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TUE EXETER ADVOCATE.
TB.0 RSDAY, . APRIL 30, 1896
The Week's Commercial Summary.
The Bank of Hamilton have opened a
branch at Winnipeg.
The Bank of Montreal has opened a
branch at Rossland, B.C.
Bar silver in London is 8015-16d. per
ounce and in New York 67 1-2d.
The Bank of British North America
have opened a branch at Hessiand. B.C.,
Mr. W. T. Oliver being appointed man-
ager,..,
At Toronto the money market is un-
changed at 51-2 per cent. for call loans.
Offerings continue restricted. In London
call loans are quoted. at 1-4 to 1-''22 per
cent.
A good deal, of wheat is going forward
for shipment, but prices in the West
have receded from top quotations in
sympathy with the easier tone of British
and United States markets.
Sir Michael 13icks-Beach delivered the
budget speech in the British House of
Commons. The revenues are nearly
£6,OOu,OUO over the estimates, and every-
thing indicates unexampled prosperity.
The past week has exceeded any other
week in 1896 thus far as to activity and
excitement in wheat. Speculation reached
large figures, and option trading on Wed-
nesday amounted to 11,485,ODU bushels.
While Canadian stocks have ruled
dullduring the week the changes in que-
r,
been unimportant. Canadian
Pacific Railway is higher in sympathy
with the advance of this stock in Lon-
don.
The amount of wheat at Port Arthur
and Fort William is 3, 4:30, 758, an in-
crease of lU,00•J bushels for the week. A
year ago the quantity was 718,178 bush-
els, No. 1 hard waste at 671-`I, Fort Wil-
liam, May delivery.
Last week's official statement showed
the American visible supply had de-
creased .abate) bushels. mainly in New
York and Chicago stocks. A Liverpool
report placed the wheat on passage
thither at 968,000 bushels leas than a week
previous.
The volume of trade at Toronto shows
but little increase for the week. but there
is some improvement in the general tone
amongdealers, and they are inure confi-
dent as to the outloo The more sea-
sonable weather bee stimulated the de-
mand and sorting -gip orders s are more
numerous. These vd,er., however. aro
generally for small parcels, and in so
ordering retail merchants exhibit nt.uli
caution.
There were 36 failures in the Domin-
ion last week as reported to the Daily
Bulletin 33 the week before, and 81 in
the'correspon,ling week of a year ago.
Ontario heads the list with la of this
number only one had a credit rating.
Quebec had 13, 10 et 'which had our low-
est credit or blank rating Nova Scotia
had four. Manitoba and British Colum-
bia two each. No failures reported from
New Brunswick and Prince Edward
Island last week.
As regards business in the Montreal
section it is reported that the very rapid
thaw has resulted in badly brdken up
roads, so that the movements of travel-
ers off the line of rail have been serious-
ly interfered With, and in some cases
they have had to temporarily abandon
their routes. Under these circumstances
it is not to be wondered that the trade
distribution does not show very much
gain in volume, nor that payments do
not materially improve.
Here and There.
A character is a completely fashioned.
will.
Before we can do much good we must
be good.
No man ought to lead others who is un-
true to himself.
TOPICS
OF A WEEK.
The Important Events in a Few Words For
Busy Readers.
CANADIA,N.
The Manitoba Legislature was pro-
rogued Thursday.
At Wiarton this season $30,000 worth of
hay and straw has been sold,
During the last ten years the birth rate
in Ontario has greatly decreased.
A new company has been formed to
work a copper mine north of Thessalon..
The steamer Lake Superior brought 140
English farmers bound for Manitoba.
Waterford does not allow a railway to
block its crossings more than five min-
utes.
A factory for the conversion of beets
into sugar may be established at Leam-
ington.
The Parry Sound railway will carr
patients free to the Gravenhurst sani-
tarium.
The Presbyterian Synod of Toronto and
Kingston will meet in Collingwood on the
11th of May.
Mgr. Laurent, pastor of St. Mary's
church, Lindsay, has been created a
Roman Prelate by the Pope.
Duncan McLeod, an eight-year-old lad,
was thrown from a wagon in Hamilton
and died of his injuries.
