There's great satisfaction in making beds and bedding of such fine quality as to win compliments like this: "Lrested 00 _comfortab that 1 examined the ly the other night at the ---- Hotel, Belleville, bedding in the and found label. ses Please let me ksow tt by acon Oa. There's great satisfaction, too, in buying and using beds that are so much better than ordinary, See that the ID cost po mote. especially when they trade mark ison the bed you buy. Ask us for dealer's name Dearest, you. Write for Free Book No. 120 «* IDEAL BEDDING Cur MONTREAL -- TORONTO -- WINNIPEG 8% two or three hours a day fixing -- ok HOW MANY PEOPLE USE'A TOWEL BEFORE YOU DO "EDDY'S SANITARY PAPER TOWELS are soft, absorbent, economical, pleasant to use, and GUARANTEE CLEANLINESS. Sold In rolls, each containing 500 towels, size 14 x 15. With handsome nickle fixture, all packed in neat, scaled carton $1.75 "oan ALE --- STOUT --- LAGER Pure -- PALATABLE -- NutRImious -- BevERAGES FOR SALE BY WINE axp SPIRIT MERCHANTS EVERYWHERE LOCAL OPTION--Residents in the local option districts can legally order from this brewery whatever they require for personal or family use. 'Write to _ JOHN LABATT, Loren, Lonnon, CANADA, y Ure-air oven | retains the (turkeys flavor You should just taste the turkey "roasted in the Pandora pure-air oven. None of the flavor: is lost, as in ordinary ovens where air becomes 'stale,' through improper ventilation. Instead, all its rare delicacy of flavor is accentuated to the fullest degree --for Pandora owners' enjoy. So perfect is the system of ventilation that si in Pandora oven cannot possibly become "stale" ih. aor oven ever smell "stuffy." vn Re | fined five shillings and costs for gam- '| established. "} not haviayg suificoont silverware, had : canstantly burning: | whose truth fou are compelled to ad- mit uitered by sotft2 one whom you do' Py ASD HOW THEY ARRANGE 3 THEIR KINKY TRESSES, Some of the African Belles Spend Several Hours a Day Their Hair, J Some of our girls spend as much their hair, writes Tip in the New York Press, while it takes only an hour ence a month or so for the girls in some ts of Madagascar fo plaster %t down with clay or tallow after making it up in many, many tails. Suceessful dyeing of the hair with hepna was used long ago by the Arabisa women; now henna hair is wen everywhere in every civilized land. = With dyeing pretty well done with 'henna, sc'entists have gone in for laboratory experiments and made to perfection, with animal, vegetable and mineral 'Substances, dyes to pro- duce ghy desired shade and to imi. tate nature so perfectly that hair, no matter" how gray, may show its ori- ginal shade. But gray hair looks best after ald. 2 In the old Indian days the hair used to grow to a wonderful length, and to this day families having a strain of Indian blood often late in or no gray in it. The hair of some of the Indians used to grow to the great length of 12 feet, and on the men at that; and thos» old foxy folk often made it look thicker and long- er by weaving into it certain fibers. Some of the East African ladies shave their heads with small, sharp, razor-like knives, first softening the (3 hair with goat's m'lk. Other Africans keep it cut off to about two inches in length and slick down with vegetable oils. Girls of Fiji stiffen their locks with tree gums and soft, fluffy hair is considered 8 curse. Somehow, some of the races that have the stiffest hair try to make it stiffer and 'those like down and still other races do The South Sea Waves. ] We gll remember with what fre. | quency in the old narratives of experi. ence in the Bouth Seas reference is made to the heavy swells of the ocean, which impressed the navigators with the idea of their remoteness from land. The great size of the sea waves in high southern latitudes has been ex- lained the fact that south of the onpe of Good Hope and Cape Horn there is neither windward nor lee- | sll longitudes is westerly. Thus when a west wind springs up it finds a long westerly swell, the effect of a pre- vious wind, still running. The new- born wind increases the steepness of this swell and so forms majestic storm waves, which sometimes attain | a length of 1,200 feet from crest to crest. The average height attained by sea waves in feet is about half the velocity of the wind in miles an hour.' He Was Gambling. "Hello, Bill. Have you heard about Jimmy Strong getting locked up?" Bill-=No. Tom--Why, he was outside a last night when the bobby told him to move on, but Jimmy wouldn't, so the copper called for assistance, and another coming on the scene, Jimmy ot desperate and tossed them all over he place. After awhile he was locked up, taken before the magistrate and bling. nl . Bill For ga'nbling? I can't see that. Tom--Why, for tossing coppers' in the street !'