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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1895-2-14, Page 71, The Best Medicine. J O. WxLsorr, Contractor and Builder, Sulphur Springs, Texas, thin speaks of Ayer's Pills: "Payer's Pills are the best medicine I ever tried; and, in my judgment, no better general remedy could be devised. I have used them in my family and recommended them to my friends and employes, for more than twenty years. To my certain knowledge, many oases of the following complaints have been completely and Permanently Cured by the use of Ayer's Pills alone: Third day chills, dumb ague, bilious fever, siok headache, rheumatism, flux, dys- pepsia, constipation, and hard colds. I know that a moderate use of Ayer's Piles, continued for a few clays or weeks, as the nature of the complaint required, would be found an absolute euro for the disorders I have named above.". "I have been selling medicine for eight years, and I can safely say that Ayer's Pills give better satisfaction than any other Pill I ever sold."—J. J. Perry, Spottsylvania C. H., Va. AYER'S PILLS Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Every Dose Effective THE ANY %� ® TIMES 'r r .POWDERS Cure SICI1 HEADACHE and Neuralgia in 8r•?7,NUTEs also Coated Tongue, Dizzi- ness,. usness, Main in the Side, Constipation, Torpir aver Bad Breath, to stay cured also regulate 'the bowels, VERY MOS TO TAKE. FRICE 25 CENTS AT DRUG STORES. CENTRAL Drug Store FANSON'S BLOCK. A full stock of all kinds of Dye -stuffs and package Dyes, constantly on, hand. Winan's Condition Powd- er, the best in the mark- et and always resh. Family recip- ees carefully prepared at Central Drug Store Exete ••"p s j t k, • i k Cr L r "Bac kaohe the scavengers means the kid- of the systema neys are in "Delay is virouble, Dodd's dangerous, Neg- Kidney Pills give !elated kidney prompt relief," troubles result "75 per cent, in Bad Blood,. of disease is Dyspepsia, Liver first caused by Complaint, and disordered kid- the most dan- gerous of all, "Mightas well Brlghts 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 areodd s Kidney clogged, they are Pills are used," Sold by all dealers or sent by snail on receipt of price go cents, per box or six for Pa, 0, Dr. L.A. Snaith Sz Co. Toronto. Wren for book called Kidney Talk, He—" Thera is orily a half hour until train time and your trunk isn't half peek- ed," She•.. -"Dont. worry, dear I have ;my bonnet on." THE WEEK'S NEWS The mercury dropped to 34 below zero at Port Arthur on Teuraday night. The town of Blenheim, Ont., has deoided to separate from, the County of Kent. John M. Lord, ex•tex oolleotor of 'Lon- don West, bas pleaded guilty of embezzle- ment. Queen's avenue Methodist church in London, was destroyed by fire on Saturday night, Premier Greenway, of Manitoba, is ill with bronchitis, and is confined to his room. Mr. F. W. Stone, the well-known stook breeder, of Guelph, is dead, aged 81 years, The smallpox quarantine against 0. A. College studenta at Guelph has been raised. The net earnings of the Richelieu Stearn - ship Company last year amounted to $164,000. A Manitoba school teacher has been bounced from North Dakota under the alien labor law. Thomas Ringer was found frozen stiff on Hamilton bay on Tuesday, and foul play is suspected. Rev. J. G. Stuart, B.A., of Toronto, has been invited to become pastor of Knox church, London. Mr. J. 0. Rowand, a farmer living near Elkhorn, Man., was gored to death by a mad.bull last Friday. Archbishop Cleary has sent a balance of £115 to Hon. Edward Blake for the Irish parliamentary fund. Sergi. -Major Smith has been appointed chief of police of Hamilton. He has been on the force many years. Melvin McPherson fell 40 feet from a tree in the bush near St. Catharines Friday and broke his neck. John M. Lord, the collector of London West, has been committed for trial. He is charged as a defaulter. Mr. James Gibson, a highly respected citizen of Berlin, Ont.,died of Heart failure on Saturday morning. Mr. W. Evans, Deseronto, has been ap- pointed hull inspector at Toronto, succeed- ing the late Capt. Harbottle. The annual debate between Toronto and McGill universities took plane in Montreal Friday night. Toronto winning the deci- sion. Ambrose MdTiernan, 26, was caught in the act of counterfeiting 50 cent pieces in a house on Jarvis street, Toronto and locked up at police headquarters., The Rev. William Harris, M. .A., has been appointed profeseaor of church history and bursar of the Wesleyan Theological College in Montreal. Mr. Jacob H. Burkholder, who was olerk of the township of Barton for forty years, died