LIVES INDESTRUCTIBLE, Michigan Professor Demonstrates Scientifically That Natural Law o: Conservation Governs Mind. Feb, 12.--Scientific proofs human soul and the human mind still continue to exist after death, were demonstrated to a large audience of students, alumni, and pro- fessional men at the Univeiwity of Michigan, by Proi. Carl E. Guthe, pro- fessor of physics and material sci ence. The subject of his address was "How We Know We Live After Death. Materialism the Way Out." "if youn claim that personality com- prises both mind and matter, both physical energy and consciousness, are we pot completely destroyed . when death claims, our body 7" said the pro- fessor, who wadgd prht into his sub- ject from the stdet.® "Gur life is a constant growth. of ihe human intellect, closely connected with the development of the body. We know there is eobtinuous interchange of eels "decaying and forming, end yet, though the living tissues may, in the course of time, be entirely renew- ed, the individual eontinues to exist, and remains with his identity abso hitely "unchanged, notwithstanding the fact that practically the whole body has been made' over. : *fBut if matter and energy, which have been given off from the living body have not disappeared, they are still in existesrs though disconnected from the life-giving principle. Should we not demand that there should be Detroit, that the a sintlar conservation for the invis | ible part of life ? '{ have Hob to describe what life after death is; the intellect will not tell ue. However, | do not see any reason why the mind could not form nw combinations which are now beyond our comprehension, nor why econsciousness in a wider sense shonld conse with death. "While I have to content with the assertion that mind indestructible my firm belipf in evolution and in an orderly plan of the universe leads me to doubt that there can be any retro: gression in its development, I be lieve my spirit will, after death, be more advanced in all the characteris- tes of the human soul, And thus find no difficulty, whatever, i * lieving in a personality the whole universe myself is ns be inmately blended with a marvellously intricate | system of ality different from ours, it is true, hut, since I form a part of it, one of the same hature as my own, only grarder, wiser, more powerful an more just." Dr. Guthe stated that the here advanced were not obtained adherence to any theological or phile- sophical dogma, but were the result of purely scientific search after a word picture which would satisfy not only the intellect but the human soul, views : High Cost of Living. Toronto Star, Why is meat double the price of twenty-five years ago? Why are Why are other necessaries so inflat- ed in price ? Can unything be done to check the upward tendency ? Are there not unnatural causes al work which are responsible for these conditions ? Does the law of supply and demand sufficiently explain the phenomenal in- creases in the cost of living ? Is the spirit of "combine" so dom- inating all the purveying classes that everything we have to buy will be come unduly inflated in price ? Is there anything to be done by leg- islation to curb the greed that is the bane of the age? Suicides on Anniversary. Philadelphia, Feh. 12.--After calling he: guardian on the telephone and elling him of het intentions, Fran:ss Flosreky, 1 twenty-two years, committed suicide bv shooting herssli through the heart. Six years ago hor father, a veteran of the civil war, in which he commafidad a Missouri regi- ment killed his wife and himself. It was the anniversary of this tragedy, he sho seemed av. Neglected Colds Lead to Consumption Unless a complete cure is effected, the imflammation passes wdly to tho , bronchial , ami then to the * : You can't make new lungs any more than you can make new fin- gers or a ew cons sumption is - practically © y But Ua y be cured, except in its final always fatal stage. Catarrh = sufferers, meaning those with colds, sore throat, bronchial trouble, ete, can all Be cured right at home hy inhaling *'Catarrho- sone," In wsing Catarrhosone you don't take medicine a the stomach-+ vou just breath a healing. pi vapor direct to the gluogs a passages. i ¢ tu » Guaranteed to Cure and the great thus sent to ev. AFTER DEATH THE MIND, IT IS DECLARED, is) as matter and energy ® horses, I | 300. per cent. higher ? 