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The Brussels Post, 1897-4-16, Page 7;k1>Itn, Iii, 19407 ilk NFWS IN A NUTSHFI a THE VERY LATEST FROM ALL THE WORLD OYHR. Inte.esaing Items About Our Own Country, treat Denier', the linitet( States, and All Parts of tie, globe, Condensed and easorted for Easy Reading. CANADA, Hamilton lots decided upon August 5 AN the date of its oleic holiday. The ('orntvall Canal will be really for ,navigation by the last week of April. Over 100 buffalo bane been seen In the vicinity of Fart. Smith, Athabasca, during tbo past winter, L despatch from llonbay says that 1 he plague has broken out among the 13ritislr troops at Celebes t'e,R11Iuctar Iiotxunl of Hamilton, is dead, es the regaleoLt injuries sustain- ed at \Vuock:no.k i.rt January Iasi. It. itt said that at the approaching 0011 TWration of Queen's University, Lady Aberdeen will be made an LL.D. The total cost of the work done by the ineninl0n Government for the nu - prevenient of Toronto harbour was `,f35(3,(134, \" al Roy, aged 00 was asleep on the I.C.R. beck one mile east at 1t. Vsner. Qum, when the Halifax express killed hian. Xt. E. 1'. llannaCnrd, late chis[ en- gineer of the ()rand Truett is suing the company fur damages on account of itis dismissal. TM, huge steel arches of the bridge that will take the place of the railway' suspension bridge at Niagara have been ol:u•ed in position. The Manitoba fund for the relief oL the India famine sufferers new reaches $17; 5500.73, of which nearly $22,000 is from the school chtldree. lit is intimated that the negotiations in oonnection with the fast Atlantic ser- ene have reached a shape that an an- nouncement may be expected before Gong, • Semler Macdonald of British Co - 1 isabitt bas introduced a bill in the Senate to hake the 24th of May a per - peewit belielay in honor of leer Lu- jeely. Inspector Scorch left Ottawa on Sat- urday night for Regina. From that place he will take with him some tw-en- ty mounted policemen to the Yukon district. Mr. J. A. Kinsella, instructor of but- Ietwoking Int the Kingston Dairy School. has been appointed as assist- ant. to Prof. Robertson, Dominion De- iry Cosnmis.ioner. The Internal Economy Committee of the Desula10 House of Commons has decided t:, came, ensue ltestaurant- keei,er .Parnett: Igor the abolition of the house of Copnmons bat last sea- son. The Canadian Pacific railway have deposited plans 1 I1 nN f ter the Crow's IvusL Nass railway with the Railway Depart- ment, which is an official intimation that they are ready to construct the rad. W ii h the approval of many oC the Boards of Trade, the Government wilt some appoint coininereial agents to South Africa, the Mediterranean coun- tries, Mexico and other places to pro- mote trade relations. The Dominion Government's proposed amendments to the Civil Service Art will be sweeping in their nature. It is said that all new appointments will be during pleasure, instead of during good behaviour, as at present. The Government has granted $300,000 to the Grand Trunk for the itnprove- tient. of Victoria bridge, the condition being that the intercolemal is to have running powers over tee road from Levis to Montreal. Trouble .has arisen between the Grand Trunk and Canadian Pacific railways owing to the new tariff of Kootenay dis- trict isssuedasseng:rbay the s to G and Trunk and a rata war is threatened. Tile union breeklayers of Montreal went on strike on Friday, They are) at present receiving 30 cents an boar and working 'ten hours a clay, and they ask for a change to 35 cents an hour and nine hours a day. CYupt, Yates of tthie Oregon Asiatic Steamship Company is en route to Ot- tawa to submit a proposition to the Dominion Government for the estab- lishment of a line of steamers between 13rietisln Columbia ports and Central America. Toronto syndicate which has ao- mitred, options an electric railway steak fat Hamilton proposes to acquire and operate all properties workingun- del' city framchisos, giving the city a vole° m their control and a certain share of the profits, St bas been decided in Ottawa by a msetimg of military authorities that the jubilee regiment will be made up of volunteers tram the different corps. They wibi leave Montreal on Jame 1 by n, troopship for Liverpool, whence a train wild convoy them to Aldershot. Twn