HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1897-8-13, Page 7the
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,A.UOUST 13, 1997
INE PEWS IN ANNE
THE VERY LATEST FROM ALL THE
WORLD OVER.
enteresttng Items About Our Own .Country,
Oreat Britain, the United $tutee, and
All Parts of the Globe, Condensed and
Amortse kr Baey Readmit.
CANADA.
Manitoba crop reports indicate a
bounteous harvest,
Smallpox Blas broken out in West -
mount a flourishing suburb of Mont:
treat.
George Higgins, a British army pen-
.sloner• who had served M India and at
the Cape, committed suicide at London,
The Governor-General is still at atan-
ley house, on the Cuscapedi.a, but will
likely pay a flying visit to Ottawa and
'Toronto next month.
The Postmaster -General has decided
to authorize the issue of partial sets of
jubilee stamps to meet the demand for
:souvenirs,
The new appointments to the Kings-
ton Penitentiary staff have been an
-
nuanced, Daniel O'Leary of Ottawa is
Deputy Warden.
The body of Ira Cornwall, Secretary
-of the St. John Board of Trade, wbo
mysteriously disappeared was found in
the St. John River twenty miles be-
low the city.
Mr. George R. Reid, Premier of New
South Wales, arrived in Montreal yes
-
`terday, and had a conference with Sir
William Van Horne, president of the
.Canadian Pacific railway.
The Dominion Line steamship Can-
ada has beaten the record of 6 days and
18 hours between Queenstown and
'Boston, having made the trip in 0 days
15 hours tend 31 minutes.
A fame rnear Whitetnoulh, Man.. re-
ports that he saw a balloon twice the
:size of his house floating in anorth
-
easterly 'direction, and the question is
aeked, "Can this be Andreas"
The Petroleum Oil Trust, which has
been boring for oll in the Gaspe dis-
trict for a longtime back has at length
been rewarded by a gusher, which will
give at least five hundred barrels a
day.
Mr. Geo. B. Reeves, general traffic
*meager of the Grand 'Trunk raiway,
says he is greatly pleased with the evi-
dence of .returning prosperity in On-
tario, which he everywhere observed
.during his recent tour.
Sir Wilfred Laurier, in a letter to a
friend in Montreal, states that he was
not consulted as to the acceptance of
the title and honors bestowed upon
him, and that he found the decree
signed by the Queen when he arrived
in London.
The British steamer Scandinavian,
from Glasgow for Boston, ran down
and sank the Canadian barkentine
.Florence twenty miles south of Cape
Race on Saturday. The captain's wife
and four of the crew of the Florence
were lost.
Mr. Raymond Blatltwvayt, a frequent
contributor to London magazines and
newspapers, is making a tour 05 Can-
ada for the purpose: 01 writing a series
of articles on immigration, the Kings-
ton Military College, and the Canadian
Pacific railway.
tt was announced on Thursday that
S. J'. Sanford, the late County Trees -
neer of Simtoe, had appropriated 064,-
4E0 during his twelve years tenure of
office. His property mud securities
wiztt realize 549,000,• so that the tax-
pa3'ers will require to make up the
balance of X15,000, in addition to law
costs.
GREAT B.RITAIN. •
The amount oe prize -money won by
the Canadian team at Risley is about
five hundred pounds.
The First Lancashire Battalion has
been ordered to get itself in readiness
for duty to Malta,
Mr. Andrew Carnegie has offered the
town of Sterling, oeotland, six thou-
sand pounds for a Public library build-
ing.
The King of -kaon arrived on Friday
in England in his royal yacht, and was
received by British warships with the
royal salute,
Mr. and Mrs. Gladstone on Sunday
celebrated the fifty-eighth anniversary
of their marriage. They, are both in
excellent health.
Twenty-one firms of manufacturers
of bicycles in England, have joined the
Employers' federation in opposition to
the striking engineers.
The British Government has placed
in the estimates £560,000 to provide
for the constriction of tour new cruis-
ers and some :torpedo-boat destroy-
ers.
In the
House oC Commons on Thurs-
day Mr. Oliemberlain said that the
Minister of tate Colonies desired furth-
er time to consider the Paoific cable
scheme.
It is thought probable that the forth-
coming visit of the Duke and Duchess
of York to Ireland will be signalized
by the release of the Irish political
erisoners,
It is announced, though not yet of-
ficially, that Great Britain will send re-
presentatives to the internationalbi-
metallic conference to be held. in Wash-
ington.
