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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1894-11-8, Page 7' a TIB EXETER, TIMES A Racking Cough eked by Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. a. P. D. HALL, 217 Gene0See St., Lockport, N. Y., says: "Over thirty years ago, I remember bearing my father describe the wonder- firreurative effecte of Ayer's Cherry a4orel. During a, recent atteek of La Grippe, whichassumed the form of a Catarrh, soreness of the lungs, acorns MAO by an aggravating cough, I used various remedies and prescriptions. 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 moment I attempted to lie down at night. After ten or twelve such nigh* X was Nearly in Despair, end had about decided to sit up all night in ray easy chair, and procure what sleep I could in that way. It then oc- eurred to me that I had a bottle of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. X took a •spoonful of tide 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 Pea- . Oral every night for a week, then grade wally decreased the dose, and in two weeks my cough was cured." Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Prepared by Dr. T. 0..4. ger St Co., Lowell, Mum Prom ptto act, sore to cure TRE OF =EXETER • TIMES CEN TRAL D rli g Store FANSON'S BLOCK. A full stook of all kinds of Dye -stuffs and package 0Yes, constantly on hand, Winan's Condition Powd- er›, the best inthe mark- et and always resh. Family recip- ees carefully prepared at Central Drug Store Exete Cr , rE'Zi POWDERS Cure sicx HEADACHE and Neural* in .20 84/8/LtrES, also Coated Tongue, Dian- ness,Biliousness, Pain in the Side, Constipation, Torpid Liver, Bad Breath. to stay cured also regulate the bowels. voter mos TO TAKE. PR1CS 26 CENTS AT DRUG1 STORES, HAVE YOU ta• .42 -"Baokache means the kid- neys are in grouble, Dodd's Kidney Pills give prompt relief." "75 per cent. Of disease is first caused by disordered kid- neys. "Mightaswell try to have 'a healthy city without sewer age, as good health when the kidneys are clogged, they are the scavengers of the system, "Delay is dangerous. Neg- lected kidney troubles result In Bad Blood, Dyspepsia, Liver Complaint, and the most dan- gerous of all, Blights Disease, Diabetes and Dropsy." "The above diseases cannot exist Where Dodd's Kidney Pills are used," Sold by all dealers or ectithy median receipt pike 46 cents. ect box or Nix for $2.0. r. L. A. Smith 8t Co. Toronto. Write for book called Kidney talk, tonintleolonaxotAnbalrot.c.v.eollopa ' A horse belonging to the Now Haven (Ct.) police department enjoys nothing to tnttch ,P as chewing tebaece. ' t Household. Apple Butter. ' Take new older, fresh from the prewar:rot yet fermented put it into a porcelaindieed kettle and hoil anti' reduced one half, Boil the cider the day before you make the apple, and boil all that you need for the quantity desired. As soon as one kettle has been boiled, take it out and boil anoth- er. -This must be watched carefully, that it may riot scorch or boil over. To each four gallons of boiled eider, allow a half bushel of nice juicy apples, pared, cored and quartered. The apples should be one- third sweet and two-thirda sour apples. Now, when ready to make the apple butter, fill two-thirds full with the boiled cider a very large kettle ; and as many apple e as you can keep moist; allow,. this to stand and cook very slowly on the back part of the stove, stirring alined constantly, until the apples are soft and of the coesietency of marmalade and the color is a very dark brown. If ,you cannot add all the epples at first, after a portion of them are cooked, add a few more, and so continue until it is the proper oonifistenay. Keep out a portion of the boiled cider; in case the butter becomes top thick you can add a little to thin it down. Twenty mientes before you have taken it from the fire—and remember,long, slow cooking is necessary to insure good -keeping qualieies—add to each gallon of cider used a teaspoonful of cinnamon and orie,half a grated nutmeg, Do not add sugar. e When it has the proper appearance .of being just the right consistency, is dark in color, drop a tablespoonful in a saucer