HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1898-9-2, Page 5THE
exiter Aburficatt
Is published every Thursday Morning,
at the O}iiee,
MAIN -STREET, — EXETER.
—By the—
ADVOCATE PUBLISHIND COMPANY
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION,
One Dollar per asinum if paid in Advance
SL50 if not so paid,
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toxo,
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A and at moderate rates. Cheques,xnoney ord-
era, &o- for advertising, subscriptions ,etc .to
be made payable to
Chas. H. Sanders,.
EDITOR AAD PROP
Professional. Cards
H. KINSMAN, L.D.S. & DR. A. R.
KINSMAN',L D. S., D. D. S., Honor
graduate oToronto University,
DENTISTS,
Teeth extracted without any pain, or any
bad effects, Office fu Fanson's Block, west
Main e
side Ila n StreetExeter,,
-11 R. D. ALTON' Ai DERSOI,(D.D.S.,L.D.S. )
L
honors Gradua te of the Toronto Tani-
rsity and Royal College of Dental Surgeons
of Ontario, Teeth extracted without pain.
All 'nodes of D
ontistry up to date.
Bice
over Elliot & Elliot's law office—opposite
Central Hotel—Exeter.
3letlical
T1rs. J A, ROLLINS & T A. AMOS.
.V Residenees, same as formerly
OFFtOES, Speakman,. building, Main St.
Dr, Rollins' °Mee; same as formerly—north
door. Dr. Amoy' office, same building—south
door. May 1st. 1893
Z. A Rollins, M. 1). T. A. Amos, 41.1)
TILT. P. McLAUGRLIN, MEMBER OF
the College of Physicians awl surgeons
Ontario. Pll:ysie!an,:Surgeon and A000uch-
eur. Office, Dashwood, Ont.
Legal,
Tat H. COLLINS, BARIiISTER,SOLICIT-
QR, Conveyancer, Notary Publie.
Office—Over O'Neil's Bank, Exeier,Ontario,
Money to Loan.
TUCKS(» & CARLING. BA,REISTERS,
.LJ Solieitora, Notarises, Conveyancers,
Gommissioucer,, etc. Money to loan at d?i
a,ud 5 per cent. Office—Fanson's Block.
main:'E„ Exeter.
1. R. Cant.lar_;, B. A.,. L. U. Devises.
(A member of the firm will be at Housall
on Thursday of each week.)
ELLIOT & (*DADMAN, BARRISTERS.
Eto., Conveyancers, and Money to
Loan.
B. V. E1.L1o'r. F. W. a G tiee a v
A.uotionteers
H
BROWN, Winchelsea, Licensed Aunt-
ioniser
uot-
ionoortor the Counties of Perth and
Middlesex, also for the township ofUsborne
Sales promptly attended to and terms rea-
aonbale.Sales arranged at Post office. Win-
obelsea.
insurance.
E ELLIOT,
Insurance Agent,
Main St.
Exeter
WANTED, HELP.
Reliable man in overt' locality, local or
travelling, to introduce a new discovery and
eteep our show cardstaoked up on trees, fences
''and bridges throughout town and country.
Steady employment, commission or salary,
$65 per month and expenses, and money de-
posited. in any bank when started. .For par-
tioulars write rico World Medical Electric
Co.," London, Ont, Canada. 2-2 98
TILE NI L310 ,& 1tH UISON
J3aslnesq and Shorthand Coll etre
Cor. Young anis College Sts., Toronto
is an absolutely first-class Business School
[ a Individual instruction by experienced tenoh-
ors holding highest qualifications. Good re-
sults. Prospectus mailed free. Enter now.
R. U. Nimmo )'.N.P.S. Tas. l[arriaon
tTnrlergradnate ofTornnto
Jl'riaeipslrs University and S, of P. S.
Cook's Cotton Root Compound
Is successfully used monthly by over
10,000 Ladies. Safe, effectual. Ladies ask
your druggist for Cook's Cotton Root Com-
pound. Take no other, as all Mixtures, pills and
imitations are dangerous. Price, No. 1, $1 per
box; No. 2,10 degrees stronger, $8 per box. No.
1 or 2, mailed on receipt of price and two scent
stamps, The Cook Company Windsor, Ont.
l -Nos. i and 2 sold and recommended by all
responsible Druggists in Canada.
