Daily British Whig (1850), 8 Dec 1906, p. 13

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Noel y grows on you. lakes---with tle picy malt and added delicious- t them. Il your old-time ast and supper, will see from the coupons I Meat, which the children like e started with Orange Meat." 1 added to the already articles given to users age contains a coupon range Meat, Kingston." and- 25¢ packages. much as 15¢ size. ry Se P-- a. $9000000000000000000000¢ . ) li . * ¢ 4 ight Specials M ) : ® . ® ¢ mas Buying ¢ 3 ® : : 3 rrivals and real Christmas 3 ting. a value you'll find $ an inducement that should $ p m. to take advantage of. $ p -------------------- $ o. 1 4 Japanese Kimonas 3 style of fine flannelette in dainty $ with white. sateen, shirred yoke efiect, * wr price £1.50 and $1.75. 4 SALE TONIGHT AT * CLOCK... .. 89c. : 4 ® + 0. 2 s Red Eiderdown Coats 3 we fitting, wide sleeve and turn: ¢ n bow, Edged all round with fancy € C : SALE TO-NIGHT AT ¢ C'CLOCK =... ... 39c. : L$ + 0. 3 $ 'ushion Tops e peacocks, ete., in red and a I amental gift. Regular price 7c o. 4 idered Silk Ribbon broidered: stripes. - Colors, pin! be replaced at 40c. yard. NIGHT AT ~. . 19¢, yard P9000 00000000000 get away from you. Also gains selliag all the time y. nkrupt Stock Co. ssi: 180 vwford's Groceries. { | | 00000000000 0000000000000000000tttlrsllttssssa POPP 99000 0000000900000 904 GO CLO BLO BODO IMPORT Delight, 26c. Ib. ; Princess Street ' vr 5 i |] erm Mrs. Gora B. Miller Says She Will. Now Give Away $10,000 Worth of Medizine to Women. Malo Fort 0 0 11S BENEFTS ¥ WHY UNIVERSAL PENNY POST. AGE IS A NECESSITY. Until a feW years ago Mrs. Corg B.' Milter lived in & Inanuer similar uu that of thousands of other" Very poor wouien of the average small town and She now resides in her one of the most sucCcessiul business wo- men in toe United duatcs. Several years aso Mrs. of a mild and simple would ready piles, Alter preparation that cure female 'diseases women needing the treatment decided to furnish it 10 those who might call for it. She started with only « few dollars" capital, and the- fenfedy possessing true and wonderful producing marvelous cures when doctors and other re vrew 80 rapidly she was several times compelled to seek larger quarters. She now occupies ome of the city's largest office buildings, which she swnis, apd ale miost one hundred clerks andwsienorrap- hers are required to assist in this ureat business. Million Women Use Jt. More than a million women have used Mrs. Milier's bduecciue, and no matior whore you live, she can refer you to ladies In your own locality who can and will tell any suniercr thut this marvelous remedy really' cures women's discascs. Desvite the fact that Mrs. Miller's Lusi- ness 1s very extensive, she is always will. ing to give aid and advice to every suf- fering Woman who Writes Lo her. She is a generous, wood woman and has de- cided to ~ive away Lo women who have never used her nedicing £10,000,00 worth avsolutely FREE. Every woman suffering with Jeu- corthcea or whitish. discharges, ulcer ati ug, disnlacemants or falling of the womb, pr. fise, scanty or painfut periods ularine we ovarian tumors or growths also mains in the head, back and howels bearing-down feelings. nervousness, cresp- ing feelings up the snine, melancholy, de sire to ery, hot flashes, N piles from 8 lnd.. and receive by ma bof in plain wrapver) a 50-cent box marvelous Svecific ; also her valuable book. - Remember, this offer will not last lone for thousands and thousands of womon Who are suffering will take advan- tage of this gencrous moans of getting cured. So it you are ailing, do not sur- fer another dav but send vour name and address to Mrs. Miller for the book and medicine before th: £10 000.00 worth is all mone. is too often forced to overtax her strength in long hours of study. The prudent mother will give her Wilson's Invalids' Port --a sale pre. ventive of anae- mia, poor appetite, dizziness and feebleness. It gives pure, strong blood, sound sleep and a perfect digest- ion, bringing the young life event- ually into the full bloom of womanly vigour. A wineglass- ful before each meal--that"s all. Big botdle--$1. All Druggist: 1 a cake of scap that dyesand washes at the same time. A household world in Kogland. No mess, no trouble, MAYPOLE SOAP Made in England, sold everywhere. toc. for Colors--1se, for Black. Farms for Sale a------ We would pve pleased to show you over toy of the Farme we have for sale. It wil cost you nothing only your time. Ta following is about one-half of our 50 acres. Price $1200 BO = 14 00 100 + » 1800 100 ae 1900 50 a 2000 87 " 2000 100 "2400 100 « » 3000 "5 " 8500 1 - - 4200 I an 4 180 » 5500 100 + * 5900 170 » 6000 216 " 6500 200 8 7000 200 ." 