- ing expenses. wt a LLL AN WOREN WORK WHERE HUSBANDS ARE] DRONES AND WOMEN WORK. ho Ladies 2 Burma Take Kindly to It and are Quite Happy Withal. The womar of Burma is the rid- e of the Grient. On a contin- ent where the-fsir sex is supposed to occupy an inferior social status, strange to say, Milady of the Pag- oda Land appears to be as free as the air. Strangest of all, the Bur- -mese beauty is willing to pay a _ heavy price for her liberty--and she does so uncomplainingly, even cheerfully. Ag one roams through this pro- ince of the Indian Empire, one es across homes where the hus- nd is nothing but a drone, liv- ing at the expense of his wife's hard = a and dressing in fine clothes with the money earned by the sweat of her brow. While he lolls about _ with a huge cigar in his mouth, idly postizing with his equally lazy male friends, or reclining on a soft couch, enjoying a delicious day- <} illmg time playing with the children, his better half not only is keeping house for him and his little ones, but actually is earn- ing the wherewithal to pay the liv- In fact, many a Burman is wise and selfish enough tai more than one wife, let- ing each keep up rhea! A SEPARATE HOME, _ where he will be welcome whenever he may choose to visit it, light- heartedly going the round of his spouses' establishments as if he were merely boarding out. The Burmese woman seems to . gubmit to all this without murmur ---quite happy in the thought that her labor is keeping her beloved in ease and comfort. Possibly she feels the same pleasure tnat thrills the Occidental husband who keeps his wife in glided luxury, supply- ing her with a retinue of servants, and catering to her slightest -de- sires--the satisfaction that springs from the primeval instinct of pos- of her country which has been e _ session. Or, like a good Asiatic, she is merely following the custom in vogue for many decades. Or, more - than likely, Mrs. Burman knows a that economic freedom is the parent - of all independence, and, believing this, she wants to be free, no mat- ter at what cost, even if her hus- band is not. And what does not the woman of Burma undettake to do in order to be economically free? You re- pair to the market-place, whether you visit the vegetable for fish, or meat shops you find them presided over by members of the fair sex. You go to the drap- er's and you are waited upon by business-hke maids and matrons. In the office, girls act as -steno- _graphers and bookkeepers. Indeed, FEMALES ARE UBIQUITOUS in the business world, vending man- goes on the wayside, disposing of precious stones from behind the counters of large jewelry establish- ments, or taking their chances cool- ly and successfully in the stock market. While such a thing is not uncommon it must be remem- bered that we are dealing with the -Orient--that verily, Burma is next door to Hindostan, where women, for the most part, are kept screen- ed from public gaze in the privacy of the zenanas, Business women though Milady of Burma is, yet, she is a good moth- er. Some one witn a sense of hum- or has said that girls and boys are born and brought up in the not | bazaars of this land, This is far from being the truth. How- ever, this must in no sense be tak- en as meaning that the children are | unfortunate, for the Burma wo- man somehow or other has mast- ered the art of simultaneously be- ing a good shopkeeper and mother. You would not expect this world- r reon to be of a religious tem- "yierament, but she certainly is. She goes regularly to the pagoda, kneels down before the image of Buddha, burns incense and colored candles, 'and lays flowers before the idol. She | is liberal to a fault, and munificent- ly gives money to keep up the tem- ples. Indeed, if it were not for her generosity, it is hard to sur- mise what would become of the thousands of Buddhist monks who, bowl in hand, go from door to door BEGGING FOR FOOD, - Yet women in Burma is consider ed not to pdssess a soul. The pop- ular belief is that the female must be reborn as a male before she can aspire to attain the Buddhist heaven Nirvana, Clever as are these women, they take this - declaration at its face value, meek submittimg to their fate as if ree "they had no more spirit than the amb that is being led to the slaugh- r-block. Many members of the fais sex enter the convents which attached to the monasteries, give themselves up to the sole pation of cooking, washing, and : ng for the priests. These nuns don yellow robes, and shave the hair from their heads. They look much like the monks that about ay you can tell one from r ig to note the fact that, the women carry their beg- - owls or their heads, the men 'naw tavtened to their wrists. rere. and | 'ECIEMA IS CUSED. 