HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1895-3-1, Page 7nom 1, 2845
THE WEEK'S NEWS
CANADA,
Miss Mery Staten of Loudon dropped
dead an Sunday etternaoP.
Mr, Robert Monorlef of Otonabee wee
killed by a falling tree no Saturday.
The new pompe ler the London water
werke have been formally awlepted,
Mre. Walter Savage, a young Chatham
woman, oommttcd nnieide by poisoning.
Mr, and Mrs, V. Oronyn of London have
gene on a visit to gen. Edward Blake in
England.
A new record for harness -racing on the
hie wan tnede at Hamilton on Thursday, the
gelding Phelps °evening a mile in 2,24j;
Mr. George W ib, a prominent commie.
Ston merohaut of Montreal, died at hie
residence in that. city the other morning, in
hie sixtieth year.
Rev. Canon Oeler, father bf Mr. Justice
Osler, Mr, B, B, Oeler and Mr. I3, B. Osler,
died In Toronto, Saturday afternoon, in his
90th year.
The Toronto Trades and Labor •Council
on Friday night expressedstrong dieap-
probatton of General Booth's proposed colo-
nization scheme.
Judge McDougall has a second time
decided thatthe Confederation Life Aasooie-
tion, of Toronto, is estimable for income
derived trent assesemente.
Prof. Foster of MaManter University,
Toronto, has resigned his position in eon.
notion with that institution to take a their
shortly in the University of Ohioago.
Mrs, Dean of Chatham tried to throw
herself out of an upper story window when
she heard that her aon George :was sea.
tenood to three years. in Kingston Peni.
teutiary,
Prof Dale of the University of Toronto
bas been dismissed from his position on ac).
count of the statements made in letter
published by him in last Saturday's Globe.
Judgment was given at Quebsa in three
matters in thei e
orb Gratton between the
Dominion and Provinces, including the
Indian claims, which amount to very large
euma.
On account of the .prevalence of a viru-
lent form of diphtheria in Ridgeway, Ont.,
the Public school in that village has been
oloeed. There ie also an epidemic of
typhoid fever.
Mr, A. W. bleak, Secretary of the Can•
ada Atlantic Company, says the Company
has no intention whatever of building a
junction line from their road to Cornwall,
as reported.
At a meeting of the Fire and Light Com-
mittee of the Toronto City Council, held
recently, Thomas Graham, deputy chief of
the fire brigade, was appointed chief in
room of the late Richard Ardagh,
The Montreal Preece, referring to Gen-
eral Booth's colonization scheme, hopes
that the Dominion Government will take
steps to prevent the head of the Salvation
Army dumping England's acetal filth in
Canada.
Cornwall Separate and Public school
supporters will apply to the Legislature to
settle the dispute over the division of taxes
paid by the Canada Colored Cotton Mills
' Company and the Cornwall Manufacturing
Company. .
Cranston, Mueller and Johnson, the
three exiles from Hawaii, now at Vaucou-
ver, B. C., have entered suit against the
captain of the steamer Watimoo and the
Canadian -Australian SS. Company for
$50,000 each for false arrest and imprison.
ment.
At McMullen & Winn's sawmill, Truro,
N. S., Edward Brenton's coat became in
some way entangled with the machinery,
causing him to be thrown across: the circu-
lar saw in such a manner that his limbs
were mangled, and he lived but half an
hour.
The students of Toronto University met
on Friday and passed a number of resolu-
tions referring to the dismissal of Prof.
Dale, They pledged themselves, among
other thioga,to abstain from Lectures until
the Governmeuthas appointed a commission
to inquire into the difficulties at the Uui.
varsity.
The annual meeting of the members of
the Toronto IndttatrialExhibibion was held
the other day. The annual report and
financial statement showed the affairs of
the association to be in good condition,
and several changes were recommended.
The old officers were re-elected, with the
exception of Mr. George Vair, whose place
was taken by Alderman Sheppard.
