At no time in her life does a girl w#stand in greater need of pure red * blood and the strength which it _ alone can give her, than when she is developing into womanhood. It is then that any inherited tendenâ€" & cJ to anaemia or consumption Bieoseds only the slightest encourageâ€" ent to rapidly develop. _ This anger is especially threatening to irls who are confined long hours idoors, in stores, offices and facâ€" tesâ€"girls depressed by worry w and cares. All these conditions _quickly impoverish the blood and Next to saying you are jealous, & girl would rather have you tell her she inspires you to noble things. _A"Fhe woman that maketh a good pudding in silence is better than she who maketh a tart reply. It is at a time like this that Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills are invaluâ€" able to young women and growing girls. They build up the blood, make it rich, red and pure, tone the nerves and give new hbealth and strength to every part of the !?dy. They have cured so many ses of this kind that they may truly be called a specific for the common diseases of girlhood. Miss Minnie Smith, Crefghton street, Halifax, says:â€"‘"I have proved that Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills are all that is claimed for them in cases. similar to mine. About three years ago I suddenly began to run down. ( I grew so weak that I could hardly attend to my school studies. I sufâ€"l fered from headaches, my heart would palpitate violently at the‘ least exertion, and my appetite was very fickle. I tried doctors‘ medicine and emulsions, but the treatment did not help me. Then I started taking Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills and ‘after taking seven or eight boxes I was stronger than ever before. I feel that I owe my present good health to Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills, and gratefully recommend them to other ailing girls."" Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills are sold by all medicine dealers or will be sent by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 by The Dr. Wilâ€" loiams’ Medicine Co., Brockville, nt. PALE, LANGUID GIRLS are among the most common causâ€" €s of sickness among growing girls and young women. If at any time a& girl finds that her strength is failing and she is becoming pale and nervous, has no ambition and is languid, itb is a certain sign that ber blood is failing to meet the deâ€" mands upon it, because it is imâ€" pure and thin. A Tonic Such as Dr. Williawms‘ Pink Pills is Needed to Build Up the Blocd and Give Now Strength, Llibby, MeReSl & Libby Ciicago Cooked Cornesd Beef Peorless Rrieqd Beef Veal Loaf Evaporates Mili Baked Bears : Chow Chow Mixed Pickies Write for free booklet,â€"‘*‘How to make Good Things to Eat‘"‘. Insist on £7/&&y*"s at your grocers. Other popular, readyâ€"toâ€"setve Libby Pure Foods are:â€" S2ge just suits for breakfast, is fine for luncheon and satisfies at dinner or supper. Like all of Libby‘s Food Products it is careâ€" fully cooked and prepared, ready toâ€"serve, in LEiG&By‘s G@reat White Kitecihkermâ€" the cleanest, most scientific kitchen in the world. _ Is distinctly diferent from any other sausage you ever tasted. Just try one can and it is sure to become a mealâ€"time necessity, to be served at frequent intervals. 