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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1908-11-12, Page 21 Fashion lints. " FAD,s.AND FANOTES, hosed for hats are immense in size. New coats are elaborately braid- ed. Modish grays raugo from deepest smoke to palest pearl The Psyche kaut is the favorite coiffure of the moment. The seek shape is smart and be - coning to good farms, The walking teat is long and the calking skirt is short. ltic•h and dart_ colors have the greatest vogue in hat trimming. Some smart French women are beginning to carry dainty walking sticks, Filet net and soutache braid are the two most popular trimmings. Ribbon ornaments of all sorts Til be used on fall and winter nuliiu A CURE FOR RHEUMATISM The Trouble Yield to the Ptiah, Bed Blood Dr, Williams' Pink Bilis Aotulally Male, Ask any doctor and the will tell you that rheumatism is rooted In the blood; that nothing can euro it that does not reach the blood. It is sheer waste of money and time to try to cure rheumatism with lini- ments and lotions that only go skin deep. You can speedily cure' rheu- matism with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, which enrich the blood, drive tut the poisonous acid and loosen the stiffened, aching joints, Among the thousands of rheumatic suffer- ers cured by Dr. Williams, Pink Pills is Ili'. W. A. Taylor, New- castle, N, 13., who says:—For a number of years 1 was a great suf- ferer from rheumatism which was seated in my shoulders and knee joints. I tried liniments and Wis- .' tering, butwithno effect. fl'c .t In fact the trouble was gutting worse, soil my knee joints grew so stiff ti.a' they would snap if I stooped, and I could scarcely straighten up. Al- together I was a. terrible sufferer, and nothing I slid or took gave me any relief until I began the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. I took the Pills steadily for a couple of months and every vestige of the trouble disappeared. That was two years ago, and as I have had no return of the trouble I feel safe In assuming that the euro is per- manent." Nine -tenths of the common ail- ments that afflict humanity are due to bad blood, and as Dr, Williams' Pink Pills actually make new blood, that is the reason they euro so many different troubles, such as anaemia, indigestion, rheumatism, eczema, neuralgia, St. Vitus dance, paralysis and the ailments of girl- hood and womanhood with alt their distressing headaches, backaches •and irregularities. Sold by all me- dicine dealers or by mail at 50c a box or six boxes for 52,50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. —_—__e___ ery. The empire style is steadily fail- ing before the triumphant direc- toire vogue. Most of the new directoire sashes are trimmed with buttons both front and back. Black and white blends form some of the smart effects in hat feathers. The seassxn's gowns, suits, and hats demand a great amount of hand needle work. The sash is worn with all sorts of frocks, from the street suit to the ball gown. Short gloves — the two button rind—are essential with the long sleeves of the fall costumes. Large pockets are a feature of the new separate coat and are set far down on the body. Some of the new fur coats are finished with flaring reveres of vel- vet and some of contrasting fur. Touches of Iingerie are found ad- ded to waists of silk in ruffles and collar with good effect. A new detail of the rich sealskin coat is a standing collar made of ends that cross over each other in the form of a cravat. ' A good many of the colored hats have black velvet facings, although black may play no other part in the hat. Blue serge is so adaptable that women are without a suit of his becoming and serviceable ma- terial, Prophetic milliners say that the midwinter will bring in smaller huts, though nothing yet paints in that direction. Black taffeta or peau de soie se- parate waists are elaborate with tucks and are made open at the front. They have long sleeves. A wing that is colored a brilliant cerise on one side and an equally striking black on the other' is a mo- dish acidities] to the autumn hat. All the latest coats aro complete- ly directoire, although they are lib- eral adaptations of the vogue of the late eighteenth century. Newest veillings include the hex- agonal mesh and