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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1915-06-10, Page 2.1 er A rig COMPRXION May Be Had Throudh the Bich, Red Blood Dr, 'Williams' Pink Pills Actually Make. A girl's vompleeion is something more than a matter to 2oneern her lenity. It ie an indleation of the state of her health. Pailor in a growing girl ineene :t thinning of the blood. Par- ents should be watchnil of their (laugh- coUtplexione and should see to it that these danger signe are cca'rected. When a girl in her teens becomes pato and, eallow, if :the ehows an pfl. elination to tire caeily, is listless and inattentive to her work or studies, she neves. Dr. WiMame' Pink Pills, a tonic Melt directly and speelfically tor- recte the condition front which she is puttering. A chemical analysis or the bleoil of euch a girl would show it to be deficient in Just the elementa that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills can eupPlY, and which retort) brightness to the C( and ectior to the cheeks. Miss Deline Arsenault, Urbain Ville, P. Ie. le Is one of the thoweands of anseereic girls restored to health by the use cf Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. She eays: "I was attacked with anaemia, and was in retch a miserable condition that I haft to commit a doctor, and wee tin- der his earn fer several months, but without getting better. I was growing thinner every clay, had clark eireles around the eyes 1 001 hardly sleep at night, but tossed reetlesely and get ee In ths morning with. black antici- pation of I. d i,te. mieerh s hetet. nte. I was rleays bothered with lieadaches and pains ie the baelt and :OWN, My appetite Wae poor and I fropiently vomited what I did eat. My friends feared that I would not recover. I hae often ssen Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills ad- vettise4, and finally decided. to try thcm. I used altogether nine boxes and they made me as well as ever I wall in my life. All the pains and aches disappeered; my appetite return- ee. I eould sleep soiindly at night, mid the color returned to my cheeks. I rdso geined seventeen pounds in weight. I am now always wale and for this happy onndition I have to thank Dr. Williams' Pink Pills." 'Yon can got these Pilla from mit/ dealer in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box or eix boxes for $1.50 from The Dr. Willittms' Medtalne Co., Brock- ville, Ont. ROUMANIA TO JOIN RUES Definitely Decides to Fight Against Germans But Will Wait Till Harvest is Gathered. Bucharest, June 7.—Rounianiaes first step toward entering the great Euro. - peen conflict was taken yesterday when the King signed the initial mobil- ization order, and no doubt remala in the minds of anyone here that the Gov- ernment has definitely decided to join ' the allies in the war against Germany • and Austria. : The mobilization order which has just been signed is only a partial one, • ' as it is understood that unless the un- foreseen happens Roumania will not enter the war until after the harvest. elost of the trained reservists are be- ing sent to their homes, and their places will be taken as rapidly as pos- sible by untrained men, who will join the colors for short periods of *steady training. la this manner the entire army will be prepared to go to the front when the wheat has been gath- ered. Meanwhile troops have been massed along the frontier and the five army corps which compose the Roumanian army in time of peace have been strengthened to their full complement. All able-bodied men between the ages of 19 and 21 are cempelled to hold themselves at the disposal of the Min- ister of War in time of peace, and these youths are now being trained in their home districts. When these recruits are ready for service Rou- mania will be able to place in the field an army of more than 250,000 well- trained men. Special instructions were sent out to- day by M. Braciano, Minister of War, to the commander of each army corps, and no effort will be spared to have the men in the best of condition when the time comes for the actual interven- tion of Roumania. The news of the mobilization order has met with universal approval by the people, and demonstrations in fa- vor of war are occurring in all parts of the country. BULGARIANS PREPARING. Bulgarian Consuls in Turkey are warning their nationals to return home, and a general exodus of Bulgar- ians from Constantinople has already begun. Many Greeks are also leaving In the fear that Greece will declare war if Constantine dies. He Meant Every Word He Spoke JUST WHY J. A. HILL RECOM- MENDS DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS. He Had Sore Back and Other Symp- toms of Kidney Disease and Got Real Benefit from Dodds Kidney Pills, Sixty -Nine COrners, Ont., June 7.