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'REEXETER, ADVOCATE.
THURSDAY. DEC.. 25, 1895,
Tho 'Week's Colnrercial Sam/nary.
"There is a further aeolino in dressed
hogs and products.
Canada's commercial failures last week
number, , against 49 a year ago.
The. world's visible supply of wheat
imereased 475,000 bushels during the past
week.
The condition of winter wheat in the
19 nit8d States on December 1 is placed at
&L4 per cent,, which is favorable to better
prices.
The movement of grain shows a slight
increase, but priees are heavy and
weaker for wheat and oats. The outlook
for better priees is not very good,
Speculation in Canadian securities is
fairly active, and the tone of the mar-
ket strong, Cable continues to be e
eavarite, .Ban.: stocks are stronger.
The earnings of the Canadian Pacific
f railway for -the first week of December
allow an increase of 870,000 as compared
with corresponding week of last year.
Receipts of hogs are large, and con-
sidering the fact that lard. and ribs are
lower now in Chicago than for twenty-
eight years, it is not likely that our
farmers are making much from this
branch of industry.
An improvement in general trade at
Toronto has taken place during the week.
The wintry weather has stimulated the
aienand for heavy dry goods and furs,
and the holiday trade has increased
.;
some. A. large number of houses are en -
aged in taking stock, and it is thought
,fhat results will be fairly satisfactory
i 1 for the year. Prices the past six. months
have been firm at advancing rates, par-
ticularly in cottons, woolens and silks,
and one would naturally suppose that
profits would be greater in consequence.
is
Inflammatory Rheumatism. --Mr S.
Ackerman, commercial traveler, Belle-
ville, writes : "Some years ago I used.
Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil for inflamma-
tory rheumatism, and three bottles
effected a complete cure. I was the
vrhole of one summer unable to move
without crutches, and every movement
e 'sensed excruciating pains. I am now
ant on. the road and exposed to all kinds
.,. of weather, but have never been troubled
with rheumatism since. I, however,
eep a bottle of Dr. Thomas' Oil on. hand,
on I always recommend it to others, as
did so much for me."
Mere and There.
The feminine element is terribly in
excess in Germany. the women exceed -
ins the men by more than 1,000,000, ac -
wording to the latest statistics.
Mme. Sarah Bernhardt's last gown
east $7,500. It is decorated with dia-
monds and turquoises, and the skins of
200 ermines were required to lino the
rain,
Sympathy, remarks the New York
World, may become a nuisance, as was
proved by the twelve young women who
fainted in a New Haven factory the other
day at the example of ane of their num-
ber,
Mrs. Mary Woolledge advertises in the
Versailles (ill.d.) Leader, that "for good
and sufficient reasons I hereby give
notice to the public that I will not be
responsible for any debt contracted by
any husband, Adam Woolledge."
TOPICS (T....A WEEK.
The XeaP tt'tant 7t:veants is a 7Ce w Words For
Balsa. Reactors,
Little Princess Olga will be deprived
of the title of Czarevna as long as her
Uncle George lives, as•Nicholas Il, issued
a ukase when he succeeded his father,
settlinee the title of Czarewitch upon his
brother until a son should be born to the
Czar.
CANADIAN.
Welland canal closed Friday.
Voting in West Huron by-eleotlon
takes pante January 14.
Mr G. J.Chauuooy, postmaster of Mark-
ham, Out., died on Saturday, urea. 47.
Action is to be taken against 47 Hamil-
ton cigar dealers for selling cigarettes to.
minors.
Mr. A. M. Brown, a pioneer citizen of
Winnipeg, died an Saturday .night, after a
long illness.
M. C. ,Cerneron has definitely accepted
the Liberal nomination for the Commons
in West Huron:
Mr. Claude V. Currie, a farmer, of Nee-
pawa was fatally wounded on Saturday
while cleaning his rifle.
Mr. Gavin Ross has been ohosen Patron
candidate fur Emerson, Man,, for the
hl•auitoba Legislature.
The warden and keeper of the Rockford,
Ill., insane asylum are charged with brut-
ality towards inmates.
