Daily British Whig (1850), 3 Apr 1907, p. 3

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HEUMATISM Price 260. Hi ; afew hours Positively cures n'a few days, not put the disrvse te sep, but drives B ~WUNY Ou. WIS TH TIME TO HAYE ir Furs Repaired or Made Over ri Ran i. F. GOURDIER EXCLUSIVE FURRIER: ) Brock St. Phone 700 .--~WeStore and Insure Furs. S ) The Diamond Month " 'he Birthstone for April 3 the Diamond. During a whole no other wift carries quite the same pleasure as a Diamond Ring. Lifetime Being indestructible it does mot grow less in Leauty. pi Our stock of Diamor consists of First Grade Stones. SMITH BROS, Jewelers. Phone 686 k's Cotton Root Compound. => 'I'he great Uterine Tonic, and =Lonly safe effectual Monthly Regulatoron which women can b=» depend. Sold in three zat of strength--No. 1, + No. & ; No. & { 10 degrees stronger, $3; . for special cases, per box. Sold ¥ all d or sent paid on Feosipt of price. pamphlet. Address : feDicing Co. TORONTO. ON. (Jormerly Wi SISIIGISIISICISISIIISIISIIISE APRIL S HERE And that meaas warm eather very soon. How your spring sewing coming v2 Is it finished, or not arted vet ? If the latter: en come here for ideas. ou'il get more at this store an can be found inside any her store in the city. WH HHH HAHAH HN HA of 2 * ERHAPS IT'S MUSLINS : Ho 1f so, we ask for a look our display, as the sight is grand one. 'All styles * om 7c. to 50c. a yard. 'ictoria Lawns, * 40 inches wide, 10c. and $ up. * ersian Lawn, 3 ali prices, 15c. to 35¢c. a 3 ndia Linen, yard. z ¥ * ¥ Ali prices, 121c, to 35c. % a yard. Xe llover Embroidery, § g big. values, 50c, a yard : and up. ; beset Cover Em- 3 broidery, pretty pat- 3 terns, 25¢. and up. 5 Hundreds of pieces of mbroideries and Insertions om 3c. a yard' and up, ewman & Shaw. SISISISIIICISISIICIIICIIIcIN Enjoyed "Wonderland.™ Gorrie, manager of "Wonder ' gave the orphans and inmates' e Hotel: Dien a free pass to the ng pictures 'yesterday afternoon. . little children enjoyed the perici- e very much. The kindness of the ger to the orphgns is muéh ap: ated . by the staff of the Hotel 3 a ©hé Farmers 7" @Y UNCLE JOSH. The most essential point is good cows, says D. B. Phillips, in the Ag- ricultural Epitomist. By good cows I mean t that give rich milk, An excellent way to test them is to milk each cow separate and strain the milk away, then in 24 hours skim and not- 'joe the quality and thickness of the cream, not milk for its prdduction. In selecting a milch cow I pick for the dish faced, slender tailed, heavy "eet-cow and also' take note of the milk mirror, most any reliable stock book will give you details in regard to hilt. I also note their eves, a cow that 'shows white around her eyes when she looks sideways at you is not to be trusted. I broke three heifers in this summer and one of them is or would be a regular wildcat if given the least bit of encouragement. I tried all sorts of plans and found nothing quite so effective as a gentle whip- ping, (not beating), one dose was en- ough for her and now when she be- Ee to stamp and throw her head and I her eyes, I speak to her rather short and she quiets down: dumb brutes are pretty much like human be- ings anyway, they have their different temperaments different modes of treatment. So to get good results from them we should make a study of their pecu- liarities and while not spoiling them, we should strive to not irritate them. One of the. most essential points is clean milking, hali pint of the last milk contains more butter fat than half gallon of the first--heifors espeoi ally should have the best of care in that respect and be milked" just as long as a drop can be obtained. It is imperative that their flow 'of milk be kent up until their lactation period is well nigh expired, otherwise you will have cows that are dry four or five months of their time. IT know by ex- perience. I had 'a fine young cow to founder five: months before calving time, which 'of course --stopged the milk flow; as long as 1 kept her she went dry or the same as dry at the same time during lactation and 1 sup- pose is the same yet if still alive. Salting regular is another essential point, milk vessels well scalded and aired, all noxious vapors and scents kept away from the milk and butter and the cream not allowed to become overripe. It is an easy matter to make fine sweet wholegome