8500 180. » o 9000 280. . « 12000 800 » ¥ 14000 T. J. LOCKHART Real Estate Agent Wellington Street = = Kingston Village. | own palatial | prown-stone resmdencs,~and is considera | Miller lsarned and | curing herself and many of | ner friends she was besieged by so wany | that she ' merit, | failed, the -demand * _Henniker Heaton, M.P., Thorn In the Side of Successive Postmasters- General, Tells of Its Advantages-- Ambitious Aim of the Man Who Has Been a Boon and Blessing to the People--Preserve Family Ties. Few persons deserve so 'well of their countrymen as Mr. Henniker Hea- ton, MLP., that stubborn champion of the people's rights in relation to postage. For years Mr. Henniker Heaton has been fighting the battle of postal progress, and in spite of the deadly influence of departmental red-tape, he has succeeded in carry- ing reform after reform until he has almost made the British an ideal post- office. Bixty important changes have been credited to his great persever- ance. .It is to him that we owe im- perial penny postage and numerous other reforms, and, before long, no doubt, his greatest scheme of all-- that of a universal penny letter post --will be in full swing. Mr. Heaton may be 'a thorn in the sides of suc- cessive postmasters-general, but to the public he is a boon and a bless- ing. Some years ago, in recognition of his efforts to cheapen our postal and telegraphic arrangements, he was presented with the freedom of the City of London in a gold casket, and he has on half a dozen occasions re- fused titles, decorations and honors. In December last he was gazetted K.C.M.G. without his authority. With an Ambitious Aim. The reduction of the twopenny haif: penny rate of postage to a penny is of such supreme importance that I ealled upon Mr. Henniker Heaton the other morning (writes a representa- tive) for the purpose of having a talk with him on the matter. Mr. Henni- ker Heatdn's aim is, briefly (I use his own words), to establish universal penny postage so that any inhabitant of our planet, white, black or yel- low, may be enabled for the sum. of | one penny to communicate with any | other, at the lowest possible rate, and the highest attainable speed: Englishman with Frenchman, Ger. man, Italian or Russian; European with American; Asiatic. with Austra- lian' or African; so that when one soul has something to say to another neither color, nor religion, nor greed, nor diplomacy, nor national anti- pathy, nor latitude, nor longitude, nor poverty, nor any other barrier shall stand between them. To those who are not overburdened with a supply of shekels, a universal penny post would be of enormous ad- vantage, and it was on this point that I commenced to cross-question my go- shead host. To Preserve Family Ties. "I have had a vast number of let- ters from poor people dealing with the subjeét," Mr. Henniker Heaton obeerved; "and some of them have been exceedingly touching. It is the charge of twopence-halipenny, of course, that prevents people from communicating with their friends abroad. When you break into a shil- ling to buy a twopenny-halfpenny stamp the change seems to be very small. Universal penny postage would remedy this; it would have the effect of keeping mémbers of a family, some of whom are resident in distant lands, in touch with each other. At pres- ent, when an individual emigrates, he writes home once a week at first, then once a month, and, finally, he ceases corresponding. If there was a popular rate he would write every week. "Do you know that last year at least 200,900 people from Great Bri- tain and Ireland went to America. There you have 200,000 letter-writers sent at once. The poor emigrants home during the year no less than £1,500,000. That is nearly a day---nearly £5,000 posted da the folk--wives, brothers, sisters--in their village homes; and certainly a proportion of it despatched with' a view to bringing out sweethearts. This immense sum was forwarded in the shape of money orders ranging in value from five shillings to five pounds." The