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THE EXETER ADVOCATE.
THURSDAY, APRIL 1('i, 1896
The Weekas Commercial Summary.
Wheat in store at Toronto 33,000 bush-
els as compared. with 28,000 bushels 'a
year ago.
The insurance companies taking
marine risks have decided to advance
rates this season on hulls.
The stocks of wheat in store at Port.
Arthur and Fort William are 3,428,554
bushels as against 689,058 bushels a year
ago.
The Canada Northwest Land Co. have
sold 2.800 acres of farm land in Manitoba
for 3L5,00U since Jan 1, which is a large
increase compared with the correspond-
ing period of last year.
The trade movement at Montreal is
not yet an active one; but as the weather
has at last assumed a seasonable spring-
like character, and spring freight rates
became effective on Wednesday, there is
a natural anticipation of improvement.
The wheat markets have ruled steady
during the e'eek, with a moderate
amount of trade. Estimates of the con-
ditionofwinter tiv ter wheat in the e U i d
n to
States are somewhat conflicting, but the
4pril average this yearis likely to be
kw.
The visible supplyof wheat in the
United States and Canada is 61,048,000
bushels, a decrease of 800,000 bushels for
the week. A year ago the total was 74,-
308,000 bushels. The amount on pas-
sage to Europe is 28,240.000 bushels, a
decrease of 240,000 for the week. A year
ago the amount afloat was 86,480,000
bushels.
There is a little new in the business
situation at Toronto. The demand for
most descriptions of goods lags behind,
and the volume of wholesale trade for
March is disappointing. Country merch-
ants are buying sparingly. The season
it backward, and although there are no
encouraging feature;, the feeling is that
the worst. i, over, and that an improyed
state of things will soon be apparent.
There were 55 failures in the Dominion
last week against 89 the week before, and
48 in the corresponding ireek of a year
ago. Ontario had more than halt the
total number, 34—an increase of sixteen
over previous week; of this number only
two had a rating as high as $5,000, and
three were rated under 82000, the re-
maining 29 had our lowest credit or
blank rating, Quebec had sixteen, none
of which were of any commercial import-
ance. Manitoba had three; Nova Scotia
two. There were no failures reported
from the other provinces last week.
The trade situation in the United
states remains practically unchanged,
though the winter weather has modified
• somewhat,and an increased movement is
naturally expected; but so far anticipa-
tions in this direction are not as yet
realized; the chief reason given is the
lateness of the season, and one serious
feature of the situation is that a large
number of wage-earners are still unem-
ployed. Prices in iron and steel are ex-
pected to be sustained by the "mi;antic
combine" just effected, one of the pro-
posals of the organization being, of
course, to limit production. But to find
;any positive encouragement at the
present moment in the trade outlook gen-
erally, the scrutiny has to be very
minute.
Here and There.
The Shah of Persia has accepted an in-
vitation to be present at the coronation
of the Czar, and will be accompanied on
his visit by the heir apparent, whom he
will take this opportunity of presenting
at the Russian Court.
Canon Knox Little has taken upon
himself the task of teaching the English
bishops their business in regard to the
marriage of divorced persons. He de-
scribes their position as "lamentable,"
and thinks th:.t it might be changed if
"good strong-minded laymen spoke their
minds."
Prince Bismarck continues to enjoy ex-
cellent health. He takes long drives in
an open carriage, and occa sionally
walks down to the station to have a chat
with the officials. Professor Lenbach'
leas been at Friedrichsruhe for several
days preparing to paint the portrait of
the Prince, ordered by the Emperor.
The Earl of Mansfield, who attained
his ninetieth birthday the other day, is,
according to a French writer, "the most
picturesque figure in England's aristoc-
racy." His lordship wears the bottle -
green coat and high roll collar of the last
generation, and, in spite of the protests
of his family, resolutely refuses to
change to a more, modern style. Earl
Mansfield is said to be the "Earl" whom
Mrs. Hodgson Burnett limned in the old
and eccentric nobleman of "Little Lord
Fauntleroy."
Five men were arrested at Wingham
namely, Charles Manser, Robert Harri-
son, Jerry Flannigan, Thomas Montgom-
ery and George Phippen, by Constable
Thomas Gundry, on the strength of a
warrant sworn out by Detective Rogers,
charging them with taking part Um the
assault on Mr. Fields that resulted in his
death.
