HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1896-4-30, Page 64. zeflar.
Result of a
Neglected Cold.
DISEASED LUNGS
Which Doctors Failed o$e 1p ,
CURED BY TAKING
Cher
Pectoral.
0611,®®....
"I contracted a severe Bold, which settled
en mylungs, and I did what is often demi
in, sem cases, negleeted it thinking it would
go sway as 1t carne; but I found, after a
Mae while, that the slightest exertion
pained me. I then
Consulted a Doctor
who found, on examining my lungs, that the
upper part of the left one wits badly affected.
He give me some neaten a wiiicli I took as
dimated, but it dM not semi to do any good.
Fortunately I happened to read to .eyer'a
Almanac. of the eiieet that Ayer's (sherry
Pectoral haul on others, and I determined to
give it a trial. After taitiefi a few doses my
trouble was relieved, and before I had fin
!shed the bottle I was cured."' -A. Lereee,
wsatei:matter, Orangeville, Ont.
Ayer'a Cherry Pectoral.
Highest .Awasde at World's Fair
Ayer''s Pats Cure 2-naigestien.
UNDER OATH.
The following testi
mony of lira. flargnret
Patterson, given under
oath before W. F. wee.
ler, Notary Public.
mares the Cott won-
derful cure in the his.
tory of any medicine;
"For six or seven
years I was badly
afflicted with rheuma-
tism and severe neural-
gia hi the head. At
times I suffered very
much pain from violent headaches. and in
eider to stop same, and upon the advice of a
hysician, I had a number of my teeth
extracted, without deriving any advantage.
n May • a , had a paralytic s rt) t
C UR.b'E1'4'7' NOTES.
It is evident that some understanding
has been reached between England and
the Triple Alliance, in order to neutra-
lize the unfriendliness ot Prance and
Russia, though what its nature le can
only be conjectured. It 'vas stated of-
fix*tally in the House of Commons that
no positive alum:we existed with Italy,
though. friendly co-operation with her
was expedient; but a. week later Baron i
Blanc, ex -minister of foreign affairs, de -
Blared in the it:alien Senate that an al-
liance between the two countries was
an accomplished fact. It was not based,
he said, upon formal treaties, but upon
community of defensive interests, and
would be extended to the security of
Italy as a maratime power, that power
thus becalming an effectivebond be-
tween Great Britain and the Triple Al-
liance, Moreover ,on the 26t:h ult., Ger-
many, Austria and Italy, which with
F.neland constitute a Majority of the
Egyptian Debt. Commission, decided that
4500,0.00 of the reserved funds iu the
Egyptian treasury should be used for
the expense's of the Nile expedition.
These facts show that some agreement
has been reached between England and
the central powers, and that It was
prompted on the part of the former
by the knowledge that any enterprise
which indicated a continuance of her
stay in Egypt would be opposed by
France and Russia.
u
That her action was wise is evidenc-
ed by the demand of France that she
should, before invading the Soudan,
designate a date for the evacuation ot
Egypt, and by the abrupt. departure of
the French acct Rusian representa-
tives in the debt commission after pro,
testing against the application of the
reserve funds to the expenses of the
Nile expedition. But as governments
are not eleemosynary institutions, but
proceed on the principle- of give and
take, the central powers must have
received something in return for leav-
ing En gland free to remain in Egypt
-for their consent to the use of the
Egyptian funds means also their rem
fusel to support France in the demand
for evacuation; and that something can
hardly be les than the Danish guaran-
tee of the status quo in Europe. It is
possible that it may be given indirect
1y, that is, in the form of a guarantee
of the security of holy; but its effect
must be substantially the same as if
given to the Alliance, collective ac-
tion being practically assured for marry
purposes, with the Mediterranean pow-
er of Italy as the bond of union. \Chat -
ever the form it may take, it virtually
creates a Quadruple Alliance, far more
side
as a guarantee of the peace
the )cit
"I Ilii riot I I I tIce do of my body' this was. followed by of Europe than the Triple ;alliance, in
the total loss of sight of the left eye, bealmg of that it will not only command the sea
'loth ears, violent headaches, severe Sts, and but the purse.
meati weakness. I became totally enable to
uo cuty work about the house, and was not
, ate to be lett alone on account of my (Bzzine:se
,.ad general weakness.
