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The Exeter Times, 1895-7-18, Page 3THJ B X ,E R I 1VIE S Thomas 4, .Totots, Common Affliction Permanently Cured by Taking YEparilta 9 Ity Sarsass •106•11•100111 A CAB -DRIVER'S STORY, 'I was Whited for eight years with (Salt Rheum, During that tine, I tried a great many medicines which were highly rec- ommended, but none gave me relief. I was at last advised to try Ayer's Sarsa- parilla, by a friend who told me that I must purchasesix bottles, and use them according to dirRtions. I yielded tt) his persuasion, bought the six bottles, and. took the contents of three of these bet- ties without noticing any direct benefit. Before I had. finished the fourth bottle, my hands were as Free from Eruptions as ever they were. My hosiness, which is that of a cab -driver, requires me to be out in cold and wet weather, often without gloves, and the trouble has never returned."—TaomAs A. JoiErse, Stratford, Ont. Ayer's_o_i-Ti--117 Sarsaparilla .&dmitted at Ayer's Pills Cleanse the Bowels. 9Rk-• 00 N STI PATI N, B Li OUS N ES S, DYS PEPS I SICK HEADACHE, REG U LATE THE LIVER ONE PILL AI;TER EATING! INSURES GOOD DIGESTION. PRi DE 25 D 0 DD's kirE0940cgi;i: THEEXETER TIMES. IspublIsned everyTharsday moan', TI MES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE kIain-street,uearly appeal t`e Fitton's Jewellery htoi e eter, nt.,by,.1ohn White da Bons, Pro - e tors. RAMIS 01' ADYIBIITISING —Firstinsertion, perllue 10 Gouts boli subserynectinsertion ,per line......3 cents, To iaflare insertion, advertriemenc 8 shonld ot sentin no ti a ter them Wednesday morning OurJ 013 PRINTING DEPARTMENT is ono tithe largest and best equipped in the County o'Huron,all work entrusted to ns with:seems nor prompto.ttention: Decsions ittlgardIng News- papers. qtAyperson who takes a paperregularly fro n . thepost-oHloe, whether directed in his name or • anothor's, or whether he has subscribed or as isresponsible for payment, 2 If a person orders his paper discontinued henrust pay all arrears or the publisher may ontinue tosend it until the payment is made, nd then collect the whole amount whether paper is taken from the office or not. 8 In suits for subseriptions, the suit may be nett tuted in the plaoe where the paper is pub • 'shed, although the subscriber may reside hundreds of miles away. It The courts havo decided that refusing to aknewspapers orporiodioals fro.0 the post. the, or removing and Ie.viit SLSC,luno.shLe 1 teprima faole evideaa.) of inteotioual fraud / /- // ///often bring coughs and colds, / while PYNY - PECTORAL brings qui& relief. Cures all in. darn -nation of the bronchial tubes, throat or chest No um. certainty. Relieves, soothes, heft% promptly. A Large Bottle for 26 Cents. BOIS I !INHERE CO.: LTD. PROPILIBTORII. -- MC)NTREAL. TOP RIg TRU55 YR. ea dal r...eir WOW= PM 6,00211.22641,...23:01 010166.1.1¢92.1106110..1 By a new device recently patented in U. S. and Car,ada by 4011.11AS. CLAJVHIE qernen.an I f 871 CAN BE; 14.41Satifitfragfn Ar11 WITH NO IpIOONVENIENCE ITHOUTATRUSS HEAP SIlf MAIL Your naMe to Us moans comfort to you. -A Pest Card vflI do it. Ago of iJerson o , CHAS. CLOTHE .3 0 hp »Auo4 134 KIM Sr WEST tonotrro casiatia THE NEWS IN A NUTSHELL VIE VERY LATEST FROM ALL OVER TIM WORLD. Interesting Deena About Onr Own PountrY, Great Britain, the United States, and Ali Tarts of the Globe tiondented and deserted for Easy Reading. oatiane. MrJotieph Ifoodletas of Hamilton la dead, Fears are expressed at Hamilton that the bay is drying up. The C. P, R. land department gold $30,- 000 worth of land in June. Mester John Gleason, seven years old, was drowned at Brookville, Hamilton dry goods merchants are dia- oussing early closing on Saturdays. Mr, David Jackson of Hamilton, come naitte d Weide by taking prussic Deal. Mr. L. W, Shannon has sold The King. ston News to Messrs. Oram and Moore. Jatnes Heiden, the young man allot by hotelkeeper Wall at Hamilton, is recover. ing.• • The shortage in London.