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The Exeter Times, 1894-4-12, Page 6
ISS 211 E E XETER' TINES • OTHERS CURE 400, 41' CLEAR SKIM) MENTAL. ENERGY ©��cs stggla :A LONG U FE U�» STRONG NERVES 44. AlER'S SARSAPARI LLA S, P. SMITH, of Towanda, Pa., whose constitution was completely broken. down, is eared by Ayer's Sarsaparilla. He writes:. "For eight years, I was, most of the time, a great sufferer from constipa- tion, kidney trouble, and indiges- tion, so that my constitution seemed to be completely broken down.. I was induced -to try Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and took nearly seven. bottles, with such excellent results that nary stomaoli, bowels, and kidneys arein perfect con- claim, onclition, and, in all their functions, as regular as clock -work. At the time I began taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla, my weight was only 129 pounds; I now can brag of 159 pounds, and was never in so- good agood health. If you could see me be- fore and after using, you would want me for a traveling advertisement.. believe this preparation of Sarsaparilla to be the best in the market to -day." Ayer's Sarsaparilla Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer &Co.,Lowell, Mass. Cures othere,will cure you CEN TRAL DrugStore FANSON'S BLOCK, A. full stock of all kinds of Dye -stuffs and package Dyes, "constantly on hand. Winan's Condition . Powd- era, the hest in the mark- et and always reh. Family recip- eas carefully prepared at Central Drug Stora Exete Ca "L T ., EcpA X37 N.B�,s97'4�. .1y l4 i11' 0 HEM FAILS TO GIMP SATISFACTION �+ FOR BALE BY ''dLL 9 1' -ERee SCientific American Agency for CAVEATS, TRADE ;MARKS, DESIGN PATENTS, or OOPYRICHTS, etc. P' MUNNN information 2618 free N w- Yto ttir. . ldestbureau for securing patonts in AmeMcit. very patent taken out by ns is brought before the public by a notiee given free o! charge lathe ggbtatific iargixest elreulation of any sclentlfo paper in the ono: Splendidly 1llueitrated. No intelligent an should be witbeut it. weeklyY S3 0(i a cart Waste months. Address MU'NN.;c CO onLraanns, 301 Broadway, New York City. POWDERS Cure SICK HEADACHE and Neuraltdp in 20 'Nun/6', also Coated Tongue, .)izzt new, Pi liadsnass, Pain hi the Side, Constipation,, Torpid Liver, Bad Breath. Co stay ouredalso regulate the bowels.:VERY Ondo TO 'Mkt; PRIOE 25 veneers dr DRUG S:ORIES4 OLDS& I QUICKLYYIELD ALLEIrt uti A CRISIS AT BLUEEIETIBS, BUT THE BRITISIi ARE ON TOP. "se Lastest News >ree>t>,>c the leloaragna* VIty—.01 su'te>xestlttg Situation. A New Qrleans, Le., special says ;--The Picayune's correspeudent in Bluefields, Neeereeeeuetent by the steamer Bergeuseren,, which has arrived here, a letter stating that a crisis has arisen in affairs there. The letter is dated 4,30 p. in,, ,March 23, and says ; "News has just bean received from Rama to the effect that William Wilson,an. American, was shat by the Governor of Rama, last ,night without justification. Wilson died at 8 o aloek this morning. The Governor, a Nicaraguan named, Aguilla, wbo is a nephew of Locayo, the commis- sioner, refused to let a boat leave Rama last night with Wilson, who might have been saved had he been brought here for treat- ment. Great excitewentprevails here this evening, One shot fired here would cause the death of every Nicaraguan in Bluefields. We are anxiously awaiting the arrival of au American war ship. I have no timeto secure further particulars, as the vessel will leave in a moment. During the afternoon a steamer arrived bringing a letter from the same cgrrespond- ant dated on the morning of the 23rd, in which he describes the tension of feeling there and alsopositively confirms the report of the ceding' et Corn inland to the British by Locayo in consideration of being left in control. Among other things he says : The oeding of Corn island to the British is the first step toward interfering with the OOIkTROL OF THE NICARAG17AN CANAL. On the 18th inst. the Cleopatra steamed away for Kingston, and on the evening of the 20th the Canada, with the chief of the Mosquitos and the deposed Attorney -Gen- eral of the reserve, a Beulah creole, steamed away for Pearl lagoon., where the chief and his legal adviser were landed, it being the home of the Attorney -General. No sooner had the Canada steamed away than Locayo brought 30 soldiers and several boxes of arms and ammunition from Rama. This was a direct violation of an agreement entered into between Locayo and the Brit- ish oonsnl in the presence of Hon. S. C. Braids, our U. S. consul, that .Nicaraguan soldiers would be neither