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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1897-4-30, Page 7A:r1ltIi, SO, 18117 THE alit/SSE LS Pad'': V07L•3 tI4\T1I coArAt 131'8. ')del tl 8 e e es OIt d 11 tq A look a''. the history of. the Mine of Samos siaw° lits escape tieorn direct Turkish rule is wool enough Matt' th struggle or the Greek rameverylvher to shake off Turkish oppeesscon !s jus tined by every inertia torsi malertatrea PM. Stenos is much smaller then Clot and contains only 150 square miters with n population tit about 00,000. l3u the Fame utneonquereble spirit that ex iris in Crete is Emend in StLmos, and I won virtual autonomy from the Salta nearly fifty years 041o. In the Ore revolution of 18'.1 Sdwnos took a deter mined -part, and 9or nine years deCie the Turkish forces, ,/after the battl of Navarino, which established Graec as an independent nation, the pave , decided that Stones. for geograJ I1lcat reasons she OI4 still belong to TorkeY and he subject ca a Turkish overlord The nmiens, rofesed to su1rmit for two yeo.ra, and it was then arranged that they should be 'granted the right to elect their own council, witlo a presi- dent, renninatecl by the Smitten, but a Greek an religion. Beyond this the inland was required to pay the Sultan an annual subsidy of 310,500. This arrangalnent was submitted to until 18.40, when a treats outbreak was threatened in Somas on account or the ate -wee and exmittens oC the Turkish re- pre.vunLatives. Tha Sultan had no re- lish for another contest with UM islanders, and further rights l:o govern themselves were granted. These in - eluded the election of a generalas- sembly, empowered to choose their own president. A senate :ileo was Himmel, of whom the Turkish prince named one- hailf. Public reVemues were taken .from the prince and turned over to a Native 00190(il. 111<11, village had a voice in chocksing Its mayor, and the cnurtsware reorganized, and given charge of cer- tain cases previously su1jee.(: to the are hidrary will of the Governor. A mayor, assisted by a local council, Sees allow- ed jurisdiction in minor 1aweilit0 be- tween inhabitants of his commune. 10 a word, Samos woe for itself political privileges carol far removed from home rule. The re(ulle during the forty-seven years that have elapsed since these 0anee_Wdons were wrested front Tnlrkey have been of the first importance to this little island. It has enjoyed peace- ful times. The population, which was 20,000 in 1832, bas inereasod threefold. Its exports are (Levan times what they were. in 1832. There is no public debt and the treasury reports a comfort- able nsinnet surplus. Complete freedom from Turkey would have increased this sheaving of Ixrosperity. In the faceof such evidences of improved conditions among their freer neighbors it is vain to expect the Crehiens to drop back into the old order oC things, subject to the greed of a Turkish Governor and the grinding presenoe everywhere of Turkish troops, Crete has five times the population. oC Samos and the same affinities of race. The powers will find that it is nerved to a finals desperate. effort to drive out the Turk forever. Any explores' wiio has reached Lake Tohad, hos wan the credit of achieving a, notable geographical feat. It all has gone well width M. Gentil, of the French Congo service, be has got to the lake by a. new route, carried nearly all the way by a steamboat, and his Utile ves- sel is now puffing around on that re- gnarOtab;e &beet of water, whereof the dimensions are so elastic Mat its area is believed, at times to be as great' as that of Victoria Nyanza. A year ago last November Gentil took hie steam- boat, 111e Leon Blot, far up the Congo and its Mebangi affltuent to the mouth of the Hemet Rives' coming from tate north. The route of the explorer Mu - tetra red through. its valley, but when Gentil reached the Obmi tributary of the Kemo he turned hie steamer up that :river and struck out a new route in Atrial.. It was the period of high wat- er and the river was then abort 850 fell, wide. It adds scores of 1011(es to the length of the navigable waters of the Congo basin, now believed to reach a total of about 7,000 miles. The Leon Mot resoled the navigable haat of this important river. It bad pushed north to 5 degrees 40 mle1ut0s N. tatittrdet and aJlted was the water eertinrg between the Congo and the Shari, or Lake Tolled, systems, The steamer was