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The Clinton News Record, 1914-07-09, Page 7A NERVOUS BREAKDOWN Can Be Averted By Feeding the Starved, Nerves With yich, Red Blood Nou'r4h your nev ---ha i the • only way you can overeOme dife's worst misery, nervous exhaustion. The fits of depeessithandirritistiom the prostrating headaches, the weak- • ness and trcanbling of the legs, the "unsteady 'hand and the impti rect digeetion that mark the victiitn of neive weakness, must eed dn ner- :sous hrealcdown if neglected, Nourish •yeur nerves lby the •liar . timed process -of filling ,your veine with rich, red, health -giving blood. Your nerves are crying out for pure blood and the mission oi Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills is. to irnaka new rich " blood. This .explains why these pills have proved 'rnmeessful so •many cases of nervous disease that did nob yield to or•dinary treatment. For exeanplo Mr. W. H. Weld.on, Anna,p.olis says: 'In the strenuous life I have to follow the drain on my ,systenn was so 'great that my nerves became shattered, the blood impoverished and my whole system underrabied. I tried a number of so-eadled reme- dies without deriving any benefit. Finally having read so much about Dr. Williams' Pink Pills I decided ' to try them. The remit was be- yoed iny expectation. I regained my energy; the Meted and nerves were rebuilt; I lost the e.enee constant, tireinces I had felt and was filled with new life and energy. I have since used the pills with beneficial results in my family and • will always have a word of praise for them." You can get Dr. Williams' Pink • Pills from any medicine dealer OT by mail post paid at 50 eerubs a box or six boxes for $2.50 by writing The Dr, WilliamsMedicine 0o., Brockville, Ont. Beauty of Character. • There is a sweetness of the child, and a sweetness of the old. The sweetness of the child is largely in- dependent of his personality. It is in his ways and in his looks, and the same thing is true, though 'not quite so mach, of the young wo- man. But edien sweetness tonnes at sixty it is the impression, of the very nature of the soul. J. M. Berrie,. Soinewhere, we believe, has mid that no woMan is really beautiful she i•s fifty-three. The beauty that is worth most is the beauty that is connected with the charac- ter itself. • Fell Report. "What did they .say to you?" ask- ed little Harry's mother after his •first visit to the new thinday school. "The teacher said she was glad ' to see ine there." "Yes*" "And .she said e•he hoped I would come every 'Sunday." "And was that all ehe said " "iiSio. She asked me if our family belonged to that abomination." Minard'S Liniment Co., Limited, Gents, --I Mired a valuable hunting dog a mange 'with MINARD'S LINI- MENT tif ter several veterinaries had treated him without doing him any permanent good. Yours Fze., WILFRED GACNE. Prop. of Grand Central Betel, Drain- mondville, Aug 8, '04. After Dost, 141e.st of us are ea for the dust, het we ,qbject, to having it .thrown in our eyes, • 1T.inard,s14nirnent Cures Garget in Cows. A. Sure Revenge. Wife --Dc you like this pudding,. dear? Mrs. MoBeyde gave me the . recipe •for .Hub• -•'No; het I guess you can got square With her by giving -her your . recipe for mince pies. • NANO FULL OF • WIIITE BLISTERS Scratching Made it Pain so Badly Lot Many Nights' Sleep. Could Not Do,Wbrk at All. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Cured. • Box 000, Valleyfield, Quo.—' My hand would get full of little white blisters and when 0 would scratch it would pain me so • badly 1 lost many nights' • sleep. My band was one Mass of sores. 1 more than suffered amitotic about itch - Mgt When I rubbed nlY hand it weeld bum, had it about six years. 1 could not do any Work at all. If you bad seen nay hand you would have said there was no cure. I used to Cry and get so •discouraged. I was never troubled with it in the smuttier hut as soon as the cold weather started my hand got sore. 