~a-tives" | you should - PAGE FIFTEEN m-- ------ > . ¢ { : 5 i 7+ THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1U, 1808. - P| "LY MEDICINE THAT DID WE WY 6000" "Fruit-a-tives" Cured Backache After Doctors Failed Utterly. "1 have received most wonderful benefit from taking "Fruit-astives." 1 wuffered for years from backaches and pain in the head and I consulted doctors and took every remedy ob- talnable without any relief. Then I began taking "Fruit-a-tives" and this was the only medicine that ever did meé any real good. I took =everal boxes altogether, and now I am en- tirely well of all my greadiv)s heag- aches and backaches. I takéd "Fruit occasionally still, but I am quite cured of a trouble that was sald to be incurable. 1 give this testi- mony voluntarily, in order that others who suffer as I suffered may try this wonderful medicine and be cured." Mrs. Frank Eaton, Frankville, Ont. Be wise. Profit by Mrs. Eaton's example, and start with "Frult-a- tives." They will quickly relieve Pain in the Back, and stop. Headaches be- cause they keep bowels, kidneys and skin in perfect order and insure the blood being always pure and rich, "Fruit-a-tives" 1s now put up in the new 26c trial size as well as the regu- lar G60¢ boxes. All dealers should have both sizes. If yours does not, write Iruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. Freg-Teddy Bear-Freg This is a genuine, Imported, woolly brown, Teddy Bear, His head, ble arog and lege are jointed on to the body so that they can be see him ehake his head and hear him unt when you hit im in the stomach. "Teddy " is all the e in the cities. The children carry him to school and even the grown up Iadies carry him with them when they go cut for a walk or ride, %0r to the theatre, The more tostly "Teddys" well as high as $256.00 each. We have picked out the one for vou on account of his good size, his | Jointed head, arnis and legs, Lis cute grunt and his | ioe cinnamon co or, Every Girl and Boy wants a Teddy Bear and vou can get one very easy. Just send us your name ! Denver CANADA AN INSPIRING LAND. Its Geography and Its Early Patriotism and Service. .Rev, Dr. Tucker. The geography of our country has had its romance awd missionary interest. The bible records. that Lot chose the land of Gomorrah was well-watered. Surely never was land so beautifully watered as, ours. Along the chains of lakés and rivers across a contin- ent travelled long ago the Hudson Bay Com- pany's canoes and York boats. In these same boats went the missionaries, carrying the mes- sage of Christ clear away to thé ffbzen Arctic, to the Rockies, and the far-off Pacific. The land of birth is a sacred thing--the land of our fathers, the lind of our opportunities, the land that will réceive our 'bones--something to live for, and, if need be, to die for. Land was the greatest of God's material gifts to man. The Land, the Land, the Land was the reirain of the Old Testament from end to end. Even the desert was used to picture our pil- grimage, the Jordan the division between this world -and the next, and Jerusalem our home beyond the grave. How did the land which in- spired the intense patriotism of the people of Israel compare with our own Canada? There was no comparison. The Jordan was but a rivulet, compared with the St. Lawrence, the Mackenzie or the Saskatchewan; Galilee but a pool compared with our inland seas; the mountains of Lebanon mere ant-hills beside the giant peaks of the.Rocky Mountains, and the plains of Palestine only fields alongside the rolling prairies of the west. A richly en- dowed land was one of the greatest of our in- heritances, and it behooves the Stinday school and the Church to inculcate Christian patriot- Jsm. Our history likewise was inspiring. Think of the glorious achievements of the I'rench pioneers who had pushed their way across the continent, and the self-sacrificing lives of the Jesuit missionaries, those splendid men who had written 4 noble chapter in the history of our country. 