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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1895-6-20, Page 6THEI EXETER TIMES Result of a Neglected Cold. DISEASE -6 LUNGS *Pnich Doctors Failed. to Help, c,WRED BY TAKING AYE 90 Pectoral. "r contre.eted a severe cold, which settled On my lungs, and I did what is often done In such cases, neglected it, thinking it would go awuy as it came; but I found, after a little while, that the slightest exertion pained me. I then Consulted a Doctor rho found, on examining my lungs, that the upper part of the left one was badly affected. H n gave me some medleine whiell I took as directed, but it did not seem to do any good. Fortunately, I happened to read in Ayer's A.Imanac, a the effect that Ayer's Cherry Irectoral had on °them, and I determined to glve it a trial. After taking a few doses my trouble was relieved, and before 1 had fin- ished the bottle I was cured.'"—k.LEFLAR, Watchmaker, Orangeville, Out. ) Ayer s Cherry Pectoral Rig/lest Awards at WorIrrs Fair. 1ree.s .21215- CILTO Indinestion. POWDERS Cure VOX HEADACHE and Neuralgia iXZ 20 ANPNJTES, also Coated Tongue, Dizzi- ness, Biliousness, Pain in the Side, Constipation, Turgid Liver, Bad Breath. to stay cured also regulate the bowels. VERY' »Ica ro TAKE. PRICE' 25 CENTS AT DRIP:12 STORRS, CENTRAL Drug Store FANSON'S BLOCK. A fUll stock of all kinds of. Dye -stuffs and package Dyes, constantly on hand. Win an's Condition Powd- the best in the mark- et and always resh. Family recip- ees carefully prepared at Central Drug Store Exebe C. LUTZ. DON'T DESPAIR WILL CURE U We guarantee Dodd's Kidney Fills to cure any ease of Bright's Disease, Diabetes, Lumbago, Dropsy, Rheumatism, Heart Disease, Female Troubles, impure Blood—or money refunded, Sold by all dealtrs in medicine, or by mail on Veceipt of price, Soc. per box, or i:.gx boxes Die. L. A. SMITH at 00., Toronto. fenkDA IND R‘id FF' GENTLEMEN Pfte 0 PALMO TAR SOAP EXCELLENT IT CLEANSES THE SCALP, RELIEV4 II .,14h, 7,1,1EOlriNqp,..A.11.D i.. le Atiail'AATA ' FALLING OUT. CAKta Pia UP kiAto$0M6'' 2 $ t THE NEWS IN A NUTSHELL •••••• THE VERY LATEST FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD. • anteres t Inn a tents About our awn Country, Great Urinate the Vatted States, Ana Alt Parts or the nione, Condensed aunt assorted for Elute, needing. CANADA. During Kay 768 immigrants arrived at The revenue for May shovels an increase of $434,000. Friends el John R. Hooper are petition- ing for his release. Hemilton firemen ask for an increase of S5 a month in their salaries. The taxes of the County of Middlesex this! year will amount to $70,368. The contract for the Halifax drill shed, to cost about $260,000, will be let in a few days. An operation for the purpose of removing a turner will be performed on Mayor Stew. art of Hamiltou. Hon. J. F. Wood, Col. Tyres hitt and Col. Denison were upeee in the canal while boating at Ottawa. A beaver dam has bean discovered in the line of the projeoted Hudson Bay road, north of Gladstone. Hamilton has received a tender from the Eleotric Light Company to light) the oity at $91.26 per lamp per year. Hon. J. O. Ward of New Zealand has arrived at Ottawa to interview the Gov- ernmenton the Peesifio Cable tioheme. The postal authorities intend taking action against a number of emelt traders in Winnipeg who retail postage stamps, The offer of the county to sell the jail building to Hamilton City for $40,000 was refused and a new jail will probably be built. Mr. F. R. Alley, a. well-known real estate man, and promoter of Amherst Park, has entered an actioo for $500,000 against the Montreal Street Railway. The distribution of seeds at the Experi- mental farm, which closed on May 31st, was enormous. The total number of 'applications was 31,145. Of these 26,033 have been supplied. The station agents along the lines of the : Canadian Pacific railway and Northern , Pacific railway report in very encouraging terms as to the crop prospects in Manitoba and the Territories. The memorial monument of De Maison- neuve the founder of Montreal, will be unveiled in that city on Dominion day. The Governor-General has been invited to perform the ceremony. It is officially annoenced that the bench - era in convocation have struck off the roll of barriaters the name of William Middle- ton Hall, who was mixed up in the Toronto civic boodling investigation. Mr. S. A. McCaw, Manager of the Lake of the Woods Milling Company, is authori- ty for the statement that the Manitoba wheat crop, as it appears at present, is the hest ever seen in the country. An inquest w,as kield