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Exeter Times, 1896-3-26, Page 3THE EXETER TIMES New Sliortening If you have a sewing machine, a clothes wringer or a carpet sweeper (all new inventions of modern times), it's proof that you can see the usefulness of new things. IS A NEW SHORTENING, and every housekeeper who is interested in the health and Comfort of her family should give it a trial. It's. a vegetable product and far su- eerior to anything else for short- ning and frying purposes. Physicians and Cooking Experts say it is destined to be adopted in every kitchen in the land. This is to suggest that you put it in yours now. It's both new and good. Sold in 3 and 5 pound pails, by all grocers. Made only by THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY, Wellington and Ann Ste., MONTREAL. oti R4e CONSTIPATION, IL.IOUSNESS, DYSPEPSIA SICK HEADACt4E, REG UI LATE THE LIVER. ONE PILL AFTER, EA'i''INfa INSAJRES GOOD DIe�GESTION. PRICE25 CTS.TIE f ©tiRps MraRonR LOST OR FAILING MANHOOD, fisaeral and tenors Dabliitj,, 'lirestcnesI of Body and Mind:, Effects 6, Errors or Excesses in Old or Meng. Robust, Noble Manhood fully Restored. Row til £rilarge and Strengthen Weald C?adevelopee organa and thrtt of Body. Absolutely tel• tilling Home Treatment --Benefits in a da A Men testify from 60 States and Foreign Coun. eines. 'Mite them. Descriptive Book, es. Potation and proofs mailed (keeled) free. ERIE EMI QOeo Buffalo, N.Y, :eocesae•••••_ "1186L" MENTHOL P • • • ese �pp 0• I have prescribed Month Piaster In a number °Teases of neuralgia and r eumatio pains, and urn very much pleased w th the effects and pleasantness f Its application.—,W. 11. CARPa-- Ts S.D., Nok 8hfia hxferd, HBoato . I lave naeQ ml Plaetera n several cases eriatleculaT rbettbmtlsin and find In every ease thatt gave ao1lumq at inbtantand permanent rend.—d. 5.1<f0onn 11.D.. Washington, D.O. It Cures Solation, Lumbago, Nen- r'aigia, Pains is llaok or Side, or • 1eny Muscular Pains. • P iceDavis & Lwrence Co. Ltd, • tee. I Sole Proprietors, MoN2•EPe ,. C/06/000640061664 • • • • • • • • THE NEWS IN! NDTSHELL THE VERY LATEST FROM ALL, THE WORLD OVER. Interesting Items About Our Own Country. Oreat Britain, the United States, and All Parts of the Globe, Condensed and Assorted for Easy Reading. CANADA, John C. O'Neil, of Brandon, commit- ted suicide with a razor. He was form- erly a resident of Chatham. The total collections on account of Crown lands in the Province of Ontario during 1895 amounted to §69,090.03, The defences in Esquimalt are again being strengthened. Seven new heavy breech -loading guns have just arrived from England. A school trustee at Dartmouth, N.S., is being suad for libel because he pro- nounced the writing of a number of school teachers bad. Charles Stern, a fugitive from Am- erican justice, was arrested while boarding a steamer at Halifax for Liverpool. He had nearly $20,000 cash, jewels and securities in his possession. Ex -Detective Flynn, formerly of the Grand Trunk Railway Company, who is now in the Montreal gaol under a conviction of perjury, is (lying of con- sumpt.iou in the mfirmary of that -in- stitution. It is now believed that Mr. Frank W. Brown ,collector of taxes for the Town of Sault Ste. Mario, who was found dead in his office, was murdered, as two bullets bad passed through his heart. Adolph Davis, who was dismissed from the service of the Montreal, corporation as water works superintendeut has been awarded $0,000 damages and $457 sal- ary alary to the end of the year for wrong- ful dismissal, Ald. Lefebvre of Montreal has enter- ed actions for $500,000 against the Banque du Peuple and each of the di- rectors irectors for statements made at the last shareholders' meeting that his account was overdrawn. It is stated in Montreal that the Do- minion order-in-Counoil passed on Feb-' ruary 20th compels the Allan and Do- minion steamship lines to make their winter terminal port in Canada instead of the United States, as at present. The value of the output of the nickel and copper mines in the Sudbury dis- trict during the past year, as reported to the