HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1895-10-4, Page 7'QG7'(it;r to 9 1.991$
'TIM MEWS T TEM
Ttfl 'VERY LATEST X Rd' \ .ALG f1YRB
THE WORLD,
ll nerestingltcnte About bur Own Country,
rtinett Britain, the united arena, arta
All farts or the (globe, Condeuied and
Assorted for diooy needing.
e6NADA.
Natural gee bag been struck at Iberville,
Quebec,
TTumilton now prapoees to terrace part of
the mountain.
Typhoid fever is reppartcd to be on the
Morose() in Chatham, Ont,
Mayor Stewart of Hamilton, is expected
home' from Florence at the and of next
month.
Constable Ifenyscote of the Northwest
Mounted Polio°, at \n*atelia, was feta ly
kinked by a horse.
Mr, Abner Matthews, an old man of 70
years, was killed on the -Michigan Central
track near Welland.
Hoe. Mr. Dickey has ordered 1,500 Lee.
Mebford rifles and 100 Loe.Metford carbines
for the Canadian militia.
Hamilton veterans propose to celebrate.
the 30th anniversary of Ridgeway on the
battle ground in ,lune next.
The statue of Sir John Macdonald nae
arrived 1111(1730011, and it is possible that
it may be unveiled next month.
Mr. and Mrs. Shortie, the parents of
Shortie, the Valleyfield murderer, arrived
in Montreal on Saturday night.
Orders have been issued to have the
Sault Ste. Marie Canal kept open. on Sun-
days until the end of the season.
The International Radial Railway Cor•
pany %skfor bonusee of$20,000from Water-
down and $50,000from EastFlamboro',
Hunt's Opera house at St. Catharines was
burned on Saturday morning. The bdilding
wae valued at$ 18,000, aud was insured for
SS, 000.
Over four hundred of Winnipeg'scitizens
attended the farewell reeeptlon ab Govern.
ment House given by Sir John and Lady
Schultz.
The Queen's Hotel property at Montreal
wae sold by the Sheriff to Mr. William
Hanson, noting on behalf of• some of the
creditors, for $21,000.
Forty-four omits a bushel is the price
buyers have fixed for Manitoba wheat at
points where the eighteen cent rate to
Fort William afloat exude.
Lord Duderin has acceded to the request
for his portrait for the National Gallery' at
Montreal, accompanying it with a very
complimentary. fetter,
A sharper who gave his name as Fred
Wilson of daiontrealwas arrested at London
after he had bummed Mr. James Blakie,
a White Oak farmer, out of 3±0.
Mr. Joseph Limoges, while driving with
Mr. Nadia at Montreal, was struck and
killed by' an electric car. The Horne was
killed and Mr. Nadin was badly hurt.
The O. P. R. is opening new stations,
putting on night operators and employing
additionaltrain crews to handle the big
wheat crop in Manitoba and the North-
West.
.A landslide 000urred at St. Luoe,Quebec,
which carried away the house of Mr. Nor -
vandal and buried five meibbers of his
family. The Champlain River is completely
blocked.
Two of the women . employees of the W.
C: McDonald tobacco works at Montreal.
who were injured in the recent tire have.
entered motions for damages against Mr.
McDonald.
• The Peary relief steamer Kitehae arrived
at- St. John 'e, Nfld., with Lieut. Peary
and his companions from .Greenland. The
expedition was a failure, and but arepeti•
tion of last year's work.
Tho Medical Health officer of Chatham,
Out., stated on Saturday that the carcase
of a cow afflicted with an aggravated
type of lump jaw, or 'Dancer, had been cut
ap by a city butcher and sold over the
counter.
The services of Rev. Prof. B. \Varfleld,
D. D., of Princeton University, have been
secured by Knox College, Toronto, fora
comae of lectures on the general aubjeot of
systematic+ theology during the month of
October. '
The Montreal Company contemplates
bolding a grand fair in Montreal next year,
covering between May 24 and October 12.
The _exposition will be celled the British
Empire Exposition and International
Dieplay of All Nations,
An agitation is being worked up
amongst the Germane of the Northwest
Territories to have the 000 of the Ger-
man language allowed in the schools. lir.
