at at Fort William r are 3,042,480 bushels 664 bushels last week, shels a year ago. isible supply of wheat e of 6,216,000 bushels much more than exâ€" all that prices in the blazing al up a fiery rity and and profit ictoria th cific earnings for the # April were $467,000, $58,000. orters of corn reportg ents to go out trom ind next month. wheat at Toronto i# as compared with 139.« © U k year aga und alloat goods, i rOocer Â¥M0UnD 10,019,000 arkets are firm. Canâ€" empire to ar night co n ol ply of inues of the resumption of New York, the gold ited States Treasury Interest to the Busy 1ess Man. ist week, and the toâ€" $4,412,000 bushels as 1 0F COMMER(E, H M &A D n ‘Toronto at 101 OGg FA na ind 16,113 bush» at 5 18 in 1res alo SCarce 1D FIRF and the on and the im‘s Peak ind Mount i, Fiji and is cireular e a gkraul to _ know . commemâ€" L. Te red wWill 20,* o. The total . is 51,932,000 ,000 _ a yea® 00 bushels. nto has been none i3 D it $4,000,000 &r & Q TTA T D L Y tal now is mand, and n such Queen H n the e sulâ€" HJ. on it re and n â€" the that " deâ€" tting than n that terferâ€" ntinu® e alight trade s wonâ€" Wilâ€" How iked ‘The to D wC+ um uâ€" r deâ€" Kaiâ€" uUnâ€" D OVeâ€" Â¥@aVv y . nts, n the C â€" t k : 1 bhat he L .0 fg made to he onâ€" cke yet stent ror nerâ€" nilst aing D OV & XW~ 1180 raid per nus he 18 A J @ TB at But if the Provincial . Parliament building is splendid and sumptuous, it is not a whit more so than t.Eat strikâ€" ing ensemble of college architecture known as the University of Toronto. In fact, all about one, as far as the eye can reach, are great buildings with lofty towersâ€"some straight up and unâ€" compromising, like that of the old At seven o‘clock on Saturday night the saloons and barâ€"rooms closeâ€"and yet no riot ensues. "Robbing the poor man of his beer‘" is no shibboleth in a place where rich and poor alike drink water. i have watched them here at the hotels and in the private houses pourâ€" ing quarts of this cheerless liquid into their stomach, and understood why the Torontonian was gaunt, and sadâ€"eyed, and dyspeptic, and why I couldn‘t help admiring his womenâ€"folk more than himself{. Yet uninviting as it is to the slranger, Saturday night possibly has its charms for the Toronto people. TORONTO THE CENTRE. Toronto is the centre, commercially, religiously, and educationally, as well as politically, of the opulent Province of Ontario. As I stood on the top of the new Parâ€" liament buildings and looked out over Lake Ontario a distant mist caught my eye. That mist was only some filty miles off, and marked the spot where thunder the mighty Fails of Niagara. The eye does noi have to travel so far of her inbhabitants, which 1 am given to understand is a greater percentage of churches than any other city in the world possesses. C027 C~emwSm andâ€"a mountain! Toronto is the most beautiful city in North America. 1t 14 as artistic as Boston without Boston‘s compression ; it is as clean and open as Philadelphia without Philadelphia‘s diffusion. Its public and private buildingsâ€"its "sky scrapers" have an architectural unity which Chicago and New York cannot boast ; and ‘Toronto bas done what no ather city of 200,000 inhabitants has doneâ€"more than doubled its population in ten years. If this is not enough to demonstrate Canada‘s progress, there is nothing left but to turn west to the mines of British Columibia, where, I am old villages at daybreak apply for a charter at noon, and elect a mayor and a board of aldermen at sundown. "IMIS A GAY CITY. Yet Toronto is a gay city. I know no other word to express it. It bears nomarks of wear, of use, of crime, of passion, o fpoverty. It is a city withâ€" out slums and without noise. Every Uay at a certain hour the gailyâ€"dressed crowds fill the streets, as the clockâ€" work figures strut about Mr. Edison‘s alectrical barnyard ; the electric cars move about like automatic serpents, and then night comesâ€"all disappear into their box in this most moral, orderly, and Puritanical of cities. Toâ€"' ronto contains one church for every 800 $s4ts nigingee tm MC.