No. t anis No 2 sold in Exeter by J.W
Browning, Druggist.
A GRUESOME TALLY.
According to a record kept by the
Chicago Tribune, the number of mur-
ders and homicides in the United
States in the ten year eudiug with
1895, was 48,834. This includes man-
slaughter of every kind when commit-
ted by an individual, whether by pre-
medition or passion, or by an insane
person, or in self-defence, rioting,
duels, or in resisting arrest. The per-
centage of murders and homicides to
total deaths from all causes, for the
same period, is about 52 in every 10,-
' 000: Mulhall's statistics enable theee
figures to be compared with those cf
other countries. In Italy there ate
29 homicides in, every 10,000 deaths;
in Spain, 23; in Australia '8.8; in
``France, 8; in England, 7. These
figures, however, represent actual
murders, not homicides from all causes
as do those given for the United States.
A9 regards England and the United
States an estimate made several years
ago fixes the percentage of murders
as 1 in every 63,000 of population in
E'egland, and 1 in every, 43,000 in the
United States. The statistics show
that murder and crime ofJ all kine
isState s
a in the United S a
� the increase
h
saws the Philadelphia Times.
KER:
Angus McDonald of London, a G. T.
R. Trackman, was fatally injured in
till Grand Trunk Yards,. and after-
wards died.
AL OF THE NEWS: PkRTiYG Of THE WAYS
"Kit," the Well -Known News-,
paper Woman, Married..
OUR IMPERIAL PENNY STAMP,
A 13,000,000 Cargo of Gold From Aus-
tralia to the 'United States—Suing
the Federal Government for au
Agent's Alleged Fraud—Sub-
cide in Montreal—Peter
$lair's Death.
Mason's bakery in Sandwich was total.
ly destroyed by fire _yesterday.
Stratford will increase its water supply
9,000 gallons daily, for fire protection.
Under the jurisdiction of Toronto Con-
ference of the Methodist Church there are
43,318 members.
Jainos Wolis Las been elected president
of the celebrated King Township Plow-
men's Association,
.Albert Fox, who lives near Amherst -
burg, has already harvested over 3,000
fine tobacco plants.
Owing to a shortage in the supply. the
price of ice has nearly doubled at Ottawa,
and is now $4.50 a ton.
The distress in seven districts of
e
Governmentae Kanzanin Russia is ae•
coming more acute daily.
At e p.iil, to.day..Sir Oliver Mowat will
touch the button and set the wheels of
Toronto's 1898 Industrial Fair in motion.
The Carleton Place jury finds that
Peter Blair came to his death by Paris
green administered by unknown persons..
William Duncan of Poterboro and
Charles Pogue of Toronto were convicted
yesterday of passing some betaken bank
bills,
M. R. Todd, the cashier who wrcke,l
the Fillmore County, Minn„ Bank, has
confessed the theft of all the bank's do -
posit funds.
Both imports and exports at Halifax
foil otr during the last fiscal year, the
former over a million and the latter
$1300,000.
The latest news from Mr, John Craig,
M.P.P„ of Center Wellington, is not very
reassuring, and it is feared, that he will
not recover,
Jahn McIntosh of Plma fell off a scaf-
fold at Morrisburg, a distance of 20 feet.
He was so badly injured that he died 24
hours later.
A vote to give a bonus of $55,000 to the
Office Specialty Co. to extend their build-
ings, was carried at Newmarket yesterday
by a majority of 98.
Hon. William Mulock says that if a
common Imperial penny stamp is not
agreed upon Canada will have ono of her
own to issue on Christmas day.
Yesterday Air. Wallace Nesbit exam
rood Hon. John Dryden at the Parlia-
ment buildings in connection, with the
South Ontario election protest.
Judge McKenzie is lying in the Gen-
eral Hospital at Sarnia 1n a critical con•
ditlon. While at Itis oil wells ho was
seized with a stroke of apoplexy..
Mrs. Lefebvre, a Montreal young wo-
man, 25 years old, attempted to commit
suidde last night by taking carbolic acid.
It is hardly likely she will recover.
The American steamer Alameda, Cap-
tain 'Von Ot;endoro, sailed yesterday
from Sydney, N.S.W., for San Francisco,
having ou board $3,000,000 in gold.
