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THE EXETER 'ADVOCATE,.
THURSDAY, SEPT. 24, 1896.
The Week's Commercial Summary.
Oats are very low in Ontario, with sales
of white at • iSo. f.o.b., and of mixed at
17c. -
The cheese markets are firmer, with the
export demand improving. The price iu
Liverpool is 40s. 0d.
The imports of gold at New York last
week were £•4,792,068, and the total since
the influx began is $12,332,750.
The Argentine shipments of wheat last
week were592,000 bushels, of which only
48,000 bushels were to the United King-
dom.
The speculative issues ou the Toronto
Stock Exchange are firmer, but there is a
limited amount of trading. Money on
call rules at 5 to 5t per cent.
The indications are that money will
soon get much easier ou 'Vali street.
Imports of gold continue, and it is thought
that they will aggregate $30,000,000 before
the movement ceases.
The- visible supiey of wheat in the
'United States and Canada is now 46,495,000
bushels, an increase of 921,000 bushels for
the week. A year ago the total was 36,-
754,000 bushels,and two years ago 09,24.3,000
bushels.
• The amount of wheat afloat to Europe
is now 20,800,000 bushels, an increase of
2,480, 000 bushels the past week. A year
ago the total amount was 25,040,000
bushels. Corn on passage 15,440,000
bushels as against 0,140,000 bushels a year
ago.
It is expected that the September con-
dition of the wheat crop in the United
States, the estimate of which will be pub-
lished today. will be less favorable than
in August. Indications point to 0 total
crop .of 400,000,000 bushels as against 417,-
000,000
ainst417,-
000,000 in August. The general impres-
sion is that corn will reach the total of
2,400,000,000 bushels. The price of the
October option in Chiu atm yesterday was
the lowest on record.
In dry goods there has been a fair
amouut of business lu the aggregate
transacted in the cutiou goods division of
the market during the past week, results
showing some ixupruvennent over the pre-
ceding weeks. It is a feature worth noting
that this gain has been made without
individual transactions of any moment, as
orders are still euuliued to limited
quantities.
• Business in wholesale circles at Toronto
has been a little inure active the past
week. The crowds from the country
visiting the fair benefited the retail trade
greatly, and wholesale dealers report a
large number of order,, booked. The
general feeling, however, is one of
caution, aud merchants are not ordering
more than what they consider really
necessary. There are no changes of con-
sequence in prices of staple goods.
Here and There.
Some people try to apologize for the
ocean's angry roar because it has been
crossed so often.
It is an excellent thing to be able to
sing well, aud the next best thing is to
'know you can't.
Trying to be happy is like trying to go
to sleep. You Will not succeed uuless
you forget that you are trying.
The progeny of a single pair of house
sparrows, if not molested for ten Sears,
it is said, would he more than 200,000,000,-
000.
The sultan of Zanzibar, Hauled Bin
Thwain Bin Said; is (lead. An extra yard
of tombstone will be put over his grave to
give that name proper display.
On most voyages of a first-class ocean
steamer about 3,000 pieces of glassware
and crockery are broken. The average
servant girl might as well give up. She
can never hope to beat that'record.
Cornelius Vanderbilt's wedding present
at the marriage of his daughter to Harry
Payne Whitney, himself a prospective
millionaire, was 85,000,000. The bride's
trousseau cost a fortune.
At the funeral of NMoolls F. Crouch at
Baltimore a choir sung his famous song,
'Kathleen Mavourneen" over his grave.
The song lived longer than he author and
will appeal to thousands long after its
composer is forgotten.
Bismarck, when congratulatedtbeother
day upon his success in politics, replied:
"Yes, but had it not been for me there
would have been three great wars the
less, the lives of 80.000 amen would not
have been sacrificed, and many parents.
brothers, sisters and widows would not
now be mourners." Old men and children
tell the truth.
Ideal Summer Resort.
Kill two birds with one stone. Spend
a pleasant summer holiday at Oakville
and get rid of the liquor or morphine
habit once and for all at the same time.
