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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1893-7-6, Page 7' rsPECiAL ROYAL APPOINTMENT = There's Nothing Like (rifivita si.OAP IT DOES AWAY WITH tolUtMe HARD RU INC BACKACHES QE HANDS +_er; )1. ANCer i .F nil ~Ash D t av GO BY WITHOUT TRYING unligbt ,-tELUtE. CHEAP ildMITATIONS CENTRAL Drug Store EANSON'S BLOCK. A full stock of all kinds of Dye -stuffs and package Dyes, constantly on hand. Winan's Gi7ndit±On Powd- er�, the best in the mark- et and always resb. Family rteoip- e-s carefully prepared at Central Drug Store Exete ■ L iii'rza. Incorporated 1887, with Cast) Capital of $50,000 ELEcTRIC al° AND APPLIANCE CO.� • 49 KING ST, W., TORONTO, ONT. G. C. PATI ERSON, Mgr, for Canada. OVER FOUR RUNDRER BRITISH TARSGO DOWN Later Particulars of the Awful Nav- al Disaster. THF,. VICTORI9. WAS THEF LAG- SHIP OF THE SQUADRON. Excitement in Lentlon---The Quevei and 11i. Gladstone Greatly Shocked. Rear -Admiral Albert H, Markham, of the the Trafalgar, the flagshipof roar•ad- • meal in the Mediterranean, has telegraphed officially to the Admiralty from Tripoli, Syria, under date of to -day as follows: "I regret to report that while manoeuvering off tripoli, this afternoon, the Victoria and Camperdown collided. The Victoria sank in fifteen minutes in. 18 fathoms of water., She lies bottom uppermost. The Camper - down's ram struck the Victoria forward of the turret on the starboard side. Twenty- one officers were drowned. Two hundred and fifty-five men were saved. The injury to the Camperdown has not yet been fully ascertained but it ie serious and will neces- sitate her going on dock for repairs. Ipro. pose to send the survivors to Malta." Electricity, as applied by the Owen Electric Belt, t, Ts now recognized as the ^.reatest boon offered to suffering humanity.' tt is fast taking the place of drugs iu all nervous and rheumatic troubles, and will effect cures in seemingly bopelesii cases where every other known means has failed. It is nature's remedy, and by its steady, soothingfeurrent that is readily felt, POSITIVELY CURES Rbeumatism, Sexual Weakness, Sciatica, Female Complaints General Debility, Impotency, Lumbago, Kidney Diseases, NervoY.s Diseases, Liver Complaint, DysppetUda, Lame nadir, Varicocele, . Urinary Diseases. RHEUMATISM It is a well known fact that medical science has utterly failed to afford relief in rheumatic cases. We venturethe assertion that although Electricity has only been in use as a remedial agent for a few years, it has cured more oases of Rheumatism than all other means com- bined. Some of our leading physicians, recog- nizing this fact, are availing themselves of this most potent of nature's forces. TO RESTORE MANHOOD Thousands of people suffer from a variety of nervous diseases, such as Seminal Weakness, Impotency, Lost Manhood, Weak Back, elk., that •uhe old modes of treatment fail to cure There is a loss of nerve force or power that cannot be restored by medical treatment, and any doctor who would try to accomplish this by any kind of drugs is practising a dangerous form of charlatanism. Properly treated THESE <DISEASES CAW BE CURED Electricity, as applied by the Owen Electric Belt: and - Suspensory wIIl most asstnediydo so. itis honly known remedial agent ;that 1 supply what 15 lacking, namely, nerve levee or power, impart: tone and vizor to the organs and arouse to healthy action the whole nervous system,, BEWARE OF IMITATIONS T ON5 And the worthless,' cheap, so-called Tiectrlc Belts advertised by Some concernsand peddled through the country. They aro electric iu name only, worthless as a curative power, and dear at any price. We Challenge the World to show an Electric Belt where the current Is under con- trol of the patient as completely as this. Our .Trade, 141'ark is the portrait of Dr, Owen embossed In gold upon every Belt and appliance manufactured by us. i5end for Catalogue --Mailed (Sealed) Free, THE OWEN, ELECTRIC BELT CO,, 4f King St. GV., Toronto, .,r.tioii, thfru saner. ]inion occurred at 5 o'clock in the afternoon, abent sloven miles from Tripoli. Tho ves- sels were almost at right angles when the Victoria was struck, `.Chose on the Vic- toria's deck at the mement of the collision scrambled away and were resorted by boats from" the Camperdown and `severalother vessels. 