Loading...
The Huron Expositor, 1923-04-13, Page 6A5' •B:e TWA to of , the Maya* COSOi'e of , Surgeens of Oita* OA of Diversity of Toronto. Late Dish Dental Office, Military District, 1, London, Ont. Office home at d, Ont., Monday, Wednesday, ay and Saturday, from one 0 PA, 14-12 DR. F. J. R. FORSTER Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Graduate in Medicine, University of Toronto. Late assistant New York Ophthal- mei and Aural Institute, Moorefield's Eye and Golden Square Throat Hos- 1 pital's, London, Eng. At Commercial Rotel, Seaforth, third Wednesday in re,uthp'd Waterloo StetSoth, satfo. Phone 287, Stratford. CONSULTING EN GINEERS James, Proctor & Redfern Limited. Just a trace of sooth- ing Boracic—to make it the perfect soap for mother, baby and all the family. ENFANTS DELIGHT `tau HAND :a :-81i' FOR THE .*HOG • 66 Tomato St. Toronto. C.p. Bridges, Pavements, Waterworks. Sewer` es. Ponstains. luohoraton. Factories. Arbitrations. Litigation. Phone Adel. 1044. Cable: J PACO** Toronto OUB P1668—UscaW paid out of the money ws use oar cants. In his annual report, the Dominion Animal Husbandman, records an ex- periment at the Central Experimental Farm, Ottawa, to determine the re- -apeetfve merits of self-feeding and self -watering and of trough feeding of bacon hogs. The results obtained indicate that with a satisfactory self- feeding device the possibly daily gain is materially greater than with trough -feeding. This possibility of preparing hogs for market at a much earlier date when such a device is used appears to have been proved conclusively. In comparing two lots, euch of six Yorkshires, it was found, on the other hand, that the self -fed lot were considerably more expensive to feed. One reason for this is laid to the fact that, under the system of a free -choice ration, where the hogs were at liberty to select that portion of the ration which proved most ap- petizing, they consumed the whole cern in large quantities. Another fact proved by the 'ex- periment was that the self -fed hogs did not dress into as desirable car- casees for bacon purposes as the trough -fed, being somewhat shorter in length of side and carrying an excess of fat in proportion to lean meat. For this reason it would seem that, for the production of the most desirable bacon carcass, the free -choice system is not satisfac- tory, more particularly when whole COIN is supplied. The fact that the self-feeding method is less desirable than that of trough -feeding fur the production of bacon carcasses, is more particulary true in the earlier stages of the pig's life after weaning. As the ration fed at that stage of growth has a marked influence on the tendency to produce fat or lean meat. LEGAL R. S. HAYS. Barrister Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public. Solicitor for the Do- minion Bank- Office in rear of the Do - =ion Bank, Seaforth. Money to say A BEST & BEST Barristers, Solicitors, Convey- ancers and Notaries Public, Etc. Office in the Edge Building, opposite Vibe Expositor Office. tt� PROVE' 'FOOT, KILLORAN AND (q HOLMES llarrfitetera, Solicitors, Notaries Pub - Ss, etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth ek. Office in No Block. y of W,aProndfoot, ICC., J. L. Killoran, B. E. Holmes. VETERINARY F. HARBURN, V. 8. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College, and honorary member of she Medical Association of the Ontario Veterinary College. Treats diseases of ell domestic animals by the most mod- ern principles. Dentistry and Milk Rover a specialty. Office opposite Street. Seaforth. AR orders leftk's Hotel, Matt the hotel will re- solve prompt attention. Night calls Medved at the office Doctors Prescribe and Hospitals Use INVINCIBLE [J l JELLY because of its purity, wholesome nourishment, and delicate flavor. Also best for home use. Economical and easy to make. One package serves eight people. Costs only one cent a serving. JOHN GRIEVE, V. S. aattyyHonor graduate of Ontario Veterin- DDimals ege. All diseases treated. Calls promptly at- tended to and charges moderate. Vet- erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office and residence on Goderich street, one door east of Dr. Scott's office, Seat forth. At all Grocers Specify MCLAREN'S INVINCIBLE JELLY POWDER Made by Ie, cLARENS t-Ih1rrED, Hamilton and Winnipeg. s MEDICAL C. J. W. BARN, MD.C.M. 426 Richmond Street, London, Ont., Specialist, Surgery and Genio-Urin- ary diseases o1 men and women. After Every Meal r DR. A. NEWTON-BRADY Bayfield. Graduate Dublin University, Ire- land. Late Extern Assistant Master Rotunda Hospital for Women and Children, Dublin. Office at residence lately occupied by Mrs. Parsons. Hours, 9 to 10 a.m., 6 to 7 p.m. Sundays, 1 to 2 P -m- 2866-26 DR. J. W. PECK Graduate of Faculty of Medicine McGill University, Montreal; member sR Colle,guy of Physician and Surge:Ma if Ontario; Licentiate of Medical Coun- cil of Canada; Poet -Graduate Member of Resident Medical staff of General Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15. Office, 2 doors east of Post Office. 