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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1896-6-5, Page 7.,717tsir t8' I� Ik71� IN A NUTSHEEL. TEE VORY LATEST FROM ALL TEE WORLD OVER. )ntetepting items about Our Own eo' ntry, (trent Britain, the Wilted States, end An Parts of the.. Globe, Condensed and Assorted for Easy Reading. CANADA. The 73r1Lis)1 warship Intrepid is at TIalifaat. The Iced River at Winnipeg has reached its highest point in years, The next annual meeting of the Royal Society of Made will In held in Hali- fax„ Bayard Fitton, aged 7, of Hampton, ww:asiven 7 years in the Industrial School for attempted lareeny. A project is on foot to build an elee- trio road from Hamilton to Atherton, through Ancestor, Dr, Wm, MoN. Jones, principal naeiital officer of the quarantine sta- tion at Vancouver Island is dead. Reports have been received at the Marine Department of a terrine storm on the north shore of Lake Superior. Application will be made at the July session of Parliament to inamorata the Hudson 13ay and Pacific Railway Company, April deposits in the Government sav- ing banks amounted to ee38,806, mak- ing 817,205,250 on deposit at the end of the month, Regulations respecting quarantine have been issued in revised form as amended by an order -in -Council pass- ed on the 4th inst. The by-law removing the government of the hospital from municipal polities to a board of governors was passed by the Hamilton City Council on Monday night, Michael Horn and Mark Tompkins have each been sentenced at Hamilton to 12 years in the penitentiary for waylaying and robbing Mayor Tuck- etl.'s cashier. Col. Stacey,pwner of the St, Thomas Street Railway, has made an offer to electrify it, provided he is given an eight or ten year contract Lor street lighting. Lieut, Col. A. H. Macdonald, com- manding the Guelph Garrison Battery, is about to retire after 26 years' ser- vice. Ile will be succeeded by Lieut. - Col. Nicoll. It is denied here that the G. T. R. is dismissing men from the locomotive shops,or that the company has any intention of having their engines built in the United States. • A mass meeting was held at St. John, N. 33., to protest against the ac- tion of the Federal Government in omitting that port from the tenders called for the fast Atlantis line. Mr. Thomas Prod S. Kirkpatrick, brother of the Lieutenant -Governor of Ontario, who was in the Civil Service for the past twenty-three years, died in Ottawa on Thursday morning. The Montreal coroner's jury appoint- ed to investigate the killing of the Belgian Rousseau by Pons, his french brother-in-law, returned a verdict that Pons had acted in self-defence, and the prisoner was set at liberty. Mr. Fitzhugh, of Montreal, represent- ing Mr. Hays, the general manager of the Grand Trunk railway, said that there was no truth iu the report tbat men tire being dismissed from the lo- comotive shops because the Grand Trunk in future intended having their engtnes built in the United States. A Halifax evening paper announces that the scheme of coast defence which is being prepared for submission to the Canadian Government estimates that three fast cruisers, with quick -firing guns, would be necessary on the At- lantic to cover the Gulf of St. Law- rence and coast waters of Nova Scotia and the Bay oe Fundy. GREAT .BRITAIN. The Prince of Wales is going to pay a visit to itir. William Waldorf Astor at Clivedon in June. Owing to the block of Government business in the Imperial House of Com- mons it is almost certain that an au- tumn session will be called. The Irish National party have decid- ed to call a national convention of re- presentative Irishmen from all parts of the world to meet in Dublin in Septem- ber. Sir John Russell Reynolds, physician - in -ordinary to the Queen's household and president of the Royal College of Physicians, is in a critical condition, and growing weaker. Sir Donald Mackenzie Wallace, of London, at one time a well known newspaper man, has been offered the post of British Ambassador to Turkey in succession to Sir Phillip Currie. Accor fling to the report of the Brit- ish.Board of Agriculture, five per cent. of the. Danish butter submitted for analysis was found to be adulterated, while Canada's samples were all pure. A manifesto signed by Mr. Henry labouchere and eighteen other Radi- cal members of