and a merry soul are inseparable -- lacking which, try Abbey's Salt. nd trip tickets will be issued ai Single First Class Fare Good going Oct. 9th to Nov. 11th t points on Temiskaming and Norta- ern Ont. Ry.. Intercolonial Ry., main line of C.P.R. and C.N.R. points bs tween Carson Junction and Gow ganda Junction Algo from Oct. 18th to Nov. 111} to Muskoka Lakes, Georgian Bay and points on CN.R. North of Washago. All tickets good December 14th J. P. HANLEY, Agent, Corner Johnston and Ontario St: ~ HUNTERS EXCURSIONS to return until Kancsions Pemerok ECTION WITH Canadian Pacific Railway Hunters Excursion Round Trip Tickets at SINGLE FARE. October 9th Nov. 11th stations. Petewawa to Port Arthur, kaming Northern Railway and points in Quebec, New wick, and Nova Scotia Oct. 19th to Nov, 11th to stations Sudbury to 8 8. Marie, Ha/elock to Sharbot Lake, Lindsay Branch Severn to North Bay Al ticks ith to at all Temls Stations Bruns- 18 good to return until 111 Full particulars at KX. and P. and C.P.R. Ticket Office. F CONWAY Gen, Pass, Agent RALLIWVAY, Train leaves Union Station, Onan ross. 4 pom. dally (Sunday excepted) or Tweed, Sydenham, Napancs, Bannockburn and a To secure gyuick de nnockburn, Maynooth, aod potats o Central Ontario Route your wiiipmeut: via Bay of Quinte Rallway For fu Per articuiars, apply, HB. H Wurd 5 gent, J HM Walch, Pass 'Phone No. LAKE oNTARIO AND QUINTE STEAMBOAT S Alc th: teamer Alcina KINGSTON, PICTON, BELLEVILLE. Steamer leaves Kingston daily ex cept Sunday, at 3 pm, I Metor and Intermediate ports, Deseronto and Belleville on Thursdays and Saturdays only, "Freight handled with care at réasonable rates E. E 'HORSEY General ) J. P. HANLEY, JAS. SWIFT & CO. ry LH, Lh despatch ane ager, Kingston Agents nh i 3 Lo / "DOMINION LARGEST "22 CANADA MONTREAL AND QUEBEC LIVERPOOL EVERY SATURDAY, 8.8, LAURENTIC, $8, MEG FP 1 all Orchestra Rates: First, $02.00; Nees NS. TEUTONIC, Only One Class Cabin (11 Class Hates: Teutovde, 838 up; Canada, $50 up, Third Class at low rates Closed Rooms onis XMAS SAILING. From Portland, Me, aud Halifax, N.S, CANADA, MEGANTIC, TEUTONIC, Dee, 2, 8, 14, Secure your ocal Agents, J. P. .8. Kirkpatrick real PQ. SIZT5 up. NADA, ) und Third berths now Hanley and Main Office, Mont- Leaving New York V by the tial Twi Bary Baia ge 4 oh 4 days "3h" $150 LAT Rt 17: ti, $. Moltke 05% 16 days 527" ™ $8367 Every Luzury of Travel Every Refinement of Service Insured. Also to the Orient, South Amevios, the World, Naly end Egypt, ete. Send for lllusteated Pamphlet, URG-AMERICAN LINE 1-45 Bway, N. Y., or local agent. MODERN MOTHERS FAIL- URES, ALE A Public School Teacher: Writes ia October Canadian Home Journal Concerning the Many New Duties of the Modern Teacher, You have seen the title, 'Public School Teachers versus others." What does it mean? It means that a public school teacher, throwing aside sll ma- lice and evil-speaking, is about to dart upon the mothers of the English- speaking people the arrows of her long-pent-up speech. They are not poisoned arrows, remember, but the bow. is bent with a true English love of justice. The public school teacher has taken in silence the criticism and censure of mothers 'since public schools began, and now .the mothers must, in their turn listen to advice and cen- sure. I used the word "must" advised- ly, for teachers' chairs will soon be vacant if there is no alleviation of the present situation. I am addressing mother and not fathers, because I am a strong believer in the old saying,-- "The hand that rocks the cradle is the hand that rules the world." If the mothers awaken to the gravity of the situation, and takes to her heart the admonition found here, 1 doubt not but that her influence will soon leav- en the American continent. a J must first show that it is with in- finite consideration that public school teachers should be treated. Now 1 know that you always say, (admiring yourself the while for your broad sym- pathy) that preachers and teachers are THE TEACHER'S TASK| i teachers have been forced out of the profession by the attitude of parent: toward them. It is inexplicable to me, gity in the assertion that parents re- gard teachers always suspiciously and often inimically. . But you