and stand it aside ; if it retains the consistency; the liquid not running over the- saucer, a is ready to take from the fire ; but if it separetes in the saucer making a sort of sauce, the liquid part running aftsund, cook longer. When done, cool; when cold, put into tumblers Of jars, and cover closely. Coal Fires. Start your stove or furnace in the morn- ing, or, when quite low, with a shovel of nut coal, when "ihat reddens put on the larger sort, open the draft till it burns red, which will be from fifteen minutes to half an hour, then close all drafts, front and rear, and your fire will keep four or five hours without attention, pouring 'oat its heat in the rooms when:You want it and not up the chili:mete Nut coal goes much fur- ther for stoves than egg, and the fire can be controlled better ; it also takes far less kindling. In warm winter days keep, the fire low by shaking the furance grate only enough to secure a draught, then when the coal burns red, draw it forward and fill the back and sides with the sifted ashes and cinders moistened and mixed with half as much coal sweepings. Bank over the top with this, leaving small vents for the fire, open the draught for ten minutes and then close for the day, leaving the cold air box or shaft wide open. When rooms are heated by stoves, economy lies in never letting the the &ego down in cold weather, as it takes more heat to warm the rooms when the walls are chilled than it does to keep them so for days. Many.a factory is run on less coal than a common dwelling house consumes* ' Dinner Giving. It is an undisputed fact that a plain dinner neatly served is a luxury, compared with a great, pretentious, ill -cooked meal, badly served. "To see one's, maid," says a writer, "trying to serve twelve people, and go perspiring around with the jelly after the duck has grown cord, is an abuse of e good thing, for dinner is to be a great pleasu4 and a delight. It ' should soothe the nerves, and not agitate them. Every woman should study the art of giving so good a dinner on small means that anyone, will be glad to sit down to her roast beef or turkey with a certainty of an hour of great enjoyment. ' Apple Desserts, Apple Custard.—Make a thick cornstarch custard with eggs, in the usual way, and pour half into a pudding mold. When set, put in a layer of tare apples, grated and sprinkled thickly with sugar and nutmeg. Put in the balance of custard, which by this time will be stiff, smother the top and set away until ready for use. Tern out on a flat dish and serve with whipped cream or any simple sauce. Baked Apple Custard.—Pare and grate three large sweet apples. Add three table- spoonfuls of butter, ten of sugar and four eggs yolks and whites separately beaten; the eggs, of two and grated rind of one lemon. Line a pudding dish with bread crumbs, pour in the mixture and bake. Poor Man's Pudding.—Line a buttered pudding dish thickly with bread crumbs, Over this put is thick la,yei of thinlY shoed tart apples, a squeeze of lemon juice, a little nutmeg, a teaepoonful of butter in tiny bits and three tablespoonfuls of angel; now a thick layer of crumbs anti apples as before, with twice the quantity of butter. Filmish with crumbs, bake, and serve with or without sauce. Baked Apples with Cream—Core, with- out paring, six firm, tart apples ; fill the cavities with sugar and a taste of nutmeg, eke, and serve with whipped cream flavor- ed with vanilla. Apple Pudding, No, 1. —Mix together oneshalf cupful of Sugar and the juice and grated rind of one lemon., 'Blend one-half oupful of butter with one pint of soft bread crumbs, throe beaten eggs and six pared and finely chopped tart apples. lVfix with sugar and lemon, and flavor with cinnamon, Bake in a pudding mold placed in a moder. ate,oVen and serve With hard sauce. Apple Pudding, No. 2, —Pare, cote and quarter as many tart apples as *MU two thirds of a pudding dish. -Sprinkle with sugar and flavoring, dot with butter, and moisten with, a little cold water, rill the dish with a nice bake batter and bake in 9, moderate oven One hour. Apple Meringue.