The Exeter Times, 1891-4-30, Page 7H
3P.A.x■.
—CS7'Sv�S,--o
RHEUMATISM
9-
Neuralgia, Sciatica
g 9
Lurnba --go, Backache,
Headache,
Toothache,
Sere Throat,
Frost Bites, Sprains,
Bruises9 urns, Etc.
Sold by nneenists and Dealere everywhere,
Fifty Ceuta a bottle. Directions in
Il Languages.
THECHARLES A. VOGELER CO„Baltimore, Md
• Canadian Depot: Toronto, Ont.
4
1
4
SHILOH'S
CONSU M !
ON
CURE.
v
r
bile seems of this Great Cough Cure le
out a parallel in the history of medicine.
n
O
C
.are stauthorized sail zt n a
a
i s are to
a n
Ia' pose
See guarantee, S t ereuraeanC-
.atet thane a . at h
en
cessfully stand. That it may become known,
the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are
placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home
in the United States and Canada. If you have
a Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for
it will cure you. If your child has the Croup,
orWhooping Cough, use itpromptly, and relief
is sure. If you, dread that insidious disease
Consumption, use it. Ask, your Druggist for
SHILOH'S CURE,. Price to cis,, t cis. and
&r,ao, If your Lungs are sole orBack lame.
ase Shiloh' s Porous Plaster, Price «S
Snag state f. $ erthevelsenteadeat
west Crpala, le, Arnea erg- .laaahn,
3.x117 and da, DAM. Ae.r h.tu,in.
,ea enc Qilterserrd uega,+,ted.1Wiy
1,t :WO Somo,an,ever esuo,Waa
1010111Vett cauelthefolk alai nra
1 leitte, %violet -ernes O. EV411 t,^-
>rinneaa pre rasa ferniest tram * t1
ade .,tneg's.Nr.hewIandour
told tint Ten. tan reaa ins re limp
teat she deo. l ec dare
1 30 l sisal f tie
r ak
✓ ao Viler. amkum, a anlnngthr,
• nud.I,aiv onJ<•1.faB.rptliruraa,etreter,
111.0n1 1 e t t t'o.,lInxtit$OPortia n41,111alue
i
r
.9'
1
Elhisioll
Cod Liver ail
AND THE
IIypopho ,nhites of Limo and Soda,
No other Emulsion is so
easy to take.
It does not separate nor
Spoil.
It is always sweet as cream.
The znrist sensitive stomach
can retain it.
CURES
Scrofulous and
Wasting Diseases.
Chronic Cough.
Loss of Appetite.
–Mental and Nervous
Prostration.
General Debility, t'zc.
Beware of all imitations. Ask for
"the D. & L.” Emulsion, and refuse
all others.
PRICE 50C AND 51 PER BOTTLE.
E .} -.SES
COMPOUND
CHT.
186 Lexington Ave.New York City, Sept. f9, 1888.
I have used the Flax -Seed Emulsion in several
cases of Chronic Bronchitis, and the early stages of
Phthisis, and have been well pleased with the results.
JAMES K. CROOK, M.D.
E
CO -g SU FP 11.1
Brooklyn, N. Y., Feb. 14th 1889.
I have used your Emulsion in a case of Phthisis
(consumption) with beneficial results, where patient
Could not use Cod. Liver Oil in any form.
J. H. DROGE, M. D.
NE.{ T.. .K.ION
sBrooklyn, N. Y., Dec. 20th, 1888.
I can st ingly recommend Flax Seed Emulsion as
helpful to ,t
herelief andpossibly
Bronchi t1 and Nervous ffectins, and a good gen-
tial tonic in physical debility.
JOHN If. TALMAGE, M. D.
A
� " .. eft?.
E L MIT
Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. loth 1888.
I regard Flax Seed Emulsion as greatly superior to
the Cod Liver Oil Emulsions so generally in Ise.
D. A. GORTON, M, D.
ESTEE
DISEASES
137 West 84th St.
New York, Au 6, 1888.
I have used your Flax -Seed Emulsion compound`
in a severe ease of Mal -nutrition and the result was
more than hoped for—it was marvelous, and con-
tinuous. I recommend it cheerfully to the profession
and humanity at large. M. H. GILBERT, M.D.