7.'he Inca below had no time to xeach the deck. The sudden heeling of the Victoria caused her to begin to fill un, mediately and no escape was possible. She went down in 80 fathoms of water. It is difficult to obtain the names of the rescued, and s as• r boa • several vessels,o theyaen Iti far all efforts have been devoted to reoov-' ering bodies. Shortly after the collision five bodies were taken from the water, one of them the body of the chief paymaster. They wereburied next evening with mili- tary honors at Tripoti, A PREYIOCS DISASTER. In January of last year the Vietoria was aground off the Greek coast near Plateau and she was only floated off after an im- mense amount of labor and large expeuse. It was said the accident was due to careless- ness. Hon. Maurice Bourke, captain of the Victoria, and a son of the late Earl of Mayo, who is the youngest post captain in the British Navy, was held responsible for the accident and was severely reprimanded by a court martial. Capt. Bourke was in corn - mead of the Victoria when she sank. TUEo.FFICERs. According to the navy list the principal officers of the Victoria were ; Vice-admiral—Sir George Tryon. Captain —Maurice A. Bourke. Commander --Chas. L, Ottley, Chaplain—Rev. Samuel S. 0, Morris. Fleet surgeon—Thome Bolster. Fleet paymaster—Valentine D. J. Riolt- cord, Fleet engineer—Felix Foreman. The complement of officers and crew of the Victoria comprised 600 men. The list of otneers drowned includes, besides Vice- admiral Tryon, Chaplain Morris, Lieut. Munroe, Fleet Paymaster Rickcord, Fleet Engineer Foreman, Engineer Harding, As- sistant Engineers Deadman, Eatherly and Seaton, Gunner Howell, Boatswain Bar- nard, Carpenter Beall, Midshipmen Inglis, Grieve, Fawkes, Lanyon, Honly, Gambier and Scarlett, Cadet Stooks and. Clerks Alien and Savage. A change had recently been made in the commander Atteched to the Victoria, Charles L. Ottley having been detached and succeed- ed by Commander Fellicome, who was saved, as were also Capt. Maurice A. ]Bourke and 15 other officers. SCENE OF TUE DISASTER. The first despatches concerning the acci- dent led to the belief that the disaster had occurred off the coast_ of Tripoli, in northern Africa. Later advices show that the scene of the calamity was near Tripoli, a seaport town on the eastern Mediterranean, 50 miles north-east of Beyrout, Syria, and a compar. atively short distance from the island of Cyprus. As soon as the officers of the Victoria saw that. there was danger of their ship founder- ing orders were given to close the collision bulkheads, in order to keep the water in the compartment into which the Cainper- down had shoved her ram. .Che sailors tried to obey the orders, but the ship•was malriag water too fastto allow of closing the bulkheads, and while the men were still trying to shut them the ship, with her im- mense guns and heavy tophamper, turned over and carried them down. TnE NEWS IN LONDON. As soon as the news ot the disaster became known in London, the Duke of Edinburgh, who w s latelyromoted. to the position of a P cited the and admiral of the fleet, y conferred with the officials there. A con- ference of the Admiralty Board was held, telegram and i ei Ct ram of instructions was sent to Rear Admiral Markham. arkham. The news of the calamity has caused the most intense excitement, not only among those who had friends aboard the ill-fated ; ship, but among all classes of the popula- • tion. The admiralty office in Whitehall is besieged by relatives and friends of the officers and crew, reporters seeking further i details of the disaster and throngs of peo- ple attracted by curiosity. So dense was the throng in the vicinity that the admir- alty officials were compelled to summon the police to restrain the crowd. No information has been received at the admiralty, since the receipt of Rear -Ad- miral Markham's first dfiicial telegram. The Victoria was ' A SINGLE TURRET SHXY, carrying two 1.10 -ton guns, mounted in a forward turret coated with 18 inches of compound armor, one 10 -inch 29 -ton gun firing aftand a broadside auxiliary arma- ment of 12 6 inch 5 -ton guns. Of artil- lery of smaller nature she carried 21 ,quick -firing and eight machine guns. Her maximum speed was 16.75 knots. She could stow 1,200 toi.s of coal