It is estimatel tint 25,000 ople have 9!}ng paged their summer olidays in The Rocky Mountain locust has made its appearance in large numberein Beaver Riv- er settlement, forty miles from Saskatoon, .N.“'.'l'., and has eaten up the crops. The Cmada Atlantic Railway Company is about to iutloduw a syubem of elouu‘iu lighting on theil curs. A couple of Frenchmen engaged in a duel at Montreal on Saturday. As the pistols Were loadel with blank cartridges nobody was hurt. _A ï¬r; the other day damaged the proper» ty of the Mantrml Warehuuaing Company («0 the extent. of $150 000. Premier Slercier has refused to accept the apology tendered by Le Mantle newspaper, and the libel suit will be proceeded with in September. Lieut. Gordon’s re ort of the Hudson Bay exploratory oxpe itiou has just been issued. Some valuabloiuformation is given in regard to whaling on the bay. Muakdkas- this season. The “eputment of Agriculture. Ottawa. has issued regulations to give effect to the vote of last session of Parliament of $10,000 in aid of agricultural societies in the North “’est Territories. Bush ï¬res are still raging in the vicinity of St. Thomas. In Michigan forest ï¬res are doing an immense amount of damage, and the village of Smdusky has been partially burned. Destructive bush ï¬res are raging on the Indian reservation near Caledonia, between three and four miles square being in flames. It is reported that. several Indians have been burned to death. The Department of Fisheries has received advices that three Canadian vessels, the Grace, Dolphin and W. 1’. Saywardn, have been seized by a. United States cruiser in Behring' a Sea. and taken to Sitka. Arrangements will be made for the utili- zation of the immence water power at Sault Ste. Marie on the completion of the proposed canal at that place. It is expected that work on the canal will be commenced be- fore the winter sets in. The existence has been made known of an organized gang of rutlims in Quebec who make it a. practice to attack defenceless wo- men. One of their number has been arrest~ ed charged with brutally assaulting a. little girl at Montmorency Falls. The losses by ï¬re in the United S‘ates and Canada. in July last amounted to 314,- 026,500, as against $10,000,000 in July, 1886. The total loss for the ï¬rst. seven months of 1887 was $76,918,110, against 363‘900,000 for the corresponding period of 1886. _‘ The agents of the Marine Department feel aggrieved at the Government’s action in changing; the system of paying accounts which have been in vogue since the begin- ning of Confederation, regarding it as a. re- flection on the honesty of the service. The Minister of Militia. and Sir Fred Mid- dleton will start for British Columbia. early in September for the purpose of inspecting the site of the proposed Imperial defences of Esquimalt. The earthworks will be built at the expense of Canada, while England will supply the armament. AM EKICAN. Diphtheria is reported to be spreading alarmingly in Cleveland, Ohio. Bush ï¬res are raging over an extensive area in Michigan, and unless rain soon comes there will be a. repetition of the for- est ï¬res of ï¬ve years ago. A cable despatch states that Mooney, who attempted to blow up the steamer Queen at New York the other day, is asserted, by the London olice, to have been concerned in various ynamite plots and to have caused the explosion of the Glasgow gas works in 188‘). The strike of the em m£loyes of the Mid. land railway,‘ m Englan l8 collapsing. The Sultan of Morocco has defeated the tribes around Fedla, and has entered the t)wn of Rabat. Mr. Chamberlain will stump Ulster in October, speaking at Belfast, Colemine and Londonderry. ‘oThe wheat crop of France is good, the es- timated yield being 100,000,000 hectolitres, against 105.000.000 in 1886. Baron Billin , late French Ambassador to Sweden, while visiting friends in Alsace, was expelled from the province. The German Crown Prince has started for Scotland, where he will occupy the residence placed at his disposal by the Queen. A farmer named (lusty was shot and mor- tally wounded near Ennis, Ireland, on Sun- day. The crime was of an agrarian