M ATS
Sold by Druggists, Price $1.00.
FLAX -SEED EMULSION CO.
0,5 Liberty €? e., New York.
Late Foreign Nevus.
A PRIEST'S DUEL
Cyclone in the South Pacific..
TERItH1C 11 SVZUDE O& .. ` oases .
Sixty-six familiestn'Vienna, who are com-
promised
om-
t isec
pron i by the medical publication of Dr.
Grethen, have cemulenced suits against
him. It is claimed that the chances of mar-
riage have been ruined for twenty ladies
whose diseases the doctor tles,ribed for sen-
sational purposes.
A horrible suicide has just occurred, in
.
Ode saA ma e
Odessa. wo ii drenched s nthe cl leer clothes
with petroleums And then set herself alight,
In a few minutes nothing was left of lies but'
a heap of blackened cinders. This is the
second suicide of the land that has occurred
in Odessa' this winter,
The hard winter in Crimea has brought
upon it the plague of wolves, so that in
several disteiets the military riflemen are
ordered to make chase of the ravaging
brutes,
In Rostov -on -tire -tion, Russia, twenty-
one persons were indicted before the crim-
inal court as belonging to theseet oflCldy. ssty.
There were cliarged with incest and other
immoralities. charged
at them were found
not guilty , forte
eu were emented
to pri-
vation
vation of all personal rights and exiledto
Siberia for life.
Two students of the Agricultural School
of Stoov, who
havo finished their course
with high eretlit have been sent to foreign
lands at the expense of the school to make a
special study of the production of Ilax acid
its cognate industries.
A Montes Carlo telegram says i -There are
atilt people here, anct play has beengaing ou
merrily, notwithstanding the solemnities of
Holy Week. On Saturda y ^ an Rn lishtn
g
528
had an extraordinary
run ef 1n
otare28ketto
wizining 2i3OOO ,francs in the morning, and
07,f00 francs in the afternoon.
When the, Vietorus, (Australia) nail left
the locust plague wasproving worse than all
inconvenience in the midland districts. A
train from Sandhurst to Melbourne was
"stuck up" for over an Isour between Ray-
onswoodanrl Hareourt an account of a swarm
of these ereatures having settled so thickly
on the lines that the engine wheels wouldnot
draw,
William Hughes, :Minim Street, Lla Muds
no, aged about eighty, wile found sutl'oaatecl
in bed, He was very terj1uient, anti slept
in an out -building on the ground floor:
When his grandson got up about five o'clock
he noticed smoke, and on going to the out-
building be saw the bedding on fire, and his
braudfather dead, ',Dore were no manta of
urning, and Dr; Bold Williams pronounced
death to beh •
y suffocation.
nfl'ocation,
Destiatches received at Queenstown from.
the Fiji Islands, ria San Fran,:iseo, state
thata terrible cyclone swept over the Fiji
anti Navigator Islands from the 10th to the
Vith ult., causing great destruction of ship-
ping and considerable less of life in the
vicinity of then islands. Twelve vessels
were wrecked and forty persons drowned.
The following British and colonial ships
wero lost: Ayrshire, Kingfisher, Water*,
Lucknow, anti Helen Davies.
A great sensation has been caused at
Vienna by the receipt of news fromKufstein
announcing the cold blooded murder of a
Vienna merchant at a railway station there..
at midnight. As the victim was. entering a'
train, he was approached by a stranger, who
dealt him a violent'blow, which immediate.
ly proved fatal. The assassin was an
Italian workman, who had intended to. kill
a fellow -countryman, sentenced to death by
a vendetta, and who had mistaken the
travellerfor the eondemned man,
Princes Henry of Batteuberg, a telegrams
from Grasse states, is eonfined to his bed
with au attack of the measles. His condition
does not, however, give rise to any anxiety.
He had been unwell for several days when
he arrived at Grasse with the Queen, but
the nature of his illness did not develop an -
til the day following his arrival, Prince
Henry, did not make his appearance at the
reception, proceeding to the hotel in a clos-
ed carriage a quarter of an hour after the -
rest of the Royal party,
A singular trial recently took place at
Brescia, A regular practising wizard at a
place called Gattolengo pretending to cure
nnaladies, to tortell future events, and to
charm fowls from thieves, with the assis-
tance of Satan, A woman was actually
driven to madness, and afterwards to death,
by the nraehi ations of this wizard, and con-
sequently a physician cited hint before the
Cornets of Brescia. Ile received only a slight
sentence.
