Exeter Times, 1896-3-26, Page 6THE EXETER TIMES
Charles ne Hutaht7,pr,
Sic
Headache
MED PERMANENTLY
BY TAKING
ills
'I was troubled a lou, time with siek
headache. It was r, calf• accompanied
with severe pains in the temple=, a sense
of fullness and tenderness in ono eye, a
batt hate in my mouth. tcangae coated.
hands and feet cold, and sickness at the
stone:eh. 7 tried a stood many remedies
reeenn ended for this cowpiaintt Out ie
was not until I
Began Taking
Ayer's Phis
that I received envthing like perm
neat l''nefit J. <.n a tea of these pills
dict the work for roe. and I am now) free
Vein t ea:taehes, tied a Weil man!" -
4.1I. Iii a't itenote east Auburn, lee
AYER'S PILLS
for,stttte5J Pleated altItatortci'S Fair
ammo's Sisrsa eeetliaw uta the 'Best.
The Twin Bar
WITH ITS
Twin Berlefits
Less
Labor
O rratef'
-R
tvol'rix l't
If you wish your Linen
White as Snow
S l Ight
SoapMil iaira'.t0 it So.
For every 22 ui r aoperq sent
Books for to Ls1'I:a MIDS., Ltd., ea
Scott St., Toronto, a use-
Wrappers
se-
bock will
folpaper-bound
1 Y a rs
r e
be sent
E NEM IN MEL
"LIE VERY LATEST FROM ALL THE
WORLD OVER.
Interesting items About Our Own Country,
Great Britain, the United States, and
AU Parts of the Globe, Condensed end
Assorted for Easy Reading.
CANADA.
Mrs. Mary Warren died at Hamilton.
aged 100 years.
Lord Aberdeen will open the Indus-
trial and Brantford Fairs.
Friction among the officers threatens
to destroy the usefulness of the Fifth
Royal' Scots of Montreal.
The total assessed value of the city
of London, Ont., is $15,858,210, and the
total taxable assessment. for. general
purposes $15,397.780.
W. R. Thorburn, a London dairy-
man, has been summoned on acharge
of leaving; some young cattle to starve
to death in an open field.
Old Mr. Carney, father of the young
man in custody at Lindsay on the
charge of murdering Mr. James Agnew,
is losing his reason through grief.
The attached men of the Royal School
of infantry at St. John's, Quebec, who
refused to do fatigue duty, were found
guilty of mutiny by the court martial.
q John Nankivell, found guilty at
Win-
nipegofthe aftemPtingmurder of T.
Glemwright and Smith.
tented• to life imprisonment was sen -
for his
crime.
A Toronto Aldermanic deputation
waited upon the Minister of Militia, to
ask that a sum be appropriated for
the riding school, for which in 18:)3 a
vote of $40,000 was put into the esti-
mates.
David Stock, Deputy Collector of Cus-
tomsp
at Dundas. Ont., has resigned on
account of a shortage in Ids amounts' to
the amount of $400 or $500. Stock had
been t'nnneeted with the Custom House
since 1890.
The news has been received in Winni-
peg of a terrible explosion atthe Gold
mines of Mossland, in British Columoia,
as a result of which four men were
killed and two more were seriously in-
jured.
Mr..lohn Craig, head of the Dominion
horticultural experimental work, is an-
thority for the statement that the out-
look for next season's crop of peaches. is
veru unpromising. In many districts it
will les a complete failure.
An influential deputation from Tor-
onto waited upon the Government in
Ottawa on Thursday to request a grant
toward,~ the proposed Domini'en Exhibi-
tion to be held in Toronto in 1897. The
request was viewed favorably by the
. members of the Government.
Dr. F. R. England is suing Kerry.
Watson 4 Co., of Montreal for $20,000
damages on account of the death of
plaint ilk's wife, alleged to have been
eau: -ea by a poisonous drug erroneous-
ly delivered in the place of bismuth by
defendants' firm.
It is rumoured in Montreal that the
u
ee Government contemplate
latesend-
ing the Deputy 'Treasurer to London,
England, in
a few weeks. to float a new
lu,in of $3,ti00,000, which, it is stated,
is a portion of the loan of ten millions
authorized by the Legislature during
the :Mercier regime. The money is to
be applied to t he payment of obliga-
tions about to fall due.