on the body of an infitnt found dead at Hamilton. The verdict was death from neglect and starvation, but the jury could not decide whether the child was alive Or not when left ou the mountain side. The Cite Council of Vancouver, B. C., on Monday evening atuipended the Chief of Police and the License Inspector as a result of the evidence given before the Felice Committee, which is now investigating into the working of the police force. Jacob Barquie, a Russian Hebrew was arrested in Toronto on Friday uight, charged with passing a forged cheque. When the deteotive arrested him, he en- deavoured to cut his throat with a pockets knife, Barquie's wound is not dangerous. Maws. nausea Bros., of Montreal, who negotiated the Newfoundland loan, deny that there is auy truth in the report that the ImperialGovernment has -vetoed the loan. They also deny that the loan is a preferred one upon the Cueeoms revenue. On Saturday, at Rideetown. Ontario, while some men were placing a heavy tele- phone pole in position on oue of the atreets, they lost control of it, and it fell across the street, striking two girls in its descent, It is feared that their injuries may prove fatal. In the Militia Genera/ Orders just issued, permiesiou is granted to the Royal Scots, of Montreal, to wear the "red hackle" in their feather bonnets. It has been aup- posed thee this honor is the peculiar distinction of the famous "Black Watch," upon whore it was bestowed for special services in the field. The firat official crop bulletin from the Manitoba Government this year was issued on Saturday. The estimated increase in acerage for the year is 290,380, of which 130,000 acree are in wheat. The total wheat area is platted at 1,140,276 acres ; oats, 482,658 ; barley, 153,859. CorrekPondentk are unanimous in their reports that the crop prospects were never brighter at this season of the year. LTLEAT 131trrArg. There has been a marked improvement in Mr. Gladstone's health. William O'Brien has issued a farewell address to the electors of Cork City. The Duke and Duchess of York have received an invitation to visit Australia next winter. Mr. Gladstone has "suffered a slight re- lapse, duo to his going out carriage riding prematurely. Fifty Canadian horde were sold in Lon-. don on Saturday at an average price of thirty guineas.apieoe. Eighteen thousand troops took part in the review at Aldershot in hon.or of the visit of Nasrulla Khan. Maharajah Abulealtar, Sultan of Johore, who recently arrived in London on a visit, died on Tuesday evening, Herbert Spencer, recently appointed by Emperor William a Knight of the Order of of Merit, hes declined the proffered honor, Dr. Murray of Edinburgh promises to send the published report of the Challenger expedition, 50 volumee, as a gift to the London Public Library, Naarulle. Khan and his suite attended religious servicee in the Mohammedan mosque at Woking oft Tneeday 111 honor of the Moslem feast of &dram, The Mayor of Southerripton gave luncheon in h000r of the offieers of the Pelted Stet end Italian 'warships in the Southampton waters. The British ./.0.,ar4 bi 'Trade kithirlsh for May alio* tlIal) imports increaaed Z620,000 andexports inoreased 0360,000 as compared With the oorresponding month last year. Itis reported in London that Oscar 1 Wilde, who was reeently sentenced to two Sunday, Tem thousand woritinen at. years' iroprlsonmeat in Peutonville prlson tempted to hold a meeting. The police at hard labour, has beoome !inane, and is dispereecl them and arreeted the leadere. oonfineci za *padded room of the prison. The London Daily News ef Thursday had an article aeking why the President of Republio eaelnot go abroad, and suggest- ing that if the Presidelate of France and the Malted States were to visit England it wonid tend to increase the friendly feeling between the respective countries. For more than a oentury the Maeleods have been the leading men in the Church of Seetland. Three of them have presided as moderator over the General Assembly, and the fourth, the Rev. Dr, Donald Mee:deed, of Glasgow, lute just been chosen for thad office. Dr. Maoleed is the editor of Good Words, has travelled over most of the world, loves boating and fishing, is a capital story reller, and has the moat fashionable congregation in Glasgow. Thomas Don, son of a farmer living at Orloff, was arrested on his way to Bahnoral to obtain an interview with the Queen. He had in his pocket a paper headed "To the Queen," and a letter addressed to Mr. Gladstone, in which the writer amid he was &beet to become King of Britain. Six chambers of his revolver were loaded, and he