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The Exeter Times, 1894-11-15, Page 3,• • VRE EXETER, TIMES • ttention la time to any irregularity of the omach, Liver, or Bowels may prevent serious oonsequenc es. FORELI CANADIAN NUM INTERESTING- ITEMS ABOUT OUR OWN COUNTRY. Gathered Prom Varioua Points Front the Atleutie to the Paenba e Waikerton curlers have erganized. rphoid fever is stiU raging in Winnie rtlo's mill, Doreheeter, is being re, ..4 • 1,v P ftt ' " ;,i , ,. Which. is Ayer's table, sugar-eoated, quick to assimilate, f aridly medicine—the vale, and useful Macy. Mrs. garris, Tenn., ,foo '.4C'8 cathartic headache end iny think there is P10 setter mid have induced ... °Thirty-five years inin clown by hard eolols, whleh made ail effort for me doctors, but kept taen up all hope nnening to be medieines were my weak and sickly it few questions euended me to try laitli in these zonoluded, at last, •a box. Before very remit better; I am. now 80 years if it had not been have been in my boxes every year, to this time, and out them than Ingraham, Rockland, AYER'S Prepared by Dr. -Evety Dose , costiveness, headache, nau- ea, bilious. --, neps, and ver- certain f um- tonal derange- •.i remits, the best , remedy for Pills. Purely vege- easy to take and this is the ideal most popular, aperient in phar- M. A. BitooKwra,r,, says: Ms cured, me of. sick nuthancl of neuralgia, Wes !Medicine, many to use it. ago this Spring, I was • work and a succession of me so feeble that it was to walk. I consulted the sinking lower until I had of. ever being better. in a store; one day, where sold, the proprietor noticed appearance, and, after as to my health, rem:, Aye's Pills. I had little or any other meaicine, but to take his advice and try .1 had. used theraall, I was and two boxes cured me. old; but I believe that for Ayerei rills, I should grave long ago. I buy 6 which make 210 boxes up I•would no more be with- witbott bread."—H, If. 310. PILLS 3.0. Ayer Az 06..Lovreleltesse Effective •, 4 ' TI T. peg. P, bit II wor Ad age, g fiat 'I Pro I aro i A ho ., II. ! hte I wt , _ wc all of st ee "" pC .0,3 00 St II( Bi le ---* -/ fo 1 ,„ --. J.HE t or AleTVMEZETER ....rim... TIMES sOEN Drug MANSON'S A. fall stook Dye -stuffs Dyes, hand. Condition in ' et resit. ees carefully Central Drug O. TRAL Store BLOCK. a P ol G c...4.:*, 1 1 of all kinds of •and package constantly on . I Wman s • Powd- er, the best the mark- and always Family recip- prepared at Store Exete Iitirr.7a. S STARKS , POWDERS Cure SICK HEADACHE and Neursigie in zo ormurgs, also Coated Tongue! Dizzi- ness, Bil1ousnessa1n in the Side, Conatiplition, Torpid Liver, Bad Breath. to stay cured also regulate the bowels. VERY WOE TO TAKE. PRIOR 25 CENTS M' CRL,Gi STORES HAVE YOU .,BAc K= AC H E • ono's KIDNEY. • PILLS ,.....- • 'WILL. CU RE. YOU "Back ac he means the hid- neys are in"Delay :erouble, Dodd's Kidney Pills glue prompt relief." "75per cent. •, of disease is first caused by disordered kid -0 neys, • "Mightaswell try to have a healthy city without sewer- age, as good health when the . kidneys are • clogged, they are • Sold by all dealers or of mice so cents, per • Dr. L. A. Smith Se Co, beak called Mislay Talk, itepeosomemseeemoseemeesemeesesseeseeremee the scavengers of the system, is dangerous. Neg- i. looted kidney troubles result in Bad Blood , Dyspepsia, Liuer Complaint, and the most clan. gerous of all, Alights Disease, Diabetes and Dropsy," • "The above diseases cannot exist w here Dodd's Kidney Pills are used." senthy midi on reeeipt box ..or six for $s. o. Tororao, Write for , _seem* Canada 1,500 shoemakers are out of rs. John Reid, Woodstocdr, Is dead, 74. tratford paid $400 for compulsory yawl - on. here 18 a 'boon: in, Revelstoke, B,C., arty, eer-hunting parties are unusually num- THE FRONTIER PARSON, It is a liough-auddieady Kind orliteligielk That Diepenses. Often these eninoto men must build their houses and live in stunt a rough society that wife and children must stay behind for some years. One minute man built a little hut whose roof was shingled with oyster lane, is mem. was eo mall that he could pour out hie coffee at the table and without getting up turn his flapjacks on the stove. A travelling missionary visiting hint asked him where he slept. He opened a p cllittle trap the ceiling and as the good woman peered in she said ; "Why, you can't stand up en that place 1" "Bless your soul, madam," he exclaimed, "a home missionary doesn't sleep standing Strapping a bundle of book e on his shoulders this minute man otarts out on• a mule trail. If