HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1907-5-30, Page 34a.
•i
o.44.444.4boo —41.644060
UN.C.UNSCIOUSNIeSS,
A person who its found unconscious
may be suffering from any one of a
great variety of conditions, sono com-
petitively trivial, others very serious;
some requiring litho or no treatment,
inhere culling for very skillful end
pains -
trilling cure in
order to terve
lite,
Such being the ease, IL can ho readily
#teen shot it is a mullrr of the first lin-
pc•rinncc to determine kill) (WISE.
Usually the 1hsL and least imeharitoble
assunjpLion, especieely if the unconscious
Person Le unkempt rued rough -looking,
is that he is intoxicated. This belief
will he strengthened if the breath smells
of liquor, yet it may be entirely erron-
eous, for the sufferer may have felt his
trouble comlrsg oil., and have taken a
dCink of whleky in the hope that it
would give hien sh'englh,
Excluding lnloxieation, the uncon-
scious stale may be duo to concussion
of the brain resulting from a sharp blow
on the treed, or la compression of the
brain from appoplexy or a lraoture of
the skull, IL may be one stage of an
epileptic fit ora purely hysterical mani-
feslallon ; or caused by opium or SOME
other narcotic poison, including illumi-
nating gas or charcoal fumes; or the
result of an electric sheet(; or a simple
fainting spell, or the costaassociated
with Bright's . disease or diabetes; or
shock from a severe injury, such es a
blow on the abdomen, or from some in-
ternal disorder, such es the sudden per-
ka'atfail of the wall of the stomach or
the intestine by the corroding action of
a•: ulcer; in summer a case of eun-
stroke, or in winter the stupor that pre-
cedes freezing to death. Finally, it may
bo a pure ease of simulation—"throwing
a fit;' as the slang phrase has it, in order
to excite sympathy in the practical form
of a drink of whisky, or a quarter, or to
get a night's rest in a cornfortable hos-
pital bed.
A correct diagnosis often taxes the
skill of the physician, but the appearance
of the patient is a good guide. if the face
is congested It may be apoplexy, or com-
pression of the brain, epilepsy ordrunk-
enness, or possibly hysteria; if the skin
is pole and clammy the condition is
more probably due to concussion or
shock ; Ln the usual forni of sunstroke
the skin is hot and dry ; a weak rapid
pulse points to shock ; a *low pulse
points to opium or compression of the
brain; in simple fainting the pulse is
hardly perceptible.
An unconscious person should bo dis-
turbed as little as possible, although he
should be removed from a gathering
p'owd. The clothing should bo loosened
and he should have all the fresh air pos-
sible. No stimulen.t should be given
until the physician comes,—Youth's
Companion.
HEALTH
DIETETIC NUGGETS.
"Generous feeding" ought not to but
generally does mean gormandizing.
There is often more depending on how
one eats than upon what ho eats.
The so-called "hearty ,veal" is more
frequently the cause assigned in cases of
sudden death than it ought to be.
"Acute indigestion" is the fashionable
or at least pollte name for over -feeding
—for which Lhe unpolished English is
gluttony.
The punishment of dietetic sins is not
always swift, but it is remarkably cer-
tain to. put t11. Its appearance.
Pepsin is a cowardly prep.
So live that when the summons comes
to join the hungry caravan that moves
to the inviting spread in the dining -room
you may be quite competent to secreta
your own pepsin.
Time is the essence of all contracts;
every meal is a new contract with one's
stomach; therefore be on time. In
other words eat. regularly. There are
many important dietetic rules; none
morn important than this. The. man
who eats one meal to -clay and four to-
morrow, or who dines at any conven-
ient .hour, all the way from 5 p.m. to
midnight, is on the direct road to 'diges-
tive purgatory.
Tho fashionable black coffee after din=
nee hasn't a redeeming feature in its
favor. It is neither food nor drink. It
is merely a popular form of taking a
two -grain dose of a: •nerve -narcotic --
caffein.
If taken for its several effects on. the
nervous system 1L is neither more nor
less than a tipple. As between the two
a like sip of any good wine would be
less harmful. The best stomachs, livers
and nerves in the world can not very
long withstand such constant nagging.
If you "have no appetite," no unmis-
taltable desire for a meal when ready,
keep away from the table. To do other-
wise is to choke with more fuel a Ilea
that has gone out.
A piece of pia is not necessarily a
death -warrant. It depends on what it
is mode of and how made. Pio proper
should represent an unobjectionable
combination of fruit and bread.