Peter Glaaeeen of Rosthern has written
a strong letter insupport of the move-
ment.
The Toronto City Council at a apeoial
meeting held on Thursday afternoon by a
vote of 13 to 8 decided to engage Mr.
Mansergh,the eminent water workeex-
pert, of London, Eng., to come to Toronto
to report en the best system of water sup-
ply for the pity.
Mr, Hayter Reed, Deputy Superintend-
ent•General of Indian Atfairs, has returned
to Ottawa from the West. Regarding the
rumoured- uprising among the Biackfeet
Indians, Mr. Reed says there is no trouble
whatever. In fact, he contends that there
never wae anything serious or unusual.
and lease aro •entertained that she may
have foundered ,oil Cape Horn,
The steamers Cepstantine and'l'revethiok
eolhlded on Friday off the entrance of the
River .Tyne, The Constantine wea out to.
the water's edge, ad foundered, but her
oroW were rescued,
Geoffrey Perkins, an American, who
represented himself to bo a lawyer and
journalist, was aeoteneed in London on
Tuesday to ten years' penal Servitude on
the charge of levying and collecting block.
snail.
The news that an American sugar
planter hue obtained the exclusive right
to land a submarine aahie in Hawaii is the
occasion of math discussion fn London
among the advocates of a British gable to
the island.
The successor to the Marquis of Salis-
bury a0 the president of the British Anse,
elation for the Advancement of Science is
Captain Sir Dougies Galton who bas been
for the lade twenty years tiro secretary of
the aesooiatlon.
Discussing the revival of the rumour
that Italy may be induced to sell a small
territory to the Pepe, aPnria correspond eat
telegraphs to London that the projootfor
the Pope's' ransom by the Catholic world
is no secret in the Cabinets of Europe.
Tho highest epeed ever attained upon the
water is oreditecl to the new Russian
torpedo boat Sokol ('Russian for hawk),
just launched in England, which went
thirty-five miles an hour en her trial trip.
At that rate an Atlantic liner would eAoss
the ocean in three or four dive.
According to correspondence from Cowes
Leveret prominent yachtsmen, inuluding the
linos of Wales, have fotmed a syndicate
to build a yacht to beat the world. The
preliminariee have been arranged, bu
nothing definite will be deoided upon until('
the end of October.
A memorial service to the Rev. Robert
in Chine,wae held on Sunday
Stewart and his wife, who were murdered
recently . '
Y
3 evening to St. George's church, Ottawa,
a when the Rev. G. 0. Troop, of Montreal,
declared that Robert Steuart is as nearly
a martyr as Stephen, who prayed for his
murderers,' aid as much deservee to wear
the martyr's crown.
The Belgian Consul•Goneral in Canada,
will demand that the Canadian Government
take action against the Monde,, which
republished an article from the New York
World, making on attaok upon the King
of the Belgians, stating that ho had
squandered the Minimum fortune of the
ex -Empress Carlotta of Mexico at the
establishment of the Congo Free State.
01t1AT BRITAIN. -.
Mr, Sims Reeves is reported to have
martial again at the age of 73,
The British Associationfor bhe Advance.
Ment of Science hoe decided to meet in
Toronto iu 1897.
Forty tbouaand pounds' worth of jewels
belonging to Mrs. Langtry were 'taken
from the Union Bauk
> Loudon, on a forged
order.
Cable despatches etato' that ib is ender'
stood that the British Government }rag
decided to hltroduoe legislation in favor
of sectarian schools.
The British ship Stoneleigh, from Mel-
bourne for London, le now 210 days out,
Among the new members of the English
House of Commons is the Indian Bhown.
agree. He is the son of a Bombay mercpant,
and has been a lawyer and an editor in
England, and a judge in India. He is the
only bne of his race in the Hoose. His
colleagues refer to Mw as the "member for
India.'
The prompt denial of the Dominion
Government that Canadian filled cheese
were placed on the English market has had
the . desired effeot, The editor of the
North British Agriculturist admits and
regrets the grave error made in using the
word Canadian instead of American, and
promises an editorial explanation, and
the publication of evidence showing the
purity of the Canadian produce,.
UNITED STATES.
Three men were burned to death in a fire
at Pittsburg.
