Elsienhad hsd but a few monds' start of him; with his powerful arms to aid him in the quest. he must surely overtake and save hzr bsfore she could drown. even in that mad and swirling tidal torrent. He flung himself On the water with all his force, and goaded by remorse, pity. and love â€"for, after all, he loved her, he loved herâ€" he drew uuu onted strength from the inter~ nal tires, as he pushed back the ï¬erce flood on either side with arms and thews of fever- ish energy. At each strong push, he moved forward apsce with the gliding current, and in the course of a few stout strokes he was already many yards on_his way seaward from the pint at which he had originally started. ‘ But his boots and clothes clogged his movo- ‘ ments terribly, and his sleeves in particular‘ so impeded his arms that he could hardly use them to any sensible advantage. He felt conscious at once that, under such hampering conditions, ' it wculd be impossible to swim for many minutes at a stretch. He must ï¬nd Elsie and save her almost immediately, or both must go down and drown together. .He wanted nothing more thantodrown with her now. “ Elsie. Elsie, my darling Emu." he cried aloud on the top of the wave. .30 lose Elsie was to lose everything. The 3“ w“ runnipg high as he neared the bay and Else." h disa peered as if by ' that dar black water on ‘ . â€s . Eï¬'fnooff'e: night.“ wondered he couldn’t of her white dress by catch a sin 1e limpee the reflecteï¬ s§arlighh 3““ the truth was the current had sucked he: “Raffâ€"sucked her under wildly with its irreslst1° force only to fling her up again, a senseles.‘ bur- den, where sea and river met at last i:- ï¬erce conflict among the roaring breakers that danced and shivered hpan the shallow , H9 twain about blindly looking rou nd him on every side through the thick darkness with elger eyes for some glimpse of Elsie’s white dress in a stray gleam of starlight; but he saw not a trace of her presence any- where. Grog’mg and feeling his way still with uumbe limbs, that grew weary and stifl' with the frantic effort, he battled on through the gurgling eddy till he reached the breakers on the bar itself. There, his strength proved of no availâ€"he might as well have tried to stem Niagara. The great waves, rolling their serried line against the stream from the land, caught him and twisted him about resistlessly, raising him now aloft on their foamnig crest, dashing him now down dee in their hollow trough, and then fling~ ing im back again over some great curling mountain of water far on to the current from which he had just emerged with his stout endeavor. For ten minutes or more he struggled madly against those titanic ene- mies : then his courage and his muscle failed together, and he gave up the unequal con- testoutof sheer fatigue and physical inability to continue it longer. It was indeed an aw- ful and appaling situation. Alone there in the dark. whirled aboutby a current that no man could stem, and confronted with a rear- ing wall of water that no man could face, he threw himself wearily back for a moment at full length looked up in his anguish from his floating couch to the cold stars overhead, whose faint light the spray every instant hid from his sight as it showered over him from the curling crests of the great billows be and him. And it was to this that he ha driven poor inno- Elsie was toning up and down there just on hopelessly now, no doubt. But Elsie hnd no pong- of conscience added to torment her. She hed only a broken heart to reckon with. cent, truatlul, wronged Elsie l tlie one wo- man who, with all the force of a profound nntureâ€"proionnder ten thousand times than his ownâ€"bod truly loved him I He let himself flout idly where wind nnd mvee might happen to beer him. There In: no help for it: he