— (Speeial). —"I am retommending Dodd's Kidney Pills as the best of medicines." The speaker was Mr, J. A. Hill, a well known resident of this place, and he left no doubt In the minds ot his hearers that he meant every everd he said. "Some titne ago," Mr. Hill con- tinued, "1 had a very sore back. It started front A, cold and I fluttered for slx teonthe with it. I also had stif f - nem in toy joints and crannes in my Muscles' and I felt heavy and sleepy after meals. My appetite Was fitful and my limbs were heavy. Then I detided to try Dodd's Kidney [Pills. I took four boxes and received great benefit from thorn. Tbat'it why / re- costimend Dodd'S Kidney Every one of Mr. Hill's syttptonn shoWed that his trouble Was of the Kidneee, That is why he got such benefit from Deddel Kidney Pills, 'MeV are Ile came all, but they do cure Sick •Kidneje, end the Kidneys aro the keyeterie Of 'health. ••••••11•11111‘ A GIFT OF A SOUL "But eacques has not forgotten him. Did you note his suffering When I eleelte to him of his friend? His face, a moment before so fresh and smiling, was ghastly and distorted. It was frightful. He looked iike a death's head, Our friend Davidoff, you will rementher, described with curious min- etenese the moral condition of the Sick Mail cured through faith. The founda- tion ot this recovery is frail," he said; "a word would suffice to destroy it. The passionate conviction which brought Jacques back to life, once weakened, he would relapse into a con- dition, worse than before. He is under a sort of spell. He is'possessed by an idea, and this gives him wonderful strength." "That is what makes charlatans and quacks succeed," said the doctor. "And then, there are besides imag- inary invalids wbora it is easy to cure, and our friend Jacques seems to be one of them." Patrizzi shook his head and said gravely: "I hope it may be so, for his moth- er's sake." A noisy exclamation cut short those words: A group of masqueraders pushed through the crowd, in the midst of exclamations and bursts of laughter. The group of which the Neapolitan was the centre broke up, and each of the young men went his own way. Jacques, his new ac- quaintance on his arm, had gone out into the corridor, examining curiously the masked and hooded woman who drew him along, with a rapid step, as if she feared to be recognized or spoken to. Arrived at the door of one of the stage boxes, she gave two quick knocks. A woman opened the door, and drawing aside, with a silent smile, allowed them to Pass. She .then discreetly left the room and closed the door of the box. Here Jacques and the domino found them- selves alone. The young man approached his com- panion and attempted to seize her hand. "Be sensible, or I shall send you back to your friends." "How can one be sensible near you?" he cried, smiling. "Ask some- thing that is possible, not something that is impossible." "You must obey me, however, or I shall go away, and we will never meet again." "And if I consent to everything you exact, shall we see each other again then?" "Certainly." She sat down on the divan in the box,, and leaned back, showing be- tween her mask and her domino her white neck, and under the ruching of her hood an ear, delicate and pink as a rose -leaf, He sat down beside her, with an air of respectful propriety, al- though his heart beat passionately, so seen had this mysterious and fascin- ating creature succeeded in bewilder- ing his senses. Hidden in the obscuritr of the box, ,close beside each other, Jacques and the masked woman were absolutely alone, more free than if-eilence and Solitude reigned around them. In a low and insinuating voice he said: "It seems to me that you are not unknown to me, and that we have met before. Will you not show me your face? I am sure you would not lose by doing so. You are young, and I am sure you are beautiful. Have you any reason, then, for wiehing to re- main unknown?" She nodded affirmatively. "Even to me?" She nodded again. The young man drew nearer. "Where have I seen you?" he asked. "Here, in Paris?" She did not answer . He resumed. "Do you live in Nice?" She remained silent. "We have met before, however, have We not?" A smile crossed the lips of the un- known, She pushed Jacques away gently, her gaze seeming to dwell on him with pleasure, and said in a low voice: "You are very inquisitive." "And why should. I not be so? Ev- erything tells that it is my fate to love you, and yet it surprises you that I should wish to know who you are! I shall know to -morrow or the day me to -night, this very instant, aud permit inc to see your face? Would you have me love you, then, with- out knowing who you are?" "Perhaps," she murmured. "What are you afraid of? The anger of some jealous tyrant? Or perhaps you have not confidence in my • dis- cretion?" She did not stir, thus giving room to the most romantic suppositions in his mind. He smiled, and said passionately: "Be it so then! I will love you as you are,—unknown, masked, myster- ious." He tried to take her hand again. Sudddenly the hood of her domino fell back, and her mask, becoming displac- ed, disclosed to View her face. Jacques started to his feet, stepped back, and cried in amazement: "Clemence Villa!" At the sound of her name the ac- tress became calm and cold. She look- ed at Jacques, Who, pale and motion- less was devourime her with his eyes. Throwing back her domino with a (Mick movement, she rose and stood before him in all her radiant beauty. "You desired to know my name," she said. "You know it now." Jimmies, without looking at her, Said slowly: "It is a very sheet time since poor Pierre killed himself on your ad - count." "O nty aceount?" she returned quickly. "Ate you quite sure Of that?" Jaeques grew paler still, And look - Ing at Clemence With a glance of ter- ror: "Do you believe it was on some other person's aecount, then?" he said, resuming hie seat on the Befit beside her. "Do you not know that it was?" She looked at him fixedly; he turn- ed his head away, but seizing his arm With authority: "It was with nie he spent his latst evening," he said "It -Was to Me he addressed his last words. I know What everyone elite, even Davidoff, N !sewer- trit of. Pierre, Weary of his feverielt existente, disillusioned regarding