It will cost you a little more than if you
go to an ordinary summer resort, but
probably not half as much as you would
spend on liquor in half the time. "Lalce-
hurst," with • its fine house, shady
grounds, water front and excellent
board, is preferable to most hotels, and
you can leave your liquor curse behind
you forever when your holiday is over.
For full particulars address Manager,
Lakehurst Institute, Oakville, Ont.
Rad a Good Reason.
Father—Why did you permit young
Mashanan to kiss you in the parlor last
night?
Daughter—Because I was afraid he
would catch cold in the hall..
How's ,This f
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. S CHENEY & Props..Toledo, O.
We the undersigned, have CO„irnown F.J.Cheney
for the last 15 years, aud believe him perfectly
honorable in all business transactions and f1n-
anciallyable to carry out any obligation made
by their firm.
Wzsr & TxttrAx, Wholesale Druugists,Toledo, 0,
W assamG, EMISAN & MAxtvm, Wholesale Drug-
gists Toledo, O.
Bail's Catarrh Cure is taken internally,, aet-
ingdirectly upon the blood and mucous sur -
uses of the system. Price 76e. per bottle. Sold
by all Druggists, Testimonials free.
TOPICS OF A WEEK.
The Important Events in a' Few Words Vol.
Busy Readers.
CANADIAN.
Hon. William Harty is at Montreal,
muoh improved in health.
Low water has caused a blockade if
vessels at the Galops Canal,
Ex-Ald. John Ritohie, an old and
well-known citizen of Toronto, is dead.
Eight Austrian families have left Win- I
nipeg to settle in Lake Dauphin district.
Capt. Stamour, of Wallaoeburg, of the
steamer City of Mount Clemens, is tuts- I
sing.
Hon. Edward Blake arrived at New
York nn the steamer Umbria from Liver-
pool.
A motion by Mr. Craig to prohibit the
sale of liquor in the House of Commons
was carried.
A Normal School for the training of
teachers in domestic science is to be
opened in Ottawa.
The shipment of wheat at Montreal
for Europe this season is more than twice
that of the season of 1895.
Lord Aberdeen's reception at Windsor
and Chatham on Saturday was very
unanimous and enthusiastic.
Mrs. S. J. Cotter, a respected resident
of Northport, committed suicide by cut-
ting her throat with a razor.
Mrs. Hattie Nolan.the mulatto 'woman
tried at Sandwich on a charge of poison-
ing her husband, was acquitted.
Don Carlos Simms, a New York aero-
naut, was probably fatally injured by a
fall at the Huntingdon county fair.
The steamer Empress of China, with
Li Hung Chang on board, sailed from
Vancouver for Hong Kong Monday.
Constable Cruickshanks, of the North.
west mounted pollee, stationed at I)uok
Lake, shot and killed himself there on
Wednesday.
Seventy-five stands of arms of the now
Lee-Metford pattern were served out to
the cadets of the Royal Military College
at Kingston.
Charles Isles, a clerk in the registry
office at Woodstonk for over 20 years, was
found dead on the steps of the court
house there.
The fire loss of Canada and the United
States for August shows a total of $S,-
895,950, over a million less than the loss
in August last year.
It is reported that a company has been
formed in London, Eng.. with a capital
of $2,500,000. to carry on a ship -building
yard in Vancouver.
Two cars of the Hamilton Radial rail-
way crashed into each other Wednesday
afternoon, but none of the passengers
were seriously injured.
Mr. B. Gilbert, an old resident of
Brantford, Ont.,on Saturday took a dose
of carbolic acid in mistake for medicine,
and died shortly afterwards.
In the Dominion House of Commons
the vote for $446,500 for the annual
militia drill for the present year was
passed through its final stages.
L1 Hung Chang arrived at Vancouver
and embarked on board the steamer Em-
press of China for home. His reception
was attended by a large number of Chi;
nese.
Representatives of the Railway Em-
ployes' Association waited on the Gov-
ernment, with the object of securing leg-
islation for the protection of their in-
terests.
One thousand Canadians will sail on
the steamship Moravia on Tuesday from
Montreal, for Brazil. They are largely
from Montreal, and are English-speaking
artisans.
34 Hung Chang greatly enjoyed his
visit to Banff. He telegraphed to Sir
Henri July expressing thanks for the
kind manner in which he has been
treated in Canada.
