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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1901-7-18, Page 3NOST EXPENSIVE SPORV, TERE1- r;§,11 WHICH COST OVER 4,400 APIECE. Young 'Englishman Says Each Lion Coast Him$1 250$ Ele- phant $2,000. A gentleman who recently returned to England after three months' tar- pon fishing on, the Texan coat e es- timated that the three fish he caught during that tine cost hint just over $400 apioee. His travelling expenses were $375, tackle $150, hire of boat and 'guide $300, while hotel bills and minor expellees connected with his holiday were covered by the remain- ing• $375. Tuna fishing off the California coast. is an even ixtore expensive amusement, for fares are higher, the distance heing'greater, hotel expens- es are more than in Wexa.s, and it is impossible to hire a boat and boat - Men tender $7.50 a day in the tuna There , is, hoWever, no need to leave Great Britain to cliscoyer how ,expensive fishing can be. On Loch Tay it license to fish costs $5 a day, apart from „ hotel expenses, boat - nen' S fees, and , the „ cost of tackle. A salmon rod is cheap at $25, and most sportsmen possess more than one. A single salmon fly often costs sixty cents. Reels, lines, and eery other accessory 'lire Proportionately expensive. If a ,fisherman thinks of ,renting a river he will find $2.50 ta- yard fpr the season a not nae0MniOn price, and will be 'lucky if his fish are landed at a cost of less tharg.$25 to $35 apiece. The sportsman who owns English coverts ,and goes in for ',pheasants has to heekon on spending' $5 apiece in food, keepers' wages, eggs, and on his yearly bag. Titus, a shoot' which yields 200 pheasants in the season will cost its owner $10,000 the fifty other incidental expenses. Dogs and guns are extremely expen- sive. $500 is no great price for a Pair of hammerless ejectors by a good maker; and one cannot buy well -broken pointers under $200 a brace. Coming to big -game shooting, which -- Might be supposed to be a • cheaper form of amusement, expenses become simply appalling. In the first place a $125 game license has to be paid for before any creature can be shot in Africa, the home of big game, and into the bargain a fee of $40 for an elephant, $30 for a buffalo, and $25 for a rhinoceros is, exacted. Then it is impossible to travel inland without a considerable number of natives to act as carriers and servants. Large reserve stocks of firearms and ammunition, medi- cine and food must be carried. :Without going into details, it may be mentioned that ' *h. Well-known young Englishman who has an estate near Blackpool, but who is best known. as a hunter of big.game, reckons that each lion he has. killed cost hina. $1,250 and each elephant $2,000. . It is practically, impossible for a man to hunt regularly in England, even with one of the lessaknown packs, for less than. $1;500 to $2,-s. .000 a year. Even suppose he rides -cheap horse's-- 'crocks,' ae, they are generalleacalled—at $250 'apiece, yet he must have two. 1 -le must feed and stable them and keep a man. There are vet.'s and Shoeing' bills Into the bargain, hunt Subscriptions, and travelling and -boxing expenses: To huntwith a fashionable pack like the Quorn costs nearer. $15,000 than $1,500. The last balance -sheet of the latter hunt gives` SOtpe idea : 'of the 'amohnt, of money hunting costs its followers; .57,150 Was, paid 'as CoMpensation for -poultry kille dur- ing 1000e 53,870 for clamages to fences; taking down wire .and soon, and $1,670 for rent of cOvers. -.The total expenses ' for, the. year Were $28,535. But even hunting Is not 'So experi- . sive an amusement as is the game of polo. At recent sales of polo ponies hr London as much as $2,000 apiece, was realised for smart anie male. A regular player always, keeps three, more often five or six.' The game knocks them about so that they cannot play for mere than a Season or 'two: Also, a, .POlo play- er's travelling expenses .• aro very heavy. ' A well-known baronet, whose herses have won more than :one Derhy, used, to say that ;each race he secured cost hinat$250,000.'' The amount is probably well within the limit of what the average Derby winner spends on the coveted Blue Ribbon of the Turf, Big as racing prizes are, they amount to but a very small part -of the expens- es of a large training stable, and the owner who can show that his bet: - ting account covers any large Por- tion of the deficit is rare indeed. Indeed, the only sport which can hold a candle to racing in the way of money spent, upon itis yachting. A great yacht -designer once Said "that the ideal bacing. machine -would be built of, phosphor bronze, with a keel