5;: z ‘ t: an! his lifeS ? ~45» '~ 3 moreover, abtc 1†~- times as much as ‘ $85â€: matrix; a. g 21 .~ {‘thv amel’s speed is equ .] an 9 his life mu ~11 longer He 3. moreover, able to carry three times as much as one horse Satisfaction means “that which satisï¬es. †Use “Salada†Tea. and 5'0“ will appreciate t_his deï¬nition 501d by all grocers in sealed lead 0801's splendid opporgnnitioa for stock raising, fruit growing, daxryin and moral farming- Winters m nhort. C man eutth and “3 “mug below its mine. but increï¬ming Aidno’cb each ear. Man Canadians are living 1:â€; rite {Ox-i omutionto W. KOINER, A Commission: of Agatha: Vs mon The Mild Climate of Virginia According to Lord Avebury, the moét important things in the World are ‘good air, good water. 'ad food, good health, and a. good con- science; and they are not costly. ‘vWaiter (who has just served up ‘some soup)â€"â€"“Looks uncommonly like rain, sir.†Dinerâ€"“Yes, by Jove! and tastes like it too. Bring me some thick soup.†packeté only: Holloway/"s Corn Cure destroys dlj‘vkinds of cows and warts. root aï¬d‘branch. Who, then would en- dure'them with such a. cheap and eï¬ectual remedy within reach? a: In 51 Yard‘Rbll’. The famous "Tb: not.“ Ionthol Plaster: w_hi ch cure lumbago ‘ m “063% hem-alga '3. etc. are also pa for saichns mtmily use. as Burme- Co., ‘ antral The frog has, like the camel, the power of storing up moisture, which enables it to pass through times of drought which would otherwise prove fatal Much distress and sickness in children is caused by worms. Mo- ther Graves’ Worm Exterminator gives relief by removing the cause. Give it a trial and be convinced. A medicine that W111 keep children well is a greet hOOn to every mo- ‘ther. This 15 Just what Baby’s 'Own Tablets do.- An occasional dose keeps the little stomach and bowels right, and Prevents sickness. During the hvt Weather months stomach troubles speedily turn to fatal diarrhoea 0y.cholera infan- tum and if a _mechc1_ne like Babl’s Spanking does not cure children of bedâ€"wetting. There is a. constiâ€" tutional cause for this trouble, Mrs. M. Summers, Box 100, Wind- sor, Ont, will Send free to any mother her successful home treat- 'ment, with full instructions. Send no money, but write her to-day if your children trouble you in this way. Don’t blame the child, the chances are it can’t help it. This txeatment also cures adults and aged people troubled with mini diï¬culties by day or night. I -â€"- sou: BY â€"â€" masts, csocsas ma swarm smnss 10°- 90? packet, or 3 packets for 25¢. I .will Inst n whole season. The victim struggles and whirls about the line. thus attracting its family and neighbors to swallow the same snare. The ï¬sherman grasps a. small lino weighed at the other end with a small stone, and at regular distanc- es along the line he attaches a. num- ber of hooks made of animals’ bones iqth ,form of a. narrow V, while to th - angle of each V is fastened a Shun line made of sin- ews end baited with a. kind of snail; the ï¬sh, swallowing the bait and like “no. swallows also the hook, which is so act-‘d upon by the ten- SEOn of the line as to expand its two prongs and fasten them ï¬rmly in the throat. FLY more 1 PADS «m to clear out the stomach and how'- .e'ls and keep them well. Don’t wait until the child is sickâ€"the de- lay may cost a precxous littie‘ life. Get the Tablets now and you may feel reasonably safe. Every mo- ther who uses these Tablets praises them and that IS the best evidence that there is no other medicine for children so good. And the mother has the guarantee of a government analyst that the Tablets eOntain no opiate or harmful drug. Dea- lers sell the Tablets at 25 cents a box or you can get them by mail from The Dr. Williams’ Medicine (30., Broekville, Qnt. Give the Children a Chance Simple Contrivance With Which Natives Make Good Catches. Natives of Nigeria are remarkab- ly skilful anglers, and their manner of catching ï¬sh recommends itself alike for simplicity and success. Own Tablet§ ig not at hand Tue child may (11/: .m a few hours. The wise mother ml] always keep a box 05 Tablets in the hOuse and give them to her yhxldren gecasionally flea'anz free as application. Write; LIE-BIG (30., Phoebe St, Toronto. HOT WEATHER AILMENTS NIGERIA. FISHING TACKLE. WILSON'S MOTHERS I RI, Epilepsy, St. Vï¬m' Danée fervous Troubles, Eta, pomtivelyl ‘....._---- ‘_ -_ __._ >.LLINGJ.