Daily British Whig (1850), 18 Oct 1911, p. 9

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Restores color to Gray or Faded hair--Remeves Dan- druff and invigorates the Scalp --Promotcs a luxuriant, healthy hair growth--Stops its falling out, Is not a dye. Jd 5 4 Stores or direct ppon sler's name. Scad Ife h g Hay ! pecizitics Co. R32 SOAP is uneguaied and keopigd the Seslp far red, rough chapped Dreggiss SUBSTITHITE = for Shamno. clean snd heat hands aad face REFUSE ALL JAS. B. McLEOD, AGENT DYSPEPSIA CLAIMS ANY LIVES, But John Mitchell's Life was saved by Morriscy's No. 11 Dyspepsia Cure. Woodstock, N.B., Aug. 10, 1910, -| Ali, late Shah of Persia. but recently "1 bad a very severe case of stomach trouble which caused me great pain, and a lot of distress, 1 tried several doctors, but could get no refief. 1 also tried about all the patent medicines that are recommend- | e stomach trouble, and still I was | U ed for sum to $100,000, which the high with fe not recorded that so great a price was yer before placad on a BONUS FOR MURDER OF PERSIA'S EXILED MONARCH. Disguised as a Merchant the Shah Has Returned to Hic Country Hoping to Win Back Mis Throne-- Failed to Establish Harmony With His Subjects and He Was Let Go-- Now Hanging Round Again. "The goodly sum of $82,500 will be paid for the head of one Mohammed & student of medigine and surgery in Odessa, on presentation of said head at the rear entrance gate where hangs the sign 'Deliver all goods Here.' It is not absolutely essential to present the head in detached form, but for ¢cnvenience in handling that method would meet with Government ap- val This is the tholght rather than the ng of a proclamation, referred sarcastically by some as a bull, which is tacked on the outer walls of the imperial palace at Teheran as an inducement to some enterprising Kurd to solve a situation that other. wise is bound to be productive of considerable excitement in the king. A of Persia in the near future. Private subscriptions have raised the shows that eost of heads keeps Ag high cost of living. It is erson's head. p to the time that this is written K PRICE ON HIS HEAD | geting the bought L would go and see him. flesh am feeling first-rate. marvelous No. 11 Stomach Kemedy," John H. Mitchell. The above prescription is not a ""Cure- All" or so-called patent medicine. Dr, Mor- riscy prescribed it for 44 years, and it cured thousands after other doctors failed, Price, 80c. per box at your dealers or Father Morriscy Medicine Co., Limited., Montreal. 800 Sold and guaranteed in by J. B. McLeod. [TACT Vanilla Extract Make sure you get ihe real Vanilla, not an im- itation. Buy Shirriff's-- the extract of the finest Mexican Vanilla Beans. Aged until it is stronger, richer, infinitely superior. ® Shirriffs LT Vanilla RASH SO BAD BABY |: GANE NEAR DYING Head Broke Out. Spread to Arms, Legs and Entire Body. ltcheu So He Would Scra' -) Until Blood Ran, One Box of Cuticura Ointment and Nearly One Cake of Cuticura Soap Cured Him. Has Had No Return, nt -- "When my boy was about threo months old, his head broke out with a rash which ftehy and ran & watery fluid, We Wied everything we could but he got worse all the time, till 1c spread to his srms, legs and then to his entire body. He got so bad that he came near dying. The rash would teh so that he would scrateh till the blood ran, and a thin yellowin stuff would be all over his pillow in the moming. 1 had to put mittens on his hands to prevent him tearing his skin, He was so weak and run down thas he took fainting spells as if he were dying, He was almost a skeleton aod his little hands were thin like claws, worse --in fact, I felt like dying, and had to stop work, My friends thought my days on earth were few, and I thought so myself. I had heard a great deal about mderful skill of Father Morriscy, and He prescribed his No. 11 Dyspepsia Cure for me, and I took his medicine as he directed, and soon began to feel relieved, and to- day I am a very well man; have gained in have no pain in my stomach, and There is no doubt but that he saved my life, and I only wish I could find words to express my gratitude, I hope all who suffer as I did will use his Kingston Mohammed Ali may be said to be still in the altogether. His