THE DAILY WHIG, THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 6 ER = THE PINKHAM CURES | ATTRACTING GREAT ATTENTION AMONG THINKING WOMEN. ; Mrs. Frances Stafford, of 243 E. 114th St., N.Y. City, adds her tes- timony to the hundreds of thou- sands on Mrs. Pinkham's files. When Lydia E. Pinkham's Reme- dies were first introduced skeptics all over the country frowned upon their curative claims, but after year has rolled by an little group of women who had been cured by the new discovery has since grown into a vast army of hundreds of thousands, doubts and skepticisms have been swe it away as by a mighty flood, until to-day the great. good that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and her other medicines are doing among the women of America is attracting the attention of many of our leading scientists, physicians and thinking people. Merit alone could win such fame; wise, therefore, is the woman who for a cure relies upon Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, CHALMERS CHURCH. -- Medical Missionary From China Speaks. There was a union meeting of the Presbyterians last evening in Chal mers church to hear Dr. MacCluare, medical misstomary on furlough from Honan, China. The story of the gene ral work, and his own special work ont there, was simply but graphically told, and although he spoke for an hour and a half, there was no abate- ment in the interest of a large and representative audience. : Dr. MacClure was at his post in the outhreak of the Boxer rebellion which, for a time, caused the los of the mission but operations have since heen umed, and with promi-e of large Succes He kept closely to re core of the work done, and its press- ing claims in the svipathy and sup- port of the Christian world, and did not touch at all on the des¢ructive) atrocities of the Boxer rebellion, or the hardships of the missionaries, as they Hed theiv lives. The address was long, and in no or wry sense of the word eloquent, vet it was obvious how easily a straightforward, earnest man, well acquainted with his subje t can interest the people. It m open to question, whether" a better result is gainel by treating a great subject at Ienoth, and then following up with an ample wxhortation, rather than hy giving the story vividly and drama tically with the briefest possible hortation." But let not the missionary he induced by any ordinary kaw 6 dis re the SO ex comse, him=eli and his m&sage | are too important for that. Chit Brant, an clder of St. An drew's church, Predinaza Indian Re servation (Deserontod, who was pre sent, also spoke briely at the request of the pastor, and toll what is being donc hy this Preshytérian church on the reservation. The choir of the church, under Mrs. Dobbs, was kindly present god rendered mach appreciated help. The pastor and Revs. Messrs. Ma thie, Laird, I MacCallum con ducted the devotional exerdses, ¢"Bibby's." rain Libis Raincoats. English The IN D. ¢Bibby's." Carrie's celebrated SLB to SI250. Co. Joulthee d in Toronto o1 William Wednesday. LIVER AND 1aDNE' BOWELS ACTS GENTLY S kJ THE SYSTEM Cleanse SeFFECTUALLY, PEL 105 CHES .. i a Ad QNSTIPATION BITUAL PERMANENTLY. ITs BENE | gFFECTS, BUY THE GENUINE --~ MAND BY J P(S (AUSRNIAJTG SYRVP € Yo, «0 Wve, Wey v. WON ATHEIST CONVERTED THROUGH . A GRAMAPHONE. Marshall A. Waggoner, Who Died at Detroit Recently, Had a Very Strange Career--Burned His Atheistic Books. Toledo, Nov. 6.--With the death at Detroit, yesterday) of Marshal O. Wageoner, there términates a life in which some very strange events have fioured. This is the man who after a successful business career, after a life of study and research that had made Lim one of the best informed men in Americ after vears devoted to com- bating the Christian religion, became a convert to it through the instrumen- tality of a gramophone. The conver- sion was one of the most sensational ;things that had come under the notice ol the clerov for many vears, and Mr. Wageoner was for months overwhelm- éd with letters from the most promi- nent ministers of the dav asking in formation as to his conversion, » Mr." Warroner was a scientist, and, as 