HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-01-04, Page 3!ALUM ROWS,
AT MAUL RATE
TRE TOT.A,1•••• Dr.:POSITS ARE
45 MILLIONS
YearInereaee of '4 Million* in
Assets More Than Total As-
ce-,e__,,#ttete Niue Yeats Age.
Nino years ago the total asseta of
the Royal D'ank of Canada were $46,-
UlADEir the etatement foe the yeee
ended November 00th wt, just issued,
shows, total aeoets of $253,201,247.
The incretiee withiu tvvelve months had:
been 55 millions, or emisiderably more
than tlertotal reeources of the instith-
time lesa than a decade ;go. •
There has
be' gowth froin*Withr;
Met threegh the medium of antalgamae
• tione, and prezently through the same
Medium 20 odd millions will be added
to the banles aeeete by the absorption
ef the Quebec Bank. But a very con-
eiderable proportion of the growth can
be assigned to the expansion rone
Within that to:; primarily; ita the
ease of a bankieg;houpe, from the de-
velopment a. public confidence in the
wisdom and integrity of the menage..
Ment, •
•
. • Nine years ago the Boeings fund%
entrusted•to the Royal Bank amounted
to 20 millions; they were in 'excess of
" :141 milliene this year. The bank's
ability'te:_render service the corn-
Milnity has growl), concurrently;
againet business advancesc of less than
26 millions nine years ago the hcur-
rent etatement shows 87 millions in
Canadian tereitery and 88 *millions
abroad.
The 20 per cent. increase in assets
within the _past year is a remarkable
record in a number of ways. A- year
ago the bank was able- to report a
20 -million dollar gale, bringing assets
close to 200 millions, a hew high level.
As the bank depend e on general rather.
than special conditions for its growth,
• and is not the custodiaii. of special
funds, govern mit or other' the .55.-
• million (means' n On top ofa record-
breaking: year is sigaificant of busi-
. 11148s activity azia prosperity•within the
territory that it serVes.
The year'e growth, it May be Pre -
mimed, has been widely distributed.
• Although the general tendency of eoni-
mercial discounts in Canada .through
the, year was downward, the Royal
reports. an increase of about five
millions or six per cent.; the increase,
actually- and relatively, in current
' loans abroad, is larger, about 131/2
inillions, or 55 per cent. The latter,
`eit may safely be conjectured, is a
, normal sequel to the. greet .activity
and prosperity uktile.„ sugar industry
in .the WesteIndies;• ;That' eoridition
was •• largely responsible for the fact
--that -.the Revd was one of the
few Canadian banks to report an rin..
crease in profits in 1915. The increase
• that year was a moderate one of $19,-
• --.484, but the 1916 statement shisivs the
subetahtial gain Of $205;781;' brining
• profits- 'within about $504000 of the
bank's best earning year, 1918. There
as slightly better. demand for, money
in Canada: a Much. Unproved demand
the •bankle outside 'territory. • ,
The. increased demand. Abroad; no
,q doubt, has been met, told probably
fbinething more, by the rising bank
"edepositeabroad., ' ,The breadth:of:the
situation continues iniportant from the
• ail ehareluilders' standpoint:La dimihished
• deinafid In. One section of the bank's
territory, can be offset by an increased
demand in another; and the hank is. ji
a position to direct _tends in large
amounts to the point of best demand.
With profits of $2,11807, equal to
17.87 per cent: earned on the average
e -paid-up;capitalieugainst 16,48 per
• ,the Previous year, the bank paid its
usual 12 per cent. dividend on a slight-
ly increased amount of stock, Set aside
$100,000 for pension fund; wrote, off
$250,000 on bank prernises, paid a tak
•. of $118;226 on circulation and contd-
. buted $50,000 to the Patriotic Fund:
After these deductions $175,874 re-
• it -Mined to be added te profit and loss
balance. Comparisons of peefrt and
• loss figures for •threeey,'earsefire given
in the following tablet- •
_ _ , .•
• 1916. 1915 1914
Proilts ..$2,111,307 $1,905,57.6 $1,886,142
Z'rev. 678,4/2 614,0-62 1,615,119
Total. ...$2,187,779 $2,519?638 92,901,262
7 --L
$1,387;200 $1 387 200
F 1110.000 10000 100.000
Prenmislies •- 250,006 - -250,000 250.600
War tax ,118,226 • 105,966 .