--London Meil Didn't Want a Postoffice. In most countries the introduction of postal facilities is regarded as an unmixed blessing, but it was not so in Korea. The postoffice erected there in 1886 had but a brief existence. The mob, in their blind hatred of all in. novations, rioted and burned it to the ground. The natural result was to make Korean stamps of the first issue in a used state of great value. The matter was allowed to drop for a time, and it was not until ten years later that th: present system was' The Orchid, The orchid is a peculiar plant, for, strangé as it may seem, there is no distinctively orchid odor. One smells { like the viol:t, othérs like the rose. the hyacineh, the daffodil. Orchids are the mankeys, the mimics of the vegetable world, in oder as well as form and tint. No other flower re- s*mbles an ofchid, but orchids are forever aping buttérflies, pansies, boots, « spiders, piich plants, birds and what not. And they are not ab- solutely certain to look just the same twice in succession. The Happy Number, "Company remarks' by children are famous for their innocent tactless- and wprisigkes. Small Jennie's mother, for instance, had invited a large company to ber house and, nee bortewed i from her sister. At table Jentic silently but palpably "count. ed Dosey," then broke out with: "It's a good thing no wore people come, mumsie, for we've only just enough knives and forks to go around; with Aunt Sarah's and all." Let In the Light. Light is a better protection than yao of barricades. Formerly when men left their business places at night they turned off the light and t up great shutters. To-day they ave learned that their greatest safe. guard against enemies is to pull back the blinds and keep" a bright light ng exceedingiy little cousin watch. inutes and then 't he walk short steps. My ed him for several A Platitude. "Father," said the small boy, "what is a platitade?™ < "A platitude. my son, is a statemsut Ra ! diving in England. The ken gi in Fixing long Years of groping and toiling' in diver. Pumping was out of the ques. | tion, as the alt sticked up from the other parts of the foundation and the foundation and jute bags contain. As cach bag was placed in he slit it open with a knife an whole" restoration scheme over $500,000. that have the softest try to make it oqlls {8 the time of the illness of Leo just the opposite. IX emt------ | pigeon, after the manner of Noah's dove, used to come to the study of the pontiff, who, no matter what the Business in hand was, would go to ! the | that the pope was seized with his fat. al illness the pigeon came as usual, but found the window closed. bird flapped pane and then struck the glass with its beak. The pope heard it and or dered the window to be opened and his camerier to feed would not eat, but perched itself on ward shére, and the prevailing wind in | the dying pontiff's couch, and thers demonstrated its delight at seeing its old friend and protector. a thickness in China, has given rise to controver- 8y among geologists. The presence of | the shells of snails that feed on plants indicates these remarkable deposits may be ful- What's he bin locked up | ly sceounted for by wind action, eou- for? pled with the growth of plants which ub d dune plants do on English shores. -- London Answers. been able to arrive at a point which enables that animal to achieve the untying of a knot. monkey with a cord, the simplest form of common knot, and unless the beast can break the string or gnaw it in two he will never get loose. observation and though a monkey may possess both he has neither degree to enable him to overcome ths | diffieulty. given to a wind which periodically blows from the interior of Africa to- ward the Atlantic during December, January and February. ed by a fog