of gold --gold is, of course, hea- vier than lead, and therefore would give greater .stability. Shamrock II. would probably not, have cost very much mere than elle' is costing. Sir Thomas Lipton had she complied with these cenditions. ' FURTHER INFORMATION.' WANT - In one of the later settlements of New South Wales a man was put on trial. for stealing a., watch. The evidence had been wear conflicting, and as the jury retired the judge re- marked kindly that if be could give any assistance in the way of smooth- ing out poesible difficulties he should be happy to do so, Eleven of the jury had filed out of the box, but the twelfth remained, and the expression on his face show- ed that he was in deep thouble. Well, sir, remarked the judge, is there any question you would like to a.sk me before you retire? • , The juror's face brightened, and he replied eagerly: ' I would like to know, my lord, if yon could tell its whether the pris- oner stele the watele. • roil the CURE of DRUNKENNESS Letter from Mrs. George Grant of Paisley, Ont., giving particulars of a cure effected by "Sa.maria Prescrip- tion;" -resulting in its use and adop- tion by the, Paisley Woman's Chris - then Temperance Union. (Copy) ' Paisley, Ont., Dec. 11, 1900. Te Samaria Remedy Co., 30 Jordan Street, Toronto, Ont. Dear Sirs,—I penned a few lines to you sometime ago,—as a member of the temperance cause, I wrote nar information; at that time I had An my mind friends whose son was a great cause of anxiety and trouble onaocount Of his drunken habits. I strongly urged the friends to try the' remedy I saw, adveetisecl in the To- ronto Globe. They did so. It was the Samaria Remedy that was ad- ministered and I am pleased to in - fermi the company the medicine was helpful; the young man has not drank a drop since, breaking off from old companions and special prayers on his behalf, all aided in breaking the chains. At the last meeting of the W. C. T. U. here, I introduced your medi- cine for the cure of the liquor habit, and a resolution was passed, "That Iinasmuch as it is the aim of this or- ganizatioa to help the poor inebriate we should recommend this remedy in 'homes where persons are addicted to the ' use of intoxicating liquors" Now, sirs, wishing you a successful ;career in your noble work, and feel- ing that assistance can he given in .the precincts of home by the hand of mother or wife, trusting God may ,open up useful avenues for your la-. ibors. • Yours very respectfully, )Signed) Mies. George Grant, (Signed) Mrs. G eo rge Grant', On behalf of Paisley W. C. T. 13 FREE SAMPLE anvd pamphlet rti ingiftal in. 'for ti ' t stimoni 1 easne enr:elOpe. Enf::-1.?Celg.-!Ilcaea7.n.tind Irea TatE SAMARIAREMEDY C0,251Jordan st tIER tfUSITSAriaWAS i4 DRUNMRD :'-' A Lady Who Coreslfer Husband of Nis Drinking Habits Writes of tier Straggle to Save Ifer Home. A PATHETIC LETTER. emse "fl .had for a long time been think- ing of trying the Tasteless Samaria. Prescription treatment on my hus- band for hi S drinking habits, but I was afraid he would discover that I was giving hixn medicine, and the thought unnerved me. I hesitated for nearly a week, but one day when the'came home very much intoxicated sand' week's salartt -nearly all spent, I threw off all fear and deter- ined to Make an effort :to save our home from the ruin I saw coming, at all hazards. I sent for your Tasteless Samaria Prescriptian, and put it in his coffee as directed next morning and watched and prayed for the result. At noon I t gave him more and'also at supper. He never suspected a thing, and 1 then boldly kept right on giving it regularly, as I had discovered something that set every nerve in my body tingling with hope and hiaminess, and I could see a bright future spread out before me —a peaceful, happy home, a share in the good things of life, an attentive, loving husband, comforts, and every- thing else dear to a woman's heart; for my husba.n.d had told me that whiskey was vile stuff and he was 'taking a dislike to it. ,it was only too true, for before I had given him the full course he had stopped drink- ing altogether, but I kept giving him the 'medicine till it -was gone, and then sent for another lot, to have on hand if he should relapse, as he .had done front promises before. He - never has and I ain writing you this letter to tell you how thankful I am. I- honestly believe it will cure the worst cases." Sent -Free to All—A sample pack- age of Tasteless Samaria, Preserips tion gladly sent free with full par-, tieulters in plain, 'sealed envelope. All letters considered sacredly confie dential: Address, enclosing stamp for repitr, The Samaria Remedy Co., 26 Jordan Street, Toronto, Canada. 