weeks will be spent there, and one in London. GREAT BRITAIN. Archbishop Piuz kei of Dublin is den.d, Mr. Ceoil Rhodes has left London on his returu journey to South Africa. The farewell banquet to Mr. Bayard will take place in Loudon on the 7th of May. Lady Laseelles, the wife of Sir Frank Laeoelles, the British Ambassador to Germany, is dead, • The Haggish Government hes refused to allow stands to be, erected in the London parks for the diamond jubilee. Major Sir Jahn Willoughby, the only one .of the Transvaal rattlers to serve this full sentence, has been discharged from the PA. ,lAt the last ballot of the Reformed Club in London every candidate bear - Mg a Getman name was lslaokballod as an dereaneteetitnn against raiser Wil-' dam. Oto ngt to the faiilt't a of the efforts to of se be venni between Lord, Pen. ohyn and his Wettish 91uarrysnen, twen- ty-seven hundred workmen are still Out of work. 11(1r, Edward Biaii'e's motion in Hie iBritish House of Commons setting la forth that Ireland was overtaxed was t defeated on Wednesday by one hundred et and sixty' votes. In connection 'with the warlike as- po0t et Europe and South Africa it is igg5aq11ficant/31�qr'eparted that Lord Wol- haw sseley, the significant/31 Comlmsander-un-Chief, will shortly vist1. Gibraltar. Preparations against eventualities in ht the Transvaal are being steadily push- P ed forward by the Pettish War' Office Iva and a general fatm(liar tvitl, African T BRUSSELS POST". Tdr. Curzon, Parliamentary Seereta for Foreign. Affairs, in addressing 1 (Onstiluents al: Southport on Saturday spoke bitterly of the aeilon of ")lie Tln- 111)1 Staten to endeavoring to kii'1' the arbiiratinat treaty, 'i'1)e Lord Mayor of Dublin, in' full robes of office, 5Lton405 the bar of the Jag/oriel house of Commons on Mon- day and presented a petition praying the (lommons to lake into consideration I1 a finaneial relations of Great Britain and Ireland, In The British Moues of Commons the other day Air. Chamberlain said he wee unable to state ll,he number of don during the diamond jubilee. No formal conference lad been arranged, but the Government would be glad to have the en -operation of the Premiers in ail matters et common interest. ry elected members of the :Premix Aca- 113 deiny. The Cretan ('ommit tee will not accept (ha fifty thousand roubles offered by the Czar for the families of the refu- gees .They ask no aid from the Czar while Russian warships Lake part In the bloekadc+, In a fashionable English chub a few evenings ago l\ r, Mtiekie, sun of the members made an insulting remark re- garding the smother of. Alt, Gerald O'Shea, son of Captain O'Shea and Airs. O'00lun-Parnell, which the young snap resented, and knocked AIr. 9faeki a diens. who fell upon a fender, receivhng a pro- bably fatal injury. UNITED STATES. Navigalinn leas opened at. Chicago, A Canadian Soelely was formed in New York last night. Governor Aclases line signed the b111 abolisbitig capital punishment in Colo- rado, The New York press says Daniel S. T,t,mnnt may become pre0ldenl. of the Northern Pacific Railway. Eight ('11ineanen are under arrest in Melons, N. Y„ who are alleged to have been smuggled across the border. Mrs. Leeopold V 3p11 nene, at Nor- wich, Mich., has given birth to five children within the past 12 months. Table hands and finishers in the Chi- cago tanneries have decided that: a gen- eral strike should 1>e declared, [basked men in the vicinity of Lan- caster, Ky., bone threatened to kill tollgate keepers if they presist 10 col- lecting ing 'lolls. (11io Baltimore & Ohio Railway Is to 'have a rail and lake line between Chi- cago and Milwaukee and the eastern seaboard. Mlle. Ifarities Pachiri, a Grecian lady at the Buckingham Hate), New York, is reported to have been robbed 01 dia- monds worth $5,000. Abraham Ephraim Elmer, of Utica, N. V. claims to 1>e one bemired and fif- teen years of age, and the oldest man in; the United States. Eastern capitalists have, it is said, bonded immense copper mines near Carson City, Nov„ and will build a mill and amettors at once. Between 30,000 and 00,000 steam: fit- ters and plumbers are en strike in New York as a result of a practical lockout on the part of the bosses. The breaks in the levees in Missis- sippi have allowed a vast tract of country to he flooded and the inhabi- tants nhabi tants barely escaped -with their lives:. Former Ambassador' Bayard will re- turn to the lJnitecl States May 151141 from England, and former' Ambassador Wayne MaoVeagh from Italy April 10th. Representative Spaldinlg, of Mioblgan, has introduced a ,joint resolution in the House at \\'ashingtcu provtd[tg for the anlnexation of Doeval to the United States. Lady Sbott:o Douglas, mea Loretta. Ad- dis, a San h'raucisoo concort'hall singer, bas given birth to a son. LordDouglas is the youngest sun of the Marquis of Queensberry. 