he meets the train he must step off and climb beck. He reaches the distant camp and finda the boys by the dozen gambling in an immense saloon. He steps up to the bar and requests the liberty of singing a few hymns. The man answers 11 : re re -organized, "Ye ken if ye like, but the boys won't 3rantford hospital has 40 cases, 23 of itch are typhoid fever. Wyebridge hoe a new public hall with a 11 -up in the basement. ancouver has organized an ease:nation t ball club. t is proposed to- abandon the cottage pitals at Ottawa. collection of 200 coins wee sold in 041- last week for $15. he sociletiee of Huron College, London, ingeton has already three or four mayor y candidates in the field. t is reported that Parkhill is in the throes a terrible eeotarian strife. Sarnia boasts of its Hotel Fortherrea fine ructure put up this year. A marvellous body of wpm has been dis- vered in British Columbia. An Indian found with whiskey in his ssession is fined $25 at Victoria, B. ii. The V4 oodstook Amateur Operatic) Com- ny has re -organized for the winter. Prof. Wiggins, the weather prophet, ntemplates removing to the United i stand t. The next minute a rioh baritone begine. "What a friend we have in Jesus,' and twenty heads are lifted. He then says "toys, take a hand, here are some books," and in less than tenminutee he has a male choir of many vetoes. One says, - "Pard, sing number so and so"—a,nd anoth- er, "Sing number so and so." .By this time the saloon -keeper is growling- but 11 18 no TIG 2. vine/ OE B ENLARGED ARN. use, the minister has the boys, and starts • valuable addition. Let a lean-to be built his work. upon one side with its outer wall extending • In some camps a very different reception to the ground. The cattle ties can then be awaits him, as, for instance the following: arranged lengthwise of the barn, and the At his appearance a wild -looking Beale manure drop - Bill type 9f man greeted him with an oath ped down into and %pistol levelled at him. t h e cellar "Don't par know tines no luck in camp daily. Room with a prthoher ? We are going to kill •is also provid- ed for a silo— "Don't you know,'" said the minute man, which can ex- tend from the ground up— calf pens a -citios 4614 driving floor, and a bay for THE FARM. Remodeling an Old-Pa,shioned Barn. There are hundreds of old-fashioned barns to bo seen about the country similar to that shown in the skethnr1 the eettle rranged s this year. f ji f y 4,V FIG 1, VIEW OE OLD BARN. a,oroos one end, the dewing floor across the middle of threbarn„ and the bay m the other end—an arrangement that gives very poor boring auger holea ie the four sides at fre- quent, intervals, Stored itt n thio snooper theta may bo Perfectly preserved mail the middle of May. • THE usToNvEL IHHHHEREH. - Interest in the Iteeveit Tragedy eit Mont- real—Early history of the Murderer - More than. useal interest is taken in Mon- treal in the ease of Almeria Ohattelle, the murderer of Jessie Keith, as the murderer io a Freneh-Canadian, and e native of St. Hythintite. Enquiries eet on foot elbow that Chattelle etill has relatives CI St- Hyaointhe, and they are very respecteble people. The naerderer left St. Hyacinthe when only a young lad, and commenced his wanderings, Fie lived for some time in Montreal, and there are some people who and very small athotrimodations, Such claim to have known him when quite barns are frequently situated upon sloping young, and that he was an ether boy at Notre Drone church, After an absence of ground, and for this reason are raised upon stone piers at one side, being left open to the cold winds of winter beneath the floor. It is quite a simple and inexpensive matter to enlarge and remodel moll a barn, and at the :Aloe time provtde cellar tha.t will be a "a minister can draw a bead as quick as The Manitoulin Teachers' Convention any man t" The boys gave a loud laugh, Id its annual meeting this year at Gore for theylove grit, and the rough slunk away. But a harder trial followed, ;lad to see ye, pard, but ye'il have to •ea up'fore ye commence —rule of the etimp,ye know"—but before our man could frame an answer the hardest • drinker in • the crowd said: "Boys, he is the fust minister as has had the sand to come up here, and I'll stand. • treat tor ' • A Prince's Monument Stolen. The monument sent out by. Queen Via- *. A. Mialdrew has left the Orillia High torte to Zululand as a token of her sympathy hoot to • become headmaster of that at with the bereaved mother of the late Princse raverilturst. Louis Napoleon has been stolen. A reward One firm in Southwestern