^.r"-' Sealed II In alumiatsm pacfteta WMK II B800 is always pure and fresh. So delicious t Try It today. THE DANGER IN tNK. i though dear, was devoted to sugges A wise woman once removed the tions to the re«pU;nt for safeguarding label "Poison" from an empty bottle beauty of nature, not merely the indi- vidual murks of htir heraldry. A bright small boy had been taught at school that the crawfish was an invertebrate. He showed little enthus- iasm about the fact, but when he was taken to a stream and the queer clay- celled home of a crawfish was pointed out to him, when he saw the way the crawfish has of moving backward, the strength of its pincerlike claws, its waving prehensile beard filament and its strange surroundings, he became greatly interested and on his return to the class astounded his fellow pu- pils with his newly found and to him marvelous knowledge. =SA PENNY PLAIN BY O. DOUGLAS Shopmanâ€" "Yott may have your choice â€" penny plain or two-pence colored." Solemn Small Boyâ€" Penny plain, please. Iff better value for the money." Copyr^kt by G*org$ U. Doram Co. CHAPTER X. „ ., . ... - One afternoon Jean called for Pam- Enthusiasm is the very marrow of ^la to take her to see Mrs. Hope, nature study. And the more you delve j^ ^^^ ^ ^,^^^_ blue-and-white day. three sons. Mrs. Hope hardly ever talks about them, but I've seen their photographs, and of course I have often been told about themâ€" by Great- aunt Alison, and others â€" and heard and pasted it on the family ink Ixjttle, "Why, mother, ink isn't poisjnous, and besides, no one ever things of drinking it." "I know; but, if the label leads us to give a second thought to what we write, it will serve its purpose. Ink, my dear, has often proved to be a deadly poLson to the affection of rela- tives, to friendship, to love. It will kill every afTectionate impulse if used indiscriminately." If it were po.ssible to gather statis- tics on such an intimate subject, it her health. Father's letter was a homily on the need of saving her money; brother wrote three lines, two of them about a new baseball mitt Only one letter contained the news that her homesick heart longed for, and that was written by a child of ten ! Guileless, sincere, loving, newsy, it was an ideal letter. "I laughed over it, and I cried over it. I read it when I was depressed, and I read it when I was happy, be- cause of the steadying influence it had on me. I really felt that I could not do anything that was not generous and kind, because of the influence of that would be found that seventy-five per letter. It visualized home." cent, of the letters in the postman's j„ ^^j^;^^ ^ ^^^^^ ^^^ yourself in bag are uninteresting, stupid, unneces- 1 j^^ j^j^^ ^^ ^^^ ^^^^^ ^^^ ^.,j sary, and are read only once by those j ^^^^ -^ j, ^^^ ^^^ ^^.^j^ ^^ ^^^ who receive them The letters of | ^1,0 is resentful or quick-tempered, sweethearts and those of children to; ^^^jj j^^^^. ^^^^^ ^^^^ ^^^^.^^^ their mother do not come into that^ ,g^^^ ^^^ ^^,1 ^itidsm of the recipient class; but even they are not above ^ ^^ ^, ^^j^^^.^ ^j,^ ^^^ common acquain- cnt.cism, for the sweethearts write too ^^^^^^ ^^^^^ ^^..^^ ,.^^^^ ^^^^„ ^^ is a long way to the furnace down- stairs. Never write, "Don't show this to So-and-So." If you must give a ., , ,,.,,, J ..confidence, don't label it as "secret," many miles from her kinsfolk and set .. 5^^^^" or "personal." Slip it in casually, as you would slip in a com- ment on the weather. Never write your troubles; the read- er may have greater oner.. Do not mention your ill health; it may cause I ly, and the children too few. â- fhtn you are away from home what kind of letter pleases you most? Here is one received by a woman aside as the one letter received in six months that did the most to make her 1 eart glad: Dearest Big Sister, We miss you very much. This morning I wore my blue and white gingham to school, and ^ "'"*' V"" iZ\ I" ""T"' '" '""y. ^""7 ... , J I J -^ TIT \ J * I needless anxiety, and you may be bet- the teacher admired it. We had wai-i ,.