For safe by all Dealers,or address the Company at Hamilton Price $1 per bottle, 6 bottles for‘ $5. 'wyu-.--, -â€" A sudden hush announced "that the men were on their feet again, and so zahilrully had the seconds done their :twork, that neither looked a jot the i worse for what had passed. “’ilson led ,viciously with his left. but misjudged ths distance, receiving a smashing :counter on the mark in reply which __ sent him reeling and gasping to the ropes. “Hurrah for the old one!†yelled 'the mob. and my uncle laughed and nudged Sir John Lade. The west-coun- tryman smiled, and shook himself like a dog from the water as with a stealthy step he come back to the centre of the ring. where his man was still stand ing. Bang came Harrison's right upon the mark once more, but Crab broke the blow with his elbow. and jumped laugh- ing away. Both men were a little wind- ‘ ed. and their quick. high breathing. with l the light patter of their feet as they danced round each other. blended into: npo continuous. long-drawn sound. Twoi "Eimultaneous exehanges with the left‘ made a clap like a pistol-shot, and then as Harrison rushed in for a fall. Wil- son slipped him. and over went my old friend upon his face. partly from the impetus of his own futile attack. and partly from a swinging halfâ€"arm blow which the west-counu'yman brought home upon his ear as he pa. . “Knock-down for Wilson,†cried the referee. and the answering roar was fake the broadside of a seventy-four. Up went hundreds of curly bummed Cop inthian hats into the air. and the slope before us was a bank of flushed and yelling faces. My heart was cramped with my fears, and I Awineed at evory blow yet 1 was conscious also of an absolute fascination. with a wild thrill of ï¬erce joy and certain exultation in our common human nature which could rise above pain and fear in it: straining after the very humblest form of fame. Belcher and Baldwin had pounced upon their man, and had him up in his corner in an instant. but. in spite of the coolness with which the hardy smith took his punishment there was immense exultation amongst the west-country~ men. _. . . . I 1""- V’ min “I‘M RODNEY STONE, "Wilson may hit him three times to his once. but his one is worth Wilson’s three,†remarked my uncle. “He’s a na- tural ï¬ghter and the other an excellent spamr,_l}nt I dgn’t hedge a, guinea.†ALAL AL- to have been lessened ‘by this round; “I‘ve seen his old faults, and I haven't seen his old merits,†said Sir John :Lade, our opponent of the Brighton @9941. “He‘s as slow on his feet and nth his guard as ever. Wilson hit him as he liked.†“Youâ€"“shéuld recommend your man to lead more, Tregvllis,†said Sir John Lade. “He'll never wi-n it unless he leads.†“He knows more about the game than you or I (3,0, Lade. I’ll let him take his him now,†said a gentleman, * ' t 7â€"â€:I a... in. was mm now, Wu .- pon." , grizzled mustache showed that he was an omcer or the late war. â€Very true. General Fitzpatrick. But you‘ll obsave that it is the raw young bloods who are giving the odds, and the Sheenies who are taking them. I still stick to my 09305033, ,,_._ 1.4-1.1.. “n fn the the smith still adopted the unpuasnc tactics with which he had commenced. Many rumors had come up to us from the west as to Grab W‘ilson’s ï¬ne science and the quickness of his hrthng, ‘bnt the truth surpassed what had been ex- pected of him. In this round and the two which followed he showed a swun- ne-ss and accuracy which old ringsiders declared that Mendoza in his prime had never surpassed. He was in and out like lightning. and his blows were heard and felt rather than seen. But Harrison still took them all with '.he same dogged smile. .occasionally get- ting in a hard body<blow in return for his adversaryk height and his position combined to keep his face cut of danger. A? the end or_thc ï¬rth round the odds p1» “How is it ed my uncle. “Hearty as nsflthe «135;: as rue Ila). I'D? cnwry answer came chn 3-) merry a ring that the clouds cleared from my angle's face. ‘vc‘x' 5â€'“ Annu. A-‘ u _-.V_V boat!" shouted the two Jew seconds. “It's a hundred to a tiny on Glouces- fer!