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The Brussels Post, 1897-9-17, Page 71SEX'T, 17, 1997 rte, Lord Charlee Beresford, who is at ;present a captain in the Royal Navy, will shortly be raised to the rank of rear -admiral. The Queen arrived at Balmoral on Tuesday. At Perth, A,'berdeen, and Ballater enthusiastic crowds gathered to greet her Majesty. All the delegates to the Congress of Women in llehal'f of national dress, to -be held ab Oxford next months, are to wear bloomers. Lady Haberton will preside. An eastbound paasenger train from London on Wednesday, was derailed and thrown down an embankment at Mayfield, Sussex. Four passengers were killed and thirty injured. The Duke of Westminster has issued .an appeal to the British public for funds for the relief of the distress which prevails in Athens among the refugee. from Thessaly and Crete. ' The Englishman now returning to London from the Klondyke are earn- .e,ebly warning the public against an English rush there, and the papers warn the public not to touch the Kion - ,dyke companies. The members of the Jackson -Harms- worth expedition, who have spent three winters in the Arctic regions, have (bean brought beset in safety to Eng- land by the British steamer Wind - •ward. UNITED STATES. Banker David J. Seligman, of New York, is dead. Negroes in and about Elwood, Ind., :have been warned to leave the town ,and suburbs. A new steamship line has been formed at Portland. Oregon, to run between Portland, Chine and Japan. The coal strike in Ohio is considered settled. The plan is to resume at G4 cents and. work paneling arbitration. Eight persons are reported to have been poisoned by eatin a stolen melon at Paducah, near Louisville, liy. Melville 11.. Valentine was killed and, :Cour other occupants of a carriage in- jured by being struck by a train near Buffalo. At Green wood Springs, Col., an ex- plosion occurred oh Friday in the Sun- shine coal mine. Nine bodies have been recovered. The United States battleship Maine is 'to be placed in dry look at Halifax next month. She is to be followed by the ba.ttleahip Iowa, The First State Bank of McPherson, Ram, of which Senator Matthews, is president, has failed, with liaiiililies amounting to el28,000, The steamer Del Norte has arrived. from Dutch Ibarbor, and the Pribyloff :Wanda, Alaska, with 80,000 skins for the North American Company. Engineer Wm. Thornley and Fire- man Louis Brown were killed by the expkteion of a C. Q. & C. locomotive' at Fredericksburg, Ohio, on Tuesday, $'.P,USSiIf'o iK NEWS 11 A NENE 'THE VERY LATEST FROI8I ALL THE WORLD OVER., interesting Items About Our Bryn Country, (Trent Ornate, the United Mutes, and An Parte or the Globe, Condensed and Assorted tor Easy Reading, C.ANAIDA, Judge Jarniesoa of Guelph is (11 with 'appendicitis. Guelpb organ and. piano mekers bavo .formed a union, Ottawa bakers have raised the price 'et bread to twelve cents a loaf. London had 45 deaths, 28 marriages and 45 births during August. A Presbyterian missionary, a student ,of Manitoba College, is about to leave Winnipeg for the Klondike. The first carload of Ontario h nit from Winona reached Winnipeg t>a a ,prime con.cltion. Mr, Isaac E. Bowman, President of the Ontario Mutual Life Insurance Company, died on Friday at Waterloo. About 45 miles of grade on nthe for the Nest Pass road is ready rails, Track -laying west from Mac- Leod will commence at once. 13y running C. P. R. cars over the H., G, & B. Electric Railway fruit • shipments from the Niagara district are , greatly facilitated. Mr. Thomas Hood, lessee of the Roy- al Hotel, Hamilton, made an assign- meat to Mr, C. S. Scott. It is said that • about 83,000 is owing for rent. Mr, Paterson bas decided thathence- teeth petroleum imported in tank cars May be stored en' bond 3.n bulk and the • duty paid on' the oll that is Bold. The corner -stone of the Montreal • General Hospital Jubilee Nurses' Home was laid by Lord Lister in the presence of 1,500 friends of the institution. During the three months ended Aug. 30th, 157 cases were disposed of in the London Police Court, an increase of 50 'over the corresponding quarter of last year, Miss Sarah Frank, head :milliner for Coyne, & Co., of Ingersoll, was al -:tack - ,ed with a very severe pain in her bead while nt