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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1895-7-25, Page 6TEE EXETER TIMES .7amoe E. RiohoZson.. Almost Passes Belief Xr. Jas. E. Nicholson, Florenceville, N. B., Struggles for Seven Long "Tears with CANCER ON THE LIP, AND IS CURED BY AYE Sarsite fgattitel.1.041. patina 16.0.4=503 Mr.Nicholson says: "I consulted (lec- tors who prescribed for me, but to no purpose; the cancer began to Eat into the Flesh, spread to my chin, and I suffered M , agony for seven long years. Finally.% 1 Uegan taking .1,yer's Sarsaparilla.lo a week or two I noticed a Decided Improvement. Encouraged by this result. I perse- vered, uutil in a month or so the sore muter my chi u began to heal. In three months my lip began to heal, and, after using the Sarsaparilla for six months, the last trace of the cancer disappeared." Ayers °nil/ Sarsaparilla Admitted at the World's Fair. 4.1"IELTV4i -P.I.L.LS Regulate- the Bowes. POWDERS Cnre .910X HEADACHE and Neuralgia in 20 smtur29, aro Coated Tongue, Dizzt- regulate the owels. VERY NICE TO TAKE. b PRICE Rs CENTS AT DRUG STORES rtess,.Bilionsness, Pain in the Side, Constipation, Torptd Liver, Bad Breath. to stay cured also CENTRAL Drug Store FANSON'S BLOCK. A full stook of all kinds of Dye -stuffs and package Dyes, constantly ort hand. Win an's Condition Powd- the best in the mark- et and always mph. Family recip- ees carefully prepared at Central Drug Store Exete C. LU'IwZ. DOMINION PARLIAMENT, ,r.••••••• Seesien-Seventlx Parliament. =Gnus' melee Sir Charlea a, Tupper, in reply to Mr. Grieve, aaid John Connor, of St- John. N.R, was employed by the Government in handling the twine inanufaotured et the Kiugston penitentiery, He was employed on commission, receiving ten per eent. on guaranteed sake, CIVIL SERVICE PRAVDS. Mr. Montague, in answer to Mr. Brodeur, weld the Government had not in its employ any of the persons found gellty of fraud at the time of the Civil Service examinations at Montreal in 1893, OsIssus rinsLIO4.TIO11. Mr, Montague,in anawer to Mr. Brunesel, said the compilation of the last census was now complete, and publication would, be made as soon as the printing could be com- pleted. The part relating to agrioulture was inoluded in the forthcoming volume. Anis DIAL LEGISLATION. Mr, Leerier -I suppose the hon. gentle- man will iaow make to the Rouse the state ment that he promised on Friday last. Mr. Foster -Yes. Mr. Speaker, I desire to state that the Governmeuthas hied under ts consideration the reply of the Manitoba Legislature to the remedial order of the 2Ist March, 1895, and after °erste' delib. oration has arrived. at the following conclusions :-Though there may be differ- ences of opinion as to the, exact meaning of WI I CURE YO We guarantee. tliodd's Kidney Pills to curt arty case of Bright: £i.se, Diabetes, lettilsago, Dropsy. Rheumatism., Heart .Disease, Female Troubles. Impure lilatal-ra• money refinided, Sold by altdcalsrs in inedleine, or by mail on receipt of srice, soc, par atm, or aix boxes - DR. L. A. SMITH ee Cees.. Tome. - 4,1 Doctor What isiood for etearishA the Sea lp and Hair, I seem to have, tried Overyrholir ar1/4t1 am in despair Why Ars R, the very •0..eStt'hill is PA lin *TOtt‘ SOAP ir is spleridid for c the head itrevents dryae5 thus pt.tt5 art end to Dandroff and Fitshas the hair AiGely. 25.c FOR, LARGE TABLEI the reply in question, the Government believes that it may be interpreted as holding out thine hope of an amicable seetlement of the Manitoba school question on the basis of possible action by the Manitoba Government and the Legislature and tlae Dominion Government is most unwilling to take may action which can be interpreted as forestalling or precluding such a desirable consummation. The Government has also considered the difficulties to be met with in preparing and perfecting legislation on so important and intricate a question during the last hours of the session. The Government has therefore decided not to ask Parliament to deal with remedial legislation during the present session. A communication will be sent immediately to the Manitoba Govern. menton thesubject,with a viewto ascertain. ing whether the Government is disposed to make a settlement of the question which will be reasonably satisfactory to the min- ority ot that province without making it necessary to call into requisition the powers of the Dominion Parliament. A session of the present Parliament will he called together to meet not later than the first Thursday of January next. If by that time the Manitoba Government fails to make a satisfactory arrangement to remedy the grievance of the minority the Dominion Government will be nrepa.red at the next session of Parliarnenn to be called as above stated, to introduce and press to a conclu- sion such legislation as will