Ontario Community Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 23 Jan 1913, p. 7

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HOME RULE BILL PASSES Majority of no On the Third Reading Memorable Fight Closes a A dsnpatrh from London says i After ft long, stern battle the home | ruU bill p.-iBM'd the House of Com- , on Thursday night by a ma- { of 110. It was later read for | first time in the House of tore's. There were two diviaio as in the lower House. Mr. Bolfour's notion for its rejection wa* de- feated by 268 to 368, whtie the third reading was carried by a vote of 187 to 257, one member of each side having left the House in the inter- Tal. The) result of the division was too much a foregone conclusion for a tremendous demonstration, but the Irishmen inside and outside of the Houae did their best, and, av 4ted by the Liberals and Labor- Hss, gav* the measure for which tstej had waited and worked so long good send-off on its way to the Bons of Lords, where its fate is rtainly sealed. ftoria of Brilliant Speeches. The division wr,s preceded by an- other series of brilliant speeches by 4 le political leaders, among whom re Frederick E. Smith and the olicitor-Qeneral, Sir John A. Si- 1 on, two of the cleverest among < M younger members, and the vet- c rans Joan E. Redmond, Timothy ' lealy and Auguetine Birr ell, Chief ecretary for Ireland. The House wa crowded through- out tho day. The Nationalist* were only one short of their full strer.gth, Joseph P. Nannetti being prevented from attending by a paralytic attack which he suffered on Thursday. Several of the older Nationalists who are seldom able to attend came over from Ireland at division. The Liberals and Laborites, too, turned out in force, and the Union- ists were not far below their total membership. The galleries likewise were filled to their capacity, those occupying seats including many dignitaries of the Church and the Bulgarian peace plenipotentiaries. Memorable Scene In House. When the figures were announced the Nationalists waved hats, hand- kerchiefs and papers, and cheered lustily for Premier Asquith and. Mr. John Redmond. Th latter, who is usually impassive, wa* car- ried away by the enthusiasm of his followers and entered into the spirit of the demonstrations as effusively aa they. Seenes in Belfast. A despatch from Belfast says: Thousands of Orangemen and mem- bers of Unionist clubs held demon- trations outside the City Hall on Thursday evening and burned a copy of the home rule bill. There was much firing of revolvers, mostly blank cartridges, but one man was shot in the bauck and is in a critical condition. There were no further disorders, but bands paraded the street* until midnight. SEVERAL FIREMEN CHOKED. The Third Big Fire in Montreal in Fifteen Houn. A despotch from Montreal says : Several firemen were carried out, choked into unconsciousness by invoke, District Chief Mann es- fls\pd death by inches when a great plank came crashing down upon a Udder on which be was standing, and damage aggregating nearly 1100,000 was caused by a fire which broke out on Thursday morning on Devisoer Street. The premises are occupied by the Canadian Tung- sten Lamp Company, and the Mc- Oormick Biscuit Co., of London, Ont., the plant and stock of both of which concern* were injured by ftre, smoke and water. This wa the third big fire in th city within fifteen hours, mofft of the fireman baring been on duty for 24 hour*. They got a much-dd meal from the biscuit* found in the MoCor- mick Company'* factory. $10^)00,HO TO AID FARMING. Minister of Agriculture Move* Ap- propriation for Ten Years. A despatch from Ottawa says : Hon. Martin Burrel on Tuesday HIM red the following resolution : "That it is expedient to provida thata sum not exceeding ten mil- lion u.jllara be appropriated and paid out of the consolidated rev- enue fund of