HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1896-10-22, Page 7!KR ARCHBISHOP
OF CANTERBURY.
CAREER OF THE LATE PRIMATE OF
ALL !NOLAND.
Illtl. tsag . Dross to Clarets w Rawer-
das Walls Visiting Mruleasesa.-
nes lenity and assraeterieUw - A
Dement idlgteas ldat.
The awfully sudden dead of the
Might Hun- and Most Rev. Edward
White Beeson. D.D., Archbishop of
Canterbury. Primate of all England
and bletropolitan and Privy Councillor.
while attending divine service In the
eburch at Hawasden, un Sunday, Oct.
110
emphasised the fact even In Canada.
The dead Archbishop. Edward Whits
Menson, sprang from an old Yurkshjre
tamely, settled fur several centuries at
Patelly Bridge. An ancestor, Christo-
pber Henson. ass nett of kin to Rob-
ert Benson, Chancellor of the Exche-
quer to Queen Anne. created Baron of
singley in 1T13, and a. Privy Council-
lor. !le seers to have held the balance
ep evenly between the Whigs and the
Tieres that a correspondent, writing to
Swift, said "he had disobliged both
aides so much that neither will once
own him." Notwithstanding which pt'o-
Ohecy, be was made Ambassador Ez-
traordlnary to the Court of Spain. He
was burled In Bt Paul's Chapel, West-
minster. not tar from Archbishop
Maher. Lord Bingley married tbe
Lady Elizabeth Finch, daughter of the
liras Earl of Ayleetord. Harcourt
House, Cavendlab square, built by Lord
Bingley, was originatlly called Bingle,
House.
Of the same family was descended
the Rev. Christopher Benson. Master
of the Temple In his day. and regarded
se • famous preacher, Christopher
Benson, delivered the (trot . ours. of
•
MHZ LATE A*CHB118AOP OF CANTS*.
BURY.
Hultman lectures In Cambridge In 132*.
His lecturers went through many edi-
tions. He hu the credit of having In-
vented the term "Tractarians' for the
dlt.elpics et Newman. Pusey and their
school. He himself belonged to the
broader .tile of the Evangelical party.
A sermon he preached during the Cri-
mean war Is touching for its eloquence
and pathos.
The family of His Grace has already
a historic connection with this coun-
try. Captain White Berson. his grand-
father, having served with his regi-
ment, the ith Royals, during the rebel-
lion of A. It may be mentioned that
a sister of this gentleman married Baal
Montagu., the learned editor of Bacon.
By a previous martian* she was the
mother of the wife of Bryan W. Proc-
tor, better known se "Battey Cornwall"
—a schoolfellow of Byron at Harrow.
and author of "English Songs'—and
grandmother of the equally famous
Adelaide Proctor, author of "Lyrics
and Legend."
Archbishop Benson's father, like the
present Prime Minister, was devoted to
the Defence of chemistry, and made
t ome valuable discoveries therein. He
was also a student of the Botanical
Society of Edinburgh. The Archbishop
married In 1116e his second cousin, a
daughter of the Rev. William Bedg-
wick of Skipton, Yorkshire. This lady
is a great grandniece of the Rev. Wil-
Itam Carr, who was rector of Bolton
Abbey, and who received the waren
commendation of Wordsworth for what
he did on behalf of that historic spot
The Primate was born near Birming-
ham In ling and went early to King
Edward'. school, then flourishing under
the tutorial reign of Prince Lee. There
he pad the foundation of his sound
damned scholarship, and there he has
as brilliant compeers the late- Bishop
Lightfoot, four years hi• senior, and
the present Bishop Wescott, one year
his junior. He enjoys a dl.Unguisbed
record at Cambridge, where he gained
a scholarship and afterwards Fellow-
ship at Trinity. He graduated B.A. '
First Class in the classical tripo. in
1 S3. and senior optlme In the mathe-
matical tripos. On the invltatl..n of
Dr. Goulburn be became lin aa•istant
starter at flashy. where he worked for
Mix yearn, latterly under lir. Temple. f
h ow -Bishop of London.
