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EXE11_, iR ADVOCATE.:
•
eifleRSDent, J'AN •
'The Weeks Commerc9al' ilmmary.
The gross earnings of'Canadian Paoific
Su the week ended January 7th were
$320,000 a decrease of $37,000.
The stocks of wheat at Port Arthur
and Fort William are 2,272,6700 bushels
els against 2,174, 520 last week.
The stook of wheat in elevators in
Canada are now 200,000 bushels less
than a year ago, the figures being
•QO hashers as against 5,972,000 bushels
on January 1, 1896.
The bank clearings at Toronto for
31896 were 11 per cent. in excess of the
clearings of the previous year. This city
had larger clearings than Detroit, Cleve-
land, Louisville, Milwaukee, St. Paul
and Buffalo.
Seventy-one failures are reported in
the Dominion last week. This is nine
more than the previous week and ten less
than the corresponding week last year.
Ontario leads with forty-three, Quebec
twenty-two, Nova Scotia. four, N. B. and
la E. L one each.
After slight changes, the general run
of prices of both raw and refined sugars
Yn the United States returned to last
week's 'averages. Centrifugal is held at
the former price by importers, but refin-
ers show no anxiety to purchase. Outside
buyers and country jobbers still make
tight offers, and holders are rather dis-
roouraged.
The visible supply of wheat in the
Ignited States and Canada is 53,872,000
bushels, a decrease of '799,000 for the
week. Tho total a year ago was 68,945,-
000.
8,945,.000. The amount on passage to Europe
is 27,520,000 bushels, a decrease of 800,-
000 for the week. The total on passage a
year ago was 25,520,000 bushels. The
total visible and amount afloat is 81,-
892,000 bushels as against 94,465,000
bushels a year ago, a decrease of 13,078,-
000 bushels.
Business in wholesale ciroles at To-
ronto has been quiet this week. The
large number of failures has an unfavor-
able influence, and the state of county
roads checks the movement of produce.
There is a hand-to-mouth trade, while
collections are somewbat restricted.
Stocks of merchandise in hands of retail-
ers are comparatively small. Travellers
are taking moderate orders for seasonable
goods, but are practically doing little in
spring goods. This trade, however, will
Increase next week. With good sleighing
business would naturally increase in
volume.
Here and There.
1h trying to stand me their dignity, a
great many people fall off.
Blessed are the road makers for they
/hall glad the children of then.
"The good dye young." This is because
early piety turns their hair prematurely
gray.
Muffs are almost as popular this winter
as they were during the baseball season
last summer.
Only about one in a thousand married
couples live co celebrate their golden wed-
ding. A couple living to celebr ' such
an event may well eujoy dist.e and
honor in large measure.
The Washington woman doctor who
willed that her body should be dissected
by a feminine medical student understood
how dearly one woman always loves to
pick another womau to pieces. p
P
The chimneyless city is a possibility of I p
the future, made so by the successful
'operation of electricity generated Innes I
away, furnishing; light, heat and power. E
What a boon it will he to future genera- n
tions not to be troubled with chimneys
and smoke.
........,..,r_r, .,,,,_
TOPICS OF THE :.MEEK.'
HERE IS THE NEWS IN SHORT
ORtYER.
Tidings from all Parts, of. the Globe, Con.
densed .end Arranted for $µs7 Readers.
CANADIAN.
The loss by Crathern & CaverhMl's fire
at Montreal will amount to $300,000.
The Right Rev. William Basil Jones,
D.D., Bishop of St. David's, is dead.
The date of South Brant bye -election
is officially announced for February 4.
Mr. F. L. Wanklyn takes charge of the
Toronto Street Railway on February 1.
Rev. John Macgillivray, pastor of Mel-
ville Presbyterian Church, Montreal, is
dead.
The body found at Port Stanley is
most probably that of Wm. Ward of
Wardsville,
A company of New York capitalists
has been formed to work an oil territory
at Bothwell.
The Markets Committee of Hamilton
will recommend the Council to pass a
curfew by-law.
Mr. Robert A. Robertson, rancher, of
Pincher Creek, Alberta, was found dead
on the prairie.
A Newfoundland dog bit a number of
persons at London, and there is a small
hydrophobia scare.
.A. young man named Sayers was
killed in the woods near Thornbury
while felling trees.
