PAGE TEN. A Wholesome Food For Growing Children A regular, plentiful diet of Kellogg's Toasted Corn Flakes makes' children strong and healthy--capable and willing for study and play. Serve it to your children at meal time and after school. Kellogg's Toasted Corn Flakes is an ideal food that builds up the body without burden- ing the digestive organs. 'd 10° MM | per pkg. TOASTED -------- Look for. the name on the package. 24 Ablloggs TOASTED CORN { FLAKES | 1. VK Ke { TOASTED CORN LANE CO LONDON. CANADA BEER THE FAMOUS NATIONAL DRINK There's a story behind "Salvador" beer --QCanada's most famous brew--that carries us back to the year 1651 Duke Mr. Lothar Reinhardt complet- monar ed his extensive studies of Ger- t brewing in this femous tirewery, ' where he the secret formula and process for brewing *' Salvador." He has the sole right under. the Canadian Government Copy- right and Letters Patent to manufacture this famous brew. Reinhardts' * Salvador" has be- come 'The National Drink by a rigorous adherence to every detail of the original process de- vised by Father Sale in 1651 Compared with all other brews, Salvador" beer 1s worth a dollar a drop, yet it costs no more than just ordinary beer Every pint of * Salvador" is matured in wood for at least six mouths before bottling. "Salvador is not only a pure, sparkling and refreshing brew ; it also possesses fomic qualiltes which make it the beer par ex- cellence for family use Ferdinand ch of that nou Grand Bavarian Fhe the seriod, fon cloister brewery Nockerberg Mountain, near Mun ich, and appointed Father Sale the chief hrewmaster, The product of the royal brew ery was first known as "Father Hale's Beer until the more convenient title of *' Salvador" was adopted, about a cemtury later. Por over 150 years * Sulvador" was brewed under the patron age of the Bavarian royal family. In. 1806, Franz X Zacher] acquired control of the cloister brewery and purchased the secvet formula of the royal brew. From that day to this the form- ula and sole European rights have heen the miost pealously uarisd inheritance of the famous ewer's family The rich," mellow flavor of "Salvador" is only attained hy a special agwmg precess, and of the output of the cloister bréw- ery 'was great enough the people of Bavaria would drink go other beer. ed the mar cloister secured on the Always order 'Salvador' sf you want the best beer brewed. BOTTLED AT THE BREWERY BY REINHARDTS' OF TORONTO « Local Agent, E. BEAUF RE. Telephone 213. Danger In Your School ? If your school is ceiled with plaster your children--and many others --dwell under a menace. or plaster ceilings may crash down 'and kill or maim at any moment. Cover old plas- ter ceilings with PRESTON Steel Ceilings--light, strong, beautiful, sanitary (becouse washable) and fire proof. Do this without rexroving the oid plaster we will' tell you how. The cost is NOT high; yet these ceil ings will outlast the buildizg itseif. "Hive SAFE ceilings. Send for the illustrated book. Write this very day to . METAL SHINGLE & SIDING CO.. Limited | ) PRESTON. ONTARIO ; Beasch Ollice and Factory, Montreal, Quebee , (forces in America, and behind its pro- ! RE ------------ - } CHURCH OF * FUTURE A POWERFUL PREA FOR CHURCH UNITY. Have | United K. Ridiculous to Sects in Dr. Thomas Economically 142 Different Statés--So Nays headed "What ie Pyeacher ¥' ut Magazine, noted as and ns 1, long msdddle makes a strong plea sreneher «nn Lhe west how + public lecturer, or the union of churches. He "Uutsude of varidus independent con gregations, there in the United | "tates a hundred and forty-two dif erent sects enough to It average Says are and sorts ge a delinite or zation. nable has nantam lest | the 18 whet! ' or ver given x Serious reacer r giver thought » reason why there are denomimatums phrase churehes Were at At in gious use the 20 ardinary many different in 'which he lives ? ole he would brand ut suicidal why, are town there i the t apvihing as foolishness, as the same plan in education, politics and it would he seli-evidently absurd. Judged by any standard of practical efficiency the religious condition of the averag ridiculous were it wee tempt business, or m town would be nat so pitiful "There are in- the United fourteen kinds of Baptists; twenty-four sorts of Lutherans: fifteen types of Methodists: twelve sabdivisions of Presbyterinns. Between the minor di visions the differences are often in their beginnings so long ago that they have been absolutely forgotten. Once begun they continue, pot 'hecause the issues of whose dis cus§ion they are the monuments still or have any earthly value, but because has the courage to challenge their value or usefulness, or reverently to lay them away the other relics of antiquity. 