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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1894-11-22, Page 7`TMIt BITER TIMES Mks. J.IX. Hollsin nra, 152 PaciCio Aye., Santa Cruz, Cal., writes: " When a girl at school, in Reading, Ohio, I had a severe attack of brain. Sever. On my recovery, I found. myself piTafectly bald, and, for a long time, 1C *Pared I should be permanently so. Friends urged me to use Ayer's Hair Vigor, and, on doing so, my hair gan to Gr S and 1 now have as fine a head of Bair as Otte could wish for, being changed, how: ever, from blonde tb dark brown." "After a .t of sickness, my ban. oamg out in combfulls. I used two bottles of yer's =Vigor and now- my hair is over a yard long and very full and heavy. I have recom- mended this preparation to others with like good effect."—Mrs: Sidney Carr, 1400 Regina st., Harrisburg, Pc. "I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for several years and always obtained satisa factory results. I know it is the best preparation for the hair that is made." —C. T. Arnett, I'dammoth Spring, Ark. yers km° Vigor Prepared by Dr. &O. Ayer ai Co., Lowell, maser i�. THE rel' '/EXETER TIMES • CEN TRA.1.i g St lfeiNSON'S BLOOM, A fail stook of all kinds of Dye -stuffs and package Dyes, constantly on hand, Winan's Condition Powd- er owd er>, the hest in the mark- et and always resh. Family recip- etas carefully prepared at Central Drug Store Exete '`c" f f TZ L S SOME MEN OF MUSCLE, DREPS QE STRONG NEN IN AN QIENT AND MODERN TIMES, Latter -Day Athletes Ear More Than a illatch for Those of Ott--Somc or the Wender. ful Treats Performed. by Giants of the Present. I have often heard it asserted, says a writer, that the human raise was degener- acing in regard to personal strength and activity ; that the anoi<nta were physically stronger than the men of modern times, In searching through the records of athletes of ancient Greece, etc., I have been enabled to make some oomparisen between the strong men of that time and those of the present day, which, I think, shows conolueively that the present generation aro far ahead of any authenticated record we can find of the ancient. The idea that the human race as a whole is degenerating is a popular delusion, founded'on ignorance of the plainest and most undeniable facts. The idea that men. are falling off in size is a mistaken one. There aregood grounds for doubting that any man of former times ever performed a feat of strength beyond the powers of the strongest man of the present time. In popular estimation Samson (the original. one) remains' the typical 'strong man, and many will think it sacrilege to doubt his claim to be the strongest man that ever lived. Yet, what feat is recordedof him that has any undoubted definite value as a measure of strength ? He killed a young lion with his hands. Polydamus also killed with his bare hands a huge and fierce lion, and so did Richard Coeur de Leon, accord- ing to history. Samson broke ropes of various kinds. How strong were they ? Breaking ropes and chains are indefinite proofs of strength, He killed 1,000 men with the jawbone of an ass. To fracture a man's ekull with such a weapon needs no very great amount of strength, as several menhave killed a man with one blow of the bare fist. .11 the 1,000 men were all opposed sed to, him at once they must have been a sorry lot, Carrying oil the gates of Gaza depended on their size and weight as to the strength required, while no details. are given by which we can estimate the strength necessary to pull the pillars of the Philistines' temple off their ped estals._ APOCRYPHAL FEATS OF A GREEN. Cute SICK HEADACHE and Neuralgia in ao MINUTES also Coated Tongue, Dizzi- ness, Biliousness, rain in the Side, Constipation, . Torpid Liver, Bad Breath. •to stay cured also regulate the Dowels. VERT 611,OE TO TAKE. PRICE 25 CENTS AT DRUG STORES HAVE YOU "Backache means the kid- neys are in trouble. ' Dodd's Kidney Pills glue prompt,relief, "TB per cent. of disease is. rat caused by. disordered . kid- neys. "Might as well try to have a healthy city without sewer- age, as good health when the kidneys are ologged, they are Sold by all dealers or of price go cents. per Dr. L. A. Smith & Co. book called 1{idney Tal the soauengers of the system. "Delay is dangerous. Neg- lected kidney troubles result in Bad Blood, Dyspepsia, liver Complaint, and the most dan- gerous of all, Bright's Disease, Diabetes and Dropsy." "The ahove diseases cannot exist where Dodd's Kidney Pills are used' sent by mail on receipt box or ,six for $2.ro. Toronto, Write For Horstniausliip has boon practially aban` The o's de.Boulogne it Perla. ,bh B i b i o is do nod s a g now orowded daily with eyelids, The toilets of the Woman riders are of the brightest and prsttioat kind. Another celebrated athlete who flourished about 500 L.C. was