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Exeter Times, 1896-6-11, Page 5INE NEW8 IN R NUTSHELL. Taila VERY LATEST PROM ALL, THE WORLD OVER,. Interesting Items About Our Own Country, Great Britain, the United States. and All Parts of the Globe; Condensed and Assorted for easy leading. CANADA. Mackerel are reported very plentiful in the waters off Halifax. Mrs. Smith, of Barton street, Ham- ilton, was killed by a Grand Trunk .train. .�/ -/:;,. Si cur) Began Ayer's AYI3�,'S Awarded r ;� , t ;y• NW-,' 1 � i 1 {' oilI \ At- iI, • Chartoi JZ H•utoftinge. 11 sae PERMANENTLY Llf BY TAKING r' Pills ...._ 'I was troubled a long time with sick headache. Itwas usually accompanied with severe pails In the temples, asenso of fullness and tenderness In one eye, a bad taste in my mouth, tongue coated, hands and feet cold, and saltness at the summit. I tried a good many remedies recommended for this complaint; but it was not until I Taking Pills that I received anything iike permar hent benefit. A single box of these pills did the work for me, and I am now free front headaches, and a well man."— C. H. Ho reineos, East Auburn, Me PILLS Medal at World's Fair .,dyer's Sarsaparifiu is the Best. bad Celery merit 247 Bio* ads. are needed to boom medicines. Manley's -Nerve Compound has alone to commend it. Dear Sirs: I cannot praise Man- iey'e Celery -Nerve Compound too Welkin, and I think its tonic and reaierative qualities cannot besnr- letelee. I was feeling poorly for some time through overwork and before 1 had taken one bottle of your medicine, I felt completely better. Yours truly, Yonge 3t,. Toronto. S, McNabb. « THE AJl'@" �6 EXETER TLS"1ES FOR TWENTY-SIX YEARS. DUNN'S . .. . 0 POW E R THECOOK'S BEST FRIEND LARGEST SALE IN CANADA. B,..,,.,-. �',9(' /r.� �eipn� Mpy{¢yp�• i}•��_ raj E NEVER FAILS TOOWSATIs SUMMON POR RAL.e .,,s 9t.1. 'Mat E a ibTh'!,O'�l�Q►gAO, Kootenay Contains the new ingredient, and is made by an electrical process that will revolutionize medical science throughout the world. Kootenay cures all kinds of Kidney troubles, and is a positive cure for Rheumatism. Spring IT CURES DYSPEPSIA, HEADACHE, BILIOUSNESS, And every form of bad blood, from a pimple to the worst scrofulous sore, and we challenge Canada to produce a case of Eczema that Kootenay will not cure. Medicine S. 8, RYCKMAN MEDICINE CO., HAMILTON, ONT. V Lade Tupperi now in London, Eng- and, og and, is arranging to return to Canada n July. The •late John Livingstone of Listo- we.1 left an estate worth $500,000, and $100,000 of insurance. Peter Black, a wealthy citizen of Parrsboro',N. S., was on Wednesday rob- bed of $11,500 at that place. Lord and Lady Aberdeen and suite have taken up their residence at the rice -Regal quarters in the Citadel, Quebec. Thomas Fennell, a Canadian, form- erly of J lma, near Stratford, has been murdered in Idaho, by a cowboy nam- ed Long. A MOTHER'S CLEAR EYE. ICE EXET MMES for the settlement of disputes between build a railway along the Oxus to Kar- America and Great Britain should be . ki, which will ;greatly improve her established. Strategic position along the line of ad- UNITED STATES. ' vane towards Cabul. Over 3,000 immigrants arrived at New The new Russian warship, the Ross - York from Europe on Monday. ajar, recently launehed at Cronstadt, Kate Field, tbe well-known American has a displacement ot 12,195 tons, '17,- journalist, died in Honolulu on May tbe 000 horse - power, and a reputed speed oil 19th of pneumonia. Thomas A. Edison and Nikola Tesla are reported at New York to be work- ing on a new electric lamp. Mrs. Mark Frost drowned her two children, then suicided, at ,Cleveland, near Bolton, Mo., on Wednesday. Rev. Francis Hermann, a Scandi- navian, is charged at Salt Lake City, Utah, with the murder of seven persons. Mark B. ("Brick") Pomeroy, an old time and well-known journalist, died on Saturday in .bis home in Brooklyn,N.Y. All the rye whiskey distillers in the Eastern States will suspend operations for one year front the first of Septem- ber, President Cleveland has signed the Acts to authorize the construction of a bridge over the Niagara river from Lewiston, N.Y., to Queenston, Ont. St. Louis, Moe is threatened with a recurrence of the flood of four years ago, when property to the value of $25,000,000 was destroyed. Frank Evans, aged 20, was instantly' killed and five men seriously injured by a boiler explosion in Scudder's sawmill' at Clay City, 111,, on Wednesday. Mrs. W. H. Hanner, aged. 22, was killed by a fall from a parachute while making a balloon ascension at Fairy Grove, near Baltimore, on Thursday. By the explosion