Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1895-10-3, Page 70.1 Almost 'Passes Belief Mr. Sas. E. Nicholson., Floreneeville, Struggles tor Seven Lone Years with , CANCER ON THE LIP, AND /S MIRED BY A Same ERs parilla Nioliolson says: "I consulted doc- toys who prescribed for me, but to no purpose; the cancer began to Eat into the Flesh, spread to my chin, and suffere4 fn IiifeugYeit°&UivirA l;enrf s Ygtarrsspighl:1.17iii a week'or two I uotieed a Decided Improvement. • Encouraged by, this result, I perse- Vered, until in a month or so the sore under my chin began to heal. In three it Months my up began to heal, and, after using the Sarsaparilla. for six months, t the last trace of the cancer disappeared." ab -2 - Ayer s only Sarsaparilla Admitted at the World's Fair. amc====.22.0.2monacates......easgencescpan -""" YEWS .P.n.E.nse Regulate the Bowelts. THE OF ANYEXETER TIMES FOR TWENTY-FIVE YEARS D NNS "KINC DE THECOOK'S BEST FRIEND LARGEST SALE IN CANADA. 'tty CENTRAL Drug Store PAXSON'S BLOCK. A full stock of all kinds of . Dye -stuffs and package Dyes, constantly on hand. Winanis Condition Powd- era, the hest in the mark- et and always resh. Family recip- ees carefully prepared at Central Drug Store Exete C. la T.PrZ. pitEAD-MAKER'S Ilissuoriff.HP FAILS 'fil OIVP 8.1171SFASECO ttrttR aart,v stSseen -ZEN /eh '44•0 ' itruserord PILLS Cure Biliousness, Sick Head- ache, Dyspepsia, Sluggish Liver and all Stomach Troubles, RISIVICaPS I PILLS Are Purely Vegetable, elegantly Sugar -Coated, and do not gripe Or sicken. ISTOL75 1"31141.46 'Act gently but promptly and thoroughly. "The safest family medicine.' All Druggists keep 13FUSTOWS PILLS TEE NEWS. IN A NUTSHELL THE VERY LATEST PROM ALL OVER THE WORLD. neterestOng Itenia Abent Our Own nontstrit Groat Gritann. the United Stone, Ann AU Parts se the (none. COndonsod and Assorted for Easy Headless) nouns., Natural gee has been struck at Iberville, Quebec. Hamilton new propeoes to terrace part of the mountain. Typhoid fever is reported to be on the inereaae in Chatham, Ont, Mayor Stewart of Hamilton, is expected home from Florence at the end of next month. • Constable Kenythote of the Northwest Mounted Polioe, at Wa,pella, was fe.tally kicked by a horse, Mr. Abner. 1VIatthewa, an old man of 70 years, was killed on the Miohigan Central track near Welland. Hon, Mr. Dickey has ordered 1,500 Lee- Metffird rake and 800 Lee -Me tford carbines for the Canadian. militia. Ordera have been issued to have the Sault Ste. Marie Canal kept open on Sundays until the end of the season. Mr. and Mrs, Shortie, the parents of Shortie, the Valleyfield murderer, arrived in Montreal on Saturday night. Hamilton veterans propose to celebrate the 30th anniversary of Ridgeway on the battle ground in June next. The statue of Sir john Macdonald has arrived in Kingston, and it is possible that it may be unveiled next month. Over four hundred of Winnipeg's citizens attended the farewell reoeptiou at Govern- ment House given by Sir John and Lady Schultz. • The International Radial Railway Com- pany ask for bonuses of $20,000 from, Waterdo yin and $50,000 from East Flame. hero'. Hunt's Opera house atiSt. Catharines was burned on Saturday morning. The build- ing was valued at $18,000, and was insured for $8,000. The Queens Hotel property- at Montreal %VAS sold by the Sheriff to Mr. William Hanson, aoting on behalf of some ot the creditors, for $21,000. Forty-four cents a bushel is the price buyers have fixed for Manitoba wheat at points where the eighteen cent rate to Fort William afloat exists. Lord Dufferin has acceded to the request for his portrait for the National Gallery at Montreal, accompanying it with a very complimentary letter. - A sharper who gave his name as Fred Wilson of Montreal was arrested at London after he had buncoed Mi. ,lames Blakie, White Oak farmer, out of $50. Mr. Joseph Limoges, while driving with Mr. Nadin at Montreal, was struck and killed by an electric car. The horse was killed and Mr. Nadin was badly hurt. The 0, P. R. is opening new stations petting on night operators and employing additional tram crews to handle the big wheat crop in Manitoba and the North. West, A landslide occurred at St. Luce,Quebed, which carried away the house of Mr. Nor- mandin and buried five members of his family. The Champlain River is completely blocked. Two of the women employees of the W1 C. McDonald tobacco works at Montrea who ware injured in the recent , fire have entered aotionsafor damages against Mr. McDonald., The Peary relief steamer Kite has arrived at St. John's, Nfld. vvith Lieut. Peary and his companions from Greenland. The expedition was a failure, and but a