brought to Blne- fields nor would Nicaraguans be put on the police force during the absence of the Bri isle warship. The presence of the Nica- ragnans on the river steamer necessarily created thewildest excitement. In leas than 10 minutes fully 1,070 citizens, Ameri cans and creoles, were armed with revel. vers. It was a trying moment. Owing`, however,S to the timely action of the U. S. consul, who was enthusiastically supported by the American element, Locayo was again brought to terms, binding himself this time to confine these foolish intruders to his residence quarters. If one shot had been fired there would not have been a Nicaraguan alive in Bluefields inside of 30 minutes thereafter, including Locayo, who beyond any shadow of doubt deserves to be. shot for the many outrageswhich he has perpetrated against the inhabitants of Blue - fields and the Mosquito reservation. A general meeting of the citizens was then convenedat the International Club, when the ACTION OF THE AMERIC4.NS was again endorsed, and which is that no assistance shall be rendered to Lecayo, and. that the Americans will remain nentral pending the arrival of a United States, ship, unless it should become necessary todefend their homes and property, when even then they will be directed by the United States consul. I must here add that owing to the per- fidiousness of Locayo and the hypocritical antagonism of the British consul, the Hon. S.C. Braida has been subjected to a most trying ordeal, and more especially so as he has received ' no instructions from either United States Minister Baker or from the State Department at Washington. However, as Capt. B. B. Seat, United States vice-consul, sailed from here on the 20th inst. for Washington via. New Orleans, as one of the committee of three appointed by the citizens of Bluefields, we feel that our Government . will be, on or before the 28th, fully . informed on all matters connected • with ' the unsatisfactory condition of affairs within. the Mosquito reserve and fot, which Carlos Locayo is responsible. While every' true American must be in favor of, the en- forcement of the Monroe doctrine, the right, however, of these Mosquito Indians to control themselves according to their ownlaws and customs within the reserve. tion as defined in the treaty of Managua, should be also enforced by the Government of the United States. For if the Govern- ment of Nicaragua should now assume the direction of the affairs of Bluefields and the Mosquito reserve the several growing in- dustries created and carried on by Ameri- dans and in which millions are involved, l would at once be destroyed by arbitrary taxation. it would be the lemonsqueezed dry, a game which the Nicaraguans under- stand only too well, especially when Amer- icans are not backed up by warships. INHABITANTS FANIC STRICKEN. A New York despatch says :—A special to the press from New Orleans says : The inhabitants of Bluefields are panic-stricken, according to advices brought by the ateamer Gussie, which arrived yesterday. Women and children are reported to be leaving the town in large numbers. All efforts to form a provisional Government failed, owing to the action of the Americana in remaining perfectly neutral. The Cleopatra arrived March 2, and the British marines landed on the bluff, seven miles from Bluefields, on private ,property, with the erinission of the owner, ib is as- serted, On the 5th the riot occurred. The Americans think the riot was planned by Gen. Locayo,the Nicaraguan commissioner, and the British, to give a pretext fox bring- ing the British marines into Bluefields to take poasession of the town, The British occupied the town, assumed the entire police power, and Locayo did not protest, When the British leftBluefielde the com- missioner promised that no more Nicara• guan soldiers would be brought there, but the next. day 30 Nicaraguan soldiers came down the river on a steamboat from Rama, The Americans asked on the 21st that the British matinee from the Canada be sunt ashore% but the consul refused to ale low it uhlces the Americans signed a request to that effect, 'Chis' they refused to do. tOtiA.Vo'S $TAmtmENT. Locayo has made the following statement: "The Americana cornplbinedoftheMosqufto Government to Nicaragua and the United' . Mates Cl•overnmertt before an y steps were taken to occupy the town. The Britiah did not land their treope at my request, and 1 refused to accept trove from the Cleopatra ttro' Mereh 21. ps after the British left irBi iefelds. Chlid"en CryorcesGastpr1 Castor's) "The. action .of Nioaragua in (dumping Bluefields is due, to