—Pare and core small tart apples and put them in a pudding diah. Pack the cavities with sugar and cinnamon spread lightly with buttes, cover with 4 late and bake in a inoclerete Oven until ender. Make a euatatel of Milk, eggs, leitelleeat• , at •sit. sea.. eeesalittie , „. sugar and venilia; pour this over the apples and leave in the oven to set. Make a Meringue of the whites of two eggs, tabltsepooliful of sugar and a few drops of vanilla; pour over the apples, and brown delieately. Apple Snowballs. —Parc and core firm tart apples. Boil a cupful of rice in salted water until tender. For each apple take a Piece of soft, White cotton lot1s, tuitably proportioned; moisten each piece in eold water and cover half au inch thick with rice, Pack each apple with sugar and nutmeg, and lay on each cloth. Wrap, tie securely and steam one boar. Dip the cloth in' water before turning out the balls. Serve with pudding sauce. SINDBAD'S VALE OF DIAMONDS. A Spot lu the Islaagl of Java that Closely Hesembies It. The spot whica inspired an anonymous author to hold schoal boys spell -bound for generations past, to write a romance which Will probably survive for centuries to come, where the scribbler of ages ago dropped the world-renowned Sindbad the Sailor from the feet of his fabulous bird, has ever been a subject for grave controversy. But the ancient mariner who contributed' to the "Arabian Nights" the startling story of Sindbad's seven voyages must surely have visited the island of Java, in the Eastern Archipelago, and made it the scene of his second adventure. Ample proofs of its locality exist in the anecdote itself. The very tall tree by the seashore uf which the forsaken sailor climbed the "very deep' valley surrounded on all sides with mountains of great height," the air "grow- ing suddenly dark,as if obcured by a great cloud," the arrival of the merchants in quest of precious stones the enormous serpents, and even the colossal bird itself, allowing for poetic license, all point to this place as the source of the author's inspira- tion. - Here the snakes seem almost big enough to "swallow an elephant with ease," and condors and eagles which prey on them could, by a little stretching of an Oriente imagination, be easily expanded into the prodigious proportions of therm Rhinocer- oses end elephants, mentioned in the nar- rative, still inhabit the island, and the "tree whence camphor is extracted " is of common growth. But the diamonds are not here. ' Sindbad probably "salted", that marvellous mine °feria. And that is a process not altogether unknown in the island. This volcanic valley is prosaically known as the Bromo. It is situated in the Resi- dency of Pasocroewan, about 'a day's jour- ney from the port of that name, on the River Gembong, which flows into the Straits of Madura. It is in the midst of a range of thirty-six lofty mountains, ;Raven of which are active volcanoes, and whose highest peaks are Sems,roc and Mahameru. Sturdy ponies and oodlie guides are pro- vided for the ambitious visitor, who would penetrate this Wilderness of eruptive and awe-inspiring nature. But the journey is so arduous, and the dangers, arising from the erratic, fiery, furnaces and the avalanch- es of lava which abound so great, that we could almost wish to be born to the Interior tied to the leg of a giant bird, as was the hero of the "Arabian Nights." When the visi tor has descended the al- most perpendicular rooks which at . height of 1,000 feet surround the insular desert, quite a family of smaller volcanoes are ob- served, smouldering in a quiet sort of way —sitting in a circle, smoking the pipe of peace, so to speak. But a sense of the latent powers they hold within and the angry tempera they r eriodioally display makes the situation anything but pleasant. One can well understand a "alley of diamonds being guarded by an :h ghastly sentinels as these. In the desert itself there are no sign of precious stones or anything that could possibly be mistaken for diamonds; but there is a tradition among the few remain- ing Buddhi ts, who live nearby, that Arab trader in years past violated this sacred 13, spot, which is still held in superstitious awe, and the', their mission was to procure the treasures it held. Whether they did a th s by means of