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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1896-9-10, Page 2Subscribers who do not reec+ive their paper regularly will please notify us at once. Cab at the office for advertising rates. THE EXETER ADVOCATE. THURSDAY, SEPT. 10, 1896. The Week's Commercial Summary, The cotton crop.of the United States is estimated at 7,500,000 bales. Pork in Chicago has broken all previous low records in prices. Sales of September at $5.55. The hide market at Toronto is dull and weaker. Dealers are paying only 5io. for the best green. The earnings of the Canadian Pacific Railway for the third week of August were $403,000, au increase of $29,000. The stock of wheat at Toronto is 112,695 bushels as compared with 127.565 bushels a week ago and 3,743 a year ago. A good foreign demand has been re- ported lately for wheat. The trade is in- convenienced, however, by the scarcity of freight room at Montreal. Stocks of wheat at Fort William and Port Arthur are 1,894,799 bushels as com- pared with 1,971,600 bushels a week ago, and 140,000 bushels a year ago. There has been another large increase in supplies of corn, The visible supply in the United States and Canada is now 14,110,000 bushels and the amount afloat to Europe is 13,680,000 bushels.' Loan certificates are now rendered al most imperative for the relief of the New York Banks, which are obliged to renew commercial paper that is becoming due, and to increase the loanable funds on the stock exchange. A decidedly improved tone pervades the wheat market, and the outlook foe firmer prices is considered good. Buyers are plentiful, and there is au especially good demand from the continent. The strength appeared gradually with small gains each day. The visible supply of wheat decreased 687,- 000 bushels last week, and the total is 45,- 189,000 bushels as compared with 35,088,000 bushels a year ago, and 64,780,000 bushels two years ago. The amount afloat to Europe is 17,280,000 bushels, an increase of 89,000 for the week, and the total a year ago 28,320,000 bushels. The trade returns for July, being the first of the current fiscal year, are en- couraging, the exports showing an increase of $415,026. Imports, on the other hand, show an increase of $1,715,782, and the duty collected an increase of $53,216. Coin, presumably American silver, to the value of $831,068, was exported. The total value of the free goods entered last month was $4,895,389. Of this coin and bullion was included, amounting to $1,273,638. Hera and Thera. It is understood tuna Cornelius Van derbilt. jr., has consented the next time he is married, not to go contrary to his father's wishes. It is to be hoped that the report is true that Crete is to have her "autonomy." Crete will then give us a rest, for which we shall be grateful. A St. Louis child of eight months has died of senile debility. Chicago will be likely to remark that this is about what • one could expect in St. Louis. France is greatly worried about her population. But some people are more concerned about the behavior of her pop- ulation than the size of it. "Pilgrim's Progress" is to be drama- tized and staged iu Great Britain, and the clergy are expected to make a great rush for tickets at half rates to the great moral show. There are times when it Is not oppor- tune to weep. A New York girl stole a bicycle, wept and got off with a repri- mand. She stole another bicycle, wept and got thirty days. A woman in Brooklyn who has sued a ' married man for breach of promise says that all that she wants is to be vindicated. Both she and the man seem to need vindi- cation very badly. 1 Topeka, Kan., has a new curfew law, , which provides that all children under sixteen found on the streets unaccom- , panied by guardians, after 9 p.m. in sum- mer and 8 p.m, in winter, shall be arrest- ed. Grown people of sixteen and one- quarter and sixteen and one-half will do well to carry their birth certificates around with them if they have to stay out ' late. Europe is aroused by the intelligence that the English troops have begun their march up the Nile. There is warm work ahead of these troops when they eater the Mandist's country, and there are political interests trembling in the balance that may shake all Europe before they are definitely determined. It takes so little to set Europe by the ears that every move- ment at home or abroad is regarded with anxiety alike by the uneasy heads that wear the crowns and the poor people who carry the burdens of maintaining military establishments on a war footing in times