$!§§€NESSE , 1......13.’ wow; Troubles, UEBIG’S HT C RC. 399 shoot. of «Icky pipe" “cg-y packet will kill more flicotban 1' Scarcely less important to a. fleet ‘rin time of war than ammunition is ‘Codl. Every modern warship is de- signed to develop enormous engine power and to travel through the water at tremendous speed. .3 ed the greater the speed the greater the consumption of coal. It is for this reason that in time of peace vessels are very rarely driven at their full speed. A ship like the Dreadnought, with its huge dis- placement and its engines working at their full 23,000 h.p., would lit~ orally eat coal by the hundred tons; and this remark a. plies with even greater force to t e new cruiser- battleships of the Invincible class, whose turbines are designed to de- velop no less {533; 41,990 13.322359“. driven at to speed'.~.A éoal bill "oi at least $2 $00,000 or £ao.ooo,oo'o might safely be looked for when the cumuuu sterung and probably a great deal more. Still. accepting £10,000.000 as the amount to be spent under this head. the cost of the campaign has now been brought vp to. approximately. £24.000,000. THEN THERE IS COAL. It will be seen, therefore. that the money this country would have to provide for ammunition and guns for its fleets in a year’s ï¬ght- ing would amount to a very large sumâ€"certainly not less than £10.- CC0,000 sterling and 7 probably a Sis built to stand a tremendous \amount of battering before it be- lcomes a total wreck, but one well- directed shot from a 12 inch or a 10 inch gun is calculated to send a torpedo-destroyer immediately to the bottom of the sea. Still, only allowing 10 per 'cent. again of the initial cost of these vessels as the amount of damage that would be done to them in a. war of twelve months‘ duration. we have another £1,500,000 to add to our little bill. ANOTHER IMPORTANT ITEM to be taken into consideration is that of ammunition. It has been calculated that a 12 inch gun with a Service charge costs over £200 every time it is ï¬red, and when it is remembered that the Dread- nought and her sister vessels each carry ten of these guns it will be seen that a very considerable for- tune would be blown away in the course of a day’s ï¬ghting. These ships, it may be explained, are all so constructed that the whole of their ten great guns can be brought to bear on either side of the vessel, so that one single broadside would cost £2,000.» Another item that would prove an expensive one during a. year’s war is the renewal of the guns of our fleets. It was proved gduring both the Cuban and the Russo- Jap- anese Wars that the modern high explosives with which the shells are charged are very destructive to the interior of the barrels. and it was found that Admiral Togo had a]- most to completely re-arm his fleet before he had been at sea. more than six months. . It was estimated that in a. single day the Russian fleet at Port Ar- thur, shortly after the commence- ment of the war with Japan, ï¬red away ammunition to the value of at least £100,000 sterling, and this without doing the slightest appre- ciable damage to the Japanese fleet. A- modern battleship of the Dreadnought or Lord Nelson class The four principal British fleets in commission in time of peace are the Mediterranean, Atlantic, Chanâ€" nel, and Home fleets. Together these are composed of thirty-eight battleships and forty-six cruisers of varying age and gun power. Every modern battleship may be taken,« in. round ï¬gures, as having cost at least £2,000,000 before she is in a ï¬t condition to hoist her flag, while a. cruiser may be set down as rep- resenting £1,000, 000 hard cash. These are inside ï¬gures, as the of- ï¬cial returns of the cost of various vessels in the Nevy will amply de- monstrate. Thus the value of our four principal fleets amounts to the enormous total of £122,000,000 ster- ling. or, roughly speaking, one- sixth of the National Debt. So far, it must be remembered, attention has only been paid to bat- tleships and cruisers; but there is a. third class of vessels that would play a. Very important part in any man; 1 “at in \Vhich this country 's in‘:‘.0l\ed This class contains the torpedo boats and torpedo destroyâ€" ers. Attached to the four fleets just mentioned are about 150 of these “mosquito’ craft, each one of which has cost at the WM least £100, 000 