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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1894-8-2, Page 7•.��67�m%wn +r at ntion In tilne to any irregularity of the. Ilitolnach, Liver, or Bowela may prevent serious consequences. Indigestion, eoStiven,eSs,. headache,. Hann - Sect, bilious« nets, and ver tigo 'indicate certain funC,- tional derange.. Inents, the best remedy. fo'• 1 a'llieh is Ayer's Pills. Purely vege. table, Sugar-coated, easy to take and, quick to assimilate, this is the ideal family medicine—the most popular, Cafe, and useful aperient in phar maty. Mrs. M. A. BnocKWELI,, Barris, Tenn., says: ',flyer's Cathartic Pills cured me of sick headache and my husband of neuralgia. We thdi;k there is No Better Medicines end have induced many to use it. "Thirty-five years ago this Spring, t was run down by hard work and a succession of colds, which made me so feeble that It was an effort for me to walk, I consulted the doctors, but kept sinking lower until I' had given up all hope of ever being better. Happening to be in'a store, one day, where medicines were sold, the proprietor noticed my weak and sickly appearance, and, after a few questions as to my health, recom- mended me to try Ayer's Pills. I had little tains in these or any other medicine, but noneluded, at last, to take his advice and try e box. Before I had used them all, I was very much better, and two boxes cured.me. I am now 80 years old; but I believe that: If It had not been for Ayer's Pills; I should have beenin my grave long ago. I buy s poxes every year, which make 210 boxes up to this time, and I would no more be with out them than without bread."—II. H. Ingraham, Rockland, Me. AYER'S PILLS 'U Prepared by Dr. J.C.Ayer hCo.,Lowell, Masse Every Dose Effective pR.l OWLENS •EXT: OF QJ H BERRY CURES HOLERA holes^aMorhuf O1-cl C-' RAMPS TARRH(EA ¥SERTERY AND ALL. SUMMER COMPLAINTS AND FLUXES OF' THE..B'OWELS IT IS SAFE AND RELIABLE FOR VIMALDREN OR ADU'rS. CENTRAL Drug Store FANSON'S BLOCK. A frill stock of all kinds•oi Dye -stuffs and package Dyes, constantly on hand. Winan's Condition Powd- the best in the mark- et and alway retch. Family recip- ees carefully prepared at. Central Drug Store Exete AN ACHING HEAD DEAR Erns,—_. had severe headache for the past three years, and was not free' from it a single day. eusa glob/ aielledAZn. I used doctors' medi- cines"and all others ircould think of, but it did me no good. y .opsin said I must l X11, II because it is .the best 'medicine ever Made, and I took three bottles of it, 'with the ,..asult that it has completely cured me. I think Burdock Blood Bitters, both for headaches and as a blood purifier, is the BEST IN THE WORLD, and am glad to recommend it to all my Wends, , Mass Fianna McDoxAnn, Glen 1fotnian, Ont. Bailey, the aseronemor, calculates the earth as weighing 6,049,836,000,000,000 tons, f: The population of Massachusetts is nearly as large as that of all the Other Ne{v England States combined, t • ,ABOUT THE HOUSE, P1010n8' Alit' a fnsband.. Girls, you wantdon't amen who o is afraid it of good hokest work, 'ad there are lots of them who are; you don't want to have to spend :the very best of,, your youth in striving to reform a man or shield him, so that you will, not become it claimant for the pity of your friends; you don't want a man wheis stingy; and what girl with two grains of sense is not sharp enough to, discovers this trait in her admirers ? Neither do you want a spendthrift ; you don't want 'a,, jealous husband, for he is about as danger- ous to live with as a lunatic; you don't want a dandy, who curls his hair, has his nails manicured, and uses a face bleach; and you wouldn't believe ,how many specimens are floating around in good"society: you want a wholesouled, lovable gentleman. He must—now take out your memorandum. book—be courteous to the aged and kind to the little folks; the sort of a fellow who knows that a girl loves flowers and sweetmeats; but who is not such a fool that he would ` pawn his overcoat to get them; the kind of a chap who disdains to fall into rhapsodies over every pretty woman he meets; who realizes that life is not a joke, but who in his seriousness is never depressing; he must be gentle, sym- pathetic, honorable, just; with enough romance about his make-up to save him from being prosaic,,and, above all, he must be so situated in life that he can attempt the role of home -making without fear of being a dismal failure. Where will such a paragon be found? Keep your eyes wide open. If you do not meet with him, take our advice and join the sisters who prefer single bliss to wedded wretchedness. whitewash: The following recipe makes Much better whitewash than that made of lime and water. For interior work, slake a peck of lime till it is thick and creamy. While it s hot mix with it a pint of linseed oil