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Exeter Times, 1896-3-12, Page 7
m -1-6 eat a'dare eat beiNr WherL tri de wilt & For e4 ares RQ!'a Cr from qa,� S E Std are eatiiiy giedi-' } S .1-. Q 4r' �j�'Y"�c dFt Gi . torrertin artat ail cC10k/I'5pu,r13os e,s C3"frOLEAIE IS better ,• buret- than. lard. Slade only by The N. K. Fairbank Company, Wellington and Ann Stay hiO1 TRE,AL. O N STI PATS 0 1N, G`BILIOU NESS, DYSPEPS n K ��I���t1�A�i4 k�, REG U LATE 'f' -I L LIVER, ONE PILL AFTER EATING INSURnE-r5 GOOD DIGESTION. PRICE25 CTS.TIEf OD^ S MTORONTOD, LOST OR FAILING MANHOOD, liam1 and Noma Ca1IIS ,, 47ettness of Body and Mind, Effects ge triers or EitoessesIn OldorYol.ng. Rebuts; Nbb1e Menlesod fully Restore& How to !Enlarge and Strengthen Weak, Undevelopel Organs and Farts of Body. Absolutely to fsfliug Hoine Treatment --Benefits In a dap, Men teetity from 5,0 States and Foreign Couto tries Wiite them. Descriptive kodit, eia planation and proofs mailed (sealed) free. ME MEDICAL _C__Q48 Buffalos Idle :9•0•0&se tee • HD " MENTHOL & PLASTER 1 0 • • • 0 I have pree,ribcd Menthol Plaster In a number of cases of 7.1euralplo and rheumatic pales, and am very much pleased with tho effects and pioaeanri,e, of 53 applies len.--W, E. Wiens. TEN, Dti)„ Hotel 0ltford, Boston, I li,tys usod Menthol Plasters in several cases teklidascular rheumatism, and and in ovary ease that it save almost instant and peralanent relief. —S. 5. moons nr.D.. w,vhiasten, u -c, It Cures Sciatica, Lumbago, Nen- envie, Pains in Back or Side, or any Muscular Pains. Price i Mavis & Lawrence Co., Ltd, 250. Sole Proprietors, MOiltsEAL, 30.0 63 0 0 • C 0 3 0 0 09,00 THE VILLIAN FOILED AGAIN. Heavy Villian — Think: not, faithless one, to escape my clutches. I will fol - tow you to the end of the earth. Flippant l:Ieroine—Indeed you won't. Heavy Villain — Zoundsl But thou talkest idly. Wherefore not? - Heroine—Because I'm not going there. The Passions, like heavy bodies down steep hills, once in motion, move them- selves, and know no ground but the bottom: -Fuller.. - KNEW HIS PREFERENCE. Are. you fond of teal she inquired of the youth, .Asshe poured out the golden -hued brew; he replied, t re ed but to 1 u Of course,p 1 you the truth, I'm verymueh fonder of U. Europe in America. Europe has much larger possessions in America than many people imagine. The areas are thus stated: British, 3,- 634,782 squarc miles; French, 48,040 Danish, ',86,614; Holland, 46,463. The population of these dependencies .is as follows: British, 6,753,507; French, 6377,203 ; Danish, 114,229 ; Holland, 107,805. THE NEItS IN A NUTSHELL I'tIL' VERY LATEST FROM ALL THE WORLD i� 4~R.. interesting Items About Qur Own Country, (creat Britain, the United States, and AU Parts of the Globe, Condensed and: Assorted for Easy Reading'. CANADA. At Quebec the St,Lawrenee River has risen high enough to flood several streets in the vicinity of the docks. • At Kempton, N.S„ on Friday, George Hingley, aged eleven ears, was aeet- dentally shot and kille<< by his brother. Dr. Herald has been appointed pro- fessor u£ clinical naediicino at Queen's Universitl, in succession to the late Dr. Saunders. In the Donxinion Banking Committee on Thursday, Mr. Mulock's bill provid- ing for a reduction in the rate of in- terest was rejected. Thomas Dixon, ,on, a .young Englishman, 1 sesta n fatal ' 'c •s .d ti a al acre 1 it in the bush ti near Baget Man., on Tuesday, by a. tree failing on him, ilr. Henry Gould, a young man of Grindstone Island, has been left a leg- acy of $2:10,000 by the death of an uncle i 1n St,Louis. uz a. 1 Cordon & Keith's, housefurnishiitg es- tablishment and a number of other buildings were burned at Halifax, the loss approximating $200,000. Leading physicians of Winnipeg wait- ed on the Manitoba Government on Tlzureday and asked for the appoint- ment of a provincial bacteriologist. Advices from Lesser. Slave Lake, North-West Territories, state that an Indian, who had become insane, was killed according to the Indian custom, The annual meeting' of