HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1896-7-24, Page 7JITIX24 1896 ¶ITB I US$EXS POST,
IBE NEWS IN A UTSHELL
TM VERY LATE$'[' FROM ALL TIE
WORLD OVER.
Agee -resting lame About our Own Country,
Oreat llrftalo, the United States, and
MI Porta of the Globe, Coodenood cad
Ips'serte4 for Easy Reading.
CANADA..
Aecording to the eeusus takenon
May 201.h, the population of Winnipeg
is 31,040.
The high water in the Fraser River
is subsiding, and railway traffic has
been resumed.
Mr, T. A. Wardell of Dundas has
been elected Grand Master of the Cana-
dian;Order of Oddfellows,
The crop outlook in Manitoba con-
tinues to improve, and the prospects
for a bountiful harvest are promising.
The Ottawa City Council has adopted
a by-law prohibiting bicyelists going
faster than eight miles en hour within
the city limits,
Assistant Engineer E, G. Barrowhas
been recommended for the a,ppoint-
memt of City Engineer of Hamilton in
succession of the late Mr. Haskins.
Manitoba crop reports continue to be
of a gratifying nature. With favorable
weather wheat has made great pro-
gress, and a good harvest is assured.
John Charlton M.P.,, has entered suit
against the New York Central Railway
company for damages for injuries re -
waved in an accident at Tonawanda lest
December.
United States officers are in Edmon-
1 en, Alberta, looking for a man known
as Cigarette Charley, who is acoused.
of murdering a son of A.W.G. Ott at
Wheaton, I11.
Thieves broke into the vestry of St.
George's Cathedral, Kingston, and
after drinking all the wine In sight,
ransackedthe box containing the Arch-
bishop's vestments.
Archie Remillard of Ottawa was
drowned in the South Nation River,
below the city. He was tipped outof.
a buggy while crossing the river with.
some companions.
Mr. George Olds, until recently Gen-
eral Traffic Manager of the Canadian
?nettle Railway, has been appointed as
the representatives of that road on the
Board of Managers of the Joint Traffic
Association.
A shortage of nearly $4,000 discovered
in the books of the late town treasurer
of Stratford has been made good by
Wm. Lawrence, son of the deceased,
who was appointed treasurer on his
father's death.
A number of well-known Toronto
bankers and financial men, who were
interviewed on Friday, expressed the
opinion that the adoption of a silver
standard by the United States would
seriously affect the business relations
of the Dominion with that country, and
that Canadian investments would un-
doubtedly suffer.
GREAT .BRITAIN.
A scheme is on foot to erect a gig-
antic model of the globe in London, on
a scale of one -five -hundredth of nature.
A peerage hasbeen conferred upon
Sir Hercules Robinson, the Governor of
Cape Colony.
Sir Augustus Berkeley Paget, form-
erly British Ambassador at Vienna, is
dead. He was seventy-three years of
age.
The Infanta Eulalie of Spain is in
London, where she is entertained elab-
orately during the height of the pre-
sent
ro-sent season.
Returns of the British Board of
Trade for June show an increase in
imports of 06,650,000 and an increase in
exports of 413,65,000 as comparedwith
June, '95.
It is announced in London that after
the naval manoeuvres the Duke and
Duchess of York will go to Australia
on board the Blenheim the Lastest
cruiser in the British navy.
The Ancient and Honorable Artillery
Company of Boston, on Friday visited,.
by special initiation, Marlborough
house, and were given a cordial wel-
come by the i race and Princess of
Wales.
The Imperial. House of Commons has
voted in favor of compelling the India
Exchequer to pay the expenses of the
troops sent to Suakin to replace the
garrison troops there who are being
used in the Soudan expedition.
Lady Mary Bligh, a daughter of the
Earl of Darnley, committed suicide on
Sunday night by drowning herself in e
a pond at Cobham balls She was in
poor health and was despondent
over a disappointed irate
d love
affair.
The Allan State line steamer State
of Nebraska, from New York to Glas-
gow, refused to answer her helm while
ascending the Clyde on Tuesday, and
collided with the warship Dido. Both
vessels had several plates smashed.
The Town Council of Birmingham
has before it anoffer from Mr. Wil-
liam Mackenzie, president of the Tor-
onto Street railway, and Mr. James
Ross, president of the Montreal Street
railway, to purchase the whole street
railway system within the town.
