HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1895-3-22, Page 72
THE WEEK'S NEWS
oAlrnpA,
The entire medical staff of the Ottawa
General Hospital has resigned.
A largo shipmentuf Manitoba butter waa
made on Monday to England,
The total of the Toronto Board of Works
estimates for the year is $1,448,054.
Ottawa proposes to spend forty-five
thousand dollars to improve int are protoo•
tion.
Mr, John Crowe has presented the
•Gnolph General Hospital with an operating
table.
Tho estimated expenditure of the Hamil.
ton Police Commissioners this year is
$40,000.
Shortie, the Valleyfield murderer, war
taken to Montreal on Saturday, and lodged
an gaol there.
The Irinango Committee of the City noun
' ell of Hamilton have struck the rate of
-taxation at 19i. milla.
Tho Montreal Heokey Club defeated
Queen's University five goals to one in Sat-
urday agsmo for the Stanley Cup.
t the nowSault Ste.
It is expected that
Marie canal will be open about a week after
the commencement of navigation.
J. G, Gaudaur of Orillia, champion of
A4nerioa,oilers to row any man in the
world for $2,500 a side over any course in
America.
Simeon Gagneau was instantly killed by
the breaking ofa large circular naw which
he was attending in Sheatl'a mill in Dover
Township.
The fourteenth annual meeting of -the
Canadian Poaifia railway will• be held on
the 3rd of April in the oompsny'a head
office in Montreal.
Controller Wallace has decided that
electricity comes under the head of union;
umerated articles, and must pay a duty of
twenty per cent.
Mr, John D. Ronald, of Brussels, was ac-
quitted of the charges of attempting to
bribe members of the tweed Connell at the
Belleville Assizes.
Luella Laney, the young girl ,oharged
with poisoning a child of Mrs. Pearson's of
North Grimsby, was acquitted at the As-
sizes in St. Catharines.
The city of Winnipeg and the M anitoba
Government propose spending $200,000 in
making the Red river navigable from. Lake
Winnipeg to the city.
The thermometer at MacLeod, N. W. T.,
, on Friday was above ninety degrees' in the
ann. There is no anew whatever there,and
the rivers have been open for ten days.
Mr. Fred Charles, aged 40, a married
firmer, living one mile north of Burford,
was engaged in drawing and cutting timber
in bhe bush on Saturday, when a tree foll
and killed him.
The Londonderry Iron Company's blast
furnace was lighted at Londonderry, N. S.,
on Thursday. The stooks of ore, fuel, and
limestone on hand and eoatraoted for are
sufficient for twelve months' work.
The Rev. J. W. Annie, pastor of the
Queen'a avenue Methodist church, London,
• Ont., died, on Thursday front brain disease,
Ly which he was stricken down about two
weeks ago. He was 45 years of age.
A bill will bo introduced into the Ont-
arioLegielature during the present mission
which will eo amend the Aot governing
the AgricultureandArtsAssociation as to
practically abolish that institution.
Neil Heath, B. A. lute vice•principal of
the$; h school, Vittoria, B. C., who was
suspended for six months for using language
disrespectful to the Catholic doctrine of
trans -substantiation, has committed "sui-
cide.
John Stone. rho Grand Trunk conductor
who was arrested some months ago on a
charge of defrauding the Grand Trunk
railway, and against whom °. true bill was
returned, has sold his property and run
away.
Mr. Footer, the Finance M mister, received
on Friday a cheque for five tnoueand dol.
lars from Sir Donald Smith, to be applied
to the Thompson memorial fund. This
brings the amount of the fund up to thirty-
one thousand dollars.
11 is likely that the venue in the Valley
field murder will be .changed from Beau-
harnoie to Montreal, which will be more
convenient for all parties concerned in the
trial, and Montreal goal will be safer for
the prisoner than Beauharnoie.
Walter Kelly, the man who assaulted
Station Agent Smith of the C. Y. R. at
Sutton Junction, is under arrest at Sweets,
burg. He told the whole story how he
^ was hired to do the job by saloonkeepers.
Kelly has waived extradition.