A delegation from Halifax is in Mont-
real for thepurpose of interviewing the
' officials of the railways regarding the
conunercial interests of the former city.
They want the $+50.000,01(1 or $60,000,000
worth of winter Imports at present com-
ing into Canada by way of Boston and
Partleni to go through Halifax. They
will .also interview the Government on
the matter.
position to postpone the exclusion of
Canadian cattle.
Mr. John Morley, on Friday, in the
Imperial House of Commons, moved a
want of confidence resolution in the
Government in its Egyptian policy.
The resolution was lost: on a division
of 288 to 145.
It is generally believed in well-in-
formed London political sets that Eng-
land has secured the sanotion of Ger-
many, Austria, and Italy to her Nile
expedition, and that France is only
burning her fingers in meddling with
the Egyptian question.
:Et is announced that the suit for five
thousand pounds damages for libel
brought by Lady, liens Somerset
against the Pall Mali Gazette has been
settled out of court. It is added that
the Gazette will apologize, and; with
twenty others papers, will pay the costs.
An Anti -Dress League has been form-
ed. in London, in which Lady Algernon
Lennox is a prime mover. The League
allows only two dresses for each sea-
son, one for day wear and one for
evening, but there is no limit to the
wearing of fur, jewellery, and bicycle
eastumes.
The bill introduced by Mr. Mildmay
in the Imperial Parliament, proposing
that all meats and cheese from foreign
countries and the colonies should be
stamped, to distinguish them from home
cattle and English cheese, was read a
second time, and referred to a select
committee.
The Prince of Wales will be installed
as Chancellor of the University of Wales
in the course of the coming summer.
The locality of the ceremony was left
entirely' to e
byhis Ro • 1Highness e t t e h
a n
33
choice of the university court. which has
now selected Aberystwyth, the seat of
the, oldest of the colleges of the uni-
versity. The Prince has formally con..
firmed the selection.
At. Wednesday's session of the Imper-
ial Committee on the Adulteration of
Food, Mr. Elliottl the secretary of the
Board of Agriculture, testified that
among the samples of food analysed by
the Government, fifty-one came from
the 'United States and thirty-nine from
Canada, not one of which was adulter-
ated. Gertdany made the worst show-
ing, adulteration having been found in
thirty-seven out of one hundred and
twenty-four samples examined.
UNITED STATES.
Mr. Lodge, in the United States Sen-
ate, made a strong speech in favor of
excluding all immigrants who were
totally ignorant,
The resolutions censuring United
States Ambassador Bayard for his Bos-
ton and Edinburgh speeches passed
the House at Washington.
The strike of twelve thousand Chicago
tailors. which began on Wednesday, as
over, the contractors having signed the
contract drawn up by the men.
The House Committee on Naval .M -
fairs has recommended four battle-
ships and fifteen torpedo boats to
strengthen the United States navy.
The Chicago Council has passed an or-
dinance giving, the right of way on the
streets to }physicians who display a small
badge, which can be obtained for fifty
cents.
The New York World says it has
made a pall of nearly every State in
the Union, and as a result predicts the
nomination of Mr. William 1rRinley
by the St. Louis convention.
It is understood that Cardinal Satolli
will bid farewell to the United States
early in DTay, and that his successor
will be Archbishop Averadi, Titular of
the Ancient See in Tarsus.
Canadian laborers are crossing the
United States border to take positions
on farms in Niagara, Genesee, and Liv-
ingston counties. Half a dozen men
hired out to as many farmers in the
township of Pavilion last week.
A call has been issued in Washington
for a. national conference, to he held in
that eft y ,on the 22nd and 23rd of April,
for the establishment, between Great
Britain and the United States, ofa per -
(GREAT 13UITAIN. manent system of arbitration.
rhe Queen will return to Windsor The Venezuelan Commission in Wash -
mei ie from Cimiez at the end of April. ington is in receipt of communications
Ar: ifirial
ics rinks continue to be tho
rage in the best cirt'les of London so-
ciety.
Queen Viet aria has created Emperor
Frant•is Joseph Colonel -in -Chief of the
Fire! Dragoon Guards.
The Venerable George Anthony Deni-
son. archtleaeon of Taunton, is dead, at
x r , the age of ninety-one.