then divided into hundreds of pieces, which, ooalet be. carried on the balm of mon. A thousand natives of tihat region wean engaged as port ere, and with their aid the expedition was moved sixty-nine miles 1110 the north, where it; struck the navigable Nana Rater. On Oat. 12 hist this vessel was afloat again, thepioneer steamer in the Lake Tcllad basin. (About forty smiles further northwest the river empties in- to tibe Gribingnr,i, which Mtuster believed lo be the Shari, though it away prove. to be merely a large tributary at ilhat ricer. If M. Gontat had good 900(01ne he hoped, in November last, to he stem/thing among the, many ls.ancls of I,alke Tt'91.acL llnnere le rainy a slip in Africa, and perhaps dame obstacle has prevented the explorer froon, carrying out his inter - eating project, out 10 Ile has proved the Itracticability of Trenching Lalke Polled, as he hoped to do, he ]res opened ar new route to the heart of ,Africa. The cotnp41et1ion of t1hs1 (Congo railroad is now 01195' a question of onontlhs. Oben that important /monk is .Sintshed, a light raiiroad, sixty-nine Imiles long, across the Congo-Tohad water parting wiuid give commenitabion, tin tibia way by steam, between Apn,orioa and thio /nest remote of Africa's great helmet. The lake is ono of the moat Jotemesting of the physical :features of Africa, xt ss a fresh water Mike wldihaut an outlet, in the caelle0ry sense, for 110 Sire= flows from It. But when elle, great Mills %that border its bestir' peerr dlheie floods fa 'trio laake in the rainy seroo)19, !Schad overCows its Brow //of/eines, spreading far away, and it fit toils .evacuee of, wel.ers that ,keeps Te.11o0 £roln being Massed among the salt lakes, Tiff' �ii'ttitl ter 1l:iTniiri- ar,.n V 15 IO U'J 1 VIILLIJ. THE VERY LATEST FROM ALL Th WORLD OVER. Harry .de Windt, who recently at- te(npt0d to travel by land from New York to Paris i'3 111 in London. Tha trade returns for nine 1000(110 of the present 600414 year were 3184,- 734,000, nearly ten millions better Limn E last year. • Dungan Forbes, of Cniloden, the do-. soend0rrt al President Forbes, of Scotch histario funis, ((1110 at Ouillodtsan holnso, three miles from /nearness, on Satur- d day. . d Tho British shipbuilding engtnoers • and their empiloyers have a dispute which is gt•awing veay grave, and a great stalke Js 011mi0en1 in all the d yards. .. Diplomatic notes are passing between x London and Washington with reference to the Behring sea fisheries, and a d1f- O fiouliy is threateninrng as serious as the Venezuelan affair. The usual Queen's Maundy bounty ( was distributed at eirestmulster on Thursday, and the coins given to the old people were eagerly bought 1104 sou - 861(00 of the jubilee reign. A despatch from the American Sec- retary of State,"couched to. decided tornts," has been served on the British Government', urging that the indis- criminate slaughter of seals inBertng Sea be stopped. r It is siatevl that Lord Wolseley, Com- manrlelr-in-Chief of the British forcer, 13111 have to shorttly retire 011 account of i11 -health. Lord Roberts and Su' Redeem Beeler are mentioned as fav- orites for the sueeession. Referring to the trouble in Hawaii regarding the landing of Japanese im- migrants, the London St. James' Ga- zette says that if a rupture takes place between Japan and the United States the latter may find the ;Japanese navy a hard aastomsr to Lacikle. DIr. R. W. Banbury, replying tp a question in the British House of Coni - moos, announced that the Board of Trade would ask the Government of the Dominion of Canada to furnish et report on the result of the law prohib- iting gambling in future. interesting Items About Our Own Country (Great Britain, the United States, an All Parts of the Globe, Condensed en assorted ler Easy Reading. CANADA. Sir William Van Horne has learne to r bicycle. ids the b °y le. SC. Patrick's Boys' School at 911111ftt was seriously damaged by fire. Cattle shipments tram Manitoba t the British markets have commenced. Dr. lV,lontegue speaks in vary high terms of the prospects of the Bothwol oil fields. Montreal retail grocers 11(180 organ- ized a boycott on the departmental stores. Manitoba's total contributions to the Dominion India, famine fund amonn to $18,390. The Thirteenth Regiment of Hamil- ton is naw completely armed with. the DOW Lee -Enfield rifles. Mr. Henry J. Moan of Train/11ton is dead as !the result; o£ swallowing a 41000 meted tack six