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Exeter Times, 1896-1-30, Page 3} Ayer's pills thawould there twlhao b4 a testimony er s forimany years, and al have taken throe best results from their use, For Stomach and livor troubles. and for the cure of beadaAyer's canuottbesequaled. When my friends ask me what is the best remedy for disorders of the stomach, Liver, or Bowels, my invariable answer is Ayer's Pills. Taken prevent la gripppo checicfever,ua and regulate the digestive organs. They are easy to take, and Are the best ali-round famiig_medicine I have ever known."—Mrs. reser JouNsoN, ass Bider Ave., Now York City. AYER'S PILLS Highest AAwrds at World's Fair. dyer's Sarsapr45.itic forthee1111bzoof/. 4 4 4 4 ,y A Treasury of Information . . . THE . . SUNLIGHT FOR ALMANAC 1898 eontalntaB iso psces or uxerut inrormsUon for alt members orthe houAahetd GIVEN FREE TO UOSERS SUNLIGHT SOAP mete 1 Commencing November, OBTAIN riles, and until the COPY books are all given, pur- Achasersof 3 packages, or g bars of Suxtrour Sb.;,r, will receive from their grocer, r Sti cetT . . ALMANAC! FREE •••(. •• •.. The book contains complete" Calendar matter, Biography, Literature, tome Management, Language of Flowers Fashions, Games and Amuse. monis, Recipes, Dreams and their significance, Poultry, etc. TO PVENT Buy uy early i! 4 tit 4- 4. 4 t 4 4 • THE 0' AlaEXETER • TIMES FOR TWENTY-FIVE YEARS DUNNTS BAKINC POWDER. THECOOK'S BEST FRIEND LARGEST SALE Id CANADA. READ -MAKER'S lolealNEYEF; FAILS TO ONE SATISFACTION !1� erne et? n 'rinds ekes UNDER OATH. The following testi. cony of firs. flargaret Patterson, given under oath before W. P. Wal- ker, Notary Public, marks the most won- derful cure in the hien tory of any medicine: "For six or seven years I was badly afflicted with rheuma- tism and severe neural- gia in the head. At times 1 suffered very much pain from violent headaches, and in order to stop same, and upon the advice of a physician, I had a number of my teeth extraoted, without) deriving any advantage. In May, 1894, I had a paralytic stroke In the loft side of my body • this was followed by the total Ioss of sight of. the left eye, beating of both ears, violent headaches, severe fits, and great weakness. I became totally unable to do any work about the house, and was nob safe to be left alone on account of my dizziness and general weakness. "I consulted four different physicians, who attended me, and they told me that they would do what they could, but that I would never become well again. "About two'montba' ago I began using the „medicine being pub up by Mr. S. S. Ryckman, g�.P., of this city, and now known as Kootenay Cure, and am no w taking the fourth bottle of such nedioine, "Before T finished the first bottle I noticed a great improvement in my condition. I have tow received the use of my eyesight, the use of my hearing, and the use of my limbs and body, the headache has completely Ilea Bare and my strength has cme backp aiind completely, and, in fact, though 62'years old,/ feel almost a ne g ., I a V' e woman. Mrs. Ont," Patterson, ti 11e Street, Hamilton, Ont, (4� 1� NEWS IN A NU1SIffll. THE VERY LATEST PROM ALL THE WORLD OVER. Interesting Items About Our Own Country, Great Britain, the United States, and Ali Parts of the Globe, Condensed and Assorted tor Bary Reading. CANADA, Chatham has named a bridge after Lord Aberdeen. A Government detective is in Chat- ham investigating a case of 'infanticide. Ex -Mayor Stewart of Hamilton an- nounces that his public and political life is ended. Mr. P. R. Linghaie one of the men arrested at Jhannesberg, is a citi- zen of Belleville. The Alderanen and civic officials of London were given a dinner by Mayor Little at the Tecumseh House. The Dominion notes outstanding in December were $22,413,463, a reduction during the month of $404,837. The deposits in the Dominion Govern- ment savings banks during December were $272,009, and withdrawals $286,-- 609. Oil was struck in Yarmouth Town- ship, near St. Thomas, by a farmer digging a well. Test wells will be sunk. Mr. E. Farquhar, of Toronto, has received eeiv ed t he contract le - n act for the com P t' to n of the Ottawa awe &Par d r Railway. y Sound The Metropolitan of Canada will issue an appeal to the church for aid to the live Arnranceiondans and prayers for their de- , The exports from Canada during last month exclusive of coin and bullion, rose from $6,739,123 to $8,932,934 of which $2,108,892 was in goods the produce of