Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1895-4-12, Page 7THS NEU IN A NUTCHELL 'THE VERY LATEST FROM ALL OVER THE WItLP.. tintoreating hones About Our Own Gain' UT, Greet Orttnln, the United Skates, and Ail Parte or the G1040, Condenser) aruri Assorted ter EM Y *loading. 'OANhDA,. .I rn Iton millers will advenue the price el flour. Mr. I'. 0. Geddes, City Clerk of Calgary, 'diedeuddenly on Saturday, Mrs. Taylor of Looms, died at London. :Her age ie paid to be 104 years, Tho mounted police are northing 4eouthern Manitoba for a secret whiskey still. Mr, Patrick Flannery, an old resident of %Paris, was found drowned in the mili- more. It is announced that Mr. J. K. Clare has been appointed maiager of The London Free ;Press, The members of the Manitoba Lepiolature will present Premier Greenway with a life - .sized oil portrait. Meagre. Elder, Dampper and Co., will run a fleet of twelve ships from Montroal during the coming Beason. Trade reports uniteinsaying prospects are improving, and pricesare higher for, many lines of goods. The Royal Commission en the Liquor Traffic has finished its labors, and the ,report is completed. The moat severe gale for many years wept New York harboron Thursday, doing much damage to the vessels. Mr. R. H. Bethune, for many years cash- ier of the Dominion Bank, died on Thursday • at his residence in Toronto. Mrs. Thompson of Detroit, who died recently, bequeathed over half a million •dollars to bar niece, Mrs. F. B. Lays of ;London, Forty-eight counterfeit quarter -dollars were found under a loose board in vacant dot on the south aide of the Hamilton Police Station, Tho Queen's Avenue Me thodists of Lon don will rebuild on the site of the Markin .property, corner of Dufferin avenue and. Wellington street. Tenet aeeesament of the pity of Lon• •don, Ont., for 1895 Is 515,182,340, an in- crease of 5284,415 over last year. The amount of exemptions is 5504,950. At Stratford, James Sheen of Logan Township, was found guilty of stealing some difty sheep from Whyte & Sons, and sew tensed to five years in penitentiary. Senator Thibaudean has returned to Montreal from England, and expresses ,himself confident of the success of the Atlantic and Lake Superior railway. John O'Shea, a professional swimmer, died at Kingston, aged 05 years. During hie life he saved about one hundred persona from drowning, besides recovering many bodies. Representations have been received in Ottawa from persons in Alberta, urging upon the Government the propriety of oonferring provincial autonomy upon the district. The engagement of Hon. A. J. Majori- banke,A.D O. to the GovernotaGeneral and brother of her Exoelleney Lady Aberdeen, to Mies Myssie Brown, of Nashville,Tenn., is announced. The 13ritieh revenue return for the year ending Sdaroh 31 are £101,007,504, an inoreaao of 23,309,912 compared with the preceding year. IXoma Secretary Asquith inteade intro, dieing in the near future a bill making options and fntnre spaoulabion in groin a penal ollenee, The attempt of Great Britain to aooare the extradition of James 30lfour,e c.member of Parliament, from Argentiva,heo bhua far oosb £40,000. The Colonial Office has been asked to ascertain from Prance the day on which it will be eouvenient to proclaims the treaty between Chet country and Penedo in forte, An appeal for an additional $,1000 to complete the international memorial to Tennyson in the Isle of Wight has been Issued by the Amerioan Committee in London, The Primrose of Wales le going to Copan• hegen this week, and much comment is made upon the foot that the Prince and Princess seldom remain in the same country together. The Provision Traders' Association of Bristol, England, have signed a petition to the Dominion Parliament asking for a law to oompel-the branding of cheese in the factories, The Cabinet Council on Saturday, which Lord Roseberyattended, decided to nom- inate Mr, 'William Court Gully, Q.U., M.P. for Uarliole, for the Speakership, to succeed Mr. Peel, T E E S . Marl !•1 1 'i,l 8 T,. Ina are advancing in pride. In xome quay' 1,Ci O E LATE CABLE A BT E N �j WSt tars wages are better and the demand for BO p Al J }J 4lid1IJJ"J lY rl li' i labour is lnereatiu , In the lower grades of woollen gocda, eowever, there le nes' cation of activity and large orders have been 00noe11ed, and in eomo mine strikes are gheokiug produotion. Owing to the continued prevalence of, the grip in the British Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, the cadets have been sent home, and the institution closed temporarily. The House of Lords hoe passed the Mar- quis of Ripon'e bill repealing tb a restrio- tions upon the Australian aoloniee regarding the imposition of oustome, andthe measure received royal assent. The Tennyson Memorial Committee has' issued a publio acknowledgment of generous subscriptions received from the