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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1895-3-15, Page 715, 1895 SSNLS POST, EEK'S NEWS OANADA, will petition for a free postal Mackenzie Howell hos aeeepted the et tendered him by the Belleville of Trade. , Mr, Lamely bas been Moues Me the paster of Bridge atreel 111etbodiet h, ifelleville. 1: bye-oleebion to fill the vacancy in Ha mend caused by the uneeating of Mr. San will be held Marcie 19, 1: Montreal Gazette believes that the gen pl elections will be held after seeding tim n the month of May. Canadian Retail Furniture Aesoola- tlot hos been formed, with Mr, Jelin Be lees of Hamilton es President, lose than 80 applications have been reel ed bybite London Free Library Beard for to position of Librarian, Me err T' nig ern gids roo race ofit of of18 o prominent citizens of Calgary, e, Parvlow and palgleiah, have been ed, charged with stealing cattle. Manitoba Legislature on Thursday pass/Kitt motion to out off all Gov- nt house expenditure after this year, Chancery Divisional Court has de- thdo it ie illegal to maintain a pool in Ontario for betting on foreign Grand Trunk Railway, has lost one oat faithful servants in the perean Edward Kingdom, train'despatcher treat. T Royal Humane Society will present Mr. +'aderiok Fritz of Hamilton with an hon ry testimonial for saving a drowning mom ion, 1+'i: destroyed $80,000 worth of lumber on 3' day in the puling grounds of Messrs. Gilm nr & Co., at Ironeide , seven `miles north f Ottawa. Th water will be let out of the Cornwall Cana on March 10 to allow of a large amou of masonry being laid before the open" 'g of navigation, Th abor element of Winnipeg is taking steps form a separate political party for the p rpoee runningof candidates of lea Own the !swims T. Watters actinCommissioner o gf Caste e, was tenteuoed to one year's im- prison ant at Ottawa for retaining poems - mon of Government money. y Mr eilin ton Parliament, respecta- ble es eat - ble lathier, whose house was near Comecon, shot hit -Melt dead on Sunday morning. Ill- heatth ie aupposed to have unbalanced hie mind. Thotn' McBride of Chatham Nae been found gbilty of oonspiraoy and defrauding the Met politan Life Aesnranoe Company, and Ghptlea Davis has been arrested on a similar .(targe. Mr. B. Pratt of Hamilton has issued a writ or $10,000 against. Mr. J. A. M. Cote of • t. Hyacinthe, Que., for slander, contain d in a letter gent recently by defend: ,to to the plaintiffs. A lieu an etetes t that an control inane shareholder of the Riche Ontario Navigation Company it there was no truth bathe report 'oglieh syndicate was likely to get t the company. A seh;ol teacher, named Whittington, living th his. brother near Moosomin attempt•1 to out off bis head with a car- penter's draw knife, but only partially severed . o nook, and will probably ream-. Thirb Beacon oontinen Chinamen from New York and ok the Canadian Pacific trans - al train at Montreal the other adorning for Vancouver, where. they will take the mpress of China for their native land. A dspetoh from Glasgow says that the warmer weather has caused a thaw, and the Clyde is full of moving ice. Much damage has been done to shipping, and should the ice jam there would be eerioaa doo4e, Two hundred of the new Leo•Metford terbium! have arrived at Ottawa for the purpose of being sorvedout to the Mounted Polite. Thie weapon has been adopted by the British military authorities for. the Im- perial cavalry. The London City Council have accepted the Street Railway Company's offer for an eleottio franohise,inoluding a line to Spring. bank, with' the exception of the Mouses relating to city badges and the working boure of employees, Early en Saturday morning fire broke out on aIle premises of Arthur A, Dloka, upholsterer, 298 St. Helen's avenue, To- ronto, and when the. firemen succeeded in *subduing the flam=e they found the remains of Mrs. Dick, burned almost beyond re- oognttion. In the Montreal Police Courson Thursday William Kelly was charged with impersona- tion et the Civil Service: examination in November last, and John Collins with hay- ing paid him twentyfive dollars for coin. mitbfug the offence. They pleaded guilty, and were fined, Kelly betty dollars, and Collins twenty -Iva dollars, At