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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1900-5-31, Page 3e TEE EXTEEE, TIMES THE REBUILDING OF HULL HOW IT IS PROPOSED TO LAY OUT TRE QUAINT OLD CITY. To Rise. i'iroentx-elite prow its 'tenses, to Nest Substantial wernaseereteat& (WM° Inane ex Wines. If the new plans; prevail Hull with be rebuilton incombustible prep- otples. There will be a broad street running north and south and :anoth- er broad street running east lama west, and the other streets swill cross t' these with beautiful mathema isal precision, The houses will be of stone or brick stu000, with metal or slate roofs. It wilt he a meat, safe, thrifty, modern city, with sanitary regailetions, Of course, this makes for the pub- lic good,. but it's hard on the word ' colorist. The burnt Hull, it it was dirty, was also quaint. It had an antique foreign flavour that we ad- Mired. There were winding little streets, noisome out de sacs, slipshod tenements and foul little alleys, which offended the nose but charmed the eye, When you came to analyze the eller= it evould A resolve into. elements, except perhaps that the shop awnings Were hung too low, there were no be -laws, against segue overhanging the ,street, and many of the houses had iron grilles as the front door. It you could just forget the chances of typhoid fever Hull was a very pretty pleas, particularly ed when the bre letee of a Sunday, � y 3irenett git'le weal, to u:utroii and the estrcetr were af,ame, with vivid color in gown and buuuet, Tao coquetry, the ewitt glances, the bright eyes and brilliant cow. these Perraauent quantities, for they are of the eternal fenini ra ,vlietl eE' c t strange elven Lor fired; belt the quaint- ness and the dirt, thele ere gone fur ever. The teterelzz of proilressa is too much for them. THIS WAS LUCKY. 1t is butter to have sere houses than to have quaint bowies. Lord ALlnto tai of that upinion, and so expressed ,prtogreasiva farmer wit() wishes to. himself to the iteratutttee. 50 heel, kimoelf iu the front ranks of thou ht au iiteuranee cornpeny wbach i Vruuue,ng ;good wholesome milk will cancelled every puhcy it laid la Bull { uo;. ua ,+rtuout a gutta aerator and two weeks before the fire. This was center. 1. ketew it 'at extremely elf - either geed luck in ea ceilwrt pros- twilit to eunvluee the orut:ary dewy cleni e, prubebly the farmer, for the man that It r3 to his interest to use Prescience wasn't workbag when the an aerator and cooler !without ani up- poticies were tweezn•'& The muni goal to direct experiment., cipalities of Ottawa and Null ba.vo Welk is never in so good] a Couch - the lesion pretty weft burnt in, and win ter treatureet ne when it is warm are now cunsiderinti the 4u -within of and fresh tru,tu he cow. An aerator fire areas. They are arse debating'; and cooler aliPl•ed at this time, will the pais of tho big lumbermen whop remove all an.mal odor, and arroat store millions of toot et inflammable all .germs of fermentation. putrefac- tion and deeag. it evil1 leave the milk tart cities. A special oeinrmittea of taodoroue and agreeable to the tante. the Ottawa f n,i, oil has the matter Welk ueelere have dtscovered this, elawsr- • 01t the Faxen. ernrrsteweth-./Malt PURE :AND WHOLESOME To produce pure and wholesome milk the first thingt to be dant is :to preoure a good, healthy cow, one' that *rightly pet up for the business for -which you: want her,. seyo B, H, obeli. With an unhealthy cow you cannot expect to get a 'whotestgme article of milk, butter or cheese,/, no matter how well you, May care tarthe milk or treat it yo'w cannot oaken n pure .and wholesome article of food from an unhealthy vcow, Second, to make pure and whole - Seine mint it is important to have pare unadulterated food and pure water for the cow, ;`or it lei one of the ins- Possibilities to make s, pure and wholesntna milk out of impure food and water, as they do riot undergo y tuannet' of purification after they ere taken trite the etomaeh un- til they are converted into milk. As milk is a secretion, and, not a monies tion, eonse ceiently the milk in agreat measure, not'altogether, partakes the nature of the teed and water, Third le oleantinesa. With a dirty ow and a dirty,badly lighted and i. ventilated stable your heed not ex- pect to get a pure and w.holeett ne tteie of milk. I don't care bow well You) may teed and water year sow has, been ditched across. A, heavy ramp during the night might work dis- aster with no ditches. At this season• it is well to tools over underalraine and see that the outlets are olear of weeds and; rub- bish. If there is a stoppage, unless the fall is rapid, the sediment gather tar back. A little attention will save much work, COLS` TRAITS.. One of the best things to tea* a cote ie to lower its head and pass wa- der a tree or clothesline. One of my horses will more than lower the head if necessary. A colt that is high - headed and was at first t afraid o ease under anything, will now put down her head whenever she meets anything liable to interfere with it. 4 docile trait I often admire in big city hors- es is theturning, of the bead. to let a carriage pass when they are back- ed up to the ourb. These habits some tunes save horse's eyes or lives. Never get a horse to the habit of throwing up the head on every occasion. . ILEAL ADEPT. Visitor. Is your daughter Maggiea very accomplished pianist. Mrs. Brown Jones? Fond Mamma. Oh, yea, indeed; yon should bear her play Sonne, Sweet Hoene with verietioast Why. she gnat in so many little twiddles and; runs yau'd really never recognize it at all DIDN'T KNOW IT BY THAT NAME, Didn't you find the tipping nuisance particularly exasperating, senate oxo ea how gooa si cow yap; amyl, have. it asked uncle Jerry., who, had just re- rulers as their natural oppressors, ous ways tried to brace him up tor. is an ampessible thing to pec a good, urued frorrr his first visit to afash- Tho army was :,o badly lad that the further wont, but It was of no use. ionable watering place. healthy lite ur growth of eithen ant- The tipping nuisances lee said. Oh, individual eaaraba et tba loan was lie slfnply could not go on. and ao the mal et' vegetable matter withent good yes, there was always some idiot who made useless. Justice, personal rest of the story never saw the tlgiit.' - t cboat. i s New York Commercial Advertiser. 11 and� � wanted a rook the rights, a bit ewers. Ineanii gle.s light, vurishtna and plenty (Apure� g " 9. Y phrases, NEW LIFE IN EGYPT. ONE TASTE OF CEYLON GREEN TEA will. captivate the taste of any Japan tea drinker. WWII IN THE FAB SOUDAN SPLENDID SHOWING OF THE BRITISH RULE IN EGYPT. Lord (;romer'el .Annual Report Showa .that a Tr,irieroran:til+n Is Item„ Enacted in the Cennnered Land. The modest .and natter -of -fact of- ficial report by Lord Cromer on Egypt in 1899, whicb. is now issued, affords a magnificent demonstration of the benefits fit tsar Imperial rule, says a London letter. Lord Cromer { ;has, had to build up the new Egypt the life of hien he could not go on with a under almost every possiible disad- the tale, and be bad to go to ltlr. Ecu- per and say so frankly. vantage. Ile found, when he began Th his task. chaos, Officialism, that had peered without the expected iilstadl- ' . tong grown fat on the Molt profits Meat of the story', but with a brief+ � of mat admintetration. was sullenly in note to the effect that. owing to the opposition. The waste of public sudden illness of Its author" its further money had been redwood to a fine Publication was temporarily suspend- ext. Extortion, under the thin von- ed. This was to give that embarrass- eer of legal form, wan universal, '1 he ed persona chance to recover his in - tJI�I WISHED TALES, in: buying tea consists in buying the best-- jsdQl�x- Stariee'Mat Antiaori. Beide. and Find It 1[mpoirnibie to pollee. The inability of an author to finish u piece of work that he has engaged to do and has already actually begun le. not sg very uneonenron a thing. It is said that ,Pickens began "The Mystery of 'Edwin Drogd" without any clear conception in his mend of how the story was going to turn out and that had he not died, leaviug it untinlshed, be would Pave found almost any ending difficult to reconeile with certain hints contained in the earlier chapters We remember a rather eustous instance of n happened a m sortasbasin.- h eA the same a � PP good many years ago, when the elder Bonner was editin{I the New York Ledger. 9, very impecunious literary man seat to Bonner the first chapters of a most exciting story which; gave promise Of being just the sort of thing wbieh ' readers of The Leder used to like.. The story was accepted and ran on me- interruptedly and very successfully for about four weeks, when all of a sudden the author's invention gave out, FM c i i Q i ;A» t IT ISN'T Int is anL7 with the eh .p pa a]tt QUANTITY Cleat cl+aantttp is required tauaa a ahaw sized then. Yost, lose iia frena and labour guittln1:4 It en. Ora. !l ' Big allon' of THAT COU e next number of The Ledger ap- Ramsay's Paints, w It " ewes." more aurt.ece *a it better than two gallons orate ary paint, sand when it's on. it aye en, and gives you some - nig ter ear time, labour and enay. It's "gv,alit�'," that coup*s. Ask your dealer. peasantry had come to regard theirsplration. Alr. Bonner asked. him to diener, tools hien sirloin g and lei wart. to breathe, and without it you Ha & let o MONTREAL. Exr,P x$4t HORSES' TEETH. "The popular idea that Um age of a horse can always he told by took- lug at his teeth," says a veterinary surgeon, he not entirely eorreot. Ate ter the eighth year the. torso has no more new teeth, so tkiat the tooth' method is useless for telling the age ut a borne whittle is more than 8 years old. Ae soon ate tate eat of teeth its co.oa,,lete, b ,wever, a wrilkie' begins to appear on the upper edge of the Lowe reyelid, and a new T$l+, CHEAPER WAY. wrinkle is added each year, so that not nave a good, health cow to get at the age of a horso over 8 sled you mallet have good, `v,heiasoana City Costain. t;• see the fame bowie years old you meat figure the teeth IA less than twenty years Lord milk. next to thea, is ctased. Why is that, plus the wrinkles." Mural Relative. Airs. Hayfork, wee Cromer and hie staff have given SS TAF FEiQOL . aunt on the ;Karn) by a comparatively er than staytn. on the farm an feedin" The Friend—Pretty sterile land f naw maotuue eepeciatly aoap.ed to city relations. other nations have acted the part pf pasturage t The 1r axrnar--� 1, AT y cang y , TI + , L REE. No Loner Any Pear of Bright' Disease `ince Dodd's Kidney Pills Came Into Use. Foursli a the stars and aool- re be sera Uvea there, leas gone to tha seaside Egypt new tire. They have not had ing of the intik The aeration of the for the auinraer. She says it's cheap- a free hand, At almost every step the dog in the manger, restraining 'a and than. l; PLAiti D, necessary changes. The young IChe- that's the way to gtt sterilized rat*. deal/ uutrylng;. I wish! to say right . a► oe Oen. eve.He. I have no appetite. There ma dive has at times shown great will- ygoad, live, w.+:9 awake „utnhling in my stomach: like a cart ingness to give trouble. Obsolete` re- quick as thought n a cobblestone pavement, gutati.ons kinder our Administrators The maddening toothache stops w She. l'erhapa ars the truelr you eta :lorviline—that wonderful nerve -pain rr luncheon. from using to the utmost advantage , e wort to a new in.ontion in Ara. - alt Kidney OPtease ere peen iteaaered llurmies4—]iaxl,t Culmood's+ Cass of nnemn nwn—per Gratitude for itodd'st teenier rill(. Montreal May 21. -.•Another cure by the prosperity they have helped into Doilds Eidney Pills is reported Intim being. An artificial system of fin- city, This time it is Rheumatism ance'has been superimposed on them This that times ens remedy bas ism f ytti r a year hundred. 