say, 'I do not believe tha children of this age do anything rea ly bad." 1 know mothers of toda are prone to think so. Now I su pose by really bad you mean putting an inverted tack on his neighbor's chair, or throwing an ink-bottle at teacher. Well, no, we stop him before he gets there, but in pinching legs, in putting cold things, crawling things and scratching things down backs, in shrinking his work, in beating a tat- too with his well-shod feet against the desk irons, he can equal, if not fa: exceed children of any other geners tion. But we will lay these tendencies aside, for, I believe, there is a fine class of diseiplarian extant, and th above-mentioned tendencies lie dorman: in the average pupil. But no age eve produced children noisier, more. rest less, or more resolute in following th gleam of their own happy imaginatior than does the present age. Had 1 Aladdin's lamp, 1 should wish ever: mother to be transported, in the er pacity of teacher, to the schoolroom in early spring, when mud from th boots grinds under each step an makes the constant shuffling an scraping of feet a sereeching, seratel ny, exeruciatimg torture, when eral pupils are in their most sulle moods, when others, as their mothe say, are, "All nerves, vou know, Mis Brown'; when two or three have racking and incessant cough, jarrin every fibre of your body and effectual ly putting an end to instruction; whe: the incorrigible pupil in the reading lesson is trying to discover how fa sen classes that have your deepest sym- pathy and consideration. Nevertheless, | your sympathy has not been strong | enough to lighten the burden or | sweeten the life of the teacher, The average class is one of forty- five children with, the distraught teacher often thinks, one hundred and forty-five varieties of disposition. 11 want the ear of that earnest, wise, ' tenderly sglicitous little mother who ! asks advice of sages, pasf and pre sent, as to the best method of deal ing with Johnny. "For you know he's | no more like Mary! Now I can per- | suade her, usually, or at worst times, a little tap or two will do, but, do you know, Johnny is so different! 1 do get so discouraged." Don't you? | Don't I rather think we teach- ers who have not the inexhaustible | store of mother's patience, nor do not | see with the same partial eyes, get | quite ams discouraged in dealing with our forty-five. Consider! We are judged by the al- acrity of our pupil's 'obedience.' In a" wie it might, easily oceur that tho' other children might not be aware of the one child's naughtiness. In school one is usually in the i If he is not punished in same manner, children are not quick in the perception of equivalents, but demand the identical things) a strong swnse of injustice rankles in the breast of a former misdoer. More- time is limited. The quick- est vay is the best way for us. Ow lesion proceed. There are forty. to be lad in the way of know- this one is demanding cur in an altogether different ine of thought, And, mother, did you wer think how you handicap us? Re- member difficult you find your task with no one to consider you but yours if amd vour child. Teachers of- ten remark that teaching would be a oy if that ever-present fear of pater- nal criticism and displeasures were not always obtruding itself. I have composed myself to view the matter calmly and what 1 relate as to teach- er's experience is not magnified nor distorted by resentment. We find it a prevailing tendency among parents to | suspect the teacher of harboring a | dislike af=their child, a half barbarous ' desire to torture him. We find we are | regarded as a sort of stepmother, a class, 1 may say here, that have my deep sympathy I do not find that children volun- tarily carry home a minute ac- count of the affairs of the school. More often it 1« encouraged by parents' questions dealing with work, nor ask- for the purpose of following the teach- er's line of thought, but questions (I blush for the Canadian mother) put only to entrap the teacher in indiffer- ence, injustice and general misdoing, I feel myself ¢ontemptible in writing of such contemptible motives, but it is too true, and, possibly this will cause | those who have been actuated by any ! such