years ago. An attempt to l9urn the steameriGar- den City a. Port Dalhousie was frus- trated by a caup10 of fishermen near by. 7'he Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nhcology summer school of architecture will be held at Quebec City this sum- mer. A general order has been issued by the Militia Department 'which re- stricts the pay lists to men who are fit for active servioo. A portion of the C.P.R. track on the Pacific division carried away by• a 'landslide has been relakt and trains are running as usual. A large mass of rook weighing sever- al tons fell fro0n tate elifl down on Obncn lain street, Quebec. A couple of houses were damaged. It is rumoured at Winnipeg that the object of the visit of Sir Prank Smith a'ud other officers oC the Dominion Bank is to start a branch there and at Van- conver, It is aspected that the lower floors of the Western Department buildings ixs Ottawa, wisioh were injured by fire, will be xeady for ocoupetian by the firs0 oC May. Mr. 3. B. Riley, United States Cbonsal, gives the exports from the consular district of Ottawa to the United States for the quarter ended March 31, as 35550,909, of which 3107,151 was lum- r. An intimation has been received from Aeist;raiia to the effect that several of the Pxemiee0 are. considering the ad- visability of travelling to Ldndou by the way of Canada to participate in the diamond jubilee. 1 ChieC Justice, Sir I'rancis i'tleLean tel- egraphs from. Calcutta to the Gover- nor-General thanking all who have con- tributed to the India famine fund, and reporting the progress of the work of relief. The authorities of McGill University Montreal, have received from his High-' nese the M 1iaxajah of Joypore, India, 11 slumber of works on India architec- ture, known as the Jeypore portfolios of architectural details. The (00)001 of the penitentiary Inves- tigating commission hes been transmit- ted to the bilinlats:r of Justice. It is started that one result oC the investi- gatltopl will be a tatorough shaking up of 0(1e staff. It is pnobuble (hat the Dominion Dovetail/mit will shortly give insteno tions to its agents in England to see that frau children scant out to 11100000- MT are not the, dreamof the criminal glasses or otltern'ise undesundesirable.Dar. 11nsu21h t, M. P., s received a let- ter from Sir Oliver 100018139 stating that his application for the 0131Ppne110100 Of the useless of the Dihssach Benefit Insurance Association cannot be granted under able ia1e1 as it e m usetts xists, The Secretary of State has prepared a memorandum for Council es a basis for a proclamation making Tuesday, the 22(nd of June a netional holiday and the day for the official celebration throughout Canada of the jubilee of her Majesty's reign. .9 man about twenty-one years of age jumped off the upper Suspension bridge at NiagaraFalls on Saturday. He was seem to strike the field oC floe ice. The may evidence left by him was a brrown Derby tat, with the maker's name in- side, ' Hall, Boston." us • f us 0 d T special ase a c r a i e m their pro- rty r rinmo xti Pam I3, y's s of frei • of Sir•. W, C. McDonald:, the Dfontreai beam manufacturer, re , was condemned Judge, Pag'1luelo to pay the entente this tate Alphonsine 'l:hlbaudeau J00, the amount of their` action for ampensation for the death 09 their avgetter, olio tv00 wordingg' in the Mc- onald tahaoco factory whet the fire April, 1895, oncnered and died front (trues received by jlwnping from a ndow of the fourth storey, GiblaIAT BRITAIN. t The resignation of Chief J tics Hagerty of the Ontario Court o Ap- peal has been accepted, Mr. justice Burton of the same court will b the new Chief Justice of Ontario, an Der. Charles Moss, Q. C., is mentioned in eget oireies as the most acceptable 11010 edge lin place of Mr. Justice Burton. The propanol to or9bintzer a 'agimernut of 000 men to represent Canada at the jubilee celebration tion watt probably fall throu(811L, ;1s the Gov - eater -General hats received 11 a'48 meesago from 11(11, Chttaurborla9,n ex- p0ainang that the Imperial authorities unmet accommodate mors than 200 nope front Ctsnada, eetlulural Markham rear -admiral of he 1V ledi•tarr•aneain Beet, has declined he Dontin,ion Government's offerto ke command of the expedition to test he navigability of the Hodson Bay sauna, a1L the grounds that a eni- ng vessel, with engines of only sevmy er'Sepower, is not a ara£t' suited for he purpose, • The Lied River