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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1896-1-9, Page 2`CS :(' pertantI;seeet ` ,ts For �,usy C The collecti;i a i 's Catholic church, l ingston, netted $.1, - SQ. Albert Moore, of f." ley, Ont., was found dead in a railway cul •• F. }gear Bur- ford, F. W. Clark, aged 80, was killed by a Mali off the sidewalk in Kingston, on Friday. A Canadian colored "saloon -keeper In Detroit .was fatally shot by his bartender Friday morning. A , chbishop Langevin will be present oath -nom 'at the conferring of the rad on Cardinal Satolll, January 5. .1'.R, traffic reoeipts show =increase for the week ending Deo. 21 of $S6, 000 over the corresponding week of 1894, Public accounts for the year ending June 30 show an Increase of nearly $7,- 000,000 7,000,000 In the public debt, and a deficit of *4,133,875, Acording to reports from Newfound- land, there wore in all 22 persons on the schooner Victory believed to have found. erect with all on board, In Montreal Centre .Friday Mr. Jas. McShane' Liberal, was elected over Sir William l-ingstou, Conservative, by a majority of 273 votes. i The annual meeting of the Bar Associa- t on of Western Ontario was held Friday n i London, Ont , when officers were elect- ed for the ensuing year. co ls, clip 73,- • or 13 ` ued at ovement receipts ining be-, estimates. In the questions t Closed with ii Co.'- eklyreview of I United fatesays The rie snisnt o .the President's 9 given its 'raracter to the ople are feeling i ore profound - but excepting stock and markets business 1. ' "'emarkably 1 and scarcely affected`, n tt so much account of any foreign gi4estion. but solely beeause of influences vhich have 1 been in continuous operation Vor months prices of rn;anufaetured goods continue to decline. The no circulation of Canadian banks at the on of November was ead.3u'.P,UUO, as against 8111171,11 ,0, a dee •ease of $809,000. The deposits of the minion Government inereas,:d from i S;iir .80..1 to $5.524.9.) during November, while the Prov inei:;.i Cieveraime nt deposits ddercased about half a million and are nowonly 02,0t320 . Current demand deposits amount tt $O7. a37,utl0 a decrease of about $`,? 3 .0 " . while time deposits are $130: ::610.110. an increase of nearly $l,$1,5e0,001for the Month. Specie and Dominion notes latId by the banks are practically unehanged, the total being $23,009400. There is a balance due of $27,773,000 713,000 from banks in the I.nited States as com- pared with $,-46.04)8.0 i0 at the endof October, C'ail loans amount to $17.U0J, 03,e while current leans on commercial discounts increased from S2.01,153,t'00 to $302 1111' 1, ?i! ►, which is over B3,O00.000 greater than a yearago. Overdue debts aggregate 81,834.10a as against $3,457,- Cuu a year ago. `I he loans to directors aggregate *ti. ld1 gull a decrease of $310,- WO for the month of November.A Life Saved. ---Mr. James Bryson, Cameron, states : "I was confined to my bed with inflammation of the lungs, and 'teas given tit!by the physicians, A nei,gixeor advised me to try hr. Thomas' Eclectric Oir stating that his wife had used it for a throat trouble with the best results. Actin; en his advice. I procured the medicine, and less than a half bottle cured me : I certainly t tainly believe it saved my life. It was with r.'luctauee that I con-' seated to a trial, as I was reduced to such a state that 1 doubted the power of any remedy to do me any good." here and There. Woman's strength is about two-thirds that of man, while her height is as six- teen to seventeen and her weight as nine ' or ten. William Burbank, an eighty -three-year old resident of Tliompsonville. Conn., was fatally injured recently while coast- ing down a hill in that place. The delta of the Nile was the first mentioned in history. It took its name from its shape, bearing in this particular an exact resemblance to the Greek letter Delta, or 1). The rivers of the "Gold Coast," in West Africa, are rich in gold. For 1,000 miles east and west from Ashantee every river's banks yield gold in greater or less quantities. A man who claims to have seen Wash- ington. and really believed that he had, no matter how other folk treated his as- sertion, died last week in Baker county, Georgia. He was a negro known as Jim Bill, and was reputed to be at least 125 years old. Bards among the Druids were profes- sional poets, and among all ancient people such employments were recognized as con- nected