to construct, ora 'Vtotal of £15 000, - 000. The danger of damage to these craft is inï¬nitely more than it is ‘u. the larger ships of war, as the work they have to perform is the most hazardous of all; while their chance of being repaired, once they are put out of action, is correspond- ingly less. In a. year’s campaign the damage done to these ships, whatever their fortunes, may be taken as at least ten per cent. of their original cost. This, again, is a very conservative estimate. so that we must be pre- pared for a. loss of at least £12,- OO0,000 upon our ships alone, and the cost (If A YEAR’S N.;VAL WARFARE to this country for damage done to its ships alone Would be more than the entire revenue of a. good many States. War Would Cost Great Britain $10,000,000 a Week for the Command of the Sea. '~ There is no nation in the world whose prosperity is so intimately bound up in its Navy as is the case with Great Britain, so that under these circumstances it is of peculiar irterest to inquire what would be the cost to this country should it ever be involved in a. naval war with a. ï¬rstâ€"class Power, says Lon- don Tit-Bits. IN THE EVENT OF WAR THERE WOULD SURELY BE GREAT NAVAL LOSSES. v-- ..-v Elable strength " Bf the ani' easier Dumlevâ€""I rend in the ï¬nancial papers this morning that ‘nmney is easier’ now. V‘v'hat on earth does that mean ’2†Poplcyâ€"“T’robably it means that it goes easier: At any rate. I don’t ï¬nd that it comes Na l\lczolml in It.â€"~Alcohol or any other volatile matter which would impair sfrencth hv evapora- firm does not in any Shane (‘Vll’el‘ into f‘m munnFMhIrr‘ of Dr. Tho- mas’ Er-lovtrir‘ Oil. Nor do clima- tiré nhnlnomg M‘Fr-r-l' '79 If is as scr- vlnenh'n 1"» H“ M‘Pt‘ï¬r‘ ("role as :n tho ’T‘nvm'd 7mm» nerbnnï¬ more useful in the hisr'nnr lntiimr‘“. Where man is mow cnlw'nr't ’m colds from nvnnsuro to the elomnnts. M Hm arm of 40 3.1mm rots bnsv "hr? 100155 for snml‘ of H10 monev .m throw :1an at the age of 21. In 1820, ninety-six million eggs were imported into Great- Britain. while in 1906 the number had grown to nearly 2,265 millions. An African woman. to be consid- ered beautiful, must have small eyeï¬â€˜ thick ling. a largr flat nose, and an intensely black skin. They Wake the Torpid Energies. â€"Machinery not properly super- vised and left to run itself. very soon shows fault in its working. It is the same with the digestive or- gans. Unregulated from time to time thcv are likely to become tor- pid and throw the whole system out of gear. Parmelee’ 8 Vegetable Pills were made to meet such cases. They restore to the full the flag- (rug faculties, and bring into or- der all parts of the mechanism. â€Death from lead-poisoning,†is the polite term used by Colorado juries to specify a. gamblcr’s fate vn a. sheeting affray. If our neighbors would only piaise our virbucs once in a. while we might be Willing to overlook their faults. In china, the property of the fa- ther must be divided equally among all his children. The American investors are pur- chasing heavily. Our reports from the Lardcr Lake Gold ï¬elds are highly encouraging the permanence“ of the Camp is stated to be. assured and the extent of the gold-bearing belt if conï¬rmed will make this camp the greatest geld ï¬eld in the world. Why not. Cobalt is now In its partially developed state. the greatest Silver Campâ€"and they are only a short distance apart. A. J. Pattison 00., Toronto, state that the recent failure of A. U. Brown Co., of New York will not. affect Canadian investors, as their business was carried on in Canada through Canadian brokers, and if the ï¬rm do not pay in full the brokers will be the losers. The New York market has been active and prices advanced beyond any immediate warrantâ€"with recent re- cessions. However, every one knows that Wall Street anticipates events, and there is certainly marked improvement in trade conâ€" ditions, which promises to not ‘only increase, but to be permanent. The well-established dividend paying stocks are undoubtedly a safe in- vestment and at present prices will pay a good rate of interest. They will sell higher after the Presiden- tial electionâ€"if not before. In the Toronto market the advance in Mexican Power which we recom- mended to our clients at 50 to 75 and San Paulo to 150 are the fea- tures. The buying at these prices is probably foreign. The