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The Exeter Times, 1891-7-16, Page 2CAAf1iMEOh P'(XE ■ RHEUMATISM!, l euraigia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Headache, Toothache, Sore Throat, Frost Bites, Sprains, y Sruises9 Burns, Etc. Sold by Drueensts at:d Dealers everywhere. i?.ity owns i, h:ettte. Dtrertion,s in 11 Languages. ThE CHARLES A. VOI EtER Cil., tialimore, hid.. Qaaatiiai Toronto, Ont. S LOH'S 4 CONSUMPTJON CURE. The success of this Great Cough Cure is without a parallel in the history of medicine. All druggists are authorke d to sell it on, a pos- Ube guarantee, a test that no other cure can sue- cefutly stand. That it inky become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home in the United States and Canada. If yea have a Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for it will cure you. If your child has the Croup, or'Whoaping Cough, useitpromintly, and relief is sure. If you dread that insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist for SIIII,tIIi';; CURE, Price ro eta., so eta and $r.oe. If your Lun s are sore or Back lame, - u:e hileh'Forme Master, Price ne els. ,... Pang toil. , t a,ree.hatrt soumxarsr 1 ksfra, rc '.,,:a 1 . ids, loxes r. -t,! r„n7.'e,et, re cot. Utte:.ort.rhr.ia nsar i, Why rare e,rr,t.00,0e erdrtt. atkme,nhrrrr*.n-fo it E.!. sager, two tst!:y lam C6 f :. Ir to *leadsy.attss-s. hest. andaan a tcnw.J1.:re 1 ti¢np tee t n time. tees *yr or, fir work.rr. Fai'r'e not a,w n elm u« them. E1. an! xiordeds,.r'anrni.rsims, r -.117811,03i4s: Co .aioxtin*Porttosin 111nine LAMM) EMULSION COMPOUND LATE BRITISH NEWS. .A. Shocking Fatality. Iystert,otts DeaNear Liverpool - London carpeuters and joiners are now iu he ninth week of a lock -out. The house Which Lord Revelstoke was building previousoto the Baring failure is now Baron Hirselis, The Queen's head piper, William Ross, died two weeks ago in Windsor, aged 69, He had piped for her :tIajeety since 1S54. Twenty of the Members of the Sal action Army, who lately caused a disturbance at Eastbourne, have been sent to jail for a month. Iu the St, Jane's Palace Stakes, Common, the last Derby winner, started with odds ou • of forty to one, and his running justified the betting. • The last Irish census shows 2,310,076 males and 2,389,086 females, atotal decrease for kR decade of 468,074 attributed mainly to enii ;ration. Chars and fees paid by the late Dr, Magee to pass from the Episcopate of 1 eter- torough to the areliaepiseopate of York amounted to $3.500. The .$otart Mercury reports an extra- ordinary manifestation of evolution in the 4es-elc,pinent of a new sort of peril in Aus- tralian rabbits, in consefiuenceof their en- deavour to 'climb over wire netting fences. The Austrian Government has received :from Engleud another consignment of 100 i Iaxim niitraillerrses. They, as well as the ;Maxim already received, -will be placed at tfortifieations near the border. 1 What yachtemen would call two long legs :were made by tine schooner Bertha Louise in her recent voyage from St, Jobe, N. D,, to Barbadoes and return. Site made the voy age each way, about 2.,001) miles, withou- making a tack. Edward :dead a gardener, who lived at Walthamstow, cut his throat with a ocket- knife in front of a butcher's shop. lie then walked to some waste land at Wanstead !Slip, acid there reheated his action with a sfatal result. There was a track of blood. ;the wbole distarecs that he had walked. Betting losses is said to he the cause of bis ash act. On Saturday night the body of Rev. Ezra T. Shaw, G'nired Methodist Free Church minister, Hull, was found au Ii mber „Bank, at North Ferry, near Hull, with a revolver wound in iris head. The revolver was lying by his side. The deceased has been in a low state for some time, tieing no ,duty, and it is izelieved he committed suicide At the Wolverhampton Police Court ou Saturday a fox -terrier dee, belonging to George Lardner. of rr3 Melbourne Street, which was stated to have bitten three boys 'residing in the neighbourhood, was ordered to be destroyed, uotwitiistending a plea ptit forward for the defendant that, having no children of his awn, he treated the quintal as if it was his child, a remark which created some laughter in Court, N A shocking accident occurred in I3irken- bead on Saturday, A pian was driving a trap across the r t e do k Cathcart Street an crap across os with the decks when t was run into by an engine, 'L'hts than was kilted on Iii exington Ava.. 1w t,w.i.. ra=cc4 r•,¢ma m in several +.n s..1 at hires of Chronic Bronchitis, and the early stages of Ph., Phthisis, and have been