HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1899-7-14, Page 73trT.Y 14 19519.
IN 1V•NRRY CLD ENGLAND
DOINGS OF THE IaNGLISH REPORT-
ED BY IIIAIL.
THE BRUSSELS POST.
,t BMW! or Iive»If 'Paging Oboe) H 1110
Lflnd or *no Iteea-uateee9/lllg (!Cony.
rences.
Groat Britain maintains a garrison
of 10,000 soldiers on the 181aud of
AIa11tt
The value of the fruit oonsumed in
Gxeat Britain every year is estimated
Ile £10,000,000,
Tho Earl of Perth has completed bis
0208 year. 1 -lo Is the oldest peer ie the
Douse of LOxds.
Q'wo hundred new designs in Penny
toys ace brought out every week In
Whitechapel, London.
The shipyards of Great ,Britain could
turn out a big steamship onan aver-
age every day of the year.
There were 240,145 marriages in Eng-
land and Wales Met year, more than
In any year since 1870.
It is not generally known that ane
pf the numerous !tiles of her Majesty
1 ghat of "Lady of Jamaica."
The latest estimate of the population
of England and Wales Is 31,000,000, the
women being in a majority of 000,000.
The late 50r. Richard Cadbury leaves
(heritable legacies to the value of
£40,000, payable at the end of six
years.
Net earnings on the eleven primi-
pal linglisli railways during Lho first
four months of 1800 increased 4409,-
434
409,434 aver 1808.
Careful estimates show that each
year there are interred within the
limits of the county of London about
130,000 human bodies.
There ere 250 railway stations with
in a six mils radius of St. Paul's CnLh-
edrel, London, while within a twelve -
mile radius tbere are nearly 4011.
Mr. H. M. Stanley is trying to raise
£5,000 for a bronze monument to be
erected on the site of the tree under
which Livingstone's heart is buried.
The British dockyards at home in-
clude Chatham, Sheerness, Portsmouth,
1 eyham, Devonport, Pembroke, Haul -
bowline, West India Docks and Port-
land.
Sir Walter Bestlnt says no elan bas
fewer amusempnte than he. IIs is too
shortst.ghted for billiards, cricket or
tennis, and has had to give .up oven
whist.
Lord Rosehary, MG., has entered on
his 53rd year, having been born in
London, on May 7111, 1817. The Earl's
son and heir, Lord Dalmeny, Was 17
on January 8th.
Pineapples from the Cape are likely
to be sent to the United Kingdom in
largo quantities in thenear future, ar-
rangements to Ibis effect being now
under consideration.
The library of J. T. Delano, who was
editor oe the London Timesfor nearly
a quarter of a century, has just been
sold at auction. Most of the books
were found to be uncut.
A Folkestone undertaker hoe just
carried a little child's coffin to the
graveon his cycle. He wore the cus-
tomary suit of was, and strapped his
melancholy burden to the handle -bar
of his machine,
The Earl of Crewe owes his wealth
andrank largely to his maternal uncle,
the late Lord Crewe, from whom be in-
herited £40,030 a year. From Lis
father, Lord Houghton, he inber'ited
little beyond a name.
Ninety-one pictures for £05,3551 The
Paintings of the late Sir John olFwler,
of Forth Bridge celebrity, were sold
on the Oth inst., and realized this enor-
mous sum. A Iiobbema landscape
fetched the record price -0,100 guineas.
Deptford is one of the poorest dis-
resets in London. It contains some
dreadful slums, and is shockingly over-
crowded. A number of Danford arti-
sans haverecenlly beide meeting and
formulated a scheme for remedying
the existing state of things.
The British Admiralty will shortly
Cake a series of experiments, with
a view of learning to what extent the
wireless system of telegraphy can
aupersedo the present system of aig-
nulling by flags, semaphore or flag
lamp. The wireless system is also to
be tried 'between the lightships and
lighthouses of the UniLed Kingdom,
Englishmen, a000rding to the Critic,
now insure at Lloyds against adverse
judgment In law suits. On appeals
the rate of premium varies according
to the judge from wbom the appeal Is
eaten. The premium on Lord Chief
Justice Ressell'e cases is 10 per, uent.;
on those of one judge, whose decisions
are frequently reversed, it is 00 per
Cent.
The Duchess of St. Albans owns what
is probably the most interesting collec-
tion
ollect•tion of Victorian autographs in the
world. Besides the royal family and the
nobility ropreeented, there are words
especially contributed by Tennyson,
Browning, Gladstone, John Liright and
Chamberlain, and verse written ex-
clusively for the Duchess by all the
(best-known verso makers of the day.
Conspicuous among the many new
buildings that have arisen on the sites
of many old • "landmarks" in London
is the handsome structure named Re-
gent House, which occupies the site of
:that ancient alma wbiah for so long
appeared entirely out of plane sur-
roun
ded byfino shops. The new pre-
mises
a.il0s ala located in Regentent s
treet
0a,e to xf 1cCileus, and aro mu-
pied
by Snavlati Jestlxam & Co., Ltd.
