HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1891-9-24, Page 7a.
Y.
fferers
T ROM Stomach and Liver derange- .-
V moues Dyspepsias, Biliousness, Sick
Lteatiaoiie, and Constipation—find asafe
and certain relief in
A.y er's Tills. In all.
eases where a ca-
thartic is needed,
these Pills are recom-
mewled by leading
physicians.
Dr. T. E. Hastings,
of Baltimore, says:
"Ayer's Pills arethe
best cathartic and
aperient within the
reach of my profes.
Won."
Dr. John W. Brown, of Oceans, W.
Va., writes "I have prescribed Ayer'?
Pills in my practice, and find there ex-
cellent. I urge their general use in
ianiilies."
"For a number of years was afflicted
with biliousness which almost destroyed
my health, I tried various remedies
but nothing afforded me any relief until
I began to tads Ayer's Pills." --G. S.
Wanderlich, Scranton, Pa.
"1 have used Ayer's Pills for the past
Chitty years, and am satisfied I should
not he alive today if it had not been
for them. They cured me of dyspepsia
when all other remedies failed, and their
occasional use has kept rate in a healthy
condition ever since.'" T. P. Brown,
Chester, Pa.
"Having been subject,, for years. to
constipation, without being able to tind
Hauch relief, I at last tried flyer's. Pills,
and deem it both a duty and a pleasure
to testify that I have derived great ben.
efit from their use. Per over two years
past I have taken one ot these Pills
every night before retiring. I would not
willingly be without them."- -G. W.
Dowinan, 26 East Main at., Carlisle.
"Ayer';} Pills have been used in my
family upwards ot twenty yeare, and
have completely verified al that is
claimed for diem. In attacks of piles,
from which I suffered many years, they
afforded me greater relief than any med-
ieine I ever tried.' -Thomas 11'. Adams,
Helly Springs, Texas.
Ayer's Pills,
RREtA.Rau i1Y
Or. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Sala ley all Drugentseud I)reters tri Afedlciue,
IiE EXETER, MI S.
n"a!".uzaod every Thu:eBay morn n4.9,
i MES STEAM PRINTM ROUSE
air-street,aearlyopposite i'itton's Jewalery
dot a. t:xeter,4ut.,byJohn White Ss Sons,Pro-
urioters.
awns 01' ADYSnxistrtti
rat nanrtion.pee line 10 cents
:ach +ibsoqueetiusortion ,per line Scents.
To Insure insertion, advertisements should
s sentto natlatorthen 'Wednesday =ruing
OurJO'i PAINTING DSP tltT\t,.'4T is oat)
?the largesta�tdbest ogtripped in the County
?13trr.ed.All rkentrttete.t to 111 Will ruanvo
arpr.mi to antiou:
ccstuits Regarding' News-
papers.
w,ay� rsonw 1, ot're,s a pau*rrJ.' etre': from
prit ollieo, w tether direr ted in his name or
anotia a,ttr whether he has .;nbscribed or not
isreaon,iblo for payment,
8 In per.=on orders his paper discontinued
no uln•4 pay All arrears or the publisher may
conuo to adnd it n ii the payment i, made.
whims t•olt'eet the whole amount, whether
tb,pzper istakenfrom theoi% a or not.
J 1n snits for subscriptions, the ;mit may be
4st1tnh E1 in the place where the paper is pub
isbed, although the subscriber may reside
•tuadratic of miles away,
1 Th' courts have decided that refusing to
eke newspapersorperiodieala from the post -
dim or removing and leaving them uncalled
or is prima facie evidence of intentional fraud
ILLET
PURE
POWDERED
PUREST, STRONGEST, BEST.
Deady for use in any quantity. For making Soap.
Softening Water, Disinfecting and a hundred other
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Sold by Alt Grocers and Druggists.
-tom- *OrSLSs'IIzR' '. Taroato.
6
TFmE BEST COUGH MEDICINE.
