HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1896-1-23, Page 3144
AO
James E. Nicholson,.
most
Passes Belief
moo..
r. Jas. Xs'. Nicholson, V'lorencevfl:.e,,..
N. B., Strug„ ler, for Seven Long
Yearn 'with
CANCER ON THE LIP,
. .ND IS CURED BY '
Y13
Bars.
elenscuil
pR
••••011•M
r.I�1^bolson says: "I consulted doe.
1s v;;a 1 eiMed for me, but to
ilo purpose; the cancer began to
Into the Flesh,
plc td to my chin, and I suffered in
11 /
fur sect loaf, years. kivally I
a c In ti t yer s Sarsaparilla. En
o eel: or two 1 liotieed a
ded Improvement.
neoura ed by this result. I pent=
i r.:',11 in a n,uth or so the so: •
i ,chin began to heal. In thr
+
r ' 'my 1Ip began to heal, and, aftc
nIt the Sus.tllarilla for six month!
e last trace of tete canoe= disappeared.'
dm/lotted at the World's Fair.
I 'Sl .IX2 L$ -nova/are the .73owetes
A Treasury of
information
. . . THE . ..
SUNLIGHT .-FiCN
LllVIA N giy C 1898
Congener. Oda "r' of uie uul tntormauon
tJt 0.t nanism otta. ilYL ellQ14
GIVEN FREE To oSERS
SUNLIGHT SOAP
a Commencing November,
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ALMANAC FA.EE • • • • • . • • •
The book contains complete
Calendar matter,iograpby,
Literature, Home tafagement,
Language of Flowers
Fashions, Games and Amuse-
ments, Recipes,
breams and their significance,
Poultry, ate.
TO PP,:VlNT Bu, early
e1cAPPo,NTM.NT
THE
'YEXETER
TIMES
R TWENTY-FIVE YEARS
DUNNTS
AKINO
OWDER
COOK'S BEST FRIEND
4RGEST SALE 1l!1 CANADA.
READ -MAKER'S 0
NEVES FAILS T6 OIVF SATISFACTION
F W leaLtc "'r At d +veins a_suss •
ISTINCTIVE FEATURES
OF KOOTENAY-®
Its application to a wide range of
diseases.
Soo cured in 6 months in two cities,
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Vie Kidneys. r: r
ging cures of Locomotot
motot
._
nd Blood Diseases.
aces.
µ,�
Y' It : ,iii,
tion of sight and hearing
grin
. 1i g .B
r paralysis.
h the effects of
•� e
Y
P
ng•
I t'c yes of Mercurial
f 1 t.
°a
o a
I
from the e syyst
em.
fChrnnic Rheumatism.
PAMPHLET OF STARTLING CURES
ro:,i;.KMAN MEDICINE CO
f4AMfLTON, ONT.
EXETER TIII+IES
r jj�� ((�� j j (�I� the Levant has been dispersed, the Tho Cuban insurgents have eaptur-
I L � � I� �1 \ �JC�� vowels being Urdered to points eat vt Guira th$ third city in the tt
(Li Ilr1 td�J1nIC knorvn. It is suxmisod that 'Great vines of 13avana, after a fierce battle,
Britain has given up the task of per. in which 000 Spaniards and 400 Cubaias
THE VERY LATEST FROM ALL THE
WORLD OVER.
Interesting Items About Our Own Country
(creat, Britain, the United States, ant
All Parts of the Globe, Condensed, and,
Assorted for Easy Reading.
CANADA.
Grave robbers made an unsuccessful
attempt in Peterboxo' cemetery.
Valentine Shortis, the Valleyfield
murderer, is now an inmate of the St.
Vincent de Paul penitentiary.
Mr. G. W. Gilbert was injured by
runaway horses at Sarnia, and it is
feared he will not recover.
The dead body of Mr.Samuel Burns;
an elderly man, was found in a Bar-
ton street house in Hamilton.
