The Exeter Advocate, 1895-5-24, Page 5it,
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Joy Inexpressible
Another' Boy's Life Saved
Health Blighted by Scrofula and
Hip Disease
Perfect Cure, Happiness and: Healtiro.
Given by Hood's Sarsaparilla.
oi
• ` yr .,
j)k
Exeter, N. H.
"C. 1. }loon ee Co., Lowell, Mess.:
"I cannot praise flour's Sarsaparilla enough
for what it bee, dorso for my boy. So= four
yarn mem when six yoor3 Old, George was
attached by hip dieeaso in 1's right 1'_g. Wo
bad to get him a p:1r of crutches, with which
he was aide to move about, but became
barely deformed. We ilad to have Fila right leg
lanced jest above the lutea lit a- fu\y weeks a
second sero broke out, both t'isabnrging freely.
Agonizing pains ttlltcted him he could not beat'
to be moveti, iris growthwas stopped and
No Frac a Here Skeleton.
Be had no appetite, and it lets hare. wore. t3
. make ltim eat enou li to keep hila alive. A few
weeks latter wo had his hip.i.anecd, gild foitow-
iug this five oteer e u rtiOns broke out, making
eight running :One i.t all, We di,1 r ii',: a could
for him, but ito grow wen::er every day, al-
though ivo hail tltrco c? CI() bet: -t physicians.
As a last resort wo 'acro prava:itccl ttpt:a
by relatives who hail t.:..:rl ilecd's Sa rat.
ps.rill a with he i;.:icial rreult0 to „i•: o the me.::
cine a trial. Wo got one bottlo algult, tho Sint
of March, 1302, nut In ]:: 1 en tlio inedloino
only a few drys when his ammtito r ^,.::1 to
improve. \1 b n he h•'d t..l:en one , u tlo ho
could mono about a little with Itis cruteltes,
*which lie had not been able to Iso for the+. i-
eeding throe months. 'W a confirmed faithfully
, with Hood's Sarsaparilla, and in 0 months ha e t:s
Ably • to Co Che.‘„noted
ted
and go about the houoo without talo crutches.
Be has now taken I-ooc'.'sSarsaparilla regu:.."ly
for eighteen months, and far the past six mouths
has been 'without tho crutches, which he has
outgrown b several incites. Tho sores hove all
healed with the exception of one which is
rapidly closing, only the scars and an occasional
limp remaining as reminders of his sutiering.
00
9 0744,
uros
flood's Sarsaparilla in ills also has truly done
wonders, and Ito is daily gaining in flesh and
good color. Ile runs about and plays as lively
as any child. We feel en inexpressible joy at
having our boy restored to health. and wo
always speak in the highest terms of Boor's
Sarsaparilla." MRs.'HENRY W. MU5PFir,
Exeter, New Hampshire.
Hood's P fns are prompt and efficient, yet
easy in action. Sold by all drugg, sts. 25e.
Peso's Remedy for Catarrh is the
Best. Easiest to Use and Cheapest.
TA F R is
Sold by druggists or sent by mall,
50c. E. T. Hazeltine. Warren, Pa.
While returning home Monday night
from sitting up with a dying friend,
Mr. John Bested, of Bright, fell dead
on the sidewalk. Heart diseaee was
the cause.
Nervous People
And those who are all tired out and
have that tired feeling or sick head-
ache can be relieved of all these symp-
toms by taking Hood's Sarsaparill,
which gives nerve, mental and bodly
strength and thorougly purifies the
blood. It also creates a good appetite,
cures indigestion, heartburn and dys-
pepsia.
Hoot's are eary to take, easy in act-
ion and sure in effect. 25e,
Mrs. Chambers, who lives at the east
end, Woodstock, walked up town Wed
nesday as she often does, a distance of
over a mile, although she is in her
93rd year. She told the Times that
she never felt better, and was able to
do more work than any other woman in
town.
For Over Fifty Nears.
AN OLD AND WaLL-TItIPO REMEDY. -Mrs
Winslow's Soothing Syrup, 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, allays all pain, aures wind colic
and is the best remedy for Diarrhala. is
pleasant to the taste. Sold by Druggists In.
every partof the World. Twenty-five cents
a bottle. Its value is incalculable. Be sure
and ask for las. Winslow's Soothing Syrup
and take no other kind
• n and Bruce.
London,�il<�ia o
' TIME TABLE.
