Daily British Whig (1850), 10 Mar 1903, p. 5

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broid Tumor, 3oston doctors. ,, - Mass, mn how: she was" se failed, by ble Compound. . Pinkham for Help: ér Boston doctors' treat- y tell me I have a fibroid and the soreness e back and front. My ab- , for three years. My ap- et for any length of time. in your little book ac- advice." -- (Signed) Mrs. ' ; ham's -advice--al- f Boston, to take would help her -- dditional instruc- h helped to bring I wrote to you desecrib- u replied, and I followed well woman. able Compound ently ole systent. I can wal pound is worth five dol- afflicted with tumoss or ul trial." -- (Signed) Mus. 1, Mass. uch testimony -- or take ch Lydia E. Pinkham's es. all women as convincing able Compound stands ssing ills of women; all ceration, falling and -dis- ar, suppressed or painfal er of the testimonial let- 1 leave no room fpr.doubt. ladly answer any letters mation about her illness. . Pinkhadm's Vegetable ie thinks no trouble is too ind happiness. ram's Vogetable Come other medicine ; don't for- something else. e oeigin=1 Icttors and signateres of te io inatvess. a Modicine vo, Lynn, Megs. PPP OIPONQ ber March ! ds cf March, re- And. fortify now 'm with one of our TOP COATS, so "held out .to you. it all the comfort ing to you these hts and mornings er © take up 'the uestion now. he New Long Coat ressers. fon : ie Medium Length | X the Snappy Box then take your 8. $10, 2, $12.50, $14. ie vulnerable part ur tiolsers Is not ress: parade oandi- If such is the our Irousers Stock furcish. you imme- rclief at a wery rale price We at, well made and ), $4, $4.50. $ BY CO. Oak Hall. ak The FHEOPOPOPIOTI0N P09:V4040 A pea _ |AZONE oF FiRE| me A AE q sg Angier's Petroleum Emulsion with Hypo- phosphites is pre- scribed by physi- cians for children's diseases. The little - ones thrive on it, It is pleasant to take and agrees with the stomach. 3 It is the best children's. medi- cine. They become fond of it. Put yourchild onasteady treatment of Angier's Petro- leum Emulsion; and note how quickly it gains in health and becomes strong and robust. The Emulsion improves ap- pete: ids (digestion, regu. ates the and bowels; quiets the nerves, and revital- izes the whole system. My little girl was troubled with bronchitis and a hay e almost since birth. Nothing her ny druggist advised me to give Yor Ales Petroleum Ision, which 1did. It cured and she almost immediately began to gaia in and improve in color. To-day she is #3 strong and tobust as can be.-- A. Pudsey, To- ronto, Canada. oh Angier's Petrolena Bmulsion is druggists Pemember the name WM insist oa Angler's, Large size, $1.00. Small, soce ANSIER CHEMICAL COMPANY, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A That Horrid Eczema and Other Blood Diseases, PAINE'S CELERY COMPOUND Does a Blessed Work for a Peterboro, Ont., Gentleman. The blood part in our physical economy, a liquid state, constitutes a large por- tiof of the entire body. Unhealthy conditions of the life stream affect ser. jously all parts of the hwman system. It seems unnecessary to-temind intel- ligent people that, when vitality is low, when the appetite fails, when op- pressed by tired feelings and heaviness, when "headaches and insomnia make our days 'misegable, when itchings, skin troubles - "and S. eruptions gfause alarm, that the condition déthe blood calls for prompt attention. = If you have delaved the work "of purifying the blood in the past months you eannot with safety allow the springtime to passewithout some eof fort on your part te rid yourseli of perils and dangers. In the spring sea son Paine's Celery Compound effective lv removes all impurities of the blood, so that the .vital fluid goes on its health-restoring mission to heart, lungs, brain and all other parts, mak ing vou vigorous, healthy, and strong er. than even before. I). McMahon, Pét- erboro, Ont., says: { 'was troubled with a very bad type of eczema on my face and in patches over my bodv for four years. 