The Brussels Post, 1896-9-4, Page 7AUGUST °B, 1896
INE NEWS IN A NUTSHELL
'CHS VERY LATEST FROM A441'HE
WORLD OVER.
interesting Items About Our Own Cgantry,
Creat Britain, the United States, and
All Parts 01 the Olobc, Condensed and
Assorted for Bally Reading.
CANADA,
The promoters of the Hamilton band
tournament have a deficit of 5200.
There are twenty typhoid fever pa-
tients in the Hamilton City Renate!,
The salmon catch in British Columbia
is reported to be very poor this season.
Winnipeg's rate of taxation for the
current year will be two cents on the
dollar,
Mr. W. 11. Nelson, grocer of Rings -
villa, shot himself through the lungs
with a revolver.
Coal was struck by the Manitoba
Government well -boring machine near
Cartwright ata depth of 62 feet.
in rs branch
Mr.Stewart, eo
c t• the
of the MutDepartment, in Ottawa,
is at present engaged in making a hy-
drographic survey of Lake Erie.
Mrs. Charles Murton of Hamilton,
:has, with several other Canadians, fall-
en heir to an Irish estate valued at
about a million dollars.
Vandals pried up the corner -stone of
the new Southern Congregational
Church at London and •extracted there-
from the coins which had been deposit-
ed m it.
Tha Winnipeg Board of Trade is
discussing the advisability of holding
a business men's convention forMan-
itoba and the Northwest Territories
this fall.
Applications for farm laborers are
being received by the C. P. 11•, auth-
orities at Winnipeg. It is estimated
that between 2,000 and 3,000 men will
be required.
Mr. Francis Robinson, who had been
employed on the G. T, B.. as a team-
ster tor the past sixteen years, fell
from his wagon at London and broke
his neck.
A break is reported in the Government
,cable extending between Anticosti and
the north shore of the St. Lawrence.
As there is an alternate cable the acci-
dent will not cause any break in com-
•
'Mr. J. A. Ruddick, Dominion Dairy
Instructor, will shortly sever his con-
nection with tbo Ottawa Government,
lend assume charge of the Dairy School
branch of the School of Mining and
Agriculture at Kingston. •
It has been decided that in the Mari-
time Provinces and Quebec one -halt of
the infantry battalions will go into camp
after Parliament has voted the neces-
sary appropriations. The artillery
camps will not be held until next June.
One million rounds of Leo-Metford
ammunition reached Kingston frons.
England and was placed in the Gov-
ernment stores. hive hundred stand
of Lee-Metford rifles also cams with the
ammunition.
The difference between the dead meat
schemes of Mr. Bender and Prof. Rob-
ertson is
obertsonis that the former advocates one
monster abattoir at Quebec, whereas the
professor favours the establishment of
abattoirs at Winnipeg, Toronto, London,
Montreal, and other places.
The chemists of the Department of
the Interior have been employed for
some time back on the analysis of maple
sugar samples, which were oollected
this spring in different parts of the
Country. There was found to be much
adulteration, glucose syrup being mix-
ed with the maple very largely.
The dry goods section of the Toronto
Board 02 Trade, at a meeting on Fri-
day,
rtday, placed on record its strong disap-
proval at the action of the Dominion
Coloured Cotton Mills Company andthe
William Parks and Sons' Company, of
St. John, N.B., in recklessly cutting
prices on flannelettes in some cases be-
low their cost of production.
Two men working in a trench in Mon-
treal were overcome the other day by
sewer gas. The crowd that gathered
did not realize the seriousness of the
situation and stood stupidly gazing at
the men for a quarter of an hour. At
length, when the Lire brigade was called
and the men were taken out, one was
dead, and the other was restored to con-
sciousness with great difficulty.
GREAT BRITAIN,
The Earl of Limerick is dead.
Sir John Millais, President of the
Royal Academy, is dead.
Spain has ordered two now first class
cruisers from the Thompsons of Glas-
gow.
The weather in England during the
past week was very unsettled, but there
was no great heat.
The Spanish government is inviting
tenders in .Englund for the construotion
of a floating dock at Havana.
