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The Brussels Post, 1913-9-11, Page 7?l- la1 es ar at re Ly re rr is 1. Mf Tx, if r, a. .i .'m'W40/41164•N�@'it•'M�6 Fashion Hints 4aolsa�'ao Fascinating Belts. • How long it seems—and yet it is only a year or two—singe we avoid- ed eontraeting belts and girdles as we would the plague, "Breaking the lines of the figure" we called it, and it ranked among the seven deadly sins in the category of clothes ethics. Bub if ever •there was a movable quantity it is these sartorial sine. What is one season's crime is just as likely as not to be the next sea- son's supreme duty. And the most conspicuous case in point just now ie this very matter of the insistent waistline. This season has witnessed a •re- markable revival of irterest in the leather belt, whir' d decidedly languished for - .al years, while embroidered linen belts have prac- tically disappeared, for the reason ' that they fail precisely in the one requisite of contrasting Dolor. In their place we now have the white leather belt, with .colored leather either applied or inset in long geometrical designs; or else • we have colored leather belts from one to six inches in width. A six- inch, suede belt in callot blue, old pink, emerald green or bleak is worn with simple one-piece white frocks or with the lingerie blouse and the separate white or cream - colored skirt. While 'these wide belts will inevi- tably crush to a certain extent, they must not be pilled tight. Let them come down below the real waist line and allow the corsage to blouse over them all around. Fashion Hints. Magpie veils are new. Tailored dimity dresses for morn- ing are in favor. Hand embroidery is seen on many bleak taffeta bathing suits. The large picture hat of white satin has returned to favor. A stunning white parasol has a band of cerise marabou, which forms a border. A touch of brilliant color is ne- cessary to the .success of many cos- tumes at present. A gown of black taffeta is draped with a sash of striped taffeta in tones of blue and yellow. The new models evolved by the leading couturiers savor much of the far that. Fall hats of velvetr moire o mo re are burned nip at the back and banked beneath the brim with flowers or loops of ribbon. The new coat suits show the two tiered skirts, cutaway coat, and single button fastening. The three-quarter length coat wrap has supplanted the popularity of the full length coat, and the fa- , vorites are made of soft damask and br.+cades, • You can prolong the wearing qualities of silk stockings to a much greater extent by sewi ig a piece of solft silk on the inside of both toes and heel. Japanese wash silk is good. Darn it in around the edge. Also sew a piece of the silk at the top where the garters fasten. d (F MEMORY. Degenerates Into a Mere Deposit Unless Put to Legitimate 'Uses. All people have not only a mem- ory, but a tenacious memory, far some things. If for nothing useful, if not for things observed, for things learnt, for thought, for events, for persons, fox the out- sides of things, for words, for names, for dates—yet for follies vanities, trifles, grudges conneotet� ' with self; and especially for losses, wrongs, slights, snubs, disparage- ments, injuries, real or fametled, rn- flioted in the course of a lifetime on that dear self. If memory is .not put to its legitimate uses, subjected to rule,.given work to do, it degen- erates into a mere deposit, a resi- duum of worthless refuse, degrad- ing the nature it should elevate, supplying the mind with unwhole- some food, on which it largely broods and ruminates. Of the same class is the memory roused out of the lethargy by the presence of others—as, for example, on the re- vival of former acquaintance -into` a sort of malignant activity; a memory dissociated from sympathy, recalling precisely the things wihi,ch ought to be forgotten— misfortunes; humiliation, and the like—and ferc- ing on reluctant ears with unflinch- ing aecureoy of detail facts long erased from busier, fuller, better - trained meinories, as though inepir- cd by a sort of necessity to let looae the unrnannerl ' grows of revived images where it gives most inoy- et e, blow often we wish for others the reverse of what, we de- sire for aurselvos 1 If they could only forgetl----Blaekwood's Maga- eine, —.19 Critical. He—Why does an aater, to per. ,' tray deep emotion, (Autcll atis head, and an name at her hear She—Each feels it • most in the wsialikest; pOinh- BABY'S GREAT DANCER DURING HOT WEATHER More little ones die during hot weather than, at any Other time of the year. Diarrhoea, dysentery, cholera infantum and stomach d)s- arders come without warning, and when a medicine' is not at hand to give promptly the short delay too 'frequently means that the child has passed beyond aid. Baby's Own Tablets should always be kept in the home where there are young children, An occasional dose of the Tablets will prevent stomach and bowel troubles, or if the trou- ble Fomes suddenly the prompt use of the Tablets will cure the baby. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ACCIDENT OR INTENTION. Leaning Tower of Pisa the Cause of Much Discussion. The Leaning Tower of Pisa, that most eccentric piece of Southern Romanesque architecture, has been the mimeo of an almost continuous discussion. Scientists and mai- teats have examined its ,founda- tions, measured its columne, and theorized as to its strange depar- ture from the perpendicular. In 1773 Goethe explained it as inten- tionally so builb for the purpose of attracting the spectator's attention from the ordinary straight shafts,. of which Pisa in the twelfth century is said to have had ten thousand. This is the interesting theory that Mr. Isaac Bickersteffe upholds in Field. To substantiate this view, he de- scribes similar divergences that oc- curred in contemporary buildings. The Baptistery of the Cathedral in Pisa, built also in the thirteenth century, leans seventeen inches out of the perpendicular, and the plinth blocks of its foundations tilt down gradually and evenly for nine inch- es in the direction of this lean. The Oampanile of San Niceolo loans forward in the same way, as like- wise do the facades of the Cathe- dral in Pisa. It is worthy of note, too, that they curve back again to- ward the perpendicular. In the Leaning Tower there is a deliberate effort above the third floor to return totheperpendicular, This is made by a delicate series of changes in the pitch of the columns on the lower eide,—evidence taken by some investigators as indication of an attempt to remedy an error made by the architects, the founda- tion according to one theory having subsided as the result of their inex- perience with the peculiar soil of Pisa. Mr, Bickerstaffeepoints out, how- ever, that careful measurements' below the third floor show that the arches of the staircase were delib- erately increased in height, and that the downward dip was so ar- ranged that the weight of the tower was thrown off the overhanging side. This, he says, would have been quite unnecessary if the archi- tect had meant the tower to rise straight up from its foundations. Equally significant is the fact that above the third floor of the tower none of the precautions just des- cribed are taken. - g STOPPED SHORT Taking Tonics, and Built up on Right Food. • The mistake is frequently made of trying to build up a worn-out nervous system on so-called tonics --drugs, New material from which to re- build wasted nerve • cells, is what should be supplied, and'this can be obtained only from proper food. "T1wo years ago I found mysellf on the verge of a complete nervous col- lapse, due to overwork and study, and to illness in the family," writes a young mother. "My friendsbecame alarmed be. cause I grew pale and thin and could not sleep nights. I took vari- ous tonics prescribed by physicians, but their effects wore off shortly after I stopped taking them. My food did not s.eem to nourish me. and I gained no flesh nor 'blood. "heading of Grape -Nubs, I deter- mined to stop the tonics and see what a changeof diet would do, I. ate Grape -Nuts four times a day with cream and drank milkalso, went to .bed early, after eating a dish of Grape -Nuts before retiring. "In about two weeks I was sloop ing soundly, In a short time gain- ed 20 The, in weight and felt like a different woman, My little .daugh- ter whom I was obliged to keep out of school last spring on account of ohronio catarrh, has changed' front a thin, pale nervous child to a rosy,. realthy girl and has gone back to school tibia' fall "Grape -Nuts and fresh air were the only agents tised• to accomplish the happy results," , Name given by Canadian Posture 0o. Windsor, Ont. Read the lit - tile' �iooli:let, "The Road to Well. ville," in pkgs. "There'aa rOason." Ever read theGbove latter* A now, one eppeare from Who to Ulne. They ars genuine, trno;'4nd fun 01 human Interest Only ,. strong minded female can refrain from chewing it. l need a policemen." A NEW FALL MODEL. Designed by Bernard, Paris. Model of blue sat}n with jacket of blue moire, made with wide sash effect and trimmed with collar and cuffs of civet. EAABA'S HOLY STONE. Visited