'BY IMPURE BLOOD Qured by Dr, Williams' Pink Pills Because They Make Pure Blood Ask any doctor and he will tell you that eczema is caused by im- purities in the blood; that nothing can cure it that does not reach the blood--that salves and outward ap- plications are worthless and a waste of money. The reason why Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have al- ways been so successful in curing this most annoying trouble is be- cause they act directly on the blood, reaching the root of the trouble and driving out all impurities. They banish eczema, salt rheum, and unsightly pimples and ecrup- tions, relieve the irritation and itching and give perfect health. Mrs. <A. Puling, of Milestone, Sask., says: "I was afflicted with a blood and skin disease which the doctor called eczema, but which did not yield in the least to his treatment. I was covered with sores and in very bad shape. <A friend advised me to to take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and after us- ing eight or nine boxes I was com- pletely cured. I can strongly re- commend the Pills to anyone suf- fering from that trouble." A medicine that can make new, red blood will cure not only skia troubles, but also anaemia, rheu- matism, neuralgia, indigestion and a host of other troubles simply be- cause these troubles are the result of bad blood. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills make new blood and under their use bloog®and nerve troubles disappear. ld by all medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. RA ENGLISH WOMAN IN CHINA ETIGUETTE OBSERVED WHEN MAKING A CALL. A Visit to a Lady of High Degree and One to a Farmer's Wife. "We could have walked from our house to that of the Wei's in five minutes," writes an Engush woman visiting in China to the Lady, "but etiquette ordained that we should |drive. So we ordered a blue hood- ed, springless mule cart, the only conveyance obtainable in that north ern city, and crawled in on all fours under cover of the hood while the servant sat on the shafts and the driver walked behind us using his voice instead of reins. "'We had dressed in gala clothes for the occasion. "-*Your white gown is very pretty,' said my hostess in a doubt- ful tone, 'but--' " 'But what? I asked anxiously, '« 'But the Chinese do so dislike white. You see it is the sign of mourning. No don't trouble to change. That pink scarf will make it all right and pink is one of their favorite colors.' "The gatekeeper at the Wei man- sion hearing the sound of cartwheels flung open the big gates and we were conducted round a few sharp corners and across some paved courtyards into an inner court where the mistress of the establish- ment, surrounded by a group of / hand maidens and relatives, came forward to meet us. 'Her face, thickly coated with a wash of rice flour paste, and rouge dabbed on here and there in what we should call the wrong places, gave her face the wooden look of A DUTCH DOLL man-made | and her wooden walk on the poor lily feet three inches long kept |up the resemblance. | 'We were ushered with many | polite speeches into the guest hall, a Bare, uninteresting room with walls that had once been white- | washed and a latticed window with 'paper panes that had once been | white. The chief furniture consist- ied of atable placed squarely against the centre wall with a pond- erous chair at either end. | "The Tai Tai sat afar off, look- ing more wooden than ever with her lshrunken legs, like a couple of large ninepins encased in purple trousers. Had it not been for the | relatives and the hand maidens con- versation would have flagged con- |siderably. She come from the 'gouth and was still unaccustomed 'to northern mandarin. "Fortunately among the relatives a vivacious, good looking girl with 'a merry laugh kept the ball rolling, |The more she calked however, the. more silent did the Tai Tai become, and our suspicions were aroused. « "Meanwhile the tea was brought in, and a dainty sup covered with an inverted saucer was placed be- side each guest. According to etiquette, we ignored its existance until the Tai Tai requested us to taste of it, whereupon, carefully raising our cups in both hands, we made a feint of offering them to her. Declining the honor, she re- peated her request that we should ourselves partook of the tea, and # - = shee aero oe formalities thus concluded, we gaye | @ suzzling sip to 'SHOW APPRECIATION. © '"'We were careful to hold the cup in both hands and not to remove -- the lid or inverted saucer, but mere- ly to tilt it slightly to one side. Sponge cakes dipped