„„ „,v„„ i.t,„ 1 f* • • . xr fles for breakfast Mrs Snarks' tiirer ^^'^ ^^'^^ ^''^ ^^^^^ '^ received. Never lies for breakfast. Mrs. i>parks tiger ^^j^ criticism. You might say the ,ihes are m bloom. Oh, what do you „„„„ ,,,â- „ ... ,. •^. ' ., â- .ink? You could neve; guess. Min- ' '^T'f, ^^''"^ ^ I d'^arming smile, r.ie's gray cat has six kittens, and Min- ^"* ^^'^^^'^''^ ^'^^'^ * ''PP^"'" '" **>« â- "•<â- nie's mother says I can have every one of them. Won't that be just grand? Last night when we had lemon pie Father said you ought to be here be- cause it is your favorite kind. He has a new hat Mother is in the dining room mending a hole Uncle Jim burn- ed in the table cloth with his cigar. Mother didn't say anything. I guess she wasn't glad about it. Auntie Green comes to wash to-morrow. Mother says I can put my doll clothes in. The new family across the street has a girl my age, and a baby. Mother says maybe they will let mj- take turns in wheeling the baby. The baby buggy is light blue. I think I shall be busy with my kittens. I haven't told mother about them yet. She seems too upset about the table cloth. It was her best The one with the poppy pattern. I have on my blue hair ribbon. Father says I look like a butterfly. The kit- tens' eyes are .shut With love and a big kiss.â€" Aii'-e. There were letters from other mem- bers of the family. An older sister told of a party to which she had not been invited and the letter was in the nature of a wail; mother's letter, Dusty hands are germ-carriers Everywhere, every day, the hands â- re touching things covered with dust. Countless times those dust-laden hands touch the face and the lips in the course of a day. Consider â€" dust is a source of in- fection and danger. Lifebuoy Protects Take no chances - cleanse your hands frequently with the rich, creamy lather of Lifebuoy. Life- booy contains a wonderful health ingredient which goes deep down into the pores of the skin, purify- ing them of any lurking infection. The clean, antiseptic odour van- ishes in a few seconds, but the protection of Lifebuoy remains. LIFEBUOY HEALTH SOAP Mure Umn Soap-aHealth Habit tEVER DROTHER8 LIMITED TORONTO !h<-9« |«6UE No. If you have won a great success, only mention it when you write to your mother. If you have failed, say no- thing about it. Never seek praise or sympathy through the mailsâ€" or in any other way. Don't write too many letters. If the recipient â€" unless it be your mother â€" is able-bodied and has had a cood education and fails to answer your first letter and your second letter, take a lesson in pride and do not write a third. If your letters are welcome, they will bring replies. When vou fail to receive a letter don't blame the postman. The govern- ment is not interested in keeping your mail from you. When yoo read a let- ter that hurts put it away until you are in a more philosophical frame of mind. Never go near the ink bottle when you are angry. Don't make excuses for not having written before. There are few rea- sons for procrastination that rinjr true. Devote no space in your letter to disappointment because the recipi- ent waits .so long to reply. Perhaps there is a reason you do not guess. Answer promptly the letters from •your father or mother and those of a business nature. Do not glory in the number of your correspondents; limit the list to those you sincerely like, and who you know sincerely like you. To reckon your popularity by numbers is a childish thing. Remember that old friends are more interested in the lit- tle intimate affairs of your life than new friends are. If a married brother docs not write, do not blame his wife. When a man marries he sometimes shifts the duty of writing to his rela- tives to hi.