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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1912-04-25, Page 6et( TO GETRELiEF TAKE GIN PILLS Pee LAME BACK. TeNasent, P. O., ONT. "I received your sample of Gin Pills and after using them, I felt so much better that I got a leox at ray druggist's and now I ant taking the third box. The pain across my back and kidneys has almost entirely gone and L am better than I have been for years. I strongly advise all wonien who suffer from Pain • in the Back and Weak Kidneys, to try Gill rinse; Mns. T. HARRIS. Gin Pills contain the well known me- dicinal properties of Gin as well as other curative agents -but do not contain alcohol. Gin Pills are guaranteed bytHe largest wholesale drug house in the British ninpire to give complete satis- faction or money refunded. 500. bei, 6 for $2.50 -sample• free if you write National Deng and Chetnical Co. of Canada, Limited, Dept. A Toronto. If the bowels are constipated take 'National Lazy Liver Pills, 250. box. 98 Physical culture tio.esn't 'neces- ' eerily 'make a Woman tefam.ng mind ad. Buli amen who leada double life never does Itsvel men's woe*. RHEUMATISM Many Skelneen ,1448.:11.e?`. ' • 6id'8 :Mere; theee let ' Is7eNV '• Dietteet Sind, Huron. Coulaty ti• -Pag.er 8. • s • , Changes hi liquor Laws,4 (Toronte Star) ... The anienchnents which the Ontario Government ujaIceethis week o the reeedatiens gevering tins sale aliquot. appear te be in the right (Inaction, The storing of liquor in local option districts will be prevented. This is but right, as the purpose in storing liquor in sueh places is to facilitate its distribution at d stile and leamp.er the secceseful operation of local uption.oli community • under local option is entitled to all the aid the law car. give it in making the will of the people Another provision enables the Gov et nment to prohibit the sale cif liquor temporarily in a.district urider license while a publie work is •under way. This is on the principle, evidently, that 'hough a licenee may be granted in a cocurnimity while it iO in its normal state, it may be desirable to suspend the sale of liquor when the coincnunity is not iteelf, but overrun by a great body of men building a railWay, canal, or work of that kind. A temporary population, perhaps law - in character, may render the sOe of liquor so indivisnhl thate Government may desire to at bitearile suspend it. . No license -holder or his employee will be permitted to accept in payment or part payment to convert into cash any check, or time -check, or Order for wages. This is a good and necessary provision. It is a bad practice which makes the bartender a • worlerciams banker. , • There -are other amendments of minor suport. Some will cibubt the wisdom of the regulation compelling any peeson to tell, on pain of impti- sow:Dent, where he get the Minor which matiehem drunk. Those who doubt the wisdom of this will dy so because it is not a regulation which w eq y offenders, but will only be eriforcedff itt the option of some local o,cial, and perhaps for purposes of bis own. , But, in the main, the Government Many people hair& it but neglect is seeking to make the law et ec ive. talD. . they are eriPPled and With -leaving declared against the abolition .oult hope of ever being cured, but. of the bar, it is evident that the Gov there is hope for all in Rheum° and ernment intends to regulate the licenor no one need have rheulnetlem now. 'traffic more strictly than heretofore. lehmerne is just 'what we sey Mae Tne competition between the two -Weeleave (received hundrode of political parties along temperance testni imeaesetelling. us thrst Rheum() lines bids fair to have good results has cured esld (etanding\ caves of from the outset. rheumatism and when all other Mr. Hanna should consider another (treatments (had failed. Rheutmo point. Could not the hours for the . enriches the blood, and cleiVes uric sale of liquor be reduced? Some would acid from the 'system,. Rheurno have the ,bars close earlier at night guaranteed to yon, don't fail to Apart from that, moreover, Should get a battle to -day at J.E. Hovey's they not open later in the morning? and you evial soon have your health Thera are medically no advocates of and strength as in the' olden days, early -morning drinking. Why sbnuld J.E. Holley sells •a mornth'S teeat- bars open before the day's work • name far one dollar, or we Will mail begins? you_ a bottle prepaid on reaelpt of I piece, BeV. *Manion, Bridgeturig, Ont. ill b uall enforced egainst all Trenton Merchant Driven To netpair By The Pahl, • • ", TREN2 thTO-, Ont. Jan. , xeoe. •1 wassindreadfal sufferer for ninny years from Stomach, and leiyer Trouble -but my greatest suffering was from violent headaches. Tbey were se 'die- freseing that I almost had to give up my business. I went to Torobto, consulted • specialists and• wore glasses, but nothing did me anth y good and e • headaches became intolerable. • I was then !educed to try "Fruit-a- tives"' and from the beginning, I was better, and' in a short time I was quite well again -no more headaches -and I threw my glasses away. • ..rrnit-a-tives" riot Only cured 0117 headaches, but completely cured me of all indigestion, and restored tele to perfect health againMB ." W, j. McCO: • "Freit-a-tives" is the greatest cure for headaches in the 'world and is the onlymiedirine made of fruit pices. • "'Pruit-a-tives" will always cure Head- aches, Indigestion and all Stomach and Bowel Troubles. soc. a box, 6 for $2.50, or trial size, 250. At all dealers or from Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. . I „oe .eh Modern airl is never ,satisfied - untie ehe gees •a bee too large fork • her head .and aloes, too ,small for her feet. The real tieing In ho.nese men is , one who pays the. wi,dow that $5 he borrowed of the .late lamentd Met before heleTti %hip vale of tears. Is Your Nose Stuffed With Cold Don't load , down your stomach with cough medicine. Send healing medi- cation through the nostrlis--send it into . the passages that are inflamed with Ca- ' tarrh. Easily done by,in- haling Catarrhozone, which cures cold in ten minutes. Even chronic catarrh and bron- chitis yield to Catarrhozone, and no ease but it cures in a short time. BREATHE CATARRHOZONE Pleasant to use, guarariteed to cure Falls Thirty Feet. Toronto, April 22. -As the result of a thirty-foot fell from a scaffold on Saturday morning John Pearson of 60 Garden avenue lies in St. Michael's Hospital suffering from a broken leg and a fractured rib. Pearson, who for the past ten years has been emploeed as a carpenter by J. J. Walsh, a building contractor, was working on e building being erected at 94 Tyndal avenue. He was standing on a scaffold thirty feet from the ground, which he, together with another carpenter; had erected, ' when shortly after 11 o'clock the aged ris yeaes. one was tne muffler of Fred, Charlie, Bob, Eddie and Alex, Degan, the well-known lacrosse play- ers. Besides the sonsalready men- tioned, she 'leaves her' husband and another son, Thomas Degan, and five daughters -Mrs. Fred. Socie and Mese John Dunlop, Cornwall; Mrs. Fabien Socie, Baldwinville, N.Y.; Mrs. Wil- liam Gilmour, Carthage, N.Y.; Mrs. Richard Socie, Newark, N.Y. ?board on which he was standing gave way and let him fall. The injured man is 54 years of age and married. and so safe a child may use it. Get • Catarrhozone; ' large $1.00 size abso- • lutely guaranteed; small size, 60 dents; Death of Mrs. Lawrence Degan. • all dealers, or the Catarrhozone Com- Cornwall, April 22. -Mrs. Lawrence Pane, Kingoton, Ont, Dtgan died here yesterday ;norning, ' Crazed With Pain. Barrie, April 22. -Grasping a large clasp knife Jutina •Salminen, a Fin- lander, aged 21 years, who had bath legs eut off by a freight train one Friday eVening, attempted to oommit suicide in the hospital here, exclaim- ing in broken English that ha could stand the pain no longer. A com- panion took the knife from him. Salminen, in. company with five oth- er countrymen, had attemptedo board a train of flat cars, and he fell- un.der the wheels. He lost a large quantity of blood before a doctor was summoned, and was in such a weak- ened state that little could be done fcn• him. He died during the' night. . Fire In Cork Factors/. Port Colborne, April 22. -The Robin- son Bros,' cork works was partially destroyed by fire Sunday morning. A watchman discovered ths. interidr portion of the north and of the fac- tory in a blaze about 4 a.m. and sum- moned all the help near by to fight the fire. About six thousand square feet of cork boards, the machinery and belting was completely destroyed. It is not known how the fire originat- ed. esson April 28, 1912. , r!. THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. se . Tenet Of the Lesson, Matt. v, 1-12. Memory Verses,' 2 -6 -Golden Text, Matt. v, 8 -Commentary Prepared by The lesson today and the portion from Luke vi, suggested to be read With this and 'which will be our lesson.' next week look somewhat like the same discourse; but, ,while the subject' Matter is similar, the words were spo- • ken on, two different OCCasiOnS. This Is seen by comparing Matt v, 1, and Luke vi, 17. In the former we read that "Be went up into a mountain and when He ,WRO set .His disciples came unto Hire," and in the latter, "He came doevn ' with them and stood in the plain!' Both John the Baptist and'Je- sus had beeri preaching, "Repent, ,for the kingdom ' of heaven Is at bend" (Matt 110, 2; iv, 17), and Jesus bad been through all Galilee preaching the gos- pel of the kingdone and healing all manner of sickness and disease (iv, 23). In Matt. v to vil we have the eninciples of the kingdom wfilch was then at hand, Which was postponed because ,they rejected it and Him (Luke six, 11, 12), but which He will sethp on the earth at His coining again in glory. Tee teaching ofs these cbapters does not set before us it life to be lived to procure salvation, but a life that can be lived only by saved people, for it is written, "Ells disciples came unto Him, and He opened nis mouth and taught them (verses 1, 2), so that those who say tbat this sermon snits them and is gospel enough for them do not know what they are saying, for His first ut- terance condemns till pride and self sufficiency, just as the first of the Ten Commandments lays all low in the dust and brings in the wbole world guilty before God (Rom. ill, 19). There is a wonderful analogy between these beet - nudes of our lesson and the petitions of the prayer- in chapter vi, 9-13, com- monly knoivn as the Lord's Prayer, more correctly the disciples' prayer, an epitome of all true prayer. Only such as are saved, who have become chil- dren of God by receiving Jesus Christ as their Saviour (John i, 12), can truly say "Our Father who art in beaven." John viii, 44, applies to all others. Only the poor in spirit can say "hallowed be Thy name," for all others prefer to magnify their own name. All who mourn because of the Bridegroom's ab- sence and sigh and cry because of the abominations they cannot remove (Matt. Le, 14, 15; Ezek. ix, 4-6) do pray, "Thy klugdom come," and, being meek enough to obey without asking why, they can heartily say, "Thy will be done iu earth as it is in heaven." That will be the kingdom, and nothing less thau that will suffice. These first tbree petitions refer to Ells name, His king- dom and His will and suggest to us the Father, the Son, who will subdue all things to Himself and then deliver up the kingdom to the Father (I Cor. xv, 24), and the Spirit, Le whom alone the will of God can be vvrought in us or on the earth. The other four petitions concern Us, as also do the beatitudes, because of our relation to God. The hungering and thirsting after right- eousness corresponds with "Give els this day our daily breath" The merci- ful are those who have been forgiven much and are always ready to forgive ethers. The pure in heart are grieved by the thougbt of being overcome by temptation and pray not to be led into It, while the children of God who be- long to the God of Peace are peace- makers and not peace breakers, like the evil one from whom they pray to be delivered. All such may expect to know much of the hatred and power of the adversary, for all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer per- secution and be hated by the world which lieth in the wicked one (II Tim. ill, 12; I John v, 19, R. V.; John xv, 18-20; xvii, 14). But, thinking of the kingdom and the power and the glory and tbat He has said that 'all who are persecuted for His sake are happy or blessed people. we can by His grace rejoice and even be exceeding glad and leap' for joy when ill treated for His sake (verse 12; Luke vi, 23), The Spirit, through Peter, tells us that we must tot think- fiery trials strange things, but rejoice inasmucb as we are partakers of Christ's sufferings: chat when His glory shall be revealexi, we may .be glad also with exceedliee joy II Pet. iv, 12, 13). The Spirit, tient-mil Paul, says, "The sufferings ol this present time are not worthy to om- pared with the glory which sleol be revealed in us" (Rom. vill, 18). It is only as we by His grace manifest this spirit of the kingdone that We ean prove ourselves to be tbe salt of the earth and the light of the world (vorSeEl 13, 14). In His last prayer He mode it very clear that Be considers us as here In Ills stead, for He -said: "I am no more 10 the world, but tfiese are in the world. As Thou bast sent me into the world, even go have I also sent them into the worle" (John xvii, 11, 18). Um less the life of Jesus is so manifested In the children of the kingdom (7l. Cor.' iv, 10, 11) that the worin can see Elm , In us how will they ever learn of film, these multitudes who read no Bible and go to no place of worship and yet upon, whomeHe has compassion':• It Is darkness and cbaos with them. and &Bess the light shall shine upon them through tie it will be bad for them and for us who are intrusted veith the gos- pel for them. We must think of tbose who are still blinded by the God of this „ world Core iv, 4, fle Mourning at Niagara Falls. •Niagara Falls, Ont., April 22. -In the churches on both sides of the river yesterday, memorial services was held for Titanic victims, eleven people bound for the twin cities having per- ished. NE VOUSGDEBILITY OUR NEW METHOD TREATMENT will cure vow and make a man of you. Underitsinflueuce the brain becomesactive, the blood purified so that an pimples,biotehes and ulcers heal up; the nerves become strong as steel, so that nervousness, bashfulness and despondency disappear,. the eyes become bright, the face full and clear, energy returns to the body, and the moral, physical and mental systems are invigorated; all drains cease -no more vital 'Mete 1:00111 the system. You feel yourself a man and know raarriage cannot be it failure. Don't let quacks and fakirs rob you of your hard earned dollars. Or NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT THREATENED WITH PARALYSIS Peter B. Summers relates his experience: 'I was troubled with Nervous DebiLity for many years. I lay it to indiscretion and excesses in youth I became very despondent and didn'b. care whether I worked or not. I imagined everybody who looked at me guessed my secret. Imaginative dreams at night weakened me -my back ached, had paMs in the back of my head, hands and feet were cold, tired In. the morning, poor appetite, fingers were shaky, eyes blurred, hai. loose, memory poor, ete. Numbness in the fingers set in and the doctor told me he feared paralysis. I took all kinds of medicines and tried many first-class physicians, wore an electric belt for three months, but received little benefit,I ...• BEFORE TREATMENT was induced to consult Dm, 1Cennedy & ..... wr .ER TREATMENT 0 , Keelledy, though I had lost all faith in doctors. Like a drowning man I commenced the NE1V Manion Tantalum and it saved my life. The improvement was like magic -I could feel the vigor going through • the nerves. I was cured mentally and physically. I have sent them many patients and continue to do so.. - 0 ,, , e CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY ' . We treat and cure VARICOSE VEINS, NERVOUS DEBILITY, BLOOD AND • URINARY COMPLAINTS. KIDNEY AND BLADDER DISEASES. and 01:H8045es peculiar to Men.-- •- CONSULTATION FREE. BOOKS FREE. If *legible to call write for &Question . Blank for Home Treatment. •, DRs.KEI4NEDY&KEINEDY 1 Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold'St., Detroit Mich.. '' , NOTICE All letters from Canada must beaddressed • to our Canadian Correspondence Departs • IIIINellimilmeleell molt in Windsor, Ont. If you desire to see ns personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat leo patients in our Windsor -offices which are for Correspondence and Laboratory for Canadian business only. Address all letters as follows: St DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY Windsor Ont. 06.41...11A.A7.1.4vravaneldrAna il THE POOR DYSPEPTIC Suffers Untold Agony After Every Meal. Nearly everything that enters a weak, dyspeptic stomach acts as an irritant; hence the difficulty of effecting a cure. Burdock Blood Bitters will relieve all the distressing symptoffis of dyspepsia and in a short time effect a cure. Mrs. F. C. Gross, Berlin, Ont., writes: -"1 have been troubled with ray stomach for the lastseven years and tried all kinds of medicine for it, but none of them ever cured me, for as soon as I would quit using any of them, the same old trouble would come back. Last fall I was ad- vised to try Burdock Blood Bitters, which I did, and used four bottles, and now feel so strong I c.an do all my house work nicely and can eat almost anything with- out it affecting tne in any way. "Our boy is also using it; he always complained of pain in his stomach and all over, like rheumatism, and at the age of ten had to stay home from school. He hasn't quite used two bottles yet and is feeling good, can attend school regularly and eats heartily." B.B.B. is manufactured only by The T. Milburn Co., leiraited, Toronto, Ont. )1/atCl!, On, illoWetei.00t*W .11f0daleallkit NeW 'eLL:-. • er Spring ailments' are noltnimagint( • Evetlif the moat robust find • thee evid t =the . roast 'byes' g. t o 'their health. :Con,fiesepaeni nidnotrs ' °gess, overheated • and nearly always, badlr venitil,a(ted ro onte-. .111,Lthe hotine, UIo °flare, t'hel Shoe) and) the schooa taxed the vetality ,of en the strongeosie erhe bloOd becomes) ;thin) SRA watery and, le clogge4 ' with. empucteties• ,Soane people hays 'headaches .ance feeling • 04 langour. ,Others are lowesperele- ed and neryoue. Still *hero are troubleill 'with ,dieftiguring• pimple,s and elein eruption's, ;Nlehtil.e eorne get up tnthe mornjmg f eeling just As tired! se wheii they went to bed,: These are all ispriingc isiyinpitoand ,thate tli,e bleed is mall of order and that arrIlleine is neeceed• Many Fez Recaptured. Paris, 'April 22. -The City of Fez, the eapital of Morocco, which had practically fallen into the hands ol the riotous citizens and mutinous Moorish