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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1903-7-16, Page 5u�t 11112,16110 (117ery T10.11Bia'S elerning at the (Mee. .gATZT-STREET, -F,xE,TER. th,---- AuvaQATE PLP3L 1 $1-21 NO COMPANY Tnams,or SC1.13CRIPTION. One Dellar per annum R paid in edvance, R net so peel. 44.eseeeiece.=...g 7.74"74QP No paper die-AA:wee 1 leer:an eneareees ere peel. ; adreiLieee...e:t.; Tv, WC pliteedel aU eneed ehareedi aeeerdiegly. Jhe1 i»tMU, .0t .04 041 ex.4.:"Ninth iniereel rer lose pereele. tetere deseripzien et Joe , RRINTING tnraei Int IN the finest style, mid sated ?reee ratee tlreee.?., melee- ordere, ece., for atbei;iese, eeeseeleteeise eee, to he metle peeabie Cas IL Sanders, EDIrog 4),11) mop Professtonal Carafe - 1 If. EiNtinAele &;. DR, A. 11. reeleS- ' ,4,1•Vidield•d.„ P.D.s„ timer graduate et Aorinto Intiveriety. DEliTTISTS, Teeth estraned without: uoy pelt; er arty bed eifeet *Otlise la Feesrat's Meek, wee; side Meta etreek Peeter. emeeyeeeeeeeeeeeeseseeeeepeeeyeeeeeeee,,,,,,,,,,,e, DR. D. ALTON ANDPRSON (111.1),S, Lae% • DENTIST ---- lieeartleteleateol .Teivittorttiver4ty end Roy College of Dental Sereeone of oatestio. Alse Past Graduate ef Cle eage etebeel of Preelr.ele lnenieteree (witlihenevele mei:time) : • - • , • Allnetiters, aral eltleanito Kates made le•the neatest mannerpeesilde.: A perfeetly ilarnitese Aesthete!" wilt for peinlees N'tr-.4'12511a of teeth. Oillee one deer seeth et Ries...stere, Pieter, interron. nedival R. T. P. ei,ArouLIN. =mann or TUE " College f Physiehris awl Sureeme Ontario. Seo mel Meenehear, Paste wee• d, Om. nr. Jelin P. Wilkom. 0:n -e Re,siesee, CPerai eye., Leneete eee, eyelet attentien peel eleeezeeee of women. tefee ileum leeeie $ p. Legal .4'et.ift• . te,e7r,e,..euree• rV' r42,s, teetentie.eset re, eel? et malea 0.2Yee, :Vele 'nava Ceteor. neesaet, 31. legisens rE'llP ELLIOT, DelititICTRIll, stiLICITOR, on,f. - , :°11,41,a elr,vt ° 4"4'4 ie•T kar' AliVtIOneerit 11 folowS, iviieltr•tqrs, Leveed .WiZoN,K for Me 4milee of PI rai 'and. 11341111;r0.1, a for the tames* et l'eneroie. $elln pramotte attendee wand tenni reeteriable. td3k$ nrranatu at i\ -et Wimitelsve. The Niolsons Bank (Cliertered he revilement, Wad Woe, 31.adro!„ Paid up Capital $2,500,1M0 Reserve Fund, ...... ;TAS. ELT.torr, MANAORR. -EXETER, nniaom---• 011ee 1ourei-10 a.m. to p.m; S.:duel:tea 10 eat to 1 pan. .4%. general banking business transacted money mean -mit to geed Farmer:at lowest rates. Ravines Ranh Deposits frout 61 and npwands ?ceche, ed. lnteeeet allowed at !ugliest current rate. Dietisox Car elem. 24, D. Demme, Nolielters. Manager. Bicycles We are still in the Bicycle teade and this year show some fine sped - mans. The CUSHION' FRAME is the Ideal wheel to ride. Prices mod- erate. New Pianos! Several New Pianos just put in stock; newest styles and the best makes. It will ply yon to see them. You will be surprised at the LOW PRICES at which we sell them. Organs of the Latest makes always in stock Sewing Machines 8cc. We are leaders in Sewing Ma- chines -the best inachines that the trade produces are on our floor for your inspection ; also repairs Need- les etc., for all kinds of sewing nia- chlnes, always on hand. Call and see us if' in need of any of the above. S. A RT GO TO THE EXETER MIER MILS FOR PURE MANITOBA CHOICE FAMILY FLOUR • (Star) BEST PASTRY (Princess) WHEATLET (Breakfast Food) A good supply of Millfeed and Chop always on hand. Give our Flour and Feed a trial and be convinced that • it is all right. Boller and Plate grinders in use to suit customers. • Harvey Bros. Successors to J. Cobbledick & Son • ns in tAe . Are YLLs, of a 'a•ell- torpid or ert conaltion of tha kidneys or ivr,nall are a warning, it isel-tremely to neglect, so important is livaitl.y action of these organs Tt•ey conmnonly attended by los.s. Iiieen of courage, and some- ' tu • 1)3' gloomy foreboding, and de- • onaency. 