could swim no further. It wu All over. all over now. Ellie wu loot, end for all the root he cured that mo- ment less than nothing “Winifred! Ho loomed And hated or very ‘_ name. He might drown at hit one. for anything he would ever do himself to prevent it. VTheivyayeI broke over him _ngain 3nd Ronâ€"rosrâ€"rosr on the hu, «ch tour growing “inter and fainter in bi- our. ()1me needing, receding Itlll. The cur- rent was carrying him along in a back edd . that not strongly south-westward towar I the dike of the salt marshes. egein. He let them burst across hls face or limbs, end floated on, without endeevor to swim or guide himself at ell. Would he never sink ? Wes he to float and flost end fleet like this to e“ eternity 2_ Still,itwasenough tsovcrwholmhim for the moment with sgonies ofrcmorse, regretmml ity to make him long just then and there {or instant death, as tha easiest escape from his own angry and nozusin conscience. He wsntcd to die ; he yearne and prayed for it. But death obstinately refused to come to his aid. He turned himself around on his fsce now, and striking out just once with his wooried thighs, and sway blsnkly towsmis the foam on the sr. whore Elsie’s body must still he tossing in 's horrible hutly dunes of desth among the csreering shots. As he looked, s gloom of ruddy light He let himself drift wherever it might tnke him. It took him back, back, back. steadily, till he saw the white crest of the breakers on the ridge extend like a long grny line in the dim distance upon the see beyond him. He was well into safer water by this time: the estuary was only very rough here. He might swim if he chose. But he did not choose. He cared nothing for life, since Elsie was gone. In asndden revulsion of wild despair, a frantic burst of hopeless yearning, he knew, for the ï¬rst time in his whole like, now it was too into. how truly and deeply and in- tensely he had loved her. As truly and deeply as he was capable of loving any- thing on earth except himself; and that, after all, was nothing much to boast of THE THREAD OF LIFE; Hugh wu wltinh. henrtleu, nnd unwras- I alone; but he was not hylicnlly n cownr . n cur. or n pslterer. \ ithout one Ieoond'll thought, he rushed wildly down to the wa- ter-'- edge, nnd bnl tnoing himsell lorn plunge, l with his hands above his hand. on the roots of the big tree, he dived boldly into thnt wild current, against whose terriï¬c force he hnd once all-end struggled no vnlnly on the mqgning of_h_ll _ gt arrival at Whitestnnd; CHAPTER XLâ€"Sxxx on Sww! on. SUNSHINE AND SHADE. groans round the Makes on tho dike sluiccs. Is head was whirlin still with asphyxia and numbness. He felt h-yIrdl in a con- dition to think or reason. But ythis “as a crisis. e life and death crisis. He must ull himself to gether like s man, and work i, allont. his douboini course for the next ’ three hours. or else sink for ever in s see of obloqny. remembered only es Flsie'e mur- derer. .verythie wee es min for him-â€" live or die. Shoe he jump once more Into ‘ And then, as he battled still flereely with the tide. in a fluh of his nerves, he felt suddenly a wild spasm of psin seize on both his thighs, and an utter dissblement affect his entire faculty of bodily motion. It was a paroxysm of crampâ€"overwhelmingâ€"in- expressible -and it left him in one second powerless to move or think or act or plan, a mere dead log, incapable of anything but a cry of pain, and helpless as s‘bshy In the midst of that cruel _n_ud nnheeding eddy. _ He flung himself back for dead on the water once more. A choking sensation seized hold of his senses. The sea was pouring in at his nostrils and his ears. He knew he was goin , and he was glad to know it. He won (1 rather die than live with that burden of guilt upon his black soul. The Wives