ot a gasolene stove in Chicago on Suuday four members of a family, named Malin were killed, and the fifth so badly burnt that death is almost certain. Lord Russell, the Lord Chief Justice of Englamd, will address the annual meeting of the American Bar Associa- tion, to be held at Saratoga, N.Y., on August 18th. As the result of an investigation, it has been ascertained that one-third of the children of one of the prinoipal grammar schools of Chicago had nev- er seen a, live sheep or hog, Grace Schloenbeck, a Chicago, girl of fourteen, twice attempted suicide in the lagoon iu Jackson's park because her mother gave her a severe whipping and turned her out of doors. M. Henri Deelandres, astronomer of the Paris Observatory, passed tbrough New York on Sunday on his way to Japan to observe the eclipse of tbe sun which occurs in August. Col, Joe Leffel, the smallest perfectly formed man in the world, has announc- ed himself as a Republican candidate for Mayor of Springfield, Ohio. Ile is 03 years old and 40 inches tall. It is stated that the day prior to the terrible accident near Victoria, B.C., the authorities were warned that the bridge was not safe. • t'.:uon DuMoulin will be consecrated Bishop of Niagara on June 24. The cer- emony will take plaza in St. James' cathedral, Toronto. The Hamilton Powder Co, is applying to Parliament to change the head of- fice of the company to Montreal, and to increase its capital. The British flagship Crescent, with Admiral Sir John Erskine on board, has arrived at Halifax from Bermuda. Lady Erskine is also on board. The seizure ot an American vessel for fishing within the three-mile limit. is reported at Halifax. The offender is the Gloucester schooner Frederic Guer- iug. E. Stone Wiggins says that the St. Louis tornado was caused by the net- work of telegraph wires in that city, and declares that a similar fate will befall Canadian cities unless all wires are buried. A dividend of 10 per cent. has been declared by the liquidators of the Commercial Bank of Manitoba, mak- ing an aggregate of 80 per cent. paid to the creditors. Mr. E. Stone. Wiggins, of Ottawa, claims that the tornado which wrought such destruction in St. Louis was caused by the network of telegraph wires in that city,and he saga a similar fate will befall Canadian cities unless all wires are buried.. Miss De Pink—Oh, mother, that re- minds me. The other day I was rid- ing in the cars, when that wrinkled old lady camein, and it's a fact that Mr. De Smart, who didn't know nie at that time, and .didn't even see me, jqmp- ad right up and offered the old lady a seat. Wasn't that noble ? Mrs. De Pink (serenely) -He" did not know you at that time, but I happened to be aware that he has long known the old lady. She is the -grandmother sf• one of the prettiest and richest girls in the city. NOT EXACTLY THE SAME. Did shingle hishouselast week? 1 don't now. When I called he wastional dif erenees without resort to the shingling iris brays• sword, and that a permanent tribunal twenty-four knots. It is stated that the Marquis de Mores has started, for the Soudan to consult with the Arab leaders, and. place obstacles in the path of Eng- land's advance. • The foureyyear-old son of Mr. Wm. Wills, of Merritton, Ont., met with a terrible death on Saturday. He bur- rowed a hole in a pile of straw in a small frame building. His older broth- er playfully set fire to the straw, and before the fire could be extinguished the younger boy was burned to death. Mrs. Fisher, of St. Catharines, had a narrow escape from drowning in a well on Monday. Mrs. Fisher says her hus- band pushed her in, but Fisher's story is that she fell in, but when the wo- man's cries were heard, and assistance was rendered, Fisher was found secure- ly bolted in his house, though he must have heard his wife's agonizing appeals for help. GREAT BRITAIN. The Queen has gone to Balmoral. The census of London, just taken, shows a population of 4,411,271, an in- crease of 200,528 since 1891. Mr. Charles Dickens, the son of the celebrated novelist, who has been seri- ously ill, is now out of danger. Sir John Millais is suffering from cancer of the throat, and it is feared that the recent operation was not suc- cessful. uncessful. Sir J: Russell Reynolds, M. D., Phy- sician -in -Ordinary to the Queen's house- hold, is dead. He was sixty-eight years of age. Beatrice Harraden, the author of "Ships that Pass in the Night," is ill, and has been compelled to stop work on her new novel. The death is announced of Professor Edward Armitage, the English histor- ical and mural painter. He was sev- enty-nine years of age. A