HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1895-5-23, Page 2.Dr. 8. F. 3ferrRi,
R suits Astonish
_9L8CIENCE.
AYERS pA.m...,Sateen
A MEDICINE
WITHOUTAN Eta
{Statement of a Well Known Doctor
"flyer's Sarsaparilla is without an equal
Asa blood-purifer and Spring medicine, auct
cannot have praise enough. I have watched
its effects in chronic cases, where other
treatment was of no avail, and have been
astonished at the results. No other bided
medicine that I have ever used, apd I have
tried them all, is so thorough in its action,
and effects so many permanent cures as
Ayer's Sarsaparilla.'—Dr. 13. F, MERRILL.
,Augusta, Me.
AYer'S Sarsaparillici
A ittoii at the World's
araseaasee
dyer's Pills for laver and boacet�
POWDERS
Cure SICK HEADACHE anti Neuralgia
in 20 MINUTES also Coated Tongue, Dizzi-
ness, Biliousness, Pain in the Side, Consttpauon,
Torpid Liver, Bad Breath. to stay cured also
regulate the bowels. VSRr NICE TO TAKE.
PRICE. 25 CENTS AT DRUM STORES..
CEN TRAL
Drug Store
PANSON'S BLOCK.
A. full stock of all kinds of
Dye -stuffs and package
Dyes, constantly on
band, Winans
Condition
Powd-
er,
the hest
in the mark-
et and always
refl. Family recip-
ees carefully prepared at
Central Drug Store Exete
C. LUTZ.
DON'T DESPAIR
WILL CURE YOU
We guarantee Dodd's Kidney Pills to cure any
case of Bright's Disease Diabetes, Lumbago,
Dropsy, Rheumatism, Bart Disease, Female
Troubles, Impure Blood or money refunded,
Sold by all dealers in medicine or by mail on
receipt of price, roc. per box, or Six boxes ease,
DR. L. A. SMITH & CO., Toronto.
f'U
st
foe ,c14C:rzANT. ya3. N
es
MAKCS
SKIN'
e s-rlsr+o
writ E
TII EXETER TnixEs
A NOBI2 SACRIFICE,
CHAPTER Y,
This story conernences in the white
ranges ae Switzerland, that wonderland
Of beauty, and on a mountain pass, up
which two young hien were climbing,
knag'sack on shoulder andalpenstock
in hand. Their names 'were Richard
Inglefield and Basil Penrhyn. .And
toilsome as was the path, its difficulties
were encountered and made light. of in
the blithest of spirits, These young
men were well-to-do in the world, had
been at school together, were firm
friends, and were now enjoying a holi-
day tour in summer weather, and with
summer in theiihearts. They had not
entered into the serious business of
life ; the glamour oe youth was upon
thein ; and, although, as will hereafter
be seen, there was more of prase than
poetry in at least one of their -natures,
they were indulging in dreams with an
earnestness which bore the stamp of
sincerity, though it proved to be even-
escent.
They had slept the night before in a
sanall inn, in which, as is usual in
Switzerland, comfort, cleanliness and
plenty reigned ; and they were recalling
the images of two persons they had
met—a mother and her daughter—the
contrast in whose appearance was so
marked as to have produced in the
minds of the young men a kind of won-
der—tee mother being worn, haggard,
and unsightly, and the daughter fresh
and beautiful as spring, A sort of
friendly intimacy, which in Continental
travel is often born and dies in an
hour, had been established between the
twain of each sex, and the mother had
shown to the young men a picture of
herself at seventeen years of age,- weld.
was so like her daughter that it might
well have passed for the `young girl's
pc rtrait.
" It seems," eadd Basil Penrhyn, " as
if it were impossible that that haggard -
faced woman should once have been
so fair and beautiful."
" In all pzobability," said Richard In-
glefield, "the daughter, when she
grows to her mother's age, will be
as haggard and wrinkled. If that is
generally the case, it serves to prove
that we are in the present very un-
faithful likenesses of ourselves Sn the
future."
