HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1894-7-26, Page 7THE EXETER
TIMES
3.. t. liOnStaVienn, 152Pacifie
AV°, Santa Cruz, dal., 'Writes:
r "-When a girl at school, in Beading,
Ohio, I had a severe attack of brain
fever. On my recovery, I found myself
perfectly- bald, and, for a long time, I
• feared I should be permanently so.
Friends aped me to use Ayer's Hair
Vigor, and, on doing so, my hair 0
Began to Grow,
and I now have as fine a head of hear as
one could %vih for, being changed, how-
ever, from blonde to dark brown."
• "After a' fit of sickness, ity hair came
e. out in combfells. I used two bottles of
'Ayer's' Hair Vigor
and now ray hair is over a yard long
a and very full and heavy. I have recom,
mended this preparation to others with
e like good effect."—Mrs. Sidney Catr,
1460 Regina st, Ilarresburg, Pa.
I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for
• several years and always obtained sails.
, factory results, I know it is the best
preparation for the hair that is made." '
—C. T. Arnett, Mammoth Spring, Ark.
9
Ayer s Hair. vigor
Prepared by Dr. Jan. Ayer deo., Lowell, Mats,
pR. FOWLERS
.EXT: OF et;
LD
TRAWBERRY
CURES
110liERA
ho1eaMorhur
L.r I
RAPS
IARRIKEA
YSEN.TERY
ikelD 414i.leile4 ER COM PLAMTS
•AND FLUXES OF' THE. BOWELS
IT Is SAFE AND -RELIABLE, FOR
VOA LDREN OR ADLieers.
CENTRAL
Drug Store
FANSON'S BLOCK.
A full stock of all k,inds of
• DYe-stuffs and ikkkage
• Dyes, constantly on
hand, Win an's
• Condition
Powd-
er
the hest
in the mark-
et and always
resh. Family recip..
ees carefully prepared at
Central Drug Stora Ezete
LUTZ.
frrtiE, FARM.
is fatal to any foreiga baeinese. You do
not knew how they obteet to it, says Geo.
0001irane in the Creamery aoural. We
A itell in Tittle, salt and calr higher than any people in
The present method of farming with im . the world, Ninety per cult, of the teble
Preyed machinery is ()Wen carried on at a butter need in Europe is not salted over
great loss or disadvantage through neglect one per cent.; what they cell high salted
and carideesuees as well as ignorance, write
a correspondent, As harvest time is near
at hand, the farmer should know just in
what eonelition las machines were put
away at the close of the last season. This
point is eo often overlooked and neglected
thet bhe value of the loss of time whim the
defective parts give out is many tunes
greeter than the actual cot of the necessary
repairs. Tae praotical farmer has found
that there are always parts on his farm
machinery that give out long before his
machine is worn out. Such puts, when
they show signs of weakness should not lie
butter is three per cent, whereas our mild-
est is six per cent, The coloring they claim
gives the butter en oily flavor, which there
is no doubt of. They cannot sell it on the
counter, as consumers will have it that it
can not be natural butter with 'so much
coloring in it and so high salted. They re-
gard it as butterine.
Australia butter is going to be a great
factor in the future and on this side they
have get to take notice and be guided so
far as tlie matter of any surplus. It is
evident to me that if we do not marketan
Europe our surplus before the let of No ei
ember this year, we will have to fitee at
least a million packages of butter of 56
left to break in the midst of harvest., Box- pounds each on the English markets from
es often heat for want of oil, ceased by oil the lstgf Deo.1894, to November 30th 1895
passages becoming filled with dirt or dust, They did last year bring in their cows at
trerentperiods so that they ship butter
caueing them to cut out ia very short much later this season than last. By next
time. Don't leave these, thinking they year they are in hopes to meke weekly
will do anothei: season. • The amount of Ektpments the year 'round to Great Britain,
service that they will do is small in corn- the °
Receipts' should
have
et dkeele pthis seemingyear
by
parison to the risk in case of breakage at The day I left London there was a steamer
harvest time. Loose boxes also add to the Landing 28,000 000
draft
steamers on the way with large
g , packages, and the advice of
of your machine. • Their presence is Tour
also the cease of unstee'
dy motion inoreas-
cargoes. The make of this Australian butter aver-
ing the danger of breakage of other parts .
ages the finest M the world. They went
as well as increasing the wear of the ma peltin for pleasing the requirements of the
chine. English consu nears and they have hurt Danish
Manufacturers are often blamed for mak- butter more than any other as it is almost
ing poor, short-lived
as good and brought Danish. down from 135
machi• nes when the
to 110 shillings. They use no coloring
blame is wholly in the operator.' • I can matter and salt three per cent. Their
still hear the eound (in tny 'mind) of a bind, packages are virtually air tight, the box is
er run on a neighbor's farm, that had eitherminside, wrapped in parchment
epnaapereled
,no
saltvisible but they havea spray -
a bent shaft or an improperly adjusted box. ing of borax over the surface between the
Such negligence is nothing more than cruel- paper and butter; when it opens it glistens
ty to animals and a heavy tax on the like the morning dew, and I never saw
farmer's wallet, any strong or sidy outof all I Moked. at.
