The Brussels Post, 1896-10-16, Page 7Ozx(>�156
THE BRE8i I,S
O s',
cssma ift nutonhtn Krol» couft):
ry districts ttis
donthrrate swells o startlipg pro.
pw Uons,
e , -01 bo ,
ti T i o ev n oar d Ito A imam
O xl Afo llh n , 7
IF
I
Y Y
' of Wooster. Ohio, i5 ender arzvet fat'
'Plea VERY LATEST PRO/11 ALL TihE
WORLD OVER.
Merderuig Thomas Kid
fourteenyoars
old, who. teased :him, d bs obild. of o•
shotgun and blew off the top of got
head,
The Canadian Paeiflo stoamor Mani-
toba was /seized at. Sault Ste, Marie, to
eatery unpaid fines for. violatipuu of
the regulations of the United States
Treasury Departmefit for navigation of
Um penal,
A letter ryritten in 1890 by Major Mc-
Kinley, Republican nominee for Pre
aiden1 of the United States, has been
unearthedin which he expresses his
faith in the doctrine of free silver and
points to leis convectional record in
support of his position.
Moreton Prowen, a;teading,bimetal-
list of England, has arrived in New
York, Discussing the monetary ques-
tion he expressed the belief that the
United States was strong enough' to
adopt bimetal,tdsm and that European
countries would follow the example,
John 0, Bodewig and George W.
Johnson charged with baying wrecked
a mail train on the Chicago & Grand
Trunk Railroad at Battle Creek, on Ju-
ly 10, 1894, during the A. 11. U. strike,
by wbioh the fireman was 'instantly
killed and a number of persons were
injured, were Lound guilty of conapir-
icy in the . United States .Court .at Do-
Irott,
The only notable feature' in the re-
ports from. the New York commercial
agencies is the marked increase in the
number of failures for the past three
months. The accepted explanation is
that the majority of these are "politi-
cal" failures, but this explanation does
not odd anything to the commercial
stability of the United States. The
business features of the week has been
the steady advance in wheat, Cotton
has weakened, and the demand now for
cotton goods is of the strictest newest -
'bus kind. Prospects are said to be
gond, but this is usual, only the mater-
ialization does not always occur. The
truth is that trade all over the United
States is in the worst passible state,
and for obvious reasons we cannot ex-
pect any marked improvement until
the spring of next year. There are,
and will be, fluctuations, of course, but
the material condition of trade will
not alter for some months.
GENERAL.
Li -Hung -Chang arrived. in Tien-Tsin
on Saturday morning,
There is a marked change, in the tong
of the Russian press towards England.
The striking coal miners at Bras and
Osseg,
in Bohemia,
are bee
amiIIg
T1
ot-
ons
The da.k laborers' strike at Ham-
burg has been settled favorable to
the strikers.
Fennel, Hayti, has been partly de-
stroyed by fire, and 2,000 of its inhabi-
tants aro homeless.
The Armenian refugees at Marseilles
are reported to be destitute and suf-
fering great hardship.
Seven men were •lost from the Bri-
tish cruiser Satellite in Dutch harbor
during a severe storm,
A lot 50 by 40, on the principal street
of Johannesburg,sold last week for
$100,000, or $2,00 a foot front.
Major Watts was tried by court-mar-
tial for the summary execution of the
Matabele Chief Makoni, and tees ac-
quitted.,•
The Spanish Government has ordered
sixty thousand rifles from a German
manufacturer, to be delivered in No-
vember.
It is stated that France bas concluded
an agreement with Italy, Germany, and
Great Britain for an exchange of poli-
tical offendeats.
An irade issued. at Constantinople on
Friday orders the formation of a flo-
tilla of ten torpedo boats for the de-
fence of the Dardanelles.
In consequence of an attack made on
aFrench party under command of Gen.
Galleni, a state of siege has been pro-
claimed in Madagascar.
A powder magazine exploded at Bu-
luwayo. Five white mon wore killed,
ns were also /mores of Kaffirs, who were
camping near the magazine.