Good Goods Wear Lorgedst.
The history of medical treatment for
alcoholism for the past five years has been
the story of the triumphant march of the
Double Chloride of Gold system, and the
hundreds of thousands of men and women
emancipated from the thraldom of whis-
ky through. its agency.: The same period
has ` witnessed the rise and the fall of
hundreds of mushroom enterprises which
have deluded the public with promises of,
cure without being able to deliver the
goods. Ontario has been the camping
ground of not a few, but all have disap-
peared. These secured patronage chiefly
by offering cheap cures, giving worthless
guarantees and misrepresentation. The
cheap cures have; proved to be worthless
ones, and many who thought, they were
saving are now sorrowing: Lakehurst
Institute; Oakville, has always maintained
a standard price and a standard of excel-
lence. Lakehurst Institute is the only
prosperous and scientifically successful
one in the province. Toronto office, 2$
Bank of Commerce Building.
TOPICS OF A WEEK.
the Iamportant Events in;a Few Words For
Busy Readers.
CANADIAN.
Newfoundland sealers report a good
catch.
Demill's. Ladies' College at Oshawa was
burned. Loss $25,000.
Mr. James McDonald's infant daughter
was burned to death aetLondon.
. The Ottawa Tribune is a new publica
tion in the interests of labor.
A branch of the Bank of Hamilton will
probably be opened at Winnipeg.
Twins were born to Mrs. Allan, while
en route to Montreal, on a O.P.R. train
yesterday.
Franklin Beirs, ' a well -digger, lost his
life at Burford through the earth caving
la on top of him.
Mr. George Cleghorn, a pioneer of
Guelph township, died in Guelph on Fri-
day. He was 88 years old, .
The. Dominion Government is to be
asked for a subsidy of $250,000 for the pro-
posed international exhibition.
Mr. McMillan, agent of the Manitoba
Government, brought a party 'of 300 set
tiers from England on the Parisian.
Thomas and George McLaughlin were
sentenced to three years and one year re-
spectively at Barrie for counterfeiting.
The Bank of British North America
has opened a branch at Rosslaud. B.C., the
first bank in that important mining
Camp.
p
Mr.
W. H. H. Webster, formally IInited
States Consul at Chatham, Ont., has
been appointed a State Commissioner of
arbitration.
A Coroner's jury at Ottawa h as found
that the death of Mrs. Hudson is due to
her husband kicking and otherwise ill•
treating her.
Mr. Daly has given notice of a bill to
make further provision respecting grants
of land to volunteers who served in the
rebellion of 1885.
Vicar -General Laurent, of Lindsay, has-
been appointed Domestic Prelate of the
Diocese of Peterboro to the Pope, with
the title of Monsignor.
The report of the Auditor -General of
Prince Edward Island shows a total ex-
penditure of $310,177 for the year, which
exceeds the receipts by $32,800.
The proposedmotocycle contest at
Hamilton will likely be abandoned for
want of funds, $3,000 being required, and
only some $2,000 being subscribed. .
The Jewish residents of Quebec have
formed an organization to build a syna-
gogue and school for children, and to look
after the interests of the Jewish commun-
ity.
Mr. J. E. Quick has been appointed
General Baggage Agent of the Grand
Trunk in place of, Mr. Samuel Symons,
Mr. Quick's headquarters will be in To-
ronto.
At the annual meeting of the vestry of
Trinity church, Montreal, Rev. Canon
Mills, rector for the past fourteen years,
presented his resignation. It was 'not ac-
cepted. -
Mr. G. W. Lawrence, who had been
treasurer of Stratford, Ont., for twenty-
five years, died very suddenly at his resi-
dence in that city yesterday from heart
failure.
Geo. Frohman, rancher and miner, of
Cripple Creek, Col„ is visiting his old
home Guelph. He says that notwith-
standing the richness of the mines there
work is very scarce.
At the adjourned inquest on the body of
Wm. Cram, at Simeoe, Ont., the jury
brought in a verdict that the deceased
came to his death from the excessive use
of alcohol and exposure to cold.
Mrs. Booth -Tucker and Mr. Ballington
Booth had a long and cordial interview
on Sunday night. After the conference
Commander Booth expressed . his deter-
mination to adhere to the policy he had
outlined.
