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Exeter Times, 1896-3-26, Page 2THE EXETER TIMES Result of a' Neglected Cold. DISEASED LUNGS Which Doctors Failea to Help, CURED BY TAKING Cherry 14,YER'S Pectoral. "I contracted a severe cold, which settled -on my lunge, and I did what is often done in such cases, neglected it thinking it would �ro away as it came; but I found after a little while, that the slightest exertion pained me. I then Consulted a Doctor f who found, on examining my lungs, that the upper part of the left one was badly affected. Re gave mo some medicine which I took as directed, but it aid not seem to do any good. Pentium -01y, I happened to read in Ayer's Almanac. othe effect that Ayer's Cherry PPectoral bad on others, and I determined to give it a tr1aI. After taking a few doses my trouble was relieved, and before I heel fin- fsbed the bottle I was cured." —A. ',Enda, watchmaker, Orangeville, Out. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Highest Awaria at World's -rc-ri Aster's 3'a[tds Cua•e 3;-a`u scion. I• OM t. At a Glance anyone can see the difference be- tween the twin -bar of clear, pure Sunlight oap and other laundry soaps, but you'll know the difference when you use it because it cleanses with Less Labor Greater Comfort $p For every 12Zvrappors sent Books for to Levee lams., Ltd., 23 Scott St., Toronto, a use - Wrappers fqI peper-bound book will be PP � sent. 45:rgi r ® /r .. ao sr>y' THE �y `J TIMES EH FOR TWENTY-SIX TEARS. DUNN7S AKITHECOOK`SBEST FRIA LeteaEST SALE IN CAN/ewe ' AD"9814 (ER S -Kew 0 ;tear Rae Tfa owe SATienieligi OTS CURES RIEUMATISM KIDNEY ThiSEASE LIVER COMPLAIN INDIGESTION ECZEMA COct aAMS THE NEW INGREDIENT .rrQ� . la. X. St. Jaeques, t?, opractoi Ei ussell House, Ottawa, Cured of lleimoi•- rhage of the Kidneys. Among travelling men, members of Parlia- ment, and habitues of the Canadian Capital, no man is better known than Mr. F. X. St„ tcones, the popular proprietor of the Russell mac, Ottawa who suffered greatly from a distressing trouble, hemorrhage of the kidneys. In the hope of effeetang ai: cure ho doctored regularly, but without success. Durhag July ho began, the use of Ryckman's 1footonay Gure. In one week he was not only helmeted, but was entirely cured. His awn worth in writing to the proprietor of yhe medicine' about his owa case are few but very strong. Bo says; O 'awe, August 7th, 1995. S. S. i'txczt .ai , Esau., M.P. DEAR. Sia,—(.will gladly end strongly recom- mend, Kootoney Cure toiny friends after the good result it hoe deem me in so short a period. Wishing it every success, which it so well deserves, ;< eat, clear lir, yours, et, .: i, ST, JACQUES. • Horticulture. SPRAYING FRUIT. It is not passible to grow good fruit unless the orchard and the berry patch are given the same care and attention— or even more—that is expended upon other farm products. After proper cultivation, the next great thing is to fight the insect ene- mies of all kind that prey upon the trees. To do this, it is now universally aeknowledged xio method is so effective 02 spraying freely, and at the proper time, with some of the mixtures and solutions prepared according to the formulae which we will give further on. Care must be taken not to use any of the arsenical compounds upon any fruit trees or garden shrubs when in blossom, as tehese mixtures are poison- ous and wiU kill the bees that visit the Bloom and do much to fertilize the fruit. if properly prepared and used as directed they will do no injury to the fruit itself or to the growing leaves. The following are the mixtures and solutions generally used for orchards, recommended by the Department of Agriculture KEROSENE E11'1ULSION. Kerosene, two gallons; whale -oil soap, one-half pound, ora .t soap, one quart; water, one gallon. The soap must be dissolved in the water by boiling and then muted with the kerosene away from the fire, as it is very inflammable, and then violent- ly agitated either with a force pump or syringe through a, nozzle about one- eighth of an inch in diameter. This will form an emulsion of tbe consist- ency of cream. This may be kept for use and diluted with eight to fifteen or twenty times the amount of water when used. Larger insects require the stronger, but small ones, such as the red spider and plant lice, can be destroyed by weaker solutions. In spraying with the weaker solution an ounce of flour of sulphur may be added to a gallon. To destroy scales the strongest