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The Exeter Advocate, 1895-8-23, Page 2Subscribers who do not receive their paper regularly will Blease notify is at epee. Apply at the office for advertising rotes. THE EXETER 'ADVOCATE. THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1805, The Week's Commercial Summary. Thirty seven failures are reported in Vie Dominion last week as against 45 the corresponding week last year. Apples are plentiful in all the Western States, and in many parts of Ontario. New York reports indicate that the yield will be much lower than last year. Considerable new wheat is offering at Ontario points. Sales are reported at 74 cents and for August delivery at, 72* cents. Oats are plentiful and weaker. The fire loss of the United States and Canada for the month of Slily shows a total of $9,085,000. The losses for the same month in 1.893 were 812,118,700 and in 1894, $16,807,000. Sales of wool at the three chief markets for the week were only 8,072,450 pounds, of which 8,018,700 were domestic against 9,886,400 in the same week; of 1892, of which 5,637,900 was domestic. Prices have scarcely changed during the week, but are stronger in the interior than at the seaboard, as they were before the rise began. The Mark Lane Express, in an article uponthe wheat crop in Great Britain, says that reports from the various dis- tricts in England show the yield this year to be 78.4 per cent of the average. The yield in Wales is 80 per cent., making the entire crop for Great Britian 22 per. cent. behind that of last year. The har- vest is now in progress, but the weather is unfavorable. Our commercial advices from the Unit- ed States, supplied by- the two principal business agencies on this oontinent,report a general good run and maintenance of business for the time of year. There is here and there relaxation resulting from the ordinary lack of midsummer trade, but there is no reaction. Employment is daily increasing. Strikes and impend- ing mpending strikes are , beim, amicably set- tled, and wages in various leading lines are tending strongly upwards. Prices for iron and steel products are higher, but Bessemer iron is a shade weaker, There is a steady improvement in the various trades in which iron and steel are employed. Some cotton goods have advanced in price. failures for the week in the United States are 225, as compared with 264 in the corresponding week a year ago. ' Here and There. Mrs. Potter Palmer says that she doesn't like the new woman. Does any- body ? The last thing an ambitious literary aspirant learns how to write usually is a check. The people who haven't read ''Trilby" are absolutely sure that they will not have to now. Water is so scarce in London that it is selling for three -pence a bucket—or, as we would say over here, six cents a pail. Woman bandits are on the increase in the West. If one must be robbed it is perhaps preferable to be robbed by a woman. Horseless carriages may be as fashion- able before long as carriageless horses used to be before the advent of the bicycle, A story in the Argonaut is entitled. "The Liar." It baeiny: "I never loved but one woman." Evidently the title is appropriate. .4. society for the suppression of scan- dal has been organized in Germany. It will certainly have some heavy work to wrestle with. Wheels in Elis Head. "And now" shouted the exhorter, "what is to be done when a man is rush- ing headlong, with lightning speed, along the road to destruction—" Deacon Jones—( between Snores)—Re- duce size o' your—sprocket 1 she's too high gear. Pectoria, Peetoria, Pectoria. Are you suffering from cough or cold on your lungs. Ask your druggist for Pectoria,and take no other. Just try and see for yourself how soon Peetoria will cure you. Send to Allan & Co., 58 Front St., Toronto, Proprietors, 25 cents a bot- tle. A bicyele factory was recently estab- lished in the state prison of Michigan, and is now turning out an average of eighteen machines a day. No doubt the prisoners would like to make trial trips on them. Can Recommend It. Mr. Enos Born - berry, Tuscarora, writes ; "I am pleased to say that Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil is all that you claim it to be, as we have been using ib for years, both internally and externally and have always receive 1 benefit from its use, It is our family medicine, and I take great pleasure in recommending it." Take Notice. I, Malcolm McBain,merchant tailor 81 Queen St. West, do certify that Dr. ,Car- son's Stomach Bitters cured me of dys- pepsia. I believe it to be the best medi- cine for all Stomach and Liver troubles. At all Druggists price 50e., "The old-time custom of the clergy- man wlio performed the marriage cere- mony saluting the bride with a kiss has gone entirely out of favor and fashion " says the Ladies' TIorne.To+urual, Do tiie ministers get any larger fee by way of compensation ? The great lung heeler is found in that excellent medicine sold as .Buckle's Anti - Consumptive Syr p, it soothes and di- minishes the sen,ibili;:y of the membrane of the throat andnit pdssage's, and is a sovereign remedy for all coughs, Bolds, hoarsencss,pain or soreness in the chest, bronchitis, etc. It has our.;ri many when supposed bo be far,advanced in Con— s umption. It has been rtilcrl in Washington that en imported arti:kloital leg is not dutiable when, it arrives attached to the owner's person, and is necessary to his comfort. Book out for a boom in foreign legs from now on. GENERAL NEWS NO'T'ES, T1.1T`WEB'S IXAF1'LNINGIS. Interesting Items and Incidents, im- portant and Instructive. Gathered From All Parts or the World, CANA MAN, Belleville's rate of taxation is 20 1-2 mills. Petrolea is advocating a new oil ex- change. The debenture debt of Watford is $22,- 978. 24. 22,-978.24. Chatham is talking electric radial rail- way. Cape Vincent's waterworks will cost $28, 000. The hay crop. below Quebec is a partial failure. The Belleville electric railway is now in operation. All the twine manufactured at King- ston has been sold, St. John, N. B., is purchasing a new park for itself, The extension of Collingwood's water- works is finished. Chippewa Bay recently was visited ba a severe hailstorm. The nursing staff of the Berlin Hospital has been increased. Kingston's dry goods stores close at noon during August. Brookville will have an immense cele- bration on the 20th. Bush fires on the Manitoulin have caus- ed great damage. Stayner's rate of taxation is 22 mills and Collingwood's 26. Cattle in Grey County are being fed on the leaves of trees. Typhoid fever is prevailing in the west- ern part of Ontario. The Quebec Government will soon re- move the "business tax." A wealthy citizen of Berlin will erect a Y.M.C.A. building there. There was a burglary in the Catholic church of Sarnia last week. The oil well at Verona is attracting the attention of capitalists. Many Chinese are passing through Can- ada in bond bound for Cuba. The Berlin Water Company has struck an excellent well at 150 feet. A branch of the Nova Scotia Bank is to be opened at Calais, N. B. Fishing about Killarney is a failure, on account of poaching by nets. The catch of Canadian seals this year is far below that of last year, Orange and Masonic lodges will probab- ly be established in Westport. The C.P.R.shops at Sault Ste.Marie will probably be opened in the fall. A 12 -pound channel catfish was naught in the Thames near Byron lately. Straftord has a 24 -year-old midget S feet 9 inches high, weighing 45 pounds. Forty-one prisoners have just been re- leased from the Kingston penitentiary. A Listowel firm last week shipped $10,- 000 worth of wool to the United States. "Babies reduced to $2 a dozen"is on a photographer's sign in .Nova Scotia. A Kaslo by-law collecting $50 license from each barber is likely to bo quashed. A new flax barn was raised near Hensel]. recently measuring 100x45 feet. The Ontario travelling dairy will visit a number of places in Prescott next month. On account of the drought cattle at Til- sonburg are being sold for from $2 to $5 each. One day Iasi week 1,000 men gathered at the Montreal Labour Bureau looking for work. Windsor will use natural gas as fuel to run its electric light works and pumping station. Vessels with 6,000 total tonnage have been chartered to take canned salmon to Great Britain. Point Comfort Is the name of a new post-oftice near Thirty-one Mile Lake, on the Gatineau. Incorporation, $200, OOu capital, will be sought for a company to operate Tilison's mills, Tilsonburg. Osbawa's electric railway and new park will be formally opened on its civic holi- day, Auugst 19th. The G N. W. Telegraph Company is ap- pealing against the assessment of their poles at Port Stanley. A Montreal paper urges the construction of a canal to join the upper lakes with the Ottawa valley. London's mayor has been enjoined not to sign the contract with the Buffalo Bar- ber A.sphalt arberAsphalt Company. The balance to credit of depositors in the Dominion Government Savings Bank on July 1 was $17,644.95. Delhi's tax rate this year will be lower than that of last year, though $20,000 is added to the assessment. Bruce County's rainfall in June was only three-quarters of an inch, while the general average there is four inches. The other day an American firm bought $20,000 worth of logs from Hale and Booth logs taken from the Spanish river sec- tion. It is not believed in Ottawa that there is any truth in the alleged cases of pleuro- pneumonia in Canadian cattle recently landed at Deptford. The customs collections at Brantford during the month of July were $7, 408.85 as compared with $3,748.22 for the Corre- sponding month last year. The Ontario Gover ment has decided to farm out the Toronto Central prison bind- er twine factory, which has hitherto been conducted as a Government undertak- ing. Bridgetown, N. S., has a lady resident aged 83 years who has one hundred and thirty descendants living; nine own chil- dren, seventy-three grandchildren, and forty-four great grandchildren. At the Tyondinaga Reserve there are at present 24 white women who have married Indians and become full members of the band, while twelve Indian women having married out, according to the Indian Act, lose all the rights but the annuities of the band. The "rib -roaster" is the name of the latest blow in the pugilistic world. Every fighter claims to have invented it. It is really an old timer. It isn't in it, how- ever, with the oraniurn crusher, where you strike your opponent a sledge ham- mer Mow on the top of the head and either kilt hint_ or make slim bowlegged free 1`fr, _ . . _.._.,.. ....._ ,... ............... . EXITED STATES, The estimated annual oonsumptien of ice in New York is 2,000,000 tons. Every state and territory of the United States has au experiment station, the total number bring 55. A mere and a Chinese woman were (married in Lawrence County, South Dako- ta, a few clays rlgo, George Freclorink Root, the well-known American oomposor and teacher of sing- ing,is dead, aged 75. Aiodioal students at Harvard attend a cooking (+lass to learn how sick room deli- cacies should be prepared properly, The Maine mackerel fleet has had bad luck this year. 1`he .Poritand seiners took bent 6,000 barrels of fish, as against 26,000 last year. Airs, P. T, Barnum, wid ow of the great showman, was married in New York on Wednesday to Demetri Gallias Bey, a wealthy Greek, Miss RemieLondonderry, of Boston, the 'round -the -world bicyclist, has declined over 150 offers of marriage. She says she has saved $1,500. The Railway Conductors' Insurance As- sooiation has paid out in cash to widows and orphans over $1,000,000 and $150,000 to disabled conductors. A telegram from New York to Austra- lia has to go near 90,000 miles, 15,000 of which are by submarine cable, and it is handled by 15 operators. Two sturgeons, one weighing 200 pounds and the ether 150 pounds, were caught at one haul of the net by a fisherman at Put- neyville, N, Y., last week. A Scotch newspaper refers to Mrs.Lease, of Kansas, as "one of those strange men, found frequently in America, who write under a feminine nom de plume." A pet dog belonging to John Sheehan of Pottsville, Pa , swallowed $11 the other day. Mr. Sheehan straightway killed the dog, but the money was not to be found. The Pacific coast trade in printers' ink is almost monopolized by a woman, Mrs.M. Tracey, of San Francisco, whose stook in trade is her secret process of manufacture. A number of women are making a good income in Philadelphia designing and drawing pictures for illustrating the news- paper adveriseincnts of a big retail mer- cantile establishment. The proportion of foreigners and their children to natives is greatest in North Dakota, where over four-fifths of the.en- tire population are either foreigners or na- tive born children of foreign parents. Among the graduates from the Haskell Institute for Indian children at Lawrence, Kan., last Friday were seven pupils repre- senting five tribes—the Shawnees,Chippo- was, Wichitas, Sioux and Cheyenne. W. T. Bornady, who has made a close investigation of the matter, says that there are now only 200 wild buffalo alive in the United States -150 in tho Yellowstone Park, 20 in Colorado, and 30 in Texas. Lewis Pierce, of Batavia, N. Y. was wounded twice in the, last war, and has been struck by lightning once, twice ship- wrecked at sea, and smashed and crushed in several runaways. The other day he had a finger crushed. Two little boys called at a bank at Owensboro', Ky., and, presenting a $1,000 bond, one of them said: "Say, maasa, please gib ns change for that." They were arrested. They had stolen the bond from a merchant's safe. The "bloomer" costume was not named after the inventor of the dress, but after Mrs. Bloomer, of Seneca Falls, N.Y,, who was publishing a periodical at the time, and approved of the divided skirt. She died recently in Ohio. An unfinished seven -storey building at West Broadway and Third street, New York, collapsed Friday morning; carrying with it to -the frrouud eighty-two (nen. Two men were killer(, and more than a score received injuries. Prof. Hunicke, of Washington Univer- sity, St. Louis, has a process by which he claims $10,000 worth of gold can be ob- tained from sea water at a cost of $1, every ton of water yielding from two to four cents' worth of gold. James Foster, a rernaritable old negro of Allen county, Kentucky,- is dead at the age of 87. He never asked for one cent of credit never owed a clime in his life,and , when he died owned 300 acres of lanun incumbered and plenty of stock. The Washington elm,at Cambridge, has been estimated to produce 7,000, 0001 eaves, wbich would make a.surface radiation of about five acres in extent, and give out every fair day in the growing season seven and three-quarter tons of moisture. Rev. Dr. John Hall's example in con- tributing to charity what would have been his income tax has inspired an unknown New York woman to give her income lax, 81,000, to the Foreign and Horne Missions of the Episcopal church of that city. A woman drummer for a Western vine- gar manufacturing house is touring the states of Missouri and Illinois on a bicycle and in Parisian bloomers. She sends postal cards in advance to the grocers say- ing she "will wheel into town about next week," and asking them to hold. their orders for her. You cannot be happy while you have corns. Thrn do not delay iti getting a bottle of Rolaoway's Corn Cure. It re- moves all k:n'14 of corns without pain. Failure with it is unknown. "Bloomers will furnish awide and fertile field in which advertisement writer's may display, their ability." prophesies the Dry Goods Reporter. Heaven forbid 1 Agitation in the world of homcepathic medicine has been its very, soul of pro- gress, as in polities and religion—the diffi- culties of opinion and the individualities of men have been parent to the disagree- ments by which the standard of these bodies have been elevated. So with most of our famous preparations—foremost in illustration of which truth stands the world-famous remedy to general debility and langour "Quinine Wine," and which, when obtainable in its genuine strength, is a miraculous creator of appetite, vital- ity and stimulant to the general fertility of the system. Quinine Wine, and its improvement, has, from the first discovery of the great virtues of Quinine as a inedi- ea1 agent, been one of the most thoroughly discussed remedies ever offered to the public. It is one of the groat tonics and natural life-giving stimulants which the medical profession have been compelled to recognize and prescribe. Messrs. Northrop & Lyman of Toronto, have given to the preparation of their pure Quinine Wine the great • caro due to their Ma - portends, and the stands rd excellence of the article which they offer to the pub-, tic conics into the Market purged of all the defects which skillful observation and scientific opinion has pointed nut in th less perfect preparations of the I:a's': Al druggists sell. it. Effect of To'haceo op the rye..: The bad effect of tobacco ou the eyes w.as. unluown even by physicians until within the present century. Sixty years ago Dr, Mckenzie of Glasgow wrote, "I have already had occasion re- peatedly to hint my suspicion that tobacco is a frequent cense of amaurosis"—complete or partial blindness. To one form of this disease Hutchinson gave the name of "to- bacco amaurosis," because he often found it in men strongly addicted to the use of tobacco, Dr. Williams, the celebrated oculist of Boston, says, "To be of service, treatment in tobacco amaurosis must be begun in the early stage, before the congestion has been succeeded by- atrophy," Dr. Francis Dowling of Cincinnati with- in a few years tested the eyes of 180 em- ployees in the principal tobacco factories of that city. Only one woman was found to be suffering from the disease, and she had never used tobacco. This showed that merely working in the factory had very lit- tle effect on the sight, though it did not affect unfavorably the general system. Of the men examined 45 showed more or less evidence of amaurosis, 30 of them being pretty well marked cases. They all mistook red for brown or black and green for light blue or orange, and in all there was also a contraction of both pupils. Thirty out of the 45 complained of a gradual failure of vision. In one case—not among the employees just spoken of—the contraction of the pupil was so great that the sufferer was unable to go about without assistance. He had smoked from 20 to 30 cigars a day. He re- nounced tobacco, and his sight was fully restored in 334 months. Chewjng has been found to be much worse than smoking, as more of the poison is absorbed.—Youth's Companion. Concrete Piers For Bridges. Concrete has been used by the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific railway for the piers of a bridge five spans across the Red river. These piers were made by first sink- ing at the site of each a caisson or box of wood 32 by 13 feet in size throughthe sandy bottom to rock, which was easily done by weighting the caisson and then pumping out the sand and gravel, previously loosen- ed by means of a jet of water. These cais- sons were then filled with concrete made of one part of Louisville cement, two parts of sand and four pasts of stone broken to pass through a ring 2„ inches in diameter. After the caisson was filled a mold of two inch plank was made of the form of the pier. At the bottom it was 29 feet 10 inches long and 1134 feet wide, at the top it was 8 feet 2 inches wide and 28 feet long, with semicircular ends. Inside these molds concrete was placed composed of 400 pounds of German portland cement, 10 cubic feet of sand and a cubic foot of broken stone, which was allowed to harden thoroughly. The plank mold. was then removed and the surface covered with a mortar of equal parts of portland cement and sharp sand. The river could be forded nearly all the time the work was in progress and was sometimes almost dry, although occasional- ly the water would rise to a depth of 20 feet, and the bottom lands in the neighbor- hood would be flooded for a distance of two miles.—Exchange. The Lines In One's Palm. Square or spatulated fingers, in the sci- ence of palmistry, denote the philosophical and practical temperament, taper fingers signify an artistic temperament, and very pointed digits are a sure sign of the dreamy, psychical nature. Much is learned by the general quality and configuration of the lines which cross the latter. The life line running around the base of the thumb de- notes long or short life, good or ill health, according as it is long or short, clear and unbroken or otherwise. The "heart line," running across the palm nearest the base of the fingers, signifies the quality of the possessor's emotional nature, also the kind of love she will give and receive. This will be enduring or temporary according to whether the line be long and clear, forked or crossed and chained. Below this is the bead line, which indicates the mental and moral qualities and achievements and de- ficiencies. The line of fate runs perpendicularly across the middle of the palm and is a very important factor in the happiness or un- happiness of its owner. It should be clear and narrow, unchained and uncrossed b the fine wrinkles which score so many palms, and it should never come to an end on the line of the heart, since this signifies disappointment in love. A cross on the "Mount of Mercury," which is just at the base of the fore or index finger is an unfail- ing sign of a happy marriage.—Philadel- phia Press. We Are the People. In many ways the United States have ed- ucated ducated the world in politics, and I, for one, do not hesitate to say that their scheme of government is the best that has ever been established by a nation. But in nothing do we owe more to the Americans than for their having afforded us the great object lesson of a state pursuing the even current of its way without that meddling in the affairs of other states which has been the bane of European powers. Here we have a country rich, powerful, industrial and com- mercial, yet never troubling itself with what happens outside its frontiers, or an- nexing foreign lands on the plea of philan- throphy, or on the ground that in some centuries its area will be too small for its population, or in order to create markets for its goods. And what is the result? No one dreams of attacking the United States, or of picking a quarrel with them.—Lon- don Truth. Bullet Proof Uniforms No Novelty. Bullet proof uniforms, it appears, were known long ago to the Chinese. They were made of leather and wool in the north and paper and cotton cloth in the south of China. It seems ridiculous to call such combinations armor, and yet they make an armor superior in many instances to steel. Thirty thicknesses of alternate calico and paper will resist a pistol bullet, or one from a rifle at a distance of 100 yards. A spearman who thrusts his weapon into a man clad in this kind of garment can - neither wound his enemy nor extract his weapon, and if the enemy is an archer or armed with a long sword or javelin he is likely to lose his life for his mischance.— London Tit -Bits, Rash.. He ---Is your father in? I'm gin to ask him for y u, g g She—What, tonight ? Why,you came on your bicycle, George, In the Durk. Teacher --What is the moral of the Ten Fodlish'Virgins ?., Dick Hicks ---They had no lights on their wheels. The original bearded woman is report- ed to have been arrested for intoxica' tion. Thus do male appcnitaes lure • s to male vice and little else g could be ex- petted, NEAR TUE D..RK VALLEY. A YOUNG GIRD CEII:D; I`ROM AN EARLY GRAPE. Pale, Listless and Weak, the Victim of a flecking Cough, Site Was Apparently Gong rata a Rapid Deol'i}ro--A Case of Deep Interest to Every Mother in the Lind. From the Cornwall Standard. It is now a 'common thing in this locali- ty to hear people acknowledge the wonder- ful benefit they have derived from the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and it is not to be wondered at that the druggists find the sale of this remarkable medicine so large and yet constantly increasing. We could give any—number of instances of splendid results following the use of Pink Pine, but so many of these are well known to many of our readers as to not need re- capitulation. However, now and again a case of more than usual interest arises, and we will give the particulars of one of those for the benefit of the public at large. Some years ago, a young girl of 14, a daughter of Mr. Loon Dore, a well known and respected resident of,Cornwall, began to show serious symptoms, and caused her mother great anxiety. She was just at the. critical period of bar life, and medical aid was called in and everything done to help " Was merely a shadow of her former self." her. But it appeared to be useless, and week after week she continued to grow worse, until it was evident she was fast going into decline, A hacking cough set in, and the poor girl, who was formerly plump and healthy looking, with bright, rosy cheeks. began to waste away, and in a few months was merely a shadow of her former self. Her mother had about lost all hope of saving the young girl's life, the doctors being apparently unable to do anything to check the ravages of the mys- terious disease. At length the mother's attention was direoted to Dr Williams' Pink Pills, and she decided to give them a trial. A box was taken, and, as the girl did not show visible signs of improve- ment, her mother was an the point of ells continuing the medicine when a neighbor persuaded her that a single box was not a fair trial, and induced her to continue the Pills. By the tihne a second box was com- pleted there was some improvement not- iceable and there was joy in that small household, and no more persuasion was needed to continue the treatnment. The use of the Pink Pins was then continued for some months, by which time the young girl had complotely.recovered her health and strength. To -day she is the very pic- ture of health, and the color in as r cheeks is as bright as it was before her illness com- menced. To those who saw her during the days of her illness and suff ring, her recovery is little short of a miracle. Mrs• a ore freely gave the Standard reporter permission to publish an account of her daughter's illness and recovery. She said she could not find words strong enough to express the gratitude for the miraculous cure this great life-saving medicine has effected in her daughter's case, and she hoped her testimony might be the means of leading others similarly afflicted to give them a , After wtrialilting the above, the reporter again called on Mrs, Dore and read it to her, asking her if it was entirely correct. She replied that she would like to give even stronger expression to her apprecia- tion of this wonderful medicine. She further said that Pink Pills had greatly helped herself. Sho had been suffering from the effects of an attack of Ia grippe, and the Pink Pills had restored her to health. Her daughter also expressed her gratitude for the extraordinary change this medicine had wrought in her boaith. • In the case of young girls who ar e pale or sallow, listless, troubled with a flut- tering or palpitation of the heart, weak and easily tired, no tine should be lost in taking a course of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, which will speedily enrich the blood, and bring a rosy glow of health to the cheeks. These pills aro a positive cure for all troubles arising from a vitiated condi- tion of the blood or a shattered nervous sys- tem. They are a specific for trout?les pe- culiar to females, correcting suppressions, irregularities, and all forms of weakness. Manufactured by the Dr- William s' Medi - eine Co., Brockville, Ont,, and Schenect- ady, N.Y., and sold in boxes (never in hose form