and pound of glue, previously dissolved in water, Let the mixture stand several hours before applying it. A little - lamp- black dissolved in vinegar and mixed with whitewash gives a grayish tint, which may be preferable to pure white ; a little umber gives'a fawn color, and yellow a cream tint. Very little coloring matter should be used, or'the shade will be too dark. For outside work the oil and glue may be too expensive ; in their place use lg pound of salt to a peck of lime. It is claimed that, salt and glue are the best ingredients to prevent the.whitewash rubbing oft. A good whitewash is made of whiting and glue. Mix 8 pounds of whiting with hat water till the compound is like thick cream. Mix with this } pound of . glue thoroughly dissolved in water. Before ap- plying this every crack in the wall should be filled with a plaster made of one part of water to one part of silicate of• potash, mixed with whiting. Simmering vs. Boiling. - Very few young housekeepers know that in all ordinary cooking simmering at 189 degrees is more effective than violent boil- ing at 212 degrees. The heat that is applied to do more than the smallest degree of simmering is simply wasted in converting water into useless steam. For instance, if you desire to stew a chicken and happen to be late, it is cut apart, thrown into boiling water and boiled at a gallop for an hour, with an apology that there was not time to cook it tender. When that same chicken, if thrown into boiling water and then pushed back where it could not possibly boil, would have been tender, more juicy and more highly flavored in less than an hour. Uses for Soda. Tinware may be brightened by dipping a damp clothin common soda and rubbing it well Very hot soda in a solution, applied with a soft flannel, will remove paint splashes. Use soda in the water, to clean paint and glass instead of soap. Strong tepid soda water will make glass very brilliant, then rinse in cold water, wipe dry with linen cloth. Ceilings that have become smoked by kerosene lamps may be cleaned by washing off with soda water. For cleaning oil paint before repainting, use two ounces of soda dissolved in a quart of hot water, then rinse off with clear water. A lump of soda laid on the drain pipe will prevent the pipes ' becoming clogged with grease ; also flood the pipes once a week with boiling water in which a little soda is dissolved. Wash white marble porches, bath, etc., with a'mop dipped in boiling hot water and soda. A good deal of soda should be die - solved in the water. A little soda put in the water in which cut flowers are placed will keep them fresh for a long time., If grease has been spilt on table or floor of kitchen or pantry, put a little soda on the spots and then pour boiling water over them. ehold Hints. All rugs, ve ' shaken, should be han- dled by the centre, not by the 'edges. Try a teaspoonful of ammonia to one teacupful of water for cleaning jewelry. Try a sheet of white paper on a dark table cover if you must work at night. Before laying a carpet, try washing the floor with turpentine to prevent buffalo moths. Pole ringmcan be made to run easily by rubbing the pole with kerosene until it is thoroughly smooth. Milk in boiling always forma a peon- liar acid, so a .pinch of soda, should be added when beginning to cook. If a wart be rubbed with the pared surface of a fresh potato three times a- day it will disappear within' a month. When blacking the kitchen range, mix the blackload with vinegar, and a very superior polish, and at small trouble, will be the result. The Tokio of a VaCatioll. The tensible woman goes away from home for a few weeks at least once a year, She ileedit the relaxation and the family. pends to get rid' of her for a tinto to be able' 1i Ii to appreciate her worth. Seeing new places and new things brushes up the mental forces and stimulates the antllitione, all of which. have rue down in the humdrum round of housewifely duties, which are confining and exacting, Then, too, many a woman who lies gone away from home chinking it a narrow life ale was living, and her horizon circumscribed has come back glad that she hasa home to come to, and that it :is so much better than some that oho has visited. BAT TLE FOUGHT 'IN COREA C OREAN TROOPS ATTACK JAYS AT SEOUL • At the Instigation of the Chinese -A Jap- anese Cruiser Stated to Babe Sunk a Chtuese Transport -•Shanghai is Out side the Sphere of Operations. A despatch received . at Shanghai from Nagasaki, on the south-west side of the island of Kioo.Sioo, Japan, says that a detachment of Corean troops, at the fnetf. gation of the Chinese residents,haye attack- ed the Japanese garrison and been defeated, A later telegram says, that a Japanese cruiser and a Chinese transport have been engaged,and that the cruiser sank the trans- port. Nothing is known here of the alleged private