A large number of the members of St.
Barnabas' church, St. Catharines, Out.,
met on Wednesday night, and decided to
ask the Rev. Chas. H. Shutt to resign at
once. A petition fpr that purpose was
started and largely signed.
It is understood in St. John,N.B., that
the Allan Steamship Company will have
the Parisian ready on the 18th inst., pre-
sumably under some arrangement with
the Imperial Government, to carry the
Eighth Hussars to London. •
The engine and five cars of the Toronto
Express were ditched on Saturday morn-
ing near Perth and eight passengers in-
jured. Train -wreckers were responsible,
as investigation showed that bolts and
fish -plates had been removed and one of
the rails broken at the end.
For the half-year ending April.1 the
Grand Trunk railway report has been
issued in London. The gross receipts for
the period named have increased £29,881,
and the working expenses have increased
440,689. There is an aggregate debt bal.
ance of £224,107.
The Canadian Pacific has notified the
Chairman of the Transcontinental Pas-
senger Association that it intends to
withdraw all the intermediate business
from under the association agreement, as
the Great Northern Railway business of
the same class is exempt.
The four men—Manser, Phippen, Mont-
gomery and Harrison—were committed
for trial at Wingham on a charge of man-
slaughter in connection with the recent
mob attack on J. G. Fields. The fifth
man arrested, Jerry Flanigan, wasnot
proceeded against, but was examined as a
witness for the Crown.
Mr. William Weeks, of Cloverton, Chip-
penham, England, one of the British ten-
ant farmers who visited Canada in 1893,
has despatched a party of forty men and
boys, who are due at Winnipeg in a'few
days, for all but one of whom places have
been secured in advance on farms in Mani-
toba and Eastern Assiniboia.
Always on ' Hand.—Mr. Thomas H.
Porter, Lower Ireland, P.Q., writes:
"My son, 18 months old, had croup so bad
that nothing gave him relief until a
neighbor broughtime some of Dr. Thomas'
Eclectrie Oil, which I gave him, and in
six hours he was cured. It is the best
mddioine I ever used, and I would not be
without a bottle of it in my house."
UNITED STATER.
"Brick" Pomeroy' the western editor,
is at the point of death.
Bishop Potter will arbitrate the strike
oftheYork lithographers.
New
William Wood, a Canadian, while tem-
porarily insane,suicided at Bangor, Maine,
yesterday.
It is reported at Meriden, Conn:, that
another Arctic expedition is being organ-
ized by Robert Stein and a party of scien-
tists.
Wesley Bellis, aged 12,saved his little
sister from being burned to death, by
plunging her into a creek at Egypt Mills,
Y.
Monday afternoon in St. Thomas'
church, New York, Gen. Ben. Harrison
and Mrs. Dimmick were married.
The Chicago Great Western railway
will now accept second-class tickets for
passage in first-class Pullman sleepers:
The Methodist Episcopal Conference at
Chri.ie, Pa., decided to favor the ad-
mission of women as lay - delegates to the
general conference.
Ballington Booth has decided to name
his paper the Volunteer Gazette, The
first number will make its appearance on
Saturday next.
By a. ;ere of . Se veuay-wig cu eler en, tale
Methodist Episcopal Conference held yes-
terday at Chester, Pa., decided to favor
the admission of ' women as lay delegates
to the General Conference.
A bill was introduced into congress at
Washington for the appropriating of $2,-
000,000 to be expended by the Govern-
ment in widening the locks of the Eiie
canal to permit the passage of torpedo
boats tothe great lakes,
They Never Fail.—Mr. S. M. Boughuer,
Langton, writes: "For about two years I
was troubled with Inward Piles, but by
using Parmelee's Pills, I was completely
cured, and although four years have
elapsed since then they have not returned."
Parmelee's Pills are anti -bilious
and a specific for the cure of Liver and
Kidney Complaints, Dyspepsia, Costive- a the Victims.
ness, Headache, Piles, etc., and tvi11 regu-
late the secretions and. remove all bilious
THE CASE OF THOS. M'GREEVEY,
I M.P„ OFSANDT, LOUURBANISSOUEUL, ARD,
, Q
Both in the Sante Boat, and Like iiLeasurea
Free both.
