1S! ERS! PPERS! he season to be thinking he time to choose them, 1g buty Up-to-Date Slip- g, in Black, Brown, 25, 1.50 to 2.50. ; Felt Slippers, 75c. Slippers, in Black, lue, and Plaids, 75c., uliet Slippers, Fur- Iren's Slippers, in , and Leather, 25¢., ). COSY SLIPPERS COMFORT. ethy"s ---- seo 0000000000000 00000000000007%000000000000000000000000000FONIOIIOIIVYVIIS ays Right orm copldn't pretend to be my styles and Fit-Reform nust be right. orm must know "What is be wom" --and Fit-Reform : able to interpret every fashion. art of Canada, depend on what" in Suits and Overcoats. w faithfully Fit-Reform lives 256 ellorm .NKINS ntario. Attention, Furnaces! f your furnace meeds repairing vilhg A work eb ome, I you " Sleusice. or Plumbing, give me a "o] OY YL = prompt attention and HAL 868 Brock St 9 'Phone 335 AVID and : Colds 1 is run-down,--perilously Something more than a system needs a tonic as SYRUP . ne iver Oil and a real tonic. Itis an rouse. It is the best and it does not aim to soothe s the cause and strength- to take. Children like it. them. : . £8 e bottle. ke, Que. ¢ Fhis is the box « that has the biscuits that are always fresh, crisp and good-- that are made in the best bakery in Canada by the best bakers. If these are the Biscuits you want, always insist on your grocer sending Mooney's _ a = ei WILSONS INVALIDS P ll (A la quina du Perou) --A BIG BRACING TONIC is an excellent nerve fortifier. Every ingredient in it acting directly on the nerve "centres it allays irritability, insures quiet, restoring sleep, cures all 'forms of nervous prestration, stimulates and strengthens the nerves, and tones up the whole system. It is a blend of nourishing, building, bracing, A ingredients. BI6 BOTTLE ALL DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE 75 FREE TO YOU--MY SISTER mem Issam "imass™ I am a woman. I know woman's sufferings. I have found the cure. I will mail, free of any charge, m ith full ctions to any my geader, for ter, a Fo or your sister. Sei& on how to cure yourselves at home without the heipof a doctor. Men cannot understand wom J ings. What we women know from exe Better than any doctor. | know t is® sale and sure cure for Leucerrhoca: discharges, Ulceration, Dis- 5 of the Womb, Profuse, Scanty Paintal or Ovarian Tumors or rgwth, als Io the head; back and nervousness, creeping feel earth. Ta asses Sroubies bladder troubles 'where caused b. 10 our sex. Twant to send you a complete 10 days' treatment entirely free to we to you that you €an cure wb at nb easily, | quick} Fons surely. : Yee ber, that ji you no! togive the a complete trial; and if you should wish to hat nt Cost you only about 12 h your work or tion. uffer, if you wish and 1 will send youthe kidney end weaknesses occu cents & week, ot less than two cents a day. It will not iaterfere with me address, tell me how you s! return mail. will also send you of cost, my boo Wi ing why an suffer, and how they can easily cure themselves a have it, and lcarn to think * you can decide for yourself, Thousands of sEiuen havecuted themsel: remed: res old or . To Mothers will expla Treatme which all or J ehecinally cures reen Sickae: t lar Menstruation in Young Ladies, health always result crever you live, I can refer you to Iadi any sufferer that this 11, ng, plump and ro . we TRS: M, SUMMER arr Skates For Hockey Practically every prominent hockey player in Canada--for the past forty years--has used Starr Skates. 16 different styles, to suit all kinds of ice. "Rex" and "Micmac" Hockey Sticks are strong and accurate. 4 'Our 190% Skate Book illustrates and describes them. Write for a 'free copy. The Starr Mariufacturing Co., Limited DARTMOUTH, N. 8. CANADA. # °F 21 4 BRANCH OFFICE - * . * * -------- -- -- SA tmen! your case, entire! free, in plain wrapper, b bo Ri k=" WO. "S OWN MEDICAL ADVISE 4+ with explanatory illustrations shows t home, Every woman shoud TORONTO, ONT The source of all Power, "fhe resalt of §o years of scienti research, © cases cured by 30 days 2 Tigre it Jounelfby atest. A A34 days carefuily sealed ina lain wrapper with no mark, full 30 days tremment (180 dosés) 'with cure or refund of 'money, for $roa™ testimonials received within the Jast twelve months, om {GING GO. P.0. PrawstL 2341. MONTREAL y home treats sufferer from 1 want to tell all women about Then when the doctor says--"You must have an opera= s with my home a simple home d Painful or its use w and will gladly an's diseases and makes women 3 ten days' treatment is R, Ont. wd et THE 010 CENTURY TRENTIENT, discovered in the Labo. The Fountain of Youth, Fates ome: manhood brought back efter years of weakness aod despair, Nature's Secret restored by combini thres of the rarest chemical reagents in the world. This ig s po experiment. it is proved by its use in the ©. spits} of Europe, Tenx of thousands of weak and hopelesd treatment. 'This is a fact] treatment with All packages wre A make the what like, that BE 10 THE POOR] Sige oi ut nl corms ems mo tie hi up in the ban d bri a : a, i a oe 0 £2 among Nhe Guim . and ROCKEFELLER ASKS TOL-| 22818 BS 2 mare cil fer an . -- without ing & hurny call for an | Among the Prince Edward Islanders STOY"S ADVICE. ambulance. I'll win the bet if there's who have been fame for them- ---- anybody outside of a "put" gollegs $0 aeives, abroad v Dr. B. Gordon, World's Richest Man Wants to confused as to-go against it. It's a JEU Re arc. Te ommeny Know How to Use sis * Set women, lovely women, cn prance resi Dr. Gordon has been engaged rtune it after , and t nO guesses mn itions In Pa . the makers and the millinery sharps | interests of archaeology and is the sf Some time ago John D. Rockefeller, reputed to be the richest man in_the world, wrote to Count Tolstoy, the Rus- sian author, asking what was the best way to employ wealth for the greatest good of humanity. Tolstoy replied with the following letter, which is printed in the Matin: "To the questions which you address to me to know in what measpre wealth is compatible with the Christian doc- trine which you profess, 1 make this answer: Apart altogether from the teaching of the Gospel, plain common sense tells us that wealth in itself is in- compatible with an absolutely good life. "I think I made that sufficiently clear in my volume "What Ought We 10 Do? "The money I keep in my pocket, in my strong box or in a bank constitutes, without the least possible doubt, a sort of weapon against the man who has none--the poor man. Now, to possess such a weapon and to use it when op- portunity arises, or merely to threaten in order to show the weapon's power, is not a good, but an evil. It i# mn this light that money appears from the point of view of plain common sense. "Looked at from ihe Christian point of view, the 'matter is clearer still. The whole doctrine, the whole spirit of the Gospel discourses of the folly of man's labors to assure his future, of the folly of the acquisition of wealth, of man's need to act not like the rich man in the parable, who stored his barns with grain, but more like Lazarus, the poor. 1t is said in the Gospel that happy are the poor and unhappy the rich; that man cannot serve both God and mam- mon; that a man must give to him that asketh, and not take back that which he has given, and many other things in a similar sense. "Such is the general teaching of the Christian doctrine. But in the conver- sation with the rich young man ix the Gospel the truth is expressed with such precision that it is impossible ta mis- understand it. There it is said, if thou wilt be perfect, sell all thou hast and give to the poor and follow Me. "I feel really ashamed to give expres- sion to such platitudes and to prove what is an axiom for every sincerely religious man, whether he believes or not in the divine nature of the Gospel." WORTH $500,000, STARVED. Mrs. Caroline Barry, Found Dead in Brooklyn House. "Dead of starvatiom" That was the verdict of Coroner's Physician Wuest in the case of little old Mrs. Caroline Barry, the recluse © Greene avenue, Brooklyn. It did not tell that the woman was worth more than half a million dollars and that death was the result of slow starv ation, a process she has been following for more than thirty years, notwithstanding her wealth The story of the woman whose little old attenuated body was found by the police huddled up on the floor of her kitchen in the mndst of a litter of use- less trash, is reminiscent of a tale