The Brussels Post, 1894-10-12, Page 7O?
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PRACRCl'L,L,• •Ff'I» INGe
wio AVOld the .Qverfipwiltg of Glsterns
7armors often bane trouble daring heavy
rain@ in kooping their uleterns frpm over'
Rowing. 4dampnees near the house oauaos
a deme, wet Cellar, which should be
ebrenuoualy avoided, The aopgmpanying
ilfustratien, presents a pilau fee avoiding
such overflowing oieteree. A forked pipe
a fastened late the rain gutter or roeoiyor
from the roof. At the jenotion of the two
arms ee swltoh pipes there is a abut -oil'
which ie operated by a wire rod, which as
it appears in the illustration turna the 0b•
sbruotton plate within the pipe and stops its
.enbranee into the cistern when the latter ie
•Ooneidehed full enough, Tho other pipe.
.;,r ""ibis-.."":uq. =
.'_l
�lpsirtt,;ln
FE{'XOE FORM/NMI/1'aOISTERNS FRO MOVER'
3LOwIT G.
carries the water away into a drain or ditch
that is properly made and covered. This
,keeps everything dry about the house, and
the annoyance so often seen on the farm in
wet weather is avoided. Tho cistern is
located back of the kitchen, under the
-platform and step of the porch, being at
hand when water is wanted, adding much
in the convenience to the housewife and
saving the labor of carrying it from abarrel
•or other receptacle near the house, net ont
to catch the water. This arrangement eau
be made at any tin store. It is beet made
,of galvanized iron, which will not rust or
wear out as easily as tin, and will last for
4.11
Stumps and Brush Piles.
Both stumps and piles of brush are an
unsightly inoumbrance to any land, and
should be removed as Boon as practicable.
Brush piles are soon obliterated by the nee
.of fire but stumps are expensive to re -
:move. When once loosened and out of their
former nest, stumps are easily disposed of
by burning. Moat hardwood stumps, as the
:hickory, maple, and oak, soon lose their
.grip on the soil by the rapid decay of their
mall roots, hence, unless the land is at once
needed, it is the cheapest plan to let them
remain undisturbed for several years. In
the meantime the land may be pastured
with sheep, thus keeping down the bushes
and sprouts that may spring up, by eating
off the leaves soon as they appear. When
land is eooumberedwith pine stumps, they
send up no aprents or auokera, and the
presence of muchpitch in the fibre of the
wood makes them well nigh indestructible.
Such stumps can be removed only by burn-
ing or pulling. The former plan is not
thorough on account of the multitude of
roots near the surface, and pulling' is a
tedious, expensive operation. Often a few
awn -me mar the appearance of any otherwise
presentable field, and many farmers have
for years plowed, sowed, and reaped around
these obstructions without any apparent
thought of removing them. The time thus
spent, and the grain and grass that would
have grown upon the portions of the field
thus occupied, would have covered the ex-
pense of removing themseveral times.
When stumps and brush heaps are removed,
now the laud immediately to grass seed.
When intended for pasturage, or to be
mowed for hay, rake off the ashes upon the
adjoining soil as soon to the fire is out.
Seed thus sown and raked into the soil will
grow,' whereas, if the ashes were allowed to
remain, the alkali from them would destroy
the seed germ.
Packing Butter For Winter.
While winter dairying is slowly increao.
ing it requires so much skill and careful
management, and such a great change in
the common methods of the farm, that
while ib is he moat profitablepartof dairy-
ing farming, it is not likely for some years
yet, to be sufficiently p080118ed to fully
supply the demand for butter in the winter.
