ISMeÇÏK Fascinating Belts. How long it seems--and yet it is only a year or two--since we avoided avoided contrasting belts and girdles as we would the plague. "Breaking th<3 lines of the figure" we called it, and it ranked among the seven deadly sins in the category of clothes ethics. But if ever there was a movable 'quantity it .is these sartorial sins. What is one season's crime is just as likely as not, to be the next season's season's supreme duty. And the most conspicuous case in point'just now is this very matter of the insistent waistline. This season has witnessed a remarkable remarkable revival of interest in the leather belt, which had decidedly languished for several years, while embroidered linen belts have practically practically disappeared, for the reason that they fail precisely in thé one requisite of contrasting color. 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. black is worn with simple one-piece white frocks oi^with the lingerie blouse and the separate white or cream- colored skirt. While these "wide belts will inevitably inevitably crush to a certain extent, they must not be pulled 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 morning morning are in favor. Hand embroidery is seen on many black 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 necessary necessary to the success of many costumes costumes 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 east. - Fall hats of velvet or moire are turned up 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 popùlar'ty the full length coat,-and the favorites favorites are made y of soft damask and brocades. ■ _ You can prolong the wearing qualities of silk, stockings to a much greater extent by sewiig a piece of solft silk on the : nside 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 gàrte'rs fasten. BABY'S GREAT DANGER DURING HOT WEATHER More little ones die during hot weather than at any other time of the year. Diarrhoea-, dysentery, cholera infantum and stomach disorders disorders come without warning, and when a medicine is not at hand to give promptly the short delay too frequently mea'ns that - the child has passed beyond aid. .Baby's Own Tablets should always He kept in the home where there are young children. An occasional "dose of the Tablets : will prevent stomach and bowel troubles, or if the trouble trouble comes 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 cause of an almost continuous discussion. Scientists and architects-Have architects-Have examined its foundations, foundations, measured its colirams, and theorized- as to its strange departure departure from the-" perpendicular. In 1773 Goethe - explained it as intentionally intentionally so built for thé 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 Bickerstaffe upholds in Field. / . e . ■ . To substantiate this view, he describes describes similar divergences that occurred occurred 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 inches, inches, m the direction of this lean. The Campanile of San Niccolo leans forward in . the same way, as. likewise likewise do the facades of the Cathedral Cathedral in Pisa. It is worthy of note, too,' that they curve back again toward toward the perpendicular. In the Leaning Tower there is a deliberate effort above v the third floor to return to the perpendicular. This is made by a delicate séries of. changes in the : pitch of the columns on the lower side'--evidence\ taken by some investigators as. indication of an attempt to remedy an error made by the. architect®, the foundation foundation according to one theory having subsided as the result of their inexperience inexperience with the peculiar soil of Pisa-. - Mr. -Bickerstaffe• points, out,- however, however, ^t-hat careful measurements below3he third floor show that the afehes of the staircase were deliberately deliberately increased in height, and that the downward dip was so arranged arranged that the weight of the tower was thrown off the overhanging side. This, hé says, would have been quite unnecessary if the architect architect had meant the tower to rise straight up from its foundations. Equally significant is thé fact that above the third floor of the tower none of the precautions jiist described described are taken. MEMORY, Degenerates