motives to consider seriously what they are doing. City teachers often board thers are children going to other | teachers in the same school. A cer- tain teacher boarding under these cir- cumstances used to be regaled with conversations of which the following is an illustration Mother-- 'Well, Vera, how did school go today? Did agybody get the strap?' Vera--No, mamma, but two or three had to stand on the floor, though." Mother-- "Well, now, how long does she make vou stand up? Poor little things!" Vera's intuition tells her that mother must be regaled with the worst and she draws on her imagination liber- ally. "Oh, mamma, they were so tiredt She makes them st up' an awfal {ong time." "But how long Vera, an hour?" "Oh, I'm sure she does, moth- er; my legs ache so when I have to stand up!" Mother--""Now, John, did you ever hear of anything like that * Making little children like them stand up an hour! The poor little things! Now sea here, John, you sit down and write het a good, sharp note and tell her not to make Vera stand up again. F declare, it makes a mother d to send her children to school." The dis tracted teacher the next day asky hec- self wildly, "Are parents possessed with a desire to torment a teacher, or are all children Rares?" How often I have been amazed find people, sensible, kind-hearted, well-intentioned in. other things, not only listen to, but emcouruge the child to repeat the day's wmisdemeanour's and the teacher's reprimands. If left to ourselves we would suffic- ently comprehend how pn is that with which we work, but when metaphorically shake their ta in our faces, and between clench ai teeth dare us to lay harming | you? the ty front se } the aver, onr must ve ' Ledge, whi attentron how where { ment has annexed for the teacher { greater part of the mother's provine | restore the their certainly do . na me, he can keep from any sort of reasor able performance without endangerin: his corporal being; anh when a di termined knock is heard at the doo acquainting you of the presence of a irate parent and suggestive of th pleasant purport of an interview wit the same. . If 1 were a mother I should be jea! ous of the public school teacher, by cause to-day the educational depart th Ihe home has been a failure, the ed: cational department things; th teachet must be given the most deli cate and sacred of its duties. The teacher instead of the mother mus teach the child the love of God, mus lead the child to the perception ¢ beauty in natural things, must lea the way through the enchanted dell of fairy-land, and old folk-lore, tellin: the bed-time story in school hours and still further encroaching upon th mother's rightful province must enter tain and instruct the child, teachin how to make doll-clothes, to sing, t draw, and even to play games An now I understand that the duty « imparting to children the necessar: knowledge regarding sex, is being lgi by public opinion upon tue teache: £0 ; The papers state that it might be con sidered by some to be the duty of th mother, but unquestionably (1) it i the duty of the public schaol teacher ST. VITUS DANCE. Cured Through the Use of In Williams' Pink Pills. Chorea, or as it is more generall known, St. Vitus' dance, is a Jisen that usually attacks the young cin dren, though older .persons may | afflicted with it. Hts most commo symptoms are a twitching of th muscles of the face and limbs. As th disease progresses this twitching take the form of spasms in- which the lerking motion may be confined to the qead, or all the limbs may be afieet ed. The patient is frequently unabl to hold anything in the hands or t walk steadily, and in severe cases even the speech is affected. The disease is due to dewility of the nerves and is always cured hy Dr. William's Pink Pills, which enrich the blood, and strengthen the nerves and thus sifiérer to good health. the following is a striking instance of what Dr. Wilhams' Pink Pills will do in this trouble. Mrs. Charles Phipps, Pelee Island, Ont., says: *'At the age of fourteen my eldest daughter, Edir became much run down, and the trouble developed into St, Vitis dance. First her left arm became af fected, then the left leg and entire left side. She grew so bad that