'such, took a oreat interest in 'the rramophone. He purchased one of the first that was brought to this city, and one evening seated alone in his library, surrounded bv his parrot, his and a fine collection of curios, the forth then hooks he was listening to the music of ranionhone when first it gave "Nearer. Mv God. To Thee," "Jesu, Lover of Mv Soul" and as the notes fell clearly, sweetly on the ears of the atheist, the man who had for vears combated and reviled the Chri-tian faith, he felt the tears roll down his cheeks, and, moved bv sc unknown impulse, he knelt for the first time in manv vears., He remained on his knees until dav was breaking and rose from them as strong an advocate of Christianity as he had previously heen its adversary, So complete was hi: conversion that he publicly burned in a bonfire at the steps of the Unit- ed Brethren church his library, one of the most complete collections of athe- istic writings in the world. ----p-------- WAS COURAGEOUS. Society Women _Are Brave in Peril. New York, Nov. 6.--Miss Grace Mar cuctite Coudert, the only unmarried danchter of the late Charles Coudert, the junior member of the millionaire law firm of Coudert Bros., showed her- <i brave and capable last Saturday evening, when, on a short drive through Tuxedo Park with Preston McAnerney, the New York society d chib man, he was kicked into uncon < fousness by the horse théy rode be- hind. Mr. MeAnerney's skull was frac ture l in two laces and one eve so terribly injured that the sight may net be save Mr. McAnerney is the son of Col John P. McAnerney, the well-known couthern millionaire and club man, He cond ont to Tuxedo on Friday to attend the autumn ball given at the Garrison cottage and was one of the week's end party invited to gemain over Sunday. In the evening Mr; Me- Anernev and Miss Coudert went for a drive, and while on the road the harness became disarranged, Mr, Me Anerney leaned over to adjust it, and while he was tugal away at a strap the hose suddenly kicked him in the face with both hoofs. Mr. McAnerney fell back into 'the vehicle unconscious. Miss Coudert had instinctively grabbed his arm as she saw the horse's hoofs strike bis face. But for her hold he woull have pitch ed head first onto the roadway. With her Ieft ham! Miss Coudert grabbed the reins, and by voice and strength of wrist he held the horse down toa wall. With her 1icht hand she held Mr. MeAnernev's shoulder and pre ventg t hime from falling out of his seat. 'As quickly as possible she, drove back to the Garrison coftage. Her seroam-as. she drove ande® the port co hire brought, members of the fam i'yv running to her aid. Mr, MeAner nev was taken to his room, and Drs. L2ushme and Johnson summoned by telegr \ prompt operation was je former to relieve the pressure up- oll, and measures taken to ht of the eve, which was injured. on Strenuous Leech Attacks Soldiers New York Times An army © r returned from duty, mm the Philippine telling recently of the many pest oth insect amd rep i e--which wioryed the American sel lies stationed there, dwelt especindly. on a rather h that chives tothe himbs or sanlings on hillsides and?sjring hy 1 lichtning-like i wHately to its busin strenuous land le s upongthe pass.rs rapidity, pro sx of neking. soltiers dreaded the presence of Leches vastly more than they aril on after a band these dil the Filipinos, fons when "hikin many oven of the little brown men the company would be demorali ed hy a number of these creepy looking things dropping from the overhead trees on the necks or other exposed parts of the men. In appearance these blood-sucking vamj ties resembled much the common lech that is familiar to the American small boy. who kas met the creature of en in his favorite "swimming hole" he his slugeish, water-inhabi contempora the out, u tin strenuons the British navy will be painted a un- i vhich will tal } | which will take the pl Philip; ine leech is a land dweller, 1 ¢ onlated a mente wnstion, put no uiaking hi~ abode on the under : thing but her ini a poof of vounz leaves in the higher pas thew i i a hat growths. with a hundred others. The quéstion -- -- was for some convincing proof of the New Paint For The Navy. wlentity of her crandiather in spirit lite thirty odd years ter he medi short time all the ships of um had answel 1 questions fi some halt r from sips the hat, A SPLENDID DRAMA. | NR Of Nebraska, the new DAVID EUGENE THOMPSON. 