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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1896-5-7, Page 6TEE EXETER TIMES Ifyou must draw the line at and have, like thousands.of other people, to avoid all food prepared. with it, this is to remind you that there is a clean, delicate and healthful vegetable short- ening, hortening, which can be used in its place. If you will. US E COTTOLENE instead of lard, you can eat pie, pastry and the other t' good. things" which other folks enjoy, without fear of dyspeptic consequences. De- liverancefroln lard has come. Buy a pail, try it in your own kitchen, and be con- vinced. Cottolene is sold in 3 and 5 po , ud pails, by all grocers. Made only by Tho N. K. Fairbank Company, VellhertoA and Ann titan 6`Egi Li S N EBB lc"\- ONE'SF .75IA/ :telt ii 7 ,r•'.. 57.\.A.0 11 E, REGULsTE.6ti ELI ER. ONE POLL AITER CATIN3 INSURES GOOD DIGESTION. PRI CE,25 GTS.TI-B'ONSRT Fain THE NEWS RI R NUTSHI I'M VERY LATEST FROM ALL T1IE WORLD OVER. interesting Items About Our Own Country, (heat Britain, the United States., and All Parte of the Glebe, Condensed and Assarted for Easy Reading. CANADA. Another train load of Manitoba cattle for the English market hasheexi ships ped: A New York traveller named Henry Brown shot himself in the head at a hotel in Thorold. Mi G. Crelxa:a has resigned the general ad management of the Banque Nationale- on the ground of ill -health. His resignation has been accepted. Judge Fournier, of Ottawa, is ser- iously l illvithenfixx1ectoris' and the donors fear he tii1 not recover. Duncan McLeod an eigilteyear-old lad, was thrown from a. waggon in $zmilton, and died of his injuries. .less Jessie Hutchinson, a Stratford girl, went. to Port Huron seven weeks ago, and has been missing ever since. Three hundred homeless families, driven out by floods, are being cared for by the municipality of Three Rivers. Work has commenced on Stratford's new sewer system, and there will be no unemployed men in that city in a few days. Mary Shea. a Hamilton woman, who. bas for years past begged from eit11- zens and pleaded poverty, y, died in the cite: hospital, worth about $4,1100._ risen Artillery, has been appointed to Lieut. -Col. Cole of the Montreal Gar - the command of tete Canadian Artillery team to compete' at ;=hoeburyne. . The trial of Morrell fur the. murder of Hannah Batton at. Holland will take place at Winnipeg -. "Ir. Justice iSillam having granted a change of venue. A verdict of wilful murder by some person unknown was returned by the Coroner's jury un the body of the child found in the millrace at St. Cathara Ines. A by-law loaning thirty thousand dollars to the Winnipeg Industrial Exhibition Association for the purr - pose of erecting new buildings was carried. Henry Allen, an educated young • ntan, who was convictr;i of hoI•se- ste:ilin.g in London. was ,ent to the Kingston Penitentiary for two ;And and a half. A watch eh was found in tfie11 near Logies Mr. l o ic s farm in i:ind<ay, which is believed to belong to John Kear- ney, at present. in jail on the charge of murdering old Mr.. Agnew. The trade returns of Canada for the first nine months of the fiscal year show an inel'tti:se in exports and ime ports of S11,526,817 over the etorresp oncl ing. period at the last fiscal year. 1 Owing to the death of Arm George iMunro, the New York publisher, whose gifts to Dalhousie University, N. S., aggregate $220,000, there will be no spy: ciaL exercises at convocation next week. LUST CH FAILINQ MAIIIIOU &ai 21 and Hermit fle61fl1,, 'Weakness of Bods and Nine, Effects a Errors or Excesses in OId or Young. Robust, Vale Mardi od fully Restored. How to Enlarge and Strengthen Weak, Undeveloped Organs and Farts of Body. Abeolately nrr failing Horne Trreetmt:nt---Benefits in a dIA Men to -dile from 60 States utd Porei$n Comi- ties. ote •ttries. Write them. Descriptive Book, oar planation and proofs retailed (sealed) free. E@IE MEDICAL as Buialoo Nati Ea::1c..trite, Fare.Acl,e, Seise Pains. Neuralgic Pains, Pain in the Siete, etc. Promptly telleved and Cured by The "1 t L 15 Menthol Piaster Havingused your D. 4 L. Menthol Piaster tor severe pain iu tun h u• t end lumbago. I unhesitatingly re,muni":id same as asafe, sure and rapid renociy: in fact. they art like ugie.