of peace. For Our Younger Readers. The present age demands special quali- fications and definite training in order to winsuccess in any sphere. For business success as a farmer, mechanic, tradesman or professional,, nothing can be more desir- able than a short, bright, practical bus- iness course in some reliable Business school. As much so for our young women too, is such a training desirable to enable them to become more economical and successful managers of the home, and to fill the many mercantile situations now open for them as correspondents, stenog- raphers, book-keepers, etc. For such a training we know of no school which offers better advantages than the Central Business College of Toronto. The new school year in this College began on Tuesday, Sept. 1st, on and after which. date students may enter. The latest and most unique Prospectus which we have seen has just been issued by the Principal and Proprietor Mr. W. H. Shaw. If you are interested in his workand in your own welfare write and obtain a copy. Pleasant as syrup; nothing equals it as a worm medicine; the name is Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator. The great- est worm destroyer of the age. TOPICS OF A WEEK. The Important Events In a Few Words For Busy Readers. t'A\AMAN.. The Manitoba census shows a popula- tion of 193, 425. Mr. W. P. Powell was appointed Chief of Police at Ottawa. Reports from the "Soo" Canal show a big falling off in business. An ` Oxford pioneer, Mr. Thomas George Clifford, has passed away, aged 78. Mr. Simon Labrosse, ex-M,P., died on Saturday at St. Eugene Prescott county, Ont. Joseph Ilynes was found on the rail- way track east of Beamsville, fatally in- jured. Mr. Laurier has been Invited to accept a banquet from Canadians residing in Worcester, Mass. About five thousand barrels of apples have, up to date, been shipped from Montreal to. Europe. Sir Oliver Mowat spoke for nearly an hour in continuing the debate on the address in the Senate. At Holy Trinity Church, Winnipeg, Very Rev. Dr. Grisdale was consecrated Bishop of Qu'Appelle. Hon. Mr. Davis has been selected as successor to the late Mr. Balfour in the office of Provincial Secretary. Plans for the new Grand Trunk Car shops in London will be submitted to the contractors in a day or two. At the Conservative caucus held in Ottawa Sir Charles Tupper was elected leader of the Conservative Opposition. The split, in the Independent Foresters of Quebec, between the English and French members, over the offices, grows wider. The salt works and other buildings at Saltford, near Goderich, were burned on Sunday morning, the loss amounting to $17,000. Mr. W. E. Hagainan, merchant, of Ridgetown, Ont., died there Monday from the effects of a paralytic stroke, aged 76. Members of the Canadian Club gave a farewell dinner to Rev. J. H. Long at Hamilton, and presented him with a gold pin. The news has reached Windsor, Ont., that the Rev. Dean Wagner, parish priest of Sandwich, Ont., has died in Alsace, Germany. The lumbering interests of the Ottawa districts are very quiet at present, being affected by the presidential contest in the United States. At a special meeting of the Canadian Cut Nail Association at Montreal it was decided to reduce the cost of cut nails five Cents per keg. Hamilton City Council decided to lay the water pipe for the Dominion Cold Storage Company, but refused to grant any exemption from taxation. Fire broke out in two or three places in the Hamilton Biscuit Company's premises, doing $9,000 damage to the stock and $2, 500 to the buildings. Dr. V. A. Moore, of Brookville. was elected President of the Canadian Medi- cal association, and Montreal was again chosen as the next place of meeting. Mr. Powderly, formerly Master Work - man or -man of the Knights of Labor, has an- nounced his intention of supporting Major McKinley in the presidential con- test At a meeting of the Bench and Bar of the city of Quebec on Thursday night it was decided to tender a reception to Lord Russell in that city during his visit there next week. Sabbatarians are disappointed because the shareholders of the Grimsby Park Company at their annual meeting did not decide to close the gates of the park on Sunday. The Hon. Sir Henri Joly de Lotbiniere will, it is understood, accompany Li Hung Chang through Canada as the official representative of the Canadian Government, Mrs. Michael Boyle, of Owen Sound, was arrested on a charge of shooting and wounding a young man named William Hughes, who, she claims, in- sulted her on the street. Sportsmen are crowding into Mani- toba