The Exeter Times, 1895-3-7, Page 3t
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A Racking Cough
(lured by Ayer's Cherry Pectoral.
Mrs. P. D, HALL,217 Genessee St„
Lockport, N. Y., says
"Over thirty years ago, I remelnbey
hearing my father describe the .wonder.
ful curative effects of Ayer's Cherry.
Pectoral. During a recent attack of La
Grippe, which assumed the form of a
catarrh, soreness of the lungs, accom-
panied by an aggravating cough, I
used various remedies and prescriptions.
Wbiio some of these medicines partially
Alleviated the coughing during the day,
none of them afforded ine any relief from
that spasmodic action of the lungs which
would seize me tlio moment I attempted
to lie down at night. After ten or twelve
such nights,'I was
Nearly in Despair,
and had about decided to sit up all night
in my easy chair, and procure• what
sleep I could in that way. It then oc-
curred to me that I had a bottle of
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. I took a
spoonful of this preparation in a little
water, and was able to Ile down without
coughing. In a few moments, I fell
asleep, and awoke in the morning
greatly refreshed and feeling much
batter. I took a teaspoonful of the Poc-
toral every night for a week, then grad-
ually decreased the dose, and in two
weeks my cough was cured."
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Promptto act, sureto cure
THE
OEF ANTEXETER
TIMES
POWDERS
Cure SiCK HEADACHE and Nenralgia
in 20 arnvure$ 'also Coated Tongue, Dizzi-
ness, Biliousness, Pain in the Side, Constipation,
Torpid Liver Bad Breath. to stay cured also
regulate' the bowels. VERY NIOE TO TAKE.
PRICE 25 CENTS AT DRUO STORES.
CENTRAL
Drug Store
FANSON'S BLOCK.
A full stook of all minds of
Dye -stuffs and package
Dyes, constantly on.
hand. win an's
Condition.
Powd-
er,,
the hest
in the mark-
et and always
reoh. Family reoip-
eas carefully prepared at
Central Drug Store Excite
Cr -LUTZ.
"Backache
means the kid-
neys are in
sirouble, , Dodd's•`
Kidney Pills glue`
prompt
relief,"
per cent.
of disease is
first caused by
disordered kid-
neys,
"Might as well
try to have a
healthy city
without sewer -
as ood
age,
alth when the
kidneys are
clogged, they are
the : scavengers
of, system.
"Delay is
dangerous.- Neg-
lected kidney
troubles result-
In Bad Blood,
Dyspepsia, Liner
Complaint, and
the most dan-
gerous of all,
[frights &seaae,
Diabetes and
Dropsy."
"rho above
diseases cannot
exist where
Dodd's Kidney
Pills are used.'
Sold by all dealers or sent by Omit on receipt
of price so cents, per box or Six for $o. e,
Dr. L. A. Smith & Co, Toronto, Write forf
book called Kidney Talk.
The butchers 4f Paris who deal only in
beef and inutton are becoming alarmed at
the extent to whichhorse flesh, ase flesh,.
-Y. and even mufia 0eeisare being used as human
food,
THE WEEK'S NEU
Chatham bas asked to be made a city,
Mr. Robert Ford, Kington, is dead.
A boy named Godfrey hanged himself at
Carp.
Joseph IEahlor,one of Winnipeg's pioneer
hotelmen, is dead,
Wtn, Fitzgerald, a well-known resident
of Hamilton, in dead, aged 76.
The strike in over on the T., H. & B„and
the men have returned to work.
The Kingston statue of the late John A.
Macdonald will be unveiled July 1.
Rev. Father Langevin will be consecrated
Archbiship ot St. Boniface, March 19.
Sir Donald Smith ,arrived in Montreal
Thurday after a brief trip to Europe.
Mgr. Bergin has started a scheme for the
establishment of a rural banking system at
Quebec.
Mr. P. Mahon died on Saturday from
njuries received in falling off a load of hay
n Puslinoh. •
The British Columbia, Legislature was
prorogued on Thursday, with less than the
usual pomp.
A runaway sohoolboy,aged 13,was found
on Thursday just out of Quebec, nearly
frozen to death.
Henry Stewart, aged 23, reoently from
Glasgow, was arrested at Hamilton on a
charge of forgery.
Ethel Richardson, aged nine, was killed
by a G.T.R. train on. Thursday at Point St.
