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Exeter Times, 1903-8-20, Page 2NE WOES U ' SOJ1. KINGS 15VI,TAN OF TURKEY'S LIFE ONE OF DREAD, Xing Otte, the Mad King of Bavaria, Is Confined at Cas title Furstenried. 1 -As happy as a king" is a saying well illustrated by many exceptions. To gay nothing of the great cares and responsibilities, the intricate System of conventions and court restrictions of a icing's life, theme is his average human nature which is suniect to the vicissitudes of Ackto' fortune, as in the case of his hum- blest dependent, •A contemporary gives an account of two very striking instances of royal woe. One is that of M2urad, the imbecile brother of Sultan Ab- dul Hamid, who, on account of his lunacy, was deposed twenty-seven years, ago, rafter reigning only afew days. He is said to be incarcerat- ed in the. Tshiragan palace, near the Yildiz Kiosk. Sometimes it is whis- pered in. Constantinople that Abdul has had the "bow string" applied long ago to his unfortunate brother. 31t is certain that Abdulhs life is well-nigh as tragic as that of Mur - ad, by reason of his Suspicion and dread of those about him. THE MAD KING OF BAVARIA. SPRAWL AND SLEEP. If you fear a sleepless night, one dress in the dark. Light stimulates and arouses the activities. Dark: neer is supposed to produce drowygi.- noss. Put sante chopped ice in a ;tubber bag, and place it at the lower extremity of the spine. This is particularly quieting to the nerves Do not use a pillow. Relax every xnlutsicle as far as possible. Sprawl oven the bed with arm and legs Stretched out, Take a Sponge bath with tepid water just before going to bed. Lie on your face instead of your back. That is the way babies sleep, and their rnethod9 are r arbe- ly to be improved upo2r in this par- ticular, All pressure is removed from the spine by this means, and a delicious feeling of resifulneee en- sues. You will drop asleep imened- iately.' "Another royal prisoner is King Otto, the mad monarch of Bavaria, who is confined at Castle Pursten- ried, while his kingdom is ruled by a prince regent. King Otto, by the way, has never been dethroned. A G.ov'er•ne eat commission, composed of the highest officials of the Bava- rian court, recently waited upon the royal captive to congratulate him upon his fifty-fourth birthday and the sixteenth year of his 'glorious reign.' When the groat lords were allowed to see the King, after sev- eral hours of weary waiting, they found him wearing a long purple gown, over which his luxuriant white beard fell thickly. He wore, as decoration, the star of the Order of the Black Eagle. He seamed blind and deaf, although his face was the picture of rugged health. The members of the commission were informed by the court physi- cian that they had been so unlucky as to arrive on one of His Majesty's is 'off days, when he forgets every- thing—who ver - y- thing—who he is, and what he has said and done since he first became insane. These 'off' days make up about ninety per cent. of the poor King's existence; on the other days IIE IS ALMOST SAXE. At intervals, as the mood seized him, he stalked round the room or dashed frantically about, while the nobles wished themselves anywhere but where they were. Finally Prince von Oettigen, their leader, asked leave to withdraw for himself and his suite. The King first of all insulted him, and then announced that not even the rats and lndoe in the room should leave until he gave his perznis'sion. Meanwhile the poor courtiers were hungry and tired, and their disener was spoiling below. Af- ter an inter -al the court physician again asked his royal master if the camanission might withdraw. 'I don't know who you mean,' replied the King, 'Never saw them, never heard of them. How dare they have names while their King is without Y Shortly after he fell into a pro- fo lfnl st•,Isee and the members o' the sorely tried deputation were able to escape from the presence of the mad King, who, although a close priso(ier, is still their ruler." ARE YOU A MOON -BLINK? What T Believed to be the Cause of Night -Blindness. Night -blindness is a condition in which vision is perfect, or nearly so, In daylight, but fails with the setting of the sun, and is not restored under ordinary conditions of artificial il- lumination. The sufferer from night - blindness can usually see the light of a candle or lamp when ho looks di- rectly at it, but he cannot read, even when the light is thrown directly on the page. Usually, however, he sees well in a room lighted brilliantly ivith electricity, the degree of illum- ination then approaching that of Sunlight. The cause of night -blindness is be- lieved to be an exhausting of the power of vision by too great light, for it occurs mainly among soldiers and sailors in the tropics, who are exposed for many hours to the glare of the sun; and among Arctic explor- ers, whose eyes are. dazzled by re- flection from the snow. On board ship it is often associated with scurvy; and persons who a=.e depress- ed physically or mentally, or in any other way "run down," are more likely to suffer than the strong. Sailors have a superstition that the trouble is due to imprudence in sleeping on deck in the moonlight, and this belief is embodied in the term "moon -blink," by which they call it. The tropical moon is prob- ably as guiltless in this respect as it is in the production of insanity, ex Cept that it might act as the sun does, although, of course, in a min- or degree, in dazzling already weak- ened eyes. The only treatment for night - blindness is keeping away from bright light, or protecting the eyes with goggles or a bandage until the exhausted retina has recovered its tone. - THE INI•i•,f1.DITD SUN. :An astronomer has propounded the • Startling theory that the sun is in- habited. Ile believes that away in the eentre of the sun's briliian't crust, and far separated from. it by a non -conducting atmosphere, lies a bdau.tiful planet having all the more desirable characteristics of our own earth, MONEY T ,OUBbES MIRED BY DR. WILLIAMS' PINI PILLS FOR PALE PEOPLE. Sufferers from This Disease are in Great Peril ,and Should not Ex- periment With Other Medicines. From tho Sun, Seafortth, Ont. The kidneys are the most import- ant organ. They must inter every drop of blood in the body, If the blood is weak the kidneys cannot do their work, no the bleed is left unfiltered and foul, and the kidneys are left clogged with poisonous im- purities. Then come the backaches that mean fatal kidney disease. Don't neglect that baiakache - for a moment. Strike at the root of the very first symptoms of kidney tk•ou- ble by enriching the blend with Dr. Williams' Pink Pilin -'tee only medi- cine that wakes the blood rich, red and health -giving. Mr. Wim. Holland, of $, eaforth, {{l�it., has proved that Dr. Timilliam!s' Pink Pills will cure the nl:ost ob- itillate care of kidney trouble. To s reporter of the Sun he freely gage ,he particulase of his case : "I have luffered from kidney trouble for bout two years," said Mr. Holland, ''Sometlmeis the backache which ac- sompanied the trouble would be so serer that I would be unable to conk, and I have often suffered sev- erely for woe1.s at a time. I tried a number of medicines said to be a sure for kidney trouble, but I found notching to help me until on the ad- vice of a friend I began the urge of Dr. ti311iams' Pink Pills. Those pills soon began to make their good work felt, and after using them for about a month every vestige of the trouble had disappeared, and I have not since had a single symp'torn. of the disoare. Dr. Williams' Pink Pilus have proved a great blessing to me and I am always glad to say a good word in their favor." tins a curative medicine Dr. fW11- tiamts' Pink Pills have never yet been equelled. They build up the blood and naives, give now strength and enable the body to resist dis- ease. Aniong the complaints cured by these pills are rheutmlatism, ner- vous disorders, paralysis, St, Vitus' dance, indigestion, anaemia lung troubles and the troubles that make the lives of so many women rnis.er- ehfa. Sold by all medicine dealers, or sort pont paid at 150e per box otr six boxes for $2.50, by writing t to the Dr. Williams' Medicine o., Brockville, Ont. Don't hake a eyuitarte at any I:rice--only the =snits* pillar can cues. Ceylon Tea is the finest Tea the world produces! and is salt only in lead packets. Black, Mixed awed Breen. la i;pan ter drinkers try "Ueda" Green try it• that The satisfaction of having the washing done early in the day, and well