HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1896-1-10, Page 3lr. i 0, 1890
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Town D3areotor/9yY
hinerVhAz,r Olinnon.—Sabbath .Service,
et 11 a m and 7:00 p, m, f onlay School
at 2:80 p re, Rey. John Bose, B A,
pastor,
few. Joiis a Quuilcu.—Sabbath Servloes
et 11 a In and 7 p m. Sunday Sohool
at 2;84 p. m, Rev. A. K. Gritlin, inoum.
bent,
MrTnonxew Qnoacu,--Sabbath Services
tit 10;80 a in and 7:00, lh m, Sunday.
Sobool at 2:80 p m, Bev. G. 11(, Oebble-
diok, Al A, B A, pastor,
Botta Camaro Onueen,—Sabbath
Servioe third Sunday in every month, at
10:00 a m, Rev Joseph Kennedy,
priest.
SALVATION Anmx,--Servive at 7 and 11
a m and 3 and $ p m on Sunday and
every evening in the week at 8 o'clock, at
thebarraolxs,
0»n FrLLowa' Loner every rbureday
evening, in Graham's Bleak,
Mame Aonon Tnoeday at or before
full moon, in Garfield block.
A 0 U W Loner on the 8rd
Friday evening of each month, in BIep.
hill's block.
O 0 F LOnos 2nd and last Monday
evenings of each month, in Blashill's
block.
I O F, 2nd and last Friday in Odd
Fellows' Hall_
L .0 L let Monday in every month
in Orange Hall..
SONS or SootrAND, 1st and 3rd Tues-
days of each month, in Odd Fellows'
Hall.
K. 0. T. M. Lonaz, 2ndand 4th Tues-
days of eachmonth, in Odd fellow's Hall.
Bons Orucrn, 2nd and 4th Fridayeven-
inge in Blasn1l1's Hall.
Post Orvzor—Office hours from 8 a.
m. to 6:30 p. m.
Mzon+Nxae' INsmxTUTE.—Library in
Holmee' block, will be open from 6 to 8
o'clock p. in. Wednesdays end 8:80 to 5
and (5 to 8 Saturdays. Miss Minnie Mo.
Naughton, Librarian.
Tows Oonzom,—W, H. Kerr, Reeve ;
W. 1I. MoOraoken, Robert Graham, R.
Leatherdale and B. Gerry, Councillors ;
F. S. Scott, Clerk; ThomasKelly,
Treasurer ; D. Stewart, Assessor arld J.
T. Ross, Oolleotor. Board meetethe set
Monday in oaoh month.
Sonoox,Bosnn. Bev. Rose, (chairman,)
Dr. McKelvey, Dr. Graham, A. Reid, A,
Hunter and 4, N. Kendall ; Sea.-Treae.,
it. Rose. Meetings 2nd Friday evening
in each month.
Plinio Smoot Treourne.—J. H. Cam-
eron, Principal, Mies Braden, Mise
Downey andI1ies Cooper,
Bunn or Haanms.—Reeve. Kerr, Clerk
Scott, A. Stewart, T. Farrow and J. N.
Kendall: Dr. McNaughton, Medical
Health' Officer.
A FIGHT IN SCHOOL.
"Order 1 Order I" cried the teacher ;
But the naughty thing was .done,
Eddie rubbed ont Tommie', lesson
And the fight had just begun.
Little chubby hands were clinching
Jackets torn and rumpled hair ;
They could never sit together,
They were such a naughty pair.
So the teacher straightway stood them
In the corner with high caps—
And two little outstretched palms,
From her ruler, got ten slaps.
"Now, then, tell me all the trouble,"
• Said the teaoher, at recess i
But they both talked loud together,
Each one anxious to confess.
"Hush now, children," said the teaoher,
"Let Eddie speak, one at a time"
So Eddie's answer, all defiance,
"Tom said his me us prettier'n mine."
A LITTLE TRAITOR.
