HN<0>“pâ€"â€"â€"â€" INFERENTIAL. Said Brown to Fogg, who had heen indulging in some of his vagaries : “ Excuse me mentioning it, but now that we are alone, let me remind you that there are always a. fool and a. critic in every com- pany.†“Two is a small company,†replied li‘ogg, “ but why do you call me a critic?†In peace patriotism really consists only in {hisâ€"that every one sweeps before his own door, minds his own business, also learns his own lesson, that it may be well with him in ' own house. Ewry mam is. the child of his own deeds. ' Perseverance is the best school for manly virtue. The winner is he who gives himself to his work body and soul. According to the security you offer to her, Fortune makes her loans easy or ruin- ous. There is nothing that so goads a spirited woman to madness as the realization that any man controls her husband. Poverty is in want of much ; but avarice of everything. A wise man is not inquisitive about things impertlncnt. There are two sorts of fools about adviceâ€" those who gnu it and those who will not take it. Gold can buy nearly everything in this world except that which :1 man wants most â€"â€"-\'iz., happiness. It is the distinctive m Il'k of genius that it lights its own ï¬re. The iron out of which true manhood is {owed is the owex' to resist. D A fool is one who never has made an ex- puriment. He who lives without; folly is not so wise as he thinks. Wit is a merchandise that is sold but 1111 never be bought. _.Aâ€"â€"â€"aoo-<¢ov>-¢>â€"â€"â€"~ MORSELS FOR SUNDAY CONTEMPLA- TION. Since March 1st., the St. 1’. M. & M., are running a new express train from St. Paul to \Vinnipeg. The train leaves St. Paul in the morning and arrives early the next morning in \Vinnipeg. It then starts from \Vinnipeg in the evening and arrives in St. Paul the following evening. This ar- rangement gives us four through express trains every day, which is a great con- venienceto the travelling public. The busi- ness of the road makes these additional trains absolutely necessary, and the nu ' ar- i‘angement will undoubtedly be a permanent (I120. John “’illiums 0f Rockwood, was killed by a stone from the blast near Rat Por- tage recently. He leaves a. Wife and six children. Facts About the Great, Country of Inter- est to all our Readers. Real estate booming. Manitoba specu~ Iatoi's are picking up pieces here and there '11 a. very shrewd manner. Pemblna. feels especially honored by the proximity of their investments. Pembina men are coming over here to in- vest in Emerson property, while Emerson- ians and Manitobans generally are picking up wild lands through Dakota. A fair ex- change is no robbery. Last week the people of the Portage had to “ hold their noses on parade.†This was partly due to the cold snap, and part- ly also to the~wellï¬malodor raised by the two local papers in their attacks on each other. Pembina will bathe terminus of the C. P. L. 11., and two other roads are expected to terminate there next summer. Pembina has a boom in real estate, and many real estate agents are very busy just now. Some very large sales have been made in the last few days. A cruel parent in Lemuington would not bestow his daughter’s hand on Mr. Quigley, of \Vinnipcg. However, the young lady was willin’ and the pair fled to Detroit, Where they were spliced in spite of the stern sire, and they are now happy in the Mud- tropolis. Emerson has crossed the river, greatly no doubt to the disgust of its detractors. and the lots are selling in “\Yest Emerson†like the proverbial hot cakes. Within the last three lawful days the proprietors have disposed of over $30,000 worth of lots. The site is unexceptionable in situation, and will be speedily in great request for build‘ ing purposes. We do not know of a. better investment round the whole country than \Vest Emerson. About 6,000 artizans will be needed in \Vinnipeg this coming season in consequence of the building boom. There are objections raised to the Sewell station on the U. l‘. 