consignment of slates from Cana- da has recently been received. in Lon- don, and has attracted attention be- cause of its excellent quality. Mr. Chamberlain hasreceived ecei ed a de- spatch from the British Agent at Pre- toria saying that all the Johannesberg prisoners have been released except the tour leaders. The Queen has finally decided that the marriage of Princess Maud of Wales and Prince Charles of Denmark shall take place in the, private chapel of Buckingham palace. There seems to be little hopes of a reconciliation between the Redmon- dites and the Diilonites, and the Irish party is more hopelessly split than ever. Lord Leighton's house in London and collection of art objects are for sale. The public subscription to purchase it for the nation is not meeting with muoh success. Lord Windsor, a very rich English nobleman, has started a model saloon on one of his estates, where he guarantees that only the best beer, wine, and spir- its are sold. Oxford University intends conferring the degree of honorary D. C. L. upon United States Ambassador Bayard, and upon Mr. John Morley and Mr. Joseph Chamberlain. The dress in which the Duchess of Marlborough was presented is said to have cost two thousand pounds, , while theewels which ` she wore exceeded ten thousand pounds in value. There is an enormous .strike in the building trade in London, and about thirty thousand men are out of work. The oause of the trouble is a demand for a small increase of wages. Prof. Darcy Thompson and Mr. Bar- rett, the naturalist, have left for Ain- erica to enquire and report to the Brit- ish Government whether or not the re- strictions on seal fishing in Behring'Sea are sufficient for the preservation .of seal life. Mrs. Dyer, the London infanticide,who is under sentence to be hanged on June 10, made a second attempt at suicide in Newgate gaol on Wednesday. While in bed, seemingly asleep, she twisted a handkerchief around her throat, and al- most • succeeded in strangling herself. The annual Co-omative Congress, of which the Earl of Winchelsea and Not- tingham, is chief promoter, passed a re- solution setting : forth that English speaking people should• settle their nee The impending trouble has broken out in Crete. The Turkish soldiery in, Canes have broken through all ree etraint, and are massacring and pillag- ing the Christmas, British warships are hurrying to the scene. One of the most famous painters of Sweden, Marten Eskii Winge, died se few days ago in Stockholm. Hiss atudiea, were mostly historical. Winge was 71 years old, and was a member of many Swedish societies. GrRIfI DEATH AT MOSCOW. OVER A THOUSAND LIVES SACRI- FICED AT THE FEAST, The Great Popular Day to Wlnd up the Week's Coronation Fetes is Harked by a Fatal Crush—The Czar Witnesses the i►lsaster. A despatch from Moscow says:—The popular fete of the coronation ceremon- ies, at which between 400,000 and 500,- 000 people were fed and indulged in all sorts of merry -making was held on Sat- urday on the Hodynsky Plain, opposite the Petroffsky place, and was the scene of the first fatalities that have marked the coronation festivities. The free feast, which has always been the popu- lar feature of coronations, has hitherto been the occasion of a great deal of crowding and good natured fighting for places on the part of the hundreds of thousands of guests of the city, but no such gathering was ever witnessed on the Hodynsky Plain, which has always been the scene of the popular entertain- ments that have marked eoronations,as that which assembled to -day. THE CROWDS Prohibitionists opened their seventh national convention at. Pittsburg, Pa.. uu Wednesday. H. L. Castle, in an ad- dress of welcome, said the liquor traffic was "the greatest foe ot God and human- ity ever invented in hell or patented on earth." Colonel Joe Leffel, the smallest per- fectly formed man in the world, has an- nounced himself as a Republican candi- date for Mayor of Springfield, 0., next spring. The Colonel is only 46 inches tall, and is 63 years old. He served one term in Council. Mrs. John M. Clay owns the Henry Clay farm in Kentucky. She has such a tender feeling for her stock that she has provided for thefuture of all the superannuated animals on the place by leaving each $50 in her will, so that they may receive good care till death ensues. A novel institution which has re- cently been inaugurated in New York is a Dogs' Toilet Club, where fashion- able ladies who go out to shop may leave their flet dogs to undergo the operation ot shampooing, brushing, combing, and clipping while their mis- tresses attend to their purchases. Two troops of cavalry have been or- dered from Fort Custer, Mont., to gather the Cree Indians for exporta- tion to Canada, The Crees say they will not go unless Canada proclaims an am- nesty for !their participation in the Manitoba rebellion. 