, but one result must be pointed out. inflammation it is about the conahtence of riddled by an enemy's bullets. The heart ha.ving more work to do tha.n liver auostance. The blood finds difficulty Unt,il 1863 he was heir to the Dukeaom of normally grows- hypA rtrophies-iu order in finding its way through thiaconsolidated- S 1xe Coburg, but in th.at year he resigned - -- M.A NUFACTU RER OF- - to keep up with it. So long as the growth struuture, whfoh is so different from the his heirship in favour of his b rother, the increases in pr oportion to the work there is spongy, normal lung substiJ.nce. Under 1 Duke of Edinburgh. In the same year the to do it is all right., but when the work be- these circumstances, if the blood is present l'rince was married and he was voted $117, · KING STREET, BOWMANVILL comes too grea.t and the blood 11.ccumulates fn the body in large amount, and is sent 275 of public moneys to pay his wed ding until the heart muscle stretches and becomes around the circulat ion with considerable expenses. H e was a t the ea.me time given Elae now on hand a number ot vehicle' (and is ;inanufacturing a gr eat many more) ot t he ne p .. tterns and best finish, which I am ofl'e r mg for sale a t t ho lowest prices oonsisteni . thinner, t hen dilatation has taken place force, there i8, occasiom\ily, a (!O'!lllib ion of an annuit y of $200,000 and his wife one of with dne regard t o workmanship and quality. 'l'he following i a a list ot and a condition of g re!\t da.nger threaten·. danger developed from an accumula tion of /$50,000, to be raised to $150,000 if she bethe princi'pe.l vehicles manutaotured by me A little unusual exertion sends an extr a. an overplus in the right s ide of the heart, came a widow. In 1875 he went to India amount of blood to the thinned and weak· which c11.nnot be sent through the lungs to and to defray cx pellses p arliament voted · Do uble Covered Carnages .. . .. . . .. ......... ... . .. ... ... ...... . . . ...... . ...... $150 U p ward a ened hea.rt, which becomes suddenly para- the left side fa.st enough. beoa.use of the in- him $710,000, and of this sum $300,vOO was Single Phretons . . .. .... . ..... ........ ..... .. ... ...................... . .......... 100 11 Iv zed and sudden death results. t ense congestion of t he Jungs. This danger specia.lly named "for pocket money a nd the Open Buggy...... ... . ..... . .. .... ..... ... .. . . .. .... .. .... .. . .. .. . .. .. ... ··. . .·· 70 a of pan]y;is from overclistension is one exercise of generosity." T op Buggy... . ....... .. .. ... ...... .. ........ .. . ........ .. ......... . .... .. . .. . .. .. . 9,0 11 DISEASE 0 1' THE GREAT VESSELS. that must be continually gm1rded against in On the death of his f .,ther he inherit ed D emocrat Wag on.. .......... ...... ......... . ... .. ... ..... . .. . . .... . ............. 65 " But sudden deaths in diseases of the hear t the treatment of this most formidable dis· 14,889 acres of l>J.nd in Norfolk and Ab.er " L u mber Wagona. ... .. ... . . .·. . . ·. . ... ........... .... ......... . . ... ........... ··· 55 are usually duo to something different from ease. I t is he1·e that the u se of alcohol be- deenshire, bringing in a rental of $48,635; L ight Wagon. .... ... . .... .. ..................... .. .. ...... .. .... .. ... .... ........ 40 11 bu t this is a private proper ty. the valvul ar diseases just n oticed. In mid- comes of such surpassing value. Express Wagon..... ..... . . .... . . . .......... .... . . .. . . . .... .... ... . . . .... ... ..... 75 " dle and advanced lift: the heart a.nd arteries A CONStiMPTIVE SUDDEN J)EAFH. His income from public resources up to Skeleton........... .. ........... . ... .. . .. .. . . . ... . . .. ..... ... .......... .... ... .. ... 50 11 the time of his mother 's jubilee wa.s :- From ..1-e subjected to a condit.ion of degeneration Consumption of the lungs sometimes Duchy of Cornwall, $10,258.500 ; rep airs Sulky ....... . . ........ ....... ... . ......... . . . ... ... .............. . . ............ .. .. . 40 ~ in which the valves shrink and the blood tubes become rigid, while there is a deposit comes to a. very sudden and unexpected ter- and al terations at Marlborough H ouse, Possessing superior ta cilitics tor manuracturlng oarrlages, I tntond t o sell very che ap for ,. 0 mination in the following manner. Rilther $223,250 ; colonelcy of the Tenth Hussars, or a.pp1·oved credit, and by so dolng I hope t o gr eatly incr ease m~ number of sales WonlG of chalky m:i.terial which makes them very sell the wood parts only, or the gearings or buggies Ironed. · brittle. Tlie valves between the kft ventri- late in the discn.se the upper portions of $162,000; wedding expenses, :Sll7,250; cle of the heart and t he entr ance of the b'th lungs are occupied by a dense depoqit $'200.000 annuit y to himself, $4,800,00{) ; aor ta-the first and greatest artery- are of tuber cle, together with infl!>mmatory pro· $50,000 annuity t o h is wife, $ 1,200,000 ; especially apt to become shr unken and u n· ducts that render the organs meless for visit to India (pocket money only ), $300,· At the Shortest Notice, Paint ed and Trimmed If Desired, able to keep t.he blood in the artery after it breathing purposes for one-third or one·half 000; total, $ 17,061,000. At the Factory l also do Planing, Match ing, Turning and Sawing with Cir cle Band .. Sor had been sent there by the contraction of their extent. The extent of lung that is JIECEIPTS SUMMARIZED. Sa. we, and prepare all kinds of lumber for carpenters nd others tor building purposee. the heart . Hence, more or less of it drops still available for breathing bec<'mes more Ornamental and P lain Pickets ror fenc oa in every style required. me.de to order. The names of the recipients of public back into the heart aa soon as t he b tter r e- and more limited with each da.y's deposit of laxes after its contraction. The blood ·in· tubercle. If now the ca.vil.y of the pleura moneys before mentioned, their respective stead of going to the head to nourish the (pleura sac), in which the lung lies, a.nd ex- relationship to the Q ueen, and t he amounts brain, falls backward and leaveu the brain pands, and contr&cts in the movemen ts of r eceive d by ea.ch up to the time of her bloodless- anremio-·in the contlition of an breathing, should become connected with a Maj esty's jubilee last year, a.re given in the cavivy in t he disea.sed lung, so that air can following t9.ble : individual who fa ints. penetrate and fill the pleura.l sac, then, of Name. A mount. R elation. When this happens to an old pa.rson who course, all movements of cxpa.nsion or con · l - Prinooss Aul('U Sta . . ..... . .. i l,fJ80,0 O Aunt is unable to help himself a nd pla.ce himself traction of that lung must cea.se, for there 2-Llodgra.vine cf liesse .....· 2,U75,500 Aunt in a proper position to avail himself of the is no room left for the movements of breath· 3-Duke of Sussex ..... . .. .. .. 3,770.000 Unule force of s;:ravity to restore the blood to the ing, 'l'he opposite lung being already half 4- Prlncees Sophi" of Gloster. . 1,330,000 Cou·in 5-Prinoesa Sophia . .. .. . . . . .. . 2,610,000 Aunt head, the results may he extremely grave. useless, or even more disabled, the sufferer 6-~ue~n Adela.tde .. _. .. . .. ... 6.000.00'l Aunt Puri fy the B lood, correct all D isorders of the Large numbers of cases of 8udden death a.re suddenly finds himself deprived of most of 7- Duke of CaQ 1bridge..... . . . 5,570,000 Unole thus brought about arid referred to he9.l't 8-Kiog of Hanover .. ... . ... . 6,830 000 Uncle .his breathing spa.ce, and must perish within LIVER, ST01'1ACD, KID1'EVS AND BOWELS. diseases without any clea.r understa.ndinll' as a very short oime, dying actually and liter- 9 -Duchess of Gloucester.... . B,275,000 Aunt 10- Duke of Mecklenburgtcr how they were produced or may have Strelit·-. . .... . . . ..... . . 