4 butter a luxury for the much depressed all 7 ; pions GREAT GRAPE-FBUIT APPETITE Has Been Acquired in Few Years by Uncle Sam. During the past few vears Und: {Sam has aquired a great grapefruit lappetite. This winter's supply of the Hiruit will exceed 4.000000 boxes, or {hall a billion pomelos. The grapefuic j receives its name on account of the {way it grows The vellow globules {grow in clusters of a dozen or move. {Only a few years ago the grapefruit was a thing despised, gastronomicaliy. Pifteen years ago grapefruit was plae- led on the bill of tare of Uncle Sam land the demapd hay increased until the supply can nardly satisfy the de- mand. Now enough grapefruit is eaten in this country to make a' gorgeous yel- {low necklace reaching entively around the world. It has only been within the past fifteen years that the pomelo, or grapefruit, has been regarded as a commercial fruit. The cultivation bas frown in Florida, Jamuica and the sle' of Pines te um enormous scale. Florida produces about 1,000,000 box- es of the total of 4,000,000 and has become the grapefruit gardin of the world. Growing, the grapefruit is spectacular, dangling in great bunches of pale vellow globes on a tree that attains a height of thirty feet, The fruit ships well and its pungent flavor has made an appeal to the jaded sto- machs pf an over-worked nation. A SCARCITY OF HORSES, ] -- |Canadian Farm Has Visions of a Horse Famine. : | Regarding the condition of the horse { market, the Canadian Farm of ewrren' | issue contains the following : Not a few are apprehensive of & horse famine in Ontario next spring. Good prices and a keen demand have {caused farmers to sell nearly every thorse that was worth selling, and i looks now as if there would not ho enough horses in the country to do the spring seeding. Whether this bo true or not, it is a safe guess tha! inot for many years has the country been so free of marketable horses ao at the present time. The bulk of tho workers and drafters for th: most part, have gone west, where they will be used for seeding the 1910 crop, which promises to greatly exceed 1m area any former ome. No great ha been the western demand that horse {are becoming a very scarce commodi ty in the east, especially good! ones. here are quite a number of the non escript kind to be found, but even these are becoming scarce and aro selling at profitable prices. True, there ! | material bodies, a" pixson- |e numbers of young animals on the way. Bat will these be able to sup- {ply the place of those sold off th {farm ? 1 not, it looks as if there may 'not be enough horses to go round jwhen the busy spring season comes. by | | Hotel Men Bled, Bought and Sold. !Marden Chronicle. ' { We were discussing the license ques {tion with an hotel man, the other day, {and we certainly wert surprised, He jis and always has ben eva {tive, but he frankly saul th: {present policy of the liquor ven ty line up behind the governmen. was ' mistake for themselves. He :taid the present government bled them, bought them and wold them--and, said he, when the present government goes oui {the liquor business will go out with lit. The liquor men have tied up their fortunes with the present governmen' just as the lignor men in Gréat Bri- tain have tied themselves to the tory party there. There will be quite a (slump in brewery stock in the old country since the election and there will be a similar slump in this pro vince when the last hour of the Rob lin government comes. More and moro the government has attracted the bum | stemoent to itself so that to-day that {element is quite a strong factor in this | party. A a et that Modesty on the Bench. with's Companion. : cr A certain prominent British jurist | was transferred from the chancery jcourt to the admiralty court rather { unexpectedly. While conversant with { English law to a surprising degree, | this gentleman had spent little time in marine law, and was rather dubi lous as to his ability to cope with the duties of his new office, i His colleagues, in recognition of the iocension, gave him a dinner, after | which he was called upon for an ad dress. He made a long and. terious speech, which embraced about every- {thi from free trade to England's | Then, pausing a mo- | foreign policy: ment, he glanced round room and said: : "Centlemen, in closing, 1 can Sak ol the crowded 'of no better words than the lines Tennyson : " 'And may there the bar ' ; When I put out to sea.' " be no moaning of @ en ter Flowers Blooming in Maine. A Grand Trunk man says this is a very unusaal winter down in Maine, {So far from temperatures being hyper- {borean, they are so high up as to | have converted the January thaw into a season of premature freshets. Pansy I blossoms have been picked in an Fast | Deering front yard, and the event has | stirred up Portland editors to boom Itheir city as an ali-the-year resort. {That this amelioration is not tempor ary and illusive ie" the belied of a weather-wise East Winthrop man, who one day (his week noted a large flock of wild geese flying northward over that town. * Catia Tn owth America Joseph J. Slechta, Ametican vice at Rio Janeiro, gives of cattle in that coumtry the provinces, Rio Matto Grosso amd ia x ive t business in ex- state of od | 1 ih - 4 ; E £ 3 { i i : Ei ih fils ny WOE BROUGHT ON BY TOO MUCH J0Y. Shock of Sudden Glad Tidings Occa- sionally Turns the Brain--Cases of Lunacy. Londen Spectator. ; It is no exaggeration Lo assert, said an asylum doctor of long and varied experience, that there are scores of men and women in insane asylums who have literall; ben sent there through excess of joys Many of these cases are, in my opinion, the saddest of all have come under my own observation. 1 remember in the very first asylum with which I was connected one of the patients was a strikingly hand some and very well aducated man, who was as sane as you or I except on one point. He was really a man of considerable wealth, but his delusion was that he was a pauper, and he would tell the most pitiful tales of his destitution, begging, with tears in bis eyes, for a few coppers with which to buy bread. According to the story told me, he was the only son of a wealthy mer chant. In his yvoutl. he had fallen among evil compumies and led such a dissolute life that his father not only threatened to disinherit him, but forbmde him ever to enter his house again, After that he seems to! have sunk into the lowest depths of | poverty until he was ghel to earn a ' few coppers by 'selling papers or matdhes 1n the streets. It was at this last and lowest stage that news came to him that his fa- ther had died intestate and that he was heir to all his vast fortune. The sudden news comyuetely turned the man's brain and brougmt on such a condition of excitement that he had to be sent to an asylum, and when he calmal 'down again he had lost all recollection of his good fortuue, and nothing could shake his delusion that lie was on the verge of starvatioa. Another patient in the same asyiun was a young and 12 his lucid momonts a most intelligent Jetlow, whose "bram was turned," as the saying is, on' learning that he had passed an ex amination, (He had sat for the ma- triculation examination at the Uni- versity of London, on passing which' he had: set his heart and had askel'a friend in London to wirk the realt as soon as the names were screend! at Burlington House. About three weeks later come a fa- tal telegram, "Failed--sorry," which gent the young man into the lowest depths of despair, for he was too oid to sit agai. Not many hours later, however, 'came another telegram "Passed honors--very sorry crush =o great dil not see name this motning."' The revulsion of feeling was so great that the student's reason gave way, and he became so violent in his ex- citement that he had to be confined. Portunately he was not with us long and is now, 1 am glad to know, doing very well as a solicitor. Disappointed love sends many people to asylmms, but it i» very seldom that success in wooing drives a man mad, It had this strange effect, however, on one of my late patients. The girl he loved had gone out to India to keep house. for her' brother before he hed screwid up his courage to the point! of proposing to her, but an offer fol- lowed by mail very quickly after her.! Weeks and months passed and no answer came to thc impatient lover until, after waiting two years in de- | pair, be became engaged to a girl who had nothing but her money bags to recommend her and for whom he had not a particle of love Scarcely, how- ever, was his fate sealed than he re-! ceive! the long despaired of letter from India, accepting his offer and ex- plain'ne that the girl's brother had re. ceived and mislaid the letter, which had only just found end had come into her hands. Within an hour of the receipt of this letter the mam was a raving manec, and, although his condition is improv- od, I doubt whether he will ever re cove: his reason. In another remarkable case it was the joy at seeing hér husband again that robbed a lady patient of her rea- son. Her husband was the captain of a merchant ship which was * reported to have gone down with all hands. The widow had deeply mourned ber, husband for nearly a year whom «ue day on returning from a walk © she found him sitting in the drawing room ns hale and robust as ever. | With a shriek she fell unconscious, on the