in her bunk- ers, and her radius of action at 10 knots speed with her full complement of coal was estimated at 7,000 knots. Her armored belt and bulk -heads consisted of compound armor from 16 to 18 inches in thickness.: She was built at Elswick. IN TUE .HOUSE OF COMMONS. Mr. Gladstone was greatly shocked when -he received the news of the disaster. He informed the House of Commons of the ac- cident and -paid a most glowing tribute, to the worth of Vice -Admiral Tryon, -who, he said was one of the ablestand most esteem- ed officers in the service. Mr. Gladstone, said there; were 611 officers, seamenand boys, and 107 marines'` on board the ship. It was feared of this total of 718 souls 430 had been lost, He was sure the deepest sympathy of the House . would ,be felt for the brave men who had found an early grave in the service of their country, and that it would be extended to their relatives and friends. Lord George Hamilton, formerly First Lord of the Admiralty, endorsed every- thing Mr. Gladstone had said,; and. express ed the deepest regret for the calamity that had befallen the country in the loss of so many brave -officers and men. AI+'R T S melee TER. E D A 5.,, I The accident ascilet to the Victoria, ia has never been equalled in the fatal results in naval annals of recent times. The foundering of this newest type of warship calls to mind a similar accident, as far as great loss of life is concerned, that befell the English line -of - battle ship Royal George in 1782. In that year the Royal George, carrying 108 guns, was lying off Spithead. She had beeu keeled over for repairs when a sudden gust of wind caused her to keel over until the sea enter- ed her open ports. She filled and went down with all on board, including Rear Admiral Kefnpenfelt. A number of women were on board at the time, and they, too, were drowned. Altogether about 600 persons. lost their lives in that disaster. TIf11 QUEEN TO LADY TRYON. The. Queen has sent Col, Carrington to express her sorrow and sympathy to Lady Tryon, On tile' evening following the afternoon of the disaster Lady Tryon, who arrived from Malta three weeks ago, was holding her first reception of the season. Two hundred guests were present, When the news of her husband's death reached her she fell in a -faint. The state concert and other royal tune - tions on the programme for next week have been postponed. The Lord Mayor has opened a relief fund for the benefit to the needy families who lost members in the disaster. THE MAN AND THE VESSEL, SAFETY IN A FAST STEAMER. Stick Vowelsas the Campania Must of Neeessilylle Strong. A ship that can make a voyage to New York and back in a fortnight will earn Atty- two freights in the year, instead of twenty- six of the heats of twenty years ago, says the. Saturday Resew, The Crew costs no more, if the coal does, and the.earninge are double. But there is yet another view of 1 the matter. The late Sir- William Pearce, who began those fast boats by the building of the Arizona, and whose suc ce so ri a t Fairfield have built the Campania, once asked a friend, whose imagination reeled,. at the idea of a twenty-two knot boat, whether' he would not prefer to go down in a fast boat in preference to meeting an ignominious death in an ocean tramp. The humor of the sentiment lies in the fact that it the ocean tramp that always goes down in the a boat easea li iandit o feet s of co 1 onis th a , thatsends the tramp down.Parliamentary humanitarians should see to this. Surely their reckless ingenuity is equal to the dis- I covory of some way of preventing people. from choosing their node of drowning. Those who know most about boats know that the safe boat is the fast boat, because. the fast boat must of necessity be strong. The fast and strong boat never waits for the waves to hustle and buffet it; it goes through them. Once in a while, it is true, an equinox may contrive a gale that will trouble even the Campania, but a wave re- quires time to gather itself together and spend its strength, and a fast boat of the right build doeo not wait. There are, of course, fast fair weather boats, designed to make "record" passages in sunshine, which flounder in the trough of the sea when the waves roll high. These are the Atlantic imposters and wise men avoid them, The Parts flayed by