'MAT aTItt.43% 42.7 be Strained Boon og. Newfound- nPfediff;e"ted**Lftip,fiii: A BABY STRAls,7a-LED, Tn p.Galt, JuiY 10. -The seven-montlis- reeent issue of tile "flooklovere 71. d child of Chatles ;$ of 13..t., xuan entere a idea for th t '3.agazille" the novelist Frani; SPear- I fell out of its carriage this eceredeg, "I wean tanen tvith kidney trouble, and t „peed ecaree.e get arOultd, 1 4- 4.4 witbeut neueni, end enelly licableal to tee- lletel'e tlersepargia. Atter tte. tiret bottle I A:a te inue.la Letter that I eentinued its use, and six teottles made me woraan. Men littld girl eves A h....1,y, the c.:,•atill eet neap anythieg on her , et einae)i, d riCti eured her." Mae. Teionee Ix» h tens. Wallegetrare, Ont. Cores kidney and liver troubles, re, lieve.s the hattk. end builds up the whom system. ling yrize-hts, did not come up f••,r lancr4 Coast. St: John's. Nfld., July 4. --The eritieers Lavoisier and Charbydis, the flagships of the French and Drtih sgredrons, re -pec :ely, in these water% have sailed fr,- the treaty s'uore of Netvfoundland to investigate an alleged attack by Freneli fishermen On d colonial cuetorns office. whfcla le causing serious friction. Admiral Douglee, with the British criers Ariadne, Retribut end Tribune, wail arrive here Auguet 7 fur a three &lee' 'swot, meeting the British mid Ft-tee:it squadrons in thee waters. Prize-fight case AdjoUrned. Fort Erie, „Tidy te.-Thgc so en,alest Mr. Herman, manager of tlie Inter- national A. C., charged with conduct - HEAD oteFICPs 3110NTRP. qi t'etid ARM 2,70 A is*n.73.41 traneeeted, art. po.= CZARC4 C.Iii1A..s.ealLetters feetelie 1"-esed. ayaaaNe CiirliqatTRTM-01:111 waver fre000 of Credit to travellers in allplrisef the we:di. • Fed EftP• liee €.7 BZIAM:i2bi RED1TON$ ONT. W. CHISHOLM. Mann hearsng, to -nay. Mr. Hersnan is hi Chicago, consequently nothing will lee done natal be return. THE MARKET REPORTS. rain Lower -The Live StOck Tradc-Latcet Quotations. 'Monday Eveniukr. :ttiy IJ. Toronto St, Lawrence Market• Little was doing ut St. Lawavnee het tine meaning. end receipts in iti neve were linto. The total gr114 tt; rearitet arsounreu bushels. Oats -One Innedred bushels eold at 37e per bushel. Drew() liog:s-Trade is quiet and prices two quoted unebange4 at trt to $7.lie Ter wt for choice light weight homier kg& Itay-About ten loads were on the mar. *N'o. 1 timothy, old. sold at 312 to 314 too, and new bay at $7 To §9. There no mixed or clover offering, end riees are nominal at 39 to O. Straw -There u -as none MI the market. arid prices are mimed unchanged and nominal at $3 to ae per ten. „ British Markete. Liverpoel. July 11.-01, ouleg Wheat, et Hem; No. 1 standard Valiforrata. per tale (*a eitra t.) Cs 24; Walla. Cs to Co ' red -Mater. C -i ail to ea fitfid. 1. nartitern fe 5%,".11 to t's tele ores eteley: July nernieat; zeii-ratesrier. value; Peeenaser. .:P02 70-mogi 41, 4 3 SP% q4.41e1,70 41114-1 Antirien, pee fltIL. 11- 4'. to 21,..1; tutor's Uh ds 24.11 nosahrol; Septend,er. nonnin311. Flour. Minr.eap cite 21 415. 