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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1895-12-27, Page 7i}. THE 1E1,1\1 TOR NtRX LAT/45T FROM ALL TU WORLD.OYHFe, entereafng items Abpat.Qur Owe Country, °rent Britain, the. Unite4 $fates, and ell Parts of the ajobe, condensed and hasorted for Baas' [trading. CANADA, Mrs, Gen. 1+'raneis a Hamilton, an invalid, died while !ter child was, being christened at her bedside. lir, Claude V, Carrie, a farmer,. of Neopawa, was fatally wounded on Sat- urday while cleaning his rifle,. A hospital. fol''endiaus is to be estab- Hsberi by the Church oe England et Dynevor, on St, Peter's reserve. Lord Aberdeen has deplaned his pat- ronage to the, ball to be bele on New Year's eve in aid of the Children's hos- pital in Ottawa. Col. Jobe Peters of the Loudon Meld. Battery is, about to retire from h corps, which he has been connected with for 30 years. Tho application made recently' by the State of• Washington ,for salmon fry from the British Columbia hatcheries ,will not be acted upon. Lieut: Col. Boman, commanding the OOth Batt., of Wnnipeg, has resigned his command, and retires after thirty years of militia service. The strike of Italian labourers at Hamilton was ended on Thursday by the contractors agreeing to give the ad- vance asked for by the men, Acolored woman named Emily Smith deed at St. Catharines on Thursday. Thereis conclusive evidence that she was over 100 years old. The first steppe towards the re -erection of tee Grand Trunk car shops are being taken in London, and tenders for con- struction will soon be called for. The Montreal City Surveyor has re- ported in favor of the propbsed electric • line to the top of the mountain, and it will probably be built very soon. The Canada S. Miohigan Bridge & Tunnel Company will ask Parliament next session for permission to bridge the river between. Windsor and De- troit Jeremiah McCarthy was sent to penitentiary for eight years by Judge Snider at Hamilton for highway rob- bery. His ,three pals got six years each. The Inland Revenue for the Dominion of Canada accrued during the month of November amounted to $736,311, as against 8744,202 for the same month last year. Tohn Scafe, a prisoner in Janet Chat - bane managed to lock the turnkey in the corridor, and then tried to „break out. The turnkey's shouts brought assistance, and Scafe gave up the job. IVIr. A. T. Wood hes made a formal offer to the Hamilton City Council to build the T., H. & B. road from Ham- ilton to Toronto without a bonus, and to put up $25,000 as a pledge, of his bona fides. • Mr. Gilbert McLeod, market garden- er, while engaged in unloading a wag- gon in Hamilton, suddenly fell to the ground, and died before medical aid ar- rived. Neuralgia of the heart was the cause of death. An approximate statement of the lia- bilities and assets in the estate of Sam- son, Kennedy and Co., of Toronto, whole- sale dry goods merchants, has been pie - pared by the receiver, and shows a de- ficit of about 5200,000. Notice appears in The Canada Ga- zette of a scheme to construct esteem and electric railway from Port Churoh- ill on Hudson Bay to Calgary. Power is also sought to run a line of ocean- going steamers from Port Churchill on Hudson Bay. The Grand Board of the Patrons of In- sedustry which metenedi.riday mesh etheto, Piave aprareee aeresohition to be sub- mitted by Mr. Joseph Haycock, M.P.P., at the next meeting of the Grand. Asso- ciation, to admit all classes and profes- sions to the Patron ranks and abolish all signs, pass -words, and pledges. GREAT BRITAIN.. The Queen will visit Nice in the spring. The Imperial Parliament will meet on February 11. Tho Queen's shortborn heifer won the championship cup at Smithfield Cattle Show, Six of the crew of a collier were drowned by her sinking in a collision near Liverpool. The Duchess of York, formerly Prin- cess'Mary of Teak, gave birth to a son on Sid urday morning. Two hundred trains enter and leave Moorgate street station, London, every hour throughout the day. British agriculturists are agitating the formation of 0, party in Parliament to look after their interests. A Canadian, Mr. Herbert: Taylor Reade, has been appointed honorary surgeon -general to the Queen. Belfast engineers have rejected the proposals for a settlement of the trou- bles roubles with the shipbuilders. Since his elevation to the post of Cora- . mander-in-chief, Lord Wolseleyis