a meeting of the Ministerial Associ- ation of ssoci-ation'of Hamilton it was stated Ghat Mr. John Crerar'o opinion against the claim that Sunday oars meld be stopped in Hamilton had been declared by Sir -0liver Mowat to be basad on an incorrect inter, pretetion of the law. The Premier of Ontario had so informed a deputation who had waited upon him, and he had further said that even if Mr, Crete:Me opinion were correct he would amend bhe law no that •oars might be prevented from running on Sunday. oltOOT noITAItt. Viae -Admiral Buller, 0.13., has been ap. pointed to the command of the China station, aelieving Viae -Admiral Fremantle. Heron Aberdare, at ono time Imperial Homo Secretary, and later Lord President of the Counoil, is dead. He was seventy- nino years of age. The five hundred miners who were inn prieonod in a pit of the Whitetood•Haigh- anon, colliery by a eollieon of the cages have been reaoued. Prof. John Stuart) Blackie, the well- known Sooteh author and Greek and Latin 'aeholar, died on Saturday morning. He was eightyeix years of age. As a result of the London CountyCouneil election on Saturday the two parties are evenly divided, the Moderates having won man t seats from the Progreeeivea. Another futile meeting Was held at End Oreepwloh on l4ondey evening to protest aggainat the continued Iinprieenmen a of Mrs, Meybriek,who is undergoing a life sentence for poisoning her hdebptid, M. Other Wilde has taken in salon for libel /,gannet the Marquis of Queensberry, ter hieviog left at the Albemarle Club, to whieh Mr, Wilde acrd his wife belong, a oars bearing moat effenalee lmputetione, Sir Seromas liebinaon, Cxdvernor of the Cepa of GOed Hope front 1880 to 1888, bee !on appointed Governor of ORM Town pod Sigh 4otnmieafoper for South Africa, in aueceseiol to Sir henry Brougham Zech, who was recently readied, Lordlosebery and Mr, Balfour, though lmproving, are ,bill confined to their homes with influenza. Henry Irving and hie company returned to the Lyceum theatre on Friday evening, but the Charles Wynd- ham company ore stili unable to perform, Influenza le Weeding with great rapidity throughout England, erfppling railway staff's, loosening the efficiency of banks and other hueinese establishments, and almost making legislation impossible. On Monday evening forty members of Parliament paired on account of the diesaae, MIME* BMWS, • Brooklyn's City Hall wan damaged by fire en Saturday to the extent of $80,000. The imports o£ gold at New York last week amounted to $4,338,7031 exports, $460,000. The steamer Ems brought 2+203,000 gold consigned to August Belmont & CO., on amount of the United Stages bond syndi• mete. President Cleveland hes nominated Mr. William L. Wilson, of We=b Virginia, to succeed Mr. Wilson S. Bisnel! au Post. master -General. George Magee, oolore3, met death on Friday on the ecaffotd'in the gaol yard at Franxfort, Ky.,for the murder of Charles, Thomas, a fellow -convict, Tao Braun Pass bill, giving free trans- port/Olen to members of the Legislature and State officials, hes passed the New York Aeaembly by a large majority. A new wing is to be added to the Buffalo General Hospital, to coat $150,000, and Mrs. George B, Gates has given a donation of $40,000 to the fund for the new build- ing. Mts. CO.' entry was burned to death 'at the Village of Liberty, N. Y., in a fire, tthiah on Tuesday destroyed the home and sawmill of E. A. Van Fredenbnrg, her eon-in•law. The Supreme Court of the Independent Order of Foreetora of Canada began "man- damus proceedings in Chicago to compel the Illinois State lnsuranoeSuperintendent to allo w the society tut to do Mama a in s s Illinois. By the explosion of a cylinder charged with carbolic acid gas in the drug labora- tory of the Smith, Kline & French Co., Philadelphia, Freak Robinson, aged 21, was killed, and Frank Duffy, aged 33 years, was fatally injured, At BuffaloJohn Burch n o A , general agent of the Lake Shore and M, S. road, suddenly reeled and fell dead while doing business in the market. For two yearn, from 1855 to 1857, he was division clerk in the office of the general agentof the Great Western„ in Hamilton. During the past month the importations into Buffalo from Canada hammed largely, as compared with the corresponding month last year. Nearly