Mr. Wm. Scea, a farmer who lived near
Consecon, committed suicide by plunging
head foremost into a well.
Miss Jessie Hutchinson, a Stratford
girl, went to Port Huron seven weeks
ago, and has been missing ever since.
A safe weighing two tons fell upon Mr.
W. A. White, contractor, of Lindsay, in-
juring him so that his life is in danger.
A Point St. Charles woman made sen
eral attemps to drown her two-year-old
baby girl, but was frustrated each time.
The Executive of the Dominion Rifle
Association have arranged that the
Bisley team should sail on the Parisian on
June 27.
Four life-saving stations on Lake On-
tario, situated at Fort Niagara, Charlotte,
Big Sands and Oswego, were opened
Thursday.
Col. Lake, of Ottawa, will visit Eng-
land in May to supervise the supplies of
arms and batteries recently voted by the
Dominion Government.
Mrs. Bell was sentenced to imprison-
ment for life in the penitentiary by Mr.
Justice Robertson for her atrocious cruel-
ties to her grandchildren at Ottawa.
Thomas Taylor, one of the Governor -
General's footmen, was shot and killed by
the accidental discharge of a gun in the
hands of a boy named John Cheyne.
The Government of Queensland has
offered the position of Government elec-
trical engineer to Ormond Higman, _ chief
electrician of the Dominion Government.
In the province of Ontario five out of
every 100 grown persons cannot read or
write. In the province of Quebec 18 out
of each 100 grown persons cannot read or
write.
Mr. Herbert Wallis, Mechanical Super-
intendent of the Grand Trunk, has re
signed, and will be succeeded on May 1st
by Mr. F. W. Morse, master mechanic of
the Wabash.
A watch was found in a field near Mr.
Louie's farm in Lindsay, which is be-
lieved to belong to John Kearney, at
present in jail on the charge of murdering
old Mr. Agnew.
I Mr. E. H. King, formerly general man
ager and for some years president of the
Bank of Montreal, died at Monte Carlo
I on Tuesday night, where he had gone in
I search of health.
! News comes from Winnipeg of the kill-
ing by Indians near Trout Lake of one of
their number, who was sick and acted
strangely, under the belief that he was .a
"wehtigo," or maneater.
A large deputation of Montrealers in-
terviewed the Government at Ottawa on
Saturday, and asked for a grant of $500,-
000
500,000 to assist in holding a great interna
tional exhibition in that city.
John Philpot, of Guelph, was arrested
on the charge of manslaughter in connec•
tion with the death of Lizzie Griffenbam,
who was killed by a falling wall, which
the prisoner had left unprotected.
The Mayor of 'Vancouver has received a
letter frpm Toronto proposing to open a
I home in Vancouver to which a portion of
I the surplus female population of. Ontario
may be sent for distribution in the dis-
tricts of the Northwest, where there is a
Many men work themselves `to death , demand for wives.
doing nothing.
Colic and Kidney Difficulty.—Mr. J.W.
Wilder, J.P., Lafargeville, N.Y., writes :
Example with children will always out- a I am subject to severe attacks of Colic
weigh advice. and Kidney Difficulty, and find Parme-
lee's Pills afford me great relief, while all
Unless we think more than we talk, we other remedies have failed. They are the
talk too much. best medicine I have ever used." In fact
so great is the power of this medicine to
cleanse and purify, that diseases of al-
most every name and nature are driven
from the body.
UNITED STATES.
Five hundred people engaged in a rab-
bit drive at Market Lake, Idaho, last
week, which lasted for about two hours
after the lines had been formed, and ended
in the capture or death of some 2,000 jack
rabbits.
Among the bills passed by the New
York Assembly and put upon the calen-
dar of the Senate Friday is one practically
doing away with common law marriages
in the state.
A bill introduced into the Virginia
Legislature provides that a tax of two
dollars per thousand inhabitants be levied
on every town, city or county in which
a lynching occurs.
The Pennsylvania's coal tonnage for
the year 1895 aggregated 22,405,298, as
against 16,616,907 the previous year. Of
this 16,424,845 tons were coal and 5,980,453
tons coke.
