The Exeter Times, 1895-8-8, Page 3'
.a
f."
THE EXETER TINES
AYER'S
Hair
VIGOR
Restoree natural
color to the tar,
and also prevoiate
it falling out. Mrs,
IK, W. B'envelote, ot
Digby, N. $,, says;
"A little more
than two years ago
my hair
to tin).
i
)41-
graT
and fa 1
t stite .., out. A
ter the
use of
ne bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor my
,hair was restored to its original
eolor and ceased falling out. An
Decasional application has since kept
the hair in good condition."—Mrs,
El. P. FENWICK, Digby, $.
Growth
•MillY1101•1111111•18NaminsiNciesto
of Hair.
0.1111111•1110MaSVOMINIOSIMMINNI
, "Eight years ago, I had the vario-
1oid, and lost my hair, which previ-
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a variety of preparations, but with- •
•out beneacial result, till I began to
fear 1 .should. be permanently bald.
About six months ago, my husband
brought home a bottle of Ayer's
Hair Vigor, and I began at once to
use it. In a short time, new hair
began to appear, and there is now
every prospect of as thick a growth
of hair as before my illness." —
Mrs. A. WEBER, Polymnia St., New
Orleans, La,
AYER'S HAIR VIGOR
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.446
EMU OF tORPSFI.,
THERE IS CHOLERA IN THE SUL.
TAN'S HOLY WELL.
"limn or oostesite,"
The horrors 'ot the cholera that in 1893
attacked Mecoa and its seaport, Djeddah
(ntitle), for Mecca is really an Miami town,
are difficult to picture, Dr, Le Grend, who
was in the regent at tbat time, states that
the country was eovered with "hills of
The Itorrthie Plague Spot at eteeea Whtch ocirpitele" and that "unless you looked up
Pierced); Contagion AU Over tete Civil- you would see (termites oa every hand.'
id worid amnia Now the Meat of a Gravee 80 feet long, 50 feet wide and 17
Fresh Outbreak. feet deep were dug, and the bodies were
thrown into them without ceremony. O
If cholera appears in this country thts neof these graves would be filled in helf a day.
Sufficient burial officere (maid not be found,
and the Turkish Guverntnent recruited
1,000 Soudaeese purely for burying. This
corps did not prove effeotive, for within a
week half of its number was taken down
with the scourge.
Of a terrible and a strange picturesque
nese were sonie of the details. The Ottoman
officers welly put up the bodies of the
dead, and, to their everlasting shame, the
bodies of those approaching death, at
auction, the sale giving the privilege of
rifling the garments, the only stipulation
being that the corpses should be taken
outside the ciity walls and 'buried. The
pirates of the desert paid goodly sums ftr
the privileges granted when it is considered
that before the bodies were taken out for
auotioniog the crafty officers stripped them
of their most important valuables, They
were then eold with the well known
oommeroial coudition attached, "Ae they
are," which means, "without examination."
THE POWERS 00.01?ERATE.
On the authority of Dr. Proust, famous
Inspector_Generel of the Samitaty Servioe
of France, the dangers of Mecca, delete
cannot be overestimated. In a recent
interview he referred to the fact that a
year ago, in the international health con.
ference held between the European powers
which was presided over by President
Casimer-Perier and called to order in Paris,
all the priucipalities of Europe agreed to
co-operats in taking the most stringent
measures to shut out the 'merges which
might come from the Orient. England and
Turkey were among the most ardent of the
nations in promieing to do their very best
to prevent European plagues. Bunnow that
the danger is approaching, it cannot be
found that either the Ottoman Empire or
Britain is making preparations to iuterpose
She slightest obstacle in its path.
With full foree do these facts present
themselves when it is considered that at
least 75 per cent. of the pilgrims, of 75,000
of them were transported by English or
Turkish agencies. Out of the 100,000 it is
estimated that 15,000 came from India,
6,000 from Egypt,9,000 from Persia, 12,000
from Java (Malays), 16,000 from the
Ottoman Empire, including Syria and
Arabia ; 22,000 from the district immed-
iately surrounding Mecca and 6,000 from
the northern states of Africa..
The Persians, or the most of .thein,
embarked from ports on the Persian Gulf.
These are the Javanese Malays, as well as
the British subjects of India, amounting
altogether to nearly 40,000 would naturally
find their way to Mama in Engliah bottoms.
