West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 13 May 1897, p. 3

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EOPLE | IN PAR eid ps & Weas 126. thes n HOLAOCUST, lety Ladiesâ€"The Used for a Chark t Awful Panicâ€" nd Perish Wiser BURNEV TO oted to wer® societ y 1 are resid~ 1 SOG he 1 h9 No h he ind t} to T.4 he OU d Lo he 10 A 1b ate i fW +0k ha o 'l’ ed 41â€" KILL3 CHILD AKND EIMSELF Weber‘s Threats to Kill Her had Driven His Wife from Her Momeâ€"He Gets the Younger of His Daughters on Pretence of Taking Her to School and Then "All right, then I‘ll take Rosie around there," said Weber, and, pickâ€" ing up the child, bhe carried her out in the hall. He slammed the door beâ€" hind him, and the next moment Mrs. Uuebner heard the sound of two shots, fired in rapid succession, and the noise o falling Yx)dins. Weber had shot his little girl in the bead and allowed her to roll down the flight of stairs to the next landing. Then be shot himâ€" self in the temple and fell dead on the stairs. The shooting aroused the tenâ€" ants in the bhouse, and the shrieks of ths woman alarmed Janitor Foreman. He ram upsiairs and picked ug'ube body of little Rose. She was still breathing, but she was covered with blood and unponscious. Foreman carried her inâ€" DRUNKARD‘S SUICIDE FOLLOWS HIS LITTLE GIRL‘S MURDEER. mittance. ‘The children, Rose and Minnic were frightened, but Mrs. HUHuebner calmed them and parleyed with Weber behind the locked door. HE PLEADED TO GET IN,. and finally induced Mrs. Huebner to â€"peâ€"a the door on his promise to beâ€" bave himself. He asked for his wife, and Mrs. Huebner told him that she had gone away five weeks ago to earn ber own living. As she continued to brush the liittle girl‘s hair Weber inâ€" terrupted hber by calling gruilly for big children to come to him. Minnie, the elder, a girl of 6 years, clung to ber gramimother when bhe called to ber, but little Rosa ran over to him. married some seven years ago to Anna Huebne?, a 16â€"yearâ€"old girl. He beâ€" gan to drink a year or so after his marrtege, and went on protracted sprees, making a little money in bis sober moments by selling vegetables. His drimking led to trouble with his wile, so be deserted her and her baby. He was arrested and committed to the jail for abandonment. His wife became reconciled to him after his release, on his promise to do better, but his drink babit had mastered him, and in a short time fresh troubles with his wife deâ€" velped. Then began a series of rows, during which he frequently beat his â€"""_'I‘E‘)v'vét;'{d the kindergarten around the corner in Stanton street," said his motherâ€"inâ€"law. 4 hok Shoots Her, Isidor Weber, 32 years old, shot and fatally wounded his 4â€"yearâ€"old daughâ€" ter Rose and killed himself on Tuesday morning, at the home of his wife, 125 Norfolk street, New York. The child died in the aftermoon. Weber was wife. «He gave up all attempts at proâ€" viding for his family, and his commitâ€" tal twice more for abvndonment had mo effect upon him. While Mrs. Lena Huebner, his moâ€" therâ€"inâ€"law was preparing the chilâ€" irem for school on Tuesday morning she was startled by a knock and the bhoarge voice of Weber demanding adâ€" _ "Where do the children go to schoolt" asked Weber. i to the room of Morris Brandt, a neighâ€" bor, until an ambulance arrived from Gouverneur Hospital. Policeman Egâ€" ger of the Delancey street station was alled in. The ambulance surgeon deâ€" clared that Weber was dead, and tool: little Rose to the hospital. She died there at 5 o‘clock. l c _ Weber had not been to see his wife and family in five weeks. On his last visit be threatened to kill his wile, so ahe ran away from home, leaving ber children in her mother‘s care. Mrs. Huebner says she does not know where her daughter is. A Tourist‘s Conversation With an Engiish Frult Grower, A stranger tramping in â€" midâ€"June through "the garden