An ice bridge has formed below the
falls at Niagara, and many visitors
and citizens have crossed on the ice.
The death rate in the city of Ottawa
for 1895 was 20.82 per thousand, com-
pared with 21.66 for the year previous.
The River St. Lawrence has frozen
over at Montreal. This has been delay-
ed to a later date than ever before
known.
The Rev. Dr. hunter, pastor of the
Dominion square Methodist church
Montreal, has resigned the pastorate,
owing to ill -health.
Tho latest combine is .for the purpose
of keeping the price of sole leathers
upon apaying basis: and restricting if
possible the output.
Mr. George E. Tuckett, Mayor of
.Hamilton, has resigned from. the direc-
torate of the Central Fair Association.
and the Hamilton Jockey Club.
Mr. J. Cranston, who sued tlie,Can-
adian-Australian Steamship Company
for $50,000 damages for his deportation
from Honolulu, was non -suited in the
court at Victoria.
The dead body of Wm. Cole., sr., of
Strabane, Ont., was found in his house
in that village, The man was nearly
eighty years of age, and had lived alone
for a long time.
Mr. J. A. Girard, a widely -known in-
surance agent and appraiser of Mont-
real, swallowed parrs green on Thursday
night, from the effects of which he died
early on Friday morning.
The Rev. Father Lacombe, the North-
West missionary, received as a New
Year's gift from Premier Bowell n,
grant of land, 150 miles east of Edmon-
ton, to be laid apart as a Metis reserva-
tion.
John Carroll, a lad. of seventeen years,
fell into a vat of bailing water at Loz-
ler's Bicycle Works, Toronto Junction,
on Wednesday, evening, and died from
his frightful injuries four hours later.
Acting for a number of Hamilton
citizens, Mr. Thos. McKeown, civil en-
gineer of Buffalo, has prepared a re-
port upon 'the T., H. & B. Railway,
which states that the company has not
complied with the conditions of the
by-law granting the bonus of $225,000.
Mr. W. F. Li,ghtall has entered ac-
tion against the directors of La Banque
du Pouple to recover his loss on are-
cent purellase of stock, alleging false
and deceptive reports and illegal pay-
ment of dividends, as well as gross
carelessness oe the part of the defend-
ants.
A militia order has been issued an-
nouncing the retirement from the ac-
tive force of Col. Walker Powell, Ad-
jutant -General of the Militia, with a
retiring allowance, and the rank of col-
onel on the retired list. The order con-
tained a high and unusual tribute to
his personal and official character.
GREAT BRITAIN.
Sir Henry Irving is to unveil the
monument of Sarah Siddons on Pad-
dington green next spring.
Lord Blackburn, a Lord of the English
Court of Appeal, is dead. He was
eighty-three years of age.
British Leh trade returns for December,
1895, show a large increase over the re-
turns for the month a year ago.
There are rumours of a raproche-
ment between Great Britain, France
and Russia over the Transvaal ques-
tion.
The death of the most Rev. Robert
Samuel Gregg Protestant Archbishop of
Armagh, and Primate of all Ireland, is
announced.
r
It is believed in London that Great
Britain has purchased from Portugal
Delagoa bay, the nearest seaport to the
Transvaal Republic.
Miss Mamie Dickens, the eldest
daughter of the he great novelist, makes
her home at Dunton rectory, in the
town of Brentwood, in Essex.
Lord Salisbury is engaged upon the
Venezuelan correspondence, and a full
statement will be placed before Parlia-
ment as speedily as possible.
Sir Claude Macdonald has been ap-
pointed British Minister to China, suc-
ceeding Sir Nicholas O'Connor who
takes control of the Embassy at St.
Petersburg.
A nephew of Washington Irving is the
landlord of the old-fashioned hostelry at
Birmingham, England, which is much
patronized by Americans visiting the
midlands capital.
The movement in favor of arbitration
in the Venezuelan question with the
United States is increasing in London.
The feeling is in favor of establishing
a permanent Court of Arbitration.