work on Friday and died in a few minutes. Mr. 35, W. Thompson. western man- ager of the Ogilvie Mining Company, estimates the Manitoba wheat crop this season at from 15,000,000 to 10,- •000000 bushels. Mr. A. 1". McC'ullogh. civil engineer, and at one time professor in Toronto University, had the misfortune to lose his right hand by the prernssturo explo- sion of a giant firecracker at Mine Cen- tre. Vice -President Shaughnessy, ot the Canadian Pacific railway, who was in Vancouver, B.C., on Tuestlay, said tbat his ct' ; any had now under ton,ildesa- t.icn the question of a direct service to the Yukon, The Hudson Bay expedition reports from Nateevan, on the coast, near the entran"e to the Iludson straits, that all .are well. _elavh ice was encountered, but the Diana mach her way through it without diffi'ulty. Sines the woamg of the Indian Fam- ine Fund in Canada on the first of Ifuly additional sula'riptinne, amounting to three thousand two hundred and thirty-nine dollars, have been received, which makes a total of one hundred :and seventy-nine thousand one hun- dred and sixty-one dollars. Mr. James McMullen, M.P., for North Wellington, in an interview in Mon- treal on Thursday, said he thought the provisions of the Dingley Act aimed at Canadian trade were an impertinentin- terference, and that Canada should no longer cringe to the American people, but assert herself by retaliation, GREAT BRITAIN. Mr. E. R, Balfour, the famous Oxford oarsman, died last Friday in Scotland from pneumonia. Over 200 Amerhians and two carloads of ammunition leave Chicago to -night for Cuba via Hey l'e'es[., 101a. '1`he men are from the ranks of the unemployed, and have enlisted for a year, George Stutz, aged eixty-five, was found dead on Sunday niifht In the ves- tihule of the Most'. Holy `trinity church, Brooklyn, N.Y. Iiia head was crushed in, and there were evidences of a terri- ble struggle, 1 raneis Schlatter, who was recently reported dead, is at present at Manhat- tan Beach, neer Chicago, come:ening in divine healing camp. Fiches been sum- moned to answer to oberge of prat tieing medicine without a license. A loiter received frarn the United States Commissioner at Dyea intimates that the Government is to make claim to a large portion of the Yukon gold (1ie'Irls which have hitherto been sup- posed to be in. British territory, ,A, hearing was given by the Stste Railway Commission in Albany, N. Y on Wednesday, to the application o the New York and Ottawa Railway Company, for permission to construct a raillevay from Moira to a point on the St. Lawrence which would shorten the trip from New York to Canada by fifty miles. The reports from the commercial agonies of Messrs. Dun. and Bradstreet represent the Lando situation is the TI tic unchang- ed. fi'tatrs us pear a11Y g ed. The filling in orders are mend- erablo, and trade int gra-series, leather wool, hardware, meat's and women's furnishings, etc., show a considerable advance. The commercial outlook is reported as more cheering than bas been the ease far same years. The commercial failures in the United Stalest for the week Suet ended amount to 191, as compared with; 84.1 in the corresponding week of last year. GENERAL. It Is announced that the Czar will visit Paris at the end of this autumn. It is reported that there are 37,000 Spanish soldiers in Cuban hospitals, News has just reached Hong Koug of the prevalence of pirates on the Canton River. Work has been commenced in the construction of the Chinese eastern railroad. Merchants ot Managua, • Nicaragua, are asking the Government for a gold standard. The steamship Meana has sailed from Sydney with 000,000 sovereigns for San lfranoisco. The Shanghai Shepoo reports that the Bubonic plague in Foo Chow and sub- urbs is most serious. It is reported from Berlin that Prince Uohenlohe, the Imperial Chnacellor, will retire in October. Arbitrators of the Venezuelan dis- pute, cannot, it is thought, in London, sit before September, 1808. The Spanish Government is formu- lating a plan to bring about the banishment of all Anarchists from Spain. Spain will call out 50,000 more reserves, 27,000 to be sent to Cuba and 13,000 to the Philippine Islands, Danger threatens the sugar plant- ers in Japan from a widespread dis- ease, which attacks the roots