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The Exeter Times, 1895-8-29, Page 7ot4t a.lgivy Johnson. Ayer's Pills would like to add my testimony to that of others wile 'halm used Ayers ?Ms, arid te say Mat 1 have taken them for many years, and elways derived the best results from their use. For Stomach and liver troubles, mid for the mire of headache caused by di the derangements, Ayer's Pills cannot be equaled. When 'niy friends ask rne what is tbe best remedy for disorders of the stomach, Liver, or Bowels, . my invariable answer Is,"Ayer's Taken in season they will break up a cold, preVent la grippe, check fever, and regulate the digestive organs. They are ... easy to take, and Are the best all-round family medicine I have ever known."—Mrs. Mar ,Tonarsox, 568 Rider Ave., New York City. AYER'S PILLS ell4atest Awards at World's Fair. Aver's Sarsaparilla/or the blood. POWDERS Cure' $>LOX HaADACHE and Neuralgia in 20 MINUTES, also Coated Tongue, Dizzi- ness, Biliousness, Pain in the Side, Constipation, Torpid Liver, Bad Breath. to stay cured also regulate the bowels. vERr NICE TO TAKE. PRICE 26 CENTS AT DRUG STORES, CENTRAL Drug—Store A full stook of all kin da of Dyt-stuffs and package Dyes, constantly on hand. Win an's Condition - Powd- er, the best in the mark- • et ana always resh. radii). pes* carefully prepared at Central Drug Store Exete • C. 1.iii.PrZ. We guarantee Dodd's Kidney Pills to cure my se of Bright's DIse.ase, Diahatet, Lumbago, 4 V Toitv, Rhentriatieta, Ileart Disease, Female Trles, Impure Blood—or looney refunded ' Sold by all dealers rti medicine, or by mail on rOcipt of oda, sec. per box, or.Six hoses $2.5o. a DR. L. A. §Ittif.Pfe & 00-, Toronto. *IS OA Platen , OF THE FAMOUS OUttE OR thefts Papas, TAY FOR eACWILIE • RHSUMATISM tam BAao NtURAIAIA tlICH IN 518 Tenn' el Olt Litt\ e FOR Me6091.4 fame AND ACHE$ r: ese- TEE NEWS I A NUTSULL TIM VERY LATEST FRO IR ALL OVER TILE WORLD. Interettinnftemis About Our Own Connie% threat Illriaallt. flee Coiled States, nod All Parte et nth eitobe. Condom:tad and Assorted tor Briny goading, . 0Alf.tD,A.. RaMtit011 ie to have a, new fireteclass hotel. Chatham is to have a new 825,000 Public •&heel. The L O. 0. F. Grand Lodge will meet next year in Sarnia, London is to have a new Y. M, 0. A. building, to ooet $20,000. • Loudon West will pay 20 mine on the dollar in looal taxes next year. A movement is on foot to establish an international park among the Thousand Ielauds. The foundation.stone of Quebeo's new city buildings was le.ii amidst great rejoic- ing on Thursday. . 11 18 expeated that Dr. Montague will take up his residence at New Edinburgh, a iinburb of Ottawa. Georm m Spence A Hamilton oarpenter, ie, fell froa bia' ing and reoeived fatal injuries on Thii day. James S. Pearson, a three-year-old son of a Ilatnilton citizen, was fatally burnt playing with matches. Mr. F. Girdlestone, of London, Eng., -a director of the Grand Trunk railway, has arrivea in Montreal on a trip, A large bin of iron weighing 50 tons gave way in Buffalo on Thursday, killing Thomas Beckett, a workman, Two privates in the Northwest Mounted Police haye been sent to jail for violenoe Against a superior officer. a Lily O'Brien Trudel, a Montreal woman, only three weeks married, attempted to coinmit suicide Thursday night. Mr, Wm. Rowland, probably the oldest resident of London, Ont.,died on Thursday night She was ninety-four years of age. Damara Leframboise, a convict in St. Vincent de Patti Penitentiary, Montreal, has fallen heir to a fortune of $25,000. A dog has died of hydrophobia in Lon- don after biting a child. The latter has gone to New Yorketgar the Pasteur treat- ment. Mr. Ogilvy, the millioneire miller, after a tour of inepection in Manitoba, makee very hopeful reports as to the wheat her - vest. The Ontario Government has deoided to move the School of Pedagogy to Hamilton at the close of the next seCion of the school. Angus McBean, e. Galt farmer, wee been out of $1,500 on. Friday by a neatly -played confidence genie. The perpetrators