DID PENAHOE EOE BBB. SlHB. The late Story of on And Woman Who Died RearButlmore. Lime. Peynaud, better krovrin Parfsas lime. Guinand, died last nightr in a little but near Catonsville, Baltimore county, sur- rounded by her dogs, squirrels, oats, and birds. The only human beiu who know of the old woman’s demise was t e good priest of the arish, who administered the sacra ments 0 the Church and gave her absoluticn. For eight years she had lived in seclusion, shunning her neighbors and venturing out only when it was necessary to lay in a sup- ply of food or when going to church. Up to the hour of her death her confessor _alon_e knew of the old woman's history, which is now for the ï¬rst time made public. aime. Peynand was born in Paris, and up to the time of her marriage enjoyed the re- spect of all who knew her. Soon after her wedding her husband, a barber, died, leav- ing her in possession of the secretpf beauti- fying the complexion. She continued the business. but it was not sufficiently remun- erative, whereupon she conceived the idea of compelling her customers to pay more liberally. She advertised extensively, prom- isitg the most remarkable improvement by the use of her wash, but enjoining absolute secrecy on r l eladies whom she proposed to beneï¬t. S( n her business increased, and then she put her scheme into operation. Se- lectin the wealthiest of her patrons, she gave gram a mixture which, when applied to the face, brought out blotches instead of roses. When they applied for relief she would demand an exorbitant sum to effect a cure, which her victims only too gladly paid. She continued this business succesfully for sometime, untiia Miss Nichols, who wasvic- timizsd, had her or: Clth for swindling. She was tried in Paris in 1875 and sentenced to prison. After serving several years she managed to escape, and railed for New York, where she lived very quietly. One day she attended church, and,.ov.er- come with remorse, sought the ofï¬ciating priest and confessed her sins, stating at the some time her readiness to do penance. The priest advised her to forsake her evil ways and spend her days in prayer. She at once wentto Baltimore and bought the but on the Catonsville road, in which she passed the remainder of her life. She prayed con~ stantly, and often scourged herself. Her only companions were the dumb animals she collected. Up to within a few days before her death she enjoyed good health. All her property will probably go to the Catholic Church. â€"_+â€"â€"â€" The Tail of a Mastiff. I was the owner of a mastiï¬' about as large as a yearling calf ; but one day he went the way of all dogs, and I employed a taxi- dermis. to set him up in good shape. While this work was being done the tramps began to at in an appearance. While ‘ J aok ’ was livrng not one of the fraternity got inside the yard. He had not been dead twa days be fore we had callers. How they caught on I don’t pretend to say, but that was the way it worked. When the do come home he looked as natural as life. By standing him on the grass beside a rose bush any one looking over the gate would have sworn that “ Jack †was alive and ready to tackle an intruder. Dur- ing the ï¬rst day as many as ï¬ve tramps halt- ed at the gate, took a look, shook their heads, and passed on, and three more were scared off next foreuoon. Soon after dinner a dil- a 'dated pair, fresh from a long tramp, arriv e , and as the ï¬rst laid his hand on the gate, the second exclaimed : “ No 0, Billâ€"there’s a dog l" “ Stu ed 1†replied the ï¬rst, as he opened the ta. " ow d’ye know? ' “ By the turn of his tail. Ever see a big dog like that with his tail carried to the left 1 Course he's stuffed." I gave the men a quarter apiece and then went out to look at the big dogs in the neigh- borhood. Every one carried his tail to the right. Indeed, nine dogs out of ten do, and that god and penniless old tramp was a closer o erver than the taxidermist who had made a life study of posing specimens. I was so hit by it that I stored the dog in the garret and fed every tramp who came for the next three months. _â€".____.â€"â€"â€"- Cowboy Myers‘s Renal One of the pluckiest fellows that ever lived in Montana is John Myers. He is twenty years old, and has just gone through a thrilling experience. He is a cowboy, and was hunting for horses with a party on the Still Water River. He was missing Tues- day night when the others came in. It was thought he had stopped at some "squaw man's" house, and no fear was felt for his safety. Two days after the men in the camp notic- ed a dark object slowly sliding dowu the side of an o posits bluff. It was Myers. Both of his e s were broken, and his head and face terri le lacerated. He was week from loss of blood and the ex ure he had undergone dragging himself ong for thirty hours in the snow. His horse stumbled and threw him'on the rocks and ran away. He crawled up the side of steep bluï¬s where few men could walk. A Oheap Elevator. The ingenious lan proposed by'a Berlin in- ventor, of a aim o and inexpensive elevator for private