the hostility of the Mosquito ohief in threatening to arrest any Nicaraguan soldiers found in the Mosquito territory, "The rumor that the English are eo have Corn island is utterly false. .The Nicara- guan Government was unofficially offered $1,000,1,00 for Corn island by the United States Government for a period of 99 years Nicaragua had no intention of accoptiug the offer, butshould the .United Stat Government desire Corr} Wand as a coal station the matter would be brought b the Nicaraguan Congress, and there doubt the request would be gran) Nicaragua, " The English marines that were at the bluff on: March 2' were land out my knowledge or consent, an twin of the Cleopatra assured me were not landed, notwithstan have a' photograph: of the ma session of the bluff, with th hoisted end the Britiah co head. On March 5 I agree lug, provided they were iso but as soon as they emu sovereign power, took ful town, and issued proola to the inhabitants. "A few days after tl English) disarmed and' and made prisoners soldiers who arrived protested and th arms I refused a taken to Greyto and tendered. t meet, which The arms were " Gen. Cab American ste Greytown the Cleopat released w that port. "Whi theresi to be i search arms rep. Co, th • es ing be is no ed by e landed ed with. d the cap - the troops ing that I rines in p05- British flag nsul at. their d to their land - der my orders, e they usurped possession of the mations and orders Icy landed they (the disbanded our troops of seven Nicaraguan from Corp island. 1 ey were released, The accept, and they were wn aboard the Cleopatra o the Nicaraguan Govern - refused to accept `them. left ashore in Greytown. ezes was. also taken from the amshipYulu while en route to and placed under arrest aboard ra and taken to Greytown; but hen the Cleopatra returned from e the British, marines were here deuces of private:citizens supposed n sympathy with Nicaragua were ed by the British under pretence of being stored. 1 have seen the official orfs of United States Consul Seat to sul Braida, in which he complained in e most bitter language of the scandalous proceedings of ;the Mosquito Government prior to the occupation. " I cannot understand thepresent position of the Americans and especially of Consul Seat, who also spoke in favor of the deepest - tion of eepesi-tionof the. Mosquito Government, and only lately, at my request, he forwarded a letter to Consul Braid. at. Greytown reporting certain acts of the Mosquito Government detrimental to foreign interests. " While the British troops 'were here they behaved admirably, there being no drunken- ness or disorder among them." Locayo's statement is denied by Consul Hatch, Consul Seat' and other: Americans who say he did invite the British to occupy the territory. THE SITUATION' ORITICAL. A Colon special says:—le is reported here that the Nicaraguans threatento make a second seizure of the Mosquito_ reservation. An American citizen is said to have been shot by the order of the acting Governor of. Rama.. The British warship Canada . is waiting for a reasonable time at Bluefields in antici- pation of thearrival of the United •8:ates flagship San Francisco with Rear Admiral Benham on board. The situation of affairs at Bluefields is said to be critical Losses in Great Battles. At Mollwitz the Prussians lost 18 per cent., the Austrians 2$ per cent. At Kolin Frederick's force suffered to the extent of 37 per cent., while his victory cost his enemies only 14 per cent. At Zorndorf, the bloodiest battle of which we have any record that we may rely upon,the propor- tion of loss to the total forces engaged rose to the enormous total of from one-half to one-third. Kuneradorf was almost as de- structive to human life, and Frederick lost 35 per cent., against 26 per cent,, of the al- lies. .. With the advent of Napoleon and the loosened formations of the Revolutionary armies losses were at first diminished; but at Aspern the Austrians left nearly 28 per of their men on the battlefield, and the French, although the bulletins denied it, are said to have been weaker by one-half after the battle. Borodino, too, deprived the Russians of 36 per cent., and the French of 24 per cent. During the later Napoleon- ic wars we find the losses somewhatiower, although after Limey the Prussians we re weaker by as many as 20 per cent., and 'he victory of Waterloo coat us rather more than that proportion. W hen,however,we turn to the campaigns whichsucceeded the lull of exhaustion f ol- lowing the downfall of the First Einp re we are confronted with no such bloody re. cords,in spite of the invention