Loading...
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.
Home
My WebLink
About
The Exeter Advocate, 1896-4-23, Page 14
Subscribers who do not receive their paper regularly will please notify us at once. Oa at the office for advertising rates. THE EXETER ..ADVOCATE THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 1806. The Woe$'s Commercial Summary. The stock of wheat in Toronto is 84,285 bushels as against 22,776 bushels a year ago. Canadian Pacific stock has been strong- er lately on the remarkably good earn- ings of the road. The demand for choice qualities of but- ter is good at Toronto, and the market continues very firm. Thirty-three failures in the Dominion are reported last week; twenty-two. less than the previous week. • The ta.raings of the Grand Trunk Railway for the week tended Marek 81, were ! Ill, ill. an increase of 84,38J. Wheat is much stronger in the. west on reports of poor condition of winter wheat and the baekwarxl season, In Britain also the markets are more active. and higher. Tho stocks of wheat • at Port Arthur and Fort William are 8.1231,474 bushels, decrease of 8,OJ0 bushels for the week. A year agu.the amount was ouly 698,287 busheL,. The visible supply of wheat in the United States and Canada is 6U.322,OUO bushels, a decrease of 72U.UUUbushels for the week. A year ago the total was 72,703,000 bushels. The amount of wheat on passage to Europe decreased nearly a million bushela for the week, The proposed flour combination was successfully en"eeted, and all spring wheat mills are divided into three classes, with a five cent ranee in scale of prices. Competition from wiuter wheat mills is expected, how: ver. owi g to the scarcity of the latter grade. Quotations at New York are a trine lower, superfine winter wheat selliug at 83.3 s. The yield at Min - =malls last week was 2i11,815 barrels, against 310,, 11 the previous week and 146,81al a year ago. Although water power is improving it le expected that the yi hi wi:l l.e lighter this week, caving t.i n. tssions in price asked by purchasers. Why will you allow a cough to lacerate your throat t•r lunge and run the risk of filling a runsurnptiv,;rave. when. by the tinily use u. I3me 1, x Anti -Consump- tive Syrup the pain eau be allayed and and the danger avuiderl. This Syrup is pleasant to the taste. and unsurpassed for relieving. Healing and curing all affect - tions o: the throat and Iuugs, coughs, colds, bronchitis, etc., etc. Here and There. The man who is close with money is often liberal with advice. The real worth of a man consists in what he is worth to his race. Life will depend largely upon what we do with leisure moments. Soktmon got a grol deal of his wisdom in the school of experience. A. woman can always trump up a good excuse for going down town. Too many try to he saints in church and something else in business. Whoever improves his opportunities will soon be improved by them. The man who throws mud at a good man slaps himself in the face. The devil lives in the same house with the man who gets mead quick. It is hard to convince a bilious man that the world is growing better. When the devil goes to church he doesn't always occupy a back seat. Some women's idea of a good time is to go to a funeral where they can cry. Every time a saloon is licensed, the devil's chain is made one link longer. Give thorns the right to live and you make a law against killing snakes. • Faith rests and waits. Unbelief re- fuses to be quiet because it has no feel- ing. The man who gets rich at the expense of his conscience, pays too much for his money. When a man feels the need of economy he is apt to think it should begin with his wife. When a child begins to ask questions, it has started to climb up the hill of knowledge. The man who lives to make others happy is engaged in the highest calling known on earth. Tithe saloons were as badly lighted as some churches, there wouldn't be so many drunkards. Prayers are sometimes made in church, that the devil would be willing to take off his coat and help answer. Only the wise can profit by the experi- ence of others, A fool has to find out for himself that fire is hot. The man who tries to defend himself by saying that he gives as much as somebody else, knows that he isn't giving enough. The accounts of expenditure of the Indian Office over the Sliahzada's visit to England have now been submitted to India, In spite of the largo suite the Ameer's son brought with him, and the many special items of expenditure, such as special tiaine, the hire of Dorchester house, and