Daily British Whig (1850), 10 Jan 1907, p. 7

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resents' PEPPY ul for a "Xmas Present y articles: all sizes. \d Coffee Pots. 1 Tea and Coffee Carpet Sweepers. 5c. to $10.00. FIIPIIIIIIIPIIIIII PIII 3 STREET. 3 FFVIII PIVSUIIVIISINY BROWNE'S DDYNE ONLY GENUINE). "4 admitted by e most wonderful and valuable rem: y ever discovered. the profession to me the best remedy known for CQUGHS, LDS, CONSUMPTION, INCHI. S, ASTHMA. ts like « charm in DIARRHOEA, d is the onl in CHOLERA, d DYSEN . ectu cuts short all attacks of PILEPSY, HYSTERIA, PALPITA. ON and SPASMS. 3 the only palliative in NEURALGIA, HEUMATISM, GOUT, CANCER, DOTHACHE, MENINGETIS, etc. WNE'S CHLORODYNE," and beware The genuine bears the worde "DR. J. y the Government Stamp of each 1s. 13d., 2s 9d., 4s. 6d. each y wompasies each bottla NPORT, Limited, LONDON. DS. & CO., Limited Toronto 'hi k ay away from our Red Label if you expect to continue hoes. See what a little | buy, For Men 60 pairs Men's Winter luchers, good shape and he "$8 kind. Red Label rice, $2.25, One Table of Men's High C luchers, value at $4, Eig a odd Sine of Velour Calf Bluch- , value at $3.50, Al abelled at. $2.50. Bel 34 pairs Men's Velour Calf luchers. The fad last, $4 Shoes, nixed with a fine line of Pat. Colt als and Bluchers. Ri ale Price, $3. od "Zabe All our Felt Men's Slippers, the 1 kind. Red: Label Sale, 75c. he 75. kind." Red Label Price, essing, sale price, Sc. and & Bro, D SHOEMAKING. e-- bis Calf style, Salas equire the Most Careful Atten- tion as Well as Good Soil. Did you ever see a rosébush which-- pite the most beneficent environ 8). of soil--of sunshine--and of at- ilthy growth, AOS 1s athiew » \ ton of manure will not hel nt that has a canker eating on ite (ou must destroy the * cause' before U can remove the effect. ie 10 cannot cure Dandruff and Bald- by rubbing on hair lotions, and : ng in vaseline, ete. Ou must logk to the cause of the uble~it's a gorm at the roots of ue baie Which causes it to fall out ewbro's Herpicide destroys - d huithy hair is wi he t. old by leading druggists. Send 10c stamps for sample to the Herpicide « Detroit, Mich. Two 50c. d $1. G.W. Mahood, special agent. NewYork Chinese Restaurant | DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, JANUARY 10. - ---------- ---------- - 83 Princess Street | Open from 10.30 aum. tol8.00 am. | The best place to met sn all round | io Dest Sian i 4D vom | Notice to Contractors on shortest notice, English and Chinese dishes a specialty. SEALED TENDERS ADDRESSED . aaiuo [PALCE OF HEAL New England Chinese | Restaurant 331 King Street | Open from 10.30 a.m. to 3.00 am. | round | The best place to yet an all Lunch in the city. eals of all kinds | on shortest notice. English and Chinese Dishéa a specially. Phone, 655. {atl or near the City of soncton, in Big Reduction | on Skates COME EARLY AND GEI A BARGAIN. a Strachan's Hardware "Significant and Inter- esting to Prospective - Assurers." The Blue Book for (1905) Shows that "The Canada Life As- | surance Company" paid by way of | Cash Profits to its Policyholders, in 1905, $1,194 689.45. While in the same year 21 Canadian Compani i tish Companies, and 16 American, in all 51 other companies operating in Canada, paid by way of Cash Profits to their Policyholders, $1,022 895 02, which shows that "The Canada Life | Assurance Companv" paid more to its Policyholders than the other 51} Companies put together. { The Canada Life, for each 5 years of its 60 vears experience, has added a Bonus Addition of $1,000 to every- $10,000 insurance in force, Full information how a Policy| would shape for you cheerfully given at the office, 18 Market street, Kings- ton. J. 0. HUTTON Manager| Te'ephone 703. | J. R. URQUHART, 153 Alfred St., Special Agent. RE When You Buy COAL 1 | From P. WALSH You get genuine! | Scranton as he DOV VVVOTTRVBVCTRBS handles nothing else Kingston Business Gollege (LIMITED) Head of Queen street, Kingston, Canada, devoted to higher Com- mercial and Shorthand education. All Commercial subjects taught. Individual junstruction. Dav and Bvening classes. Knter ar time. moderate. Arter" the best. H. F. METCALFE, Prin, | -- dd, A Bonus of $750.00 | (per $10,000 ASSURED) was added {| to life and endowment policies for §| the five years