United States, and adds that the memorial will be ineoribed "Erected by Friends in England and America." England has just adopted the Bertilion system of .minute anthropometrio mea- surements for the identification of crimin- als, in addition to Hersohell's finger print system, which Frannie Galton has made generally kncwn. In order to encourage emigration from the southern States to Manitoba and the North•Weettbe CanadianPaoifiohas deoided to give free transportation to settlers from the south northwards. Mrs. 0, T. Williams, the earnest tem- perance worker, died in Montreal on Thursday afternoon. The deceased was eeoretary-treasurer of the World's Wo. men's Christian Temperance Union. Rowland French, a young man sentenced at Chatham to the Central Prison for burglary, was released by order of the Ottawa (Government, with several months of his term uncompleted. The boy belongs to a respectable family. The land officers of the Canadian Pacific Railway Company at Winnipeg are crowd- ed daily with intending settlers in Mani- toba and the North•Weet. The pressure is so greys that the company will open a branch office at Calgary. A pitoh-in took place early on Sunday morning at the Y near Hamilton, Two freight traine were wrecked, and three men injured, though not fatally. Both traine were thrown off the track, and nine of the oars were demolished by fire. The New York Central start next month a new direct train service between New York and Montreal, crossing the St. Law- rence on the C. P. R. bridge and using the C. P. R. tracks from St. Constant to ;Montreal. The rumor is gaining ground in Ottawa that Lord Aberdeen will boshortlyrecollect by the Imperial authorities to take the Lord -Lieutenancy of Ireland, in ouoeeesion to Lord Houghton, who will receive a . Cabinet portfolio. The Bell Telephone Company has com- menced an nation for twentyseven thou- sand dollars damages against the Montreal Street Railway Company on account of the introduobioa of the trolley system, which is interfering with the telephone company's wires, An influential deputation from Montreal asked the Government on Saturday to place in the estimates a quarter of a million dollars for the World's Fair in Montreal in. 1896. The delegation was asked to put its views in writing, in order that they may bo formally considered. The proposition to build a city gaol in Hamilton has stirred up the County Coun- eillors. Some -of them contend that the city cannot bht ow back the present gaol on "- the county's hands, eepeoially as the county was; mpelled by a mandamus to build it in 18 0. The county 'fathers will look for recompense if the city is allowed to build a sew gaol. On Thursday afternoon, in the Manitoba Legislature, Premier Greenway, in moving the adjournment, said that the Govern• ment had as yet seen no reason to abaoge fns policy in respeob to the schools of the provino% The Government, be said, de• aired time to thoroughly consider what action was best, and in May, when the House re -assembled, they would be able to definitely declare their intentions. 0111110 =R11'Al2:, The Delo of York is suffering from a mild attack of influenza. The young Japp who ahob Li Hung Chang has been 0e00u0d to `herd labor for life, A laudeltde near'Titel,in Southern Rung• ary,deetroyed a hotel, and oaused a large loos of life.. The new telegraph line connecting Man- dalay in Burmah with Pekin was opened on Wednesday. It is understood that the French Govern. meat intends to take the Bole right to manufacture cigarettes, The Ozer has ordered 500,000 rubies to be devoted to a fund for the relief of the news paper men and authors. A returning officer in Hungary bee eight ded him for misoonduot. Barrels of wine,anohore,soythes-in fact, all kinds of merchandise. --urs conveyed by. the Swiss Poste0Bie' department. Deepatohes from Shanghai say there were thirty-eight memof cholera in one day among the Japanese troops at Port Arthur. uels on hen u with 1)u puties who denouno• Lord Kimberley on Friday informed a deputation from the Armenian Aeeooiation that Great Britain, in conjunction with France and Russia, would take deoided steps to attain desired reforms for the pro- tection of the Armenian Christiane. Dr. Francis Asbury Campbell, president of the Normal School for the Blind, at Norwood, London, gives an indignant denial of Immigration Inepecbor DeBarry'e state. ment that the waifs Dr. Bernardo brings to Canada are the illegitimate o9'epring of British aristocracy. Sir William Harcourt reoeutly stated that the Island of Cyprus was costing the British taxpayers three hundred thousand pounds a year. A few nights ago he had to correct his statement, and admits that Cyprus, since its acquisition, has been a source of profit ,to the extent of two hun. dred thousand pounds. Knocking about somewhere in the At. lautio, off the coast of