Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1897-9-23, Page 6R; Subscribers who do not receive their paper • regularly will please notify us at once. Call at the offiee for advertising rates, TIEE EXETER, ADVOCATE THURSDAY, SEPT, 23. 1807. The 'Peek's Commercial Summary. The net gold balance in the United States treasury on Monday was $144,261,- 000. The Bank of England rate remains unchanged at 2 per cunt, Open market discount 2 per cent. The Canadian Pacific Railway for the fourth week of August shows earnings of $419,064; increase, $74,154. The visible decrease in wheat 650,000 bushels; corn increase of 3,347,000 bus- hels; oats increase 293,000 bushels. Eighty new grain elevators and thir- teen flat warehouses have been con- structed during the present year to ac- commodate wheat along therailway lines in Manitoba and the Northwest Terri- tories. There is an improvement in wholesale. trade at Toronto. Some lines, in fact, are active. The city is full of visitors, with Toronto's Exhibition the chief at- traction, but among them are many country storekeepers, who are leaving lots of orders, The sentiment in business circles is much healthier than for years, and it would seem that confidence is again fully restored. General reports of business in the Montreal district are of a more favorable character, on the whole, the demand in several lines showing some improvement, and country merchants being evidently more cheerful in their views as to collec- tions this fall, and their own ability to meet their obligatinns. The fall millinery openings taking place this werk have attracted a good many visitors from Eastern Ontario, the Ottawa Valley, and Quebec province generally, and though large purchases are exceptional the aggre- gate of business is reported to be gratify- ing. Logging operatjons on the Ottawa and tributaries in Canada have usually afforded employment for 5,000 to r,,uu0 men. :cow that the United States tariff imposes a duty of $;3 a thousand on rough pine, it is proelaimed that opera- tors feel so hard hit and discouraged that they will put no more than 500 men in the woods this season. This means a prodigious reduction of import that will not damage American markets any. The loggers who have heretofore depended on the Ottawa district for a job will have to emigrate to the United States or go to the Klondike. Our sympathy will first have to begin at home. Lots of people have been out of employment on this side of the line because 5,01M men were turn` +.ng out cheap Canada logs, to be eon - Tenet' into cheap Canada lumber, which competed with our own in the eastern ti `S market. If the Dingley bill hats reduced the Ottawa River legging force from 6,000 to :liar sten, it clearly shows that the protecti"tn feature elf the new tariff bill does indeed pretest.—N. W. Lum- berman. Aphorisms. Malice drinks half of its own poison. Good will, like a good name, is got by many actions and lost by one. He that calls a man ungrateful, sums np all the evil that a man can be guilty of. Gaiety is not a proof that the heart is at ease, for often in the midst of laugh- ter, the heart is sad. Friendship improves happiness, and abates misery, by doubting our joy, and dividing our grief. Men of the noblest dispositions think themselves happiest when others share their happiness with them. Good qualities are the substantial riches of the mind; but it is good breed- ing that sets thein off to advantage. He that cannot forgive others, breaks the bridge over which he must pass himself; for every man has need to be forgiven. He that is a good man is three-quar- ters of his way toward being a good Christian, wheresoever be lives, or what- soever he is called. It is impossible to make people under- stand their ignorance; for it requires knowledge to perceive it, and therefore he that can perceive it hath it not. Energy will do anything that can be done in this world, and no talents, no circumstances, no opportunities will make a two -legged animal a man with- out it. WRECKED. TOPICS OF THE WEEK HERE IS THE NEWS IN SHORT ORDER. ..._ Tidings from sill Farts of the Globe, Con- densed and Arranged for Busy Readers. CANADIAN. Port Elgin suffered severely by fire, Diphtheria is prevalent at Wellaudport. The Belle River Board of Trade will bore for gas. Codfish is reported as poor in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Chatham bas granted $250 to the Peninsular Fair. John McCombe, a pioneer of Raleigh, is dead, aged 80; A Chesley man has tomato stalks 5 feet 2 inches -high. Fergus will spend $3,000 improving its school buildings. A Mormon preacher is making prose- lytes in Bruee County. Tintern has a ghost that