BI'itish methods in India are illus-
trated in the Province of Lynll pur, in
the Punjab. Four years ago Lyallpur
was a barren jengle, without a single
inhabitant. Now 1,000,000 acres have
Veen brought uncles cultivation at an
expense of 97,500,000, and t'110 province
lints 8 population of 200,0(10. The net
enema lest year Was 71.2 per 0001. 0f1
the leveslment. The Value Of a single
year's crop is equal to the total roost
of the. iMprovements.
THE DEADLY LITTLE GERM
r--.
SOMETHING ABOUT THE GREAT
TUBERCULOUS SCOURGB,
Responsibility of Goveri,i* nth to Stamm»
Ont fire Ulseaee-Rex7t1 »annoy or Eu.
rope telorested-9fittt5Ues Pio-wing (he
WUIreereafl 'mots or !'Malars,
The 'great interest taken by the
Prussian family in the recent oongeess
at Berlin for the prevention of tuber-
culosis, and the message which Queen
Victoria sent to it expressing her
warm approval and blessing, have been
referred to by European correspond-
ents as striking proof of the attention
now given to disease problems. But
it would bo strange indeed if, after
the revelations which have been made
in recent years regarding the ravages
of the deadly tubercle bacilus, sover-
eigns did not Lake an interest in the
war that medical men have declared
against it.
1f by the invasion of sono savage
horde more than 70,000 men, women
and children were killed in one year
in Great Britain alone, it would be
considered the paramount duty of the
QUEEN AND PARLIAMENT
to give every minute of their time to
the extermination of the invaders; all
the more if it were certain that the
Home number would be killed every
yeas following by the same enemy.
Why, then, should not 800140 attention
be given to the enemy that slays those
70,000, even though that seamy be in-
visible and so small that hundreds of
him could find place on the point of a
needle? Germany has at present about
1,300,000 sufferers .from phthisis, ac-
cording to the estimate of Prof. Ley-
den, and 170,000 die annually from this
disease. In fifteen years the United
States lost over 2,000,000 by tubercul-
ous diseases; and ,from
FIG ORES CAREE ULILY COalPILED
for y81U'8 it is known that one person
in every seven or eight dies in Ameri-
ca end !Europe, of tubereulosia, a pro-
ventablo disease.
No doubt the ruin cause of the popu-
lar indifference toward so deadly a
disease lies in a sort of fatalism due
1c the ignorance that has prevailed
until recently as to its origin. The
doctors themselves groped in the dark,
grappling with au unknown enemy,
and trying to find its origin in inflam-
mation of the lungs, hereditary tend-
encies, or climatic conditions. Con-
sequently all their strategy and 'tac-
tics were unavailing until 1882, when
Dr. Hoch discovered the enemy and
brought him to bay. The bacillus first
described by him La now accepted by
matrical authorities the world over as
the sole cause of the
TUBERCULOUS SCOURGE
in the various forms that affect dif-
ferent parts of the body. It Is ami-
croscopic organism—a vegetable para-
site—so minute and light that it finds
lodgment in dust and floats In the alr
which Is taken Into the lungs; or it
may get isto the alimentary canal
with food and drink; Infecting the
stomach; kidneys, intestines, oto. There
it begins a war with the calls, which,
in healthy. individuals, usually succeed
in overcoming the invaders, unless they
aro introduced Jn Loo great numbers
or too persistently; while in persons
whose vitality is low the imported mi-
crobes gain the ascenclaney,.multiply,
form tubercles, or "pinbced" nodules,
set up caseous degeneration, and thus
gradually lead to a fatal issue, unless
remedial measures sucooed in
CHECKING THE RAVAGES.
Innumerable experiments, tests, and
observations have proved the Correct-
ness of Hoche theory. The startling
discovery was soon made that man's
most useful animal, the cow, is also
his most deadly enemy. It bas been
estimated that there aro at present
halt' a million cows in England tainted
with tuberculosis, and as much as 17
Per cent. of the milk has been found
infected. In the Queen's own herd, on
her. home farm at Windsor — forty
cows, all apparently bealthy—it has
been discovered lately, as the Lancet
informs us, that only Live were heal-
thy. The others reacted to the tub-
erculin teat, in which, fortunately,
A SUITE METHOD
has bean secured of distinguisliingdis-
eased from healthy animals, the tests
marlo with tuberculin in Europe, Am-
erica and Australia having shown that
oatlle reacting to it were almost in-
variably found, on being slaughtered,
to have tuberculosis. The Queen now
hes a new herd of healthy animals.
A few days ago the Governor of Il-
linois witnessed the slaughter of twen-
ty-seven Cows that hid been supply-
ing the Executive m111810n ivitb dairy
products. 'Ile is reported to have said
he would not eat any more beef, Leek.
ily such a'edictal pledge is
entirely
Uncalled fox, a5 Cooking destroys the
bacilli in the meat, As Inc the milk,
that can be sterilized by being sub-
jected to a high temperature; but
mnny parsons greatly 1n
ofer umbosle
a
mi11r, while cream, cheese and butter,
of course, cannot be boiled; it is, there -
tore, a necessary part of the war
against tuberculosis, that all
TAINTED) CATTLE •
should be destroyed.
Much 5reeter, however, than the
danger from cows is the danger from
dost as mayi fox
d be a Li 1 eel from the fact
3
t at a thetotal f
b t i o 80,045 deaths ft. c m
all onuses in London during 1807, these
ware 10,084 fatal cases of tuberculous
dieense, a d of these I
0 084acmes, 7,864
were put down t0 i i 1a-
Vhth 8 a or tuberau-
losis
lasts 02 tee lungs, commonly known as
pulmonary cousumpLion. This pule
m011801 form of the disease is caused
by breathing into the lungs air laden
with dust; particles with which tuber-
cle bacilli are mixed. These bae1111 get
into the dust from the dried sputa of
consumptives, A single person Dan
cough up in one dayl many millions of
these fetal bacilli, and, wero it net for
the fact that ,
LIGHT AND SUNSHINE
are their deadly enemy, it le probable
that man would have euccumbed to
them long ago. The discovery of such
a powerful and insidious enemy of the
human rue is certainly ono of the
moat Beneath:mai fondants in Lhe ltit4-
tory of that rape; yet there is no NSuse
fox alarm; on the centrum, I%och's dis-
covery has planed the remedy—or ra-
tber the prevention --of the disease so
completely within our power, that if
the 'public wilt co-operate with the
medloal men, it will be possible, in a
generation or two, to make tubercu-
losis us rare in Europe and America as
typhus fever and lep2os7 are now; and
that, too, without
THE CRUEL ACT
of compelling Comities to send paticuta
to hospitals for contagious diseases.
All that is nooessary 10 do is to care-
fully collect and disinfect all expiator..
anions, never allowing them: to dry on
linen, or on the floor, ur in the street.
Thio will prevent the spread of the dia•
ease, and, In the meantime, those who
are liable to it should make themselves
immune by the free use of the cheap-
est of all tonles—fresh air. Sir William
Broadbent has expressed his belief tint
"if wean slept with open windows, the
mortality from consumption would be
reduced by one -ball from this along."
The 'tapers read and discussed at re-
cast medical congresses have empha-
sized /lore and more the fresh air
treatment as the best .of remedies, and
Germiny hasrecenly establlished more
than twenty open-air sanatorias for
phthisis patients.
Blood Poisoning,
TERRIBLE SUFFERING OF A PRINCE
EDWARD COUNTY FARMER.
Neese 011 Treatment Patted to *158885 1lim
mad Ills life Was Despaired Of -Again
Well and Strong.
From the Belleville Sun.
A reporter of the Belleville Sun re-
cently had an opportunity to investi-
gate fi cure mncle through the use of
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale
People which is little short of miraoul-
ouA. This subject of the mire is Mr.
\Viltiam H. Conklin, a well known
farmer who lives in Ameliasburg town-
ship, Prince Edward county. When
the reporter drove over to see Mr.
Conklin he was under the impression,
from what he had heard of the case.,
that he would find a partial invalid,
but to his surprise found a stalwart,
robust man of six feet, actively en-
gaged unloadtug logs from a sleigh.
On making known the object of his
visit the reporter was invited into the
house and Air. Conklin gave his story
as follows:—
You
ollows:You can see for yourself that my
COI] .din On is now one of good health,
and yet I hove been near death's door.
A year ago last summer I injured my
hand, with the result that blood
poisoning set in. A doctor was called
in and the usual treatment given and
the hand apparently got well and I
started to work. It soon turned out,
however, that Ute poison had not been
entirely got rid of and it spread
through my whole system. The doe.
tor ryas again called in, but looking
upon my case es critical, advised me to
go to the hospital at Belleville. This I
did and remained there throughout
the month of October, 1807. My con-
dition was desperate, and as I was not
making any progress toward recovery.
I may frankly say that I gave my case
UP as hopelelss. !Believing that I could
not recover, I asked to be taken home.
I then tried. various treatments with
no better result's. I could not walk
without bele, and I was doubled up
like a jack-knife. At this stage I
was advised to try Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills and sent for half a dozen
boxes. After using the first half dozen
my appetite returned and night sweats
which bad been the band of my sleep-
ing
leeping hours deserted me. (snowing that
the pine were helping nee I sent for a
further. supply. Meantime a swelling
came in my hip, which finally broke,
and from that on my progress was
more rapid and I am again as sound
as ever, and able to do a day's work
with any one. I can only add that Dr.
Will -Runs' Pink Pi11s brought me to my
present state of good health and so
long as I live I shall praise the remedy
that brought me back from the verge
of the grave.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cure by
going to the root of the disease. They
renew and build up the blood, and
strengthen the nerves, thus driving
disease from the system. Avoid imi-
tations by insisting that every box
you p00011480 18 +enclosed in a wrapper
bearing the full trade mark, Dr. Wil -
limits' Pink Pi118 for Pala People. If
your deeper does not keep them they
will be sent postpaid at 50 cents a box,
or six boxes for $2.50 by addressing
the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brook-
ville, Ont.
S'L''AY,l1) THi; UPLIFTED HAND.
The old man was about to bring the
shingle down where it would do rho
most good when the boy interrupted
to make one last plea,
You've always said, father, he urg-
ed, that your school days were the
happiest memories of your life.
Quito true, admitted the man.
And when I've heard you rawtlling
those memories with some of your old
cronies persisted the boy you've 've s1
-
ways dwelt especially oe boy,
you
were in and the tricks you played upon
your tea011818.
Um, yes ; maybe 80. What of it 8
We11 I haven'tbeen dos a in thing
but store re up pleasant memories for my
old e! e.
Ate! Anthe shingle's fall was stayed.
LONGEST BEARD IN THE WORLD.
Probably the longest beard in the
world is that of a metal worker in
1Vearselllee, The lawn is 74 years old.
When 14 years of nese he bad
a beard
six Inches long. It grow from year to
year, and now hie hirsute attachment,
wheal unrolled, reaches rho respectable
length of 10 feet 10 inches. When
this mem goes out walking be carries
his board rolled up in a big skein un-
der the arm. Situ he is tier r small
a
in size, measuring but rive feet three
inches, the beard is more than twice
the man's height,
THE EXTREME VARIETY.
Pa, What is an extreme optimist?
An idiot who fannies he'll find his
Wife Asleep at 2 5.100.,
BRIiIISH CAVALRY HORSES
S PREPARED JOHN BULLI RE ARED FOR A
CONTINENTAL WAR,
Cavup',yerun 1Vnnid Cress
gnu; (tile/!lel no(I
Fond MoOAls A.n'atHl*ai In I1vl-
Itultt-The Delay in Shipping M,i,ltale
Would Ile .Lrol,IvlI, and. (h*y mon
Would Have 10 Ile 'Transported.
Considering that a British army
corps requires 0,000 animals, it se01n8
Btrange that there is a 'never -felling
supply, and that they are tamable of
having no emelt amount of military
tactics. Equine recruiting forms al-
most a business in itself, end a certain
department of the War Office is giv-
en over for this purpose alone. The
men employed to buy the mounts have
become thoroughly efficient in their
work through long study of horses,
and, although they are sometimes swin-
dled by fraudulent dealers, who have
faked the animals they sell. for the
most part they are keou judges, and
secure excellent value for the Govern-
ment. Each horse for the light cav-
alry costs about ,$150 to buy in the
initial stage, but those used in the
Guards cannot be purchased for much
leas than 9250, and the perfectly black
animals ridden in the Life Guards coat
9800. For the most pert these come
from Ireland, and there are a number
of dealers in the Emerald Isle 10110
make a living solely through breed-
ing horses for the Government. The
p'r'ices seem at first enormous, consid-
ering the number of beasts required.
The inestimable importance of mount-
ing the most insignificant trooper Upon
the best equine to be bad makes clear
the policy of payiug the best prices
for the best beasts.
SYSTEM OF .EARLY TRAINING.
Tho training of the horse after it
has once been purchased occupies aper-
iod extending over three or four
months. It has first to go through
the riding 80ho4l, and is there taught
the use of saddle and rein by rough
riders—men who have done nothing but
train horses all their lives. Colored
flags, newspapers and other bright ab-
jects are waved near the animal's head
until it becomes thoroughly used to
them, and will not allow itself to be
frightened in any way.
This tuition over, riding in line fol-
lows. As a rule scarcely any difficulty
is experienced here, the animal under-
going training being led by the oth-
ers. Then it is that the horse gets
some idea of drill, end it is a recogniz-
ed fact that it will, in all probability,
learn its drill quicker than a man, and
also know the meaning of the bugle
calls better than its rider does.
The most trying part of all comes
when the horse has to make its first
acquaintance with fire. However easy
it has been to train up to this point,
every quadruped becomes frightened
when rifles begin to go aft in the
vicinity. One plan adopted is to strap
the animal down to a plank and fire
revolver shots near its head, accom-
panied by the rattle of tins and the
clashing of arms generally.
SIX YEARS' ACTUAL USEFULNESS
After a few weeks of this training
the result becomes apparent, and shots
can be fixed with impunity near the
horse's ear, and it will do little more
than start. Then it is fit to be rid-
den
idden in line under fire, and a month of
sub practice closes its military edu-
cation. The rest is easy enough, and
a thorough knowledge of drill will
come in time. The age of a horse when
it is purchased for military purposes is
about 5 years, and it is able to car-
ry besides its living burden some six
stone of accouterments. The period of
service varies aocording to the work
it has to do and the climate in which
it is situated. In Indiahorses wear out
quicker than they do here, because of
the hardness of the ground, but on
home service from nine to ten years'
work can be got. out of a good steed.
Six to seven years' completes the ani-
mal's actual service, for after this time
it is sent to the depot and employed
for various purposes. When it reaches
the ripe age of 18 it is considered no
longer fit for use, so is sold into civil
life again,
VALUE TO AN INVADER.
One of the greatest problems iu cav-
alry survies is the difficulty to trans-
port the mount any distance over the
seas, If, next to artillery, there is any
one aid that an army invading a popu-
lous district absolutely cannot do with-
out, it is a large and efficient force
of cavalry. A aloud of encircling out-
riders are inestimably valuable fur a
number of reasons, They oat up the
country and terrorize the natives into
submission or neutrality. They not
11118 a Cloud of abseurl.ng flies, shield -
tug the numbers and disposition alike
from all observation. And best of all,
they are a great factor in intercept-
ing and dispersing those small bands
f militia which go to
make a the
o mln
majus part of the army of en invaded
nation. and which, if concentrated,
might con trtu e nnoverwhelming
force,
REMOUNTS ON THE CONTINENT.
To the end that et any time, at al -
o t daily n0110o a British arm 7 of
m u y
s Y
invasion might bee launched at Franco
or Germany, a large store of remounts
sufficient to aupply the pink of the
British cavalry, is kept at Hamburg.
The expanse, of eouree, le enormous,
but the necessity amply justifies it.
The elioret of England's greatness lies
in the foot tial: she never does ne-
ttling 147 half. At modest computa-
tion there must be 80,000 cavalry borses
in England and 20,000 on the Dentin-
enl. The cost of these, on an average
of $220, Is about 98,700,001 Tlieir year-
ly keep would average, with trainers,
stable and food 92,000,000 more. Yet,
if, as is never improbable, neoeseity fur
thole use should arise, the wisdom of
the expenditure, cannot but be felt.
No Power in the world can at present
take England by surprise, while, should
she chose to disregard the formality of
a declaration of war, her cuirassiers
might trample the grass in the Champs
Elyse» before the French wore award
that bostilities had broken out.
AESTRETIC CURL PAPERS.
(Woman lute at last found a way out
of the difficulty of malting a fright
of herself with curl papers. Doing up
one's hair on retiring has always been
a perplexing problem to those wbo
esohew hot irons, for even in the sanct-
ity of isolation one does not like to feel
herself a fright,
With a due knowledge of feminine
caprice, some enterprising mooufoc-
turer nos sent out a curl paper which
ties around the desired curl with a
dainty bow of ribbon, so that when the
bang or pompadour is arranged for the
night, the head looks as if surround-
ed by a halo of pretty ribbons and
floating ends,
Half the horrors of a fire in an
apartment house are thus done away
with, the harrowing sight of curl pap -
ora has always added to the others ter -
tors in no small degree; sleep walking
can now bo as graceful as a scene
from "Macbeth," to say nothing of
Dne's own feeling in being well dressed
—in curl papers—which is said to give
the crowning teach to woman's self-
possession. Truly, the manufacturer
of ribboned curl papers should be Can-
onized if there is any gratitude in the
feminine breast.
Canada's Golden Heritage
Does not consist in mines alone. Put-
nam's Painless COED Extractor is a
boon, It goes right to the root of
the trouble and acts quickly and
painlessly. Bewares a of substitutes.
MINERAL WOOL.
This 'material being fire, frost and
vermin proof is now being very largely
used as a non-conductor of heat, cold
and sound in cold storage, public build-
ings private residences, etc„ also for
covering steam, hot water, hot air,
and cold water pipe. The Eureka
Mineral Wool and Asbestos Co.;
Toronto, will be pleased to send de-
serietive pamphlet if you are in-
terested.
Any dealer in firearms will furnish
you an empty gun free of
charge. 1
O'KEEF=E'S MALT
Inv)¢orates and Strenggt�hen
W. LLOYD WOOD, Toronto, GSNylltAL AGENT,
When a man loss a 920 gold piece
it isn't a ease of "out of sight,out of
mind."
LUBY'S
01re, new ore to the
Oslo, 1t runts, ,t grim
and restores the color.
Sold by all druggists. sec. a bottle.
The man who has no little vices
may make up for it by having one big
0110.
7�y, 1. 100."
�.-..,
"Pharaoh IOC ,, Payne,orOrsnby, Qar'.
Qipr Manuls0(0001.
It's better to love the person you
omni marry than to marry the person
you can't love.
Pot Over Fifty Years
MRS. WINSLOW'S 800Tneeto SYRUP nee boot
used bymothers for their ebiloren teething. It socsocial.,fh
the ohld, softens the glum, alfay9a all pale, wren with,
°olio, and N the best remedy for Montoya, 250, a Ilnt
tie. Sold by all druggists throughout the world, He
sure mud ask for "Mrs. Wfnrlorea Soothing Syrup."