Milo of Crotouo, a Greek town in the south of Italy. In his case also we have nothing recorded by which we can form any aourate idea of his strength. He was viotor six times at the Olympic games, and among the things at- tributed to him are the following Binding a cord round his head, he could break it by retaining his breath and swelling out his veins ; with his elbow resting on his side hedefiedanyone to open his closed fist ; standing on an oiled quoit he defied anyone to push him off it. The last'is sheer non- sense, the first two indefinite. Samson or Sandow of the present day can bind chains around their arms, and by swelling their arms, and by swelling their muscles can burst chains easily, which I consider a much harder thing to do than breaking a cord—. thatwould be child's play for them. I have seen Samson break a silver quarter in two withhis fingers. Let anyone try to do it and he will find out what an enormous power it requires to bend or break it. Milo was also credited with having carri- ed a 4 -year-old heifer through the Stradium of Olympia, killed it with a blow of his fist, and afterward ate it, all on one day. There aro several men 'of to -day who are credited with the ' POwER TO BILL AN O plank with logs slightly beat at the knees, back bunt forward, and his bands renting on a stool, pushed up with his bank, areas and legs the plank with pigiron resting on it wlatereighingthes ni2,5e50}athlepoundte,s, andusing a fewthe years method, raisd .3,536 pounds.. in hand lifting there is loee room for im- proved apparatus, and here again the modern strong men completely eclipsed Topman. I)r. Winship lifted 1,200 pounds, William I3, Curtis 1,230, L, Lensing, 1,384, David L, Dowd 1,444 pounds, and Jeffers son of Boston lifted. with his hands alone 1,571 pounds nearly double Topman'aa.besb lift. . There are generally from half a dozen to a score of athletes, each proclaiming him- self the strongest man on earth. Here are some of them,i; Samson, Kennedy, Sandow Cyclops, 'Ajax, Attila, the brothers Samson and Hercules and Louie Cyr, who, in the writer's opinion, is really the strongest man in the world to -day. PERSONAL POINTERS. Some Items About a I'cw of the Great lolka • of the World. n Emperor William's uniforms '.are, not all made by;the same tailor, nor are they all made in Berlin,but by Court -tailors in various parts of the Empire, all of whom possesses his measures. The average price. of a military coatis given at $45, Professor Dinglebatt, of Gottingen, has been experimenting with electricity on the vocal cords ofa goat. He suoceeded changing the "bah 1" of a bearded billy to a caoklo of a hen, and as a consequence pro- duceda great uproar in the barnyard where:. he applied the current , Lord ;Roberts will publish early next year his reminiscences of more than forty years of service in India, front subaltern to commander-in-chief. His career:' includes the period of the mutiny of 1857.8, with the siege of Delhi and the relief of Lucknow, the expedition to Abyssinia, the. war in Afghanistan, and the march to Kandahar. Prof. Herkomer has been telling an g w English lish intervio er about some ofthe famous men who have sat to him for por- traits, including Lord Salisbury, Wagner, and a Tennyson.son The composer gave him a good. den of trouble mad. seemed indiffer- ent - nt about the result. Tennyson was not encouraging. His first words tothe artist were : "I hate your coming ; I can't abide sitting." But he preyed a very satisfactory subject. It took a year and a half's bard reading of 1,500 books before Conan Doyle consid- ered he was sufficiently imbued with the subject of one of his books to write it out. There's something of "the capacity for hard work" about such a faithful preparation as this that ought to come under the definition of genius. But the author of "Micah. Clarke" is .not precisely that, it he does have the true instinct of a lover of literature, with his gift of story -telling. There is a pretty story in the Vaus family in regard to the late Richard Vaux's gallantries at the Court of St. James, when he danced with the young and .yet 'unmar- ried Queen Victoria. The family was of Quaker faith, and, according to the story,. when the news came from abroad of the favor the young man found with the Queen, his. mother spoke of. his attentions to the Royal lady, and then added: "But I hope Richard ,will not marry out of met- ing." Mrs. Kendal is accredited with a truly Kendalian method of housekeeping. In every room of the house hangs a little slate, with pencil attached,: On her daily tours she records on these slates criticisms. and comments developed by the condition of each respective room, and the maid, following her, acts accordingly. If the latter has any legitimate reply to make she puts it at the end of the mistress' note,and • by this means all