Exeter Times, 1901-8-15, Page 3NOTES 4NVD COMMENTS.
The other day a magistrate of
New York gave the opinion, perhaps
it, is more accurate to say the dic-
tum, that awoman has no right to
"go through" her husband's pockets,
We don't know that there is any
light on the subject in the Year
books. Most of women's rights
have grown up since then, and where
did the tyrant man wear his pockets
in earlier days? Is there anything
in Froissart or anybody else to
show where Edward the Black Prince
in all his armor kept his change and
how he got at it? Where did God-
frey of Bouillon hide his latchkey?
It is idle to tell us of pouch and gir-
dle, Robinhood knew where to find
the treasury of the gentlemen whom
he invited to contribute to the sup-
port of :a poor man whose leech bad
forbidden him to eat anything but
venison, but did tats, sheriff of Not-
tingham
ottingham have anything that could
properly be called a trousers pocket?
Did Blueheard or Henry VIII. in
all his glory and his plethora of
Matrimonial ventures ever have in
hose or doublet a pocket which
could readily be described en a
change pocket. "lie, good my at -
Mauer, fling me a rose noble to
yon merry minstrel." 0, we have
read historical novels and know
their lovely language,' but we defy
anybody to prove that any law of
the easement of wives in the pocitete
of their husbands can be traced un-
til the origin and history of the
packet have been more fully eta
Plained.
: -
plained.
Yete unless bureau nature was
very backward, the women Must
have exem;ised from. immemorial
lea
tiarte privilege. a, elm grownin-
to
-to a right, of inspecting the boards
or caches of their husbands, They ,
may not have looked for love let-
ters, writing schools being then un-
common and the club or adze tak-
ing the place of the complete letter,
writer; but we may be sure that
they abstracted acorns, thus laying
unconsciously but solidly the Wan -
dation for the beneficent principle of
an allowance. There were pockets
in the earth or tree or lake; it is no
paradox to say that pockets came
before clothes. And when the w h10
Salvage made him a. coat of the
skin of a, goat, womat; was there to.
share his toils; also his receipts. 'We
have no doubt that Pocahontas,
that Virginia nonpareil, meat
through Master Itolfe's pockets as
artistically as if she had been bred
within the sound of the Bow Bells,
By prescription and age -long cus-
tom, a. married woman has obtained
the right to search in her husband's
pockets. Economically, the custom.
is or has been justifiable. Woman
has had to take her own wherever
she could find it. Morally the cus-
tom is salutary. It shows a man the
necessity of wary evalkng. It holds
ao
tell w to a, standard, warns him
to be careful in his correspondence,
corrects his avarice or his prodigal-
ity. A woman begins, if we may ha-
zard a. theory, by searching her
boy's pockets, sure to contain many
surprising and some noxious objects.
She has to become a. censor and in-
spector of masculine treasures. Then
in the present day, when most men
who are not sailors or soldiers have
lost the art of sewing, she is the
r pocket maker, the pocket patcher.
She makes the pockets. She keeps
them in order. She has a clear title
to toll, rent or whatever you want
to call it ; the woman's penny.
Without her the supercilious beast
wouldn't have any pockets. She is
justified in charging him a fee, a
slight interest on the • endowment of
all his worldly goods. She has the
right to garnish his pockets.
Besides, they are her pockets.
Without enlarging upon the necessity
of a common household fund and of
a special privy purse for the wife,
it is enough to say that since for
mysterious reason, into which Hea-
ven forfend that we should enter,
she has no pockets of her: own, his
must be hers. She hasthe right to
use them, to collect her just dues
from them. If he doesn't like it, let
him stuff his ill-gotten gains into
saddlebags, and carry them securely
locked around with him or jingle his
loose change into a safe deposit
vault every day. Bet see . what
comes to the niggard. Every day
you read of
some churl who wl o tuck
away money in' a mattress or an old
stove or a cracked coffee-pot. Fate
finds him out and punishes : him.
