West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 21 Nov 1895, p. 4

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_ month. Fleshertonâ€"Monday before Onnlflevil Dundaikâ€"â€"Tueslay before Orangeviliele Shelburneâ€"Wednesday before Orangeviliq Waulkertonâ€"Last] Woednesday in each month. day after Guelph. Listowel~â€" First Friday in each month: Fergusâ€"Thursday following Mount Fores Markdaleâ€"Saturday before Orangeville Onngevillo'â€"Second Thursday in eao monts. Guelphâ€"First Wedesday in eack month Harmstonâ€"Friday Lefors the Guelph Fair Draytonâ€"Saturduy betore Guelph. Eloruâ€"The day before Guelph. Douglasâ€"Monday before Elora Feir. Hamiltonâ€"Crystrl Palace Grounds, th Nippkinsâ€"Why so blue, old boy ? Bhfikinsâ€"-l tried t% economize by marrying my typeâ€"writer. Gooyd lgdeal No, it wasn‘t. She refuses to do any more typeâ€"writing, demands two serâ€" :::- to ukec-me O‘i.t:”' and l::uu my nextâ€"typewriter shall & man, although men want larger salarâ€" Durhamâ€"Third Tuesday in each wonth Prvevi‘lsâ€"Monday _ before Durham Hanoverâ€"Monday before Durkam. Mount Fore«stâ€"Third Wednesday in emeb SAUUL'JLN 14GN~I, K.O.T.M., No. 154, meoets on the first and third Tuesdays of every mounth. Thos. Brown, Com. F C. Hamilton, R. K. M SONS OF SCOTLAND, BEX NEVIS CAMP NO. 45, meets in S. of S. Hall, Fridoy on or before full moon, George Binnie, Chief, Geo. Russel, Sec. DCRHAM L.O. L. NO. 682. Night o Meeting. on Thurscav or before fal moor in each month. James Staples, C mmik c www Secretary G_REY LODGE NO. 169 1.0.0.F. Nigh of Meeting every Monday evening a c‘clock, in the Odd Fellows Hall. Visit ng brethern welcomed. W. B. Vollet Sec POS‘I‘ OFFICE &. mM., to 7 p. Postmaster. Deputyâ€"Regist &. m. to 4 p. m Dorham Servicesâ€"11 a. m. first Sup day of every month. G‘enelg Servicesâ€" 9 a. m. first Sunday of every month 10:80 a. m. third Sanday of every month. AUGEEN TENT, K.O.T.M.. No. 154 Annual feeSl. _ DT. Gup, Pre« Suanday Services, morning at 11 a. m. Subbath School and Bible class at 2:30 p. mr. Preaching at 7 p. us, _ Week evenâ€" ing Serviceâ€"Thursday evening, regular prayer meeting at 8 p. m. Young Peoples i d 2 e s . 7 Union on Monday evening at 8. p REV. A. G. JANSEN, Pastor. Service every Sabbath at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. Sabbath School and Bible clase at 2:30 p. m. Frayer meeting on Wedues day evening at 8 p. m. H CHANICS INSTITUTE Clurch War Whitmore. DURRARAM DIRECTORY Mighty Pocr Economy. hat a masters ana s nopsis of the . 1. If any po tinned, be mu publisher may mentis .nade, whether it be { There can be r paymentisma Tok ay nersc the post office name or anoth« seribed or not is 8. If asubscr stopped at 2 car APTIST CBURCK C. CEURCL Monthly Fairs G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thoma Lnuder, Registrar. Johu A. Munoro tyâ€"Registrar. Office hours from 1( REV. W. McGREGOR, Pastox. RINITY CHUR Ayer‘s onz Sarsaparilla 4Â¥YERS PILLS ESEYTERIAN CHURCKH Decided Improvement. tEV. R. MALONEY, P Eat into the Flesh, We call Mr. Jas. E. Nicholson, Florencey N. B., Struggles for Soven Lon Years with Almost Mrs. MacBRae, I Â¥e AYERS z5: e call the special attention of Pos ers and subscribers to the following sy is of the newcpaperlaws : 1f any porson orders his peper discon d, he must pay all arreages, or the her may continus to send it until pay» is .unde, and collectthe whole aw cun!( wwr it be taken from the office or not. can be no lega) discontinuance until spr no purp Mr. NX W. J. CONNOR, Pastor. h Services at 11 a. t~. and 7 p. m School and Bible class at 9:30 a.m. Wardens, W. B. Vollet and T. M. CANCER ON THE LiP, _ * ,/ stt .. ‘ 7 PA Ne> A A /« e |a *J _/ /A,,/l C / 7 L IVM /aMZ >/ "e\ o A":f/,,‘, very Satur Newspaper Laws. ry Tuesd eb eAns AND IS CURED BY ‘E, Office hours from # p.M. Arch. MacKeaze Passes Belie son who takes a paper frow ce, whether directed to hit her, or whether he has sub is responsible for the pay. criber orders his paper to be ur:aiutime.nudtho?ublished iend, the subscriberis bound ‘ he takes it out®of the post proceeds upon e ground ist pay for what he uses. James E. Nicholson de rCH,. y evening from ay from 2 to 4 p Ramag brarian World‘s Fair x ‘ I have seen & young girl marry : young man of dissolute gl.bits. and r(: i pent of it as long as she lives. _ . . Lowels» _ Mayâ€"That‘s her exactly. Al ssking I0r