HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1896-3-13, Page 713, 189l$
It is definitely annoeed Buit te
Prince oc 'Wale, out of rasaot fo' Lho
�"IIwy of 1?rJnaa Uenry1.zrlll not rano, hs o tte Br t hilL. I NUTSHE[L n r A arna ill Rivieraga as e tt ,
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;1'HL' VI;RV LATEST iFROM ALL TGE • Co! bake, et the Canadian staff, has
Met With a very favorable reception. i'n
WARLD oVRR,
that Canaa le to 114 1(0 rn ga ne rifles
wile:. which to rearm the militia,
Leaden, a d Lord Wolseley has settled
da zl
latergstlna Reels Alma Olir own country, Frederick Leigjiton'speerage. was the
ore" 11rltaln, tlDe u°44° statea, and.. shortest lived. in .the history of l ngiiind;
All parts el the abbe, condensed end era (Ileaa on the day following that upon
Assorted ter i3asy Reading. which to patent of nobility was ise�gped,
CANADA. and es he left no heir the titioadirad.
At qaebee the St,Lawrenee River lies with him,
risen Vigil enough to flood several In the British house of Commons on
streets in the vioinite, ,of the dooke, Thursday, Mr, Curzon, Under Seeretary
M IlemPton, N,5„ on Friday, George f ovr eilnueenreligas notnf Office, said
trecent't ly
Ilingley, aged eleven years, was aeeaY
dentally shot and killed by his brother. a tu;olased from any Government in-
volving Herald has been appointed pia volving the evacuation of Egypt,
T reply
iessor'ol clinical medicine at Queen's n ply to a question . e the
health oC
Canadianot
cattle,
at in ba 134
-
Usti Caiversit , in succession to the late
fish t rpt
P.A a eat Right FIb Walter
m i n. ex
u'
g 1
a mors.
iris
A
Long said l of
in the Dominion Banking Committee ture inthought that pleuro -
on -
on Chursday, ]ir, Mulgck's bill provid- pneumonia, could be introduced into
ing fora reduction In the rate of in- England from eettls imported from
tercet was rejected. Canada.
Thomas Dixon, a young En Lishman, Sir Frederick Pollock, professor of
sustained a fatal accident in the bush jurisprudence in Oxford University,lias
neer_Bagot, Man„ on Tuesday, by a tree "finished the manuscript of the British
falling on him. ease in the Venezuelan disputa, and it
Mr, Henry Goold,, a young man of is now in the hands of the officials of
Grindstone Island, has been left a leg- the Foreign Office, It is said that the
acy of $250,000 by the death of an uncle professor door not attach any import -
in St, Louis. anus to the Schomburg line.
Gordon & Keith's, houeefurnishing es- Lord Salisbury has communicated to
tablishmont and a number of ober the Armenian Relief Committee a re -
buildings were burned at Halifax, the port from Sir Philip Currie,the British
loss approximating $200,000. Ambassador atConstantinople, in
Leading physicians of Winnipeg wait- R'higll he states that he misery and
ed on the Manitoba Government on sickness among the refdgees at .Zeit-
Thursday and asked for the appoint- oun Ia inconceivable, Miss Barton, who
meat of a provincial. basteriolog]st. desired to go to Zeitoun, was refused
Advices from Lesser Slave Lake, permission by the Porte.
North-West '.territories, state that an UNITED STATES.
Indian, who had become insane, was Lord Dunraven was expelled from the
killed acaordin to the Indian custom. New York Yacht 1 ga t Club.
The annual meeting of the Bell Tele- The Hudson River at Albany has
phoae Company was held at Montreal. risen 16 feet, and the southern portion
A proposal to borrow $600,000 on de- of the oity is flooded.
benturos to extend the business was ,At Washington the Senate Committee
authorized. on Commerce presented a favorable re -
The customs authorities are de- port on the Detroit River bridge. 1
mending $180dditionel duty on a ivrr- Samuel Edison, the father of
road roller imported for the corpora Aly.. Thos. Edison, the inventor, died. at
teen of London, and a fine of $180 for Norwalk, Ohio, aged 9g years.
undervaluation. The United States Senate has pass -
A deputation from Low Township, at ed the Cation resolutions in favor of
Ottawa, asked elle Governmemt to re- recognizing the insurgents as belli-
lieee them of a. part of the expenses in- gerents.