is still rising at E er- n. ]luny have hall to leave Danes,, and great destruction of m being caused. Some build age rte stbbme,rged Ito the second floor here is over three feet of wage in e stores on Main street, and all cam - Imitation from the country is out It iia stated that the Gove nt s decided to gran the C. It a nus of 310,000 per, mile for thecon- ruction of the Crow's Nest P aid.. w ay, in ,eetuk•nt icor the 00103011, sue - ender of the tnorropoty ukt i es its reeenont, a redeletion of glut ,tea, 11na1 reaming Prayers 90 her tilways over than new lino, et c 'Dope tit 01 i n so ark11 pa t11 of be, st s a agi n mr to of 1 d Do of tnj wi Truth says:—"lt is doubtful if Lord Salisbury's health will permit him to retain the posts of Premier and Sec- retary of State for Foreign Affairs. Un- der these eireumstu,nees many Union- ists are suggesting Lord Roseberry as Secretary o£ State for Foreign Affairs," The Sons of England are awaking ar- rangements for the heading of a dia- mond jubilee 001081ee on Sunday, the 20th at June, that will circle the +globe at the hour of four o'olook an the aft- ernoon, Everywhere the National An- them will be sung, and prayers offered for her Majesty. lOto. Min Hay's Hammond, the Ameri- can engineer and former member of the Jollannesberg Reform Committee, arriv- ed In London on Friday from South Af- rica. He says affairs in the Transvaal are very unsettled, 0L he does not think an outbreak of war with Great Britain is likely in the immediate fut- ure. ' UNI'J'ED STATES. , Comrn151ionar Roosevelt tins resign- ed from the Police Department of New York. It is reported. at Was tat 'Spain is withdrawing her m Cuba, claiming that t' is practically suppressed. The Carnegie Company, g, has been invited by the v- erarnentto bid ou armour v0 first-class battleships. A gutnnee was killed a men seriously injarod b tura explosion•. of a oherg tar- get practice ou the United cruis- er antic, Mrs. Tillie Morgan., a D n of martini spirit, insists t to enlist in the National is calming much tantalite t t- atn•t-General. Col. John Hay, United S Ambas- sador the Court of St. ft New Yorlk on Wednesday n, to assume the, duties of poet as sot) as possible. Miss Lellis-a Weiss, a Ger- man woman. of Malone, n a charge of stealing goo de her escape from gaol, and d to be making for Canada An ihoident of the fl e Southern States is the dr a colored 9000113' of see s through 'Meth bulli kicking t of the boat in which 1110 grating to ,higher land. Special ageats of the U s Sub -Treasury department k aro reported to have uneartheds- tem of smuggling of ontbr d other goods from Montreal - rests have been made. Washington t1 troops fro ha rebellion of Pitisbur 11,110011.0 Gov- ernment for t1 and two other y the prema- ture daring to d States error woina on her right and o the Adjut- ant -Genera • Cates ,Amba James, le for tondo his new 700094 N.Y., !Haid o 001 bus ma t 10 suppose nods in ill (300(0194 0f on parson the side ou y Were ani - grating State at New York a sys- tem an , Several ar- rests Mr. Wallace Thayer, of a consented to the extradition . Sternaman, charged with p r husband, 1f her trial is set e 11•iay Assizes. Mr. Cartwr' y Minister of Justice, says L 1 endeavor to have the trial e at the next assizes; but he following the ruling of Judgeit In the Hy'slms case, a United counsel will not be allows r in 'the Canadian court, The w kly reports - mercial agencies in New t the condillons of business ally u:nohanged, The stock f New York as been more fected by rumours from ' t warlike nature, lousiness in 1 States has been seriously ith by floods, and prospective troubles are/011811594 considerable apprehension. While the g ditiens of business are parka the outlook is generally 0C *attire, GENERAL, Prince Bismarck is moth health. Spain is contemplatingg• loan at fifty thousand dolt0. purposes. Ten persons were killed p1'etio,n of fire (Inane/ in the pit near Essen -oaf -Ruhr, Eight Engldgh�en and miners wore killed by en e. a mitre near' Joluennesburg According to reports from `2,853,000 parsons arra relief works in the fantite auna, Prince Bismarck has ooml. covered from his recent i• and is able to tape lou Buffalo, Ila n o£ Mss poisoning h° down for th Cartwright Depot that ho wit take place that, d to appear from the tom York state that are prootic market o or less of Europe of t tae Unitas interfered tips labour 1YLte- eneral .con- Lps normal a promising improved in raining a rs for war by too e- Oborbr+son 26 native explosion on 'race- day,m Bombay employed in the districts in dstely t'e- ndisposttfon, g cora^lags • Ruselaln prisoners far Siberia will in till's be taken to their (festination by, rain, and b. thus spared the horrors elle icing march. Special% from Havana say bet high- respectable igh- respectable'VVomen are beuter,a10est: and imprisoned on the susptei0n of dung the Insurgents, ftp t of 15 eel ai There is excetemeet in Honolulu over the arrival there of a large (1umbe1, of Japanese scOdiers, who have came Into the errantry fn the guise 09 stu- dents. 