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The Brussels Post, 1914-1-8, Page 3Fashion Hints Brown Still Popular. Brown oontinuoe to bo a favorite color, It is used even more for house and evening gowns than for street suits. When it is need for etreet suits it is generally of a dark shade. The house shades are often lighter and brighter, With pink it makes a wark and brilliant combin- ation for the house. Brown chiffon over pink silk or pink over brown silk or satin can be used effeotively. Brown and yellow are a good combination, A brown chiffon frock, made up over brown satins• is trimmed with much gold - bead embroidery and fringe and AN UNEXPECTED ANSWER. Caleb Peasleo Tells of Hen Bark- er's Horse Trade. "A soft answer ain't the only one that'll turn away wraeh," observed Caleb Peasleo, reflectively. "Nina times out of ten the onexpeoted answer will do just as well—and the tenth time it'll jolt a feller wuss, mobbo, Suthin' odd come under my observation this very anornin'." Lysander Winchope turned stiffly in his chair, the better to see his friend. Caleb was gazing musing- ly at the horizon, and a philosophi- cal smile played upon his mild old face. Mr. Winchope fiddled with his cane impatiently. "Aro you a'goin' to begin," he asked, at length, "or ain't ye?"' Mr. Peaslee's eyes twinkled sly- ly. tassels of gold cord. Another brown "Sartain I'll begin, Lysander," and yellow combination is a canary he replied, heartily, "You hadn't yellow chiffon made up over brown satin. Wheat Instead of Aigrettes. Wheat trimming has been used for a long time with good results on hats. Last summer silver and gold as well as white and yellow wheat heads trimmed many straw hate. Now there comes news that one of the substitutes for the forbidden aigrette will be a sort of aigrette built up of wheat heads. This is said to be very graceful. Artificial flowers, too,' will doubtless be much more used than they have been in the last few years, now that women must Learn to content themselves without their favorite plumage. Most Popular Fur. Skunk is the fur of the day. It is decidedly more popular than any other. It le used to edge tunics and skirts and sleeves and nooks o! bodices. It is used on the boudoir caps and negligees, on velvet chif- fon and cloth coats and muffs and scarfs. It is used on hats. And it is used, in confbination with no- thing else, for muff and scarf sets. It is said that ermine is nett to skunk in pop'`nrity. Erndno {ii'New Fashions. The faehion for tailless ermine seems to be established. Muffs, col - 'Jars , coats and trimmings are all made of ermine unspotted in its whiteness by the small black splotches that have always been considered its distinguishing mark. There is a charm to this white er- mine, but it lacks something In character. Apparently realizing this, some of the furriers have made charming garments of white ermine trimmed in odd ways with the black tails. Ermine Muffs and Collars. One ermine muff is all white, save for a small bunch of black tails fastened under a big black braid ornament. Another muff of white ermine is piped with, black tails about the hands; that is to say, they aro fastened in a narrow lino where the hands enter the muff. There are collars of ermine, all white save for bunches or pip- ings of ornaments made of ermine tails, showed any int'rest in it up to now, and I was kind- of studyinover it. The ways of hose-tredene are odd and curious. Dickerfn' and tradin' seeane to give them curves . and slants in their minds different from other folks, and even their ways of get -tin' out of scrapes seem to be ways of their own. Ain't you ever noticed it, Lysander 1 Ain't it so, Gregg7" "Get along with your story I" ad- jured the impatient Lysander. Mr. Gregg said •nothing, but waited ex- pectantly. "Don't harry me," returned Ca- leb, easily. "I don't want to get all het up. It seems that Hen Bar- ker has been tryin' to sell a hoes to two different people. You know Hen Barker, over to Amherst Cor- ner, don't you 1" "I know him well--oonsarn him!" snapped Mr. Winchope. Gregg shook his head doubtfully. "Don't believe I ever saw him," be said. "'T least, I don't remem- ber him." "You'd remember him if you'd ever seen him," affirmed Mr. Peas - lee. "If