A nm to the Prism: 0! louvalnâ€"Convlcu Col-signed Io Living Tombo. In the whole of Europe there is but. one prison in which the systr'mo celluldive of absolute isolation by day and by night. is still enforced, and it; has. on that ground, a strange and sad celebrity. That one prison is the Maiaon Centrale of Lon- vain. ' In England and in France prisoners are submitted to less severe penalties, for although they are condemned to silence, they at least work in common, walk in common, pray in common. and conï¬ne- ment in their cells is only a temporary measure recurred to in case of an insubor- dination or misbehavior. The question now peniant in France of replacing the actual penitentiary system by the solitary system adopted in Belgium gives interest to the details of a visit paid to the prison of LOuvain. There are about twelve flights of stops, containing about sixty seats ench, but as the circle of the chapel is divided by ï¬ve or six immense partitions, into each of which the prisoners are carried similtan- eously, the operation takes comparative- ly only a. short time. From his stall each convict is able to see and follow every movement of the priest who ofliciates at the altar on the central platform, while he cannot even catch a glimpse of his right and left hand neighbor, owing to the height of the dividing doors? nor can he look over at the opposite row, The buildings all converge to a central apsis, whence a. Warder can easily survey the six immense avenues or wings, con- sisting of two stories of cells. While some slight repairs were being done to one of these cells, a ï¬gure suddenly ap- peared standing motionless at the doorâ€" a mysterious and ghastly apparition, clad entirely in white linen, head and face closely masked by a hood of the same material. Air was admitted to eyes.nose and mouth by four round holes. Obey. ing a. rapid sign from the warder, the ï¬g- ure turned to the wall, and crossed its hand behind its back. It was a convict. Even through the apertures of his con. cealing headgear, the prisoner of Lou- vain must never catch a. passing glimpse of any human face beyond his keepers, and no breath of the outer world must ever pass upon his shrouded cheek. He wears his linen hood summer and winter, but during the cold he is provided with warm brown woolen cloths. Labor is com- pulsory, and the days are spent in one un» varying monotonous round of self-same duties. The buildings are situated on the an. terior boulevards, nearly outside the town. They date from twenty years back, but their tall reddish walls have re- tained the freshness of newnesss. Ad- mission to the interior can only be given by the Minister of Justice. who grants the permission with so much difï¬culty that the rare visitors are always treated with the utmost courtesy and considera~ tion, and enabled to see as much ,of the interior administration as is consistent with the rules and discipline. At six o’clock the peel: of an organ wake the cmvicts. They come from the chapel, all the doors of which are thrown open, and the prisoner who can play the organ strikes the ï¬rst chords. This is the signal for all the others to rise, dress, and make up their beds and bedding. The music lasts for ï¬fteen minutes, and may, at the will of the play er, consist of religious anthems, operatic airs; waltzes or ï¬olkasâ€"notes that must strike with weary signiï¬cance on the ears of some of the wretched beings cloistered there. They do not all belong to the dreg; of so- ciety. Leon and Armand Pettyer are there expiatiug the murder of the law- yer Berneys, whose trial two years ago startled the world by its cynical revela- tions. At the last sound of the organ the ward- ers must each ï¬nda. man at his work. Breakfast consist-s of half a pint of coffee and bread, and the other twu meals of the day of soup and vegetables. Three times a. week the convicts have fresh meat, but never wine. The convict who has earned a certiï¬cate of good conduct, however, can procure some at the prison canteen, as well as beer and tobacco in stated quantities. Each day the prison- ers are taken out of their cells in rota.