HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1895-9-26, Page 74
ft/
Charles Xi: Yrueohingh
Headache
CURED PERMANENTLY
BY TAL:ING
11
'I was troubled a long time with sick
headache. It was wittily accompanied
wall severe pains in the temples, a sense
of fullness and tenderness In oee eye, a
bail taste in my mouth, tongue coated,
hank and feet cola, and sickness at the
stemaela I tried a good many remedies
recommended for this complaint; but it
was not until I
Began Taking
Ayer's Pills
that I received anything like permits.
nent benefit A single box of these pins
did the work for me, and I am now free
from headaehes, and a well man." --
O. H. HUTCHINGS, East Auburn, Me
AYE'S PILLS
Awarded Medal at World's Fair
al.yer,s Sarsaparilla is the Best.
A.
THE
OF ANYEXETBR
TIMES
FOR TWENTY-FIVE YEARS
THECOOICS BEST FRIEND
LARGEST SALE IN CANADA.
OEN MAI
Drug Store
FANSON'S BLOCK..
A full stook of all kinds of
Dye -stuffs and package
Dyes, constantly on
hand. Win an's
Condition
Powd• -
orb,
the best
thein mark-
et and always
• resh. Family recip-
ees carefully prepared at
Central Drug Store Exete
Cm LUTZ.
EAflMAKEF'&
3r MA:meg/81-f
RHO FRS TO OWE SATISFACTION
grig.
v4a4P
• The Coal Output.
•
-S'ome idea of the enormous riches garner-
ed up of old in the chambers of the earth is
afforded by the single item of coal, for
* instance. It appeare that the greatest
* producer in this line is the kingdom of
Great Britain, which is stated to have an
output of 180,003,000 tons annually, em.
• ploytng 640,000 persoes ; the 'United States
is credited with an output of 163,000,000
tons in 1893, bitutninous and anthracite ;
the output of Germany equals 78,000,000
tons, lignites not included, and there are
• employed in its extraction 290,000 persons;
• about 19,000,000 tons are annually mined
in Belgium, and 117,000 persons employed;
Franoe has an &newt' proaucit ot :tome
25,000,000 tons,employing 130,000 personto
• apart from lignite, Austria•Hungary shows
a total of 10,700,000 toes of coal anneally ;
Spain's output is 1,300,000 tone a year ;
Italy, 800,000 toes ; Sweden, 200,000 tons;
Japan, 3,250,000 tons; Russia's annual
output ie 6,250,000 tons, with an estimated
force of 42,000 persons; Australasia is put
down as having an annual produotion of
about 4,000,006 tons, with 11,000 persons
employed, the output of Nova &sotta is set
down at 2,250,000 tons while British Col*
umbia puts out some 1:200,000 toxis.
Nothing Serious.
I euppese, he said, that all those liege
you weer bat.t tender associations? Oh,
no, ehe re:mon/led, they are merely ettgage.
molt rings.
11-1E FARM.
• Apples Ali the year.
In setting an orehard for merket u
there should not be too many verietie
still we would select teveral varieties
winter applee, and a few etiolate vetieti
of early apples, as these often eel' well
the local markets, eve a oorrespondent.
Airing the best of very eerly eppl
may be mentioned Early • Colton, TI
ripena About ten days in advauee of It
Astraoan, color A rich golden yellow, fru
of good size and of pleasant flavor !
eating, This is &leo an excellent variety
for 000king ; no orohard is oomplete with.
out at least one tree of this variety, which
we believe has only in recent yea,re bean
introduced, It has fruited several EleaBOne
Wien Ile, and. thus far seems to be an
annual biarer. Ilia season the tree was
heavily laden with bloom, but like other
varieties the fruit was killed by the severe
freezes of early May.
While the Baldwin apple is, perhaps,
the beet market apple grown, it is not an
e.nnuel bearer and can hardly be depended
upon to produce moee than one crop in
two seasons, so if several varieties of win-
ter apples are planted some of these varie-
ties may produce a crop in the "off year"
when apples are scarce and high in price,
and thus prove more profitable than a
:Rep would produoed in A year of &hued-
ance.
A few trees of Grimes' Golden should be
found in the orchard. The fruit is of fair
size and rich golden color, good keeper and
good to cook, while in our opinion it takes
a better apple than we have yet seen
excel it in quality.
