"" 'fiiwi»w!^lfg9m^ "WWP reW. Childs niversary of Iphia Public Swain. At jing heavily, ary business ecame one of the country, he man who g-room under itant factor per, is living pension list, still in work- Southerners, -^^^^Ijgmmmm ilfOV9tMrVL K|CTK m Inth«whde of Europe thore is hot one prison ill which the $ysteme eMulaire iof »l»olute irohition by day and by night lia atiU enforced, and it hw. on that f (jronnd, a strange and sad celebrity. That one prison is the MaUon Centrale of Lou- vain. „ In England and m France pnsonen are rabmitted to less severe penalties, for although they are condemned to sUence, they at least work in common, walk in common, pray in common, and confine-; ment in their cells is only a temporary measure recurred to in case of anicsabor- dinatiou or misbehavior. The question now peniant in Franca of reidatmig 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. The buildings are situated on the an- terior boulevards, nearly outside the town. They date from twenty years back, but their tall reddish walla 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 difficulty 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 rales and discipline. 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 figure suddenly ap- peared standing motionless at the door â€" a mysterious and ghastly apparition, clad entirely in white linen, head and face closely masked by a hood of the s^e material. Air was admitted to eyes,nose and mouth by four round holes. Obey- ing a rapid sign from the warder, the fig- 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 passiiig 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 aie spent in one un- varying monotonous round of self-same duties. At six o'clock the peals of an organ wake the cmvicts. They come from the chapel, all ihe doors of which are thrown open, and the prisoner who can play the organ strikes the first chords. This is the signal for all the others to risa, dress, and make up their beds and bedding. The music lasts for fifteen minutes, and may, ab the will of the plajfer, consist of religious anthems, operatic ;iirs; waltzes or polkas â€" notes that must strike with weary significance on the ears of some of the wretched beings cloistered there. They do not all belong to the dreg of so- ciety. Lgon and Armand Pettyer are there expiating the murder of the law- yer Berneys, whose trial two years ago stirded the world by ibj cynical revela- tions. At the last sound of the organ the ward- ers must each find a man at his work. Breakfast coDsis'.s of half a pint of coffee and bread, and the other two 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 certificate 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 inseperate yards. The rest of the time is entirely given to up to the accomplishment of their alloted portion of work, except on Sunday, which is a day of absolute rest. Between the religious services the convicts are at li- berty t employ their liberty in their cells as they think proper. The prison library contains a considerable collection of books of travel, and sucn publications as ^^Magasin Pittoresque fioxa which each man can make a selection. Only thoee who can neither read nor write are com- pelled to attend school f )r instruction be- tween mass and vespers. This lakes place in the chapel itself. Nothing can be more striking than the construction and internal arrangements ot ih.l-3 chspel. It is a hujje circle, or wh;el, consi'tinaf entirely of superposed fligh-s of steps, like- a circular and revers- ed amphitheatre, the centre of which f j"ms a raised stage, on which stands the altar, towering far above the heads of the phantom like congregation. E«ch row of stepjiis divided into compartments or tJjg'ion holes, just l*rge enough for a man to sis and kneel. Whan the hour for di- vine s^Tvice has coane, the first cell is opened by a warder, and