despatch stating that the Japanese have bombarded Corean ports. The British consul has received a telegram from the British Charge d'Affaires atTokio, Jap en, stating that the Japanese have undertaken to regard Shanghai as outside of the sphere of operations. The price of coal has risen 40 per cent. on account of.the large demand made on these supplies for use upon board war ships, transports, etc. THERM wAS, A. FIGHT. A London special says: The Japanese Iegation in this city has received a despatch confirming the news received by the way of Nagasaki of an attack of Corean troops upon the Japanese garrison at Seoul. The despatch states that the palace guard were the aggressors. It also states that the Corean troops at Seoul number 6,000 men, with several..gatling guns. SCORE ONE FOR CANADA. The Beaver Contentedly Contemplates the • Eagle's Baffled Feathers. There are times when the American eagle sits very quietly in a remote corner of the aviary and refuses to indulge in his tendency to scream. It is when on the one side of his cage he sees city snobs and factory lock- outs and minors' riots and industrialarmies; and on the other side he notes the quiet and content of his Canadian neighbors, says the Chicago Interior. Are our friends north of the gre at lakes made of other flesh and blood than we. Are they speaking different tongues and bred in opposite faiths, more homogeneous. It will baa day long in the future before any one will hear of disconten- ted masses seizing a train of the Canada Pacific. Who can remember a case of lynching north of the boundary line of our states? The fact is that we are drifting rapidly toward anarchy, and there is no use in assuming to be blind to the fact. The swarms that terrorize our national and state capitals would not be tolerated for an hour in a remote settlement of Manitoba. Even the Indian buries his tomahawk or 'Winches- ter as soon as he crosses the line. England suffers neither citizen nor savage to flout her laws; we suffer immigrant, tramp and des- perado to go his own gait; and just now we are paying dearly for the substitution of voluntary organization for civil compacts. Centuries before Christ was born a philoso- pher of Greece described the orbit of a state through revolution, liberty, lawlessness back to despotism again. The question will rise in every thoughtful mind, are we nearing the apogee from which we started one hundred and twenty years ago THE DUKE OF•YORK'S BABY. The Father and Child Are Third Cousins to Each Other. The infant Prince who has just been born into the line of succession to the throne has,. of course, all the ancestry of his illustrious ather ; and is on his mother's side, through the Duke of Teck, sprung from the reign- ing House of Wurtemburg and from the early Kings of Prussia. Though not de - emended from the older branch of Stuart, he is a distant cousin of the Princess of Bavaria who is now the head of that line ; and he is also distantly related to the Czar of Russia. He, inherits no title; Her Majesty having some years ago decreed that the style of Royal Highness should belong only to her own children and the children of her sons. No English sovereign before Queen Victoria ever lived to see a great-grandchild. In- deed none between Edward III. and George I. ever saw a exandchild, with the exception of James II., who survived the infants of his daughter Anne. Concerning the new Prince, the Leeds Mercury also notes that he is at the same time third cousin to his father and second cousin, twice removed, to his Mother. The Duke of Kent and the Duke of Cambridge sons of George IIT„'wore brothers. Their respective children, Queen Victoria and the Duchess of Teck, aro first cousins. In turn, the Prince of Wales and the. Duchess of York are second cousins, so that the Duke of York and the new Prince are, as has been stated, third cousins to each other. On the other hand, the Duchess of York is second cousin, once removed, to the Duke of York, and therefore second cousin, twice removed, to his son, the new-born Prince. Can Only Fill the Bottle Onee. A manufacturer of patent medicines its Maine offered $20,000 to any one wh should invent for him a bottle that could not be refilled after once being emptied. An ingenious mechanic named McQuillin has invented such a bottle, and the firm has allowed him six months more to make any improvements or changes needed its his invention, It is a curious yet Simple article and will cost but a ' trifle more than an ordinary bottle. A scientist, discussing the canals of Mars, is disposed to accept the view that only the middle of the canals is water, end that the great width of the visible dark lines is probably duo to a fringe of vegetation. Indeed, he suggests the pos. siblity that one ravine may carry two rivets fiowitg ill opposite ditootiene. TRADE AND CO EROS