An adjourned meeting of the Law Re.
form Convention held at Osgood° hall,
Toronto, on Wedneeday,adoptedresolutions
in the direction of reducing the number of
appeals and law costa. A resolution by Mr,
B. B. Oeler, proposing a reduction in the
number of county judges, the creation of
Dietriot Courts, and the abolition of Quar-
ter Seesion Courts, was rejected.
Two professional burglars got a big
surprise in attempting to enter the general
store of Wm, Smith of Gatineau Point.
They were fired upon by men on wateh,and
one of the burglars, who gave his name as
Alex. Mortimer, of Montreal, was shot in
the thigh and captured. The other burglar,
said to be a professional from Toronto,
named Onslow, escaped.
The cavalry return of comparative effici-
ently for the last annual dril ;shows the
highest number of points awarded to any
ons troop is 114, to A Troop, Manitoba
.Dragoons. 13 Troop Manitoba Dragoons,
Domes next with 113 points. The Princess
Louise Dragoon Guards of Ottawa come
third with 1121.2 points, only a point and
n half behind the leading troop.
GREAT *BRITAIN.
Seven miners were killed by an explo.
sion on Friday in a colliery at Radstock,
Somerset.
Eccles Tower, ono of the best-known
landmarkeon the taut coat, of Lnglaud,
was blown down during the geles of last
weak..
During lost month officers of the hitt.
mongers Company, of London, seized end
destroyed of Billingsgate market, rorty•
two: tone of fish which was unfit for hutnatt
'food,
The relations between Great 13ritain and
Germany are vary strained, and the dieagrse•
able diplomatic situation is being inteneided
by the blbtorneee of the prods of the two
countries.
Mr. Clancy'¢ motion in the Imperial
Parllament.torecenaidor the sen tenet) whioh
had been imposed uoon Irish political
prisoners was rejected by the House by a
vote of 299 to 111.
The Pall Mall Gazette, in ani editorial.
article oil the Hawaiian question, says that.
there seems to bo no hope for Hawaii save
fn a protectorate, and if tome one _must
have the island America lmd'bhs best tight
0011.
Owing to the repressive measures by the
County council, glanders deolined at the
rate of 00 per cent, in ,London IML year,
Owners of home audetablemen have been
warped that the (Blume may bo oaeily Qom.
=Mooted to man and is almost always
fatal,
lo the ROM of Commons on Thursday
Sir Edward Grey said Sir Julian !'81140e
foto, the British Ambassador at Washing'
ton, had been instructed to make te report
oe the alleged intention of the United
States Government to stop gambling in
wheat.
In the Rouse of Commons an Friday Mr
Sidney Buxton, in reply to Sir George
Baden-Powell, atabed that negotiations for
the construction and laying of the Paeide
Gable were in progress, but it was not eon.
sidered advisable at present to make spy
public statement on the subject.
The trial has begun in London of a suit
bn
the wall-kna own Trish membeainst Mr, rs of P rlia-
ment, to recover a balance of tour hundred
and Eleven pounds, ex enees incurred by
him while acting for Mr. O'Brien In his
emit against Lord Saliebury.
UNITED STATES,
Atlanta, Ga., has the unusual experience
of about three and a half Mabee of snow.
Snow fell on Thursday in New Orleans,
La„ covering the ground to the depth of
aboutaninob.
At Odin, 111, ,an explosion scearred in
the goal mine ,in which twenty men were
injured.
A newlabeur. organization was formed
n Columbus, 0. on Thnrsday,tobe known
as the Idependent Knights of Labour.
It is announced that the marriage of Mies
Anna Gould to Count .Peau de Oastellane
will take place in New York city on March
4,
The li ht•hcue atSmith'a Point a at
e .Y.,
the entrance of the Potomac) River Into
Chesapeake Bey, has been carried away by
the drifting ice.
Ge is
Gen. Jaynes Neil Bethune of a or who
was the ,owner and for many years the
manager of " Blind Tom," tho famous
negro pianist, died at his son's residenoe
at Washington, aged 91. years.
A telephone war is reported in Niles,
Mich, The new telethon system, the
Gilliland, give a service for $20 a year.
Now the old Bell Telephone Company
announces that old aubreribers can have
telephones for nothing.