â€"Enpossibilities . . â€" . * Chollyâ€"Maud asked me last ni what I thought of her. _ 7mght _ Everywhere outside the reservation parks the commercial idea is dominant and beauty is sacrificed to utility. T Nes e tsld s tm e y On the Canadian side a trolley line extends along the river from Chippewa to Queenston through the Queen Vicâ€" toria Park. The waste water and reâ€" fuse from a score of mills pour into the canyon, and one concern has its plant located in the gorge itself. It seems to be the desire of some one to inventa new sensation at Niagara every year. Usually some.gnrt. of this picturesque region is sacrificed to acâ€" complish this g'ntpose A few years ago the New York Central Railroad Company blasted out a roadbed along the side of the lower gorge to Lewiston for their * observation trains." Thousâ€" ands of tons of rock were removed and great damage was done to the foliage. An old suspension bridge, now ruined, hangs across the lower end of the gorge, and is a blot upon the scenery. _ One cantilever and two suspension bridges enable ngers to enjoy the novel effect oJ viewing the cataract from midâ€" air, 200 feet above the rapids. A half dozen ugly elevators sgxn! son;: of the i 8 i most picturesque points in the gorge. ‘ A SENSATIONAL TRIP, From the cliffs the appearance of a car at night is very weird as it flits along the river like & gigantic willâ€"‘oâ€" theâ€"wisp. _ While much of the scenery has been mutilated, and while the long line of trolley wires and poles defaces the hndsca})e. yet the injury is not irâ€" reparable, for the vefi::mn will _ in time be partially rep d by another growth. Nevicabie.s> 1 in train na oc o e e e en e an idea of the rapidity of this stream until he takes this remarkable journey on the trolleyâ€"a race between electriâ€" city and gravity, in which the stream rushes on with the speed of an express twain railroad bridgés. \down a. ér;d; of two hundred feet in oneâ€"fourth of a mile to the slide of the Whirlpool rapids. It is a magnificent sight to wWwatch the rapids at any time, but no one can form In The road starts from the steel obâ€" servation tower at the entrance to Prospect Park, passes along the cliff, entering the gorge, just south of the of the gorge are covered to a great height with broken rocks, which have fallen from above as the result of cenâ€" turies of erosion. Some of these fragâ€" ments are of enormous size. â€" These masses, sloping rapidly to the river, are covered with a luxuriant growth of shrubs and trees. At the base of this heap, and in some cases carved out of: the sideâ€" wall of the canyon, lies the ‘ roadbed. _ With every blast below there came an avalanche of rocks from above. _ This in turn had to be reâ€" moved ; in some instances a detour was necessary in order to avoid some of these enormous masses of limestone. Asking Too Much. DOWN BY THE RIVER composed of three Christians and thre Mussulmans, to watch over the adminâ€" istration of the Armenian vilayets. Govâ€" ernors of vilayets were to be appointâ€" ed without distinction of religion, subâ€" ject to the veto of the powers, deputy governors were to be Christian where the governors were Moslem and vice versa, the same rules to apply to disâ€" trict governors and their deputies. District councils were to be composed oneâ€"lalf of Mohammedans and oneâ€"half of Christians, the police force was to be recruited from both religious faiths, provision was made for the establishâ€" ment of assize courts and for prison inâ€" spection, the Kurds were to be disarmâ€" ed, the farming of taxes abolished, etc. ‘The peremptory renewal by England, France and Russia of their demand for the institution of reforms in Armenia, with the présence of a British fleet at the entrance to the ardanelles, has convinced the sultan of the futility and danger of further opposition. An imâ€" perial decree has, therefore, been issuâ€" ed approving the reforms, though care is taken to emphasize their application to all subjects, in order to prevent the impression that they are exclusiveâ€" ly for the benefit of the Armenians, or the result of the intervention of the powers. Precisely what scheme of reforms the sultan has accepted has not been officially made public, but that ’ it is less drastic than the one originally demanded is believed, though that was supposed to represent the miniâ€" mum of the changes to be introduced