HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1896-11-13, Page 7Nov.
".'gE i3BtletIFILS POST.
IE NEWS IN A NUT8L.
rue VERY LATEnT POM Alen THE
WORLD OVER.
latercating items About Pur Own Country,
Greet Ornate, the United states, and
All netts of tae Plebe, Condensed and
Assorted lar nun Reading.
CANADA,'
Lire stook shipments from Winnipeg
are very heavy, •
The price of lareed has been adveneed
f
i Montreal nes or lea,
n Neu sal two cg, P
Mr.:fwmea Hamilton, an aged and
respected oitizen of London, is dead.
Mr. Walter Mason, of Dundasi,.,w,as
found dead beside his waggon in Ham-
ilton,
Mr. J, $. Charleston, of Ottawa, has
been appointed Supervisor of Dominion
Public Worked
Sir Donald Smith has contributed five.
':hundred dollars to the Montreal Fire-
men's relief fiend.
The Ottawa, Arnprior & Parry Sound
Railway is completed from Ottawa to
the waters of the Georgian Bay.
The licensed victuallers of Ottawa are
offering to join bands with the prohibi-
tionists
rohibitionists in morning the existing laws.
The schooner Danforth ran into the
Ningarw street bridge at St. Oath-
arinee and blocked the canal for half
a day,
Prof, Robertson, • the Dairy Commis-
sioner, lea completed a plan for assist-
ing creameries in the North-West Ter-
ritories.
A tithe is now imposed by the Arch-
bishop
rchbishop of Montreal on the hay crop, a
product hitherto exempted from church
taxation,
Cars have begun running on the
completed lite of the 11„ te. & B. llee-
trio Railway between Beamsville and
Hamilton.
A big Toronto syndicate is applying
for letters patent of incorporation un-
der the name ot the Canadian Mining
Trust Company (Ltd.)
Dr. Deseuiniers, chairman of the Que-
bec Board of Inspectors of Prisons and
Asylums, died at his residence in Mont-
real on Saturday, aged 73.
• The Dominion Line's new steamer, the
Canada made her last trip frau Que-
bec to Liverpool in seven days and five
hours, wideh beats the record.
Mr. A. T. Neill, Hamilton, has ex-
amined a sample of the Sudbury coal,
end he is of the opinion that it is car-
bonized peat bog, a.useful article..
efi•, \V. L. Scott, son of Senator Scott,
Secretary of State, has been appointed
local Master and Deputy. Registrar for
the High Const of Justice in Ottawa.
The fund for the relief of the families
of the firemen recently killed in Mon-
treal, which has been closed, amounted
to more than fourteen thousand Goners.
Mr. John Mitchell, of Dorchester
township,. Middlesex county, Ont., cele-
brated his 103rd birthday on Friday,
He was born in Banffshire, Scotland, in
1793.
C. C. Condie was sentenced at Blan-
don to one year's imprisonment at bard
labor for the theft of an express pack•,
age containing 33,000 from Oak Lake
Station.
Mede Crawford, the daughter of
Police Sergeant Robert Crawlord, of
London, Ont., committed suicide on
Wednesday at leer home by hanging
herself. The dead girl was not out of her
teens..
A meeting of the council of the Do-
minion Rifle Association will be held
at Ottawa to consider the erection of
permanent wooden buildings at Bisley
for the Canadian rifle team,
The Dominion Government has de-
cided not to rneke any promotion un-
til after the revision of the Civil Service
in the Civil Services Act, which will be
asked for the next session of Partin -
went.
Joseph Girouard, employed in Booth's
mill at the Gaudiere, was caught by
a rolling log and pitched several feet
He fall throughan opening in the
floor into the millrace, and was swept
over the falls and drowned.
The Government cruiserPetrel arriv-
ed in fort Sain;a:y, Ont„ on Thursday
night, havinn on board a number of
sturgeon nets and herring nets, which
were seized from American busts for
fishing in Canadian waters.
•
The Rev. Dr. Robertson, superinten-
dent of the Presbyterian missions
the North -Nest, is leaving tor the 01d
Country, and wbile there will endea-
vour to attract as many as possible
to take up land in Canada and settle in
the West,
Early Wednesday morning Maggie,
daugliter of intr. and Mrs. Harrison,
Ga ono a"Ontaged
three ears and
a alf 0.splaying with matches,
which
set fire to her dress. She was so badly
burned that she died a few hours af-
terwards.