of England," as the county of Kent is called, sees postâ€" ed on boards and fences notices anâ€" mnouncing that the growing crops of fruit will be sold by auction. He also sees the fruitâ€"cherries, gooseberries, currants and strawberriesâ€"growing in fields and gardens, and observes the great barns bursting with thousands of bushelâ€"baskets waiting to be filled with the ripe fruit and sent to London. The stranger, should bhe express his admiration of the orchards, hopâ€"fields and marketâ€"gardens to a countryman will be surprised at two facts: The peasantâ€"proprietor never thinks of sating any of the fruit he grows, and the more plentiful the crops the less pleased he professes himself to be. This report of a conversation between _ a traveller in Kent and a fruitâ€"grower shows the fruitâ€"grower a born grumâ€" bler, who in his own opinion, is & most unfortunate man. "Good day to you!" said the tourist, meeting Hodge, who nods his head and mumbles : ‘Mora‘r‘ I" "Splendid crop you have down here! I should think things must be going pretty well in these parts?" HE WOULD GRUMBLE. Anxious questioners ask, "Is there no sure cure for corns?" We are g.ad to be able to tell these sufferers that Putâ€" nam‘s Painess Corn Extractor will reâ€" lieve them in a day, and extract corns without pain. It never fails. POISONED BL00D. "But â€" Nebuchadnezzar didn‘t _ eat fruit. He bhadn‘t the chance, poor felâ€" low ! He could only find grass to eatl," as fruit, 1 reckon. You town folks think a man can live on notbhink. Now a pound or two o‘ steak, a few rashers o‘ fat bacon, an‘ a few heggs fur breakfus‘â€"that‘s more my line. Hexâ€" peck a Christian man to heat fruit * "But you expect people to buy yours, don‘t you ?" . "Naw, I don‘t bexpeck nothink." "Then why do you grow it ?" "Because I suppose I‘m a fool ; that‘s about the size o‘ it. Good day t‘ ye, When Uric Acid Flows in tho YVeins, Life Looks out of Darkened yVlndovu. Exe« pecting Soon the Close of Day. The fashionable Italian poison of the XVI century was Aqua Torfana. It wias used by the medicis and all the first families of Rome, Genoa, agd Naples. In five years historians tell us, over 600 wives used it to make widâ€" ows of themselves. "Oh, how d‘you make that out ?‘ *""Make it out, is it ? Why, look aâ€"here at them there turmuts; d‘you iver see sich poor things? Ay, an‘ all the root crogg is bad‘s can be." a ‘"Yes, but you‘re all right with your fruitâ€"cherries and apples." . "‘*M yes, there‘s a dale 0‘ fruit this year. A sight too much to please me," "But you can‘t bave too much of & good thing, can you?" _ || _ _ _ say. Get it for the asking. "But I didn‘t get cherries for the asking. I bhad to pay exghtfinee & pound for some I bought at Chatham." "Oh, I desay. Wish I c‘d git a penny a pound. But that‘s jist like them ‘ere starve ‘em, rob ‘em and cheat ‘em folks! Wouldn‘t give ‘ee so much ‘s the parâ€" in?s o‘ their fingerâ€"nails if they c‘d help it I" "‘Then why don‘t you make preserves of some of your fruits?" A "Preserves? What‘s that, mister ?" "Why, jam, you know. Besides, sureâ€" ly y<';u eal some of your own fruit, don‘t you t" "Fruit‘s to sell, mot to heat." "Well, then, if you can‘t sell it, don‘t preserve it and won‘t eat any of it, what do you do with it ?" "Give it ter the pigs, in coorse." "Yes, but why mot eat some of it yourself ¢t*"* "Heat it! D‘yer take me fur a bloomin‘ Nebuchadnezzar? _ Besides, it‘s that there (mdergestuiglgâ€"f' mister I" Anything exciting about a horse show Dasher ? Dreadful Deathâ€"Draught Comes from Dissased Kidneys. Toâ€"day thore is a remedy. Science has discovered a sure cure. All may have and apply it. It is sold under the name of DODD‘S KIDNEY PILLS. _ . In theso modern days a more terâ€" rible and more prevalent poison is deâ€" cimating the human family, and men haveo asked in vain for an antidote. It is tho uraemic poisoning of the blood, caused by diseased