554,280 Cousin lllly of suffocation. They invigorate and restore to health Debilitated Consti tutions, an been p r evented. It is for the reason here There are one or two rare a.nd unusual 11- Ducheae of Kent .... .. . . .. 4,485 000 Mother are Invaluable In a.11 Oomplalnta Incidental to Female11 of all Agea. J'o1 indicat ed- the suddenly a.pplied force of modes by which valvular diseo.se of t he 12-King of Belgians .. ... ... .. 1.367,ltOQ Uncle J3- Pri11 ce Corsort.. .. ......... 3,051,000 Husband Children and the aged t h e y are priceleaa. gravity-that it is extremely dangerous for heart ma.y prove suddenl y fatal. One of 11Princeae Alice. ..... _. . , ... 6!0,000 Daughter this class of p·tients suddenly to assume the 15-Duke of Albany (and is the formation of the clot or concreerect posture 1rom the reclining position, a.n<l chese widow).... .. .... .. ... . 940,000 Son tion from the blood upon one of the valves ; th9.t such patients should not be left entire· this being washed a.way into the circulation, 16-Prince of Wales (and Is an infallible remedy for Bad Legs, Bad B reasts, Old Wounds Sor wife ..... ... . . .. ... , . .17 061,000 Son ly a.lone at any time. travels along in the blood current, until 17- Empre·s of Germany . . . . . . 1,395,000 Daughter and Ulcera. It l a fa.mou11 for G o ut and Rheumatism. For dfaordeu of t.l· .., I t is iu this ~a'lle class that are to be seen it rea.ches a ?lace too narrow for it to pass, is- Duke of Edlnburirh .· , .. . . . l,l!59,4i5 Son -Chest it ha11 n o equal.19- Princes" Helena . . . . . . . . . . . 780,000 Daughter those c&ses of so·called augina·cectoris, where it lodges. Thi~ plug -called ' an 20-Princees Louise .. .... , . .. 630,900 Dau!l'hter which suddenly r emoves its vietims in the embolns-shuts off all blood from tbe 21-Duke of Connaught. . .... _. 1,670 000 Son For Sore Throats, Bronchitis, Uonghs , Uolds, midst of great agony There is undoubtedly p'>rts beyond, and, if there is no other way 22--Princess Eeatr!ce . .. . ... , .. 210,000 Daughter Gl~ndula.r Swellings, and all Skin Diseases i t has no riva l· and m0r e than one var iety of this formid,.ble fo r the circula tion to reach that r egion it 23- Ducheae of Cambridge. . . _. l ,110,600 Aunt of Mecklenburgcontracted and atlff joints It act s llke a ~harm. ' afiliction, One seems to be due to the sud. become.a st <:ved and decomposes-in the 24-Duchess Stre!itz .... .. _. ... .. .. , 660,000 Cousin den shuttinp- <·ff of blood from the muscular brain it softenB. S oft ening is the common 25-Duke of Cambridge.... . . .. 3,125,000 Cousin walls of the heart, due to closure of the en· result of embolism o[ an artery in the b rain ; 2G- Princess Mnry of Te«k. . , . . 765 000 Cousin M anufactured only at THOMAS HoLLOWAY's Est ablishment, trances of thr. two coronary a.rteries which but, if it should be a lo1.r ge vessel t hat has 27--The Queen .. .............. 143,455,000 78, NEW OXFORD STREET, ( lat& 533, OXFORD STRE}l;T), LONDON supply it. The sudden starvation seems to become plugged and t he pa.rts t h.us cut off Total.. .. ..... .. . ... ... ... $216,702,195 "ause the intense neuralgic pain, from nourishment of great importance, death ~nd He sold at ls. lid., Za. 9d., 4s. 6d. , lla., 22e., and 3 3s. each Box or p 0 t COST ADOUT FIVE MUoLIONS A YEAR, ma y result almost insta.ntly. Such case~ are ANEti:RiSMAL DANG'.RRS. ' may be had from all Medicine Vend orathroughout the World, rare ; still, they have been known t o occur . F ifteen of the above lis t of royal person·Purchasers bould l o ()k 1ti the .Label on the rota and n oxei. ff But the heart is not t,ne only organ that ages have since died since V ictoria bec'>me "" f rom the d egenera t" . t f d HEART RUPTURE. t ,. 