The Brussels Post, 1895-10-25, Page 7roo
7,77l 7
iI '1 DEWS tLM: L
THE VERT WEST PROM *L QY.ER
THE WORLD.
latereating1fenoM About Our Ow o Country,
Great ltritaln, the Polited States, and
All Parts et the Globe, Condowod and
Assorted ifoitk hay Deniliap
aANAUA.,
Bur lanae aro reported in many parte of
the province.
Arthur Irwim of Philadelphia: will
menage the Toronto Baseball Club next
season.
A landslide took place inNewfcundland,
blocking railroads and destroying a few
bridges,
James Wall Was acquitted of the charge
of shooting James Nelson at the Hamilton
mazes.
Hamiltonsteamboat owners are applyin
to leave the 13eaoh canal deepened to four
teen feet,
1"he an Blackbird has been seized
at Campo Bello, N.13„ for landing, goods
illegally.
Sir Henry Strong, Chief Justice of the,
Supreme Court, has been granted four
menthe' leave of absence.
Mr. Alexander MoEaohren waa aaauitted
of the charge of embezzling $1,000 from the
Bell Organ Co., at London.
Mr. W. 1?. Soon will represent the
Manitoba Government in Toronto as
Immigration Agent this winter.
The Montreal Stook Exchange hereafter,
will exclude from membership all member
of other Stook Exchanges.
Mr. William Sallows,awell.known figure
in Guelph for half a ooutury,who woe highly
esteemed, died there on Thursday night.
Lieut. Alexander MacLean, of the 43rd
Battalion, Ottawa, has been appointed
aide -de -amp to Major -Gena Gascoigne.
Owing to a peculiar clause in a report
adopted by the London City Council the
electric ware have been stopped. '
Over a million baahels of wheat were
delivered at the C.P.R. elevators in Maaf-
toba and the North-West last week.
Major•Gen•. Gascoigne will attend the
Onion church parade of all the military
organizations in Toronto on November 3rd.
The opinion is gathering strength at
Ottawa that a session in the latter part
of November or early in December is an the
cards.
The London, Ont., Typographical Union
has reeolved to fine any member 51 who
patronizes a Chinaman, and 52 for a second
offence.
Twenty years ago yesterday the first
immigrants from Iceland arrived at
Winnipeg. There are now 10,000 of these
people in Manitoba.
Sir William Van Horne, president of the
Canadian Pacific railway, left Montreal
the other day in his private oar for the
Pacific ooaet,to make athorough iuepeution
of tho line.
Sixty buildings were destroyed by fire at
Chatham, N. B. A gale was blowing, and
the fire protection was poor. - Loss about
560,000 ; insurance 516,000.
One thousand gallons of rum, supposed
to have been brought from Se. Pierre, have
been found at Guysboro, N. S., and have
been seized by the Customs officials as
contraband.
Thirty-five additional locomotives have
been ordered for the 0. P. R. freight ser-
vice between Winnipeg and Fort William.
Wheat shipments are going out at the rate
of three hundred cars daily.
Disastrous prairie fires have been raging
all the way from Headingly? Man., to
within a few miles of W inufpeg. It is.
known that at least three lives were lost,
but in is impossible as yet to ascertain full
details.
Mr. Desmarais, oouneel for Napoleon
Demers, accused of the murder of his wife
in Montreal, etated that tbe-members .ol
the bar will take up a subscription :to
defray the expenses of the defence on the
second trial in November.
At Saturday's meeting of the Cabinet an
order was passed regarding the grades of
wheat. It was decided that there shall be
no wheat that is sowed or brushed to
remove smut or other fungoid growth in
the grade known as No. 1 Manitoba hard
wheat.
An important shipment of apples was
made,on Saturday from Grimsby, Ont.,
to Sydney, N. S.V. The Board of Con.
trol of the Ontario Fruit Experiment Ste.
tions is making this experiment in the
hope that it may be the means of opening
up a good market for Ontario, apples.
