The Exeter Times, 1891-4-23, Page 7Ia used both internally and externally.
It sots quickly, affording almost instant_
relief from the severest pain.
3P4C>111..a0,1.1TPr
RHEUMATISM,
Neuralgia, Sciatica
Lumbago, Backache,
Headache,
1 Toothache,
Sore Throat,
Frost Bites, Sprains,
Bruises, Burns, Etc -
sola]• by Drnngists, aria heaters everywhere,
Petty (nate u..11znttle. Directions in
11 bangnes
TOE CHARLES A. YQGELER CO.. Bateitnere, Md.
G'sila ori Detlat. TOrcEto, Fiat.
SHILOH'S
CONSU PTION
CURE.
tee=s of this Great Cough Cure L;
'tial.+at aper.ilh:l in the history of medicine.
1 druggists are authorized to sell it on a posi
regu'ir n e., arestthat noothercure can sue.
dull; etanel. That it may become known,.
Proprietors, at an enormous e'tpeasr, are
eine a Sawnle Bettie Free hirci every dome
tete L nice i eerie. ata 4 Canada. it you haw
Cosi =,1➢, S •rn ; L et, to i,c neidii', t h, for
w bl err c, i ,r c'u1 l hat riot veto,
-Lii a r * i..t`r ii, , i"; r r•ru sty eel area'
re if y.rt a A filet bean.,, . (]fawn
it„ et, . year lime:nee fee
1.$ 4E`w�l t P. ia,c6�.,511 PQi,nnl
c+ u r l un, rrr• sore fir lack /ante,
P.n. r > tray i.r,+r"1,rPU '
1--m N, 1,4 MI r4aittora a
am ,% 1r 'r,, . irnM
ge;W*of .,rf'+ori C", 1,, *510
a•saa,P:+a• t 1, a �w, L u a,:ale•,,,
ins, a,f ui i �r"ima:
11 not At, errs,• to a, oet 1. r n. ak. ,I
1 + a ,
1 ekn a ,+
ore o ohm.
tPfia.
\r n +ry•d tf o, tai,P:Iami nEnm Are.
tt.Ita4 t•,. [tf,x I+S°Porf tinnd•Mb1tn4
/01
OF
OodLi er011:
AND Ttilt
phosialdtes of Lime and Soda.
0 other Emulsion is. so
easyto take.
It does not separate nor
spoil.
It is always sweet as cream.
The most sensitive stomach
can retain It.
CURES
Scrofulous and
Wasting Diseases.
Chronic Cough.
Loss of Appetite.
Mental and Nervous
Prostration.
General Debility,. &c.
Beware of all imitations. Ask for
"the D. & L." Emulsion, and refuse
all others.
PRICE SOC. AND $1 PER n0TY1-E.
iri-SEED
p b� 1ULC1
EMSI
c OUP D
aROf1C4ITIS
136 Lexington Ave.New York City, Sept. 19,1888.
tri have used the Flax -Seed Emulsion in several
vases of Chronic Bronchitis, And the early stages of
Phthisis, and have been well pleased with the results.
JAMES K. CROOK, M.D.
CONUMPTWN
ookl N Y Feb
yn, ., case of
1889.
I have used your.Timulsion in a of,i'hthisis
consumption) with beneficial results, where patient
�puld not use Cod Liver Oil in any, form. '
i S. H. DROGE, M. D.
IERVOUS PROSTRATION
N
Brooklyn; N. Y.; Dec. 20th, 1888.
1 can strongly recommend Flax Seed Emulsion as
elpful to the relief and possibly the cure of all Lung,
ronchial and Nervous Affections, and a good gen-
ral tonic in physical debilityy.
JOHN F. TALIYIAGE, M. D.
URAL RAL D a 1 L ITY
Brooklyn N. Y., Oct. 10th, 1888.
T regard Flax Seed Emulsion as greatly superior to
e Cod Liver Oil Emulsions so generally in use.
D. A. GORTON, M. D.
VASTI G DISEASES
.
137 West 84th St.
New York, Aug. 0, 1868. '
r have used your Flax -Seed Emulsion Compound
a severe ease of Mal -nutrition and the result was
we than hoped for -it was marvelous, and con -
nous. I recommend it cheerfully to the profession
humanity at large. M. H. GILBERT, M.D.
