The value of Black Walnutâ€"Terrible Fires in North Carolinaâ€"Lake Superior Tradeâ€"Proliï¬c 0ats.â€"&c., 81; English capitalists are reported to have purchased $5.000,000 worth of black Wall nut in Ohio, Indiana and Iowa. for shipment to England. VNev; England maple sugar makers are complaining of an exceptionally late and and very unproductive reason. By the burning of a. great 'distillery at Petersburg, Ky.. a. few days ago, eight bun- dred cattle, which were kept upon the pre- mises, and which could not get out, were burned. The proportions of the exodus from Que- bec to the United States are becoming al- arming. From one parish in Montmagny alone last week 325 persons left, of whom 200 never intend to return to Canada. The date of the national wool growers’ Convention at Chicago has been changed from May 7 to May 19. in order that the delegates may be present and participate m the proceedings of the national industrial congress, which will be held at Chicago, May 21. EEK; Sgate. $15331 hous.es were destroy- ed and a number of families were rendered homeless. The American Grocer ï¬nds that in 1883 3.000.000 cases of tomatoes were packed in the United States, each containing two doz- en tins. The exact ï¬gures are 70,645,896 cans. Their value at wholesale was probably $6,000,000. Maryland puts up about one galf of the product, and New Jersey over a. fth. Terrible ï¬res in the turpentine regions of North Carolina raged for several davs, de- stroying hundreds of thousands of trees, and some of the largest turpentine orchards Among the bills pending in the New Jer- sey Legislature is one to prohibit the man- ufacture of dynamite and other explosive materials, or any dynamite machine, or the transportation thereof intended for the un- lawful wounding of anybody, under a. 'pen- alty of lrom $1,000 to $5.000 ï¬ne. or imâ€" prisonment 01 from thirty days to ï¬ve years. They are having trouble in Texas over a. man who has just received two sentences one of 50 years’ inprisonment and the other to be hanged. They want to hang him now. but the man rlaime he ought to serve his time ï¬rst. as that sentence was pronounced prior to the one of hanging. A juror gave it as his opinion that “ an the newer was a dead sure loser, he’d better c ose out with the bank and swing to wunst." The Lake Superior are trade is reported to be in a. worse condition than it has been for twelve or ï¬fteen years. Seven out of every twelve mines in the region are idle, and those which are running are owned by the largest and wealthiest corporations who are restricting the output. At least one half of the ore is of the best quality and is selling at Cleveland for six dollars per ton, which is lower than for many years past. At this price there is only a. proï¬t of ï¬ve cents a. ton. A bill has been introduced in the United States Senate to provide for the creation of a silk culture bureau which shall constitute one of the bureaus of the Agricultural De- partment and shall embrace in its organiza- tion ï¬ve silk culture stations. to be establish- ed as follows : One to be located in the State of Pennsylvania, one in Florida, one in Alabama, one in Iowa and one in Califor- nia. The bill provides for the appropriation gill$l50,000 for carrying on the obje0t of the 1 . In 1881 a. Fargo (Dakota) farmer noticed a. single stool of wheat in his oat- ï¬eld, which consisted of twenty-two stalks, headed out. These contained 860 grains, of which 760 were plan‘ed in 1882, yielding one-ï¬fth of a. bushel. met Spring this wheat was planted and carefully cultivated. The product is seventeen bushels, an increase of eighty ï¬vefold, and a yield of ï¬fty-six bushels and thirty-two pounds to the acre. Seven- teen bushels from a. single kernel in three years is a good growth. I am pulling along here very well ; managed to secure several hundred bushels of ooflee more than I had estimated. and this is always pleasant. Value of our crop. about $3,000. Never had the pleasure before of working with elephants. Sent away our crop with them this season. I did not intrude myself too much upon their attention. You see I did not feel entitled to the honor of an intimate acquaintance, I treated them with great respect and defer. ence, much the same as a street Arab does a policeman. I can’t get over my antipathy to that “trunk.