TGAN out is to-day one adian politics, arly 20 years power to be always the dread of his the marvelous cure ian people, +» Jan. Sth, 1906, uble I have had all on. I have been a 1c constipation for € been treated by taken many kinds ithout any benefit a long time which r. C. R. Church, of mths I took a pill ogers, of Ottawa, y good. Finally | try "Fruit-a-tives" m for a few mouths tely well from this I have had no mplaint now for a certainly state that the only med id me any pos m. Icanco "Fruit-a-tiv ive en- s" to y opinion, it is the r produced. d) OHN COSTIGAN, 2 pe ars with Chronic ut afferding any And in THREE s the liver in a healthy, . ic Constipation ? rr? you ? h pimples? veeten the stomach-- Is--clear the skin--and the whole system. Sc. a box or § boxes if your druggist does pig. ct in Taste. House." ie Line Wall 3 artistic in wall 1. [ORONTO. brate! pworks! RIA DAY . f Fireworks and De ing of FLAGS OF ALL ED, WHITE AND BLUE N CRACKERS, ROCK: IPENTS, STAR MINES, DOES AND TORPEDO rincess Street « Waggons. an Aperient. Abbey's Salt has a pronounced and gratifying effect of the kid- néys--and is most beneficial in all Kidney Troubles. ! It is invaluable in reducing the feverish condition--and in making the bowels move regularly. -- Uric Acid affections--Gout--and Rheuniatism --promptly disap- i" pear under the proper A treatment of ere Salt vescent 2c. and boc. bottles. A Diuretic and | | LORD OF AGRICULTURE MINISTER LORD CARRINGTON IN THE BRITISH CABINET. Derives His Income, Estimated at $500, 000 a Year, Exclusively From Land, and' Does Not Own a Single Share _of Stock or Bond of Any Sort What- ever--One of King's Oldest Personal Friends. No more appropriate appointment could possibly have been made in the Liberal Administration in England than that of Lord Carrington to the post of Minister of Agriculture, writes the Mar- quise de Fontenoy. For perhaps alone among the members of the House of Lords, he derives his income exclusive- ly from land, that is to say, from agri- culture, and was able to boast the other | day at the banquet of the Farmers' Club at Whitehall Court that he did not own a single share of stock or bond of 1 any&ind whatsoever, an extraordinary condition of affairs when it is borne in mind that he is a rich man and that his annual income is rated at consid- ly BLOOD ERUPTIONS and HUMORS - regret to their friends. . a heek and brow-- cast Reliable Fo otwear nor of nl Pra been sadly defaced, their attractiveness lost, and their possessor rendered unhappy for years. Why, then, consent to rest under this | For Boys Just what you want for the spring time, something that will stand the - wear and Don't: fail to see our Boots -hefore yon purchase. $1.50 and $1.75 i. JENNINGS, King St. cloud of embarrassment ? defects, it is, BURDOCK ties from the blood and plexion healthy and clear. Miss Annie "1 take beautiful snow this season, Waggons will | be more weed. If you are in meed of a Waggon-or Buggy of amy special design, will be to your interest to call on | a | -Jas. Laturney-| The Carriage Maker | Et w® 390 Princess Streef, Fingston} POTATO SCAB | I was completely cured and have "gu of pimples since." in that time. "It can't be." Fungi. pitted roughentd on Potatoes with Dollar Package the skin are with a minute fungus, resulti what is known as the selves just as the higher Man Medicine Free! hey 'can increase by division You can now obtain a large dollar size ree | little plant itself, or by spores package of Man Medicine--free on request. with them, act as seeds in hig Man Medicine cures man-weakness. ganisms, These propagative ¢ Man Medicine gives you once more the gusto, > | Iv } 1 the joyful satisfaction, the pulse and throb of | Were Probably on" the seed pc Puysical pleasure, the keen sense of man-sensa- | I'rogressive people in these day tion, the luxury of life, body-power and body: | jk , " wmfort--{ree. Man Medicine does it. Hse any htportant erop | steeping the seeds to destroy and fungi. Simple copperas we Man Medicine cures man-weakness, nervots gebility, early' decay, discouraged manhood, functional failure, vital weakness, brain fag, | stantly in each other's company. He is descended from the same stock as Lord | Pauncefote--namely: from Abel Smith, marred by unseemly Blotehes, Pimples, Eruptions, Fleshworms FLESHWORMS mors, nd sare | ous other blood dis | eases. Their presence is a source of embarrass. meat to those afflicted, as well as pain and There is an effectual remedy for all these BLOOD