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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1910-9-15, Page 6Fashion i infs. +' 1. T a lir'i' "trtle•f lefi= I 'fslsf ktletdeltirik A' SEEN IN PARIS SHOT'S, Beads aura More than ever in style, Vella ar.,tt less aggressive than they have been horetofoee. Brighten' theta are predicted for the owning season. Rhinestones appear on everything of the jewelry nature, Orgaudies are more medial than they have b•eeii for yearn, Suitings for fall lean 'strougly toward the inauish effect. Coat sleeves axe long and plain and rather close fitting. Velvet and velveteen promise to be extremely popular fabrics. Many of the fancy linen hand- bags ars fitted withcoin purses. Wings are placed upright on both large and small hats. Brassware in the Egyptian decor- ation is quite new and effective. Many summer parasols are built upon mission handles of white wood. ' Never were separate wraps and touring coats so smart as this sea- son. Green parasols bob by thousands on boardwalks at all of the seashore resorts. The smaller the hat the larger W the sigretta�or plumage seems be the rule. Clouds of maline continue to frame fine throats, especially in dance costumes. The turnback culfs-French cuffs -on lingerie shirts seem to be lop- ing favor with men. White linen hats embroidered with white or gold are among, the fancies of the hour. Belts, bags, and shoes are atthe height of elegance when matched with the toilet. India rubber heads are quite new and . consist of hollow tubes simu- lating dull bugles. Checkered gauzes in white and black are stylish, the foundation matching one of the checks. �- THE OPIUM HABIT.— Its ABIT.— its Effects as Described by Bill Nye In His Memoirs. I have always had a horror of opt. rites of all kinds. They are so seductive and so still in their operations. They steal through the blood like a wolf on tbe trail and they seize on the heart with their white fangs till it is still forever. Up the Laramie there is a cluster of ranches at the base of the Medicine Bow, near the north end of Sheep mountain. Well, a young man whom we will call Curtis lived at one of these ranches years ago, and, though a quiet, mind -your -own -business fel- low who bad absolutely no enemies among his companions, he bad the misfortune to incur the wrath of a tramp sheepherder. who waylaid Cur- tis one afternoon and shot him dead as he sat in his buggy. Curtis wasn't armed. A rancher came into town and tele- graphed to Curtis' father, and then half a dozen citizens went out to help capture the herder, who had fled to the foothills. They didn't get back till toward -day break, but they brought the border with them. I saw him in the gray of the morning, lying In a coarse gray blanket on the floor of the engine house. He was dead. I asked, as a r`epoiter, how he came to his death and they told me, "opium." The murderer had taken Dotson when he found that escape was impossible. I was present at the Inquest so that I Could report the case. There was very little testimony, but all the evi- dence seemed to point to the fact that life was extinct, and a verdict of death by his own hand was rendered. It was tbe first opium work I had ever seen, and It aroused my curiosity. Death by opium, it seems, leaves a dark ring around the neck. I did not know this before. People who die by opium also tie their bands together before they die. This is one of the eccentricities of oplum poisoning that I have never seen laid dowu In the books. 1 bequeath it to medical 8clence• Whenever I run up against a new scientific discovery I just .hand It sight over to tbe public without cost. Ever since the above Incident I have Leen very apprehensive about people ar'ho seem to. be likely to form the oplum habit. It is one of the most deadly narcotics, especially in a new country. Ticklish. ")IGw many ribs have you?" asked the teacher. "I don't know, ma'am," giggled Sal. lie. "Fm so awfully ticklish, 1 could never count 'em."