repeti- tion of last year's work. The Medical Health officer of Chatham. Ont., stated on Saturday that the carcase of a now afflicted with an aggravated type of lump jaw or cancer, had been cut up by a city butcher and sold over the counter. Tbe services of Rev. Prof. B. Warfield, D. D. of Princeton University, have been secured by Knox College, Toronto, for a course of lectures on the general subject of aystematio theology during the month of October. The Montreal Company contemplates holding a grand fair in Montreal next year, covering between May 24 and October 12. The exposition will be called the British Empire Exposition and International Display of All Nations. An agitation is being worked up amongst the Germans of the Northwest Territoriee to nava the use of the German languages allowed in the schools. Mr. Peter Ulaassen of Rosthern has writteu strong letter in support of the move- ment. Mr. Etayter Reed, Deputy Superintend.ent-Generalof Indian Affairs, has returned to Ottawa from the West. Regarding the rumored uprising among the BOtellfeet• Indiatts, Mr. Reed says there is no trouble whatever. In fact, he contends that there never was anything eerious unusual. The Toronto 'City Council at a special meeting hold on Thursday afternoon by a vote ot 13 to 8 decided to engage Mr. Mansergh, the eminent water works ex pert, of London, Eng., to come to Toronto to report on the best system of water sup. ply for the city. The Belgian Consul -General in Canada will demand that the Canadian Government take action against, the Monde, which republished an article from the New York World, making an attack upon the King of the Belgians, etating that he had squandered the immense fortune of the extEmpress Carlotta of Mexico in the establishment of the Congo Free State. A memorial service to the Rev. Robert Stewart and his wile, who Were murdered recently in China, was held on Sunday evening in St. George's church, Ottawa, when the Rev. G. 0. Troop, of Montreal, declared that Robert Stewart is at nearly a martyr as Stephen, who prayed for his murtierere, and as much deserve a to wear the martyr's crowe. • GREAT ItaITAIN. Ma Sims Reeves is reported to have married -again at the age of 73. The British Aesociation for the Advance. went of Selene') has decided to Meet in Toronto in. 1897. Forty thousand pounds' worth of jetvels belonging to Mrs.Langtry were taken from the tJnion Bank, London, on a forged order, Cable clempatches state that It is under. stood that the Braid) Government hail decided to introduee legislatiori itt faVonr etf'Sextarian soliools, The British ohip Stoneleigh, from Men hoOrne fer Louden, la now 210 daya amd fears are eetertained that she have foendered off Cape Horn, The stearnere Constantine and Trere collided on Friday off the entrance River Tyne, The Censtantine was a the water's edge, and foundered bit orew were reoeued, The suecetieor to the Marquis of bury as the president of the Britiah elation for the Advanoement of Saie Captein Sir Douglas Galtou, who has for the lest twenty years the seoreta the aasooiation. Geoffrey Perkins, an American, represented himself to be a lawye journalist, was aenteneed in Lend Tuesday to ten years' penal servitud the charge of levying and collecting b put, I strItaate mILY Chili has renounced the oommereial treaty with England, oonoluded 1854. bilink 1 Fifty housee and the IVIonst- eltitthtoe bteurryn:it.Friesaoh, Ceriuthies Auetria) wee t her A second Qhineme loan guaranteed by Vraoce and Russia wili im undertaken in Selie" November, , TINES nos is Several oaoes of cholera hdave befetithrme- bee, , ported in Coostantinople, and one o e ey Qf t has resulted fatally, I A military train returning to Paris on 'who Thursday night was wrecked, and thirteen ✓ and were killed aod sixty injured. on on I There are indieations that the powere e on !may be invited to iuterfere in the affair)) of lack- Belgium and the Congo Free State, A lot of titles and military stores iutend- The news that an American sugar pl has obtained the exolusive right to 1 submarine oable in Hawaii is the 000 of much diseuseion in London among advocates of s British cable to the inland. According to correspondence from Cowea several prominent yacbtamen, including the Prince of Wales have formed a eyndioate to build a yaoh't to beat the world. The preliminaries have been arranged, but nothing definite 'will be decided upon until the end of October. The highest speed ever attained upon the water is credited to the new Russian torpedo boat Sokol (Russian for hawk), just launched in England, which went thirtyetive iiiilea csn hour on her trial trip. At that rate an Atlantic liner would cream