HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1914-4-30, Page 7'NERVOUS DISEASES THE SPRING Cured by Timingthe Blood and Strengthening the Nerves It is the opinion of the best medi- cal authoritiea, after long observa- tion, that nervous diseafies a -re more coalmen and mere serious let the spring than at any other timeof • the pear: Vital changes •in the. Bye, tem, after long winter months, may •cauee much moire trouble than the Ifanailiar spring weakness and \vestal- ess from whioh toost people suffer as the result of indoor life, in poor• - ly ventilated and eften overheated • beildings. Offieial records prove that in April and May neuralgia, St. Vitus dance, epilepsy and other forms of nerve troubles are at their worst, and that then, more than any ether -ti' me blood -making, nerve -restoring tonic is needed, The antiquated custom of taking • purgatives in the spring ie aseless, .for the sy,sitem really needs • strengthening, while purgatives • only gallop through the bowels, • leaving yoti weaker, Dr,. Pink Pills are the best medicine, for • they aetually make the new, rich, red blood that feeds the starved nerves, and thus cure -`the many f•orens of nervous disorders. They cure also sueh other forms of spring troubles as headaches, poor appe- tite, weakness in the limbs, as well • as remove unsightly pimples and eruptions. Ih fact they unfailingly bring new health and strength to weak, tired. and depressed men, women and ohildteu. Sold by alfmedicin•e dealers or by mail ,at 50 c,ents a box or six bos.es for $2.50 from The pr. Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. FORMER MESSENGER ALC. Sir Edevarit Clarke, R.C., Retiring • Soon—IIad Brilliant Career. A career which has been no less • brilliant in fulfilment than it was romantic in its beginning, will be ended next November, when Sir Edward Clarke, oue of the most famous of King's Counsel, has de- cided to retire from praetiee. Sir Edward is now in, his 744i year, and feels that after the. ceempletion of his legal jubilee he is .entitled to • seek relief, As a lad Sir Edward slept for four years behind • the • coanter of his father' s • jewellery and watehmald,ng shop in King Wil- liam Street, London. At 14 he was messenger for a city firm. Much of his education he picked up at • evening- classes. Two acquiremeats hebrought away from a two years' stay at an Edmontoe boarding school, whieh, he says, were of more value in life than anything he has since added. 'Thoee were elocution and „shorthand. • The shorthand sys- • tem he found time to develop and • • • complete only in. -1907, when he gave it to tile world in a jeo•ok called 72Easy Shorthand." Since then he has published ''Swif than•d." Ac - .cording to his awn confession, Sir Edward we.nt into law as an avenue to a political career, • and he wa.s Solicitor -General from 1886 to 1892. He represented Plymouth for 20 years, and the city of London fdr a. short time.. To other achieve- ments Sir Edward has added those of a song w.riter and a, peaeemsker in industrial disputes. Cures Old Folks' Coughs Doesn't Disturb the Stomach, Eases at Once and Cures Thoroughly. "CATARRHOZONE" A BOON TO MANY THOUSANDS. GEM8 STOLEN FROM 01[1.4 VE, Pour Persoo4 Are Under Arrest 1ti Era ee. • Ne.erlY forty Years ago a beautiful girl of a very Wealthy and ariegeoera,- tie family died of consumption dpr- ing her honey g, and was buried in a great mausoleum in the peme- teryoE Bourganeuf, near Linaoges, France. The funeral eteamonies were marked by the get pomp, and according to the keel legends the body a the dead giril was robed in a coetly robe of velvet, and deck- ed with all her most precious jew- els. In the shroud, too, the story ran, her disconsolate hueband placed the great gold pieces he had given her on her betrothal, ftalow- itig the eustom of the distriet—one hundred pieces. The years passed by and the story of the treasure in the torrib grew and grew. Then one oold, dark night, in January last, a woman, whose little house was near the graveyard, was horrified to see a flickering light wavering between the cypresses near the tomb and to hear dull, thudding blows break the usual cle,a,tbly stillness, Greatly