Mrs. Riobard Simpson, of Toronto, died
on Friday night at Steubenville, Ohio,from
burns received. Her dress caught are from
a grate, and she ran into the yard, wnere
she rolled iuthe snow. Neighbors tried to
extinguish the blazing clothes, but failed.
The U. S. Treasury gold reserve stands
at $41,21.5,181, the lowest point it le likely
to reach for some time, as the gold et the
Belmont.Morgan syndicate will soon begin
to make its appearance in the reserve and
swell its proportions until it again reaches
0100,000,000.
One of the worst wrecks that has occur.
red on the New York Central & Hudson
River Railroad in some time occurred about
two miles north of Rhin sok early on:
Friday morning. The American express
train smashed into a freight car and dashed
into the river, carrying with it Engineer
James Donohue of New York and Firemen
Frank Green of Catskill. Both were tier -
lonely injured.
At Lynn, Mase,, a dozen firemen were
buried by a wall falling at a fire in
Hutchinson's hardware store. The flames
were dangerously near the spot where the
men lay buried, and all the available
streams of water were brought to boar on
this point. The work of rescuing went on
rapidly, and inbillf an hour eleven firemen
had bean taken out. 'three of them were
dead, or died it a few minutes after being
taken out. They were Capt. Henry L.
Skinner of chemical ergine No. 1, Thee,
Murray of engine Ns 3, and John Donlan
of steamer No. 3.
GENERAL.
The Pope's health is mush improved.
Earthquake shooks were felt on Sunday
evening in several parts of Sicily.
Twenty-four life members of the Upper
House of the Reieherath have been ap-
pointed by the Emperor of Austria.
A political agitation of a serious charac-
ter has broken out among the students of
the Moscow University,aud a large number
of arrests have been made.
.8. detachment of Moorish cavalry is on
its way to Fez with two oart.loads of
human heads, trophies of a punitive ex.
peditioo against the Bahama tribe.
Tee Ithedive'a favorite slave has given
birth to a daughter. Had the child been
a boy, the Khedive would have married
the slave and made the boy heir to the
Khediviate.
A duel was fought the other day in the
outskirts of Paris between Lieut. Marcel'
Canrobert, son of the late Marshal, and
Deputy Hubbard, in which the latter re-
ceived a deep chest wound,
Persia is about to try the experiment of
producing ite own ugar. Beet root
culture on a small scale has already proved
a success, and this year the root is to be
oultivatei very extensively.
WANT TO COMM TO CANADA.
But Ash the Government rer Erbil Trans -
purgation.
A despatch from Houghton, Mich., saga:
--Over a thousand French-Canadians were
packed in the opera house at Lake Linden
Mendel night to receive information from
Father Paradia concerning eheir troneporta
tion to Canada. An official of the Canadian
Pesiflo was expected to represent the Will.
way, hitt he failed to appear, Father
Paradise was unable to offer them free
transportation, end nothing epeoial was
tiouo at the meeting. Father Paradis has
left for Ottawa to get an appropriation from
LI immigration fund of $25,000. Uulnse
r'tie is obtained the ropatrlaticn eobeme will
1. o a failure.
HYPNOTISM HIS DEFENCE,
:rustic:in •' Ender the infInrnrc" When I/
Hilted lir. Pepe.
A despatch from Detroit, Minh., saysW. Brusseati, the self -confused murderer
of Dr. Roraoe E. Pope, was hypnotised by
Nile. Cheroot on Thursday; at the jail. She
had nc trouble in getting almost complete
control over him and he obeyed her come'
mandsimplfoi*,ly. D,S.Donohue,Brusseau'a.
attorney, will make lite defence on the
theory that his client.' was hypnotized ab
h time the murder wan eoinmitted, and
henoo wet not accountable for hie' actions..
JANES' BAY RAILWAY.
