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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1894-6-21, Page 5NERVE + 8E,ANS ItVf cure are t► new crib+ e covery that cure the worst eases of Nervous Debility host yrger and, i serial blanhoofi; restores the weakness of body or meed caused by overwork or the errors or ex - cusses of youth. This ReinedY air poiutely curs the most obstinate cases when, all other intra Melia✓ have:ailed event* relieve, „old by drug. est& at $1 per package, in' six for $ys, or scut by mail on receipt of price by athirr asieg THE JAMES M1;D4OINJG CO., "Toronto, Ont. veva"! for pamphlet, Sold at-. Woe $ale in Exeter X, W. $rOWIIIuttC In Manitoba this year the crop acre- age is 1,582,304, an increase of last year of 40,000 acres. Two years ago I had a bad attack of biliousness and took one bottle of Bur- dock Blood Bitters, and can truly re- commend it to anyone suffering from this complaint. Mrs. Chas, Brown,. Toronto. Mr, Meredith and E. F. Clarke ad- dressed a large and enthusiastic meet- ing at Oshawa last night. NORWAY PINE SYRUP strengthens the lungs and cures all Throat Troubles, Coughs, Colds etc, Mr. Erectus Wiman's trial in New York yesterday was full of interest. .A conclusion is expected to day. IH'oz• Over Fifty. Years. AN OLD AND WELL -TRIED uu,DY; Mrs Winslow's Soothing Syrupp has been used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teething, with, per- fect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allaya all pain, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. is pleasant to the taste. Sold by Druggists In, every part of the World. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its valve is incalculable. Be sure and ask for ltrs, Winslow's Soothing Syrup .and take no other kind John Pincombe, an old resident of Westminster township, near Loudon, died suddenly yesterday, aged 86. I can highly praise Burdock Blood Bitters. My symptoms were dropsy, backache. and sleeplessness, and all these disappeared after using two bottles of Burdock Blood Bitters. Georgina Holmes, Wood Point, Sack. villa, N.B. Col. Ray, of Port Arthur, was yester day, at Port Arthur, acquitted of the charge of criminally assaulting Mrs. Bathurst. BILIOUSNESS and LIVER COM- PLAINT, Headache, etc, are cured by Burdock Pins. A band concert in London on Tues day evening netted $146.28 for the British Columbia flood sufferers. Like magic •'rt always acted like manic. I had scarcely ever need to give the second dose of Dr. Fowler's Extract.of Wild Strawberry for sum finer complaints." Mrs. Walter Goven- lock, Ethel, Ont. John Martell's billiard hall at Wal laceburg, Ont., was burglarized on Friday night and about 575 worth of tobacco and cigars stolen. No clue. HAGYARD'S PECTORIAL BAL- SAM cures Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis and all Throat and Lung Troubles. • James Cooney, a G. T. R. brakeman, who formerly lived in Hamilton, was killed yesterday at Harrisburg. Dear Sirs,—I was sirffaring very much from diarncmsa and cou d get nothing, to cure me. .A. friend told fine of Dr Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw- berry,•and a dose cured me, Thos. L. Graham, Melita, Man. James Barnett. aged about 42, drowned himself at Howard's Station, Ont., on Friday. He is said to have been demented. SIGNS OF WORMS- are variable appetite, itching at the nese etc. Mr. Low's Worin Syrup is the best worm ex peeler. My feet were so badly swollen I could not wear env ships. I got Yello w Oil, and to m,y astonishment it gave instant relief, and two bottles complete ly cured me. Mrs, W. G. JI I .ay, Ber- wick, Ont. At the inquest in the Hartley poison- ing case yesterday at Nurham, Ling, the hired man, gave evidence which bore strongly against Mrs Hartley. Some people laugh to show their pretty teeth. The use of Ivory White Tooth Powder makes people laugh more than ever. It's so nice. Price 25c, Sold by druggists. Relief in Six Homs. of English Spavin Liniment completely Distressing Kidney and Bladder di removed a curb'from my horse. I take seases relieyed in six hours by the pleasure in recommending the remedy, "NEW GREAT SOUTH AM>RICAN KID- as it ants with mysterious promptness NET Cunt." This new remedy is a in the removal from horses of hard, soft great surprise and delight to physic or calloused lumps,blood spavin,spiints fans on account •of its exceeding promptness in relieving pain in the bladder, kidneys, back and every part of the urinary passages in male or fe male. It removes