Charles.
Wm. Ashley, jr., a G. T. R. switchman,
was killed at Niagara Falls the other day
while coupling oars.
Mr. Tooley, ex -M. P. P., narrowly
escaped serious injury in a runaway near
Gladstone on Saturday.
Mounted police have found a missing
party of Calgary surveyors in a famished
and frozen oondition,
The building and planb of the Hamilton
Bridge Company has been sold to the Gur-
ney-Tiden Company for $49,000.
The T., H. & B. Railway Company has
entered suit against the Hamilton Spectator
claiming $50,000 for alleged libel.
A family at Victoria, B. C., has been
poisoned by eating codfish from which the
liver had not been removed.
John Palmer, theallegod counterfeiter ab
Ingersoll, has been committed for trial..
Adam Ross has been acquitted.
The Dominion lists of voters for Toronto
and Montreal will be printed in these cities
to expedite matters.
Henry Starnes, who was stricken down
by paralysis at the recent session of the
Quebec Legislature, is now able to be out.
The report of the royal commission on
the liquor traffic is nearing completion. It
will contain 4,500 pages.
The Hamilton. Old Boys of Trinity Col-
lege School, Port Hope, have decided to
join the movement for the reorganization
of the Old Boys' Association.
Recent reports from the Labrador coast
and the Saguenay state that a wanton de-
struction of fur -bearing animals is being
carried on by the Indians.
The syndicate who have bought the
Hamilton Bridge Works are considering
tie advisability of moving the works out
of Hamilton to escape excessive taxation.
Seaman Jones of the (steamer Vancouver
fell from aloft, struck on the rail, and
falling into the water sank and was seen
no more. He was a Welshman.
The Hamilton Thistles on Thursday won
the Ontario Curling Association Tankard
for the fifth time, defeating Lindsay by one
shot.
Premier Bowel- on Wedneaday received a
deputation asking for Government assist-
ance towards the return of 800 families of
French-Canadians Battled in Northern
Michigan:
Mr. F. L. Shutt, the chemist of the Ex-
perimental farm, and Prof. James W.Rob-
ertson, the Dominion Dairy Commissioner,
will leave Ottawa shortly on an eastern
lecturing tour.
Ex -Mayor Spencer, Thomas McCormick
and other trustees of the destroyed Queen's
avenue Methodist church, London, will
visit American cities to secure ideas on
church architecture.
Protests have been entered against a num-
ber of London Aldermen who were mem-
bers of last year's `Council, on the ground
that they had failed to keep up the sinking
fund.
Mr. Theodore E Davie, Premier of
British Columbia, bas been appointed
Chief Justice of the Suprema Court of
British Columbia as successor to the late
Chief Justice Sir Matthew Begbie.
A young farmer of Hsrriston,Out., named
Wm. J. Shannon, while engaged in oiling
some part of the machinery of his windmill,
fell, and was drawn into the shaft, being
killed almost instantly.
Fifty thousand dollar's worth of machin-
ery lately imported from England was
seized in the Globe Rubber Manufacturing
Company at Quebec by the customs authori-
ties for under. valuation.
The Rev. Rabbi Veld, of the Temple
Emmanuel, Montreal, has been appointed
both by the Dominion and Quebec Gover n
menta chaplain for St Vincent de Paul
penitentiary and the Montreal gaols.
The Manitoba Government has submitted
a bill to the Legislature which will cut off
all supplies to Government, house at Winni-
peg. The supplies are to,be cut off when
the time of the present Governor expires.
Baptiste Cornelius died in the County
Gaol, London, from consumption. Cornelius
had been sentenced to two months' impris•
onment for selling liquor to Indians on his
reserve. His pardon arrived just before
he died,
At Leamington silver medals have been
presented to. Messrs. F. Comber, Colin
Cullin, B. Miller, G, Johnston, Frank Ives,
Herman and Ralph, Robson, John Robinson
and M. Williams, for their bravery.. in res-
cuing five lce cutters who driftedout into
the lake on February 2.