% water eupply has been overcome by the new springs taken The annual games of the Hamilton Police .Amateur Athletio Assooiation will' be held on August -28. Two homing pigeons made the flight from Montreal to Toronto, 333 miles in 8 hours 17i minutes. Hon. W. B. Ives is suffering from weak eyes, and may have to retire from the Cabinet on that account. Miss Falkiner has left Belleville to as- sunne the position of lady superhatendent of the hospital at Woodstock. The American tug Grace, seized over a year ago, and now at Port Colborne, has been abandoned by her owners. Mr. Claus Spreckels, the great sugar refiner, is reported to be about starting a beet sugar enterprise at Edmonton. .Abbe Dually, Vicar of Acton'Que., had a desperate encounter with burglars, who lefb him senseless on the floor. One hundred and sixty union cigar. makers employed by Messra. S. Davis and Son, in Montreal, have gone out on strike. The new directory of Montreal, which is just out, shows that there are at present three thousand unoboupied houses in the city. A Winnipeg despatch states that Mr. John Hallam of Toronto, has purchased nearly the entire wool crop of the North- West ranches. John Miller, a young man from Toronto, was probably drowned in Burlington Bay. 4 boat hired by him came ashore empty. The report of the Montreal Fire Com- missioners shows that the losses by fire during the past six months in that city amounted to $.159,458. Mx. Francis Boyde, 70 years old, of London Township, was knocked down and very seriously hurt in collision with a London West electric car. The gross earnings of the Montreal street railway for the month of June were $111,- 184. 32, against $88,163.25 for June, 1894, an increase of $23,021.07. The number of sheep inspected for ship ment at Montreal to the end of June was 18,720,of neat cattle 29,830,of horses 4,440, and of swine 128. John and Resale Gray, charged with the murder of James &elite, of Otonabee, arrived in Peterborough on Friday from Florida in charge of Detective Murray. The Sir John Macdonald statue for Kingston, Ont., is finished and ready for shipment. The ceremony of unveiling will probably take place on Labour day. It is announced that the American To- bacco Company has acquired control of the cigarette business of Canada by the purchase of all the Dominion manufactor- ies. Mr. Walker and a young lady of Dundee were driving across the Northern & North- western R.R when a train killed the horse and smashed the buggy. The occupants were not hurts, Dr. Montague, Secretary of State, has reduced his staff by five or six, saving seven or eight thousand dollars a year, without, he claims, lessening the efficiency of the department. At Quebec Prof. Hammer ascended in a balloon and was driven by a westerly wind over the St Lawrence River and landed in the water, where he remained 20 minutes before he was rescued by a tug. Napoleon Demets, the huaband of Me - lame Masse, who was murdered at St. Henri, a suburb of Montreal, last month, was arrested on Friday on the charge of having committed the murder, Albert and Paul Riesler, two Germane, werearrested in Toronto on Thuraday, on warrants charging.them with fraud, com- mitted in Germany. The German 06nsul received the warrants from Berlin. The Meteorological Department reports that the rainfall for 1895 to date is only a trifle above half the usual amount,and that last month was the warmed June recorded by the Toronto Observatory. The health officers of Winnipeg discover- ed a sausage factory where cat meat formed a large proportion of the ingredients. The proprietor pleaded guilty to the charge of keeping 4.1thy quarters, and was fined a small sum. ContraoCor Foley, who hae been handling the survey of the Hudson Bty railway, says thab the road will be built whether the Dominion Government granted aid or not. The survey is now completed as far es Lake Dauphin, about 125 miles, Reeve MaDonald,of London West, Ont., has written to the City Council of London, Ont., calling attention to the $100,000 judgment recovered by the village against the city four years ago for polluting the River Thames with sewage. The letter states that if the nuibance is not abated the,judgment will be enforced and suggests a cionference with it view to settleinent. A stittenient has been made in Hamilton that the deal between the Toronto, /Emil - ton, and Buffalo Railway Company and the C. P. R. will be oonsummated during the next week, by which the C. P, A, will operete the lizg between Toronto and liarrillton, and have oonneotions with the Vanderbilt system for' the remaining por- tton of the reed. Nearly the whole of the village of Lorne- ville eeburb ef Oornwo.11,Ont., wa rectum, ed to ashes Sunday afternoon, and upwarde ,of fifty families, mostly miff eiipleyes were render- homeless. Most ot the buildinge it the Mimed distriet were owned end oeoupied by mill employee, and represented their eavings for years. 