HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1896-10-23, Page 700T, 23, 1890
THE BBUS8.E
S POST.
THE NEWS IN A
WORLD OVER. H
fllf3 VERY LATEST PROM ALI.TH
Jmeresttng Items About Our Own Country,
Sheat Britain, the United States, and
All Parts ot the Glebe, Coattensed end
Assorted for •Jew Reading.
CANADA,
Ottawa's population is 51,540, accord-
Mg to the assessors' returns,
Storms and floods did immense dant-
age fn Great Britian,
The Public ani! high School Boards
of King -sten have deedded to amalga-
mate.
Tho season ivat closed has been a
very poor one i'or Immigration to Ca-
nada. i •
Dr. H. P. Wright has ' been, elected
President of the Ottawa Medteal So-
ciety.
Tho Northern elevator et Douglass,
Man,, was burned with 15,000 bushels
of wheat.
It is probable that the office of Black
Rod at Ottawa will lee abolished before
next eessioha, •
The T. Be Taylor Company's flour
mills at Chatham were badly dam-
aged by fire.
The Wentworth Historical Society is
locating a site for the erection of a
-historical Museum.
Mr. Louis Cartwright, aged 19,young-
est son of Sir Riehnrd Cartwright, died
yesterday at Lindsay.
John Maclean: & Co., wholesale mil-
liners, Montreal, trove assigned with
liabilities of §6175,000.
During the absence of the Governor-
General Chief Justice Sir Henry Strong
will act as administrator.
Nearly all the cheese in the vicinity
d�aons tbeen ten centsbt up by
oealerstnine o
I.Lrs. Philips O'Meara died on Friday
at the residence of hes daughter, Mrs.
M. Ryan, in Ottawa aged. 111 years.
The annual report of the Grand
Trunk Railway, published in London,
shoves a net revenue deficiency of
£82,000.
Lord and Lady Aberdeen have gone
to spend a two months' holiday on
Lord Aberdeen's ranch in British Col-
umbia.
The body of Miss Diary Grant, a
former member of the Toronto Salva-.
tion Army, was found in Kingston
harbor.
Mr. Thomas Hanley, Grand Trunk
ticket agent for Kingstop, died at his
residence in that city on Friday: aged
fifty-seven.
The wheat elevators of Manitoba are
filled up as a result of the recent strike
but the C.P.R. is now moving grain
again freely.
Dir. Samuel Williams, an electric
lineman of Hamilton, is lying at St.
Joseph's Hospital in a very critical
condition from a fall.
The Montreal Board of Trade object
to the date of Thanksgiving Day because
the holiday interferes with the navi-
gation
avegation of the canals at a very busy
time.
The mills, dwellings, and barns at
Tracadie, N.S., belongmg to the Trap-
pist monks have been destroyed by fire.
The lase is nearly $40,000, with no in-
surance.
The Corn Exchange of Montreal bas
passed a resolution m favor of remov-
ing an obstruction in the Lachine Ca-
nal which is causing a great deal of
trouble to vessels.
During aa gale on Wednesday morn-
ing a Norwegian barque went on shore
at Green Cove, C.B„ and the captain
and nine of the crew were killed uu
the rocks or drowned.
Relatives of William Buckingham, a
young man who went from London to
work on a farm near Hall's Corners,
are looking; for him. A fortune issaid
to await him.
Otto J. Klotz, astronomer of the
Department of the Interior, has ar-
rived at Port Stanley. Ont., to estab-
lish an astronomic station in connection
with a geoditic survey.
The Hospital Committee of the,Ham-
ilton Council recommends that Judge
Snider be asked to investigate certain
alleged frauds in the grocery contract
of the House of Refuge,
The Police Magistrate at Brockville
refuses to hold court be the roam pro-
vided for 'thatpurpose by the Counot1,
and an appear to the Attorney -Gener-
al's authority will be made.
Col. Warner H. Nsiles, one of the old-
est residents of the Niagara peninsula,
died on Friday, in his ninety-eighth
year. He was seventeen years old when
the battle of Waterloo was fought.
At the St. Thomas net works the
main shafting of the incandescent dyn-
amos fell, damaging the dynamos. The
building was considerably, damaged
and the lighting plant seriously in-
jured.
