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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1903-12-10, Page 3x GLD ENGLAND XtvitS:. > Y MOIL ABOUT JO= 131113lG AND HIS, I'i01�I.E, Pecurranees in the an That Iteigna Suprenns in tale. Com- rewrote/. World. The Corporation of Exeter has granted a site at the principal en- trance to 3arn Meadow, Exeter, for A Buller equestrian statue. A system of electro -pneumatic sig- nalling has been installed by the Lancashire and Yorkshire li,aiiway Company, now approaching colwale- tion In a high jumping competition at the Southport Physical Training Col- lege, a girl student achieved a ha,ht of four fit ten inches, This is be- lieved to $ a record for her sex. The lifort - astern Railway Conn parry have decided to substitute elec- tricity for steam power for the driv- ing of the whole of the machinery comprised in the company's locomo- tive works at Gates -head -on -Tyne. Sir Mark Collet, the well-known English financier, who celebrated his eighty-seventh birthday Tart week, has been governor of the Bank of England since 1866. He comes of Manx stock. He was'made a baron - e. et in 1868. In a plpt;tghing match at Aldermas- ton, a pair of donkeys attached to ;.$95., small plough performed excellent work. The owner entered the don- keys with the object of showing how these animaes could be profitably used by small farmers. Three men who were found in the act of rifling a Grgeengate (Salford) pawnshop had a stock of handker- chiefs wrapped round their bodies .arid other goods had been made up ready for removal, , They were sent to jail for six months apiece. A picture post -card about a foot long and nine inches broad is the latest novelty. It was an view in a Cheapside shop window. It costs • $d., requires a penny stamp, and has a view of London on the back, with space for the sender's name. At a meeting held at Hull it was resolved to establish a College of Music for Hull and the East Riding. Dr. Smith explained the scheme in detail, and a council was appointed and arrangements made to raise £1,- 000 for foundation expenses. Edward Smart, driver of a pleas- ure waggon which collided with a train on the light railway, near Wes- ton -super -Mare, whereby two mar- ried, women, of Cardiff, were killed, and four others injured, was COM - witted for trial for manslaughter on Tuesday. Tho Admiralty recently announced that they intended to provide sailors with a knife, fork, spoon, enamel iron plate, and an oilcloth cover for their irnew mess tables. In the past the Beaman has had to eat his food with a broad -bladed clasp knife and his fingers. At the annual meeting of the Dur- ham College of Science, at Newcastle on Monday, it was reported that the balance of the £50,000 required for the Lord Armstrong memorial has been guaranteed. The scheme pro- vides for the erection of a statue, and the completion of the college buildings, which will be known as the Armstrong Memorial University College. An ex -detective -sergeant of the Met- ropolitan Police, named Wm. James, was remanded at Clorkenwell Police Court charged with having murdered his sister-in-law and attempted to take the life of his step -daughter by shootings*hem with a revolver at 10 Myddelto square. The prisoner's wife obtained a separation from him some time ago, and he had not been to the house where the tragedy took place shire August. A miner named William Wilson was trent to jail for three months hard tabor at Castle.Cord for stealing fi.ve- pence from a till in agrocer's shop. Prisoner, who is known as a "black *beep,' entered the shop through the back window, winch be opened with his knife. Unfortunately, however, for him he forgot his knife and a pit bottle in leaving. An American contractor is building a, power house in London for the Metropolitan Railway, which has beon happily termed the "miracle in ricks," a tribute to the remarkable peed at which the construction is -lig erected. 