"I consulted four different pbyyicians, who
ttended me, and they told me that they
. ould do what they could, but that I would
_lever became well again,
"Abont twannonthe ago I began 'using the
eedieine being put up by Mr. S. S. Ityekman,
1.P., of this city, and now known as Itootenae
«•tire, and am now taking the fourth bottle of
ach medicine.
"Before I finished the first bottle I noticed a 1
.moat improvement in nay condition. I have
:ow received the use of my eyesight, the nse
.1 my bearing,and the nee of my liaubs and
t:,ody,the headche has completely disappearod,
end my etrenath bas come back almost
completely, and, in feet, though 62 years old, I
feel alrnost 0 new woman. Mrs. Margaret)
l'attersou, 91 Vino Street, Hamilton, Ont,"
THE
OFEXETER
TIMES.
FOR TWENTY-SIX YEARS.
DUNNS
BAKING
POWDER
1i
THECDO 'S BEST FRlE6 D
LARt ST cSALE IN CANADA.
a-
BRE_AO-MAKER'S
,,A.EEP
HEMP FAILS T4 CIVF SenSFAo1iall
fOR BAfar w:. 11 ` -rte.- teen.
A LITTLE WHILE
Only a little while of brave endeavor,
Only p. little while of care and strife,
And then -the perfect peace of God for-
ever,
And the pure glories of fadeless life.
Only a little while of patient yearning
For vanished smiles, and voices hush-
ed of yore,
And then -our loved 1 ones with their
ne
Lord returning,
And hands, now severed, clasped to
part no more.
O blissful day 1 0 glorious consumma-
tion 1
Lo, o'er the hills the dawn is break-
ing fast I
Come, Light of life, display Thy full
salvation,
And speed the lonely pilgrim home
at last.
-S. C. Lowry.
THE KANGAROO.
The kangaroo seems to be rapidly be-
roming extinct in Australia. In 1894
it was estimated that only 987,600 spe-
cimens of the animal were left remain-
ing, as against 1,281,500 in 1887. This
wholesale extinetion appears to be prin-
cipallyy due to the voracious appetite of
the kangaroo, which is said to require
for its sustenance just six tunes the
amount of grass, &c., consumed by a
sheep.
p
Thereare 197,146,420 acres of timber
Iands inthe southern states, and the
average ,yield of these forests is 3,000
reel, per dere. .
•
E
EXETER TIMES
i tale mop of Wild Goose plums annually',
H0RTICULTU E I Many coanbinationie in top -working the
apple can be made to excellent advan-
tage and tender sorts can be grown
in colder latitudes. It is always best
to cut the scions tie be used for graft -
mg or top-wvorking in December, 'but
with a mild 'winter, such as we , have
had this winter, they can be cut
any time after a mild spell of weather
for several days, and the bark and
scions do not have the shrivelled look
that they will have if cut at low tem-
perature. The plum and oharry should
be topeworked in mild days late ixt
March before any sap starts and the
wound should be carefully covered with
grafting wax. Apple trees should be
top -worked in April, if done by graft-
ing, just as the buds are noticed swell-
ing, wax being used on all the wounds.
They can be budded in the tops the
last week in May, which is preferable
to grafting,as we have found by ex-
perience. re will give additional notes
ori budding end grafting later,
"The out made in root grafting is
most easily learned by a person watchr
ing an operator at his work. It can
be learned in'a few minutes but should
be practiced by a green operator for a
half day on willow or poplar scions until
he gets the knack of the operation.
"In cherries and plums budding is
usual in propagating. The cherry is
best budded on the :trahaleb seedling.