Fire or the junkman or the ragman
gets the dollars he grudged his wife,
The right of visitation of a hus-
band's pockets is important to
social justice and domestic economy.
It may be waived ; but it is only
suspended, not lost.
The guinea-pig holds the record
for quick growth 'ginong' animals: 'It
iw full growr at E; weeks.
WHERE DIVERS COME FROM
SAIL FROM A VILLAGE AT
'Deer MOUTH OF THE
THAMES.
Cornish Miners Nay be Found
Scattered A11. Over the World.
At the mouth of the Thames,
near Southend-on-Sea, England,
there is a little village nestled un-
der a bluff, looking dead to the
world.
it is Leigh, where the divers come
from. Over eight -tenths of all the
divers in the world, serving all na-
tions, hail from this village, and
though it only holds 2,100 people
now, 900 more go out to dive in
all the scan of the earth, coming
back to Leigh to die, and the world
pays $600,000 per annum for them.
It is because there are no
DIVERS LIKE THE GENUINE
Leigh article that all navies are pro-
vided with them, as well as most
merchant, companies, and they draw
good pay—as ihuch as 640 a week
in some remote parts. It is largely
the lungs of the Leigh men that
qualify them, and the fact that the
profession has gone down among
them from, father to son.
In diving families, whose uniform'.,
is the rubber suit and copper hel-
met, the men are able to stand sin.e
ty Per cent. More of this trying
work than "outsiders" from other
parts, for the drums of their ears
are impervious to the paintul effects
that attack tee beginner, and the
blood does not press on their brains.
while diving, They and their sons
control the diving wages of the
world, and all countries, from the
States 'to ,japan, employ them.
While one is inspecting the piles of
Southend Pier, a hundred of his
brethren are five fathoms deep in
foreign seas, earning princely pay.
There is a parish in Cornwall—
Redruth--round which you might cy-
cle in the times it takes to make a
cigarette, and it supplies all five
continents with miners, which they
Cannot do without, On the last re-
turns. xove
aty-twaper seat of the
world's underground miners were
Cornishmen, nearly all from Red-
ruth, with the rest from Bodinin,',
and In all they totalled 17,(100, not!
counting the ones working in Brit-
ain, and drawing an estimated wage
-
bid from the nations of well over
$15,000,000 A YEAR.
There is no miner who can compare
with the Cornishman, for mining is
in his blood;. and at present there are
1.50(1 of them in West Africa, 5,000
at the ('apo, 0,000 in Australia,
which country owes a third of its
prosperity to the -Bedruth miner ;
4,000 in the States, where Uncle
Sam. smart os he is, cannot run Ins
mines without the lledrutih man
and the rest in Russia, South Am-
erica, and India. if it pleased Red -
rutins sons to come out on strike
all over the world to -morrow, Owe -
thirds of the Stock Exchange mar-
kets would be on their beam -ends;
and even Cecil Rhodes feels the pow-
er of this little parish, for native
miners are no good unless stiffened
with Cornishmen.
North and South Shields, on the
Tyue, turn out marine engineers for
the entire earth, with only one or
two Scotch parishes to rival them.
:fife rest of the world's engineers
make a poor show uhn,gaide them in
numbers; and of 14,000 now at sea.,
11,000 Shields men are 'rolling in
engine rooms on the wild waters,
and running navies for foreign
States,
The American Navy's engine -rooms
ethem,trust-
worthy
full of and the
n h
only
thing in the Portuguese
Fleet is
THE "GEORDIE" ENGINEERING
staff. These 11,000 "Shiclders"
draw from the world outside Britain
at least $15,500,000, including jun-
iors, their incomes averaging $1,-
i350 a year, and running from $500
to $5,000 per annum, wanting the
assistants.
Little foreign States like Siam
will pay anything for "Geor-
dies"; but they get their best berths
in the South American Republics,
where the nondescript fleets and en-
gine-rooms absolutely depend on
them to keep in "steaming order,"
and the revolutions and :fights that
are always taking place practically
depend, at sea, upon the mcn from.
Shields. A "Geordie man can do
anything with any kind of engines,
and is absolutely trustworthy.
There doesn't seem to be' any rem -
soft why the world at large should
riot supply itself with shepherds,
but it cannot; and a couple of ranges
of purple hills in Scotland produce
four-fifths of the entire globe's sup-
ply, when it comes .to dealing with
big quantities " of sheep. Rannoch
Moor and the Ochils, in Perthshire,
rear a race of shepherds that no
other brand can compete with, eith-
er for dogs or men, and, naturally,
THERE ARE HUNDREDS MORE
Perth shepherds out of the district
than in it.
Australia has 700 at present, ,and
their .sons _and grandsons, and the
whole mighty wool -and -mutton in-
dustry of that continent has . grown`
mainly from the skill of the Rannoch
shepherd. Texas, though she thinks
a great deal of her own shepherds,
cannot equal the Perthshire breed,
and counts 400. of them, rigainst a
rill of 150, or thereabouts, of the
Texan -bred shepherd.
Spain's splendid merino flocks are
almost entirely "bossed" by "San-
dy" of the Ochils; and every Perth
shepherd on the face of the globe
has at .leastthree of his wonderful
dogs with him, mostly the bobtail
sheepdog, but often the collie,, and,
though other parts may show.better-
looking dogs, none can equal these
for skill and training. The. Perth
shepherd abroad draws ,from $15 to
$80 per week; and, as near as can
be estimated, there are 2,500 of him
outside, besides some 8,000 of his
dogs.
i
The average weight of an English
boy of ten is 07 lbs.; of a man of
thirty, ` 156 lbs.; of a man of sixty,
162 lbs.:
CEYLON AND INDIA
- NATURAL LEAF
Is Free from Any Particle of Coloring Matter is and n i -.
Any g Dainty n I vtgar
ating ; is the only tea that suits fastidious palates and is wholesome for
the most delicate digestions,
IT IS ALSO A BRITISI-I PRODUCT
Ceylon Teas are sold in Sealed Lead
Packets only. Black, nixed, Uncolored
Ceylon Gree,. Free samples sent.
Address "SAI ADA,." Toronto.
TIT -BITS. BISMARCK'S DUEL,
He—I always used to over-estimate
my abilities. She—Well, never mind, Sorry Be Had Not Killed Iii„
your friends never did. Antagonist.
Rain Sails most frequently all over I That Birinarek even in his youth
the world between $ and 8 o'clock in, deserved the characterizing adjective
the morning, i which led subsequently to the dis-
ee per cent, of all criminals in I tinguishing term, "the Iron Chan -
prison are between the ages of 21 . cellord is manifested by a passage
and 40. I front 'The Love Letters of Bis -
12 per cent, of the British arm y i march," in which be speaks of his
;famous duel with Vineke in 1.852,
are 5 ft. 10 in, or over in height. Bismarck was the offending party,
The Italian has only 4 per cent. I and the vindictiveness he confesses
The average amount of time which - to does not enhance admiration for
it man loses yearly by illness is ten' his character. lie writes
days.I Vincke wished to defer the matter
The French army has 29.000 o f'a ' for forty-eight hours, which I grant -
THEN TIlE C(}.tinm LAUfinlE D.
Counsel—I insist on an answer to
my question, You have not told inc
all the conversation. I want to
know everything that passed ber ween
you and Mr. Jones on the occasion
to which you refer.
Reluctant Witness—I've told you
everything of any consequence,
You have told me that you said to
hila: Jones, this case will get into
court some day. Now I want to.
know what he said in reply.
Well, he said, Brown there isn't
anything in this business that I'm
ashamed of, and if any snonpin', lit-
tle, yee-bawin', four -by -six, gimlet-
eyed lawyer, with half a, pound of
brains and sixteen pounds of jaw,
ever wants to know what I've been
talking to you about, you can tell
him the whole story.
FRAGRANT
a parfacf liquid dentifrice for the
Teeth sad Glith
Kew Size SOZ0D0NT I,l>;Uili, 2Sc 25,
S4iI0i101k-i'T[l0ili POWDER. 2iic
e
LIQUID an. 0
P't131t7
-_. Y sc
sin ail 8teroa, or by Men for the prim
MALI. R, ttitrKEL, l oritira�0il,
Y!7`if1 S..neecr is Zt7'a[]ine
27$ YFAkxaT e.Ze. 741 ,T aver. It once,
a an yon d will inti teeneoeilli alar 1'ority'sStrength Ord .
fie*056oite600000416 400e0floeo osio.0it.ilr 100•10,411pt.
10
Yt
o.R1NT
i1 fill
: Printing Material for Sale.
O �W�dF»o••o»alw»+w.9«u.w.s»aw..�.o+ro»s..ae.+Y.Mw»aa••s..a-Wo••a�..a�c»�»w.a..w»4wa.,i!�.r�•• `•
O Four Roller .Campbell Press, front delivery, bed 43x56, $120O CD
0
i Four Roller Campbell Press, bed 37x5a, . . $11611 o
One
One
0
0
• Two 7 -col. quarto Brown Folding tachines,, each . .. 34•
• Two Roger's Typographs, in first, ass order, each e a
cars, the Italian 14,000, and the ed. On the 25th, at A o'clock in the l
Spanish 28,000. l morning, we rode to 'I'egel, to et. f SUNSHINE ANDSLI�.>:,i'.
No syrup of poppies, no tincture of
0e
opium, no powders of morphine, says
one of the medical journals, can coin tl9
pare in sleep -producing power with e
Charmg Cross bridge is the longest :charming spot in the woods, by the
of London bridges, being 1,865 ft. ;seashore ; it was beautiful weather,
Southwark bridge is only 800 ft. i and the birds sang so gaily in the
long, and Ilamuherseuftlh 480 ft, • sunshine that, as we entered the
Of Great Britain's total trade 911 woed, alt rind thoughts left me
per cent. is English, nearly 8 per, only the thought of Johanna I had sunshine. The worst soporific be Wilson '/�y r
cent. to drive from me b . force,so asI cell ti gPublishing Vo! ��R� 1171i114#R'
en S otole, .and a very little over( y licit A . n nn and the best is sl.nshine ? � !
1, Per cent. Irish, i to be affected by it.
British house property grows in It was agreed before the duel began
value at the rate of 60 millions a ;that the conditions should he (hang -
year. The average rent of a Iiritfsit ed, and that there should be but one
Also Cutting Machine, Stones, Stands, Bossy nit ..Dis Maly Typ
All this Machinery is in First -Class Order, EOM TOMS wilt be
or Special Diseenut for Casb. Oa account of Xiang a More up-to-date
Plaut the above Machinery and Type will her 4tspoxed of Al nes rltice.
shot apiece, instead of four Then it
house is �.,1, ; was proposed that the whole thing
In 181., only 400 English people ' should be decltti•ecl oil if 1 would say
I was sorry for my remark.
As 1 could not truthfully do this,
we took our positions, tired, and
both missed. t. Gforgie thegrave
sin that I did not et once recognise
His mercy. but I cannot deny it ;
when I looked through the smoke
and saw my adversary standing erect
a. feeling of disappointment prevent-
ed me from participating in the gen-
eral rejoicing. The modification of
the challenge annoyed ire, and I
would have gladly continued the
combat. But as I was not the in-
sulted party I could say nothing ; it
was all over, and all shook hands,
were assessed at 1:5,000 re year and
upwards. This number hes now
grown to 4,000,
The Banks n1-
otEngland,
an
Ireland. and
Scotland have Royal charters; but
only the first two lend money to the
Government.
The largest cemetery in the world
is at Rockwood, in Australia. It
covers 2,000 acres, of which only
200 have been, used so far.
23 per cent. of Regland'.s popula-
tion are niers capable of bearing
arms, 22 per cent. of Ireland's. 24
of Germany's, and 27 of France's.
This is an imposition! Your sign
says, Boots repaired while you wait,
and here I've been over two hours!