'I ivied all that was given Me and was treated for three months and every night I washed my hand It had spread all over my hand. I started to use the CMS- . cura Soap and Ointment and 0 got relief. One cake of Cuticurrt Soap and two boxes of Cutioura Ointment completely cured me.'; (Signed) Mrs. Sarah Mercier, June 15, 1913. TO REMOVE DANDRUFF • Prevent dry, thin and falling hair, aflay Itching and Irritation, and promote the ' growth and beauty of the hair, frequent shampoos with CUticura Soap, assisted by occasional dressings with Cuticura Oint. went, afford a most effective and oconoresait treatment. Sold thrmighoua the worm. Por a liberal froo sample of each, with 32-p, book, send post -card to Pottor Drug la Chem Corp„Dept.1), Dolton, IT, 8, A.1/ NEWS ACROSS THE BORDER WHAT IS GOING ON OVER IN '111E STATES. , Laieit Happenings in Big Republic Condensed for Busy Readers. John D. Rockefeller and his SOD have given, $10,000 'bo the New York police fund, Mrs. Morris K. Jesup, who died in New Yerls teen:elm left over $8S- 000,000 of a $20,000,600 eetate to cheritlee: . At Holly Springs., M'ase., L. P. Matthews under sentence of ben years, in 'the penitentiaty? went on a hunger strike and died en hie cell. Charles E. Whadens one of the keepers at the penitentiary, Black- well'Island; was areested., charg- ed with selling drugs No prisoners. Nifie Nene Yorkremen who; dis- tinguished themselves. by heroic ser- vices during the past year, were presented with medals by the May - At Harrisburg, Pa., Pascal Hall, a negro, condemnedto the gallows, roll -reed bo .sing uo hymn on the morn- ing of his exeunt:non, but sang 'CaseyJones," . Former Police Lieritena.nt Obarle.s Becket haa been removed to the cell in Sing Sing lately occupied' by Re- bacci, the Italian animater, recent- ly executed. Lowetrnbein an East 'mai Street, New York, music teacher, finished a lesson to a pupil, and then went and jumped off the roof, 'committing stioide. Peter Barker and William Dun- kerloot, N.J., were going on a vaca- tion on motarcyolee. They were held up for .speeding, fined $50, end had te abandon their vacation. Bands will play in fifteen parks in New York this ,rnimmer, .and ar- rangements have been made to have big singing • societies co-operate with the bands and orchestras. Mrs. Catherine M. Nolan, who died in New York, left a. piano, which will go to a niece when the latter gets married, .but not before. She is not even keeping company at preset. A seven -year -1d Los Angeles girl called on President Wilson, and asked him to kiss her, saidng she "wanted to carry his kiss back to California," The President com- plied cheerfully. Irving Ramsay, a Brooklyn chanf- fear, is suing for $50,000 for the loss of a .spoonful of brai•ns ie an explosion while repairing a gasoline tank owned by Emanuel. J. Weil, at Cedarhurst, L.I. For twenty years Pateick Farley had conducted e, ca„le on the BOW- ery. He entrusted. ,ths business to his three b.aatendere, and, -when he died recently, left the whole of his $109,000 estate to them. While standing near a gas 'teak in the Peekskill Hat Works, Ed- ward Wilson, a captain in the Peekskill Fire Depertme,nt, struck a, match no light a cigar. La the explosion which ensued the eaptain was mutilated beyond recognition. Eminent physicians at the second day's session of the American Medi- cal _Association advocated standing on the head to relieve rlieumatieum gout, insanity, nervousness and dyspepsia. One doctor said: "If poor, go to a doctor; poverty is due to nlineSs." A tube containing $2,000 weeth ef radium WaS lost in Philadelphia the other day, and subitaintial re- ward offered for its recovery. A young man entered police head- quaateri, laid the tube containing the radium on oil official's desk, and a.nel disappeared without wait- ing for the rewsaid. At Pithsburg police raided a cockfight and seized seventeen game birds, which were ready to do battle. They were offered $1,000 for the birds, but refused, and teamed them over to three hos- pitals, which made them into stew and soup. Valuing the fowl at $1,000 the soup worked out at $'7 bowl. Fulton 13xyla.wski, a young Wash- ington lawyer, used sulphurous language when he was neatly .hit by a golf