Happy is the wife who bolieves that her husband tells her all he knows. ‘‘"What‘s the argument in there !" ‘"‘There isn‘t any argument. Mother and sister are just proving to dad that he‘s wrong again.‘"‘ ‘‘May 1 have this hat sent home for further inspection, and return it toâ€"morrow if I decide I do not like it?" ‘"By no means, madam. By toâ€"morrow the styles may have changed !‘ Try Murine Eye Remedy If you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes or Granulated Eyelids. Doesn‘t Smart â€"â€"Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25¢c, 50c. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 25¢, §0c. Eye Books Free by Mail. An Eye Tonic Good for All Eyes that Neod Care Murine Eye Remedy Co.. Chicage Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. And Cuticura Ointment, at a trifling cost, is learned from the special directions which accompany these pure, sweet and gentle emolliients. "Bertie," said his mother, "what would you like to give your Cousin Willie for his birthday ?t" "I know what T‘d like to give him," answerâ€" ed Bertiec, who had been bullied by the older boy, "but I ain‘t quite big enough.‘‘ BLACKHEADS Mrs. Hiram â€" Barnhart, SBeotia Junction, Ont., says: ‘"About two i:an ago my oldest daughter, Maâ€" 1, then ten years of age, was stricken with 8t. Vitus dance. She could not keep still for half a minâ€" ute, no matter how hard she tried. Her limbs would jerk and twitch and every little thing would start her crying. I gave her several botâ€" tles of medicine said to be good for the nerves, but instead of helping her she was steadily growing worse. Her voice would change so that we could hardly understand her, and her face became twitched until she did not look like the same child. I had used Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills myself when run down, and finally decided to give her theso. When she had taken two boxes I could notice an improvement, and by the time she had used five boxes she was fully cured. However, I was determined to make the cure perâ€" manent if possible, and I gave her two boxes more, and I can truthâ€" fully say that she has never had a symptom of the trouble since, and is now as bright and active as any child of her age. I heartily recomâ€" mend Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills to all mothers as the result of what they have done for my child and myself." the world. A liberal sample of sach, with 32â€"page booklet on the car= and treatment of the akin and sealp, sent postâ€"/me. Address Potter Drug & Chom, Corp., Dept. 20D), Boston, U. 2. A. CUTICURA SOAP HOW TO TREAT PIMPLES Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere. NERVOUS CHILDREN Are Often in the Early Stages of St, Vitus Dance Many a child has been called awkward, has been punished in school for not keeping still, or for dropping things, when the child is not really at fault, as the trouble is really St. Vitus dance in its earlier stages. So common is this nervous disease in childhood that in some schools oneâ€"fifth of all the pupils have been found suffering from it in one form or another. Beâ€" fore the presence of the disease is betrayed there is usually a disturbâ€" ance of the general health. The child shows listlessness and inâ€" attention. Then it becomes restâ€" less, and twitching of the muscles and jerking of the limbs and body follow. A remedy that cures St. Vitus dance and cures it so thorâ€" oughly that no trace of the discase remains is Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, which make the new blood necesâ€" sary to feed the starving nerves and gives them the nourishment they demand. : They Need a Tonic to Strengthen Cutloura Soap and (intmant ara sold throughout Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Neuralgia. uccessfully and Speedily With the Weak Nervss and Restors Them to Natural Hoalth It was Sunday afternoon, and Maâ€" bel‘s little sister, Ruth, aged four, was seate« beside Mabel on the sofa. Presently the little girl askâ€" ed of Mabel‘s finance: "Aren‘t I your sweetheart, Mr. Bumpert" _ ‘‘Well,"" answered Mr. Bumper, with‘ a fond glance at Mabel, "you‘re the next thing to it!"