I'routlnent Men Prepared tit labii! the
33oadm-A. Vott0ttry all' 'Vliet POWWOW
flea,
A desj?atoh from Termite says --+An
loSuontial meeting of pe'mninenb merchants
of the city took pima: an Thursday le the
Board of Trade roome,with Mr.S. Caldeeett,
President of the Board of Prada, in the
chair, Aid, Daviee and Lamb represented
the City Council, and Mtwara. Gurney,
Macdonald, Howland, Bertram, MvCraoken
end others represented the merchants and
moneyed men of the pity. The meeting
was addressed by the Chairman, Mamts,
Bertram, McOraokeu and Wood. The
great impertance of the oonetruobion of the
JJarees Bay Railway to Toronto was most
prominentlyaotfortli, The immense trade
new developing in the oquntry north of
North Bay was, it was urged, just what
the city should some, and no time should
be lost in pushing on the work of construe.
tion without further delay, Mr. Bertram'e
rousing speech was followed by an inter.
eating array of figures by Mr. McCracken,
who argued that the railway could be
conetruoted for less than the estimated
cost, and would prove a profitable undertak
ing. His arguments were so convincing
that it is amid a number of gentlemen with
himself are prepared to apply for another
charter to build the road. Ald. Davie said
that in 1880 the Ottawa Government had
granted a sum of money towards the build-
ing of this road; that the cheek given to the
proposed Atlantic & PaoiUo Railway in not
being able to float their bonds should at
once be availed of by Toronto, and thee
secure the trade that would have gone other
ways. He urged that the country through
which the Toronto & James Bay Railway
would pass is of immense extent and of vain
w el in minerals timber
e th sad agriculture
resources, ae well as of almost unlimited
water power. The land, consisting of a
level tract of many thousand of mores of the
richest calcareous clay, is plentifully cover-
ed with vegetable la mould, e nal in fertility
and staying qualities to any
in the world,
and if the Grand Trunk Railway Company,
who control the charter, and the ,Tames
Bay Railway Company are not .prepared
to proceed with the work at once Toronto,
he said, should apply for a oharter and
build the road.
JAPANESE VICTORY,
pie Capture or lyoi.lfal-Wal—The Chinese
Surrender Slaps, Arms and Forte,
A despatch from Tokio says that the
terms of surrender of Wet-HairWei were
that the Chinese surrendered all their ships
arms, and forts, the lives of their crews
and soldiers and the lives of the resident
foreigners being guaranteed. The terms
were offered by Admiral Ting, and were
conveyed to the .Papanese fleet by a Chinese
gunboat, under the protection of a flag of
truce. The despatch adds that Gen.Oyama
reports Chet in the fighting since January
29th the Japanese have lost 83 killed and
219 wounded, and the Chinese 700 in killed
alone. The number of their wounded is
not stated.
A despatch to the London standard from
Tien-Tsin says that the recall of the Chm-
eat; peace envoys will be followed soon by
the appointment of Li-Hung•Chang and
either Prince Kong or Sir Robert Hart, In-
epeotor.General of Chinese Cuotome, to aon
as high commissioners and plenipotentiaries
to arrange terms of peace. This step is
taken on the advice of the Ministers cattle
foreign powers
A despatch from Nagasaki says :—The
Chinese peace envoys, who returned here
from Hiroshima,after having been informed
by the Japanese representatives that their
posers were not considered full enough for
them to undertake peace negotiations, have
left for China, having been notified by
their Govetnment to return to that noun-
tty.
Intelligence has been received at Yoko-
hama, of the surrender of the Chinese
forte and warships at Wei.Hai-Wei. The
surrender is complete, and the Japanese
are in full posses= of Wei -Hai -Wei.
The Cologne Gazette says it is informed
from Japanese sources that overtures for
peace will not be regerded by Japan until
Pekin shall have been captured. Then Ja-
pan will demand poseesiou. of Corea, the
Liang.Tung peninsula, and Port Arthur,
with pecuniary indemnity. Japan's only
fear is that England end Rueeia may
forestall this programme by bringing about
peaoo in their own way.
COUNTERFEITERS ARRESTED.
Men Y land Material Fonnd in Poseeaston
of Ingersoll lien
A despatch from Ingersoll, Ont., saya:.—
Two men, John Palmer and Adam Ross,
both of Ingersoll, were arrested here on
Monday for making counterfeit money. The
practice has been going on for some time,
and several of the coins have been passed,
Palmer's house was searched after the
arrest, and the moulds and material from
which the bogus coins were made were
found. They were arraigned before the
polios magistrate and pleaded not guilty.