Burred by sending the troops there to Mrs, Valentine Kurtz, of South Dans-
collect arrears of taxes. villa, N.Y., completed her forty days'
Mrs. O'Donnell, one of the oldest resi- fast on Tuesday. It is expected that she
dents in Eastern Ontario, died on .Fri- wilt five,
day at Brockville, where she had lived Tha.e steamer Bermuda, flying the
continuously, for fifty-seven years. She British flag, was seized at New York
was ninety-six years of age. on a charge of carrying men and muni -
Dr. Laughlin McFarlane, a well- tions of war for the Cuban insur-
known and successful Toronto doctor, gents.
effects of
onfrom the e
did
e
1 d poisoning mected while operating
Testa ph ing that he has succeeded in
en o patient suffering from frost -bite through
skull, the human onto
Col. F.G Fenn having completed his perf ct the etho but he passingopes soon ds
perfect a method of solids
period of service in command of the through solids.
regimental district at Halifax, is to be A Turkish Imperial irede has been is-
suoceeded by Col. A. G. Spencer from sued permitting Miss Clara Barton, Pre -
the command of the West India De- sident of the American Red Cross So-
pa.
In the Dominion Railway Committee ciety,Armenians to dlistrihute relief to the suffer -
it was announced on Thursday that all ing
electric railways of a purely provincial Mrs, Elizabeth Coleman, aged one
character must be brought under the hundred years, died in Galesville, -Vis.,
working of the general Electric Bail- on Wednesday, Her father was first
way Act of Ontario. cousin of the last lineal descendants of
L Royal t
the oya family o Stuarts.
The Ontario Attorney Generals De -
The - Baltiis more & Obio of Railroad
portment has decided to try for arson Com an
at the approaching Peterborough as- _Company-
oss s. yJolln It he Cowen and Osar receivers,
sizes Thomas and Bessie Gray, who Mhavingbeen named to take
were acqquiitad last spring on the chargeMurrayY
of murdering David Scopic. charge of the affairs of the coporation.
The New Brunswick Legislature Four thousand et the six thousand
Passed a bill providing for the appoint- garment workers of Baltimore, Md.,
silent of two women on every School went' on strike on Tburaday morning
Board in the Province, one by the Gov- to compel the employers to engage none
ernor in Council and the other by the but. members of the Garment Makers'
city or town concerned. Union.
The trouble between the Monastery The announcement that Commissioner
of Oka and the Revenue Department Tucker, who is married to the third
in connection with the seizure of an daughter of General Booth, is to assume
illicit still in the monastery has been cond of the United States Salve -
settled at Ottawa by the community tionmmaArmy, appears to give general sat -
paying a fine of $500. ignition, His work has bean princi-
The Immigration Convention meeting Bally in India.
at Winnipeg passed a aeries ot re- The United States House of Represen-
solutions favoring a vigorous immigra- tativea on Wednesday passed the Ding -
tion policy, the. exclusion of eChinese ley bill authorizing the extermination
tabor and the making of Hudson Bay of theseal herds in case a modus viven-
the outlet for the Northwest produce. di cannot bo concluded for the protec-
tion of the seals pending the adoption
p of proper and effective regulations by
Department of Fisheries was laid on the countries interested.
the table of the House of Commons on The Grand. House in New York
Friday. The total expenditure for all tt, as crowded Operaon Sunday evening by
the fishery ndr service during the sa year was thousands of Irishmen and their friends.
tour hundred a and twenty thousand dol- The occasion was an amnesty rally, the
says, and rhe revenue amity -five thou- intention being to start a movement
sand dollars. looking to the release of the Irish po-
Firo destroyed the chemical labors- liLical prisoners now undergoing con -
tory at the Ontario Agricultural Col- finemeut in English gaols.
lege, Guelpb, on Friday morning Most
of the materials and Prof. Shuttle- Miss Elizabeth Elegize, daughter of
worth's library were saved, but Prof. General Flag*ler, Chief of Ordnance,
liIarcourt's library was destroyed. The U.S.A., who last spring shot a colored
loss on the building will bo $7,500, and boy, killing him, Tuesday pleaded guilty
on the contents $1,500. There was no before the Washington oourt to invol-
insur•ance. untory murder, and was sentenced to
GREAT BRITAIN, a fine of five hundred dollars and three
The Prince o£ Wales laid the founda- hours' imprisonment.