E MAT S.
old by Druggists, Price $1.00.
AX -SEED EMULSION CO.
35 Liberty St., New York.
WINE AND TOBAGO.
count Toistot licnounces the TwIn EvU.
To search out the cause or root of an evil
is the first duty of a reformer. To apply
the remedy intelligently and successfully
one must be acquainted with the disease.
Recognizing these basal truths Count Leo
Tolstoi, the Russian novelist and social re-
generator, who has recently come out so.
t the(wile strongly against twin oils of
wine,dxlnking and tobacco smoking haa.
been enquiring into the cause of
the evils, Unlike his predecessors
in the some field who generally agree iu at-
tributing the prevalence of these practices
largely to custom in the beginntuR and
afterwards to the power of habit, (fount
Tolstoi think he finds it rather in the moral
than inthesensuousnature, and believes that
it is due to an attempt on the part• of those
who indulge the habit to drown the voice
of conscience and not to custom. inclination,
pleasure, or amusement The steps by which
he reaches this conclusion are briefly as fol-
lows : After postu'ating that all human
activites are of two kinds ;those which con.
list in bringing one's conduct into harmony
with the dictates of ones conscience, and
those which consist in concealing from one's
sell' the manifestations of conscience se as to
make it possible tolivea%one is living; and
after showing that the second object, the
concealing of the manifestations of con-
seienee, may be attained either by engaging
in occupations calculated to withdraw tine's
attention from the teachingsofeouseieace
or by darkening the conscience itself, be
pproceeds to show WO the external means
bei ng; insutfieient men, turn to tlieir cape and
their pipes and thus accomplisk what
business with all ire engrsssiii require-
tnents could nut ett-ect, He quotes
from the records of crime to show
that what men scrupled to do when weber,
they would execute with heartiness under
the rulinence of a atiinulant or narcotic.
His eonctusion. therefore, is" that the habit
of indulging in intoxicating s' u►lauts in
lee ge orsmell doses,periodically Aeoutinu.
misty, in the !ditherer the towersoeial moles,
is always induced by the same cause, carne
ly, the need of inutiling the eonscicuce, in
order not to be compelled to take notice of
the discord hetwe=n actual life and the re-
quisitions of eonseienee,"
No one can read the striking article of
this renowned writer without leeliuga that
he has come auto the preeenee of an nide.
pendent thinker, and a man honest and
st:•cere within. Objections are not shirked
but squarely facets. t)fteu his expiate atietis
are exceedingly novel. For instance, his
disposition of the pleat urged by mune-
co consumers that awaking conduct% to
efficient mental work, He admits that
a greater quantum of work may be
aecomplished under the soothing influence
of the narcotic; but contends that while the
quantity may be im:re sed the quality is eh
ways lowered. Ile seys i " A man who works
is always conscious of two beings within
birnself•�-the one who engages in work and
the judgment
t re eve whosite
in the
upon
P
t work
done. The severer the judgment he passes,
thoslower and thetnoroperfect is the work
done,and ('ire ty r.o. Ifthejudgebeundertho
influence of a narcotic or a stimulant, there
will be mote work done but of an inferior
quality." Thefarniliar plea of the smoker
that unless he amekee he cannot get his
thoughts upon paperbe interprets to signify
that the worker has nothing; to put down or
that the ideas he is endeavoring to ,give ex-
pressionto have not matured in his con-
aeiousnossand that the living critic within
unclounded by tobacco fumes, tells him
so. Vomit 'lolstoi's advice under touch
circumstances is, that instead of seeking
kelp from the pipe the man shall apply him-
self to his subject, weigh and discuss its
objeetiona and generally elucidate his
thoughts to himself. That this is the more
excellent way few unprejudiced persons will
be disposed for a moment to question.
