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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1894-5-31, Page 7Tan EXETER TIME 444 Loa &EAR) SKIN MENTAL ENERGY ORES oTopts wit -I.. cuRe Yott LONG LI FE STRONG NERVES SARTZI LLA $, P. SeetT t -of Towanda, Pa., Whoa° eenStittltiOn Was completely broken down, is Cared by Ayer's $Areaparilla. He writes: • "For eight years, I was, most of the time, a great sufferer from constipa- tions ItItiney trouble, and indigos., tion, so that any constitution ;seemed to be completely broken down. I was Induced to try Aye ils Sarsaparilla, and took nearly seven bottles, with such excellent resultS that my stomach, bowels, and kidneys are in petfect con- dition, and, in all their ,functions, as regular as clock -work. At the time / began taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla, my weight was only 129 pounds ; I now can brag of 169 pounds, and was never in so good health. If you. could see me be- fore and after using, yau would want me for a traveling advertisement. I believe this preparation of Sarsaparilla to be the best in the market to -day." Ayer's Sarsaparilla • Prepared by Dr. a. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. Cures others,v1,111 cu re you NERVE BEANS NERVE BEANS are is new Ws- covery that cure the worst cases of Nervous Debility, Lost Vigor and lrainng Manhood; restores the weakness of body or mind caused by °legwork, or the errors or ex. ceases of youth. This nomedrab» tolutsly cures the most obstinata cases when all other TaSh.TMENTs have failed even to relieve. Sold by drug. gists at $1 per package, or six for $5, or sent by mail on receipt of price by addressing THE JAMES etErdonsei CO., Taranto, Ont. Write fin pamiddet. Sam in - Sold at Browning's Dug Store, Exeter, CENW-RAL rug Store FANSON'S BLOCK. 4. fall stock of all kinds of 'Dye -stuffs and package Dyes, constantly on, hand. Win an's Condition Powd- ero the best in the mark- et and always resh. Family recip- ees carefully prepared at Cenral Drug Store Exete C LUTZ. B.B.B:' CURES CONSTIPATION AND SICK HEADACHE. mns. emote, A Splendid Remedy. Sins. -I think it my duty to make known the groat benefit received frOm B, 13, was troubled With Oust/patio/1 and debility. and , *god throo bottles of Burdock Blood Bettors, ' which relieved nte from euffering I esteem this ,splendid remedy above all others and teem* =OAS it to 511 suffering from constipation. MRS, g. ViSH1111, Brantford, Out, ake B. B. Mr, Gladstone it, phenomenally rapid, reader. Ha is said to have gone through Leone Italecoter's 'Mademoiselle Ixe in ,thirty-6ve r thereon, PURELY CANADIAN NEWS INTERESTING ITEMS ABOUT OUR OWN COUNTRY. Gathered from Various rotate front the Atlantic to the entente. Bothwell is to have a oretnetory, Frontenao has an organized cheese board. A glass factory is to be Imilt at 'Wallace. burg. Coiling wood manufactures Worcester sauce. Forest druggists close their stores at eight o'clock. Collingwood's bicycle club numbers 40 members. Brantford prides itself about it new eiti. zens' band. mherstburg has the curfew bell law in full operation. Meaford is considering a plan for a sys- tem of waterworks. ESsex-Pes.oh growers are figuring on a big crop this season. A lodge of Sone of Temperance has been organized in Forest. A Glenooe druggist is willing to swap wall paper for eggs. Peterborough wants $19,200 to run its eohools next year. , Arkona has a Jack the Peeper who peeps in windows at night. Point Edward merchants generally, close their stores at 8 p.m. . Listowel will bonus two industrial estab. lishments with $4,500. In Belleville a man 'charged $40 for the use of $1,000 two days. Montreal carpenters work nine hours a day at 20 cent. an hour. - A Picton firm has contracted to send 1,000 horses tit England. - Arkona's berry basket featory is turning out ten thousand baskets a day. During the summer month e Guelph grocers will close at 6:15. Wm. Nimmo has been postmaster of Ravenswood for 23 years. Parkhill's population is 1,553, and the total assessment $312,115. The essessors.put Woodstock's population at 8832, 9, decrease of 300. The Belleville assessor's returns shove the city population to be 10,117. The Michigan Central will erect a new station at Petrolea, to cost $12e000. •All the children of the Walkerville Public school have been vaccinated. A magnificent horned owl was recently