of ,percussion caps, rifles, and even rifled . cannon. The allies of the Alma only lost, some, six per, cent., and the Russians 14 per cent. Inker,- mann, however, was as bloody as*Waterloo, but it was a struggle in which tactics play. ed a very small part. The losses at Magenta and Solferino were comparatively slight. Although the conse. quences of Koniggratz were immense,they were cheaply purchased by the victors ; while in 1870, notwithstanding .that both sides were armed with breech -loaders, the losses never approached the huge totals of some of the battles of the early century or. of those of the Seven Years' War. • At Worth, it is true, one-sixth of the total forces engaged were either killed or wound- ed, but at Gravelotte the proportion was only one eleventh, and at Weiseenburg ohe. twelfth. Playing Into the Hands, of Forgers. A Pruesaian named Lautz has invented a writing paper which will be heard of in the criminal courts before long. It is of the same appearance as any other writing material, but a discovery as to its properties has caused the :German government to de - elate its manufacture illegal and a'patenthas been refused. Itis composed of parchment, glue, abestos and the ordinary ingredients used in the manufacture of fine paper, sixth as is usedfor checks,.bonds and certificates of stock. The moist sheets, immediately after leaving the rollers for the first time, are placed in a: bath of concentrated sul- phuric acid to which distilled water has been added. After having been pressed between glass ;rollers the sheets' are bue- oessively bathed in pure water, a solation of ammonia, and finally in water again, The process is completed by hard pressing, pasting through felt rollers and drying be- tween polished'and,heated metal eylinders. The peculiarity of thie innocent looking paper is that writing, no matter how aoidiferous the ink, can be readily washed off with water after any length of time. Snell material would be datig6rone in the hands of forgers. Although prohibited by the German government, quantities of this paper will no doubt be manufactured for nefarious purpobes, HE WILLIAMS' MURDER* oronte 1`aper Aloratiees on the Case and Questions ltiaewherrell's G, utl- What the Aectt$eiiahenld nave None There are serious doubts as to whether MeoWherrell is really guilty of the mnrdor 01 Mr. and Mrs, Williams; and the Crown ought to, scrutinize all the fade very closely through some well qualified and independb ent fuuotionary. The jury, by acquitting his alleged confederate, Walker, showed their disbelief in the theory of the prosecu- tion, and have practically iucreased tile. [loubts as to the guilt of MacW horrell,. for all agree thatthe evidence showed that the crime was committed` by two persons. It should be borne in mind that the leading detective in this case engineered the evi- deuce in the Handcock.murder case, but in that instance mistaken ier.l providentially resulted in proving that the outraged father —a man fond of his children—was innocent of the murder of his favourite daughter. Yet he was kept in prison for monthsafter he was practically shown to be innocent, bail being persistently refused. iiuch con.. duct would not have happened with im- punity in England. The Crown must look at MacWherrell's ease as a question con- oerning the life of a human being, and not as a question of proving the INFALLIBILITY OF DETECTIPES. The latter sometimes disregard the eniphae tic instructions of Falleyrand, when, as the French Minister of Foreign Affairs,' he sent young diplomatists on foreign missions, " Above all things avoid too much zeal." MacWherrell's case is very peculiar, and one well adapted for a moralist to preach upon. When, according to his own state- ment, he bought in the outskirts of the city the horse and cutter for $1.0, he well knew that they must have been stolen,end consequently that he was liable to be pun- ished for buying stolen property. There- fore we can, understand why he kept him- self in the background when he heard of the murder. Not one man in a hundred wouldhave.had the requisite moral courage to come forward and say " I (a man with shady antecedents) am guilty of buying property well knowing it to have been stolen, but nevertheless I had nothing to do with mur- dering the owner." Had he done so, all the same he would have been tried for mur- der, although probably have been acquitted. Very few men understand the wisdom of making a clean breast of their troublewhen they are in a false position. Men guilty of manslaughter have been hanged through trying to Dover up the lesser