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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe East Huron Gazette, 1892-04-21, Page 3eee eeen---hheeX-. SHONALAIID. ien assay Enormous,- ness. o have sesemt many this and other coin - bat Mahonaiafld wi\ gold country in the onland is rich in sil- have been kicovered district these had d in ancien limes. m rock give an assay einces of silver to the in a very large per - been found in large ind in diffeieat parts, een discovered whose e not yet been tested. where off the granite not a virgin state, re that the future of 1 -producing country is ;inking, careful devel- ry test will prove that. spects diacloved by idy been done, quite n of the most sanguine. is under the ground, aeons for feeling confi- es of the surface and ve been already reach - when the country is nanner. Of wood and nee, and in many parts sary for water- power. e clams pegged out as kings. Whoever the ked these mysterious nuch if not more about we do. Almost all the 3 is worked away. orked, it is invariably Philanthropy a underlying all re - Ports to -day is iultitude of different es all unite in this idea.' to care only for the ei another life, and has r in its efforts to save hten and enrich their t life. Philanthropic are con..ng to think alleviation of need and ging about such con - pain and need to a queenly Science her - a time, the pursuit of she brings out of her as will sweeten and Time was when this against, as an outcome even to -day there few who condemn -ove his environment, at he will be i hus led. th this world that he the world to come. s are in a hopeless en tred isolation that time saints, is giving ive solidarity that is ocratie age. To -day dily find God in the ef a cell, but in the 'women are most wont and helpful plans for iness ef the race. In ie nineteenth century eaning has been put Apostle : " None of wed no man dieth to ... 3d by a Woman. papture of a desperado eckertown, New Jer- tirs. Sarah Baker, the near there. She was ng room on Saturday p entered the house. in the dining room hrough trouble with ing green spectacles, r with her sileree, e she was blind. He him something to eat, asked her if she could could not, although at the house. After he demanded what e place. She at first vhereupon he seized neatened to kill her. d him that a roll of ed in the oven in the rge brick oven be- ioned fireplace not p opened the oven Vid the loose brick be - 3 were concealed. y, she took up the ind poured come boil - 'which he promptly eupon closed the oven h a table knife. She 's and told her story used her captive and avertisi ng. slights this, which anch of his business. urriedly and without eaves its display to a not attract the eye ider, and then says ay. Advertising is made a study. The oods just as legiti- pll as the salesman of this fact is recognized e3ratials of advertising is but three in num- hat people want or you must select the ch them, and you an attractive and 11 the resources of called to the aid of poetry, music, high rosiness insight, all Lincoln's famous bol. all the people part f the people all the n't fool all the e," rnst not be if one expects to iceess. Advertising e of variety ; what is a failure in an- dy of the question is -[Pharm Era. vor dies young, while is his senses and his sutte& swyer, tut his wife is was stunned in his ing and appealed to Latin, my dear ?" he want to know ?" shit antion. " want tes tween de jure and de famonaent. " he head of this family bit "1 undentfeeild eludedoetit ratal of de beges-* Au Sabbath Chime. 'nhneeee,Pteeome, thou Almighty King, Help us thy name to sing, Help ue to praise 1 Father all Worions, O'er all victorious, Come and reign over us, Ancient of days. Come, thou incarnate Word, isrird on thy mighty a word : Our prayer attend ; Come. and they people bless; Come, give thy word success; Spirit of holiness, On us descend! Come, holy Comforter, Thy sacred witness bear, In this glad hour; Tho, who almighty art, Now rule in every heart, And ne'er from ns depart, Spirit of power. To thee, great One in Three, The highest praises be, Hence evermore ; Thy sovereign majesty May we in glory- see. And to eternity Love and adore. THE EARTH'S MOTION. it is Alleged that the Poles in Moving Describe Circles. One of the most curious inquiries of a scientific nature now under way is the in- vestigation of the fixity of the earth's axis d rotation. It appears from various astron- mica' observations that the latitudes of cer- Ain observatories in Europe and the United states are slowly changing. The changes 1,re exceedingly slight, so that only the nost delicate measurements can reveal ,hem ; but in many branches of science it is ,he small things that count most, since they ;ive the investigator his closest acquaint - trice with the operations of nature. Yet, although the variations of latitude that seem to have been detected are very mall—amounting, for instance, in the ase ot the observatory of Pulkowa, in Eus- tis, to a motion away from the North Pole if six- inches in a year —very interesting deductions may be drawn from them. Mr. 3, C. Comstock has suggested, in a careful discussion of the subject, that the change II the position of the poles, which is indi- aated by the variations in question, might possibly be the result of a slight motion still remaining over from a great shifting if the earth's axis in long past time, by which the North Pole was brought from the center of Greenland to its present posi- tion. The idea that the North Pole may once have been in Greenland,arises from the fact that Greenland was the center of the area which was covered with ice during the glaci- al epoch. Such a shifting of the pole would, then, serve to explain the disappearance of the ice sheet that once coverbd North America as far south as the latitude of New York. Mr. S. C. Chandler, after studying the results of the observations that, have been made as to variations of latitude, has de- duced the conclusion that all the changes can be accounted for by supposing tha.t the North Pole revolves in a circle sixty feet in diamet- er, once in every four hundred and twenty- seven days. To meaty persons such inquiries may not appear to be of much practical importance, but is it not worth while to learn every- thing we can aboat this great ship of space which is bearing us on a wonderful voyage through the ocean of infinity, and every peculiarity of whose motion has some re- lation to the forces that control the appar- antly endless journey ? 'NW The Beauty of Apology. Scarcely a day passes but each one of us is guilty, through carelessness, ignorance, ir perhaps intention, of some unkind, hasty, word- or act against another. We misjudge iatother's word or deed, and, with angry motives, we try to right ourselves and as - ;eft our injured dignity. When our better mature is restored we regret that we were not slow to anger. We are niortified that sur own perceptions were not keen enotieh to see the a ord or deed from an impartial point of view, and often we feel true con- trition that we have cherished unjust sus- picions, and voiced our thoughts indignant- ly and harshly. There is an uneasy tug- ;ing of our conscience and a hurt spot in an - ether's heart—two discords where all might have been harmonious. Or we are so busy with our duties, so wrapped up in our ef- forts to get what we wish, that we hurry along rough -shod over anything or person that cheeks our hasty pace. We are not un- kind, but careless of another's share in the daily doings. We are self-assertive, and we imagine every one else equally able to main- tain himself. We are surprised to find our- selves charged with indifference and self- fishness, aud to see another indignant at our self-centered eourse ; or we are ignorant of the tender spot, the sensitive nerve, in our neighbor's more high-strung nature, and with idle or best -intentioned chat, we press clumsily the place we should avoid. All this is annoying, and we who consci- entiously live to do good rather than evil, feel discouraged with our tactless selves, and often justly with those whose feelings are apparently " always on draught." But how many of us are willing to apologize ? How many cheerfully use this, the first means of righting wrongs ? Just why should false pride succeed in convincing us that to assure another that we regret the vrong, and are minded not to repeat it, is humiliating? The humiliating part of the matter is our own shortcoming in tact and thoughtfulness, not the fact that we say we see our blunder. The offense is twofold— our part and our neighbor's—and it is not enough to be mentally resolved that the trouble shall not arise again. The neighbor should share this resolve, this mental apol- oejr. Not that apology is the whole of re- pentance, genuine turning from past acts, but it is the first chord that leads quickly, naturally back from discordant keys to past aqc higher harmonies. The Fisheries of I ake Superior. At Port Arthur alone the figures of the Fishing industry for the market are astonish- ing. In 1888 the fishermen there caught 500,000 pounds of white -fish, 360,000 pounds of lake trout,- 48,000 pounds, of sturgeon, 90,000 pounds of pickerel, 30,000 pounds of Dther fish, or me than a million pounds in all. They did this with an investment of $3800 in boats and $10,000 in gill and pound nets. This yield nearly all went to a Chicago packing company, and it is in the main Chicago and Cleveland capital that is controlling the lake's fisheries. The white -fish is, in thee opinion of most gour- mets, the most delicious fish known to Americans. The lake trout are mere food. am told that theyare rather related to the char than to the salmon. They are pecu- liar to our inland waters. They average Live to ten pounds in weight, and yet grow to weigh 120 pounds; but whatever their weight be, ib -is a mere pressure of hard dry flesh, calema''eed only to appease hunger. Spidereeee seven times stronger in pro- portion, than "Ionia • INCENDIARISM IN MONTREAL. Four Blazes in One Hour—Firemen Over come by the Dense Smoke. A despatch from Montreal says :—Bonse- courssMarket, an old historic landmark, and at one time the City Hall, was badly damaged by fire to -day. That incendiaries are at work there can be no doubt, as within an hour no less than four blazes were discovered, all of which bore evi- dence of having been set on fire. The market conflagration is serious. Upwards of twenty firms, principally in the dead meat, provisions and fruit business, have been either partly or wholly burned out and the stocae of many others in the building badly damaged by smoke. Not- withstanding this, however, the loss, owing to the nature of the stocks carried by the firms, is exceedingly hard to estimate but it is probably safe to say that it will not reach $20,000. The damage however, was not the most serious feature of the fire by any means, for there were many accidents, and upwards of twenty of the brave officers and men of the Montreal department narrowly escaped sacrificing their lives to the cause of duty. Suffocation from the dense smoke was the prinepal cause of the disaster. It was the second time in the history of Mon- treal fires that a general ambulance alarm had to be turned in. This was done shortly after 1 o'clock and from that hour until 5 o'clock the four ambulances of the Montreal General and the Notre Dame hospitals were kept busy carry the unfortunate firemen to the two institutinns. It is not improbable that some of the cases may yet end fatally. Many of the sufferers were taken either to their homes or to their several stations, Golden Thouchts for Every Day. Monday—it is a vain charge that men bring against the divine precepts, that they - are rigorous, severe, difficult; when, besides the contradiction to our Savior, who tells us His " yoke is easy " and His " burthen light," they thwart their own calm reason and judgment. Is there not more difficulty to be vicious, covetous, violent, cruel, than to be virtuous, charitable, kind ? Doth the will of God enjoin that that is not conform- able to right reason, and secretly delightful in the exercise and issue? And, on the con- trary, what doth Satan and the world en- gage us in, that is not full of molestation and hazard? Is it a sweet and comely thing to combat continually against our own con- sciences, and resist our own light, and com- mence a perpetual quarrel against out selves, as we ordinarily do when we sin ?—[Dr. Charnock. Tuesday— Tho man taught enough by life's dream, of the rest to make sure, By the pain -throb, triumphantly winning inten- sified bliss, And the next world's reward and repose, by the struggle in this. —(Robert Browning. Wednesday—The practice of men holds not an equal pace ; yea, and often runs counter to their theory ; we narurally know what is good, but naturally pursue what is evil ; the rhetoric wherewith I persuade an- other cannot persuade myself, there is a de- praved appetite in as that will with patience hear the learned instructions of reason, but yet perform no farther than agrees to its own irregular humor. In brief, we all are monsters, that is a composition of man and beast wherein we must endeavor to be as the poets fancy that wise men Chiron, that is, to have the region of the man above that of beast, and sense to sit out at the feet of reason. Lastly, I do desire with God, that all, but yet affirm with men, that few shall know salvation : that the bridge, is narrow, the passage straight unto life ; yet those who do not confine the Church of God either to particular nations, churches, or families, have made it far narrower than our Saviour ever meant it. —[Sir T. Browne. Thursday—With our sciences and our cyclopmdias we are apt to forget the divine- ness in those laboratories of ours. We ought not forget it. That once well forgotten I know not what else were worth remem- bering ! Most sciences, I think, were then a very deal thing—withered contentions, empty a thistle in late autumn. The test science, without this, is but as the dead tim- ber; it is not the growing tree and forest— which gives ever new timber among other things ! Man can not know either unless he can worship in some way. His know- ledge is a pedantry and dead thistle other- wise. —Thomas Carlyle. Friday.