double the quantity of Canadian barley, cattle, horses, and farm produce, taking advantage of the new tariff, were imported. Two falling -wall accidents occurred in New York on Friday. The rear of the old six -storey malt house, oorner of 43rd street and 10th avenue, fell suddenly, carrying with it and burying in its, ruins over a dozen workmen. Five men were killed and seven injured. A six -storey brick building in course of erection et 158 Allen street collapsed. The wall fell inwarde, burying four workmen in the ruiue. Secretary Morton has issued a statement relative to the meat trade of the United Steles. He says export' American beef is making strides in England, where it is frequently sold as Sootoh or English meat. He asserts that bhe herds of domestic auimala of the United Stotts are inoxcellent sanitary condition, and that there has not been a oath of pleuro -pneumonia in that country during the past three years. The amendment to the general deficiency hill appropriating $423,i1U0 to pay damages to the Canadian atalere under the findings of the Paris Tribunal, was at fleet by the U. S. House of Representatives by a vote of 91 ayes to 813 nays. On the aye and nay tt was rejected, ayes 112 and nays 143; The vote was mainly int party linos, the Republioanaaud Populists oppos. ing it and the Democrats favoring it, 'There are satisfactory indications of slight improvement in trade gem orally throughoub the Southern oleies of the United States, but in the East there is no noticeable change except at Pittsburg,. where more hotivity is felt in iron end steel chiefly. The only en. oouragement in the West is at Louis- ville, Chicago, and St. Paul. Iu the North•Weet there ie no improvement. Agricultural products are somewhat bot - ter. In the leading industries there are not so many people employed as was the ease feet week. Activity be wire, wire rode, and barbed wire continuos. The market for cotton goods is rather more busy, with an improvement in some lines, There has been a more active demand for the better otaet of woolen goods, while the enquiry for inferior breads 10 du31, OENREAL. The Grand' Duke Alexia of Russia died at ban Remo of oonsumpbion. France has decided to prohibit the im, portation of American cattle. It ie reported in Madrid that the distur-. lianooa in Cuba are of a tenons nature. Louise Michel, the French Anarchist, is so seriously ill that leer recovery is doubt. ul, Influenza is epidetnio in Berlin, and the recent mild weather appears to haul favor- ed avor• edits spread. The Paris Mayday Committee has de.. oided to appeal to all Socialists to cease work' on May -day. King Oscar on hie return to Sbookholth on Saturday from Norway was given a most' enthusiastic welcome. Emperor William has conferred upon Emperor Francis Joseph the: reek of Field Marshal General in the German army. President Dale, of the Hawaiian Republic, has commuted to imprisonment the death sentences passed upon the four leading - rebels. A valuable paltiting, representing the Prelim Atheoe, by Battiaelli, dated 1480 has been discovered in the Pitts palate at Florence, La/lung-Chang has beau reeoived three tilnoe in mediate° by the Emperor of China, and. tho Viceroy has aoeepted the peace mission to Japan. M. do Steal, the Russian Ambassador at London, has been Offered the post of Minister of Foreign Affairs in suceeteion to the late M, d0 there. Perla M, Prather, one of the editor, of the Journal des Dobets, wee killed en Friday morning lu a sword duel by M. Imehatelier, an oifioer of marines, Nowa of the iusurreatlou In Cuba hes bean confirmed in Madrid,apd the Spaniett Government Ilea ordered the diepatoh of cloven battoliona of troops to Havana, It is reported in Paris that new oompii- cations have entered into the quarrel be. tweed Prince and princess Colonna, whioh bid fair to prevent any oempromieo, The ambito/It who was oommiseioned to examine the Parthenon and other ancient buildings of Athens declares that most of them are in a dunggeroue eouditiou, owing to recent earthquake shooks, It is reported in Rome that the Pope is about to Issue a condemnation of the Eng - fish $rimose League, the greet Coneeryative party organization, and. will forbid Cetho- lies belong to Ib, It is reported in St, Petersburg that