The Government instructed its agents
to warn the French-Canadian families
against emigration to Brazil, and as a
consequence one-half of the 800 who had
gone on board ship decided to remain in
Canada.
The bodies of a woman and her son
have been found in the ruins of a build-
ing destroyed by fire at Meadowbrook, a
settlement twelve miles from Moncton,
N. B. It is supposed that a double mur-
der took place.
Josephine Proulx, a Catholic school
teacher, has entered suit against Rev. F.
X. E. Ecrement, parish priest of St.
Cunegonde, for $5,000 damages. She
and her scholars were, she alleges,
ordered out of church.
Arthur Prentiss was found guilty of
the murder of Thomas Lingard in the
township of Hope on the tenth of June,
and was sentenced to be hanged on De-
cember 17th. The jury brought in a re-
commendation to mercy.'
A number of vital questions to work-
ingmen will be discussed at the Labor
Congress in Quebec next week. Among
these are the American alien labor law,
the Chinese immigration policy, Dr. Bar-
nardo's waifs, and a number of others.
It is stated that a demand will shortly
be made on the Ottawa Government for
the settlement of certain claims which
the Manitoba Government have against
the Dominion, including ono in connec-
tion with the old Hudson Bay railway
transaction.
Excellent Reasons exist why Dr.
Thomas' Eclectric Oil should be used by
persons troubled with affections of the
throat or lungs, sores upon the skin,
rheumatic pain, corns, bunions, or ex-
ternal injuries. The reasons are, that it
is speedy, pure and unobjectionable,
whether taken internally or applied out-
wardly..
UNITED sTATES.
H. Dumois & Co. the well-known ship-
ping and commission merchants of Now
York, have assigned.
The daily shipment of celery from
Kalamazoo is 80 tons, an unprecedented
amount for this time of the year.
The members of a hose company in
Saginaw, Mich., have equipped them-
selves with helmets of aluminum.
A proposal is being made to reduce
freight rates on '.flour ten Dents from
Minneapolis and the west to New York.
Latest returns from the State elections
in Arkansas on Monday give the Demo-
cratic tioket a majority of over 65,000.
The sale of oleomargarine, when col-
ored to imitate natural butter, is now
prohibited by the laws of thirty-two
states.
You cannot be happy while you have
corns. Then do not, delay in getting a
bottle of Holloway's Corn Cure. It re-
moves ali kinds of corns without pain.
Failure with it is unknown.
Prof. Brooks, of Geneva, N. Y., re-
ports having discovered a new comet on
Sept.: 14th.
The colored people of Baltimore have
started a movement for the erection of a
monument to Mrs. Harriet Beecher
Stowe's memory.
Archbishop Ireland,of St. Paul, Minn.,
has announced that hereafter no tuition
fees will be charged in the Catholic
parochial schools.
A despatch from Grand Tower. 111.,
says that an earthquake of thirty smarms'
duration was felt. It proceeded from a
northwesterly direction.
Elizabeth J, Gardner. whose marriage
to Bougnereau, after a nineteen years'
engagement, has recently. taken place in
Paris, Kate Field and Annie Whitney,
the sculptor, of Boston, were all pupils
at Lasell Seminary.
The statue of Edgar Allen Poe, which
is to be set up in Bronx Park,New Yprk,
by the Shakespeare Seeley, shows the
poet seated in a armchair, in meditation,
with a raven at his feet. The statue is of
heroic size, and will rest on a granite
pedestal.
Help your children to grow strong and
robust by counteracting anything that
causes ill -health One great cause of
disease in children is morals. Remove
them with .Bother Graves' \\-orm Exter-
minator. It never fails.
There has arrived at Yaikxna, Wash.,
a combination harvester and thresher of
immense size, to be used in harvesting a
big crop of wheat. The machine will cut
a 20 -foot swath, threshing and seeking
the grain as it goes and will require
thirty horses to pull it.
A Portsmouth, N. H., woman wear-
ing a veil, practiced a new trick on a
Maine. Central train when it stopped in
that city. Carrying a six -weeks' old child
and a nursing bottle, she walked into a
parlor car, aud, leaving baby and bottle
in a chair, walked out again.