Afterwards when instating him 1n
Truro Cathedral Dr. Temple bore this
11.11. testfinony to the nee bishop: "I
hi . knov n hien for nearly twenty
fears. v.'tt' .ve- tncn•*iii g Intima•v.
1 have lateen him and worked with
him au s hr..ther, a ethane et the Brat
rank. a man 1.1 the. very widest read-
ing * man of th.r most genial aympa-
thi.•..'• The Bbat•.op went on to 'peak
of his deep religious lire.
In lt:.t Wellington Cnilege was found -
el fr.r the education of the toms .f de -
*Petted officers in memory of the great
Duke, with the motto "Heroum Rif,»
sad Mr. Benson was elected a. first
bead muter. There he Kid • sp4ndtd
work. building up a great school on the
here beath, with noble suites of bouat ,
& chapel, library, masters' houses, Ave
eta He telt It a AoutiebL...11r,nriel.Wetbn, and bid farewell to
e in a vntume of germed he
conjointly with Dr. Temple. On the
vitation of the late Hlabeg Wovd.-
wth we Asea a tthe tbtle Atoll- at Umiak mlbre
e becalm* ex-
sM ng �pbin is !ie klrop, sod •e -
Med a Prelb ailed Nall le the Bath-
rtl. Here tea Bt4btsrlal elb of kinWeereaer Mune fret Mb Presollion
wee Mae, Ve dad Lb eroMdm'Ad
ewtsal bead lawnese toil e. aA who
me fa ew tldr WM
1n iris ke A- trot e! weet te
ice +tee ear whh11 big ((lame will bels
vet• m■ tic• " i tit tit M Ilia ba'
.
o. 1
v.
THE BIONA L : GODERICH, ONT., TH f; RSDA Y. O T. 2. #*i
Horn be refounded and reemmat:teted
the 8abulae Canceller!! between ISM
Aad IIN, and este made chaaesfor and
canon of the cathedral The *Yee et
many were now Said on Edward Wklte
lirnaon, and in 1377 the caJI came to
htrn to "Cu up blither." Inc:a the time
of Edward the Ceatrssur, Devon and
(', rowall had each Its owe bshup, but
Poverty then compelled their Onkel into
one see. The ancient Moose* of Truro
had now been revived. and on the rec-
ommendation of the Earl of Beacons-
ileN Caapa Beason was hppolnted Its
nret bishop. On heavies Lincoln be
(published his "Single Heart," which
as dedicated "To the dear people
•1 the congregation of LlnooIn cathed-
ra! In memory of tbe last advent tide.
end In gratitude toe their 'letters of
••. mmendation to the Church ur Curn-
:all. " The bishop was consecrated
In St. Paul's Cathedral A.prll 35, 1lri,
by Archbishop Talt. The uccawlon was
made much act. No less than nine
bishops were present. nearly all of
them wearing their crimson convoCa-
t tun robes. The bishop designate walk-
' between Dean Church and Canon
Light( of the latter preaching the err -
mon. which was one worthy of the ue-
. Aden. At Truro the hep showed
himself a material aft WMM, M a spirit-
ual builder.
He plunged late 'tame sad mortar,
and never ceased Ull he saw the nuc-
leus of a good cathedral rising on the
Site of 8t. Mary's Church. The nave
was then built at a ant of £106.000. It
retmalned for Bishop Benson to take one
step more, and on the death of Arch-
bishop Talt he wail nominated by Mr.