for the duck•shooting, which began on Tuesday, Sept. 1. Prairie chickens come in two weeks later. Game is report- ed very plentiful. At a meeting of the Board of Trustees of the Queen's University, Kingston, Ont., Mr. T. R. Glover, M. A., fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge, was elected professor of Latin. Mr. John Galbraith, of Toronto, was appointed Vice -President of the mechan- ical and engineering section of the American Association for the Advance- ment of Science, at Buffalo. It Is stated that some prospectors have gone so far inland in British Columbia that unless help is organized they are likely to be overtaken by winter, and perish of cold and starvation. A patient at the Brandon Asylum for the Insane, named Carruthers, deliber- ately killed another patient named Ren- net with an axe in the presence of a number of inmates and a keeper. The Hamilton Trades and Labor Coun- cil have decided to forward a petition to the members for the city at Ottawa ask- ing the Government to increase the tax on Chinamen entering Canada to $500. North Grimsby Township Council has passed a by-law granting right of way to the Cataract. Power Company through the township, thus completing the right of way from Decew Falls to Ham- ilton. At a meeting of the Grand Lodge of Quebec, I O. 0. F., it was decided to transfer the Brockville Lodge to the To- ronto jurisdiction. It was also decided to adopt the assessment system of insur- ance. Lieut. -Cols. Cotton and Gordon, of Canada, who were examined before a military board at Aldershot, on July 17, as to their tactical fitness to com- mand, have, it is announced, passed with success. Dr. William T. Harris, of Brantford, Ont., died suddenly of apoplexy on 'Wed- nesday night. He was president of the Ontario Medical Association, and repre- sented Trinity University on the Medi tai Council. Mr. Robert Bickerdike, president of the Montreal Board of Trade, said that it would not be possible to hold an In- ternational Exhibition in Montreal next year,as the Premier had told him that the time was too short to snake it a suc- cesS, Mv. Laurier announced in the House of Commons that it is the intention of the Government to take a plebiscite on the Prohibition question, but • the date at which the vote would be given is not yet fixed. The Cultivateur, the personal organ of Mr. 'Tarte, Minister of Public Works, stated yesterday that no company, has offered to establish a fast line of steam- ers of twenty knots an hour between Canada and Europe for the subsidies now voted. Miss Ellis, who has been boarding on Wood street, in Toronto, got off a Yonge street oar at Roxborough avenue on Sat- urday afternoon, and, passing round the rear of the oar to cross the street was struck by a car going south. She was thrown some distance and sustained a severe fracture of the • skull. She was taken to the General hospital and at an early hour this morning was still alive. UNITED STATES. The Emerson Piano Company of Bos- ton has failed. Liabilities $150,000. A case of genuine Asiatic cholera, which resulted fatally, is reported in Chicago. The United States cruiser Brooklyn in her official trial made an average speed of 21 92-100 knots. Latest reports state that many lives were lost in the fire which destroyed Ontonagon, the Michigan lumber town. Looked -out men of the Brown Hoisting Company in Cleveland have voted to re- turn to work, and the strike will be de- diared off. Harry Hill, one of the old-time and most famous of New York dive -keepers, who gloried in the title of the wickedest man in New York, died on Thursday night. He was seventy years of age. FOREIGN. The past month has been the coldest August on record in England. The late Sultan of Zanzibar was poi- soned, so it is now reported. Italy has ordered the suspension of emigration of Italians to Brazil. Serious rioting took place at Constan- tinople, and many persons were killed. Armenians are reported to have pro- voked a serious riot at Constantinople on Tuesday. Forty Turks were killed and twenty wounded in a recent attack on Cretans at Malevsi. The British Consul has requested the German Consul at Zanzibar to surrender Said Khalid. The latest estimate places the number of persons killed in the Constantinople riots at 2,000. The Royalists of Hawaii are making strong efforts to establish Princess Kalu- lani on the throne. The Royal Academy is experiencing much difficulty in selecting a successor to the late Sir Jahn Millais. Mr. A. J. Balfour is paying a visit to Mr. Gladstone at Hawarden, and this is causing much