'The Sign of the Cross' Was One of the Best. Wilson Barrett's "Sign = of the Cross," the attraction which nearly filled the Grand opera housa last night, is one of the best religious dra- mas seen here in many a long day. The scene is laid in Rome in the days of that depraved and tyrannical emperor, Nero, whose great glory was the extermination' of the Christians. This character was well taken by John W. Thompson, whose portrayal brought out distinctly the cruel and licentions character of the emperor. The rolé of Titus was well taken by I. MacDonald, and that of Favius still 'better taken by J. W. Thompson. Miss Lily Lorrell, as Mercia, won the svmpathy of the audience. She had a difficult role. and she handled it clev- erly, although she is scarcely adapted portray such a character. = Marcus, the prefect of Rome, is a man, who. though tainted with Roman hab- its, was still a peer ameng his fel- lows. * He protected the girl from the pagan ruffians, and from his own en- vious brother offic Tigellinnus and Licinius, characters assumed very clev- erly by E. Pe Corsia and W. H. Fer- ris, respectively. George Flooa, as Mascus, is the principal member of the cast. He is high-class, one whose dignifica gppear- ance, as well as his speech, command attention. In several of the scenes he does some rare work, for which he was liberally applauded. His love for Mercia, and his admiration for her purity ana faith, cdused him to re- minister to Brazil. _ LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. Those Mysterious Performances. Kineston, Nov. 5.--(To the Editor) : In 'vour issue of the 3rd is a criticism from the Montreal Sun; of the **Mys- terious performances of Anna Eva Fay."" We have never attended one of Miss Fay's meetings and consequently know nothing personally about her methods or what means she resorts to in order to answer the guestions asked, but the explanations given by the Sun do not explain how she ans wers some of them at least, or else the reports given by another Montreal paver, the Herald, are incorrect. For example, the Herald says: "One of the best*known citizens of Montreal before leaving his office, wrote a ques- tion as to the number of shares of a certain stock his firm was carrying, and when it would be-best to dispost of it. Miss Fay repeated the muestion from the stage, named the stock and the amount, and advised selling it at once. The broker was amused and mildly impressed by the answer: he in was much more so when the stock question fell the next day for no known reason, and left him a loss in stead of a profit." ' "Another questioner, a voung bank clerk, particularly prominent in ath lotic circles, who had been tortured hy a balance which refused to be found. Miss Fay told him in response: to a question the page and ledger where the mistake would be found," J. J. Lyons, drugepist, 'said: '] think Miss Fay has wonderful power. On Tuesday nivht she told me where, in a desk, IT would find .a lost insur ance poliecv. T went home and found the document precisely where she said it was." Now. here are three questions which we would like to ask the Sun, how In the aid of "'accomplices™ or even by mind-reading she answered them ? It the Sun cannot show that the broker, the hank clerk and the drucoist were accomplices; and this we venture to sav. it will not attempt to do, . he canse of the unreasonablencss of a supposition, then its do not explain, and we are obliged to <eck for others, Other possibl ations wenld he independent cl bv aid of spirit suth explanations ance, or clairvovance vower. or by direct ecommnnicy with the medinm by spirit friends in terested in the questions, cor in the production of the phenomena for the nrpoZe of cconviwcing a skeptical and incredulous people of the reality of lite, after so-called death and the pow er to communicate with those still in the