Mrs. Anna Hodgins, :wife of Mr.
Frank E. Hodgins, a Toronto lawyer,
while riding a bicycle in London, Eng..
on Wednesday. fainted, and fell from
the wheel, and died in a few minutes.
A. coroner's jury rendered a verdict
that she died from apoplexy, induced by
sun -stroke.
UNITED STATES.
Mrs. Monroe H. Rosenfeld at New
York, is recovering from the effects of
a five weeks' trance.
Police of Fargo, Dakota, believe they
have James Dunham who murdered a
family of six in California recently.
Alonzo J, Walling, convicted of the
murder of Pearl Bryan, was sentenced
yesterday to be hanged on August 7th.
The New York Sun (Democrat) has
bolted the Democratic platform, and ex-
horts alt Democrats to support Mr.
McKinley.
At the convention of the Christian
Endeavourers held in Washington, it
was decided to meet next year m San
Francisco.
Thirty-one persons wore killed and
many injured In a collision on an ex-
cursion train on the Chicago & North-
western Railroad near Logan, Iowa.
Three commissioners have been ap-
pointed by Governor Hastings to in-
vestigate the Wilkesbarro mining dis-
aster and discover who is to blame.
By the explosion of a Chicago &
Northwestern locomotive boiler at
Trombly, Miele, one man was killed
and three others terribly injured.
Emil Gebhardt, Charles Babel and
William Sauchagrin have beau arrest-
ed at Detroit, charged with smuggling
old iron and steel from the Canadian
side.
One of the largest life insurance cor-
rat'o inNewi'
l i <
nsY xk isc a l
Iraa a b e n
a o''t
d3
number f A alecks i to u
dulness in itssbusjnesswaat gthe present
time,
By the explosion of an ell lamp in
Buffalo en Wedeeeday night, a dwelt"
ing-bouse was destroyed, three peeple
were killed and a fourth' wan probably
dataily in,jared,
The New York Board of Health has
meds epitting upon the floors of pub-
he buildings, boats and cars an offenoe,
'punishable by arrest and im rison-
ment. The lacy becomes a section of
the Sanitary Code.
The Pittsburg, Pa., city auditors have
finished their examination of the books
Of ex -City Attorney Moreland and his
assistant, House, and report $297,000
unaccounted for on the books.
Governor ;Murray, the British and
French Commodores and the New-
foundland 'Ministry held a conference
on the fishery troubles, and there 15
hope of the matter being settled.
Harry L, 33. Need, formerly assistant
paymaster on the Canadian Pacific rail-
way, was arrested on Friday in New
York, suspected of having appropriated
85,000, which he stated was lost from his
pay car in May,
O'Donovan Rosso recently recalled to
mind an old-time friend who bad been
sent to the penitentiary, and at once
sat down and wrote, a letter to Gov-
ernor Morton, askingfor els pardon.
He was somewhat sartled. to receive
a reply stating that his friend had been
dead for three years,
Business throughout the United
States continues unusually quiet, and
according to reports from the two
principal commercial agencies in New
York, not mush change for the better
is apparently immediately probable.
The dulness has been increased some-
what by unfavorable weather, and con-
siderably by uneasiness as to the fu-
ture financial position of the country
caused by the action of the Chicago
convention. Collections are unsatis-
factory, and there is a general disposi-
tion , to curtail credit. Wool is de-
pressed, with no satisfactory activity
in the demand for fall goods. Iron
and steel is in lessened request, with
no prospect of present revival. Boot
and shoe manufacturing is still active,
but the outlook is weak.
GENERAL.
Dantzig has a case of Asiatic cholera.
Three thousand houses have been de-
stroyed by floods on the west coast of
Japan.
The cattle plague in. Australia con-
tinues. Entire herds of cattle are be-
ing destroyed.
It is rumoured that Abbas, the young
Khedive of Egypt, will visit Europe dur-
ing the present summer.
The rumour is again revived that the
Prince of Naples is likely to marry
Princess Elena of Montenegro.
Baron Hirsch's widow has donated
four million pounds to promote the emi-
gration of Russian Jews to Argentina.
It is reported in Berlin that the
Transvaal Government has ordered 60,-
000 rifles from German'manufaeturers.