his geniuk and holieleta of the fixture; Pine dsopOlidebt, and in Obedienelt to I know not wbat superstitious idea re- solved to eaerifice Ms life for the sake of a beloved friend." "Pe silent!" interrupted Jacques, al- most menacingly. "Why should 1. be silent? Are you afgaid of his ghost?. I would neither injure nor reproach you, Ile knew that I loved you, He said to me, at the moment when he took his fatal resolu- tion: He will love you better than I can. And if anything of what I was survives in him it will be a bond Una shall attach me to earth and melte me thrill with joy itk my grave? " At this sacriligious falsehocel, the Young man cast a glance of terror at Clemence. He made an effort to rise and leave her, but his limbs refused him their support, and he sank back on the sofa faint and trembling. He felt that she had spoken the truth, and that a mysterious tie bound him al- ready' to this woman, as if Pierre had transmitted his unconquerable pas- sion for her to him with his soul. He rebelled against this bondage, however, and forgetful of his recent eagerness to win her favor, he now desired to leave the woman he had so ardently wooed while she was as yet unknown to him. He rebelled against the thought of obeying a dead man's com- mand; he could not consent to be the executor of his posthumous caprites. He called to his aid a last remnant of his former courage, coolness and resol. ution, and rising turned a calm coun- tenance toward Clemence. "I shall not allow myself to be van- quished by your spells, beautiful en- chantress," he said. "Beside, it was useless to call in the aid of ghosts to ensia.,ve me. Your lips and your eyes would have been sufficient. You made a great mistake in mingling 'Soreery with love. 1 should be afraid now of your philters." "I shall have no need to use thene with you," responded Clemence in a ptio•alin,eqiu,,,i,1 voice. "and wkether you wish m it or not you shall- asknowledge Y He opened his lips to answer her in the negative, but before he could speak she had glided to the door and vanish- ed like a phantcm from the box. Left alone, Jacques remained for a moment thoughtful. The dancing went on, noisy and uproarious, raising clouds of dust through which the light of the ball -room shone dimly. In the boxes, the spectators, leaning their el- bows on the velvet -covered railings, formed gay and brilliant &roues This overheated room, with its glare and nolse, was 'pervaded by a sense of in- tense life. The young man suddenly remembered the miserable existence he had so short a time ago been leading, and an ardent joy filled his heart al the thought that he was once More well andstrong,-and free to share in the enjoyment of a scene like this, af- ter having given up, as he had done, the hope of ever being able to do so again. How often had he said to Itimself with bitter longing: "Oh, if I could but east aside this languor, if I could be well and strong again, with what zest would I enjoy life!" And this dream had become a reality. The charm had produced its miraculous ef- fects. Death had abandoned hN prey. Or rather he bad chosen another vic- tim in his place, nobler and more emit - Dant than he. At this thought the pale face of Pierre Laurier rose before Jacques' mental vision. With closed eyes, a bitter smile upon his lips, and purple shadows on his temples, the painter slept his last sleep, roeked by the ceaseless motion of the waves, car- essed by the 'sunlight, lulled by the murmur of the breeze. A wanderer on the surface of thehecean, he rose and fell with the tide, forever approaching and forever receding from the earth on which he had suffered so much. Jacques follow ee with his mental- gage this corpse, this waif of the waters, terrified by the sinister apparition, yet, egotist as he was, reaseured by the thought that his friend was nuked dead, since it was with his life he now lived. 1 hdesired fo shake off the nigtomure that so painfully cppreeeee him. He rose to his feet, and the spell was broken.• Br fore him he saw only the gallery filled with spectators of tbe scene be- low, at lila feet the floor of the par- quette, occupied by a motley crowd of daticors. What had seemed the noise of the waves was the sound of their voices and the stamping of Meer feet upon tho floor; the murmur of the wird was the strains of the or- chestra. There had been no appeal - tion, everything was real. He felt eager and vigorous:. And pleasero was within his grasp. Hu passed his hand over Ids fore- Itetta; a smile crossed his face, he (5Pe1le- ed the door of the box, went oat into the corridor and wanted nonchalantly threugh the crowd. Near the foyer he saw Patrizzi, who wns flirting with a protty women. He eventuated the prince with all the boistetenta geyety of his wildest days, and said: "Shall we go and have some supper, prince? There must be at least tt doz- en of our friends here whotn We might get to join Us. 1 think we have hiul all the enjoyment there is to be had in this place. Shall we leave It?" "What have you done with the doine ino who carried vat off so uneerernon- thusly just now?" asked the Neapell- tan. Have you asked her to be ono of the party? Is she to aceompany use" "Oh, I came away and left her by herself." • "Toil did not find the iiiterViekv amusing, then?" "It 'was lugubrious," "Did she not give you a rendeteous for thee orro w es" • . "l'es, but I shall not go." As he Pronommed them words a crowd of masqueraders poured WO the toreidor, And a shrill laugh. was beard. Jacquee tented pele, fie