OF COMMEREg Toronto. | the Stock iess Man, ht rates are nuch As l. cer n paid for ca ow York and from New in < are thrown out of nt Chisholm say* probably be re* of Canadian $814,861, an â€" r eight mar ectation, the visible i the United States sed this week. The bushels as against 000 bushels the cnr. Â¥~*2,001, an |“" r eight _ monthg #4,. s of $878,.804. change are bigher some bankers see imports will _ profitable to ?:h.'. tizens are wrougnt of alarm that "b illy deserted by 1 ig. â€" Houses havye a few _ hundred ice station, baker their contents and sh and pedestrain® beart of m‘;‘:‘ k he.rl: Cl:'d ts t States, s closed in France, mn ration‘of the fad ties of guano loyed is 17 bushâ€" Is of Desperadoes~ F CRIME, Entered in Two e Mold â€"Â¥ ps. last year 15,000 by ushels a anly $24,870,724 as 8213 in â€" August leptember ogulll‘ stering exchan y with New Yolt at a point which zold at a profit. 1 discount rate is ket rate 21â€"4 per Toronto Exchange : week, with some le, and Banks of rce. These issues ivestors, and spec imnue on a limited , 000 oron terost to ao May . the .~ it of the epidemic Ohio. _ Holdâ€"up3 ts upon peaceable the startling au~ adoes and their d iarmers anticiâ€" Stocks of cured money market i# s on cahoice stock ned at 5 per cent. . discounts are 6 » bank clearings a two 11 a I‘wo years ago . afloat to Eur in increase of m veek. A year age 10 wheat has been manipulation . of some _ advance, this week‘s rise. y Northwestern iy â€" demand for a foreign buying A number of egâ€" lation, all pointâ€" News from Rusâ€" twoâ€"thirds of an nts â€" last week istound demand fop bushels ag & year ago «hels. _ The is now 124. .960 bushely hels a year 10 cents per dvance of rovement in conseâ€" ustry bas n & mr_l.slml’ is in Onâ€" is up and in sentlâ€" y 276,000. was last American in cereals und up» xats conâ€" rd mads ow held r prices. T )0 ow 11gâ€" he Amâ€" an 100,â€" expectâ€" ence in for the “rry'u.. ad Ant. houses against the cor. The toâ€" no was on United weeks, osition th the ork M while Pacifigq TA graln i and away bring »ht ind are reâ€" he ut nt T 18 Nw of hay ;‘hï¬: "eistered J Made Ofap . #a¢ " three t in m _ CC3 at ni ht, and also note t the liokes mgmt oct NQ Othep Placas where _the fowls \ I Yermin‘ are found in the boxeg :: u3 taid, then saturate with puzats, ind aftorward fift AAHF @4 siIGr Te 30 OOr the nests * ashesg We h &re gn teaning A 17 2. 1 2008 aft, Srth op ashes Alge, shoulg Weeks er alned supply q Food m‘lng by shes, or } @ have f SUuperior ay. The "fE FARM. ON "" 58 replenished every twa ks and examined as to their ee that no fowls m.h Sts at night, and also note ‘*es are not placedt nnidaAr® m oT 00 pecia sNG A 82 w we I né io ol spreading the ‘pan from coal fires Poultry often conâ€" ‘llar to stoneâ€"bruise perch upon the cindâ€" oa) ashes.. Try fillâ€" >xes with dry earth elter yet, unleached ound that earth or to nests made of saving will be someâ€" 1y if your flock of s own cows in piace l am confident he ‘s than he can purâ€" ‘ in selecting a male rd.. A few dollars t to much per bhead will be raised from il a cow that wilD of butter annually is much in the herd wluces 250 pounds y leaves but fifty 1 the 400â€"pound cow profit. In 1894 my ced 329 pounds of ! had six that made ‘»@king 508 pounds, s‘cinâ€"Friesian. One ith her first â€" calf ids of butter. naAIRY HERD. tairymen have long to pick up supplies haphazard throughâ€" It requires the utâ€" Mr. Gurler says in the herd is the founâ€" it a good foundation ss can prosper or be ssful. If weo build th cows that have a 10 more than 150 h im, we shall make a of â€" dairying. â€" We at will produce with â€" and care sufficient id labor and leave & When we cannot acâ€" : is something wrong POULTRY. and replace and: o commence with | to do some inâ€" our work. Who ie for our keepâ€" & _ Are we exâ€" sive age â€"for not Ve ivera ‘ows are paying when the dairy is it good busiâ€" now what cows n must vhich are makâ€" : are making a uction of the ome excuse for g what his inâ€" ucing, but now tever for this a wsimple and of testing the rerage intelligâ€" te the Babcock . A machine of can be bought ‘n what each io more