Some Newsy Items of Interest to The Blslness World. • The June report of the Egyptian cotton crop shows the cotton to be healthy and well forward everywhere. The platinum mines of the Ural Noun. tains whioh constitute the world's chief source of supply, are being worked to their fullest capacity with orders two years ahead, It is stated 'that the Dominion line has ordered the uoaetruotion of a new steamer for the Montreal and Liverpool service, The contract calls for a speed of seventeen knots. The number of cattle exported from Montreal in the week ended July 12, 1894, was 4,151, as compared with 2,366 in the week before. The number of sheep was 4,742 against 3,137 in the preceding week, The President of the British Board of Trade has finally announced in the House of Commons in answer to a question. that there is no prospect at present of relaxing the rule that Canadian Cattle must be killed at their port of landing. ' Notwithstanding the decline in the price of furs of front 15 to 50 per cent,, the .Hudson's Bay Company has declared a dividend of 10s. per share, about equal to 4 per cent. exhlusive of income tax. The proceeds of fursfell off from £301,000 to £227,000 the decrease being about is per cent. ' The London, Eng., seed trade, according to latest advices, report quiet markets with little business doing. Extended en- quiries throughout the clover districts of North America indicate that the new crop will probably average two-thirds of last year's. -Nearly all kinds of seeds are cheap- er, especially rapeseed and mustard, which are low. Canary seed keeps going up, with Liverpool leading the market upwards. While the value of cattle alone shipped from the port of Montreal thisseason is only $2,155,943, as against $2,225,330 in the corresponding period of 1891, with the advantage of an earlier opening this year,' the value of cattle and sheep together shows a slight increase over that of a year ago, the figures being $2,272,877 so far this year and $2,226,670 to the same date a year ago. The increase is, therefore, wholly due to the movement in sheep, and it is evident that the embargo on Canadian cattle affects our export trade more serious- ly this year than last. The usual Drop bulletin issued by the Manitoba Government relating to the growing crops of that Province shows that the acreage of wheat, oats, barley, flax and potatoes is steadily increasing. It is esti- mated that the total area under crops this year is, 1,592, 394 acres, as compared with 1,552,262 last year, being an increase of nearly 40,000 acres. Following is• a com- parison of the crop acreage for this year and the past two years : 1892 1893 1801 Acres under wheat...875,990 1,003,040 1,010,186 oats ...:.332.9i 4 388,529 413680 ` ” barley.. 37,644 114,762 119,528 "" potatoes 10,003 12,387 13,300 roots..:. 17,498 20,919 7,888 A petition in equity was filed in the United States Circuit Court at Los Angeles, on the 16th inst., which is of a startling character. The petition is instigated by Attorney -General Olney and is directed against the Southern Pacific Railway Company and thirty other railroad compan. ies, besides many noted railroad people. If the suit is successful it will affect every railroad in the United States. It is stated that the effect will be to make every cor- poration now a part of the Southern Pacific Company operate under a separate manage- ment and make void all monopoly of freight and passenger traffic. The petition is in the name of the United States, and the defendants are charged vrith combining and conspiring together, and with other persons and corporations ,w hose names are unknown, to restrain trade and commerce between and among several states of the United States, and between and among states and territories of the United States and foreign countries. The petition questions the corporate existence of the companies affect- ed, and asks them to produce certain con- tracts and show cause why they should not be annulled. The stock markets have been exceedingly narrow and sensitive. The crop news con- tinuefavorable, but were again without in- fluence in view of low prices and financial conditions. The recovery from a condi- tion of this trust, which is at present characteristic of all nations, must be slow and gradual. Frightened capital does not easily gain equanimity. The rule in finan- cial circles is likely to be for some time one of more than ordinary caution and conser- vatism, and perhaps it is a very' good rule since, probably, the moat of the week, mis- managed and unduly extended concerns have been eliminated from the business of the country. While the results are bad enough, as reflected in a distinctly restrict- ed business, narrower margins of profit, decreased bank clearings and railroad earn- ings and general stringency, they have been less disastrous than almost