English and French investor are more. favâ€" orable to South and Central Amâ€" erican investments than the Cana- dian. The settlement of Dominion Coal-Steel differences will not now be long postponed. and we look for a substantial advance in the price of this stock. The mining market has been ex- ceedinglv active. large numbers of shares changing hands. Prices have advanced slightly. but dividend payers are still selling under their market value from the standard of earning. There are a thousand and one other expenses, direct and indirect, that would have to be provided for when preparing for a great war at sea. New ships, for instance, would have at once to be laid down in every available dockyard in the kingdom to replace those sunk or otherwise rendered useless. There would also be the wages of 'the of- ï¬cers and crews, their food and maintenance, hospital charges, and pensions for the crippled and for those permanently disabled, so that it may safely be said that a naval war would cost this country at the very least £2,000,000 sterling every week that it lasted. Under these circumstances it will be well un- derstood that those in 'charge of the affairs of the Empire are pre- pared to strain every nerve and to exhaust every resource of diploâ€" macy before they ï¬nally prepare to fling down the gage of battle. British Navy took the seas to ï¬ght for the mtegrity of the Empire, so that the bill now grows to from $342,000,000 to $59,000,000. ISSUE NO. 36â€"08. WEEKLYâ€"LETTER. These, according to Dr. John Tatham’ s 1'eport to the Re gistrar- General on the mortality 11] certain cccupations during the th1ee years £10m 1900 me the calling which of- fer the best prospect of lonanvhy. At the 0th?†â€y: .. MI +I1A cnnTn r-nmn Report of the British Registrar- Geucral. If you would enjoy a. long life you should become a, minister (of any religious denomination), or failing that a gardener, a game- keepgr, a farmer or a railway en- gine driver, says the London Daily Chronicle. At the our: :7;qu or the 505115 0011‘“) me eneral 1abo1er, the tin miner, the awker and the. hotel servant, and about midway are _th(_e phy_sici- ccnist. _ As compared thh lawyers Dr. QUICKLY THE DOCTORS DIE. cal to 621 Traders Sank tuildlng, Torcnko, Heâ€"“I shall speak to your father to~night. How bad I better begin ’3†Sheâ€"“By calling his attention to the statutes governing assault, manslaughter, and murder. Papa is so impulsive. you know.†Orders oxgcutod with promptuoss. Corros~ pondoncu sohcited. Stocks, Bcnr'a, Dobanturas and Real Estate. cabaft and an Mining and Oil stocks 0! Canada and United States. A. n. BECKERSTMF a: w, ORANGE MEA'. DAY, and state tcring the conbe worth trying for. send them in to ORANGE MEAT, Kingston. The bottom of a Jumbo package counts equal to Three of the smaller size. You should be able to win one of the above prizes if you start immediately and get’ your friends to help you. Send your name and address to ORANGE MEAT, Kingston, 7T0- DAY, and state that you are en- tering the contest. It; is surely Ten Cash Prizes of TEN DOL- LARS each. ORANGE In the summer, when so many thousands d1ink from tempting springs in the \goods and on the hillsides, a Winning lecently given 11;, Mons. E. \ Martel, the cele- brated French explorer of caverns, should not be unnoticed. Contrary to a, widely prevalent opinion, Monsieur Martel says that springs of apparently pure water are, in many cases, merely the outflow of surface- waters which have disap- peared thiough ï¬ssures, earning with them pollution from the soil, and not puriï¬ed in their passage through the rocks. He thinks that even chalk is not an effectual ï¬lter for surface-water passing through it. The only condition attached is that you cut out the bottoms of the of SEVEN HUNDRED DOLLARS. Besides the above there is a- sec- ond Cash Prize of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS, also other Cash Prizes as follows :â€" DOLLARS each. DOLLARS each, and ONE HUN- DRED Cash Prizes of ONE DOL- LAR each. A Life Annuity of FIFTY-TWO DOLLARS is offered by the ORANGE MEAT people to the one sending in the largest. number of bottoms of ORANGE MEAT pack- ages before May 31 1909. This means that the winner will receive One Dollar EVERY WEEK, or FIFTY-TWO DOLLARS every year, as long as he or she lives, or they can exchange it for :3 CASH _PRI_ZE A CONTEST WORTH ENTERING. Mrs. S. J. Kountz, 1015 Fcovel street, Nashville, Tenn. writ \s: “I have had a. very bad ( ugh nearly all mv life. and I am fox-L fne \cars old. I have taken 2‘.