. • Deprec. ,...... ....... 500,660
• Patriotic P. N50,000 50,000
. Ttl. dad. 41,235,433 $1,843,166 $2,281,200
& L. 852,346 676,472 '614,062
Some of the increaseirahown in the
balance sheet have already .been re-
, • ferred to in a general way.Deposits
. the -aggregate show a gain of about
• 45 .millions, ,with slight] Ore than
•- half. the increase under th had of
savings ,deposits. Part of the M-
e- crease, it has been indicated, found
- employment in .• current discounts,
Which were approximately lgrnillions
• higher than a year ago. - The bulk of
(fUng. 4 I
BRITISH CABINET
• .
•
1.111•11.041111•111
SaMETIIPsT4 ARCEITT PUP, FIVE
"DICTATORSP
LIcYll George Is Shortest—Lord Cur-
zon `Tallest.: -.All Are
“Anti-Itooze;'
The average- age -of -the War:Ca' iihrret
of five members is 561/2 years. The
oldest member of it is Lord Milner,
who is '62/whfle Mr. Lloyd George
and Mr. Henderson) are, each of them,
03. Mr. Bonar Law is 58, and Lord
Curzon.64/. What the average height
of this Cobinet is 1AT unable to say,
as I do not. know what are the stat-
ures of Messrs. Boner Law and lien-
741eAon. But Loth' Curzon (6 feet 1
inch) is the tallest, , and Mr. Lloyd
George, (0 .feet 61/2 inches) is the,
shortest member. Lord Milner is 6
feet 11 ineties.tall - • •
-
e Ave' tfdictatow represent four
diffm- a religious denomination's he.
tween them. Lade 'Curzon and Mil-
ner are Anglicans:, Mr. Lloyd George
is a Baptist Of the hind.• that is
Sometintegeealled "Campbel/W Bap.
lists); Mr. Hendereen is .4 Wesleyan,
and Mr. Bonar Law is et Presbyterian,
The Cabinet will 'be "anti -booze" in
its tendencies. Mr; Henderson and
Mr. Boner Law are both lifelong ab-
stainers. Ur. Lloyd George was one
for many years, It was he who. de-
clared that drink was Britain's great-
est enemy in this war. The other
two are strong for abstemiousness.
Of the five, Lord Curzon is the only
one who belongs, by birth, to • the
"governing class." -.Lord Milner is -of
the .professionar elass. 'So is Mr.
Lloyd George, but sprileg ftonneelpy-
lier stock. M. Bonar Law is re.-
cessful business man.. Mr. Henderson
is a workingman. The two Peers in
the. Cabinet are the only two of its
members who have received a univer-
sity education, both of them having
been Bellied niemand both. • favorite
pupils. of the great Jewett,. None of
•them are men who are great for
sports or games. Mr. Boner Law and.
Mr. Lloyd George are fond of golf, •
is true, but the others are not gr at
at Outdoor amusenients.eIndeed, • ids
• Curzon and Milner are too serious, -
minded for amusement -of any kind 'tti •
leani. large 4n their' -scheine of things,'
*It is; by the way,' ft dieidedly hirdute
Cabinet, :a§ all its ineinbers, except
Lord- Curzon, gni* moostaches, and
Geerge, in addition, is so lax
in. hie visite. to the harber'a that he
• gaercillY grows hair enoggh"feir, two
men on his hea,d. ' "N.
Lloy'd George's Greatness.
however is represented among else,
Yer a Quick mit-UP 11A11115 IN FOG
Luncheon trthat m t
ON 'Er, SOMME
os
delicious, nourishing, whole
wheat food, Trine**1 the
shredded wheat wafer -toast.
it contains all tlie body.
building material in the
whble wheat, grain, including
the bran coat which pro.
motes healthful and natural
bowel movement. • It is real
- whole, wheat bread -without
yeast, aking 'Powder or
chemicals of- any kind—an
ideal food for children be-
cause it compels thorougb.
mastication and ensures per-
fect digestion. A. crisp, tasty
"=lacte.: for picnics or excur-
.sions. ToaSt ia the Vim
and eve,$with butter, soft
cheese or marmalades.