in oil and sav--- ory pastries stuffed with dates were piled up on the table beside us, the attendants handling them with fing- ers which made no pretence of be- ing clean. ; "The Tai Tai was becoming more wooden than ever, when by a fort- unate chance my companion, who spoke the language fluently and was well versed in Chinese etiquet- te, made the discovery that the merry faced conversational girl was an 'Ih Tai Tai'--in other words, the secondary wife. Realizing the difficulties of the situation, she was careful henceforth to address her conversation very pointedly to the real Tai Tai and thereby probably warded off a family quarrel after our departure. | 'Luckily for people like myself, | whose knowledge of the language is distinctly limited, there are various . topics to be discussed with a 'new guest' which need but a slended vocabulary. '« 'Which is your honorable king- | dom? they ask. '¢ 'My inferior kingdom is land.' '* 'And your honorable they inquire, "At which, if one desires to ans- wer indefinitely, one replies twenty- oe or thirty-odd as the case may e. "They soon discover if one is un- married and this affords some sur- prise, for spinsters of a certain age are hardly ever met with in China, An explanation that in England we please ourselves as to whether we will marry or not only increases the bewilderment. You seek to divert their attention by inquiring how many 'commanding gentl2men' they have (meaning sons). If they reply, that they have one or more YOUNG PUPPIES (meaning sons), you hasten tc con- gratulate, and so it goes on. "Finally your attemrts to finish your tea having been frustrate' by the attendant, who fill: the cup up again before it has a chanze of get- ting empty, leaving takings are commenced, You fear you have been very little company, and the Tai Tai murmurs something depie- catory about herself. Yoa beg her to detain her steps and she implores you to 'walk slowly.' At each cor- ner you all bow, huggiag your fifth ribs with clasped nands in the orthodox fashion, and the progress to the outer gates 's Laliing in the extreme, "My next visit was of a very dif- ferent charaeter. We spent the afternoon with a respectable farm- er's family. The farmer's wife wel- comed us warmly and regaled us on tea and boiled eggs--a dish of twenty or thirey boiled eggs, to be eaten without bread or salt or any accessory whatever except the tea. "The farmhouse was built of mud, with walls 2° feet thick, and the win- dows were almost non-existent. The place looked poverty stricken, but the farmer's wife spoke of recent prosperity. Crops had done well and she and her husband had been able to purchase that which they had been wanting for some years past. "She took us to see the newly bought treasures. We peered in through the door and the good wo- man's face beamed with pride and pleasure. There they where straight in front of us made of polished wood, black as ebony, two magnificent-- coffins," we If attacked with cholera or sum- mer complaint of any kind send at once for a bottle of Dr. J. D. Kel- logg's Dysentery Cordial and use it according to directions. It acts with wonderful rapidity in subdu- ing that dreadful disease that weak- ens the strongest man and that de- stroys the young and delicate. Those who have used this cholera medicine say it acts promptly, and never fails to effect a thorough wie. A FAIR QUESTION. Willie--"Pa?"' Pa--"Yes." Willie--"Teacher says that we're here to help others." Pa--"Of course we are." Willie--"Well, what are others here for?' the HIS MISTAKE. "T used to think I could hire all the brains I wanted for $25 a week,' said Mr. Pushem. "Well, couldn't you?' "Ves, But it wasn't long before I had to call in a $100,000 lawyer to straighten out the kinks they put into my affairs." CAN TAKE NO MORE. "T thought your daughters were taking French?' says the friend. 'We thought they were, too," an- swers the father, "but it seems that the small quantity they absorb simply vaccinated them." A well-known lawyer met an old- time friend named Fuller. After a hearty handclasp, Mr. Fuller re- marked :-- "You are looking ex- ceeding well. Aren't you filling out a little?' 