HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1896-8-7, Page 7AUGUST 7, 1.8
NOW stria aQWtI'Eys,
"Peace is • du11'P" once .exolainted a
little boy, Perhaps it is, but there are
some things wore(' than dulness, Tlines ssVE.RY LATEST PROM q,LL rn
T NEWS IN NEJTSHE1L
of turmoil, that Make history in .great
WON11.4 OVER.
segments, suddenly, as by cataclysmic
cban es,, . rovide the pubic° with Oleg to esti Ito
g p ha. r ng ...nye About Our Own Country,
zest of exeitement,'the stimulus of un- Great Brltein, the Belted .States, and
rest, ..and certainly also .with annoy All Pants of the Glebe, Condensed °and
exhibitions of heroin achievement or Assortod4orspeem needles,
endurance. But history--atnd perhaps CANADA,
the best •history'—is also trade In per" Repairs are being made to the Rid-
iods of deep peace, "It was when come eau rifle range,
parativo dulness bad fallen on the Immense tracts of prairie land in Al-
world and silence prevailed round the berta are burning over,
Mediterranean that Christianity wasPo face Nlag sties o •o SVS e been &&anointed
born, says the Landon Spectator, „and The Catar;ust Power .Company offer
it is in the 'quiet times,' which drive to supply Idamilton with water for $1$ -
journalists frantfo, thoagh they a1- 000 a year,
ways ,profess to be longing for them, Michael Wakeham, a siovemounter,
,that the great inermovoments of the of Hamilton, committed ealcide by cute
world, both moral andmaterial, emerge ting his threat.
from thoughts into ants." Peace cue Lord Aborclecn.bus consented to open
the Central Exhibition at Poter•boro' on
tainly allows of construction, ou a the 22nd of September.
broad scale, and in accordance with A number of, female employees of the
carefully matured.pluns which can only Canadian .Colored Cotton Oompany at
be evolved in periods of quietness and Hamilton are on strike.
calm leisure, while war is necessarily The Canadian Express Company has
destructive in its immediate effects and s°cur1'lried connection with .all points on
the e and Huron Railway,.
indirectly paralyzes industry and coinMrs. Jones, of Brockville, has geld
mereial and educational enterprise far her famous herd of Jerseys to Mr.
and near. Yet many who have never Hartz of Prince Edward island,
had experience of the horrors of bat- p Ttbeljopeiand Peteroot rhu •ond r hey crepe
are
tie appear to regard .peace as tzrainter- reported as giving an excellent yield.
esting and prosaic, Such are glad to The peach cropin the district about
hear of wars and rumors of wars; and St. Catharines will be a failure, Oth-
bave certainly had their fill of late of er fruits are generally abundant.
that sort of peppery pabulum, But The by-law eppdinting Mr. E. G. Bar..
periods of restless upheaval and un- row City Engineer, at a salary of 0.2;
settling advantage a nation but little council. s passed by the Hamilton (hey
though they may meanwhile furnish the Engineer George II. White, of the
papers with plenty to write about. As T. H. & Ii., was killed near \Velland,
the Spectator observes, "an interesting lay bis engine being thrown into the
time is a time that is principally good ditch.
for newspaper reporters.,, Mr. Alex, T. Porter, representing
English capitalists, is trying to estab-
Thero.is f- requently a value in a con- lbsh abattoirs on a
Quebec. large scale near
senses of opinion. The voice of the \\'innipeg City Council has abandon -
people is not always, to be sure, the ed its intention to asphalt certain
voice of Ggd. But still in the long run, streets after advertising for tenders,
the majority' of good people are quite and now the. city is threatened with
as apt to be right as that little human suits by contractors.
unit somewhere who pipingly protests Mr, Ballantyne, of Stratford, after a
g y visit to Manitoba thinks that the out -
against the mass of judgment that is look for dairying in that Province is
solidly against him. This is a consider- very good..
(Aloe needful to be borne in mind in S Al St.
iglatCatharines
had athe
ery iilaasrowMr.