The feeling in London against the
Kaiser personally is most bitter, and
questions in regard to his name remain-
ing, on the army and navy list are to
be asked in Parliament.
Great Britain is seriously and steadily
preparing for war on a very large scale,
at land and on sea, against Germany,or
against Germany, France, and Russia,
should they combine against her.
The commanding,officer of the differ-
ent regiments of. English volunteers
have been overwhelmed with letters
from the men under their command
expressing their desire to be enrolled
for active service.
The Westminster Gazette refers to
the ill -feeling between the German
Emperor and the British royal family,
and says that William, as the son of the
Princess _ Royal, is a claimantfor the
throne of Britain.
Mr. Chamberlain has sent a despatch
to President j:{ruger saying that the
Queen has heard with satisfactionthat
the President has decided.to hand over
the prisoners recently captured to the
British Government.
The idea that a combination of powers
has been formed against Great Britain
seems to be gaining ground, and. a de-
spatch to the Paris Soliel says that a
movement is really on foot to establish
an anti-British alliance.
The rapidity with which the various
British naval, stations are commission-
ing warships, large and small, for active.
service, has' served to remove any doubt,
regarding the efficiency' of the navy tri
the event of a sudden call upon it for
aggressive action
,
The British. Mediterranean fleet an
reading the other powers to intervene
in the Armenian atrocities.
Great Britain is evidently determined
not to be caught unprepared for war it
Emperor William should proceed ou his
recent arrogant course. Both the naval
and military authorities have been ins
struoted to make all necessary prepare-
tions to pub the navy and array on a
war footing at the shortest possible no-
tice, should such a step be deemed neces-
UNITED STATES.
A baby .weighing exactly one pound
was born in San Francisco last Christ-
mas day.
The German press of Detroit is red-
hot for war between Great Britain and
Germany.
At Luke Fiddler collieryPa., four
men lost their lives by falling out of
a. bucket in the sbaft.
One hunter in Connecticut shot 180
partridges and more than 200 woodcock
during the garrie season recently closed.
Mrs. Alva E. Vanderbilt, the divorced
wife of William K. Vanderbilt, was
married on. Saturday to Oliver Bel-
moat,
A codfish weighing fifty-six pounds
was brought into Portland, Me., a few
days ago, the largest codfish seen there
in many years.
Two men in Mount Pleasant, Florida,
fought a duel, in which both were killed,
for the love of a woman, who was su-
premely indifferent to both,
Mr. and Mrs. Durgin. living near
Portland, Me., have reached the age
of 102 and 99 years respectively, and
both are hale, hearty, and happy.
The war feeling is very strong among
the Germans of `Milwaukee, and they
think that the present Transvaal trouble
will lead to the abrogation of the treaty
of London.
The New York Excise Board have
increased the fee for hotel, saloon, and
storekeepers' licenses. This was done
because the board believes there are too
many saloons in the city.
A. H. Brownley, of London, Ont., was
held up on the beach at Santa Monica,
Cal., at the point of a pistol, and forced
to sign ten American Express Company
cheques for fifty dollars each.
George H. Smith shot his father-in-
law dead at Ransomville, over the Ni-
agara border. A committee of citizens
pursued
o vneidn taefan house wherer hed had
taken refuge.
It is reported at New' York that the
marriage of Mr. Oliver H. P. Belmont
and Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt will be cele-
brated at the residence of the latter
at Madison avenue and 72nd street on
Monday, January 28.
Rev. ev. Francis W. Bates, a South
African missionary, at present in Bos-
ton, says that England is the great
civilizing influence in South Africa, and
the world would be the better for it if
Great Britain owned all Africa.
Sir Julian Pauneefote and Viscount
Gough called upon Postmaster -General
Wilson at Washington and submitted
aproposition from the Postmaster -
General of Great Britain for the nego-
tiation of a parcel post convention be-
tween the two countries.
