“Tug MEN In " more. Mn not "no th, SIGNS LBY ST.’ MICH. I an Norvzn m ENCY “LE scovery um! tt meaning-t on tho org:- aut A-rea:. an and In. nu.†.ov.qe. 'm then tho I.) w. mung a: o Tron6ertbt Cinlllt h at In. MW RN ieir.itr, humus. In. to an def. Lot wait “no th “Ina. " fill t he. BONGO STRANGE FEASTS or THESE APRI- Ct d GENTLEMEN. Anna-e mum In lame no Preserved‘ n Fur-Isl Food For - “row: Tablet-A Inn-h Tran-Ilaâ€! Kinkâ€! " the Congo. l The cannibal kings of Africa trim still adhere to their horrid food and In- dulgo in it whenever they an. When one of a king's numerous wive- dinn her body ia smoked and kept in the royal pantry until required to furnish forth n festal hoard. The cannibnls believe that the virtues of the dead ere trans- terred m the per-mu that eats the flesh. M. Xavier Pens, A member (1 the Bo. cietie de Geographic and Anthropt» [Ogre of France, has spent thirty-five years of his life as an explorer Ind tnder in South Africa. He In; pro- tnhtr. a more intimate knowledge of the tribes of the great Congo region than any other man living. A TRAVI-ILLER'S ADVENTURE. The chief wife of King Dough. the ruler of several flourishing villages on the Congo, was a famous Amazon prin- case. for whom, according to custom. King Bongo had paid to her father A very large sum in native commodities. One day, returning from a trading expedition up the Congo River. M. Pane, with his negro servant, stopped at one of Dongo'e villages to request additional bearers for the rubber they were conveying to the coast. King Bongo was not at the village, but was expected in the morning. During the night the village was fiercely attacked by enemies and in the fight a number ot Dongn’s people Were siain. _amon% Milan's. the Amazon princess. his clue “no. . "When I opened my eyes in the'morn- 7 mg." said M. Pam, "The first thing on which they rested was King Dong). He had returned at dawn. From an r the "ot on which I slept he had drawn a short Lox and into this was putting the limbs. trunk and head of a woman. I {utlged they were those ot the Amazon w to had been killed in the skirmish of the previous night, but Bongo was sulky and would not tell [no what he meant to do with thorn. Closing the has: he pushvd it under the cot and left the hut “I hntl no inclination to remain in surh t-mnpnnv and followed the king. I searvlnm] about the village for him. but in my absence from the hut he had returned nnd taken the box to 3 vit- lage a few miles away. I vain]! wait- ed for his return all that der., he Vil- l'tgo-rs advising me that in In. present mood it would be dangerous to swatch Bongo. “The following morning I determined to wait no longer. The villagers were demoralizing my own negroes. Em since the battle they had been fasting on tho slain and were beginning to ex- hibit that ungovernczhle ficroeness Which is the result of t'annimlism. Ther were literally drunk with blood. None of the Ingrown would accompany me to the other village as they were afraid of the King. When I returned the village the [tr-groan: were almost afraid to dmct me to the royal abode. and tried to du. sunde me from r1/etaurtintLt"r'g,'i "As I walked towards t group of ItP, than which sheltered the King‘s ut I noticed smuke was r't1',e,ri"di from every ornok and cranny of me we [and roof. An I neared the hut I heard 3 man's wins raked in hideous shriek. and Iamentationi. An offensive odor mulled my nostrils. - - _ and lamen'ationi. An offensive odor mliled my nostrils. "I knocked loudly on tin hat door and bongo _,tospended his wailing long enough lo order me away. I d. no intention of going until I had obtained Mm l Wuntell. and so knocked again. Receiving no amwar. I pushed open the door and stepped inside. For a moment I nearly fainted; then I rushed out for a breath of fresh air. King Donlo sullenly followed. "in the minute's glimpse of the hut'a intarim' I saw a strange sign. Suspend- ed from the roof of the ca in were the legs and head of a human-the head n woman's. In tho centre of the room a wood fire was smouldering. and the strange odor that had smelled me on Apply-wining the hovel WM a hundred times .intr.nsifitd.. I asked the African ngwm his native dialect: ... 