.hey were remanded until next Friday,
More arrests will likely be made,
Statistics as to Language.
Almost one-third of all humanity, or
about 400,000,000 people, speak the Chinese
language. The Hindoo language and its
various dialects aro spoken by perhaps,
125,000,0(0, the third place being accorded
th English language, which is now used
by not less than 112,000,000 people. The
Russian language comes fourth, 89,000,000
persone daily using it to the exclusion of
all othere. The German language is the
audible expression of 57,000,000 human
beings, and the Spanish of about 48,000,000.
Among European languages French now
takes fifth place, and when the languages
of the world are ooesidered it is the seventh
in the category.
Wonders of Selenoe.
" I wonder what's the matter with bila
thermometer,". said the soientist's wife.
" It etande at 05 out of doors,"
" Oh," replied her husband, " that is an
interesting phenomenon. But it's very
cagily ex plaint)."
'• How'?„
"The variations in this climate have kepb
the mercury sliding up and down fn the
tube until the friction madeit hot."
Convinced,
Ntron—" IN tin Lung, is it true that
many of the Japanese have become Chris -
Nana 3" .
Chinese Laundryman -" Me eabe thatee
80. See how they fightee,"
DRUB AND SWUM,
TRIPLE TRAGEDY IN THE VILLAGE
OF TOTTENHAM,
Robert Newbury. a !tithed Partner, Mier
dare Ms '/Vire, Atlempte 00 0U1,1, 010
Mete, Then 'i'uurns the Itavulyep R4
ltlmaelb rlte Nice° 00'111 Live, Men aid
!vire pre Demi.
A despatelr from Tottenham,Ont.,eaye:—
Robert Newbury, a retired farmer, on Sat.
urdey morning shot hie wife and her ;niece
and then blew out hie own brains. The
wife ie dead, but the niece will recover.
Newbury is a man of 75. The murdered
women was his second wife, and hie junior
by 30 years. For some time past be
hag been in ill.health, and at times melan-
cholio,
s(0eLED oleo WII+E INSTANTLY.
Saturday morning he seemed absorbed
and depressed, and followed his wife around
as she went about her household duties.
Mra. Newbury was arranging clothes in a
bedroom bureau when Newbury entered the
room and took deliberate aim •and shot her.
The ball entered the baok of the head,plowed
through the braiu, passed out of the fore.
head and embedded itself in the wall. The
woman must have dropped to the floor
deed instantly.
SHOT nim 101010 t IN VIE LIP.
Hie neige, alarmed at the allot, went to
see what was the matter. Newbury met
her, and, seeing the revolver in his hand,
the girl ran into the garden. Newbury.
followed ; the girl turned and piteously
pleaded with the now thoroughly crazed
man not to kill her. Tears and plaintive
entreaties had no effect, and the wife
murderera ut baa i i
p 1 into his niece's body.
The shot took effect in the Hp, embedding
itself against the jaw bone.
DLew OUT HIS BRAINS.
Turning rapidly on bis heel,
Newbury
re-entered the house, closed the door, then
placing the revolver to his temple, blew
out hie brains. He was found a minute
later by neighbors, who had heard the
shooting, he was then alive, but expired
within half an hour.
The tragedy was evidently premeditated,
for on Friday evening Newbury had' given
his watch to a friend, with instructions
to keep it until he would call for it. The
murder would have been committed ab an
earlier hour had not a neighbor called on
Mre. Newbury after breakfast, and remain-
ed until a few minutes prior to the shooting,
The niece was attended by Drs. Wright
and Campbel), and unless blood poisoning
seta in no fears of her life aro entertained.
The New cardinal Poppy.