'Very few of the buildingwere insured. The village has no fire eysteci, nor Water Werke, GREAT BRITAIN. Patrbotiro of.l!.uicley's funeral took place at 14, Sir Henry James will take tbe title of Baron Ayleebon of Hereford, "' Merolla Khan visited the Queen at Windsor, and was received with military honors, A laborer in Dublin was blowp to pieties by a tin canister he plotted ep on Boyne atreet. tsord Saliabury's Cabinet now consists of nineteen members, and is the largest ever formed in Great Britain. Mr. Gladstone has written to the Chairman of the Midlothian Liberals in connection with his retirement from poli- ties. The aotion for absolute divorce brought by Mrs. Oraigie, she novelist, against her husband ended in favor of the plaintiff - Right Hon. Charles T. Ritchie, the new President of the Board of Trade, was returned without oppositien in Croydon. Two hundred and fifty pounds of fieth is what Dr. W. G. Grace curies from one wicket to another every time he makes a run. Mr. Gerald William Balfour, brother of Mr. Arthur J. Balfour, leader of the House of °ominous, has been appointed Chief Secretary for Ireland. Col. Stitt and Brigadier Olibbnrn of the Salvation Army are coining to Oanada to select a site for the Army% proposed farm colony. Five cloth mills situated near Leede laee been closed, owng to a dispute regarding wages. The closing of the mills affects two thousand persons. Her Majesty the Queen gave Mr. Bell - Smith a sitting for his historical pioture of the decoration of the bier of Sir john Thompson at Windsor Castle. It is rumored in London olub oiroles that General Lord Roberts will be the Com mander-in-Chief of the British army in succession to the Duke of Cambridge. The rumour that Lord Rosebery is to marry one of the Prince of Wales' daughters is revived, and -'ib is added that he may relinquish politics altogether. The returns issued by the British Board of Trale for June shows that the imports decreased £350,000 and the exports £110,- 000 as compared with those for June last year. - Lord Rosebery's mother, the Duchess of Cleveland, is writing the life of Lady Hester Stanhope, her aunt, who began life as the private secretary and confidante ot William Pitt, and for thirty years had her own exact way as an Arab sheikh in Syria. Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, the new Sec- retary of State for the Colonies, on Thuze- day received thotrepresentatives of the different colonies, Replying to Sir Charles Tupper, the Canadian High Commissioner, who was spokesman of the party, Mr. Chamberlain said the colonies could rely upon his hearty co-operation to advance their interests and inorease their influence. At Long Sutton, between Cambridge and Boston, in England, a farmer's wife recently discovered that an old woman in the neighbourhood had bewitched her. The only remedy was to beat the witch- craft out of her, which she and her huaband at once did, breaking the old woman'e wrist before they were successful As they were convinced that the spell was broken they cheerfully paid a heavy fine. 'UNITED STATES. A riot took place at Boston during an A. P. A. and orange procession. Several people were fatally hurt. Mrs. Cleveland, wife of President Cleveland, gave birth to a daughter on Sunday afternoon. The Pullman Palace Car Company has advanced the wages of its employes at its shops ten per cent. Thirty houses were washed away and ten people killed by a flood at Winona, near Springfield, Miss., on Saturday: A ten -year-old boy named Palmer fel from a horse he seas riding at Fargo, and the animal tramped him to death. The excess of United States Government expenditure over receipts during the fiscal year ended on Sunday was forty-two million eight hundred thous and dollars. Common Counoilman Charles J. Kingater was fatally shot in the head during a flag - raising in Philadelphia by the accidental discharge of a revolver. • At Elkhart, Indiana, six hundred people fell 40 feet by the eollapee of a bridge from whioh they were watching a boat race. Several fatal injuries were received. Mrs. Leland Stanford, of San Francisco, has determined to sell her jewels, which are worth more than half a million dollars, in order to