HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1888-2-2, Page 6O .D WORLD NEWS
Tons os the Oontinellt 2doza Peaceful -
The Oar's Ambitions 'lance andItely
Have kissed and Made up; latest
Cable °lick•
The tone from the Continent becomes
more and more peaceful end ail tile. energy
ao recently expended in proving thet wax
ween at hated la now bent to the teak of de
snoratratii+g that knee is certain, and tie
task bas grown wonderfully easy, especially
since the peaceful language poured out by
the Czer in response to the New Year'u dal•
dress.
eerbeee Bierearei€, ewisked appeeeatly that
all le right for the present, as far as Ituesiat
is concerned, holies hireeel_f with hone mat -
tern., Ile is now concentrating hie energies
on new measures for the auppreseiou of the
eoehal democrats, who have been constantiy
growing in strength, despite all his hostile
saeasarres, The Prince, whsle laving soeiel-
ktic tendencies himself, detests every,Seeian
ism of a: Grilse different from his owe. lie
asksfor additfonel powers to use gra aeup-
pressing freedeti] ]armee •]tae lreople, asci
centennplates niean¢re* compared with
which the Coercion Paw is mere child's posy.
Hai wishes to be able to inflict a yeer's sin
priesoument eta Ir0 0 make ke fine ate every
MA* Welalartor child who hands a a«ist-
islt cewe rep€r cr Wain to a Irked, or
who ensue. t4 peblie tiers, ,if enly by cerry-
ifig ft set t1~e had' a► copy of the forbiddeu
Men ` .
A, story is berg revived in diplomedioeir-
cles of the Cant's ir4tefition to ;have himself
preclefese l Emperor ef Assam, and, it ie
the eereneuy eis to tale ytase shortly at
Merv. The frieude ef this rumor declass it
le with thiai cad in view that the Ozer has
lately cultivated Germeny maaiiditouslyr in
order to laeve a straug ,slliaauce arnewhcro
with whi:h to offset tee buret of raga which
tialglee he expected from E gland bind front
b n$lilrid'4 Q- eenshoeld the Czar take a title
which would iuelnde dant of the J' preteaa of
Adis, Victoria's most receust pride tad
Ir le whit pered in Ialaitiell that the ntad
Minae Oda) has because suspicious; of hie at-
teneenete Teletexto cat wr Oak, and, is d},
segs fMet, Sinailteecaaaly glia eluant oil his
late mentis brother and predeceteor is ree
netted greed einehtly.
It was Marshal Mert'tttti: Cauapas Who
WAr..k1 site tiaierratatetat of Pt -Abel-
l -eh ceuee reey egaiwet tete Queen regent
and her ba.)y, the Moe, 1gy the way, the
Pope flat neat hinted to IDiA Genian that re.li ten. chicane', auel petriotiee: ialike require
he et Tee ge is a to ceueelre a 4tiOlit that lin-
tone ;I .t,nree ti tlaro.e. G Arles doesn't
think the Pepe competent] to give advice on
serelalar n:lrttere.
Freese anal 8telg have tattled their little
tiff ascent the violation by the F oreaace
Judge of the Freu^.Tao CO25%1Vs donzieite,
Premnitbly the Ino l gat dgrirtni of a Faris
utweeepsr for the eapaleien of 590.0e0
itel!i a workmen ecltttereal thrrtugboat
francs will slow ba abandoned.
Primo Ossar of Sivcuou, tsha is assn..: tq
niarrD,* a, mated of hale-. was to have welded
°soot the Mace of W,tlea'edauyiiterts, but
the ascites: Parlisaient meanly refilled : to
vote the neeeesary money, an.l the meant
wee broken,.
Peva rind arbitration people have been
very buoy, but they have, cis usual, fouuti
the swat vers unenpre ietiro of themselves.
iiereoaally and of their doctrines. Mr.
tiotigzt n Pratt, known iaa the antippustle of in•
t,:rnet:enel ar• itration, though he shares
tete homer tvitb A1r. (heeler, M. I'., has been
viiisia;; Vicuna, ]:hero every one wag frig.
illy Fake to :tion and theoretically agreed
with hist, but he wan advised •.,) oo to luv,
oil, «which country " said the Austrian^,
ar
thee
a arguments a
0 our
t0 more tvnnt i
in
v:o are,°, Mr. Cromer the tirty tato who
reseraly visited the 1,'.nite.i States on a p ac
• raisaittu• He met th Connell of Pewee a im.
r,y ta,nievr, anti gave a glowing eeeount of
his misteaa, To hoer the insult ntau and
inemberfl cf the t,'oun:il talk one would
think we were= the eve of the millennium,
wine's here in Europe. at any rate is ccr-
tllnly not the C132.
