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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1896-6-26, Page 2THE NEVILLE AFFAIR. .\ EXPERIMENT IN LIQUOR SEI,IrINe. 'The Secesas or it ilenlelpnll Jeanne !tow nun cit New Wes, Tho result of a most rotates#.ing o�^ BY F4 H. MARE. perbe re ill the airo t l to the muni- • the horse. After kissing his wife good oipalizatiola of the liquor traffic has ' QHAPTNIt L night and eautiening her to keep the just Wen ascertained after a, trial of door locked until be orthe servants map' =mole.The experiment bee The say had been a dreary ope i ane returned, he drove off, with the lad as been made by Dr; Lees, scereterY of of those foggy I ChP servants returned home about which ono lxecmes only too well ac- an hour afttrwvard and found the .front December days with pilot, �ivainted, when residing In London , and door unfastened, Thcy took An spetaal for me, the time had passed at such a ;notice of this, but looked it after they Pt �e fl a lagging para that in the evening I u had entered rho hotslbY itwent directly to their rooms but lilts. Ne- on my overcoat and started out fora villa's maid after laying aside her stroll—despite the weather. wraps, came down to the drawing room As 1 reached the street, where I u wbers thfe found ter apparently tnressswo ng stood undecided` for a few moments, the Sbe called for help, and then, raising darkening shadows of night were fast lilts, Nevilles head, tried the usual olosin about the city, The atmosphere ,method adopted #n case of a fainting g and shilling. 1 concluded not 'Nell. Iter efforts proved o no avail. was damp Her lady's arms and limbs were appar- to go very far, so I turned toward eptly be oming stiff and paralyzed. Be' the private apartments of a friends who Ing unable to find the .doctor in the was at. that time thief superintendent house, who servant aboutd another play! ] '- et the detective force of Scotland Yard, who, , oh ea arrived dbo, told them that d A brisk walk of a foe squares Mrs• Npev#lle was dead, brought me to itis door, and I was Dead 2' they exclaimed ; ' she can- all changed admitted, I had barely ex -we burst tein o tears, ornd vall the household changed greetings with hire when we were attached to her were interrupted liar the entrance of "The physician, by quentioning the one of the force who, taking the chief servants,elearned fotheir having at- aside, made some communication in a bendstheir teras uponatheir ro- lowv tone, which T was unable to hear• turn finding d that, being unable to find Dr. The chief answered him, however, with Neville. they had sent for him. less ciroumspeotion. " Having learned all that he could I believe you've made a valuable from them, and there being nothing capture, Barton." he said, in a tone that t°ththey he drove bemdo hetomy r000uld m and great satsifaction ; " as soon as tilled me, for he knew that I was an the prisoner arrives bring him in here oldfriend nandf drove tweiitthyhim toy the where we will not be disturbed," house. As soon as the door had closed on The servant who admitted us con - Barton he turned to Inc. ducted me to where the body lay, It " Wharton," he exclaimed, " I believe had been placed upon a couch in the apprehended the man same rom where they found her. What We have at last app a ebange bad come over those once who is responsible for the Neville af- calm features! . A look of horror was fair" imprinted on her face, the muscles of which were inched and drawn, as e news's that ?" 1 cried; "I thought though she had suffered extreme pain the newspapers stated that the Needles before death relieved her; as I eb- bed died from natural causes, and that served that her body had become stiff the murder theory had no foundation and rigid in so short a time. As the -that it had, in fact, been thoroughly ed by i ansevereaspasthat r tId dirt great- lynoth tsexpioded. They even said that the po- lice wonder at this: lice and your department bad dropped ' As Yet no one knew whatbad be - the case and accepted the doctor's state- some of Dr. Neville, and no informa- tion was received from him until 5 ment that they had tried a natural o'clock that morning, when be drove up death, although they were unable to to the house. He stopped,, and, after agree wholly upon the cause for the hitching his horse,2him at ame theldorthe r. As £arae," son as he had recovered from his sur - "You are quite right about the prise at seeing me there at that early newspapers," said the chief dryly ; "they hour he asked what had caused me to didmakethat statement but some- pay them a visit at such an unusual Have you not beard?' I asked. discover the inner workings of this de- ."Heard@ heard what? Explain partment. Duroch and myself were not yourself. Has anything happened?' so easily satisfied, even after the ver- "Yes, doctor, And where have Yon dict rendered by the honorable al. D.'s. So we have been investigating quietly —so quietly that none of our own force even knew we were still working on the case." The chief paused, handed me a ci- gar and lighted one for himself, and then resumed meditatively: " This has been a very strange and mysterious affair from the first. The Nevildes, as you know, are considered very respectable people, and their wealth enables them to mingle with the very best society and to get all the en- joyments possible from life. Of late years the doctor has not followed his profession, except to attend his friends or to relieve the poor and suffering waifs of humanity who were without means to secure the services of any oth- er physician. " His wife was also a kind woman, charitable and gentle -hearted, who still retained a godly share, of that beau- ty which in her youth was most re- markable. When they first came here they were a fie -looking couple, he be- ing about 28 or 30 and she lour or time, times they fail to read the minds or five years his junior. She was at that time the most idolized woman in society. She was a l odium above the m tittle height, with swell -rounded form, and moving with the ease and grace of a queen. Her dark, glossy hair formed a crowning contrast for her fair face and tinted e like pearls andcheeks. through Cher h 1 lips as they parted in frequent smiles, whiab were ever ready for her friends and ad- mirers, 11 that did not captivate them, fine roguish. look from her dark eyes, Which usually accompanied the smile, would, for she was a finished coquette, 'Nearly all themen were in love with her, and envied the doctor, who kept watch over her flirtations, for he was a little jealous of her, but so ef- fectively concealed this weakness that only a close observer could notice it. 'The first few years of their life here they were the gayest couple in society, in fact, its very pulse. They attend- ed all the receptions and grand func- tions and gave more bails and panties than any others of their set. But as they grew older they quieted down, as most people do, and, leaving the gay and giddy wbxrl for the younger ones, took their place among the quiet and steady elders. Of late yearsthey spent the great- „ er portion of their time at home, while in the city,, and seemed to enjoy each other's society so much as to be wholly satisfied therewith. They sometimes bad small quarrels, it is true, as we have since learned, but what mated doves do not—and these never were heard outside their own household. Nearly twenty years they lived bare thus, with nothing to disturb their course, "Just about six months ago the doc- tor furnished all his servants with tick- ets for the theater, so that evening be and his wife were alone In the bouse— a thing that rarely happened. About 910 or 10 o'clock the door bell rang and the doctor, Who opened the door, found apoorly-dressed youngster stand- ing on the steps, and upon his cheeks, which were none too clean, were traces of tears. " He brought the lad inside, whop as goon as he had recovered .sufficient breathe, told the doator, between sobs, that his mother was very ill and prob- ably dying' and, being too poor to employ a plc si.c1an, he had come to ask if Dr. Neville would not be good enough to go and see his mother. In- vestigation revealed the fact that they lived in a poor quarter of the city, nearly five miles away; and the lad claimed thathe bad run nearly every step of the distance. Neville dad not wish` to ge and leave hie wife alone in the house but she insisted she was not afraid, and said the servants would soon be homo the water•departmexit of the Birmmg- barn corporation: t According to the instructions of o li corporatism, a public-bouse was open- ed in SPPtember, 1881, Elanvil- lage for the purpose of mitering to the wants of several hundred