The Exeter Times, 1894-10-11, Page 7Atte nti o
tn. time to, any irreg'ularity Of MO
43t°114091)Ltve, er 130we1e may
prevent seriOU$
consequ ence%
Indigestion,
c ostiveries$,
headache,
sea, bilious.
ness, and Ver.
t i go indicate
certain func.
• tional derange-
ments, the best
r emedy
•Weldeh is Ayer's Pills. Purely vege-
• table, sugar-coatcd, easy to take arid
quick to assiniilate, this is the ideal
famil3r Morlieine—the most popular,
gate; and ureoful aperient in phara
Macy. Mrs. M. A. BROOKWELL,
tIarris, Tenni, says:
"-A•yer's tathdfrtle Pills cured me of sick
leadache and tny husband of neuralgia, Wa
Mere is
No Better Wiedieiner
and have iedueedisj to use it.
'Thirty -giro years ago this Spring, rwast
fun down lay hoard work and a succession of
colds, whith trade roo so feeble that a was
an effort for vae to walk. I consulted the
doeterssirel kept sinking lower until I bad
even cy ail hope a ever being better.
liappenum to Be tu a store, ono clay, where
medicines verse said, the pi?oprietor noticed
ins weak and sfeetly appearance, and, after
a fear euesltazas as to my health, recom-
mended rue a try Ayer's Pills. 1115(1 little
faith ha theate or any other medicine, but
cohauslect.at last. to take Lis aavice and-. try
a box.. Berate I had used them all, I was
Vet'Y raucialgatter, and two boxes cured me.
1 a,m now V> 'years old; bat I believe that
ff it had not teem tor Ayor's Pills, I should
haye beat tat or,s- grave long ago. l'boy
boxes every-yerrs, which make ate Moires op
to ;this time, Tara1 mould no mere be with -
Out them Mae withrou't bread:La-H.
Ilgre,hans, Rot:Sr:land, Me,
AYER'S FULLS
ry utzl Fiottiecteire
DEAR Sma,—I had
severe headache for
the past three years,
and was not free
feom it a single day.
4489 PL011/ ticeoasao, J;used doctors' medi-
cines asad all others
Isoould think of, but it did me no good.
74y cousin said I must
TRY
because it is tlir best medfoine ever
me.de, and I took three bottles of it, with
the result that it has completely cured
Me. I think Burdock Blood Bitters,
hpth or headaches • and as a blood
purifier, is the
BEST IN THE WORLD,
anal am glad to recommend it to all m3
friends, nue Fataua MoDowsms,
Glen Norman, Ont.
CEN TRIM
rug Store
PAXSON'S BLOCK.
J. full stock of all kinds of
" Dye -stuffs and package
Dyes, constantly on
hand. Winan's
Condition
Powd-
the best
in the mark-
et and always
resla. Family reoip.
„ees carefully prepared at
Central Drug Store Exete
LLTT'It
R. FOI/V1_,EFIS
•EXT: OF 6
"WiLD'
TfijiMtBERIli
c (JR ES
HOLtER
holeraMorbw
OL.r I C'eA-9--*
RAMF'S
IARRII
YSENTERY
M as ALL SUMMER COMPLAMTS
AND PLOXES or THE BOWELS
rr IS SAFE AND RELIABLE FOR
ti4ALDREN R ADL/gr.
In time of War France puts 370 out of
every 1,000 of her populatioa in the field ;
Germany, 310 ;tseia j0.
4A1•0 cartages used by the German Ern.
Amor are lighted by eleotrieity.
(iIIILDREN OF THE STATE,
pRovniciAL CONFERENCE OF TliEIR
FRIENDS, TORONTO 00TDEE1
is —19,
Caws and Methods of Work to e Discus
-
Sett by EXperleneed Workers -Delo -
Wars Front All Parts or Ontario Will
.4.1 to d-iltedneed Ilialiway Fares.