the Bell Tele- phone ,Company was held at Montreal. A proposal to borrow 5000,000 onde- bentures to extend the business was authorized. The customs authorities are de- mantling $180 additional duty on a road roller imported for the corpora- tion of Lon len, uncle, fine of $180 for undervaluation. A deputation from Low Township, at Ottawa, asked the Governinemt to re- lieve them of a part, of the expenses in- curred by sending the troops there to collect arrears of taxes. Mrs. O'Donnell, one of the oldest resi- dents in Eastern Ontario, died on Fri- day at. tiro •kville, where she had lived continuously for fifty-seven years. She was ninety-six years of age. The Immigration Convention meeting at Winnipeg passed a series of re- solutions solutions favoring a vigorous immigra- labor and the making of Hudson Bay the outlet for the Northwest produce, CoL F.G. Fenn, having completed his period of service in command of the regimental district at Halifax, is to be succeeded by Col. A. G. Spencer from the command of the West India De- pot, Dr. Laughlin McFarlane, a well known and successful Toronto doctor, died on Saturday. from the effects of blood poisoning injected while operating on a patient. suffering from frost -bite. Add Great Britain, In the Dominion Railway Committee it was announced on Thursday that, all electric railways of a purely provincial character must be brought under the working of the general Electric Rail- way Act of Ontario. The Ontario Attorney -General's De- partment itas decided to try for arson at the approaching Peterborough as- sizes Thomas and 'Jessie Gray, who were acquitted last spring on the charge of murderinsr Davit/ Scottie. The New Brunswick Legislature passed a bill providing for the appoint- ment of two women on every School Board in the Province, one by the Gov- ernor in Council' and the other by the city or town concerned. The trouble between the Monastery of Oka and the Revenue Department in connection with the seizure of an illicit still in the monastery has been settled at Ottawa by the community paying a fine of $500. The annual report of the Dominion Department of fisheries was laid. on the table of the House of Commons on Friday. The total expenditure for all the fishery service during the year was four hundred and twenty thousand dol- lars, ollars, and the revenue ninety-five thou- sand dollars. Fire destroyed the chemical labora- tory at the Ontario Agricultural Col- lege, Guelph, on Friday morning. Most of the materials and Prof. Shuttle - worth's library were saved, but Prof. Harcourt's library was destroyed. The loss on the building will be $7,500, and on the contents $1,500. There was no insurance. GREAT BRITAIN. The Prince of Wales laid the founda- tion stone of a new hospital at Brigh.; ton. Lord. Woleseley advocates increasing the British navy as Great Britain's first line of defence. . Dr. Jameson, the hero of the Trans- vaal raid, is at present the guest of Lord and Lady William Beresford. The Maharajah of Nepaul promises to be the lion of the London season if he visits England, as expected. • ttlr. W. H. Montague, the Canadian Minister -of Agriculture, has arrived in London in search of health. The Admiralty have decided to sell the cruiser Canada, which is now at- tached to the North American and West Indies station. A Caxton copy of Chaucer's Canter- bury Tales was sold last week 'in Lon- don for £1,020, although some of the leaves were missing. The London Daily Chronicle describes Mr. Long's bill for the expulsion of foreign cattle from England as protec- tion roteation by a side wind. The British troops which formed part of the Ashanti expedition returned to London on Thursday, and were enthu- siastically welcomed. The milia - T military expedition sent to Ash- antee returned to ngland. When the troops . disembarked they were congra- tulated by Lord Wolseley. The London newspapers discredit the despatch tniblished. in the Pall Ma11 Gazette which Indicated that Great Brit- ain was preparing to evacuate Egypt. In the House