A Cairo despatch says it is reported
that there are 20,000 Mandists in Don-
golaa, and tbat they are resolved upon
fighting.
A German sub -marine cable company
has been formed in Berlin, to lay a cable
from Germany to Spain, and thence to
the United States.
It is reported. in Constantinople that
sixty thousand Kurds in the Diarbekir
district have revolted and are pillag-
ing the villages indiscriminately.
The town of Cobrin, in the Province
of Grodno, Russia, has been burned.
Three hundred houses were destroyed,
and two thousand people are homeless.
British troops made an attack upon
the Matabele position at Theba Imam-
ba on Sunday, and were repulsed. They
repeated the attack on Monday, and
were successful.
There were seventeen cases of cholera
and five deaths from the disease among
the Egyptian soldiers at Cairo on Mon-
day, and four eases and four deaths.
among the British soldiers in the same
place.
A despatch from Athens says that.
Russia, is prompting Fiance to occupy.
Crete and hold it against Great Brit-
ain's tenure of Cyprus and Egypt. The
British fleet has been so strengthened
in Cretan waters as to almost biocarade
the island.
The new Shah of Persia has announc-
ed that henceforth public posts, digni-
ties,
ignities, and military titles will be' bestow-
ed solely on the merits of the candi-
dates, and that no money consideration
will be allowed weight in the matter of
appointments,
It is related of the late Jules Simon
that w was when he wf s directed to make an
official report on the Paris Exposition!
of 1889 the amount named for the work
was 58,000. He, however, of his own ac-
cord, reduced it to 5..0
,400; to the amaze-
ment of all office -holders.
THIRTY-ONE KILLED.
Aa Awful Accident on the Chicago North-
westertt Railroad at Logan. Iowa— he•
tails of the nail llu•.
An appalling accident to an excursion
train occurred early on Saturday even-
ing at Logan, Iowa, 35 miles east of
Omaha, on the line of the Chicago &
Northwestern Railroad, in which 31
persons, living in Omaha,Council Bluffs,
Missouri Valley and intervening points,
were killed and 40 injured. The train
consisted of fifteen coaches, loaded down
with members of the Union Pacific
Pioneer Association of Omaha and their
families and friends. The excursion
party left Omaha early in the day, pick-
ing up recruits at Council Bluffs, Mis-
souri Valley, and Woodbine, Ia. Its
destination was Logan, Iowa. About 7
in the evening the journey home was
commenced. The train had hardly pass-
ed the limits of the city, and was round-
ing a curve, when down brakes was
Whistled, and then came a crash. The
excursion train had been run into by a
fast freight, and all the coaches were
ditched, This has been a day of gen-
eral mourning in Omaha. The crowds
of anxious people at the depots did not
scatter with the break of day. although
the excitement of the night wore off
as relatives and friends of the dead ones
became convinced of the worst. About
7 o'clock the first funeral train from
the scene of the catastrophe arrived at
the Union Depot, and there was an in-
voluntary push forward to gratify a
morbid desire to learn' the neva from
these who had been in the disaster,
The 'first train contained many of the
more seriously injured, and, as the poor
unfortunates were lifted, in blankets,
from the car, the groans of the wound-
ed mingled with t he agonized sobs of
relatives and friends, Twenty passen-
gers were taken in ambulances to St.
Joseph's Hospital. Several of them can-
not hope to live more then a few hours.
At 8,30 o'eloek the train carrying the
dead wa
s jfhto
d qom l
across thelong Pacisc trestle.
As it drew up
to the station a special cordon of pa-
ice guarded the approaohea and Italia
'he orawa back, Seventeen bodies lad
on pine boards and covered with a pia n
muslin shroud were taken one by one
and placed in a long row .on the floor
of the baggage -room. Only friends of
the missing 9005 were allowed admAe-
sion. Those, silent forme gave evidence
of the force of .yesterday's collision.
Headless trunks, bodies without limbs,
limbs without bodies, were gathered on
that small space, Occasionally some one
would recognize the features of a son
or a daughter. Kind friends would
gently lead them from the room, and
the bocl would be ticketed and sent to
the und"ertalcer'e,
THE BOSTON ARTILLERY.
The Ancient and 10,neurabfe Greatly 1(4'
lighted with ahem lteeeptioa taweted
00(1, Enlhunlrietn by all Vllasses^t (i.
tabling Souvenirs at Windsor.
