The Exeter Times, 1895-1-17, Page 7•OREg
OTH ERS
CURE
•ir
AI 0
c$9
4:ACINO
.0\
CLEAR
SKIN
MENTAL
ENERGY
DP'
V.1
0\1°)
ass ,e11
LONG
LI FE
ete
STRONG
NERVES
et AYER'S
,OARSAPAR I LLA
S. P. SMITII, of Towanda, Pa.,
1 'hoses constitution Was completely
Otoken down, is cured by Ayer's
Sarsaparilla. He writes:
"For eight years, I was, most of the
ewe, a great sufferer from constipas
lied, kidney trouble, and indigos.
tion, so that my constitution seemed
to be completely broken down. I was
induced to try Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and
took nearly seven bottles, with such
excellent results that my stomach,
bowels, and kidneys are in perfect con.
,Aitiott and, in all their functions, as
regular as clock -work. Ai the time
I began taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla, my
weight was only 129 pounds; I now can
brag ot 159 pounds, and was never in so
good hlalth. If you could see me be.
fore and after using, you would want
me for a traveling advertisement.
I believe this preparation of Sarsaparilla
to be the best in the market to -day."
Ayer's Sarsaparilla
Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer &Co., Lowell, Mee.
Curesothers,willeureyou
THE
OFA MVEXETER
" TIMES
POWDERS
Cure SICK HEADACHE and Neuralgia
In 20 ralnurars, also Coated Tongue, Dizzi-
ness, Biliousness, Pain in the Side, Constipation,
Torpid Liver, Bad Breath. to stay cured also
regulate the bowels. VERY MICE TO rime.
PRICE 26 CENTS AT DRUG STORES.
CEN TRAL
Drug Store
FANSON'S BLOCIX.
A ftill stock of all kinds of
Dye-stnffs and package
Dyes, oonstangy on
hand. Winan's
Condition
Powd-
er,
the hest
in the mark-
et and always
rash. Family reoip-
ees oarefally prepared at
Central Drug Store Exete
LUTZ*
HAVE YOU
BACK -AC HZ
000n's
KIDNEY
PILLS
WILL CURE YOU
"Back ao he the scavengers
means the kid- of the system.
neys are in "Delay Is
rouble. Dodd's dangerous. Neg-
Kidney Pills give looted kidney
proin,ot relief:" troubles result
4'75 per cent. In Bad Blood,
of disease la Dyspepsia, Liver
first caused by Complaint, and
disordered kid- the most clan-
neys, gerous of all,
lifightas well Bright's Disease,
try to have a Diabetes and
healthy city Dropsy."
without sewer- "The above
age, as good diseases cannot
health when the exist where
kidneys are Dodd,'zi Kidney
clogged, they are Pills are used."
Sold by all dealers or sent by mail on receipt
of price so centsper box Or six for $1.so,
Dr. L. A. Smith Se Co, Tatham Writo for
bodk ealled Kidney Talk.
nsaassams"'""""isamaidettAnnt
.Very tiny protuberanoe on a branoh of
coral represents a living animal, whioh
geoVre from it like a plant.
TR WEEK'S NEWS,
—,..-
OARADA.
At Qaebect on Saterday the temperature
was 25 0 below zero.
It is thought that hi eopewa's (Man.) mis-
sing banker has been murdered. .
The Manitoba Legislature is oalled for
the despatch of busineee on January 24th.
' The Salvation Army is eatablishing a
&seiner and soup kitehen in Winnipeg this
winter.
1 Mit Hiram Robinson, who has herved on
the Ottawa Public School Board for twenty-
eight years, has resigned.
It is said that Lady Thompson will take
up her residence in Toronto in order to be
with her sons, who are studying law heee,
The medical men of Oshawa state that
there is less eiekness at present than there
has been at any time during the past 15
,
years. .
.An ex -alderman of Kingston states that
there has been boodling among the alder-
men of that city.
During the past season 55,842 boxes of
cheese, representing nearly 4,500,000
pounds, were shipped over the Brookville
and Westport railway.
The anti-toxine remedy for diphtheria has
proved successful in three oases 9M Chat-
ham, Ont., and the physicians pronounce
it a great success.