Serious damage by prairie fires is re-
ported in the vicinity of Grenfell,
l\arthport, Regina, Dattleford, Cal-
gary and Indian Head. In any in-
stances farmers have lost all their
Drops.
A convict in the Kingston penitenti-
ary
enitentsary named Bewail, a negro, aged 28,
.who wasserving a life term for crun-
inal assault, on Thursday made an at-
tack on one of the guards with a pair
of scissors, mad wee shot in the head.
He died last evening.
The Toronto Fire brigade�responded
to no less than ten calls during Sat -
Sank in golBisins wita' the British
steamer Emden in the Headier. Ten
of the crew were drowned,
The Irish »arty are greatly dissetis-
fled at Ula resignation, of Lord Rose,-
bort'. They do not relish therospect
of Sir Williazu fareauee being tbe lead -
es of the Liberal »arty, •
Sir Willdaan Harcourt, in his speech
at Ebbw Vale on Monday eveilin ,said
he did not admire England's splendid
Isolation, and hoped that site would
form an alliance with' Reale, which
would enable ber to control the Sultan,
Lord Salisbury, Mr, Chamberlain and
Sir Julian Pauneefate hada long 00e
ferenee in tee British Foreign Office on
Saturday on the Venezuelan question,
thevexed case well soon be arrived at.
UNITED STATES,
President Cleveland has returned to
Washington from Gray Gables,
All departments of the Cambria iron
works at Johnstown, Pa., have shooed
down, affecting 3,000 menu
Dr. Carl F. Ritz, a German physician,
of Chicago, vivisected leis wife on Wed-
nesday afternoon, took notes of her dy-
inggdcondition, and then shot himself
The report that the Venezuelan boun-
dary dispute has been seethed is denied
in New York by Frederick. R. Coudert,
a member of the Venezuelan commis-
sign.
Mr. W. Y. Atkinson, (Deanoorat) 'hes
been re-elected Governor of Georgia by
a majority of 28,000, whicb is an in-
crease of 6,000 over the party majority
of two years ago.
Lieut. -Col. Des •ardin,clark of the Quo -
bee Legislative Assembly, in an inter-
view in Boston, said that be did not
think the Canadian people, as a rule,
favored annexation with the United
States,,
It is reported at Buffalo that a traf-
fic alliance has been made between the
Grand Trunk and the Lebigh Valley
railroads which will enable the G. T. It.
to run through trains from Chicago to
New York.t
For the past week there has been
practically no change in the trade situ-
ation fpr ties United States. Business
be all lines is unprecedently quiet, and
this week the sudden advent of cold
weather has checked the movement in
some directions, 'while it has not bad
time enough or been decided enough
to develop the winter demand. Orders
are restricted to immediate require-
ments, wholesale merchants are crit-
ical as to credits, and generally col-
lections are poor. A slight improvement
is reported in Atlanta, Augusta, New
Orleans and Texas cities. Wheat, wool,
iron, and steel have advanced, and are
steady at the advances.
GENERAL.
A Ministerial, crisis is reported at
Madrid.
Guayquil•, Ecuador, ,has been wiped
out by fire.
Baron Mueller, the Australian explor-
er, is dead.
A branch of the Siberian railroad is
to be constructed across Northern Man-
churia.
Turkey wilt not admit the U. S.
cruiser Bancroft through the Dardan-
elles.
A number of Mexican villages have
been washed away by the floods in the
State of Smola.
Gen. Troche, who defended Paris until
tbe surrender to the 'German army in
January, 1871, is dead.
The magnificence of the- reception of
the Czar and Czarina at Paris exceeded
anything ever before Been in the
French capital.
The Victoria. Assembly, after an all-
night sitting, passed the second reading
of the bill establi4liing'fewalo suffrage,
and one man one vote.
Documents and maps found in the
archives of the Cepuohin Order tend
to support the British claim in the
Venezuelan dispute.
After witnessing a grand review at
Chalons and toasting the French
army, the Czar accompanied by the
Czarina, started for Darmstadt.
The Kolnische Zeitung asserts that a
written treaty of alliance is in exist-
ence between Russia and France, but
that it is only defensive in its provi-
sions.
rovl.sions.
At a large public meeting, 'held at
Cape Town on Friday evening, reso-
lutions were adopted, catling for the
abolition of duties, on meat, flour, and
wheat.