Wiade C$Inada
• .1
cial hatred a war—so uuswerving in
their, support of the arbitrary meas-
ures for which War time calls,
Lloyd ,George is the sirdPlest of
men. Ifs is a devoted family' man.
He has all the family, virtues. His
lionseheld isonethat breathes an at-•
inospliere botb serene and high. With
him, as with so many of hi gi core -
patriots, piety is instinctive. Life
he regards alike as a high destiny and;
as a school of discipline. I
It has been said of one of his pre-
ent colleagueeethat he was trained
for public life almost as Aeon as he
could lisp: Mr. Lloyd George, on the
other hand, was chiefly learned in his
an:lunge'. day in Nonconform-
ity,, Welsh bards, Welsh
and the intricacies of Welsh po tics.
His childhood was spent in the • re-
.
•
•The smallest in stature, • LlOyd
• George towers over his Cabinet .col.
leagues, perhaps not mentally, but in
power over, and prestige with, the
people:- Bisect -Ries -say -that he has
ordered the everking classes aboht toe
anuch,....bet.it -.is nicely that none but,
. one whom they had reason to. •trust
• and thank could have ordered trn
about in that way at all, • It is 'certain
that none but he could have kept the
NOriceitforrnisteeaelie have an 'espee
HE NATION'S
FUTURE
'epo4.4 Upon..
7—iefrorirlrtierdeteription----eiiebeetrall
loans, securities; banking balances,
Ite., all sheeting increases. Under
one of theliecurity heads there is an
increase of close to 11 millions, which
• represents,, no doubt, the purchase of
'_ British Government securities in con-
nection With maiiitiens credit's',
• The aggregate of liquid assets ie 121
millions; a -pin -of -3130# 86-millionee
• and. increasing .the proportion of such
Assets to public liabilities to me per
cent. against 49 per vent• the previous
year and 46 per cent. in 1914. Cash,
including cover in the central: gold re-•
serve for excess • note circulation, re-
presents 16.2' per •cent. of liabilities to
the Palle, against 18.4 per cent. in
•1915. -
The position in this, as other re-
spects should- be-Sattsfaetoty-te-both-
sharehelders and depositors. The
hank has been able to find reasonably
profitabl*employment for, a large
Amount' of money, while increasing
actually and relatively the strength of.
its liquid reserves. Some -leading
comparisons of the balance *eta. ,or -
the past two years follow: -n-
Triabilitiett
1916 1915
pepos dent. ...16906,996 117,466,997
earoulation la.78,228 14,1 ,886
, 22 ,424,460 478, 48,927
Total 1Ia1, ,261,427 108, 90,123
Asada. •
• Specie .....216,012,163 $16,049,299
• Dot% notes i)... 14,249,110 11,977,990
Cent. gold re& .. M00,000 .000,000
potol ro.sh 9e,821,878 ;928,68(1
n.geovities ,,,36,500,068 18,620,041
Balances,' ate.' 20,759419 14411,B80
.. 11,6761005 9,180409
Do, uhroad 21,372,026 , 0,815,950
• Do, total .„„ „ 34448,031 18.952,450
Total liquid 121421,883 Fini,804,402
• ourf. loans Van,- 86,936,831 32,004,872
Do. abroad 37,028,021 24,547,702
fondue ,. • til(4,640 517,863
Do. total ''12B,33-1,299 107,070,499
Total a:mop 253.26P,421 198,999,123
•
rn Cochin China the inhabitant. pre.
!for rotten cegf3 to fresh eneeft
po, 40,60,199 7,519:330.
vo. total ..... , r,227,995 154,11,327
e•
I
Premier Lloyd George.
.SHE!!!.INO GER.7.44•N TBFNCIIES
IN THU DALE.
