ING! of Canada, an im- ust been rendered rainst Drysalters, of the registered Baby's Own Soap." N SOAP" II dealers and re- ent of their labels proceeded against. warned not to acs substitutes which sJl-known name y's Own Soap." Limited, Mfrs., al. ouse eS MEN. o with hot, scald- 'e have the shoes ro SUFFERING Slippers, 50c., 75¢., r+ House Slippers, 0 to 1.50. rs, very cool and vearers. 60c. and rs, in three differ- 0. , bring them to us. or very little cost. cad sie- Ltd. Toto on._ Better, self. em more enjoyable, ng, more healthful. Keep a bottle of "Montserrat" inthe pantry -- and you have the means of prepafing an ideal summer drink whenever you want mfort. 10. it Juice weak nerves may be avoide Gold Everywhere in Canada and U. S. Woman's ~ Health Every woman may be attract- ive. DBright eyes, pink cheeks and red lips are her nature- given right. A sallow skin, lack of | animation,. low spirits and d by the use of Beecham's Pills, a remedy that well deserves! the confidence of every woman. Again and again they have proved to be invaluable at those recurring times when so many, women feel debilitated and suf-| fer from nervousness, headache' and depression. It is wonderful the way these pills assist Nature and relieve the suffering. Every woman who values health and good looks should become a user of un BEECHAM'S PILLS Prepared only by Thomas Beecham, St. Helens, Lancashire, England. America. In boxes 25 cents. Splendid Gains in 19060 for OF CAN Cains were made in every department of this Company. Here are the figures :-- Gains in Income . .... Gains in Assets ..... Gains in Surplus . . . . Gains in Insurance . . . . Head Office, Waterloo, Ont. S. ROUGHTON. Kingston, Ont. 7 / [hen "Baby's 0a --Xkeeps its delicate fragance to the very last fragment, and itisso well made that it will wear to the thinnest wafer, Albert Soaps Ltd. Mfrs., Montreal. JSeware of imitations and substitutes, 397 WILSON'S FLY = P AD S rr -- SOLD BY ue DRUGCISTS, CROCERS Ap CENERAL STORES 10. per packet, or 3 packets for 286 will last a whole season. a Fefunded ff you bu any time, Write us betore 83 Bathurst St. Soufon, Ont Traveller Had Seen Some, Too-- vet, & M0 guchet BiZY BEAD. Ab iiow Bidsal " h rom te ionad anywiem | that the gamiest of the whole lot and COTTAM BIRD SEED BASS GANEST OF FSH] The Man That Talked Says That Pound For Pound the Bass Will Fight Best of Any. + Lachine, Que., July 2--"I' am not at all afraid of being successfully contra- dicted when I say that pound for pound no fish that swims has more pluck, en- durance and agility than these same black bass." The speaker had fished for mahseer in India, for tuna in the Gulf of California, for salmon in Norway and for trout over half the world. He had heard of the black bass of North America as a coarse heavy fighter, a near relative of the European perch and as being essentially a bait fisherman's fish. Even on this side he had been as- sured by good authorities that there was not much sense in casting for bass. There are still to be found anglers of experience who have not yet discovered that the bass is a surface feeder well worth the attention of the fly fisher. "I remember playing one of the ana- dromous perch of the Ganges for a good fifteen minates one scorching hot day," went on the traveller. "He was a big fellow, really a king of a bass, fully: four feet long, lusty and strong, being just up from the sea. It was a great fight, for the tackle was. light, the rod only a pound in weight. "There was extraneous excitement, too. A number of bathers of both sexes were in the water 'just where -1 was playing my fish, attracted, I expect, by the unusual and probably unwelcome spectacle of a European fishing in their sacred river. Mt was an awkward busi- ness for me. The fish dil not"appear to mind the bathers a bit." Ongé of twice he twisted my line around them and I came near to having a smash. "But his fighting was all down under water. It was just an %imless, heavy kind of a darting abouts, with an occa- sional savage jerk. When he came to the top it was to make submission, and confession 9 defeat, not to fight. "The. nearest thing to these bass as a fighter which 1 know of is the Murray river cod, something like a bass, and a member of the same family. You find him in the big rivers of southern Aus- tralia. But there is not much fun about that fishing, as you have to bait heavily with raw meat and use a kind of a two hand salmon rod of the heaviest make. A fish of seventy-five pounds will put up quite a pretty fight and will keep it up for a long time, but it is not the quick, fierce scrambling sort of a fight that we had with our six pound fellow to-day." The fish referred to had taken thirty minutes to fight and then, being touche with the rim of the, net, went off and with renewed vigor fought for twenty minutes more. Fully a third of the time had been spent on top of the water, leaping, swirling arofind or lashing out with tail and fins. There was absolutely no kick left in him when at last he was hauled alongside. "] got a fine specimen of a kind of black bass in the Malay Archipelago. It weighed twelve, pounds, and fought well on top of the water, yet with none of the tense rigidity of body and acro- batic somersaulting of your fish. Bat he really never fought out his game, for as is the custom there nty attend nt dived under the fish when he was in one of his flurries and coming up from be- low clasped him with one hand and stuck his tail between his teeth It was effective retrieving, but a very little of it was enough for me. "One thing I noticed to-day which agrees with what I have noted respect- ing fishes#of ithis family in othes lands, is their habit of following the flies along the top before taking them. Several times 1 watched quite a procession of the bass swimming along behind the cast, with eyes fixed eagerly upon the flies, until one of them rushed forward