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The Brussels Post, 1894-10-19, Page 7slJea, C rmlnitor FOD airsy�\J�kJ' �''' "4 „, �v.' �t t. FOR AIX SIZE$ OF 0UIL@1NG3 , e eapacifiv from 10,000 to $0,00 Cubic Veet "ey�l,vN' ✓l woof) FURNACE � Fun X alt l'alYter'fl Capacity . OATAL000 and nesTIMOIIIALe00s. , eaaMe f....Mermen:Aura:1 by.:.. e,YY>y...TC1s GURNEY FOUNDRY COMPANY Ltd., TORONTO. W(1010 FUNNACE HEAVY ORATE, espooially 1; adapted for wood burning Heavy steel Plate Fire Box Dame and Radiator, will.* naval gnickeraud are mors durable RAAiATQR of Modern Construe - tion and Great IIeating Power LARGE Asti PIT COAL FURNACE largo Combustion chairmen—a Rene eiro?ravot,onelreling radiator Large pleating Surface Large Feet: ISoor Sectional Fire Pot Rotating Dar Damping Grate DE11~P ASH PIT new °CTODER 19, 1894 B 78S 1o8, O 8', E WEEK'S NEWS IiANADA, Canon Peritreatlr, of Winnipeg, will probably be appointed Bishop of New Westminster, A Chiuoso leper has been discovered in Victoria, B. 0., and sent to the lazaretto at Darcy island. Mr, J, IL Tilden has decided tc oppose Mayor Stewart at the municipal elections itr Hamilton, Out., next January, Tho experiment of ehippipg Canadian cattle to 7; canoe is not likely to prove a eacceee, as the French markets are over. etooked. The report of the 'l iehery Commission on the Fisheries of the Prirvinceof Ontario bee been submitted, and shows that the waters are being depleted of fah by various illegal methods, rhe Canadian x'aorna Railway Company has withdrawn the notion of ate intention to pay the seven million dollars duo on the North Shore railway to the Quebec Gov- ernment, A man named Switzer created estimation et Tamworth, Pot, last Sunday, by baptising his sister and his niece in the presence of about two hundred people. The prinoipalehip of MaGi1l Upiveraity, which has been vacant since the resigna- tion of Sir William Dawson, has bean filled by the appointment o£Dr. Peterson, princi- pal of Dundee College. The Rev. Father Cherrier is likely to be appointed to the vaeanoy caused by the death of the Archbishop of Si. Boniface, It is said that the appointment will be made in about t four weeks. A report has been made to the Manitoba Government on native in the Own of Mor. ris, Man„ which ehowe them to be in very bad shape, The Local Government may come to the rescue, as the town is badly insolvent. Lieut, -Col. Fred Teller, of the Governor - General's Foot Guards, has tendered his resignation, He will retire with reek. It. Ie unaerstood that Major W. E. Hodgins,.. of the Justice Department,will be appoint- ed to the command. Twenty thousand dollars were paid out by the City Treasurer of London, Oat., on Thursday to retire a number of debentures issued in 1872. This issue bears seven per cent. interest, while the city now borrows money readily at four and a quarter per cent. Sir John Gorst, M. P., the eminent British stateman, hasreturnedto Montreal. Referring to his tour through Canada, he said that he was greatly streak by the cap- abilities of the oountry,and he wondered a the sparse population of British Columbia. Owing to rumours that certain Toronto aldermen demanded money from the Tor- onto Electric Light Company for the pur- pose of securing the acceptance of the company's tender for street lighting, Ald. MuMurrieh has taken steps' to secure an investigation of the charges by the county judge. Dr. A. Proudfobt, who has just been appointed to the staff of the Montreal Gen- eral hospital, claims Toronto as his native place, having been born ab Trafalgar, near that city, and educated at Rockwood academy. He was prepared for college by the Rev. Chas. Dade, formerly principal of Upper Canada College. The Court of Appeal's at Montreal on Saturday awarded the Richelieu and On- tario Navigation Company the full amount claimed by them, forty thousand dollars,, for insurance on the burning of the steamer Corinthian two yeare ago, with two years' interest at six per cent. and costs against the insurance companies, sixteen of whom were interested. A difficulty has arisen between Mr. Vanessa, who was recently appointed ship- ping master at Montreal, and the Dominion Government, as, to whom belong the fees. derived from entering cattlemen on the shipe articles. lir. Vanasae claims theyare his, and is backed in this view by Mr. Ouimeb, while Sir Hibbert Tupper thinks they belong to the Dominion Government. In connection with the resignation of Mr Hallfrom the Quebec Treasurership because L ieubenant•Governor Chapleau