of Dickens. For many years she has been an eccentric of the most decided type, but never has there been any doubt cast on her sanity, for in all matters of business she was as shrewd and exact- ing as Hetty Green herself. Although more than an indifferent housekeeper, as the confusion found in every room of her three-storey brown stone residence, at No. 471 Greene av- enue, testified, where one of her fads was concerned she was neatness itself Tin cans--milk cans, tomato cans, and others, as well as glass bottles, were her hobby. She had collected hundreds of these and placed them in orderly rows in the drawers of her mahogany and rosewood chests. Each can was so brightly pol- ished that it shone like a mirror But the windows were thick with dust and festooned with cobwebs. Inside, except for the shining cans and bottles, there was a still greater chaos Although Mrs, Barry moved to the place more than eight years ago, her rich furnishings of antique rosewood and mahogany, with priceless carvings and upholstery, had never been un- packed, and no effort had been made to prevent them from falling to dry rot. In every room stood furniture in its excelsior wrappings, both upstairs and down, while boxes and barrels cluttered the floors. A bed had been set w in one of the rooms on the second floor, where, evidently, the little old woman had slept, but this must have been long ago, for the quilt was covered with mould. Mrs. Barry had not always been thus, Years ago she was a happy wife, and a sixty-year-old oil painting found in her attic showed her to have been a bright, pretty girl. Her husband, Alexander Barry, a Scotchman, made a fortune manufactliring a one-time fam- ous hair tonic. He died thirty years ago, though, after a fall downstairs, which broke his neck. Since then she has been changed. . Shortly after her husband's death she decided to invest in some Mortgages. She made known her request to Frank Marrin, who has since become notorions as a swindling lawyer, and was recently seht to the penitentiary as "Judge Stone." The man's mother had ft one time been a servant in Mrs. Barry's family. Alexander Barry, the husband, had taken a great fancy to the youth, and together they educated him. Be- lieving in him, Mrs Barry placed the matter of the mortgages in his hands He swindled her out of $70,000, and it covered. ee ese ENDURANCE OF WOMEN. the more 1 wonder at the enduraace © Cleveland Plain Dealer, pinched into corsets, her neck and ches exposed by peckaboo waists, her fec vder from the armful of wi stand sta she is sure going some past what th was a blow, from which she never re- Takes Shy at 'Makeup' of Gentler Sex. Lunenburg, N.S., proved Ferrozone The more 1 see of athletes and boxers, Was. 8 marvellous tonic and save; £1' Nothing 1 ever wsed gave such women, says John L. Sullivan in the When yor size fone up the way a woman is put together; done up like a Chink's, only worse, her | quite restored my perves and made me heels set up on stilts, the whole topped off with a lid brainstorm that lms every- thing from the remains of fowls to an f ribbon think of her getting away ying in the game. sq longa fblood hand her the harder she grabs for them, and the easier she gives up real money. If a man gets exposed to the night mir in an face suit he chases after concerning his recent experience in the cough killers till you can't rest, but any Frozen North: : "Dr. George B. Gordon, who is now wisp of a woman can put om a make- up that looks as if the dressmmker was shy of cloth when the upper story was built and beat the doctor at that, in six tries, and it's goosefiesh for hers above the fifth rib, You can't beat her. She's got man groggy on the Fopes, if not taking the count, in the first round, and the referee has nothing to do but give her the long end when he {las gaint the "stronger sex" in an rance contest, -------------- GOOD BLOOD FOR BAD. That is What Pr. Williams' Pink Give--They Never Fail, Good blood is the one thing peces- sary for perfect health. If the blood is good disease cannot exist--if it is bad disease is bound to appear. There are dozens of maladies caused by bad blood. Among them are anaemia, rheumatism, heart palpitation, bead- ache and backache, indigestion and the special ailments of women and growing girls. I you suffer from any of these troubles, Dr. Williams' Rink Pills will cure you--because they make new, red, health-giving blood. They succeed where doctors sometimes fail, In proof of this Mrs. Sarah Jane Duce, Deseronto, Ont. says: "In 1905 I became weak and sickly. 