-m.,uni_ * night e is unâ€" usad by ; of Ata« tef Fund THE cease* I only felt it. During 1:3 musical study I have often longed to hear iunt one musician who would make me orget everything except what he told Up to that time L had experienced three sensations; first, incredulity. and amazement; then wonder, but from then on I was dead to all speculation gnd lt_be‘ t'eLch_lLiicali\tie!s of his playing. Those soon changed to soft trills and runs which sounded like the cooâ€" ing of a pair of doves. How lovingly he pressed the keys as if caressing a friend after a long absence. Then, ag if the greeting was over, he began to talk. A few modulations changed the key, and he burst into a triumphant orsr o6 jay... .. .. "Now me blay!" he said confidently, and before I could collect my wits, he had shambled through the rooms, and sat down at the piano. I quickly folâ€" lowed him, for I felt a kind of horror at the thought of his dirty fingers ®oming in contact with the clean white keys of my beloved Stpinway. But what to do to hinder it T didn‘t know. Just then he placed his hands upon the keyboard, and as a few full chords rose I felt a thrill of amazeâ€" ment. That first touch betrayed the master‘s hand. inings, and I mentally numbered him among that class. But in the hope of getting his mind off from the subject, I shook my head and pointed to his boots. _ They were only fit to be out of doors. _ As soon as he gras‘{\ed my meaning he sat down again, and drawâ€" ing one leg across the other, he beâ€" gan to tug at his boot. _ Soon that one was off, the other quickly followed, and he stood up before me in a pair of gentleman‘s hose, the like of w{:)i«-h I never dreamed of TOF rammwainuan Lo d filth th sure‘y,. could not have had anything to do with it. "Me blay, me blay, Ma‘am," he said, rising, his face all animation. I had o'fton '!‘)ea'rd of fanaties and crazy peoâ€" who ww Kesact oz en B cce 7 7 mew through into the parlor. The piâ€" ano however, was about all that could be seen from his position, and I looked back at him very much guzzled, for that, surely, could not have had anything to do with it. "Mo Maxv mae hlaw Mialewe W T. ..+% EUE ETT EP PUWUR CUTU into the hitherto expressionless face which entirely changed its appearance. [ glanced in the same direction, wonderâ€" ing what the cause might be. The kitchâ€" an, sittingâ€"room and parlor doors were all in aline, and as he was sitting diâ€" rectly iLn fronLt of thm_n he had a straight . But that afternoon when Istood He seemed to comprehend then that ([would not buy, and began towrap up the box again. After that was accomâ€" »lished he took his cap off and began to wipe his face with a dirty red banâ€" lanna, his gaze meanwhile wandering rround the room. All at once the bent SLgtxreLstr_qighrened and a look came ie laid his %rimy hand wpon the bundle ‘hat was still wrapped up. At that I shook my head and said, nore emphatically, ‘"No, I don‘t want Ln'.v;th;ng toâ€"day." 00 e PRRRTC CC TTVY MIRVC HC paid noattention and went on undoin his bundle as he muttered to himselg Soon the cilcloth covering lay on the loor and he had opened it. It was a box with two shelves in its sides. In the top there were briarwood pipes, all the articles used in sewing, men‘s suspendâ€" ars, hairpins, and combs mixed together n the greatest confusion. The two lrawers contained chean jewa‘re soped back at an angle of fortyâ€"five deâ€" | grees, ended in apeak at the top of his head. Hewas clothed in an old frock.l which was covered with patches ofall‘ sizes and colors and a pair of dark green corduroy trousers, which were shiny with dirt and wear. The muddy boots which rested upon the floor were much too large for him and there ware deep, depressions in them where his feet endâ€" ! ad. which made them; turn up like sled runners. He seemed to be a good repâ€" resentative of his