in great demand to assist at public func- tions. Infanta Eulalie of Spain isslaending a holiday week in London, She is stay- ing at a hotel, and bas not been receiv- ed by the Queen. • A small eleetrio lamp is being used instead of a bell in some telephone ex- changes in England. The call for con- nection lights the lamp. It is reported that the Prince of Wales made a hot of money when the South African market was at its height in London a few months ago, There is a growing feeling in England in favour of protection, but Lord Salis- bury holds out no hope that England will change her fiscal policy, The Bnglith weekly papers devote considerable spate to the unfriendly at- titude of tbe. United States respecting the Venezuela and the Behring Sea questions. The shipbuilding strikers of Belfast and the Clyde bave refused to accept the terms agreed upon by their reeve- sentatives, and the Unfortunate strike still continuos. The American liner Indiana, in turn- ing in the Mersey to land her Dpassen- g'ers in Liverpool, collided with the 13ri- tish steamer Zamora, 'damaging her so seriously that she had to bo beached. Sir Julian Goldsmid, the well-known member of Parliament for South St. Panaras, one of 'OW wealthiest and most charitable of the Hebrews gf England, is in a critical condition o health at Brighton. The Queen, the Prince of. Wales, and ether members of the Royal family were present on Saturday at the mem- orial services held at Frognioro, on tee '04tltl an7Xilpemery el Thex'rinea Con - ern' ll. deaA The f a ' itl vat I T gr nnual as o char s lington, London, last week attracted groat attention The eeeeon, the Prince of Waled, ,and the Duk of York won oil the'Duke of ork is' anaexhiibiitor At the confeneece in Condor} 013,0ri- day called to consider the existing fiscal spit= of Great Britain, Mae James W. Loryther, Conservative, for the ghetto Dietelonee'Cumberlaard, stated, amid up rear an applause, that he desired to gee ti reinstatlon of protection, The Prince of Wales liar given 0 church at liabingles'; which formsart of the extreme portion of the royal es- tate of Sandringham. Babingley isre- put:ed to be, the parish where thee first Christian cburoli wee erected in East Anglia by St, Felix, the Burgundian, about the year 000 A,1); UNITED STATES. Smallpox is reported in Oleo. Samuel Compere was elected president of the American Federation of Labour on Saturday over John McBride. February 21 bas been fixed for the hanging of W.H;T. Durrant, elm xiuur- darercisco. of Blanche Lamont, in San Fran - Tee United States .Government camp report showed a lower condition and a amaller acreage of wheat than had been cepeetodr - Senator Oullom made a long speech in the United States Senate in favor of a pplain declaration of the Monroe dac- trWa by Congress, R. A, Halliwell • of Chicago, who ryas captain ofthe cricket team that visit- ed Ontario last summer, committed suicide on Saturday night. The Atchison, Topeka & Santa Ile Railroad' was sold under the hammer for 000,000,000 to Mr. Icing of New York representing the reorganized company. Allan G. Thurman, of Columbes,Ohio, the " Old Roman,"' as the Ohio ;Deme- an, emo-orats delighted to call him, died en, Thursday. He was eighty-two years of age. The Chicago brewers, Who are carry- ing a large proportion of the saloons, bave decided to reduce the number by seventeen hundred after the est of Janu- ary. A regiment has been formed in New York in connection with the Clan -nae Gael to form the neuolus of an Irish- American army for the liberation of Ireland. In the recent viaduct accident in Cleveland, Ohio, by which a street -car fell through an open draw, causing the death of seventeen persons, the coroner failed to find anyone guilty of a crim- inal act. There is no doubt felt in Wastiin ton political circles that an attempt will be made at an early date to press upon the House of Representatives the desirabil- ity of recognizing the Cuban insurgents as belligerents. A high board fence is being built around the site of all that is left of the Talmage tabernacle at Greene and Clin- ton avenues, Brooklyn.Inside the fence is a mass of broken brink and stone and twisted iron braces. Fannie Linsley, of St. Joseph, Mo., has brought a suit for $25,000 against the Central Medical College for having caus- ed the body of her husband to be re- moved from his grave and used as a sub- ject for dissection m the