l & . fee Have You Ever Thousht of This? â€"That a Cup of There is a time in the autumn, genâ€" erally October, when the male moose may suddenly rush upon anyone out in the woods with the greatest fury, especially if the rerson is making a noise in the underbrush; but stories of moose attacking people at any other time may, almost without exception, be set down as romances, although of ecourse a moose badly wounded or drivâ€" en to bay in deep snow often shows T B A. BE81 prOpe'rly infused, is one of Nature‘s greatest blessings as a harmless stimulating beverage. 1 1 heard Halse said was drowne fear from his h« i’iw forth wher itten by ancthe +_ With that my 'h»rledfround, & dry fir | ‘&rwy me. “‘C « 9 I mg:ilx}odmr:yhleq and started to xun myself, . hearing H‘mul out egein, turned back. His ..-?'3 | Rquealing mmmni and, blending | with ite cries, came the hoarse bellowâ€" â€˜ï¬ of its assailant. $ could gee them but dimly. Both als were among brush bukxwï¬: fjoad. At one Ms mm | Â¥hen nprearing, as if in combat. !i was afraid that Halse was under going, and after this fashion covered » or more. â€" Dusk was fafl.mf in1 #! hadows of the dense and silent spruce woods. 1 could now s\arc:?f #ee Halstead a hundred feet ahead, but 1 could hear his harness rattling. Quite without warning a frightful bellow, which was half a squeal and had in it a fiendish intonation of rage, burst on our ears from the fll’g growth of at our left, followed by & l?%stgwuf th’]under‘rowth and a rush! ard Halse shout, but what he eaid was drowned in a shrill cry of #esr from his horseâ€"the note horses ive forth when wounded, or when !‘mm by another horse. § whivrled round, scratched me through &m-v fir xqg ?sub the trail and re~.3 me. € brute stepped partly n my foot as 1 came down and, breakâ€" ing away, boited back down the road. them to hi to him, although little could be heard above n}o constant . bloodâ€"curdling soueals of the horse. Suddealy Halstead plumped against me on his hands and knees. He, too, had been thrown into the brush, and he Waylaid in the Great Woods , and stole forward, calling ou m. although kflo ï¬ldhw own horse snorted 1 Tie® his horse had backed over him; but he was not much hurt, except for a scratched face, and had crawled back into the road. es . The other horse, the one 1 had ridden, was found the next day at the clearing of one of the French settlers, four miles down the "winter Judging from the size and spread of its antlers, the moose that had wayâ€" laid us was an old male; and the loggers believed that it was the clatter and rattle of the hames that had led him to nush forth and attack us. EASIER FOR HER TO DYE THAN TO BUY "Diamond Dyes" Turn Faded, Shabby Apparel Into New. Don‘t worry about perfect results Use "Diamond Dyes," guaranteed to give a new, rich, fadeless color to any tabric, whether it be woo!, silk, linen, eotton or mixed goods â€"â€" dresses, blouses, stockings, skirts, children‘s coats, feathers, draperies, coverings, â€"everything! The Direction Book with each packâ€" age tells how to diamond dye over any eolor. To match any material, have dealer sbhow yen "Diamond Dye" Color Card . In ancient Rome domesticated osâ€" irighes were sometimes used by woâ€" men of the nobility for riding On one occasion the Emperor Helioâ€" gabulus had the braings of 600 ostriches served up in a single dish at a feast. that bee Minard‘s Liniment Relioves . Kenraigia Fow picnic purposes a folding tablel at has a shelf beneath the top has ep patented. | Ostriches in Rome rhting for its life, squéalâ€" from fear. What seemed ppeared unable to break early as we could discern ering duck, the two aniâ€" heek by jow!, fighting to At one moment they in the gloom, as if rearâ€" hind legs; then both fell indering through the dry never for an instant did ts awiul outeries. us hed now much doubt a moose; but we had no »d not venture near. Goâ€" : combatants, on the other ad, we started to summon h ve went on, & longâ€" ild be heard; and found when they he lantern was the oose!" Halse exâ€" He‘s killing that ertainiy _ nave outcries. The cription, and in i by the loggers 1¢ Agam; 1t cuts and received ecovered e course have TsE hne Wonderful advances have been made in dentistry in the last century. We are told that the Empress Joseâ€" phine lost all her teeth, which may perbhaps account for Napoleon‘s cooling affection. But with all our advances in knowledge the examinations of drafted men showed that many bunâ€" dreds bad overlooked the attention which good teeth demand. Not only that, but a glance at the teeth of a large percentage of the people we meet, adults and children as well, shows that the doctrine of proper nuâ€" trition for the growing