the House of Commons has been issued, announcing the for- mation in the House of an advanced Radical section. At a meeting of the anti-Parnellite members of the House of Commons on Wednesday, it was resolved to make earnest effort to bring about a recon- ciliation with the Parnellites, and to reconstruct a united Home Rule party. Mr. Chamberlain, the Secretary of State for the Colonies, presided 00 Thursday night at the South African annual dinner. In his address he ex- pressed regret at the small progress which bad been made towards the re- conciliation of the Dutch and English in South Africa. UNITED STATES. The strike among the ship -builders at Cleveland, Ohio, has ended. The carpenters of Buffalo are on strike for an eight-hour day, The Ohio river isdangerously high at St. Louis and continues to rise, Eight persona lost their lives by cy- clones in Oklahoma territory on Wed,. nesdey. Specials from various points in Kansas bring details of disasters by cyclones on Tuesday night. A terrific storm of wind, rain and hail passed over Washington on Tues- day, ,and broke up the Cabinet 'Meet- ing m progress at the White House. At Washington fire swept a whole block of commercial buildings, opposite the Smithsonian Institutiim four fire- men were crushed to death by falling walls. It is stated positively in Washington that the Urban difficulty has not yet been settled, nor any by been paid. to Great Britalu by the Venezue- lan Government, "Aunt" Sarah Tlaviland has been re- CORONATION QERN1IIQNIRs, leased frena the state prison, at Jack. son, Mich„ after serving a term of 30 wwho thedespwleb says "lirvesdimgCan- It IS reported at St, Paul, Minn., that Lite Jlrieate fortune of Arolsbishop tsttmated at 8l,G00,000, leas been dieelpatecl,owing to he depression i of real estate n Si, Paul. Congress on Wedneeday agreed to the Corlise amendment to the United States Immigration Dill, which renders all contracts with a1ieus to perform labor In the United States null and void, Tile Corliss amendment to the Uuit- ad States Immigration bill, which ren- ders all contraela with aliens to perform labor in the United States null and void, was agreed to in the House of Representatives on Wednesday. One of tee most suocessful mining mon of Colorado is said to be Count James Portales, a member of a famous old German. noble family, who has been in the west about twelve years. Me is a skilled metallurgist. There is little, if any variation in the reports of the New York commercial agencies as to the condition of business in the United States during the week. Wo aro assured that there is no reac- tion, Omagh the movement is small and the "waiting condition continues; in foot, trade is suffering from the be- tween seasons' period, and few orders for immediate delivery are Using placed. On the other hand, railroad earningsare 3,0 per cent. larger for the month than a year ago the tonnage movementeast- ward from Chicago is increasing, busi- ness failures show a marked decline; and the general tone among oommeretal men is one of confident and assuredex- peotancy. The iron trade is rather an uncertain quantity just now; but the boot and shoe manufacturers are active, the factories are mostly running full er. The most favourable reports are from :Kansas City and the Pacific coast. GENERAL',. Mark Twain has been lecturing to crowded Louses at Johannesberg. It is stated that the Mikado contem- plates a tour o1 Europe and America, The British warships Curdelia and Mohawk have arrived at Newfound- land. The pou't of Antofagasta, Chili, was visited by a destructive eyolone on Sunday. The report that the Cuban insur- gents are using explosive bullets is confirmed. A despatch from Cairo says that a death from cholera is reported among the Egyptian troops at Tourab. The gaol at Pretoria, where the Jo- hannesburg reform prisoners are con- fined, is in a most unhealthy condition. Cairo, Egypt, had nine deaths and 11 fresh cases of cholera on Sunday, and Alexandria 20 deaths and 73 new cases. ;Emperor William has prohibited the entry of the • Cologne Gazette into his castles and residences. It criticised him. Sir Hercules Robinson, Governor of Cape Colony, and Sir Graham Bower, Imperial Secretary, have sailed for England. Warlike rumours are prevalent in Samoa, where the rebel chiefs have cor- dially received a Getman