—A. LAHoian.., Elizabethtown, Of Price 25e. DAVIS & LAWRENCE CO., Ler, Proprietors, 11IoNruuAL. TOTAL ECLIPSE OF T -FIR SUN. The great event of the yeas 1896 is the total eolipse of the sun, visible only in the extreme portion of Japan, Amoor River, Siberia, Nova Zambia, and the northern part of Norway, within the Arctic Circle. It is estimated that there willbe manyexpeditions from various points in Europe, ngland Ge - reany ad Prance. It will also be pos- sible to get a .glimpse of the midr night • stir, which is seen at the North Cape, above the horizon, at midnight, as late as -August ist. Thus, within a few days, it will be poeeible to see the full sun: at midnight. The expedition will be accompanied by many astronom- ers and students of astronomy. ARMED AT THAT POINT. Bored? repeated the ArmlessWon- der. Oh, no, I don't get bored. !man- age in such a way that time. never: hangs heavy me my hands, Phe elieu and Ontaria Navigation Company has ordered a general reduc- tion of salaries. .lames Philpot of Guelph was are meted tin the charge of manslaughter in eoumeti.an with he death of Lizzie Griffenharn, who was killed by a fall- ing well tt Mich the prisoner bad left unprott coed• Harry Emes. son of Dr. Emes, Niag- ara Falls, Ont., was arrested on Fri- day, charged with committing an ab- ortion on Minnie Minchen, of Glanford, Ont., at his father's house, and mute- ins her death. Mr. Iiencert Wallis, mechanical sup- erintendent (ef the Grand Trunk rail- way, has leen sups reeded by Mr. 1F. W. Mor -t•, wlio has beer' for the past sev- en years masier xneehanie of the east- ern division (if the Wabash railway. It has been de: ided to send a detach- ment. from the Montreal fire brigryade to represent Canada atthe tournament to be held in London next June. The Do- minion rsminion Government will he asked to give some finanrial assistance. Four firemen, who were working* at a fire in a planing mill shed on Dufferin street Toronto an Wednesday after- noon, were c ru iter! by the falling walls. They were all seriously injured, and it is doubtful of two will recover. A. yartiai report of the analysis of the stomach of 011ie Reichert., who died two months ago in Hamilton under pe- culiar circumstances, shows that three grains of arsenic were found in the stomach and some mercury in the liv- er. Sir Maekenzie Bowell Sir Donald Smith, and Mr. Sandford Fleming will sail for .England on :fiat 9th. S,r _tiar- kenzie Bowell and Mr. Fleming will go as the Canadian delegates to the cable conference, while Sir Donald Smith will go to assume his duties as High Com- missioner for Canada. While the Countess of Aberdeen was driving on Wednesday afternoon near the Gatineau river, her carriage was upset,owing to an unseen hole, cov- ered y flood water. The Countess was thrown into the water, but escaped un- injured. The other occupants of the carriage also escaped, but both horses were drowned. GREAT BRITAIN. J. S. Casey, the Fenian leader, and one of the originators of the Land. League, is dead. The continued cold weather in Lon- don is seriously interfering with the opening of the season. The Princess of Wales, on behalf of theQueen,helda drawing -room — room on Thursday t Buckingham palace. An important bill was introduced in the British House of Commons by Right lion. Henry Chaplin to reduce the assessment on agricultural lands one-half. The London Saturday Review says that Lord .itosebery, considering his life uncertain, hats chosen Sir .Edward Grey as heir to all his Parliamentary dig- nities and authority. ' A great sensation has been created among the extensive force of the Blen- heim Castle retainers over a recent order that all men an the castle rolls must be clean-shaven. A