Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1895-5-2, Page 7TSB, Ti IYI 111 Thoneca A. Xoluta. A Common fir --- Affliction Permanently Cured by Taking AYI3RS_: A CAB -DRIVER'S STORY. or was afflicted for eight years with MaltRheum. During that time, I tried a great many medicines which were high, rec- o (=mended, butnonegave mmeInc relief. was at Iast advised totryA er' Sam- partite, by a friend who tole me that I must purchase six bottles and use there according to directions. ' I yielded to his persuasion, bought the six bottles, and took the contents of three of these bot- tles without noticing any direct benefit. Before I had finished the fourth bottle, my hands were as Free from Eruptions its ever they were. My business, which Is that of a cab -driver, requires me to las out in cold and wet weather often without gloves, and the trouble has never returned,"—TIIos[As A. Joints, Stratford, Ont. er's Sarsaparilla ,Admitted at the World's Fair. Alice's Pulls Cleanse the Bowels. POWDERS Cure SICK HEAPACH�' and Neuralgia in 20 MINUTES, alto Coated Tongue Dizzi- ness, Biliousness, Pain in the Side, Constipation, Torpid Liver Bad Breath. t0 stay cured also regulate the };rowels, VERY MICE TO TAKE. PRICE 26 CENTS AT DRUG STORY$/ .v.. OEN TRAL Drug Store FANSON'S BLOCK. A full stock of all kinds of Dye -stuffs and package Dyes, constantly on hand. Winan's Condition Powd. ere, the hest in the mark- et and always refih. Family reeip. ees carefully prepared at Central Drug �`tor�e Exete C. 'VI' i ITIZa DON'T DESPAIR WILL CURE U We guarantee Dodd's Kidney Pills to cure any ease of Bright's Disease Diabetes, Lumbago, Dropsy, Rheumatism, Heart Disease, Female Troubles, Impure Blood—or money refunded. Sold by all dealers in medicine or by mail on receipt of price, sot, per box, or medicine, boxes fa.5o. DR. L. A. SMITH & CO., Toronto. Doctor What is flood foreleansig the. Scalp and Hair, 'seem to have tried everyth and 2tn in despair Why Mrs R. thavery best Mho is PALM° -TAR Soap itis. splendid Por Washing file head itPrevent dryne55 thus puts an end to Dandruff ,And freshens the hair nicely, ,s 5tFoFtA LARGE TAf1L A" THE NEWS IN J. NNTSUiLT THE VERY LATEST PR= ALLOVER THE WORLD. kItereetlnZItems About Our 0lvu(loiIntry, Great Britain, the 'United states, and All *Parts of tale Globe, Vondenmdand ,Assorted for Beay itsalliug. CANADA. London's rate of taxation has been fixed at '20 9-10 mills on the dollar. All barrooms in North Oxford will be closed at 9.30 p.m, hereafter. H. M. S. Pelican has arrived at Halifax, from Bermuda, to fit out for the Newfound. land Fishery protection service. Mr. Lewie Chevalier, chief of the Pro- vincial revenue polios in Montreal, is dead. James W. Dobson, a deserter from the Quebec Dragoons, was arsested at Winni- peg. Hamilton will employ experts to advise in the matter of waterworks improvements. Londoners expect to have the electric road to Springbank complete by May 24. Mr. J. H. Hooking, a Winnipeg news- paper man, formerly of Listowel and Guelph, is dead. There has been a rapid advance in cattle in the live stook markets in Toronto during the past two or three weeks. A man named Turner committed suicide at Straitholair, Man., by taking a dose of strychnine. He was mentally deranged. A monument to the founders of Montreal will be inaugurated on May 1st. Mayor Villeneuve and Lieutenant -Governor Chap- leau will be present. Mr. W. M, Parker of the Sandwich hatchery, has placed a million whitefish fry in Lake Ontario, off Hamilton beach. At midnight on Friday a fire started in Tamworth, Ont,, and before it was got under contrel both sides of the main street were in ashes. An escort of 13 Battery men have left Quebec for Winnipeg, to take oharge of Paymaster Dobson, who deserted from Quebec, some time ago, Judge Wurtele on Thursday,in Montreal, decided to take into consideration the appointment of a commission to enquire, into the sanity of Shortie, the Valleyfield murderer. Adelard Wilfrid, a single young man, attempted to jump from a C. P. R. train near Hochelaga, but was caught and drag- ged under the wheels and killed almost instantly. The London Trades and Labor Council have taken steps to have a standard rate of wages by-law for municipal contracts brought before the City Council at an early sitting. On Saturday the City of Toronto, a splendid new steamship, built for the North Shore Navigation Company, was success- fully launched at Owen Sound, in the preen once of a large company. A number of prominent cattle men from .Eastern Canada have arrived at Winnipeg looking for cattle for English shipment. Prices have gone up owing to the American scarcity and there is keen competition. Thomas Russell, aged 15 years, was arrested at London for placing.a tie on the L.&P.S.R,R., in front of a train. He ad- mitted the aot, and said he did ib for the purpose of stopping the train and getting a ride. 