The Exeter Times, 1893-1-19, Page 2To Preserve
The riehtless, color, and beauty of the
Nair, Sale s,.estest care is necessary,.
meal berm 1%;:ing done by the use of
'worthless dressings. To be sur.: of
baying a first-class article, ask your
druggist or perfumer for Ayers flair
tigcr. It is absolutely superior to any
other preparation of the kind. It
restores the original color and felines;
to hair which has become thin, faded,
or gray._ It keeps the scalp cool, moist,
and free from dandruff. It heals itoning
hunters, prevents baldness, andimparts
to
THE AIR
a silken texture and lasting fragrance.
No toilet can be considered complete
without this most popular and e.ega:it
elan hair -dressings.
"My hair began turning gray and
failing out when I was about as years of
age. I have lately been using Ayer's.
Hair Vigor, and it is causing a aew
growth of hair of the natural color."---
I2. J. Lowry, Jones Prairie, Texas.
" Over a year ago 1 bad a severe
fever, and when I recovered, my hair
began to fall out, and what little remain..
ed turned gray. I tried various remedies,
b.
'i at last began
is 1 1
but � outsuccess,
1 1111te
USE
Ayer's Hair Vigor, and now my hair is
growing rapidly and is restored to its
anginal color." --Mrs. Annie Collins,
Dighton, iliass.
I bate used Ayer's Hair Vigor for
nearly five years, and my hair is moist,
glossy, and in an excellent state of
preservation. I am forty veers old, and
leave ridden the plains for twenty-five
years."—Wm. Henry Ott, alias "Mus•
tang Bill;' Newcastle, Wyo.
Ayer's
Hair Vigor
Prepared by Dr. 3. C. Ayer S;. Ce.. Lea .. -1:, dais.
Satz: Ly rugs s s Everywhere.
THE NITRATE II KG•
k 'Visit to John IF. Nortle, the ]Richest man
,
la
No one knows just how much John T.
North is worth. I doubt if he knows hire.
self. The has ventures in nearly every part
of the world and his nitrate fields are bet.
ter than any gold mine in the world. One
of his most intUnate friends told me in Lon-
don that his expenses every year outside of
his business are more than $500,000, and his
income is supposed to be more than $5,000,-
000 a year. He has cement works in Bel-
gium which bring him iu a fortune and
which were until he saw them nothing.bat
a brick yard. Happening to pass by them
in a trip to the continent he noticed the
clay, saw that it was of a superior quality'
and at once bought the whole field. He has
now in this place inunense works which em-
ploy thousands of hands, and he has put up
for his employes sanitary cottages, and has
built churches and schools for them. He
has never had a strike, and his people all
like him. He has other works of various
kakis in England, and his investments in
Chili extend to guano beds as well as nit-
rate folds. During the war between Chili
and Peru his fortune was fora time, in dan.
ger, and Bahmaceda was to a large extent
his a;treut. It was he that helped the rebels,
and it was his money that bought the arils
that carried on the' war. Had he failed he
would bave lost millions, and as he saw the
silver go by bashels he never blinked his
eye, but put up again and again until he
won. He is, in fact, a big gambler, and his
stakes are millions.
During my stay at Col. North's house I
took lunch with him, and the family, and
after this, chatted with bine far some time
about himself and other ]natters. He is
now about 50 years old and he weighs, I
judge, about 100 pounds. Re is about 5
feet 10 inches high. His eyes are blue, his
face is rosy, and his bair and whiskers are
of a rich red hue. He puts on no airs what-
ever, and as he walked around the grounds
be covered bis head with an old straw bat
which looked somewhat out of place among
his magnificent surroundings. He is ani
Englishman by birth, and he comes from
Yorkshire. His father was a coal merebant
who brought him up as a civil engineer,
and who put him into business as soon as
he was able to do anything for himself. He
was connected as an employe in a steate.
plow works when his father died, leaving
about $30,000 to his family. Young North,
though he was then married,1, at once
gave
ve
aand
his other,
s` share ofthe estate to in
Iii a o
shortly after this he went to South America
with his wife to seek his fortune. He went
here as a civil engineer and soon saw the,
mmense possibilities for fortune -making
Asiaexist on the western coast of that
ouutry. He invested in a ember of differ-
nt speculations and nude money, He thou
vNan to buy nitrate, and kept buying from
time to time until be at last got control of
the biggest nitrate fields in the world. He
made millions by buying guano, and it
eems that everything he touches turns
to gold.
C711FS w. FIELD ON NORTH.
rhe Widsons Bank '
(CHA TIERED/IYPARLIAMENT, 1850
'aid up Capital ... .,. $2,000.0t0
test Fundi .., .,. ... 1,100,01:9
It`eadOince, Montreal,.
F. WOLrERSTANTIits;11ASMee ...
Os crn.tL1f.LNAc EIL
'licher advanced to geed farmerson their own
oto with one or more enderser at 7 per oont.
er annum.
Exeter Branch,
/pen overylawful day, from 10 a.m,to 3 p,ze.
Sr1.Tl'RDA.YS,10 a.m. to 1 p.m,
Current rtes of interest allowed en deposit
N. DYER ECURDON,
Sub -Manager.
Is AIM
Worth $20
oras 43
DICE'S
I1Lt1CID
PtR;PIER,
50o
DICK'S
II�.1�STBIi
DICK'S
OI25uENT
LINIMENT
"c.
& SOUND
keeping over
PURI-
less food to
will sell better.
MEDICINES
and a
farm recipes
MONTREAL
"' x °` i
• t 4. - s �^
_t
,,
s e.
�� ay.
t t r`f
.r .t
ate
t
4'
"� ''• •
,tx t;
°`
IF HE IS NOT HEALTHY
Every animal than is worth
winter should have DICK'S BLOOD
FIER in the spring. It will take
keep thein incand tion They
B. horse wilt do more work.
DICE'S irn i and CATTLE
ANS VIZ ar6r IN THE tromp.
Send a postal card for full particulars,
book of valuable household and
wili be sent free,
DICK ti: CO. is 0 Box 482,
d92 ly Sold Everywhere.
tau n,• earned at ourntli line ofwerk,
rapidly and honorably. i0' those of
ONeither eex, 7auag sr old, and in their
own localiue,,rshereverthey lite, Any
ii99 one ran do the work. F..np• to /earn.
Ye tarnish everything We start yon. No risk. You ran delete
your spire moments, or all your time 10 the tsork. 1 his is an
entirely new lend,und primes wonderful enreess to every worker.
Sesinnere are earning from 8-5 to 850 per week sad upwards,
and more aftera little exrrerienee. tv a ens furnish yon the em-
prloymeot and teach you FUER. No spare to explain here. Fen
7nfarmatton FREE,. TflUE d; CO., ACatlin, IIAi11i.
NERVE
'E., SNS
,o
solutely cures the most
raaArraxsrs baro failed
gists at 31 per package,
receipt of price by addressing
CO., Toronto, Ont.
NERVE BEAN. S are a new dis-
covery that cure the worst eases of
Nervous Debility, Lost Vigor and
Failing Manhood; restores the
weakness of body or mind caused
by over -work, or the errors or ex -
ceases of youth. This Remedy ab-
obstinate cases when all other
'mato relieve. old by drug,
or six for 35, or sent by mail on
THE JAMES MEDICINE
--
write for pamphlet. Sold in—
HAVE you
HAVE
G
bs
�p
t A
so
S1
1,--
t'l.. c� l 1
wrr�b
ad•
�. ;
scavengers
system.
is
Nog-
kidney
result
Blood, 6
Liver
and
most dan-
of all;
Disease, 15
and 3
above
cannot
where e
Kidner
are. used.'
"Back
means the .rid-
nays are in
trouble.' Dodd's
Kidney Pills give
prompt relief."
76 per cent,
o disease is
first caused by
disordered frid-
r";eys.
"Might as well
tly to have a
healthy city
w, thn:it sewer-
age, ris good
glen -the
herclth .l 1
kidneys are
clogged, thsi are
.i
the
of the
"Delay
dangerous,
I cc ted
troubles
fn Bari
Dyspepsia,
Complaint,
. the .
gerous:
Blights
Diabetes
propel'."
"The
diseases
exist
Dodd's
f els
Soil beat dceese ar acS t.by nsail on receipt
of ri la -tom` 4'n^afa. per i, r;t 0t nix fo ,0a. o.
p rs:o.�, SYr. L A. r n +.,, & Co.i:oToronto, Writefor
book "d.e i.idda'ey 2allr.
CANADA O'O'E f1O.i E,
ere Oltavaeteriaties or. the Country A.
Oonisnonwealth or Homes and Band -
The patriotie Cauadianneed never be a
loss for a theme of praise to his own coun-
try and people.. In all the attributes and
features of honest patriotic pride Canada
and the Canadians are wealthy, indeed,both
by heritage and merit. This land, broad
and beautiful beyond comparison with any
other home of nationality or citizenship in
the world, is conspicuous in equal degree
for public welfare and security, by reason
of wise laws and free institutions.
Calladais pre-eminently a common -wealth
of homes and families, The same persever-
ing purpose which inspired our forefathers
to cling to the laud when in its native state
it yielded little else than promise, is still
attracting to the provinces east and west
loyal and devoted .nen and women, who, in
the old laud with its regularly recurring
years of distress and depression or amid the
crude, semi -barbarous democracy which
rules the nation to the south of us, cannot
find the means or advantages for the make
ing of permanent homes and the rearing of
happy and virtuous families. These means
and advantages enhanced by a common pub-
lic spirit which recognizes in the fullest
religious freedom, the most intelligent evi-
dence of Christianity, are the Attributes of
Canadian patriotic pride.
It is not necessary to tell Canadians who
have travelled abroad and seen the world
that no climate is healthier than theirs; no
skies fairer. And this is why it is good for
all Canadian men and women to see other
iv tat
f first cultivated axed h
countries after having r
c intimacy c and
undying love of .tame which in uta y
youthful associations alone can develop.
Our boys and girls enjoy the highest facili-
ties in sohopls and colleges for the acquire-
ment of book knowledge, but far higher
than these are the incentives here given to
the study of nature in all her wonderful as-
pects on land and water. A contributor to a
Scottish journal recently stated that the
number of artists in Canada,, is out of all rea-
seeable proportion to the possille patronage
of Oa population. That writer oh%iously
did not understand why artists are so many.'
The grandeur and diversity of Canadian
scenery order it thus, irrespeotive not
only of patronago, but of livelihood,
'lam Canadian artist does not go abroad
to other lands looking for work for brush
or pencil, even though that may mean pat•
renege, if he is a true lover of country and
r
'an artists are
As rule o anadn tt
nature. a our 4
patriotic and therefore tisoy aro legion. Nor
can it be otherwise in a land of absolutely
infinite attraction from the ocean Slope of
the Pacific across the snow•caaped peaks
and torrent torn' defiles of the Rockies,
across the broad and fruitful prairies, across
the iron walled tide of Superior, across the
cultivated farms of Outariound Quebec, and
into that strange survival of thepoetic past
tlleunchangiagArcadia. by theAtlantio. Can-
ada
is pre-eminentlya land of charm for the
artist. When its charms have proved them-
selves as potent with native and foreign
trevallers Canada will then be the home of
art. Alt in good time.
Both m winter and summer Canada is a
mese desirable country to live in. lts dry,
healthy and invigorating climate is rivalled
by a soil which yields every fair fruit,
food providing crop and product of the
sea found between the 40th and 60th
parallels. Its aide to physical and intellect-
ual vigor it yields to all—even to the crab-
bed and gloomy pessimist in search of an
asylum from despair itself. Our winters
never bring discomfort, not to speak of
famine, whose existence is a periodical and
often an annual experience elsewhere. The
fogs, rains and east winds of Britain, and
blizzards of the United. States are alike.
unknown to us. Our winters, on the
contrary, mean business activity and'
boumdieglife. In city, town and country
our people are well clad, well fed, and
are always found to enjoy the healthy
sports and worthy amusements of well-
to-do civilization. Some of God's poor
we of course have with us, but whether
these are poor by fault or misfortune they
are, we believe comparatively speaking, few.
In respect to the consumption to food there
are no classes in this country. All fare
pretty much alike. It is within the reach
of the man fu receipt of the most modest',
wages paid to labor to provide his table
with food eoual, if not better, than the
middle class people of England eat. It is
hardly necessary to say that any compari-
sons with our neighbors, the Americans,
who eat nothing but fried meat and pastry,
would be invidious. Here, thanks to our
traditions, we know the economic value of
frugality and good digestion.
The Canadian people have so often been
described as generous hospitable and liberal
minded that there can be little egotism iu
taking to heart the good things that are
said by others. Visitors are attracted as
much by the frank and friendly character'of
the people as by our genial skies and smiling
landscapes. Perhaps the skies and the soil
influence the national character; of course
they do. But nature's gifts ought to be ap-
preciated and preserved, and for that reason
Canadians would do well to make known
more to all men their honest, rightful pride
in their native land. Its soil, climate and
institutions are unequalled all the world
over. Love of liberty and respect for law
are characteristic of the people one and all.
In no other land is lite as pleasant all the
year round. Long may she live.
Shortly before Cyrus W. Field's death, in
an interview with him I asked hien if lie
thought we would ever have a billionaire in
I world. Ire replied :
"I don't know, A billion dollars is a
I sum than the human mind can grasp,
but when we have tt man like Col. John
Thomas North, with the wonderful re-
sources of a continent at his back, you can't
tell what will happen. I don't know what
el. North is worth, but I am tole. that bis
possessions run high into the tens of mil -
one."
While I was in London I heard a number
of estimates of Cola North's fortune, and
the most conservative of them put him at
about £30,0110,000, or $100;000.000. He is
wonderfully systematio in his work, and he
manages this immense sum with greater
ease than Jay Gould did his vast fortune,
Tie has an office in Loudon and ho conies
into this every day. Ile has different sec-
retaries for the different branehes of his
business, and he gets reports from these
every morning and rapidly directs what is
to be done concerning them. With respcot
fo his South American investments, be uses
the cable very freeiy, and on some days he
spends what would be a big annual salary
for an ordinary man in telegraphing dis-
patches. Be is not at all afraid of spending
money and he believes in doing everything
on a grand scale.
I talked with Col. North about the condi-
tion of times the world aver, and he told
me that the outlook for good times in the
near future was by no means good. Said
he:
"There is plenty of money in the world,
but the people are afraid to invest, and they
keep it in their stockings or in the safe de-
posit boxes. They are buying safe securi-
ties which bring no interest, and the out-
look for speculative enterprises is bad. The
trouble which followed the financial crash
at the time of the Baring Bros.' losses is
still felt.
,r What do you think, Col. North, of the
chances ofyoung men who want to make
fortunes? Are they as good now as they
have been in the past?"
"I can't say as to that," replied Col.
North. "This is a big world and its re-
sources bave as yet hardly been tapped.
Take South America. It is a vast contin-
ent, a great part of which is filled with gold
and silver, and will in the future add many
hundred millions to the wealth of the world.
I believe that it is a good field for invest-
ment to -day, and the young man who will
learn the Spanish language, and who has
the right spirit of enterprise and business
capacity, can do well there."
A Favorable Showing.
In a recent article in the Empire on
" The importance of Toronto," the follow-
ing a tmparison of our population. gad trade
returns is made ;—
Toronto
-Torouto lethe
ie cornrercia1 nerve centreof
it great Province. ere w Ha concentrate the
railways which radiate thence to all parts
of Ontario and the Dominion. Here is the
great t distributiug no
tt for Ontario's
pur-
chase of foreign products, and a distribut-
ing point much more importantortant than many
American cities which have three, fotir or
five times tho population of the Queen City.
This fact is illustrated by the following
table :
Cities. Population. Imports:
Toronto.,...,.... 183,000 $19,343,000
Baltimore......... 434,000 13,140,000
Buffalo , 255,000 5,700,000
Detroit.....,..... 205,000 3,127,000
Louisville . 161 000 420,000
New Orleans: •.... 242,000 14,600,000
Pittsburg, 238,000 596,000
Chicago1,000,000 13,590,000
In the streets leading to the quays at
Alexandria, Egypt, alinest every other shop
is a drinking -bar, where the most poisonous
and maddening compounds --a glass or two
of which will often produce insensibility --
aro retailed. 'Unfortunately these places
are largely patronized by English sailors.
THOSE SCHEMING CANADIANS.
President lltu+rison Said to be rrepariisg
at Iretiveranee on the worts of our
Ainil+lrar•s to SecureAmerican Business.
A llfashington despatch. to tlheNew York
times says Secretary Foster went from
the treasury yesterday afternoon to the
White house, armed with a report prepared
by Assistant Secretary Spaulding, on the
questiouof railroad traffic between the Untie
ed States and Canada under the consular
sealing law of 1804. The President and the
secretary went over the whole subject with'
great care, seeking for a remedy that may
be applied to remove the irritation which
has been provoked among the members of
American railways by the efforts of Cana.
dian railways to turn the law to their own
account by depriving the railways of much
business to which they consider themselves
entitled, and which they feel that the law
is enabling Canadians to rob them of.
The probability is that the President will
recommend to Congress the modification of
the law of 1864. To say that it cannot be
enforced because of the lack of officers at
the border would be a verybeggarly excuse,
and one that would sound ridiculous in view
of the acknowledgement that there has
never been the loss of a cent of revenue
through the sealing law. The expectation
is that the President will recommend that
sealing in the United States to points in the
United States through Canada be with.
drawn, It might bo amended so as to per -
nut shipment to the line of the country
where the goods are to be received, thus
making it necessary to examine the cargoes
and perhaps to reload them, That incon-
woulddo much
veuienoe and expense m
no en-
joyedovercoming the advantagesw
by the subsidized roads of Canada,
and give the American roads a °hence to re•
gain the traffic they say they have lost.
A Miser With a Vengeance.
FROM TI1R P.Ernnr'ICAti ORGAN
The New York Tribune's Washington
despatch says
aeoretary Foster will send to tho Presi-
dent a report on the shipment of goods over
Canadian transportation lines to and from
the United. Stites, as directed by a House
resolution :at the last session. The " consu-
lar seal" traffic is also discussed in the re-
port It is understood that the investiga-
tion shows that the consular seal bnsiuess
is rapidly growing hi bulk and value. Pres-
ident Harrison, it is said, will report the
facts to the House, and /laving done this
leave to Cougress the duty of changing ex-
isting regulations. Although he has decid-
ed views upon this subject, and the law gives
the executive authority to impose new regu-
latlong or amend the old ones, the President
has had no intention of doing more than to
call theattentinn of Congress tothecondition
of affairs, Ho was the more inclined to
this eom'ses it is said, by the fact that the
Canadian Pacificrailroad and its connecting
steamship line from Victoria to San Fran-
cisco secured its present privileges in regard
to United States business by proclamation
issued by President Cleveland.
Secretary Foster has given the subject
much study and thinks that it would nibs
wisp to interfere with the consular seal
traffic originating in the United States and
destined to paints in the United Status.
Traffic originating outside this country and
dastinod to points within it might well be
subjected to examination at the border.
The quadruplicate invoices required by the
treasury regulations announced in July,
1801, have, so the agents report, absolutely
stopped all smuggling so that the revenues
of the Government suffer nothing from the
consular seal system.
A FAKE EXPOSED.
And an Alleged Toronto :!hitt Likely to
Have Ills Business Spoiled.
A Chicago despatch says :—Tho LtCrys•
tai Fluid" fake bnsiuess has been exposed
by the police, and a number of arrests an d
prosecutions will follow. It is claimed by
the manufacturers that the fluid is an ex-
cellent preparation which will vitalize
photographs, that is to say, if properly ap-
plied
-plied it will color a picture so naturally
that were it not for its reduced size it might
be taken by the unsophisticated for au ex-
act image of the original. The originator
of the scheme is a crook known by the
name of Michael H. Hoben, who has
cogent reasons for not returning to his
former haunts in Toronto, Canada. lEoben
every morning causes to be inserted in
Chicago newspapers a notice advertising for
young men for light indoor employment.
Applicants are promised salaries of .512 per
week, and are given orders upon one of the
other offices owned by Hoorn for ma-
terial costing from w2 to $5, which the ap-
plicants are told it is necessary for thein to
have to begin their work. The cost of the
outfit does not exceed 47 cents. Dupes
procure the material and return to the office
at which they have been engaged, and the
individual in charge then tells them how to
go to work. Without exception the new
employes are found to be hopelessly stupid
and incompetent, and are immediately dis-
charged. Scores of persons are thus robbed
by the swindlers every week. Some victims
go to the police and swear out warrants for
the, arrest of the crooks, and when this is
done the money lost is usually refunded, ont
condition that legal proceedings be dropped.
As most of tine dupes are in poor circum-
stances, this act never fails to stop prose-
cutions. At the central police station
Hoban is well known, and upon the police
records there are scores of cases against
hien which have been dropped for want of
procecution.
Here is a story of a miser told by the
Roumanian papers, and sent by a Vienna
correspondent. A Greek died in the small
town of Caracal, having always lived on the
alms of his compatriots. Before dying he
made his wife swear that she would bury
him in the dirty old overcoat wbich he wore
everyday, The poor woman had to ask
the Greeks of Caracal to help her to provide
the costs of the funeral. A good-hearted
Greets went to see her in her affliction, and,
pointing to the body, said he would give
her a better coat to bury the man in. Then
she told him of the man's last wish. The
Greek, whose suspicions were awakened,
told her that she e should. certainly ot part
with the body until she had well examined
the coat,
for there must be some particular
reason for the request. The widow unpick-
ed the lining of the overcoat and found 35,-
000 francs in bank notes which the miser
wished to take into the grave with him,
Here is the death rate of the world :
Every minute 62:
Every hour 3,730.
Every day 91,554.
Every year 33,333,333.
The
Compagnie Tetesatlentilue
again brou hforward the question of liggh
hats-
ing the Atlantic route from Ireleucl to New-
foundland. " It is proposed to moor ten
powerful floating lights 200 smiles .part,
and connected by electric gables,
To such an extent does religion prevail in
Cxonoetoa; in the South Seas, _ that every
man, woman. or ohild on that that
who
does not go to church at least three times
a week is liable to be arrested and fined,
the fine going to the Ding.
•
EgagorremamigsgsgsfammENEEMIENIESISINIENILRIBI
for infants and Children.
IDEEMMOMMEMMMEMInismeaME
"castoriais sowelladaptedto childrenthat
I recommend itis superior to anypk'lscriptian
known to rho." M. A. Alxassn, M. D.,
111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
"Tho use of `Casteria, is so universal and
its merits so well known that it seems a work
of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the
intelligent families who do not keep Castoria
within easyreach.
Climes Marv, A.D.,
New York City.
Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church,
Caatoria cures CoIie, Constipation,
Sour stomach, Diarnccsa. Eructation
Kills Woornls, gives sleep, and promeetee di-
rWt itliout injurious medieatioa� ..,.--
"For several yew I have recommended.d.
your Castoria, and shall always continue
to
do ssoo e it has invariably produced beneficial
do
EDWIN V. PANNE%. M. D.,
"The Winthrop," 12511t Street and 7th Ave.,
Neer York City.
Ton Csxatmo COMPANY, 77 31MumoAr STREET, NEW TONIC,'
cilE CODED 8N 20 ItUNUTES f�Y
Alpha�a
OR MONEY REFUNDED. Purely Vegetable, Perfectly Harmless
and Pleasant to Take. ForSale by all Druggists. PRICE 25 Cts
AMMLESUMMISIIIES
McCOLL BROS. (Sc COMPANY
TORONTO.
Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in the following .
specialties
Larcline
Cylinder
trCar Eangiri.e
TRY OUR LARDINE MACHINE QI]
AND YOU WILL USE NO OTHER.
For Sale 33y BISSET'T BROS. Exeter, Ont,
OILS
Wool
spa
s7^
t;31'�
Eureka.
The Fate of Salt Lake City.
Salt Lake City, so long the abode of the
late Brigham Young and his numerous
wives, is doomed to be destroyed by an
earthquake. This at all events is the opinion
of Mr. G. K. Gilbert, one of the best known
American geologists, The event may not
occur for five, fifty, or five thousand years,
but sooner or later it mast, it appears, be
the scene of a „rent seismic upheaval. The
danger seems to Mr. Gilbert to be sufficient-
ly imminent for hnto urge upon dwellers
in the capital of Mormonism to build.
° earthquake -proof houses." Such struc-
tures, be of enor-
mous
require
ver, would turns, hone , w i
mous strength; and unless the tenets of
Mormonism demand that its votaries must
live ted die in Salt Lake City, Mr. Gilbert
would bave done bettor to advise the saints
and all their friends to remove to some re-
gion which is less likely to bo visited by
terrestrial disturbance. The city is situa-
ted at the foot of the steep western slope of
the Wahsatch Mountains, the precipitous-
ness of which is duo to the shifting of the
geologic level of the district. ' The !'shift,'•':
causes what in geology is known as a fault.
It here °emirs with terrific jerks, raising the
mountain slope on each occasion by many
feet. By contrasting the resultingledgeswi th
other parts of p.he country some idea is ob•
t5ined of the frequency of the movements,
Salt Lake City, unfortunately, lies.. on a
place which has boon longest undisturbed,
said hence according to the geologists, its
turn conies next.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorial
i 0 T rev us[et. UDE IN'pAITEMIE6• ,roe,, CITY WILL. CU 40 YOU ANO K[SY YOU IN t,6IAF414•
CAKE
1ULL RAOTIOUL0 05, JUDD ei.corR00 tO CO., p WCLL`NCTO'N• TNG[T CAOT.. TORONTO. OCNFDA. �J
EXETER LUMBER YAB
The undersigned wishes to inform the Public in general that It
keeps constantly in stock all kinds of
BUILDING MATERIAL
Dreezed. or 'CTasdres Bold..
PINE AND HEMLOCK SH NGLES A SPECIALTY
900,000 XX and XXX Pine and Cedar Shingles now ill
stock. A. call solicited and satisfaction guarantod.
JAMES VT
Dr. LaROB'S COTTON ROOT PILLS%
Safe and absolutely pure. Most powerful Female Regulator
known. The only safe, sure and reliable pill for sale. Ladies
ask druggists for LaBoe's Star and Crescent Brand. Take no
ao otherkind. Beware of cheap imitations, as they are danger-
ous. Mold by all reliable druggists. Postpaid on receipt of price
AMERICAN PILL CO., Detroit, Mich.
•cl" tag V°S ,o • br Boa
2'd' bcQ �P�'C�
• ,S¢o raft O 9" 01).
5r Q4i .G�e,
G 5 5 dp
°tt a S ~� • of
6e'5 • ofi e• e5
P. eCv j g?+ G
•5° \e a� .7 y
a w° �°°�
fic9ofie' o ��.
L ¢, it 5 Q6
r rS is re
ti
9'e410 at ° \e,
Os 7
ti
' q�'' tion
riktcsSr :p94 61k oss,ae'
gp e oto gee tutee oa�C'..,.
$ l 0 v
•`'j• • 4
.
ti �.
4 X, t �b
.c. manufactured
only by Thomas
Rollaway,
NewOxford Street,
,r
1 Tato Oxford
Street,
London.
' look to the Label oh the Boxes and ,Pots
q�- purchasers. should.4
spurious.
Lend
on
they
are
Oxford Street,p
not
Oxfo,
is
d
cess 1
the ad533,
I
If
Murder of a.Banker at Odessa.
Information has been received of e brutal
murder committed at Odessa, the victim
being a: rich banker naked Moses Lipschitz.
No arrests have been made, but the police
have ascertained that a band of ten armed
and disguised robbers entered' Lipschitz's
house on Thursday night and killed the
banker as he lav in bed. They then ran-
sackod the prciiiises m a very leisurely
manner, and ultimately made toocl their es.
cape with v largo quantityof jewellery and
1
money. ''.Phe pollee are said to have a clue,
but as the victim was a Jew their zeal is not
likely to be excessive.
a11EAQ"I,IAKER
NEVER FAILS 70 CIYE SATISFACTION
VCR /ALS WI ALL .IMAM -RCA
CURES WHERE ALL E SE FAILS.
itestCough Syrtrls. `1estesGood..Me
I1r time. Sold b`E'• druggists.
CII
•
.
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