charac- ter. A letter has been forwarded to Lord Salisbury, signed by 300 members of Parlia- ment, in favour of the Canadian Paciï¬c mail contract. The late Alfred Krupp donated $250,000 for the beneï¬t. of his em loyea, to which his son added $125,000 for t 9 people of Essen. Parties of Russians are traversing the country around Badakatan and are making strong endeavors to gain the good will of the inhabitants. " Owin to the rumour that he had been misonm, a careful humps) was made of M. Katkoff, which revealed the fact that he died of cancer of the stomach. It is stated that the tumour is appearing again in Crown Prince Frederick William 3 throat, and that it is probable another oper- ation will be requisite. Sir Henry Drummond Wolff, who failed in his mission to the Sultan regarding the Egyptian question, is to be given the em- bassy at Rome. In the British House of Commons Sir James Fergusson stated that England had never acquiesced in the presence of the French troops in the New Hebrides. and that the Government would not consent that their withdrawal should be postponed untilan agreement had been arrived at re- specting the neutralization of the Suez Ca- na . The Vienns Fremdenblalt, reiorrin to the departure of Prince Ferdinand for gin! garia, says that he goes without the aancli )n of the powora and his action is merely the enterprise of 3 Bulgarian adventurer. THE WEEK'S NEWS. FOREIG 2" . HUM E. There in in Atlanta. says the Comtilulion, the man who weighed, for the ï¬rst time, the largest diamond ever found in Africa. His name is J. l). Calden. lie was a mem- ber of the London party of explorers that went out to South Africa in 1870, bent upon discovering diamonds and gold. And they did. The largest diamond held in the world was their reward. This diamond ï¬eld in lo- cated on and near the river Voll, which in the dividing line between the Transvaal re. public and the Orange Free State. Kay~ wood’e Hope is the name of the place. There are two kinds of digginge there, the river digging: and the dry diggings. At the river diggings the process of ï¬nding dia- monds is akin to that of mining for gold on the plan employed in North Georgia, in the dry digging: the dirt that is mined is work- ed through many sitters, at ï¬rst coarse. but gradually ï¬ner and ï¬ner. Kimbley is the name of the mining town. In 1871, when ‘the diamond fever was atits weight, Kimbiey wasa canvas city of 90,00J souls. Imagine a. great sea of tents, in which the miners and diggers found a temporary home. It had the appearance at a distance as if an immense flock of white feathered birds covered the ground for lhe spaceof many notes. Great hotels, made of canvas movud from day to day as the exigencies of the situation demanded, givnug a sleeping place at night to the then. sends upon thousands of miners. Every roof in the town in 1870 was of canvas. The mining tield extends over eighteen acres, divided oif into claims thirty-one feet square. At ï¬rst these claims were sold to the miners at ten shillings each, and were taxed an additional ten shillings per month. After the revolution the govern- ment reorganized the letting of claims, and the Kimbley Mining Board decided that they were worth from twenty-ï¬ve pounds to sixty pounds sterning. according to the value of the ï¬nd, and were taxed also to support the Kimbley governrnent. 1,, 4L, The government of Kimbley. under the control of England, consists of a governor, a judge, a superintendent of police, three magistrates, policemen and other oflicers necessary to the execution of the law. There is no regiment stationed at Kimbley, though at the time the people revolted on account of the excessive taxation English soldiers were stationed there until all had become quiet. _ The population of Kimbley consists of representatives from,every nation on earth. The sturdy Englishman is there in perhaps the greatest number, closely pressed by the enterprising American. There are French- men, Irishmen, Spaniards, Germans, Turks, Danes, Jews, Italians, Zulus, and people from the feur quarters of the glqbe. " Tihérï¬relds or‘miues are worl‘i'ed by natives or “niggera,†who are paid ten shillings per week and found. Theye are_ from eight~ t9 ten “ mggers†to a claim, who are witched closely by an oyeraeer. Notwithstanding the strictest espionage, the “ Diggers†man- age to secrete and steal diamonds. .