The word "pastry," however, covers a
multitude of dietetic sins. Flour and
fat rolled into re duple of soggy layers,
between which spiced meats chopped
with more fat, mingled with raisins and
other fruits, and moistened with cognacs
--lits may be pastry, but it is a libel on
pie.
A crust matte reasonably tender with
sweet cream, olive oil, or fresh butler,
or with half butler and half beef suet
(the soft variety) with sufficient •balting-
powder or cream of tartar and soda to
make it light and porous, filled with
god, wholesomeme fruit or berries,—this
is pie; and 11 quite as digestibe
and
harmless as the ordinary bakers' loaf.
IL is Lime the pie net was relegated to
the limbo of Diller Iles.
•
., AN EARLY BEGINNER,
5ullih .'Timson •15 certainly a pro-
progressive individual,
Tones--Progressivot Why, "he's doWn-
1ight lazy,
Smell --Well, he's progressive enough
fo is ,-++ cpring 'fever long bekro win -
I1.1 ends,
No, Cordclia, the clock Of friendship
and the mantle at charity are not made
from the servepiece 61 clot)).
DANGEROUS PURGATIVES,
eledtnitirs of 'rhls Glass 00 Not Cure—
Their Effect is Weakening.
Nothing could be more cruel than lo
induce u weak, anternie parson to lake
a purgeliye medicine In the hope of find -
mg rolled, Ask any doctor and lie will
tell you that a puvgative inedlcihe mere-
ly gallops through the bowels, weaken-
ing the lender tissues. 11e w111 tell you
also that a purgative cannot possij?lY
cure disease, or build UP bad blood,
When the blood Is weak and watery,
when the Lsyslem is run down a lonlo
is the one thing needed ---is the only
Ming L
,.
) that
a willput o right. n
h yuli,h, Adin
all this world there is no lenie so good
os De. Williams' Pink Pills for Palo
People, livery dose of Ilreso Pills se-
(ually makes new, rich red blood,
which fills the veins, reaches every or-
gan in the body and brings health and
strength to weak, despondent ,people.
Miss Annie lleaudreau, Amherst, Meg•
daleno islands, Que., says; --"l was
pale, my heart would palpitate vlo-
lently at the least exertion, and 1 suf-
fered greatly from severe headaches, f
tried several medicines which seemed
echrall,y to leave me worse. Then 1
was advised to try Dr. Williams' Pink
Nile, and a half dozen boxes have made
me as well es ever I was. They have
done me so much good that 1 would
Idle every weak girl in the land to try
them,"
11: was the new blood Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills actually made that restored
fllss Beaudreau to health and strength,
and in the same way they will restore
ell sufferers from anemia, indigestion,
tweet palpitation, neuralgia, rheuma-
tism and the secret eilmente that make
the lives of so many women and grow-
ing girls a burden. Sold by all medi-
cine dealers or by mail al 50 cents a
box or six boxes for $2.50 from The
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont•,
z,
WAYS 09 SENDING LETTERS.
Ingenious Methods Employed to Facili-
tate Their Delivery.
Leiters by airship Is the latest nov-
elty of the French postal system. Last
iTronth a party of military aeronauts
ascended from Meudon and steered for
the War Office at Paris. \Vhen. over
the building the airship goes brought !o
a hall, and a letter addressed to the
Minister for War, General Picquart,
dropped from the car. Through their
glasses the aeronauts watched the mis-
SIVe In its descent, and, as soon as it
had been secured, turned the aerostat
and made their way back to Meudon.
A very ingenious method Is employed
to facilitate the delivery of letters to the
Islands of Me Tonga group in. the Pa-
cific. These islands, guarded es they
ere by dangerous racks and breakers,
are difficult and hazardous of near ap-
proach, and would often, were the or-
ilimuryi routmo of delivery employed,
bene to go letterless. To obviate this
the steamer that carries the mails is
supplied with sky -rockets, by means of
which letters aro projected across the
danger zone on to the shore.
During the winter, when SL Kilda,
has no direct communication with the
mainland, the inhabitants deposit their
letters in small buoys of a peculiar
'shape. These are then thrown into the
sea, and are by the currents carried to
the mainland, where they are rescued
'from the waves and their contents taken
le the nearest post-oftloe. A floating
post-ofllce, consisting of a painted cask,
1s attached by chains to the rocks at
the extreme point oI Terra del Fuego.
