~oo0ls atisfying, whole- young and ol t delicious lime- istaction to min- ger ale an d ed delightfulness -heaper than t Juice "ANADA, LIMITED. STORS on the properties, and tes, Ltd., now gelling at olling at 50¢c per share, SHARE jons point to a further rously prosecuted on all most practical and cap- | the developments have .. We believe they are old Mines, Ltd., consist ndred and twenty acres; y-acre claims, making a e Companies are free of dvising our clients and cure these shares at the eatly profit thereby. In 3lue Bell at 50c per share per share (par value $1, and Blue Bell shares will for less than this price. life. Our advice to you of these shares you must aturday next, July 6th. Lucky Boys for disposal, 1 over-subscriptions will e. )., LIMITED ders Bank Bullding TORONTO, CANADA t's office may be bind Fe fond phos : months" i ot to the Commins ef" Domi t Ottawa, of His jatention to do so. SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH-WEST MINING NS. purchased at $10 the gross output. of age, or place, may on en $500 has been expend- in lieu thereof. ed or paid, the locator may, upon having a survey made, and upon complying with other requ ts, purchase at $1 per acre. i The 'patent iovides tor dhe Symon: f ty of ; AAU on 108 aa) 2 4 cherally are T00 feet J entry. fee ble yearly, two leases to miles coc for a t renewable at the discretion Taterior, IV lve &_dredge in oper: % heats of the ied Av Teased. Royalty at the cent. collected on the output You get genuine Scranton, as he handles nothing else. | Bas amMOYED TO 93 Princess St. Between Corbett's Hardware ~ Store and Taylor & Hamil Bfon's, directly opposite An- grove's, £8 "Phone No. 778. aggoners Special Blue . Suit oe Best Workmanship Fit Guaranteed Linen, Too 1906--A Year of 'Success for A! # il he) f/1i oy J OF CANADA The report-of this 1906 tells a story of wth and prosperity, equilied in Canadian Life Insurance. New Insurance Written, $5,555,639 Gain in lasurance in force, $2,712,453 Eapeuen, $1022436 LESS thea J --the careful management of t show how the interests of the POLICY - HOLDERS are safe- guarded. They give the reasons why The Miva! Like is the. fastest growing company in Canada. Write for copy of 37th Annual Statemeat, Mailed free on request so, 20y.0 "sgt of 10 WFAD OrTICE, WATEREOS, Colonel Johnsonwas presented. wi beautiful ice Sword m a solid . Si sword. was presented by Licuna, W. Neds on f of Colonel Spalunis au follows: : ly nel Johnson, pasticular friand of. treated She in 2 Sireiivots manner, as ar as the ish language would - mit."---~Honolulu Adventist, r- Mary Muffet is a young lady whose pocket money varies according to her good or. bad behavior. One day, Mary made things exceptionally lively for the household, and a fine of a halfpenny was imposed for one offence. arcely had the parental fiat gone forth when a second misdemeanor fol- lowed, then a third. "Now," said Mary's mother, this time I shall fine you a pemy, and if you are naughty again I shall make it two- ce. i "Degr, dedr1™ sighed Mary, aghast at the threatened financial calamity; "what a dreaiuly SxDensive place this is to live in !"--Sket "And do-you-. think meat is likely to make people. ill?" said the man who studies diet. "Certainly," said the professor. "If it doesn't get' you any other way, it will keep 'worriéd "half to death about the Cost of it."--Washington Star. An uncommonly good story is being told of the Rev. WE H. White, who died recen Early fn his history, when a curatén Brighton, he was aroused from his sleep in the small hours of the morn. ing by a sick call. He was summoned to a bad quarter of the town, and was brought to the bedside of a man who was rapidly sinking amid surroundings of destitution and squalor. He passed away while Mr. White was offering up prayers on his' behalf, and Mr. White, on rising from his knees, discovered to his astonishment that *his watch had been removed: from his pocket and was held tightly in the grasp of the dead man.--Westminster Gazette. ~~ ------ Marion Hill tells a good story of the stage in the July American Magazine. The chief character is a dull girl whom a persistent manager endeavors to drill "es B11 as a witch in "Macbeth." every toilet purpose as g a soap as "Baby's Own" cannot be bought for as little Beware of imitations and substitutes accept mone but the genuine ** Baby's LADIES' GANVAS SHOES We have Ladies' Canvas Shoes, in all shapes and styles. Blucher Cut with Toe Cap or without Covered Heel or with Leather. We also have the Low Leather Heel. Prices, $1.25, $1.50. Children's" as Shoes, from 50c. oa A ---- : H. JENNINGS, KING ST SOAL.! The sudden . changes in weather ought to suggest the wisdom of . We well - ths kind that sends - x t heat, and makes the home comfortable ; it's BR Sa mined. We Geliver it to you clean and without slate, at the very bottom prices. BOOTH & CO... Phone 133. Foot of West St Hl ally. "Like this," he hissed to the stolid il Venus, trying to magnetize her with his magnificent eyes; "Macbeth, beware! be- i] ware! beware!" "All right," whispered Brenda stoic- The performance was under way, and they dared not be too vocal. She | glanced: out to the stage in order to fix | locations. "I say 'be where?' and where iss it you will be, Mr. Studheim ?" Right in front of you. (You cold- storage -'swab--) and it's beware. It 4 means look out; 'look out, look out-- (and God help us all if we don't!)" "0, I dank you, Mr. Studkeim, for your explaining kindness," murmured Brenda. He shot her an. alert look, to detect possible sarcasm; but of course saw none. With a tragic supplication to the helpful powers. above, Morris went to his doom. For the wabbly passage up the trap, the glare of fire, the bloodshot agon in the eyes of the tortured Thane, al proved unsettling to the "second appa- rition," who gutturally wailed : "Ach, look oudt, Macbeth, look oudt two dimes, and look oudt some more yet." There is a certain old gentleman who partakes of the qualities of the diamond as it is mined, but whose lack of "polish" is a sad trial to his eldest daughter. The old gentleman, as he ex- presses it, "got thar with both feet when some dude investers come pirutin' round the range." Not long ago the family were gathered in the library, one of the windows of which was open. "That air--" the father began, but was quickly interrupted: "Father dear, don't say 'that air'--say 'that there'," the daughter admonished. "Well, this ear=" he again attempted, but was as quickly brought to a halt. "Nor 'this 'ere;' 'this here' is cor- rect," he was told. The old gentleman rose with an angry snort." Lok nére, Mary," he said, with asperity. "Of course I know you have Children Who Are Nervous develop all too soon, nervous troubles among children. itus dance, headaches, epilepsy | Strength, ability to study with com- fort and perfect safety, quickly fol- lows the use of ozone. It builds up the nerves, nourishes the brain, supplies nutritive blood to the muscles. . Color, endurance and vim go hand in hand with Perrozone. Childre, who use it are robust and vi No toni¢ is beter av tes tify. * Just as good for the old folke | beer tor school amd alt that; 1 know what L . 40. sayy an' I am oy K - a oid m this ear from. r 'm going to shut the "Harper's Weckly, A néw order of things. has been in- i down at Coney Istand, which the "barkers" are not , and these played to attract the crowd: 'police won't let us talk. Aren't the mean things?" Be a this is a swell scenic rails way. Come down to-morrow and let me tell all about it." "Wo it be great if the police "If this Sow isn't" good, go around "They say that silence js golden. The Yox office mmn says that statement is a joke." Sir Thomas Lipton, apropos of bach- elorhood and marriaee, said in an after- dinner speech in Chicago: , "Bachelors, I admit, are villains, but it is a shame to play such tricks on them as it is customary everywhere ® x played b: 5 "A nasty trick was on a bach- elor friend of mine at a dance. A wo- man was h having married, when her husband, a ' little bored perhaps, said and married you if he had wanted to' "The woman started. "'Indeed I she cried. 'Why didn't he do it, then? : "'He says he owed me a grudge,' the husband explained with a chuckle." New York Tribune. TRAMP EARNED HIS NAME. Remarkable Cat Found Way From Philadelphia to New Jersey. At a cat show held in Madison Square Garden, New York, a couple of years. ago, there was on exhibition a very remarkable cat appropriately named Tramp, who not only carried off a blue ribbon: for being an honor to his race, but also gained considerable distinction from the fact that he had found his way from Philadelphia to his Orange home in New Jersey, which is a couple of hours' run ona fast train. Tramp (he was called Flip then), had been made a present by his owner, Mrs. Fielding, to a friend living in Philadelphia, and this callous method of bartering with his affections evidently rankled in Flip's mind, for he had not been' a week in his new home when, after a bad attack of homesickness' he determined to find his way back to "mother" with as little delay .as possible. He,: therefore, gave his new friends the slip and was not heard of for sev- eral months, when one morning he made his a ranee at his Orange home look- ing, if mot actually sleek and fat, at least in good health, though ke walked with something of a limp. He was wel- comed with open arms and-soon made himself at home, receiving thie congratu- lations of his former owner with a quiet dignity which, Mrs. Fielding declared, was a just reproof for her callous con: duct. She. gg ange 4 nal to 1ramp, a since open declared that nothing will ever tempt her to part with the animal again. OLD TIME SPIRITISM. Ly ------ Prunkenness Raised Apparition Whith Did Not Cure Drunkard. This curious tale of old-time spiritism is taken by Defoe from Baxter's (1615- 1691) "Historical Discourse on Appari- tions": "There is now in ndon an understanding, sober, pious man, oft one of my;hearers, who has an elder brother, a gentleman of considerable rank, who having formerly seemed pious, of late years does often fall into the sin of drunkenness. He often lodges long together here in his mother's house, and whensgever he is drunk and has slept himself sober, something knocks at his cot. : When they remove his bed it fol- lows him. Besides other loud noises on other parts where he is, that all the house. hears, they have often watched him and tied his hands lest he should do it himself." But his mother declared that she had seen his shoes under the bed taken up and "nothing visible to touch them." The drunken sinner re- fused, in spite of these solemn warnings, to abandon his evil ways. ALL RIGHT AGAIN. Conductor's Anxiety Was Relieved By One of the Two. They had evidently been quarrelling before entering the strect car .at the ferry. "I would thank you, Mr. Johnson, not to sit by me!" she said icily. "Oh, Lucy, I'll never go, with her again--never, never, dearie!" Gradually the harsh tones melted to soft, endearing phrases. The car had become very crowded. It stopped at Van Ness. The. conductor, wedgin, $- , sengers midway of the' un see the rear steps. the bell cord. he suddenly yelled: "How is it back there now?" = "It's all right. We've made up again," impulsively responded the young man. ' "Oh, Willard, he didn't mean us!" w--ren Peter The Great' Ruined Hedge. London Daily News. Tw i ing "abot. # holly There is ing | hedge that ch: 3 the; stingt in mankin ohn" diarist, had one 6f the finest in the grounds of his home a and Peter the Great ruined it for him. That extraordinafy Czar, whefi\hé came to the docks to learn shipbuilding, took a tenancy of Evelyn's hotise. © Wheéncver he felt in need of relaxation he 'satdown bin . Wheelbatto¥ and cated a servant to charge with it at the as hard as he could 'go. pos, ei up Evelyn's fine lawn mos! "leeping and shewing of Whi his suite. Altogether he did tio house or Jtden any good : But the owner could not any 'adequgté com- petisation, i ne It is only natural 'that we Howl learn fo crawl De we 2 alk, bit some men never get 1 crawling t Love at first sight i% 'easy, 3% few people can stand the test of a long- drawn-out acquaintag: of aa pit Once in a great while a mn so good-natured that le is"even nice to his wife's relations, { A man who has something to say al- as for the young dunes. To be had in ar Sls 4 ose 3 4 FER Te ER : ai SRR ey ways knows when he bab said in<then he shuts up. Saat er but ¥ reckon are some of the printed notices they dis- | on mothers-in-law > | police give you your | money back. I haven't" said anything about it" him for never | "'He says he could have cut me out | bedhead, as if one rapped on the wains- | With his hand on |3 * with § Jo the ----- There are 265,000 people in Canada today, who really KNOW "Fruit-a-tives" to be a splendid remedy. Four years ago, "Fruit-a-tives" were an unsolved problem in the brain of one of Canada's leading ria book Bs physicians. on £ know them for what they are--a positive cure for Stomach, Liver, Kidney, Bowel and Skin Troubles. "i et « Fruit-a-tives" have cured stubborn. cafes, of Constipation-- Chronic Rheumatism --8kin Eruption -- that defied "ordinary: réimedies. The cures of Biliousnesss, lodi-. gestion, Headaches, Pain in the "Back, Nervousness and Irregularity of the Bowels -- are numbered by the thousands. "Fruit: a-tives" move the bowels just as fruit moves: them: and leaves them healthy. «FPemit-a-tives "ate fruit juices and tonics in tablet form -- with: the increased "medicinal action made possible by the chemical change which takes place when the juices are combined. * all druggists--or sent 'on receipt of price. 104 FRUIT-A- TIVES. LIMITED, - OTTAWA. i To make a great big difference. in the deliciousness of soups, sauces, meats, fowls and game. Ask any honest grocer for THN BEST SAUCE--Hs is sire ¥§ give you LEA & FERRINS J, M. DOUGLAS & D0, (Ewtabitshad 1857) Montreal, Canadian Agents. _-- - ' WHAT HERPICIDE DOES : } Newhro's Herpicide destroys the tiny vegetable growth in the sealp that causes dandruff, itching, scalp, falling hinir and baldness. Once this microbe enemy of the hair is destroyed and kept out of the scalp, the hair is found to grow as nature intended, except in cases of chronic baldness. WHAT. SUNLIGHT DOES Sunlight 'is nature's germ destroyer and prophylactic. Tho effect of sun. light upon the sealp proves highly beneficial, if a complete plan of sealp cleanliness it carried out. This cannot be done without the use of Herpi- cide, which prevents reinfection and keeps the scalp pure and wholesome. More men and women have ¢ n positive results from the use of Newbro's Herpicide than from all other remedies vombined. HOT WEATHER TROUBLES The perspiration that exudes in increased quantities during the summer months, carries out poisonous and refuse matter that would otherwise clog ; h- up the pores of the scalp. : Incomplete elimination of this waste, produces a hot and feverish con- dition of the sweat 'glands known as Prickly Heat, for which Herpicide gives immediate relief. Herpicide stops itching of the scalp almost instantly. Col. Thomp: Burton, Member of the Board of Managers of the Ohio Pen- itentiary, writes as follows of Newbro's Herpicide : "As to Herpicide; I find it an excellent hair dressing as well as being ¢ the first and only absalute dandruff eure I have found. Upon'my advice a . number of my friends are using Herpicide, and the unanimous verdict is, that -Herpieide is, in al} respects, everything that its manufacturers claim for it. "' : w Guaranteed under the Food and Drugs Act June 30th, 1907. : : i Serial No. 915. TWO SIZES: 50c. and . $1--SOLD AT DRUG a STORES. Send 10c, in stamps .for sample to the Herpicide Co. : Dept.' L., Windsor, Ost. INSIST UPON HERFICIDE. : ¥ APPLICATIONS AT PROMINENT BARBER SHOPS. Tsday, over a quarter of a million of Cio Sidhe. fd Only soc. a box--.6 boxes for $2.50. At See Window play at G. W. Mahood's, Special Agent. ~~ . WF 0%