Daily British Whig (1850), 18 Oct 1902, p. 10

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EDUCATIONAL. Classes Re-opened on MONDAY, Oct. 6th, 1902. Afternoons Monday, Wednesday i day, from 5:9 to 4:30. ag Ia Saturday mornings, 10 to 12 o'clock. | : CHAS. E. WRENSHALL, i >= MUSIC ~~ MRS. CLERIHEW WILL REOPEN HER 1 A : in ber 1st. For terms and 211 University Avenue. PIANO LESSONS Miss C. M. Clerihew, undervraduate Toron- © College of Music. 211 University Avenue. KINGSTON COLLEGE - BUSINESS KINGSTON. TOROS COLLEGE BUSINESS A TORONTO. Largest and = SGHOOL OF ART best equipment in Canada. Unequalled facilities for securing positions. ' 821 Queen Strept. Kimgeton. } SEND FOR CATALOGUE Confederation Life Buildings, Toronto. TO-LET. HOOD FURNISHED ROOMS, WiTH Op without board, 101 Queen street. HOUSE 191 BROCK All modern Livingston & Bro. ---- emt ts ct mt ------ FOUR GOOD FURNISHED ROOMS, WITH , wi modern conveniences, at 191 University Avenue. STREET, 9 ROOMS. ements. Apply to C. mr. ae eesm---- ee mm ee ei 43 KING STREET, WEST, BEAUTIFULLY situated, facing the Harbor. Rent $240 and taxes. Apply to Kirkpatrick, Rogers & Nickle. HOUSE, 7 ROOMS, NO. 56 BAY STREET Detween Bagot and Rideau streets; also stable and sheds in rear. Apply 45 Wil liam street. re ---------------------------------------------------- A BRICK HOUSE, NO. 25 NELSON STREET near Brock sirees, eight rooms, rent oheap. Apply No. 45 Wilham strees, uncar King sureet. 11 AND 13 WEST STREET, 5 ROOMS. 1/3 Stuart, 9 Rooms; also other dwell 's, stores: and offices. J. S. R. McCann, : Brock street. > RICK RESIDENCE, 199 BROCK STREET, 1 condition; modern improvements. 11 rooms. Apply to The MH. D. Libby Co., 78 to 82 Princess street. STORE OCCUPIED BY R. ALEXANDER, NO. 111 Brock street, with refrigerator, fix- tures, etc., for pork and mead trade. Ap- Ply to John McKay, Jr, 151 Brock street. - POSSESSION AT ONCE, THAT AIRY Dk- sirable house on the corner of Bagot and Gore streets, near the park. Modern in every way. Daisy hot water heating ana in perfect order. Apply to Felix Shaw, 115 Bagot street. . MONEY AND BUSINESS. LIVERPOOL, LONDON AND GLOBE FIRE Insurance Company. Available assets, $61,187,215. , In addition to which the Policy holders have for security the un- Limi liability of all the stockholders. Farm and Citv Property insured at lowest i rates. Before renewing old or giving new business get rates from STRANGE & STRANGE, ta. MONEY TO LOAN IN LARGE OR 'SMALL sums, at low rates of interest on city farm property. Loans city and county debentures. 8. C. McG of Fr Loan and Tavertmont Senkty. posite the Post Office. TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS IN sums from thousand to ten thous and dol - particulars apply GODWIN"S INSURANCE EMPORIUM, over Express Office. Market Scuare. .. ARCHITECTS. WM. NEWLANDS, ARCHITECT. second floor over Mahood's corner Bagot streets. trance on Bagot street. POWER & SON, ARCHITECTS, MERCH- ts' Bamk Building, oorner and i streets. 'Phome 212. - OFFICE, Store, Ea ARTHUR ELLIS, ARCHITECT, OFFICE site of New Drill Hall, near corner of Queen and Montreal Streeta. HENRY P. SMITH, ARCHITECT, Aner Building, Market Sguare, ETC., 'Phene UNDERTAKERS. Prices the "lowest. 90. Night Calls-- 8.'8. OORBETT, FUNERAL DIRECTOR, 281 Princess Kingeton, Successor to W. M. Drenman. Carriages Carriages : EVERYBODY Who has rubber tires on their carriages are well pleased with the ease and comfort they enjoy in driving, if you have not got them on your camriage you should send to LATURNEY and have them on and enjoy your JAMES LATURNEY, CARRIAGE MAKER, 390 Princess St. Kiagston. A BIG PART \g Of the earnings of a jewelry business is its gain in repu- tation, and, we feel, that our Fall Stock , of Fancy Rings and Watches, are just the kind of goods that will further advance us in. the confidence of our customers. IE SMITH BROS." Jewelers and 350 King Opticians. er t. - INVESTMENTS --IN-- REAL ESTATE "7. 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Sent sealed on receipt of 12cents to pay post- ages, full regular one dollar box, with valuable medical book rules for health, what to eat-and what. to--aveid.