afford an ade- quate measure of relief to the said minority, bated upon the lines of the judgment of the Privy Council and the remedial orde7of the 219tMarch, 1895. Mr, Lariviere-I regret the present attitude of the Government. (Order, order,) Mr. Speaker -There is nothing before the House. THOUSAND ISLAND Faux. Mr. Taylor moved, "That in the °pin. ion of this House it is expedient that a few of the large islands in the River St. Law- rence which are yet undisposed of should be reserved for the use of the public as a Dominion park, The Government was charged with selling islands too freely. The feet was that, only a few islands had been sold, and by public auction, for prioes ranging from $100 to $200 an acre. The previous Administration sold islamis at from $2 to .55 per acre, He wished the Government to take these islands from the Indian Department, and create apark out of the large ones. Mr. Daly said the Government could not transfer the Wanda from the Indian Department as they were held in trust for the Indians. INDIAN GRIEVANCES. Mr. Laurier, in moving for memorials, petitions, and other documents from the Indians of St. Peter's reserve, Manitoba, and of all correspondence in relation there- to, seed there were two tribee on the reserve, who frequently quarrelled. Another complaint was that the Indians were compelled to observe the close fishing season, when they did not fish for trade. He thought they should be permitted to fish all the year round, as they only fished for food. Complaint was also made that treaty money was diverted by agents. Mr. Daly thought 65 petitions had been received from the reserve since 3877, all of which had been investigated. The whole trouble was, he thought, caused by different tribes living on the reserve. He had never heerd any complaint about treaty money being diverted, as the agents would not dare to put money thews other use Shan that for which it was inteladed. Mr. Laurier proposed to amend themotion by confining his request to the period since January lat, 1892, The motion as amended wee adopted. DEVELOPMENT OF DAIRYING. Mr, Davin moved, "That in the opinion of the House it would be expedient to apply $20,000 to aid in establishing oream- eries and cheese factories in the North. West Territories, and that this sum should be oonsidered as an addition to the immigration grant; that, fureher, the Government should at once take into consideration the propriety of giving a bonus on butter exported to the London markets as ie done by some of the Austra- lien °denies, and else of rising the Customs duty from 4e. per pound to 6e,, in order to enable the NorthsWest farmers to compete with Australian exporters in the British Columbia markets," The develop. ment of the dairy indrstry, such as he propoeedi would be the greateet inducement to settlers to tome to the North -Went. Mr. Rinfret moved in amendment "That the Howie could not fled any reason for granting protection tit the public expense to creameries itt the North.Weth not afforded to the other provinces in the Dominion." Mr, Montages thought hon. gentlemen would agree that any proposition to de- velop the butter or cheese industries of the omintry Wats worthy or aupport. Iriatrum Lions and experimette in deirying were now beireg carried on in nearly, all the previews:0 of the Dominion, and the Government propesed to follow the same PelioY in tile NOrtinVItTeth and Britielt Celnnsbia ea was ita operselon eleewhere. There wee et present le creemery at Mthae Taw, and. he woe hiformed by the Dairy Commissiouer atm Wattmeters would. go through the North.Weet Territory during the present year for the purpoth of calling meetinga and giving instruotion wherever it would be received, The same thing Wald be done in British Columbia, though, of necessity, the instruotteu week' there be given on la more limited, ticale, on aecount of the population. Though the ostern. Mont oould not pledge iteelt to expend the large sum Liaised by the hon. gentleman, he had authority to say that the Gevern- ment was most sympathetic with regard to the industry in the Territories, and would not fail te nth every legitimate method of promoting the industry, whether by send- ing instruotors there or in expending on it a certain, aun1 of money each year. He thought Perliament might well hesitate to grant the bonus asked for. 0. et et. PREIGIIT RATES. .Mr. Davin moved "That the commission- ers appointed to inquire into the Canadian Pacific railway frieght rates have reported Shat the Canadian Pacifio railway existing rates for grain are from one-half to one oent per 100 pounds less than the Dakota schedule from all points west of Regina, which lath, however, applied to Edinontou and Prince Albert, would be six and seven cents lower than the Canadian Pacific tariff. Thet as regards live stook the Canadian