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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1896-3-6, Page 71VTAR,c;It 0, 18 ,90 1�-'""•"""-"""T""""" .:.....:�. .:.:.:.... ,.gym .�,:�:: XOTRS 4izl'D aa, 0.r, airxs, mmt Tlta Kssion ef tim British House of (;'ommnna which began on the 1111z t - Meet, will be an o nLfT one for Elle., ijsh' political Pa party lino+$ for as long a period as did olio'se$sien of 1886, when Mr. Gladstone and the majority of the Liberala threw in their lot with the Irish Nationalists. Nopunelly, the ellioai o of 1880 still ex- ists, but it is extremely 'donbLfnl whe- ther it will outlast tiro present session, On general prineilales, two of the three groups into which the nletionelisLs are non' divided are in favor of sheering off item the Morals, a divergence which both the Redmond and the Kealy group rondo pieta even before the general elec- tion of last year, Shiee then the edu- cation queetion has been the most dis- missed of English domestic subjects, and the leaders of three groups, Mr. McCarthy, Mr'. Beale and Mr. Redmond, thave mob given the Liberals notice that in opposing tbo plans of the govern- ment on education, they must not count on the support of oho Irish members, The explanation of this change of front toward their allies of the last ten years is that when the Sallebury govern - meat amends the Education acts more money will be granted to the Church of England and to the Roman Catholic church for their eohools; and although tee question is exclusively an English one. the Irish members are determined to uphold the English bishops and priests. On the other hand, the Lib- erals are almost unanimous in their op- position to any further patching up of en unsatisfactory school system; but they will have to make their protests alone, for any help 'they may receive from the Liberal Unionists will bo more than counterbalanced in the Commons lay the eiglty-two Irish votes. A break in the Liberal and National alliance was almost certain after an election which produced results like those of last year, and it may be just as well for the Lib- erals that it should came Ln the first session of the new Parliament. The Liberals are still in the disorgan- ized state is wbioh the election of last summer left them, but an attempt at reorganization will be made in March, when the National Liberal Federation meets. The difficult task Dan be en- tered upon with more advantage when the Liberals in Parliament have deter- mined upon their future attitude to- wards the Nationalists. After all the Liberal party has gone through for Home Rule, there is naturally some im- patience at what is described as the in- gratitude of the Irish party. The gov- erwawut does not need the Irish sup- port. its own following in the Commons numbering 31% irrespective of the sev- enty Liberal Unionists, while the Lib- erals number only 177. As regard sup- port in the Commons, no government bas been so extraordinarly well plac- ed since the time of Pitt; and for al- most the first time since then, no question involving any constitutional change is likely to be submitted to Par- liament, either from the government or from the opposition benches, Few of the world's discoverers and inventors blow their trumpet very loudly before they have a surd thing. In this respect they differ entirely from these other men wbo roar at large about the discovery or the invention which they are going to .rake in short order, but which they never make. There are hundreds and thousands of these per- sons. They are' going to fly, or to cross the ocean in two days, or to find a cure for the dumps, or to straighten out things on a new plan, or to make life sweet without soft sawder. or to com- municate with the nobodies who live up in Mars, or to write a book that will make you stare, or to do something - ter than anybody else as soon as a patent can be procured. We hear of these boasters every day, and yet we don't believe that they are all mounte- banks. :They talk beforehand. They can't wait. They put the cart ahead of the horse. We `wish, for example, that Zucberbubler or that other flying - machine man who lives in Germany would rig up their wings and start off for the clouds. We wish the man who is to cross the sea quick as lightning would do it, and tbat the other men would not mention their projects until carried out. Look at Bontgen, who did not go round. for years telling about the job in which he was engaged. Tho find: we heard of the cathodal ray was when he gave practical evidence of its existence and utility, to the estonish- anent of the whole scientific world. Wo have a liking for a surprise of that kind, Brave Hearts. It seems a hard and heartless thing to say that one should not yield to weariness or to the milder forms of ill- ness; but the world is a stern task- master, and really seems to care little what the condition of the worker is so long as the labor is faithfully perform- ed. Be this as it may, there is