1:\ETt:il A well-known London society paper
1 ES expresses the }pinion that the reign of
M
i the Anieriean ..duty in London is over.
Mr. and Mrs. Booth -Tucker left Lon-
don on Saturday for New York, to take
charge of the Salvation Army in the
Ln'.ted :Mates.
Mr. Balfour appeared in the House
of Commons on Friday with his arm in
a sling. He fell trona his bicycle and
spraine.d his wrist.
An unusual compliment has been p id
to Mr. Joseph Chamberlain in his oetng
named as 1 he l: monist e:antlidate for
Gi sgow University.
Mr. S.amu:=l Plimsoll, the originator of
the famous "Plimsoll nark" to prevent
the overloading of ships, is dangerously
i11. He is seventy-two years of age.
FOR TWENTY SIX YEARS.r4 7
D u
THECOOICSBEST FRIEND
LARGEST SALE IN CANADA.
READ -MAKER'S
MEM FAIL& T8 WA SATISFACTION
eine neer x•e tli! d, ' azpA REti
About ten years ago I first became afflicted
with Rheumatism and Gout, and daring the
last ten years I bave been treated by several
physicians. and they all advised me that it was
impossible to oure me here, and that the only
remedy for me was to go to a warmer climate.
1 was confined to my honselasb December
ming to this disease, and was unable to do
my work whatever.
IcommencedtakingtheKootenay Curewitiob
Mr. S. S. Ryckman, M. P., gave me about the
tniddle of April last, and after about one week's
using this medicine I was
sufficiently cured to be
able to stare driving a
bread wagon, which work
required me constantly getting on and army
wagon.
The pains wbioh I always had in my sides
are now completely gone, and I am now able to
work without any pain whatever.
In the pasbIhave suffered almost andeco ib
able agony from this disease. My general
health has wonderfully improved since taking
this medicine. Sworn to by MICHAEL H.
OWYER, 52 Leeming Street, Hamilton.
Send for pamphlet to S. 3, RTCttetert Ment-
on.ul Co., Hamilton Ont
: xt'1 ;;si L'•41
The late William Boyne, of England,
leant upwards of sixty years in collect-
ing more than 39,000 coins. These are
all to be sold at Sotheby's in two
batches.
The Danube and its tributaries are
steadily rising,and already several towns
along their 'banks have been partially,
submerged.
The dervish force at Dongola is esti-
mated at ten thousand cavalry, camel
men, and 'spearmen, with a number of
Soudanese riflemen.
The terrible hot wave that caused so
much loss of life In Western Australia
was followed by hailstorms which de-
stroyed a vast amount of property.
Trisonersed
from the Abyssinian} ho camp declarehavecthat
the prisoners there are i11 -treated and
badly fed, and that numbers of them
have been garrotted. •
Commander Ballington Booth has de-
vised a new uniform for the revolted
Portion of the Salvation Army. The
women will wear sky-blue material,
with bonnets trimmed to match,
Mr. Fit•zmaurice, the British Vice -Con-
sul to Turkey, has returned to Constan-
tinople from Urfa, and reports that
utrectodiretacred
drngheenstubanchere.
A fifteen -year-old boy is under ar-
rest in Jackson, Texas, charged with
attempting to murder his father, 'bis
mother, and the family physician by
putting rough -on -rats in the coffee.
Add General.
Admiral Rawson, commander of Cape
Colgny station, and Gen. Goodenough,
commander of the British forces in Cape
Colony, are formulating an important
scheme for coast defences in South
Africa.
The Italian Senate adopted a reso-
lution thanking the British Parlia-
ment for its expression of sympathy
with Italy
and her soldiers, as eX
ress-
ed by the Under Secretary of State of
Foreign Affairs in the House of Com-
mons.
The British steamer Matadi, which
sailed from Sierra Leone on February
5, has been totally destroyed at Bor-
ne, by an explosion of gunpowder. The
whole forepart of the ship was blown
into the air, and forty persous were
killed.
The pacification of Cuba is now look-
ed upon in politaeal circles of Madrid
as impossible unless a supreme effort is
made involving the sending of large re-
inforcements to that island, and in-
stitute a complete blockade of its
Rt.
osa Bonheur has just finished a
large canvas representing a combat be-
tween two stallions. Rosa Bonheur is
now seventy-four, and has to wean
glasses when she paints. The painting
is now an exhibition in London.