‘ Additional powers have been givâ€" en to banks in the interests of those concerned to lend to receoivers and liquidators appointed under the windingâ€"up act upon the property and assets under their charge, and also to lend farmers upon the seâ€" curity of thrashed grain grown upâ€" on their farms, while definitions have been provided of "products of agriculture." "products of the forest"‘ and "products of the sea, lake and rivers," which will maâ€" terially assist in removing doubts that previously existed regarding the power to lend on certain classes of goods now comprehended thereâ€" in. Additional returns will in future be made to the government annualâ€" ly of the fair market value of real estate held by the banks for their use and occupation, and quarterly of the rates of interest and discount charged upon loans and discounted paper. Regulations providing for the disâ€" infection and sterilization of bank notes may be made by the treasury board. It will be the duty of the trustees to receive and, when proper and reâ€" quired, return the gold and notes deposited with them by the banks, which will be entitled to issue inâ€" creased circulation to the extent of the amount from time to time on deâ€" posit. In this way not only is adâ€" ditional circulation assured, but also the anxiety of overâ€"circulation when nearing the present limits can be avoided. M These central gold reserves will be under the control of trustees apâ€" pointed by the Canadian Bankers‘ Association and minister of finance, and will be subject to frequent inâ€" spection and audit by the departâ€" ment of finance. In addition to retaining the preâ€" sent emergency period, extending from Sept. 1 in any year to the last day of February in the ensuing year, provision for a muchâ€"requirâ€" ed increase of circulation has been made against the deposit of current gold and Dominion notes, or either, in what is termed the "Central Gold Reserves.‘ $ a special report at any time upon the affairs or business of a bank. It is placed in the power of the minister of finance to call upon the auditor of a bank, or any other auâ€" ditor whom he may select, to make P ctntsionds insl lt ns P towr td t a panel selected by the general managers of the banks and approyâ€" ed by the minister of finance. It will be the duty of these auditors, who are given the widest powers of access to the books, accounts and securities of the banks, to check the cash and verify the securities, and make a report annually to the shareholders. The annual statement to be subâ€" mitted to shareholders has been somewhat enlarged, so as to make it more in keeping with the monthâ€" ly return to the government. Many new headings have been added, which makes for a clearer and more detailed statement of affairs. The monthly government return has also been improved in some reâ€" spects. T An important departure has been made in the introduction of an anâ€" nual audit by qualified auditors apâ€" pointed by the shareholders Irun: Facilities for speedier collection of original unsubscribed or new capital stock allotted to shareholdâ€" ers are given by shortening, in the directors‘ discretion, the period within which acceptance of allotâ€" ments must be made. * o Proposals have been introduced making the keeping of shares and transfer registers in each province in which shareholders are resident compulsory, but it is hoped these provisions, which have many objecâ€" tionable features, may be amended, Changes have been made in the internal regulations in providing for shareholders being kept advised of the byâ€"laws of the bank in force from time to time by being furnishâ€" ed with copies of the current byâ€" laws every five years, commencing with Dec. 31, 1913, and by limiting the qualification shares of directâ€" ors to those of which they are absoâ€" lute and sole owners in their indiâ€" vidual rights. CANADA‘S NEWBANKSTATUTE Rules Anent Loans to Farmers and Upon Products of Field, Forest and Lake. Mr. D. R. Wilkie, president of the Imperial Bank and of the Canâ€" adian â€" Bankers‘ Association, has prepared the following statement of the important features of the new Canadian bank act: _ C Additional safeguards have been introduced in connection with the incorporation and organization of banks to insure the bona fides of original swbscriptions for stock, and to facilitate the recovery of unpaid â€" liability thereon, while statements of disbursements for preliminary expenses will require to be submitted to the treasury board for approval before & certiâ€" ficate to commence business is 16â€" sued. * EXPERT COMMENTS ON FEAT URES OF THE LiAW. For Special Reports. No Disinfect Notes,. Collection of Stock. Next. i ‘"I began to use Postum instead |of coffee, and in less than three weeks I felt like a new man. The |rheumatism left me, and I have | never had a spell of bilious colic | gince. Instant Postum is a soluble powâ€" der. A teaspoonful dissolves quickâ€" ly in & enp of hot water and, with the addition of cream and sugar, makes a delicious beverage instantâ€" ‘‘My appetite is good, my digesâ€" tion never was better, and I can do more work than before for 40 yeare." _ Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. Write for copy of the little book, ‘"‘The Road to Wellville." Postum comes in two forms : Regular Postumâ€"must be well boiled. ble.