men and their families, The rules at man- agement Were decidedly stringent, and the success of the publio-bouse, is, thereloro, more important. The pub- lio-house is opened daily between the hours of 12 and $ pm. for one and a half hours only; and for the whole time in the evening between 5.80 and 9 o'clock,. On Sundays it remains closed all day, but on Saturday's it remains open from 1 o'clock till 9 o'otook. Wo- men are not allowed in the bar at any time under any pretext whatever, men only over 18 years of age being perinitteit to drink in the bar. 150 woman under the age of 21 years or boy under the age of 10 years is served with beer at the jug department. No per - 00/1 is supplied with more than one quart of liquor at the morning hour, wbilo but two quarts may be eon- sumed on the premises in the even- ing, ONLY VILLAGE INHABITANTS are allowed to freely enter the public - house, but strangers may do so with a written order, which is easily obtain- able. 10 will be at ones conceded that the municipal public -house was started at a greet disadvantage,there being an ordipary establishment, cunducted on the usual lines, a few hundred yards off, Mr. Lees conferred with men of experience in the 'trade" before the house was duly established, and a qualified public -house manager was appointed to conduct the business on behalf of the corporation. He bas fully, entered into the spirit of the municipal experiment, and quite un- derstands that he is tbougbt no more highly of if bis sales are bigh than if they are low, whereas, should there be any drunkenness or disturbance, he is held responsible for it. The takings, of course, have varied l0U to 95 0 a abl from $ veryoder g k. The net profits for the first hall year were as bigh as 8700, and they have since been increasing. The profits are devoted to the maintenance of a reading and recreation room, which is distinct from the public- house, ublio- house, and this bas proved to mini- mize the drinking—one of the princi- pal objects of the experiment.. In concluding his report on the re - been, that yon do not know you no sult of the experiment. Mr, Lees longer have a wife?" says:. "Individually, I am a total "he old man staggered back, as abstainer but I am perfectly certain tbon b be had been struck a Heavy thatp we are serving the interests of blow, and, passing his hand across his u bolesoma liquor,erance 1ar ett tinder r in providing ire- forehead, exclaimed: "My God, moot what do you mean?" gulations, than we should be d we "He soon learned when I Drought ( affic alto- attempt t tleavprohibito be conducted in ham into the room wbere she lay. Fall- ing on his knnes beside her, he called the usual way." her by her name, and begged her to speak to him, and when be finally real- ized that she was no more tears flow- WHAT IS A CYCLONE ? ed fast and lois grief would have melt- _ ed any beart. "But let us draw a curtain here and Aar Fnyerteel four [ter C'rvrtre of treks is a4 send as Steel—Its „twilit Destruc- tiveness. The storm at St. Louis by which the damage was done seems to have been and all the out-ofedoor work. One even- a genuine cyclone. and a genuine ty- ing these two had obtained permission , clone is perhaps the mast terrible of all to spend the night at the home of the natural phenomena, It often takes housekeeper'ssister, who lived in a die- the shape of a cone inverted, with its tent part of the city and who was very P ill. They did not return until 8 o'clock base in the sky anrrounded by clouds the next morning, and on their arrival of intense blackness and with its apex were surprised to find the house still elongated into a column of condensed closed.nThe door was fastened by a air as black as the cloud from which theylatch, and, th had a key, T they let themselves in. The housekeep- It depends. The whole is surcharged er prepared breakfast and then went to with electricity, and as it moves along call her master. in its path of destruction, it is illumin- As she received no response to her ated by the glow of heat lightning or repeated calls and knocking, he came down -stairs and sent her husband up, momentarily obscured by the elinddng but be mat with no better success. Try- play of the flashes accompanying the continuous roars of thunder b ywvbich its approach is anncunced. Such descriptions given by close ob- servers, leave