The Montreal Street Railway has discov
ered a conspiracy for defrauding it. The
conductors were provided with a small
trough of nickel or German silver which is
put into the slot at the top of, the box and
the five cent pieces slide out into the oper-
ator's hand. a
The trial test of the new Merryweather
fire engine purchased by the Winnipeg
City Council was proceeding satisfactorily
when there was a sudden explosion, one of
the flues of the boiler bursting. The cause
was the turning off of the water supply by
John McLaren while the engineer's back
was turned. McLaren had been arrested,
As prisoner 6n Thursday, in Viotoria,
B.C., was leaving the dock, after having
TH Ex i"TJB T M B
been sentenced to five
yearn' lmprfsonnent
for
sroinbtbeeyr,hedaids,c"onBtamnpktyofucsoirurctwhiRche
wan taken back and given three years
additional for each ward.
Taylor & Henry, liverymen of Hamilton,
were summoned by humane Inspeotor
Hunter on a obarge of starvingtheirtwenty,
year-old stallion Raven. The horse was
removed from the stable and died two days
afterwards. The defendants gave evidence
that the animal was fed. The Police
Magistrate reserved his decision,
GROATR LTAIN.
A B
Lord Roseberry is indisposed, and le con*
fined to his bed.
Mr. Walter. Low, one of the editors of
the London Globo, is dead.
Dr. Htilke, president of the Royal Col,
lege of Surgeons of England, is dead.
Eight vessels were launched on the Clyde
in January last as againsb eleven in
Januaty'94.
The Queen on arriving in London the
other day wasunable to walk without
help.
An exhibition of the art manufactures
and general industries of Austria and
Hungary will be held in London next
year.
,Tames Braund of the Bank of Montreal
died on Wednesday. He was well known
in New York and Brooklyn.
Lord Acton has been appointed profes-
sor of modern history at Cambridge, to
succeed the late Prof. $eley.
The Charity Organization Society has
taken steps to repress the evil of street
mendacity among young children in Lon.
don.
An agent for W. K. Vanderbilt paid
$14,500 for a pearl and diamond necKlace
at an auction sale of jewellery in London
on Thursday.
One of the former directors of the ill.
fated Bank of Wales is willing to pay $125,
000 inliabilityor.der to be relieved of any possible
A movement is en foot in England Co
celebrate the sixth centenary of the British
Parliament, which will be completed this
summer.
Ott the last day of January there were
107,751 paupers in receipt of relief in Lon-
don, an increase of 7,296 over the corres-
ponding date of last year.
The new torpedo destroyer Banshee
was given an official trial on the Clyde on
Friday. The boat attained an average
speed of twenty-eight knots an hour.
Hon. Winston Churchill, eldest son of
the late Lord Randolph Churchill, has
entered the army, receiving the appoint -
mein of lieutenant in the Fourth Hussars,
one of the crack cavalry regiments.
The influenza spreads rapidly in London.
Many members of the Commons and the.
House of Lords are among the victims,
Lord Dunraven's name heads the long list
of distinguished patients in the news-
papers.
The Cobden Club silver medal has been
awarded to Hirjibhoy Hormasi Wadin for
having, in the Univeraity of Bombay ex-
amination for the B. A. degree, secured
the highest number of marks in political
economy.
At the annusl meeting on Wednesday of
the owners of the Glasgow steamship lines,
the,chairman said that the preseut pros-
pect afforded no ground to look for an im-
provement in the shipping trade during the
present year.
The Prince of Wales formally opened the
United Service Institute at noon on Mon-
day. He was very hoarse and coughed
frequently. In his opening speech he
lauded the aim of the institute, which is to
instruct officers is military science. The
building includes a banqueting -house,
fronting on Whithall street, which was
donated by the Queen.
UNITED STATES.
St. Lou is, Mo., has 85 cases of smallpox
The U.S. four per cent. bonds have been
ordered to be printed.
Washington's birthday was fittingly
honored in the United States on Friday.
Negotiations are on foot for the amalga-
mation of the Chicago Herald and Times.
Lieut, F. P. Peck, of Sandy Hook, N.J.,
was killed onTueaday by the bursting of a
gun.
Five miners are said to have been killed
Poyan explosion in a colliery near Pottsville,
Mrs. Mary O'Day, aged 65, was killed by
a Lake Shore train at a crossing in Buffalo
on Thursday.
Thomas Durant, a highwayman, was sen-
tenced to imprisonment for life atCroville,
Cal„ ou Wednesday.
The steamer City of St. Augustine, long
overdue from Jacksonville, put in at Ber-
muda on Monday for, coat.