butter if vou will be painstaking and nice; dirt and odors are death to good butter. If you use an old fashioned dasher preachers' meeting, comprising the churn,' vou can soon learn to tell by clergymen of the Methodist churches the rattle of the milk when it is in Halifax and Dartmouth, has adopt- | warm enough, for the barrel churns od the following resolution, and - the] and other kinds it is best to have a secretary, Rev. Selby Jefferson, was thermometer. The colder the cream is, instructed to forward a copy of it|the firmer and larger the butter to Sir Wilfrid Laurier and R. L. Bor-| yield. den : It requires just about half the am- "Résolved, that, inasmuch as the} ount of feed to keep cows that are morality. of our nation is largely 'af-| well sheltered as for those that run fected by the example of our political around a strawstack in the cold leaders, this Methodist preachers' | snow and rains. You need not expect meeting of Halifax views with alarm ja very great milk flow from a cow the possibility of grave charges being | covered in sleet and &now and shak- made touching the moral life of pro- ing until she can scarcely stand up. minent members of the House of Com- There are some farmers that the law mons, without any effort on the part | ought to compel to stay out with of the to prove the truth or | their stock long enough to learn falsity of the same, much to the scan- | something of their sufferings. A lone, dal of the country. We, the members | low shed, with even a straw or cedar Everyone needs something to create and maintain strength for - the ddily round of duties. + There is nothing better than an Ale or Porter, the purity and merit of which has been attested by chemists, physicians and ex- perts at thé great exhibitions. ASK FOR e---------------------------------------------- VASELINE NO GOOD FOR HAIR. Dandruff Germ Thrives In It, as Well as In All. Grease. A well-known Chicago hair specialist invited the Inter-Ocean reporter to como to his office and see, under. a microscope, how the germ that causes dandruff thrives in vaseline, The spe cialist said that all hair preparations containing grease, simply furnish food for the germs and help to pro- pagate thom. The only way to cure dandruff is to destroy the germs, and the only hair preparation that will do that is Newbro's Herpicide. "'De- stroy the cause, you remove the effect." Without dandrufi no falling hair, no baldness. Ask for Herpicide, It is the only destroyer of the dand- ruff germ. Sold by leading druggists Send le. in stamps for sample to The Herpicide Co., Detroit, Mich. Two sizes, O0c., and $1, G. W. Mahood, special age THOSE OTTAWA CHARGES. Methodist Preachers at Halifax Call in Investigation. Halifax, April 2.--The Methodist house of this meeting, therefore, call upon | covering is better than nome. Slabs the pr me minister, the Right Hon. | and cull lumer are cheap and plenti- Sir Wilfrid Laurier, and R. L. Bor-| ful in seme of the states, vet the den, to meet the reasonable expecta- tions of the citizens of the dominion by taking such steps as will secure an investigation into any immorality al stock go unprotected and the slabs rot or are burned. -- Calves dropped in the fall are more leged - against certain members of the | aasily raised and pushed. Spring parliament of Canada." ealves do mot receive much benefit -------------- i from grass the first season, because The choice of Orangeville as the } for some time after birth the rum- place of meeting of the Orange Grand | inating stomach is undeveloped, not Lodge was quite fitting. to mention: the effect of flies and the ------------ ROYAL SHOES FOR MEN Hand .in hand with style goes wearing quality. This together with the choice lea- ther and superb workmanship | places these goodsin the front wk of shoe perfection. S:e our Royal Spring Styles $5.00 a Pair McDermott's$ hoeStore " \ Thursday Specials Huck Towels 15 dozen all Linen Huck Towels, size, 40x20, colored or white borders, plain or fringed ends, 50c. is the regular price. THURS- DAY, 39c. pair. Table Damask 5 pipces All Pure Linen Table Marseilles Quilts 1} size White Marseilles Double Satin Damask, Quilts, Double Bed sige, some nice rich patterns, regular price, $3.75. THURS- DAY Special, $2.79 each. 500 yards Bleached Sheeting, 2 » yards wide, nice round even x. 72 i : beautiful 0 Damask, inches