†The Malay style of feed- ing elephants has certainly the merit of sim- plicity. When the day's work is done they are turned out into the jungle to ï¬nd their own food ; and so they go rambling about, all night, pulling and tearing away at any tree or shrub they fancy.VVhen morning somes the dri vers. tracing them by their own ap- parent marksI put the driving hook over their ears and lead them off to work. Ele- phants seem to graze in a forest quite as contenteadly as cattle in a pasture. Their ability to scramble up and down apparently impassable places is wonderful. I never saw any animal before show the intelligence to break a branch elf a tree to fan away the flies. They helped themselves to our coffee trees for this purposeâ€"Letter from India, “more.†Same fruit miners keep a. book in which they register the age and variety of every tree in their orchard, together with any items in regard to its gmfting, productive- nes, treatment, etc., which are thought to be desirable. UNITED STATES- Elephants for Farm Work. That Supplies Good Drinking Water and Good. he! at the Same Time. Cutlar Salmon of French Camp, not far from Stockton, CAL, sunk a well with a seven-inch tube to a depth of about 840 feet, and struck a. copious stream of excellent water. Desiring to learn whether he could increase the flow by going deeper, and fear- ing that, should he continue the well the same size, he might injure the quality of the upper strata. of water, Mr. Silmon hit on the plan of of sinking a four-inch tube inside the seven-inch one, and thus making what might be called the experimental well four inches in diameter. This inner one he bored to a. depth of 1,250 feet, and then came to water again. This lower stream came came to the surface, and, indeed, rose in a. tube twenty-two feet above the ground. The last water found was unï¬t for drinking, and but for an accidental discovery of its wonder- ful properties might have been considered a nuisance. It was found that there was a large amount of gas in this water from the lower depth. This came bubbling to the surface. making one think of a. gigantic soda fountain. Some one suggested the idea. of seeing if the gas would burn. A coaloil can was put over the top of the tubing, and having a. few holes punched in it. an impoverised gas ï¬x- ture was at hand. Only a match was re- quired to complete the preparations, The match was lighted and applied to a. hole in the can. and flames shot up three or four feet in the air and burned steadily. The gas would burn. Mr. Salmon had ï¬re and water coming out of the same hole in the ground. The tube of the outer well, that which was only 480 feet deep and furnished the good water, was tapped and sufï¬cient water for all domestic uses and for the stock &,c., was led off in pipes to the house and other local- ities. A curbing was built around the twin wells in such a way that it formed a reser- voir for the water from the 1,250-foot level and that portion from above which was not conveyed away in the pipes. All through this water in the reservoir came bubbling up the gas, generated somehow, somewhere down below. When Mr. Sslmon next went to Stockton he had a gasometer made with a stop-cock in the top, and this he took home and fastened over his wells. The bot‘ bin was beneath the surface of the water in ‘ the reservoir, and the gas speedily ï¬lled the bell-shaped receiver. l‘he next thing was to attach a gas pipe, and connect his home- made gas machine with the house. He put a pipe perforated with small holes across his large open ï¬re-place, turned on the gas, applied a. match, and the problem of cheap fuel was instantly solved. After that gas pipe was put into the ï¬re box of the kitchen stove, and now the meals are pre- pared