Thos. Brown, 69 yeas • of age, who was
arresbe 1 at Montreal on Nov. 16th last far
assaulting his daughter, committed suicide
at the gaol by nutting his throat with a
razor. The prisoner had been in gaol five
times before on various charges.
In view of the refusal of the United
States Congress to vote the indemnity to
the sealers agreed upon, the Dominion
Government is now urging the Home au-
thorities to deoline to assent to the en-
forcement of tate seal regulations during
the present year.
Mr. William C. Carmichael, whose mo-
ther lives in Markham, was returning with
the bankers' hockey team from Woodstock
to London. He stepped off the, moving
train when approaching the city, aid was
found with hia skull fractured on the track.
He died on Sunday. afternoon.
An order-in.Council has been passed
declaring that booms consisting of sticks
and ohaina, when ,imported into Canada
from the United States for the purpose of
confining or towing to the United States
logs or timber of Canadian growth, are to
be free from duty as long as Canadian
boom are admitted into the United States
duty free,
With regard to the charge that the Grand
Trunk railway, by paying a high commis-
eion on all prepaid passengere.routed by
way of Montreal, is attracting transatlantic
business to Montreal, to the detriment of
New York and the steamship companies
whose veeaela'tail into that port, Mr. Sear-
geant, the general manager of the Grand
Trunk, says there, is not the slightest griev-
anae as a matter of fact, and that their
action has been upheld by all their col.
ounce in the,association.
fn1LIT BRITAIN.
H. M. S. Nympha has been ordered to
Honolulu.
Mr. Henry Asquith, the Imperial Home
Secretary, B is solderin from influenza.
Severe weather hn0,returned to Great
Britain and the northern part of the Con.
tinent.
Sir Henry Rawlineon, at one time pro'
oident of the Royal Geographical Society
le dead,
On Saturday therNarquis of Queensberry
weal anminitted for trial en a (Marge of hay,
lug libelled Mr. Oioar Wilde,
Great Britain expeote to be able to with.
draw a battalion of British troops from
Egypt during the prosect year,
Seven miners were killed on Wednesday
morning while deeoending the shaft of the
Mail -peach lead mine, near Shrewsbury,
ahcapshlre.
Sir William Soovell Savory, V. R. 8,,
Sargeon.Extraordinary to the Queen, and
late president of the Royal College of
Surgeons, is dead.
Sir Joaepb Dodge Wooton, Liberal mem-
ber of Parliament for Peat Bristol, is dead.
Ho had been suffering from influenza for
some time past.
Mr. Geo. W, Smalley, the well.known
London correspondent of the New York
Tribune, has been appointed American
correspondent of the London Times,
A plsgterer named Taylor, living at
Lower Tooting, near, London, out the
throats of his wife and six children on
Thursday morning, and then took his own
life.
The British navy estimates for the
ensuing year are £18,701,000, being E1,.
334,000 more than the estimates . for 1894.
A number of new vessels will be eon•
;directed.
Up to this timetine hundred thousand
dollarshae•been promised in response to
the appeal for five hundred thousand
dollars for the deooration of 81. Faure
cathedral, London.,
The North -German Lloyd Steamship
Company will begin a fornightly service
with feet steamers in A1fril, between Que.
bee and Montreal and Manchester, by way
o: the Manchester ship canal.
The Imperial Colonial Office says the
report that Major•Gen. Herbert, command-
er of the Canadian militia, was about to
resign in consequence rot disagreements
with. the Dominion Government is untrue.
The deficit in the Imperial Postal Tele.
graph Department for the current year, is
estimated to be 32,700,000, oran increase
of. 3300,000, although the gross receipts
from telegrams are expected to chow an
increase of 3450,000.
There has been a heavy fall in British
imports from Canada. During the month
of February, aseompared with the corres-
ponding month lash year, they daolined
from i49,457 to £25,266, and for the two
months of this year there 15 a deoline from
£222,506 to £103,393,
The Bankruptoy Court at London deoided
that many of the liabilities of the firm of
Wynne & Son, solicitors, whose failure for
from £300,000 to £400,000 was 'announced
on Tuesday, are breaches -of Must. Accord
ing to the court's deoision, an inquiry into
the transactions of the firm willbe neaes-
eary, and criminal proceedings will follow.
