was sluggis! and inactive and the given the most TALOGUE HERE | vai amit GET CA ' Don', / and Razors all gunranteed al chan's Hardware Store ' 27 BROCK ST. New Carriages, Cut'ers, Harness. ete, for sale. £Sale of Homes Every Saturdsy Canadian Chinese Restaurant 881 King Stroet Ne best Tig Mace meal in the ay: shortest notice. English and nese dishes o specially. We have the largest and most complete dinplag room in the city. 'Phone, 655. NEW Tom + Restaurant 83 Princess Street Open from 10.80 a.in. to 3.00 am / best t roving fons, 3 re ie. Set Drind shortest potice. English snd Chinese _ dishes a specialty. -, 3 am an POU Mealy ot all kinds on | Ping-Pong| tO our patrons in quality as lL as just quantity, and When bad 'Fruit-a-tives' have pleasing results." ok Meadiacho and reliove all tho tronties fnak tho dont to > tiliaus otate of the system, such as esting, Pain in the &e. {le their most FomASiabia scons Bas bch spores Beadache, yot y valuable lon, ori ACHE CK | Surter's Little Liver Pile are . @%ebane of so many liven that hore is where make our greas boast. fod Wood 's The Great Englis eaki MAND AFTER hel: tio action Domo bn ir ons Be them: In vialsat 23 cents five for $l. everywhere, or sent by mall. CATER MEDICINE CO, New York, pillscureit while and 5 fl Soll Do Small Prin Remedy. A rein ste rma Brain Jomo Sper Ratan migiency, Wlots of Abuse or BE Ea ee By ald n ArT hat WEN uv AND WOMEN a 3 3 Rt wnuarur wobarg vinflanmumat {rtiintion or whowration ul mucous membr, Painless, and not astrin gent or poisonous. Rold 2004 He 1 8ton. would be, of |THE "Qpifer per Orbem Dicor." Point Of The Issue, Ontario liberal are makin M.L.A., has been appointed registrar of one of the Toronto divisions. Is it a new i mast only be given to liberal states- men Montreal Gazette, in the fact that the conservatives preached against the appointment of parliamentaries and now practice the reverse of it. Moreover, Dr. Nesbitt flamed about Toronto as a sort of new evangel, the aim of his life being to get "jobs for the boys." And he was the first to disappear from the publie arena, having, on account of ill-health, sud- denly diagnozed, fallen into a $6,000 a year office. The vacancy in it * was oaly known outside of the retiring offi- cial, to the government and himself. The MN ¢ Is Growing. The normal school scheme has been fairly launched, and it seems pretty certain that the institution will be added to those already here and re presenting our 'educational system, The government, to begin with, gave Bn assurance sometime ago that obe of the normals would be located here, The announcement was made during the bye-election, and it was only held in abeyance because, it is said, the much use of it would havé been = re- garded-ds a bribe. The fact that the government promised the school, how- ever, whatever the result of the elec- tion, is now inviting, when the city and county and surrounding dis- trict are pressing for it. Fhe movement has broadened out, It is no longer, a school board issue. Queen's College has hecome interested in it, on account of its allied inter. ests; the city council lends its aid; Frontenac has been invited to partici pate because of its educational advant- ages, ana Lennox, and Leeds and Grenville, will find in it an oceasion wv hearty co-operation. The purpose will be to show that thougn the normal school in King- : local 'importance, as an edueational centre the city has the cordial support of. the surrounding counties, their towns and villages. The school may come any way as part of the plan of the government, and jt may come the quicker as a result of the impulse which can be given by the educational authorities in its behalf, What Is Yellow Journalism ? The question is pertinent, now that an ex-judge of the supreme designated three of the papers in Ontario as "miserable yel- low journals." The term is not preciable when applied to the Tolegram, the Toronto Toronto News. court has best evening ap- Toronto Star, and the Yellow journalism has been the re- orerice that befits some publications, not in Canada however, and not r flecting in any sense public opinion. Occasionally one sees a paper, with flaring headlines, which are ofifisive and ° meant to pangfr morbid tastes. The whole appearance is sug- gestive 'of low mims and impulses and with desires to shock rather than edi- fy the readers, The Toronto papers--nor of them--have had no ambition to serve but the public interest, and one can pick them up where without any reserve or com- punction of conscience. They are scored by an eminent K.C., and why ? Because they have ceased to be journ- els of public opinion? © No. Then why are they abused ? Because they give all the facts with regard to