According to reports received at Ber-
lin, the Sultan has appointed an inter-
national committee to inquire into the
causes of the recent massacre in the
Turkish capital.
It is reported that the Sultan has ex-
iled • his second wife and a batch of
courtiers and notables, who were sus-
pected of treason.
Serious fighting lasting three days,
has taken place in Mashonaland, near
Mazoe. The British were hemmed in
by the natives for ten hours.
A Vienna correspondent telegraphs
that the powers have agreed upon a
pacific settlement of the eastern ques-
tion which is honorable to all parties.
The fifteen -ton sloop Spray, which
sailed from Boston in 1896, with Capt.
Joshua Slocum as its sole occupant ar-
rived at Newcastle, N,S.W., on .Wed-
nesday.
The speech delivered by the Emperor
of Austria on the occasion of the open-
ing of the Irongate canal at Orsove m-
dicates a possible alliance between Aus-
tria, Roumania, and Service.
It is stated. lin Rome that negotia-
tions are pending between England and
Italy with a view to the latter hold-
ing to readiness a large body of troops
to sail at a moment's notice to the Le-
vant.
The Paris Gaulois says that in view
of the disturbed state of affairs in the
island of Madagascar, twelve thousand
troops will be despatched there after
the fetes which are to be held in hon-
our of the Czar.
lateresting items About Our Own Gauntry,
Orest Britain, the Unites State's, and
, AU Parts of the Globe, Condensed and
Asserted. ler Busy Reading,
CANADA,
Safe-blowers aro operating in "tepid
City -t Man. -
The population of Kingston increaa-
ed 100 during the year.
London slortsmen have organized
the :Thames valley 'game preserve.
Brantford's population has increased
144this year, according to the assessors'
returns, '
The Guelph. Council has appointed a
committee to effect a settlement with'
ex -Treasurer Harvey.
The population of Hamilton inoreas-
ed 034 during the year, according to the
assessment returns.
The body of Alex. McKenzie, a Ham-
ilton man, was found in the bay. 1t
is supposed ho committed suicide.
Lieut, A. E, Swift of the 8th Royal
Rifles, Quebec, is applying for the
position of Adjutant of the Bisloy team.
for 1897,
It is rumoured at Niagara Falls,,
Ont„ that the Canadian electric line
will run in co-operation with the Gorge
line next season.
Seven or eight buildings in the busi-
ness quarter of Gananoquo were burn-
ed, and at one time the town was in
great danger of destruction..
The Hamilton Hospital Committee is
investigating the accounts of the
House of Refuge, irregularities in the
contracts for supplies being reported.
The Hamilton Council has decided
to grant the ten-year exemption on
the cold storage warehouse, with the
understanding that it he in operation
by June next.
A stranger, believed to be G. L, Twisa
Hartford, swallowed a quantity . of
laudanum at St. Catharines with sui-
cidal intent, He recovered under a
doctor's care.
It is reported in Victoria; B. C., that
the British cruiser Wild Swan, the
smallest vessel of the Pacific coast
squadron, struck a submerged rock in
Callao harbour, while under full speed.
Her chances are few of escape from
total destruction.
A telegram received at the Depart-
ment of Marine and Fisheries from
Commander Wakeham; at Gaspe,
states that the fishing is good on Elie
Canadian Labrador coast, and the in-
habitants well off for the winter.
There was no sickness or distress. The
Newfoundland Labrador fishery is
bad,
GREAT BRITAIN.
The Prince of Wailes' oat Persimmon
has so far won $114,380,
George Du Maurier, the artist and
novelist, is reported in London to be
seriously ill.
Mr. William Morris, the poet, design-
er. and socialistic writer, is dead. He
was sixty-two yours of age.
It is eonsidered probable that lir,
Marcus Stone will succeed the late Sir
John Millais as president of the Royal
Academy.
Alderman George Fraudel Phillips,
sheriff of the County of London has
been elected Lord Mayor of London, to
succeed Sir Walter Wilkin:
The visit of the Czar and Czarina
to the Queen at Balmoral ended on Sat-
urday night, when they took' the
Queen's special train for, Portsmouth.
