HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1894-7-12, Page 2A Racking Cough
Cured by Ayer's Cherry Pectoral.
Mrs. R D. kLALL, 217 Qenessee St„
Lockport, N. Y., says :
"Over thirty years ago, 1: remember
hearing my father desoribe the wonder-
ful curative effects of Ayer's Cherry
Pectoral. During, a recent attack of La
Grippe, which assumed theform of a
catarrh, soreness of the lungs, accent -
pained by an aggravating cough, I
used various remediesand prescriptions.
pr ptions.
While some of these medicines partially
Alleviated the coughing during the day,
none of them afforded me any relief from
that spasmodic action of the lungs which
would seize me the InonientI attempted
to lie down at night. .After ten or twelve
Such nights, l; was
Nearly in espaer,
and bad about decided to sit up all night
in my easy akair, and procure what.
sleep I could in that way. It then oc-
curred to ane that S bad a bottle. of
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. I took a
spoonful of this preparation in a little
Water, and was able to lie down without
coughing. In a few moments, I fell
asleep, and awoke in the morning
greatly refreshed and feeling much
better. I took a teaspoonful of the Pec-
toral every night for a week, then grad-
ually decreased the dose, and in two
weeks my cough was cured."
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
Prepared byDr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowen, Mass.
Prompt to act,, sure to ou 'M
DR, .Fk 'W.LEE'iS
°EXT: OF,. .
.• @ D .`
TRIMBE
CURES
HOLE
ho1er,a orhu,
Ft A...1V1 ISS
1 r.CEA
YSERTE
AND ALL SUMMER COMPLIWITS
AND FLUXES OF THE . BOWELS
ITIS SAFE, AND RELIABLE FOR.
Qt1ILDREN OR ADL!. irS.
CEN TRAL
Drug
FANSON'S BLOCK.
A full stock of all kinds of
Dye -stuffs and package
Dyes, constantly on
hand. Winan's
Condition
Powd-
er>i,
the best
in the mark-
et and always
rash. Family recip-
ees carefully
Store
prepared at
Central Drug t re Exaf;e
Cm -
a
His Dyspepsia Cured.
I have else used it for my wife and
amily, and have found it the best thing
they can take, and from past experience
I :have every leasure in strongly reeorn
Mending B. B. B. to all my friends.
I write you because I think that it
alt oukt be generally known what B.B.B.
can accomplish in eases of indigestion.
GEOP.GE 1 EAD, Sherbrooke, Que.
Regard for the Unities,
Servant--" Please, mum, Mrs. Nexdoor
Wants you to lend her sorra reading matter
Inhabit, fol' a sick person."
M1atrees—" Cetteinly. Give her those
ntedir'al alaieiiaca."
11:d MO. trate
DEAR SIEs,—
Iwrite you to say
that for some time
I had been suffering
from acute indiges-
tion or dyspepsia,
and of course felt
very great income
beniencefrom same
in my general busi-
ness. I thereupon
decided to try Bnr-
dockBlood Bitters,
and after taking
two bottles I found
I was quite another
Man, for
13. CURED WIC
ROUND THE WHOLE LB
WIIAT Is GQINIIi o'il IN THE POUR
CORNERS OF THE GLOBE,
01d and New World alveute on Interest
Chronicled itriefy-.-1ntcresteng amp-
peatiugs; et Recent Hate.
Cotton •grove wild en India..
Omnibusses with pneulxaatio tired are
being tested in llaagow.
Twolve thousand tons of Fruit were eon-
sunned in London last year.
The Queen of Italy is very clever at
improvising tunes on the piano.
AU the world over there are ninetyeight
women to one hundred men,
'Fully one-third of the female population
of France are laborers on farms.
The annual commerce of the British
eolouiea amounts uo £448,000,000.
There aro restaurants in Berlin where
horseflesh is the only meat served,
The only remains of the splendid French
possessions in India are five towns.
Whooping cof h anntially destroys
s
about 250 lives in every 10,000 In England.
The alcohol monopoly in Italy will yield
the Government an, annual revenue of 59,
200,000.
Charitablesocietiesn a are tobe organized
in France to aid convicts whose terms have
expired,
In England over $1,000,000 worth of
medicine is annually distribeted gratis at
the dispensaries.
The charity schools of Great Britain are
maintained at an annual expenditure of
£4,200,000.
Rome is to be illuminated by eleotrioity
generated twenty miles away by a cascade
on the Tiber.