1 William Bloom, index arrest in Cleveland on a charge of arson, de- clares that he has beers setting fire to buildings in various cities during the past five years. At the annual meeting of the stock- holders of the Aanoricw Bell Telephone Company, the directors were re-elect- ed, and it was voted to inorease the capital stook from $3,043,000 to $20, 015,000. Frank Butler, the. Australian mur- derer, who was extradited from San 1iraaoisoo on Saturday, confessed prior to his departure to baying killed Ar- thur Preston, bat he 011501 ns it was in self-defence. The United States Senate bas au- thorized the Seoretary of the Navy to place a vessel o8 wars and a chartered merchant vessel at the disposal of the collector oC the port oC Now York for tralnsport[ug contributions of wheat, flour anti corn to relieve the famishing poor of India. • The Supreme Court at Washhington has deoided that the Oceanic Steam Navigation Company was responsible to certain passengers for damage done to baggagein craning from Liverpool to New York, although the tickets of claimants oom,tainecl in fine type a waiver for damages to persons or pr'op- eyty Commercial reports from the Unit- ed States indicate little, if any, change. Business is dull, and the out- look uncertain, but employment is more general in various lines of industry Eban was the case a few weeks back. Prints and woollens are in steady and appr'ooiative request, and the wool mills are everywhere busy. The decision of the Supreme Court in regard to trusts has, for a time, detrimentally affect- ed the iron trade, but the °bock is only eepected'to be temporary,. The politi- cal situation in Europe is affecting' markets in the 'United States and else- where detrimentally, but in business oircles prospects are considered good. G.TSNIRUIL. There is great rejoicing, in M115111 over ,the Spanish viotories in the Phit- ippine islands, President Kruger hos suspended 'lois grandson for tnsullting Great Britain end the Queen. It is reported at Bombay that the plague bas broken out among the Brit-, )ah troops at Calaba.. Princess Leopold of Prussia is taking a regular oourse of training as a hos- pital and field nurse. The Portuguese troops Ilene been de- feated In Guinea by the natives after a fight lasting eight hours, A Paris despatch says that a new At- lantic cable is being manufaoturod at Calais and will shortly be laid. President Faure bas been effioially informed of the approatucyhing visit of the Russian Emileeror and the Czarina to Prn,nce, It is reported at Cape Town that De- goa Bay bas been leased to Groat Bri- ain for 30 years at an annual rental halt a million sterling. The British brig Aeronaut:, from Santa Tie, December 31., for xlamburg, leas been abandoned at 00a, Her anew e arrived at Darbadaes. The Newfoundland Government bee decided to enforro the net wbioh pro. - bits Emelt 'fishermen front tat. ierro taking bait in Newfoundland tors. M. 11lanotaux, the Meister far Nor- teen Affairs, and Conde de Min the righting pas been Seleetd to coanmend [si Well-kluoten cicrieal Density, bine battle 001)8, 1 THE DIAMOND JUBILEE, THE COLONIAL TROOPS WILL MARCH SEPARATELY. 1114'), Contingent 1}el'lirl 111111(4 Premier la a U11y111 (913v4ii1gr-.1a5N,u' 1'/411101105-• I)elornljens and Titles In Croat Pro A despatch from London says:--ln consequence of the unexpected num- ber of colonial 'troops coming to take part in the celebration of the Queen's diamond jubilee it has been (1014(ted that the colonial procession will march separately, each contingent• eseortiug its Premier in a Royal carriage drawn by foul richly caparisoned horses. This procession will leave :Iluckinglram palace ten minutes before the Queen's procession. On arrival at St. 1'alul's Cathedral the colonial forces chill be drawn up n•aund the west front 