GOINGNORTat- Passenger.
London, depart 8.05 L 31 4.30 r a1
Centralia 0.07 5.47
EXETER 9.22 0.00
Hensall 0.47 615
Kippen 9.44
Brucefiold
Clinton
Londesboro
Blyth
Belgrave
Winghani arrive
GOING SOUTH- Passenger
6.35Aat 3.35 al
(3 60 3.47
7.03 4.01
7.10 . 4A8
9.51
10.12
10,29
10.88
10.52
11.10
6,20
6.28
6.85
7.14
7.24
787
8.00
Win gham, depart
Belgrave
Blyti'
Londesboro
Clinton 4.28
Bee ,elielil......:....... •4 46
.ippon 4,53
Hensel!....................... 4.58
EXETER 5,12
5.33
7.30
740
7.57
8.06
8.25
8.t.1'
Centralia
Hon John Oostigan was banqueted
by frionps at Kingston.
FOR TWENTY-FIVE YEARS.
DUNK
KI
PO.. E
THECOOK'SBEST FRIEND
LARGEST SALE U1 CAt-AD .:
TOPICS OFA WEK.
'.38te Important Events ht a Few W041*
e'er iiusy iteatlors.
The annual mooting of the Grand
Orange Lodge of British America hes
boon postponed till the last 'Jhiosday ifs
July.
The I3oartis of Trade of Vancouver and
New Y1'estuliestol 13. C., join in the re-
quest for the appointment of a board of
Customs experts.
'All the union coal handlers employed
on the wharves at Montreal went out on
strike on Friday' because of the employ-
ment of non -unionists..
No. 1 Manitoba hard wheat, all rail,
Montreal, sold Friday. at $1.01 per bushel..
White wheat on the Toronto market sold
at 87 cents a bushel,
General Herbert's rosidonco in Ottawa
is advertised for stale and his family are
reported to have engaged passages to Eng-
land for the 15t11 of Jeine.
Importations into Canada during April
aggregated 558,909,796, and the duty paid
was 81,408,481. The value ofthe exports
for the saino month was 54,369,804.
Owing to the extreme range of the Loo-
Motf rl rifle used by the Impperial troo s
,
vessels have been warned to koop 8,000
yards away from the stop butts at Halifax-.
The oormna/taor of the Fishery Protec-
tion Service has noticed the Marine De-
partment at Ottawa that there aro fifty
American sciners on the Nova Scotia
ooast.
Mr . T. B. Gillarcl, who was for a num-
ber of years reeve of the village of Wal-
lacobnrg, and warden of the County of
Kent in 1801, died on' Thursday night,
aged forty-nine.
Many rosiclents of the Niagara penin-
sula on Friday petitioned the Dominion
Parliament to enact an alien labor law
on the lines of the ono in force in the
United Status.
The Rev. Father Dumortier, S.J., of
Guelph, on Friday celebrated the fiftieth
anniversary of his induction as a priest,
which took place ott the 17th of May, 1845,
in the Lyons cathedral.
Dr. Fred. Morden, of Demorestville,
Ont., who graduated at Queen's Univer-
sity, Kingston, n year ago, scouring the
gold modal, was round dead in his office,
at eleven o'clock Sunday morning.
As the steamer Nipogon, loaded with
lumber, bound down the new canal, was
entering lock 11 early Wednesday morn
ing Frank Bushaw, mate, slipped from
the deck and was drowned.
The Dominion cruiser Petrol on Thurs-
day night captured five miles of fishing
nets in Lake Erie near Rondeau harbor.
The owners of the nuts, who aro U. S.
citizens, have not been heard from.
Mr. Sifton, Attorney -General of Mani-
toba, arrived in Ottawa on Saturday aft'
ernoon. Premier Greenway, is not ex-
pected to reach Ottawa until Tuesday,
after which the conference on the school
question with the Governor-General will
be held.
Mr. Robert Bond, the Newfoundland re-
presentative, who was delegated by his
Government to conte to Canada and raise
a loan of two million dollars, has failed
in his mission, and on Saturday loft Mon-
treal for Boston. to confer with Ameri-
can capitalists.
On Saturday morning John Spence, a
blacksmith, was discovered by a police-
man in the aot of setting fire to a furni-
ture store in Owen Sound and after a des-
perate struggle was captured. Re was
taken before the Police Magistrate and re-
rrandod for a week.
