Loading...
The Brussels Post, 1896-9-25, Page 7SEPT, 20, 11/96 1� NEWS N 11 MII3�l TiiE VERY LATEST FROM ALL THE WORLD OVER. Interesting Item* About: Our Own Countre. Greet Ilrltaln, the United states, one MI Parte of the Globe, Condensed and Assorted for ela*y Reding. THE 1311,U13011 1.45 0. T, it7A'NIADA, Canadian cattle, are again being ship Ped via Boston. The rate of taxation in Chatham this year will be over 21 mills.; A Normal Sohoel for the training of teachers in domeeti.e science is to ee opened in Ottawa. During the poet four weeks 222,133 barrels of apples were shipped from Montreal for England. Thomas Smith, of Hamilton drank a cupful of Paris green, but was taken to the hospital and Is recovering, The shipment of wheat at Montreal for Europe thie season is more than twice that of the season of 1895. Constable Cruiokshanks, of the North- West Mounted Police, stationed at Duok Lake, shot and killed himself there on Wednesday', Seventy-five stands of arms of the new Lee-Metford pattern were served out to the cadets of the Royal Military College at Kingston., Dominion letters patent have been • issued incorporating the Montreil Con- struction Company and the Canadian Whiekey Esporting Company. Bishop Sullivan, of Algoma, has re- ceived a cheek for £500, given anony- mously by some friend of the diocese in England for the mission fund. British Board • of Trade returns for August show a. decrease of $10,55000,000 in imports and a decrease•of $ in exports, as compared with. August last year. A cablegram from London says a company has been formed with a. oapi- tel of £500,000 to build a marine rail- way and carry on a shipbuilding yas'd In Vancouver.' Li -Hung -Chang greatly enjoyed his visit to Banff. He telegraphed to Sin Re.nri Joly expressing thanks ,for the kind manner in which be has been treat- ed in Canada. The bodies of a woman and her son have been found in the ruins of a build- ing destroyed by fire at 9i.eadawbrook. a settlement twelve miles from Monc- ton, N. B. It is supposed that a dou- ble murder took place.. The arrangements for the new ser- vice between Belgium and Canada, which have been completed between the Belgian Steamship Company and the Canadian Government, oontem- plate a direct service between Cana- da and Antwerp, via Boulogne. GREAT BRITAIN. Li-Bung-Chang's gifts to the Queen are valued at five thousand pounds. The British battleships Devastation and Redoubtable have been ordered to Crete. The balance of £6,000,000 of the Chinese loan was issued in .London and Berlin. Vice -Admiral. Sir John Hopkins has been appointed to command the Medi- terranean squadron. Mrs. Delia L. S. Parnell, the mother of the late Charles Stewart Parnell, is seriously 111 In Dublin. Official returns of the Britisb na- tional debt show a decrease of $620,- 000,000 in 20 yearn. The correct title conferred on Li - Rung -Chang by the Queen is Grand Commander of ,the Victorian Order. Mr. Redmond calls the recent Irish convention a disgraceful imposture. The split is widening, and funds ase di- minishing. Sir Joseph Archer Crowe, theCom- mercial Attache of Great Britain at Great Britain at Paris, is dead. He was fifty-six years of age, Mrs. May brink; under life sentence in Woking prison for poisoning her hus- band is now reported to be dying. According to returns received at Lon- don, emigration to the U. S. during August decreased 10,000 and to Canada 1,000. Meetings of Armenian sympathizers are being called in all the great cities of England and at several of the capi- tals et Europe. The visit of the Czar to England, and his conference with the Queen, are ex- ' ectad to have an influence on the Eastern question. It is reported that the Prince of Wales 'has arranged a meeting be- tween the Czar and Lord Salisbury at Balmoral, when the Turkish question will be discussed. Ms. Chamberlain has written a let- ter to the Colonial Agents in London advising that all the exhibits of the British Empire at the Paris Exposition bo combined in one division. Sir Matthew White Ridley, Home Secretary, replied to the criticisms of the Government for the release of the Irish'dynamiters by saying that the action of the Government was based solely on medical reports submitted to UNITED STATES. Prof. F. J. Child, of Cambridge, Mass., one of the best known of the Harvard University instructors is dead. Tho strike of the two thousand Chi- cago , than mouth's struggle, has endedivic- tory for the men. The residence of Mr. Levi Waller, one of the lthiest eAcitizens Wil- kesbarre, Pa., blown was wnf up bydy- mite. Archbishop Ireland of St. Paul, Minn„ has issued a letter announcing that hereafter in the Catholic parochial schools no tuition fees will be charged. provereent of consequence wU1 occur Presidential e. cation. H until