A girl is all right until abe gets wo-
manish, and a woman is all right until
she gats girlisb.
Cold Was Found
In the discovery of so wonderful a
remedy as Nerviline — nerve -pain care.
No remedy in the market affords such
prompt relief for toothache, neuralgia,
and .rheumatism, Its action in cramps,
colic, Ro., is simply marvellous.
Laugh a little more at your own
troubles and a little less at your
neighbor's.
v'+LS�Y'.,FtuZ'F�n,..'1a55B";.:r.
5Ties
11(1,010 Tobe*, give!rood "Caine
—800801 eptly' --wore t 1,81 1008.
—Headquarters for
—Goodrich Single Tubes,
— G. & J. Detaohable,
--Morgan & Wright,
--BioYl ale Sundries Sad -
dies, Tubes, &o,
Demers' prices an application,
Alnerloan Tile Co.,
King St. Vest
t64-0681'
s
TORONTO,
wismoonsiol
e e
ti z.v,k4tiof
/,
4447 h
SUMMER THIRST Is 4ispelled by a cup of
Lf �
d
d
A
. r
Lead Packages,
1f e mien Ls a good listener a
Women+ voleS htm it pleget lig 00111/0088-
tiotyaliat. �^
Hotel Caretake European Plan. Roost.
I from Cday up. OPD.
0 Mit. Station, Montreal. Gee. Oarstuketc oo„ rap a,
The luck of the fool is proverbial,
but you never bear a lucky man speak
of it.
CEYLON TEA. 25, 30, 40, 50 and 60O.
owe*
La Toscana, 10a. CAU QKY 1002.'1.
Life is a peculiar thing. Tbree-
quarters of it is a "lie," and half of
it is an "if."
•
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh
that Contain Mercury
as mercury will surely destroy the NON of
small and completely derange the whole eye -
tem when entering It ti, rough the Warns sur.
face. Birch art10(88 should never be used ex-
cept on proter.ptlons from roue/able ph eleI.
ana, as the damage they will do le ten fed to
the od you nun possibly derive from them.
Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufa°Lured by F. J,
Cheney & ('e., 'Toledo 0„ continua 00 mercury,
and le taken 1ntornaily, acting directly upon
the blood and nulecus outlives of the syst em,
In buying Ball's Catarrh Cure be sure you get
We genuine. It is taken internally, and made
la 'Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testi-
monials free.
Sold by Druggists, price 150, per bottle,
Haile !t'umily Pills are the bast,
When h man is out of a job he
can keep himself busy looking for
work.
Wa F. C. 978
CALVERT'S
oarbollc Diet nfoctante, Soaps,. Dint -
truant Tooth PowdOre, etc., have been
awarders 100 medals and diplomas for superior
excellence. Their regular U80 proveuo inteo11.
nus diseases. Ask your dealer to obtain a
supply. Lists mailed free on anti/Motion,
F. C. CALVERT & CO.,
MANCHESTER, • - ENGLAND.
r ss
Instruments, Drums, Uniforms, etc,
Every town can have a band.
Lowest pelcea 004.400ted, Fine catnloguo 1o011100 -
indium, nailed free- Write us for anything In
Maxie or 910040al Instruments.
WHALEY ROYCE & CO., - Toronto, Can.
El
E
A
U
T
Y
The Talisman
of Beauty " a 'tiva$in
j,ow n
olnplexion
Benutitul ne n roee•leot 1 clear, soft and vel-
vety en an infant's, can be obtained.
Sent free on npplieation.
THE TALISMAN 00.
77 VICTORIA BT., T000a09.
Pi
E
A
T
Y
-VPANT7TD-
AGENTS-Either sex, to bundle onr superior line of
Orayeo and Water Color Portrait., Frames, etc, Solar
and Electric Prints supplied to artists and the Undo.
All goods at wholosolo,rices.
.PC/WELL k OATH, Toronto, Ont.
e(WSPAP*R POR SALE -THE PORT PsaaY
9TANnARn, Capita, opening for fore man with
limited cash. Good enrrnundlng oomtry. Ad0rm,,
S. AI. NEWTON, Os,.110, Whitby.
ONENIGH 0 G H T Cora Lllrc. Aek your
4� 1 V ®eft B r� LJ 9 drugal. Ior1t.PHoeloo
CUTTING SCROOL--avers and aa
q1nk,and for or oat•
gloom. C. & O. SCHOOL CO., hsaiootrool••
MONTREAL
The it Balmoral,' Free Bus tir',okl"i;
MOWN SENSE KILLS Roaches, Bed
11 Bugs, Rads and Alice. Sold by all
Druggists, or 381 Queen W. Toronto.
HARRIS
szw.y® Sc'..
LEAD, COPPER, BRASS
Wholesale only, Lena Dlelanoe Telephone 1720.