~Beckles Willson, special corresâ€" pondent of The London Daily Mail, deâ€" ribes Toronto in the following glowâ€" ing termsg;:â€" Torontoâ€"pearl of cities! of matchâ€" less women and palid menâ€"of buxom slreets® an ddainty architectureâ€"the sole British city where the inroads of iceâ€"water and doughnuts are â€" most manifestâ€"at once the most English and the most American of Canadian citiesâ€" the city of Goldwin Smith and Dr. Parkin ; where the street cars and the beer casks do not run on the Sabbath; 1 city topographically yet not morally flat ; and lacking only in these untraâ€" montanism andâ€"a mountain! * SUNâ€"KISSED CANADA‘$ COMELIEST QTy 0. . Beckles Wilison Dilates Upon Its Blessâ€" ingsâ€"He Says the Men are Cnunt, Saa:â€" Eyed and Dyspeptic, But Approves of Thelr Wives and _ Daughters â€" An We itc cicas 2s 8 Their Wivres â€" and Enthustastic Fribute. ‘D, SMILING TORONTO" DESCRIBED. No. 8 gg}t cenp the a weddingâ€"bell for 7;.; e, un do’t w famish and ate the church @5 w A missionary bishop who had been six weeks in coming to the convention at Winnipeg, most of the way in a canoe, began his address by saying that he would speak for himself and for a brotherâ€"bishop, â€" who â€" unfortunately could not be present. He was sorry to say that his brother‘s diocese had gone to the dogs! A general gloom followed these words. Hudson Eay that he had to build a church. As there was no wood, he used whales‘ ribs for rafters, covering them with tanned walrus hide, and so made &A cllurch to hold .ig‘h)t'y persons. All He went on to say that the bishop had found so many inquirers after reâ€" ligion among the Eskimos north of "I bad la grippe in the spring of 1894, I «id not seem to get over the effects of the attack, and as the sumâ€" mer progressed became weakand listâ€" less. Any kind of work became _ a burden to me. After pumping a pail of water from the well, I would have ’t/o stand and hold my hands over my heart for a moment or so, it would flutâ€" ter so violently. I could not go up stairs without difficulty, and towards the last would have to rest on the steps, and when I got to the top, lie down until I could recover my breath. I became a mere skeleton, my checks were like wax and my lips colorless. I lost all appetite and my meals often went untasted. _ ‘Medicine seemed to bave no effect upon me. I wasgetting weaker all the time and at last began to give up hope of recovery. My parents were of course in great distress, and I knew by the looks and actions of friends who called to see me that they thought I was doomed to an early death. ‘Then a dear lady friend died, and I manaÂ¥- ed out of love for ‘her to drag myself to her funeral. The sensation of seemg her laid away believing that I woul soon follow her, was a strange one. Shortly after this an aunt of mine,; Mrs. Wm. Henderson ,of Toronto, came to visit at our place. My condition troubled ‘her very much and she inâ€" sgisted on my trying Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. To please ‘her I consented but with very little hope of any good reâ€" sult. The effect ,however, was wonkâ€" derful and a pleasing surprise to me. I soon began to feel more cheerful and . seemed to feel stronger. Then my apâ€" petite began to improve and the color return to my cheeks and lips. _ From | that hour I steadily gained strength, and was soon enjoying my former exâ€" cellent health and I am sincere in exâ€" Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills cure by going to the root of the disease. They renew and build up the blood, and strengthen the nerves, thus driving diâ€" sease from the system. Avoid imitaâ€" tions by insisting that ezery box you purchase is enclosed in a wrapâ€" er, hearin% the full trade mark, Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills for Pale People, Enquiry among neighbors corroborâ€" ated Miss T,anggonl's story as to her illness and remarkable recovery. In her case at least Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills have given a striking proof that they possess wonderfual merits. _ _ We found Miss Langford the picture of health and