Mr. Joseph Chamberlain bas purchased
from the Government of Bahamas, for the
cultivation of thefirbre plant, the island of
Mayaguana, one of the Bahama group.�
The ticvernor, Sir Ambrose Shea, met Ur.
Chamberlain in Canada last year, and this
meeting led to the right hon. gentleman's
sons --.31r. Austin and Mr. Neville Chamber.
lain --visiting the Bahamas, where they
spent two months investigating the capa-
bilities of the various islands with the result
that Mayaguana was purchased.
News bas just rcaobed the village of Reg -
nese, Lincolnshire, of a narrow escape of
Captain R. G. 'ram -1 or, 01 tbu lndlaii
Staff Corps, who is serving
with his yogis
meet
c i-
neptrad RBunnell) at Fart Stedman, in the
Shan Hills. Ona of the native sergeants
(a Sepay) went late the commandingelliieer's
room, shooting DfajorNixon dead. Ile then
:net Captain Iremonger, who was going on
parade, and fired twice at him. The ad-
jutent of the regiment, who was a few yards
in front, he had already shot at, wouuding
him in the stomach, so that he died the same
night. During the attempt to capture the
murderer a third shot was fired at Captain
IIremonger, but missing ltim, it killed his
orderly on the spot. In all, fonIrwerekilled
by this fanatic, two English officers and two
natives.
The lovers of the ballet of St. Peteraburgh
are highly interested in a new invention
made by a, terpaiehoreen artist, DI, V. I.
.Stepanati; Hitherto the art of dancing has
been taught only by traditional rules, so to
speak. Mr, Stepanoff has made it his object
to reduce the system of dancing to writing.
For tbiu puipose he studied anthropology
and anatomy for several years. Now he has
inventeda "GhoreologicalAlphabet,"thelet-
toreof which denote the venous elementary
motions of the muscles in bodily exercise,
by the combination of which all possible
postures or artistic dancing can be express-
ed, He has submitted his invention to the
approval of the TheatriealBoard and applied
for a patent from' the. government. The
ohorcological alphabet' s written in the
form of musical notes.
Aeastust and his wife were robbed and
murdered a couple of days ago at a village
in Hungary. There was no trace of the
f murderer, and the police despaired of find-
ing him, but two little graudelriidren of the
victims, who had hidden under the beds
during tlso perpetration of the crime,
hearing the talk about the deed, said quite
calmly that they knew who did it. On
being questioned, they were finite positive
tbat "Zsiga Bacsi," Uncle Sigismund, had
done it. Ile is a son of the old people, who
is in the employ of a grocer in Budapest,
and on whom not a shadow of suspicion had
fallen. Owing to the children's words, a
snatch was made, and property was found
in his possession which connected him with
the crime, and led to his arrest.
In some of tho Paris alrurehes duringLent
vast crowds have assembled to witness a
kind of duel.betweeu the preacher from the
pulpit and another preacher (without his
cessock)who takes his stand in the congrega-
tion. The duel is, of course, a sham one,
the unfrocked priest or devil's advocate tak-
ing very good care only to put forward such
arguments as can readily be refuted. At
one of these tourneys, principally devoted
to the discussion of anarchism, the devil's
advocate atttacked the preacher on the
question of the ability of the Church to
grapple with social questions, but he only
afforded an opportunity to the orator to
launch into a perfervid eulogium of Mother
Church. These sham contests, though not
new, are not so common as they were in,
France, where preachers have sometimes
found the devil's advocate too much inclin-
ed for serious argument and putting for-
ward social and theological conundrums
equally difficult to solve or to evade.
The report of the Medietti Department of
the Russian Ministry of the Interior for the
year 1858 has just been published. The
population of the Russian empire, axpaeting
the province of Finland and Camerae, o
which exact statistics cannot be lead, was at
the beginning of that year 112,312,758.