BITTERS This remedy will drive out all the impuri- leave the com- | 'obin, Madoc, Ont., writes: reat pleasure in recommending . your Burdock Blood Bitters to any one who | Bu es may be troubled with pimples on the face. | 4 so | I paid out money to doctors, but could not got cured, and was almost discouraged, and As there has not been much of the | despaired of ever getting rid of them. I thought I would give B.B.B. a trial, so got two bottles, and before I had taken them urdnck Blood Bitters has been manu- factured by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, for over 30 years, and has cured thousands Do not accept a substitute which unscrupulous dealers say is '" just as { Can Be Prevented by Destroying holes afflicted } REE | These little parasites reproduce them- plants do. potato scab. without erably over $500,000. His appointment must also be ex- tremely agreeable toethe royal family. For he is one .of the oldest personal friends' of King Edward, and in thelr younger days they were almost con- the Nottingham banker, who flourished PIMPLES Many 28 Sthe:vise | at the beginning of the eighteenth cen- BLOTCHES iis ai op tury. Abel had three sons of wham the first was George, who was created a baronet and whose eldest son and | namesake assumed the name of Brom- ley in lieu of Smith, his descendant, the present holder of the baronetcy, be- | Ing Sir Robert Bromley, married to the | late Lord Pauncefote's daughter Lilian. Abel Smith's second son, John, was the ancestor of the late Lord Paunce- fote, The third son of Abel bore the same name amd had a son of his own named Rober?, who was the friend and banker of the famous Prime Minister Pitt, and for whom the latter secured, with a good deal of difficulty, a peer- age from George III, the latter mani- festing an invincible objection to rais- ing "any one in trade" to the House of Lords. Pitt was of a different opin- | fon. He held that any man of good | repute, possessed of an income of $100,- 000 a year, derived from entailed landed property, was, ipso facto, entitled to a peerage, and he had his way. Pitt's friend selected as his title that of Lord Carrington, and his son, fol- lowing the example of the other de- scendants of the original Abel Smith; secured leave from the Crown to change his patronymic from Smith to Carring- ton. The present Lord Carrington was one of the few cronies of King Edward of whom his mother," the late Queen, was | extremely fond, and she bestowed upon | him many marks of favor, promoting him from a baronetcy to an earldom, and appointing him to all sorts of of- fices, including those of captain of the corps of the gentlemen-at-arms, gover- | nor of the colony of New South Wales, and Lord Chamberlain. It was while holding the latter office that Lord Car- rington, in fulfiling his duties as cen- sor of the drama, had his memorable encounter with Fay Templeton on the subject of her céstume, when she Was appearing at the Gayety theatre in London Sixty-three, bespectacled, and most benevolent looking, it is difficult to re- present to oseself that Lord Carrington was forty years ago the associate of his equally gray-haired sovereign in many | a wild freak and harum-scarum prank, in the had no and Ww in of the which and that he was the principal actor in her OI" | one of the most sensational horse-whip- AZENCICS. | ping scandals of the nineteenth century. Latoes. | The castigation was administered to 8 never Grenville Murray, former diplomat, au- | thor, and journalist, for holding up the earl to ridicule and obloquy, under the pseudonym of "Bob Chousington, Lord insects ater has THE DAILY WHIG, SATURDAY, MAY 12. re Houses of Parliament, equipped with a dark lahtern and fuses, and surround- ed by a large number of barrels of gun- powder, all ready to blow king, lords, and Commons into eternity. From that time to this the vaults and cellars of Parliament have always been solemnly searched on the eve of the opening of Parliament, which, in view of the perfect manner in which the entire palace of Westminster is guard- ed by a detachment of London police assigned to this duty, is quite as super- fluous as the lanterns carried by the veomen of the guard on these occasions, the vaults being brilliantly lighted by electricity. Sir William Carrington no longer is in charge of this particular duty, which he fulfilled in his capacity as secretary to the Lord Great Chamberlan, a here- ditary office distinct from that of Lord Chamberlain of the Household and