crawls an all fours and dodges bullets. Coon hunting is the favorite sport in the neighborhood of Effingham. The first frost of the seasou struck the low lands at Moulton Saturday night. Owing to the failure of the apple crop the Norwioh evaporator has been closed. Wheat along the Feeder banks in Wain - fleet is averaging 23 bushels to the acre. Mr. John Blair, one of the most prom- inent farmers of West Zorra, died, aged 68, Mr, John Ludor, Chief of the Burling- ton Fire Brigade, is dead after a shert illness. The price of pasteboard bas risen and it may be necessary to make shoes of leather. Dresden medical men report the water in different wells in the village is unfit for use. One hundred thousand bushels of new wheat have already been received at Chatham. Mr. ,Andrew Irving, Registrar of Deeds for Renfrew County, died at Pembroke.. The curfew bell iu Paisley has ceased to ring. The citizens consider the fad to be played out. The safe of the Ontario Tack Com- pany, at Hamilton, was forced open and $103 stolen from it. Up to the first of September 1,270 bar- rels of apples have been shipped from Montreal to England. The blereantile Fire Insurance Com- pany, of Waterloo, has transferred its stuff and office to Toronto. Mount Forest is going in for asphalt pavement. A contract has been lately let at 10 cents per square foot. It is expected that the first hundred miles of the Crow's Nest Pass railway will be completed by November 1st. The assessment returns of London show an increase in the population dur ing the past twelve months of 1,553. In a land quarrel near Seeley's Bay Benjamin Kenney was shot by a man named Hill and very seriously wounded. The announcement was made that the Ontario Government has created the Michipicoten region into a mining dis- trict. The corner -stone of the jubilee wing of the Hamilton City Hospital was laid by Mr. Geo. Roach, Chairman of the Board. To hustle the' contractors on the God- erieh breakwater, the Government have sent up Inspector C. W. Stewart, of To- ronto. John Crotty struck a gusher on the Gibb property, near Bothwell, which yields 75 barrels per day. Excitement prevails. The building of a railway from Juneau to Lake Teslin is now assured, which will Iessen the route to the Klondike very considerably. Men sinking for a foundation on. Daiguillon street, Quebec, found a quan- tity of bones. Their presence there can- not be explained. After the canneries closed the other day on the Fraser River one thousand tickets were sold to workmen returning to the United States. The trial of the election petition against Mr. J. A. Gillies, M.P. for Rich- mond, was continued at Ariuhat, N.S., and the case was dismissed. The plates froni which the jubilee stamps were printed were destroyed at Ottawa in the presence of the Postmas- ter -General and a number of officials. The extension of the London electric street railway to Pottersbnrg was form- ally inaugurated on Saturday by the running of the first motor car over the line. )jr.sHarkIey. the Wife of Capt. Harkley, Well-known Lake Captain of Owen Sound, Ont., Tells How La Grippe Left Her, and How Often Doctors Gave Up Elope and Her Family and Friends De- spaired of Her Recovery—The Great South American Nervine was the Beacon Which Directed Her Into the Good Health Harbor. "About four years ago I was afflicted witha severe attack of la grippe, which Ieft me almost a complete wreck. I was prostrated for weeks. I doctored with several physicians and used many reme- dies, but none had any lasting effect. My friends began to be alarmed for my recovery. The doctors shook their heads, and held out little hope. I was attracted by an advertisement of South American Nervine, and as my trouble was of a nervous nature I decided to try it. The first bottle helped me greatly. I persisted in its use and this great remedy has com- pletely built up my system, and I posi- tively declare that it is the only remedy that gave me any relief. She'd Save Him Trouble. Jack—Maud wants to know why you shun her company now. Tom --Well, the fact is, I'm broke. Jaok—I'll tell her and you needn't shun her any more. Tom (brightening) --By Jovel Do you think sot Jack -Yes; she'll shun you. Mrs. Thom, wife of one of Quebec's best known Educators for fifty years, writes: "It is marvellous how 'Quick - :ours' subdues pain:" A well-dressed young woman who registered at the Cadillac Hotel, Mont- real, as Miss Warner, of New York, was found. dead in bed, with two empty bottles that had contained oarbolio aoid by her side. Hon. William Harty has authorized The Kingston Whig to deny the reports of his impending retirement. Be is rapid ly gaining strength, and will soon re - stone oherge of his Department of Public Works. The counsel on the British, side in the argument before the Behring Sen Claims Commission at Halifax,' N,S., will prob- ably take a rest next week, and give the United States representatives a chance of speaking. Two more smallpox cases were re- moved to the City Contagious Diseases Hospital at Montreal, the patients being the wife and three-year-old daughter of a street railway motorman, who lives in Fullum lane. Collingwood must meet a debenture indebtedness of $19,049,61 this year. The total amount required to meet the muni- cipal expenditures is $50,017.19, and the tax rate in that thriving town will be 29 mills on the dollar. Montreal is threatened with a water famine owing to a break in the big supply pipes carrying the water under the Lachine Canal. A dredge employed in deepening the canal tore up several sections of two 30 -inch pipes, Sir Charles Hbbert Tupper closed his argument before the Behring Sea Com- mission. This completed the general argument on behalf of Great Britton which has lasted nearly three weeks, According to the arrangement made the British counsel proceeded to deal with the claims of the seized vessels in detail, LNITED STATies. The big ,lining strike is practically over, and the ,ten are returning to work. Miss Frances E.' Willard announces that the conventions of the W.C.T.U. at Toronto anti Buffalo will protest against lynching. In regard to the complaints made by United States distillers against the Can- adian Customs laws, regarding the ship- ment of whiskey in packages, Mr. Pat- terson, Minister of Customs, says that there has been no change in the law in this regard since 1883. Dyspepsia and Indigestion.—C. W. Snow kes Co„ Syracuse, N. Y., writes: "Please send us teu grosnof Pills. We are selling more of Parmelee's Pills than any other Pill we keep. They have a great repu- tation for the cure of Dyspepsia and Liver C,xmplaiur." Mr. Charles A. Smith, Lind- say. writes: "Parmelee's Pills are an excellent nnediciue. My sister has been troubled with severe headache, but these hills have cured !t." 1•'OerRE G C I .. Frank Bissonette, Joseph Troy and John C. Shea, the three alleged conspira- tors in the noted lacrosse case, were com- mitted for trial by Magistrate Ogara at Ottawa. Stratford City Counoil may construct a systen'i of water works, as a result of a difference of opinion as to the price of the works by which the city is at pres- ent supplied. A young man named West was found in London by the police in a helpless condition. He was removed to the hospi- tal, where he committed suicide by tak- ing caroblio acid. A Iarge building occupied by four boot and shoe manufacturers at St. Roch, Quebec, was burned, and the losses are very heavy, About 600 employes are thrown out of work Mr. W. H. Ordway, manager of the Noah's .Ark exhibit at the Industrial Ex- hibition, was run over andkilled by a train near the foot of Bathurst street, Toronto, on Saturday afternoon. Mr. Samuel Piper, aged sixty, a farmer, residing in SunnydaIe township, Ont., while workings in the harvest field was overcome by the heat, and died be- fore medical aid could be procured. The sale of Shawnegan Falls by the Quebec Government took place Friday. It was purchased for $50,100, it is re- ported, by a company which purpose using the power to manufacture acetylene gas. The Mount Forest artesian well has been sunk 250 feet; water standing with- in 20 feet of the top. The drill is in the solid rook, whiob has been penetrated fully 50 feet, and the water is considered pure. HER HOPELESS LOVE. Clarissa's rain Attempt to Become as Thlz aw. the Corporal. A t West; Point„in the hotel, Miss Clarissa comes to the typewriter'stable, white, sen- timental, similar to a saint in a missal, tightened in her gown, andshe sits be- tween two vases filled with flowers in an irreproachable keepsake pose. It is not a secret for anybody that Miss Clarissa is in love with Corporal Anthony Wayne Chum- ley, the prettiest and the thinnest of all the cadets, Rightly or wrongly, but rightly doubt- less, she thiuks that this ravishing young man will not pay attention to hor until she shall have b000me as thin as he is. She is thin. She is a bee, but Anthony Wayne Chumley is a wasp. As she appears the big Major Books cannot suppress a cry of admiration. "Caesar's ghost!” he says. "Clarissa is thinner than she was yesterday! She'll get there," "Or die," comments Captain Hall, phil- osophically placing the double six on the board. Anthony Wayne Chumloy enters. He oasts around him happy glances. He shakes hands here and there. He asks for bis lectors, and he does not see Clarissa. Then lie goes