†"Rent. is he?" answered Belcher. You‘ll need to rent this ï¬eld pefore 735913 "Rent. is he?" answered Belcner. You'll need to rent this ï¬eld before you can beat him, for he'll stand a. month of that kind of flyâ€"flappin’.†He was swinging a towel in front of Harrispn as he spoke, whilst Baldwin mapped hxm with the spongg._ W 7 #3-..-â€" 9‘9 “51“ Po§Taialeand Mammalian |'Il. ““‘c‘vo got him! He's beat! Ho’s A __ "MA“! .5 Moo 0: R. R. DICKEY, Clerk 5th Division court, Agentfor best Insurance Companies. uï¬'ered from an attack of bilious diarrhoea wmch became chronic and ‘ tence I used several kinds of cent medicines and vyas treated by my family not cured until I used your pgysician but was gLOAN’S INDIAN: TONIC. It helped gne at once and I continued to 1mprove and now emoy perfect health. I can neartiiy recommend 11: toallï¬routgilreld as I was, or m 1‘31 ..,,__ R. R. DIOKEY, J. P. FOREST. Ont. The Sloan Medicine 00. iiiedicine. Askyourgroccflot I -. mum wubc. it with you, Hark-son?" ask- 9. as a. buck, sir. It's all right Com Doyle. were rom- t<_> one. mm are AL -:.. men were_ “OED!“ men were riotous 1n um“ .......... “What think you now?†cried the wast-countryman behind me. and in his excitement he could get no rfurther save to repeat over and over again, “What think you now?" When in the sixth round the smith was peppered twice without getting in a counter. and had the worst of the fall as well. the fellow became inarticulate altogethamnd could only huzza wildly in his delight. Sir Lothian Hume was smiling and nodding his head, whilst my uncle was coldly impassive. though I was sure that hi.- hem-t was n_s heav'z as mine. "Vi"! l. iv “(I II‘V .-uâ€"V.V , “This won’t do, Trege‘dis,†said Gen- eral Fitzpatrick. “My money is on the old one. but the other is the ï¬ner boxmz" “My man is an pen passe. but he “fl; come through all right,†answered 1!! unde. ' saw that both Belcher and Baldwin were looks-m: grave. and I knew that we SIR LOTHIAN Hl'ME “‘AS SMILINU AND NODDING HIS HEAD. must have a change 0t some sort. or the old tale of youth and age would be told once more. The seventh round, however, showed the reserve strength or the hardy old ï¬ghter. and lengthened the faces of those layers of odds who had imagined that the ï¬ght was practically over, and that a few ï¬nishing rounds would have given the smith his coup de grace. It was clear when the two men raced each other that Wilson had made himsclt up for mischief, and meant to force the ï¬ghting and maintain the lead which he had gained, but that grey gleam was not quenched yet in the veteran's ,eyes, and still the same smile played over his grim face. He had become more jaunty. too, in the swing of his shoulders and the poise of his head, and it brought my conï¬dence back to see the brisk wiry m wmcn 139_H1W _up ‘HLELIS. m_an. Wilson led with his left, but was short, and he only just avoided :1 dan- gerous right-under which whistled in at his ribs. “Bravo, old ’un, one of tlmse will be a dose of landannm it you got it homg.â€â€˜crj_gd Belghgr. Thsre twat: - g .u _v.__, :1 pause or shuffling feet and hard breathing, broken by the thud or n tremmlons body blow trom Wilson, which the smith stopped with the nt- most coolness. Then again a few seconds of silent tension. when Wilson led viciously at the heart. but Harrison took it on his forearm, smilin and nodding at his opponent. “Get 1 e pep- per-box open!