'e 1 std n raise e the ththousand slit ar a.winter, . pounds more than the national as- have reached the press. Rheumatism penditure requires. Lord. Cromer is so common in i' city —as 6 Indeed throughout the province--thet Banat Agreement, which compels this. y y .d Pills nrt� As a pointy i i debare gyp coming more and more into general use. In Iliontreal alono there have front benefiting; to the Exit extent rtes„ Oceans of aures of Rheumatism by Dodd's,Kidney Pills reportetfolaele last fall. Riie•nmatisln is seldom curable co treated by the majority of physician' and at hospitals. But more than on doctor has confessed of recent year that he has cured Rheumatism by tie use of Dodd's Kidney Pills eelebna�t e as the first and only oure ever lrnow for either Bright's Disease or Dia bates. That this latter claim is true ha: been proved over and over again it Montreal. In fact Bright's Disease is pushed _ no longer the dreaded malady ltwas modern system of drainage and water ten years ago when to be seized by in band. Thu propssel ie telae hem,. ° tinning their cttastomera appreciating fter ze, snail -owner stall have more 1 the change o1; the flavor and general than belt a mill :>,i foci of sawn : improvement. in, the condition of the lumber stated in the neighbourhood milk, 24ilk sa treated is vastly more of his atilt or in the city finite. Of healthLut and digestible by delicate course this brings a protest from the a umacus nen by children arid will mill -owners and from those who keep nearly two days longer than THE POTENT KIND. thrive on the shipping industry be-, mux not ao treated. Seedy Party, to bartender. Whisky low rho, Chaudiere. Granted that Every intik dealer known well the please, lumber as stored outside ciao city, =eery of caring for milk that has Bartender. What kind friend? T'fON TOWNS. arked the pherma fined another iaxeeerip ilk, are now a drug ria. W. ', C. ALVER''S.�. eargotro Q infect nta. gossips, writ, mens, Tooth PoWeere, este., baste beast awarded 100 rnedolem.d diplrmns+for aupesior excellence. 'flu h regular nee Prevent tcfe0tl. one diseases Ask your dealer to ol�taia aa. impel:. Lista mailed free on application. F. C, CALVERT & COss 114ANOHEATa.R - • t?ti�it,�ttta WI. Mute Os halal risks rs,et c.,rsei ores Weiler 111d .,. Web. cure—is applied to the tooth. her - vain() is the only positive, never -tail- IN NEED O + .A, DEFINITION. ing remedy tor headaches and all. nerve pain. Be advised and try it. You say they are excellent neigh- b •h b last ea they were ro cora tell- npt°red There have been scores o hours 1 eases this few of which The fee for county pupils at Gait Yes. High School, is $t2. while town pupils Well that's something indefinite. Do this cit •.pis it is Pay $1�1. you mean that they never borrow or what they are wIltIng to fond? for a change of the Interna- TUE MOON'S INFLUENCE. a ever da Dodds Si ney t PUTTING IT UTPLO tAT.TCALLY. h ,M t d b E t Upon tho weather is accepted by some as real, by others it is disputed. `t'ite Mrs. Bronxborough. Did you telt the cook that the heefete,ak was burn- od, Ifr, Brouxboroatgh. Not exactly, I told her it was just right,. but that we preferred it a trifle underdone. weeeseormeawaya they argue that labor will follow In u't' been properly treated at the the track of industry, and thatpres- °farm, Tne careful eheesero,•ker who ently there will be another lumber , has sitletto t to produce Mina goc;ds suburb Lo be destroyed by tire. luso : toile un ever and over agana that he there are hints that the lumbermen ` cannot by any process of factory might take their energy and their manipulation entirely remedy any capital elsewhere if their present i milk dealefective nllknow, that k at the fthis rmutst be methods of doing business aro ham - done dorso at the barn, There are many pored in any way. the general open- kinds of mite aerators and.coolers ion .seems to be that this is an idle threat and that Ottawa is of more use to the lumbermen than the lum- bermen are to Ottawa Ono news- Milk secreted• in the hetesl glands paper even exclaims s;—"Let Mr.yed ,of the female mammalia ore than Booth go. The fire has destroyed anyother cerretion is infteenoe.i by more in a day than he has been of nerous conditions. . mothers worth to Ottawa in ten years."What with pressure from the Government, the municipal authorities, public opin- ion and the insurance companies the lumbermen will probably be put in their place and kept there. The public safety is of higher importance than private interests. HE GOT THE INTERVIEW. mamlutfnotured, and they are so cheap they aro within the . reach of. any ordinary dairyman. A Story of Amon Cummings land See- retary of State Sevvara. it was while Amos Cummings was the Washington correspondent of the New York'Sun that he had a. memora- ble interview with Lincoln's secretary of state, Seward. Cummings received orders one day to get certain informa- tion from Secretary. Seward without fail, and accordingly he went to the secretary's office to see him. Mr. Seward did not receive the newspaper man very cordially.. "I won't talk to a representative of The Sun on that subject," said the sec- retary.` "I am very busy. You are taking up my time, young man, and I can't be bothered with you." In an instant Cummings was boiling witb anger and hurt pride. He drew himself np, looked the secretary straight in the' eyes and said: "You forget, sir, that there aro: three parties to this interview." "Three?" queried Seward in surprise. "Haw do you make that out?" "First, sir, there Is you, secretary of state and one of the foremost ft sures Oteletent bosom will fili wiih milk at the thought al ner child. The whole character ot milk is often charged per and t he infant thrown into con - proves fatal. It is an exceedingly delicate and changeable fluid, con- tatning as it dOes all ok the plastics elements necessaey for the construic- title of the various tissues of the bouy yet when carelessly treated it is liable to undergo certain aubtle chemical changes, in 'consequence of vehich from being one of the most wholesome of foods it betomes a dead- ly poison. When you, consider the ignorance and criminal indifference often prac- ticed in locating buildings, so as to pollute by drainage the water sup- ply, is it any wonder that, cows and the milk which they furnish should become media for a widespread dif- fusion of diseases? MANAGEMENT OF WET SOIL. Roll your meacloisrs as soon as they will bear a team. Have the roller well weighted and use before the lift- ed sod, exposing the grass roots, be- comes too hard and dry. If this is neglected, the meadows will not only be -uneven, but when you come to out, the mower -knives will nut toot close to the roots, injorying the plant for a future crop. This is' one reason why so much, hay is dusty- and af poor quality. Roll your meadows and do it early. Let other work slide if necessary, but zee your meadows. It will pays p Oats should. go ex as early as pos- sible, but not while the land zs' wet and heavy. It will pay to wait until the eta is meliew and looSe• enough for proper working of the drill. No seed bed can be properly prepared when the soil clings to the; harrow teeth. Oats will do better' than wheat or barley on a wet soll, but I find thal an undrainecl coil well pulverized is best for a full crop,. Whatever the spring crop may be, it is welt to guard against delay and failure. In plowing a field of clay loam thee is to be cross clitshed„ 'do mit wait work until the days' plowing Seedy Party. Glirinse the same as the gentleman bad wot's lyin' under the billard table. THE REAL warm. Your husband seems to be a riot= of the tobaoeo habit. No: I'm the virtim. He thoroughly enjoys it. Over 5,319,000 persons in India are in want, and the demands for relief are said to be inoreasing. EMPTY PROTESTATION. The Maid—My soldier sweetheart swore he loved me better than life. The, Matron—That's nothing. Being a soldier, he is presumed to care noth- ing for life. NOT WHIT HE MEANT. Robinson, whose house has been broken into, Bevel you heard of my Walker. No; when did you: come Congressman Littlefield of Maine, was the son of a Free Will Baptist clergyman, who changed his parish many times. Hence the boy was ode- cated at Lebanon, Rockland, Foxoroft, Vinalhaven, and 'Week's Mills, Me. COWED. Captious Critic. Oh, come now, you don't mean to ewer seriously that is a portrait of Gen. Sir Timothy Hot- „ Photographer. Taken from life. I can't understand that. I've seen Sir Timothy at the head of., his riot- gade many a time, and he always had a fire-eating expression