Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 27 Dec 1902, p. 10

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is the kind the doctor ordered. He knows that he can rely upon the purity and j thorough age of every bottle. Br SE . Sole agent of Kingston, J. 8. on. BARGAIN TIME. Your Opportunity for making a conservative investment, or judicious speculative purchase is Right Now. Present market. with conditions for the future as favorable as they ure and With prices down from $10 to $30 per share, the reason lor the decline, being principally behind instead of ahead of the market, make stocks most attractive at present. We will be .pleased upon in- quiry to Notate Briefly our Ileasons for Looking for An Advance in Prices, Also to Nanie the Stocks we Believe Will Make the Most Decisive and Best Ad- vances. Let us send hundred (400) page ors." Also our up Market Letter." We proffer our services as commission stock brokers, carrying upon moderate wargin, stocks in mulliple$ of 10 shares: grain in multiples of 1000 bushels. Cot- ton in multiples of 100 bales Correspondence solicited. HAIGHT & FREESE (0. Kingston, - Ouatario, STOCKS, BONDS, GRAIN, COTTOX. "Determing the character and finan- cial responsibility of your broker, _is as important as selection of right stocks." Ma lypo le ""V"™ Soap is an English Home Dye that saves time, . patience, mess and trouble. A brilliant, fast dye that washes even while it is dyeing. The dye of highest quality, An easy dye. Made in Rugland but sold everywhere. our four you a copy of to Invest * Guide to the minute ** Daily Washes and Dyes r0¢. for Colors, isc. for Black. Ch ristmas at Smith Bros. Will he Brighter Canes and and Better Umbrellas, than Ever. Chains and Gift Selection Lockets, Made Easy and Diamonds, Goods Put Pearl Sunbursts Away for Rings and Future Delivery Watches, Picked While Cuff Links the Stock is Bracelets, Complete." Novelties in Select Now, Gun Metal and Easy Prices. | Silver. 350 King St. ATTENTION! HIGHEST CASH PRICE PAID FOR NEW and Second-Hand goods, Clothing, Fumiture, Stoves, eto. Always on band, new clothing, Gent's Furnishings, Dry Goods, Jewelry, Musical Instruments, at slaughter prices 1 bave a large stock of Second-Hand Stoves and Furniture that must be sold for want of space. I have everything from a needle to an anchor te wuit the public. Give me a call. 271 and 273 3 ZACK ' Princess St. Second door below Corbett's. NEIGH IIAASAANANDIN POCKET POCO CAMERA makes a ed { dainty Holiday PRICE, $9.00 BULLER CAMERA is just what the boy wants for a Holiday Gift. PRICE, $1.50 If cash is sent with order I will prepay all express charges to any address in Canada Sold by S S. VISE, 513 QUEEN ST. W, present HH EH 3§ HA TORONTO. 4 os RIAA HAAN MONEY AND BUSINESS. HHAH LIVERPOOL, LONDON AND GLOBE Fire Insurance Company. Available assets, $61,187,215 In addition to which the policy holders have for security the unliwited liability of all the stockholders. Farm and city property insured at lowest possible rules. Before renewing oid or giving new business Kel rates from >. STRANGE & STRANGE, Ageuts. MONEY TO LOAN IN LARGE OR small sums, at low rates of interest on city aud farm property. Loans granted on city and county. deben- tures. Apply to S. C McGILL, nlanager of Frontenac Loan and In- vestment Society Of'ice opposite the Post Office. TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND ' lars in sums from one thousand ten thousand dollars. For lars apply at GODWIN'S ANCE EMPORIUM, over ONT. Market Sguare. DOL-~ to particu- INSUR- Express ARCHITECTS. WM. NEWLANDS, ARCHITECT. OFFICE, seeond Iver Makood's Drug Stere, corner Ea trante am Bagot street. fOWER & Bo ants' Bank {lding, corner Brook and Wellington strests. 'Phome 212 ARTHUR ELLIS, ARCHITECT, site of New Drill Hall, near Queen and Meatreal Streets HENRY P. SMITH, ARCHITECT, 'BTC, Aschor Building, Markets Somars. 'Phens A OFFICE sorver of LANDOFTHEJAP | REMARKABLE PROGRESS IN 25 YEARS. A Canadian Exhibit at the Osaka, Japan, Exhibition--Possibili- ties of Trade With Canada-- Something About the Japs. No kingdom oi earth, in either an- cient or modern times, has forged ahead more rapidly than Japan, not only in civilization, but industrially. A quarter of a century ago Japan was practically known as four large and many small islands off the north- eastern coast of China, where people employed their time in growing tea, inlaying trays, and deftly embroider- ing silken garments with golden threads. ' To-day Japan is an empire worthy of the name, comprising an area of 162,655 square miles, with a population of 44,000,000. lhe adoption of western manners and customs, the abolition oi the feu- dal system, under which the country was governed by