Vice.President and General Manager
Hays, of the \Yabaeh railway, has accept-
ed the position of general manager of tae
Grand Trunk railway. Mr. Hays' oontraot
with the Grand Trunk Railway Company
covers a period of five years, and .his
salary is to be $25,000. He is to have
absolute control of the road, and is not to
be hampered by specific instruction, ex.
ceps as to the general policy of the road,
from the Englieh Board of Directors. lie
ie the youngest man in the country to
occupy so important a railway position.
GREAT BRITAIN.
Four women were killed in a burning
mill at Glasgow.
If Mre. Langtry gate her divorce she
may marry Sir Robert Peel.
Belfast shipyard employees threaten to
strike if their demand for higher wages is
not conceded. '
Several oases of scab are reported in a
cargo of eheep from Montreal landed at
Liverpool by the steamer Norseman.
It reported in London that Lady Ran.
dolph Churchill will shortly marry a dls
tiagulehed officer of the British army.
It is announced that the revised Apo-
orypha, completing the rovieed version of
the Bible, will be publieed next month.
The Queen is at Behnoral, and notwith-
standing the weather, whioh is exception-
ally' severe, she indulges in long drives
every afternoon.
Lady Randolph Churchill (Mending to.
a gossip) is tattooed with a snake around
one arm. The opetation took plate during
her visit to India.
Admiral Sir James Robert Drummond,
Gentleman Usher of tho Black Rod in
the Imperial Parliament, is dead. fle was
eighty-three years of age:
The Venezuelan Consul at Cardiff dom•
plains that Great Britain will not submit
her ease to arbitration, but goes on
encroaching on Venezuelan territory.
Mrs. Ormiston Ohant, a social 'purity
loader from London, is at Boston. She
will lecture in Americo, bun refuses ,to
The Binet of the nilning sebtletnente lo
London orf Saturday was nuettended Gey
.any trouble,indhad the effeetofatren then.
fag the time .of the outride ebook markets,
4Nieie1 advioea received in London from
Ronne are to the elfeot that the Italian
Ggvermnentis willing to negotiates treaty
of oommeree with Canada on thelinea of
the Eteeee'Cenedien treaty.
Redyard Kipling, during hie reidenee
in India, wee regarded as the bestematour
actor ln thaosonntry ge often tock pert
In theatticale in Lahord, and hie friends
earnestly urged biro to adopt the etoge ae
P. profession. He wee pertioulaflyefective
in comedy rolee,
At the convention of the Parnellito party
held et Dublin, Mr, John Redmond said
that unless the freedom of Ireland ie grant-
ed, in the case of war, it would be to the
tune of the "Mareeillaise" that the Irish
would march, and not to that of "God Save
the Queen."
Lord Rosebery, e?t.Prlme Minister of
England, is enjoying life.. He has boon
entertaining guests ab hie place in Sgobland,
while hie house in Berkeley square,London,
ie being reeonatruotod, It is to be one of
the handsomest dwellings in London, It
Will take another year for the full comple-
tion of the improvements.
It ie elated that the oat of entertaining
the German Emperor on his visit to West,
moreland waa 5150,000, which ineludes the
oast of special trains, no fewer than ten of
which were used on the occasion Of hie
visit, It id further etated that the cost of
decorating Lowther castle in preparation
for the Emperor's visit was 5250,000.
Princess Raiulani, 'daughter of the ex.
Queen of Hawaii, is at present in London,
where she is treated with the reepeet
accorded to a reigning Princess. She is
accompanied by her father, Mr. Oleghorn,
who has a letter of introduction to the
British Foreign Office from the British
Minister at Honolulu, and ib Is thought
that his mission is political.
UNITED STATES.
Of the forty.four.State Governors in the
American Unioo, thirty-nine are avowed
believers in religion.
The wedding of the Duke of Marlbor-
ough and Miss Vanderbilt has been fixed
for November 14.
Five persons were killed and several
others badly injured in as Greet oar accident
in the west end of Pittsburg.
Mrs. Clara Doty Bates, the American
writer of literature for juvenile readers, is
01 at Chicago, beyond recovery.
Near Batavia, N. Y., a New York
Central express dashed right through a
freight train without even derailing the
engine.
A report comes from Washington that
Australian cattle /shipped to England have
been found to be affected with pleuro-
pneumonia,.
Mrs. Marshall, a California telegraph'
operator, was shot in the arm by burglars,
but she drew her revolver and drove the
two men off,
Gen. Mahone, of the United States army,
popularly known as the "Hero of the
Crater," died in Washington on Tuesday,
He was in his sixty-ninth year.
Stephen Hoyt, of Lyndonville, Vt., has
in hie possession a collection of old coins,
among them being an English guinea of
1705 and a shilling of 1356, also a crown of
1726.
Miss Mary B. Harris, of Warner, N. B.,
has one of the largest and most valuable
collections of autographs in the United
States. There are more than one thousand,
including all the Presidents of the United
States.
A minister at Oltioago, referring to the
torture of a colored man at Cole City,
Georgia, remarked :—" This must stop or
the torch must beapplied," and the audi-
ence of colored people rose up and endorsed
the sentiment.
The railway contractors on the American
aide of the Niagara Falls have completed
their blasting operations. They are pre.
pared to compensate those on the Canadian
side whose houses were injured by flying
rocks.
The Arion Fish Company, of Duluth,
Minn., has begun a suit against the Canadian
Government to recover heavy damages for
the confiscation of a lot of netting which
the company claims wee in American water
at the time of the seizure.
Peter Crawford, 22 years old, has been
asleep in Cleveland, with the exception of
a. few hours, for seven menthe. A little
more than a year ago. Mr. Crawford was
thrown from a mail waggon, in New York,
sustaining injuries to his spine,and this,
it is believed, has led to this remarkable
case of catalepsy_
Mr. Richard Laterbrook, founder of the
Srst ateel pen manufactory iu the United.
States and President of the Esterbrook Pen
Company, died at Camden, N. J. He
carne from England and established his
factory .in 1360 in a little frame building
on the site of the present establishment,
whioh employs 400 hands.
GENERAL.
Italian troops have captured a nativ
stronghold in Abyssinia.
This month Sarah Bernhardt will be
fifty-one years of age.
It ie reported that 200 persona were Killed
in the riots at Trebizond.
A woman arreated the other day in Sicily
confessed to poisoning 23 children.
The town of La Paz, Mexico, has been
completely destroyedby a hurricane.
The raportof the capture of Antananarivo
by the French has been confirmed.
Emperor 114 illiam's favorite drink is a
large glass of champagne containing a few
petals of violets.
The season's oafish in Behring Sea will be
only about forty thousand skins, or ten
thousand lose than last year.
The torture of witnesses at the Koohehg
inquiry was so revolting that the British
repreaentative had to protest.
The Spanish Cabinet has signed for atoms
of ten million dollars with the Banque de
Paris, wholly for Cuban ekpenses.
Advices received in Auckland, N. Z.,
from Honolulu, show that there have been
sixty-five deaths from cholera in Hawaii up
to September 26th.
1t le reported that serious disturbances
between the Armenians and Turks have
broken out at Sivas, Vanand Bitiis, three
of the leading cities of Armenia.
Ammunition and torpedooe have been
sent to the forte on the Dardanelles tbde.
fend the straits should Great Britain at-
tempt to make a naval demonstration.
A epebial despatch reoeived in Shangba
from Tokio, announces that the Japanese
forces on the Island of Formosa have met
and defeated the main body of the Black:
Sage.
A strict inquiry will be hold in the Daae
d)eouss the 'inning of music halls. of the Armenians under arrest at Constan.
oe,albeamitteueprvdwiilewes of
severe rrfl primers
.inapt.
Aspinning feetory.eb Iloabolt, forty-five
miles fromMeneter, tVeetphulle, hoe eel,
lapsed, and buried forty workingmen. in
the thine, Of We number ton wore killed
outright and nine wereeeriously injured.
It is etated In Madrid tbat the Govern -
onset of the TJnited States has noodled the
Spanieh Miele ter at Washington that there
le a neeeesity that Spain 0houldaotprompt.
iy ru het efforts to crush the tusurreotion in
Cabe,
The Berlin Itreuz Zeitung has s; deepateh
from Constantinople, whish says that the
Armenian controversy bids fair to become.
the /starting point of a struggle between
Great Britain and Roseia for paremeuut
influence in the $osphorue.
A sensational feature of the Secialistie
convention at Breslau Met week was the
presence of the Duchess Pauline Mathilda
of Wurtemborg, who was attired in a red
blow, and applauded vigorpusly the must
extreme utterances of the speakers.
The Marl of Dunmore has purobased a
farm near Johannesburg South Africa, for.
£35,000,and proposes Lullding a largo house
and taking up hie residence there,' Lord
Henry Paulet is another British nobleman
who has euaoumbed to the attraotioua of
South Africa.
There is great activity in all the Spanish
Government dookyarde, and the Befitting
01gunbeats and cruisers is being carried on
night and day. It' is believed these prepay.
attune are due to the poesibillty that the
United States may recognize the Cuban
insurgents as belligerents.
The trial of Whiles, the Sb. John's, NSd.,
smuggler, has brought to light the fast
that smuggling has been carried on to -a
gigantic extent by a well organized syndi.
sate, the members of whioh, being strong
supporters of the Whiteway Government,.
were given, it is said, a tacit support in
their operations.
Mme. Thalberg,widow of the pianist and
daughter of the great basso, Lablaohe,
died recently in Thalbcrg's villa at Posilipo,
in Naples, at the age of eighty-four. When
her 'husband died .she had the body
embalmed with a petrifying preparation
that preserved ib with some semblance of
life, and kept it seated in the room where
Thalberg used to work.
The Shandom:, likes Paris very muoh,but
in the midst of the gaieties of that frivolous
city he does not neglect his devotional
exercises night and morning, For these it
is necessary for him, as It was in London,
to face Mecca, and in order to find out just
where Mecca, when in Paris, happens to
be at the time, he oonsulte a pocket compass
which he always carries with him.
N. Vallot, the rich Frenchman who ha
made a hobby of climbing Mont Blano,and
who has made the. ascent twenty times,is
a alight little man, not at all a typical
climber. In his knickerbocker suit be
Iooks more like the conventional tourist of
the seas, le thana mountaineer. M. Vallot
now has a projeotfor surveying the Mont
Blanc range, and with a civil engineer and
nearly a dozen assistants he reoently pass.
ed through Chamonix on his way to the
mountain..
PRAIRIE FIRES.
Loss or Life and :;meat Damage to Pro
party in the Vicinity of Winnipeg.
A decpateh from Winnipeg .says: --
While fighting a prairie fire, near St.' Vital,
several miles south of the city, on Friday
night, Arthur St. Germain, aged twelve,
eon of Pierre St. Germain, was 'burned to
death, and an elder brother was probably
fatally burned. The two boyewere trying
to gave several hay stooks from the flames,
when their clothing ignited. John, the
elder brother, ran towards the house with
his clothing ablaze, being frightfully
burned before the flames were put out by
his parents. On searching later for the
younger boy his body was found on the
prairie almost burned to a crisp. At. Elm
Creek two fatalities occurred from the.
same cause. Edward Lukyn, a resident of
Winnipeg, was engaged with a gang of
C. P. R. section Hien in keeping prairie
fires from destroying the company's pro.
perry. The foreman, name unknown, and
Lukyn were suddenlysurrounded and
could not escape from the fire. The fore.
man was burned to deathonthe prairie
Lukyn was resorted by some fellow work.
men, butsuccumbed to his injuries at an
early hour this morning. Deceased Dame
here front England about four years ago,
ant was well known in the. city. It is,
feared that other fatalities have occurred
as fires were raging on all sides of the city
last night.
Later reports received show that the
losses nave been widespread. At St.Ooarles,
David 'Tait, s young farmer, was 'bunting
with his sister. The flames overtook them
and Tait was badly burned. At Oakville
hundreds of tons of hay on the big meadows
southeast were burned. Fortunately very
little damage was done to grain stacks,
The fire started from burning straw in
stubble fields. The fire around: Baldur
did -$10,000 damages, stacks and build.
inn burned in all,directions, The
south and east is partly under control.
Those burned out are.: Messrs. Huston,
Geo. Sexamith, bloKnight,Craig,Gerolamy,
Monkman and Preston,
COREA'S REBELLION.
THEY BERT PEG LE FREE.
Outgrowth or the stollen That 411 Alen ere
L,4tt1,
There la at loosbono aouatry.in the world
where it aceta nothing is die, In come vI
the eantant of Switzerland all the deed,rlah
as well as peor,are buried et public expenee,
Coffins pnd all other necaaeery artifdes are
furnished on applloation to certain under.
takes designated by rho government,
Everything connected whit the inoormentie
absolutely gratuitous, including the grave
and religious service. All classes avail
themselves freely of the law,
. Appropriations are made for the medical
fnepeabiou of the body, for advertlsing the
corpse, for the Amoral prooassiou and funeral
for the coffin and dressing of the hearse,for
opening and closing the grave, and for
putting op and numbering the headboard,
Furthermore, the grave moat be ornament-
ed by growing plaute Ina modest way at
the expense of the community, bub the
bereaved family has the privilege of adding
to such decorations. A special law provides
for the payment of sabsiaies by the canton•
al government to the oommunibiee fn eases
of epidemic.
In the Canton of Glarus etrangere as well
SS citizens are buried at the
EXPENSE OF von STATE.
The grave, too, must be kept in proper
00051(ion for a term of ten years, The
cemetery is the property of the community
and is plaoed under the care of a superin•
tendent who arranges for and conducts
funerals, keeps a register of the graves,
which are numbered consecutively, and
sees that they are properly marked and
kept in order. The oofilne are to be made
of pine wood and after a model prescribed
by theauthoritiee, who establish a uniform
price for them. The -graves follow snit
other its regular order, according to the
date of burial, in uniform rows, and the
dead are all laid side by side without die-
tmotiou ns to standing in life or religious
belief. Ohildren, however, on aeaonnt of
the sin/tiler size of their graves, are buried
apart from the adults. In can religious
serving are dispensed with by regent bells
are tolled in the customary fashion and the
recorder of the life statisticsreads at the
grave the personal record of the defunct.
Officials and employes at burials are forbid.
den to receive gratuities. Wherever free
burial has been introduced' in Switzerland
the principle has been adopted that, inas-
much as death makes all men equal, there
ought to be no distinction is tltsinterments
of the departed. It is assumed that all
citizens, high or low, rich or poor, will
avail themselves of the provisions of the
enactment, and that all funerals shall be
equally plain and unostentatious.
Details or the Mmisacre of the (Omen .—
Javanese Troops Countenanced the
10501.
A epeoisl despatch from Seoul, Corea:
whioh was delayed in transmission • by the
authorities at Tokio,givea the details of the
attack on the palace as follower—The
palace was broken into on Tuesday morning,
the Sth list.,, at 6 O'olook', by a body of
Lorean troops and a band of Japanese Soshi
(ruffians) in civilian dress. The Colonel in
command of the troops, on refusing to enter
the palace, woe killed, and a number of the
palace guard were /slain. The Japanese
'entered the Queen's room and killed the
Queen, the Minister of the Household and
three women. The bodies were taken
outside and burned. The Japanese troops
were at the palace, but took no part in the
prooeedings. Tai Won Kun, the Isring's
father, reaohed the palace soonafter the
assault and aeaumed the chief authority.
.lie fa now dictator, and is knows to have
been in the plot. The pro.Japanese party
areae control. Many of the Queen's party
have been arrested and many more have
fled. Ibis believed that the Queen dowager
was killed. Guards from the United States
warship Yorktown and a Russian oruieer at
Chemulpo have been ordered up. Great
excitement prevails. It is thought that
the butoherf will hasten aotien on the part
of Russia,
PRUSSIAN HORSES.
•
,There- the German Army Italses the
Horses It Requires 10 Time or I'cacc.
In the easternmost corner of Prussia
near the village of Trakehnen, is a famous
horse -breeding establishment, whioh was
started by ;the father of Frederick the
Great This great stud -farm ie still carried
on with characteristic energy, and not only
provides the German army with the hundred
thousand horses which it requires in time
of peace, but does much toward keeping up
a high general standard among the horses
of the country. Nearly every farm m East
Prussia is devoted to this one oocupatioo,
and the German army gets many more
horses from this little corner than from
anywhere else in the kingdom. The author
of "'Toe Border land of Czar and Kaiser"
gives an admirable pioture of the gentleness
and docility of the Trakehnen thorough-
breds.
We pulled up in a field where were a
hundred three.year-old stallions running
free, and watohed by two herders, each
bearing a long whip, whioh he cracked now
and then as a warning that some one of the
herd was straying.
The herd appeared very quiet, and paid
little attention to our carriage as it drove
up close to them on the grass. ?the major
said they were as gentle as sheep and not
half as sly, and at his invitation I jumped
front my seat and walked up to them, into
the very midst of them, strolling in and.
out amongst them, patting diem on the
nose or flank, whenever I happened to be
nearest them.
To secure this result a prize is offered to
those herders whose horses show bhe 01080
confiding disposition at the approaoh of
man.
One evening we went to see the horses
milled home from the pasture. They, came
iu troops of hundreds, and gathered in.
large enclosures faring the stables. ' The
main body divided itself according to color,.
the blacks going to one corner, the browns
to another, the bays to a third ; of whites
or grays I Saw uo specimens.
Here and there would be one that had
mistaken his corner, or was seeking for -
hidden company out of mischief. The
keeper had no difficulty in bringing him to.
his right senses, however, by simply calling
him name andwaving his hand in the
directional the corner to whioh he belonged.
The colt thus addressed invariably leaped
out from the corner to whioh he was an
intruder, and galloped straight to the
corner' whose color matched his. This we
saw done many times over, and it never.
failed.
THREATENED SHIPPING STRIKE.
Alt Impending Trouble—The Dock Yards
of Belfast, The Clyde, 00,1 Tyneshle.
Will be Affected.
A despatch from London says :—The
shipping strike at Belfast and on the Clyde
will be a big affair unless the trouble is
soon averted. She seat of the strike is at
Belfast, where the engineers are striking
for higher wages in view of MI! roved
trade. The Belfast shipowners have
agreements with the Clyde, Tyneside, and
other north' °oast yerds,requlring the latter
to shut out their own engineers if the men
compel the Belfast yards to close, On
Friday 3,000 men in theHarland,and Wolff
and other yards at Belfast etruok work,
and it is expected that 20,000 men will
shortly be idle. If the Clyde yards close ae
expeoted, more than 100,000 workmen will
be out of work, and It is estimated that
work will be suspended on 105 vowels now
building in the Clyde yards, with an
aggregate tonnage of 230,060. Muth
anxiety prevails about the Tyneside end
northeast coast, where a stoppage of work
would mean the dismissal of 120,000
engineers.
91r,APiLQCiP•
nsr
AlalootingofbAbsOes:ilall'rlvy tionnall,.
gotttuetertt iitels X3x,teeted lit Chinn,
A depatch tram London aaye 'Mr, J,
Gosobee, first Lerd of the Admiralty; the
Duke of Devenahire, .Preeidept of the
ouncili end Mr. Balton', ii'irstI,ord of the
'l'reaeury, have been summoned by Prime
Minleter Salisbury to a.eonfereuce ip Lon -
den. The ofSgiale pained, with Mr. J asoph
Chamberleiu, Secretary of State for the
Colonies, form 0Oquneil within the Cabinet.
They are preparing !Mei:dope-en which the
plenary Council's apiniou w)11 be taken,
]kir. Goeohen'a hurried arrival from
Switeerland on Friday and hie long subse-
quent stay as the Admiralty created the
impression that dangerous developments
are impending, involving nation on the part
et the British Mediterranean aquadren,
Reliable Foreign Offioe opinion is, how,
ever, that it is not the Turkish Governmqut,
but that of China,whinis urgently
engaging the attention of the Ministers,
Yioeroy Chang-Chih-Tung, updauubed by
the demonsbration made lately by
the British fleet on•the Min river and the
$ang.tse.Kfang, has curtly refesod to be
used es a medium to convey to Pekin the
British demands for a fuller enquiry into
the Ku.Ohepg _.maseaere and reparation
therefor. It is not believed that Great
Britain will remain content with the action
shehue already taken. It is generally.
expected that another ultimatum will be
sent simultaneously to Cniang.Chih,Tung
and the Government at Pekin within the
next few days. Probably Lord Salisbury
will consult with the full Cabinet before
the ultimatum is dent as the - official
expectation is that the issue of this
ultimatum will be action on the part of
the British squadron in Chinese waters.
Gen. Greely does not beleive it possible
to reach the North Pole in a balloon."
For Twenty-five Years''
THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND
LARGEST SALE Ire CANADA.
Weak, Tired, Nervous
Womou, who seem to be all Worn
out, will find in purified blood, made
rich and healthy by Hood's Sai'sapa•
Alla, permanent relief and strength.
The following is from a well known
nurse::
" I have mitered for years with. female
complaints and kidney troubles and I
have had s great deal of medical advice
during that time, but have received fit$$1
or no benefit, A friend advised mo to tali*
Floods Sersa drilla and I began to use it
together with Hood's Mills, I have reale
ized more benefit from these medicine
than from anything else' have ever taken,
From l nay personal =portent,I believe
Hood's Sarsaparilla to be amost complete
bleed' purifier." Mns. 0. CRosnaroi, 7,1
Cumberland 11., Toronto, Ontario.
Hood9s arsaparHlla
Qs the Only
True ; Eood Purifier
Prominently in the public eye today.
CC 1' fi,d0s ousytotny,easytot'ake,
easy In ailed, Ole,
One day whenD'Ale,hbert and Condoreet
were dining with Voltaire, they proposed
to converse on atheism ; but Voltaire
stopped them at once. " Wait," said he,
" till my servants have withdrawn ; I do
not wish to have my throat cut to -night."
—G. B. Cheever.
oi-nes
f she
1
The latest discovery in the scienti-an.i notthe nerve centres, which are
Inc world is that nerve centres located the cause of the trouble.
The wonderful cures wrought by
the Great South American Nervine
Tonic are due alone to the fact that
this remedy is based upon the fore-
going principle. It cures 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 -
nese, Nervous Prostration, Nervous
Paroxysms, Sleeplessness, Forgetful-
ness, Mental Despondency, Nervous-
ness of Females,' Hot Flashes, Sick
Headache, Heart Disease. The first
bottle will convince anyone that o'
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 ants through the
nerves. It givis relief in one day,
and absolutely effects a permanent
cure in every instance. Do not
allow your prejudices, or the preju.
dices of ethers, to beep you from
tieing this health -giving remedy.. It
is based on the result of yearn of
scientific research and study. A
single bottle will oonvinee the * qp/
taY
tiiseasesisthtet they treat the organainoredtilous.
M
A, DEADAY IV' atomic and Retail Agent for Mew
in or near the base of the brain con-
trol all the organs of the body, and
when these nerve centres are
deranged the organs whioh they
supply with nerve fluid, or nerve
force, are also deranged. When it
is remembered that a setons 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 reaohing the para-
lyzed portion, it will be understood
how the derangement et the nerve
centres will cause the derangement
of the various organs which they
supply with nerve force; that is, when
o nerve centre is deranged or in any
way diseased it is impossible for it
to sapply the same quantity of nerve
forgo as when in a healthful condi-
tion ; hence the organs which depend
upon it for nerve force suffer, and aro
enable 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