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The Clinton New Era, 1916-07-27, Page 4PAGE FOUR,. plS CLINTON' NBW :BRA, MAGIC READ THE BAKING"' A{,UM POWDER WATCH YOUR STEP IT TELLS YOUR WORTH Do you know that your walk be,. trays your disposition? IE you slouch along an observer doesn't havo to be a medium of any kind to ,recognize a lazy disposition. A slouching walk with the steps dragging along the ground denotes mental weakness and indecision. It showe .lack of effort as well as lazinese. And it: shows no desire to have ate attractive walk, too. Without a doubt a great deal of the instincts and sentiments ot wo- man is shown by the manner in which she walks. A free and graceful walk is something to strive or. It indi- cates a well, balanced. mind, :rength of purpose, and good judgment. There is a confidence imparted by a good, erect, firm, and gracetul carriage. People who walk slowly, taking long strides, raising their bodies on the tips of their toes, and taking allort steps, have volatile and •irresolute natures. They are lacitipg - in self- confidence. They veer front one point to another and are incapable of a decided opinion. They lack tihe charm ot poise, too. Walking with toes turned in indi- cates a self-opinionated nat :re and a stubborn one. You give the empres cion by this walk that, right or wrong, if you make up your mind you can't; be induced to alter it. \Stalking with the toes pointed straight ahead heli. Dates an open and generous nature, R shows self-confidence and great in. dependence. People wito walk with a free air and swinging stride and with the head thrown well back have fearless and courageous natures. This walk de- notes force, command, and productive energy. People who walk with a slow and undulating movement areartistic and imaginative, They are dreamy and indolent and capricious in their likes and dislikes. They are incapable of exertion and still lees of persever- ance. Notice your friends' walks an see if you cannot tell their ch. "actors, and take your observation as a bit of caution for your. own walk. LET SAWM LLS BURN But Guard the Forests, Armies Quo bee Forester Warmly Ellwood Wilson, forester of the Laurentide Paper Company, Quebec province, writes as follows; Imagine the manufacturer with his whole stock of raw material for his lifetime piled up in one storehouse. Would he have it insured? Would auto. uratic sprinklers be installed? Would he have a watchman or so on the premises? Would you if you were that manufacturer? Let me carry the Dawdle' a Little further, and ask what you would do If you knew that the destruction of your stock of raw material meant the destruction of the elements from which it could be re- produced and the supply for your children and grandchildren. The forest is such a storehouse and on it depends our most important in- dustries, the stability and continuity of our Waterpowers, the welfare of our agricultural population, the com- fort of our daily lives. The private timberland owner is just as vitally in- terested in fire protection for Ilis woodlands as any manufacturer. He might far better Iet Itis saw -mill, his sulphite plant, hie paper -mill go en- iusured and spend the money in pro- tecting his forests. In a year or two Ile can rebuild his mill, he can easily borrow the money for the purpose and go on just as before. But he cannot reproduce his forests. After a bad fire .the sot! itself is partially or wholly destroyed and it the fire has been of any extent the distance from the nearest source of seed may be too far away far natural reforestation to take place. I have seen a tract of land of about ten square miles in extent which after lfifty-six years has not a stick of mer- chantable timber on it although cov- ered with a growth of small birch and aspen, which is alread;• past its prime, and not only is there