The Egyptians, the North Atrica pilgrims
and the Central Asians the British would
likewise naturilly carry. Over 40,000 of
its own subjects the Ottoman Empire would
have complete hygienic control.
KISSING THE BLACK STONE.
When the pilgrim enters upon the lest
stage of his journey he prostrates himself
twice in prayer and assumes the pilgrim's
garment (the threat), two seamless wrap.
pers, one thrown loosely over one shoulder,
the other gathered about the waist. He is
not allowed by the ancient ritual through
all the ensuing fortnight to cut his nails, or
anoint his head. He lifts his hands heaven-
ward and. cries "Oh, God, I purpose
making this pilgrimage. May the service
be easy for me. Accept it from me."
As he goes on his journey he sings the
song of the pilgrim, known as the
Talbyia, which commences with the cry
" Lebbaika 1" Upon reaching Mecca he
bathes, and then, going to the temple,
kisses the famous black stone. Then he
runs around the edifice seven times, three
times hurriedly and four times with
ineasured step, at each round rekissing the
atone. Then he rune to the top of the
little mount Safa, and, turning towards the
temple at a distance, he ,cries : "Surely
God hath aided Hie servant, the Prophet,
and hath put to flight the armies of the
infidel with His own power." The trial of
his energy is then to come. From the top
of Safe he must run to the surnmib of
Mount Marwa.h. This is a task for even
the youngest and most zealous devotee.
The laet ceremonyis kissing the black
stone and the throwing of pebbles " at the
devil."
Burckhardt, the traveller speaks thus of
the Keith& and the black atone: "The Kaaba
is an oblong, massive structure, 18 paces in
length, 14 in breadth and from 35 to 40
feet in height. It is constructed of the
gray Mecca stone, in large blocks of differ-
ent sizes joined together in a very rough
manner and with bad cement. At the
northeast corner of the Kaaba, near the
door, is the famous t black stone;' it forms
a pert of the sharp angle of the building
at four or five feet above the ground. It
is an irregular oval of about seven inchee in
diameter, with an undulating eurface, corn.
poised of about a dozen smaller stones of
different sizes and shapes, well joined to-
gether with a small quantity of cement and
perfectly smooth. It looks as if the whole
had been broken into many piecee by a
violent bloiv, and then united again. It
is very difficult to determine accurately
the quality of this stone, which has been
worn by the million of touches Mid kisses
it has received. It appeared to rne like a
lava, containing several small, eetraneoue
partiolea of a whitish and of a yellowish
substance. Its color is now of a deep red-
dish brown approaching to black. Both
the border and the stone itself are encir-
cled by a silver band, broader below than
above, The lower part of the border is
studded with !silver nails."
summer, or, in fact, in any portion of
Europe, the oivilized world will have the
Sultan of Turkey to thank for the scourge.
The Holy Welt of Zem-Zem, in Mecca, is the
fountain -head of cholera, From this vile,
polluted well come the germs which the
pilgrime and religioua fanatics oarry away
with them and opread over the earth.
The powers of Europe have demanded
that the barbarian monarch of Turkey put
an and to these religious pilgrimages and
cleanse the aged well of Zem-Zem. But the
mere suggeation of this very reasonabe
sanitary measure has raised such ahotvi
from the holy men and -prophets of Mehemet
wlao conduct the pilgrimages and preserve
all the traditions and filth of the holy well,
that the Sultan dares uot interfere with
them. It was here at Mecca that the
holy men wrought up the pilgritila to
suoh a pitch of religious freezy thab
they attacked and killed the foreign
Consuls. And the first move towards
purifying the anoient well is expected to
result in the massacre of every foreign
resident.
CHOLERA IN MECCA. NOW.
Li view of these things, the possibility
of another outbreak of oholera, wh-ether ib
oomes this summer or next, threatens the
entire civilized world. b/leitoa is a busy
city, near the Red Sea, and a not incon-
siderable percentage of the traffic of the
world brushes past it. Fleets from all
nations pees through the Suez ()anal.
Hardly a more terrible place could have
been found for the seeda of disease to ripen -
The danger is partioularly great because
on June 4 the pilgrims who worthip
Mehemet began to.pour in. Maddened by
religious enthusiasm, by fanatical hopes,
they &Slight, regardless of law and regale,.
tion,to kiss the sacred black stone that lies
in the Raabe. For eleven days they re-
mained in the city. Cholera has spread
from Mecca before, but nob seriously, and
not sufficiently to occasion any alarra. This
has been boomuse, when the pilgrims have
arrived at Mecca hitherto,the city has been
quite free from disease. But Mecca ia
now in the throes of choleric Aa the
number of pilgrims this year Will not be far
from 100,000, the possibilities of its spread
are terrifying.