washed over his face in serried ranks. He dind’t mind: he didn’t struggle; he didn't try for one in stant to save himself. He floated on, unconscious at last, back, slowly back. towards the bank of the salt marsh. Elsie, Elsie; poor murdered Elsie! He should hate to live, now he had murdered Elsie! with hi; ï¬ngers to pull the bed-clothes clos- er around him. But there were no bed-clothes, and everything about was soaking wet. He must be stretched in a pool of water, he thoughtâ€"so damp it was all round to the touchâ€"with a soft mattress or couch spread beneath him. He put out his hands to feel the mattress. He came upon mud, mud, deep layers of mud ; all cold and slim in the dusk of night. And then with a fine he remembered allâ€"Elsie dead! Elsie drowned !â€"â€"and knew he was stranded by the ebbing tide on the edge of the embank- ment. No hope of helpin Elsie now. \Vith a violent effort, he rouse himself to con- sciousness, and crawled feebl on his knees to the ï¬rm ground. It was illicult work, floundering through the mud, with his numb limbs; but he floundered on, upon hands and feet, till he reached the shore, and stood at last, dripping with brine and crusted with soft slimy tidal ooze, on the broad bank of the moated dike that hemmed in the salt marshes from the mud-bank of the estuary. It was still dark night, but the moon had risen. He could hardly so what the time might be, for his watch ha stopped, of course, by immersion in the water ; but he roughly guessed, by the look of the stars, it was somewhere about haltpast ten. We have a vague sense of the lapse of time even during sleep or other unconscious states; and flu h was certain he couldn’t have been flea ng for much more than an henr or thereabouts. Ho gazad around him vaguely at the misty mallow-.110 was a mile or more from the villa: e inn. Thu estuary, within mid ï¬st: of mud, lay between him and the lard at Whiteotund. Shoot- oi white surf still nhimmored dimly on the ban- in ont to In. And Ellie nu lostâ€"loot to him irre- veggbly. 7 “'ilen Hugh Masainger next knew any- thing, he was dimly conscious of lying at fu_ll_l_engt}1 on a. wry c_old qukan‘d‘fumbl‘ing He set down sud pondered on the beak for s while. These five minutes were the turning~point of,hls life. \Vhst should he do end how com rt himself under these sud- den snd ow ul end unexpected circum- stances? D.zed es le WM, he sew even then the full horror of the dllsmms thet hedged him in. Awe and shame brought him back with a rush to reason. If he went home end told the whole horrid truth, every- bod would say he was Elsie’s murderer. Per eps they would even suggest that he pushed her in-â€"-to get rid of her. He dared not tell it ; he dered not face it. Should he fly the villageâ€"the countryâ€"the countryâ€"f that would be foolish end precipitate in- deed, not to say wicked : A criminal sur- render. All wss not lost, thou h Elsie was lost to him. In his calmer m , no longer heroic with the throes of despondency. sit- tingfshivering there with cold in the keen breeze. between his dripping clothes, upon the beer swept hank. he said to himself many times over that all was not lost; he might still go back_â€"- and marry Winifred. Oh, if only he had lain right in her path just then, as she rode over the waves. that she might run him down and sink him for ever, with his weight of infamy, be- neath the curiing billowe ! He could never endure to go ashore a. sinâ€"and to feel that bolus! virinelly mur ered Elsie. Hideous :horribloâ€"inhunï¬ï¬ : horcckon- ed even so his chance with Winifred. The shrewd wind blew chill upon his wet clothes. It Imilowad and roared with hoarse 5 was Wan-ten Relf‘s yawl. beating down from Lowestoft, and trying for the ï¬rst time to enter the river through the wall of breakers. ing in to the river I The eight reï¬lled him with a hint irelh ho e. That hope we: too I like despair; but etil it was something. He ewem out once more with the epumodio I energy of utter deepondency. The emeck might still be in time to one Elsie ! He would make his way out to it. though it run him down ; if it run him down, so much the better i he would ehout aloud et the top of hie voice, to outroar the breekere : “ A lady is drowning} Ssve her lâ€"Iuye her _!"