got safely away. The defunct Commercial Bank of Mani- toba has paid another dividend of 13 per cent, making a total of 50 per cent. PO far on original claims. In consequence of the •prevailing low water vessels will not be allowed to enter the Welland Canal drawing more thatz bhir- teen feet six inches of water. The corner -stone a- the new Masonic temple for Manitoba in Winnipeg, was laid on Thursday morning by Mr. 0. N. • Bell, Grand Master of Manitoba. Roy, the fourteen.months-old son of Mr. Thomas Coulson, of Soubh London, Ont., who was terribly soalded by a boiling mix- ture two weeks ago, died on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Shortis, the parents of the Valleyfield murderer, will arrive in Montreal next month, to be present at the trial, whioh will take place in Coto. ber. • A schooner collided with a steamer upon the Miramichi River, in New Brunswick, near Blaokbrook, on Saturday evening,and swept three girls into the water. They were drowned. C. E. Carbonneau,until recently Manager of the Canada Trading & Shiping Co., • blontreal, has been arrested for alleged, fraudulent dealings. Sensational develop.. ments are expected. The Governor-General, acooinpanied by Lady Aberdeen and suite, have arrived at Victoria., B. C. His Excellency will spend the fall and part of the winter in Victoria and at his farm in Okanagon, B. C. Mr. Collingwood Schreiber has returned to Ottawa from an inspection of the Sou - lenges canal, and reports that the work is progressing in a highly satisfactory manner, and what has bees done is first- class. The demand for bacon and ham in Eng- land is supplanting that for nalt pork, a fact of importance to Canadians, inasmuch as bacon from the Dominion commands a higher price than that from the United States. The ship Ellen E. Kenny is reported at St. John, N. R, from the West Indies, with yellow fever on board. The Depart- ment of Agriculture has instructed its local agent to take such action as maybe consul- ered necessary. A despatch from Berne, Switzerland, says that Miss Dionalds McFee, adaughter of a resident of Montreal, has secured the degree of Ph. D. (Doctor of Philosophy) at Zurich. She is a graduate of McGill University and a post -graduate of Cornell University, The queseion of eatablishing the author- ity of Canada in the cdeptry surrounding the great Northern Sea at Hudson's Bay has bee u under the consideration of the Department of the Interior, and it may act in con junction withthe preposed expedition to Hudson's Bay. La Bernath° Bell ause states that the Rev. Father Lacombe has secutaid from the Government a perpetual grant of fifteen square miles of good land fax his half-breeds of Manitoba and the North-West. The land will be used for a reserve for the half. breeds, where they will be under the gdidarnce of inissionariee. A public exhibition was given, on Thura- day afternoon in Montreal df the new steam fire engime ordered by the city of Toronto from Merryweather and Sons, of London, Eng, • The test was a most successful one, showing that the • engine dam throw it atm= of twelve hundred gallons a minute to the height of two huudred and thirty feet, A SetitiatiOli was <Wised in eivie giroltie in Meetrettl on Saturday by a rtpore that a cofiaidereble 'shortage had been disoovered in the City Tteisury depertmeet. Certain securities Whioh were he the bands of Mr. W. H. MoDunnough, the Ciby Accountant, are iniesing, but it is epeeted the loesewil- he made good by hie friends. IVIraftleDuril nottgb 0 at preterit very ill a t his reeldenoe. The oonsolidation a the largest miliisag , induatries inliitestern Coterie is elmoat ao complished. The mills interested are the Aylmer mills, the Rent miU Chatham ; the St. Thenute mina awl the Illenheina mine. The deal 'Invol* Yee property to the velue of $250,900, and conteinplates an invieftment of oapital stook to the amount of $500,000. At Fort (Aherne, Mao,, on Sunday morning, there wee almost a mutiny be *same tae dragoone were ordered to °leen seadiery, it being •unusual, to • give