'R. It is not centrally situated for the agricultural part of the country. James N. Macdonald, a prominent citizen of \Vinnipeg, died recently from erysipelas, caused by a scratch on the neck inflicted by a collar button. The land speculators of Emerson appear to regard the spring emigration as the great means. by which the boom is to be kept go- ing. They expect the said emigration to continue at least till August. Lake \Vinnipeg is t) have eight steamers next season. There is a pork famine imminent in Nel- sonville. There is nothing hoggish about that aspiring city. One unmistakable evidence of the boom in Manitoba. is that the “’innipeg Free PM†spells opulent with two p’s. Some \Vest Lynne peopleare talking about going further west. The \Vinnipcggcrs can’t settle as to whether a certain property in the neighbor- hood of the city should be called \Vinnipeg South or St. Boniface \Vest. The Nelsonvillc Alountaincer shrewdly suspects that “a. mild sort of land craze†has invaded the mighborhood of that my. NORTH-WEST BOOMS. flow Things " Bmxm " up There. The permit was No. (38. 011 arriving home Mr. Astor showed the document to his wife, and asked her advice, and he al< ways did in all matters relating to his busi- ness, as to what disposition he should make of them. “I have no ships; it is no use to us,†he said. At that time there was in New York a merchant named James Livermore, Who was largely engaged in the \Vest Indian trade, particularly with Jamaica. He 0\vn« ed several vessels, some of them a good size, and Mrs. Astor advised her husband to go and have a talk with him. Mr. Astor went, showed the East India Company ship pass and the Canton prices current, and “New,†said he, “if you will make up a voyage for one of your largest ships, you can have the pass and the prices current on one condition. You are to furnish ship and cargo, but I am to have one-half of the profits for my pass and for suggesting the voyage.†The \Yest India merchant laughed at the proposition, and would not listen to such a one-sided op- eration. l‘. r. Astor returned home, report- ed progress, and for a time the matter rest- ed. Mr. Livermore, however, thought it over. All that time no vessels traded to Canton from New York. The Revolution- ary \Var had just ended, and the East India ports were as hermetically sealed to Ameri- can commerce as if it had not existed. Only a few weeks elapsed before Mr. Livermore called at Mr. Astor’s store and asked : “ \Vere you in earnest the other day when you showed me the pass of the East India. Company?†“I was never more so,†was the prompt reply, and again they talked over the mat- ter. Mr. Livermore ï¬nally thought he saw his way clear, and an agreement was signed by which Mr. Astor was to receive one half the profits, and Mr. Liverniore to furnish vessel and cargo. The ship was selected and loaded partly with specie, Spanish milled dollars, about $30,01)0;nnd the other half was ginseng, a. root someth resembling li- eoriee, which is highly valued as amedieine by the Chinese, and lead and scrap iron. The ship sailed for Canton, and the pass en- abled her to anchor at VVhampea, :1. few miles below that city, and she loaded and unloaded her cargo the same as if she had been a vessel belonging to the East India Company. The ginseng, which cost twenty cents per pound in Ne 1v York, was sold for $3.50 per pound in Canton. The lead and scrap iron also brought enormous prices. The vessel was then loaded with tea and sold in New York at $1 per pound proï¬t on cost in Canton. Vhen the return cargo was sold and the accounts made out, Mr. Astor’s half share, which was $55,000, all in silver, '33 peeked in barrels and sent up to the store. \Vhen Mrs. Astor saw the barrels she asked what was in them. “The fruits of our East India pass,â€replied her husband. Mr. Astor got his pass back, bought a. ship, loaded her with an assorted