Prisoners in the County gaol at Holt,
Mo., stuck a pole with a stocking tied
to it through the bars Christmas eve,
and left it there all day Christmas day,
A considerable quantity of small Com
was dropped into the stocking by peo-
ple passing the gaol.
Mr. Henry Norman, the special °Dra-
y -el esioner of the London Daily Chronicle,
cables from Washington that all the best
American opinion is earnestly desirous
of a friendly and dignified settlement of
the Venezuelan dispute, and he considers
the presentmoment a golden one to se-
cure American good -will.
A despatch from Washington says that
Secretary Morton is still considering the
application for the opening of a new
port of entry and export m New Eng-
land for the transportation of Canadian
cattle being shipped to Great Britain or
other foreign countries. The Secretary
is said to bo favorably disposed to-
wards such a port.
• Some of the prisoners in the gaol at
Clintwood, Va., one day last week
knocked down the gaoler, Mr. Kiser,
when he brought their food, and made
their escape. it is remarked somewhat
indignantly and reproachfully in the
local paperchronicling the event,"that
h roniclin g
some other prisoners played thsame
trick on Mr. Kiser last fall."
There was trouble among the female
prisoners in the Missouri State peniten-
tiary over a "reform" innovation at
Christmastide. The prison authorities
substituted a. Christmas tree festival and
song service for the "usual dance" which
it has been customary to give in the in-
stitution for many years past, and the
women made a strong protest. but with-
outavail.
ail.
The suggestion of Mr. Norman. the
special commissioner of the London Daily
Chronicle at Washington, is that Great
Britain appoint five commissioners to
confer with the commissioners recently
appointed by President Cleveland, and
that these ten men constitute a Board of
Arbitration to virtually decide the loca-
tion of the disputed Venezuela boundary
line.
According to commercial reports from
New York business across the line is
dull even for this dull period of the
year. Generally stocks appear ample for
immediate requirements, and doubt as to
the financial course that Congress will
pursue and rather doubtful political con-
ditions at home and abroad are depress-
ing trade and killing industry. Collec-
tions are as a rule slow, and reports
from travellers during the last few days
mention only a moderate demand,
though activity has increased in dry
goods, boots and shoes, and clothing gen-
erally. While the conditions are not
perhaps as hopeful as might be wished,
it 1s satisfactory to be told that in no
direction are they worse, and in sever-
al much better, than was the case a
week ago.
GENERAL. ,
Were killed and wounded.
It is stated that Dr. Jameson"s force,
on its way to Johannesburg, marched
one hundred and sixty miles in ninety
hours, never halting more than two
hours at a time,
Scouts sent forward into the Ashanti
territory have returned to the British
outposts and report that King Prempeb
has sent a messenger to meet the expe-
dition now on its way to Coomassie, to
propose terms of peace.
President Kruger, of the Transvaal,
has replied to Secretary Chamberlain,
thanking the Queen for her kind ex-
pressions, and renewing Ins promise to
hand over Dr. Jameson and the other
prisoners to the British Government
punishment.
The Queen of Italy, who always takes
great interest in every new invention,
bas been lately snaking use of a horse -
less carriage in her grounds at Monza,
with which she has been so much pleas
ed that she has ordered a similar car-
riage for her other residences.
The Yokohama Correspondent of the
St.. Petersburg Novoo Vremva cables
that Japan has offered free and un-
limited anchorage to Russian warships
in all Japanese harbors, with the view
of diverting Russia from her intention
of acquiring a harbor in Corea,
Count de Cesti has been arrested. in
Paris on a charge of having obtained
one million frames by fraud from the
late Max Lebaudy, the young million-
aire, who recently died from typhoid
fever Contracted while serving his three
years' term of conscription in the French
The Canadian -Australian steamer
Miowera, which had not been heard of
since she parted company with the
Stratbnevis, which she was towing into
safety, is safe. The Warrimoo spoke
hex on January 2nd, about one hundred
miles south of Honolulu, and all was
well.