Into a Mere Deposit Unless Put to Legitimate Uses. - All people have not only a memory, memory, but a tenacious memory, for some- things. If for nothing useful, if not for things observed, for things learnt, for thought, for events* for persons, for the outsides outsides of things, for -words, for names, for dates--yet for follies, vanities, trifles, grudges connected with self ; and espécia-lly for losses, wrongs, slights, snubs,- disparagements, disparagements, injuries, real, or fancied, inflicted inflicted in the course of a lifetime on s that dear self. If memory is-not put to its legitimate .uses, subjected to rule, given work to do, it degenerates degenerates into a mere deposit, a residuum residuum of worthless'. refuse, degrading degrading the nature it should elevate, supplying the mind with un whoie some food, on which it largely broods and ruminates. Of thé same .<^ass is the memory roused out of .fjfe lethargy by the 'presence of otbe rs--as, for example, on tbe^ revival revival of former acquaintance--into a sort of malignant activity ; a memory dissociated from sympathy, recalling 'precisely the things which ought to be forgotten--misfortunes^ humiliation, arid the like--arid forcing forcing on reluctant ears with unflinching unflinching accuracy of detail facts long erased from busier, fuller, better- trained memories, as though inspired inspired by a sort of necessity to let loose the unmannerly crowd of revived images where it gives most annoyance. annoyance. How often we wish ror others the reverse of what we desire desire for ourselves I If they could only forget !--Blackwood's Maga- STOPPED SHORT up oh zinc. Critical. - He--Why does an actor, to por- tr*r deep emotion, « clutch Jat -his P,- and am actress at fâr Hearfc 1 &e--35ach 'feel* it mosi ln thé Taking Tonics, and Built 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 rebuild rebuild wasted nerve cells, is what should be supplied, -and this can be obtained only from proper food. "Two years ago I found myself on the verge of a complete nervous col- laps^, due to overwork and study, and tp illness in the family," writes a young mother.. - ' : ' "My friends became alarmed because because I grew pale and thin and could .not sleep nights., I took various various tonics prescribed by physicians, but their effects wore off shortly after I. stopped taking: them; My food did not seem to nourish me and I gained no flesh nor blood. -. "Reading of Grape-Nuts, I determined determined to stop the tonics arid see what a change of diet would do. I ate Grape-Nuts four times a day with' 'cream and drank| milk also, went to bed ; early after eating a dish of Grape-Nuts before retiring. • ' 'In about two weeks I was sleeping sleeping soundly. In à short time gained gained 20 lbs. in weight and felt like-a different. woman. My little, daughter daughter whom I was obliged to keep out of school last spring on accourit of chronic catarrh, has changed from a thin, pale nervous child to a rosy, healthy girl and. has gone back to school this fall. / "Grape-Nuts and fresh air were the only agents used to accomplish thé happy results." Name given by Canadian Pcs turn Co.. Wmdpor, Ont. Rea4 the little little booBet, VTne ftoad to Well-? IK: ville," in pkgs. "There's â reason." Ever reâd the i III A NEW FALL MODEL. Designed by Bernard, Paris. Model of blue satin with, jacket of blue moire, made with wide sash effect and trimmed .with collar and cuffs of civet. KAABA'S HOLY STONE. Visited for Centuries by Tens of Thousands of Moslems. Some 245 miles south, of Medina and 65 east' of Jeddah, oil the Red Sea, in a narrow, desolate valley, hemmed in by barren hills and only accessible through two ^passes, lies Becca, now known " ais ; Mecca, ■ one of the most ancient cities of Arabia arid the metropolis of >11 Islam, Islam, says the London Globe. The, Makoraba of Ptolemy and the capital capital of the Hedjas, Mecca,' s famé chiefly rests upon its possession jpf fîie Kaaba, where flock some 60,000 or 70,000 pilgrims annually. Ages beforeMohammed was born the Kaaba attracted .pagan pilgrims as •to-day it attracts .Moslems- for, as a heathen shriné, containing a miraculous miraculous fetich, it enjoyed wide repute repute in very remote times. Prior to its