• One of the great moral reform mqvements
of ths age has been to protect children
from the contaminations of vice, aims and
pauperigni. Up to within a very recent
date no thought was given to child -legislation
and no safeguards were provided to save
young lives being blasted on the very
threshold of life , 11 a boy of six or eight
stole an apple he was a criminal in the
eyes of the law anc1 was tried and convicted
on exactly the same procedare as if he were
a man of mature judgment. Young girls
in the same way were subjected to condi-
tions that conspired to rob them of their
innocence and degraded them irretrievably
before they °quid appreciate the priceless
value of viatica,
It is strange to reflect how carelessly
this whole subject has been dealt with
The 'Eitate is so wholly dependent on its
children, their welfare is so vital to its
stability and progrees': that one would
expect to find that many years ago laws
were in costive force secaring for them the
fullest protection and justice. Yet we
read of ohild-slavery, of child -insurance, of
baby -farms whose infants are slowly
murdered, of boys and girls taught by
worthless parents to beg and steal, and
even sell themselves, of little ones suffering
from the cold and hunger that drunkenness
brings hi its train
• A WORLD-wIDE MOVEMENT.
Now, all over the world, there is the
general desire to better the condition of
the children so that they may • worthily
carry forward the banner of Christian
civilization, and empty the prisons and
refuges that burden the honest toilers.
More and more is it becoming recognized
that the criminal is the natural and inevi-
table outcome of the stieet-boy's wild
and untrained life—that the poor prostitute
and despised drunken outcaet is the grown-
up girl whose evil home and impure sur-
roundings have dragged her down to the
gutter in which she now grovels.
No longer do the laws admit the parental
control to be supreme. Too often, alas,
has this control resulted in the ruin of body
and soul. of unfortunate children and
the rule been proved that vicious
parents will educate children viciously
by precept as well as example if some
higher power does not step in to protect
both the child and the g tate. Wise laws
have been framed, which, if vigorously
carried out, would stop an immense
amount of child.misery, and cut off much
of the criminal supply at its source. The
great point now is that friends of children
should rally to their aid, familiarize them-
selves with the laws designed for their
protection and see that these laws are not
allowed to remain a dead letter.
ONTARIO CONFERENCE.
To aford an opportunity for this it has
been arranged to hold a two -days con-
ference in Toronto, for all workers kr
neglected children in Ontario. These
meetings will open in the Assembly Hall of
the Confederation Life building, corner of
Yonge and Richmond streets on Thursda,y
morning October 18th and continue until
Friday evening. A programme will Lie
arranged that will include all branches of
the work—the infants, home work, the
boys' home, girls' home, orphans' home,
industrial school, reformatory, refuge
work, the children's aid society, the
children's visiting committee and even the
baby farm. All who are in any way con.
nected with these institutions, or interest-
ed in these or other forms of practical
philanthrophy as devoted to children, are
invited to attend the conference. In the
first place it is desirable that workers
should become acquainted with each other,
as they can then correspond and assist &mil
other much more readily. Then there are
many laws and methods of procedure only
slightly understood at present which could
be very easily explained the course of a
general discussion by experienced workers.
The indications are that the conference will
be a great suceess.
itt soMKWII0 WILL ATTEND.
Judge McDonald, of Brockville, who ,yea
a member of the recent Dominion
Commission on the liquor traffic'wil1
take the chair. Among these 'who have
remised to attend and take part in the
discussion are Judge Ards.gh, of Barrie; H.
H. Strathy, Q.C., Barrie; Warden Maggie,
of the Central Prison; Chief Deteetive
Stark, of the Toronto Police Department;
Judge Woods, of Chatham; Police Magis.
trate McIntyre, of Lindaay; Supt. McCrea.
son and Chaplain (lard, of the Ontario Re.
formatory for Boys; Supt. Hassard and
Sec, Atkinson, of the Victoria Industrial
School ; James B. Coyne, Pres. of the
Children's Aid Society of St. Thomas; S.