- tion for solitary exercise in separate yards. The rest of the time is entirely given to up to the accomplishment of their alloted portion of work, except on Sunday.which 158. day of absolute rest. Between the religious services the convicts are at li- berty tn, employ their liberty in their cells as they think proper. The prison library contains a. considerable collection of books of travel. and such publications as “Magasln Pittoresquc from which each man can make a selection. Only those who can neither read nor write are com- pelled to attend school for instruction be- tween mus and. vespers. This takes place in the chapel itself. Nothing can be more striking than the construction and internal arrangements 0! this chspel. It is a. huge circle, or wheel, consisting entirely of superposed flights of steps, like a. circular and revers- emmphitheatre, the centre of which fo 5 a. raised stage, on which stands the altar, towering far above the heads of the phantomlike congregation. Each row of steps is divided into compartments or pigeon holes, just large enough for a. mu to sit and kneel. When the hour for di- vine service has come, the ï¬rst cell is opened by a warder, and convict N o. 1 is lead out, conducted to the chapel, and entering the row to which he belongs, walks to the furthest compartment, which at once closes upon him. Then only No. 2 leaves his cell and goes through the some performance. And so on till all are settledâ€"no men being permitted to move until the one immedistely preced- ing him has entered his allotted pen. After mus they are all taken back into their cells in the slme order And with the some precautions. W0) NDERF UL FACTS. which is hidden by: hoarding higher than himself. and which as effectually shuts out from his view those above or below, before and behind him. The cells are clean and wall arranged. Daylight is admitted by a small window beyond the prisoner’s reach. The ven- tilation is perfect. In winter the mouth of a hot air pipe g.v9s sufï¬cient hcah,and in the evening the necessary light is pro- cured by a gas jet, to which there is no access from the interior of the cell The furniture consists of s. washstand, a com- mode On the best sanitary principle, a shelf supporting some pewter utensils, and an 1ron bed. The bedding is a foundation of sacking, a mam-ass. two sheets, one blanket in summer and two in winter. and a bolster. The convict has to fold and put these things away. The bed itself 15 taken to pieces and placed against. the wall, forming a table in front of which is a. stool. The remain- der of the space is taken up by the imple. ment necessary to the convict’s obliga- toxjy daily task. Some of the convicts are shoemakers ; others bookbinders, tailors, carpenters, even smiths. The new comer, who know no trade is taught one. Those who hive had a superior education are employed in copying student’s essays. The produce of each man's labor is divided equally be- tWeen the State and himself. This lat- ter portion is again sub divided, one-half being put aside for the day of his libera- tiun, if not incarcerated for life, and the other deposited at the canteen for his private use. His earnings never exceed two or three cents a day. In the evening, labor ended, he dines and goes to bed. To the dreary silence of the day succeeds the dreary silence of darkness. The rules of the prison are such that the convicts must replace their hooded masks as soon as the doors of their cells open. They cannot expose their faces even to their warders. If, perchance, a face is seen by a doctor it is poled by the long sunless shadow in which it