†yelled Mendoza. and \Vil- son sprang in to carry out his instruc- tions. but was hit out again by a heavy drive on the chest. "Now’s the time! Follow 'rt uplâ€. cried Belcher, and in rushed the. smith, peltinz in his half- :u-m blows. and takinz the returns with- out a wince, until Crab Wilson went down exhausted in the corner. Both men had their marks to show. but Har- rison bad all the best of the rally, so it was our turn to throw our mm: mm uu air, and to shout ourselves hoarsenvhilst the seconds clapped their man upon his broad back as they hurried him lo his corner. And what those orders were was in- stantly apparent. Harrison turned from the defender into the attacker. The re- sult of the rally in the last round had convinced his seconds that when it came to give-and-take hitting, their hardy and powerful man was likely to have the better of it. And then on ï¬ne top of this came the min. With the shppery grass the superior activity of. “31501: would be neutralized. and he would ï¬nd it harder to avoid the rushes othls opponent. It wad 1'n‘ mkmgua . or such WES-warm art 0: ringcraft~lay,, and many a . sand vigilant “second Md won. a†loan: 133m“ “What think you now?" shouted till the neighbors or the west-countryman, repeating his own refrain. "Why, Dutch Sam never put in‘ a. better rally,†cried Sir John Lude. "What's the betting now, Sir Lothian?’ “I have laid all that I intend; but I don't think my man can lose it," For all that, the smile had faded from his face, and I observed that he glanced continually over his shoulder into the crowd behind him. \Av u u vw..- A sullen purple cloud had been drift- ing slowly up from the southwest-- though I dare say that out of thirty thousand folk there were very few who had spared the time or attention to mark it. Now it suddenly made its pre- sence apparent by a. few heavy drops of rain, thickening rapidly into a sharp shower, which ï¬lled the air with its hiss, and rattled noisily upon the high, hard hats of the Corinthians. Coat-col- lars were turned up and handkerchien tied round necks, whilst the skins ot the two men glistened with the mois- ture as they stood up to each other once: more. I noticed that Belcher whispered very earnestly into Harrison’s ear as he rose from his knee, and that the smith nodded his head~cnrtly,_ with the air of a _m:m who of has orders. In I“ nu yuan“; who understands 531d approves 12th. and me west-country- in their exultatiou. “Mn†cried the (LK‘ “11'. I "(flut_the ropes! Fair play! Wait till . the ram stops!" roared a stentorirm 'voice behind me. and I saw that it came from the big man with the bottle- meen coat. His cry was a signal. for. like :1 thunder clap, there came a hun- dred hoarse voices shouting together: 4 “Fair play for Gloucester! Break the \ ring! Break the ring!" « Jackson had called "Time.†and the two mud-plastered men were already up- on their feet. but the interest had sud- denly changed from the ï¬ght to the and!- ence. A succession of hem-es from the back of the crowd had sent a 861108 or long ripples runnin through it, all the heads swaying ryt ically in the one Azmnfhï¬n like a wheatï¬eld in a Emu!“- he sent Ketu “We .....---- ,_ - _ wards into the crowd. For some tame, amidst 11w immense hillside or fncea which banked themselves up on the slope behind us, I was unable to pick out the exact point at which his gaze was directed. But at last I succeeded in following it. A very tall man. who showed a pair of broad, bottle-green shoulders high above his neighbors, was looking very hard in our direction. and I assured myself that a quick exchange of almost imperceptible signals was go- ing on between him and the Corinthian hammet. I became conscious. abo. as I watched this stranger, that the cluster of men around him, were the roughest elements of the whole assembly: ï¬erce, vicious-looking fellows, with me], dc- bauched faces. who howled like a pack of wolves at every blow. and yelled ex- ecrations at Harrison whenever he walk- ed across to his corner. So turbulent were they that I saw the ringkeepers whisper together and glance up in their direction, as if preparim: for trouble in store, but none of them had realized '. w near it was to breaking out, or hnv.‘ dangerous it mizht Drove. Thirty rounds had been fought in an hom- and twenty-ï¬ve minutes. and the min was pic-ting down harder than ever. A thick steam rose from the twa ï¬ght- ers. and the ring was a pool or mud. Repeated falls had turned the men brown. with a horrible mottiing of crimson Matches. Round after r â€2d had ended by Crab Wilson Ming flaw.