HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1895-9-6, Page 7SEPTEMBER, 13, 1895
UN NEWS TNA NNTSTTELI)
TII] VERYLATEST FROM ALL OVER
THE WORLD;
interc,tlrt;cite5ns about our Own Country,
Grant %Alain, the belted States, and
411 Farce elf the Globe, Condensed and
Assorted for Imo !tending,
oaNePA.
Mr. John Cullen of Iiugaten oommitted
suicide by bangini;,
Mr. John Eastwood,a prominent business
map of Hamilton,is dead,
.A. Hamilton boy received a oelleotfon
of Russian postage statnpe from the
Czar.
The C.P.R. has rednood rates on batter,
cheese and eggs from. Winnipeg to Mon-
treal,
Christian Erb was acquitted at Stratford
of the charge of potting ground glass in the
family soup,
The sontractor of a T., H. & B. Railway
bridge in Hamilton 'has left that ciby
and his workmen with a month's pay in
arrears.
A cable deapatch says that it seems to he
settled that the 1897 meeting of the British
Assooiationfor the Advancement of Science
Will be held at Toronto.
The first shipment of new wheat was
made last Friday from (1rebna to Keewatin,
and was graded 'No. 1 hard. 1t yielded
thirty-five bushels ho the acre.
The Queen's bounty has been applied for
by Mr. P. A. Choquette, M. 1., for is
French woman who gave birth to five
children within twelve months.
A fatal runaway acoident ocourrod at
Ridgeway, Ont., on Thursday afternoon,
when a 'bus driver named Charles Buck
received injuries that proved fatal.
A man named Kennedy fell from one of
the Manitoba harvest excursion trains and
was killed. Another man named Saunder-
son fell off and was severely injured.
Out of forty' thousand dollars required
for the Episcopal endowment for the new
Diocese of Ottawa about thirtytwo
thousand dollars have now been secured.
The traffic receipts of the Canadian
Pacific Railway for the week ended August
21st amounted to $374,000, as against
9359,000 for the corresponding week last
year.
Joseph Bernier has been arrested in
Montreal for fraudulently drawing the
life ponoion of his father from the
Dominion Governments after hie father's
death.
Prof. Andersonwho has just returned
from an inspection of cattle in Nova
Bootle, emphatically denies the statement
that there is an outbreak of cattle disease
there.
The McCormick Harvesting Machinery
Company, of Chicago, has begun litigation
over the alleged infringement of a patent,
in whioh companies at Ottawa and Wood.
stook are involved as defendants.
Alfred Evans,a young English immigrant
wap on Thursday shot in the leg by a
watchman of the Canada Atlantic railway,
who was angered because Evans persisted
in crossing the bridge at Coteau after having
been warned off.
Principal Grant, of Queen's University
Kingston, Ont., bas received from Judge
Gowan another oheque for 5900 to be
placed at the :credit of the fund for the
Sir John A. Macdonald chair of political
science in Queen's University.
Dr. Dawson, director 'of the Geological
Survey hatsleftOttawa for Athabaeka
Landing, N.W.T., to inspect the progress
recently made in boring for oil. As yet oil
has not been struck in paying quantities,
but the indications are hopeful.
?resident J.S. Bousquet of the Qanadian
Trading & Shipping Company of Montreal,
and formerly cashier of the Banque' de
Peuple,has been charged with an infraction
i - - olthe criminal code by misrepresenting the
capital stoolrof that oompany.
Reports received by the C. P. R. officials
from a hundred different points in Manitoba
and the North-West state thatthe crops.
. are undamaged, that harvesting is proceed-
ing everywhere, and that the crime will
probably be greater than estimated.
President Beckley, of the Toronto,Ham-
ilton and Buffalo Railway Company, has
addressed a letter to the ratepayers in
Hamilton, asking that the city vote them
another 8200,000 before they undertake to
build the road from Toronto to. Hamilton
Isadore Lanthier has entered an action
for twenty 'thousand dollars against the
city of Ottawa, because she attributes the
death of her daughter Georgina to the fact
that a health inspector' entered the house
and fumigated it while she was dangerous-
ly ill:
On Saturday afternoon in Montreal a
bronze statue of Ohenier, the patriot
French-Canadian leader of 1537; who lost
his life at the battle of St. Eustache, was
unveiled on Viger Square by Dr. Mareil, in
the presence of about three .hundred
eo le P P .