4.440 JAS. MURRAY &Co, MANITACTZTERS OF ILO RINGS AND ENT MIXERS 1. have for side 1 Boiler 30 p. 1 Boiler 40 h. p. 1 Boiler and Engine 30 h. p. 1 Boiler and Engine 16 h. p. Castings of every Description i brass and Lon to order. Pipe and Fittings of nil sizes ke constantly in stock. JAS. rtIURRAY & CD. LADIES, find„„f,:tz you w111 melee n sztuuto of SLOCUM'S cinavotrso PENNYROYAL TEA. Ilveryinotiorandladystiould emAts thothureruftglybythoo. warts of 'tidies. VV. tirb tOr $tile he Druggists. or turret, THE. 'T. dt. SLOCUM CHEMICAL ToDONTo. CAN. A Methodist college, to be railed Me - Dougall, will be established at Edmon- ton. The Canadian Northern .fast passen- ger service, between Winnipeg and Port Arthur opened Monday. Me. :Tames coopel., the well-known manufaeturer of aiming and railway supplies, is dead at 'Montreal. Mr. 'William Warne, grocer, Of Au- rora, shot a burglar in his store. The man was arrested and brought to Tor- onto jail. A man named James Ralleston, em- ployed with a farmer of Glendale dis- trict, was kicked in the bead by a horse and instantly killed. As a result of an old fend, over a boundary' fen: e line Oliver Richardson shot and fetadly wounded Edmund Matthews, a colered neighbor, in Col- chester South. Rend Schin.gh, aged 23, of Ottawa, shot himself le the head oecause he had been forbidden to continue paying attentions to Miss Albertin Fiset by her reotber. He may die. Mr. John Sberlin, a Brockville carter found over a thousend dollars in bilis iteder a stairway. The Money is sup- posed to be part of the coutents of a registered pa Aug* containing $5,000 stolen from the mails in May last. "I have used Ayer's Hair -Vigor for a great many years, and al- though I am past eighty years of age, yet I have not a gray hair in my head." • Geo. Yellott, Towson, Md. We mean all that rich, dark. color your hair used to have. If it's gray now, r no matter; for Ayer's Hair Vigor always re- stores color to gray hair. Sometimes it makes the hair grow very heavy and long; and it stops falling g of the hair, too. ri I.00 a Wile. MI ereggiste. It your drugeist cannet temelY !Km, • seed us one doeal" end wo exert -ss • you a beide. Be sou° grad e 1min et your nearest exp,ess oftleo. A ,1.0-rett, .2. C, YLlt CO., Lowell, B14521. aeseeeeeeeeegeeetesed • Frelt firrq; a. at California. per e.ental, to Os I'd; Wedia, C9 4.0 to Cs 44401; 'No. if red winter. c.i 44 e,a at211; NV. 2 north- ern 5121191:Oha. cs 1+4 ea ell; futures Otiltit July, Cs CV value; eQe,,iteraber. Cs lad value; Dec( miner, es M.A. duo. Vow% ot quiet; ,imerican. per eenril. new. .le to 4s Veit futures quiet; July, 45 Teed value; September. "is 0.1 value. Flour. Minneapolis. 20s fel to Lis Gd. London, July U. -Opening -Wheat on taissage more Infinity. earn on passage less efrering. Weather in England ea. Al: foreeast. showery. English country wheat markets of yesterday firm. Monday's Ttustion ehipments, wheat 3,02,C99 Weis- el% cern b12.e.(10 bushels; Panel/Ian, wheat 1.12,000 bushels. corn 210.t00 bnaltekt Loralon-Close-"Wheat on Passage. LAW - ern withdrew. Pareela No. 1 hero Mani- toba. pastrage, als 11; parcels " Calcutta elun, passage, l'fla ild: just sailed. Va; aldprnent WIt11111 a week. 20s nelid. Corn on assage quiet but tIteASISI La - Plata rellow rye. terms, september October, een Cid; loading. 