support the Stanford Univers- ity. Great damage has been done in Missouri and adjanent States by storms and floods. Chicego was also visited by a violent storm, and the destruction of property and loss of life are bad and exceseive. Mrs. Catharine O'Leary is dead. She was the owner of the fractious cow which, on a memorable night in October, 1871, kicked over a lamp and started a blaze which cost Chicago $190,000,000. Counsel for Clarence and Sadie Robinson, convicted of the murder of Montgomery Gibbs ia Buffalo, will make application for a new trial on the strength of evidence which, he says, will establish a complete alibi. Friday at noon in Buffalo, Mrs. Maria Calistan Phelps, a widow seventy-eight years ofoge, reputed to be worth a million dollare was married to Dr. Ashton Buchan- an Talbot, of Philadelphia, aged thirty- four. , Bessie Harris, a pretty sixteen -year-old daughter of a wealthy farmer of Ratnirena, Texas, confessed on Wednesday to having murdered Albert Blaoltman, her suitor, actuated by jealouay. She lured Blackman to a lonely place in the wooda, and hanged him. The trade reports from the United States for the week continue satisfactory. The advance in wages that cOmmenoed tome time ago goes steadily on, and this—added, to the inoreeeing price of many staples—is a eatisfaotory sign that the improveinentitt general trade is not ephemeral, Some advaneee in price home not been everywhere maintained, but Wile has been more than offset by the steady upward tendenoy in other lines of goods. Considering that this is the period of the midsummer and holiday dulnees, the reporta as to thepresent state of trade Woes the line are decidedly satisfac- tory. Wool, cotton, leather, lumber, iron, and tin are higher. The coal trade alone aVeears to remain in the unsatisetory tiotalition ib has been in for some time. Tlt Itusso*Cihin(4=1: has been signed Fringe Biernarok'ii health is very unsatis- factory, Five. men were injured by the bursting of a German military balloon. The infernal maehine received by the Berlin pollee was sent by Belgian anarehists, A despatch from Sofia says that the situittien is serious, almost amouuting to a eta.te of war,between Bulgaria and Turkey. Ruseia produced 207,500,000 poods of petroleum in 1894, a falling off of more than 27,000,000 from 1893. A pond is 36 pounds. Mount Atria and Mount Vesuvius are both aetive,and the villages in their vicinity are in great danger. The agreement to issue the sixteen million pound four per cent. gold loan to China, under Rusidan guarantee, was signed on Saturday evening. It is reported in Paris from Madagasoar that recently several thousand HQValil attacked the Freech troops at Za.rasootia, and were repulsed with heavy loss. It is the intention of the Emperor of Germany in the spring to send a squadron to visit the ports of the nations who were represented in the naval display at Kiel. Severe storms of wind aud ram have caused considerable damage in various parte of Austria, and at Marbach, on the Danube, six persons lost their lives. Baron Hirsch, the Jewish millionaire, has just leased the shooting on the estate of Cardinal Vitszary, Primee Primate of Hungary, which extends over 77,000 acres Governor O'Brien has refused assent to the Newfoundland retrenchment bill, vehicle outs $5,000 off his own salary. The bill must now be submitted to the Imperial Cabinet. It is reported that Russia has massed a very strong naval and land force at Vladis voatook, and is premixed to make an instant descent upon Japan should occasion afford an excuse. It is announced that King Humbert will shortly issue a decree.exonerating Premier Orispi from the charges of having been eon- nected istith Dr. Cornelius Herz, the Panama canal lo byes t. Germany's right to levy tolls on all vessels passing through the Kaiser Wilhelm canal foems the subject of diplomatic cor- respondence upon the part of Great Britain, Russia, Denmark, Sweden, and Norway, In the town of Hamned, Sweden, on Monday, lightning struck a building in whioh ten persons lied taken shelteitkilling seven of them,and injnrine the other three so severely that they will die. Olney B. Athford and Fred Underberg, who were expelled from Hawaii for alleged oomplicitv- in the recent rebellion, have announced that they will return to Hono- lulu under the protection of the British flag. The British and. German admirals