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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1895-7-19, Page 91111 NEWS IN A N1JT NEEL THE VERY LATEST FROI( ALL OVER THE WORLD. intiresiing moms About our Own (?000. ley, grout Britain, Oho Ballet! States, end All Parte of the globe, Condeneete and A000rted for Cosy Read*ug. OArrADp. Mr. Joseph Hooding of Hamilton, id dead. Fears are expreseed at Hamilton that the bay ie drying up. The 0. P. R. land department eold 330,, 000 worth of land in June. Master John Gleason, seven yore old, we drowned ab Brookvine. Mr, David Jaokeon of Hamilton, Dom- witted suicide by taking prussrb'aced. Hemtlton dry goods merobant8 aro die• cussing early closing on Saturdaye. Mr. L. W. Shannon has sold The King, Ston News to Masers. Oram and Moore, James Neaten, the young man shot b� hetolkeeper Wall at Hamilton, is recover - The shortage in 'London's water supply hoe been overcome by the new springs taken in. The annual games of the Hamilton Police Amateur Athletic Association will be held on August 28. Two homing pigeons made the flight from Montreal to Toronto, 333 miles, in 8 hours 17i, minutes: Hon. W. B. Ives is suffering from weak • eyes, and may ha' a to retire from the Cabinet on that account. Mira Falkiner has left Belleville to as.. mine the position of ladysuperintendent of the haspital at Woodstock. The American tug Grace, seized' over a year ago, and now at Port Colborne, has • been abandoned by her owners. Mr. Claus Spreckels, the great sugar refiner is reported to be about starting a beet sugar enterpriseat Edmonton. Abbe Dually, Vicar of Acton, Que., had a desperate encounter with burg - tare, who left him senseless on the floor. John Miller, a young man from Toronto, was probably' drowned in Burlington Bay. A boat hired by him came ashore empty. One hundred and sixty union cigar - makers employed by Messrs. 3. .Davis and Son, in Montreal, have gone' out on strike. The new directory of Montreal, which is just out, shows that there are at present three thousand unoccupied houses in the city. • A Winnipeg despatch states that Mr. John Hallam of Toronto has purchased nearly the entire wool crop of the Nortb Weat reaches.. The report of the Montreal Fire Com reiooioners allows tnat the losses by fire. during the past eix months in that city' amounted to 3159,458. The number of sheep inspected for, ebipment at Montreal to the end of June - was 18,720, ot neat cattle 29,830, of horses 4,440, and of ewine128. Mr. Francis Boyde, 70 years old, of. London Township, was knocked down and very: oariously hurt in collision with a Loudon West electric car. The gross earnings of the Montreal street' railway for the month of June were 3111, 184.32, against $88,163.25, for June, 1894, an increase of 323,021.07. John and lieeeie Gray, charged with the murder of Junes 'Scollie of ,Otonabee, arrived in Peterborough on Friday from: Floride.in charge of Detective Murray. The Sir John Macdonald statue for Kingston, Ont., is finished and ready for. ehippmene. The ceremony of unveiling' 'will probably take place on Labour day. It ie announced that the American To. bacon Company has acquired control of the cigarette business of Canada by the pnrohaee of all the Dominion manufactor- ies. ,.. Mr. Walker and a young lady of Dundee were driving across the Northern .i; North. western R.lg.. when a train killed the horse and smashed the buggy. The occupants. were not. hurt, Dr. Montague, Secretary of State, has reduced his staff by five or six, saving seven or eight thousand chillers a year, without, he claims, lessening the efficiency of the department. Napoleon Demers, the husband of lie• lame Masse, who was murdered at St. Henri, a suburb of Montreal, last month, was arrested on Friday on the charge of having oommitted the murder. The Meteorological Department reports that the rainfall for 1895 to date ie only a trifle above half the neapt amount,and that. last month was the warmest June recorded. by the Toronto Observatory. At Quebec Prof. Hammer ascended' in a balloon and was driven by a westerly wind over the St. Lawrence River and landed in the water, where be remained 20 minutes before be wall raeoued by a tug. Albert and Paul Riesier, two Germane, were arrested in Toronto on Thursday, on warrants charging them with fraud, oommitted in Germany. The German Conant received the .warrants from Berlin. The health oMoere of Winnipeg discover- ed a sausage factory where cat meat formed a large proportionofthe ingredients The proprietor pleaded guilty to the charge of keeping filthy quarters, and was fined a email aum. Contractor Foley, who has been handling the survey of the Hudson Bay railway, Says than the road will be built whether the Dominion Government granted aid or not. The survey le now eoMpleted as far as Lake Dauphin, about 128 miles. A statement has beea made in Hamilton