in «* i\ #@ By Laura Rose, Instructor in Dairying, 0, A.C., Guelph. I: is the things we are interested inâ€"the things we are familliar with â€"which we like to hear and talk about, and so we find a bit of newsy gossip relating to our next door neighbor far more exciting than the latest daring bank robbery in a disâ€" tant city. c on aghe oo Mr. P. 5. Dolar, e leading joDâ€" mauster in Englana, has been in Canâ€" ads for a coupie of weeks looking over bhorses bred in this country. Mr. Dollar is not a dealer in horses, that is, he does not buy them for _ sale again, but to let them out. In purâ€" suance of his business he has trayâ€" eled in many countries and was inâ€" duced to turn his attention to Canâ€" ada by Dr. Smith, Principal of the Ontario Veterinary College. While on a visit to the Toronto Exhibition he has bought sixteen horses of the driv. ing class. A few evenings ago Mr. Dollar gave the ben*fit of his experience to a number of gentlemen interested in horse breeding. Mr. Dollar said that the impression left with him after seeâ€" ing the show of horses at Toronto Exhibition was that Canadian carâ€" riage horses are as a rule rather slight in bore; if they could be bred a little stronger they would be more valuable from his point of view. He dii not know what improvement to suzgest. That must be left to Canâ€" adian experts. In England the premâ€" ium stallions selected annuaily and subsidized by the Government are doing a great deal of good, as a farâ€" mer can get the use of a real sound horse at a small fee. They are, he said, ousting the unsound animals that used to be patronized. No â€" stallion should be allowed to travel unless he the docking of horsos as the cuttng off of the hair, at least it rendered them uscless to him when this was done. *"Dock them if you will," Mr. Doliar exclaimed, "but leave the ha‘r on." Jobbed, or leased, horses, he exâ€" plained, are usod all over England, Seotland, Ireland and Walos, and quite threeâ€"quarters of all the large carâ€" gage horses that aroe in use in Lonâ€" don and its ne‘ghborhood are jobbed. Mr. Dolar sa‘d he was a practical vetâ€" erinary surgeon, and the {fact that he was a gold medallist attracted the atâ€" tention of the largest jotbâ€"master ‘n England, which eght and a; half years ago led to his taking u»p» the business! He would pay, a% high as a thousand dollars for a horse that su‘ted his business. He nrow ownsd 600 horses. He fourd that many of the horses shipped to England from Canada were angular, skewleggod or ‘{zlocked, but once or twice he came acrows a nmce horse, which fact led h‘m to come to Canada and choose for himsell. He was excoedingly satslied with his visft, and did not doubt that Canada eould produce in quantities »xactly the horse that he wanted. Ho sa‘d the once or tw.ce ne came across a .ce horse, which fact led h‘m to come to Canada and choose for himsell. He was excoedingly satslied with his visft, and did not doubt that Canada eould produce in quantities »exactly the horse that he wanted. Heo sa‘d the accommodation at Toronto !xh‘bition was equal to anything he had seen n (Great Britain except at Ball‘s Bridgo, in Dublin, and there the sitâ€" uation was not so good. He thought the purchaser should have the right to say as to docking. Cana®Wan horses needsd more bone, muscle and we‘ght, The (irst prizeâ€"winners at Toronto Exâ€" hit‘tion in the carriage class wore pounders. Their mit was six miles, ard what was wanted abroad was more lasting power and more strenzth behind. Canada had a great opportunâ€" ity if breeding was followed on the right lines, but the horses that were wanted abroad were thoss that would lastâ€"that would be as useful after their e‘ghth or ninth year. He repeatâ€" ed that Canadian horses were harâ€" der than those of the United States, but still Canadan breedors needed to pay more attention to bone and subâ€" stamnce, He wanted only geldings. Maras should be kept to breed from. To drive at cortain periods they were dangerous. [ | Â¥ LE I am going to say a little about bread, for