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Exeter Times, 1896-11-12, Page 3THE EXETER TIMES NIENEWS 1 TEE VERY LATI WOR interesting Items A Great Britain, Ali Parts of th assorted for Bee CAA; Live stook ship •are very heavy. The price of br in Montreal two Mr. .3 -ernes IH respected citizen Mr. Walter M found dead besid niton, Mr. J. B.aar been appointed S Public Warks, Sir Donald Smi hundred dollars men's relief fun The Ottawa, Aa Railway is comp the waters of tit The licensed vi offei:lug 'to join h tionists in enforc The schooner Niagara street arines and block a day, e Cars have be .completed line of trio Railway bat H+iinilton. tl, tithe is now bishop of Montre product hitherto laxation. -,Prof. Robertsoi stoner, has compl ing creameries in ritories. A big Toronto For letters paten der the name of Trust Company Dr. Desaulniers bac Board of Inst ilsylums, died at real on Saturdai The Dominion Canada made he 'bee to Liverpool boors, which bee Mr. A. T. Nei .,mined a sample end he is of the lionized peat bo 11Ir. W, L. Scot Secretary of Stat local Master and the High Court The Lund for tl of the firemen re treat, which biz to more thaneeou Mr. John Mi +ownship, Midille. braced his 103rd lie was born in I 1793. ice. C. Condie w 'ton to one yes r labor for,'thihe 31, age containing .Station. Meda Crawf Police Sergeant London, oat. weary - —7:— 't .. ,herself. The dead teens.. A meeting of ' minion Rifle As at Ottawa to co pert wood formthe eiCanadiai The Dominion cided not to ma til after the rev). in the Civil Sery asked for the n went. The Governmei ed in Port Stan] night, having o sturgeon nets an were seized fror fishing in Canad Joseph Girouar mill at the Gat e• rolling log an He fell through floor into the m over the falls The Rev. Dr. dent of the PrE the North-West, Country, and wi Your to attract to take up land i the West. Early Wednes+ daughter of Mr Gananoque, Ont., a half was playa set fire to her d burned that she terwards. Mr. Harry S a charge of shot ders from the Wilson. They r shooting party ti after game. Tie ly todcover. Sir Wi'Iiam V returned from a the C.P.R., make `port as to the and t'h'e progres The wheat yield ad been enorm Hon. Mr. Fie nig of business Board of Trade, vince should co making and lea to Ontario, beca mill in Quebec Ontario. The Railway Council has mad allow the T., pony to proceed the spur line at when it deposits Montreal in tru Milton Road Co' ' GRBA The fetes in Queen's accession in February. The Princess o1 Norfolk a Tech' making and coo Lord Alexand, was born in 183£ the Marquis of The British C E meetings on W the work of ne After a -Moroi ill War Depart) namite gun is p The: Countess suit for divorce the grounds of In pursuance � on Wednesday NANtIJ8IIEIL • —' Danforth Lin(s in mm e her, refine ve Committee London cabmen went out on strike on Thnrdaq,AN White the want of rain has cawed a. wheat famine in India, excessive rains have destroyed the potato crop QE the West of Ireland. The students of Glasgow University on Wednesday evening nominated Mr. Joseph Chamberlain for the Lord Ree- torship of the institution. The Daunt's Rock lightshtg, which d'Isappeared in the recent great storm on the British coast, has been found sunk near her moorings. There is no confirmation either in London or Washington. of the re.- moored appointment of a tribunal to deal with the Venezuelan boundary eleguts• The Duke of Connaught will represent the Queen at the marriage of the Duo d'Orleans and the Archduchess Maria Dorothea°f Austria, in Vienna, next Mr. George Shaw Lcfovre, President o£ the Government Board in Mr. Gladstone's last Cabinet, is lying in a erotts condition as the result of a ,have fall from his bicycle, UNITED STATES.the L. Sullivan is said to be iu danger of losing his right arm by ai g caneer.case, By an explosion of gas in No. 3 shaft of the Lehi h & Wilkesbarre Coal Com en six men were killed and two p y g injured. , A mysterious tripe murder is puzzl- )rig palace of ftaohmond, Mo, Mrs, the victims, and. ehr two children were The Court of Appeals at Albany, N. laiv has passed the tlaste Le Albany g' tir eluis unconstitutional. 14Trs Fred. Gardner,af'Ch'eektowaga, N.Y., ave birth on 'Wednesda • evening g� j to four ebildren, three girls and one boy, and all rite doing well. The mill at Castana, S.D., will' again this winter use the Russian thistle for fuel, and farmers are offered a dollar and a half a ton for all the thistles they can furnish. Phoebe A, Hurst will be the chiefhome donor amongthe citizens of San Franc cisco, who hve promised $4,000,000 for a State university as soon as the State gives $500,000. Two elevators with 1,125,000 bushels of grain owned by the Chicago &Pa- dila .Dfire ator Chicago. wet° de is oy- ed by fire at Chicago. 