tion stone of a new hospital at $nigh- edrhe Statesddoes not shown of s any iin mprove-
it-
ment 1 of consequence, but we are assured
Lord WoIeseley advocates increasing that "hopefulness still predominates."
the British navy as Great Britain's first tweak, and prospects not encouraging,
line of defence, The bttr•den of the tale is that supplies
Dr. Jameson, the hero of the Trans- exceed the demand, and low prices, low
vaal raid, is at present the guest of wages, with present and prospective la -
•Lord and Lady William Beresford. bur troulbes, are all round important
The Mahera'ah of Nepaul promises to factors in depressing trade. Cotton is
be the lion of the London season 16 11a weak, and prospes not encouraging
visits England, as expected. as declining prices have not created
cta
Mr. W. H. Montague, the Canadian, proportionately increased demand. Some
Minister of Agriculture, has arrived in mi11s aro eapected Co close. There is
London in search of health. a poor enquiry in„iron anti steel and
A Caxton copy of Chaucer's Canter- woollen industries. Variable and un -
bur Tales wap of last heck in Lon- seasonable weather is the alleged cause
y for a considiorablo amount of the busi-
don for £1,020, although some of the nese depression.
Lon -
loaves wore missing. add general
The London Daily Chronicle describes GENERAL.
Mr, Long's bill for the expulsion of Reports from Constantinople are to
tornibn cattle from England as proton- the effect that numerous plots to as-
tiion by a aide wind. sassinate the Sultan are being wneoct-
The British troops which formed part ad.
et the Ashanti expedition returned to The King of the Belgians has deeid-
siastion on Thursday, and were anthu- ed to inaugurate a war against the
instidally welcomed. dervishes through tile Congo Free
The Admiralty have decided to sell State,
the cruiser Canada, which is now at-
tached to the North Amorioan and
Vest Indies station.
The military expedition sent to Ash-
, mettle returned to England. When'tlie
Groups disembarked they were copgra-
tulatod by Lord Wolseley.
The London newspapers discredit the
despatch published in the Pall Mall
Gazette winch indicated that Great Brit -
sun was preparing to evacuate Egypt.
In the House of Lords on Monday,tlro
lllarquis ot Salisbury repudiated having
said anything wbich oould fairly be con-
aidered as an argemont he favor of pro-
dootion,
The Right Rev, William Alexander,
Bishop. of Derry and Raphoe, has
been elected Archbishop of Armagh and
It is learned that there •havo recently
been shipped from Antwerp large sup-
planartillernmonmunition for the
ravaalGovernment.
A German scientist has found very
deadly bacteria in Russian wheat, and
the Agrarians aro agitating for the ex-
clusion ot foreign grain.
The Sultan has ordered indemnities
to bo paid to the British, Russian and
French Consuls at Jiddah for the re-
cent attaok made upon them.
It is stated on good authority in St.
Petersburg that Russia does not intend
to annex Corea; but considers it a duty
-to guarantee the country's indepen-
dence.
Count Tolstoi says that patriotism is
&sr[mato of all Ireland, m success -on is not only a bad disposition, but he claims
:Abe Most Rev, Robert Samuel Gregg, p prefis erence
one's in principlento love
[6D. alt others neo own nation above
A. London magistrate, being unable to The Emperor of Germany has writ-
t,rr•ite, made his meek to a number of ten- an autograph letter to the Ozer,
pnmmitmente to prison lately, and they in whioh he expresses his friendship for
were held good. He is not illiterate, but the Ozer, and promises to attend the
ilea gout, cprontttian fetes at Moscow,
1'n the.Portugneae Chamber of Depu-
ties the lilinletes' of the Interior deelar-
ed that the tiovornlnent had neper en-
tertained the idea of so[iinet 1,grenzo
Marques or Polagoa Ilay,
Reports have been reoolvad in Cone
stantiuoplc that froth maesaores have
gcourrea at soma places in Armenia,
L.ie a.urkiali authorities deny that there
have been any recent massacres.
The death is announced, in Liseighty-
fifth Year, of M. Marra, who designed,
some of the coins issued by 14apoloon'
II. 146, Barre was noted for his skill
in accurately producing features, hotb
on medals and on busts,
The Spanish feeling against the Unit-
ed States no connection with the Cu-
ban revolution found vent at Barce-
lona, where there was rioting on Sun-
day, and the United Status Consulate
wasstoned s n d
e an the o flag
Russia 11as assured Great Britain that
bythe terms L
r of the treaty concluded be-
tween, Russiad
an phin
a the former
had not secured railway rights and ram-
mercial privileges to which the "most
favored nation' clause did not apply.