leek - ed around in terror kir the " white domino. But he saw only a group of young men burying pastin'pursnit of some women in fancy dress. A voice' murmured in hie ear: "Why de you beast Red tie? Do you net know that you will keep peer appointment?" And it .seemed to him that the voice that •et Clemence Villa. He, tam- ed around. Only Patriesi WAS neat him "I AM losing my senses," he said to limicelf. Re took the arrn of the prince, and saying with feverish eagertioss, "Come, let us go." he dreVe 141ra away. 1 Next day when he awoke in lile chamber at tile villa of Beaulieu at about 11. o'clock in the morning, lie had only a vague recollection of what had tam Place the night before. He remembered that at nupper lie bad drunk a great deul of champagne, and that he had played A waltz for the ,Vonien to dance to. From this moment everything wee buried in oblivion, He had been taken home in a carriage by a friend, "who was returning to Flze. What had lie PAP,What had lie done? All was shrouded • in a mystery which he had no desire to penetrate. Stretched on his bed, his eyes drink- i»g in frie sunlight that fit:coded the I'001», he felt an exq,uisito aenbe ,of well-being. This recumbent posture, whieh had seemed to hire so irksome when he wns Anion by his violent fits of coughing, that left him Walled in perspiration, weak and exhangtecl, he now enioyed with delight. Ms brain clear, his blood flowing calmly in his vein% his rentration muter. lie lied Mayer' up all night, he bad tamped, he had squandered ids strength in one of tWose orgiee whtch formerly Woitid cost him a week's illness and-deprea. Sion, and yet lie found himself treat, and vigorous. Ito experienced a sengb of profomict satisfaction. The cure, so confidently prshlicted by lea doctor, but of which he isimself had had so lit- tle hope, had indeed been effected. Hz rema.ined thus for a time, enjoys leg the mere sense of being; then, springing at a bound from the bed, he began to dress. He went about his 'teem, humming an air, careless and balmy. Ile opened his window, and the Warm breeze entered and pleyed around his brow, The fragrance c f the clematis reached him from the garden below, and on the terrace. walking toward him slowly, as he had walked a few months be- fore, he perceived his sister. Her eyes were cast on the ground with an air of sadness, and she seem- ed, in her dark gown, as if she were in mourning for her lost happinees— her health, her youth, her gayety. The contrast between what she bad been and what she now was. was so strik- ing that Jacques could not repress a sigh. Disease hacl abandoned her grasp on him, but. as if a victim were necessary, she had seized instead upon poor Juliette. And in proportion as he became more erect and vigorous, she grew more bowed and feeble. The malady fettle which she suffered was one thgt medical science could not reach, From the day on which Dr. Davidoff had brought them the fatal news of Pierre's death, she had de- clined hourly in health. A profound languor had taken possession of her; she seldom spoke, and seized every opportunity to be alon.e. She seemed to feel a pleasure in her suffering. She disliked to be questioned about' her health; she made an effort, when with her mother and brother, to shake off her melancholy, but as soon as .she found herself alone, she relapsed into her habitual eadness: At the mo- ment when Jacques perceived her she was walking with languid stop, a prey to her own sad thoughts, and under the brilliant sunshine, amid the vivid green of the trees and the gay colors of the flowers, her face looked like a dark blot upon the landscape. Jacques descended. into the garden, and observ- ing his mother in the drawing -room went in and kissed her, She looked at him attentively, and seeing him so radiant with health, she smiled. "You returned home late," she said. "It is hardly prudent for you to sit U p so late, when you have so recently recovered from your illness." "It is so long since I have had any pleasure," he answered. "You enjoyed yourself, at least?" she asked. ' "Very Much." "Di not abuse your health, my child. Do not be ungrateful to Pro- vidence who has restored it to you. And do not add to my anxieties, I am troubled enough about your sis-• ter's condition." "Is she worse to -day?" "No. And then how should we knee' it if she were? She utters no complaint. She makes every effort to conceal her dejecticn. But she cannot deceive me. Day by day T see her grow weaker. Ab, if Davidoff, who benefited you so much, were only here now!" At ,these words the young man turned pale. He fancied he sew the sardonic countenance of the Russian doctor rise before him. What could David- off do? Was he to be asked to work another miracle? Jacques knew very well how powerless was medical sci- ence. He knew how useless it was in his own case. 