the street railway and, in an action for] damages, taken by a citizen, have so edifjed . the people that there is no sy mpathy with the company in' its de- fences, o. to ono. and read them any- If the street railway company secks to become popular it will have to chinge its tactics. Jt will have to give the most liberal interpretation to its agreement with the city, and serve I the people so far as it can. Hitherto tout ia plain wi fil pm ar sant on request. Tenders for Indian Supplies. TENDERS ADDRESSED SEALED the undersigned, and endorsed '"Teo- for Indian Supplies," thi lies duri the arch, 1907, at Manitoba and the Territori | tieulars say os. rails of Tender containing be had by applyin or the Indian at be ou be re- up to noon 1006, for on the 10M par- the Commi. Winnipeg. The lowest or any NOt mecomsarly seo 3 Mirek as Ber aey. 2! thority 'of the au i aid, tary. $5 it has beencin constant collision with the council and its law departments. Every concossion has been foreed from it. The whole experience of the city has been a resort*to the law and the machinery it provides for the enforce- ment of an agreement. Naturally the press is with the peo- ple. That is where it ought to be, and th: fact that the papers are so uniani- mous Jin their detion, that they are all against the company, js evidence enough that they are in 'the right. What if they are called bad names? They can stand it. They may be oven libclled without loss of prestige. ---- There i& evidence of turbulence among the Kaflirs of Natal. Friendly natives are warning the whites that trouble is coming. DAILY WHIG, [profits with the "arin papers Rg much ado because Dr. Peattie Nesbitt, No, the peculiarity of the case lies. The sugar refinets want to discuss Mr. Anderson, wholesaler, of Montreal, wants to take a hand in it, publicly. The demonstrations of the unem- ployed in London are a failure. They were promoted by the politicians, who collected money for the purpose. Any- thing to embarrass the government. -- Mr, Bilfour is again the unionist leader--because Mr. Chamberlain will not accept the call. Suddenly Mr. Balfour's ideas have become accept: able to the party. -------- 4 Helen Keller is ill from overwork! Blind, totally, yet so busy that she injures her health. Here is some- thing to make people with their sight stop and meditate, ---- Sir Wilfrid Laurier, according to the Montreal Gazette, is not a clever boss, He does not claim to be a boss at all. He is a leader of men, simply, and a very clever one. : The Albany, legislature has under consideration the investigation of banking, insurance and other depart- ments, which threatens to keep the house in session' all summer. -- The historians were' very much in evidence at the normal school meeting last evening, They resalled a lot of things that were said and done thirty odd years ago. How will they affect the present ? ria "An Atherican paper; referring to the threatened miners' strike, announces that to be "'Torewarned is forearmed." In what way ? What good will it do any man with an empty coal bin to know that he was wamed of what might happen. SPIRIT OF THE PRESS. A Dream Likely. Toronto Mail. With education excluded from poli- ties through the appointment of a non-political "superintendent a great step forward will be accomplished. The Secret Is Out. Toronto Star. Sam Jones says Toronto parsons are altogether too seridus, Perhaps if Sam could see the collection plate sometimes after it comes back from its.rounds he might understand .t. BE a A Matter Of Habit. Brantford Expositor, The Ontario government can't get over the habit they got, under liberal management, of running to surpluses. Even the pessimistic Mr. Matheson js embarrassed with a surplus, Going Too Far. Simcoe Reformer. The Toronto Sunday' dbservance peo- ple met on Monday and decided to de- mand that all electric, radial and street railways be prohibited running on Sunday. Was that a wise resolu. tion ? Can't thes people see that such demands = alienate the sympathy of moderate men who want to aid in pre- serving the same rest day # Where Is He Af. Toronto World. Mr. Whitney ought to appoint a commission, first thing he does this session, to ascertain whether the spoils system is in force or not. The poor man must he gloriously befuddled, he- tween reading the liberal papers and listening to the roar of the patronage committee. Montreal's Tammany. | Montreal Witness. eo The Montreal Tammany or liquor shop organization for controlling elec- tions has already shown itself a power in thevity. In ecivie politics the liquor interest is like Nebuchadnezzar; whom it will it slays, and whom it will it keeps alive, ---- Great Bargains All Month. ~ Look at Prevost's window 55 Brock street, for a fine display of new im- ported tweed suiting. Suits made to order for 815, guaranteed a first-class fit. They are really worth $20 a suit. Now is your time to leave your or- der, and save money. - : -- Cowboys Catch Locomotive. A Caspar Wyo., correspondent of the Technical World, says that when the engineer of a locomotive in the yards in that town left his engine recently he failed to shut off steam completely, and discovered it moving too late to catch up. 