recoriquest by the prophet* in 627 (five years after his flight or he~ gira therefrom), Mecca was under the control of the Koreish, from whom Mo-hammed wrested it. For several centuries it remained under the rule of the caliphs, who spent enormous sums in adorning and restoring restoring it. In 930 it was sacked by the Ka-rmathions, who carried off the sacred black stone and retained it for over twenty years'. ~ Mecca subsequently fell under; the influence influence of whatever dynasty--Fati- mite, Ayyubite, Mameluke--hap; pened to rule iri Egypt. Finally it fell into the hands of the Ottoman sultans, but their power was never more than nominal. From the earliest times Mecca has been a notable trading centre. The barren soil renders agricultural agricultural 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; highlands, highlands, affords the inhabitants unusual unusual facilities" for commerce--quite apart from the city's reputation as a holy spot ; which is, of course, thé chief source of its prosperity. Mecca is made up of quite modéra modéra buildings, excepting the Great Mosque and some few others, owing to the frequent devastations caused by thé torrents which pour down from surrounding hills during the winter. Through 'it runs the sacred Course, a wide road extending from Safa to Marwa, which must be traversed traversed by every pilgrim; The streets, though broad, are unpaved, unpaved, arid as filthy as the streets of . any other éastern. town. The houses form- ; irregular terrace®, mounting the hills upon each side, and are, for the most part, of stone and fairly well- b uilt, sometimes being being three or four stories high, with flat roofs and picturesque lattioe windows overhanging the street. . "You must 'choose .between me and--this man. " A father, stood before a daughter, black-browed, unyielding. • - ( Ob, I cannot; father. I cannot." cannot." Vv^v. ÿ"You ; must. If • thisl maüé-this .scoundrel--is to 'be your husband, I will havé nothing moré to do with you. That is - final," Amy." "Father^ oh, . father, please ! I love him." I--" - " ' ' ; -, • . .. . Brit the .father Y had closed the door behind him/--He was done. Amy • Plummer, ; golden-haired, young, „ beautiful, ; headstrong, made her choice. ' She .;left.. her father's ■housq and married/the man .she loved--married him in the rooms of a clergyman. When her baby was born ..Aniy's:- happiness was almost complete. . • _ Thé one flaw was that her fathér'hàd not yet forgiven forgiven hérf for her iriarriage ; to Will Page, Shé^had never, seen him since the morriirig He - had closed- the door behind .him, though she • had- tried many .times; -'When the baby came, Ajpy ' -thought ' .surely .Her father would relent, • Hut; ; • Hér . hope was vain. Silja-s plummer was adaffiarit. A successful man, 'able-bodied, ' living living in the ; midst .of; luxury, he was deaf to. bis daughter' s pléai 'Hé- had Closed the parental door, against her and hers, forever; ; .; When her baby girl was 2 years old a storm broke oyer Amy's household. household. She never knew quite how it had happened.' SHe had been so busy with little Evelyn . Her household household duties had absorbed every vacant vacant hour. She had so little time to see whàt was going tin. about her. Perhaps she had neglected Will. Many evenings, she was too tired to notice Will's 'absence or his whereabouts. But one morning the scales dropped dropped from her eyes. Her baby was taken from her arid '.she was cast adrift upon the world--a divorced woman. Another and more carefree carefree woman had taken her place. Wheré Amy. had cared for the child and had done her own work, a nurse and servants were employed. And there was nothing that Amy could do. They told her 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 arid .