valuable head has not yet been collected, al- though the soldiery, finding in the normal wage nothing to spur them to general warfare, sees in the attrae- tive bonus for one special murder an inducement, the like of which no Cossack or tribesman ever before con. templated. { When Mohammed Ali, 28rd in di- rect line from the apn of the Prophet, passed out the northwestern gate of the city of Teheran on the evening of July 16, 1909, no loyal Kurd kissed the earth his feet had trod, or so much as gave him a parting salaam. It was all day, likewise good night, for Ali He had been a Shah for just 18 months and 8 days, to be exact, and Was Zoing into ban shm nt because Jublie opinion, which even in the Near East is not without potency, had decreed that, having failed "to estab. lish harmony among his subjects, he was no | longer worthy to wear the 18-pound g'rdle of state or the three. story tiara of the King of Kings." Once outside, the gate was closed by representatives of the new order of things, and as a Persian punster wrote at the time, a Shahkingly in. competent ruler had got h's deserts. Still. you can't always tell in Per- sia. Stable government may make ** He was bad about eight months when we tried Cuticura Remedies. 1 had not laid him down in his cradle in the daytime for a long while. I washed kim with Cuticura Sgap and put on one application of Cuticura Ointment and he was 50 soothed that he could sleep, You don't know how glad I was he felt better, It took one box of Cuticura Ointment and Pretty near one cage of Cuticura Soap to cure him. 1 think our boy would have died but for the Cuticura Remedios and I shall always remain & firm friend of them, He was cured move than twenty years ago, and there has been no return of the trouble. I shall be glad to have you publish this true statement of his cure." (Signed, Mrs. M. C. Maitland, Jasper, Ontario, May 27, 1910. For more than a generation mothers have found a speedy, se*reeable and economical treatment for their skin-wortured little ones fn Cuticurs Boup and Ointment. Although they are sold by druggists and dealers everye wheres liberal sample of each may be obtained free, from the Poiter Drug & Chem. Corp, soic propa, 53 Columbus Ave, Boston, U.S.A. Some people. are so shorn of jn- br fluence that they ean neither rule or ruin. : A lot of times our sympathy goes}e where it is not deserved or spprecia- EN the steerage of a sailing another that he covered his $3250 head with a whitened wig and sought by dress and manner to appear like a venerable Parsee merchant. town of Astrabad gave the exiled monarch a welcome of instituted cor. diality and warmth. The provinee of Mazandaran flung its ers to the breeze and made bold to ! challenge the minions of the Teheran : Government to come and try to win the $82.500 head and see what they'd | get. . challenge started some time ago. "butting in" for tranquility, but not for joy. It got dull in and around Teheran, and hers and there was seen a tired busi. ness man. And so Mohammed Ali, finding cond'tions ' and opportunity, alike favorable, has started to come back. using the words in both a geo- graphical and colloquial sense. Persia, alert to the trying emergency, im- mediately went into council on the state of the nation and issued the above proclamation. With Mohammed Ali out of the way, a regent as a figurehead and a national assembly, Persia took a step which would have given the average Shah ancurism of the aorta It actually proceeded sanely to straighten out its finances for the ptirpose of seeing, if it stood at all. where it was. The National Assem- bly, wi arg. good judgment, sent to the--1"nited States for some one who knew the double sort of addition and division. It secured the services of William M. Shuster, a product of the Washington High School, who possesses this rare quality of being able to systematize monetary chaos Persia made Shuster, who is not yet 40 years old, treasurer general and gave him complete charge of taxes, revenue, credit and accounting Whereupon, Sipahdar Salar, the Premier, knowing perhaps what it meant, resigned his office and, taking a carriage, asked to be driven to Europe--a Persian way of expressing is disgust. Having started to regu. late the national finance, the