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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1908-08-13, Page 3Ort-* . • 14;;^ August lath. IA•t t3 Sovereign Bank Sues Stewart and Others. Montreal, Mg. ath.,,..A.111.ctiov ter 4t6,330 wait today - catered bY the 40W/reign, Dank Of Canada agaiust '4141110a4 M Stewart. f6rmartY Ecatral manager or the bank, and CieOrga J. WilliS, Charles E. Pansitall EA D. 'IL 7eatherston. - "PeatherSton and Wflh1s. were °Metals 40 the head Ofdee Of 00 bank et Ur- smt.o, Charlea X.14001%11 was the Noce York agent of the batik. ',The ,action is said to be in eounec, ton, with ,eertein advaneo3. made by the defendants. 1/•••••,!••••17•••••••!..P.fr••••••17.•*•••••••••••• ...,1 111 AlgortgaIri Park. • r - The Algenquin Pad t of Ontario fast becoming popular tor anglers and 'those fond of the woods and put -door life. The Grand Trunk Railway Sys- tem have received a letter from a high Goyeramentoofticial of the State Of Ckinnectigut, who has juet'returned from- a few days itt the centime of that delightful Park. Ile Says "Some weeks ago T. sealer and ,ob-. tained a Grand Trunk folder relating to )Algonquin- Park. The printed mat. ter received was very hrteresting reading: -Rut lied 'the Oppiortunity of learning within a 'Sew days that the beatitio,i of the Park WOOS not eVerdrawn, and :that the fishing Ob. tabled:there ',ives the beat 1 have ha,d the:privilege a enjoying, although 'The Orsn'fl 1 Trunk Pasqingcr / have. tsued the tout waters of pa.rfinellh are in reoCiPt. 91 a letter priite Edward bland, through the crop.' e'-prominellt NOw 'Yorker COMO,' vanadtan,14),arentian sections, and in *noting them ell their "Xeelleat dining coior440 and wynining lobe /jaw oar serviee. .110- says: :"'My wife and I left 'New York en you train at 4.42 p. ra. last MendaY1 .Y.ewt2rdaY, I arrived at Algonquin Park trent ImEning ; we had breakfast On your TOrOhlto on /the 27t1i of June and on dioing car and everything was sa sup7 tho, 221.41 1 ett tho:hote,1 for Smoke and One, food, cuisine,:' Service; attention Raigo Loxes, arriving at Smoke • 'that I think it my 'duty to coMpli:.' Lake )ate Sunday ,nvg.ning, June 29th. •Inent the road on this branch a tut) 11starred. for Crown ..Lake the Iti/Xt * A vice. morning and Oohed in that lake and had good luck, catching square tailed • • trout. ThiS lake IS 0144(10 of the A reyolntionary outbreak is threat- Park. As I started for my headviar- ened in Ooltnrabia; :•ters. at the Park i June 30th, on My DfOori Crazy by the heat, two men neturn trip I :fished in 'Ragged and etstmuotcd :aolgide. at Brooklyn. Smoke Lakes fOr Safirion" trout, 'Laing 4;Erickseni the Danish c$plorer, and companions have perished , %reen1and. The British steamer Kirkwall was ink in collision. ..f.t is net known ffhether• the. 'crew Were all saved. • •L'i!.11ondaras has deelieed to revoke the resident's decree cancelling the ex- iquaturs f Ametioan Consuls. Catharines City Council has, can- 4el1etytiii4renchiSec,Of the Falls Power e'..; The C. P. R. ' are 'said taheim- orting men trent Chicage te take the Ides* of the striking mechanics. • , The bodies of twe mens one white , - 'lid the other colored were found in he bush near Vancouver, and - the 4ffair is a mystery. •••,' •. EAT WHAT YOU WN4T.• • But Find the Way to Digest What f You Do Eat. The first tiling: to do in•. -the ,ceso of indigestion or stomach weaknesS is,te :gtrengthen the muscular walls of the stomach and intestines, so that they *ill cage :for the food that is eaten. ./ta to other way can this be done .' as wrill as by taking a Mi-o-na tahletrhe- Ur each Meals 'i'hie" restores.Strength lo the stomach" muscles and stimulat- es the pouring • out of gastric juices;,. then •the fond digest§ readily and you, hegin to get the full benefit from what 40U sat. : 'Use Mi-o-na, wheneter you have siek headache, heaxtburn, -bad taste- in the• mouth, coated tongue, spots before tha efeS; sleeplessness and thelnany other ' symptoms that are the atteet-result of ;;ledigestion. , ' W. S. R. Hohnea' gives With eirerk. 