the ocean in three or four days. Discussing the revival of the rumour that Itlay may be induced to sell a small territory to the Pope, a Paris correspondent telegraphs to London that the project for the Pope's ransom by the Catholic world is no secret in the Cabinets of Europe. Among the new members of the English House of Commons is the Indian Bhown. agree. He is the son of a Bombay merchant, and has been a lo.wyer and an editor in England, and a judge in India. He is the only one of his race in the House, His colleagues refer to him as the "member for The prompt denial of the Dominion Government that Canadian filled cheese were placed on the English market has had the desired effect. The editor of the North. British Agriculturist admits and regrets the grave error made in using the word Canadian instead of America's, and prom- ises an editorial explanation, and the publication of evidence showing the purity of the Canadian product. enter ed for the Cuban insurgents have been and a discovered on the British Wand a Andros. "len Two e boats have been ordered to the ac eng:1Clihina, to enforce punishment the rioters who attacked the mismionar there. In the Province of Volhynia, Russ during one week totvards the close of A ust there were 5,849 cones of cholera, w 2,134 deaths. *UNITED STATES. Three men were burned to death in a fire at Pittsburg. Dr. Talmage will go to Washington as pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, Mr. Vanderbilt denies that Miss Van- derbilt is engaged to the Duke of Marl- borough. There are twenty-four creameries in Maine that do nothing but manufacture butter the year round. A Wabash, Ind., jury has decided that kissing a woman against her will does not constitute an assault. A true bill has been returned against Mrs. Mack at Buffalo for uttering counter- feit American stamps. Steps are being taken to hold an °eche dental and Oriental Fair in Tacoma, Wash., in the summer of 1900. A man in Gilsum, N. H., while cleaning out a raceway recently, found a gold ring which his wife had lost seven years ago. About 1,060 Grammar school graduates of Brooklyn are unable to find places in the High solsools, so crowded are those buildings. William J. Hollis, formerly private sec- retary of Sir Joseph Hickson, was arrested in Boston on a charge of robbing his ployers. A herd of 7,000 horses was bought on aahingcon ranch the other day by t rtland Horse Meat Canning Company a head. Boston is said to have -pent $75,000 to entertain the Knights Templar, and the knights left behind $1,000,000 in the city of baked beans, A movement has been projected t Po $3 UNIFICATION OF ITALY( ANNIVERSARY' OP THE ENTRY OF ITA,L1AN tROOPS INTO RODE, The Populace Eat thneteatio—monuotent to tltkribal4it illowetlicel—CrIspt Eulogizes Victor Entanuet anti warns the vlers.r) A despatch front Rome, says; --Buildings throughout the oity are literally covered with decorations and thttetrests are crowds ed with people eager to witness the ceremonies of the principal day of the aeries of celebrations oommemorative at the entry of the Italian troops into Rome. It is noticeable, however, that only the embaseiea of the United States and England ctieplay flags. All of the other embassies and legations abstain from any participa- ,o1 tion in the fetes, whatever. The Pope les went to St. Peter's, where he spent an hour in prayer. • A. MONUMENT TO GARIBALDI. ug- ith The chief event of the day was the un- veiling of a monument to the memory of Garibaldi on Jauioeluin 1111110 the presence of 50,000 wildly enthusiastic persona, King Humbert and the sioyal family, all of the court dignitaries and Cabinet Miniaters and numerous deputations of veteran Garibeldiana The latter, with banners and bands of music °coupled the places of honor. " Premier Criapi delivered an oration, eulogizing Victor Emanuel and Garibaldi as the saviors of Rome from foreign tyranny. If Christianity could conquer the world without the aid of arms, it was difficult to understand why the Vatican should desire a civil principality in which to exercise its functions. A Spanish warship waa sunk in eollisi near Havana. Admiral Parejo, Capt Baba; three other officers and 30 of t crew were drowned. The Japanese Parliament has voted credit for the building of four iron -el bantleships, ten coast defence vesaels, fifty torpedo boats. A St. Petersburg despatch says that fro a good source it is learned the Porte h accepted the demand of the powers wi regard to reforms in Armenia. It is reported that a rebellion hat brok out on the border of the Province of F Kien. A detachment of Imperial troo are advancing to give battle th the insu gents. Ie is reported