anywhere else, and even than some feared. So far as the resources of the country are concerned they remain unimpaired, The currency of the country has not declined in amount or de- preciated in purchasing power. There has simply been a general contraction of credits which will be relieved with returning con- fidence. The difficulty in making collec- tions seems to be increasing, although the banks have ample money and the rate re- mains at 4 per cent., in Montreal and 44 in Toronto. The bank of England rate of dis count remains at 2 per cent. UNDER PALLING WALLS. ANAKHISIKI E JflQPE: The;. New French hell Almost Eor'lb*d4 People to Thliele Auarchiata —All the lgoyal needs Closely hoarded:. A London. correspondent 'writeia-The, French authorities are in a state of alarm approaching panic over the warnings of fresh Anarchist plots. The information has been furnished principally by London and other foreign pollee, and extraordinary precautions have been taken to prevent the execution of the bloodthirsty designs. These measures are so stringent that all foreigners. in France are likely to snfi'er in- convenience, Merely stopping to admire the architecture of the public buildings is. likely to lead to arrest on suapicion,as an innocent Englishman found who gazed curiously u ly for five minutes at the Foreign Office on Thursday. The customs inspectors have been instructed to investigate the contents of everything lalger than a small orange, The bill for the suppression of anarchy, which is almost certain to pass the Chambers next week, is one of the most drastic pieces of legislation in history, It literally fulfils Macaulay's prophecy that it might prove necessary to destroy liberty in order to preserve civilization. It almost forbids people to think anarchy, It certain- ly forbids them to mention it in a private letter. It tries a offenders without jury, and on conviction sends them to solitary confinement, and possibly to Cayenne. Arrangements for international co-opera- tion against the Anarchists are believed to be making satisfactory progress. Germany is the principal obstacle. More complete police co-operation will undoubtedly be agreed upon. The French police system will be re -organized and placed under one national head, Chief Inspector Melville, head of the special or secret political department at Scotland Yard, has been pretty well worked to death in the last few months, what with murderous Anarchists and roving royalties. The latter are a perpetual worry, for in these revolutionary days they have to be watched with the greatest care, and Melville has to do the work with a scanty staff and. inadequate funds. A dozen men, under Inspector Sweeney, accompanied the Prince of Wales through- out his journey to and from Wales. A half dozen are inconstant butunobtrusive attend- ance upon the Czarewitch, and two or three look after the Duke of Coburg. With the staff thus reduced a strong force of detec- tives had to be provided for the Queen, who went to Aldershot on Wednesday afternoon. She witnessed the grand military tattoo on the same night, slept at Aldershot in a tent in the famous camp, reviewed 16,000 troops on Thursday, and returned' to Windsor in the afternoon of thatday. From Wednesday morning till Thursday evening London was almost denuded of its special detective force, and bad the Anarchist desperadoes been aware of the fact they might have committed outrages to their hearts' content with comparative safety to themselves. The Scotland Yard people have repeat- edly applied to the Treasury for an'ad- ditional grant to provide an increased force of specially selected men, but in• vain, al - thought it has been proved that the cor-' responding French force, with much less work to do, is five times as numerous as the English staff. It will probably require an Anarchist attempt, say on the Prime Min- ister or Chancellor of the Exehequer,or the blowing up of a public building, to bring the Treasury to a sense of its responsibil- ity. • Three Nest Lose Their Lives During a Chi- cago Fire. A despatch from Chicago says: --Twelve frame houses in Van Horne street were destroyed by fire shortly aftet 1 o'clock on Monday morning. While a number of people were watching the flanges the walls of one of the buildings fell into the street burying three men in the ruins. A resou; ing party at once Went to work and in a few minutes succeeded In rescuing one of the mon, named Steegget. He was so badly burned, bows er, thlat he will die. Two men nam6d Theiek and Odin are stili esG natedt atru20 O00, pro o�stViodpdP�ag: droit unknown.t "" to, 'cause no iia f t was our oW,ti. . thee, na loss of Aieep, death, kut thiel o .iigeatfve organs, so that ,exults are effected in a natthr- igular manner, Children ----- U, .pifrs tarn end regulate the bowels A Hearse His Family Car riage. " Indians