} 2 wr Ne i a There are other Coffees --but--they are not "Seal Brand" In %, 1 and 2 pound cans Whole -- ground -- pulverized -- CHASE & SANBORN, MONTREAL. OUR FRESH GROUND COk. FEE AT 40c. CAN'T BE BEAT. Try a sample order and be convinced. NOLAN'S GROCERY, Princess St. Phone 720. Prompt Delivery Drop a rd to the Office of Works, Queen Street, or 'phone 197, and| he vio "GAS. thstalled I your _THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1015. . Dont Dodge. Do not dodge. Whatever the difi- cultiés to be met, they are pot mide edsler by trying to dodge them. In trying to dodge a missile from he Al rection you may come in line with one from'a different direction. Wheh 'we dodge trouble we are more than likely to get Muto other trouble no less easy, to endure. Look with --eotiruge on what must be met. Faced with cour age difficulties are - ball conqu Better meet and conquer' dificult than to dodge them. Do not dodge duties that devolve on you. Duties performed add strength and dignity to character. It matters little what hese duties He; though they be of the simplest and humblest, well and truly done, they acquire dignity. * up bravely and squarely to et the difficulties of life. With colirage you 'will conquer. You will come through life with fewer Scars than by trying to dodge duty or difficulty. Tryiag to evade begefs in a man a cringing spir- it. He gets a habit of truckling, and upright, self respecting manhood. 1s gone, ' Don't dodge if you would hold yourself above meanpess.--Milwaukee Journal Creek Names of fowa, . That lowa. is a farming state is re flected In, the names of many of 'the streams that Sow through it. First there is Farm creek, so that Farmers creek Ts not out of place; then there is a Chicken creek, a Duck creek, a Goose creek, a number of Turkey erdeks, as well as Pigeon creek. There are Fox, Hawk and Rat creeks to de your thé domestic animals, and Some Crow creeks, while there Is also a Fly creek and Mosquito creek. Water creeks are present, likewise a Hog run and a Mud creek, so that Bacon creek is not strange. It Is fitting that with a Bee creek and a Bee branch there should also be a Honey creek. There are a couple of Cherry creeks, a Crab apple creek and®lenty of Plum creeks, and for the wild animals we have Bear, Beaver, Buck. Crane, Deer, Doe, Eis, Otter, Panther, Racvoon, Skunk and Wolf creeks, With a Keg. creek there is a Whisky creek and a Whisky rgn. Finally there is a Purgatory creek.~Argonaut, Beauty of Victoria Falls. The Victoria falls, the native hame for which is Mosi-on-Totinya, of 'the Thunder Soupding Smoke, have t ly been called the most beautiful gem In the whole of the earth's scenery. No pen picture or photograph can give the faintest idea of the mutviots gran deur and beauty of the scene. The ma- Jesty and mystery of the gigan tic gorges, the fouming torrets, {He won: orf) a effects--all 'come i pd in 3 io, ir ot [pot had eve ® bee ad or heard In connection With them falls liy moonlight are a truly tas ) clouds §' stream of the Zambezi shimmering fat above the trembling earth, thé lunar rainbow, combine to make an fnimita: ble picture. i -- Five hundred a few genera Arizona's Mines. . The northwestern continuation fn Arizona of the greut mining region of Mexico, celebrated for centuries for its fabulously rich ores of silver and other metals, is the oldest mining district in the Ufited States. The district has an area of 1,400 square nilles, situat- ed on the border of Mexko, in the mid- dle of that portion of Arizona known as the Gadsfien Purchase. Authentic records show that silver mining was earried on here bt the Papago Indians before the Spanis conquest of Mexico in the sixteenth century. Later the lodes were worked from time to time and their ores smelted under the direc tion of the Jesuit fathers and the Span- ish government, and remnants of their old mine workings, to which the charm of romance clings, point the way to possible wealth not yet exhausted. From 1853, the date of the Gadsden Purchase, to the present time mining bas been carried on by Americans-- not, however, without interruptions, gspecially during. the earlier part of this period, in which raids by the laws figured prominently.