HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1895-4-19, Page 74
ARIL" X1+1', 18,9 V
TEE
s ,t'I $ FOOT.
THE JEWS IN A NUTSHELL
THE 1VRRY FROM ALL OYYRR
THR WORLD,
antereatfng Boma About Our Own Com.
try, great Britain, the hatted Statea,
and All Pprta or the Lobe, UOndonard
and Asaorted for Easy ltondtnC,.
OANAna..
Oanada'e sealing fleet have reaohed the
Japanese meet, and have begun operations.
Experts bavo reported largo quantitlea
of petroleum in the vicinity of Kiageville
Louie Bouchard, a Grand Trunk Railway
olerk, committed suicide et Hoohelaga on
Thursday,
MraRobertBlaoltwell has
been appointed
public librarian in London at a 'Wary of
$700.
The Advisory Board Committee of Mani-
toba has adopted an agrteulturaltext-book
Mr the schools.
Lieutenant -Governor Ohapleau of Quebec,
has loft for Florida on a trip which will
last some weeks,
Mr. J. H. Roos, of Moosejaw, has been
Warn In as a member of the Executive of
the North-West Assembly.
Tt is expected that Mr. William Smith,
Deputy Minister of Marine, will return to
Ottawa by the end of May.
Working hours in the Grand Trunk logo -
motive shops at Stratford have been
increased to 50 per week.
iPhe Canadian Pacific, Grand Trunk, and
Intercolonial railways have reduced freights
on all olasaes of merahandiae.
Assistant Chief Engineer Hamel of the,
Publ Works Department at Ottawa, is
under suspension for alleged shortage in hie
a000unta.
The receipts from the Hamilton charity
concert, amountingto over $400, were
divided amongst the various benevolent.
sooietiea interested.
The Montreal Board of Trade is urging
on the Government the necessity of filling
the long -vacant office of collector ot customs
at that port.
There is trouble on the Hamilton market
because the lessee, Mr. Jacques, is imposing
what the occupants regard as excessive fees
•
forrivile es.
P g
The result of a scandal at Calgary has
been the arrest of the editors of the Calgary
Tribune for criminal libel at the instance of
Messrs. Hooper and Botta.
Francis Northey, one of the engineers on
the Hamilton Waterworks, died suddenly
while stooping to turn on the water in front
of the pumping -house.
The canal regulations for the current
year have been issued by the Dominion
Government. There will be no discrimi-
nation against the citizens of the United
States.
Invitations have been issued by Lieut. -
Governor Mackintosh to the Governors of
several States to be present at the opening
of the Territorial Exhibition at Regina as
hie guests.
From information received by the Do-
minion Department of Trade and Com.
coerce, it appears that there are prorpeota
for good stiff prices for export cattle dur-
ing the coming season..
The Fisheries Department denies the
report that Canada is objecting to the en-
forcement of Gila Behring sea award. What
it objects to is the regulation providing
for the sealing of arms.
Mrs. Nickerson has Issued a writ against
the widow of the late W. 0. McLeod,
Woodstock's well-known millionaire,
claiming 620,000 damages for the alienation
of her husband's affections.
Mr. Adam Cantelon, treasurer of the
township of Goderich, died at Clinton on
Friday. He was seventy-five years of age,
having been born on the same day and the
same year as the Queen.
The verdict of the Coroner's jury at
Gleiohen was that Frank Skinner came to
hie death from a gunshot wound inflicted
by a Blackfoot Indian (Seraphs g Hides), and
acquitting Constable Rodgers, who shot the
Indian while resisting arrest.
At the Winnipeg Trades and Labor
convention prohibition was rejected as a
plank in the platform of the labor party,
and a memorial WAS adopted opposing
General Booth's colonization scheme.
During the ooming season the completion
of the Toronto Island breakwater, as far as
covered by the contract of Capt. Murray, is
to be vigoroaly pushed, and in all proba-
bility accomplished this year,
Reports from C.P.R. agents in Manitoba
state that the fanners are generally prepar-
ing for spring work, but only in a few oases
has Reeding been done. There is a want of
snow or rain throughout the province.