Manitoba bas of 250 has been offered. The monument o England, the form of a memorial crone of plain is sassed shipped $70,000 worth of cattle took imarble, and was erected on the exact spot The Patrons' store at Straffordville was upon which the Prince fell when surprised •rokeneinto last night and robbed of $18 in ash. The Grand Trunk railroad last week a.rried through the tunnel 6,068 tons of hrough freight eastward. Rev. anon Davis, of South London, has ft the stage and returned to the plat - A young girl in London who had been coinated died shortly afterwards of look - The .ffeetleultural Association of St.Jahn, B., pro-phew...4144e that eity a: 'public ark. It has been decided to manufacture bioy- es at the new Kingston Vehicle Co.'s orks. William Harrington, an eight.year-old oy, stole a horse and wagon from Web. and a short time ago. Queen Square Methodist church, St. elm, N.B., celebrated its hundred and hird anniversary Sunday, .Tohn, Miller of Brook, shot a 250 pound rear lasemeek while it was quietly feeding pon apples in his on:shard. Since the let of September it is reported hat over thirty buildings have been dee- reyed by lightning in Ontario. During September 1,145 tons of ore, of he value of $202,825, were shipped from he mines in South Kootenay. Mr. Dodds, accountant at the Traders ank, Guelph, has been promoted to ,be Imager at the Drayton branch. , Mr. Wm. Foster, of Eldereiie, is the only ne left of a party of pioneers who took up and there on Ootober 2nd, 1853. The members of the Sarnia Bicycle Club ntertafned Angus McLeod, Sarnia's °hare - ion bloyolist, at a supper recently. Ernest Johnston was convicted of burglary t Stratford. and was sentenced to two ears in th Kingston penetentiary. • Billy McGuin, jr,, of Orilla who is about zine months old, won the first prize at the t. the Orillia show for the best babyshown. Rev. D. M. Gordon of St. Andrews huroh,Halifax, has been appointed to the staff of Pine Hill theological college, Hall. ax. The value of the exports to the United tates from the Vancouver district for the uarter to September 30th, is $81, 600. Geo Whitton, Orillia., has -a first prize calf that goes through exercises like a show horse and shows considerable gyinnaetio skill. and attacked by a party of Zdlus who had been lying hi ambush. The memorial bore the following insoription : "This cross is ereoted by Queen Victoria in affectionate .thmembrance ofNapolecin EugeneLouis Jean Joseph, Prince Imperial, to mark the spot where he, while assisting in a recommissanee with the British troops, on the 1st of June, 18/9, was attacked by a party of Zulus, and fell with face to the foe. It was surround- ed by a dwarf mall of rough stones, which also enclosed the graves of the Wes troopers who were killed at the same time as the Prince. Shrubs and violets (the Napoleonio emblem) were planted about the place, whioh thua became a kind of miniature cemetery. It is interesting to recall -that after the erection of the arose the Zulu ohief, Geboodo, and the chief men of his tribe, to whiok the party. who attacked the Prince, belonged, aesembled at the place and, standing with their right hands uplifted, solemnly declared that the memorial and the graves should never be desecrated. The stealing of the cross is therefore, all the more remarkable, especial- ly as the Zulus entertain a deeply -felt superstition regarding the spirits of the dead. •• • It is estimated that $85,000 worth of fur was purchased for cash or trade by Edmon- ton firms and fur buyers during the past year. Adana Chadwick, until a year or two ago a well known resident of Woodetook, died at Trout take, Muskoka, in the:75th year of hie age. Vancouver has decided to build its own electric light plant and a by-lawto raise $100,000 tor the purpose has been voted by the people, Bev. Jamea E. Graham, Englith church minister, was found dead in his bed at the residence of Mr. ()has. Liddell, Brooke, Ont., last Sunday. Rev. W. liibbort Binney, rector of Northwioh, IiIngland, who was on Wednes. day unanimously elected Bishop of brew Westminster, has declined the honor, Mr. L. L. Gallagher, of Kiniton, sem- eary of the Frontenac Cheese Board, esti. mates that the factories thpresented by the 42 members made 4,500,000 pounds of cheese during the season. This, at 10o per pound, an average price, would mean $450,- 000, or, after deducting the coot of making at no per pound, left $365,000 to go to the farmers, pookots. Her Hand. How soft and white, her lily hand, A fairy's, thought I, maybe, But gracious lin bhe later yeas, He strong it