'The Province of British Columbia having applied for the assistance of the mounted police in quelling the Indian uprising in the Lower Kootenay, word has been sent to the police to be in readiness to act should they be notified from Ottawa to do so, At the meeting of the Hanifiton license commissioners Chairman Proctor told a deputation of temperance people that no reduotions would be made in the number of licenses, but the board was williug to re- consider the situation on Stuart street. The balance sheet of the auditors of Hamilton shows the assets of the city to he $3,658,911.32, and the liabilities $3,- 160,550.97, leaving a balance of nearly $500,000. The debentures, not including local improvements amount to $3,052,518,- 35. The seven-year-old daughter of Mr. F. Thomas, a painter, residing in Ottawa, met with her death in a peculiar manner on Thuraday'afternoon. While attempting to enter the house through a window the sash fell, shriking the little girl across the neck and choking her. In response to a large delegation of tem- perance workers who asked for increased restrictions on saloons, the London License Commissioners decided that it would be best not to disturb the existing hours until after the next session, pending the Govern- ment's decision. Owing to existing treaties between Great Britain and Austria, and Great Britain and the German Zollvereiu, Canada has now to give to Austria and Germany the same tariff concessions as she has agreed to give to Preece. This is the additional legisla- tion that is necessary before the Frenob treaty can go into force. GREAT BRITAIN. It is stated upon authority that the Foreign Office refuses to aeoept Nicaragua .% reply to the British ultimatum. It is stated that the life of the Prince of Wales is insured for three million two hundred and fifty thousand pounds. The Queen has decided to discontinue the early drawing -rooms, and will in future hold four drawing -rooms after Easter. The ostrich which some time ago was given to the Queen by a South African Queen died on Tuesday in the Zoological gardens, London. Tremendous prices are being paid in London for prime poultry, A goose or a pair of ducklings cost a guinea (about 55.25. ) Petitions containing 70,000 names have already been presented in the British Par. Dement against the proposal to dieesbablish the Welsh Church. A daughter of Sir Roderick Cameron was robbed of a box containing jewels and money worth £400 in the Victoria Street Station, London, England. Kathleen, the eldest daughter of t,fr. Michael Devitt, the Jrish'Ioader, is dead. Mr. Devitt has just arrived, in Australia from England. Pry moose day, the anniversary of the death of Benjamin Disraeli,learl of Bemoans - field, who died in 1881, was gonetally ob. served in England on Friday. The use of the primrose was not as extensive as usna1. The Ounarders Campania 'and Luoania have been added to the list of eubsidend steamers held tit the disposal of the Ad. iniralty, to'be used in oaae of war at any titins, With a view to fostering British trade with ,Japan, the British Trade Journal will issue au that eouutry a, regular qqearterly edition. It will be printed in tho Japanese language. Au international exposition of musical instruments of ail ages will be held in Lon- don next July. There will be at the same time a eongresa ofoompeeere and of musical instrument makers. It ie reported in London that Prince M. fred, elde$t eon of the Duke of Edinburgh, is likely to be betrothed to the young Queen Wilhelmina of Holland, He is teventy-one quare of age, and she is fifteen, By the recent succession of the Rev, W. B. Ponsonby to the Earldom of Bees - borough, four clergymen are now Brirish peera. The othore are the Marquis of Nor- manby, the Earl of Scarsdale, and Lord Plunket, the Arohbiahop of Dubiin. Reoruiting in Scotland for the British army has greatly improved during the last year or two, A. leading Scottish journal states that bad trade and the coal strikes have done more for recruiting in the coun- try than all the promises and blandishments of the recruiting staff put together. Efforts are anon to be made in London to raise money to aid in the construction of the proposed ship oanal from the Bay of Biscay to the Mediterranean, It is not thought the project will be popular in Eng- land, which has iiitherbo believed she bas had control of the Mediterranean throueh posaeaaion of the fortress of Gibraltar. 