The Brussels Post, 1896-5-1, Page 7C
Ai 1, 1996
0,El'.'
THE VERY LATEST FROM ALL TM E
WORLD OVER,
"Mere/Sine bane About Dor Own Country,
greet Oafish', the United *tetra, end.
Ali Parte of the Mode, Cesdenaed one
Assorted for nosy Reading..
CANADA,
seeding operatbons have been started
'in Manitoba, but they are not general.
The steamer Lake Superior brought
140 English farmer's bound for •Mang
'theta.
Lizzie Groifenhhhn, a ten -year-old
girl, was killed et Guelph by afalling
•
wall,
Two Ottawa tobacconists were fined
.on Monday for selling oigarette$ t• mi.
noes.
Two meat were, arrested at Hamilton
in the act of robbing 'Mr. James Beatty
.of that city.
Engineer Kemp of the Winnie
-waterworks was killed by falling
the big flywheel.
The Salvation Army in London has
,been forbidden to hold meetings 00
*the street corners.
ioners
�emmlag
Ilton License The Ham
1h ave retuned to lmake any reduo
tion
in the ntunbor of licenses:
A Point St. Charles woman snubsseer
- ra
1 attain is to drown her two-year.
@ p.
h
coo
was frustrated
.old baby girl, but
tinea,
Debentureia fox new Western ' Fair
buildings, amounting to $25,000, have
been authorized by the City Council of
Londnn.
Thomas Taylor, one of the housebold
of the Governor-General at Ottawa, was
.eccidentally,sbot on Saturdayand died
•in a short tune.
Col. Lake, of Ottawa, will visit Engr
hand in May to eepervise the .supplies
.of :arms and batteries recently voted by
the Dominion Government.
On Saturday Mr. Justice Robertson
-aentenced Mrs. Bell at Ottawato life
imprisonment formurderous cruelty to
bier two grandchildren.
The St. George's Sooiety f�Hap ill -
ton has accepted p
Col. Davidson of the '98th Highlanders
to visit tbat city on May 29th.
Grand President O. K. Fraser Of
the Catholic Mutual Benefit Associae
.tion }las issued: a circular asking the
• members to exclude politics . from the
organization.
A convention of tife Board of Trade
of Quebec, meeting in Montreal, pass-
-ed resolutions favoring preferential.
duties throughout the empire, but opt
posing Imperial federation.
Mr. E. H. King, formerly general
tahenBank
fof Montreal, rds iedreatdMot nte
Carlo on Tuesday night, where he bad
gone in search of health.
A large deputation of Montrealers in.
terviewed the Government at Ottawa on
:Saturday, and asked for a grant of
4500,000 to assist in bolding.a great
international exhibition in that city.
News comes from Winnipeg of the
killing by Indians near Trout Lake of
• one of their number, wbo woe sick
and acted strangely under the belief
that wvae a "wehtigo," or man.
• eater.
Mr. Tames Dean, nearly . ninety years
• of age, a retired farmer,, was insi a ntly
killed on Friday at the Great Western
-station in Galt, Ontl, the wheels of a
ear which was being shunted passing
-over bis neck, completely severing his
head from
the
y.
The Mayor. Vancouver nes receiv-
ed a letter from Toronto proposing to
.opena home at Vancouver to which a
portion of the surplus female popular
tion of Ontario may, be sent for dis-
tribution in the districts of the North
West, where there is a demand for
-wives.
General Superintendent Whyte, of the
•,Canadian Pacific Railway, left Winni-
peg for Fort William .on Wednesday
to superintend final arrangements non
being made for the opening of naviga-
tbon previous to the sbipment of about
four million bushels of grain by the
lake route east.
The new loan of the city of Montreal
bought by the Bank of Montreal, is in
forty Sear four per cent. stock, and the
pndred and five
ppoouunnhase ds onetce is shilline se terliing for every
9tundred pounds of stock, the most sat-
isfactory terms ever obtained by any
•Canadian city.
GREAT BRITAIN.
It is expected that Sir Redvers Buller
will be sent to Egypt in June.
It is reported that ten thousand Bri.
tish troops will be sent to the Soudan
in the autumn.
Mr. James Payn, the novelist, ban r
tired from the editorship of the famou
Magazine.
Cornhill ga
Lord Dufferin, the British Ambassa-
dor to Paris will retire from diploma'
tic life about the middle of July.