50 cent box of Mi-o-na a goaraintee to refund the money 'unless the remedy cures. a deep water troll and brown minnow for bait, Between four and five o' - °leek I caught two salmontrout, one of them weighedeighteen pouods, and measured thirty-two inches in length. AS my stay was only three days in the Perk, I•mean,•to know Moro about this Place and shall try to Io. in there again this fall. DeseriPtions of localities And. prospectus of rail- roads are oftentimes disappointing. Many times I think it is due to the fact that the.Oictures are greatly overdrawn, bul from •inf: experience I should say that your /folder does not •clescribe: this ;beautiful country known, is the Algooquin park in bright colors' as the6 facts warrant. ,Since, my return 1 -met a friend of United States "Congressman Ede ward W. Higgins ot NorW'oh, Conn., who Open :my advice- is now fishing mn the 'Park in company With. his wile He writes me that all !: told him regarding the poentry is true, only that ,I shoold have said more," ' • Mr. John Ferguson, ex -M. P., died it; New Ontarioe '• .' • . Arthur Lucas Was burned • to death at Reachville,..New 'Brunswick, . . . The first ef the twenty locomotives haing„built at Termite for the Grand Trunk Paeifie have been turned out Already' there are employed west, .;of Wirtnipeg Along. the lino 07 locomotiv- es. As the .company • eXpects, te,rassist in the inOvement of thc. present crop, which promisez e er, ,there •al,V'Vreh lea* 100 leeornotivee working on the prairie .seetion • by the end of thi3 auturan. rerboaramokoWetasite,~0,40#4APeett 0."....................., ,,,,,,-77 ' • - -------" 1 ELECTRO CHEMICAL Are guaranteed to.out e -Rheumatism •and Neuralgia'. The Eleetro-Chemieel Rings is not an ignorant di ti Or fait • ure, u n swan 1 c met 11 11 tion of uric acid from the blood. The- secret, the . power, the merit ie thieringlies in the combinatinti • of the various metals of which the ring is made., No matter whet the trmible is, if it is caused he rIccets ' of uric acid, The Blectro-Chemical Ring Will effect a cure, Looks jest like any other ring. .Can, worn day and night. We guarantesthese Rings.to . do all we claitn. • . • Call and Examine These Rings. W. R. Jeweler and Engraver. .001111tera- , issUer of Marriage Licenses , 1 inene„we n Fair. Greategt Live Stock ExhibitiOtt . of Western Ontario' Pun Programme of Attractions twice daily, including Remp's Wftd West MOT. Best of Mueid. Fireworks Each Evening. A1HLET10 .1)AYMONDAY, SEPT. 14. • Come arid enjoy' keurielf at London's Popular, Fair - • REDUCED RATES ON ALL RAILROADS Prize List, Entry Poems, PrOgramuleas and all information given On•appileation to Peesident • A. NI„ !MINT, See" -ondon, -Sept., hI ILI1tLU ' fi',1 4.. Odd Events That at Times De• . maralire Veterans. HORRORS INCIDENT T.0 WAR. Two TerrifYlrn fOleorftla That 0°' ourred During the Franoo-Preselan catrapsion-,Matinass May Seize lZvett '• the Melt linedtuted Troorte. . • . • ••.• It ',Is 'A peculiar cireutnetanee • tbat hardened and trained trot:me will go throughs tong fight surronaded by 'all the; boom* that are ' insepara'ble • from war witboet Illuching and with the ntmelt Apparent eallononess •and the mania men WIII be struck twitted by a Single trifling incident; Every war of any imPOrtance. Par- tleularke wars' between civilized na, Ilona, la prolific la Incidents of tritlal character in them'selves; but 00 en, uoual and unnatural that they appeai. th• the natural instinctive horror of men nioreeuddenly 014 intensely than perhaps the main terrors of days of carnage._ Such an inaidentlo ,the one, for elfiniple, which occtirred at the battle of 'Worth, in the early days ef the Praneo-Prussian War. In the beat Of • the great • battle a, wing of the Prussian army *aff Charg- ed byte ,reginoeuts of French entrap. Mere its the „hope of turning the wing .S14 facilitating the failing back of the French, infantry; Bat the cuirasfilers were driven heel; ,by the unflinching Proosiane,, Again the euiraSsiers cbarged, and again they- were driven .back by the -Withering fire. ...For a third time they,. came down , . again; andas., the enemy waited for 'them, to draw nearer mi horribleblood freezing, terror oeized the ,Prussians, and for, the MOment it looked as . they would • turn and fly or be cut,, down. without Aleut/Mg themselves.. .But in., a moment they had palled themselves together and beaten back'' for the third and -last, time the gallant • enimssiere, . .