1 was all run down; I found housework a burden--sometimes could not do it at all; the least eof- fort made me. tired. I consulted a doftor, who told me he might help me some but could not cure me per- manently on account of my age. 1 am over fifty. His treatment did not help me and - I gradually grew worse; even my friends began to despair. Four different doctors told me my case was hopeless. My suffering was intense. Sores broke out around my mouth and 1 was unable to eat. 1 consulted a specialist, who told me my trouble was anaemia and that he had little hopes for my recovery. 1 was in despair and decided it was use- less to spend any more money on doc- tors. One day my husband urged me to try De. Williams' Pink Pills. After a few weeks use of the Pills I was con- vinced that 1 had found the right medicine. 1 took twelve boxes and they completely cured me, and I am now in excellent health. I gladly re- commend them to all sufferers, for they cured me when doctors had fail- ed and my friends were expecting death to end my: suffering." Unless the full name, "Be: Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People," is printed on the wrapper around each box don't take them--any other so-called pink pill is a fraud intended to deceive you and may do you harm. If your medi cine dealer has not got the genuine Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peo- ple they will be sent to you direct at Be. a box or six hoxes for "$2.50 from The Dr. W illiams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. ' ---- BETTER THAN HE KNEW. Story of Tmpre- sionism. A Good Lippincott's. TR There is a young artist nm Wash ington who classes himself as of the impressionistic school, and who, being somewhat out in drawing, generally makes up for his lack of technique by spreading color recklessly and counting on distance for his effect. At an amateur exhibition he once hung one of his 'most extraordinarhy performances. "Well" said a friend, whom the art ist had taken to see the work, "1. don't want to flatter you, old chap, but that is far and away the best stuff you have ever done. 1 congratulate you." Much pleased, the artist was receiv- ing the compliment with becoming mod- esty, when he chanced again to glance at the picture--and turned very "red The committee had hung it up side down! Hurrying to the head of the commit- tee he was about to launch into a loud complaint, when he was informed of the good news that an hour before the picture had been sold for $61 The original price-mark had been $10. No Self Control. Start at "Trifles." No Control of Your Nerves. The nerves are the great controlling force of the body. They govern every action, every function. Upon their vitality hinge your energy, your power to think and act. But. alas, your merves are weak ! You have burnt up your nerve force, used up that reserve you =o badly need to-day Just one way to win #t back. Build up with Férrozone. It restores worn-out nerves, be- cause it supplies them with nutriment and building material. Ferr6zone fives yon "orip" and courage -- 'makes the blood tingle through your veins--filly vou with the feeling that a powerful and strength- ening medicine is: winning you back to health . C. R. Zink, a prominent citizen of prompt. strengthening effect as Ferro- 1 was run down, quite nervous, no appetite, and in a generally used- Ferrozone gave me a + J up condition. new strength, t | wonderful amount of well. IT ean recopimend 'Ferrozone to every than whe works hard' and needs a tonic," By supplying noiirishment and vital farce to the nerves, bv enriching the strengthening the heart, --Fer- el rozone is sure to help any man, wo- best of us could do, ©. Here's a bet CU ike, dd 30 $38 50s, pec box a all thor of a valuable work on the subject. co nishes the following interesting facts curator of t vania's ar cal tale of this new race, which had never | country in which these aborigines live 'Kuskwagamites,' and show strong traces Pills For Pale People Always | are utterly unknown among them, and their religion is Pantheism. They know from Philadelphia fur- University of Pennsyl- ¥ i rtment, dur- ing his six months' expedition through the wildest regions of the Northwest, discovered a new race living along the Koskowin River in Alaska. "Dr. Gordon bh back a strange before seen a white man. Dr. Gordon heard rumors of them in 1908, and after innumerable hardships he reached the in Adamic simplicity. "They arc called by the Eskimos of Mongolian ancestry. Crime and vice absolutely nothing of the corruption and degeneracy with which the white have infected the Athabaskan Indians and Eskimos. Dr. Gordon lived for several months among them. ""Though they are dying out,' Dr. Gor- don said, 'they are strong and clean physically and morally, and are intelli- gent. They have retained the most an- cient characteristics of dress and speech. In clothing, instead of wearing furs, they year the breasts of loon and various species of ducks, which abound in the river. " "They are monogamists, and no such thing as vice is known amon They are permitted by their priests to have more than one wife, but never do so. They have no laws at all, hut are governed by patriarchs. They ate tall, and the women graceful and beautiful. There are only four hundred of them eft.' "Dr. Gordon added 1 "It is to be hoped for their own' sakes that they may die out before the white traders get to them. Then they gan die as cleanly and happily as they Ive "Dr. Gordin and his helper travelled down the Koskowin 1,500 miles in a small sloop. When they reached Beh- ring Sea they sailed for Nome, were caught in equinoctial gales and were adnft three weeks. Dr. Gordon was forced to throw his provisions over- board to save his specimens. He land- ed at Nome nearly dead with hunger and exposure." CAYADIAN HAS BIG CONTRACT WM. J. Heney ' With $25,000,000 Railway Contract In Alaska, Ottawa Freo Press. M. J. Heney, who has just been given a $25,000,000 railway contract by the Guggenbeims of New York, is a_son of Mrs. M. J. Heney, now occupying rooms in the Rideau street convent, and a nephew of Chevalier John Heney. The enterprising young contractor, only 27 years of age, has attained a prominence and status in the railway world that re- flects credit on the young Irishmen of Canada. Born in a backward part of Ontario, 50 miles above Pembroke, Mr. Heney had an obscure beginning, but had barely entered into manhood when he showed his friends that he was des- tined for a future that the simple com panions of his early bo) never dreamed of. | At Merrickville, a little Ottawa valley town, some railway work was in progress and there Mr. Heney was attracted from home in the capac- ity of a jobber. Before long he was convinced that only in a larger field could he find scope for his genius and enterprise. Going to New gu Mr. Heney met wealthy realway magnates and it was not long till he was given the contract to build the White Pass and Yukon railway. This was a big project and out of it the young con- tractor made over half a million dollars With this fortune he returhed to Ot- tawa and dealt magnanimously with his less successful brothers, starting them on farms or in whatever calling they preferred. Mr. Heney's father died four years ago in Pembroke and since then the widow has resided in Ottawa. The young railway prince was last in the Capital about ten months ago. He wis expected back om a visit soon, but | the new contract he has taken will like- ly detain him. The line is to run northwest from Cordova to Copper Riv- er, and thence through canyons and along the river to the mouth of Taz- nun and Nabusa Rivers (where are lo- cated rich copper deposits). Twenty-five millions is a conservative estimate of the expenditures planned by them. BEER is a term which covers lager, ales, and stout; and, in the practise S DEER rn Sh en RT RR BAS LER WHOLE BOD' OES THAT MUCH) Ee g $a % (NO OTHER FOOD-BEVERAGE D N that kind of beer (and no OT six people in a thousand (and those six have either 4 thumnd (8 hone di 3 ing