Pacific railway rate runs at $1,35 to $1.84 per hundred pounds to Montreal, while the Northern Pacific and Great Northern charge from $1.63 `to $1,91 for the same distance. That as regards cora and lumber the comparisons show still more favourable rates to the Canadian pub- lio. That this House would suggest to the Government that it would be well to open negotiations with the president of the Canadian Pacific railway with a view of coming to an arrangement with thet com- pany to carry for the next twenty years produce from the North•West to the Sea- board ten per cent. cheaper than at present, on condition ot the Government guarantee- ing bonds to a certain amount for twenty years and should the railways of the Lenited States lower their rate, the Cana- dian Pacific railway shall lower theirs pro- portionately." Mr, Haggart said he had not considered the report of the commission. Even by the hon. gentleman's own statement the Can- adian farmers in the North-West were better off than the American farmers. }le did not know that there was a prospect of the Government entertaining the proposi- tion. He did not see that the Government' oould guarantee bonds to tne Canadian Pacific railway and impose an indebtedness on the whole country in order that cheaper rates might be charged from the North- West to the seaboard. Mr. Martin said the commission was a farce. Canadian Pacific railway rates were most burdensome, and something must be done. THE FARM. Protecting Vines Eroin Striped Beetles. The worst enemy the encumber, sguatth, PtluemePtrkipined4illideenItele.°4 vinesltnoh tonveis only eabth: tUt. he pulp from the underside of the leaves, but destroys the stalk, and if the soil is loose it eats the stalk below the groan(' ; therefore it is a difficult matter to fight ib with insecticides. For a garden where less than two dozen hills are planted, the safest and obeapest way to proteot ,the vinea is by oovering of mosquito netting or cheese ototh, out into pieces 18 or 20 in. square. Therm, to add to their durability, should be first dipped in oil and wrung as dry as possible. Now take a piece of No. 12 or 14 wiree-galvanized it possible, - cut into 20-1nch lengths, bend five inches of each end at right angles, and set them two inches into the ground at the corner of each hill, as seen at a a in the engrav- ing. The netting is uow spread over this frame, and the edges are covered with a little sell to keep it in phew. This thin covering, while admitting plenty of light and rain as it falls, also keeps out the lit- tle striped beetles, Cucumbers can thus be protected until they send out laterals, and even if the vines press against the top and sides it doee, not injure them. Put on She protectors just as the plants are break- ing through the ground, removing them in about three weeks. Kept in.a city place when not in uae they will do good service eight or ten years. MANITOBA. RAILWAY COMPANY. Mr. Martin, on the motion that .the House adopt the report of the Railway Committee,moved that the order respecting the Lake Manitoba Railway and Canal Company be restored to the paper. The bill. hadbeen rejected by the committee this morning, and he • contended that it would not conflict with the Winnipeg and Great Norehern railway, and saw no reason why She bill should not be reported. The motion was adopted as amended. DUTY ON MONUMENTS. Mr. Watlece, in answer to Mr. Brodeur, said the monuments erected to Mahlon. neuve and. Sir John Macdonald were de- livered after an arrangement had been made for passing an order in Council auth- orizing free admission. The case of the Chenier monument was not exactly similar. No understanding had been arrived at, and therefore the department had no power to authorize free entry. GLASS INDUSTRY. Mr. Foeter, in answer to Mr. Choquette,* said the Government had received a petition with reference to assisting the glass industry at Riviere du Loup, but was not in a position to go any further this year than it had in assisting the silver. lead smelting. THE CRIMINAL CODE, The House went into committee on the Criminal Code, Sir. Charles H. Tupper, speaking with reference to the clause from Mr. Charltores bill prohibiting the publication and sale of Sunday newspapers, stated. that while be sympathised with the hon. gentlemen's motives he would prefer that the subject should be dealt with by the Local. Legisla.. tures, and not incorporated into the criminal laws of the country. He was one of those who believed they should hesitate and carefully consider before they dragged into the Dominion subjects which properly came within the scope of the Local Legisla- tures, simply by making them crimes. Speaking Inc himself, he proposed to vote against the clause as it stood in committee. Mr. Tisdale pointed. out that the obnoxious clause rendering a newsboy liable