jarring is saved, and nothing is forgotten, at least so she says. with the blow of the fist. Now, unless the heifer was four times its own weight it was no great feat to parry it, and if it was.four times his own weight, then it was impossible for him to have eaten it in a day, even al- lowing a wide margin for offal. All these reoords, however, still leave us ignorant of how strong he was. The Boman Emperor Maxinienus, who reigned in the early part of the third century, was over eight, feet in height,and is said to have worn one of his wie's bracelets as a ring for histhnmb. He is credited with drawing a loaded wag- on, splitting young trees with his hands and squeezing to powder thehardest'stones with the fingers. He had also a very healthy appetite, for it is said lie could eat -forty pounds of meat and drink five gallons and six pints of wine in a day. Taking the foregoing as the leading samples of strong men of ancient times, it is sufficient to say that further than that they were regarded the strongest men of their time, they have not left on record a siugle feat by which their strength relay be compared with that of modern strong men. LIFTING 800 POUNDS WITH ONE HAND. Coining to more recenttimes, we find Thorn. as •Topin.rn, an Englishman, who exhibited about 3740. Ho was about 5 feet 10 inches in height, and weighed in the neighborhood of 200 pounds, and was very strongly built. Topman's feats were feats of real strength, and-heis the first performer that could bear comparison with those of the present day. Here are two of the best records of real strength recorded of him Ho stood on a platform which had two parallelbars at a convenient height on his right and left, on which to plana his hands. Below him on a ower platform werethree barrels of water, weighing altogether about 1,836 pounds. These being bound together, a chain from them passed through the platform on which Topman stood, and was attached to a belt that passed over' his neck and shoulders ; he then lifted the whole by straightening his arms and legs. His other genuine re- cord was lifting by seizing, with his hands a frame on which rested a stone weighing 800�pounds. It is my candid opinion that there are hien living at the present time of greater personal strength than any Milo, Samson or Tom ann We will timepiece the following reoords against Topman's lift of 1,836 pounds. In this countrysome twenty ear%. ago several athletes ave thein attention to devisingg Lt1INESS TORR LIFTING heavy weights with the following results : Dr. 8. W. Winship lifted 2,600 pounds, John J. Lucus 2,700ppounds, A. A. Butts, 2,737:g pounds, and William 13. Curtis at resent editor of the ,S iri ' of the Tunes 8 pounds-- pounds' 5,239 p � 1,403p, more. than 6.'opman's. There' is no doubt but that the apparatus of these athletes was superior to that used by Topman, but Donald Din - Me, the famous Soottish athlete, with ap- paratus inferior to. To P man's, in that he P en so orts for his arms with hada pP more straps, lifted 1,904 pounds. In 1884 Louis Cyr, a young Canadian* standing under a 110. VANDERIIILT s $15,000 mato.. IN .THE GRASP OF A BEAR. A Bunter Carried Over a 0,000-C out Pre cipice Escapes with lits Lire. A huntingart has returned from the P Y Sierra Nevada mountains with a thrilling story. The party oons%ej~ed of five old, hunters and they took Indians along with them for the purpose of ,performing the hard labor. bier the firstfew days out very little game was found, but they finally camped in what is known aa Clear Creek canon. It is little more than a hole in the. Another anecdote to illustrate Mr. Gladstone's strength of memory. Sir H. Owen took to him on a comparatively recent occasion an important return containing a mass of figures. Mr. Gladstone looks through the return as he ate breakfast and then handed it back to Sir H. Owen, who took it away with him. In the House of Commons on that day 11r Gladstone dealt with the figures as if the written returns were before his eyes. Sir H. Owen remark- ed that. Mr. Gladstone was the only Minis. ter that ever gave him back' such a paper. Sardou's father who died reoently,refuised to believe that his son when a youth had any talent for writing plays, and made him study medicine. The boy's first attempt at a play was pronounced by the father a miserable failure. But later in life the elder Sardou recanted his harsh opinion, and used regularly to go to Paris from Cannes to be present at his son's first nights, When "Petrie" was produced the old man said: "It is all due to himself, for if he had listened to me ho would now be a fourth - rate doctor or tooth extractor in the provin- ces." Cardinal Tascherau leadsa busy life. His Eminence rises at half -past four, and at five commences his devotions, which continue until six. At six he says mass at the high altar in the Basilica. After that he takes a frugal meal, and then, whether hot, cold, wet, or fine, he walks for half anhour in his garden reciting his breviary. At eight o'olock he is in his office attending to the affairs of his diocese. Exactly at the stroke of twelve he dines. The dinner is a very modest repast. His Eminence drinks no tea, coffee, wine, or beer ; .but simply clear water and milk. After dinner half an hour is- spent, with the pupils in the seminary. At half -past one he reads his breviary, and then returns to his office to work until half -past six. The Cardinal has written a great deal. 