The British warship Blenheim, which
conveyed the remains of Sir John Thomp-
son to this country, will leave Halifax on
Friday for Portsmouth.
The Council of London 'West, Ont„ has
deoided to ask for a Government commis-
sion to examine the financial affairs of the
village.
The Northern Elevator Company has
announced its intention of building ton new
elevators next season, in different parts of
Manitoba and the North-West Territories.
Before leaving for the west Lord and
Lady Aberdeen intimated that they would
spend next summer in Halifax if they could
secure suitable accommodation, not official-
ly but as private citizens.
Mr. Michael Bird, a veteran of the Cri-
mean war, died on Thursday night at Lon-
don, Ontario, aged sixty-six. He was
wounded at Balaclava, and received several
medals for bravery and good conduct.
The appeal of the Hamilton Gas Light
Company against the assessment of eighty-
five thousand dollars on their mains has
beed dismissed by Judge Muir. He reduced
the assessment, however, to seventy-four
thousand dollars. .
The Hamilton, Ont., City Council has
given notice of its intention to -apply for
legislation to dissolve the Gas Company's
perpetual obarter ; also for power to own
and operate electric railways, and to turn
the pipe track into a road,
According to a Montreal paper, about
five months ago Sir John Thompson con-
sulted a Montreal physician, who told him
that unless he abandoned the excitement of
public) life he did not think be could live
more than four months.
The Rev. Dr. King, of Chatham, Ont.,
died there the other day, aged 83. He was a
slave -owner in Louisiana, but set free his
nineteen slaves and brought them to Canada
where he founded t'ne Elgin settlement in
1850, as a retreat and home for fugitive
slaves from the South.
Immigration Inspector De Barry, of
Buffalo, says that the cases against the
Jacob G. Shantz Company, manufacturers
of buttons, of Buffalo and Berlin, Ont., for
importing alien laborers under contract
to work in the Buffalo factory, will be
heard the latter part of this month.
A consultation took place at -Montreal
yesterday between Dr A. F. Rogers, of
Ottawa, and Dr. S. H. Birkett, ef
Montreal, respecting the present condition
of the Premier's health. They decided
that there was no organic disease of any
part, and that the entire cause of the cough
which has given Sir Mackenzie Bowell so
much trouble of late is a form of laryngitis,
mainly of a spasmodic character.
GREAT BRITAIN.
Mr. Moore, editor of the London Morning
Post, is dead.
Mr. A. C. Mackenzie, the well-known
musical composer, has been knighted.
The Manitoba Government office in Lon-
don, Eng., has been permanently closed.
There is talk of establishing a daily mail
service between Southampton, Eng., and
New York.
It is reported in London that Lord Wil-
liam Beresford intends keeping a big steble
of race horses.
About 225 fishermen, belonging to Hull,
Grimsby and Yarmouth, Eng., lost their
lives in the recent gales.
It is nnderstood that the Imperial Home
Office favors the idea of Newfoundland
becoming it province of the Dominion of
Canada.
The governors of Dublin lunatic asylum
have appointed it woman medical superin-
tendent of tho female wards. There are
upwards of 1,000 patients.
Mr. Gladatone's Concordance and Prayer -
book, the work of his leisure hours for
twenty years, will be ready on 'February
1st.
Baron Wolverton, a lord -in -waiting to
the Queen, was married on. Saturday to
Lady Edith Ward, sister of the second
Earl of Dudley.
The adherents of the Duc d'Orleane in
London are in expectation that their leader
will at any early date issue a manifesto,
which will be followed by a demonstration
on French soil at the risk of his arrest.
The Hon. Ceoil Rhodes, Premier of Cape
Colony, has been appointed it member of
the Imperial Privy Council, and Baron
Cromer. the' British agent and Conant -
General in Egypt, has been made a X. G.
0: B.
The institution of a preliminary exam-
ination at the Scottish universities has
this year resulted in tine rejection of 856
would-be studente. Tide means it loss to
the professors of the univeraities in olass
fees of sso,000,
Mr. William It. Cramer, M.P.,will leave
England on Wednesday with a memorial
sighed by three hundred and forty-five
members of the House of Conainens in
fay or of arbitration in all mattere of dis-
pute between England and the United
States, forpresentation to Presdent Cleve.
land and Congrese.