Our faces may change," said Basi
" but not our hearts."
" Not mine, I am sure," said Ingle -
field.
" Nor mine," said Basil.
They rested here, and sat by the
side of a mountain stream, fed by a
laughing, babbling waterfall, for the
purpose of partaking of food and wine,
vilzich they carried with them. They
poured out the wine and clinked their
here drinking cups, and toasted them-
selves.
" To you," said Basil.
"To you," said Richard.
" And to our friendship," said Basil.
" Never to end," said Richard, "while
we live."
There came from a bush close by the
mocking note of a bird, which caused
the young men to look at each other
and laugh.
" If that bird could speak," remark-
ed Basil, " we should probably hear
a very unfavorable estimate of our
sincerity. 'Words, words, words,' as
Hamlet says."
" That wouldn't render it a just es-
timate," said his companion. " For
my part, Basil, when I say that I hope
our friendship 'will last all our lives
I am really and truly sincere."
So speak the young ; so believe the
young. The drama of " Damon and
Pythias" is one played very frequent-
ly by cultured lads, to whom its sym-
bol of friendship is exceedingly cap-
tivating ; but it is ever an uncompleted
drama, for the curtain falls, if not
at the moment, very soon after the
serious work of life has commenced.
It opens with a grand flourish of trum-
pets, with quickened pulses, with fer-
vid protestations, with eager looks and
words, but after the first flush of ex-
citement and enthusiasm, it gradually
trails off into the region of forgetful-
ness and oblivion. Perhaps it is best
not to deplore too deeply this termina-
tion ; perhaps it is best not to take
things too seriously. Nature teaches
the philosophy of enjoyment, and so
long as it is innocent there is but little
wisdom in turning a churlish face upon
the pleasures she offers with so liberal
a hand. If they are evanescent, what
then ? Others immediately take their
pace. Spring, summer, autumn and
winter, each season is filled with its
own special delights and beauties for
the enjoyment of mankind. So with
our moral natures ; each season of life
brings its own gladriesa, its own sun-
shine, and if perfect faithfulness and
constancy are rare, 'the fault probably
comes more from our muter than our
inner Iives.
Richard Inglefield and Basil Penrhyn
believed themselves to be sincere, and
this conviction was Sufficient during
their holiday tour to fill thelr days
with joy,
" I wonder," said Basil, " whether we
Shall ever marry."
"If I marry," said Richard, "it shall
be for love."
" And I," said Basil.
" If we could marry two sisters,
now," said Richard, with alight laugh,
" it would, bring us even closer toge-
ther."
They played upon the theme, half
sportively, half in earnest, and drew
many pleasant pictures of their future.
Had a wizard shown them what that
future was to be and what pictures
were to occupy the place of those they
drew, they would have looked upon
them with incredulity, and declared it
could never be. It is well that the
Veil should he drawn before the to-
morrow, otherwise many a pleasant
hour would he embittered,
For three happy months the young
men travelled in company, and when
they returned to England it was with
the assurance that the chain of friend.
ship they had forged could never be
1 roken,
had gone on smoothly, he would leave
have pursued their callings, and laid
the foundation for substantial fortune#.
Not the least pxosperdus among them
was Richard. Ingletteld, a merchant
who dealt in produce of many kincle,
and carried an a large exporting
trade. He had one daughter, who at
this period was eighteen years of age,
he being forty-two, The oircumstanoes
of his having married when be was but
a young man was regarded by those
who thought they knew him best as
cne of the very few unwise acts which
could, be Said to his account. But,
wise or unwise, he married in his
twenty-third year, and (strangely
enough in a man who bad earned the
reputation of thinking of little else
but making money), he married for
love, as he had declared to Basil Pen-
rhyn he would ; and whether it were
wise or unwise, and whether If things
awakened from his romantic dream
only to deplore it, is not in the power
of any man to say, bate snapped the
thread for Richard Inglefield—the gold-
en thread of love, for within a few
months of the birth of his little daugh-
ter Rachel, he kissed for the last time
the cold lips of ,the wife who was never
more to brighten his home with her
pleasant ways.