Tho Supreme Oonrt of the I.O.P. bad
a session yesterday at their Deseronto
park in She pavilion. Whipping the wo-
men question into order 000upied the ses-
sion.
Mrs. Margaret Shaver of Rowena is
dead. She was the oldest person in Dun-
das County, having been born in Novem-
ber, 1799, and was thus nearly 90 years
of ago.
Douglas Stewart, Inspector of Peniton-
tiaries, will take charge of the peniten-
tiary at Kingston ou account of the ill-
ness of Warden Metcalfe. The Warden
was very low yesterday.
Maud Gibson of Lockport, N.Y., plead-
ed not guilty before Magistrate Jelfs at
Hamilton yesterday to a charge of pro-
curing girls for imanoraI purposes. The
case was enlargod until to -day.
Mayor Walsh estimates the Yukon's
gold output this year at $11,000,000, and
says that newt year's clean-up will aggro.
gate $20,000,000. Meanwhile there are
10,000 too many people in the Dawson
District.
Herbert Taylor, a young boy of Little
York, found a fog signal. He exploded it
with a stone, and when picked up was
found to have a scalp wound, a cut arm
and leg, and a right eye which may yet
be blind from the accident.
In St. John's Church, Washington, Dr.
Theo. Coleman and Kathleen Blake Wat-
kins, both of Toronto, Were married. The
bride is "Kit," the woll-known news•
paper writer, and the groom is a avoil-
known young Toronto physician.
Fred. Johnson, Vancouver, has insti-
tuted suit against the Federal Govern•
went for alleged fraud on the part of the
Government agent at Dawson. An alleged
bribe ofi9,000 and half interest in three
elaians is involved.
H. T. Higgins, cashier of the treasurer's
office of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pa-.
cifloaRailroad, is dead from burns received
by the explosion of a vapor bathing ap-
paratus. The shock was terrific, covering
Mr. Higgins with scalding steam and
leaving scaroely a portion of his body un-
harmed.
The celebrated German watchmaker,
Herr F. L. Lobner •of Berlin, who has
gained a European reputation by the in-
vention of an apparatus for measuring
time t0 the 100th part of a secohd, has
again excelled himself, and has now per-
fected a meehanistn for measuring and
recording the 1,000th part of a second.
H. A. Harrington of Toronto, .who
claims that he represents the American
Wringer Go., quairaled with T. Millar of
Guelph, his partner on the road. Miller
got the best of it, then he drew a knife
and stabbed his partner in the' neck.
County Constable Phillips arrested him,
and the Magistrate fined him. As he
could not pay he had to go to the county
jail.
M. Bouard, a French artist -journalist
who is walking to the Klondike for $75,-
000 If he does it and earns his. way in
eight months, is in Toronto. He has al
ready walked around the world twice.
He makes landscape sketches and delivers
lectures for his living by the way. He
regards the Czar's peace message a bluff,
as he says the Emperor has 150,000 sold-
iers a few hundred miles north of 'Vladi-
ecatook. •
The typhoid epidemic at Belfast is,
growing rapidly. Six hundred cases
have been reported in three weeks, and
every hospital is filled to overflowing'.
Win the Czar's Peace Proposal
Be History's Turning Paint?
HOW THE NOTE WAS RECEIVED,
The German~ Press Sneers at Itussia--
France, Being Apparently the Pivoted
Point, Receives It With Approval
—English Press Reasonable, But
Doubts Practicability—The
Kaiser Was Bested.
St. Petersburg, Aug. 30.—The news-
papers here declare that the Czar's mani-
festo will probably constitute a turning
point in history. The Novosti says: "It
stands to reason that the disarmament
question cannot bo solved without a pre-
vious removal of the causes for the arm-
aments. The conference must accurately
determine the respective pretensions of
the nations and propose means for a
peaceful arrangement, and it may come
to pass that at the close of the nineteenth
R
Cemaybe effected f
oral' a. liquidation
the internatonal policies which are so
prolific in troubles and den^ 'The
Novae Vremya remarks: "A'U true
friends of peace 4.70 naturally on the side
of Russia, but it 15 impossible to oar-
,€°
P
antee that some of the western Cabiuete
will not raise objections, prompted by
the fact that the armed peace which has
existed since 1871 Is the main source at
their international strength." Tho t vice,
referring to the sante sub,er't, F:tid: "If
all the powers :tempt Russia's proposal
with the same earnestness with which it
was made, rho dawn of the twentieth
century will see the idea of universal
peace triumphant over that of unrest and
discord." The V1odolnoet expresses the
opiniau that the note of the Czar is
essentially "an attempt to introduce the
element of trust into international rela-
tions," adding: "'Whoever believes in the
creative power of ideas propounded with
conviction and clearness mutt roaoico that
the note brings a new and beneUcent
into s and groups
orba world's life „ pa
anew the participants in that life."