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In stamps [simply as a
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nd wo will send you by express, C.O.D.,
ant watch which you can examine, and
• if you do not find
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it DO NOT TAKE IT,
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chly jewelled, with expansion balance, is
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enpar. It is suitable foe either a lady or
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ra�Ychmakers, Peterborough, Ont.
SEND US $1.00 eizosndeaslopofyourflngofpapor,aerthe
nd
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These rings are now
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Address
Geo. W. Wyatt & Co.
Jewellers
Peterborough, Ont.
Late foreign News
A GANG OF POISONERS
Sixty Sailors Massacred..
CANYIltAI,ISAj IX al: EG.A:1e
A new musical light is shiniug in Ger-
many so strong in the eyes of its admirers
as to put Wagner's in the shade. Paul
Geisler has made asensation with his opera,
the Knights of Olarienburg. Ito writes
his librettos, and as a composer is slid to
have really striking musical individuality.
Bishop Strossmayer of Pestle is reported
to say that in fifty years there will he no
crowned heads in Europe, not even in Russia
and that a European war mill be certain
within three years.
A Russian Naval Lieutenant, who has
lived many years in Japan, says that the
whole Japanese aristocracy are strongly
inclined toward Protestant Christianity.
and that they only wait for the Mikado to
make the move.
The number of periodical publications in
Germany has increased very rapidly during
the last four years. In 1838 2,;29 pertodi-
eels were published in the Fatherland ; in
1889 the number was 2,952, In 1890 it
amounted to 3.20t. This year it is 3,433.
A singular fatal aecideiit happeued lately
at a cavalry ]rill near Berlin. A cermet
of the Uhlan guards fell with his horse, and
the pian behind, ettambling over him, ran
hit lames through hit head.
A terrible tragedy occurred on Sunday
morning at Paris. 4 young man named
Macon, of American extraction, after an
attereation with bit father, pulled out a
bowie knife and literally ripped hien up.
When his victim fell he again attacked lune
cutting hie throat. The sou, who was
arrested, refuses to reveal the motive of the
crime.
A telegram from St. Louis states that
four negroes of the Shekiani tribe are now
before the Senegal Assize court charged
with li;tvingmurdered two women, cut them
to pieces, and roasted and eaten their flesh,
The police beim; informed. made araid on
the village at ni tat, and seized 20 persons,
alnouoat them tie four alleged. murderers
in question,
Five intoxicated Germane were arrested
on Monday evening on the Quay Voltaire.
They were raising eries at " t):twn with
France," " Down with Russia," and but for
the interh cation of the police they would
have been seriously maltreated at the hands
of the crowd which had assembled.
A11 the papered and correspanden: o left by
Countess von Hack°, late First Lady in
Waiting to the deceased Empress Augusta.
have been seized by Government officials at
the Royal Castle of (*Wentz, where the
Countess died. They are believed to eon.
fain serious political indiscretions, as the
Countess woe known to share the antipathy
felt by her mistress for Prince Bismarck and
other exalted personages.
The manner in which the Russian Govern-
ment forces its views upon the public
through its " subsidized paper," .jt ovoye
Vremya, is truly characteristic. In the
provincea of Kurland, Livland, and on the
Vistula, Novoye Yremya is regularly deliv-
ered to subscribers and put on the stands
for sale one day sooner than all the other
St, Petersburg dailies, although it is well
known that alt the dailies of the capital are
mailed at one and the same time in theday.
complaints of the " irregularity " of the
mails are frequently heard, but nothing is
done to remedy the annoyance, The pos-
tal service is conducted by the Government,
and must be made to serve its ends and
purposes despite the clamor of the intelli-
gent public.