Part of the most valuable numismatic
collection in Amerioa, owned by the late
W. E. Bastiah,wae stolen from en unoccupi-
ed house in Montreal on Wednesday night.
Soma of the coins were old Roman ones,
sole remaining samples of their kind. .They
are valued at at 56,000.
The Merryweather fire engine, whioh has
bawl built in Greenwich, Eng., hat arrived
in Toronto as did also the J. B. Boustead
engine which has been praetioally remodel-
led, and this, with the Ronald, gives that
city three of the most powerful fire engines
on the continent.
Lieut. W. B. Lesslie, R, E,, araduate
of the Royal Military College, Kingston,
Ont. has been appointed instructor of
fortifications military engineering, geo-
metrical drawing and descriptive geometry
in the Royal Military College,ih suoosssion
to Capt. Twining, advanced to the pro•
feseioriate. Lieut. Lesolie is at present in
England.
At the corner's inquest in Hamilton on
the body of Mr. George Ovbrond, who way
thrown from his rig last Tuesday, and
died an Thursday night, several jurymen
registered vigorous objeotions to being
palled away from their business to attend
an inquest when the cause of death was so
apparently, accidental. Oho juryman said
it looked as though inquests were regulated
to u large extent by tho interests, of
coroners and policemen.
The Canadian Bankers' Association of
Winnipeg has received the remainder of
the crop estimates, The average crop of
1, + wheat is 27,00 bushols to the acre, the
total estimated yield in Manitoba it as
follows :-Wheat,30,890,076 bushels ; oats,
23,985,102 bushels ; barley, 5,758,224
bushels ; total, 60,036,402 bushels, Olio
reports .from the Canadian Paola() railway
in lalanitoba and the North -Gosh Dhow
that the orop is now afe from all danger.
0R0AT DItlTdiit,
Mr, William ]ieitttyy'has been appointed
Sollnitor-General ferlrolaud,
The jute workers' strike in Dundee is
spreading,, Twenty tdicusand are one,.
lido, 73. M. Stanley has doolared In the
Imperial Holum of Commons that Egypt
ehouldrho evitouated.
The election of John Daly, who is serving
a term in prison, was cancelled in the
British House of Commouh.
A e invention of Liberals of Great Britain
will mee4 in London ma October 29 to con,
eider the position of the party.
The Lloyd ootnrnittee are urging the
Fmperial Governmeut to arrange with Oa
Malted Statue jointly to destroy' derelicts
in the North -Atlantic,
A national oonferenoe of the Liberal
party in England has been summoned bo
meet on October 29 and 10, in order to dis-
cuss the.politieal situation.
Mr. Chamberlain has made a apaeclr
touching Imperial relations with the
colonies, whioh suggests that radioal
changes are to be attemped.
The paaeenger steamer Seaford was sunk
by the steamer Lion in the English Chan-
nel. Her passengers, among whom were a
number of Canadians, were, with the grew,
all coved,
Perhaps the new woman is reeponoible
for the falling off in marriages in England,
For the first quarter of this year only 10.6
persons in 1,000 mahrre3, which is the
lowest rate on record.
Lord Esher, the Master of the Rolls, has
just'attained hie 80th year ; be is now the
oldest'judge on the English bench, has
been twenty-seven years a judge, nineteen
years a Justice of Appeal, and Master of
the Rolls twelve years.
In the House of Commons, Mr,Chamber-
lain, Secretary for the Colonies, said that
fitteen thoueand poundshad been expended
to relieve the distress
in Newfoundland,,
and that guarantees had been given to the
amount of seven thousand pounds. ,
Sir Maurice Duff Gordon, Bart., whose
mother translated Henke into English, and
whose grandmother, Mrs. Sarah Austin,
was ons of the first translators of standard
German works, was fined for being drunk'
and disorderly in a London restaurant
lately.