Mr, Harry Smith of Paris received
a charge of shot In the face end .shoul-
ders from the gun of Mr. Arthur
Wilson. They were members of a
shooting party who went to the woods
after game, The injured man is like-
ly t0 recover.
Sir William Van Horne, who has just
returned from a tour of inspection of
the C.P.R., makes a very favourable re-
port as to the condition of the road
and the progress of the North -est,
rhe lenient yiW
eld in Manitoba, he stated,
had been enormous.
Hon, Mr. Fisher, addressing a meet-
ing of business men at the Quebec
Board of Trade, said that Quebec Pro -
vine should confine itself to butter -
making and leave the cheese industry
to Ontario, because the qualily of the
mill in Quebec is superior to that of
Ontario.
The Railway Committee of the Privy
Council has made an interim order to
allow the T„ H. & B. Railway Com-
pany to 2iroceed with the building of
the sero lime at the Desjarctins Canal
when 11 deposits 320,000 in the Bank of
Montreal in trust for the Hamilton &
Milton Road Company.
GREAT BRITAIN.
Tbe fetes in connection with the
Queen's accession jubilee will oommeneo
in 1i'obruary.
The Princess of, Wales has founded in
Norfolk a Technical school for dress-
making and cookery.
The British Cabinet will rename its
meetings on Wednesday to prepare for
the -work of next session.
Lord Alexander Paget is dead. He
was born in 1839, and was a brother of
the Marquis of Anglosea.
After a thorough test by the Imper'
iai War Department, th'e Zalinsky dye
namite gnn'is pronounced a failure.
The Countess Cowley Ins brought a
suit for divorce against bar husbanel, on
the grounds of adultery and desertion.
Ta'pursuance of a resolution adopted
on Wednesday evening, four thousand
Le.ain( Oat s
qn trike on
Tlturondonadaye. benen w , t
While the want of rain bascaused a
wheat faninne In Index eseeaslvs mina
have deetro ed Ilia pouts crop pf the
Wast of Ireland,
The students oe Glasgow TJniyeralty
on Wednesday evening noinmated Mr,
Joseph Ohentberlein for the Lord Rea
torelxip of the institution.
The Daunt's Reek lightship, which
dura peared in the recent greet storm
on the British coast, has been found
sunk near her enoormgs.
There is no confirmation either in
London or Wasiaington, of the ru-
moured appointment of a tribunal to
deal with the Venezuelan boundary
dispute,
The Duke of Connaught 'sill represent
the1 Queenthe marriag'
Q e at a of tephe Duo
d'Orleans and the Archduchess Maria
Dorothea of Austria, in Vienna, next
Thursday,
Mr. George Shaw Lefevre, President
of the Local Government Board In Mr.
Gladstone's last Cabinet, is lying in d
dangerous condition as the result of a
fall from his bicycle.
UNITED STATES.
John L. Sullivan Le said to be in
danger of losing Ma right arm by ie
cancer.
By an explosion of gas in No. 3
shaft of the Lehigh & lilkesbarre Coal
Company six. man were killed and two
injured.
A mysterious tripe murder is puzzl-
ing the palde of liichm'ind, Mo, Mrs,
Eva Winner and her two children were
the victims.
The Court of Appeals at Albany, N.
V., has decided that the Albany police
law passed by' the last Legislature is
unconstitutional.
Urn Feed. Gardner, of Obeektowaga,
N.T., gave birth on Wednesday evening
to four children, three girls and one
boy, and all are doing well.
The mill at Canteen S.D., will wgain
this winter use the Russian tbistlefor
fuel, and farmers are offered a dollar
and a half a ton for all the thistles
they can furnish.
Phoebe A. Hurst will be the chief
donor among the citizens of San Fran-
cisco, who have promised 34,000,000 for
a State university as soon as the State
gives $500,000.
Two elevators with 1,125,000 bushels
of grain owned by the Chicago &Pa-
cific Elevator Company, wets destroy-
ed by fire at Chicago. The loss is es-
timated at over $1,000,000.
GENERAL.
Serious election riots are reported
from different parts of Hungary.
The floods are increasing In the
French' rivers, and there is great dis-
tress in the submerged districts.