of Lords on Monday,the Marquis of Salisbury repudiated having said anything which could fairly be con- sidered as an argument in favor of pro- tection. • A London magistrate, being unable to write, Made his mark to a number of commitments to prison lately, and they were held; good. He is not illiterate, but has gout. It is definitely announced that the Prince of Wales, out of respect for the memory *of :Pr'ince Henry of Battenberg, will nottaco his ` 'Britannia in the cutter 'Riviera regattas. Col. Lake, of the Canadian staff, has met with' a.very favorable reception in • T E1BTEFL London, and Lord.. Wolseley has settled that Canada is to have magazine rifles with which to rearm the militia. • Frederick Leighton's peerage, was the shortest lived in the history of England. He died on the day following that upon which the patent of nobility was issued, wit andh ashimhe, left no heir the title died , • Tho Right Rev. William Alexander, D.D., Bishopof Derry and Raphoe, has been electeArchbishop. of Armagh and Primate of all Ireland, in succession to the Most Rev: Robert Samuel Gregg, D.D. In the British House of Commons on Thursday, Mr. Curzon, Under Secretary for the Foreign Office, said that the Government has not received recently a proposal from any Government in- volving the evacuation of Egypt. In reply to a question as to the health of Canadian cattle, in the I3ri- tish Parliament, Right Hon. Walter Long said the Department of Agricul- ture certainly thought that, pleuro- pneumonia could• be introduced into England from cattle imported from Canada, Sir Frederick Pollock, professor of jurisprudence in Oxford University,has •g. it,h li • the I3r i finished the , n seri r of h <l t 1 zanu t e 1 case in the Venezuelan dispute. and it is now in the hands of the, officials of the Foreign Office. It is said that the professor does not attach any import- ance to t e Se omburg ins -cats to Lori Salisburytie. commune d < s the Armenian. Relief Committee a re- port Lena Sir Philip Currie,the British Ambassador at Consteutinople, in which he states that the misery and sickness among the refugees at lett; oun is inconceivable, £%liss Barton, who desired to go to Zeltoun, was refused permission by the Porte. 'UNITED STATES. Lord Dunraven was expelled from the New York'Yaeht Club. The Hudson River at Albany has risen 16 feet, and the southern portion of the city is flooded, At Washington the Senate Committee on Commerce presented a favorable re- port on the Detroit River bridge, Mr. Samuel 'Edison, the: father of Mr. Thos. Edison, the inventor, died at Norwalk, Ohio, aged 92 years. Mrs, Valentine Kurtz, of South Dans- vilie, N,Y., completed her forty days' fast on Tuesday. It is expected that she will live. The United States Senate has pass- ed the Cuban resolutions in favor of tion policy, the exclusion of Chinese ret•ognizing the insurgents as belli- gerents. elligerents. The steamer Bermuda, flying the British flag, was seized at New York en agentscharge of carrying men and muni- tions of war for the Cuban insur- . Tesla denies that he has succeeded in photographing the human brain through the skull, but he hopes soon to perfect a method of passing solids through solids. The Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company is in the hands of receivers, Messrs. John K. Cowen and Oscar G. Murray having been named to take charge of the affairs of the coporation. Elizabeth Coleman, aged one hundred years, died in Galesville, Wis„ on Wednesday, Her father was first cousin of the last lineal deseendants of the Royal family of Stuarts. Four thousand of the six thousand garment workers of Baltimore, Md., went on strike on Thursday morning to compel the employers to engage none but members of the Garment Makers' Union. The announcement: that Commissioner Tucker, who is married to the third daughter of General Booth, is to assume command of the United States Salva- tion Army, appears to give general sat- isfaction, ills work has been princi- pally in India, The United States House