done, belongs to every IllSer 4f Sunlight Soap.neeit PROSPECTING THE EARTH INTERESTIIITG FACTS ABOUT THE NEW SCIENCE. Men of Science Differ in Opinion As to the Age of the Earth. Tho earth has been regarded as spinning steadily round a certain fixed axis, so that the Poles remain- ed in exactly the same spots. Quite recently has come the discovery that the North Pole executes a sort of complicated waltz, always moving, but never straying more than thirty feet from its mean position. It is Professor 11. H. Turner, F.R,S„ who suggests the alternating accumula- tions of snow and ice as the possible cause of this phenomenon, and it is said the Royal Astronomical Society is about to establish a number Of stations in high latitude with the object of testing this phenomenon of the waltzing Poles. Hardly any two scientists agree as to the ago of the earth—that is, as to the length of time which has elapsed since the earth's crust be- came solid. Considering the very slow rate at which rocks are deposit- ed by water, and the immense thick- ness of the beds of these "stratified" rocks— as they are called—it seems that at least ono thousand million years have passed since the globe evolved in its present shape out of the whirling mass of incandescent matter which it must once have been. WEIGHING THE GLOBE. RED BLINDNESS. Inability to "see red" is the main form of color -blindness from which sailors suffer. Last year thirty-four officers and would be officers of the mercantile marine failed to pass the color teasts; and of these twenty- three were more or less completely red blind, the rest more or less un- able to distinguish green. The 4,- 600 candidates for certificates were also submitted to at. test foN form vision, and •twenty-two of thein fail- ed to distinguish the form of the object submitted. Oil -cake is the most valuable form of food for stock. Three pounds of oil -cake are equal to ten pounds of hay or five pounds of oats. The United Kingdom, including the t hannel Thies and `the Tsle of ]Sean its an ar412. of 774rnafllion acres, • ,f .. this 474 miit iof<i 4,61.03 are under 'Wvati•F9nj But Lord Kelvin, arguing from the known rate of loss of heat, declares that not more than one hundred mil- lion years is the limit of time which has passed by since firm rocks ap- peared and life began upon the earth. More recently, Professor Tait has shown reason to believe that a tenth of Lord Kelvin's estimate may be nearer the truth. All geologists, however, declare that the latter esti- mate is too low. Wo know with the utmost exacti- tude how heavy our little world is. If you put down the figure 6, and follow it tby twenty -ono noughts, you have it within a very few mil- lion tons. Roughly speaking, this implies that the earth is five and a half times as heavy as a globe of water of the same size. But, in spite of this accurate know- ledge of the earth's weight, we have no real idea of what is the condi- tion of things inside our planet. Thousands of experiments made in all parts of the world show that the temperature rises on an average about one degree for every sixty feet below the surface. If this rate of in- crease continues regularly towards the - centre, that part of the globe must bo at a heat so appalling that imagination is unable to grasp it. When this fact of increase of temper- ature with depth first became ascer- tained, geologists got the idea that we were living upon a thin crust of firm rock which coated a furious fur- nace of which volcanoes were the escape -pipes. BABY'S SECOND SUMMER. Why it is a Dangerous Time For The Little Ones. Baby's second summer is ctuiaid- ered a dangerous time in the life of every infant because of the disturb- ance to the digestive functions caus- ed by cutting teeth during the hot weather. In slightly less degree every summer is a time of danger the in - 's shown foe shies as r a b by creased deatih rate among bhean dur- ing the hearted term. Of groat inter- est to every mother, therefore, is a cemiparatively recent discovery of which, Mrs. David Lee, of Lindsay, Ont., writes as follows :— 'iMy little girl had a hard time getting her teeth. She was fever- isth, her tongue was coated, her breath offensive,' and she vomited curdled milk. On the advice of our &alter I gave her Baby's Own Tab- letts and she began improving at once. She had not slept well at night for about three months, and I yeas almost worn out caring for her. Nothing did her any good un- til I gave her the tablet's. Now ber food digests properly, her breath is ;meet, her tongue clean and she is quiet and good. I can strongly re- conyrein!d the tablets to other moth- ers as *they cured my baby when Nothing else would.'' Baby's Own Tablets are sold by all dcalors in medicine or will be sent posjpa•aid at twenty-five cein'ta a box, by the Dr. Williams Medicine C4'mpany, 3Yrd e, Ont, Paris has now 57 Women doctors out of a total of 8,600 medical prac- titioners. . In 1$82 Paris had only Seven women phyeloians, other. I; Ask for Mirrr�t�.s and take no at Arctic explorers appear to bo of the opinion that the flattening is greater at the North than at the South Pole, - - Another rather startling fact which has recently been demonstrated is that the equator is •not a perfect cir- cle. If you could drop a plumb-line from Ireland through to New Zea- land, it would be somewhat longer than another which cut the earth at right angles to it. The diftetenco has not yet been ascertained with abso- lute accuracy, "SEA -LEVEL" A MISNOMER. We are accustomed to talk of sea - level as an invariable quantity. It is positively startling to find how very far from level the sea is. Nat, of course, merely from the passing influence of tides and winds, but there aro great and permanent ele- vations in the sea—positive moun- tains, fn fact. It is calculated that in the Bay of Bengal the water lies at a level exceeding that of the Indi- an Ocean by fully three hundred feet, and that the Pacific Ocean along the coast of South America may be heaped up as much as two thousand feet higher than the water in the op- posite Atlantic. These water moun- tains depend upon the attractioli of groat mountain masses, the Bay of Bengal upon the Himalayas, and the South Pacific upon the American Andes. The height of our highest moun- tains has been measured to within an inch or two, and we have accues ate information on the subject of the .great depths of the sea. But we do not yet know with any certainty how deep is the atmospheric envelope time twenty- seven wen • 1 . At ono t t of the eaatr y seven milee was given as the limit. This was increased to forty, and soon even this estimate was extend- ed to one hundred. Our only means of measurement is by the meteors which spring into an incandescent blaze. through friction when they strike our atmosphere. As man cannot - live at a much greater height than five miles up, it may be that we shall never learn exactly how thick is the atmospheric ocean at the bottom of which we crawl about. .$ WHAT IS INSIDE THE EARTH? Now we know better than that. We have found, among other things, that an earthquake in Japan is able to register itself in England. This actually happened in the case of the disaster in North Japan four or five years ago, when 30,000 people lost their lives. A tremor of this kind could not pass unless the earth had a rigidity approaching that of steel, and observations of tides, and the attractions exercised upon us by sun and moon, have made it pretty cer- tain that our world is just about as hard and solid as so much steel. This does away with the liquid in- terior theory, and makes . it fairly certain that the earth is solid all through, with perhaps occasional ac- cumulations of fluid rock here and there in parts where, for some rea- son or other, the pressure is not as great as it is in others. It also upsets the old theory off r a with n the n idea and e ode m volcanoes regard to these mountains of death and destruction is that water from the surface finds its way through cracks down into the heated rock masses a few miles below the sur- face, and •these, being suddenly turn- ed into steam, causes an explosion, or series of explosions, like boiler- burstings on a gigantic scale Every schoolboy knows that the shape of the earth is an oblate spheroid—that is to say, that it is flattened a little like an orange at the two Poles. The Polar diameter HE COULD NOT LACE HIS SHE .tILL DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS DROVE AWAY HIS RHEU- MATISM. • Story of W. J. Dixon has sot the Rainy River Settlement Talking. Barwick, P.O,., Aug. 10.—(Special, • Among the settlers here the cure of 'fililiant John Dixon of Rheuana,- tissn is causing much talk. The story of the cure, as told by her. Dixon himself, is as follows : "During the sugntmor of 1901, I had an attack of Typhoid Fever, and afte', 1 got over it Rheumatism set in. I had pains in my back and in my right hip so bad that I had to use a stick to walk and had no comfort in sleeping. "fE could scarcely dross myself for nearly two months, and for three or four weeks I could not lace my right shoe or put my right leg on my left knee. "My brother advised me to trey Dodd's Kidney Pills, and after tak- ing aking three boxes, I began to walk, do my work 'acrd lace up my slhkoes. And the best of it is, I have had 0,0 Rhouanatielm since." Dodd's Kidney Pills take the uric acid out of the blood and the Mete mutts= goes with it. C. C. BICx-I{A.7R;DS Rc GO. Dear Sirs,r--ff have great faith in M ENtABD'S LINThfaENT, as last year I cured a horse of Bing -bone, with five bottles. Tit blistered the horse but in a month there was no ring -bone and no lameness. DANIEL 1147„iRCI1!1SON. Four Falls, N. 11. No fewer than 203,413 certificates of conscientious objection to vaccina- tion of children were received last year by the vaccination officers of England and Wales. RCM ( SPAVU LINIMENT WS TO WTACIIES.. Everybody carries a watch naw-a- daysF leen, women, girls and boys. Prices range from $1 to as many thousands as gno cares to expend in jeweled settings, The $1 watch of- ten keeps just as good time as the 56,0000 one. Did you ever consider the amount of labor performed by a good •watch in its lifetime of fifty years? The :balance vibrates 18,000 times an hour, 422,000 times a day, or 157,680,000 times a year. The hair spring makes an equal number of vibrations, and there is the same number of ticks from the escape- ment. Multiply 157,680,000 by 50 and you have 7,884,000,000 pulsa- tions, Yet the watch is in good condition - at the' end of half a cen- tury of labor. Removes all hard, soft or calloused lump) and blemishes from horses, blond spavin curbs. aptints, ring bone, sweeney, stitlo- sprains. sore and swollen throat, coughs, c' o Bare 11,50 by use of one bottle. Warranto the most wonderful Blemish Cure eve, known- , of the earth is actually twenty-seven miles less than its diameter at the equator. But it is as yet not abso- lutely ascertained ` whether the flat- tening IS similar at both Poles. Some "Whonn do you take after, Bertin —your pa or your rna ?'" "Neit,hls of 'ern. Ma an' are takes together. Pa gats wot's lefe-'if there. is any left," - Deafness Cannot 13e Cured by local applications as they cannot roach the diseased portion of the ear. '!hero is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness ,s caused ..y an inflamed con- dition of the mucous lining of the Iaus- tachian Tubo, When this tubo is inflam- ed you have a rumbling sound or im, perfect hearing, and waren it 1s entirely closed, Deafness is tho result, and un- less the inflammation can be takenout and this tubo restored to its normal condition, hearing mix be destroyed for- ever. Nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous sot; vices. Wo will give Ono fiuudrod Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by. Ball's Catarrh Cure. fiend for circulars, free. . CHENEY 'd CO., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 75c.. Ball's Family Pills are the best. There are in the United States 1,- 470,000 ,- 4 i0,000 people over ten who cannot speak English. Besides these there are 72,000 Indians. The majority of these are Germans. ROUND Tit IP 11011111E -SEEKERS (EXCURSIONS. On August 1S'tli, also September 1st and 16th, 1908, round trip tick- ets will be issued from Chicago and St. Paul at single Bret-cla;ts feel plus $2.00 to points on the Gres Northern Ry. in the states of Mi. ne'sota, Otregon, Idaho, Washingto also to all points in British Coles Wm reached via Groat Northerni tuc rn 3 These tickets are valid for rete: passage within 21 days tram da• of issue. Full infoumation as to stop o'i, privileges, etc„ by Graves, on t Writing Charles W. Graves, Distrit Passenger Agent, 6 King St., west!, Room 1.2, Toronto, Ont. ONCE M,EANT AUTHORITY. Origin