children, and daily use of the tooth brusb, needs more emphasis. When shall 1 begin cleaning mMY baby‘s teeth?"". inguires a younE mother. The day after he cuts the first one, is none too early. For in that way yOU establish a habit which is absolutely essential to his best physical developâ€" ment. Without sound teeth no one can be at his best physically, for perâ€" fect health depends upon perfect diâ€" gestion, and the first step in digestion is thorough masticationâ€"chewingâ€"of the food. Proper food for teeth making should not stop with the second year, howâ€" ever. Growing children are cutting teeth at pretty much every stage of their development. At five or six the baby teeth drop out and the permanâ€" ent set appears. _ During all these months the diet should be carefully watched. Milk should still form a large part of the diet, a quart a day is none too much, and eggs are valuable, too. If milk and eggs are not playing a large part in the daily dietary, feed brown bread instead of white for its mineral content. If the child is getâ€" ting plenty of milk and eggs, white bread will be sufficient. Cutting teeth does not stop at six or seven. There is that period from ten to twelve, and even later, when the child loses the first ."double" teeth ard gets his permanent ones. He should be fed generously on boneâ€" making materials, brown bread, beef or mutton once a day, still plenty of milk and eggs, potatoes, fruits, includâ€" ing oranges and prunes which are rich in bonemaking properties, oatmeal, beans, dried peas, turnips, parsnips, carrots, peanute, walnuts and the green leafy vegetables, lettuce, enâ€" Aive â€" sninach. greens of all kinds, necessary for proper bonemaking is found in the milk he drinks,. As be approaches and enters the second year this may be supplemented by e°€8 yoik, which is rich in phosphorus, In the latter part of the second year cooked green vegetables, such as spinach, asparagus tips, young beets and carrots, thoroughly cooked and strained, heip in the supply of minerâ€" als. Of course, the twoâ€"yearâ€"old will receive wellâ€"cooked cereals and fruit juice daily. As the teeth begin to come the child should be given hard toast, crackers or zweiback to chew. This will help develop strong jaws and teeth and teach him to masticate his food well. If the child is to have good strong teeth to start with, he must be fed properly. The teeth are composed of substances similar to bone and need plenty of boneâ€"making material. For the infant the lime and phosphorus Having fed the growing child the proper food to make good teeth, the next important step is to see that he keeps them clean. Teach bim at the earliest possible age to clean them thoroughly at least night and morning with a brush and water. A good tooth paste helps, but clear water is better than nothing. Do not buy every dentiâ€" frice you see advertised, as many which are the most highly advertised are injurlous to the teeth. Ask your dentist what to use. Teach the child to brush the teeth downward with straight, firm strokes. This is the best way to remove the particles of food from between the teeth. Brush inside and out and don‘t be afraid to brush the tongue. Finish with gargling the throat well and rinsâ€" ing the mouth thoroughly. After each meal clean the particles of food out from between the teeth. For this use a bit of dental floss, or if you absolutely cannot get this, use & good quill or wooden toothpick. Never use a pin or any hard substance which will injure the enamel. And above all do not let the child bite threads, or try to crack nuts with the teeth. Teeth are intended for but one purpose, masticating food. . _ If there is no time to bake an €laâ€" !Immle cake, and you are unwilling to | let your child‘s birthday anniversary ' poss without observing the timeâ€" honâ€" ored candle custom. try the plan of Take the child to a reliable dentist every year and have the teeth thorâ€" oughly examined. This will cost you a dollar a vieit, probably, but it will save you hundreds of dollars in later life. Don‘t say you can‘t afferd it. Let him go without something else, a toy, or the cheap candy you buy when you go to town. You spend many times the two dollars two trips to the dentist would cost, for things he is beiter off without. Cut out those things and look after his teeth Has Individual Birthday Cakes s pi etc. Your Child Good omans i [* fï¬}gggpe &i have been Teeth? decorating small cookies baked muffin pans. Give them an easily made icing ol confectioner‘s . sugar, moistened with cream and flavored with vanilla. Wwith red candy pellets make a border on the icing. Place a candle on each cooky. When the cakes are placed on a platter and the candles lighted, the effect is altogether pleasing. The novelty of the individual birthâ€" day cake will appeal to the child, and call forth an enthusiastic appreciation. If deposited at3% will amount to $697.78; If invested at 4%, interest comâ€" pounded quarterly, will RMOULDt to .............. ... $744.20 But If invested in our 5)/4% Dobentuge will amount to. . $860.20) rite for Booklet. It isn‘t hard to tell the truth. The difficulty is to get the truth believed â€"Lord Grey. «l-tflg;â€";lse to take the heaviest burâ€" den and expect the lightest reward.