he didn't skin you on a hose -trade tho fust time you met him, you'd remember hien for the homelie4at man you ever saw. He's so homely that flies won't light on him. A fly goin' towards Hen Bar- ker'll turn le square corner and get away soon's he sees where he's goin'--and like enough sprain a wing doin' it. He's so homely he'll eeare.a strange hoes right out of the road, and out into the bushes. He's awful plain -featured! "It seems that Han had a hors that he was tryin' to sell to two dif- ferent pussons," Mr. Peaslee con- tinued, "and one of them was that maiden lady over in Clifton.. She. wanted a hose that she could de- pend upon not to act sluttish when she was drivin', and Hen assured her that the critter was just what she wanted. "The other likely customer was Jim Sneed, and he wanted a hose that had consid'able life and go in him—one he'd got to hang onto some. Hen told Sneed that if he hunted a year he couldn't find a hose that would come nearer to fillip' them requirements than that very critter. You see, Hen's fig- gerin' waa all right—from a hose - trader's p'int of view. If he could- n't sell the hose to the old maid for a quiet one, he could sell him to Jim for one that was full of gin- ger. "The only thing Hen overlooked was that Jim supplied the old lady with her butter and garden -truck, and she tock it into her head to tell Jim about the hoes, and ask bis opinion, and when they got to com- plain' notes, they found out what Hon was up to. So the old lady was a-waitin for Hen the next time he showed up, and .she 'give him about as thorough a gain' over as a marl ever got, I guess. Hen sot there and took it—till she wound up with a. final hang! " 'Mr. Barker,' eays she, 'I think you're the neat two-faced man 1 ,ever feet in all my life'!' • "Hen looked at her kinder re- proatahful for jest a minute. 'Miss Graves,' he answered her, 'do you honestly think that if 1' had two feces I'd ever use the one ran wearin' now l' "And would you believe it," Mr. Peaslee concluded, impressively, "that answer was so onexpectecl that she bought the hoes, after ail l"—Youtbl's Companion. 'fti PIPER'S POCKET. A Comical Incident Just Before the Battle, Gloves With Colored Cuffs. White glace kid gloves have nar- row scalloped turuback cuffs of colored kid—green, yellow, pink, blue or lavender. The gloves are long wristed and are cut diagonal- ly at the end where the cuffs are fastened on. Three glass buttons, colored like the cuffs, aresewed on the white kid in a line from the cuffs to the wrist. Silk Cords on Muffs. ' Some of the new fur 'muffs aro decorated with festoons of silk cord on which big bead-like balls of col- ored silk are strung. STRANGE HOLLAND SECT. Labadists Strictly Prohibit the Use of Mirrors. There is a tient in Holland known as the Labadists, among whose members the use of mirrors is strictly pro- hibited. Their founder, Jean de Labadie, a seventeenth century Cal- vinist minister, attracted many fol- lowers, but after his death they dwindled down, and now they are found only in a few remote'villages of Friesland. Traveling in Holland in 1803 Lecky lit on a colony of Labadists. "Inter- marrying -mainly among themselves," 1'e writes, "they have quite a distinc- tive typo—a singularly beautiful one, with their delicate lips and curious sir of refinement. "They are fishermen --very prosper- ous—and their' houses, with their china and silver ornaments and prints of the House of Orauge, and great Bibles' with silver clasps and perfectly ' preternatural neatness, are very in. teresttng to see." g' -- Making the Best Of It. Tho children lived In a little cab- in home, and all three of them -- Nell, Bob and Lizzie --were taking a gay make-believe ride on an old log. A gentleman who was passing down' the road stopped and said ;— "Good morning, little folk. That Is rather slow riding, .Wouldn't you like a. horse and airriage 1" Yes, sir," said Robbie, "but we bieven't any, and so we are getting the most fun we can out of what we . da have," Was Wastyrat not a wise an - Weil HOW mueh pleasanter the world would bo if all the little pea, plc, land the big woe, too, would atop fretting about whist they oaa- not got and make the best of what .. they have, "If an old soldier should tell