of the cane. Next year's Japanese budget will show a deficiency of 25,000,000 yen, even though the fullest economy is ob- served. Your travellers of an Alpine tourist. party are reported a t Arolla, Switzer- land, to have been killed near Blount Pleuras. Aspecial commission will meetsburt- ly in St. Petersburg to discuss the introduction of universal and compul- sory education in Russia. Twenty of 20 German pities appeal- ed to have approved of the proposal to collectively participate in the Paris Exposition of 1900. The Corean Government bas sent out an official notice that the ports ofCbe- nanpo and Mokpo are open to foreign trade on October 1. Bight Armenians, w o have been con- victed of taking part in the recent Bomb explosions in Constantinople, were on Friday sentenced to death. Reports from New Caledonian re- port that rain is much needed, and if the harvest fails predictions are made that serious disturbances will occur. It is said that the Cear has decided to partly abolish the Siberian exile system and to meet large central prisons in ll•ussh, proper within a year. It is said that Germany will demand an explanation of the hope expressed by M. Matins, the French Premier, that Alsace-sLorraine will be reunited to the republic. All the Madrid newspapers publish strong pretests against the mission of Gen. Woodford, the newt United States Minister to Spain, thee causing wide - aimed irritation against the United States. THE CHAMPION IN E'RUGA,LITY. Guy, the founder of Guy's hospital in London, was as parsimonious in private life as he was munificent in public. A good story illustrative of this is told of him In connection with John Hopkins, one oC his contempor- aries, who was nicknamed Vulture Hopkins, on account of his rapacious mode of acquiring his immense wealth, On one occasion he paid a visit to Guy, who on Hopkins entering the room, lighted afarthing candle. Hopkins, on being asked the object of his visit, said: "I have been told that you, sir, are better versed in the prudent and neesssary art of saving than anyy man living, and I therefore wait on you for a lesson in frugality. I have ale ways regarded myself as an adept in this matter, but I am told you excel me,' "Oh," replied Guy, "if that is all you came to talk about, we can dis- cuss the matter in the dark," and thereupon he blew out the candle, Struck with this example of econ- omy, Hopkins •nckncwledged that he had met his superior in thrift. THE DAY OF DOOM. Prof. Falb, of Vienna, fixes the ex- tinction of the human race for Novem- ber 13, 1899. On that day the earth is to come into collision with a comet, everybody will be poisoned by gas or burnt to death. IKOD;EL OF NEA P1058S. Clara is a model of neatness, sometimes ehe, carries things 10 trainers, To wibit do you retert Why elm t rralshes the tenth of her s t�k� pr et wheel every morning, but OX - TIIE SUNDAY SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSON, SEPT. 19, ries "ewers Address 10 the Iildicsllut retierw" Acts 20, 23.05„ ,00011 •5 '1'ex1, tris Ce;:15, PRACTICAL. NOTES. Verse 20. And now, Behold, I go Hound in the splrii, .T'irlding eeedi- ince 10 the Inward impulse which he recognizes as proceeding from on. high. Not knowing the:things that shall he - fel 1 nae. The prophetic voices fore- warned. hint of: coming pulls, but left unrevealed 'their precise nature and their fins[( result, e 23, The Holy (lima witness- eth. Probably by direct ye- t elaticn and through the lips of prophets, We have no record of these predictions, which must have been giv- en iet Corinth, Philippi, and Trous. But Rom. 15, 3J, 31, written just before this voyage, expresses anxiety as to its re- sults. Bonds and afflictions abide me. "Await me." In mercy Gad hides eoniingclouds of sorrow from most men but Paul's was bile. of those rare souls that only grow sLrongelr in the fa -e nt appruhnshing afflictions, 24. None of these things [Hove me. "D make no account of Lheso things." Dan- gers are net ,to be ra koned when duty, lies in the way. Neither cuuut 1 my life dear unto myself. Ment of us most of the time regard our lived as our most predate possession, but Paul's Jife teas of ,no amount compared with his ministry. That I might finish my cruses. An illustration which Paul frequently employed, derived