latest class that can be built. We want to pay for them. We want to try to man them. Was always have to ght the tim- idity of. our politicians. I hope our rulers will have pluck enough to do what is necessary to secure the safety `of our country."--Telegram. "These things are not settled in one year or two years. They are settled in an hour or two hourx They` willnot be settled by having; C-Ianadianships in the harbors of our eastern coasts. That is not stratcrzy. `That is not common sense. If we }are spendmg money. let us put xt isome place where 1t wnll (lo good. l. Suppose this conflict is (lccltlcd in [the North Sea. Suppose the ght {goes against us. which God forbid. rwith _the colonies vessels all at home. `What good would our fleet be to us? We should have to give it up. l Monroe I)OCtI'_lI \` Folly. I Some people talk of relying on the Monroe doctrine. Would the 12,000.- ooo of German descent in the United States, would the I2,000.000 negroes, would `the 1o,ooo,ooo of Irish (lcsccnt, ght Germany to save us? If they did, should we be a free people any longer? The United States would gobble us up. We should have no country. We'd be ;either United States or Germany. and "I think of the two I'd rather have Germany. std- It that mater (0) press xvc st 10 hr Says life. fast \ \" ('0 ix` VVIuU\V LIL LVVUlII._y`D\}V\.ll- The young engineer, who had been speaking to a group of friends who had bought him a.'holly wreath. for, 'l1is engine, and had gathered atthe station to give him a Christmas send- otf. was evidently warming to his stor". -He was one of those rare talkers whose eloquence grov`v_:s_with intensity of feeling. and he was list-A ened to`wit`h silent interest. e h'\Y- 4 M ...-.._ --..._..'. A... cvcrv educ:1 nnmlc grout won] at v1(`1`( mi? uh Ex Ilfii) um- zuh; he! to I bu~ix thv izcrl "Every facility afforded to: faners and` _ , b others far the transaction of their. banking business. Sales notes will be cashed or taken for` collegtion. It i ):niry lf._I.", ing DEL` tcr um jail be! fun `WU hin Clint gin 110 wit tin: for Of l)l1~i BANKING av MAIL: throI&tgl`41o1it' Canada. and in the United States and England ll`.2.'.\..e. SPECTER SIGNAL (mam, crude. ronozrro BARR|* E_Z_ B_RANcH `BY LOUIS o'saAUu11mcssY.' " vuwf -P-I. GRAS`E"l"'l`. Manager. 'Agcounts may?.be; ,`o`p< ened: by mail ahd_ monies deposited or withdrawn in this, about it`, and was _inclined to think it uncanny and bodmg no `good to Steve- or me. n - 65117.11 .1. ,.s ,,1,.u 1 n hJlCVC' U1 Ill`- Well, the nightly exchange of sig- nals between the whistle s plaintive voice and the ghostly light became so much. a` matter of course. that when one night, about three months after, ?we missed it, Steve and It looked at each other instinctively. He had [grown pale, and if my face reected my feelings, it was as white as the driving `snow around. -It was like the darkening of a safety light _at the ent- rance of a block. for we'd hadgood luck since it came, but its absence did not -give the same right to stop. Though its first coming` had surpris- ed us, its equally sudden disappear- ance, queerly enough, seemed omin-. ous, and strangely affected us both. Never shall I forget that Christmas Eve, seven years ago tonight. We had been delayed by a hot box on the '-up-grade; and when we stopped to doctor it, the wind, before partially drowned by the familiar noise of the train. shrieked like `an enormous chorus of train ghosts among the trees and rocks around, and it cut ,like a knife to the very bone. Steve `had determined to make up a half` hour at least on the down-grade. and word had been sent back to the boys to stand ready for the brakes, for the lwestinghouse was not then what it is now, and it was the custom on specially fast runs to take double pre- cautions. As we entered the cut the big ten-wheeler was trembling be- neath us in, its mighty burst of speed, and her pulsations were like what- those of a giant's heart might have been in a supreme eort. She fairlv seemed to try to leap over the glare which her own: headlight cast for- !ward. ` uu___- __-.