alarmed, she called her husband, who made nothing of the strange sounds, as for the lights they were but "corpse eandles," A little while after, as the result of an anonymous letter, the poliao visited the oemetery and examined She mausoleum. It had been bro- ken into, Further investigation showed that the °dart had been opened and the corpse divested of kes robe a velvet an -d that the jew- els and pieees of gold—if they had ever been there—had likewise dis- appeared. Four persons have been arrested in connection -with this crime—the grave -digger at the OM- etery and his daughter (a pretty girl of 22), the gardener who tended the plants and trees there, and his naother-in-law. Three witnesses have stated that, they saw. a rich robe drying; on a line in the garden- er's yard, and the old woman is said So have sold a couple of rings in Bo u r game u f Because you are old is no reason for suffering with everlasting cough- ing—those terrible' chest troubles and difficult breathing can be thoroughly cured with Catarrhozone. You simply breathe the healing vapor of Catarrh - ozone, and instantly its rich balsamic fumes are carried by your breath into the tiniest reeesses of theliose, throat, chest, bronchial tubes and lungs. • Just think of it—a direct breathable medicine, full of soothing antiseptic pine essences that reaches every sore, congested membrane in two seconds. No drugs to take—nothing to harm or • ticken the stomach, because. Catarrh- • ozone is the purest, safest cough, ca- tarrh and cold remedy ever devised. I "For many years," writes Richard MoCallum, Stirling, Ont:, -"I have suf- fered from Catarrh, and continually hawked and coughed, so • that my ithroat was always In an inflamed, ir- ritable condition. •I "Doctors medicine did not help me in the least, and all other remedies I used were quite useless. In one case It was time wasted in snuffing powder ,up the nose; in another using, a greasy ointment, and so on. Not one of them ,was the least bit of good. •I "I heard Catarrhozone favorably ,spoken of, and tried it Really it bene- fited me more in a few hoUrs than yeare c4 treatment with dootors' and 'other so-called remedies. "Receiving such ihimense benefit, I continued using Catarrhozone, and in few weeks twatecompietety Cured of 'Catarrh and throat trouble." Get Catarrhozone to -day. Largo size casts $1,00, aiad lasts two inontbs, Smaller sizes 25c, and 50t, All deal- ers, or ,The CatarrhOzone Company, ,Puffalo, N.Y., and Eingston, Ont, Pigg eldib skirt lie 2,000 years old. Truly there ia mothing new under the oun," Fogg 'Right! Not over the daughter,' ' BABY'S OWN TABLETS • KEEP LITTLE ONES WELL Mothers, if you wish your little ones toi be well, if ybu wish them to be bright, active andelaappy, free from colds, worms, constipation, and -the many 'other childhbod ail- ments, give th•ern Baby's Own Tab- lets. These Tablets never fail to make the sickly child well. Con- cerning them MTS. Alphonse Lan- dry, Upper Caraquet N.B., writes : "Baby's Own Tablets have been .of great help to me in keeping my little ones well, and 1 eaa recom- mend them to other mothers." The Tablets are sold by m,edieine deal- ers or by mail -at 25 :cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medioine Broekville, Oat', .14 •-•.4 His Twin Brother Told Him 'file Cure wily J. 0. MAN' PRAISES DODIVS KIDNEY PILLS. A. GREAT TUNNEL. The C.P.R. Is Spending Millions in British Columbia. Advioes, receiied at, Canadian Pacific headquarters indicate -that the "Work ofothe great tunnel in the West is proceeding rapidly. Eleven hundred feet on° the east side have been driven, about 5p per cern+, of the approach has been cut on the west end. Mr. J. G. Sullivan, who is the 'chief engineer for the West, and who goes about planning for - work and seeing that when planned it is efficiently carried out, ha,s just returned from a. visit to the tunnel, Which he states is being proceeded with in a most vigorous and. Suc- cessful manner. Mr. Sullivan states that this programme will mean, for the 5, -,ear, at least,- $30,000,000 of • outlay.