with the new fuel. Mr. Salmon has also used this gas for illuminating, but it does not seem to entirely ï¬lll the bill, al- though it is a. great improvement on a tallow dip. It has been suggested that, as this gas seems to be almost pure hydrogen, it might be carburetted and its illuminating quality improved. The ga throws off a great amount of heat, and, withouta doubt, such a well would supply a large number of families with the means of warming their hotses and preparing their food . â€"â€"â€"‘Oo<-m’â€"â€"â€"â€" How to Mind a Baby. First, a man need have one to take care of. It isn’t every man that is fortunate enough to have one, and when he does his wife is always wanting to run over to the neighbor's only ï¬ve minutes. and he has to attend the baby. Sometimes she caresses him, but oftener she says sternly,_â€" 7 “John, take good cai'e of the' bhild till I come back." You want to remonstrate, but cannot pluck up courage while that awful female's eye is upon you; so you prudently refrain and merely remark,â€" “Don’t stay long, dear.†She is scarcely out of sight when the luck- less babe opens its eyes, and its mouth also, and emits a. yell which causes the éat to bounce out of the door :9 if something had stung it. You timidly lift the cherub and sing an operatic air; it does not appreciate it, and yells the louder. You try to bribe it with a. bit of sugar; not a. bit of use, it spits it out. You get wrathy and shake it. It stops 3 second, and you venture an- ‘ other, when, good heavens I it sets up such ‘ aroar that the passers by look up in aston- ‘ ishment. You feel desperate; your hair stands on end and the perspiration oozes out of every pore as the agonizing thought comes over you, what if the luckless child should have aï¬t. You try baby talk;but “litty, litty i lamb†has' no effectâ€"for it stretches as if a red hot poker had been laid upon its spine, and still it yells. You are afraid the neigh- borhood will be alarmed. and give it your gold watch as a last resource, just in time to save your whiskers; though it throws down a handful of your cherished mous- tache to take the watch, and you thankfully ï¬nd an easy chair to rest your aching limbs, when down comes that costly watch on the floor, and the cause of all the tmuble breaks into an ear-splitting roar, and you set your ‘ teeth and prepare to administer personal chastisement, when in rushes the happy wo- man known as your wife, snatches the long- suflerin child from your willing arms, and sitting own, stills it by magic, while you gaze mouonfully at the remains of your watch and cherished moustache, and, mut- tering a malediction on babykind in general, and on the image of its father in particular, vow never to take care of a. baby againâ€" until the next time. Every one, rich and poor, takes a. dip once a. day in a. caldron of hot water in Japan. The rich bathe before dinner and at night. The whole household dip in the same water. Precedence is given to visitors, then the elders, followed by the young people according to age, and then the ser- vants. On getting out of the caldron each bather guglea mouth and throat with cold aromatlzed water. They then fan each other until they are all dry. Meiesonier had the good taste to refuse the banquet offered to him as a protest against the destruction of one of his works by Mrs. Mackey, though the list of tender- ers included E. Reuan, Alexandre Dumas. Berthelot. and Pasteur. “I shall soon be starting for Italy,†he wrote. “ If people wish to give me a dinner, let it be later, on the occasion of the exhibition of my works ; but on the morrow of the Mackey affair I cannot accept it.