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Exeter Times, 1896-5-14, Page 6
0 Make a pou,hnut- "Tahe a hole and put some dough around it, then fry in lard." This simple recipe has brought thousands to grief,' just because of the frying in lard, which as we all know hinders digestion. In all recipes where you have used lard, try the ;new vegetable shortening and you will. be ;surprised at the delightful and healthful results. It is without unpleasant odor, unpleasant flavor or 'unpleasant results. With CoTTALUNEin your kitchen, the young, the delicate and the dyspeptic can all enjoy the regular fancily bill of fare. 4ottoleue is sold in 3 and 5 Pound pails, by all grocers. Made only by Thee N. K. Fairbank Company, welling -ton and Ann Sta., 314.24N TREAL. r4 ST; PATIO N, _ ` c. ^ Pe mac 5 EG 19 LrIE 1 OieE.PILL sterni: SLATING INSURES GOOD DIGESTION. f lS. iEti >OD'o'S;\lE0•co,ura LEN £ut Qolo!ltpt Permailently notes: Vi eaiftless, P.ervousness,, %Mtn tied all the train of evils from early ert ce later excesses, the results ozroserteek, sic`-.. teas, worry, etc, Full strews , ere-m41nel* and tome sic t•toevery-organ' d siSteiairu3 theebody. Serve/te natural' raetttedne Thant. diaate impraareute et seen. Failure inrltessl"hYit, 2,009 refereaeas. cook, eepiaaatioa mad proofs mailed (sealed) flea. ERIE MEDICAL C . Buffalo. Nit es 0" y9 MENTHOL 0 86 L f1 I PLASTER di O haste.green,bad IlfentholPlasterhaa number ak ak oreaseeof.aonraigae and rheumatte pains. and am rosr7 ranch pleased with rho ofaata and plcTasantnesa of Sts apyliratloa.-R". E. CAaPBB- Tag„ ave 1JantlOxford,l sters in auroral y eist of mueeulat rkeurragem, and find in ever eses -J. it B.gaveal:noatDnstantandpermanentrefief. -J. B. Moa IS.D . Washington. D.C. sOf It Cures sciatica, Lumbago, .wen- • or any muscular Pains or Side, or se O Price Davie & Lawrezaee Co., Ltd, 0 it 25e. i Sole Proprietors, MONTREAL. 00i0fif ssee(es4 iimesiciseeennensersseseiseeenairereas NEW USE FOR MICA. The uses of mica are manifold. One of its latest developments is distinctly novel. An ingenious Australian has in- vented and introduced a mica cartridge for sporting and military guns. The filling inside- the cartridge is visible, and a further advantage is, that in- stead of the usual wad of felt a mica wad is used. This substance, being a non-conductor, unaffected by acids or fumes, ae.t as a lubrieant. When smoke- less powders, such as cordite or other nitro-glycerine compounds are em- pv'yed.er ml athe has a distinct advantage t fridge manrafacture. Be usedein Bar- g transparent a any chemical change in the explosive man be at ,Once detected. The peculiar I property r has of withstanding intense heat is here utilized the broeeh.and barrel being kept constantly' cool. The fouling of the rifle is also avoided, the wad actually cleaning the. barrel. Roman slaves were often educated teen, '1 he doctors/ musicians, actors and men of other calling were often slaves. THE NEWS INA NUTSHELL ME VERY LATEST FROM ALLTHI WORLD OVER., Interesting items About. Our Own. Country, Great Britain, the United States, and Alt Parts of the Globe, condensed end Assorted for Easy- Reading. CANADA. Hon. T, W. Anglin died at Toronto on Sunday afternoon. The British warebip Buzzard has ar- rived at Halifax from Bermuda,,. Joseph Reed, formerly of Hamilton, was fatally stabbed at Muncie; Ind, A .report comes from Montreal that Sir Donald Smith is to be made a peer. Constable Kern of the Northwest Mounted Pollee is believed to have been drowned. The Queen's Own Rifles have accept- ed the invitation to spend the .eueen'fl Birthday in Ifingston. Montreal detectives ;found a lot of c<unterfeiting materials in the room of Leon Sivard, who is under arreeft. Joe Martin, the horseman attacked at the 'Woodbine racetrack, Toronto, last week, died on Sunday at the hos- pital. Detective Rodgers of the Provincial Detective Department has been detail- ed to work on the Kitchen robbery in 'Wentworth County. Wbile Mr. T. H. Hayhurst was sing- ing a solo in an opera performance at the ennead Opera