‘"" Tea is just as harmful, beâ€" cause it contains caffeine, the same drug found in coffee. "I came to the conclusion that there was no relief for me and that I was about wourd up, when I saw a Postum advertisement. I had alâ€" ways been a coffee drinker, and got an idea from the ad. that maybe coffee was the cause of my trouâ€" ‘‘The best doctors 1 could get and all the medicines I could buy only gave me temporary relief. "Change of climate was tried without results. I could not sleep nights, had‘ rheumatism and my heart would palpitate at times so that it seemed it would jump out of my bydy. ‘"‘For about forty years I have had indigestion and stomach trouâ€" ble in various forms. During the last 25 years I would not more than get over one spell of bilious colic until another would be upon me. Thoughtful Farmer Learns About Tea and Coffee. Many people exist in a more or less hazy condition and it often takes years before they realizo that tea and coffee are often the cause of the cloudiness, and that there is a simple way to let the light break In. A worthy farmer had such an exâ€" perience and tells about it in a letâ€" ter. He says: Another discovery of Mrs. Hart‘s is a material for cinematograph screens which, it is said, may mean a saving of about 30 per cent. in the amount of electricity required. She has also devised a means of making nitrocellulose â€" the bestâ€" known form of which is guncottonâ€" without the use of cotton. It is thought that this will largely do away with the dangers now existing in its manufactuhe. ‘‘My work has been essentially that of improving. Ever since my early days, when I studied mediâ€" cine in London and Paris, I have been attracted to the practical side of Laboratory work. I am fond of taking up forlorn hopes. ‘"In this spirit I set myself the task of overcoming the difficulties of weaving ramie fibre. After many experiments I succeeded in weayâ€" ing every kind of fabric in pure ramic on power looms. "It is a word very loosely used;‘‘ she said the other day. ‘‘Why, I suppose, apart from discoverers, actual inventors can almost be numâ€" bered on one‘s fingers, and even the great and true inventors probâ€" ably owe something to those who have gone before them or to those who have worked side by side with them, ‘‘Wall paper can be so treated that the cheapest kinds want only a sponge and soap to restore them to their original freshness."‘ Mrs. Ernest Hart Has Process to Protect Paper from Dampness, Mrs. Ernest Hart, o London, England, who is the discoverer of a process by which it is said that any kind of fabric, including paper, can be waterproofed, does not like to be called an inventor. ‘"‘Then I found that nobody could waterproof the material for me. After patient experimental work I arrived at â€" patentable processes. from tissue paper to coarse canvas. per box or five for $1.00, at all druggists and storekeepers, or post paid from the Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N.Y., and Kingston, Canada,. and all the symptoms of intestinal indiâ€" gestion. Nothing helped me until I used Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills. Instead of hurting, like other pills, they acted very mildly, and seemed to heal the bowels. I did not require large doses to get results with Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills, and feel so glad that I have found a mild yet certain romedy. Toâ€"day I am wellâ€"no pain, no sour stomâ€" ach, a good appetite, able to digest anyâ€" thing. This is a whole lot of good for one medicine to do, and I can say Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills are the best pills, and my letter, I am eure, proves it." Had Stomach Rumblings Distress Before Mcals Refuse a substitute for Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills of Mandrake and Butternut. 