n k r are much are reâ€" s for qualâ€" nceo to dis 1pâ€" TrION. eal says;â€"= ae Minister a trip ta le reports settled, and lnt to & I® ot 1s idus vik 6 1@ 18 at t# Ar Ihen Ard t And Af In y ¢ cit y ou at And call &T WA THI U 1y in to k 0\ t] THIE CONBLEX®‘3 SECRET. V arrived all right, Heto i2 *1"°° ""aq slip it inio that mail box and she will | get it toâ€"morrow." | Their first visit to the big stores was a surprise. Here were acres and acres of goods of ail kinds. George was asâ€" tonished to know that to get all of the things be bad orders for he must visit a dozen different storez. Mrs. Ready said that she was "@ bur-‘ g'x':nâ€"buut.er." and soun made George Tealize that he could save monsy by "looking around." Johnnie was carried off by the smaller boys to see the aniâ€" mals. â€" _ "You see that these big department ‘\tore& do just as we are doing; bunt up bargains all over the worlda so that they can sell at a bargain â€" & little above costâ€"to them. After you get your orders dfilled we will look around @ bit," she said with a smile. The boys wished that they had more eyes, for things new and strange were found on every side. The many ves~ sels in the harbour and lake were & novel sight. From the top of one of the tall buildings they had a bird‘sâ€"eye view of the city. W hat a panorama : miles and miles of buildings. "It is laid out just like a corn field. M ECC _ o hn\ COekes ce Lib t} npal PB t] im the rushing i rounded ound the There wo Dr. Earn and intrc he called " NOW, < 1 Joe toâ€"nig with Don: Frank and 0n MmLLOS &BG UUAT! 7/ / lths a a "It is laid out just like a corn field. The rows are the streets. You could not get lost, mother,"‘ confided Johnâ€" nie to his mother after he got home. The neighbors came for their things and to bhear the report of the Brown boys. "The city yards for cattle, sheep and hogs cover more ground than our farm," said George by way of introducâ€" 7 on "Thay sometimes @4 1,000 «uU D CAVRE: LEouet head a day." "More tham that; I thought they saic 7000," broke in Johnnie. George and his audience did not mind the diverâ€" hion. He went on: "From the many D 1¢ HD cons devation, l1 OT d sharp kn he DA t rRowN BoY‘s eW ! ailord to loseâ€" to ma‘ke in one short day ced pairs of ahoes. U n that I propose. _ ‘y ane of you I think, earn it, if he chose. e cobbler enters, ts around his eyes s his lip. the rogue, tB" n=, s â€"night.; toâ€"morrow Donaid, the next and Henry. If tb atbered up their bundies and big depot where people were in all directions they were surâ€" 1 by a whole troop of boys arâ€" hem in â€" the uncertaio â€" light. was ashout, "here they are." nost looked up in the distance roduced his country cousins, as d them, to all the boys. .". he says, "they go home with â€"night.; toâ€"morrow, they stop Donaid, the next night with and Henry. If they can stay we can revise the program. , write your mamma that you | all right; here is a postal card; inio that mail box and she will toâ€" morrow." _ _ __ {irst visit to the big stores was rise. Here were acres and acres is of ail kinds. George was aSs d to know that to get all of nas bhe bad orders for he must paya mss CniElY P it cheap besides h dozen different storez. Ready said that she was "a barâ€" inter," and soon made George that he could save money by g around." Johnnie was carried the smaller boys to see the aniâ€" uirter to the sight a thousand fellows, 1‘ers, bootâ€"men, shoeâ€" er sellers,â€" ol beer and smoke, t‘s wax and hides;, caysa his thirty pence, »{f polkes wondrous wise " he says, ‘"tis in @0 7 nale," says Mrs. Lr ather, and if he can © it ud h 4 h: ‘cobbling world bler once in Rome, proclamation, i‘l.ng to disclose, N d n D N AT W n d or man el pairs C red pairs o 1 the tops LO pit®s u Lle nled 2 so sure that I consent to v! th s in h n U fathe ti D x li 0 your shou8, pairs of boo m 8 jour 11 care 0 <1€ tâ€"men, shoeâ€"men is all you need 1 et us U n un that we can ot us at theâ€" hat in ID h it th sc ail, M CITYy vIsIT Obh, 1 suj { you mÂ¥ sO Mally ‘tis smp!