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The Brussels Post, 1913-7-10, Page 7Fashion Hints eifieeeivoieseeseevaeraseeeesse Odds and Endo of Fashions. a One pretty variation of the net ebvered hat is a bii,gy'hfte straw recently worn." The brim was cov- ered w,1t1,-two layers of white net, ens( extending an inch beyond the edge and the other just a little smaller than the brim. Both were edged with baby width pink ribbon stitched on flatly. The hat, was trim- med with pink roses and black vel- vet ribbon, Wide suede belts of soft color to match the predominant color in the printed design are worn with chil- dren's frocks of printed muslin. A usual trimming for ouch frocks takes the form of frills of white lawn scalloped in the color of the belt with mercerized cotton. These frillssometimes extend from neck to hem on each side of a tuoked pan- el of white muslin. Two frills,- scantily gathered, about two inches wide, *face each other and almost meet over the panel, which is about five inches wide. The belt buckles over the frills and panel and is held in place •by narrow straps of the printed muslin, The array of summer petticoats is almost endless. One practical sort is made of crepe de shine, in soft, clinging quality, with a flounce of mescaline. These petticoats are made in rose color and golden yel- low and Japanese blue. Another charming warm day petticoat is made of thin printed silk, figured in blue or pink, and made with a tucked flounce. The tucks running roundabout, give the flounce just the small amount of stiffness it needs. Elaborate petticoats of china silk d 1 with summer rie THE. DANGER O ANAEMIA Consumption May Follow Unless its Ravages are Checked There is danger to every girl !arid every woman who falls a victim to anaemia — that is bleodlessness.: They become listless, feel tee weak, too 'wretched and too hopeless to take prompt steps to stop the trou- ble, Too often, through neglect, they drift into a worse condition, forgetting ,that anaemia frequently ]ends on to consumption. If you are anaemic in the least degree you should lose no time in beginning treatment to increase and enrich the blood supply, To do this there is no other medicine eo good as Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, Every dose helps make rich, red blood, which drives out disease and brings again the bloom of health to pale and wallow cheeks, There are thou- sands of women and growing girls in Canada who owe their present good health to.the timely use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Amgng those who have been restored to health by this great medicine is Miss Rose Neville, Mount Forest, OM., who says: "Dr. Williams' Pink Pills performed almost a mir- acle in my case. I was a victim of anaemia, in what my friends con- sidered a dangerous form. I was very pale, always, felt tired: out,. suffered from eevere .headaches, and had no appetite. I was taking doc- tor's medicine for a long time --in. fact I tried two doctors—but in- stead of improving I seemed to be growing worse. My parents were at a loss to know what to do for me, and thought I would not repo - ver. Then a friend advised Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and I had only taken them a few weeks when I began to feel better. This greatly bailie. Helen Mangenot, a typical Parisian with sparkling black eyes, rich warm lips, raven hair, and of is vivacity charaeteris do of the French metropolis, who has just been elected Queen of Roses in that city. She is a dress- maker and, an. artist's model. FROM MERRY OED ENOLAU an ace are worn wi • Ogees.. They are made in pale blue, encouraged me, and I continued pink, yellow or green. Wide lace taking the pills for some time insertion runs from waist to hem in longer, and found my health again 10 or 12 strips and the bottom of as good as ever it had been. In am stronger than ever I was _ foot I g petticoat is a net'tvork of cross the at Fof i he use advised t have a v ing and interwoven bands of lace. before. I , A.lovely summer frock for a little Dr. Williams : Pink Pills to other girl is made of white wash tulle or girls who have found the results net over white silk. The dress is equally beneficial. trimmed only with a very small ball Sold by all medicine dealers or fringe trimming mounted on white by mail at 50 cents a box or six silk soutaahe braid. This ball trim- boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. ming edges the sleeves and over- Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, skirt and outlines the yoke in the. Ont. waist and sleeves. Some of