Two valuable pictures in the British
National portrait gallery have been de-
liberately damaged by vandals,
The 'Marquis of Salisbury was install-
ed. Warden of the Cinque Ports on Sat-
drdny, with quaint and ancient cere-
monies.
The Duke of Wellington is dangerous-.
ly ill with dropsy, He is 50 years of
age and has no children, his heir being
his brother.
The Daily News saysthat a commis-
sion which has been sitting for seven
years will report against compulsory
vaccination in England.
Baroness Tennyson, widow of the late
a daugh-
ter of t Henry Sollwis o d, and was married
to Lord Tennyson in 1850.
It is said that the Irish conference
whker is to meet in Dublin next month
will be a failure, as neither the Parnell-
ites or the Flcalyites will attend.
The debt of London on Mitroh 31 was
£37,856,502, nearly 6120,000,000 of winch
has been tnourred by the County Coun-
cil during the seven ysass of its exist-
ence,
It is learned that the visit of Sir
Julian Peuncelote to London is due
to the direct summons of Lord Salis-
bury, who wishes to discuss with Mm
some points of the Venezuelan ques-
tion.
The water famine hi the east end of
London has developed into a great ca-
lamity. Water is being supplied to 1,-
250,000
,250,000 of the city's population from
two to five hours daily.
Tho appointment of the special Par-
liamentary committee to enquire into
the administration of Mr. Cecil Rhodes
and into the Jamieson raid has been
ostponetl until the next session of
'arliament.
It is noted in London theta great
change has taken place lei the manners
of Lord Chief Justice Russell. Instead
of the suavity for whish he Was noted
at the bar, be has adopted a style of
surly arrogance,'.
Tile Anglo -Canadian trade le still
'
P394 satialaotory, &xports to Canada
lnoreaesd six per cent, m July, as eon
pared with the correspondia »lixcaof
Aust year, end imperil from Canalis ane
creased seven per cent.
In the House of Commons ;on Thutrs-
day Sir Matthew Whits-RidleY, h
Home Seortetary, announced that upon
medical representation it bad been de-
cided to release on lloense Daly, De -
varier. Gallagher, ,and Whitehead, the
fear Irish dynauutsrs.
On Saturday Li -Hung -Chang had an
interview through an interpreter with
Mr. Gladstone at Ilawarden. Mr. Glad-
stone presented the Chinese statesman
with a set of his own works, who in re
Limn ggave Miss Gladstone some packets
of highly prized tea,
Mr, Chamberlain will invite Mr. Ce-
cil Rhodes to testify before the Parlia-
mentary Commission appointed to• in -
Mitre into the administration of the
British South Africa Company and in-
to the origin and oirouenstances of the
incursion into the Transvaal by an
armed force.
The Imperial Parliament has been
formally prorogued till October 31.
In referring to the Venezuelan ques-
tion in the House of Commons, Mr.
Bal-
foursold that the Government ent was
still considering the latest proposals of
Secretary Olney, which are regarded as
opening the way for an equitable set-
tlement and he had reason to expeut
that the pending negotiations will lead
la an pit: I}' ei Lilihe,ent of the dispute.
'UNITED STATES.
The Security Bank of Duluth and the
Murray Bill Bank of New York have
closed.
Swarms of grasshoppers are doing
gPeaticdamaa a to vegetation in parts
The Italian Government is asking
for detailed information of the recent
lynching of three Italians in Louisiana.
Employes of the Adams Express Com-
pany In New York and Jersey City to
the number of six hundred are on
strike.
Henry Barfield, formerly a postoffioe
employee at Liverpool, England, was
Arrested at Boston on the charge of
embezzlement.
Frank Jacobs, of Cincinnati, a bal-
loonist, made his 1,005 ascension at
Quincy, Ill., and the balloon burst. He
was killed by the fall.
A runaway trolley car dashed down a
steep hill in Lancaster, Pa., on Sunday
evening,and seven of the passengers
were kiled and fifty seriously injured.
In view of the probable election of
Major McKinley and the adoption of a
higher tariff, a number of English
manufacturers are projecting the es-
tablishment of branches in the United
States.
The National officers of the Irish Na-
tional Alliance of New York have is-
sued a manifesto regarding the pro-
posed convention in Dublin next month,
which says that to revolution alone
must Ireland look for her redemption.