this order ea Sundaya. There is great diseole tent among bile dragoons, who claim that .they have to do double duty bemuse the forth is short. During the last eight deye there heve been thirteen desertions. GREAT DATUM The °berme at the mouth of the Thamee is to be deepened. The King of the Belgians is taking it brief pleasure trip in England, Emperor William has conolugled hie bola. day trip in England, and left for home. The Torouto Street Railway Company's bonds have been successfully placed on the London market William Court Gully has bean unanime oust,- re-eleated Speaker of the Imperial House of Commons. The ehaft of the steamer Paris was found fractured on her arrival at Southampton from New York. A.t it meeting of the Irish Parliamentary party Mr. Justia McCarthy, M. P., was unCnimouely re-elected chairman. It is mum:med that a British legal expert will attend the trial of the Newfoundland Bunk directors on behalf of the English •shareboldeh. The statement that Lord Wolseley will succeed the Duke of Cambridge as Com - mender -in -Chief of the British army is confirmed. Some -alarm has beea created in London by a. report that the Scotland Yard author- ities hens unearthed a plot to blow up the Houses of Parliatnent Despite frequent hints, Nasrulla. Khan will not leave England, and the European sovereigns have politely intimated that they are not desirous that he should visit them. Thequestion of the development' of mines en British Columbia is at present attracting much attention in London fin- anoial circles, and it is probable that sev- eral mining experts will visit the Province in the ituehmn. The Canadian Gazette strongly urges the Canadian Artillery corPs to arrange to compete at the Shoeburyness artillery meeting of 1896, as the Cauadiau riflemen do at the meeting of the National Rifle Association at Bisley. It is understood that a slight coolness that existed between the Queen and Emper- or William, on account of the Emperor negotiating the Czar's marriage without consulting her Majesty, has completely passed away. The Canadian Gazette says that the judgment in the appeal to the Privy Council to decide whether the power to pass prohibitorfiltplor legislation belongs to the Federal or to the provincial authori- ties of Canada will not be given until Noverub er. The Dublin Freeman's Journal states that Mr. Edward Blake will sail almost immedietely for his home in Toronto. After speeding a short time in Toronto he will proceed to New Zealand; reburning to London in time to attend the opening of Parliament nexb seasion. In the House of Commons onFriday Walter Long, the Presidenb of the Board of Agriculture, said that as late as July 10 oases of °male suffering from pleuro -pneu- monia had been found among the cargoes arriving from Canada, and the Imperial Government, in conseqUenoe,must raaintan the restrictions placed.upon suoh cattle. UNITED STATES. Smallpox is rapidly increasing in Texas. Five thousand jacket -and pant makers are on strike in New York. A commercial treaty between the United States and Brazil is being formulated. Samuel Edison, father of the inventor, celebrated his 92nd birthday on Friday. George Casey, a ten -year-old boy, was killed by freight oars in Buffalo on Thurs- day. Ten Presbyterian missionaires sailed from San Francisco for Chine. on Tuesday evening. Burt E. Hyde, the yellow fever patient "at Quarantine, New York, has died of the disease. F. R. Coudert is spoken of as it probable successor to Justice Jeakeon in the U. S. Supreme Court.