The return to Rome of the Italian
Deputies who were sentenced in con-
nection with the Sicilian uprisingxt.nd
who were recently amnestied, was hail-
ed with great delight by an immense
crowd, who roared themselves hoarse in
cheering for the Marquis di Rudini.
It is felt in British military circles
that Great Britain is not going to have
a walk -over in Egypt. . The Khalifa has
at bis disposal about three hundred
thousand men,of whom forty thousand
are Baggaras, all trained and disciplin-
ed.
The North Staffordshire regiment.
numbering 900 officers and men.started
from Cairo for Girgeh,where they will
embark on steamers for the journey up
the Nile for Wady Haifa. A Sikh reg-
iment from India that. is ultimately to
take part itt the operations arrived at
c 15.
Mombasal East Africa on March m s ,
A report from Port of Spain, Trini-
dad, W.I., says that a war between
Great Britain and the United States,.
if of any duration, would result in the
ruining of the people of the West Ind-
ies, and that the sympathy of the Cre-
oles would be with the States, and the
black inhabitants would follow the Cre-
ole,
from the (;overnt'aenes of :vain, Holland,
and Ilelgium, offering the commission
access to the arehives of theseese countries
v a t o m ds .
or data touching the di u c d 1 un ry
f g 1
Charles Ryan, of Duffelo, N.Y., who
is wanted by the Canadian authorities
for the robi:ery and attentptetl murder
of Edwar Mussell, at liridgeburg, Ont.,
last October, was captured in Easton,
Pa., and is held awaiting extradition
papers from Canada.
Gertrude Taylor, aged thirteen, of St.
Joseph, Mo., confessed on Friday that
she poisoned the food partaken if by
her father, her brother, and his wife,
causing the death of the first -mention-
ed, because they opposed her keeping
an organ that had been in the house
for a year.
A Washington despat eh says it is
learned from an official source that it
is the intention of the Navy Department
to have the fifteen additional torpedo
boats recommended by the Naval Com-
mitter so constructed that they may
be towed through the Erie canal for
use on the great lakes in case of an
emergency.
Commercial advices from the United
States as to the condition of trade dura
ing the week ended yesterday show
practically no improvement. Disturbed
financial conditions, general overpro-
duction, and bad weather, a pear to be
The Duke of York bas %tate taken the concurrent causes of the general
his father's place in laying corner- stagnation. There is noticeable
stones, opening public institutions, pre- activity in boots and shoes and women's
siding at hospital dinners, etc., and is dress goods, but in little else. Buy -
a. very busy man. ing is also reported more brisk in Mis-
A hill has been read a second time souri, Kan., Oklahoma, and parts of
Nebraska. There is no improvement
in the demand for iron and steel. .As
a rule, collections are reported poor,
and the tendency 6f prices is weaker
in many leading lines.
in the House of Lords empowering
judges to order evidence which they
think would be prejudicial to public
morals not to be published.
It has been arranged that the princi-
pal demonstration in connection with
the centenary of the death of Burns
will take place at Dumfries, where there
will be a grand procession.
The health of the Queen has so much
improved that she has arranged to go
to Coburg to attend the marriage of her
granddaughter, Princess Alexandra, to
Prince Hohenlohe-Langenburg.
An unsuccessful attempt was made
at Glasgow to float the new cruiser Di-
do, which, while being launched in the
Clyde on Tuesday: stuok on the ways
and remained half in the water and half
on land.
The Marquis of Salisbury, on Thurs-
day afternoon, on behalf of the subscrib-
ers, presented. to Mr.Middleton, a cheque
for ten thousand pounds as a testimon-
ial of appreciation for his servicesas
chief organizer of the Conservative
party.
Twenty thousand persons attended a
meeting in the Crystal Palace, London',
to welcome Gen. Booth home. Mr. and
Mrs. Tucker Booth, who are to take
charge of the army in the United
States, were prominent figures on the
platform.
Mr. Walter Long, President of the
Board of Agriculture, stated in the
British House. of Commons that the
views of Canada on the cattle embargo
were well known, and that the Imper-
ial Government could not adopt the pro -
HOLY WAR PROCLAIMED.
--
omen Diens Is Gathering the Derylrhev
-Thr Situation tierione.
