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The Wingham Times, 1903-06-25, Page 3To the Weery Dyspeptic, Wa italc This Questions Why don't you remove that weight at the pit of the Stomach? Why don't you regulate that variable appetite, and condition the digestive organs so that it will not be necessary to starve the stomach to avoid distress atter eating? The first step is to regulate the bowels, For this purpose Burdock Blood Bitters Has No Equal. It acts promptly and effectually and permanently cures all derangement% o digestion. A LIFE [Elden Bees a -humin' in Plow Lazy clouds a-haugin' Plow Sunshine laugbin' Where the shadows While low-leaniu' Plow Jaybird's laughin' Plow Worryin' only Plow Fish a-jumpin' Know flow mighty yer To get at 'em at Plow When the sun seems Plow Ain't no sense in, Plow Ic don't snake your Jes' to kick about To talk back at Plow Take the good the Plow Jes' be happy that Plow Don't be dreaulin' That won't better W'en yer done, Plow -LESSON. - Small.] the clover - ahead! over - ahead! to the river, leap an' quiver, shore -weeds shiver ahead! at yer trouble - ahead! makes it double - ahead! jes' to tease yer; well 'twould please yer leisure -- ahead! tired o' shiuin', ahead! vain repinin'- ahead! furl ows stra'gbter your fate, er yer Creator, ahead! Lord is givin'- ahead! yer livin'; ahead! lougin' wishiu' ; yer condition- there's crackin' frshitu'- ahead! ABSOLUTE ,, SECURITY1 'l•`' CenUine r•'• Cart Little LiverPills Must Bear Seo Fac.Slatilo • r i t.04eice.......4:9,----ezt:ze? p Signature of Wrapper Below. Gory small end ito take as sugar. as easy Fop oI Z1NESS: FOR OILIouSNEs's• FOR TORPID LIVER. ,fOR,CONSTIPATIOlt. FOR SALLOW SKIN., FOR THE COMPLEXION MUITnAVE MATURE, cG i 1 CARVERS ITTLE _ t 'VER PILLS. T' ,�' rya 1. �OEalfVEq. is Gats I Purely Vegetable..., . CURE SICK HEADACHE. Constipation Does your head ache ? Pain back of your eyes ? Bad taste in your mouth? It's your liver! Ayer's Pills are liver pills. They cure consti- pation, headache, dyspepsia. 25c. All druggists. t f c j t t' a it Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black? Then use BUCKINGHAM'S DYEW;, s'ers 10 M. or DaecxaTs, OR R. P. HAu a Co., NMMUA, N.N. t i d IT PAYS f r t t TO ADVERTISE h ti IN THE a, ft bi a: TIMES. OTARIO'S PROTEST. Against Dominion. Interference In Provincial Affairs,, MR. PATTUI,Lo'S MOTION, Encroachment Ilpon Provincial Jurl,dta- Oen-Involves an Invasion of the .• Rights of the slunioJpal#ties-Mover Gives $Spey Instances of the Practice, end His motion Was Carried Unanimously. Toronto, Juno 17, -In the Legisla- ture yesterday, Mr. Pattullo moved the following resolution: "Treat this House protests against the tendency, of lato years, on the part of the Dominion Parliament, in the matter of legislation, where- by companies are being incorporat- ed by special acts, though such com- panies have purely Provincial ob- jects, and come within the purview of Sub -sections 11 and 16 of Sec- tion 92 of the Brftieh North Ameri- ca Act. "That the expedient which it has become customary to adopt, of in- serting in bills the mere assertion that the works of the company, be- ing incorporated, are declared to be "for the general advantage of Can- ada," affords no reasonable protec- tion against the encroachment upon Provincial jurisdiction, the bills be- ing entertained and passed, appar- ently, in ordinary routine, and with- out reference to any serious consid- eration of the question of jurisdic- tion. "That there is involved in this growing tendency towards encroach- ment on tho Provincial field of leg- islation, an invasion of the rights of municipalities which this house re- gards as of serious importance. "That the Provincial laws relating to electric railways have been do - signed to safeguard, in many re- spects, the rights and interests of the municipalities through which these railways run, or aro chartered to be constructed, and the protec- tion to municipalities thus afforded will bo prejudicially affected, if not entirely removed, by. the assumption and exercise of the 'right' to legislate regarding these local railways on the Part of tho Dominion Parliament. "•Thin