t4, | & The Things Which Make Qottectiors Pay Big Prices for Them. *‘‘While the knowledge is fairly general that many old coins comâ€" mund bigh premiums," said a coin Realer the ocher day, "still there are very few who understand why cerâ€" taun coins are worth more than others," saye the New "York ‘Times. "‘"The great majofity; of people wrongly think that the value of a coin aucpends upon its age, the reâ€" sult being that every coin coming into their possession more than lifiy years old is careduily laiq away for some futuro time, when there may) be a demand for it. The principal reaâ€" son {for a large premium on a ‘coin ts its scarcity. The date has nothâ€" Ing whatevrer to do with it. There are plenty of Raman coins thouâ€" sands of years old, in good cong‘â€" tion, which can be bought for 23 vonts, wirle a New Jersey cent isâ€" sued in the latter part of the Revoâ€" Iution, will bring $700. It is due to the Inct that thare ave nnbes s§uk s *or a worn or 1 ter how searc instance, is a word, whet y thing, while o worth fully $ wourse, other creased val:a these is ilust ence of a w coin enllector And r e th any f them. patient to finish his collection of territorial gold coinsâ€"thai is, coins mado ty m‘ning compan‘~s and priâ€" vate firms in the west Huring the years immeodiately foll~wing@ the gold «liscarer} _ in Californiaâ€"agrertisg~q 11 outside the limits of Canada. In his remarks in presenting the annual report the Pregident, Hon. gGeorge A. Cox, stated that the amâ€" ount of the lossos of the "British America" by the recent conflagraâ€" tion at Baltimors had been ascers tained to be somewhat under $210,â€" 000 (tho original figures paublished Immediately after the firey, which amoust he pointed out represented about ten per cent. of the annual fire premium income of the comâ€" pany. These losses are being prompily settled, and it will be graâ€" tifying to Canadians to know that in the casse of this company, as well as in that of the "Western," these being the only two Toronto fire inâ€" gurasce omnxxmig‘o having agencies in Raltimore, the losses resulting from this exceptional disaster, will be met without seriously affecting their finâ€" ancial etanding. tion, which can be bought for 25 Fonts, wirle a New Jersey cent isâ€" sued in the latter part of the Revoâ€" lution, will bring $700. It is due to the facl that there are only: eight 1804 dollars in existence that those lTayor v financia the in but in outside ingurance companies of Great Rritâ€" ain and the United States, its preâ€" mium income having reached last year the large sum of $2,373,336.47. This is derived chicfly from agenâ€" ciles establisned throughout Canada and tho United States, though some of its inscomo comes from business beyond the boundaries of this conâ€" tinent. As will be seen by a referâ€" enco to the figures published in the report of yesterday‘s meetisg, the year 1908 showed very favoralble results and bears evidence of the favor with which Ontario‘@s oldest financial institution is rocarded by the insuring public, not only at home, but in its wider field of operations Beventicth Annual Meeting â€" Began in * Family Compact * Days. Prominent among the older of the Caradian _ financial corporations stamds the BDritish America Assurâ€" ance Company, of Tthis city, which commencedi business in the days when the affaire of this Province were conâ€" ducted by the old "family compact." Jt was organized in 1833, and had its Governor, Deputy Governor and Court of Directors, which offices were fillâ€" «1 by men whose names are promâ€" inent in the history of those stirâ€" ricg times in the Canadian political world.. The seventieth annual meetâ€" ing of the shareholiders was held yesâ€" tarday and the report presented sabows that the company has not only been of late years modernized by having a Poard of Directors, a Preâ€" @dent and Viceâ€"President substituted for the more stately titles of itsearly years, but that it has been keeping pace with the growth and prosperâ€" ity of the country. In