pie," remarked the veteran, "drat he wasn't nervous before his filet battle, I suppose I should have to believe him, but I should regard him as a freak cif nature. There aren't many who could say as much, I know I was scared through and through, and besides that, T was scared for fear somebody else would find it out. I was nineteen, and I've often thought that if it hadn't been for a little thing dist happened to distract my mind while We were on the march, any legs ne- ver would have earliest me to the front, but in quite the other direc- tion. "We were in camp, and just get- ting ready to have our dinner, when orders casae for us to hurry forward and join a brigade that was likely to engage the enemy at any minute, So we had to gobble down a cold snack and start. Having my first battle loom up before me sud- den like that, I couldn't eat much of anything, and not having had a civilized eneal, I didn't have much stomach for fighting. At first I was looking round for a haystack to scoot for and hide in; but after a time I began to get interested in the left-hand overcoat pocket of the man in front of me, a chap named Piper. "It looked to me as if there was something very much alive in that pocket. Every now and then Piper would clap his hand over it, as if he was afraid the critter would get out, and I could hear stifled noises from the depths of the pocket that made me suspicious. The lieuten- ant heard them, too, for twine he turned round and looked fierce enough to eat us. "By and by, when Piper was off his guard, the thing poked its head out far enough to screech, 'Outs au— I' Piper he squelched the second 'out'—cut it in two, you might say; but the lieutenant hoard something, and he looked round and shouted, 'Silence in the ranks there l' • "The men near Piper snickered, but nothing more happened till the order came down the lino to shift roar 'guns to the right shoulder. Then, of"course, Piper had to use both hands, and the minute he let go of his pocket out scrambled as marl a pullet as you ever saw ; and when she'd flopped onto the ground she scurried away, screeching, 'Out 1 cut 1 cab -doh -cut 1' at the top of her lungs, Well, the captain couldn't help hearing that, and naturally the looked bank to see what the row was; and when he saw what had 'happened, he sung out at the top of his voice: "'Corporal Davis, take three men and bring back that deserter l' "That anade everybody feel mid- dling cheerful, but those who knew where the ehiaken had come from got a real good laugh when Piper put his hand into his pocket and pulled out a new -laid egg, "Honestly, I forgot all about be- ing afraid after that." Nova Scotia Case of Interest to Ill Wonien Halifax Sande Out a Mases©e of Help to Many People. Halifax, N,S„ Dec. 15. When Inter- viewed at her home at 104 Argyle St., Mrs. Haveretook was quite willing to talk of her peculiarly unfortunate case. I was always 'blue' and depressed, felt weak, languid and utterly unfit for any work My stomach was so disordered that I had no appetite.. What I did eat disagreed. I suffered greatly from dizziness and sick head- ache and feared a nervous breakdown. •Upon my druggist's recommendation I used Dr. Hamilton's Pills, • "I felt better at once. Moly day I improved, In six weeks I was a well woman, cured completely after differ- ent physicians bad failed to help me. It is for this reason that I strongly urge sufferers with stomach or diges- tive troubles to use Dr, Hamilton's Pills." Dr. Hamilton's Pills strengthen the stomach, Improve .digestion, strength- en the nerves and restore debilitated systems to health, By eleausing the blood of long-standing impurities, by bringing the system to a high point of vigor, they effectually chase away weariness, depression and disease. Good for young or old, for men, for women, for children. All dealers sell Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and Butternut. PARABLE OF TICE RICH MAN. Wanted .to Go Into the Garden, But Was Not Allowed. The Rich Man died, and found himself in a luxurioue smoking: - room. He touchedthe bell, and a perfectly trained flunkey brought him a wondorfn1 cigar and the most delicious white wine he had ever tasted. He lazily noticed that the room had no windows, and he thought