Thus the summer dairyman may still find
it profitable to pack the fall made butter
or winter sale. And, indeed; homay do
this with advantage' as well as safety, for
when the beat quality of butter is packed
n the beet mintier, it will improve during
the keeping from the fall until winter
and be really more desirable than the or-
dinary winter made article. This is due to
the feet that by the slow ripening in the
paokago during storage in a cool, glean
plane, and inaweetair-tightpaokagea,there
is a slow internal change going on in the
butter by which its finest flavor is develop-
ed and as with fruits, so the butter is great.
improved by what inay truly be galled in
both—e process of ripening, Two things
are to be conaiderodfh thissubjecb, always,
however,promieing that the butter is of, the.
best quality, as it easily may he when it is
mode from the sweet, fresh,fall groes, equal
in every reaped to the fresh,springpasture,
The first thing in the process Ie the pack-
age ; the second, the manner of packing
the butter.
The best package for this purpose is a
new white oak pail, made of sound timber,
free of knots and blemishes, half an inch
thick, well jointed, and porfeetlyeeasoned.
This pail holds fifty pounds, White spruce
is the next beet material, and is quite as
free from any objeotionnble odor or taste
given to the butter. The pail is prepared
by a thorough cleaning in pure water. It
should be soaked for at leant twenty-four
home, then well scalded, and then filled
with brine. This ie done so that it may
stay under the brine twenty-four hours
before the butter lepaoked. The pail being
ready, the butter ie packed as soon es it
has been finished ab the second working,'
the day after it le churned. It in salted in
the ueael manner, ono 00108 to .the pound
of batter, of the very purest and fipoat
g�round salt, It le worked as dry 00 it gaa
be, The pail being gmptiod 01 Alte brim@,
le fleeted all over the inside with the ealb,
sad the better is put in only so much 80 a
time ae will make a layer of fourinehes.
This le eomeaotle Inwood down by a maple
presser, made like a common potato matter,
so Ahab all the maieturo is pressed out and
drained off: If in this moisture there is
any oloud or aha le of milk, the butter has
not been made as well ea it eltonld be, and
will not Immo out in porfeot aondition,
Not a shade of fnilk is bo be permitted in
the butter for this uao, but any moisture
that drains from it should he ae clear an
the dew pll the morning grass, Then the
butter thus put in in lightly ducted with
salt, and another layer is pttb in in the
0am0 manner, until the pail is tilled to a
quarter 61 ap inch of the edge of the rail.
If the butter is not ouffieent for a full
pail, it is peaked an far en it pan be and
covered with salt, add the pail its put away
until the next churning, being kept covered
with a clean towel. Then the next churn.
ing is packed in the same manner until the
pail is tilled as mentioned, when: the butter
is covered with a piece of good, heavy shirt.
ing cloth, well washed in boiling water
and steeped in brine, with the pail. It is
gut half an inch larger than the outer edge
of the pail. Itis pressed down on the but.
ter to exclude all air, a little eat being
sprinkled under it, and ie then covered
with dry :alt to the edge of the pail ; thie
salt is well . preened down and le (lever-
ed with a sheet of parchment paper on
which is printed the name of the butter -
maker and the dairy, and any handsome
device that may be used as a trade -mark.
This is in justice to the person who will
take all this trouble to make a fine article
of butter. The cover, treated as the pail
has been, is then securely fastened down
and the pail is stood in a cool, clean, sweet
cellar where the air its dry. Butter so
peeked will he in the finest condition until
May or June of the next year, and should
bring the highest market rater.
WHICH IS' THE SAFEST CAR ?,'
Well, That Depends on. Things Nobody
Can. Foresees
" Which is the safest car on a railway
train?" repeated an old railroad man, as he
stroked hie chin and seemed. to reflect on
the query. " Well, the best answer I can
make is that it ie the -oar which doesn't
run off the rails when all others do, and
which is left on the bank when the train
goes through a bridge,"
You've travelled thousands of miles by
rail ?"
" Yes, tens of thousands."
"And been in half a dozen accidents ?"
' I've been In exactly seventeen railroad
accidents, but some of them were hardly
worth mentioning."
" And do you locate yourself in any
particular part of the train ?"
" No. When I first began travelling 1
wouldn't ride in any coach but the rear
one. I had about two dozen reasons why
that was the safest car, and for six or eight
weeks 1 went rolling over the country
feeling as safe as if in my owe briok house.