club driven by Woodrow Wilson at the Suburban Club links. When the lowyer found out whom he had offe.nded he sent a noto of apology, which the President ac- cepted,. It was said at the elub that no warning shout of "fere" was given by Mr. Wilson. BEAR AMENDS FANCY BALL. Dancers Think Ile Is Gees!, But S0611 Learn Mistake. Having escaped from his cage at Neuilly (France) fair, a, bear took a 'stroll around the neighborhood. Ito wes attra.thecl to a private house. by strains or -music and made a sudden - appearance in a -crowded ball -room. Is it was a lcincy dress. dente the rev,ellexs at first thought he was a late guest, but they soon discovered their mistake end ran Lor the dome, while the orchestra stopped play- ing. Without taking the slightest notice of the exeitermont bruin exe- cuted a pais, soul, with ragtime Movements., and 'Deemed genuinely annoyed When his. keeper arrived and led him back to captivity. Forgot Mother. John ny--You' l'e the meanest, hatefulest, spitefulest thing I kno . • Tommy --And you're .the crabbed - est, ugliest— Father—Boys, boys! You forget that your mother is in the room. . Had Experience. "I Rant a pair of. butt.oe shoes for my wife." "This way, sir. What kind do yeti wish, sir 1" • "Doesn't matter, just so they don't button in 'the back." WANTED, NEW INVENTIOINIS Manufacturers aro constantly writlng us for .new ideas, 345,000 paid for one invention just patented and 'sold by us: $10,000 offered l'or another. Send for complete list, Met us turn your ideas into ' money. One good invention and Your fortune is made.-; Ideas developed; Inventions perfected, Send sketch and description of your idea tor Free Patent Office Search. Patents .Boltl Br No Charge. *MEOW) C. SHIPMAN Si CO., Dept. W. Patent Solicitors, Trust Bldg., Ottawa, Ont. IlEAlf PEOPLE CAN BEAR. But Not the Way Others Dos -Feel - ibra tions. 1 That .tdie deaf can really diear and do hear, but in a .different way from ordinary people, 'is a, fact -that few persons who are not deaf under- otencl. Stanley R,obineon he , who be- came deal at tage of ten, telle 80 the Scientific American just how they do it. • Not only do the deaf hear oaunds, but they are often greatly ann.oyed by them, They feel eaundo through the conottesion on the diaphragms of their ears and the vibrittions reach the brain, accoecling to Mr, Robinson,through the nerves of feeling ratdier than by way ol the auditory nerves. A deaf man feels the motion of a paosing truck, th through e vibrations it causes on tdie pavement. Ha doe o rot feel the passing of a, rubbenatire.d. vehicle on an asphalt paved street, behaese this *muses no vibeatione. He feels the footetalei of a horse neerby and not, on the soft earth. He does not hear a stamp upon stone pave- ment ueless it is quite close to him. "A deaf mute," says Mr. Rohie- son, "wail be conscious of all the noise in the room 'which he oocu- pies. He will feel the dom. slain, the fall of a ball, an apple,an orange, a key, or any other weight; the footsteps of persons in the room, if it is not carpeted, or if they do not have on rubber shoes OT 'slippers ; also the noise which he makes with his own knife and fork when eating. "A deaf person never feels the sound of a bell, as its vibrati.ons are confined solely to the latraospihere. I think there is no way by -which the sound of sucih an instruraent can be impel-11nd to our feelings." Some of the clevices employed by deaf persons to warn them of the ringing of the door bell are most ingenious. One household has a rubber ball suspended from the ceiling of the living iroom, and the ringing of the bell causes this to swing back and forth. One man has a flag that drops when the bell rings. Another IllaS the bell ants,ch- ed to an electric. lamp so that it lights up when the bell -push is pressed. A New Yorker has 01/1 alarm. eleck attached to the foot of a brass bed. He feels the vibrations when the a,e plaialy as if Wait. alarm goes off jiiet 'he could hear them. He'll Little Johnny had been naughty all day'. At bat, to cap the olimax, all sister. When he slapped his sm father °wee home from