His grief was poignant, and he
mourned her with passing sincerity,
but the cares of his business pressed
heavily upon him, and in the busy
routine of his office he sought and
found a substitute for love. This sub-
stitute may be described not as money,
but as more money—an absorbing occu-
pation, in which the sweeter joys of
life are often engulfed, and sometimes
lost eforever. So absorbing, indeed,
did Richard Inglefield find it, that he
had no time to devote to the rearing
and educating of his little daughter,
and he sent her into Shropshire, to a
maiden sister, who i:ndertook the
charge of the child, and really and
truly did her duty by her. That Ra-
chel's mother had been a pure and good
woman, with a sweet ..disposition and
a sympathetic nature, which delighted
in kindly acts, was of course of advan-
tage to the orphan, and I have no doubt
that Rachel, if she had been given to
deep thought, would have felt truly
i grateful for her inheritance of virtue
and goodness of heart. Unhappily
there are in the world too many who
are born into an inheritance which can
scarcely fail to lead their steps toward
the downward path the path of
shame. But, apart from the fact that
Rachel, by fortune of birth, was en -
delved with sweet and kindly quali
ties, she had the advantage of posses-
sing in Aunt Carry one who worthily
filled the place of her dead mother.
True, Aunt Carrie was a spinster, and
not young ; true, she had in early days
a heart -disappointment, which sadden-
ed and weighed heavily upon her ;
I, true, that in these circumstances she
should, according to popular idea, have
been sour, shrewish, snappish, and sev-
ere ; and, also according to popular
idea, that she should have exercised
these disagreeable qualities upon her
niece, to the child's misery and ddscam- i
fort. But it happened, and happily
happened, that in this instance thej
popular idea was wrong, as it is in
many other large and more in parte-tit •
instances. Under Aunt Cerrie'e train-'
Ing Rachel grew to be a sweet and :
Iovable girl, ripening to a womanhood
which would surely in good time be-
ccme the light of some good nan'n
home. All who knew her loved. her.
Near to Aunt Carrie's house was an
institution dating sorne three or four
hundred years back, in which some
very old people of both sexes found a
resting place for the latter days of
their life. They were poor pensioners,
grateful for any trifle, and Rachel's
kindness endeared her to them ; but,
indeed, she was adored by all the poor
people of the neighborhood, to -whom
she was a sure and constant friend
in trouble and sickness. This may
he regarded by some as a small mat-
ter to mention, but it is really of im.
importance, because it touches with a
firm, sure hand the very heart of hu-
manity.
Meanwhile, Richard Inglefield thriv-
ed and 'prospered - in the world, and
every year added to his wealth. Twice
in every twelve months he visited his
maiden sister in Shropshire, and spent
a few hours with her and his daugh-
ter. He was kind to Rachel in his
own peculiar way, never going to see
her without taking her some Little pre-
sent ; but for the cementing of strong
bonds of love something more was
needed than such few and far between
visits, The loss and the misfortune
were of his own creating. Had he
been fairly assidur:us in his endeavors
to bind his daughter's heart to his own,
it would have been better for therm
both. When Racnel learned to write
She would send him letters at stated
intervals, and always commencing,
" My Dear Father," and always end-
ing, " Your dutiful and affectionate
Daughter," and it was not her fault
that the nature of this intercourse
was more forma] than it should have
been bete,een two beings so closely
connected by ties' of blood and kin-
ship.
Ci APTN.IR 7I.
The soene Is now laid in a thriving
r.,‘ rt. of London, in which for ;many gen-
erations• past nierehs,nts and traders
Ti SE CONTINUED.
British "Red Coats."
We never think of Her Majeaty'a soldiery
as being attired in other than red coats and
brass buttons, but there was a time when
the regulation uniform .of British soldiers
was entirely different from what it in to-
day. In the time of Henry VIII. the colors
worn by the army were green and white ;
later on, white with a red gross on the
breast. The :first mention of the " red
coats " is found in a circular
letter by
Edward, Earl of Derby. It bears the date
of 1547, and le to the effect that " here.
after all foot and lighthouse aoldiers will
appear in a red coat made in casco fashion,"
She knew Him.