In the British House of Commons Sir
Edward Grey; replying to Sir Richard
Webster and Sir George Baden-Powell,said
that when the Congress at Washington re-
fused to make an appropriation to settle
the Canadian olaims for Behring Sea seizures
and thereby rejected the decision of the.
arbitration agreed to by the representatives
at Paris, the Imperial Government instruct=
ed the British Ambassador at Washington
to urge a resumption of negotiations.
Secretary Gresham stated that he was quite
prepared to resume, and the convention
when signed would be submitted to Con-
gress for confirmation, but unless an extra
session was called nothing oould be done
until December. The President and Secre-
tary Gresham expressed great regret al the
delay. ,
'UNITED STATES.
The Gerry Whipping-postbill was passed
unanimously oq Thursday by the New York
Senate.
It is expected that the medals and diplo
Inas of the World's Columbian Exhibition
will be lamed about May or .June next.
Judge Barrett, of New York, has granted
an absolute divorce to Alva E. (Mrs. Will-
iam K.) Vanderbilt, giving her the custody
of the children.
Some of the Pittsburg coal mine owners
have yielded to the demand of the men for
sixty-nine aeots a ton, and four thousand
miners have returned to work.
The fifty-third United States Congress
adjourned on Monday at noon, without
passing the bill providing money for the
payment of the Behring Sea awards.
As the United States Congress has de -
Mined to pay the Behring Sea damages it
is proposed that the restrictions placed
upon the sealers be not observed next
year.
Mr. E. J. Ralph, contracting freight
agent for the Buffalo, Rochester & Pitts-
burg Railroad. was found dead in his room
at the Tower Hotel, Niagara Falls. Death
was due to apoplexy.
George J. Gould says `the statement
that Count de Castellani) ever received a
Denny from the Gould family IS a taleehood
from beginning to end. That he ever made
such a proposition is equally untrue.
The case of Harry Hayward, charged
with the murder of Catharine Ging, of
vlinneapolia, Minn., came to a oonolusion
on Friday afternoon, The jury brought in
a. verdiot of guilty of murder in the first
degree.
The steamer Longfellow,starting from
Cincinnati to New Orleans with a hun-
dred people ou board, struck the channel
pier of the ,Chesapeake & Ohio bridge.
The vessel went to pieces and eight lives
were lost.
It is stated in Washington that asyndi-
oats of Atnerioan capitalists are invoking
the assistance of Russia, France, Japan,
and Hawaii in laying a cable front the
United States to Hawaii. This syndicate
will endeavor to block the Vancouver
cable.
It is understood that the Washington
authorities have removed the restriadon
planed two years ago upon the transports, -
Mon of Canadian cattle aurone United
States territory to Portland. The cattle
an now be carried to the seaboard after
inspeotion at Montreal.
The five.storey flat house, No. 370 Col.
embus avenue, New York, was burned on
Tuesday. All the tenants escaped,- with
the exception of one helpless old woman,
Mrs. Kennety, 60 years of age, who was
forgotten in the excitement, and after the
flames had been extinguished was found
burned to death.
Commeroial advices from the United
States are of more encouraging nature
tkie week. The improvement is due some-
what to better weather, bubapparently
more to the adjournment of Congress.
There has been an increased demand for
lumber and building materials generally,
Including larger orders for structural abeel
and iron. In the South cotton factor-
ies are more active, . and ataplo dry
goods are in improved .demand. Foreign
woollen goods aro attracting nlwro attention
and oompobing with American goods of
TEF;
T7 SOW,
ailnilur grade, The London wool mar,
het is obrongor. Timmer pig leen is
uoollanged, and lumber is aavanoing,
'1'he industrial situation does not improve,
and sti Ikea at Pittsburg are adding to the
induatrii4 depression, thue oecreaeing rho
spending power of the people. Amerleap
stocks are generally weak in the Loadou
market.
Tho French President is sa0'oring front
influenza.