Major-General Sir Frederick Car
rington has been appointed commander
in -chief of the Matabele campaign.
It is not expected that the hill pro-
hibit'ng the im tation of live cattle
into Britain will be passed this year.
The London press, commenting upon
Sir Michael- Jlicks-Beach's statement
�gonere3ly agree that It is a landlord'
budget.
There have been 201 fresh eases o
smallpox at Gloucester, England, mak
ing a total of 0,302 since the epidem'
broke out.
Out of respect . for the.memory .0
Lord Leighton, the council of the Roy
al Academy has decided not to hold a
banquet this year.
It is proposed in London to erect a
re
adtlAtianal troepe to Setae, Attlee, pad fell into the hetida of oho Mat/elates,
to ppe@elnanentlY inoi'ease the eerreion managed
aidDotknow Ike properties mid
of cep TOW ie, to oxplode it,the result being
The relnarkeble expansion e€ the that abo ct 200 savages were killed.
Ang10•Caeediait trade is shown by the The owners of the Britiell steamer
am, which increased by sevmetyy-one per o d pay
cant, during 7Yfareli and ey ninety' per die gee to the Nim h Germ= LlOyti
oent, during the fiirst =mate of tke laity for the nking et the steamer,
year. The exports to Canada inoreased Elbe by collision in January of last year.
imparts from Canada Ante Great Brit= i Crathie have bee coneem ed- b the
R tter am Court
pa 85 500 €vorina
seven per cent, daring Marcie and
twelve per cent, fo'r the three months.
UNITED STATES, '
President Cleveland has offered his
services aa mediator between Simla
and Cuba.
The Lexow Greater New 'Fmk bill
has p. sed the New York State Senate
by 84 to 14.
Karl Mathias, of Toledo, Ohio, claims
to have discovered the Egyptian proems
of mummification.
U, 11. 1Lolmes, the oondlemned mart,
deier, has been baptised into the Rol,
Aran Catholic church.
The United States Senate in Exeou-
tivo session on Thursday ratified the
Behring Sea arbitration treaty.
Four lifesavm g stations on Lake
Ontario, situated at Fore`' Niagara,
Ckarlotte, Big Sands, and Oswego, were
opened ThYiraday,
The Committee on Ways and Means
of the United States House of Represen-
tatives has dleoided to take no action
at .present towards a revival of reei
Canada.
p1t with Gana
Foo Y
Moritz Niche-
b andM
J o
Gorge es .ao Y
M- pea -
o n
als,.wholeaale liquor deafens, f i
polis,,Iiliim.. bees, been arrested, chugg-
ed with counterfeiting the labels of Hi-
e.
whisk
lY lker s Club .y
ram a
Th electro,therapeutiat and the bac-
teriologist .of Bennett •Medical College,
Chicago, claim that by the application
of the Rontgen rays epidemics of all
kinds will be impossible' 3n the future.
Inspector Fitzpatrick of the Chicago
police, d� not believe Holmes commit-
ted
d twenty-seven murders. Some
those whom he said he killed are alive.
Be probably murdered ten. persons.
The old Pennsylvania Railway depot
in Philadelphia was burned, with the
car_sbeds and a number. of passenger
000ches. 'Two firenien,were killed by
falling walls and a, number of men. in-
jured.
The United States Senate has at
last eatlfiod the treatyy with, Great
of acommissionin gtoor assesss damagesaagtment
for
the seizurea of Canadian sealers in
Bering Sea.
GENERAL.
Spaniards and Cubans have begun
killing their prisoners of war,
Egyptian troops and friendly Arabs
have defeated the forces of Osman
Digna.
The`Ameer of Afghanistan has order-
ed suppyl of bicycles for the women
of his harem,
An official denial has been published
in St. Petersburg of the alleged Russo -
Chinese secret treaty.
It is reported that Emperor William
has accepted an invitation to visit the
Queen at Osborne in August.
The prefect of Police in Paris has ,de-
cided that an unmarried' woman thirty
years of age is an old maid.
A large majority of the Volksraad
will oppose the visit of President Kru-
ger .of the Transvaal to London.
It is announces that Prince Ferdin-
and of Bulgaria will shortly visit Ber-
lin as the guest of the Emperor.
A. dee itch from Venice says that Em-
peror William and King Humbert have
deoided to prolong the Dreibund until
1902.