Count Tolstoi, the Russian novelist and social reformer, is the author of the Liberal manifesto recently issued against the Czar's declaration that he will uphold aubocraoy as earnestly as hie late father. In au aodideut on the Ipteroueanio Rail- way,whioh rune between Panama,and Colon actress the Isthmus of Panama, ten care were completely shattered, and sixty-five paeeongere were killed and terribly mutilated. Forty paaeengers were seriously injured, and many of them will die. A TERRIBLE OUTRAGE. Four Robbers Enter the Douse era ger. man Farmer and Demand Ilia Stoney-- He toney— He stud Ilse Wird Tortured Until Ther' Reveal Their Wealth. A deepateh from Toledo, Ohio, says;-- Information of a terrible outrage and robbery reached this city on Monday after- noon. It took plane lateen Saturday night, but owing to the peouiiar circumstances eurroundiug the affair it did not leak out until to -dem. Jacob Shonbriek is a wealthy old German farmer, who levee neer the Michigan line, some forty milesnorth-west of Toledo.- Late on Saturday night four masked men forced an entrance to the housebound and i gagged his wife, his two i R 4g , daughters, and a young son, and then ordered him at the point of a revolver to dlsalose the biding place of hie money. It was generally : known in the own. !nullity that some years before he had loot considerable money by a bank failure, and since that time, he had no oonsdenoe in banking institutions. He refused to _give any, information despite their threats. They then built up a rousing fire in the old- fashioned cook -stove, and, lifting the lids, carried ,him to It, and held hie feet and lege over' the flames until they were awfully burned. He still ro'ueed to tell them the whereabouts of any money. He was again held over the flames, when he endured such sego! pain the men were told to look under bhe carpet in the bedroom where the old couple slept. There they found 31,150 in bills. All the men but one was ready to Ieave, but he insisted there was more money in the house, and he pro - peed to have it. The old man denied the presence of any more in the building, or on the premises. He was again tortured, until he fainted from sheer pain. Then the old lady was treated likewise, but at first, although in terrible suffer- ing, she denied any knowledge of the hiding place of any more money. Again they lifted her over the fire, when she eoreamed that she would tell them if they only would not burn her any more. She was already go badly burned she could not walk when they carried her, under directions to the cellar door, when the pointed out a barrel of meat and told them to move it. Under this nearly $5,000 in coin, mostly gold, was found in a cloth bag. Dropping her on the cold cellar floor they hurriedly fled, The story' leaked out through thetwelve-year-old son,who told te neighbour's led. The old man will natant, and the rumor is that the leader of the gang was a man who is acquainted with the details of a dark oriole in Shoobrick'a history, and that the latter fears to make any efforts towards apprehending the criminals for fear of his own safety. Shonhrlok refuses to disouse the matter, and is said to have punished his son for telling it. The old couple were both terrible burned, says bhe interment, who brought the news to the oily. A BRAVE ACT. A um saves the Lives of Eighteen Young Skaters at Chicago. A despatch from Chicago says :—Eigh- teen young men aud boys had a narrow escape from being oarried out into ' the open lake on an ice floe the other afternoon. They had skated out to the four -mile crib and when they were making the return trip they found that the ice. hod parted and they were being carried out into bhe lake. The erib keeper saw the trouble and at once telephoned to the city for a tug, whieh was instantly started out. Be- fore it was on the river, however, all of the 18 had been rescued by Harry Tagg, a hunter, who was out in a small boat look- ing for ducks, The foe had parted close to the Government pier, which is ,boat one mile from the shore and forma the outer edge of the harbor. Tagg, seeing the ice part, gttichiy brought his boat areund into the open water between the pier aud the floe upon which the man were drifting out. lu ehreo trips he landed them ell is