cargo, and (lis- putched her to Canton. On her voyage out The Stream ex Wealth that Began with a. Free Permit from the East India Com- pany. A business acquaintance of Mr. Astor once asked him what particular transaction, or peculiar kind of business, ï¬rst gave him his great start. He said. in reply. that at one period of his life he had accumulated a large quantity of furs, such as beaver which were unsalable in the American market, and they were packed away in whiskey barrels, down in the cellar. He had no correspondent in London to send them to, and no disposition to do soif he had. After talking the matter over with his wife, they concluded it would be advisable that he should take the furs to London himself, and he did so. The pros- pects of the venture were very uncertain and therefore, in order to economize as much as possible, he went out as a steerage passen- ger. 0n arriving in London he found a ready market for his furs, and sold them at a. very high rate? He then made a list of such goods as he thought would sell to advant- age in the New York market, and purchas- ed and shipped them. After he had trans- acted all his business he was detained in London for a couple of weeks in consc uence of the ship not being ready to sail. I e em- ployed the time in looking about London and picking up all the information possible, especially such as he thought would beneï¬t his business in New York. Among the places he visited was the great East India house, and the warehouses and ofï¬ces of the Company. On one occasion he asked one of the porters what the name of the Governor was. The man replied, giving a. German name very familiar to Mr. Astor, who then asked if the governor was an Englishman, and was told that he had come from Ger- many when aboy. Mr. Astorthereupon de- termined te see him, and watching: for an opportunity, sent in his name and was ad- mitted. On entering he asked the governor “Is your name Wilhelm?†“Did you not go to school in such a. town?†The Governor replied, “I (lid; and now I remember you very well.†Along conversation followed, old school days were talked over, and the Governor insisted that Mr. Astor should dine with him. He declined for that day, but on the next day they met again. He asked Mr. Astor if there was nothing he could do for him. Mr. Astor said no; hehad bought all he wanted, and needed neither cash nor credit. They met several times after that, and the Governor continued urgâ€" ing Mr. Astor to name something he could do for him. He asked what present would be acceptable, and Mr. Astor declined ac- cepting anything. Their last meeting took place two days before the sailing of the ves- rel on which Mr. Astor was to return to New York, and for the last time the Governor asked him if he would accept any present he made him. Mr. Astor, seeing the anxiety of the governor replied “yes.†The Gover- nor, who was much ailected at parting with his old German schoolmate, handed Mr. As- tor two papers, saying: “Take these, you may tind their value.†One of the docu- ments was simply :1. Canton prices current. The other was a carefully engrossed permit or parchment, authorizing the ship that bore it to trade freely and without molestation, at any of the ports monopolized by the East India Company. Mr. Astor returned to New York, without giving the documents a. second thought. He had no ships and never had any trade with the East Indies, and at that time never expected to have. He then, of course, little imagined that the parch- ment would be the foundation of vast ship« ping operations and a trade amounting to millions of dollars and embracing the l’uci- lie Ocean. JOHN JACOB ASTOR’S START. Anton; the rejected candidates for the oiï¬ce of Chief-Constable for Birmingham, in the place of Major Bond, at a. salary of £700 a year, was Lord St. Leonards, grandson of the famous Lawyer Sugden. The New York IIemld is authority for the statement that one of the youngest