The Member in the House of Commons
for Quebec -Mc. Thomas McGreevey—has
in his life,tire found himself iu more than
one tight place, but with native shrewd-
ness has been able to free himself. Among
other things that have troubled him is
catarrh, but hi the use of Dr. Agnew's
Catarrhal Powder he has been able to rid,
himself of this difficulty. Mr. Urban
Soulard, of St. Louis, Que., pronounces
this remedy a "precious `'preparation," so;
effective is it in ridding the system of
catarrhal trouble. It will give relief in 10
minutes; and cures a cold almost instant-
ly. Beware of the many cheap imitations
of this remedy. '1'ney, are worthless, if
not clabgerous. Sold by druggists; or
sent by mail, by`S, G. Detohon, 44 Church
st., Toronto, for 60 cents in stamps.
There are said to be 673,643 'Freemasons
and 647,471 Odd Fellows in the United.
States.
CANADIANS DYING OFF FROM
HEART TROUBLE.
The Best Heart and Brain of the Country
matter.
FOREIGN.
The new commercial treaty between
Germany and Japan has been signed.
Col. Stevani commander of thega 1•1i -
son at Kassala, reports. that 15,000 dervi-
shes are gathered there,
It is rumored in financial circles in
London that Great Britain has concluded
a treaty of alliance with Spain.
The Town of Santa Cruz, ou the Island.
of Luzon, was almost destroyed by fire.
Four thousand houses were burned.
' The fiftieth anniversary of the repeal
of the corn laws will be celebrated by the
Cobden Club in London on the 27th of
June.
There was a terrible fire recently at
Manila, capital of the Philippine Islands,
whereby four thousand houses were de-
stroyed.
The Ameer of Afghanistan has started
an expenditure to subjugate the Kafirs
tan as a precaution against Russian ag-
gression,
A Rome despatch states that a military
attache of the British Embassy has been
sent to Massowah to report on the position
of Kassala.
M'r. Edward Blake was seized with a
fainting fit in the Imperial House of Com-
mons on Monday night. No serious re-
sults are feared.
Sir Hercules Robinson, Governor of
Cape Colony, has declined President
Kruger's offer of assistance in quelling
the uprising in Matabeleland.
Mr. Joseph Chamberlain is considering
the suggestions and proposals of the Do-
minion Government regarding tenders for
a fast Atlantic steamship service.
President Kruger has assured the Brit-
ishAbge nit at Pretoria that no obstacles
will be placed in the way of burghers de-
siring to be enrolled for service in Rho-
desia.
Alexander 'W. Terrell, United States
Minister to Turkey, was a passenger on
the Hamburg -American Line steamer
Fuerst Bismarck, which arrived at New
York.
The Paris Temps asserts that the idea
of the Dongola expedition emanated from
King Humbert, who simultaneously ad-
dressed England and Germany on the
subject
Dr. Peters, the former German Imperial.
Commissioner in Africa, states that what-
ever the result of the enquiry into his con-
duct, he will leave the German Govern-
ment service.
Emperor Francis Joseph of 'Austria is
expected to visit England in July in
order to inspect the First Dragoon Guards,
of which regiment he has been appointed
honorary colonel.
It hss been definitely arranged that the
marriage of the Princess Maud of Wales
to Prince Charles of Denmark will take
place in the Chapel Royal, St. James'
palace, on the 7th of July.
The exports from Sheffield to the United
States for the first three months of the
present year amount to «160,444, as com-
pared with £112,602 for the same period of
the previous year.
In consequence of the decision of a por-
tion of the Vienna fire brigade to go out
on strike, all the firemen have been re-
tired from duty, and soldiers have been
substituted for them.
A Cairo despatch says, the situation in
the Suakin district is critical. The Egypt.
fan forces are small, and it is highly de-
sirable that Indian troops should be sent
to relieve the anxiety.
The British yearly revenue returns offer
a remarkable indication of the prosperity
tsf the country. The receipts are £201.973,-
000;
201.973;000; the expenditures are £197,788,000,
leaving a surplus of more than £4,000,000.
Owing to the gravity of the situation in
South. Africa, the Imperial Government
are raking steps to despatch five thousand
troops to the Cape,of Good Hope as soon
as possible, in order to be ready for emerg
emotes.