A despoteh from London says; --Col,
Walker, of the Ancient and Honorable
Artillery Company of Massachusetts,
said to a representative of the Associa-
ted Press:—"Our visit virtually con-
eluded on Friday night, with the
smoker of the Honorable Artillery
Com
pany though most of the Anoients were
present in uniform yesterday after-
noon at the annual inspection of the
Honorable Artillery Company. I wish
to record our keen delight at the char-
acter of the reception we have met with
here. Of course, we expected the gen-
erous wholesouled courtesies of aur
comrades, But we were totally unpre-
pared for the great popular reception
by the mass of the people which we
have met witb every moment since ar-
riving here. It is very clear to all of
us that the mass of Englishmen are
heart and soul against any interruption
of the peaceful relations between the
two countries, and they took this oc-
casion to spontaneously demonstrate the
same. This is the spirit manifested by
the Queen, Prince of Wales, Duke of
Connaught, Lord Wolseley, and every-
one in authority. They all seem to be
most anxious to emphasize the plea-
sure of seeing the Ancients."
The reception accorded to the Anci-
ent and Honorable Artillery Company
in England surpasses anything• in
point of genuine, hearty enthusiasm
in the history of the country. On• all
sides, from the Queen and the Prince
of Wales down to the poorest of the
masses, the hand of good -fellowship
has been loyally extended to the Visit-
ors, who, as distinctly stated by the
Prince, were not received as foreigners,
but as brothers from across the sea.
But there has been .humorous feature
in the proceedings, which it will do no
harm to record. When the Ancients
were entertained in the Royal Orange-
ries at Windsor on Wednesday many
of their ladies were anxious to obtain
souvenirs of the occasion, and they
persuaded the waiters to sell them
knives and forks. Consequently the
waiters did a thriving trade. They
charged five shillings each for common
steel knives, and it now develops that
these knives were the property of the
contractor at Windsor who supplied
the feast, and that they were never
used inside the castle. ,
NEW CABLE SYSMEM.
Flnsia XIII Attxlons to Have All-ltrilish Cables
—Tice Line to Australia.
A despatch from London says :—Sir
John Pender's death will give an im-
petus to tha movement for a new sys-
tem of cables for the Empire entirely
under British control. Sir John, with
Scotch shrewdness, built up a huge
cable monopoly in India, Australia,
South', East, and West Africa, and
the West Indies. Sometimes mar-
riage alliances helped him, sometimes
political influence, sometimes cour-
tesies which fill Madeira and other sa-
lubrious cable stations with sprigs of
English nobility. Heavy pressure
from Canada and Australia, with Mr.
Chamberlain's sympathy, is loosening
this cable ring's tight grip upon the
Empire. A Pacific conference is now
sitting in private at the Colonial Of-
fice, Earl Selborne, the Under-Secre-
tary, presiding, It has been agreed
an all -British cable shall be laid forth-
with from Vancouver, British Colum-
bia, to Australia, via the Fanning is-
lands,
Honolulu being toppedby
now
to arrange minor details. It baa de-
cided that
the
cable shall be laid,and
shall be managed, not by a subsiized
private company, but by a cable trust
formed by the British, Canadian, and
Australian Governments raising a
capital of £1,80.0,000 on joint guarantee.
This new link with Australia proving
a strategic and commercial suceeee, ex-
tensions will be made to South Africa
and India, thus creating a trunk line
of Imperial cables,
The Colonial Office also is on the
point • estfIndiangcable to avoid
pre-
sent dependence upon the United Sts
and Cuban lines which are allies of the
?ender system. Two tenders are be-
fore the Government -the West India
and Panama Company propose an ex-
tension from Jamaica to Bermuda, to
meet the .Halifax -Bermuda cable, and
then to England. Tho Halifax -Berme,
da Company propose an 'extension
south to Jamaica, and ultimately to
Trinidad and British Guiana. Tim West
Indian Government urged the Colonial
Office to accept the Halifax -Bermuda
tender, which it probably will do.
FARMERS ALARMED.
Army Worm ilarehing'rllrough tile brain
L+iclds,,I New ]aril State.