raw beef and roet is not c known. P The wal a of the Brom°, in common with 1 many volcanic mountains, are of lava-basa't rock. Thi has broken off and crumbled e away, strewing the floor with crystalline t fragments, which gleam and glitter in the T brilliant equatorial sunlight. These may p have been seen by the Mtrepid traveller who possibly accompanied a band of traders to e its brink, and imagine them diamond,.. Hence his story, which has come down to t posterity. ROUND THE WHILE WORLD WHAT IS ooiNG ON IN THE FOUR CORNERS OF THE GLOBE. Old and New World Evente or tuterest clirouiried 0.001.p -interesting itair InP7rian:cmeoirt Riseiellneat arl)4tLoe.catch frees at night. 20AyeklursesoiOdu. is not legally of age till he is in England. ding of street cars is forbidden Gr''Qeehnerlaendaerres. less than 30 0 P4re"bi"lied Abeitl,s0001,0i400eresdh.ip canal across Ireland is Therailwayfrom ,fer'uselern to •ToPPa is said to be embarrassed financially. ingIran atereoaerny aleeasoutth7a0n pse1r5oceanytecitirt.be work - Alexander Dumas proposes a tax upon diners out for the benefit of the poor. Alfalfa growing has • proved eminently mucceastul in the dry districts of Australia. Every one of England's royal princes wears a facsimile oi his brim's wedding ring, Lord Arthur Hill has the reputation of laceofmngmtohnes.best dressed man in the house of Prance helds the exclusive fishing privi- lege e coast.' Id. miles of Newfoundland's 2,000 Ityla. rSiso.hnider, the head of the great Cram sot foundries, was married the other day George Meredith, the English novelist, was paid for his last novel at the rate of ,$50 per 1,000 words. Apple green shirts, a London fashion authority avers, are to be the correct thing for men the 'coming season. A street oar line is now being built in by a French company. , A nugget of tin weighing 5,400 pounds has been found in Tasmania. The assay shows 67 per cent of metallic tin. Father Epping, 8.J,'who died recently in Holland, was the 'highest authority on Assyrian chronology and astronomy. Queen Victoria has sent $15 to a couple named Moore, who recently celebrated the seventieth anniversary of their marriage. At Antwerp the International Peace Con- gress passed resolutions in favor of a perma- nent arbitration treaty among the European powers. It is said at this time there are 21 ex - sovereigns residing in different parts of Europe, some of them in the countries they once ruled. An international journal for African languages has just been started in erGmany, aided by a liberal subvention from the Government Edelweiss is rapidly disappearing in many parts of Tyrol. To save it the Lan. tag has lately imposed a fine for selling the plant with the roots. A society called the institute of journal- ists is being organized in England for the purpose of raising the standard of admis- sion to their profession. Miss Sarah Aster, of Edinburgh, a suffer- er for sixteen years from ulcer in the stomach, has lately become cured during a visit to Lourdes, France. Mme. Blanc says that Bret Earle is, of all the American authors of the time the most popular in Femme, and thal Howells is not generally liked by the French. The firat brougham aver built and name ed for its owner, Lord Brougham, in 1838 is now in the carriage house of Lord Bathurst, to whom ib is a, treasured relic. This year is 5654 of the Jewish era, 7402 in the Byzantine era, 2554 in the Japanese era, 1314 of the Mohammedan and the 27th year of the Dominion of Canada. Tashkend, the capital of Russia Turkestan In some of the hotels of Lucknow and Cawnpore, much frequented by foreign travellers, there are signs which read thug: 'Please Do Not Strike the Servants." A Paris journal says that the American artist, Mr. Thomas Shields -Clarke as pees. nt resident in Paris, pursues five different ranches of art in five different studios. A new plan for mounting telescopes so s to avoid unsteadiness resulting from °remission of the earth's surface has been reposed by Sir Howard Grubb, the Eng - bah astronomer. In 187,1 there were said to be 18,000 gas ngines in Germany, and it is estimated hat, the number now exceeds 25,000. hese engines are also developing a great