Portugal, it is announced, will remain
neutral in the dispute between Great
Britain and Germany regarding the
Transvaal, and will not permit the Ger-
mans or the British to land troops at
Delagoa bay,or to traverse the Portu-
guese terriry in South Africa..
The crew of the first-class Russian
steel cruiser Rurik mutinied recently
while that vessel was in the harbor of
Algiers. The mutiny was suppressed
by the French authorities. and thirty
of the leaders, are now on their way to
Cronstadt, where they are to be exe-
cuted.
The recent census of Germany shows
a population of 51,758,364.
The disarming at Johannesberg has
been completed without mishap, and the
Boer police now patrol, the town.
The repeated assertion of thepurchase
of Delagoa bay from Portugal by Great
Britain remains unconfirmed and un-
contradicted.
Cuban rebels exploded dynamite und-
er a trainon the Nuevitas Puerto line.
containing 300 passengers, several of
whom' were inured. -
The boiler of an Italian torpedo boat
on Lake Maggiore exploded on Thugs->
day, sinking the vessel, and drowning
thirteen people who were on board.
The feeling in Berlin against England
is very bitter, and the press constantly
refers, in- connection with the Trans-
vaal trouble, to'" British insolence."
Two severe ;earthquakes, causing the
loss of 1,100 lives, have occurred in the;
Khalkhal district in. Teheran. They
completely destroyed two villages.
News has been received in Rome that
the Italians in Abyssinia hate defeated,
Emperor Menelek's forces at Nakaleh,
The Shrews arestaid to have lost heavily.
The insurgent forces, eleven thousand
strong, under Gen. Gomez, are investing
Havana, in which there are seventy
thousand Spanish troops, commanded by
Gen. de Campos. It is not the intention
of the insurgents to make an attack un-
less their sympathizers raise a revolt
in the city.
A wreak on the Baltimore and Ohio
South -Western railway was averted on
Wednesday night by Mary Och, a nine-
year-old girl, of Portsmouth, Ohio, who,
finding an obstruction on the track,
crawled across a high trestle bridge and
built a fire on the track, which warned
the train hands who stopped the train,
which was crowded with passengers, in
time to prevent a disaster.
Henry Norman, the special commis-
sioner of The London Chronicle in
Washington, has interviewed the mem-
bers of the Senate Committee on
Foreign Relations and the House Com-
mitee on Foreign Affairs as to the
establishment of a permanent tribunal
of arbitration for questions arising be-
tween Great Britain and the United
States,not involving national autonomy
or honor. All expressed themselves
Strongly in favor of such an arrange-
ment.
OUTBURST OF ENTHUSIASM.
Remarkable Scene at a Theatre In Lon-
don the Other Night.
Of the spread of the war spirit in
England since the Transvaal incident,
the London correspondent of the New
York Sun cables the following to his
paper:— The white flames of patriot-
ism never blazed higher in Old England
than now. It is patriotism of that kind
of intensity which makes for war. It
compels the respect and admiration even
of England's enemies, but it is full of
danger. Its manifestations are on every
hand. It finds spontaneous expression
wherever people congregate — in
churches, in theatres, at banquets, in
the press, everywhere. It bursts out
as the inspiring dominant spirit of the
hour. There was awonderful scene
at Daly's theatre on Saturday night,
when Mr. Hayden Coffin sang the
new patriotic ballad, "Hands Off," by
Henry Hamilton. The lines are spirit-
ed, beginning:—
England to arms!
The need is nigh,
and the chorus concludes:
• England for her own, myboys,
It's Rule Britannia still.
