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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1898-3-25, Page 6;llabeeribersivbo do not receive their paper, 'regularly will please notify us at once. Apply at the °See far advertising rates THE ' EXETER ADVOCATE., THURSDAY. 31ARCH ,d;, 1898. Here. and There. 1Do dead men's shoes retain their soles? The sailor's wife is his star and he's her Aar, Every bride is a miss -appropriated, wo- man. e- snan. tl he find, a good many pecks of corn In re Tires t- Tires should not be filled with & sharp .aaast wind, la the blacksmith who repairs cabs t+ back writer ? Strangely enough one may get quite s "fall out of a. spring bed,. If you love your enemy don't keep your band on your pistol pocket. In a healthy state of the organism all gonane hate a tendency to heaL Does an electric wire, like the average citizen, re -volt when it is overcharged Be thaniful for the degree of success you have attained, but not entirely satin- sed. To write a btlecessfui stars, first samosa w good head and then put the proper Mae to it, If a new and briglit bicycle is e. steed of steel, is an old anddilapidated ono a bi- cycle plug ? It's hard to tell which; is the greaterbore the ignorant man who doesn't ltnow or the smart man who does. Considered as a poem a gas hill always s6antains toe penny feet and there's some- ibing wrong with the metre. The tramp who hoped to strike a res- hoponsive chord was disappointed when the usewife directed hien, to a cord, of nn- Sawed wood. Meta have measured the distances to the farthest star;;, e :leulated their weight, size tad brilliancy to a `:: a ir•splittiag certainty. rat no one *has ever been ahlo to exactly sstimate the wortl of a dimpled chess: to pretty woman who knows now to aura- rile it. MAKE QLD DRESSES NEW! Diamond Dyes the Simplest and Easi- est Way of Nome Dyeing, ]their Great Superiority Over .A.11 Other Was of Rome Dyeing -- A. Ten -Cent Package SI'111 Color Trom One to Five Pounds of Goods -Colors That Will Not Wash Out In Strong Soapsuds. Success in home dyeing depends wholly upon the kind of dyes used. With Dia- iulond Dyes, if the :ample directions on the package are followed carefully, and the special dyes for cotton are used for cotton. and mixed goods, and the wool dyes used for woolen, there is absolutely no chance of failure. Diamond Dyes are Tory simple and easy be use, and by using a stick to lift the roods while in the dye bath, there is no tweed of soiling the hands. For beauty, brilliancy and fastness no other dye stuffs, Whether for home use or for the dye -shop, equal the Diamond. The latest scientific discoveries are used in their manufacture, they are guaranteed the strongestandfast- sit of all known dyes, and their solid •elors will not wash out in the strongest Soapsuds, nor will they fade when exposed be the sunlight. Try Diamond Dyes once, and see how gasp it is to make old and faded dresses, Waists, ribbons, coats, etc., look like new. To Revolutionize Microscopy. Professor Elmer Gates of Washington lays he has worked out a process by which objects can be magnified to a size 300 times greater than by any of the microscopes now in use. His invention, he claims,will pevolutionize microscopy and will advance Wanes to a point hitherto undreamed of. Elis discovery, he says, will be of special value in bacteriology and the study of the cellular tissues. The professor declares that he has succeeded where all other scientists have failed -in diseevering a way by which the magnified image pro- jected on a lens can be magnified by a Second as if it were the original object. To do this has been the aim of scientific photographers and microscopists for many ears. Professor Gates does not divulge rhe details of his invention. Indianapolis 3ournal. REBELLION TALI IN CHINA. The Hunan Officials Conspiring Against Manchu Dynasty. France and the Chinese Loan -Mr. Glad= stone's Condition Causes Alarm- Premier Salisbury Somewhat Ratter- German Shipbuilding -•An Outrage Near Cork -The Fighting in India Ila& Ceased by the Delivery of 70 Uostageiy. London, l►farch 21,-A special despatch from Shanghai says a conspiracy, with the object of bringing abouerebellion, bas been started by Chinese officials of vari- ous ranks at Chang•Sha, in the