GLI/TED 8WATES.
^'•The Ohio river at Clinoinnati Is clotted by
icte.
Thi ()Malan of southern Nebinakte are
said to be bordering on starvation.
The Colorado Springs Everting Telegraph
is now edited and managed by WW1.
Dr. Dunnigan, of Buffalo, died Friday
of diphtheria. Anti-toxixie failed to cure
him.
1.1."11E EXBTElt "Tr1VIE8
At Saratoga Springs, N.Y,, on 5aburclay
the temperature fell to eighteen below.
zero.
Col, Willian L. Strong ie the &at mayor'
of New York city in 20 years not of the
Demooratio faith.
Mr. John Burne, M, P,, the English la.
bor leader, sailed from New York on
Saturday for Liverpool
The United States will probably build
two and perhaps three lerge battleithips at
once, to cot $4,000,000 each,
The striking oloaknaakers of Nesv York
city are in a state of starvation and are
being fed through. (amity.
Mr. john D. Rockefeller has given one
hundred and fifteen thousand dollars to the
Chicago University.
Two robbers held up the otiehler at the
post -office in the heart ot Cincinnati the
other day and escaped with the money,
The hiererehy of the United States are
taking deoided steps to reduce the Roman
Catholic membership of aeoret societies.
There is fear of a great strike at the
Edgar Thompson steel works at Braddock,
Pa., involving fifteen thowiand men.
A orusade against vice and corruption is
to be inaugurated at San Francisco. It will
be similar to the Lexow investigation m
New York,
It is said bhat the old Maryland Central
railroad, now's, part of the Baltimore and
Ohio system, will shortly substitute electric-
ity for steam power.
Mrs. Mary E. Lathrop, state president of
Michigan W.C.T.U., a lady. well known in
Ontario, died on Thursday at Jackson,
Mich., from cancer, after years of suffering.
Charles Wilfred Mowbray, the English
Anarchist, is at present kicking his heels in
a Philadelphia goal for making a speech on
Friday night inciting to riots.
At El Paso, Wisconain, on Sunday morn-
ing Mist Micheal O'Connell and- five child-
ren were burned to death in their home.
Mr. O'Connell and two children managed to
get out of the house.
Lee On, a Chinese laundryman, of Stam-
ford, Conn., committed suicide in a curious
way on Friday. He ate it hash of rice and
raw opium, and induced it stupor from
which he could not be recovered. .
The exports of specie from the port of
New '2 ork for Molt week amounted to
54,477,336 in gold, and $502,62.3 in silver.
The gold brick swindle was worked on
wealthy Englishman named A. W. With -
era at Richmond, Va. on Saturday. He
paid $5,000 for two bream bricks.
The San Francisco Morning Call news-
paper was sold by auction on Saturday for
$360,000. The purchaser was Mr. Charles
M. Shortridge, of The San Jose Mercury.
Mr, Walter Watson, the agent in New
York city of the Bank of Montreal, says
that the bank has loaned $400,000 to the
Nevvfoundlisnd Government to tide over
the present troubles.
GENERAL.
Heavy snowstorms have blocked railway
traffic in Austria.
Germany does not want its officers to
enter the Chinese service.
Several severe earthquake shocks were
felt at Athens, Greece on Thursday.
The Belgian Government has prohibited
the importation of live cattle from the
United States.
It is reported in Constantinople tbat
Ishmael Pasha, ex -Khedive of Egypt, is
dying.
Mexico demands of Guatemala $1,868,514
for damages caused by invading Guate-
malans.
There is much destitution in St. John's
Nfld. Several hundreds of people are
starving.
.According to the official report, the crops
of Russia are in a better condition than
last year.
Argentine has voted $2,000,000 as a war
credit in view of a possible quarrel with
Chili over the frontier.
Turkey wants the other powers to indite°
England and Russia to moderate their de-
mands in regard to Artneeia.
Cholera is preeominant in provinces of
Rosario and Santa Fe Buenos Ayres, but
is of a somewhat mild:form.