an. English staff of servants, the whole bill amounts to very little over £0,000,. The expense . will primarily fall upon the Indian Exchequer. TOPICS OF A WEEK. Theivaportant Events in a Few words Far Busy Readers. CANADIAN. The water in Lake Erie is rising, Woodstock has 54,500 taxes unpaid. Huntsville has two private hospitals. Downie township will bonne wire fences. .A dairy is to be operatedat Wiartou. London will soon have a building boom. Clinton gets 810,000 from the Staveley estate. White rats infest the market square at Guelph. • Canadians carry 8 8500,000,000 in life in- surance. A new wing must be added to the Guelph hospital. Lake Ontario has risen 14 inches since last fall. There is a 27,000 shortage in Brockville's accounts. A lath mill is being erected at Pene- tanguisbene. It costs 850 a night to rent the Barrie Opera House. The Ridgetown post -office was recently burglarized. Waterford will have a fine celebration Dominion Day. Princeton's stores close at 8 o'clock in the evenings. Lump -jaw is reported to the cattle of Essex County. A number of• farmers about Teeterville have stocked ice. New Sarum, on the G.T.R., is now a telegraph station. Coilingwood's police magistrate is now a salaried officer. The merchants of Drum bo have adopted the cash system. Guelph paid 90 cents a day last year to keep its prisoners. The Arcade, Woodstock, has been sold at auction for 20,000. The Lily May mine, Trail Creek, has been sold for 840,000. A Salvation Army Sunday school is in operation at Uxbridge. A. white Leghorn hen was recently sold at Shakespeare for $10. Ketnptville may have a roller mill and Renfrew a pork factory. Building operations promise to boom in Harriston this summer. The U. S. customs office at Stratford depot has been abolished. The Johnston street Baptists, Kingston, will build a new church. Fish ladders are to be placed on the The Government of Canada cabled to Mr. Chamberlain offering a milite regiment for service in the Soudan. Th offer created a good impression, but will not probably be accepted. The late Sir John A. Macdonald was a one time an agent of the Canada Life As- surance Oo. As far back as the year 1852 .' he received an application from, Rural Dean Allen, of Millbrook. Mr. Louis Frechette, the Canadian poet laureate, is writing, by special order, a play for Mine. Bernhardt. It deals with Italian life in. the seventeenth century, and is to be finished on May 23rd.. ' Mr. Geo. W.' Adams, a well-known farmer and stock -raiser, of Rock way, Ont.,. committed suicide on Saturday night by throwing himself over a high bluff near his Home into the creek below. • The St. George's Society of Loudon do not take kindly to the recent move of the churches against Sunday parades. They have secured the Opera House for their annual sermon, and are now looking for a minister to preach for then. Sir John Schultz, ex -Lieut -Governor of Manitoba died Monday at Monterey,Mexi- co, where he had gone in search of health. The deceased was born at Amherstburg, Ont., in 1840. At the time of the Riel re- bellion, in 1810, he was captured and sen- tenced to death, but escaped. The new loan of the city of Montreal, bought by the Bank of Montreal, is in forty -year four per cent. stock, and the purchase price is one hundred and five pounds one shilling sterling for every hundred pounds of stock, the most satis- factory terms ever obtained by any Cana- dian city. The great demand for a pleasant, safe and reliable antidote for all affections of the throat and lungs is fully met with in Bickle's Anti -Consumptive Syrup, It is a purely Vegetable Compound, and acts promptly and magically in subduing all coughs, colds, bronchitis, inflammation Wigs of the etc. Itis so palatable that Child will not refuse it, and is put at a price that will not exclude the poor from its benefits, UNITED STATES. WEAK AND WEARY WOMEN FIND minter A REAL FRIEND IN SOUTH AMERICAN NERVINE. Despaired of by All Her Friends, and Her t fuse Pronounced Hopeless by :Doctors, Hiss A nate Patterson, of Sackville, C a' re 'tared to Per feet Health. EE,waa cynic,}XAPS ho but seine onse has said that in this age there are no healthy women. Lot as be generous, and liscount the state- aent. The age has many women strong and noble physical- ly, as they are men- tally and morally ; but it is true nover- tue.ess, that a large percentage of the wumtn of the country suffer from ner- vousness and general debility. They drag out a weary e istonce, and each day is a i day of pain and suffering. This was the case with Miss