A man lives in 'rttrkatin in the province
of Livonia, Russia, who can cure the worst
eases of hydrophobia. His medicine for the
disease consists of bugs of the size of a fire-
fly, which he gathers in the month of May
in sandy places. He keeps them in clean
bottles until they become perfectly dry and
shrivelled to the size of the small common
fly. Only one dose of two such bugs knead-
ed inbread is sufficient to cure the worst
case of hydrophobia. When the patient
takes the dose his temperature begins to
rise" In about three hours be has "a fit of
raving madness, after which he falls asleep,
When. he awakes his disease is gone.
The progress of Pasteur's cure .of hydro-
phobia eau be seen by the following sun► -
mart' of the reports of the Pasteur Institute
since it was established: Iii MG 2,671 pa-
bents were treated, of whom '2a died ---f r„
.99 percent. In 1887 the numberof patients
was 1.770, and 13 of them died, .73 per cent.
In 1SS8 1,621 patients were treated, and
only 9--i.e., .50 per cent., ---died. Iii 1389
the number of patients was 1,830 and the
deaths were d ---i, e., ,33 per cent. In 1890
1,546 patients were treated in the Pasteur
institute and of these 11 died, The higher
percentage of deaths for the last year is '
due to the fact that a large number of pa.
bents were brought to the establishment in
an advanced state of the disease.
it. recent visitor to Tolxtoi says that he
really practices what he preaches, dress-
ing like a peasant, working in, the fields, and
receiving peasants who come to him for ad-
vice with courtly distinction. He is an
enemy of every marrie c wit€+h is not ealicd
au " angel tnarriage." Hisyoungestdaughter
it 3 years old the last of sixteen children, of
whom nine are living. Tolxtoi is 6"?, years
old,
Information has been received of the
massaet•eof two ships' =crews at the mouth
of the M'Kenzie River, 6u0 utiles trom the
east point of Barran.. They belonged to
the whaling steamers Grtunpus and Hume.
In the close season of 1S90 they went into
winter quarters there, in order to avail them-
selves of the two months' early fishing in
1801 before the ice opened, and permitted
other vessels to enter. Thetwo crows num-
bered 60. They were attacked and massa-
cred by Etquittia e.
A youug man was found at seven o'clock
on Monday morning hanging by a rope from
thenortlterngirder ofthe Eiffel Tower, Paris.
He must have climbed with his hands and
knees up the stonework on whichtbe Tower
reposes in the grey of the dawn, as he
had been dead apparently two hours. They
found in his pocket a paper in which he di-
rected that his head should be sent to the
major of his former reeitnent, his body to
the Medical School, and his wordlygoods to
M. Eiffel.
A man named Gilbert, arrested in Mar-
seilles as a tramp, turns out to be the Com-
munist who gave the order to the squad
which shot Monsignor Darbey, Archbishop
of Paris in 1871. Gilbert was transported
to Caledonia and returned under the general
amnesty. He says that he would have lost
his own life if he had refused to give the
order.
The orthodox ecclesiastics havemet in
Moscow to discuss the method of checking
the wandering from the Greek Church. The
increase of sects is so rapid as to constitute
a danger not only to the Church, but to the
State. It was proposed that all sectarians
should be forbidden to leave their own vil-
lages, and to try all offenders against the
faith, not by an ordinary jury, but by a
special judge and furthermore that the
orthodox missionaries should be increased
in numbers who should " strive in all love
and charity to bring bask the lost sheep."
The trial of a man named Dnbreiul,charg-
ed with conspiring to defraud a Paris
firm of contractors of a large sum, was con-
cluded at the Seine Assize Court late on
Saturday evening, after three days' hearing.
Dubreiul had induced the cashier of the
firm, a man named Vassort, to embezzle a
large amount of Itis employers' money by
holding out to him illusory promises of
obtaining large concessions in Turkey.
From the evidence brought forward in. the
course of the trial, it appeared that Dub-
reiul had for many years past been in the
habit of obtaining' large suns by similar
false pretences. He was sentenced to six
mouths' solitary confinement, his dupe and
accomplice Vassort being condemned to; one
year's imprisonment.
