ness, wholesomeness ? good to see and better to eat? a delicacy for every meal? lities in the "quality" biscuity-- INEY'S Cream Sodas - | proof, dust-proof packages. J 194 The onty Temeédy known gcience EE-HELP FOR MER I h will positively cure lost manhood is a moo .. is cont: rolled in this 'pica wa pear completely in the worst cases in a 3 week's treatment. We make the honest offer of ot relurg Jour money, Thousands: sponde: ce treats FIV nent sent free witha a eatin dics dvice. r greatest successes have those failed 'with other treatments. yused in the French and and oidiers German these Sen t hese Souniries ate models of steeagth °0.. P.O. Drawer L, 2341. Moritrec> ¥ . NG The Swell Shoe "{Always makes a favorable im- {pression on a woman of refine- ment. If this Shoe has also an appearance oi substance, it wins her favor every time. _ YHE CINDERELLA SHOE 11s of this sort. has got the sty} "land the substance and To "ithe wise woman, They sell at .00. Th JENNINGS, KING ST TAYLOR & HAMILTON Tinsmiths, Plumbers and Gas Fitters, 189 'and 91 Princess St. J PHONE 418. FARMS WANTED. i z "The whio-said! Lmakes 'us healthy and "beard some df our: for is scant om receipt of the tele h application is to have priority and wii be heid until the necessary pa- plete the transaction are received " the entry will be led and the 1 oF L applicant will ation for inspection must be mad Th applicant must be eligible only one a Re ta oun cation been dis A 2 vex Ar Be232 i. to Samtullation, pay, Department, . relinqui ¥ fel abi: Sat ether e, it to declaration of abandonment. entry is summarily cancelled or ntane . to sastity. e aj Will Be entitled to price Tight for 'Inbpection" must jculars the homesteader is in defgult, | beequently the statement is ay to | Be iscorTect mm material particulars, the appli- | will lost any prwer right eof reentry | the become vacant, or if entry Been granted it may be summarily | Detier--A settler is ired to perform | A ey tof he. following hn | six months' residence upon | jom of the land im each year dur | term-of three years. { father (or mother, If the father of & er resides upon a of the land entered for homesten the requirement as to, oS ith I : Wi i e father or mother. 1 bas his permanent rest laid owned by him. in , the requirement dep; must give six menths' notice in writ ig 1 the Commissioner of Dominien Lands ot Ottawa, of his intention to do sp. SINOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH-WEST MINING Coal --Coal mining rights may be leased for x of twenty-one years at an annual yomal of $I per Not more than 2,560 ucre. A royalty at the rate of five cents per tn shall be collected on the merchantable win ol Quartz. --A ie wer, having disco' 1, ,500 feet. nate a claim, fee for «8 "claim is $5. At least $100 must be expended on the tim cach year or hud to the mining recorder thereof. en $5600 has been expend paid, the locator may, upon having a made, and upon complying with 'other ts, purchase the land at $1 per Py provides for the payment of a 2 1-2 per cent. on the sales. mini claims generally are 100 feet spare, entry. fee. $5, renewable yearly. Are applicant may obtain two leases to dredge for gold of 'five miles each for a term of twenty years, renewable at the discretion the Minister of the Interior. lessee i have a dredge in operation the date of the lease $10 per annum Royalty at the of 212 collected the output after iv cethy $10,000, MY 'W. W. CORY. of the Minister of the Interior wt Unauthorised publication of this ad patent of % we EALED TENDERS e undersi , and endorsed der for ae: additions and airs to Block 'C' Tete du Pont. Bar- tacks, Kingston, Omt.,'"' will be received Mt this offce umtil Monday, September $, 1907, inclusively, dor the work above ribed. - Ten- re Plans and specifications can be seen and forms of tender obtained at this| B Albert Soaps Ltd. Mfrs., Montreal. Iepartment and on application' to H. P Beware of imitations and substitules. Fad Smith, Ksq., Architect, Kingston Persons tendering are nofified that ten- | will not be considered unless madv oo the printed form supplied, and sigu- ®l with their actual siguatures Bach tender must be accompanied by Mm accepted c Made payable to the order of the Hom- | sirable the Minister of Public Works &ual to tén per cent (10 p.c.) of the amount of the temder, which will forfeited if the person * tendering decline to enter into & comtract when abled up- oi to do so, or if he fail to complete ®e work contracved for. If the tender be not accepted the cheque will- be re- tarned. The Department. does not bind _itsell 1 accept the lowest. or amy tender ' + By Order. FRED. GELINAS, Secretary. Departments of Public Works, Ottawa, August 15, 1907. Newspapers inserting this advertise- Went without authority from the Depart- | Bent will not be paid for it eet eee ee ete . TENDERS FOR DREDGING. TENDERS ADDRESSED TO TI ; Prdersigued and endorsed "Tender OF Tedging at Fort Hope,' wil, be iv foived up to and inchuding Saturday, b August ols, 1v07, for, avedging 1¢ Shred at rort Hope, -Marham County Combined specification and form ul r can Le ovtamed at the Depart L Bant of yubl ¢ Works, Ottawa. 