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The Brussels Post, 1895-12-6, Page 7it 1 0i 189 • Tail VPRV [.A'f.DS"f PROM ALL Ttig WORi.D OVER. Interesting Items About Our .Own Country, Great Britain. the United States, and All Parts of the Globe,, Condensed and Assorted for easy Reading, OnNAPA, Wi nipog merchants are moving to haven the early-closingby-law quashed, Mr, John Y, Lloyd, a.Grand'rank engineer, shothimself dead et Mont- real. The Dominion 'Line: steamship Lab- rador brought 450 British aoldlers to Halifax Azarie Gauthier, the slayer of Colica Coneigny,has been found insane at Montreal John. Haynes has beep found .guilty of settin , fire' to Boyd &Ogee premises in Montreal. Four men have !been arrested in Winnipeg charged with issuing equaater- felt American money. The live stock shipments from Mont- real Ibisear are greatly in excess of these of former years,. Hamilton Waterworks Committeeee- commended a by-law to raise $175,- 000 175;000 for special unproeements. The eat works in Hamilton have or- gganwzed the Hamilton Art Students' I eaguo and elected officers. Wm. Farr was sentenced to ten years in the penitentiary for attempt - mg to murder his, wife at Winnipeg. Mr. 1Villiaan !loran, a pensioner of the, Royal Irish Constabulary, was frozento death at •Saltcoats, :Aasini- boia. The failure of the Nova Scotia bank- .,ing firm of rareeh"v, Forrest ,S, Co. 1eess,a-lc many small depositors penni- 1 A movement ,has been started among a certain number of Montreal eitizens to erect e, monument to Louis. Joseph Papweao. The • Minister of Justice refuses :to interfere with John 1i. elogper's sen- tence of 25 years for attempting to murder his wife, The Veterans' Association el Remit- . ton are working up a demonstration ,to be held on the battlefield at Ridgeway on June 1 and 2 next. The earnings of the C.P.R. for the week ending November 14 last show an increase of $71,000 compared with cornespotding week of last year. A banquet will be given to Mr. ,Sear- geant, the retiring General Manager cif the Grand Trunk Railway, by' a num- ber of ,prominent citizens, of Montreal. A complimentary banquet will be •ten- dered Mr. L. J. Seergeent, the retiring general manager of tbe GrandTrunk it citizens of I a Way Company 'by the e Montreal, on Tuesday. December 17th. The Canadian Pacific Railway has given a reduction of four and a half cents per hundred pounds for the ex- + pportation of Manitoba grain through to New York and Boston on the all-ral route. Tha revised figures 'for last year's tradeshow that Canada's ,trade during the period of general depression was bet- ter than any other year's business since t•onfederation, except 1892, 1893, and 1894. .., ti Major Markham, commandant of last year's Bisley team, in his report sug- gests that no competitor be allowed to have a place on the team more than three times in five years, so that the honors may pass around more freely. Last week at Calgary the body of Paul Faillant was discovered, he evidently having met death by violence. The day his body was diacovered his wife and daagbter were drowned while crossing on the frail ice of Buffalo lake. Archbishop Cleary has purchased a building in Kingston • for $17,000, and will convert it into a classical college in which Roman Catholic young men can qualify for any profession. The college will be opened in September, 1896, Degrees will be •conferred. Mr. J. T. Bowerman, president of the Ottawa Teachers' Association, at;a:meet-. ing of that organization on Saturday, predicted if . matters continue as they are going it will not be long before male teachers will be completely extinct. Mr. Charles M. Hays, the new Gen- eral Manager of the Grand Trunk, an interview at Montreal said he would not take hold of the road till the new year. He spoke of the recent railway agreement as a good thing, and ex- pressed the belief that better times were coming. The inspection of gas meters through- out the Dominion reveals the fact` that out of 313,562 meters only 2,741 were found to be .accurate, but• a curious feature was that in a very large nit- jority of cases the imperfect records were against the companies, and in favor of the consumers. The Grand Trunk Railway Company has adoptedthe block system, by which one train is not allowed to Mane a station after another until