-Lipplacott's, It Had an Effort. "Did that sarcastic fetter you wrote to the milkmen requesting hila to let you attend to the job of watering the milk now that you Have a new alter In the kitchen faucet have any effect?" "lit did," said the jokester. "He de- livers the bottles now only two-thirds Bill." -New York Sun. The F.rror. Sandy-beetor, marl, there's n wee bit error i' this bill o' yours. Ye've (\barged nae for advice, Alt never tuk ttt,a.'I.,0040',l NURSING SISTERS AT CAMP. Canada Is Now Equipped Like Armies of the Older World, Canadian girls, like their sisters everywhere, . get the reputation of having a vealness forr brass buttons,s, For instance, at a donee, what chance has a sable -garbed eivilian where there are military waltzing? So far In Canada this feminine admiration for things militant leas been only passive; which is to say that the girls of the 1)001101on. have been largely content to be mere spectators of, the aptandours of military pomp, some- times it • is true being carried away by the glitter, and then exproaaing their effervescent spirits as smart cutlets in amateur theatricals or at the college masquerade. Till this year in Canada there wore no real soldier girls -live soldier girls who could reel off the Militia List and gossip' volubly of the summer cap. Juno, 1910, im s somewhat of a mem- orable date in the history of military Canada; six girls went to Niagara camp in full regalia -and for once the dashing captains in their proud plumage were not the heroes, There were heroines - Nursing Sisters Mor. Leischman, McGiffin, Daymon, Hammel and Hatch. On the pretty blue uniforms are shoulder straps, and the brass buttons on the epau- lettes indicate that each of the young ladies is dignified with the rank of lieutenant during her stay in camp. The Nursing Sisters are attached to the Army Medical Corps. Bringing themto camp -that was a step its ad - vane for the corps, another example! of the progress which has character- ized the militia during the past ten years; which has substituted the Army Service Corps for the bull -beef contractor, and organized the Army Medical Corps#in place of the regi- mental doctor and his slim, black bag, turning the whole Canted( army from a crudity into a system, "What useful purpose is served by bringing trained nurses to a summer military camp?" the sceptic will ask. Talk to Col. Fenton, C.O., Field Am- bulance No. 10. He will dilate upon the advantage of the nurse with mili- tary experience. "Nursing experience to bP found in summer camp?" yen say. T'Pshaw!" Then the colonel and his assistants will quietly laugh at your incredulity, and tell you how dead wrong you are. This year there were eleven days of Niagara camp. Now for the casualty list. In that period out of 4,000. soldiers, 129 sick and wounded were cared for by the Nursing Sisters. The maladies ranged from indigestion and gunshot -wound down the list to colds and pneumonia. One case of appendicitis was record- ed -quits notable, for the victim for the first time in the Canadian mili- tary history was operated on, and successfully too, in the open air. What of the hospital equipment at Niagara? Eight tents comprised the hospital, each tent a ward containing six beds. The capacity of the hos- pital was, therefore, 48 patients and the maximum was well averaged during the eleven days. There was an operating tent and a diet tent. The wards were regularly patrolled, diet sheets were kept, records of the patient, his progress and treatment, -were set down. In fact the canvas institution was a city hospital in epitome -one difference; the ozone flapped through the tent wards, chas- ing away the odors of the apothecary. The innovation 01 the Nursing Sis- ters at Niagara camp was a distinct success. It is understood, that the Militia Department have it under consideration to invite more trained nurses from the big hospitals to the summer camps throughout the Do- minion, This policy would bear fruit in case of active service; the girls who have 'learned the routine of the regimental lines would then be able to superintend the operations of the military hospitals which would be established. A Versatile Soldier. Chartered accountant. graduate in aviculture, traveler, athlete and sol- dier, Lieut. -Col. James George Ross is one of the most all-round - men in Montreal, where he was born in 1861. He Has seen long service in the Cana- dian militia; beginning with the On. tario Field Battery at Guelph in 1879 At that time he was plugging up agri- culture at the O.A.C. Just after