had besides 50 cartridges in a bag. Mise Eliza Wesley, for forty years or. gullet of St. Margaret Puttens, Rood lane, London, has just died. She was the grand. daughter of Charles Wesley, the hymn writer, and deughter of the composer of the Cethedral Service in F. She was educated as a musician by her father, and was a lady of many mocomplishments, Mendelssohn, Brahma, the poet Rogers, Dean Milmau, and many other oelebritiea et the early Victorian period, were among her friends. UNITED STATES. The Women's Rescue League, of Boeton, condemns bicycle riding by females as tend- ing to immorality. Governor Morton has signed the bill making the term of imprisonment for arson in the first degree forty years. The Chicago Directory, which will be published in a few days, will give the city a minimum, population 01 1,695,000. At San Francisco, J. K. Emmet, the ac- tor, yriale intoxioated,shot and it is believed fatally wounded his wife, Emily Lytton. School teachers professing the Roman Catholic religion have been barred out of public schools in Kansas City, Kansas. Archbishop Kenriok, of St. Louis, Mo., has been deposed by the Pope, and the Most Rev. John J. Ke.in has been ap. pointed in his stead. An explosion of dynamite occurred on a steam drill at Erie, Pa. Capt. Lattnop and Driller Harritty were torn to pieces and four others badly hurt. It is stated that the United States Gov- ernment has decided to make a thorough investigation into the Colima disaster, which cost so many lives. Professor William Gardner Hale, bead professor of Latin in the University of Chicago, is to be direptor of the new Amer- ican School of Classics in Rome for a year. The new national headquarters of the Salvation Army at New York was ded- cated by the leading officers of the army, The new building has been erected at a cost of $1,50,000. Burglars on Monday night entered the vault of the State Treasury itt Concord, N. H., and stole six thousand dollars. The burglars carried away the key of the vault, and it could not be opened until Tuesday night. Sir Julian Pauncetote, British Ambassa- dor at Washington, just before leaving kr Europe, sent to the sculptor, Dunbar, who has recently made a bust of him, a check for twice the amount agreed upon with a complimentary note and presents for the sculptor's assistants. Bishop Doane, one of the State Univer- sity regents, in and address to a graduating class at St. Agnes' School in Albany on Thursday, denounced the movement in favour of woman suffrage in a very vigor- ous manner. He believed that conferring the franchise on woman Would corrupt her moral nature and imperil the existence of the nation. Telegraphic intelligence from the United States quite confirm previous advices, and add that the satisfactory statements of grewing confidence and business are eveyr- where becoming more general and decided, In fact the augmented movement is assum ing here and there the aspect of it boom, and a few auperconservative people even think that the pace towards greater pros- perity is being made too fast to maintain. An average of the advices received,however, indicate a steady, not a spaemodie, revival of trade an over the United States, not in a few industriea but in all. Wheat is maintaining its advrnce, ootton iz going up in price; wool sales are larger than for a long tpne past, iron is quoted better, hides are firmer, aud leather is very strong. Labour is in better demand, money is plentiful wed easy, speculation is rife, and Wages are advannIng. 41.11 round the out- look is a satisfactory one. GENESAL. Twelve hundred postmen,, have struck in Buda-Peeth for an increase 'of wages. The Auatriah estimates contain an item of 20,000,000 florins for repeating rifles. The village of Saline, in the Canton of Valais, Switzerland, has been destroyed by fire, It is though probable that the troubles at Jeddah will culminate in a general Bedouin revolt, The bait and Pau Districts of France are flooded by heavy rainstorms and over- flowing streams. Forty-two persons were drovvien1 by the floods in Koberedurf, and thirty persons are miseing. Paris bankers have concluded it Chinese 4 per cent. gold loan of £16,000,000, guaranteed by Russia. Emperor William inspected the Baltic North Sea Camel, and gassed through the waterway in a yaoht. An avalanche in the Alps threw fifteen French soldiera upon Italian territory. Six of the soldiers were seriously injured. The Internationel Miners' Convention, meeting at Perla; has adopted it resolu- tion declaring in favor of an eight-hour day. M. Andree,of Stockholm, will shortly go to Paris to oversee the making