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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1903-03-06, Page 5Jubilee Laundry 'iVe use no chemicals • to destroy or injure 1r� your Clothing, and we Guarantee our Work. TAILORING IN CONNECTION W. H. HOFF@ AN tCook's Cotton Boob Compounfa is successfully used monthly by over 10,000 Ladies. Safe, effectual. Ladies ask your druggist for Cook's Cotton Root Com- pound. Take no other, as all Mixtures, pills and imitations are dangerous. Pride, No. 1, $i per box ; No. 2,10 degrees stronger, $s per box. No. 1 or 2, mailed on receipt of price and two 8 -cont stamps. The Cook Company Windsor Ont. @"'Nos. i and 2 sold and recommended Windsor, all responsible Drugglete in Canada. No. 1 and No. 2 are sold in Zurich at Dr. Buchanan's driest -••tore. Clubbing rates. 'We have made arrangements to offer the following low clubbing rates with THE IieneALD : Daily Globe . :;a 4.25 1, Mail & Empire 4.255 'Weekly Globe . , 1.60 Mail & Empire 1.75 Berliner Journal (German) 2.50 Family' Herald & Star 1.75 Daily Free Press 3,25 Weekly Free Press 1.75 Daily Advertiser • 2.25 Weekly Advertiser i .50 Weekly Sun 1.75 Farmer's Advocate 1.85 EVERYONE CAN HELP THE . CONSUMPTIVE. The New Oreo Consumptive hospital ' Mect Admit Consumptives Absolutely W ithout_Oharge. The appeal being made on behalf of the new free Consumptive Hospital, built under the auspices of the National Sani- tarium Association—the first Free Con- sumptive Hospital in Canada—is one that, touches closely the heart -strings of every man, woman, and child the broad Domin- ion over. Where is the community, far or near, without its sufferers from this dread white plague? We are all in- terested in bringing these relief and re- storing them to health, family, and active citizenship again. One important step in this direction has been taken in the erection of the new Fred Consumptive Hospital, due to the beneficence of two Toronto citizens, and which is now nearly completed. When the workmen go out of the building, and that will be almost immediately, all that is wanted to make it ready to receive the consumptive is that it bo supplied with beds and other furnishing appointments, no charge whatever being made for admittance. The National Sanitarium Association are already carrying too heavy a debt to undertake the furnishing themselves, but the way is open for each ono to help in raising the $10,000 needed for this purpose. The suis is not alargo one. Ten thousand individual contributions of $1.00 each out of a population of nearly 6,000,000 people would accomplish this end. Some, of course, with their hearts racked by the sufferings of relatives, friends, or fellow -citizens, will, out of their abundance, do better than this. Fifty dollars will furnish a bed. What is needed is that the amount be raised quickly, that the many knocking at the doors of the National Sanitarium Association may find a place open for thein. Contributions for this purpose, $1.00 or more, wilt he received by Sir Wm. R. Meredith, Chief Justice. 4Lam pert Ave„ Toronto •, W. J. Gage, Esq., 54 Front St, 'West, 'Toronto; or National 'Trust Co., Limited, Treasurer, 22 .Bing St. East, Toronto. Fifty dollars will furnish a bed. It is dint 111ost of tha stocks on the market at present are, close- ly related to the Shakespeare )).lin- ing stock, a notorious fake foisted here some years ago,and people in- vesting their money are about as liable to See the back of their necks without it looking -glass, as to see the return of their rash. Beware of the smooth-tongued sto^k-sl.een- lators. Chronic hitis Mr. Win. Davidson, St. Andrews, Que., states :—"Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine has eared me of bronchitis. I have, without suc- cess, tried many remedies for the past six years. , Last winter when I had a oevere attack and was unable to wor•lc 1 procured a bottle of Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine, and Rill happy to state that the third bot- tle made me a well man," Mr. W. I.1, Alger, insurance agent Halifax, N.S., says :—"I used Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed and r`urpen• tine for a severe attack of bronchitis Permit me to testify to its splendid curative properties. I got better from the time of taking the first dose. Slav- ing a family of young children, my doctors' bilis have ennnally come to h considerable sum. I believe a bottle of Dr. Chase's Syrttp occasionally will eel the in reducing them very materially," 25 cents a bottle, all dealers. Syr D L pn Chase's i {1 p of Linseed and Turpentine. T1 -IE, Z U` 1f H H R (, 9• t ,.W......�,.,�,,.w.-.,••..��..,..�...•,�...,.�.,..,..,.,.......�-...,.,.,.•m.�„�.. + .....w .•-.,..r-.•., ....«.......... ..^^-.r--.w.n+-w,r.,••r^i.k�ewr+•• PGtl+MnyYr• A Dinner at Ilagnevs'. A tafla can Nobleman. AU ICinds of Kisses. Guaranteed Cry friend Van Amberg worries inc to death sometimes on the subject of food, He is a crank,- if he were a chim pnzce at the loo, or some equal, ly valua'b'le •exotic aniniill, 11e could not be More fanciful over dietetical matters. When he hears of a new fore)) of breakp fast oats lie is not happy till he tries it, nor, when he has tried it, is he ]!nippy till the has tried all his friends with the story of its indigestibility. His real disease is two thousand a year find nothing to do. Ile has made a hob. by of his stomach, and his hobby has ))rude him a frank, whole-souled and pea feet bore. I was sitting over the fire the other evening waiting for dinner and re -read- ing "Trilby" when Van Amberg, who in• habits the rooms below mine, came in and told me to rise up and follow him: as he had discovered a positively miracu• nous cafe, and wanted to take me there to dine. To escape a cold leg of 'nutter') ewhieh hacl haunted me for two evenings, and which I knew my landlady was at that moment "laying" only that it might. appear before me in the more frightful form of a hash, I took my hat and fol- lowed Van Amberg, "I will give you a dinner such as you have never eaten before," said he as we got into a han'sonh. "You know the state of my health and that I only live on suffer/thee, so to speak; sugar, with. out any metaphor, is death to me, and ] love it I have sometimes thought of going into Fuller's and ending my wretched existence in one wild debauch. I always take the other side of Oxford street when I am passing Buszard's, for the place has an attraction for me which I can only liken to the attraction of a precipice. I can't eat veal, 1 can't eat pork, 1 can't eat anything I want to eat, 1 sometimes pass the Carlton with a pocket full of sovereigns; but I no more dere go in there and dine than the man who sweeps the crossing just.below; but at this new place Ilagnevs' I can eat anything. 11e is the wizard of the kitch- en. You evait and see." We dismissed the cab at the Oxford street end of Wardour street. We walked down Wardour street through Old Compton street and down an alley; at the door of a dismal -looking third. class restaurant he stopped. "This is Ilagnevs'." "Surely," I said, "you are not going to dine in a. place of this description." Without replying he entered, and I followed. The place was arranged inside in the old-fashioned English manner— loose boxes with a table in each. Van Amberg chose the box nearest the dooi which was vacant, and up came M. Ilag- neve in person to enquire what he could do for us. He was a tall man with long black hair and pieruing black eyes; an ideal brigand, a mart of energy, too, for in less than no time our dinner was served. Ah! what a dinner that was, from the lobster -red crawfish soup to the pale - green curious -tasting ice. What a dream! "A very great violinist is dining here to -night," said M. Ilagnevs as he served is with coffee himself; "no less a person than Herr You will hear him play." I heard a fiddle being tuned, and then from a back room of that disreput- able restaurant came music. Ah! that was nn Cie indeed: music to live for, music almost to die for. When it ceased my friend arose wear- ily, and, placing the amount of the bill on the table, turned towards the door. "Come," he said; "let us go" "Well," 1 said when we were in the al- ley, "I rust compliment you on your discovery" Iran Amber;,* laughed. "What have you had for dinner?" he asked. I enu- merated the courses and he laughed again. Then he said. "You won't he an- gry if I tell you something?" "Perhaps not—go nn» "Well, that dinner was all at fake: all those wonderful courses were simply dry bread and cold water. Do you think I could have eaten those things? I ate then] in my iuingivation whilst lily body ate bread.y Ilagnevs is a hypnotist; his guests are hypnotized. At his place, one can est and drink anything and. enjoy it without harm to oneself—the fat man can revel in sugar, the man with indigos - tion can eat pork. I not that the great - lest discovery of the mese?" "13ut he did not hypnotize are; he did not touch me" "1)o the Indian fakirs torch the crowds they hypnotize, the crowds that watch them climb}»; ladders that hang with no support in the air and stabbing children in wicker l,nskets?" ".But the violin player?" "Oh! ho is an oil fellow Ilagnevs gets in for eightcenpenc'e and a glass of grog: he plays the tune the old cow died of, and under the spell of hypnotism it be- comes the tnusie of the spheres." As he said this 1:, suddenly vanished; the street collapsed and I woke up in my armchair by the lire just as my land- lady entered the room bearing the 1iash,e It was a dream—not the hash, but .the dinner at lhlgmevs'—Cud I think it was caused partly by "Trilby," which I lead just been re -reading, for when I examine the name "Ilagnevs" it seems very 31111011 like "Svengatli" spelt backwards. It 111a5 a thea))(, but when one thinks over the ))ratter there seems a good deal in that dream. I Ildve Seen men mesmerized and made to believe that they are eating pineapple when, as a matter of fact, they are de- vouring, a turnip, and if hypnotism can turn a turnip into a pineapple what alight not hypnotism do for English eo elaery ? If it could. even in a dream, turn the "tune the old cow died of" into the moi• sie of the spheres, what might it not dc for English music?—henry de Vere Stae. poole in London "Outlook." A Thackeray Letter. An amnlsing rhymed letter from Mack - „,ray to Miss ]into Perry and her sister; Mrs. Elliot (Jane Perry), is included in a set of manuscri pts to be sold at Sothe. by's in London this month. It rums as follows: "Well, I thought as sure as sure could be, should find a letter from kind J. E, Pray, why doesn't she write to me? I'd like to kno•w,,and if mot she, where's her r, i1'lhs5 I> P.? One or other is sure' ly free to send a line to doubly you tea. What is the reason? I have often said Are Kate and Jane both ill in bed? It that little shivering greyhound dead? or has anything. possibly happened to Fred? or have they taken a friend in. steatd, of that old fellow they've often fed (along with Venables, Clem, and Sped) with a brken nose and a. snowy head? Tell nes 1Aw shall the riddle ba read?" • "rlr; IFnglielr papers contain particu- ",y of (Jne of the most relzt'ark- <ble oases of fraud that have oo- cnllied the t1hn0 of the law courts for ening years,andwhich has just been brought Ie all end at the Leeds -assizes, !hien dainee Albert Marson, a clerk, was c ))twitted of obtaining 4'3,127 ICs by fable pretenses, and. was sentenced to throe years' penal servitude. to 1808 there apllearea an a weekly !Riper an article ]headed "The Coming 1iMc'Ihest Man in the World." It de- c'ribed how a San Francisco multi -mil- lionaire hermit willed all his possessions to •liis hale snceessor, who would be found in England. Lawyers misapplied the 'vast estate and were imprisoned for the crime, and tires the rightful. heir was discovered and the hermit's mansion ex- plored. Down a trap-door into a mys- terious passage the way led to a large room lined with gold ingots, to an - ether filled' with bags of ,gold dust, ane to a massive iron door which bore a warning that a person forcing it was liable to ,death. The door was 'lpened by ehem'eals, the death-trap—a deep pit—Was bridged, and further on was found a gold mine of -countless worth. The article went on to say teat the heir was "still .eratclting wish his pen," but shortly would enter -upon a large estate in Devonshire which had "been se- cured for him by the Government," and that the Queen had "already intimated her intention of making hint a peer of ,the realm as soon as the world was ac- quainted with the information." The prospective Croesus was James Al- bert Marson, at that time earning 305 a week as 0 merch'ant's clerk in a Sheffield house. A tall, handsome, fairly -educated ))ran, he found no difliculty in acting the part of the owner of millions. He showed to his friends copies of the will and docu- ments purporting to entitle hien to a fa- bulous yearly income, an estate in "On- tario, United States," half the size of Ireland, and vast quantities of diamonds and rubies. He told them he was entitled to bound- less wealth, signed letters "Albert, the future Lord Syerston" and "Marson, K. G•.," wore a ring which the said had been sent as a token of good will by Lord. Minto, the Governor-General of Canada, pretended to be purchasing a £12,000 steam yacht, and showed them a draft of £5,000,000 and a bill of exchange for £50,000,000, this money, according to his statement, having been forwarded by his Canadian agents. Ile retired from business, installed a telephone, a valet, .a private secretary, bought horses, guns and fur -lined coats, and was attended by a retinue of favorites anxious to please. To some of them he promised "staff" appointments—the boots at the largest hotel in the city was to have the position of butler at £2,000 a year, and his doctor was to have £1,500. All this meant money, and to keep off his creditors he borrowed on the strength of his "expectations" Sums from £5 to £250 were lent freely by his friends, who believed his promises implicitly. One man advanced as 1110011 as £3,120, another £420, and many lent smaller suers. The largest creditor, Mr. Thomas Eastwood of t'hesterlield, once received from Mama cheques for £10,000 and £150,000, but he was asked to return thein for "re -endorsement." parson's accounts showed a deficiency of £5,307,. and he had been living at the rate of 1,000 a. year. One of the most curious points about the story is the methods by which Mar- son duped Eastwood. On one occasion he wrote: "hest assured that for every pound 1 have had from- you the same will be repaid at the rate of £5,000 for ev- ery pound, and an annuity to each of your children of 4;10,000 to accumulate 'o their yenrs of discretion" Later, st son wrote: "1 have already signed half a million a year for your na. tural life, irrespective of your stipend, ,while in my service." Marson lived in a house of which the rent was 6s per week, yet Eastwood be- lieved Trim when he said that the IIonle Secretary and the Dnke of Norfolk were coming to dine at his house. The judge, in passing sentence, said prisoner had been convicted on clear evi-' dente. Whatever the original story was, he took advantage of it and made untrue statements to Eastwood, who was a gen- tleman easily taken in. - Last Year's Violent Crimes. The Chicago "Tribune" has again pre- pared a list of general statistics gleaned from the happeninees of 11)02 in Uncle Sam's country. among them are crimes of violence, which embrace murders, suicides and lynell- irlge, The figures, being compiled atom the daily prose, are not 0111001, and probably not complete, since a nuns - her of occurrences in each class may easily have been missed. Sufficient, how- ever, has been gathered to make an ex- amination of it interesting. The number of•luurders during the twelvemonth indicates a recurrence of the wave of homicidal tendencies which was prominent in the statistics between 180.1 and 1807, and 11111thh receded after the latter year. There were nearly 1,000 more murders in 1009 than in 1001, when the number recorded was 7,852. Last year there were also 1,000 more suicides than in the previous year, when • 7.295 were reported. The pistol and the poison routes were chosen by two-thirds of those wlho sought it lath to self-de- struction, and carbolic acid was the fa- •. ', on c»i rison, Despondency, ))dent' based � tc 1 1 u ), disappointment in love or dcmest.ie un- happiness, was the cause generally as- signed. Only 07 suicides were ascribed to failures in busint' s. It has generally been conceded by statisticians that the proportion of suicides as to sex is about , • fol r orales to one female. Last year the • figures formed a strong contrast with previous records, Three times as many women committed suicide as in 1001. '1111s figures 'riven are 5,032 nudes, 3,000 fe- males. Lynchings show some sign of de- creosing in number. In the Southern States there were 17 more legal execu- tions and 21 fewer lynchings than in 1001. It is to be presumed that many of the 'le+ roes lawfully executed last ,year wail have been lynched a few 'years ago in preference. Phe whole num- ber of executions in 100'2 were 144, as against 118 in the previous year, show- 'ing that punishment is keeping up with 'the increase in murders. Of the whole number of 11(011 hanged 88 were nee oes, The 2nnneger of a concert given in n small town, instead of putting "not transferable' on Ine tickets, frosted a •notice on the doer: "\'o s'entleman 3s' mitted unlea5 lie ('exnee hilaseli'," A. serious book, on a frivolous s1r1,•• lies "Theand ,i n ,ij 1s "e 116.3 aticl its History," It w� has beim translated into l:nglislc hem the Danish of Dr. C'lristopller, Nyrop, pl'ofessu1' 01 roanarlee philology in the university of Copenhagen, oy William•. Frederick ;Harvey of Oxford, and, accord- ing to the pr'ef,'ee, has. also been tritlls- lated into (Yeruuln, Swedish and ltusslanl and lids gone through two editions in :Uennrark. Verily the history of the kiss is a matter of universal interest. D1'. Nyrop presents in the voluble but little ,1)orsonal opinion; rather he contents himself with weat•ing together proverbs of all peoples of all times on the sub- ,ieet of kissing, and gives, in addition, 'quotations from • the poets who have rhymed of kisses—and they are no sn1a11 number! I'or his quotations he has hunted in out -of -the -tray places, and has sought them among the masses as well as the classes, For instance the ladies of Germany have the •poetical saying that "a kiss without a beard is like Ves- pers without the lIaginiiieat," but the milkmaids of Jutland express a like idea by the rough-hewn proverb that "kissing a fellow without a quid of tobaeeo and a. 'beard hi like kissing a clay wall." That kisses are naughty the Italians deny, saying "that a mouth is none the worse for having been kissed," while the French proverb runs: "Bah! two kisses.. \Vhat of that? They are exchanged like bul- lets that miss the mark, and honor is satisfied," and even cooler -blooded races agree to that, saying "a kiss can be washed off," though to this proverb there is ai, corollary which runs, "A kiss may indeed be washed away, but the fire in the heart cannot be quenched." Of stol- en kisses there are ]many proverbs "One returns a stolen kiss," say the honest Germans, and the tapanish have the same idea: "Dost tlhy mother Chide thee for having given nm a kiss? Then take back, dear girl, thy kiss, and bid her hold her tongue." The learned author casts a glance at the proper number of kisses that ought to be bestowed at one time, and a page or two lightly touches the doubtful subject of "tire topography of the kiss." Again, the' various kinds of eject, by an eminent scholar--•suialt . kisses—those 00ol and tender, or ones like those of Halle, whose mistress was afraid that "his too hot kisses would char her delicate lilts," or those which leave narks behind, against which Are- t'lusa warned Lyeas in a. letter—"Oh, suffer no yowls girl to print the mark of her teeth an your neck"—these are all treated. Of such tenor is the book, exhaustive almost, it would seem, of the possibilities of the subject—on paper. Pickwick up to Date. f?Iir: Jingle's Elopement.) "They're gone,. sir—gone clean off, sir!" gasped (he servant. "Who's gone?" said Mr. Wardle fierce- ly. "Mister Jingle and Miss Rachel— started off in a motor hired ten minutes since, and—" "Quick!" shouted Mr. 