¢ his @33 9e c ho What thing U ND h U u will £ is h nDo y were 1 h in oul mek to 10 mil n Brown NLSSA niD e cou supp h 18 run into time yet. h L1 wanted n the ret ré Le U is slauzhter bhouse, â€" Ibs way (nt .spatch them is acaution. We saw : mg train of cars loaded with vsed go ag east.. Trains coming in wicu stoc} i1 the time. Trains coming and going ith everything, even with Eâ€"zure he city is like a beeâ€"hive. We went t airket, and such alot of farm stuff nd such prices, the foiks pay ten cent: or alittle bunch of teets. But the ney can buy things cheap.as you see ( you know where to go. Mrs. Read: :Iped me to save you folks just $12 on hose things." & s "We‘il have to send you _ AgAN,. eorge," said several in chorus. "I won‘t go again," said young Browr unless I can carry her something. J ound that most city peop‘e were rais d on a farm. She and the boys are al) oming out next montb. They are all ust as hnice as anything." Georg«e houcht he saw a chance to bring part l the city and couniry closer togethâ€" «r to muiual pleasure and profit. Iohnnie was tirel out and soon fast «sleep in mamima‘s arins, who was glad hat they were safely homs. Jobnay confided to ns mo! her that ie was glad he was home and so glad ie went. L F F KB 00 Te s eascs M n3 18 O e went. "Mamma I am going to co "Merey child, what put our head ?" "Dr. took mse into his buggyâ€"C: ge I mean, he calls it acarriag nd we visitel the animals again irst we wen!t into a big building f dead aniinals, bugzs and Lbll‘.'zs More People Arve dheanatisa® â€"There is a C Dr. W making the nerv uine, al w Though Wesley was never rich and never bhad a large salary he managed to give away over $200,000 during his life. â€" He founded in England an enâ€" terprise for loaning poor people small sums to tide them over transient difâ€" ficulties. _ A cobbler, who recéived a loan of $20 from this fund, was able to show Wesley before the latter‘s death that the profits of his business were $150,000 per year. m EIGHTY WERE DROWNED. A despatch from Budapest to a Lonâ€" don news agency says that on Sunâ€" day, while a regiment was crossing a pontoon bridge over the River Maros, near Hoad, the bridge collapsed. Three hundred men were immersed, and it *«‘ taoared that no fewer than eighty near Hoad, the hundred men is feared that were drowned. FORTY YEARS A CAPTAIN. A despatch from Liverpool says:â€" Wm. H. P. Hains, fleet captain of the Cunard line, died in this city on Friâ€" day. In his forty years‘ service with the Cunard line he had crossed the Atâ€" lantic more than 600 times. £ | CHEAP LIVING. (Millions of men in India live, marry and rear apparently healthy children upon an income of 50 cents a week, and sometimes it falls below that. Burglary no longer pays in London. The police reports for last year shows that the whole fraternity of burglars earned only $96,000. | an Africa t.h:.l:â€" n-ot infrequently they stop trains for bhours by passing over the line in front of the engine. ; nerves, , al ways around ¢ name & DREADE nd fo elevated lane that leads 0 ims‘ Medicine LO and the pills will l it 30 cents a box or e Are Tortuved ! tism Thant by A is a Cure for It. N tations whi lers say &1 of doubt .: T but you must ge put up in boxes which bears the "Dr, Williams‘ mple." Do not be of the numerou 3 M Goop GIVER. D PS LOCUSTS. OF BURGLARY. d t collect bugs." put ithat into possibie Any Other ¢ y\ a Cote ELASE. â€"C&rTiâ€" iarn _ d l4 how to as they ondon, L to find Pan«s reoceurtâ€" toid but come ~] FEED V5UR HERVES kind but full H in South He & arid U T 1 Upon rich, pure, nourishing blood b; taking Hood‘s Sarsapariiï¬, and you will be free from tn~â€"c spelis of deâ€" spair, those slecpless nights and anxious days, those gloomy, deathlike feelings, those sudden starts at mere nothings, those dyspeptic symptems and blinding headacres. Hood‘s Sarsaparilia has done this for many othersâ€"it will cure you. Yood‘s Sarsaparillzc 1« Canada‘s