with religion, rhapsody, prophecy and music, Among the Jews this class were called prophets, and among the Romans Vates,and the Britons Bards. A young man named Johnson, an em- ploye of one of the Danbury (Conn.) bag- gagemen, is a curiosity in his way. He is 17 years old, and measures 6 feet 7 inches in his stocking feet. With his shoes on three-quarters of an inch is added to his height. During the past year he has grown nearly a foot. A fox and a heater together stalked a partridge near Tyson, Vt., the other day, but each unknown tothe other. The bird alighted in an apple tree, behind a barn, and the hunter tiptoed around one side of the barn and brought the bird down. But as the bird dropped, the fox, coming round the other side of the barn, seized it and was off with his dinner be- fore the bunter could appreciate what had happened. Proof Positive. "Blit, Marie, do; you know that he loves you ?" "Yes. I have positive proof of it." ;1 hat?" "I got him a necktie last slimmer, and he has worn it ever since." Not Up .To Date. Mrs. Silby (of Chicago)—Mrs. Dasher's matrimonial ideas are all right, but they aren't practical. Mrs. Bilby—Why so ? Lis. Silby—Why, she has actually worried along on two paltry divorces in four long years. Cut in Two, The advertisement read "Wanted—A young man to be partij outdoors and partlybehind nc the counter.tuner. "What "4vha will be A wag wilts to know , t the result when the door slams ?" A nine-year-old boy named Lambstead was fatally burned as Burlington, Ont., an Christmas night by the explosion of a lamp, and died shortly afterwards. Mr. George Hunt, the night station agent at the Grand Trunk station in Hamilton, wasrun over and killed late on. Christmas eve by a locomotive. Freddie Breen and two other lads about twelve years of age went skating on the lake near Tweed, Ont , Friday. Breen broke through the ice and was drowned. Charles Chamberlain, of Toronto, who about two years ago was sentenced to a three years' term for crookedness at the last Dominion election in Winnipeg, has been released. Miss Hannah Macey Macnab, sister of the late Sir Allan Maonab, died on Thursday evening at the residence of her niece, Mrs. J. Harvey, Hamilton, at the age of ninety-four. The Rev. John Scott, AD., a retired minister of the Hamilton presbytery, died in . Hamilton on Thursday night, in his seventy-ninth year. He retired from active work six years ago. Sir Charles Tupper, High Commission- er for Canada in London. Is at present in Montreal, the guest of Sir Donaid Smith. He is very sanguine that the fast Atlantic service will be a success. Mr. Charles M. Hayes, the general manager of the Grand Trunk railway arrived in Montreal from St. Louis Fri- day, lie will assume the direction of the company's affairs next Wednesday. The Canadian -Australian liner Mio- wera, which left Victoria, B. C., on the lath Inst. is believed to be lost. She at- tempted to tow the disabled Strathnevis, and has not been heard of since she parted company with that steamer. Tho Patrons and Prohibitionists in Manitoba have united for the provincial elections, and will bring out joint candi- dates. The main points of their platform are non-sectarian schools, equal suffrage and prohibition of the liquor traffic. Imo decision has yet been reached by the Privy Council in the case of Shortie, the Valleyfield murderer, who lies in Beau- barnois jail under sentence+ of death, and for the commutation of whose sentence petitions have been presented to the Min- ister of Justice. An interesting ceremony took place in Trinity church, Toronto, Thursday night, when, for the first time in the history of the Anglican Church In Ontario, two young ladies were consecrated to the office and work of Deaconess by the Bishop of Toronto. Messrs. Hiram 'Walker & Sons, the Walkerville distillers learning that there was a probability of the duty on whiskey going into the United States being raised fifteen per cent. by the Dingley bill, on Thursday shipped to Detroit three thousand six hundred cases, on which they paid fifteen thousand dollars in gold. The City Treasurer of Toronto has re- ceived word that the litigation instituted by Messrs. Paulin, Sorley & Martin, of Edinburgh, for breach of contract in connection with the last issue of Toronto 33j per cent debentures has been with- drawn, and that the firm will accept the terms of settlement offered by the city. The reply sent by the Greenway Gov- ernment to the rejoinder