- '..--.... |...-...i u.- ....n 1.... ' Have vou ever heard the call forl (mick brakes when it was also the death-cry of the _brave man "who lsounded it. as. alas! itoften is! If lnot. prav God that ~you.-never may. [That night it came upon me sudden- lv. just as. tp hide my dismay at the disappearance of "The. Specter Sier- nal, I had. opened the doors to re Inn. The `light of the "furnace reveal- ed Steve in thelact` of giving her air and sand and reversing. If there ever was a picture of a hero._he `presented it at that instant. No thought of jumping for life there. -though I now` know he believed thetrain in the very jaws of disaster." His example en-' couraged me to stand to my post. as the great engine first struggled for- ward _ like a. races-horse abruptly` checked. then, trembled`, then `stood still. Str-ve told me. and me alone,` afterward what he had rst seen,` for the never speaks of that night. - ""I"I_ , ,,__. I ,_ ____,--IA` f.., ._,I_'_.. i"' 71~':I:Fx'.`9'Ju1aa faintly moan- Eed, `as_tv;r`ehli_td tlgert intohtthi: baggage car, w: an s a mag . nave een isofter, but could not have been tend- i?rer..d aged l:ga`l `sentf'"forward ' oun raw_s rest e a en into {the swollen. stream two hundred feet abelow. The woman, death`-stricken lwith exposure and cold. reviveclflong `enough to tell her brief story. How I shc with~_her father, after many wand- ]CI'll`l:|`!:, ll/iIyedI,_i)n andeiitae gear bgx, gag [W nc -r. owar at een xv. ycharge a few months before, in a lit- tle house concealed from thevtraclc. by uthe_ omes. "How. remembering? Steve's; whxstle, she ,h_adlnihtly`awaied atgd [answered at wxthall the old et1mes_,f1n her heart her 'fa_t_ltgrl bregngz, `t`1a>t`;`*AnIRt _ _,.aM ffa. negh1:>orhc_i_pd hr.:._st- - ,.t;'tj:'a:'s_..-..gg V ` _ ,j 1): we`. . ear: t- _e-.- wo- r=l?enTee;1"Il);43. hyfsbtogfitny. ; roariof ..th;.!1991S.m::,t9t !!t-, r!2adj:;rsars,s1 e `ox .tlte_ rsafemgf. the In-estle; `a pure. a it half berndle lhad;;zhurr:ed!yr{l ldresssdtil rad, strap: 11;: __tp": th 1 _ , ,. . , '3 `i`T_5.k 'thfQu.l?Vi;' the` -.:;l_eet_`., ml s pyvl Ol1!`d``l `' as h ill. A.. ._'_ I 5: uywunso V1 slnuiu -algae:-o , .- ..-. ; The rest I saw myself. for when {we hurried back we found _a wornan, ethmly clad, lymg senseless an the Ice- 3 Eextlnguishcd in her_ fall. `Steve re- imembercd it as zi_81f.t to Ju11a_How- inrd in the old courting davs. Round it, in "the hasty` effort to form a red l(langer-signal, had been _ wrapped it -covered ditch by the track. By.her, side lay a lantern of pretty blde srla.ss',s lcrimson bonnet-ribbon. It was the tune: wanted and startling purple light thus made, that Steve had 1 seen `as :Julia}~ lfeeblv waved it so closelv over.:"th`e` track. andtin such familiar fashion that` to __Ste_ve s_, already excited f,rnnnd_ atf meant the mstant destruction` .of `the train if not checked before;,tl1,e. spot was reached. A - l- "l`l.`.. ........n..v 1.4:- :..:...n..`.........'..- xsnnusuan not B. Bailey. of Rochester;-i:got his vindication all; right, and .