speculation. The London Times notes that financial and political reasons stand in the way of the annexation of Zanzibar. Secretary Green, of the British Legation at Teheran, has been appointed British diplomatic agent at Pretoria. The whole Japanese Cabinet has re- signed. The Emperor has appointed Count Kuroda acting Premier, Leopold Herz, of New York, father of Dr. Cornelius Herz, of Panama canal fame, is dead at Bournemouth, Eng. It is thought in Skibbereen, Ireland, that Whitehead, the recently liberated Irish -American dynamiter, has suicided. The fiftieth report of the English Lunacy Commission shows an increase of '2.365 lunatics, the largest ever re- corded. Dr. Thomas Gallagher, the Irish -Amer- ican dynamiter who was released from Portland prison on Friday, is on his way to New York. The rumor is again afloat in London of a possible marriage between Mr. Wil- liam Waldorf Astor and Princess Vie toria of Wales. Lord Russell, of Killowen, arrived in Ottawa on Satnrday, and will remain there until Thursday, when be will re- turn to Montreal. Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, Secretary of State for the Colonies, • who sailed from England on Wednesday for New York, will probably visit Ottawa. On the advice of her court physician the Czarina, who is enceinte, will return at once to St. Petersburg, and the Czar will continue his journey alone. A despatch received in Paris from Constantinople says that the Sultan has sanctioned the scheme of the Powers for the settlement of the Cretan question. The amount of the capitalization of the new joint stock companies organized in England during the first half of 1896 will aggregate more than $440,000,000. The situation of affairs in Rhodesia is daily more reassuring. The leading chiefs are already carrying out their arrangements with • Mr. Cecil Rhodes to lay down their arms, Prince Lobanoff-Rostovsky, the Rus- sian ussian Minister of. Foreign Affairs, who accompanied the Czar and Czarina on their foreign tour, died suddenly while on his way from Vienna to Kieff. Turkey has been notified by the Uni- ted States that its answer to the latter's demands for indemnity as a result of the burning of the American missions at Kharput and Marash is not satisfactory. The American ex -Ministers to China and New York merchants in the Asiatic trade banqueted Li Hung Chang at the Waldorf. The invitation of the Montreal Chinese to visit that city was accepted conditionally by the visitor. The crisis at Zanzibar is regarded as ended, The new Sultan is expected to follow the peaceful lines of his predeces- sor, and it is understood that Great Britain does not intend making any change in the existing form of Govern- ment. The Cologne Gazette publishes a de- spatch from 'Zanzibar stating that the German Consul there refuses to surrender Said Ehalid to the British. A United Press cable from Berlin states that the Government 'has decided to surrender him on the guarantee that he shall be treated as a prince • and a prisoner of war. Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Dysentery Cordial s prepared from drugs known to the pro- fession as thoroughly reliable for the cure of cholera, dysentery, diarrhoea, griping pains amid summer complaints. It has been used successfully by medical practi-. Ion eta; for a number of years with gratify - iia; results. If staff ering from any sum- er complaint it is just the medicine that l tette you. Try a bottle, It sells for .5 CCN THE RICHEST FIND. Men Travel Miles for Health and Wealth and Are Disa•ppoita ted-Dr.Ag new's Great Cures Bring Health and Lay it at Your Feet—Sure, Certain and Permanent—dad Health is Wealth. The Heart—Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart is a peerless remedy. Ill thou- sands of cases where sure and sudden death seemed immiueut •its wonderful. curative ative powers hmwe been demonstrated, and in most acute forms relief has come. in thirty minutes, Some of the most pronounced symptoms of heart disorder are •ahurtuess of breath, smothering spells, palpitation and pain in tip left side. Mrs. J. L Hillier of Whitewood, N.W.T,, writes: "I fed that Dr. Agnew's Cure for the• Heart has saved my life. 1 was affected with heart trouble in a very acute form. I could not sleep, and could not lie down for fear of suffocation, I tried many of the best physicians without relief, until one of them recommended Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart: I procured a bottle. One dose gave relief,and a few bottles completely cured me." Catarrh—This dread disease fastens with inveterate