_ He struck out again with mad haste through the back current. This time he had to fight against it with his wearied limbs. and to plough his way with prodi- gious efforts. The current was stronger, ncw he came to face it, than he had at all imagined when he merely let himself drift on its surface. Battling with all his might against the ï¬erce swirls, he hardly seemed to make any headway at all through the angry water. His strength was almost all used up now ; as could scarcely last till he reached the smackâ€"Great heavens, what was this? She was turning lâ€"she was turn- ing! The surf was too much for her tim- bers to endure. She couldn't make the mouth of the cmek. She was lnfling sea~ gar-d again, and it was all up, all up with ‘lsie. showed for a second from a muthoul just .beysmd w? b-s- 4-2190"?! .'m-3!! kc?!“- Could he go back, then, and keep it all uiet, saying nothing himself, but leaving t 9 world to form its own conclusions! A sudden thought fleshed in an intuitive mo- ment across his brain. A Plan 1â€"3 Plan! How hep l A Policy. He saw his way out of it a at once. He lcould set every. thin right by a simple method. Yes. that won (1 do. It waa bold, but not risky. He might go now ; the scheme for the luture was all matured. Nobody need ever sus- pect anything._ A cspital idea ! _ Honour Had any one seen them that evening to- gether? He couldn’t remember noticing snybody.â€"Howshrill the wind blew though his dripping clothes. It cut him in two; and his head reeled still.â€"No ; nobody, no- body. He was quite safe upon that score at least. Nobody knew he was out with Elsie. 9n: sav'ed; (Ind he might. still go back and marry Winifred. unde (nitroge'noue, forming nlhumen); ineeed meni, one-half und (nitrogenoue, carbonnceoue, and lexet ve, need for reguln- ting the bowels); charcoal. one pound (need for promoting digeetioh nnd mining to correct ncidity); enlphur, one ounce (n neceuery constituent of nn egg, and ueiehe in wording ofl‘ dieeeee). “it, hnli pound (very neceeeery, and often neglected); ground ginger two ounce. red popper one hbloepooniul, fenugroek be]! e pound, gen- tinn one ounce (etimnlenta and oorreotivee); chloride of iron, one ounce (en invigorntor of th_e syntem). _ "Now: condition powders depend upon whet you denim them for. If for assisting to form e g tutorial, we will give end ex- plainAthe uggedienu, as follow!“ _‘ . " Groundr bone, one pound (phosphoric mid 15nd nope) ; ground [nag or blood, throo “ In giving the above the reader will et once notice why condition powderl mehe hens ley. The ingredients oi the egg and the eeeletente to d gallon ere there. Give e toblelpooniul oi the mixture onee e day. to ten hens, in the lolt food. It in sufï¬cient, with whet they will derive from their food. Now, for e lot of eiok fowle, 3 different kind of condition powder in required. “Gentien, one pound: rod pe per. heli ounce; sulphur, one ounce; eu phur, one ounce; eelt, one ounce; chloride of iron, one ounce: hypoaulphiw of node. two ounces: Peruvian bark, one ounce: black antimony, one ounce: charcoal, half a pound. Elsie dead ! Elsie drowned ! The world 1031., and his life a blank! But he might still go back and marry Winifred. "(live a tablespoonlnl to two hens, in the soft food, once a day, till better. Then use the other one. These powders cm he