2hc+ afexi' n Senate le debating the treaty fixing the boundary of the country with the T3rrt1511 (Many of Rollie. There is now 11 feeling in fa- vour of ratifying the treaty. Five Amer'iewe fishing vessels are lying off Sound Island in .i'lacenliut bay, Newfoundland, unable to procure bait owiog to the rigid enforcement) of the Anti -Bait OWNS, 5110 ehoive of the movement to began war with Turkey door not rest with [Ging George or the Greek Govern- ment, but with the ELM/like Htalo.biu, 0. secret organization, which directed the crossing of the frontier by Greek irregulars. A despotcll from Cape Totvn says the Het; 11agblad, the Dutch newspaper, de- clares that leading officers in the Trans- vital speak openly of war will, l;ngland being tmevitable. The federal ccnventlan In Adelaide by .1 val0 of twenty-three to twelve hoes rejected an amendment to allow women to vote for members of the S01411 Australian blouse of Represen- tatives. The next advance of the Angilo-:.;gyp- then farces in the Soudan will be made as soon as there is water enough for the steamers to pass Lhe fourth c•aLa- rant of the Nile, probably in July or August. , A despatch from Japan says that the recent convention between Russia and. Japan in regard to Corea have seriously injured the standing of the Japanese MenistrY, which is not likely to last much longer. The 5LVonghu1zl of Gatnesep, Bechu- analand, has been captured by the Duke aC Edinburgh's volunteer rifles. Galishewe lost three hundred horses, many cattle and many warries's. The British had six It'ouuded, The 'Turkish Government has norm- ally informed the Greek (Government that any further reeds of irregulars Into Turkish territory mill be re•gard.- ed by 'Turkey as n deolaratlan of war upon the part of Greece, at is semi-offieialtly stated that all coercion of Greece upon the past of the solvers wii1 cease so soon as xar is declared, because otherwise i(1would bear the, character of pro -Turkish in- tervention, The Srlueen cruiser Raccoon, which left Cape To1r-a1 on February 12, under sealed orders, arrived at Durban. Na- tal, unexpectedly during Thursday night with six other British 381100hies, and two more warships. were expected. The object of the naval demonstration is not known et Durban, The Prince of Monaco empresses bis willingness to offer a reward for the dotectien of the steamer which passed one o£ the boats of the foundered steamer St. Naza1rs without giving the sufferers in the boat any assistance. The action of the ,stpnmer is strongly condemned by all seafaring men. WILL GO ELSEWHERE. +_e.a German Emigration to lea Inverted Front Uuited States. As laid bare by the emigration bill which the German, Government has submitted to the reichsta•g, it will here- after be the settled policy of the gov- ernment to direct the stream of Ger- man emigration elsewhere than to the United States. During the recent cabinet session five out of six members present declared themselves Le accord with the aims of the Pangerman as- sociation, and the colonial party, name- ly, to found in the future, so far as cir- cumstances permit, large German col- onies oe an agricultural and industrial character in South Central American countries, where the autonomous and uniform make-up of such colonies will not be politically interfered with. The government will encourage as much as possible by money grants and political intervention, wherever required, those companiesaiming at settling such col- onies. The first company was organ• ized on Wednesday at Hamburg, with the title of Hanseatic colonization so- ciety. Its capital is 1,500,000 marks, This company, becomes the heir of the assets and privileges of the Hamburg colonial satiety of 1819, including a ter- ritory of about 1,700.000 acres, of fer- tile land in Lhe