retention of water and pain in passing it almost immed • lately. If you want quiek relief and cure this is your remedy. Sold by C. Lutz, Druggist. Ro to Look dell and Feel THE PLAN ADOPTED BY SENSIBLE PEOLE. They Use Paine's Celery Compound and Keep Up their Strength and Vitality in Hot Weather. "How to look well and fell well" dui- ing the oppressively, hot summer months, is a subject that should corn mond the attention of every busy man. and woman. There are thousands of business men, clerics, toiling, bustling housewives and girls employed in offices, stores and workshops, who lose all strength and vitality in the months of July and August. As a rule, these daily workers feel well in ordinary weather; but, when the sun pours down his scorching rays day after day, and when the. air is heated and heavy, then all life and heart seem to depart from every -day toilers. They look pale; listless and nervous; they are irritable, languid and broken down. It is no exaggera- tion to say that, "they feel worse than they look." To those who find life a burden in the summer time, we would strongly recommend the wise and unfailing plan adopted by more fortunate men and women, who, even in hottest weather, look well and feel well, and always escape the debilitating effects produced by a heated and impure at- mosphere. The wise, prudent and vigorous in summer use Paine's Celery Compound as a tonic and strength giver. This remarkable medicine, it must be re- membered, is not intended exclusively for rooting out of disease,for the cleans ing of the blood; its toning qualities and its virtues for kcepieg well people regular, strong and active, are favor- ably known to tbose who have used it in summer time. At this time a few extracts from let- ters may prose useful and helpful. A busy wholesale grocer, doing busi• uoss in one of our largest cities, says: "During the hot summer weather of 1893, I used Paine's Celery Compound which was recommended to me by a banker. It kept me in perfect condi- tion during the whole summer, and gave me strength and regular appetite I did not find it necessary to go to the seaside with my family. It will be my friend every succeeding sumnier." A young lady in a targe Montreal dry goods house says: "Two summers ago, one of nay lady friends ads ised me to try Paine's Celery Compouud daring the hot weather, as a tonic and health- build•g• I used the medicine morning noon and alight, and was always yig• orous and active, while many girls around me in the store, of stronger constitutions, were, complaining of las- situde and debilty." A well known lady and mother of six children says: "I seriously and con tidently recommended Paine's Celery Compound to all mothers who wish to keep up their health and strength dare fag the yery hot weather of summer time. I use the medicine every day, and feel hearty and strong, and have uo difficulty in getting through with my household work and cares, which are never very light. Since I hare used the compound I do not find it necessary to go off to the country for two or three months to gain health. In every dose of Paine's Celery Cnm- pound 1 Hud a supply of strength." MORAL.—You Gave time and health and banish all discomforts by using Paine's Celery Compound during the summer months. Showers has -e arrested the progress of the heavy bush fires near Port Ar- thur. A Booty To HoltsnerEN.—Ono bottle The Field Columbian museum, ec cupying the Art building ret the Chica- go o World'sFair, I'a , w as dedicated on Sat urday. Ir is the largest museum in America. iseeg'i and.Only bond', Are you weak and weary, over worried and tired? Hood's Sarsapaeilla is just the medicine you need to purify and httieken your blood and to give ynn appetite and strength. If you decade to:take Hood's elarseperilla do not be induced to buy any other. •Any effort to substitute another remedy is proof of the merit of flood's. Hood's Pills are the best after-dinner Pills, assist digestion, euro headache, Try a box, Sir Oliver Vnwat had a warm re- ception in Windsor yesterday, ' Thront:•h traffic over the Pacific divis- ion of the 0, P. R is now resorted. gaze FinF'Fit Ares Fo.v;1; t_. ilAflh.LF'SS 1EAllAClE . Pohial5EioS %epevogee -JALL.!dEADAC lei E, 2v.621, era :not ad4rer- ti.ted fir, 'ere every. dhiripl,buteint„piry Mend. oe e9. :Cry throiti, id tt'Vlt ansa beef, !ea costs ,r a box and they a '. ia,rtates,t. They are riot a CathartIe. curbs, sweetly, stifles and Sprains. George Robb, Farmer, Markham, Ont. Sold by C. Lutz, Druggist, Mr. Duncan