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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1906-9-13, Page 3YOUNG FOLKS Do oo*cao-00000a000000Cxr00 Once upon a time there was a lithe girl alma flea your uld.d. She had blue eyes, and light hair cut straight round, and a big Mucic bow that dangled over one eye. Tdl(e sumo other Mille girls, when bedtime mune she erten said, "011, 1 don't want 10 go to Ledl" And 'one right, when her loather called and said, "Bedtime, Dolly, demi" she said, quite crussly: "I wish 1 need never go to bed!" Site was down -stairs curled up in a big library choir. She set quite still, trying to decide whetter she would be naughty and run and hide nr go up - stales like a gond girl. Sha felt rather drowsy, but just then she thought she heard a little scratching sound In the chimney, , and preooully, puff! down cane a pretty old luny dressed all In gray, with scarlet cloak, and in her hand she carried a lung gold stick with a lovely silver star on the end of It. Dolly was to surprised to speak, but the little old lady said pleasantly: "Good evening, dear! I'm your fairy godmother, and I thought 1 heard you wishing for something. What was it?" "Oh," said Dolly, "I wished I need never go to bed, I hale it sol" "Why, my dear, that is a very easy wish for Inc to grant," said the little old lady, and with that she touched Dolly gently with the end of her wand and said, "Now you will not have to go to bed at all." Then she gave a lit- tle jump, and puffl she was gone up the chimney in a cloud of smoke. My, how pleased Dolly was! She called up to her mother, "Mother, now I don't ever have to go to bed!" "No, dear," sold the mother. gently. "Ilow nice that will bel Father and 1 ere going out to dinner, so you can just play round and have a gond Unto." This sounded a little lonely to Dolly, but she did not say anything. Down cane mother and father, and oft they went in the carriage. Out trolled Dally to the kitchen, but Lydia and Retitle. amid Mice wereto all too busy to pay any attention to her. Up to the nursery sho went, and began to play with her dolls, but the time seem - tel very long. Somehow sho began to Mei very tired, and it was not as much fun playing es she had expected. She thought about brother, sound asleep to his rrib, and she derided it was time for tie dolls to be put, to bed. Edith, Mary and Susy were all safely tucked up, end after looldng wistfully nut of ilio window for a while,—the slues looked very bright and there seem- ed a groat many of prem, ---Doily began to wish that Alice or mother would come anti tuck her up. But she was a proud little soul, and of course 11 would never do to ask to be put to bed. "Never mind," sire said. "1 can just undress my own self, and no one will know anything about It.'' • Down she sat and began to untie her Mmes. \Vhat was the 'natter? She just could not get the kn'L undone. It was only a plain bowknot, too. Well, I will leave thein," she decided, "and take my dress off." The belt buckle was stuck; it would not unfasten; her necklio would not come off. The buttons flew into the buttonholes as fast as Dolly got them out. Oh, how tired she wast Any- way, she would just creep into bed with all her 0101115 on, pull up the blanket and cry herself to sleep. Up on the bad she clambered. How nice and soft her little pillow looked! Down went her sleepy head, when sud- denly the pillow gently slipped out from under it and rolled on the floor. She was too tired to pick it up, but started to pull up the soft blanket. Tug, lug— ft did not come; instead it rolled off into one corner In a tight ball. Poor Dollyl She was pretty cold, but she was so sleepy she thought she could just curl up and sleep any way. What could be the matter? The bed began rocking slowly, then faster, and pres- ently Dolly was spilled gently on .the floor•1 This was too much. Greet tears rolling down her cheeks, she wailed: "Mother, mother, I want to go to bed! Meese come!" "Why_, sweetheart," said • mother, "what is the matter? You must have fallen asleep here in the big,.armchair•." Ab, how glad she was to cuddle up in mothers lap! "Mother," she said, sol- emnly, "1 think I shall always be ready to go to bed." . Wi1EN YOU AND I WERE YOUNG, MAGGIE. 