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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1897-10-28, Page 2LEGAL,. H, DIo1 SON, Barrister, Soli- * otter of SupremeCourt, Notary b Tia Oo y nae enact. Oornmisalouer, ate Boll- t„.4 Leant o to La e . Ofncetn aua. u'aSloak. EEeolp,, IL OO iIN S, P- Iarrister, Sol1aitort tonvoyayttosxa Eta BEETLE, - ONT. OFFICE : Over O'Neire Ban{f, ELLIOT & ELLIOT, Barritors, Solicitors, Notaries Patl l0 Conveyancers du), &o. lairMoney to Loan at Lowest Beteg ot Interest. OFFICE, - MAIN - STREET, E X.ETEle Hensen every Thursday, 5, P. EI,I,XOT, FREDERICK t':iatn'r. warm MEDICAL PR. ERSITY, M D. C. M. Tot gats Uiv r , omce•-Crediton, Out,. 1'1 rs. ROLLINS &: AMO$. Separate Mose. R sideaoesare As former. Andrew KG Qfte ;: S a tkmsa'A building. g. Main st; Dr Rollins' same as formerly, norbt door; Dr. Amos' som_a� building�•• south door, J. &. Ii01d,1N8, iii rt., T. A. A:1MO3. llxeter, Oah T W. B1i3OWNING DI. D„ M. G P. B. t;radas.te Victoria Calver: ty cosec ',ad residence, Ootn niou I.a,bo a tory , gee ter . Tg1B. HYND&IAN, coroner for tie I- County ot Huron. (Moe, opp.alte larliug Droaetore, Ezater. � AUCTIONEERS._ BOSSE1Vl3ERRY, General Li• • ceased Auctioneer Saies uonduoted In enemas. Satisfaction goarenteed. Charges moderate, Fieueail P 0, Out: EN1i;Y EILBEB Licensed Ana. tioneer for the Counties of limon end !limbless' • Sales eoudnoted at mod. rOttloe, at Post-odte a Orel. on Ont. ra a rates. emprommisimumnsmisiniS-,.- VL'1'ERIN9,RY. Tennent & Tennent EXETER. ER. uwz, eteibraieaofthe Ontario t'etarleetry Oal err, (OFFICE : enc anor south ofTAwn Rail. THE W.&T1+;RLOO MUTUAL TItti 1NSI.EANCYCO. Eetubusheditt tsd8. HEAD OFFICE G - WATERLOO, T RLOO , OiY 1' 'ale Company has been over'rwentvai,rlt yearnin suttee39fni operetiatt; in \%esters Ontario. mid eift,Ctinnfttoin+a.en niwit loss or dairny,o ht hre, }iuil€ else err:tltttdiaa Manutnetore•, an.1 all other descrti, ,oas of iueur,h;r property. iteteudine insurers 'lave the ot ti+rn of ininrlueon the 1'remiutu Note or Cob eyeteet. Durno the past ten years thin company '.:as isseeit .; .s41 n1clo, covering property to the cafe mit ut $10,+172,03ti: and bald in losses tome Etti ,t"2.uV. Assets, $170.100.00, eonsistina of atoll 1r.letuk government Demi:et and the unasses- sed I'reutilrtu Mutes on head an h in Ivrea 3.1t,ti'4LorN.M.P. President: 0 1I.'1'en,va setretera ; E. Itn,ar.s, litepe,ttur. C1iA5 B 117,.et;er.4forExotertine vlotnity AGRICULTURAL LITS. T x�r KILLING, CANADA H N to number of times recently 1 have noticed: inquiries for the best method of eradicating the very undesirable pest, Canada thistle. As I live in a „ with section,. c. peculiarly blessed them, I may be able to help some af- flicted brother. When I bought one of the farms I now own, says Ur. Wood- ward in Practical Farmer, the seller's son said, in answer to a question of a neighbor, " Yes, the farm is rich, but the natural production is Canadies this- tles, " And when I came to out the newly seeded clover meadow and found the thistles as high as the horses.' backs, and so thick that T was compelled to put " trousers" on them before I could drive them into the meadow, I con- cluded that the lad had told the exact truth; but in ane summer I so effectu- ally rid the twenty-five acre field that this year, it being again in clover Meadow, a man can carry in one fork full all the thistles to be found. If a w man has only a little Petah,. or a fe stalks, they can be killed by cutting and salting, or putting on coal oil, but ktardly by covering with straw or Seer dust. A good, healthy. genuine Can- ada thistle, will gr)w through two feet of solid sawdust, or double that of straw, and be only the more vigorous for the mulch. Nothing short of match- ed oak planks, or eelnentecl flagging stones will effectually smoother theta. They are made for " rooters," as the stalk has a.sharp, hard point. I have seen them wine up, through a foot of stolid clay, by the side of track in the I road, where it had been packed by con- stant treading all the spring. Luckily for the farmer Canada thistles have but very few seeds that will grow, " Thee- spread mostly by running under- ground root stalks, rhizoma, which grow during the after start of the sum- mer and become filled with matter for future growth, like a potato. These am in nit sense roots. Nor do any roots i grow out of them; but in the spring time shoots start from eyes, which are numerous along these. and from tbese shoots spring the roots of the plant. If vee set of tbese Cahoots be broken off, puwled up or plowed down, another lut will at on start from the remain- ing part of the shoot, or from other eyes on the rhizoma, anti there is vit- ality enough storel to keep them start- ing for a whole year if the young shoots are taken off fur so long a time. If these rhizoma be broken and scattered be cultivation every Piece an inch long will grow, and in this way tbey mostly spread.. if the plant be allowed to grow, most of the growth. up to blos- soming time will be at the expense of vitality taken from tbese reservoirs, and they win become exhausted; lit- erally "all the starch" will be taken out of them. Now, if the plant he pull- ed up t or cut off there will be but very TSE EXETER TIMES alounng from one and of the coni field to the other and baole. fearing to part with its dam lest she will leave it, and. feeling awfully 'tried in its efforts to ` hetet.) p u It must think that a t t •s this . a cruel, wicked world, If this dial eith- er farmer, mare or oolt any good it might be permissible; instead it does all three harm. It stunts the colt's. growth. and thus injures the farmer; it worries the mare and there is to possible compensation. Tie the colt in the -stable for the first day or two, or better, shill,. Put it in some small building, and when it gets used to restraint and begins to understand that at noon its mother will be as glad to see it ass it is to see her. it will take kindly to the separar tion and conclude that you are a kind snail to lier-, inSieasi of a eruc(h tyrant It will soon learn to go out into the pasture, get some fresh grass, and when the sun gets hot, go back into the shade and avoid the flies, acquire the habit of eating and become weaned when the time comes without the slightest loss of condition. It will be all the better if it has com- pang. either of other colts or some staid, reliable old horse that has learn- ed wisdom by experience a'nd enjoys the comforts of the pasture. Horses are the most sooiaoie or rarm animals, and should have company. They are not particular so it is one of their own kind with which thecoin hob nob and d gossip, parse fashion. The colt is no exception ; he is all the better with company. MERLE BEANS oovery that etre the a.0 t • of tN reoua Dcbihtyr Lest V o or and. t+'a'tth)5 Maohoutj' rtat;rt'a the weaknem at bedy'or mind cawed few plants thrown up, and what do come will be very yellow and feeble. Knowing this much of the nature of the rest, the way to eradicate it is plain. Get the land seeded to clover, by overwork, or the errant Drax. and cut just as soon as the thistles be- eneeeenneenee ceascaafyouth. This Remrdyab ! gin to show the first bloom, which will tolutely cures the most obstinate cases when eh other reser cops havebest. failed :sae 'usatits even to relieve. t who theclover e re , n . eve is II .,01 Id I drug.. r a 6 tl.te rat its per package, or six for 85, or sent by tons on 'eceipt of price hs eddressiter Tt!E d 13tFS MED t'INI Co.. To:,...- e _ at, t4 it a . •,. - -.,.. ; ., .. :old at Brownintee Drug Store Exeter In Spring Time get Pore Blood by using B.B.B. No other remedy possesses such per- fect cleansing, healing and purifying properties as Burdock Blood Bitters. It not only cleanses internally, but it heals, when applied externally,} all sores ulcers, abscesses, scrofulous sores, `ylotehes, eruptions, etc., leaving the skin clean and pure as a babe's. Taken internally it removes all morbid effete or waste matter from the system, and thoroughly regulates all the organs of the body, restoring the stomach, liver, bowels and bland to healthy action. BREAD -MAKER'S BIAS HEW FAILS g,'4 ©IVF SATiSFAOTIOH =etaa RALF; THE EXETER TIMES Is published every Thursday morning at Times Steam P1Xrit1Ha House a n street, nearly opposite Fit ton's jewelry store, Exeter, Ont, by JOHN WHITE & SONS, Proprietors, RATES OP ADVERTISING: 1 i i t insertion, per line . 10 cents, let, eh subsequent insertion, per line.. 3 cents, To Maitre insertion, advertisements should I e rentin nob later thtinednede,ymorning. Our JOB PRINTING DEPARTMENT is one or the largest and best equipped in the County of Huron. All work entrusted to us wince' ceive our prompb attention. Decisions Regarding Newspapers. 1 -Any person who takes a paver regularly from the post office, whether directed in his name or another's, or whether he has sub- scribed or not, is responsible for payment. E -II a•persoi orders his paper discontinued he must pay all arrears or the publisher may continue to send it un til the payment is made, and theca collect the whole amount, whether the paper is t aken front the office or not. 3 --In suite for .subscriptions, e suit may be instituted in the place ,vhere the /muftis pub. fished, althonrrh tho subscriber may reside hundreds ofinile away. 4 -The courts have decided that refusing to take newspaperi; or periodicals from the post office or removing and leaving them uncalled Cor, ig prima facie eridenco of intentional fraud: The plowing does not in the least set the clover back, but it demoralizes the thistles. Any that start will come fee- ble and look yellow and "sick." When the clover hes grown about a foot high, put in a team and plow every inch. No cut and cover business will answer; end be sure to have an turned over flat. Now put on the roller and fol- low with harrows, to get all down sol- id anti every thistle covered. The clov- er will form a thick mat of foliage that it will be hard for a weak thistle to penetrate, and there will be few or thane of the piece of rhizoma in the furrow slioe. Few thistles will show their beads after this treatment, but every time one does show, the patch should be gone over with some tool hav- ing sharp cutting teeth, so as to cut the thistles off below the surface, and to make assurance doubly sure, the cul- tivating should be followed the next day, and with a sbarp hoe every strag- gler should be cut off. Follow this up as often as a single thistle starts, and just before the ground freezes plow, and you will have the nicest of all seed. beds the next spring, for any sowed crop, and if the work be thoroughly y done, I will agree to pay one dollar for every plant of Canada thistle ever showing again in that patch, unless it comes from subsequent seeding. This is virtually fall fallowing commenced a little early, and is the best way to clean lands of all kinds of weeds. A VERY 'ROSY OUTLOOK, MOVER RAY FOR. HORSES. There seems to be at greet. prejudice in the minds of tbe public against clov- er hay for road or driving horses. That this is common, especially so in cities, is fully proven by the greater demand for timothy hay, and its very much higher price over clover. Chemical analysis shows, writes x, S. ti oodward, that clover has by far the greater feeding value, especially in those elements necessary for the fast driving road horse, and the experience of eho has sensibly eXPer relenevted in thewmatter fully sulrstanti- ates ellrye claimones of chemistry, The facts are that clover hay is much better for all bay -eating animals, and hss roanddrive farther thattey aneat Illsdo amazes esweight.ck d T1lIe trouble is it is too good; it is wrench more palatable to the horse that if kris rank be stuffed, so he can eat ilia fill, he mill gorge hixmself so as to he rendered unfit for fast driving. It is like filling a boy with some dainty of which he is vary fond and then putting bis to hard work or close thinking. or like turning a lot of hungry cows in- to a fresh clover pasture. from which they are sure to be troubled with hov- en. not because th'e food is unwllale- samethee eat ,tt h butt y so good Iia so rapidly as to retard digestion. With mangers filled ever so full of timothy, especially as usually cut, much over -ripe, this horse wills not eat too much. There isb nothing to tempt his appetite, To feedor driv- clover cad 1 verla.ytaax ing horse the feeder should use his judgment and give just what the horse needs and no more. Let it be eat- entimeever, so ,quickly, the horse should have no more until the next feeding 'fife feeder's brains, and not the to horse's bbeeflysha, vesh+d elould irvee l the judge as �• hat \ : roc ' There is as much digestible, muscle - supporting food in one pou'nd of clover hay as in two and one-half times as much timothy, and as much carhohyd- Tates. weight for weight, and fifty per cent more fat or food of energy. Early cut, bright, well -cured clover for hay , andideal food. oats make an a drivinghorse, fed, a proper q u ont i- tee Then, if the owner wants to amuse his horse between meals, fill his man- ger with any kind of straw ; but if the straw is bright and has been well hous- ed. be will eat too mush for his own good in fast driving. For a growing colt there is no feed so good as clover hay and wheat bran. CRUELTY TO THE COLT. Farmers are seldom intentionally cruel to farm. animals, The relations of profit and loss are too close between the farmer and his animals to permit of anything but kindness on his part. Be- sides all this, says Wallace's Farmer, there is a fellowships which exists be- tween the farmer and his stock, The stock look up to him as a protector, while he looks upon them as his depend- ents, and he takes just pride in their mute recognition of his thoughtfulness and kindness. We may attempt to patronize men. and they resent it; the animal does not. Nevertheless, 'farmers are some- times unintentionally cruel to their live stock, mainly by want of thought. "Evil is wrought by '$'&nt of thought as well as want of deed." We never see a colt trailing along after a plow in the field or to town on a Saturday or Salbbath but we pity its. We do not blame the youngster for getting in front of the team and poking along, knowing that its mother run ave it,and thus saying will not ryi g to the driver : " Holon, old .man ; I amu young and tired; this is no place for a colt ; you don't maks your babies trot along with you. in this fashion," We sometimes wonder what a colt's thoughts must be .as it trails wearily .l. OUR FARMERS. ARE ON THE HIGH.' ROADPROSPERITY. Tt) The Impending Deiieielaey' In Itirendstnffs-: Mau Tiread-I:ateraFaster h Increasing the 'Wheat -Producing Acres - Ne Medi - hoed World's !Meat klt l ) NOT SO GREEN. Good -night, dearest, he said, putting on his hat. E -r -r aren't you forgetting some- thing, Rudolph? falteringly inquired the maiden, By Jove I came near, he exclaimed 'and snatching her father's best silk um- brella from the stand, he departed. Fifty Years Ago. :t o theory of germs to chill • Affection's budding Misses; , When ardent lovers took their 511. No microbes on their kisses. How happy they were not to know The germ -fad -so years ago. mow- ru ms • Ayer 's CherryPectoral is the standard family remedy of the world for golds, coughs and lung diseases. It is not a palliative, and is not therefore in put upsmall cheapbottles. It is put up in large bottles for the household. They cost more but cure more. Fads come and go but no theory or fad can overthrow the fact, that they greatest cure for all colds, coughs and throat and:'. lung diseases, is Ayer' Cherry Pectoral. 