It is 'stated in Brussels that France will
not oppose the annexation of the Congo
State by Belgium.
The wheat harvest in Buenos Ayres is
poor and the quality of the grain is below
the average. Freight to Europe is declin-
ing.
The Russian Government will settle the
Pamir question amicably by making
concessions to Great Britain.
A few years ago the Peter a pence from
France averaged 3,000,000 francs. In 1893
the sum was 1,500,000 francs, and last year
it fell below a million.
Emperor William has decorated Count
von Waldersee, chief of the general staff of
the German army, with the Order of the
Black Eagle.
Aecording to official figures, there were
more thau twenty-five thousand young men
who were due' for military enrolment in
Germany lest year who wore absent without
permission.
As a result of a Cabinet Council presided
over by King Leopold, the Belgian Govern-
ment has decided to propose tie the Chamber
the annexation of the Oong'd Free State to
Belgium,
It is reported that M. de Giers, the
Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs, whose
ill-heelth has frequently bean referred to
recently, is dying. He will be succeeded
by Prince Lobano tf.
In it letter written by Mr. Louis Steven-
son shortly prior to his death, he expressed
the opinion that the only cure for Samoan
troubles was the annexation of the islands
to Great Britain.
The village of Orlu, iti the canton of Aix-
les-Thremes, Pyreneea, has been partly
overwhelmed by an avalanche, which de-
etroyed four houses and twelve beans. The
bodies of fifteen persons have been recover-
ed from the ruins.
A Russian soientific expedition is about
to start for Central Afrioa under the
auspices of the Russian Geographicel So-
ciety and the leadership of ihe leen-known
traveller and naturalist, Dr. Yollisseyelf.
A report from Constantinople says
Tehain Pasha, Goveroor of title, who oom-
mended the military operations ia the Sas-
Bonn diatrieb of Armenia, has been assasitin.
ated by an Armenian who afterwards
"iciideaP
TlePeal of Capt. Dreyfus, sentenced
to be deported from Frande for life and
confined in it fortress, after having been
convicted of treason for disclosing Military
doouments to a foreign nation, was uneni.
measly dismissed by the Military Council
of Revasion. •
A Paris Cabinet -melee ooinmitted gen
oide rimmed days agOin it Most extraordinary
Manner. Ile broke one of tae large paame
of glen) in the window of hie room, and
then, placing his head through the hole,
pulled the upper part of the window down,
witin great violence upon his neck, with
the result that he was almost decapitated
by the broken glass,
PROPOSALS OF IVIARRIASE.
Statlistbis Of IlOw non and Women Act at
an Interesting Moment.
There is a olever statietieian who could
teach a thing or two to the novelist. This
statistician bas attempted to classify the
action and methods of proposals, and, as a
result, has presented tabulated figures ex-
tremely interesting to psychologists. Out
of 100 moms thirty-six gentlemen. take lady
in arms, sixty-seven gentlemen kiss lady on
lips, four gentbainen kiss lady on cheek,
three gentlemen show very good taste by
kissing lady on oyes, and two gentlemen
kiss lady oia hand. It is to be presumed
those two out of it hundred are the timid,
diffident kind, though it is possible that
they mighe be of the quietly sentimental
nature. One gentlemen kisses a lady on
nose, It must be added that the statisti-
cian is careful to insert the saving clause
(by mistake).. There is even a record of a
man kissing it lady on edge of shawl, but,
thank goodness, there is only one in a. hun-
dred and the chancels are that this man is
peculiar. Seventy-two hold lady's hand,
seventeen hold it very tightly, fourteen
have lumps in their throats and nine ex-
claim aloud; "Thank God 1" Only seven
out of a hundred declare themselves to be
'deliriously happy, and five are too full for
utterance. Three out of a hundred stand
on one foot when they make proposal and
two go down on one knee, while nine make
a formal prelude—something like the slow
inusic in the play, we suppose, when the
villain appeals to heaven to witness the
consuming flame of his affections for the
heart he plots to ruin, etc.