'Eak Blood During Developâ€" ment May Easily Cause _ _ a Life of Suffering. LibGkhy‘s Vienna Seamsage Libby‘s Viensa Sauâ€" SELE1SH. The boots come from Northampâ€" ton and Kettering chiefly, but not one pair is accepted till they have been examined by an expert, who is held personally responsible for the quality of the articles. Gloves are also made outside, and some of them, such as the buckskin gloves of the crack regiments, are made in the historic town of Woodâ€" stock. The shirts are cut and sent sut to be made up, and the hose and other worsted goods are partly made by poor Itrishwomen who deâ€" pend on home industries for the Thus throughout the building the work of examination goes on alongâ€" side that of manufacture, so that Tommy may not only be amply but well clad. The work is really tailâ€" aring, however; that is to say, its productive side is mainly engaged in making coats and trousers for the soldiers, and of these, working the normal day, 2,000 complete suits can be turned out. The other articles are distributed among those who accept Army contracts. TWO THOUSAND SUITS A DAY Each web of cloth is also unrolled before an examiner, who goes over every yard with the utmost care to seek out any flaws which may exist. No shoddy is accepted, and the slightest defects or deviations from pattern or specification are regardâ€" ed as ample justification for the reâ€" jection of the piece.. When it has been submitted to all the tests, however, and found satisfactory, it is stamped on every square yard with the official mark and passed n to the cutters. portant part of the work is the inâ€" spection of the raw _ material brought in to be worked up, and of the finished articles which are deâ€" livered at the factory to be distriâ€" buted. Not a yard of cloth is 46 cepted on trust. _ Every plece is subjected to several tests to prove its quality. There are machines on which small pieces are broken to ascertain the strength of the maâ€" terial ; and other apparatus for testing the permanence of the color. uniform varies from just over £10 10s. to less than £3, according to the regiment in which he may be serving. For instance, the arnual tailor‘s bill for the rank and file in the Life Guards is just over £7, while in the infanty of the line it is under £3. TESTING THE CLOTH. At the Army Clothing Departâ€" ment at Pimlico many hundreds of workers, chiefly women and girle, are employed in turning out soldiâ€" ers‘ suits. Apart from the mere making of the clothes the most imâ€" ONE MILLION A YEAR. Even in the piping times ot peace Tommy Atkins‘s tailor‘s bill would make a millionaire poor in a year. Roughly speaking, it costs £1,000,â€" 000 ever year to clothe the British Army. The headgear of the troops, embracing everything from a simâ€" ple cap to a bearskin helmet, exâ€" kausts nearly £50,000, and boots, shoes, and leggings, which are purâ€" chased readyâ€"made, cost nearly £2_50,000. The cost of a soldier‘s From April Ist last the British soldier was clothed on an entirely different system to what has preâ€" vailed for so many years, and the innovation will probably be a great deal more satisfactory to the rank and file. Every man will receive his free outfit on enlistment as heretofore, but will be required to provide his personal clothing and necessaries out of an allowance creâ€" dited to him quarterly in advance. Irstead of his present kit allowance ol twopence a day after six months‘ service, he will receive at the end of his first year a lump sum equivaâ€" lent to the accumulated twopences in addition to the separate clothâ€" ing allowance. The maintenance of kit and clothâ€" ing will be a matter between the soldier and his commanding officer. It is intended that the prosent arâ€" bitrary periods of wear allotted to each garment shall be abolished ; under the old system a pair of trouâ€" sers might be serviceable toâ€"day and "timeâ€"expired‘‘ toâ€"morrow. Trousers are the most costly item it the soldier‘s wardrobe, and for their nether garments last year tho nation had to pay no less a sum than £73,278. And this reowlls the fact that it is less than ninety years since the British Army first put on its trousersâ€"that the British infanâ€" try soldier, that is to say, first subâ€" stituted trousers for the oldâ€"fashâ€" ioned knee breeches. It will astonish most people