wMWm üü A WOMAN'S In the loekiag-glaaa » weamn éften eëee wrinkle* hetlew eârch» nrider eye^ rcreVe frôt/L-all beeeeee she did net tore te Ae right rométy wbeaWsr* down with those troublée which ere distinctly feéhün*. ^ Beckeche, Mt«« lassitude, nervousness end drains open vital tty---bring untold suffering! «te womanhood and the face shows it. The nsrreus system and the «Wf womanly make-up feels the tente effect of 5 XV It allays and subdues nervous excitability. Irritability, nervous exhaustion, and other distressing symptoms commonly attendant unob functional and organic diseases of the feminine organs. It induces refreehing sleep and relieves mental anxiety and despondency. Known everywhere and for over 40 .years as the standard remedy fer the diseases of women. Yeur dealer in medicine» •ells it in liquid or sugar-coatsd tablet form; or yea can send 60 one-cent •tamps for a trial box of Dr. Piercs'a Favorite Prescription tablets. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y. - DR. PIERCE'S PLEASANT PELLETS REGULATE AND INVIGORATE STOMACH, LIVER AND BOWELS. SUGAR-COATED TUNY GRANULES# • a. e. McLaughlin. . • Barrister, Solicitor end Conveyancer. Office:--BleaJcley Block, King Street. Bewmauvllle. Messy to loan at reasoa- able rates. AS-tyr. B.J.Hazlewood» M.D.,O.M BOWMAHYIIiLE, . OUT. OLD MEDALIST of Trinity On IT iverahy, Toronto; Pour years Attsadiag Physician *nd Surgeon at Mt. Carmel Hospital Fltuksrg, Ks, 06 ce and Bsaidenes Welli^gtoa Ht. Tel IcccNo. 10S. LY & all countries. Ask fop our INVEN- OR'S ADVISER,which will be sent fre< MARION & MARION, S64 University. St., Montréal. Wool's The Great English .Remedy, Tones and Invigorates the whole system, Lin old Vi ' Englis) e makes new eins. Cures Nero- -nervous h Bl^ tncy, frcxualj^eakness, Emissions, Sper- Blood Mental and Brain Worry, Pes- We - - - • eus Pébüity, y, ir ot «WIMO, „ - itorrfuea, and Effects of-Abuse or Excesses. îpt at pi mailed free. The Wood Medicine Co. <formerly Windsor) Toronto, Ont Which School Shall I Attend? An important question! ... All business Colleges are not alike. Careful judgment judgment is abso utely necessary.' Write todaÿfor the Catalogue of the ELLIOTT w TORONTO, ONT. It will help you to decide. This school is conducted on the highest plané - of efficiency. : We are proud of its record. Students admitted at any time. Cor. Yonge & Alexander-sts., ' v W. J. ELLIOTT, Principal. : NOTES AND COMMENTS If Count Okuma, who was thé former' premier of Japan and is now president of a noted Japanese university, has been correctly quoted, he has been making some plain statements to his countrymen. countrymen. He tells them that the fact that their skins are- of a. darker hue than the "white races" is of little importance, but he also tells them that they are mentally and physically physically inferior z tp these races, and then he gives advice as to the methods methods of overcoming, these defe, ts. Freed From Bearing Down in Side by Lydia Ë. Pink- ham's Compound. ; -. k m and all the duties of a Station Agent are easily learned at home by means of our New Home Study Courses. 5» We invite yoii to write for particu- ^ ®- .Iars and sample lessons. It will $ pay you well to learn these things., ^ Write Shaw's Telegraph and Rail-. ffi road School, Yonge-st., Toronto, jj, *§ W.H. SHAW, President. $ f- - - - - v - - . -I A GOOD BUSINESS COLLEGE For over 52 years the British American American Business College, Toronto, has trained successful business men and. women. If. interested in the courses we give, it will pay you to write for a copy of our latest catalogue. New Term begins Jan. 6,1913. T. M. W at sou. • Principal. HAVE YOU made .provision for employment during .the Fall and Winter months ordo yon wish steady remunerative work the year through. Write us and secure our Agent's terms. We offer the best in the business. Pay weekly, free outfit, exclusive territory. -- OVER 600 ACRES under cultivation. Established ovèr.35 years. A reputation for.high grade stock and fair dealing. A salesman can make money selling for ns. We want an energetic, reliable man for Bowmanville" and vicinity. For terms