Daily British Whig (1850), 29 Apr 1904, p. 3

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t Arrived. low display. this year is the, Au: aking. light gnc one repairing and ubholster. leaning use FURN ITURE 2S REID, Phosphodine, pe 8 an old, well lished and 2 preparation. He oe fe prescribed and %)/ overddyears. Alldrg gists in the Domi, of Canada sell F~ recommend as bey (filer. the ouly medi its kind that cu atisfaction. It promptly and s al] forms of Nervous Weak forrhaa, Impotency, buse or : TH i eXCess08 dptum or Stimulants, Mental ig D , all of which lead to Infirm; and ao Barly Grave, ckage or six for & ute Mailed ro ree ol he Wood Cou Winds, 0-4 phodine is sold ists. by a L PAPER 1904 in various colouring st patterns in attrao pyond anything we red. > we be satisfy your wants, find that the jee us soon; prices are as attractive ISBET, er Book Store. AMERICAN ANCE COMPANY LIE, L. GOLDMAN, Mng. Dir. e, Toronto, Ont. DU KNOW ? buy five per cent. gold ents--and have them in are paying for them? ment for YOU---if you protection for YOUR ie. yr men of character to tives. Apply to i r, District Manager, Kingston, Om. upon, or write, for * District Manager, ican Life Assurance ingston, Ont. to receive informa- gold bond for § rson aged. Y: same alway TY :-- Ju order. IZ] 5 ome 133. fer and fing Extract that are po Use pure. Our Jelly ring Extract are put yur trade. 'They have favor and we guaran: QUE GROCERY. CKERING, PHONE 530 ST. GREAT OPENING OF THE EX POSITION TO-MORROW. | Passenger Trains By The Score, Rolling In--Governors, and Governor's Staffs, Etc., There \--Grounds Beehive of Industry. St. Louis, Mo:, April. 20.--~At noom to-morrow, the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, upon which months of la- bor and millions of dollars have been expended, will become an accomplish- ed fact. The great fair will be opened with exercises of a simple but impres- sive_character. The people of St. Louis to-day get a clear idea of the conditions that will confront them duting the next six mo Passenger trains by the score rolled in all day, and governors and governors' staffs and other distin- guished visitors poured through the gates in what seemed a never-ending stream. The visitors who wore no gold lace and came merely to see, arrived by_the tens of thousands. They came from all parts of Missouri, Kansas, Towa, Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Indiana and oth- er states and territories still moge dis- tant. It was the first day of the com- ing rush, and it came like a tidal wave. Everybody was cared for promptly. All the distinguished guests were met by escorts and escorted to quarters previously set apart for their comfort and entertainment. Those of the multitude who had mde no pre- vious arrangement for rooms were compelled to hunt for what they want- ed. The hatels were full, but not over- crowded, Hundreds of visitors sought cheaper 'accommodation at boarding houses. and rooming-houses. ¥he bu reans of information established at the railway stations and other places were kept busy answering questions and providing quarters for' those who applied for them. The exposition grounds resembled a veritable bee-hive of industrv. Hund- reds and hundreds of workmen were literally working with their coats off getting thing in spick and span shape for the opening day. A small army was employed in clearing the grounds of debris and rubbish, hundreds of Badly Disfigured By Violent Eczema A Chronic Case Which Defied Doc- tors' Skill Was Permanently Cured Seven Years Ago By Dr. Chase's Ointment Once eczema becomes chronic it is most difficult to cure, and many peo- ple after doctoring for a time give up in despair. It is to the discouraged ones expevi- ally that we would introduce Dr. Chase's Ointment, knowing from ex- perience with hundreds of severe cases that it will positively effect a lasting cure. . Oakley W. Beamer, Boyle, Ont. states : "For two years prior to 1897 1 suffered from eczema in a violent form: I was perfectly disfigured about the face and head, and was in great misery day and night. Though