'The loss is es- tinaat:ed at over $1,000,000. GENERAL. Serious election riots are reported from different parts of Hungary. All the workmen at the Constanti- nople arsenal have struck work for the non payment of arrears in wages. Armenians are bein arrested inlar a numbers at Constantinople on the e.harge of being revolutionists and dy- M. Cllallemel-Laeour, recently Presi- dent of the French Senate, and also Ainlpassador in London and Minister of Foreign Affairs, is dead. nine floods are increasing in the French rivers, and there is great die- e in the submerged districts, Rumours of a European congress to revise the Treaty of Berlin are caus- ing the Sultan great uneasiness. A panic was caused in Constantin- opts by the gun practice of the French guardship in the Sea of Marmora. Rebels in the Philippines are report- ed to lis guilty of horrible tortures of their prisoners. They murder priests by cutting them to pieces. .Em eror Francis Joseph has decor- P P ated the Duke of Orleans, who is to be married to the Archduchess Marie Dorothe, with the order of the Gol- den Fleece. • A sepoy belonging to the British -In- dian troops stationed at Fort Sandeman ran amuck on Wednesday, and killed two British lieutenants and two sol- di°rs• George Towns of Newcastle, New South. Wa•Ies has challenged Gaudaur for the sculling championship, but he wants the champion to go to Australia to row. Violent storms have prevailed upon the Portugal coasts. A fishing boat foundered in the Bay of Setubal and her crew of fourteen men were drowned. The revelation of iha secret Russo- Gernianio treaty is causing the greatest excitement on the Continent of Europe, and Drei d result in the ru tore of th y p Cablegrams received from Bombay say that the drouth continues, with no signs of abatement, and that the crop situation in India is tla>Zy becoming more serious. The Paris Eclair expresses itself in fa your of granting Germany preferentiail tariffs in, Tunis, provided the former co- operate with France in the settlement of the Egyptian question. The rejection by the Spanish Govern- went of the conditions imposed by French financiers for taking up the pro posed Spanish loan is taken as proof that Spain is able to obtain the Hetes- sary funds elsewhere to carry on the A mean trick was played on Czail Nicholas by his Danish cousins during his recent stay at Bernstorff. They were bicycling together, the Czar ahead, when the Danish Princes, who felt thirsty, turned into a wayside tavern fora drink without calling out to their header. He went onlost , way, and was directed to the castle by a Russian detective who was wash putl for his safety. The Czar was much out by the adventure, i E�CTERN MSN S VInn. Mx. Hautes ti that the a le he Toronto and teast who I add neverSOI�E 'had any previous ea erience of pp enterprise could hardly comprehend the condition of affairs in the camp at Roseland or understand whht an in- estimable possession they had in that count He, expressed the opinion that there wouldbemore development In Canada in t'he next seven years than t here had been In the last twenty. These mines, Jia believed, would be the means a Makin all lines of business is flourish and bring a period of unworn-icyc ed prosperity to the country. LATE CABLE. NEWS '� FRENCH MAYORS .TO BE' 'BANQUET-\�0. TED AT THE MANSION ROUSE. , -.A. „, g�' . • t \`t�!i '. ( r 1 . _ yy" ,''il" i% Al; ♦ et . :;. t: �, " r �► �+ STANDARD OF THE Y'V ORLD. WORLD. _.r. ROSS'LAND THE GREATEST MINING CAMP IN THE WORLD. BST FROM ALL. THE LD OVER. _ Thousands of >'rospeetors Working in the District -Wild Cat Schemes Iilay Easily be Avoided -Clamoring for the Con- struetlon or the Crow's Nest rasa Bail- wa y Mr. J. F. McCrae, of Montreal, has just returned from a visit to Roseland, B.C. Krhere he spent five weeks in a olirefnl examination of all the prince pal mining properties in the district. The object of his trip was to inspect the mines ansa if they recommended to his judgment to make investments for a number of capital- ists in Montreal, Be has returned more than satisfied that the mineral re- aourcoe of that great western region not been over valued, and that wealth latent in the soil will as- suredly place Canada in the front rank of gold producing countries. replyDavis In ra I to a few leading questions Mr. McCrae said that he considered hossland the greatest •mining camp in