after the 1 reedentlal el ductionof wages •havo ocpurred in many directions, thus reducing the pur- chasing power of the people. Boot lied Shoe manufacturers report larger ship - MOMS of goods than usual for the tgine. of year, but generals of a cheap dose cotton goods. The alicondition ayf Inl. and ge. GENgfirAah Eighty 'thousand men, 7,000 horses herOltawere 8action German military munocus at Goerlitz. The Spanish Cortes, before adjourn- pmppawerta liorraw money to prosec ute the Ouban oampaigu. Herr Krupp has discharged all the foreigners ui his employ, on the ground that they divulge secrets to foreign Governments. Two Egyptian editors in Cairo, charg- ed with Insulting the Queen, have been fined thirty pounds and sentenced to eighteen months imprisonment. The Sultan of Turkey is said to bein- oapacj.tated by disease from governing the country, and his dethronement be- comes more probable every day. Emperor 'William bus appointed the Czar an Admiral of the German navy. This .year's Egyptian cotton crop promises to be the largest ever known. Practically every department of the Cambria iron works, in Johnstown, Pa., has shut dawn for an indefinite period, throwing three thousand men out of employment. The 1VTatabele chiefs have made a own- plete surrender of Mr. Cecil Rhodes. Ole displayed great courage in going with twocompnnions, alt unarmed, into the Matopo hills to treat with the rebels. Slaughter and pillage proceed un- checked in Madagascar. jhere•is no safe- ty for Europeans outside of Antanana- rivo, and fears are expressed that the French garrison of that city may be Starved out. The British squadron, under Admiral Seymour, has been ordered to rendez- vous at Salonies, and it is expected that England will in the near future take a leading hand in forcing the abdication of the Sultan of Turkey. A number of officers. in the Greek army who deserted from their com- mands and joined the insurgents in the Island of Crete recently returned to Athens and gave themselves up. Decrees have been signed condemning sixteen of them to death. The Novoe Vremya, of St. Peters- burg, made the important statement yesterday that the Czar's tour shows that Berlin and Vienna, as well as Paris and St. Petersburg, are conscious of the necessity of common action by the powers to defeat the political de- signs of Great Britain, which, it add- ed, are clearly displayed in recent events in Turkey. TYNAN ARRESTED. The Notorious NunWer One Captured at Boulogne -The Piimnlx rack lrurderer lit the. 'lands or the Pollee. A despatch from London says :-Ty- nan, the notorious "Number One," hes been arrested at Boulogne on a Scotland Yard warrant, which was is- sued in 1882. Tynan arrived in Europe by landing in Genoa, in August. He proceeded from there to Paris, whore he remained for some days consorting with a number of the members of the dynamite faction of the Irish party. He has been travelling under the name of George Gordon and other aliases. When he arrived in Boulogne on Fri- day evening he put up at the Hotel Folkestone, where he did not hesitate to expound his Fenian views in the bar of the hotel. His movements had been watched from the time he had arrived in French territory. The local com- miesary of police, together with an English detective, burst into his room at four o'clock in the morning. The detective held a loaded revolver to his head, and threatened to shoot him if he resisted. Tynan was secured, and admitted his identity. Incriminating papers and a large sum of money were tound in his possession. The prisoner was lodged in a cell in the Boulogne police station, and will be arraigned in the morning, with a view to his ex- tradition to England. The warrant on which his arrest is made charges that the prisoner was concerned in the mur- ders of Lord Frederick Cavendish, Chief Secretary, and Mr. Burke, Un- der Secretary, m Pheonix Pank,adjoin- ing the viceregal lodge in Dublin, on May Lure of dynamite 1882, dbombs foruseth he !tumulus Eng- land.: HURRICANE AT PARIS. neer of the Opera. t'onrione .Ricer in- Pce111C Blown Into the Elver and TrCos A despatch from Paris, says :-Traf- fie•in the streets was stopped for two hours by a severe wind and rain storm that passed over this city on Thursday afternoon. The wuid blew with hur- ricane force and the downpour of rain was torrential. Much damage was done and several persons were injured by being struck by flying debris. Two hours before the storm broke the at- mosphere gave indications of its com- ing. It was dark and sultry and the clouds had a peculiar lowering appear- ante. Among the buildings that stood in the pathway of the cyckone was the Opera Comique, the roof of which was Dr. Ga ag are blown in. Most of the persons injured 11 her th leased Irish dy- namiter, became so