the office the mother told him 01 his ,son's next time you misdeeds. "The tease yeur sister you go to bed with - the lather said out your dinner,'' sternly. The kiddie sat in silence Then, all of a to his father. vant. to hit sister Lor a few moments. sudden, he turned "The next time I N emit until alter dinner," he remarked. After Sohn. - Silt 11.0111lItT LAIRD BORDEN. The Dominion Premier Is a Hard R. edden Man. • Sir Robert Laird Borden, K.O.M: is a Nova Sc.otian of United Einpire Loyaliet stook, and .tha,t fact is the a key to his. charcter. Nova Scalian United Empi.re 1,oyal- ist is very hard-headed a.nd very, long-headed, and there, is not a harder or longer head • in politics then the present Prime Minister of Canada He Inc a eool judeement and a feoulty for foresight 'whioh make him. a farmidable rival an.d a. daangerons opponent. Ho ha.s iso imagination and no emotion. Ilis intellectual p.ower is solidly tines - sive. He ie 'genuine Nov.a Scotian and .Britisher in his adherence to .tbe prose faiths of politice. Sir Rolient is net a pliable, being. He does not try to. please for 'the Rake of pleasing, He has the abil- • ity to go his own way eithout con- eidering the feelings of others. Nova, Seatians, more oe less, seem to poss.ess tins quality of tell-is:tile, Mon. They do not deliberately tread upon corns, but they are not eweily wheedled. or managed. They have a preference for going straight ahead and cutting through obsta- eles, rcuthe,r than circumventing them. If they are °confronted wibh. inseparable ariffieulitiee, they bide their Mune without falling neto. a panic q' a pdiseion. They are an im- perturbable people. They know how to weft. Sir Robert's. career since his entrance into the p.olitical .arenit is an illustration of this Nova Scotian Loyalist patience. He knows, how to wait. He lunews how to con- trol the petulance of deferred ambi- tion: He has. learned to avoid those eraors which disqualify a statesman. He ie no flexible oppor- tunist, bet on the other hand' he is a master of non -committal itectice. He has always been too cautious to immolate his reputation upon a. for - born hope or an eatreme enthusi- asm. His mind instin.etively driv.ee him along a middle course. He pre- fers to allow other men to imake "John 1 Do you 'practice regu- larly on the piano when I am away at the office?" "Yes, father." "Every day ?" ''Yes, father.'' "And Low long did you practice to- day?" "Three hours to -clay, la- ther, and tnvo-and-a-half hours yesterday." "But, John—" "Yes, father." "Next time you practice be sere and anloek the piano. I'll give you the key. It'e been 80 any pocket the last fort- night, Now, another, will you being me the strap?" HIT THE SPOT Knothed Out Tea and Coffee Ails. There's. a good deal of eatisEsie- tion and comfort, in hitting upon the right thing to rid one of the varied end constant ailments caused by tea and ooffee drinking. "Ever since I ca•n remember, ' writes one Woman, "my fathex has been a ilover of his coffee; but the continued use of it so affected his stomach that he could .scateely eat at times, "Mother had eoffee-headache and dizziness, and if I drank coffee for br.ealrfa,st -I would taste it all day and usually go tto bed with & he.ael- aehe." (Tea is just as injurious as coffee, because both contain the cl r eg, caffeine.) "One day father brought home a pkg. of Postern recommended by our grocer. Mother made it accord- ing to directions On the box, and it just "hit the epot." 14 has a dark, seal -brown color, changing 80 gol- den brown when cream is added, and a, snappy teets similar to mild, high-grade coffee, and we found that its continued use speedily put an end to all out eoffee ills. "That was at least ten years ago, and Postern has, !rein that slay to this'been a standing order of father's grocery bill. "When I married, any husband was a great ooffec drinker, .a.ltho he itelenitted that it hurthim When I mentioned Poetuan he said he did not lake Old taste ef it. I told him I could make it taste aid right. He smiled and said, try it. The result was a eaccess, he won't have any- thing but Postern." Name givers by Canadian Postern Co. Windsor, Ova Read "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. Peetum now comes in two. norms:, Regular Postent—must be well boiled, 15c and 250 packages. Instant Postern—is a 'soluble pow - (180. Made in the cup with hot wa- ter—no biltiling. 