of the Dominion Government on the School question,posi- tively and definitely rejects the proposal to establish a system of Separate schools in any form, and earnestly invites a com- mission of enquiry into the facts relat- ing to the past and present school sys- tems. The Commercial Travellers' Associa- tion of Canada held its twenty-third an- nual meeting in Toronto Friday. There was a very large representation of mem- bers present and much interest was dis- played by all in the proceedings. The appointing of a Government sanitary officer for the province, whose duty it would be to supervise the sanitary condi- tion of hotels, was reported upon by the Board of Directors. Mr. Thomas Ballard, Syracuse, N.Y., writes : "I have been afflicted for nearly a year with that most -to -be -dreaded disease dyspepsia, and at times worn out with pain and want of sleep, and after trying almost everything recommended, I tried one box of Parmelee's Valuable Pills. I am now nearly well, and believe they will cure me. I would not be with- out them for any money." VNIT:CD STATES. New York had six suicides Christmas day. United States gold reserve is down to $66, 000, 000. United States Senator Quay says that he does not want the presidency. The New York Police Commissioners have just appointed a bicyole squad. John D. Rockefeller will soon make a gift of $3,000,000 to the Chicago than versity. L. A. Hervey had his spine broken six weeks ago and is still alive in aNew York hospital. Less Mitchell and William Johnston fought a duel at Berea, Ifentucky, Fri- day. Both were killed. Dr. O.' Tower, of Wilson, has evolved a bicycle tire composed of rubber ea. d can- oes; which he claims cannot be p otur', ed. Florence Mack, aged 17, died in Detroit from blood poisoning from a splinter. Senator Dubois has introduced a bill to make the Indian subject to the game laws of the several states, The condition of the United States Treasury Is rept esented by Secretary Car lisle to be very serious. The United States Rouse of Representa- tives on Saturday passed the Bond bill, by. a majority of thirty-four votes. Ten coal barges, belonging to the Pitts- burg coal fleet, have beep wrecked at bierrirnan's Bar, in the Ohio river, below Pittsburg, Chief Justice Beatty, of the Calif orn given Supreme Court, has en 'a judgment. holding in effect that po iter playing for money is not gam bling. Mayor Jewett, of Bu io,has signed the an Niagara Falls power Zr ehise, providing. - for the introduction of eotrio power into. the city of Buffalo. Milton M. Woodsvar be new treasurer of the commonwealth t ississippi,is the youngest state oftlei in the country. He is only twenty -on ars old. The Southern Peel has decided to require each conduct on all its trains $1,0 to tarnish a bond of 00 as a measure of scl;-protection against dishonesty. up Coke prices will go to pt a ton on January 1. The outp of the Connells- ville region showed a dvanee of 1 i,000 tons for last week over he previous one. Elba, Genessee con, a little settle. Ott mont of 400 inhabita , Is reported to have 43 widows, all of oar have money and several of whom a illing to marry. etto The short Texas c n crop caused a decrease in the numb of railway oars trri handled in the state d ug the past six mouths from 439,910 o 297,950 this year, tin From the late election it appears that era no less than 10,265 otors were dip franchised. in New York city be' casting defective ball ts,four p cent. of the total vote, The U.S. Senate ha epealed the Act prohibiting Confederateofficers, who had, hall commissions in the U.S. army from being appointed to plc in the army or navy, It is asserted that wi th the Canadian Paolilo brought under a Interstate law, ffa el d, i• ifM al I e yt, fie or ut na t my wh re w er 2 t er s r ie places tri the train() of American litres would be increased between 3, u00,000 and 5,000,000 tons annually, In a house In Hartford, Conn., Friday night, Thomas Ryan shot and fatally in- jured Fred Williams while the latter was too loudly playing a banjo. Subsequent- ly Ryan suicided, William Marshall, aged 84 and Miss 'Minerva, aged 74, were married about a month ago at Chester, Pa, Last week Marshall said he was tired of his wife, and has not been seen since. President Cleveland has tendered plates on the Venezuelan Commission to Mr, Edward Phelps and Mr Robert T. Lin- coln, both ex -Ministers to England. Their acceptance has not yet been received A despatch from Chicago