be got his degree of B.S.A. from Guelph he tock a trip to far -sway Manitoba - about the time the C.P.R. was poking a nose into the province. After an extensive tour in the West he return- ed to Montreal and went into account- ing in his father's office. At the same time he linked up with the Victoria Rifles; became identified with all the athletic and club life there was in Montreal -as well as much of its fin- ancial development, being soon at the head of his deceased father's firm. Snowshoe runner, life member of the Montreal Amateur Athletic Associa- tion, expert canoeist, crack player of Britannia Football Club -particularly on snowshoes, however, he made a name, having several medals and re. cords nn the wickets. But always interested in the militia, he went from the Victoria Rifles to the 5th Royal Highlanders, of which in 1909 he be- came lieutenant -colonel. Shorter, But Not Uglier. The English word "typist," as ap- plied to a stenographer, ns become familiar lately thrnngh the newspaper stories of the capture of Dr. Crippen and Miss Leneve. The word is much more concise than stenographer., and. might well he adopted in this corm - try. The words lift," as descrip- tive of an elevator, and "tram" of a street. ear, have also the advantage of brevity. The nomenclature of many things in England is preferably to that we in Canada employ, Bath Were Scared, Charles Fox of 'Long Lake, near Brockville, met it' black bear on the highway recently, and to eseape a mix-up climbers' a &leader tree. The limb on which ire stood becks and he. fell to the ground iisectly in front of Bruin. The hear became frightened, es well as Fox, and both ran away in opposite directional - CHICKEN RACES. -- The Ridiculous "Hen Derby" inti+ toted by Sir Bohn Astley, It is said that the crowning triumph of Sir John Astley, that inventor Of absurd contests, whose forte it was to arrange races between atilmaIS which nature apparently bad made most un- suitable for the purpose, was the in. statution of the only races tbat, ever took place between ebiclrelt5. The story is that the idea Came to Sir John during a visit to a friend who ,kept a large number of bear. Ae no- ticed how rapidly the chickens used to scurry to their mother when food was thrown to her. This furnished the in. genlous Sir John with a clever notion, and et mess, he then beln't quartered at Windsor, he accordingly unfolded to bis brother officers his plans for a great chicken race. Re beugbt from a farmer a hen and a brood of chickens. Each officer Was to choose a chicken and mark it with a ribbon, so that he could easily recog- nise it The chickens were to be placed about flfty yards away from their mother, and whichever of them reached her first in answer to her cackle when food was thrown to her was to be ad- judged the winner. And so tbls ridiculous "ben Derby" came off in the barracks at Wiudsor and was witnessed by nearly the whole brigade of guards, who traveled down from London especially to see It The race was such a success that it was arranged to repeat it the follow- 1,ppg week; It might possibly have be- anie a regular Institution and a roc. ing stable of chickens might have been added to the attractions at Windsor had not Sir John's chicken won on eachs occasion with such ease 'as to cause suspicion In the minds of his competitors. Indeed, it was found, It Ls said, that in both races Sir John had selected a sturdy young cockerelwho was much too speedy for kis sisters. When vict'dry was a certainty for one particular competitor the contest, of course, lost interest, and so the chicken races at Whtdsor came to a sudden end. -New York Herald. TURNER'S AMBITION. 