lives, and the want of bracing. blowing air, forreveu the daily walk of an hour in the prison yards is at best only exercise in cramped passages between two high walls, partly roofed, shut in by iron gates, stretching out like the sticks of a gigantic fan, and where a few stunted plants soon wither and die. The prisoners have that flaccid fleshinesss which comes from absence of movement and stimulating activity; yet in contradiction to the opinion prevailing in France that no man could stand soli- tary conï¬nement for ten years without succumbing or getting insane, it has been found not to be the case at Louvain. Two of theinmates have dweltthere since 1864, the date ofitsfoundatlonbeingtransferrecf to the Central house after a ten years’ imprisonment at Ghent. They hadbeen condemned to death, but, owing to the virtual abolition of the penalty of death in Belgium, the King had commuted their sentence to the perpetual entombment of their present abode. When prisoners have deserved an alleviation of their penalty by ten years of uninterrupted good conduct. they are sent to Ghent, where the rules of the prison allow of their working in common. An Intelligent Colt. Tom Lenard, oosunmsn for A. I. Mlgeon in Torrington, he: bought a. 5-year-old oolt in his charge a. veriety of tricks. He will stand with his two fore feet on the end of a barrel, lie down, or kneel at com- mand, and raise his fore feet ss if in the act of shaking hands. He will stand up- on his hind feet, and imitate the comb- xnsn in rubbing the floor with his shoes. He will also follow through the barn and if the coachxnan olfers to go up stairs the colt will put his two feet on the stairway in an attempt to follow, and if chance of- fers he will steal the whip and run round with it in triumph in his mouth. He will also pick a. brush from the floor and endeavor to brush himself, end like Dike Turpin’s Black Bess will lie down as if dead. The secona'ary bulldings 0 mini!) the in- ï¬rmary, laundry, linen rooms, bnth rooms, bakeries, and kitchens. all kept with n scrupulous cleanliness remarkable even in that land of unrivalled cleanliness Huge irou pots contained an abundance of excellent potatoes boiling for the even- ing meal, and the bread, although brown, was sweet, crisp, and of better quality than that rationed out to the army. None but isolated cases of revolt have ever taken place at Louvain. These are punishable by incarceration in a sub- terranean dungeon containing nothing but a. single wooden bench. where nearly total darkness prevails. The time of re- tention within its walls cannot exceed eight days. during which the prisoner is kept on bread and water. This mode of punishment is rarely resorted to, us there is another which is viewed with for great- er dreadâ€"the privation of work! For those silent recluses, this labor is the only link which connects them ever so remotely with the living world. It is more than an occupationâ€"it is a. favor. a recreation, almost a pleasure, and the threat of taking his tools from him never falls to insure the submission of the rebel. Whether or not the system of solitary conï¬nement has greater advantage for the repression of crime and the security of the community than the system of la- bor in common now generally adopted in penitentaries, and which only half sequestntel the offender from his fellow creatures, is a question not easily or lightly solved ; but it is impos- sible to leave the Maison Gsntrsle of Lonvain, admiroble as its administration is in the minutest details, without a feel- ing of slmost superstitious horror at the vision of those miserable beings Cloister- ed in eternal isolation, doomed to un- broken silence, buried in their livery of infamy a in a shroud, the face of each remaining as sealed to his six hundred companions of crime and shame, dropped into the some tomb With himself, as if the lid of a ooflln had closed upon It and the hand of death forever obliterated its features. Two beautiful young damaels meeting on Fulton stream the other day, says the Brooklyn Eagle, beamed with delight: as they scanned'eaoh other'a Summer tinery. ‘I And whére have you been, my 10V6;' asked the brunette. “ Travelling," responded the blonde. †Been gone thrne months, studying our own country. Ml said a lady's education was not ï¬nished till she had gone abroad, and ’twaa vulgar to go to Europe without knowing 30111915111113 of One's own coun- try."