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 desperatidrir' : thé' cast-tiff • went to a friend to borrow the moriéy 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 employment employment as a domestic servant. For seven years she lived thus, unknown arid Unmolested. "When she went out, which was seldom, she wore a heavy veil that concealed her features features in order that those whom she loved might be spared knowledge of her lowly, life. Grossing sT busy street one day, an automobile dashed around the corner. , Its shrill siren startled the nervous woman. She dodged first one way, then the other. v The big car ' passed over her ; then it stopped ; she was lifted into thé tonnéau 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 anight be cared for. -' 'Don't try to talk, mother, ' ' said the girl. ' * 'They are bringing grandfather here. Ï want you to save your ' strength for him, ' ' > "But--you--and -- father -- together together ?" . ;■ : : x ('Yes. I ran. away from my father's father's home,. I couldn't stand it, and grandfather took me in. You see, grandfather failed rapidly after you went away. I seldom leave his side nbw. He seeiris to get so much comfort from just holding my hand. Fori years we have searched for you. And now you must be very quiet because we want to take you --home. Grandfather needs you so:" ' ibftvi letter! A new nif appears fret» lime W llm^ TJw «rt genuine* truer and full eliiuman Interest r Qnly a Strong rntodë4;féma^e;cfl,ii; ^ufc a mink tiifrgtim iti hër mbiitK -àn<I refrain from'; r ché'i^nîg/ii. •;. " x : Bad and. Worse. ■ Mack--I have three daughters on mÿ hands. WyId--That's nothing: T have three eons-in-law on mine. "John, those burglars àre *in the hwd YPhoflo for * polioemin, .qui* !" *'i;U phone 'left a' idootor--they . need atpcdicenisitti^ woman's tired eyes , lighted up wonderf ully . and ; she ; went- to sleep murmuring, " "He needs me • he.-needs me." . . " - * * By a big bay- window overlooking à park; Amy Plummer Page -and her daughter were standing. "Mother, T wish you wouldn't makè me learn to earn my own liv- ihg. We have mofaéy and--' ' "Every girl should be able to makè Her own way in the world, un aided-; every woirian. _ For none knows what day she will be thrown upon her own resotirees. I want to teach'you to ©are for yourself. -The thing we women iniiet learn Ig L-té put our trust in ourselves, Evelyn, not.inmen.." .">> ' U -- r - ; Ujoirieri by the two womeny a bro ibéh'ibti Tném had'éritètred'thé ^oori^ His wrinkly Hand rested dû tiiè r -'is aritii :. ' îou àn» rights dari^férV W®, Skin Would Cake Over and Peel,' ^Spots Large, Used Cuticura Soap §|nd Ointment ; Has Not Had a on Her Sincer Theÿ Also Mother of Pimples on Face, 678 Gladstone Ave.; Toronto,' Ont. --"My baby 's trouble began as a rash and the skin used to sometimes peel off and look as If it were going to get better, 1 but-would just cake over again and peel. The spots were large and it used to make her face very red and inflamed all the time. - It came on her face, hands and arms, and it used to make her restless at night. She got the rash in March and how I hated to see it ..on her little face and hands! I tried a lot of different things after that but: nothing did any good. I saw the advertisement and sent for samples of Cuti- cura Soap: and x Ointment and it started to get better right away. I used them only ahqut onoe à, day," arid In little more than " two weeks she hadn't a - spot on her anywhere. anywhere. She had it three inoriths before I used tiw teeàtment. . She has not had..», mark' on her since and she is two and a half r years old now. ; Cuticura Soap and Oint- , ment" also cured pimples on. iny face/.*. (Signed) Mrs; McKnight, Jan. 8,1912. jj For treating "poor complexions,' red, rough hands, arid dry; thin arid falling hair, Cuti- cura Soap and Criticrira Ointment have been the world's f avôrites for more than a geri- eratiori.' Sold throughout the world. DtH - era! sample of each mailed free, with 32-p. Sldn Book. Address post card Potter Drug & Chenu Corp., Dept. 34D, Boston; IJ. S. A. WEATHER BAROMETERS. A nourishing, tasty economics meal time A and money saver (A strength producer wmnww 1 SJWCt K- PorR c M*k & Beans FARMS FOR SAL« men fail our women, but out women never fail us. It has always been so. It will always be so. You are right; our women must lëarn to •stand alone." Daughter and grandfather tenderly tenderly placed the old man- in the room's most comfortable chair, witH cushions cushions 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 brightr en his hours. How Dumb Animals Act Before Storm. .Oat's'fur full of electricity and before a thunderstorm a, cat is always always extremely lively and playful, probably