-- Ne duty, no inspection by Custom House, reliable Canadian Company. Write at once; if we could not help you we would not make this honest offer. QUEEN MEDICING CO. P. 0. Béx A, 947, Montreal. Gy TON (ZL Wi With our handsomely illustrated new catalogue the greater portion of your Christmas shop- ping may be done at ome. Write for it, and it will be sent to Joo, of charge, by return mail. If on receipt of arti- cles ordered you are not perfectly satisfied, yeur money will be cheerfully refunded. JL TU SILICA RD) it 1) ALM AT FUEL LOG. CALL AND SEE: IT STRACHAN'S HARDWARE. { Some Book Reviews " Public Men and Public Life in Canada,' Recollections ' of Parliament and the Press, by Hon. James Young, Galt, Wil- liam Briggs, Toronto. Since the confederation of the pro- vinces into one vast Dominion there have appeared few books more entitled to consideration by every Canadian than this volume from the pen of Mr: Young." A few words concerning the author may lend to the book an ad- ditional value to thesaverage reader. In 1553 he became editor of the Dum- fries Reformer,, of Galt, and from that time onward was closely associ- ated, though in a subordinate degree, with the great men and movements which he so graphically describes. He served as a member of parliament, as a member of the Ontario legisla- ture and as treasurer of the province. He is also known as the author of a history of Galt and Dumfries. He was for many years a close friend and ar- dent ' admirer 'of the Hon. George Brown, and was also intimately asso- ciated with the men who led the mem- orable struggle for responsible gov- ernment in Upper Canada and with those who laid the foundations of our great and glorious confederation. It will thus be seen that Mr. Young is well equipped for such a work as he has undertaken. His style, though not abounding in highly polished sen- tences or rounded periods, is clear, vigorous and well suited to the strenu- ous times of which he writes. The au- thor takes up the thread of his his tory at the dawn of the railroad era in Canada. He follows it through the early struggles for responsible gov- ernment, the fierce conflict between Up- per and Lower Canada, the formation and failure of the federal union, the famous coalition government, the un- ion of Brown and Macdonald to carry confederation, the besetting dangers and fhe ultimate triumph of the clori- ous scheme and the birthday of the new nation. All these topics are frought with great interest to every loyal Canadian, for they lie at the very foundation of our country. In dealing with these questions the au- thor must deal with those men who were so closely connected with them and with the growth and development of our country. And it is here that the real merit of the book lies. Mr. Young knew the men of whom he writes, their records, their ambitions, their worth, the part they played in the great work of their-day. His pen- pictures of them are picturesque, dis- criminating and clear. They will be treasured when much of contemporan- eous literature shall have been forgot- ten. He describes them as he sees them in the midst of their work, al- lotting to each his proper worth. And what grand old names they are-- Brown, Macdonald, Mackenzie, Mc- Nabb, Dorion, Cartier, Galt, McGee, Macdougall, Sandford~ Macdonald, Mo- wat--names that shall live as long as the coniereation continues to exist. The hook is an important contribu- tion, to Canadian history and bio- graphy, and one that should find a favored) place incevery library in the Dominidn. Though the author was somewhat of a politician himself, he has written his book on broad, gene- rous lines. The party rancours and passions" have died away with the years, but the great work accomplish . the strife is set forth in The personal Sharustenty 1s ed amid lucid style. 1 C tics of the leading statesmen of day are exceedingly well portrayed. In referring to Sir John A. (then Attor- ney-General) Macdonald, the 'riter savs "Although. he 'sometimes jok ingly aescribea himsell as 'a rum 'un to look at but a good 'un to go,' he had an intellectual face, strongly marked by acuteness, firmness and ver satility, and at this period (he bad just passed his_forty-lirst birthday) a lock) of dark hair fell over his fore- head a la Disraeli; giving him an un- doubted resemblance to that eminent British statesmen." In comparing the two rival leaders, Messrs. Brown and Macdonald, Mr. Young terms them Fhe «Pitt -- and Fox of Canadian public life." © Con- tinuing he says : "Though so opposite mentally and physically, they were in many respects not unevenly matched. Mr. Brown was powerful in body, powerful in debate and poweriul with his pen. He wield- ed a claymore both hepvy and sharp in parliamentary discussions, and which was still more powerful on the country rostrum. He naturally took the side of the masses of the people, and of reforms like, representation by population," upon which he worked up public opinion until they could he no longer resisted. . 