Ari Ettl'attr(iinriy Jehu•
An Etigliish baronet, having ran through
a large fortune, took to driving a stoge-
ecfach for a livelihatel. One day an old
friend rode on the box beside him, and had
a jelly tire home, for the coachman was its
fail of fun and aneedotes as be used to be
when presiding ever a dinner peaty at his
own. table. When they came to their heir-
ney's end the friend shook hands with the
coachman and offered him a sovereign.
"No, no," said the shrewd John. "Put
that in. your pocket, and give me the half.
crown you give to another coachman ; and
always come by me andtell your friends
and my old friends the same.
"A sovereign might be all very well for
once, but, if you think tbat necessary to-
day, yon will not feel it necessary the many
times in the year you run down this way.
Half-a•crown is the trade price. Stick to
that, and let us have many a merry meeting
and talk of old times."
This baronet, St. Vincent, cr "Vinny"
as he was called, made fifteen hundred dol-
lars a year by his shrewdness in only taking
a common coachman's fee. His friends
patronized him, knowing that they would
not be taxed on the score of old friendship.
THP OCEAN.
It t1te Lod were Flattened Ont the Sea
• would beTwo ewes Leel, A11 Otey.
At the last meeting of the Royal Society
of Edinburgh, Dr. John Murray of the
Challenger expedition made. a, eommunice-
tion., on " The Haight and Volume of the
Dry laud and the Depth and Volume of the
Ocean." According to hie own investiga-
teens, .$nginesr iag nays, the mean height of
the land of the globe was 2,230 feet above
the sea level, and • the mean depth of the
ocean was 12,480 feet, or 2,080 feth,ore. If
the ocean were regarded as being divided
into two parte by the 1,000•fathom line, it
would be found that the mean depth of the
area having leas depths than 1,000 fathoms
was 2,028 feet, or 338 fathoms, or nearly
the saute depth beneath the sea as the
height of the dry land above it. Ou the
other hand the mean depth of the area be,
yond the 1,000 fathoms is 14.640 feet, or
2,440 fathoms, The forever area -..called
by.Dr, Murray the "transitioualarea"-roc-
eupies 24,000,000 square mines ;and the lat.
ter area, which is the abysmal' area, •and is
situated fully three miles below the average
hefghts of the continents, accupics 113,000,-
000 ovate miles, or mere then ball of the
surface of the earth. In the transitional
.area of tete oeean there are malty and varied
conditions in respect of light, heat, currents,
changes of level, the character and variety
of the depeeits, and in the • aniauaie ranct
plants which inhabit the *Arlene ports of
the region.
Thu deposits airs IP meat respects Rirraler
to thence which ruake tip every lenge part of
the aaediiiaeutary formation of the dey land.
Jut the avowed one there Its a uniform ant
of emetlitiene, the. tetnpetaturo being Bear
the fete€zing paint, with Ant -ritual range riot
exceeding : Fahr., unci thea. beim n a e➢ui,
light or plant life,- There ie a;rt•at; about'.
nice of animal life
e; but the ferule from
various parts of the area are very similar,
end unlike these of shallower waters ;.grad
the depeeits, which accuinelate slowly, are
unlike any of the - sedimentary deposit* of
thedry land. D'remi Dr. Morray'e bonen.
geeleue, it 4110 appears; that if the dry land.
of ]lie globe wete reduced to the eel level
by being rereeved to and piled up in the
sallower sisters of the u>:.v.ui, thea its ere•
tent would be about 80,000,0110 equercruike,
and the rest of the surface of the caribi
would be euvered by lair♦ ocean extending to
113,C00,001I squire ile , signets, should
]'tad whole of the eolin laud t,e redeeed to
Duna level guider the acean, then the,nrfuce
eif the earth woeld be everteQVIllffil by esteem
with a uuifo t;t depot of sheet ewe noise,
The Horses of the World.