0f the sacred edifice, and the wives of the Premiers will lake assigned places near the Queen. Thee, an her Ma- jesty's arrival, all the colonial visitors Will have, a splendid view, and 'will be able to salute the Sovereign. The Goveretme:nt Inas reamed to al- low- stands to be 80111411 in the 15111110 parks for' tho Queen's diamond j1ibilee procession; An offer of n70,000 was made for permission to acct a stand in the Green park, facing Piccadilly. The statement that !'resident Faure will visit England for the jubilee is denied. Much commotion prevails to the various departments of State owing to the rumour that the chiefs are engaged in making out the lists of those Government servants who are deem- ed worthy of special recognition by the Queen in connection with the forthcom- ing diamond jubilee. Naturally most men consider themselves entitled to de- coration, and those with family or oth- er influence are using it with vigour and persistency, The announcement of the amen whom the Queen will deligbt to honour will be made in what is known as the Birthday Gazette, at the end of May, and the list is likely to be a phenomenally long one, Usually the Queen follows Lhe ad- vice other Ministers in regard to the honours conferred for political ser- vices, but sine scrutinizes all the lists very closely, and has been known to refuse to accept r00000meaudations without assigning any reasons. It is nllogether too early yet to predict with confidence what particular men will get tee hs nours, or who w111 be left out in the cold, but it may be said, with reasonable, canfldlence, that the diamond. jubilee list will include a dukedom for the barman; of Salisbury and a peerage for Sir Malian Paunce- Cote, whose tactful conduct at Watshr- ington during the pail; eighteen months, many people think, has not been fully recognized here, WOMAN, WHY R You bave Sallow Skin, Pimples, Erup- tions, Disoolorations. Why Resort to Cosme1ies and Powders to hide the EL£eots? Dr, Agnew's Liver Pills regulate the System enol restore to the cheek the Healthful Rasy Bloom and peach Blush of Youth. 10c. a vial. Disorders like .these arise from slug- gish liver. From one or two pills a dose, will clarify and purify the com- plexion in short order. Dr. Agnew's Pills at all deeggisis. See that you get what you. ask for. 10c. for 40 dosis. Sold by G. A. Deadman. FORCE OF HABIT. X guess that new man must be an actor, said the star boarder to the landlady. Why so? Because die threw up his arms and dodged when you passed the eggs. A HEALED H1i ALD. Thinks Rheumatism is Born of the Low- er )legions, but Proclaims South Am- erican Rheumatic Cure a Heaven - Sent Healer. HenryHumphreys, East London, seeds his unsoliuitecl testimony: I was seized with painful rheumatism in my left foot. 1 could not Irest with it day or night, the pain was so in- tense, I tried many remedies, but they had no mare effect on me than water on a duck's back. I was per- suaded to try South American Rheu- matic Cure, I followed the directions elbsely, and in a very short time this wonderful remedy efteated a com- plete cure, and there has not been the slightest stint of a weturki bf the dis- ease. It is a sero reansdy and I de- tiwht to iieraliL the goodness) all over Sold by O. A. Deadman. A QUESTION OP 'PRIORITY. Simon:Mee—T have a Chance to marry two girls; one is pretty, but a mere butterfly, as it were, and the other though plain:, is an excellent, house- keeper. A'Ir. Russell- a,ke the pretty one first. ONE WAY, 1 cont a, dollar last week, said the Good Thing, in answer to that adver- tisement cfferiteg a method of saving one heat my gas bills. And you got— • — A prin1ed slip directing ole to paste them in a scrap book. HAND-IN-HAND. Health and Happiness go ttn.ndt rn- tHatud—With Stomaohi and. Nerves all out of Sorts, Health and Happiness are dodo getn.. frank A. Gadbois, Cornwall, Ont.: "1 wos for several years a great sut- Lerer from indigestion, dyspepsia and nervousness, I took many remedies witheut any, relief, 110030 Solrth elm 0r[oan Nervine advertised. I >romux- od a bottle, and 1 can truthfully say it is the beet medieite I over used, and I strongly recommoncl it to any - ono :uffcring its T did. ;A foto doses wonderfully helped me, and. two bon. ties have made a mete Mau of Me. It euros by d}teet action on the