In the Imperial House of Commons the
President of the Board of Agriculture, in
reply to a question, said he could not see
the necessity of aetiding an expert to Can-
ada to enquire into the existence of pleuro-
pneumonia,as the disease had actually been
detected in some Canadian cattle landed at
Deptford.
UNITED STATES:
Three thousand garmentmakers in Bose
ton are out on strike.
The carpet weavers' strike at Philadel-
phia has been successful.
Keir Hardie, late English M. P., is in
Amerioa on a lecturing tour.
Afire in Milwaukee on Thursday destroy-
ed property' to the value of nearly half a
million dollar,.
The list of dead in the Denverhotel
wreck stands at 22. Of these three bodies
remain unclaimed.
Railway' construction in the 'United`
States since the 1st of :January last
aggregates 182,138 miles.
Two thousand five hundred union vest
makers, including seven hundred women
and girls, are on strike in New York.
By a recent treasury ruling repairs
made in Canada to locomotives and oars
of international railways are not duti-
able.
On Wednesday morning Mr. Lewis
Swift, astronomer of the Echo Mountain
Observatory, Calif, discovered a, new oomet
in the constellation Pieces.
Detective Powers, who was shot last
Thursday night by the Chicago &
Michigan train robbers, died at Grand
Rapids, Mich., yesterday.
A Pittsburg despatch says :—The
Standard 011 Company has bought all the
interests of the W. L. Mellon pipe lines.
The purchase price is said to be 81,000,000.
Fierce forest fires are raging in the
vicinity of •Spokane,Washington. An
Immense quantity of valuable timber has
bean destroyed, and it is reported that four.
lives were lost.
According to commercial reports received
from the United States the -volume of busi-
ness continues to shrink, as is usual during
the midsummer season, but the shrinkage
seems to be growing somewhat larger than
is austgmery, owing, no doubt, to the fact
that transactions during July were inflated
for the month. The prospects for the fall
trade, however, seem to be good, although
much .depends on the crops. Industrial
troubles during the past week have not
entirely ceased, but are much 'less threaten.
ing, The settlement of wages in the
window -glass works foreshadows higher
prices. The expoqrt of breadstu6'a has been
light. In iron the outlook is improving,
and prices in some lines have advanced.
Cotton goods' are in more active demand as
the price of raw material advances: Print
cloths are n shade lower. Petroleum been
downward tendency, as sago have eight of
the food produots, flour, wheat, corn, oats,
pork, lard, sugar, and coffee.
. GENERAL.
There have been 16,000 deaths from the
cholera plagnein Japan.
Cbiueae soldiers at Tien Tsin are rioting
and demanding bask pay.
Japan is said to be about to make large
oontrants, in England forwarshipsand
The Porte has declined to allow the
proposed reforms in Armenia to be under
foreign control.
The British expedition sent to punish the„
revolting tribes around Mombasa, in Africa,
has had some fighting,
A Russio0 report castes that the Japan
ate are evaouating Port Arthur and
dismantling the fortifications.
Sickness and terrible suffering are
reported amongst, Freueh pilgrims to
Lourdes. Seventeen passengers died oh
ono I rain.
Sir Herbert Murray,British Commission.
eats demanding repayment of theadvanoos
made last winter to Newfoundland fisher -
mei.
Tho largest stook companyoLthe century
will posh an invention for the subdtitution
of electricity and omnpressed air for
waterpower, now in use in Australia gold
fields.
It is said the unorganized brigands of
Formosa have inflioted greater loom' on tho
Japanese troops than were suffered during
the year of war in Corea, Manchuria and
Shantung.