A colored teachers' institute in Georgia
has asked the state authorities to pro-
vide then experts of their own race to
instruct them instead of white teachers.
They also object to I3i11 Arp's "School
History of Georgia" as abounding in un-
true statements about tho negro race.
Newton F. Hurst, :34 years old, is a
grocer's clerk in Buffalo, and gets $5 a
week wages. Some time ago he invented
a car -coupler, and last week he received
a letter from a manufacturing firm
offering him $30,000 in cash and a roy-
alty on all couplers sold for his invention.
Colic and Kidney I)iliienity.—Mr. J. W.
Wilder, J.P., I.afargeville, N.Y., writes:
"I :uu subject to severe attacks of Colic
and Kidney Difli.cnity, and rind Parmelee's
Pills afford ane _great relief, while all
other remedies have failed. They are the
best medicine I have ever used." In fact
so great is the power of this medicine to
cleanse and purify, that diseases of almost
every name and nature are driven from
the body.
FOREIGN.
I.i Hung Chang's gifts to the Queen
are valued at five thousand pounds.
This year's Egpytian cotton crop
promises to be the largest ever known.
The balance of &'0,000,000 of the Chi
nese loan was issued in London and Ber-
lin.
The British Association's annual con-
gress will open in Liverpool on Wednes-
day.
The British battleships Devastation
and Redoubtable have been ordered' to
Crete.
Mrs. Parnell, mother of the late
Charles Parnell, is dangerously ill in
Dublin.
Official returns of the British national
debt show a decrease of 8620,000,000 in
20 years.
'Vice -Admiral Sir John Hopkins has
been appointed to command the Medi-
terranean squadron.
Prof. Luigi Palmieri, the celebrated
Italian meteorologist, is dead. He was
eighty-nine years of age.
The correct title conferred on Li Hung
Chang by the Queen is Grand Com-
mander of the Victorian Order.
Mrs. Maybriek, under life sentence in
Woking prison for poisoning her hus-
band, is now reported to be dying.
Eighty thousand men, 7,000 horses and
over 400 guns were in action in the Ger-
man military manoeuvres at Goerlit.
Meetings of Armenian sympathiers are
being called in all the great cities of
England and at several capitals of Europe.
The Spanish 'Cortes has given the Gov-
ernment unlimited power to borrow
money to prosecute the Cuban campaign.
Mr. 'Redmond calls the recent Irish
convention a disgraceful imposture. The
split is widening,and funds are diminish-
ing.
Insurgents on the Island of Crete have
promised to do their utmost to assist in
the execution of the proposed Cretan set-
tiem ent.
According to returns received at Lon-
don, emigration to the United States
during August decreased 10,000 and to
Canada 1,000.
The 17 Armenian revolutionists who
took part in the recent riots at Constan-
tinople, and who are now held at Mar-
seilles, will bo set at liberty.
Gen. Baldissera, commanding the
Italian forces in Africa, has been ordered
to return to Massowah, where King
Monelekis threatening trouble,
The British Trade 'Unions Congress
passed resolutions favoring a more practi-
cal system of educatinn, and also favor-
ing an amnesty to all political prisoners.
British Board of Trade returns for
.August show a decrease of $10,500,000
in imports and a decrease of $940,000 in
exports, as compared with August last
year.
Mr. Chamberlain has written a letter
to the Colonial Agents in London ad-
vising that all the exhibits of the British
Empire at the Paris Exposition be
combined in one division.
The Matabele chiefs have made a
complete surrender to Mr.. Cecil Rhodes.
Re displayed great courage in going with
two companions, all unarmed, into the
Matopo hills to treat with the rebels.
The British squadron, under Adimral
Seymour, has been ordered to rendezvous
at Salonioa, and it is expected that Eng-
land will in the near future take a lead-
ing in forcing hand c ng the abdication of the
Sultan of Turkey.
No person should go from home without
a bottle of Dr. J.D. Kellogg's Dysentery
Cordial in their possession, as change of
water, cooking, climate,ete, frequently
brings on summer complaint; and there
is nothing like being ready' with a sure
remedy at hand, which oftentimes saves
great suffering, and frequently valuable
lives. This Cordial has gained for itself
a wide spread reputation utation for
p p affording
prompt relief from all 'summer com-
plaints.