opularity in France. The Earl of Mar has a weeknetss for ornposing church music, and has a neat ittle church in the Highlands where he ries it upon the country folks who form he congregation. LOOKING FOR A DEFAULTER. i S An Ohio officer Who Failed to Find Ms Wan.flu A t oronto despatch says :—An officer from Springfield, Ohio, was in the city on vir, Monday, in search of Charles E. iViorris, H attorney.at-law and ex -police judge of o piati city, who is wanted for the crimes of forger' and embezzlement. Morris is ° known to .have been in Toronto, but left before the officer arrived. He is about 5 t feet 7 or;8 inches tell, weight 140 Or 150 pounds, 37 years old, but looks older than he is, light complexion blue eyes, build reeditim, light brovvn hair and very bald. He can Ise easily recognized by an involun- tary twitching of the muscles of the neck, causing him by walking to shake his head end turn the head from one shoulder to the other. $ :00 will be paid for his arrest or information tending thereto. Lafcadio Hearn, the author, is a teacher n a public school in Japan.; in the univer- ity there .the post of Professor of the apanese language is held by an English. LOU, Prof. Chamberlain. Dr. Makenzie's " Brittania" overture, in hich he introduces the hornpipe and 'Rule- Brittania," will be produced by fins Riehter at the Vienna philharmonic oncerts this winter. The Emperor of Russia is said to be the nip European monarch whose life is not, insured. The companies all rated him as an undesirable risk, and owing to Nilmilis. ice acticteas hazardoes to handle. The holy carpet which is the Sultan's annual gift to Mecca, was sent to Cairo by ecial train to Suez recently. It was theta despatched to Jeddiam under the care of a 9:1iiihetairea 7e aesrcort Tout 150 cooking schools in Germany ad Austria. No propeletor of a first-class hotel in those countries will en. gage a chef unlesa he has a diploma from tie of the schools. Mr. Gutzmann, a teaeher in Berlin:0unit! tuttering. Ile makes his patients practise a the title on his magazine. "Medizinischa aedagogische IVIonatosehrift fuer die esammte Sprachheilkunde," 0 The British Waist. In Gleeet Britain there are about 3,543,- o 060 °tweet wearers, whose united girth P should be 95,661,000 inchea, which is re- g slimed by compression to 81,489,000 inehea, showing, according to the Anti -Comet League, a deplorable deficit of 223 24 nines of waist, all lost by tight lacing. " So Say We All. A whale has been Washed ashore at Chap. I, on the Lincolnshire coast. It measured 5 feet in length and 16 feet in girth. The ns were six feet ten inches eaoh, and the all was seven feet across. Vi a sitor--"Wliat Ilba8On of the year do Dictator Fro* mof Paraguay, once en- oted law that all males shoold wear some hid of hat, if only a orownlets brim, so hat they could shoty respect to their het - re by removing their head cotestings. In a ton of Dead Sea water there are 187 unds of Olt;SIted "Sea, tinety,three editerrancan, eighty.five 4 Atlantic, ghty-orie ; English °benne.), seeenty.two; altic, eighteen ; Black see, tesenty-six, d daspian sea, eleven. ' you like best?" Little Boy—'i generally like best the s" one thatet just coming." "e po TO prevent lamp chimneys from cracking Dub theminto a kettle of cold water, goes. ei Il an ually heat it till it boils and then let it as gradually Gobi. CRIME IN CANADA, _— Tao criminal eiatietiet; Of VOA Covina,' Tell it Discreditable Story. atrocioushe sring etrimpast a fve:Nks occurredveebwrimtht ala airrica. trliZy in;s fthatitbi ain hlicsuflealtledfellow-men, , mesnh,a k the cp. in accordance with the theory Apparent. tha t countries are swept by alternate waves of vice and virtue, one crime leading to anoth- er, and the sequence continuing until the wave of virtue brings it to an end. Ontario is having its experience with the wave that leaves blood and ruin in its wake. It is generally admitted that the primary causes of crime are poverty, ig. norance, and a demoralizing course of pris- on discipline, and that, in proportion as a people become well instructed and com- fortable; so will • they become free from orirne, happy, and, morally speaking, inno- cent. But