But while it is admitted that Count
Tolstof's article, which it attracting wide-
spread notion at present, contains a state•
ment of many itnportaut truths that are
beyond controversy, and indicates more
than a superficial acquaintance told), the in-
tricate and complex Workings of the human
mind, and while it is admitted that the evil
effects upon the race of indulgence in
stimulants and narcotics is under rather
than overstated, it must nevertheless be
charged against this ingenious theory that,
like many another, it fails to account for
alithe facts. In the crucial test it is found
wanting. I`To doubt the Coimt is right in
affirming that many persons turn to their
pipes and cups in order to drown the voice
of conscience which protests against their
manner of life, but to say that all do so end.
that here we have furnished the clue to the
general practice is asserting what is incap-
able of proof and what is contrary to every
man's observation. Nor is it likely that
Connt'I olstoi, had be been. familiar with the
social customs that prevail in the New
World, would have hazarded a statement
so sweeping. He would have seen that in
the beginning at least many young persons,
boys and budding young men, are led to in-
dulge not for the sake of quieting their con-
sciences, but because to smoke a cigar or
tip a ease Seems evenly, end they long to be
ineli, ar because it is the custom among
those whom they admire and they have a
dread of being considered unsociable or pe-
culiar, or for the sake of amusement.
And besides the theory is at war with a
fact illustrated over and over again that the
giving up of the pipe which many have done
because they believed the practice to be an
evil and morally wrong instead of being fol-
lowed by a very comfortable feeling, which
ought to be the -result if one is living ac-
ording,�t) one'srconscience has had the very
pposite effect and has rendered the man
eevish and irritable beyond endurance.
The fact is that after a man has for a time
indulged aphysiological change takes place,
an artificial appetite or craving is engender
ed and the whole system cries out for in-
dulgence. It is doubtful whether any prac-
tical good will result from this new temper.
once theory. Like his definition or descrip-
tion of a Christian which at a stroke un-
Christianizesmen everywhere,' this the latest
theory of the distinguished Rnssiron is `des-
tined to be numbered among .t1ie curious
productions of an honest but mistakenaums.
ments in diplomatic circles are arousing
a very general apprehension that the long.
expected and greatly -dreaded conflict is
near at hand. The recent alliance between
France and Russia confirms this impression,
while it is stated that the heads of the
European powers are. soon to, be informed of
a Russian scheme of attack which is likely
to declare itself in autumn. The threatening
outlook and the necessity of Belgium re-
maining neutral will probably be Lord'
Salisbury's justification if the. matter of his
promise to Ming' Leopold comes up in Parlia-
ment.
The statement of Superintendent Porter
of the United. States census bureau that the
coloredpeople inthe
reSouth have
not multi-
plied as rapidly as.their white neighbors
and that they have not.held their own in
the last decade will come.as a surprise . to 1
those who have been accustomed to think 1
of the negro cut a veryfeennd race. Yr. 1
Portelt ealotdaltel *It a Ilse &ratiio Ulan& 1
and South central states Missouri and
Kansas, theraare 16,868,2O5 whitee,,6,90G,.
16a colored and 10,888 Chinese, Japanese
and Indians.
t3ihat'assucefor the geese issauce for the
gander." So seems to think the beautiful
I�nglish women, Beeline Neal, who up to
date has succeeded in inveighing forty-three
men to marry her by advertising herself as
a wealthy widow. This marrying one part-
ner while
y
rthe other isi.
of r r olive, havingbeen
confined principally to the lords of cration,
may now take a turn for a little, while the
women give the men a dose of their own
ii edieiue, It is stated that the irresistible
charmer has been arrested and so far as
Eveline is concerned the game is probably
up.
The gentlerr,an tramp who scorns to poi -
lute his band by bringing it into eontact
with A bucksaw or a shovel will henceforth
fare ill in the state of Delaware whose legis-
lature
has just passed a bill providing that
tramps and vagabonds shall be compelled to
work on public works, eight hours a clay
for sixty days. This is a piece of law -mak-
ing that many another community might
imitate with profit both to itself and to the
tramp. These Knights of the road need to
be taught the wholesorrie truth uttered
dearlytwo rnilleniur�nsago, "If any roan
will pot work neither shall he eat.."
BABOON h
UowT' a WARM Mete d•trle4 as Coo 14. of
# Troop or Ills Mote*.
Whatever may be the intelligence aflame
or domesticated monkeys and bahoone, the
measure of their capacity must be judged by
their actions in a state of mature, it bas
often been raid that baboons will nit acid
waren themselves at a ere, bat cannot be
taught to put on a stick to keep it alight.
E, i.m l ash.&, however, declares he has seen
them carrying; t'rlhes; but most pefgle
„
think he must have mistaken tate dwarf
aborih,ines for balsnons. The folloaving OR.