reasâ€" will no more there is in can no more When propâ€" ow that does butter annuâ€" 1 as possible. it have not use judgment ty in _ conâ€" lirst or secâ€" i is starting has his cows »mmend â€"the re they are h as produce eilter, a numâ€" Then we want ich the milk. p of the butâ€" e if we have 1andling the cow to the re it is testâ€" warm it is m to prevent chromate of s very niceâ€" ; the size of . It can be nd should be ‘_three days ill give you i cow‘s milk. the weight d together Froduced by at add oneâ€" id we shall nd the Bab= us give each n t we shall ) cents per c times is st prepare ins in the elter cows oduct with a dairyâ€" hree times wlore takâ€" he bottle. iwe to preâ€" â€"lking and â€"in eightâ€" very well, the milk scouraged undertakâ€" he â€" only lor three bout one on and. !s al lips. Bend address to C. I. Hood & Co. An Explanation of the Cause of Suicides Which Have Lately Oecurred, A case which occurred lately at Doâ€" ver, where a Scottish gentleman comâ€" mitted suicide, is of importance in ons particular, says the London Medical Press. At the inquest it was pointed out that he had not been himself since an attack of influenza two years before, and that in all probability this attack was the primary cause of the selfâ€"deâ€" struction. _ The importance of this fact, with regard to motives for suicide, should not be disregarded. and we are of the opinion that a large number of the unexplained cases of suicide which bave occurred lately are, in all probaâ€" bility, to be ascribed to postâ€"influenzal cerebral changes. During the six epiâ€" demics which have spread over the country since the winter of 1889â€"90, a very large Fropnrtinn of the populaâ€" tion have suffered, while many of these must have developed nervous symptoms. To turn to a particular instance, a casa in court not long ago depended on the question whether a man had comâ€" mitted suicide or not, but the fact that he had had an attack of influenza two years before was not insisted on, owing to the length of time which had elapsed between the attack and the deathâ€"just about the same time, it will be noticed which elapsed between the attack and the suicide in the first case, Medical jurists will do well to remember that, if the actual effects of influenza, though protean, are fleeting, the after results in many are of long duration, insidious, and often of a nervous charâ€" acter, leading to the cerebral instalâ€" Is kissing a common or a proper noun? ask:‘% tne teacher. Boin, answered the girl with the corâ€" lity. eenee in en U C apatsaazernzar ces LC PVA VC * % are the best afterâ€"dinne. Hood‘s Pills pills, aid digestion. 2¢ %% Prove the merit of Hood‘s Sarsaparilia â€"post tive, perfect, permanent Cures. Cures of Scrofula in soverest forms, Salt Rheum, with intense itching and burnpâ€" scald head, boils, pimples, etc. Cures of Dyspepsia, Rhenmatism, Catarrh, by toning and making rich, red blood. Cures of Ne vousness ind That Tired Feeling, by feeding nerves, muscles and tissues on pure blood. For book of cures by slops; fowls relish all these thi‘ngs. Boiled whoert is recommended to be fed warm on coldl mornings. Potatoes or vegetables may beâ€" added, also a dash of cayenne; this will put gour fowls .in better spirits than if a reakfast â€" of cold grain were given alone. Hoods scratching for it, t exercise. Give all spare, either swoeet __ _ C _ 2C 2I0per kind of food for the cold ecason. and leave the rest to nature or Providence, Whatever is done to inâ€" Crease the comfort and well being of your fowls increases their profit in the siame ratio. Do not overcrowd nor al low crowers among your winter layers. Secugg also a quantity of road dust and ® ols knmentacis de it & provide a place where corn can be buried in it so as D 6 §00., C AmRPO POWwIG PC rather provide warm comfortab and the proper kind of food for season. and leave the rect tn n Trs eakia . i 1. PVETe c EL T9 Oe noxious to vermin by being absorbed into fle system and finding an outlet at t pores of the body. The same rule will ax:rly to horses and cattle that are infested with vermin. We would never ghli;;k of rligdlixng nnimalg o{hlloe °Y sprinkling sulphur aroun