Henry Lee, of London Eng., inadver-
tantly married his sister, who had been
sold by ear father to the gipsies when.
an infant. When he learned of the re-
lationship he committed suioide.
A small commission has been sent
abroad by the United States Depart-
ment of Agriculture to investigate the
possibility, of Siberia being a wheat -
growing rival of the Western States.
The Japanese Minister at Washing-
ton has addressed to the Stats De-
partment on behalf of• his Government
a polite but firm protest against the
annexation of Hawaii by the United
States.
Mr. Curzon stated in the House of
Commons on Monday, ,'het the Clay-
tan-Eulwer treacly contained an agree-
meat recognized either by the United
States ox Great Britain as affecting
the annexation of Howatt.
The Imperial Government Inas again
declined to interfere in the braybriok
ease, not Sinding to the medicalreports
any reason far mitigating the treat-
ment to which in the ordinary course
of affairs she is subjected.
Mr, McLeod Stewart, ex -Mayor of
Ottawa, was given a luncheon on Wed-
asesday in the restaurant of the Brit-
ish house of Commons by Lord Lorne,
who introduced him to several memtr
ers, to wlhorn be explained his Georgian
Sae and Ottawa Canal mammies.
Tire proposition oe Mr. Broderich,.
Parliamentary Secretary totem War
Office that .there elicited be an inter
change of the troops of the Empire,
caloeel troops theme duty in .England,
THF
BRUSSELS POST..
the British regulars taking their place
is very favourably received,
• Tete British Foreign Office has noti-
fied Ambassudon Hay that Great Bri-
tain accepts the proposition of the
United States for an international con-
ference on the question of pelagic seal-
ing in the Haring nea, to be bald in
Washington during the coming au-
tumn,
UNITED STATES.
A mob lynched one horse thief and
shot another at .Little hock, Ark„ on
Tuesday,
Tile aloakmakers of New York, who
receive e ve starvation wagon, propose a
strike.
\Vflliam Karsteins, a teamster, touch-
ed a live wire and was electrocuted in
Commerce street, Newark, NJ., on
Tuesday.
The United States Cabinet had under
discussion yesterday the establishment
of a military post 10 Alaska, near Cir-
cle City.
Moses 1'. Handy, of Illinois has been
appointed special United States Com-
missioner to the Paris International
Exposition in 1900.
It is very currently reported that
Mr. Whitelaw Reid, proprietor of the
New York Tribune, will succeed Mr.
Sherman as Secretary of State.
What are supposed to be the remains
of Minnie Williams, one of Murderer
Holmes' victims have been found at
Momence, Kankakee County, 111.
President and Mrs. Mcifinley. left
Washington for Lake Champlain for
a vacation that may keep the Presi-
dent away from the city for pixweeks.
Governor Atkinson of Georgia has
offered substantial rewards for the ar-
rest and conviction of the men who
took part in the recent lynching of Ry-
der. .
Howard Benham, accused of murder-
ing his wife by administering prussic
acid, was found guilty by a jury in
Batavia. N.Y., on Thursday of murder
in the first degree.
San Francisco newspapers speak in
terms of strong resentment of the
proposition of the Canadian govern-
ment to exact royalties on Klondike
gold.
The United States Secretary of War
has appointed a board to make a sur-
vey and examination 01 deep water-
ways between the great lakes and At-
lantic tide water.
Charles Miltsky was shot and killed
by Andrew Jovaresky in a quarrel in
a saloon in Pittsburg, Pa., on 'Tuesday
night. In attempting to escape Jovar-
esky sbot and seriously wounded two
others.
During a warm discussion in &color-
ed Baptist Church at Montgomery,
Ala.. as to the admission of adeposed
minister Editor Patterson of The Argos
was shot and killed by a negro named
Pritchett.
Mr. Carlton, in an interview on !the
American duty on Canadian lumber,
said that the believed that the'Dingley
high tariff would work its only are,
and that the Democratic party will
came into power at the next election.
Notwithstanding that the British flag
has waved over Palmyra for the last
nine years, the United States are lay-
ing claim to the island on the ground
that it was discovered by an ,Ameri-
can citizen in 1802.
.The coal strike situation becomes
more serious. Applications has been
made to the Governor of Illinois for
troops to protect the miners at
Roanoke, Sheriff Lowry of Pitts-
burg went to Turtle Creek Pa.,
with 50 deputies armed with Win-
chesters,
The State Department at Washington
has issued a warrant for the surrender
to the Canadian Government of Mrs,
Olive Sternaman, who is beld at Buf-
falo on the charge of murdering her
husband and Who will be triad at
Cayuga.