Ireland, is the der- elict steamer Loch Marie, which was abandoned in a supposedly oinking condi- tion a month ago. Her cargo is. worth 8410,000, one-third of which, according to marine law, will go to any person or persona who bring the castaway to port. The midlands district of England was visited by a hurricane last week that le said to have been the most deetruotive in the memory of living man. The Peter- borough Cathedral lost three of its spires. The cedars of Lebanon at Warwick Castle and many of the beautiful and historic groves in the districts were destroyed. UNITED STATES. Mr, Henry Heylyn, Hayter, 0, M. G. the distinguished atatiabiolan, died in Mel bourne on Sunday. He woe eeventy-four years of age. The present Sulean of Morocco is de. *mended from an Irish girl who became a member of the then Royal harem more tlian 100 y ears ago. The French Government has sanctioned e proposal to allow tho Credit Foncier to issue a lottery loan of two hundred and fifty million francs. An order has been issued by the Grand Duke Vladimir, in command of St. Peters burg military die trio'', forbidding all officer attending theatres during Lent. The negotietione looking to the raising of a Spanish loan in Paris have collapsed the same way that they fell through in Lon- don. Spain ie practically insolvent. The Emperor of Japan bas ordered an armistice with China in response to a re- quest of Li Hung Chang, made before the Chinese Minister received his wound. The special correspondents in Paris comment upon the irritation and die• appointment caused there by Emperor William's speech to Bismarck, which they say tends to dash the hopes of more amicable relations. Ata Cabinet Council held in Brussels it was deoided to immediately mobilize seven thousand soldiers of the army reserve, to be employed to oountereat the danger arising from political agitation in indus- trial centres. Part of e. wreaked steam launch from the lost cruiser Reins Regents hae been seen off the south Spanish coast, near Conil. It is stated that Great Britain, France, Russia, and Italy will require the insertion of a clause in the treaty of peace between China and Japan, providing for the opening of the principal Chinese porta to European commerce. Li-Hung•Changobjects to the abstraction of the bullet fared at him by en insane Japanese, which lies a centimetre under his left eye. Surgeons Sato and Ishiguro are attending him by Imperial command. ICON, WM. COURT GULLY TO 5UG' GEED SPEAKER PEEL. Want ihrm dlau 0hee00 t'aotgryB,fluadetl --Revenue liekltrns-1Walil or Caren Alaoaler-Oale in the Midlands. A deepetch from London says °"-The As. eooiation of Provision Tradera of Bristol have eigued a memorial to be forwarded to the Parliament of Canada, saying the 0050' motion is Openly of the opinion that it would be to the advantage of both produo- ere and distributors of Canadian oheeee if the date and make were legibly and hndel• bly marked upon each cheese before it leaves the factory wliioh it is made at. The memorial urges Parliament to pose a law making such marke compulsory. When passing through Paris the Prince of Waiee told Count Tornielli, the Italian Ambassador, that he expected to make a visit of several weeks at the Quirinal soon es King Humbert's guest. The Exohenge Telegraph Company says that at a Cabinet meeting on Friday it was deoided to support Hon. Wm. Court Gully, Q. C., IVs. P. for Carlisle, to soothed Right Hon. A, W, Peel as Speaker of the Boise Half of the world's product of quinine is used in the United States. A lady in Atchison has a poodle dog which haft just bean fitted with a glass eye. The Boston fund for the relief of the destitute in Newtoundlaod now amounts to about twelve thousand dollars. Mrs. 'H:. B. Lodyard, wife of the Presi- dent of the Michigan Central Railway, dropped dead on the street in Detroit on Saturday afternoon. At Minot, N. D., the house of Phoenix Christensen, a carpenter, was burned. Five children, ranging in age from 3 to 15 years, perished in the flames. William S. Kimball of Rochester, the cigarette man, died at Virginia Beach, Ve., where he had gone for his health. He was a director of the T., H. & B. Arthur B. Chase, a retired theatrical manager, committed suicide at New York by shooting himself. Mr. Chase acted as Edwin Booth's manager for six years, and managed the Boobh•Barrett-Modjeska com- bination. Albert Knowles, the young Canadian who was accused in Utica,N.Y., of fraudulently obtaining naturalization papers in order to marry a Tonawanda girl, pleaded guilty, and was sentenced to one year in the pen:. tentlary. Senator Mullen introduced in the New York Senate on Wednesday a bill prohibit- ing any woman appearing in tights or in any indecent costume in any place whore male persona is assembled. The bill oleo prohibits the publication of soloalled high art