In planting a young orchard several year
ago we selected about forty Baldwin tree
Waive Mann twelve Ben Davisond a fe
other varietiee. The trees are now o
enough to produce fruit. The Baldwin w
know can be depended upon, as we ha
grown that variety before. The Man
apple has not yet fruited, and we cannot
say how satisfactory that variety will
prove. The Ben Davie has already pro-
duced several crops and has proven to be a
annual bearer, this being the first season
has failed,and that was owing to the freez
as the trees at that time were full of bloom
A tree that will produce fruit every ye
like the Ben Davis ham much to commend i
Though the fruit is of good size and appear.
anoe as far as coior goes, so many of the
apples are inclined to be rough and knotty
in shape that of the fruit from some trees
we have aeon probably not more than 10
per cent. would be fit for market, and we
are told that this variety has the same fault
when grown in other localities. The great
value of the Ben Davis would seem to be
that it is an annual bearer and also one of
the best keeping applea to be found. At
this writing, August, 10th, we still have in
our cellar good sound apples of this variety,
crop of 1894. While this is the "off year"
forapples th e Ben Davis has kept nit supplied
thus far,and the end is not yet. There was
no extra care taken to make these apples
keep; they were simply put in bins in the
cellar,
Some will say, "TheBen Davis is of only
ordinary quality." Whezr they are
thoroughly ripened along in March they
are of very good flavor. No apple is at its
best until ripe, and along in midsummer
when there are no other apples to be had
and the Ben Davis is present we say the
quality is not to be despised.
There is another good apple of which we
have a single tree growing in our orchard.
This is said to excel the Ben Davis in keep-
ing qualities. Thi i variety is Heyd's Kin
of the West. The fruit of this Is zaid t
keep from one season until the crop of th
next season is ripened. However, we hay
not yet fruited this variety and cannot ea
in regard to that.
In planting an orchard for house use to
many varieties can hardly be selected
provided .they are good ones. The aim
should be to keep a succession of goo
Iand two yews of poste with :stringers sup. A Dfirrr
port the °enter of *etch eide, Thi e frame* amtm
' work should be made very strong and solid,
wt e to support considerable
weight. Strong rails or poles, old planke,
' eto., may he placed olose together rafter.
Se like, from ground plates to the ridge pole,
%ben covered with straw, cora steaks, hay,
of or any kind of litter to the depth of & foot
or so, when the final ooveriug of soil dug
08 out of the pit ie to be put on. A door is
, left iu the south gable entl and a double
window with a chance of ventilation in the
es ; opposite end,
This desoription, itieomplete AB it may
be, will show plainly enough what little
ea ; expenee ie really flowery for the conetroes
it Mon of a root houee, and also bow safe it
or can be merle againet danger from freezing,
even in the coldoet weather, When proper-
ly closed, or ventilated, as circumstances
:nay require, the inside temperature can be
easily maintained within a minimum of
variation, and roots aud other vegetables
may be kept in good order all winter,while
celery grows and bleaches splendidly. Of
course there must be drainage underneath.
Without storage facilities of this kind, and
a heating furnitoe in the cellar uucler the
house, we have to fall back on the ex-
pedient of keeping roots in barrels sunk
into the ground to near the brim, covering
with boards and litter enough to exolude
frost, or by using the hot -bed pits for the
storage of cabbage, roots, etc.
ague
A NEW DIET FOR CATS AND DOGS.
Thousands or Liorsee Slatigntered la ton -
don Nowadays to reed Household Petra
One of the strangest and most proliteble
trades of London is the wholesale and retail
business of horaemeat for cat and dog food.
In barrows, pony traps and hand carts the
hawkers of horseflesh cry their wares
threughout the city and find a ready and
to constant sale for them. There is hardly
householder that fails to buy of the "cat's
a meat man."
Id
Ve purpose. All day long and all night long
o the slaying of these beasts goes on, and the
three or four establishments that cater to
the trade continually have their hands full.
haoh horse mean s, on an average,275 pounds
o of meat, and as 26,000 horaes a year mean
it 500 horses a week, it follows that the oats
et and dogs of London whose masters and
. mistresses patronize the "horse food" man
ar manage to dispose of clear ten tons a day.
t. The hawkers sell this meat in half-penny-
worths,a pound cutting up into six of these
portions,each being properly skewered. An
interesting fact in relation to the skewers
Is that half a ton of them are used each
day, or 182 1-2 tons of dead wood a year.