violent in New York were cab ho v tnessed boo anion f oma that he bad to be put in a straight Temps, w waistcoat and taken to a private lunatic the top of an for more thasay a s Lminute: aasylum. did not last Polito had to use clubs to quell a He suddenly saw what appeared. co be of a tall pillar of smoke advaneing and riot between thewarring factions the Polish Catholic church at Scran- imagined ed that therewas a large fire. in which the men But almost immediately he saw the ton, Pa., on Sunday, branches of trees snapped off and used fence pickets and the women pray - 1 countless chimney pots hurled to the or books anis umbrellas.I groti.nd. Than the storm immediately Millie Flannigan, of Portsmouth, passed away. Those an the omnibus Ohio, a child of five years, deliberately were untouched. The west end of the attempted 'to commit suicide an Thurs- city wholly escaped the fury of the day by swallowing carbolic acid be- storm, but eastward along the river cause she thought bar father Was go- way much destruction was caused. lin- ing to take her from her nether, from , tween the Pont St. Michael and Pont Whom ho had obtained a divorce, !Neuf 40 large 'trees were torn out of The business situation in the United the ground and blown into the Seine. States shows actuals improvement. Many persons who were passing across y no to a con- the bridge Financial twreat still prevails g or along the river front u , bythe wind and minesble extent and r ado tingiasand were caughtI mines are closing or adorning short; thrown into the river, but so far as time, Strikes are not infrequent, and known all of these worn rescued. prices of all kinds of produce are very I --. low. Several important failures have I F -"She's clerk"Site's a married lady." also snmswhut accentuated the !heves-Second clorlc-"slow do you know?" sionr ;and the 01110ia11 le that uo ins- "Sho ordered two hammoclts." MR, BOW LASES PAWL "Get ready1 Paok ups" exolsimed Mr, Bowser as he unlocked the front door the other evening and kiokod'hlP bat clear In to the sitting room. "Have you gone crazy?" gasped Mrs, ,Bowser as she pane forward to meet him. "Not if the court knows herself! What d'you thins we are going to do? How long will it take to peek Sip your furniture?" "What on earth id the matter now?" "We are going to rnovel See this paper? I. signed it this afternoon. Mr's. Bowtier, I've done the sharpest, cutest, and most sensible thing you ever anew use to do. I've leased. Green's farm and we take possession next week, and Green moves into this house," "You -you don't tell mel" she stam- mered, as be danced around the room. "Don't II Think of it, Mrs. Bowser .-cows to milk, hogs to feed, plowing Boeing and reaping -fresh milk, golden butter, newly laid eggs-whoopeel" She grew pale and weak and had to sit down, and she had stared at him for thirty seconds when he asked: "Well, why don't you jump up and click your heels together? Think of your going out at early dawn to feed" the hogs and pot the lambs and pull the calf's ears! Think of strawberries right off our own door! Yuml Yuml Why woman, I expected you'd faint away when I told you the newel" "So -you've -leased -a -farm?" she slowly queried. "Of course I have, and next week we'll be out galloping ,o'er the dewy grass, listening to the bluebirds and rolling down hill among the daisies. Why, I can't wait for the time to come. Meter Gregg, who came up to the car with me, says it will prolong our lives by fifteen years. You get the pure quill out there -no smoke or dirt or cinders. You'll look like a bride inside of a month, and as for the old man -well, you won't know me after I've ripped up an acre of aoill What's' the matter with you?" "I -I wish you hadn't done tti" re- plied Mrs. Bowser as she wiped the tears from her eyes. "You -do -eh? Wish I • hadn't leased a farm and prolonged -prolonged, Mrs. Bowser -our lives by fifteen years! Wish you weren't going out among the birds and blossoms and spices and pure, sweet airs Wish you were not going to see lambkins gambol and calves frisk and pigs rub themselves against the rail fences! Well, you do beat mel" "Mr, Bowser, you are no farmer," she said, as she got her feelings under control., "Oh, 1 ain't?" he shouted. "What's the matter that I'm no farmer? Why, I was sowing and planting and reap- ing before you had cut your first tooth. No farmer, oh? Don't you worryyourself that I can't make e cornfeld get* up and hump itself as if growing for a prize medal and that I don't know beans from beets. Even if I wasn't a farmer, couldn't I learn? Haven't I got the necessary sawdust in my head to bald a plow or handle a scythe? I am not going to the coun- try, to eat salt pork three times a day and put in 18 hours of hard work, but for the sake of our health and the