To this strange office, which Is under
the joint protection of all nations, every
passing ship sends a boat to post and
collect letters.
1. A. O'Shea, In his "Leaves from the
'Life of a Special Correspondent,'' re-
lates how Bezaine, during the siege rf
'Metz, sent a message through the en-
emy's lines. A young Posener, who
volunteered for the difficult task, had
one of his teeth drawn and an artificial
one, in which was a hollow, substitut-
ed. In this was placed a quill, within
Which was a despatch in cipher, re-
duced by .photography to microscopic
minuteness.
Then, disguised as a beggar, he lett
the town, 'the sentries, to give color .lo
the ruse, discharging blank cartridges
al him as he fled. Taken prisoner by
-the Germans he wes brought before
those in authority, to whom he told
such a woeful tale of his sufferings at
the hands of the French that he was
released, with many expressions of eon-
dolence. He duly executed his emission.
\Vhen Rochefort, in consequence of
his virulent attacks upon Imperialism,
was forced to seek refuge in Brussels,
he still continued to circulate La Lan-
terne in France. How he introduced the
proscribed paper into that country was
a mystery to the authorities, who Iit-
•Ilo suspected that in ,certain plaster
busts of tlhe Emperor and Empress,
which reached the empire from Bel-
gium. were carefully concealed the ob-
noxious sheets printed on `flimsy."
STARVING BABIES.
The baby who suttee's from indiges-
lion is simply starving 10 death. 11
loses all dcslre for food aiid the Mlle
it does take does no good and theohild
le peevish, cress and restless. Mothers
will find no other medicine as prompt
le cure as Baby's Own ,Tablets—they
always do good—L'hay can't possibly do
fiharnl. Mrs. dames Savoy, Little -La-
lneque, N..13., segs. "I believe that had
it not bed: for Baby's Own Tablets my
child would have been in her grave,
She was completely run down, would
velure food, and was rapidly failing.
Nothing I gave her did her any good
until I began the tine of Baby's Own
ffablets and these have changed her
ditto a well .and growing child." Sold
by druggists or by mail at 25 cents a
box from The Dr. Willfamis' ]Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont.
A story is told of a man who was
walking beside a railway line with a
friend who was very hard of hearing.
A train was approaching, aid as it
Minded the curve the whistle gave ono
of those ear -destroying shrieks which
seem to pierce high heaven. A smile
broke over the deaf man's 1040. 110b1,'
meld he, "that's the first robin I've heard
MPG Chrlstmasln
1.1
GREAT FINDS IN EGYPT
TOMBS AT 017E11 AND ASSIUT 015.
TORIC TREASURIES.
Old Bonles by the Nile-. Art of Older
Dynasties ---Real( Tombs
Explained.
Prof. Flinders Petrie delivered a lec-
ture recently to the suhsrribein of the
Cultist! School of Arelurology in Egypt
on firs the l L month's work last season at
Gizel> and the subsequent lour months
in the region of Assiut. He said the re
sults represented the First and to sante
extent the Second and 'Third dynasties,
as well es a period from the Ninth to
the Twelfth.
In the first month forty-nine graves
were found in the royal tornbs of Abp.
dos. The objects disclosed showed that
flee civilization of Ahydos goes of the
same character as that of Memphis.
There were stone vases, bracelets, blue
glaze pottery and a long necklet, Indl-
c:Ming that the people of the household
worn ornaments similar to those of the
royal house but of a cheaper kind.
'cher was a slate palette for painting.
\Vands were discovered with elaborate
ivory carving and knives of the First
and Second dynasties. The work had
been mostly destroyed by the Twenty-
sixth dynasty, but in these comparative-
ly modern tombs there had been un-
earthed
STONE VASES OF THE EARLIER
AGE.
He had also found objects of quartz and
a long slab 12 by 2 inches made of flint
with a sharp polished edge, the use of
which he was unable to determine. It
ems highly finished, He had seen no-
thing like it before.
Prof. Petrie said the season had been
particularly interesting, es objects of
the first twee dynasties had been found,
whereas the origin of Gizeh had hitherto
been ascribed to the fourth. He had also
worked a way to a crowded cemetery
and brought home 1,600 skulls, which
Prof. Karl Pearson was now examining'
at Assiut. Hundreds o1 tombs from the
Sixth Ib the Twelfth dynasty had been
discovered. The most interesting finds
were trays used for food offerings, which
hod gradually developed till they became
models of dwellings, with staircases and
porllcoes, some of them two feet high.