'Later came the Loyalists, who gave up their homes and came to a homeless land for the sake of principle. Was there in this no lesson for us to-day, when men were tumbling over one another for the almighty dollar? Are we not called upon to live worthy of such carry, on the work which they began, and to prove true to the religious traditions of our country, whose very name owed its religion to a. text of Scripture: "He shalt have dominion from sea to sea, and from the river to the ends of the earth?" yecanse it sires, to mia A Significant Victory. | Canadian Courier, Not so long ago, Benjamin Barr Lindsey was little known beyond the State of Colorado. Now, it would be difficult to go into any city on the continent where someone would not "rise and call Judge Lindsey blessed. It was a small work that this little man, with the brave eyes and frail hands, set himself to do-- just to win the confidence of the "bad boys' of He persuaded them to tell"him: how they got into trouble, he actually trusted to their sense of honor when he sent them away to learn liow to keep out of the courts, and, when they came back, he induced citizens of repute to give-them work and confidence. Not very much to do, the worldly-wise might say; yet it has become an immense force in the sav- ing of the youth, for the Juvenile Court of Denver has been preached wherever there is erring childhood. Judge Lindsey visited' Canada in the winter of 1907, impressing "all who met him. with his blending of delicacy and courage. As might have been anticipated, he has had bitter foes, for there are deadly enemies of social order, In a recent contest, and address and we wiil send you by mail 15 pack azes of our fast selling delicious perfumes, in six odors fhose, pink, violet, heliotrope, lilac and lily at | the valley) to sell at 10c. per package, You can sell | the perfume very quickly, as each person who buys a package of perfume is'ontitled to receive a beautiful | colored picture, 1€ x 20 inches, which are reproduc. tions from some of the greatest paintings and are suitable for framing, As coon as ) ou have sold the perfume and sent us the money (81.50), we will promptly send you the Teddy Bear just as repre sented. Write to-day. Address The Rose Perfume Co. Dept. 26 TORONTO, ONT TO HIS MAJESTY THE KING : SirJohn Power & Son Led. \ ESTABLISHED AD. 1791. 'THREE SWALLOWS [IRISH WHISKEY Famous for over a century for its delicacy of flavor, Of highest standard of Purity. , It Is especially recommended by the 'dAedical' Profession or account.of its peculiar "DRYNESS" ! i Sixty Years * { of Spoon-Making 8 has resulted in the artistically finished patterns in spoons, | knives; forks, efc., stamped "104 ne" | "1847 ROGERS BROS: is This name was known fo es \ Your grandparents as the 'eye? J) standard of silver quality. a. SOLD BY LEADING DEALERS When you buy silver dishes be sure they are made by . MERIDEN BRITACO. *¢ Maypole Soap With Ease at Home With Sure Results oc. for colors, 15c. for bimck. Frank L. Benedict & Co, Judge Lindsey ran independently, in opposition to party candidates, and received 20,000 votes to 17,000 polled by the Republican and Democratic aspirants. The victory was essent- ially a women's triumph, for the suffrage. of Colorado women went in favor of: this Daniel of Denver. The victory is one for moral re- form and enlightened legislation. Judge Lind- sey is no sentimentalist. A boy would find it as hard to deceive him as he would find it easy to confide in him. But he has followed the plan of fixing the blame where it belongs--on the negligent parents and criminal dive-keep- ers, and these classes naturglly resent being called to account for their wrong-doing, It is welcome news that the merely political for ces have been soundly defeated apiece The Women Are Praised. Courier The ada the done, by National Council of Women for Can- has been gaeeting in Ottawa, reviewing work accomplished, and the work to be feminine. organizations. The dele- gategeare fine examples of sane; progressive womanhood, no faddists who believe in "Excepting all things in an hour Jrass mouths and iron lungs." federation of societies, towards which Aberdeen did much, has become a large antl effective body which will go far towards oriatiizing and unifying the industrial and charitable work of women's societies. At the head of the National Council of Canada is s.ady Edgar--with marked literary and legis- lative ability. In 1909 the International Coun- cil will meet in Toronto--the most notable feminine gathering yet in that city of conven- tions The Lady a \ Hon. Adam Beck's Saints' Days. The refusal of the British House of Com- mons to adjourn over Derby Day recalls a story related of one of the Roman Catholic years before the passage of the first Reform Bill, after an' exclusion of a century and a half. He gave notice that on a certain day he would make a motion, whereupon there arose from his noble colleagues a general cry of "Derby!" The astonished named another day, only to be greeted with an equal- ly unanimous 'expostulation of "Oaks!" At this, he explained that he would have .to ask the forgiveness of their lordships, but, having been educated abroad, he. was forced to