FINE ll-I. luun uUtLUI|l }JlI\a|'-vile Everything in the Hardware line at right prices. You can get the best of Tools at rock bottom prices. rd`IvnI-Ivbk:-you :r\ I-kg I .J..-.l.....__ Irim Up Your Garden. Get a good Lawn Mower, down to cost price at A. sTR5gnAN s. Beautify Your Lawn. I Wm. Allen & Son, 1 '2` ziglggoog - vwu vv-q-I Bevan-lnqnspociuty. Give muesli. Fl. B. HBROD. D14 15.... `A nA_.A4__`u_ m-A Best. ALLEN'S SHOES. . ADVERTISE IN THE WW6. I] 01 Ill IIIO Ii00II0ldOl'I. I And when you once have got yourself ` Into the `cheering M. 5 Of the sunlight of pubhcity You bet your life it pays! ' Your nglme can be ahousehold word, And you be known so well, That folks will confidently buy Tlxe things you hgwe to sell. And hsomething you may learn from t is, If you are not an clam; You can be just as widely known As Mary and her lumb. TAKE A HINT FROM MARY.` I .Pfli, so gents perpot or 6 to'rsa.go. M ` tSnsm`u;.`*_aa~ Mq|le 'nec'.1pz or Prl_ce by 1'. mtusutzpt 5; co.. Toronto. I`! wI_I.uw LIII UIIIII. I Q `hymn vzgfot. ` wanted: with HUPIICII again. Two boxes of the pills were all that I used. and I can recommend Milburn s Heart: and Nerve Pills very highly. to any. one suffering as I did." --...4.- Laxo LiverPilla cure, constipation and sick hndaohg. 25 cents. Allrdruggiets. 11_ _|aUQI K115. Igor: a. box of Milbax-n's Heart and N erve Pilla, uni have used them with the greatest success. Iain now very much better; rest and sleep well all night. my appetite is routored, I am vigorous, cheer- ful. and happy to nd myself restored to health again. Twn hnxml nf Hm nilln IDAFA all that. I ruommnr A mnnmv 00:: n BIOIIIITY. Banana no dopodbd unnullj and lomonoun to one million , Iululowu nun um mnhvlt. nuuseuoln uuul. _ _ Ac night.Icould `gob sleep my nerves were so terribly unetrung. I suffered very greacly. muchmore lean tell you than I lob anybody know. So miserable was I that I would not have, cared when death Lrnla ma There Are Inn? People who Are Almost Bopeleoe of Recovery From Debillty. Heart '1'Mrouble--'J.`hoy Give. Home Testimony. M Mrs. Mary Cootello. of Kin:to.n. ons., says. - "For may yeerel ve been o gr-pot` eutferor from palpitetion of the? heart, eleepfeneueu; nervousness. etc. My heart uttered frequently end teamed to rise up in o In throat, and I was no bad that at times onld not attend to uly household dulaiee. AL ...-.1.` r.....I.I -'-A ..I--- _.-' ~.--- A- :"'31'.'5r'. '. 'i';*'.""-.}..T.'.."'...-`E nonunion 6! it: dnatlvdal. I30 I A11 nlnurv Ax-not : Arnie: Anodyn cure: nounlgid and toouuoho. V Ilnlook -5-` whom he bu` oonlldonoo who the mo came {on uupersnnmting tho old 0120., who had been lnlhuuturyin sbourvioo. The Tory prevail xnnkin snob In ado thou; unnll matters Of & iltorb that it will have no hyewricu left tor important qua ` tiona. --GA'1'INl:AU. umsvm sU1=1=EREiT You'll know It by ah: ha. pad nowanoufto mlliK u$'3:;3i'5 .",3'g;$i';3'o:"` so-::.:.'.-2:.-.:.r ORDERED I and tunhiod In spike! and - ' ' a .:.'.::*.~*;;,1. .:*.'::."ev.-:. -plate n 9-. 0| manufacturing The 'i=T)6TwEAR. ORIROINT Wm] WORKS. I76 King It. "5 lrpris nr M ~ only 3 Poonln lynpton-lat a blunt of luo|l'-onI'o1l by Devin : Kidney Pills. penoct Imeny lo publish it." The above statement was sworn be- fore me at Maplewood York county, N. 12., um um day of at . 1397. Timothy W. Smith, .7.P. To unsure gettln the mains ask always for Dr. WI] iauns` inkPla for . Pale People. and refuse all substitute: and nostruma alleged to he just in mud. ' S0 (llSCUUl'ilg('(l {LI HUI, regaining DI) health that Idecligcd taking it any longer. 1 then t.1'ie a liquid modicine advertised to cure rgses like mine, but did not obtain the mighleat. benefit. I had become -terribly emaciated and weak. There was a. constant terrible roaring noise in my head; my feet and ankles were swollen. and I was as pain na a corpse. `One day while in this con- dition my father brought home n. box of Dr. Williams Pink Pills and asked me to try them. In less than a week I could sit up, am! in couple of week: Icould walk quite a distance without. being tired. M appetite returned, the roaring in my end ceased, I began to gain flesh and color, and before I had used a half a dozen boxes I was as M healthy as I had ever been in my life. My friend: dbl not expect me to recover and are now re'oi-mg at the wonderful change Dr. lllinms` Pink Pills have wrought in me. If my aute- meut will be the means oi helping some other discouraged sufferer, you are at perfect liberty to publish it." The above Afntarnnnl wnu nnnrn LA. Illu Amlua Kelly Tells of nor lllnou and subsequent Cure - A statement Thu; should be Read by Every um In Oun- ads. Miss Aminn. Kelly, :1 well knownund muvh