11 this is not granted they will take to the moun- tains and become "bad Indians.' According to the reports of the com- mercial agencies there is no change for the better in business across the line. One principal factor in the present dul- ness is the doubt existing as to pos- sible political eventualities. Products all round are weak, wheat has fallen, and with goods mostly in ample supply and a light general demand, employment in many districts is slack. The enquiry for both men's and women's dress goods appears to be unprecedently low; cottons and woollens are quiet, and many mills are either closed or work- ing half-time. Some boot and shoe manufacturers have orders that will take some time to fill, but again in other quarters clutters are being dis- charged, as the makers have over -taken the requirements of their customers. GENERAL Germany has a war footing of 2,700,- 000 men. President Kruger, of the Transvaal Republic, is ill. Matabeles have again been repulsed by Capt. Plumer's force near Bulu- wayo. There have been serious cholera riots in Cairo, and the rioters had to be dis- persed by the police. There are great rejoicings at Fried- richsruhe over the birth of the first♦ grandson to Prince Bismarck. It is reported in London that 25,- 000 cyclists of both sexes rode over Ripley road, Surrey, on Sunday. The telegraph department of the Chilian Government has been defrauded of more than 100,000 pesos. The increase of mortality from small- pox and yellow fever in the hospitals. along .the Troche creates alarm in. Cuba. The . Albanians have petitioned the, Porte for reforms, and if these are re- fused they intend to revolt to regain their former liberties. The British barque John Baizley,from Singapore for Hong Kong, is ashore on Montanha isIand,and is being plunder- ed by the natives. A report at London from Madrid con- firms the rumour that Gen. Weyler has resolved to resign the command of the Spanish forces in Cuba. Barney Barneto has subscribed §25,- 000 to the fund to pay the fines of the imprisoned members of the Reform Committee at Johannesburg. Dr. Langhold's anti-microbicon has been introduced into several German hospitals, with the beat possible ae- sults, in the treatment of consumption. Padeewski's arduous !experiences in his recent American tour have com- pletely exhausted him, and he has been compelled to cancel all his engagements. Tae Czar has , appointed M. Witte, Minister of Finance,Seoretary of, State, a,s a reward for, his services and a token of his Majesty's special favour. THE FIELD OF 0014I1ERCE, Some Items or Interest to the Busy Bustness Mau The earnings of Canadian Pacific for the third week of May were $407,000, an increase of *82,000. Canada 8 per cent. 'bonds are 1-2 higher in London at 105 1-2. Montreal 3's are unchanged at 94, and Toronto 3 1-2's are selling at 108 1-2. The stook of wheat at Toronto is 41,214 bushels, an increase of 11,500 bushels during the week. A year ago the amount was 42,770 busbels. The net exports of gold at New York from January let to date is $12,700,000, as compared with $14,348,000 during the corresponding period of last year year and $34,011,00 the same period. m 1894. There was a decrease of 1,848,000 bushels last week in the visible supply ofwheat in the United States and Canada, and the total is now 51,298,000 bushels as compared with 54,244,000 a year ago, and 61,329,000 two years ago. The amount of wheat on passage to Europe is 31,280,000 bushels, and in- crease of 1,280,000 bushels for the week. A year ago the amount afloat was 44,- 320,000 bushels. Corn on passage to Europe, 7,520,000 bushels, a decrease of 640,000 bushels for the week. A. year ag,the amount afloat was 3,920,000 bushels. The world's shipments of wheat durine the week were 8,300,000 bushels. An English inventor proposes to util- ize waste heaps by making them into concrete bricks. ' His idea is to turn to account any sort of waste, even that from destructors, by mixing in certain proportions either destructor ashes, clinkers, chippings and dust from stone, hard sand, colliery clippings, or scaven- ger refuse, with blue lies or hydraulio lime. The mixture is shoveled into sections, and afterwards passed through a brick press, or 'blocks may be made from the product in moulds or jackets. These are staked or dried in the open air. The more costly processes of or- dinary