to Ee told that the British Governâ€" ment, in addition to being a maker of laws, is the greatest tailor in the world. The Army Clothing Factory at Pimlico is the biggest tailor‘s shop in England. Last year Tommy Atkins‘s tailor‘s bill amounted to £355,975. â€" During the Boer War the clothing of the Army cost nearâ€" ly £5,000,000, says London Titâ€"Bits. THE ARMY TAILOR‘S BILL Two Thousand Suits Can be Turned _ _ Out in a Normal Working Day. ‘ GREAT CLOTHING FA‘CTORY AT _ PIMLICO, ENGLAND. NEW RULES FOR TOMMY. The girl who knows how to make good biscuit and cream gravy selâ€" dom knows how to carry on a flirtaâ€" tion. ‘‘¥es, they make a splendid smudge to keep the mosquitoes away.‘"‘ Mike had only secently been made foreman, but he knew the reâ€" spect due to his rank. "Finnegan, ‘ he said to an argumentative assistâ€" ant, ‘‘ll have nawthing out of ye but silenceâ€"and mighty little o‘ that!*" Kindly mertion the name of this paper in writing to advertisers. "At last I‘ve found a use for those cigars my wife gave me last Christmas."" ‘You have?"‘ "Ves. â€" they â€" maka = â€"anlanaid Wilson‘s Fly Pads, the best of all fly killers, kill both the flies and the discase germs. _ Collector (warmly): ‘"I‘ve been here a dozen times, sir, and I posiâ€" tively won‘t call again |!"‘ Mr. Poorpay (cheerfully): ‘"Oh, come now, my man, don‘t be so superstitiâ€" ous about making the thirteenth call; nothing will happen, I assure you. FOR RHEUMATISMâ€"it is not necessary to go to Hot Springs. Just use "The D. & L " Menthor Plasters and results will be satisfactory. 25c at druggists. Davis & Lawrence Company, manuâ€" facturers. ‘Tis a Marvellous Thing.â€"When the cures effected by Dr. Thoma~ Eclectric Oil are considered, the speedy and permanent relief it has brought to the suffering wherever it has been used, it must be reâ€" garded as a marvellous thing that so potent a medicine should result from the six simple ingredient:> which enter into its composition. A trial will convince the most skepâ€" tical of its healing virtues. How an English Teacher â€" Drove Home a Moral Lesson.â€" The simple manner in which a moral lesson can be conveyed to the mind of a child was delightfully deâ€" monstrated recently at the house of Mrs. Eric Hambro, London, Engâ€" land. The children sat round a slightly raised platform with their backs to the audience. Mr. Gould, with the aid of a blackboard, comâ€" menced straightway to take them into his confidence. ‘"I am going to draw a map,‘""‘ said Mr. Gould, with a smile ; "and I wonder if you can name the countryâ€"I wonder :‘ It was a crude outline, but thir teen hands went up simultaneously. "India!‘‘ came a chorus of thin voices. ."‘And the religion of the people?‘ ‘"‘They are Mahometans." And there and then he told a story of Jelal, the Mahometan teacher, who bowed acknowledgment to a‘ street child that had bowed to him.. ‘‘Now, what trait had the great Jelal displayed in bowing to thuat child?‘ _ Thirteen children â€" made thirteen guesses, but the word that expressed the situation was not ramed. ‘‘Never mind," said M: Gould; "it will oecur to you proâ€" sently,""‘ and with charming tact he commenced to relate a story of a gentleman who, while traveling in a Parisian railway carriage with a number of miners, was asked if he objected to their smoking. He reâ€" plied in the negative, although sut fering from a bronchial affeâ€"tion. ‘‘Any way, the miners put away their pipes,"‘ the storyâ€"teller pro ceeded. ‘"Now, what had they shown t‘ ‘"Respect,""‘ came the anâ€" swer in a flash. â€"Then back the children were taken to India and the story of Jelal. They saw the point, and so at the end of twelve minutes a great lesson had been taught in the simplest of ways. So by storyâ€"telling Mr. Gouird built up ‘‘a golden ladder‘‘ of reâ€" spectâ€"respect to a