According to a Paris correspondent some
of the streets of Paris are fast becoming
veritable man -traps for unwary foot pas-
sengers. The outlying parts of the city are
the favourite hunting grounds of the gentle-
men who commit these murderous assaults.
Recently Count Menusier was strolling
along one of the outer Boulevards on the
southern side of the river when he was as-
sailed by three men, who threw themselves
upon him, stabbed him nearly todeath,
and having rifted his pockets, made off. The
unfortunate nobleman was found later on
by the police and taken to the hospital,
where he lies dangerously wounded. Strange
to say, these sneaking assassins, leave the
English-speaking race alone. They have a
mortal horror of " le boxe," as they +:all it,
and would sooner run ten miles than get a
blank eye from a British fist.
ItARROW ESCAPE.
HOW a Nears, Crew or Whalers Gui Away
from Some kijl Savages•
Some fifteen years agol was harpooner on
a Iklew Bedford whaler. We were out for a
four years' voyage and had been fairly suc-
cessful up to tete time my story opens: We
had just finished a season at the Chatham
Islands in the South Pacific, and were up
areeng the Fiji Islands after humpback
whales, 'gime hung heavily an our bands,
as whales were scarce, and we spent our
time in making fancy articles, such as canes,
cocoanut dippers, work boxes,etc.,whiclt we
could sell in New Zealand at exhorbitant
rates.
One day the captain happened to want
some cocoanut woodier canes, so he ordered
a boat cleared away and the second mate
and five men jumped in and rowed to the
nearest island procure a young tree. I
was among the number and thought it a fine
chance to stretch my legs ashore for a
while.
We took no arms, as these islands are
many of theta uniuhabited by manor beast,
bat we bitterly regretted this later an.
The laudwas scarcely two miles away and
not a breath of air rnfiled the surface of the
blue waters as we Bleed along. A coral reef
encircled the little island and it was some
time before we found a narrow opening just
wideenougb to admit of our passing through"
Noe inside a hull of ?hundred yards brought
us to the white limb,'
The second mate and myself lit aur pipes
and one of the then took a hatchet and felled
a young tree. It Was soon cut up into pima
of the right length and placed in the boat,
and then we sat down In a little grove of
palm trees a short dietetics away and regaled
ourselves with ggreen cocoanuts.
After we had eaten our fill we sauntered
slowly back toward the boat. We were
about half way there when 1 happened to
g lace► a aver my shoulder.
The next instant I gave a shout, for not
twenty-five yards behind us were not less
than twenty bhleatia•looking Fiji warriors
running after us at full speed, carrying
their huge war clubs and shields. Their
bare feet made no noise in the sand, and had
1 not chanced to look back they would have
been upon us a moment later.
tt Good (iod I" cried the second mate,
"tWe are dead men, sure I Run, bays,
run t'"
And we did run.
If 1 ever thanked Heaven for uty six feet
ih or m
four of Reel' andirons it was elle f
iia y,
long lege sent me far ahead of my shipmates
and I reached the boat drat,
The wood in the boat made her heavy,
but my fright augmented nr naturally
great strength, and, placin • my shoulder
against the bow, 1 succeeded in pushing
her into the water just as sty ahrpmatee
came tearing down the beach.
" Quick, or we're lost 1" I cried as they
splashed iuto the water and scrambled into
tete boat.
But hurry as they might, the savages
were close behind, and as the 1,titratan
climbed aboard the foremost natives dashed
into the water with fierce yells of triumph.
I stood up to my knees in the water,
holding the boat for my companions, and as
I turned to jump on hoard, a brawny Fiji
sprang upon me with an uplifted club. I
dodged a blow which would have scattered
my brainsabout, andas the huge club struck
the water 1 struck out straight from the
shoulder, putting all my 230 pounds into the
effort.
It caught the follow under the ear and he
dropped like a dead man.
The next instant 1. sprang into the boat
and seized an oar. By this time the other sail-
ors had got out their
oars aud attempted
to
they row, but t in their fright o were making
poor work of it, and one man felt baokwardi
the boat, nearly losing his oar overboard.