Annie,Patterson, of Saclt• - vile, N.B., a lady widely known in those parts. She was weak and showed symp- tosis of entering a decline, She suffered terribly from indigestion and nervous- ness. Having tried practioally all sorts i of remedies, and called in the assistance of the cleverest physicians, and, these doing her no good, she was influenced by some one, somehow, to try South Ameri- can Nervine, Of course, it was like hoping against hope—another patent medicine. But she had taken only one bottle when her system began to take on the health of earliest years, and after Using three bottles she was completely cured. No wonder she is strong in her conviction that there is no remedy like South American Nervine. This remedy is a remarkable health builder ; it removes disease, strengthens the nerves, and puts on flesh. Miss Pat- terson's case is only one of thousands that have been chronicled in these columns at different times. The State Legislature of Ohio has passed an anti-ly uCliing bill I New York � cels, State there are 280,029 acres of buckwheat uuder cultivation. Uncle Rivera Lester, of Henry county, Ga., is said to be now in his 120th year. The Mayors of Brooklyn and New York are opposed to the Greater ,New York bill. The United States' acreage in grain is greater than the entire area of the Ger- man empire. The A.P:A. have declared war on Mr. dams of the Grand river, MClainley in his candidature for the A carpenter at Loudon has been up 55 presidency. times for drunkenness. The worst snowstorm ever known in the vicinity of Raton, N.M., set in on Sun- day night. Trains are generally delayed. Itis estimated that it takes two years for the water from the Gulf of Mexico to travel from Florida to the coast of Nor- way. Ogden, Utah, an explosion of giant powder occurred at a quarry in which seven men lost their lives and three were badly injured. William Burbank, an 83 -year-old resi- dent of Thouipeonville, Conn., was fatal- ly atally injured recently while coasting down a hill in that place. A dynamite bomb was directed Monday to Mr. 'Theodore Roosevelt, president of the New 'York Police Board; but it was de- tained at the post -office. Rockland, Mr., leas a woman justice of the peace, a woman court stenographer, three women who have made an ironclad agreement to wear bloomers. Work is proceeding day and night at the ordnance shops in the Washington navy yard on the guns designed for the new ships nearing completion. The New York Senate has passed a resolution in favor of co-operating with Canada for the protection of fish iu the Nilegara River and Lake Ontario. Coal of excellent quality, and is appar- ently enortnous quantities has just been discovered in Arizona, in the Dos Cab- ezas district, ouly six miles from the rail- road, Col. Peter Glen, of New York, the highest officer next to Commander Bal- • lington Booth, has deserted the Volun. teens and returned to the Salvation Army. The congregation of a church at Fil- more, Cal., has invited its pastor to re- sign because he accepted contributions for church work from sporting men and saloon keepers. Power from the great dynamos of the Niagara Power Company will be trans- mitted into New York city over four hun dred and sixty-two miles of wire on May 5 by the new Tesla system, The electro -therapeutist and the bac- teriologist of Bennett Medical College, Chicago, claim that by the application of the Roentgen rays epidemics of all kinds will be impossible in the future. Samuel P. Langdon, the wealthy coal operator of Philadelphia, who was held on a charge of having caused the death of Annie McGrath, the girl with whom he was living, has been discharged for want of evidence connecting him with the• crime. The New York State Assembly has passed the Andrews Mercantile -Estab- lishment bill, which limits the. labor of women and children to sixty hours per week, and puts all establishments ander control of the Board of Health, Last year it cost Simcoe 11 cents a day to keep its prisoners. Newmarket will borrow39,000 to operate an electric light plant. A third Methodist church has just been established in Peterboro'. Work on the Sauitarium at Graven - burst was recently begun. The Bradford Witness -News hasjust begun its thirty first year. Belleville is trying to organize a city battalion of six companies. At Ottawa 65 liquor licenses are grant- ed, a reduction from. last year. The Montreal exhibition has been post- poned until May of next year. This summer Aylmer will have the liveliest season in its history. Two Ottawa tobacconists were fiued