or dry haze, which some. times conceals weeks bit of grass and leaf in its course is withered as though it had been sear- ed by heat from a fumaece. within an bour after it begils to blow green grass is dry enough to burn. Aurelien Scholl in his reminiscences He tells of the elaborate preparations made for a hostile encounter between two jopmalists whom he knew. One of them borrowed $100 from Scholl to meet his share of the expenses This sum was never returned. "After ten minutes' pirfunctory fencing," he adds, "the principals embraced each | other, and both left the ground with- 'mileage in Ontario totalled 14075 | gut a .seratch. hit." : ~~this one is mine." never live to tell the tale such an sch look, the br by Diver After Six. Years of Nerveracking Effort. i What is, without doubt, an under- unparalleled in the history of has been practically completed task has taken pix 88 in twenty fect of water be- the walls of Winchester Cathe- shown unmistakable signs ing foundations. - Its founda- das drat That ancient structure had for some tions were laid in the thirteenth cen. that the original work was interrupt- ed by an inflow of water. are visible signs to-day The walls began to crack and lean out of the perpendicular. After many consultations and inspections by en- gineers and architects it was decided | that the only way to save the cathe- | dral from ing was to employ a | or sand would be then the whole struec- | ture would have come tumbling down. The problem the architects had to face was how to remove thie peat and substitute concrete without using the pump. Diving apparatus was installed, and a man named Walker, a diver of great: 'experience in deep sea work, went ferme the Suk Sri be i o cuit of hair with little | & gan a tas was: ted' Tite have lull to take about a year to complete. But the difficulties were enormous. He had to work in absolute darkness and to feel his way about in Jthe water, the physical difficulties the use of artificial light. cavernous holes preventing | Bit by bit he excavated the peat at ng coucrete were then lowered to him. ition spread cement over the surisce. The has | cost Pope Leo's Dove. The recent illness of the pope re- a story which went the rounds IIL. Every day at a certain. hour a bird and feed it. On the day! | The its wing against the it. . The bird' | A Peculiar Clay. The constitwents of "loess," a fine yellowish sandy clay found in var pus parts of the world and reaching ¢ I over a thousand feet resence of as recently genesis of the former lants. decordingly it en suggested that the ave caught and compacted the blown ust and sand, in the way that sand Monkey Intelligence. The monkey's intelligence has never You may tie a fastened with To untie the knot requires and reasoning power, in a sufficient A Withering Wind. The name '"harmatan" has been It is herald. the sun for whole together, Every plant, every Often Chief Sufferer In the Duel. The cost of duels is dwelt upon by | | | 1 was the only man | A Future Capitalist. : This Jittle boy and his sister each had a penny. The boy borrowed his sister's penny to play with, and in a lift]: while one of the coins got lost, "Oh," 'he said, "I've lost Mary's penny." i "But." said his governess, "how do ou know §t is 'Mafy's penny you ave lost?" "Because," he answered, "because eg Terrible Suffering. suffer much when | He-- And did you had sppendiciti? She--Suffer? 1 thought 1 should | He--Ah, that must have been suf- fering, indeed CE ---- LS -------- Often Has That Effect. Bally Gey--What a cusning little fellow Mr. Callipers is? . Polly Swift-Cunning? Why he's bow. ' Bally Gar Ve ut that gives him you know. ------ i -- * Sotne people wre only repentant for sing that ave discovered and The ar samally ohjeets ta prove AsmPtioms me Tis the wovice wants skilled workman's wages, Sy (gl Mructutes, nature, de | "there would come another day | the lemon was preserved and hidden Dr. Graham Bell Has Begien the "Dag Days" Trouble. Prof. Alexander Graham Bell, the ; inventor e telephone, and scientist of oridnde fame, has recently invented and Gonstructed an epparatus for cooli giling houses iz summer at sm cost and with simple operation, which has been used with much success in the inventor's | bome during the hot spells of the | samumer, i While