'Phone 56. H ensall, Ontario. DR. F. J. BURROWS Office and residence, Goderich street east of the Methodist church, Seaforth Phone 48, Coroner for the County of Huron. DR. C. MACKAY C. Mackay honor graduate of Trin- ity University, and gold medallist of Trinity Medical College; member of the College of Physicians and Sur- geons of Ontario. Chew your food well, then nsF WRIGLEY'S to aid digestion. t .•:�n��.`\._ CAD It also keeps the to -'clean, bre, sweet, appetite keen. The, Crest Canadian 8oeeemose BARNUM THE CHAMPION OF AMERICAN FAKERS "Barnum," by M. R. Werner, is based largely upon the voluminous autobiography of P. T. Barnum, the circus man, a volume which for years he hawked in connection with his various enterprises. Mr. Werner•s book is one in which many American, may find entertainment and spiritual pn.fie Read properly, it should be conducive to a wholesome chastening of the soul. Barnum was a more practical Cagliostro, taking advent- ag_ of his American opportunities. All exceptional American, a notorious .American, yet from first to last in his energies, in his hypocrisies, and in what Kipling would have called "the cynic devil in his blood" with which he slyly and admiringly con- templated these hypocrisies, always an American, • says the New York Herald. While brazenly practicing humbug he blatantly howled moralities. He was not for reform—the reform of other people. There was a Peck- sr.iffian unctiousness to his every utterance. He combined "There's a sucker horn every minute," with 'Honesty is the best policy." As ee lived he died. There is no apocry- phal story connected with his last words as there is with the reputed last words of Horace Greeley. In reading the story of Barnum'-; audacious and magnificent decep- tions one dues not know whether 'o laugh or be shocked. The recep- tions themselves harmed no one, but in his astute showmanship h: "harnessed his caravan to the church by the straps of his personal piety." He advertised his collection of freaks, real or faked as "Bar- num's Great Moral Show." In his program notes each year appeared this notice: "The gentleman having charge of my advertising department will address a letter, containing tic- kets, to each of the clergy of every denomination resident in the towns where we exhibit. which will admit them and their wives free of charge, to my entire combination of exhi- tions. It sometimes happens, how- ever, that my agents are not able to procure the names of all the resi- dent clergy. Should any be omitted they will receive a cordial welcome by calling either on me in person or on my treasurer at the ticket wagon any time before or during the enter- tainment. My exhibitions contain nothing. that professed Christians do not approve." To give him his due, in one sense he lived up to his profession. Per- haps some of his curiosities wers mostly paint and cardboard, and perhaps he was not quite the "force for great moral good" that certain bullible ministers ,voted him. But to his credit be it' -remembered that never was one of his clowns allowed a broad joke or -a suggestive ges- ture. Barnum himself would pro- bably have softened the word de- ception" as applied to his freaks to the word "exaggeration." When the ancient .lumbo was landed in New Ynrk, Barnum asked that the elephants dimensions be given to the press. "How high does he reach up with his trunk?" Barnum asked. "It's forty-nine feet, isn't it?" and he stared suggestively at one of the keepers. But the stolid Briton did not take the hint. " Twenty-six feet," he. answered. Barnum sigh- ed, "If I were ,e showman, I would have exaggerfftied it, but there's no- thing like -the truth." His very first exhibit, the negress Joice Fleth, was advertised as 161 years old. In reality she was about 80. When he found on the streets of Bridgeport the midget who after- wards became General Tom Thumb, the