STRANGER THAN FICTION
1S THE TRUTH CONCERNING JOftN
• GIBBONS, OF EAST LONDON.,
He Was Tortured With the rains of Sciatic
Xil\euxnatism--Tried Doctors, All Sorts of
Medicine and Went to the Hospital in
Vain --Dr. Williams' rink hills tut
luau 11 'ben A11 Else Rad Failed.
From the London Advertiser.
Thero are two things in this world
which Mr. John Gibbons, a resident of
Queen's Avenue East, will 14eneeforth
place implicit confidence in. One is the
judgment of his wife and the other the
curative qualities of Dr. Williams' rink
Pills. In his Baso the two went hand in
hand; Mrs. Gibbons thought of tho rem-
edy, the pills did the rest,and to -day
Mr: Gibbons is a well man where last
fall he was virtually a cripple. An Ad-
vertiser reporter called at the house the
other evening and was met at the door
by Mr. Gibbons, to whom he told the
object of his visit, and was cordially in-
vited in. The reporter had no sooner got
comfortably seated when Mr. Gibbons
went into an adjoining room. The sound
of clinking bottles floated through the
half open door and when Mr. Gibbons
reappeared he had in his arms a whole
basket of bottles—all he has to show for
many a hard-earned dollar spent in use -
lees drugs. As Mr. Gibbons was busy
showing the bottles and decanting upon
the impotency of the medicines they had
contained. the reporter had abundant op-
portunity of marking the personal appear-
ance of the roan. llis speech betrays his
English birth and his face still bears the
marks of suffering, but his frame is erect,
his step light and elastic, and when he
tells you that he can work, run, or jump
with any man, gnu cannot help but be-
lieve him. He is 29 years of age and was
born in Bow Road, Stratford, England.
He came to Canada in 1882 aud located
at Galt, where he is well and favorably
known. He worked Inc the Hon. Mr.
Young, member of parliament, for a
long time and seven years ago he mar-
ried Miss Alice Mann, also of Galt. After
Mr. Gibbons removed to London he set-
tled down near the car shops aud did
very well, always baying plenty of work
and always having the strength to do it.
He cared nothing about a wetting until
ono day a year ago be took an acute
attack of sciatic rheumatism following
wet feet. "I lay down on this floor,"
said Mr. Gibbons, in telling his story,
"night and day suffering terrible agony.
I could not get up a step and my wife
had to help me up from the floor, I felt
the pain in my back first. It then ap-
parently left my back and got into my
hips. Doctors came here to see me. They
gave me prescriptions, but none of them
seemed to do me any good. The neigh-
bors could hear me all over Queen's,
Avenue when I would get an attack of
the pains. Last fall I was taken out of
this place in a hack and taken to the hos-
pital. I remained there about three
weeks and the dootors did what they
could for tne, but could not give me any
relief. At the end of three weeks I came
home again, suffering as much as ever.
My wife got hold of a pamphlet which
told of a number of remarkable cures by
the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills,
and we determined to try them. I took
about three boxes and felt myself getting
a little easier. I took thirteen boxes al-
together, and it is over two months since
I felt the least suggestion of pain." "Do
you feel that you are entirely cured?"
asked the reporter. "Yes, sir, I can go
out and do a day's work just as well
as ever I could I feel perfectly strong
and have a good appetite." "No,I don't
want another attack of sickness like
that," said Mr. Gibbons, as he lighted
the reporter to the door.
Mrs. Gibbons was not at home on the
occasion of the reporter's first visit.
Subsequently he called on her and re-
ceived an entire confirmation of Mr.
Gibbons' story. "He was home all last
summer," said Airs. Gibbons, "and last
August the pains were so severe as to
bring him down on his knees, and to
save himself he could not get up. I bad
to lift him off the floor many a time.
