HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1896-3-27, Page 7At: ,,ltci1 Vii, 1890
THE 1313,U8
'T
and u.1 her highqale home she has an
extraurrlinery collection of. them, Goats,
Mamas, ponies, : donkeys, , niglitin alas,
parrots, robins rand a variety of Others
E
1T �IN,
SSy
are alilong bar pats, and all share her
!favour,
fl11 VERY LATEST FROM ALL THE
WORD) OVIIR,.
eateresting Item* About Our Own country,
Great Britain, the Wilted States, and
All Parte of tile (Hobe, condensed end
Assorted fer Sas' Reading.
CANADA,
John .0, O'Neill, of Brandon, commit-
ted suicide WW1 a razor. Ile was form-
erly a resident of Chatham.
The fetal eolleetions on account of
Crewe lands in the Province of Ontario
during 1805 amounted to $09,090.03.
The defences in Esquitnalt are again
being strengthened, Seven new heavy
brecoh-loading guns have just arrived
from England,
A school trustee at Dartmouth, N.S„
is being sued for libel because he pro-
nounced the writing of a plumber of
,school'teachers bad,
Charles Stern, a fugitive from Am-
erican justice was arrested while
boarding a steamer ab Halifax for
Liverpool. He had nearly $20,000 cash,
jewels; and securities in leis possess1on,
Ex -Detective Flynn, formerly of the
Grand Trunk Railway Company, who
is now in the Montreelaol under a
conviction of perjury, is dying of con-
sumption in the infirmary of that in-
.stitation,
It is now believed that Mr, Frank W.
Brown ,collector of taxes for the Town
•of Sault Ste, Marie, who was found
dead in his office, was murdered, as
two bullets had passed through his
Heart.
Adolph Davis, who was dismissed from
the service of the Montreal corporation
.as water works superintendent has been
awarded $6,000 damages and $4557 sal-
ary to the end of the year 'tor wrong-
ful dismissal,
A,1d. Lefebvre of Montreal has enter
ed actions for $500,000 against the
Banque du Peuple and each of the di-
rectors for statements made at thelast
.shareholders' meeting that his account
was overdrawn.
I1 is stated in Montreal that the Do-
ininion order -in -Council passed on Feb-
ruasy 20th compels the Allan and Do-
minion steamship lines to make their
winter terminal port in Canada instead
of the United Slates, es at present.
The value of the oueput of the nickel
and copper mines in the Sudbury dis-
trict during the past year, as reported
to the Ontario Legislature on ,Friday,
Is estimated at e560,073,and the amount
paid out in wages to the miners at
$210,000.
Mr. 3. Wickert, of Dowmanville Ont.,
twos killed almost instantly on Friday
.at the Grand Trunk ra ilway station.
He was standing on one of the tracks,
looking at the morning express from
Toronto, when the local from PeLerbol'.
.nu(eh came along,and hurled him against
the other.
At a meeting in Ottawa on Wednes-
day, evening of the Executive of the
Knights of Labour, and. other promin-
- labour men of I he city, it was unani-
mously decided to form a Canadian Fed-
eration of Labour, which is to be en-
tirely separate from the 'United States
labour organizations.
A resolution has been passed by the
Kingston, Ont., Board of Trade. pro-
testing against the proposal to bridge
the Detroit river, and Mr. H. A. Calvin,
M.P., was appointed 10 co-operate with
other deputations opposing the bill to
bridge the river when it comes before
the Parliamentary Committee at Otta-
wa.
Among the latest changes on the
Grand Trunk staff are the appoint-
ment of Mr. Charles J. Haight to the
position of freight claims agent, vice
Mr. J. Broughton, resigned, and the
dismissal of Messrs. MacFarlane, en-
A.rneer ot wooden structures, Stratford;
. J. Bailey, inspector of wooden area -
tares at the same place, and F. W.
Hatelier, inspector of wooden bridges,
Montreal.
While Mr. Albert Bright was holding
one of the braces et the purlme plate,
which was spliced, at the raising of pM:r.
Hugh Russell's barn in the township of
Bosanquet,on Thursday,the plate broke,
throwing Mr. Bright to the frozen
ground, twenty feet below. Both legs
and his hip bone were broken, and he
also sustained internal injuries, which
resulted in his death a few hours after-
wards. The deceased, who was 20. years
of age, was to have been married soon.