53:l. ttx fnrd Street . Lnndnn, Otey are IJ)11l'lona. ·1011 JUS re erre Queen, and each death was a "windfall" suu:ers In fatty degenera.tion of the heart, or as I\ to the burdened taxpa.yer s of the United to. The large and medium sized arteries also bf.Come softened first, then hardened result of chr onic inflammat ion of the muscu · K ingdom. Making every necessary allowA Question of Double Personality. · and brhtle. I n the sofbened condition lar substance of t he organ, the heart may ance from the above table of t he monies The fact of sleep may of itself have al· ! (fa.tty degeneration or athcroma), the great rupture-actually " br eaking," not from a.ny drnwn by those cf t he blood royal before r eady suggested t he idea of t wo d iSt inct ontinues t o do a General Banking Business vessles are prone t o dilate and form tumors sentimental affection of t he emotions, but Victoria ascended the thr one in 1837, it is persons, for we certainly a.re not t he same . eBo wmanville Branc h. cont<>oining blood, which go on enlarging a.s from some sudd en and violent excitement of clear that t he Q'leen and her relat ions had, DEPO§l'J ' S long as there is r oom for them to increase in tbefeeliugs or a viol ent exertion of the mus- when she celebrated her jubilee last year, sleeping a nd waking. l'.et, in sleep, we size, finally bursting and causing death by cular system. . · drawn during her 50 vears' reiga public ha.ve recollections from the waking st ate, lecelve~ in Savings Bank Depart.men t and a ll and interest allowed at current rat es. No hemorrhage. Should the blood-tumor or There are. aut?en t1c matances of sudden monies to the amount of over $200,000,000. and we can remember from sleep when 1 1otice ot withdrawa l necessary. All deposit , aneur ism burst into one of the great cA.vities death occurr1;11g m eonsequence .of powerful Ii but a few of the items spent on the awa.ke. There is, therefore, an eesential ~a:rsble on demand, connection batween the t wo sta.tes. There of the body, as that which contains the mental emotions . · T~e me~han1sm of these palaces, excluded from the above c;ilcula EXCHANGE heart, one of the lungs, or into t he surface seems i.o be a. np1d. dilatation of the bl?od tion, and of the payment to milit ary and are in natural somnambulism a li the same of t he abdomen, or upon the surface, the ves~els, especially those of the abdommal naval escort and aides-de-camp, also omitted t ime more and lees of a.na.logy with t he 3oughtandaold and Draft s issued uponEuro1i'e wakeful condition. In one respect it more amount of blood that co.a be discharged ca.v~ty, and a _ flow of blood away f~o:n the from the above reckoning, were added it Jnited ~ta~ee a nd Canada, also Gold.,Silver andl a.lmost at once is enormous, and death re. brain, l?ro~ucmg a. bl?od!ess cond1t1on. of would be easy to increa.se the actua.l tobal to resembles wak efulness ; for while, in natur- Jn!ted Sta.es Greenbacks boug:ht a n d sold, al sleep, the drea.m is absolutely incoheren t, sults almost instantaneously. This is the th~ ~ram like. that which 1s pr~~ent during $250 OOO 000 or $5 000 000 per year. the somnambulist plays out his dreams; UOLli EC'J.'J01\f8 way many cases of remarkable sudden death fa1ntmg. It 1s the sa.me condi tion present ' ' ' ' ' tha.t is, he executes a syst em of co·ordina.ted are brought about. T hese are all ca.lled in surgical "shock" when the fatter is not - --·-·- - - Promptly mado at cu rrent rates upon a ll par movement~ having a beginning, a middle, "deaths from heart disease, " of course. It due to hemorrhage. Farmer's Wives. Jf Great Brittain, the United States and Do and an end, or a cenain coherence. On the minion of Canada. is true tha.t the aneuriem may be located so In conclusion : The tired, sad look of very many Canaa.s to involve the hea.r t itself, but this is un. Sudden