â€" Mr. H. W. Massingham. 2 The world would be an even less peaceable place than it is if everybody wanted the top of the ladder.â€"Mr. Kennedy Jones. % If a man were to say that be was alâ€" ways accurate, he would show that he had commited his first inaccuracy.â€" Lord Moulton. I_&B;l'i like to talk to more than two men at a timeâ€"or one girl. â€"General Pershing. The pessimi underâ€"always dread in life Leverhuime. ‘There are no moments deeper in unâ€" happiness in the life of a judge than when he has to sentence a woman.â€"â€" Mr. Justice McCardie. The mistake women hbave always made is that they teil men they are the stronger sex, knowing in their hearts that it is not trueâ€"â€"Lady Asâ€" tor, M.P. In Ten Years 500 Dollars Edinburgh University has 500 women medical students The most precious 1DNg world is brains. _â€"__â€" Loan Com Toronto Office 2 Bulk Carlots TORONTO SALT WORKS G. J. CLIFF » TORONTO The Great West Permanent COARSE SALT L AN D â€" SALT ‘s Liniment for sale every where Random Remarks. amest mt 7 2 { Doctor / > ce / \\ | said that Pok $ \ K a SR Fils * i\ \ A the Far N [ /q _Aw: asted his “ 324 eA a want 0 P ; sAE mat themâ€" TORONTO always gets snowed The things we most never bappen.â€"Lord Vour heat, light and power needs are best served with Imperial Royalite Coal Oil. Every drop is clean, powerful and absolutely uniform. Imperial Royalite gives you the highest fuel satisfaction and costs no more than ordinary coal oil. Imperial Royalite Coal Oil meets every test of a perfect oil, allows you full power from tractor or stationary engine. Used in oil heaters and stoves, it burns cleanâ€"no smoke or sbotâ€"and it‘s best for oil lamps, too. You can get Royalite everywhere when you want it. Our unlimited means of distribution assures that. No coal oil is better than Imperial Royalite, so why pay higher prices? ' ng St. West HIGH GRADE OIL AT LEAST COST nearly The two the n Dpoctor Kane, the Arctic explorer, said that one of the worst curses in ‘he Far Norih were the rate that inâ€" asted his ship. Nevertheless, when a want of other food, he was glad to cat themâ€"sometimes chopped up and frozen into tallow balls, He wrote: "During the long winter night Mans beguiled his hours of watch by shooting rats with bow and arrow. â€" The repugrance of my comâ€" ‘asted his ship. a want of other cat themâ€"somet frozen into tallo® panrions to share with me this lable luxury gave me frequent advantage of fresh meat soup, which contributed no doubt to my comparative immunity to scuryy." The Bodyâ€"Dbutlding Fower of Bouril ha proved by wnde penden! umul{c axperi to be from 10 to 20 times he amou to be fr0m BOVRIL 72 At Your Service Rats as Food. Use Bovril in your cooking. Itflavours, enâ€" riches, nourishes more. Forestail Colds, Chills and Influenza me V Tubge t pender! umu{{c axperiments to 20 times the amoun! of Boury laken. Take Cleaning and Dyeing ngx Clothing or Household Fabrics The woman in town, or couniry, bas the same advantage as her sister in the city in erpert advice from the bestknown fArm of Cleaners and Dyers in Canada. Paercele from the couniry seni by mail or express receive the same careful attention as work delivered personally. For yeare, the name of "Parker‘s" has @#ignified perfection in this work of making old things look like new, whether personal garments of even the most fragile material, or house hold curtains, draperies, rugs, etc. Write to us for further particalare or send your parcels direct to I.Yonge St. e Works Limited raners & Dyers Wherever You Live. The feltow who watches the «lock is likely to remain one of the "hands." Phoenecians were the first people to communicate to other people a knowledge of other lands. BABY‘S OWN SOAP In the interest of your ski es tE ue C â€" db "Rest jor batyâ€"best for you." Mu.‘oumlw.m».@ Toronto One day & teacher on ber way + school saw a young woman who live next door to her standing @absorh» before a shop window in which color« parasols were displayed. The teacho? spoke to her twice before she got ar answer, and even then the reply wo the quite irrelevant remark, "I belies, that lavendar parasol is Just the shavse of mother‘s new foulard!" "Â¥our mother‘s new foulard?" :1 teacher repeated. "Why, you haver geen it!" Mother and daughter h not met for years. "No," replied the other, "I haver geen it, but I bave a sample of it th mother sent me. I‘m sure it is is that shade. 