babies in Minnesota has a. mother who is 83 years 01d. â€"*â€"â€"--‘«<<ov>»-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" Catarrh. Attention is called to the advertisement in another column of this issue of Mr. A. H. Dixon, 307 King street west, Toronto, who claims to cure Cutarrh absolutely and permanently, by a. method peculiarly his own, in from one to three treatments. Mr. Dixon scouts the idea that Camrrh is caused by a cold in the head (as most people imag- ine) but claims that it is a parasitical dis- ease and treats it accordingly. He says that he has used his remedy successfully in thousands of cases in Canada and United States, and has shown us many compliment- ary letters and certiï¬cates of cures effected by him to Verify his statement. Mr. Dixon sends a treatise on Catarrh free on receipt of stamp. SulfOI‘CX'S Should give him] a trial, Many sink into an early grave by not gising immediate attention to a slight cough, which could have been stopped in time by a 25-cent bottle of Dr. W'istar’s Pulmonic Syrup The Economist says : “ We understand that the Government has now received what France declares are her ï¬nal proposals rela- tive to the commercial treaty, and they are such as cannot possibly be accepted. Lord Lyons, the English Ambassador in Paris has already intimated that decision. It is just possible that there may be a treaty on the ‘most favored nation’ basis, or theta partial arrangement may he made on those points concerning which the two Governments are already agreed. The morning sun shines brightly for that man cured of that relentless tyrantâ€" Dyspensia. Briggs’ Botanic Bitters were never known to fail when faithfully used. 111 an extended article in the Washington (D. (1,) Mar, we notice that among others, Senator James G. Blaine, who has suffered in the past with rheumatism 110w keeps St. Jacobs Oil on hand in case of any future attack. - ___._Ԥo<4-upo¢mâ€"â€"vâ€"â€"â€"â€" The Angloâ€"French Commarelal Trsany Is t0 have 2L Railroad. The coming sum- mer it is expected will be a very busy one here, no less than ï¬ve Company’s are asking for cuurters to run through this district. A letter irom Manitoba says this town is beginning to attract attention. It is not like some of the towns that have been offered in Ontario, without either railway or definite location. The census of 1881 gives it a. population of 789 inhabitants, is the mid- way station on the Canada Paciï¬c between \Vinnipeg and Portage La Prairie. It is about thirty miles west of W'innipcg, and has a- regular train and post- al service between Brandon to the west and \Vinnipeg to the east. By an act of the provincial government it has been made the county town of the county of East Mar- quette. Marquette is a. rich agricultural district and it is on its trade with the farm- ers in this and surrounding counties that Garfield looks for its permanence and pros- perity. But Gailiclil is to be a railway cen~ tre too. Application has been made for a charter for a. road ironi Garï¬eld to the town Macdonahl on the Portage, \Vestbourne and Northwestern railway and thence to Rapid City, and another road is projected from Garfield to Oak Point on lake Manitoba. Since the syndicate’s purchaseof one-third undivided interest in the balance of lots held by the founder of this town, James Fraser, prices have jumped up enormously. Lots that were offered and sold for from $50 to $100, are now held at from 55150 to $500 each. It is also supposed that the establish- ing there of Masonic, Orange and Odd Fel- lows’ lodges 113.3 something to do with the boom, because this town is tohecomo a, kind of head centre of these societies for the see tion of Manitoba in which it is located. a. Mandarin came on board, and noticing the ï¬rewood, immediately ask~ ed the price of it. The captain laughed at such .11. question, but signiï¬ed that he was open for an oll'ex‘. The Manda- rin oll'ered $500 a ton and it was