kidneys. The poiâ€" son which these useful organs should filter from the blood, is allowed to reâ€" remain in the cirqulastion and course through ths body like "Accursed Hebenon . .. whose effect Holds such an enmity with blood of man, That with a sudden vigor it doth posset and curd 3 Like eager droppings into milk, The thin and wholesome blood." _ It is a specific for all Kidney ailâ€" ments. It cures by restoring the Kidâ€" neys, so that they properly perform their natural functions. It is the only known cure for Diabetes, and Bright‘s Disease. For sale by dvufigists everyâ€" where, and the Dodd‘s Medicine Co., Ltd., Toronto, Ont. . & f s . 4.A 4 h ~A 200 l0A "hauts ce Mr. Wm. McEvea, 275 Friel St., Otâ€" tawa, says:â€"*"Two boxes of Dodd‘s Kidâ€" ney Pills have worked a wonderful cure in my case. Mad been laid up with kidney trouble for months." hi Mr. Vernon Browley, Trenton, Ont., says:â€""For a number of years have suffered severely from Rheumausm and Sciatica. _ Was induced to procure cesA s Artasctrbaliat ~d? .\ wmped ~© G. B. Cones, Orillia, Ont., says:â€""I most cheerfully testify that five boxes of Dodd‘s Kidney Pils have cured me of Diabetes from which I suffered two _ "Can‘t you, though? Look at the price ; down ter nothink, as you might years." Lk /un TD P matet 4 ie Recei®y hP °V Mr. Thos. Harrison, St. Mary‘s, N.B., says:â€"In spite of all other treatment I suffered for nearly a year with Stone of the Bladder. I was relieved by pasâ€" sing the same, after usinfi one box of Dodd‘s Kidney Pills, @and completely cured by a few boxes." _ | | _ . _; a balf dozem boxes of Dodd‘s Kidney Pills which I have used, and from being a cripple I am ?;‘Wfll m':m;; o The woman who complains that she can‘t raiso house plants is simply negl!â€" gont of them. She moves them about too miuch, is not always heedful of their need of water, permits the room they sit in to become very cold at night and then very hot during the day. Probably, too, she does not cover them up at night, ;1;’1' in any way protect themi from dust. A sudden chill often blasts an otherwisa hearty plant, and just as important is it to protect them from superfluous dust, _ When cleaning «day comes around, throw big bags of old muslin or dimity over the green things, and AS plants are usually kept in a deep window, be sure at night to draw down the shades and cover {ge portieres when the gu is lighted. The portieres shoruld be of some heavy, dark stuff to keo? out the light, heat, and posâ€" sibly, tobacco smoke. â€" Before leaving the room for the night. one window, as distant as possible from that in which the %laamta sit, ought to be pulled down at t top to let in fresh air, while the closed curt?‘ s will still keep them warm enuugh. «hen, not until she bas made ber fire, cleaned the grate and done her dusting for the day, should the maid push back the portieres and pull up the window shades, "Ay, goin‘ downâ€"hill fast enow, I‘se A QUERY ANSWERED FULL OF GINGER HOUSE PLANTS of ConBned in the Hollow of a Tree and Fed by Their Mates. In chopping down a tree the other day a Sherman county, N. Y., farmer noticed a limb with a cavity some two feet in length and three or four inâ€" ches in diameter, in which were two large, fullâ€"grown birds. There was a small opening through which the birds received food from their mates. The limb was cu‘t and the birds liberated. Neither was able to fly, bhaving never been olut of its place of imprisonment. It is probable that the mother bird was small, and tholugh able to make her nest in the bhollow of the tree and rear ber young, could not extricate them, as they did not have strength enoigh to hbhelp themselves until the hollow so closed as to make escape imâ€" possibls. _ Those who have examined the birds think they are about two years old. & They have beein fed from their birth by their bird fellows through the aperâ€" twure in the limb of the tree.