Leopold Ritter von Saohor.Maeooh, the
well-known German novelieb, is dead..
The Egyptian Council of State has de.
aided to extend the railway to Asaouan,
Tho Fromm have seized the Island of
Noasivey, on the aouth•weat coast of the
Ialand of Madagascar.
Emperor William will open the ap.
preaching States Council in person, and
will attend many of its meetings.
The Prince of Wales' Britannia was
detested in the Cannes regatta on Thursday
by the new Scotch outter Ailea,
The difficulty between Franco and San
Domingo has been tattled through the
good offices of the Spanish Minister.
A Russian Imperial decree bas been
issued aboliehmg the use of the knout for
oftencee committed by the peasantry..
In order to avoid the spectacle of the
Reichstag holding aloof front'the celebra•
tion of Prince Riemarck'a eightieth birthday
on April lot, the Easter recess will begin
on March 30.
Consul -General Penfield, stationed at
Cairo, Egypt, in a report to the United
States Department of State, shows that
during the year3,352 vessels passed through
the Suez Canal, a increase of ten over the
preceding year.
RIOTOUS GIRLS.
Juvenile Offenders Overpower the Outran
and Her Assistants—The Pollee Had to
be Called In -Tie Girls Complain of
Cruel Treatment ,
A despatch from Chicago says :—A riot
broke out in the Illinois State Home for
Juvenilis Female Offenders, at 3,114 In-
diana avenue, on Sunday night. Thirty
four girls, ranging in years from ten to
eighteen, rose in rebellion against the
matron,Mrs. A. M. Dayton. Mrs. Dayton
and her assistants were powerless to con-
trol their charges, and were assaulted, and
compelled to look themselves in rooms to
escape their assailants while the girls went
through the house breaking furniture nd
windows and smashing crockery and every-
thing they could lay their hands on. The
police were summoned, and restored
order, which was no easy matter, as
the ringleaders fought desperately.
Four of the girls supposed to be
ringleaders, were arrested. The trouble
arose because of punishment given by the
matron to Mamie Davis, sixteen years old,
who is said by the attendants at the home
to be hard to manage. According to the
girls, however, the punishment metedout
to the Davis girl served only as a pretext
for an uprislug, which had been brewing
for some time, and was due to great die.
satisfaction among the girls over their
treatment in general, and particularly be.
cause of a system of punishment which
included imprisonment in a dark room ten
by twelve feetin size, the culprit being
chaiued to the floor with a heavy chain,
and also a system of dieting in which the
'offender was half starved.
The girl inmates of the State Home for
Juvenile Offenders were again in revolt
on Monday. The police were forced to
interfere, and the inmates were taken to
the nearest station. They claim they have
been treated so rigorously by the manes;•
era of the institution that they could not
stand it. The girls declared that they
would have no more of the present modes
of punishment, and as a declaration of
independence shrieked defiance at the
matrons, rattled the bars of their win-
dows, and screamed at the passers-by.
Large crowds gathered iu the streets and
about the building, and six of the girls.
were taken to a police station.
CANADA AND THE CAPE.
The Commercial Treaty ltotweeu Canada
and Cape Colony—communis by the
Laudon Antes.
Adespatch from London says:—Referring
to the commercial treaty between Canada
and Cape Colony,the Times denies that her
treaty with France compels Canada to give
the same terms to French as to Cape Colony
wines. The French treaty only stipulated
that no more favourable terms
should be extended to any third power
than were extended to France. South
Africa is part of the Empire, and is in no
manse a third power. Until the clauses of
the Belgian and German treaties for-
bidding the British colonies to give
b tier terms to Great Britain than to
Belgium and Germany are abrogated,
Canada is obliged to enforce against Great
Britain every duty she imposes on American
goods. So Africa is at present only a Brit•
ieh possession with which a free trade treaty
min be negotiated. The fact that a treaty
is being discussed is proof of the closer
sympathies and sound economic) sense of
the powers ruling both colonies,
VALUELESS MINES.