ending 81st December, || 1904, and it is noteworthy that this rate of Bonus has been maintained unbroken for the long period of 40 YEARS, For particulars of a Life Insurance Policy, apnly to tl ROYAL INSURANGE CO'Y: (of Liverpool, ENGLAND.) W. J B. White, Ageat, Kingston | the Frovince of New Brunswick, westerly iridge westerly | Weymontachene, a distance of ahout 45 { the Abitibi River crossing east.riy fora | tistance of about 150 miles. i ghneer of the Cowmunissioners at uttawe | in duplicate, and on the | titled to rely upon the classification of | quantity and quality of materials, Pe o | tions, «ec. { by all the | witnessed, and be accompanied by | acauived by the acceptance of the tende: { will bo deposited to | formance of tl contract.saccording te its terms. Cheouss deposited by parties | whose tenders ar rejected will be. re: | turned within ten days after the siening of the contract Attention 'is called . to the following clauses in the form of contract :-- wages as are generally accepted as cur rent for competent workmen in the dis | trict in which the work is being per | formed, and if there is no current rat in such district, then a fair and reason able rate : und, in the event of a dispute { arising as to whatTis the current or a fair and reasonable rate, it shall be de- { termined hv thu Commissioners, whos | decision shall be final." {at any time racticable, use only material, ma | chinery, plant, supplies and rolling stock | manufactured or produced in Canada | provided the same can be obtained as cheaply and unon as good terms in Can- ada as elsewhere, having regard to to the undersiyned, murked on the on velope "Tender for Construction' will be receivid ut the vluce of the Lombiission- ers of the 'iranscontinental Kalway, at uttawa, until twelvé o'clock noon of the lith day of rebruary, 1907, for the WOrK reyuiréd for the construction, in ace cordance with the plans, profiles ana 8, ecifications of the' Comunissioners, for the following sections of the Transcons tneatal Hauwuy, vie, i-- (1) District "A. --From a point desig- nated on the plaps of the Commissioners the trovince of New Brunswick, westerly for a distancegpt about 50 miles (2) District 7 A,""--From a point desig- nated on the plans of the Commissioners at or near the town of Grand Falls, in to he boundary between the Provinces of New Brunswick and. Quebec, a distance of about 62 miles. (8) Dbistrict "B.'--From a point desig- nated on the plans of the Commissioners at or near the Quebec Bridge, easterly for a distance of about 150 miles. (4) District "'B."--From a point desig- ted on the plans of the Commissioners out 150 miles west of the Quebec to a point known as wiles. (5) Districts *'C"" and "D."'--From u point designated 'on the plans of ihe Commissioners about eight miles west of Plans, profiles and specifications Le seen in the office of the Uhief may En- also in the oftices of the District kEn- gineers concerned, Viz. :--Guy C. Dunn, St. John, N.B.: A. E. Doucet, Quehee PQ.; and 8S. R. Poulin, Bay, Ont, Persons | tendering' are notified that ten- ders will not 1e considered unless mad. printed forms supplied by thu Commissipners. » A 'separate temder must Le submitted for each Section, Tenderers shall North not be in any way en- any other information given hy any per- son on behalf of the Commissioners, and before submitting any tender. bidders should make a eareful examination of the plans, - profiles, drawings and specifica- tions, and read the forms to be executed and fully inform themselves as to the and character. of workmanship required : am aré understood to, accept and agree to he hound by the terms and conditions con- tained ih the fom of contract, specifica. annexed to the form of ten der Each tender must be signed and sealed narties to the tender, and an ac cented cheque on a chartered bank of the Dominion of Canada payable to the or der of the Commissioners of the Trans continental Railway, as follows (-- For Section No. 1, District "A."" $75, 000, $ For Section No. 2, District "A." $90, 000, For 'Section No. 3, District * 000. For Section No. #4, District * 000, No. 5, Districts 5.000. Any person whose For Section )," § tender is accepted shall, within ten days after the accept. ance thercof. furnish such additional ap proved security