that the deal between the Toronto, Hamil. ton, and Buffalo Railway i0ompahy and the 0, P. R. will be consummated duriugthe next week, by Whiele the 0. P. R. will operate, the line beteeden Toronto and hamilton, and have oonnoatione with the Vanderbilt system for the remaining per- tion of the road. Reeve MoDanald,of London West, Ont., Imo written to the City Council of London, One, calling attention to the 3100,000 judgment reoovored by the village agafoet the arty four, yearn ago for polluting the; River Thames With Sewage. The letter states that if the nui,ance i8 not abated the judgment will be enforced and suggests a conference with a view 00, settlement. . Nearly the whole of the village of Lorneville, u suburb of Cornwell,Ont., was reduced to ashes Sunday afternoon, and upwards of fifty families, mostly mill employee were rendered hmneless. Most of the buildings in the burned diatriet were owned and o0ocpied by mill employes, and represented their savings for years Very few of . the building were insured, The village liar no bre syetom, nor water works, 0115AT uuITAIN. Prof. Buxloy'e funeral their pian at Rastbonrne, Sir Henry James will take the title of Baron Ayleeton of Hereford, Nezrulla !than visited the Queen at Windsor, end was meelved with military 110110111, A laborer In Dublin was blown to pieoea by a tin canister he peeked up en Boyne 810080, Lard Salisbury's Cabinet now consists of nineteen members, and is the largest aver formed in Great Britain. Two hundred and fifty pounds of fleet' is what Dr. W. Grace carries from one wiokeb to another every time he maker a run. Right Hon, Charles T. Ritohie, the neva President of the Board of Tiede, wae returned without opposition in Croydon, The action for absolute divorce brought by Mrs. Craigie, the novelist, against her husband ended In favor of the plaintiff. Mr, Gladstone has written • to the Chairman of the Midlothian Liberals in connection with his retirement from poll. tion. Col. Stitt and Brigadier Clibburn of the Salvation Army aro coming to Canada to select a site for the Army's proposed farm colony, Mr. Gerald William` Balfour, brother of Mr. Arthur J. Balfour, leader of the House of Commons, has been appointed Chief Seerotery for Ireland. Five cloth mills situated near Leeds have been closed, owing to a dispute regarding wages. Tho closing of the mills affected two thousand persons. The rumor that Lord Rosebery is to marry one ot the Prince of Wales' daughters is revived, and ft is added that he may relingttieh politics altogether. Her 11.ajosty the Queen gave Mr. Bell - Smith mating for bis historical picture of the decoration of the bier of Sir John' Thompson at Windsor Castle. It is rumored in London Club circles that General Lord Roberts will be the Commander -in -Chief of the British army 10eucaeseion to the Duke of Cambridge. The return issued by the British Board import, of Trade for JI ne snowstUat the p ort , deoreaoed £350,000 and the exports 5110, 000 as compared with those for June last year. Lord Rosebery's,mother, the Duchess of Cleveland, is writing the life of Ludy Hester Stanhope, her aunt, wn"rithegan life as the private secretary and confidante of Wifliam Pitt, and for thirty years had her own exact way as the Arab sheikh in Syria. Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, the new Secre• ,taryof Seaee for theColonies, onThursday received the representatives of the different colonies. Replying to Sir Charles Tupper, the Canadian High Commiesioner, who was spokesman of the party, Mr. Chamber- lain said the colonies could rely upon hie hearty co-operation to advance their interests andincrease their influence. At Long Sutton, between Cambridge and Boston, in England, afarnier's wife recently discovered that an old woman in the neighbourhoodhad bewitched her. The only remedy was to beat the witchcraft, out of her, which she and her husband at once did, breaking the old woman's=wrist before they were successful. As they were. convinoed that the spell, wee broken they' cheerfully paid a heavy fine. VNITED STATES. Mre. Cleveland, wife of President Cleveland, gave birth to a daughter on Sunday afternoon. The Pullman Palace Oar Company has advanced the wages of its employee at its ebope ten per cent. A riot took plane at Roston during an A. P. A. and Orange procession. Several people were fatally hurt. Thirty houses were washed away and ten people killed by` a flood at Winona, near Springfield, Mise., on Saturday. A ten -year-old boy named Panner fell frotn a horse he was riding at Fargo, and the animal tramped him to death. Common Councilman Charles J. Riogater was fatally shot in the head during a flag - raising in Philadelphia by the aoeideutal discharge of a revolver. At Elkhart, Indiana, six hundred people fell 40 feet by the collapse of a bridge from wbioh they were watching a boat race. Several fatal