Governor Morton, of New York, bas
signed the Lawson bill,- preventing the
display of foreign flags on public buildings.
Mary Nino, an Italian, aged 30 years,
was murdered in New York on 'Tuesday
by her husband Vincenzo, a barber.
The Indiana House has passed a bili pro-
hibiting prize fighting, and making it a
crime to either engage is or attend a fight,
Mr. P. Bogandoff, First Secretary of the
Russian Legation at Washington, commit-
ted suioide at nis residence in that city.
John Delahey, of Cobden, Ont.died on
the train near Chicago the other, day on
his return from California, where he had
gone for his health.
The business portion of the village of
Hamilton, N. Y., the seat of Colgate Uni-
versity, was almost entirely destroyed by
fire on Thursday night.
The Lawson Flag bill, preventing the
display of foreign Hags on public buildings,
passed the New York Senate. on Wednes-
day and ib now goal to the Governor.
Frederick Douglass, the well-known
colored orator, died suddenly of heart
disease at his residence in Anaeoetia, op.
polite ” Washington, at 7 o'olook on Wed,
nesday night
The probability of the present Congress
reimbueing the Canadian fishermen for the
lose sustained through the Behring Sea
seizures appears to be becoming less.
The strike of the Brotherhood of Elec.
trice]. Workers at New York against the
nine hour day has resulted in a general
strike, which will probably take out 1,000
mien and stop work on at least 30 large
bus
Y'lildingie lecture which
Col, Robert Ingersoll
wan to deliver on "The Bible" at the Hobo,
ken, N.S., Theatre on Sunday night was
forbidden by the Mayor,
Among the passengers on the steamer
Paris,which arrived at
Now York on Sat•
urda, were Mr. D'Arey MoMalton, of the
Royal Canadian Regfinenb, and wife.
The liquor bill, the passage of which was
expected, and which would have made
North Carolina praotioally a prohibition
State, liar been defeated in the ` 'Bate.
Thera wase baremajority of .one against
it.
Fire broke out in the Ledger Wood
Bakery on Ouaohita avenue, Hot Springs,
Ark., at 4 o'clock on Friday morning. It
is in the aouthern part of the city, where
boarding houses abound, and in an hour
three women had been burned to death,
pix boarding houses, several storehouses
and fifteen cottages, in all worth $100,000,
had been swept away. The dead are : Mrs.
Laura Scammon, Mrs. Henry J. McLeod and
Augustine Stivetto (colored.)
Bradetreet'a report of the trade situation
in the United States is not encouraging.
The weather is unsettled, and trade irregu-
lar A slightly improved demand is re-
ported in a few direotlons where weather
has been bettor. Bat generally storms
and bad roads have checeed, distribution
and lowered the average of collections.
Tho success of the new bond issue is, how-
ever, restoring eofidence somewhat in the
financial outlook. ?Mon and steel are dull ;
there is no increase in the inquiry for tex-
tile fabrics, There is a prospect of the
coal industry being in a more settled con-
dition soon, but New York is again the
centre of a bad industrial disturbance from
a "sympathetic strike.
GREEBAL.
Famine prevails in East Africa.
A rising of the natives against foreigners
is threatened at Cairo.
The Pope has completely recovered from
his recent indisposition.
The bill to repeal the anti.Jesuit law
passed the German Reichstag on Wednes-
day.
A Panama special says three attempts
were made to burn Colon the other night,
but were all unsuccessful,
Count Essvon Perponoher has been ar-
rested in Berlin for committing perjury in a
scandalous adultery case.
M. de Witte, the Rusaian Minister of
Finance, is taking measures for the promo-
tion of cotton growing in Russia.
A special cable from Valparaiso says
there is no truth in the report of a possible
war between Chili and Argentina.
There is yet no -abatement of the cold
weather throughout Austria. Since Sun•
day 22 peraons have been frozen to death
in Galicia..
A special despatch from Guatemala says
it is aemi.ofiicially announced that a settle.
went with Mexico has been practcially
reached.
The.insurgents in Peru have surrounded
Lima. The Government troops are throw-
ing up earthworks and barricades for the
defence of the capital.
The Budget Committee of the German
Reichstag has voted estimates for four new
armored cruisera,
Russian petroleum exporters are conaid-
ering measures for promoting the export
of the oil from Russia.