-
these days when everything that has cape • from the fire whioh destroyed the
been and is, is called in question by dwelling.
some one, when all mortality, judging Winnipeg aldermen axe dissatisfied
by the multifarious criticisms that with Dee census figures and will. ask
abound on alt side, seems to be in a the Dominion Government to do the
perpetually changeful state, and when work over.
instant current • is given to the views ]YfanLtoba's wheat crop, according to
of any "c'rank' y or orazy theorist any- The Nor'Wester, will hot equal last
year
bgoodndeal. of the grain being
where who happens to be the latest foolby
out. In this ago of unrest accord- The 50th anniversary of the marriage
ingly it is consoling to reflect that there of
Sir r Charles
l slry and
dgLlde wedding er vill
on
still remains in society a vast deal of October 8.
distributed common sense, which to a For the first time on record the'work
considerable degree offsets and neutra- of the Dominion Supreme Court iscom-
lizes the individual eccentricities that ple iect,up readiness date,and the all
COctohejudgesgare
here and there press up for notice. An The reports of forest fires in British
Irishman was once out rowing on a Columbia state that many of the min-
lake, when, owing to his unskilful hand- ing towns are in danger, and already
ling of the oars, his boat shipped con- immense loss has been caused to the
siderable water. A brilliant idea then farmers.
seized the amateur sailor. Taking the The Goderich Council passed a by -
butt end of the• oar he battered away law granting tax exemption and free
at the planks in the bottom of the water for ten years to the Dominion
boat, finally knockinga .hole in them. Cold Storage Company's building, to
be constructed there.
On his rescue by the ares of a steam Mrs. Cole, aged. 49 years, wife of an
launch from the sinking boat, he was old pensioner, was run down by a trolly
asked why bo bad acted so insanely. The car on Queen street west, Toronto, on
son of Erin replied: "Sure the boat Saturday morning, and killed. The body
was fearfully mangled.
was half -full of water, an' so Oi knocked A pair of high -bred horses have been
a hole in the bottom to let it out ; but presented by a friend in Dublin to Lady
yez see, there was so much more water Aberdeen, who so narrowly escaped
in the lake that the little bit of a thdreowning loinst them Gathtineau,
e dent.
to replace
team acci
stream in my boat had no chance to git illi. John S. bIiddleman, of Birming-
out." It is a consoling reflection that hum, is in Ottawa for the purpose of in-
tim lake of popular good sense is gen- terviewing the Government on the sub-
erally so deep and ponderous that the jest of the immigration of juveniles to
feeble rills of individual eccentricity of this country.
The Montreal rolling mills, which
Opinion have "no chance to git out." were closeii down for some time, have
The bigger thing nullifies the less; the been restarted, and some four hun-
average sobriety rules out from all dred men, who were beginning to feel
practical consideration the occasional the pinch of poverty, have found em -
exception of a "cranky" opposition. It is reported that Chief Archibald
Skirving, of Ingersoll, will be appoint -
Every ma- n must work for his living. o fill the vara% yicausedetd byvtha resig-
or cease to live. The man who feels nation of Provincial Detective McKee.
himself above work is really below life's 111r. T. H. Lawry of Hamilton has
level, whether he feels it or not. Work entered an action for $10,000 damages
is essential to the right circulation of against Mayor .Puckett and the Pass -
the blood, to the normal elasticity of mores, who recently assaulted him, al -
the muscles, and to the due strength dleori anpiraty on the part of the
of the limbs and the frame of a man. Mr. F. A. Knopp, a Prescott barrister,
Cessation from work may be so sooth- is in Ottawa to intorest the Minister
nog and pleasurable to a man that he of ltlarine on an ocean steamer which
comes to think it is a proper condition he has invented, whioh, he says, can
t e veep the Labra -
that it is the sleep of death ♦vhich is en hours. din twenty sev-
creeping over him, be will cease to live, Georg(' Foster, of 110 Shuter street,
without being conscious of the fact. The Toronto, was found in his room at noon
story is now going the rounds of the oda Saturday fn a comatose condition. A
press, of a man who was unintcntion- physician was called Fa, but the young
ally locked in a refrigerating store- man.died shortly after his arrivals it
house for the reservation of meats. Ile- is thought that he took morphine, and
Pas he attempted suicide two years ago
ing unable to make himself beard out- this theory is confirmed,
side, he saw he must remain where he GREAT BRITAIN.
