2AGE Lesrons Prepared Especially For This Newspaper by Pictorial Review PAJAMAS THE MEN WILL LIKE. Linens, madras, mercerized poplin and pongee are used, in plain and figured effects, for pajamas. Every man likes comfortable sleeping garments, and the old fashioned paja- mas whith have an ugly way of divid- ing themselves during sleep are giving Gary & Practica Home Dress Making 8 | q ~~ away .to more convenient models made In one piece. The design illustrated has the front and baek cut in one. A choice of sleeves is provided--Ilong sleeves with turn-back cuffs or short ones, simply hemmed. If made In average size for a man the pattern calls for § yards 56-inch materiai; for boys, only 3% yards, the same width, are needed. A careful study of the cutting guide shows that the various sections of the pattern are laid on an open width of material. The front a back (A) rests on a lengthwise thread of the fabric, while the sleéve is placed to the right. In the upper left-hand corner the pocket is arranged, then several inches to the right the underfacing and cuff are laid into place, h There are so few seams that the mak- ing Is very simple. After closing the shoulder seam as notched the shoulder seams of the ulllerfacing are closed. Next; adjust underfacjng to position underneath front and "back, center- backs, shoulder seams and correspond- ing edges even. Close leg seam as notched Close center-back seam from neck edge to double "00" perforation. Stitch a bias facing about 1% inches wide when finished underneath back from double "00" perforation to the leg seam. Turn hem at lower edge of leg on small "0" perforations. Work a but- tonhole at small "0" perforation In back at pointed end and sew a button at large "O™ perforation for closing. Cen- ter-front indicated by double "oo™ per- forations. Large "O" perforations on pocket in- dicate front edge; turn hem at notches. Adjust on left front, upper edge of pocket along small "0" perforations. Close the sleeve seam as notched, close cuff seam and sew to sleeve. To adjust the sleeve to position lap arms= hole edge lof front and back to line of small "o" perforations in sleeve, dou- ble "00" perforations evem, seam of sleeve at single large "O™ perforation in front and back section and bring the line of three single small "o" perfora- tions in sleeve to shoulder seam. Fell edge of sleeve underneath over seam. EN UNDER hig B 0 O00 N ------ 0 Seti -- ies MATERIAL OF N 36 INCH WIDE Patented April 30, 1907 Pictorial Review Pajamas No. 6264. Sizes 32, 34, 36, 40, 44, 48 and 50 inches bust and 4, 8 12 and 14 years. Price 15 cents. Above Patterns can be obtained from NEWMAN & SHAW, Princess Street. | passed, rode out of the mouth of the THE ONE SURVIVOR Great Disasters In Which a Soli- tary Life Was Spared. TALES OF NARROW ESCAPES. Curious Case of a St. Pierre Prisoner Tragedy of the Terrible Manacies. There are many curious cases on rec: ord where death 'In 'one 'of 1s many dresd forms of disaster grips an entire party in its clammy embrace and then, while its ley Ongers close upon the rest, lets one solitary member of the band slip away to be the sole survivor of the tragic calamity. One hundred and @fty-eight dead, one saved. That was in brief the tale of the wreck of the mail steamer General Chanzy, which struck In 'the terrible storm of Feb. 10, 1910, on the rocks'of Jporthyest Minorca. x Marcel Bader, the solitary survivor from the wreck of the Chanzy, owed bis preservation entirely to the fact that he was a strong and fearless swimmer, A few years ago the timber vessel Ano Rebekka, one day out of Memel, was cought in a squall and capsized. Most of her crew were swept away and drowned, but three--the skipper, a sailor and the ship's boy--clambered on to the keel, where they drifted without food or drink. On the third day the sailor was weshed off, but the skipper saved him. Then the boy went mad and died. On the fifth day the salflor was washed off again, apd this time the captain had ne strength to help him. On the seventh day the capsized vessel drifted in sight of land. A life boat put out and found the captain still alive. The Manacles have seen many sights of borror, but none tu excel that Janu- ary night many years ago when two British troopships--the Dispiitch and the Primrose--both went ashore on these terrible rocks within a few hours of one another. Seven soldiers strug: gled ashore from the Dispatch through the crashing breakefs and roused the village of St. Neverne. When the fish- ermen gained the beach the Dispatch had vanished. But there was the sec- ond ship--the I'rimrose--on the rocks. They pushed out, but the doomed ves sel was shattered to fragments before they could reach her, and all that the boat brought back was a fifteenyear old ship's boy, whom they picked up swimming desperately in the trough of the icy waves. Perhaps the most terrible disaster in wodern British history was thé retreat from Cabi! in the winter of 1842. An army of 3,480 soldiers, with over 12,000 amp followers, started southward from the Afghan capital under promise of safe conduct. On the following Jan 18 a solitary figure, Sithy, unsbaven. ankempt, his mind almost destroyed with the horrors through which be had Ehyber pass. He was Dr. Brydoone, the ouly survivor from all that mighty host. The bodies uf the rest; slain by " Shrewd Sh will find rots DERE LD Aww compare more favorably than ever imported with ones. The war tax adds about fifty cents on 'every dollar to the cost of imported corsets, yet nothing to their merit. Hundreds of thousands of the best dressed women in Canada have for years been buying the D & A and La Diva Corsets which give perfectsatisfaction, They aresold everywhere, "Buy Made-in-Canada Corsets" Is better. soap at any price can be Ss cEnTS Tre 2 . 