world -not, indeed, in point of pop- elation, but from the number and the richness o£ its properties, 5o assured •'the was its position already that the great number of schemer which were beingViceroy devised by irresponsible persons to de- lude the public could not injure even its immediate future. He had been to this view of the matter after it thorough examination of all the im- g portant mines now being developed, his opinion had received the strongest kind of confirmation in the expressed opinions as well as the prac- tical action of such widely known men as Mr. Durant and Mr. Callahan, the latter of whom has had a vast exper- tensa as a mining expert 18 South Afri- ea and the United States, and who, on his first visit to Roseland, condemned the camp,but whonowregards it aq u unequalled' in the world. "The camp is all right," said Mr. DleCrae with emphasis, "There are any number of good. opportunities there for intelligent PP g and energetic men, and it is to be hop- ed that the people of Canada will be- some alis( to this feat at once and not allow all Chia natural wealth of theirfound own country to be absorbed by people from other lands." RAILWAY FACILITIES WANTED, The residents of that whole country, Mr. McCrae said, were clamoring for the immediate construction of the Crow's Nest Pass Railway, This road was _cogan)zad as vital. necessary y to the progress, not only of Trail, but also of the entire region adjacent, The Immediate future of the Boundary country, which was beingrapidly idly pros -boxes y' Pthe peeled and from which samples of ex- cardia 1bursar. g y rich ore were being can- stantly brought for ,a. ay, was also largely dependent on its construction. For the want of such a channel of ownmunieation with other parts of the Dominion, too, the people in the whole mining region were paying an immense g P Y g tribute to the United States for their daily maintenance. The great bulk of provisions of every kind calms in by way of Spokane and iha prices ware greatly in excess of what they should be. With the road built through Crow's Nest Pass much of what now comes from the States would be sent from our own country. When he had been at Edmonton he had found hay selling there at $12 per ton, and shortly before in Roseland, It had been as high as $40 per ton. There was considerable grumbling in the Trail countryover g the rates on the C.P.R., which were regarded as altogether too- high. He thought that our own great transcon- tinental road should awaken more thor- mighty to the importance 'of that min- era. country and not allow passenger as well as freight traffic which it should carry to be taken by American tines, Sp°aping of the camp itself Mr. Mc- Crae said that there were now about a dpzen mines •shipping, but only two or three extensively so. In all claims held by responsible people it had beenthis proved beyond doubt that the further the development work went the richer the ore became. A WORD OF ADVICE. When asked if all the companies professing to do business were reli- able, Mr. McCrae said that a few claims had been stocked rather heavily. Many irresponsible people were com- ing in and buying up small claims, which at the present time were not shown, at $1,500 or therabont and is- suing stock on them at probably a mil- lion. On some of these properties noth- ing had been done as vet, except the assessment work. Sucli: projects a's these of course were purely wild cat schemes and were to be avoided. To avoid them, however, was nota mat- ter of difficulty. People purchasing stocks should be careful to invest only in those properties on which proper development work had'been or was being dans. It would be said, perhaps, that stock in these mines bad gone upscribed and that those who had failed to i vest at first had lost by their lack of confidence. This was true enough, but he considered it better for them to in-, vest in a safe property all the condi- tions of which showed that it could not fail to increase in value than in a. Property the worth 01 which was para- ly speculative, if, •indeed, the honest intentions of its projectors were not to be called into question. The reason, he said, why the stocks of wild cat mines sold at all was because the brok- ers got more commission on such sales than on those where safety were un- n. do ed and accordin 1 there was a iion g Y strong . temptation to sell., '' iBUSTNLS5 FLOURISHING. The town of "Roseland itself was im- proving rapidly and property was quickly increasing in value. All who were in legitimate businesses were do- in well. There were