< wife's should is. She may not want to take his plac ^ in a mat- ter like this, but she lear .s that un- less she writes to his family they will never hear. Respect her for her at- tempt to make up for his omission. There is the paper; a clean sheet of paper. There is the pen. There is the ink. And there also should be the label on the bottle in red and white â€" "Poison." For ink is poison unless you wriU- in a spirit of helpfulness and understanding. in nature's storehouse the more your ^jth clouds scudding across the sky, I rr^VTv'X'd ° The^r^wMr^e^y cllTe^ enthusiasm grows. As you point out and a cold, whistling wind that blewT^T l^ Sin J an^d wpllTiked the the things outdoors that are strange the fallen leaves along the dry roads ^f„'l «7^;J°f "^5. v*"f are verv l^oud or beautiful the child will take them ; a day that made people walk smart- 1 S}^and^rey\rdie"fmp^riaX! iFZt into Its mind and repeat them without ly, and gave the children apple-red j., a„ expression to use. Two died in much appreciation. But by and by cheeks and tangled curls. |i„dia, one-a soldierâ€" in one of the appreciation will come, and presently „.Mhor and Peter were seated on The prontier skirmishes; the otherâ€" an L the child will conceive new and sur- Kigs garden wall as Pamela and Jean,c. s. manâ€" from overworking in a prising ideas and startle you with an ^*^\?"*' «.^ HiUview gate. Pfer wag- fa^ino-stricken district The young- :.:„:„^ *„i„ „, *»,„.,„i,» ged his tail in recognition, but Mhor ^gt fell in the Boer War . . . so you made no sign of having seen his sister gee Mrs. Hope has the right to be *"?A ./'*"*'• ,j .V â- ,„ T, , P'O"''- Aunt Alison used to tell me Aren t you cold up there?" Pamela that she made no moan over her won- asked him. I^erfnl sons. She shut herself up for Very coM," said Mhor, "but we j, ^hcrt time, and then- faced the world M ®*M? °" sentry again, her kindly, sharp-tongueJ self. original train of thought. "Were all these shells made in a shell mint?" asked a little girl. "What put that into your head?" was tha reply. "Well, you told me that dollars were' can't come down, made in a mint" | duty on the city wall till sundown,': she is on« of those splendid people A mighty mint indeed wherein the ana he shaded his eyes with his hand who take the stings and arrows world was cast; a mighty Sovereign whose seal is stamped thereon! For Sore Feet- -Mlnard'* Liniment -o- Church Incense G>me8 from Cannibal Isle. "Socotra, isolated island off the north-eastern point of Africa where a ^^„ ^^^ ^^.^^^ . ,, - â- lighthouse keeper Is mmored to have ^„„^„^,j^f ^^^ ^ J^^^^,^ ^^^ j been the victim of cannibals, has al- are going to tea at Hopetoun." way been associated with much pleas- j "Aw," said Mhor, "I hate when you and pretended to peer into space for lurking foes. Peter looked wistfully up at him and ' hunched himself against the scratched bare knees now blue with cold. "When the sun touches the top of West Law." said Jean, pointing to a distant blue peak, "it has set See â€" there. . . . Now run in, sonny, and Peter. Lookout! I'm going to jump." I played here, who had lived in the Hejuniped and fell prostrate, bark- ] white- washed house (she could see the ing his chin, but no howl came from ^barred nursery windows), bathed and hira. and he picked himself up with|f5shed in the Tweed, thrown stones at anter thoughts than man-eating sav- 1 ^o out to tea. So does Jock. So does ages," says a bulletin from the head- quarters of the United States National Geographical Society. "For it Is the Isle of Frankencense' from which once came most of the pleasant aromaJJc gum burned as in- cense In the churches