These are imported from France by
nurserymen and can be secured from
them. Plume. are best budded on
small seedling trees grown from wild
plum seethe `these should be taken out
of the plum when the fruit is ripe in
the fait and washed clean and then
put where itwillfreeze.cl Thet y should the cellar
e
set out to freeze and after they are
frozen should he carefully covered with
damp trash and left until very early
in the spring. During an early thaw
in late March or early April they should
be drilled in the ground three inches
deep and wells oultivated, and in the
summer, when the bark is loose, in
July or August, depending upon the
season and condition of the seedling
they should be budded. Cheery seed.,
ling stock cannot be budded until late
in August and September. The opera*
mon of buddingrequires same skill,
but es easily earned by an amateu.0
who is apt and ready. Buds to be set
should be selected from growing trees
at budding time."
BORERS IN PEACH TREES.
J. 11.. writes; Will you tell vie what
will kill the borers in my peach trees?
Many washes have been recorarnended
for this pest but none have been found
entirely effective, while many have
proven very injurious to the trees,
Michigan peach gnawers have adopted
the plan of hilling the soil up about
eight inches around the base of the
tree early in October and removing it
the following July. The beetle lays the
egg just at the top of the ground and
this semis to kill those laid in the fall,
and when soil is removed in July many
eggs laid the previous June :(ail to
hatch, those remaining being easily
traced by their "castings" and killed
with knife or wire. The billing up oft-
en
ften prevents hark clearing caused (lyy
water settling around the base of the
tree and freezing during the winter.
Details of H.leI.S. Desperate are now
at hand. She is 210 feet over all with
a beam of 19 feet 9 inches, and a depth
of 13 feet: 0 laches.. Below the water
she is made of mild steel of twentye
eight tons tensile strength, and above
of another start of steel of about forty
tons tensile strength. This metal is
so ductile as to be necessarily low in
carbon, and it is said positively to
bane no nickel in it. The engines Lave
a high-pressure cylinder of 20 inches
in diameter, an intermediate one of 29
inehes, end two low-pressure cylind-
ers Uf 30 inches, the stroke being 18
inches. t special exaction has been
imposed by t he British Admiralty upon
these new thirty -knot torpedo destroy-
ers in 1 he limitation of fuel. 'Usually
the very high speed crass has been free
to burn as much as it likes. If a boat
M extravagant in coal, though, she -
will need to carry an extra quantity,
and so a standard for opal having been
determined for these boats, they must
carry an extra weight of it, according
to their extravagance va ance in can
sum
tion.
It is believed that two and a half
pounds of coat per horse power per hour
is the figure for their full speed. The
contract also provides that if a given
power is exceeded in obtaining a given
speed, i.he boat must be tried with add-
ed. weight. The last trial of the Des-
perate of six runs on the Maplin mite
showed a mean speed of 30.46 knots, or
thirty-five miles an hour, as we lands-
men know them, with 5,600 horse power,
210 pounds pressure, 24 inches vacuum,
406 revolutions, and the standard load
on board. Such is the fastest boat yet
built. Compared to the Lucania she is
a toy. The Lucania would make fifty
of her, but she has ones -sixth of the
Lucania's power. Still this gives her
but 50 per cent. more speed. She would,
cross the Atlantic in a little over four
days.
BERRIES AND GRAPES.
J. Hupp writes: "I have about two
acres of sandy soil and would like to
have you give me the best method for
setting it out; in berries and grapes.
What kind of plants and varieties of
grapes would oto well in tbis section?"
Presuming that our correspondent
has in view the growing of fruits main-
ly for market purposes, it may be said
that the ohanees of success should be
very good; In the way of berries,
strawberries, blackberries, and rasp*
berries are the leaders. Four of the
leading kinds of strawberries would be
Sharpies, Cumberland, Bubaoh and
Gandy. The two beat blackberries are
Wilson and Kittatinny, and four best
raspberries, Catboat, Reliance, Miller
and Gregg -the latter a black nap sort.
A half dozen good grapes would be
Concord,Moore's Early, Erighton,Wild,-
er and Niagara. These are sorts which
usually succeed in similar situations,
but as locality has much to do with the
well doing of any kind, it would be welt
to find out what varieties of fruits
have succeeded well in the vicinity of
your proposed plantation if possible to
In regard to the method of setting
out these fruits, the strawberries may
be ha rows two and onerhalf feet apart
and the plants about fifteen inches from
eaob other. Some prefer to set them
in four -feet -wide beds, the plants fif-
teen inolies apart, three rows in a. bed,
with tworfeet-wide alley ways between
the beds, but the single rows are best
for field culture, being easily clean-
ed of weeds, etc.