svhioh no one could forget; but in the portrait he looks as meek as a lamb. Hut, my dear sir, he wasn't at the head of his troops when be sat for that picture. Well, I've .seen him alone, too, and his expression was just the same.. ne was alone when he came here, I 'sup - No, not exactly: his wife was with SHOWED THEIR 'REGARD. Joggles. Lsee there's' a new keep- er in the menagerie. Didn't the am - mals like the old one? Waggles. I guess eo. They ate turn from its own prosperity. Yet, not- withstanding this, the National debt is now being yearly diminished, and by skilful finanoial cleats the total of interest due is materially decreased. LENDING MONEY. Lord Croraer is especially laterest- ing when he descrlbes the industrial transformation of the land. Tho peasantry now find their rulers a help instead of a cheek to prosperity. The Government has started lending small sums to the falleheen with sue - cess. The great Nile reservoirs, whieh will have a most far-reaohiug effect on agriculture, are steadily being ONR-SIDED RACE... Yes, said the poet, have been per - ailing fame for the past five years. De you think, she innocently ask- ed, that it is any farther ahead of you now than it was at the start ? supply. Everywhere, in short, pro- gress rules. Even in the Soudan, -where less than two years baok sav- agery ruled with undisputed sway, civilization an& peace everywhere prevail. The Cook's tourist may soon visit Khartoum at his ease. Trade is being fostered among tribes that not long since found their one business in slave -raiding and thieving., A. TRANSE'ORMATION We are aften told by our Continent- al critics that aur position in Egypt is unjustifiable and against all pre- cedent. While we oan show such re- sults as now there is little need for us to trou.ble about the formality' of our authority. In makixer itself re- sponsible for the good. government of Egypt, England took up a task from which other nations then shrank. Our action was disinterested, for, di- rectly, we gain no single thing by our work. Indirectly, we profit much, but not in the way our detractors say. We profit in that Egypt gives us an opportunity of showiug to the world what England can do. For Egypt we have given the bravest of our sons. English blood has been poured out on its sands for it. And the outlay has not been in vain. For out of our sacrifice is coming a trans- formed nation. Bright's Disease meant certain deaele Now Dodd's Kidney Pills are well knewn and by their nee Bright's Disease is thrown from the system Dedd's Kidney Pills are just as effi- cacious in the treaeraent of maladies resulting from disordered kidneys as they are for looal kidney diseases themselves. Here is an instance: "I have followed the treatment of the first doctors of Montreal for Rheumatism frora which I have been euffering for six ye.ars, but I got no relief from it. I have taken seven boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills, and I am completely cured. I am telling all my friends of the excellence of this remedy, and I thank it a thousand ee STOR'ir OF A BARONET. The following story of the tate Sir John Millais is contributed by Lord jaimes of Hereford, to a recently pub- lished biography of the great Eng- lish artist: Shortly after his title was confer- red upon h:m Millais paid a profession- al visit to Manchester. Upon his re- turn, addressing dome friends in his cheery way, he said: "You fellows think it is nothing to be made a baronet, but I oan tell you that it means a great deal, and I like it. Here you see I went to the hotel in Manchester, and I said to a beautiful young person at the office fire in it." " Off she went to a pipe, and said: " She than asked me to write my name, which I did Looking at me, she said: " • Are you Sir John /Ylillais 1' eo the same pipe she went and said: li';`eNicn,wity.'o'u see the use of being a baronet, my boys l'' 411 times a day." Yours truly, Maria Guimond; What Be Lost. The nervous commuter bad one nilto ute in whicb to catch his train. He was hastening exceedingly when the cries of a small boy smote upon his ear. "Hey, mister!" shouted the urchin. The commuter stopped and hastily counted his bundles, "What have I lost?" he panted. "Why," said the boy, "yer've lost that shine I put on yer shoes yistidy. "I'll give yer another fur a nickel."