Ontario Community Newspapers

Waterloo County Chronicle (186303), 21 Sep 1899, p. 2

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No Right To Ugliness. The woman who is lovely in face, form and temper will always have friesds, but one who would be attracâ€" tive must keep her health. If she is weak, sickly and all run down, she will be nervons and irrita she has constipation of Kidney 0, her itapure blood will cause pimples, biotches, skin eruptions and a wretchâ€" od complexion. Electric Bitters is the bost medicing in the. world to regulate stomach, liver and kidneys and to pariâ€" ty the bfood. It gives strong nerves, bright eyes, smooth, velvety akin, rich complexion. . It will make a good M«J ing charming woman of a runâ€"down upon investigation that most of the numerous burglaries and othes crimes of violence committed recently in the various parts of the provinge have been the work of traimps of the class usually found working along the lines of railâ€" way and camping in the woods and barns on the outskirts of cities, towns and villages. 1t is deemed necessary that these men should be driven out of the province as soon as possible, and‘ it is thought by the department that the best way to bring r qbout this result is for the magistrate before whom these tramps are brought upon charges of vagrancy to impose the full term of imâ€" prisonment in the Central Prison alâ€" lowed by law. The practice of giving them the option of a fine or so many hours to clear out of the municipality is producing very unsatisfactory teâ€" sults. You are requested therefore upon any of these men being brought before you to sce that the law is strictly and vigoroualy administered." , _ The Attorney General not long since wrote to Crown Attorney Bail of Woodâ€" stock, advising that all tramps should be sent to Central Prison. ‘The letter is os follows: "It has been fonnd Since Waterloo county adopted the plan of sending tramps to the county jail for vagrancy, the number of hoboes in this municipality has been very perâ€" ceptibly reduced. Théte is a« vast amount of unemployed labor embodied in the army of tramps which infest the country and on the other hand there should be some line of work upon which this labor could be brought to bear in the public interest without coming into too close competition with free labor. Our own opinion is that stone breaking is the occupation which fills the bill better than any other, and that the tramp problem and the good roads problem should, in some way be made to solve each other. At all events it‘s a point worth thinking about. Over at Neison the people used the editors white and gave them a take so phat that everyone regretted the comâ€" ing _ of "30." â€" The reception was double leaded and resulted in a clean proof of the hospitality of Kootenay‘s old town. _ We notice that Alex. Pirie was along with the literary avalanche. We remember Alex. when he was writing "skits" in the Toronto Sun. Ilis humor made that sheet readable. Of late years Piric became married and has buried himself in Dundas, where he is content to print the Banner and attend church regularly. .ar as New Denver and loaded up on the grand, intoxicating â€" and ideal scenery that surrounds the Lucerne of America. It is a lunch for the soul that they have missed. The only memâ€" ber who got away from the crowd to gaze at the beauties of Slocan lake was D. F. Burk, and his visit was about as long as a flash of lightning. We had just time enough to shake graspers with him and then the boat steamed on. _ Burk is a noted newspaper man. He once owned a bank, one of the rarest articles in the profession. The New Denver Ledge gets off the following on the newspapermen who recently went out to British Columbia un the press excursion :â€"The last litâ€" crary wave to sweep through the sea of mountaios was the Canadian Press association,composed of eastern cditors and their wives. As far as we can learn they are very respectable people and have kept sober while in the hills. It is reported that they all can read? and some of them can write. . Their intelligence is not of the highest grade, or @lse they would have wandered as The Hamilton radial railway office was robbed of $300 onSunday evening. Wonder if that was what Patterson had saved up to buy the rails for the Berlin road. The.Hamilton Spectator thinksMr . Breithaupt should resign _ If W wished to do that the Spectator would say he shouldn‘t be allowed to do so