He will turn, the tables on you if you are
not careful, acid one woman to another,
who was berating her husband.
Tarn nothing, she exclaimed, he's BO lazy
be wouldn't turn a table if it Was on rol-
lers.
.i'L"l'il- NEWS I [ V 1) IN A. NUTSHELL, Jbill', t r Donald er dela,vee Qaie Sant h
.>lt..UU J,Il1:i if F1 #.,lV rho ntattor is farther sielayad rho Saotgh
THE VERY LATEST FROM AI.t, OVER
THE WORLD.
Intereetin„ Stents About Our Own. Clean;
trY, 4 re:tt Britain, tl*e Usha,. States,
anis ,All Parts of tUa Ciobe, poudeuseit
anti <assoeted fur Racy Atosding.
CANADA.
The Risley team will sail from Monte
real by the Parisian on June 22.
The London Sohool Board will ask
for $24,100 to provide more a000mmode-
tion.
The annual report of the Militia De-
partment acoords high praise to the To -
route battalions.
The dedication of the Kingston statue to
Sir John Maodonald will take plane in
September or Ootober.
Guelph's water main burst in the East
Ward on Saturday, and the city water
supply was oompletely shut off.
The Dominion Customs Department has
decided that pig aluminum is dutiable at
the rate of twenty per cent.
The 0. P.R. station at MacLeod,N. W.T.,
was entered by burglars ou Saturday night,
and about one thousand dollars secured.
The balance in the Dominion Government
Savings Banks on April 30 was $17,055,044,
a decrease during the mouth of $42,000.
• Last year three hundred and twenty-
six vessels, having a tonnage of twenty-
one thousand tons, were built in Canada.
Mr. T. C. Patteson has shipped from
Montreal a team of horses for the Prince
of Wales and another for Lord Lane-
downe..
The city of Hull, Quebec, added $80,000
to its debt during the pastear, and the
treasurer estimates a larger deficit for next
year.
Mr. Joseph Olivier J'oaeph, B. C. L., Q.
C., has been appointed Judge for the l)is-
trtet of Montreal to succeed the fete Judge
Barry.
Albert Dorion, who was caught stealing
registered lettere from the Montreal Post -
office, has been sentenced to three years in
the penitentiary,
At a mass meeting in Hamilton several
resolutions were passed condemning im-
moral theatrical exhibitions and certain
"sporting" practices.
It is stated that Principal Peterson of
Dundee College, has been offered the
principalship of McGill University in
Montreal, and he will probably accept.
The public revenue of Canada for April
shows an increase of four hundred and
fifty thousand dollars, as compared with
the revenue for the corresponding month
last year,
There are now on the regiatry books of
the Dominion 7,245 vessels, representing
869,462 tons. The navy is thus larger in
number apd smaller in tonnage than it
has been for ten years.
The jury iu the case of the four victims
of the McDonald, fire at Montreal recom-
mended a change in the law to compel
owners of factory buildings to plane fire
escapes on the outside.
Mr, David Legault of Montreal has re
eeived official notification from the Pro-
vinoial Treasurer of his appointment as
chief of the Quebec Provinoial revenue
police, to succeed the late Chief Louis
Chevalier.
Representatives of the Toronto Board of
Trade will hold a conference with the
Montreal Board regarding the proposal to
ask the Government to appoint a Board of
Custcmo Experts regarding disputed value -
times.
C_:eap fares will be the feature of the
new electric road in London. Seven tickets
will be sold for twenty-five cents, and
workingmen's tickets nine for a quarter
during three hours of the day. The com-
pany pays no percentage, but does its own
paving end supplies all material.
The Supreme Court has dismissed the
appeal of the Dominion against the Pro-
vinces of Ontario and Quebec. Under the
judgment the sum of $600,000 is now saved
to the provinces, representing the excess of
interest on debt to which the provinces
were entitled half -yearly for the period
between 1868 and 1873.