One night we Iost too much time at a sta-
tion and a special overhauled us and smash-
ed into the roar coach. You'll think it
funny, but out of the sixteen people in that
oar I' was the only one badly hurt. 1 had
a leg and two ribs booken 01111 W00 covered
with bruises. When I was able to be out
again S went dead bank on the rear ear."
" And took the next one to the smoker,
eh?"
" That's ivhat I did. A dozen different
railroad men had a dozen reasons apiece
why that was the eafeet place, and for
three or four months T rade in that car and
laughed at the chaps who parried insurance
policies Theu my fond dream of safety
was rudely shattered. The engine, bag-
gage, and smoking cars passed safely over.
a certain switch while running at the rate
of: forty miles anhour, but the forward'
trucks of my car caught somewhere and the
oar was twisted right out of the train.
Yes, sir, it was torn loath at both ends and
rolled down ap embankment, and not an-
other ear left the rails. We had two kill.
edand a. dozen hurt, but I got off the ear
with a bad shaking np. My oonfidenoe in
the first oar was gone, however, never tube
restored."
"And then you took the middle of the
train?"
"I did, my eon. Yes, I sat down and
reasoned it out to my perfect satisfaction
that the middle oar -of the train was as safe
as sitting at home. It was about a year
before anything happened to undeceive. me.
One afternoon when we were dusting along
to make up lost time, we crossed the tracks
of another road jest a few seconds too soon
or too late, just as you will have it. An
express' tram on the other road came
booming along, and waded right through
u6. It struck my oar, of course, and what
was left of it after the grand smash couldn't
have been worked over into a wheelbarrow.
Hive killed was. the record, and I got a
broken arta, a scalp wound, and a general
had shaking up."
"And after that?"'
"After that and up to the present date I
have no choice. I drop into a meat where-
over I can find one and don'b worry about
accidents. I've known a whole train
except the Uncouth to go through a bridge,.
and I've known every ear bet the last, to
pass safely over, In a head-on collision
the forward coach may be smashed to
splinters, or it may rear up on end and
escape all injury, I was on a train 0100
where a locomotive struck the rear oar,
rolled it aside without serious injury to
anybody, and then killedor wounded every
paooeugeoi In tho next coach.. The man
who goes hunting for the safest ear on a
train is throwing away lite time. He may
take any oar and bravel for ten years, and
never even be delayed by a hob box p or he
may settle down in the oar of his choice
and be killed In a ride of ten miles, I
once saw twenty-two people smashed ha a
conch, and yob two fellows who were
stealing a ride on the truoko underneath
got off scot-free. Just buy a first-olass
ticket, get aboard before the train goo$,•
and leave the rest to Providence."
How it Will Be..
Mrs Menke—'.{You were on a jury with
eleven men, 1 believe?"
Mrs. Ginger—"Yee."
Mrs. M.—"Did you find any trouble in
agreeing with them?"
MrMrs.t eg
' G.—"I didn roe with them
Ahoy agreed with me."
•
"Dear little handl 1" be murmured ea he
hissed her hand and mentally reckoned up
what the rings on it had Dost Win..
rltish aid Foreign,
Cengressmen Wilson, of tariff fume, is. le
bo banguetod next Thursday by thoLoodou
Chamber of Cmnmere°,
Ildgehlfl, the epens.of the Brat battle
between King Claarlge I, and hie Parlia-
meue, ie soon 00 be geld at auobien,
Omsk, In Merle, tae just been poanoetod
with St. Petoreburg by the 001:p1,010n of
the fireb 600 miles of the :Crana•Siberlaa
Iiallroad.
In one month 20,000 00 lea of Hall
Caine'a "The Manxman" have been sold in
England, a sale unequalled by any novel
eieee "Lothair."
Odessa lately celebrated the centenary
alto foundation. In a hundred yearn ft
has grown to be a city of 830,000 inhabi.
tants and the groat port of the Black
Sea.