on account of its electrical condition. Before -rain is expected you will see a cat assiduously washing washing "its face. " -- ■ Donkeys will bray loudly and Continuously at thé approach of a storm. If cows 'lie down - in the early mofning instead of feeding,, or Huddle together with their tails to windward, then there is rain about. Like- cats, the .approach - of a Hund erstorm makes cows extrem e- • y frisky. They run up and down field and butt imaginary obstacles obstacles at such times. Sheep turn their ' heads to the wind when the day is going to be : ine. But if. they graze with their •jails to windward it is a sure sign of rain, so experienced shepherds say. Like cows, too, they show" an unusual liveliness at the approach of a 'storm. Even the sedate pig is watched by country "weathpr prophets, prophets, for it is always uneasy when rain is coming. x. Most birds axe restless when a changé is expected. Rain is indicated indicated by^guinéa,; fowls and peacocks squalling, by parrots; whistling and )y pigeons returning home unusu- - ; ally_ early.; There is an old., rhyme iri the country which is ' often quoted, and which it may be well to remember. It runs ; "If the cock goes crowing to bed, He'll certainly rise with a watery head." "PRISON OF SILENCE." Horrible Treatment of Prisoners in Portugal. Entombed in a grim castle on the outskirts of Lisbon are some of the most miserable men on ; earth. These are;.inmates_ of Portugal's "Prison of Silence." In this building building everything that human ingenuity ingenuity can suggest- to render the lives of its prisoners a horrible, maddening maddening torture is done. The corridors, piled tier-on tier, five stories high, extend "from a common centre like the spokes of a huge wheel. Thé cellars are narrow, tomblike, tomblike, and within each stands a coffin.; coffin.; The attendants creep about in felt slipper^. No one is allowed to utter a word. The silence-is that of the grave. Once a day the cell doors are unlocked, arid the half a thousand wretches march Out, clothed' in shrouds arid with faces covered with masks, for it is part of this hideous punishment, that none may look uptiri; thé countenance of his; fellow-prisoner. Few of them endure this torture for more than ten years. •«ijemudia s84no iueiuiun s.pjvum Got His Number. "I'm sorry to tell you, mum, that I'll bè leaving you next week. I'm going to get married." "That so, Emma l Who is lucky man?" x "He's a policeman, mum. this beat, too." ; ' 'That' s -'fine. I wish you And what is his name ?" "I don't know yet, mum; but his number is 518." the On joy: -'Refrain is Often Best. She. (at the piano).---How do you enjoy this refrain? _^BCe--Very much. The more you refrain the better I like it. Biggs (facetiously)--This is. a picture picture of my wife's ' first . husband. Diggs--'Silly-looking guy. But say I didn't know your wife was married married before she met you . Riggs- She wasn't. This is a picture! of myself myself when I was twenty-five ; How Teddy Lost the Bear. They say a corn interfered ' w-'th. his speed. . Always apply Putnam's Corn Extractor. Extractor. For fifty years it ha.i been curing corns and warts. "Putnam's" never fails. Use no other, 25c. at all dealers.^ ■ » ^ ' 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 spot ?" "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 ?" H. w. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Street, Toronto. F buit, stock, grain and dairy Farms in all sections ot .Ontario* Borne snaps. ' F actory bites, with or withou* Railway trackage, . in Toronto, Brampton and other towns and olties. R esidential properties in Brampton and a dozen other towns. H.