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The Exeter Advocate, 1896-5-14, Page 2Subseribera who do not receive : their paper regularly will please notify us at once. Call at the office for advertising rates. TRE EXETER ADVOCATE, THURSDAY. MAY 14, 1896 The Week's Commercial Summary'. Stocks of wheat at Toronto are 30,083. bushels as against 26,272 bushels a year ago. There is no fleece wool offering at To- ronto yet, but dealers are prepared to give 18c to 20o for the new clip. The visible 'supply of wheat in the "United States and Canada increased 587,- 000 bushels last week, and the total is now 57,964,000, as against 65,776,000 bushels a year ago. Canadian securities are very quiet and weaker, with the exception of Canadian Pacific, which is higher in sympathy with the price in London. The earnings of this road continue heavy. The stocks of wheat at 'Port. Arthur and Fort William are now 8,486,000 bushels as against 746,826 bushels at the corresponding period of last year. Navigation at those points is now. open. The earnings of Montreal Street Rail- way Company do not show as large in- crease as formerly. The total for last week was $28,000, au increase of $2,200. Toronto railway earning decreased $78 last week, as compared with the oorres- ponding week of last year, Wheat in Chicago is lower than it has been,for some time past, and provisions the lowest for many months with lard the lowest on record. Stooks of wheat are not decreasing as fast as expected at this season while the stocks of provisions are steadily increasing. A favorable feature in the March bank statement is the increase of nearly a mil- lion - dollars in the note circulation of Canadian banks, The discount line showed a large increase during the month, the total now being $211,603,000, the largest in the history of Canadian )auks. A sharp break has occurred in quota- tions of wheat, but the speculative activity is not nearly up to the business of the two preceding weeks. Contradic- tion of gloomy weather and crop reports, together with the opening of lake naviga- tion, brought the figures back to within eight cents of last year's quotations. We have to report a considerable de- crease in the number of failures in the Dominion last week there being but 31, as compared to 44 tha week before, and 84 in the corresponding week of a year ago. Ontario leads with 17, of this number one was rated at $3,000, one less than $1,000. and the balance had our lowest Credit or blank rating. Quebec had seven, a deerene of eleven from previous week, none of which were of any com- mercial importance. Nova Scotia had four, Manitoba two, and British Colum- bia one. None were reported from New Brunswick or Prince Edward Island last -week. Here and There. The peddler is known by his fruits. Few things are more ludicrous than ,Jogus dignity. Fruit is so plenty in California that it is dumped into the bay to keep the prices up. That's wicked. The Minneapolis Journal remarks that "a woman suing for damages and hold- ing a set of love letters is a terror to men and angels." What have angels to do with it? Paderewski says that "America is rotten to the core." We feel this eminent Polish piano pounder is entitled to .thanks for exempting the core from his sweep- ing denunciation. A Cleveland scientist has succeeded in photographing an editor's ribs, It has been reported that he had also photo- graphed the editor's stomach; but, of course, there is nothing in that. The dead body found in a trunk in Austin, Tex., a few days ago has been identified thus far as the mortal remains of nineteen different men, with several states and territories yet to bear from. It is charged that a Louisville man sat up with a sick friend all night in order to rob him after he was dead. There was true Chesterfieldian courtesy for you; few robbers nowadays are so con- siderate. Ben Franklin has been . appointed governor of Arizona. We always have felt confident that sooner or later that man Franklin would be heard from, notwith- standing his penchant for flying kites after the paper went to press. Chicago is planning to erect a life-size statue of Dr. George F. Root, in the Lake Front park, and hopes to raise half of the $10,.000 it will cost by a patriotic song concert at which 1,500 school child- ren will sing, July 4. That's one good thing about Chicago. She does not for- get her dead. Agitation in the world of homeepathic medicine has leen its very soul of pro- gress, as in politicasand religion—the diffi- culties of opinion and the individualities of men have been parent to the disagree- ments by which the standard of these bodies have been elevated. So with