spanked the baby: Platinum has been drawn into etooth A sweat cloth, used by anoient wrestler wire sofine that it oould not bo ft a other athleteto wipe off the perspire iebca by the el'keil 0704 oven when streteh. lion, cost' lo. serosa a piece of white cardbeerd. . . Feminine Logic. many years Chattelle returned to SI. Hya- cinthe lath July, and worked ou the new electric works until September. Those who know hint say that he was of a. very quiet disposition but that howas very no. steady in his habit, d e, anwattle' never stay long el one occupation. After working several months in the electric works be suddenly left the place and nothing more was heard of him until his arrest for the horrible crime to which be has confessed. Obattelle's real age is about 52 years. A despatch from St. Hythinthe, Que., says o—Alineda, Chattelle, the murderer of Jessie Keith, near Listowel, is 0 native of this town. He left here when a. boy, and --turned last July, telling his friends that he had travelled all over the world, mostly by Bea, with varying fortune. He worked on the new electric company's work at Rapid Platt, six miles up the Ye.maska river, until September, when ho left the, vicinity, and nothing was heard of him until his arrest on a charge of murder, He is about 52 years of age, and apart from his roving disposition bore a good character here. hay. If the FIG 3. GROUND PX.iii17.01' EN- . LARGE DBASE'. cellar were dry, hogs 'could well be kept upon the manure stored there. Oar illus. tra,tieie Fig. 1 shows a•perspeotive view of the old barn, Fig. 2 of the improved barn, ittlig 3 is then the ground plan.] Ken ding Grain Saeks. Mending the holes in grain sacks is a task that the farmer's wife dislikes, hence the holes gnawed by mice and rats are often stopped with acorn cob, or the eaoks are throWn away. But here is a plan that proves to be what every farmer needs. The articles needed for mending grain sacks are An old sack that may be out up for pieces ; a batter made of flour and :sold water ; a hot flat iron and an ironing board to- fit inside the acks. Place the board as shown in the illustration in a sack with the hole to be mended on the upper aide. Trim away the ravelled edges with ihe shears or a sharp knife. Cut out a Mrs. Robbins—"That is a nice piece of goods. How much did you pay for it?' Mrs. Higbee—"A dollar a yard. They had some for ninety-nine cents, but the price showed it was of an inferior quell - Last of a Famous Tree. •A patriarchial lime tree, known a the Domlinde or cathedral, tree, hars just fallen at Brundwick. It was 86 feet high, and its girth was 19 feet. It was unique in that there fit an undoubted mention of ib in a pamphlet written in 1492, in whioh it is recorded that in 1473 summer came 80 early that "the lime tree of Brunswick" was in leaf by Easter Day. Even then the tree was famous for the size of 18s leaves. The Duke of Clumbetland possesses a vase made from a piece ot wood from this alleinrioli'e linde,' The Truth of It. Teacher—Johnny, can you define for tut the difference between "eatition" and "cowardice." johnny—Yessum. Wheu you're eart to go out on a boat an' stay at home for fear it'll sink, and the boab (males in all rights, it's "cowardice." Teacher—Well 1 , Johnny and if trou're acerb and stay at home and the boat does sink then its 'caution." Fruit wrapped in brownpaper will stand fif teen degireee more of cold than if not thus protected. SHOTFATIIERANDKOTHER MENDING A GRAIN SACK. patch haring at least an inch margin larger than the hole, On this margin apply a coat of the flour paste, place the patch in posi- tion and press it thoroughly with the hot flat iron. The batter penetrates both patoh and sack and firmly unites them. Pieces of denim, ducking or other stout material may be used, where bagging is not available, the process is so rapid that a hundred sacks may soon be repaired. Car- pets may be neatly mended 111. the same manner without removing them from the floor. --- Harvesting and Storing Roots. The first thing to be done in the harvest- ing and storing of roots is to out off their tops with a sharp hoe, while the roots are yet in the ground pulling' the tops from two rows into one. To pull the roots take a plough—one with an old mold board with the upper half broken off is the best -- plough them out, throwing the rows to- gether into the space not occupied by the tops. The few roots that aro wholly cov- ered with the soil may be thrown out with a fork. ln gathering the roots use no bas. kete, but throw them directly into the wagon, cautioning the loader:: to