it certainly is a very faâ€" miliar article of food, and one which everybody apparently likes, This beâ€" ing the fact every thrifty houseâ€" wife‘s aim shou‘d be to have upon her table the very best bread proâ€" curab‘e. But our ideas of the "best" may differ. I fear, as cooks, we study to please the eye more than the palate or stomâ€" ach, and therein have we greatly erred. ano qualld As lar as Food is taken that our bodies may be built up, and that energy, heat and nervous activity be mainâ€" tained, and whereas bread forms so large a portion of our diet, and is relied upon to such a great extent to supply the demands of the body, we shou‘d take special thought to the food vaive of the bread wo ceat, in connection with its digestibility. The appearance, odor and taste all help to increase its nutritive value, as they excite the flow of the digestive juices, and as a resu‘lt a larger quanâ€" tity is eaten and is better digested. Fresh bread, sour bread, underdone bread, heavy, soggy bread are acâ€" countable for much of the serious stomach trouble which is so rife in our country. _ io 7 a Much more thought and study are given to the care and feeding of the calves in the farmer‘s stable than to the rearing of the young at our own tables. Especially should care be exercisâ€" ed with regard to the kind _ of bread fed to infants and invalids. I have seen many a child eating a huge slice of fresh baker‘s bread â€"bread which, had I pressed toâ€" gether in my hand, would have beâ€" come nothing but a lump of dough. As I thought of the tax put upon the dear little child‘s frail stomach, Lately, in talking with a baker, the question of lightness in bread came up. He said the people thought by getting a largeâ€"sized my heart ached for the lack of knowledge the mothers of our land have. bet ho: 4 BR ® .A D in y | sto oxt ':Igll )0 horses. the horses inada were locked, but ross n imce to come to mself. He with his d iless he surgeon ds the â€" and 101 TO fis th #+ the the m .oui they were geiting more for their money, whereas he himself knew that a drier, closer, betterâ€" }baked loaf, would be vastly superâ€" ior, but he had to meet the demands | of the people and give them â€" what | they wanted. _ & Yeast consists of microscopic vegeâ€" table organismsâ€"tiny little plant:â€" wh ch under favorable conditions grow and multip‘y very rapidly. In their presene>: starch is converged into sugar and the sugar changed g alcoho! and carbon‘c acid gas. The gas is quite perceptible in the sponge and dough, but, aloug with the aleohol, passes off n the baking. Like other plants, yeast when subâ€" jocted to too great heat, will die, so when putting dry yeast cakes to soak care should be taken not _ to have the water hot, nor should the sponge or dough be kept over eighty degrees. This is a favorable temâ€" perature for the development of the yeast plant. Cold _ seriously _ reâ€" tards their growth and causes the bread to be "slow." I might just here give my formula for yeast which makes excellent bread; _ Peel â€" and grate raw, four medium sized poâ€" tatoes into a stone crock, add three tablespoons â€"of flour, two _ tableâ€" spoons of sugar and one tablespoon of. salt. Take a generous handful of fresh, loose hops, put in a granite ket tle, pour over one quart of _ cold water and let simmer for fifteen minutes. Strain the boiling hop water over the ingredients in the crock. Let cool to blood heat then stir in one fresh, dry yeast cake which has been soaking in a little lukewarm water. If made in the morning and kept warm, it will be ready for use by night. Next day put it into a selfâ€"sealer and place on the cellar floor. It will keep for several weeks. I make a rather stiff sponge at night, using a large cup of yeast for e‘ght small loaves. In the morning sift sufflicient flour into the bread tins, sprinkle over two large tableâ€" spoons of salt, pour over the sponge, mould into a stiff dough and knead thoroughly for fifteen minutes. This thorough kneading gives a nice, fine, white, closeâ€"grained bread. When