Dr. Talmage will go to Washington as
pastor of the First Presbyterian Church.
Mre. Vanderbilt, denies that Mise Van-
derbilt is, engaged to the Duke of Marl-
borough.
There are twenty-four creameries in
Maine that do nothing but manufooturo
butter the year round.
A Wabash, Ind., jury has decided t ha
kilning a woman against her will does n
oonatituteanaasault.
A true bili has been returned against
Mrs. Moak at Buffalo for uttering counter.
cin American: stamps.
Steps are being taken to bold an Oeoi
dental and i triental Fair in Tacoma, W ash.
in the Bummer of 1900.
A man in Gilsum, N. H., while cleaning
out a raceway :recently found a gold
ring which his wife had lost seven years
ago.
William J. Hollis, formerly private sere
retary of Sir Joseph Hickson, was arreated
in Boston on a ahatge of robbing hie em-
ployers.
About 1,000 Grammar school graduotee
of Brooklyn are uuable to find places in
the High schools, so crowded are thus
buildings.
A herd of 7,000 horses wae bought on a
Washington ranch the other day by the
Portland Hoc•ao Meat Canning Company
at $3 a head.
Boston is said to have spent 375,000 to
entertain the Knighte Templar, and the
knights left behind 31,000,000 in the oity
of baked beam.
WIRY lheoaes and the Pominioan'onas,
ter}, at Friesnph, Carinthia, Austria, were
horned.
000004 Chinese lean guaranteed by
Prange and Russia will be undertaken in
Nevembor.
Several 00000 of ()bolero have been re,
ported in Censtalttinoplo, and one of theta
has resulted fatally.
A military train returning to Parie on
Thursday night wee wreoked, and thirteen
were killed and sixty injured.
There are indications that the powere
may be Invited to interfere in the attains 01
Belgium and the Congo Free State,
A lot of rifles and military stores intend.
el fog the Cuban insurgents have been
discovered on the British island of Andros.
Two gunboats have been ordered to
Kuuheng, China, to enforce punishment of
rho irsgtore who attoek'ed the misaionariee
bhore.
Xn the -Province of.Volhynia, Bessie,
during one week towards the close of Aug -
wit there were 0,819 oases of cholera, with
2,134 deaths.
The Japanese Parliament hue votary a
credit for the building of tour iron -clad
battleahipe,ten coaat defence voonde, and
fifty torpedo boats.
A Spanish warship was sunk in collision
near Havana. Admiral Parejo, Captain
]3anez, three other ofeere and 30 or the
crew were drowoosl.
�
to says from
A St. Petersburg areburgg drape h ay t fro
a good source it le learned the Porte has
accepted the demand of the powers with
regard to reforms in Armenia.
It is reported that a rebellion has broken
out on the border of the Province of Fo.
Kion. A detachment of imperial troop
are advancing to give battle to the iosur,
genie.
The Brazilian Government has deoided
to present the British Minister at Rio
Janeiro with his passport if England
eetablishee 'a cable station on Trinidad
Island.
Darin a review of the Sultan's troops at
Teo the soldiersmade an attack upon the
tribesmen who were among the.epeotators,
killing nine and making prieonere of seven-
ty.
The National Zeitung has authority for
declaring that the rumours that Prince
Hohenlohe is about to retire from the post
of Imperial Chancellor are utterly devoid
of foundation
A Paris inventor named Turpin eking: to
have authority from the Porte to fortify
the Dardanelles, and to be able to make
the straits impassable to the united fleets
of the world.
It is reported that five British cruisers
are ascending the River Yang -tee -Kiang in
consequence of information that foreigners
are being threatened with violence in the
interior of China.
After a suspension of fifteen years the
meteorological observatory on the Iirooken,
in the Hartz mountains, where witohoe
hold their Sabbath on May day night, is, to
be re-established this fall.
A report from China, brought by a' re-
turned American traveller, states that
cholera is making frightfulravagee in that
country, and that the deaths in Pekin
average two thousand a day.
A Spanish court'martial in Havana has
condemned the contain of an Amerioan
veeeel toeight and the Bremen to ten.
years' imprisonment at hard labour for
landing cartridges in Cuba for the insur-
gents.