50Cures. Years .o# year after year by more then 40,000,000 buehe'ts, not an acre bee been added to the aggregate of the worltd"s bread - bearing area since 1884. Lastly, an. .t. acreage $ re e f the u deficit t P- € ex' 1 0 isltts, equal p bare of a�as P1 1reaters Y manybrei ate been added to lhe wurtd"s population in the last twelve years. We, see. then, t'het there is no like- lihood bread - stuffs that the world's 5 t,uepply of bxe stuffs wi14 ever again meet, the world's requirements, b re began man' a be Y q to uniliess a w s 6 lysis Ever Again Meet the World's 1 saying, Buropea:ne can be persuaded to Reimireetnerite. eat bread made from Indian corn, or In Me current number of the Forum, Mr. >a is an authority C. Wood. ' � NOM . vis y Dia on the relation of food -bearing acres to the world's bread -eating popula- tion, undertakes to show that our farm - ens are. entering upon a period of un- broken, and increasing prosperity. Re maintains that, after Europe shall have exhausted all possible supplies teems that Siberia never had produce the harvest of 1897, and swop crops ed, and never waited produce, wheat as may be harvested prier to July, 1898, and rye enough to feed the Siberian there win be a deficit of the equlva-' POletian. lent of 700,000,000 bushels of the bread- making grains, with no resource except CHILD SLAVERY IN FRANCE. meagre remaijnders from former bar- vests, and with no substitution pee- DIsetosurPs Concerning the Sale of Malian sible,. unless Europeans can be induced Boys to :t_ente or (Ones \World. to eat bread• made from Indian corp. Public attention has been turned to r- A review of the prices of wheat du a form of slave trade now carried on ing the least century furnishes the ie France and Italy by disolosures premises from which Mr. Davis's de- whioh are being made an the subject. duntton is drawn. It seems that, from The victims are Italian children who 1821 till 1882, the world's seasons were are bought from their parents by Pa- so equnbie, and wheat acreage was so drones and forced to work' in glass well proportioned to increasing world fa tortes, chiefly in the central part requirements, that prices were cora- of France. Formerly large numbers of paratively constant. In 'England, these children were sold into virtual they never fell below $120 per bushel, slavery as beggars, when muttlat?ons and rarely below $1,40; while but twice were practiced upon them to excite and then only for periods. of three and sympathy, as musicians and as chine- tee years respective:1. did they rise hey sweeps. That save trade was to or above ee per bushel. in 1839. suppressed, but the law does not reach 1840, aril 1841 the rise resulted from. the present form. scanty harvests in both Europe and The children bring from 100 to 150 America, In the other, which eves a francs, $20 to $30, and are sold for a biennial, case, the advance was caused period of three years. It is so much byd ilia Crimean war. Owistg to the money found and a mouth less to fill, addition of more than 17,000,000 scree the peasant;; say. The contxa'ts are to the wheat fends of the United States duly executed before a notary,and the between 1870 and 1880, the very scant village priest blesses the departing European harvest of 1879 and 1880 convoy of little ones, There are no. caused ona5+ statistics of the mortality among them A MODERATE INCREASE I but it was calculated formerly that in the prices of the bread -making of 100 children taken from their homes grains, although. through an exhaus- by padroues 20 returned home at the tion of reserves, they served to prevent end of their period of slavery, 89 set - the rapid, fall that would have followed tied permanently in their new sure r• had the harvest .n either 01 rho two'r(un.ings, and the other a0 died; and last mentioned years been as abundant in view of the conditions in which• as was that of 1882. from and after they find themselves at the glass 1882 prices fell rapidly until the year works, there is no reason to suppose of rho Russian famine. 'ltie harvest Thai the mortality is any less now. Their ages vary from 11 to 18 years'. ,1882 ox- o£ contrilru:tory areas in Tlue Preach law forbids the ompiay- ceeded the average of the preceding merit of children less than 13 years throe crops by as mesh as 320,000:000 old at such work, but that is evaded bushes, or 18 per cent., and in con- easily, 7 their Services ars sold to the r of . itt on- manosfacturers at from $7 to, $13 a junction with Imports mentis aceardung to the !orality, an: bushels from Asim, and North Africa, they work y Y. exceeded requirements by . 160,000,000TEN Ii C 77115 A DA bushel's. 'Had the harvest of 1882 'not Tho patlranea pocket alt thet i Wthat been fa:lowed by one of still larger in enol sometimes et en the grata e s it ay be distriisuted among the em - 1884, and that by other crops of aqua ployees of an establishment upon spe- proportions in 1887 and 1888, the de- nal occasions. maize. There us no foundation, for the pellet- that the Trans-Siberian Railway isadapted abouetd to a region a em'av vestP P as to the produlction of wheat and rye. In all Sdbpria not more than 50,000,000 acres can be regarded as cultivated, and much more them half of these are already employed in the production of food Istap bs.: Mr, Davis tells ua that the Russian 'Mhnister of Ways and Communications, Prince 'B'ilkaff, de - cans in price would have been arrest- Their tondition in the fa'toria't is ban, as i 1 n :1 in a superheated * he a clear e. s e heated atm'rs r P xa g ed, for comsuanptio n was t • t c e is now; increasing more rapidy than addition with naxi•)us gasps: and are were grain -Learing acres. Indeed, constantly exposes to severe accidents, not an acre has been added to the while l,elr ina'uriea do not rece.ve pro- 1884. per treatment. They era a=l•ec'a'ly world's wheat and rye area sins sui ject 10 lanai trout les iia :l its thrix The fact is that the enormous world normal state is in many eases it. is aro. • o£ 1882 was butt tehe beginning of aggravated by the brutality of the re- p t r. t a e them loth u a workman rh IL t i; an almost continuous succession of a's Tieing lta+lana ani as working at great world crops of 'Meat, so •much far below the regular scale of wages. above the average in acre yield that They are natura'ly, ill -fel. A. ma 'ribed as shocicing: Thev work i the over -average product of the fif- teen trate who was called. up an to make an teen harvests ending with 1896 was than: their chief fare wan supe aux le - more titan 1,200,000,000 bushel:e. Not gumes and bread, with cc asiona'ly a only did this produrttion, iso far above bit of cheese an:l Sime wine, but never bhe average, add to our store of sup- any meat' It is estimated that the rant of sustenance of these children plies 1,200,000,000 bushels of wheat, but ranges from 5 to 8 cents a day ea_h there was an immense synchronous to the padrane. In one care the cost over -average production of rye, as well a feeding thirteen of the little slaves as a. great augmentation of exportable child p appear- investigation in a certain ease found investigation found to be 40 cents a day. Thee ran are ac wretched In surpluses of wheat and rye, ince as it is to be expeotel. They a'e by reason of a, decline amounting to lodged in ill -smelling tenements tis es 13.5 per cent. in the consumption of and four on a mattress of eoildon straw bread per head of the Russian popu- with rarely coverings, even in winter. iration. These extraordinary econdi- They are clothed in rags, for the pa- tiolne served completely to obscure the drones do not permit them to carry existing any luggage from their homes, to save ACREAGE DEFICIT; expenses. to depress prices to an unremunerative The number of these children can Bevel and to store up great reserves only be depart at. It is estimatedeemthat in nee departments 1,3:0 are empIoSed. that enabled the bread eaters of 1895 More children are constantly being to secure abundant supplies, notwithe- brought into France from Italy standing the fact that the wheat hare to take the place of those who die or vest of that year in "contributory became incapacitated for work, and to areas," pals imports from Asia and Af- supply the increasing demand v re- rime -was 75,000,000 btuslhefib helm for +cheap labor. So great n;uirements. It served, alto, to furn- has the demand became of late that ish an needed supplies in the 1896-97 girls as well as boys are being sold harvest year, despite the fact that the by their parents. The attention of the product from that year's harvest in French and the Italian Government contributory areas," ptaus imports has been called to the matter, and the from Asia and Africa, was 138,000,000 trade will be regulated if not sup - Webelow the year's necessities. reined. We come to the years 1897-98, •ivhem P the food requirements of the 510,000,000 bread eaters well aggregate 14990,000,- 000 bushels, while, to meet these de- mands, there will be, apparently, but 1,590,000,000 beef/le,s, after setting aside 820,000,000 bushes for seed. It follows that but three-fourths of the required bread can be provided, ungess larger drafts than now seems possible can be made utpon reserves ae,ready ,reduced to the ibwest point consistent with the safety of the exporting nations. That i scarcity and high prices have not pre- e is due to the variedrecentyears to harvesting, sinde 1889, of seven world I crops of wheat and six of rye, giving outputs so much above the average ass to 'remelt in. great acournulations that; have served to obscure • the fact that the harvests of 1895 and, 1896 were each ` much be%low current requirements. As