The Exeter Times, 1893-8-17, Page 2A BRASORABLR THEME. orentotroo tos Reams.
At the commencement of he disease the
Wrong iimpressiou Wormed init She Selq-eet animal's temper becomes changed s it is dull
oil' Wad. Dogs. gloomy. said silent, seeks solitude encl. while
Almost eve to- iley the daily papers coutain strees-s lute else most &secure careers, It 2,5'
hold headlines eutiouncing that e mad dog fidgety and restless, gees here and. there,
has been killed after e ''fearful straggle.' lies dawn and gets em, keeps constautly
If yoa skip the sensational headinge and prowling elsoet and manes rest long in one
highlO colored feetuees it timidly ham:kens place. It sniffs and scratclies with its fore
that there le nobody to be found who knows pews, and appears to try to hide its hale
whether the poor, brutally killed animal under its ohest. Otten the affeeted dog
really was mei or not. It seems as if the starts as if haunted. by the phantoms; it
Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to barks and sumps at nothing. It always has
Animalemight bestir itself a little Wise:half d
of the ramie abused beasts. There does not
appear to be the slightest teeth of pity or
compassion in men who chase some frighteas
ed stray dog into a eoraer and after they
have mercilessly beaten it to death gloat
over their noble deed. Whoever heard of
any efficer belonging to the society just
mentioned intereating himself in one of
these daily occurrences. There /ono reason
why a police officer should think himself
justified in killing an animal beoause it is
trying to save itself in flight from a. howling
any man thee ie dobag everything to drive
it into madness. It is, of course, every dog
ee
owner's duty to keep his auitned chained or
provided with c muzzle, but these precau-
tions are at times of no avail. A fair Blue
aeration ot the utter senselessness of the
"mad -dog" ware was had very reeently,
A handsome young setter dog was playing
in his master's yard when sone boys stop-
ped a d began to tease him. Suddenly the
dog levee the fence and ran barking at his
tormentors. One ofthese hit the dog with
a stone, while the others yelled. The aut.
mal tarnee to run and the boys sieve their
opportunity and sat up a howl of "mad dog."
In an iastant the hunt was on ; every man
or boy in the dog's path shot or threw some-
thing at him. Block after block down the
street; did the ecereincreasing orowd chase
the poor brute. Finally,driven to despera-
tion the dog dashed elear through a kitchen
window Here the united force of three
policemen turned with cluba and revolvers ed with success there will be no need o
managed to kill the "ferocious brute." much feer of the consequences of a dog bite
Thia dog was not mad in the least; if & in the future.
kind-hearted, thoughtful person had given
the poor hunted amine], a place of shelter
AN AWFUL BIC FERIEN OP.
frotn ita pursuers it would have recovered
from its fright in s, few minutes. Now
"Handsome Jack is mourned by its little Three Hen cast Away in a Small Sealing
golden -haired mistress, who refuses to be Boat—Two or Timm inst.
comforted. Theodore Anderson, a Norwegian sailor
PRE WOWED AGAINST eons. belonging to the Victoria, 33. C., sealing
There is e large nuinber of .persons who schooner Arietas, has just returned home
have a strong Preiediee agedest dogs for i from Yokohama by the steamship Empresa
some reason or other. Nobody denies their of India. He left Victoria on the Arietas in
right to entertain whatever opinionthe spriag intending to vend the season as
choose provided only such opinions are temp-, he did the last three years in sealing,but an
ered with a doe allowance of good cormnon , unfortunate and lamentable occurrence
sense. But in nine cases out of ten such changed his plans. When about 80 miles
people lean toward the extreme ; it is inn i off the port of Yen-oshirna at 5 eelock on
possible for them to see any good. in what the morning of June 1, he and two com-
l.
should happen to have a dog, especially tf it somewhet limsted nuin er o r
be a flee eetreals they beleediatelY Colt +most, and the other a men named Johnnie,
' about to get him out of the way. Their l who leases a wife and two children in Vic -
children are titught to regard " men s best toria—left their vessel in search of seals.