Idaho's population has increased from
80,000 to 125,000 in the five years since the
state was admitted, and the assessed.valu-
ation of property has increased from $25,-
750,000 to $29,382,210.
A figured black walnut tree in West
Virginia is valued at $4,000 by its owner,
who has refused for it an offer of $3,000.
Circassia is our only competitor in walnut
production;
After several years of tireless warfare
and the payment of many thousands of
dollars in bounties, the farmers of Berien
county, Mich., have given up fighting the
English sparrow pest.
The United. States Senate has ratified
the treaty with Great Britain providing
for the appointment of a commission to
assess damages for the seizure of. Canadian
sealers in Behring Sea.
The old Pennsylvania railway depot in
Philadelphia Was burned, with the car
sheds and a number of passenger coaches.
Two firemen were killed by falling walls
and a number of men injured.
A poor man has as much right to his
own as a rich one.
Whitewashing a rascal never helps
him any on the inside.
The man who would be a leader must
be the first to start.
Only he who lives a life of his own can
help the lives of other men.
Exactness in little duties is a wonder-
ful source of cheerfulness.
The. St. Louisis the first American
.transatlantic liner in twenty years. May
may she be the precursor of very many
to follow!
Hold fast by the present!` Every situ-
ation,
ituation, nay, every moment, is of infinite
varies, for it a representative of a whole
community.
Our life is determinedfor us, and it.
• makes the mind very free when we give
e
up -wishing, and only thinkof bearing
what is laidupon us, doing what is given
us to do.
And is it not by love we expect to be
saved;? Love, which is the high priest of
the world, the revealer of immortality,
the fire of the alter, and without whose
ray u a could' not even dimly comprehend.
eternity.
Our delight in sunshine, in'the deep -
bladed grass. to -day might be no more
than the faint preception of weary souls,
if it were not for the sunshine and the
grass, in the far - oft years, which still
live in us and transform our preception
into love -those hours which all one's
life long can be looked back to with love-
ing remembrance, which can gild and
iautity the most sorrowful lives.
In the New York Senate the Greater
New York bill was passed by a vote of
thirty-four to fourteen. It will be signed
by Governor Morton.
There exists in Chicago a militia organi-
zation known as the "First Regiment
Royal. Soots," Imagine "Royal" Scots
shouldering republican muskets!
A Port Huron, Mich., cat jumped into
the flywheel of an engine that was nick-
ing 150 revolutions a minute. She landed
astride a spoke and clung there until the
engine could be stopped. She came out
uninjured.
A bridegroom of 78, with a fortune of
more than 5100,000, was married to a girl
of 15 at Delmar, Ariz., last week. The
groom has six children, more than twenty
grandchildren and several great-grand-
children.
The Salvation Army will erect a fort
and begin a campaign in Chinatown, San'
Francisco. It will be in charge, of Capt.
May Jackson, a young woman who bas
been a Salvationist many years and can
speak the Canton dialect.
Students at Bowdoin College have
started a co-operative store. All the odds
and ends of the daily necessaries of stu-
dents will be bought wholesale and sold
practically at cost. The entire enterprise
willb db t d t
e. manage y s u en s.
Three fish were caught on one hook by a
fisherman at Ellsworth, Me., the other
day. The apparent catch was an un-
usually large pickerel, but in dressing it
another pickerel was found in its stomach,
and in the second pickerel was a five -inch
smelt.
No family _Hying in a bilious country
should be without Parmelee's Vegetable
Pills. A few doses taken now and then
will keep the liver active, cleanse the
stomach and bowels from all bilious
matter and prevent Ague. Mr. J. L.Prioe,
Shoals, Martin Co., Ind., writes : " I
have tried a box of Parmelee's Pills and
find them the best medicine for Fever and
Ague I have ever used.