of Represen- tatives on Wednesday passed the Ding- :ey bill authorizing the extermination of the seal herds in case a modus viven- tion of the seals pending the adoption of proper and effective regulations by the countries interested. The Grand Opera House in New York was crowded on Sunday evening by thousands of Irishmen and their friends. The occasion was an amnesty rally, the intention being to start a movement looking to the release of the Irish po- litical prisoners now undergoing con= finement in English gaols. Miss Elizabeth Flagler, daughter of General Flagler, Chief of Ordnanee, U.S.A., who last spring shot a colored boy. killing him, Tuesday pleaded guilty before the Washington court to invol- untary murder, and was sentenced to a fine of five hundred dollars and three hours' imprisonment. The condition of business in the Unit- ed States does not show any improve- ment of consequence, but we are assured that "hopefulness still predominates." The burden of the tale is, .that supplies exceed the demand, and low prices, low wages, with present and prospective la- bor troulbes, are all round important factors in depressing trade. Cotton is as declining prices have not created a proportionately increased demand. Some mills are expected to close. There is u in iron and steel and a poor enquiry e woollen industries. Variable and un- seasonable weather is the alleged cause for a considerable amount of the busi- ness depression. .add general GENERAL. • Reports from Constantinople are to the effect that numerous plots to as- sassinate the Sultan are being concoct- ed. The King of the Belgians has decid- ed .to inaugurate a war against Free dervishes through the Congo State. It is learned- that there have recently been shipped from Antwerp large sup- plies of artillery ammunition for the, Transvaal Government, The Sultan has ordered indemnities to be paid to the British, Russian and French Consuls at Jiddah for the re- cent attack made upon them. A German scientist has found very deadly bacteria in Russian wheat, and the Agrarians are agitating for the ex- clusion of foreign grain. It is stated on good authority in St. Petersburg' that 'Russia does not intend to annex Corea ; but considers it a .duty to guarantee the country's indepen- dence. Count Tolstoi says that patriotism . is not only a bad disposition, but he claims it is unreasonable in principle to love in preference one's own nation above all others. A Turkil;h Imperial irade has been is- sued permitting Miss. Clara Barton, pre- sident of the American Red Cross So- ciety, to distribute relief to the suffer- ing Armenians: In the Portuguese Chamber of Depu- ties the Minister of the Interior. declar- ed that the Government had never en- tertained the; idea of . selling Lorenzo Marques or Delagoa Bay. Reports have been received in Con- stantinople that fresh massaccres have occurred at several laces in, Armenia. o � .n The Turkish authorities deny that there have been any recent •massacres.. T tME'S.._. The Emperor of Germany: has writ- ten an autograph letter to the Czar, hi which he expresseshis friexidship for the Czar, and • promises to attend the coronation fetes at Moscow, The Spanish feeling; against the Unit- ed States in connection with the Cu- ban revolution found vent at Barce- lona, where there was rioting on Sun- day, and the United States Consulate was stoned and the flag insulted. The death is announced, in his eighty- fifth year, of M. Barre, who designed some of the eoius issued by Napol=eon II, M. Barre was noted for his skill. in accurately producing features, both on medals and on busts. Russia has assured Great Britain that by the terms of the treaty' concluded be- tween Russia and China, the former had not secured railway rights and com- mercial privileges to which the `most favored nation" clause. did not apply. In his younger days Ambrose Thomas had some celebrity as an athlete, and in his old age he was extremely fond of physical exercise and of outdoor life. The fact that he lived'to be eighty-five