Blackberries should be set four feet
apart in the row, and if more than a
row be set out the rows should be six
feet apart.
Raspberries may be planted a foot
closer than blackberries.
Grapes are planted six to eight feet
apart -the farther distant when the
ground is rich enough to produce a
good growth: Stakes are set to eaoh
plant to which the canes are tied,.
These stakes may be of ceder, locust,
or anything that will last for some
years, and should show about six fest
above ground when planted.
A sandy sail when well enriched will.
grow the abovernamed fruits to per-
fection.
How to get a "Sunlight" Picture,
Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap wrappers,
(wrapper bearing the words "Way Does a
Mau") Sooner Than a .Ian to
Look d T
W omen �o Old )
Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto,
andyou will receive by porta 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 it will only cost Ie. postage to send in
the wrappers, if you leave the ends open,
Write your address earefully.
AN ANCHORED BOARDER.
Winks -How often do you change
your boarding -House now, Jinks?
Jinks -I never change at all,
Winks -You don't. Perfectly com-
ta.hle, eh?
Jinks -No, im' mighty uncomforta-
ble; but I've changed often enough to
know !: never gain anything by chang-
ing.
SPIDER WITH A LARIAT.
tt There is a spider in. New Zealand
that throws coils of its web about the
headof its prey until the wretched
victim is First blinded
and then chok-
ed.
In many unfrequented dark nooks
RE -SETTING PLUM TREES.
I have some plum trees which have
been set out two years and whieh I
would like to set in another place.
how much should they be trimmed?
A. S. L.
If it is really necessary to remove
Would it be safe to re -seta them, and
trees after being planted several years,
the work should be done with care eitle-
er early in the morning or late in the
evening, so as to avoid exposure of roots
to sunshine or wind, Do not expose the
roots even for a few minutes to a warm
sun or dry wind. Have the holes dug
before taking the trees up, then trans-
plant, with roots covered while carrir
ed to their new location. If any of the
roots are torn or bruised, carefully
prune thein before planting. This
work should be before the buds swell
much, and mulch with old straw if the
season is dry until the tree gets well
started again.
GRAFTING APP b CHERR 1S ANDD
PLUMS.
"Mr. H C. Dowler, desires
directions
for grafting apples, cherries and proms.
The question opens up a discussion of
the principal part of the work tale
dent to the nursery business," accordr
ing to the Ilomest.ead, "and it will be
hardly possible to give it any very
thorough treatment in a brief newst-
paper article. In growing apple trees
for one's own use, small oneryear trees
grown from the seed are grafted with
scions cut from the trees of the variety
THE CROWN JEWELS.
WOMEN-I{ATERS.
Some Notable Examples of ;thea Who Car-
ried Their Bobby to Extremes.
Henry Cavendish, the famous ahem
ist, had such an inveterate abhorrence
of female society that, from the precau-
tions he took to avoid personal contact'
with any member of the sex, he earned
for himself the sobriquet of the " Wom-
an -hater." It is said that he used to
carry on commuuioations with his
housekeeper respeeting the daily wants
entirely by correspondent)°, and a rigid
rule was enacted in his establishment
that on no pretence whatever • might a
female venture into his presence.
Such women -haters a,re by no means
rare. A gentleman died, recently in
Vienna who used to adopt extraordinary
measures to avoid contact with woman-
kind. At the theatre it was bis prac-
tice to book three seats and occupy the
middle one, so that a female' should not
by any possibility sit next to him;.
When traveling he would engage an
entire compartment in order to avoid the
risk of having a woman in the carriage,
and he invariably chose the road in
walking for the reason that he was
least likely to find a female there. The
man's hatred of tbe sex was indeed car-
ried So far that, in his mortal sickness,
he gave orders for the purchase of six
feet of ground on either side of his
grave, in order that in death a female
body should not come within that dis-
tances ot his.