dwo ings in place of the ordinary staircase, has attracted some a.tentiou as a longish; dosideratum. it is on the principle of the inclined railway, and the motive power is furnished b the city water, which uspplicdintbo anemhï¬lhthas its oeparato chair, so that, for examp o, one per. son can ascend from the ï¬rst to the second story while antthsr is on his wa from the second to the third, or still anot or is des ccndin from the ï¬fth to the fourth. The chair. ing onl of the width of the human body, requires at little space, and still leaves a free for any who wish to walk up or down, nstcad of riding. It is set in motion by a simple pressure upon one of its arms, while after it has been used it slides back to the bottom stop, its descent being regulated in sucha manner that the carrying of a passenger is a matter of entire safety. Tue motive power is, of course, more or less ex 've, aocordiu to the costofwator, thisbein ,itissta , inBer- lin, at the rate of a trio more than one- tsnth of a cent only for each trip. Quite new hairpins have a shell heading heat back in a curve and an ornamentedwithsmall diamonds in silver setting. CURB EH CY. The police department of Boston costs the city $1,250,000 per year, and yet Boston milk is adultcrated. A Pekin weekly newspaper has just ï¬n- ished aserial story which contained 2,040 chapters. You get the worth of your money in China. An Ohio woman says that pickled peach- es are the ï¬rst step in a downward carrer. Most any one can stand a bushel of the downward. A horse named “Bob Ingersoll" has been ruled off all the California race-courses. He didn't seems to believe in anything except bolting. The New Orleans Picayune has come to the conclusion that “a limited lability act prevents a man from paying more debts than suit; his convenience." When it is one minute after 8 o’clock it is past 8. When it is thirty minutes after 8 it is only half past 8. Here is another dis cogery to make the world pause and feel ea . There are explosives which have seventy times more power than gunpowder, and yet it is only now and then that a man seats himself on a keg of powder to enjoy a quiet smoke. Boston is to have a thirteen story business blOLk. If it ever gets on ï¬re the flames are to start in the third story where the engines can reach them. The architect has provided for that. An Ohio farmer mortgaged his farm to get his wife some diamond ear-rings, and she lost one of them in the ends the very ï¬rst wash day, and attempted to hang her- self in the barn. A rich man in Portland, 0., got drunk the other day and bought thirty-six coï¬ins for himself, leaving only about ten more in stock in the town. The rich are always taking these advantages. Despite the fact that women lace, wear thin shoes and expose their health in a dozen other ways, the average of longevity of the female sex is increasing. It is doubt- less due to their obstinacy. Miss Amelia Wadsworth, of Springï¬eld, having publicly lectured on marriage as a failure, a newspaper man went to work and proved that she had been engaged and jtited three different times. Peter Johnson, a colored resident of Cairo, was going to swallow ten ï¬ehhocks in public on a wager of $5, but the law stepped in and prevented him. It was decided that the ï¬sh- ing season had not yet begun. A New Bedford man had his nose broken because he said he had seen a whale ninety feet long. The man who broke it for hio‘: had never even been to sea, but he had his idea of how long a whale ought to be. Two witnesses in a case in Iowa who swore that they saw a man forty rods oï¬' draw a reVolvor were proved to be so near-sighted that they could not tell a revolver from a poodle dos ï¬fteen rods away. The hangman at Fort Smith, who has sprung the trap on about seventy men, says that it the condemned will only behave him- self and follow directions, he can make his death as painless as turning over the bed. An English ship which recently entered Vera Crnz'had seven of its crew laid up with broken bones. The mate had been pratic- mg on them for a week or two, and he was astonished that any complaint should be made. An Italian newspaper warns Italians against immigrating to this country, saying that Canadians have no respect for them. That is not true. An Italian laborer or hand organ grinder is respected for what there is in him. An Ohio cow was found in a swamp the other day where she had passed thirty~six days and nights of anxious waiting. She had grown so thin that a man easily picked her up, and it took three days to get her full of hay. George Comer, a resident of Virginia City, claims to have been visited by Satan, and to have had a long talk with the old boy. He was told that everything was 0. K. this win- ter, with'business pushing his majesty day and night. The medical student who euicided in New York the other day left a message reading: “I die because there is no room for any more doctt rs." He must have been crazy. Hun- dreds of doctors are graduating every year and ï¬ndingpatients. South Carolina always hangs a murderer