'In a towh the border of Mar itoba there Southern Methodist church, its very name a rele of the tivil war, and on the Gulf of Mexico heérn [res States finitesimal, exist no one among near 19a an anaemic, starving, Nort hyterian congregation is struggling to kebp itself alive "Between the great denominations there were originally temperamental difierénces of expression and of wor ship, depending largely "upon the root stock upon which they grew. English, Scotch, Dutch, Saxon and Latin peo ples naturally differed in many traits of eharacter. lut these beginning ure long past. With a most unig and unprecedented capacity for similation, an ethnic digestion that i¢ one of the wonders of the world's life, made a composite tempera ment in which the best and the most virile from every whither have dured, and the weaker and local culiarities have sloughead away ! one will dispute the fact which Plutarch contended, that relig lion--a 1 is necessary for the | well being of humanity. No one will {dispute * the fact that from at least | viewpoint Christianity is the high as we have en I eT tor relignon est in ideals~and accomplishment {all the world religions. No | dispute the fact, apparent on | hand, that the present condition {organized American Christianity | nett her satislactory nor pronusing "The people of America are still a Christian people. When Christianity bexpresses itself through a church | which answers the people's needs, they {will support that church, just at | present they support foreign missions, social settlements, hospitals, humane institutions of . every kind. They | waiting for the chureh of the future | Whatever that church will be, it will {eliminate the narrowness of denomin ationalism one will every of 18 as are i waiting for church | unity, but the term is Ee {ally used will venture for a moment to believe, what was once the inspiration during generations of doc | trinal discussion and dogmatic war {fare, that any one of existing denom {inatious will be the ultimate form to | which all others will come. That kind of church unity, long indulged in by visionary enthusiasts, is. merely an | 'iridescent dream." The practical pro position is a combination by elimina tion, the seeking of a common round, framed by the fundamental syllables of common belief > = | "Already farseeing leadership is re alizing the necessity of combination The many sorts of Methodists are {reaching qut to a greater Methodism; | Presbyterians, Lutherans, Baptists are | beginning to learn wisdom from 'the | children i "At a recent general convention of (he Protestant Episcopal church a commission was created to enter the religiovs world at large and attempt corporate union of the "The people are not 'as No one Qa religious | spective work one layman placed a fund of ond hundred thowsand dollars to insure its unhampered activity. The | difficulty will lie not among the lead: | ers along various lines of denomi {tional activity, but in the prejudices {and antipathies of the masses of peo-| pie who are loyal to traditions and to (issues long since buried in the fight {of vears." i { Thanks to Beauty Parlors. ! | Lady Dufi-Gordon, at a dinner in {New York, praised the beauty parlor. | "It bas put back the clock at least {fifteen yoars for woman," she. said, | "The woman of fifty to-day, thanks to ithe beanty parlor, hardly looks thirty- | (five. In fact, I might almost say that there are no old women any move." | | "Up to what age can woman still | {be called young ¥' a pretty grandmoth- jer asked pensively. x | "No matter what her years," said] {Lady Duli-Gordon, "a woman is still young so long as she can muke a man | jealous." i : A Poor Cure. i Mayor Speer, of Denver, at a recent | temperance banquet, was = discussing a {drink cure of little efficacy. | "When I think of this cure," he {said, "I yocall a poor old woman with a red nose who entered a magis- trates office and said : ' Td like to take the pledge, if ve - "Very good," said the polite clerk. 'And how long did you pish to take! it for ry "In the . man, 'I've alends said the old wo took jt for life." THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, iput back in the sea to grow of this world _iqueen found conglitions worse in othe | elasses, and JAS. B. McLEOD, AGENT WELDING TORTOISE SHELL. Methods by Which Plates Are Made Into Solid Piece, Tortoise shell oF horny of composed of plates, which a tr edges, but ob the tiles on The turties is the carapace ror which ts the back t®e hawksbill at the out tke fast another tay ne a roof they and re ried when on shore to their eggs killed until alter builing water removed without some places, heiong jury Former i turtles were roasted ve until the plate be taken awa and he tartle was new It again, Or if value, Hawksbill shells doubtiul thes hell = would be turtles are found in most of the tropical seas, and the shells are | rated Indian much darker of the commercially and West shell is and has markings that shell able as the account, The plates ness accarding to location, to a thin edge as East The Fast Indian than the other transparent toriowse fewer not so valu tha desirable, West n shell on vary in size and thick ail the but 1 cases 1 aper Ww here overlap large form thickness two or mu laid together and v | become piece thickness, : In welding plates they first boiled in a salt solution until they bw come comparatively soft and pliable, when they are care v cleaned move all foreign matter from the sw faces to be welded. The slightest im purity will prevent the forming a perfect joint After gether they | thick nesses put bw shell In those cases in which piece is required to be of un re plates are inti they DECERSALY a solid of ne are to re shells from wen lad to with ried hese parallel <0 the pressire be folded have ! the parts are Wrapped of cloth sitle several wet an ron plate on iach plates must on the and wherever shall equal cloth Wh hits of required u The pres inform the been wire bot ire meantime heavy You i In have when paper of shell and heating une enough to brown a bit of made to hold the package cloths press tO a certain ind the whole is put in a heavy Pressure is increased gradually maintained un trl cold, when the paris 'will be found to have untted to form one piece. I njess carefully & the shells separate ir point and the tongs beelme being put in hot water Nmall objects cannot welding, rule are too small 10 repaired sm because the be us 1 [ur faces knit and because pressure sufficient' to unite the parts might destroy patterns or shape. Optical Review properly Journal and A Terrible Record. the m Canada months lar death during exceeds As every mother rate of little ones the hot summes that of any other season of the vear The reason for that the ex cessive heat brings on those dreaded troubles, cholera infantum, diar rhoea, dysentry and other stomach and bowel complaints These on so quickly and with such little warning that often babywds beyond help before the mother realizes he is ili. During the hot summer months the mother must be continually her guard to see that baby's bowels are. working regularly and his hittle stomach kept sweet and Baby's Own Tablets should always be kept in the home as they the mother's gregtest friends dose now and then will prevent these troubles, or if they do come on sud: sealy they will be quickly banished 'by the Tablets. The Tablets are by medicine-dealers.-or by mail at cents a. box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont knows Ki this is on are \ sold ar pic | -- | Queen Befriends Poor. | The queen of Bulgaria is a sympathe tic and wife to King Ferdinand, but she is not a politician and does share | for the development The queen, has {mother 10 the king's children by his first to the alle condition of the poor affectionate his of his country been, a secono not mn who has given time the wife, of and suliering schools and charitable institutions fact, when she went to Bulgaria as bride she was a trained nurse, but she {found no the lof the aid ir the event viation In woman among could accident who of nobility give an stirred women could pet to start schadl where train ing in the rudiments of nursing. In the institution she is called Sister Eleonore. was Not a Latinist, Takashi Komatsu, at of dinners of the recent Harvard mencement in {'ambridge, praived study of Latin "Latin often said. "I one attended a dance Boston. A beautiful young debutante surrounded by a 'half dozen Harvard undergraduates, listened intently to a story about a footbati squabble. 'And the casus belli ¥' she asked. "Thereupon her mother, with... a shocked look, excluimed---- " 'My dear, how often have I you always to say stomach one com the he in is wseiul socially," told druff and invigorates the Scalp --Promotes a' luxuriant, thy hair th--Stops its ing out. A not a dye. SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, ould }1 Indian! fidistributed | laid in | done come | pure, | ambitions | She has started nursing | | members first | The | ay the rt INRA IN a MR PE IO ST Mal LN REA A ---- ! > er cb BABIES WHO PUZZLE DOCTORS. {Are Able 10 Sec Through Opaque | Objects, ¥ It is questionable garies of n, y Cody hs | i parents living old, Lhe at A MARTYR TO HEADACHES? NA-DRU-COTHEAD LC ge a fe © = They re National Drug asd Chemical Cosipany of Canada, igia. James eats much | father and wother tog | the present {half ston time % He Chess round . round bove the knee w He 8 wy nough to knock venr ) stantly { mount ourse ol Hor six boys of X sufficiént | his For numerous biscuits age break he dats butter spn dri and atid (with Hiwo glasses of { ple { cups {supper be is supplied with | plate of i he gives sar SV rup. K, of coffee as boiled bacon and vege full he is not given | ind vent 40 a of lungs if j refreshment between meals A ¥Vear or two country ago doetors in Uns | puzzled © Arthur Keene, | much ver Yan named par ts at Arthur had Five | parti! At | | de- | i | ! ! were Peiv-vear-old boy Hing with his Penarth, | {Glamorgan Young milk birth tele of being take: {six vears of age he finally veloped and healthy, and his diet per! week of 'thirty pints of i milk mixed with sugar { litt | water { When Lionel Brett, a Mussachusetts, was says Tit his mother | there w something peculiar | the and fearing that {in of blind sveral since his not a jon } food solid was consisted and a voung hoy « baby noticed that | il i a in arms Bie hits, as aby he she going r hy Qe | These gentlemen discovered vas pair substances | the X-rays Dr. Ferroul, of