•
GREAT BRITAIN.
Lord Rosebery is reported to be failing.
The 12,000 -ton battleship Renown was
launohed on Thursday.
The pulpits of two hundred of London's
churches will be occupied on June 16 by
women.
The Prince of Wales has acoepted the
Chancellorship of the newly -formed Welsh
University.
1 London hes taken to early hours. • The
parks are crowdedduring the early morning
and are deserted before noon.
O'Donovan Rosea was expelled from the
gallery of the British House of Commons
for interrupting the debate.
England is enjoying exceptionally fine
spring weather. London is crowded, and
the gayest possible season ie in full swing.
Lord Rosebery, as a diversion from the
worries of office, has been recommended by
Mr. Gladstone to pursue a course of theo-
logical studies, while Mr. Campbell -Banner-
man advises him to read French novels.
The defeat of the Imperial Government
in the House of Commons isnot considered
likely. The rank and file of both parties
.do not wish to interrupt with the turmoil
of an election the return of industrial
prosperity, which is everywhere apparent.
The Duke of Connaught has given orders
that the army officers under his command
at Aldershot shall qualify themselves to be
judges of the food supplies furnished by
army contractors for the troops, and also
of the forage for horses,
Miss Braddon (Mrs. Maxwell), the novel-
ist, will write no more novels after her
present contracts are filled. A couple of
years ago she finishedher fiftieth book:
Her firstsuooessful work,"Lady Audley's
Secret," was published in 1862.
A sort of prehistoric Venice is found to
have existed in the Glastonbury marshes,
England. The Manchester Geographical
Society is making an investigation of the
locality. Earthenware found shows the
inhabitants to have lived long prior to the
Roman invasion.
It is said that two members of the House
ofo 0
G mm ns who desired to. visit Const
an-
tinople before the opening of Parliament,
to enquire into bhe srievanoos of the Ar-
menians, were prevented from doing so by
the refusal of the Turkish authorities in
o r.'
L nd n to viso ChoirP p ass oris
Sir Wm. Harcourt, Chancellor of the
Exohequer, refused in the British Howse
of Commons to fife a day to proceed with
the motion to appoint a elooteh corn.
mission to deal with certain Scotoh
Liberal membere Will have to reconsider
their position towards the Government,"
Sir William Haroourt answered that it was
entirely open to members to reooneider
their position.
UNITED STATES.
The police census made on May latshows
that the population of the oity of Buffalo is
'335,709.
Mr, W. R, Smith, superintendent of the
Botanic Gardens is Washington, has held
the plaoe for forty-three yoara.
The. Journal of Commerce eatimetes the
fire loss for the United States and Canada
during April et $11,018,150.
Four thousand immigrants arrived at
Ellis Island, New York, on Saturday. This
is the largest arrival in one day since June
8, 1893.
Professor J. T. Rothrook is authority for
the statement that 115,000,000 acres of land
in Pennsylvania were sold for nonpayment
of taxes last year,
The United States Poetoilloe Department
has taken steps to secure and destroy all
the counterfeit two -cent postage stamps
recently unearthed in Chicago.
Six persons were probably fatally burned
by the explosion of a gasoline stove and
the fire whioh followed in a envoi, shop at
1,424 Pratt street, Baltimore.
The Texas State Treasury, when it
closed on Monday night, was announced
insolvent by Treasurer Wortham, He says
it will be next January before the State
will be on a cash basis again.
JohnRogers. the sculptor, has presented
to the city of Mauohester, N. H., a statue
of Abraham Lincoln, It is oe seated
figure of plaster, larger than life, and was
upon exhibition at the World's Fair where
it took a prize.
The Wheeling & Erie wreck train left
Massillon, Ohio, on Saturday to go to
Dalton to repair trestles washed out by the
cloudburst. A bridge that had been wash-
ed away, leaving only .the unsupported
track and ties, let the trent into the water
below with all on board. The engine was
buried to the bell in the torrent. One man
is thought to have been drowned and
several were hurt.