McIntyre, the well know Moutreal millionaire, died yes terday. A.LL ,iE N Young, old or middle-aged, who find themselves nervous, weak and ex - delisted, who are broken down from excess or overwork, nil:, tE.Stilelrtb In many of the following symptoms: Mental depression, premature old age, Ioss of vitality, loss of memory, bad dreams, himness of sight, palpitation of the e<it, emissions, lack of energy, pain in the kidneys, headaches, pimples in the face and hotly, itching or peculiar sensation about the scrotum, wasting of the oag ins, dizziness, specks before the et, es, twitching of the muscles, eye- lidseend elsewhere• bashfulness, depos- its in the iuu,E., lass of will -paver, ten derness of the swap and spine, weak and flabby museles, desire to sleep, failure to be rested by sleep, constipa tinil, dullness of hearing; loss of voice, desire for solitude. excitability of tem- per, sunken eyes, surrounded with engin se mentos, oily looking skin, etc, are all si`rnptoms of nervetts debil- ity that lea:l to :esanity unless cured. The spring' of vital force having lost its tension every ftlnetion wanes fat consequence. 7hnrae wile through abuse, committed iu 'gioralrce, may he permanently cured. Send your ad dress for book on diseases pr•enliair to mate, sett free, sealed. Address ef. V. LIMON, 24 eleedolrnel Ave., 'Toronto. Out, Around About Us.. If you decide to take Hood's Sarsapa- rilla do not be induced to buy any sub-, stitute artiele. Take Hood's and only Hood's. Clinton: Messrs. Seale & Hoover are this week putting up a couple of fine monuments in Usborne cemetery; one a beautiful red granite, the other a rustic design. Clinton; .Mr. Ed. Pickett was thrown off a waggon he was riding on the other day, by a sudden start of the horse, and his head cat so badly that the doctor had to dress it, Clinton: The Chief of Police received an anonymous•lctter on Aionday, inti- mating that if a certain family were not moved to the outskirts of the town,. the house occupied by them would be demolished, Lucan. While Master Beu Walden and his sister, of this place, were play- ing. with the lawn mowerthe other day, Benny got his fingers in the knives, and two of them were cut off above the nails. Brussels: John Wilbee had the mis- fortune to have several of the lingers on his left band lacerated by coming in contact with a saw in Aeuent Bros, factory last Monday. He will: be laid off work for some time. Clinton: Last Sunday evening some one entered the house of Mr. Earnest Herworth and carried off $14 in cash. Mr. Herworth had been absent but a short time. There is very strong' sus picion as to the guilty party. Clinton: Mr. T. C. Bruce was walking along the Huron road, on Friday, when a dog ran out and caught him by the leg, without any warning or provoca tion. It made a painful wound, 'which had to be dressed by the doctor. The dog was shot. Parkhill: During the thunder storm on Tuesday lightning struck the house of Mr. Joseph Thompson in the western part of the town. It entered by the chimney, which it partially demolished passed through a room or two and made its exit through the foundation. West McGillivray: A serious ac- cideht happened on Monday week. It appears that Mr. T. Munro was draw- ing sand for Mr. R. A. Patterson and in crossing the temporary bridge over Mud Creek, one of the stringers broke and the horses fell into the creek and one of them was drowned. Lumley: A cherry log owned by Mr. John Cann was one day last week being sawed at Lumley, when the saw came to contact with a large spike nail bending- several teeth of the large cir- cular saw, in many directions. It was made by a blacksmith many years ago and being driven into the tree was grown over. Hensel!: While the Rev. John Rob- ins, of Truro, N. 8., was delivering a lecture to the congregation of Carmel church on Monday evening a stranger with a strong foreign _accent, 'mitered the room through a back door. and un ceremoniously volunteered a few re- marks, which brought down the house. The unruly dog was quickly expelled, McGillivray:A. Reformer of the; 16th. con., has been for some time accumu- latinga heap of brush directly in front of bis residence, devoutly hoping that on the 26th.:af June it would send forth the glad tidings with tongues of fire, but the etee. day his path mas'er, taking tire , '.3 the fore lock, applied a match and the bon -fire disappeared. Thamesville: A Thamesville Corres- pondent says that a peculiar kind of a• worm is working havoc with the soft wood