At the closing business session of the
Royal Society of Canada in Ottawa on
Friday a resolution was adopted recom-
mending the appointment of a permanent
inrestry commissioner to inquire into and
administer the various ¢interests involved.
in the preservation of our timber ro-
SOUrcos.
Lieutenant -Governor Schultz, of Mani-
toba. calls attonticha in his annual report
to the depredations of American wharers
in Hudson's Bay. He is of opinion that
without some control over the slaughter
of the whale, walrus. and seal, the last of
these creatures in Canadian waters will
be destroyed. He advises the adoption of
more restrictive meaeures.
AMERICAN.
Tho Earl of Westmeath has arrived in
Washington to assume his duties of at-
tache to the British Embassy.
Tho Salem Wire Nail Company and the
Findlay Company of Findlay, Ohio, have
advanced wages ten per cent. The ad-
vance affects six thousand men.
The 18th annual convention of the West-
ern Gas Association, composed of gas en-
gineers of the United States and Canada,
openeie at Pittsburg on Wednesday.
The British Government and the Unit-
ed
Uni -ed States have come to an agreement as to
the holding of tt conference on the Bob -
ring sea seal question. Is will be hold in
Washington in October.
A number of sheep belonging to people
living in Itlinnesota have been killed re-
cently by dogs belonging to Itelians who
live, in Canada, and the owners of the
r
sheep a
claim damages.
ToonETG1Y.
Tho Queen will this year formally open
3 now parish church in Crathie.
It is believed in English political cir-
cles that the general elot'ions will be held
towards the end of July.
At the approaching opening of tho Bal-
tic canal all the European powers and
rho United Status will be represented by
their best men-of-war.
The Spanish steamer Gravina, bound
from Antwerp for Lisbon, was lost off
Capone' during a typhoon, and only two
of those on board were saved.
Count Golachowski had an audience
with Emperor I+rancis Joseph on Satdur-
day. and was afterwards sworn in as Im-
perial Ministur of Foreign Affairs in suc-
cession to Count iialnoky.
A telegram from Dir on Wednesday says
the native tribesmen have made a night
attack upon tbo British post at 1 ambat.
Seven coolies are reported killed and
twenty wounded.
A number of warehouses and factories
wear the leather market, Bermondsey,
covering • au acre and a half of ground,
wore burned on Friday. Tho loss is esti-
mated atone million ponutls.
England last week suffered from a very
sudden change of weather. The ther-
mometer dropped thirty degrees within a
few hours, and caused not only Moon -
Yen ienee
oon-Yenienoe but much damage to small fruit.
Tho defeat In the Gorman lielohstag of
t11e. Anti -Revolutionary bill and the To-
baeeo Tax measure has been a bad blow
to the Government, and as a result it is
said that there are serious dissensions in
the Cabinet.
1 Privy Council
The Imperial 'i opo has grant-
ed
n-
t
ed permission to the Attorney -General of
Ontario to appeal from the decision of the
Supreme Court of January last with re-
ference to the Governor -General's "action
in regard to the liquor laws,
IIIIppY JliEtt4
Woo Cap Belisq
64!.E.010t.111811.410810
INDICESTIOr t. AND .ITS TERROR'.
pAINE'S Y Cad' r '. ID RESTORES
CELERY
PERFECT DIGESTIVE VIGOR.
Nature's Great Medicine Will Give
You a Healthy and Natural Appetite,
Pure Blood, a Clear Head and
Sound Seep.
The most miserable mortals in our
communtties are those who are weigh-
ed down by obstinate and cruel in-
digestion.
The digestive organs are all out of
gear, and the sufferer is tortured' every
hour of the day. The gratest distress
is experienced after eating; there is
heaviness or weight in the pit of the
stomach, almost continual headache,
want of appetite, palpitation of the
heart,'singgish and torpid bowels and
sonstipaticn.
The common cathartics and m.dicines
of the day only aggiavate the sufferer's
troubles, and cause him to sink deeper
in the mire of suffering and despond-
ency.
Natures wondrous remedy, Paine's
Celery Compound, is the only medicine
now generally prescribed by the best
physicians. It acts directly on the
nerves, it cleanses the blood, and re-
moves all obstructions and distressing
matter from the digestive organs, and
gives that perfect vigor of body that
only the healthy can enjoy. After as.
ing Paine's Celery Compound, eating;