class, but he was the, most repulsive to me of any that had aver stopped at our place. He evidently | My gaze traveled up from the floor and rested upon his face, and as I looked at him Tcould not help a shiver of disâ€" gust. He was below medium height and somewhat stooped. His face, which was the color of bleached olives, was coarse and dirty, and his forehead, which sloped back at an angle of fortyâ€"five deâ€" I looked at his muddy boots and wonâ€" dered what Mary would say when she came in and found her clean floor all streaked up ‘"Buy, Ma‘am f Sell chean. sell cheant"* be sa 1ier a iew seconds he passed on around the house, and I heard sounds as if he was trying to clean his boots. Presently there was a "thump, thump," upon the door. I opened it, being careâ€" ful to keep one hand upon the casing and the other upon the knob, so that there was nochance for him to comein. But as it swung in there was such an odor wafted to me that I involuntarily stepped back. I suppose he took my movement as an invitation tm anter 2 VI7 contained cheap jewelry. Needles, pins, Ma‘am ? Sell cheap ?" shook my head. Table linen, Ma‘am?" he continued as aid his grimy hand wpon the bundle try to." L went into the kitchen to follow her suggestion. By this time he was just »pposite the kitchen window, and was looking this way and that in search of a door. cause of my above resolve. Mother looked out of the window. "He doesn‘t look as well as the most of his class, does he t" she said. "No, there is no use of letting him come in. B'wt if weur abam ts Tam l Ne e o Ti we hnad been bothered by them a good deal for the last two years, and the difâ€" ficulty that we experienced in getting rid of them without buying was the They are sance.*" I turned to ; room with me thl)se r)ago or from the si came plowi the drive, c OE 0F NR3 RK first st glimpse I had of him was sittingâ€"room window, as he ving up through the mud in . carrying two packs. ' 1 to mother who was in the | h me. "There comes one of | 0 or Armenian peddlers!" 1| don‘t believe I‘ll let him in. | getting to be a regular nuiâ€" | mis boot. _ Soon that ther quickly followed, _ before me in a pair ose, the like of which of for raggedness and that they could do Sell cheap, sell cheapt" he repeated, while iyed over his face. heap, sell cheap ?" nd said no, but he door he won‘t or underâ€" The two grut movers of the human mind are the desire of good and the fear of evil.â€"Johnson. fluences. muscles adapt themselves to the new conditions presented by that region, but that the blood itself becomes alterâ€" ed in response to the lessened amount of the more rarefied oxygzen â€" which each blood corpuscle can carry. The effect noticed of this process of adaptâ€" ation is that the red corpuscles multiâ€" ply considerably, while, according to some, the haemoglobin is increased also â€"in any case, the oxygenâ€"carrying of the blood is &ugmente(fe This accords fully with the well known effect of mountain air in the treatment of anâ€" aemia, and also with the feeling of well‘ being felt by visitors to high altitudes, but it does not do to dissect a cliâ€" mate too much, or attribute to one or two factors what really is 9,‘“ to the concurrence of many â€" inâ€" Langs and Muscles Adapt Themselves to the Atmosphere. Remarking upon the fact of the marked enlargement of chest capacity which is often found after a few months‘ residence in the high Alps, and the temJlency to a development of a compensatory emphysema around the diseased and contracting portions _ of the lungs, a writer in The Hospital refers to the evidence, as recently shmvP, that not only do the chest Ip 10 CR ATUOH, WHPE so satisfactory and ap arently permâ€" anent is the cure that Kljss Fisher has gone to her former home. Such are the unvarnished facts of a remarkable case, The malady was persistent, tenacious and hard to fight. But the constant use of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills wrought a marvellous change, which Miss Fisher‘s friend said might be profitably known to many others. 