There is a man now living in a Lon-
don suberb who has to similarly pro
nounced hatred of the gentler elex. Be-
ing wealthy, he keeps up a large staff
of servants, but no female is to be
found among them. Men and boys have
to do all the domestio affairs
of the household, even to scrubbing the.
floors and making the beds. Women
(even the relatives of tbe servants) are
strictly forbidden the place, and any
menial transgressing the rule by ad-
mitting a person in petticoats is instant-
ly dismissed.
An opulent gentleman in the north
ot England who has for years shut him-
self out from female society died ,not
long since, leaving a will, the terms of
which displayed in an unmistakable
manner Isis hatred of womankind. Ig-
noring the females entirely, all his male
relatives were provided with legacies,
but on this condition, viz„ that the
single ones were to forfeit their inherit.
mace the moment they married, and the
married ones were not to come into
theirs while their wives were living.
lttunoured Piot to Steal Them -Extra
'i'lgilanee at the 'lower-t'ol, Mood's
Attempt ltecalledl.
A despatch from London says: -There
was some alarm in the Tower of Lon-
don a. few nights ago, it is reported,
by the rumour that a plot to steal
the Crown jewels had been discover-
ed. •
In any case, whether the report be
founded on feet or not, it seems there
is no doubt that unusual precautions
are being taken to guard the regalia.
These jewels are kept. in the Wake-
field tower, where Henry VI. is believ-
ed to have been murdered. They are
valued at about £3,000,000, and consist
of many valuable ornaments, includ-
ing St. Edward's crown (made for
Charles II.) and the Queen's erown,
containing 2,783 diamonds. A large
ruby in front of it is said to have
been given to the Black Prince in
1367 by Don Pedro of Castille, and was
worn by Henry V. on his helmet at
the battle of Agincourt. Then there
is the Prince of Wales' crown, of pure
gold, and without precious stones ; the
Qtaeen Consort's crown, the Queen's
crown, made for the wife of James ll.,
St. Edward's staff of gold, four and a
half feet long, and weighing about
ninety pounds; the Royal sceptre, the
Queen's sceptre, the Curtana, or point-
less sword of Mercy ; the swords of
justice, the coronation bracelets, the
Royal spurs, the coronation oil vessel,
or ampulla, in the shape of an eagle:
the salt cellar of State, a reproduction
or model of the White tower, the sil-
ver baptismal font, a silver wine foun-
tain, the insignia of the Order of the
Bath, (,nrter, Thistle, Victoria Cross,
ele., and many other such relics of
the past or present, contained in glass
eases, protected by strong iron cages.
The plot said to have been recently
discovered brings to mind the nearly
successful attempt made by Col. Thos.
Blood, a disbanded officer of the Par-
liamentary army in 1671, to carry off
the Crown jewels. He had succeeded
in wounding and binding the keeper
of the jewel office, and managed to
escape out. of the tower with St. Ede
ward's crown, but was captured, and
subsequently pardoned by Charles II.,
who, strange to add,granted him an
estate of £500 a year in Ireland. Col,
Blood had previously seized the Duke
of Ormonde in his coach one night in
St. James' street, and carried him
away with the intention of hanging
the Duke of Tyburn, for defeating a
conspiracy of the colonel to surprise
Dublin castle.
it is desired to propagate or increase.
The seedling apple trees are grown from
apple or crab seed the season before
they are to be grafted. The seed is
soaked in a sack in a well or in run-
ning water and repeatedly thawed out.
About the middle of . March, or from
that until the 26th, they are drilled
on rich, welllprepared fall -plowed land,
e
from a half inch Co an inch deep. They
y
are covered lightly with earth and
about the 1st of April after the ground
is impacted on them, it is partially re*
moved from the seed wvith a garden
rake and the ground broken up every
time it anust:s until il the plants are well
through. The tender plants will bear
a great deal of raking and this keeps
the small weedta back until the apple
seeds get a good start. Thorough cul-
tivation all stunner will make small
seedling apple trees with roots twelve
or fifteen inches long and a quarter of
an inch or more by the caliper with tops
about as long as the roots. in the fall
these are dug and put in the cellar and
at the same time the scions are
out, and after being carefully labeled
are placed in boxes of dam leaves and
also stored m the cellar. In midwinter
and towards spring these scions are
grafted on the roots or on sections of
the root.