warship, caus- ing uneasiness. Emperor William has offended the clerical party in Germany by declaring that clergymen have no right to inter- fere to polities. Two steamer* will •leave Hamburg next week for German South-west Africa, with 410 soldiers and 200 tons et war material. Col. Liebert, of the Prussian service, rias accepted the mission of organizing i the Chinese army, and will leave for China next week. Mr. Cecil Rhodes has telegrepped to Cape Town saying that if he effects a iunetion with Capt. Napier the Mate - bele rebellion will be broken. Advocate Cloote.has been appointed British Diplomatic Agent at Pretoria in succession to Sir Jacobus De Wet, who resigned a few weeks ago. 4. chandelier fell in an opera house in Paris on Wednesday night. In the panic that followed one woman was killed and several persons injured. A despatch from Vladivostoek says that quiet has been restored itt Seoul, and that the Icing of Corea will re- turn to his palace from the Russian Legation. The Briiieh, French, ani Russian Em- bassies at Constantinople have each re- ceived cheques for ten thousand pounds es indemnity for the outrages at Jed- dah in May last. The daughter of General Hippolyte, lately deceased President of the Hay- tlan Republic, is at present in Paris for the purpose of perfecting herself in the french language. Several thousand persons took part in a demonstration en Paris on Sunday, near ticw statue of Jeanne d'Are, de - mending dir testablishment ha of a nation- al fete m her honour. The news from Crete is of the grav- est character. The. Turkish troops in the district of Sphakia are surround- ed by insurgents, and the, latter are being aided by the inhabitants, Archduke Charles Louis of Austria, heir -presumptive to the thrones of Aus- tria and Hungary, the eldest brother of Emperor Francis Joseph, is dead. He was sixty-three years of age. Tao of the liberated Johannesberg Reform prisoners were unable to pay their fines, and the handers forthwith subscribed the amount, il'Ir, Barney Bee- nato, heading the list; with a large amount. A Getman military court has sen- tenced Count von Holzo to two yew's' imprisonment in it fortress as a punish- ment for his duel with Baron von Schrader, which resulted in the death of the latter. It is stated that the filibustering steamer Laurada, bound for Cuba, has on board three cannons invented by Josef C. Perrault, of Montreal, which are of smite, deadly character that they eould annihilate an army in a few min- utes. inutes. Minnie Allen, now in prison at VCau pun, Wis., clavus that she killed Mont- gomery Gibbs, a Ruffolo lawvyer, for which crime Sadie 'and Clarence Robin son are now suffering. Minnie Allen (nee Clarke) says she was born in Ow- en Sound, and passed parts of her life in Toronto. DEADLY SQUEEZERS. It is said that the peasants of Dachau, in Bavaria, furnish the most frightful example of the abuse of the corset. Sev- eral hundred years ago they adopted a national dress, of which the leading feature was a earset reaching almost to the chin, The women soon lost their nei ural shape, lost the power to muse their children and the tribe was on the road to'ivavitable extinction when the national dress was abolished by ardor of the Goverumetit, 4 sable n'mt.n'Irt1u'ra or the (la'geemi *:airs ,elseeve can,—Sit•ISdwie Amid ds. e'i, id .itronet or the stenos tai Hie OM ('Halla#, Sir Edwin Arnold, wlio went to Mos- cow on behalf of the London Daily Tele. pupil, in his despatch to that paper .de. sarihing' the Beene est the Kremlin, ex elallus:—"'-,tinily oannot one write In colours? There was never anytlllnel seen on any stage like that living kal- eidoscope of fanclfnl. attire, of fantas- tic hues and embellishments, visible around me, particularly in the Oriental element, end all the far Eastern na- tions. The officials from Mime wore magenta-aolow•ad velvet robes, gold embroidered, and sugar -loaf hats, Now China contributes a dazzling group wvtih flowered satin frocks and vermil- ion buttoned hats. Now a Move of magnates from Lake 73aiical astound the eye with far-irimmed brocade and long red boots. Now I recognize the grey surtout and amber cap -strings of the Coreans, "The Cossacks' guard were glorious- ly uniformed in scarlet and gold, rid- ing little, weedy, Roman -nosed ;Uk- raine nags, with only a snaffle and bridle, and with, gold rand black ban- doliers, looking quite fit to pace in front of the Czar, "After these came upon the scene al- most the chief interest for me person- ally, since I saw gravely and signifi- cantly riding along as the vassal friends of the great white Khan all the chiefs of the Central Asian kingdoms and provinces over whish his eagles cast the shadow of their wings. But these and other pparts of the pageant palled before the Grand Master of Ceremonies, borne haughtily onward in such 'a gold- en chariot as I thonght existed only in heaven or in classical pictures, hold- ing a wand of gold topped with an emerald as big as a walnut. 