- W. DAWSON, Colborne St., Toronto . •• STAMPS AND COINS. S TAMP COLLECTORS--HUNDRED DIF- ferent Foreign ' Stamps. Catalogne, Alibum, only Seven Cents. Company, Toronto. Marks Stamp MALE HELP WANTED. MEN WANTED YOUNG MAN BE A BARBER. I TEACH you quickly, cheaply, thoroughly and furnish tools free. We give you actual e/hop experience. Write for free catalogue. catalogue. Moler College, 219 Queen St. East. Toronto. MEN WANTED MISCELt-ANEOtlA C ancer, . Tumors, lumps, eto., internal and external, cured without without pain by our hoine treatment. Write us .before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co., Limited, Collingwood, Prit. ' ( "t ALL STONES, KIDNEY AND BLAD- X der Stones, Kidney trouble. Gravel, Lumbago and kindred ailments positively cured with the new German : remedy, "Sanol," price $1.50. Another new remedy for Diabetes-Mellitue, and. sure cure, is "Sand's Anti-Diabetes." Price $2.00- from druggists or direct. . The Sanol Manufacturing Manufacturing Company of Canada, Limited, Winnipeg, Man; This is to certify..that I have used MINARDI MINARDI Liniment .in my family for years, Î nd oonsidér it the best liniment on the larket. I have found it excellent for horse flesh. (Signed) W. S. PINEO. ."Woodlands," Middleton, N.S. a Accepted. Ferdy is in financial difficul- ties "How?" "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 purpose purpose of proving the correctness of a doctor's bill, was asked by the lawyer whether "the doctor did riot make several visits after the patient patient was out of danger." "No," replied the witness ; "I considered :the patient in ^danger as long as the doctor continued to visit;" . Nothing is easier than fault-finding.; fault-finding.; No talent, no self-denial, no .character is required to set up in this business. - * SUMMER TO THE By. TOURIST RATES PACIFIC COAST. "Via Chicago arid North. Western Special low. rate round trip tickets on sale from all points. in Canada to Los Angeles, San Francisco. Portland, Seattle. Vancouver,-eWictoria*. Edmonton, Calgary, Banff, Yellowstone Park, etc., during Aug-, uet and . September. Excellent tram service. service. For rates, illustrated folders, time tables and full particulars address, B. H. Bennett, General Agent, 46 Yonge Street, Toronto, Ontario. It's a Fact. "Good resolutions are sometimes drawbacks." "Yes, a great many people are loafing to-day because they intend to move 1 a mountain tomorrow." Mlnard's Liniment Cures Colds, Etc. Sure Enough. .. Teacher-- Whàt' s the meaning of the word, transparent.? Tommy--'Something you can see through. - Teacher--Right ! Give me an example. example. r Tommy--A ladder. ; : ; Truth is what man knows; what a woman believes. Faint heart ne'er won fair lady-- but there is the brunette. One good way for a man to .get ahead and stay ahead i® to use- a head. ; -"Courage" ■ is one-of ; the - world'® greatestiwôrds. It has moulded the past mth its deed®, and it earries the future in its dreairiv ( ' FOR SALE Pulleys & Shafting Suitable for Mills, Manufeoturlog Plants, Printing Rouses, Eto. 2 Wood Split Pulleys, 1234 a£"48 in.. for 3 16/16 in. ehaffc. 1 Wood Split Pulley, 12 X x 48 in, for 2 15/10 in* shaft. Wood: Split Pulley, 12)4 x 28 in. for 3 7/16 in. shaft. Wood Split Pulley, 10% x 36 in. for 3 7/16 in. shaft. Pulley® of smaller sizes and jShafting of various length» and jdzea to be sold at very low figures. Box 23, Wilson Publishing Co., Toronto. It Sticks. "Well, son, now that.yoii've graduated, graduated, what are you going to be?" "I think I'd like to be a lawyer, The're's a good deal of money sir. passes through a lawyer's hands, isn't there?" ^ . "He never lets it pass through if he knows his business, my son." - Try Murine Eye Remedy 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 ^ye Salve, in Aseptic Tubes, 25c; 50c. Eye Books Free by Mail. An Eya Tonic ttood far 'All Eyes that Need Cere Mvrine~Eye Remedy Co.-, Chicago Better for Them. "Some of these convicts, Mr. Warden, have a very smooth man ner "That's- all th'e better for them, for if they're not.smooth, we iron them." Mlnard's Liniment Cures Garget In Coves. "Don't .beat about the Hush !" shouted an - excited voter at a Parliamentary Parliamentary meeting, "answer my question 'yes'. or 'no.' " "There are some questioDS which cannot be answered 'yes' or 'no,' " mildly replied replied the candidate. "Bosh !" ex claimed the other. "I am prepared, prepared, to prove my assertion," continued continued the woiild-be M.P; "Now," he said, . turning to, "his interrogator, ' 'the question I will put to yôu : as a proof is» this.: ; 'Have you left off beating your wife ?' " "Yes or no," demanded the meeting delightedly, and the too inquisitive voter collapsed. collapsed. . ' ;.v .. PILES YoùY^ltiidTelMfa Zem<iikj|^ It eases the baling, sth * pm, stops bteedlag iN; ease. Bok, means cure; Ju~ tKs?> Ft s