he would like a. little fresh air, He passed into the next and equally magnificent room, • and there, too, he found no windows. But now he had a distinct desire for the open. In the third room also there were no windows. Ho began to walk faster. He wanted to see a cloud, although never in his lifo had he experienced such a desire. He started to run through rooms and rooms ; there was no end to them. He grew frantic, and rushed headlong, as it seemed to him, for miles and miles. At last he sank exhausted into a seat in a. room papered in pale green, and hung with oil paintings by Royal Academicians, framed in costly gold. He rang an electric bell, fever iahly. Another perfect waiter ap- peared. "I want to go into the garden. Show me the way, quick." "Sorry, air, but it's against or dere," was the respectful answer. "Against orders I 1 What, isn't this Heaven t" "No, sir I" Happy New Year! Are you acquainted with the sweet, toasty flavor of Post Toasties --crisp kiitildes; of choice Indian Corn—toasted to a delicate golden brown -•-- ready to eat direct from package? Wholesome, convenient and imluenselr appetizing, grocer -num ,�k thegr 6d11'D'R'• 6 11"4"t4 11a tM tom. fid• FAMILY MAT HEIRLOOM. Samoans Have Great Pride in Their Artistic Work. Among the curious customs of the Samoan people is that of making heir- looms of mats. These mats are as• sootated with the family as the hearth- stone is among other peoples. These mats are really works of art and aro worthy of the boasts which the Samoans make concerning them. Some •of them have names known all over the group and are very valu- able. The most valuable as well as the oldest is called Moe -e -Fut -Fut, or "Tile mat that slept among'tlfe creep- ers " reep-ers." it got this title from it having been hidden away for years among the creeping convolvulus that grows wild along the seacoast. It is known to be at least 200' years old, e,s the names of ite owners during that time can be traced. The possession of such a mat as this gives a certain rank and power to its owner, and the poorest among them have been known to refuse $500 for such a family treasure. The Fear of Poverty,. We have grown literally afraid to be poor. We despise anyone who etoots to be poor in order to simplify and save his tuner life. Wo have lost the power of even imagining what the, ancient idealtzatton of poverty could have meant; the liberation from material attachments, the unbrlbed soul, the manlier indifference, the pay- ing ouurr way by what we are to do, and not by what we have, the right any Stag away.. our 1!!e at a y moment irresponsibly—the more athletic trim, in short, the poral figlittua shape, It fa Certain that the prevalent fear of poverty among the educated ataesen IS the worst MOM' disease from which our 'olvfltxatinit ,(tufars --Prot, V111la1n Yeietis. Most Pleasant Cure Known For Cold In the Head dives Relief In Ten Minutes. IIAJ ALL FELL OUT RI�GII ORS ON I-IEAD Also on Neck, Big Bare Spot on Crown of Head, Cuticura Soap and Ointment Cured. 108 Cllaploau St., Montreal, Quc,— "When my brother and 1 went to school wo got ringworms from the caber e101Oren and our Bair all fell out. Wo had there on our heads and on our necks. Dor months I bad a big bare spot on the crown of my bead the size of a fifty -cent piece. Mother tried. everything, all klads of ointments, to cure us but everything seemed no good until one day she saw an advertisement for Cuticula 13oap and Ointment. It wee Cuttoaa Soap and Ointment that cured us," (Signed) Mrs. 31. Blake, May 31, 1013. 'A LITTLE OP EVI'IIITTHII'iG, Provlueo of Ontario IS the owner of Priceless Assets. The Province of Ontario, Canada, says the Hon. W. H. Hearst, the Minister of Lands, Forests, and Mines, is blessed with a little of everything to be found elsewhere with the exception of coal, the lack of which is made up by Ontario's hydro -electric power system, which in time : will be utilized for heating purposes as well as lighting and power. One ounce in every seven of silver produced from the world's crust Domes from Ontario, and there is abundant evidencethat in New Ontario gold is. to bo found frons Quebec on the east to Mani- toba on the west. Foray per cent. of the mineral production of the Dominion miles from Ontario, Nearly one-h./elf of the timber cut in the Dominion was from the for- ITCHY BASH ON HANDS este in this Province. In New On- • ]i'ergus, Ont.