.Torintics Go About Their Ditties
Obflvie;isof Danger from lin-
friendlY
Law hanging, damp' leaden skies
have shrouded the land, in downer
darlmese, and observation has been al- ,
most wholly impossible. For the past
peven days t4re has been a thick
Mist, while On tWo occasions the war
zono -hu--been -vompletely curtained' -
in by a mantle Ole, heavy. fog. But
threugla this gray . murk the gunS
kept hammering away—firing at the
unseen enemy --- barrassiing past
reads and railheads or any other
"registered"! place where he was like -
1 Y to be btisy with the multitudinome
-affairs ef war between- the lines,
writes e correspondent at the front,
' A battle in the fog—and nearly
every detached engagement in, this
t 1 t 1 b 1
11 •
as„eilirie
Parolee* Mir
The reliable home remedy
foreuts, burns, insect bites
and many other troubles.
Sold in glass bottles and
handy tin tubes at chemist%
- and general stores' every.
where. Refuse substi.
• tutes.
, • Illustrated .bocklet free on
request.
.CilESEBROOOff Witrg. CO.
teopioisaigcb •
nitt% Chabot Ave. Monbonl
\
!Aro 'WAYS or C4E
1510: 14AND.
"ed as A battle by ordinary standarde Xelati" . 'Cot Of P°we Matifnerr
--IS a wierdlY mysterious° and' Oilcan'', ' ' •' and 33:m10'1lb/es. • '
• ny affair. A roar, a• ,.. .
flame, and out into the leaden mlet
flask; at red When time is no object, the best
shrieks a shell on its well intended way to clear land from timber grim*
mission of death and destruCtion is, to let • nature and live stock assist.
' When the growth is removed and the
•, Placing Shells by Map. - briesh burned off. clean, which. •with
"Thi ''t h Id (11"
, a ni where i e ou, . 4 , • e'.0-- .
most growths, may he made a profit -
Marks the gunner as he points to
' a able operation by the ,i,ade of the tim-
ber, and firewood, clover and • grass
Man Nvitil 'a Pair of compasses. "We
will pit another just over here," and
• *bang gees the grit again. In the
deepness of the fog. the battery seems
te shoot into i little drab World all
n. •
T.h Germans, however, have been
bonib rding one of their recently lost
• posit'
• of th
a pos
they
such
if the
ns,• It is a favorite occupation
German gunners—this shelling
tion they know • SO well after
twebeen driven from it. .And
stra ng". cells •for a reply, even
enveloping fog permits one to
see s arcely beyond the 'grim muzzle
of th gient gun itself, • •
•
• .Suc fighting- as this makes war
seem intensely imperial, ,and in the
colorl ss language of the official coin -
muni
this:
shorn
both'
tion
One
were
throu
'cliarte
ue may appear something like
`There was considerable hostile
g to -day' against oer front on
ides of the Ahcre. Our retain;
as ,peopipt and effective:". '
haew that if the British shells
• trely searching their., way
t e opaque mist to their
cl stination the reply must be
All th t t 0 communique chinned. '
.• Friendly and Unfriendly Shells.
To' ne only eirsuaily acquainted
with he eises of a battlefield there
is ah ys' beWilderment at first .as to
which are the "friendly" shells going
over t ward the enemy and which are
the v ry unfriendly ,' visitors coming
over,, 6 burst in a wild destroying
fury. In the mYstic grayness • of the
chive' g'S eg the: bewilderment- -was
tran lated ' into n veritable witches'
toile:ern:4. at de, the ordinary whistle and
"c nip" •(lithe • variecalibred shells
ment ;at
rushin gee
head' ha
like the si ging ofstorm winds, ,
Each e libre shell: has ets own pare.
timilar.pl int, sometimes sadly melan-
choly in t e distance and agaia spite-,
fully fiera ' in its nearness; • It is a
great) source of satisfaction When,
under the tutelage of an . experienced
Officeraene comes to distinguish for
itet.i..belf . the difference between the
outgoing screech . of the., friendly
aliellstalid-the- 'neer/ling ."Whang" of
what the, "Pommies", call "another
presen f om -Ae. oches.