Evidently desirous of eclipsing the ichievements of the producers of ‘green arnations‘ â€" and similar floral monâ€" strosities, a certain â€" Russian botanâ€" ist has been devoting himself to the ultivation of black roses. After bayâ€" ‘ng applied himsel{f to this uncanny obâ€" ject for a considerable period, with a patience worthy of a better cause, he is reported to have achieved success, and now threatens to come to London ind exhibit the results of his misdiâ€" rected experiments. When he arrives, he will no doubt be invited to explain the purposes for which he cun;xi:leys] that his sable blossoms should e utilâ€"| ized. Since he can bardly anticipate | that they will be employed for table | decoration or for personal acornment, | it can only be sunposed that he intends‘ to recommend them for use at funerâ€"| als. It is bappily improbable, however,. that English horticultnurists wili be anxious to disfigure their gardoans by cultivating them, even for that putâ€" | pose. Nor is it likety that any politiâ€" eal or other party will be indused to | adopt thom as a badge, or that "Black Rose Day" will ever take its place «mâ€" ong the floral festivals of the calenâ€" dar. Hood‘s Pilis cure Sick H ajache. mon are all owned shoet of very teaâ€"chest lett« cent. It is c by a British, | ject, for the safely print Chincseâ€"owned Sulz, a Swiss town in the canton of \ And the Great Shake Aargau, is suffering from a pmullar; the boycott. The town recenlly dais=‘ Mr. Frank Han missed itsâ€" schoolteacher, after fifty | Review offers an years‘ service, without giving him & tion of the poet‘s peusion, and advertised for &A DOW | mantators have D teacher. ‘Ibere were no applicants . . _ th dot for the place, the Aargau Teachers‘ Joot . Lhe : ARCOCLON League baving put the town on its died of a fever res black list and declared that ‘it wou‘!d mesting" with Ber ut aamnce the nar tik the discharged Dravton at Stra Chin decided to su« lawyor in the to take up t sion2l men ha gional Eni€li â€"REA VCO . MOHIO DUSCC nothing to do with Sulz. Mushroom Omeletâ€"Peel a pint of fresh mushrooms, put in a saucepan with a tablespoon{ul of butter rolled in cornstarch, half a teacupful of sweet milk, a few drops of lemon julice, with salt and pepper,. Set on the fire and let simmer until the mushrooms are tender. Make plain omelei, and pour in an omelet pan. When ready Eu turn let simmer until the mushrooms ATC tender. Make plain omelet, and pour in an omelet pan. When ready to turn pour half ths mu hroom mixture in the center, fold over, turn and dish. Pour the remainiag mushrooms arâ€" ound the omelet and serve. Mushrooms a La Creole.â€"Put â€" four large tablespoon‘uls of olive oil in a bakingâ€"dish, Sprinkle with stale breadâ€" crumbs, finelyâ€"chopped parsley and thyme. Lay on large, peeled and stemâ€" med mushrooms, pour over more oil, cover with breadâ€"crumbs and seasonâ€" ing. Set in a hot oven and bake twenty minutes. Breakfast Mushroomsâ€" Remove the stems from large, firm mushrooms, | peel, put the tops side by side in the bottom of a buttered dish, lay a tiny bit of butter on each, sprinkle with salt and pepper and set in a very hot-l over to bake. Take up, lay on nicelyâ€" toasted slices of bread, pour Over meltâ€" ed butter and serve. Baked Mushroomsâ€"Select large,{firm mushrooms, peel, place on oval crouâ€" tons, set in a bakingâ€"pan, seasoned |with pepper and salt, Put in the oven for eight minutes; baste with butter. Take up, arrange the croutons on &A dish, and serve with Maitre d‘ Hotel sauce. Stewed â€" Mushrooms â€" Feel 1resn mushrooms, cut off the stalks, put them in a saucepan; to every pint add an ounce of butlter mixed with haif a tablespoon{ul of cornâ€"starch, Set over the fire and let cook fifteen minâ€" utes. Season with salt and pepper and serve immediately. Broiled Mushrooms. â€" Select large, firm mushrooms, remove the stems carefully, place on & broiling iron, set over the fire, turn. Season with pepâ€" per and salt, take up & heated dish, spread with butter and squeeze over them the juice of a lemon. Musbhroom Fritters.