• A greaepart ef this money will be el:lent in British Columbia on the doubleebraek worki but there are also about 60 miles of new line to be laid on the prairie. Bails and ties will be a big itern ; the work on She tunnel will call for large out- lays; while the cloable-brackiing al- ways postulates big disbursements, All this work, as Mr. Sullivan points out, is part of the old pro- grannie—if it can be called old. It was provided for last year. It is pa,..,,,rt of a great plan which is to be gradually realized,. from year to year, until it is all complete—a plan which contemplates the entire double -tracking of the e,nitire eys- tem. •Title alone.wookt take years and many millions of d,ollars, The ,workahoweverf will be,proseoufbeci with steady perseverance. • . When realized, it will be the big- gest undertaking, of modern times. The Caria,dian Pacific. has epent be- fore now, fr•oni $50,000,,000 to $100,- 000,000 in the West in a single pea - son. It has moderated ite outlay this year', for 1014 will rtlot be a year of It is nat without interest to know that Mr. J. G. Sullivan was the first aSsietant engineer to Mr. Stevens when the lattite.r woe in eherge of the Panama Canal before the advent of Colonel Goetileals. Quite a, numbc)! of important tailwtgy nega vire, kg work &ii the great ditch npo !ti4gige ee great respansibili Filet , 613§ -it Irgeecr . &ward J. ,Wikaants, paymaster ,ot the Chicago and North Western, Railway, that when •he was dislimaing offiee,r aS the 9anal he paid out $50,.000,000. Ife Suffered front Ithitiey ;thwarter Lunihago and Itheutriatistii. fog. • Five Year --Now Ile Is a 1Yell •1Haa Again. , Boileau P, 0., Ponsoobei, Que., Apr. 27th (SPecial),—.1..0. MeOPs well-known farmer living near here, who suffered from Kidney Disease for five yeare, is onee more a well man, and in a. statement, given to the press he give all the credit for his cure to Dodd's Kidney Pills. "My trouble started with a cold about five years ago,". Mr. Mapp states, "and developed into hem- bagand rheumatism.I had bit- ter taste in. my month in the morn- ings and 1 ,was terribly nervous. I was depressed and low spirited and found it difficult to colleet, my thoughts, while at times I was troubled with stiffness in the joints. My appetitewas fitful, and I had heart ilutt,erings that added to any fearka. My twin brother, who had aged Dodd's Kidney Pills aid got great benefit front them, advised me So use them. The finst two boxes did me so much good that I got ,two more, and they completed, my cure. Dodd's. Kidney Pills are the right remedy for Kidney,trouble.'' Every person who has two or roore of Mr. Mapp's ,e,ymptems has sick Kidneys. The right remedy' for sick Kidneys is Dodd's Kidney Pills. If you don't 'know it ourt of your own experience, ask your neighbors. •, !!' SIR .GEOItGE SIMPSON. Initials of Famous Explorer Found On a Fallen Tree. To carve one's initials on a.tree trunk is a great and paesione'e (1 sireof all school boys, and habit the world is perhaps indebted foe the interestiog discovery of ini- tials on a. fallen peat .of the forest in the Canadian Rockies believed to be those of Sir George Simpson, at one time governor of the Hudson's Bay Company, and of his guide, James Roland, When Mr. John M. Gibbon was at Banff, B. 0.. endea- voring, to loeatte records of David Theriapson, who was the geographer in the early days of the West to the North West Trading Company, the great rival of the Hudson's Bay Company, he was referred to a Mr. Jamen„Brewste'r, -a, rancher, as a person ' weij versed in local history, and he found the latter gentleman had made a discovery of great in- terest. He had been inVeatigating Simpson PaSS," hoping to discover some trace ofSir George Simpsoes historic passage through the Rook- ies, and; halting to - exanaine ' the under side of, a large fallen etree trenk, found some carving, which read "G.S: J:R: 1841." It is ell - dent thatthese initials are those of -Sir George Simpson and his guide, James • Roland. • The year 1841 is that in which the famous explorer made his trip through the Rockies, choosing the pass whieh has been named afterhim. • The life of Sir George, the veter- an fin' trader, is one of the most picturesque in Canadian • history. HeWestwefnrotantetheCa Scotlandiliad in1820,N, to()bh Sake• Charge