piotures in any magazine or newspaper. The death is announced. of tho Dowager Duchess of 'Buocleuob. The feedbag expenses of the . animals in the London Zod'are 8300 weekly. The funeral of Lady Mary llMantagu,oall• ed the prettiest girl in London, took place last Thursday, Mrs. Prank Annie perished in her burning home, four miles north of Fenton, Mich. She was i11 and could not help herself, although two young children escaped uninjured . It is said,that she and her husband lived auhappil, and there are suspicions of crime to connection with the fire, Immigration Inspector De Barry, of Buffalo, makes tine startling abatement that the children brought to this country by Dr. Barnardo are the illegitimate offspring of the British aristooraoy, taken from ltoinee supported by the British aristoorecy iu which to conceal the evidences of their shame. Senator Lodge, who is one of the new Republican members of the Senate Com• mittee on Foreign Affairs, in an interview, vowed that Great Britain must be made to respect the Monroe doctrine, and that if elle dates to assert her claims in any of the South American Republics else must be made totreinble. 'Advices 'from , the chief commercial oontrea of the United States are snore deoidedly satisfaotory than has been the thee for a long time. Railway earnings, bank Moorings, and the industrial situa- tion are footers of primary importauee, and all of these are in boner shape, Raw materials as a rule are firmer ; hides, cotton, and coke are all higher ; and e a eotrsegeenee leather, cotton goods, and of Commons. It can be stated, however, on best authority, that the above statement is based wholly on the general belief that Mr. Gully would be put forth by the Gov ernment as its candidate. The revenue returns for the year ending Maroh 31 are 2101,697, 304, an inorease of £3,399,912, as compared with the returns in the preceding year. Frederick Beattohamp Paget Seymour, first Baron Alcester, died in London on Saturday. He was born in 1821. He was Admiral and Commander -in -Chief of the Mediterranean station from 1880 to 1883, and commanded the fleet ab Ibe bombard• menb of Alexandria in 1882, for which he received a Peerage and a grant of £95,000. It is learned officially, in reference to the enforcement of the Behring Sea regula• tions of 1896, that the deoision of the Paris arbitration will be strictly adhered to during the ensuing season, and no side fesuc will be allowed to affect that decis- ion. Last Sunday's cyclone, which went dia- gonally across the midlands and the south, is said' to have done more damage than any previous hurrioane in the memory of living men. Some of its destruction fe irreppar• able. All the magnificent ceders of Leb- anon at Warwick Castle,whiob were almost pre•bistorio, and had been familiar to tour. iota and writers for centuries were blown down; Sandringham and the adjoining estate lost together 5,000 trees ; the Marquis of Huntly's Silver Birch Plantation in Hunt- ingdon, incomparably the finest in England, and probably in the world, was wholly wiped out; the Peterborough Cathedral lost three unique spires, and the newspapers are filled with appeals from country rectors for subscriptions to rebuild ancient churches smashed by the gale. The Cabinet met at 11 o'clock on Satur- day morning, and was presided over by Lord Rosebery, who is much more vigorous than he was upon the occasion of the last meeting. The Council ended its session at 1.40 p.m. Lord Salisbury started for Nice on Satur- daymorning, and Lord Dunraven took hie departure for Monte Carlo. A contrast has been made for the con- struction of the railroad from Keneh to Aasouan, in Egypt, to be completed by the end of 1897. There will then be a continu- ous line from Alexandria to the first cataract. In response to the joint representations of the Envoys of Great Britain, France, and Russia, the Turkish Government has promised to order the provincial Governor to proteot the Christians of Diarbekir, Asiatic Turkey, who are said to be in dan- ger. The Spaniab Premier, Canoes del Cas- tillo, admits that the situation in Cuba is grave ; but says that, if requisite, one hundrethousand troops will be dispatched to the island to suppress the outbreak, and if necessary, to occupy the entire disturbed district, The Paris and Lyons railway in France is building forty locotnotites with sharp 'prows, engineers having beaome convinced that the greatlyreduced air resistance consequent on the new shape will not only novenae speed materially, but will also effect a owing in fuel of from 5 to 10 per cent. A despatch from Honolulu says a large number of political prisoners gave been put to work on the roads in Hawaii. Among them are the leaders, Wilcox, Greig, Wideman and Marshall. The Englishmen, Packard, Seward, Ashford and Gulick, will be kept in prison for the present. Seward is said to be quite ill. FfELP' T44 85 4II GRANT, Reath or the QIclesb ArtnY Water lit k.