Each year sees a distinct advance made
n the production of new and more beauti-
ful varieties ref our standard flowers, says a
correspondent. The pansy, the sweet pea.
and the poppy have in recent years been
NEW OAIlDINAL POPn.
each partioularly fortunate in the results
of the attention witch has been bestowed
upon them. I have raised many of the
newer varieties of these three flowers dar-
ns the past season and have been highly
gratified with the beautifully colored blos-
soms that have appeared; Particularly
gratifying have been the results in the nal.
tivation of new sorts of pansies and poppies,
The most beautiful variety of the latter
that has made brilliaatcolor is the garden,
has been the New CardtnalPoppy, an illus-
tration of whinh is given herewith. The
Dolor is the beautiful combination of car-
dinal and white,while the•formiedecidedly
handsome, a perfect head being formed
that is deoidedly "feathery" in appearance.
It is a decided acquisition to the list of
poppies and deeervea to be widely oul'ivat-
ed ; such beautiful varieties of our good old
fashioned flowers seeming to ,no to be much
more satisfactory to cultivate in large beds,
than a great mass of this, that and the
other flowers, some good, some bad and
many indifferent, and almost none pumas-
ing any decided character ae a blossom, A
few beautiful varieties of flowers are far
more preferable to the heterogeneous °elleot-
tions ono errs in many gardens,
A Pathetic Story.
A pathetic story comes from Rnasin
about the last prosect received by the
Liowsear Empresa from the late Czar. Last
sutmnev the Czar and Entproas visited a
groat shop in St. Pethrsburg to buy jewels
for their son's future bride, The Empress
greatly admired a beautiful bracelet, and
told'thoCzar that she wished to possess it
On their return ono of the serious attaehs
to which he was subject tante upon hint
and the Empress forgot the bracelet. The
Czar died, and to the Empresa in the early
days of her widowhood came Nov.. 14, the
first birthday she meat pass alone. On her
other birthdays the Czar had been wont to
place a bouquet in the morning room of the
Empress, inside the flowers was always
folded tome rich, rare gift, chosen months
beforehand. The Empress had avoided the
roots as too full of painful montorioe, but
this morning, the morning of his wedding
day, Nicholas requested his mother to go
there as a favor to him, The first thing
she naw WAS the bouquet in :he venal place
and inside the flowers wee a ease, fastened
and sealed by the Czar's own haude. • It
contained the bracelet. He had ordered it
on tato twine day that the Impress saw it,
and On his deathbed had given iustruetiohe
for the birthday gift, bidding his son to be
near to oomfef t her whop slte received it,
'WIFE F011450 AND A OOW
TREE WOMAN HAD JARS SOLD DE -
FORA FOR $60 NET,
Strange Mammy Vase tio3tortad From Ilan
040—elks, Beets laid 'Three Oust:anda
—The First Got flier fur Love, the nee•
urt4 for 4484, the Vitra lar $150 owl n
)Huth Cow,
A deopateh from Buffalo says:.,.Reports
have been made pnkllo o morning a sense.
tlonal ease which came to the attention of
the county grand jury on Friday morning,
lobs, Guy Beek, a Buffalo wemieni hes been
charged by some poem:, whose name is
not disclosed, with bigamy. The allege -
tion is meat peculiar in its nature, for it is
ohargsd that about eight years ego Mrs.
Beek was married to a man in Buffalo nam-
ed Ceek.
Cook and hie wife lived together for
time and shortly he grew tired of her and
agreed to pay a farmer named Heyer 5130 if
the latter would take the wife off his hands.
Heyer lilted the woman and agreed to pay
$50 for her and iter imbued sold his wile
and she raised no objection, Heyer and his
newly purchased wife lived together le
the town of Holland, Erie County, for a
time, and then along came Mr. Guy Beek.
Beck fell in love with the woman and
wanted to buy her from Rayer for the same
amount), —Noll had been paid to took for
her, $h had a couple of children by
the woma �tl�diked her and would notaell
her for the s, la, but agreed to sell her if
Beck would give him $50 and a good match
cow to boot. After some bargaining Beck
agreed to take the woman ab the price and
the deal was made. Guy Book put up the
miloh cow and the $50 and took the wo-
man,
There are 10,000 camels at work in Aus-
tralia.