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 disease from the system. Avoid imitaâ€" tions by insisting that every box you purchase is inclosed in awrap{)er bearâ€" ing the full trade mark, Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills for Pale Peopte. P : u0 C oR imE es | Miss Fisher was seized with weakness [ and a distressing sensation in the ; region of the heart. It was attributâ€" ed to several causes, all possibly more or less true, they were overwork, exâ€" [ posure, etc. She was certainly weak ‘and the action of the heart was abnorâ€" mally rapid. The doctor in attendances | pronounced the ailment nervous palâ€" | pitation of the heart and she received | treatment accordingly for two years. | At this stage she took to her bed she | was so low. For twelve months she llay receiving only domestic attention. She improved somewhat, however, and was able to be taken to a friend of hers near Lancaster village, Mrs. 3. Hancy, where she was under medical attendance and took medicine for about three years. At the end of this time she could not safely venture to walk out even a short distance. (All this time she complained of her heart, About two years ago she began taking Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pilis, from this date ahres" usns us uen iin . Wiiinbeimmene City Amimcsmiiatie uind disos dvdec sA L m L 111 5 2 she began what proved a steady restorâ€" ation of nervous energy. During the summer of 1896 the improvement was marked. Sbe was able by the middle of the summer to do as much work and wa.kkingca.s. most ordinary women, and Seo cssb bufise s lc3 c : I sullered From Weak Heart and Could Not Sutely Walk any Bristance â€" How the Puilse of Life Was Adjusted. From the Cornwall Freeholder. The romance of unwritten facts of real life far exceeds the rich elaboraâ€" | tions of fiction. A peep behind the | scenes would furnish us with adequate l'pruo[ that there is more of care, trial | and severe anxiety in human life than |floats on the surface. We find many | whose experience has almost incessantâ€" | ly fluctuated between health and sickâ€" | ness ; little, if any of this is obtruded ilupuu_ the notice of the world or [ up behind the peddler was the onliv] time that T ever passed through suc an experience. As [ look back and think about it now, I can realize some of the pecuâ€" ll.arlties of his playing, and can parâ€" tially analyze it. But then it was imâ€" possible, Indeed, I seemed to be swayâ€" ed, not by the language he spoke in, but by what he said. In reality, I only vaguely realized the different composiâ€" tions that he played, my comprehension in this respect seeming to be reached only through the intensity of emotion which was produced. Now it was â€" a happy, rollicking air, which made me After Many Years. SUFFERER ISs RESTORED TO HEALTH AND STRENGTH. AIR IN T E ALPS. clear as & bell. 25¢c., 50c. Sold by Pharmacy Hall. clear as a Karl‘s Clover Root will purify your Blood, clear your Complexion, reguâ€" late your Bowels and make your head acy Hall. When we read we fancy we could be martyrs; when we come to act, we canâ€" i;{ot bear a provoking word.