- most Cwery kind of cough medici: e that has cv r been made, but none did me much good. I would have spells of coughing that I thought I “ould cough Imself to death. I tuok Pcnma. and last winter and this winter I haxe had no cough, and I know that [’01 mm cured me.†“I know Pcruna will do just what you say it does. I cannot praise Peruna too highly, as it has done SJ much {or me. I hope my letter will reach other sufferers.†‘U‘I have no trouble with that now. The noise in my head has all dis- appggred. _ ISS SUSIE M. KINGS- WORTH, 466 Quebec St., London, Ontario, writes: “I began using Peruna. last Jan- uary, when I had such a. bad cold, and I could not; get anything to help me. “My nose and head .wcre all stopped up, so that I could hardly get my breath. I thought at times that I would smother, espec‘ally at night: CATARRH 0F HEAD Twenty Cash Prize: of FIVE Ten Cash Prizes of TWENTY Wlu'cb Pe-ru-na Relieved in a Short Tz'mt. the undertakér and theâ€" tébac- DANGER FROM SPRINGS. MEATA _ packagqs g and _ \Vife (to husband. who is worry- mg over a heavy bill)-â€"-“Jack, dear, it is unkind of you to let an insig- niï¬cant thing like that upset you just after we are married." Huh- by-“ch, it does seem insigniï¬- I†cant when one thinks of that. One of the mam' (hi ngs :1 conqeit- gm youth is 1111:1111 c to understand in how any so 11511110 {121111119 can pass him up for some other chap. In the treatment of summer comâ€" plaints, the meet eï¬'ective remedy that can be used in Dr. J. D. Kel- log’s Dysentery Cordial. It is a standard preparation. and many people empkn‘ it is preference to other preparations. It is a highly concentrated medicine and its seda- tive and curative qualities are be- yond question. IL has been a pn-r pular medicine for manv yours and thousands can attest iLs superinr qualities in overcnming dysentery and kindred complaints. Coal-Deaiér (coolly)â€"*“Woll, what could you have more economical than that?†Gentleman (indicnantly) â€" “Vnu praised vour kitchen coal up to the skies. and said it w as most economi- cal. W by. it “on t burn at all!" ‘Do not give up In despair, on who surfer. Prom obstinate disï¬gurement: oft 6 skin. Annuity: zhe sores 0:3 with Weaver'u Cemtc and punfy zhe bloc with Weaver's Syrup. All druggism It’ ts all right for a man to be a dreamer of dzcams proxiding he wakes up occasionally and gets busy. noon them. It will be noticed in the Singer Sewing Machine Company’s adver- tisement that there are three ad- dzesses at the bottom of the an- nouncement. Any one writing will please address them at- the nearest one of the three places to his post ofï¬ce. Sure Regulatin-s.â€"â€"Man<_lrake and Dandelion are knewn to exert a. powerful influence on the liver and kidneys, restoring them to health- ful action, inducing a. regular flow of the secretions and imparting to the organs complete power to perâ€" form, their functions. These valu- able ingredients enter into the com- pcsition of Parmclee’s Vegetable Pills, and serve to render them the agreeable and salutary medicine they are. There are few pills so effective as they in their action. “This watch will last a. life-time,†said the jeweller as he handed the watch to the customer. “Non- sense!†retortod the other; “can’t- 1 see for myself that its hours are numberetM†It is rather curious that actors, authors and journalists have no place in these tables. even in the index. Even numericnlh they must be almost gs impnrtant as, sav costermongers \\ igmakors and clcllimney sweeps, “ho are all includ- e . Some men start what they preach, get out of practice. In the case of a married woman this cause would appear to operate even more strongly, the deceased woman being desr'ribod simply as a wife or widow, with mention of her husband’s occupation, but without mention of her own. For the ï¬rst time in these returns the question of the mortality among women workers is dealt with ex- haustively, though it is a. matter full of difï¬culty. For instance, the case of a. domestic servant, the daughter of a bricklayer who has returned home permanently inva- lided, is given. She is thencefor- ward regarded as unoccupied, and in the event of death will be