M. Thomson. Sec. of the Children's Society
of Brantford; Mayor Smith and F. W. Gal-
braith, of Guelph; Rev. Thos. Geoghegan,
James Watson. and George Rutherford, of
Hamilton; Rev. Canon Greene and G. H.
Hale, of Orillia; Hon. Chas. Drury, Sheriff
of Simcoe; Hon. G. W. Allen, Hon. M.
Gibson, F. W. Mathews, D. S. Perrin, T.
R. Parker and St IL Break, of London;
We. Thornley, President of the W.C.T,T3.
of Ontario; James Oran and Mrs. E. A.
Wheeler* of Paris; Mts. A, Covers, of Galt;
Mrs. S. G. McKee, of Barrie; John Arm-
strong, President of the Children's Aid
Society of Owen Sound; Williaan Grant, of
Orillia; Rev, J. R. Riaok, of Kingston; Mrs.
J. Motz, of Berlin; 11fro, W. S. aarland, of
Clinton- Messrs. E. Ballent and j M
Bonds of Guelph, and many others from
places scattered all over Ontario.
TRAFFIC IN•eins,
The 014 London Horror litevive4--.Childecit
nrottgitt From the Continent For Int.
moral Purposes,
luch sensational oorrespondenee appears
in the London daily newspapers arising
from the discovery of a revival Of the train°
in girls between the continent and Londen.
It bad been supposed that the traffic had
been suptiressed, The" London Times pub.'
lished on WedoeSday a story to the effect
that e. Frankfort girl who had obtained a
sitnation iti Louden had been Saved front
proeuration Ouly by aecidentally getting
TLIE'EXETER TITIES
the protection of an Englisli laay, who 000t
her to the German Consulate. The haquiriee
that fellewehewed that a eyatematie
business of this kind is stili oared on. The
pollee are on the track of the persons en,
Raged fa the traffic, and are actively septet -
ed by 'agents of the Purity Sooiety. Re,
arding the train° in women in 3mlia and
hint, the Purity Society bee obtained
testimony from the Sheriff of Singapore
that within five years 4,100 girls acme
very young, were landed in Singapore for
immoral purposes.
ANTIQuiTIEs IN CANADA.
A. Gentleman or British Columbia Has
• round a Skull or a Tyne or an Extinct
Enke.
Mr. Hill -Tout, a member of the Histori-
cal and Scientific Society of Vancouver, has
been digging arnoog the mounds at Hatzic
in the New Westminster district, He has
been rewarded by finding a skull of a type,
he is convinced, of an extinct race, He has
been itt correspondence with the learned
Dr, Dawson, of Montreal, and others, re-
garding the subject, whose opinions, he
gays, agree with his own that this empty
dome of thought did not belong to any
of the present race ot native inhabitants.
Mounds similar to those at Retain can be
Lound in various parts of the western
province, There can be no doubt that they
were
BuRIAL GROUNDS.
But what, ages may have elapsed since the
last man of the prehistoric race was laid
away in the lap of mother earth upon their
grassy slopes is open to very wide conjec.
ture. Cartier saw the Indians making em-
bankments, the remains of which are num.
erous to -day throughout the East, but they
must have got their plans from some Tar-
tar or other original source. Mr. Hill.
Tout made enquiries among the Siwashee
in the neighborhood where he made his ex-
cavations, and he tells us that they knew
nothing of the mounds either traditionally
or from tribes who had been before them.
The report of Mr. Hill -Tout's lecture be-
fore the Vancouver association is So meagre
that we are not told how he arrives at the
supposition that the skull found by him is
at least from 1,500 to 2,000 years old. It
was in
A GOOD CONDITioN
of preservation, by reason of the fact that
on the top of the mound a cedar tree had
grown, some 4 or 5 feet in diameter, the
roots of which had kept dry and preserved
the skull. The tree itself is in the last
stage of decay. But how long had the
skull rested underneath before the green,
infant branches of the tree shed their first
fragrance around? Among other relics in
the same mound the digger found a copper
ring. This gives' us no clue to the age of
the individualwho owned the skull, since
copper is older than the sorrows of Job.