says that the army which the "Irish National Alli- ance" places at the disposal of President Cleveland. in the event of war between the United States and Great Britain is a patriotic fiction. There is no army. The body of Harry Hayward recently executed in Minneapolis for the murder of Catharine Ging, vas taken to Chicago for the purpose of cremation, to prevent the possibility of it either being placed on exhibition or given to the surgeon's knife for dissection. A severe windstorm amounting in some places to a hurricane, accompanied by heavy rains, prevailed Friday in many parts of the states of New Vork and Pennsylvania. There was a great deal of damage to property and the telegraph service was interrupted, but no loss of life is reported. • The Best Pills.—Mr. Wm. Vander - wort, Sydney Crossing, Ont., writes : "We have been using l'armelee's kills, and find them by far the . best pills we ever used." For delicate and debilitated constitutions these pills act like a charm. Taken in small doses, the effect is both a tonic and a stimulant, mildly exciting the secretions of the body, giving tone and vigor. Yellow fever is daily causing deaths among the troops in Cuba, them. In the meantime, however, the city is being put in a state of defence. Two expeditions are being fitted out at present in England to make explorations in the Antarctic. There are 1,000 soldiers in the military hospital at Santiago, Cuba. The death rate averages 15 daily. Developments in the East point to an entente between Russia and Groat Britain to settle the Armenian trouble. It is rumored that the Rothschilds have agreed to advance to Turkey two million pounds sterling against a new tax on. petroleum. Handbills were profusely scattered throughout Constantinople on Christmas eve announcing the imminent deposition of the Sultan. The report that the town of Zeitonn, held` by the insurgent Armenians for some time past, has been captured by the Turkish troops, is confraned. An Austrian named Dr. Marro brick, after four years' study at the Pasteur Institute in Paris claims to have dscover- ed a serum cure for erysipelas and puer- peral fever. Sir William Des Voeux; who was at one time stipendiary magistrate' at Brit- ish Guiana writes to the Times support- ing Lord Salisbury's views on the Vene- zuelan boundary guestien. Japan is reported to have entered into arrangements with Lord, Armstrong & Co., the English firm of ship -builders and gnn.makers, for the establishment of a dockyard and gun factory in Japan. The: British steamer Bellerophon has been in collision with and sank the French steamer Bbnilo Heloise, at the entrance to the harbor of Algiers. Thirty passengers of the Emile Heloise, includ- ing twenty-five natives, were drowned. Captain -General Marines do Campos, commander of the Spanish forces in Cuba, has arrived in'Ilavana. He admits that the ,forces under Generals Gomez: and Macao are advancing rapidly upon the capital, but he hopes to be able to check The steamer Srathhevia which sailed from Tacoma for Yokohama on October 12, and eves consequently seventy-four days out, arrived at Port Townsend Thursday morning. She, broke her shaft on October 20, and drifted until picked up. The. London Times and other L radon papers speak in high terms of t a iueg- sage sent by the Prince of Wales a d the Duke of York, by request, to tin New York World. 'The Daily Telegraph refers to it'a5 "an eireniOou to our kin b •youd the sea." MULTUM IN PARVO. Me`;i often make up in wrath what they 5,vant in reason.—Alger. To Iliad one thankful man, I will oblfgeoneny that are not so. —Seneca. Scandal is the dread of fools and the canton pt of the wise.—Ciulow. Fashion is, for the most part, nothing but the' ostentation of riches.—Looko. A sentence well couched takes both. the,soudle and the understanding.—Felt- ham. ,+ A mad must carry knowledge with him if lie oaid'bring home knowledge. —Johnson, Objects imperfectly discerned take form fro the hope or fear of the be- holder.—' ohnsoe. Mankin are always found prodigal, both of bl od and treasure, in the main- tenance of ; istfoe.—Flume. The publ o has more interest in the punishment .,of an injury than the one who receives It. --Colton. No degree of knowledge attained by man is able to set him above the want of hourly assistanes.-Johnson, The world is God's epistle to mankind --his thoughts are flashing upon us from every direction.