write PELHAM NURSERY CO., . TORONTO, ONT. N. B. Free catalogue on request.. - 36-17 TH È AUTOMOBILE BUSINESS during the winter ttooth» end be prepared for &e opportunities of the any iprity ; TAKE A. COURSE IN THE BIG tokontô y. m. ©. a. AÜTOMOf^t fÇBBÔL 2-ve. TÜ '275 BROADVIEW AVENUE: Wdte Rar Fr* Booklet to-dey "What--a mistake it is to judge men. by their clothes l'.' "Yes. I know 1 , a self-made millionaire who dreaees as-well as any of his clerks in Hib establishment." Seen in Paris Shops. Much wool embroidery is used on thé new fall costumes. - Printed silks are a favorite material material for afternoon costumes.^ There are many scarf, trimmed hats among the new models. Some/ôf theZ most dressy frills àre^parkling with rhinestones. A single rose of brilliant color is used as a clasp to a scarf sash. The newest draped skirts are raised short in front, and widen in folds toward the hips. Lace used as inside revers is a feminine touch which has been given given "to some waist-coats. : Flower sprigged challis and voile are popular, materials for making one piece frocks. - Evening, girdles are to be wide and~draped, and will be worn below below the elbow and above the waist line. ? ' .. Light blue and pink malines will be used' again to touch up the "black or white low necked gown.. . For every kind of sport the brilliant brilliant hued silk knitted or wool coat is a charming and becoming style. Some of the new skirts are slashed slashed to the knee over the right foot, Where - a bow knot of brilliant catches'the drapery in place. : A favorite fabric for. afternoon dresses is net in all weights" and in many combinations. It is" washable, washable, .cool, inexpensive and. new. Striped materials- are fashionable, fashionable, and a red and black, striped chiffon jacket is effectively combined combined with a gray tussor silk skirt. The plainest of wash frocks is given an airol dressiness by a frill around thé ^ heck or outlining, the" opening of the blouse from throat to belt. Blouses with drop; shoulders are cut out from a single breadth of wide material and form the upper part of some of the smart one piece gowns. •' . „ Fashion seems to have swung around -again to the separate jackets jackets and separate skirts, and " the selection- of "contrasting colors must be harmonious. Among' the new fall colors are putty, absinthe green, eggplant" purple, Sèvres green, Florentine red, scarab", green, mandarin yellow, yellow, and oak leaf brown. The hew fait coats for the young girl- are made of soft woolly material, material, wool.-astrakhan, the hew duve- tyné, chinchilla, and striped and novelty weaves. Close fitting hats, with outstandr ing trimming, are as much in vogue as ever. - The trimming may . be either feather, fancy or loops of i ribbon and velvet . in fantastic shape J ; : ' . ' • ■ Very smart is a little vest resembling resembling a man's evening vest in cut. It is very low and made of striped heavy material. It should harmonize harmonize with the; color of the coat worn. Both short and long coat lengths hold good. The latter drop -midway -midway between the hips and knee length ; some of. the former are shaped in cutaway style., barely covering the hips. For the young girl there v are smart- little frocks of serge, chiffon, broadcloth, charmeuse, and wool brocade. Some of them have quaint little -Eton jackets,- opening / ovtsr vests of softly gathered net or chiffon. chiffon. " • " . . e A black or dark" blue gown is brightened with the Arab sash, woven with white lines* of some-' what crude shapes into a kind of gold tissue. It is knotted in front and falls afew centimeters over the skirt toward, the hem. V- NA-DRU- This advice ought to interest us, for it is not the vapo rings of an irresponsible jingo, but the r sober words of one of .the elder statesmen of Japan. He reminds his people that England's greatness is the result result of long and arduous struggles, and that ancient Japan flourished .only so long as she strove against j her enemies ; he tells t v em that the brain "possesses a spiritual, invisible invisible quality which grows only when it is-forced to fight ' against difficulties difficulties and hardships," and that the standard of mental culture in Japan has been low in the past because because of a lack of struggling. - Toronto, Ont. -- "Last October, I wrote tioyou for advice as I was' completely run down, had bearing down sensation in the lower part of bowels, bowels, backache, and pain in the aide. I also suffered terribly from gas. I took *s •**«..