WILLIAM ST., TORONTO. r
AeDoentytnneo
Stammerers whohmra[saed
lobo mtredelee
where, writs to
Dr Arnott, Berlin wbo will Door ioeoyon he can cure you
The Rawson Commission Co., Litriitel
Oor.Weet-Marint & Colborne 9t., Toronto,
Qin get yea beat prices for your Apples, nutter, 1.451'
Poultry, and other produce, if you ship It to them.
PATENTS
PI'oonred In all coantrle" 00,10,1
rt )V Y aT Trod, Marks regletered, (7opyrighta,
Caveats procured. Write for luformation.
EGERTON, R. (1ASE, Registered aolioltorot Patents,
Notary Public, Temple Building, Toronto, Oat,
LA
Mills, milk R. Halon,
Harriolurs,ulo„ ren(000.•
to Wesley 1lldRe„ 11101.
mond St. W., Toronto.
" BEAVER BRAND" Maoklntoel,
never hardens Ria guaranteed Water.
Minot,
Riobber Clo!Ulan
hinnbu Montreal
$45 to pr, edea! 04,1100 d l o o180011otyou l am il0
$50.00 0u t, ii'rlts tar turrea.
0. W, BUNS & 00., Toronto, Tailors
TORONTO Datting Se11o01 offers medal advantages
to all desirous of Requiring m thorough knowledge n1
Gutting and Fitting ttonlletnou a Garments, Write for
partloetors.
113 'gringo 51., Toronto.
S0
y
VSODAB�IfHiTE S Pt9pSP9�
An ROervice0ing Phosphate,eminent Mesmer for lip 0,
kidney and areae,, (Asko the place of soul t a0 prepare.
Moue In ease of Leu.11toh0, its effect is immedmle. Sold by
all 1,005)0114 in 10o, Ole, 50a ani l 01lackaged.
Queen City 0001 00 , 271 Wellington st_ E., Toronto.
1 et Works.
00 1I'IQ
and10teatM t4,
i� 4
8l 1 r' 1r tock
Rooptvi
Red or eGPOnd n. SLATE ,T round Roofing `W0 en tp y
Tobi to end Mo.
ROOFING
O of Girible, R ming CID r�tnb
Cool Tari to, done
by noG'000) Metal
New CID BMW,
logs, dvonte t°M, bymwhedf, Atonal O plet0, Car.
materials
Bebmatox nypartofthaocountry.
la41 b 1001191
0.OUhllo &SO1 to 8d hpelot WeIn or Y. �hane1 o.
C,DO71fIE&sONB, Atlelnicl°.&Wiclnrer9ta.,Taronto.
Ideal Leather Polish
WiII keep your shoes soft as velvet
MADE IN ALL COLORS.
SOLD EVERYWHERE.
0
NW
AK
3
%�OTN�
TMEVALUR OF
AS A PARTIIIE tiDAORE
FOR BALE ATA BARGAIN 1
A Complete Oatilt for a Small Strom Laundry moons.
Ing Leri¢g(# 8011 flea 8, (Bllndel wgqnaer Little 8140
Irun0r old trey Short Stnraherr Dump elar0iler, wLkete
etc. .Aust the :whinnema for a town or 0111150 lou 1
dry. All the m;a•.hl,mo are in geed repair And the oqf t
00000 bought otiva08 l40l Ualy, *141(14 to
1518, Fmot 810001, Tamale, (Naar union 8totloo.
CARD INDEX.,
it. only peered oysters for keep
leg names and adAre,ses$rdr
Sample troy odor
Tho 001(00 sLpeoloI(y Mfg, 00.,
192 and 124 Bey 8L, TORONTO. Pao' pry t Newmarket
Dominion Line STEAMSHIP'ffi
Alontreal end Quebec to Liverpool.
Large and fast Steamers Vancouver,
Dominion, Scotsman, Cambroman.
Ra tee of plumage: -First Qsldn, gea upwards; (Second
Cabin, $351 900(rage, 482.50 and Pa e0.
Por further Information apply tolocal agents, or
DAVID TOnRANOE Sk rgn4(tot 0tir)Apse ul,
Rotel and Saloon men Cannot afford to be
without the Automatsp Vested Attach,
f,t1",,,.......,..v.moat,eaA�yyayslorlteelfinonoweekdraw-
lo Mgbeer. No drip, nownatu. You only need{
• one bend to draw beer with the Automatic
Indio Oaeeofnosh you can hold oo tl 14
• x�i:-•y osehkond,ns the Automatic Ve
always reads, The Automatic
drawn the fine/Asian or eer.CCC
le used for any trade, bolt puts,
the kind of bead an the boar that
e^r,
'it P,lt'^i4' You want, Price 91,e2tI,ld-
fry 509e77 rotnadod if not1 e tletoa
tory, Dendron MtgOo.,Tpronto
AMBITIOUS MEN
wftb push and energy eau oeouro permanent, profitable
pneitf005 taoppr excludre dealandemi e onpital oosoleadd•
W a hale theablishnd over 800 e ready
on In py07108 bud•
,0"004 of their Den, and we �te reedy ep deem same forr
Sow tethemsleg marobnsta oleo e! repreatot to, wttb
it
inmate
themselves
ne to -day and forfullpnrtle0lara ionYon e,,=
better percentage (romans goods than from any othee
maple aoa RO3(CO MF'C CO., Toronto, Can.