Well, Isn't that waiting?
The paper money of the first French
Republic became more depreciated
than that of any other country ever
did. A pair of boots cost $1,500 in
paper, and a. pound of butter $150.
The largest nest in the world is
built by the mould bird, a sort of
Australian fowl. It snakes mounds
sometimes" 150 ft. in circumference,
in which it buries its eggs 5 ft. deep.
In Russia there are only 740 news-
papers, one to every 170,000 people.
Of these 589 :'ire in Russian, 69 Pol-
ish, 41 German, 9 French, 5 Armen-
ian, 2 Hebrew.
Miss 'Puzzle—I wish to break my
engagement with Mr. .Stipple, but I
don't know how to do it without
driving the poor fellow to suicide.
Little Brother --Why don't you let
him see you in curl papers, just once.
He—Do you still feel angry with
me? She—I despise you! I abhor
you. I hate you! He—Then par-
Imps you'd better break your en-
gagement to accompany me to the
theatre. She—Ohl I don't hate you
so much as that.
FROM TEE TRAINS.
Passengers Get Glimpses of the
Fan -American Exposition.
People travellingfrom the east and
west will come within the zone of
the direct influence and spirit of the
Pan-American Exposition Miles away
from the great and glorious spectacle
itself. Surrounding the setting of
the exposition there are numerous
features that will rival the attrac-
tions of the great show for public
attention, and especially is this true
of Niagara Falls. There is no great-
er or snore wonderful eye -feast in the
world than the Falls of Niagara, n orathe
,
beautiful gorge, and the dashing tu-
multuous waters of the Whirlpool
Rapids. If they are alert, long be-
fore their train stops at Niagara
Falls, passengers over the Grand
Trunk Railway will come in sight of
the mighty observation tower from
which searchlight signals will be
flashed to the Electric Tower of the
Exposition. In fancy one can pic-
ture the beam of the powerful pro-
jector extending way off toward
The quarrel between the newly-wed I Hamilton, Ont., to give glad ~vel-
couple was working up into a regular I come and greeting to the incoming
row, when he said: When you begin, trains laden with humanity anxious
to talk nonsense I hold my tongue! to see the falls and the exposition.
But it was too bad for her to say:
If I were guided by the same rule—
with regard to you—I should never
speak at all! Then the battle began
again.
CHESLEY CASE
COMES UP AGAIN.
JOHN FLETCHER, A FARMER,
CURED OF LUMBAGO BY
DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS.
One of the Thousand Similar Cas-
es in Ontario—A Common Trou-
ble Among Farmers—Dodd's
Kidney Pills Invariably Cure It
Chesley, Ont., .Aug. 5.—IIarvesting
is in full swing and the farmers of
the section are hard at it early and
late. For two steady months they
will be working harder than any
other class of men in the country.
Probably no period of the year is
so trying on the farmer as the har-
vest season. The management of a
farm, never a light task, becomes
trebly heavy. Worries increase. The
actual manual 'labor from dawn to
dark- and sometimes after, ,is as • harsh`
as a man can stand.
It is not surprising that farmers
often break donin after the threshing
is over. "Plum tuckered out,". the
system is apt to be in a low, weak.-
ened condition which is easily thrown
out of order. .The kidneys will show
the sign of it first. Backache will
probably be the first sign of the kid-
ney trouble, accompanied by a brick
dust sediment in the urine. From
but a short step stage it is to
Lumbago, which is chronic Backache.
In this connection the letter of
John Fletcher, a farmer near Ches-
ley, will be found useful, showing as
it does, that Dodd's Kidney Pills
may be relied upon for cases of this
kind.