'The British brick- layers do not challenge the speed, but they claim •tiaat it has been ex- ceeded in at least one instance by London bricklayers. } VICTIMS OF THE JUNGLE. Thousands Slain Last Year in In- dia by Wild Beasts. The resolution of the Government of India on the subject notices that in 1901 more human beings were killed by wild animals than in any year since 1875 except one, and reached a total of 8,651, while last year it was 2,836; and the number of deaths from snake bite was 23,166. Tigers killed 1,04G persons, of whom 544 perished in Bengal, sixty - bye being in a, single district. This was due to the depredations of a man-eater, for the destruction of which a special reward was offered without avail. In another district, where forty-three persons wore killed, most of . them fell victims also to a num-eater. 'Wolves slew 877 persons last year, of whom 204 were killed 'vat the Unit- ed Provinces. A carnpaig,T was un- dertaken against these anilnaals in, • Rohilkhand and the Allahabad di- vision, and they have been almost exterminated in Cawnpore district, where they used to abound. . Eleven thousand ono hundred and thirty dei, tha took place in Bengal alone f; snake -bite, 8,258 of (these being in the. Patna division, While 5,110 deaths took place in the Unit- ed Provinces; 80,796 cattle (an in- crease on the, previous year) were killed by wild ` animals last year, and 9,010 by snakes, Tigers killed 80,555 of these., leopards 88,211, and Wolves and by4tt to most of the re- mainder. .erre, qrn NA\BEN WILL GTAY HOME EXPLORER ROU ENOUGH TO LIVE AT HTS EASE, 11000,0014 He Has Resolved Never Again to Go on Another Volar Expedition. News comes from Norway that Nansen says his days of Arctic ex- ploration xploration are at an end. He bar act intention el nuzkiug another vroyage into the ice regions. Nansen would certainly have little prospect of adding tohis great repu- tation by further exploratory effort, He is placed bY' common accord among the greatest of explorers and his fame is secure. He is also among the few favored ones who have been made rich by the world's interest in their great geo- graphical achievements. Nansen can live very handsomely on the interest of the money he accumulated with- in four years after he returned home from his wonderful journey. He ful- ly realized that if •bo intended to make splendid provision for his fam- ily this was the time. He struck while the iron was hot. Probably few explorers have equalled his ef- AN AOI3ING BACK, The Trouble Usually Due to Im- pure Blood and Clogged Kidneys. That weary dragging backache is more dangerous than you think. It points straight to deadly kidney trouble, Your kidneys ache because your blood es bad, and filtering through has clogged them with filthy inflanamatora poisons. Common purging backache pills can never cure you. They only melte the kid- neys; they can't possibly touch tho causo of the trouble in the blood. Dr. Williams Pink rills ate the only positive cure for aching kidneys. They make new, rich, red blood. They conquer the inflammation and drive out the poison. They cleanse tbe kidneys and stimulate them to healthy action. Then your back- aches vanish. Here is positive proof given by Mr. Geo. Johnson, of Ohio, N. S., • who says :--"My son. now eighteen years old, suffered with kidney trouble, from severe pains in the back, andpassed sleepless nights. We tried' severe:a-medicines, but they did not help him. In fact he was growing weaker; his appetite failed, and he could hardly do tbe usual work that falls to the lot of every boy on a farm. Finally a friend recommended Dr. Williams Piiilc Pills and this was the first medicine that reached the cause of the trouble. He Continued to use the pills for a couple of months and I am now happy to say that every symptom of the trouble has disappeared and he is now as strong and bea]thy as any boy of his age. There can be no doubt that Dr. Williams -'ink Pills will cure kidney trouble, even in its most severe forms." These pills cure not only kidney trouble but all blood and nerve troubles such as rheumatism, scia- tica, partial paralysis, St. • Vitus dance, indigestion anaemia, heart trouble, and the many ailments that make woman's life miserable. You can get these pills from any dealer in medicine, or they will be sent by ni.aii at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.60 by writing The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. forts to make every day count in a money sense. When he was in America, for ex- ample, during a lecture trip of al- most unequalled prosperity, he added a substantial sum to his profits by selling his autograph. Ho valued this commodity at a good round price, and found that there was an excellent demand for it. A curious story and a true one is told of one occasion when he gen- erously enerously departed from his custom of writing his autograph only for cash. It was during his visit to Washing- ton, where he was most highly hon- ored and entertained by the scientific men of the capital. A well known society of that city hes a flag on which a number of men who had won distinction in Arctic service had INSCRIBED THEIR NAMPS. The society, naturally desiring to add Nansen's name to " this collec- tion, sent the flag to his hotel. The next day it was returned to the rooms of the society with Nansen's name in a fine, bold hand at the bot- tom of the list. His secretary brought it and also delivered this message from the great explorer: "Dr. Nansen thinks .it proper to say that he has not made a practice in this country of giving his auto- graph to any one without remunera- tion; but ho is very glad, indeed, to add his name to the names of the distinguished explorers on this flag." Nansen has probably made as much money as Stanley did from his books and lectures. The books DISORDERS OP CHILDHOOD. It is an undoubted fact that near- ly all the disorders from which in- fants and young children sutler are caused by derangements of the stow- ach or bowels. As a cure for these troubles Baby's Own Tablets is gen- tle, efiectivo and above all absolute- ly safe. . Mrs. Thos. Cain, Loring, Ont., gives her experience with this medicine in the following words:— "a never had anything do my little one as much good as Baby's • Own Tablets. She was troubled with her stomach, and was teething, and was very cross and fretful. A few doses of the Tablets completely cured her, and I can sincerely reeornmond the Tablets to other mothers..' 1 • - This medicine promptly cures all stomach and bowel troubles, breaks up colds, prevents croup, destroys worms, and allays the irritation ac- companying the cutting of teeth. Sold by all medicine dealers or sent by mail at 2if cents a box by writ - in ' The Dr. Williams lifediems Co.,, ,1S%ockville, Ont.. For Purity, Strength and Flavor it is superior to the freest Japan tea grown. OWYLON NATURAL GR 1EN tea is displacing Japan tea just as "E : ada" Black tea is displacing all Other Black teas. Sold only In floated lead packets, By all Crooers. which these explorers produced aro expensive, the royalties have • been enormous and they have made both men rich. Probably the highest price ever received for writing a telegraphic de- spatch was that paid to Nansen by a London newspaper for 16,000 words, in which ho summarized, after land- ing in Norawy, the . wonderful work of his expedition. He received S1 a word. The late Sir Richard Burton and Dr. Sven Harlin have also been among the fortunate explorers who have received, not only great honors, but also very substantial rewards for their services to geography. As a rule the monetary ]need of explor- ers, even those of great distinction, is very modest. Book publishers seldom allow them more than 15 per cent. royalty and the sales are rarely large. It is not uncommon to see scores of excel- lent books written by famous explor- ers piled up in second-hand shops a year or so after their publication. Dr. Kane's book on his Arctic tra- vels is remembered as one of the most successful works of the kind produced in this country. George W. Childs was its publisher, and it did far more than any other book he handled to start him on the road to brilliant success. IT ANSWERED WELL. Wife (with solicitude of tone)—"It must be very lonesome sitting all by yourself at night, balancing your books?" Husband (tenderly)—"It is, my darling." Wife—"I have been thinking about it for some time, and. now I have got a, pleasant surprise for you." Husband—"A pleasant surprise?" Wife—"Yes, dearest. I sent for mother yesterday, and•I expect her this evening. I mean to have her stay with us along time. She will take care of the house at night and look to the children, and I can go down and sit in the oiixce with you while you work." Husband—"The dickens—that is to say, I couldn't think of you going to town." Wife—"It's my duty, dearest. I ought to have thought of it before, but it never came to my mind till yesterday. Oh, John, forgive me for not thinking of your comfort sooner. But I will go and sit with you to- night." Husband--"To-night! Why, I—I— the fact is I got through with my books last night." Wife—"You did? How delightful And so you can now stay at home every evening. I'm so glad!" And the delightful wife ran off to make preparations for the reception of her mother, while the husband, with sombre brow, sat looking at the picture of a card party, with one member absent, in the glowing grate. ¢. "JUST RUN ACROSS.'' Some People are Lucky. Some people make an intelligent study of food and get on the right track (pure food) others are lucky enough to stumble upon the right way out of the difficulty just as a Phila. young woman did. She says: "I had suffered terribly front nervous indigestion, everything seemed to disagree with me and I was on the point of starvation when one day I, happened to run across a demonstration of Postum Food Cof- fee at one of the hig stores here. "I took a sample home and a sample of Grape Nuts as well and there tried thein again and found they agreed with nee perfectly. For months I made them my main diet and as the result I am restored to my former perfect health and can eat everything I want to. "When I spoke to my physician about Grape Nuts ho said 'It is a most excellent food.' " Name given by Postern Co., Battle Creek, Mich. There's a reason. Look for the famous little book, "The Road to Wellville," in every package of both Postum and Grape - Nuts. ANIMALS THAT CO-OPERATE. Birds That Take Life Tickets and Go on Grand Tours. The annual and other migrations of many beasts and birds aro really in- stances of excellently arrangedand. personally conducted co-operative tours. Tho route is marked out by experienced members of the commun- ity, upon whose memory finger tho outlines of cape and isthmus, of river and of island. The members take, so to speak, life tickets, stud each complete tour of swift and Swallow, of lapwing and of cuujcoo, lasts exactly a year, the sun being the unfailing time -keeper, One of the most singular instances of co-operation is that of the lem- mings of Norway. These aro ani- mals of the mouse tribe, about eta inches long, with short tails, Which live among pont-moss in mountain- ous districts. They fo@d on lichens, grasses, and roots; aril like many other of the rodents, breed at a rap- id rate. At intervals they set out front the centre of Norway to the east or west, going straingbt on in a dense mast over valley, and ]till and across river and lake. They are de- stroyed in countless numbers on the journey by birds and beasts of prey, but at length the survivors reach the Atlantic or the Gulf of Bothnia, into which they plunge and die. It a vast co-operative society for the purpose of committing suicide, Ambulance societies are not un- known among birds Edwards of Banff shot at one .of a party of five terns fishing in the Moray Firth, breaking his wing. Tho bird fell into the water, whereupon two of his companions carte, and, lifing him by his wings, bore him seawards, the other couple relieving them when they were compelled to drop their heavy burden. At last they placed him upon a rock, and the gunner attempted to capture his bird. Ho failed in his object, however, for a whole flock of terns flew to the res- cue, and carried their wounded friend out to sea in triumph. 0 MESSAGE TO .ALL GANADIAN8 THAT DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS CURE ALL STAGES OP KIDNEY DISEASE. E:milien Clouatre had Backache, Headache and Could Not Sleep —Now he Can Sleep, Work and Enjoy Life—Dodd's Kidney Pills Did it. Val Racine, Que., Nov. 23.—(Spe- cial).—In these days when nearly every newspaper tells of deaths from Kidney Disease the case of Emhlien Clouatre. of this placo comes as a message of hope to the Canadian people. He had Kidney Disease. Dodd's Kidney Pills cured him cora- pletely and permanently. M. Olouatre is always glad to tell of his cure. He says: "I can not do otherwise than praise Dodd's Kidney Pills. They cured nee of Kidney Dis- ease. "I had pains in the back and head- ache and could not sleep at nights. I got up in the morning more fatigued than the night before. I took nine boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills and they cured me completely. Now I can sleep well and work well and my backache and headache are gone. I have had no trouble since I took Dodd's Kidney Pills." Dodd's Kidney Pills never fail. to euro Kidney Disease from Backache to Bright's Disease. They have an unbroken record of thirteen years in Canada. Miss Angell—"And what are you doing for your rheumatism?" Mrs. eeeFee—" 'Deed, an' I don't need to do a thing for it; it's able and wil- lhn.' to work for itself.'