the square velvet dut in brown, black, and combina- tions of brown and tan and mag- pie. Coiffures are increasing in size. The most fashionable arrangement, next to the Psyche knot, is flat, wide, and huge at the back. The sealskin coat, veteran oft many a season, was never more fashionable than this autumn—pos- sibly because the price of real seal is just now almost prohibitive. Some of the big black hats of the, season show the wide brims rolled oi'' the face in front and on one side and caught hack with two or three ostrich tips. Though never obtrusively fash- ionable, the grays are the choice of many really well dressed women, particularly for evening dresses that are to be worn often, Fashionable big picture hats arse made of velvet to match the gown with which they are worn and aro trimmed only with long ostrich fea- 1•hers, all carried out in the sante sbade. Quaint accessories rule with the renaisance gowns—sueh things as fitted bodices, laced in the back, skin tight sleeves, buttoned the whole length, old brocades, big 7111411t10S, ete. Black for general wear is evi- dently destined to have as great a vogue as last year, and black cloth gowns designed for wear with black ' fur or velvet jackets are among the smartest of ail the now models. l''ltvarite millinery trimmings in- clude brightly tinted berries and a shaded leaves, quantities of ostrich feathers, rind large, shapely point -I ed wings in brilliant t•oliu'ings, SPIRIT OF PHOTOGRAPHS. Rector of Stockton, Warwickshire, Exhibits Them. Archdeacon Colley, rector of Stockton, Warwickshire, England, et the close of a sermon on spiritu- alism at Manchester the other night exhibited a series of what he called spirit photographs. One of them taken in March last outside his residence, showed the archdeacon'•s mother, who died fifty years ago, and his father, who died in 1801, aged"81. Tho mother was never photographed during life, but her likeness had been re- ecgnized by hundreds in Learning - t 0. In the second photograph, token half a minute afterward, the father mother had changed places, and the archdeacon deduces from this a double parental blessing on what he calls his anti-Sadducee work. "Seventeen years in the ]higher life," said the archdeacon, "`appear to work for making my father in the spirit photograph look some- what younger than in the negative I took of him three years before he departed this life:'' Another print shown looked, as the archdeacou said, like a psychic fog, but in the midst of the black blotch could be clearly deciphered some archaic Greek characters, and around them in ten concentric lines some microscopical writing which, the archdeacon said, con- tained a message from a friend who had been dead for twenty-five years. The Greek chaeacters, inter- preted recently by Sir Oliver Lodge, were a quotation from Si. Luke, chapter 17, 4th and 5th vers- es, hut .seven words were missing. "This photograph, or rather, psy- chograph, was taken," said the archdeacon, "without a camera. I went to a friend's house and took out three plates and put them into t envelopes. '1 initialed them, sealed them, and retained possession of them in my hands, and no soul touched them.I took one plate be- tween the palms of my ]lands, my friend clasped my hands and a lady placed her hands above and below his. My friend then went into a trance, In a short time ho said: They are writing.' " ALBATROSS TOOK NEWS TOLD OF THE SERIOUS PLIGHT OF 503113 ('.SS'1AWAY5. Sending of Bh'ils by Shipwrecked Sailor Recalls Story of `Tragedy, The `.tory of the rosene of twen- ty-two starving French sailors from Antipodes Island says that they tried every day to notify the world of their distress by releasing alba- trosses with messages tied to their' necks telling of the serious plight c 1 the castaways. The idea of using albatrosses as message carriers was undoubtedly suggested to the men by a remark- able incident which occurred near- ly twenty-one years ago and is known to all mariners. On Sep- tember 22, 1887, a dead albatross was found on the beach at Free - mantle, ,Western Australia, around whose neck was fastened a bit of metal, on which had been scraten- ed in French: "Thirteen shipwrecked men took refuge upon the Crozet Islands on August 4, 1887," The news was cabled around the world by