All the workmen at the Constanti-
nople arsenal have struck work for the
non-payment of arrears in wages.
Rumours of a European congress to
revise th'e Treaty of Berlin are caus-
ing the Sultan great uneasiness.
A panic was caused in Constantin-
ople by the gun practice of the
French' guardahip in the Sea of
M4rmora.
Armenians are being arrested in large
numbers at Constantinople on the
charge of being revolutionists and dy-
namiters.
M. Challemel-Lacour, recently Presi-
dent of the French Senate, and also
Ambassador in London and Minister of
Foreign Affairs, is dead.
Rebels in the Philippines ars report-
ed to be guilty of 'horrible tortures of
their prisoners. They murder priests
by cutting them to pieces.
The revelation of the secret Russo -
Germanic treaty is causing the greatest
excitement on the Continent of Europe,
and may result in the rupture of the
Dreibnnd.
Emperor Francis Joseph has decor-
ated tele Duke of Orleans, who is to
be married to the Archduchess Marie
Dorothe, with the order of the Gul-
den Fleece.
A sepoy belonging to the British -In-
dian troops stationed at Fort Sandeman
ran amuck on Wednesday, and kilned
two British'" lieutenants and two sol-
diers.
George Towns of Newcastle, New
South !Vales has challenged. Gaudaur
for the sculling championship, but he
vents the champion to go to Australia
to row,
Violent storms have prevailed upon
the Portugel coasts. A fishing boat
foundered in the Bay of Setubal and
her crew of fourteen oxen were
drowned.
Cablegrams received from Bombay
see, that the drouth continues, with no
signs 01 abatement, and that the crop
situation in India is dai::y beeomng
more serious.
The Paris Eclair expresses itself in fa-
vour of granting Germany preferential
tariffs in Tunis, provided the foemer co-
operate with France in the settlement
of the Egyptian question.
Li -Hung -Chang has been made Min-
ister of Foreign Affairs, and simultane-
ously with bis appointment an Imper-
ial edict orders him to be punished for
presenting to enter the preempts of the
ruined Summer palace white visiting
the Dowager Empress.
The rejection by the Spanish Govern-
ment of the conditions imposed by
French financiers for taking up the pro-
posed Spanish loan is taken as proof
that Spain is able to obtain the neces-
sary
ece -sary funds elsewhere to carry on tbs
war in Cuba.
A PROFESSIONAL JOB AT VARSITY.
ia•neicsinen ➢brea open the alien( fled
Get ewer with $8,009 15 Cash and
Cheques:
A despatch from Toronto, says :-The
vault in the bursar's office at the Uni-
versity of Toronto, :has been opened and
cash boxes containing about 33,000 ab-
stracted. The burglary eves commit-.
ted on Saturday evening between 7 and
10 o'clock, and tlbere is no clue to the
guilty parties. ,Detectives Cuddy and
Davis and Slemin are working on the
case.
All Satuieley morning the account-
ant F. A. Biome, and the bursar, J. E.
Berkley Smith, were busy receiving
fees, for that was the last day on which
foes could bo paid. At one o'clock the
books were eleeed and the money, em -
mounting to, some 33,000,•about equally
divided in meth and obeci:s,i was put
into a cash box and placed 00 a shelf
in the vault.. The vault and office
doors were Hien securely locked,
The janitor, Robert Mai tin, was
muted bhe place up till almab 7.15 Sat-
urday evening, when ha went out, re-
turning shortly after 10 o'clool:. He
remained on ditty till one o'clock, tine
ttien as all was 'Viet he went to his
aeorpe on Rrualanwlek avenue, Tbe bean
ane, Vt'tiliam Spencer, sleeps 04 there -
wises, tent the heard nothing unusual on
leatteniney night,
11'fonday Manning,es usuaA lilerthe
took .tire amain to ie Ineraar'a offlee et
9 o'clock, Tale mond wears in the weld -
est confusion; ell iru w'e're overturned
and papers worn soatttorob over Ole
ftlbor, r12re outside eanolt doer was
burst oft its binges and one, panel oe
the Inside door' was 'gown too
Ffp ineueditvb4' gave the alarm and
the detective department wascommun-
eoated with. nen examination it was
found that entrance .had beeneffected
by the top pane of one of the windows.