made in large quantity, M. a small cost, the onl expensive articles bein the Peruvian bar and gentisn. We won d suggest that n tnbiespoonlui of the Douglass mixture he LadOJ to every quart of drinking water. It is made as follows: Water. two gallons; 00 para (suirimte of iron), one ponnriz' surphnrio sci} (oil of vitriol), ogill. _\Vo_(io When he left the spot where he had been tossed ashore, his idea for the future was fully worked out. He ran along the bank with eager haste in the direction of White- strand. Once only did he turn and look behind him. A ship's light gleamed feebly in the oiling across the angry sea. She was beating up against a headwnnd to catch the breeze outside towards Lowesboft or Yar. mouth, not. claim the above to be lnfnillble. but considering the cost should be in the hands of A". In tho mo 0! sulphur too much Ihould not be given, oupochlly in damp wetthor. The proportion given ubovo in nmnllonough." Had Elsie told any one she was going to meet him! No; she wouldn't even tell Winifred of that, he was sure. She met him there often by appointment, it was true, but always quietly : they kept their meetings a profound secret between them. Answering Kayla! ny- : He rose [and shook himself in the wind like a dog. The Plan was growing more deï¬nite and rounded in his mind each moment. He turned his face slowly to- wards the lights at “’hitestrand. The es- tuary spread between him and them with its wide mud-flats. Cold and tired as he was. he must make all speed for the point where it narrowed into the running stream near Snlde meadows. He must swim the river there, with what legs he had left, and cross to the village. There was no time to be lost. It was neck or nothing. At all hazxrds, he must do his best to reach the inn before the doors were shut and looked a‘. eleven. He hated himself for thinking all thisâ€" with Elsie drowned-or not yet drowned evenâ€"1nd yet he thong hi: it, because he was not mm enough to face the alternative He fancied notâ€"he believed no :.â€"He was certain not, now he oameto think of it. Thank lleuven, he had made the appointment verbal- ly. If he’d written a note, thatdamning evi- dence mighthavebeenproducedagainsthim at the coroner's inquest. Inquest? Unless they found the bodyâ€"Elsie‘s bodyâ€"pah l howhor‘ rible to think ofâ€"but still, a man must steel himself to face facts, however ghastly and howeverhorrible. Unlesstheyfoundthe bod , then, there would be no inquest ; and if only things were managed well and cleverly, there needn't even be any inquiry. Unless they found the bodyâ€"Elsie‘s body iâ€"poor Elsie's body, whirled about by the waves l-~But they would never ï¬nd itâ€"they would never ï¬nd it. The current had sucked it under at once, and carried it away careering madly to the sea. It would toss and whirl on the breakers for a while, and then sink unseen to the fathomless abysses of the German Ocean. Lilo ll 3 calculus ol’urylng probabilities. Wu it likely he hsd been perceived at the Hall that evening! Did anybody know he had boon walking with Elsie? If he mom's 00 , he meet go nt once. It we: no ale to t k of deleying or shill - shellyin . By 0 van o‘clock, the inn won d In 0100 . Ho mus .ml In. “perceived. by the open French h down before eleven, if he intended Itill to op the eme going But he must hove hiep of not. on deï¬nite- ly mapped out none the eubeforehend ; end to mep it out. he must nit a moment ezill ; he must sum up chm in this denperate emergency. llkotundblom. 1nd" f. hi 1‘13"." “39!"! winilroa‘y p y ' tn on [low to Make Your Own Con- dition Powders. (To us coxrmuan ) a correspondent, Poultry- Germanv 75,000 000 tons. The reduction in the United States in divid between thirty-one State- nnd territories, the largest, of course, being Pennsylvania, which last year gave us 34,000,000 anthracite and 30.