convict No. 1 is I'ir.d out, conducted to the chapel, and enteriusf the row to which he belongs, walks to the furthest compartment, which at oucd closes up'jn him. Then only No. 2 leavaa hij cell and goes through the same performance. And so on till all are settled â€" no man being permitted to raove until the one immediately preced- ing him has entered his allotted pen. Alcev mass tbey are all taken back into their ceils in tho same oidsr and with the saijie precautions. There are about twelve flights of steps, can Joining about sixty seats each, but as the circle of the chapel is divided by five or sis 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 erocy movement of the primt wh» officiatea at, the altar on the cenixal pl«tfo£n while he cannot even catch a glimpse' of his right and left hand nelghl^, owing to the height of the dividing doors, nor can he look over at Um opposite tow,. vlusli JS thaa Mt****, bdxnr, b«fan«ill Ib*odlaat*clMHiaiid wll Daylight ia adai^ tgr » muU beyoad tha piiwhi^ leadi. 1 tilatMm is pecfset. In nimur Hm maaA of a hot air ^ipe gT«a aoflciwrt hft,a« d in the evening A» naeiWMiT lig^ i pvo- cozed by a gaa jet, to iHiiaa mn is ao aoceaa from the interior of Htn ceB Tke foznitoreconsista tf a waabataod, a com- mode on the beat nnitaiy prino^Ie, a shelf Bupporting aome pewter nteiudla, and an Iron bed. ISie beddxdg ia a foundation of nclmig, a mattiaM, two sheeta, one blanket in aammer and two in winter, and a bolater. The oonviet has to fold and put these things a^y. The bed itself is taken to pieces ami placed against the wall, ioNoaul a taUe in front of which is a atooL The remain- der of tiie space is taken up by the imple ment necessary to the convict's obl^^. tory daily task. Some of the convicts are shoemakms others bookbinders, tailors, carpentefs, even smiths. The new oomer, who knows no trade is taught one. Those who have 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- tion, 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 paled by the long sunless shadow in which it lives, and the want of bracing, blowing air, for even the daily walk of an hour in the prison yards ia 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 confinement for ten years without succumbing or getting insane, it has been found not to be the case at Louvain. Two of the inmates have dweltthere since 1864, the date of itsfoundationbeingtransferred to the Central house after a ten years' imprisonment at Ghent. They had been condemned to death, bub, owing to the virtual abolition of the penalty of death in Belgium,the King had commuted their sentence to the perpotual entombment of their present abode. When prisoners have deserved an alleviation of their panalty by ten years of uninterroptsd good conduct, they are sent to Ghent, where the rules cf the prison allow of their working in common. The secondary buildings cDUtain the in- firmary, laundry, linen rooms, bath rooms, bakeries, and kitchens, all kept with a scrupulous cleanliness remarkable even in that land of unrivalled cleanliness Huge iron pots contained ^n 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 mod* of punishment is rarely resorted to, as there is another which is viewed with far great- er dreadâ€" the privation of work I For those silent recluses, this labor is the only link which connecjs them ever so remotely with the â- living' world. It is more than an occupationâ€" it is a favor, a recreation, almost a pleasure, and tJie threat of taking his tools from him never fails to insure the submission of the rebal. Whether or not the system of solitary confinement 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 ha^f sequestrates the offender from his fellow creatures, is a question not easily or lightly solved but it is impos- sible to leave the Maison Ctntrale of Louvain, admirable as its administration is in the minutest