• • • The sight' that terrified the prussb.ns . appears ,nothing very Much In• black . and white: it Was a regiment of cul-. Vassiers led at a dashing rate toward them hy.. headless officer sitting up-. ' right in his saddle and apparently en- . eouraging °his It was DO less person than Putout.° de Lascarre of the. Third regitnen,t • •Of • culkasSiers,.• whose•• head .had . been carried com pletely Off his•.shouldere as the Mop broke. bito the third desperate Charge by a cannon ball, whleh also; took Off • another ' oftleer'sc, :hand • and cut :the bugler in two, . • ' • ' . It is rernarlia.istaand singular that at , the htttfie or.• Forbaefi, which took' pin* thesame day as Worth, a very sitailar ineident occurred and.did more .te-. shake .the nerves of .the :Germans than beers of roaring .eitnnen and fighting had done: . . : • -, While a regireent of Prussfan infan- try. were: standing In ,reserve .watcliing', the fight' 'as .Welt as ,they . could from their position. Cf shelter a -charger be- longing to a French dragoon regiment,. one whleh was practically destroyed ifk • the battle, gallopedright.into the midst of the meo, who' rushed to arrest it 4;tMi.,034„..,emediatelyfell back,- in: filarna, 1'4 SWinging• . to. tbe, bridle, was the whole left -erre , Of the •charger s rider,, the ,fingers of the band -firmly grasping the reins:. The aim appeared to have, been severed s' few inches below the -shoulder find V,,ite 'certainly that of an • officer, but Who the officer was has never been: satisfactorily established:. ' moved were the 'hardened -men bf,. .baltleiat the hoerible 'Sight that no one would touch the .fiorSe.,; nod.the. entreat *as allowed to ,grillop off to be•killed.a .few rniootes-,later In. creasing' before • seme,Prtissieta guns • Thrilling- as the incident -wee, .tneny Of the brave fel- lows' who witnessed it declared thitt 'their •fliSt...,almotit'irreSistible, impulse _ .was. to throw down' 'theirarms and holt Yet it. w.as 'with the help Of Jost stteh '• men Unit. General yen Gobe.n routed the -French that memorable daY 19 August, 18.70:'• • '• . • ••• It is well . known ,. fact that. the finest and bras -eat, troops the wdelit esti Produce bave no immunity from tnat strringe andmysterlotta filminess, knocvn .to.toilitary history, tis "syn.rpanic." heavy War, freettient -saneelearY •eo• gagititents, night marches tout stir- eatnetitnes nitlY • havoc with sot- .neryous systems and 'render • them more like lthsh spirited colts. then Item who haVe taken the held preoared to suffer .Inneeasureble horrors and take. death cheerfully. • Pitting the nenhisolar sy:w tYro Brit, ish regiments, ' the .vere, pick of the army -and seasoned veterans, Isere niarehleg along in good order .wilen a. janitor ran down fle lines that the one. tny was at hand. The test, Inemenf the Ilne. of orderly soldiers wni eheeged Into an elongated mob of maned mat threwing'away Mins, baggage •and all they carried, runtilng away in every direction, blind terror In their hearts. thelrfaces blanchld and their ettra deof to the thundered .coromMitls of 'their,offleers • • 'Per the moment they knew but one sentiment, One emotion. a .sudden, pas- sionate, blind terror. and they fled without thinking whether', they vere running into the arms of_ the thing they dreaded or not It was' u terror that was mildness, and 'only Its mad. peas redeems it from •• dishonor. If .anything were.necessary to derpon• • atrute the unnaturalness of the panic , it would be done by the grand fact that • the moment it beettrae known that the enetny Was really at hand the men in, PtantlY fell in• and showed the utinciat eegetatestt to attilek. Sent war panics are mysterteil. Even the most eXperlenced military oe• Beet. ha Mutt/Satisfactorily •expla in theM CLutwNc vs-Rrii TIE AGE CF CHWAMITY. It