Admiral Tryon and the Victoria in Naval history. The names of Admiral Sir George Tryon and the great vessel Victoria are connected closely with the most impgrtant events of British naval history in recent years. In 1885 there was adopted wader Mr. Glad - stone's Government what le called the North- brook programme of naval - construction. Under this plan. the Victoria, launched in April, 1887, was one of the finest additions to the navy. Upon her. were tried many experiments with some of the heavier guns then coining into vogue. In tho summer of 1888 naval mancea area on en unprecedented scale were resolved upon, and a supposedly hostile fleet consisting of 9 armored and 12 unarmored vessels and 12 torpedo boats, under ,Admiral Tryon's command, was blocaded in the two Irish porta of Bere- haven and Lough Swilly by a fleet of 13 armored and 13 enamored vessels and 12 torpedo boats, under Admiral Baird. Ad- miral Tryon managed his fleet successfully. First a cruiser escaped from Lough Swilly, and then two big ships ran the blocade at Berehaven in spite of electric lights and rockets. The escaped vessels, Sir George Tryon on board of one of them, went north; carried the mimic warfare into the northern coasts ; attacked Aberdeen, Leith and Edinburgh; preyed on the commercial ship- ping ; and when pursued Sir George made for Liverpool, took possession of the harbor and the iron -clad left to defend it, while another squadron "levied tribute" on the ports on the east coast of England. These experiments demonstrated the weakness of the navy. It showed that the navy, for instance, in time of war could carry the entire coast of England and all the shipping except that in the mouth of the Thames. A great agitation for additions to the navy sprang up. Admiral Tryon's achievements had roused all England. The Government were forced to satisfy public feeling with a shipbuilding programme of 70 new vessels, to be built in five or six years, casting £21,500,000. This programme is now pretty nearly concluded. 1860 Admiral Tryon •on was again a central figure gure in naval manoeuvres. The object was to illustrate, by two fleets, a slower one with 24 hours' start of a faster one, how long the pursued fleet could maintain itself on one of the principal ttade routes, intercept traffic, and yet avoid a general engage- ment. Admiral Tryon commanded the pur- suing fleet, and demonstrated in a l0.day cruise that it was impossible to overtake the marauders. In 1S91 Sir George replaced Sir Anthony Hoskin as commander-in-chief in the Mediterranean, having previous to that been attached to theRoyal Naval Re- serve. In 1892 Admiral Tryon issued a re- port on the trustworthiness of this force, making a number of suggestions which were carried out by the Government. The great ship Victoria had meanwhile been sent to the Mediterranean, and in February, 1892, she ran ashore while exercising in shallow waters with torpedoes. After great exer- tions by officers and men she was got safely off and reached' Malta without serious dam- age. A court martial followed, but it re- sulted in acquitting the officers of culpable negligence. SIR OLIVER MOWAT IN IIANADA• Our Resources Unsurpassed by any Coun- try In 11w World. Sir Oliver Mowat, in his opening speech before the late Liberal convention, pointed out that Canada is to -day more populous and in many respects more advantageously situated than was the neighoring republic a few years after it became an independent nation. He showed also that the resources of Canada, for the purposes of agriculture and commerce, are immense and unsurpass ed by any. competitor. We have, he said, probably the finest forests in the world and the richest fisheries ; our country abounds in minerals, too ;, we have treasures of coal and iron and copper and silver and gold and nickel. Two-thirds of the wheat .area of North America are in Canada. We have climate and moil which are specially adapted for -raising the, best wheat, the best barley, the best horses and the best cattle' in the world, and for producing „the best' cheese. Most important of all, our country is in- habited by people :;who have in them the stuff for citizenship.: Canadians who, either in mature life or in early manhood, go to the United; States as affording a larger field for their