brick -making, namely, -the set- ting, burning and drawing are avoid- ed. The blocks or bricks usually harden in, about two mouths when they are ready for use. A London cablegram. says: Kr. which began coming long before day- light, finally became so dense and so eager to ohtant access to the free food and beer, and the free amusements, that they could not ba controlled. Men, wo- men and children were thrown down and trampled upon, were either badly injured or killedexhile others had their lives crushed out of them by the fear- ful pressure of the vast crowd. The police and military finally succeeded in scattering the multitude so that there was no further danger, when it was found that over one thousand persons HAD BEEN KILLED. The feast was held in the presence of the Czar and a distinguished com- pany of guests, who occupied seats in a large pavilion especially erected for the occasion, The great Hodynsky Plain, whereon Napoleon massed his troop before marching into the city of Moscow. is flanked on the aides by the Exhibition buildings and the Moscow race course, and extends indefinitely into the coun- try. Upon it, besides the multitude of people who enjoyed the hospitality of the city an eating, drinking and in- dulging in all sorts of games and wit- nessing various performances, were en- camped A VAST ARMY OF SOLDIERS consisting of 83 battalions of infantry, 30 squadrons of cavalry, 7 sotnias of Cossacks and 14 batteries of artillery, which the Emperor will review on June 7, the last day of the fetes. The part of the plain devoted to the festivities was directly in front of the palace. This wide, grass -covered space was enclosed with Venetian masts, with! bunting, and shields bearing the arms of the various cities and provinces of Russia, and within were booths, tables, open-air theatres, merry -go rounds, circuses, swings. etc., ALMOST INNUMERABLE. Surrounding these were hundreds of wooden booths filled with food, such as bread. cakes, sausages, meat pies, etc., and in each booth was an im- mense cask of malt liquor or mead, the food and drink being free to all who chose to come and partake of it. Throughout the night there was a constant stream of people making their way to the plain, in order to be in the fore front when the food and presents should be ready for distribution, and so densea mass of people as had gath- ered there even in the early hours of the morning was never witnessed. in Russia. While the rush was most intense and the curses, shrieks and howls of pain were nut their height an unknown wo- man was delivered of a child on the field, and the mother and infant were trampled to death. TORTURED HIS NEPHEW TO DEATH. An Alaskan Indian Otter to Be Tried ;For a Cruel Murder. In jail at Juneau, Alaska, awaiting trial on the charge of murder is Chief Ye Teetlech, the Tyee of the Hoonan Indians, a small tribe of several hun- dred members, occupying Chickikoff Is- land, about 100 miles to the south of Juneau. The offence with which the old chief is charged is the murder, by torture, of his nephew, whom he accused of witchcraft. The chief had a disease af- fecting his right leg, which had:gradu- ally eaten the great part away. He dreamed that his nephew had bewitch- ed him, and on the strength of this he proceeded to -inflict punishment due to the crime. The victim's knees were bent close back, and in this position he was bound tightly to a tree. An iron band. was then placed around his face, sinking in- to the nose and coverings tale eyes, and this was also made as to the tree, so that he was unablto move his head in any direction. He was leftin this position to starve to death. He lived five days. He was about twenty years of age. Some years ago the same chief put two women of his tribes to death in the same manner. Crimes of the kind are not uncommon among the Alaska Indians. The widow of the dead man was appropriated by the chief and is now, with two of has other wives,shar- ing his captivity voluntarily. AN ILLUSION DISPELLED. Ames—lt seems wicked to eat those dear little spring lambs that gambol on the green! Paul -Don't worry, dear, they are never eaten while they are able to gam - It is reported that Russia intends to bol. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria for Infants and Children. .4'.7astepi etiie ee well edaptod to children that I recommend kits superior to any prescription known tome." H. A. Aaasxs, M. P. 111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. "the use of c ria' it so unlversal and Itrt merits so well }mown that it seems a work of supererogation rerogation to endorse it. Few are the Inteingent families who do not keep Castoria within ` Ceaeoe E.NernTt o g .. fate Pastor Bloomingdale /Wormed Church. Caatoriaeu�es Colic, 'pati+, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Treetatiott, Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di Without niurious medicatioL "For several years I have recommended your' °Astoria, , and shall always continue do so as it has invariably produced ben results." towns F. name, 11. D., "Tie Winthrop," 1215th Street sad 7th Ave New York Glt rax Cxn'rsas Coicru,r, 77 bio'.nae.r Smear. Row Yost&. eirtiMEATIONSIMMISSEESKONSOK ,x. Neville Lubbock, member of one of the chief colonial sugar firms and Chair- man of the West India Committee, said the sugar supply of the world from July 1894, to July 1895, was about 800,000 tons is exoess of consumption. The supply from July, 1895, to July 1896, was estimated at 1,300,000 tons under the preceding year. The 800,- 000 00;000 excess did not suffice to carry over that year, and for the following y ear it was difficult to see how anything like an adequate supply could be. forthcoming. Prices, therefore must rico. When asked what could be done to meet the inadequate supply, Mr. Lubbock said: "There is nothing for it but areduction in consumption which can be best brought about by higher prices. Stocks are now run- ning low and will continue to du so ra- pidly. The visible supply of the world, now about 1,900,000 tons, would be re- duced to about 300,000 tons by October." The business during the week at To- ronto was of moderate volume only. The prospect for the immediate future is not very encouraging owing to the near approach of the elections. Capi- talists are not disposed to commit them- selves, but the situation is likely to im- prove after the 23rd. There will be un- certainty too until the crops are assur- ed. Indications point to a large quan- tity of wheat being left over from the season, and the low prices at present are due to su'li aossibility. Nearly all descriptions of farmers' produce are extremely low in price and the agrioui- tural community es suffering to a great extent in consequence. This is of course off -set in a measure by the extremely low prices for manufacturers and general merchandise. Business people are cautious and buying only from hand to mouth. Travellers are showing samples of dry goods for aut- umn and winter wear, but orders as yet are restrioted. There are no particular features in groceries or hardware, while some improvement is noted in leather and hides. Payments are fair, but com- plaints are numerous in some lines. Call loans are reported at 51-2 per cent., and discounts at 6 to 7 per cent. White wheat is about 2c. lower at Ontario points_ No. 2 being quoted at 70c., and very little moving at this price. Flour is very dull and requirements of mill- ers are necessarily curtailed. The price of wheat is still above an export basis. There is an advance in British consols, and Canadian bonds and debentures are higher on the London market. The only notable change in the speculative market is an advance m Can- adian Pacific, which is selling at the highest quotations of the year. The demand is said to be ohiefly on Dutch account. Advices from Montreal are to the effect that there is little change to note in the volumne of trade or the general situation. The dry goods warehouses are showing rather less bustle with the advancing season, and with many hous- es preparations are being made for stock taking after which travellers will be getting out with full lines of fall samples. Money keeps coming in well in this line, and payments for the month are reported much ahead of May, 1895. Groceries rule quiet. Some few moderate sales of new Japan Leas are ,reported at from 25o. to 40c. Sugars remain very dull, the demand at the re- fineries being higher than ever, and the market is weak, though quotations are nominally unchanged. A cable from Barbadoes announces a slight decline in molasses, the quotation -being now el- even cents, first cost. In leather there is rather more doing, some fair sales of upper transpiring, and there is a steady export movement in sole. Hides are reported a little off in Chicago, but the late advance is steadily held on spot, and tanners are buying rather more liberally. Receipts of cement and fire- brioks for the week have been large, but actual business has been light. Metals and hardware show just a quiet move- ment in small lots. Oils, paints and glass which have shoevn fair activity" for some weeks, are showing lessen- ing demand with the advancing sea- son. Cod oil is easier, Gaspe oil of good quality being now offered in Quebec ail 30 cents in car lots. The cargo of cape wool reported arrived last week, has been discharged in good order, and ie reported of extra fine quality, but mill men are apparently little disposed to buy until the elections be disposed of. Advices from various parts 0f the district indicate that the country is looking well, with crops well advanc- ed for the season. Butter prices are pioking up some, but cheese still rules low. 