'No, indeed," replied thé other. "You probably think so because I'm looking Fuller in the face.'"" INVESTMENT - BONDS | {| A bond offers to the investor a safe, sane, and profitable investment. q Safe because it is a first mortgage on the en- tire assets of the corpora- tion issuing the bond. g Sane because bonds are © saleable at any time. @ Profitable because they pay a higher rate of interest than any other investment that offers equal security. : q We would like to send you our literature on bonds as investments, just send us your address, it will not cost you any- thing. ROYAL SECURITIES CORPORATION LIMITED BANK OF MONTREAL BUILDING YONGE AND QUEEN STS, TORONTO is abrasion by local fusion due to THE REAL TEST. Mother--Have you been a good boy at school to-day, Clarence} Son--Yes, mother; I didn't get caught once. REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD. MRS, WINStOW's SOOTHING SyRuP has been used for over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS of MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WHILE TEETHING, with PERFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES the CHILD, SOFTENS the GUMS ALLAYS all PAIN; CURES WIND COEIC, and is the best remedy for DIARRHGA. It is ab- solutely harmiess Be sure aud ask for '*Mrs, Winslow's Soothing Syrup," and take no other kind, Twenty-five cents a bottle. Visitor--"Look here, if I decide to stay with you for a week or s0, how much is it going to cost me?' Clerk (of the swell hotel)--"You can answer that best yourself. How much have you got?' There are many imitations of Wilson's Fly Pads. Do not be de- ceived by unsatisfactory imitations. Get Wilson's. "Goodness, John,"-said a wo- man to her husband, "your suit looks as if you had been sleeping ine ab '"'Well,' replied John, "why not? Isn't that the suit I wear to church?' Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff. "The people I lived wid before, ma'am," said the new cook, "was very plain."? 'Well,' asked her new employer, "are we not plain Here?' "Yez are, ma'am, but in a different way. They wuz plain in ther way o' livin', not in their looks, ma'am." Unless worms be expelled from the system, no child can be heal- thy. Mother Graves' Worm Ex- terminator is the best medicine ex- tant to destroy worms. "Me good fellow," said the Eng- lish tourist, "kin you direct me to a place where one may get a good drink 1' "Well," replied the thirsty native, "I kin direct yer better to a place where two kin git a good drink." Minard's Liniment Relleves Neuralgia. Mother--"Now, Charlie, must be a very good boy. Yoa have a nice new brother. Aren't you pleased?' Eight-Year-Old Charlie--"Oh, I don't know. It's always the way ; just as I'm getting on in the world competition be- gins.'" you Soft corns are difficult to eradi- cate, but Holloway's Corn Cure will draw them out painlessly. WRONG DEPARTMENT. "T want a pair of shoes that will be plenty large enough," she said, as the clerk looked into her old one to find the number. 'In that case," he replied, "per- haps you had better step over into the men's department." OFTEN. "What becomes of the average man's money?' "T guess it goes to the average woman." ""TOOTHLESS SAWS. -- Toothless saws have been in use cutting armor plate for a number of years. The theory of the action the very high speed of the disk, causing so many thousand inches of surface to impinge on the metal un- der-cut that the material acted upon is heated at the point of contact to a temperature -approaching if not equal to the fusing point. It ap- pears as if a very small portion of the metal being cut immediately in the neighborhood of the point of contact is first melted and at once rubbed off, thus exposing a fresh surface to the frictional action, and || that this process goes on continu- ously while the disk is working. The temperature of the disk must necessarily be much lower than the work in contact with it owing to its large surface area, and when it is considered that all the frictional energy of the rotating disk is con- centrated on an extremely small area of contact in the material sub- jected to its action the results ob- tained are not so surprising as ap- pear at first sight.--Cassier's Mag- azine, Relief for the Depressed.--Physi- 'cal and mental depression usually | have their origin in a disordered 'state of the stomach and liver, as when these organs are deranged in their action the whole system is affected. Try Parmelee's Vege- table Pills. They revive the diges- tive processes, act beneficially on the nerves and restore the spirits as no other pills will. They are cheap, simple and sure, and the ef- fects are lasting. THE RETORT COURTEOUS. "The trouble with you is that you keep constantly forgetting that you ever were a boy." It was his wife who said it, and he, of course, ---- right back with the witty re- ply: 'Well, you never forget that you were once a girl, although every- body else forgot it years and years ago."' TRY MURINE EYE REMEDY fer Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes and Granulated Hyelids. Murine Doesn't Smart--Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c, 50c, $1.00. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 25c, $1.00. Eye Books and Hye Advice Free by Mail. Murine Hye Remedy Co., Chicago. e A REAL PESSIMIST. Mrs. Wiggs--Mrs. Harper is al- ways complaining of what might have been. Mrs. Diggs--Yes; she has wasted enough time crying over spilt milk to buy a couple of cows. The Friend of All Sufferers. -- Like to "the shadow of a rock in a weary land" is Dr. Thomas' Ec- lectric Oil to- all those who suffer pain. It holds out hope to every- one and realizes it by stilling suf- fering everywhere. It is a liniment that has the blessings of half a continent. It is on sale everywhere and can be found wherever enquir- ed for. ALMOST REPAIRED. Customer--"And my watch--when will it be repaired ?"' Country Jeweller--"You might have it now, sir, except for one lit- tle wheel. I can't seem to find where the miserable little thing be- longs !" It is a fact beyond dispute that one packet of Wilson's Fly Pads has killed a bushel of house flies. This is more than could possibly be eaught on three hundred sheets of sticky paper. All Druggists, Gro- cers and General Stores sell Wil- son's Fly Pads. Be sure you get the genuine Wilson's. Barber (to bald customer)--"Try a bottle of this preparation, sir. Splendid stuff for baldness.'? Cus- tomer--"So it may be, but I've got all the baldness I want, thanks." Minarad's Lintment for sale everywhere. And some church members seem to think it is up to the minister to make good for the entire congre- gation. When you have a pain think of Hamlins Wizard Oil. For head- ache, Toothache, Earache, Stomach ache, and many other paiaiful ail- ments trere is nothing better. FRANCE ENCOURAGES THRIFT. With a view to encouraging | thrift, in France, M. Chaumet, un- der secretary "of state to the office, has issued a circular to the directors of departments, from which it appears that various muni- cipalities intend to put a franc in the savings banks in the name of every child as soon as it is born. By way of assisting the communes in their lavdable efforts to encour- age the habit of saving among child- ren the Post Office Savings Bank will accept the deposits made in the names of newly-born -- babies. There is a stipulation that the children cannot withdraw the de- posits made by the parish. until they have reached their majority, or get marricd. ' post Figures do not lie but estimates are often misleading. relieve and PYSPEPS!4,. aLETS oure indigestion--acldity of the stomach--biliousness--fiatulence They re-inforce the stomach by supplying the active principles needed for the digestion of all kinds of food. Try one aftereach meal, 50c. a box. If your druggist has and we will mail you a box. : wets not stocked them yet, send us So M s Rt oe * z we ene om GAME. what is DEFINITION OF SLOW Little Elmer -- Papa, chess? ee. Professor Broadhead--Merely a scientific method of fooling away time. Costiveness and its Cure.--When the excretory organs refuse to per- form their functions properly the intestines become clogged. This is known as costiveness and if neg- lected gives rise to dangerous com- plications. Parmelee's Vegetable Pills will effect a speedy cure. At the first intimation of this ailment the sufferer should procure a pac- ket of the pills and put himself under a course of treatment. The good effects of the pills will be al- most immediately evident. DOUBTFUL COMPLIMENT. Mr. Bored--I wish I had your voice. i Miss Bawler (delighted) -- Why so? Mr. Bored--Well, then I could stop it whenever I pleased. Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Dear Sirs,--I had a Bleeding Tumor on my face for a long time and tried a number of remedies without any good results. I was advised to try MINARD'S LINIMENT, and after using several bot- tles it made a complete cure, and it healed all up and SueeR rat altogether. : ' DAV HENDERSON. ang ag phan Kings Co. N. B .» Bept. MODE GOOD. Kate--"Maude is married and she doesn't know the first thing about housekeeping." Alice--"Yes, she does; the first thing is to get a husband to keep house for." There are many sticky devices on the market that kill some flies, but housekeepers who have tested them know that Wilson's Fly Pads kin many times more, and do not dam- age carpets and furniture like all sticky fly catchers. THAT'S WHY. Benedict--"Do you know, old man, I don't spend so much money now as I did before I was mar- ried ?"? Bachelor--"How's that?" Benedict--"Well, I don't have it to spend." Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, Etc. PIE. Delicious Spice Pie.