nerve contras,, Seld by G. A. 1)eidbiail, THE EXPERIMENTAL UNION, 100),) ie' strew Done tip' 11, 0 Ontario A g rlral) ,rat ('4411ege, r)150 of 10D varieL108of farm erops have been tested in the, Experimental Depri.rlineet of the Ontario Agi'icutlur- al College, (1uelph, within the past el- even years, nett six hundred of them have been gross u for at least five years In IUccessitnt, Nearly all the Canadian sorts and several hundred netiv varie- ties imported by 1111 ltxperirneulal De- partment from different parts of Eine ape, Asia, Africa, Australia, and the Uni10(1 States have been included in these carefully )andueted experiments, Some ut the new var'ietie's have done extepllonally well ood have already been distributed ever Ontario, through the medium u1 the Experimental Un - Ion, with very gratifying results. '1135 Siberian Oats, 1'ilandscheuri liarley,ller- ison Bearded Spring Wheal., and the Cloud's Early ):clime- Dent, anlmmotb Cuban, \1'ieeensin Eartieet White ;Dent, and Sulzere' Net'lh Dakota varieties of corn, which itro new becoming 80 popu- lar in Ontario, were imported by the Experimental Department, and after being tlen•oughly tested were distrib- uted In small quantities.. The preseirI system of co-operative experimental work in agricultur0 WAS star't:ed in 1880 with 10 plots, which were situated on ltvelt'u different farms in Ontario. Inc}c that date, lrowever, the woil, has increased from year to year anti in 1800 there were 11,124 plots, which were situated on 2,200 farms. We are again .prepared to distribute ma- terial for c'u-t>perat ive experiments with fertilizers, rudder 00053, roots, 50100, grasses and clovers. Interes_ed persons in Ontario who wish to juin in T}n) work, may select any ane of the experiments for 1897 and iufurni th' director at once of the C1141(4' made. All material will In fur- nished entirely free of 011arge to cauls applicant, but le, lent be expeeted to conduct the test according to the in- struction, sent with the seeds, and to report the results of his test as eeonn as possible after barvesr. LIST Oh' E.XI'ERLMiiN1'S FOR 1807. 1. Testing uitreto of sada, superphos- phate, murrat0 et potash, mixture, and AOmanure with Corn. J • . Tes'tin'g nitrate of Anda, superphos- phate, muriate of potash, mixture, and AK) manure with Mangels. 3. Testing six leading varieties of Fodder Corn:. 4. Growing three Leguminous crops for Green Fodder, 6. Growing three mixtures of grain for Green Fodder. (1. Testing foto' varieties of Grasses for Hay. 7. Testing, four varieties of Clovord for limy. S. Testing them varieties of Buck- ovbeat. 9. Testing four varieties of Spring Wheat. 10. Testing four varieties of Barley. 11. Testing five varieties of Oats. 12, Testing four varieties of ;Leas. 13. Testing three varieties of Beans. 14. Testing five varieties of Carrots.- 15. arrots-15. Testing five varieties o1 Men - gels, 10. Testing four varieties of Turnips. Materials for either No. 1 or No. 2 experiment will be sent by express, and Ler each of the others it will be for- warded by mail. Ail fertilizers and seeds will be sent in good time for spring seeding) providing the applica- tions are renewed at an early date. The supply of material being limited those who apply first will be surest of of obtaining the desired outfit. It might be well for each applicant to make it second choice for tear the first could not be granted. Particular varieties need net be men- tioned, as all the kinds to be distribut- ed are those which have done excep- tionally well upon the trial plots in the Experimental Department. C. A ZAV1'TZ, Director, Agricultural College, March, 1807. ROYAL FAMILY CONNECTIONS. Reigning Monarchs 40 Europe buck Ire laded by Jilooel and Marriage. Attention has recently been drawn to the extent to which the royal fam- ily of Denmark is related by marriage to the governing families of other Eu- ropean kingdoms. Christian IX, of Denmark, the oldest secular ruler in Europe, is the father of the Princess of Wales (wife o1 the future Xing of England), the father of George I., King of Greece, and the father of the Em- press Degmar, mother tit the Emperor of Russet, Nicholas 11. In the present complication in and about Crete, the English and the Russian Governments are perhaps more deeply interested than any other, and the relation tvhteh they