SUMMER SESSION
N1MMO & HARRISON,
BUSINESS AND SHORTHAND 001.1.E08,
L0,0.2, Building, Cor. Yonge and College Cts, Toronto,
Thorough and practical lnetmotion in all nubffeotaepf1
&sluing 10 a thorough 50,400,, or Shorthand education,
Thorough prepurat.on for Inland Rorende and0lvil Son
I00 examination.. Open entire year, day and evening.
Bond postal for [roe l4forrgntlon.
L. COFFEE & CO., imam_dlabed 141$
GRAIN ANiJ COMMISSION
MERCHANTS,
Mneme 409-12 Board of Trade Building,
TORONTO, ONT.
THOMAS FLYNN Toa* L. COMM
TRY OUR
011.9, PAQKINII &
EN0INE801
SUPPLIES.
TheWm.Sutton
Compound CO.
Limited, OonauRloa
Engineer"-
198 Queen St. Boat
Toronto, Crusade,
Michigan Land for Sale. -
000 AC0E8 0000 FARMING LANDS-ARI•LNAC,
10eeo, OBemaw and Crawford Coontloe. Title pee.
feat. On Mlehignn Central, Detroit & 41,04(08, and
Der
Lake RailroIa,ds, at iriooa rano1,, from 82 to $11
Pawns, hurches, 8ohoo10ands Tetc,oant1 ala Enterprising
ergoldienmfled
t f
reasonable terms. Apply fo
8. OrS v°otliti'xS, Whitten re,Ml 1,
FREE!Th11 lorbtt
lune Ladyr
Watch, with gandor r
chatelaine terminus ado.
of our funtaeLinen
Oat100emcheindr's
9EetItn l
forgetting
dna. Doylies la la1s,0 and
prottlessi
deaden,
n sell
elakt, Write ad we They
d
ahem
Postpaid. Sen them, return our
wow/yawl Ivo pro p11 forward
eoour nablehht free. Unsold
Z,'' Toroatb,
" PEERLESS"
Machine
For MOWERS,
REAPERS, and
Agricultural Machinery.
i" H Dealers all sell it.
ly
stilt
' fi• �, 'c;0�'Il - 1 }. ,.
Dr,,,j,
rY..t tir.,tli7vxlrtorn••r�l •tiit'i}tri`'Y i
Brantford
Galvanized Steel
Windmills and
Towers. Also
Steal Flag Staffs,
drain Grinders,
Iron and Wood Pumps,
Boo slippage, BRANTFORP CAN.
.Send for Nor Canal -goo, Mention this paper.
00 LO
HAP LEY
&MUIR
00.1,1
H i1bbs Hardware Go.
LONDON.
Bi DE
ti.
LOWEST
PRICES.
HIGHEST
GRADES.
E.
Rope, Lath Yarn, and Eioyolesa
Dealers, Ask For Quotations.
•SyC�/�Att. .. .'ai/L'O"®+SV. •R
T23FL SEND
,�jTL-xmaonouniI CATALOGUE,
p .6gq a�
9(trooe0ors CANOE C 6.4' O.
rarrrnn.1
II,
OnEntario Canoe CO
J. ROGERS, Manager,
2 1\a
PT
T
E EROORODGH ON A
RtO ,
CANADA.
A.
eu .—aM t.I..a•,traen,.mmreava,RIDOS
15 105181 RESTORED
i
`
40
o
p
nm
d
o011
1tldid1pp e, Uinta -Blood, ,1(fier, n,o's, Brain avi00thbi
Fo548i41r0mayd ,.,8n,imaAd0gPt101I0dralllnca00whoha vesInvalids and Children, sod Mee eBa
0 ti
•
otw4nInfants whom,Minoritennd Debility
ly!ove !64B0rgoe a Ilevalenta
ArabiiaFoodt
vot
y5lnvnrinblu Sown, 100,000
Annual Cures of pn-
ton 4Ealoney, I
i
a Ria
,
Indigestion, IU%PInt101� Din ,EOP Ir noo to, Indio
Nervi00141,8, na, Closers,, Phlegm,nnrrhta,
onaJa,lisY,�l"sClosets, Dea7mndraY,
MBgit pry at 0oe� }egaa,nd
Londe W. alto to Perla, 1tt Buy do '0,,,Il lion, Dud
el! mitpr, hohdyt0, and Stotts
eat saev,rywltpo, In 1110,
BSlo4o le
0.,0En,tt olrltt0211. SlI In 110011enncloand 51Ilac Aet
ANEW(sickbedstTheT'.Etten230.,tin11Wd,0brinto