held jointly by Lord 'Carrington, Lord An- caster, and the Marquis of Cholmonde- ley. According to an arrangement be- fills the office during a reign. Lord Carrington was Lord -Great Chamberlain until the death of Queen Victoria, and as such in supreme con- trol of the palace of Westminster, that is to say, of the Houses of Parliament. When Edward VIL came to the throne Lord Cholmondeley assumed the duties of Lord Great Chamberlain, and when the present Prince of Wales succeeds to the Crown it will be Lord Ancaster office... Let me add in conclusion that both Lord Carrington and his brother, Sir Bill' Carrington, profess to be not mere- ly ardent Liberals but even advanced Radicals. FINDS A BIG TIMBER RAFT. Yorkshireman Gets a Rich Treasure From the Sea. tons of iron chains, steel rails and plates, has been washed up by the sea at Relghton Gap, near Filey, on the Yorkshire coast. The discovery was made by a beach prospector named Jesse Smith, It was wedged well In among the rocks, and consisted of great balks of pitch-pine thirty-four feet long and seventeen inches square, with others twenty feet long across the ends. also bolted with steel mils and protect- ed at both ends with steel plates. The wood is as good as new, but the ironwork is very rusty, and it was evi- dent that the wreck had been in the sea for a long time, for clusters of mus- sels and barnacles were on its under side It came immediately from the north, from which direction the sea had been running strongly for some days, but a reasonable assumption is that it has been adrift in the track Of the shipping in the crowded North Sea as a dan- gerous derelict, and there is no telling how black the record of its wanderings may be. Indeed, a Flley fishing yawl reports that she ran on top of it on Friday evening, six miles away 'from on it. and allowed the craft to shake clear. Had it been a high speed steamer in- stead of a fishing yawl, her the bark of a tree. been is not clear. a floating dock. by right of discovery, becomes its own- the boulders, many tons in weight. tween these three peers, each in turn | who will assume the obligations of this A remarkable piece of fletsam In the | shape of a giant raft containing over | seventy tens of timber and about eight The balks were bound together with i fathom on fathom of chain, and were | the place where it finally went ashore. It was then awash, and was not seen till the vessel had run half her length up- The boat careened, but happily the raft sagged with the yawl's weight, bottom plates would have been stripped off like What the great piece of wreckage has It may have been a coffer dam or gantry or the bottom of It is a splendid find for Smith, who, er. It has -been secured by chains to which, at the spot, are At Admiral Douglas. | congregation, interested in the insur Admiral Sir Archibald L. Douglas ' ance Investigation, had "got reli was born in Quebec in 1842. By virtue gion." To this another lawyer re NEWS OF CHORCHES| THE VARIOUS DOINGS IN THE RELIGIOUS WORLD. Probably the Congregational Union Will Meet at Embro-- What a Manager Has to Say --A Fine Address. Stealing sorrow is ad much a «in as acquiring stolen joys, Many fail through success, while others succeed through failure. Toronto will have another new Ca- |. tholic church in the near future, No man is brave until he has over- come the fear of being called a cow | ard. i | If the black sheep were more com- | mon no one would stop to count | than When some men send a dollar to for a rebate. The godly man is not likely to be [ good unless he believes in the good- ness of his God. Rev. Jabez T. Sunderland, pastor of the Unitarian church, Toronto! has {ohanded in his resignation. Rev. George 1B. Williams; Jate of Markham. has aceepted a call to the Japtist church at Flushing, Mich. | A chime of bells will shortly be in | stalled in the tower of the Central Presbyterian church, Galt. It will | consist of ten bells. Germain Street Baptist church, St. John, N.B., has, extended a call to | Rev. W. W, McMaster, pastor of the | Fourth Avenue Baptist church, Otta: | wa. | Rev. Rural Dean Wright, rector of | &t. Jude's church and purish, Brant | ford, has been unanimously chosen to' f sueeond the Rev. James Thompson, of Ingersoll, { Rev. F. VW. | a call from | ton, to succeed Rev, H, W, Crews. Mr, | Hollinrake has a charge in Woodstock, | | heaven they want to receive the earth | 1 Hollinrake has accepted Zion Tabernacle. Hamil at present. Rev. J. W. Sparling. vresident