Brazilian state of San- ta Catarina. The company's grant in- cludes a railway from San Francisca bay to the German colonies of Blue- menau and Joinsville., the Brazilian government guaranteeing 5 per cent. of the capital required to construct the railroad. A PREACHER'S STORY, Like Other Mortals he fell Victim to Disease—Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Pow- der was the Agent Whi4h Restor- ed Him to Health and 110 Gladly Allows %lis Name to be Used in Tell- ing it That Others May be Benefit- ed too, Rev. Chas. E. Whitcombo, hector of St. :Matthew's Episcopal Church, and Principal of St, Matthew's Church School, IIamiiton, was a great suf- ferer. Dr, Agnew's Catarrhal Pow- der cured him, and he now proclaims to the world that as a Safe, simple and certain cure it has no weal. It never fails to relieve catarrh in ten min- utes, and turas permanently. • Sold by O. A. Den/Einem A Pittsburg dry -goods house adver- tised avole, of wrappers at ninety-eight coats. .The nine <lrapped out of the 1dvertisome,nL, and Lhe rush of ladies to buy the w.tnppers was startling to 11e nlerobants, They sold all they had of them (four laughed and Lilly) for (ght cents cash, and on the lot lost oar hundred end five dollars. The ore eves 1)aad. by the paper in which he advertisement appeared, O.ifl TIIi0 MISERY. \h•s. GnlbraiLh, of Sbelbourne, Ont„ wase Great Suffern front Indigos- tian, the 13ane of so 013115 .Laves— South Ameriattn Nervine Released cls Hold—It Relieves in, one Day, "I wss for a long time a great safe erer from indigestlo0, i experienced 11 the misery and annoyance so canto ern to this ailment. :f tried man elnedics and spent a great deal of actors' bills without receiving any erinauent 1,00011:, I Svaa strongly nernnlne,ltied to try Smith American 008(00, I procured and used it, after sing only two bottles I am pleased o testify that 1 am fully restored health„ and I have never had the lightest indication 0f a return of the rachis. I recommend it most hoar(lly, Sed by G. A'. 2Cadima0, 1 11 n r <I 11 Pruners Ilohenlohm, the German lee- to 1011 0hdulcollor, has resigned, and s rsists in hie resign:di:on beteg ac- t pted by the Epmper e, , The delft in Enlgtlend t(18(14ls wari per th the Transvaal is heartily eyelet/Me Pa by all classes. 1 1 co wre TEN YEARS I 17 With Liver Complaint and Dyspepsia---Sufferedt Greatly and Found No Relief in the Scores of Medicines Prescribed. South American Nervine Was Recommended, and Beforei IIa1I a Bottle Was Taken Relief Came. 11:100 Sinee Reproved itnpiclly, :And Ant Nosv Comploteiy Cureid So slays Mr. David Reid, of Chesley, Ont, What tile acme to humanity from a disordered liver! Henry Ward Beecher has said that it was impossible for a man to hold correct spiritual views if his liver was out of order. The liver is so important a part of the mechan- ism of man that when it °eases to work with ease the whole man is unable to do itis work aright. Can we not appeal to thousands, nay, tens of thousands, for a verification of this fact? Cer- tainly It is, that Mr. David Reid, of Chesley, Ont., felt That the enjoyment of file had been taken from him, through the unhealthy condition of his liver. For ten years he says he was troubled with liver complaint and dys- pepsia. Employing his uwn language: "At times my liver was so tender I could not bear U pressed or touched from the outside. Had tried a great many remedies without any benefit. Was compelled to drop my work, and being worse than usual. 1 decided as a final resort to try South American Nervine, which had been recommended to Inc by friends who had been cured by it. T got a bottle from A. S. Good - eve, local druggist, and commenced taking .according to directions, Before T bad taken half a bottle I was able to go to work again, and T have Im- proved steadily since. I can coneclen- tiousty recommend South American Nervine to any suffering from dyspep- sia or liver complaint." This is Mr- Reid's story as he tells tt in his owls words. Were it thought necessary in could be corroborated by a host or wit- nesses. Mr. Reid has lived a long timet to Chesley, and his case was 'known to be a very bad one. But that makes no difference to Nervine. This great dis- covery rises equal to the most trytniti occasions. Let it be indigestion, MS most chronic liver trouble, as with Mr., Reid, nervous prostration, that makes life miserable with so many, seek headaches, that sap all the effort out of man wr woman, Nervine measures to the necessities of the case. It 1s at great medicine and thoueands to -day in Canada are happier and healthier men and women, because or its discovery.. There is no great secret about It, and( yet there is an important secret. It operates on the nerve centers of the system from which emanate all life ands healthfulness, or if disordered, sickness, even death, Nervine strikes promptly EIS the nerve centers, hence, as with Mr.