1 wandered to -day to the hill, Maggie, To watch the scene below, The creek and the creaking old mild, Maggie, • As we used to long ago. The green grove is gone from the hill, Mu ggie, Where .Rest the dnisies sprung; The creaking old, mill is still, *Maggie, Since you and I were young, A city so silent and 1000, Maggie, Where the young and the gay and the best, In polished while mansions of stone Maggie, Have eat0h found a piece of rest, is built where the birds used to play, Maggle, And join in the songs that were sung; For we sang ns gay as they, Maggio, When you and 1 were young. They say 1 ars feeble with age, Maggie, My steps aro less sprightly than then, My fade is 'a well•writton page, Maggie, But Lime alone was the pen. They say we are aged and gray, Mag- gie, As sprays by the white breakers flung, But to mo you're as fair as you Were, Maggie, When you and I were young. Chorus. And now we aft aged and gray, Mag. (le, Mid the trials of life nearly done; Let -us slog of the days that are gone, dingo;!e, When •V' and 1 \vere young. g1�elimmer ,q s® QOMBBULT'$ Caustic dsarn A fists spredr, and Pashto, Caro Th safest, I3T,IcTr:Recveyro0 used. 1I Taloa place as aloafur mild orsevere eeaon. tolerDumdum or Blemishesfrom Hamas andCattle, UIE , ALL CAUTERY 1)10 1r1 RISC, impossibtoto ode scar orblemish P ItvceD by express, tcharges efsfior ldgnftast lwa.arraaonldteId, Y ttali Ferlulusr , preaotatslds. ofon1r a0a0ufor Ds non, Bond tordescriptive circulars, The Law rearr '511nMarnin 0o., Toronto, 1t Ont, e-mrK;eeausa�=svw'»ISMEMa OPIENI2.LE (CURTAINS cod all kinds of house Bantle•., .Ito Ian OURTAINS nYEDI S NEW.NQD write Lau. "bout roue. DDITiaD MMaaIOSD DYP050 00., Dox 160, Montrarl 1WIINTY TAOUSAND AMISS IMPROVED' and unimproved laude, In the You hold tall le teat rltstrle(I from eight to twenty dollars porgy item ; aorraepnndonue solicited. A. J. STRONG, Porrlxdd, Alberta. ta Lads Parties desirous of purchasing farm lands in Western Canada are invited to comntunicete with the undersigned, who hove for sale 4:0,000 acres of excellent wheat' lands in all parts of Alberta. Prices range from $9 to $12 per acre— $3 per acre al time of purchase and the Balance spread over nine years if de- sired. Special railway rales to purchas- ers. Correspondence solicited. DAVIS,*411 SiNCLAiR & McCAUSLAND, P. 0. Box 1694, Calgary, Alberta. r. .:,. zur Cut GlaSsl owl $5. 3i eas—.1..ey ^fif.' , p\. I ¶Only as manufacturers is It possible for us to offer our special eight inch Cut Glass Bowl at $5—packed at our risk and carriage paid to your door. ¶It is of the clearest cry- stal glass, deeply and brilliantly cut .in "hob- nail" star design. ¶Our illustreied cata- logue ready will tell you of other remarkable price - savings in highest quality cut glass. Ryrie Bros LIMITED. 134-138 Vongc Street. Y3i e SPOONING F011 A LIVING. A curious industry 1n Russia, and one which, nevertheless finds employment for thousands of men, is that of mak- ing wooden spoons. In the district of Semenvosk, where they chiefly came from, no fewer than 7,000 men make a living at the trade. Tho spoons are gen- erally made from birch wood, and- a skilful workman can turn out several 'hundreds a day. No fewer than 12,000,- 000 spoons are manufactured during the course of the year, wihich are sold at six' to eight roubles ($3 to $4) per thou- sand. They find a ready market, and penetrate es far as Persia, Klniva, Bo- keara, and Khokand. Sunlight Soap is batter than other soaps, bet is boot when used in Ilia Sunlight way. Buy Sunlight Soap and follow diroetions. Copper is more elastic than any other metal except steel, niore sonorous than any other exempt aluminum, and mora ductile and maleable than any other ex- cept the precious metals. Impurities in the Blood.