• count, however, *iven b • an eye-w•t
I shows wonderful y y i noes,
a et#ul amount of ,intellrgertt
" cunning, in a wild baboon, even to the point
of counting to a smallextetat.
As is well :known, bttboans always helve as
l leader, whom they obey implicitly. A troop
y of baltowie, led by an old male of great size,
bad for a long time done traueh uthethief au a
aiertaitt mountainous diet ries of (..tpe Colo
u so it WWI tleteruained to shoot the leader. r
N>;as easy to resole e, but not so easy to do
for at the trent distant Fight of al, Clint Witl
•a gain the [whole troop -mita vanielt : whit(
for uua<rined emu they; eared nothing.
The leader tvonld mara'ti daWn; the ntiiun-
I, taiu dc;fa;autly, with a lar; o bough in his
hand, which lie used as a stick, followed by
the whole tribe, .and commit terrible depth -
;Wiwi ;n gardens and vineyards, destroy
ing much more thou they ate, but always
ceping atiespectful diatanee from anything
like an ambush. At last the farmers round
determined to build a wall in a vineyard,
4
. fad slicer the
onem y • behind a
from1 ' ( 't
n The
well was built, altl , thh baboons watching, the
operation from a fad difitance, and coining
downwhen the workmen were gone, to ex• c
amine it minutely.
It seemed (bo as though they were in the
habit of counting ; for if. by way of experi-
ment, oae man remained behind, no Lebow)
ever put in an Appearance. tint at fact
mail, the tyrant, contrived by saperior
cunning,•to outwit baboon, who bad certainly
t ahown himself to be no ignoble foe.
13y mtroducing behind the sheltering wall
an extra• number of watchers, in batebes of
two or three at a time, with carefully -eon.
ceased guns, and then sending away the
usual number, and repeating this manwuvre
several times, they succeeded in fairly puz-
zling the baboon, and were able to retain
two armed men, until the leader, believing
be had seen all bis enemies safely orf the
promisee, led his troops to raid as usual, and
was shot dead, his followers malting away
helter-skelter in consternation, and carrying
off the young to a plane of safety,.
It is not always, however, that monkeys
and baboons forsake a wounded. comrade.
They will moan and weep over the dying in
a manner so intensely human that hunters
used at onetime to Hyoid shooting them, look-
ing.upon it as little short of murder. Es•
rectally is this the case when there are
females with their young ones. If the
mother be shot, the little one will cling
about her weeping like a human baby, will
dip its hand, in the blood and hold it np im-
ploringly ; while a wounded monkey will
staunch the blood with its hand or with
leaves, all the time crying and groaning in a
way which is distressing to a tender-hearted
sportsman.
;;NAKEa IN INDIA.
The Mortality from Their Bites -Slaughter
of the iieh:iies.
The mortality of snake -bite in India is
very great, says the Yinete tnth Century. The
average loss of life during the last eight years
has been 19,880 human beings and 2,100
head of cattle yearly. I regret that I am
unable to state how many of these deaths are
to be ascribed to the cobra or each particular
snake, as I have been unable to obtain any
reliable returns which entered into this spe.
cial detail. But when conducting au investi-
gation into this subject in India some years
ago I was then able to make out that of 11,-
416 deaths of human, beings in 1869, out of
a population of ]20,914,283. 2,690 were
assigned to cobras, 359 to kraits,
the balance being caused by snakes
unnamed. This return is of little
value, but it indicates what is well
known, that the cobra is by far the most de-
structive of the venomous snakes of India.
V. Richards, who has investigated the
subject closely, says the cobra causes nine -
ten ths
ine-tenths of the human deaths. The snakes
which are most destructive to life are prob-
ably in the following order: The cobra,
Naja tripudians ; the krait, Bungarus cceru-
leus the kupper, Echis carinate ; Russell's
viper, Dabioa russelli ; the hamadryas.
Ophiophagus elaps ; the Raj-samp, . Bun-
garus fasciatus, The hydrophidtn are prob-
ably not less dangerous, but they are com-
paratively rare, and seldom brought in con-
tact with human beings, and thus do not
contribute so largely to the death -rate The
number of snakes destroyed in : 1887
amounted to 562,221, for which rewards
amounting to 37,912rupees were paid. The
table shows in detail the number of human
beings and cattle killed by all poisonous
snakes toe ether, the number of snakes killed,
and the amounts pail for their destruction
each year from 1880 to 1887, inclusive Num-
ber of people killed 1880, 19,150;1881, 18,-
670 ; 1882, 19,519•; 1883, 20,067 ; 1884 19,-
629; 1885, 20,142; 1886, 22,134; 1887, 19,-
740.