of Custom of Wearing Rings Lost in Antiquity. The custom - of wearing rings to adorn the hanks is of such remote date that all attempts to trace its orfigin are lost in the obscurity of antiquity; but the primary inten- tion of this practice, in early ages of the world, appears to have been as an emblem of authority and gov- ernment; and this was symbolically canis nznrrninated by delivering a ring to the person on wham they were intended to be conferred. In conforunity to this ancient image the Christian church employed the ring in the ceremony of marriage (which was first adopted by the Greek church) as a symbol of the authority which the husband gave to his wife over his household, and of the earthly goods with which he thus endowed her. Under the Roman Consuls, rings were at first manufactured of iron, and worn only soldiers, and that upon the third finger of the left hand, hence denominated the ring finger. In,cneasing wealth soon su- perseded an ornament of this infer- ior metal by introducing rings of more costly materials, and these nra,de of gold were afterward so very general that it is related after the celebrated battle of Cannae Baseni- bal sent a bushel of them to the Senators at Carthage, of which he bad despoiled the slain and prison- ers. Under the Emperors, the conemon soldiers, and even freedmen, wore gold rings, although they were ori- ginally prohibited unless personally given by the Emperor. The peti- tions soliciting this privilege be- came, however, so numerous that Justinian was tired of their impor- tunity and ultimately permitted all who thought proper to bestow them. Rings have very long taken a con- spicuous part as love tokens. - Of all 'the sorts of rings which have fre- quently been despatched as messen- gers of love, that kind of double - hooped one (half of which was often ler half the other worn by the lover, by his "soul's delight") called 'the gernnlow, or griminual, ring, stands pre-eminent. Upward of twenty in- stances might be quo't'ed from Shakespeare mentioning the use of this kind of ring. By 1904 the pay of the private in the British Army will be raised to 1s 6d. a day for men who have serv- ed two years or more. For Over Sixty Years ilea. wtN-tow's Soonuse Svc Ur has been used by pillions of mothers for their children while teething Ir soothes the ohild, softens rix• gums. all aye pain, cures rind collo, regulates the eromaah and bowels, and is the fret ronody fur Dh.rrhoea. Twenty -arc cents a bottle 1 ld and k for ADAdruggiWINSLOW B SOOTN:INOthroughout the rsur, ld. Be sure Ormuz" 74 Professor Jacobi has bequeathed 10,000 marks to the. University of Berlin, with the proviso thatthe money shall not become available un- til two departments are open to wo- men students. -- Lever's Y-7 (Wise Head) Disinfect- ant Soap • owder is a boon to any home. It disinfects and cleans at the same time, Not Chinese butt Japanese aro the greatest rice eaters, Each. Jap eats on an average 300 pounds of rice in the course of a year, Keep IInardi s Liniment in the Neuse, Blue Ribbon Tea is "hill grown" Ceylon tea. The best tea because it grows slowly in the cool mountain air and obtains all the fragrance and deliciousness the plant fan extract from a soil rich in these properties. A -nerve -nourishing tea --a `sense -pleasing tea _ inva1 able for brain-worriers—solacing and comforting. S3ia r1t, ivaimmei Ceylon, C,]rrenmi<a t iS Bilsrtu3d be Ari!. for th m �'i3`tT 1t8ti0 ffim9:11A4� ,:j r� �:iy:�nraa ,02.4 n 4Ta maF Tnt;.rr :t�iev:r.:,. x vrrq�ma!at :: OUR KinEdward • ` t0oos " headlight" EI Eagle u a- rc• �° u'"soca "t Victoria" "Little Comet" met -71 E eARLDil "ATrIIP Don't Experiment with other and inferior USE NULL,, - CANN_EDDY'S AND THE MASAI WARRIORS. REMARKABLE INCCTDENT. On the occasion of Mr. Joseph Chamberlain's recent visit to Mombasa, Last Africa, a torchlight war dance by the picturesque Masai warriors was'given in Ids honour. In this connection a striking inci- dent, as showing the world-wide use of Holloway's famous remedies, is illustrated by the accompany- ing photograph, taken on the spot by a correspon- dent of The Sphere. Indeed, PILLS AND OINTMENT are used wherever the white man has set his foot. The Masai warrior carrying his grease pot slung from the lobe of his