she actually could not hold anything in her hand, and could only go = about with a sliding, jerking motion. Not withstanding that we were giving her medicine, she seemed to be grow- ing worse, and finally her speech he eame much affected. We became much alarmed about her" that finally her father got a supply of Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pills, and we began giv ing her these. In the course few weeks she was much better, before all the pills were gone she was again erfoying perfect health. This was in 1908, and as she has not had a symptom of the trouble since I feel justified in saying the cure is permanent." Be sure you get the genuine pills, which are sold by all medicine deal ers or may be had at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, from The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. tone #20 of a and Waste sometimes finds a way through the pantry window, Be not too meek lest the world im- pose upon you because of it. Perfect faith is never shattered circumstantial evidence. A lot of people say without meaning it. Loose morals are usually. the result of fast travelling. Most married people are in favor of an occasional peace conference. out by "to-morrow" £100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will. be pleased to learn that there is at least sne@Mreaded atsease that sclence has been able to cure in all its stages, and that I= Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only nositive cure now known co the medical fraternity Catarrh being a constitutional disefise, requires a con- stitut onal treatment, it's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting direct- upon the blood and mucous surfaces of system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work The Jroprietors have so much faith in it curative wers that they offer One Hundfed llars for any omse that it fails :o Send for list of testimonials. Address. F. J. "NEY & CO, Toledo, O. Bold by all s. T8e. Take Tair Rly Bitte for comsti- patton, . : . THE DAILY BRITISH WHIC SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1011. RAILWAY MUSEUMS. Collections of Relics That Have Been Made by English Lines. I$ has often been suggested thst a National Railway Museum should be founded in Great Britain on the lines of the Museum of Transportation in Berlin, where one may follow the history of trayel by land and sea by inspecting the' models and relics ex- hibited. There would certainly be little difficulty in establishing such a museum in England, -for most of the railways have already many curiosities of their headquarters. At Euston, for instance, the London and Northwestern Railway have got together a remarkable collection of railway relics. Here one can see an age-stained first copy of "Bradshaw," which only had thirty-six pages as compared with the 1,200 of the "Brad- shaw" of today. Numberless old time-tables are there, and the spade and barrow used by Sir. Robert Peel in cutting the first sod of the Trent Valley line. In addition, there is a complete set of models of the early types of ooaches and passenger trucks. A specimen of the truncheon with which a railway servant was armed in the early days when he had to act as , ticket-collector, in- spector, policeman all rolled into one is numbered amongst the other curiosities of this remarkable ocol- lection. Then, again, at Paddington Btation, the Great Western Railway have got together a number of articles, which are added to from time to time, and each of which illustrates the progress of the railway from its earliest days. The pride of the museum is the col- lection of old prints which have been gradually got together during the last half century. They are very valuable, and form a gallery which, Zhape, in the is not, of its kind, surpas country. Prints bearing dates from 1730 to 1750 show the towns and views of landscapes on the routes now follow. ed by the railway. One of the most curious of the prints shows an old oak tree at Moreton, near Hereford, which was used as a station on the Shrewsbury and Hereford line in the "fifties The stationmaster"s office was inside the trunk, and it was from there that he issued tickets When railway stations first