1-1333 Yiosisil's Clifisilail Temporane Union ADOPT THE PRESCRIPTION" PIE PLAYEL A cornet -player in a local orches- tra .(a native of the Fatherland) re- cently got into trouble innocently and unexpectedly. "Let's have that oyer again," re- quested the condeictor, surprieed at hearing a note that was not on the score. The note was sminded again. What are you playing? he asked at last. I am bla,ying vat vos on de paper, said the musician. I blay vat is be- fore me. Let's have a 0 ok. The part 'was 'handed to the con- dactor, • Why you idiot, he roared, can't you see that this is aeclead fly? gare, was the reply, he vas sere, and I blayed hiin 8111E ENGLISH GARD$NS1 MANY BEAUTIFULLY KEPT PLACES MAY BE SEEN. Garden of a Hundred Perfumes— Craze for "Wild -Gardening" —Without Plants. There is in the west of England 'a garden divided into three parts, each of which is a "one -colored garden." In one of these divisions red flowers only are grown, in the Second yea- loW, and in the third blue. No var- iegated -colored fiowere of any sort are allowed, and it is found that, taking all the year round, the yel- low garden keeps up the best average display, as the yellow snowdrops and data:Wile give it such a good start in early spring. There are one or two other instances in which eccen- tricity on the part of the owner will. permit flowers of only one color to be grown; but this is, so far as can be ascertained; the only case in which three colors are cultivated, but kept apart. A garden of a hundred perfumes is probably one -of the most charming schemes it is possible to carry out in horticulture. In these gaedens are grown one hundred kinds of scented flowers and plants, and the air of such a place, especially after a shower of rain on a summer evening, is indescribably beautiful. The fashion for planting these perfume gardens, which are to be found at several country seats, arosein.rather a curia -us manner. An amateur gar- dener of some eminence suddenly be- came blind, but in order that he might still enjoy in a way his floral favorites, he caused his garden to be planted with SCENT -GIVING VARIETIES ONLY so that he might identify them in that way. The owner of a place on the Kent- ish hills has been at great pains to construct what he calls a "lost gar- den." At firsi sight there does not appear to be any garden at all, clumps of furze and trees being dot- ted about at intervals right up to the door of the house. These clumps are, however, cunningly devised to hide the entrance to glades and dells in which flowers of all descriptionsd. are to be founThe kitchen -gar- den is hidden front the house by an intervening slope. The recent craze for "wild -garden- ing" set some people to work doing very curious things in this way. One practice of wild -gardeners is to sow bulbs in grass, instead of for - lamely shaped beds—a very ,attractive scheme if carried out properly within certain limits. The owner of a place on the borders of Surrey had a method of sowing these bulbs that was peculiarly his own. . Assisted by one or two of his gardener, he would simply throw bulbs of all kinds about in handfuls all . over his grassy slopes, without anyattempt at planting them , , leaving them to "take their chance with Nature." The consequence was that the few that survived the winter and lived to flower gave the banks a most ex- traordinary appearance. A. garden in a drawing -room, with trees, streams, walks, and beds, has been successfully laid out. The trees employed are the wonderful dwarfed Chinese and Japanese maples and yews, the tiniest of Alpine flowers being used in the flower beds, which are only A FEW INCHES IN DIAMETER. "Spelling" fruit -gardens are more common in France than in England, but specimens are to be found there, The French are adepts at training the steins and branches of Various kinds of fruit tree, such as apricot, apple and pear, into the shape of different letters of the alphabet; and it is quite possible to purchase "God Save the King," in fruit trees, eith- er for growing against a wall, or in the ordinary way. Until recently there were many gardens at large country seats with- out _any plants in them. What should have been flower beds were laid out in geometrical patterns with little chips of different colored stone, and the attention of the gar- dener was -confined to the kitchen garden. "South African" gardens were very much in evidence last summer ia big places, but had to be made under glass, as they consisted only of plants and flowers that flourish in Cape Colony, Natal, and other scenes of recent hostilities. Curious and interesting collections were thus brought together, but, as