'Tie proposed oanal would, of course, end this control. UNITED STATES. John L, Sullivan saved a woman's life at Boston by beating out a fire that had caught her clothing. Manyrivers in a m shf a affected by recent $a N w, nt rains, have risen so high as to ueoessitate the abutting down of many, mills, Mrs. Parnell,the mother of the late Irish leader, was seriously assaulted by highway: men at Bordentown, N.J. Charles Knox, of New York, well known as the maker of hate bearing his name, is dead. He was seventy-seven years of age, In Minneapolis on Saturday Judge Sea- grave Smith refused to grant a new trial for Harry Hayward, convicted of the mur- der ot Katharine Ging. At San Francisco the Coroner's jury charged Theodore Durrant with the murder of Minnie Williams, one of the girls killed in Emanuel Baptist Church, Rev. Robert M. Patton, a minister of the Diadlples' Church, Somerset, Pa., was crushed to death by a passenger train on the 13. & 0. Railroad, near Casselman. The car acaountents at their annual meeting,at San Francisco eleoted as Presi- dent James Osborn,, superintendent of the oar aervice of the Canadian Pacific, Mont- real. The San Francisco coroner's jury on Friday rendered a verdict charging Durant, the dental student, with the murder of Minnie Williams, whose body was found in the church, The historic old town of Lexington, Mass, , where the first gun of the revolutionary war, "the shot that was heard around the world," was fired one hundred and twenty years ago,on Friday observed the annivers- ary of the battle. It is stated that the discipline is so lax in the Dannemora State prison that parties of prisoners often go away for hunting trips, lasting a couple of weeks at a time, and on their return present the deer they have shot to the warden, The theory that Saturn's Satellites Iocated in the inner ring travel faster than those in the outer ring is confirmed by the photographs made at the Alleghany Observatory, and by the computation of their velocity by Professor Keeler. The announcement was made atNewport, R. I., that the Prince of Wales will visit America this summer. A prominent sooie- ty man has received a letter from England announcing that bis Royal Highness will attend the cup races and spend several weeks at Newport. The lives of two workmen were instantly crushed out, three others were fatally in- jured and one seriously hurt by the fall of a derrick in the yards of the .South Chicago Shipbuilding Co. Those killed were Harry Blake and Patrick Barvy, foreman of the iron works. Those fatally injured were John Conley, J. J. Hand and Wm. McGall- ion, who has died since. Commercial summaries from the United Stanes report a fair but by no means exten- sive movement in trade. An encouraging item is that at Fall River several large mills have advanced wages 10 per cent., restor- ing the prices paid previous to the reduc- tion in September, 1893. Labour troubles are much lese serious than a week ago, and labour is in much more general demand, which means an increased enquiry for a large number of products. Cotton mills are more active and there is a better demand for wool. The speculative markets have been very active for several days, cotton, oil, and wheat having increased beyond the export price. In this connection Stories of combinations are pretty general. Beef has also taken a phenomenal rise, one which circumstances are not considered to warrant. GENSPAL, The Czar has refused to abolish the law prohibiting Jews from living within fifty versus of the Russian frontier. Steam street railways are more common in Italy than in any other country. There aro now nearly 2,000 miles of such lines, The sailors of the Spanish fleet oontrib- uted a day's pay to the relief of the families of the men who wore lost in the Reina Reignite. The Czar has rejected a petition which was recently presented to hien by journalists and literary men in favour of a modification of the press laws. The Ring of the Belgians offers a prize of £l,000 for the best plan of supplying Brussels with drinking water, The com- petition is open to alt the world. A French journal declares that ' the Anarchists have arranged to make an attempt to asaaseinate President Faure on tho occasion of his visit to Havre, It is feared that the measures France is ' taking in the matter of the mettle trade with the United States will be likely to embarrass Canadian shippers. Large proportions aro being assumed by the butter export trade of the British - Australian colonies, From July to Feb- ruary Victoria alone shipped 20,000,000 pounds, if An intereeting Latin.insoription has been discovered at Keurbe, is nude. It gives au account of the defence of the town, in 49 13, 0, by Pompey's party against Julius A despatoh has been received from .Gen- era, Sir Robert Low, stating that Mr. Robertson, the British agent, and the rest of the garrison of the Ubttrtel fort, have been relieved. The occupation of Corsa by Japan is already begieleing to change the couutry. An electric railway has been planned from thecapital to the Ran river, whiols lien three miles away. In reply to the representatione of Sir Phillip Currie, the British Ambasador at Constantinople, the Turkish Government has promised to instruot the provincial Governors to abstain from oppressing the Armenians. Tatay,a seaport of the Philippine Islands, and capital of the Province of Calainianes, has been destroyed by fire, two thousand houses having been burned. One parson is reported to have been killed. A plot has been discovered to dethrone the King of Corea in favor of his nephew, Li Shun Yon. The conspirators, including Li Shun