* JL IVU Lydia E. Pinkham' . He counsels them to forget that their imperial system is their religion, religion, that it will remain so forever, forever, and that it will ' save them from ultimate decay, but he cautions cautions them, that mère reliance on a principle leads to national decay. He calls attention to the antl-Jap- anése feeling in California and British Columbia, and warns his people that it presages the gravest international crisis of the age ; he tells them that it is not- the time for .dissentions . among themselves, and appeals to them to train themselves for the great^ struggle which is sure to come. Presumably, or y demonstrably, one of the early human reasons for gratitude was cover from inclemency--a inclemency--a damp hole in the hill or. an even damper hole, in the .rock, with a barricade at the mouth against the night prowling ^carnivora. ^carnivora. If these early nerves ooiild have quivered with anything .more subtle than anger, eagerness, or horror, there would have been comfortable comfortable little shudders in the fig- : ures, . whether distended by gorging or even wasted b} r famine, stretched stretched out on uneven but protected floors during a storm. JThe sense of shelter as something "won or happened upon an : gpeat good luck comes now to humans rarely "when they 'have scooted out of a downpour, dripping, into a door opened hospitably or. discovered discovered accidentally." Humanity immured, immured, in great buildings loses the feeling feeling of gratitude for; four walls and a roof. a WITCH HAZEL CREAM i The finest^ form can use Hazel - and Soothint Cucumber. It keeps the skin white, soft and smooth in spite of exposure or roughening work. 25c a bottle, at your Druggist's.^ 199. nation*4. a*ue am* chemical ee. •r CANAtA, LIMITS», MONTNEAU A sense of shelter abides in small house conspicuously to rains that beat upon -it. Then there is a pà,lpable intervention between between the inmates and the elements. elements. The latter are actively engaged engaged in an effort to overcome resistance resistance and find victims, and the more violent the effort the more the interior ad§reciation of the intervening intervening roof grows. A few chimney chimney pots coming down in "the wind would make a sensible addition to the liveliness of the gratitude. V egdtableCompouhd and am now entirely free from pain in back and bowels and am stronger in every way. I recommend Lydia E. Pinkham's Compound highly to all. expectant mothers."--Mrs. mothers."--Mrs. E. Wandby, 92 Logan Avenue, Avenue, Toronto, Ontario. z Consider Well This Advice. No woman suffering from any form of female, troubles should lose hope until sherhas given Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable1 Vegetable 1 Compound a fair, trial. This famous remedy, the medicinal ingredients ingredients of which are derived from native native roots arid herbs, has for nearly forty years proved to be a most valuable tonic and invigorator of the female organism. Women residing in almost every city and 'town in the United States bear w i.l 1 in g testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound. ■ If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Vegetable Compound will help you, write "to Lydia JE. Pinkham Medicine Co. (cpimdential) Lynn, Mass., for ad- viice. Tour letter will: he opened, read and answered by a worn an, and held in strict confidence. PURE BRED LIVE STOCK.. Government Distribution of Males. As announced early in thei season, the Dominion Live Stock Branch has this yeaJr undertaken a distribution distribution of pure bred male animals throughout Canada on a somewhat 'extensive scale. In- inaugurating this.policy the aim has-, been- to aid sections where pure