—Philadelphla Press. Corks Float. "Plrwas Ivery place covered in Noah's flood, Dinny'?" "All but th' city of Cork, Larry." -a Chicago News. moan never attracts corns from the 'ender, a.ehing spot. Putnanne Pain - ?MS Corn Extractor removes the must mintul mires in three deys. 'Dais reat remedy Makes no sure spots, loesn't go fooling around a Man's 'oat, but gets to business at once, and ffeots cure. Don't be imposed up - ,n by substitutes and Imitations. Get •Putnam's," and no other. Miss M. 3". Cerswell, ot Westmeath. ois been appointed Poly euperintend- ,nt of the Calgary hospital. TO CIVAE A COLO IV ONE DAV s refund the money if it fails to cure. 5c. IC. W. Grove's g iature is on each box William Ryder esraped from the '''arry Sound jail, hut was raptured after a chase of sixteeit )44:EiEEFE'ti ALT EXT. OF Invigorates arid Ste. n„thens. LLOYD WO9D. GEN URAL .h.GtICS Rev. Father Devlin, formerly of Guelph, was struek by- a foorpaei and seriously hurt. MRS. WINSLOW's ROOTED -NG SYRUP has base used by mothrre for their ehthiren teeibing, It ano hes the child, softens the gums, allays Pain, cures wind polio, and la the beet remedy f. Tic.a bottle. Bold by all druggists throughout the world. Be sura and ask for " Wins. ow's Soothing. Syrup," Acoording to the assessors only one sheep inhabits Orillia. si00 Reward, $103. The readers of this paper will be 'pleased to leArn that there is at least one dread., d disease that schwas has been able to Pure in al its etiv-es and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive our.) now known to the mo UAW 'raternity. Catarrh losing a MIS- titutlonal disease, require; a constitutional tro unmet. Hall's Catarrh Clu e tak n inter - Emily, acting directly upon the b ood and mucous surfaces tho system, thereby des. troying the fouadatioa of the disotte. and giving ti e patient strength by building up the e nstitution and as Wino natuni in doing its arora, The proprieto a hove so much faith in p a curative powere that they offer rne Hun- dred Dbliars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of tostunonittlo. Address. F. 3. 0111i3NEy&CO., Toledo, O. Sold by drungis s, Hall's Family Pills are the best Workmen .cleaning out the chimney of the old °retie. asylum found thons- ands of dead sparrowe. MONTREAL 14OTEL DIRECTORY. mum, SCAPtihras POULTRY, BUTTER, ERRS, APPLES, Thu Dawson COMM,Sii00 Co., Littlittnis Cots Weetelarket &Colborne Ste Toronto, roe the very hot +mei y sortie the "BRITISH AMERICAN BYElliC CO." Look for y air town, or Youddirset, Nlontreal,Toronto, Ottawa, Quebec ior,s,, Toronto, doe. by. oar Elf ST.. JAPVIES) HOTEL AVENUE HOUSE Family Hotel rates $1.6e Railway. Pint -class OcuunercirlrfioOt.k° *revel:omits—Rates moderate. 7"/ 44411111 44,,t radater Importer and exporter of Beer kaws and Skins. Con. signments solicited. High- est erices paid for glusing. IL JOHNSON, 40" St. Paul street. Montreal Michlgan Land for Sale. 000 ACRES 0000 FAIIMIN0 looso„ ft/sinew end Oro, Title per, reasouablo terms. APpl; to J.W. Ri1S. Ulut,.ensoris. kWh. shop Dressing OFTEN HINE ALL COLORS ALL LATHRS. Hoc. sale by all,first-olass MONTREA L. CANAPA PERMANENT Loan and Savings Company. ISCORPOiCATICA 1855. The Oldest and Largest Gonadial) Most. gage OorpOrctiOn. Reserve Fund - - 1,200,000 Head Moe—Toronto St., Toronto. Branch Offleee—WInnipeg, Man., Vanoeuver, 8.0 DEPOSITS REORIvRD. Intorest allowed. DEBEINTTIABS ISSUED for 1, 2, 3, 4 or 4 years, 4 ith interest coupons attached, INICHBY MITT on security of real estate mortgagee, Government and Municipal Bends, (AO. TOT further particulars apply to J. HER/MY:II MASON. JAS. Ft, ANNZST, Manager. JOSH J. Mittli, Supt. anti Treas. The Canadian Hai a Way BOILE Esplanade, Opp, Sherbourne St., Toronto High Claes Water Tubs Steatt Boilers, for Ali Pressarest Duties and Fuoi. ' An of Toronto, where boilers niaY be rieonuerxu/S. ette