House, therefore, respectful- ly urges the Dominion Parliament ttot to pass legislation of this Iia - tore pertaining to matters heretofore generally understood to be within Provincial jtiuisciiction, and which, in their nature, aro matters of pure- ly local concern." klr.,,rattnllo's Speech. Mr. Pattullo, ill speaking to his motion, said the Province of On- tario generally got the worst of it, and ho instanced the coal duties where the people of Ontario paid two er three million dollars to the Do- minion because one of the eastern provinces wanted the duty kept on cal. In several ov rel r s e ec s t theDomi- Pn ion Governincnt was invading the field of the province,. and he men- tioned that the Atlas Loan Com- pany, one of the defunct St. Thomas companies, had gone to Ottawa and secured legislation allowing it to go into stock speculation after the pro- vince had refused it such legislation. This was a case of invading the leg- islative sphere of the province and tete clanger of it had been shown re- cently. There should be no Dominion leg- slation in matters of purely local nterest, but there had been an incll- tation in the Dominion Parliament to invade the sphere of the pro- inces. In the matter of electric railway charters there had been a disposition to ignore the province. These were purely local affairs. Speaking of the 'Toronto and Ham- ilton Electric Railway Bill, Mr. Pat- tullo said he was not surprised that tete city of Toronto was taking E opposition to it. If the bill was allowed to go through when the I street railway charter runs out the people of Toronto would be I the mercy of the combination that s now seeking wide powers. He protested against the granting of a Dominion charter to the Mac- cenzie-Pellatt syndicate, and instanc- ed several electric railways that had received Dominion charters, though they were entirely local affairs. Hon. Mr. Gibson. The Attorney -General said the On- ario Government had protested time and again against the practice of the Dominion in infringing the rights of he province. Companies applying or Dominion charters had but to make a declaration that the proposed V • was for the general advantage of Canada, and it would be hard to find an undertaking that would not ome under that declaration. A num- ber of electric railway companies I, • seeking incorporation by the Dominion year by year, and ho pro- ested against any assumption of urisdiction on the part of the Do- inion.m Mr. Foy said it was quite clear he proposed electric railway he- wn Toronto and Hamilton was a NV • of purely a local character, nd the Attorney -General was right 3 protesting against the asuump- ion of jurisdiction by the Domin- on. The greatest care should be mado by the Dominion in making a eclaration that the work for which charter is being applied for . was or tho general advantage of tho Do- minion. There ought to be home ale in the provinces. He thought hat if the Dominion incorporated ha Toronto and Hamilton Company r any similar companies tho Legis - titre should go a little further and ave them vetoed by the Governor- General or by the Imperial authori- es. "It is a clear invasion of municip- l rights," said Mr. St. John, re- erring to the Toronto and ITamilton II. It gave the roinpeny the pow- to Ilse the highways in defiance ! tho rights of municipalities. Astir.. Preston (Brant), Whitney, THE SYINGIL I TIMES, JUNE 25, 103 Are just what every weak, nervous, run. down woman need% to make her strong and well,. They cure those feel. ings of smothering and sinking that come on at times, make the heart beat strong and regular, give sweet, refresh, ing sleep and banish head- aches and Here vousness, They infuse new life eed energy into. dispirited,ttealth. shattered women ~�•J. who have corse to think there is no cure for them. They cure Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Nervous Prostration, Brain Fag, Faint and Dizzy Spells, Listlessness, After Effects of La Griype and Fever, Anemia,. General Debility and all troubles arising from a run-down system. Price 50o, per boa or 3 for $1.23 all druggists or mailed by THE T. MILBVRIi CO., LIMITED, Toronto, Ont. Nesbitt. Crawford, and Hendrix add- ed their