regard to volume of business it compares fayâ€" orably with many of the leading fire ingursnco companies of Great RBritâ€" ain and the United States, its preâ€" mium income having reached last year the large sum of $2,3723,336.47. * Crosses Mountain RKange at Altitude Never Before Attained. One * the most interesting trips ‘afllorded by the present transportaâ€" tion facilities of Peru is that over | the Oroyo railroad, which now runs (from Callao to the gold fields of :Cerro de Pasco. It is considered one ol the wonders in the Peruvian workd | and the original contract was taken eby Mr. Meiggs at $27,600,00) in ‘bonds at 77. It is certainly the greatest feat of railroad engineering in either hemisphere, and as a speciâ€" men of American enterprise and workmanship it suffers nothing by comparison. It was begun in 18370 and Tinighed in 1876, and additional | work bas sinco been done on it. Comâ€" ‘ mencing in Callao, it ascends the narâ€" ‘row valley of the Rimac, rsing nearly 5,000 feet in the first fortyâ€"six miles. Thence it goes through the intriâ€" Cate gorges ol the Sierras till it tunâ€" nels the Andes at an altitude of 15,â€" 645 feet, the highest point in ithe wioSld where a pston rod is moved by steam. The wonder is doubled on reâ€" membering that the elevation is reached in seventyâ€"eight miles. One of the most remarkable things in conâ€" nectihon with this road is that beâ€" tween the coast and summit there is not an inch of down grade. The difâ€" ficulties encountered in its construcâ€" tiom were extremeâ€"landslides, faliing boulders, soroche (or the difficuity of breatning in high altitudes), and verâ€" rugas, a disease known only along the lin=e of this road, characterized by a epecies of waris breaking out alt over the body and bleeding. About 8,000 workmen were engaged at one time, and between 7000 and 3,000 persons died or were killed in the construction of the road. y 4 "The n PERU AHAS HiGH RAILWAY. VALUE OF OLD corns. on BRILFISH AMERICA. is a 17M ich will bring lle one in go« Uy $300. T ther â€" reason alita of a co Mustrated b a wealthw â€" e one c xt th € vorth from §$1 o. Fhere are, of t reasons for the inâ€" a of a coin, and one of strated by the experiâ€" wealthy Mnssachusct ts : _ ‘Th‘s collâ€"ctor, imâ€" in importance to om $1,200 up to oses to pay for ‘Thore of Canada. 1 presenting the Pregident, â€" Hon. e1 that the amâ€" Thus, while the habitat of the polar bear girdles the world in the arctic regions, it is narrowed even in that zone by the food supply. Nansen found 10 form of life north of the cighty. fourth paralle!; It is only the unforâ€" {nunate animals â€" which unwittinaly sot sail on drift ica that get south o" the regions adapted for their home. â€"New York San. south coast of Icreland, where the warmer waters of the Atlantis imâ€" press him as urfarorable for comâ€" fort, but be is found in tno mnorth coast. Captain Syerdrup did not find the bear on any of the islands which he discovered north of the Parry archipeiago or in the neighboring waters, doubtless for the reason ithat the favorite fod of tho bear is scarce in that region. or takes to the nearest water. Mr. Baldwin wrote from â€" Franz Josef Land that in nine cases out of ten Eunting the polar bear was about as much sport as shooting the faimily cow, but the mother bear will fight hard for her cubs, and if she gets striking distance of her foe he has little chance to escaps. With modern guns there is often danger of overâ€" confidence. We may imagine that the conCitions under which the animals sightel by the Hanover were .cuna were beginâ€" ning to be a little uncom{ortaple. There may have been an occasional touch of mildness in t] they did not enjoy. We in vain for the white ated." # "Indeed? But last year you showed us another room for that story." "So we did; but that room is now being repaired." of these huts, but retreated when the soltary ismate, a woman, pishâ€" eda wisn of blazing hay in his face. The womana might have fared badly if it had not been for a hunter, who