'His letters make six large volumes, and his mandements and circulars two more. ' At half -past six tea is served. After' that his. Eminence spends an hour in recitation, and an hour and a half in prayer. It is then nine o'clock, at which hour precisely the Cardinal retires. How Negroes Take on Color. negro child is of a reddish nut- brown ine i t At birth a g 1 brown color, which turns to a slaty gray in the first week of the ohiid's existence. 'The black color is not fully developed for a per. ion varying from one to three years, aocording to'the Planta of the locality 9,nq the I:Attendee o£ climate. I ara%lf ieaya that , the children of Australians immediate) after birth, are yellowish brown, and be come dark at a later age. Those of the Guaranys of Paraguay are whitish yellow, Out they acquirein the course' of a few weeks the yellowish -brown tint of their parents, It is curious to notice that the eyes of a negro child are blue at birth, and his hair of a dark chestnut oolor,Toing only he ends. curled d a d at t A 515,000 PIANO. Vanderbilt's Latest rurehase la the Muscat Way. Mr. Cornelius Vanderbilt has just pur ohased a piano valued at $15,000. So far as the essential parts of. its :mechanism are. concerned it is no better than the first-class pianos which any man can buy or rent. But as an art object it is .unique, • and the case alone would be prized by any museum. In general terms it ism Steinway concert grand piano, straight along -one side and curved mountains, whence a small stream flows, on the other, with three lege and a top and is away from the usual hunting ground, which lifts from the side.' The les of this The walls of the canon are very abrupt, the piano, which are specially designed, are mountains coming up nearly to the banks of the creek, and then out off by a sheer precipice over two thousand feet in height. After exploring the country at the base of the hills and finding no game, three party concluded to try of the c one of the mountains, their companions continuied ei mp neons o their hunt in the canon below. Those who climbed the mountain found nothing worth. expending their powder upon for several this instrument will be placed in a Louis hours, and finally selected a large, fiat XIV room or by mistake be setup against rock, near the edge of the precipice, and, ' a Charles X. sideboard. The stool which began to eat their lunch. While thus en- accompanies this magnificent instrument is gaged they heard, the peculiar grunt of a also gorgeously made. It is said to' leave grizzly bear in the thicket near by, and cost 2,000. knew that theyhad a fight on their hands, and probably a desperate one: There was but little food on the mountain top,and the bear was undoubtedly hungry, In this condition they were well aware that he would attack them without a moment's hesitation. The savory, odor of the food cooking at the camp fire had attracted him, and he was determined to have it at any cost. They did not have long to waitbefore the shaggy animal appeared through an opening but a few yards from them. All three fired at him, but only suoceeded in enraging the brute, which sprang ` upon them witha ferocity which completely paralyzed them for the moment. Two succeeded in taking refuge behind large treea, but the other was immediately in front of the animal, and it was. impossible . for him" to get out of the way. .Had the bear struck him he would have been instantly killed, but he came down. with such a rush as to only knock the hunter_ down and passed very nearly over and beyond him. The man seized the bear by the .throat with both hands and the unequal struggle' for life commenced.. The p.reeipice was but a few' feet away and in their struggles nearer and nearer they went to it, neither having inflicted any serious injury upon the other until finally the bear lost bis foothold and fell, dragging the hunter after flat, and decorated with elaborate carvings of palm leaves. The groundwork of the whole instrument is info= shades of green, ranging from the delicate pistache to the darker chrome green known to artists. Upon top and bottom and around the sides. of this beautiful instrument ' re many slab - orate carvings, all of glittering gilt. The whole scheme of decoration is in the