approval of the resolution. The Premier said the Dominion Got ornmeat had been encroaching upon the jurisdiction of the pro- tinco, and it had cost the province a good deal of money to fight them. Tho Toronto and Hamilton Com- pany could not get the powers they wanted from this province, and so they went to Ottawa. He thought the protest of this house would do some good. Tho resolution was then unani- mously carried. Order For Papers. An order for the correspondence re- lating to the resignation of Sheriff Dana of Leeds and Grenville was made by the house on Mr. Whit- ney's motion. Several resolutions relating to the Crown Lands Department were al- lowed to stance over, owing to the absence of the Minister. Answers to Mr. Whitney. Premier Ross, in , reply to ques- tions put by Mr. 1Vhitney, said the Government had not yet decided on the remuneration of the Gamey Com- mission; he could not say yet whe- ther there would be any railway legislation brought down before the end of the session; nothing would bo shut out of the discussions of the Legislature during the- progress of the Gamey debate. ' Mr. Stratton, in reply to Mr. Whitney, said ho would enquire if an official of his department had fur- nished one of the speakers on the an- ti -vaccination bill with his brief and if alleged offensive language to an opposition member came from such otlicial. The House will meet this morning at 11 o'clock. The Gamey report will be tho feature of tho debates for the r estf o the week. NOTICES OF MOTION. The following notice of motion by Mr. Whitney has been given: "That this House disapproves of the action of the Government in en- tering into the agreement with Wil- liam Mackenzie, Henry Mill Follett and Frederick Nicholls, bearing date of the 29th of January, 1903, om- poworing them to take water from the Niagara River for the generation of electrical or pneumatic horsepower for commercial use under the terms contained in tho said agreement, and declares that all such agreements should have been submitted to this House for ratification." Just and Impartial. The Premier's motion to adopt the Judges' report in the Gamey case, which will be moved this morning when the House meets at 11 o'clock, reads as follows: "That His Honor the Lieutenant - Governor, having appointed a Com- mission, on the address of the Legis- lative Assembly, to enquire into and investigate the charges of bribery set forth in the statement made to the Assembly on tho llth day of March last by Robert 11. Gainey, member - elect of the District of Manitoulin, and the further statement made by him in the House on the 27th day of March last, and the report of the Commissioners so appointed, having been presented to the Legislative As- sembly on tho 4th day of June, in- stant, this House adopts the said report and thanks the Commission- ers for their just and impartial con- duct in the matters referred to Kidney Disorder Are no respecter of persons. People in every walk of life are troubled. Have you a Backache? If you have it is the first sign that the kidneys are not working properly. A neglected Backache leads to serious Kidney Trouble. Check it in time by taking DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS "'I1IE GREAT KIDNEY SPECIFIC" They cure all kinds of Kidney Troubles from Backache to Bright's Disease. 50e. a bo* or N far si.s5 eU dastard or THE DOAN XIDNEY PILL CO* Tetonto, Ont. EEL E. IL DE ART. Taken III. in His Home and Died Almost immediately, HEART TROUBLE THE CAUSE. Sketels of the Eminent Methodist Divine, Who Was, .t°4r Twenty -Five ]fears, the Editor of the Christian Guerd- lan-A Well-lfnown Writer of VirJle Prose and Poetry.., Complied Hymn Book. Toronto, Juno 18. -The sudden deathyesterdayafternoon of Rev.r. Dewart came as a great shock to thousands of Toronto's citizens, and tate announcement will be re- ceived with deep regret throughout Canada, for the name of Dr. llosvurt was well known from ocean to ocean. Dr. Dewart, who was 75 years of age, is survived by a widow and two sons, Hartley 11., K.C., County Crown Attorney, and Mtward, of the hank of Commerce. The former was in Ottawa yesterday, but loft last• night for Toronto. In the death