A bust of Herod the Great, believed to
be aubhonbio, was recently discovered ab
Jerusalem. 16 was bought by the Ruse
tan Government for the Hermitage Museum
at 8b. Persreburg.
Inland revenue officers lately seized an
issue of the Minion containingan illustrat-
ed erbiole .on postage (stams by Harold
Frederick, in whloh 1,110 old penny abamp
was reproduced by engraving.
Lathy passenger lauded in ait'renoh port,
from a etoam vessel coming from a European
port by a decree just issued, is to pay a
tax of fifty centimes (ten cents); from any
other part of the world he pays a thane.
Twenty-seven million francs has already
been spent on the great Church of the
Sacred Heart at Montmartre, and the
building is far from complete. The money
has been raised entirely by voluntary
oontributione. •
Colonial forces throughout the empire,
including India and Canada, are, by a
recent order of the
War Cale,
medals for long service, meritorious service,
end distinguished conduct, on the same
terms as the regular troops.
Twenty-five miles of the Congo railroad,
forming the first emotion between Matange
and Kenge,are now completed. The work
has cost 8100,000 a mile. The line will be
ninety-three miles long in all, and will
connect the immense waterways above the
falls with tho mea.
At the meeting of the Grand Lodge of
Oddfellowe at Chattanooga,Tenn.,on Thura
day, it was decided to admit to the Order
through the Rebekah lodge alI Oddfellow'e
wives and daughters and all white women
more than eighteen years of age who believe
in the Ruler of the Universe.
The recent reprieve of a condemned
murderer et Rudolatadt in Germany hese
brought out the fact that Duke George of
Saxe-Meiningen, the organanizer of the
celebrated •' Meininger" troupe, in the
thirty.eighth year of hie reign has never
allowed a death sentence to be carried out.
Safa-el-Bahr, "Joy of the Sea," is the
name of the Khedive of -Egypt's new steam
yacht, built fot him on the Clyde. It is a
handsome boat of 700 tons and 1,100 horse-
power, fitted up with all comforts and
modern improvements. On the trial trip
it made a little over fourteen knots an hour
In Hungary the Prince Primate has
warned his clergy to confine themselves' to
their calling and leave polities alone. He
considers it essential to reestablish a good
understanding between Church and State,
and declares that in ecclesiastical matters
he hae not taken a single step' without the
previous sanction of the Pope.
France proposes to have a general exhibi-
tion of sports in connection with the
Exposition of 1900. The Bois de Vincennes
will be sot aside for them. The Minister
of Commerce has appointed a commission to
draw' up a general programme, which is
to include fencing, shooting, gymnastics,,
military exercises, be ating,athletios,cyoling,
and ballooning.
British sailor discharged in foreignports
are protected. against land sharks by a re.
cent arrangement made by the Board of
Trade. On the arrival of a vessel an agent
of the Board appears, who finds out what
Hien wish to return home and the sums due
them ; he then provides them with money
for trvelling expenses and warrants of the
board for the rest of their wages, payable
in England.
A silver box was recently found at Au.
bonne, in Switzerland, oontaining,the heart
of Abraham Duquesne, the great Admiral
of Louis XIV, after whom Modems (settle-
ment at Pittsburg was named, and who
was the only Protestant allowed to remain
unmolested in France after the revoeatlon
of the edict of Nantes. His sons, who were
banished, had placed the heart in the
church of Aubonne, from which it is to be
sent soon to Dieppe, Duquesne's pirthplaee.
At Cempuie, in France, M. Robin, the
director or an drpkaa asylum, was reoeutly.
discharged for carrying out ,peculiar ideas
in the management of the institution. He
believes in coeducation, and threw boys
and girls together at their meals, and at
work and play. He carefully kept all re-
ligious instruction from them, but taught
them that war was a crime, and that it was
right to avoid military service. This led
the Government to interfere with the
experiment.