ac- knowledge that he was not familiar with the list of saints' days in the Anglican calendar! novice A Bad Example. Courier lord Rev.. Dr misery in Mount Stephen's gift of $73,000 to Barclay has caused unprecedented the Presbyterian manse. Ralph Connor absolutely refuses to be comforted [and why not also the once-famous' Rev. Mr Hossack?] t Missing the Substance. Clarion . . What have the trade uniomists been doipg this last half 'century or sa? Mostly wasting their time trying to keep up "wages," ignoring entirely the question -of keeping up "work. peers who took their seats some foar or five THE BIBLE'S VICISSITUDES. Dr. Charles Aked upon Popular Misinfdrma- " tion About the Scriptures, The notion loosely fioating about the church= es is that the Bible came down from heaven, cleanly printed, nicely bound in morocco and gilt edged, with a bookmarker against that text which has been made to declare that every scripture, is inspired of Ged, that it is in- capable of error and every word and letter and punctuation mark infallibly gharanteed by the Holy Ghost! Nobody has ever held quite that theory of inspiration yet this infallibility is in practise cand for the Bible as printed in the English tongue and read in our church- es! All the world knows, or should know, that the revised version we now possess is improved edition of the Bishop's Bible, which was a bad copy of Cranmer's Bible, which was based on Coverdale's translation of Dutch and Latin translations in turn and Rogers' version of Tyndall's! And if we expect to find rigidly accurate messages from the very mind of God, conveyed in a version of a version which is a translation of a translation, we are demanding the most miraculous of all con- ceivable miracles. . Phe adventures of Bible documents before e day of the printing press constitute one of the romances of history. The earliest Hebrew copy of the Old Testament of undisputed date goes back only to the tenth century. For a period, therefore, of not less than 1,200 years, and perhaps of 2,000 copy had been succeeding copy, generation following generation in the world qf books even as in the human race. Twenty centuries of "editions" had gone the way of all' papyri, even as twenty centuries of human beings had gone the way of all. flesh, and this parchment was heir of all those ages in the foremost files of--books. Had no copy- ist made one mistake in the course of twice a thousand years? As compensation is the scrupulous fidelity with which' the Hebrew amanuensis did his work, his reverence for the letter of the document on which he was en- gaged and the consequent comparative purity and reliability of the text. Success of Christmas Stamp. Just as the Quebec Tercentenary stamp is going out of sale another takes its place and will be copied by a scheme more widely even than "tagrday." The idea of a Christmas stamp originated in Denmark four years ago in a' project to aid a hospital for tuberculous children. - The plan was to sell stamps, in this case a half cent. These stamps were not good for postage but they could be affixed to any postal card, letter or package, and so fill the double purpose of a contribution and an ad- vertisement for the cause. The idea proved annual institution. It was adopted with more direct government sanction in Belgium,' and then the Red Cross took it up in America. It began the campaign*with the sanction of the postal authorities last year in Delaware. Eigh- teen days before Christmas 50,000 stamps were printed and offered-at a cent apiece. Before Christmas 400,000 had been sold through schools, départment stores, clubs, banks and hotels, though not by post-offices, and $3,000 secured for the war against consumption. This year a similar stamp "4s issued in' every state and may now be had at all Red Cross head- quarters and at many other places. It will not carry any kind of mail, but any kind of mail will carry it. Nobody makes any profit from its sale. All goes to fight the great white plague. Everyone who sees this stamp wants to know what it means, and when peo- ple want tg know the fight is' won. It is be- cause they do not know a few amazingly sim- ple things that people die of, tuberculosis. Poem by Edwin Markham, Edwin Markham, who made a. world-wide reputation a few years: ago with "The Man With the Hoe," has written for the Woman's Home Companion a poem that is considered to be even greater. "Before the Gospels Were" tells, with poetic imagination, the story of the gathering together of the materials for the gospels by Christ's disciples after His as- cension. It is an illuminating picture of