Given the important roles which cavalry
and artillery play in the art of modern war-
fare, it may be interesting to know the to-
tal number of animals which the leading
countries of the world can throw into the
field, of battle. Here, according •to the
latest statistics,is the list : Russia, 21,-
570,(00 horses ; America, 9,500,000 ; the
Argentine Republic, 4,000,000 ; Austria, 3,-
Z00,000 ; Germany, 3,350,000 ; France, 2,-
800,000horses and 300,000 mules ; Eng.
land, 2,790,000 horses ; Canada, 2,624,000;
Spain, 680,000 horses asd 2,300,000 mules ;
Italy, 2,000,000 horses ; Belgiarn, 383,000 ;
Denmark, 316,000 ; Australia, 301,000 ;
Holland, 125,000, and . Portugal, 88,000
horses and 50,000 mules. It will be re-
marked that Russia heads the list by an
enormous majority.
The mother with twin boys knowswhat
itis to toil from son to son.
Ztlaul+aa 1rw.p l$ W..::.
Some. time leak, relates n contemporary,
A Indy WO aittbag et trork. with her:reedle
in one of the reems of her house. Her table
was hear au o.eai timet, end i u ei it lay'
sundry reels of cotton, such as are an nae
with eewimg;r➢aelnlnaa. Sho tens about to
supply hrr needle frost ere et these reels;
wh:a enc noticed a green caterpillar stick.
bug just iueide the central holo of the reel,
Ti4iing is to :be window, she allied: it out,
and went on with her wort.. Being a Otero'!
time after in want of more thread, she r -as
eurprieed to find a caterpillar again in the
frame postdate. A. little astonished, but
thinning that ahs must have been mistalten
in fruppststn, that she lead re novo l it before,
eheagaiu shook the reel euteide the window,
;he caterpillar fell out, and the reel stns
empty. There wain doubt about it this
time, nucl chi) reeame rigida absorbed in her
wort. Imagyine her raetuaishmeut when, nfew
moments at ter, anediscovercdinthesame reel
not one, but two green caterpillars, exactly
mgembliog the former in ei; ', colour, aced
ehepc. There was something not quite
canny in the whole proceeding; it was as
though some brownie was at work.; and
sihe resolved to watch. It van not long be.
fore her vigilauee was rewarded, for, flying,
in at the open wiatlow, hearing in his jnwe ;
a tine green caterpillar, there cameo. meson.;
wasp. G'ncting round once or twice, he
settled on the reel. deposited his burden in
the hole, and straightway left to hunt the
ro.atrees below for futher prey. hieen-
time his partner entered, deposited tin egg
on each of these eiterpillers, and went her
way, bearing in mud in many sueseeding
journeys, instil eggs and caterpillars were
quite scaled up. There are in the house at
the present moment several keyholes of
donne mud cupboards seated with mud, and
containing their living helpless prisoners;
for the mason -wasps do not kill their prey
outright -they paralyze it only, so that it
canns.t marc away, but stags to furnish good
meat tor the young wasps when newly
hatched.
Two Napoleons.
Beneath a stately dome erected by Louis
t` ii"., surrounded by memorials of his vic-
tories and agreeably to his dying wish that
his grave might bo among the people whom
he professed co dearly to love, lie the ashes
of Napoleon the Great. Upon the green
slope of an English hill in Berkshire, within
the walls ofa mausoleum consecrated by the
grief of a. widowed and orphaned ex -Ent -
press of Prance, lie the ashes of Napoleon
the Little. So great has been the spell of
the memory of the illustrious Corsican that
the revolutions which have overturned al-
most everything else in France have left
unharmed the people's admiration of his
genius and glory. So slight has been the
hold of Napoleon the Little upon the imag-
ination of the nation which ne ruled that
his mortal remains are consigned to their
last resting place on foreign soil without
exciting a throb of emotion or evoking a
tribute of remembrance from the land be-
yond the English Channel
"'attunes Corn Extractor
Is the best remedy for corns extant. It acts
quickly, makes no core spots and effects a
radical cure. A hundred imitations prove
its value. Take neither substitutes offered
as good nor the close imitations of the genu-
ine too often offered.