other dwellers on his street | sweltered and wilted under the torrid temperature that rose daily to 90 de | grees, Prof. Bell sat comfortably at work in his study. On his desk the thermometer, throughout thé whole | summer, has never registered higher | than 61 degrees. While there are gumberless appli- | ances for cooling buildings, they are, | for the most part, adapted only to structures, and are of a costly | ndent | upon involved mechanism many- | syllabled chemicals, requiring .an ex- | to operate. Prof. Bells latest in- vention avoids all these ebjections. | He first became interested in the | subject during a recent tour of the | world, being much impressed in India and other tropical countries with the total absence in the dwelling houses, | even of the wealthy classes, of all means of tempering the flerce heat. ! When he returned to the United States he at once addressed his talemts to devising an apparatus that, while | ' avoiding the objections of high cost and complex operation, would yet ac- | { hieve satisfactory results in the cools | ing of private dwellings. With char- | | acteristic energy he soon conceived | | and -constructe i he thought, an appliance which, would fill the require. | ments. Nature aided him, for hardly 1 had he installed this latest 'creation | of his genius when a series'of blister i ing hot spells put it to a crucial gest. | This is the method of constructing | the "ice stove," as"it is now installed in Prof. Bell's home in Washington: On the window ledge is set a small fan, about six feet in diameter. It is | operated by a small electric motor ate | tached by a wire to an electric light socket. The fan is enclosed in a cas- | ing. Under the lower sash of the win. dow is set a board in which is a 21.3 inch hole. A short pipe connects this hole with the encased fan, thus sup- | plying pure air from outdeors. Ant other pipe runs from the fan casing to a large wooden box, which formerly served as a pantry ice box, about three feet high and broad, and abouy four feet long. In this box are cakes! of ice. The lid fits with 'airtight snugness. From the opposite side of the, box at which the pipe from the | fan enters, another pipe leads off to) the } apartments to be cooled in juse theisame manner that hot air pipes | lead from a heating furnace. This pe is heavily encased in asbestos. i 'hen this service pipe comes through the wall into the room fo be cooled, | it runs down to within about thre inches of the floor, the end being open' | for the discharge of the cold air. _ All that is necessary to cool the | Toom is to turn on the electric eur- rent and start the fan. This draws thetair in through the window pipe and drives it through the connect | ing pipe into the ice box. Here the spressure of the air from behind, | due to the driving power of the fan, { forces it acwoss the ice, thefeby cool- | ing it, and thence on into and through the service pipe, whence it is dis- charged into the room. a t---- r Time Brought Revenge. Atgood election story comes from Oshawa where one of the hottest fights of the campaign was waged. . Kaiser, upon whose. lawn the | famous tent was spread, in which the | meetings were held, had heen the | centre, not only of this, but of pre- | vious political battles. Tn 1908 Mr. | Fowke was elected, and by way of soothing the wounded feelings of the | doctor, some ingenious, but good hu- | mored Grit walked to the door of the | { town physician and tied a lemon to | the door knob, This was discovered | next morning, and its meaning fully | read, but the doctor concluded that ! So | away for three years. i At the demonstration on the night | of Bept. 21, when Mr. Fowke was de- | feated, the lemon was brought to light amidst an uproar of laughter, and a | reward offered of a Government job to the man who would hang the lemon on the defeated eandidate's door. A | | procession of enthusiasts carried out | the project. ----ip Ontario Railway Mileage. Ontario's railwgy mileage totals | 19,017.94. During 1910 there were com- | pleted and opened for traffic, accord ing to the report of the Public Works Department, just issued, 357.58 miles | of railway. Of the 757.95 miles of the | | Transcontinental across Ontario, all | of which have been located, 531 miles have been graded and 