"Spring grafting on the top of grow-
ing trees which is known as top -work-
ing or top -grafting is an operation eas-
ily practiced and makes excellent re-
sults if certain combinations are made
upon common fxv.its. It is possible to
grow quite tender fruits on a hardy
tree and some varieties do better when
grafted on the tops of other sorts. For
example, the Wild Goose plum does not
e t' n.
a..
ave. en r 1 trsfao at)
a sit
g r, if it' its
topeworked on tie sy olfe, De Stoo, For -
of the bush you come across most per- est Garden and tops half and half are
Iset skeletons of small birds naught in mach on illand
Forest Garden plum tree
1 these terrible snares. were is in the North nearly a cep
SOMETHING NEW.
Novelty in advertising is the thing
now. The latest and one of the most
humorous schemes lies been amusing
the patrons of theaters for three or
four nights, says a city contemporary,
and has succeeded in escaping the no-
tice of managers. A bald headed man
is the instrument. On his shining pate
is painted in indigo blue the name of
a patent medicine. He silt: in the
front row, and conducts himself with
propriety, while people behind him
are convulsed with laughter, each ob-
server supposing that here is a practi-
cal joke some one has played on an
unsuspecting
friend.
ion
COSTLY CLOTHES.
Expensive Dresses Worn by High Digni-
taries
taries at the £tglish Court.
The Earl Marshal of England, which
office is hereditary in the family of the
Duke of Norfolk, has the most costly
uniform of all the English staff offi-
cers. Be is also the head of the Col-
lege of Arens, or Herald's College, and
is one of the greatest officers of the
crown.
His uniform is one of the most gor-
geous ' n the
costly description, and andws v
,
1
rod of office which he carries on all
state occasions was direeted by Richard
II. to be a rod of solid gold, tipped at
each end with black enamel, and hav-
ing the royal arms at the upper end
and the arms of the Baal Marshal at
thea. other.
The court dress of a, Prime Minister
costs £150, while that of other Cabinet
bfinisters costs £120. The uniform of
the royal heralds, including their trum-
pets and embroidered tabards, pennon
andtassels, are £270 each. The robes
of the Vice Chancellor and Judges cost
from £100 to £170.
In the army the complete outfit for
an officer of the Royal Horse Artillery,
including horse and furniture, amounts
to £220.
The uniform of an aide-de-camp to
the Queen cannot be made for less
than £180.
A newly appointed puisne Judge's
outfit: costs about £300, while tbat of
the Lord Chief Justice is more elabor-
ate and expensive. The Lord Chief Jus-
tice, when he appears at court, has a
rich gown and train of black satin
damask, trimmed with silk lace and
tufts, and worn over court dress: The
Lord Chancellor, the Speaker of the
House of Commons, the Chancellor of
the Exchequer, the Master of the Rolls,
the Lord Justice of Appeal and the
President ofethe. Probate,Divorce and
,
Admiralty Division weaon state o0-
rasions a magnificent robe and train
embroi-
dered
black satin damask, heavily with gold thread, the cost of
which is £150.
STEEL -COATED BULLETS.
Dr. Delorme, Surgeon -in -chief of the
French army, declares that steel -coat-
ed. rifle bullets for the new magazine
guns cause little pain to the wounded.
During the riots at Fourmies one man
was wounded so badly as to be paralyz-
ed, but did not suspect that he had
been shot until he saw bloodstains on
his clothing ; one, shot through the leg,
only felt a slight shiver; another, shot
through the arm, .felt bis elbow twitch
and closed his fist mechanically. At
short range, 100 to 150 yards, the bul-
lets are apt to explode and to do ser-
ious injury. ---
DEATH RATE IN RUSSIA.
Russia's death rate is believed to be
greatly inoreased by the practice of the
peasants in plunging into the rivers aft-
er the blessing of the, . water at the
feast of the Epiphany, January 18, in
power
�s then
the w
that t has T�
belief
i
the
Peace'
• sin The .
a t s
wa
to sh aw Y hear
floe has long been forbidde n at St.