"I have been troubled all hsrvest,"
he writes, "with Lumbago and Kid-
ney trouble. My urine was of a very,
red.. color. I consulted the best med-
ical doctors in the country but they
could not help me. Finally I got
some Dodd's Kidney Pills in Granton
and they proved all that I. could
wish.; In a" very short timemy back
was as well as ever and the Kidney
elsordes had completely gone;''
Speeding across the wonderful gorge
the train will carry its passengers in
full view of the Falls of Niagara and
the Whirlpool Rapids, while the re-
markable gorge will stretch out on
either side of the greatest railway
steel arch bridge in the world. This
bridge of the Grand Trunk Railway
at Niagara Falls is one of the won-
ders of the locality, and resting, as
it does, one end in the domain of
King Edward, the other in the
United States, it forms a. portion of
the industrial bond in the . Anglo-
Saxon union that forces a realiza-
tion that no matter on which side of
the Niagara we reside, we are all
Americans—Pan-Americans.
NAMES FOR CHILDREN.
In the "Parish Magazine" for
Witton .Church; Northwich, England,
the list of baptisms strikingly de-
monstrates the rage for giving pat-
riotic names to children. Major-
General Baden-Powell seems to be.
the most popular, one girl being
christened Elizabeth Powell Matching
whilst four boys have received as
part of their patronymic Baden. In
one instance General' Buller has been
remembered, ' Redvers having been
added to a Christian name Bertram,'
Sir -Evelyn Wood, General Macdon-
ald, .. Ian Hamilton, and the late
General Gordon' are also, represented.
Visitor—Charlie, your father is cal-
ling • you. Charlie—Yes, I hear him,
but he is calling Charlie. I don't
have to go till he yells Charles.
THE SUMMER NOVEL.
Let able-bodied readers choose
Historic fiction to peruse—
But, these warm • days, I've only.
brain
To read of silly Cupid's reign.
Friend (noticing the confused heaps
of goods of every description scatter-
ed promiscuously about the shop)-
Halloa! what's happened? Been tak-
ing an inventory,, had a fire, or are
you going to move out? Shopkeeper
—That shows how little you know
about business. We have merely been
waiting on a lady Who dropped in
for a paper of pins.
JOZODDiIT Tooth"Powder 25e
Thcretore,it is easily understood that ! TORONTO, CANADA -
poor sleepers should pass as ninny cont 1pepWeo •> a slpaailr olj►aQ9eQ1oeQ0Mi/►Qty ' i,ilk•illrA!
hours in the sunshine as possible.
Many women arc martyrs, and do
not. ltnow it. They shut the sun- best mash.*SOtPaU Jeer
shine out of their houses, theywear. p YOt2 ' nurriea, :eaa, taut.7sr. srPLU, ether nil#Ffttlle$le,
`'h Dawson Commission amttta+l Cex.STaartEitir8l44
veils, they carry sunshades, they do Co.. 4:11,°;".sk.?1' 11:
all that is possible to keep off the
subtlest and yet most potent influ
once which is intended to give them.
strength . t rengt r and beauty and cheerful-
ness,
The
ate a"a+3aint.,
X" a3L d"d.2,-bt ci as
Train of the Northern Pacille
which created such a fui•ior during
its first season, in 1900, is again.
shooting back and forth across the
continent in all the glory of its form-
e days.
This Crack Train of the North-
west, almost entirely new for 1901,
is the epitome of modern passenger
train construction. The Dining Car
with its a la carte breakfast and
lunch, and table d'hote dinner for
$1.00 ; the unequaled Tourist Sleep-
ing car of 16 sections, roomy lava-
tories and electric lights ; the first-
class Drawing Room Pullman with
two electric lights in each section
and the palatial Observation car
with two smoking rooms, buffet, bar-
ber shop, bath, library of 140 vol-
umes, current magazines, ladies' par-
lor and observation platform, all to-
gether e o train r rm a tralit of
unusual com-
fort, excellence, and even luxurious-
ness even in this day of luxuries.
Of course, broad vestibules, steam
heat and steel platforms are there,
and there are nearly 300 electric
lights on the train, the baggage car
and day coaches being thus lighted
also.
The train runs from St. Paul to
Portland, Oregon, passing through.
Minneapolis, Fargo, Bozeman, Butte,
Missoula, Spokane, Seattle and
Tacoma.
Connections from Duluth and
Superior and for Helena are made
en route.