• . The sealing schooner Bow Head has been seized by San Francine for sealing iti prohibited waters. It has been practically decided that Holmes will be tried for the murder of the Williams girls in Chicago. The Stete Veterinary Department of Iowa has deoided that tuberculosis in cattle is not hereditary. A son of the late President Grants has bought a large hotel in San Diego, which he will conduct personally. ' A mysterious disease bas broken out among the cattle in Indiana, in which those affected lose their sight Prospeotors claim to have struck a tech, vein of tin ore in the Cascade Mountains Washington Territory, Jennie Lewis has been shot and killed by Lewis F. Milliner in Oakland, Cala beoause she would not marry him, , Leroy Cardiff, a nine-year-old boy -in Indiana, has committed feticide front the disgrace he felt at his parents' divoroe. Twenty persons were poisoned, four fatally, at a picnic in Indiana olt Monday. Arsenic was put into the drinking water. A union catechism °emptied by a Roman Cle.tholio priett of Pittsburg is in use in both Protestant and Catholic, sohools in that city. Owing to the immense crop it is calculat- ed that Nebrasks, is richer to.day than she was this time last year by thirtlanine milliou dollars. . An attempt hat been discovered to bribe tbe jury in the trial of young Durant for the Emanuel Church murders in San Francisco. "Diainotd" Smibh, a wealthy but mien. ttio New Yorker, formerly retident in Mottreal, hat been inithieg for some days and ford play is attepeoted. 'Dr, Henry Case, an old andareepeoted physittian of San Jose, Cele has beee ar. rated on it charge of murder. He preecrib- ed the Wrong medibine to a pati6n b. The Re v.Dr. William Deamaistinguiehed as the first 13ap11tit missiouary tsiOhina mid Siam, where he laboured Afty years, died on Tuesday at San Diego, California. Ur. Frank Dauer, Manager of the Park Brewery , Waterloo, died Wednesday night ttt lVfount °lemon% Miele • Via Dauer Weeit meinber of the Waterleo Town Coanoil and highly eeteetned, 11 ievrobable that three thoasend gar. meat workers employed in the sweet shops of Chicago will go on atrike shOrtly. The workere are orgaeizite;, aud will demand better pay and shorter hours. The steamer Etruria, whioh arrived at New York an. Saturday from Liverpool, lowered her best previous peseege, made in October, 1893, of six days and eighteen Mientes, by ore hour and fifty mioutea. Patrick quinlen, the janitor of Ifoltnee' castle in °bleep, with his wife, has been dieoloarged front custody- There it+ now no prospect of Holmes ever being tried in Chicago upon the evidence secured so far, Advicee have been received et the State Depa.rtineut in Washington that Minister Denby is consulting with the British and Chtuese anthoritiee relative to the full and complete inveetigatiora. of the riots ab Ku -Cheng. Pive thousand Irishmen, representing the United States Societies of Western Pennsylvania, met in Pittsburg, Pa„ on Thursday night, and passed resolntions 0v:witting physical force in Ireland% cause. A. despatch front Buffalo says that Cap - thin William Scott, of the fishing tug Wit- liam Wilson, rum been arrested on a charge of smuggling teed by the Canadian Govern- ment, and Is now awaiting trial on a two thousand dollar bail. Commercial reports from the United States are not as satisfactory as they have been lately, and the ordinary dulnees of the midsummer season is being fully experince ed now. Still, industries generally are . aotivesand wages are steadily Increasing in various direetionit The output of pig iron during August was very large, end prices continue to rise; the average advance in iron quotations ie two per cent. for Aug- usts Minor metals are unchanged. GENERAL. The Cuban insurgents are steadily gain. ing ground. Guatemala is reported to be on the verge of revolution. Work on the Panama Canal is once more being pushed forward, Seventy alleged Nihilists were arrested in Odessa on Monday night. Fourteen deaths were caused in a drown ing aocidene at Kiel, Germany, Heavy mortality is reported among the French troops operating in Madagascar. Detachments from the Spanish army have started for Cuba to suppress the rebellion. War is said to be threatening between France and Brazil over trouble in French Guiana. It is officially announced that five arrests have already been made in connection with the maseacree at Ku-Oheng in China. The Chieisof the Police of Sofia has been arrested on suspicion of complicity in the e.thassine.tion of ex -Premier Stambuloff. Advice s received in