The Italian Minister of Marine has de-
cided to introduce the eight-hour working -
day into the docks and arsenal at Spezzia.
The Queensland Government has decided
to throw open 1,500,000 acres of land
throughout the colony for selection as
grazing and homestead farms.
A review of the Bengal jute manufactur-
ing industry gives the total exports of
gunny bans last year as 171,310,552, as
against 171,821,249 in 1893,and160,948,42,5
in 1892.
A Berlin newspaper claims that in the
settlement of the land question in Samoa
the Germans have obtained large advantages
over the British and Americans.
Sir Henry Brougham Lock, Governor of
Cape Colony, has been recalled from his
position, owing to a long-standing difference
of opinion with Mr Cecil Rhodes, the
Premier of the colony.
It is reported that the Frenoh expedition,
under the charge of Commandant Monteil
for service in the interior of Africa, was
surprised,that half the force was annihilat-
ed,and that the remainder have been driven
from their line of march and their retreat
cub off.
The Marquis of Dafferin, at the annual
banquet of the French Chamber of Com-
merce, said that there never had bean a
time since his arrival in Paris when the re-
lations of the two countries were more
friendly and more obviously conciliatory
on both sides.
SAVING HALF THE POWER.
Electric Motors Are Showing an Economy
of 50 leer Cent.
There have been many cases of the use
of electro motors to drive lines of shafting
or isolated parts of plants to prove con-
clusively the remarkable increased effici-
ency obtained, especially where the con-
veyance of steam for a long distance was
necessary: This has led to a more thorough
study of the amount of power absorbed by
the line shafting and counter shafts. The
minimum loss that can be looked for, and
this is obtained only in exceptional cases
requiring constant vigilance, is 25 per cent.
of the total power developed, and more
frequently rune as high as 65 to 70 per
cent. A safe average would be from 40 to
50 per cent., although the actual leas must
be determined for each and every case.
With the use of electric motors, when pro.
perly designed and proportioned for the
work,, as, indeed, is as necessary in electri-
cal work aa with guy other problem of
mechanics if the best results are desired,
this percentage of loss can be materially
reduced. An inefficient result may be ex-
pected with bad electric engineering, just
as with a poorly arranged case of mill-
wrighting, but, the electrical proportions
being once obtained, there will, within
reasonable limits, be no decrease in effici.
envy from the deterioration.
The advent of electricity for such pur.
poses seems to have enabled managers to
realize more fully than ever before the loss,
accompanying what was heretofore gener.
allyaooepted as the most efficient method,:<
ot furnishing power to the individual ma-
chines of a plant. The ase of electric motors
in the place of shafting and on isolated mach.
ince where the motors are belted direotly+ t6
isolated shafts or to the machines has been
sufficiently extended to render the verifi.
cation of the results obtained unnecessary.
It is no exception to find a reduction of 50
per mut. of the power consumed. This is
not due entirely to the saving of lose
through friction, but also to the advantage
gained by the intermittent action of mach,
Ieery of every kind.. Torts if that where
the motor drive has beef► aulrittuted the
machines are in operation but little more
than ono -hall the time, or, more correctly
stated, the power required is only about
one-half of the total average power of the
machines when doing work. As remark,-
able as these results may sworn, dufiieient
data are en record to prove thele correct -
nem,
NEBRASKA'S M IN
INTRNSE SUFFERING OF THE sTARY-
,ING HALF -CLOTHED PEOPLE.
Without The lvccesstties of Ji.ife,--Fhotts-
halts 'Wil have to he Supportett Until
Atter the Itarvesttng of the Next tiros
—The hong Drought.
The destitution in Nebraaka is ,greater
naw than at any time since the failure of
the crepe left the people without sustenance
or the means of providing the necessaries
of life, The last blizzard intensified the
sufferings of the starving, half olothed
at-mers. Although a large amount of eup.
plies has been collected in those parts of
Nebraska which fared better than the un-
fortunate counties for the relief of the
destitute, and although many carloads of
clothing and provisions have been present-
ed by the people of other States and for.,
warded by the railroads free of expense,
yet the supply ie inadequate to allay the
suffering of the poorer classes.
From this time until after the harvesting
of the next orops
THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE
will have to be supported by those who ars
better- off, or else will die of starvation or
of the cold. There will be no crops next
Season ualese seed is provided for the farm-
ers, The State had made provision for
furnishing supplies of seed, but in many
cases the recipients of these supplies are in
such need of food that the seed will be
used to allay the pangs of hunger unless
other food ie furnished.