â€"Prepare a quart of egg batter. Have & fryingâ€"pan on the fire with boiling fat, put a ladleâ€" ful of batter with a large mnshroon: in the center in LHO A1J*MMBAI" """" let fry brown. When done, take un, drain on brown p&per and serve. Fried Mushrooms.â€"Take large,fresh mushrooms, prepare as for boiling; rol! first in grated cracker crumbs, dip in beaten egg, then again in the crumbs, dredge with salt and papper and fry in boiling hot water. ‘« Gâ€"oatest Medicine. $1: x for $5. anese sunject. per of sufficient > owner of a na 1 if it prin. sivy. tho hbe TIIC CHINESE PAPERS 1. lhst and move the c receive PECULIAR BOYCOTT. BLACK ROSE newspapars are pecuinar in} ects, the most striking being | pmess and the fact that they | med by foreigners. A tiny| rery thin paper prinied in letters costs onsâ€"fiith of a is owned, nominally eilther sh, Prench or American subâ€" the reason that thus it can nt what it pleases, while a vned paper would be supâ€" [ it prinled any real new#. , thoe best nalive paper in a Knoâ€"Waenâ€"Pao, is owned by se subject. It is said that a o‘ sufficient standing to pose mer of a native pupor draws of $59 a month for the use me. withous labor or responâ€" 1134414 2 M ) 1 2 ncofaader rihd 2 cae td center in the fging-pan and 18 e dvertised for a new were no applicants he Aargau Teachers‘ put the town on its mlared that it wou‘d an til the discharged a pension. The town the teachers, but no inton could be found ease. â€" Other profesâ€" also decided to have S pARAPM®E Mr. Frank Harris in the Saturday Review offers an ingenious expl:mn,-‘ tion of the poet‘s death. The comâ€" montators have mostly agreed to re-‘ jeet the anecdote that Sha-ke-xpezrel died of a fever resulting from "a merry | moscting" with Ben Jonson and Michael | Drayton at Stratfordâ€"onâ€"Avon. 4 he | story was published by a clergyman‘ who heard of it about 30 years after' story was published by a clergyman; who heard of it about 30 years after the event. It has shocked into inâ€"=; credulity a good many people who imâ€"! agine Shskespeare to have not been a | man, but a demiâ€"god. â€" Now, Mr. Frank | Harris surmises from a number of passages in Shakesphear‘s. works that he was a poor drinker, and had a great contempéi for the drinking customs of his period. _ But he was bored to death at sStratford, and when his friends| came to see him he yielced to the tempâ€". tation to drink too much, and paid the: penalty. _ Jonson and Drayton were none the worse for the debauch, but it killed the poet, who, like his own Cassio, had "unhappy brains" for this form â€" of inculgence. The theory is plausible enough, but then, Mr. Harâ€" ris spoils it by arguing that Shakesâ€" peare was not only a poor drinker, but also a bad sleeper. The wellâ€"known speeches about sleep, Nature‘s sweet |\restorer, are cited to show that the ue ul s oa C n i ce ° PM wee aiddiseaa d id esd e td d lv & !3TEQ Agents in every WV sAl a city, town and village in Canada, to solicit orders for a well advertised and established ariicle. â€" Easy to sell, and satislacâ€" tion insured.â€" No dsposit reâ€" quirsd. Give relerences when replying., Address, P i uied 1 00 3008 00. 2l Act doadot 39 9 t P0 writer suffered from insomnia. They may mean no more than Shakespeare‘s observation of the effects of sleeplessâ€" 7 . 