esteemed lady living at 1\II|)]0- wood, N.B., writes:-l consider it my dut ' to let you know what your won- derfiul medicine has done for me. In April. ltltlti, I began to lose flesh and color; my appetite failed und on going up stairs I wbuld he so tired I would lmve to rest. I continued in this con- dition for three months when 1 was taken suddenly ill and not able to go about. Our family doctor was called in and he pronounvod m_v illness t`hl0l`- (Isis (poverty of the blood). At first his treatment appeared to do me good, hut only for n time, and then I began to grow worse. medicine for three months, when [was so tliscourngr-d at not regaining my Ideclihud lnkimr il. nnv I continued taking his ` i I . ;_'!"'!'V' `-4""P'"V' ruorloaut O;lAD!Al`"(;(.)lPAlV Wu-I . ater and eggs as we now import from (0 no it. 3 Meat, fruit, eggs and chel-.se are the staple products which Canada can ,put on the English marlret. Her immense and fertile territory will enable her to meet our demands in full. The Dana- dian government. lias alread begun the great. task of making the ominion food purveyor to the British consumer, and it only needs sustained and loyal ef- fort on both sides of the Atlantic to make the scheme a success. On the other side they are subsidizing ship- owners to provide facilities of trans- port, encouraging the producer by granting a bonus for the erection of cold storage accommodation, and safe.- guarding our interests by stringent laws against adults-ration of butter and cheese. The manufacture and sale of oleomargarine in Canada is absolutely prohibited, and severe penalties areim- posed on the fabrication of imitaRon" chees-e-a. nefarious blend of cotton- seed oil and bad butter. Experiments in the transport of chilled meat have been made and have proved completely successful. Furthermore, `Canada is now represemed in England by u,com- missioner deputed to study the needs of the English market.,.and it is intend- ed to appoint two permanent officials in this country to supervise the devel- opment of trade in Canadian food pro- ducts. Our Canadian friends may fairly look to us to meet them in a. hopeful spirit. They want to unite the British empire, so far as their share of it is concerned, by selling us their food- stuffs and by buying our manufac- tures. We are, of course. quite ready to sell. Let us be equally ready to buy. If Canada can give us good but- France, let Canadian produce rule on the British breakfast table. There must. be reciprooity if the plan is to succeed. Ami that way lies the wel- fare of England and the empire. We want a backbone of commercial inter- est to stiffen the sentiment of im- perial union. Men will die for an ideal, but. they seldom live a. working life for it unless it is based on a good bu.-iiness foundation. Canada isunxioue to work with us for the good of the t'IY1|)ll't`-n(i Canada in particular. We can surely work with her for the some estimable objects, having ashrewd eye to the domestic interests of England as well. Imperial patriotism plus com- nu-.I't'ial advantage provides a capital working programme. I community or ousiness interests. _ Canada has grasped the situation. Her recent legis a.tion has opened the way to cultivating imperial patriotism by the development of trade within the empire. She is following up her legis- lative opening by a practical and pro- saic effort to cater for the English mar- ket, whilst opening her own markets on preferential terms to English exports. In order to buy more from us she must sell more to` us. and in order to meet I the expected increase of imports from England s_he`is working hard to increase her exports to England. There should he no difficulty about this. We export- ed last year food products to the value of six hundred million (lollars, of which only seven per cent. came from Canada. Our fellow subjects ofgthe dominion calculate that they can su ply at least ll. third of this total, an they mean to do it. ' Maul f.-:5 l\l$r:\ .....I ..|_.am_... .._.. AI..- H. 18 going L0 be held together. Sentiment counts for nothing, but the strongest tie between `England and her colonies is _the lie of mutual. inter- est, On ngitional holidays -we all sing Rule Britannia," _and hoist the union jack and drink the health of the queen, but during the plain prosaic weeks of working days that come between we will dmw closer together in an effec- tive union of hearts and pockets by doing business wiqhour colonies. We would no more speak disres eclfully of the imperial idea. than of t, e equator, but the backbone of that ideal is a real community of business interests. Canada has rnsned fhn ni.InnHnn, cernm '_'1_'ra.cuca.l lmpermusm." says: The _ rmsh empire has been built up 911 _buau;ess lines. and on business lines 1t'1s goxng to be held together. Sentiment counts for nnthinur. but lnctlu |tnpcr1n 1Ipn- Ionunon: Inn an 0 no Sh. sumo rdnnautnon-ergo: credit to Canada -0511 Int England`: no- IIIIQdO-IlI|n Will co-operate Wlth Oluodn. ' . who London, ,En land. Daily Mail con- cerning `Pra.ctica Imperialism. The British emnira has hnnn hnilt. un - uvvs III urn lulu nuu I`-IUIIII ji all otlnrhuoc Ind Hind. Ibo IDodl oIldnoyPll|o 1-can nu. |nm_,, ;cANAnno%oK4A BIC srfil BRITISH EMPIRE HA8 Bk!!! BUILT CURE DROPBY. upon '..o;.