on Sunday at Bartonville Onb., in his ninety-third year. Preliminary steps were taken at a meet- ing held in Toronto the other night to form a permanent provincial organization for the better observance of the Lord's day. About 200,000 barrels of apples have been sbipped this season from the Annapo- lis valley, Nova Scotia, for the old country. The proceeds amount to about $500,000. Three world's records were lowered at the Canadian skating championship races at Montreal ou Saturday. The events were divided between Johnson, Davidson and Neilson. Alexander Cru:nmer and Thomas Nelson have acknowledged that they stole alarge quantity of groceries from Mr. George Glass' store. All the parties live in Port Hope. At Georgetown on Saturday Joe Mo - Master was committed for trial for a vicious assault on Aldert Turner, who, on January 20, was escorting a young lady home from church at Glen Williams. The ohlorate of potash works of Gibb, Franchot, McLaren & Company, at Bassin du Lievre, Que., were totally destroyed by fire early Friday morning. The estimated lose is $50,000, with little insurance. Robertson, the caretaker of the Mont- real Mechanics' Institute, who was arrested on suspicion of having set fire to the building, was on Friday committed to stand his trial at the Court of Queen's Bench. The Rev. Mr. Silcox, of the Emmanuel Congregational ehuroh in Montreal, one of the best known preachers in the oity, has resigned his pastorate,because, itis be- lieved he held some views in advance of his oongregation. Arohbishop-elect Langevin has decided that the consecration service shall take place at St. Boniface in the presence of a largo number of the bishops of the Domin- ion. The papal brief is expected to arrive in a week or ten days. While three boys were playing in a snow house which they had built in Montreal on Thursday, the roof and the walls collapsed, and before rescued Leopold Gingras, aged fourteen, one of the lads, was sutfocated. The Governor-General and Lady Aber. deen left Montreal for Ottawa Wednesday evening. They were accompanied by a detachment of one hundred policemen, and a number of McGill students drew their Excellencies sleigh a portion of the way. Owing to the opposition of the descend- ants of the U. F. Loyalists, it is possible that the proposed monument to °harrier, the leader of the insurgents of St. Eustache in 1837, may not be erected in Montreal, The Town Council of Longueuil are anxious to have it there. -The Canadian Pacific railway authorities in °Montreal ridicule the despatch from London stating that a scheme was on foot to build a railway paralleling the Canadian Peoific. Vice President Shaughnessy said that he would like to be shown the Eng- lish capitalists who would endorse such a scheme. On Wednesday at the Court of Revision for the Domionion voters' list at Loudon, Ont., Ald. Brener's name was struck off, a document ' from Washington having been submitted in proof that he was au alien. The decision is important, its proceedings will be taken to •remove him from the City Couneil on the sane ground. In regard to the fall in Oanadian Pacifio Railway stook, Sir Williarn Van Horne says that there is no reason whatever for the decline outside of the present universal bad condition of business on the American con: tinent in consequences of traffic. He knew of no insiders who were selling Cana• dian Pacific stock, The Oity Council of Chatham, Ont., has been advised by Mr, C.J. R. Atkinsen, Q, C. that the contract under which the town and Water VS'orke Company have been. acting for more than three years was in. valid. Advice • in the mattes will be secured from the highest authority in To.: T.H! BICET.En TIME: S route. In themeantime the town has nothing bub the Thames river water to drink. Six Methodist missionaries in Japan re- cently sent a letter to the Executive of the Missionary Board of the Methodist Church, in which they expressed a desire to be recalled. At a meeting of the Executive, just closed, the matter was .discussed fully. It was decided to write and ask the missionaries to send concise and detailed statements as to their reasons for wishing to retire from -the work. The bronze statue of- Sir John Macdon- ald which is being made in England for the Montreal Committee is almost com- pleted, and will be ready shortly for ship. menu. The statue will probably be placed in position about the 1st of May, and the unveiling ceremonies will take plane on the Queen's b4rthday. Mr, J. S. Ewart, who was one of the counsel retained by the appellants in the Manitobe school case, arrived in Winnipeg on Thursday. When asked what