_ " u“ How grand.†sighed the brunette, whose night-seeing had been limited to Central 1?er ï¬nd Qoney Island. “ Yes, by; pa didn’t want to go a lit, :0 ma and I planned and planned. Final- ly I fell in love with. a plumber, Pa reasoned with me, an aid ma, but; I got. ï¬rmer and declared I'fl'lmve my an way. Ma. gob awfully uneasy (before pa) and Lâ€"well, in short, pa concluded to let me travel." v ' you andâ€" n “ Oh 1 than you had a. chance to study Iome of tgogULSouthex-n problems one is always about: 2" “ 1 don’t i-emember them ; but pa ï¬rst bramde me over miles and miles of ï¬atbleflelds, and I saw whereâ€"0h 1 What's his name 1â€"011 1 that big general: you know whorl ‘meau 2" :1 †Well, we saw thereâ€"Oh l Grant, that’s it ; where Grant and L96, yes, I’m Iure b’was Lee, fought, or bombarded, or surrendered ; anyway. I don’t remember details. And then we went to Mecho, and that was awful ; flies and sand, and p8. just were me out: with his old Spanish Lawns, andxgpaveyards, and dug up things. But ma said it; was all important, and I wanted to be able to describe them all ; go I just got through somehow." “Yes,†responded the ethaneagerly “ never mind hm name." ' ‘ “How lovely to travel and improve one'a self I"murmured the listener wish an admiring eye on Kitty’s Lerraâ€"cotta bonnet. “ So ma says. Well, then we went to Utah. to Salt. Like City.†“ Oh 1 those horrid Mormons I Did you .eally see them T‘ " Yes indeed, and nude a study of them. Ma. said that was proper. Were there two or threedays, and such dowdies as those women are, and the menâ€"well, they are too insigniï¬cant. Pa took us to theâ€"theâ€"Oh, Templeâ€"no, Tabernacle, 'Twas ever so queer, and ma. got me a. book on s‘atismcs and things; so I’ll be way up, see?" :‘H‘o'w splendidly you’ll be able to converse with everyone ! I quite envy you.’_’_ “ Yes, ma says that few girls have such opportunities, and I mean to im- prove mine. Then we've been to Cali- fornia, and oh, such big trees and those wretched little Chinamen. San Francisco isn't much to see. The shops are not any nicer than Brooklyn. Bub St. Paul is too lovelv. Got‘ one of those stylish looking ulsters. Will you believe me '1 Pa want.- ed to drag me off to see the falls ofâ€"ofâ€" Millie or Minnelmhe, just because Whitâ€" tier. or Lord Byron, or some Tom, Dick, or Harry wrote a. poem about it. But we only had two days there. and I was a. fright.†“And you have seen all the great. grand Westâ€"the splendid mountains, the rglling prairies, and breathed that pure axrâ€"" “ Oh, my ! yes !†interrupted the tourist eagerly, “ and we visited a real mining camp. But I soiled my new silk jersey. I we: so disgusted. But paâ€" well, once get him started and there's no going beck. Chicago and Cincinnati are not like New York. Thank goodness,we are home. Travelling is improving and all, but pl- did msnn e to take us to some horrid places. Ngow ms says, ‘ Eu- rope next Spring, to give a ï¬nal polish.’ P9. is awfully cousrary, but; in». and I are patient with him, and we generally work together. I guess he will give in.†“ Of course he will,†murmured the brunepte, _ “ fox-he must be proud of yeti.