Sneering at Russia.
Btriin, Aug, 80,—Tho Czar's note was
posted in the hotels and cafes, and is
rather c
generally discussed'nic; li } a. A y
high eluvial of the War Office obsarvod
that it would be a "good topic for a dull
season. If the conference met there
would be no doubt that France would
demand the return of Alsace-Lorraine."
All politicians aro inclined to sneer at
such a proposal emanating from ''tussle.
The general belief is, however, that all
the powers aro willing to attend the con-
ference in the belief that it will prove
resultless, looking so the impossibility of
agreement.
Washington Views of It.
Washington. Aug. 30.—Whatever may
be the result of the conference proposed
by the Czar, should one be held and any-
thing substantial eventuate therefrom, it
is felt that it will not affect the United
States in any appreciable degree or ex-
tent. Tho sincerity of the proposal, which
seams on the surface to be genuine, can
best be judged from Russia's '_esponse in
conference to a countoi proposal that her
concession from China to build the
Siberian railway to Port Arthur bo
abandoned.
The Czar Thanked.
Basle, Switzerland, Aug. 30. — The
Zionist convention aas passed a resolution
expressing its profound thanks to the
Czar for issuing his peace note.
nothing eau henceforth deprive the. Czar i
of having brought peace and disarmament ,
into the sphere of practical politics.
"It looks at present as though all the
great powers might bo willing to enter
the conference, while the United States
might be expected to lend a favorable ear
to proposals tending in any degree to less-
en the weight of the Imperial responsi-
bility she is about to undertake. Her in.
dustrial policy is closely akin to our own
and her abiding interestin the mainten-
ance of peace is hardly less vital,"
The Daily Chronicle's Paris correspond-
ent declares that the disarmament olive
branch would have emanated from Bra -
parer William in Jerusalem, if the Czar's
advisors, including, perhaps, AL Hone
taus, bad not forestalled the Emperor's
project.
The Daily Telegraph says; "The idea
is so beautiful that we are reluctant to
throws cold water upon it; but what is to
be the basis of discussion? A conference
which should recognize that free and
open markets are for the adv.:ntage of the
entire civilized world would indeed pave
the way to universal peace; but, short of
this, Wo rear the gathering will prove
abortive,"
The Daily News: "The Czar by this
message leas acquired a more righteous
and enduring fame than belongs to the
proudest conqueror of his illustrious
house. Theoar
q
re is nor from tohich of
such a manifestoo would produce a more
profound impratision. Hitherto the great
obstacle was that nobody would begin.
The Czar cannot be suspected of making
t of a eltv
a virtue n ccs We s h: r b
Fhall 1d a
tg
inattributing
nor
era the n . ua tour
A t n
policy to the Czar himself. It is the pen
of Nicholas, but the doctrine of Cobden."
The Morning Post, discussing the diaTl-
anities In the way of tho proposal, arrives
at the con: lesion that it would suit Rus -
sem needs :na Russian designs wonder-
fully well, but would not suit .England
at all.
iPreach Tapers Weleetnc the Proposal..
Paris, Aug. ;4.= •'.she Figaro believes
Met the disarmament e0r1fe1ence will
: assamhle lme:lr,'e the Czar would not
above risked a refusal. It believes, how-
ever, that the aepiratian is chimerical.
The Ganinle thinks the proposal a net-
t ural one from Russia, beeausei the ern•
mens° armament imposed upon her is the
principal oh'taele to her development.
Le Journal thinks Zhu conference, in-
steaii of realizing the Crar's hopes, will
rather accentuate national antagonism,
1 if it :foes not, lead to domande totally III-
, .laical to the world's peace.
a
Lo Radical wishes all success t e
a toh
movement, but says: The readjustment
of a certain patriotic question lit which
I France cannot and never will cease to
interest herself Is, however, an essential
i preliminary to general poam
i The :Mode and the Rappel comment in
a similar strain. Tho Petit Journal ex -
1 presses the hope that the powers, will re -
i spend and that the coaforoneo will solve
,the problem in accordance with the prin-
ciples of right and equity.