A. hole about a quarter of an inoh m
diameter laid been bored, just above
the combination of the vault door and
train 4 aw of powder laid agross the floor
e distance of several feet. Alter light-
ing the fuse the burgllera must have
left the room to avoid injury from the
explosion. The concussion could not
laevo been very great, for none of the
windows, of which 'there are several,
have been damaged. With the wards
of the safe broken it was a simple mat-
ter bo pry open the door. Two oash
boxes were ttaalion, one the property of
the University,containing cheques and
bills, the oter was owned by the
bursar, who bled some private papers'
and a number of diamond rings in it.
There were evidenaewee
1 persons
ns
In the affair, for a number
of muddy
foot marks were visible on the window
sill. The marks of ajimmy show that
the
gang triedto openof e
windows he vault, but one as it was
protected with sheet iron blinds their
efforts were rabies,
That the work was done by protes-
slonal burglars there is no doubt, but
they .must have had some information
from parties inside. President Loudon
has some suspicions, but he refused
to make any statement when question-
ed. It was learned, however, that none
of the Varsity employees were sus-
peeted,
SHE LATE DABLE NN'8
FRENCH MAYORS TO BE BANQUET -
TED AT THE MANSION HOUSE.
Cantata' alatrhew's ertlw•ned-Suing tar
Divorce -rhe elitern's S.vnrpntliy_ste
/hurled nine and Henry Si. Stanley
on the. Venezuelan gaesilon-Lord Salk.
11 ucy and 'Total Alisttneore 'u Sc.
A despatch from Landon says:-Tbe
LordMayor has invited 30 of the May-
ors of the leading, cities of France to
attend a banquet at the Mansion
House in December: Tbe object of the
Lard Mayor in issuing the invitations
is to obtain the presence of the French
Mayors for the purpose of ho`ding a
conference with a view of establishing
a complete commercial understanding.
The Britlsh steamer Isleworth, from
Pensacola via North Sydney, N. S.,
arrived at Newcastle, on Saturday. Her
commander Captain Matthews, was
Frederick Tempe, recently appointed
net Head duriug the heavy weather ex-
perienced off that point.
The Morning Post says that Lady
Winifred Ross, wife of Sir Charles
Henry Ross of Ealaagovon Castle,
Parkhill, Rosshdre, is suing for a di-
vorce in Edinburgh.
The Queen has sent a message to the
Viceroy of India expressing her sym-
pathy with the people who are suffer-
ing from the famine caused by the
failure of the summer rains, and pro-
mising to assist them.
Sir Charles Dilke, M.P., who is a
well-known authority on foreign af-
foirs, has written a Metter, in mina he
says, .referring to the Angle -Venezue-
lan 'boundary dispute, that he enter-
tains no doubt of the vaeidil:y of Great
Britain's title to the territory up to
and including Point Barima. Henry
BI.
Stanley, M.P., the African explor-
er, epos also written a letter, in which
he touches upon the same subject. He
says that he has the'fu:lest confidence
in Lord Salisbury's attitude in the
Venezuelan question.
A London correspondent cables: In
one respect alone does Lord Salis-
bury seem likely to remain unchanged
to the end. He has been for years the
most influential advocate of total ab-
stinence in England, and his speeches
this week show that on this point at
least he will stand unshaken. That
he will be able to secure any legisla-
tion in the direction of enforced tem-
perance, let alone prohibition, is, how-
ever, entirely unlikely. Several mem-
bers of the present Government are
friendlypersonally to the
temperance
cause, Y party as a whole
would revolt at the mere whisper of
such an idea es attacking the brewers
and liquor interests.
The steamer Grecian was towed in
by the steamer Tritonia. The Grecian
sailed from Glasgow, October 13 for
Montreal. On October 25, when about
130 miles west of Tory Island, she en-
countered severe weather, during which
she lost her rudder. The Tritonia tow-
ed the Grecian to the tail of the bank
and than resumed her voyage.
:Che British steamer Loango, Capt.
Williams, at Bristol, from Montreal,
reports that on October 05, in latitude
51 N., longtitude 19 W., she encounfered
a gale, in which the vessel labored
and strained heavily, and she was (love
to for three days. The engines broke.
down during the gale, but were re-
paired after seven bow's' work. She
lost. 61 head of cattle and had her
mainsail, bridge and galley skylight
broken.