Hundreds si Millions Wasted In Michigan
and wlsconsta Iron Mines,
A special despatch to a Chicago morning
paper from Milwaukee, Wis., says —All
the mining property of the Menominee and
Marquette ranges and the bonds of lehpem
ing, Ironwood, Negaunee, Iron Mountain,
Bessemer, Norway, Crystal Falls, Miohi.
gan ; Florence and Hurley, Wisconsin ;
and all of the towns on the range,, which
depend on the Iron industry, are valueless
it what Mr. Solomon Curry says is cornet.
Mr. Curry eays that there oanhot be any
profitable mining on the Menominee or
Marquette ranges for many centuries,'and
the hundred millions of dollars and over
which have been invested in those proper.
ties aro practically wasted. This astound.
ing statement, Mr. Curry says, is true,
and the English and eastern investors who:
;:ave peered their mousy into these mining
ventures, and even the Rookefller eyndt.
ease, have pouted it tato a rat•hole from
which they will never recover it. Mr.
Curry who is the president of the Met.
ropolitan Iron .and Land Company, the
largest prodnoer in the world, is one of the
bosh informed iron mining men in the
country.
BRITISH TRADE IIIRRQYINIl.
A!Iuttal Meeting or ,the As000la4ed Chani^
here ei Colnineriee—'1'140 February Trade
Hetnrtts fiery Encouraging,
A deepatoh from London .eats;' -Tho
annual meeting of the Aesooiatod Chambers
of Comineroe was held on Tuesday. In hie
oponing opoeols Sir Albert KayoJ'tollit, the
President of the Chambers, reviewed the
condition of trade, and said that the iodi•
cations gave reason for the hope of an early
improvement, The February returns were
encouraging in the increasing shipmonte of
textiles, oto., eape1lally to America, allow-
ing that the modi0oetion of the American
tacit"' was producing its effect. The‘faot
that emigration was at minimum was also
a good sign. There wore, however, dark
clouds, and the very silver lining of that
cloud overshadowing both the West and
the East—America, India,China,and 'Taman
—was most ominous. Still, eilvor kings
and silver rings might rue, and, the
Eastern war ceasing trade must coma,
since all wars drew a clop downward curve
on trade atatistios.
The Right Hon. Sir John Hibbert,Finan•
oral Seoretary to the Treasury, followed
Sir Albert. He said that the revenue
returoa exceeded expectations, and if they
Continued as now the Government would
probably have a surplus of £500,000^
A resolution inviting the attention of the
Government to the dieastrcus operation of
hostile tar.ffs was rejected.
Mr. K, B. Murray, Seoretary of the
London Chamber of Commerce, in the
absence of the Right Hon. Sir John Lub
book, president of that body, made a
motion in favor of the Government nage.
tinting an arbitration treaty with the
United Sttdes. The value of ouch a treaty,
he !aid, had been signally proved by the
Alabama and Behring Sea oases.
The Hon. Sir Henry Stafford Northcote,
M. P,, who was a member of the apeoial
mission to arrange the treaty of Washing
ton in 1871, seconded the mobion, but said
he considered that no approval of the
Behring Sea arbitration ought to be reoord-
ed since the American Congress Siad oom-
mitted a breach of faith in connection
therewith.
ARIIIENIAN ATROCITIES.
The Turkish Cnao Before the Commiselon
has ttreken flown-Tnrcats of Venge
ansa on. the Christians — Young Girls
14latribuied as Booty.
A despatch from London says :—The
Armenian correspondent of the Telegraph
declares that•already the Turkish Daae
before the commission appointed to inves-
tigate .the Armenian outrages has com-
pletely -broken down. The only matter
not yet cleared up is the question
of who ie to be regarded as re-
apousibls for the massacre. The fanat-
icism of the Mohammedans is being arous-
ed and threats of a massaore of Christians
directly the delegates have retired are
heard in Kharpoot, Van, Bitlie,
Mooch and Erzeroum. These threats
have already been - partially exe-
cuted. Many inoffensive Armenians have
been wantonly attacked and beaten, and
even killed, while relatives were afraid to
speak lest a worse fate befall them. In
the village of Tscliifiik a few days ago the
Turks organized a mock representation of
Ohrisb riding upon an ass. The Armenian
chest in the village had the greatest diffi-
culty in preventing a riot. One corres-
pondent declares that he knows of nearly
fifty girls of Sasaoceu who were abducted
and distributed as booty among Turkish
soldiers and offisera. Toe greatest Dare is
taken to conceal the preasnt whereabouts
of the viotims,
Shot Dead by His 11 -year-old Daugh-
ter.