20s Wild; julY. 2e0 red; earirooe Odesee, steam, passage, 21s 710. Mark Lane :Miller markete-Wheat. fOr" eign firm at an advance of 31; English firrn at an advanee of 00. Corn, Ainerlean Pieter; Danubian *lull at a deeline of :a. Flour, American firm and rather dearer; English lees offering and tending' ulo Antwerp, zuly 13. -Close -Wheat. spot steady; No. 2 red 'winter, 2641. Corn. soot American mixed, 22e ile, Flour. spot Minneapolis, 27f. • -----. Cheese Markets, Infest, N.Y., July 13.-0n the Uticandry Beard of Trade to-dny the following sales of cheese wore made t-03 lots of 8407 boxes at Stie to 9tte. Butter -Creamery, 20 peek:Ivrea sold at 201.te, 23 at 22e, MD ono - pound prints at 221/2c, The Visible Supply. July13;03 July 14.'02 July 15.'01 Wheat ...,14,311,000 19,808,000 4g051,000 Corn 7,447,000 5.836.000 13,050,f00 Oats .. 4,396,000 1,820,000 7,144.01X/ Rye 695.060 2ai,060 s37,000 Barley .. 476,(100 120,000 391,000 Wheat -decreased the past week 1,859.003 bushels; a year ago wheat decreased 686,000 bushels. East Buffalo Cattle Markets. East Buffalo. "N.Y., July 13.-Cattle-Re- celpts, 3,700 head; active. 15c to 25c high-. er; stockers and feeders steady ; prime and shipping steers, $4.90 to $5.40; butch- ers' steers, $4.25 to 54.90; cows and heif- ers, 52.75 to $4.75; bulls, $9.25 to $4,25 ; stockers and feeders, .13.25 to 34.10; stock heifers, $2.60 to $3.25; fresh cows and springers, $2 to e3 per head higher; good to choice, 345 to $52; medium to good, $20 to $42; common, $18 to 328. Veals-Re- taints, 755 head; stronger, $5 to $6.50. Bogs -Receipts, 11,900 head; pigs and Yorkers active, 50 to 10c higher; others dull, Sc to 100 lower; heavy, 56.50 to $5:55; mixed, 95.0) to $5.65; Yorkers, $6.05 to 56.20; pigs, 56.40 to $6.50; roughs, $4.75 to $5; stiegs, $4 to $4.25; dairies, $5.50 to $5.75. Sheep and lannles--Receipts, 4.800 head; lambs -eic higher; yearlings, 50 higher: others steady; lambs, $4 to $6.50; yearlings, $4.50 to $5; ewes, $3.50 to $3.75; sheep, mixed, $2 to 54; wethers, $4.25 to $4.50. Chicago Live Stock. Chicago, July 13. -Cattle Receipts, 23,- 000, including 40 Texans; strong and ac- tive; good to prime steers, $5 to $5.60; poor to medium, Is to $4.40; stockers arid feeders, $2.50 to $4.50; cows and heifers, Om to 55; canners. $1.50 to e2.76; bulls, $2.25 to $4.85 ; e2.50 to $6; Texas fed, 53.35 to 34.75. flogs -Receipts to -day, 52,000 : estimated fer to -morrow, 20,000; left over. 13,000; epened, 10c to 15c lower; olosed. 200 to 90c lower; mixed and butch- ers', $5.15 to $5.40; good to choice heavy, 55.25 to $5.85; rough heavy, $4.90 to $5.15 ; light, $5.40 to 55,75; bulk a sales, $6.90 to $3.45. Sheep -Receipts, .15,000; sheep strong; lambs higher ; good to cnolee wethers, 53.75 to 34; fair to,ehoice mixed, $.1 to 53.60; native lambs; $3 to $3.50. ' Montreal Grain and Produce. ' • Montreal, July' 13. -Trade at the East End Abattoir cattle market was dull to - ay an prices were fair. Cattle receipts amounted. to 900 head, most of which were of :good quality.- The demand for them was slow, and at noon 400 remained un - void. Prices ranged as follows:- -Choice butehers' 4yee to 5c; good, 90 to 41/2c; medium, '31/20 to 81/2c; common, 21/2e to 3e. Calves -Receipts amounted to 800 head, and the quality being mostly common the demand was good, and at noon none remained unsold. Poor stock sold at 52 to $9 each, and good at $4 to 311. Good demand for calves. Sheep and lambs - Receipts for sheep amounted to 800 head. those of lambs amounting to 400 head. The sheep brought from Bo to 3%c, lambs selling, at 21/2c to 31/2c. The demand good for shippere. Hogs -Receipts of hogs amounted to 300 head. The demand was dull and prices ranged from 4e4c to 5c. Leading Wheat Markets. Closing previous clay. To -day. . July. Sept. July. Sept. Chicago . 