Right Rev. Mandell Creighton, D.D„
Bishop of Peterborough, has been ap-
pointed, Bishop of London, in succes-
sion to Right Hon. and Most Rev,
Frederick Temple, recently appointed
Archbishop of Canterbury,
Bir, Joseph Cbnmberlain, Secretary of
State for the Colonies bas been elected
Lord Rector of the University ot Glas-
gow,
A GOOD BICYCLE POSITION.
Must doctors now recomunand the pre-
serving of. the upright position on a
bicycle, because the spinal column is
thus kept straight, the shoulders are
thrown back, and the weight of the
body rests on the saddle. This posi-
tion is nut only the best from a medi-
cal and hygienic standpoint, but, in ease
of a fall, one is less likely to bo thrown
fatally on the head or bands than wheu
leaning over the machine. Although
certain muscles come chiefly into play,
all the muscles of the body used are
more or less strengthened. A person
who only works anti walks seldom fills
his lungs as the oyolist must do to ac-
complish his journey. This brings about
a more perfect oxidation of the blood,
'and good bleod means hraltlty tissues,
cons,
strong nerves and normal secret'
PILL J%N 1 HROPHY
Or Philanthropy a Give Yon Good
edeadtil for 10 Cents -,-the Cent of
Dr, Agnew's Liver •Pilia.
Sure, Sate, Quick a Pleasant to Aon,
No Pain, no Griping, 10c, te real,
)3»r Slek 1beadaohe, . for distress after
eating, forBildousnese, fon ,coated
Tongue, for Constipation, Thh work
wonderful cures. All druggists .have
thSod by i(.0 A.aDet duan,
A burglar entered .a residence in
Louisville, K
1t a
. ando f
h barking o
Ky.,
a i
g
watch -deg brought a policeman A tot
e
&PensThe dog seized
the policemen
b tete troesers, and held him until as-
sistance arrived. The burglar escaped
with his plunder. ,
A CRIE'PLE L'ROl1! RHEUMej,TI",.y1T.
Cured by a Few Doses of South Am-
erican Rbeumatie Cure--Mixaoulous
But Fact.
Mrs. N. Ferris, wife of a well-known
manufacturer neer of
Highgate,
nt. says;
Lar many years I awns soOdiy afflicted
with rheumatic pains in my ankles
and at times was almost disabled. I
tried everything, as I thought, and
doctored for years without much bene-
fit. Though I had lost confidence in
medicines I was induced to use South.
American Rheumatic Cure, To my
delight, the first; dose gave me more
relief than I had had in years, and two
bottles have completely cured me."
Hold b,t .1, A. headman. r
Lewis Milier,'president of the Inter-
national Association of Sunday school
Workers, is the father-in-law of Thos.
A. Edison.
TAKEN WITH SPASMS.
A Collingwood Resident Tells How
South American Nervine Cured His
Daughter of Distressing NervousDis-
ease,
The father of Jessie Merchant of Col-
lingwood, tells this story of his eleven
yaer-old daughter: 'I doctored with
the most skilled physicians in Coiling -
wood without any relief coming to 1ny
daughter, spending nearly five hundred
dollars in this way. A friend influenc-
ed me to try South American Nervine,
though I took It with little hope of
it being any good. When she began
its use she was hardly able to jnove
about, and suffered terribly from ner-
rous spasms, but after taking a few
bottles
her children " nown stomachtroublas
esand nervousness there is nothing so
good as South American Nervine.
Sold by G. A. Deadman.
Invitations have been received in tb's
Unitethe d States,
wedding DaidDghWells,sec-
and
secretary of the American embas-
sy, in London, and Miss Marietta, Ord.
daughter of Dr. Ord, physician to the
queen.
WHY THEY DO NOT PASS.