child. an invaâ€" lid, a teacher, other nations, other religions and to animals. The Department deals with amazâ€" ing quantities of material. The stocks are never allowed to run low and it is always possible at a moâ€" ment‘sâ€"notico to equip 15,000 to 20,000 men with the articles in hand. But the productive capacity of the establishment is very great, and a week‘s work would represent the provision of clothing and kit for 12,000 men. augmentation of their meagre stanâ€" dard ‘of living. : > s TEACHING BY STORIES. ISSUE NO. 32â€"09. A USE FOR THEM Kirdly mention the nam» of this paper in writing to advertisers. A code of hand signals, which appears to be something similar to the "ticâ€"tac‘‘ operations of _ the racecourse tout, has been adopted by the Edinburgh Fire Brigade. It is supposed to be the only brigâ€" ade to be in possession of such a system. The uses are apparent when a fireman finds himself isoâ€" lated in the upper part of, say a tall tenement. Leaning out of the winâ€" dow he could signal to his colleaâ€" gues in the â€"street that the fireâ€" escape was required, or that anâ€" other line of hose should be brought into use. Then, again, a fireman posted on the roof could signal beâ€" low that another steamer should be telephoned for, or, perhaps, a seeâ€" ond hoseâ€"tender, under â€" cireumâ€" stanmes when the loudest shout would be without avail. There is nothing equal to Moâ€" ther Graves‘ Worm Exterminator for destroying worms. No article of its kind has given such »satisâ€" faction. "What is it, madam?‘ asked the man behind the desk in a servants‘ registry office. ‘"I want a cook, ‘ explained the lady, "and I want her bad.‘""‘ ‘"Quite simple, madam," the clerk assured her. ‘‘We have nc other kind." Impurities of the Blood Counterâ€" acted.â€"Impurities in the_ blood come from defects in the action of the liver. They are revealed by pimples and unsightly blothes on t‘e skin. They must be treated inwardly, and for this purpose there is no more effective compound to be used than Parmelee‘s Vegeâ€" table Pills. They act directly on the liver and by setting up healâ€" thy processes have a beneficial efâ€" fect upon the blood, so that impuriâ€" ties are eliminated. It takes an expert female shopper to get rid of a dollar‘s worth of enâ€" ergy in an attempt to save 2 cents. clean ??‘ _ ‘‘Yes‘m,""‘ he answered, still climbing the stairs, ‘"‘it‘s only me shoes that‘s dirty." The grocer‘s boy was lumbering up the kitchen stairway with ns arms full of packages. ‘‘Boy,"" said the mistress of the house somewhat sharply, ‘"are your feet Don‘t experiment with unsatisâ€" factory substitutes. Wilson‘s Fly Pads kill many times more house flies than any other known article. ‘Young man,‘‘ said the successâ€" ful old guy, "I started as a clerk on $3 a week and toâ€"day I own my cwn business." "I know,"‘ answered the Young Chap, ‘"but they have cash regisâ€" ters in all the stores now." Used according to directions, Dr. J. D. Kellogg‘s Dysentery Cordial will afford relief in the most acute form of summer complaint. Whenâ€" ever the attack manifests itself no time should be lost in seeking the aid of the Cordial. It will act imâ€" mediately on the stomach and inâ€" testines and allay. the irritation and pain. A trial of it will conâ€" vince anyone of the truth of theso assertions. ‘‘My lazy son has at last decided on a profession that he thinks he‘ll like," "‘Good. What has he chosen t‘ ‘He wants to be a lineman for a wireless telegraph company." Mrs. Guzzleâ€"(head out of the second story window)â€"‘"Are you sober ?"