shot at Galt by J.C.Todd. Canada has now 8,447 post offices, an increase of 189 since last year. Moncton, N. B., is arranging to have an. electric street railway service. M. O'Gorman, the well-known boat builder, of Sarnia, ia dead, aged 61. It cost a man in Vancouver $15 for trying' to run a pitchfork into a bailirY. Mr. Paisley, who died at Itosseau lately, is said to -have, been 126 years old. The lite Mrs. Jane A.Mitchell, of Ham. Moil, left an estate worth $65,463.57. At the Ottawa hatchery 1,259,000 salmon trout eggs are in process of incubation. A judgein Brocirville said that not one aesessment in that town is properly made. Chatham promises to put an exceedingly strong cricket club in the field this season. Two young ladies took the black veil at the Ursuline convent, Chatham, recently. The names of two rival baseball teams In Brooke township are Greenbacks and Mosabacks. A part of Coney Island, in the Lake of the Woods, has been added to Rat Portage fora park. The capacity of the Greenfield flour mills at Ayr.is to be raised' from 400 to 700 bar- rels daily. The Berlin fire department has added chemical engines to its fire protecting system. TiietBrockville Athletic Association will ereot an immense building, with extensive grounds. The bad pecking of Canadian apples is said to be militating against their popular= ity in England. Ttvo Garafraxa farmers meat pay $300 costs in a lawsuit about apiece of land worth 5 9-10 cents. „. Sarnia's assessment roll shows a popula- tion. of 6,525, the taxable property being put at $2,045,840. . A vein of tin and a new gold mine have been discovered in Rainy Lake, on the Ameridite side. During 1893 Scott, Calls & Co.,S trathroy, paid out $120,000 for eggs, handling about 400,000 dozens. One hundred cars of ice have been ship- ped from Barrie for use on one of the steam- ers at Collingwood. ' The reductimi of the excise duty on malt will save from $225,000 to $250,000 to the brewers of Unlade, There is acme talk of the Forest "Excel slot band being appointed a regimental band for the 27th battalian. The Ldndon city council have decided to issuee$50,000 in debentures to meet water works expenditure. A Sarnia hen goes around cackling 'because she laid -an egg 6t inches Moircum- ference and four inches long. ' The G T. R. will put down 2,000,000 new ties this year and the C. P. R. will have to replace most of its ties. The next convention of fire chiefs of America will be held in Montreal on the second Tuesday in August. Strathroy has a Mok Minna hen 6i inches in circumferenc the other day. The Port Hope Guide tecently got judg- ment, for $11.50 against a Guelph man who sent back his paper "Refused." Mrs. Green, of Sommerville, is 83 years She does all her own' housework, and recently made a quilt, of 2, 500 pieces, Peterborough has two companies of High which laid an egg 4 i c :s in legt , and sohool cadetsand thesoltizeris vsill uniform them and equip A fife and drum baud. The Sarnia pollee tette the names of evetyone eeen on the istreets after midnight and report the same for entry in a register kept by the ohief, Strathroy's population at present is 3,013, againet 3,163 feet year. The as- eefisineet has decreased in the game time from $1,076,2/5 to $1,043,079. Canadian atehitecni are loudly coreplai n hag at the Manner in Which Americans ate employed to design large buildings in this conntry in preference to theenaelves. COMMERCIAL NEWS, 'What la 0011141( 70intt tao. tie BUSY" World of 4 The shipments of wheat from India last Week were 120,000 bushels, decrease of 40,000 bushels. An experimental shipment ot ore from British Columbia to England is to be made via Cape Horn, The Ulster Steamship Co. is about to commence a direct service between Mon- treal, and Dublin, the first steamer being expected to leave Montreal on June 15th, The exports of gold from New York last week aggregate 06,585,300, and from Jan- uary 1st, the amount is $52,046,478, while the balance in the Treasury is now below $90,000,000, Within three years the. price or platinum at the 'Oral mines has inoreased five -fold. This it die,saya the Popular Seience Nes, to the heavy demand for this metal for electrical purposes. It is now nearly as dear as gold, and if the price keeps going up will soon be dearer: A railroad which the Germans have built in Asia Minor, extending from Ismid, a harbor about 60 miles east