--Exchange. They're All Good. Burné-Jones, the famous artist, made many sketches for the children of his boy in the principles of anatomy, and there and then made for him two benu- tiful drawings representing the anat- omy of the good man and the good woman, in both of which the heart, .0f the bad woman he grave- : ae y Bh oc i "My agar boy, Shp Joegu't exist" popular song Which nd the singer to strange happenings should he prove unfaithful, and a verse which had an immense success ran: It ever re cease to love rt, at least, of "Pinafore." --London Standard. --ETE CL . The Mushroom. | ' It Is commonly believed that the mushroom literally grows in a night, #0 that it has tome to be emblematic of sudden development, but the. truth 18 quite otherwise. It is very likely. to fequire several weeks for its forma- tion, and up to the time of its appear. ance in the light of day ft remains be- feath the surface, very much compress- ed ahd bela ib small compass, Thon comes a molst hight, and the cells of Which the fungus is composed are ty xginded so that it thrusts 1t- out, above ground. But it is no ieavier, though so much bigger, thin before perhaps. when it lay hid: den. in small compass upder the top layer of moll, a perfect 'mushroom. -- " | Exchange. Heart of a Hailstons, "Tie Heart of every ballstone 13 a tiny k of dust. Such a, speck, with a moisture condensed about it, germ from which may be formed a hallstone capable of felling a man of cha window. Rut first it mus he ca up by a current of nic and a Lot ihe lofty. clrrn five or Bix or even ten, miles , Lhel, continually growing by ' h Apegkuidu of moisture. it begin thon 10 the earth, spinning the clotid and fashitg ia the sun 4 diamond boit shot from a '{ rainbow, 5s 5 2 3 : 1; bloodthirsty Apaches or Mexican out- | friend, J. Comyns Carr, He once laugh- | ingly proposed to instruct the eldest magnificently large, winged and bck. | | Some General _Information for Busy People "The Japs Work All the Time. | - Literally the Japanese work all the i It is pot at all uncommon, to | find Japanese men and women at work in their shops at 2, 3 and 4 o'clock in | the morning. They must work like this or starve, They live directly in | the rear of their places of business { Their entire household equipment com- prises a few mats; a few cushions and a little tableware. They go at their | job--whether it consists of making | clogs or inlaid cuff buttons, and work | and work and work until they are ex- | hadsted. Then they sleep a little and | go back to work. It does not take a | Japanese ten ininutes to eat his meal | of rice and fish. He has his festivals, | of course, and a good many of them, | but he works the rest of the time, and | in many households it must be a. spe- | celal and personal festival, 'connected | with some individual or family gods, | to lure him from his occupation. He | needs the money.--Samuel G. Blythe in Saturday Evening Post. é 1 Mars and the Hand. There is 2 mount in the hands of' | 'persons who are said to be impressed | more in music by marches of warlike character thapanythimg else. It is a soft, cushion-llke mount within the center of the hand proper, but is gen- erilly developed toward the outer edge of the palm. : These persons are said to be under the Influence of Mars and to have in- befited 'warlike tendencies, but if more than usually shows an ordinary amount of courage that is possessed by most persons. These are the ones who would be thrilled by the "Marseil alee Russian national hymn, the Walch, on the Rhine" or the. 'Star od Banner." Subjects of Mars Seldom become proficient musicians or Successful singers unless the other in: dications in their hands show other musical fancies, --Buffalo News, 1s. POar Knights of the Garter. The splendor, that surrounds the Or der a the Garter, makes it almost im- ssible to belleye there ever have been | "poor" knights of the order or, that still exist today. . Such, however, case. now. number eigh- "all, And thelr official title ia the ts of Windsor. 3 *"apper founda fhe er in the "low: Edward IIL. founded the Ot chivalry of the world 1 08 A ot attendant or squire to each knight, ind twenty-six was the original number. ' These were known as the "alms" or "poor" knights of the garter until the title was changed to the present one by 'Willian IV.