° Guzzleâ€"‘‘Yes." Mrs. Guzzleâ€"‘‘Then say ‘reciproâ€" city"" FIREMEN‘S HAND SIGNAL ID WE dorsh Turine Affords Reliable Relief to Eyes that Need ‘ave. ‘Try Muring Eyo Romedy in Your Eyes. t Soothes Eye Pain. Guzzle (after he had succeeded waking his wife)â€"‘"Open. the Surprising hoew quickly it eases the smerting and stinging ! Cures sores on young babies due to chafing. _ _ _ pa~ Zamâ€"Buk is made from pure herbal essences. No animal fatsâ€" o mineral poisons. â€"Finest healer! _ When troubled with sunâ€" burn, blisters, insect stings, sore feet, or heat rashes, apply Zemâ€"Buk! _ _ THE TEST OF SOBRIETY A Tomestlo Eyq Râ€"medy. NO LONGER POSSIBLE !7) Druggists and Steres everywhere, REFORMED The Greatâ€"West Life Assurance Sompany Holloway‘s Corn Cure is the} medicine to remove all kinds of| corns and warts, and only costs the | small sum of tw‘entyâ€"ï¬vedcéhï¬ â€˜â€˜Your daughter! Is it possible 1 Why, you look more Hike twin sisâ€" ters!‘‘ remarked a lady who posâ€" sessed a barbed tongue. ‘‘No; I assure you, she is my only daughâ€" ter,‘‘ replied the pleased mother. And the lady remarked : ‘‘Well, sho certainly looks old enough to be your sister !"‘ $5,045,738 Ask our Agents for Annual Report and Re guard against the anonymous letter distributor blackmailing journalists, with whom we do nc BRANCH OFFICES.â€"Toronto, Montreal, Halifax, St. John, N. B Charloitfstowna, Yaâ€"couver, Calgary, and Fargo, N. D. BICYCLISTS, young or old, should alâ€" ways carry a bottle of Painkiller in their saddle bags. It cures cuts and wounds with wonderful quickness. Avoid substiâ€" tutes, there is but one " Painkiller "â€" Perry Davis‘â€"25¢ and 50¢. ‘I understand that young man has quit calling on you ?‘ "How do you know ?‘ ‘‘Because he‘s calling on me." HER INFORMATION ACCURATE .The microscope in the hands of experts employed by the‘ Urited States Government has revealed the fact that a house fly sometimes carâ€" rios thousands of_ disease germs sttaohed to its hairy body. _ The continuous use of Wilson‘s Fly Pads will prevent all danger of inâ€" fection from that source by killing Loth the germs and the flies. Faultless in Preparation.â€"Unâ€" like any other stomach regulator, Parmeleo‘s Vegetable Pills are the result of long study of vegetable compounds calculated to stimulate the stomachic functions and mainâ€" tain them atb the normal condition. Years of use have proved their faultless character and established their excellent reputation. _ And this reputation they have mainâ€" tained for years and will continue to maintain, for these pills must alâ€" ways stand at the head of the list of standard preparations. Heâ€"‘"So you‘ve read my new novel. How did you like it?‘ Sheâ€""I laid down the volume with intense pleasure." The ardent controversy which has been waging in England and America concerning the best way to dispose of school â€"boys in the long summer vacation has promptâ€" ed the Grand Trunk Railway Sysâ€" tem to issue a special publication giving suggestions and practical hints to parents, as to what to do with the public and preparatory school boy during the months of July and August. The vacation camp is ore of the solutions and the publication entitled, ‘‘What shall a Boy do with his Vacation‘‘ thoroughly covers the ground and solves the problem of the best way for a schoolboy to enjoy his holiâ€" days. A copy may be obtained for the asking by applying to Mr. J. D. McDonald. ‘"‘They say he‘s proud of his new baby." "Proud! I should say he is. Ho actually believes that something has occurred in his family that no other family has ever experienced." Primeval Dwellings 5,000 Years Old, ~ ‘Beneath Euphrates. y= The most ancient walls of Baby: lon were construoted of sunâ€"burnt brick, scarcely distinguishable from the closely packed earth, and ;s idea can be obtained of the=ektreme difficulty of the work ofâ€"éxcavation. FThe â€"oldest Babylonian houses which hbhave been uncoveredâ€" thenmsélves | rest on rubbish heaps and ruins, | but deeper diggings is impossible ; ewing to the fact that water levéli has been reached. The