Mr. Frank Skyner, a Dominion Govern.
ment employee on the Blackfoot Indian
reserve, Alberta, was shot and killed by a
crazy Indian. The homioide resisted.
arrest, and was shot dead by the Mounted
Police.
Mr, Douglas Stewart, Inspector of Peni-
tentiaries, is at present engaged in making
an official inspection of St. Vincent de Paul
penitentiary, and ie highly pleased with the
condition of the institution under the
' .',management of Warden Ouimet.
The will of the late Col. Allan Gilmour
of Ottawa was probated o¢ Saturday. The
estate is valued at $1,452,000. Deceased
'was unmarried. The bulk of his estate is
'.`loft to Mr. John Manuel, a connection by
marriage. There are several charitable and
other bequests.
John A, Patterson, the acting teller of
the Traders' Bank at Strathroy, who
absconded about three weeks ¢ o with over
$4,000 of thebank's funds, has been located
by the Guarantee Company at Las Vegas,
Now Mexioo. He will bo brought back to
stand his trial.
Miss Pollingbon, of Hamilton, had the
ilnpleasant experience of rolling down the
• mountain side, She was walking a few
feet away from the edge at the top, and,
falling on the slippery ground, rolled over
',without
went to the bottom. She escaped
,without serious injury.
The City Council of Kingston on Thurs-
t;day night agreed to the terns of a company
;+'bf American capitalists, who will erect a
ss ahlasb and steel furnace in that city, to omit
$600,000. The terms are $250,000 of a
,gemma, a free site of 16 acres, free water,
‘a,and exemption from taxation for ten years,
7the money grant to be considered as a loan,
^
;the company to give in exchange for the
'x lama, first mortgage honde: of their own in
a, like sum, bearing interest at five per.
cent.
GREAT BRITAIN-
? Mrs. Leonard Jerome, mother of Lady
.Randolph Churchill, died at Tunlgridge
Wella on Tuesday.
Mr. Gladstone le writing a work on ex-
5itinct forma of life, with the objeot of
f reoonciling Darwinism and the Bible,
Mr. Stead le writing it novel dealing with
solid problems, under •the title of "The
Mode Maid of Modern Babylon."
A epocial .00mmiseloper has been des'
patched from London to enquire into re.
perks .of severe distress in the south of
100lend.
The engagement of the dowager�Duohsss
of Marlborou gb,formerly Mrs, Hammersley
of New Vorit,and Lord William Boreaford,
a again announced,
The British War Office hoe nob reoelved
any advices on regard to the alleged firing
upon the British steamer Ethelred off Cape
Mayel, Cuba, by a Spanish gunboat,.
The British Board of Trade returns for
March show that the imports inoreased
(:663,559, and the expecte increased £424,
127, as compered with those for the corres-
ponding month last year.
As St. Du novar
s °Mirth, Fleetet street,
London, on Priday,iu the preeenpe of a
large crowd, a beautiful memorial window
in memory of Mask Walton, author of "The
Compleat Angler," was unveiled,
Mr. William Waldorf Actor has allowed
the Pall Mali Budget to cease to exist, not-
withstanding that lb waspaying its way,
out of respeot to the memory of 'hie dead
wife, with whom the paper was a favorite.
For more than half a century a greenish
glass has been used at the greenhouses of
the famous Kew gardens near London. A
recent experiment with ordinary glass has
shown a remarkable improvement in the.
plants affected,
There recently died at Mauohline, in the
South of Scotland, Hugh Gibb, a shoemaker,
whose recollection extended so far back as
to include oonvereabione with and desorip
tions of people who had been intimately
associated with the poet Burns.
Some mischievous boys in a London subs
urb have been arrested, soundly lectured,
and fined, for throwing short tacks on a
highway frequented by bicycle riders,their
object being to see the whoelmen dome to
grief as the result of punctured tires.
Great Britain will not tolerate any inter-
ference by the United States in the bound-
ary dispute with Venezuela. This is the
reply of the British Foreign Office to
Ambassador Bayard's representation of the
desire to bring about a settlement of the
boundary dispute by arbitration.
