r PAGE TEN WHY NOT SETTLE IT? THE EXHUMATION OF SHAKE. SPEARE'S BODY IS URGED. . ---------- i Upholders of Baconian Authorship of the Plays and Some Supporters of the Actor of Stratford Favor Ex- amination £of Grave to See if Documents Are Buried, With Body ~Attempt Once Madd, Now that the attention of the whole world is concentrated upon Shakespeare by the widespread cele- bration of the 350th anniversary of his birth, the time seems ripe for ohrrying into action the often-dis- vussed project of opening his grave ia Trinity Church at Stratford-on- Avop, says Garrett P, Serviss. 'That grave Is the focus of a great mystery, if not, as many maintain of a groal, mystifitation. The open- ig of it would not be an act of viiifdalisin, or of irreverence, but a possible step toward clearing up the mystery which, in spite of all efforts to brush it aside, clouds the fame of the greatest genfus in English ltera- ture, if not in all literature, There is a persistent suspicion abroad that an exploration of the grave in Stratford Church would throw light upon the real authorship of the 4mmortal dramas that the world knows as Shakespeare's. There | ni! be some aders who are un-| soi that duy question exists as to! that muthorship, but such a question | does exist, and it h-s long been the subjéet of a very bitter controversy | in which the proponents of the doubt | maintain that the Willlam Shoakes- | Bef. or Shaxper, who was born and | a #t Stratford, was not the | "William Shakespeare" who actually wrote or composed the great plays, although thé pubic in his own day | suppored him to be their author. would advise all intelligent read- 'ers, before accepting either the '"'or- thodox"" or the "herodox' view of this 'question, to read as much as pos- i sible of the literature that has ac- cumulated on the subject within the | past sixty years, an. which can be! found on the shelves of any large | public library. Some of the books at- | tacking the ascription of the author- | whip to "the mar of Stratford," such | #8 Gréenwood's 'Shakespeare Prob- | lem Restated," have the fascination | of all recitsls in which circumstantial | evidencé and acute reasoning play | the principal pari. Mark Twain's book, "Is Shakespeare Dead?" is an | A 1using summary of the case. { When this question, which is usu- | ally Known rs the '"Shakespeare-- | Bacon Controversy," because many of | the disputants believe that Lord | Bacon was the concealed author, Mirst attracted public attention in the | early half of the nineteenth century, ! [Miss Delia Bacon, proposed to open 'the grave at Stratford on the supposi- tion that it concealed documentary | evidence which would settle the | question of anthorship. She thought | that Lord Bacon might have had | proofs of his authorship hidden there. National Hawthorne, in his book, "Our Old Home," gives a thrilling account of how Miss Bacon entered fthe chufeh with a dark lantern in ihe dead of night, prowled like a Jost. around the famous tombstone, | mouth, with just a touch of humor | small, insignificant HAS OTHER HOBBIES. Senator Davis Is Not Limited to Anti. Tipping Propaganda. The Hon. Senator T. O. Davis, "father of tie much discussed anti- Tipping Bill which be succeeded in passing through the Senate at the las. session of the Dominion Parila- ment, but which came to an untime- ly death for want of a foster father when introduced in the House of Commons, is one of the most active and frequently heard members of the Senate. He is a ready speaker and has a strong, sonorous voice, and when he speaks the Senate sits up| and takes notice. He comes by his' oratorical ability naturally, for he belongs to a family long recognized { as a power in the nationalist move- ment in Ireland, The famous and | eloquent Thomas Osborne Davis, the colleague of the late Hon. Thomas D'Arcy 'McGee and Givin Duffy, in the Young Ireland party, was an uncle, and the Senator was named after him. To judge from portraits! of the great Irish agititor, the nephew resembles the uncle very! closely. Senator Davis's father was a man of education and great natur- | al abllity, graduate of Trinity Col- lege, Dublin, and was for some time principal of Rouse's Point, N.Y. High | School. Senator Davis sat in the House of | Commons as a Liberal member, and | was chief Liberal whip for the west- ert. members for the last four years of his term in the House. Ten years ago, Barl Grey called him to the Sen- ate, where he sits, a sturdy man with a staunch figure and a strong coun- tenance, with a keen eye and a firm flickering about his chin occasion- ally, and a hint of Irish mischief lurking in his eyes. Senator Davis has had other ideas besides the abolition of tipping. It was on his initiative that official at- tention was attracted some ten years ago to the importance of investigat- ing and conserving the natural re- sources of the unexplored Northland. Or his initiative, and in spite of op- position from both sides of the House, the Senate appointed its fam- ous Northland investigation commit- tee, which discloséd so much about th: resources of the country. Senator Davis was born at Sher- rington, P.Q., some fifty-eight years agu, and at the age of eighteen went west, entered a mercantile life in Prince Albert, on the north Saskat- chewan. His knowledge of the French language, for he speaks French as fluently as English, proved of great value to him among the French half-breeds, who formed such a large proportion in the early days of the population of the North Sas- -katchewan. The Senator was a personal friend of Reil, Dumont, the Touronds, and al! of the other leaders of the North- west Rebellion of 1885, and before tho outbreak took place he personal- ly warned all officials whose ear he could get that trouble was inevitable without the rights of the half-breeds were conceded. But he was only a trader at that time, and his fears were laughed at. He was in the east when the rebel- | lion actually broke out, and, being |institution. { one of the féw white men who blunt- | | ly expressed the opinion that there was a sound basis for the half-breed ! | grievances, he was set down as al | sympathizer with the rebellion, which he was not. He was himself a victim of the uprising, the annual { {as easily as and much more conven- ~ THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, CLERKS GET SECOND CHANCE. | Canadian Banks Do Not Dismiss On First Wrong Step. A few days ago in one of the med- ium-size. Cabadian banks, a 19 year-old clerk was found to have "borrowed" fifty dollars to which be bad po title. Technically it was an "embezzlement," and the law of Can- ada would have sent the lad to pris on. But the general manager looke at it another way. He wrote rast A far her, notifying him of the incident, and stating that (he management had decided to give the clerk a second chance to "make good" by removing: him to an out-of-town branch where his act would not be known except to the local manager. Of course the fifty dollars was réturned in instal- ments from the cle:¥'s salary, but there the incident ended. The thefl becomes no barrier to promotion, and remains a close soeret with four or five senior officers of .h3 institution. Instead" of this proceeding being pointed to as irregular, it is the com- mon rule in practically all the Cana- dian banks. Petty infringements occur at intervals in all fihancial in- stitutions and the discrepancy be- tween the small selaries of bank clerks and the style of living to which they are supposed to adhere forms a constant temptation to over- reach their earnings. This is done quite commonly in a manner that at first giance does not look like "em- bezzlement," but rather like 'high finaneing" applied to petty purposes. As has been divulged in police court more than once during the past year, a clerk in desperate need of money 'flies a kite." In other words, he issues a personal check against his empty savings account, and trusts to the friendship of féllow tellers and ledger-keapetrs to hold the worthless check until such time as he is able to back it with real money. Such a thing violates every rule of the banks and when found out is made a ser- fous matter. Manipulations of this kind are wery often responsible for the first black mark on the record of a clerk, but are seldom taken by the bank as a genuine cause for prose- cution. There are cases from time to time in which large sums are stolen when open prosecution becomes a matter of necessity. Here enters the ques- tion of making restitution, which is "put up to' the relatives and friends of the guilty clerk. The dislike of publicity is usually sufficient pressure to make any family circle disgorge, or even run into heavy debt to soften down the processes of law. Restitu- tion is regarded as of such import- ance that most magistrates grant de- lays to help along the family collec- tion. This arrangement between the court and the bank is sometimes curtly denounced, as when Col. Deni- son in the Toronto Police Court re- cently refused to hold the case to oblige the prifoner's wealthy friends, and told the lawyers that he would not become a party to any scheme to curtail the punishment of a erime. In the majority of cases, however, restitution does ameliorate the sen- teacs, and to a large extent, smooths down the anxieties of the victimized Coal In the Arctics. Coal can be mined in the Arectics iently than gold. Underground work is just as satisfactory there as else- but finally, overcamc by a strange | gypplies for his store being war- {Wesitatey, refrained from taking the | hound until the arrival .f General /steps necessary for the lifting of "the | Middieton's column at Humboldt. He ia stone from the sepulcher." Af-| pargonally accompanied the force , it has been alleged, Miss {Pacon's mind dhowed signs of dls- | order. { Everybody knows, of course, the doggerel lines on the stone over ithe grave, and which, translated in- | Ho modern typog-ap':r and spelling, | read: o 'Good friend, for Jesus' sake forbear * fo dig the dust enclosed here! Blest be the man that spares these | stones, | And (¢ r#* de he who moves my bones!" Superstition would assert that "Soakespeare's curse' acted as a «charm to disarm Miss Bacon of her Tong-cheridlivd purpose. About twenty years ago Dr. C. M leby, one of the life trustees of vag birthplace, wrote an ay 8 which he strongly urged that sa grave be opénéd, not with the axpectation of finding anything that Would ehitllenge the clalm of the man who sleeps within to Le regarded as the author of the works ascribed to , but for the sake of examining skill, in order that the world t have dn assurance that the id portraits of Shakespeare real- { repemble Nim, and aldo in order 4 study might be niade of the ullarities of that house of bone |. which dwelt the brain, that con- red "Hamlet," "Macbeth," "Lear," | lo," "Shylock," "Falstaff," "| a," "Imogén:," "'Desdémona,'" Ophelia," "Juliet," "Rosalind," snd stores of other characteristics tbat are the glory of English literature. ~ Dr Togleby pointed out that hile- tory wis full of instances in which Ke great dead have been Siffuterrod for reasons no more pressing than eflling for the opening of hANGEpeare's grave; and if he had written a few yoars later he might #dded the instance of Sesos- . the greatest of the Pharoahs, ' mummy modern curiosity has to take from {tx tomb : in a museum. { 's 'grave has, at least, been broken into by accident, repairs were seeded in a vault | "it. A workman, who peer- "Into the dark Inferior, is said to | ave faintly discerned a heap of | dust, and nothing more. Too Good to Change. The Derby dinner menu at Buek- laste Palace is always the same af menu 6f 1908, which dinner King Edward pronolirced the great- ¢st achievement of the famous royal' chef, M. Mefiager, who retired from the royal service after the death of King ard, and who fled a few weeks ago. » 4 Correct, ! "Riches have wings," queted the 'But poverty gets to you quicker," the Fool.--Cincinnati Enquir- | elses practiced in front of fire halls. | dents in Canada during June was from Qu'Appelle- to Prince Albert. After the capture of Batoche, he in- terested himself in inducing the half- breeds and Indians to lay down their arms. He was first returned to Par- liament in succession to Sir Wiltrid Laurier, who was returned for both Saskatchewan and Quebec East at thu general election of 1896 and re- linquished the former seat.--Ches- terfield in Family Herald. Firemen Should Be Inspectors. | Fire Chief Tremblay, of Montreal, | is asking for C8 new firemen, one- | half of whom will be required to carry out the special system of fire inspection which. it is desired to put into effect without delay. An extra man is to be attached to each station for the work of inspecting the build- ings of each district. The work would be kept up constantly, the men taking the inspection duties in turn. This is decidedly a step in the right direction. A considerable part of the fire- men's time seems to be consumed by fatigulng games, such as dominoes and checkers, or the armchair exer- Too great attention to these pastimes tends toward mental izertia and phy- gical avoirdupois, Let part of the fire-fighting force teach the methods of prevention. Prevention will save property for the householder and work for the fire- men. Moreover, it may save both their lives.--Industrial Canada. A Bassano Fish Story. One of the most ambitious fish stories of the season comes from Bassano, Alta., and has the advan- tage of béing backed up by an ac- tual photograph of the catch. The fish was a sturgeon weighing one hundred and twenty-five pounds, and measuring six feet in length. It was captured fn the Bow river in a pool just below the huge dam, which laét month was officially opened by Sir Thomas Shaughnessy. The little prairiq town of Bassano is eighty miles east of Calgary. -- Canadian! Courier. ~ June's Accidents. The number of industrial acei- 593, of which 299 were fatal. The latter included the 189 men kilied at the Hillcrest disaster. Eleven other miners also lost their lives. In the steam railway service 17 were killed and 63 Injured. Eleven were killed and 42 injured in the building trades and there were 15 fatalities and 58 men injured in the metal trades. ------ Never Saw One. Stella--Isn't it awful to think the dumber of tuberculosis cattle? Bella---1 don't believe it. I never cl. one that was too sick to chase of me. -- Judge, g where, It is just as warm in the bowels of the earth at Cape Farewell as it is in Pennsylvania, and by stor- |ing the winter's output and doubling | the number of steamers to freight away this reserve stock during the summer the problem will solve itself. At Mercy Bay, 500 miles north of Great Slave Lake, McClure, the seek- er for the northwest passage, In 1852-4, during the three winters he was frozen up in the region made historical by Franklin's fatal expedi- tion, where in the mazy channels be- tween the islets he lost all hope of working toward the Pacific, his ships burned coal found by search parties before the hapless company abandon- ed the vessels and started south, in the hope of reaching Canadian Indian settlements, every soul perishing on the way. To Reform Prison System: At the next session of Parliament the Minister of Justice will intro- duce legislation to reform the peni- tentiary system of to-day, if the study of the subject now in progress can be completed meanwhile. This will affect the system of discipline, classification of convicts, employ- ment of prisoners, and the treatment of the insane. It is hoped that some system will be found under which convicts can be employed and their earnings ap- plied in part to the attention of their families. In the adoption of such a system care would be taken to pro- vide against any unequal competition with industries outside. In Eng- land, it is understood, a method has been devised whereby certain com- modities used in the Government service are made by prison labor. Canada's Big Telescope. ~The 72-inch reflecting telescope now under construction for the Canadian Government, a deseription 0' which was recently published in these columns, is to be located on Little Saanich Mountain, near Vie- toria, B.C. This site was chogen af- ter prolonged investigation of at- mospheric conditions in different parts of the Dominiofi, and despite the fact that fts selection entails much additional éxpénse for the pur- chase of land, the construction of a road snd other preliminaried, as compared with other sites that were | under consideration. ! Mr. Stephen's Charity. | The Rothschilds' benefactions are | now closely approached by those of Lord Mount 'Whe built up an enormous fortune out of the de- velopment of the : 1 Railway and other venturés. It fs about | understood that he gives away $250,000 a vear, and that he has en- | richied charity by at least $6,000,000. Big Business. "They say he does business on large scale." : "Yes; Indeed; Ie weighs --Bulfalo Expross, hay.' Wi A NORTHWEST VETERAV, I Sheriff Murphy of Moosomin Been 25 Years In Office, One of the veteran officials of the Northwest, Mr, (i. B. Murphy, the shariff of Mooscemin, recently com- pleted a quarter of a century in of- fice. He was 2ppoinied sheriff for the judicial district of Eastern Assini- boia by Sir John A. Macdonald's Gov- ernment in 1889, just one year after the old North vest Council became de- furct and the Territories were grant- ed 4 Legislative Assembly. Mr. Mur- phy is a native of Ontario, and pre- vious to his appointment be had car- ried on business a: Qu'Appelle. Dur- | ing the rebellion f 1885 be held a very responsible position ss one of the heads of the trrnsport division of Cen, Middleton's army. He kept a, diary during the operations, which | will no doubt be embodied some day | ii the archives of the province for the benefit of posterity. The district of Eastern Assihiboia was as big as a kingdom. It extend- ed from the internationsl boundary on the south to the unorganized ter- ritory of Atbabaska on the north, and, as a matter of fact, if not of theory, as far morth as the North Pole. From east to west it ran from) the Manitoba boundary to Qu"- Appelle, This was the judicial balll wick of Mr. Justica (afterwards Chief Justice) Wetmore; and it is not too much to say that Eastern Assini- boia in its crude formative days was ndder a debt of gratitude to the good fortune which gave. its people a fearless and masterful judge, and an honest, capable sheriff. Many long journeys in all kinds of weather, over execrable trails, or no trails at all, have the judge and sheriff tak- en together in the old "buckboard" days, when the C. P. R. runfing east and west was the only streak of rust in Eastern Assiniboia. From York- ton in the north to tho international boundary country in the south, judge, bar and sheriff made their way across the plaing, holding court in little agricultural halls and sometimes in school houses as the case might be, Besidns judicial trips of this natire there were extradition journeys bringing back prisoners from the States, and the many other activi- ties devolving on the sheriff of a new and enormous stretch of country. To tell the tale of Mr. G. B. Murphy's career in the West would be to prae- tically tell the fascinating story of the growth of Saskatchewan from its earliest days as a political commun- ity.--Saturday Night. Exceeding the Speed Limit. Now that the spotlight bas been turned on Calgary, many and divers are the stories being told of lost op- portunities and lucky holdings of oil stocks in that city. Here is one that is remarkable enough, and yet has a plausible ring to it. The chauffeur of a certain gentle- man in Calgary had many times put his employer to expense and incon- venience by his speeding propemnsi- ties. He had been up before the magistrate more times than was healthy for him, and, finally, he was caught exceeding the speed limit on the main street, summoned, and fined fifty dollars and costs or sixty days. He appealed 40 his employer to extri- cate him, as he had not the funds to satisfy the fine. The employer refus- ed, the offence hed been committed too often. The chauffeur offered as security some oil stock which he held, supposed to be worth some forty odd dollars. His employer sald no--posi- tively, and the man went to jail. When the sixty days had elapsed and and he was free, his forty dollars worth of stock had increased in value to something like seventy-five thou- sand dollars. The first thing he did was to buy an automobile, a good one, and speed down the main street at about fifty miles'an hour. He fully expected to be caught and fined, but nothing, happened. It's true, that luck invariably arrives in bunches. Wolves Overrun Renfrew. That wolves are overrunning Ren. frew county and destroying the farmer's sheep in that district is the word received by the Government at Ottawa, which is asked to take some steps by the offering of a bounty or some other means to stop the depre- dations and exterminate the maraud- ers. It is stated that during the month of May alone 75 sheep were destroyed in the county. by the wolves, which are supposed to have wandered down from the vicinity of Algonquin Park. Large numbers of deer have also been destroyed in the same manner. Farmers, it is said, have stopped raising sheep in the district as a re- sult of the inroads of the wolves. They have not been bothered with them for thirty years, and their pres. ence has only commenced to be no- ticed during the past three years. The present hounty is'small especial- ly, it is stated, as the hide is reckon- ed by the Ontario Government. in iat memes Canada Now Represented. In pursuance of the arrangement peiween Sir George Foster, Minister of Trade and Commerce, and Sir Ed- ward Grey, Dritish Foreign Minister, made in 1912, the British consulate at the following places will now an- awer inquiries and give information to Canadians wishing to consult them on {rade matters: Trieste, Ant- werp, Bahia, Rio de Janiero, Valpar- aio, Harbin, China, Bogota, Colum- bia, Quito; Beuador, Alexandria, Egypt, Genoa, Milan, Mexico City, Amsterdam, Colon'and Panama, Li- ma, Lisbon, Moscow) St. Petersburg, Viadivostock, Barcelona, Madrid, Stockholm, Geneva, Constantinople, Smyrna, Montevideo and Caracas, Slightly Sarcastic. An Irishman was showing an Eng- lish friend round Montreal. "How many people are thére here, Pat?" queried the E.-glishman. "Oh, shout a hundred thousand," said ibe Iriatiman * "Why, I thought thers were over CEH, saill iat, "ihefe ares you couvt the Irench."=-Canadian Ccurler. I "Ralf a m'ian Another. Enthusiast--+-Don't the Spectators , tire you with the questions they ask: AUGUST 13, 1914. ep bs THREE. MEN, And the Poet Brought Amity Inte Their Midst. The well-dressed youth, who ear lies in the evening bad roused the ire of the three travelers, turned out tg bé a poet: one of the modern kind They met him aboard the train short: ly after the three elders had recvg- nized one another in tae light of the smoking compartment. They were ar- guing concerning the general merits of Free Trade and Protection ¥and the merchant was complaining of the laws governing the collection of debt. from delinquent debtors, when the poet interrupted: 'See, gentlemen," he sald, "you talk to no end whatever. Let me, a poet, baving no real place in the, scheme of things as you regard it,| point out the futility of your discus-, sion. You do not argue--you sécuse one another. You, Fariier, in that the Manufacturer is getting rich at ydur expense. You protest at the size of his profits and yet you admit you don't know what those profits are. You, Manufacturer, bring e¢oun- ter accusations against the fmer. Both accuse the Merchant of emting your profits. And you, Middleman, have other complaints against them. You deal in complaints, charges and counter-charges, but not in argu- ment," . "What has a Poet to do with this sort of thing?" grumbled the Mer- chant, while the other three scowled their approval of his remark. "Very little," admitted the youth, "except to say that if you, instead of pursuing the course you now pur- sue, made a study of the relationship which exists between the three of you, if instead of your troubles you considered that all three of you are one--and interdependent for success, one upon the other; and if instead of contemplating always your immediate ends you considered your relation to the nation as a whole--then your dis- cussion would carry you somewhere." "What do I owe the manufactur- er?" demanded the Farmer. "The right to live in a self-con- tained, self-reliant nation, capable of making its own necessities, indepen- dent of the workmen of foreigners; a country in which, if your son wishes another calling besides farm- ing, he can find it!" "What do I owe the farmer?' de- manded the Manufacturer. "Your right to exist -- your most important raw material, food and re- newed vigor to supply the wear and tear of the cities -- he buys your goods!" "What do we owe the merchant?" "The same you owe the railway builder and the steamship man. He makes exchange possible between you. He assists in directing the move- ment of the products which between you are turned out." "And I?" asked the Merchant. "You. For all your courage, judg- ment and shrewdness -- what could you exchange if these men were not here to produce goods for your coun- ters?" "Then you," they retorted in chor- us, "you are a parasite?" "Paragite] Rather, a minister to the spirit. You'were quarrelling when I came."--Britton Cooke, in Indus- trial Canada. Where the Beer Was Kept. Some very funny hiding places] have been found by the provincial | police in Northern Ontario for the "booze caches" of "blind piggers," but Provincial Constable R. J. Btall- wood of Gowganda, has just had one of the cleverest concealment reveal- ed to him. When Stperintendent Rogers of the provincial police was in Gowgan- da a little wh le ago, he issued or- ders that a man who was suspected must be apprehended. As it was useless to try the "spotter" method, Stallwood learned that the man al- ways went out the biek door for the liquor. On a recent Wednesday night the constable concealed him- self in the rear of the shanty and waited for him to come out. The night passed off, and one after an- other of the early hours came and went, leaving the officer. shivering, but still determined to finish his work. At a late hour im the morn- ing the "blind pigger" issued from the back door, and going to the rain barrel lifted out a bottle. Stallwood sprang out of the thicket in which he had been hiding and arrested the man. The next day in court he was fined $200 and costs. Ninepin Oratory. Dr. Michael' Clark, M.P., the fam- ous free-trade orator from Red Deer, Alta,, is naturally a bit of a critic when it comes to speeches. Not a harsh critic, but a pithy one. Last session of Parliament one of the Cabinet Ministers made a speech on the C. N. R. which caused some discussion in the lobbies. The gen- eral verdic: was that it began and ended lamely, but that it contained a lot of good material. Dr. rk was pacing the corridor, thumbs in arm-holes, a characteristic pose, when an Ottawa correspondent approached bim on the subject of the Hon. Mr. philippie. "My opinion of it?" sald the doe- tor. "Why, ninepins." { "Ninepins?" said the bewildered | journalist. "Why, yes," said the Doctor. "Thin at both ends and {at in the middle." Afraid of Frost. The Chateau Laurier at Ottawa is frequently visited by touring English- men) who are sometimes loud in their ns that "they do things so er at 'ome." One of these | globe-trotters recently was very in- dignant over the quantity of lve used in the diming-room, fced tea, iced water, shaved ice on the salads, etc. Towards the end of his meal the ob- | sequious waiter, with his eye on the expected tip, enmquifed: "Wir you | have a demi-tasse, sir?" : "Oh, no," replied the Englishman | curtly, "it's bound to be some bally thing with hice it. Bring me a small cup of coflés, please." Fewer men are driven to drink by misfortunes than are driven to mis- fortune by drink. If you want to flatter a married What else do you 'Jester. Aviator--Yes. want to" kno fwhen they arg on the man tell him he doesn't look te - Some people are offensive en ve. * others Know T Genuine Castoria AepSihremey | Always L ar y Bears the moh TH Pervidryor fot Meine OT NARC OTIC. a ----_ S---- Use For Over Thirty Years tion. Sonr Stomach, Diarrhes Worms. Convulsions beverish ness and LOSS OF SLHER 1acSimile Signature of : " or, Tue Ornrauk ComPaxy MONTREALANEW YORK Big Cut On Oxfords AA A A ANA AANA NAAN ls AN SEAN NANI NN We Are Now Adjusting Our Stock and Will Clear all Oxfords at Big Reductions All Men's' $5.00 Oxfords, now . . $3.59 Men's Oxfords, sizes 4. 41-2, 5, and 51-2 $2.49 All Women's $4 and $4.50 Oxfords, now $2.98 All Women's $5 Oxfords, now $3.75 ? i J. B. SUTHERLAND & BRO THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES ? DJ Collis Browne's, _ aa po h(n voy Ag THE ORIGINAL AND ONLY QENUINE. Acts like a Charm in DIARRHOEA ........, Spagific in CHOLERA and DYSENTERY. Checks and arfests those loo dffen fatal diseases-- FEVER, CROUP, AGUE. ; The best Remedy known for COUGHS, COLDS, ATMA BRONCHITIS. Effectually cuts short all attacks of SPASMS. "1 the only pallntive in NEURALGIA, RHEUMATISM, TOOTHACHE \Mlorodyne is a liguid taken + 5. graduated according It sapariably velicves pain of hen in drogh 4a creates a calm SA ; alleys érrilaiion of the nervous system when all other vemedies fat). leaves no bad effects. und can bg taken when wo other medicwne can be tolerated. INSIST ON HAVING De. J. COLLIS BROWNE'S CHLORODYNE. The immense svecoms of this Remedy hse given ries to many imitations. NB. --Every boills of Genuine Chlorodyns bears oa the stamp the same gof the javestor, Dr. J, . Collis Browns.