SHOE POLISH LO Shoe Polish shines quicker.--holds its = deep, black oss longer,--can be revived more easily, --comes in a bigger box than an shoe polish made, --an being in greater bulk, keeps its oily freshness longer--is a muine leather food right to the tom of each box. Rubbers mever affect a Polo shine. Polo Tan Polish both cleans and polishes. Groeers and shoe Ladies like it. "Good for Leather-- ! 10 Stands the Weather" 3 | Those Has 30 «cars Experience Behind It -- Invaluable experience to you, who are. going to buy a furnace this year. 20 years ago, we invented and patented the most important improvement ' made in furnace construction--our now famous FUSED JOINTS These joints mean "an absolutely. gas, dust and smoke proof furnace. Then we adapted the FUSED JOINTS to the firepot and fused 97 'steel ribs into the castiron, thus increasing the radiat- -ing surface three times that of any other firepot. An accurate threc years test, proved that the "Hecla" Steel Ribbed Firepot saves one ton of coal in seven. "= YWhe learned that X' steel combustion chamber 'was not durable, By experimenting, we found that an all-castiron chamber would last longer than a steel one. We can help you, too, in planning the right heating for your home. Write for free copy. CLARE BROS. & CO. LIMITED, - Our book will tell you. 103 PRESTON, Ont. ELLIOTT BROS., Kingston, Ont.--Agents. 3 2 Kellogg's has the real -flavor of wholesome, health- ful corn, flaked, and cooked to a delicious crispness. ~ TOASTED ogg's bas the nourishment that nature takes of the earth, and puts lavishly into the grain, is clean; - No food could be cleaneh It ex- : Order Kellogg's now Sed Ty 6.50, ete, Chairs, $1, 1.50 a Ne . men sell Polo, ! ting Enpla) iis A ------ | | HER BEST PEOPLE EMIGRATE TO OTHER LANDS. ---- - > Agriculture Wanes, and With it thé | Natiosial . Stamina -- Population Crowding Into Cities, > On the face of it, 'says the Manches- | ter Guardian, it may not be well when {a nation sends thousands of its sons' {across the sea. It depends entirely on the sort of sons it sends. | Emigration is rather like blood let- [ting. The letting of bad blood and of unwholesome humors oft-times relieves the patient, and even restores him to health; the letting of good blood, on the other hand, leads always to weak- [mess and, if prolonged, to death it- self. vs : ! There are quite a lot of people who lcould be spared from Epgland--our lidlers, to wit, our wastrels, our detri- {mentals, moral and physical. : In the last census more than six 'hundred thousand adults, wrote them- [selves down as of "no occupation." But these are not the people whom tthe emigrant ships bear off towards the setting sun. On the whole, our coutitry is a pleasant wort of place for | parasites, and, anyhow, thie parasite is ba clinging animal; the wastrel is, an |unenterprising one. ; 5 of our. fellow-countrymen are losing - just now are, lif nou the best, at least ol the best, {that we have among us; those, at any Irate. who can least happily be spared. {England wants workers; England may {want fighters, and England is parting {with both . , . in many {hou sands. Ii this phenomenon be 'a phenomenon of evil some slight comfort may be ! derived from the reflection that it is not #.new phenomenon. - - It is con istant and ever recurring. For a good {many centuries there has been an out- flow, a human outflow, from these is- lands. The very fact of .the existence of the United States of America, with | their eighty millions or so of popula- ition talking English, speaks loudly of {the emigration of the past. { Emigration, moreover, is the reason {why so large a portion of the world's imap is painted red. So many of our 'kin go to Canada now because so | many of our kin went to Canada in {days gone by. Had it not been for {emigration there would he no Canada for our kin to go to, there would be only a waste" land, or a strange for speaking u- strange foreign whom we } : i | eign land tongue, A writer in a vontemporary, much { alarmed by the continued emigration,. | makes the statement