1 oo qnDt onl Eut tokine ness in others, just as against driaking may pro cept that, while a gre self, this most sympathe tals could enter into t able FEROCIOUS MOSQUITOES. ' A writer at Glenora tells of the fer-: ociousness of the moquitoes that lay | in wait for the traveller between the head of the Stickeen and Telegraph creek, on the road to Klondike, He says: . It is hopeless to tell here of the {eroâ€" cious mosquitoes which inhabit the swamps, simply because there are no figures in our notation wich convey a | just idea of their numbers, nor adjecâ€" tives in our vocabulary to adequately set forth the emotions of their victims. Men in our own party who uncomâ€". plainingly slept upon the snow night after night last winter with no tent above their bsads â€" who cheerfully worked for eightsen hours out of the twentyâ€"four on the trail, and knew no better diet for three months than baâ€" con and beansâ€"these same men, who knew the bardships cf life as few can ever know them, gave up and wept with nervousness and vexation at the close of a day‘s exgagement with mosâ€" quitoes. The Average 4n OeRA ARN Nn DNANRNAPH hx in others, just as the distribes st driaking may prove nothing ex= that, while a great toper himâ€" this most sympathetic of all morâ€" could enter into the feelings of who were constituiionally incap= of carrying their liqnor. A POOR DRINKER. ROPRE . .++ Packages ONCE TRIEDâ€" â€" â€" 25, 40, 50 and 60c. ALWAYS USED, akespeare Contldn‘t Riasnd the Pace. A. SPRONG, Hamilton, Ont VC NAAANNIYz TEA IS NOT IN IT WITH OI LUDELLA CEYLON . A WEARISOME TASK. First Visitor, at summer nutelâ€"1 have not seen your bhusband this seaâ€" son. s 200 s o it o ce es n h i can‘t comeâ€"too busy. First Visitorâ€"Indeed ? Gecond Visitorâ€"Yes, He‘s president of a big ice company now, and he bas to work like a slave night and day to keep the price of ice from falling. Putnam‘s Corn Extractor Is the best remedy for corns extant. It acts quickly, makes no sore spots and effects a radical cure. A hundâ€" red imitations prove its value. Take neither substituies offared as good nor the cloe imitations of the genvine too often offered. Particular Citizen stamps are not as . ought to be. uen un on ic 9P vulï¬..‘sv&:;l' Oificialâ€"I guess you never tried carrying a shect of them in your pocket on a hot day. Second Visitorâ€"No, poor ‘jrno:} 'um{q uo mmoqqnp amdry odJ, in the Aips, is probably at a greater altitudie than any other building in the world. Its foundation stones are exâ€" acily 12,000 feet above the sea level. Persons suffering from Bunions or: Corns should spread a little "Quickâ€" enure‘ on the bunion, or corn, before reâ€" tiring at night, cover the "Quickeure" with a piece of tissue paper, and tie a piece of linen over the paper to keep it in place until the morning, thea remove linen and the "Quickeure cov= ered with tissue paper mukes & perâ€" feet plaoster;‘ reducing ali inflammaâ€" tion causing pain. That fortuns teller said if 1 paid her 85 she would reveal to me why 1 don‘t get rich. id you give it to ber? Yes, and she told me I bad a great weakr »ss for fooling away money. b~ locol applications, as they cannot reach the disea ~d portion of the ear, There is only one way to cure desfness, and that is by constituâ€" tional remedics, Dosfuess is caus>. by an in« damed c noivion of the mucous i aing of the Eustachian Tube, When *h s tube gets bufl on oi <ou have & rumbliny «+0u2d or imperfact neawring, ond when itis on trely cloâ€"od d afneas is the sesult,and unlessise infilâ€"mmation can be taken out and this tube restorcd t3 its normal coudiion, bearing wiil bo destroyed forever; n ne cages out of ton are caused by catarrh, which is nothiag by* an inflaumed condition of the muceus «urfac@es We will give (‘ne HTundred Dollars for any nse of De: fness (caused by eatarrh) that can» not be curcd by H l‘ s Ca arrh Cure, Send for circwars, free. F. 1. CHENEY & CO., Toled4o, 0. To CURE A CoLD iN uNB dAY. Take Lazasive Bromo Quiagine Tablets, All Drugâ€" s refand the money if it tails to Cure R5e. Irate Guestâ€"See hereâ€"Your adverâ€" tisement said " no mosquitoes." _ Summer Landlordâ€"There wasn‘t a mosquito bere when that advertiseâ€" ment was written, not one. You must rglmember I began advertising in Apâ€" ril. Sold by Drugxzist«, Tac. Hall‘s Family Pits are the bost RSAEECUNIEE TiE C i Bession 1898â€"1899 begins September 26th. . Matriculaâ€" tion Examination at Queen‘s University, beginning September 1th. Degree Courses in Aualytica! Chemisâ€" try and Assaying, in (.