into the government of Armenia with which Europe would be content. lf, included the appointment, subject to the approval of the powers, of a hiKh’ commissioner, Wwho was to be Chrisâ€" tian, to supervise the carrying out of the reforms, and of a permianent comâ€" mittee of control at Constantinople, CURRENT NOTES. i Moses may easily have written the Pentateuch and the Israelites of his da have read and understood it, ProK Sayce told the recent Church Congress at Norwich, for the age of the Exodus was as lit,era.rg:s that of the Renaisance in Euroge. bylonian cities had libâ€" | raries then, some of: them 6,000 years old, and when Abraham was born a Chaldee poct was ending a long period Chaldee goet was ending a long period of verse y,wnt,mgapoemmmg;oks. Promises made in the time of afflicâ€" tion require a better memox:[‘;athnn peoâ€" ple commonly possess.â€"A. udet. Every man bas a serious rival in the ideal man a woman likes to sit and dream about.â€"Paul Bourget. A man is wise when he seeks wisdom; a knave when he thinks he has acquired it.â€"Fontenelle. There is only one thing we are willâ€" ing to have others share with us, it is our opinion.â€"Mignet. Equality may be right, but no human power can convert it into a fact. Is not a fool one who does nothing to justify the good opinion he has formed of himsel{ ? Time is the capital of men who have but their intellect for their fortune. wife Toimnanes ons C e ie use of deepwater channels between the great lakes and the Atlantic Ocean." The subject is one well worthy of such an inquiry, and the choice of the comâ€" missioners seems to be a good one. Prof. Angell is President of ‘Michigan Universitg’. and was one of the men who framed the fisheries treaty which the American Senate rejected a few years ago. h' Commissioners Appointed by President o Cleveland to Confer With Those From l Great Britain or Canada, | The President of the United States |has appointed James B. Angell of Miâ€" |chigan, John E. Russell of Massachuâ€" |setts and Lyman G. Cooly of Illinois as American commissioners to confer with any similar committee that may be apâ€" pointed by the Government of Great Britain or of the Dominion of Canada, and to report "whether it is feasible to build such canals as shall enable vessels engaged in ocean commerce to pass to and fro between the great lakes and the Atlantic Ocean, with an adequate and controllable supply of water for conâ€" tinual use; where such canals can be most conveniently located, the probable cost of the same, with estimates in deâ€" tail, and if any part of the same should be built in the territory of Canada, ‘ what regulations or treaty arrangeâ€" } ments will be necessary between the| United States and Great Britain to preâ€" i serve the free use of such canal to the } people of this country at all times, and 7 all necessary facts and _considerations j relating_ to the construction and future}] Not to succeed is social high treason. A man should find all women in his FROM THE LAKES TO THE OCEAN e Apples ar sia ; they ar vitalizing. the voice, c stomach, ar insomnia an contains as r Words of Wisdom. ly ties llm ficient sacrifice health for the sake of devotâ€" ing a few more minutes to business. Even a single meal a day caten at such a pace is detrimental to the health of digestive organs. Food must be mastiâ€" cated in order that it may not prove actually injurious. The stomach is unable to digest larzs pieces of meat or other unmasticited substances, and these when swallow. : produce irritation and inflammation cf the walls of the stomach. _ Between meals one should drink sufâ€" The Exodus. fortyâ€"five seconds were devoted to dinâ€" ner, while about eleven minutes were spent in eating supper. & By nearly half of those whose habits he observed coffee was taken. with every meal, but no water was used. According to these observations, more than half the diners in city restaurants sacrifice health for the sake of devotâ€" Pains in the epigastric region, headâ€" ache, ‘"heartburn," distress after catâ€" ing, with regurgitation of either bitter {luid or gases, or both, make the lives of many persons miserable. , A foreigner who recently visited the United States was impressed with the ’hurr_v and rush characteristic of our people, and nowhere so much as in the restaurants and other public cating reâ€" sorts. Being a physician, his habits of