Euphrates| cbhannel has silted up several metâ€" res during the past 5,000 years, and the primeval dwellings are now beâ€" low it. While we were standing at the bottom of one of these pits a workman struck out with his pick the little heap of ornaments, a couâ€" ple of copper bracelets and the beads of a necklace that had beon worn by some Babylonian woman in the third millenium before Christ, | and were restored at last to tbe‘ light of the sun. BABYLON‘S ANCIENT WALLS. RECORND FOR 1908 HAPPY ENDING BOY‘S HOLIDAYS. PROUD HEAD OFFICE Annual Repc‘)'r‘r{ and Record for 1908, and be CAIN IN BUSINESS IH FORCE IN CANAQYA. Twenty acres (bwo blocks) firstâ€"olass .Koobezr frait hnx,all slashed, adjointng Castlegar Junoble and townsite, close 80 depot, raflrud'lronb&i levelland, good soil, abunSance of water, scho store ; good boating, fishing, hunting ; an excelle: location: no gophers here. See this at once. 4 : A. HIRST, Owner, Castlegar Junction, British Columbla, Affiliated with the University of Tor control of the Dept. of Agriculture of C opens Ist October, 1909. Course of throu,h 3 colleza years. FEES PER 8 Calendar on application. E. A. A. GRANGE, V.S., M.S . Prin NZ ~town to take orders for best custom m clothes in Canada. Highost commission. â€" J Tailoring Co., Toronto. _ BRITISHâ€"~AMERIOAN DYEING OQ& TEMPERANCE ST., TORONTO, CAW Established 1882, taken over by the Provinola) Government of @ntarle, 1903. QARPET DYEING â€"Long after forgiving an inpity ® woman keeps trying toforget that she has forgiven it. & t Ontario Veterinary Collego WE GivE FRE: BAMPLE: CASE To day such investors, knowâ€" ing the merits of our Canadian bonds, knowing that they are fractional mortgagesâ€"representâ€" ing a larger mortgage secured through a Trust Companyâ€"are making a distribution of their interests. An ideal division of surplus funds, we might suggest, would be=â€"a morltgageâ€"a muntâ€" cipal dektentureâ€"a railroad or public utility bondâ€"an approyâ€" ed bond of a manufacturing concern. â€"Safety â€"Issuss recommentod by us ars purchased only after rlgld Investigation by experts, â€"Cood interest return. â€"Prompt and regrlar payment of interest ; coupons will be cashed at your bankers. â€"Long investmentâ€" bonds run from one to thirty years. â€"No expense for investigation. â€"Readily marketable. â€"Can be used as bank collateral. Bonds afford a number of amportant adrantages over mort gages. amony which might be mentioned > HFirst Morlgages on farm proâ€" perty formerly made the favored form of investment to persons of limited means._ To many, an issue of bonds was mot well unâ€" derstood. : $ We offer the services of our orgamization for assistance in selecting your investmeuts. CORPORATION, LIMITED 26 KINGSTREET EAST, TORONTO Rend particulars by post and we are suro to sa/infy. Adgress Box 168, Mantrodk . WRITE for CBTALOGUE DOMINION SECURITIES Standard Canadian Bonds have long been important assets of our Financial Institutions, of large Estates and of indiâ€" vidua‘s of wealth. S<> ~* $6,045,738 IN SELECTING INVESTMEN TS INCLUBE SCME NE RELIABEE MAN WANTED IN EVE Desk A, 75 Adwlzide is Eask, 'roxmvm, Cim Some Rallroad bonds yield 5 to 5}%. Some Utillity bontus ylield 4} to 6}%. fome approved sonds of Manufacturing Companies yield 5 to 6%. aed Oleaning. This is a specialty with the WINNIPEC. or and his frsiernds, the not advertise. ACENTS WANTED, FOR SALE. University of Toronto. under i qfl"égrioglture of Ontaria. Coll _ Course of stuiy extendg FEES PER SHKSS1ON 875‘.%‘. « M.S . Principal. Dept. B Make $3 a Day and estal> lish pernanent busine s3 o our capital. Our class geois sell on s in every Rome, are qul used up and repert 911 come fast. Exclusive ritory given. Trx Hom® BUPPLY C@, Dept. 50, Torcato, 08M HORSES ASGENTS Treatmeint for al Allmonta of E6G..08 wen am We MEN.