crime, thus leading to the natural inference that the case was one, of murder and not manslaugh- ter. The following case, which . happened in London, England, some years ago, shows the wisdom of people coming forward in such instances. Once in every half-dc.zon winters there is a panio in •London about garotters. During one of these panics two young men took a walk bne ;dark night bo: yond the region of lamps. Having garrot- ters on the brain, one armed 'himself with a sword stick. As they were passing a country side -road a man lurched our OF THE DARitNESS, and without saying a word staggered to- wards them. They naturally concluded that he was shamming, drunkenness although probably he was intoxicated- and that he had confederates, and they peremptorily bade him keep off and the one w_th the sword -stick hurriedly pointed it at him to fend hini off. The drunken intruder then staggered back without speaking, and they naturally be- lieved that they had a narrow escape. When the owner of the swordstick got home he drew it out, and to his astonishment there was a little blood at the end, and he then knew that in the excitement of the moment he had unconsciously drawn it, and that he must have pricked the man. But it turned out that he had mortally wounded him. In a day ortwo the papers were full of an account of a man who had been mysteriously murdered at the spot where this had occurred. Instead of fool- ishly . keeping quiet the two travellers attended the inquest, and explained the circumstances, and the jury accordingly returned a verdict of death by misadven- ture, thus exonerating,, them. If they had stayed away they • might ultimately have got into serious trouble. • It is quite certain from all the evidence that Mac Wherrell-who had been recently paid off by his employer, and who had some money left—never started for the Williams' house with the intention of robbery or mur- der. He took pains to inform sundry folks on the road, as well as neighbours of the murdered man, whither he was going. ` No intending thief or murderer would have acted thus. It is admitted that the evidence proves that two persons committed the crime. The jury rightly acquitted Walker; therefore, if Mac Wherrell is guilty, it comes to this, that he must have met some other person after he had left the last neighbour's house, and arranged with such person. to commit the •crime. THIS IS NOT CREDIBLE. MacWherrelPs account of his actions ontlle Thursday reads consistently. If, as alleged, Williams told him that he had hired a man for his board only, a strict enquiry as to that should be instituted by the Crown. It might have been only a put off; but Williams being old he would need help ; and the fact would tally with the statement of Cory, the former hired man. A minute and searching inquiry should also be instituted testing thetrnthof MaoWherrell's account of how•he passed the time on his return from the Williams' house. The strongestoorroborative evidence 'against hitn is the statement of the policemen who swore that he saw 'two men driving the horse and buggy eastward on the Thursday night, and that "to the best of his belief" the prisoners were the men ; but more than the best of a policeman's belief is required to justify taking away a man's life. The. jury, by acquitting Walker, showed that they believed that the policeman was mistaken as to one of the meu, Beiug mistaken as to one, he might have been mistaken as to the other. Why was this evidence kept back for months? Why was it not forthcoming when the prisoners were before the magistrates? WAS IT FAIR to act so 1 It gave no opportunity for the aeansed to show that it was a mistake. Special enquiry should be made as to the date when the policeman first reported the fact. It must have been a seoret known to many, yet unknown to the numerous lynx. eyed and ubiquitous reporters. As an of- fioisl, there was no fear of his being absent from the brial, or being unduly influenced. A trial for murder is not like a game of skill Where all means are taken to overcome an opponent. t+urther,MNoWherrell being, in- telligent, having been a great traveller, and a man well able to take Dare of himself, if he had done the deed he would immediate- ly have ()reseed the linea, which he would know would have vastly increased bit chance of escape. His returning to his old plum is in his favonr. The more the facts are examined tbe more uneatisfaotory the verdict appeare to be. We do not go the length of saying that we are quite sere that MeeWherrell ie in- ce:went of the murder ; but we reentered bhab, as the case now