college. Ex -Governor J. T. Churchill, of Little Rock, Ark„ a general in the Confeder- ate army, has telegraphed Senator James Verry, offering services t the exhis o y, Pre- sident in the ease of war with England in support of the Monroe doctrine. Attorney -General Childs, of St. Paul, Minn., gives it as his opinion that under the constitution of the United States it is illegal to open a Public school with public worship, even if that devotion be restricted to saying the Lord's Prayer. At St. Louis Rev. Father Cosgrove, a Catholic priest, died as a result of be- ing run over by a locomotive in the railroad yards. The officials of the road believe the man threw himself under the locomotive with suicidal intent. ''Chicago !University is the recipient of another 51,000,000 gift, the donor be- ing Miss Helen Culver. The condi- tions of the gift are that it shall be de- voted to the increase and spread of knowledge within the fields of biologi- cal soience. • While Mrs. James Williams, of.Jeffer- sonville, Ind., was dressing a turkey for dinner she found in the bird's claw a diamond solitaire the size of a pea. The fowl came from a farm close to a pic- nic ground, and it is thought that it picked up the jewel near there. At Topeka, Kas., Governor Morill called out Battery 1 of the State mil- itia to protect the Kansas Medical Col- lege, which was threatened by a mob. The trouble was caused by the discov- ery in the dissecting room of the col- lege of the bodies of three women stol- en from the Topeka cemeteries. Business in the United States has been quiet during the week, and no improve- ment is likely to occur now until the new year. In some directions mild %yea-, ther is credited with depressing the de- mand for seasonable goods, but at vari- oaa points in the United States the tem- perature has been quite low enough to make a general seasonable average In a business sense. Anyhow, wholesale trade is dull all round, and, as usual, stooks ust now e not being added to. In holidayar specialties there has been 0 tie- ticeable decrease in demand. Collections have also shown weakness, and prices continue a downward .tendency. The outlook is better for iron and steel next month. GENERAL The Spanish Cabinet has resigned. The Japanese have evacuated Port Arthur, Herr Bowe,the inventor of the bul- let-proof . coa, is dead, A British and ae Italian 'vessel of war passed up the Dardanelles. Russian troops are being moved from Odessa and Sebastopol to Batman. The Times places the Italian losses in the battle of Ambaisigi'at 2,000 men. The Sultan has issued an !rade per- mitting the extra guardships to ap- proach Constantinople. A large konak or villa used by the Sultan for the accommodation of :en- penial guests has been burned.. In India every resident must, under penalty of fine, have bis name written up at the entrance of his house. It is rumoured that the European pow- ers bave addressed to Japan a perempt- ory' demand for the evacation of Corea. Hewes attacked and destroyed a Christian mission in Madagascar. Mis- sionary Macefahon and his family es- caped. The German Cabinet has decided to continue the campaign against the Socialists, upon the basis of the ,come mon law. le. Adrian Lachenal, who was vice- President of the Swiss Republic for 805, has been elected Prosidont for ext year, A Nihilist conspiracy against the life of the Czar has m been discovered, hi Aloseow, and, several onsets have bn Made. o. d The It a 'e alfa Cha r ens voted th Ldditiounl way credit, and prepora- ns for •tile A ryaeinlae campaign are going 'forward rapidly. EmperorWilliam of Gcrmauy pro- poses to give a grime fete at tiro dm- eraofhfazt8he vs'y palace Ma oundatn etholmpire. It is believed that China, ,s a reward for Russian intervention ine r favour.' with Japers after the war, will permit the 1'lussian Paolflo fleet to winter le Teem -Chau bay, The Postelastere-General of New South Wales, Victoria, and Queensland suet to discus the pProjected Paoifie cable scheme. .they eeeided to send , two delegates to the conference. A special despatch from`Shangheisays news has been received which confirms • the report that the Russians rwere the instigators 00 the conspiracy 00 iii -Hua -1 Shtn against the Icing of Corea, A despatch' Moseyed from Cape Coast Castle .says teat it is reported there that the Ashaptis have deposed King Prempele and that the war party has enthroned Iris meteor as Queen