The ten tons a day of dead horse are out up
into 131,400 meals. The magnitude of the
trade oan be seen from the fact that it keeps
constantly employed thirty wholesale
salesmen.
Actually 26,000 horses, played out,
maimed and aged, are killed and cut up in
the English metropolis every year for this
THE AFRICAN BOOM.
A Mania for Speculation—Marney Mulatto,
the Leader or the'elovemen t is a Multi -
Millionaire.
A despatch from London, says z—The
speculative mania in South Africa stooks
shows no sign of abatement. StockExchange
dealess compare the present time with that
of Lame' Mississippi inflation in France,
and the South Sea bubble in England. Men
who were financially "broke" two months
ago now boast that they are worth tens of
thousands of pounds. Stooks that were
quoted in June at 1£ are now quoted ab
£40. Brokers who were reoently struggling
to keep their heads above water now employ
g large corps of clerks, and net enormous
profits.
O Barney Barnato, the leader of the boom,
O who, at one time, was an itinerant juggler,
Y is now a multimillionaire. Ve is about
to build a palace in Piccadilly, which will
° cost 42,50,000. In the meantime he hae
' leased Earl Spencer's house. D.espite the
success of his Barnato bank, and every
apples the year round. If orchard space
is limited and only a few of the different
varieties are wanted, two or more varieties
may be grafted on the same tree. In this
way thirty or forty varieties of apples ma
be grown sucoessfully on perhaps a doze
trees.
Of course there are many good variable
of apples well worth planting, but we wil
not take space to inention them here.
Varieties that succeed well in your locality
are as a rule the ones to plant. We have
mentioned a few varieties, some of which
we believe are not yet in general cultiva.
tion, our object being to show that apples
can be had the year round,
other scheme into which he has entered, he
has nob succeeded in trying the highest
financial circle, white' is also operating in
South Africa, butwhich yet holds itself
aloof from Mr. Barnato. The speculative
Y spirit extends to other branches of the
1
n StookgeEnxercahlainyr, and gives impetus to busi-
ness
a
Building a Root House.
This is the time of year to think about
building a substantial house for the storage
of the root crops now growing so luxuri-
antly. I invariably try to avoid the neces-
sity of carrying vegetables, such as onion!,
that are ready for market in the fall, into
or through the winter, writes a correspon-
dent. This would involve risks and sure
losses by freezing, rottieg, shrinkage, eto.,
and I find it more profitable to sell what I
have to sell as soon as I can find sale for
it than to try to hold. ib for a rise In prices,
BLit we have to store oelery, cabbage and
potatoes, and roots of all sorts, and per.
haps apples and pears, even if mostly for
home use only. Usually ib is not advisable
to fill the cellar under the living rooms ful
of vegetables and fruits. There is more or
less decay and a consequent poisoning of
the atmosphere.
But when a portion of the cellar is used
as a furnace room, and entirely unsuitable
fo
of
V6
ba
an
tio
• loo
of
ne
str
ch
ho
col
cot
th
pu
b a
is
of
the
r a storage room, and even the other part
the cellar is too dry and warm to Jteep
getables and fruits in good condition, we
ve very little (Mamie to otore what stuff
e wish to have on hand during the winter
d spring in the /seller, This is our situp.,
n. The possession of a conveniently
ated regular root lame will help us out
all these difficulties. For ordinary use it
ed not be large, either. But a serviceable
native of this kind oan be easily and
ettply put up on any plan. Pito or roob
uses are largely employed by professional
ery growers in various parte of the
intry for winter storage of celery, arid
ey are indeed admirably adapted for thin
I
rpose. a
The pit is suek only bWo or twO and 4 a1
If feet into the ground. The ridge
a
TWO WEEKS' VACATION IN BED.
A Pleasurable Holiday This Spent BY
TWo Hospital Nurses Who Were Short
or Sleep.