the dough has risen twice its original bulk, form into small loaves. I would just like to say a word reâ€" warding "show" bread. I have taken special notice for a number of years of the exhibits in bread at our fairs, and in four cases out of five the loaves are too large. It is almost impossible to thoroughly bake to the centre a large loaf, and more especially so if two or three loaves are baked in the sime pan. If the yeast piants are not all killed during baking fermentation still goes on and the bread becomes our. We could hardly call it a balanced ration, but caten with meat, butter or cheese ali the esentilals are secured for the proper support of the body. Bread is commouly made {rom wheat flour. To obtain the best results much care should be exercised in the selecâ€" t‘ion of wheat from which the flour is to be manulaciured. Recent chemical investigation at the O. A. C. showed that flour made from some of the soiter varieties of wheat contained only from 5 to 6 per ceont. of giuten â€"the n‘trozencous, muClâ€"â€"pullding cle meut of the grainâ€"while that from the harder varlotios has as much as 11 per cent. gluten. The ligchtness, the dxestiliity and Manitoba wheat has such a preference over many of our homeâ€"grown varâ€" leties. Whle much importance may e attached to the flour, too much stress cannot be laid upon the yeast used to raiso the bread. Many fail in breadâ€" mak‘ng owing to their ignorance of maknmg owing to t the nature of yeast It is well to slightly prick the loaves with a sharp fork before putting them in the oven. This allows the gas to esâ€" cape, and you will not have large cavities under the top crust. The oven should be moderately warm. If too warm a thick crust immediately forms which acts as a nonâ€"conductor of heat and the reâ€" sult is an underdone centre and a burnt crust. If, on the other hand, the oven be too ccol the bread rises too much and often exhausts itsel! and sinks, giving a loaft with a very light top and a heavy streak near the bottom crust. Usually bread requires from an hour to an hour and a quarter to bake. When taken from the oven liftat once from the pans,and do not cover with a cloth, but lean it up against something so the air may circulate freely all around it. Havea covered tin to hold the bread. Scald it out every bake day andputitin the sun to dry and air, and it is a good plan to give it an airing in between bakâ€" ings. On nro account put clothes or paper, cakes, etc., in your bread tin. The great objection I have _ to baker‘s bread is that it must _ be eaten fresh. _ Homeâ€"made bread is at its best when three days old, and still quite good at the end of a week. Not so baker‘s bread; it seems to lose instead of develop flavor. _ A fact which may appeal to many is that, apars from the many qualitiee in favor of _ good homeâ€"made bread, about Oneâ€"third oi the bread bill can be saved . by baking at home. Lbrewdi to be rutritious should readily crumble in the mouth to enable it to mix freely with the saliva, which acts ou the starey, converting t lito sagat and prepar nz it for further ass milaâ€" t oun. Broad contaius a large porcout age of earbosaceous matter and :A muci emalier amount of proteids and I never use potatoes, shortening or sugar in making bread as I think a sweeter, finer flavored bread can be made without them. Miller‘s Worm Powders cure fits in children. This curious attempt at English was copied the other day from the label of a bottle of Kummel at Kitzubel : "This fine aromatical liquor of cumin being carefulist destillated by me from exquisite green cumin must be recommended at the best as an exâ€" cellent and savory hygienical midâ€" dle." ui he lightness, the d‘gestiliity and rition of the bread depend largely the amount and quality ol g‘luten ta ned in the flour. This is why iitoba wheat has such a proference r many of our homeâ€"zrown varâ€" As She is Spoke. sueceeded, but not without much difâ€" ‘culty, and among the provisions of this first company wore the followâ€" ing : A married man, not more than