solu- tion will by necessary, applied with a sponge or brush. If whale -oil soap cannot be had, other good hard soap will answer, but in this case it is apt to curd by keeping and must be reheated when used. An emulsion for immediate use can be made with kerosene, two gallons; sour milk, one gallon. - This, when stirred rapidly as the other will produce a liquid of a but- tery consistency, which can be mixed ith water as before. This cannot he k pi ling without spoil ng unle„s in seal - led jars. The kerosene emulsion is harmless to the bark and will not, injure very ten- der leaves if sufficiently diluted. BORDEAUX MIXTURE. The Bordeaux mixture is .it perhaps more generally used than any other as it can be either used alone or mixed with the Paris green when necessary. The formula is as follows: Copper sulphate, five pounds; lime.(fresh),four pounds; water, forty to fifty gallons, (an oil barrel). .'.fanner of Mixture,—The barrel may be one-half filledwith � •i th water, and the sulphate of copper suspended in it in a coarse loose bag, until it dissolves—it will dissolve more rapidly in warm wat- er—then the line, which has been care- fully slacked and diluted in the con- sistency of cream and strained, if ne cessary, should be added and the mix- ture stirred briskly, and the barrel fine ed nit ti water. The lion is intended to neutralize the copper sulphate. The test for this can be made by having in a bottle a solution of the yellow prussiate of potash (a. very cheap solution) which can be had at any drug store, (a little poison- ous and must be kept carefully stopped). Take a small quantity of the liquid from the barrel and drop into it from the bottle a few drops of the prussiate solution; if it turns brownish -red when the drops fall, a little more lime is necessary,but if no precipitate is form- ed, it is neutral. Use wooden or glass vessels. AMMONIACAL CARBONATE, Copper carbonate, one ounce; aqua ammonia sufficient to dissolve the cop- per: water, nine gallons. The copper. carbonate may be dis- solved and kept in bottles on hand to be diluted when necessary. When fruit would be disfigured by Bordeaux mixture this can be used. WIIEN AND HOW TO SPRAY. The Ontario Experimental Station, re- commend the following order: Copper sulphate solution for the first spraying for apples, pears, plums and peaches, weak solution when buds are swelling and before they open. Cherries should have the Bordeaux mix- ture as the buds are breaking. For second spraying with Bordeaux mixture with Paris green mixture for' apples when the buds open; for plums as soon as the blossoms fall. For pears and peaches, Bordeaux without Paris green, just before the blossoms open. For cherries after the fruit .has set, Bordeaux mixture, and if slugs ap- pear, dust with slacked lime. Third application. For apples and pears, Bordeaux and Paris green after the blossoms have fallen. For plums nine to twelve days after blossoms have fallen Bordeaux and Paris green. For cherries if rot appears, Bordeaux mix- ture, ten days after blossoms fall. For peaches, whan the fruit has set, Bor- deaux mixture. For fourth application. For apples and pears, ten to twelve days after blossoms have fallen,l3ordeaux and Paris green. For plums, ten to twenty later than last application, Bordeaux mixture. For cherries, fifteen to twenty days after last, ammoniacal solution carbon- ate of copper. • For peaches, when fruit is nearly grown, ammoniacal solution, carbonate of. copper. The pear and the apple may have a fifth application of Bordeaux, twelve or fifteen days after the last, and the plum the ammoniacalcarbonate of goifper. The Bordeaux will discolor the frail, With this care0 if the season ie fat'or- a.hle, and trees well cultivated, a fine crop of nearly perfect fruit may be ex - I P eoted. It will pay to take care of your orchard. , Seeds d Fruit Where fruit -raising on the farm is a side thing, intended almost entirely for home use, the orebard is apt to be ne- glected until the other farm work presses attention to it out entirely or until it is too late. In the winter or early spring before the buds begin to swell all the dead limbs should be out from all the trees, and carefully re- moved from the orchard and burnt—or dead limbs from pear trees and cherry and plum trees may have been caused by diseases or insects, which are best destroyed by burning. In selecting seed potatoes for the coming planting, choose the varieties for the several plantings which you know to have given good results. Don't be too anxious to run after what you have only heard about. New varieties have generally been produced under very fav- orable, and sometimes special circum- stances, which you cannot afford tore - peat. And then, too, those who are the lucky producers usually give the best possible account of them. If you have an old friend which has done well for you in the past, depend still upon it for your ream crop, Let your first ex- periments with new seeds of any kinds be for yourself me a small scale, and you will not be so often disappointed. Tomatoes do best on a. sandy, porous loam. Now is the time to plan for the gar- den and the orchard. A little fore- thought goes a. long way in making a successful garden. Examine the trees in the orchard carefully for eggs of insects in the cracked bark, and for fungus growth or black knots on any part of the tree. These can sometimes be removed with a sharpknife, but the black knots should be thoroughly washed with strong soap suds, or better with a pret- ty strong solution of the kerosene emul- sion, (the formula for which is given in another column) applied with a sponge or brush. Constant cultivation is the secret ot most garden crops. Without it a good garden is impossible. THE SULTAN'S FRENCH MOTHER. There lives at Nantes an old lady of the best family, called Mlle. Dubuc de Rivey, who watches with great interest the events at Constantinople, and is go- ing to relate in a series of memories her experiences in the palace of the Sultan himself, where she lived many years. M. Dubuc de Rivey, her father, after heavy losses, having decided to try his luck in some French colony, embarked with his family—his wife, a son and a remarkably beautiful daughter. In those days of slow sailing, adventures were more frequent than now, and the ship which caxried the noble emigrants was attacked by pirates, who killed or made prisoners every one on board, says an exchange. Mlle. Dubuc was spared and treated with the greatest care and honor, her beautyhaving been her safeguard; but in spite of her supplications and two or three attempts at suicide she was taken at once to the Sultan k1ahomed II,, whobought her and installed her superbly in his harem. She soon became the favorite wife of the sovereign, and bore him a son, who be- came Sultan himself, under the name I of Abdul Aziz. Later she obtained. her :liberty, and returned to France. In 1867, when Abdul Aziz went to Paris for the Exhibition he disappeared for a few days, and only a few of his secre- taries, who accompanied him, knew on what errand he. had been, and thestory of the old lady with wham their master spent a week at Nantes. Mlle. Dubuc de Rivey is now just 80 years old, and in perfect health, her intellect being very clear still, and her nephew, who will write under her dictation, has al- ready arranged. with a Parisian paper for the publication of the curious sou- venir. NEW SLEEPING CAR. A new pattern of a sleeping coach bas been brought out in England that is supposed to meet some peculiarly English wants. The car is fifty-two feet long and nine feet wide, with single berthed and double -berthed compart- ments alternating, a corridor running the full length. Each passenger has room to undress comfortably and finds hooks in abundance upon which to hang his clothes, and by bolting his door can be assured of privacy How to get a "Sunlight” Picture. Send 25 "Sunlight" Soan wrappers (wrapper bearing the words "Why Does a W omen Look Old Sooner Than a flan") to Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott Si,, Toronto, andyou will receive by posts pretty picture, free from advertising, and well worth fram- ing. This is an easy way to decorate your home. The soap is the best in the market, and it will only cost lc. postage to send in the wrappers, if you leave the ends open. Write your address carefully, RICHES FROM AN ACCIDENT. The shop of a Dublin tobacconist was destroyed by fire. While the owner was gazing into the ruins,he noticed that his neighbors were gathering the snuff from the canisters. He tested the snuff, and discovered that the fire had largely improved its pungency and ar- oma. He secured another shop, built himself a lot of ovens, subjected the snuff to a heating pfocess, gave the brand. a particular name, and fir a few years became rich through an accident. when Baby ,aetack, we nave her Oasto ta. • Wiion she was a Child, she crit d for