In his younger clays Ambrose Thornes
had some celebrity as an athlete, and
in his old age he was extremely fond of
physical exercise and of outdoor life.
The fact that he lived to be eighty-five
showa the benefit lie derived from it,
Lieut. -General Lutbi Pelloux, form-
erly Minister of War, and at present
commanding the Fifth Corp of the
Italian army, with beadquartors at
Verona, bas been appointed to the
chief command of the Italian forces in
Africa. Baratieri will serve under him.
The conviction is fast growing in Ber-
lin that Great Britain's hostile attitude
in Germany must be considered apoli-
tical favor of permanence, and that the
friendly entente between Germany,Rus-
sic, and France must be made a feature
of Germany's foreign policy,
The British war ship Penguin while
engaged in making deep sea soundings
between Tonga and New Zealand got
bottom at 5,155 fathoms. The deepest
sounding ever before made was oft the
northeast coast of Japan, when bottom
was reached at 4,655 fathoms.
The Paris Figaro says that notwith-
standing the denial in the London
papers it a fact that the question of
the evacuation of Egypt is under con-
sideration, and the powers think now
would be a favorable time for Great
Britain to retire, as tranquillity has
been restored in Egypt.
The European press pretty generally
expresses the opinion that if President
Cleveland gives expression to the Senate
resolution in favor of recognizing the
belligerency of the Cuban insurgents
it will lead to serious complications, as
Spain is too high-spirited to knuckle
down to the dictation of the United
States.
Roman The 7 o an ne s a er Don Maras
o
declares that theq e donot General
Baratieri, commander of the forces now
operating' Marshal
Abyssinia, is the same as
that of Marshal Bazaine in Metz dur-
ing the Franco-German war, and that
.King Menelek is perpared to drive the
Italian forees from Adigrat, and bring
about an Italian Sedan,
ELECTRIC SHOCK` VICTIMS.
Reel for the 'rrrattneni of Per.
sons Struck Down By the Electric
(anemia.
One of the contingencies of modern
civilization which is almost entirely
new and is wholly dependent upon the
development of modern industry is the
treatment of accidents from electric
shock. The matter, says the Medical
Record, has been discussed quite thor-
oughly by physicians in this country,
but it has beein worked out perhaps more
systematically by Dr. D'Arsonval, of
Paris, who has recently made a report
to the Academie de Medecine, of Paris,
upon the method of treating persons
injured by electrical shocks. D'Arson-
val states that electricity causes death
sometimes directly by the disruptive
and electrolytic effects of the charge
on the tissues. This death is final.
It sometimes, however, causes death
indirectly by arrest of reapiration and
syncope, caused by stimulation of the
nerve -centers. Under these circum-
stances a person may be revived it
proper measures are applied.
The formula for reviving the victim
of electric shock is this: The person so
disabled should be treated like one
drowned; in other words, he should be
laid upon the back, and artificial res-
piration performed in the way that is
ordinarily described, Some further
practical advice, however, so given to
thole who are leaned at once to the
scene bf the accident and at the time
when. the ppeerson is perhaps still in con-
tact with the wires. Of course, the first
thing to be done is to stop the current
or break the contact. In doing the lat-
ter, one should not touch the victim on
the face or bands or any naked part of
the body, It is butter to lift him by
the coattails or throw a blanket over
him and pull him by this. Nothing that
is wet should be thrown upon him, and
if the clothes arra wet the kande skouid
not be put in contact with them. A
piece of dry wood can bo placed under
the body and he can then be lifted. The
further treatment of the caao is the
familiar one applied in attempting to
restore the drowned. The arms aro
worked, and the tongue is kept drawn
out ; the body may sometimes be rubbed
thoroughly with a cloth or brush in
order so increase the circulation of the
blood. Oxygen and perhaps a stimu-
lant may bo employed.
110 EQUAL IN THE WORLD.
Rev. W; II. Withrow, D. D., now Tour-
ing Burette with a Canadian Party,
is one of Many to Talk iaavourably o1
Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powders.