'Un the other hand, Mr. Macdonald was agile physicially, had a natural gift for party management, and ~ in debate = his weapon, though possibly not so powerful, was at least quits as kien as his great antagonists. He was no _less successful on the public platform, where his jokes and funny stories ~with which his speeches were freely interlarded--were often afore ef fective than a logical argument would have been. But whether in parliament or on the stump his alertness in tak iny advantage of any slip of his op ponents and in piloting his party safe ly through political difficulties was at once remarkable and unequalled by any of his contemporaries. "A field-night in the old parliament of Canada, when these two creat poli tical ¢ladiators, then in the pring of were pitted deainst cach debate, seldom members and pitch of excite- not easily manhood, other in some great failed to the spectators to gu high ment, and was an event erased from the memory." Early in the book Mr. Youpg. speaks of the journalistic enterprise of Cana dians. "The press of Canada," he tells us, "was conspicuous at an carly date for ability: and indepeutience. In enumerating a number fof the then flourishing. papers he pays this kindly tribute to the Whig: "The. British Whig, 'of Kingston, and the Journal. and Express, of Hamilton, wefe then promi journals. The Whig ix still the front, ahd is, in fact. more vigorous now i its old age than ™it was in its vouth." There are few more interesting chap- inthe "Bok "than those dealing' with the formation of the union be- tween Upper and Lower Canada and the political | deadlock that followed. arouse vers When parliament pet in 1564, the, Md donald-Dorion government had a maj ority of only one or two, and no im- portant legislation was possible... This pectiliar position (which, by the wav. | resembles: that of a government. of more modern times) gave rise to not a few amusing jokes. "The standard one was," says Mr. Young, "that 'Sand- field Macdonald didn't possess a drink- ing ahajority; a man daren"t go out to drink for fear the ministry would be defeated before he got back.' In fact, one notable attempt whs made by a western conservative member who represented a riding not a thous- and miles from the town of Stratford, td defeat the government in this way. He hired a carriage and invited two or three reform members from ridings adjacent to his own, to view the beau- ties of the Ottawa river generally and the town of Aylmer in particular. Vhey accepted, but whilst the enjoy- ment was at its height the waggish entertainer quietly slipped off with the carriage, leaving the ministerial™sup- porters nearly ten miles from the par- liament buildings, and a vote on a non-confidence motion' about to be taken. The government and its sup- porters had to speak for hours against time until their 'drinking majority' could be hunted up. It was only at the last moment that the missing members walked into the hpuse, foot- sore and weary, having walked all the way back from Aylmer. The division was taken and government. was again saved by its famous majority of one." The great array of facts that are here presented in entertaining stvle, the names of the leaders and the posi- tions they filled in the various govern- ments, the personal portraits of these men, the famous speeches of the lead- ers, the tracing of the gradual erowth of the spirit of confederation and the many other subordinate subjects form a history that, when woven tocether by a strong thread of reminiscenes will last. Several chapters are devot- ed to contemporaneous events in oth- er countries, such as the United States civil war, an interview with Horace Greely, in New York, a visit to the old land, and impressions of Gladstone, Disraeli, © Salisbury and Palmerston. To some these references may cnhance the value of the book. may relieve the continuance - of an otherwise unbroken story of political happenings; but to some readers the chapters seem slightly out of place. In referring to the close of the United States civil war, the author quotes the lines y "Truth forever on the scaffold. Wrong forever on' the throne, ete." The above lines he ascribes to Tennyson, whereas they are from a poem entitled "The Crisis," written by James Russell Lowell. 