Say.I My grampa bad some breeohee,
Yep, he had,
To that ohurob Most there be preaches
"Oh be glad."
And he hong them in the garret,
Where there's rats and a stuffed parrot,
'Oause they lacked some dozen etitohee
They were bad.
They were stamped upon the boeom,
Yep, they were.
That's a something, if you use 'em,
'Twill occur ;
And the stamps were big and healthy,
Nobble' email, ner moan, der stealthy ;
Sister Gladys said they grew some,
Seemed to her.
Now, dear Gladys is my sister,
And she's square,
But I'll have to tell yon, mister—
Now, don't swear—
For she took those velvet breeches,
And with lots o' tuoke and etitohee
Oh -11.h 1' She'd fan me to a blister,
18 she'd hear. :
Yep,lehe took those musty breeches,
Don't you see 7
Cntthem off with laughs and ,soreeohee,
At the knee.
Caught them up—the way is simple—
Sewed them so they formed a dimple
Where the patohes on the breeches
Used to be.
There's her lovely bloomers, mister,
Yep, they're real.
When I see you wheel with sister
I just feel
Like I'd get the laughing cramps,
'Bout theta breeches and them stamps.
•''Ta-ta I I saw you when you kissed her,
'hero's ber wheal 1
AN ALPHABET Ole RIVERS.
A stands for Amazon, mighty and grand,
And the B's Bereaiva, on Musoovy'e
strand,
The placid Charles river will fit for
the C,
While the beautiful Danube is ready
for D,
The E is the Elbe, in Deutohland far
North,
dud the first r, I find, strange to say,
18 the Forth.
The groat river Ganges can go foe the G,
And for H the blue Hudson will oer-
tainly be.
The quaint Irrawaddy for I lies its
Maims,
And the J is the limpid and beautiful
Jame&
The K UN Rama, I know in a jiffy,
And the L is for Loire and the Prete
ponce Liffey,
For hi we have: plenty to olrce0e f}john
aid well,
There's the noble Miseouri,' :the gentle
Moselle.
For the N we have Nile, and the Onion
le 0,
Whilpfar 1? you min °hooee the gray
Prtlth 00 the Po.
The A ie for Quinnebaug, one of our own,
But the 1% eoraes to front with the
Rhine and the Rhone.
For the A,there's the Shannon, a beauti.
fel stream,
And the T is the Tiber, where Rome
reigns supreme,
The Ural, I think, will with U quite
agree,
And the turbelept Volga will fit for the
The W'o Weyer, and Xenil is X,
(You may And it opened with a J to
perp
Then for Y, `lex,)
Rang-tee-ILiang is simple
and easy,
And io end the long list with a ;'i take
Zambezi.
A Wondrous Change.
'('1111 ITOR. Y OP A YOUNG LADY IN
811ITll'S PALLS.
Her licarlls was Badly SisalJerrod-8a1'.
fermi l'rons abed Cough and Constant
rale. 'in the Side—Talo ,cal Alnioat
lele0Aiaes--tier psoitis Again Hester.
ed.
F rom the Smith's Valls Accord,
I know that if I had not begun tak-
ing Dr, Williams' Pink Pills I would not
have lived much longer." These words
were nbtered by Miss kl:oseop, daughter of
Johnston Moseop, of this town, and a
young lady extremely popular among ber
friends and acquaintances. Miss Mos -
sop had been ailing for several years, and
her recovery to health is a matter of
general rejoicing among her friends. To
a reporter she gave her story as follows :
—"I scarcely know bow my illness be-
gan. The first symptom was a'feeling of
birednees upon the slightest exertion.