~ Seth Lem_a_n, of T Kettle Creek, declares` that `if they `evetgexpect to ha'ngUa, man `on cir- cum . ntialx. evidence they mustn t put `him'on the jury. B. W. was down in the Kettle Creek country early in the season, guest of Seth Leman s; where they entertain visit- ing sportsmen. There are some deer` `and a -few bear in that region yet. . :01 `tug otctvhb on `Any Ancpn A: `GJIVI G `LEVY llbl Ill \III'Jl. IVSIUII JUL: V -Along inthe night_a few days af- ter Bailey took quarters at Leman s Lyman heard a,shot'.' -\gV.\hile he was putting on-hisecl.othesVt`o go out and .investigate he" heard a second shot and a shout.".`Hurryin'g out he found Bailey in his night clothes very much excited, standing under his bedroom window, `which was up. He had a revolver` in his hand. a T . " I shot .a bear! he exclaimed when he saw Leman. I shot him twice. He woke me up by his` nosing around under the` vvjndow.` an ,9 ,,_,:_-_1_,..- _,,.1 -1.-. 1.3 DIIILICI LIKE VVrlll\JI.IV' u I raised the window and shot him` with my pistol; Then I `fell out of the .window `on 'tOp~of him and rolled lo him. That `stunned me. ' C`I`lYI_-., T __.._- L- 'I' __--- LL- I__-__ Ull. IIIIIIO >-LIIOI. Ulv$IllllV\.l llA\vn When! 'c'a me to I saw the bear standing under that tree yonder, scrat- ching his back on the dead limb that sticks out from it. `Then _I shot him, anain with my" pistol and hollered,1 and the _bear ran off into the woods. .`I' -..._.. .._4. L2- ..---:A....| .........L I....-I- Ianu l.llC _UCal lcuI_ U11 IIlLU'I.||\. vvuuuo. - 'Leman' got his excited guest bac {into the house, and quieting him down saidthey would go out and fol- low the bear in the morning and n- is.h- the work `Bailey had begun. Bailey went to bed `and so did Le- man, but Leman got to thinking,` so that it was a. googhwhile before he fell of? to sleep. What he was _think- 1.... -I.._..L ---.... 4.1.-` D.-:I.... n _..o..I.\... LCII Ull CU alccp. `vvuan. II\. I! an Llatllls` ing about was that Ba`iley s window was less than three feet from the szroundeand thatthe dead limb on which Bailey said he saw the bear scratchixigt its back was more than four feet above the ground. KT... ..L ~ 4...;--`:4-u, nan on l\l\, ILJIJI ICC` all`-VVC CHIC $l\lI.III\.Ia ` Now, it- _s puzzlin me like `all pos- sessed. so =Leman s thinking ran, how in Sam Hill Bailey could have fell out '0 that window less than three foot from the ground and land- ed on top of a bear that could scratch its back standing under. a limb more than four "foot up. Either -Bailey must be `mistaken and clim up on that bear out 0' the window and then, fell off it. or else he's been ridin a night4 m:}"`_`e.!) V , , - Y ._..Q._ A__-..L-L- -1--- -...I LL- llll Ca Then Leman went` to sleep and the next morning called Bailey s atten- tion to these discrepancies` in his ex- tierienee with the bear. The implied doubt of Baileyin this object lesson hurt his. feelings exceedingly. and he insisted on and persisted in declaring that the facts in the case were just as he had set them forth. which would be amolv proved by sign or sound of! bear did they come to the'be_ar. he said. an .1, ,9 ,__,' L__II_;- L2. L2... !` ....f.I `.---`up-v guru I-V\r!-T---tunic .5 ;fI?hgrc4 is vafldneiy ` moss-:cover'ed ovv_.e:j.~__"rown in summer, on t e mountains? de in Chester~Cut.` and -be4*'sure"~the` marble cross at its"; head is'Vhol`ly-sw'rea3:4_!1ed todaxr.-Q; Steve .still., ".ivhist1es as __pgss.es the spot`;-`.