- 000.000 of bituminous. In the money value the output in the United States in aafel $500,000,000 in the markets where use . This in greater than the value of gold. silver, cotton, and petroleum produced in our coun- try. At Canton, China. eome 250.000 people live continuously upon boate, and many never etep foot on ehore irom one yeare end to another. The yonn children have a habit of continualy fa in overboard and thus cause a great deal 0 trouble in cil'cctin a tonne, while in many inetancee thie ie mpoeeible and a child is drowned. China ie an over~pcpulatod country and the Chinese have roï¬ted by thin drowning rcollvity in re ucing thoeurplne population. ghey attach lloate to the male ch ldrcn eo that the can he ï¬ehed out when they tumble nto the river. The iemalee are without euch protection and are uruelly left to drown. The population of the ï¬ve largest cities of the world is: London, 3.832.441; Paris, 2.269.023; Canton, 1.500.000; Berlin 1,315, 297; New York, 1.209.577. lf that cluster of people on and about Manhattan Island be taken intooonaideration, New York’s pop- ulation would 6 ure over 2500.000. and would be the aeoon largest city in the world. ions, of which Great Britain producéa 1'60,- Q’0,000, the United States 130.000.0510, qnd According to the ofï¬cial trade returns. Ire- land sent to Greas Britain last year 669,253 cattle, 548 568 sheep, and 1,698,741 pigs. Yet Mr. Curran, of Montreal, seems to think that Ireland would be beneï¬tted by a war of tariffs between her and England, such as that prevailing between Canada and the Staten. origin. and pointed. Under Ne oleon III the Crimean war cost France ' .000 men and 2 millierds of money; England 23,000 men and 5 millinrds of money; Piedmont, 2000 men and 175,000,000 francs of money; Russia, 8,000,000 men snd-lmillisnls of money ; Turkey, 35,000 men and 400,000,000. [n 1858 the [toll-n war cost France 80,000 men and I millnrd of money; ital , 00,000 men and l50,000,000. In the Mex can “or France spent 500,000,000 money nnd 70,000 men. The Syrian expedition cost 15,000 men and 125,000,000 money. In the l“renco- Germnn wnr France lost 225,000 men and 0,223,000,0000f mono . And now France is bristling with lion engism and will be compelled to go with Rueeln ere long in n struggle more terrible then all beinreit, The estimate is that. France and Russia together can put in the iieldll,500,000 of men, while Germany, Austria and lull eon meet them with as men?' more. Thin oi 20,000 000 men eager or each others' lives on European bsttle plslnIâ€"nnd whet he: been the pin of it le Recent statistics go to show that during the past year the Southern States have been rapidly developina their industries. During the ï¬rst six months of the present year Alas bama invested $14,000,000 in new enter. prises conducted by stock companies : Ken» tucky, $3,000,000 ; Texas, $11,030.00!) ; Georgia, $5,000,000 ; Virginia, $5,000,000. It is said that the manufactured and mining products of Alabama will exceed by ï¬fty times the amount of cotton to be shipped to the centres of trade. in .- ilr. E.I. Seward an nâ€"Tho total con] produogioqu the war} jg put 3t. 420,000,000 The city of Paris is shown by ofï¬cial sta- tistics to have consumed last year 4,000,000 eggs. It also drank 87,560,000 gallons of wine, 3,217,000 gallons of spirits and li- quors, and something over, 12,000.000 gal- lons oi cider and of beer, or 6,000,000 and over of each. Population in India, according to the gincipni religions: Hindus, 187,937,438; shommedsns, 50,121,598 ; Aboriginals, 6,. 426.511; Buddhists, 3.418 895; Christians, 1,862,626: Sikhs, 1.853 426 ; Joins, 1,221,- 855; Psrsis, 85.397: Jews, 12,009; others. 