1 The Great Painter Achieved It by Years of Self Sacrifice. Turner could not bear to sell a fa- vorite`painttng. He was always met- ancholy after such a transaction. "I lost one,of my children this week," he would sadly exclaim. At a meeting at Somerset House it was decided to pur- chase his two great pictures, the "Rise" acid the "Fall of Carthage," for the National gallery. A Mr. Griffiths was commissioned to offer £5,000 for them. "A. noble offer," said the paint- er, "a noble offer; but, no, I cannot part with them. Impossible." Mr. Griffiths, greatly disappeented, took his leave. Turner ran after him. "Tell those gentlemen," he said, "that the nation will mbst likely have the pic- tures after .all." Long before this Turner had matured a purpose which continued to be his dominant Idea while life lasted. This was to be- queath to his country a Turner gal- lery of pictures and to amass £100,000 to build and endow an asylum for de- cayed artists. it was for this great object that he denied himself all pleas- ures that cost money, all luxuries. Ells resolve, once made, could not be shak- en. On one occasion he was offered £100,000 for the- art treasures locked up to the "den." "Give me the key of the house, Mr. Turner," said a Liv- erpool merchant, "and here is the money." "No, thank you;" replied Turner. "I bare refused a better of- fer." And that was true. By his will he bequeathed 6140.000 to found an asylum for poor artists born in Eng- land and a magnificent art collection to his country. This latter bequest was, however, coupled with the con- dition that his "Rise and Fail of Carthage" should be hung in the Na- tional gallery between Claude's "Sea- port" and "Mlll."-London Graphic. IDidn't Give Him the Chance. ; Scbopenhauer, when staying in Ge- neva. used to go every day to a table d'bote at which now and then ap- peared other distinguished visitors. Once Lady Byron sat next to him. "Doctor," said the host after she had left, with a twinkle in his eye, "doc- tor, do you know who sat next to you at the table today? It was Lady By- ron." "Why the deuce did you not tell me this before?" replied Scbopenhauer; "I should have liked to he rude to her." "That was what I feared." said the host, "and for that reason 1 kept It quiet" Very Thorough. New York's collector of customs was talking about smuggling. "Smuggling must cease," be said. "We'll make it cease, if we have to be as strict and thorough as the French customs officer. This strict officer, standing on the pier, frowned on a tourist with a swollen cheek. "What have you got (borer' be said, pointing to the melting, "'An abscess, elr,' was the reply. "'Well; Bald the officer impatiently, 'npen It. phase ""-Washington Star. Or. Morse's Indian Root Pills exactly meet the need which so often arises in every family for a medicine 10 open up and regulate the bowels. Not only are they effective in all cases of Constipation, but they help greatly in breaking up a Cold or La Grippe by cleaning out the system and purifying the blood. In the same way they relieve nr cure Biliousness, Indigestion, Sick Headache, Rheum- atlsm and other common ailments. In the fullest sense of the words Dr, Morse's Indian Root Pills aro A Mcetssoinold Remedy SUMNER RECORDS OP CUli,DREWS UEATTJS Records show ii'ret by fur •tbo greatest number of deaths cureirtg little ones )R r (I ^ttg IIto t Y l summer mo lilts The ex ',hove heat, the difficulty, of keeping baby's milk sweet, improper food all tend towards bringing on those deveded baby troubles --cholera ill• fentum, diarrhoea, dysentery and other sbomaolf and bowel troubles, To guard against these troubles Baby's Own Tablets should be kept in the house. An oceaaional dose ofthe Tablets will prevent those deadly summer' complaints or cure them if they come on suddenly. Mrs, O. .Morin, Ste. Tite, Qua,, says "My baby suffered from a severe attack of choler'a infantum, but after giving him Baby's Own Tablets the trouble disappeared and he ; regained health splendidly." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by grail at 25 cents u' - box from The Dr, Williams' Medi- cine Co., Brockville, Ont. , h, HIS STUPID MISTAKES Much to His Surprise it Was Promptly Rectified, A well known Londoner was plea- t 1m e- ning np el tortais out pp an etAb rA1e era e tobe givenu to v r!os Reloads iu the neighborhood of his couutry seat. Uuforttlnetely his nearest neigh- bor, a° close relative, 1s highly goon, genial, to himself. and his Intimates, and be racked his brains to devise a ecbeme by whleh be Might avoid the necessity of inviting the undesirable cousin le be among his guests. "i have 111" he announced to his wife at breakfast on the morning of the event "I'll send him some tickets. 