that our popula- ition no longer increases. The census | figures disprove this. In twenty years jour population increased between six {and seven million. The next census {will no doubt show a further increase {of three and a half millions in the past decade. So that we can-spare a few hundred thousand emigrants, and still be strong in numbers. England is not, as the writer above referred states, 'be !ing turned into g desert." Vhat, in int of fact we are turn- into is a number of dense ly-packed industrial centres. In the last eight vears 'London has, increased its population by 300,000, Manchest- et by 100,000, Sheff by 90,000, and 80 on throyzh the list' of all our great cities and towns--the cities and towns in which men work, in which they make things. These people are fed to a feat and to an ever-increasing exterft by the labor of men who have emigrated in days gone by, and their children will be fod by the labor of men who . are emigrating to-day. Speaking broadly, tol export a laborer is soomer or later to import food, especially if that laborer happens to be landed atsa Canadian port. - So long as we continue to about our navy, we need pot to worry {about our food supply. Canadian pro- | ducers will put it fast enough and in { sufficient quantity upon the corn ships { if only our cruisers and battleships see {to it that it gets here. { No, it i= not the supply of agricul j tural produce that needs greatly to j troudle our thoughts. It is the supply jof agricultural men. If history teaches jone great lesson more surely than an- other, it is that no civilieation can be based, or ean for long be sustained upon aught but agriculture, apd the reason is that only the men bred in agricultural districts and trained by agricultural pursulls can hold a civili- | zation against 'its foes from without. We should do well to remind our selves. from time to time that it was a few thousand agriculturists; not a few thousand factory hands, or Sankers' clerks, or even professional footballers who for three years or thereabouts kept a British army at bay in South Africa. : worry N 5 * i England is losing her agriculture, .and she is losing it from many and multifarious causes, the first and most | important of which is that the agri. cultural laborer has lo to dislike his job and learned how to escape from a Cana¥la and other places, He Knew His Wagh, [ion Chromtls London Col. Younghusbapd, of Thibet fame, tells ope story of a native who 7 ex ir te i i Ti Fin --o-------- THE DAILY BRITIRH WH LOSES HER BLOOD... A LISTS OF DATES fa------ ; : the Agricaltural Societies' Fairs 1910. Alexandria . sean, spl. Almonte .. ~Bept. 19, Arden ...... . Bancroft . Belleville Brockville ... Centreville Cobden .... 19 and 20 20 aud 21 i lieth, 4 29 and 30 13 and 14 Sept. 1 and 2 ve a ept. 17) Sept. 29 and 30 Cobourg .. Sept. 2}: and 22 Colborne . wy ae was diot, 4 and b Cornwall . Sept. 8, 9, Delta. .... h Frankville Guelph - . Harrowsmith 13 and It Invetary ..... . oie oreo. M4 Kemptyille . «wept. 22 and X Lanark ...... . y Sept, 8 and ¢ Lansdowne $ . o Lombardy . --- London yo oie Sept : wept, Aug. 30, 31, IR « 27 snd 2 + 2 and 2 ween Sept. 19 and XN Merrickville ...... .....c.. Sept. 15 and I¢ Morrisburg . , Sept. 1 and Napanee ...... . 15 and Ui Newbora ..... cui wwii Bepts 3 and 1 Odessa... ... on ss vine OO Oshawa . 13 and 14 Ottawa'... Sept. 9-17 Peterboro Picton : Port Hope... ... . Prescott . Renfrew Roblin's Mills . vi Shannonville ..a ... .... Spencerville ...... ....... Stella ... ... . Stirling Tweed Wolie Island . 3 and 4 Sept, 6, 7, 5 Sept. 21 and Oct. Sept. 27 and Sept. . 