bear to Xing George is therstoro of the very first importance. Ifo is related by marriage to the royal house of each empire, one sister being the mother of the Russian Emperor, and the other the slaughter -in-law of Queen Victoria, The Xing of Denmark, however, is not the only monarch of Europe at pre- sent who owes much of his 1011001006 to matrimonial alliances. The present Emperor of Austria, Franz, Josef, has two daughters, the elder of whom, Gisela, is married to the second son of the Regent of Bavaria. His son Rudolph, who died by suicide in 1880, was married to the second daughter of Leopold ll,, the Xing of Belgium. The present Xing of Portugal, Charles is a eon o1 a daughter of Victor Em- manuel, The beer to the throne of Saxony married the daughter of a former Xing of Portugal, and his eld- est son married the Archduchess Louisa of Austria. The present King of Greece not only is the brother of the Dowager Em cress of linssin, but 110 married the Grand Duchess Olga of 1inssie, and a younger brother mar- ried the Princess Marie o1 Orleans, a 01(000 Of the ()slate de Paris, whose son, the Duke of Orleans, is the Bourbon as 1[rant for the Drown of France. The eldest sols of the Xing of Denmark mar- reed the Princess Louise of Sweden, who rs a niece of the present Xing of Swe- den and Norway, Oscar IL. Ithe oldest of the sons of the present Xing 0C Greece married Sophia, the sister oC the present Emperor of Gorman, whose brother henry is married to a daughter of the late Princess Alice of England, a dlauglnter oC Queen `V'ic- t:0rie who died in 1878. The heir to the Marone o1 Roumania is the husband of the eldest dauphine of the Dake of Bdinburgh second son of Queen torine and this list does not by any means exhaust the summary or rola- U[011811155 botweeu the royal families of Europe. It was sai(1 in former times that the integrity of the once potverfal and 1M el - ways niottd Metre OC Austria was maintained only through the fact that NI .Tamen A. 11:11, of Beaverton, Ont„ brother of the hey. door \t estey then, 13.11., prostrated by ),manus hendacaes A 001 (1111 or the truub.e for se vera) yen r-. iortal ALA r10an Nervine effected 'm complete core. In their own partite:Ier field few men are better known 11uu1 the dor, John 'Wesley hell. 13.11., mud his brutl.er Mr. Jinn's .t, hell. 'Che former w'111 no re- cognized by his illousande of friends all over the entuett'y tls the popular and able missionary seiperintendent of the Royal Tempters of Temperance. among. the :loom0members of tads order in Outeric his counsel i:s 50445,111 on all .c„I't:s of oC- cas10110. On the public platform he is 0110 or the strong men of the tiny. nettling against the ...vibe Of intemperance. Equally well )'flown 14 91x. Bell le other provinces of the Dominion, 1010311:5 been per years a member of the 9lsultobe 'Methodist Conference and part of this lime wall 51111 holed in Winnipeg. Ills brother, lir, .11emxt A, Bell. is :t mghly respected resident nl' Beaverton, emer0 his influence, 11101155/1 perhaps more cir- cumscribed than that of hie eminent brother, Is uooe the less effeetive and productive 01! mond. Of recent years,hwv- ever: the working ability or Mr, ,lames A. )Bell has been sadly 'stirred by severe attacks of nervous hendadu', accom- panied by 11 1)0est'on. Who can do fit wort when this trouble takes hold 02 them and especially when it becomes r` chronic, 1 eel., ,la WAS, seemingly, the case w;ih 91r. Boll': The trotlb.e reached suets in-} tensity that last ,1001) he was cowp:utt!- ly prostrated. lu this we:denten a friend.' recommended South American Nervine. Ready to try anything and evelytong, (. though be thought lie had covered the list of proprietary medicines, lie secured: M. a bottle of this great discovery, 3 second bottle of the medicine was taken and the work was done. Employing his' own language: "Two bottles of South American Nervine immediately .0olievcd my headaches and have hum u>1 my system in a wonderful manner: " net us not deprecate the good our clergymen and social reformers are doing. in the world, but how ill -fitted they would be for their work were it not the relief that South American Nerrino brings to them when physical ills overtake them, and whon the system, as a re- sult of hard, earnest and continuous work, breaks down. Nervine treats the system as the wise reformer treats the evils he is battling against. 