Daily British Whig (1850), 25 May 1910, p. 6

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PAGE Youll Sleep More Sonndly Yon Keep Healthy With . Morse's indian Root Pills The a of woman with 3 good appetite, sound digestion, and bowels and kidneys werking right, 1 never troubled much with sleeplessness. It is when the bowels become constipated and the liver and kidneys sluggish that the trouble begins. Lazy liver and constipated bowels quickly bring on shies, making s sound, refreshing night's sleep impassible. Or the inactive kidneys allow the blood to becomes loaded with uslc Jacid, which causes rheumatism, with all its sleep-destroying tortures, Dt. Morse's Indian Root Pills, taken regularly, induce sweet and drestivless sleep by keeping all these organs active and regular, The headache as the digestion becomes good again; the blood is purified and perfect bealth returns, Dr. Morse' s Indian Root Pillshave been _ a favorite household remedy in Canada far over half a century, and they are in daily usé throoghout the world. Being rely vegetable they are safe for young a , Made by W. H. Comstock Co.; Lid., Brockville, Ont., and sold by all deulers at 25¢. a box, ¢ "More read & better bread From i Headaches ? le who have nevm the higher ner- \ more delicate | of the system. Those alse of & ner temperament and studious or seden fouytetion are subject to it, resence of mche fon ap always another disease not bé aware of By Bitters has, fi i Sine ol Sendai I) a Wo Are what it has done Tor ho, Mrs. John Connors, Bu tHington. NS, writes: "J have been troubled with head. sche and constipation fora Jong time. Altes trying different doe. tors' medicine a friend ardock BI Pitters. ely etired after having 1 ean safely recom alors. Manufactured libura Co. Limited, ly | that of a penny-in-the-slot kind of an calculated silence, KING w.1 aL When I came away from my first long talk with the Prince who on Sat- urday was formally proclaimed King George the Fifth | had the impression that | had been face to face with a reincarnation of George III. It was not bluff old Farmer George of Wind- this time. But hrusgiie Sailor George, in whom reap- peared many of the characteristies of his pamesake. Tie resemblance did not extend to the outward embodiment of the Geor- ging soul. But there also was a haunt- ing suggestion of another sovereign. ¥ ton Dally L103 ént Emperor. of Russia were as like as two peas in a pod. Height, com- plexion, color of hair and of eyes, were almost the same. The two cous- us might as easily have been mis. taken for eachother as were the Dro- mios of Ephesus and Syracuse. 1 came away from thé interview which had been brought about in or dec that we might discuss the pro- Ne with the serious impression that future sovereign had ths mind of Jas the Second--a somewhat together reassuring. I'he young man who Duke of York became in due to no succeeded he is of Friday Henceforth ni ht throne. ths Prince of Wales, King George is, and King George he will now re kind of a king will he be ? question of questions, importance for the future of the Em pire and the destinies of the race can deduce from the life and conver sation of a prince what a king will be Prince Hal is the most familiar ease in less notable instance of the transfor accession to the throne. George king will certainly' be. as unlike 1'rince of Wales as larky midshipman whose practica least up to the high average of mid dies since the days of Easy. But sufficient is known of his temperament and his character to en- able us to form a rough conception of how he is likely to frame as a sov* ereign, (ne negative may safely be hazard- ed. It geems beyond the bounds of human probability that he will ever be as popular a sovereign as his father. He does not seem to have it in him. And that from no faults of his own. Not once in a blue moon is 1a man born to the purple who pos: sessed in exact proportions all the essential elements which go to the make up of a popular king. Fdward, VII. was such a man.' He absolute genius for winning the tions of .the nation. He offended the prejudices of some; he disregarded the wishes of others; but neither the ene nor the other bors him any, grudge. His geniality, his boihomie, his good: beartedness, and, above all, tne fact of his being an intensely human crea- ture, endeared him to all: It is a dis advantage to Kine George to have to follow a monarch so far beyond a compeer in. certain instinctive apti- tudes, which, unless they are given to a man in his craic by the good fair- ix, he can never acquire by any labor of his own. To this negative may be added with equal confidence a positive prediction. Whatever else George the Fifth may pe, he will not be a constitutional king of the type which appéars to commend itself to some popular poli- ticians, whose ideal would seem to he automaton wound up every morning by his miaisters, without initiative, conscience, or judgment of his own, It is written in Blackstone