m. Instead, the surest way is to give a dose of sulpilur in soft food. _A very handy ad{iunct of the poultry house is a splint broom. It can _ be made of linn or hickory and is strong and durable. If the poultry quarters are cleansed daily, asg they should be w hen large numbers are congrega.ted1 the work is very much lessened and the broom will merally be found to be sufficient . f\%hen the cleaning is not done daily but weekly, a broad hoe should be used first, followed by n:ï¬lmt broom. Aâ€" small handâ€"barrow will be found very handy. The hennery should undergo a thorough inspection. . Do not leave gaping cracks, where _ the lumber has shrunk apart. Batten with MATrOW strips of lumbers Cover all alrâ€"holes and rafters, if your hennery it 10¢ ceiled, and provide sliding winâ€" dows, and have the windows where they should be; upon the south side of the Q"‘l.arfero so as to admit all the sunâ€" ehma wacctis 2. I thina masls, CC _/" @umil all LDe sunâ€" shine possible." Yourifowls ate as susâ€" ceptible to the cheering influence of fresh air and sunshine as yourself, and Appreciate it in their way quite as much. We do not believe in artificial heatâ€" mg of houses where fowis are confined; rle'l}g{ provide warm comfortable houses ’you will have mo trouble with vermâ€" in for some time at least. Before poultry goes into winter quarâ€" ters see that they are free from vermin. Examine them and if lice are found,apâ€" Pply a mixture made of lard and keroâ€" sene. . _Mix well by stirring briskly unâ€" til it is of the consistency of cream, and apply freely to the top of the headâ€" wings, legs, etc. Do not depend upon dry sulphur mixed in the dust bath, oto.. ~rathor mix in }|, 7 â€" _5 "3@ Dills wIg Once evary _ C 10 U _Ne_â€"given. to fowls once every week. Featherâ€"eating is caused by a deficiency of sulphur in foods, and unless you wish your fowls fo acquire that pernicious practice or habit, supply it in the food. It is obâ€" REONHNE Te esn cce s on wCC Cures es ty Sarsaparilla INFLUENZA AND SUICIDE. SHE KNOWS. weet or sour, also table elish all these thintgs. s recommended to be fed mornings. Potatoes or where corn and wheat in it so as to induce t, thus securing needed all the milk you can not depend upon i the dust bath, the soft food for .. Lowell, Mass. No. 8 do some errands, but insisted that he was feeling badly. As the family phyâ€" sician happened to call he felt _ the boi'o pulse and looked at his tongue, and said : â€" Â¥Fou had better make a good strong mustard plaster f : The boy looked depressed and left the room. When shall I apply the plaster? askâ€" ed the imother. Don‘t apply it at all. He‘ll get well before that stage of the treatment is renched. FAITH CURE. The amall boxlvlmd been reauested to do some errands, but insisted thut he PDr. Agnew‘s Liver Pills, 10c. a Vial Are Planned After the Most Modâ€" ern in Medical Science. They Are as Great an Improvement Over the 50 Years Old Strong Dose Pill Formulas as a Bicycle is Over an Oxcart in Travel, and Less Than Half the Price. Cinnamon Drop Coated makes them leasant to takaâ€"bemlg purely vegeâ€" ?able makes them absolutely safeâ€"they never qrxpe and the{ never fail â€"40 doses, 10 cents at all druggists. _ Jonesâ€"No; but if you have anything to tell a bad egg, my advice is to break it gently. Brownâ€"Have you read this article upâ€" on, How to tell a bag egg? s 2 There is more Caterrh in this seoction of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors rronounefl it & local disease, and prescribed ocal remedies, and by consiantly failing to gure with local treatment, pronounced it inâ€" curable. Science has prove ncatarrh to be a tonstitutional disease and therefore requires :ronstitutional treatment. Hall‘s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Dhio, is the Only comstitutional cure on the market. ltis taken internally in doses from 10 drops tom teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the syslem. They offer one hundred dollars for any case ib tails to cure. send for circulars and testiâ€" monials. Address, F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. T Sold by Druggists, 