Daily British Whig (1850), 24 Dec 1909, p. 6

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A DELICIOUS DRINK BAKER'S 060A Registered U. 8. Pat. Ottice Made by a scientific'blend- ing of the best tropical fruit. It is a perfect food, highly nourishing and easily digested. : -------------------------- TIE 52 HIGHEST AWARDS Walter Baker & Co. Lid. Porchester, Mass. Branch House : 86 St. Peter St., Montreal i ---------------------------- i} = vt. $3.50 Recipe Cures. Weak Men --- Free Send Name and Address Today -- You Can Have It Free and Be.. Strong and Vigorous. 1 have in my possession a prescription for nervous debility, lack of vigor, weakened nhood, failing memory end lame back, caght on by excesses, unnatural drains, or the * 'lies of youth, that bas cured so many worn and nervous men night in their own homes----without any additiousl help or medi- eihe--~that I think every man who wishes to véguin his manly power and virility. quickly od quietly, should have a copy. Bo I have termined 0 send w copy of the prescription free of charge, in o plain, orainary sealed en- vélope to uny mean who will write me for it. This prescription comes from a physician who has ade a special study of men and I am convinced it is the Rurest-acting combi uation for tie cure of deficient wanhood and vigor failure . ver put together. think I owe it to my fellow man to send them @& copy in confidence so that any nan anywhere who is weak and discouraged with re) ted failures may stop drugging himself th harmful patent medicines, secure what I believe is the quickest-acting restorative, upbuilding, SPOT-TOUCHING remedy ever devised, and so cure himself at home quietly and quickly. Just drop me a line like this: eB . Robinson, AR3R | uck Building, troit, Mich., and 1 will send you a copy of is splendid recipe in a plain ordinary en- velope free of charge. A great many doctors would obarge $3.00 to $5.00 for merely writin otit a prescription like this -- but I send £ entirely free Quick Returns -- , Honest Assortment Correct Market Prices Paid for all kinds of RAW FURS and SKINS Send your collections to 'REVILLON FRERES ESTABLISHED 1738 The Leader in the world's Fur Trade. 154 et 136 NcOll Street, Noutreal, Our 1909-1910 PRICE LIST FREE for the asking wR PAY KXPRESS CHARGES -- ------ nis teteeetetetetttnl A new line of Dining Room Demes, from $6 to $12, cheap and suitable for 'Xmas presents. High Portable Lamps Both Gas serviceable $10. only to the $6.50 and Electric kind, from Fringes, Small Toy Motors, ete H.W. Newman Electric Co, Phone, 441: 79 Princess street: FEEGRPRVR EERE EEE PETERSEN VERRY -- MAYPOLE SOAP © rou for Colove=isc. for Black, Found IL. Benedict & Co., Montvend, alla 15 BIG WITH PLANS THE NEW SASKATCHEWAN UNIVERSITY. The Infant Institution is Making Ready to Do Great Things For the West--Courses in Agrieul- ture. The western energy whith has cnas acterized the citizens of Saskatool and other settlers of the Province. of. Saskatchewan in the building up snd developing of the town, and in the amassing of material wealth, is mani tested in no less a degree in the «f- forte now being made in the univer sity town to [farther the cause of higher education. Already temporary class-rooms have been fitted up in the Drinkle Block, and equipped with the apparatus necessary for the dis- semination of knowledge in advance of that to be acquired in the public schools. Fifty-three students, with matriculation standings acquired in the high secheols, and in some 'cases in other provinces, have registered, and it is"expected that upwards of sixty will be on the roll before the enedeof the month. Af elabarate system of scholarships has been arranged for, each high { schoal «bf the province having the | privilege of nominating one student, { for a $%0 scholarship, while ten others of $100 each are open for gen- eral conipetition. It is the immedi- ate aim of the University to carry on the teaching of agriculture and arts, ard later on to go further and carry on a school of domestic science, and in this way to give those who are | taking en arts course in connection with teach ng an opportunity of im- parting practical kntwledge, which will be of value on the farm. Plans are being made for & two or course in agriculture for * gong who have previously re- ¢~tved a good publie #7hiool education. The university will also havé charge af extension work carried on at fairs, s0 that in this way it will do all the aduecationz]l work now carried on by the Provincial Department of Agricul ure, It is hoped in time to broaden this work, so as to encourage farmers' debating clubs throughout the pro- vinee, to distribute books, and pro- vide for the instruction and amuse wient of the people during the long winter gionths. Anything which will make the life of the farmers more pleasant and profitable is considered u duty of the University of Saskatche- wan. Plans are already being made for extension in other cities of the province, and it practically sure that this work will be carried on in Moose Jaw, Saskatoon and Prince Al- Lt during. the coming winter. In this way the university will be brought to the people. J The Anglican college founded by Bishop McLean at Prince Albert twen- ty years ago, has now been transfer- rod to Saskatoon with Archdeacon Lloyd as principal, Professors Tuckey and Broadbent as resident professors, | and Messrs. Dewdney and Shorefield | £0 non-resident, with -temporary quar- ters at Nutana. There are forty stu- dents in attendance, about half of whom are taking lectures in the Uni- versity, while the archdeacon, who has left for England, expects to be able to procure there thirty addition- ©! men for the mission fields. The University has agreed to grant sites | for affiliated theological colleges on the campus to be leased-to the col loges on a nominal charge, and two hdve applied for sites .already. On the 1,172-acre site on the other side of the river from the city, which cost the Government $150,000, work ; will commence on the three main structures, consisting of the general building, the residence for students nd the power-house, in January ef | next year. In addition to these, work will be proceeded with on the farm, mechanics building, stock pavillion, berns, and probably an horticultural building. These buildings will repre. sent with their equipment an outlay of $200,000. The sum of $330,000 has 6 already been appropriated by the viovernment. | The Position of Canada. \ political leaddr, in conversation with a Montreal Standard representa- tive the other day said: 'This may b: only an expression of American enterprise, but in. my estimation it may mean very Jonuch more, T daily exploitation of the riches of | Canada tor the delectation of Ameéri- ean readers must naturally have the cffeet of exeiting e cupidity of Am- ericans--this is only natural. The time has come when they need our raw material---this has become an ab- solute necessity. Especially is this true with regard to our pulpwood \vhat more natural than that Ameri- <n newspaper publishérs should do everything in their power to become possessed, by any means possible, of the treasures of the Canadian forests? And to do this the way must be pre pared--the opinion oi the people must be moulded I. may b> wrong, but this looks to me like the beginning of stirring times What the Amer | can papers undertake they generally accomplish, and it seems to me that (Canada is now the plum upon which they are to concentrate all their at tention. How Canada will come out of it remains to be seen Novelist and Priest Miners. The wide publicity attained by pro. perties bought in former sales of the Gillies' Limit brought together a most interesting 'group of buyers at the last auction, says The Cobalt Nugget, The W. A. Fraser, who is associated with 8. Ogilvie in the purchase "ol three lots for the aggregate pric: of $82,330, is the Canadian writer whose stories of outdoor life have delighted many readers. He had the distine tion of "obtaining the most coveted lots. Then, there is Rev. John De. ville, the Catholic priest, who gaw his name to the Deville property or Peterson Lake, and is now the meving spirit with 8. D. Maddin in the de velopment of the St. Anthony. Windsor's Industrial Boom. Windsor grins in glee over press talk of a tariff war between €anads and the United States. Already Wind: sor and vicinity can boast of more branch American factories than any .other locality in the country and more are coming all the time. There is an industrial' boom there that ae counts for the big increase yearly in 'population and assessment. : "FAMOUS STAMP COLLECTION, Sir