forest tress in some parts of the adjacent southern Townships. The elms especially are being stripped of their foliage. It is to be hoped that spraying may not be on the point of becoming necessary for forest trees also ;otter: Last spring, a stranger hired a horse and rig from the livery of Mr. Adam Hays. For a lona, time no trace of the horse cc uld be found, it was finally discovered that the horse had been sold and since died. The man however eluded all pursuit until Wed- nesday, when he was arrested in Dur- ham and brought here yesterday by county constable Gundry. , Grand Bend: There was an unknown man found dead last Friday evening by Mr. Robt, Pollock and Mr. Stebbin. He was found lying on the step of one niche old buildings at what was known as Morris' mill, on the road leading to Thedford. He was fairly well dressed and about 45 years old and bad only one arm. His remains were taken care of by the authorities of Thedford. 'Vingham: Frank Carrie, employed as a benderat Button & Peasant's chair fseetory, was severely sun struck on Tuesday while returning to work after dinner.11e was riding on a bicycle, and feelingit coming on got- off, and im- mediately fell prostrate to the ground. Luckily it Deterred opposite Bell's furn- iture factory and a number of employ- ees were near at hard. They picked him up and took him to rite nearest. doctor, This is the frat case of the kind this simmer. Palmerston: When the Wild West people left Listowel on Monday they dropped off here, for an exhibition. Saturday had been pay day, but it ap- pears that some one went through the ears 00 Sunday night and picked up alt the cash they could ferret out. This led to bed feelings, and one of the acro - hats was blamed for the job, The gang loaded up with whiskey and gave the suspected thief a Severe thrashing, and then proeeeded a general free fight among themselves, Bleck ai3•es and npened sealps galore was the result, : • It • The , 9na e t,hai ere.►, who also does the boxing net, had entrusted her wag G to the professor, with whom she epars in the ring. term his representation that it would otherwise be stolen that night, and thfsled suspicion to him, and he wa3 !mulled very roughlete ' more teo401e, Stafia: A tent of the order of the Knights of the Maccabees has been started here with a full charter list of twenty members, Varna: Whilst returning from: God orich, after attending the Methodist Conference there, an accident, which might easily have been wary serious, occurr,,d to Mrs, Leech wife of Rev. W. W, Leech, of this place. The horse becoming frightened ata load of wood on the side of the road, shied, with the result that the buggy was turned completely upside down, throwing Mrs, Leech out on her head, She received rather an ugly cut on the side of her head neceessitating the services .of a doctor, who put in several stitches. She is at present in a fair way to entire re- covery. Seaforth: A very sudden death oc- curred in town on Monday eyei.ings, w.hee Mr. William Kennedy, a well known charaeter about town passed away, the cause apparently being apoplexy. he was sitting in his house when be complained of felling ill and asked for a drink of water, lie then lay down on a sofa and remarked that his throat felt queer, there being a sort of tight fooling A doctor was sent for but by the time be reached the house nothing could be done. Mr. Kennedy had ceased to breathe, though there was it'll a slight fluttering of the heart. In a moment all was over. He was ao Irishman, and had lived in Seaforth for a number of years. He was a hard- working man, and, leaves a wife and large family to mourn his loss. Blanshard: During the storm on' Tuesday morning of last' week the brick residence of Mr, John Brine, Shoebottom's Corners, Blanshard, was struck by lightning and so badly trreeked that the family had to move to another house until It is repaired. Mrs. Brine and her son James, as well as her sister, Miss Jeannie Smith, were severely stunned by the shock. The lightning struck the chimney and pass- ing down it koeked the gable all out. Following the stovepipes for a distance it dr pped to the pantry . floor and plowed several furrows in it and p>issiug through the floor and entered the cellar and made match wood of the door jambs. In the pantry crockery and glassware fell a victim to the electric fluid. A portion of the charge must also have passed along the floor in the kitchen and given the shock to the inmates as aboved named. It is a remarkable thing that they were