five minutes by he 'without waste of coal. shoe stores ; Dial d School Vici, 'Send the children to good schools and also tad Jest bave to be trayied of School Shoes and offer our 90! Shoes. There's a vast difference g sort tof «Just School Shoes" Boys' Shoes Box Calf and Velour Calf, laced or 1 Blacher, $1.25, 1.50 up to 2 50 and 3 oo, or Blucher styles, $1.25, 1.50 Aberneth h oflice lath 1,750 delive wardi Basin If you have never tested o you've been missing the Beat 4 I TT TT ------ SEALED Department of Railways and Newspapers iuserting ment without authority bartment will not be paid for it. DON'T FAIL TO SEE .. WAGGONER'S .. RANGE OF -- Scotch Tweeds and Fancy The la shown in latest Girls' Shoes Vici, Velour Culf and Gun M up to $3.00. quickly aver a test fire you want in the drafts of the Pandora range, and We make etal Calf, Laced ur School Shoes, School Shoes made. y's Shoe Store . The best'way to cook a good steak is to broil it, and the best way to broil it is on a Pandora range. ora Warshouses und Factories: London, Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Vancouver, [St John, NB, Hamilton both #3 . he ¥ Department of Railways and Canals RIDEAU CANAL. until 16 o'clock on NOTICE TO DRALUERS IN CEMENT TENDERS Appr ESSE) to the undersigned and endc der for Cament," orsed ""Ten- Will be received at this Friday, the September, 1906, for the Supply of barrels of Portland Cement, to pe red in bags ng Company's in the City of Otta S0th September, 1906 Can be procured at the Specifications office of the Superintendi the eau Canal, Canadien Ottawa, on and after this date The Department does not s | accept the lowest or any te By order, LK Ottawa, 28th Aucust, this into the Ottuwa from Fors Sheds, in the Capal wa, by the Enwineer of Building, ate. bind itself to der. JONES, Serstary, Canals, 1904, advertise. the. De- 'Worsted Sultings. rgest consignment ever up-to-date goods of the novelties for fall stock ispow wo sale, : * , eall and examine before Suits hn $16 up, with Fit guar. Nature's Future Darkened conuiron that shocked us ten years now passed by without comment. women to report their observations to me. So common is the drinking habit tf that the situation is often a source of i assment to the woman who | does not drink. The disastrous 're- sults of tippling among females are already too well-known to the vhyst- || cians and experience shows that whi : this fact that it has becom a matter observation that things ago, are By Feminine 8 Indict do not become confirmed in- 7 Foll trong a. all confirmed drunkerds were ment of American Woman By Shee | motivente Sn 3 Fre Minister. the law absolute sa or ell] i Then dum pastor of the Bap- [total abstinence. If the better classes tist Church of the Epiphany, New | of Society. were to discontinue the York, writes as follows : moderate use of wrinks, Shey. would 1 wish to speak of the ty @minisly bol' the pul the: evi icy hats of, rink sOE UF | ot Loa tov. public sentiment, and if the higher of society, or even our church people, were to dis- continue the mouere te use of drink, the éffect would 1 have seen again and again in New | 7g unfashionable. [| York, in the Waldorf, the Astor, at Par Teor. | | Sherry's and Shanley's, what may be Not Far Go. seen nightly in scores of es, wo- | Youth's Companion. avy 4 men drinking cocktails, whiskey | The sort of conversation in which | | straight, wines of all kifds--women | Martha Hackett often indulged was i as frecly and as frequently Jotuliafly trying to her cousin, Mr. : (| ak the men. 1 have had my own ob- ane, - atthas been here all the | | servations confirmed by g spe- | morning," Mrs. Lone wearily at || cially quulified and truthful men and | dinner one night," *She talked on and on about things that didn'ts amount to anything and were all disconnected. I endured it as well as 1 could, but it does seem sometimes as if she was wandeting in her mind." "Well, theke's ome thing." said Mr. Lane, grimly; "you needn't ever wor- ry about her going far if that's where she's wandering." Louis 'A. Gourdain, the Chi his release from the Joliet states inten who drink often reform, women who become victims to drink are more {| intractable to reformation. il A recent editorial in a Paris fistaki of our. cocktail babit, de || clares that we are breeding a race of || degenerates. The 5 of the police J department of New Yor! City for 1903 show that there ' were arrested for drunkenness 44,085 persons; of whom 410,080 were women. A distinguished physician wrote to me a few days ago to "not for an instant retreat from your statements. We physicians know i that they are lamentably true, and | that the crime, for stich it is, is grow- ing with awful rapidity. We have thi | problem to fight in many instances in the care of the sick." The fashion that encourages wom incbrintes among the rich of America presents a deplorable outlook for the tare of the republic. History plainly enforces the lesson that the last symptom of national decline is always found in womanly folly. Corruption may 'spread far and wide and do much harm in the community, but there is hope for both the church and the state so long as the wives and mothers, the daughters and sisters re- tain their moral integrity. When that is gone. all is gone. Purity and worth find their last retreat in the woman, and if driven thence, they are doomed to die, and with them perish the prospects of the land. As the customs of the privileged are copied by other classes, the evils re- sulting from this state of affairs are widespread and degrading. My appeal is to every woman 'who loves her kind, to discourage social drinking and help save the women of the nation ftom the curse of drunken- ness. Man's own selfish 'desire is the chief factor in dragging women down from the pedestal upon which he him- sclf_has placed her, yet strangely in- consistent as it may seem, the man will idolize the woman who resists the temptation, The drink is dangerous @nough for men, to women it is especially dan- gerous. No one will dispise that the lack of moral balance and effective will produced in woman by drink are more marked than in the man. It so under- mines her will power and blunts her sense. of moral responsibility, that it is a wellknown fact that the virtue of the woman with the drink habit is The Daily Grind "Ruins the Nerves In factories and workshops, offices and stores--yes, and in the homes, too --people are being wornout by the monotonous wear and tear of unceas- ing toil. 3 n the hot summer time especially the burden is heavy to bear, and with- out the opportunity for rest or re: creation many a vietim falls by the vay, overcome by nervous exhaustion, t failure or physical decline. The world's work must be done. The toiler must toil an. But there is a method, of r ing wasted nerve cells and building up the wornout s stem, and tha Ty Paper, t is using Dr. Chase's Nerve Food alter. each meal. t gives vigor and tone to the sys- tem and prevents exhaustion and pros- tration. It is the friend of the work. er, for it makes him strong and well and fills him with cago milli prison of his own close to the Penitentiary '1 complete his: term oh ie 8 2 onaire, dissatisfied with prison before he had served his full term for connection. with a lottery. scheme, is now building a where he expects to , ACTORS WERE FRIENDS, $9 . Relations: That 'Bxisted Betwee . Jrving dnd Togle, - Ni many incidents which might be cited to illustrate the very" plea- saut relations in which Irving and Toole stood to cach other, the two following are exceptionally amusing : Many years age the two friends and fellow-artists were assodlated with a number of other actors on -a certain festive occasion on which the members of the profession were in the habit of allowing themselves a good deal of icense in the way of oratorical plea- santry at one another's expense. Ir ving made a speech, in the course of which he dealt fcetionsly with Taole's personal and professional peculiarities, to the great it "af 'the com- pany. When Tools's turn catie round he 'toll # recent dream, in the course of which he died and made his way to the gate at which St. Peter was acting as guardian, He saw Irving, who was ahead of him, walk right in, and he started to follow him, but was stopped by St. Peter, who asked him what profession he had practised on 'earth. "That of .an actor," said Toele. "Oh, then, you cannot be allowed in here," said St. Péter. "But I' saw Irvig. going in just now," said Toole. "Oh, he's no actor," was the reply. Henry ving cused to tell with glees of a joke that he, with Mr. Toole and a third flarty, plaved on one occasion at a Glasgow hotel. After their work they were supping ut the hotel, and there was Sn. the room a high screen. The instant the waiter was gone they commenéod 'vper- ations. They stripped the silverware, of which there was a tolerable supply, from the table and placed it behind the screen. They then opened the window and turned out the gas, and finally all got' under the table. The jokers had only te remain in their cramped position a few minutes before they heard the unsteady' feet of the waiter along the passage. The datkened room amazed him, and the cold air from the window scemed to strike Him with afiright. - "Goodness |" exclaimed he. thieves they are. I t t as much frae "the Tiriks "o* "thom ahd Irae their talk and their lauchin, Eh, but m a ruined man! I wish I hadn't taken the hale o' that last bottle ! Here! Here! Thieves ! Thieves | Murder! Thieves ! Thieves 1" "And shouting at the top of his voice, he ran out of the roome and along the passage. The minute he had gone the others shut the window, lit the gas, restored the silver to the table angl sat around. as before, enjoying a quiet cigar. Prepon tly Hara was a fonfused jh mur along the passage. It w loud er and louder, and in Hib d a truly motley throng, mostly hali-dressed, consisting = of the manager, two men in bare legs and slippers, and a lady with a blanket, olla by the agonized waiter, Ong man was armed with a poker, and another carried a bronge statue, ready to hurl it at the thief. As they entered the merry trio: all sat badok and lookid at them with well feigned amazement, and Toole said ta the as. tonished and bewildered manager : "Do you always come in this way with y8ur friends when a gentleman asks for' hie bill 9 i --- "It's s be to render drink- Fnings of the coming Toronto, injunction in the United Statess eathartics and pills of a reaction on drying Properties they contain. ere a what the cause or what the kind of Piles, Dr. Leonhardt's Hem-Roid can be relied upon to cu the causes of Suppurating Piles. - we ® temperature of the upper section. Ta any furnace the water always goes into the mains at the In the Bison Furnace the water in the upper section is always hottest--in other furnaces it is the coolest. = x In an actual test under ordinary cop. ditions a prominent Montreal Professor of Physics reports the following results with a Bison Hot Water Heater : Starting with the water at 65°, eleven minutes . after the match was applied its temperature in- creased to 100° in the upper section. Four minutes later it went up to 137", And 29 minutes after starting it was at 194", [ The bottom section gets as hot as in.any other furnace -- the | great gain is in the top section. Next morning, 15 hours after it had been laft for the night, the water was at 124° in the top section and 100° in the lower. THE H. R. IVES CO., Limitep, MONTREAL. 6%/ A NEGRO'S WIFE. San Francisco Society Finds It- self Shocked. San Francisco, Aug. 30. "Mrs. A. M. Curtis, who came from Washington with credentials from the war depart- ment to aid in the relief work follow- ing the April disaster, and was en- tertained by the most exclusive fami- lies in San Francisco society, is wife of a pegro physician in the national capital, it was learned to-day. When Mrs. Curtis left the city she was suf-% fering from injuries received in an automobile accident, and went to Washington to recuperate. She is to return soon, and society is in a quan dary. What will be her reception? So- ciety doesn't know. Pretty Evening Dress. a COLONIAL London Dry Gin Finest Distilled. KEEP THE CAPSULES, THEY ARE VALUABLE. BOIVIN, WILSON @& CO. DISTRIBUTORS. Montreal. ES --~ Evening gown of satin finish silk or satin trimmed with cream lace. The skirt was made on a gored circular pattern quite flaring around the lower part and had a wide band of lace in set, the edge of this lace being finished by a narrow roll fold of the silk. The corsage was cut with a rounded decol letage, and had a pointed bertha of the lace about the upper part, with flat folds of tulle inside. On each side of the front two little flat bows were slipped through tiny buckles of rhisie- stones and attached 16 the lace. The sleeves were opened to the shoulder, the space up the outer arm being fill ed in by ruffles of lace on a founda tion of thin silk muslin or chiffon, ---- Peace And Prosperity. Canadian Graphic In Canada a general dominion elec tion is due im about three vears, but as yet there is scarcely a ripple on the political sea to indicate the begin: i storm. Business men are going about concerned whol- ly with their personal affairs; farmers are busy with their crops; artisans are thinking of wage income; not a strata of citizenship is thinking strongly and definitely of politics. We have peace and prosperity in every province and. on every hand. Tn the United States the conditions appear to be reversed. There is some pros- perity of course hut there is no peace, Will Build Convent. Montreal, Aug. 30.--The sisters of Secooee LO OC RIOO0TOIOCIOICIOI000 g ; The Question of the Hour: | Is it Clean? Is it Pure ? 1s it Nourishing? WHAT DO YOU EAT? SOOOCOOR WHEN AT THE TORONTO EXHIBITION DO NOT FAIL TO Visit the New Process Building AND SEE SHREDDED WHEAT AND HOW IT IS MADE The cleanest, purest cereal food in the world--more nutritions and more wholesome than meat--an ideal summer food. Made in Canada of the Choicest Canadian Wheat. Health and Strength in Every Shred. ASK YOUR GROCER. Send for the "Vital Question Cook Book," postpaid. CANADIAN SHREDDED WHEAT CO., Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. Toronto Office, 32 Church St. Be ------------------------------_ rn A oN E. B. EDDY'S ising Al Star Parlor Match ° In neat attractive boxes containing about @ 30.Th ® St. Anne, of Lachine, finding their ® S50 M y present quarters too small, have de. 7 ATCHES @ cided to «construct a new convent, : {4 which is destined to become the Ask Your Grocer For Them ® mother house of the order. Tt will also & : { contain a novitiate for young ladies It will cost you only Sc. to try them. ® desiring to join the order. Plans for 1 x ' ® the building are completed. at an esti- OIORO oe 28 ee® C) ie i cm? S090 9809 0996 POEEOE POUEE \ -- . a Dr. Chown's Buchu Juniper Kidney Pills cure all kidney and bladder trou- ble, 25¢, : Garment workers in convention,. in condemned government by PILLS AND PILES A prolific cause of Piles is oh is always by a account of the resinous Te other causes, but no mattes re--~to stay cured remedy that removes of Itching, Nlind, Bleeding | A irantee goes with It's an internal each package Nine-tenths of a man's so-called dig- nity is nothing but a bluff, "> - containing a month's treatment, . It can Be obtained for $100 at drugwists or The flson-Fyle Co., $4.8.000 S444 FPP PPPS $2PPPPPP POPP BICYCLES TYPEWRITERS SEWING MACHINES Id and Repaired BS & C0, 171 Wellington St. wags 'ADAMANT' Ready for us Put up In bag ¢ { Whit Ro Put up BRITISH - KINGSTON Has undergo open 1 NOW pablic. W TELFER A WARM There's nothing | much interested in of the year. It speak of coal buy science, but that's Two Important « made are that cor our customers pay wuy to win busine Booth FOOT Ol Phone 133. Provan {A E. HE a Denotes True When cor ' ¢ ¢ ! ' ¢ ANTI - $ makes an ! 4 * 286 Pri eT TT VRB VN FOR Must Be Sola T The following di ty i= Y87 Brock St. Chown. 98 Bagot St. kitchen, all modern 108 Bagot St,, e modern, 108 Bagot St., kitchen, ali modern Price and art Real Estate wen Lawn The Be Only .. Strachan' (anadian (hi 331 Ki Open from 10.3( The best place Lunch in the city bn shortest notice. dishes a specialty. Wm. Murra) 27 BR New Carriages, etc., for sale. Sale of Horses Auction Book your sale and get cholcd of © I conduct all the realize the highest Phone, 665, JOHN The L J. ROSEN, 2 Fine Ladies' and Tailoring New establishment University Avenue. THE FRI LOAN & INVES! ESTABLIS President--Sir Ri Money loaned on erties. Mumicipal tures. Mortgages received and interes S.C. McGill, Mi Office, 87 Clarence NewYork Chin 83 Princo Open fr om 10.80 The best place Lunch im the eity. | shortest notice. ¥ fishes a specialty, CHOICE Sliced AT M