in his stead, Eugene Hranz, an Alsatian, has held the position of once in tee .household of the Czar of Russia for some years. and he is said to be the most accomplished gook in the world. His staff numbers some twelve hundred parson s , There is a strong Buddhist revival wr- ing on in the Japanese Empire, The Church bas bean stirred up by the inva- sion of missionaries, and within recent years Buddhist apers have been organ- ized, and the Japanese press is full of articles about religious matters. A despatob signed by a number of Armenians of Constantinople says that Armenia is at her last gasp. The, work. of extermination continues, The num- ber of people ms•ssacred reaches one hundred thousand, and half a million of survivors have taken to the mountains and forests, where they are feeding on herbs and roots. _ U. S. UNFRIENDLINESS. The Venezuelan and Jlehrnttr Sen Question -Senator,llorgan's Recent Utteraltces- A PhInlet Warning. A despatch from London says; -Tho weekly newspapers ,devote considerable space to the unfriendly attitude of the United States respecting the Vene- zuela, and the Behring Sea question. The Saturday .Review says,: -"Such vulgar impertinence as Senator Mor- gan's would certainly not be allowed in the House, of Commons.' Does the United States wish for war, and wet'? We may say with Baron Marschall von Bieberstein (the German Minister for Foreign Affairs), in his dignified reply to President Cleveland's petu- lant complaint about the German tariff, that we have a right to demand reciprocity in friendly feelings." The National Observer confirms the despatch of December 4, saying. that the Marquise of Salisbury lute refused to allow England's claim' to Vepezue- lan territory within the Schomberg line to be questioned, and adds: -"It is taken for granted that President Cleveland does not intend to press the whole claim implied in his message, but, if his .words have the meaning whichother we hound attach to any Y. ruler; the conflict of view Is very seatou0, and it seems that an open quarrel can hardly be avoided,except by the surrender. of one side. For the United States a withdrawal would be a very serious defeat."' •The article quoted above also dis- cusses Senator Morgan, and the gen- eral unfriendliness of the' United States to England, the disposition given to Yankee bluster," and con- cludes with a "distinct. warning" to America that "she stands on the ,same footing as other powers. Persistent unfriendliness shouts be met in the same spirit, and might. have a whole- some influence in clearing the air." CHRISTMAS EVE IN PARIS. Forget and Forgive 1s the Custom -Mid- night brass and. the Family Sapper.' On Christmas eve in the bores' of Paris,. when the children are fast asleep, with the., bermes to watch over them, the older ones and the parents go to the !grand high mass, lasting from 10 o'clock till midnight. This is a very solemn service and is sung with great ceremo- ny and with row upon row of white veilednuns, whose narrow belts of blue, orange or red.show their peculiar or - dor, kneeling in the transept. J ust' at midnight the mass ends, and the altar boys snuff the tall candles. Teen the family returns, and there is the reveillion, or the supper of waking -the one meal of the year at which are gathered the brothers and sisters to the .home of the oldest married child. There are places for'. the grandparents, too, and, if a child has •been lately born to swell' •the family circle, a seat of honor' or next the grandmemre for its another, who is queen of the feast. Tee "supper" is a great dinner, at which goon will is the order, where are drunk innumerable glasses of harm- less, unintoxieatin grape wine, and where toasts are offered to every con- ceivable good luck, past and • to come. At the reveillion are discussed all the' affairs of the family. If during the year the relations between two of its 'mem- bers have become strained, all, is often forgiven and forgotten in this family love feast. So with toast and rally, and story the hours creep by. until it is far into the I small hoaxs, when the party breaks up. ACCIDENT TO THE PRIN.CE. not Some 'Powder 11Is l;ye"'iPhlle Shoot .105 hi Rttclandhamshlrr. - A despatch from London, says:-Tlxe prince of Wales has poet witb an acci- dent that for a tiros caused much con- cern to those who were aware of the atf- fair, but the injury turns out to be trifl- ing. The Prince was