During the year there were 0 ,110,900 births
and. 3,3$3,515 deaths. This shows en in-
crease of 1,751,4711. There wore in the
whole empire 2,0SS drug stores, whose busi-
ness amounted to 11,820,079 rubles. Among
the practising physicians of thecntpirc there
were 003 women,
The edueatiunal authorities of the Gov-
ernment of txroduo, Russia, have discovered
that many parents living in the districts
bordering on Polish provinces send their
children to the schools of those provinces in
pprofereece to those et lmomo, because the
Polis°l language is taught in those schools.
Striugcut measures have been talcenagainst
this undesired preference. SCrret vigilance
will henceforth be exercised that in no
private school in the Government shall
the Polish laliguage be taught..
There are mines of cinnabar in Daguestau,
in the district of Iityreen ; but no effort
and no artifice of the Russian author-
ities can as yet avail to ferret out the
exact locality. The natives know that
the Government will take possession of
the urines as soon as it knows where they
are, and therefore keep their knowledge
secret. They use tho mineral as a medicine,
and sometimes tlsey carry it in bags to sell
in the neighboring towns. If a native is
taught with a bag or basket of cinnabar and
lord whence he had taken it, he will tell
t wen ty li"s to account for his possession, and
c -either by bribes nor by threats can the
turth be gotten out of hum.
The principal relic belonging to the
Church of Sainte Gudule was exhibited in
Brussels last week. It consisted of a thorn
which is said to have formed part of the
Saviour's crown. This thorn is reported to
have passed through many adventures.
l+larent III., Count of Holland, brought it
to the Netherlands in the times of the
Crusades. The irreverent Sans -Culottes,
when pillaging Sainte Gule, in 1793, took
the case and the precious stones adorning it
which enclosed the thorn, but fortunately
left behind the thorn, which has ever since
been the object of mucin adoration.
The Russian Ministry on Loads of Inter-
communication aro planning to replace all
the railroad aucl steamship officials with
officers or soldiers who have served their
terms in the army of the marine. It is sup-
posed that the management and care of the
railroads and steamers in the hands of train-
ed soldiers may involve less accidents and
irregularities than at present. Marine offt-
eers moreover, as mates of the steamers in
the interior,of the empire, will be more
competent than private, officials to study
and to map the rivers and lakes for the
purposes of the military authorities. The
revolutionary papers published outside of
the empire see in this proposed measure a
preparation for war which is soon to break
out. They augur that the Government will
have all the railroad and steamship lines
under perfect military control "before it
steps forth in the dance of carnage and
death."
Standing Bear, one of Buffalo Bill's
Indians, who married the daughter of an
Austrian baker, and got stranded in Chicago
while trying to get himself, his wife, and his'
wife's family to the Pine Ridge Agency,
will soon be out of his dilemma. Hie father.
in-law has written to General O'Beirne, the
' uumigration Commissioner, to say that his
i+rrilser, Ernest Beineck, had agreed to send
i wills to the Austrian Consul -General in
New York with which to defray the expense
of the Standing Bear family to Pine Ridge.
.His Critics
as What it takes to make a Paradise,"
some one has said, "depends upon the per-
son who is going there." There was onee an
artist who painted a picture of Adam and
Eve in the Garden of Eden. It was exhibited
publicly. One day the painter, entering the
hall, saw two men, who appeared to be
farmers, standing before the picture.
"Now,"said the artist to himself, "I can
hear an unprejudiced opinion of my work."
He drew nes r, and listened to what the
farmers were saying.
"Well, John, said one, " what do yon
think of it?"
"It's pretty good," said the other, " but
there's ono tiring about it that strikes me as
a little mite queer."
as What's that ?"
" Why, he's got .Evewith a Rhode Island
greening in her hand."
" Well, what of it ?"
<c
t
Han . Seeingthat thofirst o
RB deTsland
greening was raised in this century, I don't
quite see how they could have hacl then in,
Paradise 1"
e' No greening 1" exclaimed the other, con-
temptuously ; " how clo you suppose they
Could have got along in the Garden of Eden
without Rhode Island greenings-?"
The Travels of Venus..