The reconciliation of Emperor Wil-
liam and his brother Henry of Prus-
sia is now effected, and the Prince dur-
ing the coming winter trill reside in
the Royal castle of Kiel.
It is reported on good authority that
Russia has decided to intervene on be-
half of the Areniaes, compelling 'the
Porte to carry out the promised re-
forms. England'and France will •sup-
port the move.
A FUGITIVE FROM JUSTIC3.
1u rn 5ian's ('rime -Coroner's. \'erdlet of
blinder -s steward to be (inbred by
the 1,,ver,nnt:itt.
The Ontario Government wall., it isett-
peeted issue a reward for the capture
of an Indian named Joseph Bizaio, who
is charged with the murder of another
Indian, named Megwance, at Thessalon.
on the north sbore opposite Manitoulin
Island, on August 29th, last. As far .as
is known by alae evidence in the hands
of the authorities, the two meal 'became
involved in a quarrel, and Bizaio struck
Megwance with an oar. The injured
tardily night and Sunday; Two of the man lingered for some days, and then
fires were of n, serious nature. died, and an inquest was head at Ther•
Harvie's factory sustained $7,000 dam- salon b the coroner of the district, at
age; and Ryrie Bros.' jewellery store- y
room was scorched to the extent of which two men testified to having wit -
$1,000. nessed the occurrence. As a result, a
GRFAT BRITAIN verdict of wilful murder was returned
against Bizaio, and on Ser tefnbee 7th
Another 'hurricane visited the Bri- Last a letter was received biy tho Attor-
tish coast on Friday night, ney-General Department from the
ar-
rived
County Attorney of the localii:y,statfngg
the facts, and asking far instructions. A
warrant was promptly issued for the ar-
rest of the accused man but 'all at-
tempts to catch him have so fax proved
fruitless, the character of the surround-
ing country offering almost perfect op-
portunities for hiding'to a man of his
e'lass.
.The ImperialRussian train with the Bizaio, whose character is notoriousliy
Czar and Czarina on board arrived at bad, disappeared at the time of the in-
Derrestadt on Saturday evening. truest, and has n•ot been heard of since.
It is understood that he is in biding in
the woods ?north of the lake, and it is
expected that the advent of the oald wea-
ther will chive lam out, as it will be
almost impas able for ieim to subsist
without provisions and far from civili-
zation. It is deemed likely that he may
seen corm within reaob of arrest, and
the offering of a reward will probably
assist do effecting his capture, The mat-
ter is under consideration by the At-
torney -Generales Department at the ppre-
sent time, and it as understood (bat
steps will be immediately taken to effeet
by this means the apprehension Of the
fugitive,
Dir. and Mrs. Chitmberlain have
at Birmingham.
Crops aro reported as ruined in the
west of Ireland by recent storms and
floods,
The despatchof naval reinforcements
to Zanzibar is interpreted as a demon -
gelation against Germany.
Lord Roseberry has resigned the
leadership at the British Liberal. party.
Mr. Harry Bryan Reed, Conservative
member of Parliament for the eastern
division of Bradford is dead.
diritisli' crop reports up to October 1
$ghowl t.bat cereals have been damaged
by rain, but the roots and grass im-
proved. I •
Tho London Chronicle says tbat it
learns from it good source that the Czar
ailed Lord Salisbury have agreed upon a
policy for aha ultimate deposition of the
Sultan.
The Swedish steamer 'Alexaeiderwas
PEOPLE OF TRE EARTH,
SOMATBING FOR MATHEMATICIANS'
TO TACKLE.
An Enormous ewe tingeestetl0*'the Anter.
national Stattstteat SIPAAUnte.-A'roposed
Veneto, of 1hi, world at tbe liiu0t or the
,'resent ceni,u•y.
Old man, Li, of Chipa, baa promised to
use bis influence in getting a count of
the pig -tailed denizens of the Flowery
Kingdom, but there aro not a few dif-
ficulties inAfrioa, Asia and polar re-
gions yet to be surmounted.
Tee scheme got its real inception at
the biennial meeting of the Interna-
tional Statistical Institute, recently
held at Berne, Switzerland. M the in-
stance of Dr. Guillaume, the Direotor
of the Statistical Office of the Federal
Government, a eommlttee of distin-
;uashed statisticians, scientists, travel-
ers and geographers was appointed to be-
gin the work, by collecting an informa-
tion possible as to the best methods
of taking this world census, and to re-
port to the $nstitute at its meeting
next year.