1 was under treatment of three doc tors at different. periods; have "also tried many remedies but all proved useless. At last I bought a bottle of Paine's Celery Compound. and put in lodide of Potassium as recommended 6n the label of bottle. The one bottle did me so much good that [ bought five bottles more, and now am happv to gav 1 am perfectly cured and complete ly frbe from the troublesome disease." plays a most important and, in KINGSTON REFORM ASSOCIATION, The annual meeting of the Kingston Reform Association, for the election of officers and transaction of other general busi- ness, will be held in the WHIG HALL "WEDNESDAY EVENING ith Inst, At eight o'clock. By 'order of the president. E. C. DEAN, J. M"D. MOWAT, "Secretaries. eel ma-------- am ---- THE MOST NUTRITIOUS. - EPPS'S COCOA An admirable food with all ts natural gRiaiiiien intact, fitted to build up and main- tain robust health, and YO Jo. sist winter's extreme Sold in one-quarter pound tins, labelled JAMES EPPS- . & ©0.; Limited, Hommopa- thio Chemists, London, Eng- EPPS'S COCOM FOR SALE OR TO RENT. FURNISHED. CUT STONE HOUSE, No. 57. George Strect. Immediate AR end MORE THAN "A SCORE MET : DEATH. . =i. Human Torches Blaze--Spectators Were Watching the Burning Oil, When Explosions' Took Place and They Were Caught in the Flames. Olean, N.Y.; March' 10.--A score or more people were killed and a large number were injured by an explosion, of oil' near here last night. A freigh train on the Erie, made up principal: lv of tank cars filled with oil, broke in two north of this city at about nine o'clock. The two te tions of the train, came togethér with a crash, and cone of the 'oil tanks was de- Fire broke jout almost in- stantly, and the sky was lighted up for miles. A | large crowd of peaple Joft. this city for the scene of the fire. While they were lined up along the tracks_.a terrific explosion. occurred. The flames communicated with the other tank cms, and a second and third explosion followed each other in Sheets of flame shot out in all direstions. = Scores of per sons were caught within the zone of the fire and enveloped in flames. Men and boys ran screaming down the tracks with their Others fell where they come hy the awinl heat. At midnight the first of the wound od arrived at the hospital. They were four young boys. Their injuries were frightful. Great patches of their fle h was pwned off, and hung in shreds from their bodies: Large crowds gathered pital, and the faces of the were anxiously scanned as they were borne into the building 'on stretchers. Hearttending scenes" were witnessed when one of the poor blistered bodies was recognwmed byesa father or a mother, and it was with difficulty that the crowd was r strained from invading the operating room. Sidney Fish, a prominent busines man, who returned from the scene of thr frre--satda--d-was attractedto The scone of the 'fire about ten o'dock. When | was within a, quarter of a of the scena of the accident there Flames shot molished. rapid succession. burninz. over clothing stood, at the hos injured mile was a terrific explosion upwards for several persons who drop on the rail never ontwards and a great distance. 1 saw started to run away. road tracks, and they move Others wha stood close to the tank cares were hurled through the air for hundreds of fect. The was awful. Had a dozen young Hors ran down the track with their cloth a mass of flames. They resembled human torches. I could hear their agonizeq sereams distiretly from where ] stcod.. They réan some distance down the track, and. thén threw them selvea to the ground grovelling in the ditches in their efforts to extin ruish the flames. Then they lay still, some of them unconscious, others aead. 1 don't know how.nonv were killed, jut I counted twenty bodies before I came awav." : The latest estimate of the casualties places the number of dead at twenty. two, and the injured at forty-five. Sohe of the injured will die. Re am---- INCIDENTS OF THE DAY. again, scene . ---- Newsy Paragraphs Picked up by Reporters on Their Rounds. Mr. Pense will sit in the second row on the ministerial side of the On- tario house. S. Asselstine, hotel-keeper, Verona, was last week fined $5 and costs for an infraction of the liquor license act. it is rumored thai a young lady re siding on Main street. will be married chortly to a resident of Toronto, for- merly of Kingston. ; : Prof. Macnaughton, of Queen's, is this week lecturing in Hamiltoh and St.) Thomas. On Sunday last he preached in of St. Thomas church Miss 'Mamie Arthurs, head' clerk 