shooting on Sir Edward Lawson's estate, Hall Barn, Beaconsfield. Buckinghamshire, when he got some grains of powder in leis right eye. A dotter Was summoned, who applied folnentations to the eye to subdue the inflammation, and then in- jected cocaine, after which be extract- ed the powder, Tiro eye is now assume ing its normal condition. The Prince has returneti to London. A metal worker's, in/maxim-Saes that 1esteem= wires have been drawn 00 u tine that .two of them twisted together could be inserted in the hollow of a )lanai:! hair .,_,...., ...i 1 1YIAN TQ$NS CROP. The Last f wer;rftuni, Jluilellu-Mock EX' ports Nearry llalil.les -ovoid Ativauen la nalpy *'!'educts. A devotee from Winnipeg says: --The Pvovinoiel tlovcrnment on. Friday issued, its last °rep bulletin, wluoh eetails eeen- pletoly the niervellous Manitoba harvest of 1895. The total wheat aoxeage is shown to have been 1,140,270, from whine 01„770,088 bushels were .}steed, an aver- age of close to 28 bushels per acre. Of oats there were 482,058 acres, witli a tot- al, product oe 32,555,798 bushels, or an. aveerige of nearly 47 bushels per acre, The barley acreage was 108,880,, total Yield, 5,0d5,090, average per acre 80,09 flax, 1,281,964 bushels were raised ; of r .e 81082 bushels; and peas `1,$,220 busb- to belG1 total grain crop is thus shaven 900,472, an amount, nearly four million bushels be expose of the Govern- ment s estimate, made just before the threshers got to work. Of potatoes there were 10,710 Gores under crop, with a total prodnetion of 4,042,50e bushels, the average yield per acro being nearly 244 bushels.. The tota�l crop of roots and potatoes rias 6,827,645 bushels, Crop correspondents in the amuse of their remarks say ,that the immense wheat crop bas enabled farmers to sell as much as was sold at this date last year, enabling them to pay off Pressing liabilities, while still holding the greater part of their crop for b'�gti- er prices. The bulletin shows that the stock exports were nearly doubled during this year, and the figures sbow that stock -raising for export is grow- ing to suoh proportions that it will soon become as important an industry as wheat -raising. A great advance eras also been made in dairy products, The output of butter and cheese netted nearly two hundred thousand dollars. The bulletin shows that five thou- sand harvest hands from Ontario as- sisted in garnering the crop, and were paid four hundred thousand dollars by the farmers in wages. PHYSICIANS OF CORNWALL ONT RECOMMEND LR. AGNEW'S CURE FOR THE HEART. Mr. -Geo Crites, a Government official, Used the Remedy and is Cure 1. George Crites, Esq,, Customs officer, Cornwall, Ont. "I have been troubled with severe heart complaint for several years. The slightest excitement proved very fatig- uing and necessitated taking rest, so that I was entirely incapacitated for business. I was under a doctor's care for over six months, and not receiving the benefit I had hoped for,and hear- ing much of Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart, I asked my peysioian about tak- ing it, which he advised me to do. The use of the remedy brought results had scarcely dared hope for and I am now able to attend to business, and do most heartily recommend this remedy to all who suffer from heart complaint." Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart,; re- lieves in 30 minutes and thus has been the means of saving thousands of lives. Sold by G. A. Deadman. Murder at the Falls. A despatch from Niagara Falls, N.Y., says: There was a murder among the coloured people in the 'tunnel district;on Monday night, in which a man named Oscar J Sones, aged years, was killed with a butcher's knife. The murderer is named Wm. Smith, aged 23, coloured. The men were attending a dance in one of the dives which are run in that part of the city and are infested with colour- edpeople, Italians, and Spaniards. Be- tween midnight and one o'clock hi the morning Jonas and Smith engaged in a quarrel. Jones had been drinking heav- ily, and it is claimed by the murderer that he stabbed Jones in self-defence. The police have a dozen or twowit- nesees under arrest. .Smith has been held for the grand jury, under the charge of murder in the first degree. RHEUMATISM RELIEVED IN' SIX HOURS. South American Rheumatic Cure Gives Relief as soon as the First Dose is Taken, and Cures OrdinaryCasesof Rheumatism and Neuralgia in from One to