â€"Hannah ore. Shiloh‘s Cure, the great Cough and Croup Cure, is in great demand. Pockâ€" et size contains twentyâ€"five. Only 25¢. Children love it. For sale by Pharm. Currieâ€"Have you heard of Jackson‘s great invention{ Vokesâ€"No,; what is it ? Curricâ€"He has invented a way â€" of storinz up the energy used in trying to lift car windows, and proposes to run the cars with it. But that was before DODD‘S KIDâ€" NEY PILLS were invented. Fortunâ€" ately Mrs. Frood tried the Pills and this is what, she says; Dodds Medicine Co., ( Gentlemen,â€"About two years ago I was taken sick, I consulted doeâ€" tors; they told meI had a bad case of Bright‘s Disease, and they could not help me. I had tried every kind of medicine, but of no avail. My urine was like brickâ€"dust, and it hurt me to pass it. I heard of DoDws KIDNEY PLLLS, and conâ€" cluded to try them. T had been sick off and on for twelve or thirâ€" teer_years, but about two years ago I got worse. I am completely cured, and I feel stronger toâ€"day than ever. MRS. SAMUEL FROOD, Renfrew, Ont., x May, 20, 1896. ey *) kn d May, A fow years ago to tell a patient that she had incurred Bright‘s Disease would be equivalent to offering prayâ€" ers over the dying. The terrible scourge of mankind was long supâ€" posed to be incurable. No doctor thought he could restore the kidâ€" neys when they had gone that far to decay. Mrs. Frood, of Renfrew, After Ailing for Thirteen Years, the Last Two Years Seriously Sick, is Restored to Maiden Strength. RENFREW, Ont.â€"Now, take â€" the case of Mrs. Samuel Frood of this town. She wasailing for thirteen years withâ€" out knowing just where the difficulty was. â€" During ghe last two years of her sickness, however, she was told by her physicians that she had Bright‘s Discase. Witness One of the Most Remarkable Cures of It which the History of Medicine Records. rintaintsetralih t cssc id i in t 0d the northern continuation of the same mountains rises the Pelly, Stewart and other important go‘dâ€"bearing tribuâ€" taries of the Yukon. There is this imâ€" portant difference, that the Peace river rises in the eastern slope of the mountains, while the Yukon‘s tribuâ€" taries rise on the west side. _ Along Peace river north are the Reindeer or Cariboo mountains, which are believ~â€" ed to be rich in goildâ€"bearing quartz. The hardy miners who played proâ€" minent parts in the Cariboo exciteâ€" ment o‘! 80 years ago, expliored the country to tge north and east of the head waters of the Fraser with very satisfactory results and although the: output of golid from the Peace river and its tributaries has fn‘len off someâ€" what in recent years, the auriferous deposits there are known to be rich and extensive. It is expected that next spring w;il! see a great influx of minâ€"| mew 4e in o od% ers to that section aD mwIUH AS THE MAIN STREAM. Peace river rises in the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains, a little north of the centre of British Cooumbia. In C Wninaidiht Sgririgh hn SI N ; It is reported that more than 200 men are placer mining along Peace river at the present time, and they are experiencing good reswlts from their efforts. f Steamboats can ascend the Peace river for a considerable distance and small boats can go up nearly its entire _lbngth_. A number of its tributaries, incuuding Leon and Deer riv. are AB RICH AS THRE BRIGHT‘S DISEASE The $18,000 brought out had been cleaned up by the three men in three months. They went to Peace river early in the spring, and Johnson startâ€" ed out in Jully. Johnson said all the miners on Peace river were making big money with the crudest appliances. Up to the time he ieft only pans and 12â€"foot sluices had bean used. Most of the miners were not coming out this fall, because it was possible to purchase supplies at trading posts of the Hudâ€" son‘s Bay Company, near the mouth of Peace river. Men Coming Out of There with Thousands i of Doliars, The next mining excitement will be on the Peace river, in the Northâ€"west Territory. Mining has been carried on there in aslow way for years, but disâ€" coveries made there this summer leave no room to doulbt that an immense amount of go‘d will be taken out of the Peace river and its tributaries during the next few years, says the Neson Miner. Men who are now takâ€" ing out go‘d in large quantities are not trying tocreate a boom, but are quietâ€" y sending for