floor, and when she recovered her reason was gowe. It seems that ber hushand, after floating for some time, had been picked up by a passing "tramp" and had been landed on the west coast of Africa, from which 'he had returned home by the first avail able vessel. "Third" the Most Probable. Harrington Putnam, Judge Gaynor's successor on the New York bench, is noted for his logical mind, says the New York Times. : } Once, at a dinner at Red Lodge, his country house near Denning, Mr. Put- nam gave an admirable instance of this mental quality. The conversation | had turned to non'marrying widows, aud Mr. Putnam disposed of the ques | tion thus : i "When a beautiful widow says that | she will pot marry again on any con- dition, it may be, first, her husband was 50 good - that | she could never care for another man again; or it may of mar: E her de sire jo more of it; or it may be, third, hat she is telling a falsehood." i An Ancient Concrete Bridge. 1a the south of France is a concrete arch bridge Gard, ; 3 56 B.C. The concrete in this was not composed of 'rank and education, amd it would go stone of the va- in co it 'THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY. FEBRUARY SOME OF SAD CASES ARE VERY STRONG. Milwaukee Sentinel Oriental merchants have busin:ss me- thods which arouse the wonder of the! American storekeeper. Perhaps the | | : most peculiar are associated with the | sale of rubies in Bermuda. The prospective purchaser takes "a | sent near a window and has before | him =a large copper plate. 'The sell, ers come to him one by one and each empties upon this plate a large bag of rubies. The purchas:r arranges the | gens all in separate little heaps in| order that he may set a valuation upon them. Hel first grades, acco these groups thre ol divides them {nto T to size. Each is again divided into three other piles, according, to color, and ech of these files én turn is once more divided into three groups . ac cording to shape. Artificial Nght is pever, used in the exams nation of rubies, the merchants velieving that full sunlight alone capable of bringing out the color and brilianey of the gems. Al sales must be made between the hours of 9 wom. and 3 pm. and the sky must be dear, so that nothing can dim the radiance of the crimson stones. +The copper plate is brought into re quisition in more ways than one. The sunlight reflected from it through 'the stones bring out, with true rubies, a color effect different from that of spinels or tourmalines, whien are thugd readily separated. Many spinels bedy a close resemblance to the ruby, but this simple test made under the keen eye of the oriental, never falls. When the various stones have been sogrogated the buyer and seller begin an odd method of bargaining by tgne, or rather grips, in profound tlence. After agreeing upon the fair- ness of the classification they icin their ight hands, covered with: a handkerchief or the flap of a gar ment, and by grips and pressures un- derstood among all these dealers they make, modify and. accept proposals of purchase and salé The hand? thers uncovered and the prices recorded, is are nre s "FADS" OF ALL KINDS. Emperor William Has a Horror of Them. Emperor William has a horror "fads' of all Kinds. of many things he about, as he of He is intolerant kdows nothing is prejughced by his hard with any one whq dried to dis- cigs "Christian Science; for instance, with him. Nothing mikes him more irotable that to mentign that cult in his presence, nor does homeopathy please him, and spiritualism might drive him crazy if the subject were in- troduced in. an unguarded 'moment. But according to a recent magazine article the kaiser has an enormous ad- miration for the American people, for their go-aheadedness, progressive ideas, inventiveness, and he also abhors the suffragettes. Hitherto the suffragettes have been a British institution, but now they have popped up én America and the kaiser is terribly annoyel thereat. No doubt he will talk the matter over with Col. Roosevelt when the latter visits Berlin and try to en list his sympathy and intiuence im ex- tinguiszhing the obnoxious ladies. jo Sounded Startling. It was a Westport car already filled to capacity, but it stopped for anoth- er bunch of passengers. The conductor was caught in the jam at the front end of the car, but when he fancied he had given them timé to get safely on, he called out. "All aboard, bagk there?" and reached for tlie bell rope, | "Hold on!" a panicky voice replied from the rear platform. "Wait until I get my.clothes on!" The tightly wedged maes of human- ity in the car turned as one man it was the only possible way to turn, for that matter with visions of a frenzied passenger pulling a shirt on over his head, or worse. But it was only a boy in a red sweater (aking home a wash- ing and having trouble getting an un- wieldly laundry basket on board. The nervous tension of the tightly wedged mass of humanity relaxed and persons who had been glaring at their neighbors merely for crushing their feet, walking up their shins, or stab- bing them with hat pins, so far for- got themselves as tc look at owe an- other and laugh. Rock Soup. "Did you ever eat any rock soup 7" asked a visitor from Tennessee on go- ing out to dine with his city cousin. "Can't say that I ever heard of such a soup," replied the other. "Is it a puree or a consomme ?" "I don't know what you would call it up here," said the man from Ten- nessee, "but down home we call it just plan rock soup." "How is it made?' : "Well, you take first a large bowl der and place it in a pot of boiling ! water. Then you throw in some beef | bones, beans, peas, tomatoes, rice, car- rots, a little cabbage, potatoes, and okra--boil 'emr all up together--and I tell you it makes a fine soup." "But what do you pet out of howlder 7" ; "Why, that ix what gives the soup | the | i | its name--rock soup. 12. 1910. -- - OCRAPH up fo date <TC" Many people are not getting all of the entertainment they should out of their Edison Phonographs because they have not been equipped with the Amberol Reproducer. Your dealer has an attachment which will make your Edison Phonograph play both the Edison Standard Records and the new Amberol four-minute Records, thus tcbling the enjoyment and pleasure to be gotten out of it. By means of this attachment the Phonograph will play both Standard and Amberol Records, giving you more kinds of music and a longer cata- log to select from. Find out about this attachment today, because it will be just the same as giv- ing you an entirely new Phonograph. Edison Phonographs - - - $16.50 to 5162.50 Edison Standard Records - a. «0 Edison Amberol Records (play twice Edison Grand Opera Records There are Edison dealers everywhere. Go to the nearest and hear the Edison Phonograph play both Edison Stapdard'/ and Amberol Records and get complete catalogs from your dealer or from us. National Pk vnograph Co.,100 Lakeside Ave.,Orange, N.J. U.S.A Coughs, Colds, BRONCHITIS, SORE THROAT, GASOLINE, COAL OIL, LUBRICATING OIL» FLOOR OIL, GREASE, ETC. PROMPT DELIVERY. Toye's Building, Clarence and Ontario Streets. TURN OVER That is what we are going to do to our Btock of Grand Old Antique Furniture and Odd Articles Come early and make a selec- tion while the Stock is complete and before the spring rush Is on If you have anything good to sell drop a card to 1... LESSES, Cor. Princess nnd Chatham Sq. , Kingston. > E 4 + + + + * ® | 009060 Special All orders placed now for Monument + discount of 10 per cen' Jas. Mullen, 874 Princms St Opposite Y.M.U.A. Building. THE RISE OF United Empire Loyalists An Informing Sketch of Ameri- can History, Valuable for Librar. ies and Research. By VISCOUNT DE FRONSAC Price, 50c. Address British Whig, Kingston HOARSENESS, CROUP, ASTH- MA, PAIN or TIGHTNESS IN CHIAL or LUNG TRJUBLES there is nothing te equal Norway Pine Syrup. It contains all the virtues of the world Wild Cherry Bark and the soothing, healing and expectorant properties of Mrs John Pelch, 3 td Windsor, Ont, Rasty troubled with a nas- Cough ty backing cough for Cured. and used a lot of different remedies good. At last I was advised by a friend to try Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup relief and to-day my hacking cough has entirely disappeared and og So never im the house." The price of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine up in a vellow wrapper, three pine trees ihe trade mark, sc be sure and sriginal * Norway Pine Syrup." Manufactured only by The T. Milbum The kind the tod we sal. Wouiting dor 1a Uoal is good coal and we re Antes prompt - delivery, "phon » ! FOOT WEST STREET. The Great Engli Remed, Tones ibe Bh the oh Biood in old Vei , Ne Sus Debittty, Mental Be oa re THE CHEST and' all BRON- ' Dr. Wood's famous Norway pine tree, combined with other excellent herbs and barks. writes: "1 was Hacking the past six months + +4444 i but they did me no and with the first few doses J found great without Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup Syrup is 25 cents per bottle. It is put none of the many substitutes of Ta. Yimited, Toronto, Ons. COAL! i ° : Booth & Co., Wood's P nervous system, makes new pondency, LC matorriea, and Ffects of Abuse or Excesses, Price $1 per box, six for $5. One will please, six will cure. Sold by all druggists mailed in plain . On Tece! % if J foe, New phic adel 9 ipt of price ew nam wi Toronto, Ont GRAND UNION Sr wpward Bond be stay tor B73. BF vide Book and Map THE FRONTENAC {OAN AND INVESTMENT SOCIETY ESTABLISHED, 1863 President--Sir Richard Cartwright ciohey tssued on Uity and Farm Pro ¢ fos. Municipal and County Deben- tures. Mortgages purchased Deposits recnived and interest allowed 8 C. MeGili, Managing Director Aranca street NALLACE & PARKS, Florists Night "Phone 235 Day "Phone 22% il Kinds of Cut Flowers and Plante in season Weddings and Funeral De signs a specialty. 8 32% King Su ( RAILWAY SYSTEM Msn ake BANG H TIMETABLE Trains will leave and arrive at Chy Depo' as follows: Golng West Leave Cit ¥. Arrive Olty. one 12.25 a.m. 12.57 a.m. "red Berl BES ERR 2 am ghia pans SME EA oe Bb -SFFREF, 4 55 OD as . ally except Sul oe Trains 1, daily; other day. Fhrouxh Pullfmans to and from tawa via Brockville dally on train nd a § Pullman sccommodation reserved in dvance and all other information fag aished on application to - J. P. HANLREY, Agent. Corner Johnson and Ontario Streets 2:3 4 trains * or RE LY LAAN IN CONNECTION WITH LT N he ° a oa Trains ! eave Kingston WGHEST GRADES 00000000000 00000000000 | | { | 12 Ortaw m.. Express--For. Pp Pp Hall i 1201, | Montreal, Quebec St. John, NB, | tax, Boston. Toronto, Chicage, Denves, | Renfrew, Sault Ste. Marie, Duluth, M | Paul, Winnipeg, Vaneouver, Seatt Portland and 8an Francisco 5.00 pm---Local for Sharbot La connecting with C. P. R. East and West, 7.45 am. Mixed intermediate points, Friday KINGSTON--OTTAWA, Leave Kingston 12.01 pm, arrive Ot- ag 10.45 am, p.m. lars at K. & P. and C. P 5, Ontario Street. F. CONWAY, Gen. Pass -For Mon. Renfrew and Wed, and i ! : i Ottawa arrive Agent. BAY OF QUINTE RAILWAY. Train leaves union Ontario street, 4 pm. daily (Sunday excepted) for Tweed Sydenham Napanee, [ r= | onto, Banvockburn and all points north. | Fo secure quick despatch to Bannooks ourn, Maynooth, and points on Cemtrsl | Ontario, route your shipments via Bay id Quinte Railway. For further particus are, apply R. W. DICKS )N, Agent, 'Phone, No. 8 station, Ww. F. KELLY BERMUDA BY TWIN SCREW LINE : Largest and Fastest Steamers S. S. OCEANA, 8,000 TONS |S. S. BERMUDIAN, 5,600 TONS Wireless on both Steamers ; also bilge | howls Forty hours from Frost to Flowers, Sailings from New York at 10 - a.m every Wednesday and Saturday WEST INDIES h New 8.8, "OUIANA™ 8,700 tons, 8B. "PARIMA." 8.000 tons, 8.8. "KO ONA." 8,000 tons sail from New Y o 7 # or alternate irsday at 2 p.m woman, Bt. Croix, St. Kitts, Antigua Martinique, . 2 i | {St | Guadeloupe, Dominica, Lucia, Ay don and Demerara. For particulars apply to A. E. Outerbridgs and Co., Agents, Quebec Steamship Ceo. Broadway, New York, Quebec h Company, Quebee or Nr I. FP. HANLEY and C 8 KIRKPAT- RICK, Ticket Agents, Kingston. a Chiver's Marmalade Hu All sizes. Ready Cut Macaroni To be erected in the spring will receive | i Fine June Cheese, Fresh Oysters. a D. COUPER'S, 341-3 Princess St Prompt Delivery. "Phone 76 bdo did Aa AA 5 2222200020240 L 400240 GST SINESS COLLEGE of lMITED) . HEAD OF QUEEN STREET.' Highest Education at Lowest Cost" Twenty-Sixth year Fall Term begins August 30th. Courses' in Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Tele graphy, Civil Service and English. Our graduates get the best pos - tions, Within a short time over secured "positions with one the largesse railway corpora a | v { Sixt bof 3 ¥ tions in Canada. " & ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ Enter any time y, lor information ww OALFE, Principal i Cali H or r write MET "SRA al edd For Scranton Coal : Ali kines of Wood aud Lumber. Try o BENNETT & CO. Uor. Bagot snd Barrack Sta. "Phone. 941 * Who satd "Bour "eant 7?' It is now Pipped to all parts made It Brock ready for use and you cap depend on is being clean and properly made, as 1 myst? | He 3. MYERS. 80 Re. "Phone. 870 "YOUR LAST CHANCE SUBSCRIPTION BOOKS WILL CLO 4 O'clock AT OUR OFFICES NOT LATER THAN 7% Cumulative Preference Shares of the TUESDAY, February 15th, 1910 John Mackintosh's Toffee, Limited. We recommend the purchase of these shares, having a thorough understanding of same, and knowing that the market value is going to be y enhanced We feel perfectly assured of the dividend paying ability. Bend at once for MORRIS EDGAR & COMPANY, FIN 300 BAY SEREEE, MAGNIFICENTLY ILLUSTRATED PROSPECTUS to & ¥ ANCIAL AGEN TS, TORONTO.