They have made more advancement in the
The binder has now found its home on
dairy industry in five years than we have
almost every farm. This machine requires made in 25, and cab give us pointers.
'more skill and application than any other —
the fariner has M operate. At the close of
Dysp9psia Cured.
Thum
I write you to say
that for some time
Ihadbeensuffering
from acute indiges-
tion or dyspepsia,
and of course felt
very great incon-
^a, venience from same
in my general busi-
ness. I thereupon
decided to try Bur-
dock Blood Bitters,
and after taking
— two bottles I found
lift, MAO. 3BAD. I was quita another
man, for
• B. 8, B. CURED ME.
I have eleo :Acid it for my wife and
family, and have found it the best thing
they can take, and from past. experience
X have every pleasure in strongly recom-
mending B. B, B. to all my Mende.
I write you became I think that it
should be generally known what B.13,13.
can accornplish ixi cages of indigeation,
each season an invoice should be taken of
all defective parts, and unless your memory Press the Button and the malts man*
• d.
is perfectly reliable, they should be noted A clock manufacturerofChemnitz Sax.
down on paper. These parts can be secured ony, has patented a useful apparatus—an
at leisure from the supply dealer and put in electrical alarm clod:, with incandescent
their proper place on the machine before light illumination, as shownin accompany
Mg illustration. The apparatus is propelled
harvest, Ilow often do we see a machine by a balance, and therefore goes in any
running in the field with a crippled reel, position. • Immediately above the dial
caused by running under trees iii the hen- will be seen a small incandescent light, the
vest field eataelf day. Reel slats and fans reflector of which is set in such a position
should be kept at hand, which can be put that the brightness of the light is thrown
in on a moment's notice in case of accident, upon the dial. Under the dial is a brake
All canvas should be thoroughly over. lever, with which the alarming apparatus
haule'd and all broken slats replaced. • The is either placed into or out of gear by mov-
finger bar should be lined up. In unacens. ing the lever either toward the screw on
Mined fields stones often bring guards,out the right' or left, At the bottom of the
of line. They can be put in proper position box hangs a small wire with button. The
with a crowbar, and should be well riveted, current is closed by a pressure upon the
A good riveting hammer is indispensable in latter. • The electrical light is similar to all
overhauling farm machinery. The knifeapparatus of this kind Intended only for
should be removed and all mutilated sec- momentary illumination, which by the way
tions replaced by new ones, and the knife is arnplysufficient—the light being wanted
bar made perfectly straight, which is besb only for a brief time to see the hour of
done on a straight, sawed, wood block. If night.
the knife and guards are in proper order At an optional height above the clock is
the sections will run close to the bottom of the alarm apparatus, consisting of an elec.
the guards and form a shear cut ; the knife
will then run free and the machine run
easy,
Having the machine all in order the first
thing is oil. Last season's oil, dirt and
dust have become -dry and hard. Carefully
• open all oil passages and use for the first
oiling common coal oil. There is nothing
like coal oil to lopsen the gum of last sea-
son's oil. In cool weather it is very dia.:
cult to get a snug -fitting box, that has been
exposed to dust, to take oil that contains
proper Wearing qualities. One-fourth coal
oil may •be added to the machine oil the first
daywith good 'results. The effect of good
i
oil s little understood or appreciated by
many farmers. Many use what is called
black oil. The quality of this oil itffers so
much in localities that I do not consider it
a proper lubricant for our harvest machines.
A good oil at 35 cents per gallon is much
cheaper than the common black oil at 10
cants, Some parts require more oil than
others. Those parts that run at the highest
rate of speed should be oiled as often as
every hour. No oils should he used that
does not wear that length of time
in a • well-fittect box. All burre
should be tightened 'before starting
the machine. A burr can often be started
with hammer and chisel that will not start
with a common wrench.