child, two feet one inch in height, and weighing fifteen pounds, was five years old. He was announced as "eleven years old, just arrived from England," for Barnum realized early the American love for an im- portation. The General's first con- tract with Barnum was for four weeks and called for $3 a week and board for himself and his mother. That was in 1842. Nineteen years later Barnum acquired for exhibi- tion purposes the dwarf known as Commodore Nutt, seventeen years ol.i and twenty-nine inches high. This time Barnum paid the boy's father $30,000 for three years' services in ) eat}t,lfies your halt 'Kellnovei . dandruff Stops fr Bing hair Grows Hair ask for 7 Sutherland Sisters' COMPLETE TREATMENT Fertilizer— Grow er—Shampoo All 3 in one package $1.00 FOR PEOPLE WHO CARE to keep up,.thelr appearance, SEVEN SUTH- ERLAND SISTERS' COLORATORS W traoolorm their hair to any ahado desired. A simple home treatment. Harmlea, iaex- pawive. durable, Ask to as card showing eight different shades. E. UMBACII, Druggist, Seaforth. addition to all expenses of board, clothing, costumes and travel. In the early days of Barnum's Mu - scum at Broadway and Ann Street, New York, the showman's ingenuity enabled him to discover some way to deal with every unexpected sit- uation. Holidays were great days fur patronage, and un the first Fourth of July of Barneru's management so many people visited the museum that the sale of tickets were stopped. 'anis Barnum described as "exceed- ely harrowing to my feelings." Be 3 o'clock in the afternoon Bar- num's carpenters had built a new exit at the rear of the mu- seum, but much money had al- ready been lost. The next St- Patrick's day, anticipating a large attendance, Barnum saw to it that the rear exit was again opened. But by noon the museum was crowd- ed and the sale of tickets had to be stopped. Most of the visitors had brought lunch baskets determined te stay all day and throughout the evening Hurriedly Barnum ordered earthed R ti little 'co trill *Mount about one billion dr am whish ,it (ndt unnaturally) thinks the •' United, States might fairly place to the cred- it of the English war ,debt incurred, in effect, through England having. endorsed the notes of 'her impec- unious Allies during the Great War. Says The "Saturday Review": The British public is probably as a whole quite unaware of this debt, which was incurred by loans made be- tween fifty and eighty years ago to these various States for the purpose of establishing banks, railways, etc. The loans have since been repudi- ated, and interest on them has con- sequently been in arrear for from forty to seveuty years. So far, in fact, has the memory of these loans faded into the limbo of bad debts that to -day it is impossible in some instances (without the help of the defaulting parties) to collect the complete and accurate facts con- cerning them. The main outline, however, is contained in the follow- ing table, which is printed in the Annual Report of the Corporation of Foreign Bondholders. For the sake of convenience we give the totals in sterling, instead of in dollars as they appear in the Report, reckoning at the rate of exchange of $5 to the pound. Description Aprrox. Amt. State. of Debt In Default Arkansas—Principally rail- way guarantee, estimated at 11,740,000 Florida—Bonds issued to establiah banks and 'for railway guarantees, esti- mated .. 1,400,800 Georgia—Principally rail- way guarantees, estimat- ed at 2,540,000 Louisiana:--P'Baby Bondfal, railway guarantees and certificates of claim issu- ed under settlement of 1874, estimated at 1,200,000 Mississippi — Planters' Bank Bonds, 1831-8; Un- ion Bank bonds, 18381,400,000 North Carolina—Special tax bonds and railway guar- antees, estimated at2,520,000 South Carolina—No details available; estimated at1,200,000 INCORPORATED` 1856 Capital and Reserve $9,000,000 Over 126 Branches ♦.J. L a .'4 t ae The Molsons Bank CQURTkSY TO ALL In all departtaents every effort is made to eliminate unnecessary formalities and to assure speedy and courteous service to customers. Savings Departments at every Branch. BRANCHES IN DISTRICT: ExeterBrM e y edletd Clinton et. tss fLitlaion t 1 nick f'114: A STOBIE, FORLOI4G & CO. MEMBERS TORONTO STOCK EXCHANGE DEALERS IN Government and Corporation Bonds Bank, Public Utility and Industrial Stocks. Mining Shares—Foreign Exchange 10-12 KING STREET EAST TORONTO HAMILTON BRANTFORD KITCHENER Private wires connecting all offices with Montreal and New York t✓ atruction of a new elevator at Tarte Pier by the Montreal harbor com- mission. The elevator will have an ultimate capacity of 10,000,000 bush- els and will be built in units of a sign painted reading: "This Way 2,500,000 bushels each, the first of t.. the Egress." It was nailed over The loans here tabulated werTotal £12,000,000 which, to cost $2,347,000, will be com- tic rear door Must of the visitors menced as soon as weather condl- irtcrpreting it as indicating a new contracted for public works and doe, tions permit. attraction, rushed through the door Plot Include Confederate Bonds or War Debts. If compound interest Edmonton, Alta.