soldiers, has been recaptured by the French troops, numberins 2,000, stationed there after a desper- ate battle, in which a large numbei were killed and wounded. According to a wireless despatch -received from Fez, at the Fdreign Office yesterday morning, (leder has now been corn. pletely reestablished. IWO HUNDRED DROWNED. Jackson, Miss., 'April 22. ---Reports reached here Saturcley that 200 per- sons have been cleowned in Boliear County, Miss., by the flood that swept through that section when the river dykes broke. near Beulah, Bolivar County. Bolivar County is cevered With water and efforts to verify the report are meeting with many ob- stacles. Reports declare most of the persons swept away by the delege were ne- groes, who failed to reach high ground in thee to get out of the floocl's -path. Governor Brewer was advised yester- day there are 6,000 relugeee in camp at Cleveland and that theefood supply will last less thau 24 home. • TELEGRAPHIC BRIEFS. Dr. J. W. Clemeeha, a leading phy- sician of Port Hope, is dead. Alex. McKay, ex-M.P. Inc Hamil- ton, and latterly inspectoe of customs, is dead. The man killed near Sunnyside, To- ronto, on Friday has been identified as Joseph Gibson, Belleville. • The situation' in the Porcupine gold camp is generally encouraging, al- though four preperties ha te closed within a month. Major A. G. Peuehen of Toronto left for Washington to give evidence be- • fore the Senate Committee investigat- ing the Titanic disaster. Toronte Railway employes, " at a mass meeting, decided to make many demands opero the company, and tail- ing the granting oi their recluests will. people tal e purgative Inedicinee in the epreng. ;This jiieta iseriousi mis- eaket Youl ,eennot ewe yourself %vett, a medicine itha,0 gallops through your system and leaves' you tv,ealter stiii. ,This is all that a e give you health once steeng an the spren es a tonic) medicine Slat Will *sank the blopd and soothe the jangled nerves. And ithe one always reliable tonic. and) blood builder is Dr. Williaen's Pink Pille. These piles Doe only banish spring weaknetee but guard yoii againett the mowe serious affirments4 that fol., low, such -as anaemia, nervone de- belity, indigestion, rheumatiem, and other diseases, duet° bad blood In proof of this !Urns, Emma Duck-, Cariettaa Place, ,Ont., says:- "I was greatter troubled ;with weak spells, dizzlnees and - extreme nervous,- nees, and diicl nod find anything to help inc until aeting onthe advice of an aunt I began use at Del. VTOUJscm's•Think PiI14. Atter using five boxes I found my health f ally restored, and cheerfully rjecorn- mend the pills to other,s." le you are ,ailiing Ithis \spring you •Ica.nnot afeoed, 10 300610 oWn interest to, overlook SO valuable a rnedi- eine as Dr. William',s 'Pink Piles. Sold by all medicine d,e,alers or by mall 'at 50 cents a box occeix. boxes for $2,50 from The) Dr. William's Medicine Co., Beockville, Ont. NEMS Leneoln, Nein, April, 22. -With 'In- dications that Gel. Roosevelt has' a big .mergie (-Jeer Peeeident Oraft; Unit' Lafollette. is running ahead. 9f the. President , as the choice of the Re- puelicape, and -that Spealter Cleek is the Democratic choice, the collet 'of the votes at Friday's meeting itro- ceeded sloWly Saturday. The Roose- velt management say the colonel hal a majority of at least 20,600. 'Omaha end the eastern ceanties where the Democratic rev_olt against Beyen Was strongist, gave Harmon a big vote, but Clark is rtmning so far ahead in the rural cliessioti • and •in 'the ine,erioe eleat the Speakeee vice:ley is assured by an apparent margin .if 5,000, to 6,000. The contest hetWeen Wilson and Harmon is cloee. Every Congreselonal eistrict in the state hoe gone for Roosevelt, giving ho riixat:.:1111,11, odteelsegaiicion eforommoleleebr oasuka e nt in the second district, "Omaha," may give Hannon tevo votee, bub the four- teen others will be for Clark. purealtive dOeS. VtritiT YOB sati d $.0 - TO SEIZE MEXICO, Is U. S. Planning an Invasion of the Republic. Washington, April 22. -As a result of conferences between President Taft and leading members cf both Houses it is .understood that the President will shortly send a special message to Congress .on the relations between the 'United States and Mexico, and the conditions existing in the latter country may -require immediate action by the United States. To this message Congress will reply by placing a large amount of money, probably $50,000,000, at the disposal of the President. -A loge part of this sum will be used at once in the pur- conversion of cruisers, the acquiring he is ready to go ahead and build the chase of transports end colliers, the Georgian Bay Camel at any time, Sir and caring for of commissary sup- Robert Perks, the millionaire Britisb . Driver Is Termite, April 22.-Rolancl Carter, a driver for the Borthwicet Baking Co., Lixnited, was almost instantly killed, when the horse whith he was driving ran away on Severn avenue shortly after noon on Saturday. " When at the corner of Severn aye- ' nue sciid. Yonge street the horse took fright at a newspaper blewn along the Medway by thee wind and suer- clenly• bolted clown Severn avenue. The unexpected jolt threw Carter from the wagon to the paveme.nt and -lie fell between the wheels, one of the rear wheele passing over his head. He was picked 111.1 unconscious and died belore the arrival of the police ambulance, . KE; REPO 1 eropoi .roc! Chicage eVheat Fpturee , Cidee. 1-figher-LVW Stock- ' Latest ' Quotation's, CHICAGO, April 20,-A.ctive euyi of• Weeatereouited to-dtte from orop clemege ire Renege and 'because oe diminishingetocks both at the intex's tor and at tbe .seaboard. The triarket lei coeuequence maee 'a ,net gain of 1 te 1 1-eo. Cbrn fireshed at an advane, otea shade to 1-4e to 3-80, but oat • 1-8c to 1-4e down. • Latat trading le; provisionail . the way from last . night's level to 15 1..2e below. The Biverliool marltets closed to -day of Wheat, W4d to 1.14d higher ' than yestg, day, and on corn tiid to kid higher. Ant, werp closed 5/80 higher, 'Berlin 1E higher, and Budapest %a higher. Winnipeg Options. 1 ' Op. High. Low. Close. Closli; Wheat,- ,r,„ . may . 105 1051/2 ' 1051/2 105N, 10-P4 Tuly 1061/2 ' 1061/2 1001/2 10659 1051 Oats- lelay .. . -......,...... ... , .. , • ' 48% 40 July ............,.... . . ... ... . .. .. 47% 47 Toronto' Grain Market. Mother Is Shot. Brockville, April 22.--eirs. Samuel Hollingsworth, jr., ' of Athens, was ironing clothes in the kitchen of her home when one of her young sons picked up a 22 calibre rifle leaning against the wall behind the door. • As Mrs. Hollingsworth leaned. over to get an article out of the clothes basket the rifle was accidentally dis- charged, 'young Hollingsworth snap- ping the trigger, not knowing it was loaded. The bullet entered the we man's neck and became embedded in the shoulder. At latest accounts the bullet bad not been extracted. Mrs. Hollingsworth is expected to recover unless complications set in. • To Govern Ocean Liners. „ Washington, April 22. -The United States Senate Saturday adopted the amended maritime resolution looking to a more complete international re• milation of ocean traffic. The resolution advises the Presi• dent that the Senate would fan» treaties with the great maritime pow. 'ers to clear and broadly govern ,the courses, speed, lifesaving aparatus, wireless and other equipment of ocean liners, so as to avert -if possible, a repetition of the Titanic catastrophe. Would Help Americans. Ottawa April 22. --Declaring that plies, fodder, horses, mules, wagons, etc All these have been contracted contractor, is in Ottawa to-dae. The cost of the great waterway r and the War Department believes 1 would now fig,ure up to about $15, - that they efill be delivered within a 000,000, instead of the $110,000,000 first few weeks time. It was staMd at the Department on Saturday afternoon that satisfactory arrangements -have been 'made with railway and steamehip companies for emergency service at 111.y time and that many vessels engaged in coasting trade would be used as transports. This appropriation of money may be followed almost immediately by a- , joint resolution of Congress authoriz- ing the President to take all necessary steps for the protection of. American citizens and 'their property in Mexico and for that purpose to employ the land and naval forces of the United time Mladleserx eieceion trials will States, No formal declaration of. war not be held -until September. The will be made unless there is resistance North Essex petition. against Hon. Dr. to the invasien. Reaninee and the cross -petition wilI be The present intention of the War tried in June. • Department is to send two armies te- Several villages in Beauce County, ward the City of Mexieo, one starting. Que., have been flooded by a rise in at the Rio Grande, and the other from the Chaudiere River. Traffic on part, the seaboard. Thirty thousand regu- of the Quebec Central Railway has • lars will be available at onee and fif- ' been abandoned. by thousand voluneeers will be called Little John Magee, whose death is for.. The latter will e0603 from the reported, makes the eighth of the militia, transferred from state to fed- family in Prince Edward Island wbo. eral control. Two armies aggregating have died of poison. The Provincial eighty thousand men appear to be a Government is immtigatlng the affair. small order for the succes,sful inva- sion of a country numberinge5,000,000 estemat•ed. Canada, if it thought it should have two canals, could afford tO build the Welland one, said Sir Robert, bat he considered the latter would be mainly fax the advanteg,e• of Americans. As for the Georgian Bay scherne, the Con- servative Government had, of course, been only a short time in power and needed time to consider it. Wheat, 00 50 $,... Wheat, goose., bashel,...,. 