Visitors to the British front are al-
ways imp essed by tbe absolute indif-
I. e .
ferehe Of the Engliele 'Canadiaii and
Mantic region abeut gnoWdon.. :All Austr lia •.soldiers to the indiscrith-
his ' edication was -getteri• • at the ata s Ili i So frequently indulged in
Church of England elementary school, by th '0 mans. . .
the only available school in the yil- •
o ,intense was the bombard -
,time, with shells
opposite directions' •over -
the' Mingled Soinadd becante
lage: It was gall and wormwood to',
RI
• • ISH PROHIBITION. ,
him to have to Attend an - Anglican
school, and partake of Anglican doe -
State Con rol of Spirit Trade in Eng,
trine' teaching. •, • ' ••• •• • . . •
---Itemne aye- heeiva - realli—great. ' . - ' in'nd -14 Prtracted• • ' -- —
acure -be ngs, could izialie*himself Britie devernment for handling food
tgl
man that, om such humble and ob- Abo t t e first measure of the ear'
. .
• - ....- __ ___. - _
what he as to-day—the first real 'wipe& s' contemplates ' 'complete con -
Child of the People to bold the nf6e trol o the liquor trade, according eto
Of -British-Premier; He is -getieraUT WoIl-i forpieTsohrces. ' ‘
regarded as the man of the MoMent— . Al, 0---woh6tiong-1-the---,L
the indispensable Man. And the curi- siimpt'on
hrlibout iroirirthatethis in- ly, an
dispensable Man in Great 'Britain's
greatest war; iseprIty well the pro- are e '
fo ndest lover of peace in the British the sei
es. Which 'goes to show how pas-
s onate is his conviction that the pre-
sent •ar •ii a righteous one Ori-Grerits
Britain's pare *•; e
Properly reared -children grow
up to be strong, healthy "
•• ncitisint
. Many diseases to which child-
ren- are- susceptible; -first-indicate-
tteir Presence in the bowels. '
cate.ful mothet
tiatch, her child',s'bovvel move-
ments and use •
Mrs. Wiiisl�w's.
Soothing Syrup
• _colidendotherailmentsito-which
It is a corfective for diarrhoea, i
children are subject especially
&ring- the'teething`period.
It is absolutely. non-narcotic
and •containe neither opium,
morphine nor any of their -&•..
rivatives.
Mrs.• Winslow's
Soothing Syrup
• Makes Cheerful,
' Chubb Children'
Soothes the fretting child during
111(1v/ill' Period -et% develom
ment and thus gives rest and
relief to both child and mother.
Boy a bottle today
aod hoop it handy
.old druggists in Canada and
ihaughoot the rworld
r•4-*
-
Is
Professor gays. eanailit Could, Make.
Millions. With It.
A proposal whereby the Dominion
can niake $5,000,000' to $10,000,000 by
substituting nickel for silver c'oins
-has-been- sabmitted-to-the Federal -au-
thorities at Ottawa by Prof. Leacock,
of McGill University. The professor,
explaining his scheme, points out that
silver is only a token to -day, ahdcan
be replaced by nickel, or tin, or cellu-
loid, for that matter. He would call
in the $20,000,00.0 of silver coins in
circulation and sell the ipetel in thein
as bullion. There is about seventy
cente worth of silver in a dollar's
worth of coins. Nickel is worth fifty
cents a pound, and the total coinage
'eould be rePlaced• for $850,090. The
cost of coinage would be offset by the
saving now and in the ;future in. buy-
ing nickel instead of silver. The pro-
fessor proposes that the banks should
at as'agencies in exehanging the
.nickel for the sillier dine. He under-
takes to carry out the sehenie himself
Without salary. He suggests that the
original recoinage• should bear the
stamp' "War money of Canada, 1017,"
•tuicl it would act An a monument of
Canada's national thrift.
litiziartrg ttbillitent Coes flattest In 061'114
e.
of spirits exceptemedicinal-
r strictioes oii the beer .tracle
pee ed. The Whole regouVees of
irit trede,. it is believed, Will be
de state control eaely in the ,
new .ear and the accumeIated stocks
ettett__to. -other epurposes.
than Arin *. • •
pistillation ofewhisi.si neadegiet_will. -
be:prohibited. •
seed may. be soWn . and, while cattle
and 'sheep are pasturing and eating
down the _Sprouts, the • stumps will
slowly but. surely decay, and their
removal becoines an easy operation.
This prodess will require &Om six to
ten years before clearing can be corn -
plated. ' .
At the Experimental Station,•Fred-
ericion, NB,, where .it was 'desired to
• bring the lend into celtivation at the
earliest possible moment,. two. piens
of stump removal have been tried, and
herewith are given figures of the rela-
tive „cost on land from which an aver-
age tree growth had been removed.