Prince Bismarck, it is said, would rather
have a sure owe for rheumatism than all
the titles an Europe.
Gold to the amount of $350 was recently
collected from the soot of the chimney in
the London mine.
It is said that Mr. Gladstone will devote
much of his leisure time hereafter toa new
translation of Horace
They are working hard against the dock
A ing of horses' tails in London, and are fining
offenders right and left.
In Japan the currency is on a silver
basis, with the result that $100 in gold Is
worth $218 in money of the realm.
The marriage rate in England and Wales
during the last quarter of last year was
lower than in any previous like period.
Under a law recently put in foroe in
France only physicians graduated in France
are allowed to use the title " Doctor."
The largest oil paintingin the world is
by Tintoretto entitled " Paradise." It is
3S feet in height and 84 feet in width.
Mrs. Culloner, the widow and the sister
of a well-known English jockey,is said to be
the only woman trainer of race horses.
The finest tomb in Great Britain is that
of the Duke of Hamilton on,the grounds of
Hamilton palace.. It cost £180,000.
Signor Giolitti, an Italian deputy, wants
to straighten the national finances of that
country by imposing a tax on beards.
Henrik Ibsen, who is now 67 years of
age, was an apothecary's olerk in. Skien,
Norway, when he wrote his first play.
The Sultan has.. a right royal terror of'.
small -pox, and he is very particular to have
the household thoroughly vaccinated.
The late Mr. EdwardStanhope bequeath-
ed his estate to hiswife, with Col. Egerton
(her brother) and Earl Stanhope as trus-
tees.
Anton Rubinstein has decided to retire
from public lite. He is disgusted with the
manner in which his works have been
received.
One thousand and sixty persons were
killed in coal mines in Great Britain during
last year and sixty-five persona in metalli-
ferous mines.
The ex -Empress Eugenie of France isthe
godmother of 3,835 French children who
were born on March 15, 185 6, the day of
the birth of her son.
The Ktrig of Italy has conferred upon
Professor Virchow, the famous German
surgeon, the grand cross of the Order of St:
Maurice and Lazarous.
Giuzeppe de Felice, a member of the
Italian parliament, was sentenced to eight-
een years 'solitary confinement for having
incited disturbance in Sicily.
The latest stabistics give the number of
Roman Catholics in the world as 230,896,-
633; Protestants, 143,237,625; Greek
Catholics 98,016,000.
Tibet will be the:largest bucket -hopper
dredger in the world is now building in.
Scotland. It is to be used in the work of
deepening the Danube.
The Prime Mini' -ter of Madagascar has
just been sentenced to penal servitude for
'.fife for having talked politics in an offensive
way to Prince Rakoomena.
There are fifty-five towns and cities in
England which destroy their garbage and
solid refuse by burning, and 570 furnaces
are employed for the purpose.
The Austrian poor law5gives every man
60 years old the right to a pension equal to
one-third of the amount per day whichhe
had earned during his working hours.
The bones of the whales that the German
Kaiser slaughtered in the North Sea. last
summer are to be turned into furniture for
the Norwegian boathouse, at Potsdam.
Lord Peroy Douglas, son of the. Marquis
of Queeusbury, has been varying the mono-
tony of picking up gold nuggets, in Australia
by noting as reveres atprize fights.
Someone who has figured on the work
done at Pompeiisince June, 1872, aays.that
is will take until 1947 to unearth the entire
ruins, with eighty-five men working every
day.
M. de Coutouly, the new French Am-
bassador at Muhich, owes his rise to the
friendship of the Prince of Wales, who
knew him when he was a newspaper repor-
ter.
The Duke of Parma, father of the k'rin-
eoss of Bulgaria, is the prince who can
boast of the most children among the
princes of Europe. He has ten daughters
and five sons, all living..
There are four round ohurches in Jing -
land, Northumberland possesses one
Little Maplestead, in .Essex, another ; the
Temple ohurch, London, is the third, and
Holy Sepulchre, Cambridge, is the fourth,
The Government of Mexico exacts' a tax
of $25 on every corpse that is taken from
the country, An American lady recently
died there and it cost the relatives $615 to
get the rennins bank to her native land.
In England the successful lawyer makes
from X75,000 to $100,000 e year , and th
successful physician. $80,000 to $100,000
the Average barrister anti medicalman do
not Make more then $1.200 a year.
Dr. Ernest liiart, of the British Medical
Journal, deelarea that obolera will become
extiuet is the next thirty years because of
the rapid advance of sanitary science.