—" Cuticura Soap and Obit, ta'rio the value of the timber could Mont completely cured me of a rash on my hardly he estimated, In the wa- hands. The rash was red' like water blisters, tars of the north country there were very itchy and sore. Scratching made them over 3,000,000 horse -power withina sorer. The irritatton was bad se night. 1 short distance of the Transcortin- tried many remedies which did not do any ental Railway, and it is not a very good. I used Outicura Soap as a wash in great stretch of imagination tosee warm water night and morning with Outl- .in the near . future timber mills cera Ointment and in loss than aweek It was operated byof hydro -electric nil gone." (Signed) Mrs. Isabella Gibson, p means y May 22, 1013. I power. The country was destined Therogularvseo?Outicurasoapfortofee to become one of thegreatest man - and bath not only tends to preserve, purify 1 ufacturing centres on the continent and beautify the skin. scalp. hair and bands, of America. The idea that land in but assists in preventing inflammation, urn- Northern Ontario was not suitable tatjonoodcloggtng of the pores, tbecommon for agricultural purposes was not cause of pimples, -blackheadaand otherounra un- P po wholesome conditions of the skin. Cuts- correct. It was equal to any soil aura Soap and Ointment are sold by in Canada for the productionof druggists and dealers everywhere. Por a grains ofall kinds. These were liberal free sample of each, with 32-p. book, only a few of the priceless assets send post -card to Potter Drug & Chem, of Ontario. Corp., Dept. D. Boston, U. B. A. WHY LEAVES FALL. Botanist of Java and Ceylon Seeking Light on Subject. From a study of the growth and fall of the leaf in perpetual summer, botanists in Java and Ceylon have been lately seeking new lighton an old subject. At the Botanic Gardens at Buitenzorg, Prof. G. Volkens has found the climate not quite uniform, as there is a periodicity in precipitation, relat- ive humidity and insolation; and from records of more than 100 tree species growing in the gardens, he has obtain- ed illustrations of nearly every kind of foliage behavior—some trees being regularly deciduous (accustomed to toeing their leaves) once or twice a year, certain evergreens having mark- ed periodicity, and others having uni- form foliage gradually renewed throughout the year. He concludes that the leaf -fall is not due to the checking of activity by an excess of stored food, some unknown internal action of the protoplasm seem- ing to him the primary cause. On the other hand, Prof. G. Klebs decides that periodicity of plant habit is goy erned by periodicity of external con- ditions and that the supply of food materials may play a leading part His conclusions are based partly on experimental altering of the period- icity. Trees stripped several months be- fore the usual time have renewed their foliage and, continued it during the season when they are usually bare; some deciduous European trees in the tropics no longer wholly dropped their leaves at any season, and tropical trees of periodic habit have been made to change their period by varying the fertility of the soil. Every second person that you meet seems to have a sneeze and stuffed feeling in the forehead and nostrils. To cure promptly, say, in half an hour, there is nothing worth using except Catarrhozone. You inhale its balsamic vapor, and feel as if you were among the Norway pines. This is because Catarrhozone contains a heading med- icine, light as pine air, which Is breathed straight into the lungs and bronchial tubes. Away goes the cold; sneezing and catarrhal cough cease, bronchial irritation stops; in short you are cured of catarrh by a pleas- ant, simple remedy, free from seda- tives and tri{:tante. An ideal protection for the chest, lungs, nose, and throat is the frequent use of Catarrhozone. Two months' treatment (the large size) costs $1.00, medium sizes 50c.; at all dealers or the Catarrhozone Go., Buffalo, N.Y., and Kingston, Canada. The other day a gentleman met a little boy who was crying. "What's the matter?" asked the gentleman, "My