his clients would now do he replied that the Roman Catholics would first ask the Dominion Government to appoint a day for hearing the appeal on its merits. GREAT BRITAIN. The Bank of England has reduced the price of gold 1.2 d. per ounce. The rates for money ruled stronger in London last week on the prospect of an American loan. Hon. CeoilRhodes, Premier of Cape Colony, was on Saturday sworn in as a member of the Imperial Privy Council. The colossal battleship Majesty was launched at Portsmouth on Wednesday. The vessel was christened by the Marohion- ess of Lorne. The Prince of Wales presided at a meeting of the Colonial Institute inLondon on Thursday, when Mr. Jameson spoke on South African affairs. There was a heavy snowfall throughout England on Sunday night and intensely cold weather prevailed. In Lincolnshire there have been cases of persons frozen to death. In London on Tuesday Reginald Saunderson, a nephew of Col. Saunderson, the Orange leader in the House of Com- mons, who murdered Augusta Dawes, an unfortunate woman, last November, was formally declared a lunatic, and was sent to .Broadmoor asylum. The Marquis of Lorne had a long article in Saturday's Pall Mall Gazette, reviewing Pope's Life of Sir John Macdonald. The Marquis says that the author will find all he has said in praise of the dead Premier will be "echoed by all of us who knew him." • UNITED BTATEB. The East Side Bank in New York has been closed. Ward McAllister died in New York on Thursday night. The gold reserve at Washington is now down to $42,361,966. Lawrence Maxwell, Solicitor -General of the United States, has resigned. The naval hydrographic office at Wash- ington prediots a stormy February. Owing to a railroad war, soft coal was sold in Chicago on Thursday at $2 a ton. The will of the late James G-. Fair, the San Francisco millionaire, has been stolen. Last week $7,286,490 in gold, and $572,- 552 in silver were exported from New York. Judge E. Rockwood Hoar, the eminent Massachusetts jurist, died on Wednesday evening in Boston, aged 79. The United States Whiskey Trust has been placed in the hands of receivers. Poor business caused the trouble. David Hampton was electrocuted at Sing Sing on Thursday for murdering Mrs. Aherne, a wealthy widow of New York. A dog was the only survivor of the wreck of the steamer Chicora, which was lost off Benton Harbor, Mich., last week. The champion American cyclist, Zim- merman, has completed arrangements for a racing tour through Australia, Japan and France next season. Prof. Vigo Anderson, one of the greateat flutists in the world, and a member of Theodore Thomas' orchestra, shot himself in Chicago on Tuesday night. Congressmen Breckinridge and Heard came to blows and caused a commotion in the House of Representatives at Washing - tot yesterday. Prof. Alexander McConnell, of Toronto, who was engaged as principal of the Public schools in Grand Forks, N.D., has been deported under the alien labor law. Thomas Davidson, one of the best known shipbuilders and vessel owners on the great lakes and president of the Wisconsin Steam- ship Company, died io Milwaukee on Satur- day, aged 67. John Orlowski, the young giant who kill- ed Aeam Eberle, an inoffensive German, with a blow of his fist in Buffalo last November, was let off with a fine of fifty dollars on Saturday. Tae Buffalo Express tells of the proposed departure at an early day of a party of gentlemen for the gold regions on the Fraser River, B. C. They will purchase their machinery in Toronto in order to save the duty, and will ship via. the 0, P. R. Our telegraphed advices from the leading centres of business throughout the United States indicate no improvement. The financial uncertainty is having a most de- pressing effect on business fn all directions. in the Eastern cities the price of money has advanced, while, as a rale, collections are poor. The belief that anew loan will be carried through somewhat stimulated trade the past two days, but the majority of -mer- chants everywhere aro simply awaiting developments, and carrying a 'small trade just suited to the requirements of the moment. The demand for skilled labor has latterly shown a tendency to decrease. and a complaint- of over production is nearly universal. The revival so confidently anticipated a few weeks bank has not ma- terialized. Money is cheap, and the com- mercial demand easy. The position of iron. 