good spirits, at her pleasâ€" ant home in %‘amilla. In response to our inquiries as to our illness and the cause of her recovery. sthe expressed her willingness to satisfy our curiosity, and as whe added, relate hor experience for the good of others afflicted as she was. Her story very briefly, was as follows:â€" There is no doubt at all that many people are prejudiced against proprieâ€" tary medicines, and equally no doubt many look upon the testimonials pubâ€" lished as much inthe nature of an exâ€" aggerated puif. If the Banner has been tinctured with this feeling it has, so {far as one medicine is concerned, had its doubts removed. We refer to Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills concerning the curative qualities of which strong claims have been made, and provisadâ€" vanced in their support which seemâ€" ed equally strong. k‘sut it is whien one comes across in their own locality a. case almost rivaling any that have been made public, that doubt disapeâ€" pears and conviction follows. Such a case the Banner came across and inâ€" vestigated and now gives the facts. The case is that of Miss Sarah Langâ€" ford, an estimable young lady who resides in the neighborhood of Camiila. We were told she had been brought near to death‘s door and had been reâ€" stored to bealth through the agency of Dr. Williams‘ Pinik Pills. We deâ€" cided, however, to cast hearsay aside and investigate for ourselves. _ i n;reééins my belief that to Dr. Wilâ€" iams‘ Pink Pills do I owe my recovâ€" A Remarkable Case That Vividiy Shows the Wonderiul tealthâ€"Kestoring Power of Pr. Wiliiams‘ Pink PiIs. From the Orangeville Banner. AN AUNTS ADVICE BROUGHT A YOUNG LADY _ OUT OF THE SHADOW OF DEATH. Apropos of sunshine I should like to oresent Londoners with a few figures dealing with this commodity. L have been told that the total number of sunâ€" shiny days last year in London was 61. In Toronto it was 196. The number of bhours of sunshine in Milan in the month of March was 203 ; in Toronto it was 860, rising in June to 470. The averâ€" age number of cloudy days permonth is less than five, and four several years there have been none at all in Juae, July and August. As to the temperaâ€" ture of the winter of 1896, Londonerg would be surprised to hear that in Janâ€" uary last not a fleck of snow was to be seen. The Riviera could not do betâ€" ter than that. to make his ;{’;:).'-'t'ï¬r(;ix?ï¬_{l‘jé throngs of pedestrians which fill King and Queen and Yonge streets. _ ITS INCOMPARABLE CLIMATE. I do not exaggerate when I say that the women of Toronto are the prettiest and best dressed on the American conâ€" tinent. The _apparently eternal sunâ€" shine with which the city is bathed tempts them out of doors, and it is as much as an average wayfarer can do world St. Stogan‘s. yet with no less ornament, others with Grecian roofs, et all, whether cathedral or observaâ€" {ory. college or club houseâ€"all lofty, :ll warmâ€"hued, all rich in design. Monâ€" â€" woug C P22 2200 i0 COC2§2. ZOH® freal, I thought was beautiful; but Montreal is cold and sternâ€"even ugly â€"â€"compared with this _ And ‘Toronto owes nothing to her site, which is as flat as a pancake; but this defect, which seems irremediable to the averâ€" age nineteenth century man, will be easily overcome by the Torontonian of the twentieth century. "GONE TO THE DOGS." days, which they celebrate by getting d.ru’:'k. By u::ysl count t.hu'{ ::o lI% of these holidays, and when men sand year it is a regular system. _ ; A Land of the Past Whece Every Other Day is a Hotiday, Crete is a land of the past. It is a land of memories rather than of passâ€" ing events; a land whose period of acâ€" tivity and importance has passed, whose time of decay and torpor seems to have come. ‘To history it is the birthplace and tomb of Zeus, the home of Minos, the thalassocrat, the scene of war and carnage, the Venetian colâ€" onial seat. To Gresce it is the land of memories, sad and heroic. To Turâ€" key it is a thorn. In old days it got the name of illâ€"measure. Toâ€"day it might be maid to be scarcely known, except as a country