30e and SOe tine. The cost per eup of both kinds is about the same. "There's' a Reason" for Postern.. • —sold by Grocers. Sir Robert Borden, G.O.M.G. rah experiments. 'Be profits by the impetuous haste of less prudent na- tures. Be would rather rise upon the mistakes of others than upon the speculative daring of ihie owe elsace. Ilos as emver in a hurry, for he knows that most probl•ems solve theirneelves if they ere leSt alone. And whenevee he is forced it() act, he prefers to err on the, sid.e ol 'cau- tion, rather than on the side of temerity. He realizes that modera- tion in politics is a virtue, end that inaotion is a pardonable ean. Appeals to Moderate Men. It is these homespun virtuee that have helped Mr. Borden to 'hew his way to ,the highest office in the gift of ithe Can.adian people. It is it notable fact ithait he hthe built up his, prestige by appealing to the centeal mass of moderate anen. And what- ever May be said by heated perti- zans, it is eertain that in Canada, as in ether English-speaking coun- tries, the moderato men are, after all, generally in the majority, There is never a pentuaneet majority of extremists. They may supply the driving power for the political MS - cline, but it is the moderate man who controls it. Another Borden quality 18 taci- turnity. The Conseevative chieftain knows hew be keep his own counsel. He is the embodiment ef re.serv.e and r•eticerice. He never thinks aloud. This gift of silence is .often the cause of irritation to hismore emotional nollowere. Yet Mr. Bor- den ewes a great deal of his ouecess to his power of holding his tongue and .eaying nothing he is not foamed to say. He is not an orator in any sense of the word. In thie he is the, antithesis, el Sir Wilfrid Laurier. The Liberal leade.r is far his super- ior in all the arts that dazzle and fascinate the , popular imagination. Sir Wilfrid on the platform .the be irresistibly moving. He can cap- ture the emotions of any andience, ancl melt the most obdurate anta- gonism into momentary admiration. Borden does not try to melt OT move. If he did he evould be Un- successful. He addresses ihis scent solely and wholly te the nem son. He is a great adveortte, bub he never relics esr rhetoric, or sen- timent, or emotion. He is practia .cal, argumentative, logical, ens-, there, and Stern. Intensified Characteristics. , • Everything in the new knight/is career lies intensified his natural, .tharaoteristies, Efie intellect was shaped and modeled by the acade- mic tradition of the :staid seatc of earning in hia native prOvince, an(' ,b relight up in the environment of a law aloe, isa WaS taughtto !value dear thinking More bighi,y them eroottioetil exuberance, to Aspireal- ter balance rather than originality. And it was while being trained Ms the law that Mr, Borden developed his power of mastering facts, His mind Seems to have develossed into an amazingly efficient, machine for 'the digestion- of Practical poliftes. Whatever snitake Isa kaa made in the 'reeler) el eanotiOn., imagination, and sentiment, he, hao,inteilleed, with sere feetetiags id the region of facts. On the mornang Of Sept. 22, 1911, la face.d • ei task thet. would ..haVe ub- mergd most men, But the mantle of his .gtealt predece.esahs hrad fallen upon worthy shoulders.. In ono- see - sloe. he convinced the skeptical and delighted hid friends. Tao diverse elements in the realm behind ltis were brought tog-eth.er, factionie routed, den.gethes peaked, ohoa sMbfuhly•Ity•oitied. Three yeaes have gone, and Ins pewee and reputation have grown. A eomparatively young mitriSaa .atatesnean 'eao in thie age, he ilitS yet before him many years of political endeavor.