ofcourse a large g number in the .'town who were living by their wits, but this was unavoidable of the kind. The whole in- every placeP country about Roseland was being rapidly staked out, and there t throughout the entire gold mw, bared t x h ug. ,tn region . probably 'several,. thousand g. cos actors. P P In reply to a ueataon • whether the : D qq. : o of stocks were fhe same in quotations tataons Rossland'as in Toronto Mr. ',McCraep said that there was no difference what- s d_ ever. There were . isolated instances he a Individuals who had •become m- v rsee . _ u volAed had sold out at a saorniice, tit- cases of this kind did not apply. _ captain !Matthews Drowned -"suing for Divoree-Tho Queen's ylapath -Sir y males Dime and fleury el seaway ea the Venezuelan Question -lard Salts- bury and Total Abstinence, ate. mac. A despatch from London says :-Tile Lord Mayor has invited 30 of the May- ors of the leading cities of France to attend a banquet at the Mansion House in December., The object of the Lord Mayor in issuing the invitations is to obtain the presence of the French Mayors for the ng a purpose of holding conference with a view of estabeishing a complete commercial understanding. The British steamer Isiewoxth, from Pensacola via North Sydney, N. S., arrived at Newcaste otx Saturda Herill 'y' commander Captain h2atthews; was� washed overboard and drowned of Dun -.1,! net Head during the heavy weather ex- perienced off that point. The 'Morning Post says that Lady • ,. Winifred Ross, wife of Sir Charles Henryoss of Z3alaia oven Castle, g Parkhill, Rosshire, is suing for a di - vorce in Edinburgh. qh° Queen has sent a message to the of India expressing her sym- pathy with the people who are suffer- ing from the famine caused by the failure of the summer rains, and pro- tnisi.tlg to assist them, Sir Charles Die+ke, MX., who is a well-known authority on foreign af- fairs, has written a letter, in which he says, referring to the Ang:o-Verse enter-- Ion Boundary dispute, that he tains no doubt of the vandity of Great Britain's title to the territory up to and and iuc:tiding Point Barium. Henry Sta)i;°j', the African explor- er, has also written a letter, in which he touches upon the same subject., Ile says that he has the fullest eonfidenoe in Lord Salisbury's attitude in the `Venezuelan question A London correspondent cables: In one respect alone does Lord Saiis- bury seam likely to remain unchanged to the end. He has been for years the most influential advocate of total ab - stinence in England, and his speeches this week show that on this point at least he will stand' unshaken. That, he will be able to seoure any legisla-e, tion in the, direction of enforced tem -GO perance, let alone prohibition, is. how - ever, entirely unlikely. Several mem- bers of the present Government are personally friendly to the temperance cause, but the Tory party as a whale would revolt at the mere whisper of such an idea as attacking the brewers and liquor interests. The steamer Grecian was towed in by the steamer Tritonia. The Grecian sailed from Glasgow, October 13 for Montreal. On October 25, when about 150 miles west of Tory Island, she en- countered severe weather, during•which she lost her rudder. The Tritonia to�v- ed the Grecian to the tail of the bank and then resumed her voyage. The British Bristol,stsLoango, real, Williams, at from Montreal, reports that on October 25, in latitude 51 N. longtitude 19 W., she encountered a gale, in which the vessel labored and strained heavily, and she was hove to for three days. The engines broke down during the gale, but were re - after seven hours' work. She lost 61 head of cattle and had her mainsail, bridge and galley skylight broken. Right Rev. Mandell Creighton, D.D., Bii bop of Peterborougb, has been an- pointed, Bishop of London, in succes- Sion to Right Hon. and Most Rev. Frederick Temple, recently appointed Archbishop of Canterbury. Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, Secretary of State for the Colonies has been elected Lord Rector of the Universityof Glas- go`i., _• bout Our Own Country, s the United States, and 0 Globe, Condensed and y Reading. l'ADAa ments from Winnipeg end has been advanced cents pea loaf. am)lton, an aged and of London, is dead. .,soon, of Dundas, wasthemselves e his waggon in Hem- lestan, of Ottawa, hasLocal upervlsor of Dominion has contributed five to the Montreal Fire- wrier & Parry Sound fated from Ottawa to g e C;eoT of Ottawa are eualla s ands with the prohibi- ing the existing laws. ran into the bridge at St. Cath- ed the tinal for half unthe running nn do onB. Elm- ween Beamsvi114 and by imposed the Arch -forced al on the hay crop, a exempted from church t; the Dairy Commis -and stag a plan for assist- the North-West Ter- syndieat' s applying of darer oration un. p. the Canadian Mining Ltd.) , chairman of the Qua- )(°tars of Prisons and his residence in Mont- r, aged 73. nt i steamer, the r Last trip from Que» seven days and five ts the record. 