The behavior of the lady under the cir-
cumstances is equally entertaining and
instructive. Out of a hundred ceses eighty
one sink into the arms of gentleman, sixty-
eight rest their heads on geatleman's breasts
and only one sinks into• the arms of a chair;
eleven clasp their arms around, the gentle-
man's neck, six weep teare of joy silently
and forty-four weep tears aloud—whatever
that means; seventy-two have eyes full of
love, and nine out of a hundred rush frorn
the room and tell everybody. Only four
are greatly surprised, and eighty-seven of a
hundred knew that something was miming.
Five giggle hysterically and one even
sneezes. Only one of a hundred struggles
not to be kissed, while six kiss gentleman
first. If we believe the statistician, one out
of a hundred women will say. "Yes, but
don't be a fool."
FOR CONTEMPT OF COURT.
Alt Australian Judge Who Was Supreme
Own court.
The stories ot early Australian Judges
are numerous and incredible. The following
incident, which is vouched for as a fact, is
of a Judge who had. a very lofty idea of
his own legal capacity and was at the same
time, anxious to sustain the dignity of his
Court. A "shooting case" came before him.
There was no direct evidence as to the
perpetrator of the murder, but the in-
dividual arrested was well known, and,
indeed, confessed the deed.
When brought into Court the Judge
cautioned the prisoner that he must re
member his rights as a free citizen, and that,
above all things, he must not interrupt the
proceeding of the Court. After this friendly
warning the Judge proceeded to state
that he,the prisonenwas accused of having,
on such a date, shot the deceased. .
Upon this the prisoner broke in, " Well,
an' so I did.
The Judge was annoyed at the interrup-
tion.
"Hold your tongue, sir 1" he exclaimed
"Haven't I told you not to commit
yourselt nor interrupt me? I shall commit
y ou for contempt of court if you do so
again 1" he added sternly.
He then repeated the accusation, upon
which the prisoner broke in:
" I have told ye afore that I killed--"
The Judge's indignation was intense at
this second interruption and he demanded:
"Mr. Sheriff what is your evidence ?"
" I have nothing but circumstantial evi-
dence, your Honor, and the prisoner's own
confession."
"then," said the Judge, "I discharge the
prisoner on this accusation, but commit
him for contempt of court."
PORT ARTHUR ATROCITIES.
--
Host Revolting SCCII.CS 'Witnessed by Eng -
11.18111 and American Attaches.
A despatch from London says —The
Times publishet a letter from Kobe,Japan,
describing the Port Arthur atrocities. The
writer says: "The English and American
military atteabes witnessed the scene from
Boulder hill, and were equally amazed and
horrified, as myself at what they described
ea a gratuitous ebullition of barbarity.
The atrocities were noO'confined to WO.
nesday. Thursday, Friday, Saturday and
Sunday were spent by the soldiery from
dawn to dark in, murder and pillage, in
mutilation of every conceivable kind, and
in nameless atrocities, until the town be-
came a ghastly inferno, to be remembered
with a fearsome shudder until one's
dying day. The corpses of women, child-
ren and men were strewed m the streets
in hundreds, perhaps thousands, for we
could not count them, some with not a
limb unseveredesome with heads haoked,
out crosswise or split lengthwiee, some rip.
ped open, not by chance, but with careful
precision down and across, disembowelled
and dismembered, with oecasionally a dag-
ger or a bayonet thrust into the lower part
of the trunk. I flaw groups of prisoners
tied 'together in a bunch with their hands
behind their backs, riddled with bullets
for five minutea and then hewn to pieeee.
I saw a junk stranded on the beaoli filled
with fugitives of both sexes and all ages,
struck by volley after volley until I can
say no more b'f all the awful sights of those
four days. Why repeat them all in painful
detail. '
An Austriaii nobleman in Vienna won a
big bob by standing on one foot continu-
ously for four hours,
Twenty years ago on. Thos. McGreevy
insured his life for $40,000, The polioy
matured last week and Mr. isloGreevy re.
ee ved ibit Suitt cash.
THE FARM.
"Viteeden cover. For PUMPs.