safety ote the pier. Terrible Mining Accident in New Mexico• A epeaial from Cerrillos, N. M., says :-- One of the most Barletta mine accidents to the history of New Mexico took place at White Ash, three miles from here on Wed- nosday afternoon, when an explosion of gas wreoked the coal mine of ,the ,Sante Fe Hallway Company. The entrance Was olcsed and forty men were in the mine. It seems relined impossible that any eau have escaped alive. .Dense smoke 10 Matting from the shaft, indicating that the interior of the mine is burning, Up to two o'clook no ono Nae been reaoued, although the body of ono man, a driver, hail been foun i at the mount of the tunnel. Mora than half of the men employed in the mind. have familia, who are surrounding the eabrattee. Intone° exoitemonb prevail(' here and at White ;Aah. Padereweki will give the permed! of hie concert at Leipzig on the 18th to the fund ororooting a Statue to Li('s0 fit WOlmar 1ANITA HUD'S • THE MOST BRII,LI,p lx EVENT EVE BEEN Jia NEW YOR1i. 'A Beene of htagullloanoe-^000 lUeeora, rlena. Castntnes ante Freeeata A11 Bplendld nod IleautUnt, 8 deepateh from NOV York says :--•Ab high noon on Monday, his Grace Arch- bishop Corrigan officiating, Mise An Goold became the Countess de Castellane and the fortunes of one of Ameriea'e Mabee Mire/tad was linked with these of a French nobleman of auoione name and proud con nostione, The wedding, Which took pleat at the home of George Gould, Fifth avenue and 07th etreet, will be marked with a white steno in the eltronieles of magntflgent society events. The palatial dwelling of the head of the Gould family, with bit spacious room= furnished in oriental view dor, was a fitting plane for thee ceremony, Which could not be held in the Cathedral, owing to the fact that the bride is a Pro- testant, The canons of the Church of Rome prescribe baptism in that faith be- fore solemnizing of the rite of matrimony at the altars of the ohuroh, The bride is an Episcopalian, and while she oonsepted to the Catholic ritual she declined to join that ohuroh. A special dispensation was therefore obtained, and the nuptial mass was omitted from the ceremony, TEM INVITATIONS were accordingly limited to the relatives and about 50 intimate Mende, making Ione than 100 in all, as the house would not aa- oomnodate more. Numbers of melons peo- ple gathered about the residence. The scene within was gorgeous en the extreme. The hallway was banked with palms, terns and potted planta. The Bast India room, in which the ceremony was performed, the mueio room opening out of it, and bhe library upstairs were elaborately decorated, the prevailing to e being pink and white - American beauty and bridal roses, Japan lilies and lilies of the valley were used by thousands. At the rear of the hall palma and exotics were used to transform a reoese "into a rustic grotto, in which electric lights glowed. The heavy oak paneling of the swas covered over staircase with a groundwork of palm, foliage and smilax, white Japan fillies and white roes. Over this garlaude of pink and white roses were draped- From the centre of the dome over the stairway garlands of asparagus plumes, entwined with white roses and fillies of the valley,were hung Iike the ribbons of a May. pole. The ante of these garlands were ex- tended to form a canopy over the bridal walk, which led from the foot of the stairs morose the hall through a doorway into the music room, reaching. the centre of whieh it turned to the right into the East India room, and ended at a raised dais placed at the front of the room,and over which a can- opy of royal purple was suspended. White ribbons attached to potted plants enclosed the walk. The circular alcove formed by the tower at the Fifth avenue corner of the Rest Indio room was ((YY 1 orange bloat/erne were fastened at the hell t7tt and et intervals on tine lave /Mr/Otero of the cae d tk. b W00 orsfagsaouane4 on withits smagnifiirtT1te cent dlatnonridaldyeti R pin, a gift of the groom. The veil itself was brought sty the Castellanes fromabroedi aud is an heirloom of the family., Max ottinkeMAlpa • wore costumes of meant white cloth trim mod with genie, The bodice of those costumes woe made in blouse effect. The sleeves were very full end the Aare akirb of walking length woe