Send to Chas. S. Fee, General Pas-
senger Agent, St. Paul, six cents for
Wonderland 1901; a royal book hav-
ing a chapter on this royal train.
$
In 1882 the speed record oda: high
bicycle was 20 miles in an hour and
12 minutes. Behind a motor pacer
a rider recently covered 40 miles
in an hour.
I was cured of painful Goitre by
RUTNARD'S LINIMENT.
13 YARD McMULLIN.
Chatham, Ont.
I was cured of 7nilanvnation by
MINARD'S LXNIAr1 NT.
MRS. W. W. JOHNSON.
Walsh, Ont.
I was cured of Facial Neuralgia by
MINARD'S LINIMPINT.
J. H. BAILEY.
Parksdale, Ont.
Trrr, TRUANT JUROR'S VERDICT
A judge had been facing a jury for
two hours or so, and was just con-
gratulating himself that the case
was ' about over, when 'he suddenly
discovered that but eleven jurors
were present.
How is this? he said in surprise.
Where is the twelfth man?
Please, sir, replied the foreman, he
had to go away on business, tut he
left - his verdict with me.
One can imagine the feelings of the
judge, who was obliged to Live or-
ders for a re -trial of the 't..rse. The
evidence had to be gone over again
when the truant juror w
jo its out back
in his place.
MISSING INI:OItM4'rION•
!
ABOUT
11tR�
Oh. Merry, here's acharming 4 uxu» .
er travel article; it is cane,* How
Go-•-W'liere to Go.
Mend
Il.•arrylane m-�-iloeaniasn'?t it tell who wi.l rttr wrfweat, 'R'l a►sn, 'nine/tin 7811 9 S'.
i°.
t '
.�.�.,, ric o,
PEERLESS
A BANQUET.
is Favorite with Ontario Farrnar#-•avers
Fii:st Mosquito—Anything on this Tiara boars the Mile, is, that 'you
afternoon? gat It. Hardware, Dara on* 1iMtterki
Second Mosquiito—I believe not. stereatel It H;lan 17 13.1A Meafa *.
Then come over to my house and
THIS SEASON
seat nia w it t�.�
join me at a baby's nap. i ill A OiR1P1RS91f.7iSC,
$100 Reward, V.O.
'ICersaders of tiitspnror will be p,ease3 ie ,
io:at n that there is at fea t one circa dr 4 dt rasa The system of workmen's insurance
teat science) has heal able to cure is a 1 iia , in Germany is a. huge piece of State
+ttaaea and that Is Catarrh. floras Catarrh mttclhfncry. The magnitude of the
t ere iii the only positive cure now known to ,
the medical iratornity. Catarrh being a cone , system may be estimated by the fact
tirli ioust disease, rcgutrea a constitutional that it pages out, in one way or an-
other', 000 a day,
nay, acting directly upon the blood and outer, about 6250,
mucous surfaces of the t:yctam, thereby des t
fro�•iuir the foundatto,ti of the disease, and l 1 ,
givinglr tl a patient ittrens th by building up thea Millard'
a 7 jt
ctns:Ltution and atsdstfng natura in doing its l �nurd S 111 ®� Cur
Distemper
were. 'file ereprettet a !MVOse Intel] S.ith iA 1
'le IN GER
N
ha curative powers. that they oiler cno nun- i British mines ive raw Material
dr ed 'Belfast far any case that it foils to cure, , la
~ cad rer flet Of to tSalaanlai�. }worth £80,000,'000 a, year.
F. J. emi By &. c0,. ToLEDo ,
H eh 'd .rixn dy Pills7a o the best BUFFALO MOTELS,
CANADIAN ROUSES FOR GAHADIANN33 AT
ONE OR THE OTHER. iC
CANADIAN PAIOES AND MANAGED 4Y
ACA MAH.
That�HA
social reformer has a very 1
spectacular way of presenting some! 'The Kotot tlucktnghxrtt,
extraordinary theories. The Hctrtluorongh..And
The The LflHan.