cyclone of tremendous force sped through . Clay County, Kas., dealing death and destruction on every hand. As far as known five people. were kill- ed, three fatally wounded and seven- teen injured. Detachments of the King's Own Rifles, stationed at Dover, and the Irish Rifles, quartered at Brighten,. have been ordered to hold themselves in readinese to proceed immediately to South Africa. The Marquis of Dufferin ata Lady Dufferin and the Marquis of Lorne have. signed the petition for the repatriation of the Royal Canadian Regiment, which is being drawn up. for presentation to the Prince of Wales. The youngDuc;iess of Marlboroti h' g•. oqy . 'uxoos-,Sueeti:rp exnu eq] ye papise nee Consuelo Vanderbilt, will be pro society journals say that her presen- tation dress will excel in magnificence anything seen at Court for many years. In a speech before the Constitutional Club ou Wednesday night Mr. Cham- berlain, referring to South Africa, said. that England must continue to be the paramount power, and would at all risks and costs resist any foreign in- teerferexice. It is said that the Queen, out of re- speot for the memory of Prince Henry of Battenbers, is anxious to have the coming marriage of Princess Maud as private as possible, while the Prince and Prutcess of Wales wish to make it a public function. The prize of one thousand :guineas recently offered by the London Statist for the best essay on Imperial Cus- toms union has been divided between Mr. J. C. Conner, Acting Commissioner for Canada, and Mr. R. S. Ashton. In the House :of Commons on Thurs- day, Mr. Curzon, the Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, said that the negotiations on the Venezuelan question tion were proceeding with the United States,and he hoetheywould have favorable termination. The lobbyist of the Pall Mall Gazette says it is evident from the character of the deputation of farmers from Nor- folk and Suffolk which waited upon Mr. Long, the President of the Board of Agriculture, urging the Government to abandon the Cattle Disease bill,that the Government will have difficulty in passing the measure. UNITED STATES. Nearly ninety per cent. of the Salva- tion Army in St. Paul, .Minn., have de- clared for Bollington Booth. The long awaited distribution of Columbian World's Fair diplomas and medals began in Washington on Tues- day. It is stated in Washington that the Spanish Government within the next four weeks will put into execution a, comprehensive system of home rule for the Island. of Cuba. The United States authorities have ordered the surrender to the British authorities of David Breen, noir held in New York on a charge of embezzling one hundred and seventy-five thousand pounda in Dublin. Mr. Andrew Carnegie, of Pittsburg, Pa., has authorized the trustees of the, Carnegie art gallery to offer eight thousand dollars for the best twopenat- Ings by ,Axnericnn artists, the word American to inetude Canadians. The trial began on Wednesday, at Newport, Ky., w Scott Jackson, eharg- ed. with the murder of Pearl Bryan, whose headless body was found on Feb - roarer guar • 1st s known It i - o • thatg the girl spent the night before the murder at the since t e hau.,e of Ur. Wagner.\1'ufinerwho bassi t become insane, and it is understood the defence will put in an alibi, and claim • that the murder was committed. by Dr, Wagner. For the first time during several weeks the tone of advices from the New York commercial agencies is a little more encouraging. An important fact- or in the inipiovement leas been seas- onable weather, and the consequently 'more active enquiry for many lines of spring goods.; still, copIlint of being overstocked s very general. As a re- cult ninny industries are quiet; some factories are closed, and minors of com- ing labor troubles in the building and glass trade are exciting a depress'mg effect. Prices all round continue low. Crop prospects are reported good, and from many districts reports of com- mercial travellers are of an encourag ing nature. The outlook has brightened during the week. GENERAL. The dervishes along the Nile are un- usually inactive, The Bourgeois Ministry of France has formally resigned. Armed Germans are reported to be , pouring into the Transvaal. British forces won a gallant victory over the Matabeles at Buluwayo. Sir Henry Parkes, formerly Prime Minister of New South Wales, is dead. George Munroe, the New York pub- lisher, died suddenly at Pine Hill, in ' the Catskills. The steamer Montevideo has arrived, at Havana with 1,000 reinforcements from Spain. Captain -General Weyler is hopeful. He thinks he can subdue the Cuban rebellion in eight months. President Kruger declines to visit England, on the ground that his pres- ence is required in the Transvaal; The Matabeles are rapidly drawing a cordon around Buluwayo,and the relief from Mafrking is anxiously awaited. The Italians at b'•assala are reported to have inflieted severe punishment upon the dervishes, killing 500 of them. President Faure is experiencing great difficulty in getting any statesman to i undertake the task of forming a new Cabinet. M. Leon Say, the distinguished French political economist, died. in Paris on Monday. He was seventy years of age. The Rothschilds leave acquired a i large interest in one of the leading sil- 1 ver smelting works in New South Wales. Baron Hirsch, the celebrated Austrian financier and philanthropist, died on E Monday- He was sixty-three years of age. 1 Prince von Hohenlohe, the German 1 Chancellor, is ill with influenza, and , his condition is causing his friends ' much alarm. It is denied in Madrid that negotia- tions are in pro ress between Spain and the United States for granting Home Rule to Cuba,. France has notified Russia that it will permit the Russian Red Cross detach- ment going to Abyssinia to cross the Obok territory. In the opinion of .many people in Cape Town England should at once purchase Delagna. Bay, and so prevent Germany supplying the Boers with arms. i Lloyd Osborne, stepson of the late Louis Stevenson, was married in Hono- lulu on the loth inst. to Miss Katharine Durham, of Springfield, Missouri. Authentic information received at Constantinople shows that the prison at Maraah is crowded with Armenians,who are subjected to horrible tortures. Col, Rhodes, Lionel Phillips and George Farrar have .pleaded guilty of treason ra at Potoria in connection with e the recent trouble in the 'Transvaal. The Bertillon measurement of Holmes' head show an astonishing resemblance to the measurements of the head of Scott Jackson, now on his trial for the murder of Pearl Bryan. It is stated that President Kruger has reduced his original demand for an in- demnity on account of the Jameson raid from three million to one million five hundred thousand pounds. Baron Hirsch is said to have lent large sums of money ; to royalty, and his, death, it is said, may make eompli- cations in at leapt one European court, if the executors are obdurate in collect- ing money lent. In Coburg on Monday the wedding wets celebrated between Princess Alex, :mare, third daughter of the Duke of Saxe, -Coburg -Gotha (the Duke • of Edin»• burgh), to Hereditary Prince Ernest of Hohenlohe-Langenburg. Telegraphic communications with the town of Buluwayo, partly surrounded by an army of fifteen thousand Mata- beles, has been out off by the destruc,., tion of the wire, it is supposed by the Matabeles. There has been fierce fighting at Om- durman, near Khartoum, the headquar- ters of the Khalifa. It is said that five hundred of the Khalifa's troops were killed, and that a general feeling of un- rest prevails among his troops. SENTENCED TO DEATH CONCLUSION OE THE TRIAL AT TOHANNESBURG. A 'Vigorous I'rotesl Froth Itritdn-Mr l'Intntbcilafn's Message -War 3tnevitable. ff the Yenait3' is 1biforeed-Fouls En, lishnten and One American Sentenced. A despatch front London says: In the London house of Commons on Tues- day. Joseph Chamberlain, Secretary of State for the Colonies, said; -"1 have received