of home life. It is froperly &n agricultural island. _ In ts entire area thee are not more than six considerable town, and these the ruins of other days, the houses old and fallen, gaunt hogs, starving curs, bawks and barriers tenanting the streets. All around are the mountains and every considerable town is by the sesd. iOnmtJhe cr&tereiil mott'xhr;tam bopt: and in rugged valleys peasan till the land sntllgrstun their sheep and goats. At night they sleep in the villages, and by day they are in their T ueF kh "but moely mprioniiaricts. sorry a urists. Lu{na- is the root of the‘lrl' vices, and the Cretans are lazy no‘erâ€"doâ€"wells. More than half of their days are holiâ€" Humanity is never more beautiful thin when praying for forgiveness, or else forgiving another.â€"Richter. Blow strong sinces Nerviline is in the market. Nerviline is the great nerveâ€" pain cure. Its penetrating and pain subduing power is such that relief is almost instantanteous. Try it and be convinced. Cure the Congh with Shiloh‘s Cure. The best Cough Cure. Relieves Croug promptly. One imillion bottles sold las year. 40 doses for 25 cents. Bold by all Be Not Deceived. _ A Cough, Hoarseâ€" ness or Croup, are not to be _ trifled with. A dose in tims of Shitoh‘s Cure will save you much trouble, Sold by all druggists, t Care is the only positive cure known to the medical fratermity. Catarrh being m consiituâ€" ional diseaso, requires constitutional treat. ment. Hall‘s Cstarrh Oure is taken intornally, scting divectly upon the blood and mucous surâ€" "aces of the «ys:em, thsreby desiroyinz the founcéaticn of tho discase, and giving the patlent strength hy building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative ;nowau. that they off:r Ore Hundred Dotlare or an{ case that it fails to curo. Send for list of testimonials, _ _ _ _ _ g , I do not cast my eyes away from my troubles ; I pack them in as fittle comâ€" ?aas as I can for myself, and never 1s* hem aninoy any others.â€"Southey. Heâ€"Will you marry me if 1 ask your father ? Sheâ€"I‘m afraid not. ‘"She deserves," writes the amuthor of the "Open Letter" from which we have quoted, "to be welil known to her latâ€" terâ€"day sisters, if for no other reason than as a possibl« ideal for the newer womanhood.‘" But the delight of associating with great and goudt men, and of hearing ber writings praised, was subordinated to her onme amuitionâ€"to be John Ausâ€" tin‘s . helpmisie. _ liox «distinction is that she realized her idea of helpful wifehood. There was noib‘ag masculine about this appreciative, helpful wife; on the contrary, she was so feminine that bo: friends spoke of hor as "the most womâ€" anly of women." _ Her literary labors were abundant, and carned for many years most of the Ausiin daily bread The best men of the time, Exigiiahmnu. Frenchmen and Gezxmans, frequentod her fireside. Giuizol wrote to her as a son to a mother, aad cisonssed wath her his statecraft. _ Bentham, Macauâ€" lay, Mill, Southey, Jeffrey and Gladâ€" stons waere also among her corresâ€" ponidents. _ _ _ C WA l The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded discaso that scolence has boen able to cure in ali it: â€"tages, and that is Catarrh. HMoall‘s Cotarrh The wife and mother was enabled to do this great work becatise she hbad been interested in ber btusband‘s studâ€" ies, and for fifty years his constant inspiration. â€" They spent their days in an almost umbroksn lLeteâ€"aâ€"tete. _ He readl and talked to her on the legal sgubjects which engrossed his mind, and accepted such assistance as she could render. Wives who make their husbhands usuâ€" ally keep in the shade, standing under the shadow of the man‘s name. â€" Mrs. Austin modestly claimed only to have edited her busband‘s writings. What sho really did was to collect all her husband‘s writingsâ€"an old 1awâ€"book aut of print ; a few lectures to which few had listoned when delivered ; hunâ€" dreds of marginal annotations in books he thad gread, and smsores of scraps scrawled in an atmost illegible hand. These she pus together with such litâ€" erary skill that they grew