no mer- chantabie timber hut on this whole tract there are but 1,280 spruce and balsam trees not over three inches in diameter. The average percentage of burned over land which is not repro- ducing in Quebec is 16% or about 10,697 square miles and that o1- which reproduction has begun is 12.9%, Triumph of German "Kultur" ' A German soldier wearing a safety Mask and carrying a poison gas plant on hits back. Several kinds of gases are used but mainly aim- ., #no, bromine, carbon monoxide. These poisonous vapors some times rise, as high as 800 feet n the air. ' Tey are of a greenish color at the 'base, growing yellow toward the tole HUSBAND SAVED HIS WIFE Stopped Most Terrible' Suf- fering by Getting Her Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta- ble Compound. Denison, Texas. —"After my little girl was born two years ago I began suf- fering with female trouble and could• hardly do my work. I was very nervous but just kept drag- ging on until last summer when I got where I could not do my work. I would have a chill every day and hot flashes and dizzy spells and my head would al - roost burst. I got where I was almost a walking skeleton and life was a burden to me until one day my husband's step- sister told my husband if he did not do something for me I would not last long and told him to get your medicine. Soho got Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound forme, and after taking the first three doses I began to improve. I con- tinued its use, and I have never had any female trouble since, 'I feel that Iowa my life to you and your remedies. They did for me what doctors could not do and I will always praise it wherever I go. "—Mrs. G. O. LownRY, 419 W.Mon- terey Street, Denison, Texas. If you are suffering from any form of female ills, get a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and commence the treatment without delay. THE QL EEN OF SWEDEN, who has had remarkable ,ill -luck 1 choosing dates 'Por her visits to her ehilrihtooct home in Karls- ruhe, Baden. On (both occasions since the war began, Prench aer oplanes have 'bombarded the city close to the pelage while was "theca. SUNDAY SCHOOL Lesson V.—Third Quarter, For July 30, 1916. THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Text of the Lesson, 1 Cor. 1, 18, to ii, 5. Memory Verses, 'i, 22 -24 --Golden Text, Gal. vi; 14e—Commentary Pre - '.pared by Rev. D. M. Stearns. It is not many weeks since we had a Whitsuntide study in I Cor, ii, and now we are to have three studies in the letters to the Corinthians, with an- other a few weeks triter. The epistles tell us of the church in this age and bow we should live to glorify God, and therefore these studies ought to be most helpful. May the Spirit speak to our hearts. Sosthenes, who is as- sociated with Paul in this epistle, was one of the rulers of the synagogue who was privileged to suffer sbame public- ly fdr Christ's sake (1, 1; Acts xviii, 17). The church of God at Corinth meant the company of sinners who had become saints by believing the good news concerning Jesus Christ and re- ceiving Him as their Saviour. How great sinners they had been is seen in chapter vi, 9, 10; but, being purchased with precious blood, they were now in Christ Jesus, saints, wash- ed, sanctifiedand justified, wholly by the grace of God, apart from any mer- it or works of theirs (1, 2.4; vi, 11; Acts xx, 28). They were saved by the cross of Christ, which is the pow pow- er of God (I, 18). Christ Jesus was made unto them, as He is to all be- lievers, wisdom and righteousness and sanctification and redemption, (1, 2, 1. e, 80), for all that Christ is before' God He makes His redeemed to be. As He is so are we in this world (I John iv, 17), which may mean that as He is before God so He makes His people to be even while we remain in these mortal bodies. There is another truth in this, and that is that as the world regards and treats •Ilia we must ex- pect the same, for we are here for Him, in His name, as His witnesses. Although the staudiug before God in Christ or overt' saved sinner is so abe solutely perfect, let hi these mortal bodies we are weakness itself, so that he had to reprove these believers as being carnal because or their envying and strife and factions, standing for this or that teacher Instead of glorying in the Lord alone 0, 29. 