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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1895-11-15, Page 7ovBgnm 1i, 1890 TRE NEWS 3 A N1IITSR1i L THE VERT LATEST F Osl ALL OVER THE WORLD. NateredNssatemt About our errs couAtrf, 'Crest tirljeln. Ise nailed States, sad A11 Parr of the 4}lobe, Condonseir swat Assorted fpr Rao Readmit. CANADA. Sir Donald and Lady Smith Lave re- turned to Montreal, • Thomas Lindsay, who was iniltred 14 the, Loon Lake fire, is recovering, The Norwegian ship Beoiprooity is wrecked on the New Brunswick coast. Two eleotrio cars collided at Hamil- ton. A motorman was badly injured. Col. Villiers wan banqueted at Winni Peg on the eve of hie removal to Hamil- ton. Mr. William Wainwright will sever hie connection with Grand Trunk in March.. • Two American schooners have been seized at Cape Breton for violating the fishing laws. Sergeant Colbrooke, who was killed by .an Indian cattle -lifter, has been buried at Prince Albert. At Chatham, N. B., TosePh Doherty. shot and killed ,Arthur Luke. The shooting was the result of a street row.. The Ottawa Board of Trade )las ex- pressed a strong opinion in favor of two Aldermen for each ward instead of three. Ex -Chief of Police Page of St. Cune- todehi0argegieieatndredn thLa burned Canal. The report of Engineer Keating on Hamilton's water works recommends changes that will cost the pityabout 02755,000. Mrs, Andrew, the fifth victim of the fire at the Queen's hotel in Hamilton ten days ago, died on Saturday at the hospital. The St. Lawrence at Montreal is at the lowest point ever known—three feet one inch below average low water mark. Capt. Smith, R. N., has been commis- sioned by the Diminion Government to enquire into the wreck of the Mariposa in the Straits of Belle Isle. It is reported that the projectors of the Toronto, Hamilton, and Buffalo rail- mil - ton of 515ill 0 000 to builds them Tonto branch. The Bank of Montreal has received from the gold mines in British Colum- bia a gold pyramid and brick valued at seventy thousand dollars. Mr. J. W. Lowndes, of London, Eng., is in Ottawa to urge upon the Domin- ion Government the desirableness of adopting the Imperial penny postage scheme. Mr. J. N. Ladouceur, of Keewatin, Rainy River district, has disposed of four mining locations in that district to three Ottawa gentlemen, who . Pro- pose to work them. William McCurdy, of Vienna, Ont., and Charles Day, two men who went to Manitoba for the harvest, have been killed, the first named on the railway and Dix. Day in a threshing accident. • A vault' in the Roman Catholic ceme- tery at Kingston was broken into on Saturday night and two bodies were carried off. There is no clue to the perpetrators, but medical students are blamed. Mrs. W. C. Macleod, of Woodstock,. Ont., has presented two thousand five hundred dollars to Chalmers' Presbyter- ian church: of that place, and one thou- sand dollars to the Woodstock General hospital. The steamer Obdam broke her tail shaft on Thursday off Sable Island, and was taken in tow by the steamer Penn - land, which brought the disabled steam- er to Halifax, where they arrived on Saturday, George Cyr of Hull was sentenced to five years in penitentiary for setting fire to Gilmour & Hugbson's lumber piles. Airs. Lalonde will serve an eighteen months' sentence for burning her residence. The jury at Beauharnois, Quebec,, re- turned a verdict of guilty against young Shortis on Sunday morning for the murder of D' Ir. John Loy at the Val- leyfield mill. They answered a ques- tion regarding the prisoner's insanity in the negative. The quarterly report of the Depart- ment of Trade and Commerce gives ,de- tails of a gratifying increase in Canada's trade during the first three months of the. fiscal year. The live stock and dairy trade has been the chief gainer by this mry in busines s. o ' i F ement Commander Spain, of the Canadian fisheries protective, service, who seized the United States fishing schooner Sher- man for selling supplies purchased in a Canadian port to an unlicensed Ameri- can schooner within the three-mile limit, has been ordered by the Depart- ment of ,Marine and Fisheries to re- lease the vessel, which held a Canadian license and was doting within her rights. GREAT BRITAIN. The Belfast and Glasgow shipbuild- ers have conceded