for selling, cigarettes to minors. Another steamer for the Muskoka lakes is being built at Graveuhurst. Chatham bas a moveinent on foot to exclude Detroit Sunday papers. The British -American Hotel, Kingston, is being repaired and enlarged. London is making a great effort to keep its tax rate down to 20 mills. Belleville is struggling with 810,000 in law sults about icy sidewalks. Every ward in the new wing of the Brockville hospital is occupied At a recent social union at Woodstock 22 guests averaged 70 years of age. The suburbs of Ottawa were inundated on Sunday by a rise of the Rideau. At a cost of 843,000, twenty-eight rooms will be added to the London schools. It is reported that several deaths have occurred at Chesley from eating caucerous beef. At a lumber camp in Medora township recentlyone team hauled out 150 logs measuring 5,300 feet.' Bishop Ryan, of the Buffalo diocese,who was born in Almoute, Ont., seventy-one years ago, died Friday. The remains of the late Dr, Carson, of Detroit, were interred at Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto, Friday. The towns of. Essex, Areherstburg and Harrow will be supplied with natural gas from the South Essex gas fields. Judge Andrews, of Quebec, has given judgment for 8100,000 in favor of the Pro- vincial Government against Mr. Ernest Pacaud. The Dominion Artillery Association met at Montreal and considered a plan for sending a team to compete at Shoe- buryness. Michael Brennan was found guilty at Barrie of the murder of Mr. John A. Strathy, and was sentenced to be hanged on May 29. At Strathroy the by-law in favor of the furniture factory bonus was carried by a large majority, 502 voting in favor and only 9 against. Arrangements have been made by which all the Cree Indians, the wards of Canada, will be deported from Montana to the Northwest Territories. The present sitting of the House of Commons, which has lasted. since Monday afternoon, is the longest recorded in auy parliament in the world. •At Windsor Adolph Binsette was sen- tenced to five years in Kingston Peniten- tiary for forging the name of William Sweetmau to a mortgage. John Williams, while feeding the fur- naces at the smelting works in Hamilton, was overcome by the coal gas, and before help arrived he was dead. .A.t a general meeting of the Board of Trade of Toronto held Thursday night, a resolution was passed advocating closer. trade relations with the Mother Country. An open verdict was returned by the Coroner's jury in the case of the old man, Harvey MoNab, whose body was found in the woods near Cooksviile Th ursday night. The Proprietors of Parmelee's Pills are constantlyreceiving letters similiar .to the following whi' h ox tains itself. Mr. John A. Beam, Waterloo, Ont., writes : '"I never used any medicine ,that can equal Parmelee's Pills for Dyspepsia or Liver and Kidney Complaints. The relief experienced after using them was won dertul." As a.safe family medicine Par-,. melee's' Vegetable lilts can be given in all cases requiring a Uaths.rtie, How to cure Headache.—Some people suffer untold misery day after day with headache. There is rest neither day or night until the nerves are all unstrung: The cause is generally a disordered stom- ach, and of cure can be effected by using Parmelee's Vegetable Pills, containing Mandrake . and Dandelion. Mr. Finlay Wark, Lysander, P. Q., writes; "I find Parmelee's Piles a first-class article for Bilious Headache." FOREiGN. ; The young King Alexander of Searle /is at present in Athens, and is said to be paying matrimonialcourt to Princess Marie of Greece. The Prince and Princess of Wales will be the guests of the Marquis and Mar- chioness of Salisbury, at Hatfield house at the end of May. There is a very serious outbreak of smallpox in Gloucester, England, which is attributed to the anti -vaccination views of the local council. Mr. Cecil Rhodes, formerly Premier of Cape Colony, who has been sneering from fever at Salisbury for some days past, is now much better. 11 is rumored in Aldershot camp that the Ninth Lancers have been ordered to get ready to start for 'Egypt to take part in the Soudan campaign. A young Berlin physician announces the discovery of a now cure for tubercul- osis.` Of the ninety cases treated in the Moabit hospital during the past year all have been cured. Isis Specialty. Two citizens were discussing the local doctors and their talk turned to the specialists. I "This specialist ideaseems to be a modern one among the medical men," Isaid the first citizen. "Years ago to. call a man a speeialist was no better I than to call him a quack. Now they ap, pear to covet the distinction. There's Blank, for instance, whose specialty is 1 throat troubles." j "And Dash, who looks after skin dis- eases." 