Tbere have been some surprising de-
monstrations of popular feeling by this
undemonstrative people of late, but
never anything like the mad enthusiasm
of that crowded house. A spirit which
makes women weep, which makes
men leap up with white, tense
faces, and shout till exhausted, will not
long be content with mere words of de-
fiance. Then, at the last, when the play
was finished and the orchestra sounded
the familiar strains, the whole company
came upon the stage, and the pit, gal-
lery, and stalls rose up and attempted to
sing "God Save the Queen," I say at-
tempted, for those raw, strained throats
could not sing. They roared, and the
harsh, unmusical chorus was more• in-
spiring: more thrilling, than any sweet-
er version of the great anthem ever giv-
en. Such scenes as this are more preg-
nant of meaning than flying squadrons
or messages of Presidents and Em-
perors. I should fail to record the
most significant feature of England's
public sentiment at the present mo-
ment if I did notadd that hatred or
dislike of America seems to have no hart
in the patriotic outbursts."
No Material.
time ?" How askeis it
d Ithe nevidlere. pseeerson.you killing
"I can't find the time," said the busy
man in perfect innocence.
The High' Pressure System.
Mrs. Winks—Is your daughter learn-
ing much at school?
Mrs. Minks -Oh, she must be learn-
ever so fast. She has a headache
lit the time.
An Obstructionist.
Why have you dressed your hair so
terhigh, Maud t
so I cacn takeoff my hat at the thea
.
Children "Cry for Pitcher's Castoriaa'
THE FIELD OF COMMERCE.
Some Items of Interest to the Busy
Business Man«
Prices of the leading cotton company
stocks are lower.
Money on call continues steady at 11
per cent. in Toronto.
A good export demand for wheat for
spring delivery is reported.
The United States treasury reserve
is down about 059,000,000, or $41,000,000
short of legal requirements.
The stocks of wheat at Port Arthur
and Fort William are 2,817,654 bushels
as compared with 597,947 bushels a year
ago,
Canadian bank stocks are a trifle
weaker. Commerce sold at 134 3-4,
Merchants at 165, Dominion at 242, and
Standard at 162.
Indications are favorable for higher
rates of interest for money, and there
is a good deal of selling of stooks in con-
sequence.
The visible supply of .wheat in .the
United States and Canada is 69,843,000
bushels, a. decrease of 116,000 bushels for
the week. A year ago the amount was
87,886,000. The amount on passage to
Europe is 26,000,000 bushels, as against
32,320,000 a year ago.
The cheese buyers of Western Ontar-
io have adopted the following rule for
weighing cheese: " That all cheese shall
weigh at the time of delivery at the
railway station or other point of deliv-
ery up beam at half a pound per box
more than the weight marked on the
box, and that no fractions of a pound
shall be marked on the box."
Failures in the Dominion of Canada
were slightly more than in 1894, namely
1,891 against, 1,856, but were smaller in
aggregate of liabilities. This is the more
remarkable because important banking
difficulties at one time threatened ser-
ious disturbance in trading circles, but
liabilities in trading failures are small-
er than in 1894 by $1,647,826, or 14.4
per cent., although liabilities in manu-
facturing failures were substantially
the same as an 189.4. The latter cir-
cumstance is the more worthy of note
because of the marked increase m manu-
facturing failures in the litotes along
the lakes and the Canadian border.
During the week the weather has
been unfavorable, and Toronto mer-
chants report a quiet. business. The
ou' look is only fair. Stocks of bankrupt
goods are numerous, and prices in same
leading staples show a tendency to-
wards weakness. However, January is
usually a quiet and uncertain month,
and a few weeks may make a material
change in Oho situation. There are no
reported changes in prices of leading
staples, but in some lines dealers show
an inclination to shade quotations. The
number of failures throughout the Pro-
vince is large but individually the lia-
bilities axe small. The more season-
able weather with good sleighing will
help to improve general trade. Whole-
sale houses report the demands for
spring goods as increasing. There is a
better demand for wheat and barley with
an advance of one to two cents in prices
for the week. Large quantities of wheat
are being bought for future delivery.
. The financial situation is somewhat
uncertain. Bankers are not inclined to
make loans, and paper offering under-
goes considerable scrutiny. Prime com-
mercial paper is discounted at six to
seven per cent., and call loans on
stocks are difficult to get at five per
per cent. The share markets have been
irregular. Assurance stocks and some
bank issues are lower.