Ontario Legislature on Friday, is estimated at $566,078,and the amount paid out in wages to the miners at $210,000. Mr. J. Wickett, of Bowmanville, Ont„ was killed almost instantly on Friday at the Grand Trunk ra ilway station. He was standing on one of the tracks, looking at the morning express from Toronto, when the local from Peterbor., ough came along,and hurled himagainst the other. A resolution has been passed by the Kingston, Ont., Board of Trade, pro- testing against the proposal to bridge the Detroit river, and Mr. H. A. Calvin, M.P., was appointed to co-operate with other deputations opposing the bill to bridge the river when it comes before the Parliamentary Committee at Otta- wa. At a meeting in Ottawa on Wednes- day, evening of the Executive of the Knights of Labour, and other promin- ent labour men of the city, it was unani- mously decided to form a Canadian Fed- eration ederation of Labour, which is to be en- tirely separate from the United States labour organizations. Among the latest changes on the Grand Trunk staff are the appoint- ment of Mr. Charles J. Haight to the position of freight claims agent, vice Mr, J. Broughton, resigned, and the dismissal of Messrs. MacFarlane, en- gineer of wooden structures, Stratford; A. a...Bailey, inspector of wooden struc- tures at the same place, and F. W. Hatcher, inspector of wooden bridges, Montreal. While Mr. Albert Bright was holding one of the braces of the purlins plate, which was spliced, at the raising of Mr. Hugh Russell's barn in the township of Bosanquet,on Thursday,the plate broke, throwing Mr. Bright to the frozen ground, twenty feet below. Both legs and his hip bone were broken, and he also sustained internal injuries, which resulted in his death a few hours after- wards. The deceased, who was 26 years of age, was to have been married soon. GREAT BRITAIN. Gen. Booth of the Salvation Army has returned to London from India. Mr. Gladstone has returned to Lon- don from the Riviera in . excellent health. The death rate in London last week was 21.7. the largest • record for any week since July last. The Imperial Parliament last week sanctioned the opening of art galleries and museums on Sunday. Lord Salisbury, with his family, has left London for his seat at Beaulieu a near Dieppe, where he will remain few days. The Marquis of Lansdowne, the Secre- tary final of State for War,as tart'finally de- clined to allow the ormation of a "Regiment of Gentlemen." One of the most interesting features of the last drawing -room wasthe in- troduction of Prince Karl of Denmark as Princess Maud's fiance. Members of the University of Cam- bridge will elect a committee to con- sider under what conditions women may be admitted to degrees. There is such a demand for bicycles in England that the home manufactur- ers are completely blocked with orders, and wheels are being imported from the United States. It is related of Millais,the Royal Aca- demy's new president, that when as a boy he took his first prize for drawing he had to stand on a chair to make him- self visible to the audience. The sensation of the week in English domestic politics was the outspoken op- position,headed by the Times, to the Government. proposal to increase the pension of the Duke of Cambridge. Lord Beaconsfield's brother,Ralph Dis- ae)i, is still hiving. He bears no resem- blance to his distinguished brother,and has always lived a quiet, retiring life, having been for many years clerk of the ,House of Lords:' The Archbishop of Canterbury says that westerners can never convert the Mohammedan world. .Islam is an iron- bound, absolutely fixed religion,and can- not be grafted on the civilization of the nineteenth century. The late Prince lIenr of Battenber ile t t e' who was quite versatile, lei hescore r of an operetta that ie said to possess great merit. The London managers are anxious to know more about this work, but there are diffioulties in their path. The '13aroness Burdett -Coutts is very fond of all kinds of animals and birds, and at be Highgate home she has an THE SHAH'S VAST TREASURE. Of all the sovereigns of the world, the Shah of Persia