1), Hamilton, has ex- of the Sudbury coal, a pinion that it is car- ', a useful article• son of Senator Scott, has been appointed Deputy Registrar for of Justice in Ottawa. e relief of the families :tinily killed. in Mon- )sen closed, „mooted -teen thousand dollars. tehia!l, of Dorchester sex county, Ont., cele- birthday on Friday. lanffshire, Scotland, as sentenced at Bran- imprisonment at hard ft of an express pack- 3,000 from Oak Lake )rd, the daughter of Robeatt Cr ford, , of " ,�itteusuicicle on home by hanging girl was not out of her the council of the Do- iodation will be held the erection of ;n buildings at Bisley a rifle team. Government has de- ke any promotion un- ion of the Civil Service .des Act, which will be ext session of Paella- at cruiserPetre1• accts- ey, Ont., on Thursday n board a number of .d herringnets, which a American boats for ian waters. d, employed in Booth's glare, was caught by 1 pitched several -fret. an opening in the illrace, and was swat tad drowned. p Robertson, superinten- sbyterian missions in is leaving for the Old Dile there will rages- as manyas possible n Canadand sttle indown . lay morning Maggie, and Mrs. Harrison, aged three years and ig with =lathes, which rens. She was so badly died a few hours af- the ace ith' of land should gun of Mr. Arthur vera members eo a rho went to the woods inured man is like- j an Horne, who has just tour of inspection of s a very favourable re- condition of the road in Manis of htoba,e ohehstated, est. OILS.�► addressing a meet- men at the Quebec said that Quebec Pro- itself to butter- the cheese industry use the quality of the is superior to that of of the Privy e an interim.order to & B. Railway Com- with the building of the Desjardins Canal §20,000 in the Bank of it for ,the Hamilton & many. _ r BRITAIN. connection. withthe . jpbile° will commence ' C Wales has Sounded in ;)cal school for dress- Itery. )r Paget is dead. He and was a brother of Ang+lesea. • ila)net will resume its" dnesda to prepare for y P et session. test bytheInver. ne est.per neat, file 2altoskq. dy-"" eon.ounced a failure. Cowley has brought a ' t herhusband o ',gaited ELn n t . adultery aition ado ion. pf a esolution adn ted P,. ,, :vem.niz, four thousand • A PROFESSIONAL JOB AT VARSITY. -= Crackswen Force open the Vault and Get A'wily With )$3,049 in Cask and•_^_ cheques. ' A despatch from Toronto, says :-The vault in the bursar's office at the Uni- varsity of Toronto, (hies been opened and teeth boxes containing about $3,000 ab- streets& Th'e burglary was commit- ted on Saturday evening between ? and 10 o'clock, ad there is no clue to the gu.lty pasties. Detectives Cuddy and and Seem" tine m etre war g on All Saturday morning the ecce Y g unt- ani F. A. Moura, and the bursar, J. E. Berkley Smith, were busy receiving fees, foe• t!liat was the Last day on which fees could be aicl, At one o'clock the books were closed and the money, am- mounting to some $3,000, about equally divided in cash and checlrs,• was put into a caeth 'pox and pieced on a shelf in the vault The vault and office doors were then securely leek". The janitor, Robert Martin, ants aroiutd tee glace up till about 7.15 Sat- urday evening, wlhen he went out, re -cambia turningshorts y after 10 ('dock. H° remained on duty till one o'clock, andUNEQU as all was quiet he went to his on Brunswick avenue. The bee - die, William Spencer, sleeps on tale pre- raises, but he heard nothing unusual on Saturday night. Monday morning, as usual Martin took the mails to the bursar's office et 9 o'clock. The room was in the wild- est cciufu>ion; chairs were overturned and papers ware scattered over the floor. The outside vault door )vas burst off its hinges and one penal of the inside door was blown in. He immediately gave the alarm and the defective department wascommun- ioated with. On examination it was that entrance had been effected by the top pane of one of the windows. A hole about a quarter of an Inch )n diameter had been bored, just above the combination of the vault door and a train of powder laid. distanceacross the floor a of several eet. After light- ing the fuse the burglars must have left the room to avoid injury from the explosion. The concussion could not have been very •great, for none of the windows, of which there ire several, have been damaged. «'ith the wards of the safe broken it was a simple mat- ter to pry open the door. 