was until wino one came to open the Sir Peary Anderson assistant Under -
lace again • IIe haat the sense to per-
ceive, however, that he was growing Secretary', in the Foreign Office, is dead.
drowsy in the chilly atmosphere, and Lieut. Thompson of Edinburgh won
he realized that he must work for his rho Queen's Prize at the Risley rifle
living or die. Then he began to throw' ranges.
of his being; but unless he perceives mak(' the voyage b'
dor coast and Englan
the Heavy pieces of meat about, in or- The Cunard Steamship 8ompany have
der to gat the advantages of exercise; metered three 5000 fou steamships to he
and so be kept himself alive until help
came. In this thing that man wss sea
illustration of human life everywhere.
One must work, or die, Even if work
is not necessary for its objective re-
sults, it is essential for its advantageb
lubjectively.
"The power of influence depends in
• a great degree on the power of sym-
pathy. If you want another to go with
you, you must go a certain way with
;him. But it often happens that very
sympathetio natures are too easily in-
fluenced themselves to remain steadfast
in their own conduct, and this lessens
the weight of their influence on others.
Then again, those of weak sympathies
are not only uninfleential, but they aro
not very susceptible of influence. It
may also be truly said that indirectness
is the charactcrfstie feature of success-
ful influences. Hence neither parents
nor teachers, I would say, are the per-
sons who will exert the strongest in-
fluence, over their changes, because their
power is of too direct and acknowledged
a native to admit of the free excuse of
the other kind of poOter,",.
'T$F la. $151314 s POSP,.
Martini -Henry ammunition of 18l10,iRng-
11'sli issue fails to coma up to the stan-
dard; but it passed the inspection of the
Imperial Government.
A de peteh from Conetantinople says
that forty prosperous villa�gea around
Van nub ,pave beau destroyed, and very
shale more than eight years of age has
bete% killed,
The (peen, through United States
Ambassador ,ilay'ard, has. sent an ere-
pression of lien gratitude to the alt, •Lena
of Ocealri, Flu.,wbo recently planted and
dedicated a rnagnolia tree to her Mae
jesty,
The situation in Rhodesia is regarded
by military, men in England as very
grave, and in their opinion the fume at
the d4 nasal el Sir EirederickOarringion
is utterly inadequate.
Mr. Balfour announced in the House
of Commons en Wednesday that he fear-
ed there would not be tune this session
to pass the Deceased Wife's Sister bill,
but that efforts would be made for the
passing of the Irish Land bill,
in spite of strong pressure brought
to bear by Sir Donald Smith, the Lmper-
iel Government has finally refused to
permit the Ulster Steamship Company
to erect on the live stook wharf at
Belfast a building in which to slaugh-
ter Canadian cattle.
UNITED STATES.
Kansas Cit' banks refuse to pay out
any more gold.
Forest fires are sweeping the valleys
in 'Washington Territory with terrible
rapidity.
Millionaire John R. Rockefeller has
made. Cleveland, hi' a centennial
eve nd, O �,
gift of •$1,000,000,
Ten lives were lost in a flood which
followed a cloudburst in Frankfort,
Ky., oil Tuesday.
Gorman Swain killed his three young-
est children and then suicided, near
Attica, Mich„ on Tuesday.
Herbert C. Spencer, of Lawrence,
ties„ has the disease known as mental
blindness, Ifo lies Met all memory.
"Billy" Ward. the noted minstrel,
luts become an evangelist, He attri-
betes his conversion to the St. Louis
cyclone.
Georbe J. Gould, the New York mil-
lionaire, is preparing for au extended
northern cruise on lays yacht Atalanta.
John McMannus, sentenced 23 years,
ago to life im risonment for murder,
was liberated from Auburn prison on
Monday.
Nicola Tesla, the electrical engineer,
claims to have solved the problem of
the long discance .transmission of elec-
tricity.
Notices are posted that the Amos-
keag Mills, .tllanchester, N, H., will
close in Augnst indefinitely. This will
throw out 6,000 operatives.
John C. Howard, Deputy Town Mar-
shal of Tulare, was banged at San Fran-
cisco for the murder of an Italian in
a political quarrel
Etta Robbins, aged '24, has been jail-
ed at Huntington, W. Va., for the mur-
der of a father and his two daughters.