no doubt of the electri- cal character of the cyclone, but they hardly suggest its real possibilities of iFi 8 4 Q''oTe BJOYOLU TG FOR BABIES itees 0 P,ilitInti . IT IS CONSIDERED A DECIAEL DAFIiEROU$$ PRACTICE, eteatietiec:Vlty Children !Menai not he Cru•, Flea elf fire remit o/' it iskeci-,4'nses of 1Milured, Medical men say that the growing practice of carrying infants an bicyelss is a dangerous one. They say tllatihe delicate nervous system of a child PUY be seriously injured by riding it on a r coun- try 4 o t s. ll wheal over a 1'qh r Tough Y ae try road So perilous is the custom bloat a long continuance of it may mato a ohlld a cripple for life. First of all, the dootors say, there is danger in the drought to which achild ridden on re wheel is peculiarly sweep tible. alany adults have felt the effects of this draught, and the number of babies and small children that have suf- fered from it is inealoulable. Dr, Robert Stanford Newton, chief medical adviser of the Department of Justice of New York, and a specialist in nervous diseases, told a reporter all about the dangers to whicb"babies and young children who are taken out 011 wheels b.y their enthusiastic parents are exposed,: Dr. Newton bas had in his private BRAIN AND BAR AFFECTIONS practice two cases of children who were thus seriously injured. One was a child eighteen months old, whose parents live in Rutherford, N..7, The mother died and the father used to ride in to business every day on bis wheel, bringing the child with him, perched in a basket attached to the front of the bicyole. 1'he child was taken ill, and local -physicians sent the infant to Dr. Newton tor examination. He discovered that it was suffering from meningitis of the brain—thatis, inflammation of .the membrane im- mediately covering the brain. The other child was about one year old at the time it was taken to Dr. Newton. The history of the cesesbow- ed that the child after baying been rid- den in the basket attachment of the bicycle for a fele days, had manifested great restlessness at night, those symp- toms being accompanied by fever. It was noted shortly afterwards that the infant tossed and turned its bead in one direction, and that after two or three days it seemed to lose interestin r what was going on. To attract the child's attention it was necessary to tap it on the hand or arm. A thorough ex- amination revealed the fact that the child had become deaf in one ear, from which affliction it has not yet recover- ed. take up the story throe months furth- er on. "The doctor had dismissed all his ser- vants except the housekeeper cod her husband who attended to the horses ing the door, he found it unlocked, an on enteringdiscovered the xoom ampt Y and the bd disc ver undisturbed, shoving that it bad not been slut in that night. As the doctor, since bis wife's death, had often slept in a chair in the drawing - room, the man went there to look for On entering be saw the doctor lying destructiveness. Tbosc who hays en the floor, in a cramped condition; stu:i.ed the subject with the best op - and on going to bis side saw that he was portunities for understanding it have dead. He immediately notified the po- concluded that the air nt the centre lice of the district and sent word to of the swiftly whirling vortex bas been me at the yard. I left an inspector b tb enormous pressure up in charge of my office, and together o with Barton, started for the house. When we arrived there we found the superintendent of that district with a f few of the police already in charge, The ' superintendent and a sergeant were in the room with the body. whieh was still lying on the floor where it had been found. The limbs were slightly bent et the knees, the bands were clinched, and on the hack of the right hand wvas a slight scratch, wwbich might have been made with a pin. But the band was of a purple tinge. Upon labs face was that same awful look I had noticed upon his wife's. "The superintendent sairl be did not know wbetber there had been foul playor not; and to help him deckle he art sent fee several physicians to come and look at the body. Aside from the slight wound on bis band, there was no indication of such, and no other suspiet- ous circumstances, except the recent like death of his wife to suggest it. (To be Continued. solidified e e BRAIN AND DIGESTION, n ft. They explain the cyclone's UNPARALLELED POWER, to keep her company, So the doctor, With the boy, went out and hitched Up CAUSES SPINAL INJURY. Dr. Newton does not attribute those afflictions so much to the motion of the wheel as to the look of support for the back of the infant. "A support for the back of the child," be said, 'is found of course, in all baby carriages,, and no one would think of holding an infant in the arms or on the knee without keeping a hand or arm on its back for support. Even tive state, nunderst odin tho v n r most essary�was that support for the child, 'You re- member that the Indians strapped their children to a board, and they grew in- to fico erect fellows. "Do you, then," he was asked, "in- sider it dangerous to take small chil- dren and intents out on bicycles?" "Decidedly," answered Dr. Newton. "No child should be taken out that way until it is five years, old, at least. Then its physical formation will have progressed to such an extent that it would be tolerably safe to take it out. A child that lives to be five years of age is very apt, to live tomaturity. The wreaker go to the wall before that time, as a rule. Most children pass through the diseases inailent to childhood prior to that age. "As I have seen them" the doctor continued, "the children are simply dropped into baskets or some similar contrivance which provides no support for the back. [That is a very serious mistake and should be remedied at once if people will persist in the foolishprac- tice oe taking their children out with them on their wheels." i tlxea altogeth- er '"And the danger—doss g An asked. -of support?"was er in the leek "N-o,."answered the doctor,slowly. "The vibratory motion of the wwbsel pro- duces an irritation in the spine, which leads to diseases of the circulation, so that at ane time there is too much blood and at another time not enough in that region. Asa consequence,a chronic con- gestion of the spinal cord is soon pro- duced. Associated with this is an impli- cation of the brain, of the nature of meningitis. INTELLIGENCE ON MARS. There 10 no doubt that Nave le very like the earth. Its days and night, lis summers and winters differ only in their relativs lengths from acre. 10 has land and °Deana, continonts and ands, mountain ranges and inland seas, Its polar regions are covered with annoy and it bas an etrnosphere and donde warm sunshine and gentle mine, The speetrosoope, that subtle analyst of the most (Latent stars, g#yes us reason to believe that the ehemi,oal elements fee miller to us hard exist on Mars, Tian planet, chemically and physically is so like the earth that, as protoplasm, the only living material we know, came in- to existence on the earth, there is no great difficulty in supposing that it came into existence on Mars, 1f reas- on be able to guide us, we know that protoplasm, at first amorphous and up - integrated, bas been'guided on this earth by natural forces into that mar- velous series of forms and integgrations we call the animal and vegetable king- doms, 'Why, under the similar guild ing forces on Mars, should not proto- plasm be the root of as fair a branching tree of living beings, and bear as fair a Malt of intelligent, sentient creatures? GREATEST LITERARY AUTHORITY. Mr. Andrew Lang,perhaps the great- est n YP R eg t est living authority on literary mat- ters, is a tall, spare, dark man, bas a broad forehead, brown ,eyes and an ample lower jaw. He is extremely deli cats and nervous, Fishing, as every one knows, is his hobby, and, in the bu- maneness of his heart, pie invariably throws bask into the water whatever fish he catches. THE LONGEST TELEGRAPH LINE. pin ton:gest telegraph line in the world above ground and without a break has just been completed in Aus- tralia. The line runs from Rockhamp- ton, in Queensland, to Broome, in West- ern Australia, and crosses about two- thirds of the entire continent. The total length is sometbing over 0000 miles. FORCE OF HABIT, Mr. Haicede—By gosh, of I loafed around like you do, it would nigh kill me, 1 ain't happy 'less'n 1 got some work to do. Dismal Dawson—That ,ibst goes ,to show what hold a bad babit will git on a man in course of time, "Children antler five years of age are or destructiveness on the theory that particularly and pe:uliarlp susceptible instead of being a mere electrical wind- to brain trouble