GREAT BRITAIN.
Gen. Booth of the Salvation Army
has returned to London from India.
Mr. Gladstone has returned to Lon-
don from the Riviera in excellent
health.
The death rate in London last week
was 21.7. the largest record for any
week since July last.
The Imperial Parliament Last week
sanctioned the opening of art galleries
and museums on Sunday.
Lord Salisbury, with his family, has
left London for his seat at Beaulieu,
near Dieppe, where he will remain a
few (lays.
The Marquis of Lansdowne, the Secre-
tary of State for War, hos finally de-
clined to allow the formation of a
"Regiment of Gentlemen."
One of the most interesting features
of the lest drawing -room was the in-
troduction of Prince Karl of Denmark
as Princess Maud's fiance.
Members be the University of Cam-
bridge will elect a committee to cen-
shier under wlmt conditions women
may be admitted to degrees.
There is such a demand for bicycles
in England that the home manufactur-
ers are completely blocked with orders,
and wheels are being imported from the
United State,
It is related of Millais,lhe Royal Aon-
demy's new president, that when as a
boy he took his first prize for drawing
he had to stand on a chair to make him-
• self visible to the audience.
T.he sensation of the week in English
domestic politics was the outspoken op-
position, headed by the Times, to the
Government proposal to increase the
pension of the Dake of Cambridge.
Lord Beaconsfield's broiher,Ralph Dia -
(tele is still living, He bears no resem-
blance to his distinguished brother,and
las always lived, a quiet, retiring life,
having been for many years clerk of
the House of Lords.
The Archbishop of Canterbury says
that westerners can never convert the
Mohammedan world. Islam is an iron-
bound, absolutely fixed rcligion,and can-
not berafted on the civilization of the
uineteentll century.
The late Prince Henry of Battenlerg,
wbo was quite versatile, left the score
of an operetta that is said 10 possess
great motif. Ile London managers are
anxious to know more about this work,
but there are difficulties' ut their path,
The 'Baroness Burdett -Coutts is very
fond of all kinds of animals and birds,
Mr. J'oeepli Chamberlain, in the TM-
perial }leen of Coonnona, said that the
Government had received a strong pro-
test from Genetic In regard to the pro-
posed permanent exeluelon from the
United Kingdom of More cattle. The
protest, he added, would receive careful
consideration,
Mr. Goschen, First Lord of the Ad-
miralty, replying•the other day to Mr,
John Redmond said that IL was absurd
to suggest that the inoreesc In the navy
was intended to menace the United
States, es the naval programme was
settled in Novoniber, before Ibe Von-
eeuelan question had arisen,
The British imports from Canada in
February were four and a half times
greater than the Imports of February of
he previous year, •The imports for
January and February were two and a
half tittles greater than for the corre-
sponding months last year, The ex-
ports from Great DriLain to Canada in -
creme 21 per cent. in February.
In the Imperial House of Commons
Mr. Hanbury, the Financial Secretary
to the 'Treasury, said thatthere had
been no agreement to subsidize Cana-
dian mail ships to Lhe amount of sev-
enty-five thousand pounds yearly, but
the Government of the Dominion and
the Imperial Government were discuss-
ing the question of an Imperial grant
for that purpose,
Admiral Sir Leonard McClintcok, the
Arctic explorer, who commanded the
Franklin relief expedition in 1859, is
living in London, e, hale and active man
at the age of '77. He is sceptical about
the story of the discovery of the North
Pole by Neilsen, puinting out that the
report, to be entertained seriously
should have Como from Greenland, in-
stead. of the Siberian side.
The Canadian Minister .of Agricul-
tura, Mr. Montague, has had an inter-
view with Mr. Joseph Chamberlain,and
has urged that the eviidenee is conclu-
sive that Canadian cattle are free from
disease, and staled that Canada lscon-
fidently expecting that the existing re-
strictions should be removed, and not
made permanent. Mr. Chamberlain pro-
mised that the Imperial Government
would carefully consider the matter.
Right Hon. Walter Long, President
of the Board of Agriculture, stated in
the British Parliament that '72 cases of
contagious pleuro -pneumonia had been
found in cattle imported from the
United States and sixteen in the cattle
imported from Canada since October,
1892, Whatever view the Canadian and
United States authorities might take
he could only say that it had been con-
clusively proved that the disease was
infectious.