•= Young Wife (at dinner)—"I didn't tell you, Adolphus, I cooked the dinner to -day, myself." Husband -- "Indeed! Then in my thoughts I have been doing poor Mary Ann a great injustice." Miss Elder (displaying her new gown)—"Now this is a perfect copy of a dress of the First Empire." Miss Kittish—"You remember exactly how they looked, I suppose?" When fflhournt.tlnlnt noterac bS man up physician and sufferer alike lose heart and often despair of a tura, but hare's the exception. Wzn. Pegg, of Nor- wood, Oe{t+t., sags: "I was nearly doubled np with rheumatism. I get throe bottles of Saadi Ateeriean Ithoumafie Cure and they cured rge. It's the Tricia et acting medicine I ever Saw."—x8 "They say she's just crazy to mar- ry him." "She is, indeed. She's continually throwing herself at his head; and the strangest part of it is he never suspects it." "Oh, that's not so strange. 'Women aro notor- iously poor throwers, you know." MIeen!'s l r11'el Cars Carpel 1a Caps. Wife—"I dreamed last night thee I was in a store that was just full of the loveliest bonnets, and----" Husband (hastily) --"But that was only a dream, my dear." Wife—"I knew it Was before I woke up, be- cause you bought me one." When the little folks take colds and coughs, don't neglect them and let them strain the tender mem- branes of their lungs. Give them e 1 i] h'h• C dL� nsuumptfion. C.rt" Tho Lung Tonin It will cure them quickly and strengthen their lungs. It is pleasant to take. Prices 264,, S'Oc, and $1.00 S. C. WELLS & CO. Tomato, Can. Leitoy,l�i.1Ci Sunlight Soap will not injure your blankets or harden them. 11 will make them soft, white and fleecy. ME1'T LEIS AGAINST SLAVERY. Forbids His People to 7tf'ake Slaves of Galla Nati pas, A few weeks ago King Menelek of Abyssinia issued a decree against the slave trade, It is couched in the language of potentates who have un- limited power to enforce laws of their own making.. The King says: By a letter forwarded somo time ago to all the provinces, I forbade traffic In men of the Galla tribe. I also intimated that those guilty of this offense would bo excommunicated from. the Christian Church of Abys- sinia, but you refuse to cease making slaves of the Galla men. Now beware, You who are taken in the act of enslaving the Gallas will ne longer, as heretofore, be lined or turned out of the church. But you will be punished in your own persons, by which I mean will bo subjected to the penalty of mutila- tion. This is certainly ono of the most drastic measures yet taken against slave trading in Africa. The Gallas are aline tribe, widely spread over the country south of Abyssinia. A large part of their territory, by agreement between Meneleck and Great Britain, now lies within the King's domain. The Abyssinians, with their guns and supe aor military skill, have re- garded Gallaland as their poaching ground and have inflicted great hard- ships upon the natives, whom they robbed frequently, not only of their produce but also of their liberty. The evil has been increasing. Abys- sinians have seemed to think that the easiest way to acquire wealth 1 was to make a raid in Gallaland and carry home a few scores of natives to sell as slaves. The crimes com- mitted against this superior tribe have been the scandal of Menelek's reign. The Gallas have been power- less to make affective defence, though they have lost no opportun- ity of spearing individual. Abyssini- ans or 'very small parties and speed- ily decamping to avoid detection. Years ago the Arabs were wont to invade the Galla country and take hundreds of the natives into slavery. In recent years, however, the Abyssinisns have been the only oppressors. 4 SOMETHING SHE DID NEED. Lady of the House (sharply)—"No, sir, I don't need no soaps." Pedlar (suavely, opening another bag)—" `Elements of Grammar,' ma'am? Only ten cents." Mr. Stubb-.