AY, FEBRUARY 17, 1020. ugh Huge Laboratories Turn Out 36,000 Bottles dally Thousands of Dealers Be Supplied. j CARLOADS SOLD = IN JANUARY ALONE Shipping $38,400 Bot les of Celebrated Medicine Dne Month Factory Is Still 0,000 Behind With Or- Rr ough the big Tenlac labora fies at Dbyton, Ohio, and Walker. ie, 1 ve been running at p-#peed for mths, it has been a red impossibility to supply the i bel and ever increasing de- nd for this celebrated medicine. During the first ten weeks of last one million three hundred end ) es of ware sold, breaking all fd's record for the sale of pro- ; Ines up to that time. now pales into insig- te, however, as orders received Jampary alone of this year 4 the astonishing total of oné Hon two hundred and twesty " d bottles, showing an in- se of approximately one hundred hgent, over the corresponding fod of 1919, $0 Bay that Tanlac mow has the Best sale of any medicine of ita il In the world expresses it mildly. #8 not begin to tall the story-- by' other preparation has ever approached the marvelous re- Ml. that is now being made by Tan- I And it is now conservatively es- ted that the sales for the present iF 'alone will amount to from seven Bn million bottles. if the orders recelved during Jan. iF it was possible to ship only bt hundred and thirty-eight thou- ii bottles, and thousands of deal- CScattered throughout Canada "the United States have been 6 to obtain the medicine for EPhenomend] and Bewilering' is Way obs of the big drug jobbers he country describes the marvel- f demand for Tanlac. We know that the day of miracles b d, and we all know that hi no unfathomable mysteries | drug business, put this Tanlac position smacks of both," writes flier leading wholesale drugedst, Ho | firm has sold over thirty-four 8, or An average of nearly one jad per month since they began | Tatlac a fow years ago. ds of similat letters and tele. dave been received, but for Of space they can only be refer- fos proprietary medicines are by the dozen or by the gross; a oe bought by the trade in quan-. jl of from ten to twenty gross;'a IY few are sold by the carload, and | only to the largest jobbers, cov- Ig éxtensive territories. The fact rot. that scores of jobbers in fda and the United States have a Band sufficlent to yustify them in oting not one chrload, but from (10 three carloads of Tanlac at a 8 Taniac's pre-eminence thy, the biggest thing ot in the world and nothing like in {ler, in Battersea by C. TO SUPPLY ENORMOUS = DEMAND FOR TANLAC it hud ever happened in the drug trade before. Think of one retail firm selling one-third of a million bottles Of any one medicine right over the sounter direct to customers in only two years' time ! 'it seems incredible, but such is the record made by the Owl Drug Company, th their {l stores on the Pacific bink of one retail firm in & sin- gle city of 200,000 population, selling approximately eighty-eight thousand bottles, an average of over two bot EUGENIE STILL LIVES. Wite of Napoleon III. walks In the ' Tuileries Gardens, A very old woman walking in the Tulleries Gardens stoops to pick an autumn flower from a fading clump. passersby look at her again. She is ven older than théy had thought i certainly over eighty, possibly nifiety; the eyes are sad, as {f they had seen too many tragic decades. It is against the law to pick flowers in the gardens of the Tuileries, yet the police look on calmly and say nothing. She passed with her one maid, and a bystander asks who she may be. 'The ex-Empreas Eugenie," answers the iceman, "wife of Na~ peleon III. ety-three if. she's a day. Comes here once in a while." Eugenie, wife of Napoleon III, to ties for every family, in only four | final years' time! Buch is the record of the Jacobs' Pharmacy Company, of Atlanta, Think of one retdll firm giving a single order for an entire cafload, twenty-three thousand and fofty bot. tles and agreeing to pay cash for the goods promptly on arrival. Such an order has been received from the Lewis K. Liggett Company, of Wiani. peg, ; Another big Canallian retail firm, G4 Tamblyn, Linrited, Torodto, Can- ada, recently gave their order. for one hundred gross, amounting to $10,800. Orders from retailers for from fifty to seventy-five gross are not ufi- common, and practically all of the leading retail firmé buy Tanlec in from ten to twenty-five gross lots to supply their normal demands. When the magnificent sow labora tories at Dayton, Oblo, and Walker. ville, Canada, with a combined floor space of seventy thousand square foot and a combined capacity of thir. ty-six thousand bottles were com-$ pleted, it was thought that the pro- duction would be suificlént to supply the demand for years to come. It is now a t, however, that addi- tional facilities must be provided if the supply 1s to keap pace with the demand. And this is true in spite of the fact that there are now on the market from fifty to ome hundred preparations claiming similar thersd pautic value. Tanlac has now been on the mar. ket for five years. It hte stood the