and temples of both the west and the east. It Is even possible that one of the gifts of the MagI to the Infant Jesus came from Socotra, for In the past the island was almost the sole source of this highly prized gum. "The suggestion that there are can- nibals on Socotra Is somewhat sur- prising. The Island people became atJ ;-^-^"^y Tw^side! "Look at that leafit superficially civilized ages ago ^eech tree against the blue sky. every through the Influence of gum traders. I black twig silhouetted. Trees are They were at one time Christians, but 1 wonderful in winter." since the seventeenth century have | "Trees are wonderful always." said been Mohammedans. They are ruled Jean. " 'Solomon spalce of trees' â€" I thrown at them by outrageous fortune and bury them deep in their hearts and go on. still able to laugh, still able to take an interest Only, you mustn't speak to her of what she has lost That would be too rtuch." "Yes," said Pamela. "I can under- stand that." She btoppe i for a minute and stood l'.)o'i:ing at the river full of "w.in water from the Border hills," at the strotih- cs of lawn "rnamented here and there by stcne figures, at the trees 0-rawn with winter and rough weather, and she thought of the three boys who had WRIGLEyS After Every Meal IVa the lonaesMasllng conf ectl<Hi yon can boy â€"and It's a help to di- gestion and a cleanser for the mouth and teeth. liciMUt as well as ptcasarc* dignity, merely asking for the loan of a handkerchief, his own "useful lit- tle hanky," fis he explained, having been used to mop up a spilt ink-bottle. Fortunately Jean had a spare hand- kerchief, and Pamela promised that on her return he should have a reel of sticking-plaster for his own use. so, battered but content, he returned to the grey stone figures on the lawn, climbed the trees in the Hopetoun Woods, and who had gone out with their happy young lives to lay them down in a far country. Mrs. Hope was sitting by the fire in the drawing-room, a room full of flowers and books, and lit by four long windows. Two of the v/indows the house, Peter remaining behind to looked on to the lawns, an^l the stone investigate a mole-heap. figures chipped by generations of "What a cheery day for November," catapult-owning boys; the oth"r two Pamela remarked as they took the looked across the river into the Hope- by a Sultan under British protection. Nor Is the Island simall; It Is nearly half as large as Crete or Porto Rico. "Socotra is not often visited by west- erners, but this to rather because of the religious Jealousy of the Sultan than because of any danger from tho do wonder what he said. toun Woods. The curtains wer» not drawn though "the lamps were lit, for Mrs. Hope liked to keep the river and the woods with her as long as light lasted, so the warm, bright room look- ed warmer and brighter in contrast I suppose it I with the cold, ruffled water and the would be of the cedars of Lebanon wind-shaken trees outside. he 'spake' of, and the hyssop that > Mrs. Hope had been a beautiful wo- grows in the walls, and sycamores, but I man in her day, and was still an at- he would have been worth hearing on I tractive figure, her white hair dressed a rowan tree flaming red against a j high and crowned with a square of blue September sky. Look at that lace tied in quaint fashion under her newly plowed field so softly brown, chin. Her black dress was soft and natives. The latter were described a 'and the faded gold of the beech hedge. | becoming to her spare figure. "There few years ago by a visitor writing fori November is a cheery time. The only 1 was nothing unsightly about her the National Geographic Society aa , depressing time of the year to me is | years; she made age seem a lovely, 'a kindly folk, hospitable and quite I when the swallows go away. I can't ; desirable thing. Not that her years harmless' " I hear to see them wheeling round and were so very many, but she had lived Continuing, he wrote: "Hadlbo, the P''^P«""» .