the next station Signals that the latter has left. The change will necessitate the em- ppIoyment of a large number cif extra telegraph operators. On Thursday morning, at his resi- dence in St. Thomas, Ont., Mr, John C. Hawkins fell througha trap-door with a lighted lamp in his band. The oil ignited and set fire to his clothing He managed to extinguish the blaze by di- vesting himself of all his clothing, al- though he had two ribs fractured by the fall. The report of the Inspector of Weights and Measures for the last fiscal year bears special testimony to the honesty of Toronto, Of the vast number of weights and measures inspected in that city there was not a single rejection Belleville, Charlottetown, and, Victoria are the only other cities that bad an equally good, record. L An attempt 'was made on Thursday night by two highwaymen to rob the Ancaster stage near that place. One of the highwaymen struck the driver with a slung shot, rendering him Insensible. They evidently failed to bind the mail bag, which was under a buffalo robe. The driver. Jacobs, bad eight stitches put in the wound on his head. GREAT BRITAIN. John Redforn,the well-known London tailor, is dead. Bishop Wilberforce has been ap- pointed Bishop of Chichester. It is proposed to increase the Duke of Cambridge's entering allowanec arabic aro- cognition of his long and v services, The Chinese Government is ordering new warships, and it is feared the Clyde lock -out may drive the brdera out of Britain. It is said that: Japan has tra'neferred lrer order glean to Et gland ache 'titin) • o to "Gerneany op account of ne ip. bi .lilies' strike on leo +Pyle, • Mr, Robert Id, A•liiwerd, the ;lake of Marl ercogh'1� 1awYe• offielidlq eontradie'8 the slatereent"' that there is a heavy mortgage en the 731e,01e1.14 estate, London aeolety aro on the quii yvc ea tor the corrin divorcese of Wool- /sten v. Woolatton, in which the Duke o£ erleana 1s named ea tbe'co-iespoA- Rotom Pallia, the Turkieli Ambito- sealer to tbe Court of 'St. James, died at an early. hour on Thursday morning, Hie sleuth is generally reeretted in of- filial circles, The 'United States authorities have been `breed to admit that the Canadian sea vey ee the Alaskan boundary is eqr- rect. This leaves the town of Forty Milo in Britisb territory, In an address upon Canada at New- castle on Thursday evening Sir Charles Tupper High Commissioner, strongty irdvocated reoiproeal trade between the Dominion and the M'ot'her Country, It is learned in Londom,'frota a P,risen Bossed official, that there has been a serious collapse in Oscar Wilde%s health, and that it is ee arded as improbable that he will live through the winter, Sir Henry Ponsonby, formerly Pri- vate Secretary to the Queen and Keeper of the Privy Purse, died at Cowes; Isle -of -Wight, on Thursday morning; of paralysis, after a long illness, At Aldridge'a repository In London,, seventy horses owned by she Finnigan, df Toronto, were put under the ham - mar, sterliandngeaavcheraged twenty-seven pounds , " Lieut, Duncan Maelnnes, o£ the King- ston Military College, a son of ,Sena- tor Madames, of Hamilton, will leave Liverpool on Saturday for service with the Braise troops in Ashanti. Cabegrams have been sent by the Im- perial Government to Canada and Aus- tralia to nominate two delegates, each .to forma commission with two British delegates, to consider the question of a Pacitio cable. Capt. Wilkinson of the British ves- sel Why Not has been sentenced to six months' imprisonment at Guernsey and Ids mate to .two months for .cow- ardly desertion of the vessel and pees- angers during a .fire. :Mr. John Dillon, the well-known Irisb leader and anti-Pearnellite member of Parliament for East Mayo, was married on Thursday morning in London to Miss Mathew, daughter o£ Justice Mathew. The Pope bestowedhis blessing upon the ,marriage, Mr. Huddari, thepromoter of the At- lantic fast mail service, says that . Mr. Chamberlain has done all that Canada asked, and .he feels .certain •teat •the Dominion will ,now secure .a fast At- lantic service, that may bein operation .next summer. The Imperial Government proposes to ask for an .increase of two million pounds in the coming budget on the vote for sbipbuildin . This will raise. thegg naval estimate to.twenty-two mil- , lion pounds, nearly half of which will be