mind led him to note the time spent at meals by his tableâ€"fellows. _ ‘ At the largest restaurants in the business portion of the city he found the average length of time occupied at breakfast to be twelve minutes and two seconds. _ Eleven minutes and fortyâ€"five seconds were devoted to dinâ€" ner, while about eleven minutes were | Apple and Grape Cure. _be.commenk Half an hou One hour for Half an how pecially llowing Our Dyspepsia. Dyspepsia, or inflammation of the digestive organs, is characterized by the same symptoms, whether found in America or eisewhere; but it is doubtâ€" less more common in the United States than in Earopean countries. Health Departinect. Tl wat friendly M Ir partially nking of luring m other th li her than beneficial. critic recommended : able to dyspeptics tt iption, which may saf d in general: for breakfast. linner. for supper. should drink y to liquefy moderate qu ieals also doe: al in +5 JI number four, one boy and three girls.| ‘The little tailor thereupon sought do not know how much will come to|OuUt Rossignol‘s house. He was there them. Mrs. Crowther thinks $60,000| confronted with his own presentment will be the amount to be divided among | Oe of a large collection of the murderâ€" them. ers of both hemispheres, and ticketed Aieoaee wnll: his 0\:'1_1 x:in.me_ng;d nt getailed anthropometric description of himself. What She Meant. It was some time be&re the amazed Mrs. Blinksâ€"That horrid Mrs. Winks| man could pull himself together, then says I‘m a fool. it suddenly came to him how it was Mr. Blinksâ€"I am sure she would not}that he happened to be classified in make such an illâ€"natured remark. such company. He ‘recalled that seyâ€" Mrs. Blinksâ€"Well, she didn‘t say that |@ral years before he had been arrested in so many words, but that is what she | by mistake with a band of criminals,and meant. She says I believe everything/ while he was at the d:sot,. before. his you tell me. * innocence was established, he had been zmm _ measured and photographed on . the I have seen the extravagance and| Bertillon plan. Hugot bas now an folly of children bring their parents to| action for ga.mageu against Rossignol beâ€" poverty and want, and themselyesinâ€"/ cause he refuses to remove the photoâ€" fo ~dilsgrace." : 5; <i0s 9l o4 Cottieag graph from his collection. . _ 4 Mrs. Blinksâ€"Well, she didn‘t say that in so many words, but that is what she meant. She says I believe everything you tell me. a Children Inherit a Fortune. A despatch from Hamilton says:â€" The children of Prof. Crowther, 100 Jackson street west, at one time a talâ€" ented musician in this city, have come into a large fortune, bequeathed them by the late Jos. Crowther, a Manchester architect, brother of Prof. Crowther. Deceased left a large estate to be dividâ€" ed among his relatives. The estate was wound up recently, and the family, who number four, one boy and three girls. do not know how much will come to them. Mrs. Crowther thinks $60,000 r}’llll be the amount to be divided among em. ; | .. _ The twent{-sevent,h National Cat \Show of England, recently held in the | Crystal Palace, just outside of London, ‘| has been the most successful that bhas ‘| ever been held. There were 630 entries. | The strong point of the exhibition has | been the number of superb red tabbies, |together with a fine assortment of | pure blacks, smokeâ€"colored cats, and cats with that peculiar tone of glossy coat known as " cat blue." The efforts of the English cat breeders this .(]l)ast year have been towards getting rid of the white in tabby blue and black cats. In the opinion of many experts, a black cat without any markings whatever of white is the most perfect variety that is known, and it is a proof of the apâ€" preciation of this that certain dishonest people will pluck the white hairs out of a cat, one by one. It has been noticed that the classes that are open to workâ€"| ingmen in this national exhibition are| particularly strong in fine black cats. _ Blueâ€"eyed, whiteâ€"coated cats are getâ€" tig to be highly valued in England now, and one of these bore off the " other day a substantial money prize that was offered by Louis Wain, the great cat artist. Another prizeâ€"winner of the show was a brown tabby Tom, Champion Xenophon, which its owner t values at $5,000. h \pednedied in juant , | They Are Well to the Front in the Service 2 of the