thirty years old, could be insured for £1,000, one not more than forty for £500, and one not more than sixty for £300. Sailors and peorsons travelling to distant countries would not be inâ€" sured, and sulcides, as well as those condemned to death, lost the benefits of their insurance. The company flourished during the Cirst year, bu?t soon afterward the directors learned to their cost that the expenditures were much in excess of the receipts, and consequently they raised the rate considerably. This did not help them much, however, and the result was that Parliament finally came to their relief by granting the company an annual subsidy of £3,000. From this time forward the company did a good business, and it was not long before similar _ companies were started throughout Europe, as well as ‘n this country. The System Was Not in Existence Till Three Centuries Ago. ‘The practice of insuring human lives I‘rst came into use two hundred years agoâ€"to be exact, on Oct. 6th, 1699 â€"and credit for being the first to give roal life to thse movement is due to Rev. Dr. William Assheton, of London. Or the date above ment‘oned the Inâ€" «urance Society for the Benefit of Widows and Orphans was incorporated in London, its statutes and byâ€"laws be‘ng framed in accordance with the v.ews set forth in a book, which was published in 1661, and which was enâ€" titled "Naturai and Political Investiâ€" gat‘ons in Regard to the Current Lists of Births and Deaths." There is more Catarrh in this secâ€" tion of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. _ For a great many years doctors pronounced it a lecal disease, and prescribed local remedies, _ and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it inâ€" curable. _ Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, _ and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall‘s Catarth Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken inâ€" ternally in doses from i0 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of _ the system. â€" They offer one hundred dolâ€" lars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. John Graunt, a wealthy Londoner, was the author of this book, and Assheton was so improssed when he read it that he at once took steps to form a life insurance company. â€" He OLLBRV ECMRTY TT NC EC 1 stance ; it smells“ of cloth, and cloth has a very peculiar odor. lron and tin have smells of their own, and I can toll a hardware store |immediately. 1 pass two book stalls nearly every day, and I scent them yards off by the old books. Then there are a great many ndescribable odors by which I know this place and that. Of course, my leet are my principal guide, and I‘ve been over the same ground so often that I‘ve learned every little inequalâ€" ty by heart, but I couldn‘t get along w.th either nose or feet alone. They work together, and where one fails tho other helps out. Between them they make very good eyes. The secret of my stepping out is this : I‘ve learned how to stop. People who can see hurl themselves forward lke locomoâ€" tives. That‘s why the shock is alâ€" ways so unexpectedly violent when you collide with another person. I put no extra power whatever in my movements, and if the toe of my boot touches some unknown object I stop stock still instantly." This clever blind man leads a very tranquil life. He has a small income, and lives with a granddaughter. A servant is hired especially to read to h‘m every afternoon. Many of them who know him are unaware of his blindness.