friend" as they would a rattlesnake, and are They were separated from their companions
never slow in taking their cue. To throw and laefore rescued the two last named had
stones or in any other way abuse their neigh. lost their lives. The story of the hardship
bora' and other dogs is with these cranks a and trials they experienced, as related by
perfectly legitimate pleasure. It is such Anderson, is AS ialloWS ;
hair -brained people who to a la,ree extent "We steered in a, straight westerly di -
are responsible for the many reported oases rection after leaving oier schooner end cote
of the "mad dog" epidemic. tinned in this course until 11130 o'clock thee
There is some excuse for people to have morning, in the meanwhile losing eight of
a most wholesome fear of being bitten by our vessel. We then pulled to the wind -
any animal, be it med or otherwise, but no- ward for about half a mile and stetted back
body should deliberately join in the cruel for our schooner, as she was to be in the
epleasare of chasing a poor dog through the same place we left her about 2 °Week in
streets because some one has raised the cry she afternoon, We kept pulling in this
" mad dog." course until 7 o'clock in the evening. Then,
So little was hydrophobia understood rearing something was wrong, we listened
previous to Pasteur's investigations that it for the report of the boom gee, but we
was regarded by highly competent physi- waited for three hours before we heard its
clans and physiologists as a variety of lock- first sound, and, as it seemed to come from
law or tamale% It was thought that the a northeasterly direction, we decided to
disorder of the nerrous system was caused trace it up if possible. Until 7 o'clock next
by the infliction of is punetared intim- morning our boat Was heeding in this diree-
matory wound, in. "A hick e. specie virus or tion, lsat the sotmd appeared as distant
poison took no parte It was uot till within then as it, did when we first heard it. As
the past ten years that the matter was given our boat would not ride in, the heavy seas
serious attendee. Tho eminent French any longer, we we's compelled to heave to,
scientist, Pasteur, has done more benefit in and prepare for the gale which was rising.
mankiue in tryiug to find a oute for that We took the fifteen skins that were in the
dread disease than any living man, Now boat, the masts and mos, and tied them
it is an establishel fact that in order to seourely to the painter for a. see anchor. A
produce hydrophobia, in a man he must shook, however soon mode way with the
first, be bitten by a dog, wolf, pig, or oat, skins, and we were obligee to replace them
or any other animel which is suffering from with our guns. As we were about to lash
a well -marked. disease known as "rabies," our ammunition box also to the rope we cap -
What it is which produces "rabies" among sized. All three got iota the boat agein and
dogs is not known and has not ever been started to bail the water out, bat this was
guessed at, but it is known that the disease impossible, and we sat down as low as we
is communicated by "rabid" or "mad" dogs could in the water. In spite of all we could
teal' warm-blooded animels, even birds. do, the boat capsized repeatedly, and the
EYDROPII0P1A A 'MISNOMER. fourth time Johnnie was lost In swimming
A very gre,ve error is expressed in the for the boat I noticed him a shore distance
name hydrophobia, which means horror at behind me, but when I looked& second time
water. This is notsimply a misnomer, but he was gone. Whether the big sbark which
mialeeding in a very serious way. The was around us, and which had devoured all
name hydrophobia having become fixed in the provisions we had, made away with him
people's minds, and the idea that rebid dogs or not, I could not say. Neverthelees, I
dread water having become part and parcel believe that was the cause of his sudden des -
of the general belief, the sight of a dog appearance. The sixth time the boat cap -
eagerly lapping water or willingly plunging sized Isedore wa.slost, butes midnight came
into it naturally leads ninety-nine out of a on the waves calmed down and gave me an
hundred to exclaim : "He drinks ; there is opportunity of bailing out my boat. This
.., no danger." work I did with my compass box, which
The fact is, says tbe authority, that a was attached to the boat. After two days
burning thirst is one of the characteristic and twonights were spentin this forlorn eon
symptonss of rabies in its early stages. On dition I finally reached shore, being led to