+.g;;;.'m. A HAPPY GIRL. men mum II I unceru and Jult pne. .~ In ghthig for free trad: they were I- waya fighting the farmers bottle, or protection, had as it in: for the Inboner and some othan. Wu nti_ll worn for the farmer. And to the farmers the lit oral: owe the support they have re- mind and the point they now pecan. The libernl `government has dread` dons much for the uracil, and throng the brunt: tor the wholu nation. ' ' ._-..I..__ .... lulu}. IITF up: "I hvo.hII Inna Fi nlnil Ea 1&1 1&1 7? III ! ` rnyl: "I luv! uloll Illlorl Uollpoild IPDIIPH Inilthougoid." to: an by I. 0. licanll `QQ In thg'ny."Ahu~ vuonu-em owuneu. The liberal: have n|wely.e claimed to have the interests of the more ongo- isll at heart. And we believe t at` the I claim in Iincere and Just a In filhthit for {run trad: Ihnv wan: -I- i VVUII IJIIIIIIUI Dill`: i One of the most curious customs in connection with t.he court. 0! S 'n is the provision which is made pr the safety of the sovereign at night. `The slumliers of the little hi , and, indeed, the entire palace, are we shed through- out the night by ii. picked hotly of men. who are bound by tradition to the im- tlvi-.s of the town of Espinoee, and to have served with honor in the army. It is they who lock the palace suites, with much ceremony and soleinnity. at midnight and who open them again at seven o'clock in the morning. Their fidelity to the non of the sovereign is es tradition as their strange an ancient privileges. `* i. DIIIEYDII Al "Montreal Witness. I '11.. m....u. 5.-.... K_I4Ulllr Rfllilrlal. Report of pztlenls grzmlecl from Mari- on & -Marion, Montreal :- lhwid Aitkr.uun,Aet ul, Monlrenl, cen- trifugal drier; boiler; Willi.-1.m N. Anderson, can-op-.-n- er; Henry C. Riel to, Toronto. autogra- phio register; James Butler, at is]. desk; Hurry B. Corrideun. ini-ulmlor; Mort:-I eleolrinnl signalling mer Du Perrow, apparatus; Hurry Dukes, typewriter; Herbert H. Freeman, latch; Arthur R Jackson, Montreal, label for bottles; Henry Kelly, Lonnoxville, foot-guard; James I). Lamb, et al, street car fender; Owen Morgan, telephone transmitter; Junms D. O'Neil, Hanover, Canada, cur- ry romh; Samuel H. Hnlalon. Perth, forging solid metal oar-wheel; Bernard '1`. Steher, match-making machine; Sin- cL:1_ire Touae, et ul, stamp affixing. ma- c me. - Stephen Alley, .~4l0:un. 1" In El: Youth Gladstone`: Ambltlon Wu toi Be An Actor ; Few are aware that, not only has Mr.7 Gladstone figured as a pla 'wright, but. that, also, he was tn such un_lextent' stage-struck in his youth that he ac- tually consulted the famous _u.ctor, Macrcady, respecting his chances of suc-` cess in the theatrical profession says a writer in the Phihi.de1phia Press. The tragedian is reported to have accorded a favorable opinion, but, subsequently} Mr. Gladstone was induced to abandon` his intentions in that direction by the: advice of his fricnd,~i0rd Stanley, four-' teenth curl of Derby, so celebrated as prime minister, and as the most success-' ful translator of the works of Homer. Of course, the entrezities of Mr. Glad- stone s own relations likewise weighed in the balance in persuadiu him to change his plans, and thus 1?-l6 British stage was deprivcd of in. sin: that would certainly have proved its most brilliant. ornament. There certainly is no man on the Englisli-speaking st uge to-day, or, indeed. has been during the present century, who has been possessed of so exquisitely mt-lodious voice or of such perfect diction. The course of English history during the lust fifty yours might. have been very different had r. Ulutlstorie become an actor. \\'i ' regard to his career as :1plny- Yright, it is both brief und inglorious. t is just sixty years ago that he wrote It. play, making its theme the rctrcat of the famous ten thousand under Xeno- phon, the leading part in which was in- tended citlicr for Kc.u.n or [or Young. The drama, however, was rejcctetl by cvcry London and provincial manager of the day. It is doubtt'u| whether a play written by the grand old man now- zidnys would meet with so particularly sorry a fate. 1' '2 \ -~- ~ +--. .2-. ..,.