J. MSBarrie suggested in one of his skits
that the best way to spend a holiday was
to spend it in bed, but until quite recently
this theory was never put into aotual
practice. Two hospital nurses of London
tried it the other day, however, with the
most pronounced success. They each had
a fortnight's vacation and they hired a
cottage in the country and engaged an old
woman to attend on them. The inhabit.
ante of the little community were not in.
formed regarding this novel project, and
as the days went by and the newcomers
were never seen the neighbors naturally
were astonished.
Some suggested that there was some
terrible mystery about these women and
that their strange and unnatural behavior
should immediately be probed. It was
, even thought a ivisable to have a con-
' sultation with the police of the district
The little cottage was not molested nor
its secrete pried into,and the story did not
come out until the two ladies their vaca-
tion over, made a call upon the vioar, and
after giving him some small sum for charity
explained the matter.
It appears thab they had practically
spent their whole time in bed. For a year
past they had got their sleep in such shore
snatches and subject to so many interrup-
tams that their one ides of a blissful
holiday was a amnion of absolute and undite
turbed repooe.
Bigger Nuisance.
Cumeo—I dettast Jayamith. Re tells all
he knows 1
Cawker—Ib is not the &lap who tells all
he ktioWe that annoys me most.• '
No ?
No j it is the one ails tenet all he doetin't
knows
Dootorae" I Would Adele° you,clear tnad
in, to take frequent baths, plenty of
reeh air, and drafts in cool gowns." Hus-
a'
and (an hour later)—" What did the
odor tatty t" Wife—"Re said ought to
0 to a watering phase, and aftotwards to
he mountable and. te get some new light
owns at once."
pole '
even feet from the bottotramore Or less, u .
d is held by stout poste. The lower end!?
the roof mite on platen or ple.nke laid on 1"
surface of the ground alongaide the pit, g
lhildren Cry for Pitcher's Ca%forial
T
,-sessle,e'-eaetre s"." '
TIMES
HI: HOUSE,
)3uying. Canned Goode,
IA these days of univereel canning—and
they ere not by any mamas mentioned in a
disparaging sense --there ie more or less
danger that impelfecte goods may be
purchaeed. Unfortunately, there are
oheap, poor, unreliable articles put into
ems, ea well as offered in other ways. An
emineut physioien, who lute carefully
etudied the matter, lays down sorne rules
for the guidance of housekeepers, bas
upon his investigatioas, whicli ere we
worth bearing in mind and. observing
the eelection of canned food material. fl
inatruotions are to " reject every natio
that does not show the line of rosin round
the edge of the older of the cap, the same
as is seen on the seam on the side of the
can. Rejecb over can that does not have
the name of the maunfacturer or firna upon
it as well as the name of the oompany or
town where manufactured. Standards
have all this. When the wholesale dealer
le ashatned to have his name on the goods,
fight slay of him. Press up the bottom of
the oan. If decomposition is beginning,
the tin will rattle the 434Me as the bottom
of the oiler of your sewing machine will
do. If the goods are sound, it will be
solid, and there will be no rattle in the
tin. Reject every tin that ahotva any eigu
of rust around the cap on the ineide of the
head' of the can. If housekeepers are edit.
oated on these points, then the muriate of
zinc amalgam will become & tlaing of the
past." •
PALL FUN.
Me1tler...ft/7o you like trolley par tee?"
juot love 'ena You ltnow I'M
engaged to one ; kke'D amotermen."
"Mien Octave is a beautiful 'player."
"You mean ale plays beautifully." "No,
that'e exactly what I don't mean 1"
"Couldn't your husband be induced to
try; the faith oure ?" "I think he could.
I.Ie tried dozetie of thinge be tilde'tbelieve
"Balm a,I j uat eeve the lieutenant kleoiug
yoorue,De or t let xn e Bee that again," "Cer.
tautly, ananm
ia. We shall be more cautious
ed haf t
Dora --"Mr, Spooner says he alway.s
a feele like a fish out of water when he le
in with me." Cora—"Then you've hooked
is aims him you 1"
le
Van Jaiy—"Miee Meeks called me a fool.
Do I look like a fool ?" Millicent--" No,
you do not. I don't think she judged you
by your looks."