most of our famous preparations—foremost in illustration of which truth stands the world-famous remedy to general debility and langour "Quinine Winet” and which, when obtainable in its genuine strength, is a miraculous creator of appetite, vital- ity and stimulant, to the general fertility of the system. Quinine Wine, and its improvement, has, from the first discovery of the great virtues of Quinine as a medi- cal edical agent, been one of the most thoroughly discussed remedies ever offered to the public. It is one of the great tonics and natural life-giving stimulants which the medical profession have been compelled to recognize and prescribe. Messrs. Northrop & Lyman of Toronto, have given to the preparation of their pure Quinine Wine the great care due to their im- portance, and the standard excellence of the article which they offer to the pub- lic comes into the market purged of all the defeats which skilful' abdervation and scientific opinion has pointed out in the less perfect preparations of the pest. All `druggists sell it. TOPICS OF A WEEK. Tb.lin tiortant Event in a Few Words For -Busy Readers.. CANADIAN. A report comes from Montreal that Sir Donald Smith is to be made a peer. Robert F•Itdgson, of Toronto, was run over and killed by a train at Oshawa Saturday evening, Constable Kern, of the Northwest Mounted Police, is missing. He is thought to have been drowned. Chief of Police McVeity, of Ottawa, has been dismissed from his office and talks of running for mayor. Crop reports from the Northwest are less favorable and the sentiment on wheat in Chicago is more bullish. The South Wentworth License Com- missioners have decided to cancel the license for the road house at the Jockey Club track. Detective Rogers of the Provincial Detective. Department has been detailed to work on the Kitchen robbery in Went- worth County. Sir Charles Rivers -Wilson, who is in New York, speaksin a hopeful tone of the business of the Grand Trunk railway, of which he is president. The water was let into the Cornwall canal on Friday, and navigation was opened. on Saturday morning. The canal was kept open on Sunday. The coroner's jury has been unable to determine the cause of 011ie Reiehert's. death at Hamilton. This, it is thought, 'will be the end of the investigation. The East Flamboro' Township Council has decided to submit a by-law for the granting of $25,000 to aid in the con- struction of the International Electric railway. Mr. W. 0. B, Rathbun, the Toronto representative of the. Deseronto firm of that name, wounded himself dangerously, if not fatally, while cleaning a rusty revolver. Alfred Thomas, aged 21, shot and tilled himself at Soperton, near Delta, Ont., on Sunday night because a young 1 lady refused to allow him. to accompany her home from church.. A -fine collection of stuffed fish and eysters from the Government reserves is being prepared for . shipment to London to complete the collection in the Cana- dian Court of the Imperial Institute. Owing to the money for the militia camps not having been voted at the late session of the Dominion House,no camps can be held this year until the end of August or the beginning of September. Constable Tinsley, of Brockville, who figured in the• shooting tragedy at Brock- ville last March, is to be presented with the Sandford gold medal by the Royal Canadian Humane Society, as a reward for his bravery. T. C. Franklin, who claims to be one hundred and one years old, a resident of Detroit, crossed the river on his way to Ilowmanville, Ont., where he owns a farm. He says he wants to be on hand for the election. The Sir Chalres Tupper Cabinet took the oath of office Friday. The five new Ministers are Messrs. Angers, Taillon end Ross, from Quebec; Lieut. -Col. Tis- dale, from Ontario; and Mr. Hugh John Macdonald, from Manitoba. Mr. Timothy W. Anglin, chief clerk of the Surrogate Court, who at one time: was a prominent figure in polities in Canada, died at his residence in Toronto Sunday, at the age of 74 years. The de- ceased was a staunch Reformer. At the Criminal .Assizes, Toronto, on Saturday last, James Healey charged with the murder of one Corrigan, was acquitted. Tho.. judge's charge was in the prisoner's favor, the evidence showing that Healey struck Corrigan in self- defence. Gatineau Point Catholic Church is to have a new bell, to be presented by his Excellency the Governor-General in com- memoration of the service rendered her Excellency the Countess of Aberdeen at the recent unfortunate accident that might have resulted in her death. The receipts at the Customs house for the month of April, 1896, show a decided increase, as compared with the corres- ponding