â€"New Orleans â€" Timesâ€"Demoâ€" crat. uover Suspous M ME CC Talking yesterday with an inquisiâ€" tive reporter, he declared that he saw with his nose and feet, and this was the way he explained it : * When a man has his sight," he said, *‘ the smells of a street are all mixed up, ut when he‘s blind he learns to separate them. The smells of the shops are almost as plain to me now as the signs used to be over the doors. Some of them you would hardly suppose to exist. Take a dry goods store, for inâ€" " We were surely cheated on that carpet," she sa‘d, disgustedly. " It has shrunk until it is too small for the His Feet and His Nose Pilot d Through the Streets of a city. There is a blind man living in the heart of the old quarter who walks nearly every day to a little restaurant near Canai street. The distance each way is from sixteen to twenty blocks, according to his route, and to see him sauntering carelessly along one would never suspect his infirmity. Talking yesterday with an inquisiâ€" tive reporter, he declared that he saw with his nose and feet, and this was the way he explained it : * When a man has his sight," he said, *‘ the smells of a street are all mixed up, w sw is x2 1. icumea +m The August record of deaths from contagious diseases in Ontario shows Minard‘s Liniment is used by Physicians, Your approval is our ambition 7 you like. Capt. Freystactter, who showed such courage as a proâ€"Dreyfus witâ€" nesse at Rennoes, has been promoted commandant in a marine regiment. a greater mortality from typhoid fever than for any month during the previous four years. This is attributed to the low water in the wells and streams consequent upon the long drouth. The number _ of deaths was 54. In August, 1896, there were 45 deaths from typhoid fever; in 1897, 22 deaths, and last year 34 deaths. The total number of deaths from all causes was 2,069. Consumption claimed 171 victims, scarlet fever 8, diphtheria _ 24, measles 5 and whooping cough 15. " Well, that‘s easily remedied," he reâ€" plied. "We‘ll get a smaller flat." BOSTON LAUNDRY STARCH We are sure you will if you give it a trial for it is a beautiful starch, The discovery of what is true and the practice of that which is good are the two most important objects of philosophy.â€"Voltaire. Sold by druggists, 75c. Hall‘s Family Pills are the best. Address, F. J. Cheney & Co., To GUIDE POSTS OF A BLIND MAN. ORIGIN OF LIFE INSURANCE. Mortality From Typhoid. Easily Reminded TORONTO People who hburl stones at cars consider themselves the behind the thrown.â€"Cleveland er. Men who celebrate their good forâ€" tune generally find out that it was bad. Pills my hopes were all in vain, and my torture night and day unbearable. No one could imagine the sufferings 1 endured ; night and day my pains kept It gives a beautiful, hard finish, and the cost per shirt is less than one cent. _Most men think their permit . to mzllrry is a license to preach to their wives. BOSTON LAUNDEY STARCH is Lk. ach c t Bcduin â€"4 1 helftrastarcondntensns Aiver‘s.Ae. sn 0 w ts 1 me in misery. It seemed as if there was nelither relief nor eure. " When I began us‘ng Dodd‘s Kidney Pills I had lost faith in all medieines. But from the first one of these heavenâ€" sent Dodd‘s Kidney Pilis, I expericne»d reliel. Every sueceeding dose hastened my complete cure. "I have used in all five boxes and am thoroughly curedâ€"a _ strong, healthy, hearty, vigorous man, whoreâ€" as before I started to use your Dodd‘s Kidney Pills I was a constant and miserable sufferer. I eannot find word to express my entire confidence in Dodd‘s Kidney Pills." A whole family suffering. A dull achâ€" ing of nerve or muscle, or the acuter pangs of neuralgia, toothache or lumâ€" bago, makes life a misery. But Nerviâ€" lineâ€"nerveâ€"pain cureâ€"will relieve all these. Nerviline is powerful, penetratâ€" ing, and effectual. Is the only upâ€"toâ€"date starch on the market for Cuffs, Collars, Shirts and Ladies‘ Blouses. Nothing finer made. Concern‘ng their virtue for Lumbago and Diabetes, Mr. John Blow, No. 67 Princess street, Toronto, says: " I have been a great sufferer with Diaâ€" betes and Lumbago for years. Every remedy I eould hear of was given a fair tria! in hopes it would help me. But until I began to use Dodd‘s Kidney Under the Belgian law _ unmarried men over 25 have one vote, married men and widowers with families have two votes, and priests and other perâ€" sons of education have three votes. Severe penalties are imposed on those who fail to vote. To be strong you must have good appetite, good digestion and good asâ€" "imilation. _ Miller‘s