'The engine was on the main line and ran away. Ten miles cast two cowboys gave chase. One rode close to the en- gine and madé a flying leap from the horee into the cab. At first he pulled the throttle the wrong way, and increased the speed, but finally succended in stopping it. As he knew nothing = of how to fill the water tanks the engine '"'died' and had to be towed back, -- Big Order For Cartridges. Philadelphia, Feb, 14. --~An order for four million cartridges has been re- ceived from the ordnance department, at the Frankford arsenal, here. It is understood they are intended for the troops in the Philippines. Tt is intim- ated that the increased order for am- munition is in anticipation of possible trouble in China. Dr. David Fawdrey, one of the old- est and best-known physicians of Watertown, N.Y, dropped dead, Tues day afternoon, while making a call on perintendent of dominion government defraud the government. He was im- demand for the recognition of addition to getting : . save money in two wavs, besides get- ting Ozone in its concentrated form, Ozone (the coupon kind)" and if he] does not keep it you can the Public IN BRIEF FORM, Matus That lati Bveyboly ~ --Notes From All Over--Lit Ot Everything Easily Read Remembered. And to Areat ablished at mn -: cH, 3 , town engineer of Port B asiougall, 1 dead. The Allan line steamer Pomeranian, from London, arrivid at Halifax oun Febru 13th. : The Allan line R.M.S. Parisian, from St. John, N.B.,, arrived at Liverpool at 11 am. to-day. } John A. McCall, former president of the New York Life Insurance com- pany, is reported to be dying. A legacy of 8500 was left by the late . B. Miles, Tillsonburg, to the Insti: tute for the Blind at Brantford. Peace has come to the warring copper mining interests of Butte, Heinze having sold out his interests, Ex-Mayor Laporte, in his farewell address, 'predicted that in ten years Montreal's population will total half a million. Hon. Dr. Reaume announces that there will be a thorough overhauling of the fishery regulations during the coming session. The Russian government shortly will make a state purchase of all private lands for sale and will allot these lands to peasants. The suit of Countess Boni de Castel- lane, will be unopposed, and prabably pass through medium of a separation to divorce in three years, Mount Vesuvius' eruption is_assum- ing alarming proportions. 'The Kuni- cular railway track has been damaged at six points and the principal station is threatened with destruction. The A. E. Kemp Manufacturing com- pany, Toronto, have purchased an ex- tensive site on Bt. Antoine street, in the heart of Montreal, and will build here a large warehouse for their tin and enamel goods. Paul Celis, a watchman, of Montreal, shot Mortimer Gleeson, one of a trio he had caught in a clothing store at night. The other two got away. Glee fon was captured and will recover. The Chicago chief of police has is- sued a general order to all police offi- cers to see that no boy or girl under eighteen vears of age is allowed here- after in a public dance hall unattend- ed by his or her parents. The Canadian Forestry Association has received an invitation from the British Columbia lumbermen to hold its meeting A be silver ores will ire summer in the Pacific coast. Halifax is also anxious that the meeting should be held in that city, The friends of Thomas A. Hastings, the former Toronto license inspector, will be pleased to learn of his ap- pointment, to the vacant office of su- public buildings throughout Ontario. George W. Beavers, ~the- former ehjof of the salaries and allowance division of the post office department, Wash- ington, pleaded guilty to an indict- ment charging him 'with conspiracy to mediately sentenced to two years in the penitentiary at Moundsville, Va, The position of the presidents of the coal carrying trade is such that "the miners will have to strike or back down. There is a growing belief that if the operators will be liberal in aranting concessions to the miners the n the union may not he pressed, Windsor, Ont., conservatives are dis- pleased because i t is said that the lib- ernls intend to have Judge Falcon- bridge, Toronto, speak during the meeting of the Ontario Fish and Game Protection