'The help he had received had come to him from an unknown source. But was it not at the price of a terrible sacrifice that this help had been obtained? Had It not been necessary to vitalize and purify his blood, that the blood of an- other should be shed for him? And was not this voluntary sacrifice of a human life to save that of another, marked out for destruction by the hand of fate, a repetition of the hu- man sacrifices offered up on the al- tars of the pagan gods of antiquity?' Could the miracle be wrought a Sec- ond time? And who should make the sacrifice? Pierre had made it for him. Who would make it for Juli- ette? The sound of his mother's voice drew him from his meditation. "Besides," she added, "even if the doctor were here; Would Juliette fel- lbw his directions? When she is asked about her health she eiswers that she is not. ill, ,hat she is only a little tired; that there is no cause fer anxiety. But this very indifference makes tne all the more uneasy, be- cause in .it I ftee the indleation of a oral cause for her Malade, more dif- ficult to combat than any physical onots,, . "A Moral cause!" repeated Jacques. "Yes, the child has a secret grief, and notwithstanding the Courageous efforts she makes to conceal it, she catinot deceive tne. Each Morning I see that she is paler than the last from the sleepless hours she has spent during the night. And it has been so for the Past two months. Oh, I knOve the eicaet date Of the comtneticetnerit of her Malady. It. has remained Indel- ibly fixed Open my Memory. It is both itatiad and a happy one for Me for it marks at one the beginning of your recovery and the be- gihning t)f the illness of yOur Oaten Yes, Juliette received the 'blew frOm whieh she is now Battering oil the tla,y when Dr. Davidoff cattle to atiritletee? to Us the death of Pierre laa If Madame de Vignes had been ob- serving Jacques she would have been terrified by the look of anguish that distorted his features. What he had already Vaguely suspected his Mother had Init into worde, The death of Pierre had produCed at once a ealittary and a pentieletis effect; it had restor- ed him to life and given her death- blotr to 3ti1iette, 11'0 be Oentititted4 . Popular Ford .Oars --Equipped with -- MADE -IN -CANADA STEERING DEVIQE WEIQHING flv, pounds, which can be, Istavited by anyone in fifteen minutes, Ott ei $T.00, is,s oombinetIon that has made motoring In this ear a pleasure and isornfort. eT,114d01:948. tunas Device hat been thoroughly tested and le absolutely guaranteed and • IT DOES away with the strain on your arms and aerves mused by having to eon. gently gdp the wheel. You Cannot Afford to be with- out ons -it represents ECONOMY SAFETY COMFORT PLEASURE Ohoth from your dealer, or threat by Using coupon below. Express prepaid to any address in Canada W, L. McCRACKEN Owner one Manufacturer of THE MADE -IN -CANADA STEERING DEVICE FOR FORD CARS 7411-11 Somerset Building, MINIM , AGENTS WANTED All Over Canada. Apply at Onto UM lam. INSIST MADE 'ON IN OETT.INO j CANADA" THE DEVICE COUPON-w.L. hIcCRACICEN, 745-749 Somerset Adding, Winnipeg. Enclosed find 97.00 for whieh you may ocrul me on• of your SAFETY STEERING DEVICES for Ford Cars, togethor with illustration and full Instructiona foe Intoning. Thls devico is ordered with th• under. itandlno that it Is fully guaranteed and will do 11. work claimed for it Addreen *1 Beware the Rat. The rat is a menace,. Much filth is fostered by rats. Waring and cunning, the rat is hard to fight. Disease carrying has been proven against' eats. The rat is the chief carrier of the deadly bubonic plague. Many parasites intest tee hairy body of the filthy rats. Rats are subject to leprosy and oth- er diseases which may be transmitted. . The spread of trichouists is attrib- uted to tats by scientific authorites. . Making its home in sewers and dirt clumps, it is described as "the worst mammal pest in the United States." HOES kr E'yery birrt ecrealion Sold by all OA shoe dealers Worn* every inemberiMefamily How Railroads Have Grown. To show how rapidly railroads de- veloped in the United States, in 1328 there were only 3 miles, in 1830 42 miles, in 1840 2,800 miles and in 1S50 50,000 miles. The present railroad mileage in the United States is up- ward of 356,000 miles, or equal to sev- eral tracks around the globe, while the total mileage of the world is more than 640,000 miles, all built in less than a hundred years. Keep MInard's Liniment In the house 4.. MARRY, YOUNG MAN. (Detroit Free Press.) There are unthinking, hotheaded mar- ried men to be found. But matrimony and property -owning are great tamers of the male human spirit. And they commend the individual to the attention of employera. The moral is obvious: Marry, young man, buy a home and you'll prosper and be happy, IVlinard's Liniment used by Physicians • • 0. Industry. It argues, indeed, no small strength of mind to preserve In the habits of industry without the pleasure of perceiving those advantages which, like the hands of a clock, while they make hourly approaches to thoir point yet proceed so slowly as to escape observation. -Sir John Reyncilds. IT WAS. A NICE STEAK I And the Emergency Chef Thought als Oooktug Improved It, "My, but I'd like a big jnicy steak," eaid Patrolman Timothy Sullivan, emaoking his lips, "I'm wbtli you," echoed Policeman John Smtth. "And I'll get the 'steak if some- bedy'll cook it," said Policeman Gleo, Meee, who happened te be in the South Chicago station at the time. Tti6 steak Was brought and Police - naps Leslie Fisher offered to net as chef. He took the thick piecesof beef down to the old stove in, the basement of the station, on whieh patrolmen on night duty prepare "emergency grub," A short while in.ter Fisher Placej tho steaming steak in front of Tim, CleOrge and John. After a large por- tion of the steak had disappeared in great gulps, Tim, frothing at the mouth, expressed his opinion of Patrolman. Fisher between hiccup's. And each hiccup was accompanied by a creamy spurt of lather. John, with one band to his mouth, dragged Fisher to the stove and 'smelled the frying pan. solia:p_rehjacl.te:econonk 0! grease d -did you use?" lie spluttered. Fisher pointed to the can on the shelf, John looked at it and blanched. su.d.e4...soft s -soap," he cried, spitting d make a good b -barber," frothed Tim. "We wanted a We) meal, not a shampoo." "Well, no one has ever complained of my laundered steaks before," argued Fisher, with a twinkle. "You. see He ducked out of the door just as a frryill.lnigme . pan and a can of soft soap crashed against the jambs.