—Plato. "The world" is a conventional phrase, which, being interpreted, signifies all the rascality in it. —Dickens. He subunits to be seen through a mi- croscope who suffers himself to be caught in a fit of passion.—Lavater. When one has no design but to speak plain truth he may say a great deal in a very narrow compass.—Steele. The wise prove and the foolish con- fess, by their conduct, that a life of em- ployment is the only life worth leading. —Paley. Beware of dissipating your powers; strive constantly to concentrate them. Goethe. Duty and to -day are ours.—Greeley. Above all things raillery decline; it is in ablest hands a dangerous tool, but, never fails towound the meddling fool. — tillingaeet. Nothing is such an obstacle to produc- tion of excellence as the power of produc- Ing what is good with ease and rapidity. —Atkin. We have no right to say that the uni- verse is governed by natural laws, but only that it is governed according to natural laws. —Carpenter. If a man has any brains at all, let him hold on to his calling, and, in the grand sweep of things, his turn will come at last.—W. McCune. The good things which belong to pros- perity may be wished; but the good things which belong to adversity are to be admired.—Sone ca. In all meanness there is a defect of in- tellect as well as of heart. And oven the cleverness of avarice is but the cunning of imbecility.—Bulwer. • The attachments of mere mirth are but the shadows of that true friendship of which the sincere affections of the heart are the substance.—Burton. I Truth is the most powerful thing in the world, since even fiction itself must ho governed by it, and can only please by its re.emblance.—Shaftesbury. v i To engage in war without a clear necessity is a crime of the blackest dye. When the necessity is clear, it then be- come a crime to shrink from it. -- Southey.. WORLD'S WAGES. A jacket -maker in Erzeroum receives about 30c. a clay and his tea. In Munich printers consider themselves fortunate if they melee 82c. a day. Sailmakers in Germany earn $2.85 a week; in Italy $2.80; in Belgium, $4,56. Locomotive engineers in Holland re- ceive from $4.86 to $6.85 per week, and a monthly bonus, according to behavior and amount of work done. Tanners in Germany earn $3.80 a week; in Belgium, $5.81; in Italy, $2.20. A first-class Italian carriage builder re- ceives about 96o. for a day's work. A porter ih Constantinople, with steady employmea,t, can make 60o. a day. The average mechanic in a German machine shop Will earn $250 a year. Cutlers in Germany receive $3.90 per week, in England $7, and in Italy $3.80. In Spain, a carpenter, by working ten hours a day, makes $3.90 a week. Teamsters in France receive $5.57 a week, in Germany $2.96, and in Italy $1.50. Gardeners in Germany receive $3.78 a week,, in Fr •n -.s $5 11 and in Italy $4. I The average wage paid in the Swiss cotton mills is between 29c, and 50c. a day. A. cashmere shawl weaver in Persia earns by the hardest labor about 40e a day. Blacksmiths employed in railway labor shops in Holland receive $6.08 per weer;. The laborers in chemical factories in Germany earn on the average $188•a year. Lithographers in Germany receive $5.60 a week, in France, $7.17, in England, $7.07. The employes of gas and water works in Germany earn an average of $194 a year. A. blacksmith in England, by regular and constant work, realizes about 0136 a w. The average wages of skilled operatives in eekthe textile industries. in Bavaria are , A silk spinner in Aleppo„ by working I 72c. from sunrise to sunset, can earn '7c. a' day. Pearl divers in Ceylon receive about 20c. a day and a small percentage of the catch. Street car drivers in Spain receive $3 per week, in New South Wales they re- ceive $12. Nailmakers in Germany receive . $3.12 a week, in ,Swi tzerli nd $2.64, and in Italy, $3, 20. Bayiokiiiakers in Spain receive $5.40 a week; in England they get 7; in Hol- land, $3.29. I Roofers in Brazil make $5.34 a week; in Belgium $4.98 in Denmark, $8; in Italy, 54.29. I In New South Wales, gas fitters are paid $18.30 a week. In Germany they receive $4.08. 