A despatch from Charlestown, W. Va.,
says :—Cordelia Hill, a colored child 11
years old,living with her parents near Rip•
pon, shot and instantly killed Iter father,
Robert Hlll,about 9 o'olook on Monday
morning. The father was chastising one
of his sons, who tore away front his grasp
and ran to the mother for protection. The
father then assaulted and beat the mother.
Cornelia, who was absent at the oommenae•
ment of the trouble, returned, and Hill
ceased beating his wife. In a short time
Hill we t in the kitchen, where hie wife
had gone, and began to beat her again,
throwing her to the floor and choking her.
The daughter ran in with a revolver and
placed it near the book of her bather's head
and fired. The ball pierced the base of the
brain and death was instantaneous. The
child was arrested and taken•before Justice
Hefiebower, Who committed her at once to
the Grand Jury, which was in session, and
an indictment for murder was toundagainat
her within a few hours after the homi-
cide.
Gold Mining at Sudbury.
A despatch from Sudbury, says :— It is
understood- here that the Creighton Gold
Mtning'Comeauy are about to start active
operations again on their property some
twenty miles west of here. After the mine
closed down an expert mining engineer
advised exploring with a diamond drill
some 400 yards wear of the ARIL, and at a
depth of about 200 feet a vela of quartz
was struck indicating a total width of ever
twenty feet and allowing several very
rich specimens of free gold. It is under-
stood that a meeting of the directors bee
been held at Ottawa and aotioo taken to
prove conclusively the extent of the oto
body. Gold comma has been inactive in
this locality reoeotly,and itis thought that
this discovery will arouse interest` among
owners of properties in the Vermillion
River valley, as it thought that tiresome
vein which runs through the Creighton
property extends throughout the whole
Valley, •
Diamond Thief Arrested.
A desp itch from Chicago says :—Opera
time of a local detective agency on Saturday
night arrested Nellie Wilson, alias White,
alias Winters,eliae Sheehan, who is wanted
in Boston for the alleged theft of 33,000
worth of diamonds, Nellie Wilson lived in
the house of Ars, Amite Libby, No^ 1,044
Washington meat, Boston, and is accused
of running away with the jewellery and a
sealskin *segue, valued at $200. When
tweeted she admitted tine theft anti agreed
to return w,thnut papers. She mid she had
pawned the diamonds in Montreal. She
told the officer who arrested her that she
was arrested on the same charge in Buffalo
but managed to convince the officer he had
got the Wrong woman.
RIQTINc AT NEW QRLEANS,
4effene*v4 Negro** Shot Ponta ludo Onus
en the $treels.-TAB 1'ureer ora 1trOtlal4
'resat! wounded.,
A despatch from Now Orisons sato:- •
Another bloady riot occurred along tto levee
on Tuesday morning. The 8090e of the
oonfliot wan on the river from between St,
Ann and Dnmtiine streets. Fear men were
killed outright while anumber were wonud.
ed, The killing was doue by a number of
white men, number about 200, who were
armed, with pistols and Winchesters. Tho
nogroes were about to begin work ea the
steamer Engineer, lying at that point,wheu
the white men approached from all dime
tions. All were prated and many took poi..
tions behind box oars and ptured volley
upon volley into the .negroee. The
negroea were given no quarter and were
shot down like doge, several innocent per.
eons also euf%ring. Among those killed
was Jules Cline Cambia, a shoemaker, who
happened to be in the vioiuity. James
Bane, the purser of the Engineer, was
standing on the levee near his ship when
the attaok was made, and he received
four wounds, three in the head and another
in the arm, hie was fired upon by several
men, who aimed over the heads of three
policemen who were kneeling behind some
freight just on the edge of the *hart
His wounds may prove fatal. As near as
San be stated the shooting ooeuvred a few
minutes after 7 o'clock thus morning.