friends to come into the country and secure claims. A young man named Johnson recentâ€" ly came down from Peace river with his partner, bringing $18,000 in gold dust. A third partrner was left it the diggings. The two men have come south to purchase suppies for the winter. The money brought out was Placed in a Vancouver bank. Part of it was drawn out for the purpose of purchasing â€" supplies, which were at | once shipped to Edmonton, N. W. T., whence they were to be sent to the PEACE RIVER IS A GOOD THING A FORTUNE IN IT sowels and make Jvour head »h_el_l. 25¢., 50c.. and $1.00. A. , Mrs. Leon Delair BY LARGE PACK TRAINS it. For sale by Pharmâ€" \ Important " Offer * 1 For The Canadian People That celebrated and wonderful Kidney Remâ€" :.di known as Dr. Allison‘s Kidney * Buds," so lghlr and Justl{ estimated in the homes of all English people in E".Eland and throughout |â€" urope, for all kinds of kidne trouble, is now ‘offered to the goplo of Cumdys. A full box as & sample will sent to any person tgmtpald ‘for ten cents in stamps. If you take them you dare not condemn thom. They are good. dnomnm radien Jublsti 1Bp 06 er now. resa s is \Brockville. Ont. If you lend a person money it beâ€" comes lost for any purpose of your own. When fqu ask for it back again, you find a friend made an enemy by your own kindness. If you begin to press still further, either you must part with what you have lent, or else you must lose your friend.â€"Plautus. ; Life is made up not or great sacriâ€" fices or duties, but of little things, in which smiles and l:indness, and smal] obligations given habitually are what preserve Qxe heart and secure comfort. â€"Sir H. Davy. § [ EDC C CITUT ED CC POCRRzCOCECC ous, Pa? Paâ€"Why, Bobbie, penurious is close. Precocious _ Brotherâ€"Then ;You’re right, Pa. Mr. Penrose is awful penâ€" oorious whenever he comes to see Sisg. Marriageahe Daughterâ€"I think, Pa, that you do Arthus an injustice when you say that he is penurious. Pregoe;‘.ws Brotherâ€"What‘s penooriâ€" Gents:â€"I was dreadfully nervous, and for relief took your Karl‘s Clover Root Tea. It quieted my nerves _ and strengthened my whole Nervous Sysâ€" tem. __I was troubled with Constipaâ€" tion, Kid: sy and Bowel trouble. Your Tea soon cleansed my system so thorâ€" oughly that I rï¬pidl regained health and strength. rs. é' A. Sweet, Hartâ€" ford, Conn. Sold by all druggists. There is one body that knows more than anybody, and that is every body. â€"Talleyrand. In Telling of the Curing Powers of Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart. > M. V. Thomas, of_ Stanley House, Kingston, writes: "Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for thes Heart has proved a wonderâ€" ful medicine in my case. I was a great sufferer from hbheart trouble. I t%und it a great heallth builder and hbave received great benefit. My wife also has used %he Heart Cure and can bean equally as strong testimony of the wonderful benefit received." It reâ€" lieves in 30 minutes. Reporterâ€"Captain, â€" how much gold does 3'uur ship bring from the Kilonâ€" dike diggings this trip ? The readers of this paper will be pleared to Jearn that there is atleast one dreaded discase that soience has been able to cure in all its stages and that is Catarrh,. Hall‘s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a conâ€" stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall‘s Catarrh Cure is taken inâ€" Lervally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby deâ€" atroyin% the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and mssisting nature in doing its work, The proprietors have so much faith in it« curative powers, that they offer One Hunâ€" dred Dollars for un{ case that it fails to cure. Bend for list of Testimonials, ____ _ Address, _F.J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. Bold by Druggists, 75c. _ _ Queen Victoria