'Iwo catch were taken, one the property of University, containing eheques and bills, the other vas owned by the who had some private papers and a number of diamond rings in it. There were evidentlyseveral persons in the affair, for a number of muddy foot marks were visible on the window sill. The marks of a jimmy show that the gang tried to open one of iha windows of the vault, but as it was protected with sheet iron blinds their efforts were futile.3raired That the work was done by profes- signal burglars there is no doubt, but they must have had some information from parties inside. President Loudon has some suspicions, but he refused to make any statement when question- ed. It was learned however, that none of the Varsity employees were ens- petted. - " - , / ' '� � `� r _ 1 r - �"�� ~ a ' '-- - - ,s . s IK 4 - M -� w'-.:o-¢� rr T (!��i + ty '. 4r - '� * ` _�� �O' i t. � - " `""'^ •f - , y¢ ,. COLUMBIA STEEL One of the Pope Mfg. Co.'s five great • 1" 7- ,� }- " y + } f ' .� : _g -aY,.esrnden _ f' t `i�d, ` �g ! tJohn 1I „' �✓ J r r. ''' r ' ao �- TUBE MILLS. factories at Hartford, Conn. EARS Therefore our Steel rigidity. Columbia We appoint of testing and proving demonstrated that steel tubing would not do for Columbia Bicycles. The g ity was uncertain; the supply of the best was our own great tubemitts, shown above, for making tubing. No tubing in the world to -day equals high -carbon -steel and nickel -steel tubing for strength you are sure of qualitywhenyou buya Columbia. �. T.F.T) UNAPPROACHED. s • ordinary -- q ual• Limited. x1l. the Col - and stamp . w trio Catalogue,rrslfreeffromoany Columb) `agent ofHartfordfort Bicycles. 9•cent POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn. bit one selling agent in a town, and do not sell to Jobbers or middlemen. IfCeiumbias are not proper)yrepresentedinyoury:cintty,letuslcnow. .._, ,,, ,` ,_ ," '"��"`='"'•'•�"'"•"=•• - ` Idea, Where : If two one of accorded ledge motor, early not ;�cee aw Kincardine. irgpeless work. hopeless, tailed wine, �17 8s1 neuralgia by Sherwood, age, sir. '' ave ;statim �ienfrew, oaf able. thoda (Paisley, good trouble. the esrat two and eentative is pletely No three attribute strength," can complaint. and known 00 medical dying, Ret. o2 tsr, to . . oS-13. - twelve geetfon, T!>s I14 , 8�meg a Same Rich it is blades had the race, of weaknesses gratia he also who up through lean Nervine subject. to and two day it ue1 three suffered His of. him of my suffering; and and night's agonizing day bottles can Mr. C. His medicine bottles enjoy feelin bailiff bad," but, From Nervine and :to my usual Maritime Jolles, "Yoare treatment not C. s jj I lave By et �� • Have Female. - can truthiullr human ne Lure molds the How im- health and thea lot of by scores tG hove Goma tc South Amort Armstrong. of of the aufle3'ed help.it not help. " ei six bottler say this )xis dtLecteci Jona Wee Benno -Mut the at• slid tan, Three :rev Heath of a reicommen:led 28 battles o that she is to Finn impoverish neves. " Al 7a lealiia, o have forsaker to get re I eammeilde.� Nervine. Th errata for." I. Mrs. ti- =tap under th Canada an, and Dery to get an; she says, "t twervine, ant that if I hat be alive to valuable b to then fecal tilos talkie i language .o there, a nr3 ar The doze) speak has the hundred of Ontarle of the: bon2ln is base 'th.at al how.des It strike which flow system. I tali or bU w , tit iR kgon4 . g B the Hundreds, Those Who J Been Cured of Dire Disewse South American Nervine, ' • {j r •fip+��( �( �tr�r j r}'et �y5811�1U1t!! a�11 il�lru5il t4 lt'11ica Other Medicines Have Failed and Doctors 't. Pronounced the Crises Beyond Cureti `.),his Great Discovery Has Proven ansider Genuine Elixir of Life. Verdict Comex From Old and Young, Male and and Poor. and From All Corners of the Dominion the case that he who makes of grass grow where only grown before is a benefactor what is the position to be )cradle that man who by his know -[portant the laws of life and health;strength nd strength t anti potion of an where lane Imen had before prevailed? Is )telt e. public benefactor? Let Ithem have been down and are the use of South Ani- give their opinions on John Boyer, banker, of Ont., had made himself a Invalid through years of over- At least he felt his case was for the best physicians had do him good. He tried Ner- these