HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1891-6-25, Page 3ijjco
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CREAfirEMED
RHEUMATISM
Neuralgia? Sciatica,
Lumbago, Backache,
Headache,
Toothache,
Sore Throat,
F o t Frites, Sprains,
n
Etc.
E` ,✓Burns,
Sold by Drueeeei end Dealers ecerywhe:e..
lily teee.: etie. Directionsin
n ; c141:211fteln
l ilE CilkRI. S Ji. eeeet.en CQ.. Ltattinere,
Qa ag Tian Depot: Toronto, Ont.
SHILOH'S
CONSU M PTION
CURE.
�s
The reaet;ese of this Great Cough Cure is
without a par diel in the history of medicine.
All dauggists are authorized to sell it on a pos.
hive guarantee, ate..t that no other cure can sue-
ce=s(ully stand. That it may become known,
the Proprietor, et an enormous expense, are
placing a Sample Bottle Fres into every home
en the United States anti Canada. If you have
a Cough, :lore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for
it will cure you. If your child has the Croup,
orWheeping, Cough, use it promptly, and relief
i; sane. If yea dread that insedisans dta.:.ase
Consumption, use it. Ask year Dntggiet far
SHILO i'S CURE, Price Io cls., So Cts. and
et,00. If your Lungs are sore or Este: lame,
use Shilolee Porous Plaster, !,trice 2,S cls.
Spurt 1,e!r> r, lag rig /. ern r,lflit
Irgo55 fur413 Ca r #11,173 f, las a,
Ail, :11.r Ni.� ➢ m, ➢� I`at,Oµ:+.
^Tia 4e..: -la and vaswrit.:lhy
t• a -, o tarn orcr itetl.Wa
aamA, y, .i t anga;taut* andVra
stasMlc,tarn-art a aFunae-
$'ti[]cr,Ferael,llrr.40,-5;aa' fr^n9'5 n'go
a
*seler. A➢t acv', R4 eahmt'al Gar
11:VI :1• 4an„ rt UM,
a. cell lb ✓655e ➢ tur,urg kr isg4log
e» rel .rte t7ot;,.n n ary aR ahrm,
'NEW a t lir,,: a fat rar:. G.tl4arrrt.
11.111441tutt4't::.'P.,71ox,. shier of tt:itlll,'.lt.atDO
rLAXSOED
EMULSION
COMPOUND
BRONCHITIS
196 Lexington Natv York
Y. Sept, Ave.i0, 1888.
I Lave used the Flair -Seed Emulsion in several
eases of Chronic Bronchitis, and the early stages of
Phthisis, and have been en well pleased with the results,
JAMES K. CROOK, m.D.
CONSUMPTION
Thooklyn. N. Y., Feb. 11th,1S89,
I have used your Emulsion in a case of Phthisis
(consumption) with beneficial results, where patient
could not use Cod Liver 03 Jin Many ROLE, M. D.
NERv60s PROSTRATION
Brooklyn, N. Y., Dec. 2oth.1888.
I can strongly recommend Flax Seed Emulsion as
helpful to the relief and possibly the cure of all Lung,
Bronchial and Nervous Affections, and a good gen-
eral tonic in physical debility.
JOHN F. TALMAGE, M. D.
GENERAL DEG111T1f
Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 16th, l::.
I regard Flax Seed Emulsion as greatly superior t0
theCod Liver Oil Emulsions so generallyin use.
D. A. GORTON, M. D.
WASTING DISEASES,
137 westSlth St.
New York, Aug. 6, 1889.
I have used your Flax -Seed Emulsion Compound
in a severe case 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.
RHES ATI _
Sold by Druggists, Price $1.00.
FLUAX-SEED EMULSION .CO.
1) 35 Liberty St., New York.
For,:.: 1 y W. 1•'. ('ocheneaur, Exeter.
Emulsion
OF
Cod diger Oil
AND THE
Hypophosphites of Lime -and Soda.
'4do other Emulsion is so
easy to 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, ,
Beware of all imitations. Ask for
"the D. & L." Emulsion, and refuse
all others.
PRICE 50C. AND $1 PER BOTTLE.
In. GLORY HAS DBP&.RT} D.
'Fhe Mississippi. the Once nighty "Father
of Waters," Alias Lost its
Romance.