that the King of England can do no wrong, and is even incapable of thinking a wrang thought. That, of course, must be interpreted with the rider--in his official capacity as sovereign, for most of our kings have compounded for their official impeccability in word and in thoughts by considerable li- cense of thoughts and action in their private capacity, What is certain is that our new monarch, has not come fo the throne with hid mind as an immaculate sheet of white paper upon which his advisers may write what what they please. When his most gra- cious, majesty is officially advised. by his constitutional advisers that the welfare of the stat® demands that he should take any specific action, he will, of course, as in duty bound, act upon their advice. Walter Bagehot once said that it was a king's con- stitutional duty to sign his own death warrant if it were sent up to him by the vote of the lords and comnons. But before King George acted upon the advice of any one set of ministers which. he thought detrimental to the welfare of his realm he would cer tainly do his utmost to say, whether it was not possible to furnish himself with another set of advisers with whose ideas he would be more in ae cord, For the great and wonderful thing about the new king is that he is a man who has ideas of his own-- political ideas of his own, and what is perhaps more unprecedented still is we all know what these ideas ave. The Sailor Enthroned. The qualities of judicious reserve, of natutal that he grew bluff, breezy sailor, acous- WHAT MANNER OF it was a young] the "then Duke of York and the pres-! George the Third in the body of Nich-| bizarre | combination, and one that was not al- was then the Prince of Wales, and just before mid- the more Prince George or the Duke of York, or main till the end of, the chapter. What | That is the! on the answer | to which much will hang of the first human | 1: is all mere guessing. No ome ever mation taat is sometimes effected by ference to: the the | erence B the he was unlike the jokes in the old queen's time were at Midshipman affee- | | WILL THIS BE? and what do they know of the reserve tand caution and conventional reticence of England's court' who have spent most of their lives on the high seas y in the colonies? | began by saying that the Duke of York reminded me of a sailor, George TIL. T qualify that by saying that in him the sailor blended with the colonial. George 111 never understood the colonies and he lost America. (George V, does under- 'stand the colonies, and it may not al- together make it easier for him to | hold the confidence of the old-fashion ed fogeydom that reigns supreme in court and cabinet in the old land, I have said that we all know what {his ideas are. I should have said, {what his ideas were. For the ideas ol 'a king often differ from those of the | Prince of Wales, But as Prince of Ls ales he never made any seeret of his ideas. He was a keen politician and {very fond of talking pelitics. He was {frequently to be found in the House 'of Commons, and-at the dinner table | and in the smoking-room he was never | 18 gramme. of the first Hague Conference'|,th to give his companions a piece of our his mind upon the question of the day. What those ideas were I will not wit on record here. No obstacle | ghould be put in the way of many of { them being consigned to eternal ob- livion. And, moreover, it is impos- CONTE | ile to state the party questions now nding without in some way appear- | 'e Je to use the king's name with view to affect the Hon. The foblawing resolution, adopt- etl by the House of Commons, Decem- "per 17th, 1973, may be recalled with advantage just now : ; Resolved : That it is now necessary {to declare that to report any opinion jor pretended opinion of his majesty {upon any bill or other proceeding de- ding in either House of Parliament h-a view to influence the votes of I members is a high crime and misde lmeanor, derogatory to the honor of the crown, a breach of the fundamen- {tal privileges of parliament, and sub- a course of legisla- jeu wit 3 point. But the late king was a hardly | ~ C0 Tl onstitution. After the foregoing very guarded re late political opinions f the late Prince of Wales, I confine 'myself to what is a public record. The {king has been reared in the first flush lof the rise of colonial imperialism. As he and his brother told. us in their journals during the cruise of the Bac- chante, their lads' hearts vibrated in passionale sympathy in 'the sonorous "| | 10 ! | | {verse of "some third-rate isle |a sinking land, b her seas." half logt among ever dwells upon {Our ocean-empire Ww i homes, | { throne. In one vast Orient. When the king speaks of {with his own eyes, and touched his own hands. by travelled sovereign in the world with iscas, he has brought home deep Laver deeper impressions of loyalty to the crown and of attach ment in the old country. And as he told us at the Guildhall in 1901 "with this loyalty were unmiftakable