wide, beautiful tuead, and free from dressing, patterns and of snowy white regular 30c. = value. Special | ness, regular $1.25 yard. THURS. THURSDAY, 25c. yard. wi A DAY Price, 88¢c. yard. 4 | . Coat Specials Ladies' Spring Coats, reduced for BRSDAY, $5.50 for $3.98, $7.50 for $5.50, $10 for $7.50 each. Sia ting a good start, winter and dry food come and the growth there is more time to be given calves. Fed mostly on milk, i managed in barn or comes the fall calf is large enough to muke good use of the pasture, and so of the dry food when the mext winter ' arrives. when they are two or three days old. At first give them warm, fresh milk. Afterwards feed them sweet skim milk to which may be added a little boiled linseed oil cake. Keep before them a little bright, sweet, clover hay until grass comes. 1 fat in the food was the main source of the fat in the milk, A good cow, however, will produce in a year a much larger amount of fat in the milk than she consumes in the food, showing that the fats are in part pro- gations that have been made, show er the percentage or the total amount of fat in the milk for any appreciable at the rate of two pounds or more and therefore require | is checked. In the fall they are easily shed. When spring Take the calves away from the cows a) It was formerly believed that the duced from other nutriments. Investi- that it is not possible to increase eith- time by the feeding of fat or oils. Where fats hive been fed to cows, even a day of tallow; cotton-seed oil, or other fats, the fat content of the milk was not permanently increased. re e-- WHY GIRLS ARE PALE. They Need the Rich Red Blood Pink Pills Male. Three years ago Miss Ellen Roberts, who holds the position of saleslady in of the leading stores in Halifax; N. 8S, was a pale delicate looking young woman, who then lived at home with her parents at Amherst, N.5. She complained of general weakness and oss of appetite. Her blood was thin and watery, and she grew thinner day by day until she looked almost a shadow. Her cheeks were sunken, all trace of color had left her face, and her friends feared she was going into a decline. "I had ho energy," says Miss Roberts, "and suffered so much from the headwches and dizziness and other symptoms of anaemia that I felt 1 did not care whether 1 lived or died. One day, however, when reading our local paper, I read a testimonial given by a young. girl in favor of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and as her symp- toms were almost identical with my own I determined to try this medi cine. Before T had used the second box began to find benefit, and 1 econ- tinued taking the pills until 1 had used seven or eight boxes, by which time I was full restored to health." Today Miss Roberts looks as though she had never been ill a day in her life, and she has no hesitation in say" ing she owes her present energy and health to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills Bad blood is the cause of all com- mon diseases like anaemia, headaches, paleness, general weakness, heart pal- pitation, neuralgia, indigestion, and the special ailments that only women- folk know. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cure these common ailments hecause thev make rich, red, health-giving blood, bracing the jangled nerves and giving one Do not take any pills without the full name, "Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People," on the wrapper around ench box. Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at B0e. a box or six boxes for 82.50 from the Dr. Wil liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. HE WILL NOT TAKE IT. The Opposition Leader Could Not Accept a Salary. Toronto Globe When Mr. Graham was approached by The Globe in reference ta the ra- mor that a salary was to be paid the leaker of the opposition in the legis lature he made a characteristic reply. "No such proposition has béen made to me," he said, "and nothing has transpired to lead mie to think the government intend taking such a stop. Theoretically 1 'think the argu- ments advances] against the payment hy the country of a salary to a lead- er of an opposition are not but should the consideration of ae cepting such salary become a personal matter--well, 1 could not think of ac- cepting it, that is all." What do vou think of an increase of salary to the