Petersburg. WinrillinrrrYinnnit
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria
POWER OF ASSOCIATION.
Mrs. De Temper (looking up from the
newspaper)-t.Vell, 1 declare! Another
woman, single handed, has captured a
burglar. I should think she would
have been killed by the brute; but the
paper says t he moment she grabbed a
poker and made a dash for him, his
knees trembled and his teeth shook, and
he sank to the floor in fright."
Mr. De Temper -He is probably a
married man.
p4�9
There is no mystery about
Sunlight
Soap
it is simply a clear, pure, honest
soap for laundry and household
use, made by the most approved
processes, and being the best, it
has the largest sale in the world.
It is made its a twin bar for con-
venience sake.
This shows
• The Twin Bar
for Infants and Children.
"CiastorisieseweI1t daptedtochildrenthat
t recommend it as superior to any prescription
known to me." E. d. Ancient, M. D.,
111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
"The use of'Castoria' is so universal and
Its merits so well known that it sumo work
of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the
+ntelligent families who do not keep Castorla
within easyreach.'
Cows liLsTrir. D.D.,
New York City.
Late Pastor 1110011ingdal0 Reformed Church.
Castor's cures Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Dtarrimea, Zructation,
%r71a Worms, gives sleep, Sud promotes dY
Witfiout to "(tea medication.
'
For several years I have recommended
your Castona, and shall always continue ti
do so as it has invariably produced beneficial
Enetx F. P'soss, It.1D.,
"The W lntbrop," 126th Street and 7th aveiy
New ;Ode Cit?
tam Ostrava Comport, 77 Damao Sra*LT, Naw TOPZ.
T�ET GOUNT BY THE SCORE
Yea, By the Hundreds, Those Who Have.
Been Cured of Dire Disewse By
South American Nervine.
E meso Widesiireal U iversal Is its t pplieatioaw
Where Other Medicines Have Failed and Doctors Have
Pronounced the Cases. Beyond Cure, This
Great Discovery Has Proven a
Genuine Elixir of Life.
Who Slime Verdict Comes From Old and Young, Male and Fellaale.
Rich wad Poor. and From .11l( Corners of the Dominion.
If it is the case that he who makes
two blades of grass grow where only
one. had grown before is a benefactor
of the race, what !e the position to be
accorded that man who by his know-
ledge of the laws 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 a public benefactor? Lot
those who have been down said ere
now up through the use of South Am-
erican Nervine give their opinions on
this subject, John Boyer, banker, of
Kincardine, Ont., had made himself a
hopeless invalid through years of cover-
ers/ark. At least he felt his case wee
{iopeiees. for the beat physicians had
failed to do hilae good. He tried Nor-
witz*, and these are his words : " I glad-
ly sax it : Nervine cured ata aiid 1
am to -day as strong and wellas ever."
pan►ue liars, of lieaford, was our id of
neuralgia of the stomach and bowels
.Lw three bottles of this medicine. Jae.
Sherwood, of Windsor, at 70 years of
age, suffered from an attach of paraly-
sis. His life, at that age, was de epair-
ed of. But four bottles of Nervine
gave him back his natural strength, A
Victim of indigestion, W. F. Bolger, of
Renfrew, says : " Nervine cured me
Of my suffering, which seemed incur-
;sbte, and had baffled all former nte-
f.bods and efforts." Peter Beason, of
fPaisley, lost flesh and rarely zed a
r
good night's sleep, because o_ stomach
trouble. He says : " Nervine stopped
the agonizing pains in my stomach the
First day I used it i have now taken
two bottles and I feel entirely relieved
and can sleep like a top." A repre-
sentative fanner, of Western -Ontario,
is Mr. C. J. Curtis, residing near Wind-
sor. His health was seemingly com-
pletely destroyed through la grippe.