A STAGGER AT IT.
The population of the earth is now
estimated at 1,700,000,000. These figures
Were given by Professors Behm and
Wagner, of the University of Gottin-
gen, wile leave from year to yeer pub-
lished their calculations in a journal
called "Die Bevolkerung der Erde."
Their estimates are based upon the best
information. Yet Bohm and Wagner
frankly acknowledge that they have
had to fill up many of their columns
with nothing better than guesses -
guesses founded upon the observations
of travelers, and upon other guesses
mentionea in treaties given by such
countries as China, Persia, Arabia,
Turkey.
In the most populous country of the
world, China, they state that their
figures may be 200,000,000 more or less
than the actual number of people. In
Africa they, may be some 50,000,000 as-
tray, and in Asiatic Turkey, Persia,
Siam and Afghanistan the figures are
probably equally uncertain.
China they are now assured, will take
an official census, and the Governments
of Turkey, Persia, Siam and Afghanis-
tan will also be asked to give their as-
sistance to tbe agents of the institute,
with a view to making some districted
enumeration of their peoples.
The accomplishment of this will re-
quire a large amount of diplomacy, es
well as of money, and the widest possi-
ble knowledge of these half -barbarous
localities.
By the beginning of the next century,
at the present rate of exploration,
there will hardly be a square mile of
Africa that will be unsafe for a trav-
eler with a small guard, and an enu-
meration can be made which, IL not
accurate, will at least be of enormous
value. By 1900 Russia will have push-
ed her two trans -continental railroads
nearly through Asiatic territory, and
the wild regions of Thibet will be open
to the traveler. In the year 1900 many
keen and intelligent observers will be
sent into all these regions to make the
great estimate of the bitherto uncount-
ed millions.
THE CIVILIZED PEOPLES.
The most important feature of this
world's census will be the synchronous
counting of the civilized peoples of the
earth. The plan is to have all the states
of Europe, of America, and all the eel-
.onies and dependencies of civilized Gov-
ernments, and such states as Japan,
make a comprehensive and uniform en-
umeration of their population, their in-
dustries, homes, families, religions and
a hundred other minor features, and
to make a uniform table embracing
every point needed to be compiled in
the different languages, and submitt-
ted to the various Governments.
It is believed that a census of such
magnitude can be taken, on the same
day, or week, or month, all over the
civilized world. The effort will be
made to have it taken upon one and
the same day, if possible, all the way
around the world, from the barren
steppes of Russia to Japan. There are
machines now in use which would ta-
bulate so rapidly the figures that ne-
on the third day the press mialit give
the results to the world as the. first
great triumph of the century.
The committee suggest that the cen-
sus be taken on December 31, 1900, for
at midnight of that clay the twentieth
century will begin. It would be only
business -like; they urge, for the great
nineteenth century to take an inven-
tory of stock on band and turn over
a balance sheet to its successor.
A USEFUL ELEPHANT.
A ,fe;v years ago, when Lord Duf-
ferin was Viceroy of India, the Rajah
of Holkar paid the Viceroy a visit.
While he was there ho saw Lord. Duf-
ferin take up some illustrated London
papers which had just arrived by mail
and cut them with an ivory paper knife.
It was the first time the Indien Prince
had seen such an instrument used,
Make nee a present of that," he said
to the Viceroy, and I will give you
another." Lord Dufferin hastened to
comply with ,:his mod0t request, and
the young Rajah returned to his coun-
try. Not long after be returned to
Calcutta, bringing with him a young
elephant, whose tusks had been carved
in the most artistic manner in the
shape of a paper ]rife. This he brought
as a present to the Viceroy, A table
bearing some illustrated paperswas
i
placed by a servant before this ntel-
ligent beast, who immediately seized
them with his trunk, cut them most
deftly with' his tusks, and then hand-
ed them to the Viceroy,
THE CLOCK OF BLOWERS.