shows the benefit he derived from it. The conviction is fast growing 'in Ber- lin that Great rstsins hostile attitude in C erm ny must liconszconsidered a poli- tical favor of permanence, and that the friendly entente between Germany,Rus- sia, and France must be made a feature of Germany's foreign policy. The British war ship Penguin while cie sd in makingdeep et a di n s between Tonga d New Zealand got bottom at 5,155 fathoms. The deepest sounding ever before made was off the northeast coast of Japan, when bottom was reached at 4,655 fathoms. Lieut, General Luibi Pelloux, form- erly Minister of War, and at present commanding the Fifth Corps of the Italian army, with headquarters at Verona, has been appointed to the chief command of the Italian forces in Africa. Baratieri will serve under hint. The Paris Figaro says that notwith- standing the denial in the London papers it is a fact that the question of the evacuation of Egypt is under con- sideration, and the powers think now would be a favorable time for Great Britain to retire, as tranquillity has been restored in Egypt. The Roman newspaper Don Marzio declares that the question of General operating in Abyssinia, is the same as that of .Marshal Bazaine in Metz dur- ing the Franco-German war, and that Bing Menelek is perpaxed to drive the Italian forces from Adigrat, and bring about air Italian Sedan. - The European press pretty generally expresses the opinion that if President Cleveland gives expression to the Senate resolution in favor of recognizing the belligerency of the Cuban insurgents it will lead to serious complications, as Spain is too high-spirited to knt9elele down to the dictation of the United States. WAR SHIPS TO BE BUILT, FIVE MEN-OF-WAR AND THIRTEEN CRUISERS.. est for Wash Day makes clothes •: sweet, clean, white, with t7 the least - 3: labor. ' Ila moat - able casting and clean e1 ig' properties make SURPRISE most economical and geSt fes>r:..;. ' Sawing Wood. A TORONTCN1A1,3 OF 85 YEARS Weep CAN STILL HANDLE A BUCgsAW. To find a man of,8$ sawing and split- ting wood without any trouble Would surprise most of us to whom such vigorous exercise is—to say the least—distasteful, c m tan es under r whic h tohsax cixs buttheca it took place but increases the wonder. • " Our representative visited Mr. John Clyne, X74+ Sackville'st,. City, a, -sufferer from lddney trouble for the past to years, having undergone two operations during that time. Mr, Clyne was for some 3o. years engaged in the express and cartage business for such well-known farms as Swan Bros., Hugh Miller, 3.P,, Wm. Rehnie, etc., and having Leona resident of Toronto for 5o years, is well itnown, Mrs. Clyne was interviewed at their residence and said: ' Mr. Clyne was in a very bad state; his urine almost black with sediment and he was expecting to have another opera- tion such as he had before. The pain in his back was at times very severe and kept him from doing any work, Mr. Clyne got a box of Doan's Kidney Pills= at J. R. Lee's drug store and was relieved from the first dose* the urine is now clear, no trouble or the sensation, and to -da you would say that although 85 years old, he has taken on a new lease of life,' Mrs. Clyne then took our reporter to the yard, and to his surprise found Mr. C. sa=ving wood for over Sunday. He emphatically endorsed every word Mrs. Clyne had said. r From the very first they did me good; I ani well known here and you can use my name as reference. Two wa eeks goI expected to be operated on; perhaps to die—to-day I am well and strong, better than I have felt for a score of years.' " The littlish Naval lEstiinates An Expendi- ture of Nearly nao,0{30,000—The Excite quer Will Bear It—Gens uiid DOCi.S at Eibraltar provided L'or. A ilespatoh from London says:—In the House of Commons. on Monday Mr. George J. Goschen, First Lord. of the Admiralty, presented the navy esti- mates. He said that the proposed in- crease in the naval expenditures was not due to any feeling of alarm. More ships meant mora men, and these could be