GENERAL.
It is announced that China will re-
fuse to cede Lappa or Quemoy to Ger-
many.
Slatin Pasha, who passed seventeen
years in the Soudan, will join the Brit-
ish
Nile expedition.
The Minister of Finance intends to ask
the Cortes for authority to convert the
entire Portuguese debt.
A large Italian caravan has reached
Kassala., showing that communication
with that place is still open.
A popular subscription in Germany to
provide money to• increase the navy
has been a complete failure.
The plague continues in Hong -Kong,
in spite of the sweeping sanitary meas-
ures adopted by the Government.
The Chinese Government is making no
headway against the Mohammedan re-
bellion . in the north-western provinces.
It is stated that King Alexander of
Serein is engaged in marriage to the
eldest daughter of the ging of Greece.
A despatch from St. Petersburg says
it is reported that King Menelek will
ask Russia to mediate between Abys-
sinia and Italy.
The British and Egyptian troops are
drilling daily in Cairo. The English
soldiers are enthusiastic at the prospeot
of fighting, but the natives are not so
jubilant.
THE FIELD OF COMMERCE.
Some Items of Interest to the Busy
Business Man.
Bar silver in London continues steady li
at 31 7-16d per ounce.
At Toronto money " on call" is more
stringent, There is little to be obtained
even at 5 1-2 per cent.
The earnings for Toronto Railway for
the first half of March are $2,600 in ex-
cess of the same period last year.
The sterling exchange market is
weaker, and no exports of gold from
New York are expected the present
month.
A despatch from New- York quotes
raw sugars firmer, with sales at 4 1.2e.
Granulated are jobbing in Toronto at
4 3-4 to 4 7-8e.
Canadian Government securities in
London are firmer with advances of 1
to 2 per cent. Toronto 8 1-2 per cent.
debentures are 1 higher at 101.
Bell; Telephone receipts at Toronto for
quarter ending February 29 were $41,-
251, against $38,888 for the quarter end-
ing with February, 185.
The earnings of Canadian Pacific for
the second week of March were $313,-
000, an increase of $72,000 as compared
with same week of last year.
Postoffioes were opened in Ontario on
Manch 1, as follows: Boothville, South
Grey ; Lefaive's Corners, South Ontario ;
Pape Avenue, East Toronto, (Feb. 15,)
Cattle supplies on the London market
are excessive. The best united States
animals bring 5d. and Argentines 4d. At
Liverpool Ameriean cattle are selling
at 5 1-8d, and Argentines at 4 1-8d.
The visible supply of 'wheat in the
United States' and Canada decreased
473,000 bushels last week and the total
is 62,123,000 as against. 76,873,000 bushels
a year ago and 73,249,000 bushels two
years ago. The amount afloat to Eur-
ope is 28,9G0000 bushels as against 36,-
880,000 bushels a year ago.
Brazil grades of coffee have made a
further advance in the United States,
good qualities being held firmly with
moderately good demand. Buyers are
not anxious, and purchases only fair in
amount, but the tone is distinctly firm-
er. Option trading is picking up, and
sales are made at a few points advance,
with more activity than for many
weeks, Muoh of the business is being
done in September options. The Ameri-
ean stocks are about 40,000 lugs larger
than at this time last year, or in 1894.
Receipts at Brazil ports are light, but
attributed to inclement weather rath-
er than decreased supply,
Track advices from elontreal do not
indicate much notable gain in activity
as yet. Probably• the coming into ef-
feet of spring freight rates in the be-
ginning of April will induce a freer
movement generally. Leather shows a
good export movement in sole, splits
and buff, but local purchases are small,
and buyers of fair lots could command
concessions. There is considerable en -
fluky from the West p
regarding s ring
i~
importations of cement, but there is a
difficulty in quoting laid -down cost, as
spring railway freight rates have not.
yet been published. Prices at points of
production are higher than last year,
and are expected to remain firm, Bel-
gian glass manufacturers have with-
drawn quotations, and there is expecta-
tion of a combine, and higher prices.