'Wardle, "my ear, at once! John, Harry—some of you —go and get the pet•oll Tom, my re- spirator and spectacles this instant! Cumc along, i'lekwick, we'll catch 'em in less than no time --out of the way, Win- kle, out of the way! Isere we are—jump in, Pickwick. Stand clear there!" • And in less time than it takes to de- scribe the event the two intrepid old gentlemen had started on their chase. Away they went, down the narrow lanes, jolting, in and out of the eart-ruts and bumping against the hedges on either side. "Is it—is it safe?" mumbled pr. Pick- wick behiud his respirator, as he peered anxiously thrungh his goggles into the surrounding darkn,'se. "Hope so," replied Wardle, fumbling with the speed -gear. "!fish 1 understood this blessed machinery better, though. Only had a motor 1 ;week, and—' A. violent cannon against a signpost cut the remark short. For a while there was silence. Then JIr. Pickwick, who hod been •sniffing un- eaeily. broke the .!}epee once more. "My dear good friend," he gasped, "what is this aboniin.lbic smell?" "Acetylene," re}c.i.::ci dlr. Wardle ab- ruptly. " ornetliie l gone wrong with the lamp. Look mat. scarp carper here— and now we go cin, ::,till. Sit tight!" But to comply with this direction was impossible. lir. Pickwick was thrown np and down in laic seat like a cork. Pis goggles were jerked from his nose, his cap blown like a feather towards the sky, his whole body converted into one tl•ein en dons bruise. "Ah, we're nholingg now; cried Mr. !Wardle exultingly- • ,urd indeed they were moving. Fields, hedges and trees seemed to rush from then with the velocity of a 11-hirllvind. Suddenly 31r. Pickwick ex- etliimed with brcathlees eagcrncss: "litre t}he�• are!" les; a few ianndred yards ahead of them was a motor, on which the well- known form of Jingle was plainly dis- cernible. It teas traveling g quite slowly, and Mr. Wardle incrcaecd his speed yet further with a- shout of triumph. "\\'e have them, Pic•kwi"k, we have tlientl" he cried, while the car flew like a streak of lightning. And thea suddenly—a bump—a crash—land Mr. Wardle and Mr. Pickwick found themselves seated in the middle of the road,. which was strewn with fragments of their machine. Two members of the constabulary were coil- ing up a rope which, stretched across the highway, nad procured their down - f111. A third po deoma0 licked his pen- cil, and produced a notebook. "Thought our trope would spoil your little game. Thirty-seven miles an hour, 1 make it. Names andaddresses, please?" Jingle's car incl a,+ opped a short way ahead. "Ta-ta, Pickwick," he shouted, "good-bye, Wardle --measured mile— scorching a mistake—police waiting -•-' twigged 'enh directly --slowed down. If lucky—option of ane• --•probably impri- sonment. Well, so long!" and restarting his machine, lie disappeared.—"Punch:' Satan to Blame. _ "Lightning knocked the church steeple down," someone said to Pother Dickey. "Yes; Satan's eyes always flash fire when he sees a church steeple gwino uh" "And here's a colored brother killed another at 11 camp Meeting." bo"dYes; Satan goes ter ineetin' 'long wid de res' er dem, en sometimes shouts de es'." "Anti at prelteller was drowned in the river last weakP "Oh, yes; Satan's in de water, too. lie 'bleege ter go dar ter cool off," "So you blame everything on ;Satan, do you?" "Bleat Cod.^ was the reolp, "malt dat what he's"fery"- flanta''Constitution." The Clocks. Latest in Jcwelery. If in need of a good Violin or Harnouica, I can supply you, Prices Right, Fine Watch and CtJc:tc. Repairing. F. W. HESS, THE JEWELER. 