—Chicago r • —10 Ruskin's Political Views. Ruskin was once a candidate for the rectorship of Glasgow university an flew into a rage when 'asked by a deputation of the students whether his political sympathies lay with Beacongfield or with Gladstone. What in thedevil's name," he exclaimed," have you to do with either Disraeli or Gladstone You are students at the university and have no more bust - nese with politics than you have with rat catching. Had you ever read the words of mine with understanding* you would have known that I care no more either for Mr. Disraeli or Mr. Gladstone than for two old bagpipes with the drones going by steam. but that I hate all Liber- alism as I do Beelzebub, and that with Carlyle I stand -we two alone in Eng- land -for God and the queen." -London Express. • • Thousands Are Ailing From Constipation No condition causes so many dis- eases as constipation. It not only prevents proper kidney action, but causes Anaemia, Stomach Trouble and Indigestron. Why not use Dr. Hamilton's Pills and get cured? This excellent medi- cine restores normal bowel action in one night, thousands say so. Just think of it! Your system will be pure and clean. You'll be free from headaches, sour stomach, bilious- ness—in short, you'll have jovial spirits and perfect good health . Get a 25e box of Dr. Hamilton's Pills to- day. At all dealers. Diet When Reducing. The que3tion of food is -important to the woman reducing; and not so ranch the quantity as the quality; not how much, but what you eat. And wbat you eat must vary from one day to another, according to the amount of work done. Do not eat down your food on the day when yon have exera deed more than usual. That is when you need the full supply. On this mat- ter you will have to eitercise your own judgment. In general, avoid fats, tie nutter, cream and cocoa; starchy foode, as breads and cereals; flesh - producing vegetables, as potatoes, beans and carrots; all pastries • and sweets. Of course they are the very things which you take the moat de-, light In eating. That is just how you have put on so much flesh. Eat Plenty of fruit, except bananas and melons. Meat, if not taken in excees, poultry and fish may be added to your list. Drink water, preferably hot, be- tween meals. Not more than ane glass should ever be taken with .rneals. A hot lemonade before retiring is very good.—Woman's World for May. HOME STUDY Arts Courses only. SUMMER SCHOOL JULY and AUGUST QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY KINGSTON, ONTARIO ARTS EDUCATION MEDICINE SCHOOL OF MINING MINING 6 CHEMICAL MECHANICAL CIVIL ELECTRICAL, ENGINEERING GEO. Y. CHOWN, Registrar 1 1 Oi.71TAL PUNISHMENT. (Detroit Free Press.) Capital punishment is always objeetion- able because It is irrevocable. Mistakes will Occur as long as human Institutions last, but their victims who are in Prison can at least be set at liberty and some show of restitution ean be made to them for the injustice they Undergb. But the man who goes to the gallows or the elec- tric chair unjustly goes beyond recall. COLT DISTEMPER Can be handled Very easily. The sick are Mired, and all ethers in same stable, no matter how "exposed," kept from having the disease, by using SPOHN'S LIQUID DISTEMPER COMPOUND. Give on the tongue or in feed, Ads on the blood and expels germs of all forms of dis- temper. Best remedy eVer known for mares in foal. Drug- gists and harness dealers. Our freo Booklet gives every- thing. Largest selling horse remedy In existence, 20 years. Distributors -ALL 1VHOI.E'SA.LE DRUGGISTS. SPOHN MEDICAL CO., (Monists and Bacteriologists, Goshen, Ind., U. S .A. firomosw —*ye - Do yott know you tan take as much crop off 100 aeres properly drained as yOu can of 200 acres not drained and save half the labor? fast. Do yon know that wooer, inexpensive tile drainage assists puiveritation-leagthens the team -prevents itorface washing -makes your land lightezto worlo-prevents droughtand increases tho quantity and improves the quality ef yoar crone? Why not have us send you, today. free of charge, a very in- teresting booklet ott this subjett? Much to learn -nothing to pity. Don't neglect anything thatwil, help you grow better, biltget Grope. Proper drainage raceme as much as two dollars In Nair bank beeount for every ono that_troce there -now, and tho Goverment lends you money for the Tile if desired. sue Watt. Zifetttfors this vapor, Your book is waiting , DOtniniOrl" Sower Pipe Co,, Liimited SWUM, MAIO Irsw. • CORRUGATED IRON Galvanized, Rust Proof Made from very finest sheets, absolutely free from defeats! Binh shoot Is pressed, not roiled, °corrugations therefore fit soouratisly without waste. Any desired size or gauge, straight or curved. LOW POWES---POOMPT SHIPMENT Metallic Roofing Co., LIMITED Manufactgrers TORONTO & WINNIPEG tri 11•91•101=••••••••••••••11,14 WHERE THE TROUBLE LIES. (Pittsburg Gazette-T)nese Certainly a domestic and social system that produces a young -woman who at 19 and possessed of great wealth is haled into court as an incorrigible must have a Wheel loose in It somewhere. When it Is further said that many of the young associates of this