Number of cattle killed : 1880, 2,536 ;
1881,1882,2029,2 "
1883,1
1Gr 64 •1
4 854
1,72 ; 1885,1,48 ;1886, 2,51 ;1887, 2,716.
Number, of snakes killed :1880, 212,766 ;
1881, 254,9781
ssz 22 4oi • 1883,
; ,3412,752;
1884, 308,9S1 ; 1885, 420,044 ; 1886, 417,596 ;
1887, 562,221. Amount of rewards paid :
880, 11,664 rupees; 1881, 11,096 rupees;
882, 15,883 rupees ; 1883, 22,353 rupees;
884, 28,551 rupees ; 1885, 25,213 rupees;!
886, 18,861 rapes; 1886, BLOW =liege-
Poisoned at a Funeral,
Rainey, a Wive in the Department of the
Seine-et•Oise, is in. estate of greatperturba-
tion over a poisoning cline, which so far has
resulted in the death of three persons. A
few .days age a widow, much, respected in the
place, died of consumption, and on
return.
mg, ,from thefumeral tothe house hon a some of
her neighbours, who had been very kind to
her, espied a bottle of quinine wine, which
h'
.tde
benv '
gi en to her by her daughter sonic
nmonths before, but of which she had only
drunk a small glass, as it ]rad disagreed with
her. Someone sugeeste(1 that the rnourrling
friends might revive their spirits by euipting.
the bottle, and the proposition was accepted
with alaerity. Three persons partook of the
wine. The first to staler was Madame
Gouali;<:., the wife of a railway employe, who
was also present. A quarter of an hour
after she lied taken her glass she was seized
with violent pains, and expired aeon after-
wards, The doctor who had been called in
ascribeil her death to apoplexy, ane her
husband, overcome With eviction, filled a
large glass with the kine and (;rank it off,
He was at once taken ill in his turn, and in
the meantime a friend -•-also in the service
of the railway company -had rushed upstairs
to hie room on the upper floor howling with
anguish, The (lector; speedily recalled, saw
at once that these poor people had taken
poison, and despatched a messenger to the.
police station. A large crowd assembled in
front of tete house, and when the officiate
arrived they had the utmost difficulty
in forcing their way through, the throng.
In spite, however, of all efforts AMC to
save them, the twwo then flied. This
tragedy occurred on Sunday, the day of
the funeral, and on the following morning
the oorilse of the widow was exhumed, and
-ubjeeted, with the bellies of her friend„, to
it post-mortem examination. 4n Monday
ruorntug tine daughter of the poor women,
who ha(t given her the brittle, was interrog.
(tied at Rainey by the judicial authorities,
and laid that after she had purchased it her
husband had tasted its contents and had
taken ill, but her brother remembered that
his mother had naked him to empty it powder
into it. Where this powder had been
procured he could not saay. ^ ,....
o:gtoise8,
The gregarious porpoise, or Pherori r(:r
1.41tedfe, is one of the. most jolly and Cafelew..,
ft,hen but the seen, Hat is hardly ever foetid
ane,delights to join great 1. LI;►ir..g pcar-
tie,9, and scour the nshing coasts running
into all the coves and liey;s ruing the route
nit s ,surtrarea entering• the naautlis of thisal
yrs, hi pursuit of other /isle% lint even
oen"at great herd of porpoises is iia persuis
evhool of c;►pelau, herring, reined,
r other tial►, it will atop its nareit
play,.
The gregarious ,arious perpeiee is ktanw• a by vari-
ous mance along the coasts of Likelier.
Newfoundland, she maritime provinces of
G;'anada,and New England. The bcst-known
of these1amelareputling•pigs, herring;•hogit,
sea -hogs, and ratm(ltcads. Tbt porpoise is
frwn four
to six feet cct long, With a thick
round body, end black, shining. beirlersskin.
