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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1917-8-9, Page 6T fli Tnr'asnAl, AUGUST 9, 1917 The Saults Coal Co. arwea,..orr to McDonagb a• UledhW EXCLUSIVE AGENTS NOR LEI -110t1 VALLEY TIM, COAL, THAT SATISFIRS We deal in Hard and Spft Coal, Lime, Cetneut, Fire Brick, Fire (lay, also Hard and Soft Wood, Mahle and Hemlock Slabs. Fresh cars of Lime and Cement just received. (NE PHONE - - - - i 5 It. Saults' Residence 275 W. W Saults' Residence 202 New Perfection Oil Stove Why not t unotnize by using , fatal or wood? The New Perfection Oil Stove is just what you need. We have them for sale—three-burner and four -burner Stoves. -- Call and See Them— W. hem— W. R. PINDER Phone 155 Hamilton Street GIRLS WANTS, For nth... work to 611 the places men who nave gone or are going to t front. Young women esu render t rouutry real ..rrvice by preparing to`. ink, tar.itiou.. in bank.. and bunluew odices fpr. 1.x1 COMM., of training In Hook - keeping. rttio,thand and all otber 1'om- merrinl .ubjeei., now in program• `itudrnl. ..dndl Led aur Lime. llluutrated catalogue free. Northers Business College, Ltd. OWECN SOUND. ONT. (?. A. FLICKING. Principal. • NacEvan Estate Exclusive agents for SCRANTON COEAL for Goderich and District. Any quantity best all Maple Slabs, Mixed Wood, Hemlock and Kindligg (Cedar or Pine.) TELEPHONES, office 98 residence 3131r 68 The ten t thing that has been said about Tb Meieury special edition was the reseal k of the Listowel Banner, that, the staff of this paper is good looking. MISS OF -SALTS If YOUR MONEYS HURT Mat less meat if you feel Backaahy or have Bladder trouble -Salta fine for Kidneys Neat forms nrie acid which exeite. and overworks the kidneys in their eCorte to filter it from the system. Regular eat- en of meat moat flush the kidneys occa- sionally. You must relieve them like you relieve your bowels, removing all the acids, waste and poison, else you feel a dull misery in the kidney region, a pains in the bark or sick headache, diz- ziness, your stomach soars, tongue is coated and when the weather is bed you have rheumatic twingem. The urine le cloudy, full of eedlnient; the channels often get in-itsted, obliging yon to get tip two or three time. during the night To neutralize these Irritating acids 'and flush off the body's urinous waste about four ounces of Jad Rales rom any pharmacy; take • table- spoonful in • glass of water before break - 1 feat for a few days and your kidney* will fhett .et flee act bladder disorder dis- appear. This femme sales is made from the eeid of Romper and lemon juice, com- bined with lit.hi& and haa been used for generations to dean and stimulate slug - glob kidneys and .tap Madder irritation .d Ralte is inexpensive; harmless and snakes a delightful effervescent lithia- wester drink which millions of men and =stake &alltg�bnddarese ENO OF A DYNASTY The Rise and Fall of the Russian House of Romanoff. FROM THE LION TO THE LAMB. A Lino of Czar, Mad, Bad, Liberal or Despotic, but All Strong end Daring, That Died When Nicholas 11., Weak and Timid. Was Flung Asides When the house of Romanoff fell with the abdication of Nicholas I1.. the cur of Russia, there came to an end one of the must extraordinary dy- nasties in the history of the world, a dynasty that took a stretch of tundra and steppe and turned it into an em- pire flung across two continents and occupying one -girth of the land space of the world. It was the hereditary line that produced Peter the Great and the remarkable Catherine and many other virile and vigorous characters, cruel, yet efficient; wanton, yet success - tut Probably no dynasty in Europe pro- duced so many strong figures as the house of Romano Yet when it hit it was not due so much to the wrath of downtrodden, betrayed people as to the inherent weai)nesa and shrinking meekness of the czar. Imagine Peter or Ivan the Terrible or even Alexander of recent memory speaking as Nicholas did when inform- ed tbat an outbreak bad occurred in Petrograd; "Let it be so. Thank God, 1 will abdicate if that Is what the people want 1 will go to Livadia 4the im- perial estate In Crimea 1, to n1y gardens, if the people want 1 am so fund of flowers." Wblle the flat Romanoff to rale over Russia was not crowned until 1613. the family had become one of influence in Muscovy in the thirteenth century. At that time Iran Dlvinovitch held an Im- portant poet at the court of the gaud. duke of Moscow. .t, daughter of Ro- man. sixth in descent from Ivan. mar- ried Ivan the Terrible. whose chief amusement was to watch people dying between couaee at his banquets. Ro- man's toman's successors called themselves Romanoffs. The old Tartar dynasty in Russia came