Baron Fava, the Italian Minister at
Washington, in an interview on Satur-
day with United States Acting Secretary
Rockhill, urged that speedy steps be
taken to secure the punishment of the
New Orleans lynchers, and that redress
be made to the families of the Italians
who were killed..
According to the reports of the New
York commercial agencies, the business
situation throughout the United States
is unprecedentedly dull. The intense
heat has had a considerable effect, but
political and financial unrest has had
more, while present and impending la-
bour troubles have intensified the gen-
eral depression. Wheat, after a sub-
stantial advance, closed only a fraction
higher than last week, because the. Gov-
ernment report as to crop damage is not
generally credited. Corn leas declined on
the week. The boot and shoe indus-
try is becoming more dull. 'Thera is
no change in leather; many tanneries
have closed, and hides have further de-
clined. There is little or no change
in wool, but several mills have closed,
and the demand is not equal to expec-
tations. Rates for money are higher,
and time loans are more difficult to
obtain.
GENERAL.
Prance is making elaborate prepara-
tions for the coining visit of the Czar.
Terrific heat and severe storms pre-
vailed last week in Germany and Aus-
tria, and many lives were lost.
The Island of Madagascar is in a very
bad state. Outside the French lines the
country is seething with anarohyt
Advices received from Abyssinia in-
dicate that there is a prospect of a re-
opening of the Italian war in the
autumn.
Lord Salisbury is being roundly be-
rated by the Berlin press for refusing
to join the powers in a blockade of the
Island of Crete.
Mollah Reza, who on the afternoon
of May 1, assassinated Nazr-Ed Deen,
Shah of Persia, was hanged for his
crime at Teheran.
Sixteen members of a boating party
on the Spree, near Berlin, were drown-
ed by an excursion steamer running
into their boat.
Dr. Nunsen, in his search for the
North Pole, reached 88 degrees 17 min-
utes, bat had to turn back, not having
a sufficient cumber of dogs.
During his Norwegian tour, which
was rattier a failure on. account of bad
weather, Emperor William conducted
Divine service every Sunday.
Malinaison, so pregnant with memor-
ies of Napoleon and Josephine, has been
purchased by a well-known French 21-
nencter, who will restore it and present
it to the mitionl
It is feared that 'serious troubles are
impending in Ashanti. It is reported that
the Inkoranzas and other tribes have
joined, Chief Sammy with the object of
expelling the Britjsh from Kumassi.
Official cholera statistics show that
during the past week there were 1,001
deaths from the disease througghout
Egypt. Tho total number of deaths
since the outbreak of the scourge is
14,755.
Dr. Nunsen, the Arctic explorer, has
arrived at Verde Island, Norway, on
board the steamer Windward, which re-
cently went to Franz Josef Land in or-
der to bring hook the Jackson-Harns-
worth expedition.
Cholera in Egypt again shows an
increase, and anxiety is felt on account
of the absence of reports from the
camps of the Egyptian forces on the
Nile, It is feared that a serious con-
dition prevails there.
In an artiala inspired by the German
Foreign Office it is intimated that the
negoliattoxis between Germany and Den -
'mark for the purchase of the Antilles
will be soon resumed, and that Gcrmatty-
does not care a. fig for the Monroe doc-
trine.,
A boily of Christian insurgents at-
tat'Ited it number of merattiling Mussul-
mans at 1 atoveLhia. near Camila. It
is staled that the Mussulmons evero
nearly nnnihtlalod, A body of troops
13BU
was Bent to attack the Christians, but
they
were defeated,et
a
d,
The news from :Kansa, the moat
+porch -western provision of China, le to
the effect that the famous Tung -Fun-
slang•, in obedience tq an Iuiperial 0001-
mind, hays beg= a massore .of ell ifo-
bammedene that he comae eerose. At
Hsingfu he slew three thousand 131181 -
note men and sold their wives and fc-
#Hale children.
OUR MANUFACTURERS ABROAD.
Miele Sem Is Becoming Alarmed st Our
Vigorous Efforts 10 Secure Trnd5.