â€"Special Telegraph, New York Press. Deserves all the good things thut are said about it. It is the coming minâ€" ing region of the west. Not a week passes that some discovery is not made finer than anything that has preceded it. The comp.etion of the Red Mounâ€" tain Railroad makes direct rail conâ€" nection between Spokane, Washington and_ Nelson, Kaslo, Ainsworth, Rossâ€" land and tho Slocan District. _ These connections are made to best advantâ€" .ze by using the Northern Pacific Railâ€" way to Spokane. Capital is pouring inâ€" to this country in a constant stream. A man can get pretty much anything he wantsâ€"a go‘ld mine, a silver mine, or down lots. Don‘t wait too long beâ€" fore you go. Write to Chas. S. Fee, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, St. Paul, Minn., or to Geo. W. Mcâ€" Caskey, 83 York St., Toronto, or Thos. Henry, 128 St. James St., Montreal, for the best map and folder of the region. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded diâ€"case that sclence has been able to cure in all it: tages, and that is Catarrh. HM«ll‘s Catarrh ‘ure is the only positive sure known to the nedical fraternity . Catarrh being a constituâ€" iomal disease. requires constitutional treatâ€" ment. Hall‘s Câ€"«tarrh Cure is taken internally, woting directly upen the blood and mucous urâ€" faces of the sys:tem, thereby desiroying the foundatisn of the disease, and giving the pationt strength by building up the constitution and assistingy nature in doing its work. The proprieto‘s have so much faith in its curativa }wwers, that they offâ€"r One Hundred Dollars or any case that it fails to cure. â€" Send for list of testimoniais, s ul T tiee: A Bath, Me., boy is the proud possesâ€" sor of an autograph letter from the Queen of Holland. His interest in colâ€" lecting foreign postage stamps won him the royal favor. Itching, Burning Skin Diseases Cured for Thirtyâ€"five Cents. Dr, Agnow‘s Ointment rclieves in one da({ and cures Tatter, Salt Khoum, Scald Head, Kezema, Barber«‘ Itch, Uicers, Biotches and all eruptions of the skin. 1t is soothing and quieting and acts like magic in the cure of all baby humors ; 35 ocnts. Mr. Henpeckâ€"Doctor, my wife tells me you have advised her to go to the seaside for two months. Physicianâ€"Yes. Mr. Henpeckâ€"Do you think she needs rest ? Physicianâ€"No; but you do. Unable to attend to Hor Daily Dutiecsâ€" And a Great Suffarer from Heartâ€" T oubleâ€"Induced to Trx PDr. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart, and it Proved a Wonder Worker. These are the words of Mrs. W. T. Rundle, of Dundalk, Ont.; "I was a great suiferer with severe pain in the region of my heart. Fora tims I was quite unable to attend to my household duties. I was induced to try Dr. Agnoow‘s Oure for the Heart, and 1 must .e? the rosult was wondorfui. The pain immedâ€" lately lef: me, and after the first day I have had no vain or trouble since." Sarah Bernbardt has always had a morbid dread of fire, and this has led her to direct that all her stage dresses shall be made of fireâ€"proof material. THE WABASH RAILROAD. If you are contemplating a trip to the gold mining country, please conâ€" sider the merits of the Wabash railâ€" road, the short and true route via Deâ€" troit, Chicago and St. Paul, to all points in the Kootenay districts. Passengers Ieaving Toronto by early morning trains reach St. Paul next day at noon, where direct connection is made for all Jm'mu! in the gold fields. Quickest and best route to Hot Springs, Ark., O‘d Mexico, California and all western points. ‘Tickâ€" ets and timeâ€"tables of this great railâ€" way from any railroad agent, or J. A. Richardson, Canadian Passenger Agâ€" ent, Northeast corner of King and Yonge streets, Toronto. Adams Extract = = One bottle. Fieischmann‘s Yeast â€" One half to oue cake. Sugar = * * Two pounds. Cream of Tartar _ â€" + _ One haif ounce, Lukewarm Water = â€" _ Two