908® PURE Procter & Gamble Factories in Hamilton, Canada the tr berous Ghilzals, lay scattered for miles along the snowciad floor of the defile. It was stupidity, not treachery, which caused the disaster tv a battalion of a Japanese regiment in January, 190L Ou the 23d of that wonth a detach- ment of 210 men and officers, under comand of a major, left the town of Awambri for a long route march. It They way snd wandered on, burning thélr rifle stocks for fuel By the 25th only seventy-one were left alive. On the afternoon of the 27th a corporal alone was picked 'up by a reliet party, alive but badly frozen. At the end of April, 1902, Mount aap WAAL? 1 thohght yon were going to name Him John!" af *Ob. that waa when | still thomght bad something to say in the matter."-- ii 7 plots in the United States in an effort We are often tempted because our are in-that direction. IHE DAILY BRITISH MOND CHINESE EDIBLE DOGS. They Are Fed Mainly Upon Daintily Prepared Vegetable Food. Euglish bon vivants have tested the merits of the Chinese edible dug. and they pronounce it yery good dog: la deed. : The dog is destined from the begin ning for the table. Like the edible rat of 'the same country. it Is fed mainly upon vegetable food, which is often delicately prepared and specially de vised, In order to give the dog's flesh a peculiar flavor and agoma. The re sult is something quite different from the flesh of the ordinary dog of the western world, The genuine Chinese edible dog is known by its bluish black tongue, which is a peculiar mark of its variety. In infancy and early youth the dog's tongue Is red. and upon reaching ma- turity and the edible age it suddenly becomes black, sometimes within two weeks. Another pecullarity of this dog is its lack of the barking facunity. It is said that the dog can bark. and on oc casions does so, but these occasions are rare, Many experiments, most of them un- willing. were made with the flesh of dogs during the Paris siege. New- foundiands and St. Rernards were pre: ferred. under the mistaken impression that they womld prove more eatable than other varieties. They proved to be detestable in all cases.--Every Week. CORK TREES OF SPAIN. How They Are Stripped of Their Bark at Ten Year Intervals. An important industry in Spain is the cultivation of cork trees. This tree is an oak which grows best in the poor est soil. It capnot endure frost and must 'have sea air and also some alti- tude. It is found all along the coast of Spain, the northern coast of Africa and the northern shores of the Mediterra- nean. There are two barks. the outer of which Is stripped for use. The cork is valuable according as it is soft and velvety, When the sapling bas reach. ed the age of ten years it is stripped of its outer bark for two feet from the ground. The tree will then be about five inches in diameter and about six feet up to the branches. This stripping is worthless. The inner bark appears blood 'red, and if it is split or injured the tree dies. When eight or ten years more have! elapsed the outer bark has again grown, ! and then the tree is stripped four feet from the roots. This stripping is very coarse and is used to make floats for fish nets. ten years thereafter the bark is stripped, each year two feet higher up, until the tree is forty or fifty years old, when it is In its prime, and may then be stripped every ten years from the ground to the branches. --Exchange. Lt -------------- Dumas and His Porthos. loved Porthos best. The great, strong, vain hero was a child after his own heart. One afternoon, it is related, his son found Dumas careworn, wretched, overwhelmed, ' "What has happened to you? Are yn if: : Impossible. 't you play tennis without mak- that noise" . BOW can 'you expect us te Eqs : . At least $500.000 has been ex- pended in proumioting alleged German "0 e __¥ar munitions from . An easy name to remem: ber. A hard tea to forget. "is good tea" Te | PASTEURIZATION KILLS 99 P.C. OF THE BACTERIA IN MILK. No epidemic of disease has ever been traced to pasteurized milk. ~All our milk is thoroughly pas- teurized and sold in sealed bottles. Phone 845 Price's The Clergyman's Investments The clergyman's thoughts are turned toward dther and higher things than' the investment of 'money. In such matters he usually acts on the advice of a parishioner. The clergyman's salary, too, is not usually such as would enable him to build up an estate through investments in secur- ities. There is really only one way in which he can bring up and educate his family and at the same time create an estate, and that is through insuring his life in a good com- pany like the Canada Life. On payment of the first premium an estate is at once created. The moderate yearly payments ensure constant protection, aud the policy will earn handsome dividends throughout its lifetime if issued by the < CANADA LIF J. 0. HUTTNAN ASSURANCE COMPANY The kind you are looking for is the kind we sell. Scranton Coal is good Coal and we guarantee prompt delivery. BOOTH & CO, Foot of West St. ae ates eames mcmi------ Bulk Oysters Dominion Fish Co. ES --r-- BUILDERS !! Have You Tried GYPSUM WALL PLASTER? It Saves Time P. WALSH. Barrack St. At Sr ------------e -- ROYAL SALAD DRESSING ROYAL MINT SAUCE ROYAL CHILI SAUCE ROYAL TABLE MUSTARD SELECTED PAPRIKA CLUB HOUSE OLIVE OIL D. COUPER. Phone 76. 341-3 Princess St. Prompt. Delivery. Telephone 201, Auto Livery (Bibby Garage) for Dodge Bros. ore ------ib-- STS EIST IIIS i A Trained Nuaise Writes "Iam a trained nurse and have been using Crisco Jor some time, in cooking for the sick. I much prefer using ityin' place of lard, as the latter renders foods so indigestible when cooked with it."* The letter, of which the above is the main part, is but ene among many which have been received during the past four years by the makers of Crisco. ay Your own experience will agree with that of this nurse, if you will give Crisco a thorough trial. Try it, not in one pastry making, frying - -- thing, but in all--cake-baking, er. you are :accus- tomed to use lard or butter or any substitute Crisco will not fail you--or fail to measure. up to the good opinions of it that are held by its many users. Made in new, sanitary, sunlit factories at Hamilton, Canada ¥