evidences 'of the ' consciousness strength of a true and living member responsibility of that membership.' He is not ashamed of it. On the con trary, he excels in it. And being that the British empire floats '| the British fleet. . He is a keen observer, a voluminous Nervous Prostration For Three Years "Dr. Miles' Restorative Nerv- ine cured me of a period of nervous prostration of over three years duration, and the Anti- Pain Pills are as necessary to us as the roof of our house. They have been household rem- edies with us for many years." WM. J. LOUGHRAN, 1214 Catherine St., Philadelphia, Penna. Much sickness is due to nerv- ous troubles. Headache, diz- ziness, epilepsy and insanity are nervous troubles. .Then there is a large class of disorders which arise from a weakness of the nerves of an organ or part, as weak a 3 heart, stomach, kidney, s eyes, etc. Dyspepsia indigestion are usually the result of mervous disorders. Restorative Nervine soothes the irritated nerves, and assists the nerve cells to gener- ate nerve force. o us, 4 DR: MILES MEDICAL CO. Tersnte, GUARANTEED LIQUOR CURE. Drunkenness is a pro the moderate drinker with two or three 4 or more and more ble as the disease advances: the s Chronic Alcoholism. t used successfully by t in théir own homes is id unde your ody; : to er form costs ety note THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, -MAY 25, 1910. writer, an eloguent and pressive speaker. The rase, "Wake up, John Bull," was none of his invention, Bug when he borrowed it he used it with admirable effect in his speech in the ity. He has shown much sound sense | in daring to nrter foreailen a | in ile oi those to. whom = they sound like damnable heresies. When he was at the Cape during the war he | said a word far peawe and mutual for- | bearance. When he was in India he re- buked the besetting sin of ihe Anglo Indians by reminding them that "the task of governing India will be made easier if we, om dur part, infuse. into it a wider element of syinpathy."" | The chief danger of the king will be in his qualities rather than in his defects. He is conscientious. He takes himself very seriously. He works hard, reads much, and is very set In his own opinions. He knows that | most of the people who swagger on the foretop of the state have never seen niné-tenths of the empire which they attempt to rule. He is not swell-headed, but he is impulsive, somewhat seli-opionionated, and rather brusque in his mod and it is not very dificult to foresee that there will be considerable risk of considerable smashing of the con- stifitional crockery unless George the Fifth learns betimes that a king has to put a guard upon his lips. His majesty is one of the most ab- stemious of men. That may not be regarded by some us a merit in the king. Englishmen rather - like a man who can enjoy a good square meal without fearmg any penalities in the shape of indigestion. Angl from of old our people, before teetotalism grew, wire take his liquor like a gentleman. But the king ean do neither, He is no vauhant trencherman as his father was, neither can his constitution allow him to indulge in strong drink. 1 have neither dined nor lunched Sit 'hs table, but those who have declare that they never saw a man so sparing in his liquor. Half a glass of light wine often all that he dare take, This not from principl: but from necessity. The king has got a good cons but a bad stomach, and the slightest indiscretion in either food or drink car- ries with .it a severe penalty. The fac mates much more to the ethical ideal of the English middie classes than any mun who has ever had sway in Eng- Jand s'nee the days of Oliver Crom- well. He resembles the Czar of? Russia ~his favorite cousin--in being passion- ately domesticated. He is a model pére de famille. He dislikes fuss and feath- ers and ceremonial and all the flim- flam of Courts. He has got, a good Ig 18 e of speech, | rather despised a man who could not' rience, | , + +} is that King George approxi 'BENEFIT COMES TO ONLY FEW FACTORIES. A Baloon Ascension-- Do all Possibile to Encourage a steady Demand From Britain, Buyers Took a Special to the Whig Mowtreal, May The of t cheese has reacted from the high level reached week's son, and we am de price ' balloon ascen- are back again at t ty be disposed to do business. Last wick's advance in price was certain- | Iv overdone, avd accomplished no real | good, except the henefit' derived hy the few factories that were fortunate ! i i | et ougn to obtain the top prices paid: | Those buyers who were foolish enough to pav anything over eleven cents last wees have been wondering ever since y have ever since been doi everything pussible to get prices down again a safer and saner level. The demand from Great Drituin was choked off so crickly by the advanced prices asked that the trade generally realized that a mistake had Leen made, and have ritluced prices to a level at which the i ritish dealers are prepared to go on