-L .n 1 c,Of course, there are many illicit diamond buyers, who encourage the “ Diggers†in these thefts, and who buy from them all the diamonds they can steal. A strong feeling exists against the illicit buyers. The evil grew to such monstrous proportions that vigilance committees were iormed to teach illicit buyers a. lesson or two about honesty. Traps were laid for them. Trusty negroes were furnished with diamonds, and made to act as decoys for the illicit buyers. \Vhen one was found, the vigilantes burned his house, gave him ï¬fty lashes upon his bare back in the public place of Kimbley, and made him leave the diggings. As has been stated, the "niggers†would despite the closest scrutiny, manageto secrete diamonds. The Atwell brothers, who worked a claim at Kimbley, saw a miner swallow a ï¬ne stone one day. They immediamiy seized him and cut him open, regaining the diamond} $.01:- r0f cou‘r'se they were arrested and tried for murder. Judge Barry was on the bench, the jury was composed of miners, who had no sympathy with “niggers,†and .yvere especially hard thefts. Notwithstandnig the judge’s efforts to have justice done the Atwell brothers were acquitted. The judge earcastically thanked the Jury for their impartial action nnd ex reused the hope that when they came to e tried at the great assize in heaven they would ï¬nd as excellent a tribunal to mete out justice to them. “ I had {he honor of weighin the largest dimond ever found at the Kimb ey diggings, and the largest one in the world so far. It was found on the claim of Robert Spaulding, an Englishman. Spauldiug did not work the claim himself. It was worked by a Frenchman named Antoine \Villiame, on shares, who found the diamond. I weighed it and placed a value upon it. ‘ u nnn . u ,7 But the public sentiment at Kimbley ap- pr9zssl. the. vardist- -" ‘I , c r i‘What is the largest diamond ever found at Kimblpy. . ... .. - “The stone has never been out- yet, nor has it ever been polished, but its value is in~ disputable, and it has since then changed hands many times. The Frenchman who found it received $15,000 for his share. Spaulding, the owner of the diamond, sold it to J. B. Robinson, a diamond merchant who carried it to England. The stone was afterwards resold, and it is now in the French market and is the property of a French company. †A_ “VIE Qveigbed 288 emits and wa 1 at $60,000 1 a va ued _ "V‘ï¬wihat his How the yield of the Kimbley mines ?" , â€As in all mining communities, most of it is spent in dissipation. Kimbloy is ï¬lled with drum and liquor shops, music halls, theatres, Opals-pigs, gainlgling (lens, ï¬nd “ For the three years from 1871 to 1874 the aggregate value of the ï¬nds at Kimbley were eight million pounds or fr rty million dollars. Now the yield is from one to two million dollars per year. There is no diminution in the value of the ï¬nds; on the contrary, the deeper the diggers go the more numerous the diamonds, and they improve in quality and luster the renter distance they are from the surface 0‘ the earth. . III 7 “Whit becomes of the money of the minors ?'f qugriegi t_ho repor_ter. every conceivable form of dissi ation. Min- ers, as you know, are prover in! for their recklessness, and they [Iterallv waste their money in these places." an I e "‘The city is full of merchants who are al- ways ready to take diamonds ofl‘ the miners hands. The prices paid are generally fair, for they are valued by impartial experts who am [will for their york.†172i Haw 30:13 a part of their enninga LIFE IN THE mums» FIELDS. home to Wivea and families and relations, some buy other claims, and add to their wealth in this manner. Some build good houses, and the city is now fast becoming a well-built, substantial place ; but the majo~ rity of the miners live rapidly and quickly spend all they can get.