Tana lady inembera of the English Pres--
byteriau church have .offered a site and
£20,000 eterlin for building purposes if
the Theological College of the English
Preebyterien church be removed from Lou-
don tie Cambridge,
The Hungarian Government has commis-
sioned the painter Muukaosy to paint a
piotuve representing the appeal of Maria
Theresa to her subjects in 1741, when her
oountry was menaced by Frederick the
Great.
The. British War Office is considering a
proposition than all soldiers should he in-
structed in elements of anatomy and pay.
Biology in order that they mightbe able
immediately to atop the flow of blood from.
a leading artery.
THE ANGRY BOERS.
Intense l xclten►eut Prevails at Pretoria—
The Boers Prepared to do Hattie With
the Brettsh.
The South African Republic is surrounded
byBritish under
possessions or territory
British protection. It has no outlet to the
sea and is not likely to get one. The former
President Kruger tried every means in his
power to seoure au outlet through Swazis•
land to the coast, but was unsuccessful.
Rhodes' influence was too muoh for him,
The Boers chafe under this restriction,
Which bears heavily upon them. The Re-
public, raises its revenue by means of a tax
upon imports. These having to pass through
British custom houses at the coast, and to
be hauled many hundreds of miles by rail•
way or ox team far into the interior, where
another tax is imposed at the frontier of the
Republic, excessively high prices prevail for
all commodities in the Transvaal, which
would not be could the Boers secure an in.
dependent route to the coast for themselves.
This is looked upon as part of the
nee_ FORCING FORCING CUT POLICY
of the aggressive Premier at the Cape.
"All South Africa. British" is his motto.
The existence of the Republic under such
circumstances is doubtful, but when it is
considered that the discovery of rich gold
deposits in the Transvaal -has caused a
great influx of foreigners, so that the British,
subjects in the Republic) equal, if they do
not outnumber, the Boer population, it can
be easily seen that it will be extremely
difficult for the Republic to preserve its
antonomy for many years longer. The con-
ventions. of 1880 and 1884 with Great Bri-
tain secured to the Boers republican rights,
but the British retained control of native
affairs and foreign relations so that the
Beers are prevented from engaging in for.
eign intrigue. They had battled for their
independence and won it by overthrowing,
with great slaughter, the, British forces of
Gen. Colley at Majuba Hill in 1881, and
they have jealously guarded the Republic
ever since. The influx of British miners
and others, attracted thither by the dis-
coveries of gold, was not regarded with
favor by the exclusive Boers, but the coun-
try has advanced so amazingly within the
past few years that general prosperity re.
conoiles them to the presence of bks
English incomer or "vitlander." Still they
have steadfastly refused to extend the
franchise to- this large foreign element or to
grant it representation in the Yoer Parlia-
ment, which has
EiIBITTERED ENGLISH FEELINGS
against them. Under these circumstances
the English residents are justified in refus-
ing to do military service for the Republic,
as arecent decree enjoins upon all maledeni-
zens of the Republic. An attempt on the part
of the Boers to enforce this decree mustaurely
lead to resistance on the part of the English,
who refuse under any consideration to bear
srns for the Republic. Reports from South
Africa, show that intense excitement pre-
vails at Pretoria, the capital of the Trans-
vaal, that the English have made a demon-
stration against the Boers, and that the
latter, fully armed, were coming in from the
surrounding country, prepared to do battle
with their hereditary foes, so the situation
may be said to be serious. War with the
Boers will be uo light matter. They are
brave, iutenselyepatriotic and skilled rifle.
men, which qualitiee have won them victory
over the British before, and may again
should occasion arise.
The Richest Men.
Tne richest man in the world,' it is esti-
mated, is Han Quay, a Chinese banker,
worth the almost inconceivable sum of one
billion, eight hundred millions of dollars.
A great number of the largest banks in the
Chinese Empire are believed to be under
his control. John D. Rockefeller, who
started without a dollar, has amassed an
enormous fortune estimated at about one
hundred and fifty million dollars, and he
spends only one hundred thousand dollars
per annum, so that his wealth keeps piling
up at a tremendous rate. Mr. Rockefeller
is about fifty-six years of age. If he lives
until he is seventy, his wealth, it is esti-
mated, will amount to nearly three hun-
sired million dollars. Viscount Belgreve,
grandson of the Duke of Westminster, if
he lives to inherit his patrimony, will be
oae of the richest men in the world, as by
the time he attains his majority the leases
of the Westminster estate will have run out
and the income of the property, now esti•
mated at about $5,000 a day, will then be
nearly twenty times that amount. Amongst
monarchs, the Shah of Persia and the Czar
of Russia are the most wealthy—their re-
pective incomes being estimated at between
ten and fifteen millions of dollars a year.
ais
Went Out and Hanged Himself.