Governor Robinson of Western Australia, and the French Minister of Marine at once order- ed the transport Meurthe to leave Madagascar for the Cruzets to search for the castaways. NEVER HEARD OF SINCE. The Meurthe returned from her search to Madagascar on January 6, 1888. She found no human beings on the Crozets, but abundant evi- dence that one of the four islands had recently been occupied, and under a heap of stones was a sheet of paper on which was written iu French with lead pencil the details of the wreck of the ship Tarnaris, of Bordeaux, with thirteen men in the crew. The crew had lived on the island for nine months, and, their food being exhausted, they were about to set out for Posses- sion Island. This island is eighty miles from, Cachous. The Meurtheat ouce' went there and also to East Island, but found nothing, and the cast- aways have never been heard of ` since. It was quite certain that. they were lost. in the perilous pas- sage to Possession Island. These poor fellows neves- dream- ed that eight days before they set out the bird they sent over the waters bad finished its wonderful flight and told the world of the un- happy situation. The winged mes- senger had made a journey of over 2,000 miles with few chances to rest or, the way. Naturalists and sail- ors have told us much of the alba- tross's remarkable powers and en- durance on the wing, but no testi- mony to this fact will outlive the story of the bird that was the means of letting tho world know that poor castaways in the waste of southern waters sorely needed suc- cor. e BABY'S OWN TABLETS A BOON TO CHILDREN A medicine that will keep babies and young children plump and good natured, with a clear eye and rosy slain is a blessing not only to the little ones but to mothers • as well. Baby's Own Tablets is just such a medicine, They cure all the mines ailments of children and make them eat well, sloop well and play well. They are used exclusive- ly in thousands of homes when a child medicine is needed. Mrs. G. Collins, HirkeIla, Man,, says: — "Baby's Own Tablets are the most satisfactory medicine I have ever used for ills of young children, They are as good as a doctor in the home," Sold by medicine dealers en by mail at 25e a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ---- HE FIXED HIM. Mrs. McGrath—Sure, it woe a painless dentist Oi thought we wint 0. Mr, McGrath --Ho lnoight hov bin a painless dintist whin Oi wint, but Ale worn't whin Oi lift ]him. You can snake richer, more fra- grant, more delicious tea, if you use "`Salado." One teaspoonful makes two cups, Steep five minutes. MISSING OPPORTUNITIES. 'I have no patience with a man ivhu makes the same `mistake twice," said Armes, rather' severe- ly, in speaking of an unfortunate friend. "Neither have I," agreed his. wife, "when there are so many other mistakes to snake," 'Aitimeatl the population of hon-) f. ion.J1piu8tl'opolitatsdistrict is 3,00t,- 000 larger than that of New 'York,] the latter city does a restittrrantr business .euo'fifth greater than the former. r PHILOSOPHY, She --Frankly, now if you had to choose between Me and a million what would you do 7 Ile—I'd take the million. Then, you would be easy. - . Bhl. ch. . Watch 0hoVving Tobapoes Rich and satisfying. 1 iI The big black plug. >znoo ,tr 1ISH STORY. An old fisherman, while fishing one day, was surprised at hearing a voice, and on looking up he saw that his visitor was a stranger, and this was the conversation: Stranger --How's lucre, old man? Fisherman—Well, pretty fair ; I caught 47 yesterday and seventeen to -day so far. Stranger --Do you know who I am'7 Fisherman—Don't believe I do, Stranger --Well, I am tho game warden. Fisherman—Mr, (lame Warden, do you know who I cunt Game Warden—No. 'ishormen---Welt, I am the big- gest liar in the country, It takes four years 10 train a lion for exhibition Werk, and only ono lion in four is fit for training, A Tivoli -trained lion is five times as ,ylrivablo ea Ate 3ent7ofeed 1100, Zaare-Bulk Saved Odd Fellow's Finger "The only thing 1 oan do now is to take the finger com- pletely off, It cannot other - Vides be cured," So csaid one of tlae leading doctors of Tor- onto to Mr. 