flesh. . It i= very easy to pursue a course of ism like that of the Sun, dealing ion criti boll and sweeping statements, but v prove or disprove thing. Let have something more defivite of n. Miss lav may resort to que: tionabls methods to wer some of the questions asked for ought we knew, but we would like to ask bow it is that the Sun knows all about it? ls it to much smarier than contemporary, the H 1, which of no explimtion, but sa "Miss Fay opened the sicond week of her perfor mance here with a full house; all her pectators were, as far as ever from he able to explain her weird ac hievements." - Your correspon lent would he the last one to 'defend any medium who practi-es fraud, but he knows - that questions can be answered and answer od correctlvi too without the aid of ae comvlices, or any previous knowledge ofr quest w, by other mediums, and if by others why not hy Miss Fay? ication. It iz only a matter of ver Let us relate briefly what we © con sider a good test of the power to an swer questions mysteriously. A in Toronto friend attended a mee last winter, at which a Mr. Fenner, of Boston, ~he had never seen any of bis accomplices either, perfect stranger in the meeting the people in connection with it. She was answering questions ore, nor being a and to the man bi i bipun to ink he wo the and vellow of the home t< and the white of the ships serv- ig in tu cal waters. After much ex periment the olor selected. was oh tained 1 t ire of six pounds i of white paint with eltven ounces of } © ! It was reported from Ports- i that i d not j ten cand been ar They are noorati { Mont, at 1 i-lature, with wied, |! « under ! a pail of wate, answer hers, he suddenly held his. hand and said, "ih has the initials 'of the nanu . fll prenounet name © and spelling 1 vectly, which 1= not an pame to spell etther Then he the name l, ofthe with ah a Appa pen named the } + the quest: it Which the name daughter, and n with + died ber ds the we onnectd thet wh at | rounce paganism, and to die by her | side as a Christian martyr. In the last scene 'of the third act, laid in the house of Marcus, Miss Marv Randolph, as Dacia. did a clev- er bit of acting. When she finds Mer- cia with Marcus, hy whom she herself is spurned, | she jeers and taunts the helpless girl. then raves and laughs Uternatelv. She carried the part to a but 'not called for in the mental ques- tion, ana further told several other startling facts in connection with athe the Sun explain thi family. How would ? The theory, of even "mind-reading will hardly fill the bill, and as for "accomplices," it is too absurd to be entertained, but it needs explanation. | Your correspondent thinks, with Al- | most exciting climax. s Helen De fred Russell Wallace, that the most | Corsia, as Jerenis, a crafty Roman scientili explanation is that which | ladv, also sustained her part well. explains the most facts, and that is! The scer rv throughout was beauti- what is included in the term "modern | ful and elaborate, and each new set: spiritualism." --A Student of Psvchic { ting of the stage received with I'henoniena. ' | hearty applagse. The costumes were ems i those of the Roman period, such as INCIDENTS OF THE DAY. | one sees in plays like "Quo Vadis," | ana were very beautiful. The graceful, Newsy Paragraphs Picked Up By | free-flowing gowhs of the ladies were Reporters On Their Rounds. { much admired. The "Sign of the Pratt's headache powders cures ir with popular approval headache and neuralgia, ih packets. | last night. and enrtain calls marked 1 No] packets, {any of the scenes. Would that all 10c., for 4 powders. McLeod's store only. In the Westminster appearss a splen did article, with photogravures on Sir | Sandford Fleming. It is written by W. L. Grant, MA, : ar Q rug plays Manager Small sends here were as 'good. Miss Haskell's Scream. Many theatre-goers are familiar with Jon. G. ¥ Ross aed wy the city = (he various kinds of stage screams. & on. © S oO Wy , . > ha DE nit a De Ba NI: fide an bof p don of hem, al \ : time-honored and more or less realis leaves this evening for the east. tic and accordingly satisfactor, But ; Hooper's Asbestos