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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1909-6-3, Page 6YOUNG • FOLKS "MONEY -FLOWERS." Aunt Eunice stood in front of her dressing -table , putting on her hat, and little Eunice stood twitching her. "`hero are you going, aunty?" she said, at last, "I am going down -town to the beak to get some money," answer- ed ,Aunt Denies. Little Eunice .hugged her tall aunt's knees with enthusiasm. ' "And does money live at a bank?" she asked. "Yes, ib grows there, if yon let it alone," laughed Miss Appleby. Then she went out, aud'the child followed her to the garden gate. "I guess I'll put my money in the bank," she thought, and the more aha thought of it the mare she liked the idea. She went up -stairs to the nursery, and came down jing- ling a purse that had five bright, new pennies in it. "Here is a nine .bank," she said, climbing a small mound of green. 111 put it in mothers wild-flow- ergarden," she. said, half -aloud. "But I won't tell her till .-.e money -flowers grow, and we can pick all we want. Won't Aunty Eunice be surprised?" She grubbed in the fresh earth with her chubby fingers, and hid the pennies deep out of sight. It happened .that the windwoman, who scatters seeds everywhere over the garden when no one is leaking, had already planted marigolds in that very bed. Soon the green shoots came pushing up, and they grew and grew, until one summer morning they nodded their bright. yellow crowns at everybody who passed. Eunice saw them, and then she remembered. •and obtain new health. hiy pennies have grown in the bank:" she cried, and ran i to the! These Pills are sold by all medi.- liouse to call mother anal Aunt. cine dealers or you can get them Eunice to see the wonderful sight. by mail at 50 cents a box or six "Yogi eau pick all the golden money you want to," she said, proudly. She was se proud and happy that it was hard far mother to tell her that she had chosen the wrong sort of bank for her money to grow in. "Come along, honey girl:" said Aunt Eunice. "I ought to have explained that day. See, we'll put this old dollar in the ki bank hb g O g vn- we'll watch it real- lyto % and to U e n,w and truly grow every year." But the marigolds were so big and yellow that Eunice liked to pre- tend they had grown from her bright pennies. And this is the rea- son that the Applebyc always call marigolds "money -flowers.'' A QUESTION OF HEALTH Without Blob, Rei Blood You Vau- nt bo i efli0 i4—Bow to Obtain This Blessing, If every womaa and young girl would realize, the danger of allows hag blood to became than and pool', would uaelerstand that the majority of common diseases are eaueed by en anaemic (or bloodless) condition, that persistent pallor means that the blood is net furniehing the or- gans with the required amount of nourishment, there would be awak- ened interest in the tonic treatment with Dr. 'Vi11iams' Pink Pills. Thin blood means starved nerves, weak- ened digestion, functional disor- ders;• headaches, frequently neu- ralgia, sciatica and even partial paralysis, Dr, Williams' Pink Pills build up the blood, repair waste and prevent and cheek disease. They fill the system with rich, red blood which means good health and life, Miss Marie Dionne, St, Angela, Que., says :—"I am deeply grateful for what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have done for me. My blood had almost turned to water. I was pale, had'no appetite, suffered from pains in the back and side, and had a. feeling of constant depres- sion. The smallest exertion would leave me breathless, and I was re- duced in flesh until I weighed only 98 pounds, I got nothing to help me until I began the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. They began helping me after the first couple of weeks, and in a few weeks more I was again perfectly well. The color returned to my cheeks, the pains left me, and I gained in weight un- til now I weigh 130 pounds. I feel so happy for what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have done for me that I hope some other ailing, miserable girl will profit by lay experience QUEER "DOGS." boxes for $2.50 from the Dr, Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. es MONUMENTS— TO