Yon, were promptly arreated. A special cablegram from Kingston, Jamaica, says that a Spanish warship chased the little British steamer Ethelred into Port Antonio on Wednesday, creating great exoltement. Peat is being suocesfully used as fuel for engines in some parte of Continental Europe, Experiments are being made in Germany to extract gas from peat, is which a considerable amount of energy is stored. Arrangements are being made for trying aluminum launohes on a large scale in the French navy. The Aluminum Company at Neuhaueen, Switzerland, has been given an extensive order for necessary material. The Postmaster -General for British Cen- tral Afrtoa announces that arrangements leave been completed for the institution before the end of next month of a parcel post between. India, Aden, and Zanzibar, and the British Central Africa Proteotor- ate. A Hungarian noble has just turned Pto. testant to be able to separate from his wife, a cymbal player, whom he saw in the Vienna Orpheum two yearn ago, rnd maa- ried after a fortnight's acquaintance, All the count's relations are Roman Catholics. Out of 253,177 recruits incorporated into the German army in 1893, there were 617 who did not know how to read and write, or 24 in 10,000. In France, during the same year, among 343,651 conscripts, 22,- 096 did not know how to read and write, or 643 in 10,000. Berlin has direct telephone connections with 250 localities. Communication by this means has reached a higher state of development in Germany than in any other country. The capital alone has 22,070 subscribers, nearly as many as the whole of France. A new assooiation of French manufac- turers and merchants has been formed in Paris. The chief objects of the new society are the development of industry and commerce and the promotion of commercial relations with all foreign countries by mean• ot congresses, meetings, and publi- cations. A French man named Rulliere, who boasts that he is a son of the dynamiter Ravachol and is supposed to have assisted his alleged father in murdering the hermit of Cham- blee, bas been condemned to eight years' penal servitude for having attempted to murder the manager of a mine at Villars,in the Loire. The Government has offered to Umra Khan an asylum in India for himself, his family and his suite, on•coedibion of his absolute surrender,aud has also guaranteed that the tribesmen and their villages shall be spared if they offer no further opposition. The British expedition is continuing its march to Chitral. Ex -United States Consul Waller was recently tried by a Frenob court-martial at Tanratave, and sentenced to twenty years imprisonment for having acted as a spy in the interests of the Homes, and now the authorities ab Washineton are protesting, first, that the charge is groundless and, second, that the French had no authority to try the ex -Consul by court-martial. Close to the little village of Anadol, in Bessarabia, a very valuable and interesting discovery . of old coin has been made, In one place alone ten pounds of gold coins were found, mostly belonging to the reigns of Alexander the Great and his father, Philip of Macedonia. Most of these coins are in perfect preservation and have been selling for as much, as 50 rubles on the spot. Frederick Harriaon, who says he has been a resident of Hawaii for seventeen years, has written a letter to the London press from San Francisco, complaining of the treatment to which British subjeots i have been subjected in Hawaii. He says that when the plans of the revolt were prematurely discovered the Government made wholesale arrests, and the prisoners were tortured in an attempt to make them give information HYPNOTISM SUSTAINED. The Convection of a Ilan Who influenced Another to Murder Dust Stand. The Supreme Court of Kansas has rendered a decision in which hypnotism is recognized both as a defence and ground for conviction of crime. The case passed upon came up from the Cowley oounty District Court, On May 5 last Thomas McDonald without apparent provocation, shot and killed Thomas Patton near his home in Winfield. He was arrested, charged with murder, and set up a defence that he was under the hypnotic influence of Anderson Gray, and was neither legally nor morally responsible for the deed. He was acquit- ted. Then Gray was put under arrest and tried for murder, He was found guilty of murder in the first degree, notwithstanding the fact that he was not present when the crime was committed, the evidence for the State only going to show that he muted McDonald to do the deed through hypnotic influence. An appeal was taken to the Supreme Court, and in an opinion render- ed to -day the ruling of the lower court was sustained, Little Ben's Way of Putting It. Little lien lives in a new house, one of the most modern of modern houses, where light, water, heat and other things aro all to be had by turning a knob or touching a bell. He lives in a state of perpetual mar• vel over these things, and the other night, when