the .summer frocks are ZEBRAS AND LIONS. trimmed with what at a little dis- tance appear to bo huge crochet Wild Animals Understand Bach buttons. On closer inspection they Other's 'Ways. prove to be made of silk. Here. is the secret of their making: Take Once, when Major Stevefison- a circle of silk and shir alittle circle Hamilton was following the tracks in the centre of it. Make another of some lions in Africa, a small • line of shirring a little distance from troop of zebras a little distance in this circle and continuo shirring the front of him caught sight of the big silk in circles until you have apiece eats at close quarters,although of shirred silk big enough to Dover they were •still invisible to the hunt - your button mould. The shir strings ere. Their sudden headlong rush, d should be carried to the wrong s Major StevensonHamilton write of the silk—the side next the but- in " Animal Life in Africa," was a ton mould -and fastened securely thing to remember. Conduct of an- there. • other sort on the part of zebras, Red and yellow, fashion predicts, however, was observed by one of will be the most popular summer the rangers a few years ago. colors. Mahogany and nasturtium As he was riding along the bank red especially are increasingly pop - of the Wants River, he suddenly ular x The two colors are frequent- ly combined. Yellow silk frocks heard zebras making a great noise .•' show buttons and girdles and falist in frontrind oomin.g foto a A Bad Heart,, Its Cause and Cure Many, Firmly Convinced They Are vying of Heart Trouble, Rave Often the Strongest Hearts. Sometimes you wake Up at night, heart throbbing like a steam engine, Your breathing is short andirrogularf paiva shoot through the chest and abdomen, and cause horrible anxiety. 1Cour trouble feat with the heart et all. These. sensations ars the outcome of indigestion, which. has canoed gas to form en the stomach and'prees against- the heart. Just read what happened to Iaaao h[alloux, of 80110 River, Ont,, "Three months ago I was a weak, sick- ly man, My appetite was poor; food ter. rnented in my etomaoh, I had sour rte. Inge and indigestion. Al night.I would often weahon with gas in the stomach and heart palpitation. "I consulted my doctor and used' rem. wiles' that my friends advised. Nothing helped. "One day 'I received le sample of Dr. Hamilton's Pills, and nor euro commen- ced. To -day. I .have a vigorous. appetite, strong heart action, and no sign of in- digeetlon. I feel younger and healthier than ever before." Your druggist or storekeeper sells Dr. Hamilton's Pills, 26o per box or five boxes for s1,00. By mail from The Catarrh°. zone Oo., Buffalo, N.Y.,.. and Kingston, Canada. d SWAT THE SPARROW NOW. The Chirpy Little Bird Is a Nuts- -RUM in City and Country. To the slogan of "Swat the Fly" might well be added that of "Kill the Sparrow." Flies and sparrows belong in the sumo class as' nuis- ances and menaces to health, says a writer in a health magazine. Most birds deserve to be protect- ed for some service they perform, but when all the evidence has been submitted .in the sparrow's case it will stand condemned. Perhaps it occasionally eats a harmful worm, but the greater'part of its food is of grain. Than, it is the constant enemy of native birds -which, unlike itself, live mostly on worms . and s trees in'uriau to i � s arethat IISBGt and crops. For many years the sparrow was unknown except in the towns, and it gained the name of "town bird." But it later years it has spread all over the country, until now it is probably a 'greater nufsaaoe on the. farm than in the city. The spar- row's habit of living always near settlements and in sheltered places makes it a most prolific bird. It is almost independent of the seasons in breeding. • Several broods of as many as seven or eight birds may be reared in a year. The sparrow helps to spread dis- eases by building nests upon or near houses. Building on houses is especially a menace to health in the cuntry, where people catch water from-tha•rnofs to fill their Cisterns. The nests aro oY ^endt. ponstruotion that they are likely barbers r var- ious sorts of vermin and germs. "•.. ¢. NEWS BY MAIL ABOUT JOHN BULL AND HIS PEOPLE. Occurrences in ho Land That Reigns Supreme in the Com- mercial World. It is proposed to erect in London a hostel as a tribute to Mr, W. T. Stead from women of all nationali- ties. done 0 damages was About 20 00 g by a fire that broke out at Msesrs. Barkers furniture repository at Kensington. It is rumored that the King is purchasing Byrkley Lodge, Burton - on -Trent, as a residence for