Amongst the suggestions for the cele-
bration of the Queen's long is one
that; there should be 'a review in Hyde
Park of the colonial and other forces.
Fred Barnard, the artist of the Lon-
don Black and White, has been burned
to death in bed. It is supposed the bed -
clothing naught fire while be was smoke
ing.
Sir William Harcourt is expected to
deliver a speech this week on the Turk-
ish question, in which he intends to de-
clare a new and effective policy, which
he thinks France wilt accept.
It is generally, conceded in Scotland
Yard that there as no chance of extra-
diting Tynan from France, and inter-
est in the great dynamite sensation is
&vi•nd1ing almost lo Ithe vanishing
paint.
A very large meeting was held in Tip-
perary on Sunday in favor of amnesty
to the Irish political prisoners. For the
first time since the split in the Irish
party, Mr. john Redmond appeaed ion the on and Mr.
a plat-
form.
Civil Service entrance examinations
will be held at Charlottetown, St. John,
Halifax, Quebec, Montreal, Ottawa,
Kingston, Toronto, Hamilton, London,
Port Arthur or Sault Ste, Marie, as the
necessities of the epee may warrant,
"Winnipeg, Regina, Calgary and Vic-
toria, commencing on the 10th day of
November.
Mr. Henry Asquith, Secretary of State
for the Home Department in the late
Liberal Government, spoaking on the
Armenian question, said that such mas-
sacres in the dark ages would have led
to a orusade. He urged coercion, but
admitted that England could not em-
ploy force without the co-operation of
Ruesia. '
UNITED STATES.
A portion of San Marcos, Texas, sibs
been inundated.
Miners at Leadervillo, Col., laevo do-
terndeed to continue the strike.
Recent heavy rains have ruined por-
tions of the cotton crop in Texas.
Four lives were lost by the founder-
ing of the barge Sumatra at Milwau-
kee.
A strike of th'e bituminous coal min-
ers of the United States, similar to that
of three years ago, is thought to be
imminent.
'She Rt. Hon. Joseph Chamberlain,the
Secretary
Colonies,NYknheGermanio oleft
Wed-
nesday
for England.
Mr. John Wanamaker of Philadelph-
ia has bought the stook of Hilton,
Hughes & Co., and will carry an the
leanness lu TTew York.
John D. hart, head of the Hart
Steamship Line, at Philadelphia, has
been arrested on a charge of engaging
in a Cuban filibustering expedition.
'Tien freight trains collided on Wed-
neciday night et Philson, Pa., and a large
number of tramps, who were stenting a
ride; were buried in the wreck and kill-
ed.
Burglars chloroformed every one in
the Hotel Normae, at Wall, a suburb
oil Pittsburg on Tuesday night, and
'got away with 98,000 in cash and 9800
;worth of diamonds.
The loSs of life by the great storm
in the 'United States is much heavier
tflnu at first reported. As the reports
TWO THOUSAND MINERS.
Great Activity et ate Rossiand tlllnlig
Camps—Eighteen Steam Plaids le
Oyertitlen—Sloths 10101ng.
AL despatch from Roseland, B. 0., says:
—There are now 'eighteen mines at
Bossland equipped with steam plants,
the latest additions being the White
Bear and Mugwump.; •
Over 2,000 miners are at work at
those mines hero, and the number is
constantly increasing;
Other Wines equipped with steam
plants are the Le B+o'i, War Eagle;
Centre Star, City of Spokane, Monte
Cristo, Crown Point, jests, Nickell
Plate, Cliff, Iran Mask, Virginia, Black
Bear, 0. K., Georgia, Kootenay, Col-
unibia'and Commanders
Stooks are very active here, with a
steady advance 01 prices,
WHAT. IT DENOTES.
Yon have hoard her sing?
Oh, yes.
Well, what do yon think her method
denotes?
A totted lock of sympathy and consid•
eratiot for others. •
BORES IN PARLIAMENT,
now i1 ellp or Rhe 'Temple is Treite4 In
the etrltlell Hoose of Commons.