--:,_-n--'__u IHSUTILHCB, LUU,UUU,UUU IIHITKS. Forty-s<-vcn and one-half per cent. of this money has been contributed by the employers. Ir. has been calculated that an old uge pension of $150 per rtnnum will he the minimum when the pension fund is at its height. The recent de-` crease of emigration from Germany 18 partly attributed to this insurance against st:1rvz1i.ion, which, says the `Kol- msche Zeitung,' is not equalled in any other country of the worl(l."-'[`rans- lations made for `The Literary Digest.` UUU mu rxs lI$'|U,UUU,UlJU). The lnw providing for the needs of old age when workingmen are no longer uhlc to support themselves is, in its pre- sent. shape, really only six years old. Yet during this period this treasury has paid out `41,700 pa.yinent.s to old men, and 101,500 payments to men perumn-' ently disabled. The sums total then` paid out to needy workingmen during the lust decade were the following: The sick men's treasury, 757,000,000 mu.1`k5; the nu-ident insurance, treasury. 193,- 000,000 marks; the invalid and old age insurance, 100,000,000 marks." WA:-I-v_s-nunn nI\t` nun_|1uIf nnr nan} ti! JDCH UIGIDSCIVES 01` L0 LLIBII` IlllI.|ll|U. 1n the accident insurance department, according to the law, 426.000 concerns and businesses of all kinds were under obligation to insure their men against accidents to the number of 18,000,000 men. In the tflrst year there were but 209,000 such concerns. and the number of insured 3,000,000. In all, 91,000 noni- donts were reported, the victims of which reveived either themselves or through their ftunilies 361,300 insur- ance payments amounting to 103,000,- 000 marks (at8,000_000). The Inw nrnvixlimy fnr Hm namln nf nlrl purl. ur. rreuna anym- `The invalid or sick insurance law dur- ing this period became applicable when it went into operation, to 3,700,000 peo- ple, which number has now increased to 7,200,000. In all. some 21,000,000 cases of sickness were reported, amounting to 353,000,090 sick da. vs. The-amount ex- pended rose from 47, .000 marks in the first year to 99,000,000'in the tenth, the sum total furnished sick workingmen in jhis decade amounting to 757,000,000 marks ($189,000,000), paid either to the [men themselves to their Izuuilius. In tho mu-:d....o :..............-. .a........o....,..o on. ma cmex. ur. rreunu. u snoulu 03 home in mind that the invalid and acui- deut fund has only been established ten years. and the old age ={und only six years. Home only p. fraction of the money that will eventually be turned over to tll - workingmennd their [amn- liea every year is mentioned in the re- port. Dr. Frennd invalid or sick insxurnnnn lnwalnr- --1 ogvuuuuuu Cvtxjrtwlvfuiil Z `IV ' not III .I.IIo.-- Two In urea werifndoptod by on- peror Wiimm I. and Bismarck to check the rise of socialism in Garmnny-re- preuive lawn, and law : (or theimprove-| ment at the economical condition of the working men. The anti-Socialist lows? were repealed shortly after the preqenti emperor began his reign. The laws for the improvement of the condition of the laboring clu.sse.sTnre a. sore point to the socialism. Or imliy they an ed at the money I t in this way beg- gar-`s pence. but lately they ignore these com ulsory insurnnceb altogether. The enor oua amount of moneyhandledl by the government insurance depart- ment may be gathered from the resort of its chief. Dr. Freund. It shoal be hnrnn in mind fhnf fhn invalid nntl am-ii- ' the Iounno Ocrnnnrltopud to In- vnnt ll: ling. WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN. London a Lancaehlyo Life As! .J'..!?8!!0 .mP|n- ' ruorloanf 0AIAnnl noun-u unn- Llhxo And In-an. I `IVE: __ --_ onzoxmo ou;s`:onALIaM. --u-j- W--Oi-I-E-l'IIIdO` 3112-3. lhn vv\nnI- .u.-:...... .... Patent. Brpnrtl. I: `Q: mg ` TIME M %~.,"*-.~.. , Q uup,u-Iwuulullllvf I l5f H?'*U1f5@-4 -i 5'=W= A .. .7-3-`.3;-I`-;*'.'!'."T-'.! ; ,r----....,...... .-.,,...-----,..~ .... uv Q Q Will-Indd I onnnocpot?I'nc':v'I:`unnt" vi '1'} -_' HALL 1-Anna, Dams. nmumu. IOU H `Ca. All M tidal` u that and potions lhnnr Hlll and Pnlntlna In All IA- lll Pdd-up CIvI_t:I-'41:; PIRIMIO UPI ` buy Oompuiy In the 5'"'` 3-o Wand transacting 3 '. Fmllndn x. - . w m and mm. ' Y I rune An II III m5Ta9"o. ; .'$3np :11.-mi . no nvpwal-lIll\IlV (Ff, xxngnaiiumsuap and iqauhpu um: _4 Inoqttlnoovnoll? N Sold in :K lnnton and ovorywhuq l'q_0on-' Ad; by all rouponuihlo dnuldon. `rune uouuu - IWO oozes, nvu uouqu. No. x, or Nb: a,;.mg`iled on Neel): -at price and two 3-Ocntlntlmpu. . Th 0 no ' ......"'...*".-:.".:.... f ""f.'p`},-'A'r'.7{In"; .}3'a"' } Mofutren III. .. -. ' N o. for brdinhty can in-..by far the beat dollar nzediciv .1: known - 1d a i u n 11 be . `$3.. `3 r..'l"..