girl, parasites and out.. right crooks who have been fleecing her right and left, have become alarmed and. taken to cover to avoid arrest, the dam- aging extent of the system in New 'York Is alarmingly set forth. It is not so much an evidecne of a de- cay of morals, nor is It a sign of increas- ing waywardness among the young peo- ple of this generation, that is brought out in the deplorable facts concerning this Kew York girl, as it Is an awfut tion of the blighting sad -and -life -wither- ing influence of a combination of too much money and too little Intelligent. healthy employment of the consequent idle time. LIQUOR AND MORPHINE HABITS Are diseases, not vices. and there- fore curable. Patients are under my personal care -and receive their treatment in ordinary hospitals as ordinary medical cases. D. 11. ARNOTT, M. D. 226 Queen's Ave., London, Ont, Making History. When Kinelake was 'writing his his- tory ofsthe Crimean war he received letters from all sorts of people con- cerned in the war. One day a letter with a deep black border came from two people in the colonies, husband and wife, describing their grief. Their only child had been killed in the Crimea. They wanted to have him mentioned in the "History of the Crimean War." Kinglake was touched and replied by post that he would do his best if they would send him the necessary particulars. Again a letter. also black bordered, full of thanks, but with the following conclusion: "We have no particulars whatever to give you. He was killed on the spot,ThIce rnany others, but anything you may kindly invent will be welcome. . We leave it entirely to your imagination." London Opinion, ZAM-BUK AND OUTDOOR LIFE. Every tennis or ball player, every swimmer, every canoeist, every man or woman who loves outdoor life and exercise, should keep a box of Zam-Buk handy. Zam-Buk is a purely herbal prepare- tIon, which, as. soon as applied to cuts, bruises, burns, sprains, blisters, etc., sets up highly beneficial operations. First, its antiseptic properties render the wound free from all' danger from 'blood poisoning. Npxt, its soothing properties relieve and ease the pain Then its rich, herbal bahns penetrate the tissue, and set up the wonderful process of healing. Barbed wire scratches, insect stings, skin diseases, such as eczema, heat rashes, ring- worm, babies' heat sores, chafed places, sore feet—are all quickly cured by Zam-Buk. It also eases and ;cures piles. All druggists and stores. Use Zam-Buk Soap also; 250. per tablet. Character Shown by the Nose. "Here Is an article In the paper that says a woman's character can he deter- mined by her nose." "Well, there may be something in, that, but there's a surer way. No one can make a mistake concerning a woman's character if he will look at the noses of other women who meet her. The extent to which they turn up at such times shows Just what she is or isn't." -Ex- change. Ask for Minard'a and take no other. A Matter of Trade. An American merchant in Guate- mala had a rich customer who wanted two dozen ties exactly like the one he wore. The order was sent to a maker In the United States, who answered that those ties were out of date, and sent two dozen of the latest style. They were not wanted. The merchant then ordered two dozen in Germany, where they were made just as desired. —New York Post. Mlnard's Liniment Lumberman's Friend. THE MOTHER'S CHOICE. One Five Minutes in the tile of Her Dead Soldier Son. A mother lost her soldier son. The news came to her In despatches front tho war. He had fallen fighting nobly at the head of his regiment. She was inconsolable. "Oh, that I might aeo hln again!" she prayed. "If only for five minutes," the angel said. "Quick, quick:" said the mether, her tears turfied to momentary joy. "yes," said the angel, "bet think a lit- tle. He 'waif a grown 1nau. There are thirty years to choose from. How would you see hint?" The Mother paused and wondered. "Would you see him," said the angel. "art 0, Soldier dying heroically at his poSt? Would you see him as he left you to Jola the transport? Would you see him as you first saw him In the uniform'? weuto you see him again as on that da Y at school when he stepped On the platform to reeeive the highest honors a boy could have?" "How did you know?" the mother asked, her eyes lighting. The angel smiled. 'Would YOu Nee him as a baby et your breast? Would you?" "No," said the mother, "I Woxild have him for five minutes as he was ono day when he ran In from the garden to ask my forgiveness for being natighty. He %MB so entail and Iso unhappy, and he was very hot, and the tears were making etreaks down his face through the gar- den dirt. And he flew Into my arms with such force that he hurt irte."-0, V. Ltl* can in "Lutist` Annual," It is a good plan to wipe out -all greasy utensils with a piece of tiOrt paper before washing. This simplifies the washing process, Delltroy the, paper immedittely. ••• ISSUE NO, 28, 1915•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••■••••••••• HBO WANTED—FILMALS T AMES WANTED TO DO TAILN 14 and light liewing at home, w Ots or Sparc timet goed pan worn lien any distance; cbargee paid. Ocaul aterfiP for particulars. National Manuta.otursng Co., elontreal. FARMS FOR SAL, 'Of f nse.....W....sowsuwewsosvnees..,^06PeNsow.weve‘ewn.WW•s*MPW.A.Q't F011, tia141-.ALdu Sin] mum', grain and stock farms: autornes bile at your service. W. F. liands-lir Grimsby, Ontario, Oxygen Cakes. Solid oxygen in cakes like SON), easily turned into oxygen of the gas form, is a new substitute for the tanks of compressed oxygen used breathing apparatus for coal mine rescues, in the machines for supplying oxygen in cases of extreme eickness, toul in a great many manufacturing processes, The Woe of oxygen rap. idly turn Into the gas when placed in contact with water, in much the same way that carbide is turned into 'acety- lene gas, A pound cake of solid oxy- gen will make more than two cubic feet of the gas.