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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1899-8-24, Page 7I" TT B IP, X E 1j111 TIME QUEER REMEDIES FOR DISEASE, relevant91.'ts asc.ieed ex 0110114111- a eV, f CORIUM aloweis. To the oM medieval days the strang- ,est and Mast remarkable thlegs were meal act drugs for the amelioration and cure of disease. One of the strangest to this latter eategory, is the use of •Precioue stones Soe the cure of disease. • The diamond, oonsidered one ef the most useful of all gems ad is especial- ly bedigated in certain diseases of the nervous system, Its succeesful appli- ;cation in long-standing cases of femi- nine irritability has long been known to the average husband, and lover, but its prosaic; use as a sitbstitute for as- afetida or other 'objectionable sub- stances will no doubt come as a sur- prise to everybody. Novel as is the idea, itehowever,Viode a parallel in the eaase of certain nationa, who believe that a diamond placed in a glass of Water communicates many virtues to the fluid, making iL exceedingly valet-, able in the cure Of disease. In Jama- ica the natives believe' resolutely that --as people with warts can get rid of them provided they uee a piece of pork fat to rub the exoreacomes and then bury the fat immediately after using it, a n;ew piece being used for each apple., c,ation. For the cure 'of; walla, indeed, a somewhat similar remedy St in vogue in "'certain parts of England; ethe ex- crescencies being rubbed with Apiece of beef, which must, however,' be stolen 'before it is used- and must then be oatefully buried, Breathing on a wart nine times at the time of the new moon Is also declared to be very effectual in removing them. Among other remarkable methods of -curing must certainly be m,entioned one which is much used. in certain parts of the Tyrol for cancer. This consists In decapitating and skinning lizards, • the flesh of which is cut up into pieces and swallowed by the patient without cooking or any modification. After a few doses of this " drug " have been -swallowed they are said to produce a profuse perspiration and gradually a sloughing off of the carieerous growth, which ia repaired by perfectly heathy tissue. Scarcely less •potent is a mode of healing which is ;ouch vaunted in certain quarters of India. This may be called " oelor healing." It con- sists in administering water in glasses of different colors, from which color the draught • obtains its properties, Which are magical in their effect—pro- vided the patient is endowed with sof- • ficient faith. Water in a red glass • vvill cure epilepsy, insomnia, nervous diseases, the plague, fevers and agues and. half a snore of the other diseases which mortal flesh is' heir to. In ae blue glass it is a sovereign remedy for • the palsy, for failing sickness, for ty- phoid and for numerous other allied ani non-releted complaints, while in a green glass it is a specific for oth- er complaints and in a yellow for yet another batch.. PREHISTORIC MAN. Said to Have Had a Third Eye on the Top of Ws Mead. Deep researches as to the structure of the human body have ;recently furn- islaedsome startling facts regarding • changes which man is at •present un- dergoing It is believed that man was former- ly endowed with more teeth than he possesses now. • Abundant evidenee exists that, ages and ages ago, human teeth were used as weapons of defense. Unintentionally, traces of such use are often revealed.by _a sneer. The teeth • are somettinies bared, doglike, ready, as it were, for action,. The practice of eating our food cook- ed and disuse of teeth as wea.pons are said. to be responsible for the degen- • eration that is geing on. The wisdom teeth, in fact, axe disappearing, Hu.- n jaws found in reputed Palaeo- laic deposits, have wisdom teeth with • crowns as large as, if not la"rger than, the felnaining molars. In aocient times a short-sighted sol- dier or hunter was almost an impos- • eibility ; to -day, a Whole nation is af- flicted with defective vision. It is al- most certain that man once possessed a third eye, by means of which he was • enabled. to see above,his head. The human eyes formerly regarded the world from the two sides of the head. They are even. now gradually shifting to a more forward position. • In the dine past th;e ear -flap was of great service in ascertaining the dir- ection of souods, and operated large- ly in the play of the features. But • the muscles of the ear have fallen into disuse, for the fear of surprise by enemies no longee exist. Again, our sense of smell is mark- edly inferior to that of savages. That • it is still decreasing is evidenced • by observatioos of the olfactory organ. But the nose stile indicates a tendency to become more prominent. LONDON'S WATER SUPPLY. To London, as to ahnost every large city, the question of a water supply • has been. a serious problem. London- ers now see a way to solve it, • The • Engineer of the Cotinty Council has informed that body 'that underneath • London is an immense lake, in a chalk basin. 2,500 square miles in ex- tent. The annual rainfall that einks to this like, 100 feet below the sur - ace et the ground, amounts to 280,- 000,000,000 gallons, which •would give a daily yield of 767,000,000 gallons. An • artesian well has alread.y tapped the lake at Clapham, ancl it is pointed „out that all that is necessary to insure a water stipply is to Sink a sufficient numbee of Wells. The wonder is that London Sh,ould have existed for more than 2,000 years and never discovered that the great lake was beneath it. VALUE OF VEGETABLES.. Vegetables are like fresh air—inclis- pensable for our health; they 0001 and purify the blood and add a necessary acid to IL t t FOOS RISING IN PRICE. Alatited Meets of the Decrease ln the World's Supply Soma listati,alla. An enormous increase in the price of furs is one of the results of the de- erease in the supply tbrought by the Monte oats Indians from the wilds of 1.4abrador and aorthern Quebec. Isa'st wiatee's patch Was exceedingly poor and but fom the higher prices, seeuted „there would be a vast amount o uf- fering among the Indians. The cidvaileed priee obtained this yeat by the indiaos is.nott. due to anY sud- den outbreak of geneeasity on the part of the Iludsoies Bay Company, which for year has had a practioal monopoly of this teed°, but rather to the fac that in consequence of the reduetion in the world's eupply of furs the cora pany is meeting With competition, Boston dealer named Williams made his appearanee on the Labrador coast this spring about the tinae, that the In- djaits arrived there from their hunt- ing grounds in the interior of the 'dountry, and caused lively' competition in the, local fur market. Mr. Williams secured some $50,000 , worth of furs from the Indians. Looal trailers on th o ast bought as much more and resold their furs to dealers in Quebee. Skins of the otter, for whieh the Indian's sometime's' get only $0 to $8 yielded them this year as much as §12 t0120, Bar skins have commanded from, 015 to $25 in first hands, and the skins of the marten, which ordinarily bring about $5, have rnn up to $20 and. even $25. Black and silver gray fox skins have realized upon the coast as high as P20. The rapidly increasing scarcity of these fineCaoathdian furs is making itself felt in the Old. World, as a deal- er in. Quebec has advices of a reoent trade sale at Leipelc, where the rep- re:sentative of a Parisian fur house paid $360 for a prime silver fox skin from Labrador. Thia remarkable in- crease, in value lends importance to the new project of Mr. Menier of raising black and silver foxes upon his island --Anticosti. He now has at least fifty fanailies of them in captivity, and as they are k-ept in large incloeures, they are thriving and increasing with great rapidity and peonalse exceedingly luc- rative returns. , PHILOSOPHY OF THE EYES. Upturned eyes are typical of devo- tion. ,• Wide .open eyes are indicative, of rashaess. . Side -glancing eyes are always to be distrusted. Brown eyes are said by oculists to be the strongest. • Small eyes are commonly auppcised to indicate cunning. The downcast eye has in all ages been typical of modesty, ' The proper distance between the eyes is the width of one eye. People of melancholic temperament rarely have char blue oyes. Eyes with long, sharp corners, indi- cate great discernment and penetra- tion. The white of the eye showing beneath the iris is indicative of nobilty of char - enter. Gray eyes turning green in anger or excitement are indicative of a chol- eric temperament. When the upper lid covers half or more of the pupil theindication is of cool deliberation. An eye the upper lid of which passes horizontally across the pupil indicates mental ability. Unsteady eyes, rapidly jerking from side to side, are frequently indicative of an unsettled mind. It is said. that the prevailing colors of eyes among patients of lunatic asylums are brown and black. Eyes,of any color, with weak brows and long, concave lashes, are indica- live of a weak constitution. Eyes that are wide apart are said by physiognomists to indicate great in- telligence and a tenacious memory. Eyes of which the whole, of the iris is visible belong to erratic persons, often with a tendency toward insan- ity. • Wide open, staring eyes in weak countenances indicate jealousy, bigo- try, intolerance and pertinacity with- out firmness. Eyes placed close together in the head are said to indicate pettiness of disposition, jealousy and a turn for faul When the under arch of the upper eyelid is a perfect semicircle it is in- dicative of goodness, but also of tim- Laity, sometimes approaching coward- ice. All menof genius are said to have eyes clear, slow moving and bright, This is the eye which indicates men- tal ability of some kind, it does not matter whet. Blue eyes are generally feminate, but this is a blue eyes are found only casian nations, and the rule the world. considered ef- mistake, for among eau - white races EXTINCTION OF GREAT NAMES. Neither Baootn, Newtoti, Locke, Da- vy nor 8Luart Mill left a son to in- herit his fame, while of historians Hume Gibbon and Macaulay were never married. Among our great painters Reynolds, Lawrence and the great Lard Leighton Were bachelors. Ho;garth perpetrated a renaantic loee match, twhieli was fruitless, and Turn- er, title great magician of color and canvaS, twice sonred by early disap- pointments, never married. • Handel, who May almost be elaimed as an Eng- lishltaanhaa no wife but his art. ,FIra- lectito petheps our greatest singer, whose dataghltor we sone of, us remem- ber as Lady Waldegrave, we helieVe left no son, whilesOf the giants t5f the feottighte Davy Gareiek and ,john T<rinble died childless, and the direct male isstre of Edmund Kean ended with, tile death of his eon Charles. olleasseeeta-- --ssiso0(11.11,110101s1v • On the . Farm. _400.(1.41, THE TREATMENT OF EARTH ROADS. Deaioage in of the utmost import- ance to an earth road, writes G. F. IVIareh. Water is the greatest foe to alt roads, and cape:Silly so of earth roads, for if these are not dry they have no bottom at all. Thorough drain- age must be provided for taking away the water which falls upon the Sur- face and aka that which would rise to the top from underlying springs. If the subsoil is of a springy nature it will be necessary to run a line of tile down the center of the roadbed, ote if the expense is no objection, two on each side of the roadbed. Some will say a tile drain is of no use because the surface will become so hard that the water cannot find its way down to the drain. It is not such we -ter we wish to remove by tiles, but the hot-, tom water which if not reraoyed would work its way up to the surface by means of the capillary attraction and keep the t ueface soft and springy SO that it will out tio easily into ruts, by passing wagons. When these ruts are filled by rains the evil is inten- sified.. In oaring for the surface it is im- portant to see that the ditches are of sufficient depth to carry off all the water that will fall during the heav- iest rain storm. The culverts must be in working order so that there will be no ponds beside the road soaking into and through the roadbed, allow- ing it to cat and. spring with every passing load.. This is a very import- ant point, as it is impossible to main- tain a firm, roadbed wnere. water stands in ponds in the ditches clexiog wet weather. The surface should be graded smoothly from the bottom of the ditches to the center of the Toad, so that in passing a wide load you can drive into the ditch without danger of upsetting. By this means. all rein wa- ter will be carried off the surface at onoe into the ditches. A road. of this kind should be care- fully watched througn toe season. An ruts and holes should be filled immedi- ately, as every passing wagon only makes them deeper, and the old adage, "A stitch in time saves nine," is as true in road building as in anything else. Buts formed by travel if taken before the ..roact,gets baked too hard and dry can be filled by running the dLsk harrow over them, and than roll- ing with a heavy roller, or better still, by means of a eheap and easily con- structed road leveler. It is made by taking a single plank 4 or 5 inches thick and 15 or 17 inches wide. A piece of iron or steel 2 or 3 inches wide is bolted- onto the bottom of the front side of the plank, while a couple of long iron braces will strengthen the tongue. This machine will out the sur- face better if the tongue is put in at a alight angle so as to draw the cut- ting edge somewhat in the slant of the road grader. The use of this last named machine is to be highly recom- mended, espedally for earth roads, for by its us,e the surface can be kept at all times oval and smooth with 'little labor. Unfortunately such machines are expensive, and where only one or two are owned in a township they are likely to be in use or at the further end of the township when most need- ed. The use of the roller should not be neglected; a heavy roller should fol- low the road grader at all times. MILKERS AND MILKING. There seems to be a great deal of discussion among the farmers in dif- ferent localities nowadays in regard to the subjeot of good milkers. The re- mark that it is now almost impossible to find good milker.% is quite frequent- ly heard among dairymen. This is a great mistake, says a writer, I thor- oughly believe that there are just as good milkers, in this, and other lo- calities, as there ever were, If not bet- ter. , • The farmer who depends on day hands for his help, as a general rule, is the one who complains most bitterly M regard. to this matter. The average man who is hired by the day will not milk even if he can. Wherever or whenever I find. a good month hand, one who stays on the farm continually one who is not constantly listening for the sound of the six o'clock whistle, one who does not go to town every night, I fiod a good milker. • A cow should be milked as quickly as possible. A good milker can milk 12 cows an hour. The muscles of the fore- arm, wrist and hands of a good milk- er must be well developed; therefore, a.s a rule,women are poor milkers. They° require "too much time to milk a cow. The evil resulting from this practice is that the COWS do not read- ily give down their ratite Some farm- ers expect a man to do too much of this work The number of cows that, a man milks should depeod cm the amount and nature of °thee labor that he per - fonts. As A rule, 1 do not believe that a man should be allowed to milk more than six cows. TO FUMTGATE A POULTRY HOUSE. Remove everything, nest, perches, and all. Put a pound of sulphur in an itoin kettle, set it in the middle of the house, put a shovelful of hot coals into it, close the house up tight and don't °Pen it for two or three hours. Burn all the nest straw, paint the oest boxes inside and out with hot doal tar, and aleo the roosts. White- wash the house therolighly inside and outside aud you are clear of the mites. When these peas get a start, only the naoat herok Measures will kid a pleee at them. When the house is onoe clean, it is cony to kenp clean if properly attended to when neceeserY. The nactu who whitewaehee his poultry hense (Mon a, moilth in Summer will Meer ceMplaiti Of MiteS in the houele. A good SPraying PUMP 15 very use- sOT DEPENDENT ON NOAH, ful to get the ;weanin the eracke, A 1 paid P ter that dog, little eerholic acid and coal oil tile ; waoh is benefloiel, Give the Weide ef That seems a geed deal for a dog the house e good drenchino. but don't lilte that. attempt to do Olio With your SURdaY 131x1:' th° cl°4" has a w°T-tclerful Psdl- clothes on 3r aDy Slit worth wear- groo; and oouLottshidee; at h It [tee sane time. bard ctlilbe.e111i tee )tow 4ar bsok; do thsY trace it To the dog that Noela teek in the aek. This. silOg'SneeSter, didn't go on the • . TRADS TII4T CURE. Why not ; He had a, bark of his own. , A Few of the Callings That Bring Wealth to the Operators. One hears Much of the injurious trades—dippers' lead -poisoning in the potteries, Phossy-jaw th. the match fe.o- tOries—hut coMparatiVely few Seem to be aware that there are oceupations that are actually beneficial, even Medi- einullY SO, to the health o± those en- gaged in them. The Men WhO lay the asphalt in, the streets, for instance, seldom have a day's illness, and those eMployed in electric light works and plaoes where large quantities of electricity are gen- erated enjoy quite an extraordinary amount of fitality, A visit to tire gasworks, too, is quite frequeatly scribed by doetors for °hest ailments. The workers in the salt mines, also, enjoy an absolute inintunity from rheu- matism. Perhaps the healthiest occupation is that in the petroleuan works. The mien employed in these never suffer from sore throats, diphtheria, quinsy or kidney ailments. • The marvellous curative egeets of the petroleum fumes is such that; It is now quite a c,olummon tieing for • sufferers from throat affections to visit the petro- leum works, much as people used to drink' A telebrated and wealthy operatic tenor who , had developed_ a throat weakness has for several months past been working as ctn ordinary employe but gratis, in one of the petroleum re- fining roans, deriving from t'he inhal- ing of the futmes a cure that scores of physicians and several ocean voyages failed in establishing. • powN IN A SEWER. 