'in Ferguson's . fruit and confectionery store. King. street, is spending a few davs with friends in Mountain Grove Joseph Quigley, William, street, a well-known ~Queen's student, is -seri ously ill of appendicitis. He will probably be obliged to miss his ex aminations next month. Henry Ovens, : ligntenant in the 4th Hussars, has returned from Toronto, after taking a three months' course in the cavalry school, where he obtained qualification as an officer. f a ------------ KINGSTON CELEBRATED The Marriage of Xing Edward Forty Years Ago. Forty years ago to-day the wedding of King Edward was celebrated 'in Kingston with great jubilation, Al though the. mow covered the ground a couple of feet deep, there was a re view at Murney tower field of the volunteers under Licut.-Col. - Shaw. Lieut®Col. Jackson's field battery fir ed a royal salute, and in the evening, the city was illuminated and a carn val was held on the ice opposite the city buildings, which were brilliantly lighted by the faring of hall 5 dozen honfires. The schooner British Lion, lving at the wharf, was draped with fings oi all nations, and with the roval standard at the masthead, for which g salute of twenty-€ne guns was tendered, and which the late Capt. Gaskin gallanfly acknowledged. The citizens generally wore white roseties, and the city was in gala attire. Property To Be Sold. This morning Judge Price heard the case of five mechanics' lien olay acainst the estate of Chester Follest, t was ordered that 'the property on Noison and Victoria streets be sold, on (he 20st, that a mortgage held by Q Bailey be raid, ana the balance of fo divided amdhg the the pro tien, holders ¢ | ------ «Her Marriage Vow." Marriage Vow which j# said wry scenic treat y the ng o%] ly represcntation first tame i ci ------------ hoard is of whnlesale of discip of the largest city sthools. The Ottawa' public s consider a complaint insubordination and lack line in. one It was decided Apply to Mrs, Ww. King street. to investigate the complaint. acc Bh and "Beautiful Ever Built. | The new royal train is said te havegost $300,000. It was built by t London and Northwestern Company, antl is said-to bo the most luxurious and beautifully appointed in' the world. ~~ ad + Thee are two saloons, each mea- suring sixty feet in length, three sa- loons for the suite' and two brake vans, each fifty feet long.' Th& whole train weighs 210 tons and is 385 feet long. : 3 3 furnishings * of the ¥arious rtments are artistic in the ex- treme. Delicately shaded electric lamps suggest a luxurious drawing- room rather than a railway coach, In the King's smoking room, which is furnished in mahogany and inlaid with roséwood and satinwood, the comfortable lounge chaits are of green leather and the curtains and carpets harmonize with the. chairs. ina much lighter tone of green, with white enamel and satinwcod furny ture, inlaid with ivory, is the King's' day compartment. Even the handles of the ventilators in this and the other saloons are works of art in silver. There are provided in the King's saloon electric fans and heat- ers and silver electric cigar lighters. In the Quegn's bedroom the predo- minating color is rose pink, against which the bed, with its silver plate fittings, makes a. beautiful effect, Electric lamps peep out from unex- pécted corners and from under folds of silk, while the brocades in the boudoir. campbine pale blue with ano- ther shade of pink. All the Queen's rooms, including a dressing room on each side of the bed-room, are in white enamel, with finely silverplated fittings. But the upholstery is generally of a soft green shader When Thackeray Was Bored. During Thackeray's second visit to Boston, Mr. James T. Fields, his host, was asked to invite Thackeray to attend an evening meeting of & scientific elub, which was to be held at the house of a distinguished mem- ber, Twas; writes Mr. Fields, very Te luctant to ask hun to be present, for I knew fhe was easily bored, and 'I was fearful that gq prosy essay or geological paper might be presented, und felt certain that should such be the case he would be exasperated with me, the innocent cause of his affliction. My worst fears wero realized, | I dared not look at Thackeray. I felt that his eye was upon me. My dis- tress may be imagined when