shoes hurt my feet," said the boy. "Why, you've got them on the wrong feet." "Wrong feet 1 Why, they're the only feet I've got, ain't they 1" said the boy. You Can't Beat It for Sore Joints, Rheumatism A Professional Dancer Proved It. Few men in his profession are bet- ter known than Mr. Thomas Hogan, of 27 Fortification Lane, Montreal, who writes;—"To limber up a stiff joint, to remove every sense 0f sore- ness from tired muscles I can tell you nothing compares with Nerviline. It is really a wonderful liniment, and I use it continually, simply because I find it keeps the muscles and joints supple and entirely free from pain and stiffness. I earnestly recommend Ner- viline to every person that requires to use a strong, penetrating, pain-subdu- ing ain subdu- ing liniment." For Rheumatism Nerviline is a won- der; for Sciatica it cures where others fail; for L+l+umbago, stiffness and cold, nothing surpasses it. Keep Nerviline handy it's good to take inwardly, de- stroys internal pains quickly, and is Large family size bottle, 60o.; small just as good for outward application.' size, 25c., at all store keepers and drug, gists or The Catarrhozone Co„ Buf- falo, N.Y, A Brute. Wife (at dinner)—"You don't seem to like the rioe." Husband—"No; it's associated with one of the greatest mistakes of my life." MInard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. Welsh Miners' Superstitions. Women, like rabbits, are of ill - HOW THE SCRAP STARTED. omen to the miner. In many places, soma stepped on Smith's favorite. Dorn Particularly in Wales, if a pitman and of course there was trouble. What .meets or sees a Roman on his way to work, he will turn back; for such an encounter is held to forebode evil not only to the man himself, but all hia associates. At Oswes- try, some years ago, a woman was employed as messenger by one of the collieries, and in the course of her duties met many of the colliers on their way to work. The men im- mediately told the manager that on each side of Pat. Are you sure the could not run the risk of i11- you are comfortable, Pat?" the luck entailed in meeting a woman friend asked. "Sure I haven't much room to grumble," was the reply., Mlnerd's Liniment Cures Distemper. A Strange Pig. Five-year-old George had spent the summer in the country,, where he was much interested in a neigh- bor's pig and cow. On his return to his city home he was asked what he liked in the country. "I liked Mr. Johnson's pigs beat" ".Ah 1 How Many pigs has Mr. Johnson?" "Two." "What color are Mr. Johnson's pigs 1" "One pig is white." "What Color is the other pig 7" "Tho other pig's a cow." Likely. "My `tailorVery is beginning to dun me." ",Suspects that you've done him, eh1" Smith needed is Putnam's Corn Iastraotor —that painleee remedy for corms and warts that cures in twenty-four hours. Putnam'e is the only standby. Try it, 25a. at all dealers. An Irishman once was travelling in a train with a friend, when two very stout ladies entered the oar. riage. They planed themselves one Try Murine Eye Remedy If you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes or Granulated E ellds. Doesn't Smart Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25e, Sea Murine Eye Salve In Aseptic Tubes, 25c, 50c. Eyo Books Free by Mail. Aa Cy* Tonle Good ter All ayes that Need Care Marine Era Remedy Co., Chicago Pearls of Truth. The world has a million roosts for a man, but only one rest. -0. W. Holmes. One ofthe saddest things of to- day is that wealthy people are not giving their sons to the Church.-- Bishop of Southwell Ono whose daily life is careless is always weak. 'But one who habit- ually walks in the paths of upright - DOSS and obedience grows strong in character. -Miller. Meat people think they aro virtu- ous merely because they are tames and inoffensive, Tameness le not a virtue, it is merely the absence of a vice, J, S. £.hackie, The man who gets the .most out at life In the man who Buts the most into lb. Highest grade beans kept whole and mealy by perfect baking, retaining their full strength. Flavored with delicious 9ances. They have no equal. .ase 'riO 'f+i rxl.