Changs." "What's the matter of our health? "Matter of our health -humph! Look at mel I've lost 20 pounds in the last seven days. I have night sweats and a day cough. My lungs, liver, kidneys and general system are simply totter- ing on the verge of the grave. Look in the glass. You are thirty-two years old, but look to be fifty. Doctor Gregg, said that if I couldn't get you out of town you'd collapse within a fortnight." Then he's an idiot!" she exclaimed. You are in the best of health, and so am I and the boy. This having a farm is simply another fad of yours and the most foolish thing you ever did." W -wheat! Do you know what you are saying Mrs. Bowser? And you want me to die on the street? And you wantto you want collapse ur boy's intellecth and die in the ousel Andto be stunted for the want of fresh curl I wouldn't have believed it' of you - wouldn't have believed it 1 And you call it a fad to boot !" "Things will not go right and you will blame me," she said as he walked around the room. "How can things go wrong?" he de- manded. And bow could I blame you ou boutthey anythinghave 9 t andnever why ebegin now%, Come, now, be sensible. Here is the leaseduly signed. We are going. We are going out into the pure ozone of the country, Mrs. Bowser to sleep and eat and nut on our rase Just think of olimbmg trees, picking black- berries, feeding the hens, stoning frogs and gathering young onions under the light of the silvery moon! The crick- ets will sing you to sleep and the meadow lark will waken you in the morning. 13y George, but I can't watt" "And the lease 15 really signed?" she asked. 1 "There it is. I take the farm for ?six mantles and he takes the house." "And you can't back out 0 "Back out? What on earth do I want to back out fora I couldn't back out if I wanted to. I'll have men here to do the packing tomorrow, When you come to think :the matter over, I'm sure you will agree with me." "I suppose we must go," she sighed. "Ahs That's the way to talk !" hoax - claimed as he held her in his arms and kissed her. 'Now you are sensible. Now our lives will be saved. Now I will swing the mowing machine through the aving grass to the notes of the robin's song,while you make soft soap in the baokyard and call the geese. Mrs. Bowser, I am the happiest man in all the country !" "Perhaps we shall take comfort" "Perhaps! There's no perhaps about it. We'll take dead loads of comfort. We cant help it. That's what we go for, and as I enter the kitohan with a pail of new milk in one hand and a calf in the other you'll be there in your white apron to greet me and call me Farmer Joe.' "What will you bring a calf into the kitohan for?" she asked. "Because that's the gray farmers do. And we'll go out and wretch the pigs' backs, and we'll got up at night iso jump over the currant bushes an p strawberries and we'll wander over the barnyard while the flush of midnight is upon the hind. By the great horn spoon Mrs, Bowser, but wove struck it, and you aro Jost the nicest, aweol.ost• little woman in all this big world! Say, come and give your old Bowser a hug and a buss, and 111 Ito Lown • and en+ gage packers." the �. R ,-U i , 0. Signe -,',Bow N to ultl all s fail A'Ir, ser has got jnmo something worse than a bear trap, and even the author doesn't know how he, is going to get olit, THE TWO O'CLOCK TRAIN, flow the Travois* r was Cnllcd in Time fee itis Trntn, It was a.,very small western town, and the only train out of it that night left at two o'clock, The traveling man had impressed upon the night porter of the hotel the importance of calling him in time for. the train., Promptly at 1:50 a prodigious knock aroused the sleeper. "Say! be yez the man what wants the two o'clock train 8" • "Yes," was the sleepy reply from within. "Well, yez can ehlape an hour longer, fer she's so much. late." The heavy feet shuffled off down the hall, and silence ensued. Another hour had passed, when Pat again knocked. Says be yez the felly what said he wantedm?" to ketch the two o'olook thru "Yes l'" and there was a sound of the man hastily springingfrom bis bed. "Well," drawled Pa, "yez can go back to bed again, fer she's another hour late." A forcible remark or two proceeded from the traveling man's room, and were audible to his awakened neighbors, as was the departure of Pat; but soon all was quiet again, and the few occup- ants of the hetes were left for some time to undisturbed repose. Just as the first faint streaks of dawn were tinging the sky Pat once more made his presence known, and, in tones giv- ing unmistakable evidence of recent and heavy slumber, remarked: "Say, if yez was the felly what want- ed to ketch the two o'clock thrain, yez can shlape till morula', fer bedad, the blame thing's gone 1" IT MAY LEAD TO TROUBLE. The Milted States Have