a few lords, the con- version of an absolute into a limited wonarchy as the result of the 15863 revolution, and the introduction in 1500 of a popularly elected parlia- ment, have raised the empire of Nihon irom a petty*sovereignty to be one of the powers of the world. Japan has a national debt of §257,000,000. WHile not more than one-sixth of its area is cultivable, the soil is verv productive. Tobacco, tea, potatoes, rice and wheat are all grown; its tioral kingdom is rich, beautiful and varied; but its fruits, though abund- ant, are for the most part of poor quality. Japan has 2,652 miles of pri- vately owned railways and 765 miles of government lines, on which last year a net profit in the aggregate was wade of $3,734,585. Japan possesées my of 300,000 wen, and her war with China cost about §235,000,0 of which $50,000,- U0U was Tepaid py indemnity. She has a well-equipped navy, manned by 19, UUU men, and her mercantile marine is worthy of her progress. During the last fiscal year, Japan exported to the United Kingdom cop- per, curios, drugs, jute, silk (raw and manufactured), and straw plaits to the value of $1,494,764, while during the same period her imports from the old country in alkali, arms, carriages, cotton, yarn, cotton goods, machin- ery, metals, ships, and ship niachin- ery, and woollens, reached the value of ¥3,549,101. Hon. Sydney Fisher, the Dominion winister of agriculture, has decided to co-operate with the government of Ja- pan in furthering the success of an in- ternational exhibition to ba held in 1903 in the kingdom of the Mikado, by the furnishing of a section illustra. tive of almost everything grown or produced in Canada. William Hutchi- son, exhibition commissioner of the Canadian government, will be in charge, and one of the main features of, the Canadian exhibits will be the making on the spot of bread from Ca- nadian flour, by Mr. Jameson, an Ot- tawa' expert baker, who is calculated to prove an expert demonstrator. From Canadian flour bakers can wake not only the best quality of bread, but likewise the largest quan- tity per barrel. 'Three 'independent tests made by first-class bakers with strong Canadian flour have given the following results : Each using 100 pounds of flour, they obtained re- spectively 146, 152, and 151 pounds of bread. : In the matter of the exports of wheat, flour, cheese, butter, apples, lumber of ali kinds, fish and fish pro- ducts, carriages, raw and manufactur- ed cottons and woollens, Canada is Japan's natural next-door neighbor, controlling the whole *'red line" route irom east to west, and from the mo therland to the furthest confines of the Pacific. Less" than three weeks will transfer cargo from the Atlantic board to Yokohama wharf, and the Canadian government system of cold both on the railway cars and on the steamships, renders the trans portation of such perishable articles as butter, cheese, fruits, and meats as safe and as easy as the carrying of the roughest imperishable lumber. Whatever Japan requires in the way of imports Canada is prepared to sup- ply on the most mutually advantage- ous terms. storage, THE DAILY WHIG, SATURDAY, and silk; and it is the chief commer cial centre of Japan, containing a population of 476,271. It is what is commonly termed a 'show' cit its principal sights comprising the castle, the Tennoji temple and pagoda, the uiint, the arsenal,i the Hongwanji tem- i's, the Hakku Butsu or commereial bazaar, the theatres, and a multiplic- ity of curio shops. . Osaka is most delightfully located. and has not inaptly been termed, "The Venice of Japan," for it posses- ses no fewer than 300 bridges. Form- erly Osaka was a military capital of Japan, and within its castle walls much of its history has been made, for therein were played the final acts of the Shogunato, and with the "sur. render of 1868 the restoration began. BRITISH BRANDY. Some Interesting Facts Disclosed In Court. From the Lancet. dhe following dialogue between the judge and a witness in an action brought to recover £6 15s., the value of "three cases oi cognac," took place in Southwark County court : The judge--Do you know what bran- dy is?' | The witness--Yes; 1 brought up in a distillery. The judge--What is brandy distilled from ? The witnes: The judge--! tained ? The witness--Some is potato spirit, some rice and some beet root. The judge--What about the grape ? * The witness--For 45s. we do not put many grapes in, but a sort of cheap grape grown like currants. The judge--Not grapes like one sees in English hothouses 7 The witness--Oh no; a wild, cheap grape. Cognac brandy is up to £5 a bottle, and this is only 45s. a case, out of which I have to lay out 22s. for duty and carriage before 1 sell it. The judge--How is British