25. Was Seldom â€" Free From That Weary, Droopy, Hal{â€" Bead Feeling. "When I was working around the farm last winter I had an attack of infammaâ€" tion," writee Mr. E. P. Dawkins, of Port Richmond. "I was weak for a long time, but well enough to work until spring. But something went wrong with my bowe‘s for I had to use salts or physic all the time. My stomach kept sour, and always after eating there was pain and fulness, you will certainly be interested in the following experience which is told by Mr. " for Postum ‘‘There‘s & reason If you have any stomach distress at all A WOMAN INYENTOR. Cured, and CGives Cood Advice to Others With Dyspeptio LIGHT BREAKS IN. e snn ED. 4 ‘‘You know, my dear, men are quite impossible. If I accept Jack‘s proposal, he will expect me to marâ€" ry him ; and if I refuse, he will exâ€" pect to be allowed to marry someâ€" one else." Husbandâ€"‘"Sure ! I‘d like to talk to him. I want to know how he got in without waking my wife. I‘ve been trying to do that for the last twenty years."‘ Sergeantâ€"‘‘Yes. Do you want to see him?"‘ s A Dutchman was going to cross a bridge; he was riding in a little cart drawn by & goat. The toll man came out and‘* saidâ€"‘"Here, you‘ve got to pay toll before you can pass this bridge.‘‘ ‘‘What, to pay toll?" ‘"Yes, five cents to cross this bridge.‘""‘ After an arguâ€" ment the Dutchman paid the five cents and went on. In the afterâ€" noon he came back again, only this time he had the goat sitting on the seat, and he was dragging the cart himself. Out came the toll man and saidâ€"‘"Here, you know you‘ve got to pay five cents.‘"‘ The Dutchman shook his head, and pointing to the goat, saidâ€"‘‘Don‘t talk to meâ€"ask the driver." Husband (at police station)â€" ‘‘They say you have caught the felâ€" low who robbed our house night beâ€" fore last.‘" ‘‘Then somebody complained of rats, so I killed the rats. I went on doing this sort of thing throughout America, and then I met a man who told me that although there were no snakes left in Irelapd there were still plenty of cockroaches and rats in Great Britain. I came here on the next boat, and now I have contracts with nearly every great hotel in the country and every line of steamships and most of the big country houses, "‘And now, young man, one word of advice. I advise you to start a new profession. I have done that, and found it very profitable.‘‘ ‘Years ago in America I woent prospecting for gold,‘‘ he said. "I did not find gold, but something alâ€" most as precious. At that time we were infested by cockroaches. But they always avoided the crumblings of the quartz. overr Cured Stomach Gas, Stopped Hiccoughs Large family «ize bottles 500., trial size 25¢. All dealers, or the Catarrhozone (Co., Buffalo, N.Y., and Kingston, Canada, B. L. Philips Finds Portion of ‘Quartz Slays Vermin. King of the ratcatchers and Champion Blackbeetle Destroyer is the title conferred upon himself by & certain London, England, busiâ€" ness man. Otherwise |le is B. L. Philips of Messrs. B. L. & N. Philâ€" ips, Limited. This is his story of how he undertook an odd business and came into his unique title. Pains in the Stomach That Yield to Nothing Else, Pass Away Quickly If Nerviline ‘‘I thought there must be a speciâ€" fic reason for this shyness on their part, for they are not shy as & rule. Bo I called in an analytical chemâ€" ist, and together we investigated matters. "A few weeks ago I ate some green vegetables and some fruit that was not quite ripe. It first brought on a fit of indigestion, but unfortunately it developâ€" ed into hiccoughs, accompanied by nauâ€" sea and crampe. I was dreadfully ill for two daysâ€"my head ached and throbbed; I belched gas continually, and I was unâ€" able to sleep at night. A neighbor hapâ€" pened in to see me and urged me to try Nerviline. Well, I wouldn‘t have believed that any preparation could help so quickâ€" ly. I took half a teaspoonful of Nerviâ€" line in hot sweetened water, and my stomâ€" ach felt better at once. ‘I used Nerviline sevéral times, ‘and was completely reâ€" The above is from a letter written by G. E. â€"Braun, a wellâ€"known stockman and farmer near Lethbridge, Alta. Mr Braun‘s favorable opinion of the high merit of Nerviline is shared by thousands of Canâ€" adians who have proved Nerviline is simâ€" ply a marvel for cramps, diarrhoea, flat. ulence, nausea, and stomach disordere. Bafe to use, guaranteed to cureâ€"you can muke no mistake in keeping Nerviline for you family remedy. "‘Good,‘ I replied, ‘this is where I arrive,‘ and I drove the cockâ€" roaches out of Chicago. _ _ _ _ __"He was in despair, and said, ‘Impossible |‘ Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruff. READ MR. BRAUN‘S STATEMENT. FORTUNE INX DEAD RATS. He‘s So Impossible. Got to Pay. Interested. .I188UE 38#â€"138 TORONTO A certain island in the West Inâ€" dies is liable to the periodical adâ€" vent of earthquakes. One year beâ€" fore the season of the periodical advent of the terrestrial disturbâ€" ances Mr. G., who lives in the danâ€" ger zone, sent his two sons to the home of & brother in England to secure them from the impending havoc. Evidently the quiet of the staid English household was disâ€" turbed by the eruptions of the two West Indians, for the returning mail steamer carried a message to Mr. X., brief, but emphatic : ‘‘Take back your boys; send me the earthâ€" quake |‘" MINARD‘S LINIMENT and also prescribe it for my patients always with the most gratifying resulte, and I consider it the best allâ€"round Liniment extant. Yours truly, DE. JOS. AUG. SIROIS. ‘‘Pa, what is party loyalty?