there does not seem to be suffi- cient reaeon for attributing the apparently increasing criminality of Ontario end in Canada to these causes, for we are recover- ing from an era of depression, we are being better educated than ever before, and our prison discipline is being steadily improved. The criminal statisticis of last year, never. theism, told a melancholy tale, for it was shown that there were in Canada, in 1893, 4,630 oondictions for indictable offences, or 9.36 per 10,000 inhabitants, as againet 4,040 or 8.23, per 10,000 inhabitants in 1892. This increase is explained partly by the fact that in 1893 a different method was adopted in making the returns, but the change accounts for only 290 of the 590 additional conviction. If during the pre- sent year, the number of minor offences has been proportionate to the number of heinous crimes that have shocked the lawaabiding section of th community, it is safe tee say that th criminal atatistics will again tell a de creditable story. In crime as in ot,t1 matters there are occasional fluctualtio for which it is difficult to account except by some hypothesis like the wave theory, which may or may not bear the test of careful examination. Readers of the news papers during the past few weeks have had a series of reports ot murder brought prominently under their notice, which make it seem se if an epidemics of that particular form of crime prevails at the present time; and as there are no reasons for attributing it to any of the three primary causes, it must be, owing to some that are, like the wave theory, inexplicable As one funeral causes other funerals, so one murder causes others more or less like it, and not one but a number of excutions are necessary to have a deterrent effect. Education, industry, sobriety, and con- tentment are certainly note -declining in this country, and it is to be hoped that the number of dastardly crimes sotta will be. DON'T woRnyl, :TRY. UN110 :IT BRING(, COMFORT' ION! WASH For Twenty Year Scott's Emulsion has been endorsed by- physioians of tho whole world. There is no secret about its ingrediaatFa Physicians prescribe Scott's E ulsion Ammumemxtmseemenior doe&mgmeems.alwar because they know what great nourishing and curative prop- erties it contains. They know it is what it is represented to be; namely, a perfect emulsion of the best Nom'ay Cod- liver Oil with the hypophosphites of lime and soda. For (loughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Weak Lungs, donsump. fula, Anemia, Weak Babies, Thin Ohildren, -Riokets, Mar - General Debility, and all conditions of Wasting. ' Emulsion is put in salmon - o tes I The Chinese Siin of Heaven. In Pekin is the residence of a monarch who is still the Son of Heaven to 350,000,- 000 human beings, whom a bare score' of living foreigners have ever seen, and who at the end of the nineteenth century leads an existence befitting the Veiled Prophet of Khorassan. He is Vice-regent of Heaven, himself all but a god, mid lives a prisoner's life. To the innermost palace no man is admitted, and the imperial persons and harem are surrounded by a vast body of eunuchs, estimated at from 8,000 to 10.600. When the Emperor goes out nobody is al- lowed in the streets, which are very likely paved for the occasion while the houses are barricaded or closed with mats. The ceremonial functions of his life are manifold and engrossing, and his education in the native classics is not neglected. Ku- ang Hen, the present Emperor, takes a deep interest in everything English, and receives daily lessons in our language from two Chinese students, who, unlike the Ministers, are allowed to sit in his presence; but with the sad routine of his official life, rigidly prescribed by an adamantine eti- quette, and the temptations of the harem, it is unlikely that an Emperor of China can develop force of character or learn lessons of statecraft Should a strong sovereign emancipate himself from the petrified tra- ditions of the palace, the phantom of lin- penal power vveuld, it is said, collapse. The Rothsehilds' Riches. The Rothschild family still "holds the record" as the richest family in the world, athough the wealth