reservees will wholly disappear ear at the elnd of thea year 1897-98, requiremen15 mutat .tie met "heere&fter from current 1 harvests, fuerlher acoumullation being ilmpcssiblee. Tb comprehend 'b s Present situa- tion with regard to breadstuffs and its bearing uipcin the prospects of farm - THE FOLLOWING FACTS the worUd output of h t ' average. Secondly, � '&1. he 27 000,000 bulshe�l less present needs, and this greatest ever grown wonted not equal t Wheat an drys progressively incr brought out by 1VIr. Davis, ,must be kept steadiaiy in view, First, althbwgh 'si' w ea in 1897 is several bar c1red million bushels less than the world's 'requireements, acre l the .li tie be a'w fel v+s en t y ds ha be bulb even an average yield from the tierces now employed won 5 s than crop hem. ease PUT A NICKEL IN THE SLOT. e am nl u nnnn a un hila t l m e luau 4nlit 11 ell t l I I I l lllit e I 4 5EF3 THAT THE FAG—SIMILE SIGNATURE IS ON THE WRAPPER OF EVERY BOTTT,T1 OF CASTORIA Osstoria is put up iu one -also bottles only. It is not sold in bulk, Don't allow anyone to sell yon anything else on the plea or promise that it 1s "just as good" and "will. answer every par - pose." Kr- Bee that you got 0 -A -S -T -0 -B -I -d. The fao- simils dgaitue of MINERS INSANE AT DAWSON CITE`, One Found Dead with $30,005 in (Wieldiest Tinder Ills Pillow. Man wish have just arrived at Tacom a from Damon report that threes mineral have gone crazy there over the gold excitement. L. F. Gerrish, one of them, says: '1`11a sanitary condition of Dawson City ie net so bad as many reports have tleelttred. • tin many instances) sickness and death has been broulghb' about by hard work and exciitment, Some men live on barely nothing, and that artily tlnif socked. Tho excite.' meat at tended. upon the washing and accuti ultetion of gold is so great than men devote the time to .it that shoui:d, t be given to cooking, oieanliness, and; re,ct. • A man named, Jahnoton washed oub I him- 'e not dispossess $30,000 .d end al the idea that he was going to ; be robbed. The menta:' ptruke was ail great that it caused his death, for be I was fouand one morning dead in Led, and underneath his pi;:elow lay his sack of $30,000 in go:'d dust. When we lea Diswson men %vete begging at ,the enter stare doors to be a':ilowed I to eate d: I get supp:des. It was some daysbefi re f sun• our party sobtaining 'n ucceeded L g enough provisions to supply us on our j anent from sami-lar causes are reported, I brut the names of the men affected are net remembered by the when just out. Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Galeria of Helena and Charles Thabo are other members of the party from Dlawaon. 'Chebo estimates that thea next spring a..eean- lips in the g'eondike district tivi11 amournt to $25,000,000, and that the first steamers goiesg down the Yukon .n' .1late wi'.R carry seventeen to twenty i tons of gowd. Michael Knutson took a nugget, weighing thirty-four Troy ounces and i worth $583, from dCtaam No. 36, ]Actor-, ada, a few days before the Gerrish par- ty heft. Hunker, Dominion, Hender- son, Subpther, and. Adams Creeks are proving wonderfully rich. Some of them wilt surpass even Eldorado. Com- ing out Gerrish mnet severe'. hundred head of cattle and sheep being driven in. Lino says they wills retie& Dawson and will be a godsend there. Two thousand men who • are stall crossing Skagway and Li ea trails are having terrible experiences. t Two feet of sheer has fallen at the lakes and noveral fee„ et. Summit. The snow caught everybody unprepared. Kew Arrangement for Purchasing Railway Ticket.* In Germany. , There is a convenient arrangement. in many railway stations in Germany. Passengers for suburban stations, in- stead of going to the regular ticket office and; standing in line for several minutes, sometimes so long that they miss their train can go to an auto- matk box and by dropping, a nickel in the slot, or a coin equivalent to the amount of the face, can supply ,them selves with a ticket in Ilea instant There are rows of these boxes attached against the .wall in convenient loca- tions. The name of the town is painted in large letters, and underneath; the parse of the ticket. Platform tickets for the convenience of those who wish to accompany their, friends; .to the t'r'ain are issued in the same way. BREAKING UIP AND DOWN. "A man may bet all broken ups" said Mr: Billtops, "and yet not be broken downs at all.. Grief breaks us up, but we' get over that, while a break down a colla with reoove may mea:. collapse, ry doubtful or difficult. Jia cold climates forms in int rivers where lice winter the breaks up in the spring, and they are all in a turmoil, then, but when sum- mer comes they flow along placidly. So it is with us. We may be all ;broken up and get over 1 but a break down it, is quite another matter, , aurney out." Two other cense of mental derange - CARTER'S TITLE IVER PILLS. UR slok Headache and relieve p11 the troublesytgi. dent to a bilious state of the aystem, such ars Dizziness, Nausea, Dfowsinelett. Diatribes after eating Pale in the