is said to possess the largest treasure in jewels and gold ornaments,it being valued at $60,000,000. The chief object of value is the old crown of Persian rulers, inthe form of a pot of flowers, which is surmount- ed by an uncut ruby the size of a hen's egg. The diamonds in another symbol off his rank are said to weigh almost twenty pounds. There is also a jewel- ed saber, valued at $1,000,000. Another thing that the shah prizes is a silver vase ornamented with 100 emeralds whose equals, it . is said, are not to be found in the world. In the collection there is a cube of amber which tradi- tion says -fell from heaven in the days of Mabomet, 'and. insures the possessor tgainst bodily harm. WHEN THE SLAVE IS FREED. The worst tyrant possible is a lib- erated slave. l;i os; 1 suppose that' s the reason. so naanyydevoted lovers make such horrid husbands, extraordinary collection of them. Goats, 1 llamas, ponies, donkeys, nightingales, , parrots, robins ,and a variety of others are among leer pets, and all share her favour. Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, in the 'ea- 1 perial House of Commons, said that the Government had received a strong pro- test from Canada in regard to the pro- I Uposed. permanent . exclusion from the , nited Kingdom of store cattle. The protest, he added, would receive careful consideration. Mr. Gosehen, First Lord of the Ad- miralty, replyingthe other day to Mr.' John Redmond said that it was absurd to suggest that the inerease in the navy was intended to menace the United States, as the naval programme was settled in November, before the Ven- ezuelan question had arisen. committee that the United States lake towns would be utterly helpless against British warships, winch could be taken into the lakes through the Weiland canal. Another attempt was made on Saturn day to kill MrD. Armour, the fam- ous Chicago pork jpaoker, by means of an infernal maohine, which was sent ea gg regardedtwith suspio on at Ithe aCent al post -office, and opened, when the nature of the eontents was discovered. Commercial advices from the two ohief business ageneles in New York as to the general situation in the 'United States are not of an encouraging nature. and certainly have not come up to ex- pectations. The larger business we have been so much told of as being al- thin eight has not so far mater- ialized. The reasons advanced are various, but storms and extreme cold weather appear to be lar(lely responsi- ble. There are in several lines growing enquiry and increasing demand, but this is often accomplisjed by, or con- sequent on, concessions in price. There is notable growth in the insurance busi- ness, which is said to be larger than ever before. Hardware, shoes and boots, millinery, paints, and chemicals are in better and more immediate de- mand, but the ordinary spring trade is of "a waiting character." Cotton and wool are dull. The British imports from Canada in February were four and a half times greater than the imports of February of the previous year. The imports for January and February were two and a half times greater than for the corre- sponding months last year. The ex- ports from Great Britain to Canada in- creased 21 per cent. in February. In the Imperial House of Commons Mr. Hanbury, the Financial Secretary to the Treasury, said that there tad been no agreement to subsidize Cana- dian wail ships to the amount of sev- enty-five thousand pounds yearly, but the Government of the Dominion and the Imperial Government were discuss- ing the questio,z of an Imperial grant for that purpose. Admiral Sir Leonard McClintock, the Arctic explorer who commanded the Franklin relief expedition in 1859, is living in London, a bale and active man at the age of 77. He is sceptical about the story of the discovery of the North Pole by Nansen, pointing out that the report, to be entertained seriously should have conte from Greenland, in- stead of the Siberian side. Right Hon. Walter Long, President of the Board of Agriculture, stated in. the British Parliament that 72 cases of contagious pleuro -pneumonia had been found in cattle imported from