NAVAL PREPARATION&
Groat- Quantities of War Stora, Tieing
Manufactured at the British Arsenals.
A despatch from London says:—In-
terest in the great naval preparations
continues to absorb the public mind. A
report which has been circulated to the
effect that the Government intends to
mobilize the volunteer forces is denied.;
but it is certain that appeals from the
War Office have recently been sent by
circular to the commanders of all the
volunteer regiments, asking them to
return the probable number of volun-
teers that could be mobilized, and to
state the arrangements that would be
necessary for doing so.
At Woohvich, below London, on
the Thames, the great arsenal, covering
one hundred acres of ground, is receiv-
ing
t additions to its great store
d ditio n
of constant naval aterial, and the ativity in
all departments there is unabated. The
torpedo factory is increasing its output,
and the men in that department are
working many hours overtime. The
torpedoes, as fast as they are manufac-
tured, are despatched to Portsmouth
and Dover, the .former the principal na-
val station of England, with a forti-
fied harbour that will float the whole
of the English navy and the latter the
chief port of communication between
England and the Continent. The Gov-
ernment ,intends, it is announced, to
have these well supplied with torpedo
boats and with' torpedo destroyers.
,—w, z .
RHEUMATISM
Its Cause and Cure.
A poisonous Acid in the Blood,
which needs remooal.
Only one means for a radical cure.
Rheumatism is a blood disease, due to
the presence of uric acid—a poison—in
the, system, and it is only by the removal
of this pain -producing poison, that a
radical cure can he effected. Acute
rheumatism is hereditary, and thus it is
that young children are often victims to
this torture. The use of liniments, em-
brocations and outward applications,
may give temporary relief, but can never
cure, for the poison is inthe blood, and
until it is expelled, rheumatism, sciatica
and neuraligic pains will continue.
Scotts' Sarsaparilla cures rheumatism by
r.eanovingthe cause—by neutralizing and
expelling this poisonous acid. In chronic
cases, this medicine reaches the source
of the disease as no other medicine can.
It gives renewed energy to the organs
that sustain life, the forces that make the
blood. For the nervous troubles of
youth, for the debility that precedes old
age, for ladies in their severe ordeals, it
ie without a compeer.
Scott's Sarsaparilla is a concentrated
compoundknown
ofthe finest medicines own
to modern medical science -'The dose is
from one half to one teaspoonful and
duringits use the ordinary vocations are,
trot iterfered with.
Sold by C. LUTZ, Exeter, Ont.
for Infants and Children.
"Cartorlaisnowellsdaptedto chfdrentbat
I recommend Stas superior to any preaer iption
known to me." H. A. ,t,wnz t, elf, A.,
111.80. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. T.
"The use of ' Castorla' Is so universal and
Its merits so well known that It seems a work
of supererogation to endorse it. Feer are the
itellig nt farmilieswhodonot keep Castoria
Mtta Casinos Rome, D,D.,
New. York City.
Later/Astor Bloomingdale Reformed Church.
eaatorlad cures Colic, Constipattos,
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation,
Sills worms, gives sleep, and promotes dig
gecion;
Without injurious med(cat1O&
For several years I have recommended
your' Castoria,' and sial aerates continue to
do so as it hate invariably produced beneficial
results,
Rowse F. Plurals, M. A„
"The Winthrop," 185th Street and IthAve.,
New York Coity
l Car C.irrami, COMP4Nv, 74 34IIaaAlt STSt'uST, NEW TORA.
NAMININIMffirMISPZT,MGRANTORMISINGSAIRMINIMINIIIMMIIIIIMMINE
ED ITORS, CLEROYMEN, PHYSIC IANS
Men and Women in all Walks of Life Tell of the Remarkable
Cures Wrought h t South American Rutile TWO.