She had attempted to kill a whole
family.
Car barns, 250 ears and 50 horses,
belonging to.the Chicago City Railway
Co., were destroyed by fire in Chicago
on Saturday night, at a loss of $350,-
000.
The death is annuuneed of Right
Rev. Arthur Cleveland Coxe, Episco-
pal Bishop of Western New York, and
a most conspicuous figure in the Am-
erican eburen.
A strike of the various organizations
constituting the Brotherhood. of Tail-
ors in New York has been officially de -
eland. This will bring to a stand-
point about ,twelve thousand strikers.
The system of importing women and
girls for immoral and other unlawful
purposes is to be investigated by Com-
missioner McDonough, of the United
States Bureau of Labour Statistics.
The paralytic stroke which prostrated
Mr. Vanderbilt, sr., is said to have been
the result of a violent altercation with
his son, who persisted in his determine -
Lion to marry Miss Grace Wilson, who
is many years his senior.
The reports of the business agencies
in New York continue week after week
to be monotonously dull, and the cur-
rent ones show no variety. The week
commenced badly in the speculative
markets, owing largely to the outflow
of gold and decline in the Treasury re-
serve. Business—which is always quiet
at this time of year—has been consider-
ably further depressed by the general
financial unrest. The produce mar-
kets have been much depressed; lard
especially marked the lowest figures on
record. The industrial outlook is
gloomy, as owing to stoppage of works
in different parts of the country the pur-
chasing power of the people has al-
ready sensibly decreased, and no pro-
spect of an early improvement appears
to be in sight. The sales of wool this
week are the smallest known for years.
GENERAL.
Over 1.,300 Spanish soldlers in Cuba
are dying with yellow fever.
It is reported at Singapore that na-
tive uprisings continue m the island
of Formosa.
Massacres are reported to have oc-
curred at Orate, in which 25 Armenians
were killed.
Reports of the crops in France are
most favorable compared with the re-
ports of last year.
M. Eugene Sputter, the French poli-
tician, journalist, and author is dead.
He was sixty-one years of age.
It is estimated that it will take 00,-
000 Chinese troops to subdue the
Mohammedan rebels at Tanchue.
The British ship Sierra Parima., bound
for Rangoon, has been wrecked on the
Maldnae Wands and all hands lost.,
Mrs. Catharine Routh Clibborn, head
of the Salvation Army organization in
France, was knocked down on Wednes-
day in Paris, and seriously hurt.
The wife of Carmen Morales, of Mon-
terey, Mexico, was assaulted and tied
built at Belfast. 10 a horse. The horse was then made
Mr. Charles Dickens, ran of the to run away, and the woman was drag -
deceased novelist, died at Kensington sed to death
from paralysis.
A doctor reports a ease of cholera in
South London. The officials ars exinn-
ining into the facts of the case.
The Pope has received a present of an
elaborate typewriter, inlaid in ivory and
silver, with the Papal arms upon it.
•
A Turkish Trade has been issued not-
ifying the Council of Armenia and
Patriarchate that they will he held re-
sponsible hereafter for any treason on
the part of the Armenians.
Sir Frederick Carrington reports that
his force carried the Matabete position
in the Matoppo HUJs-after severe fight -
The diseases of animals bill andin which 80 of the enemy were
the land rating bill, passed by the killed. The British loss was threekill-
Imperial Parliament have received the ed and eleven wounded.
Royal assent. I A fire that broke out in Caine, Island
Drought has produced a severe water of Crete, on Sunday, eves mistaken as a
famine in the oast end of London, and signal for the :Turks to massacre the
prolonged rains are needed to avert seri- Christians, and a panic ensued. Marines
hamsus consequences, 1 ham the British and Austrian men -of -
It is stated Lbat the Imperial Gov- war lying off the lyprt were landed he-
ernment intend- calling upon the Char- fore the error was discovered.
Nixed South African Company to pay en
indemnity for the Jameson raid.
The new Burmah railway ioten of two
poundsmillions and six hundred thousand
Lotvlatndplaced
01n05ortbed o fo
r venty
times over.