—M. Grattan O'Leary, In Star Weekly, When a Woman Suffers With Chronic Backache Thera Is Trouble Ahead. Constantly on .their feet, attending to the wants of a large and exacting family, women often break down with nervous exhaustion. • In the steres, factories, and ona farm are weak, ailing women, dragged down with tortming backache and bearing down pains. Such sultering isn't natural, but 1.S0 dangerous, because due to diseased kidneys. The dizziness, insomnia, deranged menses and other symptoms of kIdneY complaint can't cute themselves, they require the assistance of Dr. Hamil- ton's Pills which go direct to the seat of the trouble.. To give vitality and power to the kidneys, to lend aid to the bladder and liver, to free the blood of poisons, probably there -is no remedy so sues cessful as Dr. Hamilton's Pills. For all womanly irregularities their merit is well known. - Because of their mild, soothing, and healing caeca Dr. Hamilton's Pins are eate, and are recommended for ishes and women of all ages. 25 Cents per box at all dealers. Refuse any sub- stitute for Dr. Hamilton's Pins of Mani drake and Butternut. . ABOUT "/IUM.A.N MACHINE." Why Not Give Men Saute Consider- ation as Plant Equipment. Here is a thought: Just euppose you give the men who are on your staff somewhat the emceo con.•sidera- tion you do the plant equipment under your charge. Treat them at least as well, says a, writer in Pow- er. You find a certain piece of ap- paratus net up toits peeper per- •formanee. 'Whet do you do, scrap iti Hardly; your employer would probably object if you wanted to. Se yeti first examinee it -to are if it cannot be improved. Possibly it is o.nly a litt18 out of edjustm.ent, or it is worn, or •even broken in some minor pert, when you exaanine into it. Alittle time spent in renew- ing defeetive parts or overhauling, with little or no expense, andit goes on doing as 'good or better work than befoee. • Now', how about the oiler or the fireman who is not doing the kind of work you expect? If he has not got it in Lim to. •be a, better work- man, you do him a servioe in dis- charging him, with the advice to get kite some line for which he is bet- ter fitted . Bet be sure you give him a thence if aus deserves it. Show him why this or that way ol dieing something is not right. Then teach (him to do the right way him- self. Incidentally, you will get a loyalty in that man which raone,y eannot buy. Anether thing, do not be unrea- sonably harsh with your men over their faults. Cursing them is jest as 'foolish as bangleg balky pump vith 30 hammer, and dines about as metch good. Y011 CUM carry this analegy be- tween your men and your machin- ery as far as you like. Really they are both machinery in a way, and how much more important bit ,ie to be patient with human machinery, for that can manifest appreciation in return. If you are ilDit ,appealed to by higher m.otives, there are plenty Ol eelfish reasons for your helping -the helper. Another Case of Blood Poisoning • Persisted in paring Ills corns .with n razor. Foolish when cure is so pain- less and sure with putnem'S Corn Ex- tractor. tee Putnam's only --it's the best—guaranteed and painless, price 95c, at all dealers. A Great Relief. "Say, old man, you're looking a hundred per cent. 'better thee you clid a year ago." "I was worrying about my debts then." "All paid 'now, eh?" "Noe but they have grown so , that I know there is no use trying to pay thcm. I 'tell you it's it great load off toy mind." • INTliftliST "10 INV1i.NTORS. Pigeon, Pigeon it Davis, patent Solisiiiors, Montreal, report, that 171 Canadian patents, weoc issued nor the week ezitting suno leth, 107whieli of nadiane, 21 to residents. of wetes soanted Alinreesriide:initst 35 to Cas foreign oeuntriee, and 8 to of. Great: Brltitie and colonies. Of the Caneeliane who reoeived patents, 13 wer.e. of Ontario, 8 .of Quebec, 8 of Manitoba, 2 of 13ritish Columbia, 2 or Albertne Demi 2 of New Brans - r .