bred sires were lacking and to encourage new communities in following an intelligent intelligent system, in breeding. This form, of assistance has proven very popular, and . during the past few months a large 1iumber of bulls and several stallions have. been placed, in various parts of the country country in the hands of local associations associations formed specially for the. purpose purpose of handling and. maintaining them. All animals placed remain •the property of the Department of Agriculture, ; the local associations assuming the responsibility for their maintenance and management management under the general supervision of officers of the Live Stock'Branch. . The distribution of bulls and stallions having been brought to a close fot this year the opportunity is now open to^deal with applications applications for boars and- rams. Full information. . regarding the rules •goveiming; the distribution and the procedure to be followed in forming the necessary organization may be had upon' application to the Live Stock Commissioner, Ottawa. As.it is the intention to consider only such; requests, as are. forward- eil beforeïCtetober 20th, it will be necessary for districts desiring to take advantage of: this • offer to act promptly. LORD ASHLEY SYMPATHIZED. His Short Speech Made An Effective Effective Plea.. A. brief speech is a rare thing m the English Parliament. That suèti; a speech -can be effective, however, is. proved by Lord Ashley's speech of two sentences. .. A bill that provided legal defense for any one accused of treason was under discussion. Finally, -Lord Ashley, who was sitting. in : Parliament Parliament for the first time, rose to make his- maiden speech. He was so excited and nervous that for. a moment he could not find a word to say. ;■ ' ' - ' - At last he managed to stammer, £< I--1---vote in favor of the measure measure . * If I, standing here before my peers, am so confused, what must the poor prisoner.; feel, standing alone and without counsel, before his judges !" - LCTo Ashley sat down,' trembling; and nervous, but uncoiisciously: hé 4 had made a far -more effective plea lor the measure than any; of the^ members who had previously spOr ken in -its favor. The hill was im-. mediately passed. Useful. "I supposé classical music is all right in its place," said Maud. "Fm sure it is," replied Mamie ; v 'I don't care to listen to it myself, myself, but sometimes you have to play it in order to. get a man to go home." iiu«t: »eer Signature ef S-- Fw-SheU» Wrapper Below. irb* iueA8«L •iniMBs. Mùmim. IVBL Âne» sum; ro* wccewttouw The sublime Napoleon in his wars lost 2,260,000. young French sol diers. mnrtsm CUBE SICK EARTH AS FOOD. Some Indian Tribes Eat It In Vàr- 'ious-;Forms. : . : The habit of eating earth or clay is oneof the most unpleasant characteristics characteristics of the Southern "crackers," "crackers," but the practice is not confined confined to any race or region of the world, says the Scientific American. In America, several tribes of Indians, Indians, of the northern as well as of the eouthern continent, usé earth as food. ? ' -The Pawnee Indians used to eat a yellowish clay,. which they shaped into little balls that were dried in the open air, and then roasted over the fire. When the clay became red the halls were removed, moistened with water, and eaten. Thèse clay balls were oftenest seryed;with fish-- and seem to have promoted digestion. digestion. Some of the Mackenzie River Indians used to resort to the earth as food in times of famine. They dug out the clay that they found in hollows along the "banks of the river. In prosperous years they chewed the clay as a" delicacy. The Apaches mixed powdered clay with their meal before baking their rude loaves of bread. . .In South America, the Indians in the uplands of .Bolivia eat a "light clay, that is nearly white in color. ; this they use either raw or in the form of cakes ;"of various. shapes, which, are sold in the market-plhce. They also prepare a sauce with" the this they eat with b piled pota- IS mm HE. Among the negroes of the Guinea coast, as well as among those of West Africa, the eating