1 it is, I shall get 1 parasol for her." _ "But," the teacher suggesied haps your mother already has a j sol like ber dress." "No, she carries ber old black 184 whiteâ€"striped parasol when she weas her lavepdar foulard, but the wh stripes have turned a bit yellow. T« lavendar one will be just the thing. i it is the right shade. She can us with ber gray muslin, too; whe wea that to cburch on warm Sundays "How do you know all thes« things?" the teacher @eked. "Why from letters, 1 write ino a week to mother, and she writes n« a week to me. It is the way we kee) together. You see, when 1 married . Novo Scotian I knmew that | shou‘ probably live in Nova Scotia the res of my life. Father and mother hove always lived in Ontarto, and very | )« ly always will, None of us can ator to travel back and forth very 0|« so the only way we can keep toge !» is by writing leiters frequently is regularly." The parasol did turn out to be . the right shade, and the young won bought it. A few months rater it hs, pened that her mother was able to pa ber an unexpected visit. On the ver day that she arrived the daughie» one servant left without notice 1 bher dificulty the young wom> thought of her neighbor and frien the teacher. ‘Could you possibly go to the (ra to imeet imy motbher?" she #rix anxiously. "Her train is due * !« fortyâ€"five. 1 must stay and take c of the children, and Henry can‘t es his office. Could you go*" "Of course; your mother has : seen me, but 1 think I shall know from her photograph." "Mother will know you, too. frow your photograph. 1 sent her the on« you gave me, to Jook &t." The train was on time, and :« teacher easily recognized ber frien{ s mother. On the way up from the tion the older woman said: "I thought that servant would leaving. I‘m not surprised. 1| c judge from little things in Mary‘s ters that she was face to face with servant problem." As they neared the bow lady quickened her steps. " she said. "The pictures of | good. And there are the Mary has grown from the sent her from our garden! window is in the reom th have. She sent me a plan « when she moved into it." Frequent letters! Regula: Letters full of the small, swee ly, intimate details that mak much of life! A family canno live in one house, or eve town or province, but i keep together, Love w gether, but love must be active. The dear intin mother and daughter, made up of litttle thing daughter marries or le earn her living, she nee: that intimacy; she ca by hber letters. The hbotâ€"water fountains of !« are on mounts averaging seve! high, the top of which forms (n« of a sort of basin. From this basin steam can » rising, and bot water runs o edge. The water, although | is as clear as crysial, and one « to a great depth into an abyss. incrustations under the water j a pretty picture. . Occasionall boiling water will shoot up into Afteen feet high, and this is {c by a euccession of jets, Bometimcs the basin will b« empty, and on rare occasions a °s shoot," producing & white colun spray and vapor mt least @!xts high, provides a magnificent sig! The boilingâ€"water«treams fro» € Geysers cause some delicate and 1 ty petrifications, and such thinge » birch and willowJeaves, converted ‘! to white stone with every deis" grese und rushes, marbleâ€"]ike, ar« be seen where the hot water fows The Geyser gives no warning belc it #pouts, and when it does, it is se 0 to make a nolse resembling artlc in action! ‘The bighest «hoot know was ninety feet; visitors to the b©. ing springs of Jceland heve e«‘ known to scald their fingere and hano® s.verely in the endeavor to ons‘ perfect specimens of white Inoru®‘‘ tions formed by the boiling wate What a saving in coml on wawhing days for the Jceland housewife! A" whe has to do is to take ber wash nf to the Geyser, put them in gent!p, &« â€"trust to luck that they will %01 tb shot out into the air the next minut® Bees suck three million flowers yather one pound of horey,. Iceland‘s Hot Water house nA Tha ip children‘s childrer and will look on permanent assel. You cannot deceiv« trek deceiving yours SUN LIFE SHOW GAINS IN A 49 mett What Address all questions to care of The Wilson Publishin to, and answers will appear In which they are received. tion this paper. As space is | Immediate reply is necess Gressed envelope be enclog the answer will be masled $ a rY than one The object of this depa wice of our farm readers th euthority on all subjects pe arm a nome 1of t cCONDUCTED 8y Pr the # 4