'and steel showe no sign of advancing. GENERAL. More Italian troops are being senb to Egypt - There was a heavy fall of snow in Rome on Monday night. The Arrear of Afghanistan will visib England in the spring. The Portuguese troops have defeated the Dolagoo. Bay rebels. The Spanish budget for 1894.95 shows a deficit of 6,979,650 pesetas. The Norwegian Ministry have resigned, and the King has accepted their resigna- tion. Petitions in favor of •oonfedere.tion with Canada are being oiroulated In Newfound. land. • With state honors the remains of Mar. shal Canrobert were interred on Sunday in Paris. The Hovas recently commenced to. bom• bard Tamatave, but they were repulsed by the French troops. The Chinese, envoys sent to Japan to. negotiate for peace have been sent home, their credentials being found imperfect. Advices from Hawaii announce the arrest and imprisonment of ex -Queen Liliuokalani, on a charge: of conspiracy. Six hundred French Royalists held a meeting in, Paris Thursday evening and pronounced for restoration of the monarchy. The police on Saturday found a bomb factory at the lodgings of Ravolgolia and Capelli in Rome, who, with two others, 'were arrested. Emperor William, in a letter to Mr. Foster, M.P., thanking all those concerned for their attention to the survivors of the Elbe, regrets that so few were saved. It is said a confederatiou of Central American republics has been formed, and Honduras, Nicaragua and San Salvador will co-operate with Guatemala in repelling any attempted invasion by Mexico. Referring to. Emperor William's birth- day celebrations, some of the Berlin pa- pers condemn his increasing Byzantinism, and advise him to rely rather on the good will of the nation than on the number of bayonets. The " bargain sale," so dear to the wo men of this continent, has been introduced into Germany with results so disastrous to conservative German methods that the Government has been appealed to to ours the evil. It is stated that the Porte has entrusted a confidential agent in Loudon with a large amount of. money to bribe the Executive of the Anglo -Armenian Association before the reassembling of the British Parliament. In the Spanish Chamber of Deputies on Tuesday, Senor Molinas, a member from Porto Rico, moved for the negotiation of a treaty with Canada, saying that the hest market for Porto Rico, was Canada, and not the United States. The Czar, in a rescript addressed to M, de Steal, the Russian Ambassador at London, upon the latter completing fifty years in the service of his country, thanked him for assisting in bringing about the friendly relations existing between Russia and England. ' A FIENDISH CRIME. Murder or a Doctor in Detroit With the Connivance, it 1s Said, of ills Wife. A despatch from Detroit says:—One o the most atrocious, cold-blooded and do. liberately-planned murders the police have ever had to deal with was committed early on Saturday morning,in the squalid qaarters oceiipied by Dr. Horace Eliot Pope and his family at. SS Michigan avenue. Dr. Pope was hrutally killed with a hatchet in the hands of William Brusseau, a young man 22 years of age, who was presumably employed as a nurse to take care of Mrs. Pope. The only other member of the household is Bernice Pope, the dead man's 8 -year-old daughter, who hasacquit. ed far beyond her years the sharpness imparted by her mother, The frightful deed is revolting in its de- tails. It ends the career of a well-bred man,who was broken down with disappoint- ment and who was in despair over his unhappy married life. The murderer now occupies a cell in the police station, and Mrs. Pope is under police surveillance at Harper hospital, where it was deemed advisable to send her. The little daughter will be taken care of by the police. The prisoner shields himself behind the theory of self-defence, and in that he is assisted by Mrs. Pope, who refuses point blank to discuss the murder in any of its phases, saying that she is not well enough to do so. OBJECT OP THE MURDER. The police believe that Pope was mur- dered for his insurance money, as he had about $14,000, as far as is known, which was being kept up by Mrs. Pope. He was insured in the Royal Arcanum, $3,000; A. 0. U. W., $2,000, Ancient Order of Forest- ers, $3,000; Maccabees, at least $2,000. He was also insured in the national Union, United Friends, and there may be other organizations to hear from. Tax MI RDEiiED MAN. The dead man was about 45 years of age and was born in Canada. In 1875 he graduated from the Boston Dental School and in 1576 he took a medical degree at the University of California. He "came to this city in 1885, but located here through the stress of circumstances rather than because of anything else. His wife is about 40 years old and former- ly lived near Ingersoll, Ont. Her maiden name was Nellie Mitchell, and she was married