A Montreal despatch says :—A sad case
of suicide is reported from` Varennes. At
an early hour Thursday morning a well
known farmer named Hector Messier, aged
56, and father of 10 cnildren, arose :and left
the house. Later on one of the sons went
to the barn andwas horrified tofind the dead
body of his father hanging to a beam. No
reason whatever can be assigned, as Mes-
sier was in good health and circumstances.
Gentle ilebuke,
Husband (very Iate from the club)—
" Hum
lub)--"Hum I I told you not to sit up for me."
Wife (sweetly)—"I didn't. I got up to
see the Sun rale.,
TRADE AND 001111118110.
A Few Items as to What is Gain o
in the Business World,
Thelast statement of the Bank of Ger.
many shows an inereeee in the note circu-
labionfor the week of 40,040,000 marks,
The number of cattle exported from
Montreal last week was 4,553 of which
2,339 were shipped to London, 1,007 to
Liverpool ; 425 to. Bristol, and 782 to
Glasgow. In the same week 780 sheep
were shipped.
Sir Oharles Tupper, Canadian Efah Com•
atissioner, heads a protest paper presented.
to Parliament signed by all the represen'
tatives of the British colonies, against the
levying' of an estate duty on personal°pro•
petty situated in the colonies of a person
domiciled within the Unitod Kingdom.
13y Irrigation 25,000,000 acres are made,
fruitful in India alone. In Egypt there
areabout 6,000,000 acres, and is Europe
e
about 5;000,000 acres. In the United
States where the work of improving other-
wise wasted land by irrigation has but
oomnnenoed, they have about 4,000,000
acres rendered produotive in this way.
About forty salmon miming goodsa
tab-
lishmenta are carrying on operations in
British Columbia, The full effecb of the
recent flood upon this great industry can-
not yet be fully ascertained, but it is goner•
ally believed that the total pack will not
be much less than the average of the past
five years. The floods came fa the midst of
canning operations, and while it was im-
possible to catch the usual quantities of
fish then the aggregate catohea are not ex-
peoted to be much below the average.
Banker Henry Clews sunsets an inter.:
national notecurrency or bond to take the
place of gold in adjusting commercial bal-
ances due from one country to another.
Hie plan is to have the four great commer-
cial nations, Great Britain, France, Ger-
many and the United. States, issue, not to
exceed, $400,000,000 of gold -redeemable in.
ternational currency or bonds bearing 1a
per cent. interest, each toissue$100,000,000,
and all to be equally responsible for princi-
pal and interest by mutual agreement.
This, he thinks,- would do away almost
altogether with the •shipment of gold.baok
and forth from one country to another.
The business conditions have not chang-
ed in any important effect. The tendency
to trade recovery which had been faintly
apparent has been again slightly checked.
Operations have been more closely restrict.
ed to immediate requirements and trade in
moat departments has continued quiet.
This strike has entailed a heavy loss upon
railroad and other industrial works, Ib
would be difficult to estimate the loss in
the purchasing power of the country
but .purchasing
certainly has been sufficient of itself
to work a serious disturbance in trade, and
the adjustment of this difficulty is,, there-
fore, ,a matter for general congratulation.
There are already signs of the falling off in
general business that usually come,
early in the summer, and which is
more noticeable this year because of
the loss of earnings of the industrial classes
through a series of causes, and also because
of a general falling off in revenue, not only
of traders but of the whole farming and
commercial communities. The fine weather
of the past two or three weeks caused some
activity in trade, but it did not extend to
manufacturers. On the contrary, stook
are accumulating even in the face of weak-
ening quotations. On the other hand stock
in retailers, hands are being gradually re-
duced with no disposition to buy more than
present needs, There is a steady increase
in the percentage of renewals, and many
accounts tbat in the past have been prompt-
ly met'are now dragging in a manner which
is very disheartening as well as disappoint-
ing to the wholesale trade. With a few
exceptions the earnings of the railroads are
discouragingboth in passenger and freight.
departments. For reasons already known
operating expenses can only with difficulty
be reduced in proportion to the gross earn-
ings, and consequently the net earnings
have suffered, and are unsatisfactory.