St. Petersburg from Vladivostock announce that cholera in a very serious feint prevails in China, Corea, a'nd the Island of Formosa. • The British schooner Ellen has been fired on, overhauled ande'searched by a Vene- zuelan cruiser in the Carribean Sea. The affair will be investigated, Emperor Williana has returned to Berlin Looking in remarkably good health, as a result of his recent ys.chtn3g and shooting in England. It is said that Republicans in portions of Spain are taking advantage of despatch of troops to Cuba to make uprisings for the overthrow of the monarchy. The commisiioa appointed to investigate the recent massacre of missionaries at Ku -Cheng have arrived safely. Important arrests have been made in connection with the massacres. The /attest reports of figheing in Cuba, making all allowances for the unreliability ef such news, Seem to -indicate that the Spanieh troops are suilbring serious defeats at the hands of the insurgents. • The Paris Figaro says, discussing the reoent massacre of missionaries in China, ehat we to -day are nearer to it oolleetive expedition of European warships to the far .filast then ''hen the Japanese were mardning on Pekin. The Vali of Salonioa telegraphs to Con- ebantinople it that a Bulgarian band, numbering about one thoueand men, has attacked the village of Janakli,and burned Iwo hundred and ninety hoes and killed • twentriave of the inhabitants. The Lokal Aazeiger, of Berlin, atrongly advises Germany to annex the Grand Duchy of Luxemburg, which by the Lon - den treaty of 1807 was declared neutral territory, and to fortify the capital, to that Strasburg, taste, and Luxemburg will- be impregnable fortresses. The Novesti, of St. Petersburg, recom- mends that Russia, France, and Germany unite with the 'United States and Great Britain,with a view of obtaining satisfaction for the outrages committed by the Chinese upon the different missions, and i order to obtain eubstantial guarantees against their repetition. • I A SUNLIGHT EFFECT. Tho clear morning sunlight bringe with it gladness and reaewed en- ergy, and 4 CT6tviati: Bar • ASoap drives into the haekgroundtlike a dark shadow, that old bugbear "witali dey,e tied does. ite work quickly, easily, perfeetty. Oso euniight seep. and yoti eta' matte° that "Sineighte IMP COMO Into year life . It Makee tiome Brighter. . For eVery12 wrappers 'Books foP WIt,:gl,c,"4„ila„ • pp tee ila Scott St. Toronto, 1 Wraers.• a usefulesaPer-bound book will be eon. 'ABOUT THE IIOUSE. Potato -Ball Yeast. Boil and mush fear or five medium aim% potatoes; to it pint add a level tebleepoonful of salt and A lOVOI tableepoonfel of grant/ toted sugar, writes a correapotideat. When cool edd half a oalte of any good, dry yeaet sof toned in as little water as possible. Mold into a ball and set where it will keep cold, bet not freeze, In 24 hours prepare a little quantity of petatoes; when uool, in Veto of adding yeast, add the ball ; work together thoroughly and mold bite two belle of tile same stze. These are ready for use any tires after twelve hours, and one ball will raise four ordinary eized lottvee, For the bread, set the sponge over night, using the potato ball diseolved in it quart of lukewarm water for wetting. A supply of this yeast can be kept en hand by preparing potatoes and making it new ball the day before baking as direated. We had it delicious bread for dinner ; we coal it " emergeney bread." I had been having the "'summer grip," could scarcely sit up last night, and we mast have some bread to tide us over Sunday. Into a quart, of new milk 1 put a teaspoonful of salt and a quarter of a cake of Yeast Cream" dissolved in a little water, then beat in • flour till the batter would hold up a tablespoon. I heated a little water over the oil stove, set the basin containing the batter over the kettle, covered it -with a double paper, and it was light and ready for the oven when I got up at five el.:gook Ibis morning. This is a light, sweet, porous bread, and is especially good for the little labor it takes. Brown bread can be