As I raised the oar to push the boat away
from tete shore, two more savages rushed
forward, brandishing their cluka, while a
spear whistled within an inch of my head,
Up went thu huge war clubs in the air.
and lmade a desperate sweep with the heavy
oar, striking one warrior in the neck and
sending him staggering against his compan-
ion, who nearly fell with him.
Then a mighty shove scut the boat fully
Lon feat away.
"Pull for your lives ." I shouted as I
seated myself on the bow thwat t and shipped
my oar.
But we were not to escape so easily, for
with a hoarse cry of rage the natives dashed
into the water up to their armpits, ant one
of them seized the bow of the boat with both
hands.
Just then I saw a sharp hatchet lying at
my feet in tate boat, and I sozod it without
delay. It was the work of an instant to
deal the savage a deadly blow, and he fell
back into the water, ins head cloven in two.
A fearful chorus of yells burst from the
baffled Fijis as they saw us bend. to the oars
and shoot off beyond their reach, and then
they scrambled ashore and ran swiftly into
the bush.
"Thank the Lord, boys," said the second
?nate, " that was a close call. We're safe
now unless they've got a canoe round that
that point 1"
But no canoe appeared and we were be-
ginning to breathe easier when suddenly we
saw a large war canoe shoot round the
pointmentioned, manned by fully a score of
naked
Not
a a ord was spoken as we bent to our
work. It was life or death for us now and
we made every stroke tell. We shot
through the narrow opening in the reef some
fifty yards ahead of our pursuers and our
hopes arose as we saw the old bark was
standing toward us, bringing a light breeze
with her.
Long and strong, boys 1" said the mate,
who stood up in the stern, with the long
steering oar,as he glanced back at the canoe.
" They've only got a couple of dozen then
and that craft is made for about fifty, pad-
dles. They ain't gainin' any now. Send
her . along:
How we did pull ! The men were all used
to the work and the broad backs swayed
back and forth in perfect unison. • Every
oar was dipped deep in the water and the
boat fairly jumped ahead every time the
muscular arms straightened out.
Inch by inch we began to gain, until at
last we were drawing near the bark. Then
with one ;accord our pursuers stopped paddl-
ing and united in a shout of disappointed
rage, after which they turned about and
paddled slowly back to land.
It was not till .afterward we learned the
probable cause of their attack. The cocoa
nut tree is sacred in s,uie of these islands,
and it is death to fell one. We had a nag=
row &cape.
To are., , .^;•tt , se.which is to be
nae•l f t to l + +• , in call water
over t•(-• ..; n• a ga •i l tally to
the 1)+41 a i , ❑L. .i , r tilt ,' iter !rolls
evenLt...i+ovt L.uut from the are and
G�m re.uain n .he tv tet r till it ba omos
coletld.
' The fastest mile run by a railroad train
was made itt 50:1 aces.
The fastest mile Made in rowing in a single
boat took 6 ruins. and 1 sec.
PEARLS OF TRITTli,
It is necessary to hope. though hope
should be always deluded ; for hope itself
is happiness and its frustrations, however
frequeut, are yet less dreadful than its
extinction,
You will find the mere resolve not to be
useless, and the honest desire to help other
people, will, in the quickest and delicatest
ways, improve yourself.
The unconscious intiuence of a geed pian.
is greater than his conscious wo ac. He may
not know that his face shines, but °there
see it.
The nhan elate parades hie religion and
dies to make capital out of his piety, meets
with only contempt.
Not the great things but the little things
of one's doing in life, give the true indica-
ti ous of eharaeter.
Habib are to the soul wheat the veins and
arteries are to the blond, the courses in
which they move.
Self-will 13 co ardent and aitivo that it
will break a world to pieties to :make a
stool to sit on.
Sloth, like rust, consumes faster titan
labor wears, while the key often used is
always bright.