“ and it was evident, even to my itirx- perienced eyes. that he was: weakening mpidiy. He leaned heavily upon tlxa two Jews when they led him ‘w hi: «w- net. and he reeied whrw !‘- '-.- Strmm‘t was withdrawn. Yet his Hk‘nfl' th through ion: practice. bcu "‘3 an an.- matic thing with him. so that he stop pod and hit with less 11"".11'. !~--- with as great accuracy as ow“. E“‘t| :- v a casual observer might 'wwn mm- ' that he had the beat of the. baffle. ’ " the smith was far the m we tm- “ ‘ - marked. but there was .-- "41.1 ~~"v- . the west-conntryman’s or! ‘. and .. strange catch in his breathing, «hi-'1 told us that); Lg not the meet dangâ€- ,__.n. -- knee. , 7 “His heart won't suï¬'er him to cry enough," said General Fitzpatrick. “As his patron, Sir Lothiau, you should direct the sponge to be thrown up.†“You think he can't win it?†“He is hopelessly'bcnt. sir.†“You don‘t know him. He's a glutton or the ï¬rst water." "A game:- man novvr pulkrd his shirt off: but the othm‘ is too strong for himi’: rd lot hiifl ï¬ght. Take .thc brave fellow away!†"Take him away! Take him away! echoed :1 hundred voices. .â€".. ‘,H I-s-umu u uu-u--“ .v.-_-r “I won't be taken away! Who dares say so?" cried \Vilson, who was back. after another full, upon his second's ous blow which shows upon the surface. A heavy cross-buttock.†the end of the thirty-ï¬rst round shook the breath from his body, and he came up for the thirty-second with the same jaunt: gal- Iaixtry as ever. but with the dazed ox- pmssinn of a man whose wind has been lltté'l‘ly mashed. “Damme, I like his ztyl‘o.†cried Sir 191m Ludo. “No shifting. nothing shy. no huggiquor I}_z_1u_ling._ It'§ a sham: to A_I‘..._- u w*â€"‘â€". I‘E'I-év's got the roly-polies.†cried Bel chm. “You have it your own way now! “I‘ll vight for a week yet,†gape Wilson» u\ “1‘; an.“ n...\.-. “A gamer man new" ï¬lm] his shirt off: but the other is too strong for him." “\’\ ell. sir, I belie-H- that hem!) muï¬-Vht another ten rounds." Ho halt turned :95 he spoke. and I saw him throw up his left arm with a singular gesture into the air. . â€"- - - . "7-3A ‘fl‘ 10115 “plays ...â€"..-._,. ~ heads swaying rythmically in direction like a wheatï¬eld in With every impulsion the oscf creased, those in front trying steady thpmselves__ ,aggi‘nst‘ t] 111 twuxu. unu nun-n.1,†an ._.a 7, rough follows from behind, alfnrmcd with loaded sticks and yelling “Fair play and Gloucester!†Their determined rush gal-Tied the prizeï¬ghters before them, fl}? armor ropes snapped like threads, and m .-:m} instant ï¬xexring was a swirlmz. earm winging w Luv... rum.-. ___.V the outer ring, and a spray of people. dashed from the solid wave behind, were thrown against the line 01 the heaters- mxt. Down came the long horsewhips, swayed by the most rigorous arms in England: but the wincing and shouting victims had no sooner scrambled back a few yards from the merciless cuts. fore a fresh charge from the rear hurled them once more into the arms of the prizeï¬ghters. Many threw themselves down upon the turf and allowed sncees- sn'e waves to pass over their b06198, whilst others, driven wild by the Mo“. returned them with their hunting era and walking canes. And then, as ha ! the crowd strainedjo the left and half to the right to aroxd the pressure from hehmd2 the vast wwns sudd ‘reft m twain. nnd thronglgthe" . J the mrpcnou “ht: u vauyuvnu ...O _ . _ . Wlth every nupulsxon the oscxllatmn m- creased, those in front trying vainly to steady themselves against the nukes from behind, until Suddenly there came a sharp snap, two white stakes with earth clingipg to tl‘leir points flew into 7A -â€"- _. -1 unnn'ln 33:55.}: Take the brave fellow THE CANADIAN POST. ’3 eyes. But round after wat-countrymgn 1911. M!" round the bemng rose. until no hichor in our {avg-1pm) To be Conï¬am. Lut l nub o L called "Time.