The British Minister of Foreign Affair
has informed United States Ambassador
Bayard that Great Britain will not seek, in
her present controversy with Nicaragua, to
acquire any part of the latter's territory ;
that all she desires is that Nicaragua shall
pay a proper indemnity to British Consul
Hatch and other British subjects who were
driven out of Bluefield: during the troubles
in the Mosquito reservation last autumn.
MT= STATES.
According to Marie Tempest, the finest
opera house in the world is at Duluth.
The woman suffrage clause in the pro-
posed State constitution of Utah has been
passed.
Five men were killed by a boiler explo.
sion in Loring & Jones' factory at Woburn
Highlands, Mase.
A boat .left ..Detroit for Cleveland on
Thursday, which marks the opening of
navigation os Lake Erie,
A report is current in New York that Sir
Charles Rivers Wilson has agreed to accept
the Presidency of the Grand Trunk.
A Baltimore & Ohio passenger train went
off a trestle fifty feet high at Bellaire,
Ohio. Four persona were killed and seven
injured.
The test of one of the big 5,000 horse-
power dynamos recently placed in position.
in the power -house of the Niagara Falls
Power Company proved eatiefeotory,
Mrs. Paran Stevens, the well-known.
society leader of New York, died at her
homein that city on Thursday from pneu-
monia, complicated by heart trouble.
In the Chicago municipal elections, the
complete returns for the Mayoralty give
Mr. Swift, Republican, a plurality of
twenty-eight thousand five hundred and
twenty votes. i
William Lake, who murdered and muti-
lated Emma Hunt, a domestic living with
a farmer near Carlton, N. N., last October,
was electrocuted in Auburn prison on Wed-
nesday.
Henry N. Entwistle, who was senten0
ed to fifteen years in prison in Lowell,
Mass., in 1892, for shooting Maria Clegg
with intent to kill, has bean released
through the efforts of the young woman,
and they will be married shortly.
The directors of the Link Observatory
have received a telegram whioh announces
that Mr. Edward Crossley, formerly a
member of the British House of Commons,
proposed to present to the Liok Observa-
tory his great three -feet reflecting tele-
scope, with its dome and all its parts.
President Cleveland was informed by one
of the Justices of the Supreme Court that
the court stands five to three against the
constitutionality of the income taxlaw,and
that in all probability the decision will be
handed down by the court, but that the
decision would not be announced in open
court until the first Monday in May.
Mise Tease L. Kelso, librarian of the
Public library in Loa Angeles, Calfornia,
has taken an action for slander against the
Rev. J. C. Campbell, for having prayed
that the Lord might vouchsafe His saving
grace to the librarian of the City library,
and cleanse her of all sin, and make her a
woman worthy of her office.
At Pittsburg, Pa., John Brotia, Thos.
Grogan, George Wolfe, John McManus and
and William Ford started to cross the
river in a skiff, and when some distance
from the shore the boat capsized aad Gro-
gan and Baths were drowned. It is reported
there was a drunken row in the boat, and
the three survivors were arrested.
The mutilated body of a colored woman
was found on the street in New York on
Saturday night. Superintendent Byrnes
says she was murdered on Friday night by
William Caesar, who was taken into
custody. On Saturday night Caesar out up
the body, and at 9 o'olook took it on a
Sixth avenue oar, whioh runs to Waverly
Place. When the oar stopped, finding it
did not go to the river, he left the body
where it was found. It is believed that
Caesar made a confession.
According to returns issued of the condi-
tion of trade in the United States for last
month, as compared with Murch, 1894, a
marked improvement is shown in trimly
linea of business, though the general aver-
age is belowthat of 1893. While the volume
of transactions is often larger than a year
ago,lowor prices have resulted in a smaller
margin ofprofltaou alarger volume of trade.
Tho labour situation is more satisfactory,
as in many recent inabanoos where trouble
seemed imminent the difference has been
settled without a strike. Iron and wool
mills are more votive, and an increased
demand is felt for several Wilde of manu-
factured products. Coke and ore are ad-
vauoing, Dopper is firmer, and tin and tin
plates are strong. Salmi of wool show more
confidence, but a rise in prices is not prob.
ablein eight of heavy receipts of foreign
wool, Altogether the businessoutlet)
may De oeneidored much mere hopeful.
er,N4'naa,
A rupture between Norway end Sweden
is said be be Imminent,
The plague has broken out at Kowloon
Chfua, in virulent form.