absurdity of the opposition that is being manifested in certain quar- ters towards universal penny postage is rendered apparent on the instant. Every. Friday ,000 British * letters pass through France and Italy for India, Hong Kong and Austr: ia-- distances exceeding 12,000 miles. The postage on each of these letters is a penny. By the same boat a few Brit- ish ers are carried for residents in C twenty-one miles from Do- ver; and on these letters the postage is twopence-halfpenny. A Question Not Easy to Answer. "How can this distinction be justi- fied?' Mr. Henniker Heaton, who had alluded to these facts, asked me. I replied that no sane man could answer the conundrum correctly, upon which Mr. Henniker Heaton put me another poser "Why should a letter to New York cost twopence-halfpenny, and another in the same bag be carried through that city and 1,000 miles into Canada or a pennyr for rain expressed my inability to solve postal mysteries, and we re- mained silent for a moment, reflect np is fortunate that Mr. Henniker Heaton is not frightened by obstacles: A born fighter, h& pursues the even tenor of his way until he, gets what he wants pensate. the Government if, on the establishment of a universal penny postage, a loss during three years was incarred. This generous proposition was refused. In reference to this event Mr. Henniker Heaton observed: Confident of Success. : "Tt is too bad when millionaires of- fer money to make thousands and thousands of poor people happy, that tie Goverment should dechné to ae cept it. No, it won't be much of a battle. We shall Tave yuiversal pen- EE a pe c for the officials anc e » nl the last ditch has been Patronize Whig Advertisers Some weeks back he and | several wealthy men offered to com- ~-« DAILY BRITISH WHIG. bridged over. They are using the same arguments against universal penny postage as "they did against imperial penny postage, and they are ' once more in the wrong. I calculate that when it is possible to send a letter to America for a penny ouy | correspondence with the United States will in the first year be double what + it is now, Pp: will write 6nce a week instead of once a month, and the loss entailed by the decrease in the price of postage will be only £25. 000 for the first year. In the fourth year it will show a profit." Hoalo ve told me, Mr. Henniker eaton," remarked presently, "of the Spbrosiative letters you receive; In Persia. what of the abusive ones?" i Sir ' "I am not the recipient of any a aibiortimer. Durand's ap. abusive letters. Sir William Howard Pro Washington has been re- Ruseel, however, had a rather quaint aoived with sincere EX yressions of pe- communication concerning me some ret in all parts of he United States time ago. It was contained in a post- fhe genuine liking he has inspired in eoript to a note sent to him from a those whom he has met officially or so- man oe Canada, As far as I can re- cially is reinforced by the respect with ar T, It read thus: . which he is regarded by the public. ou know that Henniker Hoaton. 1 say that he is the most popular of Tell that blackguard that he is the the Diplomatic Corps at Was ington curse of my life. All my relatives in is only to say what might be expected County Clare--you know there are a in a British Ambassador, who is na- hundred of them--have written to me, turally on a different footing to the taking advantage of the penny post, representative of any ne to ask me for assistance to enable power at the American capital then to come out to Sansda. A Difficult Position, "I can't recollect having had one 3 : : a. abusive letter on the subject of my This peculiar relation is well under- work in connection with postal re- form. Indeed, I have been over- whelmed with kindness." Of Benefit to Business Men. To haven't louched on the busi- ness side of univegsal pénny postage, Mr. Henniker Heaton," said ¥ ii "The benefits that would accrue through the introductish"of universal penny postage are obvious. Since im- perial penny 'postage was established several hundreds of thousands of pounds have been saved to the mer- chants of the empire, who have the greatest difficulty in competing with foreigners." "Would you advocate a halfpenny inland postage?" "No certainly not. A halfpenny in- * land 'postage is about as likely as the abolition of our front doors." Saying which, Mr. Henniker Hea- ton bade me good-bye. SIR MORTIMER DURAND'S RE. i TIREMENT FROM WASHINGTON. ' British Ambassador On Different Foot. 