cabinet ministers *"' "Ta be candid, if members of the Ontario government are not worth higher salaries than are now paid them they are not capable of filling the positions they occupy. The people of this province want their business conducted intelligently cally, and 1 believe they are to pay a fair remunenation for service." weighty, and economi willing such \ ---------------- Supplementary estimates amounting to a little £2 000,000 brought down' in the House of Com- mons last night. / Canadian 'Inventor's Experience INTERESTING INCIDENT BY A FAMOUS PATENTEE over were William Wilson, of Craigie Villa, London, Ont., the inventor of the Wilson Fruit Case, now adopted by the Canadian government, tells an in- teresting experience which shows the healing and antiseptic value of Zam- Buk, the herbal balm. He says: "I had two poisoned wounds on my leg, which were very sore and inflamed. They caused me much pain and suffer- BRITISA WHIG, strength to every organ in the body. VAPANEE i It a yy Willlam Carl, who was killed at the works, Ottober Ast, 1905, The case has gone to the Au the close of plaintiffs case, Mr. Clarke moved for non-suit, but his lordship said he woyld not withdraw the case from the jury. J. Le Whiting, K.C., Kings ton, and H. M, P. Derochie, for plain- tiffs, and J. B. Clarke, K. Toron- to, for defendant A telegram, yesterday, announced the death of Barton Insh. Deccasd was well and widely known through- out' the county. He lived at Morven WEDNESDAY, Spring Assises Being Held--Case | x TWO SA LBSMER HELP WANTED-MALE. HE PEOPLE'S FORUI STRONG BOY. APPLY SBAR'S |A JOB CLEANING ASHES OUT ue WANTED--GENERAL. x ENDRON BIOYCLE, APPLY AT SMART BOYS, WHO CAN BARN from $3.50 to $4.50 per A at Gould's Broow Factory, King St. pear Queen St. FOR AUTO-SPRAY. lest hand Sprayer made, automatic. Sample Machine irve hi approved agent. Cavers Bros. Galty ------------------ OUR POLICIES COVER MORE ol building and tents Against ¥arker Firm Fo Hardware. ards or Cellars. Prices t. 3 Damages For. Death of En + Dougherty, Gengpal Carter, 187 York -- - La ployee. AT dr a MEANY » JARKET . i RBMIN N ae BWRITER. APPLY Napanee, April 3.--THE spring as: Suuare, Sark; oe bain | TUOLADY AND GENTLEMAN REQUIRE Saw ee . & » 4 spring as two furmished rooms on ground floer, TWO-SEATED BUGGY SUBSTAN sires Yesterday, Justice Neo attendance aired. lease write, Sake APPLY at 49 Riog 9 . ! Clute presiding. Carl ve. Benjamin [A YOUNG MAN TO LEARN BARBER stating tekma, which toast be moder Reve was an action brought by Geneva trade. Apply A. B. Kingsbury Ants ato, to "M.." Whig office. TARE HOUSE. IV Carl against the Benjamin Manufac- splice Barber Shop, 18 = x turing company, of Yarker, for dam- : MONEY AND BUSINESS. Large ages for the death of her husband, +" Whig office, con than any othet offers. Examine them at PRIV ATR "8 compan; Godwin's Insurance Emporium, Mark. ot Square. . Pressing Galloway, ERPOOL, NDON AND GLOBE n ay Lid ed N Adainani BRICK HOUSE, 7-RO0MS, 4005 OUT assets $61,187 815. In addition te buildings, 8 acres land, which the policyholders have fot in Nigh sta cult within security the unlimited lability of ail limits of eity. For particulars, spply the kholMers. Farm and city pro- to 244 Victoria strest. perty at lowest \ rn Paton. Bafore renewing old or giving | A' VERY PLEASANTLY SITUATED pew business get rates from Strange house, 9-rovins, latge lot, west & Stranep. A~omts. : comtrete cellar, water, ete. Will ARCHITECTS. a nar 20 Whig Shon until about a year ago, when he wont west. Deceased was a brother of Al bert Irish, Morven, and Mrs. J, F. Lake; Morven, 3: William Hunter, an old and much respected resident, died, Sunday night, aged seventy-cight yea Deceased Jeaves, besides his aged wif two sons and two daughters, W. H. Huiter, Royal hotel, and John, of Napanee, Mrs. Wesley Storms, of Hay Bay, and Mrs. Soider, of Consecon. The funeral takes place today. The remains will be placed in the Eastern vault. Henry Kinkley, nother well-knewn resident of Napanee, dial very sud denly, on Monday. Apoplexy was the cause of his death. Deceased was seventy-five years. of ape Ihe fun eral takes place this afternoon, Miss Minnie Rikley and her friend, Miss Finkle, returned to Albert Col lege, Belleville, Mis¢ Nellie Rennie, Sillsville, and her friend, Miss Mumm, who spent the Eastor vacation with her, also returned