of thus Character, and Corm it is a column of solid air at many a child with a faulty family re- be Centre of an immense aerial whirl- re- cord behind it might escape if no unto-, col, revolving inwardly and full of ward accident or dnee a 1pances worsen - countered. of all kinds sucked up along its countered, But once exposed to shock curse. When this solidified column or injury, brain trouble develops gen- to a frame house it generally re- orally of an incurable type, uses it to splinters, as was often to "This irritation of the nervous sys- ass in the teat bl.arsfield cyclone in- tarn of the produced by the unnatural agits- eatigatcd by i'rot, Cyte• 1i is said tion of the child's body when in trans- it sets up disturbances of the digestive t all aro often wrecked as if by ea- functions, baron especially savers on the ex- plosion when the air in them rushes to reducing action of the stomach, In fill the vacuui created by the vortex in consequence of that there 3s in a short is passe e. time an excessive amount of acid in It is supposed that in forming and the stomach. Lactic acid in partioular until it begins to dissipate its force is found Iliad, free in fibs blood. he cyclone revolves inwardly, so that "Tho presence of this acid is destruc- he pressure of to entire storm is tam to the development and grout brought to bear on the air at its con- T she skeleton and bicbya l py re. If this is a correct theory it is this familiar, tech v physicians nota metaphor to say that the air at are famior technically is easen as the. centre is 'as solid as steel," for it rackets, co the English disease: A hardly doubtful that hydrogen and large it,ercenttof cases of idiocy red the thinnest gasses would be instantly sults fully and mbabny, a fair and solidified by Oven a lass pressure. The months c formed into is to a few weight of this compressed air accounts mrmd, converted into a stubby, ill - for the feat that such storms nearly formed, misshapen semi -imbecile. . always follow the valleys. As for There is or added danger," ofcothe reasons of economy railroad tracks al- ed d. doctor, rail taedsighs of ofha ways follow the valleys as mush as child. The deepen and se B o tole the c elono is thus enabled to with t'yes,d visiont on directed regutorset possible, the trayik by Soret of gravity as wijh which its s idera y to eslr old well as by its electrical attraction for is sets. When a eland. runing a y as railroad is set twisting and turning its head, the stool rails. Anda Y bymultiple and varied sights and col- frock leads to the towns Ilse cyclone I rarely fails to find a fair field for its sirs, one set of optic muscles are over- strained work of boyo. mand the child becomes What LS commonly known as erose -egad. There are many other dangers," said Dr. Newton, in conclusion, to which - I FOLLOW DUTY, the obild is subjected wben taken out on a viheel. The practice is one a- nis truth comes to us more and tended wvith frightful results,and should Che more the ]ingot that we live that on be stopped at once.' what field or in what uniform or with This should be enough to warn every what alms we do our duty matters very parent end the fondant' doting uncles little, or even what our duty is, great and big brothers against a repetition of or small, splendid or obec'ure. Ony to wbat loss "become with them a common follow our duty certainly ,� and some. Practice. where, somehow, do it faithfully, makes us god, strong, happy and useful men, and tunes our lives into some feeble American women are growing taller, echo of the life of Gott, --Phillips Broke. while the men are getting shorter. PEARLS Obi' '!'RUTH. What is grief ? It is an ohssure laby- rinth into wvhxoh God leads man, that bo may be experienced in life, that be may remember bis faults and abjure them, that be may appreciate the calm which virtue gives.—Scheffer, Despair is like forward children, who, when yen take away one of tbeir play- things, throw the rest into the fire for madness. It grows angry with itself, turns iia own executioner, and revenges its misfortunes on its own head.—Char- ren. I1 you should take the busnan heart and listen to it, it would be like listen- ing to a sea shell; you would hear in it the hollow Murmur of the inifintie ocean. to which it belongs, from which it draws its profoundest inspiration, and far which it yearns,—Chapin. Indifference to all the actions and. passions of mankind was not supposed to be such a disti'nguisbing quality at that time, I think, I have encountered some lite ladies and gentlemen who might as well have been born caterpil- tars.