In the eouvention just made between
Great Britain and China to settle the
Burmese boundary Great Britain gives up
her claim to- the greater .part of the Shau
States, China agreeing to cede no part of
the territory to any other nation without
the former's consent. Icor six years Chinese
products, except salt, will be admitted free.
of duty into Burmah, Chinese vesoels
being allowed the .free navigation of the
lrrawaddy, whilelirftiahmauufaotures and
Burmese produce, except rice sent by land,
are to. be admitted into the Chinese empire
on the same terms.
Tho monuments to Rmpror William I.
and Empress Augusto, recently consecrat-
ed iu the maneoloum at Charlottenburg.
Me in a chapel adjoining the one in whiph
Queen Louisa is buried. The statues of
white Carrera marble are recumbent: the
old Emperor lies bareheaded in the uuifot tn
of the First Regiment of. Guards, with the
imperial cloak of ermine round hie
shoulders' and in hie hand the sword of
state, with laurel leaves wound round the
hilt. The Empress wears e diadem and a
veil. of lace, most delicately carved ; she
holds a (muffle in let Mande, and passion
Rowers are scattered ore, the folds of her
dress. At the door of the hell stands ail
archangel with a (laming sword. The
eculpter Prof. ei, Euoke.
$PI,NNDIA WJU 4T,
Millers Never EMI ROW Wheatt to Work
tenon Than the tlluiatt0ba ('101 at 114118.
The oamplee of this year'$ efen1toba
wheat prop eel/mated to the Western Brain
Stapdard'e Board et Winnipeg are doeorib.
ed as the beat ever gathered, The Winer
peg Commercial le one authority for thee
estimate of the quality of the proeent prop th
and it expr0aaen e view of the hoard.
Rundrede of bags of wheat from all 0100
the province were Coflocted,examined, and
pronounced magnificent. 'Phe Cotnmeroia
eays: "The wheat is plump, dry, bright,
nearly all pure hard wheat, and of extra
heavy weight to the measured bushel," It
la further stated that millere never lied
better wheat to work upon thou Ake Maul-
tobo crop of 1894. Its quality ie nob sur•
peeped by the fine orop of 1888, whilst this
year's yield is much bettor. Tlae impresalon
whiph moll superior wheat will make in
h m
the pettish rX siker must be gorreapondingly
favorable.
Farmers, of course, still have room to
grumble at the way the pride of wheat
keeps down. Moreover, whatever current
experience seems available would justify
the opinion that the low prices aragomg Co
continue. But now, when the harvest is
over and the abundance and quality of the
orop have been reckoned, it io interesting
to look for the farmer's deliberate view of
prevailing conditions as well as of the out-
look. The Commercial does not hope for
any marked improvement in prices in the
near future, and it advises Alio farmers not
to hold their wheat in expectation of higher
prices. Neverthelese it goes on to say that
wheat must continue Ta InuO t0 be "the principle
source of revenue to our farmers." The
basis of this opinion is that wheat can be
produced in Manitoba of .finer quality than
anywhere eleo in the world, and it is
added : "Even at present low prices it 10
also a more profitable crop than other orops
which can be, grown to advantage here."
The tone of the paper, we would say,
distinctly speaks of the favorable position
of the Manitoba farmer despite the price' of
wheat. And in every other respect for him
" the outlook is cheery."
These things are said in all candor, and
in face of what we are so often told is the
disposition of most farmers to the contrary.
Wheat, if sold atpresent quotations, es
peoially the. splendid wheat produced this
year in Manitoba, would naturally be re-
garded by nine farmers out of every ten as
sacrificed almost thrown away. There
has been perhaps a great deal of illogical
advice and talk over the wheat situation,
and it is cheering to hear expressions of
satiafaetion in Manitoba despite prices
But while it may be to the advantage of
the farmers to part with the crop ab once,
the logic of giving confident advice ie
doubtful, at least until the quality of this
year's yield. all. over the world is better
known.
.i
s WRECKED BY A CYCLONE.