-but III ` VUIJI IIILILII Illull lo _ Two or three days after he had gone a woodchopper _in the` laurel swamp a mile east of VLeman s was oreparing to.fe1l a tree when` a bear jumped out fromtthe tangle of roots at the foot of the `tree and went lir'np- `ing away. The chopper overtook the ~,ber.and killed it with his axe. .. , 1-..; -_,,2,_ -_7_ _.,l. -_'_I LL- Ucl auu BIIICII II. VVILII III3 GAB-,_ It was a last . spri-ng s cub, and the chopper packed it in to Leman`s. There it, \_v`as discovered that . the imeness of the bear was caused by "a bullet in its right forefoot. It was a oistol bullet. -` . ' Bail'ey s bullet, sure as can `be ! said Leman, and the size -of the bear, could easil have permitted Bailev to fall out o ; the window on, it.` Bqt what for did-he want to go and saw that be seen it scratchm its -back on a limb` a foot: and `a half higher than its back couldjreach. and that h_e shot it astfin P s`aidj Lemanu V-r-a_*_- _`_~__ _ _-;.._1_ -_..1 ...:|r - _.. were united yet -parted forever, for Julia's' soul went out upon the storm before the Christmas morningerdawn-. ed. Too late she ` had 'lea rne'd to know the priceless giftoffered her by the great manly heart ':she had broken. but bravely aHnd.-jwitiiuglyr *~'hadsg she mrhreitxeratojwmrnt; ` - X sf? is. -adeiv A whuoth of mwfbullets hit him," said Bai)1ey, and they Il be found in him. ..A. g... `-...o... n 4-n:` nr\n`,A kn tnnnr` lJi|llC_y_. auu Lucy u UC xuuuu nu uuu. T But no bear~ s trail could be found. which Bailey said was because it had rained during the night after he had, his encounter with the bear. Leman admitted that this might be so, but it! was plain . to Bailey that Leman s-D manner inclined to the impression that the reason `there was no bear trail was because there could be none unless there had been a bear along there to make it. _ ._1_| `n-:I-__ LI_-.__ ..--..I-1 LIICIVC IU llldl\C ll. ` `But Leman told Bailey they would go out justthe same andtry toend the bear and fetch him in. and they went. `They hunted in every direc- tion that `wounded [bear might take. to escaoe pursuit. They `hunted all dav. but_not a sign or sound of bear didthey come across, and Leman is the boss bear hunter of that region, too. ` ' 'n_21_-, -_,__-1_1 ,--. ----._; `..I.:..l I.Uu.-_ But Bailev would not accent this failure to nd any sign of bear, wounded or unwounded, as in the least convincing testimony in re- buttal of his regarding the hear he had shot and fallen out of the`win- (low on and shot again. I.-eman said nothi_n'm but his persistency in look- ing every now and then atithe space between the ground and the window, then. at the distance the dead limb marked on the tree and then at Bail- ey, with queer shakes of` his head, was to. Bailey so unpleasantly sug- gestive that next day he packed his belongings a_nd went back home, feel- ings -`very much hurt. T...` .-... 51."--- An-.- -35.... I... Ln ! . au_Ius au.Iu_ Lncluauw That was {puzzle and still -a re- %N`oRTHERN ADVANCE Election on B ailey's: yeracitid fllntil tine` ` B__ill McCall, of Cross I-`Fotls,,-j who. Lcamg in with .3 cotiple of huntcrsto "Len'1an s during the day, after glanc`-` inc at the` bear cub s7-carcass where it lay on the oor saidthat it wasn't much like the bear that `was killed over at the` Forks the day before.. T urns.-- -....n ....:.a `nu! v*....... on I-n DYE! at ' IIIC PUIILS (Ill: uay IICIUI C. ~ That one, said Bill, "_was as big" as three 0 this little chap. \Some-' Vbody`d`" had a plug it it` not long be- fore, though, for they found afresh bullet in one of its paws. . V..- 99 ....:.a `I -.......`.. `-A..A H.