„ M4it'jrealM4', EDUCATION. T LLIoTT'F BUSINESS COLLEGE, TO - JJ ronto. Canada's Popular Comte* etal School.. Magnificent Oatalo,ne fro*. QHS Rubbers and Over.Stockings In One. guy to ral on wish*. .tt. Ntwelt —Weston—Wow weli, alt ateo roe w. �.s sari p okittrea IIoy item sad yrotatyounoih",d tuna: front wth et sus. Osman eanteliated Astl atee t a. LlmllcA, Mon ra l_ All Debi a irs, on the way to the pit, and threaten- ed to strike if she were not dis- missed. --London Chronicle. LIQUID SULPHUR cures RHEUMATISM by removing the cause. Impurities in the blood cease RHEUMATISM. LIQUID SULPHUR used according to direc- tions will purify the blood. Try it. One bottle, Price 50 Cents, will con- vince you of its wonderful merits. On sale at all druggists, or send direct to LIQTJID SULPHUR, 158 Bay Street, Toronto. Customer --,Past my hair in the middle, please, Barber -- Yeasir, sha11 I split the odd one, sir 1 IMinard's Liniment Cures bolds, Eto. Iteasous for Excusing James. With an air of melancholy resig- nation, the truant stopped at the teacher's desk, and handed her the following note from his mother: Dear Sir. Please excuse James for not being present yesterday. He played truant, but roe need- n't whip him for it, as the boy he played truant with and him fell out, and he licked Jamas; and a man they threw stones at caught him and licked him; and the driver of a cart they hong on to linked him; and the owner of a cat they chased licked him, Then I licked him when he oamo home, after which his rte trier licked him, and I had to give tie to beingim td lit t ' er fol anoth p Rim 'me for telling his father. So you Imood not lick him until the next time. Iso thinks he will n•ttend rrgulilr in .future. PARRS POR BALL N. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborn Street,. Toronto, .I F n t, Stoo017 WANT d oAn.Uor Dairy Farm. write n. W. Dawson, Brampton, or 90 Colborne St.. Toronto, N W. DAWSON, Colborne St., Toru/1t", NEWSPAPER FOR RALE. 1.ricwsparrat AND eon OFFICE 1N lr Grarenhuret. Proprietor being a draggle-. in linable to give the printing Ohm the a#ention nereoearr, and offers It for sale at, a sacrifice, No. opnoettton. One of the beet newspaper openings In the Province nbli b[nt pdr'n�,oM,ernvanon, h'antMes. WANTED. T [PE POKES, MINK AND MARTEN. JJ /told Bros,. Bothwell, Ont. TV! UNINJURED MINS. MARTEN A and Fisher. W. D. Bates. Rldgetown, Ont. C5DA t minimPOSTS. 00170TE DE. livered Botlowell. Reid Bros.. Both. well, Ont. wSCV1-1- 011} CANOES. TUMOas, LUMPS ETTpp Internal and external, cured with.. oat pain by our home treatment, Writ* te, before too Into. Dr. Hellman Mn al M TdmUes t•nttinsgand, net EA G ALL STONES, KIDNEY' AND HD. der Stones. Kidney trouble. Gravel, Lumbago and kindred ailments posttive1Y eared with the new German reined v. Sant" price 01.60. Another new rem^dv for Diabetos.ilellitue, and ante onto. t Senors Antt•Dtabetee," Pries 02.05 from druggists or direct. The Snoo!. Yam••a. taring Company of Canada. LIMl'ed. Winnipeg. Men. PRODUCERS—By shipping your NEW LAID EGGS to GUNN, LANGLOIS to 00, LIMITED, MONTREAL, you secure the BEST RESULTS. One trial shipment recommended. DO YOUR STOCKINGS siLSINB from washing and hurt rout Ito 'he children oamplain? The IDEAL STOOKINC STRETCHERS make old stockings feel and wear like new, reliove tired Lear ease corns and save darn - RI WINas nairdbllt and chil5d. WORN: Sr.& 00.. Waterford, Ont. Wuff I "In some parts of Brazil there are birds with bills a yard long," said the tall man. "What do they call thenar ask- ed the short man. "Plumber birds," replied the tall man. TAKE NOTICE. We publishsimple, straight, tentlmcni• ale not preee agents intery ewe, from well-known people. Prom all • over America they testify to the merits' of MINA10D'S LINIMENT, the best of Koueshold Remedies. MINARD'8 L.DTIMENT GO., LIMITED, Merely. Prudence. Sub.—el/ow could . you go and order that .expensive necklace! Don't you know how I'm fixed 1 Wife—Yes, but I don't want other people to know how you're fixed. . Mtnard's Liniment Mures Garnet In Cows. Tho Conqueror's Return. "I was rather embarrassed," the amateur hunter confessed. "Why so?" "When I got back to camp after my first day out the follows greeted me by singing, `See the Conquer- ing Hero Comes.' ,And all i had done was shoot off my guide's left ear," A girl's idea of an.aflinity is=the first man who proposes.