I saw him rise, quite deliberately, and make his exit very noiselessly.into a small ante-room adjoining. The apart- ment was dimly lighted, but he kntw that I knew he was there. Then began a series of pantomimic feats impossible te describe. He threw an imaginary person, myself, of course; upon the floor, 'and pro- ceeded to stab him several times with a paper-folder, which he caught up for the purpose. After, disposing of his victim in thi way he was not satisfied, for the dull lecture still went on in 'the other room; so he fired an imaginary revolver several times at an imagi- nary head, The whole thing was inimitably done. 1 hoped nobody saw it but myself. Years afterward a ponder- ous, fat-witted yvoung.guan. put. the question squarely to me "What was the matter 'with Mr, Thackeray that night the club met at Mr. --"s house?" History of Playing Cards. At the commemoration banguet of the Worshipful Company of Makers of Playing Cards the master of the company, - Dr. Theophilus Hoskins, J. P., presided, After the loyal toasts had been proposed, Lord Hals- wwe the toast of "The Comi- The master, in responding, the origin and the history of playing cards were nating to the student of the past, The date of their charter was 1628, though some of the far-reaching pric vileges then conferred had been lost by the supineness of their ancestors As they were hearing a lot about education just now, he would recall the fact that' an Englishman named Jackson, in 1658, published a book entitled 'Scholars' Sciental Cards," by which he professed to 'teach not only reading, writing and arithme- tic, but even religion. 'That cards were einployed as the handmaid of education was again shown ig the publication in the same century of a work called "The Genteel House- keepers' Pastime," by which instrue- tion was given in the art of carving An American skipper, meeting With adverse 'gales, and finding himself short-handed, pressed some Irish emigrants into his service, and by labeling the ropes with the names of playing cards the newly made sailors wore able to do the work®with w fa- cility that would have gladdened the heart_even of Captain Percy Scott. ~London Telegraph. : Pie Filled With Live Birds The new governor of Dritish Gui ana, Sir James Swettenham, 1s a man of original ideas, says a King- ston 'correspondent in The Nashvilie Banner He gave a ball the other day, and at supper an enormous pie was placed in front of him. When he ent the crust, four and twenty little birds hopped out and flew about the room: 'Their feathers had been painted in brilliant colors. At first it was thought that the idea was to illustrate a well known nurs- ery rhyme, but it appears that this sort of bird pie is a popular custom in the Malay states, where Sir Janes comes from. The birds' are caught and passed around among the * guests, fortune being supposed to smile upon all who handle them, Inches the Drawing Card. Manager of traveling cirens -- What's wrong with our new midget? {le doesn't seem to draw. Proprie- tor--Of "cour See what a moss ou'se made of the advertisements You've put his height at thres feet. and the people with a rush, se not Make it 86 inches, will come ites At Colorado Springs, Col; sentrios, stationed arotnd the three miles, al- fected] by the speiter men's strike were fired upon at midnight. There nls wrre physical encounters betwegn the workmen and strikers, . ALY WHIG TUESDAY. decidedly fasci- \ INE COUNTRY dA THROUGH WHICH RUNS ThE NEW RAILROAD, -- - Graphic Description of the Row by a Young Kingstonian-Fine Farming Land Opening for Settlement -- Frogress Being Made. St Writing from section four, of the Temiskamingue and Northern. railroad, thirty-two miles north of North Bay. to a friend fw this city, J. Vincent Gleeson, son of John Gleeson, ice deal or, gives some interesting particulars touchi the comstruction of that road. The following are a few facts from letter : "At the time there is con- siderable activity around North Bay, one of the promising towns of New Ontario, owing chiefly to the construc. tion of the first sixty miles of the Temiskamingte and Northern Ontario railway. Real estate there has receiv od what the citizens beldwe is a per manent boom. Hotels and boarding houses 'are crowded to their fullest ca pacity, and