month of last year. The duties collected at the port of Toronto during the past month amounted to $336,822.22, and in April, 1895, $328,231.45, an in- crease of $10,590.77. Dr. Samuel Stewart, of Thamesville, has been appointed an associate coroner of Kent, in place of Dr. Tye, deceased. Dr. Harry Sumner Martin, of Erin has been appointed an associate coroner of Wellington, in place of Dr. McNaughton, deceased. . Dr. Roland K: Silborn, of Kingston, has been appointed an associ- ate coroner of Frontenac, in place of Dr. Saunders, decased. The Grand Trunk and Canadian Paci- fic are about to experiment with a new device for carrying bicycles in the bag- gage cars, in order that they may do away with the complaints from wheel- men, that their wheels receive injury in transit. The new invention is a rack fast- ened to the side of the car, in which the wheels are locked. A number of them have been put up in the bicycle room of the Union Station, ;and will be placed as an experiment in some . of the baggage cars of the two railroad companies. Fagged Out—None but those who have become fagged. out, know what a de- pressed, miserable feeling it is. All strength is gone, and despondency has taken hold of the sufferers. They feel as though there, is nothing to live for. There, however, is a cure—ono box of Porn elee's Vegetable Pills will do wonders in restoring health and strength. Mandrake and Dandelion are iwo of the articles entering into the composition of Parmelee's Pills. UNITED STATES. It is said "Bill" Nye left an estate worth from $50,000 to $60,000. John I: Hughes,ofLexington, Ky. has in 29 years taken $29, 750 in premiums at the state fair. The Cincinnati, Hamilton. and Dayton ire, only one private car, that of General 1,ano,ger Waldo. Andrew Carnegie, the Pittsburg mil- lionaire, has been refused honorary mem- bership in the Cleveland Chamber of Commerce. Recent statistics show ,that the increase of divorces exceeds in percentage the ineis-tie of population in nearly all of the United States. The thirteen locomotive works in the Untied States in 1895 turned out 1,100 Jo.;aauotives, against 895 in 1894, and last year 31,863 freight cars were built, against 17,029 in 1894. At Cincinnati a five -story brick , tare collapsed and fell, burying the un- fortunate inmates beneath its ruins. How many were killed is not yet known. Two Philadelphians are making a pro- posal to the London, England, County Council to take over all the street railway lines and replace them with an electric system. _,, ' Mrs. Celia W. Wallace, of Chicago has given the Central church of that city $75,000, and will add to this real estate worth ,$40,000._ Mrs. Wallace, it will be remembered, is the lady who gave ' the Tiffany Chapel to St. John's Cathedral, in New York, as a memorial of her son. Abraham Life, a' veteran soldier of Farmland, Ind., who lost his right arm during the war, is suffering from a peculiar affliction that is puzzling the doctors.. A few.months ago his right leg began to shorten and it is now five inches shorter than it used to be and ought to be. Mr. Life .:is wondering. whether there is any connection between the loss of his arm and the contraction of his leg. Street Car Accident—Mr. Thomas Sabin, says: "My eleven year old boy bad his foot badly injured by being run over by a car on the Street Railway. We at once commenced bathing the foot with Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil, when the discoloration and swelling was removed, and in nine days he could use ' his foot. We always keep a bottle in the house ready for any emergency." FOREIGN. s The London County Council exercises jurisdiction over about 150 square miles, The Marohioness of Lorne, the Queen's daughter, has had three mothers-in-law during her twenty-five years of married life. The directors of the British aSouth Africa Company have decided to ask for the resignation pf Mr. Cecil Rhodes and Mr. Beit. Sir Hercules RolUinson, Governor of Cape Town, has telegraphed to Mr. Chamberlain denying any complicity in the secret telegrams. Prof. Geffckon, of Munich, the well- known authority on international law, and the editor of the diary of Emperor Frederick, is dead. The statistics of the recent smallpox epidemic at Gloucesterappear to show that the neglect of vaccination was the cause of the mortality. Li -Hung -Chang has arrived in St. Petersburg, bearing a letter from the Emperor of China, to • the Czar, and numerous costly presents. Not long ago a site in London,' in •the neighborhood of Cornhill, commanded the enormous price of two million pounds sterling for a single acre. The Kitson-Playfair case has been com- promised, Dr. Playfair