that five British °ruble sre ascending the River Yang -tae -Kiang consequence of information that foreign° are being threatened with violence in t interior of China. The Brazilian Government has decid to present the British Minister at R Janeiro with his passport if Englan establishes• a cable station on Trinida Island. A report from China, brought by a r turned American traveller, states th cholera is making frightful ravages in th country, and that the deaths in Peki average two thousand a day, on 8.10be a ad nd 58 th en o- ps r- osersiontos SHOULD BE GRATEFUL. re In no state, he declared, had the ahurch in so much liberty se in Italy, and Catholics re ought to be grateful for this to those who he had striven to unify Italy by making Rome its capital. Signor Crispi concluded by saying that ed if, despite the advantages which the clergy 1,t) enjoyed, they 01°01 violate the laws or n vituperate the country, their punishment d would be prompt and ffiexorable. e- PARADE wITH 1000 FLAGs. at A procession of great length marched at to the open space about the P'orta Pia. A n thousand flags were carried by the para- ders. At the head of the procession marched numerous delegates from the L. Provincial Commons. Next came pupils The National Zeitung has,aathority f deolaring that the rumours that Prine Hoherilohe is about to retire from the po of Imperial Chancellor are utterly devoi ot foundation. . A Paris inventor named Turpin claims have authority from the Porte to fortif the Dardanelles, and to be able to make th straits impassable to the united fleets o the world. After a suspension of fifteen years th meteorological observatory on the Brooken in the Hartz mountains, where witch° hold their Sabbath on May day night, is t be re-established this fall. A Spanish court-martial in Havana ha condemned the captain of an American vessel to eight and the fireman to ten years imprisonmentg at hard labour for landin cartridge& in Cuba for the insurgents. In honour of the fetes commemorating the entry of the Italian army into Rome in 1870, King Humbert has granted a pardon to all the Sicilian rioters who were undergoing sentences of imprisonment for less than ten years. The uprising among the natives in Morocco is spreading and assuming a mtich more serious aspect. Three great tribes have made a combined attack upon the stronghold of a chief who is one of the principal adherents of the Sultan, and routed his forces. IAlthough the more humble among those a concerned in the massacre of missionaries at he 1 KinCheng have been punished, the utmost at ' efforts of the British Consul have been unavailing to induce the authorities to deal with the Viceroy of the pro vines) and other high officials who are alleged to have been reaponsible for the riots. Captain Maurice Vermont, a member of a French mission on the Upper Ubangi e „tbe military schools and delegations " from the 'Italian c9lonier abroad. Then d were followed by vistottessite&sintenegree- masons after . which came a long line's of t o military, political and workingmen's thole - y ties. The whole procession made a e magnificent and imposing spectacle. As f the paraders passed the Austrian Embassy there was some hooting by the men in e'whioh was caused by the fact that , the Embassy, like the Embassies of France 8 and Russia, displayed no flag in honor of O the occasion. King Humbert has conferred the deco- ration of the Order of the Annunciate upon 3 General Oedema, who commanded the , troops who marched into Borne on Sept. 20, 1870. This evening a gala dinner was given at the Quirinal. Vincennes looking to the establishment o a university at Lincoln City Ind on tin iste where Lincoln spent his boyhood. The record of attendance at the Public schools of the LTnited States during the last year gives a total of 15,530,268 pupils it figure larger than that of any othe nation. The battle-fisld of Chickamauga, i Tennessee, where, thirty-two years ago thirty thousand dead and wounded lay was on Thursday dedicated as a pleasure park f who hats returned to France, penetrated into Emin province of Equatoria, and exploded the watershed between the Welle, the rivers flowing into Lake Tehad, and the tributaries of the White Nile. , The manoeuvers of the French army in the Vosges closed on Thurads.y with a grand I review at Mirecourt, which was made , remarkable by the presence of the Russian , !General Dragomiroff and Prince Lobanoff, The Russian officiale were received 'with the Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs. I immense enthusiasm. The story that the sum of one billion dollen is to be raised by the faithful Catholics of the world to obtain for the FROM