The two nietliodie employed- were:
stump. pulling ley. power, and removal
by 'dynamite. °• ,
A stump puller of the drum and
'Ong lever type was employed, giving Druggists or 810es.tya Remedy Co.,, Chicago .
1
alifting power of 25 tons :With, on
ordinary ' team., With' one 'hundred Nearly' 100,000;000 lb: of tobacco
and twenty stumps, 10 inches .and I are emoked in the United Kingdom'
over; to the, acre, and seventyetaro,' every year. .•
11.1111NOXIIIM NUL CAMS" Allan.
11.1411•••••
l'arning Out Three a Week to loons. Tee
tr.Y li.'400011 Ships, of au bueineeeeo,
inflitmation heed come to the Lon- ':,*41;f1Vufvotot flow&
dori Mail that Germany is concen- uneCORLUILW1101111
trAtiPe a, energy seel4
all the resources; of her shipbuilding 1.11-11“.-44°-, „11-44a.
capacity to the eonstruction of super- out pain!: holleteireaiitrie wAt;
subinarines. The Huns still have 4.r°16 iw late° lir. ilklinlah Medical
, Limited, Clillingw064, trot
hones of forcing Britain to consider r
peace by a strong U-boat campaign
wbieli will seriously interfere with
Pritain's food supply. Large sub -
'marines are said to oho, turned Out in
Germany at the rate of two or three
sLweek, and they are capoble of
ocean -wide radium of action and fitted
with torpedo tubes of the largest soli- ,S4
bre. In general dimensions they are
Similar to, the U-03- which recently
visiteCtlio Alfterican coa'st. _ ,
'
Bilgland's food 'supplY is to be cut •DOG DISEASES
cif in „every diroetion possible and it
I1411iFe
is Understood •that Hindenburg has a..ttui4,0tsa t yz,t/oraedarsis ,
been given control of the fleet as well
, C
As the army, and is of the 11LAY VLOVER Inc. opinion- that ,
lieniywlilinnFotralniacveuhe
etodeef4endeal
a
the British nsi WOOS 118 Writ 31st Stred, Newyork
v
zennnd,s)iod
oglaghhONvpythetesupi?ips. carrying•
sw•wo
.11101..46
When buying your Ilisno
insist on having sat
"OTTO HliaEL"
PIANO AOTION
a•
e) •
iloore
bronsleur: .. :
•
was'r"au gel ill: IwnillillePrnairtohf °r-thje uanntilaatri YS ill
in. the 'foot, 1 'tried 'all -kinds •of reme-
dies but nothing did, me any goad. One •
porton told'Ine.ahout KINARD'S LINIr
KENT; as soon as r tried It the Satur-
day night, nthe next morning 1 was •
• fgrr eeeo Imo: dieendd:yye' r Is ut: veryrayttte . gaQ goodn9yd; time
mII eC ettl tell a tldi give wouldy ottlb i a
to hear about any Person Sick or'rheu-
like to have on, Tt at. any time 1 come.
matism, r could tell ;them about thie
216 Rue Ontar• TicloguERras.NsA6u11,TlyonL'reaEl.11-44:,'
. •
. ' Feb 0 14. 1908.
. i--
• 0 ' •Att.A •
Vnprefitable. •. •
A six -week-old calf was nibbling Itt,
the grass in the yard and was viewed
in silence for some inialtes by the city
girl.
"Tell mg," she said, turning •.im-
pulsively to her hostess, "does it real-
ly pay you to keep as small a cow as
that?" • •, . .
1
lir/mutated Eyelids,
.0 Eyed enflamed by expo-
eautecklmySsuelinenvetally Wedeln:.
YEO-arYDr!irs.5'0'.Yul.e.,:re'neB:titl'eNeomsZer:
. • . Just Eye CoMftift.' At .
SillitinTubes2SeeForlisoksillhetyerreeasic
smaller stumpsr•it'required an aver-
age of twenty minutes with a team
and driver and two men to remove
Bleardts"Linlinent Cures Dis\temper
•
each of -the large stamps and • An elephent has more muscles
0 Min,
trunk than any other. creature poi-
utes to remove each of the smaller
Ones. The. 120 stumps. required • 40 sessesn it.entire body.
hours, aed the smaller Ones 6 'hours.