the United States and sixteen in the cattle imported from Canada since October, 1892. Whatever view the Canadian and United States authorities might take he could only say that it bad been con- clusively proved that the disease vvas infectious. The Canadian Minister of Agricul- ture, Mr. Montague, has had an inter- view with Mr. Joseph Chamberlain,and has urged that the evidence is conclu- sive that Canadian cattle are free from disease, and stated that Canada is con- fidently expecting that the existing re- strictions should be removed, and not made permanent. Mr. Chamberlain pro- mised that the Imperial Government would carefully consider the matter. UNITED STATES. The Prince of Wales has been elect- ed an honorarymember of the Thir- teen Club of Nw York. An agency is to be opened in Omaha for the purpose of enlisting recruits for the Cuban insurgents. Calvin Flint, of Williamstown, Vt., who was 88 years old last January, has split forty cords of tough firewood this winter. The Goulds have escaped paying tax- es on ten million dollars assessed in the city of New York, on the non -resi- dence plea. Thirteen thousand tailors are out on strike in Chicago, and eight thousand union garment -workers will go out on a sympathetic strike. The Hon. A. C. Core, of the United States District Court of Utica, N. Y., handed down a decision on Friday, de- claring natural gas not dutiable. A 70 -year-old citizen. of Ellsworth Falls, Me., has had. a severe attack of whooping cough during the past weak, and is slowly recovering from it. Evangelist Moody who 'has not visit- ed the Paoifio coast within the past ten years, is soon to conduct a series of revival meetings in San Francisco. Lawyer Wm. A. Shoemaker, of Phila- delphia, who was senior counsel for H. H. Holmes, has been suspended for a year, for obtaining a false affidavit. Four men were killed and one injur- ed by the blowing up on Wednesday of an engine on the Delaware, Susque- hanna, and Schuylkill railway, near Hazelton, Pa. Senor George Gomez, nephew of Gen. Gomez, who is in St. Louis, Mo., at present, said that if the United States recognizes the insurgents they will win. ' Father Dominick O'Grady, who mur- dered Mary Gilmartin two years ago, was adjudged insane by the Cincinnati courts on Saturday, and committed to an insane asylum. William Rockefeller, the multimillion- aire president of the Standard Oil Com- pany, will soon add another palace to the magnificent ones that now grace the millionaire's district on Fifth ave- enue, New York. In the United States House of Re- presentatives a bill has been passed making one year's continuous residence in a territory prerequisite to obtaining a divorce in such territory. Dr. Arthur Dueshon,the so-called. h millionaire murderer. er oSt. Louis,who r was convicted in the Circuit Cort, a short time ago of killing his wife and baby in St. Louis, has been sentenced to be hanged on April 22nd. Lieut. J. F. Thompson, Ordnance Officer of the Department of the Mis- souri, points out to the Chicago people the utterly defenceless condition of the city in the event of war between the United States and Great Britain. Forty members of the Italian Club in. Chicago on Sunday night offered them- selves to theservice of the country of their birth, and declared their willing- ness to proceed to Rome and join the Italian army fighting in Abyssinia. Dr. A. V. Burghill, of Chicago, read his horoscope on Wednesday, and re- marked. that the stars foretold his blind- ness before death, and on Thursday night while making experiments with explosives he destroyed both his eyes. Dawson Oldham, a 78 -year-old resi- dent of White Hall, Ky., never has miss- ed a sermon in the Methodist church in that place in the forty years he has been a member. He never has us- ed tobacco in any form, nor has he tast- ed whiskey. Owing to appeals before the Supreme Court, Theodore Durrant, of San Fran- cisco, California, .who was convicted last November of the murder of Blanche La - wont on April 6, is still alive, and it is not expected that his case will be decided before the close of the present year. Last August