'hat is the matter? Why do you no ittr.ospitahly forsake your friends and. shuttmg yourself in your hut, indulge i ntheee unmanly tears? u it worth? ortltt great 1varriy.rVh? otstt.Einqt? “Alas. no,' replied the African 'It is all for this woman. Unhapfy wrotch um I am, I gave nearly hal I owned to buy her from her tribe. They an very powerful and my demand mm“; ivory tasks and ostuch feathers much cattle for her death. That knot all. She was tho chief woman of mi household. Never were there sue farms as those she superintendod. With Ingrhgll my revehue 15 $990.: - . . "'Cheer up-oem. us!" I advised. 'Tyetis,. may not be 30 ba as you thin}? " gr has are very bad indeed,' rele the monarch: 'but. since I mast lose so much. I will not lose her body. When I eat of her flesh her courage will be- »mo my courage; she was braver than ill the warriors of the tribe. When t eat of her flesh her wisdom will be- come my wisdom; she was wiser than any princess of the Congo. Thus will she "hoot my heart in hours of despyir, and her virtues will again be lune. when hunger of the heart comes to Bongo he will but taste of the flesh of his queen and the evil spirits must the away. Great will be . D0030} pqwer in battle .and greet will be In. wUdom in eouneil.' " mum,' said I. pointing to the cabin, those things suspended from the tpeiiintg ninth: hat are the remains of your w o ' the Kihg. 'Had it bien' k moi niLi bk death would have been the {the of his presumption, But the war in al.. moat lininhod. Will the great white man auto hits errand t" THE CANNIBALS‘ BELIEF. "I promptly outed it. An ho listen- ad Bongo went into the but to out .40" .tho Down-.0! med theals. He “The white man has any“: "'And you are smoking It to pro- ierve it t" "'With grants and incantation! w.hielt...rmt in; interrupted,'. “gonad unit" ihrUrtui chiefs ale iiG euiiir, t'flh"d'l'l'i in conquest many village. to tr ht oist tho box in N WEEK iii' kgnad been placed to convex it from them of tht,htntdsitf"igt blotting: King Bongo my la y or i','dti,'pf,,u'gpdtd"a"r"aim"l nib. smoked w a. . "Ga-tum " j: _l§o_bec§mo one of the A STRANGE SMOKE-HOUSE A HORRID FEAST. BAA NNIBAL KINGS. t_---.------..- his possessions. The negroea feared him greatly, and no doubt ango himpelt wgibas it all to that horrible cannibal tome which he keeps stored in the cheat under his cot. This occurred only two or three rears an." Ihe reudnye-t to be Purchased by a Hindu-Me " Englishmen. The cable brings news that Admiral Nelson's old line of battle ship, the Foudroyant, which has lain for sev- eral years in a German shipyard, he. just been purchased by several Eng- lishmen. imbued with ntruly patriotic spirit. and it is their purpose to re- store the grand old vessel as nearly to her original condition as possible and then exhibit her in all the ports of the , world. Thus there is a commercial I. " well an patriotic motive behind the so- I tion. All Englishmen treasure Nelson to- lica. and it is not to be wondered at, therefore. that they have an especial fondness for the Foudrorant,tor it w" said Nelson regarded it as his favor- ite ship and loved it, "an a father loves his child." Not long agtr-onir in 1892-the Eng- liah newspapers and periodicals teem- ed