came into existence it was customery to have suspended outside them a big bell, which was sounded to give notice of the approach of trains. The Great Western have preserved one of these bells, which used to hang in the footway leading "to Windsor Station Two years ago the company, to their great regret, had to destroy one of their most prized possessions. This was the engine, "lord of the Isles," which was running in 1340. It was a fine example of the typical / that day, but unfor- tunately the company had no place in which to store it. It was offered to the Bouth Kensington Museum, but was refused by the authorities there. locomotive of Worm-Gatherers. ' A little known and seldom heard of trade is that of the worm-gatherer, who flourishes greatly at Nottingham, England. The worm-gatherer does not have a particularly easy job, neither does he earn what might be termed a "high salary." His duties consist of colleeting worms from out of the ground and sell. ing them to the fishing depots. ne rices paid for worms are at ths rate of about 50 cents per 1,000. The "wormers' "' busiest time is dur- ing wet weather, for then the worms crawl 'out of the earth, and are easier to "trap." During the recent drought the "wormers" of Nottingham have had a rough time, and they have beeu agitating for higher prices for their "catches." They have demanded an extra 25 cents per 1,000 worms from the fish- ing-tackle dealers. A compromise has been arrived at by the dealers agree ing to pay from 60 to 75 cents per 1,000, according to the quality of the Worms. Thus was a strike of averted. "wormers"' Immortal. Mr. Fred. Terry, who went from a sick bed and, propped up amongst-a heap of cushions in one of the boxes, watched the triumph of his daughter, Miss Neilson Terry at the New Thea tre, London, in "Ror.co and Juliet," recently, tells a story which, while | amusing, illustrates the popular act. | or's thoroughness "One day," he says, "we were rehearsing the death scene in "The Heel of Achilles,' and » | member of my company came in from the street and asked the eall-boy how far the rehearsal had gone. 'Mr. Ter. ry's just dying,' replied the boy. 'Good; I've time to smoke a cigarette before my entrance." Presentiy the actor returned, and repeated the ques. tion. 'Still dying,' answered the boy. 'Oh, T'll go and have another cigar- ete then." Back he came, but only got the same reply f-om the call-boy. Finally, after smoking five cigarettes, he asked, a little wearily, how far the rehearsal had gone. 'Still dying,' aa- swered the call-boy. 'Great heavens! gasped the actor, 'he must be immor- oe Musician and Scientist. There is no more brilliant scientist in the world today than Sir William Ramsay, who has been warning Bri- tain that, at the present rate of con- sumption, her ddal supply will only last another 175 years. Fie most won- derful discoveries have been in econ. nection with new gases in the atmos- phere, upon whi such names as argon, neon, and xenon have been bestowed, and the experimental work which led to these discoveries ranks as the most refined ever carried out. Of xenon, for example, there is only about one part in 70,000,000 parts of air. Sir William devotes his leisure to musie. He plays both the piano and violin and has written the words of not a few songs. The collecting of curios is another of Gir William's hob bies, and at his house at t's Park may be seen many queer ures thousands of. years old. To be honest for the sake of busi ness is not quite honest enough. Some neighbors don't like it unless you talk about them. The world doesn't ask how you got there after you arrive. lines at their } unscath THE "NINE DAYS' WONDER." | William Kemp, the Jigger and Jester, | Was the Original One. It was a certain William Kemp, the most original famous dancer of Queen Elizabeth's day and the creator ot low comedy roles in Shakespearean plays, who was the origin nine | days' wonder," for Kemp, with rib- | bois on his jerkin and bells around | his legs, jigged and capered all the | way from London to Norwich, a dis- | tance of some 125 mules. He danced | along for nine days and thus made | his pame and expression part of | household conversatiog in every ham- let in