101/2 791/2 76% 77 New York. 864 831/2 851/2. 8104 Toledo SO 8604 , 7704 78 Duluth, NO. 1 nor751/2 791/2 80 771,1 St. Louis .... . ... 79% 791/4 78 71er Detroit, No. 2 red, 7904 80 7704 7804 Milwaukee, 2 nor. 88 75 'a Ol Of till)Ski" anti getting, its nee% in tine strap. was .. . ping." It in eet iueto aey, he af- etraegied. The noetic r had left the fame, that **the whele hudy of literature. the baby for only a telt' laranatreS, ThV AS We 1,:n4,w it, etande for no art so much ehlacit of finding it dead Oil her return ae that of elapping. The forgotten, the has erostandeal her, lost, the buried mines, repreeent whet the, Nyorld bee skipped." Rine mutilates:. "Tim trouble With emir dutiful Avaeri- SHOT •HIMSELF an b calm Is that he feels a ques- Alliston, Ont., daily 1./. -W. Se IN:al- oe ,e0ent mere strained. le not eyer5, ing unclor a fitflez-n.otailletiev ta. tioa eeneeivnee in stepper; No sere,. 11& toot f[1118 1014-11„ book provided for his recreation of value largely in proportion to the auttior'a own mastery of the art of skippirig? Eve • ery boot: ebartue its reader does ge tut • tee y what nt providee; It therms OM S. ‘tLet the beek-lover cultivate the art of skipping. It iq an art, and it may be learned, metered even, by the average reader. Pollow you own lestinet in it; nothing in the art of si'apping, is so sure s your own inetinct. Dead oldie your book Nal& you, ne book -lover offers himself a, willing vietim to his author. Ilere: lie sae.; In effect, nay attention. If you can it, you, ate weleoine jS. I rather impe you ean bold it.' The bat - tie le on. Does yolar hatereet Leg? A long paregraph stares at you? Take the first sentence and jump straight to the last. Is the subeat $till the sasnel Oe abeatl. Iles the subject ehanged? Dip inte the middle of the paragraph. A glanee gives you the connection and again you ore away at a canter; Wore you know it you are reading ba lines and paragraphs *instead of in wortle and gen- telleee. "'nen Centel something. you want • eny word ef it. You read contentedly till an leward monitor stirs and, master, you reennte tiie art; "one glance, on# pp. If 7ott 140 tea tar, as you (135' 017 may, retrace. It la a plealatiI0 to be compelled by your author to do eo; but, above all, follow your instinct, the in- stinct of Selection, the first and greatest of 'natural leatinets-and soon you will be looking for something to read. More- over, you will feel after the exercise of this in$tincl. the Ir,g3-iiinf, of awl. ow• conclusions on literature and life. Selee tion Mites' one think. The hook -lover who can seleet for his own nods 011it eis Mint ha.% Nett provided for all is not far from leidee already a elpulak ern. Taste ninny beaks; hold last to Rm that Tour instinet approws." The Sprimillehl "Reptibliein" eons:der- this very bad advice, ond devotee )(teak ttvo cuisines to a rebuttpl of Mr. Spear - Mated argairdelit On behalf 'of "predige*t fed" literature. It says, in part: 'lbw many renders there are mlie read after this lazy fashion, and hoe 'many uritere there are who feel man plied to eater to their lezineee. Tina question which the average novelist anxi, ously itihs himself is nut, 'Is this good art?' hut 'Is this easy reading?' Doe,• the story get well under way in the first chapter2 le everything such clear sail- ing that abiolutely no mental effort I., required° Is everything cut out in ad - vane° which the average reader, for whom the average novelist writes, might he tempted to skip? 