to an end in 1598. During the next taw years half a dozen pretenders ravaged the country. The Swedes cat In on the north and the Poles on the west Then the common folk and gentry of [tussle met In • convention at Moscow and elected Michael Ito manoff czar of tbe Russia& It L a peculiar coincldenee that an assembly of the people chose the first of the Ronanoffs and deposed the last of them There followed a line of Mad tsars, bad czars, liberal czars, res.'tionary ware. Peters, Cathertnes. Ettzabeths end Alexander, all men and women of virility and strength of mind regard- less of their other fallings. They ruled by force of personal strength. This Le the descent of the recently deposed Czar Nicholas --a lamb foaled in a neat of tigers and lionesses. Count Paol Vaunt, who spent twosome years at the court of Petrograd and who had an intimate view of three czars, to ills personal memoirs. composed shortly before his death a few years ago, had this to say of Nlchotas: "Nicholas IL 1s one of theme tlmld, weak natures 'which nevertheless like to assert themselvesat certain mo- ments at matters utterly without lm- portauee. but which to their eyes ap- pear to be vital oues. Ills mind is as small as bis person. Fie sees the big- gest events go by without being touch- es( or being even aware of their great or tragic aides. "He !Ikea to be feared, hut he Mi- not inspire respect, mock less awe. Ile feels this. and, not knowing bow to fight against this lack of co skleratfon of his person, he becomes savage in his wrath and, though in appearance a quiet inoffensive little mean, is capable of the utmost cruelty and hardness. "When the news was brought to him of the terrible disaster at Tsushima, which cost Russia the greater part of her navy, the czar was playing tennis In the perk of Ttinrskoe Selo. He reed the telegram that sounded the death - knell of so many hopes and then quiet- ly rammed the game. "When he found himself confronted with the revolution of 1906 ht never occurred to him that be might avert it by putting his own person forward. On that dreadful day in January which ended in each b[oodshed be never for a moment remembered the proud atti- tude of his ancestor, that other Nkb- o[ae who on an almost similar occa- sion cera out of the palace and con- fronted oo-fronted the angry erowd, forcing the multitude by hie mere presence to tall to their knees and submit "The only thought of the tsar was to flee from danger and leave to others the task of smothering the revolution In blood." An incident reported in 1916 gives an Insight to the physical courage of the eztaar, or, rather, the lack of It The account at the lime said: "The emperor was reviewing the troops of General Brusslloff on the Etukowlna front when an Anttrian mer appew red overhead and dropped bombe scene Medium) from the czar. Nicholas entirely Mat hie self posses- sion. osse`skin. in consequence General Retard - toff was bitterly reproached end Gen- eral 1'vanoe was pat in command over him." Michele n, ascended the Russian thrtxte in 1194 and had therefore been mar of all the Remiss for twenty-three Years when 51. reign and the dynasty of the Romano6i came to their suedes ti1L-St Louis Past-D[apeteh. • Mt SIGNAL - GOIM ktCN, ONTARIO f NOW MRS. BEAN MET THE CRISIS Carried Safely Through Change of Life by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, N.sbvllle,Tenn.-"When I was going through the Change of Life I had a tu- mor as large as a child's bead. The doctor said it was three years coming gave me medi- ae for it until 1 was called a w a y from the city for some time. Of e I could not go to him then, so y sister in-law told e that she thought Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound would cure it It helped both the Change of Life and the tumor and when I got home I did not need tar doctor. I took the Pinkbam remedies until go tumor was gone, the doctor said, and I have not felt it since. I tell every one bow I was cured. If this letter will help others you are welcome to use it." -Ma. E. H. BEAN, 525 Joseph Avenue, Nashville, Tenn. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com. pound, a pure remedy containing the extractive properties of good old fash- ioned roots and herbs, meets the needs of woman's system at this critical period of her life- Try it. If there teeny symptom in your care which puzzles you, write to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co, Lynn, Mass. TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS. Find Out Whether You Area Prsaebr- or ■ Caretaker, In the Awerirau klagazine a writer says: "All the world of men is divided into two classes -caretakers and promoters, The moat important decision a man can make atahts tipsiness life is to de- termine in which one of these two classes he belongs. "fleetly 1 hare come to believe `bat at least halt of the sorrow and failure and heartache at the business world comes simply because men won't rec. ognlze that law. Square pegs at round holes-wbat are they? Just promoters in caretakers' jobs, that's a11, or vice versa. Brilliant subordinates who tall utterly in business on their own ac- count? e-count? Simple enough. They are care- 1 takers -splendid e6lclent successful caretakers -and they get the wrong idea that they are meant to be some- thing else. A great big basitoens sud- denly begins to stagger and tall apart, and everybody wonders why. But ap- ply the same law and ft's easy -too many promoters or too many caretak- ers, not the proper working mixture of each. "Alexander was a promoter of the first order. He conquered the world. But where were the caretaker to con- serve and consolidate and solidify? They just, weren't, that's all, and Ales. ander'slemptre fell to pieces almost be- fore hie ashes were cold. A few hun- dred years later Caesar conquered the world, and hie empire stood for gener- atiou& Why? Because Augusto& one of the great caretakers of history, fol- lowed Caesar." EYES iN PORTRAITS. Willy Some Always Seem to Gaza Right �� \\ ala -You and Some Never Do. -- �lpielbsbly hare noticed that some facesleture. seem to follow yea; also in other pie tures there are faces wbich are not looking at you, but no matter where you walk, even though It be in the direction in which they seem to be looking, you will never find the face looking at you. Indeed, faces In plcturee are either looking at ua from wherever we look at them or else they neverrlook at us from wherever we look at them. The same 4 true of photographs. The rule is very sample. 11 the per- son wbo wax being painted or Photo- graphed was looking at the painter or the camera, then wherever you stand he will seem to be looking at yotl. If be was looking on one side. then wher- ever you stand he will neem to be look. Ing on that side of you. This works very queerly if you have a group of people who were all looking at the camera when they were photographed. If you look et the pbotograph from one aide they all seen to turn to follow you and that to turn hack it you look at it from the other aide. But if they were not looking at the camera you can never get them to look at you. MAGIC BAKING POWDER CON INS NO ALUM A VALUABLE BIRO. -- The The Rough Leaped Hawk le • Nslphtl Ft•ir.d on the Feria. An extremely belptut friend of ours, when bird ftieoda are few, la the Rough legged hawk, saws a writer in Farm and Fireside. Unteetanatsly this bird Is little known or valued. It macaw the United States trout to northern breeding range in September died October, remaining until April. It may be ldoutitled afield by its broad wings, 1ta1 large size and the brad dark band which creases its breast and under side of iia wings. It L comparatively tame. TMs name rough legged or hare footed V made appropriate by the bird's full feathered kegs and feet. Tae coloration of the American rough leg and Its more western subspeclea, the terruglnoue rough leg, varies from the type here deecrtbed to almost mond black. In this darker phase the rough leg is eotuiiouly called the black hawk on such good authority as that of I)r. S. K. Fisher, under whose direction the United Suttee biological survey made extensive field observations of I this bird's feeding habits, It in stated: 'The rough leg !s one of man's most latporttant allies against meadow mice, feeding on tittle etre during its six months' sojourn in the United State& Other mice, rabbits and grown squir- rels are taken occasionally." THE MAKING OF PAPER. Thrift Was the Order of the Day When Only Rag Stook Was Used. It was in the year 1867 that the first wood pulp paper in the Uulted States was manufactured, and it would be dimcult to estimate the benefit this has cocferred upon the world, for it was a step In the dissemination of knowl- edge, particularly current news, just es was the invention of movablertypea and the printing press. It will be remembered by many still Using with what care every rag was saved to be cotiverted into paper in the days when only rag stock was used in its manufacture and how the paper, atter It had served its purpose at the printer's, was carefully put aside for wrapping parcel& Those were days of antomaticaily imposed thrift, wbieb iivere followed by diereganf of econo- mies so widespread that already, after only half a century, we are confronted by a prospect of serious shortage of supply of the new raw material Just as the supply of rags in the sixties would not hats sumced for growing needs. so it appears