very little sympathy expressed for those who fail to Snout the requirements of their position; indeed It would be im- possible to allow any business to be,at the caprice of half -sick people who give up to their aches and pains every time a fresh spasm of misery sweeps across their tired bodies. The ranks of busi- ness are full of people who work on day after day regardless of aching heads and hearts, tired feet, and almost brok- en spirits, And, in a way, this is right To give up would benefit neither thorn nor anybody else, and would be a mit- fortune to them and their families. To keep up, whatever comes along, is al- together the best way.To refuse to Meld to physical pain and depression is often to combat it successfully, and has in many instances, driven it out and allot~ tbo sufferer to regain the normal condition. A red nose may be due to a choler - Le temper, a bad liver, or bad liquor. In any case it is an unfortunate Sign, THE NES ItA N TEE VERY LATEST FROM ALLTLIH WORLD DYER, Interesting Items About Our ewe country, (beat. Britain, the United States, and Ali Ports of the ❑lobe, Condoneed and Assorted for limy Reading. CANADA, Mrs. Ifurd, mother of Lady Van Horne, is dead, Sir William Van Borne has gone to the Babamss for his beat th, A bozseless vehicle exbibition will probably be held in, I3uuilittn. Kingston will give the Queen's Cwn an invitation to visit that eitY cc the Queen's Birthday, Sir Hibbert Tupper has entered the Halifax law firm of Bordon, Ritchie, Parker & Chisholm, The bill to provide dor the marking of cheese was introduced in Parlia- ment by Mr. Foster, Judge Woods sentenced William Clark at Chatham to five years in the penitentiary for stealing grain, Dir, Foster has given notice in the mouse of a resolution authorizing a loan of 23,000,000 to put the defences of the country in shape, The Dominion Supreme Court, in the case of Neaten. y, Tomato, maintained the right of the architect of the To- ronto municipal buildings to dismiss the contractor'. The Government has obtainedudg- ment against Mr. Andre Senecas for $12,500 paid him by contractors ae bribes while he was Superintendent of the Printing Bureau. Ald. Dfarshall of London has return- ed from England and the deadlock in the Council which has existed since the The commiktgeesf the year, was broken. The cathode photo of Madame Al- bans's hand, taken at Kingston by Capt. Cochrane, shows that the ' X" rays will penetrate diamonds., This may afford a certain method of testing diamonds. Prof. Robertson gave important in- formation before the House Committee on Agriculture regarding the export of food products to Britain. lie says beef is more profitable to export than live cattle, The city of Hamilton will seek legis- lation at the present session of the Ou- tnrio Legislature to repeal the clause in the charter of the Hamilton Gas Light Company granting a franchise in per- petuity Mr. William Jarman, a retired mer- chant, died in London, Ont., after un- dergoing an operation in the hospital. He was 79 years of age, and arrived in London with e, British regiment fifty years ago. The City of Brantford has brought an anion against the Grand Trunk Railway to restrain them from mov- Mg the ear shops to London,' and to recover the bonus of $32,500 granted to the railway by the city. Mr. F. H. McGuigan has been appoint- ed general superintendent of all the Grand Trunk lines east of St. Clair and Detroit rivers, with headquarters at Montreal, while Mr. Jahn W. Loud hes been made general freight agent for the same division. G. B. H. Morin, who was sentenced to bo hanged in 1890 for the murder of a man named Roy, and afterwards had his sentenoe commuted to imprison- ment for life in St. Vincent de Paul Penitentiary, has been set free by Lord Aberdeen's order. Information bas been received in Ot- tawa that the Behring Sea treaty with the United States, which was some time ago forwarded to Sir Julian Pauncefote at Washington by the Colonial Secre- tary in London, bas at last been sign- ed by the Tlnited States Government. The public accounts of the Province of Ontario have been brought down. They show a decrease in the expendi- ture, which was $3,758,595,44, as against $3,842,505.20 last year, and an increase in the reeeipts, which were 23,585,300.10, as against #3,453,162.69 last year. Mr. W. Alex. Caldwell, one of the best known accountants and curators in the Province of Quebec' a member of the firm of Caldwell, Tait and Wilks, audit- ors, chartered accountants and trustees, of Montreal, has left that city for parts unknown, with a shortage estimated at 250,000. Principal Grant, of Queen's Univer- sity,Kingston, in a debate on the single tax theory, at a meeting of the Queen's Alumni Conference oa Wednesday night, gave it as his conviction, based on years of study, that single tax was founded on u false statement of facts, and a false philosophy of life. Mr. James Scott, one of Toronto's leading retail dry goods merchants, committed suicide