of the affairs of the Hud- san's Bay Company. In 1841 he took up his tour of the world,..leaving London on Marek- 3rd of that year. With canoe and peek horse he cross- ed the continenta took ship' from Fort Vancouver for Siberia, and reaehed London on bus return jour- ney in exactly 19 months and 26 days from his time of starting. Men a Woman Suffers With Chronic Backache There Is Trouble Ahead. Constantly on their feet, attending to tile wants of a large and.exacting family, women often break down with nervous exhaustion. In -the stores, factories, and on a farm are weak, ailing women, dragged down with torturing backache and bearing down pains. Such suffering isn't natural, but it's dangerous,. because due to diseased kidneyt. The dizziness, insomnia, deranged menses and other symptoms of kidney complaint can't cure' themselves, they require the assistance' of Dr. I -Tamil - ton's Pills which go direet to the seat of the trouble. To give vitality and power to the kidneys, to lend aid to the bladder arid liver, to free the blood of poisons, probably there is no remedy so suc- cessful as Dr. Iiamilten's Pills, For all Wonianly irregularities their merit Is well known. ecause of their mild, soothing, and healing effect, Dr, Itarnilthn's Pills are safe, and are recommended for atria and women of all age. 25 cents Der box at all dealers. Refuse any Stth- atitute for Dr, Tiaroilton's Pills of Man- drake and 13utterrint. "Popper " Said little Willie, "did ou tellea estoryeat the story-tqllori' 0 . . nigilit at the club Tuesday targhtt" "Yes, my boy, I.' did. Why 7" -' 'Dia , , they spank youlor at, 045 you do no rviven it tell a story I" 'faked Willie. Prevent 3m Biernisltes uticura Soap (1 °int el • They do SCO much to promote and 'maintain !the purity and beauty of the complexion, hands and hair un- der all conditions, and are unexcelled iti purity, delicacy and fragrance for the toilet and nursery. ,-Cuticunt Soap and Ointment are sold throushout the world. A. Ilberal sample of each, volth 32 -page booklet on the cure and treatment of the skin and , scalp, sent poat-free. • Address Potter torus t Chem. COrP.,13ept. 9. Boston, 13 .5. A.. • SMOKING NO MO. --- French Litterateurs Say .It Does Not Give Inspiration. Is smoking a, help -to literary cone - position? Emile Faguet, the French acade- mician, who is an inveterate amokee, thinks not. "I smoke a great deal, .but I do not believe that it does any g?ocl. I even think it may do harm. ' Andre Theariet, the novelist, who alternates between pipe and eigaa rnette, says: "I have never -found that the habit has the least influ- ence on what is commonly called in- iratton " • Pierre Loti shares his colleague's opinion: "As far DA • I. have ob- served, the use of the cigarette ha,s no effect whatever on ray faculties." Among smokers who are members of the French Academy, Mauriee Barres is not averse to a cigar' Paul Hervieu considers the habit as a vice and a weakness: ItEtzie Bazin also is severe: "I grnolke only; a.n oceasional cigarette, but 1 derive nothing from tle prac- tice but neuralgia and the unplea- sant knowledge that in continuing to indulge I surrender to a weak- ness which no longer has inexperi- ence di an excuse for it." SWAM f()V MOAT. Adventures of Russian 0 -Meta Ar.. rested in Austria as a Spy, The constant charges and counter- charges of espionage Jo between Ruzeia on the one band and Gef,, Man" and Austria on the, other, are creating feelimes of mutual irrita- bility and indirtation, which in the end may have a coneaderab-le effect on the course of International rela- lions. The latest "ineident" to occur is the arrest at Brody, on the Aus- trian side of the Russo-Galieia,n frontier of a- Russian postal official named Kopot, who was accused by the Anetrian police of bringing pro- hibited literature into Galicia and distributing ib, and ipso factor agi- tating for the separation of "Slav lands ' from Austria and their in- clusion in Russia,. Kopot was eonfined in the Brody jail, and after being ques- tioned once or twiee by the examin- ing magistrate, resolved on at- tempting to escape. This he suc- cessfully acoomplished by removing a weak bar outeide-the window