style of LouisXV., so that the piano is in har- mony with the Louis 'XV, rooms in Mr. Vanderbilt's house. Itis not supposed that AUSTRAIAN DAIRY PRODUCE. The Methods That leave iteen Followed by the rushing Australian.' e• The American Consular reports for October contain an article on the dairy industry in Victoria. In 18S9.90,when the factory system of butter -making was intro duped in the colony, the expert of butter was valued at less than $250,000. In 1893.94 there was an export of 16,609,600 pounds, valued at $3,904,355. Canada's export of butter increased between 1889 and 1893 from $392,655 to ,4.1,300,199; so that in rate of increase, as well as in the last reported export, it is a long way behind a colony with a papulation less than that of Quebec. It is, therefore, worth while to examine the met-hods'that have been followed by the 'pushing Australians. The butter was packed into296,000 boxes, each containing 56pounds net, and then chilled, frozen, and shipped in steamers to England. The ocean freight is about two cents a pound or nearly ten per cent. of the value. him. It was 2,000 feet to the bottom of There is au urgent demand for a reduction the canon and the other hunters naturally ' of the rate to 1 1-2 cents. Complaint is supposed that their companion' had been also made of the excessive charge of trans., dashed to pieces on the rocks below, but, portation by rail, a cent a pound for dist- to their surprise and joy, heard a cry: for antes varying from 200 to 300 miles. help. Hastening to the edge of the rocks The official dairy expert visited England they saw the man clinging for life on a fire recently, and one of the most important tree that grew out of a niche in the rocks. results of his visit was the information He had fallen into the tree and had sue- obtained as to improving the keeping quali- ceeded in obtaining a lodgment there, the ties of the butter by heating themilk to a bear. having gone crashing to the bottom. point between 180 and 200 degrees F. The It was a question as to how to get him process is said to be still in the experiment out, but he was alive, which was a matter tal stage; but the department hopes soon of great congratulation. They had brought "to place before the factories asystem ofbut no ropes with them, but one was improvised ter making that will produce an article not from a wild grapevine, and within half an to be excelled for keeping quality Many part hour the man was with his comrades again, of the world." The export of cheese is somewhat bruised from his frightful ex- insignificant, but the Government is perience but no bones broken. endeavoring to encourage the industry by a bonus of $29.10 per. ton. All butter exported last season was received at the Melbourne City Council's storage chambers, but the Government proposes to establish at the port of shipment a huge central chilling and storage depot for all kinds of Victorian produce intended for export. It appears that aii the butter is subjected to Government supervision iiefore export. SARAH BERNHARDT'S KIND ACT. Tasking lip a Destitute Countryman and Making 0150 Independent. Sarah Bernhardt is as kind+hearted as she is capricious, it appears, and as willing, often, to use her influence and talents, for the benefit of others as herself when rightly appealed to. One of the persons who has gained everything that makes life worth, living through her generosity was a French- man in most direful straits. He found himself with a wife and family in the United States and not the wherewith either to feed or clothe them, nor any pros- pect of improving his condition. A hint of his distress reached the great actress, who literally took his case in hand, for the div- ine Sarah is a very practical and energetic• person when she has a mind to bestir her- self. . The Frenchman proved to be both a scholar and a gentleman. In an instant she snapped out his eareer, airily appoint- ing him master of languages to the four hundred. He was at first hopeless and aghast, but she bade him help her prepare a series of readings she had promised to deliver, and after them at her receptions he was introduced and enthusiastically re- commended by his generous patroness. She even took him to California on the same mission, and before sailing for Prance had the pleaeuro of eeeini him prosperous, in- dependent and happy in. the very calling to which alis had appointed him. I --y- In a Box. TWO RASCALS CAUGHT. Thcy Attempted to'Wreak the Erie Express and Are Now in, Jail. A despatch from Loud on, Out, says :— A dastardly attempt was made on. Sunday night to wreck the Erie express at Strath- roy. The miscreants wedged coupling pine in the switch just east of the town, and had the trail struck the obstruction it most surely would have been wrecked,with perhaps loss of life. The would-be wreck- ere, two in