well t,l'asrd with the results. JAMES K. CROOK, M.D. Nan. York City, Sept. , 1888. CONSUMPTION Brooklyn, N.Y., Feb, 14th, 1880. I have used your Emulsion in a case of Phthisis eonsnmptiont with beneficial results, 'where patient :ou1d not usa Cod Liver Oil in any form. J. H. bROGE, M. D. t ER ts PRO8T i :TION the spot, his head being nearly severed from the 1tt1.43r. rk boy in the trap 110.d on* 10g completely severed, and lies in the hospital in a critical condition. The trap wassmash- ed to pieces. ! A man named Patrick Tippin was killed on Monday at Saggart, County Dublin. It i would appear that he had returned from a National Federation meeting at Luean and that a row arose in the village, a number of parties who had accompanied hien to Lucau taking pert. In the struggle Tippin was ]ticked iu the stomach, and shortly after he zeas brought to his home he expired. There are conflicting statements as to whether the row was a. political or a mere local squabble. The police have made several arrests. i Brooklyn, N. 1., Dac. uUth,188S. I can strongly recommend Flax. Seed Emulsion as selpful to the relief and possibly the cure of all Lung,, Bronchial and Nervous .Affections, raid a good gen- sraltoaicin physical debility, JOHN I,. TALMAGE, M. D. GENERAL DEBILITY - Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 10th, ISM I regard Flax Seed Emulrioa as greatly superior t0 lie Cod Liver Oil Emulsions so generally in use, D. A. GORTON, M. D. wain SEARS 1E7West 34th St. New York, Aug. 6,1688. I have used your Flax -Seed Emulsion Compound sn a severe Base of Mal -nutrition and the resultwas more than noped for—it was marvelons, and con- 3nuouc. I recommend it cheerfully to the profession lad humanity at large. M. 11. GILBER1T, M.D. RHEUMATISM Sold by Druggists, Price $1.00. FLAX -SEED EMULSION CO. 35 Liberty St., New York. lfor sale by W. E. Coeheneaur, Exeter. Emulsion or Cod Luer Oil AND THE llypophosphites of Lime and Soda. No other Emulsion is so easy to take. It does not separate nor spoil. It is always sweet as cream. The most sensitive stomach can retain it. CURES Scrofulous and Wasting Diseases. Chronic Cough. Loss of Appetite. Mental and Nervous Prostration. General Debility, &c, Beware of all imitations. Ask for "the 1). f « L." Emulsion, and refuse all all ©the ,PRICE SQr, ?.No 'in iPER BOTTLE. On Friday night, in Dublin, the body of Thomas Boucher, an Army pensioner, was taken out of the River Liffey, the head being enveloped in a bandage. The police are investigating a strange statement made by the deceased's landlady, to the effect that on Thursday he went out with his brother, who afterwards returned with deceased's hat, and said he was dead. The brother has, it is said, disappeared. On Saturday morning during the ebb tide the body of a young woman, apparently about 28 years of age. was discovered on the shore opposite Waterloo, at the north -end of Liverpool. There was a wound in the throat, and the face was partially buried in the sand. Life 'had not apparently been long extinct. The police are now making inquiries as to indentity of the deceased and the manner of death. At Chorley a young fellow named Wm. H. Alston was charged with stabbing his wife When he asked for breakfast, his wife gave him a saucy answer, and he struck her in the breast with a knife. The prison- er made an elaborate statement of having married for love, but his mother-in-law came between him and his wife, and they had had no comfort since. The prisoner was com- mitted for trial. Whilst two Plyinouthians were returning home from work on Tuesday evening they were set upon by four Italians, who drew iknives and stabbed thein. One named Rockey had a deep cut in the right arm, and the other, whose name isRyderg sustain- ed a wound in the right wrist, nd a gash near the ebeek-bone: Early on Wednesday morning the police proceeded on board the Italian ship discharging petroleum at Ply- mouth, and arrested two seamen whom Rockey and Ryder recognised as their as- sailants. An ingest was held in Marylebone on the body of a seamstress, aged 64, who was found dead in her lodgings, where she bad led a secluded life. The deceased was a Pole, named Olivinska. Her condition was most wretched, and her room was almost destitute of furniture ; but the coroner's. officer found rnemorania showing that the deceased possessed English securities amounting to nearly £300, besides some French bonds. The jury found that the death was due to the rupture of a blood vessel in the brain. On Wednesday an embankment at the sewerage works at Seaview Street, Belfast, gave way and buried 12 