22 and 4 and § AD AS ner. 18 Dingler's Folly. The old mansion house agbove the Ancon Quarry, on the Balboa Road called by the French "La Bolie Ding ler," or "Dingler"s Folly," andalater the French Folly, is to be torn down and has been sold for 8525, It was built for Jules Dingler, the French di rector-general of Panama canal work, and was fipished in 1835. His . wife died in Pe i I8SG, of vellow fever which had already carried off a sor and daughter. Dingler returnad te Paris in Juhe, never having occupier the home, which: was hence called "Le Folie Dingler." For a dongitime the dwelling was said to be haunted, ¢ certainly was by sad memories of tragedies" of the French oceup In those days the digeing of the ean: was a succession of delirious plehsure and grim fatalities; the cost in hum life, paid by that nation in launching the Panama canal enterprise, will pro bably uever he known. How to Tell the Date, Lippincoit's © A way of decidiche dates of certain important events is suggested by th following: aneedote. The parents of a undergraduate were disputing as the date of their last letter to thei "hopeful" from whom, somewhat to the distress of the' mother, they had not heard for some time. "Are you sure, Thamas," asked the mother, unconvinced, "that it was on the 12th that you wrote to Dick." "Absolutely," was the father's de cisive responses" "1 looked it up i my checkbook {his morning." .- Kitchener Wouldn't Write It. T. P's. Weekly ¢ Unlike many other of Britain's lead ing soldiers, Lord Kitcheher has ' no liking whatever for literature in amy shape or form, so that this is likely to take up much of his time. A short time ago, a leading firm of London publishers approached him, and offered him practically his own terms to write his. biography; but he declined, laughingly explaining that was quite impossible for him to write a single page that would be of the slightest interest to anybody. not L elgns Ry SATURDAY, JULY 9, 1910. ------ EE ------ POPE AN EABLY RISER. Long Reigns of Recent Occupants of | Papal (hair, The _pope- bh he' was and less exertion, and finds 'mental labor glouter to he = than physical | hotaltorether reranst fons of | vimirden. OF one thing he is proud, | i¢ he savs, mamely, that he is the! warliest niser in the i; apostolic | lace, as it is his "constant whole Pras tice | which bye his a fret up at umsell - says dates from hildhgo 1, when he ot up with the sun in ord r te ime to do bis lessons warefooted, the eparated "him school. The excellent nakes people ife which' the head of hurch has imposel upon since the fall of the temporal that i' to say, of remaining always] sithin the vatican, is not conducive] o lonzevity. Ta fact, while in thel ast the average duration of a pon-| tificate was from four to five vears, since 1870 we have had the lonfest known among the occupants | of the chair 'of St. Peter: Pius IX.} was the first to surpass St. Peter's in} len rth, while XII, who was | elected. chiefly because he was sup | posed to be feeble that his life! would be a shart remained | pope for twenty-five years, and Pius | X. has -already worn the fisherman's] rin for seven years, " i Of course, there is a prediction that! the present pope will not outlive thel nine vears of pomtificate, because hel was nine yesXs a parish priest, nine! years a bishop, #nd nine vears pa} triarch However, when-| ever he has read in the 'papers, which | he peruses carefully every that | he is also expected more br wine year ex claimed langhir "This time 1 point them! s 1 Aa early | obliged tof have | was and to covery] which x : miles : nearest i ! i the several from state wonder of his health | whether the the Roman | himself | pow ox, | Feo SO one, of Venice. , dav, not to be ope, "he Has am going disap | i { ! { i The Fault of the People, St. Lous Globe : Ex-Giovernor Folk, of Missouri, the Missouri Society's dinner in Waldorf-Astoria, said of corruption : "The existence of corruption is the fault of the people. The populace, in- stead of making a real effort and rid- ding itself of corruption once for all, wriggles uneasily and does nothing. "In fact populace dangerous laisser-faire boy with the stomach "You mustn't go swimming to-day' this bov's father said. "You've stomach ache r bane? w- "Oh that'll be all said the 'ri back." the the the adopts policy of ache got father," on my right, boy. swim Howling Success, woess, New York Kirke La Shelle met an actor and noticed that he was wearing a moury ing band on his arm, "It's for my father," the actor _ex- plained. "I've just come from his fun eral." ' La Shelle éxpressed his sympathy, | The actar's grief whs obviously very real and great. "I attended to all the funeral arvangements," he said. "We had everything just as fathos world have liked it." "Were there many there?' asked la Shelle, "Many there," cried the actor, with pride. "Why, my hoy, we turned am a ' 4 This Time. An old laborer was hurrying along a railway platform to catch a train when gu porter suddenly collided him, knocking him down. happened to come 'along as he slowly risng to his feet and said him, "Ah, my good man, is this whiskey again?" **No, yer honor," replied ii borer, "it was the porter." with A minister was A" the ohila- After a" man gets the farther side of forty he becomes reconciled even though he isn't satisfied. on Bi i more { FORMULA OF oe ~ s On The Oui OF Every Bx For All The World To See p> ' Every unser of " Fruit:a-tives™ knows exactly what is being taken. The formula of this famous fruit medicine is printed plainly onthe outside of every box. We have stated many times--and now state clearly---that * Fruit-a-tives is made of the juices of apples, oranges, figs and prunes, with valuable heart and nerve tonics and antiseptics. " Everyone knows that fruit juice is healthful -- but perhaps some do not understand why this is true, 2 y . Fruit juice consists of about 91} water, 8% of sweet principle, and 1 of a bitter substance. It is the quantity of bitter principle in fruit that gives the fruit value as a medicine. An eminent physician of Ottawa, after years of experimenting, fond a method of increasing the bitter principle in fruit, juice, thus increasing the medicinal or curative qualities. The juices are first extracted from fresh, ripe oranges, apples, figs and pr By a secret process, some of the sweet atoms are replaced by the bitter princi Thén tonics and antiseptics are added, and whole made into tablets, nbw known far and wide as ** Fruit-a-tives."' " Frilit-a-tives."* is the only medicine in the world that is made of fruit Joicen, and is one of the few remedies that have let their composition be known rom their introduction to the public. * Fruit-a-tives " is nature's stimulant for the liver, bowels, kidneys and skin. In cases of obstinate Constipation, * Liver Trouble, Indigestion, Backache, Rheumatism, Headaches and Impure Blood, this wonderful fruit medicine 'cures when everything elise fails, "Frpit-a-tives' is sold everywhere-at 50¢: a box, 6 for $2.50 or trial box, 25¢., or will be sent, postpaid, on receipt of price by Fruit-a-tives Limite. Ottawa. Fas { ] i i W-- 000A B0000VOOGHOLITOOOOCOTOOO00 0 to your grocer, buy a package of Asepto-- it will cost you five cents--take it home and dissolve a single teaspoonful in & pan of dishwater, _ That's what you do--then see the result, Note how it cuts the greases--how it leaves your and glassware bright and shining--how clean and wholesome it leaves your pats -- your pans -- your cooking utensils. It does all that--and more. It destroys every trace of the germ life that exists wherever there is sus. tenance for these microscopic trouble breeders to feed upon--it sterilizes and renders every- thing antiseptically--surgically, if you will clean. That's why you should always wash glass, chinaware, cutlery -- any article used for eating or drinking with Asepto. It makes contagion impossible. Perhaps the very quickest way for you to'realize how it cleanses is for you to note the way it sweetens your dish-cloths. Tell your grocer to send you a package of Asepto ---all good grocers sell it at five cents. a THE ASEPTO MFG. CO. ST. JOHN, N.B. ASEPTO SOAP POWDER sweetens the home Ni AsrPTO| 130000000000 0000000000 COGOOVOOOLOIODHVOOIOCO0 Elliott Bros., Telephone 35. 77 Princess Street. (Give us a call when you require Garden Hose, Lawn Mowers, Lawn Rakes, Refrigerators, Gas Stoves, Co:l Oil Stoves, etc. We'carry a full line of the above goods <at the lowest prices, Tile Sewer Pipe and Fittings Constantly B and. / : 5 VOO0VOO0VO0VOO0000V0O0 DOO OOO O00 000 3 1 | | 5