The Mississippi, it is needless to toll any-
body wile knew it in all its glory, is not
what it used to be, writes a correepondent.
Civilization has deprived it of its majesty
and eliminated most o£ its attractions, It
is thea shadow O S
ha F itself as it
seems to sneak
along in shallow murmurs where it once
swept by deep and swift, The forests and
the unbroken sod that once yielded their
stored moisture to keep it up 10 a navigable
stage all through the dry, hot summers have
been appropriated to the uses of man and
the soil is conaptlled to produce something
more marketable than water. And (he steam-
boats are nearly gone also. The railroad
has .superseded therm. Travel by rail affords
comparatively few opportunities for musir
and dancing and games of poker for high.
stakes, and they hags* little stuffy buffets,
where they have anything for the bibulously
inclined instead of the gorgeous bars with
the whole front end of a steamboat to sip
iced drinks in as in the good old days, Ia
these times if you see a steamboat it'sten to
one site is little and dingy and is laboriously
pushing ten acres of sawlogs down the nar-
row channel where the very catfish have to
dig into tate mull in order to make room. for
her to pass- And the steam calliope is hearts
no more onn the silent stretches of water by
night, that wonderful musical instrument
whish delighted you the mere the farther
you were away from it.
When a Uis:eissippi ,mariner heaves the
lead in these degenerate days he does it with
cane fishing pole and -signs out through his
nose that the water is "14inches scent." A,
wayfaring man from the hast occesianally
accosts you on Robert street bridge, after
looking about vainly for the Hocks of steam-
boats that his guide beak of ISO tells him
aro always along the river hanks at St. i'aul,
and asks you where the Itiliss:seippi is, and
he loons at you when you paint to the water
beneath with a deep sense of Nary, feeling
that he is a stranger and you are taking hint
its. Khat poet could sing off. .ream whose
chief affluents were the sewers of the cities
along its banks, whose turbid waterswould
be best appreciated by lampreys and red -
finned suckers? As an iilsptr-tion, exon,
the once mighty *llississippi rt=.:n the slang
Of yesterday, 44 (.., " save and except the
wooded bltitla in spats wherry uo stone queue,
or limekiln has yet been erected, and where
the sterile curse of toilet limestone, graced
with a few trailing vines and stunted trees,
]las reserved something of nature to gladden
the heart of man.
Whore Was the Money
A man and his wife rented a suite o
1.084445 anti proceeded to fnrnieh them, says
a writer in the New York Tiers. One of
the carpets was unsatisfactory in some
respect, and the dealers of whom it had
been purchased sent a man to look at it.
The wamau, Mrs, L-�--.,was on her way
out when she met the man on tiro stairs. Be
explained his errand, and she gave hirn the
keys of her rooms. "I will be back in five
minutes," she said, "and meantime you can
dceidc what hall better be done."
She was hardly in the street before she
remembered a roll of bills which elle bad
left in a glove -box on her dre:aing•table.
Her first, thought was to return, but site
said to herself that a responsible firm would
sent! nobody but an honest man on such an
errand, and. she hurried on.
Within ten minutes elle was back, and
met the man at the door. Ho explained
what it would be necessary to do about the
carpet, and paged out. She entered the
apartment, and almost mechanically raised
the: lid of the glove -box. Tile monoy was
1 not there.
$ho hurried down tho stairs and overtook
the carpet man just as he reached the tide-
walk.
" Will you come back a moment ?" she
said.
He complied at once, and the moment
they wore iu the roan sh
" A curious thing bas
o faced him.
happened. When
I went out this morning I left a roll of
bills, ninety dollars, in that box. It is gone
now.
The mau Seemed not to understand.
" Well ?" he said.
" Well," repeated Mrs. L—, " there
was nobody here but-"
The man interrupted Iter. " Merciful
Heaven, madam ! you don't think I took
your money?"
"I don't know what to think," replied
Mrs. L--; "tete money was there, and
now it isn't,"
" But I'm an honest man, I've got a little
girl. Do you think I'd steal? Why I've
been eight years with So-and-so. They
know my character. Perhaps your husband
took the money."
" Will you cone with Inc to his office and
find out?"
The man acquiesced, and the journey
down town was made. Mr. L-- had not
taken the money. The man was greatly
disturbed.
`" You can search me," he said. "There's
my own money," producing a small wad.