for Centuries by Tens of Thousands of Moslems. Some 246 miles south of Medina and 66 east of Jeddah, en the Red Sea, in a narrow, desolate valley, hemmed in by barren hills and. only accessible through two passes, lies Becca, now known as Mecca, one of the most ancient cities of Arabia and the metropolis of all Is- lam, says the London Globe. The Makoraba of Ptolemy and the capi- tal a i-tal of the. Hedjas, Mecca's fame chiefly rests upon its possession of the Kaaba, where flock some 60,000 ar 70,000 pilgrims annually. Ages before Mohammad was born the Kaaba attracted pagan pilgrims as to -day it attracts Moslems for, as a heathen shrine, containing a Mir- aculous fetich, it enjoyed wide re- pute in very remote times. Prior to its reconquest by the prophet, in 627 (five years after his flight or he- gira therefrom), Mecca was under the control of the Koxeish, from whom Mohammed wrested it. For several centuries it remained under the rule of the caliphs, who spent enormous sums in adorning .and re- storing it. In 930 it was eacked by the Iiarmathions, who carried off the sacred black stone and retained, it for over twenty years. Mecca subsequently fell under the influ- ence of whatever dynasty—Fats.• mite, Ayyubite, Mamoluke—hap paned to rule in Egypt. Finally it fell into the hands of the Ottoman sultans, but their power was never more than 'nominal. From the earliest times Mecca hes been a notable trading centre, The barren soil rendersagricultur- al operations impracticable, and the Meehan are thus dependent upon traders for provisions, but Mecca's command of the principal caravan routes, both from north to south and from coast to the high- lands, affords the inhabitants un- usual facilities for commerce -quite apart from the city's reputation as a holy spot; which is, of course, the chief source of its prosperity. Mecca is made up of quite mod- ern buildings, excepting the Great Mosque and some few others, owing to the frequent devastations caused by the , torrents which pour down from surrounding hills during the winter. Through it runs the sacred Course, a wide road extending from Sala to Marw'a, which must be tra- versed by every pilgrim. The streets, though• • broad, are un- paved, and as filthy as the streets of any other eastern town. The houses form irregular terraces, mounting the hills upon eaolr: side, and are, fox the Most part, of stone pod fairly well built, sometimes be- ing three or four etorieil;liigh, with fiat roofs and pieturesgtie lattice windows overhanging the;'street. Bad and Worse. Maek—I have three dattghters on tri hands, Wy1d—Thet s no thing. r have three sons-in-law on mint, -- "john, those burglars are in the witty, at,nry pies and cake. 'Phone for „a polibemen, quiekl" "1'11 put a runic of gum SIS her mouth and phone for' a °doctor---th0y won't WHEN MAN FAILS HER r318181.1818. .,,.I,•IiLTllllllll "Yon roust choose between nee and—this man," A father stood before a daughter, black-browed, unyielding, "Oh, I oennot, father. I ean- not," "You must. If this men—this scoundrel—is-to be your husband, I will have nothing snore to do with you. That is Anal, Amy," "Father, ah, father, please! I lova Lim. I—" But the father had closed the door behind him. He was done. Amy Plummer, golden -haired, young, beautiful, headstrong, made her choice. She left her father's hcuse, and married the man she loved—married him in the rooms of a clergyman. . When her baby was born Amy's happiness was almost complete. The one flaw was that her father had not yet for- given her for her marriage to Will Page, She had never seen him since the morning he had closed the door behind him, though she had tried many times. When the baby came, Amy thought surely her father would .relent, but her hope was vain. Silas Plummer was adamant. A successful man, able-bodied, liv- ing in the midst of luxury, he was deaf to -his daughter's plea. He had closed the parental door against her and hers forever. When her baby girl was 2 years old a storm broke over Amy's house- hold. She never knew quite how it had happened. She had been so busy with little Evelyn. Her house- hold duties had absorbed every va- cant hour. She had so little time to see what was going on about her. Perhaps she had neglected Will. Many evenings she was too tired to notice Will's absence or his whereabouts. But on•e morning the scales drop- ped from her eyes. Her baby was taken from her and she was cast adrift upon the world --a divorced woman. Another and more care - fres woman had taken her place. Where Amy had cared for the child and had done her own work, a