activity, compete successfully there in every, walk of life with natives' of that country who have had like advantages. of education and otherwise. LATEST FROM THE SCENE. He (pleadingly)—" Would you love me if A despatch received at 2 o'clock Friday I were rich ?" She—" I can't say as to that, morning from Beyront says that the col- but lid probably marry you." Children Cry for Pitcher's Castor's! THE BEHRING SEA QASB. An American 'few. The only ground upon which our Gov- ernment, says the Boston Herald, could stand was on the broad ground of general benefit to be gained by all people through the maintenance of the fur sealing industry. The case of the United States has been sub- mitted, and it is interesting to notice that the shrewd lawyers who have presented it have practically thrown aside the claim to exclusive jurisdiction. They have referred to it because the former secretary of state made so much of it in his ofliciial carte - impudence ; but the reference has been of a perfunctory character; the main argument turning on the need and universal benefit of regulation as a means of preventing the extinction of the seals- This will save, and has saved, our case from ridicule ; but if these general propositions had been put forward at the outset as the groundwork of our claim, then in the makeup of the agreement to arbitrate we should have tak- en a different position, and would not have committed ourselves to pay the heavy damages which will be assessed upon us if the decision of the tribunal is that we had no legal right to seize the Canadian sealing vessels found in Behring sea. Strange Suioide of a I'renoh Officer. Iu French military circles a painful im- pression has been produced by the suicide of a retired officer of Engineers. Colonel Serval, who lived with his family at Lo Vesiuet, situated in the neighbourhood of Paris, went out at an early hour a morning or two ago, taking his revolver with him, but no anxiety seems to have been felt by his relatives until the evening, when his prolongca absence created some alarm. The authorities were communicated with, and a search was made in every direction. On the following morning the corpse of the colonel was fouud in a wuod with the revolver lying on the ground near it. A very distressing scene ensued when the remains of the deceas- ed officer were borne to the House. Mdme. Serval, who had been for some time in a very delicate state of health (says the Lon. don Telegraph's Paris correspondent), was seized with a violent fit of hysteries. She cried out repeatedly " Thieves 1" and " Murder 1" and was for some hours in a condition of the utmost excitement. A let- ter, written by the colonel ere he committed the rash act, expressed a wish that be should be buried in a vary simple manner and without military honours. M. Serval was an officer of the Legion of Honour, and was very popular at Le Vesinet. HE FAOT That AYER'S Sarsaparilla: CURES . OTHERS of. Scrofulous Diseases, Eruptions, Boils, Eczema, Liver and Kidney Diseases, Dyspepsia, Rheumatism, and Catarrh should be convincing that the same course of treatment WILL CURE YOU. All that has been said of the wonder- ful cures effected by the use oi;. AyER 'arsap,-' cieing' the past fifty years, t,'ut;_ Hilly applies to -day. It is, in every sense, The Superior Medicine. its curative properties, strength, e.feet, and flavor are always the same ; and for whatever blood diseases AYER'S Sarsaparilla is taken, they yield to this treatment. \Thea you ask for AYER'S „Sarsaparilla don't be induced top urchase any o the worthless substitutes, which a: e mostly mixtures of the cheap- es.- ?ngredients contain no sarsa- parilla, have no uniform standard of appearance, flavor, or effect, ale blood -purifiers it name only, and are offered to you because. there is moreP rofit in eelling them: Take Sarsaparilla Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Druggists; Price $1; six bottles, $g, Cures others, will cure you -ANll---- tomaeheLiver Cine The Most Aston.:shing Medical Discovery ot the Last One Hundred Years. It is" Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest Nectar,. s Milk. Ie It is Safe and Harmless as the'Puret it lrecently This wonderful Nervine: Tonic has only been introduced into this country by the proprietors and manufacturers