of Con- etatitinople, east by south 309 miles to Angoraphem as little woodemys the Reilread Gazette, as any in the world. Not only the rails and bridges, but the ties and telegraph poles are iron. There are no less than 1,200 bridges on the line, one measuring 590 feet', one 458, one 445 and three 327 feet. 4Tliereare sixteen tun- nels, the longest measuring 1,430 feet. This is the only railroad which penetrates into the interior ef Asiatic) Turkey. The last week has been a period of ex- treme dullness in general trade. There is scarcely anything done in primary depart. mitts which can be conveniently deferred, and both bank olearinge--11road earn- ingsattestthegeneral conservatism. of trad- ers,though the figures are not remarkable in view of the continued depressionehroughout the world and the reverses we are experi- encing now. The speculative markets have failed to:respond to the stimulating effect of 4 of money, and in most depart- ments the drift of values has continued downward. Nothing has occurred to strengthen Canadian securities. The enor- thous unsold stock of wheat 'which has made a lower average ot prices in February, March and April than was ever known in any previous month he depressed May wheat to the lowest point on record. The movement has been most sluggish, prin- cipally because of the depression in foreign markets and the indisposition of Canadian millers to buy even at present low peices, expecting iftstill further lowering of prices. This must be the ruling idea since some of them are known to have only very light stocks of grain, though stocks of flour are probably heavy. There is no improvement in the wool trade, neer can we find any evidence, of improvement in dry goods or clothing, in which business is practially confined to sorting orders, and small ones at that. Experienced travelers find this. month the dullest for many years. Grocer. ies ate, perhaps, moving a trifle more actively, stimulated, no doubt, by the pros- pects of further advance in sugars ; and collections are, on the wholeg3lightly better thane month ago. This is probably the result of the opening of cheese taotories throughout"the country; a little extra mon- ey has been put into circulation among farm - ere, etc., on this account. The probreiii of handling our eggs advantageously is re. ceiving increasing attention.. Concessions' in prices do not help sales any, the supply, being greater than the demand; and if the duty on eggs is not removed by the United States, the probability is that the market will, be glutted, as it does not pay to ship them to England. There is no change in money rates, and the only feature Of satis- faotion is that liabilities of insolvent firms are comparatively less than ever; but whether this is that wholesalers and banks are more willing to carry the larger omit, and, perhaps, to sonee extent, aiming at crowding the smaller, ones out, authorities are not quite unanimous. AN UPRISING IN INDIA. A. Feeling of rarest That' may Develop Into a Revolt. Notwithstanding the fact that the au- thorities in Calcutta have declared that there is no immediate reason for apprehend- ing an, uprisineteof the natives, the fears that have been excited cannot be entirely' groundless: It cannot be denied that there is a feeling of unrest that may at any mom- ent develop into a revolt. This feeling was apparent last July, when, during the Mohammedan festival at Azingorh, serious disturbances arose through the disgust of the Hincloos at the cow -killing prevalent on such occasions. At Bembay, also, there was aria, due to the same cause, and thirty- five people were killed before peace was restored. It is not alone the jealousies and hatreds of the native races that cause dis- content '• the interference of the British rulers of the country wtth long established native customs and rooted traditions -con- tribute to the same result. The London Spectator, a short time ago, sounded a note of alarm, but little heed was given it. It was followed by the letter of the Indian his- torian, Colonel Malleson, to which more attention was given. When it is remember- ed that the calamities of 1857 were ceased by a mere rumour that cartridges had been served out to the Bengal army greased with the fat of animals unclean alike to Hindoo and Mohammedan, the °city -killing incident grows in. importance. A Rush for ,the Gold Fields. The