�h b y
SIX DOSES WILL CONVINCE THE MOST INCREDULOUS.
EDITOR COLWELL, OF PARIS, ONT., REVIEW.
Newspaper editors are almost as
sceptical as the average physician on
the subject of new remedies for sick
people. Nothing short of a series of
most remarkable and well authenti-
cated cures will incline either an
editor or a doctor to seriously consider
the merits honestly claimed for a
medicine.
Hundreds of testimonials of won-
derful reooveries wrought with the
Great South American Nervine Tonic
were received from men and women
all over the country betore physicians
began to prescribe this great remedy
in chronic cases of dyspepsia, in-
digestion, nervous prostration, sick
headache, and as a tonic for build-
ing up systems sapped of vitality
through protracted spells of sick-
ness.
During his experience of nearly a
quarter of a century as a newspaper
publisher in Paris, Ont., Editor Col-
well, of The Paris Review, has pub-
lished hundreds of columns of paid
medicine advertisements, and, no
doubt, printed many a gracefully -
worded puff for his patrons as a
matter of business, but in only a
single instance, and that one warrant-
ed by his own personal experience,
has he given a testimonial over his
own signature. No other remedy
ever offered the public has proved
such a marvellous revelation to the
most sceptical as the South American
Nervine Tonio. It has never failed
in its purpose, end it has cured when
doctors and other medicines were
tried in vain.
" I was prostrated with a particu-
larly severe attack of 'La Grippe,"
says Mr. Colwell, "and could find no
relief from the intense pains and die-
tress of the malady. I suffered day
and night. The doctors did not help
me, and I tried a number of medi-
cinesbut without relief. About this
time I was advised to try the South
American Nervine Tonic. Its effects
were instantaneous. The first dose I
took relieved me. I improved rapidly
and grew stronger every day. Your
Nervine Tonic cured me in a single
week."
The South American e i a Nervine
Tonic rebuilds the life forces by its
direct action on the nerves and the
nerve centres, and it is this notable
feature which distinguishes it front
every other remedy in existence. The
most eminent medical authorities now
concedethat fully two-thirds of all the
physical ailments of humanity arise
from exhaustion of the nerve forces.
The South American Nervine Tonic
acting direct upon the nerve centres
and nerve tissues instantaneously
supplies them with the true nourish-
ment required, and that is why its
invigorating effects upon the whole
system are always felt immediately,
For all nervous diseases, for general
debility arising from enfeebled vital-
ity, and for stomach troubles of every
variety no other remedy can possibly
bake its place.
C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter.
THOS. Wicusrr, Crediton Drug Store,'Agent.
•4
Wood's Phospholine,—The Greed English Remedy,
Is the result of over 85 years treating thousands of cases with all known ,
drugs, until at last we have discovered the true remedy and treatment -a
combination that will effect a prompt and permanent cure in alt stages of
Sexual Debility, Abuse or .Excesses, Nervous Weakness, Einissions, Menial
Worry, .Excessive Use of Opium, Tobacco, or Alcoholic Stimulants, all of
which soon lead to Insanity, Consumption and an early' grave. Wood's
Before Taking. Phosphodine has been used successfully by hundreds of cases that seemed
almost hopeless—cases that had been treated by the most talented physi-.
oians—cases that were on the verge of despair and -insanity -cases thatwere
tottering over the grave—but with the 'continued and persevering use of
Wood's phosphodine, thesa cases that had been given up to die, were
restored to manly vigor and health :Reader you need not despair—no mat-
ter who has given you up as incurable—the remedy is now within your
reach, by its use you can be restored te. a life of usefulness and happiness.
Price, one package, $l; sixpaokages, $5; by mail free of postage.
One w lltlease, sixguaranteed to cure. Pamphlet free to any address.
The Wood Cempany, Wlndsor, Ont-, Canada. AOe? Taking..`,
W'ood's Phosphodttte is sold bY'responsibie wholesale and retail druggists in. the Dominion.