†In the Public Garden, Boston, there will be planted this year 500,000 panaies. The ï¬rst floral display will continue through April, May and June. A CALIFORNIA WELL. The Methods 0! the Great Illnzlleh Dra- matistâ€"Deflnltlon: of Genius. Of one conception of genius (a. very low one, in my judgment) Shakespeare's work is totally destructive, says Richard Grant \Vhite in the Atlantic for May. Genius has been deï¬ned as the ability to take great. pains. Genius is rather the ability to con- ceive and to do, with or without pains, that which is admirable and which is peculiar to the doer. The former deï¬nition seems as if it were contrived for the comfort and coun- t+nance of that large body of men who re- gard themselves as undeveloped. or at least possible geniuses,â€"men who could have written "King Lear" “if they had a mind to do it,†and who have been prevented from elaborating that tragedy, or one equal to it, by adverse circumstances. Neverthe- less, it has been growing in favor of late ; probably because of the daily increasing im- portance of science, which proceeds by the careful collection and comparison of facts, and which demands that the most daring and imaginative theories shall be advanced by the slow and patient steps of toil and caution. However true this conception of genius may be in science, it is not true in art, in literature, the annals of which are studied with splendid lights, which have been spoken into existence by the creative will, if not by the creative word of omnipo- tent genius, exercising its native powers al mort unconsciously. 0i Shakespeare, at least, it is to be said that great pains wrra no condition of the working of his wondr 1's. 0n the contrary, the achievement of this genius was always in directly inverse ratio to the height of his aim and the greatness of his endeavor. When he tailed, when he wrought with deliberate eï¬'ort, when he set up for himself a high standard of attain- ment, he was comparatively feeble and dull and insigniï¬cant, with no ï¬re in his pro- phecy, no truth in his fable. It was when he was doing his journey-work, with small trouble to himself, with the lowest purpose and the least pessible labor either in plan- ning or in ï¬nishing, that he was splendid and beautiful and strong, with a. splendor, a beauty, and a strength that are beyond. ‘ the conception of any other man who has left the mark of his hand upon the ages. When he set out to be a poet, to do some- thing that would bear criticism and give him a place in literature, he produced “Venus and Adonis," and “The Rape of Lucrece,†which would have been utterly forgotten long ago had they not been his. When, with lower purpose, he undertook only to please “his private friends," he evolved the marvelous mystery of his fascrn- ating sonnets. But. when grinding in his daily mill, he blindly put out his hands, and took for grist almost any old play or old tale the story of which he th0ught would interest a miscellaneous London audience, he turned out such job work as "Romeo and Juliet.,’ “As You Like It,†"Hamlet," “King Lear,†"Othello," “Antony and Cleo- patra.†Nothing is made clearer by a study of his work than that at the times when he wrote those dramas, it was iqhim to write them in the way in which they were written. and in no other. It was just as easy for him to turn them off as he did as it was for any minor journalist of nowadays to elabor- ate his little paragraphs. Dangers of Gambling. The Canada Presbyterian snys:â€"\Vith some people gambling seems to be an infal tuation. In all cases it is a dangerous and a ruinous one. Others try to make it a means of livelihood. As a trade, it would be diflicult to ï¬nd one more disreputable. Rag-picking is an honorable occupation compared with gambling. Professional gamblers are about the worst scoundrels that prey on society. It is no mitigation to say that were there no dishonest simpletons, there would be no piqeon-pluckers. There are degrees of wickedness; the fools who make a. habit of gambling are descending ripidly, but the knaves who live by it have little further to fall. Ina recent trial in Buï¬alo several gamblers sought to evade justice by corrupting the members oi the Grand Jury. This coming to the Judge’s knowledge, they were told that if there was any violation of the law, its penalties would be rigidly enforced. The Judge was in earnest, and the jury felt it. They give the names of those who approached