'Bravery of William Mugford at Torquay England. To pick out the bra:vest and most self-sacrificing deed Heat has been done within twelve months is no easy task. This, however, is whet the Roy- al Humane Society of England. has to do every year before awarding the Stanhope Medal. • Few would question the Justice of the award that was made' in 1894. The medal of that year went' to a Cornish sewer foreman, William Mugford by name. In darkness and sudden danger he perfcomed the a.ot that justly won hien distinction. • Torquay, a favorite winter resort on the south coast of England, had BID- ployed a gang of men to work in the town sewer. Mugford was the fore- man of the gang, and on a certain day in Oetober he was working with his men in the drain when the water be- gan to rise. Mugford realized Slie danger, and at once ord,ered his men up, but the wa- ter was too quick for them. A heavy storm of ramn. had come on, and the water rose three feet itt a few minutes. Three men started for the manhole, the foreman remaining behind to se- cure the staging on whieh they had. been at work. Before he could. reach it the flood came dowa with a wild rush. One man was dragged into satety by means of a life -line, but another was carried away and drowned. A man named Milton was thrown down, and would have been drowned had not Mugford come along. The foreman had retained bis calmness during- all the contusion and horror of the mom- ent. He was possessed. of exceptional strength:, and after a short struggle he succeeded in half -dragging, half - carrying the man to the staging. Farther up the drain was another workmate struggling desperately against the "'flood. The water was rising .higher, and. running with ever- increasing velocity, and the horrors of She sewer were augmented by the knowledge that the outlet was direct- ly into the sea on a rooky toast. In spite of this knowledge, Mugford once tmore left Lis plave of comparative safety upon. the staging and. went far- ther into the drain to assist the strug- gling workman. After an exhausting battle with the flood he got •hina to the staging e. d then cora 1 t d hi n P e e s task by helping the, two men to °Utah by means of foot irons and chainth to the upper part of the stage, where:foe , severe weary hours they lay and wait- , ed for the thecal to exhaust itself. ' Only those who kA th h e s my depths of ,a sewer, with, the rushing sound of wa- ter filling all the spaee, can appreciate the heroism of the man who twice plunged into. theflood to rescue the men under his charge. --------- • EXPLOSIVES. Thirty years ego there were only ow e orrors ,of about 25 explosive compounds known. Now there are more than 1,100. CHEAP SILK. Football Championship for 1895. The iosowing ones are speeulatiog On the foothleall possibilities of the sea- son, Ottnera is not likely to retain the honors of the chempion chip, as Queen's will put in a team sure to mush all ressorde. It is (Atm the case that very slight causes will lose a vic- tory. It is atated that a painful corn made useless one of the best American ' player% It fellows that no team ma Lc:9e to win phis year that neglecte to supply its members with Putoam's Painless Corn Extractor, the only safe, Sure, mei.. aranieee, oe...0.2:7:. foe corns, Goverp.on Stone has a historioal lib- fary of 2,000 volumes, devoted entirely to Pennsylvania. FOR OYER FIFTY YEARS ' WINSLOWs SOOTHING) SYRUP has been rtils,:dolihyuir4rpzetrenfsort1;lr igtistd rat, g. eare It 000heo collo, and is theebeet ereedy cliarryt tee 26o a "1;1Otr tle. Sold by all dru4isba throughout the world se sure and ark for " witiolow'e Soothing Syrup.. 31Cany Atlantic liners burn as much as 100 tons of coal a day. , "Pharaoh 10o Payne, of Grapbr. Clio" ciaar Manulaaturer. Geologists say that the natural gas supply of -Indiana will be exhausted in- side of five years., La Tosoanal 10o. RELIANCE CIGAR VAOTORY,11.fontreel An American advertiad paints post- ers on cows in fields near the railroad. L LI B S Hair. It makee it grow and restores the color. Gives new life to the Sold by all druggists. soc. a bottle. American trade with Australia in leather goods has quadrupled in five years. 41.1=11101•1•1•116 O'KEEFE'S In% MALT Invigoratea and Strengthens. W. LLOYD WOOD, Toronto, GENERAL AGENT. Chicago is about to spend $10,000,000 on street improvements.. . Bow's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for otuattoafrrChatesurrrah. tho.t cannot be cured by Hall'sy F J. CHENEY & CO.,Props., Toledo, 0. 1 chelleyttoc; tigdleareltrigePe have° kti"ivn Ista era, end el eve hlon perfectly honorable in all business transact- ions. and financially able to carry out any obit- gotionanade by their firm. WEST Ir Tatteiceinoiesele_Druggisto. Toledo, 0. WALDiNG. KINNAN & MARVIN, Wheleeale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, aoa. ing directly upon the blood and mucous Bur. floes of the system. Price, 75o. per bottle. Sold by all drugg sta. Testimonials free. Hall'e Family Pills aro the best. The latest test for sobriety is a word of 23 letters. It is electropho- tomicrograpley; and the meaning as there given is: "phOtographing by elec- trio light objects magnified by the microscope." W. P. C. 985 PER PAIR. Double Tubes, give good service --Sendln early -won t last long. --Headquarters for —Goodrich Single Tubes, - G. & J. Detachable, —Morgan & —Bicycle Sundries, Sad- dles, Tubea, &o. • Dealers' pricesen application. • American Tire Cog 164-168 King St. VVest, • TORONTO - !sass Instruments, Drums, Uniforms, etc Every town can have a hand. Lowest prices ever quoted. Fine natal eve, 500 illus. trations, mailed free. Write us for onythun in Musk) or Musical Instruments. WHALEY ROYCE & CO., - Toronto, Can. Catarrh bil11V1p0•Wahif:Ar=al,r7g for eireu erre .90.508 and $1 erb ox. The Indian Catarrh Cure Co.,146 St. Jatmes.st.,MontreaL HTt"Lill' ONE NIG. PATENT pa.m, Steel and Alominum, 4 Samples FOUNTAIN • Pena by mail for 100. Agents wanted. BRA.LIAM PEN 00,, Brookville, oat. pat ecrierlytnee? Stammerers :Paha:: if °rill: where, write to Dr. Arnett, Berlin whowin convince you home our° you lo Madagascar silk is the only fa- brk used in the manufacture of cloth- Tho Dawson CominisSion Co., Limited, ing. is cheaper than linen iti clan Icert.,%71111112.io?Vtrl:it, iTirgrtok land.55 Poultry, and other produce, if yini ship it te them /al a ‘40,AZ orouat,r4 4;4 .e..;(ftne,ndler 0-41614.111 •keldel. ow -a. itc;t40.4-4.,o 4.444,/- 05 SHORT, BUT TRONCI Is this argurne fef 1,1 GEYLUN TEA HAS THE FLAVOR AND QUALITY Lead Packages,• . • ,25* Pt OS o OC A BOON FOR THE LAME", THE tvEv PATENT EXTENSION StItOE CO., Are RIO:lone to iseoure tho satirist of every lame usa aod wonato ie Caw% whose lama nese emblem in floe 1mb being shorter than the ether. midi ere tittering semi paying e8, tt wombat to ovary euce p4911 who )v111 take the trouble to write Mt cheaters tam 415 to 401 48 &tents. Got one of the Extent:'045 for yourself wed yoo will, sitar wearing a wook, have no trouble to oenrinee others of its value. This Exteusloo b by fer the wet of Ito nature ever Vetted on the merket, and enehleg the Wort to walk 'upright, te walk with ease trod mosifort, to wear any ordinary store /hoe, and gives thew the SUMO uopearaoce es their more fortunate le leads. Desoripbere ciroulare free to allask for terms to agouti.. Malmo avast, 170 BAY STRSET, .• -• -, • TORONTO CANADA lifia Ladies9 St. Thomas' College 9 Canada. Nineteenth Year Begins September 7. „, • Among Canadian Colleges Alta 4f1;5higbest advantages; five railroads 0,o4 trolley; best health record . location in beaatilsa,,,,,,*„.k in centre of southerly Cana. dian city ; large measure oisocial attention from citizectelepollegiate Institute -worle I ing Fine Art department—best studio ; course in Oratory very suaig8Alteateati voi,,a5t Mutie..4,,MSerVatory ; lead., covered by qualified staff; most thorough and successful ; development ; practical business college course; only Domestic Science School tisk? ''° ,the individual system; patronized by all the churches and by best families ; evaage s I icalspirit ; finest buildings, modern facilities, good board, largest average number 'Of students, and exceptionally moderate rates. • FOR CATALOGUE ADDRESS REV. R. 1. WARNER, 111. A., Principal. The Springfield Republieau gravely • urges the abolition of the Fourth of Slily celebrations. MONTREAL HOTEL DIRECTORY. The Balmoral," Free Bun taaPP,:: Hotel Carslake, fruormor; Irta.n up.ranO, G.T.R, Station, Montreal, Geo. Carelake & opr.