brandy made ? | The witness--From which is the cheapest. The judge--But what give it flavor ¥ The witness--Some people put sherry and others cognac essence, which is made by chemists. The judge--Krom grapes ? The witness--I can t tel} you. use the stuff. The judge--And this is the stufi the great "B.P."" get when they buy bran- dy. The oflicers of the court generally look at things and sample them for me; but they tell me they don't taste brandy, and 1 am very glad they don't now. have been s--Spirit. Sut how is the spirit ob- potato spirit, is added to 1 never What One Woman Observes. According to some people, matri- mony was instituted for the punish- ment of men's sins. The average person wastes lots of time telling other people things they do not care to hear. The most dangerous enemy of ma- trimonial happiness is that pestiferous insect called--monotony. It is not gowns that make a man fascinating, it is the way wears them. When a man becomes in any way necessary to a womal, or a woman to a man, the tie is ng longer mere friendship. There are women who believe them selves perfect wives, because the most critical eye fails to discover a speck of dust on their furniture and carpets. Nothing weakens a character SO much as the habit of taking all its troublés into another's life, thus ignoring the duty of self-reliance and courage. The flame which every 'man burns in his secret heart before some shrine of ideal womanhood never quite gods out, though there are times when it gets mighty low. ---- Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder. Has proved a blessing to many a 'man before the public" in of hoarseness, bad throat, tonsilitis and catarrh. Some of the most recent evi dence of its eflicacy comes from a well known actor, whose home is in New York City. He says: 'I have never found anything to equal -this remedy for quick relief." 50c. Sold by Henry Wade and H. B. Taylor 37 ---------- Hard or soft corns cured with three WO- sh e cases Osaka, the site of the proposed ex- hibition, is an active manufacturing city, its principal exports being tea applications of Peck's Corn Salve, 15c. at Wade's. "Ned seems to care more for brun "lf I'm not mistaken, he used to "Yes; but he married a blonde ~ 2 Der Br ettes than blondes partial 10 blondes." ou know." SCHOOL LIFE TWO GREAT SORROWS, DEATH AND SIN. Sermon at St. Alban's School, Brockville--Thanks for Mercies Bestowed--A High and Noble Tone. The striking sermon synopsized be- low was delivered at the closing fou the holidays of St. Alvan s- =school, Brocky ile : "Ye know in all your hearts and in all your sous, that not one thing hath failed of all the good things which the Lord spake concerning you ; all are come to pass unto you, not one thingy hath tailed thereof.--J oshua xxiil., 14, Above all nations, above all socie- ues, above>all peoples, the children of Israel stand out, as having been the peculiar and chosen people of God. To them, God seemed nearer than to others; to them, God gave definite and special signs, that He was working al- ways in their behalf. In all their wan- derings, God 'took care of them and led them in the way. It was not chance that brought tidings to pass ; IL was not fortune that tavored. It was God, the Almighty who took them by the hand and led them on, This great fact that they were in- deed in God's hands, was brought home to the Israelites and impressed upon them from time to time, by those whom God placed over them in authority. And in Particular, at the beginning of each mew event in their career; at the close of each definite period; as a new leader took up the teins of government, or as an old leader laid down the burden of his of- lice; as a new land was opened up to them; or as they stood at the finish of some great part of their national life ; they were reminded that God was with them in all the changes that occurred--that He was ever ready to prove Himseli the chief factor in their national life--the preserver and guide of their corporate existence. The two great sorrows of school- life are death and sin. Sometimes the stern, cold angel ventures even among the youngest and the strongest, and at the touch of his breath, the bright, warni lives wither gnd grow cold, and the happy smiles and the bright and voling eyes are gone in a moment, and forever. But more bitter and more hopeless a sorrow is to see a young one poisoned by sin, and henceforth living in death. I do not speak of boy- ish faults and slips (in which there is often more of love and innocence than in older people's respectable virtues); but refer to sin; to devilish, deadly sin, generated at the breath of satan, in the sclfishness and meanness and foulaess of actual vice. Thank "God we have been preserved from all these sorrows. We have been also kept from death, from severe sickness. We should have very ungrateful hearts, if we il not give thanks for these things. I hate known institutions that ap- peared to the outside world as very Leautitul and very prosperous, and in- wardly they were full of all things evil. Reputation (what man thinks about you) may be "one thing, charac- ter (what you have, and what God knows you have) may be another. '| he great question, therefore, is, Have we soundness within 7 Have we a rue character 7 No true man desires in his very heart a precocious develop- ment of religion but is thankful for quict signs in the outward life, which testily to the inspiring, quickening contact with the real heart of reli gion. For quiet and - reverent ° pe havior and posture in chapel, for quiet and unostentatious prayer, for quizt and unostentatious reading of the Bi- ble, for quiet and earnest comminions. And are not you all glad that ww have a high and noble tone? Wou!! vou be as satisfied and as happy, it you knew that vice was allowed and recognized ? Would you be as happy in meeting the loved ones "of your homo, if you had been spending this term in shameful, actions, and in unbecoming talk 7 Ii the oath and the unchuste word had become familiar to your lips ? Would you be able to look your mother in the face next week, if vou have learned here to prevaricate, und to make up the false tale? © no sadder sight than a boy's return home from a year at boarding <cLaool with 'the marks in style and manny -- in want of openness and in wait of manliness--"I am not what was nu year ago!" And I know of n. great er happiness to a parent, than ihe re- cedving back into the home-life the lad who can still be perfectly candid-- who carries no miserable secret in hs heart--who is bravely endeavoring to choose the good in life. The House Fooled Itself. An interesting contest is in pro gress between the house and the sen- ate, Washington, over the sale of in- toxicating liquors. In former years there was little concealment of the bar- room features of the capitol restau rants, although they were in violation of the rules. Finally, the sale was car ried on so boldly that public atten- tion was arrested,, and on the senate side the rule was rigidly enforced. On the house side, however, there are no restrictions, and visitors as well as members find no difficulty in obtain- ing their tipple. The profigion advocates succeeded in having &in amendment placed on the immigrativh bill prohibiting the sale of liquors in any part of the capitol. There was ® contest over the amen. with ment, those who did not agree i senate would it believing that the strike it from the bill. In this they have been disappointed. The senate adheres to the paragraph and it can not be touched by a conference com- mittee when the bill reaches that stage. Senators are laughing at the predicament in which the house finds itself. The representatives will be com- pelled to follow the example of the senators and keep private bottles in their committee rooms. Had Heard Of Them Before. | "I have a sure thing," said the'bet- tor. "You have," replied his friend. "Oh, it's an absolute certainty." "Well, there's just one thine I want to impress upon you." "What's that ?"' "It won't do you a bit of good to ask me for a loan to-morrow. You mus go to someone else this time." DECEMBER £7. BUILT HOTEL FOR SPITE. Made Certain That He Could Get Broiled Chicken. New York Times. George Harding, one of the leading patent lawyers of the United States, and at One time associated in patent suits with Abraham Lincoln and kg win M. Stanton, died recently in this city, aged seventy six years. He was a man of wealth, owning among other properties, the Hotel Kaaterskill, in Catskill mountains. The Catskill Mountain house was the leading hotel in the Catskills, and was kept by Mr. Peach, an oid friend of Mr. Harding. It had been the habit of Mr. Harding to spend some weeks with his friend Beach during the Catskill season. That was before the time when bufiets and grillrooms open until late at night had been ir&roduc- ed as a feature of large hgtels in this country, anl the hotels in' the Cat skills had fixed hours for meals and wee distinguished for a rigid adh. r ence to a simple bill cof fare from® which nothing could move theni. "he guests had to take what the hotel «et before them "or go without," aud they had to arrive at the dining room before the doors closed or go hungry to bed. As the story goes, Mr. daid- ing wanted some broiled (hick jor one of his children who was sick. "Broiled chicken is the only thing the child can take," he said. "There is no chicken on the bil] of fare to-day." "Can't you send chicken ?" "No," was the reply. *'You will have tq Wait till chickens come aroun or be satisfied with something ele." "Well, then" said gr. Harding, ac- cording to the story as generally re- lated in the Catskills, "I, will build a hotel where 1 can get chicken when | want it." He was laughed at by the people of the Catskill Mountain house, who thought themselves secure in a mono- poly. But within a short time they learned that Mr. Harding had bought the finest site in the entire region--g mountain top commanding a magnifi- cent view of the river, and the sur- rounding country--and almost imme- diately the construction of the Hotel Kaaterskill was begun. lhe Kaater- skill is the most celebrated of the "spite hotels," in this country built by guests as the result of similar dis- putes. It was personally - managed hy Mr. Harding for several years after his retirement from active lecal work, and the guests were always supplied with liberal quantities of broiled chic ken. Mr. Peach died a few weeks apo. Mr. Harding was born in Philadel- rhia in 1827, was graduated from the University = of Pennsylvania in 1846, and, after reading law with .John Cadwalader, was -admitted to the bar in 1849. With Edwin M. Stanton he was cngaged to argue the MeCor mick reaper case, and w hep they went west to try it, in llinois they engag- ed "Abraham Lincoln, because of his familiarity with the methods of th. local courts. In order to illustrate the mechanical principles at issue in this cae, Mr. Harding showed a miniature grainfield in the court. lhe acquaintance thus formed Id to Mr. Stanton's being made secretary of war, while Mr. Harding was offered a supreme court judgeship, which he de clined. He was said to have received two fe.s of 100,000 each and one fee of %160,000. Mr. Harding leaves tw children, a son and a daughter. The former, George .J. Harding, practices before the Philadelphia bar. { out and kill a Some Revised Wisdom. The Cynic's Calendar Misery loves company, hut company does not reciprocate. Look before you sleep. People who live in should pull down the blinds. Eat your steak or you'll have stew. As you sew so must you rip. Sweet are the uses of diversity. Where there's a will there's a suit. Pride goeth cometh after. Tamper not with fledged fools. A-------- houses glass law before and the hill Every Venezuelan war, whether by presidential message or by tov bom- bardment, always uses the stock mar- ket as a battlefield. The Nurse To Personal Testifies Benefit As Well as That of Patients Who Have Used Dr. Chase's Kidney- Liver Pills. None are better qualified to point to results obtained from any particular treatment than the nurse in attend- ance, especially if the nurse is experi- enced and observant. The doctor may have a better idea of what a certain medicine is expected to do, but he is not present to study the case and observe the actual re- sults. & The work of a nurse is often heavy and trying. Mrs. Nash's back gave out and her kidneys were strained and deranged so as to cause much keen suffering. She proved for herseli the prompt and lasting benefit to be ob- tained irom the use of Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, and has since witnessed many remarkable cures a- mong her patients. Mrs. C. Nash, the well-known nurse, 391 King street, Ottawa, Ont., states: "I consider Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills a splendid family medicine. , L keep them on hand all the time, and do not think 1 could do without them. I used to suffer 4 great deal from weak back, caused by deranged kidneys and at times had severe sick headaches, but this medicine always brings relief. I never knew it to fail. Several friends have used Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills on my recommen- dation with equally good results." Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills are considered an invaluable family medi- cine in a hundred thousand houses. One pill a dose; 25 cents a box. At all dealers, or FEdmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. EXCRUCIATING LUMBAGO PERMANENTLY CURED. A severe case_which proves the power of Backache Kidney Tablets to cure so a Dr. Phtehers ---- There are very few ple' in Havelock icini who do not know Mr. Walon Reynolds, the Doh CPR esman, whose picture appears here. About two years ago he was Lid up with lumbago, which caused him excruciating over = tira jn bed was agony, e heard of Dr. Pitcher's Backache Kidney i a splendid remedy for such complaints as his tess eitg Tablets and they cured him. Since then Mr. Reynolds has had Je Sota of his old trouble, and has recommended Dr. Pitcher's ablets to many men on the road, sue i ri conductors and fellow-brakesmen, all of whom, from the Tl Ey