injuries were received. The exoees,of United States Government expenditure over receipts during the fiscal year ended en Sunday was forty-two million eight hundred thousand dollars, Mre. Leland Stanford of San Francisco, has determined to *all her Jewels, which are worth more than half a mullion dollars, in order to support the Stanford Univers ity. Great damage has been done in Missouri and adjacent States by storms and floods. Chicago was also visited by a violent storm, and the destruction of property and Mas of life are bad and exceeeive. . Mre, Catherine O'Leary is dead. She was the owner of the fractious oow which, on a memorable night in October, 1871, kinked over a lamp and started a blaze which coat Chicago 3190,000,000. Counsel for Clarenoeand Sadie Robinson, convicted of the murder of Montgomery Gibbs in Buffalo, will make applioation for. a new trial on the strength of evidence, which, he gays, will establish a complete alibi. Friday at noon in Buffalo, Mrs. Maria. Calistau Phelps, a widow seventy-eight years of age, reputed to be worth a million: dollars, was married to Dr. Ashton Buchan. an Talbot, of Philadelphia, aged thirty. four, B ooie Harrie,the pretty eixteen•year•old daughter of a wealthy farmer of Rarnirena, Texoe, confessed or, VPednesday to having murdered Albert B.aoknian, her suitor, actuated by jealousy. she lured Blackman, to a lonelypiaco In the woods, and lunged him. The trade reports from the United States for the week continue satioto tory. The advenoe'in wages that commend Bogie time ego goes steadily on, and this—added to the increasing price of many staples -is a satisfactory sign that the Improvement ingeneral trade is not ephemeral. Some advances in price have 001 been. everywhere maintained, but this has been more than offset by the atoady upward tendency in other linea of goods, Considering that this, is the period. of the midsummer and holiday dulness, the reports as to the preaeht state of trade noross the line are decidedly otitis - hinny.. Wool, cotton, leather, lumber, iron, and tit are higher. Tho coal trade &lane appear% to, remain iu the 000001x.' factory eenditiot it has been in for some einennen. Tho Reese-Chi:Wee loan hoe been signed. lirinoe Btemerok's health lo very uneatie. f ABOUT THE ober . fa y Five men were injured by the buroting of a German military balloen, Monne .FRtoa and Mount Vesuvius ere both aotive, and the villages in their viciuty are in great danger, A deopubob from Sofia Pays that the eitnation IP ee0940, almost amounting to a etate of war,between Bulgaria and Turkey, Russia produced 297,300,000 pood of petroleum in 1894, a falling off of more than 27,000,000 from 1883, A pood is ?0 pounds. The agreement to Irene the elxteen million pound four per cent, gold loan to China, under Busman guarantee, wee' signed on Saturday evening. It is reported in Paris from Madagascar that recently several thousand Roves attaoked'the French troops at Zaraauatia, and were repulsed with heavy loss. Severe otorme of wind and rain have canoed; considerable damage in various parte of Austria, and at Marbach, on the Danube, six persona lost their lives. Baron Hirsoh, the Jewish : millionaire, hue just leased the shooting on tho estate of Cardinal Vaszary, Prince Primate of Hungary, which extends over 77,000 acres. It is the intention of the Emperor of Germany in the sluing to send a squadron to visit the porta of the nations who were represented in the naval display et Kiel. Governor O'Brien'bae refused assent to the Newfoundland retrenchment bill, whibh cuts 35,000 off his own salary. The bill must now be submitted to the Imperial Cabinet, It is reported that Russia has massed a very strong naval and land force at Viladi• vostock, andis prepared to make an instant descent upon Japan should oaaasion afford an excuse.. Itis announced that King Humbert will shortly Issue a decree exonerating Premier Criepi from the charges of having been con• noted with Dr. Corneline Herz,the Panama canal lobyiet. In the town of Hameed, Sweden, on Monday, lightning erten a building in wbioh ten persons had taken shelter,killing seven of them, and injuriug the other three so severely that they will die. Germany's right to levy. tells on all vessels peeving through the Kaiser Wilhelm canalforms the subject of diplomatic cor- respondence upon the part of Great Britain, Russia, Denmark, Sweden, and Norway. Olney B. Aehtord and Fred Underberg, who were expelled from Hawaii for alleged complicity in. the reoent rebellion, have announced that they will return to Ione - lulu under the protection of the British flag. The British and German admirals have withdrawn their guards from the Island of Formosa.. Itis believed that the reason for this action is the inexpediency of retaining the guard with the Japanese forces adyano- ing, and fighting probable. It is believed in well-informed Loudon