it was on- ly the fashionable fad of a season, no attempts are being made to carry out similar plans this year. GRAINS OF GOLD. A haggling, woman is neatly as odious as a mean man. It is better to be called proud than named a sycophant. A 'woman may overcome a man's dislike, but his contempt never. The best friend a young girl can have is a level headed, loving father. Health is a touchy profession; dis- obey .one of its commandments and off it goes. Nothing makes a vain old man so wroth as to pay him the respect duo his ego,. Keeping one's grievaaces to one's self is an excellent proof of mental equipoise. Adversity is a less severe test than perversity, where doinestic happi- ness ie conterned. Until you are sure a stranger will not bore you, brace you or babble, tell her no .secrets. It is not what we see, but what we remember perfectly that helps to widen our mental Vistas, ' There ie over a battle 'waging be- tween an idlertand time, the object being to kill each other.'" It is wiser to speak one's own lan- guage correctly than several others badly, as Many smart' persons do. Doing ell we e,aa to promote our frierhl's happiness is better than to I continually drink to his peosperity. g AN ARTFUL SPORTSMAN. A sporting gentleman, who had the reputation of being a very had shot, invited some of his friends to dine with him. Before dinner he showed them a target painted' on a barn door, with a, bullet right in the bull's eye. 'Phis he ,claimed to have shot at 600 yards' distance: As nobody believed him he offered to bet the price of an oyster supper, on it, and, on one of his guests ac- cepting the wager, he produced two witnesses, whoSe veracity could not be doubted, to prove his assertion. Since they both stated that he had done what he claimed, he won his bet. During dinner the loser of the wager inquired how the host had managed to fire such an excellent shot. The host answered: Well, I shot the bullet at the door at a distance of 500 yards, and then I painted the target round it, HEARTY PRAISE FRO111 QUEBEC. A RACINE MAN EXPRESSES III1VISEI,F STRONGI,Y FOR DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS. His Letter is Typical of Hundreds Lately Received from Lower Province—Same Work Being Done All Over the Dominion-- Dodd's Kidney Pills Stand AlonDeisienasteh.e Conquest of Kid- ney 'Racine,- Que., July 8.—(Specia1)..--- It is a very strange thins but lately all through this province, the people have been talking in a straight, downright way about the medicine; Dodd's Kidney Pills; Never before has ,a remedy made so many warm, 'outspoken friends for itself. Whatt ever part of 'Quebec one chances to be in, the mentioning of Dodd's Kid- ney Pills is always enough to bring forth the grateful story of an exper- ience with this most reinarkable re- medy froni one of the listeners. These experiences include nearly all the fatal non -contagious diseases Bright's Disease, Diabetes, Dropsy, Rheumatism, Bladder and Urinary Disorders, Female Trouble, Heart Trouble, Blood Diseases, Nervous Complaints are all emphatically de- clared to have been entirely cured by Dodd's Kidney Pills. But more than any other complaint, BackaChe COUllts oftener. Emile Couatre, of this town, says they cured him of Backache and other Kidney Troubles, and writes a letter for publication hi this paper to that effect. "I am going to say a word con- cerning Dodd's Kidney Pills," he writes, can not do otherwise , than praise this wonderful medicine heartily, for I am now, owing to Dodd's Kidney Pills, in perfect health. For some time I have not felt the slightest pain in. my back. My kidneys are working properly. When I go to bed I find rest, whereas before using Dodd's Kidney Pills I got up more fatigued than the nig,ht- before. I had pain in my back and headache which broke my sleep. "I have taken only three boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pilis and cannot help but credit them with my cure. I have been free from my trouble since taking Dodd's Kidney Pans." MISTAKES. Not all Business Operations can. be Equally Successful. There is a class of persons that do nothing but loaf around stores and taverns and gossip in regard to the doings of the workers. If this one has made a mistake, had bad luck, or "got stuck," where no one could have foreseen how it would have happened, how they will prate about it ; how weak and foolish for him to „have done so ; he should have. done so and so. If they had been in that person's shoes they would not have made that foolish move. The facts are every one must expect to make some mistakes, one cannot succeed in all his doings. The hard luck that one has at times makes him