with articles about Nelson and his ship, income at that time the British Admiralty had sold the hull ot the Foudroyent to a German firm, at the Baltic port of Swinemude. to be broken up for the timber in it. The ship was built of wood throughout, for she ploughed the seas at . time when steel and iron craft had not been thought ot. , The Announcement of the Admir. alty's purpose created A GREAT BENSAT10N. in all parts of England. and pub- lic spirit was so aroused in favour of Preserving the ship as an hiatorioal who that a fund was started for its repurchase. the sum names“); for that ig)'ftt" U. was estimated. being. about .000. Money was freely contributed. but before the full amount was realiz- ed it was announced by the London yrtnty. of the German line that ~they had disposed of the ship by print; sale to a few Englishmen. and that ll would soon be sent back to England. There was great rejoicing therefore when the Foudroyant was towed into the Thames and anchored. It seems. however. that a Germ-4n who makes a specnaiLy m dealing m such .relics suiaseiquentiy boughL what renamed of the famous old fighter, end it is from him that the hulk has Just. been purchased. They knead 3° spend a. good deal ot money 'urreti.t- tug the ship in the are prevailing m Nelson’s time, and wil even go to the extent of reproducing the furniture of tht 81398! Admiralh oabim. " .. Englishmen still speak fondly of the Foudroyant, and hardly ever mention Nelson's name with- out linking hers with his. She was a great high, bulky ship, w.ith guns on every deck, and a. mas- sive carving of Jupiter for her figure- head. When she was towed into the Theme a few yous ago there was but little left ot hat. and Mr jrpusd,bro ironLnosed oWhead had'beeu saw- ed off and pout'mg. as it martin gekmidst of the ruins of the mm c . ABOUT THE FOUDROYANT. She was, in 1798, one of the squadron of Commodore Sir John Borlaat ""ags ren, who frustrated Commodore Bona- garjt's plan to land troops in Lough willy, and took the French 74-gnn Roche and three frigate; The Earl St. Vincent sent the 'oudroyant in 1799 to reinforce Admiral Nelson's fleet " Palermo, and on June BNelson hoisted higflag to her mizaenmatt,Ua,4: " It was in his room on the Foudroy- ant that Lord Nelson annulled the treaty made by Captain Foote with the French garrison, which had sur- rendered with the condition that they should he sent to France. It was on board of the Foudroyant also that Francisco Coracciolo, who had com- manded the Tancmdi in the fleet under Hotham.lut {ho deserted to take Atr- QUE“. â€uh n “v uwvnvvu. .- ..e_v _-_ vwe in the Parthenopian Republic, was convicted by a court-martial and untamed to he hanged at the yard arm of the Minerva. The Englishmen who have under- taken tho work of refitting the Fond- royant believe it will be complefted bo- fom next fall. and that next sprlng she will be in sings to be taken to the various parts o the world for exhibi- tion. In the Andes than. in a wax tree, the product of which Is very similar to whege, "The other day,- when my son was about to start o.n a .little journey, his travelling bag lying filled but stili open on the floor. I heard his mother sayxng to him: ‘Have you ft everything?' It was almost start ing. That was who: my mother used to ask me, and I hadn't heard it. these years and years. But I guess it Is a familiar question, though one asked oftenest by mothers, perhaps, out of their constant care for their children's welfare and comfort." Minx. h% cold, in I common f,'ei'qlt,idf' It In due o impure and detieUrst tood end It often lend: to urioue troublee. The remody le found in pure, rich blood. “I on not very strong end sometime, need I tonic to no? mo bottle unmet ulckneee. I and the two or three bottl- M Hood’e Ber-eporlue lo jut what lneed. l hove ' it occulonelly for new“! not! out! do not how my doctors! bull to my.