take one root in each hand, knock them together to jar off the soil. The load is driven directly to the cellar, where a chute hal been Con- structed about the length of the wagon box and leading to the cellar. The advantage of the ohute consists itt Iwo or three men being able to work at the sonic time frith= out being in each other's way. The chute should be constructed with a stetted bet - tom, so that all the loose mitt will drop to the ground. This freeing of the roots from earth is an important factor in their keeping, as they will certainly decay it much earth and litter is left adhering. To further aid in the cleansing process, a dry time shodld be selected for the work, The general rule is to harvest roots the first week in November, though circum- stances might make IA difference of a week in the time. it id considered unwise to leave then: out longer if the weather per. mite the work. For convenierme in feeding and to keep a comparatively high tempera- ture, the bin is placed in the centre of the biteement of a large bora. The aides aro made by holing up the studding on the' inside nett tho tpots With cheap, toitgb lumber. The mashie hi covered first with building paper and then with matched Item - look boards, In very cold seasone, a cover ing of strew Will preterit the mote from be. coming frosted. Two or three ventilating tubus should be placed among the roots. Thoth are oheaply made by nailing four six. bath boards together, forming a tithe, Children Cry for Pitcher's CAStOriiii 1)ofirr LET ANOTHEll WASHDAY GO Br W17710117"(/81110 OU will find, that it will do what no other soap can do, and will please you every way. HORRIBLE DEED OF A BOY IN BUFFALO. A Crazed Sou cans Both Ills Parents out ot Bed and Deliberately Shoots Roth— The Mother Dies Instantly and the Father Cannot Recover—The Murderer Soon Captured. A despatch from Buffalo says :—At No. 658 Fulton street in a little one -storey frame house lives John Gipp. That house 1.30 o'clock FridaYtmr- %%Tie tkriag...11..„1;t1:111em% 4 t 55.7eftf consisted of John Gipp, his wife and foifr' children, three boys and one girl. The 20 - year -old boy, William, is employed by the Lehigh Valley Railroad, and vrorksnights. About 1.30 o'clock he returned home from his work and found his mother up and dressed. At that time the neighbors heard the report of a pistol shot and many of them hastened to the scene of the shooting. It seems that'm soon as William entered the house, and without any immediate provo- cation, he pulled a revolver and aimed it directly at his mother. He firedtwice, and one bullet struck her in the head, while the other took effect in her body. She screamed and fell to the floor, dying almost instantly. . The report of the shot and the scream of the woman aroused the family. The father was the first to appear on the scene, and the son fired twice at him, one bullet strik- ing him at the corner of the right eye, near the nose, and the other taking effect in the right breast. A neighbor heard the shoot. ingatnd ran with all speed to the Gipp house. He seized William and grappled with him, but the murderer succeeded in fiingine off his captor and rushed out of doors and over the back fence. The murderer was arrested at Brockton in the afternoon, and taken to Dunkirk, where he is held or the arrival of Buffalo officers. The ante-mortem statement of his father, taken by the coroner, gives no reason for the young man's awful crime, and the cause is a mystery, and must remain so unless the murderer himself decides to explain it. .1, BOOTS HAVE HAD THEIR DAY. There is Now Tittle Call for the Fong - legged variety Once So Contmon. The diminished use ot boots is a matter of concern to the manufacturers of them and to the producers of heavy leather and heavy calf skims. Twenty years ago the calf boot industry was a leading one. Whole towns were studded with fectories which produced calf boots exclusively. For a decade the sale has been gradually falling off, and to -day it 18 of hardly any impor- tances. fewAmanufacturers of shoes include boots as a specialty, but the demand is too light to amount to much. When calf boots were more in vogue manufacturers con- sulted the partialities of the cowboys, to whom price was a secondary consideration. The lege were frequently corded with silk stitching. The star and crescent and other fanciful ornamentations were inlaid an the legs of the boots ; there were bigh heels and the boots were striking specimens of Mechanical ark The soles were inlaid with copper, zinc aud brass nails. The cowboys no longer pay $15 or $20 for a pair of boots. They want substance instead of show. But they were not the only wearers of cal boots. They were extensively worn. Many men prefer them to -clay, though the num- ber is growing less. The old-tashioned stoga boots were formerly sold in large quantities ; they are well nigh obsolete. There followed a detnand for a lighter and mote stylish article. A kid boob of lighter texture was produced, about equal in ap- pearance to the best calf boot, but this, too, has fallen somewhat into disuse, and this stiles this season are scarcely over one-half the usual mnotint Where there were twee.