Is Now Rather Than In tha Days of knights Errant. When we speak of the !ozo 04 'Chivalry we are apt to /Magma the exietence at tut earlier period ot a finer wise of honer, of lott.ler of eublimer courage and of .more de- voted uneelfishnefie than are found in the ptacticel workaday world of to. daY• As a matter of feet, sverY gontil Parfit knights,' such. as Chaucer de- ecribee, who rode about with squires,. rescuing diStressed damsels and re- dressing wrongs generally, were very few. The age was comparatively a harsh and cruel one. Oppression and violence prevailed, and human righte and justice were little regarded. Poverty was more general and the cendition a the poor more abject. than anything we know, and the rich, est enjoyed little of the comfort which 51 to -day well nigh universal, People were supposed to bear the illtto which they were born, and all the efforts of a dozen knighta in mail and plumed helmets did not go as bit towaed alleviating misery in month as db, the ministrations a single visiting nurse now. We Ave in an age bf chivalry vastly expand- ed. Where there was one worker for others in the knights' days. there are hundred now, and chivalry Per- meates the spirit of all the good causes which enlist so many willing hands. Eel Veen the tenth and f^,trteenth centuries It was but in the bud, - Now it is on flower, and later on the full harvest of fruitage will come. There rioter was a time when there was such umversal war against op- pression of, the weak and helplees. sylien every forin. of, cruelty was SO indignantly frowned upon. when two - manhood and childhood Were more sturdily championed and protected. when the poor and sick were so ten- derly regarded and cared for or when the lower animals were made the ole. ject of such solicitude and shelter from harm and suffering. -There never was. a time when, at peae as we 'are with all the world, there Were more constant exhibitions of quiet, nuklest courage and splendid heroism than are constantly occurring .in the re- cords .of -our daily lives. In all 'sorts of acciderite--by fire and flood, by the forces of nature,. by travel and by the operation 'of great industries— there is always -sortie one ready, gen- erally some unknown, unheralded person, to risk his lite in order to save :others. If that isn't ehtvalry, there never was such a thing. We do not yet by any • Means possess all the virtues, but courage and 'unselfish devotion in times of stress are very good to, build on. _ _ Doom of the House Fly. Science .is after the tlieS, and that not with a broom or trap Merely, but with a club. The mosquito has long been convicted of spreading disease. Later the rat was shown to be an in- direct agent. and now the common house.. fly is put on the list of pests' that are dangerous to human life. Faraway lands, notably Africa, have long been nOtorioits as the breeding places of flies having a deadly hits.. Even in this country' a sand fly is• not 'A pleasant custerner 19 meetwith:'; Horses , are tortured by a ' Peculiar breed of flies.' Perhaps the harmless look -mg fellow around winch centre • Many- }ekes has venom itt his little makeup which ii-a-pnisen-When trans-: ferred to the blood of man. • On general principles we Should like to abolish flies, ' They love to Swim in milkand•cream and boorrni; butter, and also •haven likfng 1. certain ' paper and countless: bright ornaments which' the housewife wishes- to keep.stiotless.' In fact; flies are a nuisance first and leek and if they are dangerous as we.