105 the play toniglit In town, 01 course he'll be delighted, as he seldom has an opportueity of going to the theater." The tickets were accordingly sent, and the host with an easy consclenee proceeded to enjoy the company of his friends. But his satiate:eon was of abort duration. At the height of the festivities, much to his surprise, in, walked the objectionable neighbor. "Such a stupid mistake you made!", he announced as be approached his cousin. "Aa 'soon as I heard about your party I knew that you must have sentme the tickets for the wrong night, so I got them chapged for tomorrow • evening and came right over here as soon as I could." -London Tatler. TOO REALISTIC. Fuddy-"What kind of a singer is Jones?" . Duddy -"Why, he sang, 'Rocked in the Cradle of the 'Deep' last night with such feeling that more thanhalf the audience were sea- sick and had to leaye the hall." Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Dysentery Cordial is compounded specially to combat dysentery, cholera morbus and all inflammatory disorders that change of food or water may sot up in the stomach and intestines. These complaints are more cowmen in summer than in winter, but they i. are not confined to'the -warm months, as undue laxness of the' bowels may seize a man at any time. Sun a sufferer will find speedy re- lief in this Cordial. WHAT MISSIONARIES DO. Two little girls saw, the wide- open mouth of a crocodile in a pic- ture -book. "Crocodiles is .awful," said one, seriously. "They eat up little hea- then babies what don't say their prayers. In my Sunday school we give pennies to buy missionaries to go and shoot them." There are millions of packets of Wilson's Fly Pads sold every year, and every Pad will kill every fly that drinks the poisoned liquid from it. A fool can always find and'ther fool to admire him. Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, Etc. Visitor -"My l What a fine baby! How much does he, weigh?" Fond Mother -"I really don't know. He hasn't been weighed since this morning." It Keeps the Muscles Pliant. - Men given to muscular sports and exercises and those. who suffer muscular pains from bicycle riding will find Dr, Thomas' Eclectric Oil something worth -trying. As a lu- bricant it will keep the muscles pli- able ,and free from pains which of- ten follow constant use of them, without softening them or impair- ing their strength. For bruises, sprains and contusions it is without a peer. , The New Hat -tree -And you're a centenarian? By George I Aside' from a few cracks in your face, you I hold your age mighty well! What's the secret? The Grandfather's Clock (serenely) -I keep regular hours and always find something for my hands to do 1 Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Itiyee. Relieved By Murine I•.ye Remedy. Try Murine For Your Rye Troubles. You Will Like Murine. It Soothes. 60c At Tour Druggists. Write For Eye Nooks. .Free..Murine Bye Remedy Co., Toronto, The sweetest slumber is the kind interrupted by the alarm clock. Sleeplessness. -Sleep is the great restorer and to be deprived of itis vital loss. Whatever may be the cause of it, indigestion, nervous de- rangement or mental worry, try a course of Parmelee's Vegetable Pills. By regulating the action of the stomach, where the trouble Res, -they will restore normalconditions and healthful sleep will follow. They exert a sedative force upon the nerves and where there is unrest they bring rest. GETTING BACK AT FATHER. Father -"This is your little sis- ter, Tommy; you will love her very dearly, will you not?" Tommy -"Ye -os, of course; but it will cost a great deal to keep her, won't it?" Father -"I presume so." Tommy -"Yes, and when I asked you the other day to btty a white rabbit, you said you couldn't afford it." "Mr. Skimmerhorn," inquired the landlord, "how did you sleep last night?" "Like a top," an- swered the guest. "I thought so. I could hear you-aw-humming rill night long." Perhaps time is money because it manages to slip away so fast. Mlnard's Liniment for talo everywhere. What Napoleon Couldn't Do. An incident connected witb Napoleon when be was in exile In Elba Is com- memorated on the Island to this day. by an Inscription affixed to the wall oe a pe,gsant'e house. A man named Gla - coal was plowing when the famous exile came along *tie day and ex- pressed ns, interest In his work. Na- poleon even took the plow handles and attempted to guide