Castoria, Wher,. she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. Schen she bad Children, shenavethaus eastorie NEWFOUNDLAND'S WEALTH. Here are some of tbe sources of New- foundland's wealth: 'The money value of the crop of codfish and its products , 4 from ranges • ,000 000 to $6,000,000. Adel g � another fSg,000,000 of annual export values of ethic descriptione risi, and a another $2,000:000 for metallic ores and other descriptions oP merchandise. A FAMILY MEDICINE CHEST. I have just finished looking over and restocking our family medicine box in anticipation of colds, coughs, and oroup, says a good housewife, mother of sev- eral children, and I am going to tell you how I manage to nip in the bud the little disorders that, if neglected, so often prove serious. We always keep on hand ieertain medicinal !preparations ready for the emergencies that are especially liable to come in households containing little children. Ipecac, diluted aconite, tinc- ture of . rhubarb, castor oil, mustard, Paregoric, olive or fowls' oil, and a bulky package of flaxseed meal leave their places in this medicine box, nor do we dare long be without them. Each fall and spring, these vials and parcels are carefully examined to make sure that no rancid, lifeless or doubt- ful preparation is given quarter, but true to contents and those contents as. every bottle and box and paper labeled pure and fresh as possible. Besides the rolls of old, soft flannels, sure to be needed sooner or later for swathes and poultices, we keep on hand a generous eupply of chest and throat flannels. It matters little of what col - ere are these, if only of soft, all -wool flannel and cut with comfortable fit. A thin slice of znav', fat port dusted with cayenne pepper, isms best remedy for a sore throat, and this is the way to apply it, so the greasy strip shall be securely held in place, poulticing the throat from ear to ear and not slipping down on to the collar bone, whore little tonsils, or volt nils good it can do to swollen , rolling away from the throat altogeth- er. Cut a strip ot flannel three and one- half inches wide and enoughlong to pass under the, chin and tie on top of the head. Halve this strip lengthwise, leaving. an uncut five or six -inches length in the center on which to baste the pork. When this has been sprinkled with cayenne and applied to the throat, tie the upper string snugly on top the head and the lower ones at the back. of the neck. Chest flannels I put double with hollowed neck like a bib, and deep and wide enough to cover the entire chest and lungs. When a child • grows croupy or congestion (threatens, some wintry night, these rvo• enn which to warm or to baste the hot, thick poultices of flaxseed meal and pounded or frizzled onions, which you will prepare as quick- ly as possible to cover the little chest. A new and self -invented article we have recently added to our medicine box and find it very convenient and de- sirable, From an old gossamer we out, or, rather, pieced together, a ,rectangle, eight inches by twelve inches, lining it with the same. On each corner we sew- ed a atout tape, long enough. to tie about the person of an adult, and when colic, or neuralgia, or cramp,or rheuma- tism, r sprains,�or inflammation of any kind call for hot, wet flannels and poul- tices, this little, water -proof garment, snugly tied about the patient, over the pack of wet cloths on bowels, or stom- ach, or book, protects the clothing and bedding from dampness. For ear -ache, and tooth -ache, and neu- ralgia, in head or face, our surest rem- edy is a hop poultice wrung from hot vinegar ; and against such needs we keep on hand a half dozen such flannel strong, • of home -cured hops. stuffed with Since croup and congestion pounce so suddenly on their little, helpless vic- tims, we have learned to keep prepared for such emergoneies so fax as possible; having ready bags of thin, white dairy cloth for their quick filling of hot flax - steed meal and onion mush, and astout threaded needle at hand for basting suet poultices in place, because such little preparations, simple and trifling though they seem, help so much in the hurry and flurry and clutching anxiety, sure to come, when suddenly waked an the dead of a winter night to fight the dread. attacks that threaten a child's life. DISRFS FOR THE INVALID. Have a saucepan full of boiling water; take from the fire, keeping it covered; let stand three minutes, then break into it an