William Avery 'Gathered £24,500 Worth In Mis Time. One of the largest private stamp'| collections ever sold has just been ac- quired, for the sum of £24,500, by W. H. Peckitt, a London stamp deal- er, from the executors of the late Bir William Avery of Birmingham. Col- lected throughout a long life from the age of efght, it is generally considered to be the largest general collection cf tage stamps next to that in the titish Museum. It is rich in all the great rarities, comprises from 90,000 to 100,000 stamps, and represents al- most completely the 'postal systems of every country in the world. Two "gems" are unused Postoffice Muuritius stamps engraved by a local watchmaker in Mauritius in 1847, The Prince of Wales paitt £1,450 at auction for the two.penny stamp unused. Only two cgpies of the penny stamp im this stafe are known. Recently in Pariz a collection of Swiss stamps of the millionaire banker M. Paul Mira- baud was.seld for approximately £8, 000, but in the Avery collection there are several unique pieces lacking in the Miraband one, Unused copies of the double Geneva stamp, of which there are seven and a half in one block, fetch £75 each. So rare is the whole top two rows of the five cen- times Eagle stamp of Geneva that its value can hardly be estimated, The Avery collection of three-corner- ed issues of Cape of Good Hope in many respects is superior to the Ver- non Roberts collection, sold to Mr. Peckitt in 1907 for £4,000. The orig- inal stamps were engraved in Lon- don, but during a temporary short age in the colony a local engraver had to provide an imitation. These are excessively rare. There are a unique block of four of the penny brick-red stamp and a pair and a single of the fourpence unused and five superb used pairs. Amang the stainps of Ceylon the unverforated ninepence lilae-brewn stamp is val: ued at £126. Tha -collection also in- eludes a copy of the three-lire star of Tuscany unused, worth about £100 The pair of the twenty-seven paras Moldavian stamp are priceless, and in mo other collection will there be found so large a number of the rare first stamps of Moldavia, for which Sir William Avery had a penchant. On one day: he bought three complete sete, twelve stamps, for £2,000--a re- cord deal ih any single class of rarity. The collection includes many rare stamps of Great Britain, among them being some of the Parliamentary en- velopes issued in January 1840, some five months before the issue of the first stamp and the Mulready enve- lope. There is a part sheet of twenty of the raré penny black V.R. stamp, worth about £10 a piece singly, and of almost priceless value in a large bloek as in this instance. Sir Wil. liam has also an experimental stamp showing the first attempts to perfor- ate postage stamps by Mr. Henry Archer. There are of the famous circular British Guiana stainps of 1850 the four cents on orange paper, another on yellow paper, two copies of the eight cents on green paper, and five of the twelve cents on blue paper, some Being valued at over £100. Of the 1856 series 'the one cent black on magenta stamp is missing, the only copy in existence being in the pos. session of a French collector. Of the companion rarity. ' the four cents on blue paper, Sir William possessed a superb. copy valued at over £200. Of the next-series of 1862 the four ents black on blue is shown in a com- plete reconstructed sheet, ingluding seventeen unused und 'unsigned .eop- tes, each lacking the signature of the postmaster. Only three examples of such sheets are known, the others being in the British Museum and in the French collection referred to. Unique again. is the omly word which will describe the beautiful un- used pair of the 12D black Stamp of Canada. of which the collection con- tains five copies in all. This stamp is worth $5600 a conv! Frederic Harrison's Rules of Life. "Touch not tobacco, spirits, nor any unclean thing. « Rise from every meal with an appetite. Walk daily for two hours. Sleep nightly for seven hours. Reverence all to whom reverence is due. Be content withowhat you have." Such are the rules of life laid down by Mr. Frederic Harrison, the. veteran Positivist and man of letters, who celebrated his seventy-eighth birthday recently. Mr Harrison lives up to his rules, and is as active and as well to- lay as many men half