them, and speedy arrests followed. There is no good reason why an American judge should inot be just even though the judiciary is \ elective. HOW SHAKESPEARE WORKED. The Mighty Dollar Is lon disï¬auced by a. 10 cent bottle of Pol; son's EBVILINE, the newest and best pain remedy. It cures colds, cramps, coliu, pain in the head, sciatica, pain in the chest; in fact it is equally efï¬cacious as an external or internal remedy. Try a. 10 cent sample bottle of the great pain remedy, Nerviline. Sold at any drug store. Large bottles only 25 cents. Try a sample bottle of Nervlline, only 10 cents. Lime with a. solution of salt and water, and then properly thinned with skim milk from which all the cream has been taken, makes a. permanent whitewash for out-door work, and. it is said, renders the wood in- combustible. l: is an excellent wash for preserving wood, and for all farm purposes. Every one speaks highly of Dr. Carson's Stomach Bin can as a Stomach. Liver and Kidney Medicine. " The best family medicine we ever used," say they all. Try,a. bottle this Spring as B blood puriï¬er. A Vermont dairyman says a. young calf should be fed three times a day. Overleed- in at lung interwls, and especially with co d food, kxlls a flood many valuable calves. The cow stable should be kept neat and clean, or the milk cannot be perfectly pure. The air of a. ï¬lthy stable will taint milk that is drawn in it; and when the air is (on! the cows under such lack of care will be more or less dirty, and some of this ï¬lth will ï¬nd its way into the pzil. $Iâ€w7iu buy 12 Assorted Dahlia Roots or Scotch my Trees. JAs. RENNIE, Seeds, Toroutp. END 10c, AND RECEIVE BY MAIL Beautiful Chrome Cards with your name on. Address Eureka. Card 00., Bolton. Q1135 _ ï¬xtures on a. leading avenue in Detroit; hysi- cian's ofï¬ce and rucbice in connection: ubarga'm; 1,200 cash. P. E. P K, Attorney. Room 5, 120 Griswold Street. Detroit. That Large ‘aï¬df NipelfFihiSlï¬i store in the C‘e‘utml Block. Waterlo'o. to rent â€"renc reasonable. hmnadiabe possession. WILLIAM ï¬rm)â€. a 00.. Waterloo. OTS FOR SALEâ€"28 AND ‘29, 15:. (JUN - CESSION South West of Toronto uud Sydenhnm Road. Holland; mill site thereon. For particulars apply Box 136. Newmurket. 9'40†5; Gentlemeni Apply immeaately. R. N. URRY, J.P'. Sea-Tram Loqun. Ont. Anglyanmd 375R SALEâ€"A STWK OF DRUGS AND 9.54 250 $311: AP. 175 tem by motion} 3ht;lt;g!'n‘;|'aer. Send [BYE-SHIV): Lind plan to thANK Yiï¬IGH. 262 Sherboume St. Toronto A N 'l‘ E 1).â€" every reader of L1 salary of $15.00 a week to lar, useful. and may s_el published. 'Ade St. East. Toront SHORTHAND. PROPERTIES T0 EXCHANGE If you want a house or a farm for a. home or investment. or to exchange properties, so that both parties are better sulted, call at the oflice of, or write to Jouu POIICIIER. a (Tony! Stâ€: Toronto. 32?th comm isa perfect gem, actual to an imported. Frencn Corset; ï¬ts like a. g uve to the ï¬gure; very styl- ish, elegant in a. pearance, and approved of by the most fasti ious. Manufactured by aï¬tarib Sï¬&;thiud}1 :la'l-EEROMPTON CORSETCO. Drain Pipes. ['0 Tops. Canada Cement W. & F. P. Currie & Co. I Mnhut’acturera of Bessemer Steel bol'a, Cnnlr 8: Bed Springs The celebrated Elm City Harness Oil can be had from the following Wholesale Saddlery Hardware houses : Field 5; Davidson. Hamilton ; Morgan Bros. Hamilton '. Fraser a: Johnson. Hamilton ; 0, Davidson and 00.. Toronto; S. Treesfl, 00.. Toronto '1‘. Woodbridge and 00.. Toronto; W. Ellis, London ; W. C. Mnrtin, Kingston; J. Smith. and Son, Brantlnrd ; or from F. F. DALLEY. and 00., Hamilton. Sole agents for the Dominion. The Readyâ€"'iMiiéi/Péifls A. RAMSAY 86 SUNS. MONTREAL, AmeHcan Silicate ( Ramsay's (Members of the Toronto Stock Exchal Buy and sell on commission for cash or on] gin all securities dealt. in on the Toronto.! [real and New York STOCK EXCHANGES, Also execute orders on the Chicago Board of’l‘tade â€"IN GRAIN AND PROVISIONS.