**> ,f P"""*- ,,^ want so badly ; every minute of them; also she had capital, or Tamarida. as the Arabs call *° ?° ^'*i',^*,^^â„¢-,. ^^^"'"'^^^^^^ ^^ZTa T^". ^^"^f ^^ '"'i unsparingly of , ', ' ,1 , . . 1. . . back to me the feeling I had as a child her store of sympathy and energy to It. from taraar, the date fruit tree. Is U^hen people read Hans Andersen to others: and she had suffered griev- a collection of flat-roofed white houses nieâ€" the storks in The Marsh King's ously. scattered among the palms. {Daughter, talking about the mud ini She kissed Jean affectionately, up- "Tlie Sultan's 'palace' is a large mud ! Egypt Imagine Priorsford swallows braiding her for being long in coming, structure with flat towers, and the in Egypt! ... As the song says: land turned eagerly to Pamela. New two prayer houses are suggestive of „ ,j., , . t tv, y,- t. > y â- > t | people still interested her vividly. the graceful Arab mosques only by At\w-!y"Un%'^"he°swallow!' '' \^T ^^^ " "^^'^°'"^'' ^'^'' ^^"^'"'^ contrast. The poorer population, .Iau j i> 1. chiefly of African descent and much ! "What a lovely sound lowland Scots .„ C ' ""^ .J\ , '" ^.^ 1"?J older in the history of the island than has," said Pamela. "I like to hear you i,^„7,7v,"''l^^''f ".^Jiyi^^^ â„¢ '?^'' its Arab aristocracy lives in huts of : speak it Tell me about Mrs. Hope, y°" ^'^^ *he most interesting person thoit and Sd'graL 1° varl:br; ' f "• } ^o hope we shall see L , -»- -" Taughed'^'Th^r ^*"r " ure overrun with luxuriant gourd vines. J ^^tes â- 'therare'r^th^erUke";' for" 1 ^o" "ave wTmisl J.'^PrilrXn "Surrounded by tiny garCe:i plots, in faste of eternal punishment With no ' f"" "^/^"^'^j"? P**>Pl«- ^ fPt<=ted to which tombac, or native tobacco, len- , choice you are dumped down beside he """. and I have rarely been so tils, melons and yams grow abundant- ; the most irrelevant sort of persoiv, and 1^,1 *â„¢'i5®*'' » j- j ^v ly, they are more picturesque outside ' there you remain. I went to return L '"""?• Hope studied the charming than inside. Mrs. Duff-Whalley's call the other day, ^""^^ H" a â- " i**^" Pu ^^T 7^^ "There Is not much to be seen Inland fell into onef Before I could ri^ hy^«'-^%«'^:7„d^"*J,,^^^^^^ Hadibo The principal amusement af- ' treal I was wedged into a chair be- "'^^'^ *^^ ^"'^ of the way she had lost rordea.hev.:ifo?i:thit."ring"^^^^^^^ a woman w\om I hope I «hall,;;°- f h^^,'^^;-/^ '^/^^ <=oâ„¢-tf« •Nothing could be lovellei than the ' ^,^,5 !!:!„^,?«.!:L t\l':''I?'iL'>.'^^'>l'.\ ^^pT^^^^ she said. have our of the there was a detail in her domestic life â„¢'"^^f. °'"K'«y- ^".r P°«f « °f pon- tile lagoons near Hadlbo. Clouds ! that she didn't touch on. She told me T''***"'" are considerabl^we can massed above and mountains near be- ' all her husband could eat and couldn't «es">be an entertainment with accur- hind ; long sh.adows dappling the | eat; she called her children 'little tots,' ; f /,' ,";^^ „«" „f "*^„p°^„„'li^„«"!!)f/>: water, and the sun turning to gold tho ' and Said she couldn't get so much as a ' «"'*- ^^"-^^ "' """^ acquantances with Gunners of the Insect World. There are few animals better knowa than the skunk. Every woman has ad- mired Its handsome fur. In its wild state the skunk roams the whole of North America from Can- ada to Florida, and although it walks about In broad daylight Is rarely mo- lested. The reason Is that, if annoyed, it can discbarge from a special gland a spray, the odor of which Is extreme- ly obnoxious. ~ The writer speaks from experience when he says that there la nothing else to compare with It, and that a whlft of It will make any human be- ing deadly sick. A