Kidney Disease Prevents Hundreds of
=Apparently Healthy Men From Pass-
ing a Bledical Examination for Life
Insurance,
If yon have inquired into the matter
you will be surprised at the number
of your friends who find themselves
rejected as applicants for life insur-
ance, because of kidney trouble. They
think themselves healthy until they
undergo the medical test, and they
fail in this one point. South American
Kidney Cure will remove not alone the
early symptoms, but all forms of
kidney disease, by dissolving the uric
acid and burdening substances that
find place in the system.. T.D. Locke
of Sherbrooke, Que., suffered for three
years from a complicated case of
kidney disease, and spent over 3100 for
treatment. He got no relief until he
hesyolswsgtrand as over oninue
that four bottles cured him,
Sold by G. A. Deadman,
You cannot go through life, no mat-
ter how humble your•spbere, without
being called upon many times to de-
cide Whether you will be true or false
to honor and duty., Duty and honor
must and 'au h
in hand. -
g d You
can make
your 'trues useful, beautiful, and noble.
kou ca make them worthless end eon -
CATARRH AND COLDS RELIEVED
IN 10 TO 60 MINUTES.
One short puff of the breath through
the Blower o,ei supplied with each ]cattle
of Dee Agnew's Catarrhal Powder dif-
fuses this powder over the surface of
the nasal passages, Painless and de-
lightful to use, it relieves instantly
anvpermanently HaEFeer, ds Headache, Sore es Catarrh,
Tonsilitis and Deafness. All druggists.
Sold by G. A. Deadman.
Prince Eitel
the Fritz,
is sllaidup
from the effects of bus fall from apony.
The emperor's children are a sickly lot.
They inherit little of their mother's
rather too pronounced robustness.
COULD NOT LIE DOWN FOR EIGH-
TL'EN MONTHS.
The Sufferings of a Toronto Junction
Resident from Heart Disease,
Not an exceptional case of heart dis-
ease bat very distressing was tihttt of
Mr. L. W. Lav, of Toronto .imrtion,
Ont., who w'as obliged to be propped
up in bed with pillows for eighteen
months, because of siuotheriug spells
that would come over him whenever ho
attempted to lie down, No treatment
bad done any good until he tried Dr.
Agnew's Cure. for the 'Heart, and here
one dose gave complete relief, and one
bottle axed bine and to -day he en -
,joys the pleasures of good health its
other people do, Heart disease will
.kill if not clued. • 1
Sold by G. A. Deadman.
L. Goldstein, of \\rest Bowdoin, Me.,
steaks and writes ancient and modern
Hebrew, Greek, Polish, Swedish, Latin,
German, French, Italian, Russian, Chi-
nese and English, Yet he finds ron-
tentment as a common peddler of tin-
ware.
ITCHING, BURNING SKIN DISEASES
CURED FOR 35 CENTS,
Dr, Agnew's Ointment relieves in one
day, and cures tetter, met rheum,
piles, scald bead, eezenia, barber's
Itch, ulcers, blotches and all eruptions
of the skin It is sootilting and quiet-
ing and arts like miens in the: euro
oe all baby hunters; 35 rents,
WORLD'S OLPFST' P'ARLI,T.
momi .1.01 . d,vl�
The Nara or neetleed-4neestry 01 the
014(4(90 or Jalrnn,
As
s result of a recent investigation
it has been shown that the foundation
of the 'femLlllas of about a dozen 01'
the 400 Batons in the British Round
of Lords dates baek to 1400, the ear"
ilea being 1264, 'rite oldest fan" ily in
the British Isles is the Now family,
of Scotland, 1093, Tbe Campbellts,, of
Argyll, began in 1190, Talleyrand dates
from 1199, Bismarck from 1270, the
Grosvenor famine', the Dukes of West-
minster, 1900; the Austrian house of
Has
p burgoes bask to
9 and g52 a n
bei
house of Bourbon to 804.`elle descend-,
ants of Mohammed, born 570, aro ale
registered carefully and authorltative-
Ily, in a book kept in Mecca by the
chief of the family. Little or ng, doubt
exists of the absolute authenticity of
the long line of Mohammed's descend-
ants.
:NOTES ON STATIIONERY. ' '
The old, old fashion that used to
before fore envelo were invented
la corning back into favour, particul-
arly for notes where only one side of
a sheet of paper be used. The other
is folded over square, addressed and
stamped, and stuck down at saob'. ear-
ner with seal and wax.
Only light -tinted stationery is fav-
oured by the woman who follows the
vagaries of fashion in this as in other
fields, Wbite, the pales( grays and
blues are in most demand, deep blues
and purples are relegated to the strong-
minded person who disregards fads and
foibles.