Gardeners claim that it is quite poser
ble to so arrange flowers that all the
purposes of a cock will be answered.
le is said that in the time of Pliny forty-
six flowers were known to open and
shut at certain hours of the day, and
this number bas since been largely in-
creased.. For instance, a becl_ of com-
mon dancleliane would show it was five -
thirty in the morning and eight -thirty
at night, respectively, for these flowers
open and shut at the times named, fre-
quently to the minute, The common
haw, k -weed opens at 8 in the morning
and. may be depended upon to close
within a few minutes of 2 in the after-
noon. The yellow' goat's -beard shuts at
12 o'clock aeon, absolutely to the min-
uta, siderial time, Ibia sowthistlo opens
at 5 a. m., and closes at 11,12 a. m.
The white lily opens at 7 a. m„ mad
closes at 5 p, m.
SOI BATE CABLE NEWS
T018 P$ATII OF THE ARCHBISHOP
OF CANTERBURY'
--
An Artist's Fortune --Motor / inrilhnee$ for
Loudon Streets -Cob Drivers' fetteee-
'rlle /!icon and the rape -•Taco Terrible
Explosions -neer Stabling.
A despatch' from London, says, -Tho
Archbishop of Canterbury was seized
with apoplexy after the service$ oom-
monced at Hawarden churoh, on Sun-
day morningq: Be was carried to the
Hawarden rectory, where he died at
11,30 o'clock. •
Trio late Sir John Millais, president
of the Royal Academy, Left a fortune
of $1,250,000.
The London Road Car Company,
which runs 950 omniliuses, intends
eventually to do away with the use
of horses in its business, and to run
motor omnibuses. A• 'hundred of these
vehicles will be placed on the streets
in November, and 300 more in Janu-
ary.
The strike among the cab drivers
against the special! privileges accorded
certain drivers at the railway stations
is increasing. The Cab Drivers' Union
will call out 1,000 more men on Mon-
day. The use of cabs in the city ,is
generally declining, owing to the fact
that business mei are more and more
using the telephones instead of driving
around to the various offices as has
heretofore been the custom. 'I'bere is
hardly a chance of the cabmen win-
ning the fight.
How great a gap George Dultiau-
rier's death' leaves in Eaglisb art is
suggested by the fact that he is.suc-
ceeded on Punch by Phil May. Du
Maurier was England's society artist,
always following the advice Mark
Lemon gave him on joining Punch:
Don't do funny things; do the ggrace-
fwl side of life; be the tenor in Punch
bouffeee Phil May is the clown in
opera bouffe. The American furore
over Trilby was probably the greatest
marvel of bis life to DuMaurier him-
self, and Englishmen are sad to think
that Trilby killed him, bringing society
dlaims upon bis time and strength
which he was not able to stand.
The engagement of Coningsby Dis-
raeli, nephew of the slate Benjamin
Dierea'•a, (Lord. Beaconsfield) to a young
Portuguese lady of immense wealth, is
announced.
The Queen and the Pope have ex-
changed cordial letters upon the occa-
sion of the 00th anniversary of her
Majesty's reign. The Pope, after con-
gratulating her, and sending his best
wishes, thanked the Queen en gratefu8
teams for the freedom of worship en-
joyed by Roman Catholics throughout
the British Empire. The reply of ber
Majesty was most cordial. She de -
dozed herself happy to repeat ber
former assurances of the perfect free-
dom of Catholics within her dominion,
and added that it was her pleasing
duty to acknowledge their fidelity and
1e, alts.
illiam Beery Parnell, third Baron
Congleton, is dead. He was born in
1809, and ' was formerly in the Royal
Navy.
Three of the Angio -American Com-
pany's storage oil tanks on the railway
near Huddersfield caught fire on Sat-
urday. There were two terrible explo-
sions, and all traffic was stopped for
many hours. Each of the tanks d
2,000 gallons of oil.
The deer -stalking season has been
immensely successful. The Bradley -
Martins party of thirteen rifles atBal-
macan last week secured 49 stags, one
day's drive securing nine. The earl
of Craven got a couple of imperialts,
and James R. Roosevelt, secretary of
the United States Embassy, secured a
handsome nine -pointer.
COLLAR BONE.
ltenuiricnble surgical Operation rerroi•nr
ell by it New Vora. Physician.
IAddiph: Heeler, of Brooklyn, left the
Long Island Collage Hospital, minus his
left collar bone, He bad been in the
hospital over a month, and bad been
the subject of one of the rarest and
most difficullt operations in surgery.