`5..'.c:1`. .'....3..'.: `fmef. -, om ` aruggllu, one uoulrper I 5` . g for a cll.cu.es-10 d utro get~-nold yqrggpats. One T*:::=P*:`1-:,:= :v2.'2::::~3?.":.P.:.V Cook : Cdtton Root compound T`. 7: Nu. nnlu nnfn I-slink`; The.Ii!9!dJan1 ---n _f' 7..-, Dodd sKidne;' Pills Always cure Urlnary,Troub|dI |poDn?sKiii1i'EY PILLS Chase : ram.e` : dii alm. . Edmun- eon, Bates 8100.. |'n|'n!.. Toronto. i.`I,'r..'`- "" :i`Z..'3"a* ~%'1 `.',`-Le`? necmywumg '1.ond$h.-3%. -1 . thunYfuI- to lajlt _ um f>rIce_y0II ollllgi, 3!, CU oenru." " bought h box_ '01 I` (h|'nrrh cqro for 85 own so Mr. _ If any Iwro hem. an Henry R`... inhuIh..'of17u fummi VTROHBLES "my uuurlnu `VII Dmuull `VIII! mo worst kind of pilen," writes Mrl. Jpqlo l oLt.a, of Meyeraburg. K0 was hen in- nble to wetk. Since llling your ChIIO'h Ointment he in completely on . Ibis truly worth its weight in `gold in oaI of_ she rice_you ohnrgO. II,I .I)_oqnM." hnnnhh h bni `n! "It (Xian-In mu-n ` III Var?` lull I118-If`-IUn'u ' l "I was sick for three yours," It}! ' Simpson. of Nowoomb Mlllpgm . = boxes of a curtain" pill `which imam I tried 1. hue : Kidney.-um: iPills. Since, I hfuvlo` Bdon `able to VINE every day and feel like Knew man. You! pilllat nliime cured me at A cost of 950." ' " .-we bee aqhjgc to. sprout cold! ' ] every fall nndv !I;ll'lh `Lyn hl lan"HAtQ Delaney. of 174 Cruw'ford atrqet. TOI'0ll_Nlav miouuunged potont guru E greatly crooked up.C I got no lullifutl I uaod many cough modiciul. but noih , cured me until no a cost of 25 coat! I kind Dr. Chase : Syrup of Linseed bird - bl . - _ V ":?My buaband was troubled "WI`?lrW|o ' wnmt kind of nilnn, -wit-n Mn, Jnn. A uuarutu cf lngond orfll Onion. - Dr. Chan : tout. gnu; I gr. Chuo`aDKidCr:n3:ivor Ph-. Olnu`i_, 4 inmmonb. r. 1` Dr. Chane : Syrup of and V I bino his lawn spd gust diooovnq L . 'an {Imus and lung: im. . "I was nink for thhan van-1:." `uni: Jnn I IABVU IICCII IIIUHUICC IVI Till! ` I years with urinary trou `. 1 could not hold my urine.- ` is constantly broken of my rest, is I had to get up six or eight times every night. I tried que- tors and many remedies without getting any relief until one 6! my friends advised me to try Dodd's Kidney Pills. I felt to- lieved from the first. box and six boxes completely cured me. I cannot thank you enough ~-for the new ,lease of life and com- fort your Dodd`s Kidney Pills has given me. ' A II:-('11:-nnnv Total Assets, $63,947,665. Canadian Investments. $5.600,000` 46 ~30`-Can; _ g r: v. .\.M"' Ihave been tgoubled for up: _._--_ _,.: ___._.-___ .._-_-|_r_' -BIoc.trlcl.t_1 ., Illcuvw "groggy. ` THE "BIG" FOUR. lllllllllf IIICIIICIIJG OII WHICH U 1 H V d in the ">Ia`au:.ar:dmtim:p:;dud. 1- on--o.La-AA In O-n Ramona: IVIIIKI I\UIlI TVIZIIVIIIIC lithe ,onl safe, teliablo *monthly in icine on which Indian nun. rlnnuul in tho uA".wilcGR:ao1v. Cornwall, Ont. I0 I`. 4-- I\lII _ cum it jt H-j North Brltlsh and Mercantile Insurancb Company . . 0! EDINBURGH AND LONDON. - . urn u nun C LUDDUHIDE, AQVG II T3081`. 0 E : III BA- lol that Aullillnontn ml If-ad. _._..._.. -..-___-_.__.__. SIYTHI t LYON. 1 n"Y:"_ &2';:.'..(1"";`.?'.'.`' A d rl rain--n. In I 3 A sarmxnmic 291 OHOO. I ' .111. tnrdu ovonln . Ilulun. D.D. . nun mid. Uuvonltykyvnu. `H100. ' T1971- loam. to 10. ,LD.3.. VVV>V nu` DU": u Gm ug- III!-' arm: -0! mama uh t . P .. '. p 3 add` :.;_@%'$:':$.a > I` O 0 . m cm = `(J D , Info ghlog 11" >1 s~boonLI one liuro nnnu nlI~1 AITBU3 EL nmclkx (sings $3536 i...$`i ` 1. so-xe9'on -'5`x'a'5 Qjungton gfaxootu. .l .honI11l- Slx'1'n:t5:nY`(`),!:`.)` I.`&'..hI'!"l"Il, 0.0. 1-1:-1-:-1o----j Mums! TU 1.0`)! In I OH SHALL mum. at low noon 0 -interact an on On: and Inn 2 . Leona tn} 1: Om- .':'.'.....w?*?.::- 1%.? ..*I::'`: I I0 I OI man` M1. omooppmu th Poutooo ._...__:_.j A :7, : 3 REMBVAL. .. ~ _ ' r` _ ' om-.-v 1-o Lou: rm 1: on IQAIIA -IIAIIG nn nu..- . 1000- UNTART All) BILL Rona undtuoooI.:nt6&o; l llfrno III I v . 0 I32 xgu I .. 0 or $0110`! .S:n. BIBBY no BROOK STREET `PEI Fodlnl nk andnvonnubhhzfuolty olophono ltgr j.- ` ' 0'9`. :i'.'4'*! uunyoum dllreren cure: to 0;` phi-vnlu to Fxothetsy F [gig cure or each (1 d 9. nmudy 2I.u vial ivnuonm httnn to Prof. M `am 1.? s It me positive! cure: t,i utIon.. and omuch 1 , ; Imyo ?, o'}dag[ata..provntI pneumonia `lyqn In) few hours. 1-mo M ?' UK : 'bougli'CI'rc atop: cousin, night I union. and Ipagu Ly heal: "0 lo. u1l:g"I l'TI`dx.iey Cue Ipeecly cum: ,1: 3lb'nck;dll:ns 0; r')lnn gag all ` an. r co in! Aouwondlca ul- '*"'T`*:..i&'::.....'.*:*A**:-.. ' ...:*;:'.:?!': Norm cure curt}: nlI'~to1-ms or fnervouhness. Ilunyou'I dllreren for children are Otldd-vllu to motion." . II "II ' O!!! I0 I "'9'! M -2;-. Hr: I u at "DINO. Prluo No. . KITBUB ELLIS,-ABC]-II`I'EO'.l'. OFFICES- lxo 11:0 Chunbou, OtYord'n Bloc . I1 trout _ . nnnzon. Ont. SMYTHE & LOSCOMBE, Htlllu II TRIYRT. orlnnn-. . on I ' '-':r::'.sI,.