Compound Iron Pills bring all these. "The hippopotamus." answered the little girl, "is a very beautiful aniâ€" mal, but is not useful. It is raised onâ€" see, it‘s for my little dog Fido," she said, "and I must have it exâ€" act," and she swept out of the store. â€"Detroit Free Press. "Describe the hippopotamus," said the teacher. Miller‘s Worm Powders make the children healthy. " Broadminded as Wilkins usually is, he certainly has very narrow views on one or two subjects." "I want to soe some blankets," said a lady as she walked into a dry goods store on Woodward aveâ€" nue. _ She was directed to the de:â€" partment where they were kept. Then she took from her purse a small wisp of hair tied with a blue silk ribbon. ly in cireuses." There are two great promoters of social happinessâ€"cheerful people and people who have some reticence. The latter are more secure benefits to soâ€" ciety than the former. They are the nonâ€"conductors of all the heats and animosities around them.â€"Heips. " He doesn‘t always agree with you, then ?" ie shat n nila wl n on apr is y o ob enc ty / Dodd‘s Kiduey Pills have been found to be the only med‘cine that will cure Bright‘s Disease, the only cure for Diaâ€" betes, the only radcal cure for Rheuâ€" matism, Lumbago, Se‘atica, etc., and equally efficacious for Heart Disease, Dropsy, Paralysis, Bladder and Urinâ€" ary Troubles, _ Women‘s Weakness, Blood Disorders and any other form, of Kidney Disease. _ s e The clerk took her over all the blankets in stock, but, unfortunateâ€" ly, none would match the lock of hair. _ So the lady said she would have to go somewhere else. " You Not every housekeeper knows that the best way to keep cheese in good condition is to put it in the refrigerâ€" ator. This method prevents it from getting soft ard cily in summer and from getting hard and dry in the winâ€" ter. Wrap the cheese in a clean cloth and again in brown paper and lay it on the ice. Cheese preserved in this way does uot become moldy. Keep Minard‘s T.iniment in the House. It is reported that a Kingston firm has cornered the canned corn market by buying up at least threeâ€"quarters of the output in Canada. "I want to get a pair of small blankets to match that," she qaid, holding up the little lock of hair. Miller‘s Compound Iron Pills, only 25 cents for 50 doses. One of a Thousand Such Come to Light in the Queen City. Mr. John Blow, 67 Princess St.. Toronto, Uured of Lumbago and Diabetesâ€" An Interesting Letterâ€"High Praise For Doad‘s, Kidney Pills. Toronto, Oct, 2.â€"This city is one of the finest in Canada, and among the healthiest on the contnent of Amerâ€" ica, but like everywhere else it has its victims of kiduey disease, Nevertheâ€" less it is safe to say, however, that these cases are seventyâ€"five per celat. less common now than ten years ago, and but few of those that do exist are anything like so severe as formerly, This is.due wholly and solely to the popular use of Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. BOSTON LAUNDRY STARCH BElegance and Economy is what you get by using A CITY CASE Up in Natural History. Two Kinds of Peoples. To Preserve Cheese Voters in Belgium, An Important Detail. Man in Distress. Sizing Him Up. Debated Facts street power Leadâ€" Her Meaning. " Now, what on earth did she mean by telling him she dearly loved rainy days? SBurely she didn‘t want him to think her sentimental." "Oh! no. She knows well enough that sentiment is out of date. She wanted him to get the idea her hair curled naturally." The boest goes Farthost. That‘s what you will get by using BOSTON LAUNDRY STARCH Ask for Minard‘s and take uo other While travelling by stage coach in the Transvaal last summer I hearda discussion upon a recently deceased South African bishop. "He meant well, no doubt," remarked an _ ofâ€" ficer of the Bechuanaland Mounted Po‘lice, who happened to be a fellowâ€" traveller, "but, unfortunately, he generally contrived to do what should have been the right thing at the wrong time. The best he did was the prayer he taught our men to say when we were out in thelast campaign. It was: "O, Lord, when I forget Thee, remember me."