„1.1 the proper thing is to fence them out and anni- hilate all who break in. Screenmakers 'say that the use of screens continues. even after the imosquitoes, Which. brought them into existence,..have:'de- petted. While' barring out the tilos- qeitoespeople found that' the fly nui- sance was abated also. But flies get inside if they are allowed to breed outside,. And they will breed where - ever the refuse they 'delight to feed on is` left exposed. Cleanliness -all around the premises spells starvation, for flies. • • Artillery Salute's: .Thefiring of artillery salutes is a relic of feudal days. When guns first earne into use it was Considered an act of extreme conitesy if'you loaded all your guns with shotted roan s and fired them whenever a great per- sonage approached your castle. . The reason was the Bente as removing your helinet-ryou trust -ed your visitor by emptying all your guns before he . eame within range. This custom very rapidly went through many Modifies - tions. In the first place, rapid fire guns were net in yogi* those day, and, as firing and loading took .don - 'Adorable time, tradition says' in sev- eral iestances. this ' friendly custom created greathavoc in the retinue of .the • appreeehing, visitor, and the use 'of blank cartridges Was adopted for tobvious reasons. , Naturally in'ashort thne this courtesy was adopted by • Great City For, Prayer. A visitor to Moseow soon disenvete Why, it i$ called the limy City. Ilvery 200 or 300 feet' there is n athedral4 chureh. chnpel or shrine, end whieh. eVer way you look you nee poeple cross- ing themselves. Until One has seen &to:see* the pletyvf the place Is not eatily understood • The Outsider nab - not imagine Motirow cOnditiona, tatthot imagine church bells ringing nil • the time and people praying In the 01115110 streota tit all bouts of 40 and itwomouirm4.01,4404fortswororito A PEDDLER% JOKE. !" Bilt:;.,s" Given A 114.;,ariv Send Off, It HO • Ohara Tern That Took Ali 1, the PIM Out of Its One day a peddler 01 tint/are stopped I at a country home itt New Ongland and, leaving his hot* and wagon at tho gate, went to the door, what.. A big woman with Si rather pleasant face met him, He to her what he bad for sale and succeeded, In dispos- ing of balIa dosen article* to bor. eTnoinzhabouisal4b070ililtro.She its4 not money onaittro," sald the peddler, 0111 take rags It roe have any."' „loran e4han.Va MU! tP anatirered the The peddler saw At Welt a 406i1 children, ail omall, about the 00, and the To* and he luddeilly thollgbt of a Joke that he Plight play on the ""t°3133.ot; seem to have plenty of chil- dren," he Pal& "MEV*, you Mightsell nie one of them and take the par In till;aharei" will you giver said the WO* Man. said the MA rill) 111, the best tinware."'" "Well, sir," said the woman, "it's, a • Panlailit take yoUr Pick of the lot." The peddler was surprised that hts $clke WaS working so well, but he kept a very. serious face, and, selecting a very bright !coking little telloir of SIX "Mira, he took him up and put him, on the seat of the wagon and then gave the woman glfi worth of suck ) articles at she wanted. • Never doubting that the mother would repent of her bargain and give him, to redeem the boy, 00 in money the minute she • saw him starting off, he cilinbed up on the seat, touched up Ids horse and drove off. He drove very slowly, however., for he expected every second te hear the woman call him back for how could he,think for a moment that a mother would sell her child for a lot of tinware? • . • But she did • not • call him back, much'to his amazement, while, as for the bey, he was iro higb. glee, for he was going to have a drive. Presently the peddler, fearing that the, Joke, had • been turned on him, drove back to the gate. Lifting, the disappointed little fellow down' from the wagon, he went with, him to the doer, where he .found 'that the woman had just 'flnithed ranging her ne'tv tins nicely. on her shelves. ' "I• think the boy will not do, after all," said the peddler, "and you had better take him back ,and let me have my tins 'No, sirP cried the. "A bar-. gain's a .hargain, and yon must -stick to Itl"• • 'Why.' ma'am," said the man, "sure- ly you wouldn't sell your little son for, a lot of tinware?" - "Ob, " answereflthe woman, 41 have no'Children, mister, The boys and girls you see hereare paimerchildren and as you seem, to bea good sort of Man , Tit sell you as many of 'em as You : want for $10 apiece. • , , • , • - The peddler 'stared at her for a min..: . ' ute' in speechless aatazeinetit, and then; turning suddenly' toward his wagon; be drove away as fast -as his horse could take him. • • • • '.Dut he lefthis tins behind btm • The Eskimos.' Eskimos hate summer and love winter, for in summer they must work. Rwhereaa in winter thatr keep holiday fOr months at a stretch. visit- ing one another in :their warm and comfortable snow housee and swap- ping yarne, Owing to the darkness, which makes deer hunting practically impossible, the entire population is but of a job. It revels in merry idle- ness. it is probably the happiest poptiation on earth. • Has That In Plenty. "A prophet is without honor in hif3 own sountry," remarked the meral., 'tter. "T11.14." TejObled 0)0 demoralizer, "nut he is tievee without coral/Otte +km,' His Malodorous Joke. . De Style -When he swore at the odor of gasoline was he hz a rage? • Gunbustee-No: in a ta-renst: Ari'Autliore trick, 000 of the abler modern. Irritate *nada this 'confession the other dor: 01 am no devoted to My wife .thit !mow her to bonak tri upon me When. ever she pleases. Nattirally she cuts int° my line of thought and often de, „otters the continuity of paint, The 0131r way for me to do a good day's work Is to euarrel with her, to make her so angry that ohe wilt,cry, fuss, break 5 few dishes, *mesh a ititteni druid a puppy or two, then go.to her room and stay there. IlY the time have done a day's work she to in ex, eellett humor and tired ef being alone, The,c...wo ztkti.oc,", • , ,',i'9.es50,2.1tr.,,ellodetit „Request.. . our regular •• "profesitli5bai" ..tranni • .has a sham -tongue and.is- not slow to .USO•It when occasion arises. A farmer's 'Wife had curtly refused the usual request for,a night's lodging from a gentleman or this fraternity:. "Well,' then, ma'am," Said the tramp; • "would you mind If I slept in that. big meadow there behind your hero?" • "No," said the .woman in a magnani• n:touS tone. "you may Omen there it' you like?' . "One thing More,,,rna'ein," geld' the tramp, "before I. say I good.. night. WlII you please have me called at 4 sharp i want to catch the cattle train to market". Lacked Relish, , A. good many of the Sac and Fox Indians do .not talk .much,, and when they are in a store and see something they want they pick it up And pity for it. When Tom Hell '• was keeping a drug store .an „Indian woman en er it and picked up a can of varnish and paid for it. A few weeks, litter the same woman was in again and Tom asked her if she wanted another can. She said no, they couldn't eat the can she bad. • A Golf Outrage. The Earl of Wemiss *as on a Fife golf course an One occasion necorapap nied by an old ceddie. His lordship got his .ball onone aceitsimi so near • the hole that to play it was as It appeared to him, superfluous. So he tilinPlY tip7s. ped It flm with the toe of hie beet. . ' The 'caddie 'revolted instanter, threw,, down the clubs and looked horrified. When he 'found words to speak it was to Say., "Bang it, tne lord, gowrs gowti" • . Satin Ashes. ' Small Nellie read aloud from 'her &nodal school lesson ,as renews: "And the king of Nineveh covered himself with, saekcioth and sat in ashes." , This was i puzzler, and finally she ssld, -Mamma, what kind of ashes is stitio ashes?" ---Chicago Newel. • Deepite his refusal of a publie wel- come) Lord Roberts received unoffic- ially tonight a very hearty eend-oli when he left for Quebec •on a special C. P.A. train at 7.30. The streets front Goverument House thru the eity were lined with thous, ands of enthusiastic citizens. "Bobs" made the trip from Bitipau, Hall to the station' in a motor car, .accompanied by his daughter, Lady Aileen Roberts. He was kept busy along the •entiee line aeliaowIedgitig the eheers of the neoPlc and Was VW' ibly delighted; t , At the station the arrangeMents for preventing a rush wen admirable. Thp plairorm Was roped olt and a large number et Dominion police. were on hand. Here the cheering was pro- longed And continuous., Lord itoherts Was evidently touched to the heart. Apparently he was • on the point at thanking the assembled Multitude hitt the clang ot the 'bell gave him warning that the train was about ta make a Start. The departure . Wise enliveasd by throe bands and, the train pulled out. to the air- of "Auld Lang Syne." At neon LOrd Roberts', aceameanied by Bari Grey, paid a visit to taw library ot Parliament and the arehef- es building. PROMANPNT MANUFA.CTORER SPEAkS. Di'Venleek Hill, Ont., no Ortet is bete. ter • known then George S. Watson. When, hosays "CatarrhOZone is a 'real Vera" depend upon it being so.' • "My wits," be writes, "was subject to bed attacks of threat irritation, :and 'bronchitis. Many remedts were tried but few Proved at all useful. Catorrhozone was different. It seep- ed to get right at the sore spots and, , brought relief quickly. We have found Catarehezene an absolute Cure for bronchleih, 1 and • calialth." Noththg cure. more "quickly so get it today, two sizes, Orre mai $1.00, at all the dealers. • '" ItKr wst.,-..•••—•••••• • • •• ar:e .••••.• • w • • • ••• •• we - • • • w • • • • • • • : s 440.81:::::,:,.4.1112,1:1•Z: • .• • . ' • .• "COLLEGE MIL YOU'Ve imp THIS FREE DON'T GO TO BUSINESS BOOK Jc- lilt , ...,. i The For oaina °at Clti. Amt.._ 14,44; Cellegs --"4 ' It.ti ei:Densely Ontiortsni that you ,hould tfltbe htformatIon 'about a collets Wort you unroll 'as a student. Your success dtti panda upon your choke. Our raw Catalogue talk all • obSW oar Methode 1 v.,,,aase--4, we turn out graduates who elm 'limits IR 41311•11Ch It 11;01141111 OW Commercial ,and Short. ubh oru re"ealiminsanddill,teadidditzSprh:81::: raniuned of the Buenos Eduoator'sApsoMation's .Diplonta, And this large.. handsoniejg illustrated book will.b• sent loran FRES • •Studenta admitted any unto: Spnoiel Opening September end Januar, The Fors.* Clty ' ' Basins's. and Shorthand Cases totiDON, ONTARIO j•W•Westrapal. W. was:wet, is. eat. Fault Finding. Nothing Is easter than fault finding. No talent, no self dental, no brains. no ehareeterla required to set up in the grumbling business. bnt filmic) who are moved by a genuine desire to do good hove little time for inurohoring or e0123• /*tint, • • Most people who nth Peter to pay. Paul forget the last part of tbe coo - tract. • . oYestom. 'The Me td -750 POO t*Ifete Am, ineke to get Merited ou a Priddy? The Aboinhutble Onehelet--Cerfaitily. why shoski Pridity bean exception? . 'the Doidal"Habit, "Do yeti 'take Mit. woman to be yet& lawful wedded wifei"' "No. 'Met there* no truth bi the rii. mor, -that la to dal', 'f' do4.PittehUrg Poet. . . .i,,, iwisi•••••••11,4* ' Security Whatever amount of money one puts by in an investment—whether It is $3.0,000' or $100 --the first ponsideratien is the security of the investment If added to the security there is it profitable dividend, the invest- ment becomes on Ideal one—. eitactly the kind that the Saving • people of Ontaricimost desire. , Loan , 'TheDebentures of this Conipany -• are such an iriVesOlinef .146' • ' beyond question. Assets totalling . over $10,000,000 are pledged to their redemption. Thus their . security is absolutely safeguarded. - They pay 4 per centper amount. 'Put your lavings'into this safe 7. and profitable torn% of investment. ulars. avings Co. •k\\ London, Ont. 1111141b. IN Manitoba Alberta• . Saskatchewan. Work herveltini for -25,000 then. Good wages; • :EXCURSIM To WINNIPEG Going $1000' Se' da4)sns4 . Trip . Free tickets train Wiiinlpeg to points where fiern laborertare needed, within certain ilrnite. . . Return. for i&OO after'at least addttionai b4.•••■•‘-r4"-F`i•." 30 days work • a SION S EAST , .AUG.I3&SEPT.8 from altstations in territory between Toronto- . 'if, Sarnia One and Toronto -North Bay Sm.' .111rOSTANT Alit wriest; ownl....,..legin•at Writ. 47417147gent Sine of 'matt. t9' t.niroerratt.filskiless.dit.,CP' .11...theorito $1 a. CANADIAN NATIONAL Aud. 29 EXHIBITION Sept. 14 TORO TO Greateit and Best Attended Annual Exhibition in all the World Every Pioviaa $100 000.00 mtrit Sends lb Products in Prizes and AtiraCtions Concerts Grand Art Loan Collection From the Perla Saleia sued other Old•Wiarld Galleriaa; IniernatIonel Tattoo and nonfinite &poetised. The Siege of Sebastopol ; With 900 International Dog *ow International Cat Show 8,000 ,Live Stock on *View 61.24 ten, taffy 6644 444 iitagiuno4ML 03. On. Mimed,. ;hiYsts,st CHEAP PARES FROM EVERYW'ISSIIIE arretwOilietielnie.