slot the animai as ho was tryiug o scratch a hole through the wall on the other side of the hut. Arctic Nimrods regard ie white bear as ad indifforent sport, because it usually scampers away over the ice fields at the sight of an enemy or takes to the nearest water. Mr. Baldwin wrote from Franz Josef cerce that these immigrants on one occasion driited arouad Cape Fareâ€" well to the western coast of Greenâ€" lazd, where thoy were shot. The aniâ€" mal is nrow very scarce in Danish Greeznland, and in the best of seasons only forty to fiity are killed there, and most of them are.pilgrims from the rorth brought down ow the floatâ€" in glloe from Molviile Bay or Smith Sound. I1 spite of the reputation of these animals for timidity the travelers among thein are likely to be impertiâ€" reat. A bear somg years ago invaded the entrance to a Eskimo winter hut but was unfortunately slain by the badly frightened inmates. On another oceasion a bear thrust his head through the mombrane which serves the purpose of window glass in one of these huts, but retreated when the soltary ismate, a woman, pishâ€" eda wisn of blazing hay in his face. Un‘less appearances were deceptive it is evident that these involuntary wanderers were making an unusually loag journey to the south and were bound for swift destruction by drownâ€" ing They had probably cot suffered for food, as the; Greenland and Lab rador waters through which they kad passed abound with seal, but they were finslly in a region where bear food is scarce and icchergs rapidly disappear. There is no doubt that some of these animals perish by being carried out to sear on ico floes. The bear lthat lived for twentyâ€"thres years in the zoologicai gardens of London, and whose death some years ago brought griec! to many youthful admirers, was captured whon young on a floatâ€" ing piece of floe ice south of Bpitzâ€" bergen. From {five to twenty bears or rare occasions have been #een on the drifting floe near this archipelâ€" ago. The western drilt, which heaps great massos of ice against the eastâ€" ern shores of Greenland, sometimes brings bears with it, from far away Spitzbergen, and there is good eviâ€" cerce that these immicrants on one ‘ officers of the steamship Manover on ber last trip to Baltimore is quite unusual, but not improbable. They say that when entering the eastern edge of the Grand banks of Newfoundâ€" land they sighted a large iceberg and through the glass discovered that it was tenanted by two or three polar bears. Drawing nearer, they could see with the naked eye six beatrs calinbering around on the ice mass. Six of the Monsters Were Afloat on the Banks of Newfoundlaad. _ _‘"When the coins were offered the biddging was spirited, and the coins were finally knocked down to a youngish looking man, whoso appearâ€" ance indicated limited means, for $500 apiece. Promptly paying cash for his coins, the young man at onee left the auction room. He soon alterward was followed by‘ the coin collector, and the supposition is that the coilector finally secured the coins from the young man. The whole afâ€" fair had much the appearance of the fictitious bidding that takes place at the auction sales around town, where, by collusion between the aucâ€" tioncer and a paid bidder, the price of an article is bid wp until it reaches a satisfactory! figure. As B500 was the last price paid for last price paid for these coins, that figure will now stand as the listed premiunm. M A 1 POLAR BEARS ON ICEBERG. "As soon as the dealers and those holding these coins learned that there was somebody anxious to get them, the prices went up with wonâ€" derful rapidity. Any one of the coins before the advertisement was pubâ€" lished could have been bought under $100. But the premium soon went over this figure, and increased unâ€" til as much as $250 fwras demanded for a single coin. The â€" collector bought them as they were offered, however, notwithetanding the inâ€" creased figure at which they were placed. Finally a coin dealer in the city secured one