MADAGASCAR,. Pope temporal power is utterly discredited in Washington. The Kansas City Board of Eductation has promulgated an order forbidding the smoking of cigarettes by pupils during school hours (on penalty of expulsion) and instructing teaehere to rigidly enforce the rule. The Cotton states Exhibition at Atlanta, Georgia, opened on Weduesday with much ceremony. President Cleveland started the machinery at a set time by touching the electrical eonneetion at his residence "Grey Gables." Daniel Spraker, of Fonda, N. In, is the only president the Mohawk River National Bank has ever had. He has held tile office for forty years, and, although be is 97 years old, goes to the bank daily and attends to business. General Greely, who has been inter- viewed on the proposed balloon polar expedition of Mr. Andree, does not believe the plan is feaaible or likely to be succeen, ful, Engineer Melville is of a like opinion, and regards Mr. Andree's sehome as foolish. Business in the United States this week has been to a certain extenf, inflnetmed by the finanoial situation, but the volume of trade, While nob up to expectations, shows an inertmee of twenty per cent. over last year, though still behind the showing of 1892, The cotton market has been unsen tled, end stooks are large. The. Stook 1 Exehange at New York has fluctuated considerably all the week, and dearer o money is probable. Iron eontitlues to s increase in price, and tbere is a noticeable h shrinkage in the home deniand ; the mills p fire loonfed down with order e for months ahead, nottaithAtanding a loosened enquiry. ' 00401 mills are advaneing the pride of goods, though demand just tor is easier. There is a felling off io the enquiry for some lines of WooIleti goods, and a fell? Mills bee° clesect Chlkiren Cry for fltchee$ Otooritt Pitiable Condition of French &Afters— Three Thousand lien Sent tO the HOS- vital—Facets or the Climate. Mail advices received at Paris from Madagascar reveal a deplorable condition of affairs in that island. In hospitals oalculeted for the accommodation of 250 men are crowded 600 sick French soldiers, ly,ing upon improvised bunks, and but nsufficiently attended by the doctors and nurses. In each hospital hundreds of patients are lying groaning upon the bare groutad,and suffering from lack of medicine and food, while the filthiness that prevail everywhere about them is -indescribable. The doctors are doing the beat they can for the alleviation of the sufferings of the eick,and the mortality is surprisingly small,m considering the eircuatances. Very few of the patients,howeverarecover completely, the most of those atteolted with illness being so reduced by anaemia and so subject to strange hallucinations at to be quite incapacitated for further itervice in the field. The SoMali aoolies have proved lazy malingerers. The other coolies are willing, but aro debilitated from lack of food, and are the vietims of brutality at the hands of subalterns. Ie trimly cases the hcidieo of Freneh soldiers have been devoured by dogs before they could be buried, In a atter to the Minister of War, Genera.' Duoktsno openly admits that the hardshimi f the triareh and the bad commissary ervice have tient 3,000 soldiers to the °spite], and that the bad climate is rostrating the troops. Time and Monoy. Youtn it moot tioh itt thee, As flowers ere rich in honey ; But after awhile We find that age • ,Is only rieh in money, TRIED TO DESTROY HIS SIGHT. Oitver Curtis Perry, the Desperado, Tor- tures Himself. A despatch from Auburn, N. Ynsaya :— Ever since Oliver Curtis Perry, the train robber, returned from Mattawan to a olosely-guarded cell in Auburn prison he has been in a morose mood, varied by frequent outbreaks of violence. The most desperate act he has ever attempted was committed Tuesday of this week, 'but through the reticence of the prison officials, it has been kept a secret until now. He procured a short stick, through which he thrust two saddlers' needles the same din. tance apart as his eyes, and then, holding this peculiar instrument of torture in his hands, he repeatedly prodded his eyes with thesharp points. A keeper heard the commotion in Perry's cell, and he promptly put a stop to the horrible self -punishment. He took the weapon away from the crazed man, and reported the case to his superior officer. Prison Physician Saw- yerattempted to make an examination of the bleeding, lacerated eyes, but Perry was obstinate and would not submit. He begged to go to the hospital, but the prison authorities would not listen to that pro- position. They knew of Perry's desire to enjoy the comparative freedom of the hospital, where his chances of escaping