—Immediately af- ter the British embargo is removed on Canadian live cattle on April let this years, the provincial department of agriculture will send a trainload of specially fed steers across the At- lantic, to ascertain what conditions will have to be met in such sipments, and what can be realized in the way of this na- tureprofits in exportation P to the British market. DR. H. HUGH ROSS Graduate of University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, member of Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; pass graduate courses in Chicago Clinical School of Chicago; Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London, England; University Hospital, Lon- don, England. Office—Back of Do - Minion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5, Night calls answered from residence, Victoria street, Seaforth. w AUCTIONEERS THOMAS BROWN Licensed auctioneer for the counties if Huron and Perth. Correspondence arrangements for sale dates can be made by Balling up phone 97, Seaforth Or Tke Expositor Office. Charges mod• ttfsate and satisfaction guarantied. rDOUGLAS T'AH EGYPTIAN E LINIMENT) 4 of -----_- ( Ilk II L, Honor Graduate Carey Jones' Na- tional School of Anctioneering, Chi- cago. Special coarse taken in Pure Bred Live Stock, Real Estate, Mer- chandise and Farm Sales. Rates'in �g with prevailing market. Sat - on aimed. Write or wire, Oircar Biopp, Zurich, Ont. Phone U.-03. 2866-52 R. T. LUKER neer for the Coca tensed auctioneer Li ty /aoudad to b allEmus. Sales la, of the, county. Seven yyeeaarrsr' ex- milc'e in Manitoba and Asskatehr 8.Terme reasonable. Phone No. a r 11, Exeter Centralis P. O., 8. No. 1. Orders Iefft at The Hohn g'apoMtpr Omee, Seaforth, promptly THE FARMER'S FRIEND Relieves caked bag, gar - get,• spider or infection of the teat, also thrush in horses' feet, fistula, etc. Stops bleeding at once. Removes 'proud flesh, soreness and swell- ing. At all Dealers and Druggists Manufactured only by DOUGLAS a CO. NAPANER. Ont. to find themselves on Ann Street, with no way of getting back except by paying another admission at the f runt. SOME ASTONISHING FEATS Some astoniThing feat are achiev- ed by • character in fiction. Sir An- teeny Hope, during a discussion at Gray's Inn Hall, singled out for spe- cial mention the feat of Ouida's hero, oho, when stroking the Oxford eight to victory, "outpaced all his crew in tic rapidity of his stroke." Another of Ouida's characters—a''woman this Ottawa, Ont.—Income tax paid by tia.e—runs a horse at Ascot, win,. (anadian farmers in 1921.,22 amount - the race and then comes "proudly into ed to $1,324,693 out of a total of $78, - the paddock, leading the winner of l35 ,354, according to a statement in the Waterloo Cup." Tattycoram, the the house of Commons by the Hon. jealous servant in "Little Dorrit," trots about with an iron box two feet square under her arm." One of Trol- lrpe's creations, Andy Scott, "whistles his way ue the street, with a cigar in his mouth." Ponson du Terrell pie - tures a nefarious personage "putting out a hand as cold and clammy as that of a snake." Another villan "raised his hat and disclosed two rows of daz- zling white teeth," thus giving a per- formance as startling in its way as that of the afternoon caller who "fol- lowed a small maid into an even smal- ler drawing -room." nt, let us say, five per cent., is cal- culated on the capital sum, the total amount due is seen to reach the re markable figure of between 1190,- flIC,000 and 1200,000,000. For a long time the State of West Virginia was n!so in default, but in 1920, after pro- tracted negotiations in the courts, a settlement was made. By that settle- ment made by one State it seems to us that the moral obligation of the rest to pay was admitted. FACTS ABOUT CANADA W. S. Fielding, Minister of Finance. The number of farmers who paid in- come tax in Ontario in that year was 6,135, as compared with 1,870 the year before. 