Charles Kingsley's niece, who has been
exploring the west coast of Africa, has
reached the Cross river in safety, after
laving ascended to the top of the Cam-
eroons mountain, which is 13,000 feet
high. She is the first woman to accom-
plish this feat.
Swiss brides in several of the moun-
tain cantons receive a most prosaic wed-
ding gift—a Gruyere cheese. This cheese
is made by- the bride's friends, and is
placed in the new house under a glass
ease. It is never eaten, but the record
of each important family event is mark-
ed on the rind.
It is always better to take troubles
pleasantly. Susan Wright, a 15 -year-old
negro girl of Suffolk, Va., was supposed
to be dead, and her body was placed in a
coffin and taken to another town for
burial. When the lid was opened the
,girl sat up and began to laugh, She
said she, coned hear everything that was
said around her, and,, :anew that she was
to be buried, bee could not move or
speak. Then ,the got up and went home
-with her p•ents. 'The effect upon the
company of ,egroes of her sudden move-
ment itt oe ,,ofan was panicky in the
extreme
Samuel Gonpers was elected president
of the American Federation of Labor on
Saturday over John McBride.
The order -in -council, promoting Capt.
T. B. D. Evans to be major in the Royal
Canadian Dragoons has been passed.
Lord Aberdeen has declined his patron-
age to the ball to be held on New Year's
eve in aid of the Childron's hospital in Ot-
tawa,
The strike of Italian laborers at Hamil-
ton was coded Friday by the contractors
agreeing to give the advance asked fox by
the men.
The application made recently by the
State of Washington for salmon fry from
the British. Columbia hatcheries will not
bo acted upon.
The first step towards the re -erection of
the Grand Trunk oar shops are being taken
in London, and tenders for construction
will soon be called for,
Mr. Albert Hudson has announced him-
self the Labor candidate for Ottawa,
whether or not he receives the nomination
of the Labor Convention.
Mr. E. G. Prior, M. P. for Victoria, B.
C., has been offered and accepted aseat in
the Cabinet at Ottawa, It is not known
yet what bis portfolio will be.
A Canadian girl named Elia Bennett,
16 years of ago, asserts that while posing
for William Patterson, a Buffalo artist, he
assaulted her. Patterson is under arrest.
The Inland Revenue for the Dominion
of Canada accrued during the month of
November amounted to $736,511, as
against $744,202 for the same month last
year.
An approximate statement of the liabil-
ities and assets in the estate of Samson,
Kennedy and Co., of Toronto, wholesale
dry goods merchants, has been prepared
by the receiver, and shows a deficit of
about $200, 000.
Mrs. Shortie, the mother of the con-
demned Valleyf!eld murderer, who is now
awating execution at Beauharnois, had a
private interview with Lady Aberdeen in
Ottawa, and, it is understood, made an
appeal for her son's life.
Mr. Montpetit, the gaoler of the Beau-
harnole prison, where Shortis Is waiting
execution on January 3rd, says that the
murderer eats and steeps well, and does
not appear to have any feeling on the sub-
ject of his approaching death.
Attorney -General Sif von, of Manitoba,
left Montreal for home Tuesday morning.
In a few remarks that he made prior to
leaving he conveyed the impression that
the Manitoba Government would not re-
oede from the position it had taken on the
School question.
The local militiamen in Ottawa who
contributed to the Hayhurst testimonial
fund, inaugurated with permission of the
Militia Department, have received from
Lieut. -Col. Prior, M. P,, treasurer of the
fund, notice that their subscriptions will
be returned, as the idea has been abandon-
ed, owing to the look of support experi-
enced.
A lumber Damp in Hardy township, on
the French river, is suffering from an out-
break of diphtheria. The care of the sick
men has been forced upon the municipal-
ity of Powassau, and a supply of anti-
toxins has been sent, with instructions to
take every possible precaution to see that
the men are not dispersed and keep the
disease central.