of lir. Dewart the Methodist Church in Canada loses one of its oldest ani foremost repre- sentatives. lie was a man of great natural ability and force of charac- REV. DR. E. II. DEWART. ter, a vigorous writer, a powerful debater and an able preacher. He was in the true sense of the term a self-made man, with his success largely attributable to his indomit- able perseverance and unwearied ap- plica+tion. Literary composition, both in prose and verse, was always Dr. De - wart's favorite employment. In politics, Dr. Dewart was a staunch h su ?Porter of the Liberal party, and in the provincial elec- tions in 1898 contested North Tor- onto in his party's interest against G. F. Marter, but was defeated by the narrow of n 24. Career of Dr. Dewart. The Rev. Edward Bartley Dewart Was born in County Cavan, Ireland, in 1828, came to Canada with his parents six years later, and passed his boyhood and youth in the Coun- ty of Peterboro. His early oppor- tunities for . obtaining an education were few, but the effects were large- ly countorlyalanced by his incessant study, his passion for reading and an insatiable thirst for learning. In 1848 he became a student at the Toronto Normal School, which had been opened just a few months pre- viously for public instruction, trav- eling the entire distance from his home to the city, 120 miles, on foot. After a period of study and school teaching, he entered the ministry in 1851, on the St. Thomas circuit, and was ordained in London in June, 1855. His first station was Dundas, after which ho labored suc- cessively at St. Andrew's, Adell- town, Montreal (West), St. John's, Toronto (Elm street Church), and Ingersoll. In 1869 ho becamo editor of The Christian Guardian, continu- ing in that office until Sept., 1894, when he was. superannuated. He re- ceived the degree of D.D. from Vic- toria University in 1879. In 1873 ho was a delegate to the English Wesleyan Conference: In 1881 a member of the Ecumenical Confer- ence in London, and in 1891 of a similar conference in Washinlgton. Ho was also for two years president of the Toronto Conference. In 1880 he was president of tho Ontario branch of tho Dominion AIliance and in 1889 president of the Canadian Press Association. His literary taste aided much in compiling the new Methodist hymn book. He was always a strong ad- vocate of Methodist union, and the union of Victoria University with the Univessity of Toronto. Some of his volumes and pamphlets published are: "The True Church," "Broken Reads," "Way Marks," 'Priestly Pretentions Disproved," "Curious Catholicity," "The Development of Doctrine," "Jesus, the Messiah," "Storm Signals," "Misleadin Lights," and "Living Epistles." He also edited "Selections from Canad- ian Poets," and published a collec- tion of original verso entitled, "Songs of Life." Stabbed in the Neck. St. Petersburg, Juno 18. Kroushe- van, tho Jew baiter, and the editor of Tho Bossarabetz, tho articles in which the anti-Semitic organ in ICishineff, are believed to have been largely responsible for the massacre of the Jews in Kishlnoff, was at- tacked by a party of Jews in the street here yesterday. Ile Nivea stab- bed in the neck by ono of the Jews, but the wound is not believed to be fatal. His assailant %vas captured. Beth Sons Drowned. 'Nblsetoye N.W.T., June 18.-eLeslie and Ziordon Martin, sons of Joseph Martin, a farmer living near here, were drowned - Tuesday night it Wolfe Creek, AWAITING DEVI;I,QPMENT$. Startling News Jenne $t. ' homes.. Liquidators Por #IIIA' Appointed. St. Thornes, June 17. -The panic hero has subsided, and the people whose money is tied up in the Atlas and Elgin Lean Companies are simp- ly awaiting the developments of the liquidators, tI`he affairs of the Atlas Co., it is feared, are hopelessly in- volved. The London Western Co., whielt was appointed liquidators of the El- gin Co., has sent Ernest Weldon to tako temporary eherge of the office. The impression is still that its de- positors will be paid in full, and that the shareholders will be returned 75.. or 80 per cent. of their money. The other loan companies have had a few withdrawals of deposits this morning, and the poste -nice received about %10,000 on