'Mr. Young has produced a good work, and his "recollections of Cana- dian public men will be treasured hy his countrymen, as they well deserve to be. -- Richard Whiteing, whose novel "The Yellow Van' is to appear in The Cen- tury, beginning in November, made his first striking success 'with "No. 5 John Street." Mr. Whiteing is in his sixtieth year, and his ancestors have heen farmers' living in Yorkshire: He was born in London, studied art in the Government School of Design and became an engraver; but at twenty- five he made a hit with a short story in the London Evening Star, and so took up journalism, which finally "led to authorship. "The Yellow Van' op- ens with the marriage of an English duke to an American '"'school-ma'am." Mrs. Wharton's story in the Novem- ber Scribner's is in an entirely new vein for her. "The Lady's Maid's Bell" is a ghost story that succeeds admirably in its mysterv and sugges- tion. ®& Miss Julia Magruder's storv in the November Scribner's, "Harry of Eng- land," is delightfully full of old-fashi- oned sentiment and romance, and cen- tres about an incident at' one of the New York horse shows. Stella Statements. Stella. Oct. 15.--The gnnual mission ary meeting" in connection with the Prisbyterian church takes place next Tuesday evening. The Methodist mis- sionary meeting will take place on or before the 3ra of November. Mr ana Mrs, W. Richard lost an infant child Fast week The infant child of Mr. and Mrs. J). Glen also died last week quite suddenly Rev. Mr. Bowan has returned after. over two weeks visit in Cincinnati. Mr, Lockhart, Syden- ham, has heen visiting his daughter 9 Mrs. Chown=jor g couple of weeks. Miss Maggie Johnston, has returned from Minnesota. Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Gedvin, Hamilton, are visiting old friends here . -, Delicious Drin Ks and Dainty Dishes BAKER'S BREAKFAST ABSOLUTELY PURE Unequaled for Smoothness, Delicacy, aad Flavor Our Choice Recipe Book, sent free, will tell how t you make Fudge and a great variety of dainty dishes from our Cocoa and Chocolate. 2 ADDRESS OUR BRANCH HQUSE Walter Baker & Co. Ltd. 12 and 14 St. John Street MONTREAL, P. Q. THE DAILY WHIG, SATURDAY, OCTOBER is. + Canadian Woman's $ News Letter. : From the Canadian Syndicate. Ottawa, Oct. 15.--Their Excellencies, the Earl and Countess of Minto, re turned this week fram their shooting trip in Manitoba and the North-West. Her Exeellency's love of outdoor sports is well known, but it is not so well known that in addition to her other accomplishments, she is an ex- cellent shot and numerous trophies, in the way of wild fowl, proved her skill. Her daughters also enjoyed the sport and. bore offi no small share of the honors. It is probable that the vice- regal party may spend some weeks in Montreal shortly, Lond Strathcona having placed his beautiful residence at' their disposal. This matter; which is still in abevance, will he decided within the cours®ofeq day or two. .- . 9 TN The widow of the late Sir John Bourinot is a great favorite in Ot- tawa society, and will have the svm- pathy of many friends in her recent bereavement. Lady Bourinot is a very voung and handsomg woman, having been the third wife of the late clerk of the commons, and is noted for her winning manners and artistic gowns. She is a manager of the Ot- tawa branch of the Victorian Order of Nurses, and as acting convenor of the entertainment committee has often made »y charming hostess at Victorian Order teas. Lady Bourinot, w ho, be- fore her marriage, was Miss Isabel Cameron, of Toronto, is the devoted mother of two small "sons, but the children of Sir Johh's previous mar- riages have long sihce 'grown up. - - . - Lady Henry Somerset, resident of" the World's Women's Christian Tem- perance union, arrived in New York last week, and leit immediately for Canada where she spent 5 week in pleasuring hefore going to. Portland to attend the ynnua! meeting of the American Women's Christian Temper- ance union, which opened on the 17th. 'In Lady' Henry's party gre her cousin, Miss Cameron. an artist who makes a specialty of decorating the interiors of ocean liners, ana Rev. Mr. San. ders, rector of the Church of Brom- lev, St. Mary's, London. Lady Hen ry has been giving much of her time of late to a settlement in connection with 'Mr. Saunders' church and Mr. Sanders intends to visit some of the leading settlements of the Unite States while in that country. Lady Henry: will return to Canada in time to attend the provincial W.C.T.U. con- vention to be held in Toronto at the ena of the month. She was inter- viewed while in New York, and among other things she saia that intemper- ance was on the increase among all classes of English women. The young women's settlement, which was opened about a vear ago in To- ronto by the Dominion Young Wo- men's Christian association, and which has since served as the headquarters of the association, has grown so rap idly that