POTATOES. Statues of Sir Francis Drake Erected in German Cities. "When 1 was in Germany last year," said a man who travels, "1 saw someP eople who like potatoes even better than I do. At any rate they erect statues to them. ' `Offonberg was the first city to erect a monument of this kind. The upper part consists of a statue of Sir Francis Drake, who introduced the plant into Europe. This, as well as the pedestal, is draped with garlands of the potato vine, with full grown tubers. Day anti night, night and day, "On the pedestal on one Side is day and night, Earl had travelled Sir Francis Drake's name, the sec - across the continent, watching from and side explains what a blessing has been tomankind, thewindows of .he flying train ar - thepotato kind ft do st g dens, grassy pastures, big barns and houses, miles of wheat_fields, cities and towns. "But they have great big ant- hills here," said Earl,"bigas our largest dish -pan. If the train would stop, maybe they'd look big as a little wash -tab." "See the prairie -dogs !" said the lady in the next seat. • "Where? Where? I don't see any:" cried Earl, feeling glad that he was on the train and that the siege, which must he wild, fierce things, most as big as lions, were off on the plains. "Everywhere in the &lel, close by the track, and all &rotund. Those are not ant -hills; they are prairie - the third records that the statue is the gift of a certain Andrew Fred- erick of Strasburg, the fourth con- tains the names of the erectors. A u similar to this is laced states in P the town of Muse, and I have been told that there are other copies in many small towns." COIYIFORT FOR MOTHERS HEALTH FOR CHILDREN Baby's Own Tablets will promptly cure indigestion, colic, constipa- tion, diarrhoea and teething trou- bles, destroy worms, break up colds and thus prevent deadly croup. This medicine contains no dog huts. This is a prairie -dog vii- !poisonous opiates ar narcotics, and lige." i may be given with absolute safety I don't see any dogs. I see a to anew-born child. Mrs. 0. L. stick on the top of each ant -hill. What snakes the sticks fall down? Why, are they the dogs? They Manery, Leamington, Ont., says: "My baby suffered from colic and constipation so badly that we did jump down and frisk away so fast !not know what it was to get a good 'I can't see where they go. There night's rest. But since giving him goes one, and there, and there, and Baby's Own Tablets the trouble has there!" he cried, disappeared, and he now sleeps "They burrow for a long distanee well. The action of the Tablets is underground," said Mrs. Lee. gentle yet very effective." Sold by "Sometimes a cowboy, spurring his medicine dealers or by mail at 25 bronco over the plains, is pitched off by having his bronco stumble into a. burrow." "But they aren't dogs at all: The aren't as large as woodchucks 1 Abont as large as squirrels, aren't they 3" "Yes, just about." "Oh, I must get some pictures of them to send back to New York," said Earl. But although he search- ed through every store, he could not find a •single picture of a prairie - Slug village, because the "dogs" ere so shy it is almost impossible to photograph them. — Youth's Companion. A REMARKABLE RACE. The Lapps are very fond of sti- niulnting drinks; they think nothing of drinking fifteen or twenty cups of coffee a day, while their con- sumption of punch is on a vast scale. )t ie no uncommon thing to see numbers of helplessly -drunk drative4 in the streets of Tr'omso,. especially when the sale of reindeer flesh has been profitable. Yet rob- bery and, indeed, eri'me in general LI VP practically unknown among them; the innate honesty of the people is quite extraordinary.. Only a sober•, man should attempt to walk a tight rope, "THE WIDOW" OF FRANC E ANECDOTES OP "lI. AE NARIS" Al1'1) HIS "ASSISTANT," The Delbier Family Iles lied Three Generations q$Exeoutioners iy lv)'ance, In the eyes of thousands of French people, the public executioner is al - moat as famous a person as the President. In one respect ho is superior to the latter, for his past is hereditary. Three generations of Deiblers have been in succession master of the ceremonies at the ghastly operations of "The Widow," as Parisians jocularly nickname the guillotine, To -day Anatole Deibler, owing to the fact that it was his privilege re- cently to preside at the beheading of four desperate bandits, after Frantic+ had been without an execu- tion for three years, is a popular hero, whom the thousands of holi- day-makers at Bethune cheered to the echo. "MONSIEUR DE PARIS." This, however, was something out of the ordinary. Anatole's father, Louis, the most famous member of the Deibler family, was accustom- ed to a very different style of re- ception. The crowd used to hoot and yell curses at him when he ap- peared on the guillotine platform, though without ever making any ap- parent effect on the quiet little man, commonly known as "Monsieur de Paris," He merely went on with his preparations as if complete- ly oblivious of the fast that a howl- ing mob a few yards away would gladly tear him limb from limb, if they only had the opportunity. He had scores of weird experi- ences on the scaffold. The last ex- ecution in which he took part was a most uncanny affair. An Italian named Carrara was to be beheaded for the brutal murder of a bank clerk, in which he had been assisted by his wife. The condemned man was confident that he would be re- prieved. The shock was so great when he learned, an hour or two before the time appointed for his execution, that he was to die, that he had a violent heart seizure, and sank into a state of collapse. The doctors certified that the man still breathed, but it was toll appearances life- ra less Form which Deibler and his as- sistants dragged to the guillotine; and the knife fell to the accom- paniment of cries of "You are be- heading a corpse!" Most of the persons who were present on that occasion are positive that Carrara had actually flied before the guillo- tine was reached. SMOKING ON THE SCAFFOLD. Murderers differ in their demean- or on the scaffold in the most ex- traordinary way, and the members of the Deibler family could relate hundreds of examples of this. For instant Pr mien youth e u a o h of , y twenty-three who murdered an old woman of seventy, and was execut- ed at Beauvais, kept up a running fire of chaff at Louis Deibler, and. puffed a cigarette as he walked to the guillotine. Very different was Deibler's ex- perience at his first exeotuion. Laprade, the murderer to be guillo- tined, was a youth of twenty, who tried to kill his father,. mother, and grandmother with a gun, and, hav- ing only succeeded an wounding them, finished his victims off with a sickle and the butt end of the gun. He was a man of very powerful physique, and fought like a maniac with Deibler when the latter at- tempted to thrust him into position below the knife of "The Widow." sake of her precious storm, • Ro was caught two months later, and the last man he spoke to was Donis Deibler. "'Monsieur de Paris,, „ he said, was taketc lac guil!ootine,as "1 ho boar you mi,n grudge,,, notorious Gabrielle Bona- pard's confederate, Eyrand, was guillotined by Louis Deibler, Eyrand, most people will remember, was assisted by Bompard in strangl- ing a process-server. Ilia body they hid in a trunk bought in the Euston Road, London, and they eventually took iv to the South of France, where they aeposited it in a field near Lyons, Afterwards they took ship to Havana, but were caught, Eyrand being sentenced to death, and the woman Bompard to a term of imprisonment, Like hie son, Anatole,. Louis Deibler was of a very retiring dis- position in private life, His hobby was fishing, and wherever: he went on his gruesome business he took his rods and tackle with him, Itis told of him that once, when he had arrived at a small provincial town to parry out an execution, an offs cial intimation was received order- ing a postponement while the ques- tion of a reprieve was settled. Diebler spent the interval in fishing, and when a notification arrived that the sentence of death was to take effect, he calmly packed up his angl- ing outfit, proceeded to the place of execution, and operated with the guillotine.