ParliaMentary manners are brutal in
Westminster when a member in debate
is convicted of a ball, A speaker with
an expansive exatorisal manner recent-
ly astonished the Conrfnons with un out-
burst of unoonsoious .humor, He wee
spealcieg of the ruin and exhaustion
Wrought by misgoyernment in Ireland,
and worked himself up'sintq a fine
frenzy of orated declamation.
"The papulation of Ireland," he ex-
claimed, with flashing eyes and out-
stretched arms, "has been decimated to
the extent of tweethirdsl"
The mathematical absurdity of the
statement did not fall to excite
amusement, although the bull was less
obvious than a similar one attributed
to the Irish member, Major O'Gorman,'
"The population of Ireland," said the
contentious major in the Commons, "la
etoc millions lees than it would be if
it were an uninhabited island:"
That was a joke which provoked un-
restrained merriment among the
benches. The Irish members are par-
doned many blunders, however, because
they are, with few exceptions, humor-
ous speakers, who enliven the tedium of
debate with merry quips and jests. The
bores, who ere constantly speaking with
unvarying dullness and diffuseness, are
notongue. spared when they make slips of the'
t
A member who, in the course of a
long, uninteresting speech, was careless
enough to say,, 'The time has cone, and
is rapidly arriving," was greeted with
A WILD 'HOWL
of ridicule and delight from the benches,'
He woes dazed by the uproar, not under-
standing what the honorable members
were laughing at; but his unconscious-
ness and stupidity only served to pro-
long and deepen the merriment. 19 was
the English parliamentary method of
Punishing a bore.
Good jokes are rare in the House of
Commons. A neat epigram excites a
ripple of mirth; a flashing sarcasm stirs
a movement of pleasurable surprise;
but the loudest laughter follows Some
stupid and inane commonplace from a
speaker to wham the House is compelled
to listen too often.
"I would have 11r000edc to renahad
said a pompous debater lately, " l
mnotyself „ already anticipated and repeated
The sentence could not he finished.
There was a loud roar of laughter.
which prolonged and repeated eated when
the speaker attempted to go on with
his speech
It was oruel treatment but possibly it
was wholesome discipline for a gar-
rulous speaker who had exhausted the
patience of his audience on many occa-
sions,
Parliament' is the hardest of all
schools in which to serve an apprentice-
ship in public speaking. 11fr. Parnell
learned to speak when the members
were bent upon interrupting ,him and
howling him down; but feww public men
have the pertinacity, and gait that he
displayed. He was never, however, a
bore. His manner in his early days
in Parliament was crude and halting,
but he always had something to say,
although he did not at first know bow
to say it.
BIGGEST SORT OF A BUG.
A Small Country rrodures the iligges
Thing or its Kind.
Venezuela is a little republic, but
she has one thing that is the biggest
of its kind. on earth. It is a bug—
the largest insect in all the world. The
creature is known as the "elephant
beetle," and when, full grown it weighs
needy half a pound.• To be struck in
the face by such a bug, flying ;et full
speed, would make a man feel as if a
mule had kicked him.
This beetle, like others of its kind,
both small and large, is clad in a com-
plete suit of armour. This armour is
made of it material far moreindestruct-
ible than steel—namely, chitine. Chit -
hie cannot bo destroyed except by cer-
tain mineral acids ; in other words,
only the artifices of chemistry avail
against it. Thus the shells of beetles
that died 10,000,000 years ago have been
preserved perfectly in the rooks, so
that we know to -day just what these
insects of antiquity looked like.
RATHER RARE FELLOW
In Europe giant beetles have a con-
siderable market value, commanding
trims in proportion to their size. In
ondon there are regular auctions of
insects, and a single butterfly has been
known to fetch as much as 9800. A
specimen of the rare anti. very large
goliath beetle is worth $00. This is
the largest beetle of the old world, and
it first beton known through the mis-
sionaries in the Congo basin.