81; iii, 1-7, 21- 23; Ise. 11, 22). Because of their un- worthy conduct some were weak and sickly and some were dying, forgetting that if we would judge ourselves we might escape much chastening of the Lord (chapter xi, 30.82). We must ex- pect trials, but we shall never have more thap Re will give us grace to bear (chapter x, 131, and we should be careful not to bring unnecessary trials upon ourselves. The wisdom of this world and every arm of flesh we must persistently turn away from, and, though we may be foolish and weak and base and of no account in the eyes Make the Liver Do %its Duty Nine times in tea when the liver , right the itomech'sod bowels are right. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILI, gently but brmlycom- pel a lazy liver to doitsduty. Cure. Con- stipation. indiges- tion, Sick Headwalls, sad Distress after Eating. Sandi Pita, acral! Deas, Small Pio` Gentablie matt bear Signature giVirgiNCEMIVIgrirownweggit of the world, yet it Tully ylelaed to Christ He will be glorified in us. Apart from Him we are nothing and can do nothing, but we can do alt things through Christ, who strengtheneth us (xv, 10; John v, 5; Phil. 1v, 13). Probably the greatest reason why our Christian experience does not measure up to our standing, why wo are not as to our daily life wbat we ought to be, is because we fail to grasp by faith what we really are in Christ, and, not seeing the fullness which is already ours in Him, we try to attain to It by our own efforts. If we only knew by believing what is written what is tbe hope of His calling and what the rleltee of the glory of His inheritance in the'salnts and what is the exceeding, greatness of Ells power toward us' (Epi, 1, 18, 19), we would live better lives because of what'we really are in Christ before God. Next to the assur- ance of what we are now because of His dnished work there is nothing so purifying, separating, uplifting, as the knowledge of what we shall be at His coming (1 John iii, 1.3). Note what is written in this epistle concerning it in chapters i, 7; iv, 5; vi, 2; xi, 26; mv, 23.51; are 22, and may the thought of fellowship with Him in His king- dom and glory make us more gladly willing to have fellowship with Him now in humiliation and guttering (I John i, 3; Phil. 131, 10). He is pleas- ed to call us "laborers together with Him," and yet He does it all, working' to us both to will and to do of His good pleasure (chapter iii, 9; Phil. 18; Heb, x111, 20, 21), We are bought with.a price, even the precious blood,, of Christ, that we may be temples of the Holy Spirit, who worketb in each one as He will when He can have the' right of way in us (chapter vi, 19, 20e xli, 7-11). The one only foundation is Jesus Christ, the sure foundation (chapter iii, 11; Ise, xxviii, 16; I Pet, 0. 6), all else being as sand, a refuge of lies (Matt. vii, 20, 27; Ise. xxvil, 17). But we may be safely on this foundation and yet so build, so live, that the betiding, the daily 1ife, not being acceptable to God, shall not be approved in that day, but rejected and tbe believer suffer ir- reparable loss and find himself just barely saved—saved as'by fire (chapter' 10, 12.15). This was evidently what Vaul had in mind when he spoke o1 denying self that his service might not be disapproved or rejected (chapter Ix, 25-27, R. V.). We may not judge others till the evidence is all in, but we may and should judge ourselves al- ways by the question: Will ' Ro ap- prove? 