not instantly killed. Builders are again at work repairing the ruins. • St. Marys: Mr. Robert Treacy, con tractor of this town; with several of his employes, met with a bad mishap in East Nissouri last Friday evening, They were at work at. James Harris', between the 7th and 8th concessions, and quitting for supper they got into a light wagon drawu by a span of spirited horses, to go to their boarding house. Iu turning out of the gate the front where of the wagon collapsed and the horses bolted, The vehicle was up- set and the occupants thrown violently in all directions. Robt.'i'reaey alighted on a barb wire fence and the driver fell upun ,him He was terribly cut about the face and hie clothes torn to shreds. .Simon Henry, the driver, had the nail of the initial finger of the right hand torn ori, and was also b dly shaken up. Step- hen Towle sustained a cut across the wrist, necessitatin five stitches being put in. John McMillan • was thrown over the dash board and alighting up- on the ground Quad head first was rendered unconscious for some tune, Walter Flynn escaped with a few scratches and a badly torn coat. The horses ran a distance of half a mile but were stopped before further damage, l'he men injured are progressing towards recovery. Malting hatter in a Small Way. Now -a -days there is so much said and written about creamery butter that one is apt to forget that in hundreds of homes women are making butter.in a small way just as their grandmothers did. Last January I was visiting at a farm home and my hostess churned in a most primitive fashion—stirring the cream ni a tin pail with a ladel. As she has Jersey cows it does not take her long to bring the butter, and she thinks. it much easier to stir the cream than to bother with a churn. This churning produced ten pounds. My friend has two fresh cows and one that had been milked for some time. From these she made from fifteen to twenty pounds of butter per week after using what milk and cream a family of four or five grown people need. The me• thod of reading this butter is as follows: The milk is strained into four and six - quart pans, the latter filled quite as full as will be convenient for carrying. It is set on the stove and heated quite hot, but not scalding. To insure this heating without scorching the i lk the grate from the oven is first placed on the stove. The milk is then set away in a pantry that is heated with the sitting -room stove. Daring cold weather there were about five milkings standing all the time. Titwarmer a lie the t _he m' ilk is skimmed much closer. The churning is done twice a week. The e butter e is worked but twice, the salt—about a tea cupful to eight pounds—being put in at the first working.—Housewife, in Oltio Farmer. A P,.,turn 1,01 Etter. It is uncommon not o t o anon for• inexperienced stockmen to think they have secured' excellent pasture because they can turn into a field where grass is a foot or more high. Except with clover, and not al- ways with that, a large growth is not este sweetest and most nutritious. Very often indeed the untouched grass in the pasture Meld is left uneaten because it lacks the sweetness' which cattle found in shorter and more nutritions. We have often scan the grass eaten down al- most to the soil over an tnrderdrain, while the grass grew green and, ap parently, just as good, bat uneaten, a few feet away. Then, too, a dressing of numeral fertilizer, either potash or phosphate, will do much to sweeten this too large growth. Probably on most soils the potash adds phosphate also by snaking what the soil contains 0 E RA OY.AWPtTLCURED BY PERRY DAVIS'P LLER,1 "THE TRIUMPH OF LOVE Teff JlappY. Fruitful lelarriage, "' Every Alan who Would Know the (�eandTruths ;the Plain Facts; the New Discoveries of illeelical Set - once as Applied to Vineries Life; t<Yho Wonid Atore for Past furors and Avc►id J'atnre Pitfalls, Should Stature the Wonaerfal Little Boor: Vallee f° Complete Manhood. and How to Obtain 1t." " Here at last is evidence from a high medical source that must work wonders with this generation of men. The book fully describes a method by which to attain full vigor and man- ly power. A method by which to end all un- natural drains on the system. To cure nervousness, lack of self control, despondency, etc, To exchange a worn and jaded nat- ure p ere for one of tri htucss buoyancy b 7 .. J and power. To cure forever effects of excesses, overwork, worry, etc. To give full strength, development and tone to every portion and organ of the body. Age no barrier. Failure impossible. 