before the whole matter is sifted to the bottom. Notice of changes must be left at this office not later thanSaturday noon. _ ‘The copy for changes must be left not later than Tues: DAVID BEAN, Proprietor, cepted up to noon Wednesday of cach woek EDITORIAL COMMENT. TO ADVERTISERS BDITORIAL NOTES. It has been found English and German, in roasonable, and will be every Thursday | Mr McNish has boon again nominâ€" . « t 1 2 «* k waxskk N_ * . .. _ |ated by the Liberals of West Elgin and '”"'""_’;"'_&""" nc * gotime 0000 poprietor, |a great outery is made by the Conserâ€"| _ Didsbury, Alberta ‘ou, 1899. | WILLIAM HENMSTR H im in ‘advance| YAtives as though some great crime| Editor Telegraph. Sork .il"lblfg: e mii | â€" MeNBH IN WEST ELGIN. dvance | Yatives as though some great crime man, 4» | Were committed. Mr. McNisb, is himâ€" will be self, guiltless of wrong doing and perâ€" sonally pure. On the assumption that â€"â€"â€"|the Tories would have been satisfied with another man the pertinent quesâ€" fiice not | tion arises, What is the difference beâ€" 27. ls | tween a pure McNish and a pure some uts acâ€"| body else ? The Globe argues the ch weeX | question thus : The West Eigin case â€"â€"â€" |seems to have disturbed the mental balance of our Conservative contemâ€" ksMr . | porarics. The last election was adâ€" If Me|ittmedly void because of fraud. . The would | obvious remedy was to aunul it, try the do so | issue over again, and try it fairly. The to the | election has been annulled, it will be fought over again, and fought fairly, ___| with the same candidates in the field. O!h“ It i§ now said that the Liberal caudid ©0IREâ€" | ate has no right to appedr again, and terson | that the seat ought to be handed over or th¢/to his opponent. _ That would mean that the Liberal electors of West Elgin are to be disfranchised for frands . which, according to the Conservative >fi the .press, are the work of a small organâ€" ‘ "b9) ied gang. Over and over again these ‘""l{“" Conservative journals have insisted & lit~ | that ‘the people" are not to blame, © +©@ / that the culprits are few in number, Pr&8® | ghat they are well known and that they ditors ought to be in jail. ‘There is no conâ€" The Hespoler Football players have ’nnizwl for the season and will entâ€" a team in thein the W.F,A. interâ€" mediate series. The following are the officers of the club: President, A. Bridge anager,Geo. Ruff; captain, A.Suthorâ€" l;:g, aec'y-tm:‘;l-‘.d. Mitchell. gho ers opener the season on Saturday | by defenting.book in thnt piace by two 8. Dougall, M. Aâ€", P. D., was the oftiâ€" ciating clergyman. They will make their home in Stratford. At the Ié{»mo of Mr. and_Mrs. Robert Gilmar, Wilmot, Miss Eliza, their daughter, was united by the marriage tie to Mr. John. A. Langley, of the G. T. R. car works, Stratford, on Saturâ€" day last. Fow _ but the immediate friends of the bride and groom were present. All the appointments were charming. Many were the beautiful gifts as testimonials ot ‘affection and good wishes _ Miss Langley, sister of the groom, and Nr. Edwin Gifmar, brother of the bride, were the supportâ€" éra'of the contracting pair. â€" Rev. Hugh ’ . The Editor of the Elnira Advertiser is out again with oneofthe big speciâ€" (men products which those nortbern farms seem to produce so perfectly. This time it is not a big egg but a stalk of corn and this is what it is like: We have in this officc a stalk of corn measuring 11 feet 1 inch long with cols 10 inches in cireumference and 13 inches long. The corn was raised at Wallenstcin on the farm of Mr. John Fenton, who has 5 acres of corn about that length. Next! . _ The County selectors of Jurors, viz Judge Chisholm, Warden HMallman, County Clerk Bowman, auid acting Sheriff Bowlby, met Friday at the Court fHouse and determined the numâ€" ber of jurors to be sent from the diffâ€" crent municipalities to the clerk of the Peaee. _ From these lists jurors will be sciected. Mr. J. E. Lilly, a prominent citizen of Hannibal, Mo., lately had a wonâ€" derful deliverance from a frightful death. In telling of it hesays : I was taken with Typhoid Fever, that ran into Pneumonjr. My lungs became bardened. I wasso weak 1 couldn‘t even situp in bed. Nothing helped me. 1 expected to soon die of Consumpâ€" tion, when I heard of Dr. King‘s New Discovery. One bottle gave great relief. I continued to use it, and now am well and strong. I can‘t say too much in its praise." This marâ€" vellous