egg ; put the cover on; let it stand. fifteen minutes. Serve on a square of delicately browned toast, with a little salt sprinkled over it. This, with a cup of fresh tea makes a. dainty breakfast. Soup. Sweetbreads. Toast, Cocoa. Arrowroot Pudding. Calfsfoot Jelly. Grapes. To make the soup: Take the wings and leg of one chichen, breaking the bones; add one quart of cold water; let it simmer on the fixe for an hour; then add one tablespoonful of rice, and a pinch of salt; let it boil down to one pint ; strain and serve. Sweetbreads—Soak ane sweetbread in cold water for an hour ; then put into boiling water, and let it cook for ten minutes. Wipe dry and when cool brush over with a well -beaten egg ; roll in fine brea.dcrumbs, put into a pan and add a small half. cup of water ; spread a small piece of butter over the toll; put in the oven, basting it until it is sufficiently done and is of a bright, brown color. Serve an a. square of toast, pouring the gravy from • the pan around it. Cocoa—Put in your cup one table- spoonful of prepared cocoa; fill the cup hall full of water, stir until all the cocoa is dissolved; thea], fill the cup with boiling mile; sweeten to taste. Arrowroot Pudding -Beat a ,cless�sert spoonful of arrowroot with the yolks of two eggs, one spoonful of sweet milk and one teaspoonful of granulated sugar. Stir until perfectly smooth. Put one-half pint of -milk on the fire; as soon as it boils pour slowly on the arrowroot mixture, stirring all the time so to have it very smooth. Whip the whites of the two eggs to a stiff froth and stir lightly together. Put in. a but- tered dicb and hake in a hot oven ten, minutes. CalCsfoot jelly—Take two calf's feet, breek the bones, wash well and put an the fire in one quart of cold. water. After it begins to boil, moveto the side of the range and let cook slowly about four hours. Strain, and let stand until cold, then remove all the fat. Mix of six ly o, wlt i the jelly one pound of sd ,»,--,-,�•e juice emonone rind of one out en •,,...a,,, pieces, and one small stick of cinnamon : broken : fine, Let this heat very slowly ',then add. the whites of two eggs, beaten well with two tablespoon- fuls of cold. water. Stir until it begins to boil, then add one-half pint of sherry. Allow it to simmer tern minutes. Strain through a fine eloth. If not ,perfectly clear the first time, strain again. Pour, into moulds to harden. This is a jelly that almost any invalid would relish. A SLAVE MADE A BISHOP Patten From a Slave -Ship, Sent to England to be Educated, and Proved a Practical and Faithful Christian. Travellers in England, as a rule, make a pilgrimage to the ancient cathe- dral of Canterbury, which is filled with associations of moment to the historian and the Christian. Here the Crusaders kept vigil before departing to the Holy Land. Hem Becket was murdered. The stone steps are still here, worn in deep hollows by the knees of count- less pilgrims in past centuries, Every stately pillar and carved stone has its record of dim, far-off days in English history. One scene, however, which was wit- nessed. in this great minster, is more significant. Here, before the higlraltar with all the solemn splendor of the ceremonial of the English church, a poor freed slave, with a skin as black as coal, was consecrated the first bishop of the Niger. Adjai, a Yoruba boy of twelve, was taken prisoner with his mother by the Foulah tribe, and sold to Portuguese slave traders. His mother was left in Africa, An Enelish man-of-war ran dawn the slave -snip, and brought out from the hold the wretched prisoners frantic with terror at the white skins and blue eyes of their rescuers. They mistook t k rho cannon -balls o n deckfor skulls, and the carcass of a hog in the cook's cabin for a human body, and tried to escape from the supposed canni- bals by jumping. into the sea. The boy,pp Ad Adjai, was sent to the mis- sion i - sion schoat 1Sierra Leone. There he was taught the Christian faith, and trained to be a carpenter. He was bap- tized under the name of Samuel Crow- ther, but kept, too, his own name Adjai, saing proudly : 'I am Christian. But I am always black and Yoruba." Ile proved to be so faithful and prac- tieal, both as Christian and negro, that he was sent to England to make known the condition and wants of his people. Large sums were given him, which he used with much sagacity for his race. The Queen sent Bibles, Prince Albert a steel earn -mill and other farming sr ;flernents, wbieh Adjai taught his people how to use. On his second visit he was made bishop. He returned to bis own tribe, and after long search found his mother. He took her to his home and she be- came a devout servant of Christ, and lived to a great age. But she persisted in wearing always the decent Yoruba costume, and in speaking that language, answering all arguments by saying "I axe negro. Jesus will know me in my_ own skin and in my blanket." No man in Africa served the Master more faithfully than .Bishop Adjai Crowther. The thoughtful reader in the story of his life can find a mean- ing which, rightly used, will uplift his own, FIRE CANNOT BURN THIS MAN. Casa Bear 200 Degrees of Artificial Kent, But duffers in the Sal. A fireproof man is Jacob H. Boyer, of Phoenixville, Pa. He, can step into a furnace where the temperature is more than 200 degrees Fahrenheit ; he can work there with little discomfort, though the heat singes his whiskers and burns the soles of his shoes. And yet this human salamander wilts under the first strong rays from the sun. Boyer is a mason, employed by the Phoenix Iron Works, and he draws a big salary. His duty is to repair furn- aces when they are in use. The capacity of a single furnace is estimated at forty tons of best Phoenix steel every twenty-four hours. The ingots to be heated vary in size, the largest being a foot in diameter and eight feet long. These ingots are heated for the rolls, and it occasion- ally happens that an accident occurs to the furnace while heated. To take the heat out and cool the furnace would be a great loss of time and a big incon- venience to the company. Right hero is where Boyer's wonderful ability to stand the heat comes in handy. He can repair the break -down without the loss of a moment. His thorough familiar- ity with the details of the furnace work and his fireproof qualities have made him one, of the highest salaried men in the employ. of the company. Bayer's shoes have frequently been scorched, and his whiskers and hair have often been burned off to the roots. Once he repaired a smelting furnace while it was so hot that the tools he was using were bent double. Several of the bricks had fallen out of place and Boyer used a long, iron -handled in- strument to put tho bricks in place. The job was accomplished only after the greatest difficulty. . AN EAGLE RAISES CHICKENS. One of/ler Poster Drawl is Now Master of the Roost. • Mr. W. M. Wallis, of Reading, Eng- land told before the British Ornitho- logists' Club at a recent meeting that a golden eagle, a captive for thirty years, bad been laying eggs during fif- teen year's, at first only one egg a year, then two, in 1894 and 1895 she had laid three eggs each year. Last year Mr. Wallis took away the eagle's eggs and substituted for thein a. number of common chicken's eggs. The eagle broke all but four of these, then began to incubate the four, and eventually they hatched. There were two pullets and two roosters in the brood. The youngsters were -brought up in the or- dinary way. The eagle often tore rats into shreds and fed the chicks as if they were of its own kind. At night these Wakens flew up and: roosted beside the old eagle. One of the roosters got kill- ed. and now the other one is master of that cage "frequently pummelling its foster mother into subnussion in a mast shameful manner." This paper of Mx. Wallis's will, prob- ably, result in extended, experiments, in the eyries and nests of hawks in their native state. It would astonish an old farmer should he see a big Spanish rooster drop into his barnyard, prole up, ani] carry orf a chicken. Hawks and. eagleseducate their 'young in captur- ing re and would train the. chickens to doi ink• prey, i likewise. ot�ala�se Cr,' for Pitcher%1 Casio& for Infants and Children. "O estorir is pee well adapted to children that recommend item superior to anypreecriptian b own tome." , .. 11. A. Annum; K. D„ 111 SoOxford St., Brooklyn, N. T. The use of'Castorin' is to universal and Is merits so well known that it Boerne a work of supererogation to endorse it. Few ar,ethe Intelligent families who do not keep Castoria !cabin easyreach." Oanr oa New Yo k pity. Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church. Caetorie owes Colic, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhma, Eructation, Fills Worms, gives Bleep, and promotes di. motion Without be unions medication, "For several years I have recommended your 'Castoria,' and shall always continue to do so as it has invariably produced beneficial results," EDWIN F. PAnnirE, 3X. 1)„ "The Winthrop," 125th Street and 7th Ave., New York City. 3'us Cazrvaua Courirsr, 77 3Muxzn,r Srnnar, Naw Yosx. r. THE EYES OFTHE AORLD Are Fixed upon South Ameri- can Nervine. rteyonid Doubt the Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. WREN EVERY OTRER HELM RAS FAILED IT CARES A Discovery, Based on Scientific Principles. that Renders Failure Impossible. al' %,, �•�' nu7t1� % lin the mgtempor- lsing measuresatter, whilofe possiblyoodhealth sucoess- i"ul for the moment, can never be last- ing. Those in poor health soon know whether the remedy* they are using Is simply a passing incident in their ex- perience, bracing thein imp for the day, or something that is getting at the seat of the disease and is surely and permanently restoring. The eyes of the world are literally bredon South American Nervine. They ere not viewing It as a. nine -days' won- der, but critiotsl and experienced men have been studying this medicine for Years, with the one result—they have found that its claim of perfect cura- tive qualities cannot be gainsaid, The great discoverer of this medicine was possessed of the knowledge tiraat the seat of all disease is the herve centres, situated at the base of the brain. In this belief he had the best scientists and .medical men of the world occupying exactly the same pre- mises. Indeed, the ordinary lay- man recognized) this principle long ago. Everyone knows that let disease ar injury affect this part of the human eystern anal' death Is almost certain. Injure the epinal cord, which is the medium of these nerve cen- tres, and tara.lynis is sure to follow. Here is the Srdt principle. The trots - bale with medical treatment usets ally, and with nearly all medicines, is that they atm simply to treat the organ that may be diseased. South American Nervine passes by the organs, and im- mediately applies its ourative powers to the nerve centres, from which the organs of the body receive their supply of nerve fluid. The nerve centres healed, and of necessity the organ which has shown the outward evidence only of derangement is healed. Indi- gestion, nervousness, impoverished blood, liver complaint, all owe their origin to a. derangement of the nerve centres. 'Phousa.nds bear testimony that they have been cured of these troubles, even when they have become: so desperate as to bailie the skill of the most eminent physlofane, because South American Nervine has gone to headquarters and cured there. The eyes of the world have not been disappointed in the inquiry into the suc- cess of South American ',Teraina Peo- ple marvel, it is true, at its wonrful medical qualities, but they knew be- yond all question that it does every- thing that is claimed for it. It stands alone as the one great certain curing remedy of the nineteenth century. Why should anyone suffer distress and sick- ness while this remedy is practiealIY at their hands ? C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter, THOS. WVlofi:sTT, Crediton Drug Store, Agent, Wood% Flosig11®d111P1,—me Great Englis4a Rernecdy. Is the result of over 85 years treating thousands of cases with all known drugs, until at last we have discovered the true remedy and treatment—a combination that will effect a prompt and permanent euro in nil stages of Sexual Debility, Abarse or .Excesses, Nervous Weakness, ..t ntissioos, Mental Worry, Excessive Use of Opium, Tobacco, or Alcoholic Sti,uulam's, all of. which soon' lead to Insanity, Consumption and : an early grave, Wood's. Phosphodlne has been used successfully by hundreds of cases that seemed almost hopeless—eases thathad been treated by the most talentod,physi- clans—cases that were on the verge of despairand insanity -cases that were tottering over thegi' ave -but with the continued and persevering; use of Wood's Phosphociine, these cases that •had been given up to die, were restored to manly vigor and hearth—Iteader you need not despair -no mat- ter who has given you up as ineurable-the remedy is now 'within your reach, by its use you Can be restored to a life of usefulness and happiness. Price, one package, 9il, sixpackages, $5; by mail free of postage. One loll please, sixxguaranteed to cure. Pamphlet free to any address. >t' The Wood Corripany, Windsor, Ont., Canada. ,After Taking; e it druggists Wood'st2Ryosphodtlsae is soidhy responsible wholesale and r ata d t gglsts in tan Dominant. 1,