Dalton's Concentrated Lemonade, a pure; lemon product, with all the Dalton's- Lemonade of the Imitator--Insist on Dalfon's We Make Brass, 'Bronze, or Aluminum Castings Prompt Deliveries. Send Your Patterns. The Canada Metal Co. Ltd., Fraser Avenue, Toronto House Flies are hatched in manuré€ and revel in --filth.---- Screntists--have discovered: that they are largely responsible for the spread of Tuberculosis, Typhoid, * Diphtheria, Dysentery, Infantile Dis- eases of the Bowels, etc. > Every packet of 'WILSON'S 'FLY PADS will kill more flies than 300 sheels' of sticky paper. | For rigid iastmg hermit John They 'named SH NINA Ir NEAVE'S 'fants \ ( INFANTS Is the RIGHT FOOD for YOUR baby The stromgest argument for your using dh E NEAVE'S FOOD for your baby, is that 8o years experience has proved its value for the youngest and most delicate infant. NEAVE'S FOOD contains all the essentials for flesh and bone forming in an exceptional 3 x assists teething--relieves constipa- tion--and makes baby thrive. what one mother says : "My baby has been brought up on Neave's Food, of which I cannot speak too highly, My baby did wot thrive until 1 gave him Neave's since, If anyone asks me what they shail Here's Food, aud he has never had a day's illness give their bables, I say Neave's Food, and they get on just the dame as mine, and thank me for telling them." Mrs, Savery of Bristol. ol hoe MY. ova 2 ES EEIt IE . \ About Baby." Address to Leporion & Ca. VANCOUVER, A Canadian Agent: EBWIN UTLEY Mitre, J. R. NEAVE SCO. : TORONTO ENGLAND. ATTENTION - | WHEN YOU REQUIRE ANY Tinsmithing, Gas-Fitting, Plumbing or Hot Water Heating Done CALL UP Elliott Bros., 3 Telephone 35. 77 Princess Street. -- All orders promptly attended to, 'Saving Cents And Wasting Dollars There is no economy in buying 1 i cheap granulated sugar for, preserving. £ You 'may save a few cents on the actual cost of "the sugar you use--but you may also waste several dollars by spoiling the preserves. : t To be genuinely economical, use od ll-sides Than: thats which floweth there. As seamen on his ly morm Beheld its harbor's gleam. It was like rigid hermit John, A voice amid the wild, v / Its honey and.its {atness drawn ' From . forests undefiled. Now that the green is on the plain, The azure in the sky, ; Wherewith clear sunshine after rain Decketh they rich July, Broad is the. leaf and bright the flower ; Clote to theppale gray sands Coarse alder * grows, and wirginl bower Graspe it with. slender hands. Wit: honeysuckles, meadow-sweets, And rue the banks are lined; O'er wide fields dance gay margue- rites : To pipe of me: wind. By the tall tiger-lily's side Stands the rich golden.rod, { A king's "son 'wooing for his bride, ~The dsughter-of & god When fresh and bright were ail green) things, And ne was in the sky, The dandelions made them wings, And did as riches fly; Now the bright buttercups with gold Empave a toil-trod road-- Can wayfarers their sheen behold Nor sigh for streets of God? T'.e birds are homed amid the boughs Of oak and elm trees grand; | As for the snipe, her lowly house She maketh in the sand; | The robin loves the dawning's hush, | The eve's the chickadee, = { The "thistle-bird the garden bush, i The boblink the lea. From intervale and swampy dale i Are wafts of fragrance blown, Of fern and mint and calamus, And wild hay newly mown. God's fiery touch hath reached uf earth, And lo! its odors rise Like incense pure of priceless worth ( Offered in sacrifice. i Canadian Verse }' THE SWORD. By Isabella Valancy Crawford. At the forging of the Sword-- ' 1ne er roots -were - stirred /| Like the heart-beats of a bird; Like flax the tall trees waved, So fiercely struck the Forgers of cthe Sword. ' | At the forging of the Sword-- So loud the hammers fell, The thrice-sealed dates of 'Hell Burst wide their glowing jaws; Deep roaring, at the forging of the At the forging of the Sword-- Kind mother Earth was rent Like an Abn dusky Sm, And monster-like she a On" her children, at the forgingfof the Sword. { At the forging of the Sword-- The startled air swift whirled The red