The color left my face and I was as pale
as a corpse. Then I was . attacked with
a pain in nay left side and coughed a
great deal. At first bome remedies were
tried but as they did not do any good a
dootor was called in, and was under his
Dare for about a year. But the treat -
Could not go up Stairs iVithout Besting.
mart did not do me any good, and. I was
steadily growing weaker and' weaker. I
was unable to go upstairs without hav-
ing to sit down and rest when I got there,
and the pain in my side became more
and more intense. I kept wasting away
and lost all interest in life, and at last
was so low that recovery was not expeot-
ed.' At this juncture my mother saw an
article in a newspaper relating the cure
of a'young lady whose case was almost
identical with my own and whose euro
was due to Dr, Williams' Pink Pills, and
this prompted a trialof that medicine..
By the time a couple of boxes were used
there was a feeling of improvement, and
I continued using the Pink Pills until. I
bad taken nine boxes, all the. time gain-
ing rapidly, until now I feel that I have
regoverod my old time health. I can
now walk a long dietaooe without being'
tired, and I am no longer troubled with
that terrible pain in my side.', My ap-
petite has returned and I clan now eat
almost as much as any member of the
family, and I know that had I not begun
taking Pink Pills I would not have lived
much longer."
Mrs. Masson soya -she cannot express
the gratitude she feels towards this grand
medicine wbioh has restored her loved
daughter's health, and will always speak
of it in terms of praise.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are especial-
ly valuable to women. They build up
. the blood, restore the nerves and eradi-
cate those troubles which make the lives
of so many women, old and young,.a
burden. Dizziness, palpitation of the
heart, nervous headache and nervous
prostration speedily yield to this wonder-
ful medicine, They are sold only in
boxes, the trade -mark' and wrapper
printed in red ink, at 60 cents : a box or.
six boxes for $2.50, and may be had of
druggisbe or direct: by mail from Dr.
Williams Medicine Co., Brookville, Ont.
A negro was burned to death by a mob
near Lebanon, Ky.
The massacre.of a number of Christian
missionaries in: Turkey ie reported.
Aotiou has been entered in New York'
bo prevent the operation of the Joint
Tratfio Association agreement between
the railways.
Henna DxsnAsz Rznxzvzn IN 30 M1N-
arEs.—All twee of organic or sympathetic
heart disease relieved in 80' minutes and
quickly cured, by Dr. Agnew's Oure for
the Heart. One dose convinces, Sold
by G. A. Deadman.
The best anodyne and expectorant for
the cure of colds, coughs, and all throat,
Lung, and bronchial troubles, is undoubt.
edly, Ayer's Cherry Peoboral, the only
specific for golds and coughs admitted on
exhibition at the Chicago World's Fair.
During 'a performance by a Jewish
dramatic company in aBalbitnore theatre
some one in the andiencocried 'Fire,"
and a scene of indescribable confusion
ennead. Twenty-three dead bodies and
twenty persona, some of whom ere
thought to be fatally injured, have been
taken ont of the building.
OATAnutn n=Llunn IN 10 00 00 ntINUT5s.—
One short puff of the breath through the
Blower, supplied with oaoh bottle of Dr.
Agnew's Oaten:eh Powder, diffuses thin
Powder over the eurfaoo of the nasal
passages. Painleee and delightful to
use, it relieves instantly, and permanent.
ly cures Catarrah, Hay Fever, Colds,
Beaded). 5, Sore Thboat, Toneilitis and
Deafness 60 dents at G. A. Deadman's.
iflel'uautfe, ,'allures to .I'6lrnllir An11
Vie;ARO States Per a50 ,
+�'he usual annual repeal of'bnsinees
failukes throughout the "United States for
the calendar year just; closed, 11 will be
understood, as explained ill preceeding
years, oovere a oonhpleto year, beginning
a few claw prior to the Close of 1894, and
ouding with the final returns by wire in
time to Bemire publication in this beam of
Rradstreet's. While the year oovored,
therefore, does not coiuoide exactly with
the calendar year of 1895, the report in-
oltidee bueiness failures throughout the
country for a completed year, 'It eihould
also be explained, as bee been stated
isudee lilte circumstances in previous ie.
sues of this paper, that the only btlsinees
emberrapemenbs included as failures are
those in which total liabilities are in ox•
cess of aotnal insects, except in mem of
backs, in which iuebancea a suspension of
payment during'businese hours, for how-
ever brief an interval, ie regarded as a
failure.