7a this of the Lord? •••••••••••I>N,••�••••••••o• •' • Tswn and Country • • wNN111ar111�1.1 a•1�N�N Pt R. G. Jackson of Kippen is list ed with the killed at the front, At a meetint, of the Trustee Board of Main Street Church, Exeter, on Monday evening it was decided to build a new abed on the site of the shed I,hat was burned ten days ago. The new shed will be of cement blocks and metallic roof and 30 by 50 feet in size. The trustees consider the loss ,to he about 5600. There woe no insurance. Oaven Presbyterian Church, EE'xeter, has just completed the installation of of a motor blower for their organ, the propelling power being hydro electric. A pretty wedding took place at Col borne Street Methodist Churcb, Brant ford, at 5 o'clock Wednesday afternoon when Edna eldest daughter of Me. and Mrs. W. 3. Verity, Mimed y of. Exeter WAS united in marriage to Lieut. 'Vit ton Wallace' flitehon., of the 204th Overseas 13attahon, A pretty wedding took place at the home of Mr, and Mrs. D. Itea at Wvox titer o" Monday, when their oniydaugh ter, Florence, became the pride of Stanley Hennings, son of Mr and Mrs. H. Kennings, of Turnberrv. Rev. Mr. Gibson, of Belmore, officiated, Mt'. And Mrs. }Jennings left on the after noun train for Meese, Sask., Ofiiciil,t word was received at ford' wick at noon on Wednesday of last Week that Pte Wilfrid Montgomery had been' kilted in action in France on June 180h. Mee Frank Graham, of Heiman, has received the sad intelligence that ber brother Robert Jackson was killed in action on the J3ti of lime. Mr. A. Nichol, who hes been engag ed in the blackamithing business in Wingbam for some yearn, has Hecept ed a position sus traveling represents tive for the Capewell. Horse Nail Co, of Montreal and haseentetecl upon hie: duties. 1111 SEE SIZE OF ARMIES ii New. York saw 132,000 men in the "Preparedness" parade march twenty abreast past the reviewing stand in twelve hours on one marching day, The Tlnited States army at its full 'strength of 120,000 men could pass in about eleven .hours—loss than a day. The dead of Germany atone in the war are put by British official figures at 700,000, That number would take> more than five marching days to pass. The British Empire's army of 5,000,000 ' men would take more than thirty-six days—six weeks of daily marching.— New York World. A Veteran of Veterans TWO LONG YEARS.44++++++++4-i''+.4 +++++++t r,'+ a MY LADY'S DE SUFFERED COLUMN. +++++++++..... Fruit -a -tires" Made flim Feel As If Walking On Air YOUR GUEST TOWELS. OIuMLie, ONT., Nov, 28th, 1914. "For over two years, I was troubled Four Pretty Insertions Suitable For Curtains and Bureau Covera. with •Constipation, Drowsiness, Lark of Appeals and Headaches, Otto day 2 saw your sign which read "]''reit-a-lives make you feel like walking on air." This appealed to me, so I decided to try a box. In a very short time, Y began: to feel better, and now I feelfine, I have a good appetite, relish everyth iii„ I eat, and the .]Headaches are gone entirety. I recommend this pleasanl frail medicine to all my friends ", DAN MCLEAN, 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial sip, 25c. At all. dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit- a-tives Limited, Ottawa. - • S'I TUSK EQCIS. Clever Girls Are Making These For Their Guest Rooms, This egg basket is hexagonal shaped, with dull gold tutor its cotta Eitr91 panel ie draped with tiny French roses and their leaves. to the 1it1 is fitted a ra PTE. TERRENCE GLAZIER of Brockville, Ontario, 71 years old, saw two months' service in the trenches with a British regiment. In spite of has age he got to the firing line and did his bit for the Empire for which he fought pre- viously in the Boer War, Fenian Raid and Northwest Rebellion. ALL FOR THE EMPIRE