—London Answers. sIs ALL THE FASHIONS. In ancient time kings and queens were as assiduously copied by fashionmongers as are the Sover- eigns of to -day. Many a well- known and long-lived fashion owes. its origin to some accident on the part of a great ruler. Thus the peruke, which bad so Tong, a life, was due to the feet that Phillip, Duke of Burgundy, in order to cover up a bald head, took to wear- ing artificial hair, setting a fash- ion that became world-wide. Charles the Seventh of France, to cover up his misshapen legs, wore a long coat. This led to a fashion for long coats, The neck ruffs, which our sisters and cousins still wear, were first used by Queen Elizabeth to hide a none too comely neck. During the reign of George the Third the Duke of York fought a duel with a Colonel Lennox, who succeeded in shooting away one of his Royal Highness's earls. It thenceforward became the fashion to near a curl on one side of the temple onl '. P 3 WHICH FOOT WALKS FASTER i You may think this a very silly question to ask, but it isn't. If you will take a pavement that is clear, and walk briskly in the sen tre, you will find, before you have gore fifty yards, that you have veered very much to one aide. You must not make any effort, of course, to keep in the centre; but if you will think of something, aux endeavor to walk naturally, you will not be able to keep a correct line. If you lise yourself on an ex- panse of bleak moorland, and walk on,youwrllhavedeacribedac0 com- plete plete circle. The explanation of this lies in the propensity of one foot to walls faster than the other, or take a longer stride than the other, causing you to walk to one side. To make assurance doubly sure, try placing two sticks about 8 feet apart; then stand off about 60 feet., blindfolde yourself, and endeavor to walk between them. 1t is almost impossible. A Boon for the Bilious. — The liver is a very sensitive organ and easily deranged. When this occurs there is undue secretion of bile and the acrid liquid flows into the sto- mach and sours it, It is a most distressing ailment, and many are prone to it. In this condition a Laprade refused to submit, until !man finds the best remedy iu. Par - finally Deibler and his men were' melee's Vegetable Pills, which are compelled to render him insensible warranted to speedily correct the by knocking him down. In another disorder. There is no better medi- minute the guilotine had performed cine in the entire list of pill pre - its gruesome task. parations. Sudden remorse on the part of the criminal at the very last mo- MISTAKEN' IDENTITY. meat has led to the Deiblers becom- A imam going home at a late hour in the .night, saw that the occu- pants of a house standing flush with the street had left a window tip, a,nd he decided to warn them, and prevent a burglary. Putting his head into the window he called out: "Hello, good peop--" That was all he saki. A whole pailful of water struck him in the face, and, as he staggered back, a woman shrieked out ( "Didn't I tell you what you'd get if you wasn't home by nine o'clock!" cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Mg the recipients of many remark, Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. SO PEG AWAY. 'Tia not the great conceited, Who think themselves unique, And blow their own big trumpet With such amount of cheek, Who score the greatest triumphs In warehouse, mill, or shop; It is the silent plo.clder Who oft comes out on top. 'Tis not, in competition, Where .many enter in, Tho man who thinks, "Whoever. May enter, f shall win," Who carries off the glory When those who're beaten stop ; The unassuming rival So oft comes out on top. So peg away, ye toilers, Whate'er your task may be; There's every hope to cheer you, As far as man can see. You never knmv the moment, Until the curtains drop, That you may be sueeessful, And yet Sonic out on top. Tinnnan (moeing an old friend after a long /lbsenee)---"Hello, Sims: Fancy meeting yen. Why, I heard you were ill !" "No; it was my brother_ -not me." "Dear, dear! I'm sorry to hear that." able confessions. A Paris Apache, on the scaffold, once begged Deibler to take certain little trinkets to his sweetheart after the execution, and "Monsieur de Paris," who was by no means callous at heart, faithfully discharged the mission, and also tried to comfort the wretched girl by assuring her that her lover had gone to his death without flinch- ing. he Deihlers, in carrying out the law's most dread decree, have come in contact with dozens of men whose crimes have horrified Europe. To mention only a few of them, the name of the notorious Marchandon instantly recurs to the memory. He was a Paris butler, holding a splen. did position; but the lust of gold corrupted him, and he murdered his rich old mistress one night in her mansion in the Rue de Seze. His crime was brought home to him, and when Louis Deibler met hint on the scaffold he was a cringing coward, who crawled, rather than walked. PRADO, TEE DESPERADO. Then there was Prado, a notori- ous desperado, who for years posed as a guide, and swindled anyone who was foolish enough to confide in him. He persuaded a woman who had a magnificent collection of jewellery to fall in love with him, and then murdered her for the 1SSl'I$ N0, 22-00. GOT TO THE ROOT OF HIS TROUBLE W++� NO DODO'S KIDNEY rII,I,S C131t77U '41'. WR1G1IT'S BACIf:IC,RIE. Ire had Suffered for Several 'Years but the Old Reliable Kidney Re' rncdy Gero.11lut Quick Reliefs Kelvington Sask., May 24th (Special), -"Yes, Dodd's Kidney Pills cured me of Backache, and 1 have recommended them to others who have also been cured," .These are the words of William Wright, farmer well known hero. I be- lieve I inherited my trouble," Mr. Wright continues, "At times for several years it was very •severe. I also suffered from Lumbago, and in the morning I. had a bitter taste in my mouth and was troubled with dizziness and my skin was dry and harsh and there was a sediment fn my urine. "No treatment I could find gave me any permanent relief till finally believing that my kidneys were the root of trouble, 1 determined' to try Dodd's Kidney Pills. Four boxes cured me." Mr. Wright went .at his trouble sensibly. He examined his symp- toms., and they showed him that Kidney Disease was his trouble. Do as much for yourself, and if your symptoms point to disordered or diseased kidneys the cure is easy. Dodd's Kidney Pills will do it. They never fail. A BAKER'S DOZEN. Them as wants, must choose. Them as has, must lose. Them es knows, won't blab. Them as.guesses, will gaeb. Thein as borrows, sorrows. Them as lends, spends. Them as gives, lives. Them as keeps dark, is deep. Then. as can earn, can keep. Them as alma, hits. , Them as has, its. Them that waits, win. Them as will, kin. Do not delay in getting relief for the little folks. Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator is a pleasant and sure cure. If you love your. his whydo you let it suffer childs er when a remedy is se near at hand? TOYS ON TRAINS. One of the English railways has provided an alleviation of 'she dis- comforts of travel which does not seem to have occurred to the com- panies in this country. It provides a box of toys with which a child may amuse itself during the jour- ney. The box contains a cardboard reproduction of one of the trains P of the road, also a station, and with little .figures of passenger's, guards, porters and newsboys. We want reliable agents all over Canada to sell our high grade Perfumes, Toilet Requisites, Teas, Coffees, Spices, Etc. Excellent opportunity for energetic men THE ROME SPEOIALTIES CO., Toronto, Toronto, Canada, SORRY HE SPOKE. "This policeman seems to be very certain about everything connect- ed with my ease," said the defend- ant charged with being drunk and disorderly, "but there is one weak point in his evidence, anyway. Why does he not call his fellow -officer to corroborate what he says 7" "The gentleman is a stranger in the district, your Honor," remark- ed the witness. "There's only one policeman stationed in the village, and that is myself." "But," exclaimed the prisoner with some indignation, "I saw two policemen last night." "Exactly," remarked the bench, "exactly. That is just the charge against you." A Woman's Sympathy Are you dlscouraged? Is your doctor's 6111 a heavy financial load? Is your pain a heavy physical burden? I know what these mean to delicate women—I have been discouraged. too; but learned how to Mire myself. I want to relieve your bur- dens. Why not end the pain and stop tete doctor's bill? I can do this for yoy and wiq 1f you will assist me. All you need do is to write for a free box of the remedy which has been placed In my hands to be given away. Perhaps Otis one box will sure you—it has done Se for others. I1 so,I shall be hippy and You will be curefor 20 (tho lost of e postage stare). Your lettere held confi- dentially. Write ` to -der for m_Y free treat- Mont.IILISS, re. 87 =ARAM, Windsor, Ont, LOSE WEIGHT AT NIGHT. Don't rush off at once to the doc- tor if you find 'that during your sleep you have lost nearly four pounds. And don't get worried if yon find that a brisk walk has in- volved a similar loss. Scientific in- vestigation shows that the healthy human being is losing and gaining weight through the whole twenty- four hours, You are lightest just before breakfast, but one hour lat- tr you may have gained twenty- eight ounces; while, after losing and gaining off and on during the day, a good dinner in the evening will add no less than thirty-four onnces to your avoirdupois. The biggest drop takes place while man is in the arms of Morpheus, the av- erage loss being three and a half you nets. A worthless man always seems to have more friends than a worthless woman. P tLA.Gl'1 1111111 111' ONIO MAN, Tool(it 'Ofllli•oarrier Twenty Year's to Coustraut It, The strangest -looking building ever put up by man ie probably the palace whack a French mailcar'rier has erected for his .own pleasure. "For ten long years," the owner of this house is reputed to have said, "I treasured in my mind a dream which, took the form of fantastic palace, with grottoes, towers, aoulptare, etc., and it was my dream to build it myself." Twenty-six years ago he began building his dream palace, and he has been at it ever some, until re - gently, when he stopped only be- cause he had finished the palace.' Every 'stone that went into it was picked up` by himself ; every stone was laid by him. The design was conceived in his own mind as he want on, and was carried . out no - cording to the extraordinary plan that he had imagined. Now that the palace is finished it looks like a petrified dream is which the nightmare played a cer- tain part, It is a fantastic nonde- script, combining all architectural stiles and adorned with stone crea- tures which would defy the classi _ fication of a naturalist. In put- ting this stone phantasmagoria to- gether the builder used no fewer than 3,600 sacks of cement. The palace has subterranean pas- sages in which` nudely -•sculptured elephants and imaginary monsters stand guard, In the very centre of t'he palace is a tomb, where the owner expects some day to Be. This is the most elaborately -carved bit of the whole house. .T In the treatment of summer con'. - plaints, the most effective remedy that can be used is Dr. J. D. Kel- logg's Dysentery Cordial. It is a standard preparation, and many people employ it in preference to ether preparations. It is a highly concentrated medicine and its se- dative and curative qualities are beyond question. It has been a popular medicine for many years and thousands can attest its superi- or'qualities in overcoming dysen- tery and kindred complaints: AN EXPLANATION. "Why do you call her a cat?" "She scratched me off her visit- ing list." DON'T BE DECEIVED. — n Iascru along rakers am attempting' tin " to steal your mono m p a and our rof "The by. nutting out an imitation of 'The D. & L." Menthol Plaster, lie sure to get the genuine made ha Davis & Lawrence Co. "We obtain wool from sheep. The wool is made into cloth, and with the cloth they make clothes. Now, Edmund, what is your over- coat made of?" "0f an old one of father's, sir!" Cheapest of All Medicines, -Con- sidering the curative qualities of Dr. Thorns' Ecle. trio Oil it is the cheapest medicine now offered to the public. The dose required in any ailment is small and a bottle contains many doses. If it were valued at the benefit it confers it could n i ou of tourcltased p fon' many times the price asked for it, but in- creased consumption has simplified and cheapened its manufacture. Owing to the declining birth-rate in Iowa, $1 is to be paid to the mother of each child born in that State. Red, Weak, Wears, Walcry Eros Relieved by ltfutine Rye Remedy. Com- pounded by Experienced Physicians, Mo- rino Doesn't Smart; Soothes Eye Pain, Write Marino Eye Remedy Co„ Chicago, for Illustrated Eye Book. At Druggists. Laplanders not infrequently cover 150 miles a day on their skates. There are a number of varieties of corns. Holloway's Corn Cure will remove any of them. Call on your druggist and get a bottle at once. 'Stooloseli, Henderson & Cu,. heinbllehvd 55 Yvern PRIME e t Toronto, 74 King tat, W a., io rto, ID.YER$ AND CLEANEI RS' WORM MAONINBaY HAHpsOMa OVILOINP6> ager Hauer fN &WADS l sprees paid One Way on Coolie From a piston,o, MSU SUPPOSITION, A traveller says that the natives of Madagascar perspire only on one side, We suppose that is the enf- olds, An Always Ready Pill, --To those of regular habit medicine is of little concern, but the great majority of men are not of regular bebit. The worry and cares of :business pre- vent it, and out of the irregularity of life comes dyspepsia, indigestion,: liver andkidney troubles as a pro- test, The run-down system de- mands a corrective and there is, none better than Parmelee's Vege- table Pills. Tboy are' eimple in their composition and can be taken by the most delicately constituted. A good fountain pen is an ink convenience. HO HOME should bo without,it. Pain- killer the best all-round medicine ever• made. Used as a liniment for bruises and. swellings. Internally forcramps and diarrhoea, Avoid substitutes, there is but. one "Painkiller"—Perry Davie -26. and 600. TOOLED, Few women are morn badly Fooled than those who believe they regu- late the habits of their husbands. THE "BURLINGTON ROUTE "' will inaugurate May :8rd, two through trains, Chicago to Seattle, Wash„ ria 81. Paul, daily- Low ailyLow rates to: all North and 80u511 Pacific Coast. points A forty page folder descriptive of the ,tlauka•Yukon Exposition free for the asking. For information In regard to rates and train set• vice write or can on I. A. YOUR:a, 6d King 8t. Bast, Toronto, Ont,, WANTED. G1EL8 for dining -room work. Wages MOO, per month, Apply "The fit, 8t, Catharines. WANTED.—Ladies to do plain and light sewing at home,. whole or spare time, good pay; work sent any distance, charges prepaid;. send stamp far full particulars. Na- tional Manufacturing Company,.. Montreal. CHENILLE CURTAINS .ad .1I Yfad• of haus, Hengieg., •1.o OS CURTAINS DYED &c L¢ AHas• LIKE,r,New, Write to us about roars. CRITIEH AMERIOAII DY5I110 O0.. t<.x 16e, tiontrogD Brass Band This is the Time to Organise Instruments, Drums, Band Musk, Ede. •EVERY TOWN CAN HAVE BAND - Lowest o1]plustrsatioons quoted.Fine free catalogue, W itenvi' for anything in Music or Musical Instruments, WHALEY, ROYCE ' CO„ Limited Toronto, Ont., and Winnipeg, Man, WARREN GZOWSK( & CO. Members Toronto Stock Bicbange. Traders Bank Building, 86 Broad Street, TORONTO. NEW YORK STOCKS AND BONDS ZIT=nog COBALT Stooks. write us apocializing lq COBALT i dor tn(onsatioa, Fire Insurance Agents Wanted Richmond & Drummond Fire Insurance Com. piny, Bead Office, itichmond' Quo. Bstabtishod 1878. Capital 824000. Tor agenolesat unrepr.• seated points, Province of Ontario, address 1. H. EWART, Chief Agent, No. IS Wellington St., Bast, Toronto, =ins MEN DH WOME9 !WE GIVE FREE SAIIPLE Make three dollars C'SE a day and establish permanent business on our capital. Our high claw geode sell on eight in every home, aror Zj� , quickly used. up and WRitE iY . repeat orders uome ' P8? CATALOGUE unary r•. en Ivo tor - THE HOWIE SUPPLY CO., Dept. 60., TORONTO, O:IT. USED IN Leading Conservatories, Colleges, Schools, Theatres,and in thousands of homes where a piano of distinctive merit is appreciated. The Bell is the only piano with the Illimitable Repeating Action. h Send for (free) Catalogue No. 70. 'iii ffW-W iP1/�iNO) OrAon Co.. Limited G'U L' LPH.ONTAR fG'I`.1 A PERFECT FOOD .RANCE MEAT is made from Lho whole wheat thoroughly cooked. Wheat contains all the necessary 'elements to sustain lifein' bettor proportleusthan any other cereal. OEANGE MEAT AND MILE IS A Pi;RF.EOT ,FOOD, To persistent users of ORANGE MEAT a reward is offered. They will pay Seven hundred 0ollare In gold or Ylftytwo Didion, every year during 11 fetitre, A private postcard In every pnekago of Orange Moatgives NH details of how toearn this and other prizes, ir you enter this militant, send pont carts to Orange Mont, Whew Ma giving full name and address, and Mention' the paper in elicit you Bow this advertisement. .