†Succeuslul In Two Desperate (uses In a New York (‘lly llonplml. The case of Thomas McNamara, the glass engraver who was taken to Chambers Street Heapiml eufl‘ering from eunstroke, where he was cured by the old-fashioned method of bleeding, has excited considerable discussion among medical men, for the reason that in few cases in is now the style to bleed a pa- tient, common as bleeding used to be. Mr. McNamara. isa large, fleshy mau. Ho was overcome by the heat at about 6.20 o‘clock on the evening of July 14, at the South Ferry. When he got to the hospital he was apparently in the convulsions of death. His temperature was 108.8 °. From his color and general symptoms Dr. Lute Wedexiud, who was in charge, decided to bleed him. Six ounces of blood, about as black as ink when it ï¬rst began to run, the surgeons say, were drawn. The eflecb was INSTAN TA NEOUSLY BENEFICIAL. The convulsions ceased, the temperature fell, and there was a. marked improvement in every way. By the advice of the consult- ing surgeon 81X ounces more were drawn. The patient soon recovered consciousness, and in a few days he was discharged cured. There were symptoms indicating that he might have meningitis, but the disease did not develop. Another case of the same kind was treated in the same way. John McGinness, 35 years old, a grocer, was the patient. His case was not so serious as that of Mr. McNamara. though very serious. When he got to the hospital he was in convulsions, and his tem- perature was 107. He got there at 3 o’clock, and was taken in hand by Dr. Wedekind, who drew twelve ounces of blood. By 4 o’clock the man was conscious and able to tell who he was. Yesterday he was taken hogie in a carriage. The reason for resorting to bleeding in these cases, as explained by the surgeon, is that the heat of the patient's body had af- fected the blood so much as seriously to im- pede the circulation. It is as if the blood had been thickened with some substance. By drawing oï¬â€˜tWelve ounces the tension on the veins is reduced so that the blood that remains can ï¬nd its way to the lungs and be puriï¬ed. Only exceptional cases are treated by bleedingâ€"[New York Sun. The crops on Manitoulin Island and the North Shore are reported not to have been so good for many years. The wheat crop of France is good, the es- timated yield being 100,000,000 hectoliures against 105,000,000 in 1886. The Rocky Mountain locust has made its appearance in large numbers in Beaver River settlement, forty miles from Saska- toon, N. \V. ’1‘., and has eaten up the crops. Russian harvest reports are satisfactory, the crop is especially 3 in Bessarabia. and Podolia, doubtful in ’clhyuia, 'Minsk and Moheeley, owing to excessive rain, fair in the Province bordering on the Sea. of Azov and the River Don, and especially ï¬ne in Charkofl' and l’oltana. Reports indicate that the corn crop has materially suffered throughout the \Vestern States from long continued drought. Local rains have fallen in many localities since our reports hax e reached 113, but it is question- able whether the damage to the corn crop can be repaired even by general rains. The crop in m ~my parts of the West is in a. la- mentable condition. \Visconsin, Michigan, Iowa, Missouri. Ohio. Minnesota and De- kote have suffered less than the other States. BLEEDING Fl"! SUNSTROKE. “ In a rude sta 6, over the rough moun- tain road from orth Yakima to Ellen- burg, in February last, I and a lot of others were traveling. lhe snow was very deep and it was pretty cold. \Ve had got within about a mile of Ellensbu.°‘, which is the in- itial trading point in the Kittitas valley, when we saw at the roadside, next to a low marsh, a monster wild animal suspended partly to a bent willow tree, the other part resting on the ground. , The skin had been freshly taken oll‘, Lack of Romance. “ There is, after all, a deplorable lack of romance in this progressive age of ours.†said a gentleman in a jewellery store. “ In days gone by the betrothal ring was consid- ered as a sort of love token, and the maiden who received it were it and dated upon it because of the s irit in which it was given. Now, howwe ', t 10y are very particular, and it is no unusual thing for them to come here with their en agement rin s and have set- tings changed or some at war little matter that doesn’t suit them corrected. Now, that sort of thing is calculated to knock romance higher than a kite.