the héadquarters have 'n temporarily removed to 123 St. George St., Toronto, the home of the president, Mrs. Harris, a place suita- ble for permanent offices having not yet been secured." Miss Sara Carson, founder of the Christadora House. New York. who has been acting as organizing secretary for the Dominion Y.W.C.A., has decided to remain in Canada as a worker at the Toronto settlement. - - - - The Ottawa City Union of King's Daughters and Sons has now fairly started upon a work which was initi: ated last year. The union has or ganized u Guild and through the kind- ness of" u friend has securea the lease for three years of 5 large house in a locality close to the business part of the city. "Through the kindness of iriends, 'the house has been renovated, | artistically papered and prettily fur- nished. The Guild is the headquar- ters of work among the young girls of the city. Te, cofiee and cocon can Le purchased ior .two. cents per. cup and a lunch of bread and butter is added for three cents more ana here working girls may spend, amid pleas- ant surroundings, the spare moments at midday or on Saturday night. A Girl's Club is being formed and' classes are being organized for the members. The- Guild is open every night until hali "past nine, and young girls may find there in social company, reading or music, banishment of the loneliness of the long winter evenings. | The ior- mal opening of the Guild took place this week. - - LJ » The Montreal Women's club has ar ranged to have g talk during the win- ter, hy a leading newspaper man on * How News-is Obtyined and Given to the Public." The idea is an excellent WHY Woo 8ir, I have just come round myself to tell you that you have absolutely spoiled a pair of blankets on me, I have! Yes, sir, you have ! . Surely you are mistaken, madam ! 1 am not mistaken. | sent round my little girl a few days ago fora good strong soap to wash out some heavy In all innocence I used what you sent me, and the result is that my blankets are just the skeleton of what they were. They are ruined, sir, and it's your fault! Yes, but I sent what I usually send in such cases. What you usually send! No won- der Mrs. Moore, my neighbor, com- plains of her clothes wearing out; I find you usually send her the same soap. But, madam, 1 always give my cus- tomers what they ask for. - Had you named a particular brand of soap you would have had it. Named a particular brand! How was I to know anything of brands ? But I know better now, and I know what ruined my blankets--and my hands are in a nice plight, too ! 1 can assure you, madam, that it is not my desire to sell anything that will be injurious to either the hands or clothing of my customers, and 1 shall be glad to know how you prove that what I sold you injured your blankets and your hands. Well, 1 was telling 'Mrs. Neill my trouble, and she lent me a little cut- ting, and here it is; you can read it : " Dr. Stevenson Macadam, Lecturer on Chemistry, Surgeon's Hall, Edin- burgh, describes the destructive pro- perty of soda upon wool very graphi- cally, ** After mentioning how strong alkali such as potash and soda, disastrously affect cotton, linen, and wool, he says : "On one occasion I employed this property of soda in a useful way. There was a large quantity of new blankets sent to ope of our hospitals, which, when given out, were said by the patients to be not so warm as the old blankets were, and that led to an investigation as to whether the blankets were genuine or not. They looked well, and weighed properly, and I got a blanket sent to me for examination and analysis. We found soon that there was cotton mixed with BLANKETS WEAR ? THIN. A SCENE IN a GROCERS STORE. : | the wool,. and the question was as to Separating the two, because they were thoroughly woven throughout, and it was only by detaching the fine fibres from each other that you identified the cotton fibre. I fell on the device of using soda. "I took a bit of blanket and put it in a vessel with soda, and boiled it there, and very quickly the Wool got eaten away by the soda, and there was left behind the cotton as a kind of skeleton--a sort of ghost--ot the original blanket out of which it was taken. I mention this merely to indicate to you the pernicious effects - of using caustic materials, which, when employed strong by themselves, affect woollen articles in this way, and which, even when not very strong, will more slowly, but with equal cer- tainty, tend to destroy the woollen bre." Now, I want to tell you that we neighbors have had a talk over the matter, and we are not going to have our