Plaster on your | there is a genuine 'Trichtencd scream in furnaces and pipes will reduce voug ! "Ihe Sion oi the Cross' that belongs fuel bill. A small outlay is once made, ' to the saving in fuel goes on foreve Miss Leslie. Haskell, the English actress, who appeared as Stephanus, The Hotel Dicu and the General | (he hoy martyr. It is heard in the Hospital cach received about fifteen last act and is cansea bv the sight of dollars from the rughy match on | {he beasts that are awaiting the hoy Monday between St. Lawrence and | ,« he goes out into the arena and to Ontario wards. : 1 the fate that adherence to his faith] Mr. Chase, of the parliament build hrings him: "You wish to know how ings, Toronto, was in the city {o-day. | learned to scream ?' said Miss Has- He viewed with. pleasure the house on | kell. "Quite by accident, 1 assure vou. Johnston street, below King street, in | It was the only part of the perform- which his grandparents (McGuire) once | gnee that eave me very much trouble resided. when I was - rehearsing the pact in M. O. Hammond, of the Toronto | London two vears ago. Instead of Globe, came down this afternoon to | improving, I seemed to grow worse as report the proceedings in connection | the dgys went by, and my inability to with the Grant Convocation Hall cor- | improve my scream satisfactorily be ner stone laying, and the memorial | gan to give me a great deal of seri Ions worry. Two nights before the one on which I was to play the part for the first time, I reamed 1 was at rve- { hearsal. When it came time for me to part-with Mercia and to go into the arena, | walked through the open service, SKXIFPED ACROSS THE LINE. Suspected of Selling Carload of ; Flour. I doors of the dungeon and towards the Amherst, No.5, Nov. 6.--An employee wing. In the entrance, instead of the of the 1LC.R. has skipped across the | supers, whom 1 had seen daily, 1 be: ine. IC seems there was atear load | pol, to my horror--two enormous ui flour shipped to Atnherst by. the | jians standing on Nero's throne, only Lal e of the Woods Milling company. | yu jow 'fect away: Their. cruel 'oyos of St, John, and "this ~ young _man | glared at- me, their terrible. teeth opened the car and. disposed of the l pleamed white and long; their tails lour. "The shortage amounts. it is | ished the pir: For a moment I stood stated, to the sum of 8500. The em: ployee in que~tion | going a pretty rapid pace living 'at the rate of about S160 to about a salary 20. Further developments a THE FOOD SYSTEM oa THE SOURCE OF LIFE, " Decanters That Must Be Passed. heen New York Sunday News : . A unique set of decanters interested Any Derangenients of Liver or King Edward while he was the guest Kidneys That Interfere With recently of Kir John MeNeill, the own Digestion and Assimilation of er of Colonsay, in the Hebrides. Each Food Rob and Deplete the decanter is pointed at the bottom, 1 and can be made to © stand upright Body. when placed in socket holes cut into solid mahovany at the host's end of the tables 2 A suspiciout guest might think plan was to prevent DR. CHASE'S KIDNEY-LIVER. PILLS. the the decanters wandering from the host's elbow dur- ing' the feast. The real reason. it It matters not how good your ap mT is to insure fhe wine travelling petite, how you relish "vour food or so long as there with proper how much"you eat, iterfere around the table. The impossibility of resting the decanters anvwhere but in is anything to the socket holes near the host forces | digestion and assimilation of the food the sts to pass them arouna and" by the body, strength and vigor will around until empty. A man especially gradually decline and weakness. and det d to keep the bottles from re- | debility take their place. maining empty stands near the socket The most frequent cause of disorder- holes, fills each decanter gs it re ed, digestion is sluggish action of the aches the resting place and starts it on its liver, kidneys and bowels. The whole Journey again. . alimentary canal, throngh which the King ward was heard to sav that | food passes on its way through the the Scotchman who conceived the body, becomes choked and clogged, : : 3 idea should have been canonised. and the system is poisoned and dis- eased, . Wake' dns iver Pilis oo The Latest Phrase. Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills have i ; ! a) > been marvellously successful in exact- It was left for a little Windsor girl 4 lv this class of disease, principally be cause they act directly on the kidneys, liver. and bowels; regulating and in vigorating their action, and restoring to invent the latest slang phrase, She playing the other day with her friend, Kathleen, and it was not long before they were quarreling, was and when debility, the one real cause of Fountain of youth, which, in Paris, France. tonic. "The Vin Mariani used as itself universal esteem. A glass full of Vin Mariani meals gives strengthens the voice, and For Run Down Men EMILE ZOLA The Well-Known Writer, Specially Famous in the "Dreyfus Case." VIRGINIA MEDICAL MONTHLY : We have used Vin Mariani in prac- tice, and found it equal to the claims made for it." appetite, before retiring when mind is dull will brighten it, before a speech or singing taken at any time will brighten and increase all your faculties. Reliable . Tonic. All Druggists, Avoid LAWRENCE A. WILSON CO., ETRE ERATE Hy Ah WN "TO MARIANI: The Elixir of Life, which combats human every ill--A veritable Scientific giving vigor, health, and ener- gy, would create an entirely new and superior race." EMILE ZOLA. IN MARIAN! } b The most immediate, effective, lasting, and agreeable a general tonic has gained for when weak strengthens, before induces restful repose, and Weak Women. Substitutes. Limited, Agents, Montreal: riveted to the spot. I could neither move nor make y sound. Then one of the beasts crouched and sprang at me. 1 ceamed and awoke. Just as opened my eyes. and before 1 realized that it.was only gu dream, | screamed My mother rushed. in from an ¢ cain. adioining room terribly frightened. 'What ix the matter, Leslie 7' she ex- claimed. coming to my bedside. I threw my arms around her neck, liughing and erving at the same time: 'Ch, mother, I'm so happy ! T've got We sercam at last! t HAS BEEN ARRESTED. McDougall Was Taken in Toronto at Midnight. Toronto, Nov. 6.--Adired McDougall, late solicitor te the treasury for the Ontario government, was shortly after midnight on a warrant sworn out at the instance of Crown Attorney Curry, charging him with the theft of 300 from- the » Ontario covernment. Mr. MeDougall, functiolf was to collect succession ties," was suspended upwards of a month ago, pending the result of an investication of his books. He had held the office since 1592, and his al whose du- Jored defalcations were said, recently, to have averaged 82.500 per vear stock speculation is said by Mr. Me Doucall's friends to be the cause oi his present trouble. Mr. McDougall was formally a prominent. member. of the Toronto city council. He is sixtv- four vears old and belongs to a dis- tinguished Canadian family. Canada Fast Line. With the sailing this Liverpool, Nov. 6. the steamship Parisian from of port to-day for St. John, N.B., was inaugurated the new passenger and fast freight service of the Allan line between the mother country and. the Dominion of Canada. Five fast boats will be embraced in the service. Three of them have 25,000 feet of cold stor age space. From all indications a good business will be done, the cargoes from the Dominion consisting of the A Message Received. which was arrested ! IN OUR OWN CIRCUIT. : News Of The Districts On Both Sides Of The Line. Mus. Samuel Croshie, aged eightv, died in Perth on Monday. Three sons i reside in Cornwall, two sons and a daughtgr in Perth. | George A. Ryan, for, the nast eiovht Fie in the employ of Messrs. Me- Parland Bros., grocers, Gananoque, has pone into business for himself. Miss Maggie Noonan; third dauchter of D. R. Noonan, was married in St. John's church, Perth, Tuesdav morn- ino, to M. J. McGuigan, of Nelson, B. C. The bride was attired in a costume of castor color. William | Hardie. _ principal of the i Perth Collegiate Institute, has resion- ed, owing to_the action of the board of education in regard to 'trouble that has arisen between H. S. Rosevear, an- | other of the teachers, and one of the S¢ holars. 