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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1895-10-10, Page 3.Tamos Z, .ZVi94QiZQIh AlnlOSt r" • Passes Belief altr. as. E. NIcholson, Florencevine, T. 13., altrungles fer Seven Long rears with CANCER ON THE LIP, AND /8 CURED BY RS Sarsa- AYEparilia Nr. Xicholson says: "I consulted doc- tors who prescribed for nie, but to no purpose ; the cancer began to Eat into the Flesh SOread to my shin, and 1 suffered In agony for seven long years. loinally, I I began taking Ayers Sarsaparilla. In a week or two I noticed a Decided Improvement. Encouraged by this result, I perse- vered, until in a month or so the sore nuder my chin began to heal. In three months my lip began to heal, and, after using the Sarsaparilla for six months, the last trace of the cancer disappeared." 1.2.0 Ayer Sarsaparilla at the W. orld's netir. Tnegzels. THE OFA TIVEXETER FOR TWENTY-FIVE YEARS DLL' 'NS Ki‘(41 DER THECOOK'SBESTFRIEND LARGEST SALE IN CANADA. CEN TRA.11 Drug Store FANSON'S BLOCK. A full stook of all kinds of. Dye -stuffs and package Dyes, constantly on hand, Winan's Condition Powd- er, the hest in the mark. et and always resh. Family recip. ees carefully prepared at Central Drug Store Exete LUT. frams=• aIZMA,,07.0 i-IAD-MAKER'S 0 fEVEr FAILSfO OIVF SATISF.10efee grrti9 161.1.9$ tmp, marsTords Sarsaparilla Cures Rheumatism, Gout, Sciatica, Neuralgia, Scrofula, Sores, and all Eruptions. BEISTOLPS Sarsaparilla avestu.tart Cures Liver, Stomach and Xidney Troubles, and Cleanses the Blood of all Impurities. 21111SPI'VWS •Sarsaparill Cres Old Chronic Cases where all other remedies fail. Be sure and ask your Druggist for nrtzsgrordis Sars parilla culttAPA. eeteertell ter 'Masa lteedfult. Rev. Dr. Williamson of Queen's Colleges' ME NEWS IN A NUTSIIELL Great Dwain, the Vatted legates, and letteArje:ptt:irtsliteetriethe eAtzeu:).Urcoelnwd:Caseendstarn: 4ingston, is dead. Mayor Stewart, of Hamilton, returned, home on Saturday from Italy. John H. Holt, a earpenter,waa inetanblY killed lib London by falling torn a scaffold. It is reported in Winnipeg that a Pro- vineial general election will take place shortly, ' George .A. Sinith, of Hamilton, Ont., wait arrested on Saturday night on the charge of ices. The legislature of Nova Scotia heti been diseolved, and a general election will be held en October 16th. Ida Dodge, the 'squaw who nearly unix' dered a companion near Chatam, yeas let go on suspended sentence. At a meeting of the Cabinet at Ottawa on Saturtlay, Thursday, November 21st, watt fixed for Thanksgiving day. Mr. J. Dielraon of the Stratford Collegiate institute, has been appointed assistant oommermal master at London. By the substitution of one plan for an- other in a bridge agreement with the C. P. R. Montreal is out about $40,000. The difficulty between the .Tucketts• and their cigar makers at Hamilton has been settled, the men accepting a reduced scale. Mr. Shortie, the father of theValleyfield murderer has forwarded a cheque for one thousand dollars to Mme, Leboeuf, ths wi. dow of one of the murdered men. The Ring of Siam has forwarded to the McGill University,the Trepitaka, or sacred books of Buddha, in thirty-nine volumes. Sb. Thomas has accepted the tender of the Street Railway. Company to light the oity conditional upon its operating the electric street railway. The reports of the crops of grain raised at Stony Mountain penitentiary ferns and the Indian Head Experimental farm are of the most eattafentory character. Harry Lester, a young Englishman, was arrested at Hamilton for attempting to set fire to a room in which he had a lot of book e stored, which were ineured for $200. Prof. Dale, formerly of Toronto Uni- versity, has been appointed temporarily to fill the position made vacant at Queen's University by the retnoval of Prof. Fletch- er._ Police Constable Leonard was found lying dead with a bullet in his brain early Tuesday morning in a lane off MoCaul street, Toronto. At an inquest held the jury found a verdict of euicide. There is much speculation in Montreal regarding the rumoured changes in the Grand Trunk railway official staff. General Manager Seargeant on Saturday said that the rumoured changers were premature. General Gasooigne, the newly appointed Chief Commander of the Canadian Forces, arrived at Quebec by the Parisian, He was received with Bring of guns upon landing, and a detachment of cavalry escorted him to the Citadel. Mr. D. McNiooll, general passenger agent of the Canadian Pacific railway, tvho has just returned to Montreal from a trip to the Pacific coast, iii of the opinion that the splendid crops will have a very good effect upon