/' From the jaws of Death,
Du`-ing the past few days two conmuni-
satinees bave come to us from two men
who have taken the cure for liquor addic-
t;,on at Lakeburst Instit ute, Oakville, The
game grateful tribute is paid to the treat-
ment in each case, and in each letter the
belief Is expressed that the writer has
been rescued .from anearly grave—a
drunkard's grave. Such iebtets as these
are frequently received by us. The senti-
ments they contain are variod,but they all
agree that the Lakehurst Institute has
saved their lives. In very many of these
easesthese statements are literal facts, all
hope of recovery had been abandoned, and
a trip to Oakville Was the forlorn hope.
With what trepidation their cases were
undertaken by us, with what anxiety their
progress towards recovery was watched,
and with what gratif!oation the successful
results were attained, are fiats which will
be long telnemberod by ourselves, by the
patients: end by their friends. Lakchurst
treatment and successful results are sy-
atanymens terms. Toronto office, 28 Thank
of Commerce Building. 'Phone 1163.
Cost of English tvaarsh1ps.
• leach of the English warships of the
1t'ingitifleont °lass east about $5,000,000.
They wiegh almost 14,5)00 tons, of watch
3,000 tons Is armor. Some of the armor
plates cost as much as $10,000 each, and
the total expenditure of armor piates'ag-
gregates 1,600,000 each vessel. Over 1,-
3ia0,04)0 rivets are used 10 different parts
sof the vossels,
The New York housesmiths' strike,
which has stopped warn un 18 of the larg-
est buildings Por nearly a mouth, willeud
toolaye
A n electric car was struck by a loeotno
tine and 'carried '100 feet at Toledo Fri-
day. Only one of the four passengers was
injured.
An orphan asylum near Milwaukee,
Wise was burned on Thursday and soiree.
200 metates were taken out of the burning
building in the midst of a blinding snow-
storm. Y..
Allan G. Thurman, `Columbus, Ohio,
the "Old Roman," as the Ohio Deniocrets
delighted to gall him, died Thursday. He
was eighty-two years of age.
The Chicago brewers, who are carrying
a large proportion of the salooie,.have a -
cided to reduce the number by sevonteo:i
hundred after the ist of January.. •a
Mare than six thousand tailors are loo
ed out in New :ori:, and an extensecal of
the trouble is threatened which ;Will de-
prive eighteen thousandgarment workers
of employment. • • +-
A. high board fence is being built
around the site of all that is left of the
Taimago tabernacle at Greene and Clinton
avenues, Brooklyn. Inside the fence is a
mass of broken briek and stone mad twist-
ed iron braces.
Fannie Linsley, of St. Joseph, Mo,, as
brought a suit for $25,000 against the Cen-
tral Medical College for having caused the
body of her husband to be removed from
his grave and need as a subject for ,dissoo-
tion in the college,
Attorney -General Childs, of St. Paul,
Minn., gives it as his opinion that under
the constitution of the United States it is
illegal to open a public sohool with public
worship, even if that devotion be restrict-
ed to saying the Lard's Prayer.
While Mrs. James Williams, of Jefferson-
ville, Ind., was dressing a turkey for dinner,
sire found in the bird's craw a diamond
solitaire the size of a pea. The fowl came
from a farm close to a pionio ground, and
it is thought that it picked up the jewel
near there.
Mr. Carlisle, Seoretary of the United
States Treastuy, yesterday brought down
the annual financial statement. The rev-
enue of the Government during the year
ended June 30th,1895, amounted to $390,-
378,203; the expenditures during the same
period aggregated $433,178,426; leavinga
deficit for the year of $43,805,223. For
the coming year Mr. Carlisle estimates a
surplus of seven million dollars,
A. A. Dicks, arraigned at the Toronto
Assizes on the charge of having murdered
his wife by setting fire to his house in St.
Helen's avenue on March 2nd last, was
discharged at the suggestion of Mr. B. B.
Osier, the Crown counsel, by the judge,
on the ground that the evidence did nob
establish murder. He is still held on the
charge of arson.
A fire in a large tenement building in
Winnipeg Monday destroyed the north half
of the four-story block. The other part
of the building was saved by a fire -wall.
It is feared that several of the tenants
have lost their lives, and three are now
known to have perished—Major Monica
ono of the oldest and best-known residents,
his wife and an unknown medical stu-
dent.