There was a dense fog prevailing and this
'Worded the whitse an excellent nuance to
do their bloody work: No arrests were
made.,
Lord Randolph Churchill left an estat e
of about £76,000. •
For Twenty -Five Years
DUNN'S
BAKING
POWDER
THE COOK'S BESTFRiEND
LARGEST SALE 114 CANADA.
7:
11Ir. ,T. Tir, Dpkesnaw
St, George, New Brunswick.
After the Grip
No Strength,, No Ambition
Hood's Sarsaparilla Cave Perfect
Health.
The following letter is from a well-known
merchant tailor of St. George, N. B.:
"0, h Hood & Gm, Lowell, Mass.:
"Gentlemen --I am glad-. to say that Hood'(
SarsaparillaandHood!s Pills have done meIt
great deal of good. I had a severe attack of
the grip in the winter, and after getting over the
fever I did not seem to gather strength, and had
no ambition. Hood's Sarsaparilla proved to Mt
just what I needed. The results were very
satisfactory, and I recommend this medicine tt
all who are afleted with rheumatism or pother
$p Yilta C blA es
Hoods
afflictions caused by poison and poor blood. 1
always keep Hood's Sarsaparilla In my hour(
and use it when I need a tonic, We also keel
Hood's Pills on hand and think highly of them.
J. W. DYxEtcAw, St. George, New Brunswick. •
Hood's Pills are purely vegetable, anddt
not purge, nam er gripe. Sold by all druggists
A Lacli: of Excitement.
Ethel—She would have married him were
it not for one thing.
Marie—What was that?
Ethel—He had no bad habits for her to
break him of.
Aries 4
l
the
11
The latest discovery in the soienti•
fie world is that nerve centres located
in or near the base of the brain eon-
trol all the organs of the body, and
when these nerve centres are
deranged the organs which they
supply with nerve fluid, or nerve
force, are also deranged. When it
is remembered thtru a serious injury
to the spinal cord will cause paralysis
of the body below the injured point,
because the nerve force is prevented
by the injury from reaching the para-
lyzed portion, it will be understood
how the derangement of the nerve
centres will cause the derangement
of the various organs which they
supply with nerve force; that is,'t hen
a nerve centre is deranged or in any
way diseased it is impossible for 11
to supply the same quantity of nerve
force as when in a healthful condi-
tion ; hence the organs which depend
upon it for nerve force suffer, and are
unable to properly perform their
work, and as a result disease makes
its appearance.
At least two-thirds of our chronic
diseases and ailments are due to the
imperfect action of the nerve centres
at the base of the brain, and not from
a derangement primarily originating
in the organ itself. The great mis-
take of physicians in treating these
diseases is that they treat the organs
A. »FAb'IUAN "Wholesale
and not the nerve centres, which aro
the cause of the trouble.
The wonderful cures wrought by
the Great South American Nervine
Tonin aro due alone to the fact that
this remedy. is based upon the fore-
going principle. It aures by rebuild-
ing and strengthening the nerve
centres, and thereby increasing the
supply of nerve force or nervous
energy.
This remedy has been found of
infinite value for the cure of Nervous-
ness, Nervous Prostration, Nervous
Paroxysms, Sleeplessness, Forgetful-
ness,llental Despondency, Nervous-
ness of Females, Hot Flashes, Siok
Headache, Heart Disease. The first
bottle will convince anyone that a
cure is certain.
South American Nervine is with-
out doubt the greatest remedy ever
discovered for the cure of Indigestion,
Dyspepsia, and all Chronic Stomach
Troubles, because it acts through the
nerves. It gives relief in one day.
and absolutely effects a permanent
cure in every instance. Do nob
allow your prejudices, or the prejn•
dines of others, to keep you, from
using this health -giving remedy. It
is based on the result of years of
scientific research and study.- A
single bottle will convince the most
incredulous.
flu(; Itotitil Agent far Brussels