sporting dog, if "skunked," Is useless for days, losing all power of scenting game. There Is a small beetle known as the bombardier, which defends Itself, when attacked by discharging an acrid Quid. But this beetle's ammunition Is not only offensive ;lt Is also volatile, and actually explodes with a sharp little report when It meets the air. A bombardier can fire a dozen charges of this kind in succession. There are other Insects whjch have this peculiar habit, one a kidd of ant lion of which a specimen can be seen in the London Zoo. The spray Is formic acid, and the range is about twelve Inches. Another Insect gunner is the perl- patus, which Is something between a scorpion and a worm. It is about three inches long, and has legs and powerful Jaws. Crawling up to its prey, it shoots out a pellet of intense- ly sticky stuff which renders its vic- tim Incapable of movement Mlnard's Liniment Heats Cut*. She was one of those , I bleak people who make the thought of sight of s ender Socotran cattle graz- 1 j^ing up in the morning and dress- Well" (complacently), "we ha- Ing knee-deep among the grasse: and , ing q^ite insupportable. I don't think P?.'"^' ^^ Jane Austen wrote palm brrnchos that line the banks of ' there was a detail in her domestic life hisses Bingley, 'Our powers o An Alpine Village. Their world stands all on end; no place at all Is left for even the little fields to lie That they have hung aloft like tapestry Upon the granite reaches of the wall That towers around them. There they cling a'nd crawl And still contrive between the earth and sky To reap the fruit of their brief indus- try Before the snows and the swift silence fall. Then In the church the meager women pray, And in the huts the patient cattle sleep, And earth the vow of her white peace fulfills, And heeds them not who with sach passion pay Into her Icy breast the faith they keep And still lift up their eyes unto those hills. â€" Anne Goodwin Winslow. tawny flanksof'the cattle" niakT a pic" j '?«'-^'?.t'e' washed in the house. Ii'^IfLau h!" Jean groaned t« Koh^iH thought nobody talked of serviettes , ^^nuK"- "t^a" Kiyancu to behold, ^^j^«^ Wells and Arnold Bennett ^ •""«* ture of pastoral beauty rare In th'.s part of the east. warn you "Pamela, that Mrs. Hope's CREAM phip your Cream to us and ob- the beat results mth high- ..„ , . .;,. .,. I Mrs. Duff-Whallcy rescued me in the ^"Khter scares Priorsford to death.' "Socotra exports nothing except ghl, nj^j^ ^f ^^^ before I could do anv- ' ^^ speak her fair m order that she a rancid butter, made from goafs milk I thine^ desnerate. and th^n «*« rrosLi won't give »s away to pur neighbors. 1 thing desperate, and then the cross and highly prized In Zanzibar. The ' examined me as to my reasons Inhabitants number about 5,000, and ' coming to Priorsford." tho bulk of them are of African des- cent, though liedouins live In the ' afternoon! But it will be all right mountain caves, and the ruling class I *»-<'">'• Mrs. Hopo never sees more Is Arab. I than on© or two people at a time. She' I tain 1 est price for number one quality. Daily returns, cans supplied, and express charges paid. Write for for "*"* ^^ have no real hope that she cans now. doesn't see through us. Have we. Miss OUTDOOR STUDY. The best kind of outdoor study is Jean liuehed "What a cheerv ^"^""^^ '" **''^''**^'"*^ ^^^^ ''*"?^'*'" ^"^ afternoon! But" it will be all right *>''' ^<'"«^' '^*'° *"'<^ J"«* "=°™« ''"^ **»« room. "Ah," said Mrs. Hope, "if everyone lis nrettv old vou see and frfli7"thoi7ffh ^''s ** transparent as you, Jean." The language to distinct in Hself. I ^ P-f^^^i''^ >-;-;.„»;^d^ ,,^^ don't "Jean pleaded "You re- Iwine vounL' 1 do hone vou will like """** ""^ ***** \ "^ ''"''*' uninteresting ;« h%rer.'- She has^an'cdg.