Pumps in cold, bleak situations are
liable to freeze up, causing a vast amount
of trouble, In the accompanying sketch le
shown a simplemethod of protecting one of
the common piston pumps. An outer
jacket of wood envelops the pump, It
hould be large enough to allow a three -
WIMP l'11,0TECT0ll
inoh space all around the sides. Title space
should be filled with chaff, finely -cut hay
or straw, pressed firmly in position. Ad-
ditional-proteotion is given by the piece of
board, a, which has it hole in it that fits
closely over the pump handle, and during
the coldest weather, when the pump is not
in use, this board is placed as shown in the
illustration, presaed 'against the side of the
pump, and hung upon the nail at b. If in
it windy location the spout should be
stopped up with cioth, leaving enough pro-
jecting to readily remove it by. Any one
who hanhad to water cattle in the morning
and bas found the pump from which he
proposed to get water frozen solidly, will
appreciate this simple arrangement for
preventing such a state of affairs. Careless
employees may leave the pump unprotected
on cold nights and find it frozen in the
morning. To fix in their minds the duty
of looking out for it, let them carry 15 or
20 pails of water from a more distant well
for the morning watering, and they will
not again forget it.
--
Care of the Colt's Feet.
On the sharp, frozen ground the clots
may break their hoofs especially if they
are not kept trimmed down, a.nd unless
some attention is given to the matter a
misshapen hoof will develop that oan never
be converted into it well shaped one.
Sometimes a hoof is so broken off at one
side while it remains long at the other
that the tendons of the leg are strained.
A badly misshapen hoof in ahnoat sure to
make the animal awkward, and perhaps il
gaited. The way to prevent annoying, and
possibly serious results is to keep a close
watch on the colt's hoofs and shape them
up as often as occasion demands. It is inn
portant to use care and good judgment in
this work. It will very rarely, if ever, be
necessary to pare off the sole of the hoof ;
and if ever this work is done, it should be
done with the greatest care, and the frog
should be carefully avoided. Except in
possibly very rare oases all that is neces-
sary is to cut off the edges of the hoof.
This is best done by setting the hoof on a
solid plank or other smosth, level surface,
and with a chisel cut down and through
the edge of the hoof, cutting off excessive
growth, and leaving the edge of the hoof
as regular as possible. This trimming of
the hoofs is a good training for the colt.
It will soon learn to have its hoofs handled
and trimmed without objection. While
one must be firm, the first point is to exer-
cise kindness. The colt is afraid ; reassure
it. On no account lose temper. The man
that cannot control his temper is unfit to
handle a colt on any occasion.
--
Proper Adjustment of Sled Tongues.
We have seen more than one sled so
made that the horses pulled the tongue
down on their necks, making their work
much harder. The tongue, where attach-
ed to the sled, was several inches too high;
and the whiffietrees were placed on top of
the tongue. The result was a weight on
the horses' necks, in proportion to the load
drawn. This not only added greatly to
the labor of the animals, but might easily
produce a sore neck. The faelt could be
remedied by bolting the tongue to the
lower instead of the upper side of the
crosspiece of the sled to which it was
attached, or by placing the whiffietrees
under instead of on top of the tongue.
One must, however, avoid the other ex-
treme, for if the point of draft is so adjust.
ed that the horses pull the and of the
tongue up they will be worried, and the
collars will interfere with their breathing.
Our experience and observation show us
that this point should receive more eon.
sideration than it does, not only in the
use of sleds, but of land rollers, cultivators,
etc.
Girdled Trees.
The rabbits, mice and other rodents
usually injure trees in the winter so that
by spring it is necessary to repair them
in some way before summer. Unless tbe
pests have eaten the inner bark all around
the trees, they will recover with proper
treatment. The best remedy -to apply- ia
to make a stiff plaster out of clay and cow
maature, adding a little water to make it
more plastic. If suoh a plaster is plaoed
over the barked portion of the tree, and
secured into position by a covering of old
bagging or cloth, the wound is likely to
heal up in a short time. If the weather is
very dry it will be necessary to wet the
bandage occasionally.
The great object of Ile application is to
keep the wound moist while nature heals
up the the injury. If the wound is a large
and serious one it may be necessary to cut
off many of the top limbs of the tree.
This is to equalize the flow of the sap,
which is necessarily diminished by the
wound. Other remedies for girdled trees
are recommended, but for it simple and
°endive device, whioh any orohardist can
apply, this one cannot bo surpassed.