Though no other insect in existence
compares in bulk with the beetle from
Venezuela, there are other bugs that
exceedit in dimensions. For example,
there is the Atlas silk moth, which has
a wingspread of nearly a foot. It spins
a cocoon, the silk of which is better,
and stronger than that of the ordinary
silk worn; but, unfortunately, it can-
not be reeled.
A FINE BUTTERFLY.
There is it butterfly of the Malay
Peninsula and Archipelago which has
a spread of ten inches. In India and
tropical Africa are found giant forms
of these remarkable insects known as
w lking sticks," which look like twigs
of trees in length. Some of them mea-
sure eighteen inches in length. They
are related to grasshoppers and katy-
dids. In tropical America are found
certain huge speeies of bugs that are
closely related to the familiar electric
light nags of this country. Like the
latter, which have been popularly
known only since the introduction of
Enc eleetrto light' they fly at night,
living during the day at bottoms of
9011015,
WOMAN DESIGNER.
A lady who was formerly ono of 11.
R. H. Princess Henry of Battonberg'e
governesses has a great aptitude for il-
lumination. She is yearly commissioned
to design and decorate borders for the
Queens own privateournal, and so
very minutely and carefully is this done
that she has nearly aix months' work
before her when she once commences
a volume. Mob page has a beautiful
border, and, as far as possible, the sub•
jests chosen for the illumination are
suggestive and suitable to the season
of the yearor the place in wlrioh Her
Majesty is likely to he at the time. The
frontispiece is a marvel of color and de-
sign in the Italian style. The binding
is always left to the Queen's own taste.
I10'E01:ION 133 PETS,
Oats wvs St reete convoy-
ing surf d of Dont sy-
ing the infection of diphtheria, and mare
let fever Ilea been traced to them, To
this may be added the u:nweloome news
that a health officer has reported a ease
Of smallpox which hap to brought
about in the same way; that is to say
b g aoat fr
bo at infected house enter.
A GENERAL SMASH,
too you went wheeling yesterday. Did
you break the record'?
No; but I broke nearly everything
else,'
•
JEALOUS RIVALS
Cannot Turn Back the Tide. The P.
mond for Dr, Agnew's Little
Mills is a Marvel,
It's the Old Story, "The Survival of
the Fittest" and "Jealousy Its
Own Destroyer."
Cheap to buy, but diamonds in qual-
ity—banish nausea, coated tongue, wa-
ter brash, pain after eating, sick head-
ache, never gripe, operate pleasantly,
40 doses in a vial. 10 cents at all drug-
gists.
Sold by Dowdall & Hough encl./. Clark.
Sold by u. A. Deadman.
The Cairo correspondent of the Lon-
don Times believes there is 80me truth
in a native report that the Khedive is
now making a tour of Europe incog-
nito and that he has taken with him
a scheme for Egyptian independence.
PAIN IN THE BACK.
A Certain Indication of the Lodgement
of Kidney Disease.
It is a mistake to suppose that pain
in the back is the result only of a cold,
and is more of a rheumatic trouble than
anything else. It is evidence that di-
sease has lodged itself in the 'kidneys,
and the warning is plain, if further
trouble is not to be taken on, that the
pain must be quickly got rid of. There
is no remedy we Dan' so completely re-
commend as South American Kidney
Cure. Knowing what it will do, there
is nothing extravagant in the state-
ment of Count de Dory, who wrote from
Neepawa, Man.: 'During my travels I
was induced to try South American Kid-
ney Cure, from which remedy I re-
ceived instant relief. I do not think
it has an equal."
Sold by G. A. Deadman.
"Is he happily married? Well, his
wife is the sort of woman who will
stand up near the rest door of a street
car when there are locant seats furth-
er up front."
SIR JOHN 1?IACDONALD'S OLD CON-
STITUENCY,
Mr. J. H. Metcalfe, M.P. for King-
ston, talks of the Splendid Curative
Character of Dr. Agnew's Catarr-
hal Powder,
There is no small amount of talk in
all parts of the country of the class
of people who are proclaiming the re-
markable results accomplished by Dr.