flames round the world, From the anvil where was smitten The steel the Forgers wrought into the Sword. and matron fled, And hid them with the dead; Fierce prophets sang their doom, More deadly than the wounding of the Sword. d At the forging of the Sword-- Swift leaped the quiet hearts In the meadows and the marts; The tides of men were drawn By the gleaming sickle-planet of the Sword At -the forging of the Sword-- The i Thus wert thou forged, O lissome Sword ; : On such dusk anvil wert thou wrought; In such red flames thy metal fused; From such deep hells that metal brought; O Sword, dread lord, thou speak'st no word, . But dembly rul'st, king and lord! SD, 10 arreagre a two-days' program 'past. Tt goes without Saying that they will do so in the fature These is no South African of either race whose name commands such wide respect... In gil 'the whirlwinds of jon after the war, as well as in the, tempestuous scenes that occurred aL Pretoria. before the final outbreak of hostilities, iy at least was never ed on. His sincerity as a Lib- Ppansht of President Kruger's policy 6f exclusion was never in * | doubt. chivalry, his h ity, his co , and his skill outs e recogni by all the British generals who faced him in the field. . i honor and his loyalty to his pledged word have always been equal- iy above reprogeh. General Botha is not. at all loquacious, and his voice was seldam heard in the old Volks- jad, To Gown hissofher gerfections, speaks English eetly, When he a. Eo Eneland in 1907, Gener | Beha was initiated into the Viyswries of goll and promised to lay" out . course .u South Africa. He did thir, and now plays 'a respectable game. During the voyage to England this time, he sét an example to the rol fing early and up early in tie morta; He was out soon after six and walked briskly round the otwady geek wor an hour and a nalf. Occasionally "he took part in the deck gars, and the passengers elect. {ed nim <hairman of the-Sports Com- In this capacity he helped The events included tugs-of-war, potato races gg and spoon races, flat race, and caaking the pig's eye. mittee. Premier's Ramble. Immediately on arrival in England as one of the Dominion representaives at the coronation, the Hon. James 8 asowan, the Labor Premier of New dguta Wales, carried out a promise which he gave his aged mother (who emigrated rom Lancashire fifty years ago) that he would spend his first aay rambling among the green lanes of Old England, and he was charm- ed with all he saw. Mr. McGowan was born at sea when his parents' were about three weeks' sail from Melbourne, on August 16, 1256, but the career of the Sydney vremier has no sensational chapters. He had quietly pushed his way from i she foundry to the Premiership by determined, useful work in the un. ions and 'in the ranks of the State Parliamentary . Labor rty. He gradustéd in "Labsr polities in 1891, when he became member for Redfern in' the New South Wales House of Assembly. Redfern--the railway sub. urb of Sydney--has been loyal to him ever since. After three years in Parliament he was elected leader of the growing Labor party in 1894; and has been re-elected every three years sigoe. Like most of the best and ablest men in the Australian Parliament, James McGowan is an unaffectedly religious man. "For twenty-four years he has' been superintendent of an Anglican Sunday school in his own constituency, My Pew. The recent death of Mrs. Ware, widow of the Bishop of Barrow-in- Furness, reminds a correspondent of AR amusing experience which that lady had. Her mother, the late Mrs. Goodwin, and she entered a- North country church in a place where they happened to be strangers to the ma- jority 'of the congregation. They wer: directed to a weil-cushioned pew oo- cupied by wn fashionably dressed wo- man. The entry of the ladies excited the wrath of the occupant, and in a tone more forcible than elegant she insisted on them clearing out. They needed no second bidding, and regain ed to another part of the church where they could sit undisturbed. After the service, some one acquainted with the identity of