-.o +1-an UUIICC III UlI`C Ul IID _`pGWo Yes, sand Leman, "And that s the char that scratched its back on that `dead limb yonder, too. There was twb _bears and `Bailey was so skeert he; d1dn t know it. ` ` ._A_.. ---L -._I__ _.-_._L- A... 3.214`. LWU UCGI3 auu. Halli. vvaa .1v'an_\\.\.uu he- didn't i V . Leman not only wrote to Bailey and told him so, but bought both bears and shipped them tohim. `So Bailey got his vindication, J all right, and that's why Lemar: declarescthat if they ever expect to hang a man on circumstantial evidence they ' must l1<)eep him off of the jury.-`-American! l\\\al-7 5 Paper.` cop m-zmsou smxs om! } Hoea our%~R{u1rs` Wil1_fHave muck V Enough "t6 do Whagf is Necessary F for the-Cuntty sv_a_fety. % for the (3are of 6anada s Needy onsumptives ? % u uusxoxnrmzt nospmu. ron conzsumwes nu uumvbn LIIFLU LU WIIIC UL LIIIIIILLVV-l III. IVIIVVIS being received daily :-+ John D. McNaughton, New Lis- keard. Ont. : A young man not be- longin here, and suffering from, it _i elieved, consuni tion, is being -kept. by one of t e hotels here. He has no means and has been refused admission to our `hos ital. The conditions where he 5 offer him no chance. Could he be admitted to your Free Hos- pital for Consmuptives? If not-, could you inform me where he can be sent. and what steps are neces- sary to secure prompt. admittance ? not A ennui PATIEIIT mu Ivan uteri uruazo amussnou 70 nu: uusxon nu HOSPITAL. IEOAIISI or use on an win you%%he|p7 llnm grater urgnneyf, . fmIy.`cma;'s Iontributioill. my ` int V II! '1 ing Cln-' Inn L nn ' '-``Do you know. Steve 'Dalto_n s `whistle? ..That is it now, sounding a- note of thankfulness, and his hg_ht- ening run of two hundred and titty- six miles is once more safelyover, `and _his engine about to back into the . round-house. Know it among so many ? Why, of course. :One_ or the `first things a man does on being as-g signed a regular engine-_-a proud day "in his life by the iway--is to work at the whistle until it has an individual- ity, so" -to speak, in order, for. in-`U stance, _'uat his people may know It as he-rushes past the little house on the roadside, as well as they would - his voice at the door, he the night ever so dark, and perhapsanswer the greeting with the. ash`of a lamp -across the window. Now it. is -the wife or the dear `old mother; again it `is the sweetheart. If the house is in sight of the track, be sure that we expect to see `the light in the win- dow for us; and if, not we feel all the same that our signal is known by those who love us, and who pray for ns as they hear thethunder of the train roll in from the distance and die away again, or see its light ash by on the iron way below them. `Did, you notice. the voiceof Steve's en- . gine? It has a plaintive sound even when it records a safe arrival, and it always seems to me to reect Steve s secret soul, cheerful and manly- a front as he keeps for all of us. No, braver ore trueryheart ever beat in a` cab than his; but, like the veteran soldier who has once been hit hard, he goes to his daily battle of. duty with a. certain dread that some of us younger fellows do not feel. Not an old man? No, not in one sense. Steve is about fty now; but he was one of those men with whom the gray enters the heard before it does! the heart, and when, not yet forty. he loved as only a strong nature that .has been self-contained in earlier manhood and has not dulled the edge! of sentiment with idle irtation can! love, the already grizzled engineer] was jilted by the haughty beauty of twenty-five for a black-moustached nonentity. who led her a drudge s `life, and let her a pretty, penniless widow at twentytseven. "q.. -.A..u:u naqnnqannnu cuvlirs `\nnll A national institution that accepts tienta from all part of Canada. era is one of hundreds of letters 2-- __ -_-_-_'___.'I _'I_I_ _ [INABILITY to PAY. _ Since the hospital was opened in April, 1902. one thousand ve hundred and twenty-four patients have been treated in this one inst i- tution, representing "people from every province in the Dominion. For the week ending November tune. ennn ___-I_-___.l.