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THE CAUSE Of LANGUOR.
In ordinary *tat«a of haoltii thaatrocg'
oM pcrwum are apt to'feel sensation* or
fit* of languor .-hick they call fatigue,
and for 'vliick 11 ay can give no reason
able explanation either to themeelree or
to otherc. The ceeetiier largely influ
eooe* tlib imsUJtion. A moisl and warm
attno»Hien- ul way* increaaee the die por
tion to languor; a moderately oold and
drr atmosphere always promts It The
a***** of irlaxiHon sod diapoeition to
deep must not be confounded with true
fatigue, arialng from hard or prolonged
physical or mental work, but mart be
taken aa simply due to a condition in
which them is weariness without asuf-
ficent reason-for it
When this condition is strongly pres
ent, it is marked by one particular sign,
which Is of itself characteristic: it'comes
on after repose. The affected person ex
periences it most on rising in the morn
ing, and even after a good night’s sleep
is still oppressed by a sense of weariness,
a feeling ustf the day, with all. its cares
and Sbdenes, could not be
through. The desire, almost irr
is to go to sleep again, a desire which, if
gratified, increases the evil and makes
the day heavier than it otherwise would
be. That it is not real fatigue or exhaus
tion which causes the sense of languor
now being described is clearly shown,
not only by the fact that the feeling
comes on after long repose, but that it is
dispersed in the day, after it has been
present in the morning, try the exercise
and duties of the day. I have no doubt
that it is caused by the accumulation in
the body of some diffusible and light
chemical substance. which acta after the
manner of an intoxicant and is a true in
toxicant to the nervous system. The
probable physiology of the condition is
plain, "but whkt ls to be the cure, and,
abdve all, what is to be the prevention?
. The cure ,is. exercise and the wearing
of clothing which will give free libera
tion, to the exhalations of the akin.
Every one who is affected with the sense
of languor is soon conversant with the
knowledge that if ho resolves to throw
offtlfO Toad which npnnrntn friin and
* ta&es u short, sharp walk or outer good
and wholesome exercise,' he is always re-
babies ear fob it.
ibvauds beush it.
Bold by DragfWa. Me., SO*, SUo,
mu. Mcmraoi t co.. netieeT—,yt.
Baby Portraits.
MttoUo of MuUflil baby portraits.
A PortloUo of
ooflne£Utop*t«rby
rofany i
free to Mot
Oto^yV^-Ploturoi j
'mime and igo. a '
WEILS, RICHARDSON & CO., Propi„ Darlington, Vt
*’• **vtt 0 d * l
- x ~_
“
Superior
m *
Strength,
Fastness,
Beauty,
AND
Simplicity.
mother. j5 colors; locaata oecb. ■
WELLS, RICHMOSOH d CO., Sorlmgton, Vt.
far OUdleg or Bromine r«ncy Article*, USB
ND PAINTS.
Oold, M ne, Copper. Only 10 Cenee.
1
K
IS THE TIME TO INVEST IN
I V V. • 4
RUNSWICK
REAL ESTA
Never Before Sold at Such Low Bates I
. . • • \ %- V-- •
Great Reduction in Pricesl
5.. ' ■ y
Farmers’ Implements of Highest Quality,
, Mill Hardware,IBuilding Supplies,
ICE CREAM FREEZERS, REFRIGERATORS, CUTLERY.
GREAT BARGAINS IN W
W* ; .
Cook Stoves for Wood or Coal, Oil Stoves,
FBIENDO THE HOUSEWIFE,
JM. MICHELSON.
AUG. i\ FRANKLIN,
Healer, Broker ail Commission
Bay, (Mn, Feed, Four, ton,
Mill Feed Generally.
Car-Litou Lots a Specialty
We Compete with any Market in Quality ai\d
Price, and Mean just what we Say.
Wood and Willow Wire In ivory design. In Crockery, Glut, Tin ind Agate Wire we hive i fine ind
Urge assortment, wbleh we ire ready to offer it bottom price*. Wo wlU be pleeaed to abow onr a took it
lioved, and many find this mode of cure HI dmM - r°vr*oiTo« and u* by giving ni in early ciii
go certain that they invariably follow it.
Others, and I fear the majority, are so
oppressed that the/ feel as It they could
not bring themselves to the effort of
throwing off the sense of weariness by
resorting to anything like active motion.
When the oppression is the strongest and
exertion is most demanded, they try to
balance betwixt tho two modes of treat
ment, the sharp exertion and tho seduc
tive sleep. They give way to the sleep;
the giving way becomes a habit; in
very short time the habit lapses into n
confirmed method, and with the habit
boty btotoon ttturt and 4&iraPily to
the evil. The body becomes obese, the
liver becomes inactive, the mind becomes
doll, and a short fife is, of necessity, de
termined. ■
The treatment of languor in the healthy
consists, then, in taking exercise in due,
but in moderate amount To go in for
desperato exercise, os some do, & to
frustrate, not to assist, cure; for desper
ate exercise produces actual fatigue,
which nothing except rest will cure, and
then tiio weariness from actual work pud
the weariness from underwork get con
fused tho one with tho other, and all goes
wrong. Rightly conducted, the cure is
exercise, and the prevention is continued
exercise carried out daily and regularly,
whatever the temptation may bo to givo
it up. Second to this is light and porous
clothing, os I have many yean taught.
Whatever holds or takes up the fluid ex
halations from tho skin is not clothing fit
to wear. Whatever cannot bo easily
breathed through is not clothing that is
fit to wear.