The farmers throughout Western New
York are greatly alarmed over the ar-
rival of the army worm. The little
pests made their first appearance in the
southwestern counties of the State the
first part of last week. They are de-
stroying thousands of bushels of grain
every hour, and there is no known way
of killing them without destroying the
crops at the same time.
Whole farms are being devastated
every day, anti many of the grangers
whose farms are mortgaged will be
ruined- The farmers throughout the
neighborhood are greatly alarmed.
The army worm has made its appear-
ance in Duchess County, N. Y., and is
marching over green fields hi great
numbers, leaving them bare: Sever-
al days ago Mr. John Ham of Wasein -
ton hollow noticed a few worms in hie
spring rye field, and twenty-four hours
later they bad destroyed the fifteen
acres of ryeo The pests are cleaning
out rye, tdmotby and clover.
TRANCE'S SARAINE EMERIES.
An Aitdilstry ill
Which More xliilu 2II,UO0
Aldi Are Engaged Seven Monrths a Wear,
It takes 25,000 or 80,000 amen to catch
the fish that go into sardine boxes in
Franco alone, The fishermen are em-
ployed seven months a year, and one
village alone bas been known to oil 2,-
050,000 pounds of sardines and to salt
as many ore.
The signs of which fishermen judge
of the coining of sardines are floating
bombes of algae, the odor from satrdieeS
caught by fish of prey, and birds hover-
ing over the sea. The terns dive
straight, with wings close, and the cor-
morants kiss the water lightly with
the bills when these fish are user,
the surface. It is then the bait le cast
overboard. The bait ie generally cod-
fish roe, lnostly from Norway, salted
down in barrels for transportation, but
soaked in water to make it heavy, It
is east overboard by the barrel -35,000
tons of Norway roe are used in a season:
Countless schools of sardines are at-
tracted by it. Curiously enough the
fishermen use all gill nets from thirty
to forty-five wards long and from nine
to twelve yards deep.The bottoms are
not leaded or otherwise weighted, and
they are cast out so that the sardines,
in their rushes too and fro for the bait
fetch up in the nets and are drowned.
When a net gets heavy it is pulled in,
the fish are taken out and are cast into
the hold. Tip goes the sail, and away
fthe ish ahoatrecured, starts for the shore, where the
There was a time when 12,000 or even
20,000 sardines were taken in a trip by
a single boat, but as in the Lake Erie
and the North Atlantic coast fisheries
inc fish have decreased and nowadays
rarely more than 0000 fish are taken
on a trip. For this fishing 20 -foot
boats are `used with a sharp spear for-
ward and a square stern. They are fast
sailers but. cranky. Two masts that
lean back sligthy and two large square
lugger sails catch even slight puffs of
air and send the boat a -zipping.
At the shore say from 6 to 10 in the
morning) the Moats arrive, coming in
like a flock of birds to their roost at
night, and are met where the water
shallows by men and women dealers
holding baskets that carry 500 fish
each. The men roll up their trousers,
the women their skirts but many
plunge in water up to their elbows if
need be to get to the boats. When
the baskets are loaded, they are dipped
to make the fish look fresh, and then
they are taken ashore and salted. At
the factories women dress them and the
fish are spread side by side with their
heads cut off in a thin layer of salt atop
of flat rocks. This is the first drying.
While the fish are lying on the rocks,
huge boilers, filled with the finest olive
oil, are placed over the fire and started
to a boil. when the fish are put in lay-
ers on wire screens or baskets and dip-
ped into the oil. Then the fish are put
in frames to drip. After dripping they
are put in drying rooms and there ex-
poses to the sea air till in proper con-
dition,
DIPLOMATIC POTHER.
The (meows Invitation to the Young s'rar
and Czarina to Visit Lier at Banns 0.11—
(Objections liaised by France and tier -
any.
Her Majesty has sent an official in-
vitation to young Czar Nicholas and leis
wife to visit Balmoral during the com-
ing autumn, and the news of this ac-
tion appears greatly to have agitated
French diplomats and caused soma
stir at the German court. The Queen
sant the invitation as the grandmother
of the Czar's wife, and certainly had
no idea of arousing international pas-
sions; but it looks as though that would
be the result if the Czar comes to this
country. The French Ambassador has
been instructed, so the story goes, to
delicately hint to the Czar that he had
much better stay at borne, or if he
wants a change, that he should take
it on French poll. It seems scarcely
credible that French diplomacy should
make such a fearful mistake. As far
as the Czar is personally concerned, he
has no particular love for the French
alliance, and has never concealed his
own conviction that an Anglo -Russian
alliance could stand against the world.