* AVENUE HOUSE—yper cla4y-. 1Avenue1:1 ,22°1,,es, ST. JAMES' HOTEL --P33%. epo oalte De two blocks from 0, P. Railway, ISrst-clan, Commeadal Howe. Modern im provemente-Itates moderate. There are 430 turpentine distilleries in rlorida. CALVERT'S Carbolic Disinfectants. +soaps, °Int- ment, Tooth Powders, etc., have been awarded100 medals and diplomas for superior excellence. Their regular use prevent infeot.i. ous diseases. Ask your 44a &ler to obtaiu it supply. Lists mailed in /application. F. C. CALVEla & CO., mANcHurrEn. - ENGLAND, "BEAVER BRAND" Maokintosh neverhardens & is guarenteed Water- proof. Ask for lt,take no other. Bea- ver Rubber Clothing Co., Montreal. HARRIS '3•13.3r - LEAD, COPPER, BRASS. • Wholesale only. Long Dletanee Telephono1720. WILLIAM $T., TORONTO. M00% MIflu & Hales; Barristers,eta, removed to Wesley, Edge., Rich- • mond St. VP., Toronto. Catholic Prayer Books, Rosaries, Cru- cifixes, Scapulars, Religious Pictures, Statuary. and Church Ornaments, Educational Works. Mail orders receive prompt atten- tion. ID. & J. GAMER & CO,, Montreal. 'pc,EAReTra feNslit,j7S0 7sr • t Reeder SE E ed elicitor of Paten* Procured in all countries. Designs, rad ark, reg.intered, Copyrights, ottra Writ, for Information. Notary Public, Tangle Blinding, Toronto, Oak - WHITE'S PHOSPHO SODA An Effervescing Phosphate, excellent cleanser for liver, , kidney and stomach, takes the pl EiMb of eoal tar prepare. biome incase of headache, its affect Is immed,ate. Sold by all druggist,. In 10c, 25e, 50c and $1 00 packages. Queen City Drug Co., 274 Wellington -ale E., Toronto. BUSINESS SCHOOL. ALBERT COLLEGE BraLLEVILLE, ONT. I $36 pays for Board, Tut (lon, etc, for one terra of 10 weeks. Send for tiaeelmed Of penmanship, eto. W. P. DYER, Principal. SCHOOL OF MINING, KINGSTON. Affiliated to Queen's University. Session begins Oc- tober 4111. Pour years for degrees (B. Si., EAU.) In 11 Merallurgy and Mining Engineering. (2) Analytic Chemistry and Asa lying, and (3)Mineralogy nnd0eo1oy. Three yeast ifor diplomes, Shorter special Courses. Graduates hitve so far secured employment Immedi- ately, For calendar apply to W'. L. GOODWIN, Director. It is not necessery to have theme. ands to make looney in grain and stmts. Teo to one hundred dolIara carefully invested on margin will 001 700 same profit ais one to lire thousand do1lr alll if you 544 chaseoutrielar. Write for pamphlet, explaining fully, F. O. ANDERSON 8z. CO., Stook and inveetment Brokers, 20 Victoria St., Toren to. Wheat AND Stooks Boller Makers ! Fitters Lathe Hands I We can give good mechanics steady work, good wages, cool,well; lightedavell-heated shop, best inodern conveniences. Brantford is a healthy, progressive city, Living cheap. WATEROUS, Brantford, Canada. ICET THE VEST BEST MACHINE 011.0 YOU KNOW tIOW IT WAS LAST YEAR ? "PEERLESS"• IS THE BEST POMMON SENSE KILLS Roaches, Bed %,/ Bev, Rats and Mice. Sold by all Druggists, or 881 Queen W. Toronto. • PifotiasOitAV 6. 4 42. j0 RES f:140_1:9*-17-s.z4‘ 0,,-.A0m anEtSTIV,'Tult.011,1-0. , • CARD INDEX... The only perfeot eyetem for keep. Ing narnea and addresses. et." Sample tray outfit 3004 The Office SpeolaitY Mfg, Co., Limited 122 end Let Hay St., TORONTO. Factory; Nowmarkeki SHOW CASES. WALL CASES Office and Bank Fixtures, Modern Store Fronts, Mirrors and Plate Glass. For low prices write TORONTO SHOW CASE CO., 02 ADELAIDE W., TORONTO, CAN. EARN rolled gold ring sot with three This beautiful brillients, by selling ona dozen Austrian, Bose Stick Plus at 10oenta each. They ere imperishable. pretty and rattly sold. Sell them, return the Irt:7",i;:'.1Z,ZEredrue'va. 411: turn 00511.Home StLerialty Co., ,Deps. z, woronto. Can. Dontainton Line STEAMSHIPS • ROYAL NAI( Montreal and Quebec to Liverpool. Large and fast Steamers Vancouver Dominion, Scotsman, Cambrotnan. Raton of passage :-FIrst °abbe. $50 upwards; Secionel Cabin, $35; Steerage, 422.50 and 1193 50. For further information Wely tolocaiagenth, or D5.YD3 TORRANCE k CO., General Agents, 1781. 