'ing to the Representative of Any Other Foreign Power At the Ameri. j= can Capital--Why He Retires--A Chicago Tribune, when he says: "Considering the peculiar relations that exist between the United States and Great Britain and the extraordin- ary complexity of the questions that are continually cropping up between, the two nations, the post of British' Ambagsader at Washington may well be regarded as the most important of-/ fice in the. diplomatic service of King' Edward. Its incumbent is required to! fulfill the duties of his mission in such a manner as to promote harmony and good-will with the Government and people to whom he is accredited, with- out, however, sacrificing any of the interests confided to his care; to exe- . cute the instructions received from his chief; the Secreta?y" of State for For eign Affairs in London, and to satisfy those British colonies which by reason cf their proximity to the United States are bound to become from time to time | involved in controversies with the lat. ter. This is never an easy matter. For sometimes the interests of the colon- fes clash with those of the Mother Country, while at other times the col- onies put forward pretensions and * claims upon the United States which the Imperial Government in England does not feel disposed to endorse. In. deed, the British Ambassador at PROFESSIONAL ETIQUETTE. Medical Secrets Were Told In Court and Raise Nice Question. In a recent breach of promise ace tion in England a medical man was closely cross-examined as to the pro- fessional etiquette regarding what had passed between a patient and himself. The medical profession certainly danger of being held up to obloquy in lays it down that such matters ought ils North American or West In- not to be divulged to third parties dian dependences for having neglect- without the consent of the patient. "af to champion with sufficient vigor And the law, too, as shown in a case 8 jsgues which it has been impossible few years back, when a leading phy- 1g reconcile with the views of the For- sician was mulcted in heavy damages eign Office. One of the most thorn for telling his wife about a lady pa- problems, in fact, confronting the Ad- tient, upholds this contention out of ministration in London is the question court. But in the witness box a doc- whether pular sentiment in the col- tor is compelled by the rules of 1aw __gnies shall be contented at the expense as laid down by English judges, how- of American good-will or whether the ever confidéntial the communications jmportance of retaining the latter shall may have been, to answer questions be regarded as superior to all other concerning what has passed and what gonsiderations. It is this that renders Lie noticed. : the post of English Ambassador at The advice usually given by writ- Washington so difficult a one to fill. It ers to medical men is that they should js only men of altogether exceptional appeal to the judge, and, though the qualities that can be selected for the witness will be compelled to answer ffce * | questions, he will thus show that it is ; against his will to speak of his pa- | tients' ailments. Acting thus under compulsion, medical men are absolu- tely safe if slander actions are lafinch- ed by angry patients against them, for such evidence is privileged. In France it is by no means rare to hear of actions being brought against medical men for giving evi- dence regarding their patients' health, and in New York there is a statute which forbids a medical man to dis- ciose any information which he may have acquired in attending any patient in a professional character, Why He Retires. He goes on to declare that Sir Mor- timer Durand has admirably filled tais difficult position. The writer does not discuss the reason for the retire- ment, evidently finding sufficient cause for the step in the two score years that Sir Mortimer has spent in diplomatic service. It is reported, nevertheless, that the Ambassador at Washington was not in accord with the British Foreign Office in the mat- ter of the Newfoundland modus vi- vendi, and that his resignation marks his disapproval of the policy of his i { dation it might be denied from Lon- " don. If not, it is certain that the truth cf the story will not be formally set forth for sixty years, that