Agnew's Catarrhal Powder, for leading
citizens in all parts of the Domin-
ion are using it. Among others who
tell of the effective nature of this me-
dicine for catarrh, hay fever, or cold
in the head, is Mr, J. H. Metcalfe, the
popular M.P., for Kingston, the con-
stituency represented for, so many
year.; by the late Sir John A. Macdon-
ald. Beyond any doubt this remedy is
a marvel, radical in its effects, it is at
the same time simple and agreeable to
take, which cannot be said of most ca-
tarrh medicines.
Sold by G. A. Deadman.
Willie—"Mamma they say history
repeats itself, don't they?" Mother —
Yes. dear." Willie—"Well, why don't
it repeat itself when I'm trying to
learn it?"
"I tools One -Half Bottle of South Am-
erican Rheumatic Cure and Ob-
tained Perfect Relief"—This Rem-
edy Gives Relief in a Few Hours,
and Usually Cures in One to Three
Days.
J. H. Garrett, a prominent politician
of Liverpool, N,S„ makes for the benefit
public, the following statement: I
was greatly troubled with rheumatio
pains for a number of years. On sev-
eral occasions I could not walk, nor
even put my feet to the floor. I tried
everything, and all local physicians,
but my suffering continued. At last
I was prevailed upon to try South Am-
erican Rheumatic Cure. 1 obtainedper-
feet relief before I bad taken half a
bottle of the remedy, and to -day regard
it the only radical cure for rheuma-
tism,"
Sold by G. A, Deadman.
News from the Nile expedition con-
firms the report that Dongola is a most
fertile province. Tthenew area proper -
1y administered could not only pay its
own way, but contribute handsomely
to the cost of its reconquest,
Piles Cured in 3 to 0 Nights.— Dr,
Agnew's Ointment wilt cure all cases
of Itching Piles in from 3 to 6 nights.
One application brings comfort. For
Blind and Bleeding Piles it is peerless.
Also cures Tetter, Salt Rheum, Ecze-
ma, Barber's [tole and all eruptions of
the skin, 35 pts.
Sold by G. A. Deadman.
"Congratulate me, old boy—et last
I'm on the top round of the ladder of
success."- "Well here's to you.; but I'll
het you got there by turning it upside
dowzi.' 1 ; '
HEART FLUTTERING AND SMOTH
EKING SPELLS.
Quickly and Permanently Banished by
Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart.
Ono does not need to wait, if wise,
until heart disease has developed to
that degree that one hardly knows
from hour to hour when ho or she may
drop dead. , Those heart flutterings
that a little excitement brings on, fol-
lowed by smothering spells that seem
as though they would prove fatal, aro
simply guide posts pointing to the
grave, if ready and reliable measures
to stem the disease are not taken, A
safe remedy is always tound in Dr, Ag-
new's Cure for the Heart. It gives re -
immediately, and even, without
much of the medicine being taken, it
completely removes disease, It la, a
heart specific, really wonderful in its
results but it cures heart disease only.
Sold by G. A. Headman.
THF =fees DOG,
9 cuneus advertisement appeared in
a Zondnn paiier in tete year 7.000, Some,.
body bad stolen ane of tris king's doge,
and on the'J8th of Julie a request was
made far the animal'a return, stating
that he was "a Meath black dog, loss
than a grey hound," and was to be
returned to John Penes on his majesty's
hack stairs,.
The dog was not forthetening, ands
second appeal was issued, It to sup-
posed to have been written by Ding
sup-
posed
himself, as no one else would
hb.ve adopted such a familiar style in
using the monarch's name. The king's
se= of hunter and appreciation of the
state of affairs at caort are well shown
in the little advertisement,
"We mast call upon you again for a
black dog, between a greyhound an',
a spaniel, no white about hie} only a
streak on his breast and a tail a lit-
tle bobbed. It is his majesty's own
dog, and doubtlless was stolen, for the
dog was not born nor bred in England,
and would never forsake his master,
Whoever finds him may acquaint any at
Whitehall, for the dog was better
known at court than those who stale
him. Will they .never leave robbing
his znajesty9 Must he not keep a dog?