â€" MESSRS. FISKE & 00.. I received your Braces 0. K. Am highly pleased with them, and hlppy to say they are the BEST 1 have ever yet worn. n: Mutual Mamage Endowment As’n, Issues Certiï¬cates from $125 to $3,000. payable on mar- riage. at following rates. For $500, or half certiï¬cate. $4: quarterly dues in ad‘ Fcu" vance â€"HEAD OFFICE. LONDON, ONT.â€" $1.00 ' For $3.00. A percentage of the Fees applied towards a re- serve fund The only cash payments required at the time of making application for a certiï¬cate. The re- mainder 0f the liability is made up of assessments at the rate of $1.60 on each $1.000 upon the marriage of mem- bers. 12 assessments made the ï¬rst year payable quar- terly. which upon the present large membership secures the payment of a number of Endowments. and a. safe and reliable investment. for young eople. Send for By- Laws and full particulars. W. J. CH. Secretary, London, Ont. Dominion Line of Steamships TO SADDLERS! Running in connection with the Grand Trunk Railway of Canada. Sailing from Quebec every Saturda during the summer months. and from Portlan every Thursday dunng the ‘ winter months Sailing dates from w Montreal, May. 10. *‘afn-conyer. May. 3|. “Sarnla. May. [7. Toronto, June. 7. Brooklyn. May. 2-1. * orcgon, Jane. M. Ratesot assage:0abin. Portland to Live 00 $50, $60. 70. Return $90, $110. 3130, accor 'n to steamer and berth, all outside rooms an comfortably heated by steam. Intermediate $40. Sbeerage. at lowest rates. The saloons and stateroom in steamers marked thus: ' are amidshlps, where but little motion is felt, and no cattle or sheep are carried on them. For further particulars apply to any Grand Trunk Railway Agent or local agents or the Com- pany. or to DAVID TORBANCE a 00. General Aqenta. M’ontroal. nil dealers. N. W. T. 160 Acres Free To Actual Settlefs; (lit, 333’ First Class Land. Healthy Climate. No Fevers. Plenty of Pure Water. 425' Convenient to Coal Mines. Navigable River passing through it. Season longer than in Manitoba- w’ Located in the centre of fertile Belt. Sober, Thrifty. Moral Neighbors. Supply Store in the Colony. SHORTHAND. The capital of the Colony, already shows pros- pects of being the most important city on the Saskatchewan River. a 015 F0]! SALE CHEAP AND ON EASY TERHS. Excursions from Ontario every week. For Particulars apply to HEAD OFFICE 111, KING ST., IVEST, TORONTO. M. s. SMITIL 711v. PEMBERTON PAGE, accomplishm Jnicating m HUMESTEADS! TEMPEBANGE GULUNY 2r. TOBHNTO STREET. :ronmn'a FISEE'S THE? LIL‘ "$0.75. $1,000 Certiï¬cate‘ $2.000 Certiï¬cate. $3,000 Certiï¬cate. $15: qusflerly dues in advance‘ Agflnmmun Sense’ Braca No strain on shonlden or nu. El {equiym no BUTTONS. c"TS KT E Aï¬li‘reéï¬k. E1. JKCKSON't c‘ 11 in Pure Linseed Oil Mixed Paints are to a. I: ‘l Soda. and are dear 100 Grey Nun St., Montreal. Importers of Irma. Portland Cement, {thlmney Nâ€"Veifl'l’oronto. 35 ‘3? ï¬fï¬ï¬'-ï¬i§ib}é§s" 4-â€" H, N. 1:1st deo.,277King Street BEBE. guy. cheap. durable. Sent 29 anygidregg‘by yareceigt‘ot SPECIAL ADVANTAGES. YORK STREET TORONTO. STOCK BROKERS SASKATOON, FREE MANUFACTURED BY y "79.17 Earl; of anads‘ boughtâ€"A lrund by I“ elf instruc QU EBEC T0 _I:Â¥VEPO0L. e701 this paper who w‘ week for canvassing the mix ielliqgflgllyggvipgiog President. nt of H: STuANICET, Qua. April'lï¬th, 188i that you 3‘ nstfuction for beginner; p02 ice list to T. A. McIN’I‘Y‘RIi mnorium, 34 King St. East.,T INCORPORATED :u-‘al go gnTnmpoytE French 7 _ _ -.._1 'ent Liningiiflaiér Lime, Flu] ricks,Plascer of Paris, Fire Clay Chin Jfacc Sincerely yours! LESSONS GIV EN BY mail in IssanPitmnn'a syn; $6; quarterly dues in advance, $10; quarterly dues in advancc‘ IN THE railroad )i1 and Turpentine. The a. large extent ground with M at any price. Ask for :t. them. Apply to your Stock Exchange). for cash or on mar- Lhe Toronto. Mon- railroad by rene ‘r. E. HORAN ould like a :post_ popu book ’ ï¬e: 3., 95 King sans 0 of its mplete at free M andger. monto B All IRON. Welllnzmn Ptreet. Mann-en]. Wellington Chambers, Glasgow. 