of the bal- loon in whiclehe will attempb to reach the north pole. The Goverhment of Morocoo declines to guarantee the safety of travellers, and foreigners going into the interior are ware. ed ot tine etate of affairs, Germans have StoTillta four fedi, belong- ing to tho'rebellious Bakolto tribes, on the lower Saaage River, Tire hundred nativee were killed And nutty woutaded. There Wee a little riot in Vienne on The Spanieh Government has ennouroced its intention of sending tOri additional bettalions of infantry to Caba without delay to assist in quelling the insurrection. The Dowager Empress of Rossia hen senunoned Prof. Leyden, of Berlin, the eminent specialist on pulmonary nom, nleints,to examine her son,the Grand Duke George, Very favorable advices have been re oeived in St. Petersburg regarding the prospeets of a defiinte settlement of the questions remaining in dispute between the powers arid Japan. Rioters have deatroyed the French Catholio and the English and American Protestant missions at Chengtu Szechuan. The missionaries were given a safe refuge by the native officials. The Turkleh Government has promiaed the representatives of the powers that full satisfaction will be given for the outrageous behaviour of the Turkish gendarmes at Moosh. In the preemies 019, typical gathering of students of all the German universities on Saturday the foundation of a monument of Primes Bismarck as a student was laid at Andelsburg, near Koen. There was a tremendous oloud-burat over the Wurtemberg portion of the Black Forest on Wednesday, Many houses were swept away. Thirty-two persona were drowned, and nine are missing„ The Republic of Formosa has collapsed, ita President haa escaped from the island, and the foreign residents there are in safety. The native and Chinese sol - diem however, are said to be looting in all directions. Advioes received in Paris from Antanan- arivo, Island of Madagascar, say that the French edvance into the interior has been repulsed, and that the mortality among the invading troopa from fever la increas- ing„ Emperor Francis Joseph, replying on Saturday to the address of the Preaident of the Hungarian Delegation, dwelt npon the satisfactory character of the relations of Austria-Hungary with the foreign powers. The Duke of Anlialt, Germany, cele- brated his birthday recently by establish- ing a decoration for workingmen. Every labourer in his dominions who has been uwenty-five years in the employ of the Same person or firm is to get a silver medal. HUNAN BRAVES ARE COWARDS. Armed With the Rest llitagazirne Rides They Fled Before the Jain. A despatch from Shanghai says :-What amazes any foreigner in China is the com- placency with which even well.informed Chinese received the news of the successive, defeats of their armies in Menohurin First we were told that the Jepa won be- cause only raw levies, badly armed and equipped, were sent to meet them. But this excuse could nob be given when the army corps composed of the braves of Hunan were sent to the front. These troops possessed everything except the fighting spirit. They were armed wieh the latest improved guns, but the reports show that most of them had not taken the pains to learn the mechanism of their guns or how to make them effective in the field. Hence their shootingwas as wild as that of their fellow soldiers who were armed with ancient muskets. The Huneuese have long been celebrated as the best fighters in the Chinese empire, but their recent perforznances 10 Manchur- ia go far to show that they have pined their reputation more on brag and bluster than on the strength of any genuine courage. In fact, the fighting spirit seems to have de- parted from all the Chinese except a small band of the old Black Flags in the south of China. Many of these warriors, who provedtherriselves more than a match for the French in the Tonkin war, have gone to Formosa. to take service under their old leader. His idea was to make Forma - ea a base of operations and to send out ex- peditions to Manchuria.and even to Japan. He reasoned that the climate would prove the greatest obstacle to the Japanese get- ting any foothold on Formosa. He cited the failure of the Chinese to conquer the aborigines as the best proof of the terrors of the malaria of the island, the dreaded chang, or eapor, which rises on the collet, as well as in the interior, when the sun appears, and which is so deadly to the stranger. All his plans have been upset by the promptness with which the Japanese have moved upon Formosa and the spirit they show to gain complete possession of the rich ialand. Malaria will