the demandsof their employees for increased pay. Mr. Chamberlain will begin immedi- ately the consideration of the details of bus great plan to develop the Crown colonies. By thefinding of the Admiralty Court the British steamer Turkestan is held responsible for the sinking of the Edam h"y`+ in September last. The Prince and Princess of Wales have received, congratulations on the betrothal of Princess Maud to Prince it Charles of Denmark. The marriage of Princess Maud and Prince Charles of Denmark will take place in six months. Prince Charles k t will shortly visit England. tre`i. Edward Stockquelin, a street chalk artist, died in London recently. Stock - di quelin was a grandson of Mrs, Sarah Siddons, the famous actress. The importance to Englishtrade of the 'Nicaragua Canal was pointed . out by Mr, Colquhoun in a paper read be- fore the London Chamber of Com - mere°, V k The Duke of Cambridge, upon his re- tirement from the post of commander- in-chief of the forces, has been gazetted chief personal aide-de-camp to the Queen and honorary colonel -in -chief to the forces, In a speech at Dublin Mr. Wm. Red- r mond said the Irish question would never be settled until England was un- fable to resist or ignore ft. He quot- ed the old saying, "Eng land's danger is Ireland's opportunity," The Dublin Independent publishes an address, issued by the Amnesty Associa- tion, addressed to Irishmen in the Unit•. ed States and Canada, making an, appeal for aid in Continuing the agitation for the release of the Portland prisoners. The post of poet laureate is still va- N,1 cant. Swinhenn and Morris are Mut 01 the running, the fernier for hie ear- ly'radiealOC).tieM, and the latter for hie s pialistie endermiea, Alfred Austin le mentioned favorably' ter the position.' The Prince of Wales,wearing a Rus, Ann uniferm, Prince Nicholas of Greece, and the majority of the members of the diplomatic corps in Lendon, Wel'M pree- sent Friday morning at tbo req jena IneSS Cif the late Czar of Ryseiaf she nth It is ebattd in Landon that investi- gatione have been made of the operation fer ten years past of Germany's a for the insurance of laborers against sickness, accidents, and old age, with the view, poseibly, of adopting some- thing similar in Great Britain, Referring to Senator Chandler's pre- diotions or war between the United States and Great Britain, the London Standard says Senator Chandler may exeite enthusiasm among the riff -raft of the great towns, but ilia prophecies will be received with indignation and disgust by thereat bulk of the pegqple of the United gStates. per As regards the proposed line of fast steamers between Englund and Can- ada, Mr. Chamberlain will shortly see Mr. Huddart, the promoter of the scheme. It .is not considered likely that the Imperial Government will give a direct money subsidy, but it will give the line the carriage of a portion of the mails on paying terms. UNITED STATES. Four tailors were burned to death in a fire in Pelham street, New York. California has produced a sweet - scented violet the size of a large pansy. Mgr. Satolli, Papal delegate to the United States, has been made a Cardinal. A prairie fire burned over a tract of country. twenty miles long by two broad near Yorkton. Theodore Durant, 'of San .Francisco, charged with the murder of Blanche La- mont, was found guilty on Friday of murder in the first degree. Mrs. Elizabeth Graham of Buffalo has recovered 52,000 from the Niagara Falls (Ontario) Park Commissioners for injuries received through a defeo- fective railing. Mrs. Harriet Kellar has been found gguilty, at Oswego, of murdering Albert Kempthorne, a Canadian, in August last, and was sentenced to Auburn prispn for life. After a ,very brief deliberation on Saturday evening the Philadelphia jury found Holmes guilty of the mur- der of Benjamin Pietzel in the first degree. The ease will be appealed. Two persons were killed outright and 25 or 90 passengers were injured by the wrecking of the Cincinnati express at Elm Grove, near' Wheeling, on the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. Ex -Senator Dolph, in an address at Portland, Ore., on Monday night,said that the United States must either abandon the Monroe doctrine- or en- force it, with the sword, if necessary. Arss Flagler, of Washington, daugh- ter