Complaints are being made that the
HOW TO SHOP.
Fair Shopper (In great storel—There,
this novel will do. Don't wrap it up.
Clerk --Don't wrap it up I
No, indeed. I'll sit down here and
read it to kill time \vhile waiting for
my change.
W. WINN CONVENE
HIS COMPANIONS ALSO DROUGHT
IN cIUILTY,
tight Mentemes I'Ilnsed- Erern Einem tip
.Flue Months Without esbeer--'I'aeh•
LIP iteglas at Line Within lire Wells
or Honowary.
A despatch from London says: --The
attendance at the trial of Dr. Jameson
and his as;,gofates was never so great
as On :Tuesday) The opening part of
Lord Russell's swrnening up, however.,
and his two hours' recapitulation of the
evidence was boresome, and even Dr.
Jameson probably the most interested
of all present, indulged h a series of
ant naps, while the other defendants
were dozing at tiniest' : Besides, Sir
Richard Webster and his associates were
Clearly u'earbed, endlolled about, and
Sir Edward Clark alone showed any
signs of nervousness. He frowned fre-
quently at Lord Russell's emphasis
against the prisoners, As for the jury,
composed, with two exceptions, of aid-
erly men, there was no doubting that
they were boredd. The ladies, of whom
there were a great number in the court,
fanned themselves wearily while trying
to catchlim ser of the defendants.
8 P
The latter, while the jury was out, re-
tired to the tea-room, where they bold
a reception of their lady friends and
relatives, all. of whom had high hopes
of the acquittal of the prisoners.
THE VERDICT.
The jury, after having retired at
about 4.30, returner) at about 5.24, and
the defendants were hastily summoned
to take their places. The judges came
in five minutes latter, and the jurymen
gave an affirmative answer to all the
questions which had been propounded
to them by the Chief Justice; but they
added a rider to the effect that the dis-
turbances at Johainiestaerg were pro-
vocative. Lord Russell then directed
that their answers were equivalent to
a verdict of guilty, but the foreman
said that they were not unanimous
upon that point. Thereupon his Lord -
hip repeated that the answers of the
jurymen to the questions propounded
were equivalent to a verdict of guilty
against all the defendants. The Jury
then consulted together for about three
minutes, and atterwardp rendered a
verdict Of guilty.
APPARENTLY UNMOVED,
Dr. Jamieson and his co-defendants
were apparently unmoved when the
verdict had been rendered, andSir Ed-
ward Clarke asked thecourt's dlspoad-
tion to move for anew trial. The
judges afterwards retired for consulta-
tion, and during their absence Sir Ed-
ward Clarke and the defendants con-
sulted together with the resale that
when the judges returned Sir
Clarke said that in view of the verdict
rendered the defendants refused to in-
struct for a new trial, and expressed a
desire to settle alae case now.
TH 18 .SENTENCES.
Lord. Russell said that the verdict
was given on evidence which no reas-
onable man would be able to disregard.
Alt the defendants, he added, were men
of position and intelligence, holding
positions under the Queen, and their
crime bad the gravest consequences,
including death to some. and injury to
others, while the future consequences
of their crime no one was yet able to
foresee. Continuing, the Lord Chief
Justice said, that although they all
took part in the raid the court must
,'ietinguish between them m the pun-
ishment awarded for their guilt. His
Lordship then passed sentences upon
the prisoners. Dr. Jameson was sen-
tenced to fifteen months' imprisonment
without labour; 'Major Sir Jabot Wil-
loughby was sentenced to ten months'
imprisonment; Major R. White teas
sentenced to seven months' imprison-
ment; and Captain Henry F. Coven-
try (a son of Earl Coventry), Col. R.
Gray, and Col. H. F. White, were sen-
tenced to five months' iinprisonment.
HOW TO CURE CORNS.
Easy ? Yee, if you go about it the
right way. Get the best always. Put-
namn's Painless Corn Extractor never
fails to cure. Acts in twenty-four
hours and causes neither pain nor dis-
comfort. Putnam's Corn Extractor ex-
tracts corns; it is the best.
—
Relief in SixHours.— Distressing
Kidney and Bladder Diseases relieved
in sir hours by the "South American
Kidney Cure." 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 youwant quick
relief and cure this is your remedy.