devoted to shipbuilding. Lord ,Salisbury, replying to a depu- tation from the National Association of Hop Growers, which complained et the depression in their business. .said that he could not hold out any hope at an import duty being, placed upon any article of general consumption. Mr, Joseph Chamberlain is entertain - Mg King Khama and his two chiefs, Af- rican rulers, who are greatly pleased with the hospitality they are receiving in England. They , were granted an audience with the Queen, and her Ma- jesty and the African Princes exchanged Mr. Chamberlain's conduct of the Co- lonial Office with regard to Hing Prempeh, of Ashanti, and towards Can- ada m relation to the projected .trans- Atlantic steamship line: and towards Australasia and Canada in connection with the proposed Pacific cable,, is re- ceiving the highest praise on all sides. In spite of • the announcement that King lPrcmpeh, of Ashanti, ,has agreed,to the! terms of Great Britain, the;prepara- tions for., the campaign against Coomas- sie.continue, as there as an ;indemnity for expenses up to date and other little de- tails to be settled before Great Britain will •be thoroughly satisfied with the ;practical peotectorate which she is tak- ing steps to assume over this portion of Africa. 'UNITED STATES. Tale estimated gold •output in the Alaska .territory for 'the year 1895 is $3,000,000. Eighteen 'bodies have been recovered tram the wreck of the street car in the miver at Cleveland. St 0s positively atatedthat the Masser - Harris Company, of Moronic', has defi- ni ely decided to locate at Niagara PNlls, It stated that Hanger Brothers, of New York, are to payGeorge DuM'aur- icr ten thousaud pounds for his next novel.. Mrs. Mary T. Millan, alias Mrs. Mack, of Hamilton, was found guiltyby an Auburn, N.Y., jury of counterfeiting United States postage stamps, and was sentenced to ' eighteen months in . the Erie County penitentiary. The Supremo Court of Minnesota has banded down a decision in the case of Harry. Hayward, the murderer of Cath- erine Ging, denying his appeal for a new trial, Only the Governor's.execu- tive clemency now stands between Hayward and tbe gallows.. It is said that a number of United States capitalists are prepared to invest twenty million dollars in a route from Toronto to the Atlantic, via Lewiston, which will make a saving of twenty-four hours over the route via Montreal, and is expected to control Canadian freight. William A. Shoemaker, one of the law- yers who defended Holmes, the murder- er of Pietzel, has been charged in open court with having manufactured evi- dence for the defence of procuring a woman's sf nature to an affidavit which she bad not read, and for which haaid her twenty. dollars. The accusation created a pretested sensation. The fast mail train on the New York Central was wrecked on Wednesday 'morning_ about three miles west of Rome, N.Y. The fish -Plates wore re- moved by four lads, all under twenty years of age, who have been raptured. Their leader, the son of a wealthy Nen York lawyer, made a full confession. Re said they wrecked the train for the purpose of robbing the passengers, but when they saw the extent ob the disaster they ran away: According to commercial 'summaries, business in the United Statesafor the week has not been of a specially encour- aging nature, dulness' and low prices being generally prevalent. The fact hat stocks are large accounts to a cer- tain extent for a decline in the demand, and also .the expeetatian that prices will go yet lower. .Of course, unseason- able weather and excessive rain has con- tributed in part to the sleekness, and, the colder weather of the past day Or two has in name quarters already caused a better enqa�iry for Seasonabic goods, such as woollens, rubbers, end shoes es- tieeially, Actual and prestaeetiveetillree era having, a depressing effect. The flee mend for tion and steel is easter, and Inrieee are weaker. Unsettled ffuatatio»s. 