The Canadian Bridge Company are in
liquidation with liabilities about $100,-
000 and assets the same.
Mr. James Appleton, a farmer near
Aurora, was burned to death in a fire
that destroyed his barn.
It is said that Mr. Allen, ex-M.P. for
South Essex, is to be appointed collector
of customs at Windsor.
Dr. Wm. Grant, a prominent physician
of Perth, Ont., died suddenly of heart
failure Sunday afternoon.
Four men were badly injured by a
dynamite explosion near Saw Bill Lake.
They were thawing a can of it before a
fire.
Lieutenant -Governor Kirkpatrick, who
underwent an operation in a London
hospital last Wednesday, is progressing
well.
Mr. La Francis, of North Chatham,
Ont., found in an oyster on the half
shell a pearl, which has been valued at
$100.
The badly decomposed body of a man
was found in a lonely spot at Port Stan-
ley. An inquest is being held on the re-
mains.
Grand President Braithwaite of the
Manitoba Patrons will retire, and Mr.
W. C. Graham, Grand. Secretary, has re-
signed.
Lieutenant -Governor Kirkpatrick, who
underwent a surgical operation in Lon-
don on Wednesday, is progressing very
favorably.
Dir. D. L. elcGlashan, a special officer
of the Customs staff in Windsor, Ont.,
died suddenly at his residence in that city
of heart disease.
Mrs. Phillip Bender, one of the oldest
residents an the Canadian frontier, died
at Niagara Falls, N. Y., on Thursday,
aged. ninety-two.
Mr. Mucklestone, teller of the Bank of
Commerce at Chathm, broke through the
ice while playing hockey and narrowly
escaped drowning.
Mr. John Rowland, proprietor of the
Globe hotel, in Collingwood, and one of
the oldest and best known residents of
that town, died there Thursday.
The annual inter -collegiate debate be-
tween McGill and Toronto Universities
will take place on the 26th inst. The sub-
ject to be discussed is prohibition.
Application is being made to incor-
orate the British Pacific Railway Com -
any for a road from Victoria to Winni-
eg, with a branch to Hudson Bay.
Writs have been issued for the bye -elec-
tions in South Brant, North Ontario and
ast Simcoe. February 4 is polling day,
ominations beingone week earlier.
.A. re-count of the votes cast in the re-
cent Mayoralty election at Gananoque re-
sulted in Dir. Charles Britton being
declared elected by a majority of one.
The creditors of Mr. F. K. Messner
met at Formosa. The statement of the
assignee shows that the estate will not
pay more than twenty cents on the dollar.
CINNAMON COATED.
Dr. Agnew's Liver Pills are coated
like a Cinnamon drop. very small
and delightful to take. } p
a
One pill a dose, 40 in a vial for 20 cents.
Their Popularity is a mighty whirlwind,
sweeping competitors before it
like chaff.
No pain, no griping, no inconvenience.
Small in size and pleasant to the taste.
Most pleasant after effects.
Mars' Vegetation.
An eminent astronomer is of epicure
that the red glow of the planet ti I..,
caused by crimson vegetation. Ile ruin s
that the grass and foliage tbere are to
sat green as they are on earth
A Woman'z+ Intuition.
She—So the first thing Tom told you
about his fiancee was, that she Wn.; "acro•
fully sensible"?
He—Yes.
She—That settles it. She's plain.
CONTENTS OF THE BOTTLE.
Where a Rheumatic Sufferer Was Cured
With One Bottle of South American
Rheumatic Cure.
The cures effected by South American
Rheumatic Cure are so quick and cer-
tain that they may well be termed mar-
vellous. The secret is that the medicine
removes from the system the acids that
are really the cause of rheumatism. W.
H. Cooper, of Delhi, Ont., says: "My
son, 15 years old, was a sufferer from
rheumatism for six months. He became
so bad that he was unable to wstllr I
purchased one bottle of South American
Rhuematio Cure from Mr. Byers, our
local druggist, and the following tray he
was able to drive a load of wood to
Delhi."
Street Car Accident.—Mr. Thomas
Sabin, says: "My eleven year old boy had
his foot badly injured by being run ever
by a car on the Street Railway. We at
once commenced bathing the foot with
Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil, when the die -
coloration and swelling was removed, and
s
in nine day he could use his feet, ,$Pe
always keep a bottle in the house ready
for any emergency."