In honour of the fetes commemorating
the entry of the Italian army into Rome in
1870, King Humbert has granteda pardon
to all the Sicilian rioters who were
undergoing sentences of imprisonment fob
lees than ten years.
The uprising among the natives in
Morocco is spreading and assuming amuch
more serious aapeet. Three great tribes
have made a combined attack upon the
stronghold of a chief who is one of the
principal adherents of the Sultan, and
routed his forces.
Captain Maurine Vermont. a member of
a French mission on the Upper Ubangi
who has returned to France, penetrated
into Brein'e province of Equatoria, and
exploded the watershed between the Waite,
the rivers flowing into Lake Toned, and the
tributaries of the White Nile.
The manoeuvera of the French army in
the Vosges closed on Thursday with a grand
review at Mireeonrt, which was made
remarkable by the presence of the Russian
General Dranomlroff and Prince Lobauofl,
the Rnssian'Minister of Foreign Affairs.
The Russian officials were received with
immense enthusiasm.
Although the more humble among those
oonoernedin the massacre of mieatonarios at
Ku•Cheng have been punished, the utmost
efforts of the British Conant have been
unavailing to induce the authorities to -deal
with the Viceroy of the province and other
high offtoiale who are alleged to have been
responsible for the riots.
A 'movement has been projected at
Vincennes looking to the establishment of
a univei sky at Lincoln City, Indy on the
site where Linolen spent his boyhood.
Therecord of attendance at the Public
schools of the United -States during the
last year gives a total of 15,530,218 pupils,
a figure large'le than that of any other
nation.
The battlefield of Chickamauga, in
Tennessee, where, thirty-two years ago,
thirty thousand dead and wounded lay,
was on .Thursday dodiaated as a pleasure
pork.
The story that the aum of one billion
dollars is to be raised by the faithful
Catholioa of the World to obtain for the
lope temporal power is utterly discredited
in Washington.
The Kansas City Board of Education
line promulgated an order forbidding the
smoking of cigarettes by pupils during
school hours, (on penalty of expulsion) and
instructing teachers to rigidly enforce the
rule.
The Cotton States. Exhibition at Atlanta,
Georgia, opened on Wednesday with much
ceremony, President .Cleveland started
the machinery at a set time by touching
the electrical connection at his residence,
"Grey Gables."
Daniel Stinker of Fonda, N.Y., is the
only president the Mohawk River National
Bank has ever had. He has held the office
for forty years, and although/he is 97 years.
old, goes to the bank daily and attends to
business.
General Greely who has been inter.
viewed 011 thepropoeed balloonpolar expo-
ditinn of Mr. Andree, does not helieve the
plan is feasible or likely to be suooeatfat
,Engineer Melville is of a like opibion aud
regards Mr. Andree's scheme as foolish.
Business an the United States this week
has been to a certain extent influenced by
the financial situation, bub the v0lutne of
trade, while, not up to expeotations, shown
an increase of twenty per cent. over last
year, though still behind the showing of
189a. The cotton market has beau uneet-
tled, and :Amite are large. The Stock
Exchange at New 'Stork has fluctuated
noasiderably all the 'week, and dearer
money is probable. 'Iron continues to
increase in price, and there is a noticeable
shrinkage in the home demand •'bhe mills
are loaded down with orders. for months
mend, notwithstandingaleasehed enquiry.
e re advancing rice of
mill n adv c the 1
Caton n
goods,,thongh demand- just now 1 Balder.
There is a falling off in the enquiry for
some lines of woollen goods, and a few
mills have closed.
auxkitAL..
Chili hae renounced the commercial
treaty with England, concluded in 1864,
WAS TIM pilltUDERIV.
WORl(;ME:N UNEARrN A SKELETON
IN HAMILTON.
Evidences or drool rainy, lint es the Bones
00021 Bron hurled 'felt 'genre the 00e
odea' lyolii
RAbfri.Tos, Sept, 20,—While Contraotor
Faulkner 10a0 excavating for cellar in a
vacant lot north of 52 Magill street, one of
his men unearthed a human akeloton on
]Friday morning and a fracture of the skull
justified the seppoeition that someone had
boon murdered, and laid away quietly.