•
He—"Higbee would have run through
hie fortune in a month if it hadn't been for
his wife." She—" How did she prevent
it?" 150.—" Sho spent it herself."
hire- Youngma,--"And: so, mydarling
got the prize at the baby show? 1 knew he
would. It couldn't have been otherwise,"
Old Ba0heler (one of the judges)—"Yee
madam, we all agreed that your baby was
the least objectionable cIof the lot."
The 'Gown of Spring Talley, Minn., a Total
Wreck -Many l'oram's Killed and ln-
lurcd.
A despatch from Spring Valley, Minn.,
says :—Spring Valley was struck by a
cyclone at 10:80 o'clock Friday night,
wrecking the residential portion of the city,
Killed are Nehemiah Dodge,Mrs. Nehemiah
Dodge, Frank Moahek's child, C. G. King.
Mrs. Hopeful is fatally injured, and many
others received serious hurts. Twenty
buildings were totally destroyed and many
others badly damaged. Teams were
eet to work to carry the dead away and
remove the injured to the Lewin Rouse
which was converted Into an hospital:
Physicians were sent for from Wykooff,
Racine, Grand Meadow and Austin, who,
with the help of the resident dootors, were
kept busy all night getting broken lege and
arms and sewing up wounds: The cyclone
was about twenty rods wide. The houses
destroyed .were without exception new, and
many of them expensive, and situated in
the fashionable part of, the pity. It is im-
possible to estimate the damage done. The
flesh of the dead and injuredie blaokened,as
is usual in cyclones.
"Do you think," said the intellectual
young woman, "that there is any truth in
the theory that big creatures are better
natured than small ones?" "Yes" answer-
ed the young man, "I do. Look at the
difference between the Jersey mosquito
and the Jersey cow."
Hood's Cured
After
Others Failed
Scrofula in tiv; Neck-Nunchos All
Slone Now.
Sangerviile. Maine.
"0. I. Irood&.0o.,. Lowell, Slash.
"Gentlemen: -1 feel that I cannot say enough
In favor of rood's Sarsaparilla. For ave years
have been troubled with scrofula in my neck
and threat, Several kinds of medicines which
/tried did not do me any good, and when I ooci-
neenced to take Ifood's, Sarsaparilla there were
largo bunches on my neck 'so sore that i 00ufd
ood4 $urmsa ja, Cures
not bear the slightest touilt. When I had taken
one bottle of, this medicine, the 8900m:00 bad
gone, and before I bad finished theMendthe
bunches had entirely dlaappeerod." B6ANonu
Axwooa, Sangervlllo, melee.
1Y. B. If you decide to take Hood's 8artheee
Alla do not bo indueod to buy any other.
Hood's Pills mire constipation by rector.
Mg the peristaltic) action of the allmentar1cauai.
a ..
a
,
ThXFORD aFURNACES
alp.
F+-
r.
t .. ox w
.o n .o
R On U AC
F RN . Ei
e , FOR A41, 01108 OF DUIMDINCS . n
ea ?elciiv from 10,.000 fo 80,00 Cubic tet
ovcLoiyf3 area. RADIATOR
W0013 FURNACE
iIBAYY GRATD, 00)50010117
adapted forwsod burning
Heavy Steel Plato fere Do;; Deme'
and Radiator, whiph heat:'
gaiokerand acro more durable
RAniATOR of llrodern Cet etruo.,,,
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LAROt ASH PIT .fit
4
COAL FURNACE
Largo combustion Chamber
LongFire Travel, onglroiing.ra,8etor-..,00
barge meeting Surface
Large reed Door
Sootional;ire Pot
Rotating Bar Dumping Grate
DEEP ASK t T
SiPI
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sLI Guaranteed Capacity
ad City AOC8�
')by...g.LiOE ad TOSTMONMaoos.
