HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1911-9-28, Page 7fi
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Young Folks
A'AIr41 f►7 FasY'a ^y RFA(, i►
ON THE ROCKS.
Katlic; Ino was the first to sug-
gest it.
"Let's go away out on the rooks,"
she said to Richard. "We can see
them soo much better if we get
closer."
"We'll frighten them," answer'
ed her brother, tad perhaps they
will fly away and never come
back."
"They ought tc' know by this thne
that WO are good friends and will
not harm them," insisted Rather.
ine, •
So off they started down the long
beach which lay' in front of the sea•
shore cottage where Katherine and
Richard Gates were passing the
summerwith their parents. A11,
the happy weeks since their arrival
they had beengreatly interested in
a little flock of wild ducks, which
wore often seen on the water near
a ledge of rooks which ran far out
into the ecean from the beach. For
hours at a time, and sometimes fol
a whole day, the ducks would float
on the waves beyond the rooks,
attending strictly to their' own
. business, whatever it was, and
!wholly unafraid of the children,
who watched them and called to
them, from the neighboring beach,
Now Katherine and Richard were
going to try to get better acquaint-
ed with them.
They ran along on the hard sand,
—for the tide was far out,—stop.
ping occasionally to pick up a curi-
ous shell ' or to ox,amine some
strange bit of seaweed left behind
by the waves.
"There comes Rusty!" suddenly
exclaimed Richard as he looked
back. ,"He must not come; he
will frighten the ducks."
"Go back, Rusty I Go home 1"
gloated Katherine.
The little pet spaniel paused,
doubtfully; and then, as the com-
mand was repeated, he dropped his
tail sorrowfully between his legs,
and trotted slowly back toward
the cottage.
W.hon they reached the rocks,
they started bravely out over the
rough ledge toward the sparkling
blue waters of the bay. They made
their way with much care, for the
water was now close on either side
of them, and once in a while a rock
was so high that they had to help
each other in clambering over it.
At last they were well out to the
end, and from the top of the larg-
est and highest rock they looked
eagerly round for their friends, the
ducks.
But the ducks were wide-awake
and did not want to be too friendly.
While Katherine and Richard
ferambled over the rocks, they hid
been swimming a little distance
out into the bay. There they paus-
ed and looked back—apparently
not alarmed, but still preferring to
keep at a safe distance.
In vain. the children called to
them and coaxed them to come
back. For an hour or two they sat
en the big rock and waited for the
duo]cs to return to their familiar,
haunt at the end of the ledge.
"Oh, see what. has happened I"
cried Katherine in dismay. "The
tide is coming in and we are cut off
from the shore!"
"It isn't deep yet; let's hurry,"
urged Richard. But they soon
found that it was too deep for them
to wade through in some of the
places between the rocks.
"I guess somebody will see us,"
said Richard, bravely, "and per-
haps the tido does not cover the
rocks all over, any way."
"Yes, it does, when it is very
high," declared Katherine.
They strained their eyes up and
down the beach, but not a person
was in sight; and there was no
boat on all the bay. Little by lit-
tle each hurrying wave rushed
shoreward. They forgot all about.
the ducks, but each tried bravely
to give hope and eourage to the
other. The shouted and shouted,
but there was no response except
the pounding of the surf on the
beach and rocks.
Suddenly there was a sound of,
barking on the beach. Rusty was
pawing the sand and talking to
them in dog -language as best he
could, Then, almost before they
had time to call to .him, he had
rushed off up the beach.
"Oil, I know I" breathlessly cried
Katherine. "Rnsty has gone for
help! Good old Rusty I"
And that was just what Rusty
had done. When he came into the
cottage, barking so furiously, it
was plain at once that something
was wrong outside, and Mr. Gatos
ran down to the beach,
A few moments later he had wad-
ed out on the slippery. ledge, where
the water was now above his waist
in places, and had brought both
children on his shoulders- to the
shore, somewhat wet, but safe and
happy.
And to think,"
said Katherine
at last, "that we sent Rusty,
home !"—Youth's Companion.
Many an honest dollasa acgthines
taint tlI u,Wb ai(tociaticz.,
}IAS MANKIND ADVANCED
ROW DO WE COMPARE 1'VI'iH
OM? ANCESTORS?