the strangers approach- ed the irate pew owner. you know who those ladies were who want. ed to Sit in your pew?" "No; they were nobody in particulgr, I'm sure." "Oh! well, one was the wife of the Bishop of Carlisle, and the other, her daughter," tha wile af 'Bishop of Bar- row-in-Furness."' -- Yorkshire Post. A ---------------- Ready For All.Comers. Mr. Clement Edwards, 'M.P., who triumphantly survived s stormy scene at a meeting at: Tonypandy, in the Rhondda strike area, recently, Canadian Verse SKATER AND WOLVES. By George Herbert Clarke. Swifter he. | At Fur tax and high The wi rieks' its savage cry, And the earth is ghostly pale, Ahile the young skatgs, strong and Hush! . blast, but wail snd weil Spe. O skater, fly hee. fir moon, let not thy 1 Swifter shy Simi! lionized at the British House of Com- mons two days later. From. lunch till tea he "held court" on the ter. Hn tip ona throw -- by he ssved an awkward situa 194 2 HE [He THE WELSH INVASION, Th: Cymric Race Is Pushing to the Front 'In Londen, © Clever young men: in@Eagland get less advertising than their centempor- aries in France or in 'the Umited States, for the English need solid and long proof of merit before they raise their woices and say: "He is great." This is especially true of the world of art 'and letters, Yet to-day seems to be the day of the 'young writer-in England, snd but two innings by the most effective kind the tremendously high percen- tage of Welshmen among the pew. comers is striking. As it is, they have taken their turn in Fleet street, which first succumbed to the Irish and then 'to the Scotch, and they have invaded the realms of book-publisthing as well. Firsi among the younger literary set of the day is Allréd Noyes, who is regarded as a "certainty," if one may be pardoned the expression, for the Poet Lauresteship. Noyes is 23. He was famous at 22. Yes he is unspoilt. An orthodox, ath- letic-lghking young .man, clean-cut, very "Oxford," but full of the Celfic fire. He writes like a Cymrn (Welsh- man); his fairy tales and tinkling verse are Welsh in spirit, though he is a big enough poet to be interna- tional. .'Dralje," that rather long but stirring: @pic; the ballad of the "Forty Singing Seamen," and the wery poem he dislikes most of all his work, the "Barrel Organ," are known to al readers of English verse. Noyes has been influenced by Ox- ford--(he was at Exeter College) but the typical young Welshman, the golden, excitable Celt, is a product of Wales in education. He is far dif- ferent tothe genial sutocrat of Ox ford or the silently independent Cam- bridge man. He loves reading son. orous verse, is a natural orator, takes to theatricals with a born leaning that way. This is not ome isdlated ex- ample, mind you, but is typical of the hundreds of golden youth who come irom Gwalia to London seeking for tune or fame. Two years ago C. W. Miles, a newspaperman, founded the 'Weish Drama Society, and * already conp- noisseurs and those' who are on the 'aokout for new theatrical possibili t'es are hoping for great things from a very modest beginning. Mr. Miles 5 now editor of a ledding London weekly, although but 27 years of age. These are but two out of scores who could be named in literature -- all ailing from Wales. Ag an indignant Scotch writer remarked, when refer- tace was made in his hearing to the "rat plague" that might devastate the metropolis: "It is the Welsh plague, you mean." In art the Cymrn is coming to the front. There are a score of Welsh artists in London, all earning good dvings, who are practically self: taught. - In music the Welsh are too well known to need further eulogy, but it is especially in- dramatic 'art that they should prove interesting. The average Welshman has a na- tural "artistic" sense. It is this that has enabled David Lloyd-George to reach the heights he has. Although he is not a figurehead of English lit erature, yet he is a vety notable and 4 very clever man, so she writer may be forgiven for mentioning that Mr. Lloyd-George appears to wonderful ad. vantage in social ceremonies. But he should be heard speaking down in VVales among his own people. He is sometimes awkward in the House of Commons, but in Wales never, for he young are with him, and he rises to drama- tic heights that would astonish 'the stranger who knew not Wales and its inhabitants. His Master's Leg. Lord Brassey, who has snnouneced hig conversion to votes for women, holds many unique records, one be. ing that he is the only colonial gov. ernor whoever sailed to his colony in his own yacht--a feat which he suc. cessfully . accomplished on hig ap- pointment as governor of Vietoria. After yachting, Lord Brassey's fav- orite recreation is cricket. On the magnificent grounds surrounding his beautiful Sussex seat matches. are frequently played during the season Of one of these fights hig Jordship told a capital story. It appears that there was a scarcity of available tal. ent, with the result that it was neces. sary to secure one of Lord Brassey's footmen as umpire. In due course his lordship himself went in, and a local bowler was put on. The second ball he stopped with hie leg, and the ery was raised, 'How's that?" It was the footman who had to answer, and turning to his master, he exclaimed, in a half-apologetic tone, "I'm afraid 1 must say, 'Not at home," your lordship." "Not at home?" cried Lord Brassey. "What do you mean?" "Well, then, if you will have jt," the footman made answer, "I mean you are hout." Coincidences of Dates, Attention has often been called to fhe curious Ja of the date Sept. 2 ing so largely in the history of Oliver ED That very dominat- ing man was born on Sept. 3, 1500; he won the battle of Dunbar Sept. 3, 1650; that of Worcester Sept. 3, 1851, and he died Sept. 8, 1858 The number 88 had fatal influence on the Stuarts. Robert II.. the first Stuart king, died in 1388; Jamey I1. was killed at the siege of Roxburghe castle, 1438; Mary, een of Scots, was beheaded in Fotbetingay, 1583 (new style); James VIL (11. of Eng- land) was dethroned in 1688; Bonny Prince Charlie died in Rome, 1788, and with him died the last hopes of the Jacobites. : Weight of Trains. years ago trains were of about 160 tong weight, we now had treins run. ning at an average speed of fifty to sixty miles an hour--and weighing 1840 or 350 tons ~--Tit-Bits. "Prouse's powder. working the Mur- Bedford, is instal: A pure, rich, high grade, flavory coffee. The kind that makes you - linger over your cup--such is Seal Brand Coffee Packed in 1 and 2 pound = cans only, 12s "Eat and Be Merry!" Stop starving yourself--stop suffering the pangs of Indigestion--stop worrying about what you dare and dare nct eat. Eat hearty meals of wholesome food, take and you'll feel like 3 new person. Sour stomach--heartburn-- occasional indigestion -- chronic dyspepsia -- all yield quickly to ~"NA-DRU-CO Dyspepsia Tablets. -- The properly digested food restores your strength, your stomach regains iis tone, and soon requires no further aid. 50c. a box. If your druggist has not stocked them yet send 50c. and we wiil mail them. NATIONAL DRUG AND CHEMICAL CO. OF CANADA LIMITED, Clothes' Insurance--a paid-up "policy" against' « the ordinary troubles of wash-day is yours if you : use one of Eddy's Washhoards The---Boards With The Labor Saving Crimp Substitution doesn't pay-- it means to you loss of confidence and to the Grocer loss of a customr. There are no wash boards "just as good' as Eddy's. knows that the people, his people, . --made in sizes to fit every member of the family--=--is the comfiest woollen wear in the world AKE no mistake when ordering a "Buster" coat for the boy or girl or a lounging "coat for yourself! Ask for "Monarch Knit" and see that you get it, No other woollen wear is quite as good as "Monarch Knit." Garments bearing that label are knit of the finest selected wool and knit to fit. Your merchant carries a large variety of "Monarch Knit" Garments. ; Ask him the reasons why our yearly sales are twice greater than the sales of our next biggest competitor and you'll know a good deal about the su- perior qualities of "Monarch Knit" Garments. The Monarch Kaittiog Go. Lad. Duneville, Ost.