Province of Hunan, It is said to have spread to all the provinces bordering on the Yang -Tse - Kiang, and fears are expressed that it may prove to be the most formidable, sine° the Tai -Ping, rebellion. le is pro- fessedly a patriotic movement to over, throw the Manchu dynasty and save the Central Provinces from European control, But it is suspected that the plot emanates from the ivandarius, who are alarmed et the prospect of a diversion of part of their pickings to pay the interest on the new loan. The Pekin authoritiesare cognizant of the movement, but distrusting the loyalty of the provincial satraps, they are helpless. The conspirators are said to hese ap' preached Britishsubjects with induce- ments to join in the rebellion and they have also offered large solus of money for arms. Itrassie Increased Her Eatpencliture,. The Czar, according to a special des- pateb from a't. Petersburg, bas authorized an increase in the ordinary naval expend. iture of 3,0110,0011 roubles yearly for six years, in addition to the speciaal grant of SIa,110,000 rouble for naval purj use r9- eeutly announced, For leree Chinese Ports. `there was an important Cabinet eou- fereucc iatnrday, in continuation of the discnssion of the Chinese question. It is. reported Great Britain requests Russia to give guarantees that tbe warships of the world will he allowed free entry into fort Arthur. Great Britain, in this mnatu'r. is ostensibly acting at the instance of China. There are cases tat consumption so far advanced that Bickle's Anti -Consumptive !Syrup will not cure, but none so bad that it will not give relief. For coughs, colds and all affections of the throat, lungs and chest, it is a specific which has never been known to fail. It promotes a free and easy expectoration, thereby removing the phlegm, and gives the diseased parts a chance to heal. Given a Comprehensive Answer. "Does he know anything ?" "Know anything I" The tone was an answer in itself. "Know anything! Why, he's the kind •f man who would hunt for a leak In a gas pipe with a candle." Iiillard's Liniment Cures Colds, etc. His Proposal. "He said he wasn't good enough for sue--" "And. when I : asked him whether he gambled or drank he got mad and went away."• THE EASTERN SITUATION. Coutlrwatory and Other Reports Concern - toe the French. Demands it: China. London, alareh :IL -The Chinese Am- bassador visited the foreign Office Satiate day evening by special invitation. It is supposed that the French demands in China -were the subject of discussion. There aro some doubts as to the extent of the demands. A despatch to the Daily Mall from Nagasaki mentions a report that the Yang -Tse valley is inchifled, which tads to confirm the report from Pekin that France has demanded that Chine shall not cede any portion of the Province of lawei-Chan, this province being within the valley. The Times has a despatch from Pekin,. however, wbich explains that the de- mands apply only to the three provinces, Swang Tung, Kweng Sl and Yun-Nan. Discussing the matter editorially, the Times suggests as an explanation of these discrepancies that M. Dubai, the French Charge d'Affaires at Pekin, has demanded more than ho was authorized to demand and that M. Hanotaux, in consequence, has disavowed him in the statement issued yesterday, saying that there was no connection between the de- mands of the French Government in China and the Chinese loan. The Paris correspondent. of the Times reports passages of a conversation with a diplomatist, in the cotuse of which M. Hanotaux, the French Foreign Minister, repudiated the idea that he desired to join any scheme for the disintegration of China. Naturally.' • Mamma -Jack, what are the names of those new boys next door.? • Jack -Freddy and Perot' Jones,inamma. Freddy says his real name is Frederick, so' I suppose Percy's real name must be Per-" Brick, ickeure • cures Tooth .Aclhe. Stops all Pain.. Fast Traveling, Miss liortyy-Really, M. Drinkleigh,you aught to try ice yachting. Drink1ei h--WIx y ? g , n an' 1 --The is Miss Hoxty (sig i$G t ya y 'ear t . takes one's breath away.. • it amounted to .103,000,000 marks for Ger'nle,ny's own meechant service, and for foreigners the output increased from 6,000 marks ire the seventies to e,000,000 thusfar in the nineties, INDIAN. FIGHTING ENDED, Northwest Frontier Rebels Give Up; IA Hostages Demanded. Calcutta, march 9L, -The lighting on the Northwest frontier is now regara ed as ended. The rebels have given the 70 hostages demanded, 'The budget statement to be read to the Legislative Council to -day is very favor- able, It estimates that there will bee, sur- plus of $90,000 rupees frons, the coining year, and it reviews 20 years of Indian finance, though without discussing the currency policy, France and the Chinese Loan. Paris, March 21.