financial circles that the Franoo•Chinese loan of sixteen million pounds sterling guaranteed by Russia has been concluded without a lien on the Customs of China, and with the annulment of the clause pro- viding that China shall not borrow any more money for six months. SOLDIERS' QUEER PETS. A Hen, Several Goats, Talktug Girds and a Snake Malang Them. In Algeria, North Africa, the officers of the Third Chaeaeuro d'Afrique have a pet lion which they took, when very young, rom the Afrioan desert. It is a great pet ad very gentle. Ae a rule it lays outside the officers' muses on the veranda, and looks just like an artificial one. Many have been the viaitore who took to flight on beholding his majesty rise to greet hie guests. The lion by way o' assuring`thern that he was harmless, orperhape as a sign of his disap- proval of their impolite actions, would generally send a gentle roar after them, which, instead of having the desired effect of recalling them, would make them in- crease their pace, if it were possible to do So. In the British army several regiments. have pets. For instance, the Twenty-third Welsh Fuoileera have a pet goat that marohee in front of the regiment, The Seventy-fourth Highland Light Infantry, theSeventy-eighth Seaport Highlandere and other corps have pot deer that also maroh in front. In Indi the soldiers makee many pets, ta mush as monks a parrots, owls cr we r hawks and aquret• but their greatest pet is the mioot,'a bird like a starling, but larger. This bird after having his tongue split will talk quite well, and will fallow Ms master aboutconatantly. Often it will follow a dragoon regiment for four or five miles on a field day, and will fly round and round the regiment until he finds his master, on whose shoulder he will settle, even though the horses are going along at full gallop. A trooper in the Cape Mounted Rifles in South Africa had a green water snake for a pet, which would follow ire master through the grave to the river, and go in battling with him. The trooper, who was an expert swimmer, would worry the snake by diving under water and coming up a dozen yards away, He fed it on frogs, raw meet and little fish. It slept In his jack boot at night. He, however, wae not doomed to have it long, as before he had it quite five months a hawk carried it off before anybody could rescue the poor little thing. Ladies also have their peculiar tastes for pate. A gentleman farrner's wife in Nor- folk, England, made a pet of a pig. The animal lost its mother early, and the lady, taking pity on the poor little orphan, succeeded, with the aid of a feeding -bottle, in rearing it, 1t became a great pet, and would follow her about litre a little dog. Its good qualities quite repaid her for her kindneao. The pig oortainly has many good points, and according to Eugene Bodeohon, the great French traveller, who, after a careful study of the porcine speoiee, described it ae an animal "qui a beanooup d'oeprit." Another singular pet was a frog, wbioh was tamed by a young girl from the Dublin Mountains'. It would oome out from its bed of leaves et her. approach to be fed with a strawberry or blackberry. No Drugs Needed. Mre, Ebony—•Little Crosses jaws are locked fast. Dr, Darktown—Am dey looked shet, or looked open Dey is looked open, loofah, Dot's easy oared. Put er piece er broiled ohiekon between'em, en' el dub don't work try w,atormillion, ROUSE. Let the Sunlight In. Keep the houeH"and rooms open and fro to the eunehino and fresh air, The writer wae an unexpeoted guest at a farm house" one beautiful, sunshiny day, and oh, dear, it seemed like going into a tunnel from a bright, warm street. Tho ehades in the parlor were olosely drawn; the room Donne- quently wae dark, and there woe a damp chilly feeling, ae though sunehiee wae un unknown element in that little room where of all plans, it ehould have been freely ad- mitted, In the very midst of a beautiful country spot, with no high buildinge to abut out the light, no blank, atioky soot to begrime the curtains, and no dust and dirt to blow in, there was a .little parlor that might have been so olseery, made into a veritable funeral room, Besides this, eaoh piece of furniture stood squarely in itsplaoe as though it never had been moved, and never was to be. Now, I ask in all reason, how man any child regard snob a place as homelike, and love to be in it t 0f all places In the world that ought to be brighmotility, olieery, nstiiity, and happy, e farmer'e home le that place. Let the run. shine in 1 It will drive out gloom and give hope and health. It will make the children glad and happy. It will give them no op- portunity to grow moody. 