'hhe boss of a German stoneua tlfry earns about $232 per year; the ordinary laborer $187. Coopers in England receive $7.50 per week; in Germany, $3.97; and in New South Wales, $12.90. A first-class carpenter in Geneva re- ceives froin$3.60 to $6 a week for steady era ploymeu`t. The racists in the Swiss cotton ..mills receive from 20a to 40o. a day, accor to work. 8 Emit UIi�Th2D.; WILL READ $d09PER•ANNVM• 104PER •C9PY PVbLiS fED -EVERT rtanrii-'11111 rl�ln MASSET' PRESS TeP?IyT'9 - CANADA- A TEN-O!NT MONTHLY A new,popular illustrated literary. Magazine for home reading everywhere. :- High -o ass troughout—elegant illustrations—contributors of high standing -fine paper—beautifully printed—standard magazine size (BR x 9$). THE JANUARY NUMBER P'noxr'isi'n:os—By J. T. M. Burnside. CANTERBURY CATHEDRAL—Prof. Wm. Clark, D.C.L. TSE EvoatytIoz or Two or ISY PIC- TURES—G. A. Reid. R.O.A. SHARESPEAR 1{'S TRAoEDIES.: I. Macbeth —'2. M. McIntyre, Ph.D. Pon (Decorated)—Chas, G. D. Roberts, THE CANADIAN "Soo" Caxac—Chas. Gordon Rogers. SOME Niaw Trait's Gesee Was. (Drawings by Frederick S. Challoner, A,R,O,A, F.1•I, Bri„dee and Frederic W. Falls.) IN A BOLIVIAN MrRAek: (A New Year s Story)—Ezra rimebert Stafford. '' JUST DOMINO FROM THE PRESS 1S: FULL OF GOOD' THINGS. TSE Santee or TANTnanras E. Pauline Johnson. P,OEw--W. H. Drummond. HOMINY IN ONTAato-F. G. Anderson. DEPARTM_ENTS.—Outing and Reerea,- tion—Woman's Realm— The World of Ai't-Wit and Humor Famous Short Stones—Current Comment -Dominion of Agriculture—Editor's Outlook. DEPARTMENT QONTR(BUTORS.—Ed- wards'aner t. if. liilpatriek, F. G. Anderson, Frederic W. Falls, and others. There are thirty-six engravings In the first issue including Mr. G. A. Reids two famous pietures :—" Mortgaging ttte'1lfomestead,"and " The Nureelosure of the Mort- gage." For sale at N1;WSDEALERS, or send to cents for sample copy to THE MASSEY PRESS, 921 KING STREET WEST, TORONTO 1 • A PERFECTLY HOPELESS CASE. Iaatil South American Nervine Was Used—"It Is the Only Remedy That Helped Me," Said Mrs. Hutchinson, of Vandeleur, Out. HEN one studies the data bearing on -dis- eases of the digestive organs andstorhach,it is perfectly astoutsit. ing the extent to which trouble of this tI A kind exists. In fact here is the basis of ninny of the diseases that lay waste the bumau system: Mrs. Hutchinson, of Vandeleur,' Oct., suffered untold misery with nervous pros- tration aud pain in the stomach, more especially after meals. The case might be spoken of indifferently as one of indiges- tion and passed by, bat it was no trifling matter for her. She was really an invalid, and the doctors could. do her no good, South American Nervine was brought under her notice, and she used it with the most satisfactory results. She did net stop With the one bottle, for, to use her owe words"It 'has proved a wonderful medicine and the only remedy that helped pie." She continued to use it until several bottles bad been taken, and is healthy, hearty and happy, and has forgotten al- most that she ever suffered from indiges- tion or nervousness. South American Nervine is the only remedy in existence that acts directly 'on the nerve centers u t base of the brain. It cures by rousing up 'these nerve centers and causing them to generate more nerv- ous energy, an increased supply of which is sent to all the organs of tine body, • and then nature steps in cud does the rest. Ilifereut. Wilkins—Does your wife sit for you -when you paint those "altogether" pic- tures. Artist—No ; but sometimes she sits. on me when I paint them. There is danger in neglecting a cold. Many who have died of consumption dated their troubles from exposure, fol- lowed by a cold which settled on their lungs, and in a short time they were beyond the skill of the best physician. Had they used Bickle's Anti -Consumptive Syrup, before it was too late, their lives would have been spared. This medicine has no equal for curing coughs, colds and all affections of the throat and lungs, Not for the Bride. Mildred—I wouldn't marry the best man in the world. Mr. Suitor—There is no danger ; the bride never gets the best man. No Need to Suffer Longer. A Toronto man, recently returned from a five weeks' trip to Lakehurst Insti- tute, Oakville, was speaking to one of his friends Christmas Day about his ex- perience. He said that this was the first Christmas in five years when he could remember being sober, and the first in fifteen years when:lie was sober from choice. With an outburst of feeling he added; "What a fool I've been to suffer, all these years and Oakville only twen- ty miles away." How many thousands in all parts of the province are to -day suffering from a galling appetite for whiskey and other intoxicants, their business capacity impaired 50 per cent. by the perpetual thirst which consumes them, drifting perhaps slovrly yet with the utmost certainty