'tor loather Interfere with the menufae• tare of boats and elves. Prlcf+s are, steady for turpentine, to1aeee. 0Q14, and lumber, GENERAL. Cardinal Lucien Bonaparte died sud- denly in Rome, It is offieially stated at St, Peters- burg, that Peeler? has brpkon out afresh in leessitt. Chinese troops were defeated by ret cla, who now domiente half the Pro- vince of Harmer. A son cf the late Lord Randolph Churchill will serve .es Lieutenant m the Spanish army in Cuba. It ie reported tbat the Spanish soldiers in Cuba are committing borrible etrooi- ties, not sparing women or children. The Sultan of Turkey is reported to be a physical wreck, Higls oefieials do not hesitate to speak agaiest his au- thority, A Rt. Petersburg newspaper publish- es a despatch to the effect that Japan has relinquished the control of Corea elect rfanc'tioria to Remake Freebie has arisen on the West :African coast, Capt. Bower., the Bri- tech resident at !Madam, having ate tacked. and killed the Hing pf Oyo and many el his followers. A CanediapR missionary named Mar- tin was 'terribly beaten and afterwards imprisoned at T'ekkeh, 'near Hadjin, Turkey, where he was detained sixteen hours before he was released. A• band of brigands ,attacked a convent. at Viterbo in Italy, but were successfully resisted by twenty monks, who, armed with muskets, compelled the brigands to retreat, leav- ing several of the number wounded. The Ameer of Afghanistan is extreme- 1y angry at the failure of Lis son Prince Naziulia to establish an Afghan Legation in London, and he threatena upon the arrival: dins son and his suite that he will, torture' the chief notable and burn a. few others dive to testify ills displeasure, GREAT BATTLE IN CUBA. Lisnreents Raine Dynssn to with Tcri'lnle tareet- rears or Panic. A despatch from New. York •says r— A Herald special from Havana, Cuba, says :—Important advices received from Santa Clara declare that the rebels are using dynamite with murderous effect in every engage- ment. Great ` terror already exists among the Spanish troops, and the Gov- ernment is endeavoring to suppress the news in order that new arrives from Spain may not be panic-striliken in advance. The method employed by the rebels to break the enemy's line consists he throwing bombs into the Spanish ranks In this way, it is asserted,. Macao forced bis way through all op- posing forces in his progress through Santa Clara, which Province he could not otherwise have invaded.' Gomez used dynamite in his assault at Pelayo, and insilrgents.give what appear to be ex- aggerated reports of the slaughter that followed. In that 'engagement Gomez took many prisoners. A Cuban messenger who arrived at the quarters of the Cuban Junta in this city late this afternoon direct from the seat of the revolution, reported that on November 19 one of the largest battles fought since the beginning of the pre- sent trouble took place. The news has been strictly withheld, not even E1 Heraldo,.a Madrid newspaper, being al- lowed to send it out. The battle occur- red at Taguasco, a town in the interior of Cuba, The Spanish forces engaged consisted of 10,000 men, while the Cubans hall about 4,000. The Spaniards were led by Generals Vales, Luque and Aldave, and General Maximo Gomez led the ,Cubans. The Cubans had a most fav- orable position at the foot of a hill. For 36 hours the opposing forces fought, but the Spaniards were unable to drive the Cubans back.' The latter, however,. ,could do no more than hold their own. Finally, just at a critical moment, Gen. Antonio Maceo of the Cuban .army ,came rushing in with a force of 8,500 men. With the aid of this reinforce- ment the Spaniards. were quickly rout- ed. The Cubans then advanced toward Trinidad and Cienfuegos. Gen. Aldave is reported to have been killed be the battle, and the total number of killed and wounded is placed at 600. Gen, Gomez secured 700 rifles and .a large :amount see ammunition. CONVICTS'. RIOT. A9erten14 Affair at. .ntanlgnii Slate Prison fluency - Warden Fatally ilart-11a cnfn.'s ernes lied. A despatch from Jackson, Mich., says: —One of the most desperate riots ever !known among convicts took • place at the prison on. Tuesday forenoon. De- puty Warden Northrup was struck on the bead with a hammer and some other missile and is supposed to be Fatally hurt. Superintendent Coffee bf the new shirt factory was beaten over the head with a club and pounded into in- sensibility. Foreman Muller of the factory was hit on the head with what- ever the convicts could lay hands on. After this the enraged prisoners smash- ed a number of machines with hammers and iron bars. All this took place while the guards and keepers about the pri- son were rushing to the