-A semi-official state- ment has been issued saying that there is no connection between the demands of the French Government in China and the Chinese loan. The French demands. reached Pekin at the beginning of the month, and the negotiations were imme- diately transferred to Paris, where they are proceeding between the Chinese Min- ister, Tching Tchang, and M. Hanotaux, the French Foreign Minister. The French charge that there is no occasion to threat- en or menace China with the forcible seizure of a coaling station. MR. GLADSTONE IS WORSE. Heart Action 'Much Enfeebled - The Premier Is Better. London, March 21. -The Pall Mall Gazette Saturday afternoon said Mr. Glad- stone is worse. The facial pains have occasioned severe suffering, and it neces- sarily follows that his physical powers and heart's action have become gravely en- feebled. The health of the Marquis of Salisbury has much improved. ' A BATTLE IMMINENT Going to Look for A'ndree, Berlin, March 21, -Theodore Darner, with an expedition, aided •frons state and private sources, will start en the steamer Segoland next May in search of Herr Andree, the missing aeronaut, and to prosecute scientific investigations, Money for Spain's Nagy. Havana, March 2L,• -.Tho festivities last night at the Tamen Theatre given in aid of the fund for the Spes:ielt navy realized between $30,000 and $40,000 in gold, Between the Ando -Egyptian Column and ti,e Dervishes. Kunar Camp, Nubia, March 2L -A battle is ixnininent between the Anglo- Egyptian column and the dervishes. The combined forces have started to advance up the Atbara to meet the enemy, who are also advancing, but who, it believed,are not aware of the proximity of the British. 'Atbara Caine, March 21. -The whole force has arrived et the Mali Ports after a splendid march of' live hours from Lunar, partly through a dust storm. There is no sign of ` the enemy. The Anglo-Egyptian army bas formed a strong zereba for the night. All the fords on the Atbata are held -by She cavalry and the camel corps. Outrage Near Cork & New war omeg . Johannesburg, March `3?1,.,.,The Staua- ard and Diggers' News, in a seemingly inspired article, says; "War is almost in- evitable unkss England. aahandons her eleinl to suzerainty." AN ALL-8-IITISH CABLE, Cataada Now Freed .'rout Absolute De- pendency, on V. S, Lines, Montreal, Metall al. -..a work of great importance re the Empire and to Camila bas just been completed. Mr, Joseph lip. pon, general rnenager of the Halifax stud Bermuda cable, orrired in the city Satur- day, anti states that he has just completed the laying of the company's cable be. twoen Bermuda and Jamaica, which now forms the a11 -British route from Halifax to Jamaica :and frees the country from its former absolute dependency upon the United States lines Mr, Rippon, who is en route for Ottawa, is accompanied by Mr. T. II. Skinner, 'whose father ischair- man of the Halifax :and Bermuda Com- pany, as well as a London Ulrevtor of the Canadian Pacific and Bank of Montreal. Was in Danger of *loud. It w am thought Sunday morning that Montreal was to he flooded out, as the water rose above the revetment wall. The dyke, however, held good and last night the water had receded over two foot. The chief engineer steam, that all danger is now past, although a good many collars and mills In the lower part of the city are flooded. The ititle Wats Loaded. Woodstock, Nareh21,--Freddie MoKioh- nio, the 14-yoar.old son et Professor McKlehnio. was shot in the eye Saturday While entering alinkler & Lawson's re- pair shop, William Jordan was behind the counter in the repair shop examining a rifle, the trigger of which he snapped two or three times until the cartridge exploded and the 32 -calibre bullet lodged in young MoKfehnie's eye. The