being the time that must elapse before "confi dential Government documents rela-| ting to international matters may be wsed for purposes of publication. By, this rule the British Government en- sures that any wounds caused by a controversy will have healed before the matter is once more forced on the attention of those wom it concerned. A Triumph At Cabul. Bir Mortimer Durand has been at Washington for three years, he hav. ing succeeded Sir Michael Herbert, who had shortly before followed the venerable Paunceforte. Durand was the cibice of Lord Dufferin, who, as Vieerof in India, had come in close contact with him, and had, indeed, publicly testified to his regard after the delicate. Cabul mission had been 80 satisfactorily negotiated. The Vice- roy's tribute chiefly concerned those diplomatic qualities that the young envoy displayed, but a stronger recoms- mendation to the general public was his courage under fire, which amount- ed to heroism, and earned for hinr the | distinction of 'mention in despatches, an incident almost without precedent the among Ambassadors, It was in his dealings with the wily Bhah and in cheekmating the hostile influence of Russia that Sir Mortimer Durand made his real diplomatic repu- tation. That he was the best British diplomat who ever served in Persia is + an opinion quite generally held, and to him is given credit for Britain's Saving the Babies. os When Alderman Broadbent, a bré- ther of the King's well-known physic- ian, took office as Mayor of Hudders- field, on November 9, 1904, he offered to 'give parents living in a specified district of the city $5 for every child born during his twelve months in of- fice and which lived to the age of a year! The result of the experiment was announced, the second anniversary of its inauguration. The rate of infant mortality in the Longwood district of Huddersfield, which is the experimen- dal area, had averaged 122 per théu- sand for the preceding ten years. The period of the test proved somewhat unfortunate. There were serious epi- demies of whooping cough and meas- les, while the summer of 1906 'was one of the deadliest recorded. The first baby to earn the gift was born on No- vember 10, 1904, and the last on No- vember 8, 1905. The mothers notified the managing committee of the births of these babies. No fewer than 107 re- ceived the gift. Four died and one did not claim the gift and its fate cannot be learned. If, however, it is reckoned as dead the average mortality works out 44 per thousand as compared with the previous 122 per thousand. Mr. Broadbent in anfiouncing result at the Borouglf Council said this reduction in the average to less than one-half of what it-had been was astounding. His promise of the gift of $5 was intended as a stimulus to ma- ternal affection, but to prove his de- sire to help mothers this was done through a committee of volunteer wom- en workers who undertook to advise paramount influence in the Shah's and assist the parents if they so desir- ed. The babies belonged to all classes | a during hia tetime; a ins and there was no discrimination. Some | or Sihco the days of Durand, lived in places which were hardly bet- |-#£.5 ter than slums. Good Work At Washington. He was, indeed, the first full-fledged Ambassador from England to be ap- pointed to Washington, his predeces- sors in office having been raised to the first rank upon appointment, During A New London Hospital. There is probably mo costlier oper- ating-room in the world than that of the hospital opened in London on Nov. ia a A 19 wk is made of marble, so as his neu h oe ete have bose Bo to prevent any accumulation of dust. £ Betwees. the tn Bo nl It has a tessellated floor of Terazzo 3g. bet a Te Ditzies, aud oo " marble, and the walls are lined with Suen ichoy Titi Bho Tan Sicilian marble. Electric heating Mo ty Dumnd owed ix makes it possible to Shialu any de. Li 80id thar Wo Lae a discharged sired temperature, and noiseless fans ;" " nal provide ation. That the patient A oios.ns to sifengties he Sosa may-not-be- frightened bythe instr a] Tw Ana highest Pras Eye ments used in the operation and the Would one br rocnive. Ths ty medica R P 8, ere s - . Iv Rr Fon to the operation hall, where the increasingly difficult, for a better man rdly be chosen. patient is put under the anaesthetic. could hardly be chosen. v "The most beautiful ascortment" of Over fg Years ago we started Christmas high class candy in King- | selling Swift's Seranton coal ston, is at Gilson's Red Cross Drug Too many think of religion as sow Store ing wind and reaping wings, Coal! Coal! Canl! You get the : Pon't fail to see our stock of Christ best in coal at Swift's. mas perfwes: Medley's. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8. HIS BRILLIANT CAREER]. i Triumph At Cabul--The Best Man foreign | stood by "Ex-Attache," writing in the ! Washington is always exposed to the - | chiefs. If this rumor is without foun- ' HE RANKED VERY HIGH. -------- ¥ * > ord Mayor of London Was a Big Man In Bye-Gone Days. At a grand entertainment given in the fifteenth century by the sergeants- | at-law at Ely place, Holborn, the lord | treusurer, Baron Ruthven, refused to ' recognize that as. the sovereign's im- mediate representative the lord mayor was bound to take precedence of every other subject 'within the.limits of the city. The bold bad baron sat stolidly, therefore, at table in "the most honor- able place," whereupon the lérd mayor instantly withdrew; followed by Ris ; faithful aldermen and sheriffs and all | the other citizens. The person of the lord mayor was once held to be sacred and inviolable, and ndne dare approach his presence in an impudent manner. Men have been hanged for forcible resistance to { his authority, and it is on record that one Richard Bayfield, in the year 1479, was fined £50 for Bicsuming to' kneel { too close to his lordship at St. Erken- wald's shrine. More awe-inspiring still, the lord mayor once commanded the services of a merry-andrew and a Joe} laureate, whose wit and verse, had they existed now, would have been employed in the show which a month | hence is to body forth seven centur- | ies of the city's civie life. Ben Jonson himself was a lord mayor's laureate, and even his su- | preme talent was not thought equal to the high duty of singing the praises of the common council. Ben must have Jeriorned his duties not too gracious. v, for we know that he wrote a let ter complaining of the corporation withdrawing him from their "chand- lery pension for verjuice and mus- tard." Upon which letter a champion of the city made the comment that the pension was "not so chandlery, for it amounted to £33 6s. 8d., a sum which may at least stand comparison with what has been at any time allowed other laureates of higher degree." It was much more than was allowed even to the king's laureate in Ben Jonson's days, for, till 1630, the pension was l but 100 marks~without a sip of can | ary. { Stories of Mr. Balfour. Now that the British Parliament has reassembled, a new crop of anec- dot® of Mr. Balfour has m har- vested by M.A.P., some of which are interesting. Raising his hat to a group of ladies while cycling on his estate, Mr. Balfour man to fall into a flowerbed. "You did that ver gracefully," said a friend. Mr. Bal- four, who was a pretty wit, replied: | always dismennt in the presence of ladies." Reverting to the days uf his Irish Becretaryship, Mr. Balfour asked Father Healy, "Do the Irish ! really hate me as much as their news- | papers say?' "My dear sir," replied the grim old wit, "if they only hated the devil half as much as they hate you my occupation would be gone.' All his Irish experiences were not so bitter. On the first St. Patrick's Day | of his tenure of the Irish Chief Sec. | retaryship, a cigar-box was delivered to him at the House of Commons; con- taining a bunch of shamrocks, "From a sincere Irish admirer," But, to the terror of his secretaries, the box was alse found to contain a wicked- looking steel spring, covered with a queer white compound. A chemical expert was called for, and he ex- amined the "infernal machine" -- everybody momentarily expecting on explosion. The ro | chemist, ven- turing to put a particle of the com- | pound on his tongue, found that it was simply sugar impregnated with lemon. He then turned the box up- side down, and out rolled' a rusty corkscrew (the spiral spring) and an old nutmeg-grater. There was also a scrap of paper inscribed: "Buy the whisky yourself; you can then con- coct the famous lemonade of Bally- hooley, and drink to Ould Ireland." J Would Not Let Him Explain. A detachment of soldiers was en- gagad in clearing a certain district in the Orange River Colony of supplies, | and during the operations Colonel Bhovealong's staff officer