†The beat of a book is not 12‘ which it contains, but the tho it suggests, just as the char: dwells not: in the tones, but in of our hearts. “ Oh ! he is, but pl is queer and thinks it silly to show one's feelings. But: come round to lunch some day, and I'll tell you more. Ms says next thing to travell- ing one's self is to cultivate those who have enjo ed the privileges.†“How nd you we, dear I†“ Good-bye.†And the sweet creatures separated, on. buying her ribbons wlth In envious soul, the other selecting rushes with com- placent prlde. The golden rule in dress is to keep clear of extremes. The well-dressed man never wesrs anything striking or peculiar, and his garments are always of the best materiel, one suit that cost $50 being preferable to two suits that cost $25 esch â€"and the tsilor’s risk, it will be observed is just the same in both oases. We are bound to add, however, that the gentle- man who has but one suit instead of two can not escape embsrrssmeut when it comes to sending his trousers to the shop for the purpose of having the wrinkles pressed out of them. The proper out for cost and vest is that which makes them ï¬t snug around the waist and loose over the chest, as the polite citizen is thus ad- monished at every turn that he will not only look better, but also feel better if he stands straight. Dr CArson's Pulmonary Cough Drop; should be used ln Ilmoat every household in Canada ll; 13 one of the beat and alien cough remeniea known. In large bottle! at. 50 seats You naughty thing. But where have beei} 1†.13.) Just everywhere. First South Advantages of Travel. The Well-Dressed Man. T: Winch loug‘lt: lullle A New Way to Pay old Debts. Shakenpeane tells how this can be acâ€" complished in one of his immortal plays ; bul debts to nature must. be pald on de- mand unlcau days of grace be ubtamed through the use of Dr. Pierce’s “ Golden Medical Discovery.†In is not “a cure all,†but; invaluable for sore throat, bronchitis, asthma, catarrh, consumption, and all diseases of the pulmonary andother Irgans, caused by scrotula. lvr “ bad blood.†Scrofulous ulcers, swelliugs and tumors are cause by its wonderful alterative acbipn. By druggisbs. Ngver punish your child for a faulu m which you are addicted yourself. Don’t Wear Cumbersome Trusses when our new method without use of knife, is guaranteed to permanently cure the worst cases of rupture. Send two letter stamps for refarence and pamphlet. World’s Dispensary Medical Ass ciation, Buffalo, N. Y. In company set a guard upon yr tongue, in aohbude upon your heart. Dr. Pierce's Cumpound Extract. of Smart-Weed combines French Brandy, Jamaica, Glnger, Smart-\Veed and Cam- phor Water. the best possible agents for the cure of diam-hm), cholera morbus, dysentery or bloody-flux and colic, or to break up colds, fevers aha inflammatory attacks. FREE, Se Toronto. ( Rlilroad, Bn' kinlg 166"}; Agents wankd. COOK & BL Toronto. $75 .l phy thoroughly Munh’. by experienc'd ope'atnrn. AKlf‘TPi-W with ahmp DOMINION TELEGRAPH IN‘ STITUTE,32King E. Toronto. JAB THORNE Mir. OR BALEâ€"AT A BARGAINâ€"OR WILL TAKE in port payment. farm or city ‘properiy for nearly new anw min D"d rut mill; at station on main liueCm- Ida Southern Railway, wean. Apply Box 163. Landon. INETY SEVEN ACRES‘THIRTY BUSH PINE, oak. em; 4 milvs from Buntimd; Wurh lumber- men'n attention; would sell timber vepu-le: Soil, build- Lnga. we", arch-rd. never-(Ailing uni-«Jam; lugs nir- nzm. term! may. Annly to H A NARRAWAY Cedar St Brnmford. or A R. NABRAWAY, Echo Place. RUBBER STAMPS i?) A bank of 1 i (‘mvhahim aeK [Tainu Puhlishir N. J. Hand am ARM FOR saw-36.000. ONE-THIRD CASH balance any term! : 1501c!“ : parts law 21, 25. 26 wuoeaiion Z, cowmhip anmounb. countvy Elam: ciay 10:11:95 acres c'ewed. bnlnuce erl wooden : living spring creek ; guod Menard. Add'eu. Mrs. ELIZABETH Tnm‘znn, Sparta. P‘ O :or J. V. TEETZEL. Hamimn U BUSINESS COLLEGE, iARCADE, YONGE ST,TORONTO. Finest. rooms in America. Pram-i cal in every department. Teachers pushing and ener- getic, and know what they teach. Endowed by line lending bminrsa men of Ontmin. its graduates ue ï¬lling positions of trust in every city, town and village in Canada. Sand for new circular. C. O‘DEA. Secretary. FOR’PIEKSï¬TiSEWING smiption. Seals, etc. Bronze Medal: the last (out yen at Toronto .rxhnbition. Agents wanted KENYCN. TINGLEY, a STEWART MFG. 00.. 