On June 15 the pilgrims began to scatter
to India, to Africa, to Persia and to every
province of Turkey. Many of them will
return home in transports, herded together
like swine. These tranaports, owned in
the main by kings of commerce who expect
a fat interest rate, will, as soon as they
/wive delivered their human freight, slip
away to other porta in search of fresh
cargoes. In this the great danger of the
transmission of cholera lies. There is no
reason to believe that the transports will be
properly fumigated. Nor, save in a single
instance, have preparations been made for
a proper quarantine at the porta in which
the travel -stained and dirty Museulmans
will arrive.
PRECAUTIONS IN ALDERIA.
That single instance is Algeria, on the
boundaries of which all precautions are
being taken for stamping out the disease
and for preventing its coming. The French
eolonie,1 Government in Algeria has been
diligently examining pilgrims and has
allowed only those to embark who have
been given certificates, and each pilgrim
who atarted was obliged to deposit with
the authorities 1,000 francs as a guarantee
fund to be used for the support of his
family in case any thieg should happen to
him. The effecb of the measure is shown
n the fact that only 200 Algerian Mussul-
mans have startedon thepresentpilgrimage,
as against fully five times that number
in 1893.
But French Algeria, unfortunately, is
only an infieitesmial link in the great
pilgrimage: Among the hordes of adorers
at the shrine of Mehemet there is no law
of quarantine prevailing, no sanitary meas-
ures have been taken; no precautions have
even been thought of. That the menace is
not exaggerated oan be eeen from the
spread of cholera in Mecca in 1891 Cholera
did not exiat there that year before the
pilgrims arrived. _This summer, however,
before even a single pilgrim appeared
cholera raged to a frightful extent. But
nevertheless in 1893, the estimated mor-
tality was 40,000 out of a total of 100,000,
this number not incicaing those who died
aboard the transport ships or in the
caravana on the march. The total roortaligy
will
"0EVER BE TOLD,
To the Mahometan all this danger is as
nothing. If he auoceeds in arriving ab
Mecca and kissing the stone that to him is
the ceutre of ehe world, he becomes a Hadgi,
and is hailed by those who have not had
his good fortune as a most upright, a most
holy, a most, distinguished man. If he dies,
it matters not he has dote hie defy to
Mehemet and his fueure iaseoured. Despite
the rapid Christianizing of the Ottoman
Empire and the spread'of European civil-
ization from the East, quite as many
prostrate themselves before Mahomet's
gravel as did half e. century ago.
A clever French etatistatian has estimated
that the average mortality in a pilgrimage
is 20 per omit. ,even when there iii no plague.
When cholera strikes, the death average
rises to fully. 50 per cent, Little news of
thew horrors leaks out to the civilized
world, tor the moan that few Europeaes
penetrate into Meocaalt Wiese times. Only
three Frenohmen, five Englishmen and one
Italian have mule the trip. The French-
men were Charles Hubert, Teem) Roche and
Coutellemohe, Hubert was essassinated
within the gates of Mecca. The Englieh.
men vrere,.Theeph Pitts, of Exeter, who
saw the ceremony in 1878 • Burekhardt, the
Oriental traveller, who witiniesed it in 1814;
Richard Burton, of the Bombay Army, 13;
1853 ; th. Bicknell, in 1862, and leeane,
steamship offioet, in 1880. The Italian
made his trip in 1503.
The reason ea few have seen these oete.
monies is said that it is necessary to visit
them in the most absolute diegulee, no un.
believer being permitted within the sutra
boundaries, and the man who pee within
at these times takee his life in his hands,
far the infidel diecovered at Mecca during
the sacred days, is killed without hesita•
tion,
An Insane Mother.
A despatch from Tacoma, Wash., says:—
Mrs. Elizabeth Wildgrub,of Lake Bay,made
a desperate attempt on Thursday night to
murder her two daughters, aged wren and
ten years respectively. While the children
were sleeping the mother went to their
bedside and attacked them with a hatchet,.
cutting and hacking them with h strength
born of humility. The children struggled
Lor their lives, mid succeeded in escaping
out of doors, and With nothing but their
night clothee to cover them they sought re-
fuge at the house of a neighbor a mile away.
Wildgruh will be seat to att insane
asylum.
•
Polite Literature.
Gentlemen—Sou are e devotee of polite
literature, I presume.
Mies IVIeSheddie-eYes, indeed ;1 have
elf a dozeii books en etiquette.
Children Cry for Pitcher'* Costorisi
THE FARM.
Shades for Treeless Pastures.
Where pastures contain no trees for ehado
ie. the strong heat of summer, it is cruel
nob to afrord some artifioial shade for' the
stook. Suoh shelter should be provided on
humane grounds, but there is a question of
dollars and cents in it as well, Diseoinfort
TEKPORARY SHADE FOB STOOK,
of any kind lessens productiveness and
growth. A rough shed of boards, or even
a rough framework covered with groan
boughs, will answer the purpose very well,
but where lumber is expensive and green
boughs are not at hand, cheap cotton cloth
can be used very effectively, and economi-
cally. Such cloth can be bought for live
cents or less a yard, and can be stretched
over a framework set up against the pasture
fence.
Clover Growing.
Clover growing was a long time a puzzle
to the thinking farmer. Away back in
the time of the early Romans who grew
large crops ot Lucerne clover it was known
that' orop of clover was the best prepar-
ation for a orop of wheat, Almost ever
since that time the same practice has pre.
veiled amongst the beat farmers. Why
was this the ease? Clover is rich in nitro-
gen, in 801118 forms most valuable as
a manure for plants; and also, most
valuable in plant form as food for animals.
Could it be that the clover plant drew its
aupply of nitrogen from the free nitrogen
of the air? Air is composed of about
eighty parts of nitrogen to twenty parts
of oxygen. If this nitrogen be valued at
the price of commercial nitrogen as sold
in artificial manures the air ir and above
each acre of land vemild be worth about
$90,000. There is plenty of it about if it
could be used. Scientific men said this
teas impossible. The oitrogen of the air
was not in a coddition to be used as plant
food. Lewes and Gilbert, of Rothamated,
England, worked let the problem for nearly
half a century. They found more nitrogen
in the soil after a clover crop had removed
150 pounds per aore than there was be-
fore the clover was sown. About enough
surplus to supply a good wheat crop
which needs one and one.half pounds
per bushel. A German actintist, Hellrigel,
after years of study showed that the clover
did get its supply from the free nitrogen of
the air. All the Legurninosee or pulse family
have this valuable property. This family
is a large one, and besides all the clovers,
includes peas, beans, retches, and a. few
shrubs and treee. The locust tree belongs
to this order. On the rootlets of these
plants are found small nodules, or wart like
growths varying in size, but none of them
larger than a small seed. These contain
albumen and bacteria and it is said the bac.
teria found in the nodules of clover are not
the same as are found on peas or beans. By
some means not yet fully explained these
bacteria are able to use -the free nitrogen of
the air and manufaothre from it some com-
pound of nitrogen fit for plant food. The
clover plant in this way secures enough
nitrogen for its own use and leaves a sur-
plus for the use of succeeding crops of grain
or gram. Tnere is much still to learn as
to how the work is done. Some think that
if the soil be rich in available nitrogen the
clover will use a considerable quantity of
it before the nodules form on the rootlets.
This is over and above.what is needed to
give the plant a good start and a vigorous
young growth.
The newest phase in the matter is the
"inoculating" theory. Land aeeded to
clover is sprinkled with soil from an old
clover field. This is to bring she spores of
the clover bacteria so that they may
quickly form nodules on the youug roots.
Sowing the clover seed and then sowing the
bacteria seed. It is already claimed that
great results have followed this way of
working. There is a wide field here for
experimenting,
Clover Sickness.—This is a disease
toudhing red clover, Where a abort course
rotation, say a three or four yeare one, is
adopted with red clover it was found that
in time the clover would not do well. The
land became " clover sick " and the clover
diedthe second year of its growth without
apparent cause. Some naturalists regard
this as due to the want of available potash
in the soil and especially in the subsoinbut
it may be from another cause. Experience
has showo that it is not good farming to
have red clovet follow any of the legumes,
such as peas/ beans, .or any other clover.
Thie may be 'caused by the want of potash,
but it is probable that some product of the
bacteria rney be the chief cause of clover
sickness.
-
Slopping Cows.
There is a general belief that slopping
cows greatly Moreases their flow of milk,
and that the resulting yield is corrgspond-
ingly poor he buttet fats, and to prove, or
disprove, tide the experiment station at
Guelph, (lint, hats for the past two years
been experimenting along the line, and to
their eurprise there is practically nothing
in the belief. The cowa when fed the grain in
form of seep would, if fed once a day, give
slightly more milk and a slightly lower,but
not uniform, percentage of fat, about 0.4
of 1 per cent. ; but in every inste.nce where
slop was fed tv;ice a day, there was a
marked falling off in milk yield. Theue
tote were coeduoted in periods of thirty
days each,eo as to got the full what of the
i
food, and n the general averages the dry.
grain fed oewe came out ahead. As to the
variation of fat content ot the milk, the
sum total of all the averagee showed that
there was no more loss in the end then the
Pkriatiotui found itethe fait Content of cows
fed dry foods, and the sum OW of two
years' exptitiment is against the idea that
Slop Nod ;names the nilk yield. If any.
•
• .
• '• " y•:•; , ,g211tv,1 ^
thing is te be deduced, from the toots it is
that cows gave less milk if the slopping
was very mark -d, and the percentages of
fat yielded were actually inconoOquentiai
so far as change was conoerned in either
eaSS. The conclusions are that the best
"slop" that 09.11 be fed to a cow is a good
ration of corn, silage, roots, or uncured
grain fodders, and the drink that a cow
Juts is beet in the form of good water,
governed by the inclieaticn of the enitnel
to drink.
Peas From Seed 3000 Years
- Gardenere will be interested to learn that
J. Davis, of Wood Close, Bromley commov,
Kent, England, has growing at the present
time peas which are the product of sound
peas found in Upper Egypt in a mummer
ease about three years ego. The saroopha.
gus which contained the mummy and case
in which the parent of these peas were
found was discovered in a cave tomb situat-
ed in the Valley of bhe Kings at Aseaseef
which is about an hour's ride west from the
Nile at Thebes. The diacovery was made
by a party of five gentlemen, consisting of
two Americans, two Cambridge students
and the cousin of the lady from whom the
specimen peas now growing at Bromley
were obtained.
The ineoription went to show that the
person entombed was Mempteh, a younger
son of User-Khopara-Ra (Seti II.), sou of
Rarneses II., founder of the eighteen dy-
nasty, Prince Memptah existed about 1270
B. 0. The valley in which this tomb was
discovered is the old burying place of the
Theban Kings of the seventeenth and
eighteenth dynasties, and most of the tombs
are remarkable, not so much for their size
as for their exquisite beauty. All of these
two races of kings were baried in this
valley, but only aboue one-half the number
buried (about forty in all) have yet been
discovered. The pease are much smaller
theta those of the present day, a fact whioh
is possibly evidence of the improvement
whioh has taken place in the cultivation in
the modest interval of 3,000 years.
An Imperial Godmother.
" While the Czaritza (then Princess Alia
of Hesse) was at Harrogate, England, last
year, Mr. and Mrs. Allen, of Cathcart
House, where she resided, were favoured
with twins—a boy and a girl. So interested
was Her Royal Highness in the little
strangers, that when the time came for
their baptism she graciously consented to
stand as sponsor, the boy consequently
being named Nicholas Charles Bernard
Hesse, and the girl, Alix Beatrice Emma.
May 22 was the anniversary of -their birth-
day, and brought with It a pleasant proof
that the twins had not been forgotten by
their Imperial godmother. Not only did
Her Majesty write to enquire how they
were getting on, but she intimated the
despatch of certain birthday gifts, which
have DOW come to hand. Most treasured
of them will be the pretty little petticoats
which she has worked with her own hand,
but of more intrinsic value is a polished oak
box, lined with white satin and crimson
plush, which containe gold -mounted and
enamelled knives, forks, spoons, servisette
rings, and salt cellars and salt spoon's, all
elaborately chased,said bearing the Russian
arms and the initials of the fortnnete rect.
peints.
Just His Luck.
Whoop 1 just get on to the-.
—size of that.
In two sticcessive holidays Stratford did
not have one Police Court case.
10•10111MMMON......-- . ......, ....