Senator Snowball, who is in Ottawa
rior to leaving for Europe, says that
xpectations have hardly been realized
s regards the operation of the French
treaty.
Mr. Frank Forbes, ex.M. P. for
Queen's -Shelburne, N. S., has been ap-
pointed a County Court Judge in the
place of Judge Desbrisay, who has re-
signed.
The resignation of Mr. John Sinclair
as Governor -General's secretary has been
accepted, and Mr. Sinclair has been ap-
pointed, without pay, acting secretary for.
his Excellency.
Canada has at last been heard from
in connection with the Lord Mayor's
relief for the Indian sufferers. Lord
Mount Steghen has contributed four
hundred pounds.
Mr. Thomas Hughes, a farmer living
about three miles from Teeswater, Ont.,
fell through a trap door in his barn on
Saturday, and was killed. He was 80
years of age.
The Rev. M. Stover, one of the oldest
members of the Free Methodist Church,
who came from Burlington, Vt., to
Kingston, last November, died in. the
latter city on Saturday.
The Dominion Government has been
advised by the Indian superintendent in
British Columbia that the report from
the Pacific coast about the trouble among
the Indians regarding potlaehing was
exaggerated.
Mr. J. H. Macoun, of the Geological
Department, left Saturday for England to
join Prof. Darcy Thompson and assist in
preparing a report et the Imperial Gov-
ernment onthe result of their observa-
tion of seal life in the .Pribyloff Islands
last summer.
Free and easy expectoration immed-
iately relieves and frees the throat and
lungs from viscid phlegm, and a medicine
chat promotes this is the best medicine to
use for coughs, colds,inflammation of the
Iungs and all affections of the throat and
chest. This is precisely what Biekle's
Anti -Consumptive Syrup is a. specific for,
and wherever used it has given unbound-
ed satisfaction. Fac ion. Children like it because
it is pleasant, adults like it because it re-
lieves and cures the disease,
Lj
At a meeting of the creditors of Mr. F;
B. 'Messner held at Formosa, for the
'Purpose of .forming; a joint stook con-
panyeto'take'over, the estate tend net •:the
• debts•'of the, • insoltrente only'. a5... of Mn
Meesner's 300' creditors. Were present.
' The five alien:. acoused of tionspiraoy,
fraud, and arson in donneotlen with the
Melancthon tereeniship fires 'appeared: be-
fore the magistrates tit Shelburne, and
were remanded, till next Monday, no evi-
dence being taken: An attempt to induce
Tames Corbett, oee of the prisoners, to
turn Queen's evidence failed. • •
UNITED STATES..
IOW York banks ' report R large in-
crease in the amoturt of cash on hand.
President McKinley, when he goes' to
Washington, will take his mother, wife,
brother and nieces.
lee was blown out of the bay into the
lake at Marinette, Wis. Five fishermen
were drowned; thirty were rescued.
Commercial failures in the United
States this week number 455, against
895 for the corresponding week of last
year.
Sixteen children were burned to death
and three fatally injured in a fire that
destroyed an orphans' home near Dallas,
Texas.
The report of the deep waterways
commissioners of the United States was
submitted to the House at Washington
by President Cleveland.
The First National Bank of Newport,
Ky., the German National Bank of Louis-
ville and the Minnesota Savings Bank
stopped payments Monday.
Frank J. Palmer, a Maine boy, has
confessed the murder of an old woman,
Mrs. Betsy Hobbs, because she made him
pay for glass broken in her house.
The Pittsburg Despatch says that the
Cuban policy of the McKinley Adminis-
tration will differ very little from that
pursued by President Cleveland.
Little Maggie Dutoher gave evidence in
the trial of John Sullivan at Dorchester,
N. B., stating that the prisoner was the
man who murdered her mother.
Ocean steamship men at New York
decided to let the present rates, $27 to
$28.50, stand until March 15, when an-
other conference will be held. "
Patrick Donahue is charged at Phila-
delphia with the murder of his wife,
with whom he went on a drunk on Wed-
nesday, the day of their marriage.
The charred remains of Louis Mailloux,
an old resident of Pittsfield, Mass., were
found in a swamp near Rouse's Point,
N. Y. A. bullet wound was found.
Prof. Henry W.Elliott has advised the
United States Senate that from an econ-
omie and humane point of view it would
be far better for the United States to kill
all the remaining seals outright than to
permit the slaughter to continue under
the present regulations.