as may be required by the Commissioners © sirn the contract specifications and other documents requir- ed to be siened by the said Commission ers ; and, in anv case of 'refusal o1 failure on the part of the party Whose tender is accepted to complete and ex- ecute a contract with the spd Commis sione and to furnish the additiona ane «dl security within ten days after the acceptance of the tender, the saic cheque shall be forfeited to the Commis sioners as liouidated damages for such refusal or failure, and all contract rights shall be forfeited. ¥ parties whose The cheques deposited tenders are. accepted the credit of the Receiver General of Canada as part of the security for the due and faithful per- All mechanics, labourers or other per erforin labour for the pur 2 construction of the work: hérebv contracted for shall be paid suck *"This agreement is subject to the re gulations now in force, or which may hereafter be in force during truction of the works hereby contracted for. made under the authority of the Department of Labour. and which are or shall be applicable to suck words."" (The schedule of Minimun waces determined upon by said depart- ment will form part of the contract.) "The contractor shall. in connection with the whole of the said work, as far opality and price.' The contractor shall conform to the lations adopted by the Commis ; and also to the laws and regu- s respecting fires in the different Provinces wherein the work is being per formed The richt is reserved to reject all tenders any or AUCTION SALES Book at once with the Leading Auctioneer JOHN H. MILLS BRITISH - AMERICAN HOTEL KINGSTON - - ONTARIO Has undergone alterations and is now open to the travelling sublic. wv TELFER Proprietor THE FRONTENAC LOAN & INVESTMENT SOCIETY. ESTABLISAED 1863, President--Sir Richard Cartwright Money losned on City and Farm Pro-, Municipal and Cou ros. Morteaxes h Fl bn hy ul) Le received taterect allowed, o 8. C McGill, Managing Director Ofce. RT Clarence street. Kinewtow orxnk ORCHESTRA THE BUSY ONE. Out-of-Town epragements accepted. Violin, Viola, Cello Instruction. By order, P. E. RYAN, Secretary. Tha Commissioners of the Transcontinental Railway Ottawa, Jan. 5th, 1907. Newspapers inserting this advertise- ment without authority from the Kihg's Printer will. not be paid for it. Hockey and Skating Boots Boys Hockey Boots, at $1,35, $1.65, $1.75 and $2.25. Women's Skating Boots, $1.75, $2. Men's Hockey Boots, $1.90, $2.50 | and $3.75. H. Jennings, King St. Rumor has it that the C.P.R. in- tends running a service of cargo steamers between Manchester dnd Can- $1.50, BH. MERRY. The world has been scoured for the WHERE DUST CANNOT FIND LODGEMENT. A Remarkable Hall in London For Making Surgical Opera- tions--Has Most Up-to-Date Improvements--Fine Establish- ment. The finest and most scientific opera- ting theatre in London has just n built in the new wing of the Central London Throat and Ear Hospital, which was opened % H. R. H. Prin- Louise, on November 19. A latest and most up-to-date improve- ments, with the result that the new operating theatre is a species of mar- ble hall wherein dust cannot find a home. The floor is laid with Terrozzo marble, mosaic, noiseless and non-ab- sorbent. The walls are lined with light Sicilian marble. Very large 'slabs are :mployed, so that there shall be few- er niches for dust. And where joins are necessary the slabs are made to fit closely by an ingenious method of fixing by clamp as well as by ce- ment. There are no corners in the whole coom, and the system of ventilation ensures that all air entering the apartment comes from above the roof oi the building, far away from ground dust and the chimneys of Gray's Inn road. Lest injurious particles should aven then steal in, there is a perforat- ed zinc screen, which allows only the purest air to pass through. Nor can the air be oly or damp, for a noise- less fan first throws it upon a num- ber of electric heat lamps, controlled in such a manner that any desired temperate may be obtained. Close upon a hundred thousand cases are dealt with in a year in this remarkably efficient hospital. Hu- manity is the watchword, and it is carried out. with method and sim- plicity. In order that patients ma not be unnerved by the'sight of dead- ly-looking instruments and the as- sembly of students, there is a new anaesthetic room--on the same hy- genic lines which characterize the operating theatre--ifi the form of an ante-chamber. Here the patient is placed under an anaesthetic, and con- veyed by means of a clevér moving operating table into the adjoining theatre. All this is part of a great scheme by which, as soon as ever funds per- mit, the hospital will be further ex- tended so as to become one of the most elaborate and humane scientific institutions in the world. Donations, however, are urgently needed, and in- tending subscribers--who should send t» the secretary in the Gray's Inn 'oad--may be assured their money will be used wisely and with economy. A Finlander's Gift. A coin was exhibited by Sir Fred- erick Treves during an address on hospitals at Nottingham, which, he declared, was in value "absolutely beyond price." It was a twenty kron- er piece (equal in English currency to 158.), connected with the following touching anecdote: "Years ago a Norseman came to the London Hospital to be 'cured of a trouble which prevented him from earning his living, and was put un- ler my care. I operated, the man was cured, and there the matter, so far as I supposed, ended. Three weeks after the man left he came to my house. I did not know that he was aware of my name, still less of where I lived, and I am ashamed to say that I supposed he had come begging. "He said, 'It is now three years since I left Finland. Before I left, my wife sewed this coin in the band of my belt, and told me on no ac- count to part with it until I was starving. For three years this coin has stood between me and starvation. The value to you is nothing; the value | to me I cannot express, but when I | was in the hospital I was determined you should have it. | "I am proud to say that since then | I have been starving, and since I left { the hospital I have not slept in a | bed, but I would not part with the | coin because I wanted you to have ite" 'What magnificent piece of jewelry, asked Bir Frederick of his audience, could equal the value of that coin? An Astronomer Royal. One of the best known of living astronomers is Sir David Gill, who has heen royal astronomer at the Cape of Good Hope since 1879. Sir David, the son of an Aberdeenshire magis- trate, was educated at Aberdeen Uni- versity, and after graduating set up a small private observatory near the college. Here he pursued his studies for a number of years until engaged to conduct the private observatory of the Earl of Crawford, and to or- ganize his expedition to Mauritius to view the transit of Venus. 'In 1877 he proposed and conducted an expe- dition to Ascension Island to deter- mine the solar parallax by observa- tions of Mars. For his success at this time he received prizes from the Royal Astronomical Society and the Insti- | tute de France. Since then he has organized several expeditions, and has | been connected as director with a | large number of- geodetic surveys, | principally in Africa. In 1882 he pho- | tographed the great comet, and point- ed out the desirability of using photo- graphy for cptaloguing stars. His publications are numerous, all dealing with 'astronomical and mathematical questions, and the annals of the Cape observatory contain heaps of unpub- vations. A Castle In Ireland. The name of castle for a country house is preserved in Ireland, rather curiowgly, for Ireland has not the able in Scotland. The dullest little country place, bears that name, and the smile of the Saxon when he ar- rives and sees the castle is cheap and unscholarly. Where the Celt-- and deserve that slight sign of de- rision is in _her practice with her visiti cards intended for London use. The word castle there for a see- ond and country address does seem to k roll be a roll of honor 1 r mot. 4 Chronicle. suggest machicolations, sally ports ~London ---- N---- DANCE 'OF THE LAMAS. Adventures of a British Agent In Bhutan and Thibet. Mr. Claude White, the British poli- tical agent at Sikkim, made two ex: peditions into Bhutan last year and during. the late summer, details of | lished manuscript records and obser- vestiges of French customs so notice- | villa, so it be solitary in an Irish | the female Celt, that is--does earn | if not sieges | which are now published for the first time, says The London Daily Express. _ During the first journey, which was andertaken to invest the Tongsa Pen- lop, the ruler of Bhutan, as a Knight Commander of the Indian Empire, for the services he rendered during the Thibet campaign, the entire country was crossed; and portions of Thibet which had not been visited by white men were traversed. Everywhere Mr, | White was received with absolute friendliness. | The Tongsa Penlop himself under- took a difficult and dangerous jour- ney of over ten days from his resi- | dence at Biaga to meet Mr. White | at Lhakhang. At Lhalong Monastery, | one of the most noted in Bhutan, the | chief incarnate lama is the nephew of | the Tongea Penlop. Here a great re- | ception was organized in honor of the | British political officer. { As the caravan approached up the | gorge towards the ancient monastery | it was met by masses of lamas, all wearigg dark red robes. When Mr. | White and the Tongsa Penlop hi been escorted up to the monastery an | extraordinary lames dance was organ- ized in their honor. This took place in the courtyard of the monastery, | the various dancers wearing grotesque | masks of animals' heads. | During 'the Summer mission Mr. | White was beyond the limits of Bhu- tan proper, and traveled for a pro- longed period through hitherto un- known parts of Thibet. Mr. White came across the takin | (Budocas axicolor), an exceptionally | rare animal, which, so far as is known, | had never been previously seen alive or shot by a European. Mr. White was presented with a very fine speci- men by thé Tangso Penlop, but it died in the Chumbi Valley on its way home. | Ite habitat is just below the smow | line, This extremely rare animal, | which in appearance is half-ox, half- antelope, is stated by the natives to exist only in three places in Bhutan: The foothills of Bhutan are admir- ebly pdapted for the cultivation of rubber, ete., and the people are ex- tremely anxious to trade with us. Eventually, it is stated, they will form a valuable market for Manchester cot- ton goods. . Mr. White discovered Wa shorter route to Lhasa than the one now known. British Soldier and Religion. At the first meeting of the com- mittee recently appointed by the Brit ish Secretary of State for War to ad- vise the Army Council in all matters affecting the spiritual and moral wel- fare of the army met at the War Of- fice. Mr. Haldatie, War Secretary, made' a brief address, in the course of which he said: "No soldier fights his best who is not an idealist, and touched with idealism about his du- ties. Every man has in him a latent spark which can be kindled and which can send through him that idealism | which raises him to a different level of personality. There are times when the history of our race has shown | that it is so." After alluding to the stimulus of religion on the body and the fact still that the British soldier, simple as he | is, is capable of being profoundly stir- | red by the broad features of religious | life, which brings home to him the | consciousness that he has a side of his- nature in which he is more than a mere finite being, a side in which God is imminent in him. | In conclusion, he said: "I am very glad of the evidences which pour in on me from all sides of the fact that | the increase in the education and the | intelligence of the men of to-day, as compared with those of a generation | ago, are telling on the condition of the soldier in the army, and are be- ginning to raise him to a higher level. "But we want to stimulate this ad- vance, and we feel that we can best stimulate it under the supervision and | by the advice of those who are con- | cerned with religion--with religion in its broadest sense. And it seems to us that in the army is a field in which those who are concerned may find | abundant opportunity of working to- | gether, as indeed they are already do- ing to a considerable degree." | ---- | High Priced Bumblebees. Many years ago the farmers of Aus- | tralia imported bumblebees from Eng- land and set them free in their clover fields. Before the arrival of the bees | clover did not flourish in Australia, | but after their coming the farmers | had no more difficulty on that score. | Mr. Darwin had shown that bumble- | bees were the only insects fond of | clover nectar which possessed a pro- | boscis sufficiently long to reach the | bottom of the long, tube-like flowers | and at the same time a body heavy | enough to bend down the clover head | so that the pollen would fall on the insect's back and thus be carried off to fertilize other flowers of the same species. The bumblebees sent to Aus- | tralia cost the farmers there about | half a dollar apiece, but they proved to be worth the price. His Weapon. In some parts of Iréland it is a cus- tom among bank clerks to speak of one another as "officers" to the bank, | but little Jim Bender, the recently imported Cockney waiter in a County | Mayo hotel, was not aware of this | custom. | *""Have yon seen any of our officers | here this morning?' asked a lordly | knight of the quill of Jim a few days ago. Jim glanced keenly at his interroga- tor. ""Yussir," he answered promptly; "it em went out with his sword be'ind 'is ear."--London Answers. Louis Harcourt, liberal member of | parliament for Lancashire, and son of | the late Sir William Harcourt, is un- | derstood to have been-appointed to the [irish secretaryship, to succeed James | Brees, he uses cheap materials | certain it is, that growing number of Hebrews who are | one ecity, says The Montreal Stand- | ei of commerce, and with that wefl- | ity for his using that native genius | the gister of Dr. H. Lightstone, who | another Montreal Jewess with talent | of Jews belo | try, and, isn't three minutes ago since one of | Wha a man makes a fool of himself | A The Present Position of the Hebrew -Race In the Dominion--Will Color | __ the Life of the People. Whether future generations of Jew- ! ish Canadians will produce or be able to boast of a Benjamin Disraeli is within the realms of possibility; but | the constantly | settling in Canada and their increas- ing influence; will make them a fact- or to be reckoned with in more than | ard. That they will to some extent color our social, political and indus- trial life is also certain. Already we find them engaged in various branch- known commercial shrewdness for which they are famous, they are not the least suceessful in the particular | business in which they are engaged. | But not every son of Israel that | comes to Canada for the purpose of making it his home is anxious to em- bark in business. The(great Whajority of Jews in Montreal are industrial. They are employed in various capaci- ties in the factories of Gentiles, as well as of Hebrews. For centuries, it has been the custom of the detractors of the Jew to charge him with being a "Shylock," and a member of a race that preferred money-lending and other wily schemes to honest toil. But the fact remains that since the Jew has settled on this continent, he has striven to become thoroughly imbued with the ideals of his fellow-citizens of other creeds. It should be remarked by way of qualification that segregation, such as exists in Russia and other countries did not tend to develop all that is good in the Jewish nature. Herded together with no opportun- that came to him as an inheritance, it is no wonder that he became mo- rose, Suspicious and inclined to fol- low rightly or wrongly any "will-o' the-wisp" reformer that promised him an opportunity of intellectual expan- sion, and an outlet for his energy. In Canada and the United States, how- ever, the Jew has every opportunity to ener any and all employments that he may desire, without let or hindrance. That he appreciates such advantages is seen by the proportion of Jewish youth who are enrolled in the schools and universities for man of whom a bright future is predi 7 That our Canadian Jewish fellow- citizens are fully alive to the possibil- ities the future holds in store for them is seen in the haste they have shown as soon as statutory uire- ments have been complied with, to become British subjects. This action on their part is a decisive answer to those who say that the Jew does not value British citizenship. The more enterprising and ambitious ,of these have formed themselves into political clubs where they declaim in Yiddish of the principles and qualities of their parties and leaders. Many of Montreal's leading Jews are Yealthy and highly intellectual. In the professions they are well rej resented. In law, they have Maxwell Goldstein, K.C., 8. W. Jacobs, Peter Bercovitch, Henry Weinfleld and A. B. Vineberg, with almost as many again attending the universities. In medicine they have Drs. Lauterman, Shipviner, Schacher, Moise, Rubin, Stern, Hart and Lightstone. In ap- plied science: Messrs. Blumenthal and Cohen. Montreal Jews can also boast of having a Jewish prima donna in the person of Pauline Donalda, was recently presented with a civic medal by Mayor Ekers as a token of regard on the part of her fellow-eciti- zens, who, irrespective of race and religion, united to do her honor. Miss Lichtenstein, who is an instructress at the Royal Victoria College, is of a very high order. In the several flelds of commerce they have Messrs. Lyon, Cohen, Mark Workman, D. Friedman, H. Vineberg, M. Vineberg, M. Davis, H. Kellert, J. H. Blumenthal, M. Shapiro, Clarence I. De Sola, Belgian Consul-General; D. A. Ansell, Mexican Consul-Gener- al; Herman H. Wolff, Austrian Con- sul-General, and a host of others. What is pleasing 'from a Canadian national standpoint is that numbers ing to the less favored classes, are going in for farming. Many of the farms around New Glas- gow and Labelle, Québec, are held and being bought by Jews. They also have a prosperous goloty in the Northwest. On' the whole' it' must be admitted, considering their eireum- stances, and numbers, that the Jews of the Dominion will assist materially in developing our magnificent coun- p their fellow-citizens of other natiohalities to make Canada a nation in 'fact, as well as in name. PECULIAR WEAKNESS IN MANY WOMEN Is Promptly Overcome By the Regular Use of Ferrozone. Many women suffer untold torture from nervous debility arising from dis orders of the feminine orcans, Day by day they grow worse, A false sense of modesty prevents them using a good remedy like Ferro zone,~and it would eure them ! Every pale sickly woman can Le cur- ed and nourished back to health by Ferrozone, iL Think of it, brought back, New vital energy is supplied. The blood is not only enriched and purified, but is properly circulated throughout the body. Impossible for any woman who uses Ferrozone to be seriously ill, to suffer from weakness, ireegularities or func tional derangements, because Ferro zone acts directly on the oroane that maintain the balance of health. Because free from Alcohol, Ferrozone can be used by young or old with ab solute safety. It causes the snirits to rise, supplies ambitipn, cheerfulness and new sense of strencth that adds much to the pleasure of life. Prepared in the form of a chocolate "coated tabl t, Ferrorone is sold LT a'l dealers, B0c. per box or six boxes for $2.50. lost nerveforce is Carroll & Co., leading tailors, are elling Scotch and English tweed and serge suits for 215.50., regular rice, £29. Sale will continue up to the 25th nm ees SI THE JEW IN CANADA 7, ne mr Something 'wrong with the breakfast? Seal Brand Coffee . We have the largest and best assortment 'of HOCKEY. BOOTS in the city. : 2 Men's Hockey Boots, $2.00, 2.60 and 3.00. Boys' Hockey Boots, $1.60, 2.00 and 2.26. Women's Skatéog Boots, fleece lied; $2.00 "Hens Girl's Skating Boots, $1.60, 1.78 and 2.00. Lie | Abernethy's Sore , BONDS AND STOCKS Commission Orders Executed Bought and Sold on Commission on all Exchanges on Investment Securities : HELLY, ne eve * . : * Long Distance Telephone Main 5200-01-02 TORONTO ) 3 RA SI TAGE TA SO 5 tines. IRN _---- ---- Hh LAE Be LEB GO DIO BO BIS . FRESH ARRIVAL== Brown's Famous Butter Scotch, Walnut Glaze ! A. J. REES, 166 Princess Street Eee Le ee DO Dr BO DIO Ee Woodenware To Users of Pails and Tubs A word of caution may not be out of place. The E. B. Eddy Company's wares are FULLY GUARANTEED against factory defects, so it will be to your interest to see that the name 2 EDDY is stamped on every package you buy. Row Always, everywhere in Canada, ask for EDDY'S MATCHES, Going Fast Az we need the room for rebuilding, we are closing out our large stock to save moving it. % Briss and Iron Bedstébds Springs and Mattresses to fie AT & SNAP Ie this month It should be in every home. Gib Red Cross @Cough Svrup, Jt cures anv eongh: 904 bottle, envsided affair is all right fit happens to be a bright side. |. son's \ Everything to close out at A prices, 3 JAMES REID. PACKING AND PRE

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