a private telegram. cif the ac- curacy of which I have no doubt, say- ing that five of the leaders of the so- called National Reform party at Jaime- nesberg had been condemned to death. I thereupon cabled to Sir llereukts Rob- inson at Cape Town instructions to communicate the following to Presi- dent Kruger Government has just learned that the sentence of death has been iniposed upoxi the chief lead- ers of the Reform. Committee. The Government bas no doubt that your Honor will commute the sentence. In- deed the Government has aasured Par- liament that this is your Honor's in- tention.'" lite, W. J. Galloway asked whether the law govering such oases did not provide simply for the confiscation of the property of personsfound guilty and not for the imposition of the death sentence. . Mr. Chamberlain replied that he could not answer that ques- tion. as he was doubtful whether the condemned 1 r .men had teen tried under r e the statute law of the 'Transvaal or the Roman and Dutch .Ia«_. Right Tion. James Bryce asked the names of the prisoners under death sentence and Mx. Chamberlain said they were Col, Francis Rhodes brother to Cecil Rhodes, George Farrar, Lionel Phillips and John Hays Hammond. The name of the fifth condemned man he bad forgotten for the moment. Four of them are British subjects and one (Hammond) is an American. AN (3NEXPECTI;I) ENDING. A tragic sequel of the reform agita- tion in tho Transvaal was totally un- expected, and unless the sentences are commuted h to fine and imprisonment the whole of South Africa will be ablaze. A few days ago it was very generally understood that the senten- ces would be light and that the Boers would not again give oceasion for such a demonstration of Uitlander disaffec- tion as that which a few months ago threatened to overturn the Boer rule. The Englishmen of Johannesburg and the Rand was restive enough when Jameson was repulsed, and at that time. little, more would have been ne- cessary to induce then. to carry on an aggressive war. As it was they gave up control of the. Provisional Government, established. at Johanuesberg under the name of the Reform Committee, and agreed to disarm on the understanding that the grievances of which they com- plained omplained would be removed and that Col. Rhodes and the members of 1 be Reform Colinnittee would not suffer seriously for the prominent part they took in bringing these grievances be- fore 1 he Boer Government. A SIGNIk'1CANT INCIDENT. Though the news of the death sen- tence passed on the five leaders of the Johannesberg movement was a surprise and shock to those here, who have watched the case, politicians inside and outside of. Parliament admit.: that the sentence is the natural complement of the plea of guilty. Nobody here be- lieves that the sentences will be ex- ecuted. It is thought that under the law under which the accused were tried there was no course open to 1 he court but to impose the death penalty. It is believed now that the arrange- ment between the prisoners and the Transvaal authorities provided for the passing of the death sentence, while at the same time the five men knew that the President would exercise the power with which he is invested and later commute the sentences. What the general feeling among the Boers is towards the prisoners is a matter of doubt. Before the trouble at Johan- nesberg they were all very (popular, but there was a significant incident in connection with their arrest that is not generally known. Shortly after they were lodged in the jail at Prae- torma a number of Boers took to that city a beam on which some years pre- viously the British had hanged several Boers for treason: When the attention of the Government was called to this fact a prompt disclaimer of any im- plied threat to hang the prisoners was made,and itwas asserted that the beahad been taken. to Praetoria to be used for building purposes,. LATER. The Secretary of State for the Col- onies, Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, has