..•.Manufactured
Th GURNEY
FOUNDRY CidMPAF@Y Ltd., TORONTO,
kiii4iiiigiiii&iliiiAliAidiaikaiiiiiiiiiiiiihiliAa
EUBEN sr+r�•m(ry r 41it�
t,
x i
Hon. Reuben E. Truax, one of
Canada's ablest thinkers and states-
men, a man so highly esteemed by
the people of his district that he was
honored with a seat in Parliament,
kindly furnishes us for publication
the following statement, which will
be most welcome to the public,
inasmuch as it is one in which all
will place implicit confidence. Mr.
Truax says:
"I Have been for about teu years
very much troubled with Indigestion
and Dyspepsia, have tried a great
many different kinds of patent
medicines, and have been treated by
o number of physicians and found
no benefit from them. I was recom-
mended to try the Great South
American Nervine Tonic. I obtained
a bottle, and I must say 'found 'very
great relief, and leave since taken two
more bottles, and now feel that I am
entirely free from Indigestion, and
would strongly recommend all my
fellow-snff:rers from the disease to
give South American Nervine an
immediate trial. It will cure you.
"REUBEN E. TRUAX,
" Walkerttin, Ont."
It has lately boon discovered that
certain Nerve Centres, located near
the base of the brain, control and
suiiply Aho stomach with the neces-
sary nerve force to properly digest
the footi. When these Nerve Oon-
° iF
tree are in any way deranged the
supply of nerve force is at once
diminished, and au a result the food
taken into the stomach is only
partially digested, and Chronic Indi-
gestion and Dyspepsia soon make
their appearance.
South American Nervine is so'
prepared that it arks directly on the
nerves. It will absolutely cure every
case' of Indigestion and Dyspepsia,
and is an abaoluue specific for all
nervous diseases and ailments.
It usually gives relief in one day.
Its powers to build up the whole
system are wonderful in the extreme.
It cures the old, the young, and the
middle-aged. Itila great friend to
the aged and infirra. Do not negleot
to use this precious boon ; if yon do,
you may neglect the only remedy
which will restmn you to health.
South American Nervine is perfectly
safe, and very pleasont to the taste.
Delicate ladies, do not fail to use this
great cure, becau00 it will put the
bloom of freshness and beauty upon
your lips and in your cheeks, and
quickly drive away your disabilities
and weaknesses.
Dr. W. Washburn, of New
Richmond, Indiana, writes ; "I have
used South American Nervine in
my family and proscribed it in
my practice. It is a most excellent
remedy."
tA• IORADWAY Wholesale and Retail Agent for Brussels
PROF. KLOTZ AT VICTORIA.
Seven Thousand Hailes or Coast EXt lored'
Daring tate Season dust Ciosul.
A despatch from Victoria, B. 0„ eays:--
Prof, lilotz,chief aetronomer of the Interior
Department, with three Canadian -Alaska
boundary commission partiee tinder his.
immediate direction, returned from the
north by the steamer Mystery which was
made the floating headquarters during the
season. Their territory was from Portland
canal to Junean,- Part this point westward
Mr. Ogilvie had charge. Tho work is now
praotioaliy completed in the long disbrict
from the panel to cape Speneer,Mr. I1lota's
parties having covered over 7,000 miles of
coast this year, surveying upwards of 20,.
000 equate miles, and taking 2,000 odd
photos. The only block of work now un-
finished ie that in the neighborhood of
Mount St. Eliaswhich doee not present
features of especial difficulty. Mr. Ogilvie,,
in whose seotion it is, cannot complete hie
labors this year, returning home as soon as
his survey .ia made to Letnya bay» The
Amerioan party were engaged all season he
Lunn @neat determining the relative posi-
tion of St, Elias with the ooasb line. The
country explored by the Canadians this
season contains coneidoreblo good timber'
indicaticas of mineral wealth, little Selling
and no agricultural land. Prof. King,
boundary commissioner, to eapsated to
arrive here shortly and all the ohiefe of the
staff will then return to Ottawa to enter
upon the extenslon of the season's. notes.
Secretary Carlisle has decided it unlaw.
ful under the tariff law to appoint inspeet-
ers and teeters of bounty sugars,