-.a".'_v:-_ 1; , __ wmnezuamm M, ' _ _rngvzn.noumomgm sum; "`I' `II I `{-`:l1.2`fg`.a`-'a`\!...!-RI 8 Hal". opl Jnun-n 1: nnnuvnmr In F?-'4. ,7 ,,,,,u.. I _; gm` ' Rh 3 C Id 1 35,9}.-o&'."``a`-:`%?;a :`.'..`.', .35` .33. : t In `law (it Pam . . -}?!n1o1z'I,- npemln. (e nosmvevy cum: ....,..m g pr nnnnoo ollbn Iolo hum. n'.`.3.... llIgDlltr`ni. -1---j:.. nn. Llvcrpool and aloha Plre Insurance Company. n noni`$1'lm In ..|.nn.4. .. emu-` fun ii?"-Tel onnilo. . . 1 hull!-zlnnhn -u-4-\ .11. 3'...-..n.L.JT"" ~ MEICAL canos. , .1,` HOHBB I.-IVERY,` ___ '**- A CHVITECTURAL. 811003 Iodlnl hick nmlllnnn ..__......_....:-...-___._ INSURANCE. L..........._.___....._ lo Chombou. O11 Kingston. T.aam. Jomor of wool and Kin; ' Dnllst . in t3 Wma .32..` """ " . shod 1 am. "1:'iuE$mn`sa. nun-cine . - AIt.'K1nston I ' bun. Jn. Iwllt 00.) LANAGAN (CH! HI). ' Al %r ::'i':.....".'P... .3 u on. llxounn. '. unit: If nngn II. I. Mon. 0! on our M at W ' " r V. *5` `I W l0'*,Il io'l,.; 5 N- pun; sun lplnan the summer with Mm end Me {unity as this plenum retreat. There in no vote shunning hat. Ledy Cawrlght look: alter` the young people In bet. kindly wsyjnd the boys .' `IX . - -Wb!'I- Su'e":E"".: 23% ppm which in noeim every thy from Ot- tawa, to sun to be reading. In the evil- In 120 am on tho veranda uvon; the cool air and talking to visitors from town and onhnualag Ab no-1&7 oom- codwiih !`nim-:m' ` "co Emporium _ V06 to Anabel` lunahul. ovu- wutv nurn_I_Iunuy qaupa to mom. ` Ilrniurft limiter llopc. 32 RI hill ll regal Illllllntl hood, {$0 lt::l`;f: GOING ollil. Kllqlnl. It In I huozol .:oolonhl . or planter hint: at an Inn: I-ho on Lur- :*a':..""*'- :1.--:.. - . ., _ 3 your , - P , .-an Ruu nun ' .uH'...|.- ` cou. cure-nu ever not times get haul ' Notwithstanding t_he better feeling abroad, there is cvlxlontly a good deal of unsoundness in the body commercial. There have been two or three had fell- ures in Toronto lstsly-had' because they reveal much looseness, not to say die- honesty. Toronto is still suffering and may continue to suffer for years yet from the effects of its real estate "boom. Unhappily the boom spirit seems to have taken possession of the people and of the newspapers. Just now they are all crazy over Klondyke. Yesterday it was Trail C_1-col: and Slocou, to-morrow it will be James Bay and some other jumping-off place. The James Bay boom has, in fact. begun. The boolnsters want a railway subsidy, of course, as the Ilrst step to- wards maitin everybody rich. They say there is an a unclancer of coal in that region. Per contra. geologists like Pro- fessor Robert Bell, who have been there, say there is none. but this is explainable on the theory that geologists may be mistaken while subsidy-hunters never ale. II Isa pity Toronto does not drop hirbooms and settle down to sober busi- ness. The French speak of "mimetisme social" as a disease which attacks com- munities'-in Toronto's case it is a sort of mania tlfnt loads people to pursue the wildest chimcrns and go mad generally whenever some audacious follow formu- lates a scheme for "developing our great natural resources" or building up this Canada of ours." or "making our Queen City hum," with the View of filling his- own pockets. Is there no Gold Cure for this peculiar nervous ailment? How is it that Toronto `fa so terribly afliioted while Montreal nngl llnmilton; Kingston, onus `and London have escaped! Some 1!! oil the blame on the Toronto news- mpens, which would boom the South Sea bble, if it were resurrected. in onler to secure advertisements from the promot- ors. Btig is hsrdlyfalr. The papers `rive on bpogislf the people were in to then. as- s_n.__.`sa. L__-_._ __ .., ,, Ii`, as The Mail suggests, Mr. Laurier has but to say the word to obtain it, why. one is tempted to ask, didn't the '1`uries get it during their long spell of oloer Werefthev so intent on boodling and bolting that they hadn't time? Or is it not the fact that they new full well it would be useless to ask for m The Mail is a good newspaper in many re~ speets; its news department A is particu- larly well done. But its editorial writers seem to take it for granted that their readers are all tools,` which assumption is not well founded. "Who does . not know," says Marcus Tullins Cicero, that the primary law of ifistory is that it should not dare to say, anything false." The primary law of party jour- nalism is that it what you say is not true it__should at least be credible. The Mall is setting this canon at deance in pretending that England is ready to go back to protection for our sake. The Return 0! Better Tunes. ' -In the United States the proteetionists are attributing the revival of trade to the adoption of the Dlngley tari. Cana- dian protectionists, who prophesied smash and crash when the Fielding tariir was passed. are somewhat at sea. All they can say is that times would have improvediaster if the high duties had remained. But this at once `suggests the question, If so, why on earth did your cure-all ever let times get bad? Nnhwitlmtnndlna than sun... u. nu-. nmn..