For Twenty -Five Years
DUNN'S
BAKINC
K
1
POWDER
• THECOOKSBEST FRIEND
LARGEST SALE IN CANADA.
J, Maid° Manse
Montreal, P, Q,
A Marvelous Medicine
Whenever Given a Fair Trial
Hood's Proves Its Merit.
The following letter 10 from Mr. S. Alclde
Chauasd, architect and surveyor, No, 103 Shan
Street, Montreal, Canada:
"C. I, Hood & Cg., Lowell, Naas.:
+' Gentlemen; —I have been taking Hood's
Sarsapsrlllaforaboutalxmonths and ant glad
to say that it has done mea great deal of good.
Last May my weight was 152 pounds, but singe
HOOD'S
Sarsaparilla
CURES
began to take Hood's Sarsaparilla it has e tn-
er° d
ae to 103
I think
Hood's'warsaP
Ila
a
marvoltons medicine mt a very much pleased it.J. Ammon CnAolaE.
:Mood's Pills Dere liver ills, constipation,
biliousness, jaundice, sick headache.indireation..
A Biased View.
"I wonder," eaid Mro, Lushforth, "T
wonder when the idea of future punishment
originated 3"
I guess it came into sight about the
first day after wine was discovered," re.
plied Mr. irushforth, and his patient wife
forebore to push the question any further.
ILL—
REVV7 '4 1f�t�I'�,'���1Ar..;..N O � m BAP,
\+
CI Ja-E$EItB0E0.
lif�ri�lilf�r
l/1 ,1
rli.atk3J.hj‘
fifi",01/04/P1/1/01g1gf:71filf if
Aft
• i r'
Mr. W. S. Barker is a young
minister of Peterboro who has by his
great earnestness and able exposition
of the doctrines of tale Bible earned
for himself a place amongst the
foremost ministers of Canada. He,
with his most estimable wife, believe
in looking after the temporal as well
as the spiritual welfare of mankind,
hence the following statement for
publication
"I have mach pleasure in re-
commending the Groat South Ameri-
can Nervine Tonic to all who are
.,fllictsd as I have been with nervous
prostration and indigestion. I found
very great relief from the very first
bottle, which was strongly recom-
mended to me by my druggist. I
also induced any wife to use it, who,
I must say, was completely run down
and was differing very much from
general debility. 'She found great
relief from South American Nervine
and also cheerfully recommends it
to her fellos -sufferers,
" Rev. W. S. BARaten."
It is now a scientific fact that oar.
fain nerve centres located rear the
base of the braiu have entire control
over the stoivach, liver, heart, lungs
and indeed all internal organs; that
is, they furnish these organs 0hit
the necessary nerve force to enable
them to perform their .reepeettve
work. When tato nerve centres aro
weakened or deranged the nerve
force is diminished, and as a resalt 1
the stomach will not digest the food,
the liver becomes torpid, the kidneys
will not act properly, the heart and
lungs suffer, and in fact the whole
system becomes weakened and sinks
on account of the lack of nerve force. iI
South American Nervine is based
on the foregoing scientific discovery;
and is so prepared that it ants
directly on the nerve centres. It
immediately increases the nervous
onorgy of the whole system, thereby
enabling the different organs of the
body to perform their work: perfectly,'
when disease at .once disappears.
It greatly benefits in one day. 1
Mr. Solomon Bond, a member of
the Society of Friends, ofDarlington,
IM., writes: "I have used six bottles.`
of South American Nervine and I
consider that every bottle did for me
one hundred dollars worth of good,';,
because I have not had a gooilt
night's sleep for twenty years on
account of irritation, pain, horrible',
dreams, and general nervous pros
ta3tion, which
has been caused by 1.
chronic indigestion and dyspepsia• of
the stomach, and by a broken down!,
condition of my nervous system,
But now l: can lie down and sleep sill!
night as sweetly as a baby, and ](,
feel like a sound man, T do not)
think there has ever boon a medicine
introduced into this country, which
will at all compare with this as It
etre for the etomaob and nerves ".__ }i
A. DEADAIRY Wtzoloiale and .hetet! Agent far t3l'Iissell3