Barnum's widow was married to Demetrius Capias Bey, and went to reside with him on his olive plantation on ' the island of Meletia. It is now reported that Mrs. Capias is re- turning"to the United States, the happy home among the islands of the Grecian. archipelago having failed to material- ize. It is thought probable in Washington that Congress will vote one hundred dollars for- 'coast and lak'i de- fences. It was pointed out in a sub. For quick and easy work For cleanest, sweetest and whitest clothes Surprise is best GENERAL The Czarowitz continues to gain strength. The Italian Government refuses to discuss King Menelik's proposed terms of peace. A despatch from Bombay says that Samuel L. Clemens (Marie Twain) is seriously i11 at Jeypor. A despatch from Pekin says the re- ported conclusion of a treaty between Russia and China is confirmed. The French Minister of Agriculture has issued a decree that imported cat- tle need not he killed on landing. The Chinese Government has purchas- ed eighty thousand Bavarian rifles of the type of 1884 for a dollar apiece. It has been definitely decided to send an expedition of eight thousand colour- ed troops against the dervishes of the Soudan. Psrrine's comet, which was scheduled to strike the earth on Saturday. is tra- velling away from the earth in a south- erly direotiion. The Anglo -German Chinese loan of one hundred lxii)lion tails has been is- sued at ninety-four, with interest at at five per cent. The railway trains crossing the French frontier from Italy are crowded with Italians, who are leaving to escape mil- itary service in Africa. Count Goluchowski, the Austrian Prime Minister, before leaving Berlin for Vienna, was given the Order of the Red Eagle by Emperor William. Tho merchants of Barcelona have agreed not to sell American products in the event of President Cleveland ap- proving of the Cuban belligerency reso- lutions. Asa result of :a heavy snowfall, last- ing three days, followed by a sudden thaw, floods in many parts of Austria have caused great destruction of prop- erty. A St. Petersburg despatch says that two hundred fishermen belonging to Re- vel, with their horses and carts, have been blown out to sea on a piece of floating ice. An American student in Athens claims to have interpreted the inscription on the architrave of the east front of the Parthenon, which has hitherto been an unsolved problem. For the first time the Finister-Aar- horn, the highest of the Bernese Alps, has bean climbed in winter. Professor Fischer, with the guide Almer, accom- plished the feat a couple of weeks ago. The Rome Tribune denies that King'. Humbert has expressed his intention to abdicate. The report grew out of the fact that the King said: "My son may negotiate with the Negus, but I will never do so. President Faure of France is said to be growing weary of the cares of office, and is not as energetic as he used to be. He Is still very popular, but the price is a Lor the good will of all classes man cooking, and cares only for French cuisine. When his relatives of the House of Tuscany visit him, to please their taste he has Italian dishes served. On certain occasions the Empress, who is a Bavarian, orders German dishes. The Paris Radicals and Socialists are angry because the cross of the Legion of Honour was bestowed upon Prince Henry of Orleans, the explorer, and the matter will be debated in the Chamber of Deputies at the earliest opportunity. The Emperor of Austria dislikes Ger- Professor Rontgen is the hero of the hour in Germany. Honors are show- ering upon him in his Wurtzburg home,' and the university students organized a grand torchlight procession through the town to his house to congratulate the professor on his wonderful discovery. The Ameer of Afghanistan seems to have been pleased at the reception ac- corded to his second son, Nazrullah Khan, for he is sending the Queen one hundred and twenty-five thousandd pounds' worth of gifts in charge of a special envoy. Gen. Baratiera explains his reasons for attacking the Abyssinians by -stat- ing that supplies were becoming short, the roads being infested with