Jisok Potte—"Meking love isa good dee
like playing cards." Mies Pipkin—"Ilow
so 1" Junk Potts--"Thereal a lot in know.
bag what a hand is worth."
Bookkeeper—"I tete by the paper that
our customer, Soadskins, is married.'
E4rarytoloseilimi
l4°naille ta17--"Iudeed I shall be
so
First wisp fiend at a hotel—"He's a mean
cuss ; dida't give me a oent," Second
wisp fiend—"That fool I was brashia' give
me a quarter."
Uncle—"You only write me once every
month, when you want money." Nephew
(0. student)—" I beg your pardon, unele
last month I had to write twice."
" You say he is a promoter? What is
hie line, do you know ?" " I couldn't say
positively, but I have a suspioion that) he
deals mostly in filling pneumatic+ tires,"
" Yes," said Mrs. Hunnimune, "I
learned to cook without any difficulty at
all. There was only one trouble aboutia"
b"aWntill's"apwpaestittehaf' ? "Educating my hua.
"A word is enough for the wise"
Is a proverb that tells us no lies ;
Which is why to a jury, they say,
A. lawyer must talk half a day.
"Did you have any trouble with your
French wnett you were in Paris ?" " No ;
I understood my French well enough, but
thoee measly Parisians didn't. They had
all the trouble."
Blevins—" I am delighted to see you 1
But what a stormy night for a call 1" Bos-
tick (hanging up his dripping coat)—" I
know it is bad ; but it is an ideal night for
fiuding people at home."
" You should never take anything that
doesn't agree with you," the physician told
"11 I'd always followed that rule,
Maria," he remarked to his wife, " where
would you be 7"
Hoax—" How is it you're not married
yet ?" Joax—" This amateur photographio
craze is responsible for it." ' How so 7"
"All the girls I know have taken to devel-
oping negatives."
11 my,cook could ride a cyole
She would make a record neat,
For, to judge her by her dinners,
She's a scorcher hard to beat.
A Home -Made Book Case,
If a person would but exercise his in,
genuity and abut a libtle thought so many
neat pieces of furniture could be made at a
very slight expense. A book case, for in-
stance, oan be faehioned from a box in
which shoes, soap, or canned goods have
been packed, and with some paint and
putty, a brass rod and some light curtains
be made quite an attractive piece of furni-
ture.
Take or make a box any size or shape
you choose. With Band paper make ib
smooth and fill up all cervices and hales
with putty. Put in as many shelves as the
size will permit, and do not have them more
than seven-eighte, of an inch in thickness.
A etrip of cornice moulding should cap the
cabinet all around the top. Stain or paint
it to correspond wish the other furniture or
wood -work in the room. A brass rod
placed across the case, near the top, from
which curtains of silk or any other pretty
eoft material may be suspended will corn -
plate the cabinet. Two curtains will be
prettier than one, for when one is drawn
the obher may be pushed back, giving it a
more graceful appearance, When all is
ready place on the shelves a good encyclope-
dia of English literature, a good history of
our own country, and some copies of our
best poets and authors.
Hints and Helps.
A, housekeepei declares against screens
and in favor of lavender, to mitigate th
fly nuisance. She throws her windows wid
open to the air, and relies, as her mothe
ancl grandmother did before her, accordin
to her testimony, solely on lavender fo
protection. Five cents' worth of oil o
lavender, mixed with an equal amount o
water, and used in a common atomizer
about the table and wherever flies are an
noying, will banish these small tormentors
and shed beside a delightful arotna of clean
Apply sweet spirits of nitre to mosquit
bites, and it will draw out all soreness an
itching,if the skin is not broken by scratch
ing it.
if the seams of a new tin pail or pan ar
well greased with fresh lard or sweet oil
and the pail set on a stove shelf or othe
warm place for twenty.four hours before i
is washed, it will not rust afterward.
A simple way to remove grease spots
from wall paper caused by the head resting
against the wall is to hold a piece of clean
blotting paper over the spot and press a
moderately warm flat iron over it, Repeat
the operation until all the grease is out,
When a ham or a large piece of meat is
boiled for slicing cold, use plenty of water
and let tlae meat stand in it until cold, for
by no doing the meat will reabsorb muoh of
the nutriment which has been drawn out
during the boiling process.