The British and Amoriaan Consuls aro
not allowed to be proeont et the examina-
tion of the prisoners arrested for the
10uuheng (Meerut' mammae, Serious dilftoul-
ties are efpeotod
The Haig an Chamber of Deputies has
voted the neoeesary antounte for the
oonventlou of a ship canal from Heyst to
Bruges, and for the couvsrsio%of the latter
plane into a seaport,
Paris has given up the idea of Matruct,
ing ins school ohlldren in military drill,
The Munloipal Courtrai lta0 disbanded tion
battalions, and ordered the guns and equip-
ments to be sold at auction,
Ib mists' 9100,000 a year to k.ep up the
Bois de Boulogne, but from 540,000 to $50-
000 is derived from the paric itself, and
front the rents of the ram courses, restatcr'
ants, and private ltotteea In it,
Advices received from M.ajunga, Talaid
of Madagascar, dated the 6th leen, say
thtt the Novae are entrenohod at Ninajz
and are prepared to offer tt determined
resistance to the advtwcs of the French,
,Mail advice(' from HAkodate estimate
the combined cutch of all pelagic svaieru
in Asiatio waters this season at forby-two
thousand sealskins. Last 'mason the Cana-
diens alone took forty,nins thousand.
Fresh outrages' upon missionaries are
reported from China. The American 0015-
aloe near Foo -Chow has been attacksd by a
mob, the ehopel and school-bouoe wreaked,
and four of the native scholars wounded.
Rome will hold a great gymnastio meeting
during the national fetes in September.
Sixty societies and 1,500 Italia❑ gymnasts.
will take part in it, and many competitors
are expected from Berlin, Switzerl,nd' and
Belgium.
The Marquise de Galiilfet has been sued
for maintenance by her mother, Madame
Lufrbte,widow of the French horse breeder,;
'who is 81, and has an income of 40,000
franos a year whioh she has tied up by
penis lent litigation.
An attempt was made on Saturday at
Paris to murder the Baron Alphonz de
Rothschild by means of an infernal maphine
in the shape of an envelope containing
fulminate of mercury. The envelope was
opened by a confidential clerk, who was
seriously injured by the explosion which
followed.
Six of the Chinese who were implicated
in the recent massacre at the attack upon
the European missions have been convicted
of murder. It is said that Lha firmuess of
the United States and British Governments
has brought the Chinese to terms, and that
the trials will now be conducted with some-
thing like (admen. ,
HIGH RATES 02 INTEREST.
ti
A Cave where Five Thousand Two nun•
fired For Cent. a Year Was Pahl.
Many governments in 'good credit can
borrow money at three per oent., or even
less. When security cannot be given, or
when credit is not good, the rate exaoted
of private borrowers is much higher, : A
case has been found in London where
interest was paidon short loans at a -'rate
which would amount to five thousand two
hundred per cent. a year,
A Mr. Moon, who bas contributedan
article on the subject to an English review,
has .made a personal, investigation of bhe
matter among the pawnbrokers of White-
ohapel, London. These men and women
are regarded by the wretchedly poor people
about them as philanthropists rather than
usurers.
An act of Parliament permits these
pawnbrokers to collect on all.loaus of two
shillings or less an interest of at least a
half -penny a month. This appears very
reasonable to the poor peopleofWhite-
chapel ; but many loans of sixpence are
made, and as in the case of sixpence loans
no time longer than a week is over given
for payment, and as the halfpenny is
always collected the lameas for a month,..
the rateon these little loans amount to•
what would be equal to four hundred per.
cent, a year.
But the way in whioh this sort of usury
may be carried very muob further is
described in Mr. *Moon's narration. A
pawnbroker said to him.
"There's things here, air, that: don't stay
here not a day. Last winter a woman
brought me in one evening a child's pair
of shoos, and!'lent nor a sixpence on them.
"Next morniug very early in she Domes,
sir, with a bed coverlet. - It must have
just oome off the bed, for it was as warm
as oould be to the hands, 'I lent her six-
pence on tt, and with that sixpence and a
half -penny that she brought with her, she
took the chilli's shoes° out of pawn and
wee away with them:
"'Now then,' says she, 'the little 'un
can go to school.'
"And in the evening back she comes
again with the ohild's shoes once more,and
puts 'em up forsixpence, and gets thee.
coverlet and pays her half -penny on that,
and goes away With that to sleep under
for the night.
"And that she kept up, sirday after
day and night after night, until the mild.
weather carte again,and a coverlet on a bed
wasn't no longer necessary."
This woman was really paying interest,
therefore, at the rate of a hundred per
cent. a week,or fifty-two hundred per cent.
a year.