Wheat prices have not reacted heavily,
although there is an easier feeling than a
week ago, partly on account of the favor-
able crop reports received from the United
States, and also from different sections of
the Dominion of Canada. Not only is it
expected that the crop will be up to, if not
above, the average, but it will be harvested
earlier than usual, and this produces a
slightly depressing effect so far as prices
and present operations are concerned. It
is only"in a very few and comparatively
insignificant cases that we find expectations
below the average in the Dominion, but
stocks abroad are larger and home' con-
sumption is light, so that the prospect of a
good crop this year keeps the price low.
The course of the stook market has been in
the main steady. Current exports have
fallen off slightly, which they always do at
this season, and the imports also continue
light. The money market continues easy,
offerings being in Toronto and Montreal at
4 per cent., with commercial loans at the
old rates of 6 to 7 per cent. The low rates,
however, do not help speculation any.
Save the Elephants.
The elephant of Africa is still a tolerably
abundant animal, says Prof. Shaler in
Soribner. Its numbers though doubtless
diminished, by more than one-half within
this century, are probably to be counted by
the hundred thousand. Nevertheless, in
less than a hundred years the field which
they occupied has been greatly re..
duced, and between the ivory hunter and
the sportsman of our brutal rano armed
with guns of ever•increasing deadliness, ib
will certainly net require anotl•er century
of free shooting to annihilate the African
species. In view of the present condition
of the life of theft noble beasts ib seems in
a high measure desirable that a 'thorough-
going effort should be made to extend he
domestication to the point where the form
will not only be won from the wilds, but
will be a petmanent element' in our civili-
zation, in the manner of our common flocks
and herds, It will be an endnri' shame if,
by neglect of our opportunities, iio utmost
is nothis
done to attain t end. appears
it
fit that tide task should beufidortakenbythe
British 'Government, which in modern days
has displayed a akill and forebhought in the
administration of its Indian provinces, un-
exampled in the history of. colonies.
Children Cry for Piteher'e Castor" J
ABL) RUN B " CLOCX WORIf.
Inch rio attention Whatever the tlerses or.
Cantle are Fed and Watered.
Petout papers havereoently beengranted
for an electrically operated device for stable
regulation, With :almost no attention
whatever from the groom ore table hoes the
horses or cattle are fed .and watered with
more punctuality and regult,rity than man
,D W
tne
TRY
UNLICHT 5oAr
IT BRINGS
COMFORT
WASII
DAY
Ali ELECTRICAYLYREGULATED STABLZ.
has ever been given credit for. For feeding
hay a pointed rack is employed, journaled
at a convenient point above the manger,
the:raok being tilted to dieoharge its load
by the release of -a aatoh.un a weighted
odaillating shaft, which harm Drank extendin
into the path of a releasing and looking bar
held in a case operated by the electric
mechanism, a number of racks being pre..
ferably arranged in series and operated by
one looking box and bar, The grain is fed
to the manger in a similar way from com-
partments, each adapted to contain grain
enough for one animal, any number of sweet
compartments being provided. Leading
from the bottom of each compartment is a
discharge . pipe, the slide covering the
opening to which is connected with a shaft
aotuated by a bar from a locking and releas-
ing box.
eleas-ingbox. The water is .also similarly sup-
plied from a tank arranged at a suitable
elevation, bhe valve being controlled by a
lever actuated by the looking andreleasing
mechanism. Each locking and .releasing
box has a similar mechanism, and each
locking box has an automatic switch adapt.
ed to shunt or switoh the current from one
locking box to the next, so that the hay,
grain, and water supplyingmeohanisms may
be operated in suoaession. Any circuit-
closing olook may be used.
HIS DOUBLE,
a
The Singular Segall to a Hanging Bor a
Brutal Cringe.
"I am not a believer in ghosts, reincar-
nations, or the supernatural in any shape,
but I had a singular experience some years
ago, which I have never been able to ac-
count for satisfactorily," said J. P. Lacroix,
of Montreal. " I was second mate of a
merchant ship in 1882. Among the crew
was a tough customer named Lander, al-
ways in trouble. He had a frightful soar,
extending from brow to chin, the result of
a dock fight. He had a bullet wound which
had taken away the lobe of his right ear,
besides a peculiar protuberance, like a wen
on his forehead. I would take my oath
there was not another man alive marked just
like him.