Association meeting to be old here this week, tives say that if the judge speaks they will bring Mr, Gamey 'here to address a rival meeting, . The conserva- -- Be Ready For Colds. A hard cold so lowers the vitality that it takes the system a month to throw it off. These are danger per- iods wlten ailments more serious than colds get their start. Don't have colds, they can absolutely be pre- vented by prompt use of Wade's Cold Cure Tablets (Laxative). A cure also for La Grippe, Headache and Consti- pation. In boxes, 25c, 'Sold only at Wade's Drug Store. Money back if not satisfactory. A Cat Story. Winnipeg Tribune story comes from England which tells of a cat that was accidentally shut up in the hold of a ship for two weeks with nothing to eat or drink, When released it was discovered that the animal had become so mad with hunger that it had started to'eat part of its own body. The eastern manu- facturers of Canada are not cats, but they display remarkable similarity to the desperate little animal mentioned in the English story. The Canadian manufacturers have shut Canada up in a high tariff hold, and then, driven mad, not by hunger, hut by the greed of gain, have settled down to feud fat upon the agricultural west, ---- A quiet wedding took place at Belleville, on February 5th, when David Evan Davis, Trenton, Jennie" Louise Struthers, married. and Mijss Murray, Were You Need The Other. Ozone ig a germ-killer and a valu- able remedy, but to get the best re- sults from it you must have a tonic laxative to take with it. "Solution of Ozone (the coupon kind)" is .the purest and best form in which Ozone 18 sold. Every bottle of this remedy contains a coupon which entitles vou to a bottle of 'Celery King," the well-known remedy, free. In buying this solution you get about twice as much Ozone for your money as by buying other brands, in a package of 'Celery King" for nothing. You thus purest and most Ask your druggist for "Solution of t it from Drug Co., Sridgeburg, a patient, Ount., hy writing for it. JOCCURRENCES RECOUNTED SKETCH OF THE LIFE This ~ remarkable woman, maiden name. was Estes, was born in Lynn, Mass., Fel and investigating mind, an earnest seeker after knowledge, and above all, possessed of a wonderfully sympathetic nature. In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkham, a builder and real estate operator, and their early Hapied life was puked by rosperity and happiness. ey hac po re three sons and a daughter. In those good old fashioned days it was common for mothers to make their own home medicines from roots and herbs, nature's own remedies--calling in a physician only in specially urgent cases. By tradition and experience many of them gained a wonderful knowledge of the curative properties of the .various roots and herbs. Mrs. Pinkham took a great interest in the study of roots and herbs, their char- acteristics and power over disease. She maintained that just as nature so bounti- fully provides in the harvest-fields and orchards vegetable foods of all kinds; s0, if we but take the pains to find them, in the roots and herbs of the field there are remedies expressly designed to cure the various ills and 'weaknesses of the body, and it was her pleasure to search these out, and prepare siniple and effec- tive medicines for her own family and friende. Chief of these was a rare combination of the choicest medicinal roots and herbs found best adapted for the cure of the ills and weaknesses peeuliar to the female sex, and Lydia E. Pinkham's friends and neighbors learned that her compound relieved and cured and it became quite popular among them. All this =o far was done frecly, without money and without price 25 a labor of love. Dut in 1873 the financial crisis struck n. dts length and eeverity were too much for the large real estate interests of the Pinkham family, as this class of businese suffered most from fearful de- pression, so when the Centennial year dawned it found their property swept away. ome other source of income had to be found. At this point Lydia. I. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was made known to the world. And a True Story of How the Vegetable Com : Had Its Birth and How the "Panic of "73" (it to be Offered for Public Sale in Drug whose 9th, 1819, com- 1 good for the alert .jcommended it OF LYDIA E, r Pound Causeq Stores, their mother, combined forces ¢, the family fortune, They gre. 0 re medicine which was Zool faatihe woman friends and neighbors was equally women of the w hole world, 'ere Y filling 5 the question ore they hag gross of bottles, en came of selling it, for always bef given it away freely. They hired 3 ; rinter to run off Some pamph]etg sett orth the merits of the medicine oe called. Lydia E. Pinkham's yo 00% + | Compound, and these won. Vegetable x the Pinkham gongs ew York, and Brooklyn, The wonderful curative roperti the medicine were, to a eg -- self-advertising, for whoever used jt re- to others, and the gradually increased, nd the demang In 1877, by combined efio saved enough money to commence newspaper advertising and from thet time the growth and success of the enter rise were assured, until to-day LydiaE. inkham and her Vegetable Compound have become household words every. where, and many tons of 1008 and hey are used annually in its manufacture, rts the family Lydia E. Pinkham herself did not Jj to see the 0} lve great success of this work, She % W 0, but till she had provided Ba ---- ing her work as effectively as she could have done it herself. During her long and eventful experi- ence she was ever -methodical in her work and she was always careful to pre- serve a record of every case that came to her attention. The case of every sick woman who applied to her for advice-- and there were thousands-- received careful study and the details, including Symptoms, treatment and results were recorded for future reference, and to-day these records, together with hundreds of thousands made since, are available to sick women the world over, and -repre- sent a vast collaboration of information regarding the treatment of woman's ills, which for authenticity and accuracy can hardly be equaled in any library in the world. With Lydia E. Pinkham worked her daughter-in-law, the present Mrs. Pink. ham. She was carefully instructed in all her hard-won knowledge, and for years she assisted her in her vast corres pondence, To her hands naturally fell the dires tion of the work when its originator passed away. For nearly twenty-five years she has continued it, and nothing in the work shows when the first Lydia E. Pinkham dropped her pen, and. the present Mrs. Pinkbam, now the mother of a large family," took it up. = With woman asistants, some as capable as her- self, the present Mrs, Pinkham continues this great work, and probably from the office of no other person have so many women been advised how .to regain health. Sick women, this advice is "Yours for Health" freely given if you only write to ask for it. Such is the history of Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound : made from simple roots and herbs; the one great medicine for women's ailments, and the fitting monument to the noble woman The three gons and the daughter, with BIBBY'S whose name it 0 WIR WR, Wh uh, Wh Wh, uh wh § BIBBY'S have learned how to spend way and know the asset will, probably, be unable to It means, when a man for much less. New Sh The fashionable man need not forever be an extravagant man. . - 1 Wherever you go, you will see our clothes on Bank- ers, Lawyers Physicians, Business Men--men who money in a business-like value of good clothes ; you distinguish those we clothe from those who still go to higher-priced tailors. buys here; more clothes per year for the same expenditure or as many clothes New Spring Suits Handsome, Stylish and Correct in every detail, $10,12,12.50,13,15,16.50, I18 Dou't miss seeing our Window Display of irts for spring 1906. The Men's Wear Store, 78, A THE H. D. BIBBY CO. 80 and 82 Princess St. OR WR, Wn wh, wh, wh, wh wn senor Quesada, Clb Senor Quesads, Cuban Minis sn article in The Outlook for Jul speak at the Esteban Theater, M sudiences under the spell of elog excitement; but I have Farely wi eulogy upon the dead patriot, 8 pany, written from Washington, wPeruna I can rec cine. Itis an excell is also an efficaciou: complaint of catarrh Y Congressman J. H. Bankhead, pama, one of the most influentia persof the House of Repre sentat letter written from Washingto gives his endorsement to the g! tarrh remedy, Peruna, in the fo words: " runa is one of tt --t ever tried, and no should be without your rem remedy. As a tonic and catar, | know of nothing better,' = Bankhead. When to Take Zuto The best time to take Z too Tablets is when y first suspect you are goi tohave a headache. Int! way you will ward it « =nip it in the bud. The next best time take Zutoo is when y have a headache. Thet: lets will cure it in twer minutes and do it eve time. Yet, after all, you ne not have suffered thc twenty minutes if the t lets had been taken at j the right time. I0e. and 25c. at dealers or by | B. N. Robinson & Co., Coaticoo EE -- -------------------------- MARKETS. Provided by J. Stinson, Square. STOCK ow New Y Pe Rox Re St Sug 1 : 1 S 1 pid WHEAT M |S Yu ]3 CORN M 4] A perfec n s1}5} possible .just as good vou real nout For Malta-V n clement extiact.S Th at, converts sugar, makes it ea od adds a pleasi 1oods | sweetened Malta-Vita with