Canada. John Seaton. of Strathroy, Ont., is in the county gaol under the charge of conspiring to set fire to his own pro- perty, Seaton is 75 years of age, and totally blind. Mr. Rufus Stevenson, son of Mr. +lames Stevenson, M.P., has been ap- pointed Collector of Customs at Peter- borough. The salary is twelve hundred dollars. It is stated that Mayor Tuckett of Hamilton will present the Young 1N -o- men's Christian Association with a $10,- 000 building, and it is also rumored that he will present a music hall to the city. Mr. George 13. Reeve, Traffic Man- ager of the Chicago & Grand Trunk. has been appointed General Traffic Manager with theadquarters at Trunk Mr. McNeill has given notice of a resolution in Parliament expressing the loyalty of Canada to Great Britain and the willingness of the people to stand. by the empire in any storm that may arise. The City of London has abandoned its claim of $26,000 against the Grand Trunk Railway Company for deteriora- tion of the London & Port Stanley Railway during its lease to the Grand Trunk. James R. McDonald, who was convict- ed of flim,.flamming in Ottawa, and sen- tenced to five years in the penitentiary, committed suicide in the Ottawa gaol on Saturday evening by hanging him- self. As Thomas Cowan, of Paris, Ont., was cutting wood on Friday night, his six- yeareted son slipped and fell under the descending axe, which struck him on the head, making a deep wound, cutting through the skull and injuring the mem- brane of the brain. The lad may pos- sibly recover. GREAT BRITAIN. The anti -German spirit in London and the anti-British feeling in Berlin con- tinue very bitter. The London Standard says Great Bri- tain can hold. her own against five or six of the great powers. rtotheShas uln sent isbelieved to contain an appeal on behalf of the Ar- menians. The flying squadron recently put in commission has left Portsmouth under sealed orders. It is surmised its destina- tion is Bermuda. The British Admiralty Department in London makes the statement t hat the flying squadron is not going to Bermuda or anywhere in American waters. Canon Grey, who died the other day, was rector of Houghton -le -Spring, Eng- land, for forty-eight years. His prede- cessor was rector for fifty-six years. The Westminster Gazette says that if its information is correct the Marquis of Salisbury's desire to be better friends with France has already brought forth fruit. It is preparing da full staod tement od Salisbury h V ne- Vene- zuelan Parliament hsoon aftewill beit meets on February 11th. The British Foreign Office has receiv- ed, a note from Mr. Bayard, the United States sin h been instructed by his Go rnmentto tender thanks to Great Britain for her kind offices to Americans in the Trans- vaal. the Governmennt are tater king steps of that the Armenian horror. There will proba- bly be a land invasion of Turkey by Russia, hd a bvadatoisantple yGreaBrt in and France. George Frederick Watts, the celebrat- ed English artist, whose eighty-second year will be completed in February is spending the winter in the United States. He is still in excellent health, and works with characteristic assiduity. The London Graphitic claims to have authority to deny the report that Great Britain has offered money to Venezuela for the Tatter's acceptance of the Schom- berg line as marking the boundary be- tween Venezuela and British Guiana. Mr. Cecil Rhodes, who has been the ruling spirit in South Africa, and who is so rich that the Bank of England thinks nothing of crashing his cheque for $1,000,000, saved his hfe " by going south when he was a boy, after he ha lost one lunge �g. The Archbishop of Canterbury has de- clined to prosecute the Bishop of Lon- don for issuing a license for the mar- riage of divorced persons, on the ground that the Bishop's chancellor held that such licenses are proper, and the Bishop has a right to act - on the decision of his chancellor. UNITED STATES. The report of the United States im- migration Investigation Committee re- commends Congress to take steps to keep out Canadian chewP • labour. W. Hasell Wilson, president of the Belvidere railway Pennsylvania, in the: oldest rail way. president n tinis the United States. Ile was born in 1811. Mr. Morse proposed�_a resolution' in the United States House of Re resentati P yes,, TkZE EXETER the expressed intention of which was to " wipe the Turkish nation off the face of the earth; John Cork, who has been making beds at the Anchor lodging -house in Buffalo for