Grasset of Montpelier child possessed derful of eyes peneti ing in the same fashion ih ats ba Narbonne, and some ve 1 f 3 examined 4, young girl of Narbonne gnd was found similar Lionel she she 10 possess eves Brett. Experis | could through | nd pene Ror to those of nt that See bodies proved opatue as clearly tratingly en Another child possessed of ful sight German Schaefer, who created a entific time , was nothing um and yet he had a eves. The reversed; in the day he blind, while in the darkness the keenness of his ishing When night could many as her eves generated rays wonder was a lad name! furore in circles some Lis appearance par ! things ual in strange of was praciicg ver usual orders sight w came on vo with ar acutens pe POSSERS Nehaeler see which ordinary ple 1 ir pitch-dar ks have given much to daytime. He could room and pick up any irom the table floor with as ease as his parents could if the roc were loaded th light one casion Mr. and Mrs. Schaefer sprinkled the floor of a room with tiny pin nid at night they ordered their son to pi them up. Although the solutely dark the lad found every or of the nins in an incredibly short spa ol enter 1 small object or mu room was time People with magnetic bodies vkknown, discovered fro ago doete in the C bod wing and six vears it Viadikavk asus, a girl of twelve whose praetieally a magnet A a medico who examined her, ever ject which she approached would un Once witlked to a kitehs | dresser, ahh in an ib the crocker {upon itt began to dance. On anothe hottle stan octason raised in the \Z, whe close tan i o a heavy y table wy near magnetic maiden want Dead Sure. Swapger { Representative { Kentucky, was talking | About his amendment to strengther | pure food bill | "We must aur la | impure food and drugs he said, "or national st { health will certainly He hesitated, i rabout in Washingt and drugs make Lnpregn n te be ours us certainly as-"' PM then me of resumed reminds a story a Louisville one day to ght 1 have ff, ma'n * You'll { the mistréss © maid se misires Frida her | said visit next | { usual TI but your jected, get of it's import | Ny {next Friday a tg the fineral.' I "Your fiance? {didn't know you had a lone that he had died." I "He ain't dead softly mistress fiance is to be buried, ma' seek, and Iw Buried ¥ fiance, | : ma'am,' maid, "The { hoved. | Not dead ? Then said, 'von can't be [to die, no matier how tbe. None of know {going to die. Ik ath is { certain And yet you | predict the d | man's death and burial fof I" 'Fxeuse me, imaid, in a low 1 sured fim's goin smiled and 1 of course,' sire he il us when the thing ate It's positively vou." eaid Air ma'am,' : It to be hung Not Impressed, Mme. Nordica, at a garden party at Deal Beach, said, apropos of ber ro cent European tour "Many good people refuse to be im pressed by the armless and legless fragments of antique senipture tres sured in the museums of the old world! "Kne day in the British guide was recounting to a of wurists the glories of a cenianr, when Chicago meat man broke the hush with t quegfion TExeuse me, sir, but a they feed a hicke like that and eggs, or bay ? Musenm a knot bat tere little Verent Every woman imagines she would] have & stylidh figure if she could oely alord to dress as she would like to jf warld in the number of horses i Anstralia and Argentina lead the cuttie. SHOE POLISH Shines easiest, retains its gloss longest "and comes in the Blt box. Ask your Cc grocer or shoeman . " Good for Leather--Stands the Weather " : --- IH AINA VIIENES By 2 NEAVE?'S 'earor INFANTS is the RIGHT FOOD for YOUR baby us tS x rument for your The strongest : s th NA. GHOST PN tion Pood, of which I cannot speak fo baby did wot thrive until I gaye ! 1, and he has never } A If any x Fo since asks r Ev they mine them ne ¢ their babies, I say Ne Mrs. Savery of Sold in 1 Ib. airtight tine by all Druggists in Canada FREE TO MOTHERS ~write today for free tin of a A Neave's Food and book "Hints ba Hole 8 W About Baby." Address to Soeporten & Ca, \ Canadian Agent: EDWIN UTLEY Mirs. J. R.NEAVE AL CO, 14 Prenat SUE. TORONTO ENGLAND, Ns NNT NN HF Ud SINE FINN > Seid Wholesale by: Lv abioua A k Ih YOUR BLOOD IS TAINTED ULCERS, BOILS, SWOLLEN GLANDS, BLOTCHES, PIMPLES, AND ALL SKIN AND BLOOD DISEASES ARE COMPLETELY CURED BY THE NEW METHOD TREATMENT a desire t i no of all those kin Disease 10 Ai cod Blood or § atment " log. We : Oty for the Benefit You nany t 1 " ol a and ki + af Char A to New Mothod Treatment t » YOU CAN ARRANGE TO PAY AFTER YOU ARE CURED CONSULTATION FREE Send for "THE GOLDEN MONI ooklet on Disensss of Men TOR" FREE If unable ta « a Question List for Home Treatment KENNEDY I, write for DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont. ate address Write for our pr ey Chis furnace means that | can sell when I want to and realize on my" investment. Ihe state man knows through experience that the SOUVENIR FURNACE (New Idea Series) is the best on the market N T ng i t--that js the e Sox successful real e The Hamilton Stove & Heater Co. "4 Lold by W. Limmed + e ofa Canis 1 Princ Telephone 1033. f