^io her f «" ' »?? "-^"1^ tr^'^'' "tl'^T ^l""' friend. Thfe poor people go to her m j ..Ah«„rd child t a., â- »,.«♦» m flocks, and she scolcw them roundly, but always knows how to help them in the only wise way. Her people have BOWES CO., Ltd. - TORONTO though posi^e^sing many Arabic and Mnhrl words. It has a wondrous i weall'.i of gurgles and Impossible ; noises In the throat. There are no words f(jr horse or dog. because these animals are not found on the Island. A fine breed of camels and donkey contemplation. Get a notebook, a | which are the tamed sons of tho wild ^"â- " '" ^'â- '"'"s'*"''' f^"" *S^s; ."she knows book on botany, a hook on birds, if you will, and pack your mind with fixed and irrevocnlile facts. But do not teach your child on that principle. A curious ignorance, gilded with a happy enthusiasm, is better than the labeling, pressing, nnalyzing knowl- edge that plays a large part in modern "nature study." I-et the children "run wild" without at first teaching them even rudiment- ary truths about the trees, grass, 1 flowers, birds, animals or fishes. "Teach them one or two things at a time and encourage them by letting them see'-. ^ •â- ^^ that you appreciate their memories Yf|lir aWfifil!n6d.l*T ' when they repeat the next day what' â- ***â- " www •#»*•â- â- «#»•â- *. a.sses roaming In thouannds on the In- terior ;)lalns, are tho beasts of bur- den. Scissors or File. •"You told me to tile these letters, sir," said the new yeoman. "Yes," returned the officer. "Well, I was just thinkin' that It'd be easier to trim em with a pair of BclsKors." every soul in the place, and is vastly amused at all the little snobberies that : Absurd child! Augusta, my dear, this is Miss Reston." (To be continued.) Is Your Wife Still abound in a small town. But she f^rs laughs kindly. Pretentious people are afraid of her; simple people love her." "Am I simple, Jean?" Jean laughed and refused to give an opinion on the subject, beyond quoting the words of Autolycu.<! â€" "How bless- ed are we that are not simple men." They were in the Hopetoun Woods now, and at the- end of the avt-nuo could see the house standing on a knoll by the river, whitewashed, digni- fie<l, homelike. "Talk to Mrs. Hope about the view," Jean advLsed. "She is proud of the Hopetoun Woods as if she had made Isn't it a nice place? Old and Moths do not usually attack dyed I I them they have learned about outdoors. D(^ |f ,,,_ treat her to a meal at Mumby's proud and honorable â€" like Mrs. Hope not let them memorize names onlv.!_, ,' Z .. j . «i. j ». j herself." u . . 1 .L . • '• Dnng Room, west end of Grand Stand, 1 ,....„»>,„.„ »„.,»♦... j.,v«.U">" but teach them to mcmorir.e .-^cn.'n- • « • > • .\ re there sons to inherit r tions. Teach them the sureness and Toronto Exhibition. j Jean shook her head. "There were Exhibition Notice! Don't buy your Electric Fixtures or Appliance* until you have seen our fine display of the latest designs, in the Manufacturers' Annex Building, under the Qrand Stand, Booths 16 and 2S. Special prices or all goods sold (luring the Eshlbltlon. It not con- venient to call, send for our New Electric Fixture Catalogue, larger and better than ever. Any other Informa- tion or advice we can give you will be glHdly supplied either by mall or at the Exhibit W. I^ Earle Electric Supply Co. 1284 St. Clair Ave. West • Toronto \ Have Summer Heai ^' ThlsAVhtter A Wa nn house and a cool cellar dcty and ni^ht the wii> ter thrM^h: And a saving in yourtoalbills of fromiijlosoj' A KELSEY WARM AIR GBNERAttMR (•> your cellar will ensure this. The Kel»*> is the most efficient and economical system of home heoting ever devised arKi will hcnt the smallest cott^e or tlip latest nuinsioa properly and hcdilhfully. WAV WE StNO VOli'OARTICm AR3? ^ / CAIJAOA FOUNDRIES* PORGINGS 1. 1 M 1 T e o JAMES SMART PIANT BBOCKMLl.I. ON-. JcM