The Exeter Times, 1895-12-5, Page 6C4rTs E. Jitatehtn4re.
:
ick
2„
eadac'ine
cuRri PERIVANENTLY
BY TAKING
41. was troubled a long dine with sick
heetlache. It was usually accompanied
whit severe pains in the temples, a sense
of fullness and tenderness ni one eye, a
bad taste In my mouth, tongue coated,
hands and feet cold, and eiekness at the
stomach. I tried a gem -In -my, remedies
recommended for this complaint; tut lt
was not until I
Began Taking
Ayer's Pills
Thal I received anything like Derma.
- nent be.nent. A single no of these pills
did the work for me, and I am now free
from headaches, and S. well mane'
RUTCRUIGS, East Auburn, Me
AYER'S PILLS
A.vveirdod fiNeclui at World's Fair
dificaos,SarseLpetrina. is the Best.
,/` A Treasury of
information
. . .
THE...
SLINLIGifir
LINIANIAC 189
8
Ccalrali4LIPeglieregft:Velulnetfili""'
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Calendar matter, Biography,
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Language of Flowers,
Fashions, Games and Amuse-
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Dreams and their significance,
t Poultry, etc.
TO PREVENT
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WORLD, OVER.
Interesting Items Mem* Out •Own gnarl,
• GreAt Britain, the United States, and
• An Parts of the eilobe, eoedensed and
Assorted for Huey Reticent,
• CANADA,
Winuipog raezehants are moving to
have the early -closing by-law quashed• ,
Mr. John Y. Lloyd., a Grand Trunk
engineer, shot hiraaelf dead at Mont-
real.
John Haynes has been found guilty
elf setting fire to Boyd & Co.'s preriees
tn 1VIciatrea1.
The Dominioa Lane steamship Lab-
rador brought 450 British soldiers to
Halifax. •
Azarie Gauthier, the slayer of Celina
Consignes bar been found. insane at
Montreal.
Frau- meu have been arrested, in
Winnipeg charged with issuing counter -
fen American money. ,
The live stock shipments from Mont-
real this year are greatly iu excess of
those of former years.
T:lamilton Waterwerks Committee re-
commended a by-law to raise 1075,-
000 for special improvements.
The art avorks in Hamilton have or-
ganized the Hamilton At Students'
League and eleeted officers.
Wm. Farr •was sentenced to ten
years in the penitentiary tor attempt-
ing to murder his wife at Winnipeg.
Mr, Wihiani Horan, a pensioner of
the Royal Irish Constabulary, was
frozen to death at Salteciats, .A.ssini-
• boia.
The failure of the Nova Scotia bank-
ing firm of Farqu.her, Forrest & Co.
leaves many small depositors penni-
less.
A movement has been started among
a certain number of Montreal citizens
to erect a monument to Louis Joseph
Papineau.
The Minister of Justice refuses to
interfere with John R. Hooper's sen-
tence of 25 years for attempting to
!murder his wife.
The 'Veterans' Association of Hamil-
ton are working up a demonstration to
be held on the battlefield at Ridgeway
On June 1 and 2 next.
The earnings of the C.P.R. for the
week ending November 14 last show
an increase of $71,000 conapared with
the corresponding week of last year.
A banquet will be given to Mr. Sear-
• geant, the retiring General Manager of
the Grand Trunk Railway, by a num-
ber of prominent citizens of Montreal.
4. complimentary banquet will be ten-
dered Mr_ L. .1. Seargeant, the retiring
general manager of the Grand Trunk
Railway Company by the citizens of
Montreal, on Tuesday Dec ember 17th.
The Canadian Pacific Railway has
given a reduction of four and a half
cents per hundred pounds for the ex-
portation of Manitoba grain through to
New York and Boston on the alI-rail
route.
The revised figurea for last year's
trade show that Canada's trade during
the period of general depression was bet-
ter than any other year's business since
Confederation, except 1892, 1893, and
1894.
Major Markham, commandant of last
year's Bisley team, in his report sug-
gests that no competitor be allowed to
have a. place on the team more than
three times in five years, so that the
honors may pass around more freely.
Last week at Calgary the body of Paul
Faillaut was discovered, he evidentlY
having met death by violence. The day
his body was discovered his wife and
daughter were drowned while crossing
on the frail ice of Buffalo lake.
Mr. J. T. Bewermanapresident of the
Ottawa Teachers' Association, at a meet-
ing of that organization on Saturday,
predicted if matters continu.e as they
are goingit will not be long before Male
teachers will be completely extinet.
Archbishop Cleary has purchased a
THE building 'in Kingston for $17,000, and
will convert it into a classical college
0FA,Ny EX ET 113:1 in which Romen Catholie S'enne; me,"
TI.111 Ekl I tan qualify fel. any profession. he
- college will be opened in September,
1896. Degrees will be conferred,
TWENTY-FIVE YEARS
THECOOWSBEST FRIEND
LARGEST SALE I1 CANADA.
REAll-MAKER'S
.-1;e:n.A,LaTo
HEM FAILS TO OIVESATISMOTIOil
np 43 1 -1
/./
KOOTENAY clump :WHERE
• SO DOCTORS IPAILED.
For a gember of years I was greatly
troubled with a skin disease, I went to
Hot Springs, Ark., and I actoally believe
consulted over fifty doctors at different
time without getting any relief. I took
one bottle of your kootexxay Cure and
it has cured tnd. Previoes to using it I
was unable to fakave. It is rio doubt a
wonderful medicine. I recommend it
•triost highly, Yenta truly, .A. TRUMAN,
toe King qt. E„ Earnittort, Ont.
Mr. Charles M. Hays, the new Gen-
eral Manager of the Grand Trunk, in
an interview at Montreal said he would
not take hold of the road. till the new
year. He spoke of the recent railway
agreement as a good thing, and • ex-
pressed the belief that better times
were corning.
The inspection of gas meters through-
out the Dominion reveals the fact that
out of 913,562 meters only 2,741 were
found to be accurate, but a curious
feature was that in a. very large inae
jority of cases the imperfect- retords
were agaiest the companies, and in
favor of the consumers.
The Grand Trunk Railway Company
has adopted the block system, by
which one train is not allowed to leave
a station after another until the next
station signals that the latter has left.
The change will necessitate the em-
ployment of a large namber of extra
telegraph operators.
On Thursday morning, at his resi-
dence in St. Thomas, Ont., Mr, Sohn C.
Hawkins fell through a trap-door with
a. lighted lamp in his hand. The oil
ignited and set fire to his clothing. He
managed to extinguish the blaze by di-
vesting himself of all his clothing, al-
though he had two ribs fractured by the
fall.
The report of the Inspector of Weights
and Measures for the last Tiscal year
bears speeial, testimony to the, honesty
of Toronto. Of the vast number of
weights and measures inspected in that
say there was not a single rejection
•Belleville, Charlottetown, and Victoria
are the only other citie,s that had an
equally good record.
An attempt was made on Tbursda,Y
night by two highwaymen to rob the
Aneaster stage near that place. One oi
the highwaymen struck the driver with
a, slung shot, rendering hina insensible.
They evidently failed to find the mail
bag, whieh was under a buffalo robe.
The driver, Jacobs, had eight stitches
put in the wonaid on his head.
GREAT BRITAIN.
John Retiferrethe 'well-known 'Aped=
tailor, is dead.
Bishop Wilberforce has been ap-
pointed Bishop of Chichester.
It is proposea to inerettee the Doke of
Cambricigeei retiring allowance as a re-
eognition of his long and valuable
fiery lees.
It is said that Japan has transferred
lier order gives). to IiInglana some time
ego to Germany on aceount, of the sliip-
loctildere' strike ori the ClYde-
The Chinese Government is ordering
now warships, and it is feared the
THE
Clyde look -Out May drive tlie erder
out of Britain,
Mr. Robert I. Milward, the Duke
Q f Merlborough's lawyer,.• officially
eoetradicts the statement that there
is a heavy mortgage ox the Illeeheim
eatete,
London society are on the gut viae
for the comieg divorce case of Wool
-
sten v. Woolston, ix which the :Mike
Q1 Orleans is named es the ec:erespon-
dent,
Rustem Pasha, the Turkish Ambas-
seder to the Court ef St. jetties, died
at an earlyhour OA T1UI2SdaY morning
i ,
His death s generally xegretted, in of-
ficial, cireles.
It is learned in London, from a Prison
Board. official, that there has been, a
serious csillapse in Oscar Wilde's health,
and that it, N regarded as improbable
that he will live througli the wieter.
Sir. Henry Ponsonby, formerly Pri-
vate Seoretary to the Queen and
Keepex of the Privs. Purse, died a,t
Cowes, Iele-of-Wight, on Thursday
morning, of paralysis, after a long
illness.
At filaridge's repository in London,
seventy horses owned, by Mr. Finnigan,
of Toronto, were put ueder the ham-
mer, and averaged twenty-seven pounds
sterling eaeh.
• Capt, Wilkinson of the Britisb ves-
sel Why Not has been sentenced to six
mouths' irnprisonment at Guernsey
and his naate to two xmantlis for cow-
ardly desertion of the vessel and pass-
engers during a fire.
Lieut, Duncan Marilrine,s, of the King-
ston Military College, a son of Sena-
tor MacInnes, of Herailtort, will leave
Liverpool on Saturday for service with
the British troops in Ashanti.
The United States authorities have
beee forced to admit that the Caeadian
survey of the Alaskan boundary is cor-
rect. This leaves the town of Forty -
Mile in British territory.
In an address upon Canada at New-
castle on Thursday evening Sir Charles
Tupper, High Commissioner, strongly
advocated reciprocal trade between the
Donainion and the Mother Country.
Cablegra)as have been sent by the Im-
perial Government to Canada and Aus-
tralia to nominate two delegates, each
to form a commiseion with two British
delegates, to consider the question of a
Pacific cable.
Mr. John Dillon, the well-known Irish
leader and anti-Parnellite member of
Parliament for East Mayo, was niarried.
on Thursday morning in London to Miss
Mathew, daughter of justice Mathew,
The Pope bestowed his blessing upon the
marriage.
Mr. Hucldart, the promoter of the At-
lantic, fast mail service, says that Mr.
Chamberlain has done all that Canada
asked, and he feels certain that the
Dominion will now secure a fast At-
lantic service, that may be in operation
next sununer.
The Imperial Government proposes to
ask for an increase of two million
pounds in the coming budget on the
vote for shipbuilding. This will raise
the naval estimate to twenty-two mil-
lion, pounds, nearly half of which will
be devoted to shipbuilcling.
Lord Salisbury, replying to a depu-
tation from the National Association.
of Hop Growers, which complained of
the depression in their business, said
that he could not hold out any hope of
an import duty being plaeed upon any
article of general consunaption. '
Mr. Joseph Chamberlain is entertain -
big King Khama, and his two chiefs, Af-
rican rulers, who are greatly pleased
with tile hospitality they are receiving
in England. They were granted an
audience with the Queen, and her Ma-
jesty and the African Princes exchanged
gifts.
Mr. Chamberlain's conduct of the Co-
lonial Office with regard to King
Prenapeh, of Ashanti, and towards Can-
ada in relation to the projected trans-
Atlantic steamship line, and towards
Australasia and Canada in connection
with the proposed Pacific cable, is re-
ceiving the highest praise on all sides.
In spite of the announcement that
King Prempeh, of Ashanti, has agreedto
the terms of Great Britain, the prepara-
tions for the campaign against Coornas-
sie continue, as there is an indemnity for
expenses up to date and other little de-
tails to be settled before Great Britain
will be thoroughly satisfied with the
practical protectorate which she is tak-
ing steps to assume over this portion
of Africa, •
• UNITED STA.TES,
The e,stimated goldoutput in the
Alaska territory for the year 1895 is
$3,000,000.
Eighteen bodies have been recovered
from the wreck of the street ear in the
river at Cleveland.
It is positively stated that the Massey-'
Harris Company, of Toronto, has deli-
nitel:y decided to locate at Niagara Valls,
It is stated that Harper Brothers, of
New York, are to pay George DulYfaux-
ier ten thousand pounds for his next
novel.
Mrs. Mary T. McMillan, alias Mrs.
Mack, of Hamilton, was found guilty by
an Auburn, N.Y., Jury of counterfeiting
United. States postage stamps, and was
sentenc.ed to eighteen months in the
Erie County penitentiary.
The Supreme Court of Minnesota has
handed down a deeision in the case of
Harry Hayward, the. murderer of Cath-
erine Ging, denying his appeal for a
new trial. Only the Governor's execu-
tive demency now staiids between
Hayward and the gallows.
It is sail that a number of United.
States capitalists are prepared to invest
twenty naillion dollars in a route from
Toronto to the Atlantic, via Lewiston,
which will make a saving of twenty-four
hours over the route via Montreal,. and
is expected to eontrol Canadian freight.
William A. Shoemaker, one of the law-
yers who defended Hennes, the raurder-
er of Pietzel, has been charged in open
court with having manufactured evi-
dence for the defence of procurieg
woraanei signature to an affidavit which
she had not read, and for which he paid
her twenty dollars. The accusation
created. a profound sensation.
The fast mail train on the New York
Central was wrecked. on Wednesday
morning about three miles west of
Rome, N.Y. The fish -plates were re-
moved by four lads, all ander twenty
years of age, who have been captured.
Their leader, the son of a wealthy New
'York lawyer, made a full confe,ssion,
He Said they wrecked the train for the
purpose of robbing the passengers, but
when they saw the extent of the disaster
they ran away.'
According to commercial sun:meat-les,
business in the 'United States for the
weak has not beet of a specially encour-
aging nature, dulness and low prices
bee -1g generally prevalent. The fact
that stocks are large aecounts to a cer-
tain extetit for a decline in the demand,
rued also the expectation that prices
will go yet lower, Of course,. unseasort-
able weather and, excessive ram has con-
tributed. in part to the slackness, and
the, colder weather of the past day or
two has to some quarters already caused
a better enquiry for seasonable goods,
EXETER TINES
1 sooh aa woollens, robbers, and shoes es-
peeially; Aetuai and prospective strikes
are having a depressing effect. The de -
mend tor ion and steel is easier, end
prices are weaker. Unsf3tt1ed quotations
nor leather interfere with the mannfae-
ture oL boots and shoes, Pricea are
steady for turpentine, tobaceo, coal, and
lumber,
GENBRAL,
Cardinal Lucien Bonaparte died, sad-
denly in Rome,
It is officially stated at Si, Peters -
Piny, that cholera has broken out afresh
A
in ussie-,
Ceineae troops were defeated b,y reb-
els, who now dominate half the pro-
vince of llansur,
• A, son of the late Lord Randolph
Chnichill will serve as Lieutenant in
the Spanish army in Cuba.
It is reported that the Spanish soldiers
in Cuba are committing horrible atrooi-
ties, not sparing women or children.
The Saltan of Turkey is reForted to
be a physical wreck. High officials do
not hesitate to speak against his au-
thority.
The Pope is suffering from throat
tronble, and as a measure of precau-
tion he has postponed the coming con-
sistories.
A Si. Petersburg newspaper publish-
es a despatch to the effect that japan
bas relinquished the control of Corea
and Afanciauria to Russia.
A Canadian missionary named Mar-
tin was terribly beaten and afterwards
imprisoned at Fekkeh, near Radii%
Turkey, sybere he was detained sixteen
hours before he was released.
Trouble has arisen on the West
A.Crican coast, Capt. Bower, the Bri-
tish resident at Diadem, having at-
tacked and killed the Ring of Oyo and
many of his followers.
The French Governixient has obtained
from the Shah of Persia permission to
search the sandy wastes of Iran for
buried Biblical cities, and an arrange-
nient has been made as to sharing the
archaeological treasures.
A band. of brigands attaoked a
convent at Viterbo in Italy, - but
were successfully resisted by twenty
monks, who, armed with muskets,
compelled the brigands to retreat, leav-
ing several of the number wounded.
The Ameer of Afghanistan is extreme-
ly angry at the failure of his son Prince
Nazrulla to • establish air Afghan
Legation in London, and he threatens
upon the arrival of his son and his suite
that he will torture the chief notable
and burn a few others alive to testify
his displeasure. •
It is understood in well-informed Lon-
don official circlas that the assembling
of the British and foreign fleets in Sal-
onica bay is having a good effect upon
the Turkish Government, and that the
Sultan has finally determined to make
earnest efforts to pat a stop to the
bloodshed in Asia Minor.
•A diver recently while engaged in
driving piles for a new pier at the
Golden Horn, on reaching the bottom
found the bodies of about forty stud-
ents standing upright with leaden
weights to their feet, who had. evident-
ly been taken out by the police, and
drowned in the Bosphorus.
CHOLERA IN JAPAN.
flow the Toir.To Authorities Act When a
Heath Takes Place.
Riding through a narrow street in
Tokyo a few days ' ago I saw some
commotion around a poor Japanese
house and four polic,emen with yel-
low bands upon -their sleeves, were dis-
playing great activitie writes a corre-
spondent. As the offieer in charge
happened to be °known, to me, I was able
to learn through him that a coolie had
just died from cholera in the house.
The people in the street were driven
away, but I was permitted to remain.
Iwas anxious to see what would bA
done, and I entered the front por-
tion of the hovel, In the rear room
0/11 a futon lay the black corpse, of
the coolie. I had hardly taken note
of the surroundings when a coolie
cart came up, drawn and pushed by
four men.
It brought a large, plain box, lined
With zinc. The body was hastily
placed in it, a liberal supply of quick-
lime was pitched in, the lid, was
screwed down, and away the cart and
itsgrewsome load went. Meantime
disinfectants had been brought up.
The poor wife and three children were
• divested of their scant clothing,. hur-
riedly washed with some microbe
destroying preparation, wrapped in
fresh cotton kirninos and sent to a,
place of care and detention in the
neighborhood. The work of burn-
ing every particle of clothing and
bedding: and matting in the place then
began in the back yard, a bonfire be-
ing made for the purpose. Every
article of excrematory matter upon
the .premises was thrown upon this
blazing pile. Then the whole premiees
were • thoroughly saturated with dis-
infectants of the most approved. char-
acter, the house was Closed, and a
Policeman was left in charge to keep
People off the .premises.
The officer in charge, who spoke a
little English, told me 'Wet if the
epidemie had been showing a dispo-
sition to increase of late this house
would have been burned to the
ground. The scant furniture and be-
longings of a Japanese house of the
poorer class enables the police to
c,arry out their regulations at no
great cost. The latest figures furnished
officially touching the cholera, in Japan
place the total number of cases to date
at 48,129, and the , number of deaths
at 32,848.
Death of the Rev. Dr. Va,ndiek.
A despatch from Be3rrout, Syria, says:
-Rev. Dr. Cornelius V. A. Vawlick, the
translator of the Bible into Arabic, and
acknowledged by experts to be the
oreateet Arabic scholar in the M-orld,
is dead. 01c1 age was, the primary
cause, hastened on by an organic
trouble with which Dr. Vandick suf-
fered during the latter years of his life,
While Dr. Vandick was known through-
out the civilized world as the translator
of the Bible, he also translated many
other valuable -hooks into Arabic, The
last great work he accomplished before
he died was the translation of• General
Lew Wallace's "Ben Hur " into Arabic.
This work was completed shortly before
his death, and the most of it is yet un-
published.. The Turkish authorities are
trying to obtain possession of it in order
to destroy it, ae they ebjeet, to its pub-
lication. The • result is that the weak
will not be publiehed. fOr Some time,
and 'when it appears it wilt be in some
country outside of Turkey,
The frog, owing- to his peculiar con-
struction, cannot breathe with the
mouth open.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Cm' toes:
A Sififil 3 THE BEAD SEA
VISIT TO TB R HOLY RIVER WHERE
CHRIST WAS BAPTIZED.
r ----
Deer ou Sale, WW1 Boats to tet -On Horse'
back Through the Comalr,` )1lOultd
About Jot dior-the Alleged Grave or
Moses.
The German traveler. Prof, H. M.T.
Vogel, describes a recent visit to the
Dead. Sea and round about jordan,"
as the Bible calls the neighborhood of
the holy river where jesus Christ was
haptieed by joint, The Professor and
lds Party carried the latest scientific
apparatus, and Herr Vogel's forthcom-
ing book on Palestine will throw new
light Upon many interesting things in
the land Where the Saviour lived and
preathed.
The railroad leading to Jeruseleat
has no branch to the Dead Sea, an.1
the travellers rode for ten hours on
horse -back before they heard, the roar
of the waves of this largest inland lake
which is popularly supposed to lie sil-
ent and calm. "Surveying the coun-
try from the top of Motnat Olives," says
Prof. Vogel, ," 1 judged the distance
from Jerusalem to the Dead Sea to be
not more than three hours' ride, but
soon discovered my error after trav-
elling through the barren and stony
landscape,
" Very frequently we had to dismount
for fear of breaking our necks in
climbing the precipices or descending
into the Wabis Valley. After about
four hours' ride we came to a great
white mosque, erected over
THE GRAVE OF MOSES,
so we are told. The Moslems seem-
bagly never heard of the passage in
Holy Scriptures which says and no oue
has found his grave up to this day.'
They have a grave of Adam, too, in one
of the Jerusalem churches. After dis-
mounting for luncheon at the mosque
we discovered another party of tour-
ists, the ' Society of Hotel Employees
• of Cairo,' twelve in number, Their
leader informed us that the Dead Sea
waa but a few miles away, but the ob-
servation proved as much of an optical
delusion as my own was on Mount Ol-
ives. We had yet to climb many a
height and had to traverse many a
stony valley before we reached its
neighborhood.
"When we were about half a Inn°
from the Dead. Sea we heard the ter-
rible roar of the breakers, and five
minutes later we saw the white, foam-
ing surf. eibout ten feet from the
stra,nd the water was calm and of blu-
ish color. A fresh, refreshing wind
blew over the lake and into our fes,
and we had a hearty laugh over the
stories that say a. whiff from the Dead
S'ea was poisonous. Poisonous indeed,
and that no bird dared cross jt! I saw
hundreds flying about in the best of
spirits.
" Another superstition is that •it
would be suicidal to bath in the Dead
Sea. None of us could swim, but that
mattered little as the density of the
• water is so great that the human body
will not sink in it. Before we reach-
ed deep water, however, we had be-
come very much exhausted with our
battle with the tremendous surf.
". Riding further north, we came to
the ford of the Jordan where our Sa-
viour was baptized by John.
"'Then cometh Jesus form Galilee
to Jordan unto John to be baptized of
hira.
'Bat John forbade him saying:
"1 have need. to be baptized by thee,
and comest thou to me?"
"And Jesus- answering, said unto
him: "Suffer it to be so now; for, thus
it becometh us to fulfil all righteous-
ness." Then he suffered him.
" 'And Jesus when he was baptized,
went up straightway out of the water.'
"The description of the neighbor-
hood in Matthew iii. holds
GOOD TO THIS DAY;
the river flows at this point through
a muddy flat, and we found the ford
passable as it was in the period when
our Lord was baptized there.
"4.1 this famous historical eoitut we
were surprised to find established a
German saloon -keeper, who welcomed
Us bi effusive style. He lived. in a sort
of barn constructed of rafters and
dried med. And there was a beer gar-
den, too, with arbors offering protec-
tion against the hot sun, rough tables
and benches. The proprietor proved to
be a native of the Prussian town of
Gnesen; his name was Mayer. He
sold beer or some kind. of stuff mas-
gnerading under that name, and native'
wines, the latter being quite good.
" Thephotograph we took of the
river gives a faithful picture •of the
neighborhood, but the camera missed c
sign pole near the edge of the watei
with the legend 'Boats to Let.' Mayez
had half a dozen of them, beautifully
painted., and asked two francs per hour
for their use. We had. a good meal and
rest at his inn, and in the morning
departed for Jericho, after, filling our
bottles with Jordan water for baptis-
mals at home."
The raven is the only bird found na-
tive in every country an the world.
Racked with Rheumatism
Unable to VValk, owing to exeruolat-
• Ing pain.
' After ten years' terrible torture,
Cured by Scott's Sarsaparilla.
1 A. H. Christiansen, writing from the
Clifton House, Niagara Falls, says: " I
owe you more than I can ever pay. For
ten years I suffered the tortures of the
damned with rheumatism. Father had
it before me, and I believe it is an here-
ditary disea.se. My knee joints would
get inflamed and if I was out in any
"weather ° I was sure to be laid up,
which to a travelling man is a calamity.
In a score of Canadian towns local doctors
treated me, sonse giving relief, others
none. I read that Sarsaparilla was a
rheumatic cure, and I asked a druggist
for "a bottle of the best Sarsaparilla, on
the market." He gave me Scott's, re-
marking that it was an improvement on
others, aad that he could honestly
recommend it. I have taken four bottles,
and am as free from pain as a man can
hope to be. I was out in a rainstorm two
days ago said never felt a twinge. As I
said before, to Scott's Sarsaparilla I owe
snore than I can ever repay. '
The best remedy for rheumatism,
sciatica, and neuralgie painse-a II arising
from the presence df poison in the blood
-is Scott's Saisaparilla, a modern con-
eenttated medicine, prompt in its cure-
tiVe effects. Doses from One half to one
soopiaortful. At tt per bottle Of your
druggist
Sold by C. LUTZ, Exeter, Ont.
• for Infants and Children.
"Oastorlaissowelladaptedtoohlidrenthat
reconunend it as supelior to anypreseriptien
ksown. to man H. A. Asenaol,
So. Oxford St., Broolrlyn,
"The use of 4•0ostor1a 'is so universal add
Its merits so wellknown that it seems a work
of supererogation to endorse% Few are the
Intelligent families who do uot keep Oastoria
within easyreach,"
°Amos maaers-Y,D.D.,
New ork city.
Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church.
reswSoiurttosuS.to:macin3uirli,oDusiararrhedimeaa:ruieituctations -
Kills°448t°Wrio‘rrescure6, gie:s_nels1CZtiaPnadtt°:rozootea
gestiont .
'For several years have recommended
your Oastoria, and shall always continue to
do so as it has Invariably produced henedolal
•ZDW51i F. TURD= X D
"The Winthrop," 1.515th Street and 7th Ana,• '
Ner,York City.
:Tun OlcurAort COMPANY, 77 XUREAY SWANN; *NNW Term.
rfaomioliwaHmanapapitzwissamaniammaz
When the • Nerve 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 BAUER, BERLIN, ON
Perhaps you know him? In Water-
loo he is known as ofte 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
indioate 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 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," oaid-Mr. Bauer, with a merry
laugh, the other da,y, while recounting
his experiences as a very sick man.
"Mt. Clemens," he continued, "was
the last resort in ray case. • For
months previous 1 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
ffesh and strength rapidly. My
stomach refused to retain food of any
kind. During all this time 1 was
under medical treatment, and took
everything prescribed, but without
relief. just about when Inv condition
seemed most hopeless, I heard of &
wonderful cure effeeted isa a cast;
somewhat similar to mine, by the
Great South AmeriettulTervine Tonio,
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 aa
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 Nervine Tonic cured me
-when all other remedies failed. I
have recovered my old weight—over
200 ponnds--and never felt better
in my life."
Mr. Frank Bauer's experience la
that of all others who have used the
South 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 vitaggy
is energizedinstantly 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 Solace of trouble direct,
and the sick' alerays feel its marvel-
lous sustaining and restorative power
at once, on the very first day of its
use.
C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Itetail Agent for Exeter.
Thos. Wioatior, Crediton Drug Store, Agent.
PRINCESS MAUD.
tiler Personal Appearance -Pond of Out-
door Exercises.
A despatch from London says r-Tbe
betrothal of Terincess Maud of Wales to
Prince Karl, second son of the Crown
Prince of Denmark, has given rise to
stories concerning her qualities. She
is the prettiest member of the family
�f the Prime of Wales, and is small of
stature, Pine Karl is the tallest of
a tail race. Princess Maud tavice re-,
fused Royal offers of marriage. She le
a daring rider, a, graceful skater, and
an ,excellent shot, Her specialty is
the carvieg of the heads of meerschaum
pipee. Emperor William possesses a
valuable Pipe, representing a warrior,
that was carved by the Princess. She
has given a pipe to her betrothed, on
the bead of Whieh is carved the figure
of a Danish sailor.
• All Can Appreciate This.
What is more exas.perating than to
forget a good thing just as you're on
the point of saying it, and then go grop-
ing around for it in the dark, witli the
tail just tickling the fringe of yonr re-
collection -and never get it!
• A Heartless Parent.
Miss Bullion -Papa says we can't be
married until you are able to support
Adorer -Great Scott 1 Does he want
his only daughter to die an old maid
A gold dollar if beaten until its sae”
face was enlarged 810,814 tiines (as not-
ed, above) would become a golden film
tot more than the l-568,020th part of
an Moll inthicknesc.
Authoritme kul chess deelare that the
game was known to the Otai,nese in the
year 17 14.0.
5