4 Fhomas Duboe, a wellknown 6G. T, | R. envineer, died on Wednesdav = at { Belleville. Deceased had been ill for | some months with paralysis of the | throat. He was about fortv-eichg {veo of age, and had been oh the | railroad for twentv-cight vears. A voung child of Mrs. Niles Harris, Gananoque , upset. a lamp and its clothing iwmediately took fire. Before the flames could 'he extinguished the little sufferer was badly burned. She died shortly after the accident. She was two years and two months old, British Dairy Imports. During the first nine months of the present year the imports of butter in- to Great Britain increased, according to the report of the Colonial Con- signment and Distributing Co., .hy 226,000 great cwts. The greatest in- ease was shown in the imports re ceived from Russia, these having © in- creased - from 310,536 to 419,680 ereat cwts. . The imports from Canada in- creased from 122,253 to 176,236, while | the imports from Australacia decrens- [ed 100,000 creat ewts, durine the pe- riod. Canada now stands sixth in the products from the immense harvests of! list of countries supplyvine butter to western Canada, while on 'the. west- | Great Britain. ward trips the ships will carry steel The imports of cheese into Greig and metals, for which there is at pre- | Britain, du¥ing the nine months end- «nt a vood demand both in Canada | ine with September amounted to 1,- d the Uniteds States. 796,000 cwts., a decrease of 42.000 great ewts., as compared with the like of period last year. Canada's share Kathleen went over in the corner to them to health. ) ! : { these imports amounted to 1.134 6-1, lk she suid. "Now. Kathleen, if Mrs. Owen Commings, Peseronta, Sydney, N.S. Nov. 6. Commander Lor sell on to 61 per cont. of the Son oat Lwill slide on vou (nt.. states: F=was in very poor | Martin, of the Italian eriiser, Carlo | (ho00, . health when I began to use Dr. | Alberto; on which Marconi is trying | . i - (Chase's Kidney Liper. Pills, I had] hic experiments, is authority for the Leit A Rich Estate. Leen a great erer from conttipa- ah that a wireless message | Stands Up For Dr. Workman. London, Nov t.- Thomas A. Hall. tion and stomach trouble and was] was received off Sunny Harbor, on Sa | Regina, NWF, Nov. 6:-1n 4 recent ichty'two. an oll citizen, who weak and ran down in strength. | turday. onboard the warship from | <ermon here Rev. KR. Milliken, pastor on Friday last, Lit will was gradually growing worse every | the station at Cornwall, England. of the Methodiztchiurvh, was a ' vaing of an estate worth DN, dav, "ana fir Ydocyeh that 1 would | 7 hi o je, hy tar "the longest | Backward in taking np the cudgels on He ci SEO for the Mroction of a have to do something Hearing of | vot t ed hy wireless telegry behali of Rev. Dr. Workman, of lo Chil hi Home in this city, and $8 many ang cured by Dr. Chasels nid) piv, 'Lhe distance from the harbor to | ronte. He referred to the attitude of 000 additional to relicions and chari- . nev: baver. Rills 1 began. gsing them, J Cornw all ix oneater than from Tab i the church towards hin. saving that ralde i tions. : and soon notited a marked change for | Head to Cor all, where the station i the church" had kept him out of . his Lis ghetior, J continued "Sreatment |i be built. | rightful, mhvritance bei he dared « Sister In Canada. until I was eared of constipation aad - 7 Ito De true to his Niews of hie, y., Nov. 6---Hev. WV. mv stomach was restored to a healthy A politician <avs tHat hve-elections, S------------------------ fit It only took aheut three | off he fought in North Persh, North Lord Kitchener's soldier builders left tov entirely cure n Nodolk, Bast Middlesex, North - Gy { behind them in South Africa a' leoacy Kidney Liver. ilk. on and Lennox, {of value, The farmers in the Heilbron Ma Ix: cents a' box, at all Mrs. James Trull PickeYing, was | district, are using» the blockhouses - a« iting f Edmanson, Bates & Co. lawry serionsly burned by her clothing | yesidences pending the rebuilding of nity catching fire. | their farms. :