†and tho :red men were already up- but the interest had sud; from the ï¬ght to the a1u_11- ) m. then! Go â€in!†prise-tighten. while 9 crowd took up we No me on «2th. amp. I: so won known. mm ucallnly construct“! u- more widely Inland aim the word DODD. It mm. 3 peculiarity um mice in stand out promluntly ad («tens to In the memory. 1% cont-Inn (cur letters. but Only two letters cf the \lphnbef. Everyman knows shit the am kfltynmedy ever patenud or add In pm farm was named DODD'S. Their discov- ery aux-fled the medical profeulon the world over. tad revolutionimd the {not mg". 9! gidnoyï¬lnuu. ,_--j-‘ lâ€" “- ulfluv Lu. -lâ€"UUJ â€"-.wâ€"-‘vv Na lmltucr bus ever succeeded In new urn-noun: n lame easing the peculiarity ct DODD. than; they nut]! :11 rdopc names a llama- a possible in sound 3nd catstnotlon to this. That: [coll-haul omventa (ham rutlslcg um “tempts to halt-to {nu-cue the tune ct Dadd’u Kid- mLPilll. 7_ ._‘ - I. w-j_‘_ m‘IL" 1231ng on Earth So Famous â€"No Name More Widely Imi- utv run. Why in the name “Dodd'e Kidney Pill." imiteted i A: well eek why are diemonde endgold imiteted. Bcosneediemonde ere the moon preeicna gem. gold the moot precious metnl. Dadd'a Kidney Pm. are imlteted heesnee they are the meet vein- ehie medicine the world hne ever known. “No medicine wan ever met! kidney ems un yen-e of medical reeeemh geve D;dd’e Kidney Pill: to the wodd. No medielne ever cured Bright'e dleenee ex- cept Dodd'e Kidney Pulp. Rn other med! oineheeeuedeemeny none: of Bhutan- tiem, Diabetes, Ben: Dieenee. anhego. Drop-y. Female Weekn end other kidney dineuee. en Dodd'e idney Pm- heve. III in nniverenlly known the: they hove never ieiled to cure thue dleeeeee. henoe they one no widely nnd ehnmeleeely laughed. 0n. 0! the Atlantic Greyhounds Strike. the Ann Lino smel- Com Moo In Den-o Fog. known Atlantic grothnd tower above then for o moment in the night, then they knew that thoinhip had been struck, and the next moment they were alone on the waste of fog enshrondod water. The only sound heard was‘ that of the impact asthetwoshipsoamo together. Itwas a glancing blow, the colliding steamer’ s bow having forged ahead 01’ the Corean’s before m‘ ,_ 4L- â€"'â€"u ___°c ,, the steamers came together. Then the twomusthnvebeen swungnroundbythe collision, for the Coreuu was struck almost immediately near the stem. The second shockwunotneorlynsheuvy utheflrst. Four of thebow plates weresmnshed in, severalfeet of bulwnrksnnd rolls were carried away, angle iron were broken and the deck shattered for a space of a few feet. No one was seriously injured. There were four hundred cattle on deck, but none 0! them were injured. All the damage was found to be above the water line, but it was rather more than would have been safe to venture across the Atlantic with, so Cantam Seer-VP“? Guided to man. an iéti rifles to Halifax. The training ship, Yantio, lay wind- bound at Thor-old over Sunday, and in ex- pcctcd to proceed to-day. Tho steamship Trojan Prince, which arrived at New York on Saturday, brought 10w steel-age passengers from Italy. Eon. W. S. Fielding, Canadian Minister of Finance, was apassenger onthe Cam- nania. which arrived at New York Satur- 0 -~ Wilde is said to be living in pov- e‘ V. Sapla. .'-‘ Harm's ofï¬cial majority in Centre '10: am is an even 250. ‘ : situation at Prague, Bohemia. was g , : yesterday. mnymmmnde. 1.; :~. AlfredRiley, for «yam-e elem-kc! the Township of Mnnvers, is dead at Bethany, Among the freight which has reached St. John, N. B., for the steamship 60111;. are 2,000 turkey: from Ontario for the British markets. sn- Julian Panneefote, British Ambu- sador at Washington, is getting better of his attack of rheumatism and can now go about a little on crutches. The United States Congress opens~at noon toâ€"day. President McKinley left his dying mother at Canton, 0., on Saturday to be present at the opening. u H '4M/{l When we read of a railroad wreck in which a hundred :eople are killed. we are ï¬lled with pity an horror. There are