" At the end of that voyage Lander killed
his wife and cut hie own throat. He sever-
ed the windpipe, but he recovered. The
wound in his throat healed, but left a bole,
which he had to cover with his hand when
he spoke. He breathed through a silver
tube. Be was tried and convicted, and,
happening to be in port, I was present at
the hanging and saw the body buried. In
1890 I was on the gold coast of Africa.
Ashore one day I came across a man bossing
a lot of negro laborers. His form 'seemed
strangely familiar, and I started with sur-
prise when I saw him place his hand over
his throat when giving some orders. Going
closer I saw the gear,_ the wen, the lobeless
ear, the hole in the throat, the silver tube
and every feature and characteristic of the
man I saw hanged and buried. I got into
conversation with him. He said his name
VMS Danler. He was unable totell how he
came by the wound in his throat, ear and
face. He said he must have had a long ill-
neas.
"He remembered being in a hospital,
he said, but it was like a dream, and he had
no recollection of his life before that. He
said he remembered, while still ill, taking a
long voyage, he didn't know where from.;
until he had landed where I met him. He
told me my face looked like one he had seen
in a dream, but he knew he had never seen
Erie before. How do I account for it Y I
don't try to. I am only telling the facts. I
don't know whether Danler was Lander
come to life again, or a reincarnation of
him. Maybe Lander's neck was not broken,
and some scientific chap was experimenting.
on him with a battery. All I know is that
no two men could possibly be marked in ex-
actly the same way. If it was Lander he
was greatly benefited by thechange, as on
inquiry I found he bore a splendid reputa-
tion as a quiet, law-abiding, peaceable
citizen."
E
MOST SUCCESSFUL REMEDY
FOR MAN OR BEAST.
Certain in its eaects and never blisters.
Read proofs below:
KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE
ZLuipoIer, L. L, N',Y., ran.15,1894. ,
Dr. B..7.10ND4 LL Co.
Gentians ---I boit0ht a splendid bar horse some
ICondall''with
St avin Claire n TheoSppavin le ene low
and I havepbeen offered $150 for the carne horse.
I only had him Hine weeks, so I got $120 for using
worth of Kendail's Spavin Caro.
fours truly, W. S. 0tensott1.
KENDALL S SPAVIN, CURE
Dr. 8, d. KssDeLt Co.ennasr, Iters., Doc. 18, 1898.
Sirs -I have used your Kendalls Spavin Cure
with good success for Curbs on two horses and
it la the bast LlnitnentI have ever Used.
Yonrstruly, icaearFnant:aim.,C
2'rlte Si per lEettle.
Por Sale by all Druggists, or address
.70e. 23, J. 11LN.DdZD CO..V.P.4,X70
ENciteuv 4 Fn1.LE, v7,, "�
EX -MEMBER o PARLIAMENT
REUSE x E. RU
x,
Hon. Reuben E. 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, wllioh 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
erf'rely 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 E. TRUAX,
Walkerton, Ont."
It has lately been discovered that
pertain Nerve Centres, located near
the base of the brain, control and
supply the . stomach with the . neces-
sary nerve force to properly digest
the food. When these Nerve Oen-
tres are in any way deranged the
supply of nerve force is at once
diminished, and as a result tie food
taken into the siomaoh is only ..
partially digested, and Chronic Indic
gestion and Dyspepsia soon mauls
their appearance.
South American Nervine " is so
prepared that it acts directly on the,,
nerves. It will absolutely cure every
case of Indigestion and Dyspepsia]
and is an absolute specific for all
nervous diseases and ' ailments.
It usually gives relief in one day.
Its powers to build up the whole '
system are wonderful in the extreme. 1
It cures the old, the young, and the
middle-aged. It is a great friend to
the aged and infirm. Do not neglect
to use thisprecious boon ; if you do,
you may neglect the only remedy
which will restore you to health.
South American Nervine is perfectly
safe, and very pleasent to the taste,
Delicate ladies, do not fail to use this
great euro, because it will put the
bloom of freshness and beauty upon
your lips and in your cheeks, sad
quickly drive away your disabilities
and weaknesses.
Dr. W. Washburn, of New
Richmond, Indiana, writes : "I have
used South American Nervine in.
nay family and prescribed it in
my practice. It is a most excellent
remedy,"
0, LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter.
DR. MoDAIRMID, Agent, Ilensall.
tea
S5.
g 4.)`�3ca
,egfii
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.,5 4t\ - .+ itP
tom' Purebaaers should
look to the Label en the Boxes and Pete.
If the address is not 533, OXFOIW GT,, r.Ox111ON, Choy are spar,oum.
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04V4 ' o4v' �b�
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$3,.a
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41