-"Tho weekly papers say down at Matilda Senkin's dinner - party the table fairly groaned." Mrs. Stubb (who was not invited)—"I guess it did. Matilda Jenkin's cook- ing is enough to make anyone groan." $100 Reward, $100 There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last for years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced 1t a focal disease and prescribed local remedies. and by constantly failing to curo with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. S'ctenco has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and there- fore requires constitutional treatment. Bali's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney 4 Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional curd on the mar- ket. It is taken internally' in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous sun- faces unfaces of the system. They offer one hurt- drod dollars for any case it falls to cure. Send for circulars and testimoni. a1s. Address, F. 3. CIIENI'W & CO., Toledo. 0. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the beat. "Brilliant and impulsive people," said a lecturer on physiognomy, "have black eyes, or if they don't have them they are apt to get them, if they're too impulsive." Eyes: grid Nose ran Water. -- C. G. Amber, of Brewer, Maine, says : " I have had Catarrh for several years. Wates would run from my eyes anti nose for days at a time. About four months ago Iwasin• dnced to try Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder and slice usiug the wonderful rem,sdy I have not had an attack. It relieves in ten minutes.' 50 cents. -17 !MIsard's Liniment Cures Distemper. NOT ALTOGETHER MODERN. Breech -loading guns aro usually supposed to be a nineteenth century invention. The London Chronicle says that in the shop of a Dublin gunsmith at Cork Hill is on view a breech -loading rifle which was offer- ed to the British war office at the close of the eighteenth century. It was rejected on the ground 'that it took too much ammunition. That the breech -loader is older still, and that there is little new under the sun, has been proved at Tobormory i3ay, .Mull, where Captain Burns of Glasgow • has, with the permission of the Duke of Argyll, been searching for relics of the Admiral of Florence, ono of the vessels of the Spanish Ar- mada known to have been blown up in 1888 in that far -away water. With the aid of an old chart the diver wont down into twelve fathoms and came across a bronze breech- loading cannon, four and a half feet long, eight inches in diameter at the breech, and bearing the date of 1568, The diver also discovered a pistol, heavily incrusted with lire, a sword blade and akedge. The re- lics are to be exhibited in Glasgow, 447 irk 74 4%47' 441/ aiee ate 1k4/144 v 4Ptister,„ Hotel B I1ec1aire Broadway and 77th Street, New York. Lvxuarousty RvuNIsnsp Roasts for permanent and transient guests, at moderate prices, Oacsssrxe of SOLO PL:&Ysns, 6 p, no. 11111 e. m. RssTAvau.:T, Phut Boost AIM CAE,ms of artistio perfection. Cuisine and service really delightful. A Emma. . F$ATuaE zs flu& Asaaa Tsusrttu SUFFIXA/.. =mow PARLOR FOB LADIES Is anotherpieasant'feature. Our Gallery of Beautiful Paintings, vahted at 650,600, is open evenings to visitors. OLAIRE Affaebilitymployean.d courtesy guaranteed from every BZZV)a- . ABSOLUTELY 1;'inxraoor. ske MILTON ROBLEU, Proprietor. When you buy a X "Household Favorite." WA H AR see that it bears the name INSIST ONGETTING ONE OF THE ABOVE WELL-Ka/OWN BRANDS Tho Se.st Thai; Can be Hc.d. USaEY's FAILS A TUBS. USE Ebars AT K . 55.!,2r• 0 co.3.4n.'�A,^'T7=*,OPEAul,em*EP The demolition of the Royal Cale- donian Asylum building in Caledon- ian Road, Islington, has been com- menced. For nearly a century the asylum has occupied a prominent - place among the charitable institu- tions of London, and during that long period many hundreds of poor Scotish children have been reared and educated within its walls. Mrs. Jones : "You canst seem to keep a servant, Mrs, Baxter." Mrs. Baxter : "Yes, I can; but when it comes to half -keeping two or three Policemen along with her. I won't!" For Over Sixty Years ans. trnasLow's Sooznrrto Brnvr has been stead by ,fti1ons pt mothers for their children trial)* teethtnp. ltsootbes the child, softens the sums. SLAYS pain, aures phut polio regulates the stomach and hovels. and is the 1estseme,attor Diarrhoea, Twenty -Ma cents a bottle Sold by druggists throughout the world. Be sure and est-.trr"jilt$.NI7nrsLOr{ aSoorrt»:OSYgV?." S3-74 "WelI," said Pat, "diver as ye are, ye can't tell me