got. The Government proposed an increase of £850,000 for guns and docks tit Gibraltar. It had decided to build three docks instead of one. The cost of the new works was estimated at £2,500,000, in addition to the £301,000 already alloted for the new dock there. Summing up the demands of the Govern- ment, Mr. Goschen said it was proposed to -raise the naval works bill from I the £8,500,000 proposed by the last Government to £14,000,000, which would. be the amount of the Government bill Continuing, he said that these might seem large figures, but the Chancellor of the Exchequer authorized him to state that the exchequer could supply I the money. It was proposed to add to the navy five battleships like the im- proved Renown, four first-class cruis- ers, three second-class cruisers, six third-class cruisers and 28 torpedo boat destroyers. The total estimates were £21,822,000, against £18,701,000 for 1895- 6. The Ministers believed that they had , arrived at a point on which they might stand. If any tremendous strain came upon the country obliging Great Brit- ain to bear the whole burden alone and unaided, or whether in the event' of any general disturbance she would take her place with any other power, the British fleet would represent the self- reliance, of a great nation. This was the Ministers' unanimous opinion. On that they commended the th_ unanimous opinion estimates to the House, confident that the cost would be cheerfully borne and trusting that they would be received as they were conceived, in a spirit of mod- eration. --,M— LORD WOLSELEY'S WAR TALK. Tile Importance of increasing the Navy— The First tine of Defence. ' A despatch from London says :—The new Commander -in -Chief, General Lord Wolseley, in the address which he made on Thursday, in this city, advocating increasing the navy as Great Britain's first line of defence, expressed' the opinion that in the event of war it would be impossible to out off the food supply of Great Britain. His chief argument was that all the fleets in the world "would•not prevent our American • cousins, who are always looking out for money, and who have an eye to the main chance, from run ning into our harbors with cargoes of wheat and flour." How to get a "Sunlight" Picture. Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap wrappers, (wrapper bearing the words "Why Does e Woman Look Old. Sooner: Than. a Man") to' Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott Si., Toronto, andyou will receive by poste prettypicture, freefrom advertising, and well worth tram. ing. This is an easy way to deoorate your home. The soap is the best in the market, and it will only cost lc. postage to send m the wrappers; if you leave the ends open. Write your address. carefully. SETTLING: THE DUST. i" Mr. Winks—My gracious! Look there. where the sun • comes in, and see the cloud of dust floating,in the room. Mrs. Winks—Goodness me ! Marie Come, lower this 'curtain. 00 Dr. 8, F. Merrill. Pesult6 AStankkh M EN OF SCIENCE. AVERS Sarsa- parilla o.� A MEDICINE WITHOUT AN EQUAL. Statement of a Well Known Doctor "Ayer's Sarsaparilla is without an equal as a blood purifier and Spring medicine, and cannot have praise enough. Ihave watched its effects in chronic oases, where other treatment was of no avail, and have been astonished at the results. No other •blood medicine that I have ever used, and I have tried them all, is s,, thorough in its action, and effects so many permanent cures as Ayer's arra stills, —Dr. II. F. Ria': RILL. A sS MER RILL, P Augusta, Me. VMs Sarsaparilla 8 Admitted at the World's Fair. 4.yer's Palls for liver and bowels'.+ { 'danJa g rs"¢TA LI1vDISEASED VI Gil MS. 1U w.. -a P F1'w. GUARANTEED . F T .: ,..