Wo pI ' d Il t, p' b tat the
: is u on 8p
o n rices •
London sales are well sustained. Aus-
tralian advices report serious losses to
wool growers by disease among their
flocks, it being estimated that nine
and a half million sheep xecently died
in Australia and New Zealand. Cheese
A despatch from Cairo says that the has taken a decided turn upward in
Khalifa has proclaimed Jehad (Holy l trad-
islltlesttllsong is maColcttionsillwThe
war) against Egypt, and has called aIi condition of the money market shows
the dervishes oapable of bearing arms no material alteration ; call funis are
to enroll under bis banner. The de- scarce, and firm at 5 1-2 per cent.
speech adds that it is •said that Osman beeBnusiness at.
Toronto
this
week
e
k has
quiet benorallY Although mer-
Digna
er-
Di
na
to leave Kassala and join the aban
ty are hope
ful the indications are
dervishes now mustering at Dongola, not. very promising for an active trade.
Values of the leading staples ar steady,
The, declarint of the Jehad, or Holy hut. stot'ks of merchandise are large,and
War, by the Khalif is the same step it is necessary to cut prices to relieve
that was taken by his predecessor the the market. Collections are backward
Mandi at the time of the last British in the majority of lines and the large
expedition under General FIicks. Atlist of failures is anything but cheer -
that time Osman Digna was despatched ing. hankers are very conservative and
by the Msh:ti to raise the Jehad, and ail paper offering for discount under -
the reporr. that. Osman is to leave Kas- gos considerable scrutiny. The retail
salu and join the dervishes now mus- trade of the city is slightly better owing
tering at. Dongola indicates that he is to millinery openings. The leading
again entrusted with this office. Os- houses report a fairly satisfactory trade,
man Digne, at the time he was select- but the smaller concerns have uphill
ed by the .,M5.andi, was a slave dealer work. The large number of bankrupt
in Suakim. Ile. has given frequent evi- stocks are affetcing trade adversely,
deuce of marked ability, but is noted and probabilities are that there will be
foie his cruel and savage nature. It lower level prices in the near future.
was he who was in command under the • There is a. further decline in wheat,with
Mandi of the hundred thousand wild increased offerings. The demands from
fanatics who fell ander the ill-fatedBritain for this cereal have been great -
'licks expedition, numbering some ten j ly curtailed of late. Argentine ship -
thousand men, near Kasgeil. As is menls are much greater than expected
well known, the entire British -Egypt- a month ago and on tbe opening of na-
Ian force, with the exception of two or ; vigation Russian Supplies will be large.
three hundred who hid themselves un- Flour too is lower and almost unmet -
der the dead bodies, was annihilated. able. Western millers are offering
It is believed' that the forces of the ' straight: rollers laid down in Montreal
dervishes at that time were no more .at $3.70. Coarse grains, are also weak
numerous than these now ga- . and in some instances lower. Bankers
thertng at Dongola in response to show little disposition to lend their bal-
the call of their old leader, and it is axises on stock collateral, and the specie -
known that they are. even better arm- • lative issues have had another set
ed. now than then. At least 35,000 der- ! back. Money is more stringent in the
vishes are armed with modern rifles, ! States, but in Britain there still con -
and these rifles are, moreover, in the tinues a large amount of idle capital
hands of elephant and ostrich hunters, ' and rates are easy. Sterling exchange
who are at home in their use: in ad- ' rules steady, while drafts on New York
dition there are a number of galling are still at a discount between banks,
and field guns in their possession.
How to get a "Sunlight" Picture.
Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap wrappers
(wrapper bearing the words "W by Does a
W otnen Look Old Sooner Than a M an") to
Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto,
endyon will receive by poste pretty picture,
free from advertising, and well worth fram-
ing. This is an easy way to decorate your
home. The soap is the best in the market,
and•ib wi)1 only cost lc. postage to send in
the wrappers, it you leave the ends open.
Write your address carefully.
TROUBLE IN THE TRANSVAAL.
A despatch from Johannesberg says
that the Transvaal burghers are assum-
ing an alarming attitude. It is add-
ed that a strotag feeling exists among
the Dutch througbout South Africa and
and that they are nerving themselves
for a supreme struggle with Great
Britain. No reason is assigned for the
withdrawal of the bail of four members
of the Reform Committee. They had
been permitted to go to Johannesberg
to attend to their private affairs, but
all have now been axrested and are
kept under guard in a private .house
in Praetoria.
A true and genuine impudence is ever
the effect of igoioranee, without the
least sense of it. -Steele.