immigration. In closing the Criminal Assizes at Toronto on Satuaday Judge McDougall strongly 'condemned the overcrowded condition of the Central prison, which he deiscribed as a disgraceful state of affairs. He urged that the Provincial Government should immedi- ately enlarge the building. The Dominion Departmentof Agriculture has been informed by Sir Charles Tupper, High Cominiesioner in England, that Cana- dian barley is attracting considerable attention in Great Britain in connneetion with distilling, and that there is the prospect of a large market in Scotland. n0.0•••••• THE MY LATEST FROM ALL OVER TUE woRLD., Speaking of the seizure of the whaling. schooner Marvin, Collector Milne, of Vic- toria, B. C., says Captain Cooper, of the IJnitecl States cruiser Rush, is persecuting the Canadian sealers. The vessel was out on the high seas, forty miles beyond the prohibited zone, and a hundred miles from land. Alvin Jenks, a. well.know Toronto business man, committed suicide Thursday morning at his residenue, during the absence from home of his wife. The cause is unknown. Jast prior to his death Jenks wrote a letter to a City undertaker, telling him to call with a coroner at hi house in the morning. Mr. Beresford Greathead, formerly emigration agent at Winnipeg, has been engaged on a walk from Vancouver to Mon- treal since last March. He arrived in Ottawa on Friday, having tramped, two thousand eight hundred milee, taking the track of tbe Canadian Pacific railway aoross the Rocky mountains and the North-West plains. Mr. C. E. Sonturn, Canadian Commercial Agent in Ottawa for Norway, Sweden and Denmark, roports to the Department of Trade and Commerce that the shipments of Canadian flour recently received have given good satisfactiou and that the pros- pects are excellent for a large trade being done in that commodity. GREAT BRITAIN. The Duke of York 18 to be made a Rear Admiral. English newspapers ridicule the Irish convention an Chioago. Sir Herbert Murray has been appointed Governor of Newfoundland. England is already making distribution of the $75,000 received from Nicaragua. The Prince of Walee' Solt, Persimition, is favorite for next year's Derby, • Sir Charlee Tupper will deliver the in. augural addrosa at the opening of the Tynetdde Georgraphioal Society, Notwithstanding the finaneial failure so far of the Manehester and Beige canals, it has beim decided to blind a ship canal from Heyst to the seaboard. The London Daily Chronicle, Liberal, atatee that the leader's of the Conaervaeive party intend to make the House of Lords an elective body. • Con. Shervingtonawho was forinerly own. gralaer Mandeteinashief �f the M1agaey hrees,h8 grates doebte of the repOrted Etench vietoriee in Matiagimear. • VAile Bari Rormbery defiles that lte irn tends visitieg the Uhited States and Celled this year, ho admits that be is centemplat,, Mg such a trip next yeee. Next year will be the centenary of the death. of Burns, tile Scotch poet, end in that connection it is proposed to hold an exhibition of relics of the Peet ia Glasgow. It is generally understood iu Bnglish oiltjoa circles that it ie the intoOtlon. of the Unionist party to introduce measures for the reform 9f tbs House of Lords. Oscar Wilde ie ettid to be failing physi- eally in WandfiWortb priiion, There is a growing eyeapathyfer Ole prisoner, partiow, oily in literary and artistic °irides. The Duke of Cambridge was entertained at lunoheoe in Edinburgh, and made a long epeeoh, itt which he referred to his retirement, and replied to ttl8 hostile criticism which had been directed against him. Lieut, -Col. Sir Walter Wilkin, alderman for the Lime street ward, was on Saturday elected Lord Mayor of Loedon for the ensuing year, to succeed Sir Joseph Ren- als. 13obh political parties are preparing for the fray in Englaud, and many of the principal speakers on both sides are an- nounced to speak during ehe coming mon the, Dean Farrar, in an address laee week, deplored that theappeals and work of the temperance party has as yet barely touch- ed the fringe of the conscienee of the Eng- lish people. According to the London Times, the Irish land question will be settled next year, and this will be followed in 1897 by an Irish Local Government measure, which will probably include the creation of a central Council in Dublin. The Pall Mall Gazette prints a despatch from Shanghai which says: ---"Appearances indicate that England is finally in wriest in regard to the massacres in China. Five warships are now on the River Yang-tse- Kiang, proceeding towards the scene of the clisturbanoe, and four MOM are expect- ed to start immediately.” • 'UNITED STATES. The limbed States Trealury gold reserve is under $93,000,000. , Dr. Andrew Stewart of Washington, shot a burglar fatally in his house on Saturday morning. Ex -Congressman Finnerty talked very strongly against England ab the • Irish canyon non in Chicago, In the Birmingham distriot, Alabama, there are 10,000 more nsen at work than at this time last year. Monday's storm was the severest experi- enced in Wisconsin for years, and de- stroyed an immense amount of property. Citizens of New Orleans are raising a fund of $30,000 with which to erece monument to the late General Beauregard. The Rev, Dr. Talmage or Brooklyn, has accepted the call to be coepastor of the First Presbyterian church in Washington. Seven persona were drowned in the lake at Geneva, N. Y., by the sinking of a yacht which Was run down by a 'hemmer. • Rugby, Tennessee; Mr. Thomas Hughes' colony, has been leased to the Standard Oil Company for development as oil terri- tory. There is a water famine in Hazelton, Pa., and more than ten thousand men are idle, owing to the shutting down of vari- ous industries. • R. H. Holmes will be tried at Phila. delpnia on October 28 for the murder of Benjamin F. Pietzel, the father of the Pietzel family. Documents worth millions of dollars to St. Louis, connected with various street railway franchisees were stolen from the office of the Clerk of the House of Delegates. According to the evidenoe of Mrs. Durant, mother of Theo Durant, charged with the murder o Nanette Lamont in a San Francisco church, her son was born in Toronto, Ont. At Leadville a terrific explosion of giant powder occurredin the Belgium mine. Seven ,dcad bodies have already been taken out. Thirteen are known to have been killed. Theodore Durant, charged with the misrder of Blanche Lamont in a San Francieco church, still maintains his in• nocence, and declares Ins convietion that the jury will aquit him. The United States authorities have ruled that shipments from points in Canada, where they have no Consular agent,mey be certified to by any reputable merchant or the agent of any friendly power. It is stated in Washington that the United States has intimated to the Spanish Minister that unless Spain restoree order within a certain time in Cuba there will be international interference on behalf of the Cubans. Hop Sing Lee, a wealthy Chinese trier - chant of San Jose, Cal., offers a half - interest in his extensive 'merchandise business and five thousand dollars in cash to any reputable young Amerecan who will marrydeis daughter Moi Lee. The United Bootblacks' Protective League, having for it purpose the pro- tection of the bootblack fraternity, arid to promote social intercourse among its • members has been incorporated with its headquarters in New York. , A special to the Denver, Col., Times from Hot Springs, Wyo., says that the bones found by Prof. J. L. Wharton, of Columbia College, New York, near the head of Bitter Creek, and pronounced b him to be the "missing link,” were the skeleton of a pet rnonkeY owned by cowboys, which died about twelve years ago. ChartWilfrid Mowbray, the English Anarchist, who visited Chicago for the purpose of teaching hi doctrine of red Hag and no Governutent was stopped in the middle of a speech at Belmont park by the police on Sunday, and was so badly frightened that after a few words of explanation he hurriedly left the platform and made his escape. Commerical news from New York, giving the condition of business throughout the United Staten does not report any improve - meat in trade, Unsettled weather lute to a considerable entent depressed burliness in various districts, but there has been a fairly compensating inerearm 10 thennovee moist in other direetione, In the West and Eest an inereased demand for money hat beeexperietioed ; there has also beets an active dentand for steel and iron, and an advance in the.ptioe of cotton, CO well as flour, wheat, and wool. In some parts Of the Seuth reports bee encoureging. Among the lines ehowlug improvernene Ivh I osals notibeable. In San Freneisco quiob,bbs eit ned fruit output of California is eqeat to that of last year. Generally there is a .nobs hopeful feeling ennettg leminese men, and the fall trade so far eppeare to be prorinein thildton Cry far Pitcher ••1 xBirna TIME oPTIPars President Faure oi Frattee ie - Anti -foreign jolocarde are agate oleo posted in Oho /Kiang, China, GanlnetlY is enforoieg a strict qUareutitte itgainet foreign cattle and bp. ReStfien eoyel paisaila 110.ye suffered visitetioua from fire and burglars, The Oserewiteh is in the teat stages of coosumptiomand tenet expeeted to survive the winter. ' Ye Sung Sete, Careen Minister to the United Statea,dieci from cholera in his own country. • Preparations for the coronation of the Clear have been commenced itl,t St. Petets. burg. • An attempt was made on Saturday on the life of marquis Ito,Prime Minister and Preeiden t of the Canton of Japan, The Spanish Government has decided hereafter to send only veterans to Cuba to suppress the insurreetion, A church was raided at Varria,Bulgaria, by a mob of Moslems, and ten Aimenians who resisted the raid ware killed. The report that Prof. •PariViur IS dying in Paris is not true, but he is Suffering from paralysis of the lege, and his condition is critical. German men-of-war in the far Bast waters have been ordered to Swatow and Chee-Foo to protect foreigners at those placee. Itt is reported the erew of the oruiser Tartar had a skirmish with nativeti on the Mosquito coast and that a0M0 fatalities occurred. Dr. Kanson, 'one of Professor Behring's assistants, has discovered a sertun remedy against cholera, livhich has proved success- . •••••,•••000-00 ' YOUNG FOL' Her Answer. 1*°/4' a di,scovery of the greatest possible be efit t ki nine, and was made in medicine. Physicians universay rec,og don and nized its benefi.cent results 'and welcomed it one ok porn% the most valuable remedial agents that has been devei.::: opecl in medicine, because it covered such, a Wide range mokigh atm a of usefuln,ess and brought into requisition the ,X Studied my tables over and aver wards and forwards too Ba I coulde t remember six GI nos • I did 't to do , Ttll sieter told me to Play mita my " If you cairlietro)1Pilgy1;-foliT)Ifeeit w leo.% it by heart,'" she sal So I took toy favorite, Mary A,ma To give sug°1-,u,t2,3, And Qafgrjeivi,,Y was 11 44 the Se tt's laundred times, till Time The answer of six times 'nine as we answer of two times try 0. Next day Elizabeth IV igglesworth, aote Po proud, Said, " Six times nine aro lifty-tw nearly laughed aloud; l3ut I wished I hadn't when teach " Novv, Dorothy, tell it y Fer I tuought of my do ,11 Emd—sakes answereol, " Mary Aunt" remarkable food -medicine in existen• ce, This discovery . Y -four" a • o always 0," and 1 and. this 'wonderful nutrient wa,s Cod-liver OH, but until it was made available in Scott's Emulsion. it waS or said, s onuevanti almost useless, but by their process of emulsifying it •., a ' and making it palatable and easy of assimilation, and adding to it the flypophosphites of Lime and Soda k- , ' they have given the world a remarkable curative agent o find a. in all wasting diseases both. in children and adults. iiit and t t people Scott ee, Bowne, Belleville. All Druggists. '50c. and $1. • in order et:eery, singular ' A Nation 01' Stilt-Walke A 6oy's idea of using stilts is t method of walking that is diffic • requires shill. That a community o should be cornpelled to use stilts, to do their work and get about the e alreoet unknown. It is not that these people become so exPert that they can knit while walking on stilts. The stilt -walkers live in the south of France, on the shores of the Bay of Biscay and near the borders of Spain—so near that they have acquired many habits of the fu Oil animals. , Spanish people. The country of the stilt- • walkers is Landes. Very many years ago One quarter of the main line of the •th trans-Siberien railroad has now been e people were driven to stilt -walking. The wind from the Bay of Biecay blew the fine, white sand far inland, making what we call dunes, which are waves of eand that remind you of the motion of high waves. They look like waves suddenly turned to send. It was impossible to walk over thie sand, and all the grass and other vegetation suffered and was choked by it. The people were shepherds, but it became harder and harder to find feeding -ground for the seeep. Then the governrnene made the experimen t of planting pine forests. These grew, and prevented the sand drift- ing in as before. Still, walking is very difficult and almost impossible for women, except by the use of stilts. When the peo- ple walk on the ground, they walk in their bare leen The leg is covered with a foot- less stocking. The foot -rest of the stilt is covered with sheepskin, with the wool upperrndst, making a soft rest for the foot. The pine forests not only saved the land from utter deeolatiombut it gave the people employment. The collection of resin is the most profitable industry in Ghia section. The wool of the sheep is of such a poor quality that it brings a very poor price in the market. The people are a happy people and have en interest in sports. They have stiltraces, and some racers have national reputations. One, recently, was a long-distance race from Paris to Bordeaux, which aroused report that one hundred lives have been intsrssb among scientists. The diseance lost by a landslide that overwhelmed the! was three hundred miles, and it was village of of Hudeya. . The relations between Emperor William and Prince von Hohenlohe are so strained that it would not be surprising if the re should be a new Chancellor before the . s ts weigh about five or six pounds; the expiration of the year. pole, which is always carried and used for balancing weighs about five pounds. pleted at a pest of 7n,437,111 rubles. This is less than the estimate. Prof. Louis Pasteur, the eminent bac- teriologist, who diecovered the euro for rabies, died at Garohes, in the environs of Paris, on Saturday evening. The arrival of seventeen British war- ships within easy ellatance of the mouth of the Dardenelles is causing comment in European diplomatic circles, Telephones are to be adniitted into Italian nunneries by a recent decision of the Con- gregation of Bishops, but a, strict censorship will be exercised over the wires. The Pope received letters of sympathy containing over a million sigeatures,on the oceesion of the recent] Italian fetes corn- meniorating the entry of the troops into Rome. Telegrams from the Catioasue report the arrival there of the Czarewitch. He experienced a stormy voyage, and his physical condition is very much worse in consequence. Bouteilhe the man who on m Septeber attempted et> ignitens bomb in the vestibule of Rotiesehilds' banking -house in Paris, was the other day sentenced to three yeara' imprisonment. • Advices received in Constantinople from Hodeide, in the Arabian province of Yeme ect itt, seventy-six hours and fifty.five rninutes. The stilts used in this race were sixty-five inches in length,bub the ordinary walking -stilt is forty-five inches. The espatch from Berlin says that it hat been decided to commence at an early date the construction of a ship canal to connect A Big Playfellow. the Rhine and the Elbe, at ii cost of two . A man who has traveled in India a great hundred million marks. The commander of the German squadron ! ideeial 01 weal,: tahabtoyantehlaenphaandt oige . a. bTeht eternaptl iavye- in China has been authorized to eject i satisfaetion for the destruction of the ' boys make tbe elephants take them in inission at Sveatove, using whatever meas- "vilmning• They climb on the elephant's tires 'nay be necessary. i back and ride in triumph to the best Great precautions have been adopted in swimming hole. The elephant walks into Constantinople tor the protection of the " deep water and keeps right on walking palace of the Sublime Porte, owing to the ' until there's nothing to be seen of laim discovery of a Macedonian plot to- blow up except his trunk and a good level island the buildings with dynamite, .• of back. The boy stands on the island Iand yells like—well, just about a good, While the steamer Empress of India was . at Yokohama, some Japanese went on ' healthy American boy, and he dives off board and killed one Chinaman and badly, the island, and the elephant grabs him, slashed another. The murderer was ar. 1 with his trunk and puts him up onto " dry rested, and will be tried at Yokohama, land," and answers his yell with a ory The British ultimatum in the matter of that's ha.lf snort and half whoop, and altogether the Szennhuen riots has been issued, and he gives that boy just as good a within four days anedietiaust be published gme "in swimming" as if he had lived in Ameriaa and never dreamed of using an dngrading the Viceroy of the province, or the 13ritish admiral commanding will Eton elephant's back for a spring board. Queer country India, isn't id ? Official advices have been received in Pani, according to which the French advance guard crossed the Ambithimena mountains; and met and defeated the whole of the forces of the Hovas with thirty cannon. Thirty million taels of silver ha b Looked Like Reason. A robin's nest and a kingbird's nest were situated in adjoining treeneach containing young birds. When the kingbirds saw the deposited at Shanghai by the Chinese Gov- robin bringing a worm to feed its young ernment, with which to pay the supplemen- they would attack it and make it give up tary indemnity required as a consideration the food intended for- the young robins. by the Japauese Governtuent for the 'After being robbed a few times tha robin evacuation of Liao Tung peninsula. 