the Prince of Wales. A oopy of the rare original Kil- marnock edition of Robert Burns' poems, 1786, was recently sold at Sotheby's for $700. William Hitchcock, a dairyman of Richmond, was fined the nraxrnaam penalty, $100, at.Richmond for adulterating nnik. A ffteen-months'-old child at Birmingham, in trying to get out of its cot, got its head fixed in the ironwork and was stuffoeated. Ann Oaterei, who has died in the Henley Workhouse at the age' of ninety-two, was first admitted to the wearkhouse in 1857. There are now between 15,000 and 20,000 people. on strike in South Staffordshire in connection with disputes in various industries. Mrs. Alice Jane Hicks, of Hare Street, Woolwich, who was known as the "Queen of.the °esters," has died at the age of ninety. Several policemen were injured in a fierce fight at Bradford in con- nection with the carter strike. Some 3,000 men are now out. Selby, formerly an important centre: of flax growing, has been chosen by the development as the' site of further experiments in the industry. The new'tramway route betweerca Rushey Green and Forest Hill vie, Catford Hill and Stanstead Road, has now been opened for traffic, The Lord Mayor of Leeds re- eeived a deputation of citizens ad- vocating a proposal that the city bo converted into a seaport with a ship, sari!,: To effect the reinstatement of a man who was discharged at the Holyhead Mountain Clay and China Works, over one hundred employees struck work. Hytho Town Council have inau- gurated a campaign against wasps, They areloffering one cent a head for every queen wasp killed in the borough: Captain Fred Wombwell, the famous animal trainer, was badly mangled by a lion at Bostock and Woenbwell's menagerie .ab Ply- mouth. • The scheme to reconstruct the isolation pavilion of Worthing Pier, wrecked at Easter, with a wider structure at a cost of $50,000, has now been approved. A suffragette tried to burn down the goods• yard of the Grealb Central Railway Co, at Nottingham, but fortunately all but two istacks of timber Was saved. • Burglars broke into the Berkeley Hotel in Piccadilly, bound a,nd gagged the ten porters op duty and rifled the safe of money and jewel- lery to the value of $11,000. *The Thames Ironworks property at Canning Town, where the Thun- derer was built, has been disposed of to the Great •[]astern Railway,. whose line adjoins the site. A tombstone erected hi the Wel- ford Road Cemetery, Leicester, to t- clearing, he found that three lions ings of cherr�y'red and deep red had tiled dawn a Magee but had frocks show vivid touches of yellow not yet killed her. The rest of the. hero and there' troop were standing some twenty placieg One of of e whims of fashion is the bows at the back pcaces from the lions, facing them in of the neck k of ck instead of ab the front. a semi -creole, match excited. They The bows are flat and tailored in were making a great noise, but effect and fringed ends reach to theshowed no disposition to bolt; the waist. This method of placing bows foal was between its dam and the seems to bo, in line with the tend herd. When the ranger fired at one envy to gather the skirt in the front of the lions, the zebras at once • and leave it plain in the back. stampeded;. but the young animal Removable buttons are a feature waited about for its mother, which, of some lingerie gowns and blouses. although badly cawed, was able to The buttons, of bone, are taken out get up and make off also, when the gown is laundered. They Another ranger came on a lion are well made of highly finished and two lionesses taking their mid - bone, and although they are much day siesta within a hundred yards like the studs which women wore of a troop of zebras. Ons lion was when shirt waists first came into lying on its back, with all four being they are made to lie fiat on legs in the air, like a cat before the the surface of the material. fire, while the zebras were standing g about, apparently half-asleop. The OPER TIME TO RISE. lions must'laave, been,olearly visible PR to them. Is When 'Eyes First Open, Dozing Incidents such as this illustrate tl perfect understanding that the pef f • ft the e Not Healthy. wild creatures have of each others' The proper time to rise—if we ways, and how far pian is from a could only make up our minds to it elear comprehension of them. --is when sleep properly ends, q. admissible f any Dozing 1s not nitssi a rem reasonable or ,health ,point of view. BABY'S OWN TABLETS The brain falls into the ;state we HIGHLY RECOMMENDED call sleep, and the other organs of the body ; ol1ow it; True sleep is NO medicine for ]tittle erica is so the' aggregate 'ol eleeps. In other highly recommended as is Ba y is words, sleep, which utast be a nat- Own Tablets. . They are guano !teal function, is a state which con- teed by a government analyst.to be the several parts of the lists in the sleeping or rest of.all absolutely_ safe, and besides that organism. thousands of mothers throughout e Sometimes ons, the land praise a and at other lien as the only times another.part of the body as a sure cure for childhood sq. whole may be fatigued, and so .the Concerning them Mrs. Edward Mo- lest, to awake,or the most exhaust -Donald, Douglastown, Que., says: ed and thereore the most difbeult «i ow, highly recommend Baby's ' to arouse. Own Tablets to nay mother who ---11.-- has a baby suffering from oonstipa- ' Every failure teaches a man tion or teething' troubles." The something if he will learn,. Tablets are sold by medicine deal- Mother—Well, dears, did you ors or by mail at 25 omits a box meet any one you knew ? The three from The -Di. Williams' Medicine ch ldsen (who have just returned Co., Brookville, •Ont. from the morning walk)—Yes ; Ruby anti' Derek. Mother—Where did yoei. meet k thi ie p 'believe p youngest)—Ale the sante place an w 7 'Barber!. (the If we ' could .see ourselves as When Lovo is New. A paper states that a young loco- motive engineer recently married attracts the attention of his wife by blowing the whistle from the time he strikes the outskirts of the town until he reaches the station. Old heads in the business say that in two or three years he will be trying to make the old engine come into town on her: tiptoes. The Rif Soap For Baby'i i Is Cuticura Soap 1112 N', the caro. of baby's skin and hair, Cuticura Soap is the mother's fa- vourite. Not only is it unri- valed in purity and refreshing fragrance, but its gentle em.ol- lient properties render it of great value in promoting skin and hair health generally.. For the treatmentof eczemas,rashes and other itching, burning in- fantile 'eruptions, warm baths with Cuticura Soap, followed by gentle applications of Cuti- curaOintment are usually effec- tive when other methods fail. Cuticura Soap wears to !wafer, often outlasting several cakes of ordinary soap and making its use most economical. Onticura Soap and Ointment are sold throughout the world. A liberal sample of each, with 32 -page booklet on the care and treatment of the skin and scalp, sent post- free. Address Potter Drug & Chem. Corp,, Dept. 16D, Boston, U. S. A. PEDIGREE WREAT, Experiments Made in England and Sweden. Experiments made £r Sweden 'with a view to obtaining a "pair• g ,e" wheat were referred to £n a reoen l±fsve v.h, ..Prof. T. B, Wood, of Oambridge, Engra• M,-�»'t t y al Institution. The two important charaoterie- ties which rho farmer wanted, the lecturer acid, were a good quality and a large yield. Comparison of the yield per sore ever 10 years in Lancashire, 65 bushels, and in Mon- mouthshire, 20 bushels, indicated at once, he said, that soil and clim- ate were responsible to a large ex- tent, and meteorologists were of the opinion that the weather during the autumn sowing in a large measure determined the yield. The average yield per aero in different oeun- trnes: Denmark, 42,1 bushels; Great Britain, 32.9 buehels; Can ada, 17.6 bushalo; India, 11.4 bush- els; and Russia, 10 bushels, Experiments at Cambridge and other plaoes •showed that there was no relation between the sate of the ear, the size of the 'grain, or the number of stems and. the bulk of the crop. Both equarehead and rivet, one of which had a small ear' and the other a large,. gave an a1- most equal yield. In this connec- tion Professor Wood pointed out that the efforts to obtain a pedigree wheat had been unavailing. In Sweden, by mechanical separators, they had picked the largest grains from the largest ears out of succes- sive crops, but the result was act- tally not so good as that obtained from an ordinary sowing. HARD, SOFT, OR BLEEDING? No. matter what kind or. where located,. any corn is promptly cured by Putnam', Corn Extractor; being purely vegetable it causes no pain. Guarantee with every bottle of "Putnam's," use no other, 25o. at all dealers. UNIQUE EDIFICE. Vancouver Will Have Four Story Building Six Feet Wide. Construction is at present pro- ceeding in Vancouver on a building which will be a curiosity, for the plans show a four story steel struc- ture only six feet wide and 120 feet in length. So narrow is the pro- posed building that above the how toe 1 necessary r is rownd floc t g a continuous row of bay windows in order to provide