Empire, f| _ News recently received from India inâ€" * | dicates that even in the far eastern posâ€" : sessions of her Majesty Canadians are well to the front in the service of the empire. Everyone has heard of the Chitral expedition and knows its tale of | romantic adventure, but no one has deâ€" |rived greater honor from it than two Canadian graduates of the Kingston Military College. Well known to many both in Toronto and Kingston, Captain George Mowat Duff and Captain Herâ€" bert Nanton have been selected out of 45 officers who accompanied the Chitral expedition to take charge of the fortiâ€" fied forts of Chakdara and Malakand, | on the English frontier, and have been | left in entire charge of the works at | these points, having been selected for | this post by General Lowe, who was in | ; chief command of the expedition, and | Colonel Leitch, commanding the corps of Royal Engineers which accompanied | ] and took part in it. Their work has | : already been commended by Sir George | f White. It is no small compliment to | a Canada that these two Canadians | l should have been selected for such a post out of so many competitors. Capâ€" tain Nanton is the son of an old Toronâ€" tonian and well known to many . here. b Captain Duff is the son of Lieu.â€"Col. 3 Duff of Kingston and a nephew of Sir s Oliver ‘Mowat. 5 suf. the England‘s Cat Show A. ‘The temple of Baalbec, in the erecâ€" tion oi which stones sixtyâ€"two feet long, twenty feet broad and fifteen feet thick have been usedâ€"more prodigious masses than have ever elsewhere been moved by human power and much exceeding in size the stones used in the pyramids. 5. The temple of Karnkak, <Kaqcribed by Fergusson as the noblest work of architectural magnificence ever proâ€" duced by the hand of man. It covers twice the area of St. Peter‘s at Rome and undoubtedly is one of the finest buildings in the world. 6. The great wall of China, 1,230 miles in length. It is 20 feet in height and in thicknesg 25 feet at the base and 15 feet at the top. ‘ 7. ‘The l~1iflll-l tower, erected in the zrounds of 1889 Paris exhibition 984 i ho o e en (T“‘l sunbeams with its great dome soaring up, a silvery. bubble about to burst in the sun, and even after you have touchâ€" ed it and climed to its summit you alâ€" most doubt its reality. It cost over £3,000,000 . 3. The Taj Mahal, a tomb erected at Aga, in Hindoostan, by Shan Jehan, over his queen Noor Jehan. It is built of the purest white marble and yet seems so airy that when seen from A distance it is like a fabric of mist and l 2. The _ artificial _ reservoirâ€"Lake Moerisâ€"built â€" by Amenemba, of the twelfth dynasty, which serves to store up the waters of the Nie during the season of floods and distribute them over the land during the dry season. Its circumference was 5,600 furlongs, and on its being allowed to fall into ruin the fertility of the region became to a serious extent a thing of the past. \ Kemarkable Work in Masonry and Enginâ€" ecring. 1. The pyramids of Egypt, the largest of which, near Cairo, known as the great pyramid, built by Cheops, King of Egypt, took 350,000 men twent y years to build. omerainst. TEN WONDERS OF LABOR anal, with 88 miles o cting the Mediterran seas, and forming the I a fabric of mist and o Jong poles an ‘s of four of th fellows are pré machines ordinary ply arers whe their line mtc ueueds, % re rarely ifraid of ies. The | The Rertillon System Is Â¥ery Useful, But It CGot This Honest Parisian | Into Trouble. Some remarkable testimony as to the efficacy of the anthropometricsysâ€" tem of keeping tab on criminals has come from Paris, where that system has been in vogue for several, yenrs.{ M. Hugot, a Parisian tailor, was stop-’ ped on the street by a policeman, whol asked him if he had not committed a murder some years before. Aghast at‘ the question, Hugot demanded an explanation of the official, and was told that his photugraph was one of a colâ€", lection of murderers‘ portraits in the possession of M. Rossignol, formerly of the Parisian} detective force. | It is impossible to imagine a more, pitiable spectacle> than the â€" weekly scenes witnessed when these batches of | prisoners are being transferred fruml the terrible Morro Castle of Havana to the dungeons of Ceuta, handcuffed and loaded down with chains. [ great brisk lling, _ _The daily reports from Havana say that more prisoners and _ *‘ suspects" of the present rebellion are being sent to Africa for " indefinite confinement." Among them are many prominent citâ€" izens, and in some cases they are goâ€" ing there for life. The commutation of this sentence to death would l)c‘ welcomed by each. & $ Others again are put in large numâ€" bers in one underground cell, often 30 and 40 in a cell not more than 20 feet square and kept there with chain and ball to their legs for months. Horâ€" rible and loathsome as this is, it has one advantageâ€"company. But Spain has many political prisoners that must be silenced forever and these are sealâ€" ed up in the solitary dungeons. Some of the men now in these dungeons were cast there during the previous Cuban rebellion and may never see the light of day again. A Xi "ARE YOU NOT A MURDERER ? Not all the men sent to Ceuta are kept in solitary confinement. Many are put in the chain gangs and work for the support of the colony. This is a welcome sentence, and hard as the labor is they beg for it, fearful of being g:}nt is expected to push the dirt from is dungeon, whenever he can crawl around and clean it. In this dark, disâ€" easeâ€"infested hole, wit ban entirearea of but eight square feet, the unfortunâ€" ate victim must slowly rot away. The vermin in those dungeons is thick,and this additional torture often aids death in its ghastly work. So damp are these dungeons that the clothes of the occupants offen rot away, and in an almost naked condition the miserâ€" able wretches crouch in the dark corâ€" ners of their cells awaiting death. in in e‘ by a long flight of steep stone stairs j to long damp ulk?'s, that wind in and t | around the base of each fortress. Along n‘ the walls of each of these alleys are +) small holes about a foot from the ground, and these are the sole openâ€" â€"| ings into the dungeons. c When a prisoner is to be cast into .[ one, a hole sufficient to admit the pasâ€" â€"] sage of his body, is torn open in the ,| masonry, and be is squeezed in, folâ€" ;’ lowed by armed keepers and a blackâ€" | smith. He is then thrown on his back | and chains welded from his ankles to | the solid rock. Besides this a heavy iron bands is often times riveted around bis waist and welded to a chain and ring in the side of the wall. No locks or keys are used. Everything is done | by actual \veldin§. Thus shackled and loaded down with chains, his kee({mrs leave him. The opening in the dunâ€" geon is walled up with fresh masonry, and from that time forth the prisonâ€" I Bonite Donr e uesd ndmad . Heimatcins er is dead to all living things. A noâ€" tice bearing his name and sentence is posted upon the wall, but this in time molds and decays, and then even the circumstances of his entombment are forgotten. Through the same hole in the lower part of his wall are passed some sgare scraps of food each day, and through the same opening the â€" occuâ€" CAST INTO THE DUNGEONS | Ceuta is an old Moorish seaport town in Morocco, opposite Gibraltar. The 'town is on the side of the ancient ‘mountain Abyla, which forms one of the Pillars of Hercules, the Rock of Gibâ€" raltar being the other. It is almost impregnable, nnd is to Spain what Siâ€" beria is to Russia, with the exception that it is even more horrible. The town was built by Moors about 945, and it is probable that there is noothâ€" er one place in the world where so‘ many DEVILISH DEVICES OF TORTURE are concentrated. The most horrible conception of torture chambers which the fiendish Moors could imagine were given free play here, and many reâ€" main to this day. Spain acquired it 1640, but hardly an improvement has ever been made in ite murAarane nril I} THE DESCENT HOW SPAIN TREATS HER POLITI CAL PRISONERS. SUFFER AWFUL TORTURES FOR IMPERIAL DEFENCE IS MADE sarid _ t in . th solutely N 0o _ oUublCESSFUL REMEDY 5 A FOR MAN OR BEaAstT. N Certain in its effects and never blisters, M B llcx;d proofs below : l | KENDALL‘S SPAViN Cure. } | Mxs. Wixsrow‘s Soormxc Syrur has been sued by millions of mothers for their children while teothing. It disturbed at night and broken of your rest by a sick child suffering and erying with pain of Cutting Teeth seni at onee and get a bottle of "Mrs. Winslow‘s Sootti.g Syrup" for Children Teething. It will relieve the poor little sufferer immedia; tely. Depend upon it, mothers, there is no mistake about it. It cures Drarrhoea, reâ€" gulates the