THE CROWN JEWELS.
Rumored Plot to 8leel Tlieni--Iasis
1ilglfanee at the Tower -vel. Illood'e
Attempt Recoiled,
A despatch from London says: -There
was some alarm in the Tower of Lon-
don a few nights' ago, it is reported',
by the rumour that a plot to steal
the Crown jewels had been discover-
ed.
In any case, whether the report be
founded on fact or not, it seems there
is no doubt that unusual precautions
are being taken to guard the regalia,
These jewels are kept in the Wake-
field tower, where Henry VL is believ-
ed to Kaye been murdered; They are
valued at about £3,060;000, and consist
of many valuable ornaments, inolud-
ing St, Edward's crown (made for
crow n
D: and theQueen'sy ,
Charles
2,783 d' A .
o kinindiamonds. n large
to
c g
ruby in front of it is said to; have
k Prince in
given to the Blas
been '„tv n
Cillo ni was
1367 by Don Pedro of Cas a v
worn by Henry V. on his helmet at
the battle of Agincourt. Then there
is the Prince of Wales' crown, of pure
gold, and without precious stones; the
Queen Consort's crown, the Queen's
Drown, made for the wife of James II.,
St, Edward's staff of gold, four and a
half feet long, and weighing about
ninety pounds; the Royal sceptre, the
Queen's sceptre the Curtana, or point-
less sword of Mercy ; the swords of
Rjustice, the 'coronation braeeletd the
oyal spurs, the. coronation oil vessel,
or ampulla, in the shape of an eagle;
the :salt ocher of State, a reproduction
or niodel•of the White tower, the sil-
ver baptismal font, a silver wine foun-
tain, the insignia of the Order of the
Bath, Garter, Thistle, Victoria Cross,
etc„ and many other such relics of
the past or present, contained in glass
cases, protected by strong iron cages.
The plot said to have been recently
discovered brings to mind the nearly
successful attempt made by Col. Thos.
Blood, a disbanded officer of the Pare
liamentary army in 1671, to carry off
the Crown jewels. He had succeeded
in wounding and binding the keeper
of the jewel office, and managed to
escape out of the tower with St. Ed-
ward's crown, but was captured, and
subsequently pardoned by Charles' II.,
who, strange to adel,.granted him an
estate of £500 a year in Ireland. Col.
Blood had preveottsly seized the Duke
of Ormonde in his coach one night in
St. James' street, and carried him
away with the intention of banging
the Duke of Tyburn, for defeating, a
co Tracy of the colonel to surpnse
Dublin castle.
The foreign Ambassadors in Constan-
tinople have protested against the ape
pointment of a Mussulntan Governor of
2eitonn.
It is stated that the Papal Nuncio
at Madrid has been instructed to pro-
pose the mediation of the Pope in the
Cuban troubles.
The Imperial crown and regalia were
removed from St. Petersburg of Moscmv
on Wednesday to be ready for the a1t-
proaching coronation.
It is thought that the recent fatal duel
between Count von Kotze and Baron
v , von Schrader will result in the passage
of stringent anti -duel laws.
1 Reports are in circulation that the
condition of the Czarewitch, who Isms-
. iting nice for the benefit of his health,
has become seriously worse.
1 • Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria. has ar-
rived in St. Petersburg from Constan-
tinople. The Czar gave a banquet in
hie honor at the learner Palace.
A despatch from Cairo says that see-
oral men of the Staffordshire Regiment,
now at Wady-Halfa, are invalided by
the extreme heat and the hard march -
It is announced that ex, -King Milan
- ' of Servia will start in May' for a tour
of the -United States, which may -esq-
tend to San Francisco and around the
world.
The situation in South Africa is very
serious, and it is feared that Buluwayo
may be captured by the Mstabeles be-
fore reinforcement pan reach that
place.
I Li -Hung -Chang, the distinguished
Chinese statesman, has arrived at Coy-
- len, on his way to Moscow, where he will
represent China at the coronization of
the Czar.
A mounted British force hadabrush
with the Mataleales near Bulawayo,
killing fifty of :the enemy and driving
, them back with only one trooper
s wounded.
f IA Corean envoy has been dospatch-
,ed to St. Petenaburg toenegotiate a
loan of eight million dollars, giving
is Hamgyong, the northern province of
Corea, as security.
f The recent defeat of the dervishes in
- the vicinity of Suakim hats had a very
salutary effect upon the tribes who were
wavering between supporting the Kha-
lifs and Cha British power.
monument to the memory of G.A. Sala, A nurse who had been one of the yea -
and to make a pecuniary provision for
his widow.