from the foot rare, .With joy, The tribulations of his life brohight him frequent grief, but its completion with faithfulness to- ward God would work out eternal joy. The ministry-, whicb.,I have received of the Lord Seams Summoned to so noble a work by such divine authority one might Weil persevere through opposi- lien. The Gospel of the grace of Cod. The. work of the preacher is "to bear witness to the good news of God's mercy." • € , 25, I know. Ole felt confident that his work in Asia was completed. Prew'hing. "Ileralding." The king- dom of Clod. For, the coming of which we pray night and morning. Shall see my fees no more. This [vas not pro- phesy but expectation. He knew not what might result from the coming per- secutions and if preserved through them he proposed to turn his face to- ward new fields in the west. Whether or not bis words were verified is uncer- tain. Some think that about ten years later in the period between his first and his final imprisonment, be visited the churches of that section. There are several allusions, for example, 2 Tim, 4. 13, 20; 1 Tim. 1: 3„1 which seem to imply that Paul revisited T'roas, Mile- tus, and iIphesus,. • • 26. I take you to record. I pall you to bear witness. Pure from the blood of all men. His conscience, at- tested by the consenting voice of his people, acquits him of neglect, No soul that his efforts 'might have saved has been lost, Read Ezek. 33. 27.'I have not shunned. "1 have kept back nothing.” The same phrase in the original appears in vexes: 20. It is easy to suit the Gospel to' the de- sires of the bearers, and to dwell light- ly on the unwelcome truths; but such preaching will not satisfy but call nor save souls. 28. Take heed, therefore, unto your- selves. Those who are charged with the care of other souls must first watch over their own. To all the flock. The cthtsrch is the fold for Christ's sheep. The holy Ghost. The presiding spirit of God. Hath anode you. We elect" and "ordain," but even when welittle think of it God's will is/ being worked out through our I,deoisions. Over- seers. .7lhis is let direct translation of the Greek word. The word itself is that from which "episcopal" was de- rived, and, a little circuitously, the word "bishop" also, The ecclesiastical order to which the phrase now is confined came afterward in the Providential development of the Christian church. tin Paul's day the word aneant simply what it is here translated, n fated as meaning over- seers, The Methodist Ilpiseopal bishops are "superintendents," which means precise'y the same thing. The Church of God. Not necessarily an organized body, such as we now refer to by the use of that phrase, but an assemblyv, of those who love God. Purchased with Ids own blood. tliha more costly the flock, the closer should be its Dare. 29. Grievous wolves, lslalee teaohbrs from abroad, bringing in false doctrine end corrupting influence. 130. Of your own selves. 'Ambitious members, claiming pre-eminence, and forming parties watbin the fold. The most dangerous foes of the church are those who have drawn their sustenance from its bosom. Dr. Gloag says : "Men- tion is made of no fewer than six beret sierohs belonging to Ephesus,h3Iym on - oue and Alexander, 1 Then. 1,20; hy- ggollus and Iiermagenes, 2 lT:im. 1.15: Philetue, 2 Tim. 2, 17; and Diotrephes, 8, John 9,' •Ilere were the Nicolaitans, Piev, 2, 6, and /here Cerinthus arose against the apostle John. ' 31. Three years. Apparently a fete months less than this, in fact, but more nearly three years than two: I ceas- ed not, tI1'is whblle life was given to the work, • ' 1 I t 92. The word of his grace. which is able, No .dead Gospel, but living anti endowed with quickening power. Among all them which are sane- titled. The ward of God brings purity, peace and: power beret and et- ernal glory ,hlereabter. 