-___I ,..._.l 4.....-..4.-. V` CC $0` IUUIIUKZIJII. o Nsuomn Sutgum AW ""ii'53'. _a_u~xmg_g:. w., 1?oronto.iOu.nula. UVUl"_ IJIIUVIHUU ill but? Lluuuluuun 20th, 1909, one hundred and twen ty- `five patients` were in msidcnce. Ninety-six of these are not paying a copper `for their mintonanco-a_tnoIutoly free. _ The other twenty-nine paid from $2.00 to $4.90 as week. No one pays more than $4.90. Qn3I'nh`n hnnnn `.0100 ,IIt`lYI .f9(`V' UH DUIU WU uuugu IJIU VVIIII wvuc nuau. I was at (four Sanatorium ten months, an I was sent away from there as an apparent cure.. I `am now working m the city, and I am feeling tine. I was most thankful for the cape I got from the doctors and staff, an I must say that I spent; the time of my life while I was there. ` , nu: Muskoka Hospital to, Oomum tivel is dependent. olnthe ' _-_.I _...: -_.I .405". ..0cI.-t'1..;....I8.-... vuuuuxu uvol ll uvyvuuuuv vu unu good-wi and gifts of the Canadian public. Money is urgently needed "at the present time to make it ` Mo to can for the In and, noted: number of pntien s that are ante ng the institution. . \JVIlvl'lIlIlUI_Vl_Ip_ sun; In: away In! TW.VJ. , I 0 8` A 0. or :. J~`33`:..'3on. -.'?r..'.. \v;u_...1./A n.L.;n.-..n-....: A .`....x-n.... Norah P. Oanham :Enclosed you will find recei t for my" ticket from `.3. .":`.'.`3`_.".":`;`_'.:..2*2i.`i...?i?."..`Z.:?."l.9 Ouupuyu uluife uusu w-saw. T Suitable cases `are admitted` promptly on completion of appli- cation papers. ' A GRATEFUL PATIENT Iucaua LU uculcuu ululu. \VUIlICU auu SIKITIIUK DUFPIC HKIUI [[1315 That was nine years ago. and it Julia-t was nearly two years later that we feebly waved overftth` first saw `what we came afterwards andetin familiar `to call `The Specter 5181181-' I had thatto __Stev.e so rnmd run away from college. bent on begntz it meant the instant a practical railroader. and was firing not beforetlale, _`fOl' Steve that year. It W85. 8 moc_m- g-eachd_ . _ less but clear September night. with I ""'rh` trestle, Julia moan all the stars out. nal `we nlrlere lgl'Ifet1(ed~, `as y;ehlijt'3d.];`ef intohthabaggage running on a sc e ue ca mg or wit ~33; t_a't.mjg t_ ave thirty-ve miles an hour. which W35." softer, but -could not have been tend- V counted auite wonderful then. but erer.'. and brakemen. sent forw_ard which would not excite some`of us-ifound `C;-`gwsh tfrrestiegt -*-.fa1|en mto much now. We had Cllm')_8d, Stony theH.swo1len,strearn-two .hundred feet Hill. the longest end heaviest nzradmbelow. ~The woman, -death-gstricken . an tine westwfarg run. at:d'ha<:hbe;znB i with cgcposur ;::,d :0? ,ey.iveqv-gag t e escent o t e `moon ams 1-our enou tote er, fie std . low T the 101112 Chester Cut.` in which tyeiqshe vgith-*her.:father;after magylwandr seldom saw `cghumeln li. 0585; er'i"n'n:, bl/iIircd~on ande sht;tle gear by; of imz it as "we i a `at mi nip . I! 2 w ic F To-. owar` ; : _een;.;gi__`\'rt.`crI V denlv. just as SCCVC whistled {Of thevlc-Aha:-ge affgw in T entrance to_the cutas he wou_ld_ for .8 -tlfehotts hcealed.:`from th . funnel, `away-up Ta4mong_ the pines a-thc nine ' '2 member ' ~ liritzht light moved qu_:cltly -in the yyhisgxgg '33 ,;,_orm `of a cross three times and zdise. 