In s,uort, all the papers welcotlle the
proposal, with the reservation that the
question of Alsace-Lorraiuo shall first be
regulated,
The Czar Ts a Dreamer.
London, Aug. 30.—Dr. Emil Reich,
the eminent Hungarian historian and
British counsel in the Venezuelan arbi-
tration, in an interview on the subject of
t t �
the Czar's peace note expressos the belief
that His Majesty is visionary. He says:
"The Czar is a dreamer. He is not in
robust health and has always to take
great care of his body. This schemo for
universal peace is one of his dreams. It is
also a feint. Count Muravieff. the Rus•
sian Minister for Foreign Affairs, hopes
thereby to get a free hand in the develop.
'mut of Russian schemes in Manchuria."
English Religious World's Opinion.
London, Aug. 30.—The religious world,
however, loudly welcomes and praises
the Czar's noble initiative. Numerous
bishops have already publicly expressed
their views in that sense.
THE THUNDERER TALKS,
The Great Paper Sets Forth the Benefits
of a Voluntary Instead of an
Armed Peace.
London, Aug. 30.—The Tinos says
editorially: "The Czar's note breathes a
spirit of generous, perhaps, indeed, al.
most Quixotic, humanity—a spirit fam-
iliar in the effusions of visionaries, but
too seldom found in the utterances of
great sovereigns and responsible states-
men.
"Never, perhaps, in modern history,
have aspirations which good men in all
asci have regarded as at once ideal and
unattainable found so responsive an 03ho
in the counseli of the) greatest and most
powerful of the world's rulers. In princi
pie the proposals of the Czar put forth au
a solemn occasion with every mark of
disinterested sincerity, will command the
sympathy and respect of all men of good
will. So far as Groat Britain is concern-
ed, we long ago abandoned Continental
ambitions, and there is no power in the
world which has less to gain or more to
lose by any disturbance of existing terri-
torial status quo.
"The time has long gone by when
British commerce could be made to flour-
ish in and by means of war. The greatest
of our interests is peace, and so sensitive
is our world- ,wide commerce that even
rumors of war often do us more injury
than war itself might do to a power less
depecdentthan, is Great Britain on a free
interchange of . the whole world of the
manitold products of its native industries.
"If Russia, which has also a great
but undeveloped industrial future before
her, is becoming fully convinced, as we
in England long have been, that her re-
sources are better devoted to the benefi-
cent arts of peace than to the destructive
uneconomic energies of war, Englishmen,
as essentially a peace -loving people, can
only hail the Czar's pronouncement with
the utmost cordiality, as glad tidings of
great joy, which, whatever may the
practical issue, does cast honor upon that
sovereign's generous and lofty spirit and
ainranit7. Ibo ditiieultiesare great, bat
Mad the Uussian Yoko Roan.
London. Aug. 30.—A despatch to the
Daily Mail from Shanghai says. It is re-
ported there that the Russians at *eve
Chewing aro trying to compel native
owners of land there to sell their holdings
ateabsurdly low prices, and that In can -
sequence of this the Chinese aro on the
verge of an anti -Russian outbreak. The
local Mandarins aro, so to speak, between
the cross -fires of the Russians and na-
tives, and are helpless.
All Depends on France,
London, Aug. 30,—What is noticeable
in 'European comment is the fact that
everything is hold to pivot on the notion
of Franco.
Lord 111iuto Sails Nov. a.
London, Aug. 30.—Lord Minto and the
Countess of Minto and their staff will sail
on tho Dominion Liner Comm, from
Liveipool for Canada on Nov. 3. The
chief part of the Governor's establishment
sails on the Allan Liner Laurentian, on
Oct. 27, and it depends on the arrange-
ments at Ottawa whether they will dis-
embark at Quebec or Montreal. The ap-
pointments to ;he staff of the Governor
are not yet complete.
English Alpine Climbers Ruled.
Berne, Switzerland, Aug. 30. — Dr.