Trapping is still a profitable business in
Maine, despite the hordes of hunters who
flock into the state from all over the
Union. There are about a dozen veteran
trappers who scour the wilderness about
Moosehead Lake and Chesuncook,their ,
lines of traps extending along scores of
streams as yet practically unknown to the
bunters who hunt for pleasure. These
trappers bring into town in the spring
good stocks of furs of various kinds,
beaver, sable, bear, black cat, pine mar-
ten, and the like, and they make quite a
snug sum out of their winter's work.
Southern California is experiencing a
considerable oil boom. A number of oil
wells developed recently at Santa Bar-
bara and Los Angeles counties have
proved profitable, and borings are being I
made in adjoining counties with satis-
factory results. A new town, Oil City,
sprung up in Fresno county some two
weeks ago, and it. is thought the region ,
will prove very profitable. ' One some- !
what unsatisfactory result has been the
boring of many wells in the residence
districts of Los Angeles, sonic of the ,
wells being the most productive in the
whole region.
FOREIGN,
India has 3,000,000 acres of tobacco.
Spaniards and Cubans have begun killing
their prisoners of war.
It is reported that the Italian forces
have defeated the Abyssinians at Adis'
grat.
Egyptian troops and friendly Arabs
bare defeated the forces of Osman
Digua.
It is reported that ten thousand British
troops will be sent to the. Soudan in the
autumn.
The French law allows prisoners whose
parents are dying to pay one visit to them
when on their death -beds.
It is reported in London that the Brit
ish Government will send 10,000 troops to
the Soudan in the autumn.
There were 11,8$0 persons in penal ser-
vitude in 'Great Britain and Australia in
1570, and only 4,345 in 1895.
The number of police in England is as
1 to every 730 inhabitants, 1 to 923 in Scot-
land, and 1 to 341 in Ireland.
An eminent Austrian physician de-
clares that rheumatism can be cured by
a plentiful diet of ripe fruit.
In Blenheim Palace, the Ironic of the
Duke and Duchess of Marlborough, there
are said to be twenty staircases leading
from the main floor to the second.
The Imperial crown and regalia were re-
moved front St. Petersburg to Moscow on
Wednesday to be ready for the approach-
ing coronation.
The piles of old London bridge, driven
800 years before, were found to be in good
condition when the new bridge was
erected in 1859.
Reports are in circulation that the con-
dition of the Czarewich, who is visiting
Nice for the benefit of his health, has be-
come seriously worse.
Sir Charles Rivers Wilson, president of
the Grand Trunk railway, will sail for
America on the 25th inst. He will make
a tour of inspection over the road.
The British Radical Committee. of which
Henry Labouchere, Sir Charles Dilke
and Hon. Philip Stanhope are the
most prominent members, will be dis-
solved.
A SUFFERER FOR FIFTEEN YEARS.
Laid U» for roar or Five, Weeks at a
Time—Permanently Oared by Three
ttBottles of South American Kidneyleure.
It is surely very unwise with a disease
that quickly leads to disastrous results to
experiment with medicines, the nature
of which. cannot possibly prove perm
nently effective. Pills and powders may,
apparently, give relief in case of kidney
disease, but the disease can only be anni-
hilated by a solvent that will, before ser-
ious results follow, dissolve the hard par -
'doles that form in the system where kid-
ney disease prevails. South American
Kidney Cure can always be depended upon
to perform its work Mrs. Valentine Mat-
thews, of Greywood, Annapolis County,
N. S. says that she suffered for fifteen
years from kidney disease, the pain at
some periods becoming so severe that she
would be laid tip for' four or five weeks
at a time Medicines enough she used,
but they never removed the disease. After
taking three bottles of.South American:
Kidney Cure she was completely cured,
and has not known suffering since.
French custom receipts for tire quarter
ending March show increases over the
corresponding quarter of 1895 to the
amount of nearly 30,000,000 and from ex-
ports of 9,000,000.
Itis learned in Paris that in view of
possible events in the Soudan orders have
been issued to increase the supplies and
arrlaments of the French military posts
in South Africa. ,
There are rumors in Rome to the effect
that France and Russia are organizing
the barbarous mountain tribes in Africa
to pour them down upon the adjacent pos-
sessions of European nations,
Sir Michael Hicks -Beach delivered the
budget speechin the British House of
Commons. The revenues are nearly
£6,000,000 over the estimates, and every-
thing indicates unexampled prosperity.