Do not think a machine ought to run
from one season to another without a little
care. The strongest and finest built loco-
motives, that run on a level iron track, are
carefully examined for each trip by skilled
men. The heavy car wheels even, that run
on the smooth- track, are tested before
reaching their destination. Why should
not our farm machinery, that often runs
over washed and guttered ground, have the
same attention t
• Don't expect :he mower to do good work
with the worn -ant, rarity knife that has
been ground until the sections have come to
a point, mid Pas pitman loose at each con.
unction. Don t Guam the manufacturer
for these exignegamoditions. Don't blame
hiin for you: neglect. A few hours' time
and a few dollen will repair the defective
parts. It will save your team ; it will do
better work; it will make you feel better;
it, is bettor all around. Don't blame the
manufacturer if he wants a little pay for
repairs. He is expected to carry a line lei
repairs for all maohines made since the time
of Noah. For these repairs he must pay hard
cash, carry them in stook from the time im-
proved ones have taken their place, and
loads of them eventually go to the scrap
pile.
Look around you and you will see how
different men get different amounts elf wear
out of the same machine, all because of
proper and improper care. At the begin-
ning of each tenon carefully watch all cog
gearing to detect any cutting. I prefer
not to oil these if they do not cut. A
cutting -pinion it' often ruined in a half
day's time. The best thing I have found
to arrest cutting a cast gearinge is good
axle grease. Another important item is a
good oil can. Don't expect any man in
charge of a maolibie to keep it properly oil.
edwith a slobberitig oil can. Bay a good
can, I mean One that will readily respond
to the pressure of the thumb and deliver
oil just when it is wanted. Do not think a
few dollars in repairs are thrown away.
Consider the amount of work a machine in
proper order will do over that one in need
of repairs; then you will say it pays to re.
pair in time.
ELECTRIC NIGHT CLOCK.
Gnon.on READ, Sherbrooke, Qties
Chief of Police Kent, of Champaign, Ill,,
has been arretatod for whipping a negro
afflicted with sznall-pox.
gueband and wife as law partners is
something unknown in Great Britain. There
ere *to lees than tWentyanie such firmlb
s
Coloring Butter.
>tite'llhiwD1Statee. Tele highsalting
HAT UNCLE SAN IS AT.
ITEMS OF INTBBEST ABOUT THE
BUSY YANKEE.
Nelaithorly interest in His Hoinas—Mai-
ter4 nowiew iind Meth. Gathered
From his Deity Record.
7snhoet'Tfavor fehwmeetelYeapliirgrel: of New York
do
Jacksonville, Fla. has two hotels which,
together, cost over S5,000,000.
The Western Union Telegraph Company
coneumes 100,000,000 envelopes a year.
It is computed that there are in the
mutes, States 48,900 blind and 23,900 deaf
Wild tobacco, said to be equal to the real
Havana, has been found growing in Texas.
Mrs. Marks aged almost 90 years, was
baptised in the sea near Rockland, Me,, on
a recent Sunday,
The tallest man on the Pacific coast is
Samuel Hutchineon, of Prescott, WW1,
His height is 7 feet 2a inches. .
George Fra,ncie Train may still be seen
any pleasant day sitting upon one of the
benches in Madison square, New York.
In Franklin, Maine, hi a man who has his
divorced wife for a housekeeper. The
woman has a steady beau and all is peaceful.
Miss Edith Van Buren'daughter of
the late General Van Buren, has a fancy for
driving, and can hardly be excelled as a
whip.
The table upon which Preadult Lincoln
signed the ernanoiPatioxi proclamation is
now the property of the 'United States
Treasurer Morgan.
Mrs. Hoke Smith made 1,000 calls in two
weeks during the past season, a.recOrd never
before attained and not likely soon to be
eclipsed.
Two of Mr. Cleveland's numerous
"doubles" are John G. Johnson, of Phila-
delphia,,aaid John McDonald,of New York,
both lawyers.
J. C. Pelton who, in 1849 laid the foun-
dation of the present public school system
of California, is still living in San Diego,old
infirm and poor.
A money sieve has been invented by a
Brooklyn deacon. It sorts the, pennies
nickels, dimes and quarters taken at the
church colleCtioa..,
A partiof studentsasiltrinford Univer-
sity have discovered the osetaed remains of
a pre -historic American witifingen hour's
ride south of San Francisco. •
trical bell. It is brought into connection
with the battery by two conduit wires
screwed into two .of the three • binding
screws at the upper part of the wooden
box. The current of the battery, however,
becomes active only when' the four hands
come into contact with the index on the
glass bevel. At this moment the alarm
commences and does not stop until either
the hour hand has passed beyond the index
or the brake lever under the dial has been
pushed to the right.