by the dozen or hundred) at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50. May be had of all druggists or direct by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine Company at either address. As Parmelee's Vegetable Pills contain Mandrake and Dandelion, they cure Liver and Kidney Complaints with un- erring certainty. They also contain Roots and Herbs which have specific virtues truly wonderful in their action on the stomach and bowels, Mr. E. A.. Cairn - cross, Shakespeare, writes : "I consider Parmelee's Pills an excellent remedy for Biliousness and Derangement of the Liver, having used them myself for some time," Itasir. He—Is your father in ? I'm going to ask him for you. She—What, to -night ? Why,you came on your bicycle, George, In the Dark. Teacher—What is the moral of the Ten Foolish Virgins ? Dick Hicks --They had no lights on their wheels. The original bearded woman is report, ed to have been arrested for intoxica- tion, Thus do male appendages lure .to male vices and little else could be ex- pected. Chronic Derangements of the Stomach, Livor and Blood, are speedily removed by the active principle of the ingredients entering,into the composition of 1'artne, lee's Vegetable Pills. Tile Pills ad enthedere,nged organs, stimulating to action the dormant energies of the syatoin, thereby removing disease and re- newing life and 'vitality to the afflicted, In this lies the great secret of the popu- larity of Parrneloe's Vegetable Pills, rww, .. YORIS"ION. The catch of codfish on the coast of Lab. rador is reported to be unprecedentedly large this season. , Advices received in Constantinople from Tarsus, Asia Minor, say that a mob has,,, attacked the American Mission school at that place. Tho Canadian -Australian steamship Warimoo went ashore four miles east of Germania Point Saturday. The passen- gers and crew are all safe. At a meeting of the Republican and Carlist Deputies, hold in Madrid Saturday the memhers present pledged the two parties to oppose the payment of the Mora claims, It is understood that Italy has decided to send an expedition of twenty thousand mento Abyssinia in October. Elaborate preparations aro being made thoughout Prussia for tho celebration on September 2nd of the viotory of the Sedan. Advices received at Constantinople from Moosh say that the Turkish authorities aro Owing obstacles in the way of the distri- bution of further relief by the Armenian committee. Another effort 1s to be made by the Scotch breeders to obtain the removal Of the embargo on Canadian cattle, It is proposed that the British Government should remove the restriction until Christ- mas so as to test the matter. The Japanese Consul at Vancouver, B. C., has received word from his Govern- ment that passports will not be granted to any more Japanese to leave the country for Canada unless they have sufficient money to engage in farming or trade. One trial of Mother Graves' Worm Ex- terminator will convince you that it has no equal as a worm medicine. Buy a bottle, and see if it does not please you. "STRIKE A LIGHT " YOU NEVER "MISS FIRE " WITH E. B. EDDY'S MATCHES NO MATTER HOW DAMP THE WEATHER. IT IS INVARIABLY 100 MATCHES 100 LIGHTS And no matches wasted. Cold in the Head AND H EADACH E CURED IN FIVE MINUTES. Catarrh DR. HUNT'S MAGIC SNUFF Cured in A Week, by using IN BOXES 25 Cents at all druggists, or by mail on receipt of price. Address, THE MILLER EIMULSION CO., Kingston, Ont. Belting Shafting Puliays Hangers 1 Order your Supplies of Oak Tanned Leather Belting from ns. We supply four grades, suit- able for all classes of machinery. Every- thing in above lines at Manufacturers' First Cost Prices. •� Lowest Prices For Cash. TORONTO TYPE FOUNDRY, 44 Bay dtreet, Toronto.. 66 Salada." I can supply you with Salada Ceylon Tea in one pound lead packages atC per lb. I will ship 1.0 lb. to one ad- 3 5 dress and prepay freight. If ordered with other goods 'will ship any quantity you wish. Write for price list, and buy your supplies at wholesale prices. A. B. CANNING.. Wholesale Groner, 57 /front St. East, Toronto, T. N. U. No. 25 1GINGINE &_ BOILER, 3 horse mower.. second-hand, thoroughly over- hauled ,nd in good order.. Address TORONTO TYPE ronNDRX. Ej VElltVTb1Nlsl• pint tut; PRivrrat— Type, Presses, ,Inlrtr,. stead -.Print Newspapers, Store,etylle- MrLtteh','i],tcotro.- _�yy..tPrin , iehterrrev1,,,g . TORUN l o TY.1iii At'O[INDRY.,'r'oronto and Winnipeg. 06,Ychge and Gerrerd Streets '� .r x zao!Slut.. Canada's GGreatenCCommercial:schooln; advan• taget best in the Dominion, students assisted 16 positions every week, Moderate rates, Write• for eatalogue, Shaw 84. ;Milch, i'rinelpaid,