00. L‘onsun'llptlon. LaGrippe, Pneumonia, and all Throat and Lung diseases are cured by Shiloh‘s Cure. Pounded glass mixed with dry corn meal and placed within the reach of rats, ib is said, will banish them from the premises. _A heavy flatiron, weighing seven or eight pounds, will do better work if it is passed over the clothes once with iron hurriedly passed over the clothes two or three times. = Ask © your physician, your druggist and your friends about Shiloh‘s Cure for Consumption. They will recommend it. What makes Blackcoke carry home tl; lot' of law books every night he‘s out te Makes his wife think he‘s been workâ€" ing hard on a case. Constipation causes more than half the ills of women. Karl‘s Clover Tea is & pleasant cure for Constipation. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills create new blogod, build up the nerves, and thus drive disease from the system. In hunâ€" dreds of cases they have cured after all other medicines have failed, thus establishing the claim that they are a maryel among the triumphs of modern medical science. The genuine Pink Pills are sold only in boxes, bearin}g the full trade mark, "Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills for Pale People." Protect yourself from imposition by refusing any pill that does not bear the registered trade mark around the box. Exactly describes the condition of a hard or soft corn to which Putnam‘s Painless Corn Extractor has been apâ€" plied. So quickly does Putnam‘s Exâ€" tractor cure that its action seems maâ€" gical. Try it. f The coloured people of Baltimore have started a movement for the erec tion of a monument to Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe‘s memory. C y 3O o Bilinadidints Noi nï¬ â€" inllvelis enc m es ie xo4 A half dozen boxes were bought, and by the time one box “/:s used there was an improvement in her condition, and before the half dozen boxes were used, Miss Watson was, to use her own words, a different person altogether. Her entire nervous system was reinâ€" forced to such an extent that she is now able to dispense with the use of the glasses which previous failing eyeâ€" sight had made necessary. Miss Watâ€" son is now a staunch friend of _ Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pilis, and says: "I have pleasure in recommending tixem to all similarly afflicted." Rev. D. Miller, a friend of the family, vouches for the facts above set forth. es e w sn o o Ee it d NE 2R those whose life for years was made miserable from nervous disease. At the age of twelve Miss Watson met with an accident which so seriously afâ€" fected her nervous system that during the subsequent five years she was subâ€" Jjected to very severe nervous prostraâ€" tion, resulting in convulsions with unâ€" consciousness %or three or four hours at a time. This condition continued until March last when she had an increased and prolonged attack by which she was completely prostrated for the space of a fortnight. The diseass so affected the opâ€" tic nerve that Miss Watson was forced to wear glasses. Many remedies were tried but with no avail, and both Mrs. Watson and her friends feared that a cure could not be obtained. Ultimately Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills were strongly recommended by various friends and the young lady decided to give them a trial. 7 i8 2t least commendable to bow before the mevitable. But what apâ€" pears to be inevitable may be delayed or altogether averted. What . were considered necessarily fatal diseases twentyâ€"five or even ten years ago in many instances are not now laced in that categoryâ€"thanks to me&cal and scientific skill. Life is sweet. We must either control the nerves or they will master us. Hysteria may prove fatal. It renders the person affiicted helpless and unreliable, and casts a continual shadow upon _a hitherto bright and cheerful life. It saps the constitution ?