Abyssin- ians. To retreat would have exposed the Italians to an attack whichwould have been difficult to withstand. He held a conference with the officers un- der him, and they concurred in his opinion that it would be safer to at- tack the enemy than to retreat. STORM -STRICKEN AUSTRALIA. The Terrible heat Succeeded by Heavy llaillstornts—/treat loss of Life. A despatch from Melbourne says that there has been a terrible hailstorm there, the hailstones being the largest on record. Windows were smashed and buildings unroofed and wrecked by the force of the storm. Shipping also was damaged and sunk, and trees were uprooted. ' One woman was reported killed. During the past two months Austral- ia has been the sport and victim of most extraordinary combinations and succession of climate conditions that perhaps ever have been recorded. Brief telegraphic reports have reached here of the heat, the storms, and floods that have swept the continent, and have strewn the coasts with wreoks, and last week mail advices told of some ter- rible effect of the heat. News brought by late steamers showed that the inten- sity of the heat was much greater in the interior than on the coast, and that the suffering was correspondingly greater. We give yet another solution which may be useful when fruit is nearing maturity. Best for Every Day For every use about the house Surprise works best and cheapest. Flee for yourself. A CLOSE SHAVE A TALE WITH THE MAN WHO EX- PERIENCED IT. People really do not know haw often the angel of death hovers over them. Mr. R. P. Watkins, xy3 Bay st., isa barber by trade, and gave our representative this short history of his escape from the dis- order which was rapidly carrying him to his grave. Mr. Watkins is a skillful and experienced man, and is now enabled to exercise his skill from morning till night, where before he was unable to regularly follow his chosen calling. This is Mr. Watkins' story as related by himself. "For over three years I have been troubled with what the doctors said was Bright's Disease, was getting rapidly worse, and could scarcely attend to my business. My ankles were swollen, the pain and heat in my back were almost unbearable, the urice was of a dark wine color, and it used to dribble away continu- ally. I had to rise g or 10 times each night to void the urine, and consequently last nearly all my sleep. The scalding beat and pain in passing the urine were painful and distressing beyond my feeble power to describe. People who did not know my trouble used to laugh at .my frequent visits to the urinal. My hands and feet were always cold and clammy, and I suf. fired severely from palpitation, shortness of breath, and was, in fact, almost a total wreck. I got a box of Doan's Kidney Pills from Messrs. E. Hooper & Co., and im- proved at once, I have used two boxes and feel like a new man: can now work right along and at re p Ire feel like working right ahead. Had I not got those pills feet that I would not have been working to -day. My words only faintly express the dreadful condition I was in, and the wonderful cure shade by Doan's Kidney Pills." Jamca E. 1\ichoia°n. Almost Passes Belief Mr. Tas. E. Nicholson, 1?lcrenceviile, N. B., Struggles for Seven Long Years with CANCER ON THE LIP, AND IS OUR ED BY A ED'S Sarsa- parilla Mr. lNicholson says: "I consulted doc- tors who pres.nibed for nu', but to no purpose; the cancer began to Eat into the Flesh, spread to my chin, and I suffered in agony for seven long years. Finally I I began taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla. 