'It will make them remember their home ae full of awe. shine and light, where they were always pleased to be. That ie far better than hay. ing the rooter closed and darkened for fear the sun will fade the carpets or that the furniture will become disarranged. If the carpets become worn out, there are many others where those carne from. And chil- dren could hardly damage substantial furniture. So do not shut them and the sunlight out. Shen, too, sunshine is sure death to germ,<and it is a better tonic than all the patent medicines in the drug stores, and ao is pure air, which can be had in abundance only in the country. Where there is plenty of both air and sunshine, the housewife will be troubled bat little with fevers in the family. The children will not he morose and moody, and the entire family will be happier and healthier. Care of a Bedroom. If one thing more than another ehonld be insisted on, it ie pure air in the eleoping room, and plenty of it. Sleep is nature's restorer. In that process the tired musolea are relaxed, the weary brain reats, and the secret of it le the purifying of the vitiated blood by the oxygen taken into the system, This sends rich blood through the (Amnia - tion again, building up the entire body. Then if this oxygen be not supplied, how can sleep properly perform its function Not only should a bedroom be thoroughly aired in the morning, but fresh air should be admitted all night. Before leaving the room for breakfaat spread outeheete,quilte, and pillows, so that the air can pass over and through them. 110 is beet to stand the pillows up near the Window. Feather beds are most unwholesome things, and should not be used. It is almost impossible to air them, and the feathers catch and hold a vast amount of impurities. Mattresses are now used almost exclusively, and they are a great improvement over the old-fashioned bed, In making the bad the mattress should be turned twice a week, so that it will wear evenly,and not get full of "hum. mooke." Tuok the under sheet firmly all around the tick, with the wide hem au the top. The top sheet should he put on so that the hem will be right aide out when top is turned down over the quilts. A sweet, clean bed is, conducive to sleep, and one can rest better with such surroundings. Children should not bo permitted to sleep with older people, nor a well person with one inclined to invalidism ur with a consti- tutional disease. Roclpes. Rice Muffins.—Take a pint of soft-boiled rice ; a teacupful of fresh milk, three well - beaten egge, a tablespoonful of butter, and as moll wheat flour ae wilt snake a thick batter. Bake in muffin rings in the oven or on 0griddle. Light Family Bieauit,-Onequartof flour, one teaspoonful of Dalt, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one tablespoonful of butter or lard muted in. Wet with sweet milk, and rollout soft and out with the top of a gine. Cocoanut Pie.—Soak one and one-half oupfulsof shredded cocoanut two hours in ilk then add one cupful one pint of sweet m p of granulated sugar, the well -beaten yolks of three egge, flavoring to taste. Put in a deep tin with an underoroot and bake at least thirty minutes. Dee the whites to frost it. Poached Eggs. --To po0oh eggs in the form of a ball instead of the usual flat form le a knack knowu to many clever nooks. The water is heated to boiling and then stirred rotarily until a whirlpool is produe• ed, into the hollow heart of which the egg is skillfully dropped. The motion of the water coagulates the albumen or white instantly into a circular covering for the unbroken yolk. Handy Cake.—Here is the recipe for a cake which may be made and put away inside of fifteen minutes : " Break three egge into a bowl with a pinch of salt ; beat well, adding gradually one cup of sugar ; to this add a cup of flour in which is a teaspoon of baking powder. Butter end dust with flour two square, oblong pane ; spread the dough very thinly over these ; bake in a quick oven ; spread well with jell ; roll them up and wrap in a sloth. Poor Frank. When the olase in geography was called up, it Was uo'Cioeed that oneof the boyo, Frank by name,—cud rather dull by nature,—wae looking uncommonly well pleased with himself. Well, Inuit, said the teaoher, do you know your lesson to -day 'f Yes, ma'am, be answered. The answer to the first question is ;South, and the next is Africa, and the next is South America and the next is Peniusola, But Prank, that isn't the way to learn a Leeson. You mast Skip about. That's the way I shall do in asking the questions. Frank's o0untonance fell. Dia groat discovery was of Pio use. But Mies Gray, he said, I might not skip round the sante way ae you do. Indications. Little drops of water Oozing !tom the skin, Shows us that the weatbor'e Getting hot ag'in, A DIPLOMAT'S ESCAPADE, nlueettinr err ,Julian Penncerele '!threw a $"Uy Conductor Into the Street. Sir Julian Paunoefoto, the British Am. bassador, bad something of an exporlenoe prior to his departure several days ago for Rumps• Ho likes to explore odd regions, and one obey, bevlug nothing to do and the eteamer