FOREIGN.
The Panama Canal Company It in-
creasing its force of laborers,
The Earl of Kimberly was elected. Lib-
eral leader in the House of Lords.
The great channel tunnel scheme to
connect Dover and Calais has been aban-
doned.
The Queen continues in fine health,
and is busy over the programme for the
diamond jubilee.
It is stated on authority that Mr. Wil-
liam Waldorf Astor has not become a
British subject,
Emperor William is still very active in
forwarding his scheme for the reorgani-
zation of the artillery.
Sir John B. Thurston, Governor of
Fiji and High Commissioner for the
Western Pacific, is dying.
A Chancery suit which was started in
1720 is still in progress. The amount
involved is nine million pounds.
The Hon. Joel E. Headley, the well-
known historian, died at his residence in
Newburg, N. Y., on Saturday.
Lord Rosemead (Sir Hercules Robin-
son) is very ill, and has asked to be,
relieved from the Governorship of the
Cape.
Owing to the famine and plague, Bom-
bay is being deserted. The sanitary con-
dition of the city is said to be very de-
fective.
The trial of E. J. Ivory, the dyna-
miter, began at London in the Central
Criminal Court, Old Bailey, before Mr.
Justice Hawkins.
Mr. Richard Holmes, the librarian of
Windsor castle, is preparing the material
for the authoritative "Personal Life of
Queen Victoria."
Famine and plague are stalking hand
in hand through India, and it is almost
impossible to give any idea of the fearful
distress that prevails.
Five Drawing-rooins will be held dur-
ing the jubilee season, two by the Queen
and three in which the Princess of
Wales will actfor her Majesty.
The British Indian troopship Warren
Hastings was totally wrecked off the Is-
land of Reunion on Thursday. The
troops and crew were all saved.
Dr. Bergmann, of Berlin, has been
summoned to St. Petersburg to perform
an operation on the Czar, who is suffer-
ing from the results of a blow received
in 1891 from a Japanese fanatic.
The accounts of the distress in India
from the continued cause of the famine
and the plague are appalling. Nearly a
million people have fled from Bombay.
The British Government is taking
active steps to fit out an expedition to
avenge the Benin massacre. It is prob-
ably that the Kingdom of Benin will be
annexed.
The Sultan has attempted to exile
Marshal Fuad Pasha, who is hated by
palace officials because he has prevented
massacres, by appointing him to the mil-
itary command of Bagdad. Fuad has
refused to go.
At the consecration of Right Rev. Dr
Creighton, the new Bishop of London,
Mr, John.Kensit entered a protest on the
ground. of his Lordship's High Church
and Romanish tendencies. The Vicar -
General refused to listen to the protest.
A despatch from Bombay presents an
awful picture of the plague -stricken city.
Business is temporarily suspended and
the city is deserted. Native doctors have
fled from their posts, and the' cemeteries.
are crowded, the dead sometimes being left
unburied.
"It is a Great Public Benefit."—These
significant words were used in relation to
Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil, by a gentle-
man who had thorouuhly tested its
merits in hisown case -having been
cured. by it of lameness of the knee, of
three or four- years' standing. It never
fails to remove soreness r pegs as well as lame-
ness, and is an incomparable pullmoats
and corrective.
CALIFORNIA'S, BIG VINE.
It Rests on Sixty Posts and Covers a Third
Of an .Acre..
''Iti the rich valley of Carpenteria, in
the most picturesque 'part oe beautiful
Santa Barbara county; is a viticulttual
onriosity, almost a monstrosity. Tts loon-
tibn is comratatively secluded, and with
the exception of the residents .of the vi-
cinity, few know of the location of a
mammoth grapevine, the largest in the
world.
The massive trunk of the vine is 7 feet
8 inches in circumference, its size and
appearance suggesting an oak rather than
a grapevine. Its branches rest on: a stal-
wart frame covering te space one-third of
an acre in extent. It grows rapidly and
would undoubtedly attain even greater
dimensions were it not that the owner,
having reached the limitof the space he
has reserved for leis giant vine and being
unwilling to concede it more room, outs
it back every year.