'If the average novelist .fails In his estimate of the mental greeep of the aver- age reader, he has the average publisher bis elbow to help him with friendly ethic() and commercial exRerIence, cut. Ong out descriptions, abridging converse. tiona, excising digressions, getting rid. in short, of everything that might tax in ever so little this precious, coddled !a- mity of attention. The book must be prepared beforehand like a predigested foed; nothing must be- for the read- er to do but kindly to allow Ids eyes to wet for certain number of minutes or tonra on the printed page, after which contents are supposed to be absorbed. if :It any point a bad symptom appear, lelt ;et tendency to wander, there le tennething wrong with the preparation- . hard piece, perhaps, not quite predi- asted. Out with it; let us go on with ebe literary maltose. TJnfortunately with many renders, those in whom mental ea•tivities have not been altogether de- etroyed by predigestion, the method de- feats its very end. Left with nothing to do, the mind blissfully wanders off into quite other pastures, or emerges from a state of delicious 'unconsciousness from time to time, just long enough to make sure that all is well with the hero and the heroine. by what it it Women Who Drink Whiskey. That physicians "age responsible for a good deal of inebriety among women is charged by a writer in the "Hospital" (London). Of 9170 eases treated during the past nineteen years In an English home for inebriate women, only eleven were beer -drinkers and thirty-six habitually drank wine. The rest became drunkard through taking spirits, and especially whiskey. The fact that so many of these women were whiskey-drinkere is ascribed by the writer to the frequent prescrip- tion of this liquor by doctors. He says: 'While of late years doctors have very largely avoided recommending alcohol to their patients at all, when they do pre- scribe any it is whiskey. If a man or woman of middle age feels twinges of gout or rhcumatism,•the medical attend- ant very often advises the giving up oi the glass of sherry or claret which the patient has been in the habit of taking, and substituting a little whiskey and soda -water. From the profession the public have learned to believe that whis- key is the 'safest' of all spirits, with re- sults very advantageous to distillers. These figures,' which tell the temptation to which six hundred inebriate women succumbed; make one doubt if the ad. - vice is equally good for the public. It is true that 'the doctors recommend only 'a littlerstiiiinlant, and may even specify the quantity, but they have no guaran- tee that their limitations are adhered to. The warmth of the spirit not merely in- duces a pleasant sense of well-being, but may even give a temporary relief from pain. This tempts the patient to return to it when the pain eoraes back: The doctor is not told of this extra indul- ence, and the patient consoles herself with the notion that whiskey is 'so safe.' . . . Neither wine nor beer gives the temporary alleviation sought, but spirits do, and the notion that whis- key is not conducive to the development of any disease is a temptation to take it, This is a point which medical men might do well to consider. They may save their patients from falling if they cart assure them that whiskey -drinking, will cause some disease. But it is of no use ti warn them of the risk of acquiring the habit of inebriety. That only gives offence, and does little (rood for no ono realizes their susceptibility to that temp. teflon until, unhappily, it is too late." a'it.l.taNCED LACE!. Coley' • • lv e'tglaSe:,- jai!: . " 1:e." ilazt thee. at los wife end his wifen 104t0. 