4 4 4 E MONEY AT HOME. WS...Myna In ba.lne,a Punthb ererrtnine. Yea make 1 m 2 0 can, o hoar 0 home In your waive time. No 700 Show . eo"O,in. We re,>New to teeth yon show card lcash each ey oar New temple Method live. 0>y meh ooh week Write maser inhere live. DT OITIllusSP WoCAfand TerSCHOOL Free. DETROIT aROw CARD soon,. 254 Land Security 61d1. Toro.ro, Ont. S S ti S S S ;? . S S ,4 UNPAID U. S. LOANS DUE GREAT BRITAIN John Bull is finding out once more that the way of the honest debtor is hard. A few months ago he was un- der sinister suspicion and vigorous condemnation in the United States because he was suspected of desiring an all round cancellation of interna- tional war debts. 'This suspicion per- sisted despite the fact that while John Bull owed four billion dollars he was owed eight billion and stood to lose four billion by the cancella- tion of all international war debts. Then the unexpected promptness and directness with which last January he settled his four billion dollar indebt- edness to the United States not only aroused in the minds of the United States Anglophobes the further hor- rid suspicion that there was a catch in it snmewhere`yfor Uncle Sant but it also made sundry French journal- ists almest hysterical with anger at the bad example set by -Perfidious Al - Lion! Since the English had made a settlement with the United States all other debtor nations would be expect. Ed to pay up or be branded as in- solvents and defaulters. This accus- ed nation of shop -keepers would ex- pect la Belle France to pay them Sev- eral inconvenient billions! Now both the United States and France ought to be sufficiently con- versant with history to know that, whatever may be John Bull's faults, he has always. paid his debts,—at times overpaid them. For example, there is that little affair of the "Al- abama" Award in 1872, by which England paid the United States $15,- 500,000 for alleged damages wrought by the privateer, "Alabama" during the Civil War, and it is generally understood that there is still $15,500,- 000 on hand for which no claimants can be found. No,—it is .not on re- cord that the English repudiate tbeir just and lawful debts, it sim- ply isn't done, ypu know. But the London "Saturda$ Review" has un - Victoria, B. C.—There are now 2,- 600 industries in British Columbia with an annual output of 6250,000,000 worth of goods, according to a bulle- tin issued by the Provincial Depart- ment of Induatries for the province during the last few years, and has advanced large sums of money to new companies. Winnipeg, Man.—Grain loadings on the western lines of the Canadian Pacific Railway, between September 1st and March 7th, aggregated 118,- 065 cars, or 16,000 cars above cor- responding period in 1921-22. This forms the best record since the big clop year, 1915. 2 lbs. Cotton quilt REMNANTS 11, 6 lbs. 12. 10 lbs :S, 26 lbs. 16, 1 ib. silk or velvet patches 11.60. 2 lbs. 12. 2 the cotton remnants good lengths for children's dresses, aprons, shirts, etc. 11.60. 1 ib. fingering yarn all shads, 11. A. MoCREERY & CO , Imports, CHATHAM. Ont. Stratford, Ontario. f WINTER TERM FROM Ei JANUARY 2nd. _ Ei The leading practical train - Ing school of Western Ontario. EO • The school where yon get a El thorough course wider acompet C ens tractors in Commercial, E = S rthand and Telegraphy De- _ • rtments. We assist grads- E ted s toitions. = Write for P� free catalogue. D. A. McLACHAN= d111111111111111111I1t1I1t111I111I11It1I11lI11111.- Edmonton, Alta.--s-There was an in- crease of sixty-six school districts in Alberta during the year 1922, the number in 1921 being 3,231 and in 1922 being 3,397. There were 72 new school districta formed, iiut six dis- tricts were disorganized. There are 68 consolidated schools in the prov- ince, and two rural high schools. Saint John's,'N. F.—New facilities in the annual hunt of the Newfound- land sealing fleet will be the taking of moving pictures of the sealing op- erations and the use of an airplane as an official part of the fleet's activi- ties. The 'plane will be used for spotting herds of seals, found in the past largely through good luck er good guessing on the part of the skip- pers. 1 Send for free Mot giving full partic- ulars of Trench's world-famous prep- aration for Epilepsy and Fits—simple home treatment. ever g0 year., success, 'retamoalala from an parts Of the wo,i5 von 1000 in ono year. writ. at once tot TRENCH'S REMEDIES LIMITED 2607 let.Jantis'Cbntob rs. AdelaldeSk.E, Ottawa, Ont.