Launched a Vessel on the Laos-Iirliisii Experts Mahn She 18 n Warship.. A despatch from Cleveland, says: It is probable that diplomatic compli- cations will arise between the United States and Great Britain over the main- tenance on the great lakes of the rev- enue cutter Walter Q. Gresham, which was launched here on Saturday. Brit- ish naval experts hold, after a care- ful examination of the plans of the ves- sel, that she should be classed as a warship, rather than as a revenue cut- ter, and that her maintenance on the lakes would be a violation of the treaty entered into by the United States and Great Britain, whereby only one war vessel can be maintained on the lakes by each Government. It is known that the naval attaches of the British Em- bassy at Washington have made a complete report to their Government upon the vessel, in which they have classed it as a gunboat. Should com- plaint be made, the State Department will respond by saying that the Gres- ham arld the other two similar cutters which are to be built for service on the lakes are simply for, revenue marine service, and for nothing else, and will call attention to the faot that England was first to adopt this novelty in the construction of the revenue cutters which were built two years ago for the Canadian revenue marine, and that in addition to the novelty of their arma- ment the Canadian vessels carry heavy steel rams. CRIMINALS. They IInr0 nerd Work to llld, Themselves In Tli,!lC 1):1y11. " When one remombers," said a well- known Scotland Yard detective to the writer recently, ." that in these days there is hardly a place in the world but that somebody comes from it or goes to it from elsewhere, the question ' Where am 1 to hide ?' becomes to the criminal a problem 'fraught with the most absorbing interest. Of course, I am referring to the educated criminals, forgers, embezzlers and the like -cool, crafty customers, who think out their plans thoroughly, and, when the pro- per moment arrives, suddenly disappear as if the earth had swallowed him up. " Still, for all the foresight they dis- play, the law has been fairly successful with these folk. Before the days of railways it was comparatively easy,smce it was impossible to guard all the roads day and night, to steal into a continent- al town, but now the moment a man is wanted, the trains are watched, and even if this fails there are the hotels, the waiters of which are in the pay of the police, and are quick to note that Monsieur Anglais is pale in the morn- ing, a sure sign of a bad night's rest, that he eats no breakfast, gets no let- ters, receives no visitors, and has a knack of looking furitively at the door when it opens. As a gentleman I was escorting back to London a few years ago said: " Ono might as well attempt to hide in a glass house as on the Con- tinent." AN OBSTACLE. I am training myself for an editor, timidly remarked the young widow, as she approached the editor's desk. I am sorry, madam, but it is useless for you to waste your time on me; I already have a wife and six children. A TEN -CENT FEAST. Borax. Ever tried one of those full meals for 10c? Metax. Yes; it filled me with dissatis- faction. 1 • • • 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 1 iles it is peerless. Also cures Totter, bait Rheum, Eczema, Barber's Itch, and all eruptions of the skin. 85 otic, Sold by G. A. Deadman, Luck, like lightning, often comes in a dark hour. When a woman gets to be a little sulky her waggin' tongue becomes si- lent. Heart Disease Relieved in 30 Idin- utes.-Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart gives perfect relief in all cases of Or - game 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 m Diseased Heart. Ode dose convinces. Sold by G. A. Deadman. WAY $hi »MITT RIPE, No, sir, osid the manad who hway.. ered, I won't learn to ride a bicycle. 1 laid thoughts of tryingit, bat I. have Just heard of a peeuiar trait in tie maohjne that cauesd.me to ohange my mind. "What's that? I understand that when you first try to ride, if you see anything you espeol. ally wish to avoid, You're almost oeg- tuTto run into it,.• hs e a ga ood deal of truth in 11.. Weil that settles the wheel for me; I have enough trouble with hill col., leotors as it 10 cts. Caren Constipation and Liver Ws, -Dr, Agnew's Liver Pills are the most perfect made, and cure like magic, Sick Headache, Constipation, Bilious- ness, Indigestion and alt Liver Ills. 10 cents a x181-40 daces. Sold by G. A. Deadman. Hive lives forever, but her ohildren die one by one. Relief In Six Hours.