interfered do certain Snancialnegotiations, Dr. Belief, not, Clerk of the House of Commons, gave it as his opinion that the Lieutenant -Gover- nor was acting within his constitutional powers in pressing' his views upon Ma advisers and if his advisers could not accept such views then they must resign. Mea Moluoa,la., lraa determined to oatahiish a colony based upon the 'Henry George eingle•tax theory, President W, J, Littlejohn, of the Ult. derwritere' Asepolation of the Nortli•1'Srosb, declares that the recent forest fires wore 00 44 by order of the lumbar kings, Another heavy levy has boon made upon Chinese inerohante to moot the expenses of the war, The Italian Government has given to Krupp, of Berlin, an order for the coining of ten million nickel lips. The death of Gustav Humbert last week reduces the number of the life Senators of France to twenty-one. The European Bourses are affected by re- ports of the extremely precarious condi. tion of the Czar. It is stated that Emperor William bas expressed hie emphatto intention of visiting Paris during the Exposition in 1900,. The Primate of Spain is about to Isage a pastoral protesting against the recent con - secretion of a Protestant Bishop and ehuroh in Madrid. A report from Shanghai says that the Emperor of China will very likely be de- throned in fever of Prince Kung's son, who will treat with the Japanese. Dr, Oertel, of the Hamburg Hygienic Institute has died from Asiatio cholera,' resulting from an experiment with iufeotad water taken from the Vistula In the Upper House of the Hungarian. Dist on Friday, the bill granting liberty of worship of all religious beliefs was adopted by a majority of three. The Czar, Czarina, and family left' Spala on Sunday for Livadia, in the Critnea,where it is expected the Czar will stand a better F ahanoe of recovering from his illness. Chinese merchants in Shanghai are can- celling freight contracts to Oheefoo and Tien-Tein, owing to the report that the Japanese intend to blockade those ports. Reports have reached Tien-Tein that a rebellion has broken out in the Province of Mongolia, and troops from Pekin have been sent to Mongolia to quell the uprising. The Caere witch will notgo to Darmstadt to visit his betrothed, Princess. Alix, as previously proposed, He will be appointed regent during hie father's absenoo from Russia.' The Chinese general whose command, murdered the .Scobeb missionary James Wylie, in Sine -Yang, by beating him so brutally that ire died in a few hours, has been promoted. Robbers in Wilna, Russia, recently at- tacked a farm.house, and killed the farmer his wife, their three children, and four ser- vants, and carried off a large sum of money. Experiments in Vienna in the infection of blood serum for diphtheria are meeting with increased success. In oases usually considered fatal, three out of four recover under the new treatment. ostEAT m cicAmr. It is stated in London that six thousand roops will fiesent from India to protect the treaty ports in China. London fruit importers say that many barrels of Canadian apples are mann de- preciated in value owing to careless pack- ing. Major-General SirHeury Green, of Lon- don, Eng., states that in his opinion the sword recently purchased by Mr. J. C. Pat- terson, the Canadian Minister of Militia, as be engin to General Wolfe, is nob gen- uine. Tho London Evening News publishes a sensational statement to theeffect that information has been received that liussia is intriguing to assist China against Japan, in return for the cession to liussia of or. tain ports of Corea. At a meeting of the London city cowl - patties on Saturday to elect the next Lord Mayor, objection was advanoed against Sir Joseph Renals, the next alderman in suc- cession, and spoil was taken yesterday, by whicj'F Sir Joseph wae chosen. A +the Duke and Duchese of York were proceeding in a carriage at Leeds on Friday afternoon to the Yorkshire College, a man rushed from the crowd and attempted to force his way to the side of the carriage. He wee driven back by a Lancer, and ar. rested. Ile is believed to be insane, Lord and Lady Terence Blackwood, ac- companied by Mr. and Mrs. Davis, of New York, arrived ab Clandaboye, Lord Duffer. in's seat, near Belfast, on Thursday, on their wedding tour. They were warmly received by the tenantry, and were after, wards serenaded. UNITED STATES. On Saturday night all the tin plate plants in the United States closed. Tho entire undergraduate body of Prince- ton, in mass meeting assembled, has vote d to abolish the system of hazing. a ed with having Livee r , charged committed a forgery in Montreal, wan arrested In Brooklyn, N. Y., on Saturday morning, A terrible cyclone passed over the busin- oesportion of Little Rock, Ark., on Tues,+ day evenieg,tarrying death and destruction in ite path. Tho E:dr Rope Industrial Association, of PRACTICAL 1ARMING, Wiping Horses Fg'om Rubbing, Among other °mules, high feeding with heating food and but little exeroiee brings on an itohing whioh mairoe many heroes rub their toile while in the stable. The inking is often SO severe that the hair le nearly all rubbed from the upper aide, giv. ing them a most decidedly unpleasant and ragged apnearanoe. Tbie state of affairs should be corrected by 000ling food and proper outward application. In the mean• time a very simple arrangement, similar to that shown in the engraving, should be DIED FOR BEAUTY. A Young Woman Succumbs While may. ing Enclal Blemishes 1Camoved. A Chicago despatch says :—Sudden death overtook Miss Belle 15 hite on Sunday while eta was undergoing electrical treat- ment for the removal of facial -blemishes, She was the daughter of Benjamin S. White, of the lumber firm of White & Leathers, and lined at 3,850 Lake avenue. She went to the &Bee of Dr. Sophie Santa, and was accompanied by her sister, Mrs. W. J. Norris. Cocaine wae used to deaden the pain from the application of an electrical current, and it was at first supposed tisat death was caused by tate anaesthetic.. Eliza &. James, the partner of Dr. Santa, was as. elating in the operation at the time. She suddenly sank back in the operatingchair, and Mrs. Norris and the two proprietors of the establishment strove to revive the young woman from what they thought was a fainting fit. Their efforts were un- availing, and Dr. J. L. Worship was sum - maned. He applied restoratives, but was n able to restore Miss White to conscious - nese. Dr. Tallman was then sent for, and when he arrived he pronounced the girl dead. KILLED BY A MOTOR CAR. Daotiltou Haft curets An Awful Death A despatch from Hamilton says t -A fatal trolley accident occurred at the corner of King and Catharine strcete, on Monday. Robert Welshman, Aikman avenue, was riding along the "'devilstrip" between the tracks, when a car overtook him. When the motorman sounded the gong Welshman tried to turn off, but .apparently lost eon- trol of his wheel, for it wobbled from side to side, and then swerved on to the track in front of the oar. The unfortunate man was thrown down, and the oar went over him, breaking his arms'andlegs and almost cutting him in two When the oar wae stopped,the motorman, Joseph Taylor, looked at the body, and recognized Welsh- man as'his next door neighbor. The man was dead. Taylor exclaimed : " My God, what will his poor wife say to me 1" No blame could be attached to the motorman, but several who saw the accident express the opinion that if the oars had fenders on them Welshman's life would have been saved. NAVAL PRECAUTIONS. Equipping the 'British Mercantile Marine —The Example of Other Nations. A despatch- from London Saye:—The action of the, Uoverntnent itt deciding to equip the mercantile marine meets with tory general approbation.' Some of the fleetest steamers running between Eng. laud and America will be among she first to receive naval reeerve' crews. Nothing, hon ever, is said about providing these steamers with armaments. The French and Russian mercantile fleets parry both men and iime, and it is stated tin Russia has also made arrangements with certain American companies by svltioh, in ease of tvar,six fast vessels can bo Bent to Vladivos- took, whore guns and stores are kept for them. The artnamente for the British sub, sidized mercantile fleet have hitherto been kept at Devonport,Woolwioh, Hong Kong, and Sydney. This arrangement is deemed wholly inadequate for vessels on the high seas at the moment when a deolaration of war is mi 3e. In such a oontingenoy the Fronoh vessels of the .Messageries .Maritimes could be turned into cruisers wherever they happened to be in a taw hours. They eaoh derry about 100 tons of arms and ammunition as ballast, ATTACHMENT TO P1r0V0N0 ADBDING. used. It is a simple framework of wood, hinged to the side of the stable immediately back of the stall, and So arranged that it may be folded by pulling on the rope. The ends should -project beyond the division of the stalls and be about three feet from the floor. 1f the animal is tied short it will be impossible for him to rub, Another plan is to tie a chain or rope across the rear of stall, or a board may be used instead, being so arranged as to be easily removed. The folding plan, first described, will prove the most convenient, and when not in nee Basup out. of the we. mayeasily ybe raised . y Economy of Jersey Cattle. The lesson of the nineteenth century has been economy. Men consider now, not so much what has been done, as how it has been accomplished. The scientific engineer calculates exaatly the increase of power which an extra pound of coal beneath his boiler will produce, and the most economic amount to accomplish a certain work. The tailor and the eboemaker ne longer toil and draw their thread from morning till night ; the genius of the age has pointed the way to a production of shoes and °cats at an infinite reduction of cost. In all lines of labor and trade the rule holds true, arid nowhere are its workings better ex- emplified than in the field of, agriculture and dairying. In the vast industry represented by the cow, crmpe tition has caused new methods to supersede the old. The dairyman -farmer considers from an economic standpoint and decides by actual test the relative value of different breeds. It is under such circum- stances that the cattle of the Island of Jersey have risen into prominence until, received with almost universal favor, the Jersey cow may rightly be called the "Queen of the Dairy." Originating, as is supposed by eminent authorities, on the coast of the continent neighboring to the island whose name they bear, this breed has ever been cherish - Med and protected by the inhabitants of fertile Jersey. As civilization advanced in the eighteenth century, and ease ofcom- munication became more general, the fame of this native breed spread, and tire records they were making, even in those early times, astonished the dairy world. From 1789, when the states of Jersey enacted laws forbidding the importation of Foreign cattle from France, to the present day, the history of the Jersey breed of eatbtleis a story of progress and merit recognized. The spirit of emulation and industry raised among the ,Terseytiien has been the means of making their inland a placeofno small importance. The reasons for the so general adoption of the Jersey as the sow for all purposes aro numerous: and important. Along most lines the Jersey has no superior. Quality andquantity of butter product,email cost. of keeping, the ability to trace her pedigree through many generations, these are some of the ,points in which the Jersey is invul- nerable. From being called the"gentleman's cow," her superiority .has gradually as. eerted itself until, as a dairy oow, such records are registered by her as can be shown by no other breed. The idea is prevalent thatthe Jersey is a cow only to be owned by the wealthy cattle breeder. No greater mistake could be made. Economypoints to the Jersey as the now also for Trim who uses but a single head for family purposes. True, the original expense may be somewhat greater for a Jersey, of good breeding than for a cow of common stook. The utility of. the Jersey and her adaptability to all situations were fitly praised in a -recent number of the Countr t Gentleman : "The Jersey cow that can average a pound of butter for 365 days in the year, with good ogre, is the cow for the millions, and it has been proved that the Jersey will do this five to one over all other breeds and with less feed." The Jersey has been well denominated a milk machine. Casually small in size, there is no room for surplus fat while she is making the rich milk for which she is noted, Mr. Waybaalt may continue to feed a large naw through many years, in order that, finally, she may make more beef, but he who is abreast of the times adopts the economic, Jersey. A beef breed the Jersey is nob ; but every, part of the little oow has a use in producing the present profit of lien owner. Tho care and treatment of the Jersey must be based, ae with any ;other breed, on the broad foundation of common Sense. Different individuals of any breed require differentfood and management. For dooil- ity the Jersey has no equal; for hardiness almost no superior. Braving without harm the etorme of a Canadian winter, atelimat- ed with the most encouraging success in the warm states of the South, she thus far has defied the complaints of the croakers. Bred fu and in through many generations n that narrow land winch is their ancient' oma and alwn s with their worth for dairy purposes in view, the Jersey produoee milk richer by fee in the element of butter than that of any other breed. Tests in a different direetiou have also revealed its worth for oheebo snaking. Risher in color, finer in quality, pre-eminently superior in the quantity of butter product for a given quantity of milk—suoh, in addition to com• mending a higher price in the markets, aro acme of the chareet.erietiee of the preduete of the Jersey cow, To state Nate cramming her perform, anoos is to argue moat oegently in favor of the Jersey. flier position today seems ono of assured su000ss, As in the past, when her merits boom reeegniaed, she was warmly welcomed, se in the febr,re her worth must gala boyfriends.. The danger is always greatest witli cows' in geed oopdition and those whiclt are good milkers. Itis also greater when they Have been fed previous to valving in a way that is oaleulated to produce a large flow of milk aeeoon ae they come in. It ie a matter, therefore, that cannot receive too close et• tenbion at the hands of dairymen. The loss of any kind of owe at any time outs in ser. iously upon the profits; but when the very beat apecimene are losb,then the matter be - manes serious indeed. If the loss van be prevented by attention to such simple de- tail. as those outlined anove, then the dairy- man airyman who neglects attention to these de. tails should nee complain if this dread disease should 000aeionally decimate his herd, To Prevent Mille Fever. The following method of oaring for cows has been attended with good results in a number of oases. They are given a diet rather laxative than otherwise, and are al• lowed ample opportunity to take exercise. Care should be taken,as a matter of course, not to feed them a stimulating diet consist• Mg of carbonaceous kinds of meal, as, for instance, corn. ,As the time of valving draws near the owe should be given a purgative, consisting of one pound of w eP sem salts and two or three ounoes of ginger. Then, again, after parturition a similiar dose may be given. The milk should all be carefully withdrawn from the udder, and with more than ordinary fie. quanoy where trouble is anticipated. If hese precaubious are followed it will be h se frequently that any dairyman w:1 ave to mourn lose from this ca nee. VICTIMS OF DESERT THIRST. IHandre,ip of People have Dled 'After 1110 Most Vier richt WIZ rain. During a march` of seventy-five miles on one desert,inthe southwestern other of. our country, esye the San Francisco Argon nut,aparty ofgovernment surveyors eounted 350graves along the trail of the victims o hiret. At one point a family of eight were buried. These foolish people carried their water supply in huge demijohns. The bottles were broken. The precious fluid was swallowed by the sand. Mother, father, and children layj down beneath a mesquite bush and died the most herriblo .of deaths. Tills/bodies, broken water bottles and dead horses were found just ae they fell. It is the oustom in the desert to bury all bodies and mark the graves with crosses of stone imbedded in the sand. The air on the desert, being 'intensely dry, causes rapid evaporation from the body. Observation proved that, nine quarte of water daily was needed by one man to prevent the blood from thickening and becoming feverish. Each mule required twenty gallons daily. One surveyor was. without water for several hours. He became feverish and light-headed. Lack of water for a few hours longer, would have killed him. This was in a shade tempera- ture of 100 degrees, where the air was almost absolutely dry -.-so dry that fresh. meat, instead of putrefying, simply dries up. Ai one place the surveyors found the bodies of three prospectors within -100 feet of a natural water tank formed in the rocks. To get to this water the poor fellows had to climb upward twenty feet or so. Their strength was exhausted. They had been too long without water. And here, with the life-giving fluid just a few feet beyond them, they died. Thirst on the desert is horrible. The vicbttnfirsb feels pain bsbween the, shoulders. The tongue thickens and feels filled with needleppoints. Theeyee become painful and, finally, any movement of the body causes Gnomic iaanag pain. As the blood thickens the braingives way, and the viotim is a raving maniac. Death' soon. ends the suffering. Obedient. Mother—"W herewore you during the t thunder storm?" Boy—"Over fn thatfield wi tit the big tree in it." "But I have told you disbinotly many many times, never tostandunder a tree during a thunder -storm.” "I didn't. 1 sat down." J. ji�(t(y! r JtEr. J. il. Dj?ceman 8 . George, New Brunswick. After the Grip No Strength, No Ambition Flood's Sarsaparilla Gave Perfect Health. The following letter is from a well-known merchant tailor of St. George, N.33.: "C. I. Hoed & Go., Lowell, Mass.: "Gentlemen—I aur glad to say than -feed's Sarsaparilla and hood's Pipe have done 1ne a great deal of good. I had a severe attack of the grip in the whiter, and after getting over ilio fever I did not seem to gather strength, and had no ambition. hood's Sarsaparilla proved to be just lvitat I needed. The results were very satisfactory, mid Irecommend this Medicine 10. all Who are afflicted With rheumatism or other 9 ood a^ . 1 a e 1 p SOTsisCu H res afflictions =teed by poison and poor blood. 1 always keep Hood's.. Sarsapariila in my house and itseit when lneedatonic. We also keep 7thdsanW 'DYt TAN, $t. George, Holy )lrwiswlek. Mood's Pills are purely vegetable, and do not purge, pain or gripe. Sold by all druggists, 111 8 EWER investigate it, by Writing, to tip? Mayor? Postmaster, any Minister ster oo" Ci"t=riheaa of Hartford City, Indiana. Ilonrrean Cixr, Blackford County, Indiana, June 8th, 1808. South American, Medicine C8. Gentlemen : I received a letter from you May 27th, stating that you. had heard of my wonderful recov- ery ecovery from a spell of sickness of six years duration, through the use of SOUTH AeresuoAN NERVINE, and asking for my testimonial. I was near thirty-five years old when I took down with nervous prostration. Our family physician treated me, but with- out benefitting me in the least. My nervous system seemed to bo entirely chattered, and I constantly had very severe shaking spells. In addition to this I would have vomiting spells. During tho years I lay siok,:my folks had an eminent physician from Day- ton, Ohio, and two from Columbus, Ohio, to Dome and examine mo. They all said I could not live. I got to having spells like spasms, and would lie cold and stiff for a time after each. At last I lost the use of my body could not rise frbm my bed no walk. a step, and had to be lifted like a child. Part of the time I could road a little, and one day saw an advertisement of your medicine and concluded to try one bottle. By the time I had taken one and one- half bottles I could rise up and take a step or two by being helped, and after I had taken five bottles in all I felt real well. The shaking went away gradually, and I could eat and sleep good, and my friends , could scarcely believe it was I. I am sure this medicine is the best in the world. I belive it saved. my life. I give my name and address, so that if anyone doubts my statement they oan write me, or our postmaster or any citizen, as all are acquainted with my case. I am now forty-one years of age, and expect to live as long as the Lord has use for me and do all the good I can in helping the suffering. (Inas ELLEN STOLTZ. Will a remedy which can effect such a marvellous cure as the above, euro you ? A. J EAIDiILtY Wholesale and Retail Agent for Brussels Why France Hates Italy. The trite cause of French hatred for Italy ie nob far to seek. Smarting under the knowledge that the French armies had been do:eatedby the Germans, and that these defeats would probably be repealed were France to attack Germany, the French looked elsewhere for an oppor- tunity of regaining their lost military prestige. It was evident to every Treis y r limon that if Italy .stood alone she could easily be crushed by the overwhelm. ng numbers of the French army, France could thus gain military glory, new terra- tory and a readymade fleet. Hore, then, is a glorious opportunity waiting for the armies of France, and nothing hot that pestilent Triple Alliance stands in the way, This is the whole secret of the growth and violence of French hatred toward Italy. Prance wishes to wage a war in which victory would be reasonably certain. Frauds wants the superb Italian fleet, the possession of which would give her an overwhelmiug naval preponderance in the Mediterranean. France) wants to destroy Italian unity, so ee to render any future Triple Alliance impoaeible, and to strengthen the attachment of French Catholics to the republic by restoring the temporal sovereignty of the Popo. And nothing, so the French believe, hinders this detirebltr eonaummetion except the fact that behind the army of Italy are ranged the arteries of Atrettia and Germany. A well cultivated mind is made up of all the minds of preceding agee, it is only one single mind Which' has been educated dor• ing all this time.—Fontanelle.