Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 27 Apr 1904, p. 5

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ALK u grow very € extravagant in the news. refreshing to advertisement ng House that roclaim that nufacturer js ¢ 4 1 refreshing to | ply announce p | you asplen. uit for $10 > freshing that § shout that we § . 4 re that is not', § 4 store that is. 8 ; PY # its here®4hat § to you, and ar. tailored, $10, 0, 13 50,414 15 AND 16 50. Y co. atent Colt 1) Calf, e ry Tie nd Dunn, STORE J 4 DN. E YOU ile our line of Hardware nd Specialties er than those ld, our prices 1er than those nferior goods ? ittle comparin, d quality an urself. ' awrenson, 30008 T ] goods. "Former >rice, $5 . style. Former © $2. 50. (soiled). For} ce, $1.50. the half dollar ice, 20c¢. TON, Stand). "Pall My Housework and Take Care of My Baby and | Feel So Good. RU-NA SAVED MY LIFE" Writes Mrs. W. McRoberts. RS. L. M. GRIFFITH, Arco, Idaho, writes: "I am thirty years old and never had any children; but since beginning your medicine 1 since you am stronger than I have I was quite youhg. God and your medicine forever." _ MRS. L. M. GRIFFITH, It you do not derive proinpt and satisfactory results from the use of Peruns, write at once to Dr, Iartman giving a full statement. of your case and he will be rm pleased to give i Ai you his valur able advice \ Lat Mrs. W. McRoberts, following: third of March I gave praise it enough. ' picture. she is a Peruna baby. good health now. Ido work and take care of feel so good. > e-------- COMMERCIAL. MONTREAL MARKETS. Canadian Pacific Co Montreal Street Ry Montreal Street Ry., Toronto Street ie Halifax Street Ry. . Ne Detroit United Street Ry. Twin City Transit, BR. "i N 0 Ont. Doulinjon Steel Nova Scotia Steel . . Ogilvie Milling Co. ..... Montréal Cotton Co. ... ITvminion Ceal Co Bank of Montreal Merthants' Bank NEW YORK STOCK EXCHAN Unioy- Pacific St. Paul Manhattan BR. R. Transit Sugar People's ( u. 8. NS jas « sel, Pref. Tenn. Coal and Iron Miss. Pag Southern Pac Ont. & IWestern U. S. Rubber N.¥.C Atchison, Pref Fouls & Nash. Rock Island ' Pennsylvania R.R. .. Atchison" | American Loco. Amal. Copper MAY COME HERE. . On Occasion Of $1 « R4th. fatertown. N.Y. Wirh 'Kingston idea of battalion lion with the whether the .apmiversary celebration of Queen eén's birtnday, May the battalion decide to attend, a for mal invitation will be sent. Ji The. 25th. Separate company of Uti- ht decided to accept and the same city, will ton or the'matter. After drill this even- ca, last L_nigh the th of ing the invitation will before the local company and the men will probably decide to companies, belonging to the battalion are those from Ogdensburg, and Mohawk. While there is nothing definite, it is believed that the battalion will leave for 'Kingston, on the evening of May A YOUNG MOTHER'S LETTER. fIartman' from Delano, Mids, the Delano, Miss. Dr. 8. B.'Hartman, Columbus, Ohio: Dear Sir:--"I fee] perfectly well of $ufarrh. I did as you directed me to and took Peruna and Manalin, pound baby girl and we are both well spd Asppy: I'am very thankful to you and Peruns saved my life. I resemmend it to everyone and can't "I send you my own and my baby's She is so sweet and good,-- ""There aro' three or four of my neighbors using Peruna now since it did; me.so much good. They were Just run down, and they think it is fine, it is so good to give strength," -- Mrs. W. McRoberts. oe Victoria Day, Ma Standard. 20 military..authgrities have sounded Major James S. Boyer, commanding officer of the 4th batta writes to Dr. The birth to a ten § "I have such all my house- my baby and Address Dr. Hartman, President o! The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, S---- SINS VISITED ON SON. Most Peculiar Crime Reported oy aha. From Budapest. 117 Budapest, April 27.--A mysterious Jon; iv crime was committed at Ecidebtly by jo1° 99% relatives of a criminal, who was be- 100 93 headed some time ago and is baffling 623 61 the police of the city. A young man, pai 28 Richard Kozarek, who was serving 148 142 his military term in an artillery re- 5 74 giment in this ¢éity, was stabbed in Io 19 the back the other night as he was 120 118 returning to the barracks, and it has 110 000 not been possible to find his assail- 110 108 ant. 250 | OVO uy - . . 