Three Days -What a Grateful Citizen of St. Lmbert, Que., Has to Say. For manymonths I have suffered the most exruciating pain from rheu- matism and had despaired of getting Rpermanent relief until South American heumatic Cure was brought to my notice. I procured a bottle of the remedy and to my surprise received great benefit from the first few doses. In fact, within six hours after taking the first dose I was free from pain,and. the use of a few bottles wrought a permanent euro. It is surely the best remedy of this kind in existence. J. Fredeau. St. Lambert, P.Q. Sold by G. A. Deadman. Empress Gold Mine. A despatch from Port Arthur says: Work bas been started on the Empress Gold Mine, Jack Fish Bay, and on Fri- day Mr. Walter Ross, of Rat Part- age, promoter of the new company, re - mired a box containing -about 50 pounds, tee richest aaanples of • gold that has ever been seen in, this dis- trict. If this is an index to what the mice will produce iu the future it will not bo very long before the north: shore of Lake Superior will be noted as a gold district. The Empress has been organized[ as a purely local com- pany in Port Arthur and Fort Willianu; 540,000 of the $100,000 capital has been placed upon the market, and the whole of it subscribed, eonseenently there is quite a little gold mining boom. It is the Company's intention to proceed im mediately with the construction of a ten -stamp mill. This should be run- ning by April let, and those who have seen the property claim drat there will be no trouble to keep the mill going with ore Brom the day it starts, DANGEROUS RESULTS SUR); TO FOLLOW Neglect of Kidney Trouble -South American Kidney Cure is a Remedy that Quickly Plradieates Sidney Trouble in Any of its Stages. It is an unfortunate blunder to allow disease of the kidneysto obtain a bold in the system. The dismiss is of that character that leads to many serious complications which too often end fate ally. The strong point of South Amore iean Kidney Cure is that it drives this disease out of the system, whetber tak- en in its incipient stages or after ibhas more nearly approeahed a chronic con- dition. The medicine Is a radical one, easy to take, yet thoroughly effective, and what is encouraging to the patient the results of rte use are made mani- fest almost immediately. As a matter of fact this medicine will relieve die, ties ing kidney and bladder disease in Six hours, Sold by 0. A. Deadman: 1 WX$J PZ5 01' 013EX HAIRS. Rem Jrxn Boort Rin90' HamiltbQat„a ell-liuown iatlrad Presbie Velem fniseer, Has eleecl Dr,. nes •Qatarreal Powpder, and Tee. t :nw es to lis Be/Milts. Trio calitioes conversation that is eharaoteristioet Presbyterians, and see Imolally of those Who have scop years of eervic0 all the ehurolt gives weight and influence toany xocommendation that they may make .on almost any matter.. Wheat we find a clarggyman of tbeyoars of the Rev. john Scabt, 1). D., of Haan - Moe, one oe the church's most esteemed ministers, speaking favorably of a pi'o- prlotaxy medicine we may Teatassured that it possesses genuine merit. idr. Scott tolls oe the benefits that have Dumb to him from tee use 00 this needle dee, beeaue° he is able to speak from an experimental knowledge having used tiie medicine himself, Of its bene- fits he has testified ever hie own sig-' nature. One short puff, of the breath through the blower supplied with each bottle of Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder, dif- fuses this powder over the surfaos of', the nasal passages, Painless and de- lightful to uso,it relieves in ten minutes and permanently soros Catarrh, Ha Fever, Colds, Headache, ore Throat Tonsilibis and Deafness, 80 cants, Sam- ple bottle and blower sent on receipt of two 9 cent stamps. S. G, Detehon, 41 Church street, Toronto, Sold by G. A. Deadman: CHRISTMMIAS IN INDIA. A Lazy Picnic stall) the Tropical Sar rottnllhips of Calcattn. The sun shines gloriously overhead. The sky is a pale, elondiess blue, and the foliage around us shows every shade and tint from brown to scarlet, from the palest to the deepest green. We saunter along the grass under the trees beside the avenue and find a quiet spot, with a pool of clear water haunted by swans before us. The ground is carpeted with soft !grass and shaded with trees. On one side, 300 yards away, is a bank of shrubs, with the most gorgeous variety of coloring, from mauve and lilac to orimson red; on the