to the mirror and delight- fully admires himself. Strictly molded in his tunic, he is a thousand times thinner than the typewriter. He could be held in the ten fingers of a little girl, and his waist might pass through a finger ring, He contemplates himself, finds himself ador- able and hardly refrains from sending kisses to his linage, refieoted by the com- piacent mirror. Clarissa in despair returns to her room, breaks 20 laces and gots thinner, but when she has returned to her table she under stands, measuring the corporal's thin waist with her eyes, that she cannot race. with him. And as Joseph, the waiter, comes to ask her if she wants her lunoheon, the thin young girl raises languidly her con- templative oyes, looks at Anthony Wayne Chumley as Eve expelled looked at the gate of Paradise and says: "No, give me a small glass of vinegar." Frani: Pulaseki, the Hungarian archae- ologistand publicist, is dead. Owing to the failure of crops the southern portion of Russia is threatened with a famine, The latest intelligence from Latbraclar confirms the reports of the complete fail- ure of the cod fishery this season. It is reported at Shute that the Afri- dis are collecting in the Hazen Valley fur an attack on either I3nxa or ,7amrud. The British Government has instructed Scotland Yard to notify the United States of tho departure of Anarchists for that country. There was an explosion of dynamite near Johannesberg, in South Africa, by which five white men and twenty-five Kaflirs were killed. The Earl of Cadogan, Viceroy of Ire- land, has issued a statement of the effeot that the reports of famine prospects in Ireland are unjustifiable - The Trades Union Congress, at present in session in Birmingham, passed a resolution vigorously protesting against. the employment of child labor. At the Trades Union Congress in Birmingham a resolution was passed declaring in favor of the national federa- tion of all trades and industries. The notorious sermon preached by Father 011ivier at the time of the fire at the Paris Charity Bazaar has led to his removal from the pulpit of the Cathedral of Notre Dame. The Duke and Duchess of York at Glasgow received the civic authorities and opened the new Prince's dock. The city was profusely decorated in honor of the visit of their Royal Highnesses. The Polish newspapers announce the death at Craoow of Adam Asnvk, the greatest of contemporary Polish poets. He was born in 1838 at ICalisch, and re- ceived his education at Warsaw, Breslau and Heidelberg. He first appeared as a poet in 1864, in a Lemberg iterary jour- nal. In 1870 he took up his abode at Cracow. Mr. Appleton, secretary of the British and Foreign Arbitration Peace Society, has been sentenced to three months' im- prisonment by the Marylebone Police Magistrate for assaulting and beating a housemaid. He is described as an author and publisher, 60 years of age, who went about armed with a revolver and a swordstiok. French experts in the desert of Sahara are expressing apprehensions at the gradual diminution of the fertile oases. It is known that the large oases were much larger inthe time of the ancient Borealis, and that they are being con- stantly reduced in size by the encroach- ments of the sand dunes. The problem is how to stop these. It is stated that the British Govern- ment has acquired the concession of the French company to build the Panama canal. The Washington authorities say if this is a fact there will be no necessity for the construction of the Nicaragua canal, as English capital and engineer- ing skill will carry the Panama enter- prise to a successful conclusion. There is danger in neglecting a cold. Many whohave died of consumption date d their troubles from exposure, followed by a cold rvhlch settled on their lungs, and in a short time they were beyond the skill of the best physician. Had they used Bickle's Anti Consumptive Syrup, before it .was' too late, their lives would have been spared. This medicine has no equal for curing coughs, colds and all affections of the throat and lungs. Instead of the usual naval manoeuvres this year the :British vessels that assem- bled at Portsmouth for the Jubilee manoeuvres will sail in procession around the Unite1 Kingdom and show them- selves at the principal ports. The 14,000 - ton cruiser Terrible will bespeeded across the Atlantic from the. Mersey to New York, to see what chance she would. have to catch an American line steamer in ease of war. rxe'Il Stay Hero. "Think of going to the Klondike re- gion, liumly. "Well, I should say not, and beer fifty cents a glass." Their First Trip. "Here's some more of the horrible work of them blamed monopolists," said Farmer Hayriekc, as