of his cell and climbing down on a roPe made of his bedclothes and own clothing. • The alarm wee almost immediate- ly raised, but Kopot ev,aded oapture by hiding for nine hours under a pile of brushwood and swimming across the icy moat, thence reach- ing Russian territory, where he re- lated his experiences to the a.uthori- ties at Radiviloff. He was in a, ter- ribly exhausted condition, and is now an hospital, in delirium. T Nerviline Ends Neuralgia, Cheap,Form of Insurance 'You are insured against vrns and buniOns -by the purchase of a single 26c, bottle • of Putnam's Corn Ex- tractor;• it cures painlessly in 24. hours. Try Putnatn's Extractor. 25c. at all dealers. A Noble Action. Itis -'mother was holding an extra speeial afternoon tea., and Tommy was arrayed -in all his Sunday glory half an hour before the great event. He was sent out to the con- feetienere, to remind them that the cake hadn't arrived, and he return- ed a .few minutes later breathless and looking decidedly the worse for wear. "Yon naughty boy 1" said his mo- ther, "you've been fighting." "No, mother, I haven't replied the innocent. "How did your del:hes get torn and your fake seratchedi" "Well, you gee, mother," con- fessed Tommy, "I tried to keep a bad boy frora hurting a good little boy." ' "That was very noble,",., said his mother, softening. "Who was the good little boyi" Tommy eyed her anxiously for a moment, then answered, "Me Why not! - He was not what one inight call "manly," and a,h•e had suspeoted it, no she tried it on—"If' there was a war I presume you would go to arms kr your eountry?" "No" he said, "I shouldn't like to do tha.t." "Why not V' she tusked. "Well," he said, "they are so cateless in their sh o o tin g " .1. GIN PILLS FOR WOMEN Read What Mrs, Harris Sas About Them., Mrs. T. I-Iarris of Tyneside, Ont„ knoWe about GIN PILLS. "1 ath noW , taking' tny third box of OM PILli1S," she wrlica. "The 'rain acrofie MY back and kiclneYs haa. almost tirolY gone. T Was a great eufferer frorn Itholinkatiera, all ut It hitS 100 suer fret.% Pain. 'yhe Back stid 'Weak 14m, gfrOl'utlY wav Woln‘i IChilicsf4, to try orN 50c. a Box 6 for $2.50. Sititinie free yOu write 'National Drug Co. -of Cahada, UO1tec11 Tererite , SOT110 people eettia kthinka. anthropist rnoro_ly an easy anoxic, Keep 'Kinard's Dirtimitit In the honge. .Brings Relief Instantly No Remedy 'Like Old "NorvIline" to Cure Pain or Soreness. That terrible ache—how you fairly reel' with it—that stabbing, burning neuralgia—what misery it cauees. • Never . niind, you don't have to suffer Cop WEEKLY IN LIVE TOW i4' All reedy baleed to a sleety ; whole, mealy end,full Savored. Ileating *Illy Is oteessery. )0 ^ waist001 'Ottetit Isort:11 a 11=4. the is worth. two ' in the bare_ 'You can't provotst Spavin, Ringhone, Splint, or curbfrem putting your horse in the barn but you • can prevent these troublc4 from keeping horses in the tiara very.loag. You can get KEN ALES SPAVIN CURE :C11113Mecstgqftio=d%&Ifl • and horsetneu, :will Say So. Our book "Treatise on the horse' ' free. •• , Dr. It .3-RENDALL Co..cnosberg rails, Vt. FARVA3 FOR Sal.IL 11. w, 0 AW'SObl, 'nary Coll:nu-41s Sir ssts„. Toronto. Tr YOU WANT TO ScT OR szid, I. Fruit. Steck. Grain. or Dairy Par% write 11. W. 'Dawson. Branin1411. ")r '14 Colborne Rt- Toronto. K. W. DAWSON, COlborns St.. Taranta. NEWSPAPERS FOR SA1.E. —use Nerviline, it's a sure cure. Not an experiment, because nearly forty years of wonderful success has made a name for Nerviline among theipeo- ple of many different nations. "There is nothing speedier to end Neuralgic headache than old-tim.e 'Nerviline," writes Mr. G. C. Dalgleish, from Ev- anston. "It is so powerful and pene- trating that- It seems to eat up any pain in a minute. My family couldn't get along without Nerviline. We al- ways keep the 50e. family size bottle handy on the shelf, and use it to end chest colds, sore throat, coughs, ear- ache, toothache and pain in the_ back. My wife swears by Nerviline. For cramps its effect is astonishing and we believe it is better and speedier than any other household family rem- . The Test. Nurse—Well, doctor, must we give him up? • •• Doctor—Not while he can sign a