Children Cry for Pitcher's • Castors).
•
ernen Baby was sick, we cavo her flastealre
When hen site was a Child, she cried for Castoria.
'Monate became Miss, she clung to Castoria.
when she had Children, sliegavetberyi Oastorie
SHOT DEAD BY HIS BROTHER.
A despatch from Watervliet, Mich.,
says Frank Gough was shot and instant-
ly killed by his brother on Tuesday.
The parents were away, and the boys
for Infants and Children.
"Castor's is eo watt c dantedto children that
i recommend it as superior to any preeeription
known to me." H. A. Anen..n, X. D.,
111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N, Y.
"The use of 'Castoria' is so uuivereal and
Its merits so well known that it seems a work
'of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the
'ntelligent families who do not keep Castoria
within easyreach."
C1sLoa 3ilxaw Yo..
York
Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church,
Castorire coree Colic, Constipation,
Sotir Stomach,•Dlarnccea, Eructation,
Sills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di-
gestion
Without injurious medicatioa,
" For several years I have recommended
your ' Castoria,' and shall alezays continue to
uo so as it Las invariably produced benedeisi
results."
EDWIN P. PARDU, M. 1).,
"Tie Winthrop,"12th Street and 7th Ave.,
New York Oita:
I ua CBNTAOa COMPANY. /7 MORAY Svas127, Ntt•1 , .-r•"
t.
THEY uI'1OBY THE SCIIIIE
Yea, By the Hundreds, Those Who Have
Been Cured of Dire Disuse By
South American Nervine.
Dillon W1 es read aig liglversal• ld Its 1[14II6.8tlss?.
?Where Other Medicines Have Failed and Doctors Have
Pronounced the Cases Beyond Curet Tina
Great Discovery Has Proven a
Genuine Elixir ot Life.
!Tho Bayne Verdict Comes From Old and Young, Blabs and rentals.
lien and Poor. and From All Corners of tho Dominion.
If it Is the case that he who makes
Iwo blades of grass grow where only
one had grown before is a benefactor
of the race, what is the position to be
that man who
accorded by his know-
ledge of the Iaws of life and health
gives energy and strength where lan-
guor, weakness and anticipation of an
early death had before prevailed? Is
not he also e. public .benefactor? Lot
those who have been down and ere
now up through the use of South Am-
erican Nervine give their opinions on
this subject. John Boyer, banker, of
Kincardine. Ont„ bad made himself a
hopeless invalid through years of over-
work. At least he felt his Case was
Hopeless, for the best physicians had•
failed to do him good. He tried Nor -
wine, and these are his words : ^ t glad-
lJ saar it : Nervine cured Me and I
am to -day as strong and wellas ever."
73anuel 3s 13x, of Meaford, was our id of
neuralgia of the stomach and bowels
by three bottles of this medicine. las.
Sherwood, of Windsor, at 70 Years of
age, suffered eyed fro an
attaek of paraly-
sis.
aral -sis. His life, at that age, was deepair-
ed of. But four bottles of Nervine
gave him back his natural strength. A
Iplotim of indigestion, W. P. Bolger, of
iltenfrew, says : " Nervine cured rue
tot my suffering, which seemed incur-
able, and had baffled all former me-
thods and efforts." Peter Eason, of
t'atsiey. lost flesh and rarely i:ad a
good night's sleep, because of stomach
trouble. He says : " Nervine stopped
the agonising pains is my stomach the
sent day I used It. I have now taken
two bottles and I feel entirely relieved
and can sleep like a top." A repre-
sentative farmer, of Western Ontario,
is Mr. C. J. Curtis, residing near Wind-
sor. His health was seemingly com-
pletely destroyed through Ia grippe.
No medicine did him any good. "To
three bottles of Nervine," he seas, '
attribute my restoration to health anti
strength." Neither man or woman
can enjoy life when troubled with liver
complaint. This was the sentiment
and feeling of W. J. Hill, the well-
known bailiff of Bracebridge: " I was
so bad," says he, " that one of my
medical attendants said that I was
dying, but, thank God, I am not dead
yet. From the first -few doses I took
of Nervine I commenced to feel bet-
ter, and am to -day restored completely
to my usual health." A resident of
the Maritime Provinces, in the person
of S. Jones, of Sussex, N.B., says : "Fur
twelve years I was a martyr to indi-
gestion, constipation and headache.