nurse and servants were employed. Aad there was nothing that Amy could do. They told cher that the law had so decided things, and Amy knew nothing of the law. It terrified her. She knew naught but of the house- hold; the outside world and its ways were to' her a sealed book. For two days she sat upon the front steps of her father's house, but was denied admittance. she haunted her husband's office, but was ever turned away, In desperation, the cast-off went to a friend to borrow the money to go to another city. Often she was hungry and her clothes were ragged, threadbare. There was no work for the inexperienced hand. At last, a kindly woman gave her employ- ment as a domestic, servant, For seven yearashs lived thus, unknown and unmolested. When she went out, which was seldom, she wore a heavy veil that concealed her fea- tures in order that those whom she loved might be spared knowledge of her lowly life. Crossing a busy street one day, an automobile dashed a •round the corner. Its shrill siren startled the nervous woman. She dodged first one way, then the other. The big oar passed over her; then it. stopped; she was lifted into the tonneau and hurried to the nearest hospital. When the woman opened her eyes they rested upon a golden -haired girl, fashionably gowned. It was the same girl who had bidden the chauffeur stop the machine that its victim might be cased for, "Don't try to talk, mother," said the girl. "They are bringing grandfather here. I want you to save your strength for him." "Bub—you—and — father — to. gether1" Yes. I ran away from my fa- ther's home. I couldn't stand ib, and grandfather took me in. You see, grandfather failed rapidly after you -went away. I seldom• leave his side now. He seems to get so much camfoet from just holding my hand. For years we have seamahed for you. And now you must be very quiet because we want to take you —home. Grandfather needs you ao." The, woman's tired eyes lighted up wonderfully and she went to Bleep murmuring, "He needs me; he needs me," By a big bay window overlooking is park, Amy Plummer Page and her daughter were standing. • "Mother, I wish you wot>ldn't make ate learn to earn my own liv- ing. We have money and—" "Every girl should be able to make her own, wn.y in the world, un- aided;' every woman. For none known what day the willbe thrown upon hex own resources, I wantto teaeh ,you to care, for yourself, The thing we women must .learn is to put roar trust in ourselves; Evelyn, nob in men," Unseen by the twc women, a bro- ken old mane had entered the room, ells wrinkled hand rested on his daughter's nrm, "Yen are right, my: daughter. We AASH ON FACE IIUJSi\Ji AEMS Skin Would Cake Over and Peel. Spots large, Used Cuticura Soap and Ointment, Has Not Had a Mark on Her Since, They Also Cured Mother of Pimples on Face, 578 Gladstone Ave.; Toronto, Ont,—" 11fy baby's trouble began as a rash and the akin used to sometimes peel oft and look as if 15 were goingto get bettor; but would lust rake over again and. peel. Tho spots were large and 15 used to make her face very red and inflamed all the Ihno. It game on her face, hands and arms, and it used to make Ler restless at night. She got thorash in March and how I bated to sea it on her little face and bands: I tried a lot of different things after that but nothing did any good. I saw the advertisement and sent for samples of OW- cum Soap and Ointment and it started to get better right ,away. I used themonly about once a day, and In little more than two weeks she hadn't a spot on her any. where. She had it three months before 5 used the treatment. She has not had a mark on hor since and she is two -and a halt years old now. Outicura Soap and Olnt. men) also cured pimples on my face.: (Signed) Mrs. McNeight, San. 8, 1912. For treating poor complexions, red, rough bands, and dry, thin and falling hair, Ceti. cmc, Soap and Oedema Ointment have been the world's favorites for more than a gen- eration. Sold throughout the World, Lib- eral sample of each mailed free, with 82-p. Skin Book. Address post card Patter Drug & Chem. Corp., Dept. 841). Boston, II. B. A, men fail our women, but out women never fail us. It has always been, so, It will always be s4. You are right; our women must learn to stand alone." • Daughter and grandfather tender- ly placed the old man in the room's most comfortable chair, with cueh- ions and footstool. One brought him his favorite drink. The other selected one of the books that he liked best and read to him until he slept. Then both sat perfectly still watching over him, lest something should come to