UNITED STATES.
An agency is to be opened in Omaha
for the purpose of enlisting recruits for
the Cuban insurgents.
The Prince of Wales has been elect-
ed an honorarymember of the Thir-
teen Club of Nw York.
Calvin Flint, of Williamstown, Vt.,
who was 83 -years old last January, has
split forty cords of tough firewood ibis
winter.
The Goulds have escaped paying tax-
es on ten million dollars assessed in
the city of New York, on the non -resi-
dence plea.
Thirteen thousand tailors ere out on
strike in Chicago, and eight thousand
union garment -workers will go out on
a sympathetic strike.
The Hon. A. C. Coxe, of the United
States District Court of Utica, N. Y.,
handed down a decision on Friday, de-
claring natural gas not dutiable.
A 70 -year-old citizen of Ellsworth
Falls, Me., has had a severe attack ot
whooping cough during the post week,
and is slowly recovering from it.
Evangelist Moody, who bas not visit-
ed the Pacific coast within the past
ten years, is soon to conduct a series of
revival ineetings in San Francisco.
Lawyer Win. A. Shoemaker, of Phila-
delphia, who was senior counsel for H.
H. Holmes, has been suspended for a
year, for obtaining a false affidavit.
Four men were killed and one injur-
ed by the blowing u on Wednesday of
an engine on the -Delaware, Susque-
hanna, and Schuylkill railway, near
Hazelton, Pa.
Senor George Gomez, nephew of Gen.
Gomez, who Is in St. Louis, Mo., at
present, said that it the United States
recognizes the insurgents they will
win.
Father Dominick O'Grady, who mur-
dered Mary Gilmartin' two years ago,
was adjudged insane by the Cincinnati
courts on Saturday, and committed to
an insane asylum.
In the United States House of Re-
presentatives a bill has been passed
making one year's continuous residence
in a territory prerequisite to obtaining
a divorce in such territory.
William Rockefeller, the multimillion-
aire president of the Standard Oil Com-
pany, willsoon add another palace to
the magnificent ones that now grace
the millionaire's district on Fifth ave-
enue, New York.
Dr. Arthur Duesllon, the so-called
millionaire murderer, of St Louis, who
was convicted in the Circuit Court, a
short Limo ago of killing his wife and
baby in St. Louis, has been sentenced
to be hanged on April 22nd.
Lieut. 3. F. Thompson, Ordnance
Officer of the Department of the Mis-
souri, points out to the Chicago people
the utterly defenceless condition of the
oily in the event of war between the
United Stales and Great Britain.
Forty members of the Italian Club in
Chicago on Sunday, night offered them-
selves to the service of the country of
their birth, and declared their willing-
ness to proceed to Rome and join the
Italian army fighting in Abyssinia.
Dr. A. V. Burghill, of Chicago, read
his 'horosco a on Wednesday, and re-
marked that the stars foretold his blind-
ness before death, and on Thursday
night while making experiments with
explosives he destroyed both his eyes.
Dawson Oldham, a 78 -year-old resi-
dent of White Hall, Ky., never has miss-
ed a sermon in the Methodist church
in that plaoo in the forty years ho
has been a member. He never has us-
ed tobacco in any form, nor has he tast-
ed whiskey.
Owing to appeals before the Supreme
Court, Theodore Durrant, of San Fran-
cisco, Calhtornia, who was convicted last
November of the murder of Blanche La-
mont on April 6, is still alive, and it
is not expected that his case will be
decided before the close of the present
year.
Last August Barnum's widow was
married to Demetrius Callias Bey, and
went to reside with him on his olive
plantation on the island oe llfeletta, 11
is now reported that Mrs. Chillies is re-
turning to the United States, the happy
home among the islands of the Greelan
archipelago having failed to material-
ize.