have no terrors for them, and it is safe to say that in two or three years they will have explor- ed and occupied the wildest parts and subs slued the savage aborigines. Hitaeked the Quellileat' Jones--" Come, go &thing with me old chap." Brown-" Can't do it ; juet signed the pledge." A Strange Cremation. One of the strangest coffins ever told 61 is thab for whioh the British War Depart ment le said to be reepoiesible. The story is that a workman engaged in +meting metal for bhe manufacture of ordnatioe of the Woolwich Arsenal, lost hie balance and fell into a caldroh containing twelve tone of molten steel. The metal was at white heat, and the man was utterly cow' in leee time than it teltes to tell Gi it, The War Department mithorities held a conference, and deeided not to profane the dead by using the metal in the menu - facture of ordnanoe'and that masts of metal hi wail &cefly buried, and a Clhuroh of Enge land clergyman read the eervice for the dead over it Chikiran Cry far Pitcher's Castor* THEE MAY SOON BE WAR. BRITAIN MAY COMMENCE OPERA TIMIS AT CONSTANTINOPLE. The Armenian a illartilag Questlaa— Evince and Amide entianeere hi Their Protests and England Will Eight it Out Alone—The Situation is Serious and Press and Public are Talkilig of War. 4 eorreenendent cables from London as followie-goude are thickening with omin- ous swiftness about England. Saturday's Speaker, wiiieh i the intitnate organ of the Government, talks about the possible necessity of an English fleet steaming from I3eyrout to Constantinople and ocoupying Mitylene, or Samos, or easier still, baking proper edvantage of the fad that Cyprus is under British control. It says in SO many worde, that it Runde and France withdraw from concerted pressure on the Porte the British Government will have to go on alone. eee "Our duty now is to see that our words are backed by deeds." I quote this brief sentence as perhaps the moat important which has been printed in Europe for a long time. That they open up very sininter possibilities before -the Britieh people is only boo clear, ENGLAND IN A POSITION FULL OF DANGERS, Fully a year ago those despatches laid stress upon the remark of trained states- men here, made to me half in prophecy, half In actual knowledge, to the effect, that Lord Rosebery would try by the de- vice of a big foreign splash to make good politically what he was -losing at,home, One is bound te recall this now, when the Premier's personal organ talks as it does about the next general election being fought amid an Amenian Atrocity Agita- tion. No one can say that the situation as it exists has been deliberately planned, but there has been all along a plain dis- position to fish in troubled waters on the part of the English Ministry, and in one way or another England has certainly been put into a position full of danger, from which the Ministerial papers now are tell- ing her that she mud out her w ay out, sword in hand. RUSSIA AND FRANCE UNCONCERNED. The position itself is, of course, nothing new. England is alyre.ys drifting intoemoh positions, and soinehow-heayen only knows how -stumbling out again, with nobody much the woree for the experience. But this time there is an element of deliber- atenas which is usually lacking. The English papers have had e.n overwhelming monopoly of Armenian outrage literature, Russia and France have not in the least made the subject one of popular concern, and their govereirnents have consented to join England in representations to the Porte on general diplomatic grounds, without any pretence that their peoples were excited about the thing. They are free to drop out to -morrow, with no further explanation than that they have done all that they promised to do, which was to tell the Turk he really ought to behave better. But England is in a different position. Thousands of her politicians, pulpit orators and public spirited men stand ready and eager, waiting to ruah forth, fiery arose in head, to preach a new crusade againet the infidel and commit England headlong to an armed solitary intervention in the East. It would be hard to say just how far the Ministry itself is responsible for this highly inflamed and perfectly organized public opinion, under the pressure of which it conveniently finds itself now being pushed along toward the gravest possible crisis; but there the facts are and they are serious enough. SULTAN .EhLIEVES FRANCE AND RUSSIA. mu. AID HIM What has been said about the very doubt- ful good faith of Ruesia and Frence in the matter only borrows new force from the events of this week. If the Sultan knew that all three