are his wordy : " 3 glad- : Nervine as strong and curedme aridI i s, of Irieaford, was our ad of of the stomach and bowels bottles of this medicine. Jas. of Windsor, at 70 years at from an attack of paraly- life, at that age, was despair- But four bottles of Ivtrrine back his natural strength. A indigestion, W. F. Bolger, of says : " Nervine cured Die • which' seemed Maur- had baffled all format me- efforts." Peter 17ssion, of loot flesh and rarely rad a sleep, because of stomach He says : "Nervine Stopped pains in my stomach the I used it. I have now taken and I feel entirely relieved sleep like -a top." A repre- farmer, of Western Ontario, J. Curtis, residing near Wind- health was seemingly com- destroyed through la grippe. did him any good. "To of Nervine," lie says, ' I my restoration to health and Neither man or woman life when troubled with liver This was the sentiment of W. J. Hill, Bthe well- of Braee�bridge. " I was says he, " that one of my attendants said that Y was thank God, I am )lot dead the first few do see I 'took I commenced t:, feel be t- ear -day restored completely health_" A residezat of Provinces; In the person of Sussex,;N:B:, says : "Per 1 wee, a martyr to 1Jad1- constipation and headache, of several physicians bein' tae. I have taken ti, few r T o1.3 Wholesale and LU L 'S Tilos• �� ioiclarx bottles of Nervine, and say that I am a new man." A shrewd observer of said : " The hand that moves the world." it is, then, that should be rnadt oft ars of this ready of the benefits that through the use of can Nervine. Mrs. R. Oriiita, wife of the aolporteur, Bible Society of that town, for six years from nervous Medical assistance did all," she says, " I Have taken, of Nervine, and can truthfully is Liza ono medtoina that a more is my ease." Mrs• woody has been for 40 years of i►lesherton, and has rcaahec4 lotted three -erecta years years ago her system stLStairted ere shock through' title daughter, Nervine was She perseveringly toojc medicine, with the result gay again strong and hearty. grade of women suffer from ed blood and weakened vitality,' says Mrs. Brampton, "seemed to my system. I was unable lief from any source until taking South American results are cost satiatactcx"y- far than I could have hoped came within the way of leton, of Wingham, to treat best physicians, both in England, for heart disease ous debility, but she failed relief. " 1 was advised,'' take South American raper say T do believe not done ao I would not day." Newspaper space is too permit of further additions earnest words of testimony who know just what theyare about. In the common the day, they have been speaking from the heart. or more witnesses that here their counterparts by not only in the province but in °very other section ion. Souti _imerican Nervine on a s-eiitiilc 9rincible a_ dura a dertainty, no matter perste the ease may be, at the nerve centers trent the fife blind o; the whole is not meth t a_ `of c n pa is ,complete and: coznprelieaslvR application.- r , Retail A tent ot 4x tor. 0 Crediton i.irug ;utero;` a RICH DISCOVERIES. _. Corondnu► 10 1 In hustings County, and Gold on Bonanza Creak. A valuable discovery of a stone call- ed. "corundum," which is akin to em- cry, has been made in the Cbunty of Hastin' s. This stone is now im octad g P from Carolina at a cost of about $80 per tan. Dr. Dawson, Director of th a Geological Survey, has reported the portant discovery to Hon. R. w. Scott, acting Minister of the Interior. Mr. Scott learned that the land upon which the discovery was made belentged to the Crown lands, and he therefore had it withdrawn from settlement. It is said that there are other veins of the same stone extending beyond the Crown kinds which will make the own- ers wealthy. Mr. Scott was notified of another discovery in the Yukon lis- trict, Mr. Ogilrtrie of the Geological Survey, who is there at present looking into the delimitation of the boundary between Canada and the United States, writes to the Minister from Fort Curl ahy, which it is well known is withintoo Canadian territory.. Mr. Ogilvie re- ports large discoveries of gold on Bon- anza Creek, a branch. of the River Klondike, shown on the map as Deer River, which joins the Yuleon above Fort Reliance, about 100 miles east of the Canadian boundary.. It is de- as the richest field yet discov- ered and. 200 elai*nia have already been steered out and there is ample room for 1,000 claims. If properly prospected. there is work for over 2,000 men. One man found $75 in an !hour's work. One nugget discovered on the surface was worth 12. Thus