1 note that a Catholic Archbishop of Ameri- ca has been deprecating the abolition of war by arbitration. Ila would have been consoled by the spectacle I wit- nessed to -day in the Red square—a daz- zling illustration oe the pomp, pride, anti circumstances of glorious' war. But here at last comes the august object of this unparalleled manifesta- tion, the successor and heir of Ivan the Terrible, His handsome and man- ly young countenance is pale with the prodigious sensation which such a scene must naturally excite, and lie holds his gloved right hand almost perpetu- ally to his regimental cap. He bends his head gently to this side and that to acknowledge the boundless welcome. Every man is bareheaded and every women is waving a kerchief or shawl or violently crossingher loyal bosom in prayer for 'the little father.' "'Cha Czarina also sat all alone, dress- ed wholly in white, even the jewels, pearls, and diamonds seeming to mar by their color the effect of this pure apparel, which caused her to resemble a marble saint within a golden shrine. Most unmistakable were the affection and loyalty of the crowd, and I saw more than ono poor peasant woman's" eyes fill with tears el sheer joy to be- hold this fair lady. One honest fellow fell upon his knees to say his prayers as though\ rte had seen something Di- vine, till a Cossack bundled him back into the crowd." ALL NIGHT IN THE CLOUDS. Au Aetldent to !h1 Eanl•s ('aunt Wheel— A. Number or Persons Imprisoned all Nutt in Comportments Three llandt•ed. Feet ,Above the. (+i•enlltl. A despatch from London says:—By a curious coincidence, while the mem- bers of the House of Commons were practically confined in that so-called most comfortable of all clubs, a num- ber of people, men, women, and chil- dren, were undergoing somewhat simi- lar experiences at Earl's Court. Quite a party had entered the great wheel there known as the "gigantic wheel and recreation tower." This structure is an imitation of the famous Ferris wheel of the Chicago World's Fair; but it is larger, the highest point of the London wheal being three hundred feet from the ground, while the top of the Ferris wheel was only 204 feet high. Shortly before 8.15 pen. on Thursday the wheel started, with quite a num- ber of people on hoard, and everything went merrily until, 8.20, when the struc- ture stopped revolving. At first lit- tle or no attention was paid to the matter, t i but a time s t e >ass d and th wheel 'would not budge, passed who were able to do so left the cars, and steps were taken to rescue those who were imprisoned higher up. Ladders were procured, and, later, fire escapes were used. But in spite o1 all 'these efforts quite a number of people were eompelled to retnain aloft. Afiotih midnight they got hungry, and every means was devised to teed them and make them comfortable for the night. Eventually they went to sleep, but awoke this morning early and very hungry. By means of ropes, cans of coffee and baskets of bread anis other provisions were hauled up to them, and the worlr,of tryingto revolve the wheel was resumed. But it was not until noon on .l"riday that the prisoners were finally released, amid much cheering from the crowds who had assembled to wilness the rescue. RECEIVED $100 WORTH OF GOOD FROM EACH BOTTLE. The sYnrds of the Dry. .James imide, it, of F1. ,John, N. D„ nen cern) nl;. SSututt tinI. erleen Kidney /:are. This clergyman never spoke truer 'words, Ile hnadsuffered for a lone, Lime from kidney trouble, and commenced to think—as will certainly become the case if a renutcly is not secured—that he was fated to the of Kidney disease, He read the claims of the manufacturers of South American Kidney Cure, with scepticism, perhaps. But ho triad the medicine, and belt much benefitted with- in two days, and using his own lang- uage: "1 have talreu iti all four bottles and consider that 1 have received 100 worth of good from each bottle," The figure is not nearly high enough, for when kidney disease is not stayed, death gtt.itetly follows. Sold by G. A. Deadman. KNOWS NO PleAlt, Are you afraid, Lily, when you go driving with Dir. Phillips, that the horse will run away 4 1o, indeed. Mt. Phillips has trained his horse to drive without lines. RQFM MOB UNDER), 811JJKS, r J COLLAPSE OF THE WESTERN UNION }WILDING' IN BUFFALO, :fora l't'a',ens peeled in the Rotas—Tyro 1)10.11' llodlt.5 llit'evtt'ed--Seine 411 the $tlt)Ytil ILIUM)) Rtills('s ttitit3', lit ilnI54'd^• t'llrili'nr 115 ]ftre ilf iYel9i !n tint: :rig; lag at (bo'1'I*Ue of rho Aet'ltleid. A despr.teh from 13ntfalo, N. Y., says: -'A louti crash, the breaking of timbers, sound al tailing brief;, shrieks of men, Milted In startling people In the vtein- ity of Mein and Seneca streets about 9.20 o'alools on Thursday morning. What seemed at Ural. to be an awful calamity, involving great loss of hu- man life, had taken place. A little later it was, however, learned that the loss of life was not so greatas at first feared, but it was certain that several lives had been lost, The four -storey brick building 8 and 10 Seneca street, part :of It forming a portion of the Brown building, recently vacated by the Western Union, collapsed with seeroely a moment's warning while a large number,. of men were at work in the building, remodelling it. The falling walls went down upon a couple of smaller nr!ck buildings adjoiningon e titsll eastthem. slue, and practically demolish- FALL emolishFALL 0F THE WALLS. Sehnert's barber shop, next door to the falling building, was crushed like en egg -shell, It was full of barbers and customers, and it was certain that all of them did not get out alive. Quickly responding to. an alarm, a force of firemen were put at work cleaning away the ruins, The men worked with feverish haste, Burling brick and broken iron and thnbersinto. the street, for they heard is they worked, the agonized cry of men be- neath them. In the street, a terrible illustration of the disaster, flowed a stream of blood from those who had been stricken down in the middle of the street by the falling debris. WORKING IN THE RUINS. Like good, solid life-savers, the fire- men turned to and worked as though their own lives depended on the strug- gle. A groan was heard from beneath the heaps of bricks and timbers, and the rescuers worked like Trojans. Af- ter twenty minutes' work they drag- ged a mangled piece of humanity from the pile. An ambulance bore him away. At 0,40 the gang of firemen working in the middle of the ruins over the sidewalk were noticed to sud- denly redouble their efforts. Soon af- ter the strong arms of three firemen pulled a young fellow from the debris. He was able to stand by hhnself and rub the mortar and dust from his eyes. He had been imprisoned under ten feet of brick. The great crowd bo - an cheering when they first saw hub. When they saw he was uninjured a loud, hearty cheer rose for his miracul- ous,escape. He is Robert Castler, a young ateamtitter, who was in the cel- lar, and beard the first cracking warn- ings of the impending ruin. Ile look- ed up and saw the rafters and joist giving wayHe sprang quickly into the part of the cellar that is under the sidewalk. A moment later the whole structure was about his ears. Ele was tightly penned in, although he could breathe easily. He said there were two steamfitters tend two helpers in the cellar, and he did not 'see them as the building fell. He thinks they may injury, escaped as they were in th'e rear part of the cellar. THE CAUSE OF THE DISASTER. When the Western Union moved out of the Brown building, which is au old, decrepit structure of forty years' standing, their dynamos and engines were taken out of the. basement, and contractors were employed to remodel and reconstruct the building. The im- mediate cause of the collapse was the removal of part of the foundation walls. There were but few tenants in the building, and they were advised that they need not be disturbed by the rehabilitation, MURDER OF MISSIONARIES. Retails or the Brutal Milling or Dr. (;each and family, nt Sifts. A despaielf from Paris, says:—Pur- thin. . particulars now received from Tunis show that the report of the mur- der of Doctor :each and his faintly was, unhappily, only too true. The doctor, who was at the head of the North African Mission, had long been resi- dent at Tunis. In the month of Au- gust, last year, hs was remover, by his society to Sfax; and in January he set- tled in his new home, a house with a large garden, situated about a mile from the town. Tieing a man of stu- dious habits, .he liked the solitude, which unfortunately enabled the mur- derers to perpetrate their crime unmo- lested, It was a terrible tragedy. Doctor Leath, his wife and their elder child, a little boy six years of age, fleet from room to room as their assail- ants advanced, and the last stand was made .in their beet •chamber, the doer of which had been broken down. When the victims were discovered by the Com- missary of Police and the British Vice - Consul, the doctor was found lying dead on the floor, with ten ghastly wounds inflicted by a dagger and au axe. His wife had been stabbed in four places, and was also lifeless, while the little lad had sustained a fear- ful gash in the neck.. Only t.Ite baby, which was still in its cradle, had been spared. With regard to the motive of the crime the utmost mystery prevails, as none of the valuables in the house had been touched, It bas been sug- gested that the assassinal.ion may have been an act of vengeance; but Doctor Leach was a mild and amiable man, and was not known to have any ene- mies. He was thirty-five years of age, and had married just before he settled itt Tunis. Besides his mission work, he Leen created in Tunis by tette affair. At ales. A very painful sensation has looked after a dispensary for the Ax- fitsc it: was thought that. the culprits might have been Europeans, but three natives have now been arrested o11 alts- liicion. Stich :I hold to be the genuine use of gun -powder; that IL nates all Dion alike tail. Nay, if thou be cooler; elev- ercr titan J—if thou have more mind though all but no body whatever, then const thou kill ase first, mint art the taller. hereby at last is the Goliath powerless and Davol resistless; savage animalism is nothing, inventive spirit- ualism is all,—Carlyle. , TEE PAIN DirIMELiL+s' LY LKT'r ME go days 1lli's. sv, '!noodle, of Deeeell( After. llsttag br, Agnew's Care ler the Hears, l3ow 41221cu11 it is for those afflicted with heart disease 10 Ret relief, and to get it quickly. The nein Ilan 's on, And is sug estiee of the name terrible re - snits,. 1o' heart disease eennot be trifle ed with, trare was Mfrs. W. T. Rundle, the wife of a well-known teattte dealer its Dundalk, who suffered so several from pain in the region of the heard' that, to quote her own words: "1 was for sine time unable to attend to my household duties, I was induced to tart' :far, Agnew's Cure for the Heart, and I anent say the 'result was wonderful. Tin pain immediately left me after the first day, and I have bad no trouble. lime." Strong testimony, and yet Il2rs. Rundle stands along with thous. ends of others who tan say the same. thing. Sold by G. A. Deadman. It is always hated to go beyond your public. It they are satisfied with eheap performance, you will not easilyarrive at better. If they know what is good and require it, you will aspire and burn until you achieve it. But from time to time, in history, men are born a whole age too scan,—Emerson. EDWARD BLAKE'S SUCCESSOR IN DURHAM. ICohort Reith, 1J. P. for Durham, Dui., 19 Another sY ho Recommends Dr, Agneww's CtUnridial J'awdcr. The observing publie are commencing to ask, Wbo has not a good word to say for Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder? Certainly the best citizens the Domin- ion over are talking its praises, and not without cause, Mr.Robert Reith, mem- ber in the Commons Mor Durham, the old constituency of Hon. Edward Rieke, is another addition to the prominent citizens who have used this medicine, and from their own experience can say that for cold. in the head, catarrh iii its different phases, and hay fever, there is no remedy to equal this. It never fails to relieve in ten minutes. Sold by G. A. Deadman. Reality surpasses imagination; and we see, breathing, brightening and mov- ing before our eyes sights dearer to our hearts than any we ever beheld in the land of sleep.