came up to a Boer farmer sitting at the door of his cottage with a large stack of oat straw in the background. "I have orders either to buy or de- stroy all forage and food in this dis- trict," said the officer. "I therefore give you notice that I am about to set fire to that pile of oat straw." "Bod I tell you," began the stolid | Boer, as he removed his pipe from his mouth. "Oh, you may as well know straight | off," interrupted the officer, "that re- i and objection 'are alike fu- tile." "Bod vould you blease," once more began the farmer. I can listen to no excuses; I have : neither time nor inclination," was the | impatient rejoinder of the officer as he' | ried away. of 'Vell, my dear," said the Boer to wife, as he stack of straw burst flame, and the officer went on his ~ rejoicing; "dose Khakis are 8ffange peoples. I vanted to dell him, t dis vas de oat straw I haf! sold to € Colonel half an hour ago." Thus saying, he meditatively jingled the British sovereigns in his pocket. London Tit-Bits. i . ---- i WB 014 School Rules, ER There was no doubt in Queen Eliza beth's reign as to who was responsible for the proper feeding of school child-! | ren. The Bchool of St. BSaviour's,| | Southwark, which, excepting for an | entrance fee of two and sixpence and! | a significant payment of "twopence a | quarter toward brooms and rods," was' | a free school for a hundred poor bojs, 08! framed a very interesting set of ru for its-inmates in 1662. The boy's par- ents were exhorted to provide him! with "wholesome ST hand The hard work of bread-making should be done in the flour mill-- not in the kitchen. LR "When it 1§ necessary for jou to - make bread by main strength you can rest assured that the miller hasn't done his part. His flour is not fine enough. z Royal Household Flour is made from hard Spring wheat-- a wheat that is capable of finer grinding than any cther variety, and milled by a process that insures not only the finest, but also the whitest, purest and most nutritious ' of flours, Get enough to try from your grocer. " Ogilvie's Book for a Cook," contains 130 pages of excellent. recipes, some never published before. Your grocer can tell you how to get it FREE. £3 Ogilvie Flour Mills Co., Ltd. ; 6 MONTREAL. 60 Years Experience in stove Luilding is _con- centrated in the Souvenir Steel Range. It has no equal amontst modern cooking staves. Added 15 'its compacts ness, is every advantage to be foun in-any Its Aerated Oven, changing the air therein completely, without lessening the heat a degree, gives it an 'imi.nénse ad- vantage over all other ranges. : lis deep fire-box holds the fire easily over ni ¥it--no ashes cen accumulate to choke the draft. we : Its grates can be removed without loogenir, 3 a single balt. Every desirable improvement for effecting a saving ia labor, time and fuel is found in the Souvenir. Every Souvenir is absolutely guaranteed by the makers, THE GURNEY-TILDEN CO., Limited BAMILTON, WINNIPEG, MONTREAL, VANCOUVER 406 J. S. HORSEY, Sole Agent, 189 Princess St "Tiger Brand" Underwear For Men and Boys Made in a bright, Not a disease germ could possibly airy factory, * thoroughly cleaned sneak into *Ticer and scoured. BAND" underwear clothing beseeming his estate, .and to! | = take care of his body; and lest it should cause the undoing of the child.' the parents are reminded that the care of him at dinner time, supper time, etc., rests with them." Another recom-! ruendation to the parents is that "they! should manage with great discretion' and severity at home, which will make! ,him love his school," and the conclu ding "phrases might be written up in every home of to-day: "For the master | may do much, but good and discreet' government at home makes all sure,! and doth the greatestigood."~-London Chronicle. LiL Many 4 rich 'man is wnable to offer anvthing better than » poor: excuse Flattery when practiced as a fine art is called tact, A grufter by any other name would still be a thief, Get Swift's Scranton coal at Swift's. THE 204 GENTIRY The source of ail Powr, , «= 08 Founal, ¢FYout, Jules Ki The result of 55 years of scientific Teresrch, | wunhood Leon ht buck after years of weak dorpair, Nawre's Sceret restored by oombini cure or rifund of money, Send for sworn Canadian testi-wonials received wihin the last tw Oe. KOHR MEDICINE CO. PC, Drowerk

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