The astronomers tell us in their stellar
predictions for .April that Venus is making
her way toward the sun, and rises less than
two hours before the sun appears above the
eastern horizon. As she travels toward
superior conjunction shoat the same time re-
cedes from the earth, her semi -diameter
naturally decreases, and with it her bril-
liancy. She has been fair to see for many
weeks, and although she will not lay aside
her starry crown.for some little time to
come, her rival, Jupiter, is gaining rapidly
upon her, and will fairly outshine her before
her present course as a morning star her,
been fully ruin
TRE:.AME,RIOAN Ba APARTES•
Prince Napoleon, who died only the other
clay, was the son of Jerome, the youngest
brother of Napoleon the Great. This fact
brings nearer to us that great series of events.
beginning with °' a whiff of grape -shot" and
ending with Waterloo. His death, snore-
ovor, had. a peculiarly vivid interest for
Americans, because it recalls the story of
the first love of his father, Jerome, for a
young American girl, Betsy Patterson of
Baltimore.
It is a sadtale of romance, imperial ambi-
tion, and diplomacy,. says the Philadelphia
Prese. Napoleon had alreadywon undying
fame in Italy, when his oung brother,
Jerome, was but 12 years of age. He soon
entered the Frenebn•y,for it gas his great
brother's ambition to Snake of hint a fighter
on the seas fit to cope with Nelson. It was
an English frigate that destroyed this plan
by driving the french frigate bearing ,Ter -
cane into American waters, At Baltnnore
Jerome fell madly in love with and married
Tilizebeth, the beautiful daughter of William.
Patterson, a rich merchant, and an Irishman
by birth. Elizabeth, or Betsy as she was
called, had ueonsurningambition, and when
friends opposed the marriage the said: a' I
would rather be the wife of a brother of
Napoleon for Due Itonr than the wife of any
other 281538 forlite,"
Napoleon was highly displeased with this
mateb, because he already saw himself on
OR, throne, and wished his brothers to marry
only "blue bloods." Jerome and his wife
only learned of the establishment of the em-
ire when about to sail'from. New York to
beg the forgiveness Odle first consul. They
learued ae the same time that both Jerome
and his bo debarred
u brother, >;nteien were dela to d
from the line of� suee eesion for marrying
against Napeleons "e:a, Nevertheless,
the young couple, still hoping forgiveness
and advancement, sailed for Lisbon in
18028
There Jerome was arrested and taken to
France, after a tearful adieu ana protssta•
tions of everlasting fidelity to hie wife, who
was not.ellowei to land. Site sent a rues.
sage to 30 emperor, which tl n i Iiseh tick ed him
a P
,
1
immensely.
"Tell the emperor," site said, "that
Mine, Bonaparte demands her rights as a
member of the imperial family."
She proceeded to England, where a boy
was soon born to her and christened Jerome
Napoleon Bonaparte. Jerome, the father,
proceeded to Paris, little thinking that he
would never see Betsy again, save as a
stranger, and with another wife upon his
arra.
tiapoleon positively refused to recognize'
the Marriage, but piomisedBetey an annual
pension es" S12,000, providing.she would re,
turn tosemerica and reneunee the name of
Bonaparte, which conditions 8110 accepted,
Many times, in later years sho returned to
Europe, and figured as the center of seem -
tions nr ioreign courts, winning the homage,
not only of her ltuslsaud's mother and other
mcml a ofs family, s
ice the ,.int but also from the
Duke of Wellington, Gime. de teei, Byron,
and even the baughtyold Louis XVII., who
tried to have leer appear at court, but, as
she still received a pension from the exiled
emperor, she declined.
Tier husband, Jerome, thus separated
from her, was compelled by his brother to
marry Catharine, the daughter of the king
of Wurtemberg. :loon niter he was made
king of Westphalia. Ho thea sent to Amer -
cis for Betsy's child, " Bo" ---an abbrevation
of Bonaparte. She refused to gree hint ftp,
and its reply to the offer from -Ur husband
of a ducal crown, with an income of $40,-
000 a year, she sent back the scornful mes-
sage : " Westphalia is too small for two
queens ; beside, I already receive$12,000a
year from the emperor, and I would rather
bo protected by the wings of the eagle than
bo dependent on the hill of a goose,"
She ever afterward spoke with contempt
of her husband, although "Bo" frequently
visited his father's fancily in Europe, where
he was treated as a son and abrother, his
half-sister, Princess ,llathildo, being espe-
cially found of him. Afterward "iia" mar-
ried a Baltimore lady, causing his :nether,
Mme. Betsy, great auger by doing so. His
cousin, Emperor Nape�eon III., invited him
to France, where Ice was legitimized trod re-
ceived as a member of the family. His
half-brother, the son of Jerome by Catha-
rine, quarreled with the emperor and there
was at one time a strong intention to make
"Bo" theheir-presumptive, but ultimately
f ° Bo" was declared ineligible. He declined
a duchy, refusing the condition attached of
surrendering• the name of iBonaparet. On
the death of King•Jeromo in 1800 his Amer-
ican wife, Betsy Patterson, contested his
wilL She was, however, refused a share of
his property.