A despatoli from Washington sayst—
Consui James B. Taney, writes the De-
partment of State from Belfast, Ire-
land, that the Canadians are malting
great efforts to Introduce household and
office furniture in all parts of the king-
dom. One agent of an Ontario firm
within a week took orders for about
85,000 worth of furniture in Belfast, and
in Dublin for about $10,000 worth, "If
American manufacturers," says Mr.
Taney, "desire either to retain or in-,
ire se their trade they
should d
under-
stand that it will be necessary to give
it the most careful attention in direc-
tions that are comparatively new to
them., Their representatives must be
prepared to meet representative manu-
facturers of other countries who are tak-
ing great pains to extend their trade,"
Mr. Taney says in this connection that
itis not too much to saythat the Cana-
dians are not only making vigorous ef-
forts to divert export trade from other
countries to their own, but are quite
successful, not only in many branches
of manufactured goods, but also in pro-
ducts of the farm. In fact, evidence
is not wanting that the vast resources
of Canada ars being utilized more gen-
erally and successfully in their indus-
trial arts, trade and commerce with
the United Kingdom that at any per-
iod of her history. Bach successive
year finds her people elbowing their
way more extensively into the foreign
trade and successfully competing with
the exporters of other countries, andim
lines, too, which were entire strangers
to them.
STREET -CAR COLLISION.
A. Trolley Pgslles Into a Eire-Trttek-One
Firc,nnii Kilted and Several Injured.
A despatch from Buffalo, N.Y., says:
—At daylight on Sunday morning fire
truck, No. 6, with a crew consisting of
seven firemen while responding to an
alarm, collided with a trolley car at the
corner of Woltz avenue and Sycamore
street. The truck was stretched across
the street car tracks when the trolley
which was running at full speed, struck
it. Every fireman on the truck was in-
jured. John F. Clarke was pinned und-
er the track and crushed to death. His
lungs wereerforated by the round of
a ladder, Fred Jacky went under the
truck and received a ennoussion of the
spine., He cannot recover. The other
injuries are :— Lieut. Hadden, hip bruis-
ed; Michael Rosenberger, left leg sprain-
ed and concussions; John W. Brechtel,
knee sprained; Nicholas N. Oeller, hip
bruised; Anthony Manhard, bruised,
The motor car was smashed to pieces,
but the motorman escaped with Unit
slight injuries. Both the motorman
and conductor of the car have been ar-
rested. James Cowan, the motorman,
is blamable for the accident, as he says
he heard the fire gong, but did not
spew up, as he thought he could
cross the street ahead of the truck.
HER VISION CAME TRUE.
Iter lather Met Death at the Time and in
the Way lie saw' B.
A few days ago AIex Gindelsberger,
a farmer living near Portsmouth, 0.,
was called from his home at night by
unknown men and murdered. The
night the crime was committed his
daughter, Mary, thirteen years old,
stayed at the home of William Cook,
in Portsmouth. The next morning at
breakfast she told of her strange dream.
Sho said that it seemed that some
one called her father and that lid went
outside, where he was murdered. After
this she thought that sac heard rap -
pings in her room and on the head
of the bed, in which she was sleeping.
She was so terrified that she covered
her head with the bed clothing and
went to sleepy. She was awakened
soon and imagined that a hand touch-
ed her and pointed towards where her
father was lying dead.
Within an hour after she had finish-
ed tolling about the dream she received
a telegram saying that her father was
dead. She afterwards learned that
he had baso killed as she had seen in
the vision and at about the same time,
AN INOUBATOR
--
That is I'st',l To ]latch Out Microbes Por
Expert mealal Purposes.
A firm in Regent street, London,
makes a business of hatching out arti-
ficially birds, chickens and the like,
and the incubators adapted for their
various purposes are Lined up against
the sides of the long room. They also
take infants that are prematurely born
and by keeping them in a certain un-
varying tenmperature, and giving them
proper nourishment, and
them into
healthy and lusty babies,
Perhaps the strangest of all. their
many, appliances for hatching living
organtsims is their biological incubator,
Here aro "cultivated" whole "colonies"
of deadly microbes for purposes al bae-
teriological investigation and experi-
ment,
The cholera bacillus, the scarlet fe-
ver micrococcus, the leprosy and tub-
erculosis bacilli and dozens of other
varieties of these pestiferous little or-
ganisms propagate themselves in these
iorcinrry houses with marvoLous rapid-
ity, 'they are grown on small lozenge-,
shaped pieces of gelatine, and a frag-
ment the site of a quarter suffices to
maintain a "colony' of. 80,000,000 of
microbes.