72 King St... West. Town: Clapperton’s Spool Cotton! Wax-mined FOIL Length. and!» run smooth on any sawing mat-bins See um. CLAPPIRTOF‘S name xs on the label. MFor sale by all Dryâ€"Goods I)- ale". I I . West, ’I‘oronro, writeal Have Inflated tor yen-u with Dyipspim ; felt grant dlacnss utter eating : dared nul em. hreml or potatoes; Ghouiht there was no help for me ; eh“ I mush euflar while I lived : was inA duced to try " Compound Oxygen" at 73 King street West; a: the end of three wean couid eat my food I withad. and gained six pound! : have now tnken one month's arenuuent, and feel like a new man “together: no eignrof rhsnmatism,whioh his troubled me every The mosh mnvaulaue meat to: farmers in their busy nelson. These menLl are cooked and letdy for ma Sold b grown through the Dominion Bend for pm: to W. LARK P‘ O. Box 342 Manama)- HARD HAMPS Conlpound Oxygen. U LINDSAY, GROL‘ER. 60 KING STREET SEWER!) SAUSAGES†Running In connection wit-h the Grand Trunk Hail way of Canaan. Baum; from Quebec every Bncmdu during the summer monthsmnd Emu: Porclnud even Thursday during the winter month; Sailing dues bu: PORTLAND. BITISH AMERICAN BUSINESS COLLEGE, :‘ARCADE. YONGE Winn} for years Toronto. Dec. 4m noulrtul, “ 13m Ihooklyn, Jun. Isl. Ema 9!.vï¬iwses ‘ Etgnmet 'arud lowest mtua. marked thus 2 1-; ND 31.00 fdr Gn- keu‘; Compenmu Mmmiun Line m Steamshlgs y~ \2(ng> ,rflvâ€"ffr’ $5 (JOHNSTONSFLUID BEEF. ng felt, and q ELEC A PEEK"; 'Ricï¬xï¬bï¬d.‘Vi MERIDEN BRITANNIA 3mm Q’vlmru mm and ï¬ilver “glam V New York. Meriden (CL), Chicago, San Francisco, London, (E715). BRANCH FACTORYâ€"Cor. Cannon and Wellington Streets, Hamilton, Ont. 'D $1.00 for 03- keu‘a Compendium And lenm {a lite We"; w. UOOTE. Mmon Ark. 174 8. A, T0370] AND A MONTH GUAb AM’EID to AGENTS everywhere, Circulm iand sdtnmp {or "ply. W. A HOATH k 00.. an: a. and berth. ‘Inwrmedsm $35. Steer-83. u thus. The saloons and staterooms In Iteamen thus: ‘ Me amidahins, where hm little motion and no cattle or sheep Ire carried on them. For particulars apply to any Grand Trunk Bulk-I; loom menu of the Company. or be DAVID Tomamw a 1‘0†RAPHY: Railwny and Commercial Tele. ,8uge:0abin' uebea Fawn-$13031 @117. (Tmrzahimzeut free by the niou PublishingCa.. Newazk . J. Sand. Bumps lor poutaze A book of 160 page: on I UPIUREâ€"EGAN’SIMPERILL TRUSS. with a Spirml Spring ; the‘ be“: ever invvnbed. Too! Len Years to perfect. Cuves every child, 8 out of 10 adults. Holds the worsl Hernia. during hardest work or money refunded. 25 year! practical expu- lieuoe. Ulrcularn free. Address. The EGAN IMPERIAL TRUSS 00.. 23 Adelaide 8t. Eat. Toronto. Ont. USE ONLY All kind: of 1: en] atamw madé no order, 7 Datera, Sell‘Inkera Genera) Assam. l‘oronw. Jan. 1511: noun-cal. " 29m Md fancifljyvsesln étc‘ NKER 36 King St West; METAL 8: RUBBER wraps. 9! eyerv Many purchaser: having through I. similarity of names purchased other wares under the impression that the were of our manulacture. we are compel - ed to ask special attention to she above TRADE MARKS The fact that our name and Trade Marks are beiusao close- ly imitated aheuld be a suflicient gumm- gee tort};qu "oghntionr wares are the BESTIN'THE WORLD. ._:) mmcrmns 0F (:â€" to Liverpool 855 $144, according u 835. stanza. m BABG. New M99 Mo Mm. 2091 ALVS F Ontariu Furm or City nmpevty, G40 ncrea lahd in Sonris Did-rich, “ the Garden of Southern Muitabn." of which there has been brnkau and backset Ibis season. 