†“ Men, boys, and even women were standing in groups. discussing something eagerly. Down the princrpal street was a. bigger crowd advancing toward us, headed by two little boys dragging something over thesnow. these boys, mark .you, was only nine, and the other youn er. They had gone out hunting along t 6 river and in the swamp for jack rabbits. They had killed several and at length coming out to the roadside, were apialled to see the lion standing there loo ing at them and preparing b hie threatening gestures to come forwar and attack him. Without a second’s hesitation Johnny Singleton, who carried the only un, let fly a charge of shot at him.‘ He I it ï¬im plump in the head, then he let 0 the other barrel, and killed him deader t an a nit right there in his tracks.†" It. proved to be the hide of our big wild animalâ€"a genuine California lion-â€" and what do you suppose it measured ? Nine feet from _tip to up. The oldest of Should adorn the brow of the inventor of the great corn cure, Putnam’s Painless Corn Extractm'. It works quickly never makes a sore spot, and is just the thing you want. 829 that you get Putnam’s Painless Corn Extractor, the sure, safe and painless cure for corn. _ .' A Youthful Lion Killer. The Victor‘s Crown THE CROPS. M . STAUNTON 8L 00-, Samples on application. TORONTO. ONT DiPlomas awarded in Collegiate course, commerv cial science, Penmanship, Munic, Fine Arts and hlo~ cution. Lunge classes prepared yculv [or matricula- tion in Arms. Law, Medicine and Theology. HO" "1 AIM}. L4H“, alculclllc uuu Luvvlvay. [Flu ’50. out of 6 candidates for Second-Class Tea-hers“ Certificates 4 were successful. Record equlllygood in ctherdepnnmrms. Fullterm eglus Tuesday. Sep. 6, '87. Send for circulars. Address h. wan. Aunsruosu. I ermmoloun. Specialty. Skin dluawu. Scrotum and all diu- euelo! the blood. All cancers cured that, an: cur. - able. without. the use I t the knile. Ufllce hours, lrom 9 to )2 am. and Item 1:30 w «l 30 pan. Sabbath: ax- gomul. '18 Imumu Strwl. Toronto. W an nggr Erysipelas 01 two 'enrs' standing; “0M. Iomell, ‘24 South St. laughter cured of Ev- eptic Fits after six earu'suï¬ering : Jen- Aie Birrell, 55 Walnut is., cured of Weak- naus anu Lung Trouble ; Junn Wood, 95 Cathcart St. cured of Liv_er_C_omp)ai_nt aqd Eiliguauess, used only I! A _._‘....L_ at uulLu u... “v... ..- _..-._ 3 ï¬fty-cent bottlzs; Mrs. J , Beal, 6 Augusta Sh, troubled for years with Nervous Prostration, two »mall bottles gave her great relief. Sold at 500. 8: 81. F. F. DA LLEY C0,. Proprietors. STOCKMEN, give this valuable prea ’ ‘ ’ , paration a. fair trial. It Operates , ‘ ‘ 3 -' romptlyand cflectuallylndeetroyinï¬ â€™ ' v 9 cks and otherveminpests, aswo. _ “m. ‘. s». as in eradicating all affections of the . ~ ' 'akln to which Sheep are subject. Sold in Two at 35c., 700. and 81. A 350. Tin will clean 20 Sheep 01'35 Lambs. HUGH MILLER 66 00., Toronto. PeerlessOil FARMERS 1 mm W Sodium 'mn. .u nu-vâ€"--â€". All classes ofï¬newuk. Show!“ NINE HOLEMEDAIS “£321:ewa'aï¬ag'g"ï¬or;::*mzm mmozssflm Mu'wiw n QUEEN CITY OIL WORKS by SAMUEL ROGERS 00.. TORONTO. FOR BUTTER. ETC. Ew lmportations.-Higgins' Eureka. Washing- , ton and Ashton Brandu, in large or small sauks. lsoj‘dce’s Canadian 83".. Wrip {pfyrjgem Diplomas awarded in» Eqi}eg_iatt}“Coug-sq, Coqnpgrv The E. 8: élflGurheyGoJI-d) GURNEY FURNAGES “mutt-Cal“... â€mutual-um... “-ww L D. SAWYER 00., Hamilton. on “ L. D. S.†ENGINES, A mo. mu AID SHAW BURHEBS, run up mono]. “Grain Saver" and f‘ Peerless " cur-“Aron... MILLER’S TICK DESIHOYEB. LIN-281‘ ('ibLLllGlï¬. IthLtJILLI-l, 031‘. i (Shattered 1557. Over 4, 00 Students enrolled. i men for I!“ now meshing n on“. Send I one. for a truth. gm! - Free Bonlo ol my Infnlllble re dy. 01v. Ilpnu and P0" 01!â€. n cout- you nothing for I kill. 1nd I wflllcugolon. Addreu DB. 3.2.. 8021‘, . MH-fluuw Branch 011106. 