HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1897-7-1, Page 2LEGAL.
1 H.DIOK.SON,Barrister, Soli-
At attar at Supreme Court, Notary
publtit, Bea,..yirecer: Commissioner, dre
Lees.
Iffonev to I. 11
Omcetn e.tion (Block. Exeter, .
R l3. GOl,l.tlN ,
arc ster, Solicitor, Couv yanctlr, Etc.
15][55TEit, - ONT.
QFFi.()'Ii Over O'Neirs Bank.
rLLIOT & ELLIOT,
-Barristers, Solicitors, 'Rotaries Pablic,
C'otiveyanoers ti+ac, deo.
fa -Money to Loan at Lowest Rates of
Interest.
DFFIOE, - MAIN - STBE'ET, WATER
Hensen every Thursday.
E. v. Inane,. FRN.nlrtuce eine r.
MEDICAL
R T. wICXI1"rr M. B. TORONTO JINX
V1',RSITY, M D. C. M. Torc ntu Culver
s ty office --Crediton, Ont..
1 S.ROLLINSeoAMOS..
Sopnrate'Ol$ces. Rosidenoesame asformer.
la.ndrew se Offices: Spackman',v building:
ma st; Dr ltottine' same 04 formerly, north
oor; Dr. Amos" same building, south door.
J. A,. ROLLINS. M. D.. T. A. .MOS, M.
Exeter. Oat
W.BEOWNTNG M. D., Del. D
L1 • P, Sd Graduate Victoria 'Univers ty
I nce and residence, Dominion Lebo a
tory ,Exeter,
HYNDMAN, ooroner for tie
^
!1-• County of Huron. Onioe, opp.,site
Caning Bros, etoro.Exeter.
AUCTIONEERS.
1-41, BOSSENBERRY, General Li-
• cowed Auctioneer Sales csnduated
in sfparts. Satistaotionguarantesd• Obargee
moderate. Bonsai) P 0, Outs
11.NRY EILB1 R Lioenee8 Ante
tioneer tor the Counties of Huron
and Middlesex • £area conducted at mod-
erate rates. 011ce, at Poat-otfoe Cred.
Ion Ont.
V11.11CRINARY.
Tennent & Tennen
l°.XL'TLrlt.
ONT.
CrtrtInetstofthe Ontario trenertaa,ry Oa
r t.
Inca : One door South 0f Town Halt.
t
_L
• "' WATERLOO MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCBOO .
Established Ile 1403.
IIEAD OFFICE - WATERLOO, ONT
('etnplrny b tis beet! over Twen
y
eLrh
years in sueessf I oli1r ;Hun in4astern
0htarte, and continues to insurearat nst losss or
damage byFire, Solidifies, .tferenaneiso
Msni.factories and all other deseripttuas of
tiberaes property. Inteudina insurer;( bete
beoptioh of Insurieson tee Premium ehnoor
Can: Se Hem.
During on
past..ten
years this s co
mpan
y
has as
pe1 57,r .; ran.. coveriu_ uPeIt tothe
a7t�pt340,872.03a;anl 1a1 in alone
<r%7! eSz.e .
Assets, !St 11,100.00, consisting of cash
r. I:auk Goreruntcnt Depositand the unasses-
sd premium Dotes on han,b and in loree
.11; •itAU.nitN 11.U.. ih•esidea tt a M. TA Tule
eczema- ; 1. 3). ilt:r+art:s, lneieector . C11,Li
111, .Agri t for Exeter and vicinity
NEM/ •-
BEANS
THE NEWS IN R NUT8LL1
THE VERY LATEST FROM ALL THE
WORLD OVER.
interesting home About Our Own Country,
Oreat Britain, the United states, and
Mt Parts of the Globe, Condensed and
Assorted for Easy Reading.
NI taVE
benne
err.core rsthatrra tho worst
ca..... of
:serums Dobiiity Lost vigor and
Failing Manhood: rester(•, the
weakness of body or mind caused
by over -work, or Ihe errors or ex-
cwse.3 of youth. This Ramcdy ab.
olutely cures the must obstinate cases alien all other
rnaAaxz.•ere have failed even to relieve.-ldbydrug�.
tilts at $1 per paekage, or ria 1 tis or tent U mail or
vr,.!rt of price by srtdr�-'• TEIt JA VV. MEPI(':'
Fold at Brownine's 1)rnk Store Exeter
1CURES
COUGHS, COLDS,
HOARSENESS, ASTHMA,
BRONCHITt IS, AND ALL
DISEASES OF THE
THROAT AND LUNGS.
PRICE 25c. OR 5 FOR $I.00
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS
Dg WOOD'S
SHAAB-MAKER'S
•d✓4. '.16 .0MP r
EV£r Ftlt3 i0 wr ghtitil flOS•
THE EXETER TIl1'fES
Is published every Thursday morning at
Times Steam Printing house
Ma'n street. nearly opposite FItton's jewelry
store, Exeter, Ont., by
JOHN WHITE A: SONS, Proprietore.
RATES OF AAVERTISINO :
First insertion, per line 10 cents.
Each subsequent insertion, per line3 cents.
To insure insertion, advertisements should
oe sent in not later than Wedne: Ras morning.
CANADA.
The new Grand Trunk car works at
London were put in operation on Thurs-
day.
Waters of Hamilton while in-
toxicated fell downstairs and broke his
neck.
Premier Marchand has been offered
the presidency of the Royal Society of
Canada.
Mr. Robert Neaman, a London dairy-
man, was struck and killed while driv-
ing across the Grand Trunk track.
It is reported at Winnipeg that the
present Indian troubles near Duck Lake
have been greatly exaggerated.
A farmer named David Martens was
struck by lightning and killed during a
heavy rainstorm at Winkler, Manitoba.
For the month of May, the increase
in 1'. P. R,. earnings was larger thau
the gain shown by any road in the
United States.
Weavers at the Royal Carpet Com-
pany's work's, Guelph. are on strike
against a reduction of 2 cents a yard
on their work.
Mx. Roland Gideon Israel Barnett,
well known in Toronto in connection
with the Central Bank innash a few
years ago, claims to be a brother of
late n Barnette
the a e 33ar ey Ba
The rejection of the bill in the House
to incorporate pilots has caused a
strike he that body, and ocean vessels
to and from Montreal are having great
difficulty in getting through.
1M 1r. W. F. Easton, of Chatham has
issued a writ against Sylvester Bros.,
of Toronto, for $10,000 damages for al-
leged misrepresentation in connection
withthe sale of the Eurydice.
The trans-Atlantic passenger business
between Montreal and Liverpool pro-
mises this season to be the most pros-
perous in the history of the steamship
companies, although the prospects for
the freight hwaness are not so good.
Continuous rains and a cloudburst
in the Rocky Mountains have caused
serious floods at Calgary, twelve
houses and stables being carried away
and 50 houses partly submerged. Rail-
way communication is Ileo suspended.
GREAT BRITAIN.
T.bee Prince of Wales' horse Persim-
mon won the gold cup at Ascot.
The reply of the Transvaal Govern-
ment to Mr. Chamberlain's despat •hes
an the Alien Immigration Act and oth-
er measures is conciliatory in tone.
The Right Hon. Hugh Holmes, of the
Queen's; Bench, Ireland, has been ap-
pointed Lord Justice of Appeal to suc-
ceed the late Right Hon. Chas Robert
Barry.
y
Mr. Chamberlain has arranged for au
informal conference with the Colonial
Premiere now in London to discuss the
relations of the British colonies on the
navy question,
The north of England. and Scotland
have been swept by
heavy gales.
A
terrible stem hits wept over Liver-
pool, and Nelson's flagship, the Foud-
royant, which is now touring the coast
as ashow ship, has been driven asnore
and is expected to be lost.
All the British officers in the Egyp-
tian army now on leave in Engine'
have received orders to be at their lents
between
themiddle and end of the
present month. The Kltalifa is prepar-
ing to offer desperate resistanr•e to the
Anglo-Egyptian expedition.
Our JOB PRINTING DEPAR'r]VIENTis one
of the largest and best equipped in the County
of Huron,All work emernsted to u; will re-
ceive our prompt attention.
Decisions tiegardiug. Nevvepapers,
1—Any person who takes a paper regularly
from the post office, whether directed in his
name or another's, or whether ho has sob -
scribed or not, is responsible for payment.
2-1f apemen orders his paper discontinued
lie must pay 01 arrears or the publisher may
continue to send it until the payment is made,
and then collect the whole amount, whether
the paper is t al: en irons the office or not.
3—In suits for subscriptions, the Putt may be
stitubed Intl the place where the paper ispul:-
3sttndetas ofotttlhi tl eaqubscriber may reside
9' -The courts have decided that refusing to
tak9,newspapers or periodio>als frgm the post
cines, or removing and leaving theta uncalled
for, is prima facie evidences of intentional
fraud,
THE EATER TIMES
GENERAL.
On Friday Kaiser William unveiled
a statue to the memory of Wiliiamthe
First of cologne.
A despatch from Bombay says the
i
monsoon has fully v11y burst, and it is min-
ing
ing heavily and continuously.
The Japanese Government has form-
ally protested against the pending
United States Taxa hill.
It is state(. that the Porte has de-
cided to abandon the policy of delay,
and to accept the advice of the powers.
The Rev. Father Kneipp, of Munich,
known throughout the world for his
water cure, died on Thursday morning.
France has resumed diplomatie glu-
ttons with Venezuela, ,liar ing obtained
a settlement of the pending indemnity
claim.
Almost the eutixe Province of As-
sam bas been devastated by. the re-
cent earthquake, and the ruin is ap-
palling.
A cyclone swept over the villages of
Benzona. and Colombes, near Paris, on
Friday, doing great damage to pro-
perty.
German naval experts are testing the
practical use of airs!hdps. which may be
put an board of vessels for use during
naval engageanentg.
President Faure has consented to
arbitrate the frontier dispute between
the Central American Republics of
Costa. Rica and Colombia.
The Paris police say that during the
a
number o1: inast mth fernal macchinesehavetovered in differ-
ent parts of the city.
,It is announced that mare than six
thousand lives were lost in the cartel-
quake which recently vis-
ited the Province
f
Assam
The annual session of
the
World's
Lodge of Knights 'Templar, in alneet-
ing at Berne, Switzerland, hasselected
Toronto for the meeting next year.
In a fight between Italian and French
workmen at Barc•arin, near St. Louis
du Rhone on Wednesday, two French-
men were killed. The district is In-
tensely excited.
It as stated in Constantinople that
the Porte has abandoned the idea of
retaining Thessaly, and it is under-
stood that the changes in the frontier
line will be slight,
The sensational stores as to the
Q.u:•en being almost totally blind are
contradicted in London. Her sight is
no more impaired than Wright be ex-
pected in a woman of her advanced
years.
In anticipation of the passage of the
pending tariff bill by the United States
Congress the Legislative Council of
Jamaica bas decided to increase the du-
ties on a number of articles imported
from the States.
The Czar is very melancholy because
his wife gave birth to a daughter in-
stead of the longed -for son and heir.
He now fears that the succession will
pass to the eldest son of the Grand
Duke Via (limb- Alexandroviteh.
The manuscript of Scott's "Lady of
the Lake," and other poetical works,
brought $8.450 at a sale in (London
on 'r\ ednesday. The manuscript of "Old
Mortality" and other prose works
brought $3,000, and a collection of
Robert Burns' manuscripts $1,800.
While Mrs. Ormiston Chant, the Lon-
don social reformer, was in Turkey
with the Red Cross Society she was de-
tained on the Turkish lines, and to
assuage the pangs of hunger she smok-
ed a cigarette. Now she sympathizes
with the fondness for tobacco, thougb
she does not believe in women smok-
ing.
f ii
E
BRITISHGOLDEN AGE.
Ifietoria's Beige -Sawn log Tribute From a
New• S'ork'Newspaper.
In a coluutn editorial, headed "The
British Golden Age." the New York
Tribune
of Sundayi <y .
3
s .
"iiis longest. reign in
British his -
'tory is also the most glorious. Others
have been snore sensational. Not one
hues seen sip great progress made in the
expansion of the. Empire, in political
development, in t Le indn:tt rial, res ial,
r .spirit a.l advancement
<• ata iu
it true to n
1
of the people. The statement iv a
sitt:Ti;tg one, butt it is tturra.nteil by
the rer•urd. Space k given elsewhere in
to -day's 'i'rihwne to reviews of roue of
the salient features of British history
for the past siaty year's, espe.:inlly to
the territorial growth, political evoiu-
tion rind the march of science. These
are necessarily brief, and are sugges-
tive rather than exhaustive. But, per-
usal of theme ie sufficpent to bring
conviction tllctt the Victorian reign has
been pre-entitnently the golden age of
British history. An Empire, on whi-h
literally the sum never sets, and which
cont :tine ont'-fifth of the population and
one-fifth of the, land area of the
world, is a rajestli• fact, unprecedent-
UNITED STATES. ed and u¢rapprouehahle. 'I'he progress
A New York bootblack is dying from of a great people, calm and conserve -
blood poisoning the result of a trios- t.ive. Stool a scarcely
� tunstitutional
quite bite. menart'hy to advanced repuhlicenisur
i le. • than two generations without
Railway Union is Rea
u1 u n t
The American Ra y d,
t •
reyuIutirsn or any speller upheaval,
and Debs' Social Demoeraey of. Amer- but. (Lith the smoothness a•ndeont.lnu-
ice is to take its place.ity of the procession of the equdpoxes,
' The tailors' strike in New York is i in hroauan annals. A nation, warlike
being settled, the contractors "giving' on rr•,•aiolla and aggressive atoll times,
in." There were 3.500 men on strike. the world's past master in manufac-
40000000000.
JUBILEE DAT IN LONDON.
THE WORLD,..WAS NEVER SEEN THE
LIKE QE THIS PARADE.
A Maguilleent Pageant or the Represents. -
lives or tite 1\'ortd.WIde Empire—The
Queen Cheered. by Milhous of tier t ub-
Jr'ets as She Bode Through the Streets of
tendon— Riches of All the Earth Oh -
played.
IThe procession av!as practically in
three sections fax as St. Paul's,
tlhough the tev last on route to the
cathedral re consolidated as they
alloyed into Pia'eadilly. tile first to take
wpposition was the colonial procession
tamed on tents. enlban'klnelnt and moved
vin the Mail thence past the Palace.
Where Her Majesty viewed it from a
window, over the route to St. Paul's.
The march began at 8.45 .and the great
cortege proved a weleomae relief to the
waiting tmultitudK. 1'roui: the colo
nies
were living In turtle presenting in tan-
gible bhape the growth of Empire, the
trading extent of the Queen'dsWu•y.
The prweasiou, tenor spots police, was
headed iay au ethane* party of the
Itsnal Horse. (Guards, Teen followed
the baud of the same corps piayiny the
inspiring "Washington Post Mame."
N'e.xt carne. Lord L and:nick Roberts,
commanding the colonial troops, with
Col. Iver alerbert, of the Grenadier
Gita rds ; the second in command; then
the Canadian Iius-ars and the Dragoons
of 'the Nertimeet lulit
e.
ist
advance of the New South Wales
Maunt,eel Rifles were the New South
Wales Lancers.
'this: MOUNTED POLIC.E.
C'luse upon the 'band came a portion
of the pecturesque Nor(hu est Mounted
Police as escort to the first colonial
Premier to win a great round of cheers
from nett and many a welcome waved
by women, the Hon. Wilfred Laurier.
The Northwest Polite made astriking
appearance ; quite as brave and service-
able looking as the. New Souter \Vales
Illounted Rifles with their grey seine
sombreros and black ('arks-p1uules, nho
sw•ceeded them, escorting the Premier
of New South Wales, the Hon. S. II.
Reid.
The Victorian muustteit troops follow-
ed, atuart, weather-beaten fellows, in
unattractive brownish uniforms, suc-
ceeded by the New Zealand mounted
contingent, a. fine luo►,ting suunl,urned
lot, draws' frttttn aliisoat every town of
any iutportunt•e in tbe colony, display-
ing ulriiforfiiu intended for the t•onfliet
rather that( the purade ground.
Then came New Zealand's Prem-
ier, the lion. Diehard J. Seddon. The
Quecsu+lasitt Mounted Infantry carne
next in their flclharke:I tunies and sear -
let fatrbitgs and then the Premier of
Queensland, ndr IL al. nelson, K.(',AI,G.
CAPE OF (IO)OD HOPE Itill.F.S.
President McKinley has prohibited the 1
landing of the new French cable at
Cape Cod or any part of the United
States.
The Canadian Pacific Railway has
made a contract to carry GO tons of
butter from New York to Sydney,
Australia.
The British and American Mortgage
Company, of London, Eng., has bees
granted authority to do business in
Missouri.
ExrQueen Liliuotkalani filed a pro-
test in the office of the Secretary of
State at Washington against the an-
nexation treaty.
The National Dairy Union, of Fort
Atkinson, Wis., has de idesl that but-
terine must be legislated out of the
United States.
Chaplain Henry Masterman,. of the
Grand Army Post, Lincoln, Neb., was
present as a lance -corporal at the
Queen's wedding.
W. B. Bradbury, a San Francisco mil-
lionaire was recently sentenced to
twenty-four hours' imprisonment for
expectorating in a street. oar.
President MoKinley is preparing a
new arbitration treaty with Great
Britain, and a draft will very short-
ly be submitted to the English Gov-
ernment.
The Universal Postal Congress the
fifth convention of the kind in the
world, enncied in Washington. The
next congress will be held in Rome,
in February, 1903.
According to the reports of the New
Yolk commercial agencies, there is a
steady advance in trade all around,
throughout the United States; employ-
ment is increasing, and the ontlodk is
more satisfactory than it has been for
some time past. Some large purchases
of iron have had a good a feet in
steadying prices. Hoot and shoe fact-
ories are receiving, large orders, and
prices cannot now be cut. Bides are
very firm. Woolens are active. Wheat
its practically unchanged on the week.
The commercial failures in the United
States for the week just ended amount-
ed to 198, as compared with: 278 in the
corresponding 'week of la:at year. ,
taring- and sten:keeping, in commerce
and finance, yet above these material
things attaining the foremast rank in
orient's and literature and a credit-
able standing in the fine arts and all
sa•ial culture, is a combination of the
useful and t he beautiful approximating
to the ltigbest known attainments of
human genius. There is, indeed, not
one benef tient sphere of human action
in which its record is not nobly made.
It has been an era worthy of the
great Anglo-Saxon rare at its hest
estate, and worthy of commanding
prominence in the now closing cycle,
which succeeding.,fienerations the world
over, far on in the summer that we
shall not see, wilt mark in glowing
ati ars as the hest in all these sixty
centuries of recorded time."
For the moment A'ust.ralia gine way,
Africa was allowed a elnincea and the
Cape of Good IIope Mounted Rifles,
well set up mea, wear'•ng that scarlet,
wi'iit white helmetti, rude by to herald
the corning
ufthe <ape P
remier.
the
tin. SirJ.Gordon�tip i;s KR.\I.a
•
hardly Stud he Lean notived• and to the
Ina,iorty known, when atteniicn was
claimed for the yellowish brown .har-
kee lie with bright :varlet. fr..,,i the
bl:tzing Pug6rgagree cm the .pti'red helmet~
to the double stripers dawn the seams
of t:i:htly-fitting,t'urduroy t rousers wit h
large ohrintois leather patches; where the
,knee gripped the "addle., which pro-
elaianert the Snutb Atee retie u mount ed
otnies, the Rhodesian Horse, the colonial
infantry broken by three bands, typical
of the United Kingdom, those of St.
Georges, the London Scottish, and the
London Irish Rifle volunteer corps. The
oolanini contingents were a varied lot
from 1► Lot of varied places, local militia
Of Hoeg Kong, Singapore, Ceylon,
Mnutritius, Jamaica, St. Lucia, Ber-
muda, and the R,ayal ;Malta Artillery
Corps; Hong Kong, Singapore, Ceylon,
Mauritius, Jamaica and Royal Malta
submarine mining companies of the
Royal Engineers; the West India fort-
ress Company of Royal Engineers; tbe
West Indibn Infantry regiment; the
Hong Kong regiment, and the Royal
Malta regiment of militia.
THE CANADA INFANTRY.
Then there passed the splendid con-
tingent from Canadian •Infantry,.175
strong, uniformed somewhat like the
regular service infantry, with Colonel
Alymer leading. WW1% applause was
bestowed on the fine marching, of these
men, who in every way kept the Do -
oilmen to the front.
Following came, the real oddities in
the eyes of Londoners, of whish the
Zaptiehs from Cyprus divided the hon-
ors with the Dyaks of Borneo. Both
are military police. The Zaptiehs were
mounted on island Ponies and naturally
wore the Turkish fez, with a, jacket
somewhat suggestive of Constantinople
and the minarets of Statubaul. The
Borneo Dyaks, yellow colored smallish
chases, were eagerly expected by the
crowd, owing to their head-huntingpro-
clivit;e't, of which, however, no trace
could be noticed in their dress. These
and others coming after emphasized
and repeated the fast haw widely
scattered are the races the Queen
rules.
The Trinidad Field Artillery, tbe
Sierra Leone militia, with their strange
small blue turbans and depending tas-
sels and knickerbockers, the British
Guiana Police, with their white curtain-
ed ceps, the Httu;ses in the familiar
Zouave txedunies of long ago, and the
Royal Niger Haus,as,•—men Nebo fought
at Marin and Bida—in; uniforms of
kharktll cloth, trousers expiostng the
leg, and shaved heads, were all blacks.
Tim Haussas, the blackest of the
blacks, wearing the burnished livery of
the sun, were enthusiastically greeted..
The procession ended as it begun appro-
priately by defenders from tile Domin-
ion—tbe balance of th'e Northwest
Mounted Police, a body of men ,London
Itas taken entirely to heart. A. they
slowly disappeared under the summer
trees, the applause died away and
people , enthusiastically congratulat-
ed each other on what "our colontea
can do."
THE MILITARY PROCESSION,
The secaud procession passed the Pal-
ar:e fifty minutes after the colonials had
elienbed Constitution 11111. Formed in
Eaton square and Sluan street, it more
than eloquently filled up the pia -
Lure of Rtitaiin's war strength; mere
than magnificently completed the carni-
val
arnival of gorgeous costume and color.
Scarlet and blue and gold, wb'rto and
Yellow, shining cuirasses and polished
helmets, plumes atnd tassels, furs, and
gold and silver spangled cloths; bullion
embroideries and acc'out.rements, splen-
did trappings and riots splendid t
ra
-
pinge foe men, sashes and mars, crces.$
and anedals—medals for the Crimea.,
Indian. Stringipatam, the Nile, At•h,nti, tin the beat of the furnace over the hod -
Afghanistan. Chitral, South Africa, 1 les o` tdtree men,
(tans( mod dozens of others and here The injured nwn. are.:—Engineer
and thane the f,nest of them all, the Thomas E,trrith, All:,ert Trader, an as -
finest and most highly prized the world sistaett fireman. and James Martin, a
ca:n JJtt the Victoria cross; death !i1er,n. The. , is tr
wet fatally
h
uI -
dealing weapon', swords and rvolvers, ed. The (Ilene were firing the furnace
carbines and cutlasses,. batteries of ar- when the txpioncsn occurred. Martin
tillery, anon of splendid physique, and 'was beast lone, peering into the bed of
,horses with rare action fully entered coals which. ae.e. was 1evellieng in. the
in the spirit and meaning of it all, the furnace. Trader was tttanding beside
fondly carried colors for whish these him, ehovellieg. Without an instant'e
sten would die„ and over al: the rich warming he, tube, under a pressure of
strains f that music they
hest loved toseveral hundred rounds,
burst, and the
al into
,ir—the sight was e;to explosion threw the t>urnin coels ha tght one stir the p g
blood ns only soldiers have stirred it the faces of the three then• with ter -
since the dwwn of time. rible force. Tie noise of t'htr explosion
CTIF.EW3 FOR HER MAJESTY. could be heard througb the whole
4luildiiig. t
spe,nll igi n1111uN1uNlunn1111isess stle
els ewe,
y oe lbws
Ps
•
_
ri6un,n„uw,i111un11111l „•o,p
AVetxetablePreparationforAs-
similating theFood andReguta-
ting the Stomachs andBowelss of
Promote s Diges tion,Cheerful-
ness andRest.Contains neither
NO iuln,Morphine norNaneral.
OT NARCOTIC.
yserpklJy&AMD!ZPnIrU1R
linnphin Seel -
..digirmier •
Rx&rlo Slit -
-Anin Berl •
J}6.e:sant -
, r Crtd'err0R.raeia, •
O'aM#d Stayer .
((ureic
flew
}
AperfectRemedy forConstlpa-
lion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,
Worms,Convulsions,Feverish-
ness andLOSS-OF SLEEP.
Tac Simile Signature of
l4
NEW YORK.
SEE
THAT THE
FAC—SIMILE
SIGNATURE
--OF
EXACY COPY Of WRAPPER.
IS ON THE
WRAPPER
OF EVERY
BOTTT •'F+: OF
C;T:'STORIA
Canaria is put up in one -sire bottles only, It
is not sold in bulk. Don't allow anyone to Bell
you anything else on the plea or promise that it
is "fust as good” and "will answer every Fur.
pose." sue See that yon get fen -S -T. -0 -E -I -A,
The fat -
et
nimile
if 01
every
Gam'` wrapper.
A FRIGHTFUL ACCIDENT.
Explosion of a Hotel Boiler- One Mali Klll-
ed
and Two Badly'Infured.
A deepateh from Buffalo says:—(!, ter-
rible accidetnt,'tvhIcll evill result in the
death: of one tram and the disfigure-
iiwr of two others, 'happertni in the
engine.-rocirn of the tl3roozeal house, at
Wells and Seneca streets, on Wednes-
day 9 o'clock. An nm -
i foist ,iii sot a
ea n
y f?
• oneat the boil -
can
w•ntns Luise in
t ire buret and. hurled the red-hot coals
Follow lino the foreign 1'rin:res come
the Gunrsd 0' Honor, twenty-two offi- ANEW SPINE WANTED,
tWrs o. native. Indian cavalry corps
—nun of reale Physique picturesque uni-
forms anal strange, faiths. But for tfichaai O"rook, ert'atnten,Bass•, goes to
Bent real .
troops. Lean, ltmg sper;lntens of wiry these tho crowd had few eyes; for the
mnnhood alley wen applause litre the Conlnul,,.,. n -Chief, who followed be-
hi,ne. themm none..They (weld see the
rent and passer( aai to gi:t•e place• to the Quern's °Horses—it utas the Queen at
last.. A ehter broke forth that seem-
ed to strike the ground. renewed again
amd :(:rain a, box Majest.y.s • a••r'ag; an -
Premier of New fouedlst•nd, Hien. Sir W.
V. ?Wine ewa y.
Next carne the Prr•inr,er of 'I:tsrna•nia„
Six Frio I3radddai
fares(, hr'd. hr ousi sigh i-
l�rom Newfuundlan't, nue was trans- us•n ltcrrses, ')"ream•faattitt color, wIiitihnoverlong
ported to Natal by the Natal rnount.eel {1,ils. white, r'old almost fish -like eyes
troops. a eontihrgent si.mil.tr in model aril p nk not�eu, their manes richly
and equipment to their Cape brothers
ite,eee ts. ti". 4ii.. 11. JI_ Nelson. K.C. woven will -ri.bborg of royal blue were
M..G.. rode after them. the offi:'tel per -,j tnow hen.
p:n$l'ing' Gorgeous tthle:y looked in
ha•' eta harness saddle cloths
i. r•'r t state
sr,tni1:i ation of \S est.ern Australia, h. ii
of :royal hrue velvet, with rich fringes
The Premiers being lisp( iced trf, Gera of
bullion, the leather work red.meroc-
sueeeedect et really nirsi .tttl irii•re lis co above. and blue- 'mero:co h. neai'ki
play, imr.umted troops of its Crown col- , litteriRng. evert•'et~here with the roy-
CAUGHT.
I wast to be sure I understand you
rightly, said the lawyer, who was cross-
examining the locomotive engineer. At
the time the accident happened to the
plaintiff at what rate were you run-
eling t Please repeat your statement
as to that particular.
I had slowed down to about six miles
am hour replied the engineer.
You are positive as to that, are you?
Yes, sir.
You want the jury to understand
that you had slowed down to six miles
an hour no you?
Yes, six.
Once again, you bad slowed down to
six miles an hour, had you?
Yes.
Now, sir I tbusndered the lawyer, ris-
ing to his feet and g g
lairin at the wit-
ness, did you not testify in your direct
examination that you bad slowed up?
Of course, but—
Taal will do, sir I Gentlemen of the
jury, that's our case 1 : 1 . I
,And the jurysnlen without leavin
their seats, broughtire' a verdict
against the railway company.
DEAiRx ENOUGH.
Is Nervely as der a friend of yours
a n he professes to bet '
I ratiber think lee is. He mists Mg
about ($50 a mentih'.
Fifty Years Ago.
This is the stamp that the letter bore
' which carried the story far and wide,
Of certain cure for the loathsome sore
That bubbled up from the tainted tide
Of the blood below. And'twos Ayer'sname
And his sarsaparilla, that all now, know,
'That was just beginning its fight of fame
With its cures of 50 years ago.
Ayer's Sarsaparilla
is the original sarsaparilla. It
has behind it a record for cures
unequalled by any blood puri-
fying compound. It is the only
`"sarsaparilla honored by a
medal' at the World's Fair of
1898. Others imitate the
remedy; they can't imitate the
t record :
A despatch from Clinton, Mass., says: .
—Mil'bael O'Thole, who has lived five
years with a dislocated: spine, has been
taken to Canada, where an operation
is to be.!pierformee whfe+h, it is believed,
will restore theman to sound physical
c'andition. O'Toole goes to Canada
uren the soli:etation of the faculty of
the Royal Academy :at Mc tn:treal, where
he will enter Victoria. het;pital.
O'Toole fell from a teending, and tbe
dislo^ tion
of
his spinal al colu
n re-
sulted itt creeping paralysis. By means
on the "X" ray, the injure.' spinal col-
umn huts Leen photographed, and the
dtrelotated vertebrae found. The phi-
al arms, the lion, the unicorn,, sie_ians will now. seek to restore tbe
she erowtn in (;old literally, the hnrn-` Misplaced hones.
e e of t'omn rotor unit brightness, just
sue;h. nn ,effect as the herons knights of
Elizabeth's tithe made in their panoply.
The liveries o'' fits rostillions were in
keeping with the 'harness, rind had
cost $600 it piece. the. scarlet and
gold e0/IIs, white trousers and riding
ho:'ts. For on:'e since the. Prince Con -
soros death, the goners permitted the
mourning liana toberemoved from the
men's arms; there was no need for sor-
row now. The carri'tge in which her
Majesty role now came abreast. It
proved ttr la what is known at: the
royal mews xis "No: 1 pla.i•n post-
i•ng landau," a carriage wither a llght-
ru•nrti.ng hotly built about a quarter of
a maims- ago and of which her Ma-
jesty is known to he very fond. The
o -1r ens dark claret, lined with t•er-
millic>'n, the mouldings outlined with
beads; of brass. Brass beads decorat-
Pet the rumble, the body loops and
lamp ib'uns were gilt. The wheels and
umderw•orros were vermillion with
heavy lines of gold. Resides her Ma-
jesty sal. the Pri:n,•t'ss of • \Vales. while
the Princess Christian sett opposite. her
3tia:je,asty. Ctt the' left of her Majesty
rode. H. R. H. the Duke of Cambridge.
On the right. El. R. H. the Prince
of Wales, who was followed by the
Duke of Con.nanght, the (general offi-
cer commanding.
A NEW YORK SKY -SCRAPER.
Architect George Sage is ' preparing
pians for a fifty-nine story office and
studio building to be erected in the
central part of New York. The esti-
,
mated cost of the lnrildi will be from
nig
$12,000,000, to $15,000,1)00, which will be
furnished by a syndicate of Englisbmen
who want to own the highest building
g
in the world. The dianensions of the
foundation (will be about 300 feet
square. Above the first two floors
the building will be composed of as light
material as possible. There will be
five elevators, which will ruin through
the center of the building. Water for
the upper floors will be forced by
means of. penniesin the basement. The
building will also have its own fire
'•erartment.
The fa -
tisane
sigaatitre
or
CA.f.S9L'C9RYA.
-rGr.Clr�
h on
every
wrapper.
HOW SHE ENTRAPPED HIM.
Ethel—You. say Algy has been heart-
lessly deceived by a young woman. Did
she lead hiss an to think that she loved
him?
May—Oh, no; she led him an to be-
lieve that she didn't' care a rap for
him, and then when he carelessly pro-
posed, accepted him etre the spot. .
Is packed under the supervision of the Tea grower,
and to advertised and sold by them as a sSm le o)
CARTER'S
iTTLE
VER
PILLS.
URE
Sick ffeedachoand relieve a,1 the troubles inci-
dent to a bilious state of tho system, such as
Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness Distress after
eating fain in the Side. &c. While their most
remarkable y a e success has been shown in curing
SICK
Headache, yet C.taTER's LITTLE LIVER P.W.Plei ,
are equally valuable in Constipation, curing
and preventing this annoying com laint, while
they also correct all disorders of the stomach,
stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels.
Even if they only cured
HEAD
Aehe they world be almost priceless to those
who suffer from this distressingcomplaint;
but fortunately their goodness oee not end
here, and those who once try them will find
these little pills valuable in so many ways that
they will not be willing to do without them.
But after au sick head
CHS
In:bebane of so many lives that hero is whore
we make our great boast. Our pills euro it
while others do not.
CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER Pius are very small
and very easy to take. One or two pills make
a dose. They are strictly vegetableand do
not gripe or purge, hitt by their gentle action
please all who use them. In vis at 25 cents;
five for $1. Sold everywhere, or sent by mall
CAST3a 1MEDIOIP3 CO., Now Tort
Sm ■1 Snail Dose. Small Not
QVC IN SEALED copies
ne U T THE SOPEAV 17 OF 44).
"MONSOON" TEA ....
the best qualities of Indian ad Ceylon Tctiii, p For
that reason they see that none but the v,t y fresh
leaves go into Monsoon packages. - • -
That is why " Monsoon," the perfect Tea, can
be sold at the same price as inferior tea.
It is put up in sealed caddies of 34 Ib.,1 Ib. and
lbs., and sold in three flavours at ioc., 60c. and 60e.
STEEL, HAYTER R CO., Front St., Toronto,
THE DIETZ
.DRIVING LAMP,.
is about as near perfection as 50 years
of Lamp -Making can attain to. It
burns kerosene and gives a powerful
clear white light. and will neither blow
nor jar out. When out driving with
it the dal kness easily keeps about two
hendrod feet
ahead of
Y smartest
sm
a est
horse When you want the very best
Driving Lamp to be had. asic your
dealer tor the "Dietl,"
We issue a special Catalogue of this
Lamp and. it you ever prowl around
after night -fall it will Interest you.
'Tis mailed free
R0 Ea DIETZ COL.,
6o I,.aigght St., New York.
q�q
Specie! terms to Canadian elastomers.
4�!t�4l<ea1tL3�e'�g'a
CURE
BILIOUSNESS
COKSt:11IiION
SICK RE OIICHE
AND ALL LIVER TROUBLES
is
VI
. H.ta,R VOCteI, COUNTENANCE.
They tell me, Grin:lti', t Int your
daughter singe w 11.11 t'1 e ; , et csssan._
Greatest e i r :• l i• ;arty,
leer own motreer cc.n't rerngnize her
hi nt
wihst rhes st gkig it hes lent.