to Albert College, Belleville, yesterday Charles Coxall returned to vesterday, after spending the holidays with his paraits, Mr. and Mrs. W. Coxall. William Madill, of the Crown bank, Kingston, ix spend ing a few days with his cousin, Clar ene Madill, Faronto, Easter Mohair. Dress Model In Checked The fancy for narrow braid as trim ming is shown in the model gown pic- HELP WANTED-FEMALE. -------------------------- PTEN-ROOMED HOUSE, A HEAD WAITRESS, APPLY RAN- doiph Hotel. -- ------------------ A PASTRY COOK AT ONCE. APPLY British American Hotel office. -------------------------- A PLAIN COOK, REFERENCES RE quired. Apply 817 University Ave a ------------------------------ n a MODERN IM- ARTHUR ELLIS, ARCHITEOT, OF y x provements, 114 Barrie St. also furs fice, Cor. Q and Bagot streets. nished suminer cotlage, On lake shore (Murton's Point). Apply to JENRY P. SMITH, ARCHITECT, Dr. A. P, Chowan, 155 Princess St. ote. Anchor Bulld Market Sq : 'I'hone, 343 ISTRAWDERRY AND RASPBERRY Plants; also Bhack alnut trees. Those are the most beautiful of all ARCHITECT, MER- roer Broek the native shade trees, and "are very x, ool ! 13, and Wellington streets. 'Phone, valuable for nuts and timber. Orders ---- eerste rm | poked wow, Apply R.A. Maveisow, WM. NEWLANDS, ARONITEOT, OF Cataraqu fics, second floor over Mahood's Drug Cormack, Centre street. ---------------- -- -------- A COMPETENT COOK AND WOUSE- maid. Apply in the evening to Mrs Calvin, 181 King street. ei GENERAL SERVANT. ¥ EF ERENCES required:--Appty--Mes. FR. Anglin, Cor: Queen and Sydenham Sts. A HOUSEMAID. APPLY IN THR store, corner Princess and Bagot | goLID HRICK RESIDENCE AND evening to Mra. Howard 8. Folger, ertn. Pnirancs on Bagot streets OL number 174 Bari St, forine 55 West street 'Phone, S08 erly occupied by the late W. R. Me. Ra hat naw occupied hy the Ladies' A NURSE APPLY MORNINGS OR TO.LET. RauiGenep: asat in on the wet evenings, to Mrs. Py, C. Stevenson, | south of 4 st, Apply to A.B 114 Stuart street DWELLINGS, OFFICES, STORES, Cunningham, 79 Clarepes St, Ven rs : ANT. ro NAS) - WARE etc., at McCann's, 51 Brock sures. dors' Solicitor, AG RAL SE T, FO BH | rr ; ing. Apniy in the evening to A. Me LARGE RONT HEDROOMS, ALL LOST. modern conveniences, with or with- King St, | =~ out board. Apply 160 Cor. Union street. ~~ | A GOLD BROOCH, BETWEEN GORN pr 5 St. amt St. Andrew's church. Res NO. 224 KING NT A 1IESIRARLE ward if returned to 108 Gore SL flat of four or five rooms t ia water closet, furnace. gas A CURLEY FIELD BPANTEL. athe for family of (Ww Answers name "Sport." Meward for fie return to BN tore St. nyona harboring after this wotice will be 1 . Marriage Licenses, 42 Clarence 8t. "Phone, 568. AVENGED HER MOTHER. ---- .A Sixteeri-year-old Girl Shoots Her Mother's Assailant. New York, April 2.--Seeing her moth er lying like ond dead at the feet of a woman who had struck her down, Bel ato Torillo, a sixteen-year old girl, of No. 35 Jerome street, the Bronx, ran to her home, half a block away, and, returning with a re volver, shot her mo ther's assailant. A crowd of excited people looked on, apparently in sym- pathy with the girl No attempt was wade by anyone to interfere with the pretty young girl tured. This frock in the original was of light blue mobair, crisscrossed by fine lines of white. The skirt was a very full gored circular, trimmed with | stitched bands and an oddly eut front panel. The bodice was of "jumper" sort, and was worn over a blouse of allover embroidered batiste. § Assorted Literary Flood. The Pilgrim For clearness read Macaulay For lo read Burke and Bacon. For ac tion read Homer and Scott. cisengss read. Bacon and Pope For con For sublimity = of gondeption read Milton For vitacity rend Stevenson and Kipling For imagination read | Shakedpoare and Job For sense read Denjpmin Franklin For elegance read Virgil, Milton and Arnold. For common things read Jane ity read Burns, For humor read Chance, and Mark Twain For the study of human nature read Shakespeare and Fliot. For choice of individu read Keats, Tennyson and For loving and patient ob read Thoreau and terest an Austen. For mmplic Whittier and Bunyan Cervantes George al words Emerson servation of nature | Walton ------------------ PROSPECTS BRIGHT For Ending the Western Railway Difficulty. Chicago, 11, April 3.