not sailing for twenty-four hours, he took a trip to the pioturesqregion north 0f the Bronx, in New Yueork, He was riding on a trolley at a furious speed WIMP a woman carrying a basket signaled to the conductor to stop. Now the oar oouduotore of New York, as every 008 knows, are the most insolent creatures alive with the single exception of trolley company dlreotors, and this oonduotor not only refused to stop, but proceededto give the woman a talking to as well, *tying that she ought to know better than to order a oar to stop at inconvenient moments. " Stop 1" exolaimed Sir Jaliau,interrupt- ing„ the tirade. "Stop if she wants you to. Again the oonduotor refused. The Am- bassador immediately went to the motorman. and ordered him to atop. By Ohio time every one's attention .was attraoted, and alter some dispute the car was brought to a standstill The woman thanked Sir Julian, and when aha had alighted the oonduotor deli• berately threw her basket off the oar into the road, spilling the contents. Quick as a flash the Ambassador leaped up, grasped the conductor by rho Dollar and hurled him clean over the road. In getting up the bewildered fellow fell head first into a fountain and was soused from beadto foot, and all the passengers in the. oar roared with laughter. The trip was continued uneventfully after that, and the drenohed object did not ray another word either to Sir Julian or to the motorman. Sir Julian's trip to England ie said by For Twenty-five Ye ars DUNN'S AK1NC t �e1;1 ltd POWDER THECOOK'S BEST FRIEND LARGEST SALg 108 CANADA. Hood's Cured After Others Failed toreftlla In the Neck—apnohee AN Cone Now. Sangerville, Maine. 0. I. Hood & 0o., Lowell, Mass.: "Gentiemen:—I feel that I cannot say enough to favor of Hood's Sarsaparilla. Por five years I have been troubled with scrofula 10 my neck and throat. Bosom' kinds of medioinos white I tried did not do Many good, and when I corns. timed to take Hood's Sarsaparilla there were largo bunobes.on my neck so sore that I could ll9 SurP Cures not bear the slightest touch. When I bad taken ane bottle of tlifs.medicine, the soreness had gone, andbefsre I had finished the second the bunches had entirely disappeared:, BLAm000 ATwoon, Sangery Ile,Maine. N. B. If youdetdde to take Hood's Sampan rilla do not bo induced to buy any other. Flood's Pills 'sure constipation by, rester. 'ea tea rrri.va •te ration or theallm it,,, ra".,' some of the observant to be oonneo0ed with the pending extradition treaty with Aus- tralia, and by others to have something to do it the financial roblem. At an d with e rate, the Ambassador has managed to make himself a very popular onareeter, and hie experience in this oountry would make a very interesting book. . ATII1E YIECS MIITFEfl SECREI Tt has often been contended by physiologists and men of science gen- erally, that nervous energy or nerv- ous ervious impulses which pass along the nerve fibres, were only other names for electricity. This seemingly plaus- ible statement was accepted for e time, but has been completely aban- doned since it has been proved that the nerves are not good conductors of electricity, and that the velocity of a nervous impulse is but 100 feet per, second—which ie very much slower than that of electricity. It is now generally agreed that nervous energy, or what we an pleased to call nerve Haid, ie a wottdrone, a mysterious farce, iu which dwells life itself. A very eminent specialist, wbo has stalled profoundly the workings of the nervous system for the last twenty-five years, has lately demon- strated that two•thirde of all our ailments and chronic diseases are due to deranged nerve centres within nr at the base of ,the brain. All know thin, an injury to the Spinal cord will muse paralysis t0 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. A.gailt,when food is taken into the A. DI'AD11IAlg Wboiegale a etomaah, it comes in oentaet with numberless nerve fibres in the walls of this organ, which at once send a nervous impulse to the nerve centres which control the stomach, notifying them of the presence of food; where- upon the nerve centres send down a supply of nerve force or nerve fluid, to at once begin the operation of digestion. But let the nerve centres which control the stomach be de. 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 organa of the body, if the nerve centres which con- trol them and supply them with nerve force become deranged, they are also deranged. The wonderful emcees of the remedy knowu os the Great South Atnericau 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 euro of Nervousness, Nervous Prostration,Headacho,Sleeplessness« Restlessness, St.'Vitus's Dance, Men- tal Despondency, Hysteria, Heart Disease, Nervousness of Females, Hot Plashes, Sick Headache. It is also an absolute specific for all htomaalt tra1lgoat. ... . .,.. nit ytetaii' Agolit for Brnsfet lrt