of the Wesleyan College, Winnipeg, de livered an cloguent mingham, Ala, at | General Conference. Rev, C. D. Campbell. who has been lecturing in Chicago University for the past year, bas taken charge of the Preshyterian church at Copper Cliff, | for the summer months, I The head of ome of the biggest manufacturing establishments in Wor address at Bir the Methodist coster, Mass., says that since the VY. M.C.A. has held Pible classes in his shops, 'the men have done work of a better grade. . Rev. Thomas Feggette-- left---Burford; for Pryant, South Dakota, where he will become pastor of a chmeh, Mr. has done cood service in Burford, and New Durham, and his going is regretied. | Leogette All flour is made from wheat. But there are. different kinds of wheat and several ways of milling. When you select Royal Household: Flour ou get the nutritious properties of the best hard wheat in its finest and urest form. It always produces uniformly. light, wholesome bread or pastry because its quality never varies. If your grocer does not carry Royal Household Flour, he will get it for you. : " Ogilvie Book for a Cook," contain 130 ages of excellent recipes, some never published fe Your grocer can tell you how to get it FREE. Ogilvie Flour Mills Co., Ltd. : MONTREAL. Rev. B. W. Merrill, B.A, pastor of McPhail Memorial church, Ottawa, has heen tendered the position of superin- | tendent of Sunday school work for the Baptist church, in succession to Rev. Mr. Sheldon, who resighed on account of failing health, Rev. J. H. George, D.D., Ph.D, for. merly of Stratford, Ont., and now president of the Chicago 'Theolog al Seminary, is returning to the regular pastorate, and will take charge of the First Congre~ational Church at Burl . Vt. Dr. George's work in Chi. ago, has been highly commended. Embro will probably be the meet ing place of the Congregational Union of Ontario and Quebec, June 4th to Oth. The union during its half cen tury of organization has always met in cities, and the change to a rural community should prove interesting and profitable. a church meeting held in the i suburbs of New York the ¢hquiry was made whether a certain lawyer of the Talay PRICES TO SUIT EVERYBODY. TERMS TO SUIT kache, prostatitia, kidney trouble and Bervousness. You can cure yoursel? at home by Man Med!- sine, and the full size dollar package will be de- livered to you free, plain wrapper, sealed, with irections how to use it. The full size dol- age free, no payments of any kind, no receipts, io promises, no papers to sign. Tt is (rec. All we want to know is that vou are not send- Ing for it out of idle curiosity, but that you wani tobe well, and become your strong natural self nce more. Man Medicine will do what wou make you a real man, man-' ie, od name and address will bring it; al: you dave 10do is to send and get it. We send ju free everydiscouraged ope of the man sex Inter. Remedy Cos g7gLuck Bldz.. Detroft, Mich, STENCILS SEALS, STEEL STAMPS, ETC. Best Standard, Fairest Prices PRICE MARKERS, WHITE ENALEL LETTERS (.W. MACK, 60 YONGE ST. amg. TORONTO been found efficient, but for those who Jarvey," in a weekly newspaper of the prefer to try other © methods the fol society order entitled the Queen's Mes- {lowing is recommended: Formalin, will | senger. practically free seed potatoes from Grenvifte Murray, who received a ter- scab germs by immersion for two | rible drubbing, brought suit against Lord Carrington for assault and secured the imposition of a fine of $500. But during the course of the legal proceed- ings he was unfortunate enough to swear to somssthing that was not true, and thereupon Lord Carrington pro- ceeded against him for perjury. To es- cape the consequences of a certain con- viction Murray fled to France, where he remained an exile from his native land uritil his death. Grenville Murray was understood to be a natural son of Lord Palmerston, who was his protector as long as he lived, and whe certainly gave him his first appointment in the diplomatle ser- | vice. He wrote a number of books, of which the best known are "The Member for Paris," and "Sidelights of English Society," which latter is of the most 'libelous description and long since out of "print. He collaborated from Paris with Edmund Yates in starting the London weekly, World, and died under a Spanish name and title of count | which he had obtained through his marriage late in life with a Spanish countess in her own right, that is to say, the eldest daughter and heiress of a Spanish