Yellow fever has broken out amongst the
Spanish troops sent to Cuba,
The field of Waterloo is covered with it
rop of crimson poppfee every year.
Dlequieting news bas been received from
Algiers regarding the health of the Caere-
witoh.
Between March 31 and April 2 Prince
Bismarck received 8,390 telegrams, 50,000
lettere and 120,00 postal oarde.
Mrs,. Maakay'e daughter, the Princees
Colonna, has been granted a separation
from her husband by the Roman courts.
Prince Bismarok, on bis birthday, re-
ceived eight thousand telegrams, fifty
thousand letters, and one hundred and
fifteen bhoueand postal cards.
With the close of last month Sebastopol
ceased to exist as a port for foreign shop.
ping, and will in future be used only as a
naval port and arsenal.
The famous Johannisberg vineyards have
just reverted to the Emperor of Austria,
Prince Richard Metternich having died
without leaving a son.
Li -Hung -Chang has so far recovered
from the bullet wound in hie cheek as to
be able to resume the peace negotiations
with the Japanese representatives.
Joshua H. Stover, of Staunton, Vs., has
been sentenced to the penitentiary for life
for stealing three and a half pounds of bacon
worth thirty-eeven and one-half Dente.
Stover is a white man, a carpenter and a
confirmed thief.
A lapidary in London found a tiny ame
thyet imbedded in the very centre of a nine
karat diamond which he had been employed
to out. There is no record of any such
thing having previously happened in the
history of diamond gutting,
LAKE CRUISERS.
A Proposition That the United states
should Have a Navy on the Lakes.
A despatch from Washington, D. C.,
says :—An effort will be made at the next
session of Congress to secure an appropria-
ion for three, and possibly five, light.
draught gunboats for the protection of the
lake oities. It is argued that the elaborate.
system of coast defences which is being
created by the ordinance branch of the
army for thecities on the sea coast, as well
a: the increased number of harbour defence
vessels now rapidly going into commission,
gives to these oities a protection which is
not enjoyed by those upon the lakes. It
has been claimed for years past that our
treaty wish Groot Britain prevents us from
plaoing naval oruising vessels on the waters
dividing the United States from Canada.
It is asserted, on the other hand, however,
that Great Britain has not rigidly respected
these treaty provisions, and that in the
event of war between England and the
United States, a number ot vessels are now
in Canadian waters that could be speedily
armed with rapid firing guns and which
would work great destruction among our
shipping, as well as such important com-
mercial centres as Buffalo, Cleveland, and
Detroit.
If Congress can be made to believe that
the placing of a few speedy gunboats on the
lakes would not be a contravention of our
treaty relations with Great Britain, there
is little doubt that an appropriation for
this purpose will be promptly made in the
next House. It has been suggested that
those boats have a displacement of about
1,000 tone, andthat they be armed with
half -a -dozen or more four-inoh rapid-fire
guns. This would give them an offensive
quality fully equal to the demands that
might be made upon them, and they would
serve as the nucleus of a small lake navy,
to which additions might be made from the
more swift of the vessels now plying those
waters as freight and passenger boats.
Many of these latter could be converted
into acceptable praisers by arming them
with light,rapid.Sringguns, and this would
probably be done in the event of war. -
Meanwhia it is bah p
I believed that some steps
shouldbe taken for the building up of a
distinctive naval squadron on the lakes,
and the initiative will not be delayed
longer than next winter. If such an
appropriation be made the bill will doubt-
lessprovide bthey
leen ro icthe shall be constructed
on the lakes.
Prices of Meats Going Up.
A despatch from Chicago says :—Prises
of all kinds of meats will be higher this
summer than they have been for ten years
past. It is not probable that much relief
will come before next autumn.- Prices have
already advanced about 25 per cent., and en
additional advance in about the same pro-
portion is almost certain. While the prime
cause of the advance is the soaroity of choice
beef cattle, all kinds of meats have gone
up, partly through speculative sentiment
and partly on account of the increased de-
mand.