•The relative cost, therefore, stood
as follow: Where power machinery
was used, cost per acre was: '
46 hours work,, Wilt and driver
_ at 92c 14 72
92 hours work, helpers at isc.. 16 56
3.16'-holinr:nwtocks,ccleaning• and p.1.1-..
59 40
- .60 Ileum LVIvnork,- hiira'IlilW•11.1.-iie.:•• 10 se
•• • n, ••• •• 9101I8
Where .extriosives were used, the cost
per. acre,*is: •• ' •••;•.,,
150 lbs, stumping powder at 414,90•
•150 ;bs. • stumping , powder • at
$14.90 , „ . .422 35
566 feet tute at• 80e -. . : ., 500
300 gaps at $1 300.
-
erator" at 2301 .• -9 20
:40' hours, team:- ancr•-dieven-aat--32e1280
80 hours,: helpers at14 40 1,
60 hotirs, labor piling -at 18;..... 10.80.4
40 hoursilabor burning•at 18c.. • 720 •
• •• • • . • • ; .• 82i5
'Ori Other areas, Where there -word)
heavy boulders and small stones, the
cost of clearing rim up: t� $186, per
acre, while, Where the ,Iiiiid was free
frem_stene, and 'stumps ••averee
and OomparatiVely few, the land Was
Made -1410 !far -• the nlen—gif ii74:-COst .
• of leas them $40 per, ectee- . •.
Opinion.'
"Willa are Yeti; &ling litre ?If `said
Mr. Teldwelis to a tramp whom he
found suspiciously near his henhouse.
"Lookin' for work,"' was the w'an-
derer's reply. •— •• e
"You mean looking for trouble;
don't yeti?". ••••••• • •
"Well, isn't work trinible ?".
isinura's Linintant Curei_iyds, .
,
„
. Marriage may be a ;lottery; but •a..
whole lot of people seem td be sato
is4ed-wlth4ene
Artifidal Teeth Bouoie
. Send • its ;yOur old false teeth,
•
• 'Plates and -gold. -We remit best
aGapShldvaaluembaytinretitmurni,z:lil
enfianii••
Ig.
'4 &d�lalcI� Bt *est,- Tori.nrio.
AW FURS
Xi p -ay ion to :•11.11)
value, Ask for our pilot hat
- end 'hipping instnictionsi.
EDWARD POLLAK& CO. '
280 liTt. BOIL ST WET.
MONTREAL. QUE.
fORANLJOHNSON
-
4"O -ST , 'PAUJ STOW
MONTREAL.
Established over 89 years aus.. '
Raw Fur Dealers
Write us• fSF price
Send us yoUr furs and get, the
highest market price.
ILLIARDS
Those long whitey nights
you.. 'will need indopf xecrea.
tion. why not instal a.
Home Billiard • Table?
Write for particulars OP -
our famous
• .
Maisonette Table,
for cash or on easy terms.
rrittUg hes 84 Watts, Ltd.
M.akerss to H. M. the King,
• 341Church,,pt., orontp
UitGESUIREPROOF ISISORT
HOWIN
•-
• Ortro. or 44314-41%
Magnitude' alai csasarroilis
. - •
AMEBIC:AM TX.A.E '
73.1020PEANEE.IMF .
0 ritio,,•Ereti. J.117. lifOtt JED.'
• ABS
. oder
' . stops
dealer
•. Libels
F,
A 5SORB1NE'
TRADE MARK REG.U.S.PAT OFF
will reduce' hdlanied, swollen
Joints, Sprains, Bruises, . Solt
Bunch*: Beale Bono, ,b11
Bvil,Qulttorkula and
ap it is a n he
infgcted soma (Ir
positive ak.
anagermict e. Pleasant to
use; doe* not blister -arrestors -
the bait, and yon can vorirthe bone.
5200 des bottle. delisere&
Hook 7 M free.
ItSINBAIR..the antiseptic liniment for minkhd.