He seemed powerless. The bottles he
showed you had almost all of them been
repeatedly filled so that the number of
bottles is no criterion of the amount of
medicine taken. Before he took the
pills," concluded Mrs. Gibbons, "I
thought my husband would never be
able to stand upright again. But now,"
she added in parting, "he is as well as
ever he was"
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills create new
blood, build up the nerves, and thus
drive disease from the system. In hund-
reds of cases they have cured after all
other medicines had failed, thus estab-
lishing the claim that they are a marvel
among the triumphs of modern medical
science. The genuine Pink Pills are sold
only in boxes, bearing the full trade
mark, "Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for
Pale People." Protect yonrself from im-
position by refusing any pill that does
not bear the registered trade mark around
the box.
Cynical.
Those who have reached a point in their
journeying on a wrong road where they
have lost their pride iu a good name are
in a very dangerous position. They are
not far from the moral case of a certain
speculator of whom one acquaintance
said to another:—
"I don't see how he can do as he does; he
does not seem to think much .of his repu-
tation."
"Well," answered the other man, "I
don't see how he could think much of it—
it's so badl"
Mr. T. J. Humes, Columbus, Ohio,
writes: "I. have been afflicted for some
time with Kidney and Liver Complaint,
and find Parmelee's Pills the best medi-
cine for these diseases. These fills do
not cause pain or griping, and should be
useciwhen a cathartic is required. They
are Gelatine Coated, and rolled in the
Flour of Licorice to preserve their parity,
and give then is pleasant, agreeable taste.
OT
TER
But Just 10 Cents, and 40 Doses in a
Vial of Dr. Agnew's Liver Pills,
No pain, no bad after effects, pleasure
in every dose little, but
awfully good.
Cure sick headache, constipation,
biliousness, mins* sallowness. T
r
oy
are purely vegetable. In big demand
and all druggists sell them. Try. them.
LESSABOR,
COST,
MORE COMFORT.
O
IhN
Are the Best
Wood -Heating
FURNACES
EVER .LUL.TIL'T.
B ♦ 0
Ask about them. See their
Improv*ements over ordinary
heaters.
SOLD E'iERYWIId:RIC.
•
DEUR EY TILDEN CO., LTD., HAMILTON.
GURNEY-MASSEY CO., MONTREAL.
GURNEY STOVE AND RANGE CO., LTD., WINNIPEG.
You Don't Mind Raw Weather
when you have your clothing or
wraps interlined with FIBRE
'n CHAMOIS, It is the simplest and
surest protection from cold and
wind that you can have,costs next
to nothing, is so light you don't,
notice its presence, adds durable
,,If • !- \\ stiffness and body to a garment
and never fails to preserve the
t healthful 1'
anti i <l.l h alt ul � <L1 I1'it11 of the
e a l ' - body in all seasons.
You can't afford to do without the comfort it gives.
ONLY 25 CENTS A YARD.
Look for the Fibre Chamois -label on all ready: -to -wear
garments, and TAKE NO OTHERS.
EAGER TO TELL IT.
There's a Ring of Genuineness in Testi.
mony Upon'l'estiunon y T hat Pours in
From the Great Army of One -Time
Sufferers Sounding the Praises
of Dr. Agnew's (*rent Cures—
Heart Disease and Catarrh
Relieved in a Few
Minutes aud Per-
manently
('urea.
IF THERE 15 PALPITATION, Flut-
tering of the heart, or shortness of
breath, it denotes Heart trouble. 1f there
is pain over the eyes, foul breath, or a
simple cold in the head the first seeds of
dreaded catarrh may have been sown. Be
warned in time. These good remedies
never fail to cure.
THE HEART.—Mr. George Witter,
Walkerton, writes: "Three years ago my
daughter, 18 years of age, began to be
troubled with palpitation and fluttering
of the heart. It increased until she was
unable to attend to her daily duties.
Couldnot lie ou her left side. We bad
doctored without any results. We bad
heard of the excellent results following
the use of Dr. Agnew's Cure for the
Heart. We procured it and from the very
first dose it helped her. Before the first
bottle was taken she could sleep on either
side, Another bottle entirely restored
her. That it saved her life I have no
doubt, and I feel it my duty to tell suffer-
ing humanity of this great cure."