euti'ering from a headaoho, the little ellow said to his mother, who sat beside hint i Please turn on the dark, mother ; my eyes hurt me•, Tho Paris FIgaro gives ourr'enoy to a rumor that Dr. Nansen, the Arctic ex - rioter, has discovered the North Pole, and hat it is attested on a ohnin of moon Att Atlanta, city barber has engaged tains. two female assistants to wiele errors, YOUNG FOLKS, Tho Spell ng Match. Ten little ohildreu standing in a line. 1''-u•iy, fully," then there were nine. pine puzzled fees, fearful of their fate, O -i-1.1 y, silly, then there were oigitt. EIghtheapairvens. of blue eyes, bright as stars of "B -u -s -s y, busy," then there were seven. Seven b -*rave heads, `shaking in an awful fix, "t,-a-i•d•y, lady," then there were six. Six eager darlings, determined each to strive, D -u -t -i -e, duty," then there were ave. Five mhearts so anxious, beating more and ore,. "See -h -o -1.1 -a -n scholar," then there were four. Four mouths like rosebuds, on a red rose tree, 111-e r-q•e, merry,'then there were three. Three pairs of pink ears, listening keen and true, "O-n-i.e-y, only," then there were two. Two-u-sturdy ,turkeyladdie,'stthon readythere both wato s runone, T. One head of 'allow hair, bright in the sun, R One hero,' the spelling match was won. The Land of the Crisp -Haired. Far away over the sea lies a strange country the native name of which means "Crisp -haired." A large country it is, too, but it has not been well known until with* in a few years. Miasionariea and explorers have opened the door for us, and let us peep inr and see some of the queer things that ars found there, There are two kinds of people in the land, but the real native is of a dark brown color and has very black hair, which is arranged in the most marvellous styles probably ever known in the fashion of hair dressing. Sometimes it is placed in masses on each side of the head, as though two great mops had been tied on for ornament. Sometimes some of it is out off, leaving behind patterns of squares, circles and triangles, making the head look like a garden laid out in beds of various shapes, Sometimes for full dress a man will add to his costume plumes of the young palm fronds, which are fastened to his back and rise over his head waving gracefully in the breeze, In the forests in this country are mane kinds ot beautiful birds, birds of paradise, parrots, cockatoos and cassowaries. There are also numerous sorts of inaeots, one thousand species of beetle having been discovered in one square mile in the space of three months. Many of the villages in this strange country are built over swamps where no dry ground is to be seen, and everything has to be raised above the water. The streets are laid with large trees, from which ladders lead up to the houses, which often are perched on poles fifteen feet high. In front of these houses are the flower - gardens, made by spreading earth upon elevated platforms, each one of which is surrounded by a fence within whose inclos urs bloom brilliant tropical plants and flowers. There are, besides, Mug platforms that slope tip to the temples, in which may be seen the skulls or men and of animals, carved and colored, and grotesque figures that resemble fish, with mouths like frogs and bodies nine feet long and seven broad. Some villages are built directly over the water, and sometimes the baby of the fami- ly will fall through one of the cracks in the bamboo floor and drop into the stream be- low, but as the nurse usually knows how to swim, he iseasily pulled out again, none the worse for his sudden bath. The people have some queer notions about life and death, and the world in which they live. Some of them believe that one of their ancestors made the earth, the sea and the aky,and theancestor of another line of chiefs made man. They think that when the soul leaves the body it travels away to a land toward the setting sun, where the sego paten grows in abundance, and where those who enter this happy plaoe may eat as much sago as they wish. Other tribes think that good men after death go to live in the Milky Way, where are groves of fruit and delights of all sorts. In aleep they think that the apirit departs from the body, and meets other spirits in the air who tell it of things that are going to happen, so they plan their actions by their dreams. One of the missionaries in this country it named James Chalmers. He has visited many places and had many adventures. He has slept in the temples surrounded by cannibals, and stayed in villages in which the usual custom is to kill all arrangers; but by his kindness, wisdom and courage he has won the love and respect of many of the people. They call him "Tamate" or teacher, and sometimes "God's Man" He. has settled their quarrels, taught them many things that they had not known, helped them to rise from their low con- dition, and given them Christian truths in place of their savage ideas. And now if you wish to know where this country may be found, look on