µ53 lirlktah AriliY-itis lUliktary Career. A dcspatolt from Landon eayo:-ll'teld Marshal Sir Patriek Grant, Governor of Chelsea hospital, and the oldest army °Meer in the Brltieh sarvloe, ie dead. He was the 0001 of Maior Joltai'Grant, of Auoh• terblair, Inverness, and was born in 1804. He entered the army in 3520, Re rose rapidly, and in 1843.4 served as A, A. G. with the Gwalior army, and waementioned in the despatohee. In the lintlej campaign, 1845.4, he was twice dangerously wounded, was repeatedly mentioned in despatches, and was given a medal and three olaspa. He aleo fought in the Punjaub campaign 1848-0, and in the expedition to Kohat against the Afghan Hill tribes, He we Commenderdn-Chief at Madras in 1866.7, of the Bengal army in 1857, and of the Madras army in 1857.01. He was Governor and Commander -in -Chief of Malta 1867.72, and appointed Governor of Chelsea hospi. tel in 1874. He was knighted in 1881. Poor Printer Weds an Heiress. John Boben, a printer of Boston, is soon to marry Miss Theresa Gertrude Butler, only daughter of Captain Howard G, Butler, the Philadelphia millionaire: The engage- ment has been kept a secret, it is said, at the desire of the young woman's parents, who do not favor the match. After an extended tour in Europe, in pursuit of her studies, Miss Butler returned home. She is a beautiful girl, the idol of her mother's heart and the pride of her rich father, with three-quarters of a million in her own right, The wedding will take plaoe in the borne of the bride's parents on Cheater avenue, iu Philadelphia, but there will be no dis- play. It is planned that their honeymoon will be spent in a New Eusland town, and then the couple will go to .Europe for a year. ABOUT THE GREAT WEST. O. Responsive "Grumbling." An excellent though unconscious oritiolem of the rapid end incoherent manner in which too many congregations perform their part of the responsive reading of the Psalms on Sunday, was made by a small boy on his return from his first attendance at ohuroh, Mamma, he remarked, the people don't like the minister, do they ? Wheek uchoa question was Harold the made you reply. Well, said Harold, sturdily, he'd read something, and then they'd ell grumble, and then he'd read some more, and they'd all grumble again ! A big gold In has been discovered in the Nilisein4 district. near Wahnapitae, excommem FOR TWENTY-FIVE YEARS F DJNN'S BAKIN OWDE THECOOK'SBESTFRIEND LARGEST SALE IN CANADA. Mfr. J. 4144e 0futtrs56 Montreal,l?, Q. A Marvelous Medicine Whenever Given a Fair Triad Hood's Proves Its Merit'. The following letter is from Mr. J. A.loldt, Ohaussa,architect end surveyor, lie, 1533 Shaw Street, Montreal; Oanode; "0. L Hood 100., Lowell, Dias.: '"Gentlemen: -I have been taking Heed's Sarsaparilla for about six months and am gla9 to say that it has done neea great deal of good. Last May my weight was 152 pounds, but sines S rsaparill I began to take Hood's Sarsaparilla it has 10., creased to 1e3. I think Hood's Sarsaparilla is marvellous[ AL,, iSE and am very much plat se4 Hood's Pills euro liver ills, constipation, tiliousness, jaundice, sick headache, tndtgcsiao0. A. Distinction. Barrore -"I say, old chap, loan me ten for a week." Munn -"I've no money to loan." Barrore-"Come off, you're rich. You've money to burn." Mian -"Perhaps, but not to loan, my bnv.' A Talk With Mr.W.B.Scartb, or Winnipeg, on Live Topica. Mr. W. B. Scarth, of Winnipeg, Mao. was in Montreal the other day. "What are the business prospeots in the North-West ?" he was asked. "I think that for a new country Manitoba and the North -Rest are not so badly off," was the reply. "The depression has been the means of inculcating ideas of economy and prudence into every class in the community, and as far as Manitoba ie concerned I think we are on the eve o better times." Mr.Soarth also had an encouraging word to say regarding the setting up of the coun- try. Alberta, he said, had received a very large number of new comers and the Cana- dian Paoific were in constant receipt of hundreds of enquiries from the state of New York to Washington, all along the line of border states, and the number of people who will make their homes in the Canadian West will certainly be enormous. An effort is also being made to settle some -of the unoccupied land in the vicinity of Winnipeg, and Mr. Scarth detailed the steps thee have been taken in this direction by se committee composed of members of the Winnipeg Board of Trade to well as other leading oitizena. lie also explained that a good deal of drainage would have to be done before a certain portion of the land would be suitable for successful oulti- vation. The local Government would, how- ever.be approached in this connection and, no doubt, something would come