000 135 The knife penetrated his spinal ecl umn, and the young man is to-day paralyzed from the hips down. ~ He is being cared for at a military hospi tal, and according to the belief of the surgeons, will live, but will never get the use of his legs back again. The father of the young man, M. Kozarek, has for some yeas been executioner in this city, and when he was beheading his last criminal some one in the crowd cried out, just as the . head . dropped into the basket : "We shall get revenge on your son for "the death of this innocently con- demned man." WILL BE GOOD CROPS. | Seeding Will Begin Next Week In North West. Winnipeg, April. 27.--Crop reports re ceived here, indicate that seeding is in prdgress all over the provinee, and * the territories, gud by the end of the week will be general. A few districts are behind the others on account of high water, and none will be later than the end of the week in getting their seed in. In spite of the late opening of the season, there is every indication of a good crop. ascertaining would attend Should 21th. Shoots His Sweetheart. New York, April 27.--Gustav Fing- bush, an unmarried sailor, vesterday, shot and seriously wounded Adelina Buttner, a singer with whom he Was infatuated, and then shot himself, per. be brought haps fatally. Fingbush first met the x singer last week, and has been very £0. The other attentive, refusing to go to sed, and insisting on an early marriage. Miss Malone Buttner had an eagagement in a Ho- boken concert garden, and Fingbush was escorting her to her home in Brooklyn. The shooting following a quarrel, and is supposed to have been 23rd, and will return on the 25th. | "ooo by jealousy, Get The Spring Habit. Of buying the earliest and best A Saving In Fuel. novsky's. oe Laver, lunch, sponge and cup cakes at Ferguson's. = anit All Drugs spring vegetablés. Always first at Car ~ Cures Headache Within ' Free Sample and Booklet. A deal of gas and coal is being sav- wl every day by the use of "Clark's Pork and Beans." You cannot im- prove on the quality. W. Clark, Mir., Montreal. m-- It Speaks for Itself Ne 30 Minutes or Money Refunded The Herald Remedy Co., Montreal gave birth to al0-pound baby girl, L| THE DOMINION. ick cr mm---- CANADA WILL SHINE AT THE WORLD'S FAIR. -- Her Agricultural Exhibit Has Space Of 10,000 Feet--Parlia- ment Library Reproduced In Grain -- Canada's Boundless Wealth Exploited. St. Louis, April 27.--Canada's wen derful exhibit in the palace 'of agri: culture at the world's fair is a ve velation to the one who may have had an idea that the great north country was one of cold and ice always. - No sections in Uncle Sam's galaxy of states displays fairer i 8 of the result of the husbandman's industry and no land shows a greater variety of products than do the great prov- ince that adjoins the United States on the north. » Canada has a space of 10,000 square feet in the exposition mammoth pal ace of agriculture--a structure that covers an area of twenty-three acres apd contains all that is edible.from a 1] lands. The Canadian space is on the cast side of the main aisle, about mid- way of the giant structure's unrivalled length. A replica of a historic struc: ture forms the centre piece of this notable exhibit. Cne of the handsomest of the public buildings in the dominion is the lil.- rary of parliament at Ottawa, the Ca- nadian capitol. The dome of "this building, reproduced on a smaller scale, is one of the Smit commandinz objects of the big ®huilding. It is an octagon, thirty-four feet across, and its top extends sixty feet upward an! brushes the rafters of the agricultural palace. Its frame is of pine anf the surface that shows is covered with glowing red burlap. + Artistically fus- tened to this background are' the grains and grasses of Canada, more than 3,000 specimens being shown in charming array. Great buttresses are built up of mil let, ar forage plant; brome grass, a fodder crop grown extensively in west- ern Canada, and which appears short lv after the snow leaves the ground ; wheat, oats, clover, blue grass and hundreds of other choice specimens. Corn, used £0 much in the embellish- ment of the exhibit of the states, finds no place 'in this display.: The eight arches of the octagen afford a ccnspicuous place for oil paintings. typilying the live stock industry of the great north. The pictures are works of -art, and - their great size makes the scenes