details, without a feel- ing of almost superstitious horror at the vision of those miserable beings cloister- ed In eternal isolation, doomed to un- broken silence, bnxied in their livery of infamy as in a diroud, the face of each remaining as sealed to his six hundred companions of crime and shame, dropped into the same tomb with himself, ^s if the-lid of a coifln had closed upon it and the hand of death forever oblitwated its features. An Intelligent Colt Tom Lenard, ooaohman for A. 1. Migeon in Torrington, has taught a 6-year-old colt in his charge a variety of tri^. He will stand with his two fore feet on the end of a barrel, lie down, or kneel at com- mand, and rais^ his fore feet as if in the acb of shaking hands. He wiQ stand up- on his hind feet, and imitate the coach- man in robbing the floor witii his shoes. He will also follow throi^h the ham and if tiie coachman offers to go np stfors the colt wiU. put his two fe^t on the jttairway m an attamp^ii? fofi6.«» pxA if'ehanee ei- iera he will s^al the irn^: affd irQil coosd ./iiFithit m i^B^sag^ t^^^ ^e will idso pick a hniA ^mmMteTflax and ratdeavor to brush himself, and like Dike Torpm's Black Ben will he down as if litfiB jtm been, 'k^.kif," **TmftSSas^" req^mded tbt ** 3cea,g(mo three months, lAaifing oftr own e jimitqr. Ma said a hti^i edileBtpaa was not finished tin she had gone abiaid. t hJafinlwrQ^Hfi Ifedioil OiMOToy." 2t Ipnot Haootf iaO^- bttf UKrahM^lo for acne the M knowing somethttig of one's owneonn- tiy." **How gmnd," sighed the bronette, whose s«ht-see ig had been limited to Ceotial-Paik aiul Oaney Island. *• Tea, bnt p« didn't want to go a lit, so ma and I fanned and planned. Final- Ijl fell in loTe with a plumber. Pa roâ€" oned witii me, so did ma, bat I got firm^ and declared I'd have my jwn wi^. Ma got awfnllj uneasy (before pa) and â€" well, in short, pa ooncluded to let me travel." ** You nanghtj thii^. But where have you been)" ** Jost everywhere. First South andâ€"" ** Oh 1 then you had a chance to study some of those Southem'problems one is always reading about Â¥' " I don't remember them h^t pa first tramped me over miles and miles of battl^el^, and I saw whereâ€" Oh I what's his name 1---0h 1 that big general ybu know who I mean V "Yes," responded the other, eagerly. ' never mind his name." "Well, we saw thereâ€" Oh 1 Grant, that's it where Grant and Lee, yes, I'm sure t'was Lee, fought, or boml»rded, or surrendered anyway, I don't remember detaUs. And then i)re went to Mexico, and that was awful flies and sand, and pa just wore me out with bis old Spanish towns, and graveyards, and dug op things. But ma said it was all important, and I wanted to be able to describe them all so I just got through somehow." " How lovely to travel and improve one's self ' murmured the listener with an admiring eye on Kitty's terra-cotta bonnet. *„ " So ma says. Well, then we went to Utah, to Salt Lake City." " Oh I those horrid Mormons I Did you .eally see them " 'Yes indeed, and made a study of th^m. Ma said that was proper. Were there two or three days, and such dowdies as those women are, and the men â€" well, they are too insignificant. Pa took us to theâ€" the â€" Oh, Temple â€" no. Tabernacle, 'Twas ever so queer, and ma got me a book on satistics and things; so I'll be way up, see?" 'How splendidly you'll be able to converso with everyone I quite envy you. " Yes, ma says that few giris have such opportunitieSj and I mean to im- prove mine. Then we've been to Cali- fornia, and oh, such big trees and those wretched little Chiitamen. San Francisco isn't much to see. The shops are not auy nicer than Brooklyn. But 8t. Paul is too lovely. Got one of those stylish looking ulsters. Will you believe me I Pa want- ed.to drag me off to see the ialls of â€" of â€" Millie or Minnehaha, just because Whit- 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 West â€" the splendid