Intelleetaially It may Be Clainscd
Mankind Ilan Made Great
Advances;
Every now and then eivilieation
has a fit of dejection, and begins
to ask itself whether it •is worth
while, and whether the average
twentieth-century man would not
have a happier tine of it if he could
be transplanted' back' into theeav-
agery in which his ancestors lived
thousands of years ago,
Sonia distinguished American pro-
fessors have recently been discuee-
ing the question afresh, and it is
curious how widely they agree that
mankind has made rather a bad
bargain in adopting civilisation.
Medical opinion holds emphatical-
ly that, as healthy animals, we are
not to be compared with our savage
ancestors. We are steadily losing
teeth, hair, and, toes. We are
ravaged by indigestion—a disease
which, with its consequences, one
professor has called far too heavy
a price in itself to pay for civilisa-
tion. Our sanity, too, is steadilly
being underminded by nervous dis-
eases,
None of these maladies' were
known in primeval times; nor was
consumption, another scourge of
civilisation. Ins spite ofthe brillan
t deeds and discoveries of medical
and surgical science, the civilised
world is simply undermined with
disease. Civilisation, in fact, is
unhealthy, and these centuries of
disease have permanently weaken-
ed the human body. A'savage ter-
ribly mangled by a tiger will recov-
er steadily without assistance from
wounds which even the healthiest
of Europeans, under the most skill-
ed medical attention, could not sur-
vive for an hoar.
A VISION OF THE FUTURE.
In fact, medical opinion declares
that the civilised man will, after a
few thousand years more of civilisa-
tion, be a toothless animal, with
small, shrunken legs and arms, and
a massive, bald head, with large,
half -blind eyes.
Even though the average man of
to -day undergoes more physical suf-
fering in a month than his far-off
ancestor did in a lifetime, it may be
claimed that intellectually mankind
has made tremendous' advances.
That is true; but, intellect does
not add to all-round happiness. The
professors of philosiphy are of
opinion that if the finer modern
brain gives a wider circle of plea-
sures, it also makes sorrow Jn.ire
bitter. Our more sensitive nerves,
too, find causes for worry and de-
pression in trifles that would fail to
make any impression whatever on
a simpler, stupider brain.
Then the digestive troubles, from
which practically every civilised
man suffers more or less, cloud
and darken the capacity for hap-
piness. The civilised 'world affects
superiority to the ehiidlko glee
which makes a savagestand on his
head or dance when he is pleased;
but that, say the philosophers, is
simply a sign that civilisation has
dulled men's capacity for joy, and
made them poorer.
TAKING TROUBLES SIMPLY.
Are we an improvement on our
savage ancestors morally? That is
a point on which opinions are more
varied. There certainly seems in
civilised countries a spirit of kind-
liness and charity that is not common
among savages; who are' usually
quite indifferent to the sufferings of
others. The spirit which has pro-
duced the great charitable organ-
isations, and which is shown, to
take only one instance, ingen-
eral
the
eral hatred of cruelty to animals,
must have been quite incompre-
hensible in the days before civilisa-
tion.
The cruelty that young children
often show to animals weaker than
themselves is simply a cast -back to
primeval days. Education and the
example of their elders soon drive
this cruelty out.
But another school of thought
points out that, from the point of
view of personal happiness, this
tendency to enter into the suffer-
ings of others has been a loss, not
again. Our savage forefathers not.
only took their own troubles more
simply than we do ours, but refused•
to add the sufferings of others to
their own; or, rather, their brains
-and imagination were so undevelop-
ed that they were incapable of doing
ED.
ISSUE reali
so. Th Probably did not matter,
a pin to the American or English -
Ulan of the Stone Age whether his
son lost a leg in a fighter not. Our
ancestors took other people's trona
hies easily.
RAILWAYS IN AFRICA,
The Enterprise of the Germans on
the Vilest Coast,
The Deutsche Kolonialblatt, print-
ed ha Germany, publishes the in-
formation that the Central African
Railway, starting from Dar-es-
Salaam on the West Coast, has now
reached the station of Tura andis
now only eighty-three miles from
Tabora, says the London Standard,
The company is said to be now
laying down the line at the rate of
sixteen miles a month, so that ' it
would reach Tabora in the spring
of next year, or nearly two years
earlier than was expected when the
scheme came before the Reichstag in
1904. At that time, it may be re-
membered the concession was ap-
proved as far as Morogoro, and the
lino first reached this place in Oct-
ober, 1909, It was then decided
to prolong it for another 460 miles
to Tabora, '
The first part of the new section
was difficult, and at the beginning
of 1910 the work had only got as far
as Kideten, a little more than
eighty miles, From here onward,
however, a vast tableland stretches
almost to Lake Tanganyika, and the
330th mile is now under construc-
tion.
There is little doubt that when
Tabora is reached the line will he
further prolonged to Oujidi, on the
lake, as soon as the Reichstag has
approved the extension. Although
the line has a certain commercial
value, its principal object is politi-
cal, and it must be looked at in con-
junction with the great scheme : of
the late King of the Belgians for
a transafrican line which he placed
before the Geographical Congress
of Brussels in 1876. It lay dormant
for many years, but has lately been
taken up again seriously.
At present the Belgian -Congo
Railway runs from Matadi to Leo-
poldville, and from there a steam-
er service goes up the Sankuru
River 1,124 miles from the Atlantic
coast to Lussambo. There remains -
a little more than 460 miles between
Lussambo and Lake Tanganyika.
A Belgian company, styled the
Company of the Upper Congo and
African Lakes, hasalready com-
menced operations, by surveying for
a line from Lukuga to the lake at
Cabalo, and is applying for a new
concession to join Cabalo and
Mutombo, thus completing the Bel-
gian -German chain of railway and
steamer services across the contin-
ent. -
It is calculated in Belgium that
the line from Cabalo to Mutombo
could be finished in 1914, which is
about the date the German line
line should reach Oujidi. That this
is no "wildcat" scheme is proved
by a recent announcement in the
Kolnische Zeitung that the capital
of the above named company was to
bo raised from £2,000,000 to £3,-
000,000, in order to bring the ter-
minus at Tanganyika opposite the
German, one. It is more than pro-
bable that in the negotiations now
proceeding at Berlin this, tran-
afriean railway project of Germany
will be taken into consideration.
Thousands of country people
know the value of Hamlins Wizard
Oil, the best family medicine in
case of accident or sudden illness.
For the safety of your family buy a
bottle now.
QUITE TRUE.
Don't hate the man whoskins you,
With more than passing vim;
Somebody, somewhere, surely,
Is busy skinning him.
And while we're on the subject,
Consider this much, too: •
You're probably skinning someone,
While someone else skins you.
Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere.
TO CURE THOSE SCOWLS.
Just Scare Yourself by Noticing its
Effect on Others.
A good way to cure yourself of the
habit of frowning is to observe the
different expressions due to frowns
in the faces of the people we meet.
The scowl, given by two deep lines
between the eyes ; the worried look,
resulting from a furrowed fore-
head; the sly expression, induced
by squinting and causing tiny lines
to radiate from the corner of the
eye, an these and many more are
the result of frowns. For awhile
;the beauty specialist is able, with
the help of hot applications, cold
creams and much massage, to iron
out these disfiguring marks, but
there comes a time, and that soon,
when no amount of persuasion on
her part and no amount of money
extraoted from the weekly allow-
ance, will avail. How much better to
proceed on the plan that an ounce of
prevention is better than a pound
of pure,' and place a watch on the
frowning habit, dispersing the lines
as soon as they appear.
Solve people's idea of a helping
band is one that is lined with
von,
Well, Well
THIS len HOME DYE
X11 that ANYOuseNE
I dyed ALi, (hese
\ DIFFERENT. KPI DS
of Goods
with the SAME Dye.
Ursed
CLEAN and SIMPLE to Use.
NO Ie, n of using. th WRONG Oyu
0.
tor the Coeds
ons bus to lor. • All colors from your .Druggist or
TboniieSfitmAlov
Jehn.Rldon Co,LI,cvenl,
Cascada BLiSines$ College
CHATHAM, ONT.
In a class by itself Among America's
Schools of Business Training.
414 STUDENTS PLACED IN 1988
986 STUDENTS PLACED IN 1909
476 STUDENTS PLACED IN 1910
We publish the lists annually.
We pay full fare up to 68,00 and bring
long distance students for half fare.
Good board and room, 86.00 per week.
If you cannot. come to Chatham. we ecu
train you b9 MOM,.
Here aro some studeate placed reoentlyt.
Nate Wade .Cameron & Heap, Regina.
E. Burk,Nioboloon do Baia, Regina.
H. Woo, Trust Co., Cheboygan, Mich.
Eight calls just rooeived for Stenograph-
ers, Teachers and Auditors, for oponiugs
worth from 1°600 to 51600 will give you
some idea of the demandls.
COLLEGE REOPENS FOR 30TH YEAR
SEPTEMBER 5TH.
Catalogue
34osft at Chatham.,
sll .,Catalogue3tollwork Yma
(Either Free.)
D. MCLACH ANtbamO,OnL. 0, Mese.
cha
UNKIND ANSWER.
Mr. Wibbles—What fine dark hair
you have, Miss Knox. My wife,
who is younger than you are, has
her hair quite gray.
ktiss Knox—Yes, and if I'd been
your wife no doubt my hair would
have been gray, too.
Nearly all infants are more or
less subject to diarrhoea and such
complaints while teething, and as
this period of their lives is the most
critical, mothers should not be
without a bottle of Dr. J. D. Kel-
logg's Dysentery Cordial. This
medicine is a specific for such com-
plaints and is highly spoken of by
those who have used it. The pro-
prietors claim it will cure any case
of cholera or summer complaint.
"1 vont to leaf five tousand dol-
lars to each of my clerks dot haf
peen in my employ twenty years,"
said a Jewish merchant to the law-
yer who was drafting his will.
"Why, that's very liberal!" re-
sponded the solicitor. "Not at ail I
None of tem haf peen mit me ofer
von year, and it vill look good,
von't it?"
Don't experiment with unsatis-
factory substitutes. Wilson's Fly
Pads kill many times more house
flies than any other known article.
Mrs. Kinder (reflectively) — "I
wonder why a man never pays his
wife any compliments after they are
married ?" Kinder (briskly)—"B e
does better, my dear—he pays her
bills."
Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff.
Mrs. White (sympathetically) —
"So your husband is in trouble
again, Maud?" Mrs. Black (cheer-
ily)—"No, mum; he's out o' trou-
ble just now. The scoundrel's in
jail.''
Always Serviceable.—Most pills
lose their properties with age. Not
so with Parmelee's Vegetable Pills.
The pill mass is so compounded
that their strength and effective-
ness is preserved and the pills can
be carried anywhere without fear
of losing their potency. This is a
quality that few pills possess. Some
pills lose their power, but not so
with Parmelee's. They will main-
tain their freshness and potency
for a long time.
Stranger (after an examination)
—"Well, doctor, what do you think?
Have I the gout I" Great Physi-
cian—"Hem 1 Er—what is your in-
come?" "One thousand a year."
"No. You have a sore foot."
No man or woman should hobble
painfully about because of corns
when so certain a relief is at hand
as Holloway's Corn. Cure.
Don't cry—unless there's sumo
one around with a tear mop.
Consider the running expense of
a fast young mangy
MI/lard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia.
VORCE OF HABIT,.
The ,to
ae
phonegirl was 'on her
vacation and fishing. Some one in
another boat called, "Bello!"
Just then she got a bite. "Line's
busy l" she answered,
Mothers Value This Oil.—Mothers
who know how suddenly croup
may seize their: children and 'how
necessary prompt aetion is in Ap-
plying relief, always keep at hand
a supply of Dr, Thomas' Eelectrio
Oil, because experience' has taught
them that there is no better pre-
paration to be had for the treat-
ment of this ailment. And they
are wise, for its various uses ren-
der it a valuable medicine,
"If you marry Grace," exclaim-
ed an irate father to his son, "I'll
out you off without a penny, and
you won't have so =oh as a piece
of pork to boil in the pot. " "Well,
said the young man, "Grace before
meat," and he immediately went in
search of a clergyman.
The microscope in the hands of
expoits employed by the United
States Government has revealed
the fact that a house fly some.
times carries thousands of disease
germs attached to its 'hairy body,
The continuous use of Wilson's
Fly Pads will prevent all danger
of infection from that source by
killing both the germs and the
flies.
Mrs. Skinnum—"Why are you all
hiding
from Tommy?„
itt1a
zie—"We areplaying
'grown-ups,'
and Tommy is the butcher come
with his bill."
TRV MURINE EVE REMEDY
for Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes
and Granulated Eyelids. 'Murine Doesn't
Smart—Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists
Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 250,
50c, $1,00. Murine Eye Salve in
Aseptic Tubes, 25e, $1.00. Eye Books
.1nd Eye Advice Free by Mail.
Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago.
There are times when it is easier
to find a four-leaved clover than
the keyhole in a front door.
rdinard's Liniment Cures Burns, Eto.
A JAPANESE SLEEPING CAR.
This night we had our first ex-
perience in a Japanese sleeping car,
says a writer in the Railway Gaz-
ette. The track is narrow gauge
and the standard sleeping ears have
six seats running lengthwise, each
seating two passengers, with a
centre aisle. The upper berth is
the regular Pullman style and a
section will accommodate two pas-
sengers. The night was during the
extreme heat of midsummer, the
car was crowded, and in addition
to the regular curtains each berth
was provided with a mosquito bar,
which added to the general discom-
fort. Passengers were taken on
and let down at all stops, so there
was constant procession through the
aisle all night. Part of the car was
reserved for local accommodotion,
and those who sat up smoked inces-
santly, so that long before morning
ing the atmosphere became intoler-
able.
a.•.z+:r^rr.sa :rn•3'1.,.- A
MAGISTRAT'tYESrl:n
CURD OF'
Ono of the latest prominent gen-
tlemen to speak highly in tam
Buk's favour is Mr. C. E. Sanford
of Weston, King's Co., N.S. Mr,
Sanford is a justice of the Peace
for the County, and a member of the
Board of School Commissioners.
To is also Deacon of the Baptist Church
in Berwick-. Indeed it would be difficult
to find a man more widely known and
more highly respected. '/fere is his
opinion of is am-Buk, Es says
' f never used anything that gave me
such settee§otion as Z:un-Buk. I had a
pitch of Emma an my ankle which had
been there for over 20 years. Sotuotlmoo
also the disease would break oub on my
shoulders. I had applied var,aus oint-
ments and tried allsorts of things to
obtain a aura, but in vain. Znm-Buk, un-
like everything else I had tried, proved
high, eetiefactoryand cured the ailman5,
I have also used ;tam-Buk for itching
piles, and it has cured them completely
also. I take comfort in helping my brother
mon, and if the publication of my opinion
of the healing value et Zam•Buk will load
other sufferers to try it, I should 110 Med,
For the relief of suffering caused by Piles or
Skin Diseases I know of nothing tongue'
Zam-Buk+'
zam•liuk euros ulcers, ahscomsca, blocd.potbon,
Flog -worm testorlug or Ivuningueres, bad leg,
varicose pleere, salt rheum, pantie itch o,,
barns, Bruises, baby's sores, eta Purely itch,
boa box, druggists audst0ree, Refuse Imitations,
AN ICELAND lE tB tfBO'IJSB,
The Apaxtmente Are Fecullarly
ted Up,
The guest mem contained a nar-
row bed, a big round table, and an
Organ. Our hoot produced the
usual box of snuff, and with it a box
of good cigars.
The hoot and hostess then allow-
ed us all over the house, It is a
turf structure, and is typical of the
older .£arm -house, with narrow,
dark; windowless corridors; wind-
ing in labyrinthian maze from room
to roam. One passageway loads to
a large open mound, whore a fire is
made to smoke meat and fish, and
incidentally the whole house and
everything in it, Another ;passage
leads to another kitchen with a
modern stove, The walls are all of
turf, as is the roof, with just :en-
ough driftwood in thearoof to make
a framework to hold it in place.
Very steep stairs lead up to •the
badstofa, or sleeping apartment..
The badstofa frequently forms the
sitting and common work room of
the family, especially in winter, as
well as the sleeping room of the en-
tire household.
Bunks built into the wall extend
around the room and are often fill-
ed with seaweed or feathers, over
which is thrown a fold or two of
wadmal and a thick coverlet of
eiderdown. The floors ore some
times covered with boards, but more
often consist of damp earth. From
the ceiling are suspended numerous
articles of domestic economy, while
large chests containing clothing and
r
valuables are scattered throughout
the house.
It is Wise to Prevent Disorder.—
Many causes lead to disorders of
the stomach and few are free from
them. At the first manifestations
that the stomach and liver are not
performing their functions, a
course of Parmelee's Vegetable
Pills shoukl be tried, and it will be
found that the digestive organs
will speedily resume healthy ac-
tion. Laxatives and sedatives are
so blended in these pills that no
other preparation could be so ef-
fective as they.
TAKING NO CHANCES.
Storekeeper—"I want a boy to
be partly indoors and, partly out-
doors."
Boy—"What becomes of me when
the door slams?"
Carterhall..Nild,
Mlnard's Liniment Co., Limited.
Dear Sirs,—while in the country last
summer I was badly' bitten by mosqui-
toee, so badly that I thought I would be
disfigured for a couple of weeks. I was
advised to try your Liniment to allay the
irritation, and did so. The effect was
more than I expected a few applications
completely curing the irritation, and
preventing the bites from becoming Bore.
MINABD's LINIMENT is also a good
article to keep off the mosquitoes.
Yours truly,
W. A. V. R.
The average man doesn't think
he is having a good time unless he
makes a fool of himself.
Wilson's Fly Pads, the best of
all fly killers, kill both the flies
and the disease germs.
RAIN MAIKING EXPERIMENTS.
The Use of Rockets on an Estate in
Southern India.
Experiments made to ascertain
whether the discharge of explosives
during cloudly weather produces
rainfall are described in a letter
from James Stones, says the Lon-
don Daily Mail.
"Some years ago,” he says, "an
experiment was tried in the Cud-
dapeli district of southern India
with considerable success. I am
part owner of an estate in the Sera-
mully Hills, which is situated in a
particularly dry zone. For several
seasons poor coffee crops withered
away from lack of rain during July
and August.
"When I was visiting the estate
in July, 1005, I noticed that heavy
clouds gathered every afternoon
and I thought that if we had been
in a position to fire explosive rock-
ets from the highest peak of the
hills, about 4,500 feet, a shower of
rain might have 'been produced.
"I therefore arranged to have a
supply of rockets kept on the estate
and fired off every afternoon at the
rate of ono rocket every five min-
utes, but only when the condition
of the atmosphere was each that
heavy rain threatened on all sides.
"Whether rain has fallen in re-
sponse to these explosives or not
the fact remains that ever since we
first tried the experiment we have
been fortunate enough to catch
sufficient moisture to enable the
crops to survive the drought."
Firing into the clouds with the
object of causing rain was practised
for several years in southern Ger-
many, Switzerland and France, but
seems to have been abandoned
some time ago. The idea was to
protect the vineyar•s and other
cultivations from damage by hail-
storms, it being thought that by
the discharge of large guns rain
would fall and that the danger from
hailstorms would be averted.
v
THE SAFETY of A
BOND
INVESTMENT
g Bonds are the most attractive'
investment because of the seemm,
city they afford the ievestar,
principal and interest 'being a
first charge on all the assets of
the Corporation issuing them,
Because of general prosperity,
development and expansion of
the business of Corporations or
concerns---finaneia] and Indus-.
trial -.-the material assets natur-
ally increase, and so year by year
the security to the hood investor
becomes greater and the safety
of bond investments more certain.
g' Bonds yield a very liberal rate
of interest, when one takes into
consideration the high degree of
security they offer.
d9 Write for our booklet on
Bond investments.
YAL
SECURITIES
CORPORATION
LIMI000
BANK OF MONTREAL BUILDING
YONGE AND QUEEN STS,
TORONTO
FARMS FOR SALE OR RENT.
ASK DAWSON HE KNOWS.
IF you want to sell aa farm, consult
me.
ryou want to buy a farm, consult
U20.
T RAVE some of the beet Fruit Stook,
.! Grain or Dairy Farms in Ontario.
and prices right.
g1. w.. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne
g.il. Street, Toronto,
t' ELF -SUPPORTING HOMES IN. TIM
glorious fruit district of -Southern
British Columbia, for 510 cash and. 910
monthly. without interest; annual: profits
8500 to 51,000 per acre; orchard,, garden,
poultry; scenery hunting, fiohing, boat.
Mg; delightful warm climate; - school.
postoffiee, store; big sawmill daily trains;
close to markets; unlimited demand for
products. Write quick for maps, photos,
free information. West I{ootenay Fruit
Lands Company, Dept. W„ Drawer 1087,
Nelson, II, C.
BC. FRUIT LAND, FOR SALE. 320
acres, Prairie land, having a dark
sandy soil, with some gravel, and under.
laid with a clay sub -soil. Ou part of this
farm there aro some surface stenos but
most of the land can be plowed with a
gang plow. Small frame house, log
stable and never failing well. Farm 1s.
about half fenced with post and wire.
20 acres under cultivation, balance all
good laud. Price 910,000. One.half cash,
balance to suit at 8 per emit. Fred A.
Russell. C'ranbrook, II. C. _..
AGENTS WANTED.
,g GENTS 1VANT.I:D.—A study of other
tSL Agency propositions convinces- us
that none eau equal ours. You will al-
ways regret it if you don't apply for
tio STB Otto Travollere' ' Dept, 11
82
Albert
MISCELLANEOUS.
TAI -AY and FARM SCALES. Wilson's
Lk Scala Works, 9 Esplanade, Toronto.
CtAWMILL MACHINERY, PORTABLE
0 or heavy Lathe Mills, Shingle Mills,
Engines and Boilers, Mill Supplies. The
E. Long Manufacturing Co., Ltd., West
Street, Orillia.. Ontario.
A GENTS WANTED. A LINE FOR
-LA. every home. Write us for our choice
list of agents supplies. We have the
greatest agency proposition in Canada
to -day. No outlay necessary. Apply- B.
O. L Co., 228 Albert St., Ottawa.
/"1 ANCEit, TI MOBS, LI MMY6, etc. An.
RJ tercel and external, cured without
pain by our home treatment. Write us
before too late. Dr. Bellman, Dolling•
wood, Ont,
Le TON SCALE GUARANTEED. Wilson's
V Scale Works, 9 Esplanade. Toronto.
PECIALISTS ADVICE FREE. Consult
i7 us in regard to any disease. Loweea
prices in drugs of all kinds:
Trusses fitted by matt. Send measure..
meat. Glasses dated by age. Write to -day
for anything mold in first-class drug
chores to Dr. Ullman, Collingwood, Ont.
CHENILLE CURTAINS
and all kinds or horse hangings, also
.LACE CURTAINSDYE LIKE N�LWEANED •
Write to us about yours.
BOITt5a AMERICAN DYEING 00,. 605158, Montreal
The Heart of a Piano Is the
Action. insist on the
"OTTO MGM,"
,"
Piano Action
Ede NIGHTINGALE
TINGALE
STOCK BROKER
Member Standard stock and Mining Exchange
LISTED STOCKS CARRIED ON MARGIN
Correspondence Melted.
.lg MELINDA ST., TORONTO
Silver Pince Healing Oil
Healed a Barb -Wire Cut
without leaving a scratch
Dint IOAIR D10Cansv, or Dlow-
SRAr, DIA'., writes;
"Please send me a bottle of
your Siler Pine Healing Oil. 'I
had a colt cut lost winter- with
herb wire --I used Man bottle and
it healedup and didn't leave a
scratch. Now I hew enothercolt
that has got cut that I calculate
to heal with whet is left, but I
would like to have yon scud me
another bottle if I should happen,
to necd'it, for I think I could not
get on without it."
For all kinds of wounds,
bruises, burns and sores
on animals or human
beings, Silver fine I-Ieal-
ing Oil is a quick, safe and
wonderful beater. Keep a
bottle on hand for tortes of
need. In 25c., OIOc and $1 00 bottles, It
your dealer's or from the
International Stock Food Co.,i.imitod,ioronts, Sen.
The cheapness of Mother Graves' Mother-"Whoz' arc those or -
Worm Extermjnator puts it within antes that were on the tahie9»
reach of all,rind it can, be got at Tommy--"'tViththe tarts that were
any druggist's. in the cupboard, 1 suppose