When Alfred Green one of the workmen
wee about two feet below the surface, his
pick.etrltok something !lard. He thought
it was a stone; ' 7ie lug the hard object
out and found it was 0 human eku11, Jon.
tinuipg to shovel away the sandy loam be
found the other bones of the body, and,
putting them all together a human skeleton
was farmed. The bones were large
and long, indicating the person, had
been big, Coroner: White was notified
and an examination showed that the
murdered person was a man. The jaws
were big and square. The skull was of
ordinary size, the forehead being low,
receding, while the book of the head was
well developed.. Over the left temple was
a' fracture, which had not been mode
recently, the only recent marks on the
skull being a puncture on the back of it,
node by the pick. ' The -bones were dry,
but well preserved ; there was no vestige of
flesh about them, and from their condition
the: interment took plane probably from
six to ten years ago.
A few years ago this locality, which 1s
close to. Vinegar Hill, was a resort for cook
lighters and all that class of people, who
held high carnival every night. It is sup-
posed the man was knocked on the head
and laid away in this quiet little spot.
The lot was, till a few years ago, owned by
Mba.Jamea Jonos,l)e Grassi street, Toronto,
who resided at No 62 Madill, having
inherited the property from her father, the
late Thomas Furlong. No inquest will be
held and the bonen will be interred.
WHIPPED BY WOMEN.
A Minnesota Teacher Adorned With Ode
lnsacs and Peatltere.
A despatch from St. Cloud,' Minn., says:
—John Welna, a ochool teacher at Olding
Ford, came to town and reported a case of
molasses and feathers in school district No.
88, in which he was a victim. Three
strong women visited the school and at
once poured a pail of moleseee over \Vetoa's
body, and then emptied a big bag of faith -
era over him, %Veine'shends were pinioned
behind him in the presence of the scholars
by one of the women, and he was also
strut* on the head and face with a pail,
'leaving ugly outs, Warrants were lamed
by direction of the County Attorney for
the arrest of the three women, Mrs, Katie
Zinner, Mrs. Stephen Dieterioh, and airs,
LutherNimrood. Welna began his term a
few weeks ago, and found a warning pin-
ned on the door of the schoolhouse that it
would not be healthful for 'him to teach
that district. The only motive for the
action on the part of the women is that
Welna was arrested la* fall for whipping
a child named Halleok, bub the evidence
showed the punishment was not over
severe, and Welna was discharged.
Love at a Cottage.
Mrs. McUue—Biddy, ehtop shot longi()'
at th` front dire, an' send Paddy Manes
off about hisbusiness.
Biddy (innocently)—An' did ye hear any
kiseln', mother ?
Mrs, ldoOne—I heard 'Atwell sounded as
muoli loike a kiss as wan pig's squeal;is like
another,
Paddy (gallantly)-4ur0, mum, it was
only me a.cpittin on me hands t' get ready
Or 100 long walk home.
What destiny sends, bear 1 Whoever
perseveres will be crowned, ---Harder.
BRITISH MILITARY SYSTEM.
9110 much in Advance or That or the
United states,. Says an American Army
'Officer.
A despatch from London says :—The
American army officers who have been
abroad on leave this summer studying
European military systems at their own
expense, have had their eyes opened very
wide, indeed, to the shortcomings of the
American service. Several of the young
officers in the infantry army who have seen
duty in the west have taken advantage 0
all opportuuities for studying scientific
warfare. They came across the ocean with
a fair idea of American military weakness
and a commendable readiness to learn much
from the armed powers on this side, but
they have been astounded to learn, even in
England, where the military is not so con-
tinually in evidence as on the Coutinent,
that the responsible officials are deplorably
delinquent in the matter of making fair
use of the power vested in them. No one
who looks below the surface of military
affairs in England can avoid being struck
by the fact that Englanddepends not so
muchfor protection on the regular troops,
as upon the excellent, far-reaching provi-
sions in force for rapidly mobilizing well
drilled and experienced volunteers, aswell
as the opportunities afforded general
officers for learning how to
COMMAND TR0005,
These two invaluable desiderata are se-
cured simultaneously by the military
manoeuvres. One of the brightest young
lieutenants frankly told Ambassador Bay-
ard
aymrd a day or two ago that nota single
general officer in the Xmeriban army to -day
had more than it theoretioal knowledge of
the 100,000 men operating under modern
conditions, and possibly confronted by an
army of equal size holding a more favorable
position. This officer had just witnessed
the New Forest manoeuvres, which wore
undertaken by two oorpe, each equal iu size
and armament to the entire standing army
of the United States. This official was
denloring that the United States did not
seed a few colonels of high rank,approach-
ing promotion, to Europe each summer to
study the methods by which great masses
of troops are manoeuvred by officers
prepared to fight at a week's notice.