coin for $75, and another for $250, which was especiâ€" ally sought by the cullector, and then advertised their sale at aucâ€" tion. ‘The advertisement attracted the attention of ‘the collector, who was promptly on hand on the aay of the gale. for the coins he needed ‘to complete his set. Of these gold coins there are nearly 200 pieces, ranging in face value from $2.50 up to $50. Of this npumber he lmad alreaqy obtained about 160, and needed about forty, more to complete the series. The pol Historical Rooms. (Argonaut.) is is where the duke wa ar bear story told by the was assassinâ€" e air which should jook ear on ‘the where the \tlaiis imâ€" arvuesems s Foveenn? A distinguished physician, upon being asked what was theâ€"best spring mediâ€" cine, replied that it was breatEing. People have been exceptionally deprived of air during the past winter, and as the cold air becomes sufficiently tempered not to injure the lungs, those organs should be built up again by daily breathing exâ€" ercises. Breathing is a sovereign remedy for our national disease of nervous deâ€" pletion. Correct breathing brings into play all the internal organs, and at the same time develops the heart, liver and kidneys. A advertising@g expert says that "a large and growing number of manufacâ€" turers have learned (what retail merâ€" chants have long known) that without an enterprising advertising department it is impossible to bhave an effective sales department." The man who manipulates the bass drum is not the only one who beats his weyr throuch life. ton, D. C., which the inventor claims will give great relief to horses in hot weather. The device is an ordinary briâ€" dle with a water compartment, designed to cover the top portion of the horse‘s head. Arrangement is made for the filling and draining of this reservoir whenever an opportunity presents itâ€" self, so that the compartment may be conveniently filled with cool water when the water has become warm. New Wedâ€"Oh, I guess noft. I don‘t think she is going to prove dangerous. The invention of a bridle has been made by James D. Flynn, of Washingâ€" WHY SHCULD YOU SUFFER uanecessary pain from Rhenmatism, Neuraigin, Backache or Aching Joints when the application of "the D. & L " Mentbol Plaster will give you inâ€" atant relief? 1i‘« an infallible remedy for any oi these ills, and not only relieves but cures. No Cause for Alarm. (Chicago News.) Insurance Agentâ€"Now that you have a wife, don‘t you think you ought to take out a life policy ? w" * % Use Lever‘s 1ry Soap (a powder) to wash woolens and flanrels,â€"you‘ll like it. a4 Its Mcaning. | _ (Tidâ€"Bits.) Unsophisticated Cookâ€"If you please, mum, the butcher says 1 shall get 5 per cent. on all the orders I give him. What does that mean? Mistressâ€"It means, Mary, that we shall have a new butcher. MINARD‘S LINIMENT is the only liniment asked for at my store, and the only one we keep for sale. All the people use it. MHARLIN FULTON. "Are marriages made in heaven, mamâ€" ma?" asked little Tessic. "Some of them are, dear." "Where was yours made, mamma?" Eend ten cents in stamps for Russoâ€" Japanese War Atlas iesued by‘ The Chicago and Northwost R‘y, Three fine colored nmaps, each 14x20 ; bound in convenient form for . reference. The Eastern situation shown in deâ€" tail, with tables showing relative military and naval strength and financial resources of Russia and Japan. B. H. Beonnett, 2 East King St., Toronto, Ont. C 1 1 Perhaps. Tsw : * (Toronto News.) There were more than a hundred fewer â€" admissions to Ontario asylums last year than in 1902. Had the good times anything to do with the change? The Northâ€"Western Line Russiaâ€"Japan Atlas. Cheap and Good Spring Medicine. Shiloh‘s â€" _ _ Consumption Lure The delicate blue lavender may be grown by carefully protecting the plants during the winter, but it quite repays one for the trouble, says Country Life in America. No wedding chest is comâ€" plete without the pale lavender silk bags filled with the gray blue sprigs, whose perfume adds the last touch of romance to a dainty trousscau of lace and linen. Pleasant Bay, C A NECESSARY DEPARTMENT. It Is So Lasy Minarda‘s Liniment Relieves Nevralgia. TO CCOL HORSES‘ HEADS. La grippe, pneumonia, and influâ€" enza often leave a nasty cough when they‘re gone. It is a dangerous thing to neglect. Cure it with Prices: S.C. Werrs & Co. 309 25. 