hold upon the linings of the nostrils. A simple cold in the head neglected will induce it. It is estimated that SO per cent, of the population of the continent are in a greater or lesser degree subject to its ravages. One case has yet to be cited where the faithful use of Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder has not effected a perfect cure. The Rev. Mango Fraser, D.D., of Knox Church, Hamilton, Ont., who has a continental reputation as a divine and scholar, was a martyr to an acute catarrhal affection, This great remedy being brought to his notice he used it, and he writes over his own signa- ture the strongest words of commendation of its curative powers, and recommends it to all like sufferers, PILES CURED IN 3 TO 6 NIGHTS.— Dr. Agnew's Ointment will care all cases of itching piles in from three to six nights. One application brings comfort. For blind and bleeding piles it is peerless. Also cures tetter, salt rheum, eczema, barber's itch and all eruptions of the skin. 35 cents. It Was Very True. "I seem to be addlepated." As the lecturer made this remark he removed from his hair, as well as he could, portions of egg, about which a decrepit odor hung. The Public should bear in mind that Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil has nothing in common with the impure, deteriorating class of so-called medicinal oils. It is eminently pure and really efficacious— relieving pain and lameness, stiffness of the joints and muscles, and sores or hurts, besides being an excellent specific for rheumatism, coughs and bronchial com- plaints. A Hopeless Case. Visitor—So this is au utterly hopeless case? Attendant—Yep. Visitor—What caused it? Attendant—Well, one morning he drop- ped his collar button and it didn't roll under the bureau or the bed. When his wife turned around he was a gibbering idiot. Not Without Cause. Her Friend—I am sorry you are going to marry old Totterly. I hear he is a man who gets violently jealous without cause. She—Don't worry, dear. I'll take good care he never does that. Ideal Summer Resort. Kill two birds with one stone. Spend a pleasant summer holiday at Oakville and get rid of the liquor or morphine habit once and for all at the same time. It will cost you a little more than if you go to an ordinary summer resort, but probably not half as much as you would spend on liquor in half the time. "Lake - burst," with its fine house, shady grounds, water front and excellent board, is preferable to most hotels, and you can leave your liquor curse behind you forever when your holiday is over. For full particulars address Manager, Lakehurst Institute, Oakville, Ont. His Natural Query. Hideous Oliver—Hairy Haggard said dat he was no good beggin' and dat he mus' eider work or starve, Mouldy Mike—Where did dey bury him? How to Cure Headache.—Some people suffer untold misery day after day with Headache. There is rest neither day nor night until the nerves are all ,unstrung. The cause is generally a disordered stomach, and a cure can be effected by using Parmelee's Vegetable Pills, con- taining Mandrake and Dandelion. Mr. Finlay Wark, Lysander, P.Q., writes: "I find Parmelee's Pills a first-class article for Bilious Headache."' Just a Trifle Too Far. Mrs. Weary (reading)—The body of a book agent was found on Blank Street this morning. He had evidently been murdered. Mr. Weary (meditatively)—Um—er— really, now, I think that was going most too far.—New York Weekly. How's This! We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO. Props. Toledo, O. We the undersigned, have known Props., for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all.business transactions and fin= ancially able to carry out any obligation made by their firm. Wnsr & Tama, Wholesale Dru ists,Toledo, 0. WALD, rmG,KINNAN 8i MAnv1N, Wholesale Drug- gists, Toledo, 0. Hal's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act- ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur- faces of the system. Price 750, per bottle. Sold by all Druggists, Testimonials free. They Are Different. Fangle--I rode seventy-nine miles on my wheel yesterday, anmso—Lady's miles or gentleman's' miles? FITS.—All fits stopped free and permanent IN cured. No fits after first day's use 'of Dr: Kline's Great Nerve k4nstorer. Free $2 trial 'bottle sent through Canadian Agency. Address Dr. Kline, en Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa. The Term Described Him. First Deaf Mute -That was a great speech our valedictorian made. Second Ditto—Yes, indeed. He is the coming silver -fingered orator. Give Holloway's Corn Cure a trial. It removed ten corns, from one pair of feet without any pain. What it has done once it will do again. NEW IDEA WOOD FURNACE Made in Three Sizes, The Best, The Cheapest, The Most Improved, and Greatest Heating Furnace EVER SOLD. If you will take time to examiine it you will buy no other. Sold Everywhere. 