CATARRII AND DEAFNESS.—John
McInnis of Washabuck Bridge. writes:
"I used Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder
and found it a wonderful cure for catarrh
and deafness. I can hear as well as ever
I did, and all signs of the disease have
disappeared. I have never lost an oppor-
tunity of recommending it to others, and
you will please send mo a bottle for a
neighbor who is afflicted as I was."
PILES.—One application of Dr. Ag-
new's Pile Ointmeut gives instant relief
to itching, bleeding or blind piles, and n
permanent cure is not a tedious one. I:
acts quickly. 35 cents.
Sorrow, Indeed.
"He loved me" she sobbed. "I fel upo•
his love until it grew cold. Want a e I
then to do, I, who had been used to time,
warns meals a day ?"
As they listened their heart grew heavy.
Here, indeed, was sorrow.
GOLD MINE,
THE RICHEST GOLD MINE IN ONTARIO,
THE GOLDEN GATE
Situated in the Rainy River District, Ontario.
A working mine producing gold bricks
At the present rate of output a handsome divi-
dend is assured on thc'stock.
I have had placed In my hands for sale 150,150
shares of pa,td-up and non -assessable stock.
par value es each, which I am instructed for a
short time only to offer ar PAR.
The money raasod from the sale of this stock
wil be expended in purchasing more mpehiuerr
to increase the output of this far -fanned
bullion -producing mine.
The direetors are prominent men in Montreal.
Hamilton, Toronto and Rat Portage. The
Manager of the Company, .Mr. R. H. Alin, is
probably the best known musing expert in the
RainyRiver District.
Allapplicationsfor stock and any informa-
tion will be furnished on application to
FRANK MCPlILLIP.-z,
Mining Broker for Rainy River District
1 Toronto Street, Toronto.
Irti7774 PIN 1.1
AE
fTERWW1 nTIGH 1'—iffe0./F-31
�FT
OROff o 044 C'euzado
SEND EQ LATALOGUE 's•"1
IF YOU WANT A '
Canoe, Skiff, Steam Launch,
or anything in the shape of a boat,
WE BUILD THEM.
THE CHEAPEST AND THE BEST
Write to us.
JAMES L. ROGERS, Mgr
B .
a5�uccessorl o edime
Then There Was the Other.
"Ma," inquired Bobby, "hasn't pa a.
queer idea of heaven?"
"Well, I think not, Bobby. Why?"
"I heard hila say that the week you
spent at the seaside seemed like heaven
to him."
FITS.—All fits stopped free and permanent.
h cured. No fits after first day's use of Dr,
Kliuo's Great Nerve Restorer. Free $s'
trial bottle sero through Canadian Agency.
Address 1)r. Kline,1101 Arch St., Philadelphia,.
Pa.
NOTHING LIRE IT. •
SALADA".
CEYLON TEA
IS DELICIOUS.
Sold Only in Lead Packets
Agents Wanted.
In every town and county to exhibit,
demonstrate and $ell The Ever -ready
Solder.
'1`liis article is now on exhibition at
Toronto Fair and has proved the fast-
est selling article on the .grounds.
There is big profits for agents. None
but energetic men need apply. Write
for particulars. A sample dozen mailed
to any address for one dollar.
Address.
The Ever -Ready Solder Co,,
. 5 7 Front Street East, Toronto.
The Discriminating
Pubic ai�Vaj
ask for
E. B. EDDY'S Matches
sesesseizzatelessmonszassistegamssso
NIAGARA FALLS LINE.
DOUBLE TRIPS
EMPRESS OF INDIA and G. T.E.
Daily from Yong'e Strdet Wharf at
7.45 a.m. and 3.20 pan. for St. Catha-
rines, N. Falls, Iiuiialo, N. York and
all points east. Family books for
sale. Lowe rates to excursion parties.
Tickets at all principal ag'ellts and at
office 011 wharf.
T. N, U.
81
Gives the latest and best courses of training in
its Commercial, Shorthand and penman-
ship Departments.
08 Students aesiated to positions in six creeks.
rat
Term now open-. Students admitlul at
any time.—Get araieular¢ Mention:this 1,:wer.
W.H.
SHA�
�TcP
Yrin :i al.
Toronto; t)ntario.12