All Races Testify With Words and Deeds of Sacrifice ' After commenting upon the expres- sions of loyalty from the great colonial statesman, Church Life says: And not only the great Dominions sponte. Le- wenika, chief of the L'arotse, made utterance: "We shall stand always to be under `the British flag." And Grif- fith, chief of the Basuto, said: "I ask whether, as my King le engaged in fighting Ibis enemies, 1, his servant, will do well -to keep aloof mid watch him being attacked." Somali chiefs ,arrayed themselves "As one with the government against the Germans—our- selves, our warriors, our women, our ;children. By God, it is so." In little islands of the seas, scarcely known even by Hume to most of us, "the small children of tee Empire as they called ,themselves, stood up to help the king- dom of Ring George." ! The chief of the Mohawks in the Six Nations' Council. Chamber, told how in ancient days a warrior of his people, if captured by an enemy, was ,effete& the alternative—to remain ,with the women and children in ignominious safety, or to seek free- dom by passing through the path of fire which his captors bad -prepared. He told how the braves of his people never hesitated, and called on their descendants to follow through the Path of fire at the call of the Bing. And the whole world—allies, ene- )nies, neutrals—knows that it has not been a lip loyalty. Froin those great days of August, 1914, onward, there has been. throughout the Empire "silence and the mustering of men," and men inspired by tine "faith and fire within them" have marched forth in steady streams and have Bailed across the seas. Ypres, 8t, Julien, Festubert, "Anzac," the South and East African campaigns—these names with many other, bear silent abiding testimony to Me reality of lave and ,Empire, MODEST LADY DRUMMOND Leads In Many Useful Forms of War Work Ona of Lady Drummond's striking traits is her essentially modest nature. She loves the work she undertakes sufficiently in itself, seeking no praise tor what she accomplishes. One of her greatest efforts has been the establishment in London of the Maple Leaf Club whose hospitality baa done so much for Canadian soldiers who do not know their way - about the great city, Mr. Steel Maitland, who presided at a concert in London at- tended by the Anglo -Canadian cont. munity in full strength, told the Audi -t enee that he has been besought by Lady Drummond on no account to lnention her name. Lae Drummond. thlso works among the Canadian pris- oners OEar in w Ger3nariY. The statue of Florence Nightingale, unveiled at London in 1916, le the idrst statue of a woman ever erected ie that city, except the statues of Royalty. CAS-TORIA Por Infants and Children dee Use For Over 30 YeerS Always bears the pp� �yy Sigfiature of 4� �. a' eeig TIM ULTRA RD:11Pr . tiny mirror held by gul'i braid, and the basket is filled with best quality pow der and tndividunl 7n les mode of all sorbent cotton tied' with bully ragman. Children Ory FOR FLETCHER'S CA.S 'tl ORI A Now for the exodusto the sum- mer resorts. Business and Shorthand Westervelt - vent School Y M C. A. Budding: is London, Ontario College in Session Sept. 1st to July Catalogue.Free. • Enter any time. J. W. Westeryelt, Principal ' Insertion No. 1.—First Row -3 sp, 2 W, O ep. Second Row -2 ep, 1 be 5 sp. Third Row -2 sp, 2 bl, 2 ap, 1 bl, 1sp. Fourth Row -1 ep, 1 51, 1 ep, 1 bl, 2 Sp, 1 bl, 1 sp. Fifth Row -1 sp, 1 bl, 1 Bp, 1 ht, 2 sp, 1 bl, 1 sp. Sixth Row -2 sp, 2 51. 2 sp, 1 51, 1 sp, Seventh Row -2 sp, 1 bi, 5 sp. Eighth Row -2 sp, 2 51, 8 sp. Ninth Row -5 ap, 1 bl, 2 sp. Tenth Row -1 sp, 1 51, 2 sp, 2 he ,2 sp. . Eleventb Row -1 sp, 1 51, 2 sp, 1 bl, 1sp, 151,1sie.-, Twelfth Row -1 sp, 1 be 2 sp, 1 be 1 Bp, 1 bl, 1 sp. Thirteenth Row -1 89,.1 bl, 2 sp, 251,2ap, Fourteenth Row -5 sp, 1 be 2 sp. Fifteenth Row -3 sp. 2 bl, 3 sp. Sixteenth Row -2 ep, 1 51, 5 sp. Seventeenth Row -1 sp, 1 51, 2 ap, 2 bl, 2 sp. Repeat from first row. Insertion No. 2 -First Row -3 ap,' 1 bi, 8 sp. Second Row -2 sp, 1 bl, 1 ap, 1 bl, 2 sp. Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Rows -1 ep, 1 bl, 3 ep, 1 bl, l sp. Ninth Row 2 sp, 1 b1, 1 sp, 1 bi, 2 sp. Tenth Row -3 sp, 1 bi, 3 sp. Eleventh Row -2 Bp, 1 be 1 Bp, 1 51, 2 89. 1 Twelfth Row—i spi 1 51, 1 sp, 1 bi, 1 spi 1 b1, 1 ap, Thirteenth Row -2 sp, 1 51, 1 sp, 1 10, 2 sp. Fourteenth Row -3 $ pi 1b, 3 89. Fifteenth Row2 sp,1 51, 1 ap, 1 51, 2 sp. Repeat from first row. Insertion No. 3—First Row --3 ap, 1 b1, 3 sp. Second Row -2 sp, 1 51, 1 sp, 1 bl, 2 sp, Third Row -1 sp, 2 51, 1 sp, 2 51, 1. sp. ., Fourth Row -1 sp, 1 bi, 3 sp, 1 bl, 1 sp. Filth Row -3 sp, 1 bl, 3 sp. Sixth Rom -1 ap, 1 bl, 3 sp, 1 10,1 sp. Seventh Row -1 sp, 2 be 1 Bp, 2 h1, 1 sp. Eighth Row -2 sp, 1 b1, 1 sp, 1 51, 2 ap. Ninth Row -3 sp, 1 bl, 3 sp. Repeat from first row. Insertion No. 4—First Row -1 sp, 1 bl, 1 sp, 3 53, 1 sp. Second Row -1 sp. 1 10, 1 spi 1 bl, 1 ap, 1 be 1 sp. Third Row -1 sp, 3 b1,1 ap,1 51,1 sp. 1 Fourth 511Rowe--1 ap, 1 bl, 5 sp. Fifth Row -1 sp, 8 51, 1 sp, 1 bl, 1 sp. Sixth Row -1 ap, 1 bi, 1 sp, 1 51, 1 sp,, 8 . Seventh Row -1 sp, 1 bi, 1 sp, 3 bl, 1 sp. Eighth Row -5 sp, 1 51, 1 sp. Ninth Row -1 sp, 1 be 1 Sp, 8 bi, 1 sp. I spi thbi, Row1ep—.- 1 sp, 1 51, 1 sp, 1 bl, Teni ' Repeat from first row. Get your job printing clone at The New Era office. Sdow but sure has been the pro - greets on the west (front. Tbwt'sdsy, July 21T, 1916. Preserved Raspberries will keep their natural color if you use Mantic Suaar. the pure cane sugar which dissolves at once. Order by , name in original packages. 2 and 54b cartons 10 and 20-1b bags PRESERVING LABELS FREE Send red ball trade -mark cutfrom abagorcartonto Atlantic Sugar Refineries Ltd. Power nem., Montreal 43 Frangipan Cream Pie. Cut three circular pieces of paste- ' nine inches in diameter, place on bak- ing sheet, prick with fork and bake. Put together with Franglpan cream, for which mix two-thirds cupful pow- dered sugar and one-third cupful dour, add yolks of three eggs and one wholm egg, slightly beaten; one-fourth tea- spoonful salt and one cupful scalded' milk and cook over hot water fifteen minutes. Add two tablespoonfuls but- ters uttert two tablespoonfuls macaroons (dried and rolled), two-thirds teaspoon- ful vanilla and two-thirds teaspoon- NO lemon extract. Crop prospects are looking up wonderfully these days. , Unable To Sleep Or Do Any Work. SUFFERED FROM HER NERVES, ' Mrs. Thomas Harris, 8 Corrigan St., Kingston, Ont., writes: "I had been a constant sufferer, for many years, with, my nerves, and was unable to sleep at night, or do any work through' the day. I at last decided to consult a doctor and find out what was really the trouble. The first one told me I would have to go under an operation before I would be well, but I would not consent to this. One day I took a fit of crying, and it seemed that if anyone spoke to me I would have to order them out of the house. I must have been crying two hours when my insurance agent cause in. He advised axe• to try a box of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, and I at once sent to the drug store and got two boxes, and before' I had Mein taken I felt like a different. person. I have told others about them, and they have told me they would not be without them. I am very thankful I started to take 7,4ilburn'e Heart anal Nerve Pills,l' Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are - 50 ceats per box, or 3 boxes for $1.25, at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of' price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited. Toronto, Oat. D i Y E �i�i P fl ti= W Oksa7 Warp taco PIM IMO 00 yo:: real me l:at you must now foresee your requirements ? Do