his age. In- deed, he claims to feel younger than wer. He is not sparing in his de- nunciation of bad habits. Smoking he lescribes as a "baastly habit'; play- ing. cards as "wearisome and inane." With regard to literary work, he | slaims never to have written for the sake of writing or for money, but only when he had something to say. Cr. Johnson and Bagpipes. Dr. Johnson's préjudiee against the Scots stopped short just where so mary knglishmen's toleration ends at the bagpipes. Boswell records the creat man's confession that he did not like music and had hardly any perception of it. He knew, he said, "a drum from a trumpet and a bag pipe from a guitar, which was about the extent of his knowledge of mus ick," and he algo said that it seemed to b> .a "method, of employing the mind, without the labor of thinking at all and with some applause from a man's self." But in the Highlands he appeared to be distinetly 1ond of the. bagpipes "and used often to stand for some time with his ear close to the great drone."--London Chronicle. A Carlyle Retort. An empty-headed duke once to Thomas Carlyle at a diner: "The British people, sir, can afford to laugh at theories." Carlyle, scowling, replied: _ "The Prench nebility of a hundred years ogo thought that they could af. ford te laugh at theorists too. But a man came and wiote a book called "Fhe Social Contract." This man was sean Jaeques Rousseau, and his.book was a theory and nothing but a theory, The nobles could tavgh at hig theory, but their skine wen: to bind the see ond edition of the book." : said -- Have a care about the geod bar- gain: you receive, lest it rob the other follow. It offems happens that we mistrust those %ve have 'placed in positions. of trust, ? Beh, When Art Experts Are Taken In by Crooked Deale-s. ++ °° All "amiquities'" are not antique. The art of the art-laker is an art that conceals itself, 'and often =nough iv is almost impossible of detection. The adubt;: for instance, tps has been cast by art experts generally up on the wax bust attributed to Leo narde da Vinei--pronounced Layonar do da Vinchi<~purchased by Dr. Bode | for the: Gemnan Government for £8: 000, is by no means an isolated inci | dent in the history of ast collecting It has yet to be decided whether this bust ix the work of the great and versatile Leonardo or Mr. Cockle Lu- 'cag, the recently deceased wax model. lér; but it is dn undeniable fact that there is hardly a public collection that does not contain several itoms, the authenticity of which would not boar investigation, At the Victoria and Albert Museum the Louvre, and elsewhere, it hi: more than once been discovered that treasures that had b%en long venerat od es uniqu#. Gre most flagrant. for, géries. Some years ago, a. Parliamentary commission was held upon the con- tents of the museum at South Kens: ington, and very early in the evidence it' transpired that the predecessor of the then curator had removed ove) fifty objects, as either forgeries ot as absolutely worthless, which had been considered of great importance and value. . For instance, the authorities pur chased three items at the famous Hamilton Palace sale in 1882, all of which proved to be other than was supposed. Those were the Agate Cup, purchased for $2,600; the Cardinal Wolseley chair; and a Vernis Martin cabinet, which cost the nation no less than $4.000. Phe cup' proved to be & made-up piece, worth, at the most, $250; the chair, which was supposed to be Eng: lish fifteenth century work, turned out to be Cingalese work of the eigh- teenth eentury; and the cabinet, though partly genuine, was discover ed 'to contain panels made by a man who later, upon obtaining employment at the museum, readily reecoguized his handiwork, There is also at South Kensington a statue attributed to Michael Angelo which many claim to be a made-up piece; whilst '& 'terra-cotta bust of Savonarola.in the same collection, pur- chased in the middle of last century as u genuine example of fifteenth cen. tury work, was later discovered to be of quite modern manufacture. In the National Gallery 'there is more than one work, the attribution of whieh .does not meet with general aeceptance; In 1904, when the portrait of Arios- to, by Titian, was acquired for the na- tion for the huge sum of $150,000. there were. many who claimed--and, in