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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1896-1-16, Page 3Restores natural color to the hair, and aloe preventsit falling out. l'drs. W. Fenwick, ofDigby, I'T. S„ gays:"A little more than two years ago my hair e an to urn gray and fall.ut Af- ter�the u.se of one bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor my stair was restored to its original 'color and ceased falling aut. An locccasional application has sits ce kept H. F k ENWICX D gby, Nn4.^Mt s, Growth of Flair. "tEight yyears ago, I had the vario- Lold, and lost my hair, which previ- ously, was quite abundant. I tried :t variety of preparations, but with -out beneficial result, till I began to fear I should be permanently bald..About sic mouths ago Iny husbR nd brow ht home a bottle of Ayer's Hairiglor, and I began at once to use it, n a short time, new hair began to appear, and there is now every prospect of as thick a growth of hair as before my .illness."Mrs. A. WEBER, Polymnia St., New Orleans, La. AYER'S HAIR �IlfOR x'SHPARSA BY ©R,1.C. AYER & GO., LOWELL, MASS., U.S. A. Ayer'r Pills core Sick Headache,. A Treasury of Information . . THE , . SUNLIGHT ALMANAC ran 1898 QontalntnR IRO pitfe. or u.etut Information forsal iaa,aUm otthe hoa.ebol4 GIVEN FREE T° ERs SUNLIGHT SOAP OW TO Comg�mencing November, OR74iN bookaurde ilglven,pur- A Copy chaser re%ppackages,erg bars of Sutatauns Sour. will receive from their nroicer, r Su$taoats ,,ALatANec FREE • • ...... . The booknontal- npleta Calendar matter, Biography, Literature, Home Management, Language of FlowersFashions, Games and Amuse. ments, Recipes,, Dreams and their significance, Poultry, etc. TO APPOINTBtuy early P,SAAAOINTMINT �j THE BX T R TU S THE itipptrIcram'g. gfootingi.E(7atiada seeks �IN �����d 6 th Af ' beelazed by the Government, and no other despatches have been received from there for four days, A number of rumors have been pput in circulation, one being that Dr.,iameson was court- martialled and shot by his captors, and another that the Uitlanders have arisen Jahannesiierg against the Boers andfired the city. The Foreign Office pro- fesses to have no information. 'UNITED STATES.President Cleveland haat signed theproclamation making Utah a State: One of Maine's curios is Machias; a town of 200 inhabitants, without a debt. Mr.Brice has a bill. before the Units ed States Senate to raise the lake lev- el by damming the outlets. A series of three explosions at St. Lou' 't of Sec -is laid t th i iwase a via nyand and Vine streets and killed sev-eral people. Secretary Carlisle has issued a Call for tenders for the purchase of $100,000,- 000 4 per cent. United States gold bonds The death sentence passed on Sbortis, repayableIn coin.the Valleyfield murderer, has been con►- The fox-hunting championship ofVer- muted into imprisonment for life„meat is claimed lay Jahn Davis, of Ben- enr. Charles M. Hays, the new Gen- ningtan,He is 40 years old, and has eral Manager of the Grand Trunk. sets killed251 foxes. taken hold of the road at Montreal. At a meeting of the New York.Cham- Mr. George Olds bus retired from theger of Commerce. on. Thursday a reso- position of general traffic agent of lotion was carried in favour of arbitra- the Canadian Pacific Railway Company.tion in aha Venezuelan boundary dis- The City Council of Kingston. Ont.,pate,has appropriated 2,400 for relief work. Be the burning of a araall dwelling ra h lines between London ti an oath. rice have n monopo- TH VERY LATEST FROM ALL THE WORLD OVER. Interesting Items About Our Own Country, Great Britain, the 'Sneed states, and, All parts of the Globe, Condensed and Assorted for'easy Reading. CANADA.. Building operations in Hamilton last year cost $279,070. John Edwards, an old man, was kill- ed in the Grand Trune yards at Lon- don - Business in Winnipeg showed a re- markable revival for the month of De- cember. water Merritton wet dogged. the e Ice has c works intake peipe and the water sup- ply is out off. Mr. Dicke , Minister of Militia, will ill to arm the forces with Lee -Melford rifles. THE Q' tvEXETER i'+F TIMES FOR TWENTY-FIVE YEARS DUNN'S BAKING POWDER THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND LARGEST SALE I iM CANADA. BZ ,Be.15:tP tiEVEr FAILS Tti GIVE SATr8FAMTMOS FOR SAW av .au. oE.Af-IER3as READ -MAKER'S KOOTENAY cuRED WHERE f50 DOCTORS FAILED. For a number of years I was greatly k' I went to troubled with a skin disease Bl n Hot Springs; Ark., and I actually believe I consulted over fifty doctors at different times without getting any relief. I took one bottle of your Kootenay Cure and it has cured me. Previous to using it I was unable to shave. It is no doubt a wonderful medicine. I recommend it. most highly. Yours truly, A. TRUMAN, toe Icings St.' E., Hamilton, Ont. .