~The possibili- ty of settlement between the train- men and conductors and general man- agers of the western railways bright ened, early yesterday .alusngon, when Chairman Knapp, of the interstate commerce commission, and Charles P. Neill, commissioner of labor, uno ed they would remain in thay an other day, after having arranged" to start for Washington last night. For a time, yesterday ling, it seomed that all' negotiations were off, and that & strike was the next step on the part of the unions. The com. missioners will meet the men agoin this ing, and although 1 tried several salves they refused ter heal. Zam-Buk was recommended, and I applied some. It acted splendidly and In short time healed the wounds. "At. another time I ty cut. Zam-Buk took away the yreness almost instantly and soon closed: 'and healed the wound. 1 have also used Zam-Buk For other injuries and I have no hesitation in expressing my high opinion of its value. Jt is, without doubt, a splendid househo balm !"' Zam-Buk cures blood poison, cuts, bruises, oll wounds, running sores, ulcers, boils, spring eruptions, scalp itch, barber's rash, burns, all skin injuries, and diseases. All druggists: and stores , cents a hox, or from T oromto, Jor priee, Re a very sustained a == morning. £ ------ Something Of A Bad Break. Tolephone mistakes nay have their serious sides. -A man who wanted to communicate with another named Jones looked in the directory and called up a number Presently came through the roeiver a soft, feminine "Halloa !"* and he asked : "Who iz that "This vie Mre. Jones," "Have vou any idea where your bushand is?" He could not understand why she rang off so sharply until he looked in the hook again and discovered that he had called up. the residence of a widow, : A ------------ . Pure crenm of tartdr ja sold at Gib- common Jeween the two women for in her mission of vengar and after she hid seen Angeling Degenown fall to the floor beside the une necious form of her mother, Belato walked away in the direction of her own howe The holief is that the girl is being shielded by friends in the of her home, and if her vietim should not recover an attempt will probably be made to pir it har away to Italy, where she will be safe among her kingpeople, Mrs. Maria Torillo, the mother, and Mrs, Degenova met in the hallway of a house at No. 35 East Two Hundred and Fourteenth Both gavly dressed, and had heen visiting neighbors in eclebration of the Faster started be rome un vicinity streot were festival. A quarrel was nown reason, and Mes. Degenova knocked Mrs. Torilly down with a chair. WIFE'S THIRST FOR BEER. No Base For Divorcé Declares at St. Louis Judge. St. Louis, April 2.-Cirenit Judge Matt G. Reynolds, in dismissing John Gréen's petition for divoree, held that a wife's fondness for beer was no ground for divorce. He added that the defendant's conswnption of 400 bottles of beer a month as charged, was m- sufficient ground for a decree in favor of her husband, The plaintiff testified that his wife was in the habit of drink ing a cosg 'of heer a day, amd to prove his charge had bis family grocer tes tify that last October he delivered to the defendant's home more than 100 bottles of beer. "Judge Reynolds, in summing up, said the evidence show: ed that the plaintiff knew of the de fendant's "thirst" for lager before he made her his wile, o The Surgical Butcher. A Liverpool lady had given her butcher her daily order over the tele phone, and later in the day decided to change it a little and counjermand an order she had given for some liver. Ringing up her butcher she said: "You remember that 1 gave you .an order for a pound of liver a while ago "Yoo ," was the reply. "Well, T find that I do not need it, and you need not send it." Before she could put down the re ceiver she heard the butcher say to someone in. the shop : "Take out Mrs Blank's liver. She says she can get along without it." ------ Want Larger Purses. Horsemen in the vicinity are get- ting anxious to know the prizes, offer- od here on Victoria day. There are quite a number of fine horses in the vicinity, and owners could be induced - - HOUSE, 481 JOHNSON ST, IN . good repair, all modern improve prosecuted. A SERVANT: REFER ments, furnace and ges. rent moder EE -------------------------------------- Apply ti the evening, ate. Apply to R. Nesbit, 837 Joho ricuson, 191 King street son' street. VETERINARY. © BXPBRIENCED