The letters show a great conte
native land. She wrote to her fa
Florence in 1829 as follows :
"A parent can not make asilk
sow's ear, and you found that you
apt for her
they from
purse of a
•
teouid not
make a sow's ear of a silk purse. It was
impossible to bend my talents and my am-
bition to the obscure destiny of a Baltimore
housekeeper. and 15 was absurd to attempt
it after I had married the brother of an em-
peror. I had not the meanness of spirit to
descend from such au elevation to the de-
plorable condition of being the wife of an
American.
" I often tried to reason myself into the
courage necessary to commit suicide when I
contemplated a long life to be passed in a
tradingtown, where everything was disgust-
ing to my tastes, and where everythingcou-
treated so strongly with my wishes.
" I never could have degraded myself by
marriage with people who, after I had mar-
ried a prince, became my inferiors.
" The Americans themselves had sense
and good taste enough to feel that I had
risen above them, and have always treated
ane with the respect and deference due to a
superior.
" When 1 first heard that my son could
condescend to marry any one in Baltimore I
nearly went mad.
"I repeat that I would have starved, died,
rather than married any one in Baltimore."
In her olclage Betsy's constant companions
were
a carpet bagand a rod umbrella ,the
color of the Nalloleonic dynasty. "Bo "
died in 1370. His mother survived ti11187
9,
dying at the age of 94 years, and leaving a
fortune of $1,500,000 to Bo's two sons,
Jerome and Charles J. Bonaparte.
Charles J. married Miss Nellie Day of
Boston, who is a granddaughter of James C.
Dunn, a merchant of Boston.
Apropos of the Eikon Basilike.
don't believe Charles I ever wrote it.
I don't believe Charles I could have writ
— began Shilley Higgins.
Ola, rodents, Shelley, rodents t You
overwhelm me with ennui," retorted Pene-
lope Adams.
The continued bad weather in New York
has given the grippe a firmer hold there and
in the New England cities. Twenty-two
deaths in one clay and 108 in one week from
the malady in New Fork alone is rather
serious.
:3 tele ; 9
A Word to the People. 1
HE remarkable .effects and facet satisfactory results, in every variety of
disease arleiug from ire =units ws of THE BLOOD, .vehieh are experienced
_ .
>,
and mala n Yaizes„.r r..:n day t, c,a}, lay -those who have taken NORTHROP
& L a1AN :S VEGETABLE BLE 1DISCOVE RY, for complaints whielt were pro-
nounced inetunble, ere ss'rarising to ell. !n many of There eases, the persons say
their pain and suffer egg cannot be eep'eined, as in eases of Scrofula, where
apparently the wholo bony 'wee one plass of corr'uptien.
This celebrated medicine will relieve pain, cleanse and purify the blood, and
cure such diseases, reetaring the patient to perfect health after using many
remedies Gini hawing vainered Inc ears, Is it net concrosl e proof that if you are
a sufferer _you can be cured? Why is this medicilue venerating such great cures ?
It works in the 01.000, the Circulating Fluid. It van truly be called the,
The great source of disease originates in the Rana Ola, and no medicine that dotes
not act directly upon it, to purify and renovate, has any just claim upon viable"
attention. When the blood becomes lifeless and stagnant, either from change of
weather or of climate, want of exercise, irregular diet, er from any other cause,
NORTHROP & LYNIel!i'S VEGETABLE lISCOVEItY will renew the Blood,
carry off the putrid humors, cleanse the stomach, regulate the bowels, and impart
a tone of vigor to tine whole body.