'In a week or two 'noticed a, Decided Improvement Encouraged by this result, I perse- vered, until In a mouth or so the sore under mychin beganan to h al. Int three months my lip began to heal, and, after using the Sarsaparilla for six months the last trace of the cancer disappeared.'; ro)n5 yt� ' spina C Admitted at the Worla'a .AYEE'S rIL2 5 Regulate rho .noeeels. PAINLESS BULLETS. Steel -coated rifle bullets for the new magazine guns cause very little pain, Woman—She. needs no eulogy; she says Dr. Dolorme, surgeon -in -chief of the French army. During the riots at • Fourmies one man was wounded so bad- ly as to bo paralyzed, but did not sus- pect that he had been shot until he saw the blood stains on his clothing ; another, shot through the arm, felt his elbover, twitch and closed his fist me- chanically. At short range, 100 to 150 yards, the bullets are apt to explode and be do serious mischief. EAKIEN CUREDI 'STARTLING FAOTS FOR DISEASED VICTIMS.. rOU REES GUARANTEED OR NO PAYI YOU ) "evens cod despondent; week or debilitated; tire mprein t i , rition- 1qq;��ltss; memory poor: ensiiy fatigued: exo t bre r r eyes emu en red and blurred; pimples on feat; ereame an y, '.tosses; eatle,,., .,b, ;and looltla ; wq :it back; bune,pain heir loose tame; sera for Varicceele' deposit to mine anal dr armee et etaol: distrustful;want or confidence; leo. guexltp said etreeett.--11t a O 4 rt1 DURE YOU/ tabes RESTORED TO MANHOOD 3Y .DRS. K.& K., JOHN 8, MANUN. JOHN A, MANLIN, CHAS. POWERS. CHAS. PO 103- BEFORE' leseezizs1`, A*TKR zarAzxENT, Bx iris 'rrtiAThiSNT. Anne srultaTiaziT. NO NAMES pR TESTIMONIALS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. John A. Manlfn sayer -"I was one of tho mustiest' vie. time of early ignorance commenced at 15 room o5 age. I tried seven medical tinge and spent $000 without avail. Igoe up in despair, The drains on goy epaulet 'were -weakening my intellect as well as my sexual sad pphysio& life. My brother advised leo as a last resort to confetti` Drs. Kennedy &Horgan. I commenced their Naw Methoc. Treatment and in a new weeks was a new man, with navy BW and ambition, This wail four years ago, and now I specialists to all my afilieted fello wraen ;led and happy. 1 recommend these reliable CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY.—CONFIDENTAL. "The vices of early boybro5laid the foundation or my rain. Later on a "gay life and exposure to blood di - seance completed the wreck. I hid all tbo symptoms of Nervous Debility—sunken wee emiesioie, drain in urine, nervousness, weak back, o•e, i3yphilts canoed my hair to fall out, bone pains, u'.cer8 in mouth and cn tongue, blotches on body, etc. I thank God I tried Drs. Kennedy b Horgan. ''1 Loy restored me to health, vigor and happiness." CHAS. ROWEiiS. VARICOCELE, EMISSIONS em IMPOTENCY CURED Syphilis, Emissio• ns Variooaele, Cured. elf We treat a'ta' care Irarteocele, Emissions, Nervous Deb1liO, Seminal Weakness, Glee' Stricture, Syfihilis, Unnatural Discharges, Se,44buse„ Kidney and gladder Diseases. 17 YEARS IN DETROIT. 200,000 CURED. NO RISK. READER Areyonp.victim? have yen lost hope? Ara you contemplating mar- • t i .;re? ries your Blood be en diseased? Have. you any weak -nese? Our Now Method Treatment will cure you. 'What it has dons for others it will do for YOU. CONSULTATION FPEI:. leo in .ttsr who lane treated you. write for an honest opinion Free of Charge. ('hergaa ra:t'naW 1. BOOKS FREE ---"'The Golden Monitor" (illustrated), on Diseases of Silex. Ih a oatF ^stege, 2 cants. Pealed. •!-NO NAiv, S ur.,,eD W]T13QUT WRITTEN CONSENT. Piea- VA.TEi. No ':roc:" Ir' . nt C. O. -s No names on boxes or envet-. asses. EverythIn;, evnfidontial, Queuticoin List and cost of Treat- ment, PRE,'-.. DRS2 KE 9 E I ' Eriis g No.f ETROIT,, m CH!"• DR. SPINNEY St CO The Old Reliable Specialists. S 3 Years Experience in the treatment of the Throat and Lung Troubles, Catarrh, Asthma, Bronchitis, Nervous, Chronic and Special Dis- eases of men and women. T ost Manhood restored—Kidney and Bled - 1i Manhood der troubles permanently cured—Gleet, Gonorrhoea, Varicocele and stricture cured without pain. No cutting. Syphilis and all Blood Diseases cured without mercury. Tong ffhrul folfromorhetsonosf, 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 S GLSARAtr`TEED. wThere are any troubled Middle -Aged Men with too fremquent evacn- tions of the bladder. often accompanied by a slight smarting or burning sensation, and weakening of the system in a ,Wanner the patient cannot account for. There ars many Men who die of this difficulty, ignorant of the cause. The doctor will. guarantee a per. feet cure in all such cases, and healthy restoration