From the .tenor of telegraph despatches
in the business centres throughout the
United States there is a general improve-
ment in trade. There is a general improve-
ment in the prices of the leading staples,
and an upward movement is experienced
all round. Iron, sugar, print, cloths, flour,
and other leading lines are all firm at
advanced figures. The reverse of the story
is, as usual, labor disputes ; these are
disturbing various lines of industry,'Where
—without these troubles---prospeobe would
be good. As it is, prospects are regarded
as more than fair by most business men.
GENERAL.
New South Wales proposes to adopt free
trade.
Cholera has broken out on board the
Japanese transports at Talienwan, on the
Liao -Tung peninsula.
Advices received at Yokohama from the
Pescadore islands show that thirteen hun.
dred persons died there from cholera during
one month. The epidemic 'snow subsiding.
Russia seems to be making some progress
with her elementary schools. It is stated
that the educational budget has been in-
creased 3,000,000 roubles for tneir support.
The Spanish Government has decided to
establish an arsenal, dock yard and arms
factory at Manilla, capital of the Philip.
pine Islands, and to erect elaborate fortifi-
cstione.
To prevent the possibility of the Japanese
eutering Pekin, the Chinese have cut the
river embankments near the city. Miles
of=territory have been flooded, and hundreds
of Chinese have been drowned.
Robert Lebaudy has subscribed 1,000
francs towards the prizes for•the Bordeaux -
Paris and back horselees carriage race,
which will take place on June 11 and the
following days.
Caycao, a small island in the West Ind-
ies is inhabited exclusively by turtles, some
of which grow to enormous size. Several
vain attempts have been made to establish
,human habitations there.
In a recent speech in the French Chamber
M.Lockroy inveighed against extravagance
in the naval department, claiming that
the English could build a wsrship for about
half what the same vessel usually cost in
she French yards.
It is reported that Herr von Koeller,the
Prussian Minister of the Interior, received
au anonymous letter on Friday, warning
him that he would go the way of the late
President Carnet, who was assassinated at
Lyons in June last.
The Paris Figaro of a recent date said
"Lord Gladstone passel through Paris
yesterday." The same paper also referred
to the ex -Premier of England as the "great
old man," apparently intending to use the
expression "grand old man."
With a view of creating oases in the
barren waste land of the interior, the
authorities of South Australia are boring
for artesian wells in a number of places.
They will also plant Algerian treea in the
neighborhood of these wells, should water
in suffioient quantities be found.
Pope Leo XIII.'a hands are nearly use -
leas, and cause him much suffering. When
he writes he must hold his right wrist with
his left hand, and what he writes is almost
illegible. This is not due to age, but to an
attack of ague twenty-five years ago, when
he was Bishop of Perugia.
The smart money to be paid by Nicaragua
to Great Britain is being raised by popular
subscription. The feeling against England
is very bitter, and it is expected the Central
American Republics will enter into a secret
league to exclude as far as possible the im-
portatioteof British goods.
A oorrespondent in St. Petersburg learns
from a high source that Russia has a
separate underatanding with China, which
does not cede leanohurian territory wholly
to Russia, but it planes it under Russian
control to the extent of allowing Russia to
prolong the Siberian Railroad to Broughton
Bay, in the Sea of Japan.
North Pole Moving South.
For the past forty or fifty years the
geographers and astronomets havo suspect*
ed that, on recount of a "tilting" in the
earth's axis, the latitude of all places on
the earth's surface is gradually changing,
A few years ago (l892) the Astronomers
decided to make a "test case" el the mat-
ter, and now report that the theory is
correct. for example, they hate proved
that Berlin was fifty-one feet nearer the
Bole in September, 1892, theta it was in
March of the same year, if 'Peary and
Wellman will only he patient the pole will
come to them 1
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoriai
ryel ou fortified?
When you are in a low state of health, and on the verge ea
illness, there is no nourishment in the world like
Scott's Emulsion
alMillISIMX1010452059Bir 410511111613102101:11F
to restore strength. Scott's Emulsion nourishes, strength-
ens, promotes the making of solid
flesh, enriches the blood and tones up
the whole system.