kngland aod on the contineut | as weil, Accousts 'of Will Kemp ocecupy many pages in the books on Elisa bethan arama and those on the man ners and customs of » 2, Ab is; universally conceded that Kemp ere ated the character "such Ado About N of Peter in 'Rom As for the 'r Elizabethan among others, Was the subject the graphy Only one copy of Kemp's "Nine Days' Wonder, rerformed in a D From London to Norwich," in the Bodleian library But there have been several repnn Kemp, who describes himself as a man who spel fe "in mad lig g€8 and merry loste recounts biitn iy and wntiy how he an made their way throug Cnelmstord, Suabury, iockls Barford Bridge tv Norwich They were entertained. royally along the route and avsnite the bad weat! er, which delayed them, would doubtle have arrived at Norwich long before the twenty-three days were up had not tie good 1oik along the road been $0 hospitable . Kemp started from the house of the Lord Mayor of London, and at Nor. wich he was re ved by tne mayor of taat Hourishing town, who presented him with a sum of money ang pen. sioned h.m for life When he again reached where he had "put out : money against accident along road, Kemp was repaid fourfold was in 150y that Kemp performed his "mine days' wonder It 18 written, but with doubtiul authority, that the idol of the El:zabetl populace al terward capped this by jigging oversthe Alps. In the old woodcut of Kemp's "daunce cal and conceited du Kemp" is seen in Elizabethan mor- ris dance costume jigging away to the music of pipe and drum of his taborer an feat in the account | that most comi- | Cavalier Monsieu Famous Smokers dnd Antis. Mr. Gladstone detested tobacco. Thomas Hardy, the great novelist, has | never smoked a pipeful nor a cigar in | his life. Ruskin aghorred smoking of | all kinds, | Sir T. Lauder Brunton does not use | tobaccd in any form. Other eminent men, past and present, who have | disliked tobacco are John Stuart Mill, Sir Robert 8. Ball, who never smok- ed but once, when he was at school; | Gen. Bir William Butler, Dr. W. B Carpenter, the great physiologist; Mat- | thew Arnold, Dr. Alexander Bain, Pro- fessors Skeat and Murray, the philo- | logists; Frederick Harrison, Professors | Freeman and Gardiner, and Mr. Lec- ky, the historian; W. D. Howells, and Sir Erskine May. i Non-smokers are, therefore, in very | good company. On the other hand, Mark Twain said he commenced smok- ing when eight years old, and smok- ed 300 cigars a month from the age of thirty onwards idison, at work, chews tobacco const George A. Sala said he was a constant smoker, but'if he could begin life again he would never touch tobaceo. Mr. G. A. Henty smoked from after breakfast until he went to bed at 3 a.m. Hero of Balaclava, "Well done,; young Wombwell. I'U write to your {ather in Yorkshire to- ight to tell n how proud he ought to be of his son." Such was the re- mark made to Sir George Wombwell, who recently celebrated bis golden wedding. by the late Duke of Cam- bridge, when the remnant of the 17th Lancers--the "Death or Glory Boys" to which Sir George was then at- | tached as a cornet, returned from the "Valley of Death.' Lir George of Lord Car 1 Twice he had his under him, but hundred yards o wl I xie on the ag extra mount si he went to withinwa | terrible batteries try Wis y retired from € eding his ne Largest of Flowers. 3 The largest of all the flowers of the the we is said to be affles native of ¢ ! Stamiord Raffles pays 8 e 3 Wif and petals of & brick- | l measuring a foot red with num- SA0us Irregular yel, shh white swell ings. The petal Trot iy a font wi bears the stan Hesia is HE upper « with projection horns ihe s cows' | , when iree from ity contents, i about twelve pints. he flower weighs about fifteen pounds and is very tuick, the petals being three.quarters of an inch : An Ancient Bet. ancicuil country Corn oid Near th th: Carews stands a door of v shoes. 1 iin it pres. ent position iy Oy years. A former member of the Carew family made a wager with a friend that he would ride his horse a mile out to ses in Tor Bay aid back again. The eat was more -difficyii than appears at frst sight, for the crosscurrents are dangerous, even for hoats. He won the however, and nail. od the four horse wes of steed to tire churchedoor to commemorate the performance. seat of Eagland, i, to the r horse The watched pot will not boil quicker becsuse you watch it. It's mighty diffienit to get straizht results from crooked methods. any EE -------------- Even light housekeeping will some times jar Jove s young dream, | "Dr. Miles' Nervine 'Raised Me From the Grave" se. Tutor This is astrong statement to make, but it is exactly what Mrs. Thomas Taylor, of Blum, Texas, said in expressing her opinion of ! this remedy. "Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine raised me from the grave and 1 have much confidence init. I can never say enough for your grand medicines. If anyone had offered me $100.00 for the second bottle of Nervine that I used I would have said 'no indeed." MRS. THOMAS TAYLOR, Blum, Tex. Nervous exhaustion is a com- mon occurence of - modern life. The wear and tear on the nervous system is greater now than at any time since the world began. For sleeplessness, poor appetite and that "run down" feeling, nothing is so good as i Dr. Miles' Nervine Your nerves are your life and lack of vital energy makesexistence a misery. Dr. Miles' Nervine will tone up your nervous system. Ask any druggist, If the first bottle fails | to benefit, your money is returned. MILES MEDICAL CO. Toronto, Cane sSestscsessesssesseseseasd BUILDERS ALL KINDS OF LUMBER AT LOW PRICES. ASBESTIO PLABTER run BALE, ALSO ODAL AND ALL KIN" OF WOOD. S. Bennett & Co. '. and Barrack seo 'Phone 941. The great Uterine Tonic, and safe effectual Monthly Regulator on which women can Sold in three degrees | = gonly b~No, 1, §1 stronger, $3: al cases, 2) pe vy all druggists, « prepaid on receipt of Pevw namphlet, Addre £ Co. Tonexro, Our. oem ly We x "Las ; No 2 $3: 1a 8 r or di K i : al 1 x ' ¢ 4 a pr piped anc complet 1 ne Personal attention J. MN. OLDFIN & CO, Cor. Sydenham and Ordnance Sts OUR CRYSTAL BRAND Of Standard Granulated Sagar Has been tried and fHund excellent for preserving and table Price Is always right ANDREW MACLEAN, Omiarte Street. Gove cscscsesassssarsesssssl { THECLUB HOTEI WELLINGTON STREET, (Near Princess) There are other hotels, sui pone approach (the Club for $ homelike surroundings Located In centre of city sud close to principal stores aed theatre * Charges are modorsie Special rates hy the week P.M. THOMPSON, Treprietm Dotto ttssstrastetree The American Cafe!8s Wellington St The an; Up-to-date Restaurant ating Hoube. Separate | ® apartments. Well furnished ® '® and lighted 2 : > : 3 : Try our Full Course Dinner, be. » Tawa vy ew § TALKTO THE COOK WHC HAS TRIED IT She has And will tell vo her { The many OW, WAY erived by the Eo um Gas For denving Cooking ne {here 18 no fact Phat for C1} Convenience, f king can't be for o« npPness Cleane beat \ card addressed to the Office of the Works, wy we 197, will bring ry informatior | Necoss Light, Heat and Power Dept. . C. FOLGER, Gen, Mgr. t! HOW MANY PEOPLE USE A TOWEL BEFORE YOU DO The best way to cure a disease is to prevent it. EDDY'S SANITARY PAPER TOWELS GUARANTEE CLEANLINESS. id In rolls, each containing 500 towels, size 14 x 15 th handsome nickle fixture, all 2? 3175 4 | core soft, absorbent, economical, pleasant to use, and sealed carton I Zz 8B Perfect oe bd ' space Door ences Londen, Toronto Two Minute Talks About ANDORA RANGE for Coal or Wood AVE you dora feature. The ordinary door, when opened, is inside the warming closet and takes up valuable space. But the Perfect Spring Door, when opened, warming closet adds two inches to the height of the space inside the closet. more dinner or dessert plates. door cannot drop down and smash the dishes because the spring holds the door up out of the way until you desire tc close it. The Perfect Spring Door is a con- venience worth having. more than a score of other conveni- booklet tells about them. Send for a Mc<Clary's Stands for Guaranteed Quality ERTS Vancouver, St Johs NB. HamilMor. Calsary seen the Perfect Spring Door on the warming closet? It is the newest Pan- is entirely outside of the By being outside it That extra for fourteen provides room The There are on the Pandora. Our Pandora 7 Montreal Winnipeg For Sale by J. B. Bunt & Co., Kingston.