owns a dress manuâ€" factured entirely of spider‘s webs. It was a present from the late Empress of Brazil, who had it specially prepared in her palace by 20 native silk workâ€" ers. According to the Premier of New Zealand, a homing pigeon recently flew from Victoria to New Zealand in three days. The distance is about 1,000 miles, and tha bird must have flown without rest at a speed of about fifteen miles an hour. Cycling on board an ocean liner in the early morning, before the crowd of passengers turned out on deck, is becoming popular. The motion of the yessel makes riding delightful in an ordinary sea, and those who have tried it say a spin on land is nothâ€" ing to a spin on the ocean wave, as it were. Hall‘s Family Pills are the bost. Captainâ€"Between $4.75 and $960,000,â€" CYCLING ON OCEaAN STEAMERS I coudn‘t be without it by me and I am continua‘lly recommending it to my brother professionails." _ Al Emmett g_otstell, 207 East 101st street New York ity. lic speakers, or those who have a tenâ€" dency to sore throat, hoarseness, tonâ€" gilitis and catarrh. Myself and wife are both subjects of catarrh and tonâ€" silitis. We had tried most everything but have mnever found anything to equal this great remedy. For quick action it truly is a wonder worker. Tells What Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder Did for Him and His Wifeâ€"â€" Truly a Friend to the "Profession." "I can but prociaim Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder a wonderful mediâ€" cine, particularly for singers and pubâ€" of a "morning gory," lasting only a single day. The flower, when it opens, is starâ€"shaped, its petals of the asme length as the leaves, and about balf an inch in width. Oun the third day the extremities of the anthers, which are five in number, show minute, glisâ€" tening specks, veritable vegetable dia~ monds, about the size of a gin's headâ€"-‘ these are the seed of the fFlower. _A Russian nobleman â€"named Anthoskoff took a number of the seeds to St. Petersâ€" burg. They were placed in a pot of snow and frozen earth. On the coldâ€" est day of the following January the miracwous Tlower burst through its icy covering and displn‘yed its beauties to the wondering scientists. ‘The plant has been very appropriately named ‘"the snow flower." BIBERIA‘S SNOW FLOWER. Travelers in Siberia tell of the wonâ€" derful flower that grows there, and which blooms only in January, when the winter is at its height. The blosâ€" som has something of the characteristio DREADFULLY NERVOUS A PIGEON‘S GREAT FLIGHT DOMESTIC INTERLUDE MADE FROM WEBS. $100 REWARD, g100. APPROXIMATELY JOIN HANDS AN ACTOR TALKS. TORONTO WARD & GOW (GHS#TEY!®"*) NEW YORK, EYVERAL GOOD IMPROYVED 50 AND 1(0â€"ncre mortgaged farms in tho countios of Middlesex, Essex, Kent and Lambton for rale very cheap; smal!l amount down, balance at a low rate of interest, For list, apply to WILLIAM F. BULLEN, Manager Ontario Loan & Debenture Co., London. 1 CC CSE CV POVE B OWn« ada, to introduce our Household Specialties, Enclose referencoa, Dominion Specialty Co., 29 Melinda St., Toronto TANTED o neoomeneg ANTED.â€"United States Life Insurance W Co., (established 1850) wants Acents in unrepresented districts. 1. A, STEWART, Manager Quobec Bank Buildings, Toronto, V Enrliab sheep and American hog casings. Reliable goods atright prices. Park, Blackwell & Oo., Limited, Toronto, PROCURED in Cana A da and Foreign Coun se Sm t shd (PQpc¢h Counr Patent Attorney, Canada Tikgs wisl "wa ce 99 LAW Ceylon Tea }i&" Trouble in the Houseâ€"Baum â€""We had a row at our house yesterday." Jacksonâ€"‘What was the matter?" Baumâ€""Our pretty housemaid broke my china cup and brought me another, ?;1 which was inscribed: ‘To one I ve.' a# doOcToR® PEComm‘nm â€" CALADA Cleanliness and neatness about a house are necessary to insure comfort, â€" Man likes comfort, and if he