most important news received from Australia by the steamer Alameda deals With the rush to the new mining camps of Cool Garda in West Auatraliti, and of Wyalong in New South Wale', Many clis- Mi.:its of New South Wales have been7draiu- ed of labor by the wild rush to the Wyalong geld field.s. Titil new dietrict is in the northern end °Mips cOuntY. The gold Bpi in reels. Early in Merch there ,wetei 3,000 people on the ground, and the number has since been swelled_ several hundred daily. On March 50 it had reached 8,006, , The road from the nearest settlement, 30 miles distant, is in a fearful cendition, and the water supply is bad. The camp swarms with men who have had no experience in mining, and whOlall ready violins to sharp. ere, Others who have no means and who expected to get work have cronscied tin They are practically deatitute, and the Goverment will have to help them ofib. he gold field prolsably consists of a main baiik bone of Volcanic forination of uneertain length, trending north -West by north, and crossed by eumercets feeders, principally, of quartz and ironstono, running north-east by south-west. But What portions of mein reef and .of the feeders besidee those already found Oft`rry payable gold is a question that reinaths to be discovered, Children Cry for Pitchee$ Cagorial GOVERNIINT SALARIES. QNTARIOCABINO MINISTERS "- AND TREIR ASSISTANTS, The Annual Pay Dolt or the Provineint Ministers and Their etafr Of Clerks Who Labor in the Parliement HuLld logs at Toronto. Ontario's Cabinet consists of eight mem- bers of the Local Legislature. There are but seven portfolios. - Sir OligerMowat, Premier and Attorney. General, has a staff of eight assistants, clerks and messengers in his department at the Parliament buildings. Sir Oliver's salary le $7,000 atyear, beeides his sessional allowanee of $600 a year. The total amount of ealariea paid to the eight members of hie etaff is $10,350. The iniecellaneone expense of hie offine for 1893 was $2,909.79, zneeteettee. Hon. 4,W. Ross, Minister of Education has a salary of $4,000 a year. There are twelve assistants, clerks and messengers in his department, their total yeaely galleries being $13,482,66. The miseellaneous office expenditure tor 1893 of Mr. Ross' depart. merit was $2,408,28. ' CROWN LANDS Bon, A. S. Hardy is Commissioner of Crown Lands, ariain the various branches of the department, including the Bureau of Mines, there are thirty-two regular assis- tants and clerks on salary. The salary list of Mr. Hardy'sdepartment for 1893 was $45,- 732,25. The offices expenses for the same year amounted to 010,806,22. This includes a eum of $3,002,10 paid for the services of twelve clerks and writers engaged tempor- arily during the year. monsemi WORKS. Hon. 0,F.Fraser, Commissioner of Public Works, receives a salary -5f $4,000, and the assistants, clerks and messengere in his de- partment number twelve, the sum of $19,- 250 being paid to the Minister and his staff In 2893. The office expense of this depart. meat for the past year was $2,247.66, none° remain. s 'Hon. R. Harcourt, Treasurer of the pro- vince, also gets $4,000 a year. He presides over the audit office, the licensing and jus- ticiary accounts' branch, and is also Registrar -General and chief of the Provin- cial Board of Health. In all the depart- ments over which ter. Harcourt presides there is a staff numbering thirty-six. Their total salaries for the past year amounted to $38,332,67 ineluding the salary, of the chief. The miscellaneous expenditure for all the branches for 1893 was $10,666.04. PROVINCIAL SECRETARY. * Hon. J. M. Gibson, Provincial Secretary, is also Chief offPublic Institutions. Mr. Gibson has ninteen assistants clerks and messengers in his department, and their salaries for 1893, with $4,000 for the Minister, amounted to $28,134,40. The office expenditure for the same period was $6,464.09. AGRICULTURAL. Hon. John Dryden, Minster of Agricul- ture, has also charge of the immigration office. His salary, $4,000 and that of his eleven assistants, clerks and messengers, amounted to $16,050 for the year 1893, whilst his office expenses footed up $2,371. 