- I 1 "3 4;: 3-q , 91% ; H :1 ` sumo Ioup-A-A stow `ran-a r:ua-:1,-;rao Proposed Road 1. Duluth-1`_ho rou- ~oIclIc!llUIioit."~ .-~ 3 .- " maul Onrown otawa, -- V10.`- -'l?he - Tories who told us that England woult_i never do- nounce the GermIlfa"ud"'Deigh,n treaties, that the Governor-General 3 struc- tinnu to amuaw or disal- iowanoe anf note! the Co ' lia- Inent rnnng foul of `those tmaties, and so on, do not neatly -know what tour now. The Mail-and Empire has started the story that Mr. Laurier was guilty of treason to Onnedef in not obtaining concessions from land, lnnotigutting In to rerurieet the Hay she abandoned it; years ago and tax _prodnoe from foreign countries whilst admitting colon- ial tree or at a lower rate. Mr. Laurier is yretty well thought of in the Mother Oonntry but not even his sweet tongue and [pleasant ways could induce English- 'men to restore the Corn Lawn and revert to protection for the sake of boosting" the colonial grower of wheat, meat and wool. The Mail has no sense oi propor- tion or it would perceive that booming . the colonies by starving the British deinocraoy and destroying its foreign commerce would be an odd way of con- solidating the Empire. 30 at least Brit- ish statesmen think. Tory and Liberal. mr and commoner, from Lord Salisbury in Mr. Richard Golding, the able secre- tory of the Cobden Club. who is now visiting Canada, they tell us with one accord that we are only deceiving our- selven when we look forward to prefer- ential treatment {or our wares in the British rnnrket. no Inn:-n ngcueifribdbiir ihau-J's, 1, 115;. -TQIEATMENT on 11-is bnrnsn MARKET. Iunomluuws wnom no $3 IIIII. - In I incur which he WI-obi in 1878 (Life and Times in` looking! and Ron. p 67!!) Alenndcr lacuna a said to oinunbar of the civil service who had hon aocunod of akin; some part in the Tory rejoicing: over his defeat: Eva: pounon man have his own` opinion on 0080. However, Mr. Grecnway may be only talking through his hat" to the elec- tors. He is as good a Canadian an the next man and is surely not going totakc a step in the direction of secession. I used to believe what the grumblere said. that (J.P.R. rates were mcnstrcualy high, till I looked into the matter for myself. No doubt there are grievances here and there for which the railway is responsible: it would not be a human institution it it worked with absolute perfection and eat- ieiied everyone: but, its rates are dis- tinctly lower than those of any American line with which a fair comparison can be made, while the etake it has in the country in no great that we may be euro it will never do anything contrary to the intereet of the eettier it it can avoid it. The Poet-Olllce Department. The Tory papers are pitching into Mr. Mulotk for appointing a friend to the deputy-minieterehip of his department. Dr. Coulter, they say. he had no experi- ence of poet-otllce affairs. which ie true. But, after all, what are the duties of the average deputy than an intelligent man should not master them in ,a week or at most in a month! These eame paper: need to throw up- their hate when Mr. Hanan wee made Minister of Railwaye or air John Carling Minister of Apical- ture and lay, Now we ehall have elli- cieot manaaemem." although neither oi those gentlemen had had any training for the technical work heff-e them. There is ncthlna partioiiieeh technical Ia-the work cl the poet-omee `department. Dr. Conlter ie a men ct ability and quite competent to diecharp hie dutiee. He iwae eeiected. I euwcee, mu. Ilr. unlock. it that IX ha eubcrdinat: ahomw g. ;i " `h A W Qklnla Ia. 1&5` I-h en:-n u'uIu Us uuulr euwrpruse. This is not a party question. it belongs to the hirzher politics. Anything that Mr. Greenway says is worth hearing and when he enters the` plea that farming in Manitoba can never be made to pay properly till, they get an independent road to Duluth those in authority will have to look carefully into the facts; indeed the Ottawa Ministers have already begun to do so. Investigation proves be- yond doubt that with respect to railroad rates the Manitoba farmer is better o than his neighbor south of the line, Canadian