Misplacement of a Comma.
A popular captain's wife was more than
usually anxious over the safety of her hus-
band, and accordingly handed a parish clerk
a slip one Sunday morning, bearing the
words, "Captain Wilson, having gone to
sea, his wife desires the prayers of this con-
gregation on his behalf. Unfortunately, by
the misplacement of the comma after the
"sea," the congregation were told that
"Captain Wilson, having gone to see his
wife, desires the prayers of this congregation
on his beilielf."--Klornhill Magazine.
Demand for Bread or Work.
A despatch from Buffalo says —Five
hundred Poles called, at the Poor Master's
office Tuesday morning, demanding either
bread or work. Prior to this, a delegation
of them went to the City hall and asked of
the Mayor that those Poles who had been
employed all along on the streets be laid off
so that achance could be given to others to
get employntien , They were told that no
thing could be done to help them, and they
went away grumbling. The excitement
over labor troubles has stirred the foreign
born population of this city to a spirit of
extraordinary restlessness.
NORTH.WDST CROPS.
*'borreeent eneicetIone 14'0;0, to A WA
Told or Wheat.
Crop reports from Manitoba and the
North.- West give promise of a good harvest,
The wheet flelds,aeeording to these accounts,
are looking well, though in Immo districts
they will be the better of a rain before
ripening begins. There is time, soad in
these districts room, for a eoneicierable
growth of straw and filling out of beta be-
tween this and reaping, Favoreble
weatli-
er in the interval can add a. large percentage
te present maim i tie of the yield. Ibis to
be hoped it will. There is nothing else of
so vital importance to the material welfare
of that region as its crops. They. are at
present almost its sole effective source of
wealth. if they fail there are no produc-
tive coal mines, with their progeny of
Industries to make up the deacib. fhe
wealth and living of, the settlers,
large interests of their creditors in Ontet-
rio, and the very future of the Nora'.
West
DEPEND oit rye CROPS.
Local merchants carry farmers accounts,
wholesalers carry local merchants'accounts,
banks make advances on wholesalers' paper
secured by these accounts, implements are
supplied to the farmer on credit, money on
mortgage, all on the faith that harvest will
produce the whercesithalforliquidation,and
return to every man his own. As the
J. C. Stutte, a contractor, and builder din
St. Louis, claims to have gone without a
wink of sleep for 22 years. He is hale and
hearty and about 64 years of age.
Apropos of presentation to her Majesty,
Queen 'Victoria, in Mrs. Bradley•Martin's
•!few York drawing room hangs a full length
portrait of herself in her presentation
gown.
The Bowery takes its name from the fact
that it follows the course of a country road
which ran from the city out to the farms or
boweries on the northern outskirts of New
York city. '
•Readers of "The Hoosier Schoolmaster"
will remember Phillips, the champion speller
of the Indiana school described therein. He
still lives in Vevey, Ind., and will soon be
73 years old.
There are 15,000 Jews in San Francisco,
according to the Jewish Progress of that
city. The majority of them have settled
there within the last ten years, and are of
Russian birth. -
At the Leavenworth Soldiers' Home a
teat is to be made of the authority of the
superintendent to withhold the pension of
'an inmate until he had, under compulsion,
taken the Keeley cure.
Professor Scripture of Yale has made it
his nightly practice for four years past to
plug up his ears on going to bed, thus ex-
cluding the voices of the night and ensur-
ing sound sleep.
Miss Martha Polonius, of Wabash&
County, Minnesota, the Swedish giantess,
is about to merry Oleson, of Stockholm,
Wis., who is less than five feet tall but is
a millionaire lumberman.
A complete list of the Jewish business
establishments of New York which keep
the Sabbath is to be compiled by the Jew.
ish Sabbath Observance Association. There
are already 600 firms on the list.
A calf was tied to a fence at Hazard, Ky.,
the other day, near where W. T. Drake
had hung his coat, and the animalmanitged
to chew up $1,116 in notes, cheques and
bank bill out of one of the pockets.
Mr. Joseph Noun, the Greek archdeacon,
who has brought a damage suit for $5,000,-
000 against the United States, is the man
who recently claimed to have discovered
Noah's Ark on Mount Ararat.'
The Result.
Doctor --Let's see, did I prescribe for you
the last time you were beret
• Patient—Let me see—oh, yea I remem-
ber now, for I was deadly sick all the next
anti coloring of butter day !