‘eolngi avd Mining Engineering. Bpecial Students admitted w thout matriculation. Calendar, &¢., from DR. W. L GOODWIN, Director, Doafï¬e i3 Canuot be Cured ALLAN LINE |ancs Royal Mail Steamship Co.,i in Montreal to Liverpool. l°£':‘,?‘.,‘: Montreal to Liverpool. ) otal kindsâ€"the finâ€" e I ‘ est in the market. Steamers sail from Montreal every Thursd | Bost material, morniog on arrivel of trains on Toromty aml | _ Linbtest:unting: the W est about 9 o‘clock. ammnmmmmmemem en mm mm mememmen RATES OF PASZAGE F Cabin $52.5:â€"and upwards ; SBecond Cablnm or _ CabdIm *0*5°" se on: Stacrage to Liverpool TRUTHFUL ADVERTISEMENTS Queenstown $22.50 and *#2.50, A reduction of five per cent. is allowed round trip fArst and seocond cabin tickota, 5 sailings of «teamers or cther informatien to any authorized agent. L. Bourlier, 1 King 8t. W. Toromtt,. or K. & A Allan, Mentreal, uw‘i;;:{vl_)&' ironclads far more HIGHEST BUILDING. A POSTAL TEST. Citizenâ€"These new . red not as adhesive as they UGaET oOr wWISDOM e teller said if I paid ber h reveal to me why 1 don‘t | @gomas F1Â¥XA man, be -ronom ind uoc LAW : CUMPANY, 370 Q: con West, Toronto. old shingle roofs or «ds of buildings. Used 22 vears. _ Ask your ccml@r for it. THE FINCH w00D0 PI_“ERVATWI & PAINT: PAINT F you want to either buy or sell Apples 1 in car lots, write us, o en "“TAT'O" is hereby extended to ali young men and women is terested : practical education to write for the New P rospectus the Orwre in B oswess Copu®o» or Toroxro. Faum Terx Orexs 8 ®rr. 1s1. Â¥oght r«Fnu teachers, wee excelled facil ities for Accounting, ‘slegraphy, Bhartâ€" hand, eto. Many students secure splendid positions each term. Getparticulars. _ Addras W. A. SHAW, Principal, Yong e and Gerrard Sta., Toronto. Ti\.;;‘lï¬\;l-s;é;l‘);n;vr;f:vslo‘n Co., Limited, Cominion Line Steamships. Montreal and Quebec to Liverpool in summer, J ig® and fast twis screw steamehips *Labrador,‘ * Yanâ€" couver,‘ *Dominmon,‘ *Scoueman,‘ * Yorkshine! Superior oooqn-nm«lnuon ‘or Firet C.hln, Kee, ! 1000 sn srans atma BHS* o ©qOpmEnUNAmUT TLE Deins a on d Cabin and Hteerage passongers. Rae« of gn-uuo-flrut, Cabin, Su.ffl; recend Cabin, M : *wuruge $22.50 an ugw.rdl mccordinx to steamer and berth, KFor all information nppoly to Local Agents, or Davinp ToxxaMo® & CO, Gen‘l Agents, 17 8t. Bacrament Bt., Montreal RoorInt s" sX nediramm. SLATE BI ar Green. SLATE BF D'lklm\ High Schools To boul Yar, ets. ROOF ING pg*s, Toronto, done by our 1 ricer, otc. Tstimases furnish Raterialn rhirped to any par PVAE CRA Cacasl mterials this Pourme & Patent Rolior and Ballâ€"Boarâ€" | ing Steol | Windmilis aÂ¥all Finds._the finâ€" cOrFEE & 60. Hooms 400â€"12 Hoard af Trado Building, TORONTO, ONT. ue PR enE e Only institution in Canada for the .n’ every phuse of speech defect Eetahbl in Toronto, 1820 _ Cure mranioed. UnUkoX® aUTOVOOK ?.\'GTITUTI. 0 Pembroke 8L., Toronts, Canad® 18 IN. STURTAVANT BLOW FAN Good as New. Cheap. The Wilson Publishing Co., CRAIN AND COMMISSION WNERCKHANTS, THE TRiIVMPH@ o Em & C l:\‘x put up aud taken down. Can be cleaned, pested, and put away :n a «mall space. Ask your dealers for them. â€" Manufactured by _ G. B. BARCLAY, 168 Adsiaide 81. W., Torento. A OJUSTABLE STOVE PIPREA We make MAPLE LEAF For Sale. Towron to. 73 Adelaide St. West. LW U poorING SLATY, in Eack, SLATE ELACK BOARDA (We anpply gh School T wonto) Roofing Felt, Pitch, / ROOFING TILE (See New Oy Build» â€" done by our frm) Metal Coilings, Oor ima yes furnished for work compi ote or "O® r«t‘ +o any part of the country Phove 1936 {ons, Adoiatde &Widmar 8t3,, Toronte. RAIN RINDER. TORONTO 80 CHEAP 102 Burristers,eto. Outlet, 4x3 Pulley. and Ahoot NMetel Works. No. 1 has 104nch re versible burrs. No. 2 has 84nch sinâ€" gle burrs. Joux L Cour®® Both have ballâ€"bearâ€" iuY buer plates relief »prings and shake food. Grind fine and fasd â€" with least power. Always guaranteod A trial given. TWO BIZES. FOR AN Y POWER Established 1848 Rungreds in Ust. use it on ©LOSZD f‘: Ni 9