Assem- | bly didn't stop. It went on regulat- ing until it has got the people mixed up. There seemed to be too many rulers, a condition long ago discover. ed elsewhere on the footstool. When Mohammed Ali had made his predecessor step out of his shoes to the end that he himself might step into them he paid his regrets to re- bellious notables with quick firing guns and it was not long before he was as unpopular as the man he had ousted. The populace rose and swarmed to the court square and the Shah, aware that his popularity was waning, summoned troops of tribes. men to protect him. { The aver tribesmen, whether 'in interior Africa, the Barbaray states or Persia, is not a gentleman of un- swerving integrity. What with ir. regularity of both habits and cus. toms, he is 8 most uncertain quantity. Having come to the aid of the Shah, it wasn't long before the mounta'n nomads had made him a prisoner. Then, following established custom, they traded on their balance of power with the real enemies of the Shak and his undoing was complete. Stories differ as to how the ex-Shah back into Persia. One says that wore a false beard and rode in The royalist ban. Three regiments accepting the After the dinner the prodigal ought to set himself at work to pay for it. 5 makes a practice of oukl be "butted out." Youn generally win when good prin- iple is back of you ia the battle. Most of us have to have more The man ar ship, and | So | a meal. "Would you be willing to do Jess help in our efforis to go it aloge, THE DAILY A BAD BREAK. Kingsley Thought Aeronaut Must = Have Been a Dentist. Charles Kingsley was at a dinner ace with the geronaut Coxwell. It was shortly after Coxwell and a com- paniou had made a fight in which they had risen so high that Coxwell's nands were frozen and he had only time to tear open the air valve with 18 teeth, A. C. Benson tells the story in the latesi instalment of "The Leaves of the Tree" in the North American Review. After dinner Kings- ley suddenly exclaimed: -- "I have often thought that the first man that ever went up in a balloon must have been a d-dentist." Some oie laughed and said, "What an ex- traordinary idea!" "I don't know," said Kingsley; "a man who is always looking down people's throats, and pullisg teeth about and breathing their breath must be inspired with a tremendous desire to get away and sbove it all." Coxwell leaned forward and said very good-humoredly, "Well, Mr. Kingsley, it is true that I am a dentist, but it was not that made me become an aeronaut." "My dear Mr. Coxwell," said Kingsley, flushing red, "I am sure I beg your a had no idea it was so. You must have thought me singularly ill-mannered to make a joke of it." Kingsley could not recover his spirits for the rest of | P Si ada, under the | unlamented end, | Canada became Ontario. the evening. He hated giving pain to any human being more perhaps than anything in the world. Thoughts on the Onion. The onion is a much-abused fruis. Bome of its traducers claim it is a vegetable, but those who truly love the onion consider it a fruit. In its BRITISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, ONTARIC'S GOVERNORS. Passing of Government House Recalls | Some Of It Tenants. The building of 8 new Government | House in Chorley Park, Toronto, not | only means the end of the old red. | brick structure that for forty-four | years has been a landmark of that city, but it emphasizes anew the rapid growth of the city and the trend of | population from south to north, says Frank Yeigh, in The Toronto Globe. | The Toronto of 1911, when measured | by that of 1867, affords a striking evi. | dence of civic expansion. When the Government House was | built, at the corner of King and Sim- | coe streets, the settled part of the To- | ronto of that day was practically ! bounded on the north by Be street, and the official home of the Lieuten- ant-Governor was practically within the residential area of the city. To- day, however, commerce and trans. portation are ruthlessly closing in on the old house, the spot it now occu- pies will in a short time be yielded up to their insatiable appetite, and prosaic freight sheds, with all their din and dust, will succeed the home centre of the King's Provincial repre. sentative, Government