cheque. Znziazws,Idainient Lumber:flaws Friend When She Opened On. Him. Wife --The doctor Said I must keep gay mouth shut when in the cold air. - Hub—I'll open the window,im- mediately. Only One "BISON° QUININE" To get the genuine, call for full nam, LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE. Look for, signature of E. W. GROVE. Cures a Cold in One Day. 260. Ths Pleasure. "1 suppose your husband gets a great deal of pleasure out of his garden?" "Yes, indeed. He goes out. every evening and finds fault with what the hired gardener has done during She day." Idniment used by Physicians. Trying to get there. The fervent, temperance oratoa stopped in the midst of his speech and said impressively: "My friend, if all the Saloons were•at the bottom of the ,sea,, what would be the inevitable result'?" And from the back of the room came. the loud, emphatic reply: "Lots of us people would get drowned!" Try Murine Eye Remedy If you have Red, Weak, Watery Byes or Granulated Eyelids. Doesn't Sinati. ---Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Marine Eye Remedy, Teigeid, 2e, 50e. Murine Bye Salve in Aseptie Tubes, Sc, 50c. Eye Books Free by Mail. flIHeuereiyneaTogye it,11 oromr A0141 Erectoise.: NeeladicenariDio somethang of a, v ti,vidnan Trish el---ntaitraein Pat's Will. . elderl,v g a who knew village where no solicitor had ever penetrated, tend evae in the habit of arranging the disputes ofhie neighbore and making their wills. At an early hour :One 'morning he was aroused fromhis gun:them eby a knocking at hie gate, ttaiti, putti•ng bitike0.41 (AA of the window, he ask- ed eke itb thea. "11'6 me, yea. 'honor; Paddy Flah- erty. 1 •Geilld not get a wink of qtto.p• thinkin" of the will. 1 ha,ve ".vrriat's the niatter with the will1" Said the amateur :lawyer. ''Matite,r,•indeed I" ,repaied Pat, "Sate Inlef 've not Wt myself a throe logged stool to sit, upon." GYork Count.Y. Stationery and Book Business in.. connection. Price mai, 24.000. Terrna-liberal. Wilson Publish.. !rig Company,. 73 West Adelaide Street: Toronto. anseaet.ettgaisa ONION GROWERS. GET LITERA- ture re onion weeders. R. G. Bruner. Olinda, Ont. , TUMORS. LUM,Ps. interzial and external,' curet" with. out pain by oar home treatment. Writo las befcire too late. Dr_ Bel -trawl Medical. Co., Limited, Collingwood, Ont. Warmer or Colder-. "You lore nie, dealing7" he "A little," eh e replied. "Ah, 'bat do yet not think you leve will Deem • • "Yes, but ren not, • mire rues ce.vea in 5 to 3.4 Day= Druists refund money if FAZES, OINTggMENT fails to cure it,citing. ameee, or Protruding Fifes. „First applicatioal gives' relief. 60c. • - SettIng Hun Right. Jail Visitor: "You have betta, tried by adversity, ray feitiad." Priedner : "You're wrong in the name, mistier. It was Judge Brown." Minard's Liniment Co.. Limited. I was very sick with Quinsy VA.. thought I would strangle. I used, 1KIN.A1'lD'S LINIMENT and it cured, me at once. I am never without it now. 'Yours gratefully. MRS. C. D. 1'RINCE:1. Nautvigewauk, Oot. 21st. Where She Got Them. Mrs. Whittler—What delightful; manners your daughter has. Mrs. Bilter (proudly)—Yee. You see, she has beeu away from home. SO much! Ask for minerals and take no other. ' No Good, 'Master. A clergyman in Prince Edwatd Island some years ago, When pre. aching on the sweetnees of home and duties of husbaadssaid that old married men should kise their arives as they did when they were a year or two married. Meeting the preacher the next day aa old man aid:s"It's no good, maieter.", "What isn't'?" asked the preacher.' "Weel," said the man, "when I went home alter the sernion last night and kissed my wife she said— ' What's gone wrotig with you,, you old fool?' " Dr. Morse's Indian R,00t, Pills are made according to a formula in use nearly a century ago among the Indians, and learned from theta by Dr, More. Though repeated at- tempts have beet). niatle, by physi- delis and chartists, lahas been found impossible to improve the formula or the pills. Dr, Morse's ledlite Root Pills are a ousehoid remedy through- out the world for Constipation and all kidney and Liver troublas. They act promptly and effectively, and 49 C1eati46* the 5teutc El). 4. 18—'1.4.4