CHEE-F00, CHINA.
The Fashionable Oriental Welcris,5
Place Where tite Recent Treaty Was
Stgned.
Chea -foo, where the treaty' of peace was
signed. between .China and Japan, and
whish also goes, by the name of Yen -Tal, is
one of the best known ports in the north-
eastern part of China. It is situated at
the head of one of tho bays of the Gulf of
Petohiii and is in the neighborhood of two
,of the moat prominent places in the resent
Chino•Japanese war. 1t was here thsttho
peaoe of 1876 between England and China
was signed, by which three new ports of
entry were opened to foreigu oommeroo.
The signing or treaty on the Otto of last
May between the. two inimical brothers of
the far Orient has given Chee-Foo a new
historical importance. From June 8, 1S50,
until the Chino -European war, France had
oocupted Chea -Foo without any iuterferenoe
from foreign powers..
is thickly populated, having 120,000
inhabitants, according to the consular
repport, of 1801. In summer it isa fashion.
able watering plane lolto Trouville and
Brighton. Ib is very attrontive, with its
villas with vine enshrouded verandas
clustering on the hillsides which overlook'
Semaphore Point or dotting the plaint
Reside the signal -tower a pretty pagoda
rears its hood, Drowned by its cap with
upturned wings. America and Resale amid
petroleum oil to Cheo-B'oo,EnglaM eobtons
and metals. The great artiolo of exportia
raw silk.
In the quarter fooing the sear in a small
hotel boating the European natita of 13eaoh
Hotel,tho peace treaty between the Chinette
and Japanese plenipotentiaries was signed.
S
WO.
Styeis an affection of the margin of the
eyelid, With ata first appearance the entire
lid beware swollen and painftri, and the
tuiiammatiou may increase until the whole
side of the face becomes involved:
This inflammatory period uecally lasts
titres or four days, Ab the end of that
time the inflammation may subside grad-
ually ;
rad-ually; but in most casesa minute point
appears near the edge of the lid whioh has.
every Appearance of being what a stye
really is—a minute boil,
The swelling and•pain amused by a stye
are relieved by nothing so well as by ]teat,
anduponthe Oral) appearance of the trouble
we should lay cloths wrung out of hot
water over the closed eyelid, whether Dr
not there is evidence of iia "pointing."
At night it is well to apply some simple
ointment, like pure vaeeline along the edge
of both lids, in order that they may not
become glued together in sleep. Salt
pork and similar old fashioned remedies
are of no avail, and should not be resorted
to.
Immediately upon the appearance of
pointing, the skin ab, the summit of the
elevation should be puootured with the
point of a neddle, or better still, a little
slit may be made with a sharp knife,
This will allow the matter, and especially
thestagnant blood, to escape. We may
use pressure to squeeze out this waste
material, but only very gently, since it is
useless to attempt to expel the "core ,"of
the boil until it has thoroughly detached
itsrlf fromitsconneotionwlth the surround-
ing healthy parts.
When the core has finally ful'y separat•
ed, it can be easily removed, and frequent
attempts should be made untilthis has been
accomplished.. A little vaseline is all
that will then be needed to establish
complete' recovery.
If there appeals to be a disposition to a
repetition of the: annoyance, the family
dootor should be consulted, as internal
treatment is called for,
Perhaps the worst feature about a stye
is the fact that in some persons the mama.
ranee of the attack seems to establish a
tendenoy,sothat often suohe comparatively
short time elapses between the successive
attacks that the ltd becomes ohronioally
inflamed. In this event it la especlally
advisable to consult a doctor.
Itis often possible to prevent pointing
by touching the lid with caustic.
A stye is not oontraated by simply
looking at an inflamed eye, as is sometimes
thought:
Keep the Water Pure.
If a pitcher of ion water is set in a room
inhabited, in a few hours it will have
absorbed the perspiration gases of the room,
the air of which will have become purer
but the water unfit for use. This depends
010 bhe fact that water has the faculty of
condensing and thereby absorbing nearly
all the gases. Hence water kept uncovered
in a room a while is always unfit for use,.
and should be often removed, whether it
has become warm or not. Impure water is
as injurious to health as impure air, and
every person should provide the means' of
obtaining fresh pure water for all domestic.
uses.. An hours- intelligent examination
of the water supply at a proposed country
home would in a large majority of oases
prevent the risk of fevers and 'diphtheria.