4' 1 ". . 4 :not her withone etfeele Ile then tielie. 'Shorts' per 441,1. eratelv placed that barrel in his enralin Iltdoln Per owl and Died antitee fleele wounalle. liewifl likely recover.. Ile was tsiken , Pato enstod%-. I101tetE RAN AWAY. Watfottl (1/115.0 Jo1y i60.'-ooia3, nurli14,,tral, of tide place, tea, emit:ably fetelly itnlered in a runeweny areltitett thi•ev tulles vii•st of Matfett! ISO -is Inert:log. In company sskh tlir4.1- Slhe WaS driving tint te; pies. lierr,es 11 twit:nag R•roree and the. startrol to %fel:, Mrs. Dwringtou vra,"; neetnal in tine head, and her elkuil fractured. Thtee dee- wete sossiiinened, and rearm -m.1 a lief thin of the skull, but clianecs are ASSAULTED THE WRONG MAN. isigham, July 14. ---The mou1der.7. strThe m the Wrsteln Fountlyr was quietly along. until 1a.-4 1:.tht when as sty:toe:en, sepposed to be a /*inkier, was ussaulted hy four oe men near tbe King Street. House ;ord very badly used up, It turned it this morning that op man was a tu= EPILEPSY, FIISI ST, VITUS' DAN ktgarea *LAMM 0,1% d.' ins car ativaittawstiraiiisf i:rante the IItinqt.onTsltzny,t1 hurin3A0.42morlys 41.11loara1 83 era li:bag st . . . gook's Cotten Root Compound, leactiesl' It7avor2te, To the caly. ;:afe, re14.4.14 regoator en whieb wOntaa Can t.'eleew "in Vele fend time of need." Prepereel in etTo elegereeel Of strengiro. t aud No. 9/. No. 2. -For ordinary ceseet to• far the beet dolle;" , Ne'; 2 rot' Rae -eget tiee'reWe strengee-tieree dadlovi per peg. Teeeifee-aelt your druereeee deer Coolies Cotton Root teememeand. tonne n) other , as au pills, mixtures and imitatfons aro_ dangerous. No. 2 nand No. 2 are seed an% ensile:mended'. by ad drug:4sta la the Po, minimefCanaft. Mailed 'to {My Addreali r Qvi reveleat ofeenrIee nild four ?.-ei-nv pestagn titavev, Whet Coors Countetay, WIttelhOra Qat. I. and eere s`!..-1 ilt.tier10; I re. ;ma teell ler •":4-411.4. efeeMao R0LLE THE CHARITY OF • re giving e7,-.).:,elmint tisfaction, sime e- delling our mill 'TING ana CHOPPiNO omPTLv. THE CARE OF THE - CHILDREN. hot The hospital for Sick Children ou College Street. 74-ro has Done and Is Donn; for tile Little Sull'ererrt of the Province ot Ontario. 4 444. 14 'AO, d eesielee.04.........%e- , ete dar e4d'k - " 9. Au institution that requires about $34,00o a year for maintenance, an in- stitution that depends for support on the goodness of the generous people of the Province of Ontario, must needs have considerable faith in the love, affection and generosity of the people. While the institution is located in Toronto its 'work is essentially pro- vincial. It admit?, not only children from the city of Toronto but tom every city, town, village and hamlet, yes, from every spot in the Province of Ontario. So when you give -be your giving large or small -it goes for the benefit of every child of the province that is adulated and treated. This statement is made because occasional reference is made to the Hospital as a Toronto institution for Toronto patients, whereas every sick child in Ontario has the same rights and privileges as those who live within the shadow of the great red pile on College street. It costs about $34,000 per year, or a • dollar per patient, per day, to main- tain the Hospital. The Government of the province gives about $7,000 a year, or nearly eighteen cents per head, in other words, per patient per day. This amount is all expended in maintenance. The .corporation of the City ofToronto doe0. even mote. It gives $7,500 per year of eighteen cents per head per day, and this too goat towards the maietenance, not only 'tat Toronto patients, but for every patient in the Hospital, no matter from what part of the province the little one may come from. Yes, and this contribu- tion of the corporation is increased by from $4,000 to $5,000 donated by citi- zens of Toronto for the meinteeance of all patients, to say nothing of the $4,000 contributed yearly by Tmeento people, the founders of maintained and named cots in the buildine. During its lifetime the Hospital has handled 8,000 indoor patients and of these 4,000 were cured, and 2,700 were improved. Of these --and please note ,757 came from 1,205 places in Ontario and outside the city of Toronto. Ten 3 -ears ago the Hospital carried a heavy burden of debt. The building and it furnishings cost $150,000 and of this $20 000 was paid by the corpora- tion of Toronto and $60,000 by its citi- zens. Year by year the debt has been reduced and it is now down to $13,000. To eleter the indehtecine4 this 0.1)- 00, peal is made. Hospital tvoik cannot be carried en without mo- y. Interast on mortgages has to he re -td. An arifi.y of werkere has to hoe. Nur.ez, domes- tics, officials are all bur -tan. They earn their wanes whethcr thoy Eve in or out of the A hundred ar.d twonty eltilarrn per day -yes, in seine mouths hnedred and fmty-onte it wa.s a inn:fired end fifty-ttil theee to look aftcr ar. I eare inr. Thirty Inures t anemia:1y at Work. A half-dozen mai;1 with broom, and dosters; (*Mtn- a -:d table inaidl to orepat'e the food and serve it, cl.nks in the office win) evork like beavers, typewriters who tap tlto keys of their machines for hours a tlav an- swering sheaves of ItAters, oreparin; accounts, watch:rig every doing in the immeivie bulailing on College street, that never closes night or flay -al tho year round -a hive of t.vo hundred people, small and largea little town doing what it can fok. God's suffering little ene3. True, it is, that some have to pay - yes, all who can afford 't a e expected, to pay -but those who cannot pay and; can prodoce the certificate of a clergy- man or known zateoaer of the pro- vince to the effect that they are too poor to pay, can have maintenance 'and:treatment free of charge. If all could pay there would be no need to appeal for mone,;, but eighty per cent.' of the work is free eit6rk for the children of those who cannot -af- ford to pay. Fancy n great family of nearly mre hundred and fifty sick children. You who have had perhaps one or two sick little ones atyour own home, therefore know something of the work, but when you vieit Toronto drop in and see what they are doing to win back little ones from the grave. It would only weary the reader to go on with more story. This year a giant effort is being made, to clear away the debt. Every dollar of tble debt handi- caps the Trustees.. Every dollar sent in helps to lie-,hten the load that Le being carried. If every reader would send but a dollar what a grand fund would be raised in a few weeks of thne. Let every one who car, spare a dollar, send it to Douglas Davidson; the Secretary - Trees -neer of the Hospital, or to J. Rees Robertson, the Chairman of the Trust. And please send it in at once, for even the best of us are prene to fret Q1,ir beSt iatentions,