133, T heave coveted no man's silver, or gold, or apparel. The gamine self-sn.r- rifiee or Pawl isshnwn, by the fact that while he ordinarily: refused to receive any return for his labor as founder end pastor of n sesrohes„ ha tnteadii;v naintainerl for all, other laborers that) L11.9 laborer is:worthy of his hire, 04. Ye yourselves 101,0W. They lord seen his signs Banging, out in 'the street; AS a Lentinakar, ,lust as wo remember So-and-so es a grater. ylhese hand have ministered unto my necessities, How, is shewunl roll Acts 18, 3, end there are frequent references; to his manual ether at the very tftne,when be was making spiritual conalnest. .Paul's (teal is always,tihat neehnsities are the only things that, are needed, To t}ietn that were with into. 0le:eared net only for (himself butt for others also, 35. So laboring. His industry help- ed. society and helped the Niels/Lien Church. And tie he had helped those who wore weak he desired that they, might follow his example. They were ur'oerl to labor, not that they might gam, but that they might give, It is more blessed. to give than to receive, 'V ben Jesus. said, this, we do not know. It is not feuntl to the (Jos lel, but "it 1s Jn uerfecti accord: withall his teach- ings." • i HINTS FOR Ell FARMERS, SOME VALUABLE VARIETIES OF WINTER WIihAT. I[eeeeo er 1k.ri'0s0,,t Plspet'tntenls front 11:1011Tartu pains -351151, f. Zavitz,. or Inc 00 tnll) hl;rtclllluivtl ('u11110e, 511.1. OD 111' r00404.1• hji','1 There will likely be about 800,000 acres sown with winter wheat in On- tario within the next month. It is very important, therefore, that winter wheat growers take every available means to oscura those varietieswhich ars likely to give the best results. By experiments conducted within the past eight years at the Ontario Agricultural College with 150 varieties of winter wheat, it is found that there is a great variation in the comparative yields of grain produced by the different var- ieties. It is also found that the varis- ties which have given good average re- sults in the experiments conducted at the College for a few years in succes- sion have usually given good satisfac- tion throughout Ontario: ;This fest has been determined by the results of co-operative experiments conducted througbout the Province during eaob of the past five years in connection with the experimental work at the Col- lege. From seven to nine varieties have been selected each yeas' for send- ing out to ex -students of the Agricul- tural College, and to other interested and progressive farmers throughout Ontario, who have expressed their de- sire to join in the co-operative experi- mental work, and have written Lor the necessary material. • In the autumn of 1896, seven varie- ties of winter wheet were selected for distribution and were divided into three sets with three varieties in each, the Dawson's Golden Chaff being used throughout as a basis by which t he results of all the varieties could be compared with one another. We have received 281 full and satisfactory, re- ports of carefully oouducted winker wheat experiments for 1897€. This num- ber is more than double that of any previolue year. '[dines reports came from 35 counties, .19 of which are sit- uated east and 16 west of Guelph. The following table gives compara- tive results of straw and grain per acre of the winter wheat varieties test- ed during the past season on 031 forme, atrax'nernore Gran per sore tom) bu. amts, Dawson's Golden Chaff.2.2 1 133.9 Stewart's Champion,,.,.2.4 133.7 Early Red Clawson 2.1 131.2 Pride of Genesee., .. 2.2 01.0 Early Genesee Giant2.1 09,6 Siberian. . . 2.0, 29.6 Poole ,1.8 , 27.5 As none except the 231 good reports of successfully conducted experiments have been used iii the preceding sum- mary of results, the table should be of great value and worthy of the thought- ful attention of wheat growers in On- tario. Much credit is due to the care- ful experimenters who sent us the re - porta of the tests made on their own #arms. , ' CONCLUSIONS. 1. In the average yield of winter wheat per acre, the Lawson's Golden Chaff stood highest among 11 varieties tasted over Ontario in 1893, 9 varieties in 1894, 9 varieties in 1895, 9 varieties in 1896, and 7 varieties in 1897, also among 53 varieties grown at the Agri- cultural College for six years in sue- aecoion. r . , 2. Three varieties of winter wheat have been tested over Ontario for four years in succession, with the roilowing average yields of grain per acre; Daw- son's Golden Chaff, 32 1-2 bushels; Early Red Clawson, 20 1-8 bushels: and Early Genesee Giant, 29 1-20 bushels, 3. Dawson's Golden Chaff was the most popular variety with the experi- menters in each of the past four years, 4. In the co-operative experiments for 1897, Stewart's s Cham io n Pride of Genesee, Dawson's Golden Chaff, and Siberian, made the best appearance in the spring. 