It himself, but the oxen refused to obey him, overturned tbe plow and spoiled the furrow, The Inscription runs thus: "Napoleon the Great, passing by this place in MDCCCXIV. took in the neighboring 'field a plow from the bands of a peasant and himself tried to plow, but the oxen, rebellious to those bands which yet had guided Eu- rope, headlong fled from the furrow." -St. Louis Repubile, Minnrd'a .Liniment Co., Limited. Gentlemen, - I have frequently used MINARD'S LILNIMENT and also presoribe it for my patients always. with themost gratifying results, and I consider it the best all-round Liniment extant. Yours truly, DR. JOS. AUG. 6IR0I9. How we dislike a man who asks quesl,.ons merely for the sakeof getting a chance to answer them! The never failing medicine, -Hol- loway's Corn Cure, removes all kind's -Of corns, warts, etc.; even the most difficult to esenceve cannot withstand this wonderful remedy. TWO CELEBRATIONS. Miggles-"Congratulate me, old man, I'm preparing to oelebrate my wooden wedding next week." Wiggles -"And I'm going to ce- lebrate my wouldn't wedding to- morrow. Just five years ago Miss Gotrox said she wouldn't marry me." DON'T BE DECEIVED.-Inscrupulous makers are attempting to steal your money and our reputation by putting out an imitation of 'The D. & L." Menthol Plaster, Be sure to gut rho genuine made by Davis & Lawrence- Co. • Bobby -"There's visitors in the front room." Polly -"How do you know?" Bobby -"Ma's calling Pa `Dear' every time she speaks to him." In thirty years there has never been one of Wilson's Fly fads sent out that would not kill flies in im- mense quantities, if nt the first place the flies were in the house, and if the housekeeper followed the directions sail got them to the Pads. ' Some men are self-made and sumo others are -wife -made. !Mare's Liniment Cures Dandruff. AS IT HAPPENS, His wife is away, In. the morning behold, His breakfast toast's 'burned And his coffee is cold 1 'Tis the best he can do As a cook, but I vow, If she served him thus, Ho would kick up a row. Isstii NO. 86-1.0. Ten Sound Reasons tr •a' 4 I �,a� I! k PronounNA-MOO-KO) d ( s iel and Toiletratio Medicinal Because 1. Guaranteed - Why You Should Buy I t i , � rt J ^I d •t 1're-�as n They are a '-eO 6. Non -Secret a We will furnish to �. any physician or e- ;,�. ��`e,. 'dregglst, on re - ll,, quest, a list of tbe ingredients in any Na-Drµ-Coprepar- FOR THIS ,atfon. Mk your MARK drug Int 7.'A"Complete Trade -marked Line practically every Toilet or Medicinal preparation ever need, Made 8. in Canada by Canadians -for Canadians' benefit. 9' On 'Saha Throughout Canada If your druggist hasn't the particular Na -Cru -Co arthil'e you need, he can get it within 2 das. 10. A `Money Back". Pro. posion If anyyiNa-Dru-Co preparation is unsatisfactory we will gladly refund your money. by the largest °e 'Wholesale qAA--' Drug Firm 100)1 TRADE to and par. In p: America- the flatlonal Drug and Chemical ALWAYS Company 0 1 Canada, Limited. 2, Made of Purest Ingre. clientsincluding every ounce of which has passed rigid.: tests for strength and purity. 3, Compounded by Expert_ Chemists legally qualified'to dispense prescriptions, 4. Made according Proven Formulae Ionics for years for safety efficiency. 5. Not "Ctare.Alla" but specific prescriptions for Ocular ailments. Na-Dru-Co Headache Wafers, Na-Dru.Co Laxatives without Stop headache in 30 minutes. Act thou anydiscomfort. St a he t Contain no harmful drug. Increased dosenot needed. i Na-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablets Na-Dru-Co Baby Tablets Curesourstomach-heartbunt-flatulence Relieve Baby's ills. Especially -indigestion-chronio dyspepsia. valuable during teething. National Drug and Chemical Company of Canada, Lit:died Wholesale Branches at: - John -Montreal -Ottawa -Kin .ton -Toronto -Hamilton. Roldan St. Jo ■ - -Ro ;ns, -Cal or-Nakos-Vanoouvar- oto nden �Vyiaa; e ¢ y -Vancouver-Victoria. ria. L.o p e e 41 NO TROUBLE AT ALL. "Have any serious trouble with your new automobile?" "Not a bit. So far I- haven't hit a single man without being able to get away before he got my num- ber.'' • A Safe Pill for ,Sufferers, -There are pills that violently purge and. fill the stomach and intestines with pain. Parmelee's Vegetable Pills are mild and effective. They are purely vegetable, no mineral pur- gative entering into their composi- tion and their effect is soothing and beneficial. Try them and be con- vinced. Thousands can attest their great curative qualities because thousands owe their health and strength to timely use of this most excellent medicine. ,UNCLE EZRA SAYS: "Ef people on'y practised what they preached they would be a hull lot less preachin'." If at first' you do not get Ratis- factory results from the .use of Wilson's Fly fads, dht't blame the Pads, they are all right, every ono I of thews, and remember this, -that you must manage to get the flies to the Pads before they can bo killed. The directions with each packet will show you how to do. this. BAD SELECTION.' "Goodness me, but that woman's make-up is loud." "It is that. She should have used noiseless powder." FOR THE LITTLE ONES in trouble ..FOR cornea with quick relief. The bumps and the bruises, the pains from green apples, and snob things are quietly cured by its use. Avoidsubstitutes, there to but one Painkiller" -Perry Lavis'- 26o. and 60c. "Yes, mother," she said with a hitter sigh, "we parted last night forever." "Very well, dear. Your father and I will go somewhere this evening so that you and he can have the place here all to your- selves.'' Mother Graves' Worm Extermin- ator does not require the help of any purgative medicine to complete the cure. Give it a trial and be convinced. There is one bad habit that most of us are addicted to. We talk too much. Minard's- Liniment Relieves Neuralgia, HER OPENING. The courting of the Widow Hea- ley by Terence Cecoran, was ate- dious affair to ever;v one in Ma grave Place, most of all tote wi- dow herself, who tried various ex- pedients to assist her timid admir- er. "I'm thinking I might go for a sojor," Terence announced one night, when his fancy had been stirred by a newspaper account of a military pageant, "I'm not so old but I could do it. 1 -was wriest in a School. regiment." "You go for sojei' I" cried the Widow Healy in mingled scorn and alarm, "A man that, calls on a lone widow for two years and more widnut pluck enough to speko his mind, hasn't the Makings of a dltruirener boy in him,'t ('IANVASSERS WANTED. WE1IKLY SAL. ary paid. Alfred Tyler, 955 Clarence Sb.,• London, Ont. CANDER, Tumors, Lumps, eta internal and external, cured without pain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr. Betlmau Medical Ce., Limited, Collingwond, Ont. COLOR BOXES FOR SCHOOLS Retail at 15 and 85 cents atoll. Ask your dealer or write direct to Artists Supply Co. 77 York Stroll! - TORONTO FISHWILL BITE arlike hungry wolves at an ,canons 11 you use F 1.S 11 LURE. ling them obit 'Keeps you onto day and. get a box' to help introduce. Agents Wanted, Michigan Balt Ce.. Dept. 20. Port Huron, Mleh. ChHENILLE CURTAINS and all kinds of house hangings, also LACE CURTAINS DYED 51100 RCELWANERI Write to us about your.. ��,1 8BITl5H AIECICMI DYEING CO., !Puttee; Montreal( Ontario Vefeririary College Affiliated with the 'University of •rnruuto and • under the Control at the Department of Agriculture of Ontario, Infirmary for Sick Animals at the College COLLEGE RE -OPENS SEPT. 30th, 1910 N.B.-Calendar on application;. - n. A. A. GRANGE, Dept. Ti. - - PrinclpaL A GREAT DEMAND FOR WASTE PAPER OF ALL GRADES. Also Ran. Iron. Stetale, Rubbers. Eta. E. POLLANf Adele lTodorontoand , Mapt. d Sia.. "On Pbono for orrticnlars. Main rr■ a..-3f1JcsArIGt,tO/1fta4' a•,d •pAl,NS.s"Ai' S In4tuua,atlou of ilk' ta. Iftdnoye.of the Bladder, of ggo*elo, of theihe Lunge, Sore Tltroatl Droachltittt, Diltkul • tt.Brrrh TMiiionr%nt,pflaad- acho, :oothacho, Nan- rub1y�ie., Ague C Ilam, Cold Onllls Ague 0hlils, 0111. blahs, Frostbites quickly e 8adi'iay's Really Rad tsji LITERAL. "Everything about Mrs. Milly- uns' house is in such good -taste:" "Especially the dinners." I man never knows what he ear do until be tries. But it isn't al- ways expedient to try.. when troubled with fall rashes,eezgnia, or any' skin disease apply Zam-Buki Surprising ha* 'quickie it eases the smarting and Bungled Also cures cuts, burnt. sores end plies. Zam-luk Is made from pure her- bal auencee. No animal fats- no mtners.t poisons. most healer 1 Drugyhlr and Stom Ireerywhera, r -t P'! i1