three ,years past, is the presumptive heir to. a fortune of forty thousand dol- lars, derived from an estate in England. The United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations has adopted a re- solution which is a more forcible en- unciation of the,Monroe doctrine, and will exceed the claims made by Presi- dent Cleveland in his message. Peter Houghaard, a Dane, killed him- self, his wife, and five children, in Chi- cago, on Sunday night, IIe waited un- til the family were asleep, and then, turning on All the gas ,lets, he calmly lay down and awaited his own death. Superintendent Craig, of the Duluth Gas and Water Company, has been in- dicted by the grand jury for man- slaughter in the second degree for sup- plying the city with impure water, which caused the death of a citizen by typhoid fever. Timothy B. Blackstone has given a 8500,000 library to his nativep lace, the town of Branford, t,onn., which will be completed in a few months. Mr. Black- stone is to present his choice collection of books to. the library, and will also, liberally endow it. A man who gave his name as D. V. Esmond, who arrived in Utica on Fri- day morning from Montreal, and at- tempted, to get a check oashed, was ar- rested, as he is wanted by the Montreal police on a charge of buncoing a man out of eighteen hundred dollars. At the opening of the United States House of Representatives on Fr' a id Mr. Y, Couclen, the blind chaplain, prayed fer- vently for strugling Cuba, and the suc- cess of her battle for independence. The sentiments he expressed were greeted with around of applause. The number of immigrants who ar- rived in the United States during De- cember, 1895, was 18,164, and during De- cember, 1894, 14,777. During the twelve months ended December 31, 1895, the arrivals numbered. 324,542, and during the preceding year 248,983. It is recalled now that Napoleon, on the completion of the Louisiana pur- ch se, said:—"This accession of terri- tory strengthens forever the power of the United States, and I have given to England a maritime rival that will sooner or later humble her pride." Senator Sewell of New Jersey offer- ed a resolution in the United States Senate declaring that the Monroe doe- trine was never intended to be anolied in the manner proposed by President Cleveland, and that the President's ac- tion was premature and inopportune in view of the financial condition of the country. John C. Eastland, of Danville, Ky., has aremarkable record as a Sunday school scholar. He has only miesed at- tending school one Sunday in seven years, and but two Sundays in nine years. This is the more notable as he lives five miles distant in the country, and has had to brave some pretty bad weather at times to get to school. Miss Ella Wilcox is the highly effici- ent janitor and sexton of the Church of the United Brethren in Marcelius, Mich. She has full care of the church, keeps it in order, rings the bell on Sun days, and attends to all the other duties of asexton "in every way better than any male janitor ever has," the church- goers say. She is good-looking, as well as accomplished, doubtless another point of superiority over the male janitors. United States Senator Davis, of the Committee on Foreign Relations, refer- ring to the Alaskian bountlary,says there is nothing to arbitrate between the United. States and Great Britain. The claims of the former country are right, and those of Great Britain are wrong and no matter how much England. and Canada may desire to obtain millions of acres of tillable land and a naval sta- tion, the United States must maintain her rights. The tone of commercial summaries to the condition and outlook of trade the United States is none too enco aging. The present position is depr mg, and the immediate future doubt The financial muddle increases distr in commercial circles, and strongly centuates the prevalent indisposit among business men to do more t just hold on in a tentative way. He there is little or no speculative mo went in trade ,and merchants are parently indulging in the negative co solation of being thankful that matt are no worse. Some serious commerc failures have occurred during the e in the United States. Manufactur are unusually dull, owing to a gene slackness in demand; staples are lit enquired for, though stocks in deale hands are believed to be low. Prices various important lines oontinue to cline. Pig iron is firmer, though t finished iron products are in no gr request. as in ur- 8a8- ful. ust