room for a stair- case. The site of the curious block is the southwest corner of Carrell and Pander streets. The lot had a width of 33: feet on Carrell Street, flanking on Pender. The city, how- ever, took the greater portion of the lot for the Ponder Street widen- ing, paying a sum in the neighbor- hood of $65,000.as• recompense to the owners, who alleged at that time that the six foot strip left would be of no use, as the indivi- duals owning the next lot on Car- rell Street would not consent to any satisfactory arrangement for using the property. It is said now that there is a pos- sibility that the new narrow build- ing may thrown in with the block standing on the adjacent lot, there- fore losing identity as a distinct otaacture and merely becoming the Pender• street face of a building fronting ofr- !'errall Street. The estimated cost of's'i,e,six foot build- ing is $8,000. It is to bt built by Chinese labor. The upper .e ries BANISHED. Tea and Coffee Finally Had to Go. The way some persons cling to tea and ooffee, even after they know 'they are doing them harm, is a puzzler. (Tea is just, as harmful because it contains caffeine, the same drug found in coffee). But it. is an easy matter to give it up for good,- when Pos�tum is properly made and used instead. A girl writes: • "Mother had been.suffering with nervous headaches for seven weary years, but kept on drinking coffee,. "One. day Tasked why she did' not give up coffee, as a cousin of mine had done who had taken to Postum. But Mother was such a slave to cof- fee,,she thought it would be terrible to give it up. "Finally, one day she made the change to Postern, and .quickly her headaches disappeared. Ono morn- ing while she was drinking Posture so freely and with such relish, I asked for a taste. • "Thatme on Postannand started I now drink it more freely that I did coffee, which never comes into our hoarse now." Name given by Canadian Postum Co,, Windsor, Ont, Write for book- let, "The Road to Wellville," Postum comes in two forms. Regular Pesten' (must be belled.) Instant Postum doesn't require boiling, but is prepared instantly by stirring a level teaspoonful in an ordimal•y cup of hot water, which ,makes it right for mast persona. A big cup requires more, and some people.who like strong things put in a heaping teaspoonful and. temper it with a large 'supply of cream. Experiment until you know the amount that pleases your paiate, and have it served that way in the future. the memory of a man and his wife, have cabinet portraits of theme. 0 others see us we wouldn't The hotos aro let into the stone- work and covered by galls. at. l A Bad Joke. "A famous college president de- clares that there are no new jokes." i 1 does h eZ rm he does Y "Ah,g retured the Old Codger. "Well, he ought to see the husband my niece has just married and brought home to live on me." Por< Beans CLARKS .WOO , l Wl SRtl1oF1 ° Quality,flavour, and perfect cooking, cembloed. The maximum of nourishment and palatability, Just ]teat -- then serve minimum trouble and coat. 4 FARMS FOR SALE. H. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne .Street, Toronto. ril�.' $Farms inC all GRAIN so sections t DAIRY °Inertlor Some snaps. 'J AOTORY SITES, WITH OR WITB:OUT 1• Railway trackage, In Toronto, Aramptnn and other towns and cities. Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Dear Sire --Thin fall I got thrown. en a fence and Sire,—This my chest very bad, 00'I could not work and it hurt me to breathe. I tried all kinds of Liniments and they did me- no good. One bottle- of MINARD'S LINIMENT, warmedon ! unci flannels and applied on my breast,me 0. H. COSSABOOM. Roseway, Digby 0o•, N.B. • EBIDENTIAI,' PROPERTIES IN • Brampton end a dozen other towns. H. W. DAWSON,. Colborne St., Toronto - "Did Repeat. Mr. Cumso seem annoyed at your calling with his bill?" asked Mr. Gaskett of his new collector. "No, sir," replied the young man; "on the contrary, he asked me to call again." 