The Prince of Wales has taken Apple-
ton house, on the Sandringham estate, for
Princess Maud and her husband, and the
young couple will spend fonr months
there every year, according to present
arrangements.
There has been an unusually strong
turn -out of the British volunteers for the
Easter inaneuveres this year, the policy
of Gen. Wolseley being to convert what
has been an ornamental corps into an
efficient branch of the service.
The death of Sir Edward Cholmeley
Dering, who was firsteleoted a member of
parliament in 1880, when he was returned
for Wexford, leaves living only three men
who sat in the House of Commons before
the passage of the reform bill in 1832.
A despatch from Bucharest says it is
announced that a military convention has
been concluded between Russia and Bul-
garia,•by which in the event of war Bul-
garia cedes two Black Sea' ports to Russia,
Russia to maintain Prince Ferdinand on
the Bulgarian throne.
After considering the adverse vote in
the French . Senate, the Cabinet decided
that the successive votes of confidence of
the Chamber of Deputies made it the duty
of the Government to continue in office,
and M. Bourgeois so informed the Presi-
dent.
There are so many cough medicines in
the market, that it is sometimes difficult
to tell which to buy; but if we had a
cough, a cold. or any affliction of the throat
or lams, we would try Biekle's Anti- Con-
sumptive Syrup': Those who have used it
think it is far ahead of all other prepare,
tions recommended for such complaints.'
Time little folks like it as it is as pleasant
as syrup.
•
Thoughtful people everywhere are ask-
ing themselves the question, What is
coming over the race, with the alarm-
ingly growing prevalence of heart disease?
This is not the place to search the cause.
The immediate matter is to know the
I
renslv
This is, without rho
ut any doubt,
found more surely in that great discovery
of the present century, Dr. Agnew's Cure
I for the Heart, than anywhere else. One
dose of it will give relief in severe cases,
and one or two bottles will remove the
I disease. Let any one who has the slight-
est fluttering of the 'heart, the barest
symptoms of the disease,guard themselves
I against possible fatality by using this
medicine. .
It is believed that the world's popula-
tion is increasing at the rate of nearly
6,000,000 a year.
'FOOLISHNESS OF TAMPERING
WITH INEFFECTIVE REMEDIES..
Necessity of a Good Solvent to Cure Kidney
Disease—Secure Relief in Six Hours.
A burnt child dreads the fire, and prej
uclice against many a good article is born
of disappointment in using an inferior
article. Kidney Disease, Bright's Disease,
Diabetes, and all disorders of the kidneys,
are - known to every physician to arise
chiefly from time presence of lime and solids
in the blood. These solids must be dis-
solved. Pills and powders will not do
this,' but a liquid medicine, a perfectly
and thoroughly tested solvent like South
American Kidney Cure immediately goes
to the seat of the trouble, dissolves the
solid substances, and • will give relief in
the worst cases of kidney disease inside of
six hours, and continuously used for a
reasonable length of time will cure the
worst forms of this dreaded disease.
Christ did not come to help us ,to be
saved, but to do the whole work himself.
The man who robs another cheats him-
self.
RHEUMATIC PAINS BANISHED
LIKE MAGIC.
A Dozen Boxes of Pills Failed to Help a
Well-known Citizen of Ar nprlor—Wh ere
a Few Doses of South American Rheuma-
tic Cure Brought Atelier.
The almost instantaneous relief that
comes from the use of South American
Rheumatic Cure finds an apt illustration
in the case of Mr. Theophite Gadbois, who
had suffered intensely from rheumatism.
Employing his own language: "I had
taken several kinds of medicines, but
found no benefit from them. I took a
dozen boxes of a pill advertised to cure
rheumatism, but got no help. Before I
had taken half a bottle of South Ameri-
can Rheumatic Cure I found very great
benefit, and a little further perseverance
banished altogether this terribly painful
trouble."
George Ebers, the Egyptologist, has
discovered that many of the queer
medical recipes found in old English
and German books came from the an-
cient Egyptians. They were not known
to the Greeks, but were spread from
Salerno the great medical school of the
!c c v7fs.
Are the Highest
hest
of alla
�Yih Grades.