†Mm Jun! groaning, 1!!2P'" Filood's Hood's PillillTi'G'cG1 [3th. 0110?“. Blood Plug: Always ttarsaparilla, NELSON’S OLD SHIP. THE MIDDLE-AGED MEN. CIT-Hum, any whimiuw "iiaiuint- 3. '1;Mor.: Nutter"! Bo Severely That le lemme Ar, t moqt A Ilelpleu Crigrpte--" Again Able The Experience of 9. Bruce Co Farmer. MWMOU¢0st86C*3‘-Sf "t.r,t-t-t8H8set 3’$.!.OMWQ t MILK IS AN EMULSION of butter. You don't need t to be told that milk is an easier food than butter. Scott's Emulsion is an easier food than cod-liver oil. It is half digested; almost ready to enter the blood and help , make tissue, nerve and bone. It is rest for digestion: it stimulates, helps, restores digestion; and, at the same i time, supplies the body with a kind of nourishment it t can get in no other way. t q"toq9Wi.aoio. -.rc.t',:-r-iqs-ir.gra$rs.cCc"i.-.'ess_ to tre About Ills Work as Well as Ever Frgm um Walkerbog Telescope, _ . During the past five years the Tele- scope hag pul)li.~l’wd man? statements giving the Ban..;ulars o cures from the use of r. Williams' Pink Pillar They were all so well authenticated as to leave no doubt as to their complete truthfulness. but had any doubt re- mained its last visrage would have been removed by a cure which has recent- ly come under our personal observation. It is the can of Mr. John Allen, a pro- minent young farmer of the town- ship of Greenock. Mr. Allen is so well known in Walkerton and the vicinity adjoining it, that a brief account of his really remarkable recovery from what seemed an incurable disease will be of interest to our readers. Duringgthe ear- ly part of the summer of 1 5, while working in the bush, Mr. Allen was seized with what appeared to him to he rheumatic pains in the back and shoulders. At first be regarded it as but a passing attack, and thought that it would disappear in a’ 'day or two. On the contrary, however, he daily continued t, grow worse, and it was not long before he had to give up work altogether. Fran the back the pains shifted to his right leg and hip where they finally sett ed and so completely helpless did he be- come. that he was unable to do more than walk across the room and then only with the aid of crutches. Of course he consulted the doctors, but none of them seemm able to do him any good. People in speaking of his case. always spoke pityin%ly. it being generally thought that IP had gassed from the worh of activity, an that he was doomed to live and die " cripple. We are free to confess that this was our own view of the matter, and our sur- prise. therefore. can be readily imagin- "l when some few weeks ago. we saw this self-same John Allen driving through the town on the top ofa large load of grain. Great however, as was our surprise at first, it became still greater when on arriving at the rist mill, he proceeded to jump nimbly from 1 the load, and then with the greatest ap- ‘garent ease began to unloa the heavy age of grain. Curious to know what it was that had brought this wonder- ful change,wetoolr the first convenient _ opportunity to ask him. "Well,") said he in reply, "r am as well a man‘ as I ever was, and I attribute my cure to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. and to nothing else." Mr. Allen then gave us in a very frank manner..the whole story of his sickness, and his cure. the chie points of which we have set forth above. After consulting two physi- cians and finding no relied, he settled down to the conviction that his case was a hopeless one. He lost confidence in medicines. and when it was suggested that he should give Pink Pills a trial, he at first absolutely refused. How- ever. his friends persisted and finally he agreed to give them a trial. The effect was beyond, his mosh sanguine expectations. as the Pink Pille have driven away every trace of his pains and he ia able to go about his work as usual. As might be expected Mr. Allen is loud in his praise of Pink Pills, and was quite willing that the facte of his case should be given publicity hoping that it might catch the_eye of someone who was eiinilarly afflicted. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills act directly upon the blood and nerves, building them anew and thus driving diseaee from the system. There is np. trouble due to either of these caueee which Pink Pills will not cure, and in hundreds of cases they have {gamed patients to health after all ot r remedies had fail- ed. Ask for Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and take nothing else. The genome are always enclosed in boxes the wrapper around which bears the full trade mark "Dr. Williams' Pink Pitta for Pale People." May be had from all dealers or sent post paid on receipt of 500mm a box or six boxes for $2.50 by ad- dminn the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., arming the Dr. Brockville, Ont. During a. terrific but short thunder- storm at Lytham. England, on a recent evening, large fig-ks pf wild dqck: 39d geese Tied over the town in a panic- stricken condition, screeching very loud- ly. They had been driven from the banks of the river, and so low did they fly in the country that farmers went out and knocked them down with sticks. sun or OHIO, CITY or Toma. Luau Court". ) M. In" J. Calm-r make: oath that he in the unto! partner of the firm of F. J. CHIN" 2 80.. tts tte/ith", To (an ' Talado, o n ' II . O I . I m 'dl, W, the up of t,ttrlith8G'tii DOL. LAR or out tgl ovary one of (Juan-h that - be our“ ' the use at HALL'I (Du-nun CURE. IRAN! J. CEINIY. . Iron to Mon no and sub-crib“! in any pronoun. this It! do] at Doc-nut. A. D. l . A A. W. GLIASON . ( anan) mm Ma. ttl The Czar of Bush has two bobbing -the collection of when stamp' and CURED OF SCIATIGA. PANIC-STRICKEN GEESE. h. Agnew’s Triumphs in Medicine. Heart. Disease Exiled-Over Fifty Members of the House of Commons Tell of the Virtues of Dr. Att- new's Catarrhal Powder. The name of Dr. Agnew is one that deserves to rank with Jenner, Pasteur and Rontgen in the good done human- ity. Dreaded as it is by everyone heart disease has no terrors where Dr. Agnew's Cure has become known. Mrs. Roadhouse, of \Villscroft, Ont., has said--") sweat would stand out in great beads upon my face so intense were the attacks of heart disease. l tried many remedies but my life seemed fated until Dr. Agnew'e Cure for the Heart became known to me and to-day I know nothing of the terrors of this trouble." It relieves instantly, and Bayes. many lives. daily. . It has been said that everyone in Canada suffers, to some extent, from catarrh. Whether the trouble is in the air. or where, it is a satisfaction toknow that in Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder is the medicine that gives re- lief in ten minutes, and has cured some of the worst cases. where deafness and other troubles have followed the dis- ease. Geo. E. Casey, Michael Adams, Donald w. Davis, A. Fairbairn, C. F. Ferguson, W. H. Bennett, and all told some fifty members of the House of Commons have borne testimony to the effectiveness of this remedy. _ 'i-iris/tmrs-nt , Riermmtl "Kg; Jairir jFuiririkt for Agnew: m- medies, and see that you get them and not worthless imitations. A GLASS FLOOR. A new warehouse in Paris has been built with glass floor. The initial cost is considerably over that