of the Great South American Nervine Tonic, and yet its great value as a curative. agent has long been known. b yofew of the most lear ed phyeicians, who have not brought its merits and value to the knowledge of the general public. This medicine bas completely solve ;the problem of the cure of indi gestion, dyspepsia, and diseases of the general nervous system. It le also of the greatest value in the cure of all forms of failing health from; whatever cause. It performs this by the great nervine tonic qualities which it possesses, and by its great curative powers upon the digestive organs, the stomach, the liver and the bowels. No remedy compares with this wonderfully valuable Nervine Tonic cs a builder and strength- ener of the life forces of the human body, and as a great renewer of broken-down constitution. It is als1, of more real permanent value in the treatment end cure of diseases of the lungs than any consumption remedy ever used on this continent. It is a marvelous cure for nerv- ousness of females of all ages. Ladies who are approaching the critical period known as change in life, should not fail to use this great Nervine Tonic, <a4inest constantly, for the space of two or three years. It win carry them safely over the danger. This great strengthener and cu1•.a- tive is of inestimable value to the aged and infirm, because its great energizing properties will give them a new hold onlife. It will add ten or fifteen years to the lives of many of those who will use a half dozers bottles of the remedy each year. r[[ IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF Nervousness, Broken Constitution, - Nervous Prostration, Debility of Old .Age, Nervous Headache, Indigestion and Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Heartl• lrn and Sour Stomach, Female Weakness, Weight and Tenderness in Stomach,. Nervous Chills, Lass of Appetite, Paralysis, Frightful Dreams, Nervous Paroxysms and Dizziness and Ringing in the Ears, Nervous Choking, Weakness of Extremities and Hot Flashes, Fainting, Palpitation of the Heart, Impure and Impoverished Blood, Mental Despondency, Boils and Carbuncles, Sleeplessness, Scrofnla, St. Vitus' Dance, Scrofulous Swellings and Ulcers, Nervousness of Females, Consumption of the Lungs, Nervousness of Old Age, Catarrh of the Lungs, Neuralgia, Bronchitis and Chronic Cough, Pains in the Heart, Liver Complaint, Pains in the Back, Chronic Diarrinaa, Failing Health, Pelieate and Scrofulous Children, Summer Complaint of Infants. All these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful Nerrvine Tonic. �p� NERVOUS I ASES• As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has been able to compare with the Nervine Tonle, which is very pleasant and harmless in all its effects upon the youngest child or the oldest and most delicate individual. Nine -tenths of all the ailments to which the human family is heir are dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired diges- tica. When there is an insufficient supply of nerve food in the blood, a. general state of debility of the brain, spinal marrow, and nerves is the result. Starved nerves, like starved muscles, become strong when the ` right kind, of food is supplied; and a thousand weaknesses and ailments disappear as the nerves recover. As the nervous system must supply all the power by which the vital forces of the body are carried on, it is the first to suffer for want of perfect nutrition. Ordinary food does not con- tain a sufficient quantity of the kihd of nutriment necessary to repair the wear our present mode of living and labor imposes upon the nerves. For this reason it becomes necessary that a nerve food be supplied. This South American Nervine has been found by analysis to contain the essential elements out of which nerve tissue is formed. This accounts for its universal adaptability to the cure of all forms of nervous de- rangement. ement. CnewFORnsvtLLE, Ixn., Aug. 20, '86. REBECCA wnxisaoN, of Erownavalley, Ind., To the Great Saud. American 1ledicine Co.: says ; " Iliad been in a distressed condition for DEAR GENTS: -1 desire to say to you that I three years from Nervousness, Weakness of the Stcach Dy s1�1sin and indi estion until rt Y health . I had been doctoring con- stantly, wasg0ne g en- stantly, with no relief. I bought one bottle