in public, and she deï¬es any one to ï¬nd a spectator of any hanging who has snbse queutly taken human ife. She claims that every execution makes a profound impres- sion of the vengeance of the law. N o fewer than 46 Icelanders were married in Winnipeg last year, or 13 per cent. of the total number of persons who assumed the yoke matrimoniaL The clergyman who per- formed the fect number of marriages, Rev. Mr. Bjarson, is an Ioelander. The facts show either that the Icelanders are a numer~ ous population in and around the capital of Manitoba, or are exceptionally enterprising in matrimonial adventures. Many of the marriages are between Icelanders and Eng- lish people, and the readiness with which such unions take place an gests that those sturd Norse settlers, despite the strong na- tion traits their interesting history and surroundings have induced amongst them. are likely to be speedily assimilated by the Canadians. The attention of the American press is con- stantly occupied with the ever present and ever growing problem of the conflict of races in the South. It is as pressing a question, and threatens to be as difï¬cult a one, as that of the relations between Ireland and Great Britain. The latest phase the diï¬iculty has assumed is that the negro" are not only in numbers, but also in ion llienoe and in ï¬nancial and political influence. rapidly be- coming su rior to the whites. The Rev. J. (l. A. Clar e, of Georgia, a presiding elder of the Methodist Church, has asserted in public addresses that his own observations, reinforced by reports from other ministers, convince him that a census of the children born since the war in some sections of Geor- gia would show a greater amountof illiteracy among white than among black children. These are curious, not to any signiï¬cant, facts if facts they are; and from the serious con- sideration they receive at the hands of the press of the North one is warranted in con- cluding that the North docs believed them to be facts. If the norm should continue to progrecs at this rate the reins of litical power mi ht are ion class in th son“ 8 8 8° 9 NEWS BY WIRE. The German Government is said to be dis- posed tc suspend hostilities in Samoa during the conference. Toe seamen’s strike at various British ports is subsiding. The men are freely sign- ing articles at compromise rates. The British ship Anglo-India. Capt Cat- tauach, from Shanghai for the Phillipine Is- lands, has been wrecked at Formosa. Part of too crew was lost. Another report is in circulation that H. M. Stanley has been killed. The London papers do not believe it. King Otto, of Bavaria. has been proved hopelessly insane. The King recently show- ed signs of improvement. Commissioner Berchmer, of the North- west Mounted Pol co, in his annual report, vigorously protests against the introduction of the license system into the Northwest. The Chicago Irish societies have decided to resume St. Patrick’s Day parades, which have of late years been dispensed with. the money thus saved having been sent to Parnell. The Park Central hotel in Hartford, Conn., was demolished by an explosion and a large number of people were killed. The London Post has hinted that Gibral- tir and Malta will be armored more strong- ly in view of the probability of a great European war. It is expected that the Imperial Govern- ment will propose a defence loan of $25,0L0,- 000, to be spent in building warships and torpedo boats. The visible supply of wheat on this Con- tinent is now 6 150.000 bushels less than a year ago, and 26 450,000 bushels less than on Feb. 19th, 1887. _ _â€".â€"-â€". NEW GUNS. f The Trial 0’! Two Great War Engines. Two recent foreign publications, one of an event and the other of an opinion, deserve to be recorded as the most important infor- mation we have concerning the tremendous machinery which is now ready to play havoc with humanity in the next great war. An encounter took place recently in the Sulymah district, on the west side of Africa, which provided a fair test of the new arm known as the Maxim gun, and a fearful weapon it proved to be. Sulymah is a Brit- ish ;proteetorate adjacent to Sierra Leone, and some warlike natives outside recently threatened an attack. The English com- mander sent against this party, although it could not have been small, eleven native policemen and one British cfli cer, taking with them a Maxim gun. They halted in front of a native stockade. and soon the hostile savages, the “ War B lys†as they are called in the country, marched out to the assault, and the gun was set to working. The effect was magical. The assailants turned and fled, but in that short movement 131 of them were laid on the ground dead. When it is remembered that savage tribes never operate in very close formation, the awful effectiveness of this machine gun will be understood. ' The other publication follows upon the ex- periment performed in New York harbor with Capt. Zilinski’s dynamite gun. The results of that experiment have led the Daily News, of London,to the indisputable opinion that “ at this rate the lOO-ton gun may soon become the Brown Base of heavy ordnance." Such appears to be the nature of the new weapons that during the last few years have been peacefully prepared for the next great international scrimmage. What a prospect! ~_______..