0 90 .... Rye, bushel 085 .... Oats, bushel' ......... ..... . 0 55 Barley, bushel .. .. 0 S6 ..„ Barley; for feed ,0 65 0'76 Peas, bushel 7. 25 .•.• Buckwheat, bushel . .... 0 63 • 0 65 , Toronto Dairy Market, Butter, creamerY, 113. rolls0 30 0 97 Butter, creamery, solids 0 34 Butter, separator, lb0 34 ..,. Butter, store lots 0 31 . Eggs, new -laid 0.23 021 Cheese new, lb • 0 161/n 0 17 50 500 Honeycombs, dozen Honey, extracted, lb 0 13 ..•. Montreal Grain and Produce. 5,I06,TREAL, April 20. --Cables on Manitoba spring wheat cam,e higher, with bids 1 12d, to 3d per quarter higher and sales of a. few loads of No. 6 were made to 'London for nearby shipment, but on the ,wholo business was culeet. Butter continueS weak with only a small trade passing. De- mand d for is., active. Provisions strong.. Potatoes in goon demanwith iig Corn-American No. 2, yelloW, 910. Oats -Canadian Western, No. 2, 64c; do., No. 3, 50c; extra No. 1 feed, 510; No. 2 local white, soc; No. 3 local white, 40e; No. 4 local white, 48e. Bar- ley, Man. feed, 60o; malting, $1.06 to 51.10. Buckwheat -No. 2, 740 to 750. Plour-Man, spring wheat patents, first, $5.80; seconds, $5.30; strong bal- ers', 55.10; winter patents, choice, $5.1.0 to 55.35; straight rollers, 5465 to $4.76e straight rollers, bags, $2.15 to $2.25. Roiled oats -barrels, 55.35; do.'bags, 96 110., $2.55. Bran, $25; shorts, 527; mid- dlings, 529; 'nonlife, $30 to 536. Iray- No. 2, car lots, 515.50 to $16. Cheese - finest westerns, 14a to 14 1-4e.- Butter --finest creamery,' 280 to 29e. Eggs -4 Presh, 23c to 23 1-2c. Potatoes -per bag, car lots, 51.85 to $1.90. Dressed hogs -abattoir killed, 12 3-4c to 13e. Pork -heavy Canada short, mess, bbls., 35 to 45 pleces, 525; Canada short, cut back, bbls., 45 to 55 pieces, 523. Lard -compound . tierces, 375 lbs., 8 3-4e; wood pails, 20 lbs., net, 9 3-4c; pure, tierces, 375 lbs., 13 1-4e; pure, wood pails, 20 lbs., net, 15 3-4c. Beef -Plate, bbls., 200 lbs., 514.50; Plate, tierces, 300 lbs., $21.50. 31, Liverpool Provisions. els LIVERPOOL, April 20. -Beef, extra /nj dia mess. 113s ild; pork, prime mess, west. ern, Ms; hams, short cut, 14 to 16 lbS.; 005 64; bacon, Cumberland cut, 26 to toi lbs., 55s: short ribs, 16 to 34 lbs., 5Ss Gcl• clear bellies, 14 to 16 lbs., 575: long clod middles, fight, 38 to 34 lbs., 558 66; lop clear middles, heavy, 95 to 40 lbs., 56s, short clear backs, 16 to 20 lbs., 53s; shot\)- ders, square, 11 to 13 Me., 49s; lard, prin western, in tierces, 50s; American refin- ed, 63s 3d. Cheese, Canadian, finest white, 75s Ocl; colored, 710 64. Tallow, prime city, 305 3d; Australian in London. 34s 41*.4. Minneapolis Grain Market. MINNEAPOLIS, April 20 -Wheat -May. senee; July, sieve; Sept, 31.051/2; No. 1 hard, 51.1451; No. 1 northern, 51.1359; No. 2 northern, 51.1104; No. 3 wheat, $1.05%. Corn -No. 9 yellow, 50%e to 81.0. Oats -No. 3 white, 65%.e to 56c. Rye --N011;ir2h89peattos,4 ottitl1Vc/5.10 to 85.40; se, cond patents, $4.75 to 05; first clears, 53.50 to 52.86; second clears, 52,90 to 52.50. ; Buffalo Grain Market. ; BUFFALO, April 20. -Spring wheat, nci offerings; winter higher; No. 2 red, 51.16; No. 3 red, 51.13; No. 2 white, $1.15. Oats -Lower; n-Stoewriediy: Oats-Lower;a No. 2 white, 02c; Noit white, 61340; No. 4 white, 601/0. Duluth Grain Market , een DuLuTH, April 20. -Wheat -No. 1 hard, 511551; No. 1 northern, 51.1404; No. 2, do., 51.1214.; May, 51.1304; July, 51.1334. ' CATTLE MARKETS. Cook's Cotton Root . Compound: The great Uterine Tonic, and on-ty safe' -effectual Monthly Regulator on whichwomenean depend. Sold in three degrees of strength -No. I., 31; No. 2, 10 degrees stronger Sfit No. for special 00555, 35- Per box, Sold by all gee sts, or sent Dire1=Tnepllief°t?L`!,frlf4 Ci1;11cM10161tlitio. CRONT0.011T. (lerrserhlVi”,i.n peoples and some army officers believe that 500,000 men will be recmired. But in, this oonneotion it is recalled that in the former war 'with .elexico Gen. Taylor crossed the Rio Grande with only five thousand men, and that Gen. Scott made his way without serious opposition along the historic path of Cortez from Vera Cruz to the capital. At the present jun,cture the United States seems to be, for the first tune in her history, in a happy position of having made some preparation* Ter trouble before it came. During the past year Mexico has been thoroughly ma ed the transportation thorough- ly stutlied and every important moun- tain pass 'located and charted. delnei3 OraWIOrti 