--The yolks of three eggs, one and one-half cups of sugar, one cup of good cream, two tablespoons of flour, two thirds of a cup of butter, one teaspoon of spice, cloves, cinnamon, and nut- meg. Mix flour and sugar to- gether, then cream with butter; add yolks of eggs, beating thor- oughly ; next add cream and spices. Use the whites for the frosting on | top. spoons butter, one and one-half tablespoons sugar and the yolk of one egg; cream butter and sugar; beat the yolk well and add; then add a small cup of flour. This re- sembles a mass of crumbs. Press into a pie tin with the back of a spoon; bake until a light brown. | Fill with the following cream: One pint of milk in the double boiler; mix well together three tablespoons of sugar and three tablespoons of flour; add to the boiling milk ; cook until thick; then add the yolks-~of three eggs; cook for a while, then | take from fire and add one table- spoon of yanilla. © Cover with a meringue mde of the well beaten whites of four ¢ggs and-a_ little sugar; cover the pie with this and brawn nicely in oven. This is a delicious pie, and easily digested. rf trouble th fall § 4 rashes,eczema,or any skin § 4 disease apply Zam-Buk! § 1 Surprising how quickly it easos the smarting and stinging! Also cures cuts, burns, sores and piles, | Zam-Buk is madefrom pureher- & D balossences. Noanimalfatsa--no § mineral poisons. Finest healer! | Drugzists and Stores Bverywhere, Sk RT el tt ey -wish to improve their prospects. _ } Cream Pie.--Crust--Two table- | FARMS FOR RENT AND SALE. ASK DAWSON, HE KNOWS. F you want to sell a farm, consult me, <oe i is you want to buy a farm, consult -- me. x So ; it HAVE some of the best Fruit, Stock, Grain or Dairy Farms in Ontario, and prices right. : W. DAWSON, Street, Toronto, Ninety Colborne Ss ACENTS WANTED. GENTS WANTED,--A study of other Agency propositions convinces ua iuab pone can so hy ours, ee i = ways regret it if you n't spply for -- particulars to ovate Dept. 228 Albert 8t., Ottawa. ee MISCELLANEOUS, AY and FARM SCALBS. Wilson's -- Scale Works, 9 Esplanade, Toronto, PPRENTICES TO THE MOULDING A or stove mounting trade wanted at Good chance for country boys who Write or call at once, Gurney Foundry~ Com- pany, 500 West King Sireet, Toronto. GENTS WANTED. A LINE FOR | A every home. Write us for ev choice list of agents supplies. We have the greatest agency proposition in Canada to-day. No outlay necessary. Apply B, Cc. I. Co., 228 Albert St., Ottawa. © ANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ete. In. ternal and external, cured withous ot by our home treatment. Write us efore too late. Dr. Bollman Medical Co. Limited, Collingwood, Ont. ' G6 TON SCALE GUARANTEED. Wilson's Scale Works, 9 Esplanade, Toronto. S PECIALISTS ADVICE FREE. Consult us in regard to any disease. rices in drugs of all fitted by mail. Send meas ment. Glasses fitted by age. Write to-day for anything sold in __first-claes bite g stores to Dr. Bellman, Collingwood, On DYEING! CLEANING! Forthe very best, send your work to the "BRITISH AMERICAN DYEING CO." Look for agent in your town, or send direct. Montreal, Toronto, Oitawa, Quebece ---------- once, russes When buying your Piano insist on having an 'CTTO HIGEL" Piano Action TWO ANGLERS, .. A barefoot boy, A white birch pole, A can of worms, A swimmin' hole. A baited hook, A tug and swish; A steady haul, ~ A string of fish, A white duck suit, A canvas boat; A costly rod, A patent float, A gaudy fiy, A cast and swish; A pretty sight, But nary fish! Well, Well! I dyed ALL these 1. DIFFERENT KINDS Cetin of Goods wt ----------=e" With the SAME Dye. Ny SO CLEAN and SIMPLE to Use, NO chance of using the WRONG Dye for the Goods one has to color, Alflcolors from your Drugrist or Dealer, FREE Color Card and STORY Booklet 10, The Johnson-Richardson Co,, Limited, Montreal, | Eibatnartet rte 0 evpaanavonmapsengunemansanl Canada Business College CHATHAM, In a_class by itself? Among America's Schools of Business Training. 414 STUDENTS PLACED IN 1903 385 STUDENTS PLACED IN 1909 475 STUDENTS PLACED tN 1910 We publish the lists annually. We pay full fare up to $8.00, and bring long distance students for half fare, Good board and room, $38.00 per week. If you cannot come to Chatham, we can train you by mail. Here are some students ged recently: Nato Wado, Cameron & Heap, Regina. B. Burk, Nicholson & Batn, Roxiun. H, Wood, Trust Co,, Cheboygan, Mich, Fight calle just received for Btenograph- ers, "eachers, and Audivers, for openings worth from $600 to $150, will give you somo idea of the demands, COLLECE REOPENS FOR STH YEAR SEPTEMBER 5TH. Catalogue 33 tells of work at Chatham, Catalogue 34 tells of work by mail (Kitber Free.) ONT. _ 0, MCLACHLAN & CO. c. Be artes, | Chatham he.