out of it. Mr. Scarth deolared that the farmers of Manitoba had not lost heart on account of the low pried of wheat, and he believed the total acreage sown this year would be greater than last, when the yield was about 17,000,000 bushels. "How much wheat is there yet in the country ?" ' I think about two million bushels, a part of which is yet in the hands of the farmers and the rest in the elevators along the line of the Canadian Pacific." Mr. Scarth, in referring particularly to the oondition of the Manitoba farmers, said that aparb from the mortgages they were not more indebted than the same class of people in the province of Ontario. "What do you hear as to the payment of interest 1" " I hear that the loan companies have little to complain of on that score, was Mr. Smith's ready reply. Possible Rubber Famine. According to an exohange, there seems a possibility of an advance in rubber goods, The enormous inorease in the uses and the adaptions of rubber has been somewhat startling, and with that inorease has ooine agrowing acerbity of rho crude material. Most of the °rude rubber oomes from South America, and the immense quantity of sap taken from the rubber trues has aifeoted their vitality. Many ,of the largo and more produotivo trees aro dying, and it will be many years before the young trees will be eufifoieutly grown to yield cap, The rubber industry is confronted with a possible sap famine, His Favorite Season. Teacher -What season do you like beat Boy -Summer. bo do I, And why do yea love summer° 'Cause there ain't any school, Conselenee Makes Him Tell. Warren Sherman, a fartn laborer, abou 10 years old, went to Lansing, Mich., the other day, and in the presence of Judge Dolan, Deputy Sheriff McKale and two witnesses, confessed to staving set fire to his house in Williamston townsbip in Doc - ember, 1882. He said that he was perfect- ly award of what ho was doing and realized that he waslikely to be sent to prison for A term of years, but in the thirteen years which had elapsed alma the oriole AVE oonunitted he had not one moment's p0ao0 f mind lie collected 003 from mance company, but 10 now without money or ptoperty. r�ryam_* Ilam. lv:�n OF TETERBORO0 Dir. W. S. Barker is young minister of Peterboro who has by his great earnestness and able exposition of the doctrines of the Bible earned for himself a place amongst the foremost ministers of Canada. He, with his most estimable wife, believe in looking after the temporal as well as the spiritual welfare of mankind, hence the following statement for publication: I have much pleasure in re- commending the Great South Ameri- can Nervine 'Tonic to all who are afflicted as I have been with nervous prostration and indigestion. I found very great relief from the very first bottle, which was strongly recom- mended to me by my druggist. I also induced my wife to use it, who, I must say, was completely run down and was suffering very much from general debility. She found great relief from South American Nervine and also cheerfully recommends it to her fellow -sufferers. "ENV. W. S. BAESER." force is diminished, and as a resniil; the etomaoh will not digest the food, the liver beoomes torpid, the kidneys' will not act properly, the heart and. lungs suffer, and in fact the whole' system becomes weakened and sinks: on account of the lank of nerve force„ South American Nervine is base&'! on the foregoing scientific dieoover4 and is so prepared that it acts directly on the nerve centres. It immediately increases the nervous energy of the whole system, therebyl enabling the different organs of theta body to perform their work perfectly, when disease at once disappears. It greatly benefits in one day. i Mr. Solomon Bond, a member of the Society of Friends, of Darlington it Ind., writes: ""Ihave used sixbottlesr of South American Nervine and I consider that every bottle did for me one hundred dollars worth of geod,t because I have not lima a goot5 night's sleep for twenty years (mai aoconnt of irritation, pain, horrible`. dreams, and general nervous pros. tration, which has been paused by t chronic indigestion and dyspepsia of the stomach, and by a broken down condition of my nervous system. Iv Bob now I can lie down and sleep all night as sweetly as a baby, and I feel like a sound man. I do not think there has ever been a medicine introduced into this country, which` will at all compare with this as a cure for the etomach and nerves." It is now a scientific fact that per- tain nerve centres looated near the base of the brain have entire control over the stomach, liver, heart, lunge and indeed all internal organs ; that is, they furnish these organs with the necessary nerve force to enable Caren to perform their respective work. When the nerve centres are weakened or deranged the nerve t, AEAD OEt1 Wholesale and Retail &gone for Brussels