This dog's place (though better than
some imagine) is the only place which
nobody offers to begs'
THE EMPEROR GOES ARMED.
Emperor William is probably the only
European monarch who carries a re-
volver.1 convinced that
firmis
goingto die by tc v cod he he bullet of an anarch-
ist—this fate having been prophesied to
him long ago—he la determined to fight
for his life, if necessary, and according-
ly never is without his revolver. . He
Is extremely skillful in the use of the
weapon, and his Jaeger, or body ser-
vant, who accompanieshim everywhere,
inspects it every morning to make sure
that it Is in perfect working order.'
THE LAW'S MAJESTY,
Justice—You are oharged, sir, with
failing to provide for your motherless
children, who are at this moment
starving in your miserable home. How
much money have you in your pockets#
Prisoner—Ten dollars.
Justice—I fine you ten dollars, Next
case.,
"I hear that Baglemmer's wife is su-
ing for a divorce, and they haven't been
married a year." "Oh, well, she only
married thim to get him to buy he,r a
bicyole."
Nervous
People wander whey their Iler'eo aro s0 weak;
way theyget tired so easily; whY they de net
sleep naturally; Why they have frequent bead-
echos, indlgestlee and
Nervous Dyspepsia, Tbo ezplsnatlon is
temple. It 1e found inthat impure Mood feed-
Mg the nerves on refuse lnsteed.of the elle
meets of strength and vigor. Opiate aid nerve
compounds simply deaden and do not cure.
f'lood's Sarsaparilla feeds the nervus pure,
rich blood • gives nebula sleep, Perfect Mess.tion, is the true remedy rerun norvonstreubres,
Sarsaparilla
to the cue True blood ruiner, All druggists, 91.
HOOdeuro Liver Ins; easy to
En P111s take, easy to operate.eee,
FAR 51W.ENe IGSIX :YEARS.
DUNN'S
BAKING
POWDER
THECOOK'S BEST FRIEND
LAIeci ST SALE 191 GAI8ADA.
KNOWLEDGE COSTS MONEY., •
Irate Patron—See her, sir. I dropped
a nickel into this machine, and noth-
ing came out.
Agent—If nothing came out, that
shows it's empty.
But, sir, what do I get for my nickel!
Information,
I
SCOTCH INDIFFERENOE. • .-
'A.n old Secteh' sergeant was going his
rounds one nightto see that all the
lights were out in the barrack -rooms,
Coming to a room where he thought
he saw a light shining he roared out:
Put out that light, there!
One of the men shouted begk:.
It's the mune, sergeant!
I dinna care a taoket wdfat it is, the
sergeant said; pit it ootd
I
If
rE t1.WUfflE
i'i ..tx +}.��
Yea, By the Hundreds, Those Who Have
Been Cured of Dire Disease By
South American Nervine.
Remegg .1Tilifispn3H1 dij UQiv r$.1 I lig 51411001m
(Where Other Medicines Havo Failed and Doctors Have
Pronounced the Cases Beyond Cure, This
Great Discovery Has Proven a 1
'Genuine Elixir of Life. '-
"3'ho Sarno Verdict Come s From Old and Young, Hale and Female
Bich and Poor, and From .411 Corners of the Dominion.
, If it is the case that he who makes
two blades of grass grow where only
ono load grown before is a benefactor
of the race, what is the position to be
accorded that man who by his know-
ledge of the laws of life and health
gives energy and strength where lan-
guor, weakness and anticipation of
early death had before prevailed? is
not he also a public benefactor? Ler
eSere who have been down and are
pew up through the use of South Am-
Srloan Nerving give their opiniois on
this subject. John Boyer, banker,•of
Kincardine. Ont., lead made himself a
hopeless Invalid through years of over-
work. At least he felt his case was
hopeless, for the best physicians had
failed to do him good. He tried Nor -
vine, and these are his words : ".1 glad-
ly say it : Nervine cured me and I
pen to -day as strong and well.as ever."