fact,' still do go--~that the portrait was not by Titian; and, moreover, that it was not a portrait of the famous Italian poet. Another remarkable instance of ex. perts being hoaxed is that of the purchdse of a picture, reputed to be by the great French landscape artist Corot, for the New Dublin Gallery oi Modern Art, a few years ago. The sensational discovery at the ath Picture Gallery that, of the 260 pictures ~~ labélled. with the greatest names in the history of art, only sev- enty were genuine, is: still fresh in the memories of most readers.' "Dry Cure" For Colds. A fact that ought to please all the sufferers' from colds, and they are] legion, is that there exists an inf4[libie cure for them, according to 'Dr. Romme, of Paris. Dr. Romme adds that it is an English cure; and is | moreover, 'some 160 years old, having been discovered by an English physi. cian, Dr. J. B. Williams, who was well kibown at the end of the eighteenth century. : This marvelous and simple cure con- sists in abstaining from all liquide during a period of 24 or 48 hours, starting. from the moment when the! sufferer feels the first irritating symp toms of a "cold in the head." Bread, fish, vegetables, "white" meat and pudding may be eaten, but beverages should be taken in very sniall quantity--a spoonful of tea, cof fee, or milk in' the morning, and a small glass of water before going to bed--or, if possible, not taken at all. It is not necessary to remain at home. The dry cure, in fact, is more rapid and complete if the sufferer breathes in the open air. : Dr. Steinberg, the well-known, Vien- nese medical authority, fully believes in this old English cure, apd consid- ers it as thoroughly efficient. He has modernized it by forbidding ® Soup which is more liquid than solid, and even the small quantity of tea or milk of Dr. Williams' system. But he al- lows a small glass of wine and water during the day. Got a Prize.' Wertheimer, a london art dealer, was one day passing' through Mayfair when he noticed «sale about to take place of the 'furniture and household effects of a deceased pebleman." He walked through the rooms were deal ers were critically examining choice specimens of undoubtedly genuine Chippendale and Sheraton, intérspers- ed among early Victorian furniture, his eyes apparently dwelling on noth. ing. But when thé sale was about to begin he asked the auctioneer if he would take $25,000 for everything in the house. The offer was accepted. "Now you can resell everything for me," said Mr. Wertheimer, "except this," and he took dowm.drom the mantelpiece a dirty ornament some nine inches high and put ipto his pocket. It was>a piece of the rarest Dresden china, bearing the coveted mark of the wand of Aesculapius, which he afterward sold for $50,000. Canada's Manufactures. The capital invested in the various manufacturing industries in: Canada amounts to $834,000,000, an increase of 86 per cent, in five years; while the total deposits in chartered Canadian banks on November 30, 1906 equalled nearly $100 per capita for everyone, man, woman and child, as against $38 | road. One night he got off a King per capita. ten years ago. a Only One "BROMO QUININE," that i 1 E Flomnia PV Rapbor. 25¢ 'did not pursue the subject further, H it were "ures a Cold in One Day, S ) 2 Dayr | longer. ¢ ln mW a i RE * A DISTINGUISHED aE T. Late Sie Henri T, Taichérsau Care |. iw: "1" of a Legal Family. i Son and grandson of a judge, and descendant of one'of the most dis tinguished of French-Canadian fang ilies, it is small wonder that the late Bir Henri T. Taschereau, LL.D., Chief Justice of the Province of Quebec, should have one of Canadi's forémest jurist and most prominent citizens. . He was the son of Jean Thomas Taschereau, judge 'of the Supreme Court of Canada: and he was © the grandson of another olgan Thomas Taschereau, who was a mem: ber of the fg Legislative ly of Canada, did good service in defemce of the country against the Americans in 1812, and who was also a distinguished 'judge. The founder of the family in Canada was Jacques Terchureats of Toursine, who emi: grated to Quebec 'in 1785, as secretary of Intendant Dupuy. Since then five generatiofis of "brave soldiers, distin. guished citizens; noble churchmen, and honorable jurists have dome their share .of work first for Canada and then for the Empire. The Honorable Gabriel Elzear Tascherean. the ' son of the secretary, was, while very young, one of the soldiers who fought against Wolfe on the Plains of Abra. 'ham in 1759. Later on, in 1775, being then a British subject, he was one of the best, soldiers of Canada against the American "army. "He ded a colonel of the Quebec militia. This mun was the great-grandfather of the late chief- justice. Sir Henri Taschereau was born in 1941, and was egucated at the Quebec Seminary and val University, and was called to the Bar in 1863. For a time he was an alderman of Quebec, and represented the city on the North Shore Railway Board for four year® From 1872 to 1878 he represented Montmagny in the Dominion Parlia- ment in the Liberal interest. In the latter year he was elevated to the Court of King's Bench in the Province of Quebec, and two years ago became shief justice. Last year the honor of knighthood was conferred upon him. {n 1864 he married a daughter of the late Mr. E. L. Pacaud, of Arthabaska- ville, and two years after her death, in 1883, ha teok his second. wife, the widow of Mr. Henri Masson, of Mont. real. He wad the 'father of Mrs. Joseph Pope, Ottawa; Mrs. Jolin A. Carling, 'London, Ont.; Mrs. » Vidal, Mr. Robert Tascherean, KC. Montreal; Mys. Lyon, of Montmor- ney, France; and Mrs. Sutherland, yf Montreal, The late chief justice died' at Montmorency, France, while on a visit to his daughter, Mrs. Lyon. His body was brought back to Canada for burial. r ' Prison Statistics. The annual report of the Department of Justice , contains some interesting figures compited by 'G: W. Dawson, inspector of penitentiaries' as to the | penitentiary population of the Dom- inion. There was, during the fiscal gear 1908-09, a decided increase in the number of convicts from urban cen: tres, due no doubt to financial de- pression and lack of employment, but for the country districts," the statis- tics as to criminality do net show much change, The average daily population of .the penitentiaries was 1,625, as compared with 1,418 for the previous year. The "inspector, in commenting upon the fact that, by the fixed sentences system, scores of dangerous criminald are set free to sgain mingle with so- ciety, says: "From our experiences if the administration: of penal ineti- tations, we are coryinced that society would be more adequately protected by the application of indefinite sen- ¢ences to habitual offenders." Roman Catholics in prison number | 871, Anglicans 1856, 'Methodists 173, Presbyterians 78, Baptists 78, Luther. ans 16; Hebrews 15. - Twenty-eight have no creed. Convicts 'of British birth number 310. There are 66 life convicts, of. whom -33 are confined in Kingsten, Ten per eent. are under 20 |' years of age. Fifteen per cent. are unable to read or write. Seventeen per cent. have been total abstainers, while forty per cent. Have been intem- perate, The report shows a decrease in the number of pardons, and an increase in the number of convicts liberated un- der parole system, as' 244 were liber- ated as against 215 for preceding year. Absolute pardons numbered 14, as compared with 29. The assertion is' made that the pa- role system is the most important and useful reform yet introduced, and the recommendation is made that the var- ious provinces be requested to make provision for supervision of prisoners released on parale from provincial in- stitutions. Only one convict escaped during the year, and he is still at large. A Lady Gold:Digger. Lady Sybil Grey is the latest dis- tinguished gold-digger. She accompan- ied her father, Earl Grey, Governor- General of the Dominion, on his re- cent trip to the Canadian Arctic gold- fields. Near Dawson City, the capital of the Klondike, she pegged out a claim "for herself with all the pre- scribed legal formalities, and christen- ed it the "Sybil." Her first panning: out produced twenty dollars' worth of gold, which she cousiders a very promising start. During the long Arctic winter Lady Sybil will work her claim by deputy, but she intends, it is said to return next summer tw | supervise operatiops and examine re- | sults in person. ' -- Caught It Beth Ways. A former manager of the Toronto Railway Co. was talking the other day about the trouble of making connee tions with street. cars at transfer points. He said that he. became « couraged when he. was manager of the street car, and after a race up Yonge street, succeeded in catching his car. "Why don't you fellows watch fur people making connections and wait a moment or two sometimes?' he! panted. : | "Didn't you catch it? What the h--1 are you kicking about?' was the astonishing reply, and the ex-manage: remit en mat: rt for borrowing many | families would remain neighborly You and | ought not 10 be afraid to speak if our silence sanctions ins « Such Mills, the Boss Says, Make | ~~ Wholesome Flour + Sure, you've forgbtten something." suggested the Superintendent as we were climbing tw the fourth floor of the big FIVE ROSES : mills. ie . fly Pa f $e! " The solid concrete construction? * inquired yours truly, We "hadn't forgotten--merely waitigg: for a favourable' opening. Evidently we had guessed'right." i "Yessir", smiled the Supty; * this reinforced concrete business in modern flour mills does help seme." © + # a "Strength, of course, and'economy"' . 'fhe. we put in with our chronic know- it-all air. **Nosir. More than that; Durability and economy st@étly apart, there's the sanitary argument, you knw." We didn't know. He must have sen sed cur "show me' attitude, for he went on without awaiting cur gra cious permission. usewives *', continued the Supt. tly and politely gazing t'other , 'are 80 ly squea~ mish these days about their flour that lalways emphasize these precau- tions to dy visitors. When rats ind other pet g ) rodents grow too famii- Tarwith a flour mill, you know what happens. A 4 Nuf sed", we chirped in chorus.' 1'd like to see the rodent that'd apply here for free lodgings ", quoth this fierce enemy of diminutive live stock, *"I"dalso like to seé that nérvy individual two seconds later. "And, say", he added wickedly, "Well, 1 couldn't keep this Will 80, - 7, Tieton thatinyour advertising. spick and span as it except for Sure thing *. we chirped again. this concrete flooring. ' The main LA ~reasonincementing the basement in fact, building the whele mill solid concrete--is to keep the entire plant sweet and wholesome; to shut out the mice and rats that always harbor'in the basement 'of flour mills when they see a chance to get free bed and grub--and they generally get iv in lavish abundance.!" Here the only feminine member of the company shuddered violently and looked about apprehensively for 4 high stool with wn instinctive clutching of skirts "You saw fhe basement just now when | showed you our giant power wheel. Sure; you then remarked on the wonderful ' healthy' conditions below. If there is anywhere a cleaner, more wholesome, purel, hore sanitary flour than FIVE ROSES, or ex tended experience and Immense capital have failed to locate it. FE ROSES appeals irresistibly to the woman who buys eritically, who really wants her money's worth--1lour that's sever musty, tainted, im ure, Surely, Madam, you are not too 8x sclusive to belong 10 that class See your grocer about it, Who. qr RA AMIR ANI LR ONS LAKE Of THE WOOD'S MILLING CO., LTD. MONTREAL - ed Bake Days< what's more dis- | heartening than an unevenly heat burns or o illustration' above shows a dividing" strip along top of oven extending _ * down side and along bottom, follow ( the little arrows and you will see that the fire heat must travel equal- ly over every part 3 the Sven his guarantees an even baking he Any Gurney-Oxford dealer can show you features that have made this range the best by actual test. Don't fail to see this range | before buying. ol r ; a " MPERIAL OXFORD RANG *Simmons Bros. The Yellow Store' Princess St. Phone 494. 211-213 Kingston Package Same price--~and a larger package of ASEPTO than of other washing compounds. Yet ASEPTO does what others don't, Jt STERIL- 1ZES everything washed with it ----- Makes cidthes more healthful -- Annihi- lates all disease germs present in bedding and dishes used in sick-room, Cleans better than soap. Odorless. HARMLESS alike to fabrics and hands. MANUFACTURED BY ASEPTO MFG. CO., ST. JOHN, N.B. justice. Shoe Repairing Done at the House of Quality is satisfac. tory" proof that honest trading, efficient service, coupled with fair prices, wins the confitence of the public. = A. E. Herod, Princcss §t. "Ehe Henge of Quality, Plone 837 LS

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