RI BLE /°NAB
SOLE AGENTS
34 FRONT ST. WEST, TORONTO
Send for Catalogue.
r%trV`Ti%FV1M”ir ilr�lri�� rh o .p� in�il. �n� m��n •�h�'i� riv. rte noihi�ii
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EVE4, TEr�
01�® � ® CEidTS
...WILL READ...
000000004.0.4
Masy's M0gaZ.11,42 °11.p ill
r
)r
i�
V.
I.One Dollar
ka year.
. Ten Cents
Which Will contain among others the' following illustrated articles
and stories :—
YORK CATHEDRAL—by Prof. Wm. Clark, D.C.L. Five Illustrations.
CANADIAN HORSE: SHOWS—by Stewart Houston. Five Illustrations•
MYSTERY OF THE RED DEEPS—Story by Duncan Campbell Scott. -
MIGRATION OF BIRDS—by Robert Elliott. Six Illustrations.
MY BROTHER'S KEEPER'—by Seranus. Five Illustrations.
PECULIAR TECHNICALITIES OF THE LAW -by Alfred Hoskin, Q.C.
t, a copy.
P ow The sale of "LIGHTS OF A CITY STREET," of which we had a
t a few proofs struck off on heavy board for framin purposes, has met
iIpp
THE MASSEY PRESS with marked success. There are only a lirnitc�namber of copies
927 King St. W. left. Those desiring to secure this magnificent production should
D TORONTO, CANADA. order at once. Price 25c, Liberal discount to the trade,
v e..9i .1,l a . !-a r .b. falG>2.,..a te. ifrafr_gtx, r4 &ate v �N a?e.4g.+,!G.tli
About one hundred and fi;ty lettere
awaited Dr. 3's meson on his „r,iva1 as
Plvm•duth, England. alany of them
et ntaiued offers of marriage. One was
it in a lady of good pcsitic n, who assert-
cd
sserted that her friends considered her still
handsome, but she was the mother of.
two marriageable daughters. She in-
formed Dr. 1 aineson that ho' c .uld have
his choice of the three.
$100 Reward $100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at lever one dreaded disease
that a lance has been able to cm in all its
stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure
is the only positive cure known to the medical
fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional dis-
ea,e, requires a constitutional treatment.'
Hail's Oatarrtr Cure is taken internally, acting
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of
the system, thereby destroying the foundation
of the disease, and giving the patient strength
by building up the constitution and assisting
nature in doingits 'work. The proprietors
have so much fath in its curative powers, that
ti.ey offer One Hundred Dollars for any case
that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimon-
ials. Address,
P. J, C}IENEY & CO., Tol
Sold by Druggists, 76e.
Julius Schwabgunst, a baker in Cin-
cinnati, made a life-size figure of a man
in dough, and baked it. During his tem-
porary absence a vagrant cur ate off the
nose and chin 61 the dough man, which
so infuriated the baker that he swallowed
a gill of liquor varnish aith suicidal in-
tent. This had the curious effect of
changing his voice from a deep guttural,
to a falsetto: He will recover.
FITS Stopped free and permanently cured.
No fits after first dav's use of Dr. $fine's
Great Nerve Restorer. Free $2 trial bottle'
sent through Canadian mgeneles. Address Lr.
Kline, 921 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Assessment System.
MUTUAL
RESERVE
FUND
LIFE
Assoeiatlon
Middle Ages to which they must have Edw. B. harper
Founder.
Fred. A. Burn-
ham
President.
15 Years Com-
pleted
The Largest
and
Strop west
Natural
Premium
Lifeinsurance
Company
In the World.
869,000,000 of New Business in 1895.
$308,660,000 of Business in Force.
84,084,075 Death Claims Paid in 1895.
$25,000,000 Death Claims Paid Since Business -
Began.
1595 shows an Increase in Gross Assets, Net:
Surplus, Income and Business In -Force.
f3'Over 108 8.0 members interested.
W. J. McIkURTRY, Manager for Ontario,'
Freehold Loan Building. Toronto,Ont.
A. R. McNICHOL, Manager or Manitoba,
British Columbia and North-West Territories,
McIntyre Block. Winnipeg, Man.• D. Z. BES-
SETTS, Manager for uebec 12 Puce d' Armes, •
Montreal, Que.; COL._ JAMES DOMVILLE,I
Manager for New Brunswick, St. John, N. B.;
WJ. MURRAY, Manager for Nova Scotia,
Halif.ax, N. S.
come through Coptic and Arabic trans-
lations.