3)!) none. which is all r~ say to now the seed on in the ï¬ning, The ï¬rst crop would more than pay the price In land. Terms liberal. Address Box 163, London Ono. M?! FREE Toronto, 03?; H. WILLIAMS. sun-g Ann FELjnsoFEn, Manufacturer and Dealer in Turret] Fan, Rnoflnz l’nch. Building Paper. "aw-pet Fen. dc..at lowesl Prices. Leaï¬gher Beglting ! Belling during winter from Fenland every Thursday and Halifax every Saturday to Liverpool. 3nd in eummel from Quebec every Saturday to Liverpool, calling at Don donderry to land mails and passengers to: Scotland end Ireland. Also from Baltimore v‘m link!“ and BL John’l N. E. to Liverpool fortnightly durum~ summer month. The “earners of the Glasgow lines as during winter be tween Portland and Glasgow. and Boston 5nd Gluaou alternately ; and during summer between Quebec end Glygowpnd Boston and Glasgow every was}. ma wh iuï¬'hia ihe power man: to r brain. and music) Brain 1‘! pen, Obigeney flops. Rename: :stoel 50in; Chan; For frei ht. passage. or other information apply to . Schnrpachor &: 00.. Baltimore: :5. Cunard 8; Co. Hahtax: Shank 00.. St. John’l N. F. : Wm. Thomson 65 00.. St. John. N. B. ; Allan 8; 00.. Clncago; Lave 55 Alden. New York :H. Bourlier. Toronto :Allans. Rae 8500,. Quaileo; H A..A1Ln.n "artlamd. Boston Mon- tres. ' munul I: {he F E. DIXONA’U cu All?!" Lilla 30W] 31341.1 Steamhins. MYRILE MW ONLY WElGHSSIX POUNDS! WHUUU I'IEIIHIIIU 10R. Washing and. light and easy. The clothes have that pure whiteness which no other mode of wuhing can produce. No rut- bing required-no friction to injure the fabric. A ten- year old girl can do the washing as well as an older per- son. To place it in every houpehold, the price has been reduced to $2.50. and if not found satisfactory mo refunded. See what the JAPTIST says: From ‘perso examination of its construction and experience In its use we commend it as a simple, sensible, scientiï¬c Ind successful machine. which succeeds in doing its work Id- mirahly. The price. ‘60. places it within the tench o! alL It is a. time and abor-sevins maohine. is Snbstah. tisl Ind enduring. and is cheap. From trisl in th hauls- hold we can testify to its excellence! [3' Can be carried in a small “11mm Satisfaction Guaranteed of Money Remna- , ed in one month "om date 0! purchase. $1.99 Q REM??? C. W. DENNIS, 'l'l'll‘.‘ MUDEL 'f Washer, â€"~ANDâ€" BLEACHER. 0R flattening and bringing Into condition, Harm Cows. Calves, Sheep and pigs. The Yunnan: CATTLE FEEDER is used andrecommended byï¬rmllu breedera. Milk Cattle produce more milk 3nd butter It fatten: in one-fourth the usual Vtixpewnm} amen @094. Price 25:81!“ sud Ex. A donut box conhï¬i 200 Feeds. Ibis In Kin; Mum. Bun, Toronto. imwn donhla Driving Belts 3 Bymialtv. son r Prim: Liane and Dlacounta Buy Inflow: W hem-in a red fin tag; that Lorillard's Rose mnfï¬ne cut; that Lormard's rwy Clippings. and that Loriilard’s Snufqm a best and cheapest. quality considered ? « ‘3' Please mention this paper. :08. SALE OR EXCHANGE FOR FmST-CLAS through I. mad other 1 that the Us compel - a the above not that. our eingao close- :ient. guaran- nas a." thn * DELAIDE 87. EAST, mo Grey Nun St" Montreal. Importers of m Pipes, Portland Cement. imqu Tops. Onnndn Cement, Vent Linlugl. Wnber Lime. Flue Covers. Whiting. Fire Bricks. Plaster of Paris, We Ola. Born. Roman Cement. Chin. Ln. Manufacturers of, 90v n19 by “magmas evar‘ AUTION! annï¬mflirÃ©ï¬ ol‘ Sit-r “1:79! 2133YONGEZST..DTORONTO. th: only prepapntlon of the kind which a an umuutntlous. together with the tiuz, prupeniea of beef. and the only iuh has lhq powe; to ,aupply nourish- NONE OTHER GENUINE. By return "nit ï¬ooily‘a Now iDross Cathing‘ HUGH MILLER and 00.. Aumovmunu. 01mm“. 167 King]: East. Toronbn In Bronze Letters. DIE? Each Plug of the THAT Lorillaxd’s Climax P111 IS MARKED 1847 Rogers Bros. A1. R" U. AWARE N33 ELUD BEEF Currie (' TRADE F'wu denrinqion Ta " Synam of P 0F. M0 )DY. MARK. FOR I TS SUPER THE MODEL vBaaaSz .1 apd M33113 uJNow York. Tonomo distant), to 50mg!