appears, there ere very serious douhts as to his guilt; and that there is not eufacieat evidence to justify taking life. The CrOWO should reinvesti- gate the whole of the Moto. Boxing in mind the Handcook fiasco, this should be done by some impartial funotionary, some one gifted with a judicial mind, wile is skilled en sitting and weighing evidence. Resources and Prospects of Queens - Land. Oe the 9tli Inst. the lion. M. Hume Bleak, epecial agent of the Queensland Government, delivered au a.cldrese before the member., of the Edinburgh and Leith Chambers of Commerce on "The resources and prospects of • Queensland," with a, vieW—to the extension of trade be- tween that colony and the Mother Coun- try." Towards the development of the en- ormoue territory of Qaeensleaul, the lecturer seed, the eaopularly elected Government had expended during the thirby-three years , of its independent existence a capital sum of £31,000,000 in the conquest ef nature, of the wilderness, and in a series of great public works which murit oOmmand the admiration of everyimpartial student 'of sociology and empire, Queensland has been perhaps the most progressive colony under the Crown M its immigration policy, no less a sum 'than two and three-quarter millions °Haan money having been Spent since 1850 in bringing immigrants from every part of the United Kingdom. Seven- teen and three quarter millions sterling had.. been spent on the 2372 miles of railway system, and two millions sterling on the construction of harbors, lighthouses and the deepening and improvement of navigable rivers. On public buildings a million had been laid out ; £827,000 had been spent in erecting and equipping 10,000 miles ot telegraph lines, and £4418,000 had been advanced to local bodies for the purpose of earrying out local imaroveinents. The lecturer then enlarged upon the inineral,pastoral and agricultural resources. of the country, discussed its sugar and marine induatries, and in conclusion said that the prospects of the country were of the brightest and the soundest. The pub- lic debt, though large, had been wholly expended on works of a reproductive character, which materially enhanced the value of the public estate, and. consequently gave added security to the bondicolders. The public estate consists of 427,838,080 acres, only 11i millions of which had been alienated. Expenditure from loan had practically ceased, and strict economy had been introduced into every department of administration. The whole strength of the population was nowavailable for those pun. suits connected with the development of the pastoral, agricultural and mining re- source of the soil. If their indebtedness were large the means of meeting its annual cbarge and its final extinction were ie finitely greater. These might be measured even now by the excess of exports over imports. That excess in 1891 was £3,226,383, and in 1892 it was no less than £4,761,180. The total exports last year reached £9,170,408 of which Z6,290,931 was the value of pas- toral products, £2,290,232 mizaing,£588,453 sugar, and .4121,992 pearl shell and bech- de-mer. Dais was equal to £21 per head of the pepulation—a proportion unparallel ed in the history of any country in tit - world. With the expansion cot the meae and sugar industries, to gay nothing ot the increasing returns from the principal mines, the exports in the next few years would go on increasing by leaps and bounde. To the practicalman with moderate means, to the capitalist, and to the young and en- ergetic, Queensland offered opportunities, not excelled anywhere. - How Do We See ? The exact mechanism of the action of light on the retina has long been a eubject of discussion among students of physiologic- al optics. The oldest theory of color -vision that deserves the name—that due to Young and improved upon by Helmholtz—supposes that there pre in the retina three separate sets of organs, each of which is sensitive to only one of the primary colnrs—now gorier. ally taken to . be red, green, and violet. Thus, when all these organs are equally affected the brain receives the sensa.tion of white. .A. more recent theory, that of Hering, assumes an independent retinal process for the sensation of white, and sup- poses that as regards the colon, the effects of part of the spectrum are chemically constructive and of others destructive, one color producing a chemical combination in the retina and its complementary color a chemical decomposition. The newest theory of all, due to woman, Mrs. Chrietine Ladd Franklin is set forth in Mind, February and Mareh. It strives to avoid the