The long -continued drought last Summer
was the cause of the failure of the crops.
No rain fell in some counties from June
4 unfit late in September. In July the
winds were so hot as to blight the famished
vegetation. This failure of the crops fol-
lowed others in previous years. In some
parts of the State, newly settled, only two
crops have been harvested in six years.
As the settlers are mostly of a class but
poorly provided with money, clothing, and
household effects, when they go to Ne-
braska, the failure of one year's crop is
severely felt. When the failures come one
after another, as they have, starvation and
nakedness inevitably result. The counties
most affected are Furnas, Red Willow,
Hitchcock, Dandy, Hayes, Chase, Frontier,
Perkins, and Lincoln, on the Kansas front-
ier, and the tier of counties_ next. There
is destitution in other localities, but the
greatest suffering is in the
WESTERN PART OF THE STATE.
Gov. Crounae appointed a Relief Com-
mirsioa, at the head of which is the Rev.
Luther P. Ludden. There has been consid-
erable criticism of hie administration; but
this may have arisen from the fact that the
supplies of clothing and provisions have
been inadequate to meet the needs of the
sufferers. Dr. Louis Klopsch, proprietor
of The Christian Herald, who recently
returned from the West, where he went
to distribu co $21,000, raised by the paper,
commended Dr. Ludden's management of
the commission.
1». Klopach, on his return, said of the
situation in the West :
"In Western Nebraska tnere are from
30,000 to 40,000 people who are actually
destitute, and in six months, or before the
harvest can be gathered, the number will
be doubled. They have already received
seventy -fire carloads of clothing, and they
are fairly supplied with fuel. The mine
owners are giving the coal, the miners
their labor, and the railroads free transpor.
tation. Each family is given enough to
keep one room warm. The State is going
to supply seed grain, but the people will
eat even that, so that they will have to be
supplied with food clear to harvest time.
They are in absolute need now, and they
want fodder for the few cattle and hones
they have left.
" In Kansas the people are very badly
off indeed. I think there are 3,500 fami-
lies, or about 16,000 persons, destitute
there. We have recently sent five car-
loads of clothing to Kansas, but more is,
still needed. In those five carloads there
were 1,300 boxes and barrels and 40,000
garments.
"As for Colorado, I think that the local
agencies will now be able to take care of
the destitute there. To a certain extent
the suffering has been denied, from motives
of pride or for business reasons.
"There is, in fact, a great deal of suffer-
ing also in in
Texas, in Oklaho ma
and South Dakota." •
Why IlIen Should Marry.
It was olearly meant that all men, as
well as all women, should marry ; and
those who, for whatever reason, miss
this obvious destiny are, from nature's
point of view, failures. It is not a ques-
tion of personal felicity (which in eight
cases out of ten may be more than
problematic), but of race responsibility.
The unmarried man is a skulker, who,
in order to secure his own ease, dooms
some woman, who has a rightful claim
upon him, to celibacy. And in so doing
he defrauds himself of the opportunities
for mental and moral development which
only the normal experience can provide.
Ile deliberately stunts the stature of his
manhood, impoverishes his heart and
brain and ohokes up alt the sweetest
potentialities of his sou'. To himself he,
is, apt to appear like the .wise fox that
detects the trap, though it be ever so
cunningly baited ; that refuses to` sur-
render his liberty, for the sake of an sp.
petizing chicken or rabbit, which may
after all be a decoy, stuffed with saw.
,dust ; while as a matter of feet his case
is that of the cowardly servant in the
parable, who, for fear of losing his
talent, hid it in lois napkin, and is the
end was deemed unworthy of his stew.
ardahip.
THOUSANDS STARVING IN CHICAGO.
eerily One Hundred and Filly Thousand
Persons In Necd ot immediate Assist-
nuee.
A despatch from (Chicago, Bays :_. _Ao-
cording to a report made by the outdoor
relief committee of the County -Board there
are 150,000 persona in Chicago who require
assistance to avoid starvation ; 50,000
persona;have already been supported at
theit Ifemes,at public expense. Many are
said to be industrious persona who have
have blitn out of employment until their
credit and resources ate exhadsted. Many
more are in danger of being evicted from
their homes,
Children ' Cry for Pitcher's C;astorlo
DOES YOUR
WIFE
CSO HER OWN
WASHINC s
'` silo oeS, Seta that
the h i e
Wa s iYt
S std Easy
API
Cleangetting
a by her
SUNLIGHT SOAP,
which does away with; the
terrors of wash -day.