Cholly—"Thought you were going to
a I marry Miss Kostique ?" Gussie—"Going
e to awsk her to -night. My chawuces are
about even." "How so, deah boy?" "She
✓ must say either 'yes' or "
g Dozber—"Do you think that constantly
✓ wearing a hat has a tendency to make a
f man bald ?" Jazlin—"No ; but when a man
is bald Fee noticed that it has a tendency
1 to make him constantly wears hat."
"I don't see any use in gettime blue over
- it, old man. She isn'e the only girl in the
, world." "That's just what I'm blue about.
Think of the chances I have of making the
Fame kind of a foal of myself again,"
O Mies Innersent—"You say, you object
to Charles because he is too much in the
_ swim ?" Her father—"Most decidedly."
Miss Innereent—"But papa, I am sure be
e would give up bathing altogether if he
knew."
✓ Grocer (to new boy)—"See, now, if you
can lift this fifty -pound bsg of flour." New
boy—"No,eir,I can't." Grocer—"Thought
you said you could carry fifty pounds ?"
New boy—"But this wasn'b weighed on
your scales 1"
A cleaning fluid for men's clothes that
the housewife will find valuable consists of
one pint of deodorized benzine'one-half
drachm sulphuric ether, one-half drachm
chloroform, one drachm alcohol, and a very
little good cologne. If it is used for clean-
sing coat collars and outside garments,
apply with an old piece of soft black silk.
For neckties—and it den be used on those
of light colors as well as black—a,pply,with
a piece of white silk. In washing soiled
black goods put a tablespoonful in a gallon
of warm water. Twenty or twenty-five
cents will pay the druggist for a quart
bottle of the mixture.
Purify by Agitation.
Our cistern water got to smelling bad.
I heard that agitation would help the
trouble, and tried pumping out of and
back into the cistern through a hose
attached to a pump nozzle. A few min-
utes work made a very noticeable improve-
ment. It is simple, easy and effective;
every one so troubled should try it.—
H. a B.
--
Unferrnent9c1 Grape Jules.
Pick over grapes, place in a porcelain
or granite kettle, water to barely cover,
boil until the skins burst, strain. Add
half as much sugar as juice ; boil 10
minutes. Can and seal closely. Keep in
a cool, dry, dark place.
• Covers that Stiek.
A fruit jar cover which will not readily
come oft should be inverted mad the top
pub in hot water for a minute or two.
Than tlae cover yields to a very elight
effort,
A Septernber straw.
September grins at the man la the straw,
Of the Alpine sbyle or flee,
And she softly murmurs into hie ear :
"Where did you get that hat
After the Summer.
Hinks—Where did you, spend your vaoa.
tion?
Binks— I didn't spend it. My wife and
daughter spent everything else I had, and
I thought I'd better eaVe tiontethings
That surly sign; "Keep off the grass!"
From sight of man will shortly pass;
Soon shall we see, as oft before,
Its rude successor : "Shut the door 1"
" Of course" said the practical girl,
" there is such a thing as love at sight."
" I'm so glad to hear you say that," re-
plied her romantic) friend. " Yes—but
I'd always advise giviug it at least thirty
days to settle just tee same."
For the lite of me I cannot see why
people think it ao comical a thing for a
mau to get married," complained the young
man who was on 1 is bridal tour. "Nor
me, neither," remarked the passenger with
the white whiskers. " An' I may state
furder that been inarrit twelve years."
A Fish Story.
Bluegrass—I caught a sucker the other
day that weighed a huadred and eighty
pounds.
Burbin—Oh, come off. You fellows that
fish can't ten the truth.
Bluegrass—But I'll swear to it. I sold
him that old hose I got from you for $150
or e200,
scott:"
arsa arilla
tasteseeetwasa .33,1474V4.-atiqiVe'Nfgrri
CATARR,I-1 OF THE HEAD
. . OF THE EARS
. . OF THE KIDNEYS
. . OP THE STOMACH
. . BRONCHIAL
CTJRED BY—arerrearata.
SCOTT'S SARSAPARILLA
You may relieve a cola in the head
by local armhole.
tions, but, all the snuffs, powders, sprays,
ealves and balms on earth won't cure catarrh,
Scott's Sarsaparilie will, because it acts con.
etitutionally with pure blooa, reaohing every
part of the system, searching out the fount
of mucous accumulations, removing the cause
of their being. The reason it cures catarrh is
on aceount of the newly discovered Properties
it contains.