—A preliminary agree- ment has been signed for the pur- chase by a syndicate of the property of the Duke of Devonshire 3t Blue Sea Lake. The property includes 93 acres of land and a fourteen -room house which was built for the Duke of Devonshire during his regime as gl've-nor general.The present pro- posal is to organize a fish and game club at Blue Sea Lake, as it is one of the finest inland bodies of water on the continent. "My Boy was Starving to Death" "As He Was Getting No Nourishment He Was Gradually Wasting Away." "Here's a story which will interest every mother. Before my boy was born, I was in such delicate health that the doctor didn't think I would survive the ordeal. For weeks after he wasbornm life was despaired of, so I couldn't feed hits and the poor little fellow was left to the care of friends. He wasn't naturally strong. No care was taken in choosing his food and his poor little stomach became so weakened that he couldn't keep anything on it. As he was getting no nourishment from his food, he was gradually wasting away. Finally, in desperation, we sent for a child specialist and he said that sty boy was statving to death. He gave him some medicine and advised a certain diet The child did improve but sotrtehow couldn't seem to get strong. This went on for four or five years and the boy still continued weak,and puny Looking. He could not play like other children without having to lie down and rest. My sister who lives on a farm near the sea, said that she could fix hint np if I would send hint to her. While 1 hated being separated from him, I ' was ready to make any sacrifice to get him strong. Ile was away from me for three mohths and it was with feelings of great excitement that I awaited his return as my sister had written me that I would be surprised when I saw my boy. When my sister got off the train, I could not believe that it was my own boy that site was leading by the hand. I never sawffsuch a change in any child- He wasffat and rosy and full of lite with a happy smile! 'What on earth have you done to him,' I said. 'Why,' she replied, 'I simply made him live out of doors, gave him good food—and here's the real secret, 1 gave hits three bottles of Carnot, Before be had taken half a bottle his whole appearance had changed. He got heavier, his face took on a colour and he would run round for hours at a time.' The change in my boy is the most wonderful event in my life. I mut a regular 'fan' for Carnol and never lose a chance to boost it As I write I aha looking out of the window and when I see that rosy, active, healthy child rimming round, I cannot believe that he was once a puny, delicate boy." Carnol is sold by your druggist, and if you can conscientiously say, after you have tried it, that it hasn't done you any good, return the empty bottle to him and he will refund yonr money. 5-623 For Sale by E. Umbach, Phm. B. 4 Toronto, Ont.—Ontario accomplish- ed nearly 1,000 miles of road im- provement, including grading, cul- verts and bridge work in 1922, at a coat of approximately 61.0,000,000. Of this 20 per cent. of the cost will be borne by the municipalities. 40 per cent by the Ontario Government and 40 per cent. by the federal gov- ernment. There were 1,300 culverta constructed, 25 bridges and two rail- way subways. Ottawa, Ont.—People of British origin constitute 56.4 per cent. of Can- ada's population in 1921, according to a statement issued by the Dominion bureau of statistics. In 1921 English made up 28.90 per cent. of the popu- lation; Irish, 12.60 per cent.; Scotch, 18.36 per cent.; French, 2if.91 per cent., and all other European races, 8.59 per cent. Asiatics were leas than one per cent. of the population in 1921. More than 68 per cent. of the population in 1921 were of Brit- ish and French racial stocks. Montreal, Que.--By the passing of an order -in -council at. Ottawa sanc- tion was formally given to the con - We' own and offer $5500,000.00 C.N.R. 5 per cent. Fully Registered Income Charge Debentures DUE: MAY 6, 1980 Secured by a mortgage on the Canadian National Railway System, now owned and operated by the Government of the DOMINION OF CANADA f _ Profit on 75. Equal tc 9 0 50o Per annum • 1 .hJ /Investment / Over % Simple Int. Price on application G. A.tSTIMSON & CO. Limited. Established 1888. BONI) DEALERS FOR OVER 36 YEARS 36 King St. East. Toronto.