gallons Dissolve the sugar, cream of tartar «nd yeast in the water, add he extract, and bottle ; place in a warm glnve for twentyâ€"four hours unjil ib ferments, then p ase on ice, whon it will open +parkling, cool and delicious, The ginger beot can ce ob‘ained in all drug and grocery storer in 10 cant boitles to make two ga.lons, It is said that Ras Alula, tho great Abyssinian chief, began life as a groom. He ended it by freeing his country. William Phillip Schreiner, the Atâ€" torney General of Cape Colony, is a brother of Olive Schreimer, the noveâ€" list. Lord Roberts, commanderâ€"inâ€"chief of the army in Ireland, is an indefatigaâ€" ble cyclist. He may be seen any day pushing through Dublin streets. FAST LINE TO NEW YORK £ND PHILADELPHIA. The Lehigh Valley, R. R., in connecâ€" tion with the Grand Trunk Railway, have the first through train service beâ€" tween Toronto, Hamilton, London, and principal points in Ontario, to New buifét sicep: cars,. ‘Li ahead of ml:gber lines. York City. Only line running Pullman buffet sleeping cars. Time two hours Pusonqers for Europe, eto., via this line are landed in New York at Desâ€" brosses or Cortlandt Sts., in close proximitg to all European -teamshis docks. Don‘t fail to ask for tickets an sleeping car accommodation ‘via Leâ€" high Valley route, at all Grand Trunk _ Address, F G. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. Bold by Druggists, Toc. Hall‘s Family Pills are tho best, HEART PAIN3 LEAVE IN A DAY, THE KOOTENAY COUNTRY, BIRDS‘ CURIOUS PRISON. $100 REWARD $100. THE REST CURE. Adams‘ Ginger Beer REOLPK, THE CIRCUIT RDER. CHRISTIANITY OWES MUCH TO HIS ZEAL ANV ENDURANCE. In the early days of Methodism in Canada the gospel was spread abroad in the land by the active exertions of the circuit rider. It required a man of no ordinaty health and strength; an iron constitution and unflagging deâ€" termination to fulfil the arduous duties incumbent on one who undertook to preach salvation to his fellowmen. It was no easy task that these men set themselves to, but they were strong in the faith and hope of ultimate reward. Many fell by the wayside, while others struggled on, and prospered, and a few are today enfloy&ng a ripe old age bappy in the knowledge that a Iutin% reward will soon be theirs. Most of these old timers are not now engaged in active church work but have been placed on the superanuated list, and are now living a quiet life in town or on a farm free from the cares of the world, they await the call to come up higher.:. ««= s ao0 .. P . o 7 ty, was one of these early days cirâ€" cuit riders. He was a man of vigorous bealth and although without many adâ€" vantages in the way of early education he succeeded by dint of hard and conâ€" stant study in being admitlted to the iministiry; He was the first born in the first house built in Glen Williams near Georgetown, Mr. Geo. Kennedy, the founder of Georgetown, being a brothâ€" er of his mothar. Toâ€"day he is 70 years old and for the pasi 26 years has lived in this county. For many _ years he had been _a sulferer from kidney and kindred diseases. He tried all kinds of remedies, and alâ€" though sometimes temporarily relievâ€" e1 he gradually grew worse until in Detober 1895 he was striken with parâ€" alysis. From this he partially recoverâ€" e and recovered hus nowers of speech but his mind was badly wrecked, and his memory was so poor that he could not remember the name of the person to whom he wished to speak without thinkinc intently for several minutes. Ons day driving to church he wished to speak of a meighbor â€" who lived next to him for twenty years, but he could mnot recall the name for an hour or more. In addition to his mental trouble, he had intense bodily suffering; pains in the head, across the forehead, in the temoles and behind the ears, across the lowâ€" er part of the skull and in the joint of the neck. He had great weakness and