A Heavy Verdict.
A deepatob from Cleveland, Ohio, :aye:—
One of the heaviest verdicts ever given in
a personal injury ease was rendered in the
United States Circuit Court on Saturday,
Charles Heathorn, wh-, sued the Baltimore
and Ohio railway. for $100,000 for the loss of
both lege and the crushing of an arm in a
collision in Indiana, was awarded 530,000
by the jury after only three hours' delibel..
ation. It is understood that the railroad
company will appeal the case.
Twenty-three Bodies Recovered.
A despatch from Seattle, Wash., says:—
23 bodies of miners, who lost their lives in
the explosion at the Blue Canon mine, near
Lake Whatoom, at 3 o'olook on Tuesday?
have been already reaovered, and, so far as
can be learned, only two of those in the
mine when the explosion occurred, escaped.
This disaster was undoubtedly caused by
an accumulation of firedamp, whioh explod.
ed by a blast in the breast of the gangway,
Smugglers Are Fined.
A new four -ton sloop unnamed, but hail.
ing from Seattle, has been seized and oon-
fisoated by Canadian government offioiais
off Vancouver Ielaud, 13.0., for smuggling.
The /adieus along rho omnet have been
holding high carnival for weeks, the
stimulant being ,the whisky supplied by
this nameless sloop. ,Three men, two of
them Japanese, constituting the crow, have
been fined by a Victoria magistrate,
0AEL DUNDEE'S AL ANAO'
"Weill" queried the fat pollee sergeant,
as he looked up from his blotter and saw
Mr. Ilunder standing before him,
"Sergeant, you will oxeoose one." ro'.
plied the caller. "1 remembers dot your
fodder and madder vhas deadt, mud I shunt
sbbep int'
"Y-e.e, You are not going to reed me
any more of your jakae, are you 1"
"Simko '1 Ra, ho, ho 1 Sometimes I haf
some ;Mime, und,aomtimes she vhaa ead-
nese or philosophy. I will now—"
"Please don't, Mr, Dunder 1 I am very
busy today, you know."
"So vhaa 1 worry busy, but I like to
make you feel goodb. Listen now to some
einga which vaill be in der next number of
Carl Dundor's Condo Almanac, what sells
all ofer Europe and America
'Maybe a bird In mine handbvhas wort
two in tome bushes and maybe not. It de.
panda on der kind of bird he vhas.'
"'I haf always firmly believed dot bon
Doty vhaa der beet policy, but der trouble
vhaa to make der odder mac believe it, too.
He visas always a leelde shy on deb.'
"'Some folks vhas like some pieces of
wool—full of knots; mit der grain all mixed
oop. When you find s000h a man, you
should be big enough to link him or alimall
enough torun avhay from a fight.'
"' I doom' like to talk to a dumb man,
and Idoan' like to haf a man who vhaa
all talk ahpeak to me. I like somepody
who vhas half way an orator during a
campaign and a mute all der rest of der
time.'
"' I eomedimee bear two men disputing
about Noah and hie ark, mad I took notice
dot dey fight :bust as queek after dot as
someding dot happened only last week.
What we doan' know vhaa :Must as good
ash what we do know, if we can make
eomepody believe it.'
"' Nobody can take his riches mit him
into der next world, bub he can invest
$50,000 in a monument to ehtand shoat on
dor edge of eternity. Dot, is supposed to
be a great consolation to some folks.'
" 'Somedimea a man comes to me and
:aye he has no luck. I talk mit him and
I find he invests $1 in a lottery and fondly
oxpeoto todraw $50,000. My experience in
die world vhas dot a fool and luck vhaa in
close partnership.'
"' Baferyli'ody hates a liar, and yet
eaferypody takes care to ehpeak only so
much truth ash won't give avhay nottinge
aboudt himself. 11 we'il set oudt next
week to tell der solemn truth, we should
be so pleased mit a liar dot we make him a
president for life.'
"'Moet men are agreed dot each one of
us should do somedinge for der peoples to
come after us, but I find dot der great
majority vhaa willing to set out a goose-
berry bush and let it go at dot. Perhaps,
howefer, der Doming peoples vhill have haf
an appetite for gooseberries.'