theotherhand,the name hydrophobia is very land by a light which I had seen the last
appropriate when applied to mau, as an in- night I was out. The place I landed at
definable dread of water or any liquid is the was a, little island. I crawled out on lane
characteristic of the later stages of the dis- on my heads and feet, and it was but a
ease when afflicting a human subject. In short time until I found two baskets filled
degs, so far from a dread of water being a with sea -gull eggs. Having eaten some of
reliable symptom, it is one whith shows it- these I remained there until the next day,
self but in extremely rare cases. . when some Japanese fishermen came along
Another popular error attributes the in a boat and rescued me. They could not
madness of dogs to the heat of the dog understand my language, but I said 'Yoko -
days. In July and August, says the scent- barna' to them and they seemed to know
tist, all kinde of precautions are taken the rest. They took me to a little yillege,
whiels no one thinks of in November or and from there I was taken to another place
December. Now the simple fact is that of a similar description, Thence I was lent
the dog days have no more to do with the to still another small village, and from there
rabies than We moon has to do with lunacy. taken inland on a journey, in course of
Dogs are liable to attack.s, in every month svhises we travelled over mountains on
of the year, but it so happens that Jiffy and animals that resemble donkeys. The next
August, are precisely the months in which place I reached was Yen -es -keno., where I
the fewest cases occur. The records of the was taken in charge by Japanese policemen,
veterinary schools of Alfort, Toulouse, who took me to Yokohama and left me in
Paris. London end Lyons shove thst it is charge of the British consul there, who paid
majority -of cam are seen. In April, No- Empress.
not in the hottest months that the great my passage across to Victoria, on the
vember and December the recorded cases
are doable and triple those in June, July ARelentless Creditor.
and August. That the heat of the weather is
is not the these of rabies is strikingly prey- A creditor seldom goes so far as to seize a
ed by the fact that in hot countries the coffiu ithout to be carried to the grave. But
disease is rare tied in some even unknown. this happened in the open street in Berlin
Thirst, however intense, is incapable of pro- a few days ago, arid created considerable
deicing rabies. Dogs have been aubjectecl etxaeciiiitnoraot eteasnesdagegeresalailladsiensattoipepne. d it
ence from water when chained to a wall front of a house near the Alexander platz
to the cruel experience of complete abstin-
under a burning sun, They (ilea from in the German capital with a coffin for the
thine, but showed no symptoms of rabies. wife of a locomotive engineer who had died.
Another error is to suppose that mad As the coffiti was about to be borne into the
it is only et one house an official of the court appeared,
oaken box, and
any foam. A perfectly healthy dog PloredecierdedhiitetreeaenisfenrPreend the
the Berlin pawn
dogs foam et the mouth.
stage of the disease that rebia the dog shows
shows an thandante ei foank to the mouth office. The ofboiels had acted on behelf of
a relentless creditor. Tete engineer pleaded
As it is Moist important that, the symptoms in vain for the coffin. The reeore failed to
aftet a heed run.
of rabies in dogs :should be remembered, the soatYher7hether Irte succeeded
in getting en -
following of the most noteble are given far
the guidance of hot.. thoee who are fond of
dogs and thoee who fear them.
a gloomy, sullen a.spee . e
hasno dread of water, but, on the conttery, , ing in the middhi of the tught, with the
will greedily swallow it. 1 moon et the full, it was impossible even
Wheu the desire to bite, which ie one of then to resist the fascination of Niagara's
the essential characteristics of rabies at a deep diapason sound of welcome. We
certain stage, begins to measliest itself the wandered. out, the night as light as day,
animal first attacks inert bodies. It seems under acres of white blossoms, to see the
to delight in. gnawing wood, leather, its upper torrent before it falls over 'the preci-
ohain, =pets, the wood of its kennel, straw pice. This was to be all. The rest was to
coal, earth, etc. The sensibility of the be left to the imagination. You can not,
rabid dog is greatly blunted; when it is conceive the effect of that mideight ramble
struck, burned, orwounded, it emits no cry —the eternalthed of the oataasetemphasiz.