~Lon- don Standard. = ' ---------- Death to the Mosquito. The Panama canal was built by par afinl The fearful mosquito plague, which once made life for the workers unbearable, and which was one of the factors which made the French relin quish their attempts to build the canal, was ended by the simple expedient of covering all stdghant water with a film of paraffin. Midges lay their eggs in stagnant waters, but the larvae which develop have to come to the surface frequently to get fresh air. The paraf- fin entirely cuts off the supply of air, the larvae are suffocated, ard conse quently there are no midges. Other parts of the world, formerly. regarded as the grayes of white men, have now become mosquito free by the same means,--Pearson's Weekly, Positive and Comparative. In the lobby of a. Cinclanat! hotel, during an eduedtional convention, one school min approaclied another and, by way of introducing himself, said: I'm Beck," .. .. . ' "nas 00d,' replied the man ad- dressed, taking the proffered hand. "I'm more so." a "You're - what?" asked the first speaker. : "I Say I'm more so." repeated the at do you, mean by thaf? PR Baan n't you Baish 1? Rastus--'Chuse Miss Emily, you tol' us to leave out de any, other drug. | "Look, for example, into some great | Jnlo_two_"foundations," | yp ing the: soft yet sudden catastrophe; it is al- fi "As. a pile" replied | Mr. Speeking Of the manera) expenses." Seattle Post -| futies of Wood micobol Is thelr effect J : The Mescal Button. { Pejote, known commercially a8 nes «al, is a species of cactus grown in northern Mexico. The mescal button, about one and a half inches in diam- eter, is to the uninitiated disagreeable | in both odor and taste. Although a tea is made from It, it is more generally { eaten ih ils dry state, and bas hence | been called "ary whisky." The effect upon the user is different from that of i There is trembling. | and ndusea, g sense of dual existence, in some cases a delirium somewhat similar to delirium tremens, and an overestimation of time--minntes be- | Coming hours and hours jong periods H of time, The most extraordinary ef- || fect, however, is the visual hallucina. i tions and the effect upon the hearing. || The habitue enjoys "a regular kalcido- |] scopic play .of most wonderful colors, i an incessant. flow of visions of Infinite || besuty, grandeur apd variety, while || each note produced on the plano be- { comes: a center of a medley of other | notes which appear to be surrounded || by a halo of color, pulsating to the music."--Leglie's. | The Difference. Herman Frasch, chief chemist of the Standard Oil company, who died worth $5,000,000, made many millious | Tor his employers by his utilization of waste. ¥ "In an interview in New York, dis cussing the discovery that turned coal tar from a waste to a highly valuable byproduct, Mr. Frasch ofice said to a reporters 3 "That one little change, that little { chemical change, did it all, There is i bever more. than a tiny difference, you | know, between a waste and a byprod- | uet, between wealth and poverty, be- tween sucoess and: fallure. business office. , Here is a baggard man in his shirt sleeves pu a high stool working, for dear life--~he checks the cash. Then, in a little glass office all by himself, look at that other frock coated man Jdeaning back.in a tufted green leather armchair, smoking a ci- gar and reading the paper--he cashes the checks," Boston, Record. I v Hp ooo Eating Asparagus. Mr. G, K. Chesterton does not like ie modern way of eating asparagus, "Excluding cannibalism," he writes, "and the habit of eating sand (about which: I. can. offer neo. opinion), there is really nothing ene can eat which is less fit to be eaten with the fingers than asparagus. It Is long; it Is greasy; iit is loose and liable to every sort of ways eaten with some sort of oily sauce, and fts nice conduct would in volve the powers of a professional jug- gler, combined. with 'some' practice in climbing the greasy pole: Most things could easily be eaten with one's fingers, Only this one tiresome, toppling vege- table I eat between my finger and thumb. I should be better off as a giraffe eating the top of a palm tree. It doesn't want any holding up."--Lon- don Chronicle. Lots of Vowels. In the Hawaiian language every word ends in a vowel, . A Hawaiian finds it almost impossible to pronounce two comsonants together, and In Eng- lish he has the greatest difficulty in pronouncing any Word edding with a consonant, Mr. Hale in his Polynesian grammar says: "In all the Polynesian Qialeéts every syllable must terminate In a vowel, and two consonants are fever heard without a vowel between them, It is chiefly to this peculiarity that the softness of these languages is | to be attributed. The longest syllables | have only three letters, and many syl- | lables consist of a single - vowel." i Again, no syllable, as a general rule, | fa the Bantu family of African speech can end In a cohsonant,- but only in vowels. 5 " = Protected. Grubbs--I bear that old Skinem bas | given the committee his views on the proposed pew charter. . Stubbs--That must be a mistake nem never gave anybody angthing If the committee Bad his views be his the, committee's note providing for the return of the views with something more than legal interest. -- Richmond Times-Dispatch. Tr wy An Element of Difficulty. , "What Is the Imrdest part of your work psn lectwrer? asked tlie man designated as toastimaster, "the hardest giait of uy work = wak- ing the andience yp after thig- man whe introduces me Bas conchided his remarks.' --Washington Star, No Postmorte Touch, "Loan me $5 unt! Thursday, old man. If 1 live till-then I'l suvely pay son." . : tek "AN right. But if you sucenmb dont send anybody around to tow h we for fulelligencer, ga Modus Vivendi. - The term, modus vivemli isa mista)' arrangement whetvhy persots not dt the time being on' friendly terms edn | be induced to fre fozctlicr ih harfiony. The Term may be applied to individuals, to or to peoples. It signifies a mode of living. : -------- Wood Alcohol. » The greatest danger in fehaling the The World's Finest Tea Sm Tea out-rivals and Al out-sells all others, §s : B72 solely through its delicious flavour "and down-right all-round goodness. nn Hallid Phone 94 = is ie lye "KITCHENER" Is th? name of the new Electric Canadian General Electric Co. Under the new power rates, it will 2 1-2 cents per hour to operate this Iron. \ --FOR SALE AT-- Iron made by the cost only y's Electric Shop, 345 King Street A Clergyman's Great Relief A clergyman wrote us recently :- "It is a great relief as well as a great satisfaction that, -after so many years of serious effort, I will have no further premiums to pay, but will have a little surplus until the endow- ment is due in 1917." He had taken a Canada Life endow- ment for $3,000 twenty-five years ago. In two years he will receive this amount in cash. Would you not like to be in a similar position when approaching the sunset of life? You can manage it by easy steps through a Canada Life endowment policy if you will start now. It will give you the added advantage of pro- tection from time of paym ent of the first premium, and the profits will be substantial as it is in the CANADA LIF General Agent, Kingston. ASSURANCE COMPANY ESTABLISHED 1847 ._Latus of ¢ Ly o L" J Virasting YRTor TS SOUL emma os TIaTSASEL, Jt comtainamnch Bary e Practical FHomé Dregr Making) ALerrons Prepared Especially For This Newspaper by Pictorial Review A MIDDY BUILT ON NORFOLK LINES The middy olouse figures conspieu- ously in' éhiid wear this scasom, and this design with pleats and pocket seems a fellow of the Norfolk jacket Like the one-piece frock, the midday blouse ¥s toa serviceable as well as Stylish to pdss Into obscurity, there- fore designers of youthful fashions ring in the latest novelties upon it, as far as they consistently can, to give it the earmarks of smértness. This design in white linen may be trimmed with braid in color and is suitable to devél- opment in a large list of serviceable and attractive looking fabrics. In ay- erage size the blouse calls for 2% yards of 'material, which must Be handled carefully in. the eutting to produce the best results. From an open width of the linen the sleeve, front, pockets and Cuffs are cut. The pockets may be in two Sizes if desired, the largest below the Belt. Al. of thé sections of the pattern alréady entumernted aréd Wid on a lengthwise thread of the goods. For the fold of linen dre reserved the eollar, yoke and back, all three being ald @s near the fold as possible, Either long or short sleeves may be used, small "o" perforations being provided to de- termine the length. © If the high neck fs preferred to the open effect cut off extension on front on double "00" per- forations, 3 The middy blouse enters into many designs, though ft is not essentially a dresny garment, Much depends upon the way In which it is worn. Some . girls make of it a garment of untidy appearance by the careless way in which they wear it, while others make of the middy a trig accompaniment' for the skirt of contrasting material «3 --=gA sl. : f hoy NT ACK Cw MATTRIAL WiTH Ral Patented Apel 30. 1907 Pictorial Review Middy Hiouse No. 6505. Sizes 6 & 10, 12 14 and 18 ° years. Price, 10 cents. Pictorial Review Skirt cents. Mo. 5978. "Sires 14, 16, 18 and 20 years Price, 15 Above Patterns can be obtained from NEWMAN & SHAW, *