towards"' financial disaster. No one handicapped in this way can expect to hold his own in the struggle for wealth and fame. Why suffer in mind, in body, and in pocket when Oakville is only a few miles away and certain emancipation awaits you there. Send for full particulars to Tor- onto ofi'ice, Lakehurst Sanitarium, 28 Bank of 'Commerce Building. There never was, ani? ` never will be; a universal panacea, in one remedy, for all ills to which flesh . is heir—the very nature of many curatives being such that were the germs of other and differently seated diseases rooted in the system of the patient :what would relieve one ill, iii turn would aggravate` the, other. We have, however, in Quinine Wine, when obtainable in a sound unadulterated., state a remedy for. many and grevious ills. By. its gradual and judicious .use; the' frailest systems are led into,convalescence and strength, by the influence which Quinine exerts on. Nature's own restoratives., It relieves, the drooping spirits of those with whom a chronic state of morbid :despond- ency and lack of . interest in life is a disease, and, by tranquilizing, the nerves, disposes to sound and refreshing sleep imparts.. vigor to the action of the blood which, being stimulated, courses through- out the veins, strengthening the healthy animal functions of the system, thereby making activity. a 'necessary result, strengthening the frame, and giving life to the digestive organs, which naturally denllannd increased substance—result, imcl - To oto, Qhave given to the public their sur: aged nine Wine at;ns ofusual rate, for a' youngman or woman th EDUCATIONa 4 enc_, gaged by the opinions of scientists, activdi tesoflife, isobtainedat ding, thi9wineaipproachesnearest erfectionof ;ThertorthernBusinessCellege.: Onlydomntonschooi P 'education re aired to enter.', Students admitted an an inthe market; Alldru gistsqy Y,„ sell it, time,' C. A. F leuiitrE, Principal,Owen Sound, pat. pro" e appetite. -Northrop & Lyman of rb fir itt HAVE YOU TASTED CEYLON TEA Its Delicious. Sold Only in Lea.d_Packets. 000.�oo®000aoa000♦0000�o♦ 4 ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ .• ♦ 4 4 ♦ ♦ • • ♦ • • There are many things 41+t• o4be attained in the ♦ ♦ • production of good •• ♦ ♦ matches. ♦ ♦ • E. B. EDDY'S ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ • possess them all. •O • ♦ ♦ ♦ 4. 4- ♦ 4 ♦ 4- Matches • Z 6 ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ 00®000000�00000000OOp008' COR SALE—J. & S. TAYLOR SAFE— dimens'ons outside 37 1-2 x30 8-4 et 2.1 4; inside, 18 s 15 3-6 r 28; combina- tion lock, two cash drawers, one iron box; good second-hand car ditien. TORONTO TYPE FOUNDRY. Two Schools Under One Management CritrfTZ' TORONTO AND STRATFORD, ONT. Vnquestionabiy the leading Commercial saeo.ds of the Dominion; advantages best in Canada; moderate rates; students may enter at any time, Write to either school for elrenlars and mention this paper. S[IAW & ELLIOT 2, Principals. T'HE NEW YEAR, 1896. We wish to thank our thousands of customers for the liberal support they have given us in the year just closed, and solicit a continuance of their orders for the year 1896. Your interest is our first object and to supply you with go"ds, better in quality and lowerinprlcethem you can purchase elsewhere. Ryon hare not our price list, mail us a postal card. and receive one by return mall, A. H. CANNING, Wholesale Grocer, 57 Front Street East, Toronto. Belting. Shafting, Pulleys, Hangers. Order Your Supplies of OAK TANTE® LEATHER BELTING from us. We supply four grades, suit. - able for all classes of machinery. Every- thing in above lines at Manufacturers' First Cost Prices. Lowest Prices for Cash.. TORONTO TYPE FOUNDRY, 44 Bay, Street, Toronto. .0r. e ef,Life Four -id at Last,. Vitae -Oro is very properly called Ore of Life. It was discovered by Professor Theo. Noel of Chicago, Geeloglet.. This ore makes an elixir which is Nature's. Great Remedy for the cure of human ills. It will reach the nidus of 'human diseases when drugs and doctors' nostrums fail. It is nature's' great restorative, to which nothinis added. It is pure as it comes from nature's laboratory. Sold only on direct orders or through local or general agents. Price $1 a package, or three or $2.50.. Sent prepaid to any part of the globe on receipt of price. Send for circulars and full particulars to Vita -Ore Depot, 240 Adelaide street west, Toronto. 3. JOHNSTON, General Arent T. N. U. 45 %//E I, 1