Samuel +slya, of eleaford, was cured of
neuralgia of the stomach and bowels
by three bottles of this medicine. Jas.
Sherwood, of Windsor, at 70 years of
age, suffered from an attack of paraly-
sis. His life, at that age, was despair-
ed of. But four battles of Neriine
gave him back his natural strength. A
victim of indigestion, W. P. Bolger, of
Renfrew, says : " Nervine cured nue
of my suffering, which seemed incur-
able, and load baffled all ioniser me-
thods and efforts," Peter Essen, of
Paisley, lost flesh and rarely road a
good night's sleep, because of stomach
trouble. Ile says: " Nervine stopped
the agonizing pains in my stomach the
first day I used it. I have now taken
two bottles and I feel entirely relieved
and eau sleep like a top." A repre-
sentative farmer, of Western Ontario,
is Mr. C,'J. Curtis, residing near Wine-
sor. His health 'was seemingly com-
pletely destroyed through la grlope.
No medicine did him any good, "To
three bottles of Nervine," he srys, 'I
attribute my restoration to health and
strength." Neither man or woman
can enjoy life when troubled with liver
complaint. This was the sentiment
and feeling of W. J. Hill, the well-
known bailiff of Bracrbridge. "I was
so bad," says he, " that one of MY
medical attendants sale. that I was
dying, but, thank Cod, I am not dead
yet, From the first few doses I took
et Nervine I commenced to feel bet-
ter, and am to -day restored completely
lo my usual health," A resident of
the Maritime Provinces, in the person
of 11..Tones, of Susses, N.B., Says : "Per
twelve years I was a ntartyr to tell-
estion, constipation and headache.
Tho treatment of several physicians
'id not help zee, I have Taken tt few
bottles of Nervine, and cantruthfully.
say that I am a new mala."
A shrewd observer of human neture
has said : " The hand that rock the
cradle moves the world." riow Im-
portant it is, then, that health and
strength should ' be made' the lot of
the mothers of tide country. The wo-
men of Canada are readyby scores to
toll of the benefits that have come to
them through the use of South Mined -
can Nervine. Mrs, R. Armstrong, of
Orillle, wife of the colporte-ur, of the
Bible Society of that town, suffered
for six years from nervous prostration.
Medical assistance did not help. "In
all," she says, "I have taken six bottles
of Nervine, and can truthfully say this
is the one medicine that .has effected
a cure In my case." Mrs, John Din-
woody has been for 40 years a resident
of Flesherton, and has reached the al-
lotted three -score years and ten. Three
years ago her system sustained 9 ecv-
ere shock through the death of a
daughter. Nervine was recommended.
She perseveringly took 12 bottles of
medicine, with the result that she is to-
day again strong and hearty, lian-
dieds of women suffer from impov •rish-
ed blood and weakened nerves. " AU
vitality," says Mrs. J. Pallts, of
Brampton, " seemed to have forsaken
my system. I was unable to get re-
lidf from any source until I commenced
taking South American Nervine. The
results are roostsatisfocttnry—greater
far than I coujd have hoped for." It
came within the way of Mrs. it. Stap-
leton, of Wingham, to treat under the
best physicians• both in Canitda and
England, for heart disease and nerv-
ous debility, but she failss-d to get any
relief. "I was advised," she says, "to
take South American Nervine, and
must say i do believe that if I had
not done so I would not be alive to-
day."
Newspaper space is too valuable to
permit of further additions to these
earnest words of testimony from those
who know just what they are talking
about. In the common language of
the day, they have been there, and are
speaking from the heart, The dozen
or more witnesses that here speak 11aVe
their counterparts by the hundreds,
not only in the province of lrntarlo,
but in every other section of the Domin-
ion, South American Nervine is based
on a s,.ientf lc principle that makes
a cure a dertainty, no matter how des-
perate the ease may be. It strikes
et the nerve centers from which nowt
the life blend of the whole system. It
is not a medio4ie of patchwork, bee
is complete anti comprehensive in Stas
A. DEA11111?1 a llavltilo z'1+1 Re II ,►goat fol flrllsl34i3. "