grandee, who had no sons. hours in a solution of one part of for- malin to 0 parts of water. It is | sublimate in effi ciency, anl is without its dangerous and troublesome properties, being a | ncn-poisonous non-corrosive substance, Seed of seemingly good quality, as lwell as that much affected with scab. shows excellent results from the for- malin treatment. The recive for its {use is to add ahout one-half pint of formalin to fifteen gallons of water {and sonk the potatoes in it for two Kours before planting. This solution may be used several times, equal to corrosive Rare Insect. There is in the American museum ol natural history a butterfly which pot bi tween £1,500 and £2,000. This rare | insect exists only in Sierra Leone, and an expedition had to be fitted out and maintained for' two vears before it was captured. Don't think, because a man offers an apology, that he really means it. DR. AGNEW THE FORESIGHT OF A PROPHET, BY THE AID OF THAT EST OF KNOWN TREATMENTS --*DR. AGNEW'S CURE FOR | WITH GREAT E HEART" --1IS BONDAGE," OUT OF T '"p HE "PROMISED LAND" OF PERFECT HEALTH DOES YOUR HEART ACHE? DR. AGHEW'S CURE FOR THE HEART WILL STOP THE PAIN Is there fluttering -- fainting turns '®, shoulder or arm -- ¥ Scnsations ? and it can he Ve any of With a remed phys I suffer ex Ustion, + Heart, DR, AGNEW'S LITTLE LIVER LEADING THOUSANDS OUT OF ILL-HEALTH AND UNTOLD SUFFERING TO | Yife. Do you have smothering spells--- Do your feet and ankles swell -- Do you have nightmare -- Do you have pain in the left er experience great hunger and exhaustion--- Do you have Dr. Agnew's. Cure for the Heart has saved thousands of sufferers, Ip and cure you ; but you cannot afford to toy with heart troubles, so if you the heart symptoms to-day then to-day is the day to put yourself in touch y this great heart treatment that never fails. . yi, under treatment," says Mr. A. Lavers, of Collingwood, Ont., * with some of the leans in London (England) for what they diagnosed as incurable heart trouble. ed agonies through pain about my heart, fainting speils, palpitati As a drowning man grasps at a straw I tried Dr. Agnew's Cure for the heart os botlle relieved me greatly; two bottles took away all traces of my Ty Myers' "Ht me- Made" AGNEW's CATARRHAL POWDER a sure cure for eatarrh. FOR SALE BY H. WADE. Lord Carrington is married to a daughter of Lord Suffield, the favorite lord-in-waiting of the King and the oldest member of his household, and has a younger brother, Col. Sir William Carrington, who Is the controller of the household of the Prince of Wales. Sir William Carrington, who was also as- sistant private secretary and equerry to the late Queen, has an American a daughter of the late Francis | Warden. One of the queerest dutles which Sir 'Wililam has had to perform has been to direct the operations of the party composed of yeomen of the guard in their quaint medieval uniforms, and of modern garbed policemen, who on the night before the opening of Parliament search the vaults and cellars beneath the House of Lords and the House of Commons. This is more of a historical ceremony than a measure of precau- tion, and it dates back to the day of | King Jdmes I. and of the gunpowder | plot. It is scarcely necessary to relate here the time-honored story of how Guy Fawkes was discovered on Nov. 6, 1605, concealed in the vaults beneath' the '" EGYPTIAN Is your breath short -- Is it hard to find your and PILLS cure all liver ills--10 cents, of his position as commander-in-chiet spondal : 1 think not, unless at Portsmouth he received the King on it's in his wife's name. the occasion of his visit there some Bishop DuMoulin, is working ona weeks ago. The admiral 1s the son of scheme for the, erection of a building the late Dr. G. Mellis Douglas, inspect- j;, the centre of Hamilton, to be used ing physician of the port of Quebec. |, ull branches of the Anglican church At the age of fourteen he became a .. iat city. His plan is to have the midshipman on H. M. .8. Boscawen, _. 