the bustling air of activi: ty around the warehouses of A. R. MacDonald & Co., the head contrac tors of the railway, has affected the town people in general. "It in absolutely necessary that the contractors along the lines of the road be supplied this winter, for it is im- possible to move freight (hrough - this country in the summer time. Hund reds of teams are daily rushing sup- plies along the finest winter road in Canada, "hey miles long. and not a single hill on it of any account; to headquarters: at Moose Like. twenty. five miles from Narth Bay, and 'also 'to Boise Lake, fifty wiles from the Bav. "The railroad, after leaving North Bay, winds out along Trout lake 'ip order to get over the height of land north of North Bay. Trout lake js a very pretty lake, ten miles long' and from a quarter "of a mile to three miles wide. It is dotted, with 'many islands and has a very wide popular lily_on__account of the fine maski nohge and trout fishing y found there! "Fhe double Township of Widd field, twelve miles square, in which Trout lake lies, is the only land north of North Bay along the line of this railway as yet open to settle ment. The land 'is good farm land, though a trifle rough and hilly.- In the wooded hills moose, deer and bea ver mre plentiful, and even bears are sometimes kitled there. "Leaving Widdifield the line runs in la northerly direction, through rough ef country, and for the next twenty: five miles the land is of. no account, except in a few yalleys araumd Moose take. Along the Jocko lake, ten miles above "Moose -- lake, the road vei' through long stretches' of mus keg, covered with small pulpwood. Thie muskeg is very similar to peat, and if well 'drained would make fine farming land. Between Moose lake and Jocko lake there are immense tracts of pulpwood and a great deal of good pine. The codar, however, is valuclest, us itis nearly all' 'punky.' Deposits of mics ard frequent in this part of the country, and a little iron hus also been discovered. . "As vou go further north from by innumerable small takes. The pine and hardwood. is more abundant and the ground con siderably flatter till Boise "lake, head quar§:rs for the first fifty miles, is reached, where there is a small log cabin town. "Work on the grade of fifty miles ix in full sewing. The first ten miles is all gratel, with the exception of a piece near North Bay, and a few bridges. Over two thousand 'wen of all nations, principally Swedes and Italians, are employed, A very good line has been . secured through this rough country; no long bridges nor heavy grades, and great credit is due W. B. Russel, the chief engineer." rivers and INSANE THROUGH GRIEF, Widow of a Disaster Victim Com- mits Suicide: Glen's Falls, N.Y., March 10.-Mrs. Fred Ferran, widow of the Italian in terpreter, caowned in the disaster at Spier's Falls on Saturday, committed suicide at Warrenburg, by shooting It is thought griei unbalanced her mind. J Appeal Dismissed. Regina, N.W.T., March 10.--Judge lichardson gave judgment yesterday in the appeal case of C.P.R. against Benoil, Sintaluta, NWT, found guil ty last December of infeactions of the Manitoba grain actin the matter of allotting cars for wheat shipments,' sustaining the magistrates decision. The appeal to the supreme court hore was taken in order to obtain authori tative decision on several points with reference to the meaning of act which both the Dominion government 'and the C. P. R. were anxious to have closed up. . In the Sugar Bush. _ Morven, March 9-5 Some farmers have tapped their sugar trees and re- port a good run of shp last week. Hay is still moving. whenever they can get cars to =hip it in. W. W, Dav- is and wife started for Manitoba - last Tuesday, and other will follow soon, Great damage has been done to fruit trees by miee this winter. Farmers fear a scarcoty of help this. susamer. Visi: tors: Miss RK. Smith, Tamworth High School, spent' Sinday' at home: Rev. and Mrs. F. B. Sfralten' renewing old acquainténces here. x New Barge Nearly Completed. company's new barge, built on .the ways sl Garden Island, will be ready to go into commission with 'the opening of navigation in the spring. Workmen are now engaged on her completion. She will be a valuable addition to the company's staunch fleet of lake and