He has subordinated his personal opin-
ion and predilections to the unanimous
advice of
u i
R ss an statesmen and di
A-
)cants, and has aver made believe to
love the French alliance, another proof
that autocracy has its limits, if, how-
ever, the french presume to give ad-
vice and make representations in con-
nection with such a purely family af-
fair asa visit to the Queen, the Czar,
as likely as not, will tell the French-
men to mind their own business, The
German Emperor seems to think that
if he is not to go to England this year
no other monarch ougbt to go
there, and German diplomats un-
doubtedly would regard the Czar's
visit to this country as an intentional
rebuke to their efforts to get .England
within the meshes of the triple al-
liance. Hence it is possible that there
will be a prodigious pother over a dis-
tinctly innocent transaction on the
part of a sovereign of whom it may
truly without flattery he said that
she, personally, has never, in the
sixty pears of tier reign, made a seri-
ous mistake of policy or etiquette in
dealing .with foreign monarchs and
international questions.
A TIME FOR DISCRETION.
Ts Mrs. Dodgerly in deep mourning?
Yes, indeed; she wouldn't have a
short -cake in the bouse until black-
berries came along."
-------
LITERARY NOTE.
They say that bicycles are driving
books clear out of the market,
Yes—folks who own good wheels
don't care whether they can read
and write or not.
THE RULING PASSION.
My dear said Mr. Simple to -his wife,
1 dreamer{ last night that I was in
Heaven looking for you.
And dict you find me, dear ?
No. They told ine you were at the
bargain counter.
Hay Fever and Catarrh Relieved in
10 to 60 Minutes.—One short puff of
the breath through the Blower, sup-
plied witb each bottle of Dr.Agnew's
Catarrhal Powder, diffuses this powder
over the surface of the nasal passages.
Painless and delightful to use. It re-
lieves instantly, and permanently cures
Catarrh, Hay Fever Colds, Neadaohc,
Sore Throat, Tonsilitis and Deafness.
Piles Oared, in 8 to 0 OTighi'n.-..lir,
Agnew's Oen neent will cure all eases
of Itching Plies in from 8 to 0 nights,
brings application bricomfort. I' ort
Blind and Bleeding ,Biles it se Eeerless.
Also cures Tetter,lt Abeam, Eexcwa,
Barber's Itch', and all eruptions of the
r
elfin,bld by U. A, Deadman.
FILLS A LONG VEEIT WANT., 1
She—What have you there, George?
Tie—Oh, it's the new adjustable en-
gagement ring --fists any fines.
have found it a neat thing, 1 assure
you. Will you try it on?
Heart Disease Relieved in 80 Min-
utes. --Dr, Agnew's Cure for the Heart
gOr-
ganic orrSympathetf i nHearl taDisease in
80 minutes, and speedily effects acure,
It is a ,peerless remedy for Palpitation,
Shortness of Breath, Smothering Spells,
Pain in Lett Side and all symptoms of
a Diseased Heart, One dose convinces.
Sold by G. A. Deadmen.
Mrs. Snobbs—"How many girls dq the
Newlies keep?" Mrs, Itobbs—"Only
one." Mrs. Snobbs—"Only one? Good
gracious, and I came pretty near call-
ing there yesterday."
Rheumatism Cured in a Day.— South
American Rheumatic Cure for Rheu-
matism and Neuralgia, radically cures
in 1 to 3 days, 1te action upon the
system is, remarkable and mysterious.
It removes at once the cause and the
disease immediately disappears. The
first dose greatly benefits. 75 cents.
Sold by G. A. Deadman.
I learn several great truths; as
that it is impossible to see into the
ways of futurity, that punishment al-
ways attends the villain, that lova is
the fond soother of the humae breast,
—Goldsmith.
Relief in Six Hours.— Distressing
Kidney and Bladder Diseases relieved
in six hours by the "South American
Kidney (here," This new remedy is a
great surprise and delight on account
of its exceeding promptness in reliev-
ing pain in the bladder, kidneys, back
and every part of the urinary passages
in male or feamle. It relieves reten-
tion of water and pain in passing it
almost immediately. If you want quick
relief and cure this is your remedy,
Sold by G. A. Deadman.