H.: w•ns thus able to ascertain what an
old Egyptian dwelling was like.
Very few of these objects were known
before now. He had found 150 In more
or less perfect condition. Sections of
some of these were shown on a screen.
Ir1 some cases the house was two stor-
eys high, one of an elaborate character
well a stairway and chambers behnid.
A cucho was placed below
FOR THE SAICE OF COOLNESS.
The Rest essential of an Egyptian
house was the portico, which in the
earliest stage constituted the house be-
ing copied from the temple, which, of
course, was regarded as the gods' house.
One wooden tomb of the Twelfth dy-
nasty wes one of the finest that he had
ever seen. 1L was at the mouth of the
rock tomb of a elilef and contained live
statuettes and other objects. He had
often wondered at the size of the rock
tombs, but concluded from what he had
seen of the unfinished ones that they
were used as quarries by the chiefs to
build houses they would inhabit In life.
Then a space was quarried out to be
used for the maker's last long sleep of
death.
He had found also two complete mo-
dels of boats and a block granite figure,
seated, soma fifteen inches high, which
showed much anatomical knowledge,
though -.the proportions were not always
correct. Such figures were rare in
Twelfth dynasty tombs.
•
TYPHOID AND OYSTERS.
Bh'Rlves Acquitted After an investiga-
tion by a French Scientist.
M. Baylac, a French physiologist, has
just. reported' on an exhaustive study of
oysters both from the ocean' and inclosed
seas, undertaken to determine whether
there was any foundation for the idea.
that the bivalves were infected by the
typhoid and other poisonous germs and
Were the means of Causing serious 111-
ness in people who eat them.
Flo concluded that the typhoid mi-
crobe by no means infected the oyster.
In the rare cases where the oyster ab-
sorbed the germ through pollution of the
oyster beds it eliminated it again in e
Joy or two when transferred to pure
sea water or when removed from the
water altogether.
As to other ailments following the eat-
ing of oysters M. Baylac soon reached
the conclusion that they belonged to the
same class .as those resulting from
tainted meat, Ile then made a study of
the liquor exuded by oysters lander dif-
ferent conditions, satisfying himself in
the first place that its chemical composi-
tion underwent 'no important alteration,
It always contains albumen, onimoni-
aeal salts, sillcates, chlorides and a few
organic compounds. Next he tried the
effect of injecting small quantities of it
into !ho veins of rabbits. He found that
with the liquor from fresh oysters he
could inject forty-four cubic centi-
metres before euy toxic disturbance was
manifested.
With lie juice of oysters which had
been three days out of the water and
which had been exposed to the air at a
temperature of 75 degrees, distinct signs
of poisoning were produced by time in-
jection of six cubic centimetres. Then the
tried oysters which had been kept two
days at a temperature of 60 degrees and
then freshened In river water slightly
salted, A dose of four cubic centimetres
from the liquor of these caused poison
inh� Baylao forms two general
conclu-
sions ; First, the danger of typhoid from
oysters is negligible unless they have
been taken recently from beds exposed
to direct infection, Second, oysters are
healthftll he direct, ratio to their fresh-
ness. The stomach disorders They pro-
duce are not apt to be serious but be-
come more so in proportion to the Lime
that has elapsed sines their removal
from their native water and the lank of
care in preserving them,'
ISSUE N0. 21—.07.
stopsend #11 eiemech
and bowel ddsordere.
Makes puny b#bine
Coleis plug end ropy. Proved
y P gqsafe euceeeeful
ate.. Del' your &ago
fee t—
Nurses' god bottlers' Treasure
^21o,—k bonds t11a5.
&timid Dm O'Cho: nisei Co.. Limited
Aa .2 MoetreeL
The Algerian Coral reefs ' aro divided
into ten portions, of which ono only is
finish
td yearly, Tanyler ears Is the time
for filo proper i growth of coral,
A Liniment for -tire Logger,—Loggers
lead a lite which exposes then, to warty
perils, Wouuds, cuts end bruises can-
not be altogether avoided In preparing
timber for the drive and In river week,
where wet and cold combined are of
dally experience, coughs and colds and
muscular pains cannot but. ensue. 1Jr,
Thomas' Eeleetrfc 011, when applied lo
the Injured or administered to the ail-
ing, works wonders,
A woman is apt to make some very
striking remarks when she has occa-
sion to hit her husband far a little pin
motley.
I'I'CII, Mange, Prairie Scratches and
every form of contagious Itch in human
or animals oure din 30 minutes by Wol-
ford's Sanitary Lotion. It never fails,
Sold by all druggists,
Up to the year 1873 the non-commis-
sioned oflieets and men of the British
Army were allowed one penny per day
beer -money.
Very ninny persons elle annually from
cholera and kindred summer complaints,
who might, have been saved 1f proper
remedies had been used. If attacked do
not delay in getting a bottle oI Dr. J.
I) Kellogg's Dysentery Cordial, the me -
(lichee that never fails to effect a cure.
Those who have used it say it eels
promptly, and thoroughly !subdues the
pain and disease,
Teacher : "Now, Freddie, It's very
wrongof you to quarrel with Billy
Jones and to harbor such revengeful
feelings against him. Colne, now, pm -
mise me that when you meet Billy to-
night you'll forgive hits." Freddie:
"Well, when I meet hilly to -night, if his
big brother is with him Pll forgive him ;
but, if net, I'll nearly wallop the life
out of him."
MART DO PEOPLE NEED .vac ave ren down
om
aneic pole, listless?. Ferravhn," the bee,
tonic. it builds, makes strong, it gives new life.
There are many tonics but only one " Frerovim.
Higgins: "01d Millyuns is a distant
relative of yours, isn't he?" Wiggins :
"Yes; and the richer he becomes the
more distant he Is."
Only tho e who have had the experi-
ence can tell the torture corns cure.
Pain with your boots on, pain with
them off—pain night and day; but re-
lief is sure to those who use Holloway's
Corn Cure.
The French possess four settlements in
India. These are Chandernagore, Kari-
kal, Yanon, and Mahe. Their combined
area is 189 square miles, and population
about 280,000.
Flungary uses more charcoal than
any other European country. Its an-
nual consumption is about 2,000,000
tons.
There's a lot of brass in the composi-
tion of a gilded youth.
MARE THIS DISTINCTION; A purely local
disease of the skin, 1ikebarber's itch, is aured by
loadeddr°wiith alempurlty, euehBut wso Salt bloodeis
Weaver's Syrup also should be used.
Gibraltar was first fortified in 711 A.D.,
when the Saracens made it a base for
their operations against Spain.,
Flow to Cleanse the System. Parme-
lee's' Vegetable Pills are the result of
scientific study of the effects of extracts
of certain roots andherbs upon the di-
gestive organs.. Their use hes demon-
strated in many instances that they re-
gulate the action of the liver and the
kidneys, purify the blood. and carry
off all morbid accumulations from the
system. They are easy to fake, and
their action is mild and beneficial.
1n 1861 the rainfall at Cherapungi on
the Khasi Hills in Bengal was 805
inches. The average fall there is 610
inches or 51 feet of rain. The average
rnlntall of 111e British Isles Is 30 inches,
or 8 feet. The weight of rain which falls
yearly on each acre in Cherapungi is
60,000 tons,
CLEANING
witilti0Ai
/�
on
LADIES' R{C OUTING
• e e SUITS
Can be dons perfectly by our Frecob Prowse. Try 14
0.221Na 02,
MOSTARAr, TORONTO, OTTAWA te GUERIC)
if
. i.
ek
Saves time, became it
makes ironingeasier.
Saves linen, ecause it
gives a butter gloss with
half t h e iron -rubbing,
Saves bother,because it
I
needs no soaking . ,just ,!
cold water. And It
CANT stick. Buy it
�y,,� a by name,
203
Y uNl' fit'
UNFEELING MONSTER.
"Oh, mother, Jack doesn't love me any
morel"
What makes you think so, my dear?"
"Ile ran out o1 mucilage and he want-
ed to borrow some of diet p -p -pudding
sauce 1 mode to -day!"
Not a Nauseating Pill. --The exelpleni
of a pill is the substance which enfolds
the ingredients and makes up the pill
mess, That of Parmelee's Vegetable
Pills Is so compounded as to preserve
their moisture, and they Dan be carried
into any latitude without impairing
their strength. :luny pills, in order to
Keep thein from adhering, are rolled in
powders, which prove nauseating lo
the taste, Parnielre's Vegetable Pills
aro so prepared that they are agreeable
to the most delicate.
The rannan-ball tree is a myrtle wllirh
grows to a height of 80 feel, has pinitisll
flowers, and a fruit the size of .e 32-1b.'
shot.
One of the greatest blessings to par-
ents is Mother Graves' Worm Exter-
minator. 11 effectually expels worms
and gives health in a marvellous man-
ner to the little one.
Germany's army bills have increased
160 per cent. in the past thirty years.
,eeeeeiay.ee. goo
Before deciding where to locate
in the West, let us tell you
about these lands. The best
wheat fields, the richest grazing
land, are in this province.
Write us for full information
about crops, climate and, special
railroad rates.
Local representative wanted in
each county.
Teiter & Osgood
Eastern Selling Agents,
205 .CORISTINE BU1LDIN0,
MONTREAL.
GIl'P YEARS OPE WOMEN'S AGES,
Scheme of German Neter More Oua•
cecafal Than Satisfactory,
The British Modieai Journal, 01 a re-
cent date, tells this story:
A Carman doctor discovered a means
of restoring lost youth to women which
is more potent than Cegitolra's famous
pentaclerejuvenescence end advertised
tl.at he could in two days rejuvenate
the most decrepit hag, . This brought
a crowd of ancient dames to his home.
At the first Interview after a careful
nlierullation he invited each patient to
write her surname and Christian roma
and age on a piece of paper. 7'ho ages
to which the women pleaded guilty
varied, but all ruled higlh. The doctor
undertook le give retch patient the prom-
ised elixir the next day, biLsome tame,
hn. said was .required' to edjust the
strength to the individual power of re•
sistance.
On the appointed day the women
coiled again, but the doctor expressed
regret that he had unfortunately mislaid
the papers containing their egos. Por
this mason 0 new set would be requir-
ed. He added ensually that they ought le
know that: the oldest of them muse allow
herself to be burned for the good of the
rest, as the basis for the remedy was
Inman
ash'
The next. day the women brought back
papers with their ages inscribed, 11
was found that earth had taken many
pare off the age previously admitted.
The doctor, pretending to hovefound
the first papers called them to witness
ill success of his invention. Compar-
ing the lists, he showed that he had
kept his word In regard to rejuvenation,
'remiss in forty-eight hours they bed
ail become many years younger.
Bees will fly as far as 5 or even 6
miles trent the hive to gather honey if
supplies are scanty nearer at hand. As
e. rule, three miles is their outside limit
or flight.
epee
In a variety of Oyler,
fabrics and prices, for
women, men and
children. Farm -fitted.
Peelers aro authorized
to replete instantly and
at our gout any Pan,.
Angle garment faulty
in material or MAking,
en An00 under-
wear is formkttifd
s0 it can't help
Fitting yourligura,
—It's trade ell
long «, llbredi<'tbooi
1 0011 won"t shrink
—and It's gnaran-
teed besides, The
wbole idea in to
make It so
agood,
you can't afford
grot to buy by tbtl
trademark (in
red). 209.
UNDERWEAR,..
eV
A pure, hard
Manitoba
flour for bakers and others demand-
ing strength, color and unit STRONG�rmity.
& TE
AT YOUR GRO9l612S
DEALER$ EVERYWHERE f tIFP;ikq WITH
FLOUR A. NO ►EEO. WRITE V,I:
WE ALSO MAKE 'QUEEN CITV.e A steitpep rt UR
THAT HAS CAINE!) GREAT FAVOR AS A GENERAL
HOUSEHOLD ,ALL PURPOSES' FLOUR.
JHfry.
:,.of: A sDro.®lf�
•
y;7:1
hUN ',l
liN
Your eons Can't I$oip isovissing
If your savings are deposited where you can't run In any moment and draw One
amounts to meet passing waste you'll be morn apt to let the ysineiyali fie, Cud
gather Interest. Our system of
BANKING is as Ws end
as if yon visited tho Union Trust Co's offices in poracm. We eJbn
4 per cent. interest if n Deposi
Intereet is compounded quarterly. Balances are always aubjoct to ck o ze.
THE UNi • N TRUST CO., Limited
Temple Building, 174-176 Bay Street, TORONTO
Send for Booklet, "Bunking by mail"
SAFETY DEPOSIT VAULTS SQta£taW
MONEY TO LOAN
E HTe1 CANADA
:Z and 4 Cyclo
lCnglnoe,
Complete
Launchae
HAMILTON MOTOR WORKS, Lttl.
HAMILTON. ONT.
CPECIAL 60•D,4Y OT°TEIi. AvnnCOMArIc TEI.,d0eo:PE,WiT5I a0LA3. EYUEr I lcS
FACETQ FACE WITH THE SUN!
Beon te tea she un.pout NEEDED ON FARM,SEA OR HANCH. BY MAIL INSVRED, 81.20
cod tpo,1 D a w n .er r ,, near t
eBITIVELy Boob a � p x o •y)d or tbL pica ba[ora. T>tno Ta]ewapae oro made A7 VV he
It's it rnTr CAY o o Iobnod mewu cloned ,t ,oleop� ones acere0ac 0 eeoaona 913 o ioii e6 BOCNd.
UA9a iiTr. CATEL LUPEd toe,Ch do re Teduetleseop,e)sPew$a1^UL es "old (rotencly to P1•A . Ever solos r.0r
uanAN
r ag TSM IIARI(a. "boon!
�on a men eats been sold from so to at r onld 3e; m,roer
• �tnyetwee erto vl i ego a nor be; edlitb
-'rat's r r o is one of !etas ne m n<e• and�no tenter ti d
iaenonatryry" a melds ppoopp __ T.s4ou
ono.osornO Ta IIII,E9AWAFere bron,;htt0 view Mth ltl'oetoaeleeaarrnnroc rent ren fdy,,bpslupaoot 0, l( off
Sea ln• A lLls.O,o irgr optic watrhn,em ea005'eroohnrd�r.Tblelnert,d. oW nd 5011,ldnot 510(
Wffi IV.oa So,. mush Tc0,01,, SQaTAR),, (50.e00500bor monerrornndal. 4YVHMAT' lOur,pitieT0000
oar; Hoo. e, #4 It•sere.?F' vgratir e. Trot I end nleb mtoa my reeoae Rarapeaa ,1o, T C
TTour,o0oo.traal• acneoesrwa wire ,,ah Ier cya yleamr 515ahe1Mnaaa r,vo tosaeeaun. Attea Anotrinn saucy
It was nlmortBE par cone oonCealad, Tanr Ater cTe• ate a ac Ih1ns vita �y,111no to me on this ooeoelo'a woe many
Mit'
rail
RAO
chs en fro orey fer Cha Teleeaope. YonrA T pH'RNRR�r.
ii'1�1t�fLAND BRO�. erne (JDq DEPT. W y D bH,1M Zits STREET, NEW YORK.
Your Grandsons W 111 Be
Old Men Before This
"Oshhawas" *r, oOf Wears Out
Roof your bettldin s with " Oshawa " Galvanized Steel Shingles
this years and that will be a GOOD roof in 2004. We will give
fou a written guarantee backed by S260,00)0, that such a roof,
roperly put on, will need no repairs and no painting for at least
weenty-five years.
! ,1 p " is IfIEEL"Warmed Y 1 GLES
make roofs water -tight, wind -proof, weather-proof, rust -proof,
fire -proof for a century, -our plain guarantee steeps 16 so for
26 years without a cent of cost to the man who buys it.2
Made in ONE QUALITY ONLY,—of 28-guaje,t
semi -hardened STEEL double -galvanized
TheThey lock on all FOUR, ides—the ONLY METAL
+d ahI 1e that need NO CLEATS. Ea toput
y Gat the facts � � on --a laam-
before z> and'a amps (tinners'shears) are tools enouh. Cost
you roof L , „ and last longer than any other roof. Tell us the
athe ,
ng sil�face a of an foo
7 u area � � fon,_ your place and itwe will
> 0�1 of Oshawa e1 you exactly what it will cost to roof right.
IMts rr� qqWinn ripe
691-a ilr tw D ti61ba'tna tit, te9 rt sash st 69;tWZIse. Ie JAin fit alb Pasha t,
I FE MY.
0
Made of Bt h Carbon W lro,-x071 prove it to you. 0011, D -[rpt hope I. This
ones it etltl stronger in semen, 16 stake taut. Painted WS1ITB 0040 Iter
taxa. :A GrICWltF4lPk WICNCz COMPANY, LZ$ivillae
WEA
Urslv4eteing—rust proof Experienced deal(' /n to arca. Loado all [n aeles
leo9 4 -ea in Mont, Get illustrated book' t and 100? )trios before buying
W lrVUU1wa Toreka$.as a4440,-,>009,0.140 yfi*o .TO'j*tiw Wiaa.ipeg