� /{ � ff OR i PAY � � d �,t�eL. '�.o��zo:.a� s,�...sa: x ri r, in g ! l e eveteend. dss oueexitweek or deb il itetetit tired io Hi ng et en am. m 11 y btion—lieelsolmessory•poor,'iteiy iatigaednecita la a aitptalbl t eyes aonEren, red and marred; pimples en ice; dems wtnate.Pn �r ,re4A1c:n.a�3CICS. � e,r 'back; psn-tbatr loose; ulcers; sore throat! vilaet4e n oetxnl•laseal ',hetes at diatra6 `ala wantOf C liide ie, lack a; energy and st.a egdt-- WE Qealif QlJF E YOU 1 s RESTORED TO MANHOOD BY DRS, R. r K. JOIFN A. M:1.NLIN. JQ1iN t. 1&42 LIIt. i3HAS, POWERS. ORAS. POF Its, BSrORZ iesM lIENT. ArraFt Tett&' ' T. AFTER Ta84111Cx-4T. NO NAMES OR TESTIMONIALS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. John A. Manila secs:—"I was one of the conntleee vie - thee of early itnoianco commenced at 1S Feara of age. 1 tried seven medial thane and spent 3515 without avail. I caro up in d; apair. Tlie drains on. my system nr eseakeeinsg' my intellect as well as my sexual and phys:e lite. By trotter advised me as a last reeort to corse t Dre. itennelly &icer e,an, 1 commenced their l+lew Idvthol Treatment and In , . Yew weeks was a new man, with new Tito and ambition. This was four years ago, end now I eat married and happy. 1 recommend these reliable specia3iste to all my aticted fellowmen." CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY.—CONFIDENTAL. "The vices of early boyhood lclsl the found :tion or my rain. hater on a "gay life" n rd expn'ure to blood di- seases completed the wreck. I had all the symptoms of Itervons Debilit:—sunken eyes. emissions, drain in urine, rte vousnese, weak back, etc. Syphilis caused my hair to fel not, bone pains, meet's in mouth and on tongue, biotrhes on body, etc. I thank Clod t tried Err. Kennedy & Her„an. Timt`y restored oto to health, vigor and happiness." CHAS. PO'WEBB. " We (real and cure l'aricacele, Emfssio,:s, Ner:'o;ss Debility, Seminal Weakness, Gleet, Stricture, i} Shills, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abase, IKid':ey and Nader Drs :cses. VARICOCELE, EMISSIONS ANA IMPOTENCY "ENCY CURED, Syphilis, Emissions n Varicocele, Cured. 17 YEARS IN DETROIT. 200,000 CURED, NO RISK. J 7 at .contemplating tI .nD 7 Ar inn n vrr+ u . t.i yon lest hoFe. Arts mar. °t Fi hl�r ' d. I7 �? 1 ae = Denee leen timeliee?.: Rave you WO' 'weakness e One New eletl,e , t•t get sell care eee. el hat it lets done for others it will do for vett. e.e'SL'L "t eel Flo i tt , hn1-•tre:ted,on mite for an honest opinionFree e?t 1 x, , ('::r.:.,. ig e .r eine EOM'S FR-i:E -- -"Tho Golden Monitor" (illustrated), on 1 s ,sz• t f 3 }.It. t r, 10 Scc.,{,� stage, Gouts. a'. oalod. eeisleJ NMS U.3ED WiTI-TOUT :' RiTT?EN CONSENT. PRI- VATee t' o .-s cl l::filts 13 r.t C. O. D. No nettles on boxes om envel- n o,,aR 1~.'r}rytt•tti'te ru..ri,:dert'-nl. Qu.rstlon Ilst and Dost Of Treat-. trent, Fhtl . SHELBY p gg.,� �p T. . t ,' u E ic,b lz a 9 DE. t ROS ", M'CE�. '� S1-4* r r •,•-z-r�e'F.. 1ww ;:ts-;-,_. • SPINNEY $i C The Old Reliable Specialists. 8 8 Years Experiera.oe in the treatment of the Throat and Lung Troubles, Catarrh, Asthma, Bronchitis, Nervous, Chronic and Special Dis- eases of men and women. LostManhood restored—Kidney and Blad- 61fi der troubles permanently cured—Gleet, Gonorrhoea, Varicocele and stricture cured without pain. No cutting. Syphilis and all Blood Diseases cured without mercury. YOnng Men Suffering from the effects of youthful follies or indiscretions, or any troubled with Weakness, Nervous Debility, Loss of Memory, Despondency, Aversion to Society, Kidney Troubles, or any disease of the Genital -Urinary Or- gans, can here find safe and speedy cure. Charges reasonable, especially to the poor. CURES GUARANTEED. "tt11 * ` t• iThcrearcmanytroubled Middle -Aged Men with too frequnt evacv- tions of the bladder. often accompanied by a slight smarting or burning sensation, and weakening of the system in a manner the patient cannot account for, There are many men who die of this difficulty, ignorant of the cause. The doctor will guarantee a per - feet etre in all such cases, and healthy restoration of the Benito -urinary organs. Con- a sultation free. Those unable to call, can write full particulars of their case and have medicine Sent by express, with full 9 ainstructions to 8 pfor m. use, Meng ton Ilia, is paper when writing. 