I tried many remedies and the best doctors, I steadily became worse, and was fin- ally prevailed upon by friends to use Dr. Chase's Ointment. "Five boxes of this golden remedy perfectly cured me. I shall always re commend this ointment, and often think that if I was a "Carnegie' my first move would be to purchase' a million boxes of Dr. Chase's Ointrient and send it free to the afflicted all over the land. It is six years since I was cured, and the cure is therefore a permanent one." Dr. Chase's Ointment has a record of cures unparalleled in the history of medicine ; 60c. a box, at all dealers or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. To protect you against imitations the portrait and signature of Dr. A. W. Chase, the famous receipt book auth- or, are 'on every box. Wood's Fair lamp sale. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Dusky diamonds--first cousins to the brilliant, beautiful gems that are worth so many times their weight in gold Nothing in Crawford's coal to appeal to the eye. But a ton of it contains more real com- fort and satisfaction than half as much again of poor, unclean, fickle coal. Our coal is dependable --it's. ALL COAL. x You need a ton-or two right now. To-day's the best tie to buy. " R. CRAWFORD. ORGAN BARGAINS ! Organs, second hand, in good condi- tion, from $25 to $50. Upright Piano, second hand, large size. regular price, $350, will sell now for £125. Violin. Mandolin, and Guitar strings. not wound, 2 for Sec.- steel rn, AT McDOWALL'S MUSIC STORE, others were touches to the putting the finishing decorations and the arrangements for illumination, while still others "of a countless number swarmed through the great buildings and gave their attention to the final preparation of exhibits. The Pike, also was a scene of activity. From all in dications this part of the great fair will be. ready to-morrow with nearly every one of its many and interesting features in a completed state, Another busy lot of men to-day were the fire and police forces, upon whom will devolve the welfare and protec tion of visitors and exhibits in the exposition grounds. Fire houses and police stations are located in various parts of the grounds and experts who have examined the ' arrangements along this line declare that no previ- ous exposition has provided such am ple protection. Married Sixty Years. Cape Vincent, N.Y. Eagle On Monday evening an informal re union of relatives took place at the residence of Mr. and Mrs, William Majo, Sr., in this village, it being the sixtieth anniversary of wedded life. Mr. Majo was born at St. Jacobs, Canada, October 5th, 1822, and came to Cape Vineent, then Gra velly Point, with his parents August 7th, 1825. Mrs. Majo, whose maiden name was Mary Datler, was also horn in Canada, and came .to this place in 1537. They were married at Millens' Bay April 25th, 1841, by the Rev. Mr Slater. Mr. and 'Mrs, Majo are re spectively eighty-three and eighty years of age, almost the whole of which time has been spent in Cape Vincent. Call And See Them. You are invited to call and see the newest thing in gent's tan Oxford shoes at Aberncthy's for £2.50. David Rountree, a westera cattle dealer, leaves an estate of $15,617 to his wife and seventeen childg on. ET Auer: Hair Vigor Always réstores color to gray hair, always. Makes the hair grow and stops falling hair. A splendid dressing. fowdi se re Sante! ot A) A ry ) 4 These delicious small tongues are somewhat cheaper than ox tongues and could not be mere j and tasty. » 's name guarantees their quality. | W. CLARK, uvR. ®8 L wonTREAL | 2 YOUNG MAN. GO WEST. Another Call From The Teeming Prairies To The East. Foxwarren, Man., April 25.