The pursuit of science amongst us is quite
in its infanoy still. If among our great na-
tural and historical treasures we only had
the good fortune to possess a Duke of Ar.
gyll,or some modern wealthy and influential
friend of science, we woald perhaps know
more than we do concerning the antiquities
of our country.
FIRE SUPERSTITIONS.
odd Notions About combustion in Vari-
ous Countries. .
Where a fire burns upon the hearth the
Germans say that lightning never strikee.
In Cambridgeshire, England, there is a
curious belief to the effect that a fire started
by a lightning stroltd can only be quenched
with milk.
In Devonshire if a fire burns blue and
dead it is thought so be a forerunner of
death or disaster in that house.
When a Russian family moves from one
house to another they always rake all the
fire from the hearth of the old domicile and
carry it in a closed pot to their new
residence.
The Siciliana say that fire will not burn
a man born on St. Paul's day (January 25),
but that if a woman be burned upon that
day the sore will never heal and will even.
Madly cause her death, according to the
St. Louis Republic.
In Greece, when one peasant borrows fire
from another's hearth to kindle his own,
,the owner of the fire must accompany the
borrower to his home "to see the fire
blaze," otherwise the one making the loan
will have his house and goods destroyed by
the devouring element.
In Wales and in Cornwall miners burn
their hats upon the birth of amale child: if
a girl be born his neighbors burn it for him,
STABBED TO DEATH IN PLAY.
now John Brand, a Wealthy Bogattattet
Farmer, Was Killed*
A. despatch from Forest, Ont., says :—
Last Friday evening David Brand, a prom-
inent farmer in Bosauquet Township, met
with an accident, which resulted in his
death on Sunday night. At supper time,
while some of the men were fooling, Mr.
Brand was accidentally struck in the eye
with a pitchfork, The tine touched the
brain and paralysis instantly set in. He lay
unconscious 48 hours and diod without
rallying. Mr. Brand was for several years
deputy -reeve of Bosanqueb, mad Svas one of
the wealthiest farmers of the township. He
was 46 years of age and left a widow and
nine children.
�e1 Reason.
• Loving husho.nd—"The tut letter X got
from you while r,waa way, was the first
one Vott ever wrbbe without a postooript."
Fond wite—"I know it, darling, I had
no more paper. .
THE PAM..
Parrn Machinery,
What a wonderful improvement has been
made In this line duriug the last thirty or
forty years, Then everything was rude and
orucle, made without any atteinpt at sym-
metry or *artistic design. Presto 1 what a
change 1 Coald those who " blazed " the
way for Western eivilizetion, those who
bore the burdens in the conquest of the
wilderness alid wrested a livelihood from its
virgin soil with their'simple tools,have seen
the display at the World's Fair of that
matchless array of implements upon which
the greatest ingenuity of the artisan and
artist had been exhausted and which ahone
resplendent with gold and silver, they
would have thought themselves in .fairy
land.
But to the modern farmer, in this ape of
development and invention, nothing causes
much surprise arid wonder. He seems to
think there's nothing new under the sun,
and the fact hi many of these splendid
labor-saving tools that are so nearly per-
fect are so poorly'appreciated and cared for
that they don't remain "new" very long
tor the sunand sky are about the only
covering they ever get.
No wonder some people complain of hard
times 1 In driving over the country one sees
tons 61 thousands of dollars'worth of costly
implements lying unsheltered, rusting and
rotting.
We knew a man who kept the new can-
vasses from the binder in his hen.house, It
is almost needless to add that the sheriff
sold him out.
Brining Butter.
It is difficult to lay down a hard-and-fast
rule, says an ex -dairy teacher in London
Dairy as to the strength of the brine. In
its use a dairy maid ought to mako the
brine of the strength best calculated to suit
the market to which she sends the butter.