SI hen he is above water for some time, with
the hot sun shiningt upon him, bis bare hide
fairly glistens with oil, and if you pass to
leeward of hint in aBoat you catch his
NORTHROP & LYM N'S
t•
tis
or
DIScoviEny
atranit oily smell. Like the whale, he is
obliged to rise to the surface regularly to
breathe, and he sends his breath through a
blow•holc situated on the top of his head.
'Chen breathing; through dais curious f;lnnel
he makes a plifii+rg, labored sort of notion
wvinich oro aunts for one of his names. If you.
should see him alone on a fine day in sone
little cove, leo would look exactly like a big
black pot turned bottom up bobbing up and
down. lit: has from forty to fifty teeth, a
wide mouth, rind an estonishing stomach.
lint he has the smallest ear to be found, I
suppose, on nny beast of his size. It is no
bigger than n pinhole,. and is placed just
about an inch behind his eye. But small as
it is, no fish that swims the sea has sharper
hearing, and none will more quickly take.
alarm .at the slightest sound.
Protestant Persecution in Russia.
Recent events lir Russia are making it
evident that the terrible persecutions to
which the Jews have been subjected during
the past few months ore not simply because
they are the sons of Abraham, but because
they are not members of the Greek Church.
Latterly the realintention of the method.ties has manifested itself more openly and
the pains of persecution which were mono-
polized by the Jews are beginning to fall on
Protestants as well, and indeed on
all who are not of the established religion.
Protestantism in all its varied forms is be-
ing repressed by officials in South Russia,
and army spies and informers are busy
reporting religions meetings and swearing
to. suspicions of heterodoxy, upon which
people are imprisoned or packed off to
Siberia. This fact explains why the rumor
should have been circulated that the Grand
Duchess Sergius who is the grand daugbter
of Queen Victoria had been converted to
the Greek faith. The fact appears to be,
however, that the Duchess who is most
unhappily married has been persuaded by her
brute of a husband who is reported to have
used arguments not generally employed in
producing conviction. The Vienna corres-
pondent of the London Times has again
i eiterated after a quasi -denial of his asser-
tion that the wife of Sergius is not changing
her religion voluntarily, but is only yiekling
to moral suasion of a very brutal kind.
What will England have to say to this
should the information prove to be well-
founded ?
The expenditure for liquors and narcotics
absorbs the net proceds of one day's work
of the world per week.
Several of the Welsh songs that -are most
popular at the present dayQdate from the
eleventh century.
Chancellor Von Caprivi has notified Lord
Salisbury that Germany will abandon Sou th-
west Africa unloas the Anglo -German
syndicate succeeds in raising the proposed
capital which is Considered doubtful. ubtful. if;;;
An epidemic resembling diphtheria is pre-
vailing among the children of the Heohsber-
ville valley, inPennsylvania.
A stern father in Keya Paha county, Neb.,
with a large family of girls, has passed the
cold edict that each, beau who frequents his
domicile through the Wintermustcontribute
a load of sawed stove wood.
For some years past society dances have
steadily degenerated in style and character,
until at the present time little remains of
their former grace and elegance.
It has been pointed out, in connection
with the discoverythat in England the aver-
of men is decreasing age statureg while that
of women is increasing -a fact attributable,
it is claimed, to the stunting effect of the to-
bacco habit upon the masculine portion of
humanity -that if this be true the statement
should give heart to the advocates of Women's
rights, since in the natural course bf events
the result of the tendency thus established.
will be bo reduoe men more and more to the
uuim ortaass •i mora lrnppOta.
A :.�.
14
44
. ,
� � Blood
-44* Purifier
A Medical Triumph T
HOW THE HATH OF
ONg OF BELL5V1L.LE'S CITIZEN
WAS RESTORED.
Remarkable Cure of Dropsy and
Dysposia.