'W. C. Edwards, P.D.C,R.A.O•F., P.G.M.I.O,O• F,, the well-known Friendly Society leader, of Peter Street Toronto, Ztltu-Buk proved otherwise. Mr. Edwards out his finger badly and blood poisoning followed. He says : "The blood poisoning spread up my hand and arm and caused me terrible agony. After two months' treatment the doctor said there was no cure, and. amputation would have to take place if I intended to save rho arta. My hand at that Limo Was 011 swollen up and discolored, and 1 held to carry it in. a sling. I left that doctor and consulted another. After a few weeks' treatment he also told me that operation would be necessary. That night I btu hod the wound and put on some Zatii•Bult. I got a little steep for the first time for many nights. In rho morning the wound began to bletd intend of the foul discharging as 10 (ho pasL.Cit This was a healthy sign so I went on with the lam-P,uk. Well, to cut a long story short, in a few days I put away the sling and in a few weeks the finger was healed completely. To -day that finger is as sound as a bell and I owe it to Zan1-Buk. I spent over 820 in doctor's fees and yet Zam-Luk, at such a trifling cost, saved mo from amputatiOn." Zan, -]Bilk cures eczema, ulcers, cold sores, chapped places, cuts, burns, bruises and all skin injuries and diseases. Also cures pies. All drug. gists and stores LOc a box, or post free 'Lam-Buk Co., Toronto, for price. The Balm that benefits �,... a lifitM MONETARY. If all mon could make money as easily as they can lie, almshouses would soon belong to the leas -been class. The Most Popular Pill.—Tho pill is the most popular of all forms of medicine, and of pills the most po- pular aro Parmelee's Vegetable Pills, because they do what it is as- serted they can do, and are not put forward on any fictitious claims to excellence. They are compact and portable, they aro easily taken, they do not nauseate nor gripe, and they give relief in the most stub- born cases.' It's a gay old world when you are gay and a sad olcl world when you are sad. It all depends upon the point of view. THS JAYS did it. They supplied the Menthol round in the "D ,0 0' Menthol Plaster, which r.• lovae instantly beolmoho, hoa,lache, neuralgia, rheumatism and eoIatioa. New Zealand has been called by its inhabitants, "The Fortunate Isles," "The Star of the South," and "The Wonderland of the Pa- cific." As only a little over one acre in ft hundred of Ireland is tinder tiin- her, great results aro expected from the afforestation movement now in progress. Do not let a cold settle on your• lungs, Resort to Bickio's Anti- Consumptive Syrup at the first in- timation of irritation in the throat and prevent disease from lodging in the pulmonary organs, Neglected colds are the cause of untold suf- fering throughout the country. all of which could have been prevented by the application of this simple but powerful medicine. The price, 25 cents, brings it within the roach of all. THE PERISCOPE. Under this name Commandant Soulie de Conac of the French Log- ien of Honor has designed a pinta nes, or eye -glass, which el -tables the wearer to see ab the same time on all sides, and even behind. This is ingenuously effected by means of reflections. At 110 satne time trio glasses are so constructed as to cor- rect myopia, and other errors of vision, ,A use for the instrument that the inventor did not think of has been revealed to him by deaf portions employing it. They say that it increases their safety by enabling then to perceive the approach of dangers of which their ears 'gi'Ve diem no warning, Nuts form the principal dietof ha4 Samnoli soidiorr;. RING'S SNUB TO SCOTLAND. Revenges Himself for Slight When Prince or Wales. Ring Edward passed through Edinburgh the other day on his way to 13alulural Castle, his residence in 1110 Highlands. When his train arrived at the station the Lord Provost and 1110 Corporation were waiting to pay their respects. But when the King was informed that the representatives of the cfti- sons of his Scottish capital wished ll' pay him homage he sent word that he could not see them, They could 000 him through it winclow, though, cahnly smolciug a cigar in his royal saloon'car and yoadilrg a newspaper. The Scottish officials left the rail- way station in High dudgeon and their indignation was intensified on bearing that at the next stopping place the King got nut of the train, received the local representatives and kissed