50c $1. LeRoy, N.Y.. Toronto, Can. K The Lun Dure *Tonic & The cure that is guaranteed by your druggist. f REAL LAVENDER PERFUME. Pressing It Home. d ONTARIO archHivesâ€" **=â€" TORONTO Royal Yacht to be Burned. (London Mail.) The late Queen Victoria‘s old yacht Victoria and Albert is to be broken up at Portsmouth. Relic hunters will be disappointed to know none cf the wood is to be sold, but all to be burned. It is said that the Peruvian bark raisâ€" ers of Java are forming a trust. As Java supplies about 75 per cent. of the total amount of the Peruvian bark used in the world, and only 89 planters are enâ€" gaged in cultivating the trees, it is proâ€" posed to erect more factories in Java and to use at least oneâ€"half of the yearly crop for this purpose, as well as to inâ€" terest the Peruvian bark growers in othâ€" er countries in the trust, and so control the price of quinine in the market of the world, independent of the European inâ€" dustry. It appears that the letter was typeâ€"writte2 on paper bearing the priated, name of the Elinburgh Public Library, of which Mr. Morrison is the head. Mr. Morrison‘s signature was also typeâ€"written, and initialled "per J. C." This fact «lid not arouse the suspicions of the Kilmarnock â€" counâ€" cillors, although they were surprised at the immensity of the sum offered. It has gravely accopted a supposed offer from Mr. Carregie to provide a marble temple to Burns, to cost "not more than £500,000." Mr. Carnegie has made no such offer. A letter purporting to be written by Mr. Hew Morrison, ol Edinburgh, Mr. Carnegic‘s adviser in his library schemes, reached the Provost of Klâ€" marnock. It described Mr. Carnegie‘s plans for the nagnificent temple, and was duly read to the grateful towa council a few Lhours later. It was Mr. Carnegie‘s intention, the council heard with rapture, to make the memorial a most claborate one, the building to be cousiructed of granite, white marble, or some other superior material, and to be of magâ€" nificent design. The interior would contain statues of Burns‘ contempoâ€" rarics asd the principal characters of his ecreation, and under the dome "a chaste figure of the immortal genâ€" lus would stand." . Artistic pauels would embell s1 the walls, ilustrative of sceres depicted in his poems, and the wholto hulding would be lavishiy treated, a Now the counciliors are vexed and Lumiliated at being hoaxed. When the news of the supposed ofâ€" fer was submitted to Mr. Morrison for copfirmation by a press repreâ€" sentative the same night, Mr. Tarâ€" negie‘s adviser pronounced the letter "an impudent and cruel hoax." | PAGE FENCES Wear Best Carnegie Hoax Played on the Milâ€" marmock Council. Kilmarnock Town Council has been the vjictim of a great hoax. At first we couldn‘t bank on it, "I‘was just a mere report; The Speaker‘s name was said to be Napoleon Belcourt. But now we hear from Ottawa, The thing is settled sure; , 4 The man who will be Speaker is Napoleon Beleourt. When a sufferer finds permanent relief in such & meritorious medicine as South american Rheumatic Cure, how glad he is to tell it C, W, Mayhew, of Thamesvilie, Ont., coulda‘t walk or feed himself for monthsâ€"four years ago three bottlesa of this great remedy cured himâ€"not a pain sinceâ€"isn‘t that encourageâ€" ment for rheumatic sufferers?