House in Hamilton a woman pointed au empty revolver at him and snapped the trigger. On Saturday the Board of Police Coen- mi,uonexs of Ottawa ,formally dismis- sed Chief of Police elle .'city. Mr. .DIc, V City has announced himself as a candidate for the mayoralty. ;1 Ir. Thomas MacFarlane, Chief Do- minion analest, will heave Ottawa shortly for Europe, to make a special study of the utilization of city pew age fox the purposes of fertilization. Harry Ewes was swmmitted for trial at Niagara Falls on tbe charge of causing the death of Minnie Minchen by an illegal operation. The evidence against the prisoner at present is very indirect. The Toronto City Connell bas•decided to petition the Commandeer -in -Chief of the Imperial Army for the restoration of the n#:uie of the Royal Canadian Regiment and the establishment of a regimental depot in that city. A number of pa engers jumped from a runaway.street ear going down- hill on Thorold road, near St. Catharines. frs, O'Neill of Me.rritton received a number of cuss on the head and face, and a young girl named Edwards had her leg broken in iwe places. GREAT BRITAIN. Field ailarehal Lord WolseTey is not in favour of international arbitration. Mrs. Dyer, the Reading infanticide, has made a confession admitting her guilt. The trial as- sociates 1 of Jameson meson and his as sociates in London has been adjourned till June. 11. The statistics of the recent smallpox epidemic at Gloucester appear to show that the neglect of vaccination was the cause of the mortality. The Kitson-Playfair case has been coinproxnised, Dx. Playfair paying Mrs. Kitson eight thousand pounds, Instead of the twelve thousand awarded. Numerous British peers and members of the House of Commons have form- ed a South African Association, to sup- port Mr. Chamberlain's African policy. The secession of the Eealyites from the anti-Parnellites has become defin- ite, so that there are now three discor- dant Irih parties in the House of Com- mons. The euestian of abolishing the Irish Lord -Lieutenancy and establishing a Royal residence in Ireland, is said to find favour with the English Govern- ment. The Home Department, after finding from a special medical examination that Oscar Wilde is in good health, re- fuse; to make the smallest remission in his sentence. Prince Christian of Schleswig HoI- stein, husteend of the Queen's daugh- ter Princess_ Helen, was knocked down by a. cab in London on Tuesday, but was not seriously injured. The appeal made by Dr. W. Playfair of London against the judgment of £18,000 damages granted to Airs. Kit- son for slander and defamation of char- acter has been withdrawn. The British house of Commons has decided to devote the remainder of the present session of Parliament exclusive- ly to the consideration of the business of the Government programme. The Daily Courier, the new paper started in London by Sir George New - nes, Iearns from trustwox y sources that the late Baron Hirsch let ane mil- lion pounds to the - Prince ot \Vales. The ship -building business, f the Clyde is better than it has b. for years. All trade differences hay been settled, and there is enough work ahead to keep the yards busy all the present yeay- In view of President Kruger's refus- al, the •British Government have with- drawn the invitation to him to visit London, and have summoned Sir Her- cules Robinson, Governor of Cape Col- ony, home for instructions. Mr. l3alfovr announced in the British House of Commons that negotiations were still proceeding on the Venezue- lan question, and it was confidently hoped that a satisfactory solution of the matter would be reached. In the imperial House of Commons Mr. Curzon announced that M. de Steal, Russian Ambassador at London, had as - Bused him that there was not the slight- est foundation for the rumoured treaty between Russia and China. According to a London correspondent of the St. Petersburg Novosti, Great Britain's aim in the Soudan campaign is to reoccupy the Equatorial province and when she has established herself on the Tapper Nile she will evacuate Ft. It is' reported that Lord Salisbury has decided to appoint Lord Llandaff, better known as Mr. Henry Matthews, Q -C., who was Home Secretary in the last Salisbury Cabinet, to succeed the Marquis of Dufferinx as British Ambas- sador at Paris. The London press are clamouring for he crushing of the Transvaal, and in. his spirit Mr. Chamberlain has sent message to President Kruger, with regard to the fifty-nine accused int- enders, to the effect that the British overument will treat tbe execution of their sentences of fine, imprisonment, and bauishnlent as an act of deliberate. hostility to Great Britain, which would be resented by active measures. UNITED STATES. Sir Charles Rivers -Wilson. ' who is in New York, speaks in a hopeful tone of the business of the Grand Trunk Rail- way, of which, he is President. THE A thousand students of the Ohio Wes- leyan University went on strike on Fri- day because of eertain rulings of the faculty disapproving of the college Glee Club. The McGraw Sunday barbering bill al- lowing barbers in Buffalo, Brooklyn,and New York to shave on Sunday until noon, has passed the New York As- sembly. Governor Hastings, of Harrisburg,Pa., has received a petition from Holmes, the condemned murderer, praying for a respite in which to prepare himself, to which the Governor replied, "Applica- tion refused." The largest expedition sent to Cuba since the revolution broke out is now being organized in New York. It will be composed of several ships. and its chief object is to provide the army of General Gomez with artillery. Commander Booth -Tucker was brought 'before a New York Police Magistrate charged with appearing on the streets the previous night in disguise. He said he wore the disguise so that he .might not be recognized, and was not aware it was against the law. He was caution- ed and discbarged. The burden of commercial advices fromeNew York is to the effect that bueiness in the United States, while bet- ter, is not as good as bad been expected -or, perhaps hoped for -at this ad- vanced period of the season.. Business is fairly active, and much accumulated stock of all kinds is being used up, but the demand is not such as to stimulate production sufficiently, and as a result some mills are idle and many factories are ion short time. Prices are lower than teat month, and as low, if not low- er, than ever before. A better feeling is reported in reference to building ma- terials, hardware, and agricultural im- plements. Pittsburg reports the larg- est aggregate trade for the week just ended that has occurred there this year. So far the record of labour troubles has been satisfactorily small. Pig iron is higher, copper easy, and wool weak, GENERAL, A despatch 'Luau Simla says that the drought in that district is causing great distress. The Sultan of Turkey is said to 'be suffering from sudden and acute devel- opment of a chronic disease. May day was either not observed in the European capitals, ar it passed off without any disturbances. The funeral of Baron de Hirsch took place at Paris, the remains being in- terred in the Montmartre Cemetery. Two hundred leading Armenians have been arrested at Moosh, and there are fears of a fresh outbreak at Sassoun. M, Meline has succeeded in forming a Moderate Republican Cabinet in France ,in which there is no Radical element. The retreat of Osman Digna from his camp at Horasab, as a result of the demoralization from sickness and fam- ine among the dervishes, is confirmed, Prof. Geffcken, of Munich, the well- known authority on international law, and the editor of the diary of Emperor Frederick, is dead. Li-HunPete ebuurg, bearingaa, les tter frived ionm the Emperor of China, to the Czar, and nit merous costly presents. The Matabele inipi, evbieh was defeat- ed on the back of the Umguza river, now occupies a position commanding the Salisbury road, for the purpose of intercepting the Rhodes column. Muzapex-Ed-Din, the second son of the late Shah, was enthroned at Tab- riz, the capital of the province over which he has been acting as Governor. Judge Gregorowski, who presided at the trial. of the Reformers at Pretoria, was hooted. and groaned at on bis re- turn to Bloemfontein, in the Orange Free State. The arrival of Earl Grey and his troopers at Buluwayo will be the sig- nal for a general advance of British forces, which will immediately take the offensive against the Matabeles. The Portuguese government has granted permission to England to transport arms and ammunition from Beira, on the Indian Ocean, through Portuguese territory, to British South Africa, There is not the slightest hope of the recovery of the Czarewitcb, who is in the very last stage of consumption, and arrangements have been made, in case of bis death, to cancel the coronation ceremonies. Capt. Lothaire, the Belgium officer who has been on trial for the alleged illegal hanging in the Congo free State, of Stokes, the wealthy English trader, said to have sold arms to the natives; has been acquitted. Young King Alexander of Servia is in the xnutrimonial market. His fa- ther wants him to marry an Ameri- can heirs ss, but 91e has bis eye on Princess Xenia, the fifteen -year-old daughter of the Prince of 'Montene- gro. A PATHETIC SCENE, The Dowager Empress of Russia has twice been parted by death from loved ones. As the Princess Dagmar she was engaged to the then Heir of the Russian throne. On his death -bed he gained a promise from: the brother who would become the tsarwitch to marry the princess. The promise was kept; she be- came Empress of Russia, and than a widow. The London Gentlewoman de- scribes the pathetic scene of the tsar's death -bed. In the last twenty-four hours the empress never left her husband's side except once, when she was persuaded to change her gown. The tsar, who had seemed unconscious for hours, im mediately missed her. Turning to one of the doctors; he mur- mured, :"Where is she? On being told, he muttered, "Of course, of course!" yet kept ,his eyes gazing piteously at the door until she returned, when a look of relief and peace came into his face. Soon the end came' With his head on. her breast., and her arms clasped around, his neck he breathed his. last. For three-quarters of an hour after his death they remamed in the same posi- tion, her ashen white face looking as dead as his own. It was only when the Countess K., to whom she es tenderly attached, man- aged to convince her she could do noth- ing more, that she was persuaded to leave the room. DUTY OF PARENTS, The best and most enduring princi-e pies of religion. can never be left to the Sabbath school to ixupart-they. must be the personal concern of par - eats to instil. The home has always been the real school, with daily object lessons in faith, virtue and reverence. When the home ceases to be an altar, with parents as priest and priestess; when prayer is banished from the house- hold and the Sabbath atmosphere' is no longer visible, the process of degener- acy may be retarded by the Sabbath school, but It can never wholly be checked. ;Children Cry for Pitcher's Castcria EXETER TIMES. ABOUT BRITAIN'S MEATS, THE COUNTRIES SHE DRAWS HER SUPPLIES FROM. It Is a Steadily bowing Trade-lnnada Third cls the hist or Supplying l'oiu►- tries-Egect on Native Cattle Tratie. So much has been written about the dependence of Great Britain upon oth- er countries for its supplies of cereals that the uninitiated might have imag- ined this the only direction in which danger of interruption by war might be looked for. ,While undoubtedly among the most important items of Bri- tish imports, however, grain and flour are far from being the only necessaries of life which it is found advisable to seek supplies of abroad. Great Britain imports vast supplies of salted meats, butter and its substitutes, cheese, fruits, eggs, potatoes, raw sugar, and, in fact, is a oustomor as is well known, for every grade and variety of food product, wherever grown. As is pointed out in a recent article in the Glasgow Herald, it is not alonft however, in that list of articles that in- terruption by war would exercise an unfavorable effect. It