"1 haven't another cent about me." And he
turned his pockets inside out.
Mr. L-- was impressed with the man's
apparent sincerity, and Mrs. L-- was puz-
zled. The man was allowed to go to his
work, and Mrs. L-- went home. She
ransacked drawers and boxes, and moved
the furniture, but the bills could not bo
found.
Several days passed. Then Mrs. L --
happened to go to an upper shelf in the
wardrobe, and noticed a towel pinned up in
a roll. What could that be? She took it
down and unrolled it. Inside was a discard-
ed wallet, and in the wallet were the missing
bills.
The sight of them recalled to her mind
the fact that she .lead put them there her-
self. It had occurred to her, just before
going to bed, that it was careless to leave
the money in the glove -box, and she bit upon
this method of concealing it. Then she
wentrto sleep, and in the morning had for-
gotten what she had clone.
Now, the moment the bills were found,
she sent a despatch to the man at the car-
pet store, and his relief may be imagined,
The story, as the writer suggests, may bo
taken as illustrating the uncertain value
of Iwo things -a woman's memory and
cireiiaustautial evidence,
Love at First Sight.
Friend-" So yours was a case of love at
first sight?"
Mrs Getthere-" Yes, indeed. I fell des-
perately in love with my dear husband the
moment I set eyes upon him. I remember
ie as distinctly as if it were yesterday., I
was walking with papa on the beach at Long
Branch, when suddenly papa stopped, and,
pointing hint out, said, " There, my dear,
is a man worth ten millions,"
ASK
The marrow in bones should be scraped
out and used for cooking. It is more deli-
cate for this purpose than suet.
A MySTERIDUS VOLOANO..
A 'lair Century's Unsuccessful Wort to
Solve the Secret of a Swamp.
Another unsuccessful attempt has been
made to penetrate a swamp in Florida,
known asthe Pinhook, andsolve the problem
of the mysterious volcano that is always
visible but has never been approached. For
more than half a._ Century this mysterious
volcano, a column of smoke by day and a.
flaane by night, rising in the midst of an im-
penetrable
m-
enetra le swamp b on the gulf coast, has not
only puzzled the rustle fishermen and
hunters who watch it from the outer edges
of the swamp, but scientists and thousands
of ethers who have viewed it from elevat-
ed points about Tallahassee, 30 miles away
13y day it presents the appearance of a vast
volume of jet black smoke rising upas
though issuing from a huge smokestack,
ascending high above the treetops and float-
ing off on the breezes, At night it presents
a bright light, as though a large house was
burning and the !lames were not quite
visible. It appears and disappears at ir-
regular intervals, but always in the same
place,
Numerous expeditions have started out
with sanguine expeditions, but came back
worn out and disgusted. They can get all
around the mystery, and see it from any
elevated standpoint, but when they start
into the swamp, which is from 15 to 30
Hailes across in any direction they are met
by insurmountable barriers, besides snakes,
alligators, mosquirnee, and sand flies.
Expulsion of the Sewn From Russia.
The public meetings which have been
held in England to protest against the ex-
pulsion of the Jews front Russia bid fair to
lie supplemented by public meetings to
protest against their adminissi"n into .Eng-
and. It is estimated, that the number of
Hebrew inrl)if?rants is Moly nearly .five him -
deed peg week, and the agitation ,n this
country for the restriction of immigration
la finding its coauiterpert among the work.
iagmcn of Loudon, The Jewish workmen
in Louden take a, position somewhat similar
to the Italian and Hungarian workmen
here. They are willing to accept a lower
standard of living than their English eon•
petitors, to slam longer hours and accept
lower wages, The hostility which tits
arouses is not lessened by the fact that the
intellectual auperiority of the Jews enables
them in tine lope run to succeed better
than their CI41145Ren co•wed:ere. Charles
Booth, in leis volume en " East Leaden,"
s.aye "In the Jewish inhabitants we
see a twee of brain -workers corns
' peting with a class of manual laborers."