workmen. The foreman labourer, William Early, a widow- er, about 40 years of age, residing at 67 Joseph Street, Shanklrill Road, was killed, and the others were injured, John Angus being seriously crushed. A body of men ' were occupied about an hour extricating the dead and injured. James Cunliffe, collier, of 43 Ashton Road, dge Green, Galborne, died at Wigan In- riflerybetween eight and nine o'clock on Haturday morning. On Friday night Cun- liffe went to bed in a drunken condition. He lighted a pipe, and while smoking in bed the bed -caught fire. Cunliffe sustained shocking burns on different parts of his body, and one hand was reduced to cinder -like substance= Cunliffe ran intothe street, where be met a member of the Golborne po- lice, wbe took the suffering roan back into hishouse and there dressed his wounds.. Mr Henry Burridge, residing at Helena House, Chelverton Road, Putney, appeared at \'P'aldsworth Police Court to answer a summons for disobedience to the order of the magistrate tahave his child vaccinated. The defendant admitted that his child wen not vaccinated, and said he had conscientious objections because he had been a sufferer i,oeo the effects of vaccination for the whole of bis life. hir. Denman said that was not a lawful excuse and imposed a penalty of 201 and costs. The defendant addressing the magistrate said—If my fears are realised and the child dies, who, in God's sight would Le the murderer, you or I? Tithe child dies it will be nothing less than murder, .England in India. It bas long been a wonder to many how England manages to maiutain herposition of supremacy in India,, and how with a Euro. peen army of only about 70,000 men and an administrative force of about 1500 she SUB. ceedsin governing foreigners a cation of i� e rs numbering more than 250,000,000 souls. And certainly the fact is unique in history. It is not wholly unaccountable, however; Had the Indian tribes been unit'et among themselves and not separated by ' renew of religion, raga, caste and by the sisal constitution of the country as welt it may be doubted whether England would have conquered the country in the first place or, conquering, that she would have held it now for nearly a half century. -Their differences made them a comparatively easy prey; and these same differences strengthen the hands of their rulers to -day. But will this state of things continue and ,Indians remain English? is the ii,teresting question at present agitating the minims of politieal prophets. Sono, among whom inay Ito men. tioned such .Englishmen as Ityndmaun, Sto- bie. Cotton,Townsend,etc. ,do not hesitate to affirm that the end of the British Empire in India is near at hand. In support of this contention they assert that discontent is spreading among the Indians, especially the manufacturers whale business has been de - strayed, by the extensive system of ratlwaya which have opened up the countryjto the British manufacturer and his cheaper goods, and that the leaven i to of ns rreatian' scads• l et work, 'Moreover, they cant d that the result of England's effort to at h the 0 Ilinda s to herself byinstructingi► Ci eau.. tr� eating them is far frm eucou ing. The educated native it is claimed "becomes sharper and more gunning but deteriorates in morality. He loses the belief oflris huh, ers without acquiring anything to take the place of that belief. I-Iis honesty is based only on fear of the policeman and his club. His education changes him from a good Hindoo into a terrible enemy." That the situation is as strained as mese pessimists would have us believe, or the feeling of dis- content with the rule of the foreigners so wide spread may well be questioned, It is not improbable, however, that as the Sinn doo'bocones more enlightened and civilized he wilt deinand a larger share in conducting the affairs of tate nation, a demand which when the time seems ripe England will no doubt be prepared to yield, England is no a novice in the matter of colonizing, and may be trusted to settle whatever teontin- geaofes future events may develop in this the most populous portion of the realm. The Ropal L3,bor Commission, The Royal Commission appointed by the British government to inquire iuto the labor question, Inas fairly entered upon its work, but when the assigned task will be completed he would bo rash indeed who wouldatternpt to predict. The Commission has divided its subject into three sections, oath of which is { to be considered by a separate committee. Group A includes mining, engineering, ship- building, hardware ; group B deals with questions of transportation and agriculture