all sold at that price. That was sandal-wood. For seventeen years Mr. Astor enjoyed the 111- crative sandal wood trade without a, rival. No other concern in the United States or Europe knew the secret, and it was only dis- covered when a. shrewd Boston ship owner detailed a ship to follow one of Mr. Astor’s and observe the events of the voyage. Then for some time that house was a participant in the trade. Captain VVhetten commandâ€" ed one of Mr, Astor‘s ships, and he married the captain’s sister. Mrs. Astor knew more about the value of furs than did her husband and she could select a cargo for the Canton market and never make any mistake. \Vhen they became very Wealthy she demanded, as an expert, $500 an hour for using her judg- ment and knowledge of fur to promote his commercial plans; and he paid her whatever she asked. A syndicate of Toronto capitalists who have lately purchased a large quan- tity of real estate in this town, have also purchased the water power on the river andare going to orcctlargefactories. Among the many to be erected are grist and saw mills, also a paper mill of no small dimen- sions, the whole to cost in the neighborhood of $300,000. This town appears as if it was going to be the manufacturing centre of a. large district. Farm lands are held in this county from ten to twenty dollan per acre. she touched at the Sandwich Islands to takein water and fresh provisions and a large stock of ï¬rewood was also taken on board. 0n the arrival of the vessel at Canton MANITOBA. The Town of Garï¬eld. Shr )Wd as Ever. Pilot Mound. ¢o<tabv>u o0 <-db»> o§ ‘0' <‘OVVOM Mlllford Some time since a well known physician of 40 years standing, after much cxperi lenting, suc- ceeded in discovering the necc‘ ry combina» tion of ingredients, which never fails in abso- lutely and permanently eradicating this horri- ble disease whether standinir for one year or forty years. Sufferers fshoulfl. Without delay. communicate with the business manager, Mr. A. H. Dixon, 307 King St. W est, Toronto. and get treatise free by enclosing stump. Ask your ruggist for it, (Jaturrh is o mueo-purulent discharge (:11, sod by the presence and development of the vege- table parasite anueba. in the internal lining membrane of the nose. This parasite is only de- veloped under favorable Circumstances, and these are: morbid state of the blood, as the blighted eorpuscle of tubercle, the germ poison of syphilis, mercury, toxoemca, from retention of the effected matter of the skin, suppressed perspiration, badly ventilated sleeping apart~ ments. and other poisons that are germinated in the blood. These poisons keep the internal lin- ing membrane of the nose in a constant state of irritation. ever ready for the deposit of the seeds of these germs,which spread 11 p the nostrils and down the fences or back part of the mouth, causing ulceration of the throat; up to the eu- staehian tubes, causing deafness: burrowing in the local cords, causing hom‘sencss, usurping the proper structure of the bronchial tubes endingnin pulmonu r' consumption and death. To éifect' a cui‘cfltiï¬: ï¬ï¬rusit}; inust be removed or destroyed, hence lnhulmlbs and snuffs are worthless. VTALLIOX FOR SALE. â€"- YOEING LCDKEB L Iluddo, u bemlhiful bright bay, 5 years old, stands 16; has, weighs 1700 lbs., sound. J’urtirâ€" Illm's apply to JO!!! )1 .QL‘HAN, Monekton, 0m. Send for Descriptive Circular, Price List, and Testimonials 0f BRIUK MAPMNESLBEIQKPRESSES, (DITLDINGS. Y’HleTIEE FRAMES, MIR- 1mm PLATES, CHROMï¬N, 460. Price List to the trade on application. H. J. M A’H‘HEVVS & BBQ, 93Yonge ‘ ’ AND TILE M‘lCfll \Ve aisn make H'enegr Machines for Cheese box stuff, 01‘ perforated Furniture. The Causes of Colds aregetting overheated in hot rooms 01' crowd- ed assemblies, sitting in a draught, or cool- ing out rapidly after exercise, nmflling up warm and changing to lighter wrappings, cold or dump feet. No matter what is the cause Hagyard’s Pcctoral Balsam is the cure for allthi‘oat andlung diseases that induce consumption. 