It is an old-fashioned remedy, .but it is as
good to -day as it was in the days of our
forefathers,
Pumstied by 1999 Furies.
' Ifousekeeper—"No able-bodied man like
you has any muse for tramping about the
"uTtitrY
rainp.loYou'll not, bay that, mums
when you've heard my tale of woe. Once,
When I was young and thoughtless, accept.,
ea a position as judge in rt baby ahow—to
thousand babiette-and/ had to decide Which
was the prettiest. I Ca mo duty, 'mum,
but eine.) then I've been a wanderer on tho
face tho earth."
Children Cry for Pitcher's Cestoriai
DOES YOUR
WIFE
Do HER OWN
WASHINCP
E she does, see that
the wash is made Ea8y and
Clean by getting her
SUNLIGHT SOAP,
wbich does away with ths
terrors of wash day
Experience will convince her that
it PAYS ta n'se this soap.
•sa - ease as anal dets
thrive on Scott's Emulsion when, all the rest of their food
seems to go to waste, Thin Babies and Weak Children 4iroia
strong, Famli. and healthy by titking it.
Scott's
Thiulsi
overcomes inherited. weakness and all t1'4 t ndoncies tothtd
Emaciation or Consumption. Thin, weak batiek Etna giovi g
children and all persons suffering from toss of Mesh, Weak
Lungs, Chronic Coughs, and Wasting Disease i will i45"ceive
untold benefits from this great nourishment. The formula
for making Scott's Emulsion has been endorsed by the med-
ical world for twenz> years. No secret about it.
Sandfor anethlet on Seott's Emulsion. FREE.
Scot: & Down°, Delleviiie. All Druggists. 50o and 51.
desteassease eas
EX MEMBER PARLIAMENT'
REU I.EN E. TRUAX
Hon. Reuben E. Truax, one of
Canada's ablest thinkers and states-
men, a man so highly esteemed by
the people of his district that he was
honored with a seat in Parliament,
kindly furnishes no for publication
the following statement, which will
be most welcome to the public,
inasmuch as it is one in which all
will place implicit confidence. Mr.
Truax says:
"1 have been for about ten years
very much troubled with Indigestion
and Dyspepsia, have tried a groat
man); 'different kinds of patent
medicines, and have been treated by
a number of physicians and found
no benefit from them. I was recom-
mended to try the Great South
American Nervine Tonic. I obtained
a bottle, and I must say I found very
great relief, and have since taken two
more bottles, and now feel that I am
entirely free from Indigestion, and
would strongly recommend all my
fellow -sufferers from the disease to
give South American Nervine an
immediate trial. It will cure you.
"EMMEN E. TRUAX,
g: Walkerton, Ont,"
It hail hitely been di000vered that
certain Nerve CJettrea, LiMated tear
the base of the brain, control and
supply the 401119,011 with the neces-
sary terag force to properly digest
the fool. Wheat, theSe lierve Oen-
tree are in any ray deranged the
supply of nerve force is art once
diminished, and as a result the food
taken into the etoraaela is only
partially digested, and Chronic Ind!.
geetion and Dyspepsia soon make
their appearance.
South American Nerving is so
prepared that it acts directly .on the
nerves. It will absolutely cure every
09,I30 of Indigestion and Dyspepsia,
and is an absolute specific for an
nervous diseases and ailments,
It usually gives relief in one day.
Its powers to build ttp the whole
system are wonderful in the extreme,
It cures the old, the young, and tht
middle-aged. It is a great friend te
the aged and infirm. Do nob negleot
to use this precione boort; if you do,
you may neglect the. only remedx
which will restore you, to health,
South American Nervitig is perfectly
safe, and very pleasent to the taste,
Delicate ladies, do not fail to use this
great cure, because it will put the
bloom of freshness ma beauty upon
your lips and in yonr °hooka, and
quickly drive away your dieabbitiec
and nreaknegeog,
Dr. W. Washburn, of Sow
tishniona, Indiana, writes :
used South American Nerving
my fataily and prescribed it tri
my praetiee. It is a Mad eloolleati
reMtillr."
C. LITTZ *Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter.
Dn. 1VtuDA1atarta, Agent, . 'Reagan,