about ]0 years ago. A LITTLE Or BRUSSEAU'S IIISTORY. Brusseau has been in Detroit about two years, coming here from Tilbury, Ont., where he was a farmer. He worked in a barber shop out Jefferson avenue, and final. ly bought it oat. Last spring, with his brother Israel, he bought a shop at the corner of Joseph Campau avenue and Franklin street, but business was not good and his brother went home. William got a job in a shop in Belle Isle, but he was discharged. It is said that he had too many women around after him, one in particular being a large, bony woman, whose name was not known, bat whose description corresponded with Mrs. Pope's. TRAIN HELD UP. TIso Robbers Failed to Get Into Dm Express Car, gut gobbed the Passengers. A despatoh from Pueblo, Col., says :-- The —The western express on the Atohison, Top. eke and Santa Fe road, train No. 1, bound for Colorado and California, was held up one mile west of Sylvia, Reno county, Kan, sae, at 11.25 o'clock on Monday night by four masked men, who signalled danger. Two of the robbers oovered the engineer and fireman and two went to the express oar.. For some reason they failed to effect an entrance and then went to the coaches and made the passengers give up all their valuables. The train was held for an hour and ten minutes by the robbers, who then rode south. There is in New York City a policeman who has managed on pay never exceeding $1,200 a year, and without opportunity for unlawful gains, to put ono son through a famous college and to graduate him in medicine ; to get another a comniis:doh in the navy, and to lend two daughters to ono of the best women's colleges. children Cry for Pitcheet Castorkoi YOUNG FOLKS. A Cheerful Disposition. Says Mr, Thaokeray about thaenice boy,. Clive Nowoomb, "I don't know that Clive was especially brilliant, but he was pleas ant." Occasionally we meet people to whom it seems to come natural to be pleas- ant ; such are as welcome wherever they go as flowers in May, aitd the most charm - ng thing about there is that they help to make other people pleasant, too. Their pleasantness is contagious. The other morning we were in the midst of a three -day's rain. The fire amoked,the dining.room was chilly, and when we assembled for breakfast papa looked rather grim and mamma tired, for the baby had been restless all night. Polly was plainly inclined to fretfulness, and bridget was undeniably cross, when Jack came in with the breakfast rolls from the baker's. He had taken off his rubber coat and boots in the entry and he came in rosy and smil- ng, "Here's the paper, sir," said he to hie father with such a cheerful tone that his father's brow relaxed, and he said, "Ali, Jack, thank you," quite pleasantly. His mother looked up at him smiling,and he just touched her cheek gently as he pass- ed. "The top of the morning to you, Polly- wog," he said to his little sister, and de- livered the rolls to Bridget, with a "Here you are Bridget, Aren't you sorry you didn't go yourself,this beautiful day ?" He gave the fire a poke and opened the damper. The smoke ceased, and presently the coals began to glow, and five minutes after Jack came in we had gathered around the table and were eating our oatmeal as cheerily as possible. This seems very simple in the telling, and Jack never knew that ho had done anything at all, but he had, in fact, changed the whole moral atmosphere of the room, and had started a gloomy day pleasantly for five people. "He is always so," said his mother,when I spoke to her about it afterwards, "just so sunny and kind and ready all the time. I suppose there are more brilliant boys in the world than mine,but none with a kinder heart or sweeter temper, I am sure of that." And I thought, why isn't such a disposi- tion worth cultivating ? Isn't it one's duty to be pleasant, just as well as to bo honest, or truthful, or industrious, or generous 1 And yet while there are a good many hon- est, truthful, industrious, and generous souls in the world, and people who are un- selfish, too, after a fashion, a person who is habitually pleasant is rather a rarity. I suppose the reason is because it is such hard work to act pleasant when one feels cross. Very few people have the courage of that cheeriest of men, Mr. Mark Tapley, who made it a point of honor to " keep jolly" under the most depressing circumstances. People whose dispositions are naturally irritable or unhappy think it is no use try- ing to be otherwise ; but this is a mistake. If they will patiently and perseveringly try to keep always pleasant, after a while they will get in the habit of smiling instead of frowning, of looking