other dangers in this life a thousand times greater than that of the railroad wreck, only we do not have then: brought so forcibly to our attention. Consumption does not kill a hundred people at once in one train. It does kill tens of thousands {or every one thgg is kil_led by nccident. If a sufferer will resort to the right rem- edy before it is too late, consumption can be cured. Dr. Picree's Golden Medical Discovery cures 08 per cent. of all cases if taken in the earlier stages. It has main- tained this record for thirty years. Many of those whom it has rescued from the verge of the grave have permitted their names, addresses. experiences and photo- graphs to be printed in Dr. Pierce's Com- mon Sense Medical Adviser. ‘This useful book is free, and any snfl'erer who wishes to investigate may procure it and write to those who were once sufferers themselves. For: paper covered co y send 3r oneâ€"cent stamps. to rm (0:! afmxlom: and mail- ing only. to the World's Dispensary Med- ical Association. Buï¬'alo. NY. The " Gold- en Medial Discovery" is the great blood- maker and flesh-bands: â€It wage; the log a tite, corrects e impu‘ igu- tion, 33°15 the liver active and the blood pure. vAny medicine-dealer who 05ers you something else said to he “just a flood†is thinking about his pocketbook and not "X have uken Dr. Picm‘st Golden Nedial W and Favorite Mpï¬on' rm: wondexï¬l reams." writes Mm. Annie M. £0:- m.oquuinunk.Wayne Co..Pa."lh-d consumption: the doctors maid I'd die. The Golden Nadia! Discovery and me." _, A DOUBLE COLLISION. iZOT FROM THE WIRES. LINDSAY. M pEOULIABrrIES 01" THIS WORD- Wm NOMINATED The Premier Addgosses His Con- sï¬tuonts at Brantford. nepneent the riding in the Wm nookpiaeein theWyemleHnll minute:- noon. The amend-nee from the county m unusually large nnd the members was nominated. Amide secneot great enthusiasm Mr. Hank accepted the nomination afterm- eoiutiom of conï¬dence in the policy and acts of the Government of Hon. A. S. Hudy, with especial reference to the tai- ented Premier; and one expressive of con- fldenee in the Dominion Government, were (m; in 1314. $654,895,507; in the year fol- lowlrgjlvat. and. in 18% due amount. manage-n The amount!!! 18% was ;w,'497,911-' Thoma wmmï¬. ~ misc: W m in tho in. m in chasm! mow They ran up vaMWmm,m mwu ' --____,, pun-w 7 _ South Brant, and to an equally pronounced victory for the Ontario Government all over the Province. The Attorney-Genes! wok his seat amid dealenlng applause. Mr. Hardy's reception by his constitu- ents. after a quarter of a century's service, mm more. enthusiastically eordlnl than ever even he has. known in this intelligent and upâ€"todato riding. Toronto, Ont, Dec. 6.â€"Mr. William Ogilvic of the Dominion Topographical Survey, had by no means on uninterested audience when he dellvened his lecture on " The Klondike,†“the Canadian Insti- tute, on Saturday night. The lecture hall was packed and so many wen turned away that it became obvious that a larger hull should have been engaged. Prol. Mc- Cullum pneslded. Lecture by Mr. “'Iu. Ogilvle. Doll Surveyor-A Very Blch Cum» am mm country. Passing over the various routes 0! in- gross to the Eldondo. nod the progress in development from the discovery of its wealth in 1870 until the present day. the Dominion Surveyor reverted enthusiastic- ally to that wealth. “I believe there is uoo,ooo,ooo in sight in the district today," he said mklapplnuse. This did not include what might be ob- tained by placer and quartz mining. The district was composed of 102W!) square miles and gold could be found all over it. Ihc only thing necessary to have {mm 100.- 000ww0,m0peoplein themmsndeqnm transportation facilities. As to quartz mining, 12 miles up Klondike my: show- cd from 8100 to 810.0!!! per ton. The endin- any processes of pun-origins were of no avail where the water was frown nine months in the year. The lecturer suggest- ed the use of Edison's scheme for extract. ing iron by running the ore up elevators and shooting it down spouts. The impetus would carry the heavy gold iurthcr, while the sand would drop. The sumac“ seemed to meet with approbation. Similarly placer mining was impossible, although yields as high as 85% ton pen. consisting of two shovelfuls, had been ob- tained. He produced at this juncture n small bottle containing $90 worth of nug- gets, gotten from one pen. When the meeting was over there was anmhboscc it. He suggested a possible process of placer mining by means of steam, The tales of the starvation- which await.- czl the 6000 miners there this winter should be discounted by the fact that almost an equal number had survived the winter of R196 under equal conditions. Canada owned 650 miles of the Yukon and it was the richest 650 miles along the river. [Ar- plnuseJ The miners thereenme {tom al- most- cvery conntry under the sun; Ten years ago there was no factions. no cliques, no politics. Conditions now were chang- ed. A man's popularity depended on how often he trashed. His rights depended on his popularity. J unticc formerly was ad- ministered by means of miners' meetings. These had of late been brought into disre- pute and discredit by mix-administration of justice. humorous incidents of which Mr. Ogilvie related: OE For Monumen- Bonxlxxy,- Dee. 6.â€"Thc twenty eevcmh Bombay infantry with a. ï¬eld hospital. large quantities of telegraph equipment and several lakhs of rupees for immediate expenses, sailed Saturday for the Island of Mombasa, ,0! the coast. 01 Zanzibar, west coastofAh-im. Menthoumndeowes wfllbe engaged» accompany the troops. The expedition is under the (“met orders of the British War Oflee. The Island of Mombasa belong to mm, which is included in the East Africa protectorate of Gust Britain. Mamba :- the «phi! of what is known as the Coast Province. Toronto, Dec. 6.â€"A bulletin just Issued by the Ontario Bureau of Industries mu momma of km mom “been do- creaclug since 189. Then is manned?» $979,157,244. In 1893 the sum “33970.81.- THE YUKON DISTRICT. Decline in Fun-In Tunes. “'Iu. Ogilvle. Dominion To be delivered at Stations during the winter of'97-‘98. Sputum god particula- on "pu- ,cuuonto 3- W. “FAKE“?! ‘u‘ ‘ Wants to buy IHEGHIIPH PlllES CEDAR PO LES Hrs. H. D. loamy It will be to the interest of growers to get our offers before disposing of their seed. Parties who have not good Cleaning Mills can get their seed cleaned at our ware- house. We are prepared to pay the highest cash I ALSIKE, BED 0mm, ; and TIMflTHY SEED. l We are also paying the highes: prices for ;. H. D. MAFFREY 0F oswnco, N. Y., GOOD GREEN Wheat, Oats, Barlev, Rye, Peas, Etc SEEDS WANTED; ORRâ€"LIA, ONT. SEED EXPORTERS. GRAIN .AND.. Spratt a: K_111__on. 0! "W“ , rr’s 2322 To EVERY mAN ; V " Elefvflliflg Sent Swan/y “44.. -4 W:THE 34; s. M. 91 Sulfate†from Youthful £01131 M Emissions. Varlctcele. bzn Put: can. do not despair but conï¬dent! ‘ y full pzrtlculu‘s o. 5 III" will lend you A FREE TRIAL TREATM Weak‘ Men Rejoice! (SUI MET! New Ad â€1.3131199; “‘ / 32's, Hero‘s £0 m we: 08 0057 market Sm; but ' )Iou'hvr “an writing Your docu M food ton‘ic The Premier and the Leader Forega THE 1‘ Cent» Per mm m“ uxns‘n bales i topro \‘ literal Ioudaud w the provin lion; the] kick; the notdeflnin eddoing a mount-am don bean In any dvg mudn‘r b tel-ma to 1‘ mw ruigl founded n, Conservat mtumdt ever been Eon. Mr misstatcm ing thc : tram KUI‘ instam-v. tarot botl‘ leave that 1 St. John, v admitted matings of x lattice, and â€don to f d the Govcn Il-mtured a ll hour and ï¬nitely his M “ Wchavc no pHW -. duty." Mr. German. minedm place the publi “platform of the Op; â€at. again asked, "1) hflona which would virt export of logs?" Ills 1‘ hum}: than: later." (I . B was within an hour “when the Prvmicr. All voice, stood “P W ,Io-Ig cheeredby the H pm that thong] .mmd‘ Borax mt mam! true ' m an inlpt hung the p h warlock the cum pan nth VERY SPIRI Publuhen’ 31.00 PER “:4 Jen! Lnglet sol it Wm OW cums mandr- rasOWN prov nun u! an FRIDAY JEUSL Invn‘ lCl