- IBetreseing Kldnee and Bladder Diseases relieved in six hours by the "South American Piidney Pure." This new remedy is a great surprise and delight on account of its exceeding promptness iu reliev- ing pain in the bladder, kidneys, back and every part of the urinary passages iII male or feamle. It relieves reten- tionpainin passing it tion of water pa g,u almost immediately. If, you Want quick relief and cure this is your, remedy. Sold by G. A. Deadman. A hog may be asquealer, but he never gives anything away. Hay Fever and Catarrh Relieved in 10 to 60 Minutes. -One abort 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 nasar passages. Painless and delightful to use. It re- lieves instantly, and permanently cures Catarrh, Hay Fever, Colds, Headache, Sore Throat, Tonsilitts and Deafness. Sold by G. A. Deadman. Laughter proves nothing. Wise men laugh and idiots grin all the time. Rheumatism Cured an a Day.- South American Rheumatic Cure for Rheu- matism and Neuralgia, radically cures in 1 to 8 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 by G. A. Deadman. Ys What givea 11004'? tlareeparills 1's great pope ularity, lnereeeleg solos and wonderlil mires, The cmmination, proportion sed process la preparing geode! 6arsaparillaare unknown to other n+edlolnos, and male it peculiar to Itself. It ens directly and positively upon the Need, and as the blood reaches every nook and corner of Me human system, all the nerves, lnusolea, bones and tissues come Wi- der the behe0cent IpSuenee 01 ood's' Sarsaparilla The One True Blood Puri00r. All druggists. $1, Mee, ure ieast Hood's Pills tske,oLiverusytoalls;perate.ywco. FO�t MWEREY.SII IMAMS. A D U N 7 S BAKING POWDER THECOOK'S BEST FRIEND LAP.aEST SALE lIf CANADA. a.eamatenon vornwoomusanomomrsou.. ,.. The. SEVEREST TEST. The severest test of manhood is nev- er found in good times, but only in hard times, It is not the man who has success when others are doing well, but it is the man who keeps up his courage and struggles on when every- body alas is wavering or going down. who is the hero in the sight of God and men. It is an easy matter to make good times when both wind and tide are in one's favor, or when one is moving with the current; but it re- quires character and skill and daring to make head in spite of opposing for- ces or to work successfully against the current, 'i , 1 ; . l -! POINTS THE WAY TO PERFECT P South American Nervine. The Great Health Restorer of the Century. Sickness Cannot Cope With It. Has Cured the Worst Cases on Rec- ord. Cures at the Nerve Centres and Thus Cures Permanently: A Wonderful Specific in All Cascs`of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Nervousness and General Debility. Has No Equal as a Spring Medicine. There is a great deal of uncertainty In the methods adopted to remove dis- ease. Doctors are not free from this kind of thing themselves. The poor pa- tient has to put ep with a good deal of experimenting, The discoverer of South American Nervine takes too serious a view of life to play pranks of this kind. He does not think that tbese human bodies of ours should he fooled with. He has recognized that they are subject to disease, but, by scientific methods, he has learned that just as the watch le to be put in perfect repair only when the main -spring is kept in running order, so with the individual, be remains in per- fect health only when the nerve centres air kept healthful and strong. What disease is more distressing_tban Indigestion oe dyspepsia? Some simple retnedy may be given fa cause relief for inn moment. Nervine is an indisputably successtnl remedy for the worst cases of indigestion, because it teaches the source of all stomach troubles -the nerve can- EALTH tree. Indigestion exists because tEe vital forces have become diseased and are 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. How many systems are run dowse through nervousness. A stimulant may, give ease, but it will not cure nervous troubles. Nervine has cured more des- perate eases of nervousness than any, otheerr• medicine anywhere. And it does so fbr the same reason that it cures in- digestion. The nerve centres are de- ranged, or there would be no victims of nervousness. Nervine rebuilds and strengthens the nerve tissues, and hence its marvellous powers in diseases of this kind. In the spring of the year the strong- est suffer from general debility. The blood, through neglect, has become im- poverished and the whole system gets., out of order. We speak of it as a spring medicine. Nervine restores the exhausted vital forces that have led to this tired don't -care, played -out, miser- able iserable condition. No one can take a bot - tie of Nervine at this season of the. Year without disease quickly giving wail to abounding health. The moral is plain, simple and readilyf� understood. If you would'sot trifle waif disease, then Soil will take South Amer-; icon Nervine, which will not trifle with~ you, A. DIiL1111k5 Wtiote ale nl1'A A.etnil ,9,gent for3rtl8scl8.