At Aldershot it was noticed that the
regulars appeared to be smarter in dress
and appearance than American soldiers,
and that the manual and drills were per-
formed with a snap that 10 oouapieioue by
its absence in the United States. This is
attributed to oho "swagger stick,'' which
while not necessary to the men, all of whom
carry them, imparts a distinction and
carriage to the soldier when off duty.
Manual and recruit drill is much more
complicated than in America.
b'lABI,B0B 0 UG ii•VAN DBIIBILT,
'Magma*, Announced or the moo09o liatlghter or lviillnnt If, Vanderbilt
*-\Wedding 'fide rcnr.
A despatch from Now York, eve ;—
Mee Oonsuolo Vanderbilt, the daughter of
Mee, W. 7'n.. Vandorbila, Will, betore the
end of the year, Impale the Duchess of
Mariberough.,'The engagement was quietly
ennounoed by the Tamales to the friends of
tile parties oa Friday. The marriage will
be performed in accordance with the rttu.
el el the Protestant Episcopal Church,
conforming with that of the Clluroh of
England, Bishop Potter will probably
offoiate, and the services, it is thought,
will be an open church. The Duke of
Marlborough cabled the news to Ibe mem-
bars of his, family and intimate friends iu
England and the continent. Inoluded
among those to whom the information was
conveyed was, the Prince of Wales, who is
god -father to the Duke. ;It is expected
that several of the intimate friends of the
Duke will cross the Atlantio to be present
at the wedding, The acquaintance between
the Duke and Mise Vanderbilt was formed
in London abouteighteen months ago.During
Me last two . London mamma and In Paris
last spring they met frequently in satiety,
fri duh' thus formed ed o the
and the au ip hu rm 1 t
entertainment of hire. and Miss Vander -
hilt atBlonheim early this present summer.
It was but naturol under theciraumetonoee
that when the Duke reached New York on
his tour of the world he should have re-
ceived and acoepted an invltetian to visit
Marble House at Newport. The three
weeks spent there gave him a pleasant
insight into American manners and ouatoms
and resulted in the engagement. The
plane of the Duke of Marlborough have
naturally been changed by the engagement
and approaching wedding. The tour of
the world will be abandoned, but he will
devote mime time to seeing America.
Within a few days he willjoin Sir Charles
Rivers -Wilson, the recently elected Presi-
dent of the Grand Trunk, and party in
making a tour of that road. Thereafter
he will join Mrs. and Mies Vanderbilt
either in this city nr Newport and without
doubt participate in an extensive round of
entertainments given in his honor and that
of his fiancee. This will make him well
acquainted with the friends of the Vander,
bilt family before the date of the wedding.
VALUABLE DOG COLLARS, ,
Gold and Precious Items Often Vied lit
Their Decoration.
"T can ensure you that you have not
been misinformed as to gold and precious
gems 'mine used to decorate dogs' collars,"
said onn of the best-known dealers in auoh
artial s to a friend,. "but the craze is far
more prevalent iu France, Russia and Eng.
land than 1010 here.
"Not micny weeks ago I supplied to the
special order of an English lady a dog
collar that cost 50 guineas, It was a ohain
collar of silver and gold links alternately
and with a gold bell to hang in front.
French ladies are very fond of wstoh dog
Dollars, a small gold watch being let into
the front of the oollar, and I have made
several of three. But in acores of pans
T
supply beautifully made collars with name
plates of solid gold, and often enough with
gold 'bones' as well. Nearly all the collars
of this class are intended for oarrlage doge
and drawing -room poodles, and in most
oases the dogsdonot belong to men,though
the,jattor order and pay for the collars as
presents.