mountains, the rolling prairies, and breathed that pure air â€" " " Oh, my yes " interrupted the tounst eagerly, 'andwe visited a real mining camp. But I soiled my new silk jersey. I was so disgosted. But paâ€" well, once get him started a"d there's no going back. Chicago and Cincinnati are not fike New York. Thank goodness, we are home. Travelling is improving and all, but pa did manage to take us to some horrid places. Tsow ma says, Eu- rope next Spring, to give a final polish.' Pa is awfully contrary, but ma and I are patient with him, and we generally work together. I guess he will give in." "Of course he will," murmured the brunette, " for he most be prood of yoo." " Oh he is, but pa is queer and thinks it silly to show one's feelings. Bnt come round to lunch some day, and I'll tell you more. Ma says next thing to travell- ing one's self is to cultivate those who have enjoyed the privileges." "How kind you are, dear 1" "Good-bye." And the sweet creatures separated, ons buying her ribbons with an envious soul, the other selecting ruches with com- placent pride. The Well-DreBsed Han.. The golden rule in dress is to keep clear of extremes. The well-dressed man never wears anything striking or peculiar, and his garments tae always of the best material, one suit that cost $60 being preferable to two suits that cost $25 each â€" and the tailor's risk, it will be observed is j ost the same in both cases. We are bound to add, however, that the gentle- man who has bnt one suit instead of two can not escape embarrasment when it comes to sendmg his trousers to the shop for the purpose of having the wrinkles pressed out of them. The proper cut for coat and vest is that which makes them fit snug around the waist and loose over the (diest, as the polite citizen is thus ad- monished at every torn that he will not only look brttur, but also feel better if he stands straight. Br OMMiniPnittaHfyGoDidLSroiM fhonld be used iaaJBMMtcTRXlMiMBhold in CmikIs it ia one rf the beaftodinlUkacii^hsinMdwlnoin. lotlaigeliottlet mSO â€" mi. m d iadodair etfuia, and 'twawTld|isr«»gotl»rEarope withont y serpfnla or " bad Moed.' Sorofulons nloejci, swelBngs and ibmoni are oaose by its wondMfal alterstiTe action. By droggiste. ' Never punish your ohild for a fault to which yon are addicted yourself 9»|i't WeaET Cradhii^^ Trasses when our new method without use of knife, is gOMnmteed to permanently core the wont cases of mptare. Swd two letter stamps for ref erenoe and pampUet. Wwld's Dupensary Medical Association, Boffido, N. Y. In company set a guard upon tongue, in solitude upon your heart, Dr. Pierce's Compound Extract of Smart- Weed combines French Brandy, Jamaica Ginger, Smart-Weed aud Cam- phor Water, the best possible agents for the cure of diarrhoea, cholera morbus, dysentery or bloody- flux and colic, or to break up colds, fevers ahe inflammatory attacks' A P. 209. SEItD 91.00 for Qatkell's Oompsnaium and learn to wri te weU W. COOTE, Marion Ark., TT. B. A. TO.$303 ASTD EXPENSES A MOJSiTH Guak- Iieather Belong 1 your idooUe Driving Belts a spealaltf. Sea Usts aB4 DisQoaata H. WIIAIAHS. SUTE AND FELT RMFER, ilanntaoturer and Dealer la Tarte« Palt, K«efla« mek. BttMtot rapw. Carpet Velc. «e.«a« lawest Prices. 4 AnsLAioa St, East, • Tobimito $75 The beit ef^» be^ iriwt- Oe thoi^ht â- wUdL ito(mtain%%«ibiltithM^twhieh it kaggui^j jost as- the eharm of music dvda not in tiia tones, but in the edloes. of ITREE. Bead Stamp for rtply. W. A HOATH CO., Toronto, Oaaada. ' TELEGBAPHY BaUway and Commercial Teletra- phy thoronghly tansbt by ezperieccd operators. A ddress w ith stamp DOMINION TELEGRAPH IN- SIii-UTJ!:, 32King E. Toronto. JAS THOBNB M«r. FOESALEâ€" ATABABGAINâ€" OB WILL TAKE in part payment farm or oiy 'property for nearly new saw mill and grist mill at station on main line Can- ada Southern Bailway, west. Apply Box 163. L wdon. RUBBER STAMPS AU kiadg of