Should only a very slightly salted butter be
required, as for the London market, one
pound of good salt to a gallon of water, left
on the butter for about ten minutes,will be
sufficient; enough brine should be used to
cover the grains thoroughly. As a general
.rule, a little less brine than the quantity of
cream put in the churn should be used. If
a more fully salted butter be desired the
amount of salt to the gallon should be in-
creased and allowed to remain a longer
time on the grains of butter—say twenty
minutes to half an hour. I certainly con-
sider salting by means of brine the best
method, if carried out with judgment. I
find there are many who have tried brine
and given it up because they fail to get the
butter sufficiently salt; and on inquirtsg
;generally find the butter is churned. into
lumps before brining. Done in this way,
it is useless, as it would be hours before the
salt had penetrated to the center of each
lump, while the exterior would be too salt,
thus ladling' to effect that uniformity which
should be the aim and object of all good
butter -makers. On the other hand, if the
grains are not larger than wheat at the time
of brining, the salt will quickly penetrate,
distributing it far more evenly thanby dry
salting, and also, in my opinion'improving
the color, flavor and texture. Should the
dairy maid be churning daily, and desire
to be economical, she can with safety, if
the brine be clear when drawn off, use it
again for her next lot tf butter; of course,
adding a little salt to make up for that
inoorporated in the previous day's butter.
The salt used should always be of the very
best quality, either for dry salting or brin-
ing—though it is perhaps not quite ao
important in the latter case. The uae of
inferior salt often spoils large quantities of
the butter placed on the market, which
otherwise might have been of good quality.
It is false econonfy to use so celled cheap
salt, and eapecia.11y as a reliable brand is
now so easily, obtainable.
Cleanliness.
The meat of the animals being fattened
as well as the milk from the cows in the
dairy, are easily affected by the food that
they eat and the quarters in which it is
given. Cleanliness pays in the better health
secured and in the better quality of the
Product. Animals that are compelled to
eat in filthy quarters or to eat unclean food,
cannot keep healthy. Because numbers do
live through so as to be finished fot market
does not prove that they were more or less
diseased and that it was only a question of
time until it would develop. Cleanliness
not only saves feed, but improves the pro-
duct. A better gain in proportion to the
amount of food supplied can always be
sesured if the animals are kept in clean
quarters, and only sound, healthy, clean
food is supplied to them. In order to secure
the best possible gain, the best health is
necessary. Thrift and vigor are essential
in digesting and assimilating the food most
thoroughly, and good digestion and assimi-
lation are necessary to make the most out
of the food and gm animal cannot maintain
the heat health when eating unhealthy
food in unhealthy surroundings.
It is easier to commenoe hi the fall to keep
clean than to allow the quarters to become
foul and then attempt to clean up. Plenty
of bedding with regular oleanling out will
help to maintain cleanliness. Good racks
and troughs, veith care in handling the
feed, will help materially to supply clean
food with hogs. A tight place fey feeding
graihe and good troughs for feeding slops
and supplying water will aid materially in
supplying clean food to the hoga, and alt
the same time lessen materially the waste.
From this time on until the stock can be
turned out into the pastures, more or lees
feeding of all of the etook will be necessary,
and it is quite an item to supply under eiteh
conditions as will secure the best possible
results and nothing is of more importance,
when all things are taken into censidera.
tion, than cleanliness in the food and the
aupplying.
Two 'Views.
Western Farmer—" The corn atop is
ruined. Why, air, the hot winds just burnt
it right up/ •
Western. Rea' Estate 1V1an—"The great
and glorious Wet ig the plaee to live.
Why, sir, this summer we just feasted os
hot roast sore right out in the fields."
Children Cr f rt h C t "
,y or c er s as (ma,
JAPAN AND HER PEOPLE.
Wile• Ilan is the Pleasantest aud nesi ani•
Pitaine iteing on Earth.