of the €enito-urinary organs. Con- sultation free. ' Those unable to call, ran write full particulars of their case and have medicine sent by express, with full instructions for use. Mention this paper when writing. [1 Office hours: QF�rom 9 a. m. to 8 p. m. Sundays, 9 all a. m. Delo spIN .TTV j�, 290 WOODWARD .it'ENUTB. J , (Side Entrance No. 12 E. Elizabeth St.) DETROIT, MICH. ■ TIIE TOAST WOMAN. There is no perfect meal without a woman to do the honors of the table. Water is as good as wine, and the fol- lowing may serve as hints to the fath- er, brother, husband, or guest who is able to talk, yet needs a little aid. to lift him out of the common rut : Woman—God bless her, the queen of all creation. Woman—The tyrant we love, the friend we trust. Woman—The sweetest creature the Lord ever made. Woman—The source of help, happi- ness and heaven. SLOW BUT HEALTHY. The Italian battleship Christoforo Colombo has a curious arrangement, for furnishing her seamen with drink- ing water. Experience proved that drinking large quantities of cold wa- ter after violent exercise especially while cruising in the tropics, caused many deaths. The water tanks on the vessel are connected with innumerable little rubber hoses and on the end of each hose is a small rubber nipple: When any seaman wants drinking wa- ter he must turn a stop cock and then suck it through the hose and nipple, g fo wok but it has been and I It is slow work, that it preserves many valuable lives, Children Cry for Pitchers Castor speaks for herself. 'Woman—Once there was a woman, sir, and here she is ! Woman: A creature " nobly plan- ned, to warn, to comfort and command." Woman—The fairest work of the great Author ; the edition is large, and no man should be without a copy. • CLEVER MR. SEXTON. Mr. Sexton is one' of the most inter- esting figures in the British Roue of Commons. He is a powerful debater and is possessed of remarkable resources inn the line of eloquence. He is a bril- liant mathematician, and .his ability to use statistics in a telling way is one of his most valuable qualities. In private conversation he is even more sparkling than in debate. He is witty, epigram: uratic ' and sympathetic. He is a great Shakspearian. scholar. Watts—" How did you ever getethe notion that Briggs was thinking of joinin the prohibitionists ?" Potts— ' Got it : from his talk. He. has taken to calling his sideboard his medicine chest." A HEAVY MMfIORTGAGE. How a prominent farmer quickly. Iifted it. A mortgage has been described as an incentive to industry, a heavy mortgage, as a sure sign drum, The last is particu- larly true, for if a mortgage is allowed to ran it will eat up the farm. In this con- nection Mr. Henry Fowler, of Huron writes "From my boyhood scrofula had, marked me for a victim and it seemed as if it had a life mortgage on my blood. I suffered fearfully with sores, and know- ing my condition I have remained a single man, Doctor after doctor prescribedfor me, and finally a Toronto specialist told me bluntly that my complaint was a, deep-seated, incurable, blood disease. Sarsaparilla I knew was a good blood, medicine, and I sent for a bottle of the best. Mr. Todd, the druggist, sent me Scott'sp Sarsaparilla, and I have stuck to it. It has lifted my mortga e, for to -day am free from those horrible sores, Imy eyesight is not blurred; my tongue is not furry, and I have no irritation. I look upoii_Scott's Sarsaparilla as a marvellous needicine when it will cure a life long disease in so short a time." Scrofula, pimples, running sores, rheu- matism and all diseases generated by poisonous humors in the blood are cured by Scott's Sarsaparilla. • `The kind that cures. Sold only in concentrated form at ei per bottle by your druggist. Dose from half to one teaspoonful. r .o Ont. �etor, 0 Sold byO. LUTZ, h A hustling woman hotelkeeper el Burns, Ore., who is credited with being one of thebest looking as well as most successful hotelkeepers in eastern Ore- gon, advertises in a .recent issue of the local newspaper that she will not be responsible hereafter for any debts con- tracted ,by her husband or lien son,.