on Saturday by leap- ing from' one of the Rosedale bridges, a fall of more than 120 feet, while suf- fering, it is believed front a fit of in- sanity. Thu deceased was in easy cir- cumstances, but had been in ill -health for a considerable time. GREAT BRITAIN. Earl Grey has been appointed co -ad- ministrator with Mr. Cecil Rhodes, of the British South African Company. All officers holding commissions from her Majesty who took part in Jame - son's raid in South Africa will be tried by court-martial. Hiram Maxim has fitted to a tricycle a machine with two Maxim guns, each weighing 25 pounds, and capable of fir- ing 600 shots per minute. The Princess of Wales, on behalf of the Queen, will hold two drawing -rooms at Buckingham palace, one on March 11, and the other on April the 21st. The second son of the Duke of York was baptised in the March at Sand- rinham on Monday. The infant was christened Albert Frederick George Ar- thur, Mr. Andrew Boyd of the late firm of Boyd, Gilles & Co. has been arTosted in London, England, on charges of forgery and arson. He will be brought to Canada. The Scotch farmers have preferred ob- jet:Um to e bill for the exclusion of oreign cattle. They base their objec- tions on the fact that Canadian store cattle have proved a success. The British Admiralty has ordered that the new fast steamer Gladiator be fit- ted for the consumption of petroleum as fuel. This is the first experiment of the kind in the British navy. The Queen returned to Windsor from the Isle of Wight on `Thursclay. Provi- our to her departure from the island she depposited a wreath on the casket eon- taining the remains of Prince IIonry of .Battenberg. The Marquis of Salisbury did not visit the Queen during her stay at Osborne, notwithstanding the troublous times. This Is duo to the fact that the Pgemler ie it horribly bad sailor, and suffers greatly from sea -sickness. • - Admiral a ATeCllntoclr, who botwego 1818 and 1807, was connected with faun• Aran ie. expeditions 10 soureb of Sir John Frenklln's remains, does not believe that PoDr'l, o,Nanson lout discovered the Ner'tli The offwiaLe of the Imperial Foreign O11ae confirm. tits report that a dataob- went of British marines have been land, ed et C11omulpo and sent to Seoul, the le oapgattalion there. of Corea, to prpteet the British The steamer'farIcell, with 300 of the South Africa raider's, arrived at Ply- mouth on Sunday morning, and at mid- night the transport Victoria Arrived with Dr. Jameson and the offioers. No eommnnleation was allowed with .the last named steamer. While the feeling in :English political circlesis generally in favour of rio- ting a joint ooznmission to enol the Venezuelan boundary dtapute, dt is pointed out that no offioiai suggestion in that direction has yet been made by the Government of tpc United States, Mr, George Cuz 400, the Under-Seere- tary to the British Foreign Office, stat- ed on Friday that the Government re- cently, agreed with France to renew the Newfoundland modus Vivendi of 1890 re- garding the lobster fishery, and that no negotiations were in proTresa looking to taking up the fishery question in gen- Prof, Goldwin Smith, while in New York, on his way to Lakewood, N.J., for rest and recuperation, was interviewed on the European situation. He believed that all boundary questions should be settled by arbitration, and he hoped that the Venezuela dispute would be settled in this manner. He regarded the Afri- can trouble as a firebrand that mayset all Europe in a blare, Itis learned. from asemi-official source that negotiations are going on at pre- sent between France and England on the subject of the French shore of New- foundland. The basis of the negotia- tions involves the coding of curtain of ETunis in exchange dor ts the Frren h clof aims. in Newfoundland, Lord Dufferin, the Britislt Ambassador to France, is con- ducting the negotiations. UNITED STATES. There is a water famine in Buffalo, and there is practically no water for household purposes. Commander and Mrs, Bailington Booth, of New York, have resigned from the Salvation Army. Mr. Nye, the humorist, known under the pen name of Bill Nye, died an Sat- urday. He was forty-six years of age. Eight persons lost their lives in a fire wbioh destroyed the residence of Mr. James R. Ar'miger at Baltimore. A large meeting was held inPhiladel- phia on Saturday, which declared itself in favor of international arbitration, Mrs, Valentine Kurtz, of South Dan- ville N.Y., has abstained from food for thirty-four days, and she will endeavor to outdo all records in the fasting line, It is expected that the engagement will shortly be announced of Mx. Wm. Waldorf Astor to Lady Randolph Churchill President Cleveland has signed the Act extending until 1898 the time for the completion of the reilway bridge aaroas the St. Lawrence river, in St. Lawrence County, N.Y. Ezekiel J. Donnell, the New York cot- ton merchant who died recently, left an estate of six hundred thousand dol- lars, which, in