paying Mrs. Kit - eon eight thousand pounds, instead of the twelve thousand awarded. The recent action with the insurgent Matabeles resulted in - inflicting such severe loss upon them that Buluwayo is ,looked upon as being practically relieved. Judge Gregorowski, who presided at the trial of the Reformers at Pretoria, was hooted and groaned at on his return to. Bloemfontein, in the Orange Free State. A useful charity called the London Spectacle Mission provides spectacles for poor needlewomen and other deserving persons dependent on their eye -sight for a living. A number of cipher telegrams connect- ing the South Africa Company's officials with Dr. Jaineson's raid in the Transvaal have been made public by the Boer Gov- ernment. The appeal made by Dr. W. Playfair of London against the judgment of 12,000 damages granted to Mrs. Kitson for slander and defamation of character has been withdrawn. Advices from Trinidad state that the British intend to force the passage of the Orinoco, and that the Venezuelans are determined to resist the attempt to their utmost. The arrival of Earl Grey and his troop- ers at Buluwayo will be the signal for a general advance of British forces, which will immediately take the offensive against the Matabeles. The shipbuilding business of the Clyde Is better than it has been for years. All trade differences have been settled, and there is enough work ahead to keep the yards busy all the present year. The Matabele impi, which was de- feated on the banks of the Umguza river, now occupies a position command- ing the Salisbury road, for the purpose of intercepting the Rhodes column The Daily Courier, the new paper started in London by Sir George New- nes, learns from trustworthy . sources that the late Baron Hirsch left one million pounds to the Prince of Wales. While the Shah of Persia was entering the inner court of the shrine of Shah Abdul Aziin, six miles south of Teheran, he was shot in the region of the heart, and died shortly after reaching the pal- ace. Willie Wilde, brother of Oscar Wilde, was charged at the Marlborough street Police Court with having been drunk and disorderly on Saturday night. He pleaded guilty, and was fined five shil- lings. A Gwelo despatch says that it will be impossilbe for the Rhodes column, en route 'from Salisbury to relieve Bulu- wayo, to leave for three weeks owing to the Shangani district, being infested with rebels. There is not the slightest hope of the recov!!ry of the Czarewitch, who is in the very last stage of consumption, and ar- rangements have been made, in case of his death, to cancel the coronation cere- monies. Capt. Lothaire, the Belgian .officer who has been on trial for the alleged illegal hanging, in the Congo Free State, of Stokes, the weathy English trader, said to have sold arms to the natives, has been acquitted. According to a London correspondent of the St. Petersburg Novosti, Great: Britain's aim in the Soudan campaign is to re -occupy the Equatbria1 province, and when she has established herself on the Upper Nile she will evacuate Egypt. The Marquis of Northampton, who owns the greater part of Clerkenwell, is building in the heart of a desperately squalid district a vast polytechnic institu- tion, in which, the humblest classes may obtain, without charge, mental and phy- sical recreation.:• Princess Beatrice, youngest daughter of the Queen, and widow of Prince Henry of Battenberg, has been appointed Governor of the Isle of Wight, the office previously held by her husband: This is almost, the first time that such an ap pointment has been 'bestowed upon a woman: QUEBEC LARC= LY OF ONE OPIN ION. M. E. Bernier, M.P., St. Hyacinthe, and P. Bechard,M'.P., Ibervllie, cue., Solid for: the Measure. There are other questions besides that of remedial legislation, in which the peo- ple of Quebec and those,; ofthe entire Dominion are intensely interested. It is a matter of individual concern, when one is a sufferer from catarrh. This was the case with M. E. Bernier and F. Bechard, two well-known members of the, House of Commons from Quebec. With many other members of Parliament In that Province, they had used Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder, and. to -day have given their signature to the 'statement telling of its beneficial effects to any who' suffer from this disease. They know all. about it, for they have tried it them- selves, and whatever ,view they may en- tertain of other matters, on this they are. solidly of one 'opinion, Sample bottles and Blower • sent by S. G. Detchon, 44 Church st., Toronto, on receipt of ten cents in silver or stamps. Courtesy. "Did you see Broakton?" he asked, as