The frame over which the vine is
spread is largely built, as it is required
to support the tremendous weight of
grapes annually yielded by the vine.
Sixty stout posts, with heavy crossbeams,
form the fbundation for the grape laden
branches. The vitae is of the mission va-
riety and is so prolific that in 1893 it
bore eight tons of grapes, and. in 1896 the
owner took ten tons from the vine, in ad-
dition to as many clusters as the neigh-
bors cared to car y,'anvay.
This Carpenteria vine is much larger
than the celebrated grape bearer of
Hampton court, England, which has been
regarded as one of the horticultural won-
ders of the world and by many claimed
to be the largest in existence. In 1876 a
grapevine from Montecito, Santa Bar-
bara county, was then admittedly the
largest in the world. It was removed in
sections and set tip in the Centennial ex-
position in Philadelphia, where it at-
tracted much attention. The Carpenteria
vine is now `one-third larger than was
the Montecito product when exhibited.
During the World's Columbian exposi-
tion the owner of the present champion
grapevine, Jacob Wilson, was offered a
round sum to permit its removal to Chi-
cago for exhibition purposes. He was
also urged to send it to the Midwinter
fair. Mr. Wilson declined to part with
his elephantine vine, however. He owns
a small ranch of eight acres, and, al-
though his big grape arbor brings him no
revenue from tourists or sightseers, be
refuses to despoil his property of this
unique feature.
The vine was planted in 1842 by a
Spanish woman, Joaquina Lugodi Ayala.
Under her care the little grape cutting
flourished and grew to unusual propor-
tions, although she repeatedly cut it
back. She retained ownership of the bud
and the rine until 1877, when the pro-
perty was purchased by Jacob Wilson,
the present owner, himself a pioneer.
Dona Ayala died three years ago, aged
84, but to the last retained the greatest
interest and pride in the mammoth vine
she had planted and tended.
Beneath the thick leaves of the vine
800 persons could find protection at the
same time from the summer heat. The
people of the neighborhood have often
assembled under the spreading branches
for public meetings. Thirty years ago
the vine formed a roof over so large et
space that it was used as an election
booth. The first election in Santa Bar-
bara county under American rule was
held under its branches of ripening fruit.
Colonel Russell Heath, the pioneer wal-
nut grower of Santa Barbara county, a
neighbor of Mr. Wilson, was then sheriff
of Santa Barbara, and the election was
held under the vine by his direction. The
space thus utilized was larger than any
available room in the vicinity.
Beneath his own giant vine Mr. Wilson
loves to spend his leisure hours, speculat-
ing what dimensions the viticulture'
monster might have attained if its ex-
traordinary growth had never been
checked.—San Francisco Examiner.
Newport's Nov Ocean House.
It is news of general interest and of
especial concern to frequenters of New-
port that the Ocean House is to be sold
to persons of enterprise in New York
who will tear it down and build on its
site a new Ocean House—big, modern,
gorgeous, equipped with ballrooms,
tennis courts and all the apparatus which
makes contemporaneous existence easy
and agreeable to people who can pay
their hotel bills. Part of the equipment
of the new house is to be 75 cottage
suits, each comprising a parlor, dining
room, three bedrooms and servants'
rooms. The grounds of the old house
contain fine trees, which will be left
undisturbed. The present house was
built in 1846 at a cost of about 862,000.
The grounds on which it stands are now
reported to have been sold for 8250,000.
The new house is to be kept by Mr. War-
ren Leland, Jr., who was proprietor of
the old one.
The effect of a great inodern hotel upon
life at Newport will be interesting to
observe. There is a great deal in that
summer city which may well attract
visitors—houses .of notable beauty and
architectural interest, fine people, fine
roads for driving or bicycling and a daily
and hourly parade of fashion and wealth,
which diverts its participants and edifies
and amuses lookers on. It has been un-
derstood that the people who have made
modern Newport, the cottagers, have
been quite content to shine for one an-
other and have not especially coveted the
admiring scrutiny of casual visitors who
merely come to see. The building of the
new hotel will doubtless tortd to attract
an element like that which is seen in so
much force at Saratoga, and it is possible
that the habitual Newporter will not like
the town any better for this innovation.
Still the old Ocean House was hopelessly
out of date and out of keeping with its
environment, and it was only a question
of time when it should snake way for
such a structure as is now proposed.—
Harper's Weekly.