John Hopkinson, an English electrical
engineer, and his son and two daughters,
have been killed while ascending the
Dents de Vesiwvl in the canon of Valais,
the mountains of which are among the
highest in Europe, and which aro exposed
to furious torrents and destructive aval-
anches. The party had gone on their
perilous trip withoxt the assistance of a
guide.
Much in Little
15 espeeially true of Hood's Fills, for no medi-
cine ever contained so great curative power in
so small space. They are a whole medicine
To Say Farewell to the Omen.
London, Aug. 80.—Colonel John Hay,
the retiring United States Ambassador
to the Court of St. James, who has
aoseptod the portfolio of Secretary of
State at Washington, went to Osborne,
Isle of Wight, yesterday, to bid farewell
to Queen Victoria, who starts for Scot-
land on Wednesday. The royal yacht
met Colonel Hay at Portsmouth and con-
veyed him to Cowes.
Welsh Coal Strike Ended.
London, Aug. 30.—At a ioint mass
meeting of the Welsh miners yesterday,
it was decided to accept theemployers'
terms, offered at the Cardiff conference
on Saturday, by which the miners get an
increase of three per cons. in their wages.
This ends the disastrous six months'
strike.
2,300 Deaths From the Plague.
Silula, Aug. 80.—It is of cially an-
nounced that there were 3,300 deaths
from the plague last week in the Bombay
Presidency. The epidemic is spreading,
and there has been a fresh outbreak in
the State of Hyderabad.
King 11Talieto Is Dead.
Auckland, N.Z., Aug. 30.—Malieto
Laoupepa, King of Samoa, died on Mon-
day, Aug, 72, of typhoid fever.
The Humber Mystery Solved.
Toronto, Aug. 40..-7 o
Humber mys-
tery—which means that the county police
have been., searching for a couple who
rowed up the Humber carrying a baby
and returned without—has been solved.
Dr. Tremayne and wife of Mimioo were
the couple, and they canoed up to join a
picnic party up the Humber: Other mem-
bers of the party were driving and they
took the child home in aoarriage.
According to Boyle.
Toronto; Aug. 30.—The petition against
the return of W. H. Hoyle, M.P.P. for
.North Ontario, has been :dismissed.
vilest, ahvays ready, al-
ways
lways e01eient, always tat''
lsfactory; prevent a cold
or fever, cure all liver ills,
sick headache, jaundice. constipation, etc 2 e.
The only Pills to take with Hood's $arsuparilla..
EXETER MARKETS,
(Changed every Wedl,eseay)
Wheat per beaiiel
Flour per ewt
Barley
Oats
Peas
Batter
.. to
•1 1:,
35 tole
21 to"+
51 to :3
11 to 12
Eggs
Potatoes perbag 13 to :•+•
Rayner ton Soto '2 '
Dried Apples per iE+ 4
peep
Coughing
We know
of nothing better to tear the
lining of your throat .and
lungs. It is better than wet
feet to cause bronchitis and
pneumonia. Only keep it
up long enough and you
will succeed in reduci ng your
wight, losing your appetite,
bringing on a slow fever and.
making everything exactly
right for the germs of con-
suinption.
Stop coughing and you
will get well.
Ayer°s
Cherry
Pectoral
i
cures coughs of every kind..
An ordinary cough disap-
pears in a single night- The
racking coughs of bronchitis
are soon completely mas-
tered. And, if not too far
along,, the coughs of eon-
sumpnon are completely
cured.
olAsk your druggist for one
Dr. Ayer's
Cherry Pectoral
Plaster.
It will aid the action of the
Cherry Pectoral.
if you baro any rompiaint what -
over and desire the bast medical
advice you can „possibly obtain,
write us freely. „possibly
nnlreCMvea
prompt reply that may be of great
Dail, J yCtnATE , Lowell, Mass.
�a►
witkWdvtrbs
but don't think you C&11 patch.
clothes to look like new.
Tlieu again it would not
payllyou when you can buy
Clothing at the pices we
sell.
BARGAINS -
Paints 31 '(1le to o:'i, • e."41
ct(I lir t. t>; ve.:s $2.00
suits $0.80
overcoat,. 8,09
Black War• ..+.,t i- ; t : !Tea-
.SI2.Qfl
Oar S20
others at S'? v. (Axle avid aef
foe
PATRONIZE US.