doctors found it necessary to remove the eye hall from the injured eye, but cannot locate the bullet. The unfortunate occurrence was purely accidental. Cork, March 21. -On the Cork, Baidon & South Coast Railway, where a strike` is in progress, the line patrol discovered last evening that the rails had boon torn up at the approach to a viaduct 70 feet high, a few miles from Cork. The patrbi was just able to stop the express. A Negro Clubbed a Carl, Woodstook, March 21. -Miss Locke of Mill street was attacked by abrutal negro at 10 o'clook on Thursday night as she was on her way home from the Dundas street Methodist Church. Miss Locke was not a great distance from her home when a burly negro confronted her and, without warning, struck her over the head with a club, rendering her insensible. When Miss Locke recovered the negro wus run- ning away and was almost out of sight. As there was some delay in reporting the matter to the police the ruffian is still at large. German Sett -Gratulation. Berlin, March 21. -The Germans are congratulating themselves upon their successful competition with Great Britain shipbuilding developreente. Sinoe 1875 ='the exnployes in the shipyards have' trefilled. , Between41871 and 1880 the out- puta put Ah leading yards amounted d to to 6,. n)o,opo Marks', Between 1891 and 1896 Lithophone at Port Dalhousie. Port Dalhousie, Ont., March 21. -Sat- urday morning the steam fishing tug, Nellie Bly, left hero in search of the miss- ing stouehooker Lithophone, which went adrift from Port Credit some two weeks ago., They succeeded in locating her about 12 miles out in the lake, and brought her into the harbor in the afternoon. Her cabin and part of her bulwarks were car- ried away. The Nellie Bly loft for Port Credit the same night with the Litho- phone in tow. Thinks tie Is Crazy. Toronto,March 21.- Thomas Goldsmith, 259 Lisgar street, visited the detective offio° at headquarters on Sunday morn- ing and explained that be was a danger• ous man, liable to commit innumerable offences if he was not placed under lock and key. At his own request he was locked up and a charge of insanity placed against him. Goldsmith :is single, 34 years of age, and a telegraph operator. Helooks very sick. THE BEAR IN CHINA,. WHY RUSSIA OBJECTS TQ THE OPEN- ING OF TA-LiEN-WAN, The Loos Fight to Keep the. Railroad Oat of the Flowery Kingdom Given. IJp. at. Last -This Czar's, Flans For an Eastern. Olerattae, Just now the most important feature of the squabble over the looting of China is the withdrawal of England's demand that Ta -Lien -Wan be made a free port andher reasons for making that demand in the first place, It was a shrewd British. move to checkmate Russia, As is well known, the pet project of the. czar is to make Port Arthur, which he bas recently acquired, an oriental Gibraltar,. Tile reason he desires to have such a stronghold in the far east le because he plans to snake the terminal of the Trans- siberian railroad en Impregnable strong- hold. He is pushing forward with all. haste his railroad, the greatest enterprise of the kind ever undertaken. Great Britain's demand that Ta-Llen- Wan should be made a treaty port knocked his plans all askew. A glance at the map will tusks the situation clear. Ta-Lien-Waa inion the eastern,sideet the Regent's Sword,. not far from Port Arthur, and command, ing the approaehes to the latter at the rear or landward, side. If ltwvere made an open. port, Russia's commercial facilities at Port Arthur would not be impaired, but her dream of reeking a new Gibraltar there would be dissolved into thin ala It was that consideration that impelled ttussla not only to protest against the opening of ',1'a -Lien -Wan, but actually to threaten China with force to prevent her tram making each a concession. She does not wish to find, after building a railroad from the Urals to the Yellow sea, the only satisfactory terminus cheek by jowl with a port thronged with British and Jape- nese ships. On the other band, Great Brit. Ain and Japan, while freely granting Rus. AA's right to access to those waters, sought to prevent her having a monopoly of the northern bulwarks of the entrance way to Peking for the undisguised purpose of transforming them,into ARussian fortress, While this contraverssy Is 'being thrashed out, it is of lnterest to observe that the waxi; of tbe engineer is being pushed in A. Co,not t, iLi, a Tail. Cambridge, Mass., March 21.