deposit from this source yesterday. Rowley, tho defaulting and ab- sconding manager of the Elgin Loan Co., has not been heard from. REJECTED BY 276 TO 217. Ur Wyndham Declines to .Accept Amend- ments of Mr. Redmond. London, June 1.7. -In the house of Commons yesterday John 11cd- mond's amendment to the Irish Land Bill asking for the abolition of the minimum price at which the land- lord may sell, even though tho land- lord and tenant might agree on a lower price, was discussed. Mr. Wyndham was unable to accept the amendment to raise the minirnum re- duction to 15 per cent. in the case of second term rents and to 25 per Cent. in the case of term rents. John Redmond, T. Healy, and John Maley complained of Mr. Wyndhani's atti- tude. Mr. Wyndham said he realized the gravity of the situation, but the minimum reductions must remain 10 and 20 per cent. respectively. Mr. Redmond's amendment was re- jected by a vote of 217 to 276. - MITCHELL PREVAILED. Alt Talk of Strike Among Hard Coal Mliners Silenced. Scranton, Pa., Juno 17. -President Mitchell's advices has prevailed and all talk of etrike in the anthracite coal fields has been silenced. The convention of aline workers yester- day unanimously adopted resolu- tions prosiding that each district should 'oto separately on the elec- th,n of the representatives on the Conciliation Board. The throe dis- triA presidents were named as the miner's representatives on the board. Another resolution was adopted pro- viding that all grievances, instead of heing thrashc-d out in debate, should he given to tiro ton^itiation Board for consideration. ST WINNIPEG'S LAT E FIRE. Premier Ilnlfour's 'lock in the Canadian City 10 Ashes. Winnipeg, 'June 17. -The old Bal- fourlock b at the corner of 1llcDer- mott avenue and Rorie street was gutted by fire at an early hour yes- terday morning. The business con- cerns located in the block were: head 4 Clark, manufacturing jewellers ; 11c Ic 7a o s, cigar manufacturer; ford Stationery Co., printers: McAllister & Watt, smallware and notions ; Toms & Davidson, and the Boss tea agency. The block was a three-stor- ey brick structure, and was owned by flight Hon. Arthur James Bal- four, leader of the British IIouse of Commons.. The total loss will be £80.000. First Spike Drtveb. North Bay, June 17. -An event of more than local interest took place Monday, when tho ilrst spike in the Temiskaming and Northern Ontario Railway was driven by Mayor Mc- Kenzie. Already about one mile of track is laid, and a work train; on it. • Suicide Used Hammer. Windsor, June 17. -Mrs. Gregory Langlois, about 45 years old, living on the Maisonville road, near Walk- erville, made a desperate attempt to kill herself yesterday morning by smashing her skull with a hammer. She will die. From 25,000 to 30,000 letters are post- ed every year in England without any address. Marmalade Jar A substantial evidence of Diamond hall's marvelous value offerings. Bohemian Glass Jar Sterling Silver Top Holed -Pries i1.S0 (Nxpress prepaid to any address) A largo number other epeeist Yalue entries aro handsomely illustrated in out new Wedding Girt Folder. Write tor a copy and It w111 be tots warded at ones lies of cast, RYRIE BROS. 3E'YW3"1.181iS 118, E O. 122 and 124 emee 8t., Toronto DEATH ROIL IS 5000IKINGOOMOFPET Awful Disaster That ee fel the Town of Heppner, Oregon, CANADIANS AMONO DROWNED Wall of Water Overwhelmed tire Wown- %11e Inhabitants Were et Diluter. end Mad :to Iatintetleu el Veneer eon, SO Et )vas Upon Them, -sir, Hugh C# Frk, A#. Y.V„ lr'eers Fur 111M llro!h rr, Toronto, Juno '.e4. --1t is feared that a brother of lluglh Clark, M. I'. 1'., may have been one of the victims of tike water -spout horror in the west. Mr. Clark •wass in the general store business of Miner to Co., and has been in IIepprter for seven or eight years. The home of Oscar Reiner, one of the firm, is mentioned as having been demolished by the flood, and Mfrs. Miner drowned. L, hili),, 1 yopia l.