Painful. Swollen Veins, VVens. Stahl: Bruisers
alis And indammation. Price 51.00 per bottle at
oy delivered. win to you more if yet mite
'nisi Bonk for, 10e instnmpj.
OUNG, P. D. P., 516 tymans Bldg., Mohireali•Cen, ,
stubble -end Absorbioe. Jr.. avmade In Duda •
•
_WINTER fDAYS AND' SUMMER- DAYS
, .
and Christmas Days are thebeet, Th ermoAlays of all .
...
. -• ,
' Guaranteed to keep Boiling Liquids hot 'et hrs..I or tie Cold Lignid'oold S dips.
• .
Bore is the ideal gift, handsome and' practical, giving years of perfect
• parolee at or away from hoztwo. Torn the Idotorlst—for the Iiivaliti—for the
•',1IrIfuntsr—for the lifursery—for the Eusizeis-Stan—for the Worlrt
• ja---____-__ man—for the Bedroom and tut y other uses. . •
li
Bottles 91.75 up. Nita . 87 0'0 p*
Carafes • .(water, bottles) 55 00. ull•
..... ,,• Motor 'sets 99.50 up. Thermos is avid
at all good Drug. Hardware, _ porting
.F.., ••- goods and • mot:- Stores, an , some
0,,,......7- Leather Goode and (Jewelry St rem.' If
.,-,----- you cannot see ii'vhat 'you need en for
-
fully illustrated Catalog ndw.7- e end
-4":. lioods• prepaid on receipt of pri e.
THERMOS 'BOTTLE Oo„
, If
- —
__.._ ___,4 •
ST. .TOR41114TO.
Al! tb,e lCings ofsiCtibsia lierVe been
called Frederick or 'William. " ,
wizard s Liniment Ciftree ElPhthe
"Father,' Too. •
• t —
"This is my son Frederick,"_.gaid
r. Graliffeetcpretidlec ieffucifig:hM
five-yeareokl hoy A!) his caller.. , •
-"Well • Frederick," said the caller,
"de you mind your marnma?" •
"Yes. sir," replied Frederiek kompt-
ly, "and so does liana?'
0 ti- 3
Sti011
I. iHEPats.t..1,,,tivn Ica 1
(
•
•
.1
.,„
Pedigreed Clydesdale Mares, Fililes
and. Stallion, .111tiet havegood qual-
ity and -thick, Made UP to a `fair Wee.
Mares 3 to 6 years -old. Fillies rising
yeee-bld, up, taflit teite 6 yeah
old, Alt etallions :over 2. years nius't-
bave
prove'n themselves reasen'ably
sure. When • writing state county,
fiearest, railWaY 4tation, ef.T.R. or
.C,P.11., -end telephone exohange,
:Quote prieee.. ..kayene with good p041, -
greed Olydesialefefor sale Amid Cone
intinicate at once Also wanted neunber
It•Ifintered Shorthorn Cettli.
Bulls. eild Heifers.
Must bC. Well inside, good coloiro; ties,
1A11119 8 • months to 2 years; hotedrs 6
tnonths ttP Years. , ,
• W. I. NieCALLUM, Importer,
I3rampton, Ont.
*MAT • ilterohante *auk, atraMoteti; ont,,
• •
A trip lw the JLM S P froi*Iltilifarto-perne rara
' and return to St. John occupies 89 days. .
• On the outward voyage you have a delgy
at. Bermuda, Barbados, and Trinidadand
you have -part of a•day at Antigua, Domin-
• Ica, Montserrat,St. Lucia; St, Vincent and
•9rena4a. At Demerara the t3hip stays for'
fou-Fdayk-artdon-theltotneward voyage -you--
, have at least as much tinte at each of the
places mentioned as you had on the outward
voyage. Please observe that there is never
. a day for oar half the trip when you will
not be on shore a portion of the time; Is
• there any sea voyage In the world" that is
just like this' one? It is hard t6 believe
that there 18. Certainly there -is none
enjoyable at the price. Ask your. Itailnax
• Ticket Agent for a'booklet, or send us your
address and One Will be forwarde4r. ,
104.
"
ii:111A#
;11/A .redirdrit
-14 •
t). 'It
ILOVAL MAIL 81tAM Mettler COMPANV
'Grancille oloetto ' • maim, t414