you grasp the fact that after September 16th there will be no more stepping into a liquor shop and buying a bottle as you need it? Size up your requirements for the next year or more—cud buy now. A case of whisky hie good investment— at the prwcs we are quoting. Any k.nd of spirits you use in your home may be bought from us to -day at lower prices than you can possibly expect to pay outside the Province after Prohibition goes into effect. And. so with wines. Take Scotch Whisky. Think of " Dewar's Special" at $12.00 a case! This brand tclii h you, ordinarily pay $1.50 a quart for, you can now buy from us at a dollar. We are Selling direct to the consumer at these wholesale prices: (ALL PRICES QUOTED ARE F.O.B. TORONTO) . CANADIAN WHISKY . Per Case G. &. W. Special 59,75 G. & W. Ordinary 7,50 Walker's Imperial Qts,5.50 Walker's Club Qts" 10.50 Weiker's. itYe Qts, 7 ,`20 Seagram's '83 Qts 9.00 Seagram's Star Qts 7,50 Seagram's White Wheat moos WWI Corby's Special Selected10,, 00 aja Sovereign Qts 8.00 am National Qta 6,50 Per Cal, G. & W. Special ,,.,,, 53.75 0.8 W. Rye, 2 year old. 2,50 G. & W. Rye, 5 year old. 3.00 Walker's banana) 3,75 Walker's Club, 4.50 Sovereign Rye ' 3,50 SCOTCH WHISKY Pcr Cosa Mackie's White Morse Ots $13.50 lvtackle,s Laird o' Lan- gan, 20 year old 16,00 ;Tull Top Qts 13,00 Teacher's Highland Cream Qts.,....,.,. 12,50 Usher's O.V.G. Qts 'Yel- low Label.,. ... ,13,00 Usher's Special Reserve,. White Label 13.50 Usher's Green Stripe Qts. 14,50 SCOTCH WHISKY Per Case Usher's G,0,01,, Black Label 15.00 Ushers The Very Finest20.00 Dewar's Special Qts, Yellow Label 12,00 Dewar's Blue Label Qts13.50 Dcwar's Special Liqueur15 ,(10 Dewar's Extra Special Liqueur - 17,00 Buchtanat,,'s Red Seal Qts2.30 B chs n n'a Black &S14.OD Walker's Kilmarnock, White Label 14.50 Walker's Kilmarnock, Red Label 15,50 Walker's KIlinarnock, Black Label,,, 17,00 McCallunr's Perfection Qts, 14,00 King George IV. Top Notch 13,00 King Winimn IV 18.50 Per Gal, I•Iill, Thompson & Co. I0111,Thompson & Co$5.50 6.50 Perfection 7,00 RUM Per Case Burke's Jamaica Rum ,113,00 Sherriff's Jamaica' Bell" 12,00 Buccaneer Jamaica.. , , , 11,00 If you prefer brandsnot mentioned In above Iist,we can, Probably supply you at equally attractive prices. Containers for Btilk Liquor will be charged as follows 5 Gallon KO, $1.25. 10 Gallon Keg, 81.50 -;f 5 Gallon Jnr, 75c. 6 Gallon Demijohn, $1.00,'' Minimum quantity sold, is One Case or 5 Catton Lots, Terms Net Cash, f.o.b., Toronto.., �csrimrceer�vascsamea�satrrsa>a�w.tSJ����. GINS Per Case ,Ino, Dc Kuyper Imperial Qts., 15 bottles $17.50 Van 7.legler Imperial Qts„ 15 bottles„ , „ , 15,00 Coate's Plymouth. 11,50 Gordon Dry Gin 10.00 Burnett's Dry Gin 10.50 Booth's Old Tont 11,00 Ross' Irish Sloe Gin, , , , 12,00 Per Gal. Holland Gin, London Dry Gin, and 010 To,n 0,, $4,00 IRISH WHISKY Per Case Burke's Imperial 000. .516.50 Burke's Ordinary Qts,,, 12,00 Bushmili's Gus 1.3,00 Balbriggan lin pori aI Qts15,00 Balbriggan Ordinary 910 11.00 r3RANDY - Per Case ktennessy One Star -cats, $17;00 Hennessy Two Star Qts18 , 00 Hennessy Three Star Qts 19,00 I•Iennessy V.O. Qts 23,00 Marten One Star Qts, 17,00 Martell TWD- Star -QW , 18.00 MartellThree Star Qta•19,05 Martell V S.O.P,,,,, .., 24,00 Juba Robin 010 14,00 BRANDY Per Case Sarerac Qts 13,00 La Rose Qts 12,00 Per Gni. Brandy... -frost 85.00 to $7.00 PORT Per Case Convido $13.50 Commendador 16.00 Taylor's Tronco,17.00 Magnifico 8 00 Priornto 9,00 Per Gal, Port from $3.00 to 07 , 00 SHERRY Per Case 15ando 915,00 Ruenccerd's Emperador, 17,0D Fuethcerd'a Oloroso 10,00 Magnifico.., ,.,.,, , 8.00 Per Gal. Sherry from $2.00 to $7.00 WATERS • White hock Qts., 50 bottles. $7.50 White hock Pts., 100 bottles 10.50 White Rock Splits (N.), 100 bottles 8,50 GEORGE J. FOY, Limited 32-34 Front St. West, Toronto 1 Inn mate. ael MEW doral sem nese e