ac - ion han rice ve- ap- n- has made iter alone the silent arbiter of the peace of the world. She will not interfere between Germany and ..Eng- land. It is generally admitted inliavana that Captain -General de Campos has failed in his attempt to put down the Cuban in- surrection, and his immediate recall is urgently pressed upon the Spanish Gov- ernment. It is now known that the Queen of Corea, who was supposed to have been murdered and cremated, with her maids of honor, escaped, and remaha , in hiding in an out house while the palace was being sacked. According to the official figures just published. .French importsfor the past year decreased one hundred and fifty - mi. ion francs, and exports increas- ed three hundred and ten million francs, as compared with the previous year., The Porte has decided to prohibit the distribution among the destitute Arm- enians of the funds collected in foreign countries for their benefit, and says that the alleviation of their distress is the function of the Turkish Govern- ment. Mr. Cecil Rhodes, previous to leaving Cape Town; for London, said, in an in- terview that he did not intend resign- ing his seat in Parliament, and that ho would be present at the meeting of the Charteain nhwilladd eedsshsharehders London, recent events. It is told of the great Russian states- man Gortschakuff that in the transac- tion of public, business he systematically refuses to do anything in a hurry. He used sealing wax instead of gummed ed envelopes, sand instead of blotting titgP n paper, e and preferred not to receive news pby telegraph that needed long explanation by mail. JANESON'S GREAT FIGHT, DETAILS, OF THE BATTLE WITH THE BOERS. The ltravery or hespalr—Bone Thousand 2lleetKilledJameson. .-A hundred Boers Were A Cape Town cable despatch says; Captain Thatcher, a traveller known in the United States, who bas served seven years in India and was with Dr. Jalne,son's column from its start until its surrender, but escaped capture, has arrived at Cape Town. He tells the storyt:— of the expedition to a correspon- dent:— ' " The column started," he says, "on Sunday afternoon. We were 600 strong. Besides there were 100 Kaffirs, There were three waggons, eig , ht Maxim and three Whitworth guns "We knew what we were going to do. It is all rubbish about our thinking we were going to fight natives. We count ed on support from the Rand. There was no other column. and we realized that we had no official support. "The first shot fired was by the Boers, an Tuesday night. We were 20 miles from Kzugersdorp. It came from about M.as ins yards0 ranandgt. We hey clew ed ligd.out with Wee fought atthemonly, puffs of smoke. The Boers were ambushed, and we could not get yards"Oa Wednesday evening 1,000 Boers appeared on a ridge in open order 2,000 CONCEALED BOERS continued firing from every direction. We could not charge, but when the Boers vanished under the fire of our guns we followed them. We were com- pelled to retreat, We were under a hot tire all night. We laagered and slept in the saddle. We were all played out. through the one Boer eli es, atdany push and escape. At dawn of Thursday we were fired at heavily from the Village of Tiuiter. My horse was shot from under ma. Horses and men were fall- ing dn We sideserof the hill where we on all sides with 4,000 intrenched men, but had no cover ourselves. The wounded were dragged along in waggons. All were in the open at the mercy of the ers Boers. It was bitterly cold, and our dal •hands were benumbed. week " The odds were ten to one against ers ral tie rs' wounded were dreadful. Not an en - in emy was in sight. All the fighting was de -I done from ambush. The situation was he ' hopeless. We could only stand and be eat shot down. then The w went up. Iparty's wasshirt.r yan old truce The Boers continued to fire for anoth- er ten minutes. The Praetoria artil- of lery i ins could have knocked the e. spot ur max- i in l of them, but we had . Our men were cursing Johannes - berg. Cries for water went up on every side. The sufferings of the GENERAL. A hundred Portuguese troops w surprised and slaughtered by natives It is expected that Spain's reverses Cuba will cause a Cabinet crisis at Ma rid The transport Victoria with 1,2 troops from Bombay has arrived Cape Town. NO AMMUNITION. At first we thought the guns were the 00 artillery of our allies. at " ` Thank God, the Rand fellows at last,' was the cry that went up. " Our hone was short lived. The fir- tng stopped• The Boers rode