Au official despatch from Buluwayo
says it is impossible to estimate the nutn-
bers of the enemy. The whole country is
now in the hands of the rebellions natives.
It will require a large force of troops to
dislodge them.
The owners of the British steamer
Crathie have been condemned by the Rot-
terciam'Court to pay 555,500 :florins dam-
ages to the North German Lloyd Company
for the sinking of the steamer Elbe by col-
lision in January of last year.
Five systems of law are in use in Ger-
many; 18,000,000 people live under the.
Prussian code, 2;500;000 under the Saxon,
7,500,000 under the French code civil, 14,-
000,000 under the . German commercial
code, the modernized form of Roman law,
and 500,000 under Scandinavian law, It is
cod
substitute a new
proposed toe, the
draft of which was completed this year,
tor all the older laws,
QUEBEC COUNTY HEARD FROM.
J. J. T. Fremont, 11I,P., Falls Into Line
With Other Quebec Members.
The men of prominence who have suc-
cessfully used Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal
Powder are representative of all portions
of the Dominion. But in Quebec it is to
be noted that first one member of parlia-
ment and then another bears testimony
to the efficacious qualities of this medi-
oino, When this remedy will cure deaf-
ness of twelve years' standing, as has al-
ready been recorded In these columns, it
may be depended upon to remove catarrh
in less aggravated form. It is a visiting
angel to the man or woman whose head
is stuffed up with Catarrh, for it clears
away the trouble almost in a moment.
Unlike other catarrhal medicines, it is
exceedingly pleasant to take, and leaves
no distasteful after effects. Sample bottle
and Blower sent by S. G, Detohon, 44
Church street, Toronto, on. receipt of 10
dents in silver or stamps
Rheumatism Cured iii a Day.
South American Rheumatic Cure, for.
Rheumatism and Neuralgia, radically
cures in 1 to 3 days . Its action upon the
system is remarkable and mysterious It
removes at once the cause and the disease
immediately disappears. The first dose
greatly benefits; 75 cents, sold by all drug -
gists.
The Time Allowance.
(CYCLES.
A Higher Grade Bicycle it
is im possible to roduce•
p p
A Number of bargains in second-hand wheels.
CRIBBLE & M°NAB
SOLE AGENTS
34 FRONT ST. WEST, TORONTO
Send for Catalogue.
HEART DISEASE CURABLE.
Evidence Hardly to be Questioned Feints
That Way.
in general opinion the doom is fixed of
the man or woman who finds heart trou-
ble growing upon him, and the most ob-,
servant is aware that this disease has
fastened its fangs on a very large per-
centage of Canadian people. Men and
women are dropping dead daily from
heart failure. It has been proven beyond
a doubt that Dr. Agnew's Cure for the
Heart is possessed of such elements as
give back to the individual—who may
have been a life-long sufferer from heart
trouble—his usual rigour and endurance..
It will give relief in thirty minutes. The
slightest exertion proved fatiguing to
Thomas Petry of Aylmer, Que,, who had
suffered for five years from heart com-
plaint. He had not taken ono bottle of
Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart before
its good effects told, and having taken
four bottles of the remedy he says:
am entirely free from every symptom of
heart disease"
First Traveler—Does the train stop
here long enough to let you get some- '
thing to eat I
Second. Traveler—No; just long enough
to let you pay for what you order, I
,
The great lung healer is found in that
excellent medicine sold as Biekle's Anti -
Consumptive Syrup. It soothes and dim-
inishes the sensibility of the membrane
of the throat and air passages, and is a
sovereign remedy for all coughs, colds,
hoarseness, pain or soreness in the chest,
bronchitis, etc. It has cured. many when
supposed to be far advanced in consump-
tion.
Just.tk eTiling.
Tiling.
Mrs. Hopeful—Is my boy improving
any?
rofessor of Penmanship—Ho is get-
ting worse, His :writing is now so bad
that no living soul can read it.
"How lovely! The darling! He'll be
a great author some day."