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e
No\
Sunlight
6 Cents
Twin Bar
Soap
is made in a twin imr (as shown
above) for the sake of convenience ;
it is mado of pure materials for the
sake of quality; it ;is made by our
peculiar- processes fOr the sake of
effectiveness (doing its work easily);
it is made at the largest Soap works
in the world for the sake of supply-
ing the largest demand in the world;
it m used everywhere for the sake of
Less Labor
Greater Comfort
Voe ovary 12 wrappers
I
!looks for rAt,g,,'„,;,„1,,d„
29 SOH Si,,WTotento rappers a useful paper -bound'
book win be soot,
eirse.
:YEARS
a discovery of the greatest possible benefit to mankind
was made in medicine, Physicians universal!? recog-
nized, its beneficent results and welcomed it as one of
the naost valuable remedial agents that has been devel-
opecl, inmedicine, because it covered such a wide range
of usefulness and brought into requisition the most
remarkable food -medicine in existence. This discovery
was
Scott's ulmon
and this wonderful nutrient was Cod-liver 011, 'but
until it was naade available in Scott's Emulsion it was
almost u,3eless, but by their -process of emulsifying it
and making it palatable and easy of assimilation, and
adding to it the HypOphosphites of Lime and. Soda,
they have given the world a remarkable curative agent
in all wasting diseases, both in children and adults.
Scott et. Bowne, Belleville. All Druggists. 50c. and $1.
•
Words of Weight and Wisdom
Canada's Well-known Railroad Contraotor,
Mr. J. W. Dinwoodie, 111.
Treated by Several Doctors and Tried Nearly Every Proprietary
- Medicine—Got Very Little Benefit—Was Influenced to
• Use South American Nervine—Found Immediate Relief—
"Te Nervousness Has Entirely Left My System"—
" I Will Never Be Without It in My Home."
MR. T. W. DIN WOODID, CAMPBELLFORD, ONT
Men of affairs usually weigh their
words. They are not of that class of
people who carry their hearts upon their
sleeve. One of the best known men of
affairs in Canada is Mr. Je W. Dinwoodie.
'the large railroad contractor, evidence of
whose work is to be found in all parts of
the Dominion, from the Atlantic to the
Pacific, to chin one section of our vast
Dominion with another and bring its
people into easy touoh with eacb. other
through the medium of the iron horse, as
Mr. Dinwocdie has in a short lifetime
done, is a work of which any man may be
proud. Hard and brainy labor, however, is
necessary to success of this character, and
the strongest constitutions are in danger
of breaking down under the strain, It has
been so with Mr. Dinwoodie. The great
thought that he has had to give to his
work, and the care and responsibility that
it has carried with it finally told on his
constitution, and he bee sme a victim of
nervous troubles, his liver and kidneys
beconting seriously disordered.
Naturally he consulted e medical man.
Comparatively no relief was obtained.
He ohmaged his doctor, and did not stop
with one, two or three physicians, but he
got no better. Various proprietary medi-
cines were recommended, end, es he says
himself, " Tried them all, but gob veere
little benefit. Last fall / was camping
oat, and I was feeling very ill. I hapt
peiaed to pick up a papa with tete ad -s
vertisement for South A merican Ner vine.
I determined to giTe it a trial, and pro
cured a bottle from the lc cid druggist.'
After having taken but a few cloaca Z
found very great relief. The severe pain,
that I had been suffering in the email of
my back left me and the nervousness that
had rendered me, in a large measure, um
fit for work, has ne a result of the con..
tinued use of Nervine, 'become baniehed
from my system. I am now able to en-
joy refreshing sleep tho night through,
I keep South American Nervine always,
in the house, and I do not hesitate to say
that it is the very best medicine I have
ever taken, and rre st confidently re-
commend it to anyone troubled witb
nervousness of whatever form anti tht
attendant diseasee of the liver and stom
ach that follow this weakness."
The important fact can not be to.
often emphesized that South American
Neevino cures at the nerve cantors, from
which emanate all diseases. 'Tins being
an uudoubted scientific, truth, fully and)
perfectly demonstrated by soience, it is
never an exreriment to use Nervine, but
in this remedy is elwess found a ue4a.i4
curt,.
C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter.
THOS. W/CNBTT, Creditoon Drug Store, Agent.
Fsmormiotoosi*effe.
SCALDS
(
10 • )))) r
and Barna are sootbied at once with,
Perry Davis'
PAIN KILLER.
It takes out the fire, reduces the inflam-
mation, atid prevents blietering\,,, Zt ie
the quickest and most effectual remedy for
aiti that is known Xeep it by you
neeetteeseintesteleafietteese