into the rational system of jurisprudence which worked a revolution in the study of English law. Address, F. G. C"IENEY & CO., Tolodo, 0. Soid b*l)rufgiï¬t s, To¢. Hall‘s Family Pilis aro the best,. died in 1859, destined, apparently, to remain unknown, or to be rememberâ€" ed as a man of great talents whose life was resultless. Teir years later his name became one of the most promâ€" inent in the history of English law. "A woman was the leader of the deed." Mrs. Ajustin made her hushand famous by publishing his "Lectures on Juris prudence" in three volumes. Ho ~lacked, thowever, the qualities which win success, and failed as & writâ€" er, teacher and practitioner of law. He Women who think wifehood und motherhood an obstacle to the "higher life" should read the sketch of Sarab Austin, published among the "Open Letters" of the Century. She was the mother of Lady Duff Gordon, whose letters from Egypt are a classic, and the wife for nearly fifty years of John Austin, an English lawyer, who, in the opinion of Lord Brougham, had the finest legal intellect of his time. THE OLD MAN OPPOSED $100 REWARD $100. TUE TRADE WINDS LIFE IN CRETE. ONTARIO ARCHIVES f ToRronNnto NEED FOR REFORM. Lawyer (after many insinuations and much twisting of Breviou.s testimony in hbis questions)â€"Do you know, sir, tbat you are under oath ? Witness (testily)â€"Yos, and you waere. Adams Extract â€" = One bottle. Feischmann‘s Yeast â€" Oue balf to one cake. Sugar + * * Two pounds. Cream of Tartar _ â€" * One half ounce, Lukewarm Water = â€" _ Two galion& Pissolve the sugar, cream of tartar and yeas in the water, add the extract. and bottle ; place in a warm ghco for twentyâ€"four hours urmiil it ferments, then pavse on ice, when it will open mp.rkling. cool and dolicious, The gingor beet can te obtained in all drug and grocery stores in 10 nent bottles to make two gaiions. London‘s Fire Chief, who is a Comâ€" mander im the royal navy, was marâ€" ried recently in style, a procession of a bundred firemen in full uniforms and a police band nmccompanying him and his bride to the church. years." WiILL CALKEZLZ THE SCARS TO HER G:iAV E. Spent Thousands for Mealth, But Did Not Gatain «is Gromtost of ail Hlessings Until She Used the Greoat South Amoriâ€" can Racumatic Cure. Suifered iInton» sely ior 12 Years, Mre. F. Brawley»0(Tottenham, Oont., states: "I suftered almost continvually for 12 {oars with rheumatism, the effects of which 1 will carry to my grave, und while the joints at my elbcws and wrists are yet stif I am ontirely irced from pain in the use of south American it ermatic Oure. lt has inged proved & woudersiu‘! cure in my case. i have spent thousancs of dollars in doctor‘s bills and mediâ€" cines without avail. . Five bottles of this wonâ€" derâ€"wore@. has cured ali pain. 1 am better in health geaoraliy than I have bsen for ten Human wisdom is the aggrewate of buman exper.ence, constantly accumuâ€" lating, selecting and reorganizing its own materials.â€"Story. Vitriol throwing by jealous women, ditherto a peculiarly Parisian maniâ€" festation of decadent affection, seems to be growing fashionable in the London West End, too. A case where the actâ€" ors were English was tried recently. Mr. James. Siokes, â€"Deseronto, Ont., says:â€"From â€" #he first box taken of Dodd‘s K dney P:lls I found relief, and hundreds here, knowing me for the past fifteen years. can vyouch for my cure of long standing Kidney Trouble. Louis H. Bounsall, 573 King East, Torâ€" onto, says:â€"‘"Had been trowbled for several months with pain in my back and kidneys which prevented my entâ€" ering in bicycle events, but am in the ring once more after using three boxes of Dodd‘s Kidnay Pils.. ks D. J. Kenney. Queen‘s Hotel, Mount Forest,. says:â€"Have â€" suffered greatly from Nervousness, but information, as to the effects of Dorid‘s Kidney Pills in suwch cases led me to use them, with the result that I am cured." praises is DODD‘S KIDNEY PILLS. Yet not alone we, but every one who has tried them. One hundred per cent. of llues we record. _ Here are exaimâ€" plestâ€" W. _ F. Smith, 16 Carrol