of pain or sign as svhen itatiffers or is afraid ing the delicious silence of theuight Stand-
in health, One of the most important indi- ing, as I did, on the edge of the green
cations ot madness is that the sick dog is preen on the Atomic= side, 'milling over
always very numb enraged at the sight of to the deep and somber belt of pines on the
an animal of its own species. Even when opposite island, watching, and eternally
the disease is but little developed it will watehing, these angry waters lashed. into
show this strange antipathy. foarn and hurrying to their downfall below,
The voice of the rabid dog is of a marked it did not seetn tome at first that this cont -
contrast and eon easily be detected. The paratively narrow course could end its a
sound le very hueky and. jerking. These triumph of magnificence.
may be taken as the moat Important symp. But there was no veatige or shadow of
toros of this dread disease and are the re- disapointment in the morning. How should
sults ef long observation and study by a there be? The apple blossoms wore waxen,
noted English soieutist, the grass of emerald greeti, the eky woo
The resale of I. Pasteur's experimental blue, the sun was in the heavens. At last
study of rabies and hydrophobia. has now it was all right with the world. So I took
reaohed a practical import:owe. Through the picture gradually, piece by piece, like a
his treatment the fated cases of hydrophoble miser. I lifted the °extolls gradually and
hese been reduced to an extremely small peeped at, the wonderful scene point by
percentage of whet they used to be, and the point, and hit by bit. The plan was to walk
eminent scientist is adding fresh discoveries by the siee of the torrent, and to pause at
to this branch from time to time. If his every resting place—first, the very eege
present labors and investigations are crown. where the water breaks from its narrow bed
into irnmeesurable &Sieves° and becomes e
mighty cataract; next, & little lower down,
where can be seen the effect of the greet fell,
the majesty of whith seems incomparable ;
thee & little further down, where you find
that the first falls are mere ohild's pley com-
pared to the misty majesty of the Horse-
shoe Falls, The proportious of this hulas.
oribable picture are so equal and admirable
that at first, as at St. Peter's in Rome, you
are apt to be a little disappointed. You
tau not be convinoed of the magnificence of
St. Peter's melees you go to the top of the
highest dome. You can not becompletely
Grounded of the astonishing masesty of
bottom. Modern enterprise allows you this An American "peerage, bast eels a y
iagara unless you deceu to e y
experience. Formerly you had to stand on I published. It inoluties all titled American
a slippery rock in a mackintosh and go ladies from Timbuctoo to Paris, and, better
literelly under the falls. Nowadays a still, appends abet of marnarried scions of
they condemn, be it doge or men. Reason pamons—one a young Portugueseplucky little steamer plunges into the very the Bridals nobility.
never enters their heads. If their neighbor
. who was only known as "Isadore" by his , heart of the torrent and takes you so near The gold mines of Peru were so rich that
. this1 the falling maws of glittering and rainbow- , Atahuallpe, to buyhisreatisom, filled a room
tinted weter that you gasp for breath. i 2dx17 feet to a height of nine feet with
golden vessels. When melted they pro.
duced $15,480,710 of gold.
NIAGAtti TO ENGLISH EYES.
be Valls by Day aTut-ii- by Night—The
-propitious or a Traveler.
Not every visitor to Iliega,rie Felle has
for his benefit a full moon every night. and
a brilliant sun by day, says a writer in the
Leaden Telegraph. They tell me that the
grand eerie to sea Niagera is at faidWiater,
when huge tons of ice go thundering over
the cataract, end the Lower Falls are one
Maas of sparkling icicles. But pue can not
see everything, and Niagara la summer
time is quite good enough for me. Arriv-
FACTS IN FFW WORDS.
France is soon to adopt, an interesting ea -
novation ie the postal eard system. The
cards will be issued in the fown of cheek -
bookie with stubs, The seeder of the pos-
tal card ems make memoranda of Its con-
tents on the stub,and eon hare this stamped
at the post office before the coed is detach-
ed, so time a verified record of the corre-
spondence can be kept.
The archives of the pore of Southampton,
England, °entails e outlets% naval tam of the
fourteenth ceetury, The discareent holds
the captain cif a vessel responsible for the
value of the goods lost if his vessel is wreck-
ed on any voyage begun in spite of the
opinion of 9. mesority et the crew that the
wind was unfevourable.