but real good from the use kind is brewed in Ontario) benefits the whole body of the normal adult,--enriches 5 the blood, vitalizes the stomach, makes "kidneys and liver active, builds flesh and betters nerves. Beer Is Not A Mere Tonic Good beer, drank with meals and at bedtime, is not merely a tonic--for a tonic simply gets one part of the system to~work better for a while, by stimulating its activity, while beer, rightly J used, does the whole system permanent good... ¥ i Beer Builds Up Thin Folks That is why good beet is such a notable flesh-builder, and why it is so effective in changing the too-white blood of aenemic people into the red, strong, healthy blood of the vigorous. 'It has qualities that are very valuable to women, especially. itis distinctly NOT an intoxicant, nor a hurtful stimulant. Ask your doctor if beer wouldn't be good for you as an item of daily diet. the world) malt, hops, and er ---- You can remove the Grate Bars from a "peerless Peninsular" in 30 seconds. "Peninsular" i Duplex Grates can he removed : without loosen- ing 2 bolt or distutbing 'the water front or linings in any way. Thereare no slide rails to wWarp---Ano gran frame to urn out--and the absence of these parts, makes it ossible to increase the weight and strength of the te bars. These 'bars, with ordinary' care, will last 10 years. If they must be changed, the operation will not take more than 30 seconds, no matter how long they have been in use. : ««Peninsular'" Duplex Grates barn either coal or wood. To change the fire-box from coal to wood, remove the ead dining dnd reverse ithe v grate bars, The change can be made in a A Ask your dealer to show you these grates, Also the Dron Oven Doce, and Adjuuahle Over Dampes~featares that make the "Peerless Peuinsuiar' the easiest best range 10 work with, Write us for Lliustrated catalogue. 53 "Peerless Peninsular" RANGES Four ------ = Soule fos dao the Guggenheim interests in building this railroad and establishing a smelter at Tidewater. Probably it is the large con- tract ever made in connection with the development of Alaska. The contract was signed two weeks ago, when New York was in the midst of the financial flurry WINDING A WATCH. -- Reasons Why It is Better Done in the Morning. "Vou wouldn't think," said a watch- maker, "that it wonld make any differ- ence whether a watch is wound up in the morning or at night, but it does make considerable difference. "When a watch is wound up at night, coming out of a warm pocket, and laid down or hung wp in a cool place, the mainspring will contract ty the cooling off of the metals. Being wound uf tightly all chance of contracting has been ght off and the spring is bound to break. . If, however, the watch is wound up in the moming, having partly run down through the night, there is room gh left in the barrel to contract. Another reason why it should be wound up in the morning is that the spring will then (LONDON) orter ifs the continent. Proved to be ky analysis of four chemists, awards s 1893, where it received ninety-six much higher than any other Porter in the by of the world' Exhibitions, especially : Juited States or Canada. ; JAMES McPARLAND, Sales Agent, have more power and thus will be in a better condition to. resist the disturbing movements of the bearer during the daytime. "Being generally ina horizontal posi- tion during the night and running with less power, the horizontal position, in which the balance runs more freely, Will operate tp make the length of the swing of the balance wheel during the night as nearby as possible 'the same as in the dajtime™ When 3 man calls his wife an angel man or child in illhealth; try it-- druggists, the chances are that he has been drinking again l : pint for Spinal Cur: ; Curvature vature, Partial 10 cure, each cause. 135 Charéh Se. Surgical Aids Toronto, Est 1860 } Seal tis Authors & Cox Our Appliances. w Sinee 1960, w= have bro haopiness 10 the homes of Paralysis, etc., are the result of half & centre's experience in afilicied, with our appliances. = testing mid fitting such assists] San Baby ants. We. know just what e i i 1 doatisg apparatus will relieve, or help 4 Our isnos slay (alls uy p bow io! fie apuliance yo that it