\6, ¢ Committees of the Motormen‘s Homiâ€" cide Defence Asociation have called at the headquarters of the candidates seekâ€" Ing to enlist their sympathies in a liberâ€" With the introdrstion of the new era all street car employees will have not more than eight hours work a day. There is a probability that they will go to work at ten o‘clock in the morning and quit at four o‘clock in the afternoon except on Saturday half holidays and Bundays. The custom of travelling twenâ€" tyâ€"four hours out of the twentyâ€"four is to be discouraged when municipal ownâ€" ership wins, whether it be on the Ivans, Hearst or McClellan ticket. The city will provide not more than six ‘mor less than four large cigars for each day, and on a tabouret will be disâ€" posed one large highball for every call of the starter. The vestibules of all street cars are‘ to be fenced in with bevelled French ; plate glass and the coat of arms of thef eity will be cut in the panes. Morris | chairs will be placed on the carpatodi front platforms and the brake handles | and controllers will be depressed so that | they will be within easy reach of the reclining motormen. 1 There can be no doubt that the Utopâ€" ian day is coming, for alil the nomineeos are pledged to see that the city owns evorything in the way of a public utility which is not nailed down too fast. The fact that the trolley roads are spiked will make no difference. The motormen are waiting for the day when their names will be on the city pay roll just as if they were firemen or policemen, and they will insist then on a three plaâ€" toon system. New York Municipal Ownership Camâ€" paign Goes Oan. Everybody who has anything to do with gas, street cars and electricity is gotting ready for the access of good fortune which munricipal ownrership will bring. Cash or Cure The waiter who brings change from a check not exceeding $1 so as to make it necessary for the guest to give him 20 eonts, or only 10, deserves only 10, even if he might have got 15. This trick is often tried by waiters, but it never fazes the regular eaters in restavrants. They are also indiffcrent to the demeanor of a waiter, ard when they have given the amount which they consider sufficient, do not care whether he looks pleased or otherwise.â€"New York Sun. The amount of change which a waiter brings after the check is paid always has its influence in determining what he gets. Persons accustomed to dealing with the guild are very likely to be prejudiced when the money is so divided as to make it necessary to give him more than he is entitled to, and from them he generally gets less, The 10 per cent. rule does not always carry in a simall check. The sum of 10 eents is too small for any waiter in Sherry‘s, Delmonico‘s or the Martin, when he has served a $1 check. He will expect 15 or 20 cents, and in the majorâ€" ity of cases he will get it. For a check amounting to $4. 40 cents is too much in any but the most expensive placesâ€"30 or 35 cents is ample. For a dinner costâ€" ing $20 any waiter in a‘firstâ€"class resâ€" taurant would expect at least $2. The probability is that he would get maore from a person who was only an occasionâ€" ‘ al diner or came from out of town. Of course, anly larger amount would be ex-‘ cessive. But the tendency is to give them too much in nine cases out of ten. make them expect large fees. One hotel much patronized by millionaires from a western city has become almost imposâ€" gible to New Yorkers on accourt of the demeanor oi the waiters towards those eustomers who do not give them as much as they expect. The visitors from out of town, espeâ€" cially from the west, have done more than any other class to ;Poxi \;;l-i;u* and er. He is more likely to get $7 or $8. If the man giving the dinner comes from the west, he will probably give the waiter $10. In the opinion of many men who should be competent to judge, they get too much in the way of tips. ‘The rule of 10 per cent., for instance, is not followed by one person out of twenty. A dinner eosting $50 at Sherry‘s will result, as a rule, in a larger tip than $5 for the waitâ€" Within the past decade the cost of living in New York has materiall{ inâ€" ereased. _ Rents in the quarter of the town that waiters are forced to live in have greatly advanced, and as in the present economic arrangement the pay of thes men falls on the customers, and not on the proprietor who hires thm, it is Just that they should get more than they. w sl > sitiics. en io conanis Cinl . 