the bill collector came in. "Yes, sir; I went in and told hjm I was a bill collector." "What did he say?" "He said he was, too, and that if I'd leave my bill, he'd take pleasure in adding it to his collection." DEAD 'WITHOUT A WORD OF WARNING. LeftEomo Well in the Morning to be Cnr, tied iionie Dead a Few Hours Later. There is no fiction in the suddenness with which death is coining to many people in the present day, Apparently in the best of health. an hour later they are in the throes of death. Heart disease has obtained a terrible grip upon the men and women of this day. No greater duty under these conditions falls upon one than to proclaim to the world that Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart is - a' medi- cine that absolutely cures this disease. Mrs. John Jamieson, of Tara, Ont., suffered so severely from heart trouble that it did not seem possible that she could live. This medicine was brought to her notice,and at a time when she was suffering intensely. inside of 20 minutes after taking the first 'dose relief was scoured. She continued its use, and says: "It was the means of saving my life." So Busy. "Did you put those buttons on my trousers?" asked the husband. "No, dear," returned the wife, "I have not had time. I have been all the after- noon at the sewing club." Whilst pain will sometimes accompany kidney trouble, this is not always so. It may obtain a strdng grip on the system before the victim knows he is under its spell. What numbers are dying of Bright's disetwe and diabetes, apparently in good health, and yet the system undermined. Security is found in the use of South American Kidney Cure, which purifies the blood of all poisons, and unlike pills and po'ivders, speedily dissolves the hard- ened substances that locate themselves in the system, an outcome of kidney disease. Physicians will sometimes say these can not be removed, but South American Kidney Cure does it. The Rev. Jas. Murdock, of St. John, N.B., was cured of this trouble by taking only four bot- tles WORKS ITSELF INTO THE SYSTEM. The Insidious Nature of Hidney Disease. The Lucky •'Touch: , "I touched a hunchback for luck the other day." "Were you lucky?" "You bet. He lent me $10." Get Well in Thro2 Days. South American Rheumatic Cure for rheumatism and neuralgia, radically cures in one to three days. Its action upon the system is remarkable and.mys- terious. It removes at once she cause, and the disease immediately disappears. The first dose greatly benefits. 75 cents. His Little Joke. "I see," said the Cheerful Idiot, "that the Order of the Golden Eagle has been in session for a few days. Funny order, that. Man who sings bass can't join." "What—ther—er—how?"—said the shoe clerk boarder. "Golden eagle, you know, is always a , teener. ' • PITS.—All fits stopped free and permanent - 1 cured. No fits after first day's use of Dr. line's Great Nerve Restorer. Free $2 trial bottle sent through Canadian Agency. Address Dr. Kline, 581 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa: A Lucky Catch. Tottie-What do . you think? Dollie Cheekeigh is engaged to a real French count. Worth millions, too. Pollie (enviously)—I wish I had her Gaul. $100 Reward $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at lease one dreaded disease that s •fence has been able to cure in all its' stages, and that• is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the, medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional dis- ease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's (intern. Cure is taken internally, aetfng directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system; thereby destroying 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 for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimon- ials. Address, F. J. CHENEY & CO., Tol edo, G. Sold by Druggists, 75e. Vicarious Knowledge. Woman . of the World (to youthful admirer) You seem to know a great. deal about married life. Are you ,nier- ried?. -' Youthful .Admirer' (with a blase air), —No—but my father is 1 ' No Rest, But Lots ofFleasure. Work in the country during spring and summer is harder, and more plenti- ful than at other times, and yet the men don't seem to mind it nearly as much as the tasks which fall to their lot during. autumn; and winter. To be out in the fields while nature smiles glorying in her renewed emerald robes is always a pleas- ure; but October's leaden skies and piercing winds followed by •winter's bit- ter gales make everything a hardship: The best known antidote yet discovered for the wet, cold and frost of outdoor work in winter is a layer of Fibre Chamois through your garments. It gives