-A tele- gram has been reecived at the Harvard College Observatory from Prof. Schee- bora) at the Lick Observatory stating that Dr. Perine has just discovered a bright comet. The cornet is 2m in diame- ter of the seventh magnitude, has strong central condensation and a tail 1 degree long, - - Mr.ole Y 's )sod mound. Deseronto, March 2le-The body of the late Iwir. Colt, postmaster of Big Island, was fomxd near Deseronto Saturday. Mr. Cole, in company with Mr. Morden, was out duck shooting near 131g Island last fall, when their boat capsized, and al- though, searching patties were out, they failed to recover the body., Rev.. G. Sanderson Dead, London, Ont., March 21. -The Rev. G. R. Sanderson, asuperannuated Methodist; -minister, and one of the oldest and best known divines in Ontario, died shortly: before midnight last nightat his resi- dence, Woifo street, this city. Dr. Jossop:Is improving. St., Catharines, March 21. -Doctor Leach, .who. ;is in attendance upon Dr. enesop, IVI:P.P., who narrowly escaped being killed. here last „:Week by being thrown from his rig,. reports his patient es resting easy. MAP SHOWING RUSSIAN RAILROADS IN crank. various parts of the empire wbiob was so long sealed against such innovations. It was as long ago as 1863 that the first Chi- nese railroad was projected, but it was never built, the opposition of the man- darins proving too strong. Tho second at- tempt was at first successful. A line was built in 1876 from Shanghai to Woo -Sung and actually put into operation. Rut the natives were scandalized hy such an ex- bibition of the blank are, of the ••rnreign devils" and literally rose in rebellion against it, so that for the sake of peace the rails had to be torn up and the whole en- terprise abolished. Some of the plant was sent to Formosa and laid down there, but tho bulk of it was thrown into the Yang- tse-Kiang and still lies rusting at the bottom of that river. It was perhaps a good thing that that road did not prosper, for it was of narrow gauge -only 2 feet 8 inches -and it would have been a misfor- tune to have that established as the stand- ard gauge throughout the empire. The first successful railroad was built by Li Hung Chang in the eighties. That farseeing statesman determined to intro- duce into the empire what he recognized to be one of the most valuable adjuncts of civilization, and be undertook to do it on his own account and on his own property. He opened some iron mines at Lin -Si, in the north, in 1881, and built a tramway to connect them with the nearest canal. This was worked by horsepower, but it demon- strated the value of such a roadway. Then, in 1888, he had the tranrway transformed into a steam railroad. ' be story of that work is a most romantic one. The chief engineer was an Englishman, a Mr. Kinder. He was compelled to work by stealth, as though he were committing some great crime: He had to build the first locomotive secretly, out of such scraps of machinery as he could pick up. He got some small driving wheels as scrap cast- ings and a boiler from a wornout station- ary engine, while a local winding engine furnished him with a cylinder and piston. When the thing was only half done, the authorities got wind of it and ordered work stopped at once, and it took all of Li's tact and influence to get the order re- voked and permission given for the coxn- pletiolr of the lino on his own private grounds. It was not long' before the dowager em- press became interested in the enterprise, end she and Li together got the govern- ment to consent to an extension of the line under official control. It was first ex- tended to Lu -Tai, then to Peb-Tang and Mika, then to Tien -Min and finally to a point ton miles beyond Shan -Hai -Kwan, its present limit. It is now, however, to bo prolonged northw".d and eastward, to connect with the Rubstan system at Kirin. -Tho plans for the Russian railroads in China are extensive. A branch is to be run from the Siberian road from a point a littleeast of, Lake Baikal down 'through Mongolia and Ivinnoburia to Kirin,; but not touching thesacred city of. Makden, which is to be entered only by the Chinese