The Manitoba, Government issued its
last crop bulletin on Saturday. The total
wheat acreage is shown tohave been 1,-
14.0-,276, from which 31,775,038 bushels
vrere raised, an average of nearly e8 busb-
ies per. acre. The total grain crop was
61,38$,472 bushels, nearly four million
bushels in excess of the Government's esti-
mate. The total crop of roots and potatoes
was 6,397,645 bushels. Five thousand
hands from Ontario assisted in garnering
the crop. and wore paid $400,000 by the
farmers in wages.
In his vegetable pills Dr. Parmelee has
given to the world the fruits of long
scientific researoh in the whole realm of
medical science, combined -with new and
valuable discoveries never before known
to man. For delicate and debilitated
constitutions Parmelee's Pills act like a
charm. Taken in small doses, the effect
is both a tonic and a stimulant, mildly
exciting the emotions of the body, giv-
ing tong and vigor.
uNITi;D sTATlrs.
Navigation on the tipper Hudson has
closed
The Republioan National ,Convention
has beets fixed for St. Louis ire June.
United States Government locks at
Sault Ste. Marie were closed Friday.
Business faittcrea in the United Staten
this week number 1338, against 340 last
year,
Col. W. 0. Bradley, the first Republican
Governor of Kentucky, was inaugurated
at I3'tankfort Friday,
Worit will shortly be commenced iii the
Construction of six battleships for the
United States navy.
Mrs, E neline Westinghouse, Mother of
George Westinghouse, jr., the inventor,
diedat New York Friday.
Parmelee's Pi11s possess the power of
acting specifically upon the diseased
organs, stimulating to action the dor-
mant energies of the system, thereby re-
moving disease. In fact, so great is the
power of this medicine to cleanse and
purify, that disease of almost every name
and nature are driven from the body.
IUs. D. Carswell, Carswell, P.O., Ont.,
writes : "I have tried. Parmelee's Pills
and find them an excellent medicine, and
one that will sell."
FOREIGN.
The Spanish Ministry bas resigned.
Prime Minister Crispi is ill at Rome.
M. Adrian Lacheual has been elected
president of the Swiss republic.
The Governor-General of Puerto Rico
cabled to Spain for more troops.
The Victoria, Australia, Legislative
Council bas rejected the W onion's Suffrage
bill.
All Europeans in Madagascar have been
ordered to the capital as a measure of safe-
ty.
Dr. Herbert Taylor Reade, a Canadian,
has been appointed`surgeongeneral to the
Queen.
The Queen has engaged the Hotel Cim-.
fez at Nice, where she will visit in the
spring.
•
King Humbert has signed a deoree call-
ing into active service the soldiers of the
1878 class.
The British steamer Angerton, previous-
ly reported ashore near Gibraltar. has
been mated.
Vessels of the Russian Paeille fleet will
pass the winter in Iao Chan Bay, in the
Shantung peninsula.
British agriculturists are agitating the
formation of a party in parliament to look
after their interests.
Two hundred trains enter and leave
Moorgate street station, London, every
bonr throughout tbe day.
A small electric lamp in lieu of a bell is
now being used in some of the telephone
exchanges in England.
The funeral of George Augustus Sala
the English journalist and author took
place Friday at Brighton.
The Imperial Guards, decimated by dis-
ease in Formosa, and by casualties in the
field have returned to Tokio.
Sir Julian Gol.dsinid, M.P., for South
St. Pancras, one of the wealthiest Hebrews
in England, is dying at Brighton.
It is rumored that the European powers
have addressed to Japan a peremptory de-
mand for the evaor...tion of Corea.
Since his elevation to the post of Com-
mander -in -Chief, Lord Wolseley is in great
demand to assist at public functions.
Premier Crispi has refused to accept the
resignation5of Signor Caliendo, Minister
of justice, who desired to withdraw.
The Hamburg -American Steamship Co..
has decided to establish a regular line of
steamers between New York and Brazilian
ports.
The High Court of Madrid has refused
the demand for prosecution of Senor Bosch,
Minister of Public Works,for alleged brib-
ery.