assistance' of the wounded men. In a few moments. ilio prison force controlled the desper- ate convicts and those on the entire floor were marched out and looked up. There were eight convicts directly en- ggeged in the battle; of this number Dick Huntley, the Detroit twenty-year burglar; and Curly, the five -yeas man also from Detroit, and Lige Bullard, the fightingcolored man, serving a second sentence, were the ringleaders. hunt - ley being the an who struck tele first blow. The trouble came like a flash and was about a trivial. matter. After. the Deputy was rescued and taken away the rioters found tete keepers conimg armed to the scene, and no doubt fearing that they would be shot ceased their murderous efforts and were at once placed in their cells. There are 100 convicts m the shirt bac- tore, but the Warden says only eight seemed to have anything to do with the murderous efforts. As soon as the fight became generalin the shop some convicts threw a lighted match into greasy oaten waste and flames sprang up. To add to the horror of the situa- tion one of the conviot:s turned on all the steam, white another attempted to anneal the pipes and idt• the steam fo- to the room and thiia cause a etanapede into the yard. Prompt action of the officers an ',overcoming the demons alone saved a general outbreak no doubt andgreat loss of life as well. In all there Wee 40 machines smashed, Change ax Selene at Reline. A ebange of air and scene ie often prescribed for invalids, In.nmey Mee it is te wise proscription, Out in others the journey entails expense which can- not ba borpe without,preat interlace, and means for the sufferer an unbeem) iaola- tion among strangers ani! a depriva- tion of -the home comforts and care which are 30 neceasary to a sick per- son's peaces and well-being,. Homesick and disheartened, the invalid returns from bis sejurn among, strange seems pot benefited by the clienge, and alas 1 bis return is too often but a coming home to die. Happily it is possible 10 secure many of tea advantages of a ohange without incurring the disadvantages just des - Bribed, In other words, a real change may often be secured without sending the patient away from home. Per one thing, his room may be changed to the most cheery and sun- shiny in the house. And here, with a little attention, an almost daily son - bath may be obtained, a sun -bath sluice as goodas would be 'afforded at the Inc sanitariums in foreign lands or in Ulla country. Well wrapped from coldand draughts, the patient can sit on the lawn or the piazza, or in the open field or .pasture, and breathe the lite -giving air, Walks and rides, which need only to be planned for, will aid in the good work.' Open windows and .o ep doors, with a fire when needed, will In many instances afford a most salubrious ohange of air after the close, stuffy 10oms in which sick people are prone to spend their time, A friend,—perhaps a former school- mate,—.where a nurse is out of the ques- tion, may be glad to pay the invalid a Visit, making himself a cheerful com- panion, always ready to amuse, to read aloud, to play games, and in general to keep awn the blues." These few hints will suggest some of the changes that can be wrought at bome'to: aid in restoring an invalid to health, changes which may be effected at small cost of money or conven- ience. And after all, if the sufferer falls to find the health hoped for, it is at least a comfort that his last days should be spent at home, sheltered by love and care, and not among strangers, home- sick and wretched. To Improve the Reek and Throat. An admirable exercise for expanding the chest' and filling out the hollows of neck and throat is to rise upon the tips of thetoss at the moment of inhalation and hold the breath, throwing it forci- bly against the muscles of throat and neck whiley o u can count fifteen • then exhale forcibly and 'come down upon the heels Repeat ten times night and morning when there are no con- stricting bands about the body. These exereises are no modern dis- covery. Thirteen hundred years before Christ the people of India practiced full, deepp breathing at regular intervals, daily, using it as a healing remedy for disease; andit was no secret to the old Greek and Roman physicians, wbo also prescribed lung gymnastics as curative means. A severe cold can "be