n;et*I stamps made to order. Baters, Self-Inkers, Bailroad, Ba kin«, Notarv and Society sealp etc. Agents wanted. COOK BUNKEB 36 King St West, Toronto. NINETY SEVEN ACBESâ€" TfllKTYBUSHi-INE. oak, etc.; 4milpsfromBrantfo^d; war'h lumber- men's attention would sell timber separate soil build- ings, wel?, orchard, DeTer-fsi'ingFpri'g, gctod large cit- tern, terms easy, Anp)y to H. A Nakraway. Cedar St Brant ford, or A B. Nakraway, Echo Plaoe. FREE A bonk of 160 pages on 03UTtsbip, sent free hy the TToiou Publishing C},,Nt:wak l_ N. J. Send stamps lor poBtage. Ibave s posirivo remedy for tho nburo disease; by tta nas tboosands of cases of the worst kind and of Iobk •tandinif tisve beon cnrod. ludecil, sostrongismylUtS In Its efficacy, ttiat I xrlll send TWO BOTILEd rREB. to- KCtber wltb aVAtlTABLE TUEATISE on tliis Tl'Tt-ssrr. t» anyBaSBrer. Glve-ExpressandP.O. address. JB. T. A. SIiOCUH, lEl rearlSt,KewTork. R. U. AWARE THAT Lorillaxd's Olimgg Fl\:i^ bearing a red tin tag that LorlUatd's Rose Iieaf fine cut that LorlUard's Kavv Clipptnars, and that LorlUard's Snnffs, ars the best and cheapest. Quality considered 7 AV. F P. Currie Co^ 100 Ore7 Nmi St,, Montreal. Importers of •ratal Pipes, Pertland Cenent, OhimneyTopa, Canada dement. Vent Ltniniat Water Ume, Bine Oorers, Whitinc, nre Brinks, Flaater ot Paris, lire Oari B«rax, Roman dement, dhina Hag Manntacturen ot Beissmer steal sofa. Caalr Bed Sprlaga VIRGINIA FARMS W in lands of all kinds. Cittaloinie fn CREAT BABOAINg ' in lands of all kinds. Catalogue frfe. New Map of Va. 16c. H. li. STAPIiEis, Bichmond, Va. F ABM FOE S4LEâ€" S6,000, ONE-THIED CASH balance easy term* 150 seres parts lots 21, 25, 26 ooncesoion^, to wnF hip Yarmouth, county Elgm: clay loan 95 acres c'eued, balaoce well wcode liviog sprliJKcreek; goodotcoard, Add-eas, Mrs. Blizabkth TsETZEL, Sparta, P. O: or J. V. Tbbtzel, Hamiit'.n. BIETAL ft BUBBEB Stamps of every de Bronze Medals the last fotur years HAND STAMPS scription, Ssals, etc. Bronze at Toronto .chibition. Agents wanted KENYON, TINOLEY. ft STEWABT MFG. CO., 72 King St., West, Toronto BRITISH AMERICAN BUSINESS COLLEGE, (ABCADE, YONGE ST,TOBNTO. Finest rooms in America. Practi cal in every department. Teachers pushing and ener- getic, and know what tbey teach. Endorsed by )be leading business men of Ontario, its graduates are filling positions of trust in every city, town and village in Canada. Mend for new circular. C. O'OEA, Secretary. RCPrUBE-EGAN'SIMFEBIAL TBUSS, with a Spiral Spring the" be't ever invented. Took ten years to perfect. Cures every child, 8 out of 10 adults. Holds the worst HerDia, duringhardest work or money refunded. 25 year practical exper- ience, rirculars free. Address, The BGAN IMPEBIAL TBITSS CO., 23 Adelaide St. East, Toronto, Ont. FOR PLEASANT SEWING â€"USE ONLY Clapperton's Spool Cotton! Warranted FULL Length, andto run smooth on any sewina machine See that Clafpxrtois's name is on the label. SS'Foi sale by all Dry-Qoods Dealers. OompoTind. Oxyg-en. LINDSAY, GBOCEB, 60 KING STBEET Wejt, Toronto, writes:â€" Have ruffered for years with Dyrpepsia felt great distress after eating dsred not eat bread or potatoe3 ^houKht there was no help for me that I must f uer while I lived was in- ducied to try " Compound Oxygen " at 73 King street West; attbeendoftbreeweesB could eat any food I wished, and giined six pounds have now taken one month's treatment, and feellike a new man altogether; no tign of rheumaticm, which IMS" troubled me every winter for years. Allan Line Royal Mail SteamsMps. Sailing during winter from Portland every Thnradap and Haufax every Saturday to Liverpool, and in sniniiiei from Qnebee every Saturday to Liverpool, oalling at Lod dondeRy to land maila and pasaenf^rs tor SooUand and Ireland. Also from Baltimiwe via Halifax and St. Joiin'l N. F., to Liverpool fortnightly during summer moidbi. The steamen of the Glasgow Ones sail during vrinter be ttreen Portland and Glasgow, and Boston and Glasgow alternately and during summer between Qnebee aad Glasgow and Boston and Gbtsgow every week. 