—Goethe. Taking cold, le a common complaint, 5111 is dueite impure and deficient blood and it often leads to aerlons troubles, The remedy la found 10 pure, rich blood, I am, not very strong end tiometimes need a tonic to het me battle against sickness, I find thetptwo or threebottles of lfood'a Sereeparlila ie Pet wenIneed. 8 have taken it occasionally for sevorel yearn and do riot have epydootors' blue Le pay i" MM./AMU 1110(1INa, 56 Bean- fain et., Oherleston, ti. C. liemembex rilla Ie the One True Blood Purifier. 51; t3 for 05, y easy to bay easy to )the Hood S easytooperate. Zee. FOR T.WENTS:-Sig. 'TEARS, THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND LARt-OST SALE IN CANADA. She Had tie be Turneclin Bed With Sheets. "My wife," says Dor. Thomas Cros- bie, of Lisle, Ont., was laid up with rheumatism for months, and for two weeks the pain was so intense that she had to be turned in bed with sheets. I sawn an advertisement in the Allis- ton, Ont., Herald, saying 'that South American Rheumatio Cure would give relief in fifteen minutes, and quickly cure. I at, once took the train for that )place, and secured one-half dozen bottles tram Mr. J. R. Ripwtell, druggist. My wife began the use of it, and in 24 nouns she wasout of bed, and has not been troubled with rheumatism since. This remedy is a. wonder worker, and I 'be- lieve will prove a great blessing to anyone suffering from rheumatism." Sold by G. A. Deadman. t Y \, .nut1A4 "itv,JOHN w. e' E L L , 6.0. �. ,O NT. MILTON iV'4'. A 14. .11411E6 R.1310L.., Dea%IERYOM ,ONT. Janes A. Bell, at Beaverton, Ont., brother of the Rev. John i\ ewes, bell, B.D., prostrated by nervous headaches A victim et the trouble for several years. South American Norvine effected a complete cure. In their own particuler field Lew men are biter known than the Rev. John Wesley Dell. 13.1„ and his brother hir. James A. Keil, The former will tie re- cognized by his thousands of friends all over tite country no Um popular and able missionary superintendent cf the Royal i'I'nt4dets of Temperance. Among the 20,000 members of this order in Ontario lila counsel is sought on all sorts of oc- ensions. On the public platforms he is one of tete strong men of: the del'. nettling against the ,evils of intemperance. Equally well I•nwn is Mr. Bell in other provinces of the Ilominiou,•hnving been for years n member of the hfauitoba Methodist 1 lloW:clence and port of this timwas shalt n ,t in Winnipeg. Ills be ur, \!r, .lnnu•s A. Bell, is it htghly respected revid, nt of 13 'naerton, where Ills influence, though herh,,is mere eir- ettmseribed than Out of his eminent brother. 18 unite 1be loss effective and prodttrtive itt good. 02 recent years,1wwv-' ever, the warhlnis utility ofllr, hones A. Bell has been aridly mitered by severe etleeks rte nervous heedncbe, n, c•tnt- pnnied by itulitnesgen. 'Who can do fit tvorlt when this trouble talus hold of A. 3)lIA1)lt1AN Wholesale 0' • them auci especially when it becomes chronic, its was, seemingly, the case with ,lir. Kell? The trouble reached seta in- tensity that last June he was complete ly prostrated. In this condition a triend recommended South American N'irvine. Ready to try anything and everything, thmrgb he thought he had eovereu the list of proprietary nieclicines, he secured a bottle of this great discovery. h second bottle of the medicine was taken and the work was done. Employing bis own languages "Two bottles of Sonde American Netelno immediately. relieved My headaches and have bunts up nsy system in it wonderful manner." Let us not depreeate the gouts our clergymen turd social reformers are doing in the world, but bow ill -fittest they would he for their work were it not the relief that South American Nervine brings to tbem when physical ills overtake them, and when the system, as a re. sun of lard, earnest Dud contlnuons work, breaks down. Nervine treats the system es the wise reformer treats the evils be is battling against. It strums at the root of the trouble. All dile) else comes from dtesrgaseizetiin of the f nerve centers. This is a scientific fact. Nervine at once wvorint 1su those nerve centers; given to theta health and vig- or; and then there commit throneh the system strong, healthy, lite-nrtrtairing blood, and .nervous trembles or every variety are things of the past.. td Retail Agetlt tor2iruspils.