—Saturday Evening Post, BETTER THAN SPANKING Spanking does not cure children of bed. wetting. There is a constitutional cause for this trouble, Mrs. M. Summers, Box W. 8, NS indsor, Ont., will send free to any mother her successful home treat- ment, with full instructions. Send no money but write her to -day if ,,your children trouble you in this way. Don't blame the child, the chances are It can't hely it. t.4 This treatment also curie adults and aged people troubled with urine dif- ficulties by day or night, .e• FICTION REFORM NEEDED. f (Detroit Free Press.) It seems high time that some one said a word against that class of fiction whiOlt portrays the business man as a beast of prey, lacking scruples and honor, who re- gards every good-looking 'girl as a possi. ble victim Such stuff Is an Inault to thousands of decent men • and virtuous girls: it suggests what it tacitly con- demns -but sometimes condones. No man 1 insensative to the charm or the pretty face, but. it by po means follows that he has an' evil heart. The average business ma understands that a liaison with an office employe is a menace to his bust- ness and social standing* and to his fam- ily relations. Most men prize and honor their homes and children. That there are exceptions we know, but they prove the. rule. They get into the courts and the newspapers. but they do not reflect the general relation of employer and his female employes. THE BEST MEDICINE FOR LITTLE ONES Thousands of mothers say Baby's Own Tablets are the only medicine they would give their little ones. Among them is Mrs. Howard Hodgkins, St. Catharines, Ont. who says: "I am a user of Baby's Ont., Tablets, and think them the best medicine in the world for little ones." Once a mother has used the Tablets she will use no other medicine because she feels the Tablets are absolutely safe, and knows they never fail to banish all the steeple ailments of little ones. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mall at 25 cents a box from The ,Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. BLOODTHIRSTY FERRETS. They Kill Not for 'Food, but for the Mere Sake of Slaughter. The ferret is one of the most peculiar members of the animal kingdom. it be- longs also to an extraordinary family, that of the weasels. A branch of this family Is called the polecats, the Euro- pean representative of our skunks, and tho ferrot is a species of polecat, gener- ally an albino, yellowish -white in color, with pink eyes. To hunt and kill mice, rats, rabbits and Other small animals is the ferret's de- light. It is coldly methodical In its mur- derous pursuits, and, while it serves its master well, never tiring inthechase and never shrinking fro man attack, 1 texhi- bits no trace of affection or attachment toward its trainers, aa nobler animals do. The ferret is a typical killer and blood shedder. It has no friends and apparent- ly wants none. It cannot be trusted and will sometimes attack small children. It likes to kill not for the sake of food, but for the sake of killing. The mere act of taking the life of another creature is a pleasure to it. How it got this blood- thirsty strain in its nature no one can tell. Its appetite for slaughter serves well In ridding our houses of rats and mice, but of what use is it to the ferret to kill those creatures? its nature is that of a demon, and wherever it sees the life blood beating at a throat its brutal in- stinct urges it to slit the throat with its keen teeth and let the life throb out - New York Journal. At the Yarmouth Y.M,C.A. I3oys' Camp, held at Tusket Falls in August, I found MINARD'S LINIMENT most beneficial for sun burn, an immediate relief for colic and toothache. ALFRED STOKES, General Secretary. THE ENGINEER KNOWS, (London .Advertiser,) The Brotherhood of Locomotive Engin- eers, representing both the Canadian and American wings of the great order, have passed an unanimous resolution for provincial and state and national prohi- bition. No set clf• the men knows the clangers'of the bottle more clearly than the engineers. Your engineer is usually about the manliest type in the commun.* Ity. He takes care of your life constant- ly, and he knows that liquor is as much 0 .menace to humanity a9 a, znisraced switch or at, broken rail or a tio placed en the track by desperadoes. BOY'S HEAD A - SIGHT FROM ECZEMA • In rBlisters. Itched and Burned Badly, Had to Put Gloves On Child's Hands, Cuticura Healed. 10 Abbott Ave.; Torepto, Ont.—"My boy had etzems badly all over, but his head was affected most. It canto out in blisters and it was ti tight to look ht. It Itched tend burned so badly that I had to put gloves on the child's hands. /t came out first on his face near the ears, and then vett to hie head and then on )iis body. Hisht)ad was bios so bad.r. "I used Cuticura Soap and redntment and et the end of six weeks he was cured." (Signed) Wm Carroll, Jam 1, 1014. Sample Each Free by Mall catcall. soap and Oletntent mold throttghs out the World, roe liberal tree MOM% of etch, With 32-p, book, cend poel-card tO .1!.,‘Csttisu.nri,'Daipt.:1011, eatedb ILI. IL