For (loughs, °olds, Sore Throat, Bronohitis,
Weak Lungs, Consumption, Scrofula, Anosmia,
Loss of Flesh, Thin Babies, Weak Children, and
all conditions of Wasting.
Buy only the genuine! It has our trade-
mark on salmon -colored wra-p),cr.
Sendfar pamphlet on Scott's .Emulsion. FREE.
ret
T(RAGC MARK.
Scott & Bowne, Belleville. An Druggists 50o. and Si.
esie ,.._.."seaneeitietiseetateasseeeseeteeeesses'47 •.e
When the Nerve Centres Need Nutrition.
A Wonderful Recovery, Illustrating the
Quick Response of a Depleted Nerve
System to a Treatment Which
Replenishes Exhausted
Nerve Forces.
MR. FRANK BAITER, BERLIN, ONT.
Perhaps you know him ? In Water-
loo he is known as one of the most
popular and successful business men of
that enterprising town. As manag-
ing executor of the Kuntz estate, he is
at the head of a vast business, repre-
senting an investment of many thous-
ands of dollars, and known to many
people throughout the Province.
Solid financially, Mr. Frank Bauer
also has the good fortune of enjoying
solid good health, and if appearanoee
indioate anything, it is safe to predict
that there's a full half century of
active life atill ahead for him. But
it's only a few months sines, while
nursed as an invalid at the Mt.
Olemens sanitary resort, when his
friends in Waterloo were dismayed
with a report that he was at the point
of death,
"There's no telling where I would
have been had I kept on the old treat-
ment," said Mr. Bauer, with a merry
laugh, the other day, while recounting
his experiences as a very sick man.
" Mt. Clemens," he continued, " was
the last resort in my case,- For
months previous I had been suffering
indesoribable tortures. I began with
a loss of appetite and sleepless nights.
Then, as the trouble kept growing, I
was getting weaker, and began losing
flesh and strength rapidly. My
atoritach refused to retain food of any
kind. During all this time I was
under medical treatment, and took
everything prescribed, but without
relief. Just about when my condition
seemed most_ hopeless, I heard of a
wonderful cure effected • in e. case
somewhat similar to mine, by the
Great South AmericanNervine Tonle,
and I finally tried that. On the first
day of lta use I began to feel- that it
was doing what no outer modioine
had dons. The first dose relieved the
riistress oomplstely. Eefearo night I
actually felt hungry and ate with an
appetite mob es a had not known for
leoaths. I began to Irick up in
strength with eurpri*lag rapidity,
slept well nights, and before ! knew
it I war sating three square .meals
regularly every day, with as uxtioh
relish as ever. I have no hesitation
whatever in saying that the South
American :cervine ` anio cured me
when, all other remedies faded. I
have recovered my old weight—over
200 pounds—and never felt better
in ley life,"
Mr. Frank Baner's experience 10
that of all others who have used the
South American Norville Tonic. Iia
instautaueous action in relieving dis-
tress and pain is due to the Aired
effect of this great remedy upon the
nerve centres, whose fagged vitality
is energized instantly by the very first
dose. It is a great, a wondrous cure
for all nervous diseases, as well as
indigestion and dyspepsia: It goes
to the real source of trouble direct,
and the sick always feel its marvel-
lous sustaining and restorative power
at once, on the vory first day of its
08e,
C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter.
'.Gros. WieserTT, Crediton Drug Store, Agent.
with a colioy baby or a colicy stomach
isn't pleasant. Hither can be avoided
by keeping a bottle of Perry Davis'
PAIN Krr r,,va on the medicine shelf, It
is invaluable in •sudden attack ' of Cramps,
s
Cholera 1Vl:orbus, Dysentery and Diarrlicea.
Just sir valuable for all external pains, • •,�^ �•:
Dost—oueteasnooni'ul in a :bleb' rase of eater dr rank arta f ctinvenientl.
•