Jim Senn—"Why do they call money
the 'long green 0' ' Joe Cose—"Nega-
lively, I suppose; because without it
you are short and blue,"
Prove the merit of )feed's Sai'saipia9Aa—nasi-
Ilya, perfect, parinauellt (:urea.
Cures of Scrofula hi severest forms, Salt
lthoual, with intense ltaldle;and bum -
scale head, boils, phnples, ot(4
Cures of Dyspepsia, itlieiun:atlsm, Catarrh, by
toning and making Aleli, red Nod.
Cures of Neevouteessluid That Tiredlreeling,
byfeedleg norvas,musules and Elsner
on pure blood. lror Welt of cures De
0
Sarsaparilla
Send address to C. L deal & CO" Lowell, Nese..
Hood's 'Pills s aost, hadb,edsitgnornd, latnac
FOR TWENTY -SIS f YEARS
UNN
KINC
POy ri
DER
THECOOK'S BEST FRIEND
LARGEST SALE IN CANADA. _
TIRED OF WALKING.
First Laboring Man—You had slate
session at the assembly last night, I
hear.
Second Laboring Man—Yes ; we
didn't get through till nearly 4 o'clock
this morning.
First Laboring Man -What was the
dispute about?
Second Laboring Man -0h, the walk-
ing delegate wanted us to buy him a
bicycle.
10 cts, Cure* Constipation and Liver
Ills.—Dr. Agnew's Liver Pills are the
most perfect made, and cure like magic,
Sick Headache, Constipation, Bilious-
ness, Indigestion and all Liver Ills. 10
cents a vial -40 doses. •
'1,
NEFFOft 6
INSOMilIt
POINTS THE WAY TO PERF
le
-CT HEALTH
South American Nervine.
The Great Iieslth Restorer of the
Century.
Sickness Cannot Cope With It.
Ilas Cured the Worst Cases on Rec-
ord,
Cares at the Nerve Centres and Thus
Cures Permanently.
A Wonderful Spcelfic in All Casee of
Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache,
Nervousness end General Debility,
(las No Equal as a Spring Medicine,
There is a Front deal of uncertainty
In the methods adopted to remove dis-
ease. Doctors ora. not free from this
kind of thing themselves. The poor pa-
tient has to put rap with a good deal of
experimenting, The discoverer of South
American Nervine lakes too serious a
VIM of life to Play pranks of that kind.
131 does not think that these human
bodies of ours should be fooled with. Ile
has recognized that they are subject to
disease, but, by scientific methods, he
has learned that jest as the watch is to
be put in perfct t repair only when the
mein -spring is kept in rtinning order, so
with the indtvitinnl, he remains in per-
fect health only when the nerve centres
are kept healthful and strong.
What disease is more distressing than
indigestion or dyspepsia? Some Simple
remedy may 01' given to cense relief for
the moment. Nervine is an indisputably
successful remedy for the worst eases of
indigeetiou, because it readies the source
or all stomach troubles --the nerve ten -
tees H:digestion exists because the
veld farces have become diseased and
ere weakened. Nervine builds up the
nerve centres, from which come these
forces, removes the causes of indiges-
tion, and then builds up the health com-
pletely.
Ifow many systems are run down
through nervousness. A stimulant may
give case, but it will not cure nervous
troubles, Nervine has cured more des-
perate 10508 00 nervousness than any
other medicine anywhere And it does
so for the spine reason that it cures in-
digestion. The nerve centres are de-
ranged, or there would be no victims of
nervousness, Nervine rebuilds and
etrcugthens the terve tissues, and hence
its marvellous powers in diseases of this
lti
•
In the spring of the year the strong-
est suffer from general debility. The
blood. through neglect, has become im-
poverished rind the whole system, gets
out of order. We speak of it as a
spring medicine. Nervine restores the
exhausted vital forced that have led to
this tired don't -care, played -oat, miser-
able condition. No one can take a bet -
Ole of Nervine at this season of the
year without disease quickly giving way.'
to abounding health.
The moral he plain, simple and readily
understood. If you would -not trifle with
disease, then you will take South Amer-
ican Nervine, which will not trifle with
sow
G. A, RDlILL Dlii,t10 Wholesale and itetail Agent forBrussalo.
•