() t. London, June t. t. -•Among the hun- dreds of people who lost their lives in the cloudburst at Ileppner, Ore- gon, may be a former resident of this city, Mr. A. M. Gunn, and son of Mrs. Catharine Gunn, Oxford street. Ho lived in the town of Ileppner, and it is feared he and his family, con- sisting of his wife and four children, play have been lost. Reports say that Mr. Boyd and family, who lived next door to the tlunns', are lost. Later reports state that Mr. and Mrs. Gunn were both drowned. Five 11uudrr,1 Dend. The Dalies, Ore., June f. -A tele- phone message from Ione status that the latest find in the ruins of Hepp nor indicates that the loss of life will be much greater than at first supposed. The casualty list will foot up 500, and many of the bodies will never bo recovered. One hundred and fifty of tho best residences were swept from the earth. Among the incidents of the catas- trophe was the saving of tbreo lives by Julius Keitley, 70 years old, who rode a mile and a half and saved three people. James Itiernan, the Oregon Railway and Navigation Company agent, met his death at the telegraph key trying to call Port- land, to inform the outside world of the impending calamity. All 1 viten Suddenly. Portland, Oregon, Juno 7.1.-N. I. Tooker of Portland, a survivor of the Heppner disaster, says the cloud- burst struck the town at 5.30 p.m., when everyone was at supper. "All Were taken so suddenly," says Mr. Tooker, "that nothing could be done to savo them. Homes, stores and buildings in the main portion of the town wore torn loose and driven onward. Those who were on the streets ecus shout d warnings cas they rushed madly to the hills for their lives." David McAtee, an eye -witness of the disaster, says: "Oscar Miner's h us w d m i 0 o as c of shed and Mr . s Min- er drowned, It e the rest of the family succeeded in saving their lives by clinging to the roof. The house of Mr. Boyd, and Mrs. Walton were al- so destroyed, and both families lost. "Tho house of Benjamin Patterson, Mr. Gunn and Mr. Noble were entire- ly demolished, and all persons in the three families drowned, as were the families of James Jones and Henry Blair." Land Tinder 'Water. Vancouver, B. C., June 11'. -The water In the Fraser is now higher than it has been since 1894. Pitt Modow dyke has broken down, and as a result over a thousand acres of land is under water. At Upper Su- mas, William Melbourne, not think- ing the current so swift, waded in and was swept away and drowned. Fifty families aro deserting their farms on Niceman Island. REPORTED MISSING. The MaoDnfr and Her Crow of Thirty Men Lost. New York, June :.7. -The British barque MacDuff, which left here on April 28, in ballast, for Pensacola, Fla., was reported yesterday as missing by hor agents. She had a crew of about 30 men. Socialists Load in Germany. Berlin, June 1'f. --• The leading feature in the Reichstag elections, which were held yesterday, was the success of the Social Democrats, who have probably increased their representation by 15 seats and their total vote to 2,500,000, or 400,000 more than in 1898. All the parties concede the success of the Socialists, which hay been at the expense of them all. New Grand Masonin secretary. Hamilton, June 17. -The new Grand Secretary of the Grand Ma-. sonic Lodge of Canada was yester- day morning appointed by Mr. J. E. Harding, Grand Master, who camp in from Lindsay for the purpose. Mr. IIugh Murray, P.C.M., of Iiatn- ilton, received the appointment. suc- ceeding Major J. J. Mason, of this city. who died Monday. Doily Sent to Hamilton. Deseronto, June 17. -mho body or Bombadier George Reid, 4th Field Battery, who was drowned in the Salmon River Monday evening, was sent to Hamilton yesterday after- noon. fternoon. A military funeral was held at Camp Deseronto, and the re- mains were sent forward accompan- led by a number of the ooros. Burned to Death. Toronto Junction, Juno 19. -The two.year-old daughter of 31r. while playing in the hack yard, ran en to the smoldering embers of rub- bish heap, which Ignited icor cloth- ing. Before her mother discovered herr, the flames had severely bunted her body. and, although immediate remedies wore applied, the infant die litst evident. Servia Practically Ruled Military Despotism, THE CZAR AND ME' NEW Nichola* Ea* tient mug peter Wlsise* tor the Pre*ilerlty Iteterprise, Which Me }tepee itesult in li)tlrplaess For Teeple --Assassins Vele ve Their Jeb. 13,dgrade, Juno is'. --Tho po of Bing 1'eter I, promises to b 11e mere than tent 01 a 1'o,ftti Usti. 'Pile real head of the co will be a military dictatorship, der the leaders of tee revo:u Col. 1llast'l,in tint! C:ui, 11IItt;elti The nett/ Bing is alleeet wit ally personal adherents, •ttid the ing spirits of the urrny, it Is tho probable, Would jl:ct as readily der hint as they slid his predeee should he oppose their aims. At the present moment, the country is under military rule, although no prefectos in the con districts have been removed, ea accompanied by an army office attends the prefect wherever he There has been no disorder, he er. Extremely forcible argil were found necessary to suppress Itatilce' aspirations for a republi The foremost adyoceto of a re Mean Ierm oI erovernment was bonir Schiokovles, editor of Belgrade Odjok. Finding him im vious to arguments, the conspire invited hien to a dinner at the cors' Club. His hosts told him t unless he agreed to support I Peter there would ho ono head les relgrade. The editor yielded to force of this reasoning, and acme the situation. Ile is now Ministc Justice in the new Government. conspirators 'wore Paid. Berlin, June 17. The Berl' Tagcblatt's correspondent at P, asserts that Colonel llfaschin and fellow conspirators received a 1 sum of money for their deed. Czar Congratulates Him. Geneva. Juno 17. -The Czar telegraphed to Icing Peter as lows: "Learning that the Sen and Skupschtina had formally p Claimed you King of Servia, I v ture to express to Your Majesty cern wishes for the prosperity your country, and the hope that may come to your assistance in enterprise you have undertaken the happiness of your people. (Si ed) "Nicholas." Ontario Medical Mon. Toronto, June 17. -Tito press presentatives were not admitted tted the 23rd annual meeting of the tario Medical Association yesterd Dr. J. C. Mitchell, the President, livered a long annual address. the question i on of vaccination th e a dress said they must "continue protect the public from thcroselve in this matter, and in a concludi paragraph on this subject said: ' would be safe to pay no attenti to these anti-vaccinationists a class them in with the followers Christian Science, the Dowieit Vitosophists, Ostoeopathists, etc were they not such a menace by re son of their position as guardians the public health." There were n many doctors present at the open session. In tete evening a smoki concert was held. Killed in- a rall. Woodstock, June 17. -Angus Sut errand fell from a tvaeon in Buffal and was killed. I1is body w brought home to Braemar last nigh CURIOUS FACTS ❑A Robert Bruce farthing realized 1; In order to pay for their education expenses 25 students of Ponusylvan University have hired themselves o for the holidays as waiters at seasi hotels, and as conductors on electri tramcars. An invention for manufacturing ga out of chalk has been tried in Su sex with, it is said, surprising suoces To every 100 tons of chalk will be mire about ten tons of coke or coke breez and from this it is claimed 10,300,00 cubie feet of gas will be obtained. Throwing its rider into the road, runaway bay horse, in East Eighty seventh street, New York, dashed into building, up a flight of stairs,and kicke in the door of a first -storey flat. Then it became docile, and quietly submitted to be led downstairs and out into the street. A Washington official who has been inquiring into the cause of spring sui- cides has issued a report in which he declares that the majority aro due to eating strawberries out of season. This indulgence, he says, invariably profit -wee mental depression, and leads people to think of self-destruction. DILEKONE A ,J E FHP L. S mrs. Opinions of Leading Physicians. I have used Strong's Pile Remedy in my practice, and would cheerfully recommend it to the general public es one of the best rente• dies for piles on the market; knowing its core• position makes me more inehned to recommend it es a first -plass remedy for piles. JOHN R. FLOCK, M. D., Acting Physleian,London Jail. Price $1.00. For sale by druggists,or by mail on reeeipt of Brice. ' W. T. STRONG, Manufacturing Chemist London, Ontario.