St.,. Toronâ€" to, says:â€""I have taken eight boxes of Dodd‘s Kidney Pills which have cured me of Heart 'Â¥rouble, Pain in the Back and Dizziness, after other treatments had failed." We read with horror of the cruelty and butcheries of Gen. Weyler in the fair Tale of Cubm, but little reok we of the ravages of that more direful King of Graveâ€"Fillers) Kidney Disease, here in our midst. People of high and low degres drop into graves on all sides of us daily from Kidney Trouble. We incur it ourâ€" selves. We encourage it. We Uo everything but cure it. I Yet there is a cure, I:!easa.nt as a May morning. Sure as fate. lnf{fallible as heredity. Before this ‘wonderful remedy, the agonizimng tortures of Kidâ€" aney is \ zmis%l like a snowflake in & ï¬erg furnace. This cure, of which we sound the BUTCHERED WOXTH ITS WEIGHT IN GOLD d 1 Adams‘ Ginger Beoer OR BURNE)D ? wieat > °C 00 ronto. _ A _ Goodyear “ Weited upâ€"toâ€"dats Boot. hz & No cacks; no naiis; flexâ€" ible; oasy. It will not squeak. THE J. D. KING CO., LTD., TORONTO, ONTARIO. Ceylon ‘Te® e 100 io & on T & TS DoOOTOR® NTNOMMEND â€"â€" They tell me Van Wither is very weak since his last sickness. He is. I saw him on the street just now and asked him for a fiver; but" he couldn‘t stand a loan. DREADFULLY NERVOUS. Gents:â€"â€"I was dreadfully nervous, and for relief took your Karl‘s Clover Root Tea. It quiected my nerves and strengthened my whole Nervous Sysâ€" tem. _I was troubled with Constipaâ€" tion, Kidney and Bowel trouble Your Tea soon cleansed my system so thorâ€" Give me the liberty to know, to think, to believe, and to utter freely accordâ€" ing to conscience, above all other liberâ€" ties.â€"Milton. "CALADA oughly that 1 u[’pi'd'l' regained health un’ strength. _ Mrs. g A. Sweet, Hartâ€" ford, Conn. Sold hy all druggists. SLCID NCMCS 200 neld out litile hope, 1 was attracted _by an advertisement of South American Nervine, and as my trouble was of & reryous nature I decided to try it The first botile helped me greatly. I per=‘sted in its use and this groat remedy has oom(rlozoly built up my »yssem, and I positively deciare m?hig is the only remedy that gave me any roli Wu’ of Her Recoveryâ€"The Great ;fll h:ril Dlrmli.or Into 2: sacon whic Good Health Harbor. * A bout four years azo I was affliicted with a severe attack of la grip which left me alâ€" most a complete wreck, p} was prostrated for weeks, _1 doctored with several physicians and unsed ma~y remedics, but nove had any lasting effect,. _ My friends began to be alarmed for my recovery. ‘The doctors shook their heads, and held out litcle hope. I was Examine her feet, and if she has corns buy her Putnam‘s Painles Corn Exâ€" tractor. _ +Home will then become an Eden. Much of the misery of married life is due to corns. Putnam‘s Extractâ€" or is sure, painless, and prompt. THECOOK‘SREST FRIENE All wool and a yard wide, she ans ered, reassuringly, and nestled yet FOR TWENTYâ€"SEVEN YEARS, BAKING POWDER iye. seundnous â€"hmke,, Captain _ of Owen Sound. Ont., Tells How La Gripne Left Hor, and ow Often Dociors Gave Up loml.nd Her Family and Friends Whiaew a & 2ewe l ae C LARCEST 5 COULDN‘T STAND ALONE YOUR WIFE TLLâ€"TEMPBRED t L U iN N & , the Wife of Captain Hark:â€" Doctors‘ Bills Are High ALE 1N Canana YOU SAY HOW? E:s w.Pr.C 867 For Weak and Inflamed Eyes, or Chronic Granulation of the Lids, Ulceration of the Glands. A NEVER FAILING REMEDY of Boots and Shoes by J. D. King & Co., 'l.o'» IN COOMBINATION WITH CORK Used in the manufacture Patent Sleeper Flexible Insole QNLY Cana&.i;nuï¬fp';gr;;lla..,tw. Its Bearings are dust and oil proof, Is oiled but once a year. Will last a lifetime. . & D. BOVCL MERIT Slate, Shootâ€"Motal, Tile & Gravel Roofere Bheoot Motal Ocilings, Terra Cotta Bleot P 22 heii s i 3e pcgdoee s Ar, < g::nlm &o., unï¬:d the trade. Telophone 1998 Adclaide & Widmer Sts @. DUTHIE & SONS Hotel St. Charles. Finest Hotel u..().."“ #1++ Mu?ho“ Inhnd%?surh\;uqum_ ®i ‘or Booki®t. v. o smaw, . JAMES 8. RElLLY, Lhis in a word, is expressive of the reputation enjoyed by the WINDESOR, ONT. ATLANTIC CITY, N. 3. Get a catalogue. Prop rietor.