Dasa of the decease of his wife and daughters, is to be used to establish a free circulating library in New York. Dr. Donald Smith, a Philadelphia phy- sician, has returned from an expechtion to Lake Rudolph, Africa. He discovered a race of pigmies who are coal black and absolutely naked. They range be- tween four and five feet in height, and live in primitive conical huts. Prof, le. L. Garner, of Roanoke, Vt., has returned from Africa, whither he went to renew his study of the monkey language. He is convinced that mon- keys talk to each other, and that some of them possess a higher intelligence and a greater fluency of language than many of the African natives. Dr. Seaman, who was convicted in De- troit on Wednesday on the charge of having caused the death by a criminal operation of the young English girl, Emily Hall, who was sent to Detroit from England by her betrayer, was on Friday sentenced to ten years' 'impri- sonment impr1sonment in Jackson State prison. Eleven respectable young men who reached Ocala, Fla., a couple of weeks ago on a bunting and fishing expedition were arrested as tramps and sent to a convictcamp, where tlaey were horribly treated, They were released on a , ha- beas corpus, but the injuries they re- ceived are likely to prove fatal to five of the party. Commercial telegrams from New York business agencies are not cheerful reading. There is actually no appre- ciable advance in trade. Bad wea- ther, storms, and generally adverse cli- matic conditions are of course to be taken into account; but outside this the general tenor of advices is that prices are lower, requirements unpre- cedentedly easy, and payments unusual- ly poor ; in fact, "extensions" use being much too frequently asked for, while present and prospective features of busi- ness in the United States are not en- couraging, GENERAL. Bear Admiral Pallister has been ap- pointed to the command of the Pa- cific naval station. The report of the uprising .of the maroons at St. Elizabeth, Jamaica, has been ascertained to be false. During the recent storms in the Black Sea seven ,steamers and eighteen sail- ing vessels foundered, and one hundred lives were lost. The natives of Samoa hare organized a Governnient of their own, and expect to take the power away from the pres- ent authorities. The Madrid policehave arrested sev- eral persons on suspicion of exploding a petard on Wednesday night in the square iu front of the Royal. palace. A despatch from St, Petersburg says the young King of Corea has arrived there, with the object of seeking the protection of Russia for his country. The Ministerial crisis in France has assumed grave proportions, The Min- istry is defying the Senate, and a revo- lution is talked of in some quarters. Tito Emperor Menelek, of Abyssinia, bas written to the Queen of England and the Czar of Russia asking them to intervene and compel Holy to make peace. It is reported that the health of Prince George, the Czarewitch, is much less hopeless tban has been so often de- clared. With care he tatty live from tan to twenty years. Mimed Bey, formerly Imperial Com- missioner on the Public Debt, has fled from Constantinople and taken refuge in Cairo. Ile bile been condemned to death for alleged treason. Recent despetobas received in Rome' front Abyssinia tell of the treachery of native troops under General Baratieri. It a t revolt s'i have a I Is feared that the yo t ll had effect on other native clues, The Proneb President makes the rule of retesing early Le rest at night, This habit is well known to hie guests, and the President's dimer parties usually break up soon utter' tan o'clock. Some or lalf•pest seven is his favorite dinner' hour, The grounding of the Gorman steam- er at ,lsmaallia, for several days, com- pletely'blocking the traffic of the Suez Canal to all but vowels of very light draught, has opened the eyes of the British Government to a serious con- dition of affairs. An entire company of Alsatians, be- longing to the sixty-ninth German In- fentry of, the line, in garrison at Tre- ves. Rhenish Prussia, deserted in a body, and marched solvesthe 'frontier, in oompany order, wearing fullregi- mentals, The men were immediately disarmed, but were allowed their free- dom, HERE AND THERE A GEM. A man endowed with great perfec- tions, without good breeding, is like one wbo has his pookets full of gold, but always Wants change for his ordinary nceasions.'--Steele. All .ply experience of the world Maxillas'me that in ninety-nine roses out of a hundred the safe and just side of a question is the generous and merel- ful side.—Mrs. Jameson. What can be more foolish than to think that all this rare fabric of heaven and earth could come by cbance,wben ail the skill of art is not able to make an oyster.—Jeremy Taylor. An inexhaustible good nature is one of the most precious gifts of heaven, spreading itself like oil over the troubl- ed sea of thought, and keeping the .rind smooth and equable in the rough- est weather.