No kind of clothing for the human
body is so good as that which admits
freely into and through its meshes the
most perfect purifier and the most per
fect non-conuuctor and healthy equalizer
of temperature known — atmospheric
air. Patients sometimes come to me lit
erally borne down with the weight of
their own clothing. They are coated
with three or four layers of heavy and
yinm materials. These materials are
saturated with the moisture from the skin,
are unduly heavy, are always damp, if
taken off for a short time leave excessive
cold, and if kept on too long induce op
pressive beat; all round mischiefs of suro
and certain development A fairly
healthy person who takes reasonable out
door exercise daily, and who clothes him
self lightly in porous material, will fee!
no weariness except that which come*
naturally from healthy fatigue.—'^
Tho M*kta« at (Map Book*.
The cheap libraries have given amuse
ment and instruction’to thousands, but
Ufa too opbtidh'at the shrewdest men in
the trade that they have injured book
raiWfaMng. After all we are creatures
of h&bit, and we have become accus
tomed to baying a novel far 20 or 23
cents. People are unwilling to pay 75
cents Of a dollar now’. At 80 or 23 cents,
ainiaa. an cnonpou* number of copies ore
sold, th«v is not much money for toe
author, nor, in fact, for any one. Out
of the cheep reprint has grown the sum
mer novel, cheaply but tastefully got up,
and intended to pass away on idle hour.
Some of the hundreds which are pub
lished ore good, but the majority aro be
neath contempt. They make one simply
weary whilo reading them, and yet the
publication goes on. “Of the making
of books there is no end.**—Current lit
erature. ■
wrapping fruit treaiwitociora roxeep
them from being, injured by sunburn and
Insects lu>« proved ill—trout to the tree*
in Sharis county, Gil.
Glauber & Isaac,
Pm uce and Couassi (Hauls
Brunswick., G-a.
Office and Wareroom in the former Freight House of the B. <fe. W. R. R,
next to Freight House of E. T., V. & G. R. R.
*
HEADQUARTERS FOR
Dry Salted and Smoked Meats, Hams, Breakfast Bacon, Meal
and Grist, Corn, Oats, Bran, Hay, Mill Feed, Atples,
Potatoes, Onions, Oranges, • Lemons, &c.
Consignments solicited. Parties wanting anything in my line wlU find it to their i
eall on me before purchasing feisewhere. Highest market pricea paid for Hide*.
Wool, Ac.
POPULATION.
1884...., 3,500
1888 10,000
1892 20,000
Valuation of Property.
1884
1888
1892
.11,433,677.88
. 2,672,113.00
. 6,000,000.00
65.000 acres of Timber Lands on line of Railroad.
Thousands of acres of ejrpress lands. '
60.000 acres of Timber in one body; good ns can be had in the
State.
CITY PROPERTY.
One corner lot
on Newcastle si
business.
‘with 150 foot street front,
Excellent stand for any
Host clc9ivnblo;rcsidoneo lot OOxiaojfrontlng on
t\vo|5trccts near park.
Six room house on Union street
Three Town Commons lots near Dr. Uale’a,
cheap, cheap, cheap.
One loqtrontlng cannl.
Two Water front* In Now Town, with railroad . One two-story 13-room house
inning on linoot tamo. of city, with five lots—cheap.
— - . . Noy two-story eight roomlhouse In New Town
runnlnj
Store and dwolllng corner O and Wolf streets,
now rented for 515 per month, 11,350.
New dwelling on Newcastle street, with lot OCX
.situated in business portion of city.
One of tho most dcslrnblo lots on Nowcastle
street south of park.
Exccllent|buslncss lot 60x180 on lho Bay.
Modern cottngo with lot 00x180 on London
street. A pleasant homo In the best part of city.
Four room cottage in Dixvillo with lot 00x100.
Can ho bought cheap as owner is anxious to soil.
Two story hopaojust completed on IraAvenne.
Truss lot on Boulevard in two minutes’ walk
of post office.
Lot 80x100 fronting railroad and adjoining lot*
on which tho Oglethorpe hotel 1* altuatcd.
Lot 80x85 on Oglethorpe street near Mansfield.
Two reddenco lots near Boulevard.
Lot 80x00 corner Albany and I streets.
Lot 80x00 oorne-. Wolf and 1 streets.
invone can double hie money
nths by purchasing either of the to
cage property I offer for sale on th
In twelve
our tracts of
la on the Point.
60 acres of high lands Inst north of the el !
sin norther
$800 will purchase six Town (Commons lots in
one body.
Two.two-story houses on desirable lot 180 fee'
from Boulevard. Can he bought for $3,500.-
New six-room house on Boulevard-cheap.
Three of those desirablenow
ran avenue, between George -
Small farm of seventeen acrea;three mile* from-
Court House, j .. .
Truck farm of twenty-one acres with new »
oom house. ■■■ r l
Six acres with house near EIVi G docks.
65 teat front on Cochran avenue. 35 feet from
street oar line, tor 1315.
$1,300 will bny nine lots almost in centre of tho'
Lot corner London street and Cochran avenue-
00x180, with the house.
-
Three stores oo Bsy street. , ’
Truck farm on bold salt creek, 1J4 miles frcn>
Post Office.
Oak Grove Plantation, contain
the beat farm lands In tho State,
eltv.
Hodges & O’Connor.
t After one Year's trial’ll Is now an acknowledged fact that wo
Keep the Purest and Freshest Drugs in the City.
Our Prescription Department
la without doubt the most enmplete, as the amount of work done demonstrates. Wo also gaaraataa
OGLETHORPE BOTTLING WORKS.
SSSSasSfe?*'*":
H
Also Farms and Farm Lands situated in
* this and adjoining counties.
Jo Trouble to
Careful attention paid to the renting of property.
References, Oglethorpe and First National Banks.
Real Estate Agency,
216 Newcastle Street,
Brunswick, Gf&