upon us from every direction. They gave us food, for lack of which we were near- e- ly dead. hs Jameson asked if our lives would be spared if we surrendered. ire lives of theamen rwili berspared, but not yours.' Never mind me,' replied Jameson, 'surrender.' as e a Times correspondent.ed bTheey letHme t go. The others they took to Johannes - berg. The Boer losses have been ridicu- y lousiy understated. They must have lost at least 100 men. I was at the e taking of Mandalay in 1885, was in the Black Mountains, was with the Ruby e expedition under Gen. Stewart, where f I was shot in the chest and forehead, n but I never saw braver men than Jame - son's. What do I think of Jim himself and his generous blunder? "D --n the blunder 1 Janeson's sim- ply the grandest man I ever met," Ex -Premier Floquet of France, who has been ill for several days with con- gestion of the lungs, is dying. The heat in Sydney, N.S.W., is terr fie, reaching the highest point on r cord: There have been many deat from sunstroke. The latest' reports from China say tub Li, -Hung -Chang, who is living in rat' dont in Pekin, is rapidly failing in health. An Imperial decree has been issued. announcing that the coronation of th Czar will take place in Moscow nex May. According to information collected b the Embassies in Turkey, three thou and Armenians were killed at Orfah o December 28th and 20th. Despatches received in Madrid Stat that the Cuban insurgents have cut of all means of communication betwee Havana and the interior. The citizens of Havana are greatly afraid that the insurgents will destroy the water works, which are situated about five miles from the city. It - bas been finally settled that Dr. Jameson and his officers shall be con- veyed as prisoners to England, where they will be arraigned before the pro- per tribunals. The twenty-fifth anniversary of the crowning of King William of Preseia. at Versailles as Emperor of Germany was celebrated with much pomp in Ber- lin on Saturday., . It le reported from the British .Pr+m- ba sy in Constantinople that about f thousand pound Will: be required cluired to save the Armenians. of Anatolia from starvation until spring. • As a result of hisuerrel with t German Emperor, Prince' Fre deridit he ald of Hrussia has opal esigned hisslat.- tion in the army 54d taken his wife away to southern Europe. The e Pa r•is Figaro seen t gthat Prance will not :depart front the position which MEERONG TREATY. Britnln and France Agree on .a Boundary A despatch from Paris, says:—A treaty wassigned on Thursday, by.representa- tives of Great Britain and France set- tling the Meekong dispute, each power agreeing upon the Meekong River as the boundary of British and French terri- ier of Chitia,and that the upper Meekong tory from. the not th of SIAM to the front. in SiaI� shal be th¢ sole buffer be- tween tuba territ,oriee of the tyro, Theliestilasers. q ort di a buffer State was,eld- minated from thecontrovertiy. The ,London Dail News J Bays it re.. cards the signing ofthe treaty with 11ranee for the settlement : � en of the Mee- r kong dispute res a, complete English l,;nuckleeunder Giliidren Cry for Pitaiter's castor FORTY-EIGHT . LIVES LOST THE DISASTER TO THE BRITISH CRUISER EDGAR. Seveuly.One Members or Usa Crew gent Aslnai•e to l►rlli, Started for Their Ship in a Boat, and Forty -Eight of Them Were Drowned Through the Swamping or Their Craft, Particulars of the drowning of forty- eight members of the crew of the Brit- ish cruiser Edgar in the harbor of Che- mulpo, Corea, early last month have been received, The Edgar, which is one of Her Majesty's Chinese squadron, has been anchored in the 'harbor of Chemulpo for nearly a year. It has been the custom for the crew to go ashore monthly for drill. Early in De- cember they went to Rose Island for naval practice. At the conclusion of the drill, the men, seventy-one in num- ber, put out towards the cruiser in a light boat. The wind was blowing a gale, and the waves were rolling high. Soon the boat became unmanageable and the officer in charge fearing that it ed would smal washedithinking island, urais- ed the wind to a place of safety, For a time the boat sped along under sail, when suddenly the wind chang- ed and it capsized. The accident was witnessed sled from m t he other cruisers in the h harbor bor and boats were sent out once to the assistance of the Edgar's men, A Russian boat rescued fifteen, and a French; cruiser lent succor to eight mare. The launch from the United States