trading. At Campbellford, on Tuesday morn- ¢ the entire ofering was sold af 1 1316e. per 1b., and in the after. voon at Stirling fie same price ruled. It evident from the events of the past few davs that the British dealers are: prepared to do a considerable business in cheese at prices ranging lle. to Hie. per Ih, here, at ite. to 10e. in the country at the fretories, but immediately prices are advanced to eleven cents or over the comand ceases, trade becomes Jdull aud there is a set-back in prices, In tte face of the steadily increasing re ce pts from day to day now we should do everything possible to encourage a steady deniand from the side for our cheese at fair prices, and in this wav ¢ od any serious accumulation of cheese on this side which would be to ' from " | Saturday : {died on the 17th, aged seventy years. raf possessed then: at the time, and | y Vancouver, Calgary and Winnipeg tak- ing large quantities at current mse of prices. At the country "boards last and again MOUS SY offerings were all sold at fram to Wie, equal to He. and We. 1b., delivered in Montreal. Considerable basriness was done here om this basis, but the buvers as a rule were rather dithdent about paying these prices, most of them having looked for lower prices to rule this week. Receipts are increasing rapidly, and we will soon have more than can be conveniently handled by onl away at present prices, which is handly probe { able at this early period of the season, NEWS OF THE DISTRICT. ---- Interesting Events Occurring In The Vicinity. John Fox,. Sophinsbuxg township, { has for AL Toronto clerk-treasurer A. TT, Lawson, heen appointed -hgnfrew John Walker, aged twenty-six. Belleville, : Wheat at thirty-five inches and rye at thirty-eight inches is shown in Prince Fdward county, The Quinte hotel, Picton, has been granted a license, and will open after being closed down a vear. W. T. C. Bethel, Pembroke, has sold his drug stove to A. Hl. Box, Cobden, He will continue his optical parlors. The marriage was solemnized on Monday of Miss Isabella Adell Ford, of Belleyille, to Herbert Roy Wilson, of the inland revenue department. George I. Sturgess, New Haven, su- perintendent of the Belleville rolling mills, has had to resign his position owing to ill-health, He will take a sea trip. } Mary Ellen Fitzsimmons, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Robert Fitzsimmons, Alexandria Pav, N. died at the hospital in Brockville, aged three years. Diphtheria was the cause of death. Mrs. Roswell P. Flower, widow of Minneapolis, is dead, He formerly lived in likdly to affect the cotirsée of prices in | the future. The receipts of cheese last week nounted to 28,905 boxes as compar e! with 21,374 for the corresponding week last year. This is a substantial increase for this time of the, vear and the probability is that the make for i the month of May will average twenty | per cent more than during the same nonth last year. Whether this increase vill be maintained throughout the vonth of June remains to be, seen. The shipments for the week were fair- a | Gov. Flower, has subscribed $1,500 to |the fund being raised by Secretary {George R. Van Namee, of Watertown, IN.Y., to make arrangements for the { annual convention of the New York |state volunteer firemen, to be held in August. To be lieutenant-colonel and to command the 16th Regiment : Major A. A. Ferguson, vice Lieut.-Col, H. E, Putman, who, on the expiration of his period of tenure of command, is transferred to the reserve of officers, 10th, 1910. To be major, | wife, and he knows it. He is simply de- | voted. to his children. His one delight | ly. heavy. amounting in all to abou Tennyson when he repudiated {with scorn the notion that Britain was His mind ith her boundless | For ever broadening England and her these things he speaks of what he has seen He is the most wide- And whenever he has come back from {his journeyings among kinsfolk over- and their of ship in the empire and of ther power" and readiness to share the burden and a navy man to his finger-tips he knows upon is to get home and spend a quiet even- ing with his wife and weans. He hates dining out. He does not play much at cards, and never for money. He hates ! corrupt jon, and rumor credits him with chérishing designs against the in- numerable takers of commission who fatten on the tradesmen who supply his palace, which; if carried out, will raise old Harry in certain quarters. He is a studious man, reading news- papers and Blue Books with avidity, He owns no racehorses, He plays well at golf, and when he goes out shoot. ing his hand is steady and his aim is true. To be in bed at half-past ten and to be up and about at half-past sin has been his ambition as a Prince. Of many other sides of the character of our new sovereign I have not left myself space to speak. I have said en- ough to indicate that whatever George V. may be on the throne, he is not likely to be a cipher. He will be no roi: faineant, but he will be a kmg, aye, every inch a king. He is no mere youth, He is 44, in the very prime and heyday of life. He has spent many years in fan.iliarisine himself with the problems of government in every .part of the am- pire. The king is ambitious, and he has a high sense of F «duty to the nation and the responsibilities of his position. It remains to be seen how thie new hand at the helm will steer the ship of State through the gathering storms. wt as Archbishop Tait reminded the lad on his confirmation, "a perfectly level plain calls for little engineering; a sunny vovage through a summer sea toes not test the mettle of a sailor's Seamanship, or lay up for him a store of useful experience " The king need not fear but that he will have plenty of opportunities call for his engiveering, and for of the mettle of his seamanship. I have not more than a line whick to say, perhaps, the most im (portant thing in this article, that it 1s ¢ good thing for the nation in this crisis that 'our now king has a good wife, whose tact and judgment and in- born instinct will stand him in good stead in every hour of need. The queen better known as Princess May, is the first English queen we have had for centuries who is an Englishwoman. It is, perhaps, the fact. which of all oth- «1s is of happies. augury for the new reign, RL p ' to tests in -------- Budget From Keelerville, Keelerville, May 24.--Farmers are all through seeding and are working at the com ground. Quite a large acreage of corn will be sowed. Rev, Mr. Short preached to a large cons gregation here on Sunday morning. In the absence of the organist, ' Mrs, William Mecllroy presided. The Sun- day school was largely attended, Sun- day, every seat being filled. More seating room 'will be provided for. The officers and members of the school are very sincere in their efforts in both making the school very in- resting and profitable. A pienic will be held for the school on : 11th Chicken-pox has been playing havoe among the children here the past few weeks. Miss Jennie Robb, school teacher, cher, was in the city, Sunday. Visitors : Mrs. € Mcllroy at James Mcllroy's; Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Holder, of Washburn, * at William Dixon's, Sr.; John Sleeth, of Cedar Lake, at Edward Sleeth's; Wellington Ruthven, of Elgin, at George Ruth- ven's; Mr. and Mrs: Frederick Balls and Howard and Miss Nellie Angli all of Bat at J. E. Anglin's; Mrs, William Mellvoy; of Seslev's Ray, at John ' Patterson's; Miss Lizzie Sleeth, of Kingston, visiting her pa- rents for a few days last week -------- IP , youngest son of 1. R. McQuigge, i died suddenly 25,000 boxes, the quantity being prac- tically the same as last the corresponding week. I'e butter market is very firm with prices steadily maintained owing the good demand for the new creamery that is coming from all parts of the Dominion. Heavy ship- ments are being made out to the West, vear's for to grass THE WAY WONDER- ~ -OHINE Cleans Silver and Gold is making it famous ask your TRADE mane Dealer ~~ Household Convenience Co. Lid. TORONTO NICE HAIR FOR ALL. Once Destroy the Dandruff Germ and Hair Grows Luxuriantly. Any one can have nite hair if he or she has not dandrufi which cansed brittle, dry hair, falling hair and mid ness. To care dandruff it is necessary to kill the germ that causes it, and that is just what Newbro's Herpicide does. Cornelius Grew, Colfax, Wash., says : J "One bottle of Newhro's Herpicide completely cured mie of dandruff, which was very thick: and it has stopped my hair from falling out." I makes hair soft and glassy as silk: delightful od- or, and refreshing hair dressing. It permits the hair to grow abundantly and kills the da germ in Sudbury, where he was employed as br 4 p January Capt. J. son. t G. Jarvis, viee A: A. Fergu- Li bt Intelligent Precautions. New York Sun. August Belmont, in the smoke-room of the Lucania, told, apropos of lu- veung Marquis of Anglesey, who died in Monte Carlc some five years ago. "Lord Angelesey's cars were the most luxurious then known," said Mr. Pel mont." "This young man went to ex tremities in everything. He was very intelligent, though. Once, at his his- tore castle in. Wales, there: @as slight fire. So, lest the priceless pile burn down, quantity of hand gremades, or extin- guishers, from London. grenades arrived they were hung all over the castle, but though it was an enormous place, there were still seve ral dozen grenades left over at the end of the hanging, I do with them, my lord ?' the butler dryly to the butler: 'You 'may put them in my coffin.' "' Toronto Street Market. Toronto, May 23.--Wheat, white, new, per bus., $l; wheat, red, new, per bus., 81; wheat, goose, per bus., 95¢.; oats, per bush., 3%.; peas, per bush. 70c.; barley, per bush., 48e. to Boe. ; rye, per bush., 65¢.; hay, timothy, per ton, $18 to $21; hay, mixed, per ton, $12 to $15; straw, per ton, $13 to 814; dressed hogs, $12.50 to 813; butter, dairy, per ib., 240, to 28¢c.; butter, in ferior, 18¢. to 2lc.; eggs, per dozen, 20c. to 22e.; chickens, spring, per Ib, . to 50e.; turkevs, per 1b., 2le. to e.; fowl b., 15¢. to 17e.; apples, per bbl, WW; potatoes, hag, by load, 40¢, n.; onions, per sack, £250 to $2.75; beef. hindquarters, $12 to 813.50; beef; forequarters, $9 to $10.50; beef. choice, carcase, 810.50 to 812 beef, medium, carcase, $8.50 to $9; mutton, per cwt., 811 to 81% veal, prime, per cwt., 811 to $12.50; lamb, per th, 16c. to 18c. Where thee Peach Came Foom. The peach is a native of China, but it was introduced into Persia, where it was called Persica and finally the peach. From Persia it was introduced into Europe and from there into the United States. The Indian peach type was introduced into the southern part of this country from Spain, Species may be found growing wild in some localities. As early as 1812 the bota- nist Nuttall found the peach growing wild as far -- west as Atkansas. The type of the original variety, known as the Peen-to, is still found in China. King George is nearer a teetotaler than any king whp has ascended the English throne. Those who have liv- al in his house, dined at his table and travelled with him at home and abroad say that for years he has been one of the most abstemious of men. : Thononles-Baines, France, was. visit; el by a cyclone, followed Ly a water: spout. Three persons were killed or drowned. The municipal building was washed away, Montreal is nearing the 500,000 mark in population. The annexation of seven outlying municipalities and the natur al growth of the city, assisted by im migration, has caused the rapid in crease. At Niagara Falls, Ont., F. W. Klute, a wealthy cattle owner from Hamp ton, Nebraska, declared he had. been robbed of $6,000, while taking a trip around the : "Sanitol alions" sold in King- sion at Gibson's Red Cross Drug When a barber gets out of ome 10. | Store. ape he gety into another it Ou dottae | . Mahood, 30 Ww. Meleod's Ask for sample Wade's Ointment at xurious motor cars, a story about the a he ordered an enormous When the 'And what shall asked. Lord Anglesey coughed--he was already in a pretty bad way--and said TOOTH AND TOILEY PREPARATIONS fifteen in the family, all good it be W BEER the best and purest lager _brewed--a tonic as well as food and drink. Sparkling and full of life Salvador | tones up the entire system. A light and nourishing drink for every member of the family. Brewed and bottled by REINHARDTS' OF TORONTO this market unless dealers & 3 > decide to put some butter 'level at which the British dealers seam | i Let i i : { 1 i : $ | Sold Everywhere nia Local Agent, E. BEAUPRE, Kingston. Tel. 318. Hair Health If You Have Scalp Or Hair Trouble. Take Advantage of This Of. fer We -esuld not afford to so strongly endorse Rexall "93" Hair "Tonic continue to sell it as we do, if we were not certain that it would do all we elaim it will. Should our enthu- siasm carry us away, and Rexall "93" Hair Tonic not give entice satisfac: tion to the users, they would lose faith in us and our statements, and in consequence our business prestige would suffer. Therefore, when we assure you that if your hair is beginning to unnatural ly fall out or if you have any scalp trouble, Rexall "93" Hair Tonic will promptly eradicate dandruff, stimu- late hair growth and prevent premn- ture baldness, you may rest assured that we know what we are talking about. Our of one hundred {est cases Rexall "93" Hair Tonic gave entire satisfac. tion in ninety-three cases. It has been proved that it will grow hair on bald heads, when, of course, the baldness had not existed for so long a time that the follicles, which are the roots of the hair, had not become absolute- Iv lifeless. Hexall 93" difierent from ons. We anh Hair Tonic is vastly other similar prepara- believe that ir will do ore than any other human ageney ywards restoring hair growth and Wair health. It is not greasy and will not gum the scalp or hair or cause permanent stain. It is as pleasant to use as pure cold water. Our faith in Rexall "93" Hair Tonio is 80 strong that we ask you to try it on our positive guarantee thatyour money will be cheerfully refunded with- out questian or quibble if it does not do as we claim. Certainly we can of- fer no stronger argument, It comes intwo sizes, prices Be. and $1. Re- member you can obtain it only at our store~The Rexall Store. G, W i a hood, As Snug as a Bug in a Rug We have no bug beneath our rug, We have none in our bed ; The scourge is past, we're free ot last, Through Common Sanse they're Common Sense Bug P In crevices and it worked splendidly. lite the only satisfactory Vermin E giermingtor. The pests eat It greedily and die. 25¢, S50c and $1, at all dealers. Remember! { |. Twe Kinds 12. Government statistics fur- nish ample evidence that local option and reduction of licenses does not curtafl drunkenness. the Regal Lager and Why not ad- vocate drinking of promote true temperance,

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