have withdrawn their guards from tne Island of Formosa. It is- believed that the reason for this action is the inexpediency of re- taining the guard with the Japanese forces advancing, and fighting probable. It is beleived in wall -informed London financial circles that the Franco -Chinese loan of sixteen million pounds sterling guaranteed by Russia has been concluded without a lien on the Customs of China, and with the annulment of the cause pro- viding that China shall not borrow any more money for six months. THE WHEAT TRADE. Great Changes That Itave Taken Place In Buying and Selling During the Past Few Tears. Some of the vast economic changes which have accompanied, as causes or effects, the development of the wheat mar- ket curing the last generation are discus- sed in an article in the current number of the North American Review, entitled I! Thirty Yeare in the Grain Trade," by Egerton R. 'Williams. The first revolu- tionizing influence Mr. Williams notes is the cheapened and extended telegraphic service. That brought exporters and im- porters close together, and put an end to the old custom of buying and storing for months in advance of require. ments. The succeeding hand-to-mouth system intensified competition and reduced profits. Next, along with decline in pro- fits, the greatedecline in freights lessened .materially the difference between prices on this side of the Atlantic and prices on tbe other. The extension of railways into and throughoue the wheat area, and their sharp competition with lake routes, led to the oonstruation of steam vessels and tows of large capacity and increased speed which have captured the larger share of the traffic, and in turn have by their minimum rates practically driven the small craft out of the grain trade, which was first a matter of buying and storing a long time before selling, then a matter of trading FROM RAND TO MOITTli, finally passed into another stage, that of selling and then buying, she reverse of the first. The grain dealer sells wheat before he buys it, the miller sells flour be- fore he has bought the wheat from which to grind it. It is either on a hand-to-mouth or on a future basis that wheat traders now operate. The author of this essay recollects that in the 70's fature trading or short - selling was looked upon by the great major- ity as gambling, whereas it is now practic- ed by the most conseevative. This trading in "wind," originating in the United States towards the year 1870, has been introduced bath England and Europe. The tremendous decline in wheat production in the United Kingdom is another of the great changes dwelt upon. In 1869, 97 per cent. of England's population were fed on home- grown wheat, some 18 1-2 millions of peo- ple out of a total of 19 millions. In 1890 only 20 per oent. of England's population, some five millions of people out of a total of 215 millions, were fed on home-grown wheat. The wheat area of Britain shrank from 3,500,000 acres in 1846 to 1,200,000 acres in 1890. Yet English land is far more prodnotive than is the land of any of the wheat -growing countriee, averaging 28 bushels to the more, as againet abonb 12 1-4 bushelin the United States,. The estitnat. ed British imports of wheat and flour for this year are 189,799,680 buthelems against 152,474,000 bushels in 1890, and. less than 120,000,000 bushels in 1877. These long strides in the rate of importation shone the etreng.th of the forces before which the British farmer is retiring. Exceedingly ow prieee, lOW overland and ocean freight rates, high rental,taxem, and poorratesatre, ti the open etate of his home market, driving the British farmer off the soil, despite hie great advantage of high yield and cheap labour. A newepaper milled the l'!)mpty Dottie bad been founded in Honston, Tex. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria A GREAT ACTOR HONORED HENRY IRVINO'S ICNIORTROOD WILL RAISE THE PROFESSION. He Dears the New Distinction with Neat. eety—So Ille MIME Aheht the nehte LUo altd Surroundinus or the vetehra t. ed Man and Minions Artist, Henry Irving, the first English actor, has entered the lists as a knight, The modern ceremony is very simple compered with the old days, The fortunate knight to be is Mean ted at court in the regulation court costume ; he kneels before Queen Viotoria, who places a drawn swoad, ueually the sword of State, upon either of his shoulders and then says, " Rise," calling him by hie Chriatian name with "Sir" before it, ' The knighting of Henry Irving seems to raise the dramatic profession a good many rounds on the ladder of Bethel distinction. Heretofore actors have played before the Queen and court and havorbeen goodfriends with the Prince of Wales and his set, but the line has been drawn very rigidly at their being presented at court. It has been said that the conviction that the social barrier, once broken down, would be of lasting good to his profession influenced Irving more than any other consideration. TRYING'S LOVE 01' SITARESPEARE. The great actor is thoroughly in accord with the art spirit, thoughts and °asthma of this end -of -the -century time, but he is, above and beyond all, an actor and an artist. Hie great house, Grafton street, in the West End of London, shows plainly that his art is the sante to him in the quiet of his home as behind the footlights. Every where are souvenirs and mementos of the great lights of the English drama. In a book ease in the beautifully furnished drawing -room there are thirty or more different editions of Shakespeare. • Some are editions de luxe, some remark- ably early ones. One bound in red leather would be a great bargain at $2,500 ; while another was the third edition of the great playwright's, and was once owned by the Duke ot Bedford, RAS MANY vALTIABLE RELICS. There are memoirs of the great actors, Maoready, Edmund Kean,Garrick,Forrest, Siddons, and ail through the lone liet. The magnificent collection of souvenirs ot great actors have nearly all a double valtie from the famous donors of the much -prized gifts. There is a little green silk purse which was foundennpty in Edmund Kean's pocket after he died, and given by Robert Brown- ing to Irving. A ring was presented by the Baroness Burdett -Coutts which David Garrick used to wear ; then there are two watches, one of which belonged to Kemble and the other, of solid silver, whose hands stand at twenty-two minutes of 6, the very moment when the old owner, Forrest,died. Among the cherished "relics Of Kean are the russet leather boots he wore in "Richard III." and the broad, heavy sword he car- ried in "Cymbeline," The long, slender, fascinating face of Ellen Terry, the aotrese, whose name and face have been associated so long with Irving, looks down upon all of these treasures from a marble bust shrined in one corner of the room. .A. MEMENTO oF mRS. SinnoNs. In the luxurious dining room in the place of honor, hangs a picture of the "Shoulder of Mutton Inn" at Brecon, New South Wales. This was the birthplace of the great tragedienne, Sarah Siddons. On the wall opposite haugs a striking likeness of the gifted woman, and a little framed auto- graph letter from her, written in the daintiest of the old-fashioned, microscopic feminine chirography. Thereare books and pain tinge and bronzes all over the house, arranged in the most artistic manner. At judicious spaces along the staircase one comes upon the choicest bite of bronze or the moat exquisite paint- ings. The scholar and the studene are suggested in the choice bits of china, quaint old pieces of silver, the curious and grace- fully carved furniture with its coverings of old Spanish leather arranged so carelessly but so effectively in the smoking room and the study. Juat over the door of the study is perched a stately raven, but, unlike Poe's famous bird, it never croaked, and has been a bird of good rather than evil omen, since naught but success, fame and prosperity has come or is likely to come to Sir Henry Irving. Irving takes his titled honors modestly. He has told all his old friends that they would confer a favor by continuing to ad- dress him as Mr. Irving instead of Sir Henry. The latter he regards as too formal for a man of his profession. How to get a "Sunlight" Pieture. Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap wrapper, (wrapper bearing the words "Why Does a Woman Look Old Sooner Than a Man") to Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto, andyou will receive by poste pretty pieture, free from advertising, ancl well worth fram- ing, This is an easy way to decorate yeur home. The soap is the best in the market, and it will only cost lc. postage to send in the wrappers'if you leave the ends open. Write your address carefully. Money often costs too much, and power and pleasure are not cheap. --Emerson. When Baby was sick, we zave her Cestorts. When she was a Chifd, she crit d for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castorie When she luttl Children, shegave them Castoria. He shall be inimortal who liveth till be be atoned by one without fault.