This, particular incubator Is fastened
by two locks of. the attest design and
most intrloate construction, and, in
vice- of the terrible results- that night
possibly fellow from any unauthorized
meddling ivilit its i'ewsolne contents,
the precaution Smears a wholly necessary
one.
An immt nice pumping engine at the
mines of i riedeinsville, Pa„ raised 17,-
1500 gallons of water at each revelation
of the hugs fly --wheel.
SELS ' Q8T.
SHOOTING AFFRAY AT C1,EYELaND.
outcome or atm ureal Brow* Strike Ili
That lily,
A despatch fru a Cleveland nays:—One
of the most dastardly attempte at mux' -
der ever laid at the dear of organized
labor took place here. on Erriday night,
it being the outcome of the great
Brown stroke, that 'has been going on
10 tbie city for the pest three months.
As a result four men are wounded,two
of whom are liable to die. On June 25
the great Browtt Reistitng 4a Coavey-
ing, Meohine Company discharged its 800
employees because of a threatened
strike, Since that time rioting has been
the pastime of the strikers and their
thousands of sympathizers. About a
week ago the seven companies of mil-
itia were withdrawn from the Brown
works and the police protection taken
away. Friday nicht a party of ten
strikers went to the corner of Wade
Park and East Madison street and lay
in wait •for a party of workmen who
came by on their way home from the
Brownworks. � or s. There were nine men In
the little group of workmen with their
dinner pails. Without a moment's
warning the strikers rushed from be-
hind a saloon where tliey were in hfd-
Mg, and with a cry of "Scab," bean
shooting into the crowd. A few of the
workmen were armed and returned the
fire. The battle lasted about three min-
utes, in which! about 30 shots were fir-
ed, when the strikers fled. Four men
were, shot, two fatally, George Plumb,
one of the workmen, was shot in the
head and is expected to die, white T.
Caldwell, another workman, was shot
in the right leg and in the shoulder.
Two of the strikers were shot, and one
will die. The one fatally injured is
George Larsen. Ile was shot through
the lungs. The other, whose name is
Hixley, is not fatally injured. Several
people
cosi d e of tn he leearn d. The polbut ice
police
made several arrests among the strik-
ers.
THE QUEEN'S REIGN.
On the Thione tenger Than Any Other
British Sovereign.
If Queen Victoria lives until Septem-
ber she will have the extraordinary
distinction of baying occupied the Brit-
ish throne longer than any other pre-
vious sovereign. Next to this reign in
longevity would come that of George
UL, who ruled 50 years.
A curious historic coincidence is fur-
nished in this connection. The Queen
will establish a British record at the
age of 77 which was exactly the age
attained by Louis XIV., who Suc-
ceeding his father when only five years
old, was king of France for the unpar-
alleled space of 72 years.
The two other long reigns of Eng-
lish history were those of Henry III.
(56 years).and Edward III. (50 years),
who both inherited the kingly office as
minors.
Among contemporaneous crowned
heads, the Emperor Francis Joseph, of
Austria, comes next to England's Sov-
ereign in length of reign, he having re-
ceived the Imperial title on the abdi-
cation of his uncle, in 1848. so that His
Apostolic Majesty will at no distant
date be in a position to celebrate his
jubilee. .11
Hay Fever and Catarrh Relieved in
10 to 110 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, Hay Fever, Colds, Headache,
Sore Throat, Tonsilitis and Deafness.
Sold by G. A. Deadman.
Ten thousand dollars was lately paid
by R. von Mendelssohn, of Berlin, for
a Stradivarius' 'cello.
Heart Disease Relieved in 30 Min-
utes.—Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart
gives perfect relief in all oases of Or -
gado or Sympathetic Heart Disease in
30 minutes, and speedily effects a cure.
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.
Buffalo buyer (to shoe dealer)—"Why
did you warrant those patent leathers
to last, when one has cracked already?"
Dealer—"ltty, dear sir, how can we be
sure there is no infringement on the
patent."
Piles Cured in 3 to 6 Nights.—Dr.