The sale of a wife was not an uncommon
practice in England a century ago. Among
the uneducated the n ire was regarded as a
chattel, and it was considered the proper
thing to dispose of the article of furniture if
thought necessary or desirable. The cus-
tom, s'range to relate, is not altogether un-
known in Canada. A Winnipeg contempo-
rary is authority for the statement that nob
very long a professienal man drew up an
agreement, under which one man sold his
wife to another for whom she had presum-
ably • a greater affinity for a small sum, and
thus got rid of a difficulty which only weal-
thier 'people could have solved by an appli-
cation for a divorce. This is a practice
which it is to be hoped wilt not become
fashionable.
A DrxiiPQRJ .T OF 230,900 MEM.
Mac Enormous Estates Brought Into One
by Mr, Wlean's otBaltimore.
"The great American deer stalker,' as
Afr. Winans has been catled, is at present,.
or meat the beginning of the season, tenant
of nearly twenty sporting estates, the total
area of which probably exceeds 230,000
acres, Taking these in their alphabetical
order, the first hs Afferic, e deer forest by
-Seemly, be Inverness-shire. It is the pro-
perty of Mrs. Chisholm, and it is rented by
Mr. Winans at £509, The area covered le
14,329- acrca, The next on the list is Correa
cballie, also in the county of Inverness, to
which 1. joined Glengowrie, in Ross shire.
The extent is 9,000 acres, yielding about 12
stags. Corryuachoulaud and north side of
Giassletter fs also the property of Mrs,
Chisholm, but heat present in the oecupancy
of Mr. Winans. The'rent he pays is £?a"0,
The forest of Craskie,'in Inverness shire, is
tenanted by the same gentleman. It cover s
en area of 10,000 acres and affords on an
average a couple of dozen stags ; the estate
f;] a very beautiful one, and yields a big bag
of grouse (say 100 brace) and a good head of
mtscellaeeous game; there is a very nice
house in the forest belonging to Mee. Chis-
holm. Durusduari is a email shooting in
Rum -shire rented by Mr. Winans from Sir
R. J, Matlieeeii, Bert., at the sum of £200;
it extends to 10,000 acres and admits of a
liberal bag of mhscellaneous game being shot,
as wall an a fete stags ; this shooting matches
with the forest of Giomaeh, rented from the
ealae proprietor 4; a. eun; of X550, the area
beteg tot dowry at $,0d0 acres. Fasual: le
Foreat,'in the county of Inverness, iii also
the property of Mrs. Chisholm, but isat
present tenanted by "the greet Aauerheen
deer, str,lker, that mut laaad for it being. 4700;
twenty -Ave or thirty stags may be shot, as
well as abeut 2C0 brae* of gfouee; the Asea
Of the forest is 16,000 Berea.
The south side of Glaasletter is ileo shot
over by Mr. S'i`ipans; it beloege likewise,
to Mtn, Chieholzt, and is reuted at £245.
The sant+gentlemen_ is tenant of that lady's
Mete of lr'letwennicb, the rent paid for it
being £1,350, In the official return the
three forcers of Creeltie, Fasualtyle, and
fllencannich ere stated as being to the ex.
teat of 39,810 acres. The chief shooting
held by Mr. 't'iria s is that of Glenstrath.
farar aad(ulligran Dcer]orest 1nlnverneee
shire. le is the propertyof Lard Levet,
and the refit is £1,7.50; this forest occapica
an area of 51,290 ,acre, Sir, K. J. i'Iathe.
soil's forts% of and C'orrycasb,
Rees -stare, are alga oesupied by the modern
'eatnrod, the rent pia beir. 4'150 ; tho area
covered is 20,603 steres, but it portico, of the
grunt➢d ii not forested, being still under
nisi cp :,frosts ta:enty:.live to thirty eteees may
be hot ou tine ground, mid there are Verity
of gruuf o and iteiteellatieu; i gamete to had,
as well tis good irelmcu tithing in the El-
claaig and Luing. In the same consity le alt.
mated the deer !...rest of Mittail ; it extends
to t17,080 ares, and i* also in the tenlllor•
ary polesettsion of Mrr, ll'ivans, the relit Raid
beine£1,101. Another of the (Anaheim for.
caw, that of huori:Qiu, ie tenanted by the
fauna gentleman, who pays for it a rent of
£00.000. fuibita damph is also the property
of A1rn. Chinholm, and is at present held by
:41r. \Finan. It coverri about 0,000 acres ;
eoneidcrable number of Maga is annually
allot, as matey bulit7tin:c3 a3 thirty. Goma
aro alta obtained. On this estate there are.
cheep wattle covering from 7,CC0 to 8,000
tierce. Mr. Winne also pays £1.000 for
Pont, Meehan, and t.'errycach, in ROM.
chine, extending to obeut A1,600 acres, well
stocked with many kinds of game. :firs.
Chigbohn hau also )et Siu'graph to the sante
gentleman, at a rent of £740, which ex•
I ues tbo Ike of Mr. Winan's shootings,
who, it has been calculated, enpenda an.
nually in the Scottish Highlanda a rum of
about £:'.'.5,000 in the pursuit of sport.
WIT AND HUMOR',
A111411 will do almost anything to increase
the hnppineesof the women ho levee except
a
lone
n i
tol,.nta her whoa she wants to et id of
Wm,,
"Say, die fou see a hat that wap knock-
ed out of the car window l" " les, I threw
it back on the train." "Great Scott 1 I've
just jumped off after it."
Epitaph on an editor's tombstone in
:linins :
within this town he lived and lied
For forth years, and then he ditd.
Elevator boy (to fat old lady)-" Goin'
up mum b° Old lady--" Yes ; I'm going
up, but, sakes, alive, a little boy like you
can't pollute up in that thing."
A hole in the ground and a smell of gas
said for $4,000 in Ohio the other day; The
hole wan found to be all right, but the smelt
of gas disappeared with the owner of theland.
It troubles aman who has raced wildly
down the station to catch adeparting train,
to have the train stop just outside the depot
and back in again to take on another car.
The Floods in China.
The special correspondent of the Stand-
ard at Shanghai sends a graphic Acture of
the tremendous loss of life in China from
the overflow of the Hoang -Ho River, and
of the tremendous famine now threatened.
About one-sixth of the entire area of the
"Garden of China," as$o-Nan is styled, is
now converted into a vast lake, with here
and there a pagoda top or the gable of some
higher wall rising over the ever-increasing
waters to mark the site of what were a
short time ago prosperous cities of many
thousand inhabitants. The rest of the
ecuntry is overrun with wretched refugees,.
who were fortunate enough to escape with
their lives, though with naught else. In
hundreds of instances men, who three moons
ago were men of wealth, to -day sit gazing
on the inland sea stunned and hungry,
stupid and dejected, without a rag to wear
or a morsel of food to eat. The inundations
commenced a little distance from Karfung
Fn, one of the largest cities of the province,
and in one instant some four miles o solid
embankment of stone, brick, sand an clay
were swept away with innumerable moles
and fasoines.
Not Exactly a Hard Dunker,
I have a letter of introduction to Mr.
Samuel Slump," said a stranger to a citizen.
" Can you tell me if ho is a man of drinking
habits ?"
" Wall, stranger," replied the citizen, ex-
pectorating copiously, " I 'wouldn't go fur
to say that Sam is exactly a hard drinker,
but I reckon if you go an' ask him to take
suthin' yon won't have to build a fire under
him to git him started."
MISCELL&11+,EOWS ITEMS.
Fifty years ago the. Scriptures were circu-
lated in 139 languages ; now they are circa-
lated,in 280.
M, Cheveenl, the noted seientistof France,
who is 102 years old, is sitting to a screlptor
for a bust. Be kind enough, he said to
the artiet, "not to make me look any elder
than I am."
John Jacob Astor, the father of the tens
of utilifons' worth of real estate tvhioh the
Astor family sow bold in New York City,
once peddled bread and cakes over the
streets now lined with his children's pro.
perty,
A lady in San Francisco had tin ee canaries
so tame that they flew about the house at
will. One slekened and died suddenly. The
dead body was, taken from the cage and laid
on a table, and the other two flew to it and
examined it very carefully, Then they
went beck to their cages, and for over thirty
days neither of then] uttered a note. After
the] period of mourning was over they piped
up and sang as of old.
The Princess of Wales is always to be
found on the side of common sense, and in
haring her daughters taught the complete
art of dress -making has set an example
which ought tie be widely followed by wo-
men to whom it must -be of much greater
consequence. The Princess herself is known
to be completely up both in theory and
practice, and this, is a great reason why she
is so perfectly dressed and why her dress
makers find her ao diiflcult to eetiefy with
auytbiug abort of the beat cut end work.
ruau1'bip.
Oae of the te:nperatiee women told is Sear
reporter that a child of one of her neighbor•
lied been stupefied from eating these ready
drape and smoking cigarette,. In the neigh-
berhood of the.Peabody sehcel she said tuere
was a small store patronized by the children
and kept by a woman who ]tells all sorts of
notions, oaudies, cigars, cigarettes, and alae
theca] rock and-ryo drops, which the lady
lead no daubs created en appetite far tame
drink,
drink, The store, elle eaaid, was patronized
by'lthe neghbors, who n)atde mow small
purchases, until is few days ago, when the
pareute done of the school children learned
that the atupiel condition of their child was
caufled by eating these drops, which he pur-
chased from the ;store referred to. The
mother of the child visited the prapriotreas
and told her hots this candy+ had affected
her child, and resluessitt1 her to dibcoutinne
its tale. This, however, alio refined to do.
The deepest bore hole iR. Europe is et
Sehlatloba h, near Koteohan station, ou the
raihvay betwvicea Corbethi. rod L inzig, and
was undertaken by the I:'rue:dart Goverment
is search of coal. The apparatus need is a
diamond drill, down the hollow Anil of
which water ie forced, *Aug again to the
surface outside) the shaft of the gill and in.
side the tube in while the drill works. By
this "'lathed cares of about fifty feet in length
have been obtained. The average length
bored interm:Ay-four hours is from twenty
to tbirty.five feet, but under favorable 'dr.
eumstances ra much no 180 feet has been
bored in that time. Other deep boles are an
Whim :
:eel,
Dentate near Witten .... , , ..... , • .3.297
i'robat•Joaar, Mecklenburg 3 957
nperenberg, near ?,omen 4,178
tineenburg near Stasefurt 4,2.32
Li'eth•Elmsborn, IIolstein......... 4,290
l,]hiedebach 4 416
E1 hen our enemies fall out we shall get at
the truth. Tho brewers do not like the way
some of their number do business, so they
have fallen to tolling on each other. ta.
queer sort of burliness this proves to be.
One man saga his firm made $1S0,003 in one
yearout of the sale of 45,000 barrels of beer.
Thttt trap when the article nue selling high,
Thero are manifold adulterations to make
up at present for the decrease of price. The
saloon.lteeper buys at six dollars a barrel
and retails the drinks out so as to put from
$23.00 to $37.G0 into his pocket. At that
rate he n afford 1 s
atopayalmost t any1P ergo
and purchase or rent l;ost any stoe front.
It is said that in Chicago alone $,30,000,000
is spent in ono year for lager boor, which is
equivalent to $3500 a year to every soul in
the city. At least $3,000 000 of this goes to
the brewer and $22,500,000 to the saloon+
keepers, who number now nearly four thou-
sand. • As a secular paper well says : " No
wonder the lager lords wax r,ch and fat,"
Nuns 'Who Never See a Han.
The Via Merulina convent, in Rome, will
remain in possession of the nuns until the
death of the last of them, when the property
will go the city. The sixtoon remaining
Franciscan nuns, who are called the Stipulte
Vive, are still in the old monastery, where
they once received a visit from the Princess
of Wales. These nuns, some of them ladies
of noble families, observe a very strict rule.
Once entering the convent they never leave
it alive. They never see men, not even the
priest who says Mass in the chapel. '1 he
altar is screened off, and they can just see
the elevation of the host. Through a small
aperture they receive Holy Communion.
Iron gratings and a linen veil guard the
small openings through which they make
confession. They never undress for repose,
but spend half the night in prayer, and
keep, except in extreme cases of illness, a
perpetual abstinence from meat. They
make almost everything they use, even to
shoes and medicine. If a parent of one of
these nuns dies the announcement is not
made to the nun herself, but in general
terms it is said that one of them has lost by
death, a father or a mother, as the case may
be.
Woman's Work.
There is no end to the tasks which daily
confront the good housewife. To be a auc-
c:ssfnl housekeeper, the first requisite is
good health. How can a woman contend
against the trials and worries of housekeep-
ing irregularities, ailments and weaknesses
peculiar to her sex? Dr. Pierce's Favorit
Prescription is a specific for these disorders
The only remedy, sold by druggists, under
a positive guarantee from the manufacturers.
Satisfaction guaranteed in every case, or
money refunded. See printed guarantee on
bottle wrapper.
At some of the, milliners' ready-made
bows are sold which almost trim a bonnet.
The decided preference for trimming on
blank lace gowns is watered silk and ribbon.
A General Tie+np
of all the means of public conveyance in a
large city, even for a few hours, during; a
strike of the employes, means a general par-
alyzing of trade and industry for the time.
being, and is attended with an enormous ag,
gregate boa to the community. How muolt
more serious to the individual is the general
tie up of bis system, known as constipation,
and due to the strike of the most important
organs for more prudent treatment and bet.
ter care, If too:long jnegleered, a. torpid:,
or sluggish liver will produce Aeneas forma
of kidney and liverdiseases, itixlarial trouble
and chronic dyspepsia. Dr. Pierce's Pleas-
ant Purgative Pellets are a preventive and
cure of these disorders, They are prompt.
sure and effective, pleasant to base, and pos-
itively harmless.
Dignity does not consist Iva possessing
honors, but in deserving them.
The Coming Comet.
It is fancied by a grateful patron that the
uext comet will appear in the form of a huge
bottle, having "Golden AledicalDiscovery'
Inscribed upon it in bold characters.
Whether ties conceit and hieh compliment
will be verified, remains to be seen, but l)r..
Pierce will continue to send forth that won.
derful vegetable conipoune, and potent era*
Meeker of disease. It has no equal in
medicinal and health.giving propettres, for
imparting. vigor and tone to the liver and
kidneys,. in purifying the blood, and, through
it cleansing and renewing the whole system.
For ecrofnlous humors, and eansulnption, or
lung scrofula, in its early stages, itis a posi
tive specif 3. Aruggiste.
The credit gentled by .t He lasts nay ly+ until'
the truth comes out.
People who are subject to tad breath, tool ocstrt0
review, or any df:erder et the Stomach, can al oats
be relieved by using Pr. Careen', 8totaaeb Bitten,
tbo old and tried remedy, Alae Fear Druggist.
130 not room what you aro net,
bIos 1 Cornu Cate euro, in one minute,
An oance of conviction ba mirth it pound
of eoerolou.
ChioiLrsa Baia Itsaawp¢ restores grey and NI
MO to eta mantel tele and pteveot3 faking sant,
The true way to be happy is to make
others happy.
whenever Yaur 0t0aa5eh or Potseie got onb of 0t,
der owing Alliourime. nyeeewee, or Indigestion,
read their atttttideaa erne, take qt once a dere of Dr.
,arson.a Stonucp. hitters. nest sassily tnedialnv,
All ll;u,getir, SOeettte.
We oan do more good by being good than
ha any other way.
dl cure for Drunkenness,
The opiums habit, depaintania, the esetei•tee habit.
ueeiaui premien zi caused by the nes of tobaoco.
walmialeaem, tensa dews -win. estimate et the
brain, etc., premature cls age, loss of iitxllty calmed
ivy overexert -ma of the brats, and less et natural
strecgtL, from any sauna whatever. Mese.--) ming.
Old or middle Aged. -who aro bleten down trOeI any
Rf 11cent:sae ean,e,,or any came set inentionad c11.u,
rend your address and 1" yenta in stamps tor Lnbon'a1
,Treadee In hook formI), et .. nes of Alan. £,00hs
sent smiled and ereure tom oetervatieo..tddrees 33
V I.vsas 47 Weiltuvtoa etrectEast. Toronto Out,
Ono day iS worth three to hint who does
everything in order.
Cott' No Iiore.
Wateon'n cough drove are the best In th
world for the throat and cheat, for the voice
unequalled. See that the letters R. bt T.W.
aro otamped on each drop.
If you aro not wiser at the end of the
day, that day is lest.
'5CIIIGYI 1',169.
Srxrr000-ltolatore : intense itcltiagardetinginq;
most at night : torso by esratchin, . It allowed to
continuo tumors term, which erten bleed and ulcer-
ate, becoming very sore. SOATIG1'8U1snoisr steps
the itching and bleeding, heals ulceration and ➢a
many Nisei removes the tumors. It 19 equi lry(�Ica•
eioua In curing all Shia Diseases. lilt. SWAIN. E dt
S UN Proprietors, Philadelphia. SWAMI'S Oa:tr
eau im obtaiacd of druggists. Sent by nail for 110
cents.
71'U0US. t'LfEitS. Ertl,
BANGER,Tul 2.Bfr, without the knit:. Po
cure, n0 av, $Nod slam
pp ipbJrt,. Wv.L 441iaTa, 31.0.,p1.3 t 0eenE.,Toro to
l ltl1.11., IBU111BUi1.%Ir 1i;V411'l(rsIt9V nervi sneer.
-(( ante tompnny of Canada,
CorenIting `ug:nitre and Solicitors of Patents,
T0110NT04
G. C. Ross, Chief i;aki, neer. A. nasals, Sco'y.Treaa.
OLD, tN:Ol0SiW\ GUI.Y). nntiq+as Bronro,
and atter Pacturo and
Itoon,3ioulding a, Frames, etc. Paintings, En. a Etch •m r
A tit A t0 t t
it t cA Stti t
R , .. . s 9 Materials
iI
a
AI➢eters, eta„ tzhc'ea�lc and retail, Trade Ca➢•
nlogue. ;t5au1';1ES1 i 3:1208. at d'o, Toronto
FAA Speelalttr- I'I1?3I5 in itr
sun �'� supply. Dealer.+ billed out on
Liberal terms at the IIALTON
NGTtS1;B.iES, Burllneton.Ont., REEft.
11 13.11•CILT
O & EON, Proprietors. TREES
Al•ocan offer aIewcars Ned aneYellow alone com .
0
Roses, .�f shuns,
And alt other Flowering Plant., in great variety.
Illustrated Catalogue upon application.
welister Bros , - 11•'Iortnto, - trantilton.
THE MARTIN
MACHINE, with new
w ,
rickitnprovemnts it away
• of any and ever
Wahine in America. dlanufictured only by
H. MARTIN & CO., 90 Mary St.. Hamilton, Ont
,y.. SHE LONDON ]GUARANTEE
AND ACCIDENT CO. (LD), OF LONDON, ENO.
CnpitaI, £300,000. Dominion Government Deposit,
565,000. Head Office : 72 Sing St. East, Toronto.
Gentlemen of influence wanted in unrepresented
districts. A. T. MoCORD,
Resident Secretary tor the Dominion.
OH1N1QUY'S FIFTY YEARS.
In the Church of Rome -10th edition -cheaper In
pnce 032 p es. Agente,Ladiea or Gentlemen to cell
EhiriVIVIn, FASCINATING and TRAGIC, book. Liberal
tonne. ADDRESS, A. G. WATSON, Tottotrro Wieaaan
num DsroarroRZ, Toaoaro.
'CANADiAN BUSINESS UNIVERSITY
Public Library Building, Toronto. Students from
British Columbia, California, Kansas, Illinois, and
?nuite a numoar of other States and Provinces, now
attendance. Write for Detcriptiva Circulars.
THOS. BENOOUG11, CHAS. H BROOKS,
Troaddent. See'y & Manager.
ALLLEADINGMf CHANTSI•
rsee STRATED DATALLO.OUE,MAl E. FREE.
•
Ao'b_F•
STE,�r
AGENTS : AGENTS I
OURAGENTS niagnirment Parnl➢el Bibles
dY 6%49L651 withrow'epopular"History,
Canada, Bough's 'Platform Echoes," Dorchester's
"Liquor Problem," Sam P. Tones' "Living Words,'
"The Cottage Physician," (gyp fin
Goughe "Snnligbt and MAKE MONEY
Shadow," "Mother, Home and Heaven," eto. Popo
tar Books !Liberal Terme 1. Write for oirculara, terms
etc, to WILLIAM BRIeos, Publieher, Toronto.