of General Flaglar, whose shooting and killing of a negro boy who was stealing fruit, several months ago; created a sensation, has been ,indicted for manslaughter. The Masons of Mississippi have made a rule that " no Mason, either as prin- cipal, agent, employes, or in any other capacity, shall sell intoxicating liquors to be used as a beverage, andthe pen-' alty thereof shall bo expulsion." Senator Morgan said in an interview on Friday that if Russia and China have made the treaty reported in the London papers, the United States, whose interests are antagonistic to those of Great Britain, should not in- terfere. Horace Manvill, of 1Voodbury, is prob- ably the oldest Church member in Con neoticut or in the United States, he having been receivedinto the Church at MiddleburyDecember 3s 1815, eighty years ago. SIr..Manvill is nearly 101 years old. • The TIM/tie/1 Government dee:muds. the =Mediate withdrawal al the Amer lean mlaeioqarses front Sassoon, en the ground Chet if they remain they may be massacred, Dr, LIMBO, leader of the :anti -Sem, ices in Vienna, has been elected burgo- master of that City, Vienna is the fist of the capitals of Europe to be ado mr#ntstered by an anti-Semite, The King of Ashanti bas rejected the l3ritieh ultimatum.,. He says he will fight and that be le prepared for the struggle, A British expedition will be sent against him in the middle of De camber, Ther) is a strong tensing against the rule of the Sultan in many parts of Tprkey, and it it believed that there will be a fusion of the Mussulmans and Arrulemrenians, to overthrow the present It is learned that Lord Salisbury is dissatisfied with the Sultan's verbal guarantee of Armenian reforms, and the four great powers favour an early European eonferenoe on the Turkish question. The condition of the Czarewitell is steadily growing worse. He is now continuously confined to his bed, and remains in a comatose state, not even recognizing members of the Royal fain - News has been received that the Jap- anese have captured the inland town of Katehi, in the Island of Formosa. The position of the Blackflags is said to be desperate, and the Japanese demand their unconditional surrender. The south of France 'has suffered from a huge railway ,job, and as the attitude of the Government was re- garded as attempting to shield the guilty. the Ribot Ministry has been de- 'teased in the Chamber of Deputies. Another terrible massacre of Armen- ians, accompanied by the outraging of women, is reported to. have taken place quite recently in the district of Bal. burl. .The Turkish authorities say the Armenians provoked the outbreak. Tbs Mohammedan insurgents in China have captured Lau-Teheon-Fu, the capital of the Province of Kau -Soo, on the Yellow River, They are de- featingthe Chinese troops in every di- rection, and they intend to form an in- dependent kingdom. ' A despatch from Constantinople says that Kiamil Pasha, having put the Ar- menian question• on the track of settle- ment, has asked the Sultantorelieve him from the. Grand Viziersbip; but, his Majestydeclares that he cannot dis- pense with his services. enthusiastic welcome by Emperor Wil The next consistory to be held will leave the Italians in a majority of three over the foreign cardinals in the con- clave,• so that the supremacy ofthe Ital- lana is assured over any possible com- bination in favor of a foreign candidate for the Pontificate. Gen. de Campos says that; a policy of leniency towards the Cuban insurgents must prevail or one hundred and fifty thousand troops will be necessary, and even then seventy-five thousand of them would perish. He thinks. the United States would recognize the in- surgents : as belligerents before : they could be conquered. The St. Petersburg Noyes Vremya 'publishes a despatch saying that the British squadron of warships in the far east has been concentrated at Foo - Chow, and adds that Great Britain is zealously seeking a pretext for de- claring war upon. China in order to counteract the success of Russia and restore her shattered prestige in the Pacific. At Chicago John W. Cadman, an uncle of Mrs. Cleveland, wife of the President, attempted' to commit suicide by shooting himself in the mouth with. a.32 -calibre revolver.