There are few more noted travellers
than the Rev. W. H. Withrow, D.D.,.
editor of the Canadian Methodist Ma-
gazine, and of other publications of the
great Methodist church ,of this country.
tr
Ile is a wide traveller, and enjoys the
epportunitios that travel gives of judo-
ing broadly of the merits of any article,
Ile has expressed the written opinion
that Dr, Agnew's Catarrhal Powder is
a most excellent remedy for cold in the
bead and various catarrhal troubles.
One short puff of the breath through
the Blower, supplied with each bottle
of Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder, dif-
fuses the powder over the surface of
the nasal passages. Painless and de-
lightful to use, it relieves instantly,
and permanently euros Catarrh, Hay
Fever, Colds, Headache, Sore Throat,
TonsiliLis and Deafness. 00 cents.
Sample bottle and Blower sunt on re-
ceipt, of two three -00M stamps, S. G,
Detehon, 44 Church, street, Toronto.
Sold by G. A. Deadman.
Willie—"What's the matter with your
nose, Bobby ?" Bobby—"Tommy Hig-
ginbotham an 'me had a £ ight in school
about some marbles," Willie— " Valle
got '6011" Bobby -"Teacher."
P ,TTINg OF 111:11LIN FLE A
ARMINISPEMOR OP OANNIBAI.ISN
IN PARIS.
AYeeelrr toadia Watite' 1'atliee—fow a p.8
Arenaedl Rio iraster's IDCala arli4
Reettaht'MMYe Criminals to •Justice,
Many a nian iris been guilty of the
crime of cannibalism unconsciously, and
95 past agar hundreds of mon and wee
men in the city of Paris wore fed upon
human Slash in ignorance of the kind
of food they were Consuming. Row
knowledge of the fact was brought
home to some of them by e, flog, whose
Master mss leadleen innrderedhe
the
hu-
man shambles, is worth translating,
VV
hon Louis IX., known t o'
his admlr
ers as Saint Leuis 'was Xing of France,
there dwelt in the Rue dos Deux-Er-
mites
eux Ermites a master barber named Galipaud.
He handled the razor With unpsual dex-
terity, and hie customers were well-to-
do and numerous,.
Galipaud's immediate neighbor was a
pastry cook named Grimaldi, a native
of Florence, who did a large business
With wealthy customers. His shop was
one of the most frequented in the city,
and certain little patties after a re-
cipe of his own were sought by epieurea
from every quarter. They were better.
seasoned and more delicately flavored
than those to be had from other poetry
cooks, and be sold an euormoul quan-
tity every day. Just at dusk one
Chrletmas eve a bell-ringer at the Ca-
thedral of Notre Dame econceived the
unlucky notion of getting shaved, and
he stopped into Galipaucls shop Accom-
panied by a little spaniel called Oar -
pillar= At sign from his master the
dog lay down in a corner of the shop
near the door, while he himself went
into the rear Elliott, whore the barber
awaited him,,
Carpillan, always an the qui vire, a
few minutes afterward heard a groan,
immediately followed by a noise like
that of a door shut firmly.
THE DISCOVERY.
The dog jumped to his feet and rush-
ed into the rear shop, barking, He
searched for his master without avail,
for the bell-ringer bad disappeared. At
once the dog set up a long,, loud howl,
and Galipaud, in a rage, seized a cane,
with the evident intention of dispatch-
ing the animal. Oarpillon avoided the
blow, and becoming furious in turn, at-
tacked the barber's legs, which he bit
severely. After wreaking this partial
vengeance he retreated under a heavy
cabinet and recommenced bis wailing
howls.
At this juncture two of the bell -
ringer's friends entered the barber's
rooms. Carpillon recognized them,crept
eut of his retreat and ran to there,
renewing his plaintive lamentation.
Why, it's Carpillan," one of them
exclaimed, ` What is the matter, lit-
tle dog? Where is your master?"
The dog's excitement was redoubled
by these sympathetics words. Again be
rushed upon the barber most franti-
cally, biting him wherever his teeth
could reach, and drove him to the furth-
er end of his shop. The two men fol-
lowed in an effort to calm the animal,
but upon seeing Galipaud hastily pick
up a, bloody naghtes and seek to con-
ceal it, they stopped• short, as if petri-
fied by fear. The barber's terrible pal-
lor, haggard eyes and strange embar-
rassment were a complete revelation for
these witnesses, and they trembled at
theprehend, horror they had only begun to com-
Jean Lefevre has certainly been
murdered!" they exclaimed.