trimmed with sable, A broad sash of moire with loops and ends Ann fastened et the back completed the cos. , tome, Madera Kingdon and Jay Gould, t the nephews of the bride, who carried her train, were simply and prettily drmeed, They wore knee breeches of white corded silk, white eilk stookiage, white kid dip- pers with rhinestone buoklee, white liberty natio coats over white silk shirts, with large square out pale pink silk collars, Each wore a pin of diamonds and arae. thyate, the gift of the bridegroom, Among ilia rarest and most costly of the bride's presents was a breath fastened in the shape of a heart 1 in the centre was the rare and world famous Eeterbezy diamond.' Mr. end Mee. Geo. Gould', prevent was a collar of superb pearls. Frank Gould pre - anted a ohain of 200 diamonds, Howard Gould gave a largo knotted cluster of dna. monde. The Marquis de Castellane pre. seated to the bride a superb and unique neeklace, oonsisting of five ropes of pearl!, each string of which has bietorfo interest. Another present by the Marquis de Castel• lane was a ring of two stones, a superb ruby and sapphire. Count Jean de Castel - lane's present was a diamond hat pin of exceeding beauty of design. Priaoe Del Diego presented a diamond horseshoe pin. Gen. and Mrs, Eckerb presented a superb diamond star, One of the finest presents was a magnificent tiara of diamonds presented by Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Gould, A DEgdtl OF FAIRYLAND. It was panelled with lilies of the valley, over which hung garlands of pink and white roses. Suspended from the ceiling of the. alcove was amammothhorn of plentyehow. ering Mlles upon those beneath. An orates tract stringed inetrumeata,00ncealed behind a bank of palms, an organ in the hallway and a gitertette an the mneioal pro- gramme. The guests were all assembled at 11.46 a, in. Mrs. George Jay Gould,aseist. ed by her mother, bits. Kingdon, received 1 thin. Promptly at 12 o'elook all was in ready - nese, Organist Palter of the Cathedral, touched the keys and the strains of the bridal chorus from "Lohengrin" floated through the house. There was a brief delay aa the procession was being formed ie the library on the second floor. Archbishop. Corrigan and two assistants from the Oath edral took their places on the dais. Grouped about in the front of the room wore the relatives of the bride and the Marquis and Margate° de Cattella ne, parents of the groom, Count de Castellane entered from the hallway a moment later with his beat man,CountJean de Castellane. They took positions at the side of the dais. The bridal prooeasion ascended the stairs and passed along the floral walk through the mueio roost and into the East India room in the following ,order:—h'trat eamethe ushers, Prince Dal Drago,RaoubDuval, Brockhurat Cutting and Howard Gould. Then came the bridesmaids, all in white. They were Miss Nolen Gould, Miss Beatrice Richardson, Mies Catherine Cameron and bliss Adelaide Montgomery. Following them were George Jay Gould with the bride. The two nephews of the bride, Mestere Kingdon and Jean Gould, carried the bride's train,whioh was of great length. Tne ushers parted when they reached the dais and stopped book, the bridesmaids took positions in front of them and Mr. Gould and the bride walked between the two lines until the groom stepped forward and took hie place at the aide of the bride. Mr. Gould remained cloth at hand and MAYA HIS SISTER AWAY. The Archbishop reed the brief Catholic ritual, the bride and groom !nada the re- aponoes promptly in hem tones, the quar- tette chanted au anthem, hie Grace pro. roomed the couple man and wife and gave them his benediction. Then the Count aud hie bride stepped across to the room to the alcove in the corner, where they stood be. math the shower of liliesof the melon. and the horn of plenty and received the coin gratulatione of their relatives and friends. When this was over the doors of the dining room swung open and small tables were placed he the mueio room and the East Indus room aud breakfast was served. 