The total number of failures in the
United States in .1895, as reported fn
Bradstreet's, is 18,018, contrasted with
12,721, in 1194, an increase of 2,2 per
pont, This is the largest number of fail-
ures ever reported singe the record was
begun, with the single exception of 1898,
two years ago, when the aggregate was
16,560, compared with which year the
falling off in 1895 is 16 per omit, Au in.
oreese in the second year following one of
panic is exceptional In the panic year,
1884, the total nnmbor of failures was
11,620,; in the following year the aggre-
gate was 11,116, and in the year suc-
ceeding ib was 10,568, nearly 5 per cent.
less than in the grab year afterthe pauio
of 1884. The year I891 was conspicuous
during the greater portion thereof for
marked depressions in trade, following
the re$eobion here of the Baring panic,
and may therefore be regarded as having
followed a pauio year. The total num-
ber of business failures in that year was
12,894, anmoronse of 16 per cent., but in
the year following there was a sharp fat.
ling off in the number of failnrosamount
ing to more than 17 per cent.
The year 1892, therefore, the second
after the Baring Crash, corresponded to
the year 1886, the second year after a
year of panic.
Bub in 1896, a second year following a
panic there is an increase in the num-
ber oil failures over the year ,before, and
the year itself is conspicuous as one of
financial complications for a,,brief period
at the close. .
The total amount of liabilities of fail-
ing firms, corporations, and individuals
in the United States during 1895 amount-
ed to 9158,842,445, more than $9,000,000
in exoosas of the total in 1894, an increase
of less than 6 per cont, or three times the
rate of increase in the total number of
failures. The grand total of assets of
failing firms, corporations and individuals
during the year amounted to 088,115,-
580, or more than $8,000,000 in excess of
the like total one year ago, an increase of
more than 10 per cont., showing a rela-
tively greater degree of solvency of those
embarrassed than in the preceeding year.
This record of the total number of fail-
ures, together with gross liabilities and
assets for 1895 makes it plain that. the
after-effects of the panic of 1898 were
more far-reaching than anticipated one
year ago. During the past four or five
months, reaching back to a period when
business generally, was more active than
at present, and when prices' generally
were higher,., serious embarrassments in
commercial and industrial lines have.
been showing a previously unsuspected
increase.
The anneal report of the number of in-
dividuals, firms and corporations in busi.
ness shows a marked but not unexpected
increase in what may be galled the com-
mercial deabh'rate dnriug the past year.
The total number of business failures
reported from. the Dominion of Canada
and from Newfoundland for the calendar
year just olosed is 1,923, or 50 more than
in 1804, while the aggregate liabilities are
$15,798,559, as compared wlih 923,995,-
283, a decrease of 60. per cent., which' can
only be construed as a remarkably favor-
able exhibit. The corresponding falling
off in assets of failing traders in the
Canadian Dominion and in Newfound-
land is a little more bnan 50 per cent.
"Old, yet ever. new, and simple and,
beautiful ever," sings the poet,: in words
which might well apply to Ayer's Sarsa-
parilla—the most efficient and soieotifio
blood -purifier ever offered to suffering
humanity. Nothing but superior merit
keeps it so long at the front.
RztroncAmxsro Ounzn IN A DAX.—South
American Rheumatic Cure for Rheums.
tiem and Neuralgia radically aures in 1
to 3 days. -Its action upon the system
is remarkable and mysterious. 18 re-
moves at once the clause and the disease
immediately disappears. The first dose
greatly benefits. 75 cents. Warranted
by G. A. Deadman,
RELIEF IN SIX Honas,—Distressing' kid-
ney and bladder diseases relieved in six
hours by the "Great 'South American
Kidney Care." This new remedy is a
great surprise and delight on account of
Re exceeding promptness in relieving
pain in the bladder, kidneys, back and
every part of the urinary :passages in
male or female.' It relieves retention of
water and pain in passing it almnst im-
mediately. If you want quiok relief and
cure Ibis is your remedy. Sold by G. A.