Israel Gollancz, a learned young Jew,
has been apeointed to the new lecture-
ship of English literature in Cambridge
University.
The ten thousand British troops that
will 'be sent to the Soudan ie the
autumn will include three battalions of
the Bonsehold troops.
The"' burial of Lady Mounlstephen
took place in Lomsford Churchyard,
adjoining Brockct Hall, Lord Mount-
stephen's Iierfordshire seat.
IL is rumoured in Aldershot camp that
Um Ninth Lancers have been ordered
to -get ready to stent for Egypt to take
part in the Soudan campaign.
Sir. Charles Rivers Wilson, president
of Cha Grand 'Prink railway, will sae
for America on the 25th inst. If wil
make a tour of inspection over the road
A bcautitul window will shortly be de
(limited in St. George's cathedral,, South
work, to tee memory of Mr. Oxenford
the Londoi Times' stamens critic •o
many years ago. .•
Mr. Chamberlain has announced 111
Intention of the Government to sen
the attendantssince the birth of the
Crown Prince of Greece in 1858 died on
Monday, and the Icing and Royal
Princes attended her fuuerai on Wed-
nesday.
It is learned in Paris that in view of
possible events in the Soudan orders
have been issued to increase the sup-
plies and armaments of the French mil-
itary posts in South Africa.
The United States Charge d'Affaires
at Constantinople leas been informed by
the Turkish Government that thetrade
expelling Christian missionaries from
Asia Minor has bean repealed.
There are rumours in Rome to the
effect that France. and Russia are or-
ganizing the barbarous mountaintribes
to Africa to tour them down upon the
l p
adjacent possessions of Lluropcan na-
Lions,
An official despatch from Buluwva- o
-. says it is impossible to estimate the
numbers of the enemy, The whole
country is now in the hands of the re-
forco of troopsnaives
sto dislodge
large
�
e A lot of dynamite left at Gwwz lmv by
1 the South Africa Company's miners
ADVANCE IN ELEC'T'RIC HEATING
ffeeafl! ng More lerrellcitl1 Cps a Van.
venlentJtottse Wanner,
Boma interceding Pante in regard to
the steady eactenaion of electric 'heat.
Mg are brought out by W, S. idadawaytt
Jr., nays the St. Louie Globe, -Demon
neat. More large enntraets Inc elec-
trlo oar heaters' have been closed der
ing the winter than ever before, and
there is every evidence that the 0100 -
trio ear heater bas become a staple
condmercial device. While most of the
electric oar heaters now made fail to
meet the conditions of ideal tear heaee
ing, the fact that several thousand
ears are being equipped with them is
significant testimony as t0 their yel-
ue. As a matter of feat, the heating,
of cars byt eleetrioity le morn expeaelve
than by the ordinary methods, but, as
a well-known street railway expert
says, the decision for or against heat-
ing in any particular Dasa must be
reached on the distant basis that col-
lateral advantages and not .coal 0000;
amp form Ube real cr1terion. tl'he
manager of a large plant which has
been using heaters this winter with
a considerable expenditure of power
o in
says that 't costs b' much more, Y i t tin
f
t
' to heat
act, aitout four thmp", as much
his cera oy electric nesters, as it did
by coal stoves. He says, however. that
e saves two seats in the cart the h
peo-
ple like the stem oheating, and d
the are more attractive for this
rrsonndthat on the whole he re-
lieves in
it, and would not go beck to
the old system. nor would he fail •to
adopt electric heating if the decision
were to be mads again.
For the•heating of buildings eleotrio-
'eyes rapidly making its way, especial
ly in England and ,.France. It receive
ed' quite a stimulus from its suecesse
fat application to the heating of the
Vaudeville theater in Leaden, where a
lowepressure hot water'system was us-
ed. The necessary furnace was found
to be an incumbrance and an extreme
inconvenience, and by using electricity
that difficulty was overcome. It was
found that in ordinary cold •weather
only, two or three hours' heating were
required, whilewith the hot water sys-
tem it was impossible to limit the time
as the water took two or three hours
to beat up, and the same to cool down.