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE TRACE MARKS ,ry Drs►Gras CCPYOiGHTS &c. AnyonesendingfdreLuny •ascrtniour fe descriptionher invention is probably patentable. Communion, Sons trrietlyy confidential. 11 nndbook on Patents sent flue. ,Jldest Hawley for securing patents. Patents taken throdell Munn & Co. receive Special ricticc, without charge, in tho $Cienttt6c jinierican. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir- culation of any scientific journal. Terms, 53 a year ;pfour months, 51. Sold byall ne,rseeslers. 1lIYONN & Co 3GlBroadway, New York Branch Office. 0:^` ti St.. Wasbinaton. D. C. ZURICH P. 0. Is open daily except S))))tars from 8 a. n1., until it p. 111„ The mails are t distributed as follows : MAIL FOR HXIefALL, c'lo:•p at fi :;.,i tt.211 2 :55 pill • .Jorr:rn. " 11:10ttnl " L. H. &13., '• ti:55ttill " L. H. & B., 2 :55 am " I+'tt(ritl limi:sAl.r„ arr. 11 :f'0 0111 '• 7 :40 1»11 ,• " b+T.J(:til;PIr, t' 10:45 0111 L. H.&IB,, " 11:00Ulla „ cc L 11 t , B., „ 7: 80 am LI!OTTERS %'oIt It1IOII$TRATIOV, Illtl):t be posted half an hour previous to the time for closing the mails. D.S.i'AUST, Postmaster. Should be in every household. If you are not a subscriber, send in your name at once. Address "The Herald" Znrieh, ' - - Ontario wa''e• " Wood's Thosp'hodine, The Great English Remedy. Sold and recommended by all druggists in Canada. Only reli able medicine discovered. Rix packages guaranteed to cure all forms of Sexual weakness, all effects of abuse or excess, Mental Worry, Lrseessive use of To. bacco, Opium or Stimulants. Mailed on receipt of price, one package $r, six, $5. One will please. 914614411 cure. Pamphlets tree to any address. The Wood Company. Windtiory Osz$. Wood's Phospholine is sold iu Zurich by Dr.l3uohanan, Druggest. Strayed. On to my premises, Lot 3, Oon. 10, PIay. a few months ago, 1 lamb. Owner may have 513111e by paying all expenses. JACOB ROEDER, Sarepta P. 0. Lost. On Monday, Jan. '26th, there strayed from my premises, Sauhle line, Stanley, a large white sow. Finder will pleabe notify me. Joos Drt'rrar.tnc, 28.2pd Drysdale, P. 0. PilesTo prove to you that Dr. Chase's Ointment is FL certain and absolute cure for each and every form of Stehinrt, bleeding and protruding piles, the manufacturers have guaranteed it Seo tee• timoniais in the daily press and ask your neigh- ' bora what they think of it. Yon can use it and got your money back if not cured. 60c a box, at all dealers or IiOMAI SON,IIATES & Co., Toronto, 1 Drs Chase's Ointment •• f:r4•p 0u' some weaker one, gine me strength fo help him on." ••,(• hearts are more than coronets."—TzNxrsoN. TO FURNISH THE -SEW FREE e,0MUMATI1tE jiOSAITAli MUSKOKA. The Only Free Consumptive Hospital in Argenta, CANADIANS EVERYWHERE INTERESTED. —The New Free Consumptive Hospital, built under the auspices of the l rational Sanitarium Association, will be ready—so soon as the money to equip and furnish is secured to receive 50 patients absolutely without charge. —Over 800 out of 500 patients admitted to the Muskoka .Cottage Sanatorium -- the property of the National Sanitarium Association —have returned home either cured or greatly improved. --The Free Consumptive Hospital is situated in the same ,delightfully health/id locality, bringing the same ad= vantages to the poorer patients as to the rich. 47m4d !MI,, 1. �,fl FIRST FREE HOSPITAL FOR CONSUMPTIVES IN AMERICA The gift of TV T. Gage, Esq., and the Executors Hart A. Massey Estate r ec- • —Think of the sorrow and suffering the Now Free Consumpw tive Hospital will alleviate and indeed entirely remove. —Will you not send a dollar—or $2.00, $3.00. $5.00, $10,00— or more, for this most pressing of all charities ? —The victims of the White Plague are found all over Canada. $50 WILL : URNISH A BFrD. T' toe . w. CONTRIBUTIONS 1tAYBI. SENT TO— SIII, W. R. MEREDITH, Kt., Chief Justice. Vico'1'res. Nat. San. Ammon,. Toronto. J. GAGE, Chairman 11x. Coon., Toronto. NATIONAL TRUST CO. Limited, Treasurer, Toren to. eti