re- ceived the following despatch from Sir Jacobus DeWet, the British Agent at Pretoria:-"Leyds • (Dr. W. • J. Leyds, Secretary of State for the Transvaal) has just told me that the sentence of death has been taken off the four prisoners (Hammond, Rhodes, Farrar, and Phillips). It is undecided what punishment will be substituted. The Executive Council is now engaged in considering the sentences of all the prisoners." A FAMILIAR MAKE-UP. Mrs. Dix --I wonder what presentmy husband will bring' me to -night? Mrs. hicks -What makes you ex- pect one? Is it you birthday Mrs. Dix -N -o; we quarreled this morning. For quick and easy work For cleanest, sweetest and whitest clothes Surprise Is pest Best for Every Day For every use about the house Surprise works best and cheapest. Seo for yourself. A TORONTO LADY GISTS A. CH'RIST161A8 I302C WHICH SHE .PRIZLS xcroHLY, In tracing up some of Santa CIaus' good deeds this year, a lady gives us the fol- lowing account of her Christmas box. The lady's name is Mrs. H. G. Ferguson, and she resides at 2X Church st. Mrs. Ferguson began as follows ;- 44 I have for years been a great sufferer with kidney complaint, severeain under shoulders and across. back, andlatterlyso weak that I could not walk out or do housework, Seven years ago the doctor told me I had Bright's Disease. A number of physicians told. me I was past help; one of them said I could not live a month. I have taken a great deal of medicine, but without relief, and had given up hope; in fact, told my son that I did not expect to u live until spring. My sou saw the adver- tisement of the Doan Kidney Pill Co., Dec. 3rd, and told me. I asked him to get a box and I would try them, although I had but little faith in them, because all other remedies had failed, and as a result I had given up hope. He got one box of pills at J. R. Lee's drug store and I commenced taking them. The result has been marvellous. After taking them once I experienced relief, and after tak- ing them three times the change for the better was marked. I have only taken one box of pills. but I feel like a new woman. The pain and other symptoms of the dreadful disease are gone. I am stronger and better than I have been in many years. I am now able to do my housework and walk out without suffering any inconvenience. That box of Doan's Kidney Pills was indeed a grand Christmas box forme amglad lad to let everyone know about this wonderful cure, in the hope that some one who has suffered as I have ntay try the remedy and be benefited as 1 have been." Charles Ii Hutehirepe. Sic Headache CURED PERMANENTLY BY TAKING yer's Pally I was troubled a long time with sick headache. It was usually accompanied •tvith severe pains in the temples, asense of fullness and tenderness in one eye, a bad taste in niy mouth tongue coated, bands and feet cold, and sickness at the stomach. 1 tried a good many remedies recommended for this complaint; but it was not until I Began Taking Ayer's Pills that I received anything like ppermaa nentbenefit. A single box of these pills did the work -for nye, and I am now free from headaches, and a well man." - 'C. H. F1t:TCOOJNGS, East Auburn, Me AYER'S PILLS Awarded Medal at World's Fair .dyer's Sarsaparilla is the Heat. ere ....awe., JI:MSON'S MOTTO. i Jimson• has just married again. That makes his third venture and he is still a young man. Yes; it seems to be his motto to mar- ry in haste and repeat at leisure. ABSENT-MINDED. Waiter (touest who is absorbed in the "mdo you wish to enu -What ) S eat,: please ? Professor -I haven't time to talk now. Ask me after dinner. Nothing precludes sympathy so much as a perfect indifference, to it.