—•Dicirtns. , s t c s d C t a !? i t t t is w ,11140 :2'Q, 1'89O oa ake Care, gwour p'bysieal hea'lt'h. Build up your •eYstem,aeueyour etoonieh and digeetave •ergan,leeeneee your appetite, purtf snit ,enrich your blood anti prevent aiegUelrs bY,talce Itave bees moo; lieod's Seemly- Villa erail - Villafor a cumber olgyeers, and it Pee never failed taw be most elileacloua, 411 our obildrep are troubled with belie, but Uood'e.Sareupgerilla rgmovee tate trouble end restoreetheir akin to a healthy con- dition. 13. C. So0,rr, Colurnbue, niit{n. Be aura to get 11oo('e and only Sarsaparilla The One True 'Blood Purifier. 81; 0 for ((S. Hood's Pills ppt osrmonloasl wort ■V {,7 1 I sed'i aureapart#10 731. FOR TWENTY-SIX YEARS. UNIVS BAKINC E THECCC'BBESTFRiEN 1-ppaEST SR4,EIN CANADA. TH); FIRST QUALIFICATION. Young Barlow has selected his va- cation. What is his choice? He has decided to become a poet. Nonsense! What qualifications has be? He bas ono very important qualification, Name it. An assured income. MONEY SAVED. Cook—"What shall we have for support" Boarding-house Keeper—"Not much of anything. The 15oarders won't be in condition to eat to -night. We bad bak- ery mince pies for dinner." Neither colored folk nor Chinamen are permitted to live or work in the new colony of Fitzgerale, recently founded in Georgia. UNLDE ci ore. els°Mial1El POINTS THE WAY TO PERFECT HEALTH FoutbaAmerieen Nervine. Tiro 'Great health Restorer of the Centnt;v, Sickness Cannot rope With It. Iles Cured the Worst Cases on. Rec- ord. Cares nt the Nerve Centres and Thus Cores Prrm,mently. A Wonderful Specific in All Cases of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Sielc Ilendache, Nerrousnees and General Debility. I:Ias No Mein] as a Sprang eieclieine, There is a great ileal of uncertainty In the methods adopted to remove dis- ease. Doctnrs ore not free from this kind of thing themselvee, The poor pit tient hos to put 000 with a god deal of experimenting, The discoverer of South Amerielus A,'rvine Mires too aeriotls a view of lite to play pranks of tbie kind, He floret not think that these hntnnn bodies of ours shook] be fooled with. He has recognised that they are subject to disenee, bet, by scientific methods, be has learned that just as the watch is to he put in perfect repair only when the main -spring is kept in running order, so with the bidivbdonl, he remains in per- fect health only when the nerve centres are kept healthful and strong. Wbat disease is more dlstresaing than Indigestion or dyspepsia? Some simple remedy may be given to cause relict for the moment, Nervine ie not indisputably successful remedy for the worst sows of incicgeetion, became it teacbee the source of all stomach troubles,—the nerve con - fres, Indierstion exists hecanse the vital farces have boemne cliseased dna, ere weakened. Nervine bnilds up the nerve Centres, from which some these farces, removes the cunkea of indigen- dnn, and then builds up the health com- pletely. How many systems are run doom through nervousness. A stbmnlant may give erase, hilt 10 will not mire nervous troubles. Nervine has cured more dis- perate ramie of nervousness than any, other tnedlcbne anywhere. And it does so fortis same reason that it cures in- digestion. The nerve centres are de- ranged, or there would be no victims'of nervousness. Nervine rcb*3lde and etressgtheus the nerve tissues, and hence its marvellous powers in diseases of this kind. In the spring of the year fhe strong- est suffer from general debility. The blood. through neglect, has become im- poverished and the whole system gets out of order. We speak et it as is spring medicine. Nervine restores the exhausted vital forces that have led to this tircdt` don't -care, played -out, miser- able condi(ion. No one can take a bot- tle of Nervine at tbis season of the year without disease quickly giving tray; to abounding health. The moral is plain, simple and readily,-. Understood, If you would not triflewi'ith disease then you will take South Amer-' lean Nervine, which will not trifle ,wlyd' you. A. D1ADMlN Whole'tlalo and Retail, I►g'iftlt ter$rueselg.