- He was removed to the hospital, where it is stated be cannot' recover. It is arranged that Miss Vanderbilt's • dot on her marriage with the Duke of Marlborough will be ten million dol- lars, but so settled on her that she has only the use of the income during her life, and at her death the ,princi- pal will descend to her iesua. I Commander Heiermann, of the Unit- ed States navy died on the Havel at sea, at 4 p.m., October 27. Command- er Heierthann was in' command of the Kearsarge when she was wrecked on the Roncador Reef. For that he was. suspended from duty, and recently) went on the retired list. Senator Stephen B. Elkins. and ex - Senator H. G PDavis have renewed the proposition made by them four years ago to the Presbyteryof Lexington, W.Va. The proposition, which has been accepted, contemplates the found- ing of a' Presbyterian C illege at El- kins, W.Va., to which Messrs. Elkins and Davis will give 530,000 in cash and land for the site, provided the Presby- tery raises a like sum. Advices from the two chief commeroial agencies in New York as td the condi- tion of trade in the United States in- dicate no decided 'change either way. If anything, the volume of general business has been rather smaller, though there is better demand for many manufactured products, and the. retail demand is fair. The report of works in different parts of the United States closing is by no means unusual at this season of the year, which in trade is always a time of comparative uncertainty. Cotton has made anoth- er decided advance, and the milia are reported to contain only 'moderate stocks. There is increased activity in iron and steel, though some grades are weak in price. Minor metals are also a shade lower. Some shoe factories are. closing. GENERAL. A little rebellion is reported in Hayti. The Icing of Corea bas chosen an- other Queen to replace his murdered wife. The German Asiatic fleet bas been ordered to concentrate at Sevalon and Amoy. The ex -Queen of Hawaii is reported to have purchased winter and summer residences in Italy. The King of Portugal arrived in Pots- dam on Friday night, and was given an liam. He will visit England, Gen. de Campos has decided to sus - Cubamilitary hile the operations ts.m Western Mr. J, B. Patterson, formerly Prime Minister of Victoria, is dead. His Mi n- ietry resigned So tem er 25th, 1894. An extensive anti -foreign outbreak is expected at Canton. Pour hundred braves, enlisted at Hong Kong by the Viceroy, have gone to Canton. Travellers arriving at New York re- port that all is quiet in Venezuela, and the feeling is that the boundary cis puts will be settled without trouble. FATAL GUN ACCIDENT. A Cornwall Baker Shot by 11Is Companion While Ilunting Ducks -Particulars or the Tragedy. A despatch from Cornwall, Ont., says: Mr. Frank J. Nicholson, a well-known baker of Cornwall, was accidentally kill- ed by his companion, Mr. H. Yates, general merchant, of this place, while on a dunk -hunting expedition on Lake St. Francis. Both men left here on Wednesday, intending to spend a couple of days duck shooting. Thursday morn- ing between' ten and eleven o'clock they were about four miles south of Lancas- ter, and were moving from one blind to another, when a couple of ducks flew towards them. IlIr. Nicholson was row- ing and, Mr. Yates, standing up, was endeavouring to get a shot at the dunks. He thinks that the'lurehing of the boat, there being a heavyswell at the time, caused the gun to go off just when Mr. Nicholson was in line with it. The whole charge took effect in his left side, about three inches below the heart. Mr. Yates rowed to Lancaster, a dis- tance of about four miles. Mr.Nicholson, . realizing that his in- juries we 'ur' re fatal.prepared himself. for death. About a halt mile from shore he spoke for the last time, and breath- ed Ills last as he was lifted' from the boat. Deceased was about 35 years of age, and was a native of Lancaster, being a son of the late Wm. Nicholson, sr. He bas been in business in Corn- wall for a number of years. He leaves a widow. The remains were taken to Cornwall. The deceased was a member of the local lodge of the A.O.U.W. For Eighteen Months nable to Lie Down in Bed—A Toronto .Junction Citizen's Awful Experience With Heart Disease. L. J. Law, Toronto Junction, Ont. : "I consider it my duty to give to the public my experience with Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart. I have been sorely troubled with heart disease and unable to lie down in bed for eighteen months owing to smothering spells and palpitation. Bach night would have to be propped up, by pillows in order to keep from smothering. After treating with several medical men without benefit, 1 procured a bottle of the Heart Cure, After taking the first dose I retired and slept soundly until morning. I used one bottle and have not taken any of the remedy for seven weeks, but the heart trouble has net reappeared. I consider it the greatest remedy in existence for heart disease." Sold by G. A. Deadman. I Give HIM Some Eneouragement. Do you think, said the ambitious young man, that I ever will be able to snake a oompetei se with my voice Well, said the outspoken man, per- haps you m.ght use it for hollerin' ap- ples. I was. Cured of Rheumatism in Twenty four Hours. I, George English, shipbuilder, have lived in Chatham, N. S., over forty years. Last spring I took severe pains in my knee, which, combined with swelling, laid me up For six weeks curia which tune endured great suffering. I saw South American Rheumatic Cure advertised in The Chatham World and procured a bottle. Within twenty-four hours I was absolutely free from thonmatium,aud havonot been troubled ith it since, k Sold by, G. A. Dominion( P 0 +'•r. 11101188 AWF1/14 DEATH CAPTURED SY WHITES HF IS BURlQFD AT THE STAKE. HOt (*One Was a Horrible One, and a Top. vier I'OIO Ileuldfd Ills Fele,-flcenesand rlielllenia,at Ilse Execullon, A despatch from Kilgore, Texas, says:—Ata point about four miles from Tyler was enacted a horriblebrag- edy, the very recital of which causes the heart to shudder. A Mrs. Dell, who had been visiting her mother, a short distance from horns, was on her return met by a negro, What occur- red can only be told by the negro him- self and the evidence given by the dead body of the lady. The ground showed that she bad struggled for her honor, and the condition of the body 'told of the cruelty that has rarely been equal- led by Tack the Ripper. After out- raging the lady the negro deliberately out her throat and then taking his knife ripped up her body. When the erime became known a posse was quickly or- ganized, led by Deputy Sheriff Smith, of Tyler, who with lanterns in hand and aided by a hound, ,tracked the negro to within four miles of this place, where they found him fast asleep in a cotton pen. The negro's clothing was stained with blood, which he had at- tempted to wash out. The posse start- ed back to Tyler with the negro, who offered no resistance, ;Soon after the officers had him handcuffed a snob of some two hundred mon HEAVILY ARMED arrived on the scene and demanded the immediate surrender of the prisoner, which was readily given. The mob then left for the scene of the murder,. where they arrived on Tuesday after- noon at three o'clock. The crowd con- tinued to gather at the scene of the hor- rible crime until nearlytwothousand citizens of Tyler and vicinity were there. A few momenta before the fiend was brought to the place a meet- ing was held and a committee was ap- 1 pointed to investigate his identity. Witnesses were summoned and closely interrogated_ The result was a thor- ough, identification. In a few moments an officer appear- ed from ov er the hill, followed by three hundred well -armed men. These, however, were overpowered and dis- armed and the negro, HenryHilliard brought before the committee. He made a full confession, insubstance as renews: ' I was coming down the road and saw Mrs. Ball in the road. She was scared of me, and I knew that if I passed her she would say I tried to rape her, and I concluded that I would rape her and then kill her. I cut her throat and cut her in another place and left." The negro then wrote a note to his wife and gave it to the sheriff. It read as follows: ' 1 am arrested, by Wig Smith. You know what : they will do with me. If I don't see you any more, good-bye. " HENRY." After his confession and thorough identification a vote was taken as to what tips mods of punishment would be. It was agreed to BURN HIM and that he should sufferthe penalty on the public square. The lineof march was taken up toward Tyler, and at four o'clock the head of the line enter- ed the main plaza, where