He sustained a fracture of the left clay -
kyle, or collar bone, while at work some
weeks ago. The fracture was set, but
a tumor formed alongside of the break.
This was removed. After a while it
formed again, and the patient was tak-
en to the Long Island College Hospital,
Dr. H. Beekman Delatour•, professor
of surgery atthe hospital, took the pa-
tient under his supervision. He saw that
the bone was decaying on account of the
tumor. and that it would have to be re-
moved. July 21 the. patient was placed
under the influence of ether, and the
operation was performed.
The whole of the left collar bone and
the tumor were removed by Dr. Dela-
tour and his assistant. The operation
took 40 minutes, and was seen by a
large number of students,
Beeler left the hospital without any
sign of ,'having lost his collar bone,
there being absdlutely, no deformity re-
sultant on the operation. He has the
free use of his nam. Dr. Deltatour says
that Healer will not feel the loss of Isis
collar bone, and that the muscles will
take the place of it:
WHERE HEART DISEASE IS UN-
KNOWN
A Beulah Land in Contrast with this
Age of Fret and Fume.
Where this Beulah Laud? Thousands
will enquire, for IIeart Disease is strik-
ing down its victims in every corner
of the land, and its terrors grow apace.
Beulah Land to the victims of heart
disease is to be found in the use of
that remarkable medical discovery, Dr.
Agnew's Mire for the Hart, which le
miraculous in its effectiveness. In de-
sperate cases it gives the quickest re-
lief -really within 30 minutes after first
dose is taken -and in a short time
banishes the diseases Where the sym-
ptoms aro loss pronounced every
wise man and woman will take this
medicine as a certain means of freeing
the system of any elements of heart
trouble, Only one positive statement
does this medicine justice -It is an ab-
selute mire for heart trouble.
Sold by G. A. Deadman.
FOR HEADACHE,
For headache, bathing behindthe ears
with hot water often proves of immense
relief. , 1 •
AFTER FIVE YEARS OF AGONY
From Rheumatism Mr, John Gray, a
)?ioneer of Wing#aant, Ont„ Secures
Perfect Roust in, VOW Retire, and
is Cured in a Few Days,
Mr. John Gray, 330 years a residentof
Wln ham,,One,, requests us to publisb
the gtollowmg:-'About flue years ago
I contracted rheumatism owing to an
accident, and since that time have suf-
fered great agony. At Intervals I
have been completely laid up and en.
fit for any kind of work.A friend
strongly recommended me to go to
Mr. hisholm's drugstore and secure
South American Rheumatic Cure. T
did so and received Iorfeet relief in
four hours, It enabled me to sleep
which I had not done for years, sat-
iefaotoril'. I used in all six bottles and
am completely cured! I leave reoom,
mended it to many and it always cures
in a few days,"
Soli! by G. A, Deadman.
SUFFERED UNTOLD MISERY FOR
YEA 1 i.
At Times Unable to Walk -Totally
Cured of Kidney Trouble by South
American Kidney Curs.
Perfect relief from intense suffering
is as the oantrast between the darkness
of the dungeon and the bright sun-
light of the heavens above, This was
the experience of Mr. John Snell, a
well-known retired farmer, of Wing -
ham, Ont., Let him tell his own story:
-"For two years I suffered untold mis-
ery, and at times I could not walk, and
any standing position gave intense pain,
the result of kidney diseases that fol-
lowed a severe attack of la grippe. Loc-
al physicians could not help me, and I
was continually growing' worse, which
alarmed family and friends At this
critical moment I saw South American
Kidney Cure advertised and resolved to
try it, as a dying man will grasp at
anything ' Result :-Before half a bot-
tle bad been taken I was totally re-
lieved of pains, and two bottles en-
tirely cured me."
Sold by G. A. Deadman.
AN ALBINO FROG.
A white frog, the only specimen of
its kind known to exist. was recently
on exhibition in the Museum of Na-
tural History in London. The frog is
absolutely white and bas red eyes,
which stamps it without a doubt as be-
longing to the Albino class.
lapel) the merit of liood'e Sarsaparilla. -pas(.
live, perieet, permanent Cures.