It is- thought probable in 'Washington
that Congress will vote one hundrod
million dollars for coast and, lake de-
fences. It was painted out in a sub-
committee that the United States lake
towns would. be Intern( helpless against
British warships, wbicli 00111d he taken
Min the lakes through elle Welland.
conal,
Another attempt was made on, Satur-
day to kill Mr. k.D, Amateur, the fam-
ous Chicago pork;paoker, by means of
all Internet machine whieh was sant
tlu'ou h, the local post, Tho ppackage was
regareed with suspicion at the Leetr'al
post -office, and :opened, when the nature
Of the contents was discovered,
Commercial advices from the two
chief business agencies in New York as
to the general situation In the halted
States are not of an encouraging nature,
andcertainly have not come ne to ex-
pectations, The larger business we
have been so much told of as being al-
most within sight has not so far' meter-
ialized. The reasons advanced are
various, but storms and extreme cold
weather appear to be largelyresponsi-
ble. There aro in several lines growing
enquir•Y and increasing demand, bu
this is often accomplished by, or con-
sequent on, concessions in price. There
is notable growth in the insurance busi-
ness, whieh is said to be larger than
ever before, Hardware, shoes - and
lents, millinery, paints, and chemicals
are in better and more immediate de-
mand, but the ordinary spring trade is
of "a waiting character," Cotton and
wool are dull,
GENERAL
The Czarowitz continues to gain
strength.
The Italian Government refuses to
discuss Icing Menelik's proposed terms
of peace.
A despatch from Bombay says that
Samuel L. Clemens (Mark Twain) is
seriously ill at Jeypor.
A despatch from Pekin says the re-
ported conclusion of a treaty between
Russia and China is confirmed.
The French Minister of Agriculture
has issued a decree that imported cat-
tle need not bo killed on landing.
The Chinese Government has purchas-
ed eighty thousand Bavarian rifles of
the type of
1884 for a dollarapiece.
It is announced that Dr. Hoch will
shortly publish his latest discoveries in
using his new lymph against consump-
tion..
It has been definitely decided to send
an expedition of eight thousand colour-
ed troops against the dervishes of the
Soudan,
Perrine's comet, which was scheduled
to strike the earth on Saturday, is tra-
velling away from the earth in a south-
erly direction.
Tho Anglo -German Chinese loan of
one hundred million taels has been is-
sued at ninety-four, with interest at
five per cent.
The railway trains crossing the French
frontier from Italy are crowded with
Italians, who are leaving to escape mil-
itary service in Africa.
Count Goluohaltski, the Austrian
Prime Minister, before leaving Berlin
for Vienna, was given the Order of
the Red Eagle by Emperor William.
The merchants of Barcelona have
agreed not to sell American products in
the event of President Cleveland ap-
proving ot the Cuban belligerency reso-
lutions.
Asa result of a heavy snowfall, last-
ing three days, followed by a sudden
thaw, floods in many parts of Austria
have caused great destruction of prop-
erty.
A St. Petersburg despatch says that
two hundred fishermen belonging to Re-
vel, with their horses and carts, have
been blown out to sea on a piece of
floating ice.
An American student in Athens claims
to have interpreted the inscription on
the architrave of the east front of the
Parthenon, which has hitherto been an
unsolved problem...
For the first time the Finister-Aare
horn, the highest of the Bernese Alps.
has been climbed in winter, Professor
Fischer, with the guide Almer, accom-
plished the feat a couple of weeks ago.
The Rome Tribune denies that King
Humbert has expressed his intention to
abdicate. The report grew out of the
fact that the King said: My son may
negotiate with the Negus, but I will
never do se.
President Faure of France is said to
be growing weary of the cares of office,
and is not as energetic as he used to be.
He is still very popular, but the price
be pays for the good will of all classes
is very high.
The Paris Radicals and Socialists are
angry because the cross of the Legion
of Honour was bestowed upon Prince
Henry of Orleans, the explorer, and the
matter will be debated in the Chamber
of Deputies at the earliest opportunity.
The Emperor of Austria dislikes Ger-
man cooking,and cares only for French
cuisine. hen his relatives of the
House of Tuscany visit him, to please
their taste he has Italian dishes served.
On cjwtain occasions the Empress, who
is a Bavarian, orders German disbes.
Professor Rontgen is the hero of the
hour in Germany. Honors are show-
ering upon him in his Wurtzburg home,
and the university students organizeda
grand torchlight procession through the
town to his house to congratulate the
professor on his wonderful discovery.