House was erectad during the Confederation year of 1867, | | when the troubled period of partner. | | tender youth, raw and bashful though | it be, there is nothing quite so de licious. As it approaches sturdy ma- turity it a 8 to the aesthetic senses, whether sliced and eaten raw, or stewed or fried. ided people have set up the t that the onion is health- { ful. This has led others to regard it | a8 a medicine of some sort. The onion should be taken for what it is --one of the most delightful of our American fruits. If the crop were limited, then the flavor of onion on the breath would be considered an | indication of affluence, and the wooer who not only tinctured his kisses with onion but bought onions for | his dulcinea, as he now buys bonbons and ice cream soda, would be the beau ideal of the community, Scientific Salesmanship. "How "do you manage to sell so many automobiles?' was asked of the | salesman who wears diamonds and a silk hat and smokes thirty cent cigars. "I don't mind telling you if you treat it confidentially," he replied. { | complexion : o | | ; "You know, most people judge a ma- | chine by the speed it can make. Well, there is a quiet little stretch of road about ten miles out of the city. I get the prospect to take a ride in the | machint I want him to buy. When we reach that stretch of road I let her out for all she's worth, generally about thirty miles an hour. Pretty soon my partner, disguised as a oon- stable, stops us and asserts vehe- mently that he has timed us and we were going eighty-five miles an hour, After some wrangling I manage to buy him off, and on the way home I close the deal with the prospect." $ -- Made an Offer, After one of the selling races had been run, in which the noble steed had run badly, it was out up for sale. Bidding was not very brisk, in spite of the auctioneer's eloquent re. cital of his virtues. Slowly, very slowly, the price rose to five pounds and there stuck, and it seemed as though no power on earth could in. duce the company to offer another penny for the dilapidated steed. "No advance at flve? Going at five! For the last time at five!" said the knight of the hammer. Just then a gentleman strolled up, and, after carefully scrutinizing the animal, said: "Stay, I'll give five and six for him!' Collapse of auctioneer. Some Snake Story! This story is told of the late Dr. { Emil Reich: One day while traveling i he lay down to rest in the shadow of a bush and fell asleep. He awoke | with a start to find that night was coming on and that rain had begun to fall. Quickly snatching up his um- brella he tried to open it and, finding | it worked stiffly, he pressed the spring vigorously. Suddenly there was a sound of ripping and tearing and a snake fell to the ground split in two. The reptile had apparently swallowed the umbrella as far as it could! Record Money Yield. What is believed to be a world's i record has been created by a hive of bees on the farm of Mr. J. Selley at Cadeleigh, Devon. No less than 147 pounds of honey has been taken from the hive, and had there been 20 other hives there they would all have done as well, says the expert who removed the honey from the hive. The whole of the honey was gathered from white clover, and is of the best quality. A Careful Quail. "I thought I ordered quail." "Dat's quail, sub." "Quail nothing; that's chicken!" "It was chicken, sub, but it seed me a-comin"." "What has that to do with it?" "De sight ob a cullud pusson al ways makes a chicken quail, sub." ------------------ With Alacrity "Waal, 1 dunno," said the farmer's wife when Dusty Rhodés applied for a few chores?" "Madam," said Dusty, "if you'll | give me something to chaw on I'll claw all day." Unexpected Politeness. "1 notice," said the young man's employer, "that you are always about the fir in the office in the morn. »" The dishonest man and hic dollar are not, as a rule, easily parted, Real worth sometimes dresses calico, while sham Raunts jn satin. It's a wighty poor argument that has to be settled ter. in by a hstie encoun-! leges that you ship between Upper and Lower Can. u act, came to an sud when Upper It was oon. structed by the Sandfield Macdonald Government, at a cost of $100,000, the Hon. John Oarling--mow the veteran bir John---being the responsible Cabi- net Minister, as Commissioner of Pub. lic Works, and the late John Elliott of Brantlord the contractor. The building stands on the site of Elmsley House, an old-time and state ly residenee of the days of Little York, occupied by Chief Justice John Elmex lay, which beeame Government House after the war of 1812. For many, years, therefore, the original Vice. regal "mansion" was the home of ore and Maitland, ' of Oolborne, nd Head 'and Arthur, and later of Sir Edmund Head, as Governor-Gen. eral of the two Canadas--all of whom figure jromineutly in Oanadian, and especially Upper Canedian, history. 'hep Conlederation was accom- plished(Blmsley House was demolish. ed, and' the new structure, imposing for its-day, typified the new era of revincial development. Government ouse has had ten opoupants simoe 1807, each appoinument reflecting the the Bolitical party' in power. Ii may be resting - tof re. call their names in sequence offap- pointment: -1867--Major-Gen. H. W, Stisted. 1868--Hon. , William , B, Howland, PO, CB. 1873--Heun., John W. © 1876--Hon.3D. A. Macdonald, P.O. 1830--Hon., John Beverley Robinson. 1839--Hon. Bir Alexander Campbell, KCMG@G., PC: 3 2%~ Hon. George A, Kirkpatrick, C 1 y= Hon. Bir Oliver Mewat, - GO. 1903--Hon. Bir William Mortimer Clark, K.O. 1908-Hon. - John K.C., . LL.D, The:very names recall memories of | the many interesting incidents that cluster around. the old Viceregal | headquarters, especially in connection with the social and military lite of | those early days, when, as now, hos- | pitality was unbounded, and many a | of gaiety of the earlier years is | i in special remembrance by thoge who live to tell of them. Morrison Gibson, | -------- "Varsity" New Stadium. football teams | visit Toronto this year in | games will find the | nt iver The intercollegiate which will the annual oval at Te that { the brief i 5 of | Ottawa, i Mr OCTOBER 18, 1911. CANADIAN 'HOBBIES, Many of Our Big Men Have a Predh lection For Killing. It is in the use of the spare mo- ments that men have for themselves e real spirit and The deadly days from energies it when In p the s of the thing he wants to do in to the desire that iz within 1} shows what he cares gives expression ality. « The Canadian "Who's Who" is an interesting study in the careers of severai thousand of Canadian men and women who have attained dis- tinction .in some line of activity; bud the significant features of these brief histories are not so often in the re. cords of success and accomiplishment as in the list of recreations in which these men indulge in their moments of leisure. Recreation is play, whe ther for body or for mind. really of emetion or personality in the form of art. Even nding a hobby is play, and a'hobby -is often & test of char acter, Of the 660 whose, recreations are | quoted, 225, or more: than one-third, | acknowl shoo ss a favorite form of play. Of least specify rifle target shooting, and six big game shooting. The may be presumed are ing in one form or another. a witty Frenchman once described the Englishman's idea of ing go together with a large number of people, and 162-mention fishing as a recreation. Golf and bowling Te00, recreations of many sue- cess men. Next to hunting and shooting, golf appeals to a larger num. ber than any other individual form | of sport, There are 199 golfers and | list, phy- professional fifty-five ' bowlers among the among-whom are judges, lawyers, sicians, business and men in all walks of life. There are also those whose chief pleasure in the margins of their days 18 in the company of Mother Nature, | try' 2 to understand something of her marvellous secrets. When the work of the i A is over 38 turn to gardening as; fecfeation, twelve to farming, ten to*horticulture, three to fruit- three" to 'botany, two to poultry-rais- ing, two--and all honor to them--to tree-planting, and one eech to culture, orchard work, bee-keeping and plant study. The most extraordinary ios. how. over, abouts the entire list of recrea. | tions is the comparatively small num- ber who find play in intellectual or artistic pursuits. Twenty-two claim to find relaxation in music, and twenty. one in reading. Of these one confesses that his astitude towards music is that of listener rather than perform- | er, and Mr. J. Castell Hopkins gives | the readi of novels as his only re. creation. Bix others give literature as | their refuge in their hours of ease, | three others mention books, ahd one poetry. is bibliography, John Tolmie, M.P., is fond of Flint, clerk of the House mons, is given to travel and research, Sir James Grant is a collector of Si. | lurian fossils, and W. L. Goodwin, of the Kingston School of Mines, is a | student of birds and their songs. Three men are philatelists, but only | the Chinese Consul-General at is a numismatist A. H. W. Cleave, su, of the Canadian Royal one, intendent int, has a r. 'Ami, formerly of the Geological Survey, has made geology his hobby | » | as well as his life work, and Rev. { C. J. 8B. Bethune, who for forty years | Was Versatile Miss Ashwell. Miss Lena Ashwell, the Canadian girl who fas made such a fine repu- tation for herself on the English stage, #8 to appear, for some time, at least, in the London music halls. In other words, she is going to try vaudeville for a while, When Miss Ashwell last appeared in the Dominion, sha was not seen to advantage, both her role and her play | as g whole being of an impossible and | dreary description. What she will do in the "halls" we can't imagine, as her bent is for the quiet sort of emo- tional actifig, which is not appreciat- ed by everybody. However, Miss Ash. well is a musician as weil as an ast ress, and perhaps she will make use of that talent. This clever Toronto | woman is very versatile. She has | even writen a novel. ------------ "George" and "Double George." The issue of Canadian gold coins | Which will be out in the course of a few weeks, will bear King George's head on one side, and on the other the Canadian coat of arms. , The dies are now on the way from England, and coining will be com.' | menced as soon as they arrive in the capital. : The designs for the five and ten dol- lar pieces are practically the same. The five will be generally known as a "George," and the ten as a "Double George." Would "Abolish Slaughter Houses. : The abolition of the private slaugh. 13 (ter house and the wiping out of the {trade i4. G. Rutherford, Dominion Veterin- in home-killed carcasses are ly recommended by Dr. ary General and Live Stock as a" Don't worry if a blind man threat- ens to whip vow on sight, i Keep in mind the fact always thai other people have rights and privic and 1 are in Jety' bound to respect. : headmaster at Trinit School, Port Hope, is one of ¢he lead ing authorities in Canada on entomo- logy. Bir {lliam Vana Horne is one--are artiste; two are woodcarvers, and two ars interested in' | art and one in pictures. Mr. Ergest Thompson Seton, the distinguished ar- tist and writer of animal stories, hunts | big game with a camera rather'than with a rifle; is widely known as the "Kahn," takes his recreation in the planting of trees; | Domin.' | Dr. George Johnson, Jormerly ion Statistician, studies place names; W. E. Smallfield, of the Renfrew Mar. cury, devotes his leisure time to muni. | cipal and local activities and takes | pleasure in it, and Dz, J. A: Macdon-' ald, editor of The Toromto Globe, finds his obiet delight making speeches --E. J. * i ll 'Cana dian Century, Furs Double 'In' Value. Among the many articles the prices | of which are advancing, may now be | added that of furs. Dealers say that | the coming winter will see a rise of from 10 to 100 per cent. in almost all lines of these comfortable garments. The reason given is that the de. | mand for fur during the last four years has increased & hundredfold, and owing to the districts where fur was formerly very plentiful being rapidly becoming thickly settled, it is becoming difficult to get This is particularly trus of Canada, | where the tide of immigration has lately been very great in the parts of the country where the most valuable' fur animals were plentiful. The Health of Montreal. The Montreal Star has been taking, a fling at the health situation in the metropolis. The terrible infant mor-' tality in Montreal during the beat wave isifresh in the minds of the! public, \ The Montreal death rate is very high. In the last six years the aver. age is 22.84 per thousand of the popu. lation. i supply of Ny. : Improvements in the water are under way for the relief phoid. But typhoid is only one ail-! ment of the suffering Montreal pub-| | The white plague is eating ite lie. dirty way into the homes of the peo- ple. is deaths have increas. Pee. 3 le not decaved Ther and plenty of times when will refuse to weep with Sometimes it Is possible to forget the world you. our own troubles by helping others to | lose sight of their trials, to his own person- | in the | form of outdoor spert or ath! tics, in- | tellectual study or in the expression ese fourteen ab | rest. it | voted to hunt | "Let us | go out and kill something," is the way, | sport, and the | Canadian seems in a fair way to fol. | low his example. . Pishing and shoot | , however, are the | owing, | flori- | vine culture, | Bir William Osler's recreation | cotch poeiry and music, T. B, | of Com. | as well | passion for microscopy-and astronomy. | College | "l am all right now, thanks to Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy." The same relief is ready for you. Are you sure you do not need it? If Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy helped Charles Holmes, why won't it help PAGE NINE. Sectional Book Cases | Gunn---The Best Made you? *1 wastroubled with rigs and after reading about Dx. Miles' Heart Remedy, I got a boitle. Be- fore I got the Heart Remedy I had to sit up most of the night, and felt very bad at my stomach. Whatever Iwould eat made me feel worse, and my heart beat very fast. But thanks to Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy, I am all right now. I eat good, sleep good, and feel like a new man, al- though I am almost 68 years old. 1 have been a soldier in the late war of the rebellion, and was badly wounded." CHARLES HOLMES, Private Co. B, 54th N. Y. Infantry Volunteers, Walton, Delaware Co, N.Y. Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy is kept in thousands of homes as a friend always to be relied upon in time of need. Sold by all Druggists If the first bottle fails to benefit, your money is returned. Ask any Druggist. MILES MEDICAL CO. Toronto, Can IOC OOOTOONICO OD DOOOODOCIOKIOICOOOOIOO OO OC { x See our line of Book Sections tn Golden Oak, Fumed Oak. Early Eng- | lish Library Tables in Golden Oak and Early English Card Tables, $3.50, $8.50, $18.00, "R. J.REID Phone 577 The Leading Undertaker (eYe ere evs) ieje ajeleve] How We Build A Growing Business OOOO avn oe CRie eerie NOT BY TIONAL MEANS OF SENSA. ro ADVERTISING. NOT BY MEANS OF PREMIUM 55 SCHEMES. J NOT BY MEANS OF SO-CALL- ED BARGAIN SALES, » all at a reason- fairest treat Simply by supplying, ut } $ mes. the t Shoes iwice and the ossible to our customers Our method glmply verifies (a ( what "Emerson' wrote better . he ¢ there leads 10 a man does a thing ill Id lve be a. be the rest--even if woods that in the alen path This particular-path leads to J. H. Sutherland & Bro. "THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES" BOSSE LOOSE OOOO CECE ERREA® Photography is a Dobby Th eleven; | seven--of | whom R. K. Kernigham, who | and most of you know sor still first Th market, it is Canadian housewife, mination of its maker: thal no to put into it rial, the best wor good enough The best ma Every year | Every pew idea in range and when found to be an advan Happy Thought. By this means alone could its that it bas been maintained jg praise. of the thousands Come and see one at our siore. worth, it leads. daily use KINGSTO McKELVEY & BIRCH, THE LEAST FUEL, THE MOST SATISFACTION, It Was the Bet 25 Years Ago-It is the Best To-day. You have all heard of the Happy Thought Range of the first ranges made exclusively for the Canadian AdAPPY THOUGHT Range has maintained its leading position 5 seen it a better range. making of housewives who use jt More than a quarter of a fidllion "Happy The William Buck Stove (Us. Limited, . ne one who owns one. One in the estimation of the through the deter- thing short of the very best was kmanship. the best ideas tested to the has been tage it has been thoroughly added maintained---and ihe enthusiastic supremacy be testified by to In appearance, az in general Thoughts" are Ia in Canada. N AGENTS: 69-71 BROCK ST

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