â€"Notes and Queries. Spiders are a serious plague in Japan. They spin their webs on the telegmph wires, and are so numerous as to eause a serious loss of insulation. Sweeping the wires does little good, as the spiders begin all over again. Ladies! If you would be l;t,romz and healthy, and have good complexions take Miller‘s Compound Iron Pills. v“'?orï¬'é;;,"' she said, "I have to use it as much as any one, and I am so short that I can bard‘y reach it." | Minard s Liniment the Lumberman‘s Frend Aug., 1893. Messrs. C. C. Richards & Co. Gentlemen,â€"I fell from the bridge leading fTrom a platform to a loadâ€" ed car while assisting my men in unâ€" loading a load of grain,. . The bridge wont down as well as the load on my back, and ! struck on the ends of the sleepers, causing a serious in jury to my leg. Only for its being vyery fieshy, would have broken it. In an hour could not walk a step. Comâ€" men®ed using Minard‘s Liniment, and the third day went to Montreal on business and got about well by the use of a cane. â€"In ten days wasnearâ€" ty well. I can sincerely recommend it as the best Liniment that I know of in use. Yours truly, w‘v‘f)‘h,‘;v;'l.l._ nii:s’a,"w said the humorist in charge of the work, "you can raise your vyolce, can‘t you {"â€"Boston Transâ€" "Do you have any rag time down bere ?" asked the man with the guiâ€" The other day a little stenographer | .'. in a downtown office in Boston begâ€" | «»â€" ged â€" some workmen _ who were | &A putting up a new telephone not to | SRP place it so high on the wall as they | was were doing. f .‘ "It‘s always rag time down here," replied the hardâ€"time citizen, with a lugubrious sigh, "nothing but rags, hardly any patches." _vut rates . is the somewhat inâ€" congruous sign d]splg_yed» by a five cent barber up in Kensington as it goes farther and does hetâ€" ter work than any other starch sold. Miller‘s Grip Powders Cure Stanstead â€" Junction, P. Q. A Short Prayer for Soldiers Plague of Spiders in Japan One on the Stenographer. C. H. Gordon [ 3 _ . 4 . " _ C OO TTRY C1r00t from us and #ove the deaier‘s profil. « .. Johnston & YeFariene, Box B TZTumato, Ont 12th FOKG® write and we send Doylies l Bell M"n.:nn m&ey.m mail your watch free. Unsold Doylies our fullâ€"sized Linen Doylies at 10 cents each. . Fine Boy‘s Watch for selling 2 doz. Latest and ï¬vme-t designs ; soll at sight. No Money Required. Simply FREE! Cereal Coffee Health Drink, Pure, Wholesome Nourshing. 15c ib., or 2 ibs, for 2%¢. ROKCO is equal to 40c coffec. â€"For Sale by all Grocersâ€" or send 10c for tlb 1pm:lmae to the Rokeo Mfg Co., 154 Queen E., Toronto. Agents wanted every locality. . A 1 National Paper Cutter, 25 inches, good as new. Price $50.00, a bargain. which protects it from impurities bound to ariso from the frequent handling of the nnked loaf. Branches and agencies i cities and townsin Canada, THE E. B. EDDY CO., Progressive Bakers FEDDY‘S Kingston ~citizens have subscrihe $12,500 to bmild a summer hote!, LINEN DOYLEY CO. pert. Toronto Write for samples of wrappers and prices to Mrs. Winsiow‘s Boothing is a Neves dling remedy, It not only .Zm';. the child There is a great knack in «sing the tpe*4 _ =scafally «*‘ BREAD FOR SALE WRAPPERS ADDRESS « HERALD," Put up their BREAD « it leaves the oven in~}> m% Lady‘s W x: nufng $ doz. of for} turaurep. LE MANUFACTURERs, Hull, Canada. 7nole syetem. It will almos xrlph:ml.n the stomach avr hers, % fail to nrocure â€" agencies in all the principa Dundalk, Ont ves the child stomach and ves tone and Washing course Dr, for the proj the gospel is Psalms _A body & divinely col not to abus potencéeâ€"it stery of t the work « giving pow Almighty; | ment shall great Ni found his eonstructi voting his Bo wond: God nam different scienceâ€"I sick sub; chlo peo} .I“l constr the h« instru: the J in his or AI til pa gi he n W h n it is Â¥ jud sys coa log wwit prov mak t h« is An i consicd at nigl OL£ or to n 18 the w to tak wh con $ H h WI M W HQO fo th