•
SHAT AIMSRL1+ IN 'flail: BANK.
A Baytotg Teller Elns 1010 eNeir In the
Presence or n Boma Other thorns In
the .'lank P8 Toronto,
A despateb from Termite. says i'—Q,
Spencer Milliehamp, paying teller of the
Bank of Toronto, ehot himself dead ab 2.30
Saturday afternoon, The tragedy was
enacted within the wires of the teller's cage
at the head office of the bank, Churob and
Frontotreeto, The bank had been closed
for business ab 1 p.m. and the 15 clerks
employed were engaged at their books,
Their teaks were almost completed and
the time was drawin_g near for closing the
bank, when Hector..Read, receiving teller,
who was at work close to Milliahamp,heard
a mound reeebein
g a moan or stifled
groan. Thinking it was the ory of a child
he raised tie eyed from hie books and was
horrified to see his fellow -teller flourishing
a revolver,
""O dont, for God'ssake, don't !" Shout.
'ed Read as Millichamp's purpose flashed to
him.' At the same tome he rushed for the
nage in which Mtlliohamp stood, in the hope
of intercepting the arm on He mission of
death. Milliohamp raised the revolver to
hie head, and as Read reached the cage
door the report rang out and the victim
fell in a lifeless heap. The ball entered
the head immediately above and before the
right ear, and being of a heavy calibre pass-
ed completely through the brain, emerging
from the left side. Death was instantane-
ous.
Dr. Adams was summoned by telephone,
and a messenger cent in search of a police
officer. The medical man was the first to
arrive, but the unfortunate man was beyond
the reach of his skill
For Twenty-five Years
DUNN'S
B AK1n1
POWDER Exchange of Civilities.
Broken in Health
rho Tired Feeling, constipation
and Pain in the sack
Appetite and Health Restored by
Mood's Sarsaparilla.
//y�.rr.1' rw J�sl It\
/ I %fig *a".-.
Mr. Chas. ,5teeia
St; Catherine's, Ont.
aft I. Hood & Co„Lowell, Mass.:
"For a number of years 8 have been troubled.
With a general tired feeling, shortness of breath,
pain in the back, and constipation. I could get
onlylittle rest at night on account of the pain
And had no appetite whatever. I was that tired
In myy limbs that I gave out before half the day
but did eat tried
ria great number of medicines
g any permanent relief from any
ood'ssivi,Curess
source until, upon recommendation of afriend,
I purchased a bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla;
which made me feel better at once, I havecon.
armadas use, having taken three bottles, and
1 Feel Like a New Man.
bavo a good appetite, feel as strong as ever 2
did, and enjoy perfect rest at night. I have
muoh sure in recommending Hood's Sarsa.
patina.”e OnARLEs S EELE, with Erie PrP,
serving Co., St, Catherine's, Otitario.
Hood's Pills are prompt and efficient, yea
sasy in action. Sold by all druggists. 26c.
THECOOK'S BEST FRIEND
First Good Fellow—Have a cigar.
Second Good Fellow—Thanks try one of
mine.
Each (to himself, a few inomento later—
LARGEST SALE IM CANADA. This mieerable weed is even worse than the
one I gave him.
SI
11
The Bane of Millions of Lives
"I LIKE TO BILL RIIL"
" Sometimes I find a man who doan
believe aboudt dot garden of Eden because
he nefer caw her. I find, howefer, dot der
same man believes in der whale, although
lie vhaa nefer within sight of der sea.'
' ' If eomepody Domes to advise me how
to bring.00p my children, I ahenerally find
oudt dot he vhas a young man who dean'
get married yet, or a man so oldt dot he
has forgotten how she vhas. Dot vbas
natural, howefer. A man whose advice is
good forsomedings keeps quiet and makes
u. for him,'
you
I see in der papers dot eome-
pody vhaa divorced, 1 believe I know how
she vbas, Dot feller figgere too high on
love and too low on meab and potatoes.. If
weo le could love and be sensible,too it
ould be all right. You can't mae bread
out of a romance, and you can't fry love in
a spider.'