The mode oe mongram most desired
Is called the ring monogram. The let-
ters are intertwined on a round col-
oured background In some contrasting
shade to thea colour of the stationery
used, and the whole is enclosed in a
decorative ring Room for discretion
and taste in the matter of harmony
is in the power of the purchaser.
Cards are still so thin that fifty may
easily be accommodated at once in an
ordinary card case. It is rumoured
that autograph cards will take the
place of the present popular block let-
tering, which has at least the merit
of being plain and unpretentious. In
many casesautograph cards might
prove pugzling and even the cause of
endless embarrassing positions.
X+ neva done, anti It 1e espeolelly. wearing 0x14'
weenie wee to 11(090 whose WNW: is lcepure and,
neat propeely to. tone, sustain and renew the
wastillg of nerve, suuselc and tissue, The only
remedy for tired, weals, nervone. Weinen Is uk
building up by taking it good nerve tonin, Motet
purifier and vitalizer kite Hood's l;arsaparllia_
1100 troubles Pena -tar•to• Women at change of
season, climats 51 Ole, 'nstt cures aromatic hg
ood.!s'
Sarsaparilla
The One True Blood runner. 11.1 cements, et,
Prepared only by C0.'food & Co., Lowell, mass.
do t or
Hood's Fells gripeno, All druggists.esusepale 270,
POR .'L'W N11Y.8iX TEAM;
7
D U ,
BAKINO
POWDER
THECOOK'SBESTFRIEND
LAFOGGST SALE Ili CANADA.
MEN, NOT WOMEN, FAINTED.
It is rather a striking feet that in
the examination beld at Oxford -the
great examination week of the univer-
sity year-tbe fainting and similar de-
monstrations supposed to be peculiarly;
feminine were confined entirelty to the
masculine candidates. The result, as
regards acquirement of knowledge, can
oral' be discussed on the publication of
the class lists, but the women students
have every one gone through the ordeal
nobly from a physical point of view,
while one man collapsed suddenly in a
dead faint, and several retired temp -
°eerily overcome in lesser degree Iby,
similar weakness.
U
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N E R V IN -
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iNSO__��f?
POINTS THE WAY TO PERFECT HEALTH
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
Cares Permanently.
A Wonderful Specific in All Cases of
Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache,
Nervousness and General Debility.
Has No Equal as a Spring Medicine,
There is a grout deal of uncertainty
In the methods adopted to remove dis-
ease. Doctors are not free from this
hind of thing themselves, The poor pa-
tient has to put np with a good deal of
evperimeuting. The discoverer of South
American ?Orrin(' takes too serious a
view of life to play pranks of this kind.
Ile dors not think that these human
bodies of ours ebenld be fooled with He
lips recognized that they are subject to
disease, but, by .scientific methods, he
tins learned that jest es the watch is to
be put in perr`eet repair only when the
nraln-spring ir: kept III running erder, so
with the individual, he minium; in per-
fect health only when the nerve centres
are kept healthful and strong.
What disease is more distressing than
Indigestion or dyspepsia/ Some simple
remedy may be glspn to cause relief for
the moment. Nervine is an indisputably
successful remedy for the worst cases of
indigestion, because it roaches the source
er all stomach troubles --the nerve cen-
tres. Indigestion exists because the
vital Vireos have bernme diseased and
are weakened. Nervine builds up the
nerve centres, from whi,'h come these
forme, removes the causes se indiges-
tion, and then builds up the health com-
pletely.
How many systems are ran down
through nervousness. A stimulant may
give ease, but it will not cure nervous
troubles. Nervine stns cured more dee-'
perate cases of nervousness than any
outer medicine anywhere. And it does
s0 forthesame 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 thin
kind.
In the spring of the year the strong-
est suffer from general debility. The
blood, through neglect, has become im-
povoriseed, and the whole system gets
out of order. We spent: of it as a
spring medicine. Nervine restores the
exhausted vital forego that have led to
this tired, don't -care, played -oat, edema
able condition. No ens can take a bot-
tle of Nervine at this season of the
year without disease quickly giving Nay
to abounding health.
The moral is plain, simple and relit bg'
understood. If you would not trifle with
disease, then you will take South Amer-.
icau Norviae, which will not trifle !Ante(
Yell,
,l• D.EA'.aii lV IVA )1:1.:t141 . S(l Retdll ,Agent forRrusfails,