cruiser Yorktown broke down in the gale and was unable to render aid to any of the men in the water. Some of the sailors clung to the up- turned boat, while others swam• about until they were picked up. The water was and and h The bodiesnof�many of the dead were recovered, but others were washed out to sea. ChThe arrlesto anws d Yore ktown madeu pia collection to give a decent burial to the bodies that had been recovered. Later the sailors of all the warships at Chemulpo gave a monster entertain- ment, in aid of the relatives of men who had been drowned. The show net- ted over $1,000. However, that did not satisfy the Charleston's sailors, for on returning to Nagasaki a few weeks later they gave another entertainment and cleared another large amount of money. This money has all been turn- ed over to the commander of the Edgar, and he will send it, with other collections, to England to the relatives of the sailors. ANOTHER REPULSE. Abyssinians Punished by Italian Defend ers of Maltelle. A despatch from Rome says :—The Government has received advices from Abyssinia that another attack was made by the Abyssinians upon the Italian stronghold at Makelle on Jan- uary 13, with the result that the na- tives wore repulsed with greater loss than that which they sustained in their assault of January 11. When the enemy fell back the Italians pursued them, and, taking advantage of this, the troops remaining within the fortifications were new supply of water, to obtain fof whchit the e Italians were greatly in need. Why did you refuse young Stingyma,n? He asked me to walk through life with him. CHRONIC HEADACHE. The ehange in my Mother's condi. tion marvellous. Qoott's Sarsaparilla Is a Boon. MONTREAL, August eeth, 1895, GENTLEMEN :—There is such a change in my mother's health that I cannot re- strain myself from writing you. She suffered for years past with a chronic headache, accompanied with a disordered stomach. She was weak and irritable, and we thought she was going into a de- cline. For three weeks she has been taking a course of Scott's Sarsaparilla, which was recommended to her by Mr. McGale, Druggist, Montreal. Her head- ache is now but a memory, her appetite is good, and she has gained five pounds in weight in twelve days. She is a ,different woman, and I feel that you in God's hands, have been the means of re- storing her to health. I shall always recommend Scott's Sarsaparilla to suffer- ers from bead or digestive troubles. Thanking you again, I close. Yours sincerely, Hortense Gaviliere. Scott's Sarsaparilla is a concentrated extract, pleasant to the taste, and is taken in small doses. It is the finest remedy for disorders of the stomach and liver,palpitation, scrofulous sores, eczema and skin diseases arising from impurities 'of the blood. It builds up the weak, the strong it maintains in health. Si of all druggists, Sold by C. LUTZ, Exeter, Ont. Cook's Cotton Root Compound Manufactured by T h e Cook Co., Windsor, Ont., and Detroit,Mich,, is the only known safe, reliable monthly medicine on which ladies can depend in "the hour and time of need." Every lady- who reads this is requested to inclose two post- age stamps; with her address, for ket and full particulars, which we will send by return mail itt plain, sealed envelope. At old physician, 35 years con- tinued practice treating diseases of women, has charge of the office, and can be consulted by letter person, Address or 1n p sass our main office THE COOK .COMIPANT, Room 3 -No, 253 Woodward Ave. Detroit, Mich. ' Cook's Cotton Root Compound it sold by all responsible wholesale and retail druggists in the Dominion ofCaliadamace Unitedtat S es for One Dol larp e r bok weinenorimimamosammimesammumiimmoll e j forinfants and Children.11.111. aces ter, a ig eo wen eda ptedte childrenthat irecommend tassuperiortoanypreecription known to me." if. A. A,ncnza, It D., 111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. T. "The use of Castoria' is so universal and Its merits so well known tbat it seems a work of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the 'ntelligent families who do not keep Castorda within easyreach," Lantos .Ml(� ARTIN. D.A. New York City. Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church. Castorla cares Odle, dpnetie tl Sour Stomach, Dinrrhas, Eructation, K;71s Worms, gives sleep, and promotes 0 gestion, Without injurious medieatioa, • " For several years I have recommended your' Castoria,' and shall always continue bis do so as it has invariably produoed benefcfal results." EDWIN' F. I'4RDIni. X. D., "'rhe Winthrop," 125th. Street and 7th.Ave., New York pity rate Carmine Cotulsr, 77 3funatz STtnraT, Saw Yoas:. '1 TELL All MY FRIENDS." A Lady of Shelburne, Ont., Permanently Cured of Indigestion After Using Two • Bottles of South American Nervine —(Gad to Let Everyone Know It* MRS. A. V. GALBRAITH. With indigestion it is not only that one suffers all imaginable torments, physical and mental, but more, per- haps, than anything else, an impaired digestion is the forerunner of count- less ailments that in their course lead to the most serious consequences. Let the stomach get out of order and it may be said the whole system is dis- eased. When the digestive organs fail in their important functional duties, bead and heart, mind and body are sick. These were the feelings of Mrs. Galbraith, wife of Mr. A. V. Galbraith, the well-known jeweller of Shelburne, Ont., before she bad learn- . ed of the beneficent results to be gain- ed by the use of South American Nervine Tonic. In so .many words she said : " Life was becoming un- bearable. I was so cranky I was really ashamed of myself. Nothing that I ate would agree with me; now it does not matter what I eat. I take enjoyment out of all my meals." Rem are Mrs. Galbraith's words of testi- mony to South American Nervine, given over her own signature : "Shelburne, Ont., March 27, 1894. " I was for considerable time a suf- ferer from indigestion, experiencing all the misery and annoyance so common to this complaint. South A..ulerican Neurine was recommended to me as a safe and effective remedg for all such cases. I used only two bottles, and am pleased to testify that these fully cured me, and I have had no indication of a return of the trouble since. I never fail to recommend the Nervine to all my friends troubled with indigestion or nervousness. " MRs. A. V. GALBBAITH." The testimony of this lady, given freely and voluntarily out of a full heart because of the benefits she ex- perienced in her own person, have an echo in thousands of hearts all over the country. South American Nerv- ine must cure, because it operates at once on the nerve centres. These nerve centres are the source from which emanates the life fluid that keeps all organs of the body in proper repair. Keep these nerve centres sound and disease is unknown. There is no trick in the business. Every- thing is very simple and common sense like. South American Nervine strengthens the digestive organs,tones up the . liver, enriches the blood, is peculiarly efficacious in building up shattered and nervous Constitutions. It never fails to give relief in one day. C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter. THOS. WICKETT, Crediton Drug Store, Agent. esty will then go to London for a couple, of days, mainly in order to be present at the first drawiugeroom of the, season, and will leave Windsor for the Riviera on March 12. The Prince of NN ales, after a busy' reek in town, during which he visited he theatres nightly, went to San gingham on Friday. The Prince will ld the first levee of the season dura ROYALTY IN ENGLAND. lie'osttvitles at Osborne Ilene—Private Tin eA — s Qr1cA1 The Queen's14lovetiaents— The 1'rivee of Wel es' Busy Wel:—The King of the Belgians at Clnatstvorth. A despatch from. London says: -The t war clouds have in no way interfered di with the festivity at Osborne houe,Isle of ho Wight, where the Queen is staying,and the extremely mild weather hastended to heighten the enjoyment of those who have composed the Royal party. cal companies commanded to perform before her. Majesty, Princess (Princessof Beatrice HenryHenry Battenberg) arrang- ed fax and supervised t da 1? ed an elaborate co ser' zes of private theatricals, which were i greatly enjoyed and highly praised. bi The Queen will remain :at Osborne t until the middle of February. Her Maj- B mg the thud week of February, and will afterwards go to Marseilles, where he will go on board his speedy cutter. Britannia, said to have been improved'. y slight alterations and recopl,�ering, e Britannia ' will take part in the Mediterranean regatta. The Duke of Devonshire hase been an- terteining the King of the Belgians at Chatsworth, near Baire,well. On Thurs y last the Duke and bis guest; nipanied by tube' Prince of , i slew, vis- it b In addition to the number of theatri- T1t the Olympia in order to see the cycle races, which were a great at- -action there, The Ding returned to russets on Friday,