‘‘ ‘‘Hope of a good job."‘ Bt. Isidore, P.Q., Aug. 18, 1904. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. _ Gentlemen,â€"I bave frequently used Not men, but corns that were put out 6f business last week by Putnam‘s Corn Egâ€" tractor. No corn can live if treated by Putnam‘s. It is safe, painless and sure. Use only Putnam‘s, 2%¢. at all dealere. Out of Every Dozen Skins only one or two of the very finest are chosen for Royal wear. A man named Duffield made pumps and slippers for Royalty fifty years. He was one of the very few who knew how to put a heel properly on a slipper. This may appear quite a simple thing to do, but as a matter of fact not one shoemaker in 10,000 can do it to perfection. He made hundreds of slippers for wealthy customers, and a pair made by him have been worn for over ten years. Not a stitch has given, and the soles and heels show very little sign of wear. Any slipâ€" per of which that can be said at the end of ten years is a pretty good one | Ninetyâ€"nine persons out of every 100 walk on the outside of their feet. Few persons walk absolutely straight and wear their soles out in the middle. While the average white man wears his boots away on the outside, the majority of black men wear them away on the inside. Two of the most costly pair of boots ever mado in the ordinary way â€" were Astrachanâ€"lined long boots, one pair being made for the late Earl of Lonsdale and the other for H.R.H. Duc d‘Aosta. They cost ‘‘Bridget, does you mistress asâ€" sist you in cooking!"‘ } ‘"‘Yis ; very much.‘"‘ ‘‘How does she do it!" ‘"‘By kaping out of the kitchen.‘"‘ Most of the wealthy classes wear a very thinâ€"soled boot, but thin as this sole is it will outlast any thickâ€" soled pair of readyâ€"made boots. The secrot of this is not only in the quality of the leather, but also in the way this sole is prepared. _ _ $84 a pair. There are only half a dozen or so men in London who can make a pair of boots fit for a king to wear. A firstâ€"class boot clicker is as valuâ€" able an asset to a shoemaker as a firstclass cutter to a tailor. A boot clicker is the trade term for the man who cuts out the shape of the leather to be stitched together, just as a tailor‘s cutter cuts out the material for a coat or & pair of trousers. The man who actually stitches the leather is called a "closer.‘‘ A ‘"‘clicker‘‘ is, of course, a more exâ€" perienced and better class of workâ€" man than the ‘"closer,‘"‘ for he is the designer, while the "closer‘ merely follows instructions, though the latter has to be a very smart man to sew the leather properly. The leather used to make a first class boot is made from the skin of a calf nearest the backbone and on the rump. The skin over the actual backbone of the animal is not used, because it is not only thinner, but actual experience proves that it is not so good as the rest of the hide. For the first few days of wearing a pair of new boots the soles feel like steel under the foot, and it is not until they have been worn for some time that they begin to get elastic and comfortable. In the case of the late King Edward, one of his suit would wear his shoes to break them in, though the soles of the late King‘s boots were thinner than usual. The leather that is used for the sole is half an inch thick to begin with. Before being fixed on to the boot this sole is beaten for more than an hour by the "closer‘ with his hammer. This hammering reâ€" duces the sole to half its original thickness, and at the same time makes it as hard as steel. Bo hard is this beaten sole that, though less than a quarter of an inch thick, It Is Difficult to Bend It. The Finest Leather Is Used in Building Boots For LONDONX HAS ONLY A FEW GOOD "CLICKERS." ROYAL BDOTS RARD 10 MAKE Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burns, Ete. 5,000 OUT OF WORK. Frequently. Assisted. i2 Pulleys of samaller sizos and Bhafting of various lengths and sizos to be sold at very low figures. Much reading will not make : full man as quickly as much feed Two lawyers before a probate judge recently got into a wrangle. At last one of the disputants, losing control over his emotions, exclaimâ€" ed to his opponent : "Sir, you‘ire, I think, the biggest fool that I ever had the misfortune to set eyes upon !