Stomach and Bowels, cures Wind Colic, softens the Gams and rec uses Inflam~ mation, and gives tous and er ergy to the wliole system. â€" ‘Mrs. Winslow‘s Noothing Syrup" for children teething it pleasant to the taste and is the prescription of one of the best female physicians and nurses in the United States, Price twentyâ€"live cents a bottle. Sold by all druggists â€" throughout the world. Be sure and ask; for "‘Mrs Wixstow‘s i ooruing Svene » [ HOST SUCCESSFUL REmEDYy At Ottawa two young men had to pay for a lady‘s dress they damaged by toâ€" baccoâ€"spit, and had to pay $6.50 in costs besides. English Spavin Liniment removes / all Hard,Soft or Calioused Lum; sand Blemishes from horses, Blood Spavine, Curbs, Splint», REweeney, Ring Bone, Stiflcs, Sprains, w‘ Ewollen Throuts, Coughs, eto. _ Save $50 by ase of one bottle. Warranted by McFarâ€" mne & Co. by McFarlane & Co., Druggists. At Berlin a fine well of water has been struck at a depth of 172 feet, the water being impregnated with sulphur. Save Your Ammenia soap Wrappers And when you have 25 Ammonia or 10 Puritan Soap Wrappers send them to us, and a three cent stamp for postage, and we will mail you FREE, a handsome picture euitable for framing. A list of pictures wround each bar, Ammonia Soup has no equal, We recommend it. Write your name plainly and address : W. A. Brapsnaw & Co., 48 and 50 Lombard St., Toronto. Sold by all general merchants ard grocers, Give it a trial. Mammaâ€"You been used at all Jackâ€"Don‘t n black. The annual value of our oceanâ€"borne trade already exceeds slightly 1,009 milâ€" lion pounds a year. One penny in the pound on that enormous sum would give about five millions a year to begin on. With such a sum as revenue, money enough to supply us with a fleet of: cruisers, such as the world has fRever seen, could be borrowed. This fleet should be distributed on the various trade routes in proportions determined by the directors of the company. It should be manned by officers and men of the Royal Navy, supernumerary to the ordinary establishment, but paid Let us form a Gc Company against w Imperial Conference directors * * * For Over Filty}Â¥.cars What an English Oficee Thinks Should be Doneâ€"A â€" Government _ Insurance Against War Risks, Capt. Maude, a British army officer, makes the following suggestions as to how to raise an Imperial defence fund. He says: Don‘t need it, my new pants are Not Necessary NOVEL SCHEME TO RAISE A BRITISH DEFENCE FUND. ur penâ€"wiper has form a Government Insurance against war risks, and let an Conference or Board become its == EDITORS, CLERCYMEN, PHYSICTANS For Sale by McFARLANE & CO,, Wholesale Agents for Durham and Vicinit y rmy. l urâ€" have to be iation, and . which, if n set us in rade might not During his experience of nearly a quarter of a century as a newspaper publisher in Paris, Ont., Editor Colâ€" well, of The Paris Review, has pubâ€" lished hundreds of columns of paid medicine advertisements, and, no doubt, printed many a gracefullyâ€" worded puff for his patrons as a matter of business, but in only a singleinstance, and that one warrantâ€" ed by his own personal experience, has ho given a testimonial over his own signature. No other remedy ever offered the public has proved such a marvellous revelation to the | most sceptical as the South American | i Nervine Tonic. It has never failed | in its purpose, and it has cured when | t h Hundreds of testimonials of wonâ€" derful recoveries wrought with the Great Souch American Nervine Tonic were recceived from men and women all oyer the country betore physicians i ; Mespuxt { = W/// ho al \\v'(f: ”;“ * ) mm 3 y, 11 P [ Sm i2 S 1 './,«"7*//"?'4@973// Sss AHYiGGral Z4# mss ///”/,/ ’,',,', C ;/"’,f/’ aS&ntin U e es . PS 4 S . p S § 7z m\ Al> % ‘ \C Afi Sy ns omspiion. ts C is vo Ne i medt Ho most ro cated c EDITOR COLWELL, OF PARIS, ONT Newspaper editors are almost as ’doctors and serptical as the average physician on | tried in vain. the subject of new remedies for sick ! "I was pro people. _ Nothing short of a series of | larly severn a. Xen and Women in all Walks of Life Tell of the Remaikable Cares Wrought by South American Nervine Tonic, SIX DOSES WILL CONVINCE ThE Most incrcbulcy;. remarkable and well authentiâ€" 1 cures will incline cit‘ vr an r or a doctor to seriously cons er merits honestly claimed for a Lumber, Shingles and Lath always AMhawen iesd