Yes. man is either posing or; Allnp•to11uildinr;e;roof-;ardrnonih•.arnclt-
supposing all the time. i in„ham , roan lee pnr,lay. ADDIJ,1'. B, RO5thb,
Rotel Buckinlha•o. BoSalo, N. Y.
!inard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria
02 the total world's output of 60
million pounds' worth of gold ie lit. trumente, Drums, uniforms, Etc,
1898 South Africa contributed 16 EVERY TOWN CAN HAVE A RAMI
millions. Lowest prices ever quoted. Fixe cntaleSua
1 e0fiinstrati^ns,mailed tree. Write us fpr any
iinard'S LiQ meat Cures Colds etc thing in SZeslo Cr 7iu1fea11astrument+.
Raley Royce GO., Tvtnai .°a nk n,l
rasa B
Only two fish can turn their heads
independently of their bodies. These
are the garpike and the seahorse.
inard's iIoimaai
OURS ` Gam! In (Jolls..
The biggest artesian well in Eur-
ope . is at Grenelle, near Paris. It
gives 700,000 gallons of water a
day.
nit fortmS$.
$ebcstoa Gonda,
Piga Cauerin5-,
lubricating Oils,
Oren,.., eta
WM. SUTTON
OtkiPOUND Co.,
Limited,
ToRONfO.
Dominion Line Steamships
Montreal to Liverpool. Dogma to Liver -
For Over Fifty Years pool. Portland to Liverpool. via Qneces-
Mian. WntaLow's BeaTIIINO Smaur hal been used by
millions of mothers for their children while teething.
Itsoothes the child, softens the gums, allege pain, cures
wind colic• regulates the stomach and bowels. and is the
beat remedy for Diarrheas. . Twenty -fere cents a bottle.
Sold by druggists throughout the world. Be sura sad
tilt for "Mite. Wneeke sSooTnnto tisane."
Lady (engaging servant) --Yes, I
think you'll suit. But have you
a sweetheart? Servant -No, mum,
But I can soon get one.
W. P. C. 1.038
CALVERT'SS
CARBOLiC-
OENTMENT0
for an shin aliments.
i. D. Calvert & Co.. Minohcster, E,ngiaafd.
RENWll CLEANING;.
For made up Goods Suite In Clo:h,'Velvet, Mit
or Pura and all. valuable house Ranting', nothieg
to equal itif done by the
BRITISH AMERICAN DYEING 00., Montreal,
SHEET iNFTAL DOUGLAS encs,,
124 Adelaide St.,
CORNICES. Tortor:To, of
town.
Large -and loot Steams4,pa Superior eoowamodatla,
for an clams of parsongera Saloons sad Stataroe:4
t are amidships. Special attention hos been given to tit
Second Saloon cad Third -Chas accommodation. ser!
rates of passage sad all partieulare, apply to may agent
of the Conapaay,er
Richards, Mille & Os, D. Torrance It Co..
77 StateSt.,lbeaten. Montreal toad Perifs,o8
R1oor'iNe and Sheet Metal Work,
Room% SLATS, lo ;Baa
Red or Green. SLATSBLACKBOAiti$. Weauppp y
Public And High School, Tomato). Roofing Telt, PI ,
d-
ings, Toronto, clone ba our trr tine). Metal � ee Collings, Cilor-
nice+, etc. Estimate.furnisbed for work complete or for
materials shipped to any port of the country. Phone 1493
D. DUTHIE ASOItS,Adelaide &Wkk'morite., Toronto
OAN A DA5S
PREMIER
COMPANY
WITR TIllS
LARGEsT
Plaid -up Capital
esery F
e ttitd
Assets :
Receives sums' of $100 wig up ,.
wards on -which interest at "FOUR
PER OSNT. Petit ANNUM
paid half yearly, for which laves -
tore have the most
UNQUESTIONABLE SECURITY.
Full particulars on application.
THtE. CANADA PERMANENT
AIUI'WESTJIN CANADA -
I ITOh-CiE CORPORATlO
Toronto crreet, Toronto,