The Italian Government has ordered in
England one hundred thousand tins of
preserved meats for the use of the Italian
troops in Abyssinia,
It is reported that the Prince of Wales
made a lot of money when the South Afri-
can market was at its height in Loudon a
few months ago.
The great ship -building strike and"iock-
out at Clyde and Belfast have been settled
by concessions made to the men by the
masters, who found that large orders for
tbe construction of foreign warships were
being given to other countries..
On the ground that she was hypnotised,
the St. Petersburg Court of Appeals has
reduced the sentence of death imposed
upon a girl to five years' Iniprisoninent,
the evidence showing that she was nom-
pletely under the control of the man Who
compelled her to poison her tether.
The Prince of Wales has given a church
to Babingley, which forms part of the ex-
treme portion of the royal estate of Sand-
ringbanl. Bebingley le reputed to be the
parish where the first Christian church
Was erected in least Anglia by St. Felix,
the Burgundian, about the year 600 A.D.
A despatch signed be a number of Ar
meniatis of Constantinople earl that Ar-
menia is at her last gasp. The work of
exterrninatian continues. The number of
people massacred machos one hundred
thousand, and half a "million of survivors
have taken to the rnountains and forests,
where they era feeding on barbs and roots.
r T�tr r r J���r7�-�```frr��t�l
RIGIT � IN OUR ,il1,1D8l..
NIR., S%CiF L •1x 01? THE Slia7TiPON
ROUSE ALL lt.JGW L AGAIN,
Au Iuterestlag Story.• -Seven Years Acute
Staining—Ins Disease Was Dlabetos---
Cui'ed by a Few Hexes of Dead's It iduey
fills.
Had this remarkable euro occurred a
thousand miles away, few here would
have bolievad it.
But when a jolly fellow like Dir. Ship-
man,
hipman, that anyone oitin talk to about his
case, gets cured, and, says so, who can
doubt it? '
Or who that is ailing and events to
learn how to recover wants to?
Mr. Shipman bas told his story in the
hope that it teas benefit others, and we
publish what he says:
"Yes, Iam willing to talk of my very
fortunate escape from a deadly form of
kiclney disease by using Dodd's Kidney
Pills,
"As the result of a tumble which se-
verely injured any back, I have been inose
or loss troubled with weak kidneys ever
since I was a boy.
"Especially for the past, seven years I
bave been a great sufferer, In spite of doc-
toring
ogtoring and modicines,I had been growing
worse and worse until about a year ago I
was advised by a friendly druggist to use
Dociil.'s Kidney Pills.
"Before commencing I had my urine
tested, winch disclosed the presence) of
diabetes, and I felly realized the danger
1• bad to face,
"In all I have used about ,one dozen
boxes, and from time to time while taking
the pills. I had further tests of the urine
made, until ono day &bout two months
ago I was assured that I was perfectly
cured.
'"I had found it dlfl'ioult at all times,
and when tired, utterly impossible to
stand eruct. There was a dull ache across
the loins, and occasionally sharp pains that
would awaken me from sleep.
"I was also ranch broken of my rest by
frequent necessity to get up.
s "I am now perfectly healthy and strong.
I eat, sleep and rest like a boy. Have
taken no other medicine or treatment than
Dodd's Kidney Pills, and I say it truly
and thankfully, my roeovory is entirely
due so their use."—Owen. Sound Times.
Let Us Hope Not.
Johnny—Where did baby come from,
maw
Mamma—From heaven. Ess um did,
dicldeu um ? Um's mummer's ownest
oozle-goozle daddle darlings, um is !
Johnny—Maw, is that the way people
talk in heaven ?
VICTIM OF A TERRIBLE COM-
PLAINT.
O➢i-
PL ANT.
Pala $3.00 a Day to a Doctor for Ten Days
;without Obtaining a 1Vtoment's Belief --
Ralf a Bottlelof South, Awericaan Kidney
Cure "Cs upletely Cured and Saved any
Life," Says a I'rominent Iluron County
Farmer.