"Once in a great while eomepody's
conscience troubles Trim so much dot he gifs
himself cop to der law, but der rest of us
keep quiet and go right along :hast der
same, If we vhaa all to gif ourselves oop
at der same time nobody would be left to
pass sentence. It vhaa worry wise in us to
keep quiet.'
' If we like a man,it vhaa more because
he doom' find oudt our faults than because
we find somedinga to admire in him. If
eomepody injures ne, of coarse we vhaa
malt aboudt it. If we injure eomepody
else, we find ourselves even madder yet. 1
once told a man dot 1 like hie honest opin-
ion of me. He said 1 vhas a fool, and I
vhaa so mads I like to kill him. If he vhaa
a liar nod said I vitas ehmart, he' vitas my
freodt for life.' .
"Vhell how you like em 3" asked Mr.
Duuder as he finished reading and looked
u But the fat police sergeant had quietly
slipped into hie room and out on the street,
and the almanac maker was alone with his
philosophy. _
Lady Phillimore's Poultry.
It is a oommon belief that members of
the English aristocracy do not do me tap of
work from year's end to year's end, All
of them do not live in idleness and luxury.
For instance : Lady Phillimore, the wife ot
Admiral Sir Augustus Pnillimore, at her
place in Hampshire, has made a profitable
experiment in poultry rearing for the mar-
ket, and she purposes to uoubinue this form
of small industry. Out of nix hunderd eggs
purchased at 3 Dente each she secured 487
chickens, whioh iu the W iuclreater and
London markets realized $3110. Tier im-
mediate expenses were $127 ; but In order
to arrive at the net profits it will be neons-
eery to deduct from the balance of $175 odd
an allowance for interest, ten t and deprooia•
tion of plant.
The Shoemaker's Mistake,
Customer—These alma you made for the
squeak eo I Can't stand them. You'll have
to take them back.
Shoemaker --Ain't you a ehuroh member
No.
Ohl Bog pardon. I thought you were.
1r'f�1t"�flf ,d•
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it
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4.
Sick Heada^he is a malady which
makes its appearance most frequently
in women. The attaok often begins
in the morning, upon awakening,
after a night of restlessness or heavy
sleep ; though it is especially wont
to occur in connection with emotional
disturbances, such as excitement,
fright or mental strain. The pain is
usually localized, being in one or
the other, more frequently the left
side of the Bead. Ib is generally
accompanied by great disturbance of
the stomach, when light pains the
eyes; noises otherwise unnoticed
inflict punishment; odors excite
nausea. From the fact that people
with strong nerves aro never troubled
with Sick Headache, it is generally
conceded by the moat eminent phy-
sicians that it is dependent upon
weak nerves or nervous debility, and
can only be permanently cured by
streugthoning the nervous system.
The Great South Amerioan Ner-
vine Tonic is the only remedy manu-
factured whioh is prepared especially
and expressly for the nerves. It
ante directly on the nerve centres at
the base of the brain, correcting any
derangement there may be, greatly
increasing the supply of nervous
energy or starve force, giving great
l-'
tone to the whole body, and thereby
enabling a system subject to Sick
Headache to withstand future attacks.
It gives relief in one day and
speedily effects a permanent euro.
Mrs. Isabella S. Graham, of
Friendswood, Indiana, writes: "For
a number of years I have suffered
intensely with Nervous and Sick
Headache; had hot flashes, was
sleepless and became despondent.
Dr. Faris, of Bloomington, Indiana,
spoke so highly of South American
Nervine that I was induced to buy a
bottle. That purchase led to a few
others, and now I sleep soundly, feel
buoyant, strong and vigorous. I
would not be back in the condition I
was in when I began taking this
medicine for any eum you could
name."
Mrs. J. H. Prouty, of La Gr tinge,
Indiana, writes: "Your South Amer-
ican Nervine worked to marvellous
euro with me last year, I began
taking it last April about oho 20th.
The first week I made a gain of 16
lbs. and from that time on I made a
steady gain until I reached my
normal weight, making in all a total
gain of 80 lbs. After taking it three
or four months I found myself a
Rall woman."
A. DILkD1ILAN" Wholesale and Retail Agent fo
Brussels