can‘t find it at home, he will seek elsewhere for it Good housewives know that SAPOLIO makes a Aouse clean and keeps it bright. Happiness always dwelis in a comfortable home. Do you want cleanliness, comfort any happiness? Try SAPOLIO and you will be surprised 2t 3y NPTY IC . Ri.,C CAr)Cl+ NCOE ABG SUIG cure for Piles in all forms. One ape pication will give comfort in a few minutes, and three to six days apâ€" plication according to directions will cure chronic cases. It reljeves al! itching and burning shin diseases in a day. 35 cents. Dr. Agnew‘s Ointment stands at bead as a reliever, healer, and ; cure for Piles in all forms. One pication will give comfort in a minutes, ‘ and three to six days plécation according to directions â€" s @‘}‘a\gï¬od houseâ€"wife.who us=s _ SAPOLIO. it is well said."The mause is muzzled in her house‘Try itanas=ep your house clean+All grocers keep it \f AUSACE CASINGS.â€"New Importations, Anert "In marrin_ie." said the old bachelor, as he mentally figured on the cost of a wedding present, "a woman gets everything." *"Yes," admitted the «d maid, "she even gets the worst of it." BREEDS Vepy© ’,"" #iy â€" U ce " KE 5 e n 4 + * _ dasl.aut C Soie P Somnonigey _ @f&gOOd NOUusewite whirm 1issuum Be Not Deceived.â€"A Cough, Hoarseâ€" ness or Croup, are not to be trifled with. A doss in time of Shiloh‘s Cure will save you much trouble Sold by all druggists. PILE TERRORS swWEPT away Patent Attorney, C;;Ju;i;"iuifl Write for free book on patents, every city and town in Ca FIRST CLASS MAN in BSEWARE OF imiTaATIions. Mills, Mills & Hales, Barristers,etc., removed to W'eslc*vBld *,. Richâ€" mond St, W., 'l‘fu-onto. LEAD PACKETS onLy 254. 400, 500 & 000. Ga and Foreign Coun tries by C. H. ISICBEB. a Life Bldg., Toronto. tents, etc. w N P C 88g8 CREELNAN BROS., Georgetown, Ont. THIS 18 For Youâ€" KNITTING Clothe your family from head to foot with our 908 MONEY MAKER Prices only $15, $20, $30, the FOR TYPEWRITERS wRITte us. Send us your name with a line from your teacher or minister, reoommondin{ you as honest boy. and we will send iou. ex pres« pai twelve paates. size 21x28 inches, wr en i the La urier Cabinet in Councii. ia.;lc(uu is in n‘ce, soft colors. fine froup. Por.'oot Mic@» nesses, full Agures,. Soil at ai‘fh for !wom'- five cents ecach. Boys selling the tweive pl tures and remitting us Threa Dollars, wg receive by return mail A WATCX, Stem W and Cood Time Keeper. Address, THE OLEOGRAN‘VCO.. 680 King St. W., Toronte. Truth Building, 73 ADELADDE 81. WEST. 1 ".i."i"'ic'iéix'«fé.i' & CO., 33 Richmond St. W., | ""oronto, Out., Canada Manufacturers Cea®e s a€ 9 4 IVVY i UV L 0 "LighSon Dark Corners," & 003- Fhre sexual scienge by B J, Jefferiecs, M. D. | P.H. D. If you are marriod you susely need a | topy, Agents wanted at once in every county I r to $10 a day gunaranteed. Sead for circuiar® | Mention this paver and address THECCOOKSEESTFPIEND We Still Continua the Offer : to the boys who have filled t h;i-r contracts with us, according to advertisement. Harry Hazlewood, Paris, Ont., writes: "I receivged vrv’;'ch Bat v‘x‘rdl_\ a l’.n much pleased with it, 3! wish all the boys had one." We are Mailing Watchos as Promisea to the havewhahava £Nadswhaetl 22zl2 c ca% DUNNS BAKING POWDER YQU FOOL G.DUTHIE & SsoNng Elate, Sheet.Metal Te &Gravel Rosfors Sheet Motal Ocilings, Terra tobta R Black and Green RoutlmL SlakG \(‘o.?:t' O* mnices, Felt, Tar, Rooring Pitch, Stm . Gullér® Downpipes, &¢., sapplied the trade. Telephone 1038 Adclaide & Widmer Sts., TORONTO. RWFERANCE :â€"IMPERIAL MACHINES, FOR TWENTYSEVEN 7E LARGEST SatDga ~aa\ Coming to Toronto will find flats of any size, with power, heat, elevator, and all conveniences. . _ G. HARERILS, OLD AND RSLIABLE Established 1872 William Stroet BUYTS Afrr coPPER, BRASS, LEAD. . Toronto, 3 Yeuraoél i( you ger married before purtharing a of " Ligh on m 3 %