greatly relieved and quickly cured by conscious breathing; and if taken in the first stages, as soon as the usual symptoms of'a cold are felt, it can be thrown off in a half-hour's time. Many cases of headache, especially when aecomgqpanied relieved; anddphthaaisis iwhen takenkin the incipient stages cab always be great- ly alleviated, and is often cured, by this simple means. A Minute Boll. A stye is really a minute boil, and the swelling and pain caused by it are best relieved by heat. Applications at hot water, by means of cloths, should be made on the closed eyelid, Pure vase - line or some similar pure ointment should be applied at night along the edges of the lids. When the ' point- ing of the stye -appears make a little slit with a sharp knife, to allow the matter to escape. Only gentle pressure should be applied., ODD AND INTERESTING. The butterfly collection belonging to Prof. Nemnoegen, of Brooklyn, N.Y., is valued at $60,000. There were 11,890 persons in penal ser- vitude in Great Britain and Australia in 1870 and only 4,345 in 1895. A connoisseur in cats, living in West - Geld, Mass., has twenty-three cats in his house. One he values at 51,000. In some portions of ' Upper Egypt rain is absolutely unknown, and in Low- er Egypt there' is sometimes no rain for years. During the sealing season of 1895, now ended, the Canadian fleet secured 72,- 413 seals. ' Eight vessels of this fleet were lost with all on board. A man named Walker found ' near Sebree, Ky., (recently, a buried jug marked by a ramrod sticking above the ground. It contained $500 fn gold. An enterprising butcher on Third av- enue, New York, teas a piano in the back of his shop, upon which a colored man plays popular tunes every night. Professor Joly, of Paris, says that in France crime es increasing, while the population is decreasing. In 1800 the Youthful offenders numbered, 18.000; in 1890 they numbered 31,000. So much fruit has been raised in Cali- fornia this season that the localmarkets have been glutted, and m San Francisco tons of melons, pears and plums nave been thrown into the sea. The operatives in Japan mills are not to be envied, They work everyday, there being no Sunday, -and the Hours range from twelve to sevefiteen. The rate of work, however, is slow, aid there are frequent boltdays. A mossengee by carrier pigeon from Capt. F. W. Patten's ship, off the coast of England, recently cisme to Arthur Sewall 81 Co., et Bath. The little bird flow aboard by chance ono day and was dispatched with the note, which, after many adventures, at last found itsway to Maine, although the winged messane ger dropped dead In Prance, The only man in the world, perhaps, that ever drove a horse wearing shoes. made from metal whieb but a few weeks before had been in spare, is Frank Mor- ris of Woethington; W. Ve. A few years ago a small'aarolite, oompoeed of pure mon, fell near libr, Morrie home - steed. He obtained posse sign of it and load aportion of it madeintoshoes for his favorite berme, These moonstones are usually highly prized and seldom used for such bane purposes, RUSSII,'S SIaL,J0 PW QLD LIBIIAS) sante roots er raterub About '!citta comae tiny nr motor The tenlvcrsity of St, Z1etcreburg.has the largest and Wet oriental faeuity in Burope; its profcseors lecture do Arabie, Persian ,TurIsisli, Tarter, Ar- mania», Georgian„ Mongolian, and many others. Particular facilities are always given to students el .oriental languages to pursue their stadies, and many of tbem have been sent to China, Japan, Persia, and elsewhere at the expense. of the Russian Government. Per in stance, Prof. Wasslolbjf,,the veteran orientalist and professor of Chinese, was sent to China. These are some of the peaceful means by which the Im- perial, library has bean added to, but war and revolution have also contribut- ed their ciuota. Gen, Suvarof, with bis motto, " b orward and strike," has been Just as great- a benefactor In his way to this great institution as the wealthyy Whenever the body has been weak-. Czars and merchant princes. The sae encd by diaoas°, it sitoull be built up pf Warsaw, in which 9,Q00 Poles were b hood's Sarna i slain, wade im master 'pf that town y 1 anile. Itead this: and master al the valuable Zaluski 1131 "About two years ago I auftarcd with a rary, But the benefit which the Rus eery severe attack