Agnew's Ointment will cure all cases
of Itching Piles in from 3 to 6 nights.
One application brings comfort. For
Blind and Bleeding' files it is peerless.
Also cures Tetter, Salt Rheum, Eczema,
Barber's Itch, and all eruptions of the
skin. 95 els.
Sold by G_AADeadman.
Ethel—"Did you illy that second-
hand bicycle of a friend';" George —
Well, I always considered hint a
friend till he sold me the 'bike.'"
Relief in Six Hours,— Distressing
Kidney and Bladder Diseases relieved
in six hours by the "South American
I'iidn•ey Cure," This new remedy is e,
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 mitlo or reunite. It relieves reten-
tion of water and pain in passing, it
almost immediately.if you want out*relief and cure this ier"iour remedy,
Sold by G. A. Deadman.
THEN SITE'S THE RAGE,
Your friend Miss Scriiilet is n writer
of verse, you say. Is she a poetess of
passion
Well, you would think so if you
heard her talking to her maid.
Rheumatism Cured to a Day.— South
American Rheumatic Cure Tor Rhou-
inatiani and Neuralgia, radically cores
in 1 to 3 days, its action upon the
system is remarkable and mysterious,
It removes tit once the cause anti the
disease immediately disappears, The
first dose greatly benefits: 71.1 cents.
Salt) 11,1 .,. A i,,.,.ntuau.
Don't wear diamond eartngs in the
Morning. Mu* jewelry at any time
is hardly good taste.
10 oto, Cares Constipation and Liver
Ills,—Dr. Agnews Liver fills aro the
most perfect made, and cure like magic,
Sick 13eathnrho; Constipation, llilious-
ness, Indigestion and all Liver Ills. 10
cents a vial --40 doses.
Sold by G. A.. Deadman.
ITEMS OP INTEREST.
Par the last fifty_ years of her life,
Betty Webster, of Wensleydote. Eng-
land, was a constant smoker. She has
just died, at the age of 107.
8011 was brought up from a depth of
326 feet, from a coal mine in Belgium,'
and from it sprouted weeds of a species
>i'lknown to the botanists,
A brood of ohiokons just hatched at
the home of Mns. George Hunt, in Ped-
rioltown, N. J.. has a curiosity among
them. It is a ohioken with its heed up-
side down,
A machine for catching grasshoppers
isowned by Henry Crow. of Garden
Kansas, It scoops them in by the bush-
el, Mt, Crow boils them, and feeds
them to his hogs.
The interior of a gold bearing rook,
was inspected in an Oregon town, by
means of the Roentgen rays, and
veins of auriferous metal were as visi-
ble as if they were on the surface.
Two twelve -year-old lads in Sutton,
England, contrived to get some candy
out of a slot machine, without dropping
in the usual coins. Renew:se then at-
tacked thorn, and they drowned them-
selves.
The Mayorof
flint, Mich., receives
no salary, The late mayor, who re-
cently retired from offioa, was so high-
ly esteemed that the Common Council
voted an appropriation to him. They
awarded him ono dollar.
Strange black spots appeared on the
body o1 Jeff Wallis. just before he
died, at Luverne, Ala. Similar bleak
spots also appeared on the floor, un-
der the bed, and all efforts to scour
them out have been useless.
Three aching teeth so annoyed Isaac
H. Ivins, of Camden, N. J., that be
said, "1'11 have them out, though their
removal kills me." A dentist extract-
ed them, causing a shock which result-
ed in a fatal attack of heart failure.
Most of the monks at Bing William's
Town, Cape Colony, are, tradesmen, and
do their own carpentering, bricklaying,
blacksmithing, etc., besides teaching
school. All the buildings they occupy
were erected by themselves.
A Danbury man has bit upon an ori-
ginal and profitable way of commit-
ting suicide. He announces his inten-
tion to enter a cage containing a fero-
cious lion, and permit the beast to eat
him. Spectators are to be allowed, on
paying an admission fee of $5 each.
Wm. Watson, of Brooklyn, dreamed
that be saw his eleven -year-old boy
drowning. At breakfast the next
morning he commanded Jack not to go
Nervous
Semple waatler why their nerves are so •woalt)
tally
they get tired so easily; why they do not
steep Autuealiy; why 1115Y have frequent heat;
aches, indigestion and
Nervous Dyspepsia. The explmpat1Stt la
simple. It is found 1n that impute bleed feed.