he hung his coat over the foot of the bed "Goodness, where?" asked his wife. "Here's a sign that says 'Don't blow out the gas.' I s'pose they make these folks burn it all night, so's to run up Their bills on 'em. Slosh, I don't know what this country's eomin' to"' It has been estimated that the sub- scribed capital of the brewing and distil- lery firms in the United Kingdom amounts to 12i 0,000,00'), while the mar- ket value of the shares is nearly double that amount, $100 Reward $100. The readers of this purr will be pleased to learn that there in tt least one dreaded disease V s 1s that .cut has been able L m r iu all u steers. s uni ttt tt is Catarrh. Ball' Catarrh Cure is tne eilly positive cum. known to the nodical lratl•ruity. Catarrh being a ennstltutional ilo. ease, requires a r"nstltuttuutd treatment. Il tit's Quarrel Cure is taken internally,.actin • direct- ly upon the blood and mucous srfaces of the system, thereby destroy fug the foundation 01 giving by Inc. nc t nt ^•t patient strength •t1 t,and the t• tlu s i t t £+1 in building 1.11) the. i•unstr ulnarand assisting * na- d ,.S i, ture In doing its work. The prnprictnrS have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer out Hundred Dollars for any ease that it fails to cure. send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. t HEN EY & Co. Bee Sold by Druggists, Sec. Toledo d. To Make Brown Boots Black, Take equal parts of ordinary ammonia and shoe ink, which any shoemaker will supply. Mix the ammonia with half a pint of cold water and with it sponge the hoots all over twine, carefully applying it to every part. Then sponge the surface over twice with the ink and dry. After- ward apply blacking in the usual way. A Foot as "Black as Your Hat" "One of my children sprained her ankle, which became much swollen and. discolored. Some 'Quickcure' was spread on linen, and applied; the pain ceased at once, the swelling was gone the next day, and on the fourth day she walked to school as usuaL" Signed, HENRY MITERS, L.D.S., Quebec Working Over Time. "What was the cause of the watch- makers' strike?" "Oh, they claimed they had to work over time." If your child is attacked by Croup, a plaster made with "Quickcure" spread with a warm knife blade on canton flan- nel, linen or cotton, will give more prompt relief, from croup or any inflam- mation, than camphorated oil, or mus tard. In severe cases, doctors tell you to apply hot applications also, over the "Quickcure" plaster, covering the chest and neck well. An Indignity. "What's the colonel so tearing mad about, doctor?" "I gave him some medicine to be taken three times a day in half a glass of water." W. J. Fraser, Esq., Manager and Agent for the Mutual Life Insurance Co. of Clew York, Quebec, writes: "My wife suffered intensely from ear-aohe for ten days, pausing complete deafness in affected ear. He tried several remedies without effect. 'Quickcure' warmed and dropped into the ear removed the .pain, and in ono night hearing was restored. We have also found it splendid nor tooth- ache and burns." Not Needed. "Can't I fit out your residence with our new burglar. alarm?" "No use on earth for them, man. The twitxs aro only throe weeks old." The Sisters of Charity, "Grey Nuns," Guy street, Montreal, write: "Having made use of your'Quickoure' in our es- tablishment, we are happy to, add our testimony, also, m its favor.' Nothing equals " Quiokonre" as a dressing for Burns, Scalds, Cuts or wounds: even Toothache need no more be dreaded'. The. Olin Gas and For all Power Purposes; SIMPLEST, STRONGEST, EnginesSTEADIEST, MOST ECONOMICALf {' THE OLIN ENGINES FUELaare made from 2 Horse Power to 40 Horse Power a :p and may be run with gas- " ��`,hjl�*• olive, manufactured or illuminating gas, producer or natural gas. As gasoline is always an avail- • able and economical 1 the Olin •'t a w fue , i engine was designed withspecial iii�i„� reference to its use. The gasoline 4ttl p;, *I nhll a, Tall is taken from a teak (which may ei!Li 3 be located at a distance from, and „ th;, r� . a,t!,q ,•.: below the engine) by a simple pump ': - f and forced into a mixing chamber, =; ..s-, ' ` which is kept hot by the exhaust. ?=:`' �' By this system .we secure a • perfect vaporizing of the fluid which is mixed with air before entering the cylinder and a low grade of gasoline may be used—in fact, almost a kerosene. ADVANTAGES OVER STEAM. The first cost Is Tess than the , cost of installing a steam plantof equal capacity. No boiler to keep in repair. No boiler -house or coal storage room required. No coal, ashes or cinders to cart and handle. 