Almost the sole hereditary trade in the
United States is that of the deep water
pilot. At most of the im.portant seaports
pilotage has been coofiued for generetions
to a few families. The Delaware pilots
congregate at Lewes, where they have liv-
ed these many generations.
A Mr. Talbot, of To.corne, Wash., who
recently returned from Lake Chelan, eawa
that the miners about the lake catch, all the
troue they wish with their shovels. He
saw a man with one puah scoop up four
fish, not one of which weighed less than a
pound.
France, Belgium, Greece. Italy and
Switzerland constitute the "Latin Union."
Their wine are elike in weight and fine-
ness, didering only itt ileum. The seine
system has been pertly adopted by Spain,
Servia, Bulgitrie, Resale and Roumania,
Asa Hefner, a Maryland farmer residing
near Sykesville, gave his gueets wheat
bread at a 0 o'olook -supper the other even -
log that was melee from grain that was
growing in his field at 11 o'clock that morn.
log.
In Machyn's Diem entry of March 3,
1557, is found the following: "Seen &shoe-
maker soundly thrashed ist, Cheapside to.
day by. order of the bailiff tor making a
higtthr
h-epr.i.,e,ed boot of a cheep quality of
ie
According to a report of the Preach
Minister of Finance 148,8d8 families itt
France have claimed exemption from cer-
tain taxes receritlyvoted. by the Parliament
odnreanc.count of having seven er more ehil-
Stinday was it day of amusement with
the Londoners of 1800. According toe oat-
oulation 200,000 of them apent es,th Suneay
in summer in the suburban tuns aud resorts
in getting rid nf $120,000.
This expedition should be nstased by no one.
You can not see the falls or understand them
without it.
You will ask me, What is the effect of
Niagara Falb on the spectator? To me
theyhave an indescribable attraction end
fascination. While resting there I could
not get away from them. The roar in the
distance seemed a call which 1 was bound
to answer. AU day long I was strolling
about Goat 'slender standing on the bridge,
or over on the Canadian aide sitting and
looking at the rainbow tole the waves of
the opposite fall. Try as I would I could
not teat myself away from the attraetive
caterect. The most hideously fasoinating
corner dell is the exact break whore the
ruslung water falls sheer down the pre-
cipice. One-half step here and death
would greet you in less thane second. This
is
it corner that ought to be berme from the
sight. If it is necessary to heighten the
barriers of Clifton Suspension Bridge it
should he doubly right to hide these f
°hinting corners of Niagara where the roar
soothes and the rushingwater allures. But
for all that, hither suicides eternally come.
Niagara. has been the Nepenth of meny it
weary soul. If I were to visit the place it
hundred times I should still be tound, all
day long walltiug round and round the
fails and rapids, and watching the everlast-
ing rush from peace of lake to turbulence of
whirlpool. Niagara is, to my mind, one of
the most fascinating spots on earth,
In Madagascar e. dissatisfied husbend has
only to give his wife it piece of money and
say, "Madam, I thank you," and, accord-
ing to the laws of Madagascar, he is di-
vorced straightaway.
There are some words in the Chinese lan-
guage that boom as metty as forty different
meanings, each depending on the iritonation
usecl in pronouncing it.
When a person loses the ono of hearing
in one ear only, he finds it impossible to
locate the direation from which a sound
proceeds.
In Moscow the winter cold is so intense
that it freezes quicksilver, while the sum-
mer temperature is as high as that of
Na les.
h 's selt mine at Wieliezlas an
THE GREAT SOUTH AMERICAN
E TONIC
1
eltaZiainiGuelsituelAINTalenGSUleselsalle
Stomachelaver Cure
0
The Most ,Astonishing Medical. Discovery of
the Last One Hundred Years.
it is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest NeCtaK
It is Safe and Handless as tbe Purest Milk.
This wonderful Nervine Tonle has only recently been introd.ueed
into this country by the proprietors ancl manufacturers a the Great
South American Nervine Tonle, and yet its great value as. 1.,etirative
agent has long been known by a few of the most learned Or sicians,
who have not brought its merits and value to the knowledge of the
general publie.