â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€" Conversation. All men, and especially young men, should be modest in conversation. It is very wholesome for a young fellow to associate occasionally with persons who are older than himself. It will not flatter his vanity to learnâ€" as learn he will, sooner or laterâ€" that the crude ndtions which had seemed to him quite a glorious revelation are by no means inspire , or even original, but have been all well sifted, and for the most part decisively rejected, by men of an experience a good deal wider than his own ; but it will lead him to form a more lowly estimate of himself and his abilitiesâ€"and that will do no harm. “ Let us remember, gentlemen,†said Dr. Whewell once to the members of his col- lege, “ that we are not infallibleâ€"not ev en the youngest of us." Be easy and unconstrainedâ€"as merry and cheerful as your nature will let you be ; but never try to be either impressive or funny. Be what you are. If the mantle of Sydney Smith have descended on you, the wittier and more humorous you are the better ; but do not joke on solemn or serious subjects, and do not hold .up to ridicule or sarcasm any member of the company in which you ï¬nd yourself. But if any one olseso far for- gets himself as to make personal or ill bred remarks about you, keep a tight rein on your temper, and laugh it 06's: best you can. Re- member Cowper's couplet: †A moral. sensible, and Well bred man. Will not affront no. and no other can " Royal Blood in Everybody's Veins. Every man has two parents, four grand- parents, eight great-grandparents, sixteen great-great grandparents, do. Now, if we reckon twenty-five years to a operation, and carry on the above calculation to the time of William the Conqueror of England, will be found that each living person must have had at that time even the enormous number of 35,000,000 of ancestors. Now, supposing we make the usual allowance for the crossm or intermarryin of families in a genealog line, and for a same person bein in many of the intersections of the is y tree, still there will remain a number at that sriod even to cover the whole Nor- man Anglo-Saxon races. What, there- fore, might have been pious, princely, ly, or aristocratic, stands sido by si e in line with the most ignoble, plebeian or democratic. Each man of the present day may be certain of having had, not only barons and ’n quires, but even. crowned heads, dukes, princes, or bisho , or renowned gen- erals, barristers, phyai to, among his ancestors. use}: asp THERE. ‘ OhIt turns out that the. ditih iwhiilat ‘tio lea peels ro tomaeuo orto carrygtlieir Eewfgepggem Lake Michigan to the Mississippi will cost $25 000,000. Better send for Do Lesseps at once, or else abandon the ï¬lthy practice of deï¬ling the water supply and put the sewage on land. A Windsor lady appears to have outwitt- ed the Customs ofï¬cials. Coming across from Detroit with her carriage she brought with her aparcel of dutiable goods. The Customs tiliwr. instead of charging the duty upon the goods, seized the carriage and horses, but subsequently released them on the receipt of a cheque for $100 Alter giv- ing the cheque the lady stopped payment at the bank, and now the ctiicials are unable to collect. The Paris Exposition is likely to have an important bearing upon the peace of Europe. The London Times thinks that the eh va- tiou of Bonlanger will be in the long run, a disturbing element in Eirope ; but it says that the view generally taken in European capitals is that if he came into power of or a dissolution he would not, for many months at all events, he a menace to the peace of the Continent, because he would not venture to imperil the success of the Exhibition. . Although the New York, Brooklyn, Min- neapolis, and other strikes have brought the subject into prominence of late, the fact is that, as compared with last year, 1889 is fortunate in its comparative freedom from strikes. The January of 1888 saw more than forty thousand men on strike. In the ï¬rst month of 1887 there were nearly seventy-seven thousand strikers, whereas during the past month the number does not reach nineteen thousand, and seven thou- sand of these belonged to the short-lived New York ear aï¬'air. A curious phase of the color question has appeared in one of the schools of New York State. A laborer and his wife, both claim- ing to be white, had four boys attending the school. Two of the boys were light in color and,were not interfered with. The other two were dark and were expelled on the ground that they were Negroes. It appears that the immediate cause of the dismissal was that some of the children were in the habit kissing the teacher before going home. and she did not want to receive this mark of af- fection from the two dark-skinned boys. The