1\o dirt, dust or soot. No fire or smoke. (The smoke nuisance is abolished). No steam or water gauges to watch. No danger of explosion. No skilled engineer regtliired. No waiting to get up steam. No increase in insurance, but in the near future a decrease. THE OLIN GAS ENGINE MAY RE PLACED ANYWHERE IN YOUR SHOP. R'EQUXRES VERY LITTLE FLOOR SPACE. IT WHAT USERS SAY. Stumm:'III E, N. Y., Nov. 24th, 1890. OLIN GAS ENGINE Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Gentlemen :—My engine works fine; better and better each day I run it. I start it in the morning and do not stop until 8:00 or 8:30 at night. I like the engine first rate. Today I have beets running the 20 -inch burr ,mill, the iron mill, tate cob and corn crusher and the elevator, ail at the same time, grinding corn, cob and grain, and then I changed and left off the corn crusher and put on the shelter in its place, and all worked well. But I can't keep up with my work. I want a larger engine the worst way. ,Would you advise me to put in a 10 or 15 horse power next ? Now using a 5 horse power gasoline engine. F. A. COLwELL- Ti1E OLIN GAS ENnxxu CO:. Buffalo, N. Y, Gents :—The 2.111.p. Gasoline Engine you placed in my ,mill last Septeniher is giving perfect satisfaction, in fact it is doing a great deal better than I expected it could, I find it :.tgreat saving hi expiense over sreani, as 1t requires no care whatever after starting and steam requires an engineer. I also find it runs with less expense for gasoline than a steam engine requires for fnel. It is it very powerful machine, in fact, we have never used the full power of the engine. and gritttl 70 bushels per hour right along. I think I have the best feed Mill in the State with the Olin to drive it. It will give me pies cure to recommend it to anyone contemplating putting in power. Very Truly Yours, - i.. L..11:noste. LAFeoGnv1Li.•.. Nov. 28th; 1896. SOLE AGENTS FOR CANADA, Send for Descriptive Circular and Price list. Toronto Type Foundry Co., Ltd., 'roIR0NTQ. *A________************************ **********•*********************************** C •F iii• � ? .,i� a1].dIQon&ke 1 IIIustrated Gazetteer Parties who intend going to the Klondike Gold Fields or investing in Stock Companies oper- ating in that country, should send and get the YUKON and KLONDIKE GAZETTEER oc The Gazetteer is very extensive, abounding in Photo Engravings and Maps, and gives the most reliable information as to routes, outfitting points, climate, etc. It also contains Wm. Ogil- vie's complete report to date on the Klondike country's indescribable wealth which so as- tounded the Ottawa authorities. ADDRESS a*F By Mail, Post Paid, for 25c. Stamps Received. ,at , t 00001013000 The Toronto Newspaper Union, 44 Bay Street; Toronto, Ont. Sh 4sech hesele*s eYe**esees*h•Ifo•isaF'f•ai•*of•***iFiFiF**iciJ•****** •,r A letter from Judge Angers, brother to the ex -Lieut. -Governor of the Prov- ince of Quebec, has written to the au- thor of "Quickcure," saying: "It has always given mychild relief from tooth- ache; its effeot is wonderful. I have also found it good for burns and outs." Signed, C. PANET ANGERS. Skepticism. --This is unhappily an age of skepticism, but there is one point upon which persons acquainted with the sub- ject agree, namely, that Dr. Thomas' Eclectrio 011 is a medicine which cau be relied upon to cure a cough, remove pain, heal sores of various kinds, and benefit any inflamed portion of the body to which t is applied, roospeesososeaseesompoioeses HOME WORK FFOB AMILIES. We want the services of a number of fam- ilies to do work for us at home, whole or spare time. The work we send our work- ers orkers is quickly and easily done, and re- ttirned by parcel. post as finished. Pay 81 to 810 per week For particulars ready to commence seed name and address. Tau S. A. SUPPLY CO BOX 266, LONDON, Ottr. FARMERS, DAIRYMEN And Their Wives Drop us a post card, and get free our booklet on "INDURATED FIBREWARE" It costs nothing, tells all about Indurated Fibre Pails, Milk Pans, Dishes and Butter Tubs, and will put moony in yo ur pock ts. The E B. Eddy Co., LIMITED. 1 D. HULL, CANADA. T. N. U. 138 Splendid Equipment and Good Solid Work —Have placed the— Thoroughly at The Northern BusinessCoilege Owen Sound, Onr., by experienced. Tau 1 teachers. Course includes Short. ,' , hand,Typcwriting,Penmanship and Letter -writing --just the subjects re. quired by Shorthand writers in office work.: College Announcement free. C. A. FL EMING, Principal. OF TORONTO, At the top. It has more 'teachers, more stu- dents, and assists many more young men and women into good eosittoi:s than any other Oen:, ,adien Business School. Get particulars. Enter any time. Write W. 11 'IIUAW, Principal.. Yong° anis cert 'd Streets_ Toronto.