— .And I have seen thoughts in the valley— Ah me ! how my spirit was strirred ! And they wear holy voile on theft faces— Their foot -steps can scarcely be heard; They pass through the valley like virgins, Too pure for the touch of a word. --(Anonymous. Saturday—The simplicity of a good and trustful instinct looks not in vain to God. "That little fellow," said Luther of.a bird going to roost, " has chosen his shelter, and is quietly rocking himself to sleep, without a care of to -morrow's lodging, calmly hold- ing on his little twig, and leaving God to think of them." And thus, what Christ would tell us that the flowers, by the divine hieroglyphics of their ephemeral beauty, teach us that God loves us; is and the birds, by their divinely implanted instinct strenu- ous trust, in every varying light upon their plumage, and in every beat of their quiver- ing wing, and in every warbled melody of their natural joy, say to us ; " Fear not ; be not anxious. Your heavenly Father feedeth us, and are not ye of much more value than we are—of more value than many sparrows ?"—[F. W. Farrar. The Crocus and the Sunbeam. The crocus peeped above the sod and looked about au the brown earth and up into the gray sky. A few suowflakes flitted through the chil- ly air and one fluttered down and fell upon the face of the crocus. The flower shivered and the snowflake was gone. A gust of winter air shook the crocus,but it was brave and the wind passed on. The crocus looks about the bare, brown earth and ever up to the gray sky. The clouds were moving slowly and the gray was changing to white. The crocus watched and waited. It no longer saw the bare earth; it saw only the whitening clouds. A bit of blue came and went, and came again. Then a sunbeam struggled through the rifted whine. Faint and fickle it looked out upon the brown earth and hid itself again. The crocus shivered a little and waited. The sunbeam came forth shyly as if it flirted with the flower and looked over the brown earth. The crocus turned its face upward hope- fully. Softly the sunbeam left the.clouds and stealing gently down, it creme and kissed the flower's head and nestled it in its bosom. And then the crocus smiled and blossomed' and kept the sunshine there. HOW THE SULTAN EATS. He Himself Lives Simply but Feeds Lay. ishly Six Thousand Persons. The author of " The Sovereigns and Courts of Europe" describes the present Sultan of Turkey as leadtng every simple life. He came to the throne in 1876, without any' agency of his own, and almost against his own will, after living for many years in re- tirement, and no doubt finds his trappings of royalty something of a burden. When it is said that he lives simply, how- ever, the wcrd must be understood as ap- plying to his personal habits rather than to his official eurroundingseand expenditures. Thus it is estimated that more than 6000 persons are fed every day at his Dolma Bagtche palace when he is there. The treas- urer of the household has a pretty heavy burden upon his shoulders. There is a regularly organized force of buyers, each charged with the purchase of certain supplies for the palace. One man's duty is to buy fish ; and to do this for 6C00 persons is no light undertaking in a city which has no great markets. About ten tons a week are required, and to secure this some twenty men are kept busy. That there is enormous waste and extrava- gance in the kitchens is almost a matter of course ; it is said that enough is thrown away daily to feed a hundred families. But such waste is not confined to a Turkish royal household, and might be found in kitchens nearer home. The surplus is gathered up by the beggars, with whom Con stantinople abounds, and what still remain is eaten by the scavenger dogs. Handling. There are few breeders who realize the importance of this factor in judging of the merits of a beef animal. While form, color, finish and smoothness are readily perceived by the eye,yet the all-important question of quality is best determined by the handling. From the handling can be determined to a large extent the relative proportion of fat and lean and the quality of the same. This cannot be done in every case, but a careful study of handling will enable one to arrive at the truth quite often. As an indication of feeding qualities it is even more valuable. A large loose, mellow hide indicates a vigorous outside circulation. Such an animal will usually prove a quick and profitable feeder. The fairs offer a good opportunity to study handling. The owners are willing to volunteer information and the cattle quiet enough to be handled, so that a great deal may be learned in a short time. Martin Luther's Last Will and Prayer. The last will of Luther is less known than some of the events of his life, and in it the circumstances and character of the man are grandly displayed. It closes thus "0 Lord God, I thank Thee that Thou wouldst have me to be poor upon the earth; I have no house, land, possessions or money to leave. Thou hast given me a wife and children ; to Thee I leave them ; nourish, teach and save them, as hitherto Thou hast me, 0 Father of the fatherless, and Judge of the widows, 0, my Heavenly Father, the God and Father, of our Lord Jesus Christ, the God of all consolation, I thank Thee that Thou hest revealed Thy Son Jesus Christ to me ; on whom I have believ- ed, whom I have professed, whom I have loved, whom I have celebrat- ed; whom the Bishop of Rome and the multitude of the wicked do persecute and reproach. I pray Thee, 0 Lord Jesus Christ, receive my soul. My Heavenly Father, although I am taken out of this life, though I must now lay down this body, yet I certainly know that I shall dwell with Thee forever, neither can I by any be pluck- ed out of Thy hands. God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whosoever believeth on Him should not perish, but have everlasting life. John iii. 16 ; x. 28 ; 2 Timothy iv. 6, 7, 8." Dressing Chickens. I was taught to draw chickens thus : First, to remove the crop, which is done by cutting the skin lengthwise over it, and pel. ing it lose; draw it out, then make an in- cision below the breast, insert the hand and draw the intestines, which is a tedious and useless operation unless the fowl is for the roast. If for frying or fricassee, first remove the wings, then the legs ; make the incision below the breast large enough to insert two fingers, hold out the flesh and cut down to the back on both sides ; bend the back over and it will un - joint ; cut the remaining flesh and remove the back from the intestines. Next cut through the ribs on both sides, then pull the neck piece and the breast apart until un - jointed, cut the remaining flesh, and the chicken is drawn and out up at the same time. It can be prepared for the kettle in this way in heli the time taken when the other method is followed. Oh ! Yes They Had. Once at a little dinner party in New York, one of the guests, the younger brother of an English nobleman, expressed with commen- dable freedom his opinion of Ame rice and its people. " I do not altogether like the country," said the young gentleman, " for one reason, because you have no gentry here." "What do you mean by gentry ?" asked another of the company. " Well, you know," replied the English- man; " well—oh, gentry are those who never do any work themselves, and whose fathers before them never did any." "Ah 1" exclaimed his interlocutor, " then we have plenty of gentry in America. But we don't call them gentry. We call them tramps." A laugh went round the table, and the young Englishman turned his conversation into another chaimel. Farmers' Boys and Oity Life. The boys of the country will soon see that they can make more by staying at home than by running off to town. The farm is a far better place than the city and the farm of the future will be coveted by the people of the cities. As it is, our farmers' boys, if they will use the same study, brains and energy which enable them to live from hand to mouth as it were in the city on the farm, they can make a success of it and can grow up into a, life of independent manhood that they can have nowhere else. The farmer of to -day has moat of the advantages' of the city. He lives better than his city brother and with his books and his papers he has the leisure to live an intellectual life which his city brother cannot have. There is no morality withont religion, and there is no religion without morality. Morality is religion in practice; religion is morality inpinciple. A crippled man is helpless; frost -bites cripple and St. Jacobs Oil cures frost -bite promptly and permanently. A fact without dispute. • They Rave Their Heads Modled. A curious eighteenth century custom has been revived by the leading Paris coiffures, of having models made of the heads of dis- tant clients, in order to 'study the effects of new styles of hair dressing and keep the ladies posted on the newest and most becom- ing fashions. A Russian grande dame, for example, sends at a considerable expense a fac-simile of her head and face copied per- fectly in every detail, to her hairdresser in Paris. He experiments freely, and when a satisfactory result is obtained he mails a photograph of it, with minute directions for arrangement, each month to the St. Peters- burg belle,and thus enables her to look up to date in the matter of coiffure. The inital expense is not small, for the wax modelier must be in his way a true artist. A New Business for Women. A new profession is open to women in large cities. No special qualifications are requried beyond good looks and good taste. The profession is that of window gazing. The duties are light and the pay is good. All that is re- quired is to stand in front of your patron's street windows during the fashionable hours ef the afternoon and in sufficiently enthusi- astic terms draw the attention of your com- panion to the merits of the latest sweet thing in bonnets or that perfectly ideal thea- ter cloak for the benefit of the genuine shop- pers who are passing. The professional win- dow gazers must go in couples in order to be able to start a conversation. What She Said.. Met R. Peck, E. 15th street, New York City, visited Canada last year, and had the good fortune to pick up something which not only suited her, but her neighbors also. Writing the manufacturers of Nerviline she says: —"I bought three bottles of Nerviline while in Canada and treated my neighbors to some of it, and all think it the best medi- cine for internal or external pain they have ever used." Nerviline deserves such a com- mendation, for it is a most powerful, pene- trating, and certain remedy for pain of all kinds. Take no substitute. The moral feelings of mankind are so or- ganized that men must feel toward us ac- cording to to the moral qualities which we pos- sess. Nature's Oreltive Powers Srpass all the arts of man. Fearless of contradic- tion, St. Leon mineral water has proved its superiority. Used freely as a table water it absorbs those secretions that quenuh life. Also St. Leon soothes, feeds, and tones up the nerve and vital forces, is so full of that mysterious life, sustaining fluid can be ignit- ed. The charmed, refined feelings that flow steadily on when St. Leon is imbibed those only can tell who try it well. Humility ever dwells with men ot noble minds. It is a flower that prospers not in lean and barren soils, but in ground that is rich, it flourishes and is beautiful. Mr. C. Harper, Ottawa, Ont., writes :— " I have pleasure in stating that your Pink Pills are a wonderful tonic and reconstructor of the system. Since beginning their use, I have gained on an average, a pound of flesh a week. I have recommended thein to a number of my friends, who declare that they are the only medicine that they have ever used that done all that is claimed for it. Sold by all dealers - From experience, that discouragements are to be found on all sides, but that en- couragements are dealt out sparingly by prudent hands? Solite Children' Growing Too Fast become listless, fretful, without ener- gy, thin and weak. Fortify ;aid build them up, by the use of SCOTT'S SION OF PURE COD LIVER OIL AND HYPOPHOSPHITES CPalOf Lime and Soda. OF aCsOnFACli A:BCOLDS, 94 NIT:v:001.D CUE Palatable THE 01.0 AND YOUNG, IT 63 UNEQUALLED. Genuinemade by Scott & Blume, Belleville. Salmon Wrapper: at all Druggists, 60c, and $1.00. CATARRH DR. CLARK S CATARRH CURE f • s send Sc. in stanme CURED er • for postage and we will mail you FREE a free trial package. Clark Chemical Co., Toronto, Ont. WATSON'S COUGH DROPS. Are the best in the world for the throat an Chest, for the voice unequalled. It. at T. W. Stamped on each Drop. ARTIFICIAL LIMBS. We are the leading firm in Canada. No other firm can compete with us, every Limb warranted for Comfort, Finish and Efficiency, equal to the best in the world. AUTHORS & COX, 121 CHURCH STREET TORONTO eene7 :cifiveeereyee 4"ess e- sn,STisi tviATI 0 es —nen—se P Nereid llayes,M.D. =ED TO q‘•-•-• , IMPORTANT. The preparation of delicious and wholesome food is necessary to our happiness. To accom- plsh this tine materials must be used. We recommend EMPIRE BAKING POWDER as containing strength, purity. and safety. Guaranteed to give satisfaction. Manufactur- ed only by ELLIS Az KEIGHLEV, Toronto. Sold at 25cts pound tin. Ask your grocer for it. ARTIFICIAL IDBS J. DOAN & SONS For Circular Address, 77 Northcote Ave., Toronto W. McDOWALL DIRECT IMPORTER OF Fine Gum, Rifles, Shooting Suits, Hunting Boots, Eto. Dinded Cartridges, krtillielal Birds allfi Traps a Specialty. 