‘lfld maksa one involuntarily ask, "Is NFG | Ritavwl nBE 20 Cns‘ se 2 The Victim The Frequent CauTe of Much Misery and Suffering. STRUCK AS BY LIGHTNING > Vietim Helpless and Uureliableâ€"It Saps the Consiitution and Makes One l-vollmlarlly Ask is Life Worth Livâ€" ing, NERYVOUS PROSTRATION P IL L â€" A G B ; PROPER METHOD. A LEGAL RUSE. That is how so many women feel wh blood is impure and unft to tone sustain and renew the wasting ner . muscile and tissues, St. Leon Mineral Water is the greateoâ€"t nerve builder known to science. It purifies and enriches the blood, Pure rich bood is the food thad strengthens and builds up the entire nor vous system, 8t. Leon Mineral Water Co., Ltd Out â€" â€" â€" FPACGCGGED FPatent» obtained To I "v E“Tnns- in all countrics by International Patent Bureau, 12 Melinda 8t., Toronto. Longest experience, Lowest ratos Information free. _ G. q Fl}‘lglANi Manager Mr. John McEdwards, the genial purser of the C.P.R. liner "Athaâ€" basca," says :"I used Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal) Powder for cold in the head. It is very effective, easy to apply,mild and pleasant. For caltarrh it has no equal. I have tested nearly every catarrh cure made, and found none to compare with it. 1 recommend it first, last and always." 3c Catalogue on ?pliciï¬nn. All Bakers Should Have Them. GCreat Labor Savers ® A Strictly High Grade Wheel at a MODERATE . g;nc:. G. T. Pmnurr-i i anufactvrer, 73 to 8 Adclaide $t. W. Toronts Most men who are "made‘" by their wives are made worse. w.P.C 886 M*s MiLlLS & HALES, Barriâ€"ters, Solicitors &c., Abo.deen Chamnsers, 35 Adelaid S reoct Rast, Toronté, Money to Loan, Adds His Testimony to the Merits ot Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder for Catarrh and Cold in the Head He Says it is Peerless. 3. G. Mills. B.A.â€"A. Mills.â€"Jas. Hales. LLB _I should judge he was. He doesn‘t seem able to make a living. Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart can not be over estimated, says H. M. Musâ€" selman, a wellâ€"known G.A.R. man of Weissport, Pa., and he continues: "My ailments were palpitation and flutterâ€" ing of the heart. I used two bottles of your valuable curs and feel like a new man. I have taken bottles and bottles of other medicines without help. I introduce it to mf friends at every opportunity possible. It is a great medicine. Inside of 30 minutes after the first dose I had relief." AN JINDICATION. They say that Womley is a very highâ€" ly educated gentleman ! * wl © A Grand ‘Army Man Crosses Swords with Heart Disease and Wins a Glorious Victory with the Aid of Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart. A plaster composed of the yoke of an egg and salt will often relieve pleuâ€" risy, kidney, and neuralgic pains. Cattarh.â€"Use Nasal Balm. Quick, itive cure, Boothing, cleansing, hul{’no;: The addition of a little salt to sweet foods help to bring out the flavor, and acid things are improved by the addiâ€" tion of a little sugar. Karl‘s Clover Root Tea is a sure cure for Headache and nervous diseases. Noâ€" thing relieves so quickly. After the juice has been squeezed from lemons the peel may be utilized for cleaning brass. Dip it in common ï¬altt and scour with powdered brick ust. in the house to meet a sudden attack of illness. NTAR! .__ ASs IF BY MAGIC, This is always the case when Nerviâ€" line is a,p&}ied to any kind of pain ; it is sure disappear as if by magic. Stronger, more penetrating, and quickâ€" er in action than any other remedy in the world, pain cannot stay where it is used. It is just the thing to have rocolls éEmulsion.7 | Scott‘s Emulsion prevents prevents mm ption and general debility. Stâ€"AuckL@ ® isoncof the best & fuelâ€"foods. The © codâ€"liver oil Obâ€" kmss @ tains its oxygen from the air, and @ heat is prtg:tccd. It warms, nourâ€" © ishes, invigorates, gives good 101} King St. W., Teronto. Phone 1321. THECOOK‘SBESTFRIEND DUNNS BAKING POWDER FOR TWENTYâ€"S8IX YEARS. A POPULAR C.P.R. OFFICER pation LP®®, _ C °U, ® MIRPRATNY ATTC KELLOXND, Expert and Examiner, LARGEST SALE IN CaANADA. OLD WAR HORSE. TORONTO ae of Cod=Liver Oil ** | piood, and fortiâ€" with Hypophosphites | fies against the Every feature of mearit is emnodie4 in its construction, most of them #0 Be found nowhere else. A littie bhigper in price than poorer constructionm not enough to make it extravagant, but sufficient to show its superiority. See your dealer, or write the maker, William