952,066; total, 253,891,821. It appears that from 1845 to 1817, when bleeding prevailed in the treatment of pneumonia, according to The Medical Record, but one person In sixteen treated for that disease in the Pennsylvania Hospital died; while, on the contrary, from 1884 to 1886, after this treatment had been abandoned, the proportion of deaths was 1 in 3.2. Faota are atnbborn things, and the question arises whether. in every case, we have always ined by ignoring the aimple and old-fashioned methods of heal- Mr. Matthews, at Quebec, presented a sta~ tistical report shownng that there were 4,000,000 ccmmunicants of the Church in the world, equivalent to 20,000,000 adher- ents. He said that education was much looked after as the principles they held did not commend themselves to persons without education. Respecting missions, 60,000 communicants had been gathered into the Presbyterian Church from heathenism and over 500 ministers had been sent to preach the gospel to the heathen. Tho ensilage society of England, of which Lord Walsingham is president, reports that while the system was practically unknowu ï¬ve years ago yet in 1887 statistics showed in Great Britain alone 2,700 silos and 1,300 stacks of ensilage. The total value of green fruit bought by the United State: in Canada last year was $210 000. nearly the entire sum having been paitl for apples, of which 56, 912 barrels were from Ontario and 42,151 barrels from Nova Seotia. It in eatinmted that to collect one pound of honey from clover, 62.000 head- of clover moat be do; rived of their nectar. end 3,750. 000 visits from been would be necessitated. Madagascar is almost a miracle of mi:- aionary triumph. The native Christians of that inland have given more than $4,000.000 for the Ipread of the gospel during the [an ter_1_ years. It is stated that at least l,(00.€00 ton! 0f commercial fertilizm no now unnually used in this country at a coat to the buyer- of $30,000.600. Secretary Endioot IhoWI thnt since in creation at {he outlet of the civil wu' the United States nrmy retired lint bu can 826,- 530.00 ). The production of nlllnl In Ctllfomla mm I»: you 800, 000 50!“. In 1873 it wu only 6 000 boxes. There are 67 tunnel: of more thun 1.000 yud- in England. the longest being am of the Swanâ€"7.664. '1‘ho Iollowipg {Inflation an! of French STATISTICS. QUERY : I! “V. l'mo‘o business]! the Ingmln In "no In the United sum. la It no‘ the bus poal‘yle moot 0! Ma nblm ' co pty hllhm prion? I! h. did not do so, would a mtunlly If“ mom 8km tn. Any of his commuter: In the same “no? "We be‘lieva thitin cxtcn‘ ol ilszht-Iel ht raw ~ term collected and carried. Hr. Page ho ds the in?! of any com 12mm nmi that his present stock is the Ingest he]: by any house In this country." And the Review siya: "Mk-r a most thoromzh investlg ï¬lm at Mr. Pugo'o business, as compared with other: In same line we have becomafuily satisï¬ed cm: in m. eciaity Ii 1.. real.“ “00);. he lmnquestionrhly "tawny“ an or n scoun ry. w elnm tort of nail . conieuediy at the head." Ape y q u h. I. GHOIGE FARMS [OR SALE IN All PARTS OF ARTIFS wishing to purchase improved Mmltobs ans, from 80scres upwards, with lmmsdisis possession. call or vain to G. I. MAUISON, Mo- Anhur's Block, Msin IL, Winnipeg. iniormstion imnlshed ireo oi charge, and seniors assisted in making selection. Moan 10 Lou st current nus The Shoe and Leather Reporter. N. Y.. and the Shoe and heath" Review, Ohlcam, the leading trade papers 0! the U. S. in the Hide line, have sent their representatives to investigate Mr. Page's business,lnd “Let A thmou h examination and comparison, the Hemmer ghos (.1: .this qndqragqmpt: GIIBLPI Buslneen College. Gum". 0n.