right ear. Thepot in this case was a HOLLOWAY'S 01NT31SNT jar, and the lobe of the ear had been stretched Co get round tire pot. THE PILLS arc a wonderfully prompt and effectual, but gentle and benign, remedy for all disorders ,of the Liver and Bowels. They cleanse and thoroughly regulate the system. Females should never he without therm. r! THE OINT1'CENT is the greatest healing agent known for Old Sores and all skin affections. Rheumatism and Sdiatica yield to its influence quite magically, as also most throat and chest troubles. Manufactured only at 78, New Oxford Street (late 533, Oxford Street), London. tespozsenranaimemenseoczonwmas mcmaarmrcrfurnsr' 13-33 Amey : "Poor Mr. Billion has been' iu a railway sln,ar•h and is sinking fast." Bella : "Dear me 1 How sad. And I only refused him last April 1" "Bridget, did the dog eat much when he got into the pantry?" "Shure, murn, he ate everything but the dog biscuit." ROUND TPJEP RATES VIA UN. ION PAC,LFIC, to ni:arey points in the s't'ates of Col- orado, Utah, California, Montana, Oregon and WIasxrington from Mis- souri River Ternrxnaltd—Council Bluffs to Ramos City in'tiusdve. $17.50 to Denver, Colorado Springs and 'Pueblo, daily to Sept. 110. - $80.150 to Ogaden and Salt Lake City daily to Sept. 30. $44.50 to Spokane bug. 4 and 18, Sot. 1 and 15, $5'2.00 to Poetlatn.d. Tac'om'a and n?eatttle A;ug•, 4 and 1'8, Sept. 1 and 115, $4,00 to San Francisco and Los Angeles Alu'g. 1 to 14 inclusive. $45.00 to Portland, Tacoma and Seattle Aug, 1 to 14 inclusive. $50.00 to San Francisco and Los Angeles Oct. 11: to 17 inclusive. For full information adelresis 1h F Canter, T,P:A., 14 Janos Building Toronto, Canada. Toronto, Canada, P, 11. Choate, GI - Al, Af, 128 ;Woo'dward Ave., Detroi,t Mich. •- Minard's Liniment is used by Physicians A slow -match is • made of rope steeped in a solution of saltpetre and lime water. Minard's Liniment Lumherman's Friend An excellent and pleasant disinfec- tant is made of 9 per cent. essence of thyme and 18 per cent. essence of geranium mixed in alcohol. t20.5-culacirtwor We are getting them, Iotsof them. when no other ties will held thin they game to us. what Ara fret we hold." ' The beat ie the ahoapeet" That's our natant pre• unison pad Trais. It horde the edges of the wound together so that with t%tr pia .t moat heal. You may get well; yen can't get worse while you wear It. Prr.r•urable only from MIR ilil TI+A 'D TRUSS SMr G.Ott CO., Hernia ntep,lhaliats. 433 pa Ina Ave., Termite. TTA' tY W:11%) E Raz 1]Oeup)rlorr RESIDENTIAL „811:.,71 for • Gives Academie, Matriculation ant Soleotol Courses. For MIMIC (Canadian densoroatorr), Ars, L'lo.mien, Stenography, Art -Needlework, So., SF:Tt OALLNDAll S ND FOR CALENDAR, Address, Trill LADY PRINCIPAL, Site deer, .eretel. Pt F,.s..T ELI HT TsmHet Sap Best for best for Blg Folks t Little Folks JOHN TAYLOR & CO. Verfumers and Soap Ma,1 els TOEONTO. PATENTS Cd1polloit17H ors of & OAMPrratentsSOfi Canada L•fo lluild'g, Toronto. ventereassalserserstareenantes Write tar arse edvioe •• f,-•.a,-•-,sa ilard Tables Tho Boat at the Loweot Prico Write for Terms REID BROS., Pil'f'g Co.'31 785 King elk. W. Dyeing 1- Cleaning 2 For the very best send your work to the "BRITISH AMERICAN DYEING CO." Look for agent In your town, or send dtraee. Montreal,Toronto, Ottawa, Quebec, 4 ATE INALL Coo4Thlz:Er. Ft DO LI T TOS PATENT LITIGATION. Send for Handbook 103 rias, St„TOFONTO on patents, &o, AY BEE ORANGES 1 LEMONS We have Mexicans, California Navels, Valencias; and Sevilles. WE HAVE THE EST Carload every week. All the above at market prices. Wo can also handle your Butter, Egrve Poultry, Maple Syrupand other produce to advan- tage for you. U1 DAWSOM GOMMISSlOH ON Lirrlited., 00r. West Marjeot et.,. TOI:ONTo. * =dirt •,rte,” ri ° `w,.:._ 111 Dominion Lino Stoansifip esontroaf to Llveepclol Beaton to Liverpool Large and 3fasteteanfahnps. Superior accommodation br all classes of ``fawengore. S•tloona And Stateroocnre re amidships. Special attention has been given to the ,re Saloon and Third -Ohre ectonnnodati.,'iu POI ate1l of passage and all particulars, applyp•, to at.l) age hl ff the Company, or to paasengor agent. 5j DOMINION LINE Oi'FiHla'1,t 7 stnto elle Ilsaton, 17 $t, Sazrnment l3., Montrea l ISSUE PIM 33 03 I-,