group C with textile, chemical, building and miscellaneous trades. From this classifi- cation it will be seen that the investigation coutomplated is most comprehensive, and that it is intended that no aspect of this burning question shall be overlooked. It is intended to go thoroughly into the q,iestions of wages, hours of labor, classification of work, apprenticeships, machinery, safety of employment, dismissal, refusal to work, employment of foreigners, obnoxious of- ficials, strikes and so forth. Judging from the manner in whicb the investigation has started out, it would seem as if all recent trade disputes were to be threshed out over again, with the labor side represented by acknowledged leaders giventhe first hearing. One result the Commission can hardly tail to bring about, viz., the finding out what really lies in the minds of workingmen with reference to most of the questions at issue between them and their employers. Deaths on Canadian Railroads. Statistics relating to the operations of Canadian railroads during the past year have just been presented to the House. From these it is learned that the number of passengers carried last, year by the various roads in the Dominion was 12,521,262 of whom 11, or one in every 1,074,569 was killed. Although as a matter of fact the proportion of fatalities is not large yet when compared with the proportion that obtains in Great Britain there is reason to believe that the number of deaths is un- necessarily large. Taking the years 1889 and 1888 (the figures for 1890 are not yet to hand) it is found that in 1889 the number of passengers carried on roads in the United Kingdom was more than 775 minions, of whom only 183, or one in every 5,236,000, was killed; while in 1888 the proportion of deaths was only one to every 5,942,336 car. ried. Were Canada's record as good as that of the Mother Country, instead of eleven there would be only two or three deaths to report. How far these deaths, or any of. them, were purely accidental and not in any measuredue to carelessness on the part of railroad employees or of the persons them- selves, though an interesting question, can- not be determined. It seems a reasonable inference, however, that if greater care were exercised by all concerned the present pro- portion might : bematerially lessened and our record made to appear more favorable. Good That Came of Evil. Mrs. De Style -Smith (showing off her new dress)—What esss)?What do you think of my new Paris d Poor Mr. Smith (her husband)—Howranch did it cost " 0, a trifle—only four or five hundred, I believe." How lucky it is for your dressmaker that Eve ate that apple and discovered her nakedness 1" THE AUST.SIA T COURT TRAGEDY. The Current acid Accepted Story of .the Manner of fringe ltttdolpk s Death - A writer says :=-I met the other evening at a dinner party a,most charming old Aus- trian lady who had come from, Vienna to Paris to visit her daughter, who is the wife of a French noldeman and had just present, ed her husband " s h an heir to their joint estates. After ..'nerthe conversatiou turned upon mat and: things in Austria, and I spoke of the mysterious death of the unfortunate Crown WilkeRudolph, and the secrecy that had been.observedconcerning all the details of that astly catastrophe. The Countess von '..X --shrugged her shoulders, "It is• a mystery for the outside world and for the newspapers if you will," she answered, " but the true story of the ease is generally known among the upper classes of Viennese society, and I have no objection to relating it to you, " Briefly stated, the facts are as follows A foreign nobleman, the prince de Z---,, wlio was a widower and a connection by marriage with a leading member of the Austrian royal family was presented one evening at a ball to the radiantly beautiful Baroness Marie de Vecsera, instantly fell madly in love with her and formed the re- solution of making her m k ng h r his wife. He was on tering of intimate friendship with the crown Prince, and before proposing in due ,form for the young lady's liana he consulted Prince Rudolph an the advisability of the step be was about to take. "I must seethe Baroness Marie," replied the Prince, " to ascertain if elle is in all respects as charm. iug as you say, before I give you my full ap. probation," The intros itetion took place, and the superb beauty of the lovely girl impressed Prince Rudolph no less than 11 had done bis friend before ldm. - "The passion thus inspired was mutual, mud of uncontrollable vehemence. A. liaison was formed, which was conducted with the utmost possible secrecy, but rumors of its