" The children of Israel," he goes on, "the
a ;alien of priests. Each reale child, rich
or poor, isa student of the literature of !tis
rice." The intellectual training which the
Jew receives through his religion enables
him to regard "manual labor as the first
rung of the social ladder, to bo supplanted
on the fiast opportunity by the estimates of
the profrtmaker. the transactions of the
dealer, or the calculations of the money.
lender." 't ntil lately the English workmen
1 uteri against the Jews that they were in
capable of forming trade -unions. But this
reproach, says David F. Sehaloss in a recent
article in the "Nineteenth Century," has
been largely removed. The Jewish workmen
are forming trade -unions, and, in one in-
stance at Feast, Nave forced employers to
abolish the ewcating system and provide
workshops of their own, in 11411;11 ten thou.
sand workmen are directly employed under
sanitary conditions, instead of receiving their
stork through a succession of contractors
and sub-contraelors and sub -sub -contractors
until the middlemen had taken nearly half
the pay for the work finally performed in the
lowest of tenement legatees. Yet these unions
are as yet exceptional, and even Mr. Schloss
admits tinct most of the Jews front Russia
ere willing to work fourteen to eighteen
boars per day for wages which the English
workman would deem it a degradation to
accept. Already, in 1SSS, when thorn were
but sixty thousand Jews in London, the
feeling against thorn among the workmen
was strong, and this feeling is certain to be
intensified now that they are pouring in at
the rate of nearly thirty thousand per year.
England will probably follow the United
States and the Australian Colonies in the
enactment of anti -immigration laws.
A School Episode.
She was just a little curly -headed school
girl who wore one shabby black dress such a
long time that the children made fun of her
when she came and went among them.
" What do yon think?" they said to each
other; "that little Louisa has only one
dress and she wears it all the year round."
But that was not true. It was a winter.
dress, and one day in spring little Louisa
blossomed out in pink.
" What do you think ?" cried the children;
" Louisa's got a new dress."
Children are uufeeliug little monsters,
naturally. One of thein discovered that
Louisa's new dress was not new, and she
took pains to announce the fact to the school
in a few scornful comments.
" Made over ? Yes, indeed, and so old-
fashioned ! We could see the old stitches.
Some one has riven it to her."
Louisa heard and cried herself sick. The
teacher knew nothing of it. She was doing
sums ou the blackboard, and thumping
knowledge into the children's heads.
"Please, teacher, a girl's fainted."
This unusual announcement roused all,
even the lethargic teacher, into a show of
interest. The girl was Louisa, she of the
pink dress.
"She's been a-cryin' awful," volunteered
one of the other children.
Wheu the child canoe to herself, she clung
sobbing to the teacher's unfriendly hand,
and told her story.
"Twarnt' cause it was out of fashion -I
didn't care for that ; nor 'cause 'twas the
only one I've got, 'sides the old black, but
,twas made over for ane from one of
m -m -mother's, and oh -h, teacher, she's
dead."
A tear fell from the eyes of the teacher,
who had travelled that road herself.
" I'm sorry," she said ; " I will see that
the children treat you differently in future."
And she kept her word.
Russia's Bad Financial Posieion.
Prof. Geffcken gives a startling array
of statistics showing the bankrupt condition
of the Russian agricultural classes, the
stagnation existing in the industry and
the overwhelming indebtedness of the
state. The Russian budget of 1890, he
said, amounted to £111,000,000, of which
the public debt ' absorbed £33,000,000
and debentures £32,000,000 -an enormous
burden on a country where 02 per cent. of
the population are poor. Of £130,000,000
of unconvertible paper ,money only £24,-
000,000 was covered by ametallic reserve.
He warned investors that the failure of the
last loan was the bursting of the bubble,
and declared that Russia must reform her
corrupt administration and preposterous
fiscal policy and abandon her aggressive
foreign policy.
When Old Jaok. Died.
NVhon old Jack died we stayed from school
(they said
At home we needn't go that day) and none
Of us ate any breakfast -only one,
And that was papa -and his oyes were red
When he came round where we were, by the
shed
Where Jack was lyln", halt way in the sun,
And halt way in the shade. When we begun
To
cry out loud, pa turned and dropped his
head
And went away; and mamma. she went
back
e
Into the kitchen. Then, for along while
All to ourselves, like, we stood there and
cried :
Wo thought so many good thingsor old leek.
Aud funny things -although we didn't
smile
We couldn't only cry when old Jack died
When old Jack died, it seemed a human friend
Had suddenly gone from us; that some face
That we had loved to fondle and embrace
From babyhood. as more would condescend
To smile onus forever. We might bend
With tearful eyes above him, interlace
Our chubby fingers o'er him, romp and race,
Plead with him, call and coax -aye, we might
send
Tho old halloo op for him. whistle, hist
(If sobs had let us), or. as wildly vain.