31 Yonge 81., Tdruntu m I an can 1 do not mun merely to flop (bun for a “mo and than luv. mam nzurn nxnln. I mun . natal can. I luv. undo the dim-e or FITS, EPILEPSY or PAL]: mo SlOKNBS. “(o-long study. I wnmnt my round, lo cut. the want cues. Became others h-vo lulled II v0 “non for I!“ 310w rmghiqg n gun. Bend Alone. £0! a i E FITS! “magnum A. gas, 83 ADIL‘IDO IT. I.. TORONTO. _-. , ,h a. .-__II MANUFACTURERS. Wholesale Prodlice Merchants. Torontn. Recent Testimonial to USE ONIYOUR MACHINERY ONLY THE WELL-KNOWN mmmom. Tonomo. uomnmnï¬m wmmrm. REV. W. P. DYER. M.A., Principal. HUBBtH SIAMP ‘ “5‘33. cils and Burning Brands, ac. bend iorLulalogm DAMN" IL BROS. CU. ., 37 Scum St" '1‘ «onto ’ HE Greatest. Du- covery of the Jresent age (or Raou- uAnxu nu: Bownm, mo Cumso all “won. Lwnnnndexnx‘Cow :Jnums. A Perfect flood Puriï¬er. A few m Hamilton who have reen beneï¬ted by its $0: Mrs. M. Keenan. .2 Robert’sm pun-ed M. \[OGREGOR, PASTOR. J. H. FFRGUSON, (Magnum .TIIOMSON, CHAIRMAN 13’ n ’0 Con J. FARNSWORTH, B'Hm Ixsrzcron. Send for Catalogue. To W. E. CONN, Tilsonburg, Ont. : Drum. Simâ€"This is to certify the: the two Gurney-Harris No. 15 \Vood Furnaces, laced by you in our Avondele Presb terlan C uroh, have iven complete satisfaction. We hove found It possible to heal: our building, from freeI-' ing point. up to 60 dog. in two hours. We have also found them to be very economical in the matter of fuel. We can cheerfully recommend these furnaces to any parties who contemplate heating by Hot Air. fPATENT Sï¬ï¬‚fléï¬â€˜ï¬ï¬‚ï¬iï¬ï¬‚mï¬aï¬mï¬iï¬ P tent Attorneys. and expert» in Patent. Cum hub- ï¬shed 1867. [Donald 1’. Illdout a (1).. Tout“. The largest and most lfromwrousl o n Amman Association in the war! desires so in re manh- tiws in every section of Cnnadt. Libs induct- manta. It has lull Goxernmant deposit, snd undu the supervision 0! insurance De Manama“ n on“. Correspondence solicited. SILVER PLATED WARES. CH 91‘s n}: nunuTm' twin; r (our (“fluent pow dun-blue. white, “allow and the French liq uid stampingior huh, when and silk, minuteiy dewtib ed in um, alum by mail (or 40 (“W l‘ 31'")- MAN ‘IERUH. 4) King St. [an t. Toronto. Butterick'o p: uterus and hooks aiwmu on hand. Toronto Silver Plato Go, TheMutualReserveFund LIFE ASSOCIATION. ALL 0001’s GUARANTEED. T0 BO N TO. Royal . Dandelion Coï¬â€˜ee. A Deiicious and nourishing Bruktast Beverage. ocu~ tninu a pro )rtion 01 German Dandelion Root, which vats medic-ï¬nally on the Liver and Stomach, gumyigs the blood and invigorating the system. reps only by ELLIS KEIGHLEY, TORONTO. (Signed), Allan Lina Royal ML Spaamsmm Sailing during wxnter from Portland eve Thule- day and Hallie: every Saturday to Human and in summer from Quebec every Saturday to Liverpool. oalllnnnt Londonderry to land malls and anew lor Brotland and Ireland; also from Bal more VII Halifax and su John's, mm. to leerpool mum, during summer months. The steamers ol IheGlal zow nee sail durl 5: winter to and from Ham“. Portland, Boston an Philadelphia ' and durl enm- mer between 0 w and Montreal weekly ' Show and Boston week y. and Glasgow and Phllad fortnightly. For lrelght, or other lnlormatlon a N A. Schumacher a 3', Baltlmore' B. Ounarfm. Halllnx- Shea a 00., St. John's, N. .; Wm. nonp- eon a (’30., St. John, N.B.; AllanbOo.,Ohloago Love 8: Alden, New York; I]. Baurller, Town.†Allnnr, BaebOo†Quebeo' Wm. Brookle, Phlladel- phle: H. A. Allen Pnrtlond’ Rmrnn Vnnh'anl. BABY'S" BIRTHDAY; ASSESSM ENT SYSTEM ll‘lfl.’l‘l0\8 FOB B'I‘ARIFI\l-‘ _A\II Ili- DB '1‘ A SLOCUII, Branch Ofloo. 37 Yonge St, Toronto l have a punitive remedy for ï¬lm than discus ; bv mu. Ihounndl olcuel or the wont kind In: oflonx landing Mu been cured. Indeed so Itmnx I: my {mun II. My, nut 1 VIP! send The BOTTLE FREE, tent“ with I VALUABLB TREATISE on this dual“ to 0-, Motor. 0|" “mg-03m! P. 0. nddrcu. GUNSUMPTIUN. MANUFACTURRRs 01’ Till lllOllIST GRAD] 0' TRADE 5bi§déï¬Ã©Ã©sblicite¢ Address, J. D. WEI-Ins, Genertl Mm A Beautiful Imported Birthday Can! some to any baby whose mother will send ustho names of two or more other babies. and than parents addresses Also 3 handsome Dm- mend e Sample Card 0.0 the mother M muchv unblelntormeuon. Wells. Blcbudlon J; C... Monti-ed. _ â€-1- n Il~~ Genenl Minna. 65 King Street East. Toronto. MARK.