line. Thence it is to branch in two direc- tions. One branch will run north and east to Vladivostok,' and the other southward *to Port Arthur, there finding the terminal so long desired. A better could not be wished.' The port is a commodious one, already supplied with fine docks and ship- eards. It is 'always tree from ice. It is capable of being fortified into a practically impregnable state. There is a good supply of fresh water at hand for shipping In, deed it is an ideal place for either a naval station or a conimercial emporium. If Russia could make' the approach to it along,the peninsula, secure she would be satisfied. To make it: thus secure is the task she now has in hand, and an unoona- monly bard task it appears to be. • tee Was There Ever a Greater Victory? PU1IIG's tlerij Campougd! the World's FaRous, llis8u.B au -es the Life of Mr, ChM. All Other Medicines Had Failed and Death Was Fully Expected. As a Spring Medicine for New Blood, New Strength and Sound Health,. ePaine's Celery Compound is Reoom- x mended by Thousands. The complete cure of fir, John A. Church, of Coldbrook, N.S., anti the pro- duction of his strong letter of testimony is favor of Paine', Celery Compound are of themselves sufficient to comities) every sick person that Paine', Celery Compound is a uredicine honestly prepared and re- oomznended for the oaring of all sic#; peo- ple. No other medicine ktxown to medical science can so well and so promptly re- store Mit strength tend vitality in the spring months. It is not the emersion medicines of the day that physicians prescribe anti the best classes of people recommend. It is only a wonderful avid marvellous' life restorer like T'rine's Celery Compound that can cem- mnatxl attention and respect. hlr. Church writes es follows : WL'lis & RICHARDSON CO. QRNT1,1:a1EN ;---It iS with pleasure give testimony in favor of your marvellous ►at I medicine, Paine's Celery Compound. I had an attack of la grippe which put u into such a condition that I could not sleep or eat. I was completely run dawn, had extreme nervous prostration, and lay for days in a half stupefied state. After spending all my money for Medi- clue which did little good, I gave up to die, when one day a paper on Trine's Celery Compound was brought to rne. I at °nee procured the medicine and derived great relief from the first bottle. I slept better, ate bettor, and digestion unproved. After using nine bottles I feel like a now man, I cantruly say that Patio's Celery Com- pound snatched nue (rein the grave and gave me. a new lease of life. I earnestly urge all sufferers to use Paine', Celery Compound, feeling sure it will cure them. Do nut spend your money for znediaines that canner cure you. Yours truly, Jour A. CHURCH. The Darn's Bold, John Graham Brooks, in a lecture on Robert Owen delivered in New York re- oently, speaking of the early awaltening f the great reformer's heart and: mind, said: "Ho never ceased asleing himself what kind of a rate he and his partners were waning while they were gettingrieb, In his diary he said, 'It seems as if the devil had hold of us, crushing out every hope of a better race.' Another entry re- cords the fact that in the preceding year be had made ta00,000 while the laborers were working 10, 11 and 12 hours a day for 10, 9 and 8 shillings a week. Ile sees that it is all controlled by economic law ami that ho cannot change existing conditions as he adobes, but is convinced that he has no right 'to $50,000 a year on the condition of making for England a race of mothers unlit to bear children." Deafness Cannot be Cured by local applieatlans, as they cannot. reach the diseased portions of the ear. There is only one way to cure Deafness, and that is by constitu- tional remedies. Deafness15 caused by an In. darned condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in- flamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when It Is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unlesw the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its nor- mal condition, hearing will be destroyed for- ever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which Is nothing but an inflamed con. dition of the mucous surfaces, We will give One Iiundred Dollars for any case of Deseeess (caused by catarrh) that can- not be cured by hall's Catarrh Caro. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo. O. /R'Sold by Druggists, 75e. lir. Staybolt on the Effects of Labor. "My friend Mr. Noggleton tells me," said Mr. Staybolt, "that he has added five or six years to his life in the last year by hard work. I suppose that what he really means is not that ho has added, but that he has subtracted, that number of years from his life, but I think nevertheless that his own inaccurate statement is more likely to be actually correct. Moderate use is more preservative than rust, and I have no fear that Noggleton will be im- moderate in labor." -New. York Sun. The healthy glow disappearing from the cheek and moaning and restlessness at night are sure symptoms of worms in children. Do not .fail to get a bottle of Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator ; it is an effectual medicine. Are your corns harder to remove than those that others have had ? Have they not had the same kind ? Have they not been cured by using Holloway's Corn Cure ? Try a bottle. Had No Ilse for It. Mistress of the House -My good man, did you ever take a bath? Tramp -No, mum; I never took any- thing bigger'n a silver teapot. Port Mulgrave, June 5, 1897. C. C. RICHARDS & Co. Dear Sirs,--MINARD'S LINI- MENT is my remedy for colds, etc. It is the best liniment I have ever used. MRS.J OS IAH HART. Helpful Hindrance. Daughter of the house -I want `to help you to -day, ,Mario. Cook -No, no, miss; I've too much to do today. Vaporize Quickcure for • Cold in the Head. A Difaerence of Opinion. "Treadwell , gave the role of Hamlet; a remarkable execution, didn't he? "Yes; he murdered it beautifully." • .,c.. -- .A gentleinau, weighty and of comforta- ble habit, was running as a candidate for parliamentary honors. One of his election posters was unintentionally made to over- lap an advertisement of a beef extract, as that It read, "Vote for 0—, tbe genuine product of prime ox beef."--Tit-Bits. Work of the Wind. "I'm proud of you," said the bead of the firm. "I have letters from all over Kansas snying that tbey have seen your samples How in the world did you man- age it?" And he patted the traveling mann on the beck. "Cyclone." --Detroit Free Press. Trouble Over the Bill. "You appear to have feathered your nest pretty wall," observed tbe male eider dnok. "Yes," assented his mato, smoothing her rumpled plurnao, "but I feel down in the inouth just the same.",- Chicago Tribune, Changed Her Mind, Mildred -So you and Fred Burwick are )ngaged ? I thought you said a few weeks ego that you wouldn't have him if he were the last man on earth. Jessie -I know I did, but they say that Frankie Jones and Gertrude Mills art both crazy for him, Not in the Swim. We've read of Noah and the rest Who brayed the waterspout, But who is this Joan of Ark We hear so much about? CONTAINS THE EW INCREDIENT PRICE, 25 CENTS. FROM YOUR DRUGGIST, OR BY MAIL FROM THE S. S. RYCKMAN MED. M00,.. 1ITED.. HAMILTON, ONT. Frances E. Dillard We are handling the (authorized) Memorial Life of this wonderful Woman. It is the only official book beautifully gotten up and cheap. Without doubt will have an enormous sale. A I%londyke for agents. Write immed- iately. J. L. 1 ICHOLS & CO., Out this out. 83 Richmond West, Toronto. PATIENT RAIR.RISTERS. CHARLES H: RICHES-SUCCaSSOR TO Donald C. Bidout & Co., registered patent attorney, solicitor of Canadian and foreign patents and counsellor and expect in patent causes; Canada Life Building, Toronto; books on patents and trade marks free on applica- tion. , 166. BOECKII'S Brushes and Brooms E guarantee vV highest qual- ity and best work- manship. See the name'on every handle. ' Chas. Boeckh &Sons mfrs. Toronto. SA FR NI FA • aso lz In all Grades. Gobd as American, sweet as a nut, 74, 78 88, 90 per cent. ravity. Only hxtgh grades made in Canada 'THE QIIEEN CITY OIL CO., LIMITED, Saml. Rogers. Pres., Toronto. 159 writ . oarmxRrr DO you WANT' a to tris N, - ' An AdmisYion�, BtrsrzSuss'Cot.Lttcis;Ooen TO N Sound Ona ity onwanf 1 h R IT u� I . ike the man w o praises and laude me q THOIidUGH Course t. ' teethe skies; I honor hun : 1 i , a I ePe 1•iL4--e emS `1a ShorlhanrL or a practical Business Educat,on, though I know he Hee. Circulars frso.' C A. FL1IM1NG.Priecl s4