of the ordin- ary floor, but in view of the fact that toughened glass is so much longer liv- ed than wood, the exgeriment is likely to prove cheaper in t e long run. WEST SHORE THROUGH SLEEPING CAR TO NEW YORK. One of the haiidsoinest sleeping cars that had ever been turned out of the factory is noyv running from Toronto to New York without change via the pop- ular West shore route. It is a. buffet car, and refreshments can be obtained en route, if desired. This oer leaves Union Station, Toronto, every day except Sunday, at 4.55 p. m., reaching New York next morning at 10.10 a. in. On Sundays the sleeper tone from Bam- ilto.n only, connecting with the through train from Toronto. Call " any Grand Trunk office in Toronto for information or Y,,",' in sleeping our. Reservations can made In advance if desired. Rynkman’s Kauuenay cure. An Australian paper contains an Bd.. vertisement of an enterprising trades- man, who at the end of it announces: Ministers supplied with goods at cost price, y they agree?. to mention the fact to their etmgregtrtiorts. Positive Cure for Rheumatism and Paralysis. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN. I’Rovner or UMumo. l L'ountyof Weurworus, - Town: J I, Ann Cattery, wife of Owen Caf- tery, of the City of Hamilton, in the County of Wentworth, Province of Ontario, do solemnly declare ‘bat. I am forty one years of age and live apt No. 227 Ferrie street east, in said on y. Three years ago I was afflicted with severe pain in my head. So great was this pain that I thought I would lose my reason. I also be- came very despondent. my general health was poor, and I was as tired when I awoke in the morning as when I went to bed. About a year anda half ago my left aide became paralyzed which caused it to he numb and cold. Everything was done to bring back warmth and oircalatiomtrut all was in vain until I began taking Mr. Ryckman'e Kootenay Cure in Ap- Til, 1895, of which I have now used two and one half bottles, and have recover- ed my health. My side is free from Par.. alysis, the numbness has left me, and I feel like a new woman. I cannot speak_ tgo highly, pf the medicine. . And I make this solemn declaration conscientiously believing it to he true, and Peter, that it is of the same force and ef act as if made under oath, and by virtue of the Canada Evidence Taken and acknowledged before me at the fN of Hamilton, in the County of Ventworth, this 18th day of December. 1895. (Signed). Ann Cattery. (Signgd). ly. .Fred Jvai,lery Pet ' . ""dRNGmikiGiiG' forrrtaking affidavit] and Notary Public. Act. The preparations for the coronation of the Czar still go on, and it promises to be a very brilliant affair. One event is keenly watched for at this time by a certain portion of the Russian Com.- munity, and that is. the inning of the manifesto that gives freedom toaomany who have been banished. Ohl what; joy to be free once more! In the same my those who havebeen banished from the gleasurcs of thial.ife , Dyapegaia and qdiget.io.n. experience this w en cured tr.C4rinkintt freely of St: [icon '&ilerra. M inst-,1. Ada-0’ ttttot Bur late-......... one but“. Ttlit".'.'.'.'.'.". "iaa.C.T.r.L......haltatsu., ugnr................................|vo pound. [Alumna 'iViiav.y.'.y.V.r....,.v.ttrojrallo- Din-01nd†- and you. in the In“. "d thy "tret, 35nd tyer, 21,923; g war: Recipe-For Making a Delicious Health Drink " Small Cost. add tho extract and homo; titll in n warn tltr to! "Iona-(our hour“: tit it fermentt on plan on too. when it will on: awning Old dollelous. Tho race but n ho obtained h d! on. ad groom-y 'tor" 10 ad ll out mau I. “In two ind in wtoare. MtMCOW A SCENE Oli' ACTIVITY. AN EYE TO BUSINESS i" Triai.r"h, an!" on" for Dys- . uni "rar youtowrlte III before buy Ind 1ndigestion. Sold by " l "i"a'lrg'2tgi'SNl'fd In the Bolder Valley. no†Butch". in the Crimea, there standl I walnut tree which must be At [out 1,000 years old. It yields annually from 80,0ptl.ut 100.000 nun. and is the property of two Tartar families, who shun ita product: equally. STAMPS dating before 1870 ot Canada. Provinces. United States: also Bill and LAw y, amps bought. Good Prices. WM. R. ADAMS. 