31. Hon. E. H. Bronson is a member of the Cabinet Council withoutportfolio, and does not control any of the departments. MISCELLANEOUS. There are also the Queen's Printer's de. partment, salary bill $2,600; Registry Inspector's office salary bill $1;500 ; ineur- ance braneh, salary bill, $4,600, and the salary of an investigation clerk, $1,860; making a total of seven officials with sala- ries- amounting to $lits500. Ties office ex- penses for the year amounted tot$12,184.26. LEGISLATION. Hon. Thomas Ballantyne, Speaker of the House, enjoys the privilege of controlling a staff of 16 officials, most of whom are en- gaged the year round. They come under the head Legislation, and received $13,293- 10 in ane year. ^ • Besides,these officials, some 125 sessional -writers and messengers, 18 pages, and three attendants were engaged dating the pro- gress of the '93 session, ata cost -of $15,579. 05. • The total expenses incidental to the thirty-nine days' sitting of the Local Leg- islature In 1893, including the printing -of bills, etc'wee $138,924,82, this inoluding the sum of $56,102.40, paid to members for sessienal indemnity and traveling mileage: SUMMARY. The total salaries and office expenses dis- bursed for 1893 to Ministers and the offi- cials under their control in the Parliament - buildings was as follows: Department, No. of Salaries. Office. Officials. Expenses. Sir 01iver Mowat .. 9 $ 17.360 00 $ 2,909 79 Hon. G. W. ROSS.... 13 17,482 66 2.408 28 Hon. A.S. Hardy 32 45,732 2$ 10,808 22, liOn.C.F. Fraser.... 13 19,250 00 2,247 66 Hon. It. Harcourt 37 38,332 67 10,666 01 Hon.J.M. Gibson.... 20 28,134 40 6.461 09 Hen. John Dryden.. 12 10,050 00 2,371 31 Miscellaneous 7 10,000 00 1,081 20 Speakers and Legis- lation 162 28,872 15 110,052 67 Totals 306 3221,701 13 $152,912 32 About one-tenth of the revenue of the entire province is paid out for salaries and office stationary and furnishings in the Par. Bement buildings in the Queen's Park. There is a regular staff of about 150 at work in the buildings each day. Scotch Shipbuilders Busy. During April the Scotch shipbaildere were Way. They 'winched 33, vessels of an aggregate capacity of 33, 781 tons,, of which 22 of 24,405 tons were steamers, and 11 of 9,286 tons, sailing ships. lathe pre. vious month the number of vessels was 21, and the tonnage 20140. In Aril the Clyde oontributedjas usdal the bul of the work, its t9tal being $0 veesels o 48,801 tons; and it is significant that 21,642 tons were for Scotch owners. In regard to wet* in loud, tte Clyde is now, by 9otri palgtion vvith 1893, in 4 voter good position. At the end of Mareh there was 282,00 tons of work in hand, beine 51,000 tons better than at the Elam time last year. There is now, aftet the heavy launches Of the month, °loge on 300,000 toe M. hand. Ptificilla-" Don't you with you were old lei Bullion's wife 7" Priniellit--" No ; but I wish I was his widow." A °Mem of Mattin, Texas is named Augustus Bonaparte Caesar 'Duna teary &hereon Fredinand Grant Ranfilbal Isaiah Titoksoll Kn ox Leonidas Meredith Nicholas Oscar Tate Ring, Otheriehei he is feeling nnitwel1. The Jersey COW an,d Her Product. It is conceded without dispute, even by those whose self interest and admiration for other milking breeds ehuts her out from employment in the dairy, that the jersey cow, as a superior butter maker and great producer of nob cream, stands without a peer, and an holiest confession from any praptioal source, with a full knowledge of fact, will accord her this distinction, no matter what objections the breed may pos. sees in disqualifying it for other purposes. As a family cow, whose milk fie* never ceases from the beginning to the end of the year, always heavily laden with cream, a royal favorite, and an ornament to the barnyard, mild in disposition, continually evincing a disposition to do the right thing -these points her bitterest opponents will freely admit, She is not noted especially sea large yielder of milk, thoUgh scores and hundreds of instances are recorded Westing great capacity in this direction. Five to seven gallons per day is an admirable showing for a cow, of any breed, to make, and is fully equal to the amount given by many good aunnals of the heavier milking breeds, whose best claim is for great yield of ,milk. Jerseys without number have records well authenticated in excess of the highest amount named, and the loweet is but little above good average for high-class animals of the breed when in full flow of mak, and when ()Jr. OUrnstances are most favorable. A large quantity of milk from the Jersey cow is not, in itself, esteemed the most valuable