"A fashion has lately had great woe in
France of putting jliny bracelets round the
forelegs of poodles, and, I have8000 0000
diamonds set into these circlets. At the
same time, in any own stock, I have lots of
dog boilers ranging in price from 31±10 5100
The most remarkable dollar I have ever
made was to the order of a gentleman from
South Africa.. It consisted of nuggets of
gold and an uncut diamond, which lie 0119.
plied, and it was given to a well-known
ady ea a present."
T liagic Touch
Of Hood's Sarsaparilla, You smile at
at the idea. But if you sulfer from
Dyspepsia
,And Indigestion, try a bottle, and be-
fore you have taken half adozen doses,
yon will lnvbluutarily think, and no
That
exclaim,
FG P hat Just Hits It!"
"`shat soothing effect is a magic
touchi floods Sarsaparilla gently
tones and strengthens the stotnaeb
and digestive organs, invigorates the
liver, creates a natural, healthy desire
for food, gives refreshing sleep, and
in
entire short, raissysteme0, thei(onileai
raaitlibsr•tend of the
lion, d Par ala Cures
Flood's Fills care livor Ills, 250.
For 11'went-r-five Years
,i�l
BKINC
POWDER
THECOOK'SBESTFRIEND
LARGEST SALE IN CANADA.
AMMO. VSI
• Easy.
Some questions are not half so hard as
they sound.
Doctor, I have an important physio..
logical question to ask' you. When I stand
on my head the blood rushes into my
head. Now, when I stand on my feet,
why doesn't it rush into my feet ?
Because your feet are not hollow.
One consequence of the battle of the
Yalu is the proposal made 1a Europe of
establishing a naval Red Cross Society,
whose vessels painted in some distinctive
color shall aoeompany hostile fleets and
pick up the crows of vessels sunk fin
action.
AN EMINENT MINISTER
EV.
fl s
OF PE11E1130RO:
KER
Mr. W. S. Barker is a young
!minister of Peterboro who has by his
great earnestness and able exposition
of the doctrines of tho 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
pubiication:
l' I havo much pleasure in re-
commending tbo Great South Ameri-
can Nervine Tonics to all who are
afflicted as I have been with nervous
prostration and indigestion. I found
very great relief from the very first
bottle, which wae strongly recom-
mended to me by my druggist. I
also induced my wife to use it, who,
I must soy, was completely run down
and was suffering very much from
general debility. She found great
relief from South American Nervine
and also cheerfully recommenda it
to her fellow -sufferers.•
" Bay. W. S. BAREER. "
It is now a scientific fact that ser-
Cain nerve centres located near the
base of the brain have entire control
over the stomach, liver, heart, lungs
and indeed all internal organs; that
Is, they furnish these organs with
tho necessary nerve force to unable
them to perform their respeotive
work. 'When the nerve mentree are
weakened or d'oranged the nerve
force is diminished, and as a result''
the stomach will not digest the food,t
the liver becomes torpid, the kidneys
will not act properly, the heart.andI
lungs suffer, and in fact the whole,
system becomes weakened and sinks
on account of the lack of nerve force. I
South American Nervine is based
on the foregoing scientific discovery
and is so prepared that it acts
directly on the nerve centres. It
immediately increases the nervous
energy of the whole system, thereby
enabling the different organa of the
body to perform their work perfectly, •
when disease at once disappears. 1
It greatly benefits in one day.
Mr. Solomon Bond, a member of
the Society of Friends, of Darlington,
Ind., writes: "I have used six bottles
of South American Nervine and I
consider that every bottle did for
one hundred dollars worth of good,
because I have not had a goat`4,
night's sleep for twenty years' on
account of irritation, pain, horrible'`
dreams, and general nervous pros• _.
Craton, which has been ceased by t,
chronic indigestion and dyspepsia of
the stomach, and by a broken down 6:
condition of my nervous system.'
Bat now 1 down B 1 can lie dm and sleepall.
night as sweetly as a baby, and it
feel' like a sound man.. I do not
think there has ever been a medicine
introduced into nt t Yr 'which
hien
will at all compare with this as A
pure for the stomach and :servo .
A. »1FIADIMAY W olesaIe and Rtetait Agent tor Drustseiiic