death is due usually to some dis· dian farmers' wives has often been r emark . other hand, somnambulism is further separ· Tdegraph Trans.rers ated from wakefulness in the fa.ct tha.t the usual. The gr eat artery, the aorta is the ease of the heart, great vessels or brain. ed. As a class, they are over.worked, an d Made tor large or s mall sums on a ll parts man awake wholly loses t he recollection of most frequent seat of the trouble, and it is It is not so common as is gener&lly suppos- their dull, continuous employment without what t he sleeping man has done, while the Canada. This ls especially a dvantageons o not a very unc.o mmon one. ed. breo.k or rest or holiday sends many of them somna.mbulist can remember what he has persons living In Manitoba or t he North·we t When aneurisms oacur in the chest or It is not to be feared so much as long a.nd to the lunatic asylum and to an early graves. done in a previous sleep. There ar e, then, in as lt makes the tunds a vailable at onoe abdomen they frequently attain a large lingering illness. One writer lately put the case well in the some fashion, two lives, and t he hypothesis place ot payment . For further partlcnlara c all at the Bankln size, because of t he density of the structures It is not generally preventable. followi.i.g terms: dreamed of by Pascal is very near to being Involved and the size of the arteries whioh I r emember several years ago a. farmer realized : "If we drea.med every night the House. GEO. MoGILL One Way to Tell. took me home from a.n institute to dinner. same things, it would affect us as much as T. RODIE, give them origin. In the smaller vessels, Man~er .A.ccounta.nt. as in those at t he base of the brain, they He had added farm to farm tiU he was objects tha.t we see every day ; a~d if o.n ·lv never attain a large size, but this does "Ef a gentleman say: 'Come hya.r, you worth $100,000. We had a good dinner, artisan were sure to dream durmg the not prevent them from being of the very blaok scamp , en' black mer boots, en' do hit but the tired·looking wife at the head of the twelve hours of every night that he was a greatest importa.nce. N ot only m ' y they quick, too,' I k nows dat man's from down table spoiled it for me. As I was leaving king, I believe that he woul d be almost as cause hopelelll! disablement when they do Souf, en' he gwine to gimme eompen, en' the house, I said to her, "Can you not get ha.ppy as a. king who should d ream for not kill, but they ma.y lead to dea.th, mos' likely a quartah." out to our meeting this afternoon ?" She twelve honrs thab he was an artisan." which may come on as suddenly as if it Thus a. darkey boy on a Mississippi said, "I do not see hG 11, as I have not been Pasca.l speaks her e only of dreaming, but it were brought about 'l>y the lighning's stroke. steamboat wa.a explaining his position as t o asked," H er husba.nd then said " Uh, must not be forgotten that somnambulism is Under the influence of fatty, or calcareous, sectional proclivities. He went on further Ma.ry does not care much about getting composed both of dream and reality. The degeneration, the coats of the arteries grad- to say : " Ef a nuther gentleman say to me, out," and hurried me off. I ha.d a subject somna.mbulist performs actions that take ually give way in plaoes, permitting t hem ' My dear youug cnllud frien', will you be that afternoon which gave me a cha.nee, and -~-~ "~Ii~ to form small, pouch-like dilatations upon so k ine llZ t o black my boots?' dat me.n's some strong words we1e said for his benefit place in the r eal world; he walks, he writes, ':i does nearly everything that he does them, varying in siz6 from t hat of o. pea from Greenlan's icy mountains, er sommers that were not in the prepa.red paper, but he while awake, and is even sble to speak and to a millet seed, or smaller- many of them in dat direction. En' mebbe he