383 miles of tracks laid. On the Algoma Central' and Hudson Bay Railway 98 miles are | under construction. | Prior to Confederation the railway miles. Bince then 7,507.44 miles have' been completed. There are now 708.77 miles u construction, The total | tlectric railway mileage is 721.73. | Thete are under construction 67.5 | ey : : -------- Hon. Mr. Parent. i Hon. Simon Napoleon Parent, who is retiring from position as chair- man of the National Transcontinental} Railway Commission, as: & result of | the overthrow of the Government | which appointed him, is'a Quebee law.! i yer, who has been a civie and politi-! cal leader at the Ancient Capital for! | many a year. He siafied by becoming' | an alderman of in 1800, | Then he became successively mayor, | member of the Quebes slature, | | member of the Cabinet, Provin. cial Premier. He resigned the Pre. miership in 190Mto accept the 3 tion he is giving up. He is a fine. i ing man fiftysix years of age, -------------------- First Sunday School. Tt is a hundred years ago this month | since the first Protestant Bunday schocl was inaugurated in Brockville, which was then known as the Village | of Rlzsb thtown, i+ Perhaps you have not made the fires | payment on the mansion in the skies you si - { * Pon't wait for Crente one hers. the fival paradise Coweait a of of times hes po sh | stantial "NEALTH IN PURE SUGAR Sugar is one of the best, and most widely used foods. Would you risk your heaith for the sake of a few cents on a hundred pounds of sugar 7 Buy only & vl EXTRA GRANULATED SUGAR Its Purity and Quality cannot be questioned. Compare it with any other and note the difference in color. PARIS LUMPS . When buying Loaf Sugar ask for Redpath Paris Lumps sold in RED SEAL dust proof cartons, and by the pound. ° The Canada Sugar Refining Co. MONTREAL, CANADA. Limited Establi shed in 1854 by Joba Redpath THE FAMOUS NATIONALE ORINK There's a story behind "Salvador" beer --Canada's most famous brew--that carries us back to the year 1651 Duke Ferdinand, § Mr. Lothar Reinhardt complet- ted his extensive studies of Get tmans brewing in this Jaomous cloister brewery, where be ft secured the secret formula and rocess for Lrewing *' Salvador." fe has the sole nok under the Canadian Government Copy- right and Letters Patent to Sale's Beer" until the more # manufacture this famous brew. convenient title of "Salvador" = Reinhardts' * Salvador" has be- was adopted, about a century @ come "The Natioma! Drink by later a ngorous adherence to cvery F y 5 ars "Salvador" § detail of the original' process de- Fu OVE 130 re = patron- ; 'vised by Father Sale in, 1651 age of the Bavarian 'voyal' JCompared with all other brews, family. In 1806, Frame X. '"Sahador" beer 1s worth a dollar Zacherl acquired contsol of the ; g drop, yet it costs no more than cloister brewery and purchased § just ordinary beer the secret formula of the royal Every pint of "Salvador" is brew, : N matured in ghood for at least six From that day to this the form- § months before bottling ula and wale 'European fights i "Salvador" is not only a pure, have heel tance of ne ao 4 sparkling and refreshing brew; gua . anil it also possesses fomic qualities ys ¥ which make if the beer par ex- The rich, mellow flavor of corey for family use. *'Salvador" is enly attaimed by A ' a special agg s, and if the output of the cloister brew-; / ery was great e the jeophe tf you want the: best beer of Sav would k no ot brewed. BOTTLED AT THE BREWERY BY REINHARDTS OF 'TORONTO The Grand the Bavarian monarch of that period, established the now Pus cloister brewery on the Nockerberg Mountain, near Mun i ich, and appointed Father Sale § the chief brewmaster. The product of the royal brew- ery was first known as 'Father Always order 'Salvador Local Agent, KE. Beaupre. Telephone 313, KO-KO-BUT THE PERFECT COOKING BUTTER Makes all cook- ing more whole- some, digestible, and more nounshing, because 1t 1s a pure vegetable product. more Ko-Ko-But gives you better cooking, frying and better pastry than either butter, or lard. You will find Ko-Ko-But more economical -- because | Ib. go as far as 1% Ibs. of butter or any other shortening. Test and prove Ko-Ko-Bat iu your own kitchen. ° "Your grocer sells it." Manufacturers : Dominion Cotosnut Butters Limited, MONTREAL.