23 Paternoster flow. London. Conland & Import Orders. BEAVER S. S. LINE WDI‘EEKLYIBETEVE‘EN l uebec onlrea . an vol-poo a ’ CALLING AT ' QUEENSTOWNA 5mg ‘ELFAST H , MURRAY, BEAVER LINE, Montreal, Que. 70 King Street, East, Toronto. Large double Driving Belts :1 specialty. Sand for Pnce Lists and Discounts F. E. DEXON 6L CO The Newell Patent Unlveml Grinder. Leraj'ghgr _B§1ti_ng ! Proprietors. 95 81:. J times-at. was Montreal. These Mills save time. grind any kind of grain very fast n d w I t II 0 ll lsnpnuï¬gh L a. rgigr ,_ 7-5.; we 1 a wet 3 NA“ on same principle with different style of cutter, grinding phos- phates. gold and silver ores. quartz. plaster clay, bangs. flab-gcrgps. bark. M. Please call 6361-3656? Bail-timid. 'For lowest rates and all particulars apply to â€"â€" FOR THE â€" citizens Insurance 00., of Ganada. E-stahlished 1864; â€"Capital and Assets. $1,426,985. â€"Goverument Deposit $122.000 Cash.â€" Ag the Company transacts Fire, Life. and Accxdent business. a proï¬table agency is thus offered t9 those soliciting jnaprance gislgs: Vuvnvu w yum", --.-V..‘_ __, Special terms to those "who HiQéVaiuhble con- nections. Farm property insured as low as by Farm Mutuals. 7 Address. llead (mice. 179 St. James street. Montreal. WThe stock of this Company is held by many of the wealthiest citizens of Montreal. Maï¬iziéflid $5,000 Paid 011 Marriages. Over $100,- 00 Paid in Beneï¬ts to Date. ISSUE IN 1333. [IVER $2.nuu.rnrnn. [11â€"511 Line Royzpl Mail Steammghipg Agents Wanted. Smlmg during winter from Portland every Thurs-day. and Halifax every Saturday to Liverpool. and in summer from Quebec every Saturday toLiVerpool, calling 3.: Lou- douderry to land mails and passengers for Scoutsz and. Ireland. Also from‘ Baltimqu vi? Halifax and S John's ,lLA N. E. to Liverpool fortnightly unng summer months. The steamers of the Glasgow lines sail duxing winter be- tween Portland and Glasgow. and Boston and Glasgow alternately; and during summer between uebec and Glasgow and Boston and Glasgow egery vyeg . For freight. Eassage, or other information apply to A. Sc umacher & 00., Baltimore; 5. Cunard & Co, Halifax: Sheasc Co., St. John's N. F. : \Vm. Thomson &Co.. St. John, N. B.; Allan & 00.. Chicago; Leve & Alden, New York :H. Bourlier, Toronto ;Alla.ns, Rae 8:00., Quegaec; H. A. Allan, Portland, Boston, Mon- ï¬'eél Weighs but 6 pounds. Can be carried in a. small valise Illustratiun shows Machine in boiler: Satisfaction guaranteed or monev refunded. _ $ 1000.00 REWARD FOR ITS SUPERIOR. Washing ma.th light and easy. The clothes have that pure whiteness which no other mode of washing can pro- duce, No rubbing required. nu friction to injure the fabric†A 10 you old girl can do the washing Ba well as Washing made pure whiteness w duce. No rubbi fabric. A 10 yea “Lame; peysqn. flu mu“ Am. To place it. m every household rm; Pmcz HAS Bum REDUCED to $2.50, end if not found satisfactory. money refunded. See what. the “ Cansda Presbyterian," say: about ibâ€"The Model Wanker and Bleacher which Mr. O. W. Dennis offers to the public has many and vnlunble advantages. It. is n. time and labor anvlng mwhine, is substantial and enduring. and is Very cheap. From trial in the household we can testify to its excellence. Delivered to any express oflicein the Provinces of On- tario and Quebec. Charges paid $3.00. Sand for clrculm. Agents Wanted 'rl'beionly bompany in Canada that has {mid a. élaim Premiums smll. Address, Eli. W. DUNHAM NQW on Iliad. A}l_ Pulling! g "éEm‘ng-Ge m2. Kim-€365; . w. DUNIIA M. Wayne guNPa‘fea‘Cgu Illinois. (35 went at Chicago. 0110 .- . ,,_ .____._ TORONTO BARGAIN HOUSE, 213 women STREET, Tonom‘o, on. From France in America. EHEET METALS. FIRE CLAY GOODS. CHEMICALS AND OILS. 9!] PER OEHT OF ALL HORSES Manufacturers of Star Rivet . W. DENNIS, ASSOCIATION. UNDOUBTED SECURITY. Ort’ era to igwortrsolicited‘ MUTUAL AGENTS WANTED. “WQIO All Ever Imported 11 A8 IKPOBTED m 84,000 §§ Washer Award of Gold and. Sihier Medals] NB“ ELL & OHAPIN W. B. WEBBER, Secretary. Hamilton. BLEACHER GLOBE Sold In 11 Months. Wa'.terWoods THE MODEL BUY ONLY THE El lull'l‘0‘ ONT. w. mm memvnj: 4 50 STALLIOIS lb MAKES AND