Loading...
The Brussels Post, 1896-2-14, Page 74, t8 )6 THE VIM( LAT1.',ST FROM Mel, THS ' WORLD OYISR, interesting Monts Afloat .Oer 'Owe Country, area Britain, the Waited States, and Alt Parts pi the Qlpbo, Coded and Assorted ter Pity Reeding. CANADA,' Hamilton will hold a charity con- cert. , 'Lord Aberdeen will attend, +the next annual games ;of the Dutton Celedon- , ran Society, lady Renee, widow of Sir ledwerd Kenny, died on Saturday at Halifax, N. S., at an advanced age: W. O. Wood, a .farmer of Baldur, Man., was shot ina mysterious way and will probably die. , AHamilton policeman let the }wrong .ran go pry mistake in <liecharging a prisoner- from the station, Mayor Tuckett laid the corner -atone -of the new Salvation Army barracks, Hamilton, last Monday. The Winnipeg Exhibition Association are tusking the City Connell for a loan of $80,000 to erect new buildings.: Mr. G., E, D. Elliott, a popular com- mercial traveller of Winnipeg, died on Monday night from ,injuries sustained 'lby felitng down an elevator shaft. The report of the Minister of Militia 'Shows that the total expenditure for the year were; $1,574,018, and 20,877 offi- •cere and men performed twelve days' dri11, Alice Ellingham, of Hamilton, twelve .years of age, was struck by an'. icy snowball on .Wednesday and died on Thursday night. An. inquest is being field, J. G. Fitch, secretary of the munici- pality of Calgary, lilan.,:is short $2,300 in his accounts. He bas not been arrest- ed, and.eis friends are making efforts to effect a settlement. A fire destroyed the planing mill of Mr, Marks B. Williams and anumber of dwelling-houses;in.the eastern' portion of Toronto early Thursday morning. The loss will be'$20,000, with hardly any insurance. Great excitement was created among the legal fraternity in Victoria, B. C., by Chief Justice Davie refusing to hear a divorce application, on the ground that the Supreme Court of British Co. lumbia. was not entitled to do so. The Dominion Gold. Mining tend BO - deletion Company en Thursday waited upon the Ontario Government, in To- ronto, and asked for a bonus of two thousand dollars per annum for five years, to enable them to run their re- duction works at Rat Portage for ,a custom mill. By the explosion of a threshing boil- er near Emerson, Man., Mr. F. W. Free- man was hurled with a portion of irdn work' through the wall of a barn. He wasbadly scalded and hurt in other ways, but there are 'hopes of bis recov- ery. A large deputation of Ottawa citizens waited•on Premier Bimini and Mr, Hag- .gart to ask for a subsidy 02 $250,000 to the proposed inter -Provincial bridge over the Ottawa River. Mr. Ha art said 4150,000 was as much as should be ask- ed. • Geo. Thorndyke, a barber of Strath- roy, was arrested on a charge of bi- gamy, It is alleged that he married Miss Lottie McWilliams, of Lindsay, on May 30, 1894, and within a year mar- ried Miss May Johnston; of Strathroy. The relatives of the Lindsay wife are taking the proceedings. The Hyams brothers were released on fifteen hundred dollars cash bail =Sat-, urday night to appear at the Police Court on Moiiday. They left on Sun- day at noon Wit li Mr. Wellman, their New York counsel, in a special train .for New York. They are not expect- ed to return to Canada. Messrs. 0. A. Howland, M.P.P., T.C.. Keefer, C.E., and T. Monroe have been appointed by the Canadian Government commissioners to confer , with United .States commissioners on the ,feasibility of building such canals as shall en- able vessels engaged in ocean commerce to pass to aridfro between the great lakes and the Atlantic ocean. GREAT BRITAIN. The Prince of Wales is insured for $3,250,000. The failure of Sims Reeves, once Eng- land's greatest tenor, is announced,with liabilities of more than $3,000. Sir Jolie Ponder, the sub -marine cable magnate is in a critical condition, suf- fering from paralysis of the brain. Lord Leighton has bequeathed his Kensington house in trust for the use of future presidents of the Royal Acad- emy 1 It is announced that Laureate Austin is surprised and disheartened be- the un- favorable reception -accorded his first official poem. It ie believed' that Mr. Thomas Sex= ton, who represents North Kerry in' the House of Commons will be selected to, lead the Irish party. The. British Medical Association will shortly hold a meeting at Carlisle. It is likely that its nextmeeting in 1897 will be held in Montreal. . When• Imperial Parliament reas- sembles the stand taken by the G0901.71 - meat on the Venezuelan and Armenian questions will be challenged by the Lib- erals. The London Times thinks that very likely there is some agreement between Russia and Turkey but that it bas tak- en the form of .a treaty is highly im- probable. The Right Hon. Hugh Childers, the English Liberal ,.Statesman, formerly First Lord of the Admiralty and Chan- cellor of the Exchequer, is dead, He was sixty-nine years of age. During 1895 the London mint struck off 72,245,295 coins, about 10,000,000 more than in 1894. The value of the gold coins was £3,592,625, of the silver coins 41,196,168, and of the bronze £40,995. The February Drawing -room has been abandoned, and the Queen will start for the Continent two weeks earlier than previously determined upon, leaving for Cimiez during the first week in March, The Westminster Gazette says it is almost curtain f'that Mr. Justin Mc- Carthy will not resume the leadership of the Irish Parliamentary party in Par- liament after tee 'reassembling of that body. Purcell's Life of Cardinal Manning, in whiob he makes statements regarding the Cardinal's political andreligioos in- trigues which are damaging to the pre- late's reputation, has created a vast amount of °Heine' inCatholic circles. en The London Observer lays it has good authority for stating, that Germany re- cently invited Russia and the other Powers to co-operate in a plan hostile to Eagiand's continued occupation of Egypt, and that the proposition was de- clined by e-clined:by Russia. It is is t at uz'i the Ripe � Me t osers: 1 ,, n Bassi ' of 4 oriel a^ o f ell o m P in n g h t .l l e Ggwer I t Y a with t it on � l 1 deal Ice in- orease of tile Pevy, neesures for the re- lief of husosndry.Irisll land letr islation, nnthe tiestion of tee.supporb of vol- e'Soitools, 'UNITED STATES, viNux l D iwaishnow'91 yearn old, and in Fifteen women's eludes were organized. u Maiao last year. The United Slates treasury gold re- servo is below the $00,000,00Q mark. A Buffalo commission Ileums sent a barrel of^ovaporated apples to Jerusalem on Thursday, Twin sisters, 70 years old, were pre- sent lis witnesses in court at Columbus, Ind., a few days ago. A menun ent to the memory of flahne- mamr is to he orooted to Waellingtoe by 'homoeopethio practitioners, James Dills, who died near faints- ville, Ky., recently, was credited with being only nine days short of 105 years old, There are 39,951 Italians in New York, the largest' colony of this people in the United States, Brooklyn comes 500- ond with 9,593, Tee United States Senate be Satur- day passed the free menage substitute to the House bill by the decisive vote of forty-two t0 thirty-five, Five persona were killed and nearly a score injured, some *2 them fatally, by a• boiler explosion at Hallidaysbung, Pa., on Thursday morning. "Mr. George Bliss, Gov. M'orton's part- ner. in the banking firm of Morton, )'hiss & Co, died at his home, New York, from paralysis of the heart.' Professor C, A. L. 'Totten, a former instructor in Yale, has issued a calen- dar for past and 'Future time, covering a period of 67,713,250 years. A sealing expedition is fitting out at Stonington, Conn., the first to go from there inmany years, Where the sealers propose to huiit is no given out. After a struggle with ancient and modern history, the Washington patent office has granted to a Brooklyn in- ventor letters patent for bloomers. In the United States House of Rep- resentatives 00 Fridaya bill was pass- ed to extend the'time in which, the St, Lawrence railway can bridge the St. Lawrence river. The United States House Committee on Foreign Affairs on Saturday adopted Ambassador party Bayard for resolution speeecches at Edinburgh and Boston, England. Reports from over 50 points in dif- ferent parts of the State show the heaviest rains known in 'Texas at this season for years. Streams are out of their banks and are still rising. Much damage will result. Mr. and Mrs, Stephen G. Thurber, of Warren, R.I., aged respectively 86 and 80 years, died within three days of each other• last week, and were buried to- gether in the same grave. Mr. L. J. Seargeant sailed from New York on the Campania on Saturday to assume his duties in London as advis- ory member of the Board of Directors of the Greed Trunk Railway of Can - ads. Owing to the trouble in Salvation Army ,circles in the United States over Commander Ballington Booth's recall, General Booth is expected to visit the United States on his return from Aus- traria, Me- thodist chi r h at Peru, Ind., e last Thurrhe s day, a man, 40 years old, stood up to ask the prayers of the congregation. told of his belief fn his conversion he Then he made some remarks, and as he fell dead, of heart failure, the doctors said. One Vermont trapper, hailing from Houghtonville, has trapped during this season 1,600 skunks, 171 foxes, 70 minks, 200 muskrats, and 100 coons. The rec- ord seems pretty high, but it is vouched for by a local ppaper, and Vermont has a great reputatidn for galore and trap-. Pers. Th'e Rev. J,,A. Rondthaler, of the Tab- ernacle Presbyterian church, Indianapo- lis, hes been forced to resign on account of his congregation's dislike to his rid- ing a bicycle. Mr. Rondtbaler decided that in such matters of personal rights he could not sacrifice himself to satisfy the old fogies. Major-General Miles appeared lie or before the Commission on Coat Defences in Washington on Tuesday, and stated that the cost of coast defences for the ade- quate protection of the United States would amount to eighty million dollars, not including the price of ammunition and projectiles. • Last Christml.a a San Francisco news- paper gave a silver cup to every child Dorn on the Pacific coast on that day. The offer was not made until some three weeks before Christmas. The Ledger of Mexico, Mo., now announces that it will give a silver cup to every child born in the county next 'Christmas week. Adolph Nioso and his wife, of Colville, Wash., were on Thursday sentenced to twenty years in the penitentiary for beating their ten years' old son to death, Shortly after being taken from the courtroom to their colts both the pri- soners risoners cut their throats with a razor. Mese is dead, and his wife is in a criti- cal condition. Potatoes were selling for two cents a sack in San Francisco a week or ten days ago,' and sold slowly oven at that prem. • The potato crop all over the country last 'season was enormous, and most growers lost money on a consider- able part of their orop. In some regions the potatoes were not taken out of the ground the price got down so low. The telegraphed summaries of the trade, situation in the United States, supplied from New York by the lead- ing commercial agencies of Bradstreet and Dun, are of an indefinite and by no means satisfactory nature. Business is described as "waiting," and there is as yet little if any demand for lead- ing products. The uncertainty as to the course Congress may adopt is a disturbing factor both to commerce and manufactures. There arosome, signs of improvement in the, iron and steel trades, but the average demand is not materially changed as yet though there has been more enquiry during the last few days. Minor' met- als are reported a shade more firm. The boot and shoe trade 18 scarcely be to expeatatioes for this sensate and loath- er and hides are somewhat lower. The cotton oatput is large, and curtailment. of production is spoken o1:. Woollens are unchanged, and. open weather has checked demand. GENERAL. M. Ravier, ex -President of Switzer- land, is dead. ]'jour crops a year can be raised on Cuban soil. Four British war ships are anchored ca. t Port Royal, t a Yal, Jamai Woman elegem are to be excluded from Roman Catnolio Church choirs in Paris, Tho Japanese Government bas opened several ports in Formosa to the trade 0t the World, In e ;laden t'wealth), l h drusen regard it a9 bad farts to ride a heree faster than a walk, The winter is so mild in France this year that daisies are already blooming in the Parisian parks, It is announced Limb Emperor Wits liens will meet ging iiumberi of Italy in February et Genoa. A Paris popes announces that the Iiia- zihe.ns Imo 000uppied the Contested ter- ritory on the border of Frenebi Gulana The Duke end:quchesa of 91aglbornuglt ere traveling up the Nile in e dehabe- yah, wltioh toy baso hired for six weeks, At the militiary licspital at Mons on Sunday a mud soldier, armed with e knife,'suddonly killed two patients acrd Mortally wounded three others, President Kruger, in an interview said that ho wee prepared to meet the wvishos of the 1Jitlondera, and that he had a scheme wbiph lie would submit to the Volksrand. Maraslrtt Centra received , stn ed that during the massaoro of November 18, near that city, from nine te. ten thous- and Christians were killed, It is asserted in SlaVgphile alleles in St. Petersburg that the Bulgarian ques-. tion is •approaching a solution, and that. Prince oreinand s resignation is only. a matter of time, A despatch from" St. Petersburg says that no doubt arrangements point to a conclusign between Russia, Great Bri- tain, France. and Italy for a final set- tlement of the Ilrnienian question, English newspapers reporting Mr. Ohemberlain s recent speech at Bir- mingham or containing the United States Senate's Armenian resolutions are forbidden circulation in Turkey. When in Rome' Signor Crisps has an escort of twenty-nine police officers; which costa Italy $12,500 a year. When he leaves the city the expense is in- creased to three or four times that, amount. The influx of immigrants into South Africa is continuing at such a rapid rate that the Cape Times fears that before many months have passed they will once more be face to face with the, unemployed difficulty'. Among the decorations bestowed at the Elysee on New Year's day was one given to a Sister, of Mercy known as Sister Saint-Bomi, She received the Cross of the Legion of Honour for hav- ing served thirty-nine years in the Mil- itary hospital at Rheims. The change in the British Embassy is talked about, in the diplomatic corps at Paris just now. Su' Philip Currto is spoken of as Lord Duf£erin's probable successor. There have been but three British Ambassadors in Paris during forty years. Dr. Canini, of Leghorn, the specialist on diseases of children, who died a short time ago, has bequeathedhis entire es- tate, amounting to 4'1.60,000, for the es- tablishment and ma,nteuance of achil- dren's hospital devoted to the serum treatment of diphtheria. • WLile King Charles of Portugal was returning to his palace in Lisbon on Thursday, an anarchh't workman threw a stone at his Majesty. The missle hit the Ring's aide -de -came, ,who leaped from the carriage and seized and held the anarchist until he was arrested' by the police. • DIZZINESS IN THE HEAD. This Is a Sure Precursor of Apoplexy and Dr: Agnew's: Cure for the Heart at once to bo Taken. No one can read the daily, papers without being seriously impressed with the fact that a"large number of peo- ple in the present age have within their system the evidence of apoplexy, This is seen and felt often in a trembling and uncertainty of the limbs, and fre- quently in an unpleasant dizziness and lightness of the bead. He is a very unwise man who, knowing these aym- toms to exist, does not promptly take measures to have them removed. We know of no remedy that bas been so remarkably successful in this particu- lar as Dr Agnew's'Cure for the Heart. Primarily it is a heart Cure, but it is extenteqa ually effective in what is to some parallel disease, apoplectic symptoms. In a season 'when unusual beat prevails and excitement often runs high, we are doing a kindness to man and women by letting them know of this remarkable marlines. Sold be U. A. lleauman. f Why the Oat Crop Is a Failure. Farmer Hardacre. -Fate is always ague the farmer. Mr. Cittiman-What is the matter Mr. Iardacre. Farmer Hardacre -Why, I've got a bustin' big crop of oats for the first time in four years, and there's nuthin' to feed 'em to any more but bicycles and trolley care ewe PROTESTANT AND CATHOLIC CLERGYMAN. Are of One Mind Touching the. Remedial Character of Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder. While Protestants and Roman Catho- lics are wide apart as to certain re- medial measures proposed just• now, they find common meeting ground in Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder, Take Hamilton alone. This medicine has been used by Presbyterians tike the Rev. Mungo Fraser, D.D., and Rev. John' Scott, D.D. by Episcopalians as with the Rev. 1,7' A. Wade, and Rev. Chas. E. Whitcombe • by the well known Baptist Rev. G. Anderson; by promin- ent members rominent.members of the Methodist church, and by the Rev. Father }Meehan and many of his parishioners. They all tell the ona story of the great good this medicine has done them. The same story has come from the most prominent clergymen in Toronto and elsewhere. It is unlike any other catarrhal remedy, simple, easy and pleasant to take, aid %intik in a cure. 16 will give relief within ten ,minutes in Hay Paver. Sald by all Druggists. Sample bottle and Blower sent on re- ceipt of two 8 -cent stamps. S. G. Detcbon, 44 Church street, Toronto. Sold by G. A. Deadman. Mrs. Chatterbox -"Do ydu ever make any ergots in speech?" Mrs.Wordsworth Yes; I made one a few years ago." Mrs. Chatterbox-" What was it 8" IsTrs. Wordsworth-." I said Yee,'" A Family Suffers for' Want Ora Mother's Attention, Mr, Neil Morrison, St, John, N. B.: "edy daughter, Mrs, Gregory, has had rheumatism so bad during the last year that she was unable to help her chil- dren, or attend to her household duties. Ever t ing im a inabloeras tried, but to no appose, I was at last reaom- mendedp to get South American Rhine, matic Cure, Otte'• bottle 'oared my daughter within four days, and I take much pleas'ure in giving this recom. mandation.'' Sold by G. A. Deadman. , AREER 0. M INTIai;NSTINc HISTPIIT QF TIME NOW FAIsiO J9 DB, JAMESON, A Pyiiioal Advcntnrc With Ali the 'e'lr tuns and Al4 the Vides of Bit More ramous Pred000asar-noted and len• tertwined by novelty. -Mime ox. Itis Characteristtee, "Dr. jinn" le a Septsnlan, .and strange stories of his dash and eievornesswbefi a boy are told. Companions of his Youth remember how, to get fruit for them he hz''de. would,cioutefy aofil tihe canonfateofs tgarhe honusell0- hold. Go was educated for the medical prpfeesion; and was in good practice at Kimberley when Cepil Rhodes picked him up. Devoted to his profession and making a large income though be was, he abandoned everything to take ,Part in the opening tip of Mashonaland, and bconduct all through the Matabele troubles is written large in South' Afrfcisaaa history. In 1887 Jameson and Rhodes. Were living together at Kimberley in lodg ings that consisted of one "sitting -room and two bedrooms. It is not generally knaves that Rhodes owes his life to the doctor, who attended him assiduously,. night and day, through a dangerous ill n0ss, This laid the foundation of their friendship. When the infant operations of the future chartered company were endang- ered' by Lobengula, Jameson made his .way, alone and unarmed, to the dusky King's presence. His friends thought be would • never return. But the King was ill, and Dr. Jameson's fame as a medi- ,eine man had penetrated toLobengula's court. ,$e was, therefore, called upon. to euro the Ring. This, fortunately, he. succeeded in doing, Lobendula and all bits retinue were delighted,' and the doc- tor not only obtafhed the concession he was in quest of, but permission for the. Pioneer force to march through Mashers. aland. When Fort Salisbury bad been es- tablished, the question arose as to a direct route to the coast. Jameson took the matter in hand. Accompan- ied by Major Johnson, be marched from Fort Salisbury to Sarmento on the Pungwo river, then an unknown region, and so on to Beira. The Beira railway wasthe result. In his visit to Loben- gula and his march to the coast Dr. Jameson had given ample evidence of the stuff of which he was made, and on his return to Fort Salisbury he received the ,. SUPREME COMMAND. But a quiet career, however exalted, was not in his way, and when, a little later, it became necessary for an offi- cial fficial of the company to visit Chief Gun- gonyana, at the mouth oz the Limpo- po, Dr. Jameson undertook the task. It was a two months' journey, prac- tically on foot, through a deadly clim- ate. The doctor on this occasion was accompanied by Dr. Doyle and Mr. Moody end a Doylewas' stricken down terbsy fever,Fit then.Dfoody, and finally Jamesom him- self. They suffered from want of food, and for many days were exposed to a pitiless rain, After two months' march through forest and swamps they ar- rived 'in rags and half dead at their destination. A stay there to recruit, and Jameson and his party started for the const, and so home again. ter- rible was on. ey tht return eson trecco ris eceived the post of Administrator of Mashona- land. in succession to Mr. Archibald Col- quhoun, and in that capacity had a very narrow escape of a brush with the Boers. When the latter were preparing to trek across the Limpopo into new territory Dr. Jameson and a band of Bechuana- land police met them, and, although bloodshed seemed, at first unavoidable, Jameson succeeded in turning back the trekkers without the fir of single shat. firing a g e Laterm ca a the Matabele war, whioh, if its necessity be admitted, even his greatest detractors would declare Jameson carried through in a manner worthy,of him. The forces at his com- mand in that campaign numbered about 2,000 and they were manipulat- ed with a prompitude and decision worthy of a v eteran in the field. The war was sharp,but short, and what- ever credit thre was in connection with it was very largely due to Jame- son. For his services in Rhodesia the doctor was made a Companion of the Bath about a year. ago. It was about the same time that Dr. Jameson and Cecil Rhodes were feted in England and entertained by Royalty - at the Imperial Institute, in the com- pany of such guests as the late Lord Chancellor, the Duke of Fife, Earl Grey, Lord Playfair, Sir Frederic Leighton, Sir R. Herbert, and Sir C. •Mills. The Prince of Wales on that occasion, amid the enthusiasm of near- ly 3,000 hearers thanked Dr. Jameson for his."moat interesting and excel - 1 t xcel-lent address, ' and 'hoped that he would continue to be most successful" in his wor kin South Africa; and it was also on the same occasion that Dr. Jameson expressed his belief that Rhodesia "must lee a great factor in what he hoped would be attained, viz., a commercial union, - of the different States of South Africa." He ventured to think that "within a reasonable time even the Transvaal would join in a much -desired confederation." Miss Balfour, a ur in her recently-publish- ed eoently-Aabrinh-ed account of �"Twelve Hundred Miles in a Waggon," gives the following de- scription of DR. JAMIISON'S ABODE Jt Duluwayo:"Dr. Jameson and Sir. 'oho Willoughby, who have a house betweon the old and new towns, about tWO miles from the latter, aro living n tents, and have given up their rooms i"* I have Sir John eVilloughbyy's oom. This is a true and faithful de- ription of it: It has mud walls, mud r so floor, thatched roof, with', no wiling, doors made of two packing -case lids, and an unglazed window, with shutter, of rough boards, Pnrniture-a bed stead, one box upside down, Como wooden sholveg, a small strip of mat- ting, an empty whisky bottle doing duty as a, candlestick, and (Oh. lux- , ury 1) a table 1 Dr. dameson's room is much the same, only it has a sit -inch square Molting -gime as well. ""The dinin room and kitchen are Diose by. .e« The house is very comfortable, really, although my description •of it maymakeyou think it is ins an ro- o p ria{: abode for the Adm` istrat premise m or of a territory as large as Franca." But the Doctor was always a Spartan in his tastes. To those who know biro it is not dif- fimes cult to see the reason of Jaon's g teat sweets. "He is," wrote Dr. severs, who_ saw much of him as a atndemt, iii, Par) of wide and deeps oa• hisilit istcttnetilty, therefore,onc nraed., �'ha' seorot et success in the work of life is concentration. It is the die., fusion of ability, the scatterin Cif the shot, whiell prevents .any grew result. Dr. Jameson 10 ane of the won wild tosses auliulistinctive ceaar d Monetent� ped volition of the relation o1 means to ends, of the ends • worth pureeing and of the zuea'nesYhteh will secure thein. To this he unitesa physiques capable 01constant hardship, which responds with increasing strength to buffet, and 4490 an intrepid courage and a ea aelty, when need arises for untiring lahor," The Spiteful Thing. Mrs. Mann-lt is so provokingi That girl I discharged last week i.e going about telling everybody what a splen- did woan mam, 31 or r Ma A • AiMd rs. anan-Of coarse 1 do, Don't you see that the artful thing is trying to make people believe that she left of her own accord hehat nyou find fault with DO NOT SUFFER, With Kidney Complaint -you Can be Re- lieved ' Within six Hoare. 1 take much.pleasure in stating that 11 have been using South American Kid. ney Cure, and found relief within six hqurs after first dose taken. 1 became sick in January, 1803, when I employed several of the local physicians, and was treated by them until the Fall of 1893 without receiving much benefit. ISidney than began using South American Cure, and have found great benefit, and am almost, if not quite. cured. Have not been taking any of the medicine for seven weeks, and feel as well as ever. MRS. A. E, YOUNG DAM/ETON, P.Q. Sold by G. A. Deadman, FOR TWENTY -4C' YEARS. UNN'S i KINC OWDER THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND LARtO ST SALE 121 CANADA, Weak and Nervous Whenever the body has been weak- ened, by disease, it should bo built up by hood's Sarsaparilla. Read this "About two years age I suffered with a very severe attack of inflammation of, the bowels. When I began to recover I was in a very weak and nervous condition, and suffered intensely With neuralgia pains in myhead, which caused loss of sleep, end having no appetite, I Betaine Very Thin and weak, F,ortunatelva'friend who had used Hootl's Sarsaparilla with great bene - 50 kindly recommended me to try it. I did so and aperfect cure has been effected. lam now as well as I ever Was, and I would not be without Hood's Sarsaparilla in my house for anything," Mas. G. KERN, 245 Manning Ave., Toronto, Ont, ' Sarsaparilla. Hood's Sara pair la Is the;Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in the public eye today. Hood's Pills easytobny,easytotaks, easy in 015000, lac, Many people in New York city spend the night riding in the elevated railroad cars, as they find it cheaper than going to a hotel. Four round trips from the battery to the Harlem, going up on the east side, and coming down on the west, consumes about eight hours and costs only twenty 'cents. a RIK The Bane' of Millions of Lived u s ..Kir r.Fr 101141 1+'lll 1 t ,i t petit r It►�iyi L ON h`f Sick Heads -be is a malady which makes its appearance most frequently in women. The attack often begins in the morning, upon awakening, after a night of restlessness or heavy sleep ; though it is especially wont to occur in connection with emotional disturbances, such as excitement, fright or mental strain. The pain is usually localized, being in one or the other, more frequently the left side of the Bead, It is generally accompanied. by ,great disturbance of the stomach,' when light pains the eyes;' noises otherwise unnoticed inflict punishment; odors excite nausea. From the fact that people with strong nerves are never troubled with Sick Headache, it is generally eoncoded by the most eminent phy sicians that it is dependent upon weak nerves or nervous debility, and can only be permanently cured by strengthening the nervous system.' The Great South American Ner- vine Tonic is the only remedy manu- factured which is prepared especially and expressly for the nerves. It acct' directly on the nerve centres at the base of the brain, correcting any derangement there may bo, greatly increasing the supply of nervous tsaergy'or servo force, giving great. coy /� '..•••'* . a- tone to the whole body, and thereby enabling a system subject to Sick Headache to withstand future attacks. It gives relief in one day and speedily effects a permanent care. Mrs, Isabella S. Graham, of ,( Friendswood, Indiana, writes: "For a number of years I have suffered i intensely with Nervous and Sick Headache ; had hot flashes, was sleepless and became . despondent Dr. Faris, of Bloomington, Indiana, spoke so highly of South American Nervine that I was induced to buy a bottle. That purchase led to a fear others, and now I sleep soundly, feel buoyant, strong and vigorous. I t would not be back in the condition Y , was in when I began taking this• medicine for any sum yon could 06010. Mrs, J. H. Prouty, of La Grange,, ]ndiana, writes: "Your South Amer. loan Nervine worked a marvellt)us. cure with me last year. I began taking it, last April about the 201h. 1 The first week ;i made a gain of 1B lbs. and from that time on I made a steady gain until I reached my • normal weight, making in all a total gain of SO lbs, After taking n it three or four months 1 found myself wall woman." A. DRIVE Wholesale and Retail Agent far Urnsails.