The electric radiator is now the favor-
ite method of beating offices, libraries,
cabins of steamships and yachts, bath
rooms of houses, etc. The rest of beat-
ing a bath room, say twenty minut-
es each day is three and a third cents.
or practically $1 a month. The cost of
electric cooking is, roughly, two and
five tenths cents per person per meal,
which compares favorably with other
sources of heat for cooking. One singe
ular application of electric beating is
reported from a brush factory for the
warming of the pitch used: to fasten
bristles in the brushes. When the fee,-
tory
acttory was built the problem of obtain-
ing high temperature for beating pitch
and other applications without em-
ploying
mploying gas or other forms of flames
or fire to the shop presented itself,
and the underwriters were appeased by
the adoption of electricity for the purr
pose. Other novel applications of elec-
tric heating mentioned by Mr. Had
away are to maintaining the needed
high temperature of 125 nine -pound
sadirons in a linen factory, and the
heating of the water baths of fifty glue
pots in a hook bindery,. , Where the
health of the workmen is considered the
use of electric heating in place of
flame or fire greatly simplifies the
problem of ventilation.
NO MORE EPIDEMICS.
The Experiments 18 Chicago Univerglty-
'rhe Deadly Meet or the Bentsen ]toys
en taeiill,
A despatch from Chicago says :-Prof.
H. P. Pratt and Prof. Hugh Wright -
man announce to the world that diphth-
eria and typhoid gerras are absolutely
Y
killed by the Rontgen rays. This
statement is made without reserve. The
decision was reached on Thursday night
in the laboratory, when the last of the
germs which had been exposed tothe
say failed to showy signs of life under
the glass -the deadly bacilli remaining
idle and inactive in the midst of the
best and most tempting imitation of bu-
man tissue. Prof. Wrightman prepar-
ed four now colonies of epidemic breed-
ers, They were labelled as cholera,
tuberculosis, hog cholera, and diphther-
ia. They were located in tubes filled
with nutriment, Prof. Pratt turned the
current into the great call, and the
rays were thrown into the groups of
bacilli. The magic agency was allow-
ed to work 62 minutes.
A critical and elaborate examination
showed a great chemical change. It
was evident that the force had acted
upon the artificial tissue. It is ex-
pected that free oxygen was made
and an acid created, exactly as would
take place in the human body. This
acid either kilts the germs or puts
them to sleep. They will now be
transplanted. The two physicians are
risking their professional reputation by
the prophecy
that not one of the four
groups willever be able to recover.
They are certain of the effect on he
diplttberia-oonfident concerning the
other three. There cannot possibly be
failure on the score of machinery or
appliance, and they have already prov-
ed the correctness et their theory,
DEVELOPMENT OF INDIA.
India is a wonderful example of the
energy and enterprise of the British
race, says Pearson's Meekly. At the
beginning of the last century, before
the British became the rulin sairor,
the country did not produce $5,000,000
a year of staples for exportation. Du
ing the first three-quarters of a con
tury of our rule exports slowly rose to
about $50,000,000 in 1834. Since tha
data the old inland duties and other
restrictions on Indian trade have been
abolished. Exports have multiplied
sixfold. In 1880' India sold to foreign
nations $800,000,000 worth of strictly In-
dian produce which the Indian bus -
'madman had raised, and for which he
was paid, and in that . year the total
trade of India, including exports and
imports, exceeded $010,0011,000..
Dur
15EY,Ett15 KIDNEY' i' TIooUELE COM
PLi3TIOLY CURED.
l'wo Rottlns of South American Kidney
Ours Diol It.
The idea that disease of the kidneys
cannot be oared is a mistake, True,
many so-called kidney cures do not
Gyro, but in that great discovery,
South American Kidney pure, there is
found 'an unfailing' remedy. This is
what Mr. David Hogg, of Sunnymead,
says; "I was greatly afflicted
with severe kidney trouble, suffering
the many annoyances and pain that fol -
14W this disease. There was, hardly
any remedy that I did not use, in hopes
of securing relief, but it was not until.
I bought a bottle of South American
Kidney Cure that relief came, The
one bottle immediately relieved me, and
twobottles produced a complete cure,"
l5old by .U, A, X.)ettdman.
NEW BRITISH GUNS.
Some of Great Britain's latest guns
will be employed for the first time
during the autumn campaign in the
Soudan. They carry a highly explo-
sive shell ten miles, and each shell
is capable of disabling 200 of the ene-
my. These guns have such a rapid-
fire capacity that before the fust
shell bursts .three others are on their
way in the same direction. The Gov-
ernment shell foundry has been over-
whelmed with orders for the manu-
facture of projectiles, and private
contracts for 1,000,000 shells have been
given out. __-
Michael Adams, M. P. for Northumber
land. N. B., is Another Who Hes Used
Dr. Agnew•s Catarrhal Powder and
Been Cured,
It does not seen to matter where one
looks for good results from that won-
derful medicine, Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal
Powder, they are to be found: Every
one in bis own province, and every_ mom-
ber at the Commons knows Michael
Adams, the popular member for North-
umberland, N.li. When he says to the
world, as he has done over his own sig-
nature, that eengew's Catarrhal Pow-
der is productive of most satisfactory
resultsforcold in the heaand othe
catarrhal troubles, they, know it means
much. The medicine rs one possessed
of peculiar virtues and never fails to
effect a cure.
One 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 in ten min-
utes, and permanently cures catarrh,
hay fever, colds, headache, sore throat,
Sold by G. A. Deadman.
A rotten cause abides no handling.-
Shakspeare.
IBefore man made us citizens, great
- Nature made us men. -Lowell.
Boring for natural gas was begun in
1 h heart of he cit f c a to
l e ear t i o Sa r man
I Y
I
Cal., last week. A company with scapi.
eat of 5120,000 has been formed to Carry
on the work, end it expects to make a
great deal of money supplying the city
with =tiara' gas. 'There has been quite
a boom in natural gas exploiting on the
Pacific coast lately.
---' 1
SIVso Rita Lill,
What One Bottle of Dr..Agnew's Oure
foe the Heart llrcl for Mrs, J, L. Flit
' lier, of Whitewood, N. W. T,
Only those who have so sufferedknow
the d,stressiug feelings that follow an
, affection of the heart. Lab ona who
0 has been afflicted speak, and tell of the
1 remedy which will cure. Says Mfrs,
J. L, Hillier, of Whitewood, N,W.T.;
For sonic time I was much afflicted
ar
o with hat failure ; in fact I could not
d rlcep or lie down for fear of suffocation.
I tried 411 the doctors in this section
of country, but they failed to give me
relief. A local druggist recommended
it bottle of Dr, Agnew's Cure for the
• Heart; I triad it, and wit the result
O that I immediately scoured0aso that 1
0 did not know before, and after taking
UNDER QUEEN VICTORIA.
During the 50 years succeoclingller
nccession, the area governed by Queen
Victoria exclusive of Great Britain
increased. from 1,100,000 to 8,400,110
square miles; the European populatint
of the colonies increased from 2,000,-
000 to 10,500,000; the colored population
from 9,800,000 to 20,200,000; ani 00
stake revenues of possessions heyon
seas grew from £24,000,000; to £122,000,-
000 a year.
"Moral courage," said the teacher
"Is Lha courage that makes a boy 2
what he thinks is right? regardless o
the jeere of bis companions. l""hon,
sant Willie, " if a fallerhas candy and
eats it all hisself, and ain't afraid of
the other feller's cililin' him stingy, i
that moral courage4"
further doses of the imelle ate, the trou-
hie altogether left mo, The foot is,
knowing Itowv.sareous was my condition,
S this remedy sivad my life.
Sold by G, A. Deadman.
PRESUMPTIVE.
Those photographs must flatter bar.
She's ordered another dozen from the
same negative,
A Marvellous Statement by a Promi.
reedy Whichf is duriRheumatic old e
Mr. E. W. Sbormen, proprietor of the
Sherman House, Morrisburg, Ont., is
known by thousands of Canadians,
hence the following statement from Mr.
Sherman' will he read with great In-
terest and pleasure: I have been.
curedof. rb rheumatism of ten years'
ree
O e bottle of
cede n 1
n three d
to in r y
e n(i
eumatio Core per-
formed
Rh u e e
S American P
entA 1
formed this most remarkable :ours, I
h' disease as I
had suffered from this say,
ever expect
•ten ears, and I did notpe
for y
to be entirely cured. The effects of
the first dose of South American Rheu-
matic Cure were truly wonderful. I
bare only taken one bottle of the re-
medy, and now haven't any sign of
rheumatism in my system. It did me
more good than all the doctoring I ever
did in my life."
Sold by : 0 A. Deadman.
FOR TWENT reS1% YEARS.
TH .,912C"S REST FRIEND
LANGiCST SALE hitt CANADA.
Tired but Sleepless
Is a condition which gradually'eitti
away the etreagth. Let the blood p
purified and enriched by. Reed's Sar-
saparilla and this condition will ceaae.
e For two or three years /wee snbleet to
poor spells. I always telt tired could ict4
sleep at night and the little 1 could eat
did not do me any good. I read about
. Hood's Baresparilla and decided to try it.
Before /had finished two bottles )< begins
to feel better and in s abort time I telt
all right and h
a
d gained 21pounds ds iu
weight. Tam stronger and healthier tbau
Ihave ever been in ray lite." Jaws W.
r7olrzlx WallacebnrOntario.
Co � gp
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Is the Only
True Blood Purifier
Prominently in the public eye today. Be
sure to get Boodle and only Hood's. Do
not be induced to buy and other. •
KOOd'S pips oareailltrerilts,btlottr.
aese,lieadaolie. 960.
EVER YOUNG AND FAIR.
If we live in thoughts, not years!,
'Tis very plainly seen
Why many maidens never pooh
Further than sweet sixteen.
MIT UP THE
SYSTEM IN
WONDERFUL
^�— MANNER
\c„
#ee r.
fti-v,Jogli w.BELL, ,B.D. ( T
oN,
O N't L
1'1 w iH1
a
of
James A. Bell, of Beaverton, Out.,
brother of the 1lcv. John 'Wesley Hell,
B.D., prostrated by nervous teadecbes
A victim of the troub:e for several
years.
South American Nervine effected a
complete rare,
In their own particular Paid few men
are •betel• kuowvu than the .Rev. john
Wesley Bell, Bea, and his brother Sir.
James A. Bole The former wttl be re-
cognized by his thousands of friends all
over the colnttry as the popular nuts able
missionary superintendent of the Royal
Tempters of Temperance. Among the
20,001) =tubers of this order in Ontorle
hie counsel Is sought on all sorts of oc-
casions. Ou the public platform he is one
of the Belem niers of the day, battling
against the. e.t.a:" of intemperance.
Equally well known is Mr. Bell in other
provinces of the Pomieion, having been
Ler years 0 member of the Alaldtob:i
Methodist Conference and (tart of this
time was stationed in Winuipeg. leis
brother, Air, :nnm+s A. Bell, is a highly
respected resident of Besaivton, wnere
his influence, 'hong') heciters more cir-
ctunscribed than that of his eminent
brother, 15 gone the leas effective ansa
produetire 0f good, Of recent yeal's,bow-
ever, the working ability of Mr, :lames
A, Bell bas been sadly marred by severe
attacks of net•notts hendoclte, accom-
panied by indigestion, Who can do fit
work when this trouble takes hold of
them and especially when it becomes
chronic, as was, seemingly, the case w,th
Mr. Bell? The trouble reached such fu -
tensity that last June he was complete-
ly prostrated. Li this condition a inane
recommended South American Nsrvintt.
Ready to try anything and everytating,.
though he thought he lied covered the
list of proprietary medicines, he secured
a bottle of this groat discovery. A
second bottle of the medicine was taken
and tits work was dune. Employinghis,
own language: "Two bottles of South
American Nervine immediately relieved
my headaches and have bunt up my
system in a wonderful manner" Let ne
not deprecate the good our etergymen
and social reformers nee doing in the
world, but how ill -fitted they would be
for their work were it not the relief
that South 4merioaa Nervine brings to
them witon physical ills overtake
them, and when the system, as a re.
suit of hard, earnest and continuous
work, breaks down. Nervine treats rho.
system as the wise reformer treats the
evils he is battling against. It senate at
the root of the trouble. Alt 2,'e.
ease cotnea from disergtlnizatbon of the l
❑erve cantata: This is n scientific tact.
Nervine at ' once works rn ihrse nit VI
centers; gives to them healt't and vete
or; and then there come.n thponat the 1
system strong, healthy, life -m tt. tnr. l g •
blood, and .nervous it•pult'.cs c:r every
Variety are things of the hist.
1#. DE,iMIAN WholoSale and Retail Agent forBrnsgels.