splendid satisfaction, being light in weight, inexpensive, warm and com- pletely waterproof. ',Yours truly, A. H. CANNING. The above is ci cut of A. H. Canning, the head of the firm known as A. H. Canning &'Co. We do not solicit your vote and influence at the coming election, but we do ask you to send us your name and address and we will forward you by mail our No. 8 Catalogue and Buyers' Guide. This book will give you more information concerning everyday requirements than you can get out of a dozen elections. We quote prices, freight prepaid to your nearest railway station, on all orders amounting to Five Dollars and upwards. We do not ask you to buy until you have examined our price list. Below we quote a few prices. Sulphur a c. a pound, Salts g c. a pound, Resin 3 c. a pound, Salt- petre 8 c, a pound, Tapioca, best, 4 c. a pound, Baking Soda 3 c. a pound, Baking Powder, the best on the market, 15 c. a pound, Corn meal a c. a. pound, Pure Black Pepper 15 c. a pound, Whole Black Pepper 12 C. a pound, Teas at prices that cannot be equalled. Awaiting your commands We remain yours truly, A. H. CANNING & CO. Wholesale Grocers, 57 Front Street East, TORONTO, ONT RECIPE—For Making a Delicious Health Drink at Small Cost. Adams' Root Beer Extract. Gine Bottle Flcischmann's Yeast.......Half a Cake Sugar Two Pounds. Lukewarm Water Two Gallons. Dissolve the sugar and yeast in the water, add the extract, and bottle; put in a warm place for twenty- four hours until it ferments, then place on ice when it will open sparkling and delicious. The root beer can be obtained in all drug and gro- cerystores in xo and 26 cent bottles to make two and five gallons. An Agreeable Young Man. Her Father—You ask nay daug'iter's hand in marriage. Have. you fixed the date of the marriage? Suitor—I will leave that to your daughter, sir. Her Father—Do you wish a church or private wedding? Suitor—Her mother can determine on that, sir. Her Father—And what is your income? Suitor—I will leave that entirely to you, sir.—Puck. Fever and Ague and Bilious Derange- ments are positively cured by the use of Parmelee's Pills. They not only cleanse the stomach and bowels from all bilious matter, but they open up the exoretary I vessels, causing them to pour copious effusions from the blood into the bowels, 'after which the corrupted mass is thrown out by the natural passage of the body. They are used as a general family medi- cine with the best results Some persons have periodical attache; of Canadian cholera, Dysentery or Diar- rhoea, and have to use great precautions to avoid the disease. Change of water, cooking, and green fruit, is sure to bring; on the attacks. To such persons we would recommend Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Dysen- tery Cordial as being the best medicine; in the market for all summer complaints. If a few drops are taken in water when the symptoms are noticed no further trouble will be experienced. Slightly Different. Temperance .lecturer—A nice mistake you made in the sign "Drink• is the• Curse of Everything!" Sign painter—How so? Temperance lecturer—You , left out, the "s" in curse. pr•ingtime A healthy condition of ' the kidneys is 'the best safe -guard against all, the ills incidental to the season. Tone ne the syr- ternby tisin, - g DODD'S Kidney e Pills The best blood purifier er P. on earth, andthe only V Absolute Cure for all diseasesY of the kidneys •, NOTHING LIKE IT. ALADA !' CEYLON TEA IS DELICIOUS. Sold Only in Lead Pac ets+ OHN MACGREGOR, BARRIST BB 4T -1J LAW, Solicitor in Supreme Court ppf h1 ada. Money to loan. Offices -28 -Se Toront•l street, Toronto. AGENTS WANTED—ON SAL ART OR commission ; good agents can seonre a permanent position. Send stamp for 'eartic bars. No postals. Address VITAE -ORE DE. POT, Toronto. a Matches to Burn." Over twenty-eight lions 'made daily at our factory. Nineteenths of Canada ' supplied by us.. Popular • opinion —7,the best judge -says E. B. `Eddy's Matches ARE THE BEST, Two Schools Under One Manag amen 0.1 TORONTO AND STRATFORD, ONT. Unquestionably the leading Commercial Schoolsof the Dominion; advantages best in Canada; moderate rates' students. may - enter at any time, Write to either school for ,, circulars and mention this paper. SIIAW & ELLIOTT, Principals. T. N. U. 63 Way to spend a winter is to attend the Northern usi- ness College, Owen Sound, Ont. All who"would like turrets in life should prepare for it. Send for Annul kunouncemem-•tree. C. A. D'leminz. Prince al.: � VE1IYTBING• FOR THE PRINTER ' Type, Presses, Inks, Ready Print p1 ev-spapers, Stereotype Matter ,1Gie trot Itt�yyppingR••, Engraving. TORONTOp TYP? FOUNDRY, Toronto and Winnipeg.