—W. Irving. In early life you may lay the founda- tion of poverty or riches, industry or idleness, good or evil, by the habits to which you train your children. Teach them right habits then, and their fut- ure life is safe.—Anon. There is a moral excellence attainable by all who have the will to strive for it; but there is an intellectual and phy- sical superiority which is above the roach of our wishes, and is granted only to a few: Crabbe. Where we can not invent, we may at least improve; we may give somewhat of novelty to that which was old, con- densation to that which was diffuse, per- spiceity to that which was obscure, and currencyto that which was recondite.— Colton. Accustom yourself to submit on ev- ery occasion to a small present evil, to obtain a greater distant good. This will give decision, tone and anergy to the mind, which, thus disciplined, will often reap victory from defeat, and hon- or from repulse.—Colton. TALE OF A MINE. Deserters 'Who Did Thirty -Two Tears Ago -The Kline Cared In and They Were imprisoned. A despatch from Colliers, W. Va.. says: David Snyder recently explored an told mine near here which bas not been worked since the 60's, and discover- ed Truman bones. Ona of the skeletons was sitting upright against a ledge. Beside this skeleton was found a flask containing a note which explained the mysterious disappearance of John Ewing, Ben Ayers, Tom Aokelson, and Joe Obney, tbirty-two years ago. The notes were written in pencil, but well preserved. They read as follows:— November 2, 1853,—Should this ever reach the outside world, let it be known that we (giving names) are prisoners here, owing to the caving -in of the mine. We are deserters, and were in biding here when the mine caved in. Food and water all g0ue. We are doomed, as no one outside is aware of ,our hereabouts. This is about the eighth day of imprisonment. November 4,—John Ewing and Tom Aokelson have just killed Ben Ayers and are eating him. I have already eaten my bootleg. The water in the mine is terrible. Our oil is getting scarce, air becoming foul. I only know the day of the month by my watch. November 6, --Ewing has just }tilled Aokelson, cut off one of his feet, and is eating it, and dancing around and flourishing his dirk like a maniac. November 7,-1 am now alone with the dead. I had to kill Ewing in self- defence. I have just eaten my other bootleg. Am sleepy. Good-bye. I en- close this note in this flask to preserve it if possible, so that if ever found our sad fate will be known. JOSEPH OBNEY. Several old residents hereabouts re- member these men. THE PAIN LEFT QUICKLY. Rheumatism of Seven Years' Standing Oured in a Few Days. I have been a victim of rheumatism for seven years, being confined to bed for months at a time, unable to turn myself. I have been treated by many physicians in this part of the country, none of whom bepefited me. I had no faith in rheumatic cures advertised, but my wife induced me to get a bottle of South American Rheumatic Cure from Mr. Taylor, druggist, Owen Sound. At the time I was suffering agonizing pain, but inside of twelve hours after I took the first doss the pain left me. I continued until I took throe bottles, and I consider I am completely cured. (Signed) 3'. D. McLEOI), Leith • P.O., Ont. Sold by G. A. Deadman. We are commonly taught our duty by fear or shame, but how can they act upon a man who hears nothing but his own praises 0—Johnson, Fear is implanted in us as a preserva- tive from evil; but its duty, like that of other passions, is not to overbear reason, but to assist Lt.—Johnson. WORK OF A SINGLE DAY. Some Startling Facts Oonoernihhg tlh Action of the Heavt• Do people recognize the immense work transacted by the heart In a sin- gle day 0 It equals that of lifting one hundred and fifty pounds to a height of thirty-three hundred feet, And yet, knowingly, or through ignor- ance, nine out of ten people abuse this hardeat worked organ of the body. There is nothing remarkable in the fact that heart failure and apoplexy are among the most prevalent diseases of the day. happily a remedy is fouud in llr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart, which gives relief instantly. This me- dicine should be kept in every house, so that on the slightest indication of heart trouble le maybe taken, It baa saved, by its prompt and offioient work, the lives of thousands of Canadians, Sold, by G. A. Deadman. KIDNEY TRDURZSEi The Sane of 1K11llons of Livoo, Gan be (Purest. The diseases that we 30 dread do not coma upon us et one step , They are a matter of growth, Tile sail news is only too gammon of friepds who have died of Bright'a disease, diabetes and kindred complaints, It is known that in the system of thousands exists the $reds that in a short time will develop into these dread maladies. Disease of the kidneys un its mildeet form never stands still, The warning is worth needing that efforts should be prompt- ly taken to eradicate the slightest symptoms of kidney disease, and in