This medicine has completely solved the problem of the cure of indi-
gestion, dyspepsia, and diseases of the general nervous system. It is
also a the greatest -value in. the cure of all forms of failing health from,
whatever cause. It performs this by the great nervine tonic qualities
whieli it possesses, and by its great curative powers upon the digestive
orserans, the stomach, the liver and the bowels. No remedy compares
with this wonderfully valuable Nervine Tonic as a builder and strength-
ener of the life forces of the humau body, and as a great renewer of a.
broken-down constitution. It is also of more real permanent value in
the treatment and cure of diseases of the lungs than any consumption
remedy ever used on this continent. It is a marvelotta cure for nerv-
ousness of females of all ages. Ladies who are approaching the critical
period known a$ change in life, should not fail to use this great Nervine
Tonic, almoSt constaaly, far the space of two or three years. It will
carry them safely over the danger. This great strengthener and cure
tive is of inestimable value to the aged and infirm, beeause its gre
energizing properties will give them a. new hold <es life. It will add t
or fifteen years to the lives of many of those whe will use OW! doz
bottles of the remedy each year.
Austro-Galicials town, that has been worked
Lor COO yeere anti is still yielding fresh suption. When there is an insufficient supply of nerve food in the blood,
,
plies. general state of debility of the brain, spinal marrovs, and nerves is th
lt. Sterved nerves like starved muscles, become strong when th
The Sultan is establialtihg a:public library
IT 13 A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE"Of
NervousuesJ, Broken Coustitution,
Nervous Prostration,
Nervous Headache,
Sick Headache,
Female Weakness,
Nervous Chills,
Paralysis,
Nervous rarcaysine and
Nervous Choking,
Hot Flashes,
Palpitatiod of the He
Ablated Despondency,
Sleeplessness,
St, Vitus' Dance,
Nervousness of Females,
Nervousness of Old Age,
Debility of Old Age,
Indigestion and Dyspepsia.
Heartburn and Sour Stomach,
Weight and Tenderness in Stom eh,
Loss of Appetite,
Frightful Dreams,
Dizzine.ss and Ringing in the Bars,
Weakness of Extremiaes and
Fainting,
Impure and Impoverished Blooa,
13olls and Carbuncles,
Scrofula,
Scrofulous Swellings and Ulcers,
Consumption of the Lungs,
Catarrh of the Lungs,
Neuralgia, Bronchitis and Chronic Cough,
Pains in the Heart, Liver Complaint,
Pains in the Back, Chronic Muslims
Failing Health, Delieate and Scrofulous Children,
Summer Complaint of Infants.
All these and many other eoraplaints cured by this wonderful
Nervine Tonle.
NERATOIJS .3)1{.SEASTES.
A.s a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no reaggy hats bee
able to compare with the Nervine 11.'onie, whish is very""Pleasant and
harmless in all its effects upou tbe youngest child or the oldest and ma
delicate individual. Nine -tenths of all the ailments to which the human.
famil is heir are dependent on nervous exhaustion, and impaired dige
THE E01.1011 PINE'S DIET.
---
The Only living Thing, That lEats the
)Pollage or the Ilemloelt
"You don't have to skirmish around
much to get feed to fatten one of these hem
lock porcupines on," says an old Bruce
county woodman. "Just sprinkle some
salt over a stick of cordwood, or a sawlog
for that matter, and he'll eat the whole
business, and enjoy it like yon would mince
The mood diet of these animals, though,
is hemlook browse. They make themselves
a home in a hollow log, or under the roots of
some old tree, but always in reach of a big
hemlock. The hemlock is their pasture,
and they make beaten paths going to and
fro between the tree and their home. The
porcupine climbs the tree as readily as a
squirrel would, provided. you don't slip up
and cut his tail off while he is going up.
Somehow or other he can't climb a'tree
without a, tail, nor will he come down with-
out it.