-Seshaviisaisaliegives,itaesimeaenea.ese ii- ACTIV11r1E8' OF 'WOMEN tary iO0V00 13 compuleoey foe wo- 5400. yoTpdc. .ke ertyartenernenpt;yf3 oofhe;,017y th ilone n:NacVfn In Hungary certain sorts of mill - In Australia the women toil eide by side with the men in the fields. Spanieh WOMen will SoOn start a campaign fee auffrage in that coun- Appledore, Eng., has a female team of bell ringers eonneeted with the parish chureth tthere. More 'than half of all the females in Germany over fifteen years of a e are wage -burners. lie French ssiornen as a rule ie 'a man of ithe house, and hes a b usine.ss 'sense. Only. seven w.e4clings hems token place on elouceeter eatheeleal, Eng- land, in the last 25 years. Women are nacre sane than MOIL m$ tatbsbit silew that rapine men. go insane than women; In Mexico w.oinen and children pack their belongings and follow' the husband ailed father Ito wax, Germany leads all the o.ther countries in the number of mem- bees of the Inteimationail Connell o! Women, Fasittonelale -women in London - have adapted the lad of ha,ving their bedrooms in black, even to the sheets. Miss Elizabeth Bradley has the honor of receiving automobile Ji - cense tag No. 100,000 in Pennsyl- vania Mise Fannie. 0. Clement is super- intendent of the health teething de- partment of the American Red Gross Society. • — Women teachers in the elemen- tary and secondary 'schools of ithe United States average $458.51 a year in salary. Sixteen -year-old Edith jacksan, of Vancouver, B.C., succe.ected in landing a huge shaek xeee-ntly after a two-hour battle. In a teat vote conducted by a Paris newspaper, 505,972 women declared they wished to vote and 114 decilitre& they did not. krise Olets, M. Smith ef Saint Louis, Igo., has entered the law office of ther father, she having just been graduated from the Benton College of LaW. Mr. Eiteciasheav, a Cossack wo- man, is now exploring darkest Rua - 011 a horse preseete(1 to her by Czar Nicholas for her feet in rid- ing from Vla,divosto.ck across Man- churia, Siberia and Englisih Russia three years ago. Under the French law a divoreed woman is compelled to abandon the use of her former husband's name Lo certain time e,fter the decree is granted or else she is liable to a fine for every day she uses it there- after. Mrs.. Francisco Villa, wife of th.e famous Maxie= rebel general, is only 28 y -ears 01 age and married her husband when he was a bandit. She now has two automobile& and a great many diamonds besides a magnificent home at Chihuahua In City. Zutisili, Switzerland, there are three middle-aged escapee who have luerative business of shining shoes for travellers a.s they emerge from the trains at that point, When they have no custonne,rs they spend their time knitting stockings, Pleurisy Pains Vanish! Chest Colds Cured! NERVILINE HAS NEVER FAILED TO CURE. Don't suffer! Nervillne Is your relief. Nervillue Just rubbed on, las 01 111, win ease thet drawn, tight feeling over your ribs, nein destroy the pain, win have you smiling and happy in no time. "I caught cold last nveek while mot- oring," writes P. T. Menem from Linden. "My chest was full of con. gestion, my throat was mighty sore, and I had the fiercest stitch in my side you could imagine. As a. boy I was accustomed to have My mother use Nerviline for all our minor ail- ments, and remembering what confi- dence she had In NervIline, I sent out for a bottle at once. Between noon and eight e'elock I had a whole bottle rubbed on, and then got into a pers- piration under the blankets. This drove the Nerviline in good and deep, and I woke up next morning fresh as a dollar and absolutely cured, Nervi - line is now always part of my travel- ling kit, and I will never be without The large 50c. family size bottle is the most economical, or you can eas- ily get the 25c. trial size from any dealer. Wanted a Little Praise Himself. Following a disastrous fire in a • Western city, many men and women • gathered to look .at v.. ruins. Smite Of the men, seeing that e well near which they were standing was top .pling, made haabe to get <nit of the way, and narrowly •escaped being °relined. johney liatahison, good Irish citizen, WaS SO near the wall that he could not escape with the others, Se, whirling &beet, the made for a door in the wall, burst through it, and came eat on the other side safe and evidently very proud of his ex- ploit. Women who