—Fuller. earasersemcomeomsermiwmassweseromarsamearmantimmermessexrusucsagioremarca;caormtanto=mematems 'IRR RAILWAY 00 NORM. The litelegates Visit )rindsor enelle-•preo dents of Seettoso, Presented to the Ailueeli. despatch froirt London says:— The dekates to the International Railway Congress vieited ViTindeor castle On Saha. day. The weather was eplendiel, and the delegates were enabled not only to view the State apertinen, but were admitted t� the private gardens, where the band ef the Guards were Speeially stationed for the occasion, The Queen and the Prince of Wales drove to the gardens at 0.15 p. where the presidents pf sections were introduced to the Princi of Wales by Sir Andrew Vairbairn President of the International Railway Congrees, and director of the Great Northern Railway. Afterwards the Priece of Wales presented the presidents and vice presidents of the plant system to the Queen, Most of the American delegates are enthusiastic over the manner in which they were received by the Queen and Prince of Wales They say they will never torget the gracious mannere of both, No Baek Talk. Jenkins— Well, sir, I gave it to that man straight, I oan tell you, sir. He is twice as big as I am'too, but I told him exactly what I thought of his rascally- con- duct right to his face, and 1 °ailed him all the names in the dictionary. Spudds—And didn't he hit you, Jen- kins ? Jenkins— No, he didn'b. And when he tried to answer back I juet hung up the telephone and walked away. Possibly. However we may laud the wise, And think that their condition's best, We rnust admit, if we are wise, The ignorant are the happiest. First sojourner—"Do you always get your 1 meals on time here ?" Second sojourner— "Yes ; I have to till some of my friends show up. I'm deucedly gled to see.you, IS A MOTHER'S REMEDY regulating and 1 streugthening the maternal functions. Tt purifies the female system of ulcerative weaknesses and debilitating humors. It expels the first symptoms of hereditary humors in children and youths that may ONVO their origin to past generations. Itsearches out and renders the system free from disease -breeding germs. 'THE KIND THAT CURES." There are not many forms of disease upon which Scott's Sarsaparilla does not act favor. ably, because pure blood carries to the diseased parts renewing and building up properties. This medicine makes pure blood 'which builds up where disease has torn down, and carries away the impurities upon which it feeds, HEREDITARY DISEASES. SCOTT'S SKIN SOAP KEEPS THE SKIN son Sold by C. LUTZ, Exeter, Ont. is worthy every parent's study; not only what they can eat, but what gives the most nourishment. No children are better, and most for eating ed food. ever, food is with the ful new shortening, are worse, lard -cook - If, how - their prepare health. vegetable co instead of lard, they can eat free- ly of the best food without danger to the digestive organs. You can easily verify this hy a fair trial of Cottolene. S°14W00501.Palla Made only by The K. C oFmapiarbnaynk, Wellington usi Annits., MONTREAL. 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Soxnal Weakness Impotency, Murray & Lanman's FLORIDA WATER A DAINTY FLORAL EXTRACT For Handkerchief, Toilet and Bath. Kidney DIscases, Lame Back, Urinary Diseases (It\ Electricity properly applied is fast taking the htre of drugs for all Nervous, Rheinnatic.-10d- sy and Urinal Troubles, and will effect cures seemingly hopeless cases where every Other lawn means has Billed. Any sluggish, weak or diseased mop May this moans he roused to healthy actiVitY ' .forc it is too late. Leading medical men use and refibtlamond. Owen Belt in their practice. OUR ILIXSTRATED CATALOG13117 el; aim; fullest information regarding thire mute, chronic and nervone diseaSOS, tow to order, etc., mailed (sealed) PR any address. The Owen Electric Belt & Appliance Go, 49 KING Sr. W., TORONTO, ONT. - 201 to 211 State St., Chicago, 113 ''.umvrtox TISIS RAPIM. Sententious, Fine young woman in country store -1 want to get some powder. Smart young clerk --Paoe, bug or gun