Dr. Andrews, who resigned the Pre-
sidency of Brown 'University because
his views on social questions were too
liberal to suit the authorities of the
Institution, has accepted the Pre-
sidency of a new University to ,be
known as the Cosmopolitan.
Prof. Elliott, of the SmmithsonianIn-
stitute, says that the letter of Mr. Fos-
ter, United States Commissioner, on the
sealing question, lays him open to a
crushing reply from Canada, and that
as a matter of fact, Mr. Foster knows
no more of the subject of sealing than
a parrot.
¶Phe reports furnished by the commer-
cial agents of Messrs. Dun and Brad-
street as to the condition of trade in
the United States ars scarcely of a na-
ture to be regarded as very encourag-
ing, but des atalnes from the Northern
eines state that business is improving
and•erop prospects are exceptionally
ignoche d.rease
foreign demand here has been amar
graincSome
a
large cotton mills are closing and
strikes continu • o
e to e m heats the in-
dustrial situation in thecoaland iron
markets and in some grades of iron
prices are a Shade lower.
GENERAL.
Torrential rain throughout Lower
Austria has done great danutge to
ere is,
patches from Bombay and Simla
sbow that the native uprising in the
Chitral is serious.
In spite of the intense heat thePope
is m his usual health; in fact, he is
better than he was last winter. . •
Sir Wilfrid. Laurier has been made
a Grand Officer of the Legion of Honor
by President Faure of Prance.
There seems to be now no doubt that
both Japan and Hawabi are prepared to
submit their differences to arbitration.
Severe storms have prevailed through
out Catalonia, Spain, ler the past few
days, doing great damwge to the vine-
yards.
eel -Hung Tsao, the Chinese statesman
who was a strong believer in the anti -
foreign policy, and chief opponent of
;Li -!Hung -Chang, is dead.
Tele political situations in Portugal, al-
ready grave, has been aggravated by
the strong measures taken by the Gov-
ernment to intimidate the Republicans.
In the engagement at Fort Martin
near Hartley, Sou 1s Africa the noted Mashiayosnbi was kilted and 400
or 500 of this followers were taken pri-
loners.
Capt. Boitcheff, ex -Ai ds-de-Cltmp
to Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria has
been convicted of mua'dering Anna
Szimon, a beautiful singer of Buda-
pest.
The Belgian Chamber of Deputies
has passed a bill compelling all for-
eigners who have had a year's resid-
ence to enroll themselves on re civic
guard.
The ParisFigaro predicts the early is -
Mateo of a Papal encyclical censuring
bhe priests who continue to melte the
workLngmele of France and other couti-
tries to demand. their rights,
The Rri.tish ship Tasmania, from Cal-
outta, ran upon sutlken rocks off Clone
*tele, at tea northern extremity of
Naw Zealand on Friday morning, and
sank immediately. All on board were
saved,
The Paris Figaro says it is probable
that an amicable arrangement will be
made 'between Japan and the United
States in the Hawaiian question, and
that the United States will bank down
on the most important points.
The Cologne Gazette says that sev-
eral of the powers, ineludlsig Germany,
have adopted the etwndpoimt that the
evacuation of Tlhessaly by Turkey can-
not be demanded unless the indemnity
by Greece is pail or guaranteed.
A large body of tribesmea made an
attack on. Monday niglht on the camp
at Malakand in the Chitral. One priv-
ate was killed and two officers and an-
other private were wounded. The cav-
alry are now pursuing bhs enemy.
The story that Prof. Marsoni is con-
templating applying wireless telegraphy
be exploding magazines against distant
warships and automatically synchron-
izing watches in people's pockets is de-
nounced by Prof. Crookes as the irre-
sponsible chatter of an unsophisticated
reporter.
BAB RAILWAY SMASHUP,
HEAD -END COLLISION ON THE GORGE
RAILWAY,
[en.6
Twenty Persons. Some of Thrtu From.
Toronto, In j,u•ed--In excuse h1e Careless.
111x1.
A despatch from N1a:garaFallseGnt•,
says:- At 5 o'clock this afternoon two
heavily loaded electric cars on the
Gorge 'Railway on the American side
met in a. terrific head -end collision at
a point .where the double tracks con-
verge, and persons to the number of
twenty were injured, some probably
fatally.