No medioine did him any good. "To
three bottles 01 Nervine," he says, ' I
attribute my restoration to health and
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 Braeebridge. " I was
so bad," says he, " that one of my
medical attendants sale that I was
dying, but, thank 'God, I am not dead
yet. ' Prom the first few doses I took
of Nervine I commenced to feel but-
ter, and am to -day restored completely
to my usual health." A resident of
the Maritime Provinces, ccs in the ars on
of S. Jonesof Sussex N.B.a :
s ys "For
twelve years I was a martyr to indi-
restion, constipation and headache.
1'l:e treatment of several physicians
lid not help ane. I hate taken a few
bottles of Nervine, and can truthfully
say that I am a new man."
A shrewd observer of human nr.ure
has said : " The hand that recite the
cradle moves the world." How int -
portant it is, theta, that health and
strength should be mad. the lit of
the mothers' of this country. The wo-
men of Canada are ready by score* to
tell of the benefits that have come to
them through, the use of South irnarI-
aan Nervine, Mrs. R. ..rtnstreng, of
(Drill's., wife of the eolporteur, of the
Bible Society of that town, suffered
for six years from nervous pacers
Medical assi*taxsoe did not h "
all," she says, "I have taken els Cagily
of Nervine, said cam truthftiit7 sear this
is the one aledielne that has 01115114114
a. outs is my case." bibs. 30118! '
woody has been for 40 years itrseiiitiltt
of Plesherto t, and has reached the Me
lotted three -score years and tea. 'Throe
years ago her syatetn gssstainad 5 telom-
ere shock through the death of w
daughter. Nervine orae reoenuitenled.
She perseveringly took 12 bottles of
medicine, with the result that she Is to-
day again strong and hearty. l?4un-
drads of women suffer front impovatsh-
ed blood and weakened nerves. " AU
vitality," says Mrs. J. rants, of
Brampton, "'seemed to have forsaken
my system. I was unable to get re-
lief from any source until I commenced
taking South American Net'vtrte. The
is o - e
results are most eat fact s X gr ater
far than I could have hoped for, It
came within the way of Mrs. 11, Stap-
leton of Vu hanto treat underth
e
best physicians, both in n,sde._ ^L.:
England, for .::enrt: "uteeiEe and nerv-
ouli (lability, 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 ie too valuable to
permit of further additions to these
earnest words of testimony front those
who know just what they are tallying
about. In the common language of
the day, they have been there, and are
speaking from the heart. The dozen
or more witnesses that here speak have
their counterparts by the hundreds,
not only in the province of Ontario,
but in every other seetton of the Domin-
ion. Sou+e :irrierioan Nervine is based
on a s..,entiNc prinetpie that makes
a cure a certainty, no matter how des-
perate the ease mas be. It statk
es
at the: nerve centers from which flown
the life bI`od of the whole syete'm. It
is not a medicine of patehwori+:. but
is complete and comprehensive in itr
application.
C. LUTE 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter.
Txos. Wiameler, Crediton Drug Store, Agent.
II 11 eagle seas e sag ellenetteWie
Use will'reveaal
The Twin Benefits:
Leu Labor.
Greater Comfort.
For every 12 wrappers sent
Books for to LsV>,x 8sos„ Ltd., as
Toronto, a use -
Scott St.,To n
nd book will
f paper -bound
a
r
r es ul P
Wa
Wrappers �. be sent.
itp OOU'0S i IIOcfIIOU1f6J,—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
combination that will effect a prompt and permanent cure in all stages of
Sexual Debility, Abuse or Excesses, Nervous Weakness, Emissions, Mental
Worry, Excessive Use of . Opium, Tobacco, or Alcoholic. Stimulants, all of
which soon lead to Insanity, Consumption and an early grave, Wood's'
Phosphodine has been used successfully by hundreds o cases that seemed
almost hopeless -cases that had been treated by the most talented physi-
cians -cases that were on the verge of despair and insanity --cases tbat were
tottering over the grave -but with the continued and persevering use of
Wood's Phosphodine, these cases that bad 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 to a life of usefulness and happiness.'
Price, one package, $1;'sixpackages, $5; by mail free of postage.
One will pleas,., six guaranteed to cure. Pamphlet free to any address.
The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont-, Canada. After
wood's Phos hodine is sold byes sible wholesale and retail druggists In the Dominion.
P r i>mn