Cares of Scrofula 1n severest forms, Salt 1.
liboum, web intense ticking aad burs-
seald tread, boils, pimples, cte,
Cures of Dyspepsia, ltheumatlsm, Catarrh, by
-.meg and making telt, red blood,
Cures of Nervousness and TbatTlredreeling,
by feeding 000505, musolos and tissues
on pure blood, 11or book of euros by
8
Sarsaparilla
Bend address to 0, I, Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass,
Hood's Pills aenst,btabadgeeennn.
FOR TWENTY -8= YEARS,
UNNY S
AKINC
OWDER
THE COOK,"S BEST FRIEND
LARr-s,ST SALE IN CANADA.
DIDN'T WANT HIS SHARE.
Perry Patettic-1Vhat do you thnmk
of this here idea of the progress of the
country belle' mostly deo to the divi-
sion of labor?
Wayworn Watson -Oh, I guess it is
all right, but they needn't take the
trouble to divide, no labor with e,
Piles Cured in 3 to et Niglits.-Dr.
Agnew's Ointment will cure all cases
of itching Piles in from 3 to 6 nights.
One application brings comfort., Fax
Blind and Bleeding Piles it is peerless.
Also cures Tetter, Salt Rheum, Eczema,
Barber's Itch, and all eruptions of the
skin- 85 ots.
Sold by G. A, Deadman.
Are Fixe upon South
c,�a( 11`w- 4
WR, L .I i1 a U, h e
'nom!.
I3yc:,c'. Ccubt the Grentr et Medic.; Discovery'
of file A.Lfe.
WHED EVERY OTHER HEil O HIS FAILED IT CURES
A Discovery, Based on Sci 3ntifiC Principles. that
Renders Failure impossible.
eteeee
etee
,
so,"
iV1110^tgett"`,y
In the mutter of good health tempos- bre with medical treatment Usti.
ring measures, while possibly success-
ful for the moo est. can never be last -
Ing, Those In 1 o"r h,.altli soon know
Whether the r.,tdy they are using
Is simply a passing fneldedt in their ex-
eeeleeee, brach g them up for the day,
or soMething that 1s getting at the
teat of the disease and is surely and
vermeil tie restnrinr
any, and with nearly all medicines, is
that they aim simply to treat the organ
that may be diseased, SOuth American
Nervine passes by the organs, and im-
mediately applies its curative powers
to pie nerve centres. from which the
orgtans of the body receive their supply
of ,serve fluid. The nerve centres
hes led, and of necessity the organ
The eyes "1' tli0 world are literally welch has shown the outward evidence
feted on South American Nervine. They only of derangement is healed. Indi-
are not vlenlir 11 5; a nine d ys' war- gest,lon, nervousness, impoverished
der, but grill r1 and experienced ,non biodd, liver complaint, art owe their
have been ;undying this medicine for oripin to a derangement of the nerve
Wars, with •.,e mo result -they !rave centres. TlIUsands bear testimony,
found ti:r.t its c'tttm of perfeot tura- that they have been cured of these
live qu il tier eamtot be kair.said. tro,ibles, even when they have become
The •rte .. , ,t erer of this medicine so ,despers.te as to battle the skill of
was (055,1l"the knowledge that the the most eminent physticians, because
seat of all 01:.‘ t 1e the nerve centres, South American Nervine has gone to
situated at t},, 3, s,. of the brain. In bea,9quarters and cured there.
this 1c11o0 1;r had the best scientists Tht' eyes of the world have not been
and medical men 00 the world (Thai Pointed in the Inquiry Into the sue-
ocempyang et -neer the same pre- rose of South American Nervine. Peo-
mines, Ir,losd, the ordtnary lay- Pie rr•aryel, 1t is true, at its wonderful
then r:cogndrea this principle traell-al qualities, but they know be -
ago. altiryane knows that 7olld all tt•ueetion that it does every -
ha disease or 103111' affect this part of thing that is claimed for it It stands
the human system end death Is almost alone as the one great certain curing
c. nein. inure the spinal cord. whichreme,ly of the nineteenth century. Why
Is the inediun, of these nerve cen- should anyone suffer distress ante sick -
tree, and Nirafys.n Is sure to follow. ncss while this remedy 1s practically
'Here is the first principle. The trou. , as tk'a1r hands '2
A, DE:t)t)al1 Wnalcdale edam tfut.lil Ag nit far9trns>tels,1, '•3