FITS.—All fits stopped free and permanent- I
lyy cured. No fits after first day's use of Dr.
Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Free 52
trial bottle sent through Canadian Agency:
Address Dr, Kline, 981 Arch St., Philadelphia,
Pa.
In the Future.
Hulking
uture-
Hulking Harry—Do you know where I'
can strike a job?
Plodding Pete—Be yer a goin' bank on
der perfesh?
Hulking Harry—I must. I can't stand
der. grub dose new men housekeepers are
a givin' me.
Common Sense Temperance.
Perhaps one of the most engrossing
subjects under public consideration is
that of intemperance. It is a subject
which touches all classes alike, from the
highest to the lowest. There are few
homes which have not this skeleton In-
temperance, either hidden away in the
closet or openly parading itself to their
humiliation and disgrace. How to deal
with it is an all -absorbing topic. Minis-
ters of the gospel and Temperance advo-
cates exhaust their ingenuity in trying
to grapple with it ; and frequently, by
the very intemperance of their language,
defeat their own cause. Some of them,
unfortunately, are too bigoted to look at
the matter from a common sense stand- I
point. The victim of intemperance turns
a deaf ear to their exhortations and to •
the pleading and advice of parents, wife
or friends, and why ? Because, in many
cases, he is a helpless victim of a disease
from which, by his unassisted efforts, he I
cannot free himself. One might as well
tell him not to suffer from toothache or
rheumatism, as not to crave, for stimu-
lant. Fortunately, modern science, among
other wonderful discoveries, has found a
remedy by. which this drink disease may
be permanently cured, The most suc-
cessful curative agency known is the
Double Chloride System of treatment as
administered at LakehurstInstitute, Oak-
ville. For interesting facts bea ring on
the drink disease and its cure, address
The Manager, Oakville, Ont.
Agitation in the world of homoepathic
medicine has been. its very soul of pro-
gress, as in politics and religion—the diffi-
culties of opinion and the individualities
of men have been parent to the disagree-
ments by which the standard of these
bodies have been elevated. So with most
of our famous preparations—foremost in
illustration of which troth stands the
world-famous remedy to general debility
and langour "Quinine Winet" and which, I
a
Lo ' its en
y� o tainab m ume stlen, t
waren b b �1
is a miraculous creator of appetite, vital-
ity, and stimulant, to the general fertility
,of the system. Quinine Wine, and its
improvement, has, from the first discovery
of the great virtues of Quinine as a medi-
cal agent, been one of the most thoroughly
discussed remedies ever offered to the
public. It is one of the great tonics and
natural life-giving stimulants which the
medical profession have been compelled
to . recognize and prescribe. Messrs.
Northrop & Lyman of Toronto, have given
to the preparation of their pure Quinine
Wine the great care due to their im-
portance, and the standard excellence,
of the article which they offer to the pub-
lic comes
ub-lic'comes into the market purged of all
the defects which skilfull observation and
ific' opinion pointed out in the
nion has. pp
less perfect preparations of the past. All
druggists sell it.
Saving Time and money.
"Shall I write out Slowpay's bill?"
asked the clerk.
"No," returned the head of the firm,
after some deliberation. "I think you'd
better have it printed. Get about a hun-
dred copies or so. You'll need that num-
ber before he pays it, and the time and
money will be saved in the end."
$100 Reward $100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded disease
that s. hence ties been able to cure 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•
ease, requires a constitutional treatment.
Halt's Oatarrn 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 doing its work. The proprietors
have so much faith in its curativeowers, that
they. offer One Hundred Dollars for any ease
that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimon-
ials. Address,
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Tel ado, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75e.
Flame Figures.
Mrs. Younghub-Frank, some people
say they can see figures in the flames.
Can you?
Younghub (wearily)—Yes; $7 a ton,
Nature's Spring Garb.
No wonder that every one hails with
delight the appearance of Dame Nature,
in her emerald spring gown. After the
long dreary winter when we have been
wrapped and muffled up like mummies it
is a treat to throw off heavy clothing
and enjoy the mild air. Winter is
specially trying in the country where
there are such long distances to travel
and so much outdoor work to attend to.
