HD PACE TWELVE. -------- OO ® Neils The Chocolates thal are Different : "Chocolates Made Fresh Every Hour" isa myth. Chocolates woul not be fit to eat an bour--a day--or even a veek--after being made. The cream centers would be hard, and the fruit flavors, cream and chocolate would nof be sufficiently blended. To have chocolates that are vedlly delicious, they must be matured just as the' Christmas fruit cake is made weeks before . #ticames on the table, . tmagine eating fruit cake an hour after it comes from the oven! ; Neilson's Chotolates are matured for at least a month. This maturing brings the fruit centers back to their original soft creaminess. 33 diffétent packages of these different Chocolates=~each one @ surprise In chocolate making. oo can't gat Neilson's Chocolates conveniently in your neighborivoa, , sand us 80c. for a pound box of the most delicious assorted Chocolates Jou ever tastea. 8 TORONTO. SOLE AGENT WM. NEILSON LIMITED, + = N, R. GRIMM, 102 PRINCESS STREET, THIS STORE, of aga PEPSIZ BLETS | * _geliéve and cure indigestion--=acidity of the stomach biliousness-~flatalence #~dyspepsla. . They re-inforce: the stomach by supplying the aetive. principles Besded for the digestion of all kinde of food. Try one after edch meal. © 80c. a box. and we will mall you & box. | Netlonsl Drug and Chemical Company of Canads, Limited, + += + Moutrsal EXTRA GRANULATED SUGAR -18 ABSOLUTELY PURE The first and great essential of a food product, is ~ Purity ; the Purity and Quality of our Extra Granulated have never been questioned. "Once make a comparison with other Sugars and # you will not be satisfied with any but Redpath. Dainty Tea Tables are always served with PARIS LUMPS to be had in RED SeaL dust 'proof cartons, and by the pound. The Canada Sugar Refining : MONTREAL, CANADA. Established in 1854 by Joka Redpath Co., Limited If your druggist has mot stocked them yet, send ws S50c. ; FOR : : : ably arxtics. ge . So ka LY 5 D ATI Or declamations--we are KINGSTON, AND NEILSON'S (CHOCOLATES CAN ONLY BE HA x . | hostility BELINGUALSUHOOLS, i ------ | Le Canada Says Their Intemperance i is Responsible----Le Temps Says it | is a Question of Constitutional | Right. "Le Camada," of : do ua Montreal, in_ a column front page aditorial on the Ontaric bi-liogual school {question in Untario, savs it seems i that vhese sehools are in danger of} {being abplished, and seeks to find 4 {reasob for the sudden expression of on the part of large sec- itions of the English-speaking popu- tlation. "Le Canada' gives as the {reason ? Jb ys the intemperance of the de- mands vergne in clajming as an absolute right, as a right supported: by the constitution, the right of our | patriots living in other | tench their children {public schools : 'As' long as the French-Ounadians were satis ta address themselves to their English countrymen's sense of justice, to ask from them 'fair play," and €6 make an appeal for mutual" toleranee and conciliation, they obtained, | though not at | the very first attempt, all that they ask- ed for, important concessions, iy' which profsably = were concealed some political plan, but which gave our fellow-countrymen gradual ameliora- tion of their situation, and made them hope, by finally arrive at their goal, But the in- temperance of the nationalists, their haughty demands, their affiviations of rights that the text of the con. stitution. did not. clearly: estabbsh. have: drawn forth reprisals on the part English-speaking trymen. : "And in the face of these they have made theirs, - which we write down here without wishing to estimate their value, but only that our rewders place them- selves in their position, and dye thom impar filly "We wish, Stheéy sav, that all the children of oir province learn the fanguage of? thes province, which is the English Tanguage, but in the bi- lingual schools? whether from lack of time or incompetency in instructors, they' do not learn it. "fr is not by menus of com: provinces to French in the degrees, to of our coun demands asking comming convinced that 'one can make theni' 'hope to ~tabandon this position. ™TTE "How does it happen, we 'also ask owselves, that the redoubtable champion of the Freneh language, who 'makes for themselves at home a very glory "out of this Ship (of French), have not already gone to the aid of theip fellow countrymen whom their demands, at the very leagt imprudent, have placed in d#nger ? "How is it that Messrs. and * Lavergne have not | themselves Into this conflict. not « attempted to obtain from the English-spedlting population «f the tprovinde of Ontario, ate least the maintenance of concessions = previous ly obtained ? > "18 it then that they anid convince, persuade, convert ar mong them the adversaries of bi-line gual schools 7" "Mr. Bourassa was not afraid to go and speak in the county of Ni pissing, in order to have elected an adversary of Sir Wilfrid Laurier; Mr Lavergne was not airaid | meeting at the university of Toren to; why do they not go and preach the'rights of the French in -Toromto, Hamilton,: London, everywhere where the bi-lingual schools are attacked ?" "Le Temps," of Ottejwa, in an edi- torial, conclulles as follows "This #8 a fact that the 'lof the French 'Ianguage to lose sight of, ngmely, that in Ontario, as in all other parts of Canada, the exiseence of French is a historic fact it is not in any per son's power to suppress; that in the province of Ontario as in the other proviuces of the confederation; French 18 spoken, written, printed and pro pagated for the simple reason that Bourassa thrown dare not go (namies ought not it 1# Frenchmen who have penetrated into, evangelized and couwquered for the Christing civilisation, that im mense territory which. extends from Ottawa 'to the Detroit river and thence to the great Lake Superior far "up into the regions of the north, tario is, then, an altogether natural thing: (t is a part of the socal poe litical and religious order, which is incrusted santo kKistory, and whichi all, in spite of themselved, must acknowl ify. has passed" ' through terrible storms, rested rude attacks, and triumphed over terriblé ordeals. She bas gained; by her battles, liberty and peace. She asks to-day in On tario only Wwhab she has haughtily won, and what she granted to the hemmed-in minorities of the 2 vince af Quebec liberty and peace. "Yet out enemies declare them- solves against it, vet the French lan- goage will continue to be spoken and 3 in spite of the outeries of famdtics from Taromto and else' where, and in spite of the anmti-bi- lingual candidates which already ap- pear in some fanatical centres of our province, 14% it be remembered. the teaching of French is not a qués- tion 'of privilege, (but a question of law and comstitutional right" Witnipegs Nov. 28.+The cast-beund in two sections, the first bearing about three hi . ; : 'about two hund- and the THE AGITATION AGAINST of men like Bourassa and La-} champion] to hold ede "the duality of language in On}. edge. The French-Canadian national, train of poy R. last night went | 'Cold-Sores Are your hands chapped, cracked ior sote? Have you "cold cracks" which open and bleed when the skin is drawn tight? Have you a cold sore, frost bite, chilblains, or a "raw" place, which at times makes it agony for you to go mbout your household duties ? If so, Zam-Buk will give you relief, and will bedl the frost-damaged skin, 'Aricint the sore places at night, Zam-Buk's rich healing essences will sik into the wounds, end the smart ing, and will heal quickly. Mrs. Yellen, of Portland, says : "My hands were so sore and cracked that it was agony ta put them near water. When I did so they would smart and burn ak if [ had id Hui 1 Soom uite yukble to get reli oma anything t on a mil 1 tried Zam-Buk, is. succeeded. when all else" had fipled. It closed the big ergcks, gave me easé, soothed the inflammation, and in & very shor time healed my hands." ------------ ; Zam-Buk also cures chafing, rashes, winter {them out of Canada. acts. sczema, , taiders, fewiermg sores, sove heosin and , abscesses, pimples, Ting-rworm, wie. 3, b brwides, soacda, Pos TE Buk Co., Toranto. obi) Ling was directed at the mother-in-law, a box. Nerve Force Wilson's Invalids' Port {a la Quina du Pérou) Is Specifi 4. 1t contains good in. Wine acting a8 nourish- ing and recoustructive adinvasi--and extract of Cinchona Bark, & general tomic, increasing cagdiac action dnd stimalsting mental getivity. The combination is palatable easily borne by the most delicate stomac and way, be depended upon to give goad results. For Blood Impoverishment | Depressed Big Bottle. Ask YOUR Do¢ctor. }12 ET have _ TRAPPERS send us your FURS and we will pay you the Highest Prices BEVILLON FRERES "134-136 MeGILL STREET o MONTREAL PA: We will send free to every trap per who sends us furs, our book | "The Trappers LoyalOom- panien™. L. A. {bas conferred with Premier Borden re- "f that when the other two provinces are EB ter and to submit say Guestions. | Ship Pestroyed From Underneath, | The Mtawas government" will events the " ernment will TO PERNICIOUS PUAYS COMING . TO CANADA. Enough Not Being Done Them Out-go Vulgar Common in Plays. to Keep Jokes Too Halifax, X.8., Nov. 35. (To the Fdi- tor) i 1 would like to eall attention to the numbers of pérnicious plays and common chbap vaudeville periqrm- ances which are coming to Canada' the latter are holding forth in the cheap theatres such as the nickels, dren, I do pot think there iz enough being" done in the direction of keeping The class of ma-, torial which they are giving in the way of amusement is mowtly made up of vulgar and suggestive jokes and This form of low sentiment is fast permenting the youths throughout Canada. { There is 'another feature which is ful: lv ax bad as that of vulgaritvZ-it is the way they bring in and make light of religions subjects in thelr jokes, also their jests at matrimony and do- mestic affairs, which can but go far to destroy the sanctity of the home, This I believe is doing as much harm as downright vulgarity. b You can hear numbers of jokes on lines such as, "The husband leaves his home in the, morning by the' front door, the wifg admits a lover hy the back door." Ncemes depicting immor- ality in the home, drunken scenes where the hushand comes home in the morning with "a jag of." Such exam ples as this can be depreciate the home and poisog the minde of the young. In the United States. for years one of the leading jokes in this This was carried so far that in many states a law was passed to stop ils fither use, but still you can hear, it used in the United States and through Canada by these cheap actors. These classes of performances should be kept out of Canada; they may not reach the smaller towns, but they cer- tainly can be found in most all cities and' towns of any importance. There has been a law passed in Ontario to prevent the exhibiting of demoralising pictures in the nick®f shows. But | do not think any consideration has been given: to these low vaudeville act- ors. If the law covers them then such a 'law should exist that would them out of all parts of Canada. saw recently that wfiorfs were be- ing made in some places to prevent these cheap vaudeville performances from appearing in thé nickel shows. I such a law were passed and enfore- ed it would be the means of keeping them out of Canada. Most of performed come direct frowi the Tow est dives in the United States, and sre a class that should not be permitted to - take part in the 'providing of amusement for our people in Canada --~GEORGE WRIGHT. keep PREMIER ROBLIN SATISFIED. Provincial Government Got All it Wanted at Ottawa, Winnipeg, Nov. 28 --Premier Roblin has returned from the east, where ho garding the extension of the Manis toba boundary. He said that the pro vincial government had got all they wunted--the placing of Manitoba on a basis of absolute equality with the sister provinces of' Sagkatchewan and Alberta. The question of natural re- sources, he said, would come up later on,' it being Premier Borden's policy being given consideration® on their ap plications for their natural resources, Mumnitoba shall Brconsidered on exaet- ly the same footing. That was cer- tainly as much as his' government could expect, added the premier. He had nothing to say on the report. from Toronto that Ontdrio was to get ac cess to a port on Hudson Bay through a friendly arrangemént with Masgobin. NEW TRIAL, FOR SLAYER, Harry Wilson Had Been Sentenced to be Hanged. Halifax, N. 8., Nov. 26--Late last summer, Harry Wilson, of Dighs, was tried by Judge Meagher, and a jury on a charge of the, murder of his brother, He was convicted and sen- tenced to be hanged on November 15th, Tt came ont in the'evidence that Wilson was intoxicated when hé com- mitted the deed, and it was agreed that, therefore, he did not kKhow what he was doing. The judge did not dir- ect 'the jury on manslaughter, con: fining himsell on the charge of mur der, but he granted a crown case re served and afterwards the court post- poned the date of exeeution for one month to give time for agreement. The full bench yesterday gave judg- ment unanimously ordering a' new trial, on the ground that the charge to the jury by Judge Meagher was erroneous because of failure to direct the jury on the subject of manednugh- WRECK OF THE MAINE, , Thinks Inspectors. Havan#, Nov. 25.~The Maine in- spection: board will start for home some day this week. It has already been Emply demonstrated to them that the Maine was destroyed by an ship, a little to the port of the keel, between twenty-eight and thirty, where the oalside kin was blown up and doubled ovér towards the star- board by the first explosion. After this {he traverse armor bulkhésd was blown aft from frame tweaty-lowr by a second explosion, and buried itself in the mud through the hole leit by explosion, which removed that part of the bottom of the ves Adopting ; a Liberal Scheme. Toronto Telegram (conservative) a department of externs! afaire. The o of such a move by thal Laufier goverment was demeunced on} ground that it Was not consistent EJ] "wtatos. - The largely patronized by women and chil: | texplosion which = occurred under the, MAGIC TRING PO MADE IN CANADA Laboratory of Provincial Government Analyst. - Moxtrear, 22nd Febraary, 1909. * I' Hexesy Ceamiry that I have dawn hy my ow hand ten samples of the St. Lawrence Sugar Refining Co's EXTRA STANDARD GRANULATED SUGAR, indiscriminately taken from four lots of about 150 barrels each and six lots of about 450 bags' each, analyzed same and find them uniformly to contain 99-99/100 to 100 per cent of pure cane sugar, with na impurities whatever. (Signed) MILTON L. HERSEY, M. Se. Li. D. Provinaral Oe vern ment Analysb. The St. Lawrence Sagar Refining Co. Limited | MONTREAL. 38 ° have cnn isis TT TR Tm rr Porm pre Make it a point to bu original bags or barre s these }- ASSUR- ANCE OF [ole]0]v] BREA D PASTRY point To look for this TradeMark on every bag and barrel you buy and others of the spiendid line sf durable, economical, reliable and attractive Gurney-Oxford Stoves and Ranges now oa display at our store--a demonstration that marks the 20th Century vement in stove-making. Come and #xamine the specia' points of v excellence-- The Oxford 8 Economizer z marvellous device for the sontrol of the beat, Tt gives a saving of 20% * in fuel, besides economy of time and labor. A patent authorized only on * thie line. ' ; - .. The Divided Oven Flue Strip is a great economy of food, All danger of failure in baking is minimized with this clever arrangement for ~ even distribution of heat, There is no better test of practical stove work than this perfect oven control. Anbther advantige lies in the Reversible Grate equipped with strong +; interlocking teeth that sgve waste, maximum heat with less fuel, ~ ° The Broiler Top--the strong Oven door, are excellent features -- and these all combine with attractive designs in wide variety of sie and price. : You are egmnestly invited to come and inspect the Gurney-Oxford ' lihe--for the 'good of your purse, your bealth, and "dll the comforts of home" - Simmons Bros.