Mg the nerves 011 refuse instemi of the tile,
meets of strength end vigor. Oplete and 110980
(iohnpounds simple deaden and do not caro,
need's liltreap)trllle feeds the nerves baro,
rich blood' givssaiateral sloop, perfect Mrs'tloii,le1 etrueremedyforallnervous wank OS,
os
Sarsaparilla
Is the One True Blood Purifier, A11 druggists, 51,
(111)5 Neer I11si easy t0
flood's Pills take,easytooporate.20
traimes.
BAKINC
POWDER
THECOOK'S BEST FRIEND
LAlat:.ST SALE IN CANADA.
near the pond where he was accustom-
ed to swim. Tile lad disobeyed the
command, and that very day was
drowned.
An immortal oat has for a long time
annoyed Mr. B. F. Feeley, of Tremont,
N. Y. It has been in his family for
two years, and he has tried various
ways to close its career. His last plan
was by tying a brick to its back, and
dropping it in the Harlem. That came
night it walked home, handicapped with
the same brink.
A radish 18 inches in length has been
grown near Widen, Germany, which is
said to be the exact form of a baby,
even to the fingers and toes.
IEN V YFMS
,.a
OUBLED
With Liver Complaint and Dyspepsia ---Suffered
Greatly and Found No Relief in. the Scores
of Medicines Prescribed.
s
South Anicrioan Nervine Was Recommended, and Before
half a Bottle Was Taken Relief Came.
Have Since Improved Rapidly, and Am Now Conxpletoty Cured•
o ' ays 51r. David Reid, of Chesley, Ont.
What ills come to humanity from a
disordered liver! Fienry Ward Beecher
has said that it was Lmposslbio for a
man to hold correct spiritual views 11
his liver was out of order. The liver
is so important a part of the me0ban-
ism of man that when it ceases to work
with ease the whole man 1s unable to
do his work aright. Can we not appeal
to thousands, nay, tens of thottsands,
for- a verification of this fact? Cer-
tainly it is, that sir, David Reid, of
Chesley, Ont., felt 'that the enjoyment
of life had been taken from him,
through the unhealthy condition of his
liver. For ten :;rat's he says he was
troubled with liver complaint and dys-
pepsia, Employing his awn language:
'At times my Myer was so tender I
could not bear it pressed or touched
from the outside. Had tried a great
many remedies without any benefit.
Was compelled to drop my work, and
being worse than usual, I decided as
it final resort to try South American
l'erviue, which had been rocuntmended
to me by friends who had been. Cured
by It. I got a bottle from A. 5, C,00d-
eve, local drueelet, and Commenced
taking according to directions. Before
1 had taken halt a bottle I was able
to go to work again, and T have 1m-
moved steadily since. I call consolen-
tiously recommend South American
Nervine to any suffering from dyspep-
sia or liver complaint" This is Mr
Reld's story as he tells it in his own>
words. Were 11 thought necessary itl
could be corroborated by a host of wit-.
nesses. Mr. Reid has lived a long tlmel
In Chesley, and his case was knows to
be a very bad one. But that makes ties
difference to Nervine. This •great dis-
covery rises equal to the most trying
occasions. Let it be Indigestion, thd`
most ohronic liver trouble, as with Mr.,
Reid, nervous prostration, that -makesl
life miserable with so many, side
headaches, that sap alt the effort out
of man or woman, Nervine treasures to
the necessities of the case. Lt Is to
great medicine and thousands to -day lea
Canada are happier and healthier men
and women, because of its discover:
There is no great secret about it, and)
yet there is an important secret. ft
operates on the nerve centers of the
system from which emanate all life and
healthfulness, or if disordered, sioknesa„,
even death. Nervine strikes promptly at
the nerve centers, hence, as with Mil
Feld, where ten years' Use of other me-
dicines had done no good, less than s1
bottle of Nervine brought about ert.
couraging results, and a few bottles
cure •.
1l. DE:1.DYRY ;5tril01:o i s'e i iiI !total .tgeat for
minds.