5. Dawson's Golden Chaf€ and Early Genesee Giant possessed the strongest, and the Pride of Genesee and Siberian the weakest straw in 1897. 6. The Dawson's Golden Chaff and the Stewart's Champion were the least and the Pride of Genesee and the Early Genesee Giant were the most affected by rust. 7. The Stewart's Champion and The Pride of Genesee produced the great- est length of straw. 8, The Early Red Clawson and the Dawson's Golden Chaff were the first to mature, and the Early .Genesee Giant and the Stewart's Champion were the lent to mature. 9, The Dawson's Golden Chaff and the Stewart's Champion produced the plumpest grain, and the Siberian and Poole the most shrunken grain, 10. The counties of Grey, Middlesex, and Huron furnished the largest num- ber of successful winter wheat reports in 1897. 11. The experimenters have taken such interest in the work as shown by the many favorable comments given in the. reports, the Wowing being 50 ex- ample: "Co-operative experiments should be located in, conspicuune places as object lessons. Aly experiment with winter wheat was near rho road where 200 to 300 rigs passed sanity. The vis- itation. to the pots were very numer- ous. The remarks by passers by and the cbinparisons mads would fill a vol- ume. The experiment nctun.ily became the Leading topic of the village talk for some tune previous to harvesting. Thus many object Iessons were learn- ed by every day observers, I have tak- en a good deal of pains with the experi- ment bol: feel wall repaid." The following leading varieties of winter wheat will be distributed this year for co-operative experiments in On tario. Set 1, Dawson's Golden Chaff, Early Genesee Ginnie and Early Red Clawson, Set 2. Dawson's Golden Chaff, Pride of Genesee, and: Poole, c Set. 8, Dawson's Golden Chaff, New Columbia anti imperial Amber. Aiiy parson wishing to conduit is careful experiment with 000 of these seas 54,001,1 apply to the Ex erimenta1- tet, Agricultural. College, Guelph, Cor the chaired set and one -halt pound of each variety together with instructions 7 EDITORS, OLE YM N PITY' " C 1 len and women in all Walks of Life Tell of the Remarkable Cures Wrought by South American Nervine Tonic. SIX DOSES WILL CONVINCE TILE MOST IN EDULOUS. , EDITOR COLWELL, OF PARIS, ONT., REVIEW. Newspaper edi'ors are almost as soeptioal as the average physioian on the subject of new remedies for sick people. Nothing -short of a series of most remarkable and well authenti- cated cures will incline either an editor or a doctor to seriously consider the merits honestly claimed for a medicine. Hundreds oeo testimonials of won- derful recoveries wrought with the Great South .American Nervine Tonic were received from men and women all over the country before physicians began to prescribe this great remedy in chronic cases of dyspepsia, in- digestion, nervous prostration, sick headache, and as a tonic for build- ing up systems sapped of vitality through protracted spells of sick- ness. Durin his experience of nearly a quarter of a century as a newspaper publisher in Paris, Ont., Editor Col- well, of The Paris Review, bas pub- lished hundreds of columns of paid medicine advertisements, and, no doubt, printed ninny a gracefully - worded puff for his patrons as a matter of business, but in only a single instance, and that one warrant- ed by his own pe'-sonal experience, has he given a testimonial over his own signature. No other remedy ever offered the public has proved such marvellous revelation to the most sceptical as the South American Nervine Tonic. It has never failed in its purpoee, and it has cured when doctors and other medicines were tried in vain. "1 was prostrated with a particu- larly severe attack of ° La Grippe,' " says Mr. Colwell, i• and could find no relief from the intense pains and dis- tress of the ma:ady. I suffered day and night. The doctors did not help tee, and I tried a number of medi- cines, but without relief. About this time I was advised to try the South American Nervine Tonic, Its effects were instantaneous. The first dose T took relieved me. I improved rapidly and grew stronger every