Mr. James McBrine, of Jamestown, a
leading farmer of Huron county, writes:
—"Last spring 1 was attacked with a ter-
rible complaint, wbiah entirely laid. me
up and no doubt would bave caused my
death in a very short time. My kidneys
and bladder were so affected tbat my fam-
ily pbysioian had to visit me every -day to
take my urine from me as I had lost all
power of relieving myself He paid sever-
al visits at the expense of $3 each, and
would likely have continued, if a friend,
who himself had found relief in this man-
ner, had not advised me to try South
American Kidney Cure. My wife drove
22 miles to Wingham to procure a bottle,
The first dose relieved me and I only used
half a bottle, and was completely cured. I
will gladly reply to any inquiries of my
case, as $1 expended for this remedy saved
my life and $30 paid my doctor did not
even relieve me for a moment,
hessian Christmas Lore.
The Hessians contend that only those
whose consciences are clean can hear the
animals talk, and they tell this story in
confirmation of the assertion. Oae Christ-
mas Eve a farm servant went to confess-
ion by way of preparation for the sacra-
ment. The church was some distance off,
so that when he reached home it was 1late,
and to avoid disturbing his master he
went to bed in a hay loft over the barn.
Underneath was a stall in which was a
pair of oxen. The man fell asleep, but
was soon awakened by the sound of voices.
Listening, he heard one say to another,
"Let us blow out tbis fellow's light of
life."
"No," was the reply. "Ho has been to
confession to -day and to -morrow will go
to the Lord's table. We caunot do it."
"But he has heard us and will repeat
what we have said."
"No matter.. Be quiet and let us pray.
The time will soon be gone in which we
have the power to do so."
Gathering courage, the man crept to the
ladder, and looking down saw the oxen
on their knees making the sign of the
cross with their right forelegs.
There are cases of consumption so far
advanced that Bicklo's Anti -Consumptive
Syrup will not mire, but none so bad
that it will not give relief. For coughs,
colds and all. affections of the throat,
lungs and chest, it is a specific which has
never been known to fail. It promotes a
free and easy expectoration, thereby re-
moving the phlegm, and gives the
diseased parts a chance to heal.
Too Much.
Banns—You didn't know that I was
once engaged to marry your wife, did
you?
Danns—No ;; who broke the engage-
ment ?
ngage-ment?
Banns—I did.
Danns—Did, eh ? (Smashes him, and
pounds him within an inch of his life).
There now ; if you ever play a. trick like
that on Me again, I'll kill you the next
time.
Tithe for a New One.
"Say, papa, are you going to New
York to -morrow?"
"I guess so, Nannie. 'Why?" '
"Well, 1 wish you would get,me a new
tooth brush; my old one is moulting."
PONT'S FOR MARRIED PEOPLE,
Dent nag.
Don't weep..
Don't lie to. each other,
'Don't go shopping together.
Don't gossip before ohildron.
Don't buy your wife's hosiery.
Don't sot line silly young lovers.
Don't be deceitful no each other.
Don't sleep all Sunday afternoon.
Don't lot your wife cut your hair.
Don't accuse each other of snoring.
Don't buy cigars for your' husband.
Don't be suspicious of one anothor.
Don't get on bad terms with the jan-
iror.
Don't walk along the street in single
file,
Don't call eaob other "Maw" and
c,Paw.
Don't mope; enjoy yourslves occasion-
ally.
Don't refer to your wife as "the old
woman."
Don't forget that the walls of fiats
have ears.
Don't get into the habit of drinking
too much.
Don't talk shop all the time you are
at home.
Don't insist that every visitor shall
kiss the baby:
Don't uso'slang or profanity before
your elaildrexi.
Don't quarrel in nubile; wait remit you
get' home.
Don't let your neighbprs'linow all of -
your affairs. '
Don't tell your husband he's growing
gray and ugly.
Don't wink at each otber while Oran -
gars are present.
Don't let your children run about the
streets at night.
Don't give a farce comedy of your love
on the streets.
Don't keep harping on the subject of
"mother-in-law."
Don't worry your wife to death about
business troubles.
Don't flirt unless you wish to break up
the home circle.
Don't fail to take your wife to the
theater occasionally.