stitred up in the same way, whioh is as good as that which requires several fermentations, kneadings, etc. I use half and half white flour and whole wheat flour, lukewarm water in place of nailk, and half a teacupful or leaa of sugar to a quart. Set the basin contain- ing the batter over night in a warm oven, and in the morning when you get up they will be ready to bake, which is of great advantage these hot days. Uses of the green and Purple Plum. The plum, although not so popular or so healthful as its sister peach, le an attrac- tive and delicious dethert fruit, when in perfection, while its rich flavor oommends it for puddings, pies and conserves. English plum tart is a favorite dish with our cousins over the water. Either blue plums or ripe green gages are used. When stemmed and stoned fill with them a shal- low pudding dish, sprinkle well with sugar and cover with a rick pie crust, cutting slits in the pastry that the steam may escape. Bake in a moderate oven. When ready for the table lift off the orust, lay it upstde down on a large plate, pour era the plume upon it and smother all in wiaipped oream. • Preserved Greengagete—orall varieties the little round. greengage is perhaps the beet liked for doing up. They are of °aurae never skinned, but for preserving should be prioked with a needle. The usual allowance of 1 lb of sugar and 1 pint of water to each Ile of fruit is used. The water and sugar are bailed. together until clear, all soma being skimmed carefully off as it rises to the surface. When tranaluoent drop in the plums, putting in only as many at a time as the kettle will conveniently hold, and cook for 20 minutes, Take oat and lay on platters to cool. Proceed thus with each kettleful until all are done, when pack in small cans, pour the boiling syrup over them and seal. Damson Jam.—Thoegh damsons are not an eating plum, they possess a richness that makes them particularly acoeptable for jam and jelly. Stone and weigh the fruit and stew it 20 minutes. Add a lb sugar for each pound and cook gently for an hour longer or until of the proper con- sistently. Can while hot in small recep- tacles. Plum jelly is nice and is rather uncom- mon. Plum the plums in a colander and pour boiling water over them. Then put in a preserving kettle with just sufficient water to fewer them s.nd boil until quite soft and all the juice is extracted. Pour off the liquid, strain it and set back on the fire to cook. Weigh out 1 lb of sugar for every pint of juice and spread it on shallow pans eet in the oven. Let it heet until the liquid has boiled 20 minutes, when add it to the mixture and stir constantly uutil is dissolved. Remove at once from the fire and fill bowls or glasses that have been immersed in hot water to prevent breakiug. Lay rounds of paper dipped in brandy on top and seal up securely. Pickled Damsons.—This recipe, secured from an old housekeeper, is for damsons, hue other plums may be used by numbing the quantity of sugar if they are of a sweeter variety. To 10 lbs of damsona take 5 lbs of sugar, Q pints vinegar, 1 table- spoonful of cloves and 8 small sticks of cinnamon. Boil 9:11 together for fifteen minutes. Remove the fruits. and boil the syrup quarter of an hour longer. Put up the same as preserves. Hints. Vaseline makes the beat dressing for ruaset, shoes. Soft newspaper is excellent to oleanae windows or any glaasware. Spirits of turpentine is the thing with whioh to °lemon and brighten patent leather. Oold tea oleanses paint better than soap and water, unless the paint Is white, when milk is better. If the hair is thin and dry rub well two or three times a. week wibh a mixture of slaty graitis of quinitib to an. ounce of vas%likneee. Tp tortoise -shell combs bright rub them after earth wearing with soft leather When they become dim, clean with rotten etone and oil applied with chamois. Rubber can title Which have beoome hardened can be made pliable and elaetio by soaking them fifteen to thirty minutes in two parts of Water and one atrunotita, Soinetimes there tire ridges in