�a introduce a for the unemplove and distressed with- in the municipality, J. R. Bourdon, Treasurer of the Richelieu & Ontario Navigation Cosn- ppannyy,z hasmbeen arrested on a charge of e in the mining town of Frontenao, gen- eses. fear boys. Robert, Wili, John and Archie MaTaffan, lost their lives. Mrs. Alva S. Vanderbilt, the divorced wife of Mr. William K. Vanderbilt, is engaged to be married. to Mr. Oliver Shphoof Belmont, who is divorced from leis 'w e• fifty-ipfiveing ' vesselsreturns isn thewa Provincesdecrease of Governor Rickards, of Montana, has NovaScotia, New Brunswick and left Helena for Washington to make a Prince Edward Island since 1894. protest against the invasion and depre Napoleon Demers, who was accused dations of Cree Indians from Canada. of killing his wife at St. Henri, was 1 The New York Tribune in an editorial declared not guilty after a protracted second trig!n the Court of Queen's saysmay be , as saforid the causes of the trouble, it ifrankly that the Uitlanders Bench at Montreal.are in the right, and the Boers ,in the The large dry goods store of J. D. wrong. Williamson & Co., Guelph. was burnt Justice Jarvis Blume, of Chicago,was on Saturday night. The Mercury of- attacked by two robbers at an early flee and Bell organ works were in great' hour on Thursday morning. Fie shot danger. but were pot injured, one of the men dead, and the other The police officials of London, Ont„ made his escape, claim that the Salvation Army Is re- sponsiblewas for bringing a large number ears of age. died on Wednesday in of tramps to the city. owing• to the ex- tthe Chicago Horne for Incurables. Fifty cheap are and lodging pxovid- years ago he invented a bicycle made • ' on the same lines as the safety of to - Col. Lake, the Canadian Quarter- day. master -General. has left Ottawa for A large mass of rock caved into the England, and rumour connects his vis shaft of the Anna Lea mine at Victor, It with proposed rearming of the mill Colorado, crushing two men, who were tie referred to in the speech from the in the cage, to death. and imprisoning throne. e, whom very little hope Lack of supervisions and proper in- is ight entertainedothers.for spection are the causes assagncd 1a' the committee of investigation for the An Arizona prison has an ostensive Peuple. A total deficit of b88B,138 is a fury, whish is under the charge of deplorable condition of La Banque du : the inmates. A single hive is said to have produced 200 pounds of honey reported, last year, and it is expected that the A nine-year-old boy named Oliver St. industry will prove exceedingly profit- Jean, while playing on Thursday at his able. home in Ottawa, tripped over a heavy 1It Ls authoritatively stated by the hay rack, which fell on toll Of him. .. United States Administration that the corner of the rack struck him. on the Venezuelan Commission will be abso- head and Breast, causing injuries that i lute master of its MEI procedure, and resulted fatally. that the United States Government Tho affairs of La Banque du Peuple will occupy the position of a neutral are in bad. shape. Mho investigating body. committee is expeoted to report that a One of the first fchita settlers in deflcionoy of $250,000 exists on the pay- Northern Michigan, E. F. Dame. of went of ordinary liabilities to deepest- Northport, says that since 1841 the wa- have been completely wiped out, tors, and the capitis! stook and rest ter in Traverse bay, at the northern end of Lako Michiganbas lowered Jaines Gale, aged 21, of Brownsville, sixty-three and ai hall inches. by1 actual a brakeman on the M. C. R., was measurement. crushed to death between an engine Duffield, chief of the United and tender at Tilbury. The engine had into a freight train, wrecking the ton- tStates coast and geodetic survey, has become unmanageable, and crashed presented to tbe Washington authorities he joint report upon the Alaskan dor and causing Gale's death, GREAT BRITAIN. -Liverpool has the Iargest total debt of anytown in England. Great Britain pays the Continent up- wards of $70,000,000 a year for sugar, and makes not an ounce. The Prince of Wales has the smallest feet of any royal personage, and they are also perfectly shaped. The British revenue returns for nine months of the financial year show an increase of over six million pounds. Over two hundred persons have sign ed the appeal for peace written by Mr. Hall Caine on behalf of the British authors. in the naw home of the new Duchess of Marlborough there are said to be twenty staircases leading from the main floor to the second. The cruiser Pallas has been put in commission at Portsmouth, and order- ed to join the North American squa- dron. It is reported that a syndicate is be- ing formed in London and Berlin to take up the new United States loan of $200,000,000. Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, the Colonial Secretary, is preparing a paper dealing with the subject of colonial exports to the United Kingdom, Threes large bodies of Cubatls are ad-vanoua"g upon Havana, and the city will soon be. in a state of siege. Reports. have been received of a ter- rific massacre o1 Armenians at Orfah;in which two thousand Christians were killed. The Emperor of Germany and Prince Frederic* Leopold have quarrelled over Prince Frederick's treatment of his wife. There bas been a serious uprisinFormosa. On New •Year's Day ten thou -sand rebels attacked Taipsen, but they were repulsed. Mr. Jules Content, a member of the French Chamber of Deputies, has been shot and seriously wounded by his former election agent. An explosion took piece in a coal mine in Prussia Silesia. Twenty-one miners were killed, seventy injured, and seventeen are missing. boundary. It shows a practical agree- ment between the reports of Canada and the United States. All the brewing companies doing busi- ness in Chicago have perfected an agreement by which the price of beer will be advanced one dollar a barrel. It is estimated that Ibis will result in the closing of some two thousand small saloons. In the United States Senate on Fri- day riday Mr. Squire offered a resolution for the negotiation forthwith of a confer- ence between Great Britain and the United States for making the boundary line between Alaska and British North America. Recent statistics show that the in- crease of divorces exceeds in percentage the inorease of population in nearly all of the United States. The causes are such as indicate a growing disposition to regard marriage as a. mere contract, instead of a sacred union. The death is announced in New York of Alfred EIy Beach, Editor of the Scien- tific. American, at the ale of seventy. Among Mr. Beach's earlier inventions was a typewriting machine, which ob- tained a medal at the Crystal Palace Exhibition in London in 1850. President Cleveland has named the following five commissioners on the Venezuela boundary line :—Judges The Queen on New Year's Day, the an- niversary of her proclamation as Em- pressof India, received many valuable presents from Indian; obiefs. There are 48,000 artists in Paris, more than half of them painters. The number of paintings sent in to the exhibitions last year was about 40,000- A despatch from Swatow, Province of Qua -lag -Tong, China, says that the ring- leaders of the mob which plundered the German mission at Malhn have been Wielded. Enquiries made in Rome have elicited tbe information that the rumors to the effect that the Duehess of Marlborough was ill with typhoid fever are without foundation. Prince Frederick Leopold of Prussia has been installed Grand Master of the Prussian Masonic lodges. This dignity was last held by the late Emperor Fred- erick when be was Crown Prince. The Turkisb Government has accepted the offer of the representatives of the powers to mediate between the forte and the insurgents of Zeitoun, who are surrounded by the Turkish troops. Emperor William has telegraphed to President Kruger, con ratu;.ating hun upon having repelled the invaders of the Transvaal without baying to call for the assistance of friendly powers. A despatch from. Caracas, the capital of Venezuela, says that all is quiet there, that the excitement Ilas greatly sub- sided, and that there has not been an not of violence towards the British eub- jects. The Berlin correspondent of the Lon- don Standard says that he has excellent reason to state that the reports of an agreement between Russia and the United States about Venezuela are un- founded. A severe aback of earthgnslre was felt at Cicciano, near the city of Nola. in the Province of Caserta. A number of houses were blown down, and sev- eral persons were killed and many in- jured. The Russian Ambassador at Con- stantinople is baying private oonfer- enees with the Sultan, and it is said that Russia has veered around and is now supporting Turkey, financially and otherwise. Lord Hawke, who visited America a Brewer of Kansas and Alvey of Mary - few years ago with a team of English land, Messrs. Andrew D. White, Fred - cricketers, has just started for the Cape crick R. Condert, New York, and Presi- of Good Hope with another team. The London papers are almost unani- mous in denouncin the message of Em - pertinence that Great Brit-peror William to resident Kruger as who has already endowed the University a piece of im sin cannot tolerate. of Chicago with a woman's dormitory costing $60,000, has d c The surplus in the Imperial budget at the end of the current financial year will be five million pounds, and the London dent Gilman of the Johns Hopkins Uni- versity. Mrs. Elizabeth G. Kelly, of Chicae'o, e ided to erect on the university campus a chapel to cost one hundred thousand dollars, to be known as the Kelly Memorial cliapeyn papers advocate the expenditure of every memory of her brother. The university penny of it to increase the strength of has no chapel .building now. The ap• pointment of Mr. Alfred Austin to the post of poet laureate, which has been vacant since the death of Lord Tennyson in 1892, has caused much sur- prise, as his poetic works have not com- manded public attention. Ex -Empress Eugenie recently deposit- ed her will with a. prominent London attorney, in which, true to her pledge, she has left a legacy to each of the 6- 834 male persons of France born on the birthday of her son, Prince Louis. The '"Rev. John Watson (Ian Mao- laren), author of " Beside the Bonnie Brier Bush " and " Auld Lang Syne," has closed a contract by cable for a lecture tour in the United States and Canada, beginning in October next. As is usual, business for the week has beendull, both in Canada and the States, T.he holiday, added to the general slack- ness in demand just after Christmas,bas caused a sharp falling off all round. Commercial reports from New York say that there has been a noticeable slack- ening of activity in several important lines of manufacture, and that collec- tions are unsatisfactory, except in a few districts in the Southern States. Usually the outlook is regarded among business men with confidence, though anxiety is general among commercial circles in the chief cities of the States as to the ability or otherwise to secure the necessary financial legislation to sounder basis. Prices, which have been unprecedentedly low for the past few months, are more steady; and occasion - Mr. S. Lewis, who was born in Sierra ally are advancing. Leone, admitted to the English bar, and GENERAL. afteSierrrwaa Lerdsone, becameswaknighteChief d JusticeonNeofw a M. Bourgeois, the French Premier, is dist. Year's day. This is the first time that Y a full-blooded negro has been knighted. There are 13,000 school masters in Ger- many whose salaries fall below Peeper annum. The Italian armyin Abyssinia is short of supplies and the troops are suffering ftom dysentery. The V 1paraiso press lectures the ex- oitable Venezuelans on their folly in provoking Great Britain. The Paris museum contains more than 20,000 stone implements, all of which were gathered in Prance. The Emperor of Japan is an all-round Gen. Dyrenfurth, enfurth, the ram -maker h as a scheme to dispel the famous London fog. He is !Kee been in correspondence with leading officials of the"cit , and it is said a fund of fifty thousand dollars will be raised, with which to conduct the experiments. A special from London sans that it is understood that the Imperial Govern- ment fully, recoggiiiz Canada's grave peril front ).nv 1hh if war were declar- ed by the United. Stet , and it is quite prepared to co -opera eraau in sportsmen, putting devoted to ridin shooting, the Canadian Militia and defences on a a g, fishing tennis, Billiards", and football. • LOOKING TO CANADA. Japamese Steaanera Are Jlxpectcd to Corot pate for Cartadiattx Trade. According to advices brought by the Empress of India to Victoria, B. C., there is a strong probability that a fourth first-olass steamship line will, before many months, connect 'Victoria with the far East, this being the fam- ous Nippon Yusen Kaisha, of Japan. The proposal to inaugurate an Ameri- can -Japanese line was hinted at in Mikadoland some months ago, but did not take definite shape until the 30th of November, when the annual meet- ing of the N. Y. K. was held. There were according to the Yokohama Ad- vertiser, upwards of 1,700 shareholdera present—though probably this should be t aken to mean 1,700 shares repre— sented-and the report of the diree- torate advising the immediate exten- sion of the company's lines was uermi- mously and enthusiastically adopted. There is a mational and patriotic, as well as a commercial, side to the N. Y. Z., as will be noted in every line of the extracts here appended from, the director's report on extensions. "It is well understood," says this document, " that the extension of the facilities of marine transport is au im- portant factor in the development of the national power, and the extension of Japan's steamship services abroad is a matter of special urgency. The un- dertaking, however, requires consider- able expenditure, and is liable to incur HEAVY LOSSES. Its object is to promote the national interests of the Empire, and not to se- cure any personal profits for those con- cerned, so that they must be prepared to sustain whatever losses may ensue. In Japan the general drift of public- opinion ublicopinion is inclined towards the extension of the existing steam services; the protection, and it has now arrived at so happy a state as to be able to de- clare a special dividend of profits on account of the steamers chartered by the Governmentduring the latter " Under such a felicltious condition of affairs the company must be prepared to devote such surplus of profits to the development of the steam services of the Emeire, and thus to repay the benefit which has been rendered by the nation to hte company. The com- pany is, therefore, now prepared to push forward the extension of its business, in accordance with the poli- cy adopted long ago. Among the many lines to foreign ports, which should be quickly opened m the inter- ests of the Empire, those most urgent- ly calling forth the development of our national resources are lines to Europe. America, and Australia. " The opening of the proposed line to America should not be delayed EVEN A DAY, M. Poincare, who bas been investigat- ing the action of the moon on the meteorology of the earth, has discovered that it has an influence, not only on the production of cyclones, but also on their direction. The Marquise de Plaumartin, who re- cently died in Paris, bequeathed 50,000 fr. to the Paris Deaf and Dumb Institu- tion and 4,000,0000 fr. to the Brussels municipality for the erection of art asy- lum for the aged. A despatch from Pretoria says that President Kruger has declared that he is willing to make satisfactory conces- sions to the Uitlanders, whose demands for representation led to the ill -feeling which resulted in Dr. Jameson's raid. COST OF ENGLAND'S WARS. 'What the British Have Iliad to Pay for Their Fighting of Two Centuries. In the wars of the present and of the previous century England has expended $5,000,000,000. Almost incessantly since 1700 England has been prosecuting war and paying the cost of it, either in al - Mance with other )-European nations or against barbarous or semi -civilized na- tions single handed. The first of the wars in which .Eng- land engaged in the eighteenth century was against the French, England havirg as its allies Holland, Prussia, Hanover, and Portugal. It culminated in the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713, after an ex- penditure (relatively much larger in _ these days) of $900,000,000. t Canadian The English war against he g g colonists, who were favorable to the French, followed at a cost of mum, - 000, 300,000;000, and then followed the war against the American colonists south of the Canadian border lines the Revo-utionary war. The cost to England of the Revo- lutionary war is given in the official figures of the English War Office at $600,000,000. The closing years of the eighteenth century and the early years of the nine- teenth century were years of strife and war in Which England took an active part, but never single handed. Her first alliance was with Russia, Prussia, Sar- dinia, Portugal, Italy, and the minor German States against France. That was in 1793. The next alliance six years later, included the same countries,with Turkey, Naples, the Barbery States, and Austria in addition as allies of England. The combination of European nations of which England was a part in 1805, in- cluded England, Russia, Austria, Swed- en and Naples. In 1809 England and Austria combined against France, and in 1813 all the great powers of Europe and most of the minor ones combined against Napoleon in what was known afterward as "the seventh coalition." While these wars were in progress in Europe, England carried on other wars, particularly against the United States (the war of 1812), and in India, and dur- ing this period, beginning in 1793 and closing in 1815, the total sum expended by England for war and naval purposes was $4,000,000,000. Such was the debt of England at the olose of the last war with the United States, but it bas been greatly reduced. since. The Crim can war, in which England engaged against Russia with France, Turkey, and Sardinia as its allies, cost England $350,000,000' and consequent wars and eneounters in India, in Southern Africa, where the Boers proved a sturdy foe, in Egypt and elsewhere have entailed considerable cost upon the English Treasury,but very much less than the expense of fighting with civilized sol- diers in well-equipped armies. The present debt of England, exclusive of the debt of English dependenoies,which is $2,000,000,000, is three . billion three hundred million dollars. A 400-1b. bear was recently shot at Eedy. &hiidren Cry for Pitcher's Casterlai as it will prove a most important factor time has arrived to undertake that extension, and it will not be long be- fore the proposal is put into effect. The extension or steam communi- cation is really a public act beyond the power of a private individual or company to carry out. Nevertheless it is the duty of those who are concerned in the marine transport busiess to as- sist it as far as their financial resources allow. This company leas been carry - in gon such a business under national in the development of commerce, but the steamers required for such a line must possess great speed so that they can be utilized as cruisers in case of war. Tile opening of lines to Europa and Australia is hardly less important. The opening of these three lines should not be delayed in the face of the exist- ing opportunities. The company is pre- pared to open the European line with- out waiting for any national subsidy, and it has arranged to run six steam- ers on that line regularly, " That was decided upon a long time aog, but its carrying out has been de- layed until now on account of the lack of funds for the purchase or construc- tion of the necessary steamers. Now that the company has acquired such funds from the profits made by the steamers chartered by the Government, it is the duty of the company to de- vote such special profits to the public service. The company has also decided to open an Australian line out of the profits to be made during the next fis- cal year by the steamers chartered by Government. The shareholders, who have received a special dividend, will no doubt, approve this measure as pro- posed by the company." Sticking to Business, Little Boy (at toy -store -window)-- Mamma, won't you buy me a top ? Mamma (meditatively)—It is now too cold to spin tops. Well, then, buy me a double -ripper sled and some new skates, and we'll tet the top go. No Great Difficulty. A greedy boy is capable of clever mis- understandings. No, Willie, my dear, said the little boy's mother, no more cakes to -night. It is too near bedtime, and you can't sleep on a full stomach. Well, said Willie, but I can sleep on ray back. IT PUT NEW LIFE IN ME. " ALL I DID WAS JUST TO MOPE AROUND" " SCOTT'S SARSAPARILLA CURED ME." The chilly weather of late fall and early winter fids them unprepared to stand the change and hence they suf- fer. This fact is plainly proved by the following opinions of some who speak from practical experience : "I felt like a man that could commit suicide. I caught a cold while camp- ing on damp ground, had twinges of awful muscular pains, couldn't eat and couldn't sleep. All I did was to mope around and make all in the house as miserable as myself, Scott's Sarsapar- illa put now life in me, braced me up thoroughly, and since its use plein is a stranger to me." Alex Grant, Toronto. J. T. McGraw, a mining prospector, writing from Minden; Express Inc three bottles Scott's Sarsaparilla here before Saturday, Have been a martyr to rheumatism and indigestion brouelit on by expesure. Scotts Sarsaparilla is. rapidly curing me." Nothinghas ever equalled led Scott's Sarsaparilla for building a the system, - putting the blood in healthful circula- tion cula- tion and invigorating the body. Thou- sands testifygto its splendid effects in extreme weakness and all debilitating diseases.. On this account no: imitation of Scott's should' be accepted. Of your local druggists at $1 per bottle, 6 bot- tles g5+ Sold by C. LUTZ, Exeter, Ont. for Infants and Child ''Cwat+ortalaeowel adaptedtoehtldtnatiult irecommend itassuperiortoanyprescril on known tome" H. A. Moaxas, AM I)., 11t So. Oxford St, Brooklyn le Y. u and Universal ria is s0 a real The use of Caste its merits tae wellksown. that it seomn ajsrtrk ofsupererogation toendorse it. Few arethe xiteliigent families who do not keep Cascada within easyreacb." Casae Maurits, r ar>DCity. Late pastor Bloomingdale Beformed Church. Canteen n (wee •Collo: Oertettttit15e, Sour stoitro^it, Diaivhoea, uctatto5 Rips Worms, gives sleep, -mid proanoter4 di Wi out' urlous roc ,altiOS " . z "For several years I have recealtne'idek your 'Castoria,' and shall always continue to ° d � it hen invariably produced beuel1 1&1 EDWIN 7l'. rases*, X. A., "The Winthrop,"125th Street sad 7th Ave:, New York Oit7, 'las Cattrr.&tm CokP txr, TT h1tsanar Si'ara7F, New Toalt. suraMMINISMINNINNIMEM hen 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, ONT. Perhaps you know him ? In Water- loo he is known as one of the most popular and succeasfulbusiness 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 - l'ew months since, while nursed as an invalidat the Mt. Clemens sanitary resort, when his friends in Waterloo were dismayed with a report that he was at the point of death. " There's no telling where I would have been had I kept on the old treat- ment," said Mr. Bauer, with a merry laugh, the other day, while recounting his experiences as a very sick man. "Mt. Clemens," he continued, " was the last resort in my ease. For months previous I had been suffering indescribable tortures. I began with a loss of appetite and sleepless nights. Then, as the trouble kept growing, I was getting weaker, and began losing flesh 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 relief. Just about when my condition seemed moat hopeless, I heard of a wonderful cure effected in a case somewhat similar to mine, by the Great South American Nervine'T`onic, 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 aux appetite such as I had not known for months. I began to pick tip in strength with surprising rapidity, slept well nights, and before I knew it I was eating three square meals regularly every day, with as mncb relish as ever. I have no hesitation r in saying thatthe g y South American Nervine Tonic cured mar when all other remedies failed. I have recovered my old weight—over 200 pounds—and never felt better in Arty life." Mr. Frank Bauer's experience tit 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 that nerve centres, whose fagged vitality is energized instantly by the very first dose. Itis a great, a wondrous cure for all nervous diseases, as well as indigestion anil dyspepsia. It goes to the real source of trouble direct, and the sick always feel its marvel., lour sustaining and restorative power at once, on the very first day of it// USN. C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail. Agent for Exeter. Tiros. WICusrr, Crediton Drug Store, Agent. Before Taking, fl1(oO'S Ptt0500iL.-The Great Ling -Kish Remedy. Is the result of over 85 years treating thousands of eases with all known drugs, until at Iasi we have discovered the true remedy and treatment—a commination that will effect a prompt and permanent cure in all stages of Sexual Debility, Abuse or Excesses, Nervous weakness, Zmissions, .Mental Worry, Excessive Use of Opium, Tobacco, or Alcoholk Stimulants all of which soon load to Insanity, Consumption and an early grave, Wobd'i Phosphodine has been used successfully by hundreds of cases that seemed almost hopeless—cases that had been treated by the most talented physi clans—cases that were on the verge of despair and insanitycases that were a —the continued and Perseveringuse of butwith h tottering over the grave—but g �' � Wood's Phospizodine, these cases that had been given up to die, were restored to manly vigor and health --Reader you steed not despair—tad Mat- ter who has giveai you up as incurable -the remedy is now within ,your. reach, by its use you can be restored to a life of usefulness, and happiness, Price, one package, $1; sixpaekages, $5; by mall free of postage. One zor'lZ lease, six,; saranteed to cure, Pamphlet free t0 any addi ees. The Wood Company Windsor, Ont., Canada Aftet T44cht Wood's by res Phos hodlne Is sold onsible wholesale and retail di'te ists..ii the Domiutorlr' pp T;g fi