If you can eateh one of thee porcupines
climbing a tree and chop offhis tail close he
will stop right where he is and will stay
there untilhe starves to death, unless lie is
taken away. Once up a tree the perm -
pine eoes out on the big limbs and, pulling
the small branches in with one paw, browses
on the pungent leaves. In going through
.the woods you will find little piles of these i
fine leaves on the ground under hemlock i
trees. That means thab a porcupine is
feediag in the tree, the leaves on the ground
being drooped from his feast. Sometimes
a porcupine will remain in a hemlock tree a
week at a 'time, hugging. close to the trunk I
at, night and feeding during the day. This ,
curious little beast is the only known living 1
thing that eats the foliage of the hetnlook.
in Constentmople. All the r
mosques are to be transferred to it.
At the Belding Bros.' eilk worka, North-
ampton, Mass., there is a well 3,700 feet
deep thee is perfectly dry at the bottom.
The Goose Neck district, in Platte Co.,
Neb., boasts of a nise old lady who was
recently married to her eighth husband.
A prayer book was among the articles
found in the stomach of an ostrich which
was lately disseetee he London.
An ordinary day toacla weighe about 50,-
000 pounds; Pullman sleepers weigh about
74,000 pounds.
Lake Michigan is twice as deep as Lake
Superiot and nine times as deep as Lake
Erie.
Horses are said to be perticularly fond
of the skin of the banana.
A Boston housewife utilized hailstones to
freeze four quarts of ice cream.
One-fifth of the faaniliee in telasgow live
in single rooms.
Women of rank go bareheaded in Mexico.
There are only two lawyera in Iceland.
It would take a man 3,000 years to reed
all the standard works
A soientific joernel tells this story of al
A Bohemia:* Batrathian.
toad's cunning : A brood of chicks:as was
fed with moistened meal in sa,ucers, and
when the dough soured a little it attracted
large num.bers of flies. An observant toad
hed evidently noticed this and every day
toward evening he would. make his appear-
ance in the yard, hop to a sencer, climb in,
and roll over end over until he was covered
with meal, lowing done which he awaited
developments. The flies, enticed by tbe
smell, soon swarmed around the scheming
bistrathian, and whenever one passed with-
in two inches or so of his nose his toilette
darted out and the fly disep-peared. The
plan worlsed so well that the toad made a
regular business of it.
Millions of
sossmscrns.ssunssessasma *AY
Women use it
siessmszoisrMassts.messam.mssor.2
for all purposes
La.undry a.nd
ry-Msr:er•
HOUSeheld
,..superar0+1.3M0WOK•Miselo.
and -find it a
assmolsaMessmssasordmstmcm..MMosm
great comfort
elossarssAsseamsrnmemm,
and savor of
010.11,
Labor
right kind of food is supplied; and a thousand weaknesses and ailment
disappear as the nerves recover. As the nervous system must supply a
the power by which the vital forces of the body are carried on, it is th
first to suffer for want of perfect nutrition. Ordinary food does not eo
tain a sufficient quantity of the kind of nutriment necessary to rep,
the wear our presentinede of living and labor imposes upon the nerve
For this reason it becomes necessary that a nerve food be supplie
This South American Nervine has been found by analysis to contain th
essential elements out of which nerve tissue is formed. This accoun
for its universal adaptability to the cure of all forms of nervous d
rangement.
ditesorthesvmee, Atm.:it), 16. I Ilmaten. IVILEOlsoN, of tirownsvalley, In;
stays: "I had beim la a distressed condition
To the Gretzt South,4 fleriett*. Afediene
I desire to say to you that I
Dtaut thfNervousness, Weakness 0 '
have suffered for many years with a very serious re.e years ro=
Thdratenoefitieleoustuolihntetaelriaoni,dbnuetts neost.hiTptgrigneeVemrt' Suet0amthaewh,asnygenpnepe.siai %nada InCugeedtolcotno,ruLaug 1
staidly, -with no relief. I bought one bottl
any appreciable good until T was advised to
South American Nervine, which done me m
try your great South American Nervine Tonic
and Stomaelt and Liver Cure, and tints using
several bottles of it must say that I am sur- good titan any $50 worth of doctoring I ev
prised otitis wonderful powers to cure the stain-
stdnitnfuYslelitcbisIv1.17=3:17nibdeleolveerlYylverearnkelllYYP;
Lich and general nervoas sys e . •
knew the value of this remedy- as Ida you -would
few bottles of it has. cured me completely.
notbea.a. bAle, IttoAsenvpisly;Ethx_e•Tdreeraasuttudo.
ntgemery Co. 1 consider it the grandest medicine in the world."