8001a01001 81.. Montreal. Rotel and Saloon men cannot afford lobe without the Automatic 'Faucet Attade runt, u itpays for itself Inoue week draw- ing beer. No drip, no waste. You only need one hand to draw beer withthe Autornatie but in ease of meth you can hold glaesesia eaoh hand, as the Automatic le alwerye ready. The Autoreatie draws the finest se ass of beer and is used for any trade, as it put" the kind of bead on the beer that you want. Pries *150 pre-pald- money_refunded if not eatiafata tors. Hamilton Mfg Co.,Teronto 32% Profits for the fvlooth OF JULY. This Company, after paying the 4 per cent. monthly coupons maturing Analyst 1st, have remelting a surplus 05 38 per cent. aftee deducting expenses. and the an2Ount cturied to the reserve fund there remaius to the credit of the inveatirs a surplus over dividend of IS 4-5 Ter cont. Any enema from $50 upwards reoeivod tor investment. SZTBook free, giving full particularise The Dominion Investment Company of 'Toronto, Canada Permanent Chambers, 18 Termite St. Michigan Land for Sale. fat 000 ACRES 0000 FARMED LANDS -ARENA°, U s Togas, Ogemaw and Crawford Counties. Title per, feet. On Michigan Central, Detroit et Mackinac and soon Lake Railroads, at peace taeging from $2 to 05 ger acre. These Lands are Close to Enterprising Nee Towns, Churches, Scheele, etc., and will be sold on meet reasonable terms. Apply to • R. M. PIERCE, A gent, West Bay Oity, Mob, Or J. W. CURTLS. Whittemore, Mich. SUMMER SESSION NIIVIMO & HARRISON, BUSINESS AND SHORTHAND COLLEGE, I.O.O.F. Building, Cor. Neese and College Ste., Taranto, Thorough and practical instruction In all sulejecte pen taining to a thorough Business or Shorthand education, Thorough preparation for Lilsuid Itevenne mai:111dt See vice examinations. Open entire year, day and evening. Bend postal for free laformatiou. • FARM FOR SA_LE, 198 ACRES SITUATED In Waterloo Co., Wilmot Tp., Ont.: femile north of New Dundee and IS miles south of Petereberg, on G.T.E. ; the 1-nd slopes gettly towards south and east; is a tide clay loam, to a good state of cultivation ; there acres of orchard and garden, about 28 80000 Of goad hardwood kWh, cedar and ispruce hedge around bulidiege, n.aa 200 n aple trees bordering 00 arm; t ard ana soft water at house.; barn tupplied with seri seater by hydraulic ran; power wheel on bore; abort 50 acres oe wheat, 46 meadow., balanee epring crop farm curt be bonght with or wabout crop. For amiss address ISRAEL ORESSMAN, Now Dundee. Ont. Per Farmers' tee on agricultural machines, and for gen- eral purlieus. Stores tell It to their best trade. Don't take any other -get FEERLESS. ALLAN LI N E ROYAL 11.11,,A1:1, L 8T: LnAlowu'rtY2Esulm.scel, STEAM IRIS ' witZligittior 1 ovaav TH OBSDAV sr2fr AAttliv.o..7,,o,!1,,,,,, •,:.,,,...nrA.irs.vitAllswjltyAi4:2, Von) 411,t1uA:tuorguilaltlt 51 ,Aug.,.... , ....CALIFORNIAN '' '' " ' ' '11 • iiii,eat- .. ,, .. ,, , PA%1SIAN . ' ' '''''' . 21 8°1* 7 Sept Tho new Twin $crew FL S. Eavatintl, 10,100 tom, will I a clinic II t„Ltilarr 851 ctola2u4d, and ton . Montreal Sept.?, Second Cabln-$36.00, BAUM *KA Stoerolle -Liverpool, Lemuel, Meyer,. tondoodettY• thleoegtowe, vase,. For tieltets and ell iniotmotion apply 10 tonal ageotoi. II. SWIRLIER, 71 Yonge St., TorOnta. Or .IL & A. ALLAN Montreal, FREE to every boy antigill vibe sends us the full name and address of Ste bead or girls (ever 14 yeare old) and their own address, we vA.I tward a handsome bicycle weld set. We require all who are awatded the waist sot to dia4ribu1o23pkgs. of our Lemonade Ponder arid collect 5e per pkg. Etude package con taloa enough for tOn elutes. %tweet the looney to us by express, money order or postal note, and we evil I give 700 addition te eyelet eot art elegant bricelet. In order to induce a tempt - nem, to all who inekereturneinelde twelve daye ism receipt of roodit Wtit furthOr give a love. y stick phi. DOMINION SUPPLY nourst, 92 'Cog 81. W., Hamilton, Oat, hEALT H nesTonto vgluq.: most Bladdet, Kidneys, Drain and Breath, by disordered 814401001,, Image , Nieves, Liver, Md/ oo Du garritiPft ReFalert a 0,g): ' 'f -e' E,L- r: w Ambl°4 Food' irkfi 10 _. 9 Itwariable 84.emess, 10,000 Aftemai Cures or (Inmates. who* Saxes Invalids and Children, sad also Ift are 010. ,Von,a le rejected, saves 50 arno its cost In motile at fl messfally Infanta *head Alitetets and Debility IWO ,rta Sisted1111 °thin treatments, It eilOsts when tt I otlief Moo, Itlatieloney, Clellegisie, Indigeetios, Consumption, Diabetes, 'Bronchitis, 15011.ones, Coughs Aetilma. Catarrh, Phlegm, Diarthose, NOVOlth DebilitySleopittOnOtt Dociscodency tanarry Co aa . (1,1inited) • at all Grentlait Oleamists, sad Stores otter; whess!itnkqtit:ler London, 11',, also he Pads, 14 Rae de Otestiglieu. nod la, 0„ Bet, 81., 8110.1 144, StiotiadrrIaiie 1r40. 11188 rtO Botta' s Iteealmits, Dirmitiein tius, to. 45. andiat, menu fottlandedat TIM T. Eaton Co., Limited, Toronta . . .. ...