The Amer of Afghanistan seems to
have been pleased at the reception ac-
corded to his second son, Nazrullab
Khan, for ha is sending the Queen one
hundred and twenty-five thousand
pounds' worth of gifts in charge of a
specie I. envoy.
add Canada
Gen. Baratiera explains his reasons
for attacking the Abyssinians by stat-
ing that supplies were becoming short,
the roads being infested with Abyssin-
ians. To retreat would have exposed
the Italians to an attack which would
have been difficult to withstand. He
held a conference with the officers un-
der him and they concurred in his
opinion that it would be safer to at-
tack the enemy than to retreat,
THE ARMENIANS.
Terrible Sufferings orate People for 111(116
01 Feud.
A despatch from London says :—The
Daily News says that 200,000 Armen-
ians are in e, starving condition and
are wholly dependent for the neces-
saries of life upon the charity of the
British and American public. One dis-
tricts alone, the News will say, absorb-
ed £16,000 of the £30,000 remitted to Sir
Phillip Currie, Lite British Ambassador
to Turkey, for the relief of tate suffer-
ing Armenians. The News will also
announce that It is the intention of the
Anglo -Armenian Society to approach
Mr. Gladstone 'soon with a proposition
that a deputation be; appointed to wait
upon Lord Salisbury and urge upon
him 1ho establisitmont oC a national
relief, fund under Government patron-
age. '
TO RELIEVE I~ASSALA, NEW IUGH1IIOND STREET 1VISTJ O'
IST CHURCH,
GH,
Rov, A. 713; giiambers, LL,B. the Popular
Pastor of the New BeineMond Street
Methodist t'lLuroh, Toronto, 'Pestlties
13tfialght in Favour of Pr, Agnew s
Catarrhal r owdcr,
Heaps of good things are being said
Of the Hee. A B. .Chambers, LL.13., for
his,straiglit talk for secularized schools.
(luito aside freta the merits of the ques-
kion, the vigorous and able manner Ln
wbioh Mr. Chambers handled the sub -
tpct bus been universally admired. In
he same frank and straightforward
manner this gentleman, whom the NOW
Richmond Street Methodist Church boa
requested shall remaln their pastor for
another term, talks of the help that
comes to these who uses Dr. Agnew's
Catarrhal Powder. Mr, Chambers
knows, from exporieooe in hie own fam-
ily, and he says eo over his signature,
how helpful this remedy is for cold in
the head and catarrh. In hay fever it
will give perfect relief in ten minutes,
price 60 cents.
Sample bottle and Blower sent on re•
ceipt of two 8 -cant stamps.
S. G. DETCHON, 44 Church St., Tor-
onto. Sold by druggists.
Sold by G. A. Deadman. -
'1'130 0bJeet or the HHrlllsh ligrptinn
wanton—The Qocstiou of i'anlls—,l.d•
1(1(11(1 el' l/angolu, -
A despatpli front Cairo says: --Op'.
tiers have been given to advance upon
Dongola W101041 delay. The Con.
nang* hangers have been expected to
proceed to Wady Haifa, and ti black
Egyptian bettelion,is also about le start
for that place,
A later announcement is to the ef-
fect that the North Mefferd regiment
llot the Connaught Rangers have been
ordered to \Vttdy Haifa„
The transportation of troops wbo will
lake part In the Anglo-Egyptian ex-
pedition to Dongola will begin on March
20,
A ilex pale1i from Cairo
1 r to Phe London
Globe says that as the fast of Rada-
man will end on Mamie 15, it is ,prob-
able the Derviabes will immediately
thereafter adtrance northward from
Dongola. A great deal of anxiety is
felt at Cairo aver tee situation, and the
military authorities were in conference
all day yesterday for the purpose of
considering what steps should be tak-
en.
The Tinsa9 publishes a despatch from
Cairo allying that the ultimate object
of the Anglo-Egyptian expedition to
the Soudan is undoubtedly the relief of
Kassala, which if it should be captur-
ed by the Dervishes, would become
serious menace to Suakin and Tokar.
Possession of the fertile province of
Dongola is essential to the protection
of Egypt from Dervish raids, inasmuch
ELS besides being a convenient base for
hostile operations it furnishes large food
supplies to tips Soudan countries rul-
ed by the Rltalifa, The writer of the
despatch hints at a final advance to
Omadurutaii and a reconquest of the Sou-
dan.
The Paris Temps makes a vigorous at-
tack upon the Anglo-Egyptian expedi-
tion, It declares that; it is a mere pre-
text to enable Great Britain to• pro-
long her occupation of Egypt.