( Reid, where ten Tears' use or other ate. Moines had done no good, less than as bottle of Nervine brought about en- couraging results, and a few bottles cured. . Sold by Deadman 8s McColl A NAVAL COMPARISON. Wairs, Pt should ffy carry a little mane sn as Like that a I supposed he must have asked her? Peelheps. Do you know want they look like? No. Looka like a wheezy little tug towing a disabled cruiser. BEST AND CHEAPEST. • Never was a greater truth than when said of Dr. Agnetv's Liver Pills, 20o. a vial. Little priced, little doses, but little ter- rors to drive out impurities and leave you a clear brain and a bright eye, Do you suffer from Const%patlon or other disorders arising from this caused Dr. Agnew's Liver Pills are a safe and pleasant cure. At all druggists, 40 dnsos in a vial. Sold, by G. A. Deadman. NO KISSING LIKELY. Mr. Grubbs (10 p.m.) -1 hate to go to sleep, knowing that a strange young mon is clown i0 the parlor with our cinughter. Mrs, G. 1 is rub )s -Don't you worry. We had onions to -night, you know. 1 A SUBTLE TI11104 ICidnry Troubles Steel on ono lnsidi- ously-'-A Slight Cold — :Chen Congos- tion—Then Inflammation— ',Then the Deadly Malady Bright's Disease— South Amerienn 1Culttee Cure is a Kidney Speeific—lt Relieves in Six Hours and Cures—Never i?ails. itl4, James Itte Trine, oC Jamestown, Ont.,, says: "I believe South 'American Kidney Cure saved my Ilio. 1 was so severely afflicted that my friends had to attend mo daily to take the uriuo frnm m0," • Mr, A. Williamson, Customs Officer, Khic rdine, Ont., writes: "I: win n high- ly recommend this apecifio 00 the greet - est of boons to suffering huirtanit.y for all affections oC the bladder and kid- neys," Sold by G. A'. Deadman, J'ohtt Tweed, of Chelsea, and once of Glasgolw, Iles been commissioned to oxo- cuts to statue of Cecil Rhodes, whioll is to be 03eated at R.uluwaj^o. , 0 303.4 wcw-li 4P3LEtirrerN Y�A3(Ss. .7 BKIN • - ti' ' 'ff,POW t? ; '. ER THECOOK'SBESTW LAAGgST SALE 1r CANADA. 111•191.1/1•1.8 461d11.164,1660111.1.11=90043=¢1111111 CARE O'h' SHOES. The expensive russet shoes will last far two or three seasons, but they cost at least twit's iv oe ns much as the shoes that look well through one season and tben become shabby and suddenly break down all around. Footwear is cheap- er than it was a year ago, so far as the use of superior qualities of leather In the general manufacture of goods Is 000000ned, and yet the prices are about the same. The russet shoe is es- sentially an article of summer wear still, expensive makes envo been sold far winter as well. It is surprising, however, what a difference there is in the quality sometimes of two pairs of cheap shoes manufactured by the same house.. Shoes that sell for $8 and 33.50 sometimes go to pieces in a few weeks, whilet o hors last for montes.:I'he fact of the matter is that all the stitching is done by machinery, and such shoes ere weak or strong according as tite girl or man who runs the machine has been careful or careless. When a boot is muddy let it dry be- foir'o trying to knack the mud off. then lightly rub, being careful not to rub it into the loather. Take a soft sloth, dusting carefully, when it will atonal with Very little stain. Take a damp woolen cloth ,which will remove all the stain, Warm water (s best to use: This simple process will keep the shoes in Wee order, senile if the shoes are black- ened each time, the grain will soon become so filled with tt it will stiffen and crank. If you should in a storm get them very suet, wipe them dry as passible with 11 soft elot1, fill them with paper to shape them, and, put thent in n, warm place to dry. If this is 00re- fully carried out your boots will be stiff, but with an old loose glove on the handwork some vaseline, a little at a time, all over the shoe, Alter standing a few hours, the leather will absorb it, and any good black%dig Swill give 11 a nice 110 fele being also pli- able and Soft, . , till