Like a thunderbolt these words struck
Gaitpaud. He saw that bs was lost, and
tried to escape, but the dog seized him
by the leg with a firm grip, and the
bell -ringer's friends barred the pas-
sage and shouted for help. Soon the
shop was filled with people. Sergeants -
de -vide came promptly, and immediate-
ly they set about searching the prem
fri
]sus,ghtful Theirone. discovery was a moot
THE SECRET TRAP DOOR.
In Galipaud's rear shop they found a
trap.door swinging upon a hinge, and
thenwrginto etch had cut!lar h beneath.
victim s throat
he threw him down backward upon the
trap, and the body disappeared, while
the door was brought back to its place
by a carefully adjusted spring. At
night, after the commission of each
murder, Galipaud went down 'into his
cellar and out the body into joints'pre-
cisely as a professional butcher would
cut an animal lie had killed. The head
and bones were put into a sack to be
thrown into the Seine at the first op-
portunity. The flesh was sold to Grim-
aldi, and this was the meat with which
the scoundrel made the famous patties
that all Paris enjoyed with so keen a
relish. A small r excavated in the
foundation of the building established
a coinmunicatioal between the adjoin-
ing
cellars
• listic dociupied by this pair of oan-
The victims of Galipaud tvero prob-
ably, numbered by scores, but he assert-
ed his inability to tell how many he
had killed. Wlron the officers search-
ed the cellar they found beside the
Notre Dame boll -ringer's corpee two
heads separated from the bodies. They
were lying close to the butcher's block,
upon which the monster teas accustom-
ed to- cut up human flesh. ITB ex-
plainod that in the preceding night he
had not found time to go and throw
them into the Seine.
A few days after the arrest of these
villains they were burned alive in the
Place de Greve. The house where the
murders had been committed, and the
patties concocted, was demolished. A
largo, square memorial stone marked
the spot for many decades, and upon
the stone was sculptured the likeness
of the faithful dog who avenged his
master by bringing the criminals to jus-
tice.
PROPPED Usk' BY PILLOWS
FOR EIGaPRBN h'IONT11s.
A Terrible Eeperionao with D'art Dia -
ease. lett cured by Dr. Agnews cure
for the Mart
Do •not our largest sympathies well
out to those who aufEor from heart
disease? 15, comes so suddenly, and
its symptoms aro usually so distressing
that the direct agony is experienced by
the patient. The case of Mr L, V
Law, of Toronto Junction, Ont„ who
was unable to lie down in bed for
eighteen months owing to smothering
spoils find palMtation, is by no means
exceptional. Who would have tbought
the case could be cured, and web one
bottle of Dr. Agnew's Cure for the
Heart removed trouble in tbis case, It
gives suoh speedy relief, that even
where the symptoms aro less danger-
oua, it ongllt at dn0e t0 be taken as e
means of driving the terrible disease
from the system.
Sold be .;, .t. Deadman,
'MR IIFIEUMATIG PAINS
Lose Their Rway After ITslns' Rqutfs
Aureriven Rlrpureatio Oure,
The pain and sufloring calked by
r'baunlatiam is indescribable n1 lan•
guage, The bent back, the crippled
limbs, the intense neuralgia pains that
are caused by trek trouble almost drive
tlie vlotines to despair. The bioesing
comes to those who have learned of
South Amor-loan Rhenmatio Cure, which
is simply marvellous in its effeete, our-
ing desperate cases In from one to three
days.'About some things there is no
certainty, but of the certain cure that
comes from Heath American Rheumatic
Caro there is no doul1t,
Sold by G. A, headman,
s
A Personal Matter.
l M .
Can yer tell me 'ow far it is to 'And -
cross 'Ill, Guy nor 1
It'sa bout three miles
Who dou
Sro
want to sec there?
I event to see myself there.
Dread Kidney Disease Quickly Re
moved.
To oven hunch themany words of
praise written of South American Kid-
ney Cure would consume large news-
paper space. But take at random a
few : Adam Soper, Burk's Falls, Ont.:
One bottle of South American Sidney
Cure convinced me of its great worth,"
Michael McMullen, Chesley, Ont.: ' I
Procured one bottle of South American
Kidney Cure, and taking it according to
directions got immediate relief," D. J.
Locke, Sherbrooke, Ont.: "I spent over
$100 for treatment, but never received
marked relief until I began the use of
South American Kidney Cure," Rev,
James Muri9ook, St, John, N.B.; I
have received one hundred dollars'
worth of good from one bottle of South
American Kidney Cure,"
Sold by G A. Deadman.