'And Quad-111st, the -pulmonary ex - pert" Yes, and you mustn't forget Liver - wort. ." And he named a prominent physic- ian. "I didn't know he had a specialty. What is it?" "Collecting!" Tlio Drink Disease. There is scarcely a drinking man in existence who does not i'requently and earnestly wish that he could free himself from the habit. His business may be going to ruin; his friends may bo leaving him; he has to endure the reproachful words and looks of parents, wife or children. He recognizes the fact that he is destroying their happiness as well as his own, and in his sober moments he perhaps curses himself for his selfish cruelty. In an agony of remorse be vows that he will stop drinking ; and in some cases, where the will is exceptionally strong or the disease has nob made too much prod ess,this is sufficient, although, unfortunately, such cases are extremely rare. When the drink disease is once developed, nothing but proper treatment can free its victim from the craving for drink which will periodically recur, and which must be satisfied at any cost. Home, wife, family. business count for nothing; all must go to enable the un- happy sufferer to obtain the stimulant which in his peculiar condition has be- come as much a necessity to his system as food and sleep are to that of a healthy man. To such as these, the treatment at the Lakehurst Institute, Oakville. may be recommended as a safe and certain cure. There are hundreds of bright, happy, prosperous men who have been cured by this treatment, and there are hundreds of parents, wives and children who thank God that their loved ones have been induced to take it. For full information address The Manager, Lake- hurst Institute, Oakville. Totally Deaf—Mr. S. E. Crandell, Port Perry, writes : " I contracted a severe cold last winter, which resulted in my becoming totally deaf in one ear and par- tially so in the other. After trying var- ious remedies, and consulting several doctors, without obtaining any relief, I was advised to try Dr. Thomas' Ealectric Oil. I warmed the Oil and poured a little of it into my ear, and before ono -half the bottle was used my hearing was completely restored. I have heard of other cases of deafness being cured by the use of this medicine." The New Woman Not In It. With all her freaks and fads the new woman does not commence to enjoy the same comfort with her mannish clothing that a man does. For she will almost always sacrifice comfort for style and effect, while with a man comfort comes fust. Men's suits and overcoats admit of so few changes in style that the main question is to get a becoming color, and for severe weather, to make -them warm enough without too much bulk or weight. Andhere men take advantage of the manyfeminine i e appropriations of their styles and borrow the invaluable Fibre Chamois on which such extensive sleeves are safely built, using it in winter coats and vests for the sake of the healthful warmth it gives—a comforting warmth which neither wind or rain can penetrate. It Was the Scales. Mrs. Blank—Oh! Henry, you must send for the doctor at once. I believe I am getting 'the dropsy. Don't delay a moment. Mr. Blank—Why, what put that idea into your head? "Dear mea, will you never be satisfied that what I say is true? I got weighed to=day, and it's awful. I weighed 800 pounds." "Great Caesar's ghost! Where did you get weighed?" "Around at your coal yard." 'Cahn yourself, my dear. Your weight is exactly 150 pounds: Those who don't like the flour trust may find a way to paste it. Worms derange the whole system: Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator de- ranges worms, and ,gives rest to the suf- ferer. It only costs 25 ents to tryit and be convinced A Higher Grade Bicycle it. is impossible to produce. CRIBBLE c M°NAB SOLE AGENTS 34 FRONT ST. WEST, TORONTO Send for Catalogue. s rV "ice / \ IITIF /6.7'. t e 2 t. �qp �p •1\ I!\ Att-./1\ 4►\ q'A''9 \ %P� %at 11).• X91\` ✓it..