no less than seven thousand people were assembled. Large 'crowds of women and children were congregated on the awnings sur- rounding the public plaza, while wag- gons, carriages, trees' and buildings were converted into grand stands, to accommodate the throng A scaffold was erected in the centre of the square. Waggons laden with kindling wood, coal oil and straw were driven to the scene and placed in posi- tion. The negro was given an oppor- tunity to speak but his words were mostly inaudible. Whenhe offered his last prayer, however, he could be heard for several blocks. He was then lashedto the iron rail that extended through the platform. Mr. Bell, the busban I of the murdered lady, applied the matih, and the flames shot upward, enveloping the negro in sheets of fire. The fuel presently gave. out, but in a few minutes the fire was started again. From the .time the match was applied until the negro's death was exactly fifty minutes. The I. & G. N. south -bound train was crowded with people from the towns north. Hundreds of negroes witnessed the execution, and many of them ex- pressed their endorsement of the pun- ishment. A11 business houses and fac- tories closed and the big cotton belt shops were deserted. SERGEANT COLBROOKE SHOT. Mounted Pollee .Oaieer 1(111e11 by an Rumpling Indian. A Despatch from Duck Lake, Saskat- chewan, reads: "Last Tuesday an In- dian, with a companion, was arrested on One Arrow's reserve, on a Charge of cattle -killing. They were arrested and brought mto Duck Lake during the night. While Constable Dickson was on guard one of the prisoners, a tough •character, effected his escape. Surmising that he would take a south- easterly direction, Sergt. Colbrooke, who had made the arrest, started in pur- suit. He was joined by police Scout J. McKay, and they soon were on the trail, which led in the direotion of Touohwood Hills. On the second day, however, they found the culprit had gone towards Fort La000ne, and they followed this trail. Wednesday night the news reached here that Sergb. Col- brooke had been shot and killed by the escaped prisoner the following morn- ing. No details can be obtained owing to the impossibility of pressing, the river. Deceased is a married man, and leaves a wife and one ehild. The mur- derer bas not yet been arrested. Col- brooke had served with . the mounted police since 18531 having served during the rebellionwith the column against Big Bear. I AM A CURED MAN." Kidney Disease' Vanquishod by South American Kidney - Curo—The Rem- edy Which Relieves in Six Hours, Adam Soper, Burk'n Falls, Ont, : " I su8'ered much pain for months from kidney and bladder disease. I received Allied medical treatment and tried all kinds of msdimnes to no purpose ; in fact, I did not obtain any relief until South American Kidney Cure was used. It seemed to fit my eae exaotly, giving ole immedabe relief.'1 have now used six bottles and van say positively that I am .a cured man. I believe one bottle of the remedy will con. vine) anyone of its great worth," Sold by u. A. Deadman.. • WEblL'KNAWR, ,IC4't'>iii4X40. C Of H'amllton, ACV.. *jabber iTp11n .T, MA. soupy, Pastor of fit. Joseph's Church, Hamilton, Bears Toeyineeny to the. T,Tndisputod Worth of Dr, Agtlow'9 Catalrbal Powder, In the person of the Rev. John T, Rin• they of St. Josephs Church 1R, C,) Handl. ton, 10 found Ape who does the highest credit tp the self.sacrifioing work in which he is engaged. Rio kindly heart ooustant. ly prompts to deeds of love and goodness, and in the oity ei Hamilton all who know him are ready to bear testimony to his high character and active generosity. 40 result of neglect, thinking more of others thou himself, he has been a sufferer froth gold in the head and its almost pertain associate, catarrh. Recently he made use of Dr, Agnew's Catarrhal Powder, and has found in it so great relief that he deems it a pleasure to tell others of the good ib has done him, One short puff of the breath through the blower supplied with each bottle of Dr, Agnew's Catarrhal Powder, diffuses this powder over the surface of the nasal nponsagee. Painless and delightful to use, it relieves in ten minutes and permanently cures Catarrh, Hay Fever, Colds, Head. ache, Sore Throat, Tonsilitis and Dominoes, 00 cents, Sample bottle and blower sent on receipt of