â€"82, Minard‘s Liniment zor sale everywhere, The late Sir Frederick Bramwell, of England, was fameus both as a witâ€" ness and arbitrator in engineering disâ€" putes. It is recalled that his brother, the late Lord Justice Bramwell, on givâ€" ing advice to a young barrister, told him to be careful of four kinds of witâ€" nesses: "First, of a liar; second, of the liar who can only be adequately deâ€" scribed by the aid of a powerful adâ€" jective; third, of the expert witness, and, finally, of my brother Fred." In the evening, instead of punishâ€" ment, the captain received the cross of the Order of St. Vladimir. _ "It‘s true," remarked the marshal, turning away to consider other measures to slience the enemy‘s fire. *‘Tell that to others. Don‘t come trying to fool me with such chaff. You will receive your punishment this evening." ; The captain cooly took a shell from a pile near by, lit the fuse, and holdâ€" ing it in the paims of his hands, preâ€" sented it to the marshal, saying; "See for yoursel{, sir." The marshal, folding his arms across, his breast, stood looking at the smoking shell. It was a solemn moment. Both men stood motionless. Finally the fuse burned out, and the captain threw the shell to the ground. 4 ‘"‘True, sir, but it is not my {ault. The shells do not ignite." Minard‘s Linimect Cures Dan4ruf. "I am," answered an officer who approached. & ‘"Well, captain, I «hall degrade you. since you @o not know your business. Your shells have no effect." It is the fence that has stood the test of timeâ€"stands the heavicet strainâ€"never cags-â€"th: standard the world over, Order through our local .‘e:n\;“ direct from us. s en THE Pace wiPre FENCE 00. LIMITED, ~ wamkervSic.Oct, Hontrss!.Que. 64. Jobn, X.B, Winbipe£, Fem It is doubtful if nation are braver Czar ol Russia. | Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burns, etc. The Pall o‘ Rheumatic Pains.â€" BOTH Sii0OWED THEIR GRIT, NOW THEY ARE MAD. FOUR KINDS OF LIARS. A QUININE TRUST. How to Pronounce It. Fish Easy to Catch in Northern Lakes. (Milwaukee Sentinel.) "Fishing has rever been so good in the lakes about Madison as during the preâ€" sent winter," said Graham Rice, former Railroad Commissioner. "The lakes are frozen over solid, and the fish are so hungry that when you cut a hole in the ice they will justswarm to it and can be caught with a piece of red flannel for bait. The game wardens are active in preâ€" venting the catching of protcceted fisi, but we are having perch served up for breakfast that are 10 inches lon#." In reply to a request for a criticism made to Count Tolstoi by the secretary of the Bristol Dickens Society, the great Russian author has written: "I think that Charles Dickens is the greatâ€" est novel writer of the nineteenth cenâ€" Itury, and that his works impressed the true Christian spirit. They have done, and will continue to do, a great deal of good to mankind. court room "This is my trial trip," remarked the facetious burglar, as he stepped into the prison van that was to carry him to the ‘The most remarkable and striking feature of the new Liverpool Catheâ€" dral, Liverpool, England, will be the height of the vaulting of the nave and choirâ€"measured in the barrel vaulting, 116 feet, and into the high transcepts 140 feetâ€"which cannot fail to produce a very| magnificent effect. No cathedral in the country, says te London Nt. James Gazette, approaches its height. The nearest is Westminister, the nave of which has a height of 102 feet, while York measures 99 feet ; then Ralisbury) 84 feet, and Lincoln, 82 feet. Chester reaches only) 78 feet. The whispering gallery of Rt. Paul‘s Cathedral is 100 feet from the floor. FAT CATTLE Minutes.â€"Dr. Agnow‘s Cure for the Heart gives perfect relie{ in all cases of Organic or Sympathetic Heart Disease in 30 minutes, and speedily efiects a cure. It is a peerless renedy for Palpitation, Shortness of Breath, Smothering Spells, Pain in Left Side, and al; symptoms of a Diseased Heart. One dose convinces..â€"83. ones. $ A bride «hould never wear pins in bher wedding clothes. No bride should wear green. Pour hot water over â€"the doorstep afte* the bridas couple have departâ€" e4. to keep it warm for another bride,. The mail who secures the bride‘s garter will be a bride within a year. The bride wears a coin in her slipâ€" rer to avoid money troubles. C We with two rings, no parting will oceur. The bride should wear "something old ard something new, something yeliow and something blue." Pï¬'lé:ssed is the bride on whom the sun #hines. * en December 31 is a favorite wedding Jay in Scot andâ€"possibly, perhaps, becauso the hagpy couple will not have a quarrel lor the rest of that year. T EY + 3 A€ on dn s s Sunlight S your blankets will make th fleecy. 