- ty fectorite producing boots exolusively there is now not one. Even the farmers are using heavy shoos instead of beets and if it becomes a necessity to wear long,legged boob a they buy rubbers. it is Easy, Clean, and Economical to wash with this soap. tea Consumption Yvas formerly pronounced ineura,ble. Now it is not. In al of the early stages of the disease Scott's Erriulsiori 8 TRAPM Will effect a cure quicker than any other known specific. Scott's Emulsion. pr motes the making of healthy lung -tissue, relieves inflammation, overcomes the meals- iye waste of the disease and, gives vital fk atTeourilg Fooughs, oolas, Weak Lungs, Sore 'Throat, Bronchitis, Clonsumption, • Scrofula, Antemia, LOBO of flesh and Wasting Diseases of Ohildren. Buy only the genuine with our trade - 5. mark on sat:non-colored mutter. Send far pamphlet on Scott,: Emulsion. FRB.B. Ott & BOWDe, Belleville. Al! Druggists. 50o. and Si. John and Alexander Tyler, of Northport, Ala.,. lord a dispute about seine real estate, and 'Might a duel. John rot:lived three ballad, and died insbantlyb and the other Was also thought to be fetidly tvotinded. Jollit'e two little sons witnessed the duel from e,,buggy. • "4!,44 1:44,4,1.4.44 ou..a.AN AN EMINENT MINISTER REV. W. S. BARKER OF PETERBOROv- Arr. W. S. Barker is a young minister of Peterboro who has by his great earnestness and able exposition of the doctrines of the Bible earned for himself a place amongst the foremost ministers of Canada. He, with his most estimable wife, believe in looking after the temporal as well as the spiritual welfare of mankind, hence the following statement for publication "1 have much pleasure in re- eeramending the Great South Ameri- can Nervine Tonics to all who are afflicted as thave been with nervous prostration and indigestion. I found very great relief from the very first bottle, which was strongly recom- mended to me by my druggist. I also induced my wife to use it. who, I must say, was completely run down and was luffering very much from general debility. She found great relief from South American Nervine and also cheerfully recommends it to her fellow -sufferers. "Ray, W. S. Bantam." It is 'tow a scientific fact that oer- • fain nerve centres located near the base ofthe brain have entire control over the stomach liver, heart, lungs and indeed all internal organs ; that is, they furnish these organs with the necessary nerve force to enable them to perform their respective work. When the nerve centres are weakened or deranged the nerve force is diminished, and as s. . nun the stomach will not digest the food, the liver becomes torpid, the kidneys will not act properly, the heart and lungs suffer, and in fact the -whole system becomes weakened and sinks on account of the lack of nerve force. South American Norville is based on the foregoing seientifie disooverl and is so prepared that it nett directly on the nerve centres. It • immediately increases the nervous energy of the whole system, thereby enabling the different organs of the body to perform their work perfectly, when disease at once disappears, It greatly benefits in one day. Mr. Solomon Bond, a member of the Society ef Friends, of Darlington, Ind., writes: "I have used six bottles of South American Nervine and I consider that every bottle did for me one hundred dollars worth of good, because I have not haa a good night's sleep for twenty years on account of iri*ation, pain, horrible dreams, and general nervous pros- tration, which has been caused by chronic indigestion and dyspepsia of the stomachi a,nd by a broken down condition of my nervous system. But now I can lie clowii iadsleep all night as sweetly as a baby, and 1 feel like a sound man1 do riot think there has weer been a raedicine introduced into this conntry, which Will at all compare with this as 6 cure for theAtowash and nerves." C, I.A.TTZ 'Sole 'Wholesale and Retail Agent for :Exeter, Do„ MoDAImuin, A.gent, Henson. •-• f.? -44 44