Since the outbreak of the war iXk Eaotera
Asia, tbe Occidental natiOng have added
greatly to their store of knowledge regard-
ing Japan, and the progress, that has been
Made in the Mikatio'e silbjeete during the
past thirty years has excited the wonder
and admiration of every reader. While
little has been learned regarding the Chin'
ese that is caleulated to effect a ehange in
the opinion that Europe o.nd Ameriea haVe
formed of them, the stories of the immense
and rapid progress of the Jar aualie have
almost led the Aryan people to conclude
that they are not as a race their inferiors,
but their equols,and to generously applaud
and sympathize with them in their efforts
to win the primacy of the East. During
the past few years Japan has been the fash-
ionable field for the investigations of globe
trotters and aesthetic pleasure -seekers, and
the smiling Jap has been pronounced the
pleasantent and most hospitable !being on
earth. The good foreigner him been capti-
vated by his arts andgro.ces, by the beauty
of his country; and by his patriotism, and
upon returning to Chriatendom has dwelt
as did Sir Edwin Arnold, upon the aesthe-
tio aspect of Japanese life, to the erAusion
feel-
ingswhat ie more solid. These visitors have
been regarded by the Japanese with feel.
AraUSEraeNT AND RESENTMENT,
and when they pose as critics Japan has
proteeted. Fearing that the country may
be contaminated, they have cried out
against the further introduction of civiliza-
tion, and Japan has laughed. Mr. K. T.
Takahashi, a talented Japanese contributor
to the Canadian Magazine, probably ex-
presses the feelings of his fellow -country-
men when, in referring to the people of
Europe and America, he exclaiins "Do
they know that out of one hundred foreign
visitors to Japan, sevent7-five are, I may
be allowed to say, pleasure -seekers, who
are only too apt to indulge in vagaries
unworthy of home and relatives ; and
twenty-four are commercial Christians,
whose Christianity is consistent only with
their simple motto, Heathens have no
rights'; while the remaining one is that
good missionary just out of a college cradle,
who, instead of looking after those globe-
trotting sinners of hi a own race, is destin-
ed, as soon as he reaches Japan to write
home reporte of 'divine graces' and other
merciful things, among, every -day people
to whom salvation is precisely as good
whether it proceeds from Christ, or Bud-
d ha, or Mahornet, for that matter, so long
as it promises to be of fairly good quality."
It has been chiefly from the pleasure.
seekers that the world' has acquired know-
ledae of Japan, and from their views it has
formed its opinions. It is only now learn-
ing that it has been in error.
As is well knowtt to every reader of Ja-
panese history, a new era began with the
downfall of feudalism in 1868. The Toku-
gawa Shogunate were then overthrown,
privileges and distinctions of rank were
abolished, the doors of the Western world
were thrown open, and the Japanese pre-
pared to join the family of civilized na-
tions.
TREF MADE MISTAKES,
as experimenters always do, but they also
made nore progress in a generation than.
any country of Europe has made in a cen-
tury. They have been exploring every
nook and cranny of kuowledge, of art and
industry, of philosophy and of specula-
tive morality. Thoroughness has been
their ruling principle, and the consequence
is that as a nation Japan is perhaps one of
the best informed respecting the affairs of
other nations. • Her people are splendidly
self-confident, their ambition knows no
limit, and their patriotism is unbounded.
Of his country the writer before emoted en-
thusiastically says. "She has her twenty-
five centuries of unbroken independence
and undefiled individuality to cherish for-
ever with fondness and pride; to look back
to for inspiration and aspiration." Many
incidents that have been recorded since the
outbreak of the war illustrate the fact that
shnilar feelings dominate the Japanese
wherever they may be, and one is almost
led to believe that, should success crown
their efforts in the present war, the twen-
tieth century may be not more than well
begun when their civilization will be high-
er than our own.
A Dog and a Lord Story.