very lifelike. The windows under the pointed arches are filled with bottles of threshed grain Bencath the dome is the office for Superintendent W. H. Hay, in charge of the entire agricultural exhibit de partment. The walls are lined 'with attractive exhibits. In th: corners around the central pavilion are attractive little booths, built to show"to best advantage the boundless wealth of Canada's soil. One hooth is devoted 10 honey, and two tons of thé product of the apiary makes: a beautiful sight. A maple sugar industry is exemplified in an in- teresting manner. A small house is built of maple logs and branches, and in this house is the model of an up to-date sugar plant. There is a miniature grove of maple trees, and the story is illustrated of how the sap is taken from the trees, how evaporated, erystalized and made into sugar. Another section is dévoted to (he cereal food industry and two exhibits of flour, and the manner in which it is made, proves attractive to all visi- tors. QUEEN'S CONVOCATION, Outline Of This Afternoon's Big Ceremony. The. convocation ceremonies, cluding the sixty-third session - of Queen's University, were held in the City hall this afternoon, commencing at half past two o'clock. For fifteen years pest, the university astrono- mers. dec'ere that fine weather has al- ways favored these great ceremonies. Queen's University seems to always he blessed with the proverbial queen's r her fete days. There was assembly in the City hall "before the hour appointed for opening. On the platform were mem- bers of the senate, the university council, the trustee board, graduates and 'many specially invited guests. Fully two hundred visitors from dis- tant places were present. Pn led at the be- Principal Gor: ginning of convocation. Francis King, registrar of the university coun- cil, announced the re-election of Sir Sandford Fleming ag chancellor for the ensuing three vears. Sir Sand- ford was then robed by Mr. King, and DrxJ. C. Connell, amid hearty ap- plause. The chancellor' addressed only a few brief remarks to the convoca- tion. After the presentation of prizes and scholarships, and the. laureation of the aduates, those to receive honorary egrées were presented. Rev. Dr. Ross presented Rev. John Pringle, of the Yukon, and Rev. Dr. McComb presented Rev. John Neill, of Toron- ta, for the degree of doctor of divin- ity. The - Earl of Dundonald, who was given a great ovation, was pre- sented by the principal. Lord Dun- donald addressed the graduates, after which convocation concluded with the king's anthem. con- Endorse Sunday Baseball. New York, April, 27.<8everal prom- inent min'sters in Brooklyn where vi- rious church societies have been mak- ing a fight against Sunday baseball, have publicly announced that they can see no harm in playing or attending the ball games on the Sabbath day. The unanimous opinion of the cler- gymen seems to be that persons at- tending ball games are kept away from more vicious forms of amuse- ments on Sunday afternoons. Accidentally Killed. Yorkton, N.W.T., April 27.--George Brice, Jr., leit his father's home, near here, three days ago, to go to his homestead. Yesterday Brice's father found his son dead, with a' shotgun in his hand. It is thought to have been a case of acridental death. Duke of York, early white potatoes | cow FER] lal fine of for planting. Crawford's. Cheese straws at Ferguson's. Real Article Gets Thirteen Years In Prison. Boston, Mass., April 27.-~John Davis was cunvie and sent need to ° thir- teen years and six months at hard "in state ptison, and to pay a $1 for counterfeiting. Sentence was nounced by Judge Bowell in the United States circuit court imme- diately after the return of the jury, and Davis received it with the same calmness with which he has Tistened to the testimony during the days that Lis case has been on nial. This con: vict has the utation of being one of the most skilful counterfeiters that ever came to this country; and though he has not been sagacious enough to elude the detectives he has thus far ged to escape imprisonment. In fact it was pointed out to Judge Lo- well, before sentence was declared, that Davis was paid £3,000 by the Bank of England for aiding in the prosecu- tion of his colleagues in crime on the continent, and gi¥én his freedom at the hands of the British government. The career which led to