‘‘ ‘"Order ! Order !‘ said the judge, gravely. ‘You seem to forget that I am in the room.‘‘ Nativeâ€"‘"Yes ; the Sock and Busâ€" kin Club played ‘Little Mace, or the Mountain Mystery.‘‘ â€" ""As near as I could make out the | mystery was how the audience stood ; it till the last act was over."‘ | Suitable for Mills, Manufacturing Plants, Printing Houses, Ete. 8 Wood Bplit Pulleys, 12 x «48 in. for 3 15/16 in. shaft. 1 Wood Bplit Pulley, 12 x 48 in. for 2 15/16 in. shaft. 1 Wood Bplit Pulley, 1214 x 28 in. for 3 T/16 in. shaft. 1 Wood Split Pulley, 10}; x 36 in. for 3 7/16 in. shaft. "Ah! And what was the mys hry'†® Visitorâ€"‘"I understand that yo had an amateur dramatic perform ance in the town hall last night ?‘ FOR SALE Pulleys & Shafting Wilson Publishing Co., Toronto. WANTEDâ€"More Workers &.3%~3.%,,ric"ts Corass® S " * C 2C C " _ _ jeal Procsers. Bimp!®, mechanical work, npw“.‘ou All pat terns furnished. Positively no n&cflem required. We furnish Procsess and chemicals and msly you with tures to color. which you return to us Good prices paid promptly by the vo& or month,. No canvassing or sellingâ€"our trayâ€" ellers sell tgo md- and the field is unlimited for our work. If you want ol:a pleasant work the year round for whole or spare time, write us and we will Sunant sc akY WBnkE * *‘ :s COLLEOE sTRt i Eommenciar" art works, 315 COLLEGE STREET, Toronto, ont. poor t z. . Ait a ME 1 URIS { No‘ Disagreeable Odor in ‘MHot Weather because there "is No ‘Turpentine @ Easy to Use, Good for the Shoes Babys Own Soap sp e M it o c ooataae d of it 4 im #" 0 io. ze ns ( 2 s a ( A'é"f’ oprc~ Qull fmae t 23 * UKâ€"T_ 2 â€"buy St. Lawrence Extra Graâ€" mulated by the bag. You get the choicest, pure cane sugar, untouched by any hand from Refinery to your kitchenâ€"and St. Lawrence Sugar Retingries, Limited. Montreal. For Preserving Bags 10o 1b8., 25 1bs., 20 1be. Cartons 3 lbs., 2 1he, Best deaters can supply you. !". th fv’f.‘f;:.ft,':."i 1 x S"fll The Mystery. Overlooked. vou C%/ internal and external, cured withâ€" ont pain by our home treatment. Write ce before too late. Dr. Bellman Medioai Co., Limited, Collingwood, Ont. (‘1 ALL 8TON®ES, kIDNXEY AND BLAD KÂ¥ der Stones, Kiduey trouble, Gravel, Lumbago and kindred ailments positively cured with the new German remedy, "‘Banol," price $1.50.â€" Another new remedy for Diabetesâ€"Mellitue, and eure cure, is "Banol‘s Antiâ€"Diabetes." Price $2.00 from drugwists or direct. The Banol Manufa t»\u-inf Compauny of Canada, Limited, Winnipeg, Man. YOUXG MAN BE A BARBER I TEACH you quickly, cheaply, thoroughly and furnish tools free. We give you actual ehop exforlouoo, Write for free cata logue. oler College, 219 Queen 8t. East, Toronto. AN ESTABLISNED _ MONTREAL INâ€" vestment Company selling dividend paying Securities, requines the . services of able men. Exclusive territory to right parties. Good profits can be made in whole or spare time. This is a solid proâ€" position backed by iufluential men who form the directorate. Write P. 0. Box 1445, Montreal, for particulars. Mention paper. STAHP COLLECTORSâ€"HUNDRED DIF ferent Forsign Stamp®. Catalogue, Album, ouly Seven Conts. Marks Stamp Company, Toronto. P‘ ACTORY 8ITES, WITL O@% WITHROUT Railway _ trackage, in _ Toronto. Frampton and other towns and «ities. FRUIT. STOCK, GRAIN AND Daikx Farms in ail sections of Ontario. Bome «naps. MEN WANTED H. W. DAWSON, Ninesty Colborne Street, Toronto. H. W. DAWSON, Cotborne St., Tororts When buying your Piano insist on having an ANCER, _ TUMORS, LUMPS, EPC OTTO MIGEL" MAXWELL‘S CAT‘D MAXWELL & S9U8, . $T7. MARTS, dst The Wringer Beard oxtends from the ri4c, out of the way of the corer. . This mhow» practically the whole top of the *ub to open nyâ€" auakes it easy to put in and taze out clothes. No other washer has as large an opening. No other washer can be worked with crank handie at side as arell as top lever, Do you use Maxwell‘s "Favories"=the churn that mekes quality butrer ? Write us f7F catalogues if your dealer does mot handle there. £9 EAIDENTIAL PROPERTIE® 1N Brampton ind a dozen cther town*. w1G6H SPEep “CHAMEOQEND MALE HELP WANTED. §TAMPS AND COINS FARMS FOR SALE ACENTS WANTED MISCELLANEOUN® u numbers pt:“ enth receive sing Tublets, and the vertmiuly do cur trouble. Here is a ty$ "It is vou the Tublets in "NA â€" DRUâ€" Â¥) i DS have pro ried. rean any lastig tablote | with ph 17 6Ww O speak E4 "ping x pert sig U We j6t d