The cold seems even more nenetrating
than in the cities, and the question of
suitable clothing is ono of vital interest.
Fur lined coats are warm enough but
too heavy and cumbersome to move
about in with comfort, and a Fibre
Chamois Interlining seems to be the best
thing yet found for all round. satisfaction.
It gives no weight or bulk and yet is ab-
solutely wind and weather proof, and
what's more, is cheap enough to be in
everyone's reach.
Let Off Easy.
Judge—What's the charge?
Policeman—Intoxicated, your honor.
Judge (to prisoner)—What's your
name?
Prisoner—John Gunn,
Judge—Well, Gunn, I'll discharge you
this time, but you mustn't get loaded
again.
Money saved and pain relieved by the
leading household remedy, Dr. Thomas'
Eclectric Oil—a small quantity of which
usually suffices to cure a cough, heal a
sore, cut, bruise or sprain, relieve lum-
bago, rheumatism, neuralgia, excoriated
nipples, or inflamed breast.
:Springtime
A healthy condition of
the kidneys is the best
safe -guard against all
the incidental ills incide -- -
nl to the
season. Tone on the sys-
tem
Ys-tem by using-
.
DrDD'S
idney Pills
The best r
bloc 1P urifier
on earth and
Y
Absolute b Cure for ..all
ease- of h
1 s the kidneys
Y.
NOTHING LIKE I.T.
iill
A /i
CEYLON TEA
IS DELICIOUS.
Sold Only in Lead Packets
JOHN MACGREGOR, BARRIST ER AT-
LAW, Solicitor u s Supreme Court of Can
ada. 11Soney to loan. Ufllees-2s•au Toronto
street, Toronto.
AGENTS WANTED—ON SAL Ain' OR
commission ; goad agents can secure a'
permanent'positlou. Send stamp for rartieu-
lers, No pastels, Address VITAE -ORE DE-
POT, Toronto.
Assessment Srsttem.
MUTUAL
RESERVE
FUND
LIFE
Association
Edw.13. Harper
Founder.
Fred. A. Burn-
ham
President,
15 Years Corn,
pieced
The Largest
and
Stronrest
Natural
Premium
Lifeinsurancc
Company
In the World,
$69,000,000 of New Business in 1893.
$908,600,00 of Business in Force.
$4,084,073 Death Claims Paid in 1895.
$15,000,000 Death Claims Paid Since Business
BSurpleganu,
Income and Business in Force.
s,
1806 shows an increase In Gross Assets, Net
t�•Over 105,8 0 members interested.
W. J. McMURTItY, Manager for Ontario,
Freehold Loan Building. Toronto Ont.'
A. R. MONICFIOL, Manager for Manitoba,
British Columbia and North- West Territories,
Mcintyre i3loek. Winnipeg, Man: D. Z. BEC-
SE'rTE, Manager for Quebee,l2 Place di Armes
Montreal, Que.: COL. JAMES DOMVILLE:
Manager for New Brunswick, St, John, N. B.;
W. J. MURRAY, Manager for Nova Scotia,
Halifax, N. S.
Mutual Principle,
When we read
or hear of
HULL
We naturally
think of
E. B. Eddy's
Matches.
Drop a postal card to A. ll. 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 Manag emen
TORONTO AND STRATFORD, ONT.
Unquestionably the leading :Commercial
Schools of U. Dominion; advantages best in Canada; arlaa
� moderaterates; students may
enter at any time, r WrI'e to either school for
circulars and mention this paper.
Se:AW & ELLIOTI`, Principals.
T. N. U.
61
CDS' t
TO ATTEND THE NORTHERN BUSINESS DOLLED!.
For either a Business or a Shorthand Course, No eoe
should expect to succeed without good business train
ing. Announcement free. C. A.:Fleming,.Owea Slum
VEl4YTHING FOR THE
PRINTER-
Type, Presses, Inks, Ready -Print.
Newspapers, Ste,a'otype Matter, if i,► tr o-
tyypin_ ,Engraving. TORONTO 'IIPI?'
VOLT it
VOY,`lroronto and Winnipeg.
4