POR TWENTY -Sex YEARS.
THECODK'S BEST FRIEND
LARGEST SALE IN CANADA.
That.-
Tired.
t -Tried Feeling!.
51anns danger. It is a..serious
condition and Sell lead to disas-
trous results it it is neat over-
come at once. It is .a anre.s191
that the blood is impoverished.
andimpus'o, niched relnedy:is• ;+
•
Sarsaparilla)
'W'hioh makes rich, red .blood,
and thus 6n
es strength and elas-
ticity
ra -ticit to the muscles, vigor to
the brain and health. and vitality,
to every part of the • body.
Hood's Sarsaparilla positively
. ars the 1
Weak Strong
V
"I have used six bottles of Rood's Sar-
saparilla as a general tonic and have
enjoyed the beet
of heath. Although I'
had a strain o1 work I have had no sick .
spells for many months and no lost time,
so I am doublyrepaid," THOMAS S. HILL,
St oh �e Brunswick.
26 Rrussells, , St.J n New w
x
Hood's Sa!sapariii:
is the Only
True BNoo'd Purifier
Prominently in the public eye.
Mood's paieS euro habitual constipa-
lice Prlee2Se.per box.
Assisted.
I hardly know how to begin, sir, said.
the would-be son-in-law, as a starter.
Permit me to help you out, said the
old man.
The words were polite enough,but
the young man thought he sawa glare.
and got out unassisted.
Cr'+�
ro
7ES OF T
HILO
is & JJ Upon South Ameri-
can Nervines -
Buoy c_1:1 Doubt the Greatest Medical Discovery)
of the Age. -
11
iz IIEU EVERY OTHER HELPER HAS FAILED IT CURE'
A Discovery, Based on Scientific Principles.. that
Renders Failure Impossible.•
ee
PHE
XER
In the =otter of Food health tempor-
tring measures, while possibly success-
ful for the moment, can never be last-
ing. Those in poor health soon know
whether the remedy they are using
1s rimi,ly a passing Incident in their ex-
per;ence, geeing them Cup forthe day,
or something that Is gutting at the
seat of the disease and is surely and
permanently restoring.
re eyes of the world are literally
Sred on S -nth American Nervine. They
are not vic,ing it as a nine -days' won -
het critic's] and experienced men
twee b:en studying this medicine for
1*vire, with the one result—they have
[mind that its claim or perfect cura-
tive onniities cannot be gainsaid.
The great discoverer of this medicine
wase !r-sre-eed et the knowledge that the
seat of all diesare in the nerve centres,
situated at the base of the brain, in
this belief he had Ole best scientists
end medical men of the world
occupying exactly the same pre-
mises. Indeed], the ordinary lay-
man recogni.30a this principle
long ago. 71vr.ryone knows that
let disca.e or In,inry affect this part of
the human ryetem nod death is almost
certain. Injure the stained cord, which
is the mecliem of these nerve cen-
tree, and paralysis is sure to follow.
Rere is the first principle. The trou-
id..
b t ~: "apt
n//IIP
ble with medical treatment usu.,
ally, and with nearly all medicines, fe,
that they arm simply to treat the organ;
that may be diseased. South American
Nervine passes by the organs, and trek-
mediately
mmediately applies its curative powers
to the nerve centres. front which then
organs of the body receive their supplee
of nerve fluid, The nerve centre=
healed, and of necessity the organ
which has shown the outward evidence
only of derangement is healed, Indi-
gestion, nervousness, impoverished!'
blood, liver complaint, all owe their
origin to a derangement of the nerve
centres. Thousands bear testi.tnonyt
that they Lave been cured of these!
troubles, even when they have become!!
eo desperate as to baffle the skill o
the moat eminent physloiane, becausal,
South Amarilxtn Nervine hasa gone tui
headquarters and cured there,
' The eyes of the world have not been''
disappointed In the inquiry into the suc-
cess of South American Nervine. Peo-
ple marvel, it is true, at Its wonderful
medical qualities, but they know be -
'pond all question that it does every-
thing that 1s teamed for 1t It stands
alone as the one great aortain curium
• remede of the nineteenth century. Why,
should anyone suffer distress and s1o]c-
nese while this remedy is pow:eta:01r
at their handtt
A• DEA1►9UN Wholo>3ale an,d Retail Agent for itrusstilS