Don't spend more than half of your
time before a mirror.
Don't get into the habit of sewing on
your own buttons.
Don't forget that man is mnob more
selfish than woman.
Don't let your children talk disrespect-
fully of their elders.
Don't make fun of eaob other in the
presence of strangers.
Don't forgot the promises yon made
when you were married.
Don't try to look dignified while
wheeling the baby carriage.
Don't leave the house in a temper. It
will upset your whole day.
Don't imagine that yours is the only
baby on the face of the earth.
Don't throw your young and pretty
wife in the way of temptation.
Don't get jealous if other men einerit
your wife enough to call on her.
Don't bring friends _Immo to dfn ' � ht
out first inforining`your wife.
Don't trundle your baby on the sen
walk if tbein Is a park convenient.
innon't negleoteto raise your bat when
you meet your wife out of doors.
Don't allow your husband to leave the
house without a good breakfast.
Don't smoke all over the house If your
wife bas any objection to tobacco.
Don't pet one child more than another;
don't pet any of tbom too much.
Don't whine if your wife asks yon to
take her to walk when you feel tired.
Don't feel Burt 1f your husband spend.
an occasional evening at tbe club.
Don't talk about the hearts that yon
bave crushed in the dim and checkered
past.
Don't invite friends to dine unless
you have thorough confidence in the
cook.
An old custom.
Blabzey—I've seen your face before.
Plumber -I'm not surprised. That's
where I always carry it.
Apropos.
11Lay-4 800 that the young ladies are
giving fancy names to their bicycles
nowadays. ,
Alice—Yee. I shall Call miltel'ride.
1V1 ay—Whitt for ?
Alice ---Bae use the scripture says it
goes iv r• fall.."
WOMAN'S DICTIONARY.
HEART , 1RT � AILV 1R.E.
1r� .4
ALL SUCH EXITS FROM LIFE ARE
PREVENTABLE.
Called by Its 1'soper .tame It Would Be,
"Kidney Failure," Every Time.
To pass from seeming robust life to in-
stant death is the most appalling end of
all.
Not a day passes, however, without its
records of death in such term.
The columns of every newspaper has its,
accounts, '
And preventable endings, every one of
them. But how?
A noted Toronto physician gives them
answer when he says: "I bayonet to learn,:
of a single case of so-called 'heart failure°'
where examination after death did not dis-
close kidney disease as the primary cause;
of death."
Therefore, kidney treatment is the only
method of preventing the failure.
The warning dlatress or symptoms of
heart disease are but calls for kidney'
treatment.
The Most absolute and effective answer-
to tls.
his demand is to use lJodd's Kidney -
These pills are solely and purely a kid-
ney treatment and go direct to help tb,fr•:
kidneys as soon as dissolved in 'tine
stomach.
They have sawed or prolonqeste, iseindrede
thousand lives in Canada,
Dodd's 'Kidney Pills are sold at 50o.
box by all druggists and dealers.
Blush.—Rod color in the face, caused
by shame. or confusion, prevalent among
women of ancient times.
Candor.—A noun of two meanings.
For ourselves, frankness; for our neigh•
bor, impudence.
Drawer.—A sliding box in a table;
usually too full to slide.
Empty. —A husband's wardrobe after
the missionary box has gone.
Friend. --An acquaintance less pre-
ossessing than ourselves.
Graduate (sweet girl).—The only per-
son who knows exactly how the country
should be managed.
Handwriting. — Written characters.
One of the lost arts.
L—The most satisfactory 'of the per-
sonal pronouns.
Joke.—A speech or action said by men
to contain wit -
Key.—An 'apparatus which would open
the outside lock of our house door if it
were not inside on the bureau.
Love.—Affection for a rich man.
Martyr,—One who suffers for a copse,
A man at an afternoon tea.
Naughty.—The child who returns our
infant's slaps.
"Out" -A safe distance from the win-
dow.
Photograpb.—A representation of our-
selves that does us an injustice
Quart. —Tveo pints of ice-cream.
Right.—Our position in domestic dis-
cussions.