of South American Nervine, which done me more good than any I, 50 worth of doctoring I ever did in my life. I would advise every weakly per- son to use title valuable and lovely remedy ; re. few bottles of it has cured me completely. I con$ider it the grandest medicine in the world.' have suffered for many years with a very serious disease of the stomach nndner es- I triedd every medicine I could hear of but nothing done me any appreciable good until I was advised to try your Great South American Nervine Tonic and Stomach and Liver Cure, and sluce using several bottles of it I must say that I am sur- prised at wonderful powers to cure the atom - itch and general nem ous system. If everyone knew the value of this remedy as I do you would not be able to supply the demand. J. A. HARDEE. •Ex-Treas. Montgomery Co. A SWORN CURE FOR ST. ViTAS' DANCE UR CHOREA.. CRAWVFORDSVILLE, IND., June 22, 1887. My daughter, eleven years old, was severely afflicted with St. Vitus' Dance air Chorea. We gave her three and one-half bottles of South American Ner- vine and she is completely restored. I believe it will cure every case of St. Vitus' Dance. I have kept it in my family for two years, and am sure it is the greatest remedy in the world for .indigestion and Dyspepsia, and for all forms of Nervous hisorders and Failing Health, from whatever cause. State of Indiana, JOHN T. 14iIs1 Montgomery Couni•j, f ss Subscribed and sworn to before me this June 22, 1887. CHAS. W. WRIGHT, Notary Public; INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA. The Great South American Nervine Tonic Which we now offer you, is the ofaly absolutely unfailing remedy .ever discovered for the cure of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and the vast train of symptoms and horrors which are the result of disease and debility of the human stomach. No person can afford to pass by this jewel of incal- culable value who is affected by disease of the stomach, because the ex- perience and testimony of many go to prove that this is the cave and ONLY ONE great cure in the world for this universal destroyer. There is no case of unmalignant disease of she stomach which can resist th wonderful curative powers of' the South American Nervine Tonic. HARRIET E. HALL, of. waynetown, Ind., says: - MRs. ELLA A. BRATTON, of New Ross, Indlata-; " I owe my life to the Great South American says: "I cannot express how much I owe to tilt Nervine. I had been in bed for five months from Nervine Tonic. My system was completely elate the effects of an exhauster] stomach, Indigestion, Nervous Prostration, and neral shattered tered, appetite gone, was coughing and spitting condition of my wholo system.a Bald given up up blood; am 'sure I was in the first stages all hopes of getting well. Had tried three doe- .of eousniuptton, an inheritance handed down tors, with no relief, The first bottle of the Nerv- through several generatidns. I began taking Me Tonic improved me so much that Iwas able to the. Nervine Tonic, and continued its use for walk about, and a few bottles cured me entirely. about six months, and am entirely cured. It I believe it lo the best medicine in the world:" I le the grandest remedy for nerves, stomach and ;an not recommend it too highly. - lungs I have ever seen." No remedy compares With Souris At2ERieAN NERviet as a cure for the Nerves. No remedy coni pares with South American Nervine as a wondi ons euro for the Stomach. No remedy will at all compare with South. American Nervine as a cure for all forms of failing health, It never [Ails to Cure Indigestion and Dyspepsia. It never fails to cure Chorea or St. Vitus' Dance. Its powers tr. build up the whole system are wonderful in the extreme ;at cures the old, the young, and<themid, dle aged. It is a great friend to the aged and infirm. to not neglect to use this prerlous boon; !1-. you do, you may neglect the only remedy which will restore you to health. South ,mesicaa N orvine18 perfectly very pleasant to the taste. Delicate ladies, do not. fail to use great cure, =because it will put the bloom of freshness and beauty upon your lips and in your chehks, and quickly drive away your disabilities and weaknesses.' Large 16 ounce Bottle $LOOK EVERY BOTTLE WARRANTED. C, LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter. �:ir'