Children Cry for Pitoher's Castori4
•
•
• t• ,,,nteanientate
'I I,. IA?
One of the queer delusions of a patient in
the KankakeeetIll., Insane Asylum is that
his feet are made of sardines. As he is
harmless he is permitted to keep them tied
up in tin cans filled with olive oil.
The Texas court of appeals has decided
that the laws prohibiting prize fighting in
that state are null and void. The only
penalty that prize fighters can be subjected.
to is a small fine for assault and battery.
General F. A. Shoup, who was chief of
artillery at the Confederate army at Shiloh
and afterwards served as General Hood's
chief of staff, is now a member of the
faculty of the University of the South at
Suwenee, Tenn,
Senator Sherman begins to show plainly
the effects of advancing years. His face is
thinner, and the wrinkles are increasing.
He is tiling the beet possible care of him-
self, however. He was 71 years old on May
10.
Harry Dickson, of Pueblo, is considered
to be one of the fastest men in the went. He
is a railroad blacksmith. He first tade in
1891, and that year won the road race of
the Rovers' Wheel ()tub against a field of
16 starters.
The real name of Brothee Joseph, who
has succeeded Father Damien in tee work
among the lepers of Hawaii, is Ira P. Dut.
ton, a native of Vermont. He adjudicated
war claims in the border states after the
civil war.
firs. Dandridge its the only surviving
daughter of Zachary Taylor. While Gen-
eral Taylor was President •she married
Colonel Bliss, his chief of staff. She pre-
sided in the White Rouse, and was gener-
ally known as "pretty Betty Bliss."
groundwork of a great superstructure of
credit, the crops of Manitoba and the
North-West are of vast importance to dis-
tributors, manufacturers, bankers, and
money -lenders in this province. Good crops
mean not only liquidation, but also new
business. As the source of much of this
credit is the saving class of this province,
and the distributers of it are our bankers
and business men, Ontario has substantial
reasons for wishing the North-West a pros.
perous harvest. The maintenance of good
crops is, in fact, the very hope of that new
country. Its reputation for them is what
it must rely on to draw the right sort of
immigrants—people who want to make
their living by farming. A. country whose
harvests are always good cannot remain
long sparsely settled, unless it is at some
great disadvantage. The only one of which
the North-West farmers complain is the
coat of getting their wheat to the semboe.rd.
That remains
SUNLIGH
Has proved
SOAP beiyeoritnseoUS
sal i tiiht it is
The hest value for
the Consumer
of any soap in the market.'
Millions of women throughont the
world can vouch for this, as it
• is they who have proved its
value. It brings them less
labor, greater comfort:
A ilEA7r BURDEN,
but as the country fills up, and the volume
of its freight ineverd andoutward increases,
the transportation 'charges -must diminish.
As Government promises to cause -an investi-
gation into the complaints of high freight
rates after the clese of the present session
of Parliament, some reduction in them may
be effected before very long. A material
lowering of avert amulet be an ironmnette-e
lief te the farmers, and codld not fan to [
promote immigration. The keeping up of
thecountry's repution for good crone asing
peniir largely on the farming of the set- -
tiers. Their, land is undoubtedly most
fertile, and grows the b6rii, wheat in Mee
works'', but it needs good tillage to keep up
the fine yield that was almost spontaneous
at the outset. This the farmers appear tobe
giving it,as the earlicet setelements are re-
portest to be producing as good crops as
they ever were. Farmers see the folly of
taking too muc'esedvantage of the generosity
of the soil, anti give ita chance to recuperate
by frequent eammer-fallowing. If tbeir
crops turn out as they are expected to do,
and prices are reasonably good, the people
of the North-West will be able to settle
their arrears, and to prove all statements
to the effect nutt the North-West is in a
bad way to be merely defamatory,
Canada's Turn is coming.
British crenate', which has never favored
Canada for the sake of Canada's flag, will
yet be dreninto Canada by the superior
seourity which this law-abiding country
can offer. Canada has always paid good
dividends to British investors, if the original
owners of the capital which built the
GraadTrunk are excepted. They lost money
but, including their losses, the British cap
italist has not lost shillings in Canada for
the pa Leeds -he has thrown away in develop-
ing the resources of foreign countries.
Canada's turn is coming, not because cap-
ital follows the flag, but because capital is
timid, and will be driven to seek in Can-
ada the safety and certainty which the
United States cannot offer to buyers of
American securities.