is an assurance of iha ri(hness of the field. Ct is said bhat frotin $300 to $400 per clay could beaor. turned out if properly worked. Mr. Ogilvie requests Iiia t same arrange- mentis be made for the Laying out of claims in order to avoid. future die- Utes: paten — MOONBLINK. _ itr:wee Disease er ilio Eyes rrevaient in the Tropics. Three cases of "moonbiink" occurred on the British steamship Acanthus, whish reached Philadelphia the other day. After the low-lying hills fringe ing the shores of Batavia faded from view on the afternoon of July ,14 for eighty days her crew of sixty-six of- fivers and seamen saw no land, sighted no vessel and encountered no storm. Among the crew are three seamen who, during the run across the Indian Ocean suffered terribly from sudden blindness - •at night, the result of that strange an- ease of the eyes prevalent iu the tropics, and known to sailors as "moonblink." One bright, moonlight night, while the Aoanthus was steaming across the In- dian 'Ocean, one of them findinghis berth in the forecastle uncomfort- ably hot, went out and lay upon the deck. The moon was nearing her full and slinne alunost directly overhead. When the watch was changed at mid- night he was awakened and was hor- rifled to find himself blind. At first 'the captain thought the man might be shamming to avoid going on duty, but an investigation was made, and it was found that he could not seealthough his eyes were wide open. The calamity was at once diagnosed at a case .of "mooubhink," and the captain caution- ed the men against running such risks, When da be an to break sight be an to return, and by sunrise hec could. as well as if nothing unusual had hap- pend.: Ail of that day the ease formed the chief topic of conversation and when night came two more men determined to test the effect of t!he moon, After a two hours' nap 'an the full glare of the moon .bottle men were awakened totalily blind. An order from the cap- prevented any further experiment- in that line during the rest of the vay e. A LIVING ENGLISH J'UDGE'S TOMB. --- The Monerment lunger Which Lord Esher and ili5 Niro WILL be Buried. In Esher churchyard stands a mag-$ nificient monument with the recum- bent figute of an English Judge of the Court of Appeals .dressed •in his robes and by his side a beautiful wb- man. A casual visitor would probably regard this as: memorizingsome dead g , and 'gone ;legal luminary, but as a i- • matter of fact, it is the tomb which isfain to receive the remains of tar living Judge and his wife when they cast off. this mortal coil. The Jud;ge in question is Lord Esher, Master of the Rolls, and he has spent many thousands of dollars in preparing this beautiful tomb. For p p g months, a weal -known srtulptor, F, J. Williramson, was engaged 1n carrying out the work, and now, the tomb stands m the churchyard ready for its future inmates. The canopy of marble sur _werescat-the recumbent effigies is a mounting .the ,r triumph of the, soul tors art and the P p whole tomb is beautyfull ornamented. i • is y l Mr,Williamson generally known in •y ' "" England as the ween s Sculptor, est of iiia ro a. orders for as he gets m y statues, His .best known work is a of Wales which st rue of .the Prince w^ a . • l of the Royal College stands i ons, onll y „1 - Epns an thea . es bwn-. of „Surge `111ilanu ens 17ent. in London. �` QUITE A BARGAIN. Arthur, dear, she said, I do wish you would not use cigarettes. Why B Because you don't know what is in them, • C oh,yEs I do! Why, for the trifling sum that. a cngarette costs, you get rico- tine, valerian, possibly a little mor- hie and anyuantut of carbon. q• Y She looked up intro his eyes and mor mored, Arthur dela, it gore seem like a , _. bargain, down t > t 9 FLIES OCEAN JOURNEYS. Atnong the things that furnish oc- cut talon for the eyes and minds of transatlantic voyagers are the house c accompany the teat t flies which omp y g seam ships from one side of the,ocean to the - other. In fine, sunshiny weather the flies buzz cheerfully about the steel- teedplaces on the.deeks, and when the x �. _ wind blows high they tale refuge to the cabins and salons.', The flies often • renmen •'with+ the •shi while • in port;and pp t return with her on her nex trip, thus erossung thr 'ocean several times in sur)- _ cession and perhaps spending the feta 'season• at sea. ANEW WANT. ; . Well, said Mrs. Wifflea to the tramp, I- suppose sou want scene tihin to eat ?g e 313,01'n m 9 this. 8. , No kind lady,rap?ted the wayfarer . f you had a cat -off bi- I calledto 1 q s a d tyro ins cycle to give ase B n, t t