A Large Currant.
Although no American garden in the
northern half of our continent is con-
sidered complete without some currant
bushes, it is rare we hear tell of them
growing anywhere to the perfection that
they do in England, although it is quite
possible that they may successfully con-
tend for the palm of, superiority in Can-
ada. The currant does not like long spells
of warm, dry weather. Under these cir-
cumstances, the leaves become a prey to a
parasitic fungus, and we all know that
injury to leaves is the, first step tovga d
deterioration. At a meeting of the Royal
Horticultural society in England the red
currants called the Comet was exhibited,
in which the bunches were 6 inches
long and some of the berries half an
inch in diameter. "With these figures we
may be able to decide how
y near Ameri-
can Durrant growers can come to thin
excellence of their English brethren.
DOOMED TO DIE
Total Stranger.
Bags by— Truth le said; to. be "traava,
than fiction.
Gadigo-To a gree, many teen's it le.
--Washington Times,
Docto'r's Said Mrs. 'Ackerin ui of 73elle- .
Ville "Would Never Get Better.
SHE CAN LAUGH AT DEATH.
And the Doctors, Toe. for Eight ]loxes of
Dodds' Riduey Pills MIarie a t) ell Woman
of .Iler After Six Years' Illness. •
Hollowsiy'sCoin Care is a specific foe
the removal of corns and warts, . We have
`never heard of its failing to remove even
the worst kind.
Not. Necessary.
"The neer] die young."
"1 avonldn't •take out a lif
Belleville, Ont., Jan. 18.—If there's polio' .if l were von.
any one thing under heaven that excites
a man's pity it is a weak, suffering
woma aa.
If thero's any disease on earth that
causes weakness and suffering in women
more than another it is Kidney disease.
If there's any medicitle between Heaven
and Earth that will infallibly euro
KidneyPILLS. Disease, it is DODD'S KIDNEY
And that's no dreanl.
Women rise up by the score and call
Dodd blessed for his wonderful discovery
that has made weak Wake and backaches
unknown where Dodd's Pills have been
tried.
Let one of these grateful women tell
her story:—
"I had been troubled with Kidney
Disease for six years. I had doctored,
but it was of no use. They told me I
would never get better. I saw about
the wonderful clues • of DODD'S
KIDNEY PILLS, and I procured
one box. Upon getting relief I con -
tinned to use eight boxes, and I can
safely say I am completely cured.
You inay publish this as you see fit,
so as to help some other person who
may have Kidney trouble.
MRS. S. ACKERMAN,
North Front street.
April 27.
DODD'S MEDICINE COMPANY, of
Toronto, are the sole owners and makers
of this remedy in the Dominion. Write
to thorn, enclosing price (50 cents), if
your local druggist is not supplied.
Evidently a Mistake.
"All that this state asks now," says a
free silver Kentucky weekly to Mr. Car-
lisle, "is that you set up shop somewhere
else than within her borders." When and
how did Kentucky make such a request of
Mr. Carlisle, honey ? Haven't the returns
of the recent election reached you yet 1'
CATARRH OF LONG STANDING
Cured in a Very Simple Manner.
It is not alone the people of our own
country, and prominent citizens like
Urban Lippe, M. P., of Joliette, Que.,
and other members of Parliament, who,
having used Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal
Powder, pronounce it the most effective
remedy they have ever known, . but peo-
ple everywhere are expressing their grati-
fication at the effectiveness of this medi-
cine. C. G. Archer, Brewer, Maine,
says: "I have had catarrh for several
years. Water would run from nay eyes
and nose days at a time. About four
months ago I was induced to try Dr.
Agnew's Catarrhal Powder, and since
using the wonderful remedy I have not
had an attack. I would not be without
it." It relieves in ten minutes. Sold by
all druggists.
DEATH FROM DELAY.
ALife Lost b3 - Heart Disease When Prompt
Measures Would Have Saved It.
This is not to be said of one death
from heart disease only, but of tens of
thousands. If the symptoms that warn
one of heart trouble are not heeded, the
outcome is almost sure to be serious.
When one is fortunate enough to be
acquainted with the merits of Dr.
Agnew's Cure for the Heart in 95 per
cent. of cases disaster is averted. This
medicine will positively give relief in
Half an hour's time, and taken with
some little degree of perseverance radically
cures. If your heart palpitates, flutters
or tires out easily, and you value life,
use the remedy.