disturb his comfort. And when he awoke they smiled tenderly up into his face, asked what more they could do to bright- en his hours. "PRISON OF SILENCE." Horrible Treatment of Prisoners in Portugal. Entombed to bed iu a grim castle on the outskirts of Lisbon are some ofthe most miserable men on earth. These are inmates of Portugal's "Prison of Silence," In this build- ing everything that human ingenu- ity can suggest to render the lives of its prisoners is horrible, madden- ing torture is done. The corridors, piled tier on tier five stories high, extend 'from a common centre like the spokes of a huge wheel. The cellars are narrow, tomb- like, and within email stancls a cof- fin. The attendants creep about in felt slippers. No one is allowed to utter a word. The silence is that: of the grave. Once a day the call doors are unlocked, and the half a thousand wretches march out, clothed in shrouds and with faces covered with masks, for it is part of this hideous punishment that none may ,look upon, the countenance of hie fellow -prisoner. Few of them endure this torture for more than ten years. g 'sJoglgd10 sorn0 luowlui'1 S,pJeu118 Got His Number. "I'm sorry to tell you, mum, that I'll be leaving you next week. I'm going to get married." "That so, Emma? Who is the lucky man 1" "He's a policeman, mum. On this beat, too." "That's fine. I wish you joy. And what is his name l" "I don't know yet, mum; but his number is 518.• , Refrain is Often Best. She (at the piano).—.How do you enjoy this refrain/ He—Very much. The more you refrain the better I like it. Riggs (facetiously)—This is a pic- ture of my wife's first husband. DiggseeSilly-looking gny. But say, I didn't know your wife was mar- ried before site Met you Biggs- She waslt't. This is ?'picture of my-: self when I was twenty-five, EDY 7. SI/F, i5.• --'i$, 'WEATHER- BAROMETERS. How Dumb Animals Aot Before u Storm. Oat's fur is full of eleotr'ioity and before a thunderstorm a eat is al- ways extremely lively and playful probably on account of its eleotricai oondition. /;afore rain is expected you will, see a cat assiduously wasb- ing its face, Donkeys will bray loudly and oontiuuously at the approach of s. storm, If cows lie down in the early morning instead of feeding, or huddle together with their tails to windward, then there is rain about. Like carts, the approach of a thunderstorm makes cows extreme- ly frisky. They run up and dawn the field and butt imaginary ob- stacles at auch times. Sheep turn their heads to the wind when the day is going to be fine. But if they graze with their tails to windward it is a sure sign of rain, so experienced shepherds say. .Like cows, too, they show an unusual liveliness at the alpproaoh of a storm, Even the sedate pig is watched by country weather pro- phets, for it is always uneasy when rain is coming. Moat birds are restless when a change is expeoted, Rain is indi- cated by guinea fowls and peacocks squalling, by parrots ivhistlingand by pigeons returning home unusu- ally early. There is an old rhyme in the country which is often quo. and which it may be well to remember: It runs: "If the Dock goes crowing to bed, He'll hoertaiei ead," ly rise with a watery How Teddy Lost the Bear. They .pay a corn interfered w'th his speed. Always apply Putnam's Corn Ex- tractor. For fifty years It has been curing corns and warts. "Pntnam'e" never faila. Use no other, 25a. at all dealers. w•: The Truth at Last. "Doctor, I wish you would tell. me, as a medical man, if you know anything that will make the hair grow on this bald spoil" "My dear sir, if I could answer that question in the affirmative do you suppose my forehead would extend from my eyebrows to the back of my neck?" This 1e to certify that I have-neesMIN. ARM'S Liniment in my family for years, and consider. 15 the beet liniment on the market. I have found it excellent for horse flesh. (Signed) W. B. PINEO. "Woodlands;" Middleton, N,B. Accepted. "Ferdy is in financial difficul- ties 1" "Howl" "Offered his creditors.. ten cents on the dollar and they accepted it 1" Mlnard's Liniment .Cures Distemper. In Danger, A person who was recently called into the County ,Court for the pur- pose of proving the correctness of a -doctor's bill, woe asked by the lawyer whether "the doctor did not make several visits after the pa- tient was out of danger." "No," replied the witness; "I considered the patient in danger as lone as the doctor continued to visit.' Nothing is easier than fault-find- ing. No.talent, no self-denial, no oharacter is required to set up in this business, SUMMER TOURIST RATES TO THE PACIFIC COAST. Via. Chicago and North Western Ry, Special low rate round trip ticketson sale Pram all points in Canada to Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland, Seattle, Vancouver; Victoria, Edmonton, Calgary, Banff, Yellowstone Park, eta.. during Aug. uet and September. Excellent train ser. vice. For rates, illustrated folders, time tables and full eartieulars address, B. 11, Bennett, General Agent, 46 Yong° Street, Toronto, Ontario, It's a Fact. "Good resolutions arc sometimes drawbacks." "Yes, a great many people are loafing to -day because they intend to move a mountain tomorrow." Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, Et). '— Sure Enough. Teacher—What's the meaning of the word transparent? TommyeeSonrtebhing you can see through. Teacher—Right l Give me an ex- ample, Tommy—A ladder. Truth is what man knows; what a woman believes. Faint heart neer won fair lady— but there is the brunette, One good way for a man to got ahead and stay ahead is to use a head. "Courage" is one of the world's greatest words, It has moulded the past with its deeds, and it carries the future in its dream. 4114, A nourishing, tasty, economical ?Heal. A time and money saver, IA strength producer. 7 i7Gl.'?a'hiini •FF i;'ltliifi'iraa 4:4'; FARMS FOR SAL,. H. W. DAWSON, Ninety .Colborne Street, Toronto, 1iiRII5T, STOOK. GRAIN AND DAIRY 11'' Farms in all paotloas et Ontario. Rome snaps, A' AO'rORY simas, WITH OR WITHO'U'T Railway trackage, eland Teroato. Brampton and other town, artier. Tl/ BBIDANTIAL : PROPERTIES 115 1:L Brampton end a, dozen other tones, H . W. DAWSON, Colborne St., Toronto STAMPS ANO 001146. Ct TAMP COLLEOTORS^H•UNDRED DIP'• i� forent Foreign Stamps: Catalogue, Album, only Seven Conte. Marks Stamp Company, Toronto. MALE HELP WANTED. MEN WANTED YOIING MAN BD ABARBER. I TEACH You quickly, cheaply,thoroughly and furnish tools free. Wgive you actual shop experienoe. Write for tree oats•. Logue. Moler College, 219 queen Si.. Beat, Toronto. MEN ANTED SOIECELLFNE0111 ,GYANOER, TUMORS, L•OMPB, HTO., internal and external, cured with. out pain by our home treatment. Write ue before too late. Dr. Belizean Medical Co„ Limited, Collingwood, Ont. (y ALL STONES, ICIDNHY AND BLAD. klr der Stones, Midney .trouble, Gravel, Lumbago and kindred ailments positively cured with .the new German remedy. "Sanol," price 81,60. Another new remedy for Diabetes -Mellitus, and euro cure, Ie Sanol'e Anti -Diabetes," Price 41.09 from druggists or direct. The Sanol Menefee. tering Company of Canada, Limited, Winnipeg, Man. FOR SALE • Pulleys at Shafting Suitable for P01111s, Menetacturing Plants, Printing Houses, Etc. 2 Wood Split Rulings, 13% s ti in, for 3 15/16 in, shaft. 1 Wood Split Pedley, 123 r 48 in. for 2 15/16 ilt. shaft. a Wood Split Pulley, 12% x 28 in. for 3 7/16 in. theft. 1 Wood Split Pulley, 10M, x 36 in. for 3 7/ie in. shaft. Pulleys of smaller . sties and hafting of various lexgthe and sizes to ba sold at very low figures. Box 23, Wilson Publishing Co., Termite. It Sticks. "Well, son, now thatyou've gra- duated, raduated, what are you going to be 1" "I think I'd like to be a lawyer, sir. There's a good deal of money passes through a lawyer's ,hands,. isn't there 1" "He never lets it pass through if he knows his business, nay son." Try Murine Eye'Renaedy If you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes or Granulated Eyelids. Doesn't Smart —Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c, 50c. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 25c, SOc. Lye Books Free by Mail. An Eye Isok Good ter Ali Eyes that steed Caro Murine Eye Remedy. Co.. Ch.toaea Better for Them. "Some of these convicts, Mr. Warden, have a `very smooth man- ner." "That's all the better for them, for if 'they're not smooth, we iron diem." amerces Liniment Cures Carat In.Cotee. "Don't heat about the bush!" shouted an excited voter at a Par- liamentary meeting, renewer my' question 'yes' or 'no.' " "There are some questions which cannot be answered 'yes' or 'no,' " mildly re- plied the candidate. "Both!' ex- claimed the other. "K rum prepar- ed bo prove my assertion," eontintr- ed'the would-be M.P. "Now,,, he said, turning to his interrogator, "tire question I will pub to you ars a proof is this: 'Have you left off beating your wife l' " "Yea or no," demanded the meeting delightedly, and the boo inquis tive voter col- lapsed, You will find relief in Zam•Bnii i It eases the Lwrning, stinging pain, stops blooding and brims ease. Perseverance, with Zanb. Bilk, means cure:. Why not prove• thi3'7r rill flints+ Maui lllgrn,••+,