to a month's imprisonment if he sold a paper on Sunday, although there was no provincial law against it, still remained in the bill, and said he would oppose the clause on his a000unt. Mr. Laugelier moved that the clause be struck out. The motion majority. STREET RAILWAY 'FRAUDS. Sir Charles H, Tupper, on the clause re- specting frauds perpetrated on street rail- ways, which was amended to meet the aupposed case of the Toronto Railway Company,, said he desired to have the claims dropped on more mature consideration. The frauds had referenoe to the nee of -transfer tickets, and it might happen on busy days and crowded cars that the con. d actors might inadvertentleepu rich tra.nsfers wrongly, thereby endangering the liberty of the oitizen by holding them responsible for fraud upon subsequently presenting the ticket, The railway should provide for the case by appointing additional conductore if neoeasary, and not retort to Parliament for special legislation. He believed the Toronto company wanted to make nee of the °lame at proposed to be amended as a deterrent and post it in their oars, He moved that the clause be dropped. Mr, McCarthy thoughe six months was an exthasive punishmene for attempting fraudulently to ebtain paseage on the Tail. way, vessel, or carriage. Mr. Edgar moved in amendment to the amendment that the words "oarriage, tramway, and street railway" be etruck out. The amendment was lost. The motion was adopted and the disuse dropped. The committee rose and reported pro- gretia. (Thildren cry for Pitcher's Castori4 was carried by a large TIII8 IS NIDE MEDICINE. FOOD FOR SORE 'THROAT, COLDS AND EVEN CONsUMPTION. Crayilidt Broth -- A Strengthening Decoction or SII MIS alld Frega Aledleal itailtiee of Elam SUOil good, oldrfaahioned decoctions as sage tea, catnip and herb brews have for years been prescribed for various ills and ailments to which flesh is heir, but pala- table dishes of nourishing foods for the cure of coughs, oolds and sore throats, as well as consumption, are now said to have acquired quite a yogi% among a thrbain class of physicians. While nob wholly new, they are at least a departure from present methods, and this is suffioient to recommend them to many people. The firat reoipe is fcir those who are in delicate health caused by sore throat, knd would notbedespised by thetnost fastidious of hungry people, albeit the name is a trifle against its popularity. MUO/LAGINOIM R74:0FR. Take a young fowl, out it into mall portions aid wath thoroughly. Put these into a saucepan oontaining three quarts of water and add three pounds of very lean, white veal, also two turnips, a carrot and Weed Collections. Weeds have been neglected in more ways than one, and just so far as they are over- looked and left to themselves, the greater will be the ourae. If any one glances over the premium list of any of our thousand town, country and other fairs, he seldom sees a prize offered for the best collection of weeds. It may be incompatible with our ideas of the fitness of things to have a good coilection of anything that is bad, and yet the fact remains that 'there is no class of plants, an increasing knowledge about whith is more imperative than these same ugly weeds, writes Prof, Halstead. A few dollars expended in awards by each fair association would bring together a list of plant pests, the exhibition of which would not only surprise but greatly instruct those who see them. lt is not less import- ant for the farmers of any district to know of the arrival of a new weed thou of the advent of a new fruit or grain. Exhibi. lions of weeds at fairs are, therefore,one of She best means of extending and increasing the knowledge of our plant pests. If every fair association would this year offer prizes for the largest named collection of weeds, it is evident that much good would be done; and if the offer were continued from year to year, the farmers of the next generation would be far better able to raise profitable crops than those of to -day. a head of celery chopped finely. Boil all together and skim eonstantly as the num arises. After the albumen oontained in the mes.t'has been thus carefully removed with the skimmer, add two ounces of pre- pared Ceylon moss and mix thoroughly. , Boil slowly for an tour and a quarter,then strain through a cloth into an earthen, vessel. Keep in a cool place until wanted. This brotb is both nutritious and cooling to the system, as well as benefioial for all throat diseases. Here is another dishpossessing medicinal qualities for consumptives. It does not sound very appetizing, but those who have tried it are loud in their praises of its remedial powers : SNAILS ARO FROGS FOR CONSUMPTION. Rearing Heifers. Why cannot the farmers who are located far from markets so that trucking or fruit growing or even milk production is