medicine is the surest and quickest cure in the world for all Throat and Lung Trouble. Regular sizes 50 cents and $1.00. Trial bottles free at S. Snyder‘s Drug Store; every bottle guaranteed. We are told also that this is another Dreyfus case, that it almost justifics another rebellion like that of 1837. Who is the Dreyfus ! _ Who is the vietim ? / Who is being oppressed or deprived of his rights ? Frauds were committed, but no one is clinging to the resulteof the frauds. The race is to be run again. What is alleged is not that any injustice‘is being done, but that the Government is Jax in not: punishing the offenders. _ Offenders against the election laws should cerâ€" tainly be punished, but aÂ¥rebellion would hardly be in order because the Government does not prosecute one Duncan Bole, nor have we here a parallel for the Dreyfus case, or that of the late John Y. McKane. | McKane defied the law and imprisoncd citizens who came to assert their rights. . In the present case the rights of the citiâ€" zens of West Elgin have been vindiâ€" cated, and they will have a fair clecâ€" tion, in place of the fraudulent one which took place last winter. â€" The case was bad enough ; it will not be strengthened by exaggeraited and frenâ€" zied language. sistency between this position and that of punishing the Liberal electors of Woest Elgin by preventing them from voting for the candidate of their choice in a fair clection. Woedding in Wilmot His Life Was Saved. Selection of Jurors Long Corn. Germania Day at the Industriat Toronto, Eept. 6.â€"Germania Day was & pronounced suocess at the Industrial Fair yesterday. Tho eariy hours wore not faverable for the visitors, rain falling stondily for several hours. Later the weaâ€" ther improved and the afterncon and evening v:m v-rgilm. 'I."bo attendance was very large, berond the average of Gmnnh" Day. Crowds ”.fi-m early trains, principsily Waterloo, Goderich and all intermediato clay and are less. It is 1 arsenic, and it Time to Do Something. Mrs. Mimmsâ€"Mary, it was 1 ofclock this morning when you got in. 1 beard you. ‘"But what is the use of striking the wheels?" * "God knows; I have been doing this for years. It is the order of authority." â€"Chicago News. "It‘s the order of ‘i'l;{l;;;l'iy," replied the imperturbable native. hibvct oc it ds . ul d i c 0 ‘"Why do you beat the wheels like that ?" was the first question. At n station on the mainâ€"line of the East India railway a train from Delhi had stopped, and one of the travelers, an officer of the royal engineers, began to quiz from the carriage window a "tester" who was going his rounds, striking the wheels with his hammer. Sleep. Some doctors believe that a mun has just so many hours to be awitke, and that the more of them he uses up in a «ay the shorter bis life will be. A man might live to be 200 if he could sleep most of the time. The proper way to economize time, therefore, is to sleep when there is nothing better to do.â€" Cincionati Enquirer. The executive committee is as tollows: W. G. Balicy, Hamiltun; J. D. Finvelle, Lindsay; John Goldic, Ayr; J. J A. Hunt, London; M. Mcl aughlin, Toronto; T. L. Spink, Toronto. Association Transacts Its Annual Busiâ€" ness on Board a Lake Steamer, Oakvilie, Sept. 6. â€"The Millers‘ Assoâ€" clation for the Dominion held their anâ€" nual meeting and dinner yesterday afterâ€" noon. ‘The association chartered â€" the stenmer White Star and picnicked at Oakâ€" ville, returning to Toronto in time to witness the fireworks and grand stand porformance at. Exbibition Park. The business of the convention was transacted in the smoking room of the steamer. ‘The officers of the association for the ensuing year are: H. 1. Price of St. Mary‘s, president; W. H. Meldrum, Poterboro, first vice president; J. C. Vanstone, Bowmanville, second viceâ€"president; W. M. Gnlbnnh.‘ Toronto, treasurer. ‘ Our Waterloo visitors and land seekâ€" ers inform us how famous our beloved country has grown in the East. The Northwest is a table topic, they say. Well, it is an interesting subject, to be sure,â€"and a big one; for, as the new home seekers say, the world is vast out here. â€" There is still room for a few more settlers if they come before the Doukhobors and Galicians and Finns swarm in like grasshoppers for multi tude. So far, the population of this settlement â€" includes only first class Ontario and Michigan immigrants. So come along and make your home in the land of the Rockies, but ere you start, screw your courage to the stickâ€" As to the crops, they look good, but they "are rather backward in coming forward." Barley and the early varâ€" iety of oats are about ready to cut, but most of the oats are still in the milk ; wheat, too, is pretty green. Some think that very little of the grain will ripen at all; but if the present fine weather continues for two weeks, it seems probable that the greater part of the cvops will yield excellent grainâ€" provided, also, that no severe frost comes. There has already been a local frost, but it injured only certain low lying fields. Mail has done little or no damage in this localitys ‘ 1 With the return of fine, sunry weather, haying has recommenced. The bay made now ‘is, of course, all upland, which is considered as nutritious as meadow hay. If the warin weather continues, there will yet be a chance of putting up a considerable quantity of fodder, as the grass can be cut until late in the autum»n, unless there will be too many hard frosts to freeze the grass before it cures. If an open winter follows, there will not be so much hay necded, as the cattle can then craze. * Berlin, Ont. . smm niatng ‘ Du:ilx:-wo:“n hlrdlm He Was A-‘o:‘m mn:oo such a t as been Perlod and Thovg! a Daye t-ommwnl"m about the widdle 'd-‘nmuu-nn Fastâ€"He isAgain June until a few days age, rain was the m"‘ Kobust as ito Was rule, a dry dl:; the pxception. It was are Ago. a fonan‘ifh rain, inten:l&led by ap | From the Free Preas, Acton, Ont occas gleam of sunshine. . For| No man is better known to the peop‘e many a year Alberta has not seon anyâ€"| of the countics of Hailton and Welâ€" thing like it.. We have not seen any|lington than Wiliiam Homstreet, a fire lately, nor anyone bauling water, | pioncer and much estcemed ufi-nt“ unless it got into somebody‘s wagonâ€"|of \Acton. Mr. Hemstreet is a native box in crossing a ereek. The little/of this county, baving been born in creeks, as well as the larger streains,| Trafi‘gar township 1817. In hbis had risen high above former high water | youngerdays Mr. Hemstreet conducted marks. In this place, the Rosebud,|a tauning business. fHe subsequently which ceases torun about miâ€"summer, | engaged in the and batchering having after that only standing poole, | business, and iwentyâ€"five years was, (furing the past month, often imâ€"} ago,owing superior kw'hj‘eof passuble, and a few days ago it rose so | the value of live stock, he teok out a much that it swept away the bridge|license as an auctioneer. In this calâ€" crossiqg it at Didsbury. ‘The sloughs|ling be became at once popular and (natural prairie hay meadows) with | he was constautly on the road, driving their crop of good grass are under | in all kinds of weather, holding auction water and are not expected to dry up |siles several days a week. Although this year. Somewellsare nearly brimâ€" | possesting a strong, bealtby constituâ€" ful. tion, the continued exposure and hard THIS ORKCINAL DOCUMENT IS IN VERY POOR CONDITION Wheel Testing In India. atives of (ininea love to devonr | are pale, listless and ambitionâ€" is supposed the clay contains aud hence the delight in eating vanauiAs NILLEIS Kontroal, ®rpt. 6,â€" T1 luck still follows tho Kolsone Bank, This wme a forgery kas Leen . porpatratcd.. the "hank baine on th It was never learned who the child was, but she was adopted by a gentleâ€" man of the parish and grew to womanâ€" hood. She tnust surely all her life have bad a peculiar interest in that church. â€"Sir Welter Besant‘s ‘"‘London." The next morning there was fonnd upon the leads of the Church of All Hallows a young child in a cradle, haby and cradle being entirely nninjared by the explosion that bad lifted both to such a giddy height. In one house among the 50 a mother bhad pnt her baby into its cradlo to slcep before the explosion occurred. What became of the mother no one ever knew, but what became of the baby was very widely known. The tronble was that _the man who did the mischief was not the only one to perish. Fifty houses were wrecked, and the pumber of people who were killed was not known. A Mirnculons Esenpe. It bappened that in the last month of the reign of Chatles I a certain ship chandifer of London was foolish enough to busy himself over n barrel of gonâ€" powder with a lighted candle in his band. He paid the price of his folly. A spark fell into the gunpowder and the place was blown np. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills cure by going to the root of the discase. They renew and build up the blood, and strengthen the nerves, thus driving disease from the system. _ Avoid imâ€" itations by insisting that every box you purchase is enclosed in a wrapper bearing the full trade mark, Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills for Pale People. "I am as much averse to making personal matters public as auy one could possibly be, but my long conâ€" tinued illness was so widely known and my recovery has been so marked and satisfactory that I feel that 1 owe a debt of gratitude to the simple but effective remedy which cured me, and this is why I thus acknowledge It, as well as to show to those who are up in years and in illâ€"health what Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills did for me." â€"| of Acton. Mr. Hemetreet is a native ejof this county, baving been born in , | Trafilyar township 1817. In hbis r | youngerdays Mr. Hemetreet conducted , | a tauning business. He subsequently , | engaged in the and butchering , | business, and iwentyâ€"five years â€" | ago,owing superior kU'lJ‘eol o | the value of live stock, he teok out a e |license as an auctioneer. In this calâ€" s|ling be became at once popular and ; |he was constautly on the road, driving r | in all kinds of weather, holding awction p | sales several days a week. Alihough â€" | possessing a strong, bealtby constituâ€" tion, the continued exposure and bard , | work of seHing some days for six or ; | eight hours at a stretch, be gradually , |lost his strength and vigor, and about s | three years ago found himsclf a colâ€" _{lapsed and wornâ€"out mau. In converâ€" feation with a reporter of the Free ; | Press he said:â€""I felt that my days | | of usefulness were over. My strength ) |had departed, iwy voice was gone, I :| was too weak to do work of any kind }and I was undeniably uscless to myâ€" |self or anyone elsc. My syimptoms | were peculiar and baffied several of the best local physicians, who differed very much in their diagnosis. 1 took their | medicines faithfully but no imppoveâ€" ment resulted. 4 did not suffer Much pain but was a very sick man. ~Had no appetite, no strength, coult not |sleep, and both myself and my ffiends concluded that my days on earth were numbered and that my wornâ€"out aysâ€" |tem would in a very short time lie down in cternal rest. Ihad to give uo all my business interests." When Mr. Hemstreei‘s condition was most serious his attention was attracted by the published testimonial of Rev. Mr. Freeman, a minister with whom he was personally acquainted, r(-l:?)fiufo his restoration of health after g Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills He was particularly impressed with this tesâ€" timonial and concluded that these pills must possess singular merit and healtug powe: or Rev. Mr Freeman would not lend his name to their apâ€" probatiob. Air. Hemstrect then deâ€" cided to give them a trial; he first got one box, then three, then half a dozen, and took them regularly. No very marked effects,he says were noticeable but with characteristic persistence he purchased a further supply. By th thime twelve or thirteen boxes bad been taken, be felt that new blood was coursing through his veins; that he i possessed renewed vigor and was able to perform all the datics his business calls demanded. _ "For a year I conâ€"|| tinued to take the pills". he said. . «@J|â€" knew I was regaining my old time]| strength and good health and 1 was 1 determined the cure should be comâ€" plete and permanent, and 1 giveâ€"them | the credit for making nie the new| man I feel myself to be toâ€"dav. As| evidence that my recovery is complete | 1 have only to state that this spring 1| have conducted amnumber of auction | sales in the open air with perfect ease| and with entire satisfactian to my | ! ciients. ‘ No man is better known to the peop‘e of the counties ;: ml“l‘:lwuu and Welâ€" lington than W cmetreet, a p{t:loor and much estcemed resident ‘ A Pioneep‘s‘ Mosun« Hank Lower Again. _ eword, and was repeatedly . rmprisoned, _and more than once forced to fllght on | accoubt of what he did. Later in life he ‘ became convinced that complete indeâ€" pendence would never be possible in | Hungary, and in 1861 he went to the J Chamber of Deputies as a representative of a more moderate rnr. Here his | oratorical abilities and clear jadgment made bim a party leader. He sat uninâ€" terruptediy in Parliament until 1896. Then, boing defeated in the elsction, he was at once named by the King as a life member of the Upper House. ‘"Black *a. Medirn Mide : ate untouy trentd *A m .u-n are wo . best known on this side of the Atlantlo fountain ot story oxhausted, for he is still producing at the rate of two norels or more a year. His works have, howâ€" ever, only resently begun to be popular in this country. In the Hungarian revoâ€" Intion of 1849 Jokal was heart and sosl! with the movement of the people. He served the cause both _with pen and l Famous Hungarian Author Is to Have Childâ€" W ife. _ Maurus Jokai, the Hungarian author, whose approaching marrilage to the 15â€" yearâ€"old actress, Arabella Nagy, has been annour.ced, has bad an adventurous and romantic career, with which such a marâ€" riage as this in his 75th year is not at all out of keeping. As revolationist, journalâ€" 1st, politician and roveilst be has ratged through roany flelds of human experiâ€" ence. Of ccurse it is as the ncvelist that be is bost known. Often he is called the Huangarian Dumas In 1813, as th!'nzo of 18, he prodtood a drama which roâ€" ceived honorable montion from the Hunâ€" garian Academy, and since thon he has written about 230 voltmes. Nor is h‘s the right way they should use the short words which we learn in early life and which have the same sense to al) classes of men. The English of our Bible is good. Now and then some long words are found, and they always hurt the verses in which you find them. Take that which says, ‘O ye generation of vipers, who bath warned you to flce from the wrath to come? There is one long word which ought not to be in itâ€" namely, ‘generation.‘ In the old ver siou the old word ‘brood‘ is used. Read the verse with the terim, and you will feel its full force: ‘O ye viper‘s brood, who Hiath warned you to flee from the wrath to come? Crime semetimes does not look like erime when it is set. before us in the many folds of a long word. When a man steals and we call it a ‘defalcation,‘ we are at a loss to know if it is a plunder or a crime. If he does not tell the truth, and we are told that it is a case of ‘prevarication,‘ it tnkes us some time to know just what we should think of it No man will ever cheat himself into wrongdoâ€" ing, nor will be be at a loss to judge of others if he thinks and spenks of acts in clear, crisp terms. Tt is a good rule, if one is at a losgâ€"to know if an act is right or wrong, to write it down in short, straightout English." "We must not ouly think in words, but we must also try to use the bost words and those which in speech will put what is in our minds into the minds of others. ‘This is the great art which those thust gain who wish to teach in the school, the church, at the b‘ar or through the press. To do this in Here Are Some, and They Are Right to the Point. The following paragraph on "The Use of Short Words" is attributed to Horatio Seymour. It practices what it preached therein, since there is no word in it with more than two syllaâ€" bles, save such as are quoted for purâ€" poses of illustration; Globeâ€"Democrat. A proposition is made in all seriousâ€" ucss that United States senators wear a court dress and sword while engaged in the performance of their public dutics. It will occur to most people that the senâ€" ate is sufficiently picturesque without any enificinl trappings. ~â€" St. . Louis PridtI Abrblaisbinn i The king of Belgium is going to save his throne a little while lopger by grantâ€" ing ‘proportional representation" to his rebellious subjects, but be will find that this is only a palliative. Evidently the Belgians are not so docile as they once EL ds o e oo um were.â€" WuAhiu‘t'ox;‘Tini:; Russia is biue over the grain erop shortage. American farmers will cheerâ€" fully supply the deficit at a reasou@ble advance in prices. Let Russia take courage and not fear starvation.â€"Kansas City ‘Times. A way to embaim ice to keep it from melting has been invented by an Indiana man. If he will discover a scheme to keep coal from consuming, the cousumers of the country will hail him as the Dewey of the economic world.â€"St. Louis Republic, will be uo such thing as the suburbs of a city.â€"Lewiston Journal. The London Baturday Review setties it with the decision that Americang are the better gymnasts and Englishmen the better athletes. Clevab! Awfully clevâ€" abh! And so Reviewy.â€"Boston Herald. Chicago fire, but the Tallulab ...T-: not be allowed to precipitate a war heâ€" In a recent race in Paris the autome biles averaged about 32 miles an hour. When automobiles become common there Memphis Appeal. Kansas has pleuty of grain on mu-».au..uz:‘:....':fi consent to things up again.~Wash se mt i ho. "mon! ,%e"..w"‘m.”"_ merous as ever.â€"New York Press. bascball to Brazil, and bereafter the Brazilian diamond may shine brightly on Honors are even m-;uuc.n.t i and the Shamrock. Each now bas a in her bull.â€"New York Sun. Mrs. O‘Leary‘s cow brought on the MAURUS JOKAL SHORi WORpS. MAURUS JOKA:. THE VERDICT, A recent Siberian traveler relates "At Sadonsk in the intensely cold nigbts the silence was sometimes broken by a loud: report as of a camnon. This was the bursting of one of the ice bubâ€" bles in the river, a phenomenon I bad meither heard nor read of before. The streams coming down from the hills «were frozen on the surface some six to nine inches thick. The water beneath flowed faster than it could escape, and the pressure, on the principal of a hyâ€" draulic press, became irresistible. First, the elasticity of the ice was seen by the rising of citenlar mounds from siz to d‘:t feet in diameter and from tour to five feet high. The bursting poin® came at last with a report like an . explosion. ‘The water escaped, but soon out doubt Miller‘s Compound Iron Pills are the best. + ar nrinaR® K0. % eoats regular price$3. 50, es Hookl t20. % Youtbs‘ 3 piece suits with _ knickers, single â€" ~~ Men‘s a‘} wool cordigan jackets, Mohan bit color, shades in black Ans.bmn. regualar $1.23 Boy‘s 2 â€"piecce . suits short lined pants, dark brown SheckedCanad an tweed, single breasted Men‘s ulsters in gray, brown, black or blue shades, doubleâ€"breasted, high _ collar, _ checked tweed linings and rugby waterproof,size 36 to 44, at $8.50. _Men‘s mediam weight overcoats for fall wear, imported English whi cord _ single brwtes short b x style, test satinlinings, size 35 to 14 at $0.50 Men‘s single or double breasted savque styles, il! woo!l, dark and medâ€" vum _browo _ Canediâ€"n tweeds, the beet farmer satin linings, sizes 36 to 14, regular price $10.00 special at $8.00 Meu‘s suils, single breasted, cut away or «que sty‘e.imoor ted Eoglish clay worsteds ~lik stitched edges firstâ€"class liniuas and trimmings, sizes 36 go 44, price only $10 w Cc e ie t ns w Some others may be good but withâ€" 14 King Street, To Keep Your Head and Body Cool S. Sauder & Co. | | FOR A . Light Weight Coat and Vest, items that are worthy representaâ€" the stock which they repre:eut. Thcre is no beiter aseortment better qualities and value:. If you and makeâ€" comparisons. If your direct to us and you will be highly can do for you in our Clothing secâ€" items that are worthy representa. J. 8. ROOS For Holiday Travelling. Popuar . Bo Fall and;Winter Clothing Tce Explosions In Siberia S. R. ERNST & CO., All the latest styles in Ladies‘ and Gentliemen‘s Shoes in sizes to fit â€" any foot. Children‘s Linen Snits and Linen Hats They‘re Just the Thing. Our Tranks, Valies and Telescopes are just the thing. All shapes and 8. SAUDER & C0., FURNISHINGS AND UNDERWEAR MEN‘S CLOTHING i i c ' Men‘s fire »ilk,satin neck wear in fourâ€"inâ€" '!“‘d*y har ds, puT«, ) nots, dark,light and meditim and | shades satin lined, choice enlored Strines, $10 | fancy pstzons,rcgalar 50,40,35 : lines at 25¢. . ! The Popular Boot and ‘Shoe Store. AT THE 'q \ Men‘s _ unlaundried t / heavy _ white _ cotton & « hirts, sale price 500 binding. battoned cuffs, guarantesd fast 23 line for only $1.03. Men‘s Furnishings and Unâ€" derwear. ASK YOUR DEALER For Cutfitters to Men. CeSsPUr CHOICEVIRCIA 1A LEAF LILY. _ 10c. Plu & You will like it if you try it. tives of the v Ines within yeur reach, nor bave time fook arcund time is limitel come pleased wi h what we tion. These are a few Men‘s fice laundred shirts, all sizes, regular price $1.00. These kave doub‘e backs, pure linon besoms and cuffs conâ€" tinuous stays, spocial at 15c. . ted fi t blacl shirls, â€" extra regular price 75 ouly at 50c > Men‘sz5e shirts at00c; 20 doz Ven‘s heavy ail wool undershirts and drawers _ all denbleâ€" bâ€"easted, ribbed shirts and cuffs, winter weights. These come in fg-ncy stripes _ medinm dark shades reguiar price 50c speci 1 at 30¢, J0 doz men‘s guaranâ€" 32 King St.. Berlin breisted coata, all wool Sectch _ and English tweeds in brown and fawn mixtnres size 27 to 33 at $5 00, men s gurranâ€" s black sateen extva} we‘shts BERLIN. i0¢ relling #+

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