Take in your dressing case an ounce phial
of saturated solution of permanganate of
potash. Mix six or eight drops into a
tumbler of the drinking water thatis
supplied. If it turns brown in an hour,
the water is, broadly speaking, unfit to
drink ;if.not, it not especially harmful.
Ifs country hotel sewage system is confin-
ed to cess pools, within a hundred feet of
the house, and near the water supply take
the next train These natters should force
themselves on one's personal attention.
Effect of Happiness on Health.
Itshould be remembered that happiness
and health are most intimately, it 'not
indissolubly, associated. The man who is
happy,: not by transient gleams of spiritual
sunshine, not by casual guy surface -coloring
of his existence, but by a blessedness all
through his body, isnot, in the proper
sense of the word, dieoased. The radical
idea of the term disease is inconsistent
with this state.
Lot us remember that life, blessedness
and health are one. He who is not blessed,.
who isnot happy, does not really live.
Re doss not realize the idea of whut we
call life. The wheels of life move, if they
move'. at all, with friction and labor and,
edor.t. All action in the line of duty is an
up -hill exertion and not a spontaneous
vivacity.
An unhappy man can not, in the full
sense' of the word, be a healthy malt. - Much
of what physicians treat as physioal disease
is only a mental unhappiness. It follows
from this that the hest physioian is he who
blesses others, who makes other souls
happy by the divine sunshine of his words
and presence. Tho sphere of hie tenefieent
life is a contagious .peacefulness and
undisturbed tranquillity. He ministers to
minds diseased, calms their fears, allays
their anx10410S, solves their doubts, quiets
forebodings, removes the gloom of despair,
supplants their .self•condomuation by a
sense of pardon, and aims to pluok from
the heart every rooted sorrow,
A Good Disinfectant.
The best disinfectant for a sick room
whore patients suffering from diphtheria,
scarlet fever, mnesles, or similar` diaeasss
are confined, is said to be equal parts tur-
pentine cud carbolic acid. Half a teaspoon-
ful of the mixture put ludo- a kettle of
boiling water and kept at a boiling point,.
will give relief to the sufferer, and prevent
the spread of thecontsgiou.
There is an underground river near
Charlotte, N. 0,, which is, only 45 feet
the surface. t is fent vide
below I 700t and
e bout 6 feet in depth. It was discovered
in 1893, •
Over 400 diamonds are known to Have
bean recovered from the ruins of Babylon.
Many ars snout, but most aro polished on
one or two sides only.
One of the hardest things in a young
lawyer's life in Koirttteky is that he has to
take his pay in moonshine whisky for
defending moonshiuers.
TK1 11QhU' ANbJ OF VIE TELEQRAPH
y0000:00 tits Odd #llllleutlues or operating
n Ionic A'hrmank Smear coital r10a,
A good deal of romance hovers around
the moue by whloe the world's news fs
gathered, The speed and acouraey with
whioh telegraph massages are transmitted
between the uttermost parte of the earth
is marvellous when the conditions under
whioh they aro sometimes transmitted ere
considered,
The 7ado-Eurapean telegraph line offers
it good illustration, Ib rune from Lollar% to
Lowestoft on the east 0000 of Euglend,
It then dips under the sea to Emden, on
the Gerntanycoaet,whence it passesthroukh
Germany to the Russian frontier, From
this poiob the wire passes by way of War.
saw, Rowno, Odessa, the Caucasus, and
Tiflis, to Persia, and by Toads to Teheran,
the oapblal of the Shah's queer domain.
There it joins the Indian Government line,
whioh runs from the Persian oaptial to
13uehiro on the Persian Golf, Thence
the wires run through Bel000ltistan, and
complete the route by oonneoting at Nur:
reehee, in northern India. The opera-
tion of thisimmenseetretait of line, passing
through countries of such varying climate„
end general characteristics, is obviously
one of much difficulty.'