Snapped thumbs, called "Speak," and he
had not replied;
We might have gone down on our knees and
kissed
The tousled ears, and yet they must remain
.Deaf. motionless, wo knew, when old
.hack died.
When old Jack died it seemed tons, some Way.1
That all the other dogs in town evere pained
With our bereavement. and some that were
chained
Even unslippcd their collars on that day
TO visit Jack in stt,te, as though to pay:
A la.,t, sad tribute there; while neighbors
crane)
Their headeabovo the high hoard fence. and
3eigred
T sigh -. Poor dog!" reme➢nbering how they '
enTed him when alive. perchance, bo.
cause,
r love of thein, iso leaped to Dick their
minds --
ow that he: could not, were they sada. .I
lied?
We cllitdren thought that, AS WO crossed his'
paws.
Ana o'er his grave. 'way down the bottom
lands.
Wrote • Our First Love Lits Here." when
old Jack died.
.feasts: \ UITeoaxn BOXY..
HOOT I'ISHES EAT,
Interesting Facts About Some of the Diver
Iers in the Weep.
The sea urchin has five teeth in five jaws
-one in each jaw -all the .five immediately
surrounding the stomach,. The jaws have a
peculiar centralized motion, all turning fn -
ward and downward, so that they also act
ax feeders.
Snails have teeth on their tongues, hen.
dreda of them, but, as if these were not
enough, some have then also in their sto-
mach.
The'area teeth are set back on the idler -
pre, so that Ir may be literally acid to
anasticate its food in its throat. The carp,
too, is about the only cud -chewing fish, the
coarsely -swallowed food being forced up to
these throat teeth for complete mastication.
Some fishes aro absolutely toothless, like
the sucker and the lamprey ; others again
have hundreds and hundreds of teeter, some-
times so many that they cover all parts of
the mouth.
• The great Greenland whale lras no teeth,
its baleen plates, or whalebone, taking
their place. Along the center of tate palate
uns a strong ridge, and on each side of
this there is a wide depression along which
the plates are inserted. These are long
and stat, hanging free and are pliteed across
the mouth with their sides parallel and
near each other. The baso and outer edge
of the plates aro of solid whalebone, but
tiro inner edges aro fringed, filling up the
interior of the month and acting ns a strain-
er for the food, which consists of the small
swimming mollusks and medusae or jelly-
fish.
While the Greenland twhale has no teeth,
the sperm whale has them in greatquantities
on the lower jaws, and uses them, too,
when occasion requires, On the other
!rand the narwhal very seldom develops
there than ono, the left upper canine. It
makes up for the lack of numbers by the
extraordinary growth attained by this oue
tooth. It grows out and right forward, on
a lino with. the body, until it becomes a
veritable tusk, sometimes reaching the
length of 10 feet.
The river dolphin of South America has
222 teeth.
Tho sturgeon is toothless,and draws in its
food by suction, but the shark has hundreds
of teeth set in rows that sometimes number
ten.
Lobsters and crabs masticate their food
with their horny jaws, and they have also
sets of teeth in their stomachs, where they
complete the work of chewing.
There is one peculiar kind of crab, called
tite king or horseshoe crab, which chews its
food with its legs. This is an actual fact,
the little animal grinding its morsels between
its thighs before it passes them over to its
mouth.
Thejelly-fish absorbsits food by wrapping
itself around the object which it seeks to
make its own. The star -fish is even more
aceomanodating. Fasteningitself to the body
it wishes to feed on, it turns its stomach in-
side outaud enwrapsitsprey with this useful
organ.
The clam feeds with a siphon, and the
oyster with its beard.
No Extra Charge.
Diner-" Waiter, I've got a bone stuck
in my throat."
Waiter-" That's all right, sir. We don't
charge anything extra for bones taken away
ftoin the table."
When four women sit down for a quiet
game of whist you can't bear the silience in
the next room.
News from Alaska states that the grip is
creating great havoc among the natives of
Kodiak. Hundreds have died. There are
no doctors on the island and no medicine
stores. The natives are also suffering hard-
ships on account of the poor catch of sea
otters, on which they depend for a living.