his arrest and conviction this time is briefly thus. - He was invited by Moses No- vak to come from England to Am- erica to engage in counterfeiting; he came last summer, travelling jn ~ the second class, under an assumed name and on a ticket sent to him by No 1 vak; he indicated his own terms to a gang of five or six men, who met him on this side and in pursuance of the agreement entered into in' New York, established headquarters "on Prospect avenue, Revere, and equipped an ela- borate counterfeiting plant in which he had the assistance of Joseph Bou- menblitt, Moses Novak, and the New York men, Faber and Stein, who fur nished the money. So far as tha gov ernment knows he did not succeed in placing any spwious money on the market. from this plant, as he hed considerable ditReulty * in establishing himself here; and on December 4th, 1903, when he was beginning to draw proofs from his plates E shaw tq his financial backers, his nfice wad raidsd by government detectives and he was arrested, together with four of his as- sociates. All four pleaded guilty to the charges against them, and Di®s alone insisted n a trial. He called no witnesses, however, * and relied wholly upon cross-examination of the government witnesses to establish his defense. The trial lasted three days and the jury was out twenty minutes; or more carrectly the jury remained in twenty minutes, because it reached the verdict without leaving the 'court room--an arrangement suggested by Judge Lowell, boeause of the difficulty in removing the counterfeiting imple ments in evidence from the court room to the regular jury room. COMMON ASSAULT. The Decision Of Judge Price On Case. The Mallen assault case, which has heen hanging fire for same time, was heard on. Wednesday morning, by Judge Price, in the county judge's criminal court. The plaintiffs in the case left town some weeks ago, and the only evidence against the prisoner was their written testimony, given be fore the police magistrate. Harry Wilkinson, one of the party at the time the assault was al to have taken place, and John Hastings, proprietor of Park Villa hotel, Catara. qui, were the two main witnesses. Mallen was also called to the witness box and his evidence was -much the «ame as Wilkinson's, both of their testimonies contradicting the main points of the accusation made hy the girls. In the written testimony of Ethel Byron, she stated that the pris ¢ner had choken her into unconscious ness twice, and that she had screamed for help while in the hotel yard. The evidence of Hastings and Wilkinson de nied this. W. F. Nickle, counsel fee the defencs, in summing up the evidence, said that while it is necessary to. protect the reputation of an honest woman, it is also right to show the same considera tion for a man who, even if he has erred in the past, should not be con demned on the evidence of abandoned characters. The judge, in commenting on the case, said that he wished he knew which of the witnesses to believe; the fact of the matter was that he didn't believe any of them. He thought the crowd were a bad lot and had no doubt that they were all out for a timie, and both parties were equally tn blame. The judge gave the prisoner a severe lecture and deplored the actions of some of the vounger people of thi: city. He said that he did not consid er that a case of. i t assault had been proven, but found the. prisoner guilty of common assault, but would suspend scntence in the matter to ob serve the prisoner's future conduct. Didn't Know Him. Since the revelations regarding Ben -* ator Smoot by. "President" Smith, be fore a senate committee at' Washing ton, Mormonism has attracted a good. deal of attention throNighout the Unit- ed States. Many an tes are heing told of the Mormon leaders. "One of the best of these is to the effect that President Smith was. re cently walking down a street in Salt Lake City when he met a boy smoking a cigarette. The prophet, stopped, to remonstrate with him, ! "Little boy," he said, "don't you know that it is Very wicked to smoke those nasty cigarettes ? What would your father and mother say if they saw you now '"' The boy looked up in the speaker's face and sail, "Don't you know me, pa?' Reflections Of A Bachelor. A pretty good way to marry an heiress is to admire the way she plays bridge whist ~The map. who wouldn't lie to his wife about her beauty deserves be married to a Chinese idol, It takes ten times as Jong to listen to a sermon as the man who delivers it thinks it took to write it, From the way a woman gots on a street car, vou can't tell whether she imagines 'sho is climbing a step-ladder or trying to peep up to the top shelf of the cloget. ------ Ffom The Isles Of The Sea. Trinidad cocoanuts, Bermuda on- ions, Cuba - pine apples, Jampica grape fruit and bananas, at Carnov- sky's, like those of the Ward line, which runs A PREACHER AT THE ROU. " LEITE TABLE. He Lost Pulpit On Account Of Age And So He Tried The Wheel And Won Considerable Cash. Butte, Mont., 27.--C. E. Henderson, a Methodist minister, sixty years old, lost his pulpit in Salt Lake City a yoar ago on account of his age and came to Butte, with his wife and two children. Since then he has been un- able to get a call as pastor, and has eked out a scant living for himself and family. He has worked in the streets, washed dishes at hotels, but could not supply his wants. To-day he called at the city employment agency, where he had a year been a daily call- er, and announced that he was going to Los Angeles. He had a prosperous appearance and said that he had sul fered from want long enough; he had turned gambler and fortune had smil- ed on him. "1 would have committed crime to save my family from hunger, for 1 could get no assistance," said the old preacher. "I believe it was God that put it into my head to try my luck at roulette. I played my last dollar on the red and won. I doubled and won again. I played them all and Provi- dence remainind with me and lifted me from' the quagmire of "dépair. Every day for two: weeks I have played and continued in luck, and: to-day I have 81.500 in mv pocket, and we are go- ing to California to start life over." TO STAND AN ORDEAL, Let Crush His To a Train Hand. Denver, Lol., April 27.--after spend- ing two weeks in Denver and Pueblo searching for some one who is willing to allow a railroad train to run over his hand, Miss Josephine De Vair, Morristown, N.J., departed. She in- formed Clerk Rudy, of the Windsor hotel, that she had succeeded in en- gaging the services of a wan who will consent to the mutilation of his hand and that the painful ordeal will be gone 'through with some time within the next month. Miss De Vair's object is to secure instantaneous photograpiy of the vie- tim's face, in order that she may copy the features in oil. She is a graduate of an eastern art school and has long wished for' a photograph of some one who is in great agony. Photographs taken of persons suffering from pain- ful injuries have proven unsatisfac- tory, and she conceived the idea of paying some one well for the injuries he will receive and afterwards place his picture on the canvas. The instan- taneous photographs will not only permit her to use the fils in a mov- ing picture, but will give her an op- portunity to copy a look of feal pain. Before she departed Miss De Vair said : "I came here a couple of weeks ago and since then have here and in Pueblo, for a person who would consent. I did not advertise, fearing the notoriety which publicity would give me. Now that I have suc- ceeded in engaging the services of a man | do not care so much, only you must not ask me who he is. I have promised not to tell his name. He lives in Denver, : "My idea is to have him bound and placed across the switch near the point where it joins the main track. The work will be done by two men and this will make it appear in the picture, as if it is a real murder, hut the moving picture part of it is the part about which I am the least anx- ous 5 'The camera will be on the side of the track which will make it appear as if the form of the man was on the main track, and when the engine reaches him it will be seen to be running right over him. His face will be turned toward the camera, and one hand will be across the rail, In this wav he,will know that he is ab- out to have the. fingers of one hand smashed, and 1 bélieve the look on his face would make a great hit if done in oil." Accused Of Murder. Windsor, Ont., April 27.--Jonathan George will have to- stand his trial for the murder of Mrs. Williams, fend dead inv her home, on McDougall street, on the evening of Aprit 5th. At the adjourned inquest, last night, the coroner's jury returned the fol- lowing verdict : "We belisve, by the evidence given, that thie late Eliza J. Williams came to her death by be- ing murdered; and we further believe, by the evidence produced, that the crime was committed hy Jonathan George." ---------- Marriage In Borneo. The marriage ceremony» wi-Borneo (where the wild man comes from) is delightfully simple. Bride and bride groom having been brought with great solemnity before the assembled crowd, the medicine women 'of their tribe bi- sects a betel nut, and gives hall to each of them. While the young people chew their separate portigns, the old woman mutters an incantation--which being ended, she knocks their heads together, and they are indissolubly bound in matrimony. Was Driven Ashore. Atlantic City, -N.J., April 27.--A steamship is ashore about three milex off this station. The ring and funnel marks of the grounded steamer afte to southern ports. The steamship was driven ashore during the sévere north- east storm last night. The Loss At Albany. Albany, N.Y., April 27.--Thirty day coaches, several dining care dnd one private car were = destroyed in a fire hich burned the coach shop of the West Albany shops of the New York tral railway entailing a lows of _~ $250,000. ------ Baseball On Tuesday. be In the Prgvions asticle of this series we indulged in an umaginary journcy in ths ls in an aerial machine such as will perhaps be in vogue. a dozen years hence. Let us again give rein to the imagination, and take a tour in the depth of the ocean in the perfected harine of that period. Starting from our port, having clear- ed the shallows, we turn the regulator which admits the sellin, cud are soon cautiously progressing ward a few feet above the floor of tha ocean, which, lighted by our powerful helio-calcium searchlights, is reflected 8 A punckamy tn the tetests of the icturesque garden the sea, a very ow. of beauty, adorned with sea | plant extreme grace and elegance of lgtm; some, tinted a delicate rose: hue, or a wivid emerald, or a led carmine, their. | feath- yfronds waving rhyt! ly to and 0 as the water is sti the mo- tion of the fins and fish-tail propeller of our submarine. ow we pass a voracious shark, which, perhaps misting us for a luscious whale, is apparently mediating an attack, until driven off by a flash from the search-light; now an enorm- ous giant octopus, which threatens to enfold us in its great slimy tentacles; and now varied other denizens of the deep which gather round us, unwieldy sun firth, great Mideous rays, and sun- dry other ungainly monsters. Havpi- ly, however, that terror of the sub. marine explorer, the dreaded and' sav- age scourge of the lower depths, : the seh serpent, does not obtrude his gris. ly and repulsive he At oo we descry, Tellectedon the old Spanish periscope screen, a fine galleon resting on the rocks. In a. few moments the radium' engine is 'stopped, and we are moored alongside the great ship. And even now, after more than three centuries of immersion inthase lacid, stormless depths, she is a pork { sight; the massive timber of her bulwarks, nearly three feet thick, still. sound, though the spars and rigging have mostly disappeared, and the up: feared loop-haled castles at her bows and stern still intact; while numerous circular aperatures in her hull indicate where the cannon shots fired from or. Frohisher's frigates had struck and sunk her. The galleon is immediately boarded by some of us in diving-dress, who, clambering up her contorted skelatons, 'rusted'. weapons, and piles of untouched wealth; golden doubloons and woidores, bars_and ins gots of the same preci t with innumerable jewelled ornaments, doubt- loss seized from the vgnquished Incas, whose wealth so lavishly enriched their victorious and predatory con- querors. And having | our vessel with as heavy a load of the treagure 'as we date, we expel] the water-ballast, open another cylinder of liquid air, and rapidly rise to the surface, well re: paid for our adventure. But, having. taken this slight excur- sus into the realms of romance, lot us return to the realities of life and re- member that a time will come when the sea shall give up her dead, and all heen searching Vihose who in all time have gone down to their watery sepulchre, together with the whole race of man, will stand before the great white throne to be judged according to their works. Han: py they then whose misdeeds have hoon purged from the record im virtue! of the expiafion made for them by the Saviour of the world, ECCENTRIC TESTATORS.' One Maker Of a Will Wanted His Skin Made Into Drumheads. Westminster Garetto. There have not been many will makers more eccentric than Mr. MacCaig, the Oban banker, whose last testament will shortly come under the considera. « of the Edinburgh court of session, Mr. MacCaig, it may be remembered, left instructions in his will that gi gantic statues of himself, his brothers and sisters, a round dozen in all. should be placed in the summit of a reat tower he had commenced to puild on Battery hill, near Oban--each statue to cost not less than £1,000, A much more whimsical testator was a Mr.-Sanborn, who left £1,000 to Prof. Agassiz to have his skin con: verted into two drumheads and two of his bones into drumsticks, and the balance of his fortune to his friend, Mr. Simpson, on condition that on every 17th of June, he should repair to the foot of Bunker hill, and, as the sun rose, "beat on the drum the spirit- stirring strain of 'Yankee Doodle." " A Mr. Stow left a sum of money to an eminent K.C., "wherewith to pur: chase a picture of a viper stinging hig benefactor," as a perpetual warn) against the sin of ingratitude. : It was a rich brewer who bequeath- ed £30,000 to his daughter on condi: tion that on the birth of her fist child she should forfeit £2,000 toa specified hospital; £4,000 on the birth of tw second child, and io, dic ] arithinatical pro jon until { 0 ne ohle Shee Byduey Dickenson left £60,000 to his widow, who appears to have given him a time during his life, on condi- tion that she should d two hours a day at his graveside "in company with her sister, whom I know she loathes worse than she does myself." Cheap Enjoyment. At a funeral in Glasgow a str r who had taken his seat in one of t mourning coaches excited the curio- sity" of the other three occupants, onc of whom at last asked him! *"Ye'll be gn brither o' the " "No, I'm no a brither o' the corp!" "Weel, then, ye'll be his cousin 7 "No, I'm no that!" "Then ye'll be at least a frien' o' the corp?" "No that cither. To tell the truth, I've no been weel mysel', doctor has ordered me some o exercise, I thocht This wad be tl cheapest way to tak' it." Dyspepsia in its worst forms will yield to the use of Carter's Little Nerve Pills, aided by Carter's Little Liver Pills. They not only relieve pre- sent distress but strengthen the stom- ach and digestive apharatis. Te Corsets every at 40c., 50c., and up. New Dress Reform. . Early Rose potatoes, extra fine -for planting. Crawford's, : National league--At New York, 2; Brooklyn, 4. At Boston, 3; Philadel phia, American league--At Boston, "2; Philadelphin, 1. At Detroit, 5, St, Louis, 6, A» sides, soon are busy in, the 'midst of | Covering Une Side of . Face and ' SEALED TENDERS™. Al to w idl Brille, 8 Catiariney, will DAY, May 106th, the construction of a tharinés, Ont., tment of Public Wo Tenders will not be consi made on the printed form i suned with the actual signatures of rs. 3 i on a ¢ ul 1 cent (10 pc.) of the amount of ie der, must uesompany each . cheque will be for oitad IF tendering ¢ e the con or x ia ha work contracted ora rned case of ance of tender. 'The department «oes not bind itself accept the jowest or any tender. y order, FRED. GELINAS, Department of Public Wo \ . Ottawa, April 28rd, 1904. Newspapers | ing adv ni ment without suthority from ment, will not be paid for it. All kinds of good and split to suit, ways under cover. Prices right. None but the pure ton Coal mixtoess, » B. BARNEY | During the rest of the year conduct a ood boarding stable, Ev animal guaranteed best of attentla HARDING'S 210 Wellington St. Mrs, Rhoda Merritt Left $25,000 The W NT Evandiéd ib The Watertown, N.Y., 8 y lishes that Mrs. Rhoda Merritt. Harrisville, N.Y., has returned trom Kingston, Ont., after Slatnaing pro- perty amounting to $25,000, left he and her son Ralph by her Jennie Hornback, recently Mrs. Hornback was loved by all knew her. She was born in 1831 died April 16th. * She is survived o husband, cighty-one years old, . Call And See Them. : You are invited to call and see the * newest thing in gent's Diphip corsets worth $1 for 66s, New York Dress Reform. n shoes at: Abernethy's for. $2.50, ¥

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