Gladstone to the Queen for the Arch-
bishopric of Canterbury, and enthron-
ed March 2a, i33g. On this occasion. as
the procession passed up the cathedral
"Onward Christian Soldiers" was .ung•
followed by "Thi. Church's One Foun-
dation." and afterward Psalms 121 and
1?2, and the "Hallelujah Chores." The
Archbishop, as such, was seated first
In the throne, then aa Metropolitan In
the ancient marble chair, and lastly, as
a sign of hawing taken real and actual
porression of the see, In the Dean's
stall. The several acts of Inatttuton
were performed by the Mellop of
Dover. as suffragan. Thrn. was one
noteworthy element In the Archbishop's
enthronement, namely. the civic pro-
cession. no civic honors having been
done to a Primate since 1*32. whne It
was a time of great political excite-
ment) a citizen spit at Archbishop
lowley.
ArchWshop Benson had taken part
In Many leading functions since he be-
came Primate, preelding at the Lane
I.eth conference, prear hing at church
congrcspea, unittng members of the
royal family In holy wedlock. and bap-
tising their chlldrew, but probably his
greatest work was the pmnuuncement
of the famous Lambeth judgment, by
which he seemed to have given Peace
to the Church of England and estab-
lished a re a f t
g me o " .Ive and let Live.
Assuredly since that judgment then
has been lees of acrimony and a bet-
ter feeling all round Probably Hie
Grace. as the head act the great Angli-
can F.pisn.pate was unwilling to have body they chose. For example, the
his poaiti n tabulated, but he once left bag toe could be made to wriggle
Bald a striking thing. In addition to In response to slight irritation at a
High church. 1.,,w Church and Broad certain small spot on the brain sur-
Church.
ur-
Churh, he would add another dile, of faceProfessors Schaefer and Horsley
which men beard little, the "Deep
Church." Probably His Grace would knew jest how to go about 11, became
rot object to being found there. they had treated many monkey. In
Archbishop Benson, by virtue of his the same fashion. In demonstrating
exalted position, was the first Peer In this before classes of students, theft
the United Kingdom after the royal method was to administer an anaes-
L)ukes. and took precedence of the Lord Mak to the Simian victim, which was
Chancellor. the Archbishop of York not permitted to Teel any pain
°ming third: In his person he set throughout the operation. At the end
forth all the dignity aad influence of of the performance It was s dead mon-
his high office, being of a powerful and key. But It had suffered not h bit
A part of Its skull w
striking presence, softened by muchwasremoved, and
then It was secured in an erect pod-
ifenlaltty and gof reel
of manner. tion. and in such a way that an etec-
He had a pair of Rel gray eyes that tile light would shine full upon it
flashed with a living emotion, and con- The lecturer would touch first one
veved the Impreeslon of genius and far- point and then another on the sur-
atghtednear, the aquiline bend of has face of the brain, saying preliminarily
none and the distended nostrils bespoke In each case: "Now. the monkey will
much energy. and he possessed a yoke ,rove his right leg." g." "Now he will
full of sweetness and compass. His move his left thumb," and so on.
features, strangely mobile. seemed to
carry on them a perpetual llght.
SCIENCE OF MATTER
SURPRISING RESULTS OF EXPERI-
MENTS ON A MONKEY'S BRAIN-
dbreMY PswMasMlesissa Lens • ((ranee,
Wilds Lead observers la OesalUM
That the Ape atesli3 re a
sterl.g.
le the ape in truth a man!
Religion and vanity shrluk from ao
coming the Idea though it hie
indorsed aur sonar time past by
mann, Wings and a trw other natura-
lists of reputation. But recent schen-
tine experiments. the results of welch
are now fur the first time pubWhed,
go some way toward verifying soca a
belles They have consisted In the
actual vivisection of buman beings.
Human
his been experimenting lath monkeys
oa these lines recently. He has suc-
ceeded in removing the frontal lubes.
and the Simian patients have been
stoparently as Might and clever as
ever on recovering from the operation
The secret of 1t 1e that he has found
out bow to Jo the thins *lateen in-
jurrrtg the remaining parts Horsley
and Schaefer have obtained the same
results without taking away the cere-
bra! hemispheres at all adopting the
equally conclusive seetbud of separating
them by cutting truer) the rest of the
brain. Here again the animals re-
ained seemingly as intelligent as be -
re.