Deadman, druggist.
SHUWLES
British. Columbia
Tied Cedar Shingles
AND ---
North Shore
Pine and Cedar
FOR BALE A'S TAD
Brussels PlaninY JVIills
A1eo Doors and Sash of all Pat
tern; on hand or made to order
at. Short Notion,
3ietimatee Furniebed for all
kinde of, Buildings. Worizman-
ship and Material Guaranteed.
J. 8c P. AMENT,
1McLEO D'S
System Itenovator
—4NR 000811-
TESTED REMEDIES
SPECIFIC AND ANTIDOTE
}'ior Impure, Weak and Impoverished
Blood, Dyepepsia, Sleeplessness, Palpate.
tion of the Heart, Liver Complaint, Neur-
algia, Loss of Memory, Bronchitic, Con-
eumption, Gall Stones, Jaundice, Kidney
and Urinary Diseases, St. Vitus' Dance,
Female Irregularities and General De.
bility,
LABORATORY GOOEIUCH, ®i T.
J. M. MoLEOD,
Prop. and Manufacturer,
Sold by JAMES FOX,
Dru gist Br ussels.
WINN ...ra.ardrw,,
Featherbone Skirt B -
FOR GIVING
Style and Shape
TO
A light pliable•,. elbstio honer ereaKie;
from: .quills. It is, soft awl" yaoddnrd;;,t'
conforming readily to folds, yet gi•,axzs
proper shape to Skitter prase.
The only, Skirt Bbne tiati L'aat' 00
wet without injury..
Ladies' Dresses.The Celebrated Peatlherheate•iCor.
sets are corded nihil this lma182501(5..
10-21 For sale by leading Dry Goods Dealers,.
eramEsommitiumementantes
Fall
and,
1' 1'
I: have a fine, ne ec and
well selected stock of
THE
MOST SUCCESSFUL REIl9EDY
FOR MAN OR BEAST.
Certain in its erects and rover blisters.
Read proofs below,
KENDALL'S SPAVIN CUM
Bost; Carman Headorsoa Co., 111,, 051.01, Vt.
Dr. B. J. KENDALL bo,
Dear Sirs—Please send me one 'of your Horse
Docks mid oblige. I have mod a great deal of your
%ondull'a epovin Cure with good suoctoes • it is a
wonderful medicine. I once Lad a mere that had
le Doe ,it (comic and ave bottles toured her. I
keep a bottle on hand all thetime.
Yours truly, Ones. PowELL,
KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE.
Dr, B. J. %]SNDALL Co. 0A0Toa, lire„ Apr. 8,'92,
Dear Sire -1 have need several bottles o4 your
think it the boat LinOhhent I ever used.. success.
awre-
-named one On hDOC Bleed annvin and killed
two Ilene Baa i Have recommended it to
n vocal of any friends who are ninon pleesad'wah
rad keep it, Roepeotrullyy,�
B. R. RSY, P. 0, Dose18.
For Bale by ail Druggists, or address
Dr. D. J'. IC.'IIND4Ti7. COli[Yd.2,or
ENOEBURSH FALLS, 5T.
Charles S. Hutchings.
Sick Headache
MED PERMANENTLY
BY TAKING
es Pills'
"I was troubled a long tiro with sick
headache. 1 tried a good many remedies
recommended for this complaint; but It
was not until I Began taking Ayer's Pills
that I received permanent benefit. A.
Single box of these p111a: freed me from
headaches, and I em now a well man."
—0. 13. Il0000 xos, East Auburn, Me. 1
Awarded Medal at World's Fair
Aver's Sas•setInarilict is the Best.
WESTERN
ADVE':TSE
33rd Year
Mut- 0.0 Youzaa•
am f7ver.
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published in any of the cities
of Canada.
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