--(To the Editor) : Many of the successes and failures in. this life arise chiefly from a man's location on this terrestrial sphere. Many a young man has labor- ed faithfully, with his God-given tal- ents of body and mind, to raise him- self above the level of the lower class- es, and beconie a man in the world of men. But, if after several years of hard--either mental, or physical labor, he finds his position no higher than when he began, he is apt to give un in despair; and as the Presbyterians of yore were led to believe in the do trine of predestination, so this un fortunate young man believes there is no success for him in the world, and he gives up in despair. It is to such as these that I address this letter. Young man, whoever, you may be, von have perhaps heard the remark that the west is a good place to make money, but a poor place to live. The statement is misleading from the outset. Why, I believe there is no place in Canada that is so highly fav ared with the best of everything. Fu tertainments given only in the cities of the east. are given in every little country village in the west. As for sporte--why in Ontario we were awav behind the times--and the fresh prai put a ecrtain energy in every boy, not witnessed in anv oth er part of Canada, The school and churches have been most thoughtfully planned; the stores and factories em- brace ything nee ssarv to man; the roads are sufficient]: wide for teams to pass, some extending the width of hundreds of acres of prairie soil. The railroads too, are foing grand service and with the ec mpletion of the new Grand Truk Pacific' with its branches, all yarts of the west will be easily reached. It is not a lonesome place either. The very wight of the prairie leads one to feed the boundless liberty! of the place; and like the poet Bryant, vou would be led to say: "My heart swells, while the dilated sight, takes in the encircling vastness." Truly, here the sky takes on a tenderer blue than that which bends above our eastern hills. How surprised one would be in Ontario to go out some morning, and see pictured in the heavens some town or village twenty or thirty miles away; vet this is a common occur rence ind Manitoba, and although in a mirage of this kind buildings, tras, etc., are wrong side up, this only adds to the bewildering beauty of the rie breezes Every true Canadian is proud of Canada, but if one part is to be more highly praised that any other, it is the earth with thundering step; the place where the ved-man's face may vet be seen; the place where the vast ficlds of waving grain appear like bil lows on the mighty ocean; the place where the majestic deer and the howl ing prairie wolf still roam through the meadows; the sportsman's para- dise, the farmer's home, the profes- sional man's banking ground, and the 'ladies' best market. I can't begin to describe all the advantages of the west, but seeing is believing, so young men should take "their first op portunity and come west, and old men should not be content to live longer without seeing it. Ontario has sought to improve on nature in mafly ways, Manitoba still remains in many res pects as nature left her. Visit her be fore the hand of man turns all these vast plains of waving grass into fur row, grain and stubble. Now is the i Spring is upon us. All nature is y "Young man come west.) --D, Got Good Dama In the matter of the T yusand Isl { the place where orice the bison shoo and Park Association vs Piradley. Winslow, as refer by Jan Watzon-M. Ro, certain the damages sustain Ora Tucker, appdinted to as I by the grated by Justice Pardon C. Williams in 1809, has rendered Fis decision. Acide from the costs amounting to the defendant, the referee finds that the defendant is entitled to damages in the sum of 868%. This is the fa. mous huckstering case which has been in litigation since 1509, £495.10, which the plaintiff has paid | defendant by reason of the injunction ! mi ------ weeks miter 1 started fo take it. ment gene: A athiy pocied the pain had diminished considerably. kopt £5 he treatment, and was cured a month later. om I Deranged Nerves fir.R.H. Sampson's, Sydney, N.S, Advice to all Sufferers from HEART AND NERVE He a year >fien weak spells would come over me and oe so bad that I sometimes thoug! would be unable to survive them. been treated by doctors and have taken numerous preparations but nome of them helped me in the least. I finally got a box of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. Before waking them