John Devlin, aged 17,of Carleton
,
,
ill on theat ]•
Place, was killedh C. P. I.. A
monte. He was stealing a ride.
American troops at Chattanooga
stoned two negro pedlars to death in
revenge for the death of a non-com-
missioned officer at the hands of an-
other colored man.
riiv FILL'?
The Leading Specialists of America
20 Years In Detroit.
250;000 Cured.
curEsTRICTu i
Thom f young and miadlo-aged
menace . iwiththisdisease—many
uncon>:ci�They may have a smart-
ing _ meeiion, small, twisting stream,
she -lifting pains at times, slight dis-
ch:!. difficulty in commencing, weak
ergo. minions, and all the symptoms
of nervous debility—they have STRIC-
TURE. Don'tlotdootorsexperimenton
you, by cutting, stretching, or tearing
you. This will not oureyou, asitwill re-
turn. Our NEW METHOD TItItAT-
3IENT absorbs the stricture tissue;
henceremoyes the stricture permanently.
It can never return. No pain, no suffer-
ing, no detention from business by our
method. Thesexualorgansarestrength-
eued. The nerves are invigorated. and
the bliss of manhood roturus.
SECURE GLEET
Thousands of young and middle-aged
mon are having their sexual vigor and
vitality continually sapped by this dis-
ease. :They aro frequently unconscious
of the cause of these symptoms. General
Weakness, Unnatural Discharges, Fail-
ing Manhood, Nervousness, Poor Mem-
ory, Irritability at times Smarting, Sen-
sation, Sunken Eyes, with dark circles,
Weak Back, General Depression, Lack
of
arts, Ambition, Varicocele,_ aaond 1STRICTURE
maybe the cause. Don't consult family
doctors, as they have 310 experience in
these• special diseases—don't allow
�Quacks to experiment on you. Consult
1leeielists, whehave made a life study of
Diseases of lien and Women. OurNIiW
METHOD' TREATMENT will posi-
tively cure you. One thousand dollars
for a ease we accept for treatment and
cannot cure. Terms moderate fora curd.
CURES GUARANTEED
1� a treat and cure: EMISSIONS,
VARICOCELE SYPHILIS GLEET.
STRICTURE 1'MPOTENCY, SECRET
DRAINS.UNNATURAL DISCHARG-
ES,KIDNEY and BLADDER Di eases.
CONSULTATION. FREE. BOOKS
FREE. If unable to call, write for
QUESTION BLANK for HOME
TREATMENT.
DF.t9.
KENNEDY& KERGAN
Cor, Michigan Ave. and Shelby St.
K. �
DETROIT - MICH. _ if
T^�
People patronize els because
they realize that we always
sell clothing that is strictly
up•to•dalte.... .
J. IC GRIElitt
l.,ppc , tr 1 - opt tem.
Bicycles !
Bicycles
j 1
1
Bic' %'
a
Bicycle Pleasure.
Are you seeking Bicycle pleasure
if so, you should seek first .a good
wheel. We cau furnish you any of
the best wheels made, at lowest prices
Musical.
Do you want anything is the
musical line. We have a choice lot
of Pianos and organs. call and In
spect them before buying elsewhere
A full stock
Of sewing machines, baby ear
riages, ete. eta.
Perkins & Marto.
THE
tcryiRAL fiRtio I
STORE.
Tn I INAN'S COUGH BALSAM
far Coughs, Coles and Bronchial trouble
in old or young.
We 1115 usfaeture ,
WINER'S LINAMENT
which is an excellent remedy for
Cramps, Pains, Neuralgia, Sore Throat
and Influenza.
The Old Reliable, 'tVinan's Con-
dition Powders,
still holds first place in the market.
Also Lotion for scratehes on horses
and Condition Powder for same
SOLE.AGENT l O3
DIX. LIT
1L. U T .E.,
OVER
LOADED.
Every incoming freight train,
since last January, empties part
of its cargo on our floors, and the
new things have crowded every
foot of our large floor space.
WE ARE NOT
hurrying you to purchase, but
many prefer to get as near as
possible the first choice of new
assortments. Our stock of Fur-
niture of all kinds was never
more complete. Purchasers get
from us always the
LOWEST PRICES
and the advantage of all the stud
of styles and of the most perfect
taste that we can command:
S. GID
LAY
SON
Furniture Dealers & Undertakers