7 Ann st†Toronto. Ont. DOUOL“ DIG... Slam.Gravol 3nd metal waters, metallic ceilings, sky “can. shoot meld workers. IM Adelaide W..Toronto G. DUTHIE & SONS SLATE, SHEET-METAL. TILE & GRAVEI. ROOF!†Sheet Maya! Ceilings, Terra Comm Tile Red Black and Green sei",',','," Slate. Meta! Cor nices. Felt, Tar. Itootintt iteh, Etc. Gutter- Ioownpipes, &c.. supplied the trade. Telephone 1936. Menu: a Winner " TORONTO Midisriia-Pr-iG. senCtlauslmrt"t. _ G. T. PENDRITFL Manufsctmr. " to 81 Adelddo " W.. Toronto. (“CYCLES-- PRODUCT orr A WALNUT TREE. ilil ll. W. PETRIE. otritte “WM" Toronto, In. Adjoining In Union In“. cum-we to: nun. M Aji' i)ri'iiy RY , - - - ‘1 - - - - v memo In â€phony. EM" Working annulle- nitd Durability. camera T0 GIVE HILL MEI MIR Mn.. A WWII." â€may. 3nd all kind. of TORONTO "MOI AND ORNAMIITAL WORK. TORONTO. CAN. Over 2,000 in 3|:le operation. ttwt 'rar you to write u| before burutrf'ftefff"t: IRON AND WIRE WORK. Iron Fencing, UP. tin 'jiiiiil2iiiiiiU'iiiili' I.†I I LC"'] . ._.__'__- iG niGrk JariCiiNRWiifje, 1'ii,tll'5ril Busy wives who use SAP Ll c: never seem to grow old.Try a. cake .. Hors‘é‘éflï¬hoes A complete wreck of domestic heppinese has often resulted from bsdly washed dishes, from en nucleon kitchen, or from trifle. which seemed light no air. But by these things s men often judges of " wife’s devotion to her femily, end chutes her with genera neglect when he bttia her cereless in these perticulers. Kerry s home owes I lug. part BAPOLIO. " Grocer. omen cub-ma“ cheapo! - tor urouo. to nuke a - prom. Sou but such "new. and lulu on hung jut what you ordered. oucnv’n-o’u! 2jome INCEE .r.tr-ers.j,rgrs,trf40lANettillQti?!P) ENGINES [IV * "coup-mo All) To " A. IIPIIBIITED All: I!!!†" “THE IUI.’ A t3truttr High Gradg WhooL " I of its thrifty nuts)“. and its consequent happinou to USE , n. nuns , afn"iiiiiinitia 8t, lantmL W. PA). 8 17. ottuq “I Work- WATEROUS tol .e.t.....- vii - ___V - Will dry land over night with a hard [ion ttttUh. I Par; Prop-rod lam "ttMa--" shadu.‘ isIAun cm new. PA!.N_I§._' Isumu. III.“ “I n. “metal-g psi- ot INIUIA‘I’IOH OI NEURALOIA When you on buy a bow. of I b y'- ahoumutol. For " cents and in" immodinte roll“. BOLD " DROGGIITS. “SAM Oh" ’“Mm MW“ . CANADA PERMANENT LOAN AND SAVINGS COMPANY CumibodWIMI...... ......0 5,000,000 "ia-u-tti---..-- 1.600.000 "qqt-r....-----. H.000... [{le o.rum-ToRotrTo BY., TORONTO. Branch ottieaa: Winnipeg. um. Vancouver. B.G. The mph resource: ot this Com may onâ€. It. mumm- tonne adv-noel on Rut. Run! without ddâ€. st low nu- of interest. Ind on the molt. tunable torm- of upsyment. Inna Ig,','),?'.', on Improvod Farms and on Product! " own and City Properties. “cannons an HVNICIPAI: DIBIITURII Punclnsun. " h ., __-‘_ .L_.‘..n r a â€UNIUII'AL III-II“ .%r..-i. - MP-__--'-'-- _ Ammo-lio- may In made through the 09mm!) a Logan Ann-tinny or M. the 0mm 6656 tkstyrr..Hs..r. " " ,. canon m mom THECOOK'S BEST, FRIEND DUNN'S BAKING POWDER 753a tor a any“ “do t1l11'k'lt Many '"". _ J',",0li Women fi'iitate likes FOB TWENTY-SIX YEARS. GAGES? BALI In CANADA. "AV! VOID TACTID THEME“ MASON. In.“ Director. Toronw. BunTFORD GANG. DON'T Bill!“ In - nodal“ You DO IILIIVI than.“ Ink and m, no YOU - that you no can: to gain health. it...“ Ild vuort SUPPER ... it,,, F.