1 apneared with a worm,accoropanied by two The Japaneee army in Formosa, which other robins, and when the kingbird made number,' sixty thousand men, will have to his appearance the two extra robins pitched be reinforced, as the troops are worn one in and gave him a sound thashing, while with the hardships of the eampaign. At the one with the worm fed its young and present there are more than three thousand ; seemed to be laughing all the while. The ,Tapariese soldiers in the hospitals in For. gante was played until the kingbird gave it MOSS. p, and now the robin feeds its young without help, The Italian Government has published documents to show that atter the occupation of Rome the Government was willing to make every conceesion that would ensure the liberty and independence of the Pope, while the Vatican, apparently in order to maintain a pretext for oomplaining that the Pope had been deprived of his liberty, refused to accept any of the proffered concessions, Cheernp (to Tom Hardup, who hat a lot of bad debts and no money, but who ia the only heir of a very old, very healthy and very wealthy aunt). -"Now don't get dis- omaraged, Tommy; there is your Aunt Maria." Tom Hardup—"es, there she is ; that's the trouble," Neglect. Mr. and Mrs. Jones conversed at the table so earnestly that they forgot to serve Adele, their four-year-old. At last in a break of the dialogue, she said. Mamma'please pass me the salt. The salt, child ? What for ? Oh, I might need it in case papa should give Inc any meat. "Is that performer familiar with yonr =obi 7" she asked at the concern "He nthet be," replied the composer, who was writhing "he takes such libertiee with rackTattotommmodmimm.,„,tikoment,g2t,rimoromiz.soiromemmaisumnionnsen,F4!=sm SOME PEOPLE GET FAGGED OUT tiervone, weary, depressed, headaches, valid or blue lips, energy all gone --just wasting away, REG A IN HEALTH by bundling, up were out tissuen-pure Moon does it. SCOTT'S SARSAPARILLA Makers pure, blood, outer nervous Min wasting alio Nees, Sold by 0. LUTZ, EXeter, Ont. a 1 TELL ALL MY FRIENDS." A Lady of Shelburne, Ont., Permane tly Cured of Indigestion After Using Two Bottles of South American Nervine —Glad to Let Everyone Know It, \yr MRS. A. V. GALBRAITH. With indigestion it is not only that one suffers all imaginable torments, physical and mental, but more, per- haps, than anything else, an impaired digestionds the forerunner of count- less ailments that in their course lead to the most serious consequences. Let the stomach get out of order and it may be said the whole system is dis- eased. When the digestive organs fail in their important functional duties, head and heart, mind and body are sick. These were the feelings of Mrs. Galbraith, wife of Mr, A. 'V. Galbraith, the well-known jeweller of Shelburne, Ont., before she bad learn- ed of the 'beneficent results to be gain- ed by the use of South American Nervine Tonic. In so many words she said: "Life was becoming un- bearable. I was so cranky I was really ashamed of myself. Nothing that I ate would agree with me; now it does not matter what I eat. I take enjoyment out of all my meals." Here are 'Mrs. Galbraith's words of testi- mony to South American Nervine, given over her own signature; 4.1 ••••, common to this complaint. South American Nervine was recommended to me as a safe and effective remedy for all such cases, I used only two bottles, and am pleased to testify that these fully cured, me, arid I have had no indication of a return of the trouble since. I never fail to recommend the Nervine to all my friends troubled with indigestion or nervousness. " MRS. A. V. GALBRAITH." The testimony of this lady, given freely and voluntarily out of a full heart because of the benefits she ex- perienced in her own person, have an echo in thousands of hearts all over the country. South American Nerv- ing must cure, because it operates at once on the nerve eentres. These nerve centres are the source frOm which emanates the life fluid that keeps all organs of the body inproper repair. Keep these nerve eentrea sound and disease is unknown. There is no tejok in the business, Every. thing is very simple and common sense like. South American Nervine strengthens the digestive organs,tones "Shelburne, Ont., 1VIarch 27, 1894, up the liver, enriches the blood, "1 was for consictera,ble time a suf- is peculiarly efficacious in building up ferer from indigestion, experiencing shattered and nervous constitutions, all the misery and annoyance so j it never fails to give relief in one daye C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter. Thos, WICKS -TT, Orediton Drug Store, Agent, ,iltl, ',rt., • ' 111 2,0 + AS, , Wee to at:nit-teed neer It' when he hail a pain Tee tan grin and ben. lab It at once by using`Pxamt DAvas, nom end usnd everywhere, a A. mime meatetne ehent by itself. IC11,1s ever' form Of externel or Internet pate, nesy--e, seespeentai itt hat:gene Of water credits (w8rrn 1rv�tzVet)s