what Christ's life meant to His disciples and why it was so accurately reflected in their gospels. The opening verse is: Long moons and evenings after he was gone, Mary the Mother, Matthew, Luke and John, And all those who loved Him to the last, Went over all the marvel of the past-- Went over all the old familiar ways With tender talk of dear remembered days. They walked the roads that never gave Him rest-- Past Jordan's ford, past Kedron's bridge, Up Olivet, up Hermon's ridge, To that last road, the one they loved the best. The last verse sums up thoughts. expressed: So huddling often-by the chimney blaze, Or going do%n the old remembered ways On many a lingering walk, They held their wonder-talk, Minding each other of some sacred spot, Minding each other of a word forgot; So gathering up till all the whispered words Went to the four winds like a flight of birds! Corporations and Publicity. Every corporation is, in a sense, a public institution; and if the stock holders of every corporation were to put this card on its Christmas tree for all its directors and mana- gers: "Be Wholly Frank with the Public for the Public gave us our existence and is Entit- led to our Confidence as well as our Service." and of this hint were literally followed a period of surprise would soon be followed by a period of pride; the people would boast of our great corporations and look to them for the guidance in practical affairs that they ought to give. The voice of the demagogue would be. less often. heard in the land. and we should lose growing class hatred, the most ominous fact of our industrial era. In a Chinese Hospital. Dr. Keeler, of the Methodist mission" hos- pital at Chang-li, China, relates that many women of the district smoke great, long pipes, but on coming to the -hospital and hearing the gospel from the bible-women, and seeing the foreign women (who because they can read and speak the Chinese langnage must be very wise, and yet they do not smoke), often give up smoking. = A small girl from the Ya- men came for many days to the hospital with a_ badly infected hand, and after she recovered, her father was so grateful that he sent the mission staff a feast, all.that four men could carry, of more than twenty courses, and more than twenty people could eat. This opened the way and the missionaries were invited to several official homes in the city' socially. and professionally... The Chinese visited the "hospital, school and residence also £3 ps a very popular in Denmark _ and _has become an ~ LESSENED INCOME. Account For Distress in the Old Lands at Present. The distress in the old lands has been avg: mented by the retrenchment of railway com- panies, due to lessened incomes and the re- | duced dividends which produced growls from shareholders. One company alone, the North British, has cancelled 150 regular trains from its - time-table. Reduced freight and parcel rates have also been withdrawn. The exodus of employees has been alarming and a situa- tion precipitated almost without parallel. It does not touch the heart of the agitator, since crime and lawlessness in Ireland are increas- ing. - If 'the public at large were given the facts, as detailed by the reports of the Pro- testant Federation, they would be stirred to surprise and indignation at the high station of some of the forces behind the disorders. The Imperial Government has hurried on pro- grammes of work that would ordinarily have been reserved for the new year; they have loaned municipalities. £1,500,000 for with unemployment; they have given grants to compensate for the use of unskilled or unfit men, and they have increased the grant to the Central Fund under the Unemployed Act to | £300,000. It is still Christian, motherly Brit- ain. y + Justice Asleep in England. In the Strand Magazine Henry Furniss shows how the law is administered at times in England. ""A friend of mine, wishing to give a ring to an acquaintance on the eve of being married, bought the article and gave the jeweler instructions for an inscription upon it, with a stipulation that it should be return- ed by a certain date, otherwise it would be useless. Months elapsed before the ring was delivered. It was sent back to the jeweler. The tradesman took out a summons, and my friend had to go to town and sit in a stuffy court all day without the case being called. Next morning he bribed the usher to let him know when the casd'was called. He was sent for at lunch time and sat for four hours listen- ing to other cases. By this time the old gen- tleman on the bench was asleep. The jewel- er's case was called, and at its close