3fade by GURNEY-TILDEN CO., LTD., HAMILTON. GURNEY-MASEY CO., MONTREAL. GURNEY STOVE AND RANGE CO., WINNIPEG. You Can't Feel Draughts 1 When your clothing is interlined with the light and durable? FIBRE CHAMOIS. It positive -1 ly keeps out every breath of cold wind and frosty air and keeps in the natural warmth of the body,l because it is a complete non -con-! cluctor. You'll enjoy genuine Fall and Winter comfort with it through your clothing for only a„ few cents extra expense. ;{ The Real Fibre Chamois sells now for 25 cents, with a' label on each yard, and there is also a label on every ready-to-wear suit which is interlined with it. Always, look for them. Jt� tt.414.4,4 G IG \!� 7i iiG \Vi,\h V�7VG71CptC i ih}tt�7 f. 3eE' /p\ m !n \ iiif an\ illT;IhWif /l\ �n� ` !T\ G v i .\G $� \�i • 7 i "di =AC 4-C ii P Jnr SOME of the up=to=date Contents of FOR SEPTEMBER..... GOLD TUNING IN BRITISH COLUMBIA, by B. R. ATKINS. Five Illustrations. CUBA IN WAR TIME, by PRANK POLLOCK. Six Illustrations. FORTY-EIGHTH HIGHLANDERS (Canadian Militia Series), by ALEX. FRASER, M.A. With Portraits and Illustrations. • INTERNATIONAL YACHT RACE, by W. '.. Pn1LLIPs. 'With illustrations. CANADIAN SUCCESSES ON THE STAGE, by W. J. TUOROLD. �- v G Illustrated. �\IG �\Vi �\I14 4V... e 6 ��/,/ 4RI1 y. \1/ Jia sv40,. �I/\V �i/� �11t. It. 41 � 91D'%1Pl—al$1 i hc.bu. \ `%i$ %$%\s' ite �7j\ Vif Il\ 4l�c�I�'/If 40 RED -COATS PUT TO ROUTE AN ARMY OF FORMIDABLE TRESPASSERS. Constipation, Dizziness, Pain Under the Shoulder Blades, Sick Headache, De- pressed Feeling, Bloating After Eating, Debility and Insomnia, result from an Inactive Liver. Dr. Agnew'ssLiver Pills, 40 little Red-, Coats at a cost of 10 cents, will set you right in short order. Piles of testimony to prove it. GOLD MINE. THE RICHEST GOLD MINE IN ONTARIO. THE GOLDEN GATE Situated in the Rainy River DIstrict, Ontario. A working mine producing gold bricks At the present rate of output a handsome divi- dend is assured on the stock. I have had placed in my hands for sale 150,000 shares of paid-up and non -assessable stock, par value $1each, which I am instructed for a short time only to offer AT PAR. The money raised from the sale of this stock willbe expended in purchasing more machinery to increase the output of this far -fanned bullion -producing mine. The directors are prominent men in Montreal, Hamilton, Toronto and Rat Portage. The Manager of the Company, Mr. R. H. Ahn, , is probably the best known mining expert in time Rainy River District. All applications for stock and any informa- tion will be furnished on application to FRANK MoPHILLIPs, Mining Broker for Rainy River District 1 Toronto Street, Toronto. NIAGARA . FALLS LINE. DOUBLE TRIPS EMPRESS OF INDIA and G.T.R. Daily from Yonge Street Wharf at 7.45 a.m. and 3.20 p.m, for St. Catha- rines, N. Falls, Buffalo, N. York and all points east. Family books for sale. Low rates to excursion parties. Tickets at all principal agents and at office on wharf. mra,—if, ;o : �hnomnWn� a. !31 �qn 77R NOTHING LIRE IT. �■ SALIDAYY CEYLON TEA IS DELICIOUS. Sold Only in Lead Packets JOFIN MACGREGOR. BARRIST ER AT - LAW. Solicitor in Supreme Court of Can ada. Money to loan. Uflices-28.80 Toronto I street, Toronto. CURED MEATS. We are headquarters for Smoked Hams, Roll Bacon and Long Clear Pork. Our prices are right and nothing but first-class goods shipped. TEAS, COFFEES AND SPICES. In these lines we lead the trade Our Teas and Coffees require no comment. They have proved themselves to be leaders by our enor gnus sales. Send for our Illustrated Catalogue. All goods quoted Freight Prepaid. A. H. CANNING & CO., Wholesale Grocers, 57 Front street Eagt, Toronto. The Discriminating Public always i ask for E B. EDDY'S Matches R ROIR eAli s 0/1 , � 'PETERB$RCKNIP, OitA.Git� da --� SENO FOR CATALOGUE IF YOU WANT A Canoe, Skiff, Steam Launch, or anything in the shape of a boat, WE BUILD THEM. THE CHEAPEST AND THE BEST Write to us. JAIIES L. ROGERS, Mgr. T. N. U. CENT' 6 de. // Gives the latest and best courses of training in its Commercial, Shorthand and. Penman- ship Departments. 28 Students assisted to positions in six weeks. New Term now open. Students admitted at any time.—Get particulars. -Mention this paper. W. IL SHAW, Principal.