can be induced to buy any- thing when they have money," said a Western man the other day. " At Wag- goner, Indian Territory, I saw a family of Indians, dressed in the brightest colors, and the brave, with a stovepipe hat, riding on top of as handsome a hearse as lever saw. Upon inquiry I learned that he had re- ceived a considerable sum of money a few months before, and made up his mind that he wanted some fine blankets for his family and a carriage. The agent to whom he went for the vehicle showed him a cata- logue, and the picture of a hearse struck the red man as the finest thing there was there. It cost $1,000, but the Indian had the money and cared nothing for expense, so the grewsome equipage is now a com- mon sight in ti'at locality, with the family riding on top. ' KENDALL'S. SPAVIN CURE THE MOST SUCCESSFUL REMEDY n FOR MAN OR BEAST. Certain in its effects and never blisters. Read proofs below: KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE BLvxronT, L.I., N.Y-, Tan. 15,1591, 4 Dr. B. J. KENNDALL Co. Gentlemen—I bought a splendid bay hone some time ago with a Spa vin. I gothim for $80. I used Iiendall's Spavin Cure. The Spavin Is gone now and I have been offered $150 ferthe same bone. I only had him nine weeks, so I got $120 for using 62 worth of Ifendan's Spavin Cure. Yours truly, W. S. M'AusDElr. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE Dr, B. T. Iicspent Co.sniruar, .Mies., Dec. 16,1893. 4 Sirs—I have used your KendalI's Spavin Cure with good success for Curbs, on two horses and itis the best Liniment I have ever used. Yours truly, AUelST h'SEDBnrcg.� Price dl per Battle. For Salo by all Druggists, or address .Dr. .13..T. SE2%D4,L.L COtlYP6,11TI'y) ENOSOUAGH FALLS, IT., For Sciatic Neura TRY e ONE APPLICATIONratns .,.SZAvTgla mod, saparilla, Do 'MrN';t`l10 flatmconbreflu a 0 pi S reekkupy_ areeperilla n, I. THE PAIN' L11(E give you ttren %Iobd'e' l5i11 tic amid' liber afire, prove by its enormous sale that it The best value for the Conhsumer 't of any soap in the marks th Millions ofwomen throughout e world can vouch for this, as it, is they who have proved its • value. It brings them' less labor, greater comfort:, llisteries of the AN BRAIN The latest discovery in the Boienti- do *Perla is that nerve centres located in er near the base of the brain con- trol all the organs of the body, and when these nerve centres are deranged the organs which they supply with nerve fluid, or nerve force, are also deranged: When it is remembered that a serious injury to the spinal cord will cause paralysis of the body below the injured point, because the nerve force is prevented ;by the injury from reaching the para- lyzed portion, it will be understood how the derangement of the nerve sentres will cause the derangement pf the various organs which they )upply with nerve force; that is, when nerve centre is deranged or in any lway diseased it iet. impossible for it to supply the same quantity of nerve force as when in a healthful condi- , tion hence the organs which depend upon it for nerve force suffer, and are unable to properly perform their work, and as a result disease makes ,ite appearance. I At least two-thirds of our chronic diiseases and ailments are due to the imperfect action of the nerve centres at the base of the brain, and not from a derangement primarily originating in the organ itself. The great mis- take of phySicians in treating them and not the nerve cientres, whioh tote the cause of the trouble. The wonderful cures wrought by the Great South American Nervine Tonic are due alone to the fact that this remedy is based upon the fore.; going FincipIe. It cures by rebuild. - ing and strengthening the nerve I oentres, and thereby increasing the I supply of nerve force or nervous This remedy has been found of infinite xalue for the cure of Nervous- ness, Nervous Prostration, Nervous Paroxysms, Sleeplessness, Forgetful. ness, Mental Despondency, Nervous - fleas of Females, Hot Flashes, Sick Heahohe, Heart Disease. The ftrat bottle will convince anyone that a cure is certain. South American Nervine with. out doubt the greatest remedy ever discovered for the cure of Indigestion) Dyspepsia, and all Chronic Stomach Troubles, because it acts through the nerves. It gives relief in one, day, and absolutely effects a permanent cure in every instance. Do not' illow your prejudices, or the prejul dices of others, to keep you from, using this health -giving remedy': if HI based on the result of years of scientific research and study, fr. A 1 single bottle will Convince the IllOSt diseases is that they treat the organs incredulous. _ C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter. DR. MCDAIRMID, Agent, Hensall. ce jl, Akt) As" Iry *Parehotert should' ieek to the Label the 0148 Pete, If the address it not 688, OXIFORIli liONDOS, theY er4ottkoluf. • AI