Sold by G. A. Deadman.
Seven Noels are among the pets of the
Sultan of i\Iorocco„ At night he lets
them range the courtyards of the pal-
ace, to act as guards to the royal harem.
Rheumatism Cured is a Da}'.— Sough
American Rheumatic Cure for Rheu-
matism and Neuralgia, radically cures
in 1 to 3 days. Its 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 be s A Demimen.
There are seven members in the fam-
ily of Mr. and Mrs. Nathan B. Hutchins,
of Dover, Del., and their aggregate
weight is„1,705 pounds. The heaviest
weighs 20o potinds, and the lightest 182.
Piles Cured in 3 to 0 ,Night's.—Dr.
Agnew's Ointment will cure all cases
of Itching files in from 3 to 0 nights.
One application brings comfort. For
Blind and Bleeding Piles it is peerless.
Also cures Tetter, Salt Rheum, .Ectema,
Barber's Itch, and all eruptions of the
skin. 35 cis,
Sold by G. A. Deadman,
The annual income of John U. Rock-
efeller, is estimated at $85,000,000. From
his Standard Oil stock alone his pro-
fits amount to $1,328 for every hour
of the Clay. He owns tour -tenths of the
entire stock.
Hay Fever and Catarrh Relieved in
10 to 00 Minutes.—One short puff of
the breath through the Blower, sup-
plied with 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, Il°y fever, Colds Headache,
Sore Throat Tonsifitee and Deafness.
Sold by G. S. DeadmanI 1 , 1
BRITAIN'S EULWARKS,
Pee l%aatriinarrs haw powerful !'raisers
b*e 10 8leana tit hallway hate.
A London owlet says: The enora-
nus unermoured oruiser Terrible, zee
gently built on the Clyde fon the Bri-
tish navy, maintained a speed of twen-
ty knots an hour on her lecent maiden
trip from Glasgow to Portsmouth, and
it is asserted that her maximum speed
was 24 knots, whit'), is certainly remark-
able in now at her size and length, 14,-
200 tons and 200 feet respeotively. Not
fess remarkable le the Terrible's coal -
carrying capacity, enabling her to steam
25,000 m lea without roweling. Her sls-
tar slain, the Power
andthfulen t, i0he 8000Bto ritish he cl-
in
coA
mimmission, ralty may (Seim to hold the world's
record in this class of vessels. The
nava! experts are not satisfied, however,
Tiley are still crying aloud for' more
wen, more quickfiring guns, and such
like things, which, of mimes, mean more
money, The! eader of the mal(ontents,
Captain Lord Charles Beresford, loses
no opportunity of warning itnglfshmcn
that they aro living, be a fool's para•
dist' and being deceived by .the very
people who ought to tell .them the whole
truth, No doubt, he says, we aregra-
dually remedying the grave defect of
too few ships, but what is the good of
building ships if you do not at the
same time increase the number of men?
This distinguished critic pledges his
veracity as a man that t if wer were
rs
declared to -morrow a score of power-
ful warships would have to remain in
port for lack of sailors and stokers
to man them, and this for the sole
reason that the Governments of the
day, Tory and Liberal alike, fear to
face the necessary expenditure, and so
keep the strength of the navy's per -
sennet below what should be the
standard, even in a time of peace.
Some of the women in Russia need
reformation in regard to the use of
tobacco. So thinks the Bishop of Kursh.
who in a circular letter has urged the
clergymen's wives to refrain from smok-
ing in public places.
10 els. Cures Constipation and Liver
Ills.—Dr. Agnew's Liver Pills are the
most perfect made, and curs fake magic,
Sick Headache, Constipation, Bilious-
ness, Indigestion and all Liver Ills. 10
cents a vial -40 doses.
Sold. by G. A. Deadman.
To t hat gives Rood's Soreaparllla lt.i great pope
Murky, hiereasiugsalmium) i ont eget cerete
The enmbhaatlon, proportion and process la'
preparing 11000+ Sarsaparilla are mamma
to other ine,llc mos, and 1111)1(5 It pwullar to
itself. 11 8(0 directly'p0ailtivelY-lIpontlta
blood, amine Ute blood readies every %0014
ad eo e u system, all 1
end rn r of Life human y to a, the
nerves, intrudes, bones and :tissues come U0'
der the benellosat influence of
Sarsaparilla
The Ow True :Wood I'urilier. All dratlists. ,31,
cure Liver Ills; easy to
Flood's Pills talce,oasyteeperuto.250.