An anecdote about Lord Rosebery is
going the round of some French and Ger-
man papers. It ie alleged that once, while
crossing from Liverpool to London, or vice
versa, Lord Rosebery lost his favorite dog
'-Mutton" overboard. " S top, captain,
stop the steamer I" cried Lord Rosebery.
But the captain replied that he was only
allowed to stop if a man fell overboard.
"Oh. that Oan soon be arranged,"answered
Lord Rosebery, and jumped into the sea.
Of course the captain had to order "Stop,"
and the peer and his dog were taken up safe
and sound.
'KENDALL'S.
SPAWN CURE
4,4
E
MlISI".dlICCESSFOL REMEDY
' FOR MAN ON BEAST.
certain faits effects and never blistorg.
Read Dreofg below ,
.
KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE
. nimeronvz Jam 15,1801.
Dr. D. J, nasDAaa co.
Gent/men-I bought 5 spiondid bay bane some
Mine agowith a saavi a. 1gal:bill far S80. 5 hoed
Bandon's %Anna core. The Sbasirin la ono how
and I have been offered Stge Ur the tame horse.
I ems lute bita tibia Weoltg, go I got troo tor wine
sg Werth of itendatea 'Sporn Our
Votint truly, Vi". S. MAUSnnt.l.
KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE
Suttar, Moir, Dee, 10, 1855.
ree n, telmsra, to. '
have used your Rondttll'a SMWiti yard •
With good sueeess far 47,tibbES an twoliorses 531(1
It Is the bost Liniment I have ever asset..
Vow% truly, Ateesr rareceracat,
• Isrla6 St net Uattle.
VOis eats br tniDrugglats, orAcldrogg
Pr. Xi RIMDAZZ
SN080LIa014
7,7•0"
A01i 'S 37
SICK
HEADAC
The Bane of Millions of Lives
ITS C A -13 S E
Sick Headaehe is a malady which
makes its appearance most frequently
in women. The attack often begins
in the morning, upon awakening,
after a night of restlessness or heavy
sleep; though it is especially wont
to occur in connection with emotional
disturbances, suoh as excitement,
fright or mental strain. The pain is
usually localized, being in eone or
•the other, more frequently the left
side of the head. It is generally
accompanied by great disturbance of
the stomach, when light pains the
eyes; noises otherwise unnoticed
inflict punishment; odors excite
nausea. From the fact that people
with strong nerves are never troubled
with Sick Headache, it is generally
conceded by the most eminent phy-
sicians that it is dependent upon
weak nerves or nervous debility, and
can only be permanently cured by
strengthening the nervous system.
The Great South American Ner-
vine Tonic is the only remedy manu-
factured which is prepared especially
and expressly for the nerves. It
acts directly on the nerve centres at
the base of the brain, correcting any
derangement there may be, greatly
Increasing the supply of nervous
energy or nerve fore, giving great watt woman."
tone to the whole body, and thereby
enabling a system subjeot to Sick
Headache to withstand future attacks.
It gives' relief in one day and
speedily effects a permanent care.
Mrs. 'Isabella S. Graham, of
Friendswood, Indiana, writes: "Pot
a number of years I have suffered
intensely with Nervous and Sick
Headache; had hot flashes, was
sleepless and became despondent.
Dr. Faris, of Bleomington, Indiana;
spoke so highly of South American
Nervine that I was induced to buy a
bottle. That purchase led to a few
others, and. now I sleep eoundly, feel
buoyant, strong and vigorous. I
would not be back in the condition I
was in when I begaia taking this
medicine for any sum you could
name,"
Mrs. J. H. Prouty, of La Gr ange,
ineliana, writes: "Your South Amer-
ican Nervine Worked a marvellous
cure with me last year. I began
taking it last April about the 201h.
The first week I made a gain of 16
lbs. and from that time on I made a
deader gain until I reached my
normal weight, making in all a total
gain of 80 lbs. After taking it three
or four months I found myself a
C. LUTZ 'Soh? Wholesale and Retail Agent foi Exeter.
Da. MoDannun, Agent, liensall.
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