SCOTT'S. SKIN SOAP Prevente Rougb Skim
Sold by C. LINZ, Exeter, Oat
can, without doubt, be cuxed in its early s -ages.
battle from the start, but with. the right kind of wea.ponic
properly used it can be overcome and th,-.) insidious foo
vanquished. Hope, courage, proper exercise, wit,
power, and the regular and continuous use, of the beto
nourishing food -medicine in existence—
Scott's E Ision
--tb.e wasting can be arrested, the lungs healed, the)
cough cured, bodily energies renewed and the physioat
powers made to assert th.emselves and kill the germs
that are beginning to find lodginent itt the ltmgs
This renowned preparation, that has no doubt cure:
hundreds of thousands of in.cipient cases of Comsump,
tion, is simply Cod-liver Oil emulsified and made
palatable and easy- of assi-zdlation, combined with the
ypophosphites, the great bone, brain an.d nerve tonic
Scott et Bownes 3elle-00.e AP Drusr.O.sts, 70G and SI
ds of
and
1 dem
Canada's VtioUnown Railroad Con actor,
Mr. J. W. Dinwoodie,
Treated by Several Doctors and Tried Nearly Every Proprietary
Medicine—Got Very Little Benefit—Was Influenced to
Use South American Nervine—Found Immediate Relief—
"The Nervousness Has Entirely Left My System. "—
"1 Will Never Be Without It in My Honae."
MR. j. W. DINWOODIE, CAMPBELLFORD, ONT.
Men of affairs usually weigh their
words. They are not of that olv,ss of
people who carry their hearts upon their
sleeve. One of the best known men of
affairs in Canada is Mr. .1. W. Dinwoodie,
the large railroad contractor, evidenee of
whose work is to be found in all parts of
the Dominion, from the Atlantic to the
Pacific, to chrdu one section of our vast
Dominion with another and bring its
people into easy touch with each other
through the medium of the iron horse, as
Mr. Dinwo, die has in a short lifetime
done, ie n Is ork of which any inan may be
proud. Hard and brainy labor, however, is
necessary to SuCeeis of this character, and
the strongest constitutions are in dauger
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 be bec -me s, victim of
nervous troubles, his liver and kidneys
beecaning serieusly disordered.
Naturally he oonsulted a medical man.
Comparetisely no relief was obtained.
Ile ohanged his doctor, and did not stop
with ono, two or three physicians, but he
got no Letter. Various proprietary medi-
cines were recommended, slid, as he says
himself. " Tried them all, but got very
little benefit. Last fall I was camping
out, and I 14'843 feeling very ill. 1 hap,
pened to pick HD a paper with the ad.
vertisemen t for South American Nervine.
I determined to give it a trial, and pro
cured a bottle from the lc cal druggist..
After having taken but a few doses
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, tin.
fit for work, has as a, result of the con-
tained use of Nervine, become banished
from my system. I am now able to en-
joy refreshing sleep the 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 mrst confidently
commend it to anyone troubled with
nervousness of whatever form and the
attendant diseases of the liver and stoner
ach that follow this weakness."
The important fact can not be too
often emphasized that South American.
Nervine cures at the nerve tentars, from
which emanate all diseases. Thas being
an undoubted scientifie truth, fully and
perfectly dernotstrated by soienco, it is
never an exrerinsent to use Nervine, but
in this remedy is always founa a *erttaiab
Cure,
0. LT3TZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter.
Tuos. Wicxx7r, Crediton Drug Store, Agent.
IT. • z,41. 1.1`.1t
*4/r
MidnightWa k
with a coney baby or a coney stomach
isn't pleasant. r,ither can be avoide
ay keeping a bottle of Perry Davie'
Parer Etr.tiltn on the medicine shelf. It
is invaluable in sudden attacks of &wasps,
Cholera Morbus, Dysentery and Diarrhie.,
Just as valuable for all external
bobn.,-Ono teagpoonfal th a half roirs at riavter or rnilk (wtt1tn it .111,0711orit).
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