FOR TWENTY-SIX YEARS.
U N
BAK1NC'
POWDER
THECOOKSBESTFR EN
L.ARGSST SALE IN CANADA.
CAUSE AND EFFECT,
Enamored Youth—Your father seems-
worried,
eemsworried about. something to -night,
Sweet Girl—Yes, poor pa has so many
business cares.
Little Brother—That isn't it. He's
mad because the big dog he bought
didn't come.
Heart Disease Relieved in 30 Non-
utes.—Dr. Agnew's Cure for the :Heart
gives perfect relief in all eases of Or-
ganic or Sympathetic Heart Disease in
30 minutes, and speedily effects a euro.
It is a peerless remedy for Palpitation,
Shortness of Breath, Smothering Spells,
Pain in Left Side and all symptoms of
a Diseased Heart. One dose convinces.
Sold by G. A. Deadman.
EARS IRV '21D
ii
With L:vcr Complaint and Dyspepsia ---Suffered
Greatly and Found No Relief in the Steres
of Medicines Prescribed.
South Af1:^:'ic;ln Nervine Was Recommended, and Before
L'alf a Bottle Was Taken Relief Came.
Kayo Since Improved Rapidly, and Ani Now Completely Cared'
leo . flys J1r. David Reid, of Oltesley, Ont.
what 111s come to humanity from a
disordered liver!. Henry Ward Beecher
has said that It was impossible for a
man to hold correct spiritual views if
his liver was nut of order. The liver
is so important a part of the mechan-
ism of man that when it ceases to work
with ease the whole man 1s unable to
do his work aright. Can the not appeal
to thousands, ray, tens of thousands,
for a vcr;ticatlon of this fact? Cer-
tainly it 1s, that Mr. David Reid, of
Chesley, Ont.. felt 4hat the enjoyment
of life heed been taken from hint,
through the unhealthy condition of his
liver, For ten years he rays he was
troubled with liver complaint and dys-
Persia. Employing his own language:
"At Braes my liver was so tender I
could not bear it pressed or touched
from the outside, Had tried a great
many remedies without any benefit.
Was cornpelled to drop my work, and
being worse than usual. X decided as
a final resort to try South American
Nervine, which had been recommended
to me by friends who had been cured
by it. I got to bottle from A. S. Good -
eve, local dri e...1st, and commenced
taking aecnrdirg to directions. Before
I had talcen hair a bottle I was able
to go 'to work again, and X have :m -
moved stcad:ly s.r.ce. X can wale:lem
t r•,:r
7,1k k
Itiously recommend South American.
Nervine to any suffering from dyspep-
sia or liver complaint." This is Mr.
Retd's story as he tells It in his own
words. Were it thought necessary it
could be corroborated Ly a host 08 wit-
' nesses, Mr. Reid has lived a long time.
in Chesley, and his erre was *known to
be a very bad one. 1iut that makes no
difference to Nervine. This great dis-
covery rises equal to the most trying.
occasions. Let it be indigestion, the.
' most chronio,llver trouble, as with lIr.
Reid, nervous prostration, that makes'
life miserable with so many, side:,
headaches, that sap all the effort out
of manor woman, Norville measures tee
the necessities of the case. Int is se
great medicine and thousands to -day iii
Canada are happier and healthier then
and women, because of its discovery.
There is no great secret about it, and
yet there is an important secret. I11
operates on the nerve centers of the
system from which emanate all life and
healthfulness, or if disordered, sickness.,
even death. Nervine strikes promptly sit
the nerve centers, hence, as with Mrs
Reid, where ten years' use of other Wins
dlcines had done no good, fess thaw se
bottle of Nervine brought about ep+r
eouragtng result*, and a LsVI, bett8 H*
cora, ,....., . .... ,.,.......,.i
l4. A, DEVONIAN Wholesale and Retail Agent f'ernrntsslels.