*:t I IC•;J r ...Horse Simi..., Plumber... a©©mo00��a4� TEN e� °e CENTS y ...WILL READ... 1 One Dollar a year. Ten Cents La copy. a EVE' YBODY M"sy's Magazioer).Aprill Which will contain amongothers the following illustrated articles 3J j and stories :— YORK CATHEDRAL—by Prof. Wm. Clark, D.C.L. Five Illustrations. CANADIAN HORSE SHOWS—by Stewart Houston. Five Illustrations. MYSTERY OF THE RED DEEPS—Story by Duncan Campbell Scott. MIGRATION OF BIROS—by Robert Elliott. Six Illustrations. MY BROTHER'S KEEPER -by Seranus. Five Illustrations. PECULIAR TECHNICALITIES OF THE LAW—by Alfred Iioskin, Q.C. The sale of "LIGHTS OP A CITY STREET," of which we had a HE MASSEY PRESS a 1o"'proofs struck oil on heavy award for iruusmm; Durnoses, has met with reeked success. There are oniv a limited number of copies _ 927 King St. W. left. Those desiring to secure this magnificent production should oile\Te, C :NADA. order at once. Price 25e, Liberal discount to the trade. Vr\iG JG41I JIG \fG V!_\l,.'tb . ett.i4-:-.1iGw:ASrG?tor t Aid. .aaWt. ltahal4a I Didn't Like On Perin. Tho hostess I suppose there is no use of asking you to stay tti ,lin::er? The caller- Not i th t \v,y. • 4100 i,etc,.rd 0.00. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at lean one dreaded disease that s•ience has been able to euro 1» all Its' stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive etre known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a eoitstltutional des• ea•e requires a constitutional. treatment. Hall's (:atarrn (jure is taken internally, acth..' directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destr ,yang the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars or any case' that it falls to euro. Send for list of testimon- ials. Address, F. J. CH.ENEY & CO., Tol edo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75e. An Old Investigation. Biggins (reading his Sunday paper) -- I notice there is to bo little change in men's trousers this season. Mrs. Biggins (gloomily)—I've notict d that right along. FITS stopped free and permanently cured No fits after first day's use of Dr. lathe's Great Nerve Restorer. Free $2 trial bottle sent through Canadian Agencies. Address Lr. Kline, 981 Arch St, Philadelphia, Pa. Tho Dean of Westminster has taken great pains to meet the demand that Dr. Johnson's gravestone shall be better pre- served and rendered inoro conspicuous to the public. He has had the ancient flews in it made good with pieces of Irish marble, the lettering has been cut deep, and the letters filled with white cement, After these improvements no one can have any difficulty in at once recognizing a gravestone which is one of the most in- teresting in the South Transept. Hard .and soft corns cannot withstand Holloway's Corn Cure; it is effectual every time. Got a bottle at once and be happy. "Oom Paul's" salary as President of the Transvaal works out at about £7,000 per annum, with £400 a year for "coffee money," i.e., for entertaining purposes. We may add that the old gentleman keeps well within the £400, for his official entortaissments are neither numerous nor costly. As regards his private for-! tune, this may be put roughly at a mil- lion sterling. How he made it is known only to himself and his Maker. If some men had the world made to suit them, it would be just large enough to cover with both their feet. • In the Sprillg s Purify the Blood by way of the Kidneys. This is Nature's way of doing it, an. d the ways. e � Pills V + �1•s pq V , o ' See that you gpt DODD'S Imitations are dangerous H ,I LEADING ALL OTHERS. CEYLON TEA In. Lead Packet Only. Black or Mixed! BY ALL GROCERS. OTIN MACGREGOR. 13ARRIST ER LAW, Seli,ltor in Supreme Court of Oant adn. Money to loan. offices -28.50 Toronto street, Toronto. A GENTS WANTED—ON SALARY Q1$ cotmnissine ; good agents can secure a' permanent position. Scud stamp for r artieu- tars. Ni petals. Address VITAE -ORE POT, Toronto. Toronto. When we read or hear of HULL We naturally think of E. B. Eddy' Matches. Drop a postal card to A. H. Canning. & Co., 57 Front Street East, Toronto' for prices on Seeds and General Goods. Their seeds aro guaranteed to be true. to name and prolific. Two Schools Under One Mann g amen. TORONTO AND STRATFORD, ONT. llngqncstionably the leading Commerciail Schoeds of the Dominion; advantages best in Canada; moderate rates; students may. enter at any time, Write to either school for circulars and mention this paper. SHAW & ELLIorr, Principals. ' T. N. U. 60 • i ThoroThoroughly at The Northern BusinessColleg; ughly Owen Sound, Ont., by experienced teachers. Course includes Shore. • Taught o s hand,Typewriting,Penmanship and• .Letter .writing..j ust the subjects re- quired by Shorthand writers in offrework. Coikge Announcement free. C. A. FLEMING, Principeh li VE1tYTBIN(( FOR THE PRINTER -- Type, Presses, Inks, Ready -Print Newspapers, Stereotype 5fiutterk7loctrt- yp , 1nlp wingg. TORONTO TY,P.D" H'OUNDBY, Toronto and Winnipeg.'