clothes and hands ruined in this way. Several of our neighbors who know have proved to us that Washing Sodas, Potash, Chloride of Lime, and * soap substitutes " are most injurious to clothes and hands. *" Free alkali " in soaps is practically the caustic soda that burns the clothes. Why, you dare not keep Caustic Soda in a tin canister; it must be in an earthen jar, or it will even corrode the tin ! Now, it's for you to provide us with pure soap without free alkali, or we must find it elsewhere. Madam, you enlighten me! So many soaps are advertised as pure, that I really took little heed to any difference between them. I have one, however, that has medi- cal certificates of its freedom from freg alkali, It is guaranteed pure; and the makers offer $5,000 reward to any one who can prove it is not pure, and further, I am authorized to return the purchase money to any one find- ing cause for complaint. : Let me see it! Why, Sunlight Soap! It's a beautiful clean, fresh- looking soap, and this Octagon shape is very handy. Give me five bars. Note by the grocer.--This whole neighborhood is using Sunlight Soap now. Ihave no more complaints, Ve NO room in my store now for resinous ©0NCoo- tions of alkali poisons : but it is not the grocer's fault if the public are satisfied with common-soaps. If the public ask for Sunlight Soap--octagon bar--we give it them. fd FALL OPENING of Bhe Leading Shoe Styles of Canada and the United States. "Np We are showing in our windows this week samples of the best and Jatest styles of Men's, Women's and Misses Fall Shoes of the best makers in America, a few of the names of the up-to-date manufac- tures here given will be positive proof of the excellence of our im- mense Stock now open for inspec- tion : - ORNE & GROVER, Boston, Mass. KROHN & FECHHEIMER, Cincinnatti. WALKER & WHITHAM, Cam- pello, Mass. < The famous Crossett Shoe A. ABERNETHY, for | XT | Men made in North Abington, Mass. . FLORISHEIM & CO., Chicago. GEO. A. SLATER, Montreal, Que. J. D. King & CO., Toronto, Ont: VICTORIA SHOE CO.' Toron- to, Ont. SOVEREIGN BRAND, London. JAS. McCREADY, Montreal. J. & T. BELL, Montreal. JOHN McPHERSON & Cco., Hamilton. : We have just received a carload of Trunks and Valises, which we will sell at a very low price for the next two weeks. ' 123 and 125 _ Princess Street... = mg The Ideal Beverage JOHN LABATT'S | .ondon Porter Full of the Virtue of Malt and Hops. Perfectly Agreeable to the Most on, and if ali women's organizations would take pains to inform themselves | on the subject they would confer a hoon on the newspaper women who have to report their procecaings. | Feminine misapprehensions regarding newspapering are many, but one of the most troublesome is the inability to appreciate the mnportance of early copy. Any time before the newspaper goes to press is thought to be time enonvh, und that there is any differ ence between mews from the seat of war. which every one knows does get in at the last minute, and news of , church social is seldom considered | Another annoying wisapprehension -is | that newspapers know everything hy intuition and are independent of = the ordinary means of acquiring know ledy Reporters are supposed to know things without being told, and those who take the least trouble that thev are correctly inform £d will eSmplain. most # loudly about to see their mistakes. But this is generally | speaking. . There are exception and | every woman reporter has a small | company of "stand bys." w ho save! her from being reasonable of others and without ! whom. she would .qesuredly have 10 en! oat of business, | | One Short Puff Clears the Head. | Docs your head ? Have vou pains over vour the breath | offensive ? These are certain sviptows ! of Catarrh.- Dr. Agnew's *Catarrhal Powder will cure most stubborn in a marvelously short time. If you've had Catarrh a week it's a sure cure. | IT it's of fifty vears' standing it's just as effective. 50 cents. For sale hy H cases B. Taylor and Henry Wade.--357. driyen mad by the un | le London City 5 Clrendnosdl S57, 'arn Lmslod, Delicate Palate. JAS. IMcPARLAND, AGENT, KING STREET. KINGSTON. Witlond Tonk d Loner, Sugland, Gotablished 7556 ; Sidup Capital, @Facerve Fond ESTABLISHED 1890. . © £3,000,000. £5, 000,000. ° "PHONE MAIN 4303. W.F. DEVER & CO... STOCK & BOND BROKERS. 'WE EXECUTE ORDERS IN DOMINION COAL and DOMINION STEEL om Boston Stock Exchange, over ow private wire, for cash or mesyia. BOSTON, NEW YORK AND CHICAGO. . We solicit accounts , of kisted stocks rout 19 Wellington St. East., Toronto.

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