powers were in solemn earnest he would not be shilly-shallying in this contemptuous fashion. It becomes more aud more evident that he possesses quite different information. Everybody here feels in his bones that at some point in the game England will aud• denly find hereelf alone with the whole burden of the adventure on her own unaid- ed shoulders, and very likely with her present partners ranged egainst her to boot. RUSSIA.N ASTUTENESS IN TEM EAST, This Turkish business is so immediate and urgent that people here are not m- ing much attention to events on the other side of Asia. They have apparently, how- ever, a close relation to suudry phases of the intrigue- on the Bosphorus. Russia, which historisally is a borrowing govern- ment, is posing as a lender to China. She gets s80,000,000 from ehs French at 4 per cent., lends it to China at 5 per cent., and takes upon herself the undivided reopen- sibility for securing theldebt This will explain the presence of her soldiers in Manchuria and numerous other things of the sort which we have been hearing about during the summer. This ingenious devine by which Ruestagets the trangible rewards of Japan's vintories is not eividly appreci- ated in Paris, where Russian securities tumbled heavily yesterday on the Source, but it is a beautiful Slavic conception none the lees, and since the French are schooling themselves to admire all things Muscovite, they will have to accept it as one of their new partner's characteristic little foibles. So Europe stands at the end of &Week, in -which apprehensions of trouble have been steadily piling up day by day. For once even the politicians in the •House of Commons are thinking more about the foreign outlook than about domestic wran- gles, and all signs seem to indicate that they will have reason to be still more en- grossed in it as midsummer appease:shoe. The Summer Oyster. The oyster now is out of date, He's getting long and slim ; He's feeling mighty daily for There are no Ws On him. A Modern Cottage, WM' Paper.Efanger-We'll have to paper right over the old paper. We Can't get this paper off without taking theeplaeter along with it Owner (modern oottage)-Beeause • the 1)aper sticks to the plaster Paper•Hanger-No, because the piaster ti aka to the taper. e) netelsoneitosemite, Scars EMIllSi011 Aiannosamonnimmamisor of Cqd-liver Oil, with Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda, is a oanstruotive fo`bd that nourisb,es, enriches the blood, creates solid flesh, stops wasting an gives strength. It is for all Wasting Diseases like Consumption, Scrofula, Anomie, Marasmus; or for Coughs arid Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Weak Lungs, Doss of Plesh and General Debility. Scott's Emulsion has no equal as Nourishment for Babies and Growing Children. Buy only the genuins.6t up in salmon -colored wrapi5er Send for 'ample on Scott's .Etindsion, FREE. Scott & Bowne, Belleville. All Druggists. 50c. and SI. eemegemgemungsmagagaggeoggigisgungemsni , 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- tul Father Has? 'ay. MRS. JAMES MoRITCHIE AND DAUGHTER, A leading local physician, whose profession takes him 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, vihich sap the system and prevent proper development. In many eases the doctors are powerless to cure these troubles. They cana 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 retnedies and doctor- ed with her in one way and another, but nothing gave relief, Seeing South American Nervine advertised, as par- ticularly efficacious in ner yeas die. 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, she 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 nerirous prostration, and has found very great relief." Whether the patient be an or woman, young or old, South American Nervine provides a complete medium for restoration to health. It i a, medicine differing absolutely frop3 every other. A cure is effected by application to the nerve centres of the human system, and science has proved that when these nerve centres trre kept healthy the whole body is healthy. Per thesereasons failure is imposs- ible. C. LVTZ 'Sole Whiilesale and Retail Agent for Exeter. .Thos. Wicacaxr, Crediton Drug Store, Agent. ',GREAT. Lab !tat once by using kgater Days' Sent and used everywbete. AVOW° medicine tiled sialeM21111111111111111111111111011111.20130 by itself. Kins every feral of external trr intertai gain, Attlgi)0(.,)a, laairtXtiter Aft5 Dort—A tehapoonful in ball glass or water or Intik (wartn r convenient), frail to “Gitin and tear Xt" iviien bad a pain, You can grin and Wi- ll eaO: