MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1919, VALUES IT MORE THAN A FORTUNE Power Gains Eighten Pounds-- Rheumatism Disappears After Taking Tanac. "I consider what Tanlac has d for me to be worth more ths tune," sald George Power, af fax, N.8., while talking to the lac representative a few days ago Me. Power lives at 203 Rostenberg Street, Halifax, bas lived in Nova, Scotia all his life and Is a well known | employee of the Nova Scotia Tram! and Power -Company. "I've actually gained eighteen! pounds since taking Tanlac, and I feol | better in every way than I have in twenty-eight long vears, and what's more [ have spent hundreds and hun- dreds of dollars on medicines and never got a particle of good until I found Tanlac," continued Mr. Power. | "1 had rheumatism in both my legs from the knees down and in damp! weather | just had to stay at home| from work. My avkles bothered me] too, and 1 don't believe anybody in| the world ever suffered from rheu-| matism as bad as I did for it was just | sharp shooting pain that would go| through my knees, down my logs | and into my'ankles lke somebody | Was sticking a knife through me, and | I would be in such agony that I would | turn as white as a sheet. When these attacks came on me I wouldn't be! able to sleep a wink, but would roll | and tumble all night long. and my! joings would swell and my knees would be as stiff as a board and I me A for Hali Tan- OF INDIAN! OF THE MANY NOTABLE | SONS OF MONTREAL. FOUNDER ONE After a Lengthy Discussion It Has Been Established That Francois | Marie Bissot de Vincennes Was | Born In the Ancient Canadian | City on the Banks of the St. Law- | rence River. REAL can be called the | ther of the Canadian and | American West, for men | were borm in that | closely connected | with and progress, | have their names | to the "history or nomenclature of | many localities on this continent; to wit, starting with Jacques Cartier, | who (1635) discovered the Montreal island and district, erstwhile called the Kingdom of Hochelaga, and gave | the mountain its name of Mont Royal | or Montreal; Samuel de Champlain, | who after discovering Lake Cham- | plain (1609), founded in 1611 the | first trading post of Montreal and called it Place Royale, giving the'| adjacent island, St. Helen, its name in honor of his young wife. Who can also forget that it was from this trading station at the head of navi- gation Champlain discovered (in 1615) the Ottawa river, the Lakes Huron, Ontario and Nipissing and the {near west? Then there is the Cheva- who or were its rise bequeathed city {| born THE DAILY BRITISH WHI e diocese of | nto be of Irish ng him with one ken of as Morgan of had with them ! the historian Dillon. ar that this error arose Vincennes' names ve"~--not unlike Mor: Shea, Tanguay, Sulte previously identified &s a Canadian, fixing ame and origin: but he aking the hero into his --~Jean Baptiste Bissot de ie Vineen vis family rred in own father | Vincennes 1887" Major Edmond Mallet, in the United States, but of | Canadian origin, published a study | in English and French on de Vin- | cennes, which, while being a sum- in | mary of the controversy, was an ap- | peal for aid and for a more serious | | study, so as to obtain a definite solu- | tion of the identification of the foun- | der of Indiana. But still not absolute | - $ proof was forthcoming. i In 18168 the Hon Mr. Merrill Moorse,, an Indiana deputy in the United States Congress and a serious student of the history of his state, | made a journey to Quebec, sparing two days on his way to Congress, tp | try whether or not he could find jus- tification in the archives of the pro- | vince of Quebec for his suspicion that the my our was a Cana 3 There at Que Georges Roy, Provincial inion / after two *¢ he met M. Pierre HIS "TEN COMMANDMENTS" 8 in charge of the WON WEALTH ON PRAIRIE rent of the Dom- Most merchants, in opening a store, hunt for a suitably prosperous com- FE SUS! EDITED BY MANSFIELD F! HOUSE rms) NESS | OL UMN &.! | Posteards mailed to children seldom |no matter how insignificant. {failed to bring repeat orders and | enter may read. revery now and then Breniser would {mail out hundreds of invitations to CHICAGO NEWS. tive displays, but they were not "marked." That was all very well for his old home town, where every one knew him and his reputation for square dealing, but it wouldn't work in this "city of strangers." | McWilliams now has not only his! window display plainly priced, but] each and everv article in the store, All who he first month after "decorating" | his stock with price tags, his trade | 20 PAGE NINE HELPLESS WITH RAEUNATISM Until He Took "Fruit-a-tives" The Fruit Medicine R. R. No. 1. Loss, Ox. "For over three years, I was confined to bed with Rhbewmatrim. I treated with doctors, and tried nearly everything without benefit. Finally, I tried "Fruita tives". Before I had used half a box I saw improvement; the pain was easior and the swelling started to go down I continued taking this fruit me- dicine, improving all the time, and now I can walk about two miles and do light chores about the place". ALEXANDER MUNRO. 50¢. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25e. At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. NN NN A a at PNA ltl You have no moral right to sit dnwn snd leave matters to the Lord as long as you have health and two Both hands, instead of the right | only, ought to know what they are {doing. That man who is charked with hig faults is entitled to credit itor his eased fully per cent, And | munity in whi e it. But Jim| iday ings, distributing souv- ¥ > ; Tm kh 1 loca ut Jim | holiday openings, distrib . : nee, mn six: months, it has doubled. | virtues: Thackery opened his on a prairie and! enirs £5 the children. In the last place permitted a town to "coagulate" | likewise in the first---Breniser kept aropnd it. Jim Thackery's store was | track of the proper way of figuring opened in Cleveland, - Okla., when | profits and the exact amount of his Cleveland consisted solely of his store | turnover, so that he would not only Thackery is now worth half alknow that the business was going million, but even in the days when he! well, but how well it was going 4 5 am and his family were"the eMire com-| When it is remembered that Read- other than Francois Marie Bissot de | munity he did a fair trade. {ing has only about 110,000 people, it Vincennes, gr Bn of Franeois| There was a population in Cleve- | will be seen that Breniser sold more » Best seigneur of {jand, even if there wasn't a com- | than seventy toys to every person in munity, but it was an awfully transi- | Reading in the six years of his busi- among. dusty ¢ v " ler 8 reproche, Paul Chomedy de couldn't walk a step for two or three | lier sans rep Be ou during three ce 3 r 3 Maissonneuve, who organized the Says at a Sans and Would ve lig Po first permanent Settlement and called knees so stiff I couldn't bend them |i! Ville Marie (1642). Nor must we at all | forget the discoveries of Jus Jesus "w 1 ow i | MISSIONAT . suchn as aumon i aoad where Tenlac was being! (with Brebeuf), discoverer of Lake her in Halifax, 80 I decided to try | Erle (1640), Isaac Jogues, the mar- iit. And I wouldn't take anything in| tT, who, with Raimbault first ex- | ithe world for the good it has donePlored Lake Superior (1841) and me. If anybody don't believe that| Who mamed (1646) Lake St. Sacra- 1 am a well man, and that the rheu-| ment (afterwards Lake George); de i matism has left me entirely and that | Quen (1646), the finder of Lake St. | nts accumu 5, he has pub- roofs, whieh sy concern- Vin- ers should be grate- ful to Qu J n of letters For the founder diana Is no ing the cennes eur de IBY IT Te mmonia Vincennes He was born in Montteal on June I never feel even & trace of it, just|J tell them to see me. My appetite has picked up and I have gamed in weight and feel Detter in every way and can sleep fine at night. Tanlac ds the greatest thing I have ever seen, and I want you to pubish this state ment, for I want everybody to know what this medicine will do." Tanlac is sold in Kingston by A. P. Chown, in Plevna, by Gilbert Ost- ler, in Battersea by C. 8. Clark, in Fernleigh by Ervin Martin, in Ar- dock by M. J. Scullion, in Sharbot Lake by W. Y. Cannon.--Advt. Tobacco Habit Dangerous % Doctor Connor, formerly of Johas He ins Hospital nds of men suffering from fatal diseases would be in perfect th to-day were it not for the seadly drug, Nicotine. Stop the ow before It's tee Mate ils & simple rocess to rid yourself of the tobacco bit in any form. Just go te any np-te. fate drug store an ded, and gtal pern q vanishes, ists refund the money If they fail Preeti read large and interest log sn. uncement 'on appear in this paper. It tells of the dan- ger of nicotine peisoning, and bow te avoid it. In the meantime try Nicotel tablets; you will be surprised at the rs suit. 5 ®) Sore Throat, Golds Quickly Relieved By Hamlin's Wizard ON Hamlin's Wizard Oil is a simple and effective treatment for sore throat and chest colds. Used as a gargle for sore throat it brings quick relief, on the chest it will often loosen hard, deep seated cold in one nighi SL Dr pe, breed, euls ; urns occur in e well as little troubles hike earache, toothache, cold sor 1 stiff and i Soothing, Wizard Oil will al et it . druggists for 30 cents. m If not satisfied return the bottle and get your money back, Ever constipated or have sick head- aches Jat Tu Wizard Liver Whips, little pink Makers of Hollow Damp Proof Cement Blocks, Bricks, Sills, Lintles, and Drain Tile, also Grave Vaults. - And all kinds of Ornamental Cement work. Factory: cor. of Charles and Patrick streets. PHONE 730W. Mgr. H. F. NORMAN : A fine of $5 'was imposed on | ' English for writing love EE ® oy * Nn. Miss 5 Sten, i= visiting at lett child ohn above the river Saguenay; Al- banel, who first visited James Bay | i by the overland route from Quebec. | { Then there are La Salle (of Lachine), | who founded Cataraconi (now King- iston) for Frontenac (1673) and {afterwards (1682) explored the mys- jteries of the Mississippi to the sea, {the task left undone by Joliet and | Marquette, in 1672, La Mothe Cadil- {lac, one time resident of Montreal, jand afterwards the founder of De- {troit (1701), and Duluth (c. 1690) ! (one of whose lodgings was hard by | the Notre Dame Church) the foun- der of the city of that name. Then Biloxi was founded in 1699 by Plerre {le Moyne d'Iberville to hold the Louisiana Valley for France. Then {his brother, Le Moyne de Bienville, | founded Mobile (1701) and New Or- {leans (1718), and the Sulpician, Pie- i quet, who founded (1748) La Pre- | sentation (now Ogdensburg). | ~ Meutreal can also claim some i share in the discovery (1743) of the Rocky Mountains by La Verendrye i of Three Rivers, for Monfreal mer- { chants financed his expeditions and { indirectly Montreal may make a | similar claim for the erection of { Fort Bourbon (Lake Winnipeg), { Fort Dauphin (Lake Manitoba), | Fort Pontiyac at the mouth of the | Saskatchewan by La Varendrye's isons in 1748. { Montreal, through its most distin- | guished son, Pierre Le Moyne d'Iber- ville, the brother of the two Le | Moynes already mentioned, and sons {of Charles Le Moyne who lived on | St. Paul street, left a legendary name | for valor, wherever he went as a { naval officer of France, Hudson Bay, Newfoundland, New England, and other places being the scenes of his exploits. Montreal has, however, giv- en, under the French regime, gover hors to Acadia such al a former { governor of that city, the notorious { Perrot (of Isle Perrot fame) to Ile i Royal (Cape Breton), Le Moyne de { Chateauguay, to Canada, Louis d'Ail- {leboust, Louis Hector de Callieres and Phillipe de Rigaud, Marquis (I) de Vaudreuil, Claude de Ramezay, Charles Le Moyne de Longueuil, nor of Louisiana. This reminds & 8 a country of France by La 54) | who had dreams of a French Ealle, | in America, was supplied for inpire + two governors by sons born first | real or ita district, viz., thed Mont. | D d'Iberville and de Viéaville rothers | latter Jean Baptiste | Bidur de Bieaville (11) 1680 and died in Paris company with his brothf 1 {in 1689) he discov: the Mississippi by through ill luck by fated expendition (1684) shortly by his mutinous Moyne, | born im | 768. In! 4 Joy missed le in his ill- from France his slaughter panions. It was led as Governor later Orty years. &ime, what m , the British re- ries of western ex- treal are not con~ names of Sir Alex- David Thompson of r bore'. | tradition, this was situated .in the |Stock nor Pierre de Rigaud, Marquis (II) de'25, 173 : : Vaudreuil-Cavagnal, formerly gove; the exact site where this distinguish. | Who chide thee, "I didn't think " ed son of Montreal was put to death, | that Louisiana, proclaimed (16g but all the cord in placing the forts of the £hica- | MANNE thou shalt do chas near Fulton, in the county of | thy days Lee, Mississippi, that when the identi 1). This | "®00es should have | established, his memory should be State of Indiana. Causa d'Iberville | MAY the statue in bronze | cois-Marie Bissot de Vi @ mouth of | Montreal, incennes of uo Vincennes, the ancient capital of | dianapolis, state! Frente height than 1,000 feet. Kagles ha of 6,000 feet, the same hoisht. thes {ent population. New York has quite ne irtiage of Jen {& reputation for a transient popu- 4h Sr Nos ene or lation, but it never could hold a candle He ane Wr) the as to Jim Thackery's locality in the old day BY M. FAs on ed his go. | days for transientness. The popul- father boing tousin ' Francois ation was transient at that spot be- Margane de Batilly. alse an army | Cause it was always traveling from aliens. Yr + | Ransas ( fy 30 Penns, or from Texas Be "Moiean* ths is th {to Kansas City. paused at what is Fa lb 5 erat i dow i now Cleveland only to take a deep himsell "Margane de Vincennes," breath before fording the Arkansas Francois-Marie Bissot but followed river or to co a little trading in Jim's A tustom sufficiently common among | Store. Freneh-Canadians under the French Jim was twenty-two at that time regime, as it is to-day, of using the 11° lived with his unele and aunt, and godfather's name in preference to | they Were all poor together. : sm His inventory showed such items as teenth birthday, our | Broceries, clothing, guns and ammuni- hero served with his soldier father | 10D, tobacco, pipes and blankets. The among the Miami posts as a cadet. | StOT® was just a one-room. log hut, Later he was given the command of | PUilt between the river and the higher & military post on the Wabash river Dills, far enough up so that the in the Illinois country. According to | 2nnual floods weuld not water - his : bring too many floating neighborhood, or perhaps even on, |8SSets into his business, the actual site of the important town His customers were Indians of Vincennes, the first capital city others, but principally Indians, of Indiana. In this district he re- | classification "others" mained for many years, upholding drovers, freighters and trappers. For the good name of France. quite a while Jim was unpopular with The want of success of the first the white population of that general campaign in 1734 of Le Moyne de | Section of the map. They thought he Bienville, "Governor of Louisiana, | Was too "highfap'*=" ik Egy) against the powerful Chicachas, business idegs" prompted a second by him in 1736, |ettitude wertotan win BE amin by way of revenge, and with the in. . Jim ™ . But gradually that tention of humiliating the Chica- abop: a «Ore itself out. chas for ever. lwo Chackery didn't know much This - second attempt was als st the science of merchandising, futile, although all the command r, Ben he opened his log hut to the of the posts of the west were op > | Indian trade, but he had a pretty firm by the King of France tg Py wits | grasp on certhin fundamental busi- forces at the service of £ gered fess principles. He calls them his One of the latter was pat their "Ten - Commandments of Business," Vincennes, then comm Pre yidy 3 jand sets them forth in this manner: of the Pesuguichins AIRC the ¢ © | First. Thou shalt not wait for some- In the course of' & the ort thing to turn up, but thou shalt pull Vincennes perisiy [off thy coat and go to work that thoy with his compan', imayst prosper in thy affairs and chaplain, Ant Sr (make the word "failure" ll "sue-| Ing been Bt", 00S and their Jesuit | cons » spell "sue | <Oine Senat, after hav- | insulted v; i | aly th ripped naked, inhumanely to «0d cruelly beaten, and fin- | piles frown on two blazing funeral 2 bum for thou shouldst know that yom the little hill of the enemy's | than Detsonal of annet Is 0 better | irE. > : recommendation. { f Phis Sunday, March | APM. Thou shalt not try to make' It is difficult to establish | *XCUSeS, nor shalt thou say to those 17, 1700, Baptiste B in the arm egtier. of the m hi his ana The included cattle Second, Thou shalt not be content go about thy business looking like was.on Palm 6. { {. Fourth. Th evidences are of one ac. | told what thou shalt do, nor in what | lo it, for thus may be long in the job which | in the United States, | [OTtune hath given thee. i One werd more. Major Mallet in | Fifth. Thou shalt not fail to main. | 1s appeal of 1897 expressed the hope | thin thine own integrity, nor shalt | ty of M. de Vin- been historically ty ything that will | good respect for thyself, Thou shalt not covet the Set Sellaw:s : Job, on his salary, nor i the on that th i i this own hard labor, sand 2 Seventh, Thou shalt not fail to ¥Y & memorial in the finite est; | of Fran- grace a public place either American Northwest, or at In- the present capital of the Height a Will Fly, As a rule, birds do not fiy at a known to fiy to a height A lark will rise to | DOT and sn will crowr boi A i Shas celled! it ir i i i 1 Ad I: i ! i iA po I pe some from his} but as in all miniAg | "came and went." In a failed to | Hh a ou shalt not wait to be | | Teen or an average of twelve a year r person, Pe let an ad go stale and no | novelty space, movies or other me- | diums was neglected by this enter- i prising chaser after toy buyers. His | retirement has left a gap in the toy {trade of Reading, but his success has fi Fy impressed upon the merchants of thatYcity -the value of consistent and persistent advertising. PRICE-TAGGED HIS STORE INTO PROFITS Hugh McWilliams's from 'the night he slipped outside his store and overheard the remarks of two men who stopped to look in the window--and passed on. It was all a question of price tags which were not there. When he had moved his stock of clothing, trunks and gents' furni goods to the new location in Miami, Okla, he had high hopes for there was room and to spare for another such establichment. He was a good salesman and he employed competent clerks. He brought with him the name of "a good man to deal with." And 'this proved true chose cel those permanently located *X thoan alia harnanad $a an .Avith ere and former location, cities, people locality of strangers "Mac" do as well as he had a right to expect. One evening, after closing hours, he | happened to his store when a moment to admire the splendid values there displayed. "Good stuff, that," look at that brown suit, that shirt, | that pair of shoes and that tie" {pointing at each in turn) "Wouldn't | that make a swell outfit?" i "It sure would," answered. his | riend, "but he's got no mark on them to show what they are priced at. They | probably cost more than we could | pay." 'He had solved the problem. People wi to see the Jriee oh an article that struck their ancy, and not be compelled to ask for it. Yes, he had good stock, splendid value, attrac | | standing in front of fo XY 'y TITER LRN BR PILLS success dates the little | two men stopped for | really | said one. "Just | Fit Well At prices you can : , Headquarters for PREMIER a nd WEAR WELL brand Shoes, The kind that Feel Well Wear Well afford to pay. as ee N household nocessity that an lce for good of the family's health precaution and year around. Better take food before it's too late. is a com Boxes plete assortment of | in ali sizes and styles a woderate prices,