—When the action of the kidneys becomes impaired impurities in the blued are almost sure t0 follow, and general deeangement of the system ensues. Pnrmelee's Vege- table Pills will regulate the kidneys, sd that they will maintain healthy action and prevent the complications which certainly come when there is derange- ment of those delicate organs. As a re- storative these Pills are in the flrst rank. UNCLE ALLEN. "When you hear a fellow ahveys say- ing, 'the moan men ain't all dead yet,'" moralized Uncle Allen Sparks, "you can generally spot him as one of the sur- vivors." WONDERS OF VEGETATION TUE GREAT LIFTING POWERS OF SOME PLANTS, 1lemorlcablo Growth of Onions—Melons Hulse a Weight Amounting to Twod a Half f Tons. a 1 The fertility of some members of the vegetable world is really astounding, Thus, an ounce of onion seed widen was sown In a garden at Newton Abbot produced no less than 400 pounds of onions. This will give s01110 idea. as to the prolific nature of vegetables, but It is by no means an Isolated example, says London Tit -Bits. For instance at hsbur a village near Axminster, ru, an agriculturist plumed an ordinary winter cattle bean. The average Individual If asked how many beans made five would make a different answer from Ural which the agricultur- ist would give. His single bean pro- duced no fewer lhuntDeans. ons. Very extraordinary is the force exerted by growing vegetation. A curious ex- ample of this fact has been furnished In the gardens at Kelsey Park, Becken- ham. Signs of cracking were observed in the brickwork of a frame and gra- dually a block was pushed out of posI- Won. This weighed in the aggregate over 1% hundredweight. Several bricks had to be cut out by the workmen, and then they found a mass of mushrooms, only 8 pounds 3 ounces In weigtl.t, grow- ing In the centre of the wall. Melons are extremely strong; in fact, one has been known to raise a weight amounting to - TWO AND A HALF TONS. A well-known student of nature tried to estimate the strength of a melon when It was eighteen days old and measured 27 inches In circumference. He fixed a sort of harness around it, with a long arm or lever attached, and so was able to measure the force of the melon by the weight it lifted at the end of the lever. When about twenty days s old—prat >s acouPleof the harness had been fixed on—it exerted d a strength of sixty pounds, while seven- teen days afterward it actually lifted 5,000 pounds weight. The seed of the globe turnip measures only about the twentieth part of an inch in diameter, yet in the course of a month or two it will enlarge into 27,000,000 times its original bulk, in addition to the Large crop of leaves. In fact, by careful experiment 1t has been found that a 'turnip seed, under favorable conditions, will increase Its own weight fifteen times in o. minute., Turnips growing' in peat ground have been found to increase more than 15,000 times the weight of their seed in a single day. By exceptional means, such as by drugging, even this may be ex- ceeded. In this connection it may be added that by drugging plants and other vege- tables their rale of growth can- be in- creased to an astonishing extant. When placed In air -tight dens and fed on til other for twenty-four hours,un they become permeated with the fumes, they mature in about half the lime it lakes them to develop naturally. It is confi- dently expected that this method of drugging will work a revolution in the methods of forcing flowers and garden vegetables. TiHE CLEVERNESS OF PLANTS is extremely remarkable, and some of them employ the most ingenious stratagems whenever danger threatens them. There Is, for example, a species of mimosa in South Africa which feigns death in times of danger. This is evi- dently for Use purpose of- preventing grass -eating animals from plucking it. While in a natural state the plant is of a vivid hue, yet directly 11 is touched by any living animal it collapses into a tangle of apparently dead and withered stems. Among British wild plants, by far the most sensitive is that of the insectivorous sundew, which is found on boggy land. Notwithstanding their vitality, mem- bers of the vegetable world will not flourish in smoky towns. Even the hardy trees have no lova for those pro- ducts of modern civilization. It Is well to know tial horticulturists are almost unanimous in giving their vole to the plane as the best tree for planting in smoky towns. Where the smoke is not too dense, It is found that limes, syca- mores, poplars, elms, horse chestnuts and Turkey oaks do well, but that prac- tically exhausts the list. Among the shrubs which will grow are hollies, laurels, japonicas, mountain ashes and almost any hardy evergreens. .4 CHINESE BABIES. The Heathen Chinese has curious ideas as to the rearing of children, and especially on the amount of cleanliness desirable for them. A Chinese babe 1s washed on the third day after its birth, and generally witlh warm water. Occas- ionally a newborn Infant is rubbed all over with raw eggs, but not washed .1111 it is tihree months old, On the thir- tieth day of its life the infant's head is shaved. This caremmhy, among wealthy people, is accompanied by foastings and rejoicings, and poorer folic aro as fes- Uve as their ameans will allow. A boy is allowed a 'bt•lhdny feast once in tan years. Evil, spirits aro held In great awe by the Chinese, who do their bust to protect their oftsprhng from therm Witlh this end in view a baby Is some- times dressed as a priest, ,and some:. tines dofiked wiih ail manner of charms, one queer idea being to attach a piece of lamp -wick to, its clothing. As boys are more valued by their parents than girls, they aro supposed 10 he most un- der the rye of evil spirits, and embed• ingly parents often chess their intent MS as girls! and give them girls' tlnnles, hoping thus to deceive file spar- its. Often the poor little things are treated to harsh words and even blows. to assist in rho work of deception. Business based upon friendship threat- ens both,, friendship based upon business strengthens both. A MOTHER'S STORY, She Tells flow Dr, Williams' Pink Pills Saved ilex Daughter. zAnaenda is Lite doctor:' name for bloodlessness. It is an ailment that effects almost every girl In her teens. m e a rip- en Womanhood oleos new dam ads - 1 I rnl her blood supply that she cannot meet Monthlafter month her strength, , her vary life, ere being drained away. No Mod and no cure can do bar any good. No common mcdirine can save her. She needs new blood. New blood 15 the one thing—the only thing—that can Leake a healthy woman of her. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills actually snake new blood. Thal is why they never full to cure anaemia, That, is bow they save from an early grave scores of young girls whose health and strength depend upon their blood supply. Mrs. Anson Clark, Arden, Ont., says:—"Dr. Williams' Pink fills have been a great blessing In my family as two of my daughters have used them with marked success. When my eldest daughter was about seventeen she began to fail in health. Her blood seemed to have turned to water. She was troubled with headaches and dizziness; the least exer- tion would cause her heart to paipitate violently and she could not walk up stairs without slopping to rest She doctored for upwards of 'a year, and the doctor said she did not have es much blood 1n her body as an ordin- arily healthy person would hove in one arm. The doctor's treatment did not do her a particle of good. She seemed slowly fading away. Then she became afflicted with salt rheum and her hands were almost raw. About this time a neighbor advised the use of Dr. Willi- ams' Pink Pills and she began tutting them. After using the pills for a few weeks we could see an Improvement, her appetite began to improve and a trace of color came to her cheeks. She continued taking the pills until she had used thirteen boxes when she was as well and strong as ever, every trace of both the anaemia and salt rheum had disappeared and she has since enjoyed the best of health: Later on my young- est daughter, aged fifteen, begun to lose Icor health, but !hanks to our experi- ence with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills we knew where to look o for a cure and after using four boxes of pills she was all right again. I have also used tho pills myself for nervous troubles with com- plete success." [rich red blood is the secret of health —Dr. Williams' Pink Pills 1s the sec- ret of rich red blood. They actually mmice rich red blood, that is why they cure anaemia, headaches and backaches, indigestion, nervous prostration, heart palpitation, neuralgia, rheumatism, scia- tica, St. Vitus Dance and the ailments that make the lives of so many women and growing girls miserable. Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. "REINCARNATED" QUAIL. Novelist's Story of a Second -Hand Res- taurant Bird. "I was dining the other night at one of our best restaurants," writes Mr. Frank Richardson In the Pall Mall Gazette, "and on analyzing my quail, I found that it was only a scenario, that the skeleton existed, but the buil. of the bird had been 'made-up' with potted meat. My neighbor's quail, I noticed, lacked a leg. Now, what happens Is this : During a long dinner, the chances are that one only cuts off the breast of the bird. The rest remains intact. The quail is then carefully collected, taken to the kitchen, and reconstructed. "Most of the best hotels and restaur- ants aro run, in connection with cheaper restaurants, and to them the quail re- incarnated is sent. It may then, pro- vided 11 has not been too seriously damaged by the diner, be sent on to a third, fourth and even a fifth restaur- ant." "Neither in London nor in Paris is it prudent, we imagine, le inquire loo closely into the vicissitudes of fortune undergone by any dismembered bird or beast on the table, even though the res- taurant be one which is beyond suspi- cion of its food coming from Qilicago. Curries, minces, salmos, fricasees and viands in aspic are rarely made of fresh meat, and the wooden, savorless taste of the tneal in them is anong the least of their disadvantages. They are quite out of fashion, It may be added (with the exception of the aspic) in most first-class restaurants. Mr. Richardson's quail might, how- ever, be a perfectly honest hind. To pick the flesh from a quail, pound 11 up, re• place it on the skeleton, and serve the bird in aspic is a common, If foolish, effort of 000kery, utterly ruining the two or three delicious Mouthfuls of which a quail consists. Chickens are sometimes served in this fashion, and In the fanmiar "melon rouamals" certain parts of filo duct: are pounded up into sauce for the reset. One likes, however, to be well ac- quainted with the restaurant where lice dishes ore presented. At a cheap table d'hote dinner in Soho or the Palats Royal they are best left alone. SMOKE VERSUS FROST. In Germany some interesting experl- menls have recently been made in the protection of orchard Trees against night frosts by means of fumigation. A part of an orchard in bloom was thus suc- aessfully guarded against an April frost by the dense amoko of naphthalene. But the experinent was very expensive, 50 kilograms of naphthalene being con- sumd by 7 flames in one hour. Later a new preparation of chemicals was tried, producing a comparatively large volume of smoke with the expenditure of only two kcilograms, of the material per hour. These trials are under the direction of an experimental gardening association. De filyie—"\\chat did your rich ttnelo. leave you when he cited?" Gunbddsla--y "Nothing " Do Style—"Didn't he say anything to you before he passed away?" Gunbestn—"Yes; he said nothing was too gond for mo," But the mon who lives upright 18 apt to die 111 a horisoutal position, , SEEK INLAND OF WEALTH, Mysterious Expedition Inas Started From London, Mystery surrounds the voyage of the steamer hleulu, which has sailed from liruve•,eud or: the Themes, for a destine tion which is a close secret Il Is set, tato, however, that she curries a die- mond-seeking iu- nu dsekimg expedition Jrn te1Y a s •mlfeute in Loudon, and 11 is thought that she is going in search of an un- chartered n- cl r ercY island off the Alrle n eons!, nl of whosediamond twilit 11111101S were recently Mit:ulated. The Xerna Is uwned by Earl Fiizwil- llam, who Wu years alto, !tiled nut the abarlive expedition in the Verunique to Cocos Island In search of a pirates buried treasure, The Earl, however, has nothing further to du with the ex- pedition, which is the enterprise of the Collis Diamond Syndicate. Tho crew signed on fur St. Helena, which lends color to the story of the on Isle. The shin is fit- ted up with great luxury and the officers are resplendent in gold lace. In ad- ditinn she carries as passengers a party of ladies and gentlemen whose identity is narc secret. 50 that nothingthing is lacking to make the voyage of the Xenia roman- tic and Interesting. Its Power Grows with Age.—How many medicines loudly blazoned as pa- naceas for all human Ills have come and gone since Dr, Thomas' Ecleclric Oil was lirst put upon the market? Yet it remains, doing more good to human- ity than many a preparation more highly vaunted and extending its vir- tues wider and wider and in a larger circle every year. 1t is the medicine of the masses. GOING TO BE A GENIUS. "John's home from college?" "Oh yes." :'What's he gain' to do now?" "Well, twist you an' me, I think he's just about decided to loaf around and be one o' these geniuses that nobody oan understand." PLEASANT MOMENTS. It has been said with a great deal of truth that you can never become really acquainted with a mat until you have supped with him, and in order to en- sure a pleasant time good lea roust be used. During the pest sixteen years "SALADA" has become a familiar word to every newspaper render, and the fact that the demand is steadily inereusmg requires no emnlnent; it tells lis own story "SALADA" is king. IN A CiRCLE. "Did you ever stop?" "What for?" "To consider," "To consider what?" "What you stopped for." Dr, J. D. Kellogg's Dysentery Cordial is prepared from drugs known to the profession as thoroughly reliable for thele cure of cholera, dysentery, diarrheen, griping pains and summer complaints, 5 Da IL has been used successfully by medical practitioners for a number of years with gratifying results. If suffering from any summer complaint It is just the medicine that will cure you. Try a bottle. It sells for 25 cents. THE SUNLIGHT WAY RUB ON SUNLI NT SOAP I111, / t 1 LEAVE 30 To 60 MINUTES RINSE WELL Sunlight Soap is better than other soaps, but 1s best when hn used in the Sunlight way (follow directions). Hard rubbing and boiling are things of the past in homes where Sunlight Soap is used as directed. Sunlight Soap will not injure even the daintiest fabric or the hands, and the clothes will be perfectlywhite,ee wcolens soft and fluffy. The reason for this is because Sunlight Soap is absolutely pure, contains no injurious chemicals —indeed, nothing but the active, cleansing, dirt -removing proper, s & I gp er- P ties of soap that is nothing but soap. Equally good with hard or soft water. ' YOUR MONEY REFUNDED by the dealer Coalmi 1P you find any cause for complaint. v5s LEVER BROTIhORS LIMITCD. TC RONTO tilestern Canada, Twc aantering. ad_ tau aero la ad_ laude is Saskatchewan, only 8 miles from two railways, O.P.B, ds G,T.P. Strung soil, 00 par cent. plough land, .pring croak, no slougbe. About 40 miles H.B. of Indian Head, Price 510.50 par sure. Write for map and lull partieulara. R. PARSONS, pi -Wellesley Street, Toronto, Canada. 73 Sizes for 1, and 4 horses. The only Disk that duos Twice the Work while halt easier on horses—a Record Not Equalled by anything alae built for cultivating, A Success for making Seed Bed on Fall Plowed Land. For Summar Fallows or Stubble Fields niter harvest. Look for the name "BISSELL." - genuine •oaufao without D. For 6a1 o byAgents, K ata Oa exhibition in the new Imp lament and Process of Manufacture building at Toronto Pair, oleo on exhibition at Ottawa, Fair in rho Implement building. Full particulars free. Bend your address to T. E. BISSELL, Dept L, ELORA, CRT Fifty Horse Rower 6' THOMAS" Motor Car, in perfect condition, cost $5,000, Very low price takes i;;. Address, NOT SAFE TO FOLLO\V IT. "Did you follow my prescription?" ask- ed the doctor, "No; and if I had it would have Idlled me," answered tine patient. "Why, how is that?" "I threw it out of the window.. Weak end Sickly People envy those In robust health. No need to stay sink when by tbo use of the best tonic, "Rerrorfm,' ,poo can get rioh blood and renewed strength and vigor. "Gentlemen," said the professor," this is one of Lhe most dangerous experi- ments known to science. The slightest mishap, and the experimenter will be blown to atoms. 1 will now step into the next room while my assistant per- forms the experiment" THEY KNOW IT. Thousands of people know that the ordinary remedies for piles—ointments, suppositories and appliances—will not cure. The best of them only bring passing relief. Dr. Loonhnrdt's Hem -Bold is a tablet taken 'eternally that removes the cause of Piles, hence the cure is permanent. Every package sold carries a guarantee with fl. It is perfectly harmless, $1. All deal- ers, or The Wilson -Fyne Co., Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. Benevolent Lady : "But, my poor man, if you have been looking for work all these years, why is 1L that you have never found any ?" Tramp (confiden- tially): "It's luck, mum; just sheer gond luck.' ADVANCE OF SURGERY. Twenty years ago fifty per cent. of cas- es of amputation terminated fatally; but under the modern system of antiseptic surgery the danger of this operation has been so far reduced that the rate of mortality does not now exceed from five to twelve per cent. of the number of cases. Wilson's FLY IPA TICE ONLY THING THAT 1t1T:1 S THEM ALL 5&vOlt POOR IIMITATIONS& gold by all Druggists end General Stores and by mail, TEN CENTS PERPACKET [Rom ARCHDALE WILSON HAMILTON, ONT. ISSUE NO. 86-06. Ave.,.1.1110 Rose, t11 ale, Toronto TELEPHONE MAIN 15. More Safe Sur = L� and Sur e Than an hivestment in Toronto Real Estate. $34,000—F'OR INVESTMENT—Block of new solid brick houses, under five years' lease to pay over mo per cent. net: most cen- trally situated on quiet residential street. As owner has other houses .n d. r construction these are offered at a bargain. 3. FRANK %%LS9ftl, Owner, 73 Adelaide Street West, Toronto. TELEPHONE MAIN i5. "OSH Yilnd, ' Water, Storm and Fire Proof WA" Steel Shingles. Looked OR All Four Sides Made from Pointed or Galvanized Steel, at prices varying from 5:.85 to $5,10 per hundred square feet covering measure. This Is the most durable cov- ering on the market, and Is an ideal covering for Houses, Barns, Stores,Ele- vators, Churches, etc. Any handy man can lay the "OSHAWA" shingles. A hammer and snips are the only tools required. We are the largest and oldest ccompany of the kind under the Brkttvh flag, and have covered thousands of the best buildings throughout Canada. making them FIRE, WATER AND LIGHTNING -PROOF. We also manufacture Corrugated Iron in long sheets, Conductor Pipe and EAVESTROUGH, Etc. METAL SIDING, in imitation of brick or stone. METAL CEILINGS, in 2,000 designs. Write for Catalogue No. 140 and free samples of "OSHAWA" Shingles. Write to -day. ¶ ? 9t il, 3E'" X9X0- ` '. 3L9 E 5X15 ]CaEI's Montreal, Ooe, Ottawa, Oat roroolo, Om. loncon, Om, P�laalpeg, Mao. Vancoauer,B.O. 11 tborne at 0O Dnndas at. 70 Lnrdbard wt. 010 Ponder eh 1{21.0 W Craig St. 100 Susxoxst. Co ` Write your Nearest Offtoo.—HrdAD OFFICE :AND WORhtS-OSNAWA, Ont "Miss I.aoy—"1 do1l'Ifeel comfortable in this bodice at ahs." Miss Ascum— "Why not?" Miss Leey-"It makes mo feel uncomfortable because it feels too comfortable to be good fit." Sure Regulators. — Mandrake and Dandelion are known• to exert a power- ful Influence on the liver and kidneys, restoring them to healthful notion, 11- dueing a regular flow 01 the secretions and imparting to the organs complete power to perform their functions. These Valuable Ingredients enter into the cons. position of Parmelee's Vegetable Pills, and serve to render them the Agreeable and salutary medicine they are. There are few p1115 fie effective es they in their action TO 13E FORGOTTEN. "Father," called James, after 11e had reached hone frau college, "what shall 1 de with ray diploma?" "Forget it," yelled father, "and go out and look for a job." Mother Grltves' Worm Exterrninaler does not require the help of any pur- gative medicine to Complete lite cure. Give it a trial and be convinced, me with a, Self Educator," A man always making excuses loaves himself no time to mance enythhng else, Voir are right In regarding aryteeeres eat 1► . itangor0us disease, Annoiew icer s`voiles itohinr skit with Woavar'a Cotatt,' r'Wi4 Lake Weiletw 't Syrup Internally.