MUST BE DISSOLVED.
Bidncy Disease Cannot be Cured by Pills
or Powders—Tho Common Sense
of Science.
For a disordered stomach or a sick
headache pills and powders are not with-
out effect, but whenthese same remedies
are said to cure kidney disease, the com-
mon-sense of science rebukes the claim.
This insidious and growing disease. will
not be driven from the system unless a
medicine is given that will dissolve the
hard substance—murio acid and oxalate of
Lime—that give rise to the distress and
pain that is common to all who suffer
from kidney complaint. South American
Kidney Cure is a kidney specific. It dis-
solves these hard substances, and while
it dissolves it also heals. The cures
effected leave no question of its powers.
Correct.
"Dad, what do you mean by a 'well-
known man'?"
A well-known man, my son, is oue in
the. crowd about whom everybody asks
'Who is he P'"
$100 Reward. $100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased
to learn that there is at least one dreaded
disease that.science has been able to cure
in all its stages and that is Catarrh. Hall's
Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now
known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh
being a constitutional disease, requires a
constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh
Cure is taken internally, acting directly
upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the
system, thereby destroying the founda-
tion of the disease, and giving the patient
strength by building up tha constitution
and assisting nature in doing its work.
The proprietors have so much faith in its
curative powers, that they offer One
Hundred Dollars for any ease that it fails
to euro. Send for list of Testimonials.
Address, F. J. CHENEY, & 00,
Toledo,
"0.Sold by Druggists, 75e,,
YOU WANT
EED
THAT
GROW
SAVES TIME AND MONEY
The leading Catalogue in Canada
'Yours for the asking—write for it.
Tells about Best and ttarest seeds known
Seeds by Mail—safe arrival guaranteed
THE Steele, Briggs Seed Co. UP
LEAD/NO 2rERCHANT3 Toronto, Ont.
(/\(\A�
SELL THE
V
"Canada's Greatest Seed House."
THEM
a
insurance
LL" in PAYS TO DRINK"
ALADA"
CELLON TEA
Because it is incomparably the beat
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NEVER SOLO IN BELIE.
BLACK AND MIXED. ALL GROCERS.
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2ON .4 2 ,,
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Wrinkles
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To Purify the Blood, Tone
up the System and give new
Life and Vigor nothing equals
Perfect
Health -pills.
110 els. each et Drug stores or sent
prepaid on receipt of price.
CROWN Manictas Co., TORONTO.
LODGE
Souvenirs
Emblematic of any
Society to which you be.
long. 05c. senttoOrder
Dept. will secure an
elegant Rolled Gold Button
with screw and spur fasten.
ing. These Buttons are
beautifully made with
colored enameled centres,
Making a suitable present
to a friend.
Dominion Regalia Co.
TORONTO
Manufacturers of all Lodge
Requisites and Uniforms,
Badges, etc.
E--------..
M
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Matches
.: ----
Smokers and fiotise-
,,,,,keepers aliiry find them ^�.^="'n°
faultless. =
." s," Their odorless
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r."n"'; Iurtsr' t "�"M'
"Eagle
Parlor"
nes tome.
Mr.,"
.mow.
HULL,
MONTREAL,
TORONTO.
THE
E. B. EDDY Co
essen.e."
MANTES
PROF. CHAMBERLAIN,
EYE SPECIALIST,
Announces to ' the r
public that he will�s�,
not travel any more,
but can be found atf
all times at his place of business, 79 King street
east, Toronto. Gold spectacles, $8, $4 and $4,
Steel spectacles, 255. to 11.
[54 ---YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN---Iat
Now in attendance at the
Yonge and Gerrard Streets, Toronto.
The latest and best conrses of Business Train
ing,and the most Thorough and complete facll
ties for Shorthand and Typewriting are foun
in this College. 'Particulars free. Write
once. W. R. SHAW, Principal._
T. N.: IL 99
TO TAMS
YO'U'R
PLACE Ai
a useful,
progressive,
pro
s,epu
s and successful citize
qby takinga thorough Business or Shorthand Comeliersad
THE NORTHERN BUSINESS COLLEGE,
OWEN SOUND, ONT.
Writs for: Announcement to C. A. FLEMING, Print