01 DrOcilt %Green, Perth, was trimming a tree on Sat- urday, teeny,. a pruning, knife attached to a pole and worked by a lever, when, he got a shook from overhead_ wires whieh proved fatal. • riOrSee met 01105 ft lenuenc.y ro nee' trouble, often manifest in azeturia, may be helped quite it hit by giving them a dose of 60 III -icier now rind then. In severe eases, where the limbs nre affected with tho overflow of albumen. amexcellent medieine is IroWler's solu- tion put 011 tile 01110 or ground feed. The dose should be increased from a teaspoonful at first to a tablespountee given twice n der. Where oats are scarce cornmeal and bran, mixed at the rate of one part meal to two parts bran, make a tine feed for horses. Feed according te what the team is doing -four querns three times a day when . working and considerably less when standing in the barn. Horses should get their, meats at the same bour every day, stoned bare water three times every day and a lump of salt in the manger. Why Salves Can't Cure ECZ017142 Since the ald-fashiOneci theory recommend as highly meads' for we of cueing eczema through the know that D, D. D. stops the itch blood has been 'given up by Ocien- alt once. 'bees, main'y different 'salves( have Of course ether druggesite have been:bled far skin dioeases. But D. D, D. Pros crIption -go to 'them if et has been foul:A(41A these Isalves you carelt come to us-bult! dOna ',only( clog the poxes/ eann pe,neltratee to the lamer liken believe the epidermis where the eczenea germso are lodged. This -the quality of penetrating --probably explains the treiciende outs 'success of the ietelll lonoven lis - quid) eczema remedy, ate of 'wen- Itergreen, thymol, glyceiene, etc. nompounded 111 D. D. D. 'Prea2 eriptIon. •_ We have sold Other renieclietsi for skin tronblee but none that Regan accepli soMe big profit oubsitstutec• .Bult if you ,coene, to ,our'' store, we ,callt tell You' all about D. D. D. Pres- cription and how lit cultlesi eczetaa, b.ecause wehave had Mho' agency tPrescription and how euiree ec- zetner because iwe ha'A ve had the agency fox so long. .Ori you can gelid a free trial bob- ble by writing the D. D. D, Laboirse tortes, 43 Colborne St., Toronto, W, S. R. Hoaraes, Drugglisit, East Buffalo Cattle -Market. EAST BUFFALO, April 20. -Cattle - Receipts, 100 head; steady. Veals-Receipts, 200 head; active and 250 lower; $4.50 to 58.25. Hogs -Receipts, 2500 head; active; and 10e to 15c lower; heavy and mix- ed, $8.25 to 58.30; Yorkers, 57,65 to 58.30; pigs, 57.25 to $.7.40; rough, 57,25 to $7.30; stags, 55.00 to 56.25; dairies,) 58.00 to $8.25. Sheep and lambe-Reeeipts, 1400 head; active and steady unchanged. Chicago Live Stock. CHICAGO, April 20.-Cattle--Reee10765, 200; market, dull and unchanged; beeves, $6.60-10 55.75; Texas steers, 54.79 to 56.10; western steers, $5.00 to $7.10; stockers and feeders, 54.30 to 56.05; cows and heifers, 52.65 to 57.25; calves,' 54.50 to $7,50. Hogs -Receipts, 19,000; market, fairly ac- tive, Sc lower; fight, $7.50 to $7.90; mixed, $7.55 to $8: heavy, $7.60 to 58; rough, $7,60 to 57.76; pigs, 50,60 to 57.20; bulk ef sales, ' 57.75 to 57.50. Sheep-Reeelpts, 080; market, steadY strong; native, 54 to 56.50; western, 54,21 to 57; yearlings, 55.30 to $7.25; lambs, na- tive, 55.25 to 57.90; western. $5.50 to 53.40. Liverpool Live Stock, • LIVERPOOL, April 20. -John Rogers te, Co., Liverpool, cable to -day that there were very few cattle for sale In 'the Birkenhead market. There Was very little demand, but owing te the general scarcity, prices showed a slight ad- vance. Both States and Canadian steers made from, 15 1-2e to 1.6o per pound. Prominent Belleville Doctor Dead. Belleville, April 22. -One of Bello- ville's well-known. and 'esteemed phy- sicians, Dr. Tracy,, died , here eaturcla in his '76th year. or Fyears' the de ceased oecupied public positions here having been chairman of the board o education and medical health office of the city. In 1805 he was on duty in the Northwest rebellion. A wide\ but no family stuvive. • Mary Maddern, Actress, Dead New York, April 22. --Mary Mad, dere., an old-time actress, is dead at her ,home here after a long illness,' She Was an English woman, end an Aunt of. Mrs. Fiske, of whose company 'she had been a member Inc mane Years. • , *oceo Phosphodiaii; The Great Baldish, Rentedil• Tones andinvigeratesthewho nervous system, makes 11517 Blood in old Veins. Cares Nero. OW Debility, Mental and Drain. Worry, Des- pondency, SexactlYreakness, Emissions, Ayer. nuttorrhwa, and Affects of Abuse or Excesses. Price 51 per box, sixfor $8.. one wai please, six will cure. Sold by all druggists or mailed in plain pkg. on receipt of price.. New pamphlet mailed free. 'rho Wootil Medicine coo Iforaterly Windsmi Voirerat0:178-45 5