two 3 cent stamps. S. G. Debohon, 44 Church St„ Toronto, Sold by G. A. Deadman. John Armstrong once a well known auto r, but who has been off the stage for about eleven years, 10 DOW in the ministry. Mrs. Potter Palmer, Mrs. Russell Sage and Mrs, Elizabeth Cady Stanton are interesting themselves in a movement to erect a monument at Seneca Falls, N. Y., to Mrs. Bloomer, the lady who first had the courage to don the garment that now bears her name. eeetiONYMINUMMIMMIMMINVINIMIMI For Twenty-five Years DUNK' BAKING Purified Blood Saved an operation in the following ease. Hood's Sarsaparzl]a.cureswhen all others fail. It makes pure blood. " A year ego my father, William Thorny. son, was taken soddenly Ill with inflam* oration of the bladder. Re suffered a great deal and was very low for eometime, At last the doctor said he would not get well unless an operation was performed. At this time we read about Hood's Sarsapa- rilla and decided to try it. Before he need half a bottle his appetite had Dome back to him, whereas before he could eat but little, When he had taken three bottles of the medicine he wee as well as ever.'+ FRANCIS J. THOMPSON., Peninsula Lake, Ontario. Remember Hood's,Sarsaparill ,a Is the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in the public eye today. Hood's Pills cnese, heure all auivedache.rllis,bmoos. ESC. Obeyed the Doctors, Housekeeper—You' don't look as if you had washed yourself for a month, Tramp—Please, mum, th' doatore says THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND tip' preper time be us itwurattar a meal, and I htoavena't ads anybho hoinsg .yon. LARGEST SALE IN CANADA. could call -a meal in six weeks,. AN CF Y .L• Td•'.aP,Bor.oe tt1 4 r 1,, r Er. W. S. Barker is s young M Minstar. of Peterboro who has by his great earnestness and able exposition of the dootrines of the 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 ea • the spiritual welfare of mankind, hence the following statement for publication " I have much pleasure in re- commending the Great Booth Ameri- can Nervine Tonic to all who are ffiiobed as I have been with nervous prostration at, d indigestion. I found very great relief from the very first bottle, which was strongly recom- mended to me by my druggist. I also induced' my wife to use it. who, I must say, was completely run down and was suffering very much from general debility, She found great relief from South Amerioan Nervine and also cheerfully recommends it In her fellow -sufferers. "Rev. W. S. BJ,REIR." It is now a scientific fact that per- Iain nerve centres located 'near the base oftho brain have entire Control over the stomach, liver, heart, lungs and indeed all internal organs ; that is, they furnish these organs with the necessary nerve force to enable them to perform their respootive work. When the nerve centred are Its likened or • deranged . the nerve force is diminished, and sd a reset thestomach will not digest the food, the liver becomes torpid; the kidneys,I P will not act properly, the heart analq lungs suffer, and in fact the whole system becomes weakened and shahs on account of the lank of nerve force. l Routh Amerioan Nervine is based on the foregoing scientific discovery and id' so prepared that it bete directly on the nerve Centres. It immediately increases the nervous energy of the whole system, thereby enabling the different organs of the body to perform their work perfectly, when disease at. once disappears. r It greatly benefits in one day. i Mr. Solomon Bond, a member et the Society of Friends, of Darlington, Ind., writes: "I have need six bottles of South ' American Nervine and 1 Consider that every bottle did for mo one hundred dollars worth of good, because I have not . bad . a goon night's sleep for twenty years on account of irritation, pain, horrible dreams, and general nervous pros- tration, which has been caused by chronic indigestion and dyspepsia of the stomach, and by a broken dowel` Condition of my nervous oyster®,' But now 1 oan lie down and Weep a,B11 night e,s sweetly as a baby, and &i. feel like a sound man. I i$o moan_ think there had ever been a medians introduced into this Country, wialatt will at all compare with this all 9t; once fed the stomsole and test a SS ; ' A. DEA.Di1RAS wt olesale and Retail Agent for Brnaeale A' 17