unpro- fitable, firid a remunerative use for their pastures (many of which are hilly and totally unfit Mr the plow) and meadows in breeding and raising heifers of heavy milk- ing strains, They need not be pure bred. Farms devoted to heifer raising would need to grow little besides large grass crops with a few acres in corn. Ensilage or a few roots would no doubt help to keep the heifers thrifty during the winter srason. It is a mistake to think that the heifer can winter acceptably on coarse meadow hay alone. To be readily salable the heifers must be well grown, not starvelings. Where the milk is not much of an item, these heifer calves can be kept on milk from the mother much longer than would be practicable where the milk was more in demand. In fact, it would dearly geem that many farmers could make heifer growing more profitable than anything else under condi- tions that surround them. Take two tiozen garden snails and the legs of the same number of trogs, clean all' thoroughly and then bruise them together in a mortar, after which put all in a stewpan with two finely chopped turnips, a little salt, a quarter of au ounoe of hay saffron and three pints of water. Stir until the boiling point is reached, then skim well and set the pan back on the stove to simmer for a half hour, after which strain by pres- sure through sAairly fine cloth. Here is a recipe that is in use largely in England among the coast people during the spring and hot season. It is agreeable to the taste and is designed to purify the blood. This recipe is used by Queen ViO- Soria : ortaYstsis BROTH. Cut iuto very small pieces two pounds of very white veal and pound well • then add three dozen crayfish and a handful ef green chevril and again pound all so as to thoroughly bruise the crayfish. Put the entire mass into a pot with three pints of water and let it come to a bon, then put it back on the range and let it simmer gently for three-quarters of Dal hour to extract all the curative properties. Strain carefully. A cloth is the best method, and that adoptedin the royal kita, A large cupful should be taken *AL, patient a short time before the ,regular meals. CLAM JUICIE FOR DISORDERED STOMACH, This broth will be found most acceptable before breakfast, and is so easily prepared that it can be made fresh daily. Put into a sauce pan, agate or prOcels.in lined, six medium sized Warne, previously scrubbed and washed of all sand,and cover with water, Cover and let boil until all the clams are opened, then take out the shellfish and boil for one minute, carefully skimming ; strain and season With salt and pepper, add a little butter and serve piping hot. This method has the advantage over the method of first opening the clams and then boiling, in that all the restorative proper- ties of the clams as well as the lime in the shells are preserved. BROTH FOR PECTORAL TROUBLES. Boil in three quarts of water a young fowl,well cut up; add a little salt and skim well. Wash thoroughly two tablespoonfuls of pearl barley and one ounce of marsh- mallow roots, well shredded the better to extract the healing qualities, and continue boiling for one hour. This remedy has been thoroughly tested and is highly re- garded for its efficaciousness. For convalescents beef tea affords wonder- ful nourishment if properly prepared and the proper method is as easy as any other if these instructions be followed: BEEP TEA. Carefully prepare two pounds of lear gravy beef by removing all fat, sinew on skin and cut into pieces the size of a hick- ory nut, Add three pints of water, a.nd when all come to a boil, skim and place on the side of the stove to simmer for an hour, then strain through a fine .napkin, that none of the fibrea may remain. There is more need of judicious cooking "In the ortlizary household," says an emi- nent physician, 'than there is of medicines; half of the ailments of every family can be corrected by common senso, coupled with the administration of proper .food." Are we about to enter on an era of food culture? Who knows ? Honest Cheese. As a rule, the worth of cheese is calm lated on its fat content, the pounds of fat m a cheese being rated at 25 cents a pound and the case in at about two cents, though many grocers seem determined to sell half and even more skim cheese at full cream prices. While some water is needed in cheese to make it plastic, usually one- third, there is an attempt made by many makers to overdo this matter. The best intereets of all would be . promoted by stringent laws, that a fair exhibit of the water and fat composition of thecae should be stenciled on each cheese, eo that the buyer shall be made acquainted with what he is buying, if he desires, and alsoprotect him against both fraud and imposition of heavy filled cheese, whioh has had the butter fat all removed, and its place supplied with