pains in the back, hips and legs. In fact so much did he suffer that sleep was almost am (mpossibility, and he fell away in weizht until he weighed only 145 Kgunds. By this time. Dec. 1895,he became despondent andfelt that if he soon did not obtaim Folief, he would soon bid adieu to the things of this world. On the 20th of Dcember he read of a cure _ in tha Reformer by Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, and being seized with a sudden inspiration at ence wrote to Brockâ€" ville for a sunply of that marvellous remedy. Immediate good results folâ€" lowed their use a‘nd he has improvâ€" ed wonderfully during the past year. Hebhras recovered his hodiiy health and strongth, is comparatively free from pain and bis memory is nearly as good His Life During the Early Days of Mctho dism in Crnada Was Ofter One of Great Mardshipâ€"The Sstory of One Now Enjoying a Ripe Old Age. From the Simcos Reformer. â€" Rev. David Williams, who lives two miles southwest of Nixon, Ont., in the township of Windham, Norfolk Counâ€" Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills are a blood builder and nerve restorer. They sunâ€" ply the blood with its life and healthâ€" givimzg properties, thns driving disease from the system. _ There are numerâ€" ous pink colored imitations, against which ths public is warned. Thagenâ€" uine Pink Pills can be had only in hoxes the wrapper around which bears the {ull trade mark, "Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills for Pale People." _ Refuse all others. as it ever was and as the improvement, continues the prospects are very bright for complete recovery. He has gained 20 pounds in weigcht since hbeginning the use of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, Mr. Williams mays: "I can heartily onâ€" dorse the many good things «aid of these pills in the papers, and strongly recommend them to any one suffering Rooms on the south side of the ship as she crossas are the best. That is the side that the sun shines on, and it always seems to be less waveâ€"beaten than to the porth; one‘s chances _ of having the port open, if the weather is tolerable at all, are, therefore, betâ€" ter. On the big ships there arestateâ€" rooms on four decks, the promenade deck, from which one can slip into the open air at once; the saloon deck, where the public rooms and the officers‘cabâ€" ins are, and also most of the bad smel!s; the main deck, given up alâ€" most entirely to staterooms, and the lower deck, whore people do not stay unless they must. 4 STATEROOM ON THE SUNNY SIDE. TORONTO bana. _ Nervilaneâ€"nerveâ€"pain cureâ€"hbas a wonderfu: and immetiiate curative power. It relieves in one minute; it cures in five. P.easant to the taste and the best known remedy for pain. We don‘t advertise for mere effect, but for busingss. We know that, if you are subject to rramps, that you should bave a prompt, efficient ~remedy on John Bright, though a Quaker, kept a diary, parts of which his eldest son is going to have published. At Eighty Years of AF. One Box of Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder Cures a Case of Fifty Yearsstanding â€"It Reâ€" lieves Colds and Catarrh in Thirty Minutes. George Lewis of Shamokin, Pa., writes:; "L am cigty years of sge. 1 have been treubled The fact is noted that with Mme. Hirsch‘s $1,800,000 the total amount of the Hirsch charilies is $14,800,000. w.P.¢0 866 am (ig=ty years of sge, 1 have been treubled with catarch for fifty years, ond in my time have used @& great many catarch cures, but never had any relief udiil L use1 Dr. agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder, (me box cured me comâ€" pletely, and it gives me great pleasure{0 recom mend it to all suiiering from this malaay." poctoRs RPCMMEND â€"â€"â€" Ceylon ‘Tea "GALADA This Company possesses one of the most comprehensive charters ever issued. The Articles of Assocition are particularly designed to safeâ€" guard the interests of shareholders, and the management is composed of practical miners, thoroughly up in every detail of the business, ?rom the staking of a claim to the milling and smelting of the ore when the mine is in operation, and who are now giving their special time and attention to the interests of the company. I have been appointed Broker for the Rathmullen Con. Co., Ltd., whose stock I recommend with the utmost confidence. _ Treasury shares ABSOLUTELY UNASSESSABLE. Present Price 12kc. each, in blocks of 100 and upwards. _ Subject to withdrawal or increase in price without notice. Harey GacEr, Esq., M.E., reports reâ€" garding this property : "*I feel that I can recommend in the highest and most posiâ€" tive manner the property of this company% as an opening for the investment of capital,‘ it being certain to give in my opinion highi and permanent returns on the capital invested in its development. There are at! least six well defined veins running through | this property, varying in width from Six to One Hundred and Thirty five feet. The Rathmullen group will rank among the best as it is at present among the grentest in exâ€" tent of B.C. mining properties, | It is surrounded by several of the best known Mines in Rat Portage District, namely, the Sultana, Pine Portage, Norway, Triumph, and the Haycock, and only 7 miles from Rat Portage with every facility for economical working. And a sure dividend payer. It has ail the necessary buildings, Boardâ€" ing House, Blacksmith Shop, Shaft House, etc. Three shafts, one nearly 100 ft. deep. 5 large veins already opened up, all rich free mill» ing quartz, which is being taken out and placed on the dump ready for Stamp Mill. The Company is formed on a business basis, only $500,000 and the Treasury stock is ncarly one half. 100,000 shares only of Treasury stock (Fully paid and Nonâ€"assessâ€" able) is being offered, proceeds to be used for purchasing necessary Machinery, Stamp Mill, etc. This stock is gl?li,ng' well. If you are looking for something safe and exsre. BUY NOW. ese shares will soon be PAR, for the Sweden will be The property at ‘present owned by this Company consists of & groun o+ TWELVE® MINERAL CLAIMS having a combined area of about SIX HU~DRED acres situated in the groat KETTLE RIVER MINING DiVISIQON of British Columbia Sweden Gold Mine! in shares of $1.00 each. Fully paid and Nonâ€"assessable. Tus Forcowimng Terscram Has Just Been RecCEIVED : #Struck rich body of ore. AVERAGE assays Forty One Bolars, t (Signed) CHAS. E. CARBERT, Secy. Sweden Gold Mine." All application for stock, subject to increase in price, to be made to WILLIAM C. FOX, Mining Broker, ons o +A 21 Adelaide St. E., Toronto, RATHMULLEN Consclidated Mining and WILLIAM C. FOX, MINING BROKER, 21 ADELAIDE ST. EAST TORONTO. A WORKING MINE, Capital Stock, $500,000. A VETERAN‘8 STORY. PRACTICAL MANAGEMENT. (Incorporated under Imporial Act, 1862.) LEAD PACKETS ORLY 250, 4060, 60o & 60c. Prospectus on application to Development Co. Ltd. Mr. C. E. Hurr, of Spokane, is most emphatic in his report. HMe says: "I can say absolutely that in my opinion no better properties exist in the Province of Britishk Columbia, or claims more sure | tw repay the investment capital, than the above group owned by the Rathâ€" | mullen Con, Co., Ltd. I have examined | this group closely, and my investigation | has brought me to the conclusion that at least Six of theseTwelve Ciaims | \q'mnlutkg mgne', while ore undorbtâ€" | edly will be found on every claim withâ€" | in the group. I have not during my thirty \ years‘ experience in Western America | examined a property that i can more em» | phatically recommend as a safe investment | than the property of the Rathmulien Con. | M. & D. Co., Ltd., North Fork of Kettle River, B.C. THECOGKSBEST FRIENR DUONNS BAKING POWDER LARGEST SALE iN Cansane.

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