2,000 references The book is purely medical and sci- entific, useless to curiosity seekers, in valuable to men only that need. it. A despairing man, who had applied to us, soon after wrote:. " Well, I tell you that first day is one I'll never forget. I just bubbled with joy. I wanted to hug everybody and tell them my old self had died yesterday and my new self was born to -day. Why didn't you tell me when I first wrote that I would find it this way Y" And another thus: "If you dumped a carload of gold at my feet it would not bring such glad ness into my life as your method has done." Write to the ERIE MEDICAL COM- PANY, Buffalo, N.Y., and ask for the little book called " COMPLETE MAN- HOOD." Refer to this paper, and the company promises to send the book, in sealed envelope, without any marks, and eutirely free, until it is well intro - The. health authorities reported 82 deaths from the plague at Hong Kong } esterda y. HEART DISEASE RELIEVED IN 30 MIN ur> s,—All cases of organic or sym• patlretio heart disease relieved in 30 minutes and quickly cured, by Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Bear,. One dose convinces. Sold by C. Lutz, druggist. Benjamin C. Peters, assistant treas- urer of the New Central Coal Company of Maryland, has decamped from New York with nearly 86,000 of the com pang's motley. He also deserted his wife and children and eloped with a pretty young school teacher. A DISTRESSING ,SITUATION,—What a dreadful thing it is to wake up in the middle of the nig••ht suffering from cholera—the nearest doctor a mile away and no one to send for him. Imagine a more distressing domestic situation, if you can; awl yet cases of this kind are very commo:•. The trouble, however, would never have become serious if the man of the house had a bottle of Perry Davis' Pain -Kil- ler at hand, for it is a remedy that never fails to cure cholera, cramps, diarrhoea, or dysentery. Ali druggists keep it. 25c for large New. size. A cheese board has been organized at Newmarket, Ont, composed of Mr. Walton, Kettleby; Mr. Thirsk, Mount Albert; Mr. Greenwood, Sutton; Mr. Pilkey. Aurure;,Jlr, C. E. Lundy, Neu- market; tie) salesman at Cookstown, with the privilege of adding to their number. Tuesday, July 3rd, is to be the first sale day of the board for the sale of cheese of the various factories Me. C. E Lundy was appoiued secre- tary -treasurer and Mr. Walton chair- man. JLIieumatlgni Cured in a Day: South American' Rheumatic Cure, for R ieutnatisrn and Neu 'a Igia, radically N eui Igia, radically, cures in 1 to .8 days. Its action upon the system is remarkable and myster- ious. It removes at once the cause and the diseaseimmediately disep- pears. The first dca; greatly benefits. 25e. Sold by C• Lutz,ler ug„ ist, The Countee of Aberdeen is making a torr of the prt5vinee of Ulster, Ire- land in behalf of Irish home industries The Iron Trade Reylew, of Cleveltreel' says: The ail ountcimeet of an agree- event betweenthe coal minors' cilicf'7a and a majority of operators in import districts means that the fuel ember& will soon be raised, W. G. Bissett's Liver... First Class .Torses and Iii, SPECIAL RATES WITE COMMERIAL MEN. Orders left at Bissett Bros.'HardwaAi Store, will receive 'prompt attention. TERMS - REASONABLE A TRIAL SOLICITED. W. G-. BISSETT }BEA. 9. FORD STEAM LAUNDRY! A. HASTINGS, Agin If you want your linen %4D look whiter than snow, take it to , . , 91. R�STfl1S, a •♦s • EXETER'S Popular Tonsorial Artist. Ladies' and Children' Haircutting, A. Specialty. MURRAY 86 CO. Tdanufacturers and. Dealers 3a Walking and Riding Plows, Cultivators, Iron Plows, Spade and Disk 'Harrows, Land Rollers. Castings of every descrip- tion in Brass and Iron to order. Also dealers in Piping, Fillings, Brass Goods, Shaftings, Pulleys and Hangers. Special prices to dealers in large quantities. Repairing promptly done. . . JAS. MURRAY & 8 .. jO qXT� S T PI D 1,14 RAWBER CURE 1\ COLIC C H 0L EPA A— PIORBUS CHOLERA— DIARRHOEA OEA DENTERY. YS1�,� {�r A •, APIARLL�S„ C �1LAIiIT Sri " w of U '. ViovADULTS, �����y cis h, price 35 EiilARE off' IMITATIONS B. '264 .7 .40, RH EU^A7t NEURALGIA MUSCULAR STIFFNESS, PMN IN SIDE LAME �� ,UAG wNENu �� is .T�II D.&Le,ME MENTHOL PLASTER tea) SAFE PLE.AS.ANT THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER BRISTOL'S SARSAPARILLA CURES ALL Taints of the Bleed, ti . ; .. CERTAIN RH EU^A7t NEURALGIA MUSCULAR STIFFNESS, PMN IN SIDE LAME �� ,UAG wNENu �� is .T�II D.&Le,ME MENTHOL PLASTER tea)