On the snow -swept steppes of Russia the
wires are sometimes snapped litre thread
by the rapid Hight of Books of wild geese,
The poles are out down and made into
firewood by the nomad tribes of the
Caucasian districts, and the Dunning inn
keepers of Georgia seek to boom their
post -horse trade by deliberately creating
faults in the wires. In certain parts of the
mountainous regions of Asia the maintance
of the solitary t y ] ine involves no little per-
sonal risk and hardship to the staff hands,
Communication is often out oft by melees
rhes in the mountain distrlats, and the
work of repairing after a snowfall of five or
six feet is no light matter,
For Twenty-fiv e Years
7
AMC
R
THECOOK'SBESTFRIEND
LARGEST SALE IN CANADA.
'Mood's CUred
After
�
tilers Failed
5ot'ofu)a In the fbieck-fsonches ISIS
Clone 19InW..
Sangervllle. Maine.
"0. I. now & co., Lowell, Ideas,:
"Gentlemen: -I feel that I cannot sayeli ngh
lu favor of Hood's Sarsaparilla. For five years
Ihave been troubled _with scrofula in my neck
and throat. Several kinds of medicines which
I tried did not do me any good, and when I nom -
mewed to take Hood's Sarsaparilla there wor,
large bunches on my neck so sore that I could
9 . $walla
food P
ar
� Cures
not bear the slightest touch. When I had takbl.
ono bottle of this medicine, the soreness had
gone, and before I bad finished the second the
bunches had entirely disappeared," B0AMoan
AxwooD, Saagervflle, Maine.
N. B. If you decade to take, Flood's Samoa,
-lila do not ne induced to buy any other.
Hood' e Pills pure .constipation by restos,
ir•gthe peristaltic - ;tion of the alimentary canes
These mountain stations are provisioned
with several months' supplies before the
winter sets in, as the stall will be in touch
with the rest of the world by the wire only
until the spring weather opens out the
passes. In these supplies are always
included a liberal allowance of books and
games wherewith to relieve the monotony
of the teiinus winter exile.
stories
a
tories
1
The latest discovery in the scienti-
Io wos? C is that nerve centres located
in or Lear the base of the brain con-
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 that a serious injury
to the spinal cora will eanse paralysis
of the body below the injured point,
because the nerve force is prevented
by the injury from reachiug the para-
lyzed portiou, 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, when
a nerve centro is deranged or in any
way diseased it la impossible for it
to supply tho same quantity of nerve
fovea as when in a healthful aoutii-
lion ; hence the organs which depend
upon it for nerve forge suffer, and are
enable to properly perform their
work, and 00 a result disease makes
its, appearance.
Itt least two.thirds of our chronic
digeases and ailments aro due to the
imported 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-
srfl not the nerve centres, which alb
the cause' of the trouble.
The wonderful cares wrought by
the Great South American Nervine
Tonic aro dna alone to the fact that '
this remedy is based upon the fore- i
going principle. It cures by rebuild- i
ine and strengthening the nerve
centres, and thereby increasing the
supply of nerve forge or nervous
energy.
This remedyhas been found of
infinitevaluefor the cure of Nervous-
ness, Nervoats I'rostratiou, Nervous
Paroxysms, Sleeplessness, Forgetful.
nese, Mental Despondency, Nervous.
nese of Females, Hot Flashes, Sick
Headache, Heart Disease. The first
bottle will convince anyone that a
cure is certain.
South American Nervjne is with- ,
out doubt the grafi test remedy ever
discovered for the dare of Indigestion,
Dyspepsia, and all Chronic Stomach
Troubles, because it acts through the
nerves, 1t gives relief in ono day;..
and absolutely effects a permanent}
cure. in every instance, Do no;@
allow your Frejudicee, or the prejn.
dices of others, to keep you from
using this health -giving remedy. It
is based on the result of years of
soieutifie research and study. ,A
toile of physicians in treating those single bottle will convince, the magi
iscaoes is that they treat the organs incredulous. iffiret
A, 1911:tDU,N 'Nllotestile and Retail Agent for IRlrusdeta