A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' DANCE OR CHOREA.
eRVVOBDSVILLE, IND., June 22, 188
My, daughter, eleven years old, was severely afflicted with St. Vitus' Da
ar Chorea.. We gave her three and one-half bottles of South American
vine and she is completely restored. 1 believe it will euro every case of
Vitus' Dance. I have kept it in my family for two years, azoftain surei
the greatest remedy in the world for Indlerestion and Dyspepsia, and for a
forms of Nervous Disorders and Failing Iea1th, from whatever cause.
Jam T. Slum.
State of Indiana,
_Montgomery County, f
Subscribed and sworn to before me this June 28, 1887. .
CrsAs. W. WRIGHT, Notary Publf
A salnt is a man of conviction& who hes
been dead a hendrecl years, canonized now,
but cannonaded while living.
un:Ir
f▪ or c icaning nd
Sweetening; MU te •
e
• r 41 fit;
clothes and
1/211=17.222”101.....K.E.rir...9101111
M4I19111.
bands from in
• jury, nor for
.rr?Ag..?."e Xn
seastincavo...rfm, rs7-7-474;,,..t.reas
gone:roe sme.
10.1,1u.WSIE: CHEAP iftflit7c.,‘"FlOtifi
INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA
The Great South American 'C▪ orvine T011ie
Which we now offer you, is the only absolutely unfailing randy ever
discovered for the cure of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and the vast train of
symptoms and horrors which are the result of disease and debility of
the human stomach. No person can afford to pass by this jewel of incal-
culable value who is affected by disease of the stomach, because the ex-
perienee ansl testimony of many go to prove that this is the, ONE and •,•
ONLY ONE great cure in the world for this universal destroyer. There .,
is 110 case of unmalignant disease of She stomach which can. resist the
wonderful curative powers of the South American Nervine Tonle.
semen, E. ECALt, of Waynetown, Rays; Mao. Etta A. BRATTOlis of New Ross, 'Indiana,
"I owe Tn7 Ille to 'the Great South American55y$•‘I Cumnot express how much I owe to the ,
Nervine. I had been in bed for five nconthe from 1
the eifects of an
Nervine Tonle. My system wail completely shat-,,,,
exhausted etomac 11
Nervous Prostration, and a general thattered tered, appetite gone, was coughing and spttUng
condition of my whole system, Had given -up up blood; ani sure I was in the first stagee
all hopes of getting well. Dad tried three doe- of equsumption, an inheritance handed down
tors, with no relief. The first bottle of the Nerv- through several gene _Nations, 1 began taking
me Tonle improved me so much that I -was ableto the Nervine Tonic, dful continued its -use for
walk about, and it few bottles cured me entirety. about six months, and am entirely cured. It
1 believe it is the best medicine in the world. 1 is the grandest remedy for nerves, stomach And
can not recoramen , • lungs I have ever seen,"
No remedy compares with Sorrn AMSI1IOEL1E 141111MINS an it Cure for the Nerves. No remedy com.
pares with South American Nervine as a wondrous cure for the Stomach. No remedy wili at all
compare with South American Nervine as a cure for all forms of failing health. It never tails to
cure Indigestion and Dyspepsia. It hover fails to citre Chorea or St. Vitus' Dance, Its powers to
teild up the -whole system are wonderful in the extreme. It cures the old, the young, and the mid,
dle'aged. It is a great friend to tile aged and infirm. Do not neglect to rise this precioue .boon ;
if you do, you may neglect the only remedy which will restore you to health. South Americas
Nervine is perfectly safe, and very pleasant to the taste. Delicate ladies, do not fail to utte this
great cure, beam:sett will put the bloom ce freshness and beauty,upou your lips and in your ebeeks,
and quieklyr drive atray your disabilities and weaknesses,
16 - nee °tide, $1 ▪ Gal
LoargeivERY BOTTLE WARRANTED.
C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter.