Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 22 Aug 1907, p. 7

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a xative yutward bathing® To keep the eater importance than to keep od. The neglect of either in- tural laxative occasionally, to rities For this purpose take a hose who suffer from the ills ty youre Beecham's Pills have , a Liver regulator and Bowel se pain. Powerful purgatives eecham's Pills. They give re- rgan.,. Their action is in har- m regularly and the necessity 'They are a natural laxative Biliousness, Indigestion, Sick" echam, St. Helens, Lancashire, Eng. America. In boxes 25 cents. > Are owing Any tractive yles ES iced Summer Sea-~ | Be Appreciated. m---- » and & Bro, | Shoemaking. piture Sale >» nt, and a large selection. Seé vorth $25, reduced to $20. worth $48, reduced to $40. worth $80 (special); 'reduced to es, reduced to $5. ges, reduced to $9.50. | reduced. LEADING UNDERTAKER. "PHONE 5 shine 1- Metals. Fire departments, Steamships, Auto- desiring a brilliant of tins: : Quart, Half : 'Gallon. , 69-71 Brock St GOIRIELONNELOSHARLE a ------------------------------ WURANCE CO°Y L TORONTO, ONT. s been administered 7 The following ufficient end satisfactory. answer : in Premiu eceived ms $56,120,891.90, 33,311 ,288.93. 9 1,280,542.59, 64,591,781.52. ders w Policyholders the og oa 8 ago the Canadian Life earned, and known ms "Canada's Leading Com- you cheerfully given at the office, J. 0. HUTTON; ~ Manager. over a ed lates B. Chocolates. c Best. : ss Street. 'Synopsis of Canadian Northwest ' HoWESTEAD REGULATIONS. | even b section of Dominion Wr Manitoba er the North-West Pro | | | | excepting 8 and 26, mot reserved, may | Te omesteaded by any person the sole head! of & family, of male over 18 years of age, to the extent of omequarter section, of 160 acres, or less. Application for homestead entry must be made in person applicant at the office of the local ub-Agent. Entry by oxy may, however, be made on certain con- | Bos by the father, mother, son, daughter, | brother or sister of an intending homesteader, | An application for entry or inspection 'made personally at anv Sub t's office may be Tired to the loca Agent by the Sub-Agent, at| the expense of me applicant, and if the land applied for i meant on receipt of the tele a ach saplicanon is to have priority and! the juud wii be held Gngil the necessary pa | to complete the saction are received | = mail. : { in case of atin the entry will be! summarily cancelled and the applicant will forfeit all priority of ciaim, 'An application for inspection must be made 3 rson. The applicant must be eligible for homestead entry, and only one application for inspection will recei from an indi | «dual until that application has been dis posed of. A homesteader whose entry is in 'good stand ing and mot liable to cencellatios, may, sub ject 10 approval of Department, relinquish it | m favor of father, mother, son, daughter, Irother or sister, if elfgible, but to ne one dise, on nung declaration of abandonment. Where an jemtry is summarily cancelled o voluntarily &bandoned, subsequent to institu tion of cancellation Jroteeding, the applicant cor inspection will be entitled to prior right of entry: Applicants for inspection must state in what particulars the homesteader is in default, snd if subsequently the statement is found te be pcorrect in material particulars, the appl will lose amy prier right ef reentry shouid the land become vacant, or if entry been be summarily cam celled. . Duties--A settler is wired to perform the sondittons under one of the following plans:-- (1) At least six months' residence wu snd cultivation of the land in each year dur ing the term of three years. (2) 1f the father (or mother, if the father is deceased) of a homesteader resides upon 2 faim in the vicinity of the land entered for ty such homesteader the requirement as to residence may be satisfied by such person re | siding with the father or mother. | If the settler has his permanent res: | dence upon farming land owned by him in the vicinity -of his homestead, the requirement | may be satisfied "by residence upon such land Before making application for patent the | settler must give six months' notice in writ | ing to the Commissioner of Dominien Lands af Ottawa, of his intention to do so. } SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH-WEST MINING REGULATIONS. Coal.--Coa! mifiing rights may be leased for | 3 period 'of twenty-one years at an annual | rental of $1 r acre. Not more than 2,560 | acres shall be leased to one individual of com pany. A royalty at the rate of five cents per ton shall be collected on the merchantable coal mined. Quartz. --A son eighteen years of age, or over, having iscovered mineral in place, may | locate a claim, 1,500x1,500 feet. { The fee for recording a claim js $5. At least $100 must be expended on the claim each year or paid to the mining recorder in lieu thereof. When $500 has been expend ed or paid, the locator may, upon having » survey made, and upen complying with he requirements, purchase the land, at $1 per | acre. | The patent provides for the payment of 3 royalty of 2 1.2 Jer cent. on_the sales. Proves mining claims generally are 100 fee square, entry fee $6, renewable yearly. An applicant may obtain two leases tc dredge for gold of five miles each for a term of twenty years, renewable at the discretion of the 'Minister of the Interior. The lessee shall have a dredge in operatior within oie season from the date of the leas tor each five miles, Rental, $10 per annun for each mile of river leased. Royalty at the rate of 2 1-2 per cent. collected on the outpw after it exceeds $10,000. - W. W. CORY. Deputy of the Minister of the Interio N.B.--Unavithdrized publication of this ad | vertisement will not be paid for. SEALED TENDERS ADDRESSED | to the undersigned, and endorsed der for alteratioms, additions and I Bar pairs to Block 'C' Tete du Pont racks, Kingston, Ont, will be received at this office until Monday, September | ¥, 1907, inclusively, for the work above ders will not be considered unless made and sigu- X described. | \" Plans and specifications can be seen ind jorms of tender obtained at this | Départment and on application to BP. ] Smith, Ksq., Architect, kingston. | Persons tendering are notified that = on the printed form supplied, ed. with their actual gignatures. I tender must be accompanied by an accepted cheque on a chartered bank | made payable to the order of the JHon- | ourable the Minister of Public Works | equal to ten per cent (10 p.c.) of the | amount of the tender, which will be] tendering decline | called up- | complete | tender | forfeited if the person to enter into a comtract when on to do so, or if he fail"to If the the work contracved for. be not accepted the cheque will be .re-| turned. a) The Department does not bind itself | tender the lowest or any Order. { FRED. GELINAS, | Secretary. i | to accept By Departnient of Public Works, Ottawa, August 15, 1907. | Newspapers inserting) this. advertise | ment without authority from the Depart- | nent will not be paid for it SH BO rei Sosssspssstestetttstts | » i ST mean a YORK SPARKS a pleasantly-sharp, delight- fully refreshing beverage for hot weather.':It has nothing of the disagreeable after-taste you have noticed in the im- ported waters which cost more. J PEALLY pure mineral water, in its. natural state, charged | with purified car- bonic-acid gas, adds zest to food - and to drink, too. The Mineral Springs Limited, Toronto so For Sale By Rigney & Hickey, "Phone, 242. W. RB. McRae & Co., 'Phone, 227. Jas. McParland, 'Phone, 274. J. S. Henderson, "Phone, 279. am SHOE POLISH The Public knows better than to take any substi- tite for 2in 1. The dealer® knows better than to offer a substitute if he wants to retain his reputation. Bl ack and all Colors "HUMORS OF STRIKE 'SERIO.COMIC EPISODES OF Kidnapped the Ringleaders i Carried Them to Sea--Awmen-|relafes how he opce ict a fellow-coun- | bl tryman able to Terms After Ice Cream Sy edge bearing { United § the | mitee. | south or rrance have brought to light} / fter a time the {the customary | such movements. [tcuiar, show {these cases. | extraordinary scene mn the Avenue de lla Motte Miquet, m | Some sixty masons and bricklayers em- ipoyed upun a struck work, declaring their wages two weeks overdue. A | later the builder mimsell appeared on the | scene, and was forthiwth surrounded by {an angry mob, all shouting and gesticu- | latng ac once, . fused payment because, as contractor had not setued with him. la THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, AUGUST 22nd, 1907." + : i : line just now," he told them dryly, "bat | unless you return to work forthwath and abandon - your preposterous de- » d . -- » WESTERNIZING THE FETICH MOVEMENT. Served. The present labor troubles in serig-coic episodes ot | 0s Lhe rrencn, in par- ed distinct "Sngmality wn} he writer witnessed an | fiew building suddenly | ch were | few munutes a Line bwider, however) steadfastly ré- he saiq, the | in th torice the intunated workinen pundied that builder. into the temporary |p omce, and with { martar, 'declaring that he should not es- lcape until he had paid them what was | due { soon on the spot, but tue masons armed t Kill them all. No dead files tying about when used as directed. vowing they wowd attack soon collected, and great was the extraordinary rapidity lar ally walled him up with bricks and w SH Strong farces of gendarmes - were} hemselves with pickaxes and crowbars, any ome who €X- in untal 3 in the afternoon. Masters, driver nearly to despair by |! the preposterous demands of ° ther workers, have before now taken the law mto their own hands with a vengeance | Some years ago the cigarmakers at|d fampa, Fla--mainly Itahans, Spamards and Uybans--iformed themselves mto aj umon, 'to which they gave the signif |¢ cant name of La- Resistencia. To say {! they were tyrannical is to put St mildty. | Betore long the unlucky masters could] hardly call their souls their own, let alene their factories Ihe last straw was a demand on the | part of La Resistencia to dismiss forth-{ with all employees who did not belong |¥ to the union. This was met with a flat refusal, and a wholesale strike was im mediately declared. In, this case notj only the masters, but all Thgpa, suf- fered, and finally banded 'together to put a stop 10 a state of affairs that had become intolerable One might an innocent-looking vessel, apparently an humble fruit schooner, lay lin the bay, and next morning she had | disappeared as mysteriously as she had | come. So had 13 of the chief leaders of | the strike. The fact is they had been| kidnapped by the vessel, which had been | | specially '®hartered for that purpose. | Where the men were landed only those the kidnapping really | knew. It was said to have been at a South American port. All that Tampa | cared was that the result was entirely | | satisfactory, and conditions soon settled | back into' the 'normal At Pittsburg once, so workmen en-| gaged upon a building threw down their | tools and came out because their em- | ployer would not supply them with lem- onade! Nor was the boss to be intimj- | | dated =~ { "1 gave you lemonade once," he said, with tragic firmness, "and all of you] drank so much of it that you made your- | selves ill. Why, you'll be wanting lady ngers and ice cream next, and maybe hammocks to take naps In The luxury lovers mn this case got no sympathy from. their common-sense union, and were soon glad to come back on their employer's own terms Think of 400 miners throwing down picks and shovels for the sake of a mule! This happened at Daleston, O., and Jim, the mule in question, was a pet, to which all the men were really attached. One day the mine boss de- cided to transfer Jim to another pit, and it was not until this decision was re- versed that the men recommenced work No doubt an immense amount of strike loss would be saved if only em- the good-humored « responsible for possessed ers land, Ohio. Most of his hands were girls, and one dav every maiden of them struck for some fanciful grievance But instead of storming at them or locking them out, the proprietor himself came on shortest motive. Dishes a specinity: English and Chinese | : WwW | : == SOLD. BY ~ 0 ympathetically into the huge work- € hen You Buy 3] oeuccisrs, crocens mo CENERAL STORES § |, + * 100. per packet, or 3 packets for 28c. "Yioung ladies," he said, blandly, "we | ; 8 C O A L 3 will last a whole season. ought to talk. this little matter over 3 |] quietly. Come with me." And he led ' : i the ; to 'a great ci wh ¥ $ 'From a THE FRONTENAC ey a or <4 * MENT SOCIETY just what she pleased. By the time the 4 » LOAN AND INVEST last big plate of ice cream was finished : P. WALSH 2 ESTABLISHED 1863. the employer ond {hem all ; quite 4+ Y ine ® President--Sir Richard Cartwright Smenable to his -own very sensible ! "iMoney Jouned on City and Farm Pro- | h : ou 9 ¢ t geawn hq oo ey ; v v and C ds Deben- Looking abroad in other countries, we < Scranton, as Wwe » ures purchased Deposits | find still more fanciful situations, T ns, 4 | received @ st allowes . in April, 1903, almost every class © + handles nothing : »| S. C. McGill, Managing Director. | worker. in Amsterdam joined the great ¢ else. . ®! "Ofice, 87 Clatence street, Kingston. |Socialistic strike. . Even the Christian & + PA. Association of Bakers' Bread Carriers VIII PISIIIY aa a CARROL _ op lcame out.. The streets of the Dutch Shee 20000000000 00000009999T5 - pital were patrolled by hundreds of ~ ® og ° bers 3 ® blue-uniformed strikers, talled out under C. H. Powell, $ HOME-MADE MEDICINE $ military law, and armed with rifles and " . 2 amsegfibons= , @ bayonets to protect the railroads and Ca rpenter and Jobber, | € Said to Relieve Kidney Trouble @ ithe public against--themselves! ; b 7 and Rheumatism $ | Also in Holland, in the same year, a + ; eps 4 uid B ol _ @ (the railroad employees struck work 103 Raglan St. ° " One ounce Fluid Extract Dande 2 This led to a very curious incident in --------meieeimme | 4 OB} : : the opera house at Rotterdam ere | # One ounce Compound Salatone; * @ thc OF Ouse 3 - : \ 95. & the Netherlands Opera company found Ww M ' } Four ounces Compound Syrup ¢ heria ith a m., urray, Auctioneer, on las $ [themselves stranded wi out any lug- {| § Sarsapari'a: ; age ties, and they were | teas; nful @ Rage or stage properties, al hey wer 27 BROCK ST. » | 8 tel ad eer, times is 2 forced to pHy Beethoven's Fidelio in "ll & ted by a prominent physician to their soiled travelling' clothes, with an New Carriages, Cutters, Harness $ ive most excellent results in kidney @ 'ancient piano for an orchestra. Perhaps ete., for sale. i ® n utinary afflictions, and also in it was the very novelty of the perform Sale of Horses every Saturday. | ® rheumatism and sciatica The mix: 3 ance that insured'a good audience and --_-- 18 ture opera ie clogged pores of the & |entRusiastic applause » } kidneys, thus assisting them in their $ | Bx surely the récord strike of wark- SUMMER WANTS 4 work of filtering all waste and poison- '& |< ic that which took place in Canton, 1 & ous matter from the blood, and expe 3 in China, fast year. Here the execution- Screen Doors and Windows, 108) & these in the urine. 10 a. 0 $ ers who "undertake the beheading of Cream Freesers, Lawn Mowers $ pgisonous mattes to remain means § |. iningls came to the local mandarins ef le the muscular : and Charcoal Irons. & that it will settle 1b Heuntold $ land almost tearfully explained that un- ST HA N°'S { @ tissues or joints, and cause Le un $ [less the contract prices for decapitation RAC } misery known as theumatitt, harm: QAWOTE forthwith raised they and their er ete s The mixture 18 0003 i ® "families would surely starve Current Tus vegetable ingredients which can & $i © lens vege wood drug store, '@ rates were only 500 cash, or say 25 NewYo kChi Restaurant $ be purchased a any g 8 » @ cents, for each head lopped off ; and the r : nese LL. aud mix ers from any of these 3 {executioners now demanded at least so 83 Princess. Street. t nt ool a oubt be pleased to & [cents for each job as a "minimum living RK 3 > > " 1 Open from 10.30 a.m. t0 3.00 8m: | § | of so simple and highly reconi- $ Nhe Iv of the principal mandhrin The best place to get an all round b mended remedy. } '& | e reply 0 p and} S. Luoch in the oity StSis. of ail 'kinds & : @ |6f Canton was both grim and Cio! E v 4 "Busi not a | London Daily Mail. A well-known Z and spends a good part of his time in Paris displaying such an' emblem to the for- digners. : = "It's just this way, cheerfully Pars, last autumn, plained the other. i the big hotels, 1 noticed a 'number me at all | century times. ers tipped him. tome of the Legion of } | these and other orders, added the waiter, | ne. | pipe: six inches in diameter, wit {a solid rock weighing 2 ton or more to 1 : 4 o : ging lest for which 1 have figures) £4,500,000 was 5,070,124, or 93.23 per cent. a distance of fifty or a hundred feet solid that if a 'crowbar<or other heavy ibe tact couple of hundred feet. stream, with 375 feet fall, projected mo- {will in a second denude it of the heavi- the leadh@ citizens | ABAINNA jin every caves. and causing tons of earth to melt X the | commodities tact of a certain factory owner in Cleve- | mands the trade will get very brisk in- | deed™ ------ Socialists' Notable Victory. New Yorker who | who invariably sported a huge } _ the legend of the tates National Republican Com= f ty got the better of him, and he ask- his fellow-countryman why he was ex- aps who got the best of 1 bethought me that it would be |an good idea to consult one of the wait- | as to the reason. : | be "A great ntlemen indicated wore the e insignia of t had | India, and that the third was the proud (as I Michael \ssessor of the Order of St g wearing Wd St. George. Gentlemen ere invariably given the deration. ¢ -* lw "It didn't take me long to drop in |w 1 'dug down ito my trunk 1 put it on and Of course none | th attempted the rescye of the built-up © A : JUS Ot course, an €NOrMOUS a what it represents, but it's a decoration, with satchel and books in hand, walking | 4 ad and that goes with them! Since 1 don- blithely, to the nearest academy, is the ed it nothing has "been too good for | rule rather than the exception of to-day citement and amusement. A few hours aud tly significant 'one in an later, however, the builder gave way and |™ {=--and a vastly gv d cant ane. sent for the necessary casa. Thus was | AD gp eastern country. And 11 we turn to sta- carefully counted out and each man] Cutting Caves With Water. tistics regarding education we find that {pad. 1hen, and then only, did the ma- | The effect "of the hydraulic motor, they Hore Ahn conten the deductions | sons and bricklayers pull cown the walls | which -is now sed for the purpose of |© Th nL 1800 8 Wi. oer cent of Hl {they had erected ana release their pris- | removing masses of earth, well-nigh bo eh gi « wi ar vi = . inls 5 oner, who had been shut up witnGut passes belief. : ; | oe a. ening Se hofig- foou or drink f ornmin A stream of water Issuing. irom ai" al | or drink from 8 m the mormng h a fall |ures which had increased five years | il sehind it of 375 feet, will carry away |v The velocity of the stream 1s terrific, | and the column of water projected is $0 {3 | ¢ sbject be thrust agaihst it the impinging | ybject will be hurled a considerable od ance. By this stream of water™a man would instantly killed if he came m cou- with it, évéh, at. a distance of a At 200 feet from the nozzle a Ix inch | mentarily against the trunk of a tree, lest bark as cleanly as if it had been cut A : nly lout of the old: family hand machines on | 7 which were made the exquisite embodying the artistic soul of Japan. uch, a stream 1s turned bank it cuts and burrows it direction, hollowing out great and fall and be washed away In sluices et Immaculate Soda Glasses. At. many fountains glasses are mere- | ly rinsed in cold water. At Wade's each glass is set aside.giter use and is then thoroughly washed in hot soap | suds, is rinsed, dried and polished | with a clean towel--just as you would | do it in your own home. Wade's ice glasses tastes bet- | Wade's Drug Store. | cream soda in such ter and is better. ----ep-- An Important Point. | Philadelphia Ledger. .i i] "E. H. Harriman," said a New York broker, "talked the other day of the de- | cline in the value of securities. 'He said we must be careful not to legislate too | harshly against the country's vested un- terests, or the prosperity of these mter ests, or the Sy would be impaired. | "He illustrated his meaning with a a school story. There was ) t said. who exclaimed impatiently afternoon: : "*Johnny Jones, what are you fum bling with there . "Johnny hung his head and was silent But the tell-tale of the class spoke up: ""It's a pin he's got, ma'am.' "Well, take it from him,' said the teacher, 'and bring it here to me.' "This was done, and then, in a molli- fied voice, the teacher said: "Now, Johnny Jones, get up and re- vite your history. lesson.' "*But Johnny .did not obey. He i blushed, hung his head and sat still. { "'Johnny, said the teacher, 'rise, 1 | tell you a "Then the little fellow blurted out distressfully : . "'] can't, ma'am. That there pin you took is what holds my trousers up." The Results Of Poor Blood: The whole machinery of health must be kept in order or diseases of the stomach, liver and kidneys will fol- low. These organs are so related that when one weakens all weaken. To keep them vigorous they must be sup- plied with pure, rich blood. 'Such blood is always the result of using Wade's Iron Tonic Pills (Laxative) They are a great nerve strengthener and blood maker. In boxes, 25c., at Wade's Drug Store. Money back if not satisfactory. Spain's Queen-Mother, The favorite hobby of the Queen- Mother of Spain is collecting playing- cards, of which shé¢ has a most valuable collection. Her. Majesty possesses, Sone others. the famous pack of ivory cards whith Prince Eugene, the...com- rade of Marlborough, always carried with him in all the campaigns in which he took part. 'Already Girls Attend School-- | Certain symptoms of innpvation struck New Yorker's curi- | forcibly upon my travelled through of Japan, says a writer in Schools presented™a conspicuous Tea- ture in every corner of the countr the schools dear to the bigoted "One day, at one of of China or the intolerant mullahs of of | Islam, but modern, up-to-date, twentieth in Incidentally, I| § light burst upon me when 1 {lage school in a district far : { was politely informed by the waiter that | from the. influence of railways and big e! ears. On my approaching them Sonor. that the other sported {drew up to attention with military-pre- i the Order di the Star of |cision and bowed ceremoniously to me son for this spontaneous subsequently Jearned that the cause was | utmost" con- | to be found in the cut of my clothes. 1} and | spect. : | pulled out the badge you now see adorn- | peanizition is the fetich of the day. i ng my manly chest. have 'worn it ever since ; f our_French friends has the least idea | for the schoolgirl in magenta hakama, |age, were recorded |tary {haps a sinister--influence eating slowly {but surely into the old communal life of | the people, the | dustrial ands of women and children are toiling wearily in factory and workshop, 'at; | tending mechamically" to the great steam driven spindles {smile over their one | ceded OF THE DAY. Modern Industrial Require. menté< Eats Into Industrial Life. imagination as the country districts Blackwood's. --not iterati schools, where the kndwledge d learning of the west is fast becom- impdrted to the Shildyen of the east. rgmember one day theeting a num- r of small boys returning from a vil- removed they passed. : 1 was somewhat puzzled to find a rea- display, and as dressed after fhe manner oi the est, and was therefore an object of re- You ask why? Because Euro- Nor is it only the boys who attend he schools in this year of grace 1907, ater to 96.50 and S088 respectively. uring the school year 1903-04 {the lat- education, and of the chil- iren, boys and girls combined, of school a¥ receiving elemen spent on public instruction. another--a Lhere is powerful, per- influence of modern in- requirement. Already thous: and looms which are | slowly but inexorably crushing the hie | fabrics "We have our duty plain before us," say the manufacturers, "to establish our firmly upon the world's markets. Let us get our hold "of them before we are tied and handicapped by government inter ference." Suich was the fervent prayer, which I heard breathed by more than one manu- facturer--a prayer which would appear to Have every chance of being granted, sincé only so lately as August last the Japanese government refused an invita- | tion to send delegates to an interpational | conference "at Berne, held with a view | to prohibiting night work by women on | the grounds that the state of the indus- | tries of the country did not "admit of) such interference! True, the women and children may work as' the casual visitor passés to and fro among the | whirring creels or the crashing looms, | but then the Japanese smile is an enig- matical thing and, as has been written, "the Japanese can smile in the teeth of | death, and usually does." | Some day the workers of Japan will{ | rise and will demand for themselves the teacher, he {same 'rights and privileges aiready con- to their fellow workers in the | | west--but the day is not yet. Before {that time comes Japan will have dis- { pelled once for all the illusion that she 1s.a trifler in toy "lanterns and paper | fans, and will have vindicated her claim. {to be regarded as one of the manufac- [turing nations of the world + emit | Eminent Canadian Jurist. | Buffalo Courier King Edward of Sir Charles Fitzpatrick, thus deservedly typifies the highest citizenship of { Dominion. ates, opportunity is open for the man lof talent, industry and energy to rise, as the case of Sir Charles Fitzpatrick proves, for these qualities have enabled him to advance from originally humble station to the exalted position of chief justice of the Dominion Supreme Court. He is a native of Quebec, where he was born in 1853, was educated at Laval col- lege, and almost from the" tifhe of his pointment as Queen's counsel twice, and admission to the bar came quite -prom- inently into public' life, receiving ap- elected first to the provincial parlia- ment and then to that of the nation. In 1885 he conducted the defense of Louis Riel, the noted French-Canadian, who incited an insurrection and was executed for treason Made solicitor-general under the administration of Sir Wilfrid Laurier, he passed from uctive politics to his present high office as head of the high tribunal, from which appeal can only be taken to the British privy coun- cil at London. Sir Charles Fitzpatrick is respected and admired throughout his countgy, and Canadians of all parties are gratified by the favor the King has shown him. : Can't Do Without Her. If there were no women, men would have no object, in life; their mustaches would cease 'to interest them; they would not care a Chinaman whether their collars were ironed or not; they wotild have nobody to nurse them wheh There would be nobody to fight against being kissed and then take to it as natu tal as a cat does to cream. Most im- portant of all, there | write against, to complain of and to love | with all your heart and soul. {her man would never get to heaven and without her he would the world he would do without her, Wade's tooth paste, in tubes, at Fall's drug ; RE England recently | | conferred the order of knighthood upon honofing a distinguished Canadian who | the | In Canada as in the United | they had the toothache, or tp keep them | from believing they were going to die | when an old-fashioned stomach-ache had | the grip upon them. There wonld be | nobody to take for ice cream, and no! small edition of flesh and blood to hug. | never have a taste of the other place on earth. | So if man has any sense whatever, he will put his arm around the woman he is the foridest of, thank the Lord for | her, and wonder, as she does, what in grocery store In Chase & Sanbom's SEAL BRAND -- that AND ONLY GENUINE. THE ORIGINAL Acts like a Charm in DIARRHOEA wc on seaen GHOLERA DYSENTERY. Checks and arrests those too often fatal diseases-- FEVER, CROUP, AGUE. The best Remedy known for COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA. BRONCHITIS. Effectually cuts short all attacks of SPASMS. Is the only palliative in NEURALGIA, TISM, TOOTHACHE Chlorodyne is a liguid taken in drops. graduated according to the malady. It invariably relieves pain of whatever kend ; creates a calm refreshing 8 i allays_ irritation of the nervous system when all other vemedics fail. leaves no bad gliects | and can bs takgn when no other medicine can be tolerated. (INSIST ON HAVING Dr. J. COLLIS BROWNE'S CHLORODYNE. CONVINCING MEDICAL TESTIMONY . The immense success of this Remedy bas given rise to many imitations. N.B.--Every bottle of Chlorodyne the same y of the inveator, Dr. J. Browne. i We carry in stock a nice assortment of the Chicago "Jewel" "Gas Stoyes, which are . acknowledged the best stoves manufactur- 'ed. Examine them before purchasing else- where. All orders for disconnecting Gas Meters promptly attended to. : ELLIOTT BROS. 77 Princess Street. would be nobody. to | Without | NO HONING~NO GRINDING "CARBO MAGNETIC" THE RAZOR OF PERFECTION. -- Are you interested in a better Razor than you have? If s0, your dealer will deliver to you a "CARBO MACNETIC" Razor on thirty days' trial without obligation on your part to purchase. "CARBO MACNETIC" Razors don't pull--otheérs will! , Get one to day and you'll have NO MORE RAZOR TROUBLES. * Hlagnetic Street J ALL WEIGHTS AND SIZES. THEE, B. EDDYGONPANY, HULL, CANADA. ai N

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