'an5w?_;-gg . appeared. `It. was cvidently_ a ozrcett-.~ her 1: moi somef`kind.;bnt 8O!_,w.cEIl' :thatI ` ` (l';\.v-;x.x'l'x1-1;` l;,-`l'1'()i)'ifx `Chili 3'68 will in able to oblige me with the fare. nun... nI- Irnnn Qnnnl-nu-inns fan IUSKOKA IIII IIOIPITAI. FOL CONSUIPHVISQ `All IUILDIIO FOR PATIENTS. T I-I IRIS. Ill win--In an uuvc-u IIII IQPITAL $3, OOISIIIPPIVIS. of exnansion, is there a country any-l where which is more calculated to `excite the cupidity of these nations `that have power than Canada? Col. 'Denison asked in replying to thel toast, The naval and,milit'a_y forces Iof the Empire. e i l ' Owe it to _ British Navy.` l "Never in all our history, the col- `onel continued, has there been :1! time when every man should be con-I sideringafor himself what is best for: Canada and for our Emnire. Were] *it not for` the British Navy we should I l not` be enjoying thecomfortable, easy, safe condition of aairs under! which we are developing our_ re-3 ';- sources to-day. . K In 'Gerrnany s Way.l Suppose Germany gained the com- mand on land, she could conquer all; `Europe, but` for the British navy. `This is` why Emperor William has declared that Germany must have a strong navy. l . E-_-_1I, _C\ O n, I want you to make no mistakei about it; Canada has always excited the cuoidity of the "strong nations.I `Even "Japan is casting envious eyes.` yuoon our western coast provinces. If iGermany were to get, on top no}v,| iwhat country would there be to ex- lcite her cupidity more than Canada? ;Our safety is in standing by Britain `who has stood by us in the past. 3 """ "5 Cam ' Dreadnoughts. I If we want'to do anything we want. to have -Canadian ships of the! onw`.--._.___.. _ C N BRAND SYRUP? VVhen you holesomeness, of all the dainty and :1 make with it,-w11en you think of . flavor and clear golden colour, e you t_roub1e and bring variety to u think it -worth your while to order 've on it. Adults enjoy it. |=..,......v..i-eecnan ands-asap-nupi.2.5. l0nnd20nini:huinswithlift-olidu. __ - - (I4 _ _I_ I1- I!_._21-J - _Won't you hf) C_R Athiuk of yurity, its Q--u-- --.--..__ `I - I - ESTABLISHED I858. 309 Workl: CAl.DINAI.`;0nt. Occsz MONTREAL. TORONTO and BRANTFORD 7.Vva_v with ` equal faci|iAty.V L 1: e 5 3 mg was a material factof. in the sucss 61' -failure of your business? -1: `Did you cvcx consider for a _.__.- x_'g_ent that the style of your Print- Your printed letterhead is an in Vufg_t_l_uction to men who have ` s`_i_b never saetfyou. Do you CIICU IU WILII BIICIII uuclcac. No, thank you--no more cigars to- night; we start in fteen minutes, and . I never smoke under way. Well, there were those who whispered that Julia Howard had soon repented in secret? of her hastv choice; but she was too! proud to show it, and when she re-5 turned to her father's homein herl weeds Steve Dalton was too high-l spirited to renew his suit. though it; is said that until the familv'.left- the: neighborhood-for ;.'California. it wasl indenitely given out-'--the old and at} one time favored lover had found! means to befriend them. `PHI.-. -____ --_..- _---.... -..- -...I :4. your printed mesiages to the stimp of conviction with them -.-to reflect the qualig of `your Advance, gnu thein IIIWIIVU:-uuv.-.._ -..... _.-., H- - `I'll: Edwllslrnrg Starch Co., Limited 5-gnaw A III IQl.lEl\ IQKQ [next order for printed ---anni---n DECEMBER 9, X6Jte E.-fevriennn, President Paid-up'Capital00$)I0,000,000 'v1-F33? *3-930? `#319 Reserve Fund, -- 6,00 0,000,