The conviction is, in the public mind as well as the medical profession, that
the remedies supplied by the VEGEi'ABLE KINGDOM are more safe and more elite-
teal in the cure of disease than mineral meclicines, The Vegetable .Discovery is
'
composed of the juice of most remarkable roots, barks and Herbs, >:t is pleasant e?+sant to
take, and is perfectly safe to give an. infant:, Allow us to ask you a candid slues.
tion :—Do you need it? Do mot hesitates to try it. You will never regret it, AU
ug
„igis live it for gale,
Iden Jortx 0. Fox, Olinda, writes s--" biorthrop & Lyman's Vegetable Dis-
covery is giving good Satisfaction. Those who have used it say it has clone them
snare good than anything they bare ever taken,"
IN. ITS WORST FORM-M7Fs,•IC7,TA A. PIISwoir ss, Toronto, writes
"I had D} spepsia in its worst foam for over a year, but After taking three bottles
of Northrop d: Lymen's Vegetable Discovery, a perfect cure followed. I take great
pleasure in recommending it to anyone auiT'<ring from Dyspepsia.
31Ti, W, TIM'S -Rn, Wright. ISO, , had DYSP€F JIA FOR TWENTY' YEARS; Tried.
relief.i appetite waspoor,hadA
man remedies d doctors,.but t no Hifi fisc
i c ana
1'1very
f3
x
w '•h
distressing pain in his side and s#otnach, and giadnal wastingsting a ay of fie, , when
he heard of and immediately commenced ttl;iug Northrop ,t Lyman's Vegetable
hisecvery. The pains havo left, and he rejoices in the enjoyment of exeelleut
health; in fact he is quite a new scan.
Sold by all Medicine Dealers at $1.00 per Bottle.
"Truth is Nighty, and will
prevail,"
1
DO YOU KEEP IT IN THE HOUSE?
ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM,
L �
NO BETTER REMEDY FOR
COUGHS, COLDS, CROUP, CONSUMPTION, &C.
ETER LUMBERYARD
The undersigned wishes to inform the Public in general that he
keeps constantly in stock all kinds of
BUILDING' MATERIAL
Dressed. p' ' zard , 'es gid.
PINS AND UE t1LOQU b t TLtR ,
SIiI:.ra .,r. aClZc�tTY
00 ,000 X andXXX Pi mac Cee ar Shingles now in
stock. A call solicited and satisfaction guaranted.
J,A,ME$ WXLLIP1,
rs need both internally and externally.
I5 nate Quickly, affording almost instant
relictfrom the severest pain.
DIRECTLY TO THE SPOT..
114STAt1TANEOUS Ill ITS HGTIO t..
For CRAMPS, CHILLS, COLIC,
DIARRHOEA, DYSENTERY,
CHOLERA MORBUS,
and all BOWEL COMPLAINTS,
NO REINEtI'( EQua'Ls
THE PAINsKILLER.
In Canadian Citolora and Bowel
Complaints its effect is magical.
It cures in ayeryshort time.
THE BEST FAMILY REMEDY Poe
BURNS, BRUISES, SPRAINS,
RHEUMATISM,
NEURALGIA and TOOTIFACRE.
satS1 Eve:traw."-.FE Ar' 2So. A"s0'rri-r4
tar Beware of :Counterfeits anti Imittttfow.
'Farmers and Threshers
—SHOULD
USE—
McCall Br s,' Larcline Oil,
CYLINDER, WOOL, BOILER, AIiD 'PURGER OILS
SEE THAT THE BARRELS ARE BRAITDED
McOALI; BRCSS,`.
LARDINR - TORONTO_
FOR SALE BY BISSETT B:RQ.S.,. ExEIBn.
Manufactured only at Meares Hoatowev's•Esres'nisx-,fene,
578, N>✓W' OY 'ORS a'2'�uEE2�
1 4 1�
�
�A 0.000e,
sr1 � 9
o
4{e tti e.
"ti ' 9"e�*snip
who hero wa N m9
V1 t,P ',,,'0.
2Ad oti° oda
4
%N. $4a:, e•`0d
S14g1(O •t)4�� oae4 ..,.
4,po1Ge
hof
Purchasers should look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots.
1f the addrees is not 533, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious,
'w�i"rAW