consideration, as this feature is almost certe.in,to detract from its richness; a heavy milking cow, of any breed, can- not very well, in the natnral order of things produce very rich milk, and in proportion to increase of flow there is a lessening of the oily parts of which butter is composed. EXperience teaches that comparatively small milkers are often the heaviest butter makers; very few of the large butter prm decers of the race have giveh an unsually a great flow of milk, and it will be noted invariabirthat'a pound of butter is pro- duced from less milk from a cow giving a 'smallarrimeiir than from one with a heuvi owof Before us is a list of over thirty Jersey cows, none of them remarkable for great milk -giving capacity, that have produced.a pound of butter each from an amount of milk varying from three and one-half to ten pounds. The average of Jersey milk requires from fifteen to sixteen 'sounds for a pound of butter. This is the average quantity of milk from fresh cows; as the milking period advance, the milk becomes richer in cream and yields proportionately more butter. The list alluded to contains the names of many of the most noted dews of the breed, with butter records varying- from thirty pounds to forty-six pounds twelve and one- half ounces per week. One of them pro- duced 936 pounds fourteen and three-quar- ters ounces within a year, which was all sold at an average of thirty cents per pound; several of them have official recerds of thirsty pounds per week add more; all are great 'consumers of concentrated food, with im- mense digestive powers, and none are in. caned to accumulate flesh when in full flow of milk. A daily yield of m6re than thirty pounds of milk from any cow in the list is exceptional, and during the greater period of their milking -term it runs down below one-half that quantity. These cows and their characteristics are typical of their race, and the wise breeder Will not seek to divert the course of useful- ness into other channels than legitimate ones. The gain in quantity of milk will be at the sacrifice of butter and cream, and is nonsequently a retrograde movement and unwise. The Jersey cow was created for a butter producer, and for this she is abso- lutely unrivaled; and while it is possible, by a persisterit line of breeding, to change, to an extent, her habits, and even her nature, and produce an animal that will give more milk, the course is wrong, and antag. onizes the plans established by nature, letrge quantities of milk, andthis rich in the exhaustive fats of butter, are wholly incompatible in the same animal. There are other breeds in the field special- ly adapted for heavy milk production, the capacity of which the Jersey cow scarcely hopes to successtully compete with, even if desired ,• but her supporters need have no alarm that her prestige for butter making will ever be lowered or weakened by these enormous milking machines. 'They may -fill the largest bucket, but that is as far as they will ever reach. Leave that honor to them, and let -the aim of the Jersey breeder be to produce the greatest number of cows capable of producing fourteen pounds and over of butter per week, or 1,000 pounds per year, and to so skilfully control the system that there will be no blanks or digs - appointments. This is glory enough for one breed._ --- Granular Butter. "How many boys and -girls on the farm have had an old apron tied around their waists andebeen told to churn until the butter will hold up the dasher?' Such instructions are fatal to good butter," says the Homestead. " In the first place, the dash churn is ten years behind the times and ought to be thrown out of every farm, even, if no more butter is made than to sup. ply the family table. The box or barrel churn is cheap and it is so much more con- venient and so much better butter can be made with it that there should be no hesi- tation in discarding the old dash churn in its favor. But no matter what kind of a churn is used, never churn until the butter is gathered in chunke large enough to hold up the dasher. There are several reasons why this should not be dons. One of them is that the grain is destroyed. dood butter has a fine, distinct grain, and when broken slum a distinct fracture like cast-iron. If this grain is destroyed by over -churning or over-working, the butter becomes a greasy mixture, like lard, and has a greasy