a little girl who present- ed him with a bouquet. The cause of the Ring's affront to Edinburgh was bitterly canvassed, and it was finally explained by a statement that forty years ago, when he came here as the Prince of Wales, shortly after his appear- ance in the celebrated Morclaunt divorce suit—at which, gossips laved to say, "be perjured himself like a gentleman"—ho was hooted in the streets. Be then aware that when he ascended the throne ho would be revenged on Edinburgh and Scotland. The rebuff to the Edinburgh city fathers is only a small part of his revenge. His selecting the title of Edward VII. of Great Britain is considered a deliberate insult to Scottish pride, for he rightfully is only Edward 1. of Scotland, and hie title falsely implies that Scot- land always has been subject to England. Moreover, he has altered the or- der of precedence, giving English peers precedence over Scottish peers oven in Scotland. MO.THI'ERS! Give the Children a Chance. Spanking docs not cure children ofbed- wetting. There is a constitutional cause for this trouble. Mrs. Al. Summers, Box 103, Windsor, Ont„ will send free to any mother her successful home treatment, 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 help it. This treatment also cures adults and aged people troubled with urine difficulties by day or night. Among the factories in the Wandsworth district of London is one devoted exclusively to the mak- ing of dolls' clothes. Mother Graves' 'Worm Extermin- ator has the largest sale of any similar preparation sold in Canada. It always gives satisfaction by re- storing health to the little folks. It has been estimated that less exertion is necessary to ride fifteen miles on a bicycle than to walk three miles. DO NOT ALLOW yearsolf to become alarmed borluao you hire lost ymtrapt,et!te and aro losb, flesh, Iwtaormnencu taking •' l"orre,vhu Ih. lies/ tonic. It will build you up qurckly, "There's only Ono thing the Arm- less 'Yonder can't du with his feet," said the showman. "What's that?" asked a spectator. "Put on his gloves," answered the showman. Signals of Danger.—Have you lost your appetite? Have you a coated tongue? Have you an unpleasant taste in the mouth? Does your head ache and have you dizziness 7• 11 so, your stomach is out of order • and you need medicine. Bub you do not like medicine. He that; pre- fers sickness to medicine must stif- fer, but under the curoumstances the wise man woald procure a box of Parmelee's Vegetable Pills and speedily get himself in health, and strive to .keep so. The man who cannot go to ei urch without sleeping has a remarkable ]power of keeping his eyes open at a political meeting. DO NOT ALLOW yourself to become alarmed because you have lost your appetite and are losing flesh, but commence tatting r''orrovim " the best Coria It will bund you up quickly. "No, darling," said a mother to her sick child, "the doctor says I mustn't read to you." "Then, mam= ma," begged the little girl, "won't you please read to yourself out loud 7" Preacher—"When you're tempted to drink, think of your wife at home" Henpeck — "1 do ---and Usage what drives me to drink." ISSUE i'lO. 95-w08 a - THROW AWAY ALL YOUR FEARS DACHA CIIg, GRAVEL AND RHEUMATISM VANISH BE, FOKI3 DOUD'S KIDNEY PILLS. Proved Once .tgltin in the Case of Mrs. Fred. Itt'ie,^,er, Who Settee - ed From the ZVorst Fond' of Kitlucy Disease. Palmer Rapids, Ont., Nov, 2, (Special).—Tho thousands of Cana- dians who live in daily terror of those terrible forms of Kidney bus ease known as . eckache, Gravel and Rheumatism, will bo deepl r in- terested in tho story of Mrs. Fre) Krieger, of this place. "I was for years a great sufferer from Kidney Disease, Gravel, -Rlheu matism and Baekache," Mrs. Krie- ger states. "It all started througlo a cold, but I got so my head a';htd, I was nervous, my limbs were heavy, I had a dragging sensation across my loins, and 1 was t0talls unfit to do anything. "Reading about wonderful cures by Dodd's Kidney Pills led mo to buy some. After using a few 1 four i they were doing me good and this encouraged me to continue their use. -Eight boxes made 100 well. "I have been able to do my own work ever since and to -day I am completely cured. Dodd's Kidney Pills gave me health and I roil like a new woman." If you keep your Kidneys strong and healthy you eau never have Backache, Rheumatism or Gravel. Dodd's Kidney Pills never fail to make the Kidneys strong and well. TH' VAREA PEST 1 Piper—Tho versa pest music I ever heard whatever was done at Jamie MacLauchlan's. There was fuftoen o' us pipers in the wee back parlor, all playin' different chanes. 