'The money market is easier, call money being available in some quart- ers at 5 per cent., but others of the hanks still quote 5'12. UNLIKE N OTHER MEDICINE, POINTS THE WAY TO PERFECT HEALTH South American Nervine. The Great Health Restorer of the • Oentury. 131ekneas Cannot Cope With It. Sas Cured the Worst Cases on Rec- ord. Ouaes at the Nerve Centres and Thus Cures Permanently, A Wonderful Specific in All Cases of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Narrousness and General Debility. Has No 'qua1 as a Spring Medicine. There is a great deal of uncertainty in the methods adopted to remove dis- Cesp•, Doctors are not free from this tied of thins thesaaselves. The poor pa- tlont has to put tri with a good deal of xpp�aorhnenttng. Tine discoverer of South A.a,erlean Nervine takes too serious a view of life to play pranks of this kind. He does not think that these human bodies of ours should he fooled with. Ho has rocotniazed that they are subject to dilltulae, batt, by scientific methods, ho has learned that just as the watch is to be Dtat in perfect repair only when the ri 3l i- ring ip I'.ept In fanning order, so with thehidigidsai, he remaans in per - feet health oily when the nerve centres are kept healtrefel and strong. What disease is more distressing than Indigestion sr dyspepsia.? Some simple remedy may lu± giden to cause relief for tate moment. Nervine is an itidisputably successful remedy for the worst cases of lhdigestion, because it reaches the source 0= all stomaeit troubles ---the nerve een- tree. Indigestion exists because tare vital forces have bepomne diseased anti are weakened. Nervine builds up the nerve centres, from which come there forces, removes the causes of ipolgeei tion, and then builds up the health com- pletely. How many systems are run down) through nervousness. A stimulant mat give ease, but it will not cure nervpgu troubles. Nervine has cured mere de•• perate cases of nervousness than any other medicine anywhere, And it does so for the same reason that it eures in- digestion. The nerve centres are des, ranged, or there would to no viptims o nervousness. Nervine rebullde and strengthens the nerve tissues, and hence its marvellous powers in diseases of thin hind. In the spring of the year ttig strong- est suffer from general debility. The blood, through neglect, bas become mw. poverished, and the whole system gets out of order. We speak of it as a spring medicine. Nervine restores the exhausted vital forces that have led to this tired, don't -care, played-oqt, mille able condition. No one can take a bat. tie of Nervine at this season of the year without disease quickly giving way to abounding health. The moral le plata, simple and readil understood. If you would not t itis wi disease, then you will take South Arne lean Nervine* which will not trig` !.Atli you. C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter. Trios. WICKETr, Crediton Drug Store, Agent. Before 'skin Wood's ! n®s1m[1,,—The Great English Remedy. 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 cure in all atagesof Sexual Debility, Abuse or Excesses, Nervous Weakness, Emissions, .Menial Worry, Excessive Use of Opium, Tobacco, or Alcoholic Stimulants, all of which soon lead to Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Wood," Phosphodine has boon used successfully by hundreds of cases that seemed almost hopeless --cases that had been treated by the most talented physi- cians—eases that were on the verge of despair and insanity—oases that were tottering over the grave—but with the continued and persevering use of Wood's Phosphodine, these cases that had been given up to die, were restored to manly vigor and health—Reader you need hot despair --no mate ter who has given you up as incurable—the remedy is now within your reach, by its use you can be restored to a lite of usefulness and happiness. Price, one package, $t; sixpackages, $5; by mail free of postage. One will pleoee, sin guaranteed to cure. Pamphlet free to aeyaddress, The Weed Company, Windsor, Ont •, Canada. Weod's Phospholine Is sold by responsible wholesale and retail druggists In the Dominion,