3 Ann FREE HOMESTEADS AND Ih[• } proved forme, 516.00 to 546.00 Per acre, Bost grain and mixed farming country.' Write Commissioner. Board of Trade, Humboldt, Beek. Try Murine Eye Remedy will be laid'out for sleeping room- �F you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes purlioses and every tenant will en- or Granulated Eyelids. Doesn't Smart RUSSELL MOTOR CA joy the privilege of having a "hall—Sooth.,rr Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Limited. „ Murine Eye remedy, Liquid, 25e, 50c. I Accesaorieo Dept., WLiy bedroom. Murine Eye Saha),- In Aseptic Tubes, MALE HELP WANTED, A T.ONOE—MEN. WANTED; LEARN t]L Barber Trade; great demand; good wages; twenty to thirty advertised for daily In Toronto papers alone. Oen. teach you in six to eight weed, Send for Oats, o• logne, Moler College, 4 Moto. STAMPS ANO COINS, L'1 TAMP COLLECTORS—El/ 4Nnitht uIp. 1.0 resent Foreign Stamps, Catalogue, Album. only -Seven Lente. Marks Stamp emmmnnv. Toronto MI8CELLANEb11S. CAN MR, ' TUMORS, LUMPS. le TO. internal and external, cared with. ont vain by our home treatment. Write Co. before ited• Cotginew00I elOnt Dtodlod (Boys AND GIRLS make one or two 'dollars a week selling Post Cards for.ynar. vacation trip, and win also a Write articular. wet beautiful prise. P P TRADING CO,TORONTO TR/A �4&4 LOGAN AVE.. TORONTO, OfiT. "BLUE FLAME" SPECIAL To lower our stock by July 31st—our stocktaking'—we of- fer these excellent Plugs at $2 Per Set of Four "BLUE FT,AVFW, give , perfect igni- tion and will give a hotter spark than any plug at this price. q. 2Se, Soc. Eye Books" Free, by Math I An, Eye Tonle Good for All Eyes that Mood Caro 1 The Gift of Sympathy. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago' None know better than women how infinitely the little things in life count, and yet we. often are to blame in leaving the little things undone. Lame dogs do not always limp, and it is sometimes difficult to heal a hurt that is hidden with- in, but by cultivating the gift of sympathy, which is so' important a part of our women's heritage, we can often ease an ache and make a dark world aglint with sunshine. Mlnard's Linnnent Cures Colds, Etc. An army officer, noted for his bluntness of speech, rudely remark- ed-in emark- ed in the presence of a clergyman "If I had a son who was an idiot I would make ,aim a parson." "Evi- dently father held a different view, sir," responded the clergy- man, quietly. Mlnard's Liniment Cures blphtharla. In Ancient Legend. "This inn must be very old;" re- marked a tourist, in a story printed in London Opinion,; to the landlord, who was serving him with dinner.' ."Very old, sir," assented the lancllord,"Would you like to hear some of the legends connected with the place," "I would indeed," replied the tourist. "Tell me the legend of this curious old mince pie. I no- tice it every time I come." Being unable to find a seat on the overcrowded train, a large Woman went into the smoking car and sat down by the door. The man next to her, absorbed in his newspaper, kept' on smoking: „"I was foolish enough to suppose said she glow- ering, at him, "gnat some of the men re here at least were gentle- men." "Pardon ane, madam," he answered, politely offering her a cigar. general 1 "There's a Rebeol5" for Postern. all trent mistakes. Limited. Jack Makeit—How can we mar- ry? I'm only worth fifteen thou- sand dollars, and that wouldn't buy your clothes. May Spendit—Oh, yes, it would, Jack, for nearly five years! Mlnard's Liniment Cures Corset In Cows. Fact and Fancy. The average man's idea of econ- omy is to preach it to his wife. Hebrews are the longest -lived rase. Strong fish brine will remove su- perfluous hair. It's easy enough to die game. Live game! Siamese women, to avert bad luck, take down their hair when a funeral passes. The tender dog in a fight gets all the sympathy, but, unfortunately, that isn't all he gets: Some dealers consider an egg ne'wlaid till it is seven days old ; others till' it is fifteen. Tire lazier a man is, the more he is going to do to -morrow., neral aide is at bottom +of Ile 1l). '.., _ lS N»JICATION CO. ' 4IAGARA To THE SEA Your Vacation •� W ace .a.Lion Trip MIME TO 00., Niagara Falls, Toronto, Thou- sand Islands, St. Lawrence Rapids, Montreal, Quebec and the Saguenay River—one of n a tux e's most impressive scenic wonders. Low rates for tickets including meals and berths. For infop m atiott apply to local ticket agents or • Hugh D. Paterson, Geu. Agt.. Toron- to, Ont., or Foster Ohaffee, P.T.M., flout. treal. Clue. C j Acrobats in India. The wandering anderin acrobats. of India are recruited from a lose caste of people called Dombai'anos; who live by this profession alone. The children aro trained from their earliest childhood, and do not re- eeive' any education in schools. They travel from village to town and give their perforrnanoes, which ere really wonderful, in the open air before crowds of otllookers. Rajahs and rich Indians are very fond of the acrobatic displays, and engeges the best of the men to per- form before their guests at enter- tainments. wearies l,Inintent Mures nl*temftr, Mttny have fallen by the ed • e o the sword, but nob so mans ,es Julien by the Ws$uoa - avtl