'lenders Bust include the towing of the plan to 8 from the works. Only dredges an f be employed winich mre registered in x fa at the time of the filing of wn- Mes: Contractdrs must be ready to Le $4 work within thirty days Yate they have heen notified of Splance of their pepde F Dender§ wild aot ve Bade on the pripted form supplied, and 1 ped with-the-actual signatures of tou: "An atcepted cheque a chartered hank, bE Payable to the el the Honouraule the Minster of PubMe Works, for one Wousand dollars ($1,000) must accom ¥ each tender as security deposit in p fonhection with thé dredging to be Per Mined. 'The © will be returned in | Ste of Ee og of tender. toh® Department does not bind itself E10 accept the lowest or any tender ly order; "PRED. GELINAS, E dep Secretary. rtusent of Public Norks, so7 taWe, 22, ' Newspapers ghveust this advertise- Sent without autPon ty from the Departs out will not he paid for it. LN. Nicholson GRANITE AND MARBLE after the the ac r. considered unless be satisfied by such person re | i REGULATIONS, | acres shall be leased to one individual or com- | eighteen years of age, or | ed mineral in place, may | ADDRESSED | we on & charterod bank, | Nothing you can wear costs you so litle in 1 color Ral Hr a a eine] Pen-Angle ~ Guaranteed Underwear yc ores fri, inform fling wes for women, « Trade-marked in red as above. 208 Looseness of The Bowels. Br varpenkon pinks. 4d. sain months that most people-are not troubled with "looseness of the bowels." the maker to won't stretch, Complaint o tendency to weaken the whole eystem. When 'the bowels get loosened up in this way and you wish to check the un- natural discharge without bringing on constipation, there is only one remedy to use, and that ove is Dr. FowLer's Exmeacr or Wp Sreawssrzy, This remedy i= not an experiment as it has been used in thgusands of families dur- When you ask for Dr. Fowrzs's be sure you get it, as many unprincipalled drug- | gists will try to palm off a cheap sub- | stitute on you. | ing the past aikty-two years r { Miss M. Hopkins, Roseview, Sask. | writes: "I have used Dr. Fowizm's Exreacr or Wn Srraweery and found it is all it is recommended to be for | Diarrhoea and Summer Complaint. We would not be without a bottle of it in the | house." Manufactured by The Milbum Co, Limited, Toronto, Ont. Price 35¢. Nw Own" Soap --keeps its delicate fragance to the very last fragment, and it is so well made that it will wear to the thinnest wafer. | | | i t MAKES YOUR CAKES LIGHT. MAKES YOUR BISCUITS LIGHT. MAKES YOUR BUNS LIGHT: MAKES YOUR LABOR LIGHT. MAKES YOUR EXPENSES LIGHT. Order from your Groger. E W.GI LLETT COMPANY LIMITED TORONTO.ONT. | FL 8Y UNCLE JOSH. Reports received here state that the grasshoppers are * re-appeanng in con- siderable. numbers in - Dundas, North Lanark, and one or two other places, and are stripping-the leaves and hgads of. the oats. "That last rain was a good one," said 4 Yarmer to the Whig, "but we need more. "The soil is very dry." Similar. reports are made on every hand. A general rainfall would work won- ders to the dairy and vegetable interests. Reports say that there will be a good supply. of all kinds of fruit, but that the prices will remain firm, 1t looks now as if theré wauld be a good all-round crop of apples The farmer who has a good field of green corn to cut these days i¢ a happy man, _ Where do all the immigrants go? Some farmers are still on the lookout for help. Shortage of fodder, is reporfed by many correspondents in the Kingston district. It 1s-said that a 'greaf deal of stock will have to be disposed of before the winter sets in The inspectors are after the dairymen who put water in their milk. Here's hoping that all the guilty parties will be caught. i 3 With forest fires and electrical storms; some farmers have suffered hedvy losses Prof. A. L. Haecker, experiment