I did not feel abis to do any work, but now I can work as well as ever, (hanks to one box of your pills. They have made a new man of me, and my advice to any to get a box of Milburn's Heart and Nerve | afterwards adopted a new bore for } , Pills." the rifle barrel, changing the name of .50 a Price go cts. per box, or 3 for $1.25, all | the weapon to the lee-Enfield. For Men « $3 00 # For Women dealers, or 5 Mr. Lee was 78 years of age, and $5. : THE T. MILBURN CO., Limited, TORORTS, ONT. is entirely free from periodical suffering, it does not seom to Et amon Jong) Lae egetable Com, . ors' ute uch discomfort and robs menstruation of 8 IS. . : s ¢ 'amen who are troubled with painful or irregular Sttuatio backache, bloating (or flatulence), tg 3 ng, ir fammation or ulceration of the uterus, ovarian, bles, that " bearing-down " feeling, dizziness, faintness, tion, nervous prostration or the blues, should take iate action to ward off the serious consequences; ve restored to perfect-health and strength by taking E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, und then to Mrs. Finkhasn, Lyon, Mass, for further free ads Thousands have deen cured by so doing, and by the = : 4 3 ¥ Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Y DEAR Mes. PINEHAM : -- I suffered for six with dysmenorrhea (painful periods) #0 much so that I dreaded every month, as 1 Jemew it meant three or four days of intense nd? The dobtor said this was due to an ju- condition of the uterine appendages caused by repeated and neglected Ary The RE "If young girls only realized how danger | membered. Ion 3 aap ous it'is to take cold at this eritical time, | my mother bad used I. E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound nmin x X | occasions for irregularities and uterine troubles, and 1 felt sure 1% could ) A harm me at any rate to give ita ; 5 5 me any. Within three| 'Iwas certainly glad to find that within a weel I felt much bettir, the tereille pains in. noticed a marked improve- | the back and side were uning to and at'the time of mes I not have ral bealth, and at the time of my next nearly as serious a time as heretofore, so I continued tavo months, and at 2 1| end of that time I was like a new woman. I really have never felt better in my life, have nob 1 had a sick headaghe since, and wel h 20 pounds more than 1 ever did; eo] Clubs ousehold the orig. LR its use another person since. I am in perfect health, | mend your medicine, ~Mus, May Havurs, Edgerton, Wis., President are brighter, 1 have added 1? pounds to my cee -- y color is d, and I feel light and $5000 0 RE Lt tts I. ; "Miss Aowes MrLLen, 25 Potomac Avenue, inetd FAMOUS INVENTOR DEAD: nn Straight Pull Rifle James PF. Leo's Great - Triumph. James P. Lee, whose death took place at Now Haven, Conn, recently was spending the winter there, and it was not generally known in Galt that he was seriously ill. The dis- tinguished inventor only returned to Galtiive years ago, after a long re sidence: in the United States and Europe, His name will be insepar- ably connected with the improves ments in small arms, his inventions being the . basis of most of the re- cently-adopted weapons, He was born in Hawick, Scotland, and came to Galt with his father, George lee, whén a boy of five years. Apprenticed to his father, he became an expert watchmaker, but, being an ardent sportsman, he early became interested in firearms, When at Janesville, Wis., in 1854, he first began his study of guns, bringing out an idea he did not perfect for many years later; when it appeared " in the Lec straight pull rifle, which |. » PILLS. was first used in active services dur- ing the Spanish-American ane " A The fifél magazine w \ + '#4 have been ailing for about | 1. invented Ro a for the rom deranged nerves, and very | Apnorican navy, where it has been in use ever since. In the seventies Weak Spells: Common shoes atc priced by the dealer who charges what he thinks he can get, "Slater Shoes" are price branded on - the soles by the ers who know the wear value ¢ br Tos vont nto the maviacture pair of the Goodyear Welted | in Milwaukee, and later had his in- : ventions handled by the Remington if Arms Company. Gy ! } Nerve Trouble Is "GET A BOX OF MILBURN'S ht I 1 have In the early eighties he went to England and laid his rifle before the ritish army authorities, who took it up and furnished the whole army troubled as I was, is | with Lee-Metfords. The Government had been a sufferer from an eccident | which befell him when a youth, Dy | the accidental discharge of a gun he | Ne was shot in the hecl, and he carried ' Te I grains for. over [0 ; ieee ot we [Fs Qs , Kingston, many of the years, until tha X-ray machine. ------ -- I-------- ------ Call And See Them. Men's tan Oxford's, latest styleprice is only $2.50, at Abcrnethy's. - - . Al Carpet Buying Time IS NOW HERE a The subject of floor covering occupies the. minds of many house- holders at present. A new carpet puts fresh life into a room, and a neat matting or oil cloth makes a floor covering and satisfactory. Already we have made many sales and customers have expressed themselves as being well pleased with our prices ard delighted with the exquisite colorings and designs shown. range from | wide, 25¢c. to 60¢c. a yard. : Inlaid Scotch Linolium, 2 wide, $1 a square yard. Art Blinds, Rollers, C Poles, all widths and lengths. SUMMER I'TAG Stores, Offices McCann' fice; 61 Brock street. impre 3 Clergy St., West. lv at Crumley Dros. dry goods, THAT DESIRABLE RESIDENCE, ON Union Street, known as ** Cslder- wopd."" Possession about the first of May. Apply Walkem & Wallkem. eee -------------------- BY THE FIRST OF MAY, THAT Brick Dwelling, 181 Division street, pear Princess street, twelve rooms, with hot water heat ing, bath, ete Apply to BE. RR. Welch & Son, or to 179 Division St. Tapestry Carpets, 35¢. to 75¢. a yard. Velvet Carpets, range from $1.35 to $1.80 a yard. ; Union and Wool Carpets, range from 36¢c. to $1 a yard. Lace' Curtains, from 25c. to F Hemp Carpets, range from 10e. ['a pair. -_e , to 25c. a yard. c Musli i Nets, hz and Plumbers, an Wellington street, en 42 urtain with large workshop in the rear. Stair Carpets, range from 12jec. | ge. to 50c. a yard. Apply to Felix Shaw, 115 Bagot St. | to 50c, a yard. Lace er ---------------- e Curtain ; China and Japanese Matting, | each, worth double the range from 15¢. to 45c. yard. Ta 1 Chenslle C rt & eet eee ON APRIL FIRST, 1904, THAT DE- sirable "Store, at present gecupied by Taylor & Hamilton, as Tinsmiths Hsiatic Dyes « Wash Silks (IN PATENT HOLDERS) for . no Stair Oil Cloth, range from | $2.50 to $10 pair. Es 124c. to 35¢. yard. : i SEALED TENDERS ADDRESSED i ° ¥ Goods shown with p o the p od, ¢ y - # 2 8 ¥. to the Snare Ath or a oden: | Floor, Oil Cloth, 1te 2 yards | satisfaction guaranteed. will be received at this office until MON- goa DAY, May 16th, 1904, juclusively for ---- the construction of a Drill Shed at St. Catharines, Ont., actording. to plans and specifications to be seen at' the Publis Huilding, at St. Catharines, Ont., and at the Department of Public Works, Ottawa. Tenders will not be considered unless made on the printed form supplied, and signed with the actual signatures of ton- Ss. An accepted cheque on a chart- ered bank, payable to the order NEL COAL}. inti 58 BRAIN ON BREAKS, CANNI AL 15, of bolt SE tt BUY BRAIN ON BREAKS. porate. | ET TL ES Bg Cuiary Hourd of Trade and can five whexcelled service in Maguire, SB. Cor. King & Yorge "Phones Math 189056 BRANCHES Hunter 8t., PETERBORO ; Broek Bt, KINGSTON der. must accompany each ténder. This cheque will be forfeited if the party tendering decline the contract or fail to | complete the work contracted for, and will be returned in case of mon-accept- ance of tender. The department does not ind itsell to nder, YOUR GRATE. I lasts all night. Try it. accept the lowest or any tel By ord -- er, FRED. GELINAS, Secre -P. WALSH - 1557 BARRACK STREET. Department of Public Works. : Ottawa, April 23rd, 1904. * Newspapers inserting this advertise ment without, authority from the departs J . an 5 ment, will x t be paid for Mm, po 3

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