neutral oils of unknown (to the buyer) origin. Fruit a, Pure Food. Fruit is the only unadulterated food in our markets. We may have filled cheese, but never filled peaches. We may have adulterated sugar, but we have yet to hear of adulterated green apples. Our oeffee may be mixed with ohicery and clay, but we cannot mix hicitorynuts with plums and eell the mixture Inc pure plums. Pee. plot are becoming tired of adulteration and will turn more end more to the use of fruit. Therefore, that fruit growing may be made 6nel-totally profitable to our farmers. But in order to succeed in this, tat in any other occupation, we must keep up with the times, We meat study our surrotuidings Dud DMA Ourselves of every oppottunity and conditioe which promises to be -to our Ad Mk tage. eeSo work the honey -bees, oreateree that by a rill° in meter° teach the tlet. of order to 9, peopled kingdonao-Shakespeare, um, .without doubt, be cured in its early stages. It is a. battle from, the start, but with the right kind ,of weapons properly used it can be overcome and the insidious foe vanquished. Hope, courage, proper. exercise, Will- power, and the regular and continuous use of the 'best nourishing food -medicine in existence— Scott's1sion --the wasting can. be arrested, the lungs healeu, the cough cured, bodily energies renewed and the physical powers made to assert themselves and kill the germs. that are beginning to find lodgment in th.e lungs. This renowned -preparation, that has no doubt cured hundreds of thousands of incipient cases of Comsump- tion, is simply Cod-liver Oil emulsified and made palatable and easy of assimilation, combined with. the. ypophosphites, the great bone, brain and nerve tonic. Scott & Bowne Belleville. All Druzzists. 50c. and $1: • Liquor Traffic in Afriea.. ' In a letter to the London Times, Bishop Herbert Tugwell, at Western Equatoria Africa,gives an appalling account, of the pre- valence of desunkenness among the natives of his exteesive missionary diocese, owing to the unchecked importation of gin. In She course of his letter he quotes the extra- ordinary apology made far the traffic by a gentleman holding an important colonial appointment at Lagos. Speaking at a diocesan conference this official had con• demised the opposition to the traffic on the ground that but for the reveuu e arising from it, they woeld be unable to carry on the work of oivilite.tion and humanization among the nativee. All the great improve. mente, roads, eta., must be given up. The questima was, therefore, whether it would be better to let the natives frive the means of intoxication, and therevertlceritan ad- vantages of trainng, Oommunioation, etc., or to deprive them of both. Bishop Tugwell did not pretend to eater ittt.0 such a controversy. He thought it enough to state the simple facts as he and others had witnessed them, and they Were cot. tainly dreadful in any Mum, bet eapecially so when the relations of the viotims to the trader% were taken Ian Odflitifienabi011. MOTHER AND DAUGHTER Rejoice Together. Nine Year Old Maggie McRitchie, a Victim of Chronic. Fainting Spells and Nervous Weakness, Completely Cured tly South American Nervine After all Other Efforts had failed. The Mother, a Sufferer From Nervous Prostration and Indigestion, Likewise Cured. Hear What the Thank. ul Father Has to .ay. MRS. JAMES MatIT011 A leading local physician, whose profession takes him among the chil- dren of the various public institutions, remarked to tbe writer, that one would hardly believe that so many children were affected by nervous troubles, which sap the system and prevent proper development. In many cases the doctors are powerless to cure these troubles. They can relieve the suffering little ones, bit in South American Nervirte we have a medicine that does more than siroply 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 Inc 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 anti doctor- ed with her in one way and another, but nothing gave relief, Seeing South American Nervine advertised, as par- ticularly efficacious in nervous dig. IE AND DAUGHTER. . 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 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 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 has proved that when these nerve eentres are kept healthythewhole body is healthy:. For these reasons failure is imposs- ible. C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter, Tilos. Wicrmr, Orediton Drug Store, Agent, ve•melli seetteremsneesetemerlesistateeresigtemeeeiriers ree COLIC, cramps and Cholera Morbus, Diearlicea, Dys- entery and Summer Com- plaints, Outs, Burns, and Bruises, Bites, Stings, and Sunburn can all be prom» ly relieved by Pneetat De.ves' Pain Killer5 ete eee eteeet DqsT-OnCteioflOOflflil In 1 bit ait,5 of Water or milk (worm it co seeneet)