the glees which prevett cans being hermetically Beated with rtibbet rings I apply otter the place a little putty or a oola paote of flour ajournal recotinde, as a nt:ellanlive:eta formra saving the ergs from the offebts cif contiamous tlee in sowing, typeeetting, teaditig, de, at habit ofiookingup from the work at short ittetvele and glanoing about the room, This practised °Very ten or fifteen Minute's, relietme the nouseular ,.entIon, reale the oyes, and makes the Wood simply mob better. Ohildren Cry far Pitche6, Cadogia: 7" 1:1437,7i Children are always thin and. pale when they do not assimilate enough. fat. This 5eems ,strange, perhaps, but it is literally true. Unless there is a hezatlay as- similation of fat food th,e blood becomes depleted, tissues waste away, vitality becomes low and, the body languishes for the need of proper nourishment. , is useful to children, especially in two ways. It is Cod- liver Oil emulsionized, thus being easily assimilated anc1. rendered palatable, with the Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda added to tone up the nervous system and nourish the bones. This combination of these potent nutrients is just what thin children need to give them flesh color and vitality. Almost all °children like it. Dcm't be .persuacted to accept a substitute/ Scott CI. Bowne, Belleville, All Druggists. 50c. and $1. 1•13.1171,11MMAYMIJ........teGVI.1.31001.011/111.1211.11.6613.1.4 When the Nerve Centres Need Nutrition, A Wonderful Recovery, Illustrating the Quick Response of a Depleted Nervy, System to a Treatment Which Replenishes Exhausted, Nerve Forces. MR. FRANK BA.UER, BERLIN, ONT. ear** e Perhaps you know him.? In Water- loo he is known as one of the most popular and successfulbusiness men of that enterprising town. As manoi- ing executor of the Kuntz estate, he is ab 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 appearances indicate anything, it is safe to predict that there's a full half centtety of active life still ahead for him. But it's only a w months since, while nursed as an invalid at the Mt. Clemens 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 it very sick man. "Mb. Clernens," he oorktinued, "was the last resort in my case. For months preVious I had been suffering indescribable 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 a,,ncl strength rapidly. My stomach 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 mv condition seemed moist hopeless, I heard of it wonderful cure effected in a case somewhat similar to mine, by the Great South AmericanNervina Tonic, and I finally tried that. Ozi the firet day of its use I began to feel that it was doing what no other medicine had done. The first dose relieved the distress completely. Before night I actually felt hungry and ate with an appetite such as I had not known for months. I began to pick up in strength with surprising rapidity, slept well nights, and before I knew it I was eating three square meals regularly every day, with as much roll* as ever. I have no hesitation whatever in saying that the South American Nervine Tonio cured me when all other remedies failed. I have recovered my old weight—over 200 ponnds—and never felt bolter in ray life." Mr. Frank Bauer's experience is that of all others who have used the South Ameriean Nervine Tonic. Its instantaneous action in relieving die - tress and pain is due to the direct 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 direot, and the sick always feel ite marvel - lone sustaining and restorative power at onme, ell tile very first day of its use. C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter. Tnos. WICItETT, Orediton. Drug Store, Agent. 1.rframonesoassIonswirr • • ,efe.i0 ll'Iv‘COLICt Cratripe and Olitaeta Movbue, Diiirrlitait, Dye, celery ahal Suzemee Otkii,, faintti, Ott t 1311tDift, eta riiises, Mail Stialli, ehd =burn. gati all be promete itrelleed by Plat? VA:V/6' Pain itiller -1-v470'40'1r 3"? tcSa—Olsn teat brut. in holt' plots Of water* lee sa eseatas arm if tionvement wasos ese. aeasesseteeaa