se’zure of a New England whaling vessel off the Azores by the Portuguese be- cause it had been guilty of smuggling and fraud seems to be regarded as an outrage in the United States. That the seizure was made, according to the story of the delinqu- ents, eleven or twelve miles out at sea appears to render it in the eyes of our neigh- bors an unheard of atrocity. When they seize Canadian sealing vessels one hundred miles from shore, and not having even been within United States jurisdiction, they ap- pear to think it all right, but anything like turning the tables upon them is apparently beyond their understanding. Alaska in the year 1867 was purchased from Russia by the United States Govern- ment for the sum of 37.200000. Three years later the Alaska Commercial Company was formed for the purpose of embarking in the sealskin trade. It was obliged by law to limit the numberjof seals it destroyed yearly, and to pay a tax on every bide. A report of a committee of Congress calculates that in the twenty years that have since elapsed a sum exceeding $8,000,000 has been paid into the treasury bv the company. This means that though a single company, and by means of a single trade, in the space of two decades. Alaska has repaid the whole of the capital invested in her purchase, together with interest at the rate of about 11 per cent. To speak of the ï¬erce light that beats upon a throne is ofter a mere en hemism to express a dangerous state of a airs for a ruler. Take the recent escape from assassina- tion of the Ameer of Afghanistan. He was inspecting a military parade. and was seated on a platform with the British envoy beside him. As a regiment eased by, e stpoy in the fourth rank sud only faced about, de- liberately took aim and ï¬red at the Amcer. The bullet struck his chair. and he only es- caped from having leaned forward to speak to one of his oï¬icers. The Ameer remained quiet and cool and ordered the march-past to continue. This is the sort of experience one wants agood price for consenting to undergo. It is also an entirely new feature in a military march-past. The Public schools in New York are suf- fering, very much as we are in many parts of Canada, from want of accommodation for pupils, especially in the junior forms. There are in the city of New York about 150,000 pupils and two-thirds of these are primary scholars. For this large number of children there are so few teachers that the average number of pupils in a class in the lowest grade is 86 “ It is absurd," says the New York “Times,†" to suppose that any teach- er, however giftsd and skilled, can deal fair- ly with such numbers. It is simply im- possible. And, moreover. these teachers are not the best, but with the hardest work to do, under the most difï¬cult conditions, they are the youngest, least experienced, least trained, and poorest paid of all.†Dr. Paul Gibier, the French physician who was sent by the French Government to Jacksonville to study the yellow fever when it was at its height, has generously oï¬'orcd his services to the Federal authorities to continue, gratis, his researches in connection with this terrible epidemic disease, the French Government having declined to spend more mono on the undertaking. “ All I want." and Dr. Gibier, " is the moral sup- port of the United States Government and the payment of incidental expenses. I ask for no renumeration for my services." Such offer. if the deadly nature of the disease is also remembered, would be more cnorally regarded with astonished atitu s were it not that such sacriï¬ces are y no means rare in that high-minded body of men, the medi- cal profession. The Electric hlsht Is a matter of small importance compared with other a plications of electricity. By thissgency olson's Nervilinsis made to gusts-ate to the most remote new every no, muscle and ligament is made feel its booefleent power. Nervilins, pleasant to take, even by the oungost child, yet so powerfully far recap-E3 in its work, that the most agonizingin pain yields ml! by magic. Neglect no longer to try Nervilino. Bu todayatonoenttrlalbottloandbo and country dealers everywhere. "‘“mmԠWWW J.Pertlnstllo; THE CANADIAN HUT ASSOCIATION. AY‘RUAL ammo. The eight annual meeting of “ The Cana- dirn Mutual Aid Association “’ was held at the company‘s (dice, 10 King street cast, Toronto, on Thursday, 24inst., a good to- preseutative gathering being present. The President, Mr. William Rennie, cc. cupled the chair. and in opening the meet- ing expressed his pleasure at seeing so many of the policy holders present, and was also specially pleased to see the number of the active agents of the Company present. Great success, he said, had been the ex~ perienoe of the past year. Although steady progress had marked the work of the As- sociation from its organization, yet the past year far exceeded its predecessors in the volume of new business. He attributed this to the growing popularity of the assess- ment system of the insurance and more especially to the ( quitable and popular plan of our Company We issued during the