IIe who apt take no interest in what is
small will take false interest in what is
great.
The accepted Hud betrothed lover has lost
the wildest ebarun of his 'maiden in her ae
ceptauce of hits. She was heaven while he
t?
nl
ttrauod her as a star ;alio ca totb e heaven
if alio stoops to such an ono as he.
The last best fruit which comes to tato
porfeetiou, even in the kindliest zone, is,
tenderness toward the hard, forbearance to-
ward the unforbearing, warpath of heart
toward the cold, philanthropy toward the
misanthropic.
That which befits us, =bosomed in
beauty and wonder as we are, is cheerful-
ness and courage, and the endeavor to
realize our aspirations. Shall not the heart
whiclt has received so 'much, trust the power
by which it lives ?
A man is a great bundle of tools. His is
born into this life without the knowledge of
how to use there. Education is the process
of learning their use, and dangers and
troubles are God'swltetstoneswitlt which to
keep them sharp.
No other autobiography, certainly not
that of St. Augustine, its nearest pro-
totype in literature, is so intensely theologi-
eel as that of John Henry, Cardinal New.
man. It is not the life of a man we read, it
is the drama of a soul, and of a soul entire-
ly occupied with the relations of itself to
God.
We have all seen people who appear to
have had all difficulty taken out of their
Iives. They have always depended on
others, and have never been thrown on their
own resources. Their paths have been
smoothed for them, and they travel at the
most leisurely pace. Their own wants have
been supplied, and they have not been ac-
customed to think of the wants of others.
Can we look to such people for courage,
heroism, self-sacrifice ? They have never
accepted the teachings of difficulty nor
known the value of her friendship. Napoleon
Bonaparte once said, " All the great cap-
tains have performed vast achievements by
conforming to the rules of art—by adjusting
efforts to obstacles." But those who hate
and avoid whatever is hard and unpleasant
need never hope to attain to greatness, nor
even true success in the arts of either peace
or war.
The Visitor was Impressed.
Dibbs (anxious to impress his visitor.
To Mrs. Dibbs). "My dear, when you go
to the country, shall you leave your
diamonds with the Safe Deposit Company?"
Mrs. Dibbs (candid). "Oh no ; I'll
carry them in a pill -box in my trunk."
Innocent Childhood.
Physician (crossly)—" You have a very
bad temper, my child."
Small boy—" I wonder at that. Pa told
ma only yesterday that if I kept on taking
your. medicine I'd be an angel in a short
time. Angels are good tempered, ain't
they ?"
It is stated that at the present moment
there are in the market large quantities of
yellow Cape stones which have been chang•
ed to a brilliant white by a well-known
chemical process.
Brown—" And so Susan is to marry ymmg
Tenuous? Does he inheritany thii g ?" Ii',eck
—" Nothing, I believe, beyond a squint
from his mother and a 81.4; ht .itz.;gesifon of
the gout from his father."
If you have found some ono who knows
how to scratch your back just where it
itches you have come pretty near finding
your affinity.
Ameaseeemmegememenw
The Creal Mood P�nilieR.
A Word to. the People.
"Truth is Mighty, aid will
prevail."
HE remarkable effects and moat satisfactory results, in every variety of
disease arising from iMPURITIES OF ma BLOOD, which are experienced
and meas manifest from dayday,by
to those who have taken NORTHROP
LYMIAN'S VEGETABLE DISCOVERY, for complaints which were pro"
trounced incurable, are surprising to all. In many of these cams, the rsons say.
their pain and sufferingi
s eannot be expressed, as n cases of Scrofula, where
apparently the whole body was one mass of corruption.
This celebrated medieine will relieve pain, cleanse and purify the blood, and
cure such disease?, restoring the patient to perfect health after tryiug many
remedies' and having suffered for years. is it not conclusive proof that if you are
a suffereryou can be cured? Why is this medicine performing such great cures?