?tStt, S;txrst. T. (`iASt;T,ellerilit, writes;
'In the opring;of 1b8.1 I beg}auto be troubled
with Dy:spepaia, which gradually became;
snare and more distressing,, 1 used various
domestic remedies. and applied to my phy
sicifau, but received AO benefit, B tins tune
my trouble assumed the form of repay. 1
was tumble to use any feed wbetever, except
boiled mills and bread; my lumbo were awol•
len to twice their natural size; all hopes of
my recovery were ,given up, and 1 quito ex-
pecte(ladeath within a few ui:t! r Nnnewine
ANA LTAfAY':i Veorneuee Insii,Ytruy horning j
been recommended to me,, I tried ,a bottle
with but little hope of relief ; and now, after
usit(geight bottles, tr(y Dyspepsia, and Dropsy
are cured, Although now eeventy°.nine years
of age, I can enjoy my melees well as ever,
and my „ enetal health is good. I:etti well
known in this t' -:tion of Canada, laving
lived here fifty-seven years; and yen have,.
liberty to use my name in recommendation'
if your \tuts este: J iseov'srx, wvl,i.h liar;
a.ona such wonders im any; Care."
A Very Bad Case 1
DYSPEPSIA, VANQUISHED,
Mo. JA»sa Jon score, 4th ecu.„ lilt lot,
Amaranth, writes:: "Two_bottles of ISon-
weaP tc LrD[A\'s V E(sa ri pLE Discov' ix
cured me of Dyspepsia, Mine was a bad Lase -
and 1 had tried s number of other prenat•a-
tionswithoutglettinganyfi benefit frota tnem."
Dyspepsia Had to Go.
Mii, W. J. Dla}-girt, SS Ingham, carpenter
and builder, writea; "Three years ago 1 was
greatly troubled with Dysppeepsia; a pain be.
tweet; myshouldera was so bad ]hail thou9bt
I would have to quit norlt' altogether. No
Medicine ,gave notelet, until I got c. hart?u of
l!1rlr.TRitUr & L 'u tr s VkGETAI:r.F.-
Frw, which gave me relief. I continued using
the medicine until 1 had taken three bottles,
when 1 was perfectly well, I consider it in-
valuable as a euro for 1)h sptpsia. 1 know of
€everal persons who have used it with the
tame benefit."
NORTHROP& LYDIAN CP
TORONTO, PROPRIETORS.
DO YOU KEEP IT IN THE HOUSE?
ALLEN'S
NQ BETTER REMEDY FOR
couGHS, corms, CROUP, CONwVMPTtQN,
EXETER
Tile undersigned wishes to inform tha Public to general that ire
keeps constantly in stocks all kinds of
BUILDIYCIr MATERIAL
Dresaeci or struc,ree cid.
PI v E AND HEMLOCK LUMBER.
SHINGLES A SPECIALTY
G OO,OOO X X and XX X Pine and Cedar Shinnies now in.
stock. A call solicited and satisfaction guflranted.
t,t t a' ferry Davis
J'"A2 E$ "072T LZB,
DIRECTLY TO THE SPOT.
I11STANTRIEOCIS Ig ITS IGTIOlit
Por CRAMPS, CHILLS, COLIC,
DIARREI EA, DYSENTERY,
CHOLERA 1VIORI3US,
and all BOWEL COMPLAINTS,
NO RE=MEDY EQUALS
THE PAIN -KILLER.
In Canadian Cholera and Bowel
Complaints its effect Is magical.
It aures in a very short time.
THE BEST FAM it -Y REMEDY FOR
BURNS, BRUISES, SPRAINS.
RHEUMATISM,
NEURALGIA, and TOOTHACHE.
3060 EVERYWHERE Ar 280. A BO7ri.e.
8 Eeware of Counterfeits and Imitations.
Farmers and Threshers
-SHOULD USE -
McCall Bros.' Lard.iue Oil,
OYLINDFR, WOOL, BOILER, AND PURGER OILS
SEE TaAT THE BARRELS ARI: BRANDED
MoCALL BROS,
LARDINE - - TORONTO.
F011 SALE BY BISShiTT BROS., EXETER.
Manufactured only at THOMAS Hotoowey's ESeenlasnAICNT,
78, Nii.NV- OXFORD STR t71.', TAXtsT1]ON.
oro
•O to
4 o a
a.
IP so.
s.•S>zcO" cos �w Co to
N.
w.
es ip'
°t S' �e3oe se- cay•,
�s w o, 4' 'c�
ea3 w oeo°o o b
t 4 e
0
T i
D
s 4
�e
'1aSest. t�o4Pse1
GX
P'0 a
e
see
0 ea" X04 �°400,�ntit' o°�o�aw va, °
e iit/1'kc ,,
s' Purchasers should look to the Zabel on- the Boxes and Pots.
If the address is not 583, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious.