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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1895-2-15, Page 7?EB1NARY U 1805 roCaraiatoranteweatoeutetwossressesetworuareete THE WEEK'S EW OANADA. General Booth's tour of wostoitn Cando is a triumphal march. The mercury dropped to 34 below zero at Port Arthur on Thursday night. Boob the Now Brunswick and NovaSootia Logielaturesgpened Wednesday. Tho Ontario Legislature hes been galled to meet on Thursday, February 21st. The town of Blenheim, Ont., ham decided to separate from the County of tient. Mr, F. W. Stone, the well-known stook breeder, of Guelph, is dead, aged 81 Yearn. Mr. Jamee A, Candie has been elected president of the Montreal Board of Trade. Premier Greenway, of Manitoba, le ill with bronoltitie, and is confined to his room. ,John M. Lord, ex -tax collector of Lon- don Weep, has pleaded guilty of embezzle- ment. Queen's avenue Methodist church, in London, was destroyed by fire on Saturday night. ,. The smallpox quarantine against 0. A. College students at Guelph has been radon. The net earriinge of the Richelieu Steam. ship Company last year amounted to $164,000. ' A Manitoba eohool teacher has bean bounced from North Dakota molar the alien labor law. Thomas Ringer wits found frozen stiff on Hamilton bay on Tuesday, and foul play is suspected. Rev. 5. G. Stuart, B.A,, of Toronto, has been invited' to become pastor of Knox Church, London, Mr. J. 0. Rowand, a farmer living near Elkhorn, Man., was gored to death by a mad bull Met Friday. Mr. James Gibson, a highly respected oitizen of Berlin, Ont.,died of heart failure on Saturday morning. Archbishop Cleary hoe sent a balance of £115 to Hon. Edward Blake for the Irish parliamentary fund. John 111. Lord, the collector of London Went, has been committed for trial. He ie charged as a defaulter. Sere. Major Smith has been appointed chief of police of Hamilton. He hae been on the force ninny years. Melvin McPherson fell 40 feet from a tree in the bush near St. Catharines Friday and broke his neck. Mr. W. Evans, Deeeronto, has been ap- pointed hull inspector at Toronto, succeed- ing the late Capt. Harbottle, A business man in Winnipeg who lost fifteen hundred dollars in poker threatens to bring action for its recovery. Within the past 12 months Mr. G. W. Hinckley, of Chatham, Ont., has shipped over 1,300 horses to the old country. The Governor-Generaland Lady Aberdeen have accepted for February 19 the bell tendered by the citizens of Montreal. The annual debate between Toronto and McGill universities took plane in Montreal Friday night, Toronto winning the deci- sion. It is elated in Ottawa that Mr. McDougall, Q. C.. of Hull, will soon ensa ceed to the Provincial Treasurership of Quebec. The Winnipeg Grain Exchange has ar- ranged with the railway company to carry seed grain to farmers at half the usual rates. It is said ex-Deteotive Fahey,of,Montreal will soon be liberated from penitentiary He was sent for 14 years, and has served half that time. Ambrose MaTiernan, 26, was caught in the act of counterfeiting 60 oent pieces in a house in Jarvis street, Toronto and locked up at police headquarters. The Rev. William Barrie, M. A„ has been appointed professor of church history and bursar of the Wesleyan Theological College in Montreal. Mr. Jacob, H, Burkholder, who was clerk of the township of Barton for forty years, died on Sunday at Bartonville, Ont., in his ninety-third year. Preliminary steps were taken at a meet - ng held in Toronto the other night to form permanent provincial organization for he better observance of the Lord's day. About 200,000 barrels of apples have. sen shipped this nation from the Annapo e valley, Nova Scotia, for the old country. he proceeds amount to about $500,000. Alexander Crammer and Thomae Nelson ave acknowledged that they stole a large uantity of groceries from Mr. George lass' store. All the parties live in Port opo. Three world's records were lowered at c Canadian skating championship races Montreal on Saturday. The events were vided between 'Johnson, Davidson and Olson. The ohlorate of potash works of Gibb, anohot, McLaren & Company, at Bassin Lievre, Que., were totally destroyed by e early Friday morning. The estimated. s is $50,000, with little insurance. At Georgetown on Saturday Joe Me- ster was committed for trial for a ons aeeault on Aldert Turner, who, on nary 20, was escorting a young lady me from church at Glen Williams. tobertaan, the caretaker of the Mont - 1 Meohanios' Institute, who was arrest- on auopioion of having set fico to the ;ding, was on Friday committed to nd hie trial at the Court of Qneeu's ob. ho. Rev. Mr. Siloox, of the Emmanuel i regational church in Montreal, ono of best known preachers in the city, has geed his pastorate because, it is eved, he held ono views in advance of congregation. rohtiishop.eloo6 Langoviu has decided 1 the: aouaeoration Boyne shall take so at St. Boldface in the preaonce of a o number of no bishops of oho 1)omin- The papal brief is expeated to arrive week or tan days, pile three boys wore playing in a snow e which they had built in Montreal on raday, the roof and the walls collapsed, before monad Leopold Gihtgras, aged teen, ono of the lade, was sull'ooated, :• o O'overnor•Genoral and Lady Aber. loft Montreal for Ottawa Wednesday ing. They wore acoompaniod' by a aliment of one hundred policemen, and mbar of McGill students drew their Sondes' sleigh a portion of:tice way. ing to the opposition of the donna. of the TJ. E. Loyalists, it is oseible oho proposed tnonutnent to Ohorrior, dolor of the insurgents of St.Eustene 37, may nob bo eructed in Montreal. ,Coven Council of Longueuil aro anxious Ne it there, tl The Margoie et Lorno hada long artieloln Satnrday'o Pall Mall Ulazette, reviewing Pope's Life of Sir John Macdonald, The Marctele soya that the author well find all he has maid in praioe of the dead Premier will be "echoed by all of tie who knew The Canadian Pacific railway authorities in Montreal ridicule the dospateh from London stating that a schema was on fent to build a railway paralleling the Canadian Pacific. Vice -President Shaughnessy sold that he would like too be shown the Eng. Bah oapitalieta who would endorse ouch a eoheme. The bronze statue of Sir John Maodon. ald, which ie being made in England for the Montreal Committee, is almost oomplet. ed, and will be ready shortly for ehlpment, The statue will probably be plaood in pusi- tlon about the let of May, and the unveil. ing ceremonies will take place on the Queen'e birthday. Mr. J. 8, Ewart, who was ono of the couneel retained, by the appellants in the Manitoba eohool one, arrived in Winnipeg 00 Thursday, When Booked What his oliente would now do he replied that the Roman Catholics would first ask the Dominion Government to appoint a day for hearing the appoel on its merits. On Wednesday at the Court of Revision fortheDominion voters' list atLondon,Ont,, Ald, Brener's name was snook off, a docu- ment from Waehfngtoa having been sub- mitted in proof that he was an alien. The decision is important, as p"oceedings will be taken to remove him from the City Council! on the same ground. In regard to the fall itt Canadian Padiac Railway stook, Sir William Van Horne says that there is no reason whatever for the decline outside of the present universal bad condition of business on the American con. Silent in consequence of low traffic. He knew, of no insiders who were selling Cana - (Ilan Pioifio stook. Six Methodist missionaries in Japan' re- cently sent a letter to the Executive of the Missionary Board of the Methodist Ohuroh in whish they expressed a desire to bo recalled. At a meeting of the Executive, Ivet closed, the matter was discussed fully. t • was decided to write and eek the missionaries to send ooneioe and detailed statements as to their reasons for wishing, to retire from the work. GREAT BRITAIN. The Bank of England has reduced the price of gold 1.2.d. per ounce. The rates for money ruled stronger in London last week on the prospect of do American loan. Hon. Cecil Rhodes, Premier of Cape Colony, was on Saturday sworn in as member of the Imperial Privy Council. The colossal battleship Majesty, was launched at Portsmouth on Wednesday. The vowel was christened by thelvlarohion- ess of Lorne. The Prince of Wales presided at a meet- ing of the Colonial Institute in London on Thursday, when Mr. Jameson spoke on South African affairs. There was a heavy snowfall throughout England on Sunday night and intensely cold weather prevailed. In Lincolnshire there have been oases of persons frozen to death. In London on Tuesday Reginald Satin. demon, a nephew of Col Saundereon, the Orange leader in the House of Commode,. who murdered Augusta Dawes, an unfor- tunate woman, last November, . was formally declared a lunatic, and was sent to Broadmoor asylum. BATTED SIATE8. The East Side Bank in New York has been closed. Ward McAllister died in New York on Thursday night. The gold reserve at Washington is now down to 342,361,966: Lawrance Maxwell, Solicitor -General of the United States, has resigned. The naval hydrographic office- at Wash ingtonpredicts 'a stormy February. Owing to a railroad war, soft coal was sold in Chicago on Thursday at 32 a ton. The will of the late James G. Fair, the San Fraucisco millionaire, has been stolen, Last week 37,286,490 in gold, and 3572,- 552 in silver were exportbd from New York. Judge E. Rockwood Hoar, the eminent Massachusetts jurist, died on Wednesday evening in Boston, aged 79. The United States Whiskey Trust hae been placed in the hands of receivers. Poor business caused the trouble. David Hampton was electrocuted at Sing Sing on Thursday, for murdering Mra. Aherne, a wealthy widow of New York. A dog was the only survivor of the wreok of the steamer Chicora, which was lost olf Banton Harbor, Mich., last week. Congressman Breckinridge and Heard came to blows and caused a commotion in the House of Representatives at Washing. ton yesterday. The champion American cyclist, Zim- merman, has completed arrangements for a racing tour through Australia, Japan and France next season. Prof. Vigo Anderson, one of the grottiest flutists in the world, and a member of Theodore Thomas' orchestra, shot himself in Chicago on Tuesday night. Prof. Alexander McConnell, of Toronto, who was engaged as prinoipalof the Public schools in Grand Forks, N.D., has been deported under the alien labor law. 1 The Buffalo Express tells of the pro- posed departure at an early day of a party of gentlemen for the gold regions on the Fraser river, 13. C. .they will purchase their moabinery in Toronto in order to save the duty, and will ship via. 0, P, R. Thomas Davidson, one of the beat known ehipbutldors and venal owners on the great lakeu and president of the Wisconsin Swam. ship Company, died in Milwaukee on Satur- day, aged 67. John Orlowski, the young giant who 561 - ml Adam Eberle, an.innflonaivo Gorman, with a blow of his fiat in Buffalo last November,- was lot off with a fino of fifty dollars on Saturday. Our telegraphed advices from the leading centras of Mimosa throughout the United States indicate no improvement. Tho fin- ancial uncertainty is having a moot depress- ing effect on business in all directions. In the Eastern °idea the price of money has advanced, while, as a rule, otllectiono are poor. Tho belief that a new loan will bo carried through somewhat annulated trade the past two days, bub oho majority of mar, ahaute everywhere are simply awaiting. developments, and carrying a email trade just suited to the requirements of the moment. Tho detnand for skilled labor has lattarly shown a tetttlonoy to docraaao, and a oomplaintof over-produabion is nearly universal. The revival so confidently anticipated a few weeks back hag not ma- terialized. Money is ahoap, and the oommerbial demand (aasy. The position of iron and steel shows no'eignof advanoing More Italian troops are being sent to Egypt. There woe a heavy fall of ROW in Roma OA Monday night. The Amcor of Afghaniatau will visit England in the spring, The Porbugueee troops have defeated the Delagoa Bay rebels. The Spanish budget for 1894-90 ohowo .a delielt of 6,970,0:50 persona. Tho Norweglan Ministry have resigned, andthe King has aocepted their resigna' loon, • Petitions in favor of confederation with Canada are being circulated in Newfound. land. With state honors the remains of Mar. oho; Camber') were interred on Sunday in Parte. The Hovas recently commenced to bow. bard Tamatavo, but they were repulsed by the French troops, The Chinon envoys Dont bo Japan to negotiate for peace have boon gent home, their credentials being found imperfoot. Advioos from Hawaii announce the seraph and int prieonment of ex -Queen Liliuokalani, on a charge of conspiracy. Six hundred French Royalists held a meeting in Paris '1'hureday evening and pronounced for restoration of the monarchy. The police on Saturday found a bomb factory at the lodgings of Ravolgolia and Capelli in Rome, who, with two others, were arrested. Henri Rochefort, who was banished from France along with Gen. Boulanger, has returned to his own country, having been made free by theamnesty bill.. Emperor William, in a letter to Mr. Foster, M. P., thanking all those concerned for their attention to the survivors of the. Elbe, regrets that so few were saved. It is said a confederation of Central American ropublioe halt been formed, and Honduras, Nicaragua and San Salvador will co-operate with Guatemala in repelling any attemptod invasion by Mexico. It is stated that the Porte has entrusted a confidential agent in London with a larg. amount of money to bribe the Executive of the Anglo -Armenian Association Sabre the reassembling of the British Parliament. The " bargainsale," so dear to the wo men of this continent, has been introduced into Germany with results es disastrous to conservative German methods that the Government has been appealed to to cure the evil. Referring to Emperor William's birth- day celebrations, some of the Berlin pa- para condemn his increasing Byzantiniem,. and advise him to rely rather on the good- will of the nation than on the number of bayonets. In the Spanish Chamber of Deputies on Tuesday, Senor Molinari, a member from Porto Rico, moved for the negotiation of a treaty with Canada, saying that the beat market for Porto Rico was Canada, and not the United States. The Czar, in a reecript addressed to M. de Steal, the Russian Ambassador at London, upon the latter oompleting fifty years in the service of his country, thanked him for assisting in bringing about the friendly relations existing between Russia and England. Tho trial of Mme. Henri Jon iaux, a wo- man moving in the beet circles of Brussels, concluded on Sunday morning. The pris- oner wao found, guilty and sentenced to death. At different periods she had pole. oned her brother, sister, and uncle, to realize the insurance she held on their lives, ANOTHER RAILWAY WRECK. Two Killed—Fifty Injured—An Ontario man Among the ;dumber. A despatch from Indianopolie, Ind., says: —A terrible wreck, causing loss of life and maimed limbs occurred at^Coatesville on Monday afteonoon, when Vandalia train No. 1, due in this city at 2.35, was wreaked by the spreading of the rails. Two parsons were killed almost instantly and 40' or 50 were seriously injured. The train was running at full speed and about 20 min- utes lata. It had just passed the town of Coatesville, and was rounding a curve when the tracks spread. The privato oar of President R. W. MuKeen, which was attached to the train,jumpsd the track a. This was followed by the parlor car and and then the ladies' car, the two rear cars going down the enbankment 10 feet before the train could be stopped. Tho smoker left the tracks but did not go over. The ttvo, rear care caught fire, but were extin- guished without damage. The dead are: John W. Norton, manager of the Grand Opera house, St. Louis; and Mrs. W. S. Towers, Carthage, Mo. The injured were carried up the embank- ment to the houses on the north aide of the track and soon the townspeople and physicians gathered together to give asois- taaoe. Reversing an Engine in Short Time. "An engineer, if he isn't rj,ttled, can re- verse an engine in from five to ten emends," says a railroad man. "Perhaps a man under extraordinary conditions could do it gaioker. Ono time up in eastern Main our train jerked up suddenly and we rushed to the platforms. Thera the engine stood with both parallel rods gcno from the drivers and without any cab. Back a ways the engineer and fiteman were crawling out of the snow. They said that ono parallel had brokau and had come lip, whang 1 under the firoman. The next moment both men were in the snow. The engineer said that ho roveraed mechanical- ly and it was all over so suddenly that when no got book and saw what he had done he could scarcely believe his eyes. His prompt. nese saved tido train, though." Costly Cigar Ashes. A certain Hans Weber, of Stettin, Belle and advertises largely a powder whioh, it isolahnod, will ours the dropsy. This marvellous specific, offered with modioal rocommendattona and numerono testimoo. tale of oures, is sold ata t.rioe which amounts to 140 franca the kilogramme (lasso than one and one-quarter pound avoirdu. polo.) Dr. Hoffman, • of Stettin, bought some of tale aeoret remedy and had it ana- lyzed by the director of the laboratory of analysis at Darmstadt. TO director found that the powder was composed, nautically, ono -half of carbouato of lime, 13 par cont. of carbonate of potash, with variable poi, Mons of octal, clay, phosphate of lime, magnesia and some litho thinggs, the whole from a chemical poiat of view being idents• cal with, diger ashes. A HEROIC NURSE Stayed with 1100' "Wont IA it Enrnuce of Eire^-IIolb Ilurnod. A deepateh from Cleveland ear Pour livco were lost in a fire which ataloa destrgyed the Deaoonness' fiospital at 163 Jennings avenue shortly before noon' on -Priday, The dead are; Jaoob Krause, 65, burned; John,Allmeyor, 59, burned ; Min. nit Rammer, nurse, 25, from Chicago, burn, ed I Clark Walter,6 menthe old, suffocated, Several other patients were"injured, but none Betiooely. It was 10.30 o'clock when Rome Gerber, one of the laundry girls, die- covered flames in the basement of the hos- pital, The first persona to arrive hoard screams and saw flames shooting from every window 'on the soaond and third floors. Suddenly a woman's face appeared at one cf the windows, and she was seen to smash the heavy glass with her fiat. Then she leaned nut head first and struck on her face. The fire department was clow in reaching, the hospital, the'anow and ice in the streets preventing a quick run, but when once at work the fire was quickly auhdued. • There are only two exits from the upper part of the building, one in the front and one in the rear, The nureee got out safely almost at the etart, with the exception of Minnie Bauman. When her sister nureee called to her that the building was on fire she Dried : " No, I will not Wave my patient:; I will die first." She was nursing Krause, who was also burned to death. She sat by tho aide of the sick man until death came to both of them. The injured were taken to the other hoepitala of the oity. The Deaconess' hospital is under the direction of the Id. E. Church. It woe opened last October, and was nearly filled with patients. The front part of the building is entirely destroyed. The Duke of Argyll. In matters touching the state, the church, the soienoe, the name of the Duke of Argyll ie well known. His. name, George John Douglae Campbell, bespeaks hie nationality; and in behalf of Scotch Presbyterianism he had taken up hie pen before he wao out of hie teens, as he has done more than once since then. On his succession to his father's title began his career ae a etateeman,andhe soon made his mark as an eloquent member of the House of Lords, During several administratione he held important offices ; and, under Gladstone, in 1881 he was secretary of state for India, a position that A COUNTESPEITER CAITOBT, pie min who mtampse4 le Bell Hetet; leve Ravin Nabbed ice 9l4leago for 1'n$a• tug Roans stoney, The York county pekoe have received nformation of the capture 01 John Rollin• sou, a young oolorotl Man who fe wanted in Toronto on the double charge of counter. felting and shooting at Detective Davie With intent to kill, Robinson lived in the village of New Toronto with a young white girl to whom ice Itad bean married a few months, and travelled through York Coun- ty disposing of bogus 00 cent pieces, The county constables finally struck his trail, and accompanied by Detootive Davis, Con- stables Stewart and Sheppard made ajaunt to New Toronto one dark, stormy night in December, in the hopes of capturing him, They met him, but be gave Detective Davie a long run aorono the commons, and made a desperate attempt to take the ofifcer'slife, firing three shots at him at uncomfortably short range. The inky blackness of the night saved Davie' life, but allowed Robin• map to escape. Word now comes from Chicago that Robinson is under arrest there on the charge of making and passing counterfeit. money, From the partiaulare received, Robinson made a stubborn reeistanoe when the American officers attempted to arrest. Flight was impossible, but he put up so desperate a fight he was only taken when laid out by a blow from the officer's " ly." Her Temper. Wife (severely)—"I'd have you know, sir, thac I always keep my temper." Husband (eootbingly)--" Of course you do, my dear. Of course, you do,and I wish to goodness you'd get rid of it." For Twenty -Five Years DUNN'S BAK1NC POWDER THECOOK'S BEST FRIEND LARi:EST SALE IN CANADA. f esi ,Eitf�Le Ositawa, Ont. Pains in the Joints Caused by inflammatory Swelling A Perfect Cure by Hood'S Sarsa- parilla. "I1 affords me much pleasure to recommend Rood's Sarsaparilla. Myson was afflicted with great pain in the joints, accompanied with 'swelling so bad that he could not get up stairs to bed without crawling on hands and knees. I was very anxious about tum, and having read Hood'sspasa- ri1i5CureS to much about Hood's Sarsaparilla, I deter mined t)try it, and got a half-dozon bottles, 'our of which entirely cured him." Mao. G. A. LAsa, Oshawa, Ontario. N. 13. Be sure to get Hcod's Sarsaparilla. Flood's Pills act easily, yet promptly ant< efficiently, on the liver -ad bowels. 23a Means to an End. Little Sister—"This book says the old monks used to wear hair shirts. I wonder what that wao for 1" "Little Brother—"Guess that was so they wouldn't go to sleep in church," REU '/..lAitltf amn A u' he had filled before, but one that he soon resigned because of his views on the Irish question. Shortly before, he had published a book reviewing the Eastern situation. His leaning in politics has been onarauteriz. ed as "Whig by family,Liberalby intellect, Independent by nature, and Conservative by inclination." His tastes have led him to the study of art and literature, and he hes given lectures on various topics in those fields. He has been president of the British Assooiation, and the work of his most gen. erally known is "The Reign of Law." In the realm of science he ie marked as one that does not find it necessary to rejeot Christian truth in order to accept soientifie truth. In 1878 bo visited the United States; and in that eamo year his son, the Ivfarquis of Lorne, who had married the Prinoess Louise, the daughter of Queen Victoria, received a most enthusiastic welcome as the new governor-general of Canada. If his high connections reflect honor upon the duke, it may be no less to his credit that by encouraging another eon to enter business he showed himself to be arse from some faloe but common ideas as to nobility. HEIR TO AN EARLDOM. Good Luck Said to be in Store for George Graham. George M. Graham, 14 St. Albans street, Toronto, has' received a letter from his cousin, a lawyer in Scotland, asking that if he is a son of the late James Graham, of Loitehtown, he will put himself into com- munication with the writer, who goes on to may that he has lately been who into the Loitohtown family matters so far as that can be done from records and printed mat- ter, and hue found that the representative of the family is heir male of the Earl of Monteith. iIr. Graham is forty-three years of age, and has lived Toronto for twenty years. His father, James Graham, was for many years manager of the Bank of Montreal. On the walla of his drawing room hang five life sized portraits of his more immediate progenitors, finely painted and at:iodated to grace the walls of a man- sion. Mr. Graham possesses also a number of old miniatures and many family papers Penalties for Qarlesu Coachmen. When an omnibus or cab driver runs over a foot passenger in Loudon streets the pos. Obis lova of a license exercises a wholesome restraint. The private ooauhman and the driver of the tradesmau'a mart have far lase compunction in toaobing an old gentleman to get out of titoir way by running him down. At the worst they ore fined ; not infrequently their flues are paid by a sym. pathizing employer. But no one pays a poor cabman's fines, and the loss of a ltoenee in addition means tho lose of his means of a livelihood. Iu Paris, wo believe, the driver of a lucre fa generally allowed by the law to run over one bourgeois in the course of a year; in London magistrates are loss lent. ant. Moreover, the law stakes an unfair and arbitrary distinction between the cab. titan's baso and bhat of the indication driver. Tile former is liable to be removed from the box for good and all; the driver of the Bart may nontiuus to urge on his wild career, though ha doatrbya mayoral citizens in the course of a year. Kon. Reuben E. Truax, one of Canada's ablest thinkers and states- men, a man so highly esteemed by the people of his district that he was honored with a seat in Parliament, kindly furnishes us for publication the following statement, which will bo most welcome to the public, inasmuch as it is one in which all will place implicit confidence. Dir. Truax says : "I have been for about ten years very much troubled with Indigestion and Dyspepsia, have tried a great many different kinds of patent medicines; and have boon treated by a number of physicians and found no benefit from them. I was recom- mended to try the Great South Amoricnn Nervine Tonic. I obtained t'. bottle, and I must say I found very great relief, and have since taken two more bottles, and now feel that I am entirely free from Indigestion, and would strongly recommend all my fellow-sI;%vers from the disease to give South American Nerving an immediate trial It will cure you. "1 EUBEN E. TRUAX, Walkerton, Ont." It has lately boon discovered that certain Nerve Centres, located nen:' the baso of the brain, control and supply the stomach with the neces- sary nerve force to properly digest the food. When these Nerve Gen. tree are in any way deranged the supply of nerve force is at onto diminished, and as a result the food taken into the stomach is only partially digested, and Chronic Indi- gestion and Dyspepsia soon make their appearance. South American Nervine is se prepared that it acts directly on the nerves. It will absolutely cure every case of Indigestion and Dyspepsia, and is an absolute specific for all nervous diseases and ailments. It usually gives relief in one day. Its powers to build up the whole system aro wonderful in the extreme. It euros the old, the young, and the middle-aged. It is a great friend to the aged and infirm. Do not neglect to use this precious boon ; if yon do, you may neglect the only remedy which will restore you to health. South American Nervine is perfectly safe, and very plensent to the tanto. Delicate ladies, do not fail to use this great cure, because it will put the bloom of freshness and beauty upon your lips and in your cheeks, and quickly drive' away your disabilities and weaknesses. Dr. W. Washburn, of New Richmond, Indiana, writes: "I have used South American Nervine ill my family and prescribed it in my practice, It is a most excellent remedy," A. DIlAD1lL&N Wholesale and Rotaii'tAgent.for Brussels