HOUSEMAID. | gRICK DWELLING, NO. 181 DIVISON | JR. G. W. BELL. VS, HAS RE AN Apply to Mrs, Walken, in the $V: street, twelye rooms, extension dine maved to his brick block, on Ularence ing, Cor. of Beverly and Union Sta, tng room and 'kitchen, hot Water stroet, just above the Post Offess -------------- -------------------------------------- heating ; possession first of May. Ap Ounlls bv . sly to Frederick Welch, No. 179 promptly of to. TWO GIRLS, STEADY WORK, Who Yivisiom street. ; can earn from $3.50 to $4.00 per a MEDICAL. . week, Apply at Gould's Broom ee ---------------------------- 8 Factory, King St., near Queen St #1 KING STRE iT, CORNER, | St, e i residence, ¥ hot' water, furnace, all modern con- | PR MeCARTHY; OFFICE LATELY ventences, Stable and coach house, v . Ryan, coroer Mon MARRIAGE LICENSES. facing Macdonald and City Parks and a ne -- per m------ Formerly occupied by W, Fr Nickle. Woon. BR 2. SPARKS: i > a 3 < cr SSUR OF Rent, $500, free of taxes, for a term « X ly % A C, 8. KIRKPA 1 BR Bien, for, a te WOO! o> i of years if desired i. 'MeCann, 51 Wrock street. Tren amd William strvets. 0% en | The Paragraph Pulpit REV. OW. OTTAWA -- The Jesus Who Inspires. To believe in Jesus as deity, as very God, is to hopelessly shut onesclf off from the inspiring influence of His splendid life. If he were Gogly, what Nit chanes have we as human beings to 3 expect to bo able to emulate his ox- amples ¥ With Jesus the God we can have nothing to do as a comrade ora leader. The limitations of the human effectually block our endeavor. Tht to believe in Jesus as a man lke our- solves, is to. bo given the inspiring knowledge that what he did, we can NEGRO LYNCHED. Hanged to a Derrick and Riddled With Bullets. Durant, LT., April 2. Jim Williums, a negro, charged with committing eri minal assault on Lillie Mimer, white, near Colbert, LT. Baturday nfter- was lyriched at Durant, last a mob of a thousand peo was hanged to an of and his body riddled with bullets, Deputy 0. 8. marshals and local officers pleaded with the mob, and threatened it with their revolvers, but to no avail noon, night, hy plo. Williams derrick ------ Thaw Not Capable. New York, April 2.-At the opening do, and what he achieved, wo can of the Thaw trial, today, Dr. Me Lo gov, 1s th no helpful impulse Guire. of the Tombs prison. testified i in the thought ¥ Thaw had always talked in a very sensible manner and did nothing in an irrational wav, Dr. Hamilton testified that Thaw is not capable of understanding the nature of charees againet him or of rationally advising his counsel. ' that Address Mr. Cosson for free liters ture, Writ Is Issued. Halilax, N.5., "April 3. ~Messrs. Har ris, Lovett & Staies issued a writ tor doy on behalf of Hon. H. B. Ewmmer- son minister of railways, against the Halifax Herald Publishing company for libel in publishing an article from the Fred ricton Gleaner, reflecting on his charaeter. ---------------- mer------ Killed By Powder Explosion. Cincinnati, Ohio, April 2.-A dis pateh fram Laporte, Ind. reports that five men hinve been killed by a explosion at Aetnea. The powder ntry was badly surrounding Lo shaken. ean Hats Off. Look at your bat; you need on new "Ut shows god soonomy" to buy a double strength Tarine moth proof bag to keep your furs from moths, one Ree our new decbies ot $1.50, 82, | all sizes, ave sold at Gibson's Red 2.50, £1. 81. Campbell Bros, King: | Cross drug store. ston' style ootre for men's hats. The Canadian Pacific railway has wp g-- given a contract for the construction "Kando pilish" has no equal. for | of a branch line between Peterboro and Victoria Harbor at a cost of ¥ nearly 3,000,000, : rr The. Family Physician| The best medicines in the world cannot take the place of the family physician Consult him éarly when taken ill. . Ayer's Cherry Pecroral REVISED FORMULA polishing silver, 2 packages for 2%e., at Gibson's Red Cross drug store. If the trouble is with your throat, bron- chial tubes, or Tungs, ask him about taking Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Do. as he says. vo ; rs 5 4 : 7 he new kind contains no alcohol BE We have rio secrets to hide! We pub- : id lish the formulas of all our medicines, 3 i y train son's Red Cross drug store, te were larger, their speeders if the purses J. C. AYER CO.;

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