what Peeps bricks together." "Shure," said Mike, "it's mortar." "No," said Pat. "It's wrong that ye are. Sure morther keeps them apart i" Use Lever's Dry Soap (a powder) to wash woolens and flannels,— you'll like it. —� Quizzem : "Hallo. Pat ! I hear you went out on a strike.." Pat : "That's right. Oi sthruck for short- er bours." Quizzem : "Did you get them ?" Pat : "01 did. Oi'm not wurfdn' at all now, b'gorry 1" Mieard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria, "Why, how rumpled your shirt- waist is, Edith. "Dear me, and it has only just been pressed, too." Edith was quite as self-possessed as ever. But John colored deeply. MESSSRS. C. C. RICHARDS & CO. Gentlemen,—I suffered for years with bronchial catarrh. I conunenc- ed in January last (as an experi- ment) to use MINAItD'S LINIMENT which gave almost instant relief. And two bottles made a complete cure and I have had no symptoms of a return of the trouble since March. Gratefully Yours, MARIC BURNS. Vankleek Hill, Ont., Oct. 3, 01. t -f It is great misfortune not to have enough wit to speak well or not enough judgment to keep silent. Heart relief In ha.iiah hour. -- A lady in New York State, writing of her cure by Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart, says: "I feel like one brought back from the dead, so great was my suffering from heart trouble and so almost miraculous my recovery through the agency of this power- ful treatment. 1 owe my life to it." --29 Golding (who has given his con- sent) : "1 hope, young man, that you know the value of the prize you will get in my daughter 7" Young Man : "Weil--er--no, sir; 1 don't know the exact value, but as near as I can find out it's in the neigh- borhood of $25,000," That Afll IS DUE TO CATADRII AND COLDS Possibly you haven't noticed it, but athorn have. Catarrh and colds if neglected sooh develop into tho chronic forms, acd`bnr- pauied by the most nauseating and dingueting symptoms. ;)r, Agnew's Catarrhal Powder Is a specific for our iiigg colds, coughs, deafness, headache, sere throat, tonsilitis, cold in tile head, i 'ttensa and all diseases of te nose anti throat It relieves in 0 minutes. 0 Or. Agnew'S Ointment Is afiltllout an nenani for oli satin troubiee, People who do the be they can to -day have the way open bel~ore them to do better to -morrow. iilaard s Lth t Gres till aetc? "She's not hall as bad as she's painted." "Well, she has only her- self to blame." "Eh ? "Hie paints herself, doesn't she 7" An admirable Food of the Finest quality and flavour. Nutritious and Economical. 48-21 THE BET' WAY TNEW YORK IS VIA THE LACKAWANNA t IXOAi.. INVEST IN TtiE BST. Fire trains daily from Buff to, %tor the Pocoon Mountains. the Delaware Vales Oap, across tho geno.ee Susquaht.nna, Delaware and liudson firers. blo•est to all ncamor docks. write toPEEDP. FOX, D.P A., Baguio, N. Y. BiHiard Tabes 'rias Borst at the Lowest Price Write for Torras RE i D BROS., M'fe@' Co.'y 7S8 Kirrg; a3t. tV. 20.44+.703EiC c® 77 King St, East, Toronto, JACKETS, OAPFRINf4S, STOLES. RUFFS. at aloe prices. Seed for catalog SAW rues ANS eetfalttc wanted. sand fe price list. 6S -M PST Hers tN AL -L g Qau��'ai�pps�, RI ��{,9s� OUT IA ACoAp ttt,T rs�T ■ e Yy Send for CHan p oli 100 Say St.,WCltW NTO en Patents, &ie, 14E(E �sYIIE2it9.o mos aw®.n¢mmamaua�m .snag and MAOAZINIS, PBItIODIQIALS BO01CS, etc, dispatched to subscribers byfirst mails by rm. DAWSON Ss SONS, Limited, Cannon House, Bream's Buildings, London, England. The largest Subscri tion Agency in the world: Send for our list. Free on application. Est. 1809. Prompt and reliable. Dominion Line Steamships aiontrasal to Liverpool Rosters to Liverpool Large and Fast 80*mila/a Superior noopnemodstxp r ell classes of pps'aon5ers. Saloons and 8taterooc o e amidships. 8peoisl attention has been siren to soya Saloon sad Third -Clam accommodrtlen. ttt,5-of pusage and all partioiulart, apply to any tithe Company, or to passetser agents 1®®uINION LINE OFFICES: 1 State at.. Boston If 8t. Sacrament fit„ Slants**, YOUR OVERCOATS and faded Suits would look better dyad. It no agent of ours In your town, write direct Montreal, Box 158. BRITISH AMERICAN DY@lf53 (O: Montreal. Poultry, Butter, Eioneyo Iip'ko THE ALL KIDS OP FRUITS And Farm Pro- duce generally„ consign it to us ani we will get you -.good prices. Dawson OOmmisSoln eA, AO --013