number, were seen and identified by some boys while at their work, and ran away. Word was sent to the station and men were despatched to the scene and re:- stored e:stored the track to a condition of safety. Monday morning G.T.R, Detective Logan went to Strathroy and, armed with a de- scription of the men, seen had them id custody. Their names are Fife and John- son, and they are about 20 years of ago. They admit their guilt, but lead that theywere under the infiuonee of liquor at 4 the time. They were brought to jail here 1 Monday night, Y I$ ight To Bring NationsTogether. tern tonal telephone a i s t . m sem td Au. .a. y , cover all Eva ape with its network, is one of the latest movema'^,te to bring the nations into more intimate and make peaaefdi tigna with each other, The cities of Ani. eberdam, Rotterdam, Brussels and Antwor , connected bytele are already.telephone, r 4c a pp all p , en o o the lines is t` scot si s f a tie sG on be 1 of. q -: 4 Old .T+riend—+t§eerts to the you are pay- ing your cook pretty Waget" stiff Wel " Jimson-- as Ha es.he' 11 va to. If I don't alio leave, and then my wife will do the cook. ing herself." In the museum at Mayeoce, Germany, thorn are several iron -tipped piles ;which ch were used b tli omens 2 Ob0 , sere ago , oE' y Y g in the construction of a leridgeLaear that Cr far pl#}hers, Cflwst . .., Children, ti�'l�! I iaoe. Cry p only a littlk time. kids proved by its enormous sale that it is The hest value for the Consumer of any soap in the market. Millions of women throughout: tin. world can vouch for thus, as it is they who have proved its value. It brings them less labor, greater comfort, thrive on Scott's Emulsion when all the rest of their ,food seems togo to waste, Thin Babies g hau b sand Weak Children miaow strong, plumps and healthy by taking it. Se tt's Em overcomes inherited weakness and all the;tendenoies toward Emaciation or Consumption. Thin, weak babies and growing children and all persons suffering from Loss of Flesh, Weak Lungs, Clnonic Coughs, and Wasting Diseases will receive untold benefits from fl,is great Nourishment, The formule, for making Scott's Emulsion has' been endorsed by. the fried ieal world for Twenty years. No secret about it. S id` o pamphlet on Scott's I ' en rEmulsion. FREE. Scott & Sowne, Belleville. AR Druggists. 50o and S 1.. z` b .�z • �s�TSFb,�j �:R• xe , ::.e t row r�• ��]�f MillionsLives 11�e1 �� lick Heade-he is a malady snakes its appearance most frequently in women. The attack often begins: in the morning, upon awakening, after a night of restlessness or heavy sleep ; though it is especially wont to occur in connection with motional disturbances, suehflas excitement, fright or mental strain. The pain is usually localized, being in one or the other, more frequently the left side of the head. It is generally accompanied by great disturbance of the stomach, when light pains the eyes ; noises otherwise unnoticed inflict punishment; odors excite nausea. From the fact that people with strong nerves are never troubled with Sick Headache, it is generally b- conceded. by the most eminent. p y sitsians that it is dependent upon weak nerves or nervous debility, and can onlybe permauentlycured by strep thenin the nervous syete11. S g The Great South American Ner. whieh vine Tonic is the only remedy mann ftintured which is prepared especially and expressly for the nerves. It acts directly on the nerve centres at the base of the brain, correcting any lila ". ••• .k. .n,.rumf there 1l. be, grOP.13ly. aeribngeAab3' tone to .the whole body, and thereby enabling a system subject to Siok. Headache to withstand future attacke., It gives relief in.one day and speedily effects a permanent clue. 1 Mrs. Isabella S. Graham, of Feiendswood, Indiana, writes: "For a number of years I have suffered ihtensely with Nervous and Sick Headache; had .hot flashes, was sleeplees and became despondent. Dr. Faris, of Bloomington, Indiana, spoke so highly of South American Nervine that I was induced to buy s bottle. That purchase led to a fete others, and now I sleep soundly, feel buoyant, strong and vigorous. T would not bo back in the condition I was in when I began takingthis S medicine for anysum you con. 14 d' name. Mrs. 3. H. Prouty, of Ls, Orr ange, IIAisne, writes. Your South Amer: loan Nervine worked a rxlai°velloua euro with me last year. 1 began y g, takingg it last April about the 20612, The first week I made a gain of 6 b i p ylbs. hind *Poen that time old .i me ad>3 tt stead ain until 1 reaehetl y g normal weight, making in all a OW of - 0 lb. After t t. din S s ,A, i three • gtaking . ttr months C found l• of norvoua or fo u zi�..y�tl t irE �;nOl'eaN1lCl�j the supply ?.fl tT or }nerve f oder giving 0014C/"417"1841' + �,• LC1xZ'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent forExeter, 1VIdD<atxlttD, .A.gei t, ;r Hemel,