For some time pant the fact has been
gradually dawning upon the superior
human animal that he is nut the only
creature who enjoys the poesesalon of
an Intelligence. He 1. beginning to
realise that the so-called brutes have
minds In all essential respects like his
own. though nut so highly developed
A SEMI-SCIENT : FIEND -
Ms Moho Ma W lI N Motors Her Dosb
Struggdm sad m.to. Leet.. of TMs..
Lr. Carl F. Nita, a c'hinago pbysMlau 01
standing, stabbed Lis wife. after baring
stilled her erlee with chloroform. and. due
beg her test anemias, stood byand eel=
by_ Ids 4 buuk of te women's
ELECTRIC NEEDLE EN 1'ERIMENT ON
AN APR's BRAIN
whoae living brains have been exposed
to view and studied. In this way It
haa been definitely eacertained that a
monkey's modes of thinking and feel-
ing are exactly the same as those tit
a man
The men who have been doing this
work are tbe femous Professors Hors-
ley and Schaefer, of the University of
London. Not long ago they were so
fur•tunate as to get hold of a person
who had a tumor in his brain. It was
a desperate cue, and a radical opera-
tion was absolutely necessary. To Per-
form It properly, they were obliged to
remove a large portion of the roof of
the patient's bead. and advantage
was taken of the opportunity to make
a few most Interesting tests.
Different parts cf the exposed cere-
bral cortex were touched successively
with the points of two electrodes, con-
veying a mild current of electricity,
and the experimenter found that by
this means they could cause the sick
man to move whatever muscle of tela
A SCIENTIFIC TOUGH.
Ur. Masses, the Aretle, ga.*.e.r, as He
Aope.red 1a Fromm Je.eph Land.
The arrival of Nanteen at the carnp t>t
Jackson In Frani Josef Land la thus
DA NANBEN IN FRANZ JO8 I'll LAND,
described: "One of the members of the
Jackson -Harmsworth expedition came
into the hut and staked If all his col-
leagues were there. On being told that
this was tie, he exclaimed that there
wan a man out nn the Roe. It is natur-
al, perhaps, that such news should have
caused astonishment—natural, too, that
a man of the alertness which It is
known Mr. Jackson poaeeoaue @timid
have jumped up End ran down to the
Me to discover who the stranger wsa
Jackson came up to the long -haled
and grimy explorer—"n dlagufsed. In
fact by his rough experience that the
Engltsbatan filled to recognise the Nor.
w•egian whom he bad known. it was
only after looting steadily Into the
face of the stranger for some seconds
that tt soddenly occurred to Jackass
that lb* feature resembled those of
the ganast Norwegian explorer He
then =claimed: 'Aren't you Nanaan"
'Tea,' area the reply. 1 am Nanooa-'
'By 19v.!' said the llagtiahman. 1 sm
realty awfully giad to see your The
Norwegian was taken to almwood.
pakotograpied in en his grime and
travel -stain, taduJgsd in a hot bath
and Wen to a dinner tient eouldm't
ba esee1led In essay regime of the
wart& !1• pe'tralt is repredesd Aon
Os Ns.AaM1. la Tlie Leedom Ot'apbb
draws from • pbotograM of the m-
eatier. lobos et ilw•d.`
Certain portions of the surface of a
moneky's brain are called "motor
areae," because stimuli applied to them t.
cause definite movements of the mus-
cles of the body. For some thine past
1t has been Imagined that the same
rules would apply to the brains of
human beings. but proofs of the fact
are now offered for the first time. Sub-
sequently to the Important event de-
scribed Professors Horsley and
Schaefer had a chance to operate upon
two epileptics, and the results ob-
tained In these Instances were exactly
the same. Consequently, science Is
now prepared to lay down the dic-
tum that the brain of a monkey is
practically the brain of a man, re-
duced In size.
Another discovery recewtly made Is a
big surprise to scentific students. It is
that the intelligence of human beings
and brutes does not reside altogether
In the frontal lobes, or "cerebral hemis-
pheres." which compose the upper and
front portion of the brain. During
many years experiments repeated over
and over again have seemed to prove
this proposition. The frontal lobes of
mankeya, rabbits, chickens and even
hogs have been removed, somewhat
cruelly, in order to see bow these crea-
taK s i
os
Ql,1,s'
agree eetele get al'ing wltbout aim
t'nttormty the remelt has been that
the animals treated bare beessm..Mss
automata, swallowing teed that egg
put Into their mostbs, wbeetsey 1t
stock with aesdkin and ebklkIVng
other aymptewta (hely troalraisei=
apparently baring ally
et what was totes on. Thy t
live for imeutbr or airs. years le
ia
condlttose r
Reference has been Yat M the a1-
ways-nllable inoahmys far peering 120
Welty professor Yak, of iltetasM-
tbe settee Is • asinmdoams, test & lois-
-mise- a+.sa.asurse1
0 crime since the
slaying of Dr.
Cronin baa aroused
Chicago as has
the ?Ills murder
and suicide. Dr.
Carl F. Nits, a
prominent Lake
View physician,
sta,bl ed his wife
to the heart, stood
over her dying
form and made
ag-
e/0 notes of her ag-
onies, and four
"'he fore's Notes. hours later killed
himself with a recuiver. as the pullce
were about to capture him.
over her dying Corm and made notes
01 her agonies, and four hours later
killed himself with a revolver, as the
polite were about te capture him.
It was a most remarkable tragedy; 1t
evert had tinges of romance about it.
But it 1s one of those cases which will
sone be forgoten—forgotten because
the principals are both silent In their
graves. It was the old story of a
union of May and December, of an-
other mlamated couple, whose troubles
began almost imedlately after the
nuptial knot had been tied
Dr. Nits was a German. He was a
hard student and something of a philo-
sopher. When he found bimself bound
by law In a meslliance he at first
sought to drown his sorrows In drink.
They wouldn't be drowned. Instead.
they continued to arouse all that was
brutal in his nature. Then the family
quarrels increttiaed In violence. Final -
DR. AND MRS. NITZ.
1y,take the philosopher of the ancient
school that be was, he determined to
break asunder the tles which were
uncongenial—no: by divorce; that was
too uncertain—but by death.
The fates were propltlour, and fur-
nished him with liquor, with anger
and with the sought opportunity. After
chloroforming his wife as she lay on
the bed, where he had violently thrown
and gagged her, he straightened out
the body and then thrust his long
surgical knife twice into the still beat-
ing heart. Then he sat by and noted
in his prescription book her agonies.
This accupled some ten minutes of bis
tlme-
He then wandered around the city
for four hours, and finally he bolted
himself into the room where his dead
wife lay. The police were after him
The captain of the precinct kicked
against the door. Courage came of
fear. An Instant later he heard a
shot, and. forcing the door, found Dr.
)
ree1e
*fir'• y1
rile a e,el. Itf• Mi l
uw w..
•e- .•.e
ha .. NO
THE WEAPONS OF DEATH.
Nits breathing his last A revolver in
his hand and a bullet hole behind the
right ear told the reit of what had
happened.
In the murderer's poeket Captain
Pchuettler found a prescription book.
containing the notes which Nits had
made while watching his wife's dying
struggles. The writing eras In a legible
hand, and though It showed haste, •t
the same time it Indicated that the
physician had good control of his
nerve.
The Ueeeer's Sete.
The notes read:
3 m.-- With two stabs 1n the longe mice
would not go ender.
3.30 p.m. -Abe died game. If abe bad
not been eeeh • bane woman elle wonid
bare bees • good nee.
5.Z1 n m.—Ronght the revolver Is Aute
street. lly dNlrermr.
*.e6 p.. 1.s. 1.d the deliver. 1
mydebt here that sice was a Tietar.
dyes' es weft as Ilrlag, but eh. wilted.
Bhs made a bard fight fee the "coop de
met.'
t'It:a�a retlo-Wb.e maws Lev, ter lite
bas dta•ppet.red. It 11 best for biro to
creel oft. Toren trsly, MTBEL.Ir.
At tie Tessetti: i pm.-_{irserod m
Mew drier rood. Wet and
Mfor bedtime.
`elain comforter admire the tenacity et tbatbbed. I.sA
woman: i Mend she had to p*
--1 herAO eby uncoils •M �mgl.3 II ?POOPS
Leen �. .' m�__77 nets streetmens l Rees-
9et1 netted street. itere-
bare Msns'k. Mhos•! island Rammed d Me
In•miger Mmy redline,
Ch .
(lay et L hawgra la We world
fess b My deer agt*evd eldldree. Alms
aped leas Nits. Leafs t4hnnrehee knows
ebat M M i bevr�pnst.d him. 11.
numb. pflatedepilfiama dee yolr eempftm.wO tw
INV .Ase lbi,s, to my l kf to ka tread w
west (bat mean. y .air. ghs apt bow
MIS wife bad bora a warmed be ble
tunny for three years after hb gra
wth Mod. but after be married ben be
teen to drink, and to excuse his weeds
he saki It was to drown Ws grief at
eke Sege of lie departed oath.The
niugeg-.4 wife wee le: ha was III. sod
tics Won wen .abaypy, sank* that
reseals t trent bks fleet 1*arriage. Dr
NUS WM a reeetai..4 aatatetitp es
dlwttMo and was both
P80Pt t WE HEAR ABOUT.
K. D. Jeflers.s has sewpMI.d the few et
obese • hem (stead to Irk e eh, •
diamses of SATS nubs, is ewe hundred and
Why WR
Capt. W iggies' trading expdittes s. 81 -
herr. Ma retell mal. ,west :el
beVerde Leena Dees* barbs robbed erde es
the return voyage from the Y. 01. dhe
brnesghs with Per the selvage of the NI fre-
es, which tan ambers last year is the $era
Star
Prof. Arrest Dater, wtta died reoe.tly •at
the see el 90 years et Friedla•d is Meek-
wabarg, had published • low moaUte before
hie death • teaael•ties of Homer tab
PI•atdesteah term. He ie best Imams by
hie tr•ae1•tines of Gera poetry Into
elao.teel Ores
Altbagb the Sudsy ..pesfsg of the Na-
tional Gellert' and the N•ties•1 Portrait
O•llery proved very suuueeold dartsg the
Ys.mor menthe. both oulleotiess have sew
hese dosed ea Seedaye, becomes the Gover• •
sliest epproprlattoa for the extra expense
hes been exhosated.
We k•ew whereof we affirm whoa we
state that Ayers Pills, takes promptly, at
Um first symptoms of olds sad fevers, ar-
rest further progress of these disorders• end
speedily restore the s'omaeh. liver tied
bowels, to their normal sod regular aelldi.
He Items were seed is the remit thrum
army mao••-uvrs. is.oh corp had • ball-
oon bandied by sixty ones. Six gall o•r-
rise, dr+w■ each by sir berose, holnnged
to snub halloos. and the nalosdtng, filling
and anodise op toot only fourteen mtrutae.
The halloos. were kept ata height of 3 200
feet, from which the eiders telegraphed to
headquarters and vent sketch., of the
asmy's positron down the rope.
A ample method of mortise and rnhhery,
with small chances of lrat.onon, de-
vised by some Romeo peasants on the Pres-
et•• border, has moment been brought to
BOIL A fever for emerr•tton has existed
ler sono years is Poland, and paw!. who
amid sot otters pa•eporta to leave Komi*,
atter selling all they here would secrete their
mosey epos their persons and bare these
prison to emuegte them auroes the front-
ier. A. their dep.r'ure had to be. kept
motet, and the immigrants were generally
illiterate persons of oo promineooe, it wee
easy to lead them tato out of the- way
warder them. awl strap them, with
'tib prebsbilrty of their bolas missed.
SUNLIGHT
SOAP.
PICTURES
FOR
WRAPPERS
A pretty colored Picture
for every 12 " Sunlight " or
every 6 " Lifebuoy " Soap
wrappers ;�tllle C_
These Pictures` are ; well
worth getting.
Address:
Lever Bros.,
b ae.tt-N„ Tomato.
LT 1),
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All Coal weighed on the market
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SVM. LEE.
or Harbor Qoay.
=Rina fl LIZ'S Store.
FOR TWEN I Y -SIX YEARS
DUNN'S
BAKING
POWDER
THECOOICSBEST FRIEND
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DODDS
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Do you know of
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DOES KIDNEY PAIS
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If so, we want to
know it. Over
a million boxes
sold without a
single complaint
aka
a
les ate
Coal &, Wood Yard
The undersigned begs to inform
he public that he keeps on hand
sU secedes d
HARD
SOFT
PAL
BLACKSMITH COAL.
PRICES OF WOOD REDUCED.
amedellatte.tion event*
CUT anSPdLIT WOOD
Call and get prices and see maniples
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Office and yard, N ELSON -ST.,
Wag Smelts Best. Hots:.
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--Rrprleter
THE HUNTING SEASON
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When you want your outfit we
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the shortest notice. A full line
of the best American Pow-
ders always on hand. Call and
see our Shot Guns, which for
quality and price downs them all.
DAVISON cS Co_
Baby Wants It.
Martin's
Cardinal Food
IOa Is.►AMT$ AND INVAUDN.
The most palatable food prepared,
1. unequalled byanyoth-4
Mita kind. The best food and the best
value, put up in one pound Tins, peke
25 ata per Tin.
Sold Retail b�jj•e all )ratdlisAA dad
Grocers and R�,iafeas/g
Kamm WATSON & Cts.. t.on.te.eN
UI LOON rRLEA L.
THE STAFF CF LIFE,
Adulterattoo and substitution i- •,1 pro-
ducts have of late years become -e .0 ea
evil, that hovernmenteevery wirer- - hests
ohl iged to a!! In the services re • • r ' .ate to
cheers their spread sad save the toe. of the
people.
One of the meat important articles of food
nngneslosably la BRAD.
For pare wholesome Bread, 1t mast be made
from Malt sad Bop Yeast ; for this matron it
is essay soluble Is the Julies of fly stomach,
or. Is oder words. I* ht of direetioa.
Hop and M
by the
bast analyst. la YeasttRagla•d town sad
madahersted yeast, nail le used by the beet
bakers la the esanery.
IN MY BAKERY
Toe em get ter °as cert es much Bread made
from Hop Yeast as you ass for three odeae
teem the premed vomits whieb ars foreleg
tkemeelver e• tae public, but which do ^et
and canoes give the same tweet favored breed
MY BREAD n MADE FROM THR PURR
MALT AND MOP YEAST AND NO. 1
MANITOBA PATEttT FLOUR.
11.01 prove ter yourself. it le the most
;w and sweetest bread that ma be
redeemed e[ yeast es the market My
ex these Mn beta Bakers bedsits, has
prov
D OANTELON .
GODRRIOH
STEAM BOILER WORKS.
A. S. C H RY STA L,
gmeemer1• Carpdsl • el..k
lllaaatadarer ed an klsds at
BOIz•BRS.
Smoke St•oka, Balt Pana, Meet Igoe
Work., etc., etc..
AM Dealer (0-
k-. Ma hlaary Castings, he.
• tai nsPip...nd Pyo Ph1MMAte
Iglu, w Owes,� Globe Valves„
Valves. Isteiraaen, Missteps .std Ia-
s Csasmstly s Mand as Lewes*
• Hoe of Steal Water and Meg
far as .1 farmers sad Wawa
111/aMla pritaidg esst.dea et
A. L f:1113T>l1A&.
P. 0. lis. W. Oplea kiffek.
dl.! L -rri_,ffe4w it