It covers the ffrour�d
—the B. & C. corset. It is
perfect in shape and fit, • is
boned with Thabo, which will'
not break nor roll up, and if
you are not satisfied, after
wearing it two or three weeks,
return it and get your money:
For Sale by J. A. Stewart, Exeter.
NOTHING LIKE 1T0
M8. JOAB SCALES, of Toronto, vzxites : "A short brae ago
I ,was suffering from Kidney Complaint and /Dyspepsia,
Sour
Sour Stomach and Lame Back ; in fact, I was completely
prostrated and suffering intense pain. While iny -this state .a friend
recommended a to trya bottle of Northrop 4S,Y � Jiialli s ''Qe e-
rn 1p y g'
table Dirscovery. I used one bottle, and the permanent manner`
in which it has cured and made a new man out of me is stuck
that I cannot withhold from the proprietors this expression of
my gratitude."
WONDERFUL CURES
"VOR THIRTY YEARS.- Mrs. L, Squire, Ontario Steam Dye
J Works, Toronto, says; "For about thirty years I have doctored
for Liver Complaint and Dyspepsia without getting any cure.
l then tried Northrop .k Lyman's Vegetable Discovery, and
the benefits I have received from this medicine are such that I
cannot withhold this expression of my gratitude. It acts lien ,
diately upon the Liver, and its good effects are noticed at once.
As a Dyspepsia remedy I don't think it can be equalled."
INIDISPUTABLE
EVIDENCE.
ARDENED AND ENLARGED LISTER, •- Mrs. IL Ilan,
Navarino, N,'Y,, isrrites,, "For years I have been troubled
with Liver Complaint. The doctors said my Liver was
hardened and enlarged. 1 was troubled with Dizziness, Pain in
my Right Shoulder, Constipation, and gradually losing flesh all
the tixue. All food soured on my stomach, even with the closest
attention to diet. I was under the care of three physicians, but.
did not get any relief. A friend sent me a bottle of Northrop do
Lyman's Vegetable Discovery, and it affords sae much pleasure
to inforrn you that the benefit 7~ have received from it is far beyond
my expectation. I feel better now than I have dope for year's."
ETER LUMBER YARD
The undersigned wishes to inform the Public in general that he
ceps constantly in stack all kinds of
BUILDINGr MATERIAL
Dresfsed or Madras
PINE AND HEMLOCIK LUMBER.
SHINGLES A. SPECIALTY
900,000 X X and XXX Pine and Cedar Shingles now in
stook. A call solicited and satisfaction guaranted.
J.,2611,1ES WXLLI$,
DO YOU KEEP IT iN THE HOUSE?
LLEN'S LUNG BALSAM
NO BETTER REMEDY FOR
COUGHS, COLDS, CROUP, CONSUMPTION, &c.
McCOLL BROS. & COMPANY,
TORONTO.
Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in the following
specialties :
liardine
Cylinder
Ree. Engine
OILS WoolE(�lt Cutting
Eureka
TRY OUR LARDINE MACHINE OIL' !
AND YOU WILL USE NO OTHER.
For Sale By BISSETT BROS. Exeter, Ont.
Is need both internally and externally.
It sot. quickly, affording almost instant
relief from the severest pain.
DIRECTLY TO THE SPOT.
I i STAVTATIEOUS Ig ITS AGTIOlt
For CRAMPS, CHILLS, COLIC,
DIARRHOA, DYSENTERY,
CHOLERA MORBUS,
and all BOWEL COMPLAINTS,
NO REMEDY EQUALS
THE PAIN -KILLER.
In Canadian Cholera and Bowel
Complaints Its effect is magical,
It cures in a very short time.
THE BEST FAMILY REMEDY FOR
BURNS, BRUISES, SPRAINS,
RHEUMATISM,
NEURALGIA and TOOTHACHE.
SOLD EVERYWHERE AT 25o. A sorrLB.
ROT Beware of Counterfeits and Imitations.
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Manufactured only at THOMAS HOLLOWAY'S ESTABLISHMENT,
78, NEW OXFORD S'I'RIiIT, LONDON.
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or Purchasers should look to the Label on the Boxes and,li•oti, .
If the ndcress is not 533, Oxford Street. London. they, are saurian.
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