Pacic rates to Fort. William being lower than Northern Pacic or Great Northern rates to Duluth. Mr. Greenway has not yet made it clear how he is going to get an independent rail- way from Winnipeg to Duluth that shall carry wheat for so much less than the rate charged by the big all-American roads that run to Duluth. The older provinces have made great sacrices for Manitoba andcgvg prepared, at least l venture to thinlf so, to help her with any legitimate undertaking calculated to promote her well being. But she could hardly expect us to approve of, an enter- prise which, assuming that it fullled Mr. Greenvvay's rosy expectations, would have the eilect cf crlpplinrr the Cana- dian Paciflc and depriving us of the material benets we are entitled to lock for from those sacrices. In plain Eng- lish, having taken our money. the money we raised by mcrtgaging our present and future, she would have no moral right to sell out body and breaches to our Uncle Samuel and leave us bun- mod. 4 suw ruwu uu wneuu DU WOTUIIT Anyhow it would be hard on Ontario to see Mr. Greenwny diverting Manitoba trade and traio to the States after all that Ontario` has done for the Canadian Northwest by public nnd private. invest- ment. is it too much to say that it would be the beginning of the end of Confederation? '1he Munitobnns would naturally wnntto. buy their store goods where they delivered their wheat so as to have return treighte; hence the older provlnces would have spent their money and run desperately in debt for the de- velopment of the Northwest only to see the Americns come in and reap the fruit of their enterprise. This in nni-. n mu-tv nmmlzinn it hnlnnma mun mm. M... * n.va;.1;a.wT.iai 3; awn - . 5` m ` w syncs, U1 .l_ lnl12lll Inn owner unru- party men. who, by the way, are going ' tshotd a oonventlon at Toronto durlng . the Fair. "`If_ we cook: only get Sir R_lchu'd, said: one 01 . them the other day, we conldsweep the on and our T_eI-tlumAQu1d would hol e-balance or power. But he is too. staunch a Ub- ersl. too loyal to his own party, notwith- etsndlng that some of it`:-xnembqrs treated hfl scurvlly, In the dal-k`days, to leave It, unless Indeed hie self-respect should force -hlm to do so; . vyhleh, let us hope. for the sake of Liberalism; mayqnever happen. The rumor that he was` going : to Englsndas hlgh co nnxlssloner ls, to say the least, premature. The Government could not get along wlthout him and the Liberal members 0! the 1-!oT1`se have unanimously 'round-rob'lned mm to re- maln where he ls. It would not be sur- prlslng lf the varlous thlrd-party ele- ments should manage totlnd a common anchorage, ii` whlch case -the Govern- ment wlll need all the strength it can muster -in Ontario. Accordlnc to the `promoters, a feellng that Quebec and the seaboard provinces have too much to say at Ottawa, especially In the preparatlon ot`the setlmatos, ls at the -bottom of the new movement. The Proposed Route to Duluth. A cloud, as yet no hlgger than a man's hand, ls rising ln Mnnltoba. Mr. Green- way s project for bonusing a rallway from Wlnnlpeg to Duluth, which ls to carry graln by roll and water to Bualo `and from there by rail or water to New York, ls bound, if lt comes to a head, to create dlsappolntment and lll feeling in the older provln . From all I can hear, Mr. Greenwayl not llkely to succeed; that ls to say, lt is not probable that he can persuade the Manltobans to vote thelr need money to an enterprise over whlch from the nature` of the case they would have no real control and which could vlolate late azreements with lxn- punlty. Once the Amerlcan oapltallsts had got the bonus or bond guarantee and bullt the road, there would be noth- ing: to hinder them from aelllng lt or wrecklng lt and turnlng lt over to a receiver. and then what would thelr oovenant to glve Mnnltoba a wonderfully low rute on wheat be worth? Annbmm H ..n...I.I I... |......I .... n..4....s.. .._ ;Y,_---.vg ' ".4 Row Arm:-,4 Party. `- paper: which nnodtoabtuo mm ll: day: a week no longer conceal their Mglr unseen: for this man. Be it also looked up to on their natural leader, no to speak, by Patrons and other third- lIIl't' Inll. whn. `IV thn CA7 Ann nnhup nu ma `::j.1,."`.-1,1` unnmaarnal and o'.:nuI?h31h' '11:; Xoier nnd_ remnant- qtiyoh tlyonbinelaa much ab _I_ But- cn Quin-lo, I ' n no... -g._.n -.__-_ `BAIL Y wme; ;wmnmcsmu'. gu a(9}f1si~ 11, ` 1857. eav y my Slabs ruu 1&0 Ill-JI\l-II 354PtInoouBt.- station : Oldstnnd -j:--:-j- Acqgpanrs F. PARTRIDGE. Machine Made GALVANIZED WIRE FABI {ENGINE from 50:: to 16 per rod (M3 foot). A porfoctulook fence. the cheapest and hose {um fence madc- Alno ovary dooolflpuon of 0:-nolnoutol Win Work nnnulccturou by