bright instead of sur- ly, and of giving a kind word instead of a cross one. And the beauty of it is, as I saia before, that pleasantness is catching, and before long they will find themselves in the midst of a world full of bright and happy people, where every one is as good natured and contented as they aro. WEATHER INDIOA,TIONS,•i Last Wednesday, - With some other stuff Eddie donned his old ear' Mufti On Thursday he made such a howl, We wrapped' Ida ears up fn a towel:, Oa a'riday mother —.. toed asheo2 on Saturday her good -by .kiss And wound his head ep nice and neat. Sent ot.. loo&ins- jest li"re Shia, tsti when he came backhome at ndgb Ile rolled in simple' out of eight A Black Sheep. Mrs. Highmind-" It worries me sfalt to think how my little boy is growing up without a taste for literature." Friend-" Hasn't ho any 1" Mrs. Highmind—" Not a bit, I bought him a . beautiful bond dopy of Ruskin's 'Seven Lamps of Architecture,' and 1 actually had to whip him to make him read it." Louisiana has the largest farm in the Vnitod States. It 100 miles one way and 50the other, The fencing alone cost $50,' 200. DON'T der ANOMER WAs/IDAY Go Br WITHOUT 1181NO Z0u will find that it grill do what no other soap can do, and will please you every way. It is Easy, Clean, and Economical to wash with this soap. BIoo.1 iiseases such as Scrofula and' Anmmia, Skin Eruptions and Pale or Sallow Complexions, are speedily cured by Sc Ws Emulsion ere,sell'><eerei eeeeatii-ar tee the Cream of Cod-liver Oil. No otherrem- edy so quickly and effectively enriches and purifies the blood and gives nourishment to the whole system. It is pleasant to take and easy on. the stomach. Thiel` EzlPand all suffering from a )tinglaoiated Diseasesersons are re- stored to health by Scott's Emulsion. Be sure you get the bottle with our •ra,.ocmnaa. trade -mark on it. Refuse cheap substitutes!. Send fordhamphlet on S'cott's Emulsion. .FREE. Scott & Bowes, Belleville. All Druggists. 50o. and q f, P �, •.v • :,Y« -.,Z- s..,., -dam u4s,••,4a. _ _.:�..,. "I TELL LL Y FRIE ick 99 A Lady of Shelburne, Ont., Permanently Cured of Indigestion After Using Two Bottles of South American Nervine —Glad to Let Everyone Know It, MRS. A. V. GALBRAITH. With indigestion it is not only that one suffers all imaginable torments, physical and mental, but more, per- haps, than anything else, an impaired digestion is the forerunner of count- less ailments that in their course lead to the most serious consequences. Let the stomach get out of order and it may be said the wholo system is dis- eased. When the digestive organs fail in their important functional duties, bead and heart, mind and body are sick. These were the feelings of Mrs. Galbraith, wife of Mr. A. 'V. Galbraith, the well-known jeweller of Shelburne, Ont., before she had learn- ed of the beneficent results to be gain- ed by the use of South American Nervine Tonic. In so many words she said: "Life was becoming un- bearable. I was so cranky I was really ashamed of myself. Nothing that I ate would agree with me; now it does not matter what I eat. I take enjoyment out of all mfr meals." Here are Mrs. Galbraith's words of testi- mony to South American Nervine, given over her own signature : " Shelburne Ont. March 27, > , 1894. "I was for considerable time a suf- furor trona indigestion, experiencing all the misery and annoyance so common to this complaint. South American Nervine was recommended to me as a safe and effective remedy for all such cases. I used only two bottles, and am pleased to testify that these fully cured see, and I have bad no indication of a return of the trouble since. I never fail to recommend the Nervine to all my friends troubled with indigestion or nervousness. " Mns. A. V. GALBRAI'TH." The testimony of this lady, given freely and voluntarily out of a full heart because of the benefits she ex.- perienced in her own person, have an echo in thousands of hearts all over the country. South American Nerv- ine must cure; because it operates at once on the nerve centres. These nerve centres are the source from which emanates the life fluid that beeps all organs of the body in proper repair. Keep these nerve centres sound and disease is unknown. There is no trick in the business, Every- thing is very simple and common sense like. South A merlon Nerving strengthens the digestive orgxns,tones up the liver `enriches the blood, is peculiarly ci1caoious in building up shattered and nervous oonstittttions. It never fails to giverelief in one da 1 y« C. LUT'Z 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for 11;xetcr. D1t. MoDAtami y, Agent, .L-Imisrll