3 \Ve should not suffer from a cough, when a few doses of Ayer’s cherry Pectoml “ ill cure. Time, money, comfort, health, all are saved by it. Forty Years Experience have tested the virtues of Dr. Wista7"s Balsam of Wild Cherry, and it is now generally acknowledgâ€" ed to be the best remedy extent for pnlman- ery and lung diseases ; embracing the whole range from a slight cold to a. settled consum- ption. Were it not for its merits, it would long since have “ died, and made no sign. †3] Universal Accord, Arm‘s CATHARTIC PILLS are the best of all purgatives for family use. They are the pi oduet of long, laborious. and successful chemical investigation, and their extensive use, by physicians in their practice, and by all civilized nations, proves them the best and most effectual purgative Pill that medi- cal science can devise. Being purely vege- table no harm can arise from their use. In intrinsic value and curative powers no other Pills can be compared with them, and every person, knowing their virtues, will employ them, when needed. They keep the sys- tem in perfect order, and maintain in healthy action the whale machinery of life. Mild, earching and effectual, they are es- pecially adapted to the needs of the dich- tive apparatus, derangements of which they prevent and cure, if timely taken. They are the best and safest physio to employ for children and weakened constitutions, Where a mild but effectual cathartic is required. Fon SAM! BY ALL DEALERS. FURNBWRE. BRICK MAKERS. $I5 SLVER WATGH FREE! def and full train ofcurs mow lng through the country, adorned on every available spot with the nlnglcnl wordsâ€" “b‘r. Moon‘s 011,!" It looked gorgeous,“ full displnynfoolor 1:4 allowed to menu anything these times. It looked sublime, if the impu- dom'c ofthe mlwrtisin g man be the nmusnri 'n , f slundnn. ’1 It looked funny m soc ‘. the train 9 and engine s n' at h e d with those purli molor- cd rheuâ€" matic \vmp- pings; and at a (mch- niont 0p- Immunity our ("mt - pnndon, in- quired of 11:0 (mmlnv- - 1m- \\'l:nt iL ' all mm 3'! ' means; that my whole, 1min lrmlzs‘ 11" tzn ;: mmm ' " r-‘nid 11:0 vmnlumor. “l hid up my ‘ why, us usual.anll,<l11r- ins} 1h†lmnr Klm‘p,’ I mmum-snuic 01' thn ulvct'iiq wch hos lmclurtl up thvir ’kit‘ mm pmlvd at. from front :0 rpm, I (l.»n‘L know why they (lid it: but there stands Hm elongated, rvd and yellow {Bu-ts ï¬lming You in the favv, and just as; prominom :Lx'n mhhit 0 A. . 11’s hm‘d luck stranger, Inn I guess iL‘s all“; â€"Galv 'ion (T611) Daily Journal. (ier, the Jocomouvc ‘ (tar and full train of( lug through the 01 adorned on every spot with the mnglcn “SLJACOIH 011,!" , gorgeunsjf full displu 1:4 allowed to menu these times. lilookod ii'l WHAT IS CATARRH ? Address}, C‘. “K DENNIS, V. \Vawdslock, 0m. ’]‘he people along the line of railway from Tramway Landing, L3,, to the inland towns were sur- prised and amused at a recent occurrence. So many stran 0 things, however. are constant y presenting themselves to the av tention oflhe people now-afluys mat genuine surprises are few indeed. This was the exception. We have read of the “pninted ship on a painted 00min,†and witnessed the “ oetry ol‘nmlion,†as shown in (aiming, but hud I: never heard of decoratin an We in rapid flight on a railway :. train until this time. People ‘ observed, with \\'ide»0yed won- (jer, the locomptivg and ten- A Swearing Engineer. A Surprised Locomotive T6f6n~floidï¬hï¬t OSHA \VA CABIN HT 90., 97 Kongo Street Toronto. Ontario. Thisis the season of sloppy wentherso productive of colds, and lung troubles ; neg- lected cold or damp feet: is {L great source of these difï¬culties. Cure your cough with Hagyard’s Pcctoml Balsam. Pleasant to take and always reliable. l W'as ï¬rst introduced into this country some four years i go. At 111m; time merchants would scarcely give it store-room. Uflicers of agri~ cultural societies would only admit it grudging- ly within their grounds, while farmers feared to feed it even as a gilt. Now some merchants order by the TON. Ofï¬cers of agricultural societies solicit our favors, while the most dis< ,ineuished breeders and feeders in the Domin- ion use it freely in ï¬tting their unimnls in con» petition for the highest prizes. A necessary result, we believe, of doing an honest busines with em honest preparation. For sale by dcztlers evergwhore. Mannfactory 43 John b rx-etSomh. Hamilton. (but. 1111:1113 1U11111 111MB THIGH humble, Light, Elastic, and cheap. First prize at Provincial Exhibition, London. ’I‘ostimoniala on applica- tion. Satisfaction guaranteed. 7 Address J DOAN & SON Drayton Ont. ARTIFIUIAL LIME Tinorlcy's Improved Horse and (Tattle Food Those going to Manitoba will ï¬nd it to their advantage to corrtmpond with me. Subscribe for the Colonist News, a paner giving just the information you require: Sam 10 free, Pam- hlets with maps, sent free. Ho brook‘s Second arty. with sleeping cars attached, will leave on 14th oanrch,and continue every other week during the season. preceded a few days before by their fast freight train. Please address with stamp for reply. And will be M'00n1p1L11i0d by a responsible tiger. t of the Cumpanytln-ough to Winnipeg. Thu», trains, which have been specially arranged for the convenience of intendan settlers in the North-West.Willbecontinuedduringthemonths of March and April. leaving: (in Wednesday of each week, and will be run through on express time, reaching \Vinnipt-g'. it is: expected, on the following Hatnrdav. Freight trains! for gen» oral merchandise and sactt‘lcrs' (atl‘ccts will leave iVinrlsoron Fridays (lurian the same months revions tn the starting of} somgcr trains. Fur nrtltcr particulars as to 1m scngcr and freight rate/H. timetables. maps. on apply Ln any 02' the Cmnptti ‘ ' Station Masters and Agents. WM. EptiAR,_ I l“. Blit)U(i_§l:l“()N. D. A. noumoox. North-west. Emigration and Real Estate Agent. 64 King-st east. Toronto. For Fargo, Grand Forks. limrrson, “Vinni- IN‘SX. Portage La Prairie. Brandon. and points In I!" Norm-West. will have um “no ofthls Railway an WEDNESDAY of each Week. [DO 301‘ RE similar names. MANITOBA! GREAT WESTERN RAILWAY. A SERIES 01“ Special Colonist Trains this Small DH. WIST‘ {NF} BALS‘AM UP WILD GHERR The ordinary fare, to 313111101)“, is from thirty to forty dollars. “you invest, tint amount in ourcclobrutcd $8.50 Single Barrel ] lroeL-h Loading: Hummerle han 1m; , Breech qulinu .,,»t 0: Z11]u$ll.:30: Breach Loud- ing Rifles $48.00 «w 510.00; Genuine Twist Double l\'luzzlo$l‘.2l0( Jennino 'J'wi Dou‘Jle Breech 1m Elegant Gm . )0 and up to 1:"; 75. Send 6 cents for our {Mi-page Illustrated (umlogue containing over GOOillnstrutions of P re Arms, \Vutehes, Silver-\Vare, Jewellery, . \‘i'ill send to any express Olliee for examination when charges are guaranteed. CHARLES STARK, 52 Church Street, Opposite St. James Cathedral, Toronto. MTW'hen you come to tlielcity give us a call we will Show you more Fire :ersflmn can be seen in all ’l‘or0nm~llmnilton and London Noodle Shot, Gun, you 11111 more mr exponsos. Improved Climax combined with the signature, of “ I. “nuts "on le'wuupor GRAND EXCURSION WIANETQBA! THEN AND NOW. MAN “m A E " ‘bo mailed free to an inf/emlirruzw Brï¬haém on up: 1‘ ion {arrqefa wishing 9 ï¬ling) e changepf Sged, mguvuugeï¬tgaqucqogaaor 1882 gain; LL: fir-Mia (Eider EE'rlï¬yV ' PnceBn upsi'f'oaï¬on: M. TZENRIE, Seedsmau,Toronto. anada. Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Influenza, Asth- ma, Whooping Cough, Group, and every Affection of the Throat, Lungs and Chest, including Con- sumption. Sold by all Dmggists. 50 "WNW w d $1.00 a “MFG. (Mu. I’ass. Agrn.“ WELL CERTAEMLY CURE PENSIONS IOUSANDS: Keep the Feet Dry. [HICII‘S’MD by articles hearing )0, sun: you got 1882. PREPARED LEA Far Soldiers, widevmiV payeny} or . ‘ 'm'ul Ill‘uuigm'