that soon there will not be euough wood pulp to go around. But we hare grown 00 ore eu•tomed to finding substitutes when we bad to hare them that the world is not alarmed Imprisoned In the Wind. Butterflies may be imprisoned and uninjured in the coling of a whirlwind Gales In a genuine typhoon are so ter. tilde that the stoutest ships can scarce- ly bope to weather them, but there 1e a spot at the very center of the storm Where something like a dead calm pre- vails. From the outer edge of the dile turbence, which may be 300 mile& across, the wind velocity increasear to ward the center until within , a few miles of that point there comes a man den lull. There the rain ceases and the sky often clears. In this little calm area, which sailors call "the eye of the storm," a group of butterflies has frequently been imprisoned, and their dainty, delicate fomes are as sah to this aerial cage as If hovering in sonny meadows, but as helpless as if 1n a collector's bottle. Soap Bubbles end Portrait,. Professor Boys of England, expert. tenting with bubbles, obtained some very large ones, which lnithe sunshine changed colors so beautifully that he conceived the idea of using them as backgrounds for photographs. The large bobbles were blown with an ordinary bellows, says the Popular Science Monthly. The soap sotuthoo was heated and a large mouthed ftm- nel wee dipped into it The bellows, connected with the funnel, wasthen worked very gently. Bubbles with as great a circumference as two and a half feet were easily obtained. Bananas. Banana, if they are unripe, may be used with advantage as a vegetable. Out the fruit is halves, New them for twenty -eve minutes in just a little water, drain, corer them with a cream mance such as you use for cauliflower and nerve than hot The ripe fruit is a delicious garnish to meat Oat round alarm from ripe, firm beans, fry them in butter and lay a few on the by and around a broiled steak as It goes to table. He Was Sowed. "Time you 'Love Lettere of Wes Yen P " site asked timidly. "14o, mists," responded the clerk k the boot department "Ara why mar -Ream* wise man ne r write low leasee&"-Llondm Telegraph. Hew • Hotel Measures Most people are re•sonabie. but the nacres of a hotel 1s measured by tam manner 1m which 11 caters to the e ' cease sable man. fle"s sue to be abort. Al M. Marisa in American iragask► Ieweieal. 11 hear the cashew of your Carat le wary musket." Int that I know et" Try woehtng off a alis mate es mtaana'l titlark ao.'a t.er'werensd we tansy we- edi ala m 'Nub we coma ID art tel =kg a i)so*oktr ammtZr,ark • fa..P a.„ ,t Jnr r :r FLY,PAIDS' WILL KILL MORE FLIES INA! S&° -WORTH OF ANY STICKY rLY CATCHER r ., _.4 • Clean to handle. Sold by all Drug- gists, Grocer and General Storca. Blind Dogs and Rata Canines born blind or that became blind by accident are able to smell and paw their way luto the most inac- cessible and out of the way places. 1t is practically impossible to starve them, lose them or tap them. Fur- thermore, blind deg. learn as quickly as tboee that see. Lose of sigbt in no way- interferes with their ability to learn tricks. acquire habits or find their bed. ltats, as a matter of fact, by they acme their eyes at all --a doubtful matter - can see little or nothing of the world. The retina of these creatures has no point of perfect vlslou such as Is found In tbe higher animate and man; hence Weir nose& muscles. toueb and hear- ing earIng give them information about the world they live 1u. Rim -Culture. The culture of rice is alluded to in the Talmud, and there is erldence that it was grown In the valley of the Euphrates and to Syria before 400 B. C. It esu taken tnto Persia from frldla and later Into Spain by the Arabs. Thence lta culture was intro duced Into Italy about 1408 A. D. The Spaniards are also responsible for its Introduction Into Peru and other sec- tions ertions of Spanish America durtug the early colonial period, but the exact date has not been definitely determin- ed. The first introduction of rice cul- ture In the Amerlcaa seems really to hare been in Brazil His Worst Book. In •'A Last Memory of Hobert Louis Stevenson," by Charlotte Eaton, this cyrlous incident la recorded: "What do you consider your brightest fail- ure?' the novelist was asked. "'Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.- he replied without a moment's hesitation, add- ing, -That 1s the worst thing I ever wrote." Yet in a standard book of brief biographies this is the one book title given under the name of We au- thor. When Real Acquaintance Began. "When did you fiat become acquaint- ed with your husband?' asked ooe wo- man. "The first time i told him that I bad overdrawn my housekeeping account," answered the other. -Cleveland Plaid Dealer. The Reason. "The feminine ontl.matrimony clubs generally come ter grief." "Of course they do. Naturally they are miss-wantlt-d." Penny Wise. Re not penny wise; riches have wings, nevi v. mer`imes airy fly away of them- e • sfimetitee•. t hey must be set 11,e- 1114 to brine In more. Food Value of Milk. Milk Is an animal food. In nature lb use le universal as food for the grow- ing young. This means that milk makes growth, does more than merely maintain the body. Milk possesses the element oe growth not only in the but- ter fat, bet also, t the sklmmilk. Tbers is no better food than milk.-iflxchauge. SUDDEN DEATH Caused by Disease of the Kidneys. The dose connection which exists between the heart and the kidneys is well known nowadays. As soon as kidneys are diseased, arterial tension is increased and the heart function as attacked When the kidneys no loner pour forth waste, aremic poisoning occurs and the person dies, and the came is often given u heart disease, or disease of bran or lunge. It is a good insurance against each a risk to send 10 cents for a large trial package of "Anuric' -the latest dis- oovery of Dr. Pierce. Also send a sample of your water. This will be examined without charge byexpert chemists al Dr. Pierce's Invalis' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y. When you troffer from backache, tregnent or scanty urine, rheumatic pains here or there, or that constant tired worn -oat feeling, it's time to write t)r. Pierce, describe yonr symptoms and get his medical epininn without charge-ab.olntely free. This "Anuric" of Doctor Pierce's is (mond to be 37 times more active than Iithia, for it dissolves uric acid in the system M hot water does sugar. Simply ask for Dr. Pierce's Anarlo Tablets. Them can be no imitation. Rvery package of "Anuric• i• sure to be Dr. Pierce's. You will find the signa- tor on the package at as on do on Dr. Pierce'. Golden Medical lar blood and stomach. •ORRV, DR IPONDIfIgeT, Kidney Dleeaaa M su.perted by mettital own ween patienta complain of bckacbe or eager with Irregular urination, dis- turbed, too frequent, seagglh or painful plumage. The general symptoms are rheo- spains or tatic Pella Irritabil, neuralgia, depoonndub y workmen and general misery. Worry ire a frequent cause and sometimes • symptom of keipey dingle.. Thousands have lemtllppiLeod to Immediate pine_frost th em nrlerempena eWet U.114 Or. Fames GREAT VALUE OF TIN. It 1e Indispensable, and There 1s Ne aiestitute For It Nickel and tin are the only important acetals that have not been found In payfag quantities among our mineral re source& altbougb the fact tbst we are the largest consumers of tin plate in the world has stimulated the search. Tln ore in small quantities has been found In several places in the United States, but most of what we use comes from Cornwall. in Ragland; Banka, in the Fast ladles, and Malacca, W south - cru Asia, Tin L a metal that baa played as Im portant part in the history of the world. Combated with copper to make banes, it was doubtless the flat metal that man converted to his use. Weap- ons, tools and utensils made of bronze were used during a long period before iron and steel came into use. The United States now uses in the mauu- facture of 11n cans as much tin plate u all other countries together use for all purposes There 15 no substitute for tin. Price has little effect ou consumptloa, which is not true of other metal& ll fin cost 1b cents a pound we ahomd per- haps put a thicker coating on our plates and make better solder and bab- bitt ah-bitt metal, but 1f it were a dollar a pound we should still have to use 1t for nearly every one of the purposes for which 1t L now employed. The lack of tin ls one of the few things that keep the United States from being self sufficient 1f we were suddenly deprived of our supply of fin and solder we abouki soon have seri- ous sanitary troubles. EXPERTS IN THE WATER. Ths Japanese Are Masters of Many Tricks of Swimming. The Japanese are extremely fond of swimming, and among the younger gertewtion of students and the coast. population tbere are some splendid long distance swimmers- Schools of natation teach the art in a systematic manner. and, although the befit acing records of Japan are not equal to the western, a Japanese expert can per- form erforts some truly wonderful feats- rule example, he can jump Into deep water and maintain Ms position with the water no higher than the loins, while he fires a gun, writes on a slate, paints a picture on a fan with a brush or moves freely in every direction as 1f he were walking on solid ground. The expert, while he rarely emulates the graceful high dive of the American or the European, can leap from a great height and strike the surface of the water with his cbest without sinking ? or wetting his face and bead. ID some mysterious way 4e contrives to escape the painful consequences which the Impact would Inevitably cause to he - foreigner who should try this feat It L said that the oto time &mural fre- quently made use of this trick when crossing a river or stream. In such ease. they carried their armor and weapons on their heads, The famous "crawl" stroke, which ooddental swimmers first acquired not very long ago, has been known and practiced in Japan for hundreds of rears Seperetitione of the Sal, The perilous who sail as paseengera on a ship which does not regularly car- ry passengers are looked upon either with favor or disfavor by the crew, The premise. of a cblld 1. thought to be a good Does, whlle women are he. tiered to briag bad luck. Lawyers ars looked upon with greatest dislike, for they are colsidered particularly an. lucky. The name "sea lawyer" 1s the worst term one sailor can use toward another. A cat on board ship is supposed to cause the vessel to meet wish gales. The old Raying G, "A cat carries a gale in her tail," and the average sailor be- lieves that when a cat Make about the deck she is raising a storm. Pigs alga have a bad reputation on atdlpboard. A Pathetic Benefit. Perhaps me of the saddest of the many benefits which have been ceie- brated at Drury Lane was that given on June 27, 1828, for Grimaldi, the greatest clown the stage has known, wben the heartbroken old man was wheeled on to the stage in an arm- chair and hopelessly broke down In his endeavor to sing his once famous ditty, "Hot CodUns." The old man's memory had eonplete- ty forsaken him. On that occasion a sum of 11,700 was realized, which for many years remained a record. - Pure Resects. In his essay "Perpetual Peace," pub. llshed In 1796, Immanuel Rant declar- ed that we can never have universal peace until the world Is politically or- ganised, and it will never be possible to organise the world politically unlit the people. not the kings, rale. And ha added that the peoples oe the earth mT*t cultivate and attain the spirit of hospitality and good will toward all moss sod nations Of Caere* It Cant Is Dente. Of merge well informed people know better, but there are some ignorant kik' woo think it la possible to hires is good time wlthoat ipendbog mass Olean they can afford -Claud• Allan in Mort Worth Star -Telegram Never Finished, ke►terafiooslY)-Alxout how Mea, dar- ling, will it take to complete your trona- esaa7 t4ht•-Ali the rest of my married ifygnasonua is Lila edngeosieli ON misery sad vbs. ' sestaitalweeL 1 LET A LITTLE SUNSHINE IN! Why use coal oil when you can have Electric Lights that will not cost you any more and will give more light and better satisfaction We know how to LET THE SUNSHINE IN and will cheerfully fur- nish plans and estimates for wiring your home. Just Phone 82 or 193 Robt. Tait West Stroet, Next Polltoffac. STOWE'S THE RED BARN, SOUTH STREET for 'Bus, Livery and back Service 'Bases meet all trains. Passen- ger,: called for in any part of the town for outgoing trains on C. T. R. or C. P. R. Prompt attention to all orders or telephone calls. ood horses First-class rigs H. R. STOWE Telephone -51 ti l e -s,.rto T. M. !ra%i. -- —,WEBSTER'S NEW INTERNATIONAL Why bot give your boy and girl an opportunity to rnake their hoses studs easy and :newt Give the same chances to win pro- motion and emcees as the lad having the advantage of Dictionary in his home. Thie new creation answers with final anthor- ity all kinds of puzzling questions in history, geography, biography, spelling. pumu nciation, sports, arts, and sciences. NO.eee Vocabulary Terme, f7N Pyaa Oren sono illustrations. Colored Plates. TI. naly ara.■ary with the 17104.e P... The type tastier is equivalent to that of a 15 -volume encyclopedia More Scholarly, Aceurete. Co■veelent. teed Authoritative than anyorbw Lat. „,,,r�• Ilab Dictionary. REGULAR AND PAPER - - , EDITIONS. WRITE ter apertimen pages, IllwtraUons sec. FREE, a set 01 Pocket Mape if you name this Vspnr. a-aC-MIAMI , m ■ r� S5'bNSWI[LD. Mhz& Homeseekers' Excursions Every Monday till October 29th, LOW FARES FROM TORONTO TO Albreda Athabasca Edmonton atettier . Canons North Battish: W 4x.76 pepina .. ,40.30 forward .. . .. Saskatoon 42.25 Dauphin , - 47.26 Lucerne , 77.76 ”"....'....•-- 67.00 Calgary C1110170111047.00 Manna ..;. 441.76 ROsetOwn 411.00 Yorkton . 654 00 4..50 47.00 47.00 36.75 Moos. Jaw 41.00 Prince Albore .........., MeeBrandon .. 17.00 Winnipeg . 7e.00 For Tlrkete, Reaervatlonaf.lter- lituro and Information. apply to J ' n('rw r i Insurance ander- ink or P A., 61 Kin H 1' 1C.menus, R At ., Toronto. CANADIAN NORTHERN