river vessels. The Calvin Winnipeg council will attack the al Joged bamber trust, and will take le gal getion against. the Western Lum bermen's Association, for forming * a combing "lo boveott dealers who were not members of their association. Lapt. W. O. Zresland; of Hawmillon, has been appointed io the command | of the government steamer, Lord Jocko lake, vou find the land cut up Awgke one wight trom a "av within, th Poa iu hiExom, datas i wi x book Ne ory mn Re a i "ge AL SEL HL and ith 2 look that thade of all sweet Ausware "The names of those who love "And In mine oneY" wid Abou. "Nay, aot Bat an, ALR J Write me as one who loves his fellow: The angel wrote and vanished. The vext It came again with a great awakeding And showed the names whom love of Ge has bid And, lo, Ben Adhem's name led all the ---- A ------------ : HOME OF THE BUCKINGHAMS. of Country Seats. Stowe Palace, - one of the most magnificent and stately Country seats, not only jn England, but like wise in all Europe, is in the market, and, while it may possibly be acquir- ed at a bargain and far below* its actual value, yet it is useless for any one save an exceedingly rich man to dream of purchasing it, so vast is thé cost of its maintenance. = | Although best known as. the "- ase of the last three Dukes of Buck hai and: Chaiidos, it owes its origin to that Lord Cobham who was one of the principal lieutenants of the first Duke of Marlborough. Indeed, _there is un good deal in common be- tween Stowe Palace . and Palace, the creation of the first Duke of Marlborough, Stowe decid. edly the more manificent of two. Its facade is a thousand feet long, and the area of the buildiggs alone is enormous. ; Among the features of the place are the trees around the so-called Bour- bon tower, planted by King Louis XVITI, of France, who spent much of his exile at Stowe us the guest of the first Duke of Duckingham. . The second Duke entertained the late Quoen Victoria and the Prince Cone sort there in the early days of the Victorian era, and the place, after having beeu rented to the late Count of Paris from the time of his ban- fshment from France until his death, is "pow fa the possession of Lady Kinloss, eldest daughter and heiress of tho last Duke of Buckingham snd Chandos, and a peeress in her own right. * She is married to Captain Morgan- Grenville, a former officer of the army, and at her death the title of Lord Kinloss will pass _to her son: Though weil off, she is not rich enough to live at-Stowe or to keep the place empty year after year un- rented. For she has found no tenant for it since the death of the Count of Paris, That is why she is now en~ deavoring to sell it, and the person who buys it will by reason of its possession become at once. one of the most _copspicuous and influential fig- ures in the aristocratic County of Bucks, where there are 80 many beau- tiful patrician country seats. re-------------- An Answer ta Prayer, Your correspondent, 'De Prefund- is,"' in The Spectator, of May 81st, says that to pray to God to inter. fire with the machinery, once start- ed, is as unreasonable (all experience shows) as to thank him for what we conceive to be blessings is superfiu- ous. This dees not accord with uni- versal experience. Some years ago I impulsively resolved to send £20 to a lady who had a coffee-room, and conducted a "'mission.'"" 1 soon real- ized what an 'unreasonable impulse it had been, Dut though entirely com- trary to my judgment, after about a fortnight's delay,. 1 félt the money must go. I despatched {t with the strictest injunctions that there should be no thanks, verbal or by letter. The lady wrote to me that she had beet} praying for about two months for £20, a quarter's rent; (hat on Lady'day she had but £21, and hes- itated to reduce her resources to £1; but that after a few days' delay she paid her rent, whereupon I at once posted to her my two ten-pound notes. I shall néver forget the re- lief it was to end the period of inde- cision by getting eid of the money. The lady's gratitude to God, not me, was unbounded. I wanted ne thanks; I sent the mouey simply because I felt 1 must; and pever even visited the coffeesrcom, the cause of this strange experignce. 1 may observe that £20 is a solid sum to spend on mere sentiment; but the pressure on my conscience was no sentiment. am, sir, ete ~Cor. Londoh Spectat- or. ------------------ The Youngest Earl The youngest earl, David Lyuiph Gore Wolseley, ninth Earl of Airlie, is a very pathetic little figure, for he lost his father and became chief of the great Scots house in the summer of 1900, when his father laid down his life for Queen and country at Diamond Hill, near Pretoria, The eighth Furl of Atrlie had not long returned to the field after a severe wound, when he headed his regiment, the Twelth Lancers, in the victorious charge--a victory of which his life and that of Lord Chesham's heir swelled, the cost. The widowed Coun- tess of Alrlie, a daughter of the fifth Earl of Arran and sister of Vie countess Cranborne, is now's member of the household of the Princess of Wiles. The young earl is in his ninth year and has two brothers and three sisters. ~The Tatler. Beat 2,000 Years OId, In County Mayo, Ircland, a wood- en boat, believed to be neasly 2,000 years old, was recently dug up by some laborers. The boat; beautifully carved from the trunk of a tres, is of onk, 46 feet long, 'and in a perfect state of preservation. So hard fis the wood that the hatchets. of ihe mon scarcely left an impression. Pro vision will be made to Yeceive the relic in the Dublin museum --Peare son's Weekly, _ Westin. Foster and Cares have sold 100 'acres in North Burgise mica re- gion for $4.000 and still hold 200 ae ros, much richer in mics than the arey wold. ¥ . Stanley. Stawe Palace, One of the Mest Nogaifices That 2 Wear! worn. You get style, f¢ : --But the one thing Mothers Bre For sale only by . PO 407: anion Malt Broaktast Food Is the World's Best Cereal Food ~for-Maintaining the Health of | Those Who Are Now Well and Strong. i -- While the most noted experts and medical men strongly recommend Malt Breakfast Food ak the most article of diet for invalids and people | of weak digestion, they are also ag rood that it ie the king of breakfast |. foods for 'young wand old in good health. Malt Nreakfast © Food is the only eereal food that regularly furan: ivhes that vitality and energy neces. sary for the daily success of the body and brain worker. Malt Breakfast Food pleases. the whole faujly, be cause it is the only ecreal food that is thoroughly relished day after day. All grocers sell and recommend t Iireakfast Food, 7 FENCE POSTS A nics lot of Cedar Posts for Wire Fencing. : SHINGLES Several grades at moderate 8. ANGLIN & COMPANY, Foot of Wellington Steeet. Auction Sales, SAVE MONEY . FATAL FIRE IN YUKON, People Perish in Blaze Twenty Miles From Dawson. . { Dawson, Y.T., March 9.-The Auro: ra Road House, at Discovery Hunker Creek, twenty miles from 'Dawson, was burned, and the thermometer stood fifty-five degrees below zero! Mr. and Mrs, Charles Bernsie | their two childien, formerly of Port- Jand, Oregon, and Thomas Baird, formerly of Lanark, Ont., foreman of the Humker government road; were burned. The reaios of Mey. Bernsia and her two children were found in bed. The mother had covered. the lit tle boy. with her body. The remains oi 'the two men were foung near the door of the barroom. Bot were so- ber, industrious. men. The fre is sup posed to have started in an oil stove 'which was in a dangerous po- sition. Pernsie had been warned of the danger, and = also the danger of the bedrocui being cut off by fire. F Assistant Of Dr. Lorens Coming. New York, March 10.--Dr. Frederic Muller, the assistant of Dr. Adolf Lor- enz, the famous Viennese surgeon, is a passenger on the weamuhip Barbaro-of wa, which iv die here 0° or to morrow. Dr, Muller will vemain in New York about five days, ; hh he will' proceed to Chi , where' he will look after the further - tréatinent of Lolita Afgaur, sthoat Di. yLafihe operated on while there. 5 Maulie will thon remain in Chicago, where he will heros professor of orthopedic. surgery in the medigal schiogl of the University of < Chicigo. During his brief stay in thie city. prior ta leay- ng for. Chicago, Dr." Muller will oper ate 9 nba Poot Lo ot ren of the east side at th J infhieftlial Jewish friends : : Birong toilet ammonia in large bot- tes, Je. H. B, Taylor. wid , thing in the world,"--in 'any GRANBY RUB We emp Sweet, fresh, wholesome, like

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