8 > )C N 1 L * 4 7 ym (â€"â€" o 3i0â€"a) i( Eais f==.l-= & & Heoart Disesase Relieved in 30 Can be had in TUBS, PAILS, WASH BASINS, MILK PANS, STVABLE PAILS, ETC. FIBRE WARE May marriages are never happÂ¥ Use TOLSTOI ON DICKENS. The Tallest Carhedral. Hymenal Superstiticns. From any firstâ€"class dealer. Y J 4e 4 *“.7 ~ /’ Soap will not injure ts or harden them. It them soft, white and DÂ¥ restored. This seems to noted after the thirty ye; Germany, after the Napeo! in France, and even in m times after the siege of D. Statisties ot population seem to show that after long and sevore wars, in which many men are killed and the male part of a country‘s popâ€" vulation is greatly decreased, there im for several years a preponderating birth of male chiidren until the norâ€" mal proportion botween the sexes is restored. â€" This seems to have beon noted after the thirty years war in (lmnmanies qviee GRp W en C _ Oklahoma Girl‘s Composition. Men are what women marry. They drink and smoke and swear and bave ever so many pockets, but they won‘t go to church. Perhaps if they wore bonrets they would. They are more logical than women and also more zroological. Both men and women have eprung from monkeys, but the women certainly sprung further than the men. Lord Dundonald‘s new army scheme will make most of us soldiers in war time. The hope is that the time w‘J never come. We, the undersigned, have known F. 4. Cheney for the last 15 years and believe him perfectly honorable in all business trans actions and tinancially able to carry out any obligations made by this tirm. WALDING, KINNAN & Marvi®, Wholesale Druggiste, Toledo, 0 Hall‘s Catarrh Cure is taken internally,ac* ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. | Testimonials sent free Priceâ€"75¢ per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Take Hall‘s FamilyPill« for constipation We offer One Hundred Dollars‘ Reward for any case of Caterrh that cannot be cured by Hall‘s Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Not infrequently a semiâ€"savage girl has a wardrobe consisting of furs which would be worth from $5,000 to $10,000. Grundeman, the explorer, relates how one fair Greenlander wore a dress of sealzkin with a hood of that costly fur, the silver fox. The garment was lined with fur of the young sealâ€"otter and there was a fringe of wolverine tails. COsTLY FURS WORN BY GREENâ€" L&ANDERS. Y Y LC Sb tb LiA 24M »es v / home. Address or apply to Mrs. Hamilton, Ont. sooths colic and is the WANTEDâ€"A highest | ISSUE NO. 12 1904 BUSINESS CUIDE teii«= a" " notes, receipts, -ortï¬:gn, leasem, 4: wills, property exempt from aelzure, land and tenant, ditches and watercourses, one agent sold 47 copies in three d. another sold 88 in a week ; Freach ed now ready ; outft 25¢ ; order ou u:‘t (iu“ COROCOOOOCWaw seafomndad if not ';-a’u'-(iétog money reiunded. The J. L. Nichols Co., Limited, Toronto Alter Wars Brusk & GO. B % C NO BRASS EYELETS A POPULAR CORSET FOR 1904 STYLE U LONC HIP // MANUFACTURED ONLY EY HOW‘s THIS ? TORONTO, â€" ONT. P4 aÂ¥G! lc glege of Paris Hear, , Male Children, CUIDE tells all abow: llortï¬:gn, leasen, deed», empt from selzure, landlord GENERAL Hear. Napoloonic war in more reeont 10n scem to and â€" sevore men are killed cou n_tr_y'. popâ€" watercourses, etc., es in three day« : ek ; Freoch edition r outht toâ€"day ; m!undfd T uo (:-oâ€";ibrl able . W. Holion, SERVA N1 mil #on aPo discovered forwarding was arrost The At ponden t thorities that infc and pian gia. The ern 4 aro ax a t Lavckk W naly faccluba Chwa e t K. LT pourt Jazs Now Wash Warsh Severa tC Rl® W 1# A «de W lou i4 toâ€"day suspec LC3 w» L W M Li (a iN« b SCJA over m 1 1 y PC t Gifd Cf (