of its individual mem- bers is not as great as that of sonic other individuals in England, France, Germany, and the United States. Le Signal contains the following particulars: "In round numbers the Rothschilds own at present 10,000,000,e00 francs ($2,000,- 000,000). A tenth part of this immense wealth is in the possession of the French branch of the family. In 1875, the Rothe childs owned less than e thousand millions ; their wealth has, therefore, more than doubled 'within the last eighteee years. It has been calculated that ill 1965 this enormous wealth will ho.vaincreased to $60,000,000,000. ,,,,The interest of this im- mense capital would be sufficient to support' 37,000,000 of human beings, or about the population of France, Yet the grandfather of the Rothschilds did not own a penny in 1800; his wonderful financial success duo since the battle of Waterloo." CHINESE WHIPPED AGAIN. The Rattle on the frani—A cores or 20.- 009 Hooted by the laps, A despatch from Yokohama says:—News received here confirm the' reports of the battle between the Chinese amid Japanese forces after the latter had ()reseed the Yalu river. It is added that the whole of the Japanese army afterwards advanced north- ward, and Kiuren castle, which was held by a large force of Chinese, was 4ttludced upon all sides. The dhinese inat?e a desper- ate defence and the fighting Wag very severe. The Chinese are reported to have numbered Men. Another despatch repeats the assertion frequently made that time Japanese army has landed on the east coast of the p`eninstila of Kin -Chow, upon which Port Arthur is situated. The Japanese salty, according to these despatehes, now occupy the neck of the peninsula, thus cutting on cormnilnicationbetWeeti the port and Arsenal and the mein laud. 15)41:0401:==:=46r.,,,_ Truly Wonder Statement .•••••1011 Investigate it, by Writing to the Mayert Postmaster, any Minister or Citizen of Hartford City, Indiana. IMAttpla.A. • • e „.iLl• si i0P.P.t"T • • 4.fr 44141,03044,64 ;." .;" ,,ivorittOpAaN8 4 A....4 77.40- A kag ..t.r,t...N.04 40' ikt "'" '6' ii •tiLtIrrirdHn "dirt, Mackford. County, or walk a step, and had to be lifted Indiana, June 8th, 1808. like- a child. Part of the time South American Medicine Co. could read a little, and one day saw Gentlemen: I received a letter an advertisement of your medicine from you May 27th, stating that you and concluded to try one bottle. By. had heard of my wonderful rcoov- the time I had taken one and =e- ery from a spell of sickness' of six half bottles I could rise up and take years duration, through the use of a step. or two by being helped, and SOUTH ANDRICAN NBRVINB, and asking after lima taken five bottles in for my testimonial. I was near felt real well. The shaking went thirty-five years old when I took away gradually, and I could eat and down with nervous prostration. Our sleep good, and my friends could family physician treated me, but with; scarcely believe it was L I am sure out benefiting me in the least, My this medicine is the best in the world, nervous system seemed to be entirely I belive kt saved my life. I give my shattered, and I constantly had very name and address, to that if anyone severe shaking spells. Ill addition doubts My statement they can write to this I would have vomiting spells, me, or our postmastcy or any citizen, During the years flay sick, nay folks as all are aegrittinted Wi.th hay ..eaSl had an eminent physician from Dap. I aro now forty-one years of age, ton, Ohio, and two from Ooltunbue, and expect to llong as the Ohio, to cores and exanaine me. Lord has use for me 411a do ali the They all said I could not live, I good I can in helping, the (mitering., got to having spells like spsonns, and Mtge Ewer FiTatzt would lie cold and etiZ for a time Will a terneoly which can rftcot after each. At laet lost the UAW c): ouch marvsllotto cure at the abova my bode—could not rise from my bed dtifd You The Znyder Zee is to be dreined at an ex. - — of $105,00C,000,72,792 acres of ground C. ist U '1SZ, `).':$01.0 W anf 1d,Otail Agoilt for Exeter, velieii,at $180,000,01 0 being reclaitned. Dn. MoDAingto, Agent, .thi1drp Cry for Pittivir'.$ Cutoria ' • • • ' "'•