acid test of time, It is known apd honored in every city, town, village, and hamlet on the American contin. ent from Key West, Florida, to the northern wilds of Canada, where even the Indians and fur traders have learned of its wondegful powers as & medicine. : Its enormous and ever-increasing popularity is'the ote great outstand- ing proof of its wonderful merit. No medicine, no matter now extensively advertised, could sell and continue to sell and estabHsh new world's records year after year, if it did hot produce actual and positive results. \ Tanlac 18 00 of the moet beneficial- roots and herbs known {6 the scientific world. Sgrmaia conforms with all National Sats Pure Food and Health he of the United States and , and although Tanlac's claims for super- fority are abundantly suppdrted by | leading authorities, it is the y themselves who heve shade Hise what it fs. Millions upon millions have used it and have told other mil Hons what it has done for them, That is why Tanlac become the real sentation of the drug trade all over America. x Tanlac is sold in on by A. P. Chown, In Plevaa by Ibert Ost- Fernleigh by Hrvin in Atdoen by M. J. Scullion, in Bharbot Lake by w. on. "epdvt, "ART IN THE MON EYED OLASS. - --- : | Seal DAN a ' * | pi. rofiteer (just having bo ught. mansion with contents) : ed by Sir Josh Reynolds, ow, just cut off that old was it! Never heard of hifn. bloké's legs to make room for ored photo of me and the missus." 3 ~--Passing Show, London. i generation into the past, taking with her all sense of responsibility, all moods of the present tense: And the dead of her gederation escape with her. What does it matter to them if we blame them for a war of our day? We might have avoided it, they would tll us, if we had wanted to badly "We learn from history," says Hegel, "that men never learn anything from history." Meanwhile the former Empress Eugenie walks through the gardens of the Tuileries in the flesh; and the of her youth have been dead | |i 80 long that she herself hardly knows BOW what they were. Why should We try to lengthen our lives when she body so often continues on fu. tilely beyond the life of the spirit, like an artow shot past the target? |! To Eugenie, the old and forgetful 'Woman, it must seem that she has Mwed quite long enough. Germany's Year of Peace. Results of the first year of the revolution in ADY are summars ised by the ist Monthly as com- prising a decline in the value of the mark, increase in the cost of living, production of coal and steadily mounting public debts. The paper casts a balance for the year in a bitter and sarcastic vein. It poiats out that the mark has détlined in value within the y Hom 13 fragica to 20.25 france. givens a showing increases ranging up to 100 per cent. for butter, and nearly 200 per cent. for eggs. The paper states | | that the cost of transportation has increased. - The production of coal is asserted to have declined from 190,000,000 tons a year the war to 70,000,- 000 tons in the first year of the revo-| On account of the evailing high prices we have extended our sale for 11 days longer, as people have recognized the exceptional values, and for the benefit of those who have not yet visited our store, our prices will remain the same. ~~ MEN'S SUITS An opportunity for those who want a | good Suit, both in quality and workman- ship. We have reduced our stock of Men's Suits to suit all pocket-books., Prices ranging from $14.95 to $38.95 MEN'S WORK SHIRTS 250 Shirts in Khaki; black 'and~white stripes and assorted patterns; sizes from 14to0 17. Regular $2.25; Sale Price . ....$1.38 \ BOYS' SUITS "Mothers," don't miss these Suit values, as they are greatly reduced. Suits well tailored, belted or waist-line models; . bloomers with Governor Fasteners. Sale prices from $6.95 to $10.95 _ OVERALLS ™ Good, heavy weight materials, in black and blue and white stripes. Sizes from 36 to 44. Reg. $2.50; Sale Price CHILDREN'S COATS Heavy Tweed Coats with flannel lining, in very dainty models. 50 Coats, reg. $10.00; Sale Price $5.45 50 Coats, reg. $11.00; Sale Price $6.95 30 Coats, reg. $12.50; Sale Price $7.45 "The above Coats cannot be purchased any place in Canada at these sacrifice t prices. > LADIES' SHOES Hundreds of pairs, in all sizes to choose from; in tan or black; the very latest styles; every boot guaranteed up to the mintite. Prices from $3.78 to $7.95 MEN'S BOOTS vy In black and tan, with or without Neolin soles; in blucher and long lasts. Prices from $3.48 to $6.78 J MEN'S PANTS . 150 pairs of Men's Tweed Working Pants; well-made of strong wearing ma- terial. Regular $4.00; Sale Price $2.49 85 pre., reg. $4.50; Sale Price ...$2.98 MEN'S HABERDASHERY Neckwear ....... 64¢., 89¢., and 98¢. uspenders, reg. 75c.; Sale Price .47¢. Socks «.. .49¢., 59¢c. and 97e¢. Handkerchiefs, white . . .. ..2 for 28¢. | Men's Undershirts only. Reg. $1.25; SalePrice . ......... Fleeced; reg. $1.25; Sale Price only ...... 95¢. a garment. in the future. Xk repetition ti "Ten of thie § ear's T.C.C. téam, S0