had shut .their eyes and shrieked when they saw •his danger Pow gathered round him in greatjoy, and retied out: "Praise heaven, Johnny Beabi- son; down on your knees, end thank heaven!" "Yie, yis," 'said he, "and I will, but name() 'it injaarnyone in me, aw et Iiiitmsiitet rein t. Lawyer (to hesitating client), -- Revenge is sweet, remember. We'll fight the case •th the bitter ezel 1 ' Client—But wolooll get the bitter end—the other fellow OT me ritinstriPa Lininient Clues Colds, Die.' The child's The picnicker's choice. Everybody's favorite. POTTED MEATS— Fuji flavored and perfectly cooked make delicious sandwiches. Pain= FOR BARR, Fr, W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Street, Toronto, elforl:b.YrOneU sltV..ATN:0:00.BUY 0E,, SELL A Al Fruit, Stock, Grain or Dairy 'Parra, write 05, W. Dawson, Brampton. or 90 U. W. DAWSON, Colborne St., Toronto. NETTSFA.PEILS PON SALE, CA.0013 WPiDICI.,Y 010 LIVD TOWN IN V.T4 York County. Stationery and Book Business... in connection. Frio° only 34,000. Terms liberal. Wilson Publish- ing Company, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. • ralsoiax.x..ammous. CIANCLUI, mustons, LUMPS, ETO., ‘..) internal and external, cured with- out pain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical go.. Limited.' C011ingwood, Ont, 1.611, • HOME STUDY The Arts Course may be taken by correspon- dence, but students desiring to graduate mast attend ono Session. OUEEN'S •-•-• UNIVERSITY KINGSTON, ONTARIO ARTS APPLIED SCIENCE EDUCATION Including MEDICINE ENGINEERING SUMMER SCHOOL JULY and AUGUST 22 G. Y. CHOWN, Registrar, Kingston, Ont. • Yet your best horse is just as liable to develop a Spavin, kingboxic, Splint, Curb or lameness as yourpoorestl KENDALL'S SPAyIN CURE has saved many thousands of dollars in horse flesh by entirely curindthese ailments. Carnet, Ont. reb. 25011,1013. .113eve used kerakill's S'forin Cure to kill several jackti, and remove( a bunch of long standing, caused by a kick." 0,„j,00,,, Don't take chances with your horses. lieep bottle of liendalPshandy,31--Ofort35. Ourbook "Treatise on the Horse" free at druggists or Dr.11.1.1(ENDALL CO., Euesbura Falls, Vt. 82 ISSEVESEREIMESMSEgNe=5=00 Not Paid Yet. A man who was very miserly hoarded up his stacks of hay year alter year in the hope of making double the price he was offered for them. A well-known lia,y and etraw buyer in the district one day asked the price of a stack. An en- ormous sem was asked, whieh the buyer accepted. "How about the terms of settlement?" asked 'the old miser, "Well, you see," said the buyer, "my terms are to eettle when I fetch the last load away." "ThaV•s a baangairt," said the miser, slapping the other's hand. The old chap watched every lead go away except the last, and .that the buyer has never fetched yet. SVMMTIR TOTINISW RATES TO TUB PACIFIC COAST. Via Chicago and North Western 17.5t Special low rate round-trip tieltcts on sale from all points in Canada to Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland, Seat- tle, Vancouver, Victoria., Edmonton, Calgary. Banff., Yellowstone Park, etc., airing July, August and September. Exeellent train service. Vol, rates, illus- trated folders, time tables and bull particulars, address B. 53, I3enne U., General Agent, 45 '1fonge Street, To- ronto, On tart°. Soap is one of •the few 'things that should be hanel1e,c1 without gloves. rdlautrd's Diniment Cured Distemper. Jack—I was jest admiring Ma- bel'‘s hair. How pretty it is1 Ma - bens rival—Oh, she has •sorae pret- tier than that 1• VOUS* OWN 133000151 MIL TELL 1.0E.1 Try Muria° Dye Remedy ler Red. Weal:, Watery Vlyes and Granulated Eyelids; No Smarting -- just Eye Comfort. Write for nook of the Eye Sy mailrree. dierino Bye SemedY ---..- 1Superstition never keeps people from accepting 13 for a dozen. • Minard,s Liniment Cures Diphtheria. — • .WalltOd. to Got -in. An Iriehm.an walked into a hotel aud• noticed two men fighting at the fax end a the teem. Leaning over the bar, he earnestly inquired el the •bartender : ) ses 'bhat a •private fight or ean anyone get into it?" ED. 4. ISSUE '28--'1.4.