your map until you come across a big island not Mr from Australia, by the name of New Guinea, or, as it is called in the native tongue or, or "terisp•haired." At the Bank of England. The site of the Bank of England bears an estimated annual value of £70,000, This sum, if capitailzed at 3 per cent„ would represent a gross value of £2,1u0,000. Es- timating the buildings, vaults, printing, and weighing machines, etc., at £400,000 more, it will be seen that the "plant" of the bank must be worth over $12,000,000. Add to this the average amount of bullion, coin, securities, and unissued notes usually held, and you have the gigantic sum of £120,000,000 sterling, or $600,000,000 are heaped on a space of leas than four acres. Nowhere else in the world is there such an aggregate of actual and potential wealth within so small an area. in its early days the bank employed fifty-four clerks, and the yearly salary list amounted to £4,300, the chief accountant and the secretary re. maiming £250 each, At the present time the total number of employee is about 1,500, the salaries anti wages amounting to over £300,000 per year, and the perisinns to nearly £50,000. The present price of Bank of England £160 shares is £332, making the capital of eel 4,553,000 worth £48,315,- 060, or about $240,000,000. The usual dividend distributed is wad to 10 per cent. on the original capital. 'Chesoiidity of tho bank is thus shown to be, in ;he opinion of investors, equal to that of the British Gov. ernment, as the yield on bank Meares et the enhancers price and on consols is nearly tits 0ame-2! per cent. 1;i iidren Cry for Pitcher's, Castorii of Cod-liver Oil, with aypophospbites of Lime and. ,Soda, is a constructive food, that nourishes, enriches _ the blood), creates solid flesh, stops wasting and gives el;xestgth. It: is for all Wasting Diseases like Oonsumption, Scrofula,Aneaima, ?i1axasmusl or for (loughs and Colds, Sore Throat,-Bronobitia," Weak Lungs, ;Boss of Ilesh and General Debility. Scott's Emulsion has no ecinal as Nourishment for Babies and Growing Children, Buy only the genuine put up in salmon -colored wrapper Send for parnptef on Scott's Emulsion. FREE. Scott & Downs, Belleville. All Druggistei. 50o. and S. MOTHER AND DAUGHTER Rejoice Together. Nine Year Old Maggie McRitchie, a Victim of Chronic Fainting Spells and Nervous Weakness, Completely Cured by South American Nervine After all Other Efforts had failed. The Mother, a Sufferer From Nervous Prostration and Indigestion, Likewise Cured. Hear What the Thank - MI Father Has to Say. MRS. JAMES IticRITCHIE AND DAUGHTER, A leading local physician, whose profession takes bine among the chil- dren of the various public institutions, remarked to the writer, that one would hardly believe that so many children were affected by nervous troubles, which sap the syst.m and prevent proper developfnent. In many cases the doctors are powerless to cure these troubles. They can relieve the suffering little ones, but in South American Nervine we have a medicine that does more than simply give relief. Its peculiar strength is that it completely cures where physi- cians relieve. A case in point came to us the 24th ult., in a letter from Mr. James W. McRitchie of Bothwell, Ont, He says :—"My daughter Maggie, aged 9 years, was afflicted with nervous fainting spells for over a year, which left her in such a con- dition. of weakness afterwards that the child was practically an invalid, We tried several remedies ana doctor- ed with her in one way and another, but nothing gave relief, Seeing South American Nervine advertised, as par- ticularly efficacious in nervous din. eases, I decided on trying it for her, and I must say that I noticed a decided change in my daughter for the better after she had taken only a few doses. As a result of using this medicine, sbe is now entirely free from those faint- ing spells and possessed of that life and brightness that is the happy lot of childhood. I am satisfied it is an excellent medicine for any nervous weakness. My experience has been further supplemented in the fact that my wife has also been using South American Nervine for indigestion, dyspepsia and nervous prostration, and has found very great relief," Whether the patient be man or woman, young or old, South American Nervine provides a complete medium for restoration to health. It is a medicine differing absolutely from every other. A cure is effected by application to the nerve centres of the human system, and science bas proved that when these nerve centres are kept healthy the whole body is healthy For these reasons failure is impose ible. C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail. Agent for Exeter. Taos, WIcxxnr , Crediton Drug Store, Agent. COLIC, ted ` Cramps and Cholera Morbus, Diarrhtira, TVS- entery and Sunnier Com- plaints, Cuts, Barns. and Bruises, Bites, Stings, and S Sunburn ran all bo plompt- ,•, , relieved hy fly ,'rami lisvr t Pair Kiii4N i. ]losing-Ow4 a^ Ma hale class of water e