difficul- ties of both these theories, while presenting no new ones. According to it the sensa- tions of black, white, and the intermediate gray tones are fundamental and produced by the dissociation of certain tnolecules of the retina, which Mrs. Franklin calls the gray molecules. The dissociated atoms have different vibration -periods, and in eyes developed highly- enough to perceive oolor, as in rnan,they behave according to the wave- length of the light that strikeri them, those that give rise to the sensation of red, for example, being torn eff only by red light. Tilus,the eye would have a structure analo- gous to that of the ear, which has a sintple apparatus for hearing noise and a highly complex structure for selecting and appre- ciating musical notes of almoet every pos- sible pitch, within certain limits. SUBMARINE GHOSTS. A Diver's Experience, A diver who went down to work on the steamship Visaaya, which wag in collision and gunk off Barnegst light, had a grewsome experience. It was a difficult job, rio two diven were sent, down --one of them to remain on deok in sixty feet of water, to act as second tender to the other diver who went below. 'rhe latter had been below but a few minutes when three jerks came over the life -line, When he had been hauled up on to the deek he Was eo un- nerved that he forgot he was still in eixty feet of Wider, and Signalled to have his hel- met removed. When both divers had been hauled to the surface, he said that while he was working through a gangway, be had seen two huge objeotts (Mining teward hire ; and nothing could 'diseutide him from the belief that he had seen two submarine ghosts—until the other diver went doWn and diseevered that there was a mirror • at the end of the go.opray, and that the diver bad teen the refleotion of his olvn ter, rattly enleged. coining toward him.*--tFrotri " Life Linder Water," in the April Scribner, Almost one-half of the quinine produeed is used in the United Stetes, ONfT LET ANOTHER Byr WITHOUT OU will find that it will do what no other soap can do, and will please you every way. It is Easy, Clean, and Economical to wash with this soap. SINO iystenes ci tho The latest discovery in the soienti. lio world is that nerve centres located 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 which they supply with nerve fluid, or nerve force, are also deranged: When it is remembered that a serious injury to the spinal cord will cause paralysis of the body below the injured point, because the nerve force is prevented by the injury from reaching the para- lyzed portion, it will be understood how the derangement of the nerve centres will cause the derangement of the various organs which they supply with nerve force; that is, when a nerve centre is deranged or in any way diseased, it is impossible. for it te supply the Satne quantity of nerve foree as when in a healthful condi- ,. tioir;- hence the organs which depend upon it for nerve force suffer, and are unable to properly perform their work, and as a result disease makes its appearance. At least two-thirds of our chronic diseases and aihnents 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- and not the nerve Centres, which aro the 'eause of the trouble. The wonderful cures wrought by the Great South American Nervine Tonic are due.alone to the hot that this remedyis based upon the fore- going principle. It cures by rebuild.. flag and strengthening the nerve centres, and thereby increasing the supply of nerve force or nervous energy. This remedy has been found of infinite value for the cure of Nervous- ness, Nervous Prostration, Nervous Paroxysms, Sleeplessness, Forgetful- ness, Mental Deepondeney, Nervous- ness of Females, Hot Flashes, Sick Headache, Heart Disease. The first bottle will convina anyone that ti cure is certain. South American Nervine is with- out doubt the greatest remedy ever discovered for the ore of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and all Chronic Stomach Troubles, because it acts through the nerves. It gives relief in one day, cure in every instance. Do not allow your prejudices, 'or the preju- dices of others, to keep you front using this health -giving remedy. It is based on the result of yearg 01, take of physicians in treating these Bine° bcttle will convince the`t.noet organs incredulous. Dn. MODAIRMin, Agent, Herman. diseases is that they treat the C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and 4etail Agent for gxeter. 1 OI 01/4 Ne ,65 le 4e:A Purehasers look tO the Label an the Acmes and Pets. the adaresis in not $83, OX1010 LONDON; tbeY /PM astmesiateeiwr