The treatment of several physicians
aid not help me. I have taken a few
got to quarrelling over a loaded gun.
Neighbors rushed in, and found the
children sweeping up the boy's brains.
The dead boy was aged 15,and the shoot- '
er 12. The parent's are respectable
citizens. - ....--... _ .
A MALL FAVOR.
A. F 0
Peasant to Conductor. I ' haven't
quite enough money to go home on the
flyer. Couldn't you go a littleislow-
er
and take me on n ordin r,y ticket?
AT HIGH PRESSURE.
I hear that Dobbs' baby is a little
mite of a thing.Does it cry much ?
With all its mite.
bottles of Nervine, and can truthfully,
say that I am a. new man."
A shrewd observer 01 human meter*
has said : " The hand that rocks the
cradle moves the world." How im-
portant it is, then, that health and
strength should be made the lot of
the mothers of this country. The wo-
men of Canada are ready by scores to
tell ot the benefits that have come to
them through the use of South Ameri-
can Nervine, Mrs. R. Arm:tree& of
Orillia, wife of the colpoaj 'u.,... of the
Bible Society of that tet n, suffered
for six years from nervous prostration.
Medical assistance did not help. " Its
alt," she says, " I bave taken six bottle%
of Neevinet. and case truthfully say this ,i
is els one medioins that has effecteit _
a oure in my case3."' Mrs. Topa Dine
woody has been for QA yeaYe a resident
of il'leslierton. and has reaoheti the al-
lotted three-sclrre yet\re and fen. Three Al,
years ago her system suetateed : *w-
ere shock through the death of a
daughter. Nervine was recommended.
She perseveringly took 12 bottles of
soft thatshe is to
Iei with the re
medicine, n
day again strong and hearty. lHtin
dreds of women suffer from impoverish.
ed blood and weakened neta•es. " All
vitality," says Mrs. S. learns, of
Brampton, " seemed to have forsaken
my system. I was unable to get re-
lief from any source until I, commenced
taking South American :Che
results are iliost satisfaetcn'y-•greater
far than I could have hoped for." it
came within the way of Mrs. IL Stap-
leton, of Winghaai, to treat under the
best physicians, both in Van:uda and
langiand, for heart disease and nerv-
ous debility, but she failed to get any
relief. " I was advised," she says, "to
take South American Nervine, and
must say I do believe that if I had
not done so I would not be alive to-
day."
Newspaper space is too valuable to
permit of further additions to these
earnest words of testimony from: those
who know just what they are• talking
about. In, the common language of
the day, they have been there, and are
speaking from the heart. The doses
or more witnesses that here speak have
their counterparts by the hundreds,
not only in the province or Ontario.
but in every other section of the Domin-
ion. Soute American Nervine is based
on a s,..entiflo principle that makes
a cure a certainty, no matter' ow des-
perate the case may be. rikes
at the nerve centers from which flows
the Iife bii-ad of the whole system. It
is not a medicine of patchwork: but
is complete and comprehensive im its
application.
C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter..
WICKETT, Crediton Drug Store, Agent.
Wood's l 11osplio(1if6o The Great 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
oombination that will effect a prompt and permanent cure in all stagesof
Sexual I)ebilily, Abuse or Excesses, Nervous Weakness, Emissions, Mafia
sem.i
Worry, Excessive Use of Opium, Tobacco, or Alcoholic Stimulants, all of
i_ M• 1 which soon lead to Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Woods
Phosphodine has been used successfully by hundreds of cases that seemed
almost hopeless -cases that had been treated by the most talented physi-
o cians-cases that were on the verge of despair and insanity -cases that were
tottering over the gravo-but with the continued and persevering use of
Wood's Phosphodine, these cases that had been given up to die, were
restored to manlyvigor and health -Reader you need not despair -no mat-
g
your
' now within
I remedyis
ter who has given you up as incurable -the
reach, by its use you can be restored to a life of usefulness and happiness.
Price, one package, $1; six packages, 35; by mail free of postage.
One will please, six guaranteed to cure. Pamphlet free to any address. alai
The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada, imAfter 'ra9ciri -
Before Taking.
Weed's Phosphodine is sold by responsible wholesale and retail druggists in the Dominion.
4