.The victims include a number
of T.oroneonians. The point at which
the accident occurred is on the lower
strata of the river, belong the whirl-
pool, and the track is many feet above
the heater. Owing to the narrowness
sof the roadway the outer and inner
tracks converge for a space to permit
of the rounding of the curve which
obstructs the view from either direc-
tion. e3oth oars were heavily loaded
and going at full speed, and when tale
impending calamity became ,evident a
panic took plaoe among the passengers.
Many of the men jumped and found
sadetyr. Had it not been for the, fact
that the track used is the innerone of
the two, the outer being deemed un-
safe, both oars would have rolled into
the rapids. The injured were placed
bn other cars and taken to the Falls,
where a Staff of eight physicians is in
attendance. At a'late hour it was re -
parted that no fatalities would result,
tluough several are ie a precarious
condition. e I
Mrs. Elizabeth Duan, 77 Robert
street, Toronto, is the most seriously'
injured. Two ribs on her right side
were fractured, and her head was tut
openr with a wound eight inches long,
She was thrown "violently from the car
and struck the rook embankment. Two
pmysicians are in attendance on her
at the Tower Hotel where she has lain
for two boars unconscious.
Mrs. Alexander Sinclair, 71 Bleeker
street, Toronto, lead both ankles and
right wrist sprained and face and
bead eat. I I
Mrs. A. J. Jackson, 501 Ontario
street, Toronto, is seriously bruised
about the body.
lbtrs. J. B. Johnston, Dayton, Ohio,
had bier teeth forced through her
cheek and was badly bruised about
the body. She is infirm, and is ter-
ribly prostrated.
Miss Mabel Spencer, sof Toronto was
badlyi shaken up, but not seriously in-
jured..
Mgrs. E. Robbnsoty, of Toronto is
slsgihtlyr injured.
(lir, and Mrs. McCormick of Balti-
moree mad bruises on. head and limbs.
Mrs. McCormick, whb is a lady of 50
yearso is seriously hurt in the back,
and inns a bad scalp wound and cuts on
the faoe.
bIr. Ja,me!e G. Lapp, American cus-
tams offfoer of Suspension Bridge, who
was en neve up car with bis sister, Mrs.
Day of Lockport, N.Y., with a party
of lady visitors from Michigan were
all :more or less bruised and shaken
u p. One, of the party, Miss Craddock,
e young lady of twenty years, was
badly bruised, awl had the two bones
of her left arm fractured.
Among others ilnjulred are: Mrs. C. S.
Gleed, Topeka, Kansas, ankle spracned
and chest bruited; lellr.•C.St Gleed and
(Aug ter, 'ranee and other 'bruises ;
A9irs. Annie Anderson and daugbiter, Het -
rape, tuilvent altlin'
rape, external injisries. A neater ee seata wgih !their deeper con-
g�assamgers liars carried to private v et:tone were Christian, .lint it es a
Bonuses, and then names and injuries thag to ffeeed7tni�stiatmav o aidol,
neve. teen dhffieuit to 'obtain. The ex- h has never
cesrorirve rains tint have TTiaovatled here been an. edolater is only palet -
lately have ggreatly loosened the debrie able food, hits to t'he fancy of the weaker
ae'ong the cliffs, and a member of recent brother con almost Supernatural pow-
landsliSies induced the railway nuthori_ sr, bike tee "consecrated wafer'' to
biles to kern thea trat'&i all utter j ,,, the Raman Catholie, 'Their conscience
being weak ie clanked.. Not strong en-
ough to grasp ,firsuhy the great truth
that an idol is nothing, but seeing clear-
iy that to worship idols is a sin. If
you believe a thing to be wrong, though
it be not intrinsically wrong, since you
must decide to clo wrong before you can
do it, to do it is sin, Many a person has
hurt his conscience, and therefore com-
mitted sin, by doing a dead which in-
trinsically was innocent,
8. Mutt oommendeth us not to God,
Christianity is something much deeper
end more spiritual than physical food.
ror neither, eta Paul note falces up the
intrinsic right and wrong of the qucs-
lton• Bo parties in the Church vvese
conscientious, and he would have each
undrlrrs(and the other.
9. .Cake head, 13ervare. This liberty of
yours, ' hk right of yours, Become a.
e umbli.n,g-bloelr, The exercise of your
rights" where other people inevitably
m sunderstannd them is wrong.
10. 1f cony malt, !Any weak Cbris-
tiau; any inquiring heathen. See
thee which hast knowledge. 'One
is sure to watch one whom he
regards. as 'stronger than he. Thee"
stands for She enlightened Christian,
Sit at meat 10 the idal'stemple. Where
feasts were often held; thus going Oto
ime4i extreme in the exercise of
one's rtgtas, Shall not the consoience
of mire which is weak be emboldened
to eat those Mimes. The word for eme
boldened is '"edified," built up. The
weak brother's :respect for your super-
ior intelligence end goodness may in-
duce Eine to follow your example and
do a thing that his own eonsoiehoe,run
act approve. Love , With knowledge
7
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL. When
NTERNATIONAL LESSON, AUG, 15,
"A41tn11 111g for the Sake one;11e1e." 1 CO,.
s, 1.13. Golden Text, Arts ru,sl% IC•
PRACTICAL NOTES.
Verse 1..Tourmlley things offered. Re-
vlsad Version, "concerning things sucrI-
fload." We know bent we all have
knowledge. 1 wile ;meaning of this
clousa is, "All Christians everywhere
are firmly convinced that idols are no-
thing." Nobody ,undertook to dispute
thele fouhdation doctrine; but not all
eoulld feel what they; all thought they
believed; the reason of many was fwily
convinced but they had worshiped these
gado for so long it wad hand to get rid
df the feeling that they actually exist-
ed. Paul, le reader to ;,praise men for
their "ksnovWledge," but he feels here
whet he spys later "And yet show 11
unto you a more excellent Way."
IOnowledge pu9fet'le up, but charity edi-
Ilathi "Knowledge naffs up, but lave
Weds up." Geer and ever again
Pane' uses the figure, of a building ris-
i n'g ort a strong foulndn tion to repre"
sent a Christian Fite rising on Jesus
little word "ed!fieth." Regard this
the word "edifieth." Re'gardl this lit -
little sentence and the two following
verses as a pare'nt'hesis. Knowledge
ley Heeeif is Never a safe director of
Christian' Hying. • 1
2. It any mrtnl'think that he knawetll
anything. In modern phraseology, "If
any may be cnteitesi ;" 15 be has know-
ledge withoutt love. Hee kn'oweth noth-
ing yet as hp ought to know. Revised
Version, "He knows not yet." He
needs heart knowledge as well as brain
knowledge. "Satan," as Da•. Whedou
says, "is this modce+l elf intellect with-
aat love." The question is not so
meal what to know 'es how to know.
8. If any, main( love God, the same is
known enema.. No matter how mubh we
know, our knowledge falls short of our
needs; but from the moment we begin
to love God he is on our side, and his
vigilant watehoare and tender love are
better protection and guidance than the
highest human knowledge. There is no
e
true knowledge unconnected with lov
for God. ,
4. The parenthesis is ended and the
discussion concerning the propriety of
eating food offered to idols, and of sit-
ting in pagan temples or at the tables
of idolaters, again begins. An idol is
nothing in the world. That is, the dei-
ty represented by the idol. This image
of metal, or stone, or ivory, is harm -
/Pen in itself, notwithstanding the rev-
erence of heathen's who regard it as an
embodiment of some supernatural be-
ing. Not only de we know that there
is 'no suxrh embodiment here, but we
know that there is no such supernatur-
al being as the heathen fears; if behind
idolatory there be any personality at
all it is that of devils. 1 Cor. 10. 20.
5. Though there be. Not really, but in
current opinion, in heaven. The sun
and stars were widely worshiped. In
earth. The ancients deiified the powers
of nature; and their fancy peopied ev-
ery brook and tree with divinities; be-
sides which they were always ready to
worship the castings and carvings of
'menmany.'s hfanThemds. Clindsodsof ma
theny,
supanderstitious lords
peers haunted by unnumbered gods who
could cinly be pacified by prayer and
sacrifices, •
6. One God, the Father. TIM father -
!mod. of God, brought into full view by
Jesus, was unknown to the heathen
and only dimly apprehended by th
Hebrewei Of whom are all things
He is the Fonrttain and Source of al
good. ,We in mem. "We auto bine.'
Living for maim, we find perfection. One
Lord Jesus Christ. "Lord" ahould have
a comma after Lie or else"Jesus Christ"
should be put wrthen, parentheses. The
heathen have ,many gods; we have one,
the ii'ather. The heathen have many
lords; we ma.ve one, Jesus, the Messiah.
'CVs by 1eim, "We through bum. The
expressicen refers rather to: our hopes
of heaven than tootle original creation.
All we.,have, as anon and as Christians,
we have through Jesus the ielessieb..
This glorious creed is introduced to
show ,how an enlightened Christian can
afford to disregard idols -they are ciph-
ers,one and all.
7caul: o: 1 '
f[3 w there is :net in savary
man that knowledge. erre must make
allowance, for therapies who are not yet
entirely freed from heathen concep-
tions. ,Note the Revised Version "Same,
beiumg ,weld until now so the idol.')
Then lifelong habits made it wail-nige
Impossible to shake off superstitious
e
inner teaks at certain points. The
anyyleteky of blew both cares vwere run-
ning at full opteesd on tibia one track
bile not yet beiteneetude clear, and 'both
canetluctors insist that they; were run-
ning on time. 'Tluelpsesence of so large
a. proportion of Canadians bis not easily
expl tined., as the road leas been .1171-.
popular wilt•,lul Canndieuris since the re-
cent edict calling for the discharge oC
Ceneelfau' employees,
CANNON OF PAPER.
To eutd to the number of astonishing
things that are made of paper, Krupp,
the Great German manufacturer of can-
non, has latety completed a number of
paper field pieces for the use of the
German infantry, They are intended
for use in situations where the move-
ment of field a.riiltery would be imprac-
ticable.
CI1ANCB,a OF LIFE.
Of the children born alive one fourth
die before 11 months, one third tmfore
thoetwenty-thtrd month, half before
their eighth year, two thirds oC man-
kbnd die before the Halsey -ninth year,
three fourths before the fifty-first• year,
and of about 12,000 only one survives
a whole century,swisoo,
first: reunion and dinner of the
alumni of the University of Ottawa re-
sidetlt in New York and vicinity took
plena on Thursday night and was large,*
y attended,
the Nerve Centres Need Nutrition.
A Wonderful Recovery, Illustrating the,
Quick Response of a Depleted Nerve
System to a Treatment Which
Replenishes Exhausted
Nerve Forces.
MR. FRANK BAUER, BERLIN, ONT
Perhaps you know him? In Water-
loo he is known as one of the most
popular and successfulbusiness men of
that enterprising town. As manag-
ing executor of the Kuntz estate, he is
at the bead of a vast business, repre-
senting an investment of many thous-
ands of dollars, and known to many
people throughout the Province.
Solid financially, Mr. Frank Bauer
also has the good fortune of enjoying
solid good health, and if appearances
indicate anything, it is safe to predict
that there's a full halfcentury of
active life still ahead for him, But
it's only a few months since, while
nursed as nn invalid at the Mt.
Clemons sanitary resort, when his
friends in Waterloo were dismayed
with a report that he was at the point
of death.
" There's no tolling where I would
have been had I kept on the old treat-
ment," said Mr. Bauer, with a merry
laugh, the other day, while recounting
his experiences as a very sick man.
"Mt. Clemens," he continued, "was
the last resort in my case. For
months previous I had been suffering
indescribable tortures. T began with
a loss of appetite and sleepless nights.
Then, as the trouble kept growing, I
w is getting weaker, and began losing
flesh and strength rapidly. My
stomach refused to retain food of any
kind. During all this time I was
under medical treatment, and took
everything prescribed, but without
relief. Just about when my condition,
seemed most hopeless, I heard of s
wonderful cure effected in a ease
somewhat similar to mine, by the
Great South AmericanNervine Tonic,.
and I finally tried that. On the first
day of its use I began to feel that it
was doing what no other medicine
had done. The first dose relieved the
distress completely. Before night I
actually felt hungry and ate with an
appetite such as I had not known for
months. I began to pick up in
strength with surprising rapidity,
slept well nights, and before I knew
it I was eating three square meals
regularly every day, with as much
relish as ever. I have no hesitation
whatever in saying that the South
American Nervine Tonic cured me
when all other remedies failed. I
have recovered my old weight—over
200 pounds—and never felt better
in my life."
Mr. Frank Bauer's experience is
that of all others who have used the
South American Nervine Tonic. Iter
instantaneous action in relieving dis-
tress and pain is due to the direct
effect of this great remedy upon the
nerve centres, whose fagged vitality
is energized instantly by the very first
dose. It is a great, a wondrous cure
for all nervous diseases, as well as
indigestion and dyspepsia. It goes
to the real source of trouble direct,
and the sick always feel its marvel-
lous sustaining and restorative power
at once, on the very first day of its
055.
Sold by Deadman & McColl
builds up a right character • knowledge
without; love builds up harmful one.
11. Through thy knowledge shall the
weak brattier beresh? This perishing"
does not neoessarieyimply loss of 'soul;
though it may easily be followed by
that. Old man's "independence"_the
maintenance ce of
his r•i 'ts
gdn"- ofted
breaks down snottier man's fences and
destroys safeguards which may indeed
have: been faulty, by which teeshevveak-
er men were as important as were
truer principles to the larger minded
man. ,for whom Christ died. A most
pathetic argument,
12. When ye stn iso against the bre-
thren When you weaken them, ar-
fend them, unintentionally lead them
into sin. Wound thiein weak console
enol. 'Wouinding ;their conscience
when it; is weak:' Ye sin against'.
Ch'r'ist, IWaake.nieng theins you weak-
en' mom, for Christ has identified him-
self with each of bis followers. "Inas-
melee as ye have; donee its to the least
'ot these, my brethreln, ye have done et
min bo me."
13. Wherefore. A. eenclusion from
all that has (gone before. If meat
make, my brother to offend. If my
babits cremes another to stumble, I
will eat no flesh while the world stand-
et'is. "Will eat no flesh for evermore;"
it deolaratibhl' of total abstinence for
the sake of others. a Lest I make my
brother to offend. The entire lesson
presents stroingly one oT(t'he two great
negumen,Ls for wbstunence from the
nee of iln;toefeating liquors. Modern
steam hos slrovvn that they do Unex-
ampled injury to tlmsel who habitually
n tea tTuenx, and t'hp t where they are even
nuoderateey taped tthere its an insidious
tendency to drunkenness passed by
gueredity deavn' to the, next generation.
P3lalt creta' if you! naiad I knew, what no
one knows, that 'We. may seedy indulge
in tgsem, we. stiulIsheu'ued. not de' so'be-
n't tee tnbralt principle Payul here
gays down; It irewronlg tq do anything
tls.vi weakens another.
ro INNOCENT.
Little 5- ear -old Jennie's mother bad
e tootlurch leaving her and her
baby Sister with their grandmother,
After a while grandma got weary and
pact the baby to bed. Then she suggest-
ed that it would be Mee if Jennie also,
would retire.
I don't want to yet, grandma, said
the little girl.
net see haw nicely little sister has
moue to sleep, grandma urged.
Olt., well, replied Miss Jennie, she
ain't sial enc t
h 0 to
eat dant t realize that it's
FOR TWENTY-SEVEN YEARS. ,
U '
t.
' NS
AKINC
POWDER
THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND
LARGEST SALE IN CANADA.
eas
A LAKE OF INK.
It .t110 11 Getter Than 8,"111 110,1,11'1- Some
Wonderful Oures Wought.
lin the middle of the Cocopah hills, int
Arizona, is what is known as the Luke
of Ink. Though supplied by beautiful
springs ore clear water, the liquid of
the lake is black and of an ink -like
extractor. The temperature varies from
110 degrees to 216 degrees, according
to the locality, and the water fees
smooth and only. According to the In-
dians, not only of the vicinity, but far
away, the waters of the lake have
strong medicinal qualities, though•
most white people would hesitate to
adopt the mode of treatment presorlb-
ed. The invalid is buried tip to
mouth in the bot volcanic his
twent to thirty muhen from
y y minutes. 'then he is
earned covered with mud to the ed
of the lake, into which he is plunged
for from fifteen to twenty minutes,
after which he is rolled in a blanket
and allowed to sweat on the hot, sul-
phurous sand or rock near by. The
cures wrought aro said to be wonder-
ful.
WHAT RIE NEEDED.
Mr. Woodwure-`.khat young fellow
you,
hvo to your office is the most con-
ceited
puppy I ever rant aorass.
Mr. Queensnvarm-.Yes, I know; but
Viol must remember he is young yet.,
,mutmiu, character,is not fully formed
l .
Hua ins never been, tried by fire.
Mr. \Voodwnre--`.11lseln you had better
fire Ium.
"'What is a hardy rose, bush?' "IL'
is
one ,•lint doesn't mind your ,rife b1rulling
it tin by the roots every few (Lava to
i_ it tt W}la begswu reYr