and caught on. "You do not catch the trout at that kind of anticipatory, following after. From somewhere down below the spot- ted fellows ¢Atéh sight of the lures and with minds made up, rush to the top and suck 'them in without deliberation It bespeaks a difference in the mentality of the two types, I 'suppose. The sea bass of the Pacific coral islands, great fellows running into the hundred- weights, will follow on for sometimes hours at a time before the rush at and fight for the bait, "It was there I "first neticed the chameleon-like habit of the bass in changing his skin coloring to suit his environment. If you examine the string we made up to-day you will find some of them of a bright green with light yellow underneath. Those are the fish we got in the blue waters, 03 the sandy shallows. The dark*Black 'ones with the muddy colored sides we took over the dark looking weedy places. "In the South Pacific 1 have caught bass almost pink on the belly where the pink coral abounds. Near by, where the prevailing color of the reefs is white, they havg backs. of, ghd: ree, shad- ing to silvery white. y they should have this curious faculty it is hard to say, since nature has armed them with powerful muscles; a strong jaw and given them ample protection against predatory foes. fs "It may be that the bass are intended to prey upon fish swifter in- the water than they are, such as the trout and the whitefish, so that partial invisibility is necessary to them, though somehow wherever 1 have met with them the bass never seemed to me sneaking things which got their living by fraud." The writer remarked upon the bold- ness of our black bass in the springtifne, when the; old males are guarding their young. If a fish spear is thrust into the water near them they will actually seize the prongs and violently wrench it with quite surprising strength. One would hardly expect such pugnacity*and crafty lying in wait for prey in the same fish "Bid you ever hear of bass attack- nrakes semious attacks upon bathers. It is a true bass of a dark color with ugly tecth and spiny fins, and the British soldiers quartered there are regularly warned to look out for him. They are quite fierce. in their rushes and no one ever pretends to offer battle when they appear among the swimmers in the surf. pearance. Even trained soldiers beat a retreat il CANARIES when a drove of them puts in an ap- o We Mors profile than pouiry. Rxperieae ; I ee. aL ane ey "In fact bass are always fighters, 9 Rit BS wheraver you find them® and I believe the faitest fighter is the six pound black TOR ing men?" the other asked, "There is a fish commonly found about Aden which THE DAILY BRITIS TURDAY, JULY 13, 1907. (A LD = E-NOT: SATISFIED - WE - PAY-THE' CH "T. EATON C%%me ONTO EVERY" HOUSE AND:IF YOU -AR nn "CHURCH SENSATION. Wrote the Word - Ichabod Over Entrance. THE CITY TEMPLE. | A recent church sensation of London | was the sight of the word 'Ichabod' in glaring letters over the portico of the City Temple. Two well-dressed men were seen at work on the letters early | that morning; nobody interfered with | them, it being assumed that they were | orthodox "Unristians, who, saddened by a7 "lz : id A it to be their duty to fulfil the invocation of the late pastor of the church, Dr. Parker. He, on a memorable occasion, declaimed from the pulpit of the Tem- ple: "Should it ever come to pass that the great truths of Christ's death and resurrection be denied by any future oc- cupier of this pulpit, or should the "act of his gracious Godhead and divinity be questioned may the word Ichabod be written over the doors of the City Temple." I -------------- i Kidney Ills Are Stealthy. | Serious kidney troubles often come | almost unawares. No other serious ail- | ments have so few symptoms. When | the back is weak and aches frequently. | When the action of the bladder ig | sluggish or irritable or there are signs | of kidney, liver or « bladder trouble, | take Pock's Kidney and Liver Pills at | once. They give prompt and sure re- | lief. In boxes, 25c. For sale only at} Wade's Drag Store. Money back if not ! waters."--New, York Su. fellow of the North American inland atisfactory." © The Sunshise way of placing coal FEED DOORS on the Sunshine furnace provide an opening deep and wide enough to admit great rough chunks of wood that would either have to be wasted, or chopped up for an ordinary furnace. As for putting coal in the Sunshine, why, it's the easiest thing imaginable ! Such a generous opening would be next to im- possible to miss. And you can_easily deposit the coal in any spot you desire. " Alter you have experimented with small feed- doors, and hit the edge of the door frame a few M<Clarys Rev. R. J. Campbell's heresy, conceived London Toronto FEA HA or Seah ee geal ee LHL) Aver ED: PPLIED BY MAIL RGES. times, you will recognize more completely the ase and advantage of the Sunshine method. The illustrations | hint at the difference. If you will examine the fire-pot of the Sunshine you will notice that the sides are straight up and down. On many furnaces the firé-pots slope, forming a rest on which the ashes accumulate. As ashes are non-conductors of heat they prevent | the fire-pot from radiating as much heat as it should; | they clog up the draft and deaden the fire. "i adhbr But the Sunshine fire-pot is a wonderful radiator} of heat. No ashes can cling to the straight, sheer sides of its fire-pot. The live, red-hot coals are snug up to them. There is nothing to prevent th radiation of every unit of heat produced by the fuel. . The Pomshipe | is the most scientifically etly con- ho structed furnace. It =) radiates most heat with less consumption of fuel. It is the easiest-man- aged, cleanest, greatest labor and fuel econo- mizer you can buy. If your local dealer does not handle the Sun- shine, write direct to us for Free Booklet. fg Qi Vancouver St. John, N. B. LEMMON & SONS. " gir