regis- tered as a b1‘if‘l;lay€1"s(laughtm‘, no mention being made of her pre- vious occupa’rfrm. In the previous supplement it was remarked that there was no other occupation in which the ravages of cancer approached that among chimney sweeps It is still note- worthy that although the mortality from that disease has fallen by nearly one- fourth part, chimney sweeps are still subject to the big h~ est fatality from this disease, gal- though among several other occupa- tions, such as servants in London, brewers, furriers, general laborers and seainen, the meimlit) does not fall far short of that of chimney sweeps. It is a subject which as Dr. Tatham points out, descnes further attention. ‘Do 1303. glye imam despair, vou who suffer. ,,A1;L‘,J»l.. A..." an A sign of the times is given in the particulars relating to commercial travelers. They fall victims to al- coholism in greater proportion than do all occupied and retired males by 38 per cent, while their mor- tality from liver disease is more than double that standard. But the mortality from alcoholism. gout, liver disease, accident and suicide was considerably less in the last period than in 1880â€"82. Tatham records, medical men die more rapldly at every stage of life, while as compared with the clergy their mortality is enormously in ex- cess. Tuberculosis, phthisis and dis- eases of the respiratory organs are the only causes of death that are substantially less fatal to medical men than to males in the aggregate. Diseases of the nerves and circula- tory systems contribute the largest Ishare to the mortality of medical men, due‘, no doubt, to their anxi- cus and ardgous occupation. C h evw i 11 Tobacco. fl guarantees thehigh quality of Mack Waï¬m The Binglack Pi Men should look for this out to practice but they soon “hm. â€(lithe £811 33mm me Beli mum and 0H gtewart Lackwamï¬ :8 The path to success is paved wi'h gmd mtentlons that were carried out. COBALT STOZKS 50 CENTS. ALL DRUGGISTS, OR The Pango Company, Toronto RUSH! Wanless 86 Co. have a continental reputation for good Jewellery. ’l‘heir entire stock is to be sold by Oct 1. To do this prices have been greatly reduced. Attend this sale when at Toronto Exhibition, and see cure some of the bargains. GOOD WATCHES ARE GOING VERY GHEAPLY WANLESS CO, LYMAN BROS. (30., Toronto CLARKSON. Toronto; {i It is a mistaken idea that sewing machines are pretty much alike, when as a matte; of fact there is a vast difference. :1 There is but one machine that sews better than any otherâ€"and that one is the Singer.‘ 9] This is because the Singer idea is dis- tinctiveâ€"every year shows improvement in that idea. I} This is~because the Singer factories are not only equipped with tools and machinery better calculated to make good sewing ma- chines than any other, but this equipment is unique and not to be found elsewhere. (3 This is because a half century has been devoted to training and specializing men, each to do one thing best in sewing machine construction. The Singer’s superiority-â€" its lifetime-lasting valueâ€"does not appear, on the surface. a One machine does sew better than any otherâ€"and that one is the Singer. Bonds and Stocks Bpught and Sold on an ail Exchanges A.J. PATTISON :5: C0., 168 YONGE ST., TORONTO Correspondents â€" Chas. Head 5: 00.. rumba-s New York and Boston Stock Exchanges. 33-35 SCOTT ST., TORONTO. The Difference in Sewing Machines K111 00.411, GEM 9L“ AND IS USED THE WORLD OVER l3 GARADA’S BEST Bell Organs are also world famed Send for Free? Catalog No. 75m JEWELLERY I Phnue Main 7466. 4.3 Excmxus PLACE NEW YORK CITY. Memhc's uf Standard \bock and Mining Exchange, 18 Adtlaide E.. ' Toronto. JEWELLERQ, ESTABLISHED 1840 GREAT BARGAINS W HOLISALE [to and Montreal; LYMAN KNOX lo; NATIONAL DBL‘G CO.. London. For Heuraigia, Headache, Rheumatism, Pain, Etc. how much In ' he could an by using g Fairbanks-Mop} man-races Gamline bin-i gins to saw wood. ump water, grind (wed, m. we would not be ab 0 to supply :ha demand. Cut, this ad. opt 51nd sandy/o n3 t-n-day, and we , ,.. the Canadian Fm: 09., Liming. Toronto, 03‘ Momma}; Winnipeg, Vancouver. Every Farmeri ' *"rr'a '- Cu: :1: 5 id. ogit aha Send to us till so you cu: {m catalogue. Name Knew BRETSSH AMERICAN DYEING GO. Céï¬ï¬FI. Bond WWI! 1:, you. and we are sure to with and Czeninx. TM: [3 a menu: with the Address. m In ta. mammal. [SALE