4 office in the building, and als) then the fugehip of the North Americans o, juve a lecture room Yo be used for an Jest Indies' squadron. In ne he . f all His lordship ratherings of a i was made lieutenant on the Arrogant, intends to open a new parish on the and on this vessel he saw service In top of the mountain. gonnection with thy Congo asd Gamba An anecdote 'is narrated of a neoro River expeditions. During the Fenian N cdict who held cvenin~ sorvices invasion of 1866 he commanded a gun- "VANE : BE boat on the great lakes and four years '" © chapel formerly used by the An F % ican church. In « hymnal, which had later he was promoted to the rank of ¥ 7 heen left there he found an old and commander. In 1873 he was appointed ' i r tatl for hig to take charge of the commission that familiar hyma suttab : I COXIX was sent to instruct the Japanese in mon, hut the Roman number CXIA naval warfare and acted as director of somewhat confused him, and wae not the Japanese Imperial Naval College for able to announce it, As was the ous two years. How well he taught, and tom, he read the verses through, still how apt were his pupils recent history showing signs of embarrassment . an' tells. His name 1s couple with nearly then re-read the first stanza. This did every important operation in which the not seem to aid him or the conreon navy has participated since 1880. In (jon, and at last he straight ned him 1904 he succeeded Sir John Fisher as wolf and said with dignity "Brethren, commander-in-chief at Portsmouth. Jot us sing the skeesix hymn. SOrts, ---- The Plural Hostess. London has set the fashion, Wash ington has copied it quite freely, and there seems to be no reason why pro should not recognize of several hostesses A Gladstone Story. A story of Mr. Gladstone was told by the late Mr. Rhinelander, president of the United States Museum of Art. A miniature painter had been employed to paint a portrait of Mrs. Gladstone in her old age. It was intended that it should be a present for Mr. Gladstone on one of his birthdays. Mrs. Glad- vincial society the Hence joining forces for moth entertainments, conv one or more man stone was particularly well pleased with It is so obvious that a good or the portrait, but some of the grand- ganizer is seldom a sparkling conver children had opinions of their own sationalist and that a' discriminating gift in humanity may not extend tg the ordering of a well-balanced sup per, that it fully is sufprising that collaboration in this line has not been resorted to ere this, about it. One of the younger 'grand- sons drew Mr, Gladstone aside, and asked him If he did not think that the portrait was somewhat flattering. "It isn't much like grandmother, is It?" he asked. "My boy." replied Mr. Gladstone, | in his beautiful voice, "it is the truth | beautifully told. That's all."--Dundee | Advertiser. Get The Best Liniment. When you need a liniment you want the one that cures qiickest and best. Smith's White Liniment penetrates deaply, relaxes the muscles, reduces in- Latest Type of Freight Steamer. Of the very latest type of freight flammation and heals more surely, steamers is the British ship Bellero- : phon, built without masts, instead of thoroughly = and 'quickly than any } : 'e % other liniment on the market. Don't which she has four pillars, two ab®east + ' ox e and att. for derrich fail to get a bottle to-day for 25 fore and aft, for derricks. The hold Is | cents, at Wade's. Money back if not made especially to accommodate heavy machinery and other bulky consign- ments for the China and Japan trade. | Twenty-six winches and derricks can be worked from the dock. satisfactory. Right Time To Rest. member that the most complete and the most natural rest should come at night when, the day's bustle and worry over, the tired brain and body are given an opportunity to throw off Have you weakness of stomach, back, or dinary medicine. any kind | any organs of the Hollister's Rockey ANYBODY. THE WILLIAMS MANUFA COMPANY OFFICES: MADE IN CANADA vy A CANADIAN COMPANY. C--O AA SEI IA A Sac) i eat CTURING CC. LIMITED, MONTREAL, P. Q. TORONTO, LONDON, HAMILTON, OTTAWA, ST. JOHN, N. B, AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE. Head Cheese. : Mountain Tea is the supreme curative! the strain of work, and for eight ak . ' a power. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. Ma- | hours or so may be freed from ner- body ? Don't dope yoursell with or- | vous tension, La bhood's Drpg Store, Lice BISON FURNACE a > . ; a. == wo ary » -- ~ HIN Z - A Sapo --] With a Bison Hot Water Furnace in the basement, there is little need for brush or scraper. : No place in it for soot or dirt to lodge, and its flues are practically self-cleaning, 4 most furnaces the water jackets are constantly covered with soot 'and ashes, requiring constant cleaning to enable the fire to heat the water --a dirty job. The Bison has more good heating points than all othér heaters combined. THE H. R. IVES CO, LIMITED, 66 ~ MONTREAL.