4p�rOfficehourrs: FQ� m. DES A F lT1 E 9, CO, 29© VPOODSB'AIW AQL,NIIF. '� (Side Pntrnnce PTo. 1251. Elizabeth St.) ��gs,.�.nTROI ', IIOJCH. ` . DEATH -DEALING STORMS. Terrible sates 1%3141 !Roods—Vessels Wreck- ed and Villages Destroyed Lives noel. The -last s week of January of this year will long be remembered by resi- dents of the Australian colonies by rea- son of the fact that it witnessed the most terrible gales and floods ever known, on the Queensland coast. A large number of vessels were wrecked and entire villages destroyed, the dam- age ashore alone being estimated at •half a million pounds sterling. The loss TALLEST CHIMNEY. The tallest chimney in existence has . just been completed for the Metternich Lead Works, in Germany. It is 440 feet in height, 11 feet of which is un- derground. The foundation is of block stone, and 37 feet square; the rest is of brick, 34 'feet in diameter at thb base and tapering to 111-2 feet at the top. The tallest chimney previously constructed is that of the St. Rollox Chemical Works, near Glasgow, which is 434 feet high. THe BLUSTERS MAKE UP. General Bluster—I have changed my mind about getting, . a divorce from •you. Mrs. Bluster—And .why I hear that a person named Napoleon got divorced from his wife, and people. are comparing him with me. I do not wish to follow the example of so unime portant an individual. BONE PENCILS. Slate. pencils are now manufactured of bone. They are not :likely, however to meet with the approval of the -;;small boy, as they are unbreakable ; and, still worse, noiseless. The peculiar and de- lightfully e- li gg htfully shrill, Musical screech of the old-fashioned slate pencil. is nitturell y a great source. of amusemen}: to the. young. • of property at sea was .not so great as that ashore, but the loss of life by accidental marine disasters waseven greater. Townsville, a small city on the north-east coast of Queensland, seemed to be the centre of the storm, not a tow or vessel in the harbour es - ;caping. Ross island, a short distance away, was also flooded, and many lives were lost in .attempts to reach the mainland in small. boats. The damage wrought by the hurricane in Towns- ville harbour alone is assessed at £250,- 000, this including damage to water front property. On Ross island many houses were swept away from their foundations, and the wind upset a res- cue boat, and Mrs. Hunt and her ha - fent, Mrs, Gunnman, Gertrude Rowe, the elder Miss Rowe, . and a boy nam- ed Willie Wallace were drowned. REPORTORIAL MEMORIES. Mother --I ani gladto hear that you went to church to -day. What was the sermon about ? Adult Son(a reporter)I—. don't know, mother ; T haven't written out my notes, yet. .; What you keep: by ' you; you may ad mend `bawrds oce spoil .change }? 'lin can never be'recoiled.—Roscommon.. He win take no Risks. Shrewdness of a wellknown City Merchant. • HE maw WHAT WAS GOOD FOR RIM. In winter when Canadians spend a large portion of their time indoors and cannot have the same variety of. fresh 'food as in .summer and fall, indiges'tion 'and dyspepsia afflict a ma)ority. If anybody will tell me that dyspepsia in its advanced stages is perfectly curable," laid a Toronto merchant, r' I will take his word. Personally I run no risks. As soon as I. feel a sense of weight in the stomach, after a meal, I know that my blood is sluggish in circulation. In my ': business I cannot take much exercise, and. I fight the first sign of stomach troubles with Scott's Sarsaparilla. It has never failed me, and Itas saved me many a doctor's bill." • • Scott's Sarsaparillapossesses medicinal properties superior to all other so-called sarsaparillas made. As a remedy for in - `digestion, rheumatisrz,.pimples, scrofrdla 'and all blood diseases, physicians state • that its equal was never known. Sold it ex per bottle,. of all dealers. Sold lay C. L•UPZ Exeter Ont, • NO HOPE. Doctor—What you need young rbsan is ehauge. Patient—Then there's no m©, doctor. It woll,tekat 'all to pay your bill. llildren Cry for Fitctier's :Castorix } hope,. for 1113' obanga ,