Experience will convince her that
it PAYS to use this soap -
Balm id Children
thrive on Scott`s Emulsion when all the rest of their food
seems to go to waste. Thin Babies and Weak Children grow
strong, Fun:, and /ealth,y by taking it.
Scott's Emulsion
overcomes inherited weakness and all the tendencies toward
Emaciation or Consumption. Thin, weak babies and growing
obildren and all persons suffering from Loss of Flesh, Weak
Lungs, Chronic Coughs, and Wasting Diseases will receive
untold benefits from this great nourishment. The formula
for making Scott's Emulsion boas been endorsed by the med-
ical world for twenty years. No secret about it.
Send for pamiskloe on Scott's Emulsion. FREE.
Scott & gowns, Belleville. All Druggists. 500 and $ I.
FULL OF ENCOURAGEMENT
1PC1101 411..X.alEat C1,11102E1M '0
In Bed 5 Months—Had Given Up All Hope
of Getting Well—A Remedy round at
Last to which " I Owe My Life."
Science has fully established the
fact that all the nervous energy of our
bodies is generated by nerve centres
located near the base of the brain.
When the supply of nerve force has
been diminished either by excessive
physical or mental labours, or owing to
a derangement of the nerve centres, we
are first conscious of a languor or tired
and worn-out feeling, then of a mild
form of nervousness; headache, or
stomach trouble, which is perhaps suc-
ceeded by nervous prostration, chronic
indigestion, and dyspepsia, and a gen-
eral sinking of the whole system. In
this day of hurry, .fret and worry, there
are very few who enjoy perfect health;
nearly everyone has some trouble, an
ache, or pain, a weakness, a nerve
trouble, something wrong with the
stomach and bowels, poor blood, heart
disease, or sick headache ; all of which
are brought on by a lack of nervous
energy to enable the different organs of
the body to perforin their respective
work.
South American Nervine Tonic, the
marvellous nerve food and heal th giver,
isasatisfyingsuceess, awondrous boon
to tired, sick, and overworked mt'n
and women, who have suffered years
ofdisoouragereent and tried all manner
of remedies without benefit, Its is a
model's, a seientilio remedy, anti 6 iia
wake follows abounding health.
It is .finlike all other remedies in
that it is not designed to act on the
different organs affected, but by its
direct action on the nerve centres,
which are nature's little batteries, it
causes an increased supply of nervous
energy to be generated, whih in its
turn thoroughly oils, as it were, the,
machinery of the body, thereby en-
abling it to perform perfectly its dif-
ferent functions, and without the
slightest friction,
If you have been reading of the re-
markable cures wrought by South
American Nervine, accounts of which
we publish from week to week, and
aro still sceptical, we ask you to in-
vestigate them by correspondence, and
become convinced that they are true
to the letter. Such a course may save
you months, perhaps years, of suffer.
ing and Anxiety.
The words that follow are strong,
butthey emanate from the heart, and
speak the sentiments of thousaixds of
women in the 'United States and Can-
ada who know, through experience, of
the healing virtues of the South
American Nervine Tonic.
Harriet E. Hall, of Waynetown, e
prominent and much respected lady,
writes as follows :--- '
" I owe my life to the great South
American Nervine Tonic. I have
been in bed for five months with n
scrofulous tumour in my right side,
and suffered with indigestion and
nervous prostration, Had given up
all hopes of gettin weld, ,F%ad tried
throe elect?r' 'tg r •t P, Th
.g, *vl,h _o reit - ,
Ant bottle of Nervine Tonic im rove
me SO much that was o w
ba I able to alb
about, and a few bottles cured me en
tirely, I helievo it is the best -nodi•
cine in tho world, I cannot mommend it too higlttr.'t
Tired omen, can you do bette;
than become acquainted with ail
truly ;greatwreined-' t
C. LUTTZ tSole Wholesale and Retail Agent for llx,eter,
lilt, Mrl)Ulxrlilr, Agent. fhte,.1,1,