other three, cool, restful green leaves. On suoh a Christ- mas morning it is good to be alive. i Let us think of t as we shiver over our fires in England. We spread our rugs and coats en the ground and lie down and smoke lazily. Presently the Ifhidmutgars arrive with hampers. We do not move, for in India we have not that irrational. and 'idiotic notion that a picnic is no picnic unless you wait 'neer. e. Viking. cold, is a centrum complaint,It d is doe to inn urn and d nvi nt blood al It attest loads to fere:ma %roubles, else' remedy is found In pure, rice blood. stn am not very otreng acid soinetim s heed a tome 10 hells; me battle against eielceess, I end that two or three bottles of !food's Sarsaparilla fe just 141130 I need. . 1 Lave tixlco0 it weemionally far several yeare had do not have iuiy doctors Mils' to pat," Mies,IArale 111uorsS, 65 Beau,- fain eau,fain 5t., Oberlestoit, S. U, liainember rsaparilla Is tee One True Blood Purifier. 51; 6 for$5. easy to hay easy to take HOOCH $ V Aii S easy to operate. 26c. For Twenty-five Year f .�U�INS AKING WDER. THE COOKS BEST FRIEND LARtSEST SALE IN CANADA, upon yourselves, lay •your own lunch and burn your own fmgera over your kettle. The lunch is admirable from the solids to the fruit, from the drinks to the ice. Nothing has been forgotten, for once a lghidmutgar has been taught a thing he may be relied upon to do it again with absolute exactitude on a similar occasion till the crack of doom unless he is idiotic. A picnic is a complete rest, with nothing to do save to lie still and en- joy. No one even talks unless the spirit moves bine. For the most part we sit quiet, drinking in the beauty of the scene. The servants pass silently Wand fro, handing dishes, which are accept- ed or rejected as silently, It is waste of energy to speak. The cool breeze fans us gently. Thereare no mosquitoes. All is peace. Last of all come the coffee and the cigars. AN Via B 0LLS t 01 Wa' JL.3STuER.i.1oZO, �y Afv. W. S. Barker is a young minister of Peterhoro who has by his great earnestness and able exposition at the doctrines 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 as the spiritual welfare of mankind, hence the following statement for publication "I have much pleasure in re- commending the Great South Ameri- can Nervine Tonic to all who are „flicted as I have been with nervous prostration and indigestion. Ifound very great relief trona the very first bottle, which was strongly recom- mended to me by my druggist. I also induced my rife to use it, who, I must say, was completely run down and was suffering very mats from general debility. She found great relief from South Amerioan' Nervine and also cheerfullyrecommends it to her fellow'sufferers. " Bev. W. S. 3,i i lt." 11 is now a ecienti$e fact that cer- tain nerve centres located near the base oftile brain have entire control over the staniaeh,liver, heart, lungs and indeed all internal organs; that is, they furnish these organs with the neeeesa y nerve force to enable them to perform their respective work. When the nerve centres aro weakened Orr deranged the nerve A. DIIADDIAN Whale, 7,f'"'/ ,/�� sir" 4, / 1r .0 force is diminished, and as a resa% the stomach will not digest the food. the liver becomes torpid, the kidneys. ,. will not act properly, the heart and 1. lungs' suffer, and in fact the whole' system becomes weakened and sinks on account of the lack of nerve force. South American Nervine is based on the foregoing scientific discovery and is so prepared that it . acio. directly on the nerve centres. Ii 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. It greatly benefits in one day. Air. Solomon Bond, a member of the Sooiety of Friends, of Darlington, Ind., writes: "I have used six bottles of South American Nerving and I consider that every bottle did for me one hundred dollars worth of good, because I have not bad a good night's sleep for twenty, years on account of irritation, pain, horrible dreams, and general nervous pros. tration, which has been caused bye chronic indigestion and dyspepsia of the stomach, and by a broken down, conditionof my nervous system. 13nt now can anliodo down and sleep night as sweetly as a baby, and I feel like a sound man. I do ,net' •• think there has ever been a medicine introduced I ' nto this country, whloh7 Will al a1l compare with this all ouzo for rho mtomeets mad saepeoji k Id and 8tetaiI Aunt for Rrussel0