A despatch from Cairo says that
Lord Cromer, the British diplomatic
agent. in Egypt, announced on Saturday
to the Egyptian Cabinet that 1,000 Bri-
tish troops to reinforce those already in
Egypt would leave on March 18 for
Cairo. The despatch adds that the Cab-
inet decided to defray the expenses of
the expedition from the Egyptian bud-
get. At first credit of £1,000,000 will
be asked for. Puhle opinion is against
the expedition as being needless.
France, as one of the guarantors of the
Egyptian bondholders, will not agree to
charge the :Egyptian funds with the
cost of the expedition, which, it is esti-
mated, will amount to 82,000,000.
HOLMES ASKS POR A COMFORTER.
reel., the Need or the ministrations or a
Uhut•chnitnt.
A despatch from Philadelphia, Pa.,
says :--After the most brazen front
that ever a fiendish murderer assumed,
H. H. Holmes has at last broken down
and asked for the ministrations of a
priest. When confronted with a score
of murders, including that of Benjamin
F. Pietzel, for which he was convicted,
Holmes never flinched. Even when
sentenced to be hanged, this arch con-
spirator only smiled. Like many other
murderers, Holmes now appears in his
true light. The air of Bravado assum-
ed for the occasion has disappeared, and
Holmes practically says he is afraid to
die, and desires to be buoyed up by
spiritual advisers.
He wrote to Archbishop Ryan asking
him to send hint a priest with whom
he might confer. This request was
complied with, and the archbishop wrote
to Rev. P. J. Dailey, rector of the
Church of the Annunciation, in which
parish Moyamensing prison is. He
gave the murderer several books to
read. The change in the man's demean-
or is favorably commented upon by the
district attorney. For a long time it
was rumored that Holmes would never
be hanged, and that if convicted he
would cheat the gallows by committing
suicide. Assistant District Attorney
Barlow said that the fact that Holmes
is conferring with a priest is sufficient
evidence that he does not intend to com-
mit suicide.
Before and during his trial Holmes
absolutely refused to see any clergy-
men, and even after conviction and sen-
tence he maintained his position, de-
claring that he had no need of their
services.
HEART TROUBLE RELIEVED IN 30
MINUTES.
Wonderful ResultsP' ollow the Use of
' Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart.
The good that Dr. Agnew's Cure for
the Heart has done finds a ringing echo
in the hearts of thousands in Canada
who have used this medicine. There
are same diseases where prompt action
is not absolutely necessary to avert
quick disaster. This is not the case
with heart affection of any kind.
Whether this be chronic or sympathe-
tic, or partakes of a more startling
character, be is a foolish one who will
hesitate to apply an immediate remedy.
This remedy will never fail to relieve
in 80 minutes, no matter how long
standing or distressing the trouble may
be. If you have heart disease and wish
to live, you have only to use this great
cure. At druggists.
Sold by s,. A. Deadman.
GOOD PLACE TO SWEAR OFF.
Biffers—How did you come to stop
smoking?
Whifers Got stuck for six weeks in
a smallvillage where there was only
one cigar store.
One Source of Pain end Suti'er:ng Linder
;Human Control.
An eminent specialist, in studying pro-
foundly the construction of the kidneys
and their diseases as well as the di-
seases of the bladder and urinary pass-
ages, has recognized the tact that in
'order to treat kidney and bladder di-
; seams successfully, a remedy must 'be
prepared ospeeially for these organs, and
one rich in heeling powers. After much
resew -oh a remedy was found, which
proved a surprise even 10 the manufao-
hirer. After having been used in gen-
eral practice by several physicians, with
grand results, it was placed on the mar-
ket, and is known as South American
kidney Cure. It never falls to give re-
lief in six home in all det'angements (at
the kidneys or bladder, Bright's disease,
dlabeles, inflammation or uImre tion of
t110 kidneys, neuralgia, consumpption,
hemorrhage anti catarrh of the kidneys,
inflammation of the bladder, ore. At
druggists.
Sold by G A Headman
Whenall else is lost, the fultuc still
remains.—Bovee,
Years of Suffering From Rheumatism
Relieved by one Dose of Medicine,
"For many years," writes Mrs. N.