Sagi are liable to bud backs and kidney trouble, and, in every instance, the Tablets ot STATEMENT MAY 31st, 1900. This is what Mr. William Reynolds had to itcher's Backache Kidney Tablets on May 31st, 1900, just after he a hau De Mx : umbago so bad when I got Dr. Pitcher's Backache Kidney Tablets from » the druggist, that I could hardly move. It was most painful to turn in There was a dull nagging aching in the small of my back continually, and to stoop or assume an upright position after sitting waa extremely painful, This was uot the only time I suffered that Way; my case was becoming chronic, and the remedies that formerly gave me relief did not help me now in the least. * I found, though, that as soon as I started taking Dr. Pitcher's Backache Kidney Tablets, they helped me at once. They have removed the whole trouble. I have neither pain nor eness now. I cannot say too much for them, and I heartily recommend them." (Signed) Wx. REvNoLDs, STATEMENT MARCH 29th, 1902. When our representative called on Mr. Rey; i i ] : Ar. Reynolds, recently, he did h speak in the highest. terms of Dr. Pitcher's Backache Kidney Tablets, -- esiiste to nent cure they ad made in his case. Said he: "I have never had any return of that lunlago and Eduey trouble which attacked me so severely in the spring of 1900, r. Ditcher's Kidney Tablets made a complete and th z ae ridney Table plete an orough cure then, and I have ENDORSATION OF A. C. DENIKE, DRUGGIST. Mr. A. C. Denike, Phm. B., the well-known dru rgist and ici whe sold Mr. Reynolds the Tablets, writes : SUIS Sud Stlisien of Havelont, "I am acquainted with Mr. Wm. Reynolds, brakesman on the C. P.R d k that about two years ago he suffered greatly from lumbago and kidney oe. "Ho purchased Dr. Pitcher s Backache Kidney Tablets from me, and claims that they were the means of curing him, and I believe this to be the case. I understand from him that since Dr. Pitcher's Tablets cured him Le has had no return of tha trouble." (Signed) A. C. DENIER. 50c. a bottle or 3 f 1.25 The Dr. Zina Pitcher C » Toronto, Ont. 5 ial, 5a LEAD TO LUNGS ¢ Gonsumption. VND THOUSANDS OF PERSONS ARE HASTENING TOWARDS THEIR GRAVES AS A RESULT OF THIS DREAD DISEASE A cure is now within the reach of every sufferer: a severe attack of pain, so that to stoop Dr. Pitcher's Backache Kidney Tablets are druggists or by mail. . VV VVY WEAK Pul-Mo stands alone--the use of any other medicine as an assistant is not necessary. Eat » plain, nourishing food, get plenty of fresh air and out-door P U L - M oO exercise, and use Pul-Mo as directed, if used as directed will check the progress that is all--Nature' will do the rest. of this fatal disease and restore the afflict Pul-Mo IS inexpensive, being sold by ed to perfect health. Db not go to Florida, dTVggists at $1.00 per large bottle, or you Madeira, California, Mexico or the Rocky May procure a sample bottle for 15 cents. Mountains. Remain at home with friends | If your druggist has not got Pul-Mo in and home comforts around you and use| Stock, a sample bottle will be delivered to Pul-Mo, which is the achievement of the ny address century in medical science. Pul-mo is an FREE OF ALL CHARGE. absolute cure for Consumption, Throat| Address all letters to and Lung Troubles, Coughs, Colds and all] other consumptive symptoms. ! The Pul-Mo Co., Toronte, Ont, Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. RAKE WENNER: They build up the S renew Lost fe Jews and ffesh boas ms , Prove the Appetite, ic » dispell that Weak, Mm De No Ambition feeling and make you feel full of Life and Energy. €y are a sure cure for Nervousness, Nervous ) tion, Palpitation of the Heart, Brain Fag, Faint or Dizzy Spells, Anemia, Sleeplessness, After Effects of La Grippe, Shortness of Breath, General De. bility or all troubles arising from a run down system. Price 50c. per box or 3 boxes for $1.25, all dealers or . Toronto, Ont. 20% OFF ALL GOODS During Our Big Stock-Taking Sale. STOVES, CUTLERY, We %X, RANGES, PAINTS, Handle TINW ARE, WASHBOARDS HARDWARE, KITCHEN AGATEWARE, UTENSILS, Etc., Etc. : WE MEAN BUSINESS! These goods are the best to be found anywhere. This BIG REDUCTION is being given so as to reduce our stock before we begin the hard task of stock-taking. NOW is your time to buy LEMMON, CLAXTON & LAWRENSON, KING ST. a ---- --_-- ESTABLISHED 1890. 'PHONE MAIN 4303. W. F. DEVER & C0, STOCK AND BOND BROKERS, 19 Wellington Street East, Toronto. MAIN OFFICBS--47 Breadway, New York; 60 State Street, Besten STOCKS, BONDS AND GRAIN Bought and Seld fer Cash or on NRargin. : Particular attention given to Canadian Becurities. Market letters mailed daily (4 p.m.) on application. Correspondence invited.

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