99ME Mc $ 6 444000 00e e c 9 e the omnibus or boy who removes the dishes from their table and helps them serve the medls. The complaints of excessive tipping in New York ought to have one good effect. They ought to make it plain to the perâ€" soms who dine much at hotels aml resâ€" taurants that they need not give so mruch. Unluckily, they are not the chief offenders in this matter. The casual visâ€" itors to those places, those who dine there once or twice a week, are more to blame, They spoil the waiters by giving them tips far in excess of what they deâ€" serve. There is one good reason why a tip given in a restaruant should be larger toâ€" day than it was ten years ago. ‘The tip is now more than it was then the waitâ€" er‘s wage, on which he is expected to live. What he gets in a month‘s salary from the restaurant would not keep him a week. The average pay of waiters in the good New York restaurants is said to be $10 a month.= With this pay two or three waiters togetber have to pay the omnibus or boy who removes the THE MILLENNIUM NEAR. S$HILOH 3+3 25c. per bottls. _ All dealers guarantee it. If Shiloh‘s ion Cure fails to cure your Cold gm“gdhckallyw paid for it. You are sure of a Cure or the Cash. H it wasn‘t a sure cure, this ofer would not be made. Can anything be fairer > 1f you have a Cold, Cough, or any discare of the Throat, Lungs or Air Passages, try A French writer in a scientific magaâ€" zine tells of the great ocean depths of 28,000 to 30,000 feet, the temperature tending toward zero, with perpetual darkness reigning below depths of about 1,280 feet. At that level plants deprivâ€" ed of light cannot exist, and the animal life must be carnivorous. â€" The organ of sight, not being used, has disappeared, and yet there is light even in that sightâ€" less world. _A German exploring ship found a fish with enormous eyes at a depth of 6,400 feet. Phosphorescence is common in these hollows of the sea, and sometimes special organs flash light. | It is a pleasure to comment upon the . conservative methods employed by the G. & C. Merriam Company in the publiâ€" cation of the Webster‘s International | Dictionary. _ Not every slang word or phrase is put into the book regardless of its scholastic or linguistic qualities. |[It is this conservatism backed by the | scholarship of the editorinâ€"chief" Wil. ‘liam T. Harris, Ph.D., LL.D., United States Commissioner of Education, and hundreds of others of the greatest eduâ€" cators of this and other nations which has made the International a stanrdard in the United States Supreme Court and in all courts of the nation, as well as in eolleges and public schools. : The longest submarine tunnel in the ‘| world runs beneath the River Severn. | The total length of it is four miles 624 | yards, and of this two and a quarter |miles lie from fortyâ€"five feet to o hundred feet below the estuary of the frivcr already named. The provos=1 Channel tunnel would be twentyâ€"three miles long. That which is eventually to join Sicily to the Italian mainland is to { be eight and a half miles. There is a ! project afoot under which Ireland is to i be linked to Britain by means of a tunâ€" ! nel which would be twentyâ€"thrse imiles . , long and lie at a depth of 500 fees helow . { the water, and would have x gradiont ofâ€" Waldort Astor has been talking what he well calls "learning walks" about New York and hbe expressed his amazement as well as he could at the Aladdinâ€"like changes on every hand. He spoke of the terrific hurry of the people and their smartness in dress, while the face of the city was changing alâ€" most as by pantomime, new buildings going up as by magic and new districts of trade being created "while you wait," so to speak. This is equally the case with Chicago. We shall get over the hurry some day. It is a threeâ€"fourth nervousness, that is a disease, and the oneâ€"fourth affection. Another generâ€" ation will move more leisurely and yet get as much done. 1 to 75. Removes all hard, soft or calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringboue, sweeney, stifles, sprains. sore and swollen throat, coughs, etec. Save $50 by use of one betâ€" tle. Warranrted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. ENCLISH SPAYIN LINIMENT When a new pavement is needed there is no scandal about the letting of the paving contract. War is declared upon some neighboring tribe, and presently the worn out pavement is replaced by a new one at small cost. Life is cheap in the African interior. (al elifor}sement of the préqept laws ing skulls, polished to whiteness by the attrition of countless feet, form an ivory like approach of no small attractiveness. More than twelve thousand skulls are used in paving the approaches to the various gates, and to those who do not !now w'lw.t material is used these gleamâ€" While municipal authorities are deâ€" ciding upon the relative value of asâ€" phalt, Belgian blocks, vitrified bricks and wood squares as paving material the inhabitants of Gwandu, im Africa, have settled the problem to their entire satâ€" isfaction by using the skulls of their enemies for paving the approaches of their town. The prospect of municipal ownership is accepted as reality by voters of all political faiths.â€"N. Y. Herald. The fare will be one cent, including as many transfers as may be desired, regardless of the time used. Trolley car conductors will be expectâ€" ed to step off the cars to assist passenâ€" gers to alight, and will see that none is permitted to depart until he bas been brushed with a whisk broom. For $3.00 we will send prepaid one dozen teaâ€" spoons in a favored Old English. pattern. regard to rmm!i over citizens, With the city in control of the transâ€" portation® facilities it is likely the moâ€" tormen will be responsible nly to ‘the Department of street cars, and will not be detained by the interference of te police while engaged in the maintenance of their sehedules. A club for the enâ€" tertainment of all railroad. employces when off duty will be maintained in the City Hall Wearing quality should be the chief consideration in selecting silverâ€"plated tablewareâ€"and then comes beauty in design. Plate from Diamond Hall‘s own factory pracâ€" tically equals solid silver in its effect, both as to durability and artistic merit. «mm â€"LIMITE mm 134â€"138 YONGE ST. TOBONTO â€" ONXNT. €¢ Ryne RYRIE BROS. Still in the Rusking Style. Longest of Submarine Tunnels. In the Bottom of the Sea Silverâ€"Plated Ware | Skulls for Paving. Biped and Quadruped Hogs. The Arabiars may beat us on horses and the Scotch on sheep dogs, but when it comes to swine America takes the cake. _ Our breeds are numerous, but all are fat and gifted with enormous equealing power. Witness the squeais ot the railroad hog when it is even suggest. ed that he is getting rather more than his share of swill. But there are others. There is the kerosene hog, whose lard makes such a beautifual light in college and church. There is the private car hog, the steel hog. the steel railroad hog, the insurance hogâ€"all fat and ready to the butcher.â€"Portland Oregonian. toothsome â€"morsels. .served. to them were quail. As expert évidence seems to be neâ€" cessary to determire just what sort of birds are being served up for the epicures of the city, perhaps there is no real caure for disgrunolement. If owl by another name t-tug:od. why should it not be a favorâ€" ite dish Lovers of game in this city have been eatâ€" ing owl!l under. the impression that â€" the Then he tapped a few times with his fork. The young man and woman turned very red in the face, and suddenly departed. This is what the telegreph operator had signalled: "Ob, quit your spconing and mied." : Cutting In. (Baitimore Sun.) A tclegraph operator went with a friend to lunch in ore of the uptown restaurants. Aiter they had been there a few minut»s the telegraph operator called his tiuen t‘s attention to a pretty young woman scaied at a table at the side of the rcom, who w« toying with her spoon and occasionaliy tisâ€" ping gently with it on the side of her plccs, A wellâ€"Gdressed man seated at a table som» distance away was going through a similar periormance. The telegraph opcrator inâ€" formed his friend that the couple were ganyinz on a flirtation by the Morse alphaâ€" et. g Tilling New Ficlds. | As a matter of news interest a London ! newspaper recently printed a picture of | the Bishop of London, who had made . some flattering remarks about a new j book. Though the publishers of the book â€" supposed it had already been advertised to the limit, this mere mention of the ; work in connection with the Bishop of London‘s indorsement brought to one | wholesale bookseller orders for three : thousand copies within a week. No matâ€" ter how much publicity a salable article has had, there is always some untilled field which only needs the right kind of cultivation to yield a rich harvest. It is the advertiser‘s province to discover the uncultivated ground. When he finds it the newspaper is ready at his elbow to see that it is properly tilled. | Agnew‘s Ointment cures Salt Rheum and all itching or burning skin diseases in a day. One application gives almost instant relief. For Itching, Blind, or Bleeding Pilos it stands without a peer. Cures in three to six nights. 35 cents.â€"151 So furious was the fearless creature‘s attack that it was with difficulty shakâ€" en off. It had bitten a large piece out of the fur. Vrto for * Dictionary We G. & C. MERRIAM C9., Suddenly she felt something pulling at the wrap, and discovered that her aseaiâ€" lant was a rat, which had evidently misâ€" taken the imitation animal for one of its enemies. The girl was wearing a fur boa, on which was an imitation head of a small animal. * While out walking with some friends near St. Agnes, Cornwall, a young lady recently went through an unpleasant experience. (Buffalo Commercial.) At one of the dinners in New York is honor of Prince Louis, Rear Admiral Coghâ€" lan was among the speakers, and of course referred to the friendship between England and America. ‘"I know,‘" he went on, "that the two countries will never have a written Alliance, but they don‘t need it. Sir Gilbert Parker told me a few days ago a story of two Scotchmen who had been out laie and were getting home. One of them stumâ€" bled, fell into a ditch and couldn‘t get up. *Andy,‘ said be, ‘will ye help me out? Andy tried and failed. So he said:. ‘Sandy, I can no help ye oot. but I‘ll lie doon wi‘ ye.‘ And I sincerely hope if there comes a tims when we cannot help our brother officers out we can lie doon wi‘ them." SALT RHEUM CURED QUICK.â€"PDr. Ow!l Served for Quail. Rat Attacks Girl‘s Fur Wrap REWARD wi $500m be paid to ant person who proves tha Sunlight Soap contains an injurious chemicais or an; form of adulteration. If you use Sunlight Soeap in the Sunlight way (follow directions) w;/\g} you need not boil nor mb your clothes, and yet you will get better ‘éffs results than with boiling and hard rubbing in the oldâ€"fashioned way. As Sunlight Soap contains no injurious chemicals and is perfectly Your money refunded pure, the most delicate fabrics and dainty silks and laces may be . bythedesler fromwhomzen B washed without the slightest injury. cause for complaint. is equally gocd with hard or Lie Doon Wi Him. ONTARIO ARCHIVEs TORONTO get marâ€" PC cras 7 GHV a l ars I o|L@, ~ x4 Ahi‘ L . fSXS KX *3 $5,000 HENR m â€" 2l } ( 15 Arnght boap eomammeang .. . " Lo 4 [( Te \'& ,f'::'x:x:‘ 3':â€.&"1:::3:.“ *OY _ (ogr oo reacand ( ~ ‘., r‘ [LuIf J P x PT . o) | 1ard or soft water. \ hE _é Soap in the Sunlight way (follow directions) °N\ C f Via Lehigh Valley Railroad, Friday, Dec. 15th. Tickets good 10 days, and only $90 from Suspension Bridge, Niagara Falls, to New York City and return. Tickets good on all regular express trains except Black Diamo:s“ Express. For furtbher mcn_lau, call on or address Rotbe;;. is, Canadian Agent, King street east, Tomm There has never been a flowing bow! really deep enough to drown sorrow. _ i *‘When you receive a bouquet, sprinkie it lightly with fresh water; then put it 'ilz.to a vessel containing some soapâ€"suds, I\‘.‘hich nourish the stems and keep the flowers as bright as new. â€" Take the Ebouquc-‘u out of the suds every morning, tand lay it sidewvays in fresh water., tha | stock entoring first into the water; keep jit there a minute or two, then take it | out and sprinkle the flowers lightly with | pure water, â€" Replace ine bouquet in the ; seap suds, and the flowers will bloom as ; fresh as when first gatbered. The S%oapâ€" suds need to be changed every third day. By observing these rules, a bouquet can lbe kept bright and beautiful for three [or four weeks, $9â€"NFW YORK EXCURSIONâ€"s59 "MY WwWOMAN, IS It THE KIDâ€" NEYS*‘â€"Investigation in half the disâ€" orders peculiar to woman would prove faulty kidneys the seat of the trouble. Ift you‘re troubled with that tired, dragging feeling, have an almost constant heaviness, mayb» sharp pains in the 1 2ad, put South American Kidney Cure to the test. You‘ll find it the long sought friend, and it never fails.â€"1) ‘‘And vcow, my son.‘" said the bank proâ€" sident. ‘"‘on this the threshold of your busiâ€" ncess life, I de#sire to impress one thought upon you. HMonesty, ever and always, is the policy that is best. ‘‘Yes, father," said the yourg man. ‘‘And, by the way," appended the grarâ€" beard, "I would urge you to read up a little corporation law. It will amaze you to find how many things you can do in a business way and still be honest." MISERABLE FOLKS could trace both state of mind snd body to some one or other form of stomach disorder. Dr. Von Stan‘s Pineapple Tablet is a "vest pocket®" remedy that nature provides and that mediâ€" cal scionce has proved a wonder in preventâ€" ing and curing stomach ailments. If you‘ve a eymptom of distress in your stemach test the Pincapple cure. 35 cents.â€"172 p* How to Keep a Bouget. The debutante often receives more flowers than she can earry, and it is a grief to her when she sees her favorite bouquets all withered the sccond or third day after she has got them. â€" She might try how the following directions, econtributed by one who has had experiâ€" ence with flowers, work out: on 5... All the other rooms being taken, a single is said to be a double room. ‘ Postulates and FPropositions. 1. A pie may be produced any numâ€" ber of times. 8. The landlady may be reduced to her lowest terms by a series of propoâ€" sitions. 3. The clothes of a boarding house bed, though stretched ever so far both ways, will not meet your ends. 4. A wrangle is the disinclination to one another of two boarders that meet together, but â€"are not on the same floor. Definitions, 1. All boarding houses are the seme boarding house. 2. Boarders in the same boarding house and on the same floor are equal to one another. * 8. The landlady of the boarding house is an obliging, angular figure that canâ€" nl;)t be described, but is equal to anyâ€" thing. MAN AND WIFE IN DISTRESS.â€" Rev. Dr. Bochror, of Buffalo, says: "My wife and I were both troubled with distressâ€" ing Catarrh, but we have enjoyed freedom from this aggravating malady since the day we first used Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder,. Its action was instantaneous, givâ€" ing the most grateful relief within ten minâ€" utes after first application.‘" 50 cents.â€"153 A new story of Adam Smith was told reâ€" cently at a convention at Kirkaldy, Scotâ€" land, the birthplace of the Economist. The professor fell in love and proposed. The ofâ€" fer was refused. ‘The next day the lady met Smith in Princess street, Edinburgh, and reopened the question of the propos!, about which she had been thinking. ‘‘You rememâ€" ber what I said?" the lady inquired, and the philosopher replied that he did. ‘"Well," added the lady, "I was only joking." ‘"You remember what, I. asked?" said Smith. ‘‘Yes," replied the lady. ‘"Well," said Smith, ‘"I was only joking, too." Horesty of the Modern Kind. (Minneapolis Journal.) Lover Brothers Limited, Toronto GEOMETRICAL BOARDING The Talk of the Day. is absurdâ€"London Punch. Ccore a bouquet, sprinkle fresh water; then put it ontaining some soapâ€"suds, the stems and keep the zht as new. â€" Take the _the suds every morning, wvays in fresh water, tho first into the water; keep > a bouquet, i owater; thi ring some s stems and â€" s new. > f suds every in fresh w J ‘"Is your busband up yef?" asked the ) early morning caller. 1 *"I guess he is," replied the sternâ€"looking | woman. 1 "I‘d like to sey a few words to him * ORANGE BLOSSOMS "T‘d basn‘t That precious remedy, is a positive cure for all female disonses. eircular amd free sample R. S. McOGILL, Simeoe, Ont. Write "fer ‘The most common materials, of ecourse, are wood and bone, which are decorated with prints or pressed work. One of the most notable fans, made with metal sticks, is the one of carved silver said to have once belonged to Marie Anâ€" toinette. This fan is now in the South Kensington collection. _ The motherâ€"of pearl sticks give an excellent opportunâ€" ity for artistic carving, and also for clever gilding. The disadvantage in the use of this material comes in the diffiâ€" culty of so joining the picces as to conâ€" ceal the points of contact, and to have the work so well done that there is no danger of the pieces separating. These difficulties have now hbeen largely overâ€" come by the manufacturers."â€"Jewelers‘ Circularâ€"Weekly. TOILET PAPERS ’ "The Chinese workmen, brought to Paris in the seventeenth century, in orâ€" der to teach Frenchmen the art, aided greatly in giving the prominence to French fans. At Dieppe and other in: dustrial centres in France fine examples of carved ivory fan sticks are producer, and many of the most beautiful fans reaching the New York market come from there. There is a wide choice of material for th sticks, comprising ivory. mother of pearl, tortoise shell. horn, sanâ€" dal and other woods, with occasionally filigree work in metal. USE but is best when used in the Sunlight way, Buy Sunlight Soap and follow directions, Â¥Fans With Pearl and Tvory Sticks "You may say that the Chinese stil excel in the elaborate carving of ivory for fan sticks," said a fan importer. "Ycars of labor are represented in some of the fans made in the Orient. â€" For nearly two centuries the manufacture of fans for the European market has been an important industry in China. _ m ,’9@ @ %g‘fla i 5 Other wellâ€"known brands as follows: Io Rolisâ€"*"*Standard,"" «Mote!," *York," . In Sheoetsâ€""Imperial," "Royal," «»Regai‘ BC sVRE TO ASK Fom They are CLEAN, SCFT, TOUGH aod SANITARY in every res pect. Eunlight Soap is better than othor soaps, which contains 12,000 sheete in four rolisâ€"one year the average family For Oone Dollar like to sey a like to say m« come home yet A fow dozes, at the first sign of a cold, will allay all throat irritationâ€"take away hLhoarsenessâ€"check the inflammationâ€" ttrenpthen the lungsâ€"ward of the cough. All ihe hcealing, soothing, curative properties of Canadian S‘prv' Gumâ€"combined with aromatics. Pleasant tn talkn . ar amks L. k mrenee y â€" 77**â€"â€"‘.‘_“""‘“;. _‘,.__.“â€"_‘ â€" K\ > f Ac} i ¢ T Aut" s is ; Willing to Talk Freely, P a ’.“J 4 TS 8YRp | $ o :itfd sey a few words to him say more than a few. A Favorite Brand is the "COTTAcCGE" C.‘B. EPy‘ 5 & Taplaryi Ifldl‘;;’wï¬Ã© Tkere‘s a ispensable 11â€"Winter. To s a peed in every home for ~g, curative properties of Canadian $prv~a miatics, Pleasant to take. 25 cts, bot.‘â€" w or Reo Srerce Co: 156 le is he doesn‘t want to leave aiy Of it for the rest of us. York," "Mammorh,* The trust magnate believes in taking .thg world as he finds it, but the trouble Joung Jay Greenâ€"Ye ain‘t? Why, whenâ€" ever a drummer or anybody gives him a 10â€" cent cigar he saves the band off‘m it and wears it as long as it holds together on Young Jay Greenâ€"I tell ye, Lester Dooiltâ€" tle is a sport f‘r your life! Abner Appledryâ€"â€"i ain‘t noticed it pertickâ€" Address the BELLEVILLE â€" BUSINESS COLLEGE, LIMITED, Believilie, Ont.; evâ€" ery department gives special training and catisfaction. 12 for 10c; 60 for 50c; 100, $1; 209, $2; 500, $5; all Gdifferent. Largest and finest stock in Canada; 500 mixed, $3; albums, all prices. W. R. Adams, Toronto, Ont. \/ J., probationers wanted; to enlarge the training school. Apply to Superintendent of C =aist HOSPITAL, JERSEY CITY, I nrahotinnare wankadr TainnLAenea Nurses A2 tilating window lock. _ J Hamilton. BUROLARS KEPT OUT. PATENT VEXNâ€" tilatine windaw lant. %0 T.0 Adan F OR PINE, HEMLOCK AND HARDWOOD ‘‘Jumber or timber, telegraph poles, ties, posts, dressed lumber, interior finish, eniâ€" matched and bored hardwood flooring, ::.. try John Harrison & Sovs Co., LimiteU; head office, saw and planing milis, Owen Sound, Ont. Kegal‘* *"Orient,"" e For o â€"»: C Eg;rRAL TELEGRAPH SCHOOL, 8 rrard east, Toronto; under Prineiâ€" palship of T. J. Johnston; eighteen years‘ experience; gives thorough training for railâ€" way operating; catalogue free; write. |ISSUE NO,. 48, 42 tarioâ€"stock $6,000; _ turnover, $18,000; big moneyâ€"maker; good reason for seliing; possession Jan. lst; write quick. Harry Fisher, Cookstown, Ont. FOR sause. imannnnannnnnnnnnnnnnnnannnanamares Bll‘l‘ GENERAL BUSINESS â€" IN ONXâ€" tarioâ€"stock â€"$6.000: turnover. $18.000; SMIENâ€"TO A FEW HUSTLERS WE offer a bona fide liberal contract for six months or longer; special proposition; musi be ready to start at once. Write Capital Nursery Company, O:tawa, Ont. C ANVASSERS WANTED, TO SOLICIT orders for Iwanta nonâ€"alcoholic flavorâ€" \ orders for Iwanta nonâ€"alcoholic flavorâ€" ing powders; used by many cooks and houseâ€" keepers; will pay salary and. commission. Iwanta Manufacturing Co., Mamilton, Casn. AGENTS. LADIES AND GENTLEMEN. Quick seliers; everybody needs. 43 Adelaide east, ToFonto, Ont. AOBNTI WANTEDâ€"IHUSTLERS CAN make two bundred dollars per mouth selling our household necessities; no fake. Write for samples and information to Box 157, Smith‘s Falls, Ont. # % Easily heme. Cmm ommc C Ns 2 Mrs. Winslow‘s Soothing Syrup should always be used for Chiidren Teething. . It soothes the child, soothes the gums, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for Diarâ€" Souvenir Post Cards fi‘lâ€"cent cigars be buys himseif GENTS WRITE J. H. ROWE, DUXNAâ€" ville, Ont., for a great money maker. Ily sojd. An article needed in every Really a Hot Sport. AGENTS WAKTED. MISCELLANEOUS, a eup»‘y foe +600 €145. should thr O H Assassin Smas Chai in Was Villed Shot Thrt GiR "Lom outn L