on 10L 33°0Cp an 0 OBR LTBSte! you, write for an honest oninion Tre of Change. Charges reasonable. BOOKS FREE â€"â€"*‘The Goides Mo uitoy. iMlastrated), or Diseases of Men. Tntl(m postage, 2 cents. Fealed. IRSNO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PR1 VATE. No medicine s«nt C. 0. D_ No names an boxes or enve:. opes. Everything confidential. Question list and COSt of ~â€"eatâ€" ment, 3EE. ~ ho eammmmenmemmnen C DRS. KENNEDY & KERGAN, Nss 3skszys> 1 4 â€" DETROIT, MICH. coxsuchiti Treatment will care you. What it sgsm. ON FREE. No matter who hn« trea harge. Charses reasonnble. BODKS FRFF . ib q omm Having Completed our New Factory we are now prepared to FILL ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY. We keep in Stock a large quantity of Sash, Doors, Mouldings, Flooring and the differâ€" ent Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside sheeting. Our Stock of DRY LUMRE is very Large so that all ordcis can be filled. READER 1 Areyoua victim? Have: * riage? Has your Blood b« New Method Treatment will eare you. . What I@" We treat and cure Varicocele, Emi Weakness, Gleet, Stricture, Syphilis, Un Kidney and Bladder Diseases. , to all my affli fpu::n;:::-_n;nw 220 COPD7. I recommend these ro.iuble CURES CUARANTEED gR NO PAY.â€"CONFIDENTAL. ‘"‘The vices of early boyhood laid the foundation of y Pn Pn tm in. e life"_and to hlood diâ€" | Mant tiaiefe the mreck 1 had allanccoescocs or | SyphiliS, EMISSIONS Nervous oâ€"a&imey-.sflnm‘:ou.ck;m in’:;ino. v a , c d nervoushess, 'uk ate. #£ can m t fall out, bone pains, ulcers in"’mou!h and nnyu:ngru: f,,a_['colie,gv,,, u'e * blotches on body, etc. 1 thank God 1 tried Dr#. Kenredy & Kergan, They restored me to health, vigor and happiness." CTAS PDWTPE Sash and Door Factory. VARICOCELE, EMISSIONS ano IMPOTENCY CURED, 4 DFSOnâ€""leless; memory poor; easily fi snn e ind 2o eyes sunken, red and f'lurrvd; pimpl Jogsos; restlesa; haggard looking; wenk back; bone pain»: waricocelo; deposit in urine -m:fdrnin- at «tool; distrustf energy und strength â€"WE CAN CURME YOU 1 9 Nervoms and de J bition .'ln_!n}v.o: B@"*CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAYy:! Om e se ie e hn mamait onl â€" F2R _ L HAsh s DEPORE TREATMENT, | AFTER TREATMENT. . BKPORL GolkraryT. a2vek mioraTauove, 4 NO NAMES OR TESTIMONIALS USED WiITHOUT writtew CONSENT. 200000 WEAX MEN CURED! RESTORED TO.MANHOOD By prs JOHN A. MANLIN. JOHN A. MANLIN. _ CHAS. rowrERs. «¢ 17 YEARS IN DETROIT. 200,000 CURE STARfLING FACTS I?OR DISEASED VICTIMS TESTTCTIFE q â€"| _ The South American Nervize 7 | Tonic rebuilds the life forces by its â€" | direct action on the nerves and the nerve centres, and it is this notable | feature which distinguishes it from | every other remedy in existence. The most eminent medical authorities now concedethatfually twoâ€"thirds ofall the physical ailments of humanity arise ‘rom exhaustion of the nerve forces. The South American Nervine Tonic acting direct upon the nerve centres and nerve tissues instuntaneously supplies them with the true nourishâ€" ment required, and tha%t is why its invigorating effects upon the whole system are always felt immediately, For all nervous disearses, for general debility arising from enfecbled vitalâ€" ity, and for stomach troubles of every variety no other remedy can possibly take its place, weakening my intellect as well life. My brotber advised me : Prs. Kennedy & Kergan. | 1 con Treatment and in & few woeks life and ambition. This was f am married and happy. 1 : John A. Manlin says:â€""I tims of early ignorance com: tried weven medical firms : 1 gave up in despair. The . American Nervine Tonic. â€" Its effects were instantaneous, â€" The first dose I took relieved me. Iimproved rapidly and grew stronger every day. Your Nervine Tonic cured me in a single week." In Stocli. me, and I tried & number of mes cines, but without relief. About t! time I was advised to try the Sou F Cikas. L 4+ . PS ‘ > N.. G &J. McKECHNIE, «* I was prostrated with a part larly severe aitack of "*La Gripp says Mr. Colwell, * and could finc relief from the intense pains and tress of the malady. 1 suffered and night. The doctors did not 1 mpondi Aoctors and other medi tried in vain. nk or S P i c 4 2 , REVIEW ain»: hair loose; ulcers; sore throat; rustful; want of contidence; lick of S and a M C

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