appreciate' -the good when it comes. If one keeps trying all the time he •Will eventually succeed. The greatest men and generals we have had made mistakes, but in the end they succeeded by their courage in not giving up. If these gossipers and loafers would have some business of their own, they would find that it will not al- ways turn as they want and expect. They are the ones that have failed in their undertakings, yet they think they are the ones to advise. The general to trust is the one that has won battles rather than the one that has lost them, and the ad- vice of one that has in the end suc- ceeded in doing something is better than that of one who failed in what he tried to do. Difterendes of Opinion regarding the popular internal and external remedy, Dr. Thomas' Electric Oil—do not, eo far as known, exist. The testimony is posi- tive and concurtent that the article re- lieves physical pain, cures lameness, checks a cough, is an excellent remedy for pains and rheumatic complaints, and it has no nauseating or other unpleasant effect when taleme ifiternallit for giecE,ETH atid BREATH New Size SOZODONT LIQUID 26o New Patent Box-SOZODONT POWDER . 26o Large LIQUID and POWDER . •76o At the Stores or by Mail, postpaid, for the Price. A Dentist's Opinion: "As an antiseptic and hygienic mouthwash, and for the care and preservation e,f the teeth and gums 1 cordially recommend Sozoclont. 1 consider it the ideal entifrioe for children's use." [Name of writer upon application.] HAL 06 RUCKEL Montreal. if Yo u Want beat 1.3,,ipilttECUSnip .t t, our YPOULTRY. APPLES. other FRUITS And PROMOS, The Dawson Commission Co. LImIted, Oer. Wesealarketand Colborne St., Toronto. FACTS AND FIGURES. Canada imported last year 637,- 268 pine -apples. Syria now exports raw silk to the value of $5,000,000 annually. Recent surveys show that the Par- aguay River in South America is 1,800 miles in length. The towns of England and Wales cover an area of 4,03.9,788 acres out of a total of 77,675,572 acres. Britain inaports annually.. about $135,000,000 worth of raw cotton sanodol. about' $126,000,000 worth of v Coal is cheaper in Austria than in any other country of Europe. There it averages $1.20 at the pit's mouth. Great Britain contributed 5,800,- 000,000 of the 12,000,000,000 tons of coal mined in the world during the nineteenth century. The deepest colliery in the world is at Lambert, Belgium. Frona the opening to the bottom of the shaft is a distance of 3,500 feet. Before a coal gas explosion can oc- cur there must be six parts of gas in 'every hundred of the air of the room, but 4 per cent. of coal gas will cause suffocation, 130Ware OT 'ointments ror tararrn that contain Mercury as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely -derange the whole system when en tarint throne.' the mucous surfacc, Such articles -Mould never be used except, on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the geed you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Care, manufactured by FA'. Cheney & Co., To- ledo, ID„ contains no mercury, and Is taken in. ternally, acting directly upon the blood and - mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the gents. Ins. It is taken intornally,and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & co. TostimoniaLs free. Sold by Druggists, price 75e per bottle. Hall's Family Pins are the best. Mabel—What made you gY? accept Al - Suffer No More.—There are athousand who live naiserable lives because dyspepsia dans the faculties and shadows existence with the cloud of depression. One way to dispel the vapors that beset the victims of this disorder is to order them a course of Parmelee's Vegetable Pills, which are among the best Vegetable Pills known, being easy to take and are most efficacious n their action. A trial of them will prove this. Lanark is the only Scotch county with more than a million inhabi- tants. Lifilifieill IS useil tY HyslcIallS. Beer has on an average 1 per cent. of alcohol, cider 8 per cent., claret 134 per cent. `Port has 23 parts in the 100, and whisky 53 to 54. For Over Fifty Years Mao'. wisstowa SOOTHING SYRUP has been used by rnillions of mothers for their children while teething, It soothes the child, roftens the gums. allays pain, cures wind colic, reculates the stomach and bowels, and is the best remedy for Diarrhces. Twenty-five cents & bottle. Sold by druggists throughout the world. Be ,pura and ask for " WINSLOW'S SOOTHING Sr5IJS corns, and Portland. Dates of sale T. N. U 332 AVENUE liOUSE—ItZ-13UsletE1711: Papa (severely)—Did you ask maninaa if you could have that ap- ple? Eive-Year-Old--yes, papa, Papa—Be careful now. I'll ask mamma, and if she says you didn't ask her 1'11 whip you for tellihg a story. Did you a.sic mamma? , FiVe-Year-Old—Pa.pa, I asked her. (A pause). She said I couldn't have it. They Are Not Violent in Action. --Some persons, when they wish to cleanse the stomach, resort to Epsom and otherpurg- ative salts. These are speedy in their sta- tion, but serve no permanent good.Their use produces incipient chills and if ppm sisted in they injure the stqmach. Nor do they act upon the intestines in a . bene- licial way. Parmelee's Vegetable Pills answer all puepeses in this reepect, and have no superior. --- Russia has still 899 million acres of forest, and only 315 million of cultivated soil. "-30modoiar Minaftl's nen! Lilmbormoil's ENV. Italy's vintage is valued at 48 millions a year, Spain's 46 millions, France's 44 millions. • . There never was, and never will be, a universal panacea, in one remedy, for all ills to which flesh is heir—the very nature of many curatives being such that were the germs of other and differently seated ' diseases rooted in the system , of the patient—what would relieve one -ill in. turn would aggravate the other. We have, however, in Quinine Wine,' when obtainable in a sound unadulterated state, a remedy for many audgeevious ills. By its gradual and jutlicioue' use, the frailest systems are led into convalescence and strength, be the influence which Qui- nine exerts on Nature's own restoratives. 11 relieves the drooping spirits of those with whom a chronic state of morbid des pendency and lack of interest in life is a disease, and, by tranquilizing the nerves, disposes to sound and refreshing sleep— imparts vigor to the action of the blood, which. being- stimulated, courses through- out the veins, strengthening the healthy animal functions of the system, thereby making activity a nece'sYary result, strengthening the frame, and giving liTe to the digestive organe, which naturally dennand increased subscance—result, im- proved appetite. Northrop & Lyman of Toronto, leave given to the public their superior Quinine Wine at the usual rate, and, gauged by the opinion of scientists, this wine approaches nearest perfection of any hi the market. All druggists sell it. The first patent for cutting screwia by machinery was obtained by Wyatt , in 1760. Cheap Round -Trip Rate Between St. Paul, Minn., and the Pacific Coast, On July 6th the Northern Pacific Ry. will place in effect a low first- class round trip rate of 515.00 from eastern terminals ixt Seattle, Ta - ANOTHER MOUTH TO FEED. I'se just got ter havemno' wages, missy. But, Matilda, we are pa,ying you $18 a month, now. I'se aware ob dat, missy, but, I'se ovine ter be married. Ksep“ MORI Hi IN HOE. Europe grew 750,000 tons of in 1836, and now produces 50 lion tons. 114.4111.110641141111414.44.4444, beet mil - Rubber Company. I wascured of 13ronchitis and As- thma by MINARD'S LINIMENT. MRS. A. LIVINGS'PONE, Lot 5, P. E., I. was cured of a severe attack of Rheumatism by MIhTA1e1.1'S LINI- MENT. Mahone Day. JOHN MADER. I was cured of a severest' sprained leg by MINARD'S LINIMENT. JOSHUA W3NACHT. Bridgewater. iVforcury's yearis only 83 days, that of Venus 225 days, and of Mare 687 days. et/ ifaakikmantrewarinialine* 11044110 4 nt14 44, at eastern terminals will be from July 6th to July 13th inclusive, and the final limit for return will be Aug, 31.st, 1901. Destination must be reached not later than July 18th, stopovers being allowed IN EITHER DIRECTION within the transit limits. This offers an unsurpassed oppor- tunity for those desiring to hunt new homes and farms to go into the northwest and look over the coun- try, or for those wishing to visit relatives or friends or to make plea- sure trips, to do so. The full equipment of British ln- -fantry weighs 601b., of Rueeia 681b., of French 7211). Cavalry equipment, varies from 1251b. to 15511) Ask for Kinard s and take no other The lowest tide in any largo sea is In the Mediterranean, At Toulon there is about 4in., which is the average for the whole Mediterranean. SPECIAL TRAIN TO SAN FRAN- CISCO. For Canadian delegates and all others going to the Epworth League Convention, via Chicago and North- Western Railway, to leave Chicago Tuesday, July 9th, 11.59 p. m. Stops will be made at Deaver, Col- orado Springs, Glenwood Springs and Salt Lake, passing- en route the finest scenery in the Roeley and Sierra Nev ad a Mou n La JAS. Throtigh Pullman Palace and Toueist Sleep- ing Cars, Order berthearly, eh party will be limited in 11113111,:ei Fare only 350 roand trip, with choice of routes returning, Send stamp for Illustrated itinerary and map of Sat Francisea to 13. H. Dene nett, Gen'l Agent, 2 'King 11, Eait Toronto, ont.