--Idazlitt. AN ECONOMIST. Gladys -Mr. Pennypacker told me he took you to the church fair last night and spent a most enjoyable evening. Mabel (with a sigh) -Yes; but that was about all_--^ A FATAL CASE. Bystander -Doctor, what do you 'think of this man's injuries ? Doctor -Humph I Two .of them .are undoubtedly fatal, but, as for the rest of them, .time alone can tell. IT WAS SO. Miss Sweetly -How did you know I was going tb wear my hair curled this evenigg t Mr. Plainman-I saw 11 in the papers. this morning. HER EXPLANATION.. Short -There's another bill from the tailor. I wonder why he keeps sending bills to people whohe knows can't pay. Mrs. Short -Perhaps, s my' dear,he does it as an advertisemen. The Brotherhood of Locomotive En - Sneers will have a big convention at Ottawa in'Matiy. 0 SAM ME IIIJRflII ST ART 0 NaFACTS FORDISEASEDviC TIMSf CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY ARE y o l j ' NtaTivl tane3 aeepondeat; ^weak qr dobwtniod; tt a1 manus ;ga; >l am- fl6 U bition lifolewzs; memoa7 ocsrt a leak f`atIgded ext ifabi'er ttrid sxr'tahJe; t oyes retakeen, red and ktl ttrr t 'idple9 pn std die ns slid ogke ]1csges; seatless; haggard look p ;weak begin b tytl Millett; hero lose.' ulcers; sore t r at• 'satiracocolo• deposit in mine stud drains at stool; dibtrustdtai• wartbf confidence .acts of energy andstrength.- WE OAN CURE YOU/ • RESTORED TO MANHOOD BY DRS. K. et, K. JOIIN A, ?1tANLIN. 301114 A, MANLIN. _ CRAB. POWERS. GRAS. pt7wmle. BEFORE Tits AnDtlIT. Ab'rx:A Ta6ATYENT. SitO, OAL TAZATICE5T. Areal Yaryan! ni r, NO NAMES OR TESTIMONIALS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. John A. Metnlin aays:-"I was este of the (somatic. viae time of early ignorance commenced at 15 v of mace; tried welt medical firms and spent $tihl wit oft 1 gave up in despair. Tho tlttfna on try elst weake/sin my intellect ns well as my sexual and v ss i life, My brotfi*b advised me as a Inst resort to eonsiiiiddlillllt Drs. Kennedy &iter , xcommenced thoirNowMeillir4 Treatment and in a weeks was a new suite'with now life and ambition. This was four yeass'ass:•tiad n,ta 1 are married anpy, d hap, 1 recommend those voltam specialists to alt my a listed fellowmen," CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY.-CONFiD•LNTAL. 'Tho vices of emir boyhood laid the foundation of m7 raM. Later on a gay life' wed exposure to blood di- sc m l t d .b r had all the symptoms saes 40 o t o ecL. xof p R Ne Debility -sunken ew em'eeicns drain in i Trona c I urine, y nervousness, weak back, etc. Syphilis calved my hair to fall out, bone pains, ulcers in mouth and on toilette, blotches on body, etc. 1 thank God 1 tried Drs. Eeneeds' A Bergen. Ther; restored me to health, vigor And happiness," CRAB. POWERS. VARICOCELE, EMISSIONS At IMPOTENCY CURED. Syphilis, Emissions Yp , Varicocele, Cora e e r d. I Eze-1ia treat and cure Varieocels, Emissions, Netvaus Debility, Seminal Weakaness, Gleet, Stricture, Sybhilis, Unnatural ,Discharges, Self 4i'use, Kidney and Bladder Diseases. 17 YEARS IN DETROIT. 200,000 CURED. NO RISK. READER' Aro yon a victim? /lave yon lost hope? Are you eontompr,latinm mar. Angel' Ens your Blood been diieeased? Ifnvo you any weakness? Our New Method Treatment 11 cue you. What it has done for others it will do ft;^. .S- CONSULTATiON FREE. No matter who hes treated ou write for an ionet t opinion 1ren ofCbusss Charges reasonable. BOOKS FREE - "Tie holden Monitor"i.lluetrated}, an Discuses of Men. Inclose postage, 5 canto. Sealed, Le -NO NAMES USED WITHOUWRITTEN CONSENT. PRI- VATE:. No medicine s• pit C. O. L No names on boxes or envoi-. ones. Everything confidential. Question list and cost of Treat- mont, FREE... DRS, KERIEBY KERGAN, N©ETR SHELRC ST. DR SPINNEY tit CO The Old Reliable Specialists• . 