'For freight, passi^ce, or other informatioB apply to A. Schumacher Co., Baltimore 8. Cmnard ft Co, Halifax Shea ft Co., St Jobn'i N. F. Wm. Thomson Co., St John, M. B. i Allan Co., Chicago; Leve ft Alden, New Tork ;H. Bonrlier, Toronto Allans, Bae ft Co.. Qaebeo H A. Allan Portland. Boston Mon- treal cTA~utToir! Each PlHg of the MYRTLE KAVY IS MARKED T.B. In Bronze Letters. NONE DTHER EN1IINE. THE MODEL Washer, H. â€" AND â€" BLEAOHERi ONLY WEIGHS SIX POUNDS! tSr Can be carried in a small valise.*Ek Satisfaction Caarantced of Himey Keffu4« i ed In one month trom date ot pnTcbase. Di nnn DcufADn^oRiTs super- wliUUU liLllflllll lOB. Washing mad* light and easy. The clothes have that pure whiteneas which no other mode of washing can produce. No mfc- bing reaniredâ€" no friction to injure the fabric. A ten* year old girl can do the washing as well as an older son. To place it in every houediold, the price has reduced to $2.50, and if not found satisfactory monev refunded. See what the :iA.PTl8T says: From 'peraonal examination of its oonstruction and experience in its use we commend it as a simple, sensible, stdentific and snocessCul machine, which suocieeds in doing ite work ad- mirably. The price, $2.50, places it within the reach ot alL It is a time and labormavinn machine, is subetan. tial and enduring, and is cheap. From trial in th bouie- bold we can testifrto its excellence.' SN0KEDSAU8AOES. The moat convenient meat tor farmers in their bosy season. These meats are cooked and ready tor vmt Bold by grocers tiirough the Dominion Send for prior to W. OLABK P. O. Box 343 Montreal- Dominion Lioe ot Steamshipa Banning in connection with the Grand Trimk BaU- way of Canada. Bailmg from Quebeo every Saturday dnring the summer months, ana from Pcntland ever; Thnrsday dnring the winter months. Bailing dates tmn FOaXLAlTD. TwrontOi â- ontreal. Jan. ISlIi Toronto, Bec« 4tli Monireal, ' IStii B-ooklyn, Jan. iUt Bates of passage Cabin. Quebec to Liverpool $50 $60, $65, $80. Betnm,|«l,$lW.$U7,tl44.aeaordingtr steamer and berth. Intermediate $36^ Bteerage, a( lowest rates. The saloons andstaterboms in steamen marked thus are amidships, where but little motioc felt, and no castle or sheep are carried on them. Fo; particulars apply to any Grand Trunk Ballway local agents of the Company, or to VAV19 TOKKANCe A rO, General Agents. Montrea, C. W. DENNIS, 213|T0NeE:ST.,DT0B0NT0. l^ Please mention this paper. FOB (Fattening and bringing into condition. Hones Oovrs. Calves, Sheep and ^gs. The Yobkshm Cattle Fekdeb is used andveeommended by first clas s breeders. Uilk Cattle produce more milk and bntt^ It fattens in one-fourth the usnid time and saves food. Price 25 cents and $i. per box. A dollar box oontunr 200 Feeds. HUGH MTT.T.TCn and Op., AaBICTTLTUBAI. CHKIOBX. 167 King Bt Bast, Toronto. For salcby Dmgeists everywhwre. JOHN STON'S FLUID BEEF It l3 the only preparation of the kind which caatiinp all Uieuat'itiona, tc«ether with the -jSimalt tin?, uropcrUvd of bee^ and the only 3a^ wh ten has ihe p.wer to supply nonrlah- ment f o r brain, and muscle. ]V[ ERn)E]sr T^ RiTAJsnnA :)MASOTACTUBEBS 0F(:â€" â€" Sew YotiCi Meridev (Ck), Chicage, Saa Franoiseo, Londim, BBASGH VACSOBX-^Oet. Gaaaon and WdUngbm Streefep, ^m^^on, Qnt. ^i^^a^ Iboy voraliMMn hurtag ttmme^ a rfmilaifty at names punfeaaed otber mimwaikiriim,baatmiadibM» the/ wesKOEoM aMBwftWnia. we «n ooaeadt- edtoaakneeal'aiMMHb to Sie anovA TSADXXASEa XBrCMl that ear ly haWstail slwnMlwa snfflcjeg $aqg teetotha noMfatt gAgm iwwi an tba TRADS 18471 "^tB^^' MASS. p= n^ iliiiiMiMiaiiiiiiBia^ â- lttiaiiiaiilWMiaiiiMis aiBIBBi^MA^^;..^..:A;i-:.. â- ^jfc'-^Aa.^^-.^Yf-Mniiiiffi' "i-V^---^-^"-*-liTi^r iiiirfrii iiiijm-itfir";aifr-ii»rMi-n"i