Street Gars.—A public vehicle for
transportation in which seats are arrang-
ed horizontally for gentlemen.
Talented. -An unmarried minister.
Useless. --Questioning an angry man
Vacuum—A. space unoccupied by mat-
ter. A pocketbook that bas been shop-
ping.
Watch—A piece of jewellery resembling
In appearance men's . chronometers.
Differing in that it does nos tell time.
Xantippe.—A woman born in advance
of the suffrage movement:
Yes. --The tip of a woman's tongue.
Zero. --A conjugal disagreement—Ex-
change,
TRY, TRY AGAIN.
iL
HAVE YOU TASTED
AUDI"
CEYLON TEA
its Delicious.
Sold Only in Lead Packets.
WANTED
by every person reading this paper, Groceries:,
and general supplies far home use. Write to us
for price list and buy your winter supply from.
20 to 50 per cent cheaper than you are now-
paying
ow-
wholesale prices. N to addressor goods and cath
A. H. CANNING,
Wholesale Grocer,
57 Front Street East, Toronto.
Crocheting dish 'towels from string.
Doubling thin dish towels, quilting
slightly; for dishcloths.
For a kitchen floor covering, oilcloth,
Wrong side up, painted wi li two °date
Of paint, the last one mixed With var.
nish.
Rot elate water for all Vermin.
Old oilcloths for kettle rests..
Fainting silverware, not in tee, With;
Collodion dissolved in alcohol to prevoAI
tarnish: --(.call tieniekeoping.
ipj,i,IwwV - •^/TMwwr ..F'•'M,{rineL'nRx,.,, ,___ nY+'wY.: *,aeMj.,{iIM'
1
A Blizzard!
A Hurricane!
A Cyclone!
A Tornado!
Wouldn't be enough.
t6 -extinguish
E. B. Eddy's
"Flamers"
when lit.
The best "light"
for smokers in these
high autumn winds
Made only b7
The E. B. EDDY Co.
1
WAITS"
HULL
COR SALE -3. es J. TAYLOR SAFE—
S dimeus'ona outside. 87 1-2 x 30 3-4 sr
2 1-4 ; inside, 18 x 15 8-6 x 28 ; combi zea
tion lock, two cash drawers, one iron'
box; good second-hand c'wditi'in.
TORONTO TYPE FOUNDRY.
Two Schools Under One Management..
TORONTO AND STRATFORD, ONT.
Unquestionably the leading Commerelaa
Seboo s of the Dominion; advantages beck
In Canada; moderate rates; students mar
enter at any time, Write to either school foS-
circulars and mention tbis paper.
SHAW & ELLIOTT, Principals.
Belting.
Shafting,
Pulleys,
Hanger.
Order Your Supplies of
OAK TANNED
LEATHER BELTING
from us. We supply four grades, suit-
able for all classes of machinery. Every-
thing
verythin; in above lines at Manufaotureree
First Cost Prices.
Lowest Prices for Cash-
TORONTO
ashTORONTO TYPE FOUNDRY,
44 Bay Street, Toronto.
Ore of Life
Found at Last.
Vitae -Ore Is, very properly called Ore of
Life. It was discovered by Professor Theo;:
Noel of Chicago, Geologist.
This ore makes an elixir which is Natnre'r,
Great Remedy for the cure of human ills.
It wilt reach the clans of 'Littman diseases whet*
drugs and doctors' nostrums fail, It Is nature's+
great restorative to which nothing Is added,
It Is pure as it canes from nature'n laboratory.
Sold only on direct riders or through local or
i�mesal agents. Piles $i a package, or three
for $2.50. Sent prepaid to any part of the gglobb
On receipt of price. Send for eireulars and felt
particulars to Vital -Ore Depot, 240 Adelaide.
street west, Toronto. .3. JOHNSTON, General
Atrent
T. N. B'.
43.
Th'
EDUCATION for rvyeon¢ fraoefn,ofr w.somtnantlo
The Northern3toiness Calltce.sOpeomman sehoe2
edtestion tcgrecl to enter. Students admitted tar
time, C, A. Fiemuijf,Principal, Owen Seunci. Oct.
a