A women whoae movemetits are now
little exploited is Miss Rose Cleveland, the
President's sister. Her last appearance in
a public capacity wet! at a young ladiese
school at Sing Sing the other day, where
elm addressed the graduating class.
It was tIelen Iluftis Ohoate'e brilli-
ant daughter, who made the reniark quoted
in one of 1:merlon's essays, /2 a Woman
the consciouetieek of being wee, and fault.
lessly attired gives a sense of trenegiliv
Which religion fails to bestoW,e
7.tn. Brazil a couple may be married by
drinking brandy together.
A unique case of borrowing is reported
from Sherman Mills, Me. A man whose
home was destroyed by fire last winter has
m
borrowed a house from one of hie friends,
which he will have hauled in his lot, and
will occupy as a dwelling bhis summer, re-
turning it in the fall.
In making out a pardon, Gov. Brown, of
Kentucky, virtually signea a deathwarrant
for its recipient, C. T. Taylor, a convict at
Frankfort, who expired immedfabely upon
receiving the papers. He is supposed to
have died of excessive joy.
THE
MOST SUCCESSFUL REMEDY
•‘10 FOR MAN OR BEAST.
Certain in its (snag and never busters."
Mead proofs below:
KENDALL'S SPAM CURE
BLIMPOINT,L.L, N.2'.03ali. 16, 1894. 4
Di'. B. Z. itENDAti Co.
.Otttleolerc---1 bought a splendid bay horse some
time ago with a Spavin. igothim for $30, I deed
HeUdall'a SpavIn afire. The Suntvin is gone -110V
Arid I ha -Se been Offered $140 tor the same hei'ao.
I Only had him nine weeks. SOS got $120 for uSing
e2 Worth of Mendell's Spavin Cure.
Yount truly, NV. S. Moons. 1
KENDALL'S SPAM CURE
so.mt, MOB., Dec. 10, MeS. 4
D. 3. Iii.do.
sirs—I have Mod your Mendallt Spayln COM
With good simeass for Curbs on two horses and
18 11 She best Liniment I have ever used.
Yellin truly, Amensr Emitandog.
Pelee en per Bettie.
Per $rde by all nrugelets, et steerage
tt. ICZW.D.11711.1 COMPAZISisg.
6NOesunGH FALL*. Vt.,
ATURE YIELDS ANOTHER
SECRETF'
'f,„.4-`1, •
a bee often been contended by I stomach, it comes in contact with
physiologists and men of science gen-
uraberless nerve fibres in the walls
ep
of this organ, which at once send a'
orally, eat nervous energy or nary- nervous impulse to the nerve centres
ous impulses which pass along the which control the stomach, notifyingi
nerve fibres, were only other names them of the presence of food; where -
for electricity. This seemingly plans- upon the nerve centres send down s'
supply of nerve force or nerve fluid?
ible statement was accepted for a
to at once begin the operation of.
time, but has been completely elan- digestion. But let the nerve centres
cloned since it has been proved that which control the stomach be dee
the nereees are not good conductors of ranged and they will not be able to
electricity, and that the velocity of a respond with a sufficient supply of
nervous impulse is but 100 feet per nerve force, to properly digest the
food, and, as a result, indigestion and
second—which is very much slower dyspepsia make
their appearance,
than that of electricity. It is now So it is with the other organs of the
generally agreed that nervous energy, body, if the nerve centres which con -
or what we are pleased to eau nerve trol them and supply them with
nerve force become deranged, they
fluid, is a wondrous, a mysterious
are also deranged.
force, in which dwells life itself. The wonderful success of the
A very eminent specialist, who remedy known as the Great South
has studied profoundly the workings American Nervine Tonic is due to
of the nervous system for the last the fact that it is prepared by one of
twenty-five years, has lately demon- the most eminent physicians and-
strated that two-thirds of all our specialists of the age, and is based
ailments and chronic • diseases are on the foregoing scientific discovery.
due to deranged nerve centres within It possesses marvellous powers for
or at the base of the brain, the cure of Nervousness, Nervoua
All know that an injury' to the Prostration, Headache, Sleeplessness,
spinal cord will cause paralysis to the Restlessness St. Vitus's Dance, Men -
body below the injured point. The tal Despondency, Hysteria, Heart
reason for this is, that the nerve Disease, NW/MIMS of Females,
• force is prevented by the injury from Hot Flashes, Sick headache. It is
a
reaching the paralyzed portion. also an absolute peoifio for al
Again, evil= food is taken into the stomach troubles.
CS. LUTZ ‘Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter.
Dn. MoDenemen, Agent, Heneall
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