day. Your Nervine Tonic cured me in a single week." The South American Nertini3 Tonio ril>�pilds the life forces by 568 direct action on the itdi'vee and the nerve centres, and it is tblia *Stable feature 'which distinguishes it front every other remedy in existence. The most eminent medical authorities now concedetha t fully two-thirds of all the physical ailments of humanity arise from exhaustion of the nerve forces. The South American Nervine Toni." acting direct upon the nerve centres and nerve tissues instantaneously supplies them with the true nourish- ment required, and that is why its invigorating effects upon the whole' system are always felt immediately. For all nervous diseases, for general debility arising from enfeebled vital- ity, and for stomach troubles of event variety no other remedy Dan possibly take its place. Sold by Deadman & McColl for testing and the blank form on wvbich to report will be furnished free of cost to his address. supply 1y of some of the varieties is limited but we will be enabled to furnish a large number with this seed before the supply is exhausted. A. navitz, Agr'1 College, Experimentalist. Guelph, Aug. 23rd, 1897. SHE MURDERED MILIEU HERMAN NACK SAYS HIS WIFE WAS A FIEND. Undertakers and 'Doctors Named as liar Aecotnpilces—this to Three MI dren Murdered Every Year. A despatch from New York, saya:— District Attorney Olcott made public on Thursday a statement made,'by Her- man Nack, husband oC Mrs, Augusta Nack, who is now in the Tombs, with Martin Thorne, charged with the mur- der of William Guldenauppe. Nack states that his wife made a living through the murder, of children,. She was a so-called midwife, but never had a diploma- Nack says that she tried for one int Germany, but failed in her exaenilne,tigns, At one time, Neck de - attires there were as many as six•dead ohildretn preserved in spirits in bat. ties in his room. 'Ile adds that she murdered from ono to three children meet year for a period of from elgbt to tell years. (Neck also alleges that his wife was assisted by certain, pbysi- cians,, and he mentions undertakers' names, charging both physiolans and. undertakers With complicity with his. mite. He says' that they aided her in making away with. the bodies oC dead children, The etateusent was gotten from Melt by Assistant District Attorney Michael, who has been work- ing herd to est evidence from him as to his wife's history, He managed af- ter a time to get Nnelt to tell a little about his and his wife's lite. '.hen the Ma000 evening on in a buret of efirl- 00100, told him tally of the life that his wits had been living. He swore tlsat he wits toiling the truth, and said that his I was one of the most abominable FOR TwENtIY-SOVEN YEARS, ., P D BAKINC POWDER THE COOKS BEST FRIEND LARGEST SALE IN CANADA. • women in the world, District Attorney Olcott got the man to make a sworn. statement in writing. The statement was prepared on Wednesday, and was signed by Nack on Thursday night. Tie ' was at the offioe of the District At- torney on Wednesday giving assist - muse in the preparation of the state- ment. In the beginning of the state- , went Herman Nack states that he came to New York from Germany in 1880, His wife arrived here a few months before he did. He declares € that her maiden name is Augusta Pus - sat and that she was born in tLonway- en-iE+lbe, in Germany. Then follows the entire career of both bimeebf and his wife for the next ten years. The ma.k- inq public of the statement by District Attorney Olcott was followed by a great deal of excitement in the District Attorney's offioe. It wins not known I o anyone before the making public of Neck's sworu charges that Lha wo- mau was thought to be capable Mauch acts, AVOIDING DISTINCTION. First Burglar—I'll have ter get a bike soon. Second Burglar—What ford S''irst Burglar—Well, if. I don't, I'll soon bo,known to the pollee as de only man in de perfresh what don't ride. MARRIAGE A SUCCESS. ,She-1Ly dear, I want fifty dollars to do some shopping, 10—i4ly goodness) Why it's -only-: yen remember that you tame. home last night in a very shaky con= dition ? Cfiuml Perhaps 1 did. 1 Yes. And 1 didn't say h word,; did It No, my deer, not a word. 5 [Vett, you know, silence is goldeni' germ's the fifty dollars, nsy loves ,