Side, do, While theirmost remarkable success hu been shown in curing SICK. Hiadaohe, yet OAN'rea'e Lirrtm LrvsR Para are equally rateable in Constipation, curing and preventing this annoying complaint, while they also correct all disorders of tete stomach, stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels. Even if they only cured HEAD Ache they would be almost priceless to those who suffer from this distressing complaint• but fortunately their goodness does not en here, and those who once try them will dq theselittle pills able so man wast a filo t avail in h theywill not be willing to do without them. But terhe . ut E all sick ad ACHE ts'ehe bane of so many lives that here tri whore we malre our great boast: Our pills cure 11 while others tip not, CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS are very small and very easy to take. One or two pills make a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or purge, but by- their gentle action please all who use them. In vials at 25 cents; five for 91. Bold everywhere, or.sentby mail. CA&Tm 1lEDlOni9 00„ Now Yark, I��11 P hi batt tit vo UP 1N SEALED Cgpoits UNDER THE SUPERVISION OOFF c ; ltd �LP��.�' tcMONSOON" TEA.... is sAIs packed under the supervision of the Tea growers,... ovary and is advertised and sold by them as a sample of wranoer the best qualities of Indian and Ce lo Teae. Foe • that reason they see that none but the very fresh leaves go into Monsoon packages. That is why "Monsoon, ' the perfect Tea, can cera i�,ye-,q�12 be sold at the same price as inferior tea. AIt is put up in scaled caddies of j! 1b,;'111, and 51bs., and sold in three flavours at 10c., 50c, and fisc. STEEL, HAYTER & CO., Front St., Toronto, THE DIETZ DRIVING LAMP le about as near perfection as 30 years of Lamp -Making can attain to. It burns kerosene.; and gives a powerful clear.white light; and will neither blow nor tar out. When out driving with it the dat kness •easily keeps about two hundred feet ahead et your smartest horse. When you want the very best Driving Lamp to be had. ask your. dealer for the "Dietz," Dietz," We -issue a special Catalogue of this Lamp and, it• you ever prowl around atter night -fail it will interest you. 'Tis mailed tree R.E.T: ]M' ]� Z CO„, 6oZ-jai sat St. New V r g f W OSl;. Spoke terms to<Canadian nustomers, CURE BILIOUSNESS E�v S i1��L�S CONSTIPATION ��t' Ga SICK HEADACHE ANDALL LIVER TROUBLES tan KNOTTY. QUERY, Hie-AllMone rn father's is tied y Y She -In his handkerichief? AN EASY LET -DOWN. slid you lever love before, Reggie, n.r? Yes, datrai'ng-,once, ;but only in -a ii w i 1 �V1ij lYvJ, 11 nm n�mn,. a+umuuunleielmil1um Yuoemnmml:lt n,t 11 ` . , n ,�Il ,1111111., ulh+lnniennln onus uul,nM(0 AVegetablePreparationforAs- simitating theToodandReguta- tiR$ the.Stoutachs andBowels of a1o\ r: s1�xig,e(sik1io1nChekieLrftu1\,; Yr,om less andRest,Contains neither O nartMorphine jior funeral NOTNARCOTIC. �. 1Aa ofOldDrSAMU°LZP17Y,7I Jirmpkm Bad - 411Ffatusa r las.fliS'Fs - Aitin Srgd * )tpmmurr - A earkonakSeda • jfarmaAell - li ivcnrEdiw1 onstipa- A perfect Remedy for Constipa- ton, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, tion. Worms ,Convutstons ,Feverish- - ness andLosS OF SLEEP. Ta;Simile Signature of NEW YORI£. r pit:bl t o,rit"t►,ti:;�tO�lt1,; "'7 5' .,� N I EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. I' 4 5EF3 THAT THE FAG—SIMILE SIGNATURE IS ON THE WRAPPER OF EVERY BOTTT,T1 OF CASTORIA Osstoria is put up iu one -also bottles only. It is not sold in bulk, Don't allow anyone to sell yon anything else on the plea or promise that it 1s "just as good" and "will. answer every par - pose." Kr- Bee that you got 0 -A -S -T -0 -B -I -d. The fao- simils dgaitue of MINERS INSANE AT DAWSON CITE`, One Found Dead with $30,005 in (Wieldiest Tinder Ills Pillow. Man wish have just arrived at Tacom a from Damon report that threes mineral have gone crazy there over the gold excitement. L. F. Gerrish, one of them, says: '1`11a sanitary condition of Dawson City ie net so bad as many reports have tleelttred. • tin many instances) sickness and death has been broulghb' about by hard work and exciitment, Some men live on barely nothing, and that artily tlnif socked. Tho excite.' meat at tended. upon the washing and accuti ultetion of gold is so great than men devote the time to .it that shoui:d, t be given to cooking, oieanliness, and; re,ct. • A man named, Jahnoton washed oub I him- 'e not dispossess $30,000 .d end al the idea that he was going to ; be robbed. The menta:' ptruke was ail great that it caused his death, for be I was fouand one morning dead in Led, and underneath his pi;:elow lay his sack of $30,000 in go:'d dust. When we lea Diswson men %vete begging at ,the enter stare doors to be a':ilowed I to eate d: I get supp:des. It was some daysbefi re f sun• our party sobtaining 'n ucceeded L g enough provisions to supply us on our j anent from sami-lar causes are reported, I brut the names of the men affected are net remembered by the when just out. Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Galeria of Helena and Charles Thabo are other members of the party from Dlawaon. 'Chebo estimates that thea next spring a..eean- lips in the g'eondike district tivi11 amournt to $25,000,000, and that the first steamers goiesg down the Yukon .n' .1late wi'.R carry seventeen to twenty i tons of gowd. Michael Knutson took a nugget, weighing thirty-four Troy ounces and i worth $583, from dCtaam No. 36, ]Actor-, ada, a few days before the Gerrish par- ty heft. Hunker, Dominion, Hender- son, Subpther, and. Adams Creeks are proving wonderfully rich. Some of them wilt surpass even Eldorado. Com- ing out Gerrish mnet severe'. hundred head of cattle and sheep being driven in. Lino says they wills retie& Dawson and will be a godsend there. Two thousand men who • are stall crossing Skagway and Li ea trails are having terrible experiences. t Two feet of sheer has fallen at the lakes and noveral fee„ et. Summit. The snow caught everybody unprepared. Kew Arrangement for Purchasing Railway Ticket.* In Germany. , There is a convenient arrangement. in many railway stations in Germany. Passengers for suburban stations, in- stead of going to the regular ticket office and; standing in line for several minutes, sometimes so long that they miss their train can go to an auto- matk box and by dropping, a nickel in the slot, or a coin equivalent to the amount of the face, can supply ,them selves with a ticket in Ilea instant There are rows of these boxes attached against the .wall in convenient loca- tions. The name of the town is painted in large letters, and underneath; the parse of the ticket. Platform tickets for the convenience of those who wish to accompany their, friends; .to the t'r'ain are issued in the same way. BREAKING UIP AND DOWN. "A man may bet all broken ups" said Mr: Billtops, "and yet not be broken downs at all.. Grief breaks us up, but we' get over that, while a break down a colla with reoove may mea:. collapse, ry doubtful or difficult. Jia cold climates forms in int rivers where lice winter the breaks up in the spring, and they are all in a turmoil, then, but when sum- mer comes they flow along placidly. So it is with us. We may be all ;broken up and get over 1 but a break down it, is quite another matter, , aurney out." Two other cense of mental derange - CARTER'S TITLE IVER PILLS. UR slok Headache and relieve p11 the troublesytgi. dent to a bilious state of the aystem, such ars Dizziness, Nausea, Dfowsinelett. Diatribes after eating Pale in the Side, do, While theirmost remarkable success hu been shown in curing SICK. Hiadaohe, yet OAN'rea'e Lirrtm LrvsR Para are equally rateable in Constipation, curing and preventing this annoying complaint, while they also correct all disorders of tete stomach, stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels. Even if they only cured HEAD Ache they would be almost priceless to those who suffer from this distressing complaint• but fortunately their goodness does not en here, and those who once try them will dq theselittle pills able so man wast a filo t avail in h theywill not be willing to do without them. But terhe . ut E all sick ad ACHE ts'ehe bane of so many lives that here tri whore we malre our great boast: Our pills cure 11 while others tip not, CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS are very small and very easy to take. One or two pills make a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or purge, but by- their gentle action please all who use them. In vials at 25 cents; five for 91. Bold everywhere, or.sentby mail. CA&Tm 1lEDlOni9 00„ Now Yark, I��11 P hi batt tit vo UP 1N SEALED Cgpoits UNDER THE SUPERVISION OOFF c ; ltd �LP��.�' tcMONSOON" TEA.... is sAIs packed under the supervision of the Tea growers,... ovary and is advertised and sold by them as a sample of wranoer the best qualities of Indian and Ce lo Teae. Foe • that reason they see that none but the very fresh leaves go into Monsoon packages. That is why "Monsoon, ' the perfect Tea, can cera i�,ye-,q�12 be sold at the same price as inferior tea. AIt is put up in scaled caddies of j! 1b,;'111, and 51bs., and sold in three flavours at 10c., 50c, and fisc. STEEL, HAYTER & CO., Front St., Toronto, THE DIETZ DRIVING LAMP le about as near perfection as 30 years of Lamp -Making can attain to. It burns kerosene.; and gives a powerful clear.white light; and will neither blow nor tar out. When out driving with it the dat kness •easily keeps about two hundred feet ahead et your smartest horse. When you want the very best Driving Lamp to be had. ask your. dealer for the "Dietz," Dietz," We -issue a special Catalogue of this Lamp and, it• you ever prowl around atter night -fail it will interest you. 'Tis mailed tree R.E.T: ]M' ]� Z CO„, 6oZ-jai sat St. New V r g f W OSl;. Spoke terms to<Canadian nustomers, CURE BILIOUSNESS E�v S i1��L�S CONSTIPATION ��t' Ga SICK HEADACHE ANDALL LIVER TROUBLES tan KNOTTY. QUERY, Hie-AllMone rn father's is tied y Y She -In his handkerichief? AN EASY LET -DOWN. slid you lever love before, Reggie, n.r? Yes, datrai'ng-,once, ;but only in -a ii w i 1