83 Years, Experience in the treatment of the Throat and Lung Troubles, Catarrh, Asthma, Bronchitis, Nervous, Chronic and Special Dis- eases men and women. iJuui Manhood der circ iblesdnpermaneentldp- cured-Gleet, Gonorrhoea, Varicocele and stricture cured 'without pain. No cutting. Syphilis and all Blood Diseases cured without mercury. a YUUh1 Suffering from the effects of Wan 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 Troubles, can here find safe and speedy cure. Charges reasonable, especially to the poor. CURES GUARANTEED, \`\ ;•+ There are manytroubled \ `\L„v : Middle-AgedMen with too frequentevncu- tions of the bladder. often accompanied by a slight smarting or burning ensare atwand weakening of the system in a manner the patient cannot account for.y men who die of this difficulty, ignorantof the cause. The doctor will guarantee a ger. fect cure in all such cases, and healthy restoration of the genitourinary organs. Con- sultation free. Those unable to call, can write full particulars of their case and have medicine sent by express, with full instructions for use. Mention this paper when 'writing.1 OIItce hours: Qdill Froin 99 a. n: to 8 p, m. Sundays, 9 to 11 a. m. DP a`1PI11i j EJ l>L ROo WOODWARD AVENUE. (Side Entrance No. 12 E. Elizabetk'St,) DETROIT. ?''SIICH. r - CANADIAN CATTLE. -- I His Face was a mass of i'robability that tin: Animal. Disease Bill Will be Withdrawn. A despatch from London says :-There is good reason to believe that the Gov- ernment bill closing the United King- dom lo foreign colonial cattle will not get through the House this session. Its opponents have not been making much noise, but they have been working head and effectively. The order book is crowded with amendments, the bulk of them palp=ably obstructive, and more are added almost. daily. The Government might overcome this kind of opposition, but public business has got into such a tangle that it is al- • ready evident that some business will have to tae dropped, and thf Minis- ters have practically decided that the Cattle bill must be ono of those semi. fired, as the time necessaryto force it through may be more usefully em- ployed on measures of greater import- ance and provoking comparatively mild hostility. the Minister of Agriculture is na- turallypretty angry over. the project- ed sacriice of his measure, and This feelings got the better of his discre- tion. On Thursday, when receiving a deputation of nfembers . which urged him to exempt Canada froxn the scope f. t as e ei not: on erned to Lath: ane ur , h lY khe any cameession, but harefd un- ma seemly wrangle with the deputation. The incident was almost unprecedent- ed. in English. Parliamentary annals. The Minister evidently suspects that he .has been made a fool of by his colleagues, and he is not far wrong. STRICTLY IN FASHION. Maxie -When are you going to be married -at high noon Estelle -Na, George: said he thought us to for it would be better be married at high ,8 p. m. . Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorrai Blotches. Out now his skin Is clear as a year old babe's. 800tt's Sarsaparilla his Salvation. Nothing blights existence like the knowledge that our appearance is -re- pellant to those with whom we come in contact, nor is there any relief like that of feelingthat the disfiguring causeshave been removed. Says r. William Alger : My face on one side was a mass of blotches, some of which were constantly full of matter. I run a bake shop doing my own work, but my face got so bad that customers drifted away. Then I hired a man and went to a doctor. He said my blood was in a horrible condition. I sold my business and moved to the city where Scott's Sarsaparilla was recommended to me. 'The first bottle did me much good, and after taking five bottles my skin is as clear as possible, and not a sign of my previous disfigurement. I say Scott's Sarsaparilla is the best blood medicine going and am speaking from experience. Pimples, blotches, boils, ulcers and all diseases arising from vital exhaustion and impure blood areradically cured by Scott's 's S s o p ar a arilla, a concentrated com- pound pound .of the finest medicines ever known. Your druggist has it at $x. But - get Scott's. The kind that cures. Sold by C. LUTZ, Exeter, Ont. Walker -"Er -when you run into a, man the rider is as likely to get the worst of it as 'the ppedestxuixx isn't he?” I. Wheeler -"You bet he • is t The last fellow. I ran o intoil -lost a front "Y tooth, while .I ,had four spokes broken ail and my sprocket tvrenchrzrl, nut of true 1'