It works in the atom), the Circulating Fluid. It can truly be called the
The great source of disease originates in the Bi.000, and no medicine that dote
not act directly upon it, to purify and renovate, has any just claim upon public
attention. When the blood becomes lifeless sad stagnant, either from change of
weather or of climate. want of exercise, irregular diet, or from any other cause,
NORTHROP & LYMAN'S VEGETABLE DISCOVERY will renew the Flood,
carry off the putrid humors, cleanse the stomach, regulate the bowels, and impart I
tone of rigor to the whole body.
The conviction is, in the public mired as well as the medical profession, that
the remedies. sup plied by the vCcirrat .5 KiNCIDOM are to ore sate and more eU'ec'
=dictumtual in the cure of disease than mineral =dictumThe Vegetable laiacovery is
compoaedof the juice of moat remarkable roots, barks and herbal. It is pleasent to
take,and La _. rflectl safe to give an infant. Allow us to ask you a candid Ives.
tion --Do you need it Do not hesitate to try it. You will never regret it. All
druggists have it for We.
Mu. Joux C. Vox, Olinda, writes; -="Northrop & hymen's Vegetable Dia.
covery is giving good satisfaction. Time wile have used it say it bas dans them
more good than anything they have ever taken,"
IN ITS WORST FORM.- hiss-Jt•I,1a A. Pirr wpuru, Toronto, writes ;-
"I had. Dyspepsia in its worst Sorin for aver a year, but after taking three battles
of Northrop & Lyinan's. Vegetable Discovery, a perfect cure followed. I take groat
pleasure in recommending it to anyone suffering; tram Dyspepsia."
bis. W. TiLtrEi:, Wright, 1',Q., had DYSPEPSIA FOR TWENTY YEARS. Tried
many remedies and doctors, but got no relief. Ria appetite was very poor, had a
distressing pain in his aide and stomach, and gradual wasting away of tiesh, when
he heard of and immediately commenced taking Northrop & Lyman'e Vegetable
Discovery. Tile pains nava left, and hie rejoices tri the ea:Pyrneut. of 0440/leaut
health ; iu fact lie is quite a new man.
Sold by all Medicine Dealers at $1.00 per Bottle.
EXETER LUMBER YARD
The utdersigned wishes to inform, the Public to general that he
keeps constantly in stock all kinds of
BUILDING- MATERIAL
Dresiaed or Trudros Eeti.
PINE AND HEMLOCK. LUMBER.
SHINGLES A SPECIALTY
00,000 X X and XX X Piae and Cedar Shingles now in.
stock. A. call solicited and satisfaction guarauted.
JAZZES
DO YOU KEEP IT IN THE HOUSE?
ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM,
NO BETTER REMEDY FOR
COUGHS, COLDS, CROUP, CONSUMPTION, &C.
MoCOLL BROS. & COMPANY,
TiOItONTO.
Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in the following.
specialties
Lardisae
Cylinder
Red Ertgizle
OILS
Wool
Solt Cutting
Eureka
TRY OUR LARDINE MACHINE OIL
AND YOU WILL USE NO OTHER.
For Sale By B1SSET'1 BROS. Exeter, Ont.
SrHiltE't
THE F ;JT
-
•O8SEPSE
Is need both internally and externally.
It sots Qniakly, afford in almost instant
relief from the severest pain.
DIRECTLY TO THC SPOT.
IfIST1WTgNEOUS W ITS ACTIO%
For CRAMPS, CHILLS, COLIC,
DIARRHCEA, DYSENTERY,
CHOLERA MORBUS,
and alt 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.
SOLO EVERYWHERE AP 2SC. A hemi. r,
lag' Beware of Counterfeits and Imitations
�tv+t
5� 5.
\� G0
44' SG
teCsPi',:t \tzt;
vai.**7G,fiO
$‘1� *,���
•
der Purchasers should look to the Label an the Boxes abd Pate.
If the address is not 553, OXFORD ST., LONDON, they are winkle.