Buck, â€" Brantford, Ont. Your house will be evenly heated from cellar to garret by using a BQadiant June Sun The only satisfactory, econothical mode of heating is by a perfect base burner. The only perfect base burn« Wood furnace. It‘s the greatest heater <ever built, has the largest radiating surface, burns any sized wood, is the best and cheapest furnace on the market. It will pay you to ask about it. Sold everywhere, CURNEYâ€"TILDEN CO., Ltd., Hamilton PEERLESS Ask your dealer for itâ€"Take no inutationâ€" best 5eB eral purpose oil madeâ€"Adapted to farmers‘ usoâ€"Genu Ine lubricantâ€"Saves machinery. _ ie S Samuel Rogers & 0o ..; Quoon City 0| works.Toronts RADIANT HOME BP‘ Groce»s often substitute cheaper goods for SAPOLIO to make a beticzr ;z00M fNend back cuch articles and insist on having just what you ordered. New lIdea If your grocer sends you anything in place of SAPOLIO, : _ it Back and insist upon having just what you ordered. SAPOLIO alâ€", ways gives satisfaction. On floors, tables, and painted work it acts like a charm. For scouring pots, pans, and metals it nas no equal Everything shines after it, and even the children delight in using it im théir attempts to help around the house. A large, flnoly-eqnlp*bed. oldâ€"established instt tutionâ€"NONE BETTER IN CANADA. Best Business KEducation at Lowest Possible Cost. Graduates Al'%l succes«ful. Write for catalogue. . J. ELLIOTT, Principal â€" wwoking out over the many homes of this country, we see thowâ€" Sanids of women wearing away their lives in household drudgery that might be materially lessened byâ€"the use of a few cakes of SAPOLIO If an hour is saved each time a cake is used, if one less wrinkle gathers upon the face because the toil is lightened, she must be a foolish woman who would hesitate to make the experiment, and he a churlish husband who would grudge the few cents which it costs. po G. DUTHIE & SONS isheet Metal Ceilings, Terra Cotta Tile, Red Black and Green Rcoflnï¬ Slate, Metal Cor nices, Felt, Tar, Roofing Pitch, Etc. Gutters Downpipes, &c., supplied the trade. Telephone 1936, Adelaide & Widmer Sts. TORUNTO L usiness College Company, Ltd., Syswi@re _ SATE, SEFETâ€"METAL TILE & CRAVEL RoOFERs of fall and winter. The Hypoâ€" phosphites tone up the nervous system and improve digestion. MONEY AT LOW RATES by a W. K. LONG, Manager, CREDI 00 Walticzan oi n m â€" Gurney Stove and Range Co., Winnipeg ; Gurneyâ€"Massey Co., Montreal, TORONTO FENCE AND m ORNAMENTAL WORKS ‘TORONTO. CAN, *Revor Turn a Wheelâ€"Without Using" Affiliated with Institute of Chartered Accountants. Send for Handsome Frce Prospecius. EDW. TROUT, President. D. H. HosSKINS, Seoy A REAL LUXURY! Stxatford,O0Ontario ECC Can Sevun MONEY AT LOW RATES by applying to W. K. LONG, Manager, CREDIT PONOIER, 28 Wellington St. E., Toronto. (Madoin three sizes) MACHINE Like a Office & Communion Railing, and all kinds of IRON AND WIRE WORK. Iron Fencing, piercing winds [ome 45 * y3 w \‘:“: & Farmers harâ€" ing firstâ€"class security to of« fer can secure Tâ€"_â€"CO‘â€"/ YJ CC oo 2200 PoCagt wiek Gives the latest and bost courses of trai in its Commercial, Shorthand and i mamhlr Departments. 23 students as ed to positions in rix weeks. Getal) partion by writing for New Prospectus. Mention paper. Address, W. H. BHAW, Princip RARRIS‘ * METALNK® METAL Why not now 1 It has l.l; eq'ua.“hsd Packet# enly, Black and Mixed. Ail grocers. Trail Creck, Rossland, Kootenay, B, da Cold _ Mining Mocks, | ** Jowe," **Mon! Cristo." "*Old Ironsides." " 8¢, Eimo," **Cab ifornia," alro ** Big Three " Prospectus g which will be sent on application. Any wanted can be secured. For ?urther particulars apply to A. W, ROS8 & CO., 4 King Street Kast, Toronts YOU ARE ONE ‘Salacda‘ atright T‘n: omto British Columbia Gold Mines In N hï¬ veram mm E!.a ?or a l;'.ei?..g w.h.: no hot boxes are wanted. 111 n gw the shallowest box and woar . Try it W. 0. HARRIS, Manufacturer, William 8t., Toronto. AUVSAGE CASING®, English _ American Hog Casings. R TORONTOâ€"Gerrard and Yonge ;u.. CEYLON TEA FOR Perhaps, that has never tried Park, Blackwell & Co., sh Bhecp and Rei:_vie goods #â€"+ s 1 A .. seotisn" Aikd [ M *: + \J ‘w R w dn us