station, says: I'he cow end of the dairy business ie the big end- and - the --most--important of Nebraska Here 1s where improvement 1s wost needed, and where 1t seems slowest to come. The common cow is.stll in greatest \ number in the dairies of the 3 ¥ land, and though she isa pretty good animal, she is not the best or.mest pro fitable To increase her yield is as im- portant to the dairyman as to'get a good price for her product, but this fact does y be generally known. In talking with the average cow keeper he is quite likely 'to tell you that dairying doesn't pay, and gives for a reason that the price of butter and low. He is not likely to tell you that his cows are' no good and don't pay for their keep, or that half his cows are boarders and consume the pro fit of the other half. The fact is, dairy products are selling. at a ahout all the public will pay. By this is meant if butter or cheese much higher"the consumption wouid drop off and re-act in lower prices, Closer attention must be paid to cost of milk production. Better cows will be the cry when this is known and believ- ed, but we are often told that the cow for the farmer is one that will be able not seem 1« ream 1s good price, were Bl 10 withstand ro igh treatment, and give fair results at both milk duction; that the dairy is not a good anim T average farmer, etc. This n that it is believed d they have accepted t along with a lot of other unproven 1 don't deny that a dual- purpose cow would be good to keep, but farmers don't keep them long, and don't seem to get them Dual purposes and these two ve often n _and beef 'pro- wl for the means two purposes, functions don't blend amimal and give sth sides. To the cows on a 'small jeal whether his or fhity dollars per the sam m ference between a cow averag- r year and one at to ignore farmers are not in the ¢ only doing a lit >. 1 would call it farmer is keeping after year and long as they give milk e point: Such farm: are not bred or con- ble production of their calves is but se from dairy bred it_would pay better cows, even If it were ree and buy one good yrtant to know the f every cow in the herd, r she 3s paying or not, if the re wished for. To this end s are being formed in country to work out rd improvement »f butter ep cows th the pre y replace sary t some pa the problem o The nterest taken by the dairy farm- k of the cow testing asso- d 'by the branch of the storage commissioner, Ottawa, is steadily increasing. Evidence his is seen in two or three ways, The s in the wor a larger number of cows whose is beng weighed and sampled six s a month, and better still there 1s nerease the yield. That is to sav. that the second and third tests in she various localities show.a marked im- provement on the first s m Wieekly: Sun reports: in the supply of September The Toronto There will be no ght hogs in this province during e and October, at all events. 50 much is nade abyndantly clear by the special reportsigiven on next page of this issue i the Sun. There may be a somewhat heavier pressure on the market in No- vember, but after the end of December indications point to -the probability of receipts running below demand Lhe reason why shipments in the first be kept within 'Nurses' and Mothers' Treasure --safest régulator for. baby. Prevents colic and vomiting Eve fr containing opiem oY sw writer of in the Sep- of a forge Francis Cotton 18 F i Dpea short stories 0 BF : tember SE ¥ with a tale of Corot paintingde _._ DRUCEISTS, CROCERS Axp CENERAL STORES J two fall months. will : or 3 packets for 28¢- limited compass are .plainly stated by ow pus whole season correspondents and will be readily un- its fuss & . derstood by all readers. The heavy Ion mortality in spring litters caused a re- - wage duction in the number - which would stherwise have been available before the end of the ygar, and many of those that survived will be, owing to the complete clean-up' of last year's feeding grain, Jatep in reaching market than would otherwise have been the case; there has peen a holding back until new grain came in But, because of this delay in finishing hogs which should Have been ready for September and October, there will likely be a heavier run. in November than would occur under normal conditions. 'With the opening of the new year the number of marketable hogs available will, because of the reduction in the total of the year's of necessity record sheets being tabulated daily y . Lain feeding to 'the Gips For BL in oli A Btwn, secrud Che Farmers |||= ies affect local § we are likely to ve a fairly good market in September n r, a weaker one in Novem firming up of prices again with the ppening of Of course, conditions in n and Ireland, which are out competitors in sup- plying the English bacon market, or the commercial situation in England itself, may upset this mn; but the domi- nant factor in market is the local su eem to justify thie forecast just made. seem to Justify te fooNaLY JOSH, Ws : Ki , . 2>-The {0 prio nvevailed Ba the ity tony Flour and + ley, 480. tb 56c.; Tye, 850c.; peas, | corn, 63c. to 6le. Butter--Choice, creamery, farmers' butter, in prints, 2c. a lb; packed, 24c.; rolls, Meat--Beef, catease, $6 to $7 a ewt.; choice cuts, 12¢. to 1c. per ib; pork, 9jc. ta 106. a owt; veal, 'by quarter, 5¢. to 9c. per 1b.; cuts, 6c. to 104c.; by carcase, Se. to So, per lb; cutlets, 123¢,; hi live weight, $6.85 per cwt.; carcase, to $10 per ewt.; cus, 1240. to 156. a lb; lamb, by pound, 12¢c.; chops, 20c. a lb; mutton, Se. to 9¢. lb. Ihnea--Salmon trout, 12jc. a lb; whitefish, lZge. a 1b; pike, lve. a Ib.: Chinook salmon, 30c. a lb; smelts, & a lb; kippered herning, Yarmouth*"bloaters; 40c. a doz.; At- lantie 30c. a 1b.; salt codfish, 7¢. to 15c. a 1b; halibut; 20c. a Tb; fresh haddock, 10c. a lb.; bullheads, 100. a lb.; red hefring, 15c. a box; mackerel, -15¢. a lb; trout, 12jc. a Ib; perch, 30c. a. dozen; frog's legs, 40c. a lb.; ciscoes, 16¢c. a 1b; oysters, 400., 50c. and 60s. per qt.; bluefish, 15c. a lb.; butterfish, 15c. a Ib.; lake herring, 10c. &+lb. Poultry--Chickens, 750. to $1.25 per pair; tw keys, $1 to $2 each. Fruit--Lemons, 280, to 30c. a doz; oranges, 0c. to fe, per dos; banan- as, 20c. to 2c. » Goz.; Malaga grapes, 15¢. to 200. per Ib. Vegetables--Potatoes, new, -$1 per bush.; new cabbage, Te. to $1 per doz. lettuce, 40c. a ; radishes, 400, a dozen; celery, Bo. ahead, or 80c. a doz.; parsnips, 75¢. bush.; turnips, 15c. peck; beets, 90c. peck; onions, 60o. peck, Beef hides, No. 1, Bo. per lbs No. 2, and bulls, Te. per lbs pes, freshly taken off, §1 to $1.25; call skins, 10e. Ib; skins, 80p. each; rendered tallow; Die. Ibs bees wax, No. 1, 27e. a lb.: ved fox, No. 1, large, $4; mink, fine and dark, $3 to 37; ve- coon, 50e. to of same; skunk, 28e. to 27. Baby's Hold On Life. Baby's Own Tablets cost 25 cents a box. A box bought now may save your baby's life. Summer laints come often withéut warning, and thousands of little them every summer. If children' mach and bowels are kept iin. onder there isglittle danger of these trou- bles, and that is just what Baby's Own Tablets do. They ave for the new-born baby or the well-grown child--and they are absolutely safe. Give your child an occasional dose of tablets, and you will keep it well, Ii vou have not got a box of tablets in the house now, send for them at once and you may feel that your little ones! 26¢. a lb; are safe. Mrs. William Parrott, Myrtle, Ont., says: "My little boy suffered greatly from" colic and cried almost continuously. A few doses of the tablets 'cured him, and now 1 give the tablets occavionally to prevent the trouble returning." Sold by medjcine dealers or 'hy mail at 35 cents a *hox from The Dr. Williams" Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Hibernians In Scotland. Freeman's Journal ' At the various misses throughout Scotland, last Sunday, a circular was read from the archbishop and bishops, condemning the Ancient Order of Hibernians in that countey. "The priests," says the circular, "will be good enough tor the next three Sun- days to announce to the congrega- tions that the members of the Ancient Order of Hibernians cannot be admit- sed to the sacraments of the church. If any further information on the matter be received from Rome it will be communicated without delay. It is, therefore, obligatory for ors to leave the society if they wish to me main in the Roman Catholic church." ------------ The Resulés Of Poor Blood. be kept in order or diseases of when one weakens all * weaken. plied with pure, rich blood. blood is always the Wade's Irop Tonic Yhey are a great and blood maker. Wade's Drug Store. satisfactory. In boxes, 25c., These Other Days. There rode in the golden oldest days A horseman through the towe And many o gentle maid. would gaze From a roschung cesmbent down. He greeted ber ; then, guick and glad She sized ber bandkerchief 3 Add waved until the lad Was gone § then we "for grief. The autoists, in these iron days, Around the camer ly And 'many a geotle maid will gaze From a window, hell hit fers : The scent ome to then on the Greece s not, as them, o = boy They smiff, their a dkoreniold they boire-- Amd hol them to their noses @ "Don't Use The Knife. _ That's the barbatons way of freat COrpR-BangeEcus, "Corn _ be removed painlessly by Put gray crops, almost certainly run below | pam's Corn Extractor in twenty-four the average of recent years; as Sun cor- | hours. oily 2 7 you respondents say, there i ¥ general dis- "want Teurey Bec . : Th ; apt 4 ik pply, and the regarding this |. $2, according to Leauty The whole machinery of health must the stomach; liver and kidneys will fol- low. These organs are so related that To keep them vigorous they must be sup- Such result of using Pills (Laxative). nerve sgtrengthener at Money back if not 3 v mht > . MANY CAUSE GRIEF AS WELL AS JOY. Salting the Duchess of London In Cost 250 Men Their Lives--One Kiss' Caused Six Weeks War and 1,000 Lives. The efficacy of a fair woman's kiss was incontestably proved when, A 1704. the famous Gordon Highlanders were raised by the lovely Duchess of Gor don, who was directly instrumental in gaining a thousand recruits by the do- nation of a guinea and a kiss apiece. in a sense, many of these kisses may be said to have been fatal, for in an en- ward more than 250 were either killed or wounded. 3 Alain Chartier, the French a 38 the hero of a romantic legend. day he sat down in a public place, and being weary and exhausted by the heat of the day, fell into a slumber. As he a Margaret of Scotland, the wife of the Dauphin, afterward known in history as Lows XI, chanced to pass with her ats tenidants. She glanced at the unton- scions man and recognized in him the poet whose verses she so loved. en, motioning to maids to be still, she gently stepped orward and, stooping, imprinted a. kiss on the -sleeping 'poet's ips. . PAL times, however, a kiss has been the prelude to a tragic sequel, as that be- stowed in 1718 by Prince Ferdinand of Bavaria u Princess Thyra, the near relative of a ruler of a neighborin, state, where he was on a visit. Thi affectionate greeting, a heedless whim of the moment, was given under the very eyes of the - princess' betrothed, who, naturally taking umbrage, soundly rated 'the thoughtless prince. Words came to blows, which resulted in a duel being arranged, and diplomatic relations between the two states were hroken off. In the war which followed, although thousand lives were sacrificed. ---------- ABSENCE OF KILTS On Edinburgh's Streets Brings Disappointment. London Tathr. . There is one thing that always disap- points the visitor to Edinburgh, and that is a complete absence of kilts--of rather the absence of $cotsmen in kilts, If you meet a man wearing a kilt in the streets of the Queen City of the Forth it will be a grave mistake to suppose that he is the Laird of Gormuck or some other equally famous Highland chieftain. He 'is nothing of the sort. Asa matter of fact, his name is Hodgkins, and he is employed eleven months of the year lick- ing up envelopes for the firm of Eisen- stein & 'Ritzheimer on the shady side of Lothbury avenue, E. C. Another mistake which strangers are apt to make lies in 'supposin that the good people of Scotland talk cotch, 1 shall never forget my surprise on the oc- casion of my first visit to Edinburgh when a policeman at the corner of Fred- erick street, to whom 1 remarked, pleas- antly that it was "braw, brient nicht the and . stop asking him Scotchmen do not as a rule talk at all. They possess the gift of silence to a really remarkable degree. I know a gillie named Donald who lives in Perthshire in whose society I' have sometimes spent whole «days stalking the elusive stag without his ever vouchsafing a single remark of any kind. 1 remonstrated with him once, pointing out that such silence as his almost amounted to taci- turnity. He promised to try and culti- vate a certain measure of garrulity," and after we had- walked across the heather for five hours, during which time 1 could see that his brain was working feverish- ly, he suddenly turned to me and ex- claimed, "Yon's a fearfu' earthquake they had in Jamaica!" after which strik- ing effort he relapsed once more into his habitual attitude of respectful silence. Thé College Girl's Rescue. "I believe in a college education for girls," said Admiral Erbin at a dinner at Jamestown, "but the girl who comes out of college thinking that she knows a Aeat deal has not profited by her four yrs' course. For, after all, it is but a _} smattering that college education gives | us "Most girls know this. Many do not. The latter sort, carry themselves super- ciliously, use big words, correct ignorant persons' grammar and fail to make a good marriage. In fact, they create a bad impression everywhere. "Thus there was a girl--a Vassar girl--who got caught by the incoming tide out on a rock. The tide rose higher, and the girl shricked and screamed madly for help. "Help came at last in the shape of a grizzled old shellback, in a flat-bottomed boat. The girl, as soon ad she saw the shellback, recovered her poise' and '| said in her most affected manner: "'Ah, 1 knew some succor come if I but continued calling fatigably. "The shellback scowled. "Wall, miss,' he said, 'if that's how ye express yer gratitood the sucker'll be durned if he. don't row back without ye. would inde- . § Another True Story. Vino Vetitas, in N. ¥Y. Sun: * After all, John Burrough's story is the best, and, as I saw it in the Sun, it's true. A lieutenant of an English regiment stationed in Africa was hunt ing for big game. He was fearless, bat for some reason he hesitated to shoot at the great lioness that 'ap- proached. Nearer and neater she ame and was limping. The big-heart- ed soldier took out the thorn that he saw was in her foot and she limped away gratefully. And the, Britisher forgot the incident. : Not so her ladyship. She returned the next night, looked over the roster of the regiment, and ate every. officer that ranked the lieutenant, who, of course, by her active gratitude, was made a colonel. -------------- Stevenson's Clothes. London Tit-Bits. Robért' Louis: Stevenson's get-up is thus described by a fellow-member of the Saville Club: "He wore a black flannel shirt, with a curious knitted tie twisted in a knot; he had Wellingion boots, rather tight dark trousers, a pea- jacket and a white sombrero hat. But tume was a lady's sealskin cape, which he wore about his shoulders, fastened at the neck by a fancy counter with the French shortly after-} hostilities lasted but six weeks, over a nieht," whateffer," told me to push off conundrums.' the most astonishing item of all his cos- § OF CANADA Head Office - - .- - Toronto * The Standard Bank pays in four times a year on all Savings Bank deposits. od 32 [opal Sn KINGSTON BRANCH i COR. PRINCESS AND STS. THAT COOL, COMFORTABLE, SATISFIED FEELING COMES FROM THE USE OF It contains the great- § mm gay est amount of muscle ath building, brain-works § ing material for the : L least money. Whole- , some and nutritious, 1 TRY IT WITH FRESH FRUITS, All Grocers--13c. a carton, 2 for 25¢. Brass and Iron Bedstead, in Fancy Designs. We are' selling off at Special Prices. ry Also Feather Pillows, in the best of Goose, Duck 'and Feathers. ' y pt ERE Ee Also Lock Weave, Hercules Springs and James Reid, Polishes All Metals. Used by Yachtsmen, Fire. departments, - Janitors, Engineers, on Steamships, Auto- mobiles, and by anyone desiring a brilliant lustre on metal. Sizes of tins: : Half Pint, Pint, Quart, Half Gallon and Gallon. A MCKELVEY §& BIRCH, 69-71 Brook St . ' Summer Furniture Sale= . -- Reductions from 18 to £0 per cent, and a large "selection. Ses our stock before buying. § : PARLOR SUITS--5-Piece Su'ts worth $25, reduced to $20. PARLOR SUITS--2 3-Piece Suits worth $48, reduced to $40. PARLOR SUITS--1 5-Piece Suits worth $80 (special), reduced to " iba Ar he 7 wb be Oe $60. ' LOUNGES--Our $7 Velour Lounges, reduced to $5. LOUNGES--Our $12 Velour Lounges, reduced to $9.50. Bed Lounges and Davenports, all reduced. 1 R. J. REID LEADING UNDERTAKER. s "PHONE 577. CANADA LIFE ASSURANCE CO'Y HEAD OFFICE wv..ciminm mms ins mms tm msmneiwon TORONTO, ONTY ¢ How well have the affairs af Policynolders been administered ? The ra Te aan oe tha T ones OF 3500" | ecorved Premiums Policyhoiders . in $56 Paid "Polie: "om i -- -------- ST 2:566.08, Credited to Polityhoiders -- mo sienna BA 348.0. Total paid or credited to Po re eps (HS, 7854 Excess of Assets and Payments to Policyholdera over 8.47 62 >For every $100 received in from Polcyholders Pre i, . or wr $115. Many "Many years ago the Osmadien Life Ay Data wn as 'Canada's Piny:"! Figures how Mey chee given office, 18 Market street, Kingocan on for-you io we; J. R. URQUHART, J, 0. HUTTON, Special __ Managers ------ -- -------------------------------------- « i Chocolates ' Buy Ganong's G. B. Chocolates. They are the Best. A. J. REES, 166} Princess Street : i also held together a bunch whi of daffodils." ¥