South American Kidney Caro is found a sure and safe remedy for every form of kidney trouble, Whether chronic, inolpient Or in .110x0 of the diatrasain ' deetive andewh t is 'it sinvto an eh a ready and quick Curo, g ow, Cam Sold h, at. A. Deadman. A Long Journey on Stilts, About two yeare ago a Frenchman made a bet that he would walk from Paris to Berlin and back again cm stilts, the stipulation being that he should not once, while on the actual journey, get down from his pedestal, He tookkis food and iris sleep leaning up against the walls of churches and of houses, and, strange to tell, he won his bet. Catarrh and Hay Fever Relieved in Ten to sixty Minutes. Ona short puff of the breath through the blower, supplied with each bottle of Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder, dif- fuses this powder over the surface of the nasal passages. Painless and de- lightful to use, it relieves instantly and permanently cures catarrh bay fever, colds, beadacbe, sore throat, ton - stalls and deafness. DD cents. Sold by druggists. Sample bottle and blow- er sent on receipt of two three -cent stamps. S. G. Detobon, 44 Church st., Toronto. Sold by G, A, Deadman. FOR TWENTY-SIX YEARS, 7 THECOOIL'SSESTFRIEND LAOLFST SALE IM CANADA. Y Qrk�'it`.is. Purified Blood Saved an operation in the followiitgf ease. Mood's Sarsaparilla euros when. all others fail. It makes pure blood. "A year ago my father, William Thomp. sou, was taken suddenly ill with Infame oration of the bladder. Re • suffered a great deal and was very low for some time; At last the doctor said be would not get well unless an operation was performed. At this time we read about Hood's Sarsapa- rills and decided to try it. Before be need halt a bottle his appetite had come baok to him, whereas before he could eat but little. When he had taken three bottles of the medicine he was as well as ever." Themes J. T$otz5so4, Peninsula Lake, Ontario. Remembers H:. od's Sarsaparilla is the Only True Blood Purifier Promineutly in the public eye today. OOdf cur05.1101110: ills, bilious. S Pills.ashe25e. His Express Desire. Salesmen—Do you want to have your goods ley yoyor anress? Customer-Cerainly, fu can find a particular express. I can't. Jatnee A. Bell, of Beaverton. Ont., brother or the Itgv. John 15 ealey hail, prostrated by• nervous heauaches A. victim of the trouble fur several years. Mouth American Nervine effected a complete cure. In their own particular field few men are betcr kuown than the Res, John Wesley Boll, B.1)., and his brother Mr. Jams A, Bell. The former win ne re- cognized by his thourands ut friends all over the country ns the popular and able missionary superintendent et the Iloyat Tempters of Temperance. Among the 20,000 members of this order in Ontario his counsel i3 sought en all sorts of oc- easions. On the public platform he is one of the strong men of the day, nettling against the eras of inteineerence. Equally well known 1'e Dir, Bell in other pros/Mere of the Ilominion, bi.ving been for years n member of the il:iouitob:h Methodist Conference and part of this time was stationed In t'innipeg. His brolhor, 3lr, ,Temtes A.. Bell. is e mghly respected resident of Bens -erten, wnere his influence, though 1:1111115 more cite ee1tilaerlbe,d than Gust et his eminent brother, is none the less effective and productive of good, Of recent Yeers,h,rw- ever, the working ahilite of 111r..1ant5s .A. Bell hes been sadly .mired by severe attacks of nervous headache, ncront- ponied by indigestion. Who can do fit work when this trouble talcs hold of then and especially when it becomes chronic, as was, seemingly, the case with Mr. Bell? The trouble reached 8000 in- tensity that last ,lune he was complete- ly prostrated. In this condition n -friend recommended Sttuth American Nervine. Ready to try anything and everytniag, though he thought he had coverer the list of proprietary medicines, be secured a bottle of this great discovery, ,S second bottle of the medicine Ives taken and the work wee done. Employing his own language: "Two bottles of South American Nervine immediately .relieved my headaches and have bunt up my system in a wonderful manner." Let us not deprecate the good our clergymen mid social reformers are doing to the world, but how ill -fitted they would bee for their work were it not the relief that South American Nervine brings to them when pbysleel ills overtake them, and when the system, as a re- sult of ]lard, earnest and continuous 'work, breaks down. Nervine treats the system els the wise reformer treats ;he evils be is battling against. 11 striates at the root of the trouble. Alt dig• ease comes from disorganization of the ' nerve centers, This is a scientific tact. Nerviue at once works all these nerve. centers; gives to them health and vig- or; and then there courses through the system strong, healthy, ]ife-maintareing blood, and -Ammons troubles of every variety are things of the Past, A. »EAD1LAiv Whole sale and Retail &.gent for Rrussett