1 thocht I was floatin' in heaven 1 It is only necessary to read the testimonials to be convinced that 1=lolioway's Corn Cure is unequalled for the• removal of corns, warts, etc. It is a complete extinguisher. The Nurse—"Yes, we kept you alive for throe weeks on milk punches and brandy." Tho Pati- ent—"Just my luck; and I was un- conscious all that time." MONTH A1'Tllit MO\Tn' a eeid et!cke, anti somas to tear holes in your throat. Aro you aware 'that oven a stubborn and long,megloctod cold is mired with Allen's Lung Balsam 7 Oougb and worry no longer. Johnny, aged four, wont into a near -by gr'ocer's shop and asked for a box of canary seed. "Is it for your mother?" asked the gro- cer. "No, of course not," replied the little fellow; "it's for the bird." Manitoba, although the smallest and most thickly populated of the prairie provinces of Canada, has still large areas of vacant land for settlement. BIG MONEY ;;1 for agents selling our toilet soaps, f" Lots maltinf, So.00 a day. Writs at Lis ones for full particulars to the SOAP $Ur3PLY 00„ Box 332, Toronto .FR+S1S 1Z..., r4;y�'+,�rv"." ^�*{,"4'•u5q k�w,m/...n�, WE ARE LOOKING For a'ropresentativo in your town to handle a ucw idea in publishing a magazine. If interested at all write fur particulars, Supplement Pub. Co., u York. 5t., 'Toronto. HAD HER DOUBTS. Hairdresser (while giving lady a vigurous 'shampoo)—•11'ill you have anything on your head when I bavo finished, madam? Madan—I'm sure I don't know. I was in hopes you would leave enough hair to pin my hat to. It Lays a ,Stilling Hanel on Pain. —For pains in the points and limbs and for rheumatic pains, neuralgia and lumbago, Dr. Thomas' lfclec-. InciOil is without a peer. Well rubbed in, the skin absorbs it and it quickly and permanently relieves the affected part. Its value lies in its magic property of removing pain from the body, and for that good quality it is prized. IIE WAST SOT. Toms --I ate some of the cake she made just to make myself solid. Dick—Diel you succeed? Tom—I couldn't feel any more solid if I had eaten concrete or building stone. Own! Cleaning nor the ,or: bettoond 105r wort to th• •r 131 7111180,1 AIRIRIIBAN DYEING 030." f,ss40 for 05.at to your town, or send direct. fa€.atrc*.ai,Toroato, Ottawa, Quok °,°°°,°°° RAW FUNS WANTED SKINS Jii,,hast prices paid. write for price Hit. Addro;s Steman Hi tiTaw, Deep Drool,, Anise ,lbs eo,, N.S. 5 i !L®11 C± ➢tt1V ? Ask far particnlnra L T 19 t7 1il abuut my natural 1'ompdfoi, 0,l re euro 111 o1ary 0a.e. 2070405' 05- Ppurimrce in fdormany, Itnglau11 and Can;uin. '1'lia Lxcalslcr l'bemtual worts, 10) lX24sur.�U;5Ontario.-.. _. VI/ANTED he_a_a 5troot, in rCa aAa onJ t v>'lr�++r.,>.• ,I:o Ward Slalom a _ to edroni,o rood,, lack up dlstrib,,, Ent dae,aism� m>tcr co G'emmiuelenite. Li a baa nee ,ne.ei, end a 5004,., _a oer dao E,oady a r,. t1 A fornna<�in,ry,ti8 „ve 5ta.; no <>5rdete• rtQ1 ad. „0r WM. R. WARNER 0110. CO„ Loudon, Out, Ceesde. 1 PIANO' ARE CANADA'S BEST 01(3 EYERYSOOY KNOWS IT PAYS IO, ISUV THE BEST Bend for ens Froo Catalogue No, 72. Toa Ball Roo & Nalco. ltd., Gaalprl, G 6 Makes of Boll Pianos, Roll Cl gang and Autonole Peyer Plano., A. J. PA i4 TlrS N Sc. CO. 33-35, SCOTT ST., TORONTO, Stock Brokers and Financial Agents and other stocks bought arid sold on ��OI��p �-+� commission. Correspondence invit- ed. Orders may be wired at our expense. FACT INTENDING TO LOCATE IN TORONTO WILI FIND Ideal Manufacturing Premises IN TRUTH BUILDING Flats a000 do 10,000 Square Feet Each LOWEST RENTALS, INCLUDING Stearn Power, fie_' t, Electric Light Fire Sprinkler System, Lowest Insurance. Most Central Location. Four Large Freight Elevators. S. Frank Wilson && Sons, 73-81 Adelaide St. West � • Ian 43)555 inch beci, cost 02,500, ' ill be Sold for $400 Cass. In order to nlalce room for larger and faster nacltinee It is in ;oocl rrunoir order, as it has just been thoroughly overhauled by a 0onspcteet. machinist, The Wilson Publish im ted 1 � . � Co,,f 23 Adelaide St, West, Toronto,