is probably a fact that no other nation in the w^arld, ex-, cent the United States • consumes such a large quantity of meat products of all kinds as does Great Britain. So far as can be 'gathered from the statistics, the cutting off of the meat supply of Great Britain would be second in ser- iousness only to the stoppage of the supplies of grain and flour, The state- ment is. ale, and apparently backed, that nearly, one-third of tbe beef and mutton consiuned in Great Britain is imported. The following table repre- sents the consumption per bead, in pounds, of domestic and imported beef and mutton during each year for thir- teen years past: Year 1885 1886 17 888 1890 1891 1892 1893 1895 Pounds Home Imported Total meat, neat, mistime. 61.9 15.5 77.4 63.5 14.2 77.7 65.31.2.9 78.2 64.0 12.2 76.2 62.9 11.5 74,4 60.6 13.8 74.4 60.5 19,3 79.8 63.4 22.9 8.5.3 66 8 66.5 2 .4 87.9 63.5 18.0 81,5 60.3 23.2 83.5 59.2 23.5 82.7 The consumption of British beef and mutton in 1895, it will be scan by this table, was more than 69 pounds per head of population, while the consump- tion of nnported meat was 23 1-2 pounds, or a. total of 82.7 pounds 'per capita. The increasing dependence of itseat met suppliesois alsote shown a4 the above table,by !the increase in the consumptioof imported, meat year by year, while the consumption of domes- tic meat in 1895 was the smallest of any year recorded since 1883. The varia- tion in the consumption per head is ex- plained partly by weather conditions and partly by wages, while the large increase per capita within the last ten years, was due not measly to the great-. er spending power of the people, but also to the enlargement of cheap sup- plies from abroad by means of the re- frigerating process. It is worth not- ing, in this connections that 13 per cent. of the entire British imports of meat come from the United States,and 10 per cent. from Australia and New Zealand. THE IMMENSE GROWTH in the frozen meat industry of late years is the most prominent feature in the present situation of the.13ritish pleat supply. The daily sa]es in the United Kingdom now exceed the whole year's imports in 1881. The total im- ports of frozen beef and mutton com- bined in 1895, were 145,384 tons, or 8.48 pounds per head. of population, against only 23,306 tons, ox- 1.45 pounds per head in 1885. The most ,notable feature in the frozen .meat trade has been the immense increase in the receipts from A.ustralia, and New Zealand. So far as can be judged, there is no limit to the possible extension of this trade. Of late years the possib- ility of importing live stook from the British colonies has been agitated, and it is pointed but in the article that South America and Australia inay, in time, supersede the United States .as a, supplier of meat to the United King- dom, while the possibly great future of South Africa as a meat producer is also hinted at. The United States is, as yet, the most important single ship- per of Give cattle and sheep to the United Kingdom, aa it is also of cbille ed meats, as the following tables will indicate: .LIVE CATTLE AND SHEEP IMPORTS, Number From From From F"om other United From Austra River coun- States. Canada. lasia. Plate, tries. Cattle - 1888....143,495 61,114 172,449 1889.,..294,424 81,583 176,210 1890..-.384,640 121,312 653 135,985 1891-..-314,902 108,289 ..,. 4,180 80,036 1892,.-.392,941 98,239 .,.. 3,5)1 7,556 1893....248.892 82,925 6,882 1 346 1894..,.381,241 82,326 36 9,545 1,605 1895... 273,000 102,000 1,650 39,000 180 Sheep - 1886 .., 1,203 ' 45,339 9093, 668511 1889.... 18,690 55,887 60 1890.... 3,901 -..-42,610 22,075 289,839 1891.... 10,537 31,633 20,911 281,423 1892,... 2,829 15,743 ... 14,658 45,910 1893... 3,589 22,365 36,728 1894....193,837 136,092 42 73,442 76,368. 1895....448.0 0 211,000 2,825 317,000 92,808 CHILLED AND FROZEN BEEF IMPORTS, hundredweights From From From From Queens- N.S.W. New River land. & Vic, Zeal'd Plate. Year. 1888 864 40,490 3678 1889 - 24,515 360 75,131 8605 1890.. ,. 20,799 627 88,495 8,933 1891 40,850 765 107,433 14,485 1892 54,000 2,568 62,065 8,309 1893 206,783 4,200 14,706 35,383 1894 285,806 15,090 2,617 5,279 1895 322,000 127,050 15,000 25,000 Rand redweights From From From United Can- Conti - States. ada. neat. 1888 784.429 93 7,195 1889 1,275,948 148 935 1890........... ..., 1,693,148 27,911 14,680 1891...... 1,747.578 287 9,113 1892 1.9514887 154 654 1893 1,489,949 84 56,947 1�••..•• 1,775,528 40 18,705 ....... 1,6554100 9.000 000 Owing to the restrictions which, for sanitary or other reasons, are now place ed on importations of live stock in the United.Xjngdom the trade in dead meat, whether frozen or chilled, has oppor- tunities of almost indefinite earansion, and,, saes the Glasgow Herald. `,so large is the trade already that It'London re- frigeratetd storage alccoinneodation..ex- iota ample- encekAa to hbdrl Best for -s» - Wash pay makes clothes sweet, clean, white, with the least labor. enaoseemeemeessimmusammenumiszae remark- able lastingi and cleansing properties make SURPRISE most economical and Best for. Every jay l YOUR "BAD BACK " RE -BACKED, HOW IT IS DONE: The pertinent question of the day Is -- Does your back ache? le it lamp? Thousands suffer from what they oom- nionly term " Bad back," When they walk or when they work, when they lie down ar rise up, wherever they may be or whatever they may do, the old aching, paining, 'dame book" worries and wearies and wears them out. Few people understand the real cause of their aches, and fewer yet know how easily they can be cured. just a word of explanation. The bank is the key -note of the kid- neys. When it aches that's a sign that the kidneys are not acting properly. When it is "lame," that indicates that the kidneys are clogged up. Then all the poisonous products that it is the kidneys epeoial duty to eliminate from the blood, are carried in the blood current to every organ and tissue of the body, bring. ing on many a kidney trouble which ii neglected means disease. Will yon heed the timely warning the back gives you ? Will you strike the enemy while you can strike hard ? Doan's Kidney Pills are the little enemies of kidney dia• orders. They strike with no uncertain hand, Old backs and young backs are being "re - backed" and freed from never -ceasing pain and many a lame and shattered one, stooped and contracted, is strengthened and invigor- ated by the use of Doan's Kidney Fills, I; 'or sale by - AYE'S 3 hair VIGOR Restores natural color to the hair, and also prevents it falling out, hire. Et. W. Fenwick, of Digby, N. S., says: ".A little more than two years ago my hair began pito turn gray and fall out. Af- ter the usone bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor myP hair was restored to its original color and ceased falling out. An occasional application has since kept the hair in good condition." --Mrs, H. F. FENWlcli, Digby, N. S. Growth of Hair. "Eight years ago, 1 had the vario- loid, and lost my hair, which previ- ously was quite abundant. 1 tried a variety of preparations, but with- out beneficial result, till I began to fear I should be permanently bald. About six months ago, my husband brought home a bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor, and I began at once to use it. In a short time, new hair began to appear, and there is now every prospect of as thick a growth of hair as before my illness." - Mrs. A. WEBER, Polymnia St., New Orleans, La. AYER'S HAIR VIGOR PxurrARED BY DR. J. C: -AVER & CO., LOWELL, MASS., U .S. A. slimes Pills etre Sick Headache. ®m. 1,000,000 SHEEP, while the combined storage capacity of Liverpool, Manchester and Cardiff should be equal to nearly another mil- lion. This is an important matter should we be unfortunate enough to go to war with a maritime power." There are now engaged in the Lon- don and New Zealand meat -carrying. trade 4 sailing vessels and 28 steamers fitted .with refrigerating chambers, whose carrying capacity is about 1,500,- 000 carcasses per voyage. In the com- bined Australian and New Zealand trade there are 11, and in the exclusive- ly: Australian trade there are 41 steam- ers, so fitted with an aggregate carry- ing capacity' of over 1,50(1,000 carcasses per voyage, and in the River Plate there are 24 steamers engaged, with a carrying capacity of over 730,000 car- casses per 'voyage. This is a total of 108 vessels now engaged specially in car- rying. frozen meat to Great Britain from Australasia and South America, and it is estimated that their maxi- mum importing capacity is nearly 9,- 000,000 care saes per annum. This is al- together irrespective of the transetlan tic liners,which regularly carry Ameri- can beef in a chilled :(not frozen) condi- tion. The increase of this trade in Meat h'as had a serious effect upon the do- mestic cattle -raising industry. The num- ber of domast'ic cattle in 1895 was 10,- 570353:3111w%, while the number of sheep and lambs in 1995 was only 29,774.853, the smallest since the year 1889. 20 , WEAK MEN CUR -EDI 'STARTLING FACTS FOR DISEASED VIC"CtMo SarOURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY i R r YOU? IVerrone and doFpondent; vv.ak or dob113tgted; tvmd 131 bition-lifeless• memor`y,p�0000r• easil fatigued• enditab3e eyes sunken, red and taw. Press; pimples on fgee; dreams t /losses; restless; haggard looking; weak beck; bone Paine; heir loose; ulcers; sore hie nes varieocele• depositxin urine and drams at stool; distrustful; want of confidence; Mauls eners' and strength -- WE CAN OUfi+ YOU RESTORE© TO MANNOOP BY DRS. K.& K. JOHN A. I(ANLUN, JOHN A. MARLIN. CRAB. POWERS, CHAS. POWERS. IS$D'oius TBEAThn:NT. AMES Ta ATAISNr. narOas TagAThnas' . .Ames TStiA'LiJGNT,, NO NAMES OR TESTIMONIALS USED WITADDT WRITTEN CONSENT. VARICOCELE, EMISSIONS An IMPOTENCY �na CURED, John A. Harlin says: --"I was ono of the countless Tia time of early ignorance commeaced at 15 years of age. I tried never). medical firms and spent$t100 without avail. I gate up in despair. Tho drains on my system were weweakeningmy intellect as well as mat sexual andwereytelcai life. My brother advised me as a last resort to commit Dre,Eennedy&Ker n. I commenced their Now Method Treatment and in a flew weeks was a new' man with new life and ambition. This was four years ago, and now 1 am married and happy. I recommend these reliable spenia iota to all say efdicted fellowmen." CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY.-CONFIDENTAL. . "The vices of early boyhood laid the foundation of rey ruin. Liner on a "gay life" end expoenre to blood di- Beatles completed tho wreck, I bad all the symptoms of Nervous Debility-acutkoupyes emissions, drain in urine, nervonaness, weak back, eta. Syphilis centred my hair to fall out, bone pains, vinare in mouth and on tongue, blotches on body, oto, 1 thank God 1 tried Drs, pennedy & iceman Thi,/ restored me to health, vigor and happiness," CHAS. POWERS. Syphilis, Emissions Varicocele, Cured. IV" We treat and cure T%arrenceZe, Emissions, Nervous .Debility, Seminal Weakness, Gleet, Stricture, Sj 5hilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self Awe, Kidney and Bladder Diseases. a 17 YEARS IN DETROIT. 200,000 CURED. NO RISK. READER! Aro yon a victim? Ii:avo yon lost ho e? Aro you contr�mr latfn , ar- riage? Ilan your Blood been licorice}? Bavo3 on ens weaaa�aaxxae C7k:: New Method Treatment will cure yon. W1i81 it has donA for others it will do for on. CONSULTATION FREE. No matter who bee treated son, write for an honest opinion fuse of Charge, Charges reasonable. BOOKS FREE -"The Golden Monitor" (illustrated), on Diseases of Men. Inclose postage, 2 cents, Sealed, Eltir-N0 NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRI- VATE. No medicine a-nt C. O. D. No names on boxes or envei,- opes. Every-thi;ng cotifidontlal, Question list and cost of Treat- merit, PRUE. DRS. KENNEDY 85 KUBGA1, NDETRo T,n�IGH.. DR. SPINNEY $i CO. The Old Reliable Specialists. 83 Year® Experience in the treatmeni of the Throat and Lung Troubles, Catarrh, .Asthma, Bronchitis, Nervous, Chronic and Special Dis- eases of men and women. Lost Manhood restored -Kidney and Blad- der troubles permanently cured -Gleet, Gonorrhoea, Varieoceleand stricture cured without pain. No cutting-. Syphilis and all Blood Diseases cared without mercury. Young Men Suffering fravn the e$+ecta 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. Thtrearear troubled Diddle -Aged Men with tno frequent evaca- 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 anany men who die of this difficulty, ignorantof the cause, The doctor will guarantee aper- fect cure in all such cases, and healthy restoration of the Benito -urinary organs. Con- sultation free. Those unable to call, can write full partici.':,: a of their case and have medicine sent by express, with full instructions for use. Mention this paper when writing. Office hours: From 9 a, m to 8 p. m. Sundays, 9 to 11 a. m. DR.SPINNEY & CI 220 WOODWARD AVENUE. SPINNEY , (Side Kntranee No. 12 E. Elizabeth St) DETRO r•'eF.. Ml C Ii . SLAVES AND SLAVERY. Some Statements About Serfdom -Suppress lug the Slave Traffic. During the sixty years ending with 1847 1,462,000 slaves were transported from Africa to the Americas. Chinese parents, unable or unwilling to provide for their children, sell them to whomsoever will buy. The number of slaves emancipated in the United States by Lincoln's procla- mation in 1863 was 3,980,000. Among the Jews all slaves, except such as desired to remain in servitude, went free at the jubilee year. A doctor brought in the slave mar- kets of Rome from $200 to 4600, accord- ing to his reputation for skill. It is estimated that not less than 180,- 000,000 Ar Clean slaves have perished to glut the avarice of slave traders. A Hebrew slave who desired to remain such had his ear pierced with an awl and was than a slave fo ev In 1840 all serfs in the Austro-Hun- garian district were liberated,' their owners being paid in Government scrip, in the Roman slave markets slaves were always sold naked, and those that were not warranted sound wore a cap. In 1329 A, D. the Christian captives taken by the Turks were organized into the celebrated Corps of Janissaries. In 1872 Sir Bartle Frere made his journey to Zanzibar in order to suppress the slave traffic in that part of Africa. Over twenty 'centuries before the Christian era slavery existed as an in- stitution in Arabia, ,Mesopotamia and Egypt. in. 1879 an English convention with Egypt was made to suppress the slave trade and mitigate the horrors of. slav- ery. After a Roman viot ai'y slaves were often sold on or neer the battlefield, in great numbers, for a few cents each. Racked with Rheumatism Unable to Walk, owing to excruciat- ing pain. After ten years' terrible torture, Cured by Seett'e Sarsaparilla. A. H. Christiansen, writing from the Clifton House, "Niagara Falls, says; "I owe you more than I can ever pay. , Per. ten years I suffered the tortures of the damned with rheumatism. Father had it before me, and I believe it is an here- ditary disease. My knee joints would get inflamed and• if I was out iii. any "weather" I was sure to be laid up, which to a travelling mate is a calamity. In a score of Canadian towns local doctors treated me, some giving relief, others none. I read that Sarsaparilla was a rheumatic cure, and I asked a druggist for "a bottle of the best Sarsaparilla on the market." He gave me Scott's, re- marking that it was an improvement on all others, and that he could honestly recommend it.. I have taken four bottles, and am as free from pain as a man can hope to be. I was out in a rainstorm two days ago and never felt a twine. As I said before to Scott's Sarsaparilla I owe more than I can ever repay," ay,' The best remedy for rheumatism, sciatica, and neuralgic pains -all arising. •from theresence of poison in the blood -is Scotts Sarsaparilla, a modern con- centrated medicine, prompt in its cura- tive effects. poses from one half to one teaspeoiiful. At 11 per bottle of your druggist, Sold by C. LUTZ, It eeter, Ont. Berlin schoolgirls seems to be grow- ing• very emancipated. They now have'• their.: salamanders," or drinking bouts just like the university students, but content themselves with coffee instead of beer..