the legal functionary slowly disentangled himself from the embrace of Morpheus, gave 'Verdict for plaintiff and = lumbered out of court. My friend was furious and addressed the judge in terms the reverse of polite. The usher, after pocketing another half-sovereign, remarked, 'Yes, sir; it's very 'ard, I know. But, you know, sir, he allers gives a verdict for the plaintiff after four o'clock!" So Say Many of Us. Ao not very many think as does the Otta- wa, correspondent of the Presbyterian: The 'writer was 'induced to attend the final football struggle between Queen's and Varsity. Hence- forth he shall say "no" to any seductive, voice that invites to a football match. Let no one infer that the college men behaved unseemly. They were as gentlemanly toward "other as the barbarities of the game would permit. It would be presumptuqus to imply that depony ent hath any premium on the civilities of life, and perhaps. it is none of his business if men find pleasure in "this kind of pastime, but he cannot bélieve that manhood, either morally or physically, is developed by men throwing each other to the ground with a thud tha jm- perils life. There can be no objection to com- pétitors catching one another or to scrimmage, but for one man to catch his opponent by the ankles when running'is not sport. Accidents are lable to happen in all well-regulated games. Rugby footballers, however, antici- pate cuts, bruises, faints, broken noses and limbs, by their carefully-planned preparations, such as helmets, pads, plasters, bandages, stimulants and skilled attendants. The Gracious Compliment. Dr. Clifford, léader among thes "Frees" in England, with a zeal for attacking the Estab- lished Church, which must please all admirers of strenuous life, has completed fifty years of ministry under ordination. The Archbishop of Canterbury showed the true Christian and gentleman when he addressed him in these terms: "I should like to be allowed to add, for myself, a word of fraternal greeting to a Christian teacher who has for so many strenu- ous years fought with perseverance and power on behalf of purity and temperance and manly simplicity and moral earnestness, and many another principle which should be dear to the followers of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. There are big and important matters upon which you and I profoundly differ; there are some wherein you regard me, I believe, as in a high degree mischievous and wronghead- ed, both in policy and action. But you will at least let me assure you of my respectful and sympathetic appreciation of such efforts as you have continuously devoted for half a cen- tury of London life to the furtherance of civic righteousness and: Christian citizenship and progress." | Neglected Thanksgiving. The Herald, of Rochester, N.Y. remarks: "We are getting farther and farther away from the Anglo-Saxon. The Teutonic, the Gallic and the Iberian conscience does not comprehend the measure of the Puritan Thanksgiving. It never will. So now our Thanksgiving day is a legal holiday, pure and simple--a day for a good dinner--and the end of the football season. We do not need this day for recreation, because the half-holiday custom has become so gengrally prevalent that the people have an abundance of time for pas- times, without desecrating the holiday which, of all others, ouglit to be given to the worship of the Maker of all things. Surely out of 365 days, weought to devote one to serious thanks- giving. Invented by Practical Woman. The collar separate from the shirt. was in- vented about 1825 by Hannah Lord Montague, resident in Troy, New York. In those days with no sewing machines and no laundries, the making and washing of shirts was no small item in the housewife's work, especially for a husband fastidious in regard fo clean linen. To lighten her labors, Mrs. Montague hit upon the idea of a detached.collar, which could be fastened to the neck band of the shirt, so that several collars might be used with one shirt; At 'once requests came from neighbors for separite collars and her available material was soon exhausted, and she actually invested in a yard of linen. Quickly the knowledge 'of this labor-saving device spread far and wide. --_-- ) «© The British government grants $500 a yeaf each to John Davidson and William Watson in consideration of the merit of their poetical works. To Henry Austin Dobson is granted $1,250; while Alfred Austin receives as poet laureate, $1,000 + : 5a dealing: TWILIGHT TWINKLES. A Lot of Things That Will Be Read With Interest Instruction. +f Canada's wheat for this year were to be shipped in cars, each holding fifteen tons, miles long. Once in Kingston a discussion took large space in a daily paper upon the question, a paradox: Dogs the top of a carriage wheel move faster than the bottom? Certainly. {Try a marked wheel. The top moves forward with the carriage, while the bottom turns backward. st member of the British cabinet, iman, has a ready wit. A heckler ng him on the education question. his question. "Now, sir, I have a schol in my eye" "No, pardon me," inter- pted Runciman, "you have only one pupil." | Recently a schooner went ashore off San Buenaventura, Cal, and the crew were in dan- ger of being lost. But an Irish setter swam out through the breakers, seized a stake that had been thrown overboard with a rope at- tached, and carrying it to the shore made the rescue possible. ; The London Mail says an optimists' club is to be formed in the metropolis. Most clubs are in reality pessimists' clubs. Lectures on current topics will show that there is no reason for discomfort, let alone despair, and the news- papers will spread the good influence thirough- out the nation. Cats are held in great reverence in Persia. The Shah alone has fifty of them, and each one has an attendant of its own, with a special room for meals. When the Shah travels, the cats go also, being carried by men on horse- back. The westerner, on the contrary does not appreciate his dumb friends. ~The mayor of Rome, Signor Ernesto Nathan, a Jew, has erected in the poorest part of the cemetery, where are many nameless graves, a marble pillar, with the inscription, "Over her children who here nameless rest from their hard and lowly lives, the city, flourishing through the industry of their hands, keeps watch _with sympathetic love." Four years since the legislature of Kentucky passed an act" forbidding co-education of whites and black. Berea college contested the cohstitutionality of the law; the state su- preme court upheld it, and so. now does the Federal supreme court, but Judge Harlan dis- sented, since the same argument might lead to the two races being forbidden to appear in the same street or market square! Education nowadays is looked upon as an essential to success in-life, but Solomon And- rews, who lately died at Cardiff, was a striking exception. He was very rich yet could neither read nor write. He began life as a pedlar of sweets in the streets and ere he died he owned property in all parts of Wales, including col- lieries and tramway systems. Of course he had the aid of men with the harmless necessary education, so we had better keep on going to schoolzas formerly. The longest span of life is that of the ele- phant, which will survive two centuries. The shortest life, the mayfly's, which hatches, mates, lays and dies within a few hours, know- ing but one day, followed by one darkngss, irom which it never awakens. The longest human life of modern times, 169 years, is be- lieved to have been attained by Henry" Jen- kins, of Yorkshire, England, 1501 to 1670. It was proved by court registers that he had ap- peared in evidénce 14 years before his death. From Mexico is reported the discovery of a tree, the palo amarillo, which, accordihg to expert offical reports, will take the place of the guayule as a rubber-producing plant. The known supply of .guayule will he exhausted within seven years. , The palo amarillo grows wild throughout Mexico, and yields ten per cent. of rubber and forty per cent of varnish and soap material, whereas guayule yields eight per cent, of rubber and no by-products. Here is richness, | "Sun worship enters largely into latter-day Christiarfity, and this shows the gradual de- velopment of the Caucasian races up from barbarism." Thus declared Professor Oscar Montelius, curator. of the National Swedish Museum of Stockholm, in a lecture at Chicago, As a proof he evidenced the building of altars ir Fhurches at the eastern end. But the veri- est! tyro in church knowledge can' tell him that there are several intelligent reasons for the eastern position, into which no astrono- mical consideration enters. Why is the Archbishop of York styled "Primate of England?" York was created a see in the second century, and in 625 A.D. Paulinus became the first archbishop. Much dispute arose between their graces of York and Canterbury as to precedency. Eventually an appeal was made to Rome, and the dispute was settled in favor of Canterbury, although Archbishop of York was allowed to style him- self Primate of England, and the Archbishop of Canterbury to. be Primate of All England. What a good thing it would be if church folk could always settle their grievances with one word as the Archbishops did! Who w "the man with a window in his stomach"? Alexis St. Martin, a French Can- adian, who at age of 18 was accidentally shot while employed in Michigan, the charge of powder and buckshot from.a musket a yard away tearing a great hole in his left side. For nearly two years, 1822-1824, the wound was dressed and bandaged frequently to relieve pain and retain food. Then a small fold or doubling of the coat of the stomach appeared, and grew until it closed the orifice with a kind of valve, This retained food, but could be pushed aside to show the stomach's interior. For eight years Dr. Wm. Beaumont made ob- servations on digestion through this unique aperture, laying the foundations of American physiology. Rendering Belated Honor. The design for the $3,000 monument to Bar- bara Heck, the founder of Methodism on the American continent, to be erected at her grave in the little Blue Church cemetery on the banks of the St. Lawrence, below Brockville, will be of Barre granite and consist of a shaft with carved cap and base. It will be twenty feet in height' and contain a bust medallion of Barbara, and an inscription and brief 'his- tory of her life. An international commission of Methodist clergymen and laymen is receiv- ing funds from both sides of the line Checking the Scandal. The influence of the church is having effect South Dakota has proceeded further 'in reform of divorce laws, which have given her unhappy notoriety. Her new law, ratified at the polls, requires a residence of one year, instead of six months, by an applicant for divorce, and that all cases shall be heard at a regular term of court. This abolishes the pernicious,practice by which divorces have been granted secretly by judges sitting in chambers between terms of court, ) they would make a continuous train 1,365} \ a , i QA ius AO 'a he PNY SECO SHERRY BOTTLED IN SPAIN ONLY. A WORD TQ THE WISE: To those who enjoy and appreciate the goodness of a good wine for the family table, THE LANCET--the world's recognized leading medical journal--recommends SHERRY. It is a well known fact that the premier sherry house of the world is that of Messrs. GONZALEZ & BYASS, Jerez, Spain, This firm bottles, and seals exclu- sively at their own bodegas a brand of sherry, the excellence of which they absolutely guarantee--and' that is IDOLO SECO. For sale at all leading Hotels, Cafes, Restaurants and Wine Merchants the 'World over. Lawrence A. Wilson Co. Ltd. Canadian Agents, - Montreal, 11 "Don'y Neglect a ~~ Tough or Cold." It can have but one result." It leaves the throat or lungs, or both, affected. Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is the medicine you need. 1t is without an equal as a remedy for Coughs Colds, Bronchitis, Sore Throat, Pain in the Chest, Asthma, Whooping Cough, Quinsy and all affections , of the Threat and Lungs. A single dose of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup will stop a equgh, soothe the throat, and if the cough or cold has become settled on the lungs, the healing properties of the Norway Pine Tree will claim its reat virtue by promptly eradicating the faa effects, and a persistent use of the remedy cannot fajl to bring about a cowm- plete cure. : Do not be humb into buying so- called Norway Pine Syrups, but be sure aud insist on having Dr. Wood's. It is put up in a yellow wrapper, three pine trees the trade mark, and price 25 cents. Mrs. A. Elles, Innisfail, ARa.; writes: «Last spring I had Typhoid fever and Bronchitis, which left me with a terrible cough. I tried doctor's medicine but gob no relief until my husband got me a bottle of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, and before I hac finished it my cough was cared. My hnsband also uses it whenever he has a cough.s I would not be withe out i" You cannot possibly haw) a better Cocoa than EPPS'S A delicious drink and a sustaining food. Fragrant, nutritious and economical. This excellent Cocoa maintains the system in robust health, and enables it to resist winter's extreme cold. COCOA G1ld by Grocers and Storekeepers = in }-Ib. and }-Ib Tins. \ MONUMENTS Inspect our stock and work before placing your order. s INSCRIPTION WORK SOLICITED. The Kingston Granite and Marble Works WELCH"S OLD STAND. Cor Princess and Clergy Sta. Every Woman is interested and should kn about the wonderfy MARVEL Whirling Sg. cy pew Vaginal a ne yringe. LK your di $e ruggist for it. MA YE Ly aoc other, but sen R SUPPLY CO., Windsor, Ont. Sonera] Agents for Canada, FINE FURNITURE. ELLIOTT & SON, LIJITED. 79 KING ST. WEST, TORONTO,