1 he orchestra and singers rendered several selections while the breakfast was in pro- greae. Then the guests wore taken up to the library in parties of a dozen at a time, and the presents,, whioh had boon arranged on, a number of small tables, were shown. The bride, who is small and clerk, with jet Meek hait, wore a gown of heavy ivory white satin, high in the nook, and euppllad in oiled with one side of shirred satin and the other in real old thread lace in Duchess pattern, falling over the right shoulder and meeting the folded belt on the left side, The sleeves were very full et the shoulder and fastoned at the wel=t with four small eetin buttons. The skirt wan otrouiar in shape and felting in deep fade front the belt. The train formed a double box plait at the waist line and flared with graceful folds, it meas. tired three yard/ in length. Clusters of For Twenty -Five Years DUNN'S BAKINO POW THECOOKt S BEST FRIEND LARGEST SALE IN CANADA, ood'si Cure After Others Failed ier'1ttblm In the fleck- +tlnehes Ass! Gane liow, Sangervilie, Maine. '0, I. Boos & 0o., Lowell, Mao: eeentlemen —I feel that Icannot saymoug'd, a favor of Hood's Sarsaparilla. For aye years 1 have been troubled with scrofula iu my nock end throat, Several kinds of medicines which t tried did not do me any good, and when I corp, lamed to take Hood's. Sarsaparilia there were. terga bunches on my neck so sore that I could t I ood'sts Cures not bear the slightest touch. When I had taken dna bottle of this medicine, the soreness had gone, and before I had tabbed the second the Mulches had entirely disappeared." BLANCU ATWOOD, Ssngerville, Maine. N.13. It you decide to take Mood's Sarsap& rl0a do not he induced to buy any other. Hood's pills cure constipation by restate IllEthe peristaltic autism of thealtemec aweams OMNI. 4111.11.,...M.1•0411111111 Human Nature In Sharks, Observing Shark -Thera goes a man over- board Philanthropic Shsrk—Poor. fallow 1 We'll have to est him, or he'll drown. AMIE YIELDS AOTHER SECRET It has often been contended by eh,ysiologists and men of science gen- daily, that nervous energy or nerv- ous impulses which pass along the nerve fibres, were only other names for electricity. This seemingly plaus- ible statement was accepted for a time, but has been completely aban- doned since it has been proved that the nerves are not good conductors of eleotricity, and that the velocity of a nervous impulse is but 100 feet per second•---whioh is very much slower than that of electricity, It is now generally agreed that nervous energy, or what we ort, pleased to call nerve fluid, is a wondrous, a mysterious force, in which dwells life itself. A very eminent specialist, who has studied profoundly the workings of the nervous system for the last twenty•five years, has Iately_demon- /trated that two-thirds of all our ailments and chronic diseases are due to deranged nerve centres within or at the base of the brain. A11 know that an injury to the spinal cord will pause paralysis to the body below the injured point. The reason for ,this is, that the nerve force is prevented by the injury from reaching the paralyzed portion,. Again, when food is taken into the stomach, it comps in oemtact 1st% numberless nerve fibres in the walls of this organ, which at once send a nervous impulse to the nerve centres whioh oontrol the stomach, notifying them of the presence of food; where- tipon the nerve centres send down a supply of nerve force or nerve fluid, to at once begin the operation of digestion. But let the norve centres which control the stomach be do - ranged and they will not be able to respond with a sufficient supply of nerve force, to properly digest the food, and, as a result, indigestion and dyspepsia make their appearance. So it is with the other organs of the body, if the nerve centres which con- trol them and supply them with nerve force beoonxe deranged, they are also deranged. The wonderful suecese of the remedy known as the Great South American Nervine Tonic is due to the fact that it is prepared by one of the most eminent physicians and specialists of the age, and is based. on the foregoing scientific discovery. It possesses marvellous powers for the core of Nervousness, Nervou=s Prostration, Headache, Sleepleeenessp Restlessness, St.Vitus's Dance, Men.. tai Despondency, Hysteria, Heart, Disease, Nervousness of P=males, Hot Flashes, Sielt Headache. It ,a also en absolute speoifla fee sit stomach troubles, A, DRAD1[AN Wholesale and 1 etail Agent for Bromide