year 1888, new and renewed polio}: a. 1,508, representing insurance to the amount of $2,306,000; the total number of policies now in force being 1393. representing a total insurance of $9,017 000. In Reserve Fund there is now in the credit of policy- holders about 340,000. During the past year there was paid out to bemlieiaries to the large sum of $88776 This system of insurance, he said, evidently ï¬lled a long felt want, giving, as it did insurance at such rates as were within the reach of the people who most needed such protection. Our Complny aimed, not alone at CHEAP INSURANCE. but rather RELIABLE Ia‘a‘cma‘cs at REASONABLE near. and our success is the best evidence of the wisdom of our plan of insurance. The manager, Mr. Wm. Pemberfou Page, was then called upon to read the Directors’ Report. The following is condensed from the ï¬nancial statement: AID Assets. Reserve Funds,()dortgagcs) $4,890 00 Cash in Bank and due . . . . . . . . $9 817 (I2 interest due and accrued. . .. 1,072 )3 Amount due from members on assessment to be made for claim accepted . . . . . . . . . illJOU 00 Furniture and Fixtures . . . . . . . 366 77 Total assets ............. . . 906.0% 92 Liabilitits. Claims for death losses â€" Adjusted but not due . . . . . . . .. SEEM» 00 Due on account of general ex- penses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 2,125 $0 Total liability . . . . . . . . . . .. $7,128 80 Surplus to credit of policy holders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 38.917 00 (Assets in excess of ilflbiiltifl) Income. Collected on assessments for the year, unnualdues, sic .. 8128.636 63 Interest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 1,9“ 44 $125,431 12 Amount on hand at begining of year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 1,887 45 Total income . . . . . . . . . . . .. $27,368 57 Expenditure. Gish paid for death and disa- bll ty losses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "988 776 25 Legal expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 180 38 â€"-- $8.900 38 Comm'sslonsto agents . . . . . . “$13,430 13 Cash paid for salaries and other expenses of ofï¬cials, including general agents.... 7,254 00 Other expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. {Hull 15 -â€"-â€"â€" $24,195 25 Postage, printing, (to . . . . . . .. 3.953 77 Total expenditure ...... 3:17.055 83 Amount of cash on hand (in- cludlng amount carried to " Reserve and Disbursement Fund.) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. AUDITORS' REPORT. To the President and Directors of the Canadian Mutual Aid Association. Gsa’rrmm‘.x,-â€"We have carefully audited the books and accounts of your Company, and compared vouchers with expenditure for the year ending 3let December, 1888, and have found them correct. We have also had free access to all bonds, mortgages and other securities held by the Company, and have much pleasure in certifying to their ac- curacy as ahown in the Directors’ report. No ï¬nd $23,000 of the funds (Reserve and Disbursement) invested at 0 per cent. $11,- 390 at 7 per cent. and all deposits in banks are drawing 4 per cent. We would also express our approval of the very satisfactory manner in which we ï¬nd the affairs of the Company. Jens Parana, Hastings, Jous Warns. Oakville, ) Toronto, Jan. ‘24, 1889. mm 94 $127,368 57 Auditors. A. 1’. $38 GANDES. was. itlllllll'. 3mm. 0.... l KNITTINllï¬ii’ll‘hltul‘ll’ltmmfllllES ERICA]. INSTRUMENT8.â€"Send for our Large lllust ated Catalogue of Band instru- ments, Violins, Guitars, Flutes. etc., and all kinds of Trimmings Agent for Frenches and Heme Plays. BUl LANDS MUSIC STORE. 37 King St. West, Toronto. Ont. AUTOMATIG SAFETY ELEVATORS i’at. hydraulic hand and steam elevators. LEITCH &TURNBULL Canadian Elevator \Vorks. Peter and Queen streets HAMILTON. ONI’. GENTS â€"Tus [luv-mun timer, is onlnpanlon , book to the lhly Bible. to whlon Modded " Golden Guns of Religious Thought." mitten and edited by J W asst, assisted by T. DKWI" Tu.- iuos, DJ). Just the book for agents to well quickly, and reap promptly. The-boobcatch-theleve-at a- lsncpbock ever sold in (hands. WM. BRIGGS, ubllsher. Toronto. Ont. 0016. our FOB BERG-tum l t7uw,w Slo'en from the Bmk at Bull l Protect your tone. lion-res, Bublcs, as well as Goods hung on the outside by using the Champion Burglu Alannl .\0 one can get into a room or building without alarmlugthe whole neighborhood. Can be put. up in a minute Commercial lien can attach one to or. door by slm iv closing it. Does not run the doorin the least his is no to , but a well-made article. Made, patented and d by a well-hnwn llouao. bk your hardware dialer for one, and he sure my name is on it. or send Cl and receive one free. Good Agents wanted in every lacs. 3. ii. K1)!!! P.0 Box 965, Baluroom‘ll‘n Craig 8:. Honda‘s: 0? ALL KINDS. Dealers billed out on farcrablelerm I R I I SH lililllill 8.80! Numrymannr- liugtcn, Out. A Dozen ('nr Loads Very Fine Kati" u-Ions. Brown Engines IRON AND STEEL BOILERS Alli SIZE. 1030510 ENGINE WORKS, P3810 AND IRON“! - foam l l