Canada during the period of ten year*, beginning with the year ending March 31, 1914, for the purpose of aiding and advanc- ing the farming industry by instruc- tion iu agriculture, including the work carried on by veterinary col- kge*." Her Hearing Good. Qibba So your wife quarrelled with you. I thought you said she was blind to your faults. Dibbs She was blind to them al] right, but she wasn't deaf, and the neighbors posted her. Handy Breakfast Ready to Serve Direct From Package Post Toast ies nd cream A dainty dish of toast- ed Indian Corn . brimful of sweet flavor and substan- tial nourishment. Post Toasties in the pantry mean many deli- cious breakfasts. Direct to your table in sealed, air tight pack- ages. Sold by Grocers every- where. "The Memory Lingers* Postnm rr*l Co.. UA. Ontario. How to Cure Korse Distemper An Experieneed Horseman Sol- emnly Declares Nothing ia So Satisfactory as Nerviline. Says Nerviline I] Fin* Liniment. "Aftr fifty yars' experience in raising horses I can safely testify that no remedy gives euch good re- sults for an all-round stable lini- ment as Xerviline." Thus opens the very earnest letter of J. J. Ev- anston, who lives near Wellington. "I had a very valuable horse that took distemper a month ago, and was afraid I waa going to lose him. His throat swelled and hard lumps developed. His nostrils ran snd he had a terrible cough. I tried different remedie*, but was alible to relieve my horse of his pain arid suffering till I started to use Ner- viline. I mixed a bottle of \orvi- line and tweet oil JWid rubbed the mixture on the throat nd cheat three times a day, aad you woull care-sly believe the way that horse picked up. Nerviline cured him. I also have used Nerviline for colic in horses and cows, and earnestly recommend it to every man that is raising stock." For strains, sprains, swellings, colio, distemper, cough*, and colds, no liniment will prove so efficaci- ous in the stable as "Nerviline" it's good for man or beast, for in- ternal or external use. Wherever there is pain, Nerviline will cure it. Refuse substitutes. Large size bottles, 50c. ; trial size. 25c., at all dealers, or the Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N. Y., and Kingston, Ont. PRICES OF FARM PRODUCT; POUT* mom THI KAtima THAOt CSMTRtI OP If Cattlt, Cram, CIUIM r.a OMM 'rUu it Mm* lit* A 0<* Breadstuff s. Toronto. Jan 21. Manitobfc Wheat Lake ports, No. 1 northern, 961-4o: No. 2, 9J J-4oi No. 3, 911-40-. feed wheat, 65c. Ontario Wheat No. 2, 9Zo to 93o for oar lota outside, ranging down to 70c (or poor grades. Ontario Oats No. 2 white, 33o to Me at western points, 37c to 38u on track. To- ronto. Manitoba Oat*-No. 2 C. W. oats, 41 1-Zc; traok, bay poru; No. 3 C. W., 40o: No. 1 feed, 40c, for prompt shipment. Corn American No. 3, all rail, Toronto, December shipments, 57c. Peas No. 2, $1.15 to $1.20 car lots out- side. Buckwheat No. 2. 51o to 52c. .Rye No. 2, 70c, nominal. Boiled Oatii Per bag of 90 pound*. $2.- 221-2: pr barrel. $4.70, wholesale, Wind- sor to Moot-real. Barley Good malting barley, outld, 63e to 65o. Mlllfeed Manitoba bran, *19.00; In bags, track, Toronto; shorts, 122; Ontario bran, 119.00, in bags; shorts. $22. Manitoba Flour First patents, $5.30 in jute baga: second patents, $4.80 In jute bags; strong bakers', $4.00 in jute bag*. In cotton bags, ten cents more per bar- rel. Ontario Flour Winter wheat flour, 90 pr cent, patents, is quoted at $3.95 to $4.05. Country Produce. The following are the latest prices To- ronto wholesale men are asking of the trade: Eggs Cold-storage eggs, 2Sc to 27c in case lots; fresh ejres are polling at 29o to 31o; strictly new-laid at 32c to 35c. Cheese Twins, new, 14J-4c to 15c, and large, new, at 141-2c; old cheese, twini. 151-4c to 151-20! larste. 15c. Butter Creamery prints. 31c to 32c; do., olids. 29c to 30c; dniry prints. 25o to 27c; Inferior ^bakers'), 22o to 23c. Honey Buckwheat, 9o pound in tin* and j 8c in barrels; strained clover honey. 12 l-2c a pound In 60-pound tins. 12J-4a In 10- pound tins; IJc in 5-nound tln; comb honey, No. 1, 12.60 per. dozen : extra, 43 per do*en ; No. 2. S2 40 per dozen. Poultry Live chicken*, wholesal*. lOc to ] llo per pound: fowl, So to lOc; ducks, lie; to 13c; live turkeys. 15o to 17c: gees. 9o i to lOc. Dressed poultry. 2c to 3e abow . live quotations, excepting dressed turkafi at 20o to 21c. Beans Prime*. $2.50, and $2.60 for hand- picked. Potatoes Ontario potatoes. 85c per bag: car lota, 75c; New Brunswicks. Jl per bag, out of store: 90c in car lots. Spanish Onions Per case, $2,35 to $2.40. Provisions. Wholesale dealers are selling to the trade as follows: Smoked and Dry Salted Meats Rolls Smoked. 14 3-4c to 15c; hams, medium. !7c to 171-2o: heavy. 15 l-2c to 16c; breakfast baoon, 18c; long clear bacon, tons and cases. 141-2c to 143-4c: backs (plain). 211-2c: backi 'peameal), 22o. Oreen Heats Out of piokle, lo less than smoked. Pork- Short cut, S26 to S28 per barrel; mess pork. $21.50 to $22. Lard-Tieroea, 1! 1-Zo to 133-4e; tubs, 135-40 to 14o. TRANSPORTATION FIGURES Worth your while to test ft n ,, <-* C1 _ _ -_ fck __ Railway Statistics Showed Remarkable Increase UPTON'S IT SATISFIES MILLIONS OF PEOPLE TEA Sustains and Cheers. T in Every Phase for 1912 Baled Hay and Straw. Hay-No. 1, $13.50 to $14.00: No. 2. W.50 to $10.50; No. 3. $8.00 to $9.00. Straw. $9.- 50 to $10.00. Montreal Country Produce. Montreal. Jan. 21 Cheese Finest west- ernu, 13o; df>.. finest eastern*. 12 l-2c to 123-4c . Buttor-ChnioMt creamery. 29 l-2o to 29>4c; do., ncconils. 2ac to 27c. Esgs- Freah. We; do., selected, 29c to 30o; do., No. 2 stock. 20o. Potaloea Per bag. oar loU. 75o to 85o. United State* Markets. Minneapolis, Jan. 21. Wheat May, 89 3-4c to 89 7-8c. Corn-No. 3 yellow. l-Zo bo We; No. 3 white oats. 31o to 31 Me. Bye, No. 2, 57 to GOc. Bran, S19 to $19.50. Flour unchanged. Duluth. Jan. 21. Wheat No. 1 hard. 89c; No. 1 northern. 88c: No. 2 northern. 8601 July. 913-Sc b: May, We aeked. Live Stok Markets. Montreal, Jan. 21. The beat steers gold at $6.25 to $6.50 and the lower grades from that down to *4. whilf itood butchers' cows and bnlis brought $5.25 to $5.50. me- dium from $4 to $5, and common $3 to $3 75 per 100 pounds. Good demand for lambe at $7.25 to $7.50, and shetp sold at from $4 to $5.25 er 100 ixmnds. Calves from $3 to $12 each, as to size and quality. Hogi $9.25 to $9.50 per 100 Ibs. for select- ed lota, weighed off cars. Toronto. Jan. 21. Cattle Choice butcher $6.50 to $6.90; good medium, $5.15 to 86.40 1 common. $2.75 to $3.75; oows, $4.75 to J5.65| bulls, $3 to $5.25; canuers, $2 to $2.79. Calves Good veal, $7 to 99: common, $3 to $325. Stockers and Feeders Steers. 700 to 900 pounds. $5.25 to $5.50: feeding bulls, 600 to 1.000 pounds. S2.75 to $4.25; yearling!, $3.15 to $3.50. Milkers and Springer* From $50 to $80. Sheep and Lambs- Light ewes. $4.75 to $5.25: heavy ewee. $3 to $3.50; lambs, $8 to $8.75. Hogs $8.50 fed and watered and $8.15 f.o.b. CROWN PR1>CE ALEXANDER OF SEKVIA. King Peter's second son, who was the nominal head of the victorious army. 807 MILES OP NEW C.P.R. LINES Big Undertakings for Western Canada arc Entered Into. A despatch from Winnipeg says: Oontraots were awarded on Friday morning by the Canadian Pacific Railway for 807 miles of new lines be constructed in the west dur- ing the present year. The men to whom these contracts hay? been warded will not consider tne igreements binding until they have >een formally ratified by the Pre- ildflnt. Sir Thomas Shaughnessy. Chare is but little doubt, however, iht they will receive thr signature. HER HEARING RESTORED. Astonishing Deliverance of Woman Thought to be Hopelessly Deaf. NEW YORK (Special Despatch). Fully convinced that her hearing has been permanently restored af- ter years of torture with liead noises and almost total deafness, Mrs. B. A. Barrv of 555 W. 170th St., N. Y. City, has now been per- suaded to tell the story of her won- derful deliverance. After having spent hundreds of j dollars on mechanical devices, medi- j cines and doctors' fees, she decided i that this latest discovery, however j simple and inexpensive, should be the last she would try before re- signing herself to the hopelessness of permanent and total deafnese. Those interested in Mrs. Barry's case and the hope it holds out for them may write to her in confidence for full details, which she offers to send gratuitously. INTERESTING BITS OF GOSSIP FOM THE OUEEN OITY. Lieutenant-Governor's New Homo Cooks'j Cliuroh Pastor The Roman Cathollo Bishop iniooant Shews. The new a/)Ternmnt Ronae In Chorley j Park, North Bosedalo. Is now taking form, and iiatfsersby can get soma Idea of wbut will be the general effect of the completed oflicial residence ef Ontario's Lieutenant- j Governor. Frankly, the Impression eo far j made is not of the beet. The residence is : located amidst tine surroundings, but ths particular spot chosen for the site la a ; depression which doee not seem designed to set it off in any striking way. From the nearby roadway one may look Into the upper windows of the hum c. As a result, the building eeems afflicted with | the appearance of aquatiness and Insic- { nificanue. which its quality and value do not deserve. In addition, the outlook from the reaidcnre looks down Into th Don Valley, which, in its pristine state was ; beautiful, but juat at this parti- oular point has been decorated with a brick-making plant, which, at Bout houn of the day, is belching forth great clouds of smoke. When the wind Is in the east the future occupants of th GoTernment House, whoever they may b. threaten to be enveloped in coal dust and grime. Thaw are the current objections of the man on the iret. Possibly, sa the rsl- | dnce approaches completion, they will be removed, and whether they are valid or > not it looks as though they will form the i ba.-.o of discussion fur some time to uome. . Cjoke'a Church New Preacnar. It is hard to say whether Rev. John i McNeil, the new minister of Cooke's ' Church, who was brought from Liverpool to .. ku the charge. Is living up to hll advunca notices or not. In this oorres- , pondence some time ago It was stated that wh.it down town Toronto needed in a re- ligious way was a great preacher, who would do what Moody or Spurgcon did In ' their renpective spheres. Those who ex- 1 pected a Moody or a Spurgeon in 5ir. McNeil are possibly doomed to disap- pointment. For all that. Mr. McNeil will probably i have a successful ministry in good old . Cooke'a, which for half a century has . been a beacon light of Christianity in down town Toronto. He is a common- sense Scot 'the first minister of Cooke's who has not been Irish), who proiniitw to preach the Qoapel and avoid sensation- alism or frills in any attempt to gain popularity. Ho has a keen sense of hu- mor, which breaks into his sermons and : illuminates them like splashes of free gold in the flinty quartz. But if h lacks the i qualities of a supreme pro<-hi>r it is be- ' cause be haa not ae yet displayed those qualities of fervor and of imagination whirli grip the hearts of hie heitrars. Meanwhile he is getting acquainted with life and conditions in Toronto as fast as j he can. Frwiuently he may be seen on the busy down-town streets sauntering along alone, apparently getting his bear- ings as to streets and buildings and study- Intr human life i* he can read It on tht fares of the crowd. His own rugged , frame and strong face ar wflloient to arrHt attention. Ho has already doubt* lees demonstrated the truth ef bin re- mark that while he WHS in Liverpool he could speak only to the people of Liver- pool, he can in Toronto speak to the poo- pie of Liverpool. London. Glasgow and practically every city in the British Isles. The Two McNeils. It is curious that there (should come to Toronto almost simultaneously to import- ' ant ecclesiastical positions, two McXeila, one from Liverpool, the other from Van- couver. Archbishop McNeil, the new head of the Roman Catholic Diocese, is also sending down his roots into the life of Toronto. Except in the inner circle, how- over. little has been learned of his por- ! sonality So far he has declined to be interviewed by any uewspaper represen- tative. When Is a Show Indecent? The virtual Scotch verdict 6f "Not guilty, but don't do it again," rendered by the jury In the prosecution of F. W. Stair, who controls a burlesque theatre, on a charge of permitting an Indecent performance last winter, gives little satis- faction to the moral reformers. The per- formance under attack was the one which Eev. B. B. St. Clair attended and dencribed In a pamphlet which ho circulated among fellow workers, thereby incurring a pro- secution on a charge of circulating im- moral literature. In that case, also, the | rcMult was anomalous, for Judge Denton j found Mr. St. Clair guilty, but suspended ' sentence, and found that the performance j Itself was indecent, a declaration which had the Inevitable effect of stirring up the prosecution of tbo theatre, which has just enu>d ill the unsatisfactory jianner de- [ sorlbed. It is dilBVult to account for tbo j difference In view between the jury iu the Stair case and Judge Denton. It Is said j that eleven of the twelve good men and | truo favored an alwolute acquittal, and it WHS due only to the pertinacity of the j twelfth that the Innocuous rider mildly censuring such performances was added. Some of the jurymen said they had them- selves witnessed the prrform.ciot 1 . nml pre- sumably approved of It, or tlu-y would not have been there. In any cnse it ig evident they felt less responsibility than A despatch from Ottawa aays : A summary of railway statistics for the year ending Jims 30, 11)12, com- piled by J. L. Payne, Comptroller of Statistic* for tho Railways and Cauals Department, and tabled in the Commons by Hon. Mr. Cocu- raue, gives maiiy illuminating facts as to the recent remarkable trans- portation development of the Do- minion. During tho twelve months cover- ed by the report, 2,953 additional mile of railway were put in oper- ation, with 1,738 miles more report- ed ready for operation , and 10,000 milea under construction. All told the railway mileage of Cann-ia is now over 30,000, exclusive of sid- ings, double-tracking, etc. Elimin- ating Government lines, the total oapital liability of Canadian rail- ways on June 30 last -was : Stocks, $770,459,351; bonds, $818,478,175, a total of 1, 888,937,520, or $60,832 per mile. On this capital invest- ment dividends were paid last year totalling $31,164,791, equalling 4.04 per cent, on the total stock issue. The rapid growth in net earnings may b gauged from the fact that In 1907 dividends totalled only $12,- 760,435. Generous Publie Aid. The generous measure of public aid to railway construction in Can- ada is shown by the fact that the total Federal, Provincial and mu- nicipal cash aid now totals over 8208,000,000, while land grants to- tal over 56,000,000 acres. Federal and Provincial bond guarantees ag- gregate $2-15,070,045, of which the Dominion's share is $91.983.553. Al- berta has pledged its credit to the extent of 846,489,000; British Co- lumbia, 838,946.832; Saskatchewan, $32,500,000; Manitoba, 820, S99,- 360, and Ontario, $7,860,000. Cash aid to railways totalled $5,892.818 for the twelve months, including $4,994,416 to the Grand Trunk Pa- cific under tho "implement" clause. Record Gala in Traffic. Traffic shows a record gain during the year. The number of passen- gers carried was 41,124,181, an in- crease of 4,020,463 over 1911. The number of tona of freight hauled w.s 89,444,331, a gain of 9,560,049. The traffic increase is reflected in the gross earnings, which totalled 8219.403,753, a betterment of $30,- 670,259, or a little over 16 per cent. In ten years the gross earnings of Canadian railways have more than doubled. Operating expenses laat year amounted to $150,736,640, or $19,691,494 more than in 1911. Net earnings were 808,677,213, an in- crease of 810,978,504 over the pre- ceding year. Net earnings per mile of line last year were 82,570, aa compared with $2,272 in 1911. Equipment Improvement. The equipment reported in use on June 30th last shows substantial improvement during the year. New j locomotives toti.lled 205, passenger i cars 433 and .'raight cars 13.760. , These figures will be greatly bet- tered by ttfe end of the present fis- cal year. Oil appears for the first I time in the official reports as fuel for locomotives, the consumption last year being 1,729,577 gallons. Accidents Increase. Railway accidents also show a considerable increase during the year. The fatalities totalled 568, an increase of 73, and the number in- jured totalled 3,780, an increase of 451. One passenger in every 872,- | 855 -,va.-j killed and one in every 84,- j 792 injured. Of the total killed on ! railways during the year 47 wer 'passengers, 215 employees and 236 were trespassers. Passengers in- jured numbered 486 and employees injured numbered 1,606. Collis- ions were responsible for eighteen passengers killed and 73 injured, while 203 passengers were injured by derailments and ten were killed and 51 injured by falling off trains. The number of railway employees grew during the year from 141,224 to 150,901, while the increment in wages was 812,685,001. do men like Judge Denton and Judge Middleton. who did not beitate to tell them that their action waa a miwarriaee of Justice. The incident trve to illus- trate some of the difficulties the moral reformers have to orercom* In police circle* there U naturally some inpprewed chuckling at th remit of the unwnoutiuu. Censoring thcatrK-al per- formcncea la not a- job th poliro cara mnrh for, becinse It Is apt to make them enemies whatever they do. Now they are to be relieved of the duty. Wm. Banks, en., a nownpaper wpor'or of many years itxndinv, is ** new c^nnor. Ho has oan- turn and firmness, but then ape not many who envy him the task. Gounod Off ti Good Start. With the Council chamber overflowing with the wires and other relatives of al- dormon nd with flowers and palma, the City Council of 1913 started out in some- thing like a blaze of glory. Oood resolu- tions wire In th air. What the perform- anora will b Is another story. Uaynr Ilocken, in an undistinguished Inaugural of 40 minutes' length, rehearsed the great- nest of Toronto and her undertakings. Already a somewhat more critical atti- tude toward his Wonhip rhan linn been In evidence since he assumed office last autumn is being; aesnmod. and it would not be surprising if he were made the target of attack before loosr. Some muni- cipal sharps express the belief that lie may not prove to he a strong mayor or auoceesfnl administrator, btit as yot they have little to base their opinion on. Stomach Always Baulked, Had Constant Indigestion Smell of Cooking Made Him Sick Bilious Two Days a Week. Curod by Dr. Hamilton's Pills. Mr. Clcmmons' experience is not unusual. Xo\v-a-<lays poor stomachs are more the rule than the excep- tion. But the proper treatment is- sure to make a quick cure. You can always depend on Dr. Hamil- ton's Pills, they reach the trouble at once, go right to business, work while you sleep and have you feel- ings better if uot cured next mom- DISGRACE TO SOCIETY. Man Gets Six Months' Hard Labor for Neglecting flls Children. A despatch from Montreal says ! Emery Longpre was sentenced on| Wednesday to six months in jail I with hard labor tot neglecting to j support his children. Three little, tots were found lying on straw in ; an empty house on Dufferin street. I In pronouncing sentence the Judge tolcl the accused that he was a dis- grace to society. INVESTMENT VS. SPECULATION Speculation means risking or gambling your money, while investment is defined by safe- ty of principal, combined with a fair interest yield. Whsn we try to interest you in bonds, we offer you the highet class of investment, where safety of principal is assured and 6% earned on yor mony. We offer bonds in .?100, J500. and $1,000 denomination*. J. A. MACKAY & COMPANY LIMITED Guardian Bldg Royal Bank Bldg, MONTRFAL TORONTO TWO LIVES WKRE LOST. Crushed in House in a Bad Fire at Edmonton. A despatch from Edmonton, Al- berta, says: Fire in th wholesale district on Thursday night took the livs of several Italians. The blaze started after midnight from an unknown cause in the five-story brick block of the Canada Rubber Company, which was completely destroyed in less than an hour. Two bodies have been recovered from the ruins of an Italian board- ing-house, which was crushed by falling walls. One is that of a wo- man, probably the wife of tho pro- prietor, and the other that of a child. It is behoved that there are two more bodies in the ruins. "My food seemed to decompose in my stomach, writes Jlr. Ralph Cleminons, of Newbridge P.O. "I had a stomach that failed in some way to perform its work. Diges- tion seemed more or less arrested and I grew thin, yellow, nervous. The stomach became distended and impeded, apparently the action of the heart, for often at night it would do great stunts. At times my head ahed most terribly. A friend who had been cured of a similar condition, advised me to take Dr. Hamilton's Pills' regular- ly, which I did. The result in my case was simply marvelous. Dr. Hamilton's Pills removed the causo, strengthened the stomach, excited the liver to normal action, the kid- neys were released of excessive work. Health soon grew within me. I can now eat, sleep and live liko a live man." Be advised use Dr. Hamilton's Pills they are sure to do you good. 2Bc. per box, five for 81.00, at all druggists and storekeepers or by mail from The Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N.Y., and Kingston, Can- ada. NEARLY 400,000 ARRIVED Of These 145,859 Were British and 140,143 Were From the United States .V despatch from Ottawa says: During the nine months. April 1 to December 31, 1912, 3a-UW3 immi- grants arrived in Canada, 113,798 being from the United States, the remainder coming in by ocean ports, from Britain and all other countries. These figures show an increase of 14 per cent, as compared with the number of arrivals in th cor- re;pcsdi!M* jaonths of isn, whioh were 186,1^1, and '07.360 froqj tjw United States, making a totai uSf the nine months period, lost year, of 282,516 persons. During the month of December this year there were 13,023 arrivals, 7,262 of them having been at ocean ports, and 3,763 from the United States, as against 10,624 for Decem- ber last year, 4,945 of whom were at octan ports, and 5,679 from the United States. Varying the comparison, we have for the same nine mouths : British. 127,875; United States, 113,798; all other countries, H2,410| total, 334,- OS3. Corresponding months of the preceding fiscal year : British, 120,- 137 ; United States, 107,365 ; all other countries, 60,014; total, 292,- 510. Comparing th calendar year iaia with ijnl. Immigration figVrei* are ns follows- 191? British, 145,- 850; American. 140,143"; Sther coun- tries, 109,802; total. 395,804. 1911 British, 144,076 j American, 13~V 114; other countries. 75,184; total, 350,374.

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