Ferris, wife of the well-known BIroh
manufacturer, of Highgate, Ont., "I was
sorely afflicted with rheumatic pains in
my ankles, and at times was almost dis-
abled, I tried everything, as I thought,
and doctored for years, without much
benefit, Though 1 had lost confidence
in medicines, I was induced to use South
American Rheumatic Cure. To my de-
light the first dose gave ale more re-
lief than I have had in years, and two
bottles have completely carred me. You
can publish this letter." At druggists.
Sold by G. A. Deadman.
FOR TWENTY-SIX YEARS.
DUN 7 S
BAKING
POWDER
THECOOK'SBESTFRIEND
LARGEST SALE IN CANADA.
S.
11'•
Weak and Nervous
Whenever the body has been weak-
ened by disease,, it should be built up
by lIoocl's Sarsaparilla. Bead this:
kc About two years ago 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
outfoxed intensely with neuralgia p400 in
my head, which caused loss of aleep,aud
having no appetite,I
Became Very Thin
sad weak. Fortunately a friend who had
used Hood's Sarsaparilla with great bene-
fit kindly reeommended me to try it. I
did so and aperfect euro has been effected.
I am now es well as I ever was, and I
would not be without Hood's Sarsaparilla
in my house for anything." MRs, Ci.
KERN, 246 Manning Ave., Toronto, Oat.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Is the Drily
True Blood Ptsrifier
Prominently in the public eye today.
Hood's PiIiS °maytoany,easytotsb50
easy in eIIeat. 265.
A truly good christian woman, Mrs.
Porter, of ifillsboro, Ore., announces in
the local newspaper that her "umbrella.
was changed at the Congregational
church two Sundays age, and, although
she got the better umbrella, she would.
be glad to change back again."
POINTS THE WAY TO PERFECT HEALTH
South American Nervine.
The Great ITecath Restorer M the
Century.
Sickness Cannot. Cope With It
Has Cared the Worst Cases eat Rec-
ord.
(lures at the Nerve Centres anti Thus
Cares Permanently.
A Wo:tderfttl Specific in All Cases of
Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache,
Nervousness end General Debility.
Has No legluel es a Spring Medicine.
There is a great deal or uncertainty
In the methods adopted to remove dis-
ease. Iloulm's are net free from thie
kind of piing ihemeelves. the poor pa-
tient has to put rip twith a goad chill of
exnevi mrntleg, The diecovefer at South
Auteriran Nervine lakes too sextons n
view of life to piny pranks of this kiud.
Ile dues not think Clint these human
bodies or ours ahonld be fooled with. He
has recognized that they are subject 1.o
dlsease, but, be scientific methods, he
has learned that just es the watch is to
be butt in perfect repair only when the
maimenring is kept in running order, 50
With the individu'il, he remains in per -
feet health only when the nerve ,entree
are kept Ilrnitlaid and strong.
What dievem, 15 more distressing than
indigestion cr dyspepsia? Some aluillle
remedy may bn given to 18118e relief for
the moment. Nerwluc 15 en indisputably
sac' esrt'ul remedy nu'dy for the worst cases or
indigestion h.+cense 11. vedettes the source
of all stomach troubles --the carve cen.
fres. Indigestion exists because the
vital forces tiara become diseased and
sre weakened. Nervine builds up the
nerve centres, from which conte these
forces, removes the causes of indiges-
tion, and then builds up the health com-
pletely.
How many systems are run down
through nervousness.. stimulant may
give ease, but It will not cure nervous
troubles. Nervine las cured more des-
perate cases of nervoasness than any
other medicine anywhere. And it does
so for the same reason that it cures in-
digestion. The nerve centres ere de-
ranged, or there would be no victims or
nervousness. Nervine rebuilds and
strengthens the nerve tissues, and Bence
its marvellous powers in diseases of this
kind.
In elle spring of the year the strong-
est suffer from general debility. The
blood, through neglect, has become i'm-
povei•ished, and the whole system gets'
nut of order. We speak of It as a
spring medicine, Nervine restores the
exhausted vital forcce that lave led to
this tired don't -care, played -out, miser-
able condition. No one can take a bot-
tle of Nervine at this season of rho
year without disease quickly giving way
to abounding health.
The moral Is plain, simple and ret lilyy
understood, If you world not trifle with
disease, then you will take South Amer-
ican Nervine, tvhioh will not trifle with
you.
A. IDEADR1 AN Wholoiatle and IOW Agent for Rrusfisll.