Glad to See Spring.
Another long, cold winter is well over
with all its hardships, and now
p , we can
revel in the bright weather and outdoor
life. But—there'll be another winter and
we will be faced again by the problem of
keeping warm without being burdened by
the weight of our clothing. A Fibre
Chamois Interlining seems to give the best
results, as it furnishes warmth without
adding weight, and is both wind and water i
proof.
There never was, and 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,
in turn would aggravate the other. We
have, however, in Quinine Wine, when i
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
hroughout the 'veins, strengthening the healthy
animal functions of the system, thereby
making activity a necessary result,'
strengtheung the frame, and giving life
to the digestive organs, which naturally
demand increased substance—result, im-
proved appetite. Northrop & Lyman of
Toronto, have given to the public their
superior Quinine Wine at the usual rate,
and, gaged by the opinions of scientists,'.
this wine approaches nearest perfection of
any in the market. All druggists, sell it.
Sleeplessness is due' to nervous excite-
ment. The' delicately con stituted,the fin an-
cier,the business man, and those whose oc-
cult t.icii nccessi bites great mental strain
or worry, all cutter less or more from it.
Sleep is tie great restorer of a -,worried
brain, end to get sleep cleanse the stomach
from all ilnpii with a few doses of
Parmelee's Vegetable Pills, gelatine
coated, containing no mercury, and are
guaranteed to give satisfaction or the
money will be refunded.
Mnensl Prineinle.
Springtime
tl
� me
t
A healthy condition of
i
the kidneys is the best:
safe
-guard against all
the ills incidental to the
season.
Tone n
et17e
sys-
tem 'by
usin
Y g
DODD'S
Kidney eV P1
lls
Thebes
s
t bloodp urifier
on'e •ar
t
th
and
the
only
Absolute
Cure
for all
diseases of
the kidneys
,E.ADING ALL OTHERS..}
71I
CEYLON TEA
In Lead Packet Only. Black or Mixed
BY ALL G1tOCERS. '
fro T.ik
hi
wA •
,
rr j3 w� Mai
=lCt.
t"'
r^;
You WANT THEM. CAN CET THrM
SFT (FROM MERCHANTS OR DIRECT
FROM US. CATALOGUE FREE.
B—S Fuchsias, asserted, . Soc.
I —G Roses, ever.b1Motning, 50e.
G-8 Geraniums, good, .. 50e.
V-6 Canna Bulbs, as'd, for5oc.
A—S Montbretias, pretty,. 50e.
L-30 Gladi's Bulbs, mxd.,COo.
U—Sweet Pcas,Co11.3ovar.SOe.
B—Window Coll., reach
Ivy and Show Geranium
Coleus, Manetta-Vino
Mexican Primrose, Fuchsia
Heliotrope & Tr.
.descantia 500
ti
itgY
When we read
or hear of
HULL
We naturally
think of
E. B. Eddy's
Matches.
JOHN MACGREGOR, BARRIST BRAT.
LAW, Solicitor in Suptdreme Court of Can
Rda. Money to loan. Offices -28.80 Toronto
street, Toronto.
Drop a postal card to A. IL Canning
& Co., 57 Front Street East, Toronto'
for prices on Seeds and General Goods.
Their seeds are guaranteed to be true
to name and prolific.
Two Schools Under One Diana„ em en
s
•
ce, /..' /! yr
TORONTO AND STRATFORD, ONT.. '
Unquestionably the loading Commercial
Schools of the Dominion; advantages best, Canada; moderate rates; students may
enter at any time, Write to either school for
eircniars and mention this paper.
SHAW & ELLIOIFP, Principals.
T. N. U.
59
.7/E
EDUCATIOhforareungmanorwo th-
essuo dunes of life, is obtaipedat
The Northern BoainessCollege. Only common srho.l
education required to enter. Students admitted any
time. C. A. -Fleming, Principal, Owen Sound, Ont.
VVat Y'1'HLIN Ur If ta'E II YYLIN'L'I]it—
i.'ype, Presses, Inks, Re:tdy-Print
Newspapers, Stereotype tlatter,Llleetr
typing, iingravingTommie:,
. FTP
FOUNDRY, Foronto. and Winnipeg. �.