11 srrl0ee at the root of the trouble, Ail die- ease comes from disorganization of the nerve centers. This is a scientific fact.. Nervine at once works on these nerve centers; gives to them health and vig- or; and then there courses through the system sarong, healthy, life-nuuntalnicg blood, and -nervous troubles oe every variety are things of the past. Sold by Deadman & McDoll the princes of the House of Hapsburg), not handsome mon themselves, had, all of them, beautiful daughters, and the marriage et these daughters to scions et other royal houses in Europe had the effect of forestalling and prevent- ing the dismemberment of the Austri- an empire, repeatedly threatened af- ter each successive defeat of Austrian soldiers in battle, At the present time it is the royal house of Denmark, rather than of Austria, which exercises the largest measure of influence, mn- trimoulally, on other European courts. FASCINATIONS OF POISONS. The Men who 5011).e Ilendty enieffdc of I'Otf5Fiilia Are (strangely ,Tempted to Ent of It There is a factory in London that makes only the deadliest poisons known to chemistry. Last year it produced 1,000 tons of cyanide of potassium, Five grains of tent is sufficient to kill a man. In rue room of the factory a visitor found tons of this deadly poi- son. It resembles very closely white crystallized sugar. The visitor re- marked to the manager, "11 looks good enough to eat." "Ah," replied the manager gravely, "that is just oma of the dangers we have to guard against, For some in- explicable reason oyanide of potassium exercises a remarkable faseimation over the men engaged in its manufacture. They ars haunted by a oon.stant and aver-recau'ring desire to eat it. Tiley are perfectly alive to the fact, however, that to give way to the craving woltld mean instant death, and are conse- quently usually able to resist it. But not always. During the tlono I have been here three of 8,10 bast and stea- diest workmen have committed suicide in this 3tra,ago manner, impelled there- to apparently by no cause save- this mysterious, horrible longing. I my- self have felt the same strange lust when I bave been long exposed to the cvanido £umee, and have had to leave tiro works for a time 111 consequence. So well is this ourioes fact recognized that there are always two men at work together in tbis branch of our business, and a jar of am/Amite Which, as you may know, is the antedate to the poi- son., is ]rapt constantly near at band." Apart from this remarkable infatua- tion, 10811th may be likened to the de- sire oxpOrienoed by many people when stamding oe the brink of a precipice to throw t emselees doW11, the Innnutee-. FOR TWENTY-SEVEN Y.P,'ABS. P THE GOOKS BES TFR ENID LAlscgs,- SALE Irl CANA A. INALTMFFEIFRIIIIMMAFROMPAMMIAMICAPAISSAPIIMAARVO ture of potassium cyanide is tot par- ticularly dangerous. Neither is it un- healthy. In tact, it is asserted that men have Bono into the cyanide louse ill and debilitated and in a short time have been restored to robust health. : 'l1' PERPLEXED BUTCHER. :Che old saying that a little learning is dangerous, is verified by the follow- ing inordentot 1.A young pnatkon upon entering a butcher's shop, pleasantly and with all confidence, said: Good -morning, Mem you any hon' vivant this reorient? Any what:, madam? was the sur- prised ingjauy. .Any bon vivant: Yon know that ,is the Preneh expression for good liver, AN 'APPREHENSIVE FATHER. X think, said Mr. Blykins, that I'll sand a note to Willie's teacher and tell her to stop his geography lessons till next term. X don't see why, replied. his wife. The e1e3s has just started in on the map of Europe; and the higher he passes in his examination the harder it will be to start }n end learn it e11 over again waren Xing George and the sultan got through with what they are going to do to the boundary lines. Piles Cured in 3110 0 Nights—Itching, 13urning Skin Diseases Relieved in. Ono Do,y, , , , Dr. A eeav'e Oin(ment will aura all) cases of itching piles in from three to six nights. )Ono application brings comfort. .For blind and bleeding pile3 itis peerless. Also oures'tettor, salt r'h0wn, eczema., barber's ilcli and alis' erepbimns of the skin. Relieves inal date 35 bents. •t l t Hold by» ' . A;. 'D0145mati�+