rise and progress did not fail to reach the ears of the unfortunate Prince de Z—. At last the ill-fated expedition to Meyerling took piece, and the presence there of the lovers was betrayed io the unhappywooer by one of the servants who was in his pay. Ile hastened to Meyerling, but was denied admission- to the House. He then made his way to the back part of the ground, climbed ever the wall, scaled the balcony attached to the Prince's room, and, shattering the windows, he leaped into the presence of iris false friend and his faithl ss lady love, A. terrible hand-to-hand eneounter ensued betweeni t to two o men both of ,great strength and accustomed to all sorts of athletic exer- cises. Thefurniture of the roonr was literally smashed to pieces in the conflict. "Finally the Prince de l—snatched up an unopened bottle of wine and deatt the Crown Prince a furious blow on the head with it, crushing in his adversary'a skull and killing him instantly, The Baroness de Vecsera bad, it seems, always carried about with her a dose of strychnine, with a pre- monition of some such catastrophe. On seoing her lover fella corpse before her, she swallowed the fete' tiles and death iusned in a very short space of time. One of the young nobles who had been Prince Rudolplt's bnest at Meyerling hastened to Vienna to ear the terrible;, tidints to the Emperor, while anather-ol4 reinained to guard the heuso wherein lay the bodice of the lovers. "Tho Emperor," continued the Countess, "would. permit no legal proceedings to be taken against Prince de Z— declaring that he only acted in self-defence; neither would he consent to receive tice Prince's re- siguation of his position in the army. The facts were hushed up as much as possible. An discussion of the catastrophe was pro- hibited to the journals of Austria. But the story was known to too many persons to be kept a close secret," I afterwards met, at an eveningrcception, a Belgian physicianwho has been settled for several years past at Vienna. Ho fully cor. roborated all the detail sof the Crown Prince's death as imparted to me by the Countess von X -- , and added a curious little his- tory concerning the Emperor of Austria. It appears that for long years past his Majesty bas sought and found consolation for his troubles, and repose from the cares of State in the remarkable inteilectand bril- liant conversation of an ex -actress, by name Catharine Sabratt, whose counsels are said to have been of the greatest advantage to hint on many important affairs of state. He is accustomed to drive out to the pal- m° at Schoenbrunn, and there, leaving his equipage, he will be met by lime. Schratt, and will take long promenades r.e1t her in the forest to talk over matters and things in general. So widely is this friendship known in Vienna that the lady is known there as the Vice -Empress. Her extraordinary in- telligence and clear, cool judgment are valued in the highest degree by the Emper or and are acknowledged even by the Em- press herself. Premier Brett, of the North-West, who bas arrived at Winnipeg on his way home from Ottawa, states as to the result of his visit to the capital that he was perfectly satisfied with the outcome of his negotia- tions with the Government. He is fully convinced that the North- West will secure everything that has been asked for, even to a divisiou of the Territories into three gov- ernmental districts. The public appears to have misunderstood this proposition for division. It was not asked that three dice tricts should be established with an elabor- ate system of government, but with a sort of large county council, and that one lieu- tenant -governor should preside over the whole Territories, as at present., The formation of a great central European customs lePgue is an accomplished fact, acknowledged by the official circles. The exchange of communications between Ger- many, Austria, Hungary, Italy and Switzer- land has resulted in the basis of an agree. ment which became known in Berlin last week. Interest }n the realization of the most formidable zollvereia ever conceived will overstep that in every other public matter when the scheme is generally publish- ed. in the meantime the official circle alone knows the negotiations have attained a de- finitely successful stage. - The terms upon which commercial union was agreed are meant to be held secret untilafter thepleni- potentiaries prepare the draft of the treaty. A conference for this purpose has been ar- ranged to meet at Berne, July 20. The league is to be an intimate commercial alliance, in which no one of the contracting powers will be