of inflammation of the siapereaped from the Trench revolu- bowels. When I began to recover I was i tion s, perhapa the moat noteworthy of in a very weak and nervous condition; and all. Count Dubroveki, a biblioph.le, was suffered Intensely with neural is pains In attached to the Russian Embassy in my head, which caused lose of eleep,snd Paris when the great upheaval took having no appetite, I place, During this time museums and SeGame Very Thin alacos were pillaged by the raging and weak, Fortunately a friend who had opulac nand collections and libraries urnt and scattered to the winds used Hoods Sarsaparilla wife great bene - hundreds of manuscripts and books tit kindly recommended me to try .it, I did so and aperfect cure Lias been effected. Dun now as well as I ever was, and 2 would not be without Hood's eareaparilla In my hon=.s for anything," OIRs. G. Munn 245 Manning Ave., Toronto, Ont. Weak and Nervous were ruthlessly destroyed. Some, how- ever, escaped the hands of the destroy- er, and were sold by the government of the day to small shopkeepers,from whom Dubrovsk, bought them for a song. Thus Russia has become the cus- todian of unique treasures. Among the letters which were thus acquired are several written by Henry VII., Henry Vies., Richelieu, - and Catherine de Medic's. For Twenty-five Years THEDO©ICSBESTi FRIEND LARnFST SALE IN CANADA - f Hood's Sarsaparilla is the Only Tripe 136 od Purifier Prominently in the public eye today. s pills easyiebny,easytotake, easy. in etiiest. 260. The earliest printed book in Russia, which is in keeping there, is a history of the apostles, with the date 1564 on its title page. As regards the public library building there is not much to be said ; it is not a very imposing build- ing, nor is it so well adapted to library requirements as other large libraries.4msaymper`� s .Ones of ✓ a'sly i;'l, The latest discovery in the salmi- arta not the nerve centres, which are ao world is that nerve centres located the cause of the trouble. in or near the base of clic brain con- The wonderful cures wrought by trol all the organs of the body, and the Great South American Nervirio when these nerve centres are 'Tonin are due alone to the fact that deranged the organs which they this remedy is based upon the fore- supply with nerve fluid, or nerve going principle. It cures by rebuild - force, are also deranged. When it ing and strengthening the nerve ie remembered that a serious injury centres, and thereby increasing the 'to the spinal cord will causeparalysis supply of nerve force or nervous of the body below the injured point, energy. because the nerve force is prevented This remedy bas been found of by the injury from reaching the para- infinite value for the pure of Nervous= lyzed portion, it will be: understood nese, Nervous Prostration, Nervous how the derangement of the nerve Paroxysms, Sleeplessness, Forgetful- centres will pause the derangement nese, Mental Deapondeney, Nervous- of the various organs which they noes of Females, Hot Flashes, Sick supply with nerve force; that is, when Headache, Heart Disease. The first a nerve centre is deranged or in any bottle will convince anyone that a way diseased it is impossible for it cure is certain, to supply the name quantity of nerve' Sontli American Nervine is with - force as when in a healthful condi- Qat doubt the greatest remedy eaex tion ; hence the organs. which depend discovered fox the oare of Indigestion, upon it for nerve force suffer, and are TDryosupte esai,ab, acnadusaellitOehartosntihorSoitmomh athcheunable to properly perform their work, and as a result disease makes nerves. It gives relief in ono day, its appearance. • and absolutely effects, a permanent At least two-thirds of our chronic ogre iu every ivatauoe, Do not diseases and ailments are due to the allow your prejudices, or the preJu imperfect action of the nerve centres dices of ethers, to keep you from at the base, of the brain; dud not from using. tills health -giving routody. it o derangomonb primarily originating is •based nn inc result of years of in the organitself, The great mis- scientific roseareh and study. .t . take of physicians iu treating these single bottle twill Convince the 11208* fllpeasos rs that they treat the organs orednlong, A. 1Dt3ATAlltAlg Wboinaalo and Retail Agent for ittrusselS