â€" ‘l'hle populet Institution, now In It! “I: you. ledo‘ng egmnd were for the Eduostlon ol young men end women In thoee bunches. A knowledge of which In no eeeenllel to the intelligent end enoouelul mungemont ol practloel mun. ltegreduetee ere everywhete ivlng slim] proof 0! the thcrouqhneu ol thelr treln ng, and beeï¬ng antelul teetlmony to the monehry velue of Its course ol etudy. The Fourth Annunl Clrouler vln lull lnlormetlon will hemmed tree. Address I. Awomucx. Palnolpzl. Merchants, Butchers “23:29:," We want a Good Man In your locality to pick up EXCHANGE ol Newspcpor ofï¬ces. Toma, om per cont. Summation glunntoed. â€We In" now (out good establishment. lot ale u 3 human. md on. publisher gaming 3 ï¬nger. of Interest. [or us. Cash Furnished on atls'nctory guaranty. Agrees“). S. P:\QE. y ydeï¬l’nk‘ Vermont, 0.3: ,, In mm mm vuucs urwsmm PUBLISHER E hnvo nucxcelled facilities for flu SALE or S» EXQKqus‘olflowspcpu-r ofï¬ces. Toma, SELF-IHHEADING NEEDLE .°§2§Lï¬$ out! Instant“ Ihreaded without passing thread through the eye. Agents coll: money selling them. Sample packet by mail 15¢. dozgp pn£k>ta $2.00. , “'l-l.__ u__._p_-. . oromo (Yuulng Schoolâ€"Scientiï¬c and relia- ble system! taught whereby stylish. perfect-ï¬t- ting garments ere produced. Cutters having trouble should secure mv systems sud ensure fneure success. En ire satishetion guaranteed. Shirt system taughi separate. A rue chance (or young men to sequin I lnrrative profession. S. CURRIGAN, Prop., 12! Yonsre Street. Terms on application. SAFES. nun" In "All I [U Dominion for, 311â€"! ii'cu'; hold SpecialtieuAddnss, Tuna: 81105.. Toronto,0nt. l-‘OB At!» $30- woolunaox no 0 WORK ud. Vdulble outï¬t nnd cunts . as. P.0. “CHIEF. Ammonium BEAVER LINE 0! STEAMSIIIPS Saloon Tickets. 840 260. $60. Return, 880. 090. $110,1ntermediate, $50; SteerageJSU. Applyto H. E. MURRAY. Gen’l. Manager, I Cussom House Square. HORRIBLE. KNITHNG 23%;: AGENTASAWANTED ASflï¬LFflflflEADIHG N_EEDLES.°§’§ PATENTS ’1‘!) L0 t! on Farms. Lowest RIM. MON EY No deb). Correspondence solicited. IL“. I). Bl] "£8, E‘inmcm Agt. Establishedlsco 72 King- fl 8.1mm)». Storyrfi u]. â€"Sales marvelibii: :_§‘eâ€"aï¬; 400,000. Sand 81.50 for A copy and go wwork. Agents Wanted. Address. GANOES WELLS.R|CHARDSON (LCD. MONTREAL. P.9- W A valuable pamphlet on “ The Nutrition of Infants and Invalids,†free on appligauon. (- r""“ v u, u..." Univ. uvLcu PHI. HI.l\‘ II'W V..UU. W â€(on Manufacturing (‘0.. Toronto. Ont At_qugglsts,7725c., 50m, â€.003 MONTREAL AND LIVERPOOL. lathe best Food for bottle-fed babies. It keepq them well. and is better than medicine when they am sick. ’ MANITOBA. THE MOST PALATABLE,‘ NUTRITIOUS. and ~ DIGESTIBLE FOOD. EASILY PREPARED. M . .1 Tm: BEST Arm M051 Ecoxonncï¬. F001). Iao Meals .for an Infant for $1.00; President Cleveland's Prize for the three best babies at the Aurora Count Fairatn 1887. we] clven to these trl lets, Mo lie I a and no; ‘ children of Mrs. A? K. Dart. linmhmgh. N. 3 She writes: “ LnstAugust the little ones became very sick. and as I could ct no other food that would agree with them. commenced the use of antated Food. It helped them immediately.' md they were soon as well as ever. and 1 con- ï¬dent very larEely due to the Food that they are now so we! " | Wine! pho!a. of these tri lets mtfree to the m. at any baby m this year MRS. DART’S TRIPLE 73.: A. G. WATSON, Manager, T030310 WILLA“ Tue! Dunno". Tonom. A ' xm rubn‘iuiic‘o'h I m :3 md 35 AdehISQ 83’ Lactated Food . . J. T A Y L O R, Toronto Safe Works. CALF SKINS â€"SAu.lso Wu“? Brrwnuâ€" . Send {or III. Catalog: . WM. l-‘NGLISII. PeleI-bol-o. om. Assam; WANTED â€"-" EAGLE: iMun Washer. Address (mo. ID. mums. 37 Church St. Toronto. Cuelman Bros“ Georgetown.0nl. For 83â€"111mm decoupfln On- done me. 8. Ohunborlin. Tomb OF THE BIBLEâ€"By Cnubl “a?!“ Protguly mum FlRBk. BURGLAR PROOF Pntent Non- Conduoting Doou _ _ _ AAV sgpcun'n. Evapy‘w'gmas in the VAULT 66633. MACHINES mum Toronto, Ont.