gwine ter which I could not keep back. ·It makes me reply. Hence we ha.ve only to represent to not being visible to t he unaided eye. gimme a John d e Baptis'- da.t's one cent- angry now just to think of it. I have seen ourselves somnambulism gaining more and 'rbese are points of very little resistance, but mos' likely he gwineter jis' give him since ; but I pr ay to heaven that he more upon the wa.king condit ion, encroach- :B'Yand when the circulation is excited by t hanks. · may have stopped the mer e accumulation ing upon it , and at la.st becoming a second strong exertion or powerful emotion, these · -·· · of dollars, and given Mary ·t he rest and waking alternating with the other, a~d r e· little so.cs are likely to give way. If a An Important Distinction. some of t he en joyment he could so woll o.f. taining only one feature of somnambuhsm... I am tn!ly prepared to attend Funera\80 number of them burst t hey p roduce a ford. If he has not, she has p robably gone t he loss of recollection on waking. the shortest notice, at the lowest possible rat hemorrhage whose presence produces pres"~illie,:' said his mot her, with: stern re to her long rest ere now, or else her mind Gaskets and Buria l Cases ready on short notl, sure apon the brain, ann when in sufficient proof ip her ton~, '.' I sh11oll certam!y ha.ve h1's given wa.y from the endless monotony of First-class hearse on very moderate tQJ111 f orethought. amount is capable of bringing all mental to_pums h y ou this tune. You prom!sed !Ile her work, and she is one of those numerous Shrouds and Coftlns constantly on hand , 'l!'p. "Darrine;er, I have oome to ask you to eraloards s npplied at once. Furniture Sllop'l operations to a. standstill. T hia is t he faithfully you would never play a.gam wit h ex..mples of overworked farmer's wives who how Rooms- Bouneall'sNew Block. do me a grea.t favor." usual mechanism of apoplex y or cerebral that bad boy, Sammy. Shackleford , and people our insane asylums. " W ha.t is it, young ma.n ?" hemmor rhage. Of course, apoplexy of this hereyo.i've been pla.ying ball with him for Almost every body coulli tell of such ca.sea " You've been ma.rried a. good many yea.rs, variety does not always kill. Bnt if the annour." · , ., within the range of personal knowledge. Ma.n's Inhuma.nity to Man. bleeding takes place into the important. - :· ~o, I ham t , mamma I protested It is the dull, monotonous grind laoo and haven't you ?" "I ha.te that man," exclamed Mrs. U pper "Ye11." structures at the base of the brain, where ~t~lie, red faced! ~reat~less 11!1d vehement, early t hat kills, and yet m ..ny husbands cea.. "I'd like to make his life miser· "And three times, if I mistake not ?" the centres that control the movaments of I ve been p~ayi~ agiunst him. He wa.s ·don't seem ,o see it. able." " Tell you what ," said her husband "Yea," the heart and lungs are loca.ted, the effecs' on the other side. warmly. "I'll send the wretch an " Well, I am on the point of marrying, must be fatal almost without exoeption, and Allie had just had a birthday. Beine; invitat ion to your musice.le, We'll torture not delayed long a.t that. If the bleeding is Truth has many rough flavours if we bite asked how old AB wa.11, he r epli<:1d, "I'se just and I want you to dissuade me from my him."-]Burdette. purpoae." into the large maaeea of the hemispheree of . it through, i next t-0 wha.t I was." It.hmg th?'t 18 apt to be lef t behmd, m ten some· Duchy lands compri~e 74 113 acres and t he more to be deplored than would ls d -1 · ' · d '$' 10 000 - ---o --- ' · Harness! I I I 0 I I HAND·MADE COLLARS I ! HA I NE s' CARRIAGE "WORKS GEORGE C. HAINES, Proprietor, OARR IAG ES, SLEIGHS, CUTTERS, WAGONS, &G . A 11 Kinds of Vehicles Repaired HEALTH FOR ALLI mn·tiW41!1filt] IOOl~i-1 THE PILLS THE OINTMENT. 1 I" THE ONTARIO BANK I I a· I uNDERTAKIN~ L EV I MORRIS. l j I I I --- ------