taste. Again, it is necessary that the bettermilk be well washed out or the butter will be- come strong and rancid in a short time. This commit be done when the butter is churned into lumps, so in the latter case lie grain, flavor and keeping quality are all injured. The churn should always be stop. ped When the butter is in the form of small granules, ranging in size from a red clover 'heed to a grain of 'wheat; then the butter. milk can be well washed out and the grain *111 be uninjured if the working is proper- ly bee. There is no reason why the farmer sohould not, melee just as fine butter at any one, providing he will take the, trouble to do it right, LOVO it the only craze that is gekerally considered excusable. Sponges ere being propagated in a 61101/14 way juat now. About three years ago a cute German divided a few healthy sped. Mots of live sponges into a goodly imbiber of parte and pladed them in deep water, with the result that he now has it crop of 4,000 at an initial expenditure of $20. k SUNL S Has, proved OAP by its enormous sale that it s The hest value for the Cortsurner of any soap in the market. ' Millions of women throughout 018 world can vonch for this, as it is they who have proved its value. It brings them less labor, greater cOmfOrt: EX -MEMBER t PARLIAMENT REUBEN E TRUAX Hon. Reuben B. Truax, one of Canada's ablest thinkers and states- men, a man so highly esteemed. by the people of his district that he was honored with a seat in Parliament, kindly furnishes us for publication the following statement, which will be most welcome, to the public, inasmuch as it is one in which all will place implicit confidence. Mr. Truax says: "I have been for about ten years very much troubled with Indigestion and Dyspepsia, have tried a great many different kinds of patent medicines, and have been treated by a number of physicians and found no benefit from them. I was recom- mended to try the Great South American Nervine Tonic. I obtained a bottle, and I must say I found very great relief, and have since taken two more bottles, and now feel that I am entirely free from Indigestion, and would strongly recommend all my fellow -sufferers from the disease to give South American Nervine an immediate trial. It will cure you. "REUBEN B. TRUAX, "Walkerton, Ont," It has lately been discOvered that certain Nerve Centres, located near the 'lase of the brain, control and supply the stomach with the neces- sary nerve force to properly digest the food. When these Nerve Oen- tree are in any way deranged the supply of nerVe force is at once diminished, and as a result the food taken into the stomach is onii partially digested, and Chronic India gestion and Dyspepsia soon make their appearance. South American Nervine is se prepared that it acts, directly on the nerves. It will absolutely cure ever# case of Indigestion and Dyspepsia, and is an absolute specific for all nervous diseases and ailmentiro It usually gives relief in one day. Its,powers to build up the wiaole system are wonderful in the extreme, It cures the old, the young, and the midale-aged, It is a great friend to the aged and infirm. Do not negleat to use this precious boon; if you do, you may neglect the only reined* which will restore you to healt14 South American Nervine is perfectly safe, and very pleasant to the taste. Delicate ladies, do not fail to use this great cure, because it Will put -.the bloom of freshness and beauty upon your lips and in your cheeks, ana quickly drive away your disabilities and weaknesses. Dr. W. Washburn, of New Richmond, Indiana, writes: "I have used South American Nervine in my family and prescribed it in t my practice. It is a most ,excellent remedy." C. EUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter. DR. MODAIRblID, Agent, Hensall. .pormatma 0 cc‘ (ik., Ik'k s\z. .9° v.:C. ,z,..k s \00'I \).co\• Q,'• A'\ 61\;"\c' •Abc:Q: .,\'`'\\:: s '4??C'''q'' "'vt:k;:kNq''' ''' 0)" N'S$1 sk%)' ' C ccv b•\''' tz*.q' ..,,gSo• a \ ,,,,''" ,,\‘'` 4.` ti.,e, ' 0. ' b,Xl16 ,c,1 cb , ,es ,,,,,.5 k 4t, ..., e ,c,,z. 1,1Z/ *C(‘ sR) i 4'. VO). C.3'ib 1 ' Ob -• e .‘ S'.....' '0 I /„ • •R..‘ Jf6' o 42.1 s0 ‘1S4b ch04k <,\*kN4‘) /Y\k\ \). ';•tC, 4 . 'A- 4,- 0' •rf2 't" $3' '6C" l'Ae0 40 ,+. ,c,1/4c\\,,b,t\*00. t„•k\''t. 44. Purchasers shvitia iook tO the tato/ on the Boos etal Vote, U the eddresit it not 533, 011'013 tit, Ifidelittt, they esnotOtletee