would be materially increased. So, instead of being taken there, Perry was removed to one of the isolated cells in the new building. Here he was put under the influence of choloroform, and a earefulexamination of the injuries was made. It was discovered that the needle had not yet destroyed the sight of either eye, but the unruly patient resists treatment so persistently that inflammation may develop, and the result will probably be blindness of one or both eyes. eart Disturbance There is more heat disturbance now than ever. Present clay modes of living, hurry, excitement, worry, promote it. You moan% have heart trouble, be. cause you can keep from having it. Palpitation or fluttering of the heart, smother. ing spells at night, Swelling' of the feet and ankles, ehortness of breath, pain in the left side, fainting spells, mean that the heart is oppressed—circulation is out of order. ELAY IS DANGEROUS Nato the papers daily,' chronicling the demise Of eome one by neglect of these warnings-. result, total heart failure. Scott's Sarsapttrille cures heart disturbance by equalizing the eir. eulotioe, tot:Lori/4 oevo power, supplying putt blood and nelieving the heart Of its -burden. WO SCOTT'S sICIN SOAP In Vont Oath. &ld by C. LUTZ, Exeter; Ont. KeepH t4. -P• td 0.4,11118FRING GA 107 21 104. "Msk y baby was a living eleton, The doctors :Said be was dying of /dame rims, Indigestion, eto, The various foods tried seemed to leep him aliVe, but. did not strengthen or fatten hirri. At thirteen4noriths old. he weighed exactly what he did at birth—seven pounds. began, using. B ores Emnxiszon," porno, times nutting a, f ew drops in his bottle, then again feeding' it with. a opom then again by the absorption method of rubbing it nate his body. The effect larnia mar an, velous, 33aby begto stonten and fatten, and became a beautiful dimpled box, a wonder to all. SCOTT'S ElYtnrott' supplied the one thing needfnl. "Mite. KITAINOkr WITsnInnt 9S Scott s rm • is especially useful for sickly, delicate children when their other fovi fails to nourish them. It supplies in a concentrated, easily di,gestibl,; form, just the nourishment they need to build them. up and gi.ve them health and strength. It is Cod-liver Oil made palatable and easy to asSimilate, combined with. the flypophosphites, both of which are rnost remarkable nutrients, .Don't be persuaded to accept a substitute/ Scott ec Bovvne, Belleville. MI Druggists. 50c. and $1. When the Nerye Centres Need Nutrition. A Wonderful Recovery, Illustrating the Quick Response of a Depleted Nerve System to a Treatment Which Replenishes Exhausted Nerve Forces. MR. FRANK BATTER, BERLIN, ONT. Perhaps yssu know him ? In Water- loo he is known as one of the most popular and successful business men of that enterprising town. As manag- ing executor of the Kuntz estate, he is at 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 century 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 9, 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 a very sick man. "Mt. Clemens," he continued, "was the last resort in my case. For months previous I had been suffering indescribable tortures. I began with EL loss of appetite and sleepless nights. Then, as the trouble kept growing, I was getting weaker, and began losing flesh and 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 rehef. trust about when ruv condition seemed most hopeless, I heard of a wonderful cure effected in a case somewhat similar to mine, by the Great South American Nervine Tonic, and I finally tried that, On the first 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 relish as ever. I have no hesitation whatever in saying that the South American Nervin.e Tonic cured me when all other remedies failed. I have recovered my old weight—over 200 pounds --and never felt better in my life." Mr. Feank Bauer's experience is that of all others who have used the Sotith American Nervine Tonic. Its instantaneous action in relieving dis- 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. is a great, it wondrous cure for all nervous diseases, as well as indigestion and dyspepsia. It goes to the -real source of trouble direct, and the sick always feel its marvel- lous sustaining and restorative power at one°, on the `Very first day of ite C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter, THOS. W1cliEy, Crediton Drug Store, Agent, (Saetiiretetroo wawa) stru ao,tephrN 40 sstrz non vsFr, 1P-7.0 ZII LSOCt GAtoill'i 01124 ,s1Ava &auk,/ .e1; peast/e,t idutoad eq flts usa tranqun%,, pne ,skitrOs ,giviTET 4sestttaq pun %tram/ iglu° 's/rtyptd -moo asittrung pun .R.10),rts SA/ Lusatian/a 'slitvtox sae/otio pus ottutesn 6'4)11