privileged to form. a trade treaty with any other-: outside the union until' it first, obtains the assent of the other parties to the alliance. It is understood that the Berlin Government has obtained the consent of the -Federal States of Germany to a de nunciation of the treaty of Frankfort, and to accept whatever consequences may arise'. from the hostility of France to such a course. The existence of the league will naturally affect the trading relations of the four con treating powers, with France, England, the United States and every quarter of the globe, ' .How far their independent action will bo controlled, depend upon- the nature of the decisions of the Berne conference: NORTHROP 8c LYMAN'S A Sure Cure ' for e n D�� spepsia•- .A Great •=° Blood —4e Purifier 3 - ISCO71RY A &dim rl Triumph HOW THE HEALTH OF ONE OF BELLEVILLE'S CITIZENS WAS RESTORED, I'xemarkable Cure of Dropsy acid Dyspepsia. Mn. SAMUEL T. Casey, Belleville, writes; ''In the springof 1884 began to be troubled wilds Dyspepsia, which gradually became more and more distressing. I used various domestic remedies, and applied to my phy- sictan, but received AKS benefit. - By this time my trouble assumed the form of Dropsy. I was unahle to use any food whatever, except boiled milk and bread ; my limbs were swol- len to twice their natural size; all hopes of sty recovery were given up, and I quite ex. peter' death within a few weeks. l`Tonrliaor ai n laterarl'e VEGETAsnu Descevi r. having been recommended to me, I tried. a bottle with but little Hope of relief ; and now, after using eight bottles, myDyspepsia and Dropsy are cured. Although now sevonty-uine years of age, I can enjoy my meals as well as ever, and my general health is good. I aur well kuowit in thissection of Canada, having lived here fifty-seven years; and you have liberty to use my name in recommendation 0f your VEGETABLE Discov ira,'which has done such wonders in my case." ts` Very Bad Ca: e 1 PvSPI;.Psla VANQUI'•SHED. ME. JAMES JORNSTOs, 4thth lot, Amaranth, writes: "Two be .ea of Non, Thier d: LYErAll's 'G BoETABLH DIsBOW' 1K eared me of Dyspepsia. Bine was a bad. Dasa and I had tried a number of other prepare. tions without getting any benefit from. then. Dyspepsia Had to Go. 111i:. W. J. DEYE&L, Wingliam, carpenter audbuiidcr, writes : "Three years ago 1 was greatly troubled with 1lyspopsie, ; a. pain he- twcen mysheulders was so bad thatIthougbb I would have to quit work altogether. No medicine gave sue ease until I gots bottle of Nonenaor &; LYMAN'S 'VEGETABLE D1SCOv- REY, which gave me relief. I continued tieing the medioine uutil I had takenthree bottles, when I was perfectly well, I consider it in, valuable ua a cure' for Dyspepsia. 1 know of i several persons who have used t with the saute iieuefit,'t NORTHROP 85 LYIDIAN CO - TORONTO, PROPRIETORS. 44.1.?" ^ ETER LUMBER YARD The tmdersigned wishes to infers, the Public in general that he keeps t;onstantty iii stock all kinds of BUILDING° MATERIAL lareeased or TTndree ed. PINE AND EBir LOCH LUMBER. ' ► S.HINGLE1S A SPECIALTY 900,000 XX and XXX Pine and Cedar Shingles now in stook. A. call solicited and satisfaction guaranted. JAZ= 'C7� 1:ilLii , --v• as DO YOU KEEP IT IN THE HOUSE? ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM, NO BETTER REMEDY FOR COUGHS, COLDS, CROUP, CONSUMPTION, &C. MoCOLL BROS. & COMPANY, TORONTO. Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in the :Following specialties Laraine Cpl=aider Red Engine '�i'oo1. L Solt Cutting Eureka TRY OUR LARDINE MACHINE OIL" ! AND YOU WILL USE NO OTHER. For Sale By B1SSETT BROS. Exeter, Ont. Perry Davis; PAIN -KILLER Is need both internally and externally. It acts quielriy, affording almost instant relief from the severest pain. i-- . . DIRECTLY TO THE SPOT. IILSTAUTA$EOUS IN ITS ACTIOjtI For CRAMPS, CHILLS, COLIC, DIARRHD;AA, DYSENTERY, CHOLERA MORBUS, and all BOWEL COMPLAINTS, NO REMEDY EQUALS THE PAIN -KILLER. Complaints effect is Bowel . It cures in a very short time. THE BEST FAMILY REMEDY FOR BURNS, BRUISES, SPRAINS, RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA and TOOTHACHE. SOLD EVERYWHERE nr 260. a Souse. JO' Beware of Counterfeits and Imitations. Manufactured only at THOMAS HOLLOWAY'S E+STABLISIHMENT, 78, 141EW OXFORD STRM1GT, LO1�TI]ON. am, 9 4e~ 4awe'. 1-e'- CP C.1• 8' •s,,,'4�de q,4� `e. .1‘.4420 1X11 49b ofe a d4 1'4°.,1ti, ebi �g' aq ro•�t° 4o db �'o�� <e4°;b'S����eS��NO � brp�y0 RIP• 0o1' ;m . 4a3 ,ogee op< n�9 of e 01t��eef oc ..• . Purchasers should look to the Label on the Sexes and Pots, If the anuress is net 633, Oxford Street, London, they are;spdtitfsc 1