8 KING STREET EAST, TORONTO. he= Jr, Confirmed. The favorable impression produced on the first appearance of the agreeable liquid fruit remedy Syrup of Figs a few years ago has been more than confirmed by the pleasant experience of all who have used it, and the success of the proprietors and manufactur- ers of the California Fig Syrup Company. The endowments of nature we cannot command, but we can cultivate those given. GIBBONS' TOOTHACHE GUM For sale by Druggists. Price 1.6c Twenty-three thousand travelers received hospitality in the snow -bound convent at St. Bernard during the past year. Of those things only should one be afraid which have the power of doing others harm. A. P. 601 Are re BLOOD 13 111 L DER and NERVE TONIC. They supply m condensed form Ann the sub- stances needed to enrich the Blood and to rebuild the Nerves,thus in eking them a certain and speedy mare for all diseases arising from impoverished blood, and shattered nerves, such as par- alysis, spinal ells. eases, rheumatism, sciatica.,loss of mem- ory, erysipelas, pal- pitation of the heart, scrofula,chlorosis or green sickness, that tired feeling that affects so many, etc. They have a specific action on the sexual system of both men and women, restoring lost vigor. WEAK MEN (young and 01(13., suffering from mental worry, overwork, insomnia, excesses, or self-abuse, should take these PILLS. They will restore lost energies, both physical and mental. SUFFERING WOMEN afflicted with the weaknesses peculiar to their sex, such as suppression of the periods, bearing down pains, weak back, ulcerations, etc., will find these pills an unfailing cure. PALE MID SALLOW GIRLS should take these Pills. They enrich the blood, restore health's roses to the cheeks and cor- rect all irregularities. PaiVARE OP IMTTA.TIONS. These Pills are sold by all dealers only in boxes bearing our trade mark or will be sent by mail, post paid, on receipt of price -60 cents a box or 6 for $2.50. THE DR. WILLIAMS MED. CO., Brockville, Ont., or Morristown, N.Y. TMORONI° BISCUIT ND CONFECTIONERY C) make the best goods. Try them and see. -- - — -- ACSCALE R TI FODRESS CUTNG, AorE, taught ey Miss Chubb, general agent ntario. 2551- Yonge 51, Toronto, .*nt. WANTED—By a Canadian House a Man with $5,t00 to buy an interest in their business, and go to England and take charge, business contollred by them. P.O. Box 523, Toronto. CARFIALeLatclacThEeArecsutroerl C etho opii% xlioenk Get Free Sample at GARFIELD TEA AGENCY, 317 Church St., Toronto. AGENTS WANTED -For "Out of Darkness into Light, or the story of my Life" by Joseph F. Hess the converted Prize -Fighter and Saloon -Keeper. She story of his travels and the life he led are more thrilling than the page of fiction. Send for circulars and term WM. BRIGGS, Publisher, Toronto, Ont. ASTH M Aral" nevie= your address, and we will mail free trial bottle. DR. TAFT BROBe Romm-FREE TER,N.Y.Canadian Dept.186 Adelaide St, W. TORONTO. CANADA. KEEP YOU F% afai' AN D Agyour sewing machine ag't. for it, or send a 3ct. stardip for particulars and price list: THIS IS GOOD FOR $L BE. ON THIS to GREELMA 24T BROS. Georgetown, Ont. THE DOLLAN VITT/NG MACH/AZ HONEY. MONEY. MONEY. LONDON AND CANADIAN LOAN AND AGENCY CO., LTD 103Bay Street, Toronto. Capital $5,003,000. Money to Loan on improved farms, city and town property on liberal terms of repay anent and AT LOWES1 CURRENT RATES. MUNI CIPAL DEBENTURES PURCHAcED. Apply to local appraisers or to 01. F. KIRK, Manager. Choice farms for sale in Ont. & Manitoba CONROY'S CARRIAGE TOPS. are the best in the market and have patented improvements not found in any other make order one from your Carriage Maker. Take no other kind. THE 3E3I8T IS iLIVAYS THE CHEAPEST s. It has STOOD THE TEST for over 40 YEARS which is a record no other mill can claim. We still GUARANTEE it to be MORE RE- LIABLE n STORMS than any other we nd.m ill made. We make several other styles both for PUMPING WATER and DIMING MACHIN. ERY, it WILL PAY YOU to WRITE IS for large descriptive catalogue before purchasing else where. ON T A RIO PUMP CO., LTD, To. s. ronto Ont. Mention this paper. 0•121i1•1•1=MMINIMCM... BURTON'S - ALL HEALING TAR AND CLITERINE SOAP Is the only reliable and safe Soap to wash your head with. It preserves the hair, makes it grow, keeps the scalp healthy. Beware of Imitations and always ask for BYRTON'S. • GRIPS ALWAYS 41 - SEND FOR ESTIMATE IV TI 3E" 17 11 1,13EVIC -Y-013" 1\T You will wonder after using our Grip Pulley how you man- aged without it. GRIP PULLEYS AND COUPLINGS MADE SPLIT OR SOLID BY WATEROUS I3RANTFORD CANADA NOW LEAD ALL Motionless when out of CLT.TT -e4 UNIMINININIIMMOOPOIMMIIMINNININEEMOMMMO6- ele THEY ARE MADE SPLIT OR SOLID, DOUBLE —0 R -- SIN GLE DRIVERS. ANY SIZE. - ANY POWER. Best Grip Pulley invented. RE YO U the man we are looking for? If so, ' we would urge you not to keep PUTTING OFF a mat- ter of so much importance. you will never meet with such another opportun- itY of INSURING YOUR LIFE as is now presented by us. For full particulars write the Confecioration Life, Toronto, or , apply at any of the AGENCIES. MIIIIIIIIMPanonsofee 50 -e-