of clay is very common. The natives of the Sudan dig their favorite clay from between layers of sandstone in the banks of rivers. The natives of Java, prepare little cakes of clay containing ochre; these are sold in the public markets. /" The "hairy Ainus," -&e aborigines aborigines of .northern Japan," mix clay with their rice, and with the leaves of various plants that they use for food. In Persia, certain classes of the population, think - that some OF CANADA Notice No. 92 Notice is hereby given that a dividend at the rate of THIRTEEN 1 PBR CENT. PER ANNUM upon the capital stock of this Bank has been declared for the quarter ending 31st of October, 1913, and that the same will be payable at: the Head Office in this city and its Branches on and after Saturday, the first day of November, 191,j8g/ to shareholders of record of 23rd of October, 1913. X By order of the Board. " "- . ' GEO. P, SCHOLFIELD, General Manager. V Toronto,; 16th September, 1913. 155 varieties of clay are delicious luxuries, luxuries, and in the foot-hills of the Himalaya s th e native s are 00 ns tan t- ly chewing a piece of greenish clay, wihioh they believe has the property of protecting them against goitre. In Finland, as well as in parts of Sweden, powdered clay is mixed with the flour used for baking bread. In the Ural Mountains, the natives mix gypsùm with -their dough. In Sardinia and in Styria, cakes of clay are sold in the markets markets with other foodstuffs. \ - . Asthma ■ Brings Misery, but Dr. J• D. Kellogg's Asthma Remedy Will replace the misery with welcome welcome relief. Inhaled as smoke or vapor it reaches the very inmost recesses of the bronchial passages and soothes them. Restriction passes and easy breathing returns. If you knew as well how this remedy remedy would help you as do thousands of grateful users, - there would 'be a package in your home to-night. Try it. ' In Real Life. In real life the fireman, who rescues rescues the fair maiden is married and eats, onions. Fact and Fancy. , Love is blind, but not, alas, permanently. permanently. The Gold Coast exports 275,00tf monkey skins a year. . The more you, help your friends, the more they'll considez_Jit y out duty to keep on helping them. A marble ' book, with marble leaves of exceeding thinness, is in the Strozzi Palace in Rome. Artificial limb makers keep in stock 300 or 400 per cent, more right than left limbs; it is the former that most accidents happen to. The bonds of matrimony seldom pay a dividend. i It costa the world $4,000,050 a year to pepper its food. - The more a married man is blown up th esmaller he feels. Don't dry your wife's tears with â handkerchief--try a $2 bill for a change. , Over the Counter. "Are these candies, fresh, my. pretty one ?" asked the youth with* the , sunset socks. "They are fresh; but not in you/ class," answered the saleslady with the Titian hair. ! i : : ' Lofidoo Toronto lotireal SLJota Bartbi dm SasUooa Btaiaioa MRUUll ' suiuuw «HUM VIBUUycg. iCUWaia al> nut IKDBHH wel$6Uj MMawa HHHII91 Sold in Bowmanville by R. G. Sturgeon & Co 'V ^ Do You ^ know WHat This Label Means ? It means ceme&i of the highest possiSfe quàKt It means cement tested by experts whose authority is final at aD our miDi. ^ It aieinsceœeot acknowledged by engineers, architects and hundreds of thousands of farmees to fulfil everjf requiremeet of scientifically made Portland cement. It means a cement that is absolutely reliable, whether used for a great bridge oi. a concrete wiitmg tioti^ Yoii can use whh eomplote confidence - that your concrete {work will Î be thoroughly aatisfactory. ' You ought to have thia confidence in the cement you Uee, because you bare : not the •faoditiêa for teeing Its qualities, such aa are at the disposal of the engineer» in charge of big contracting " jobs» These engineers ltnow that when oement ha* passed the.teats made upon it at Canada Cement mills, it will paea all their tests. And thie seme cément is aold to you for your silo, your foundations, your feeding-floor, ÿour milk-hduse or your watering-trough. . y sad aeeewdinr 6» dke.fdüréetieas in our free book "What die Farmer can do with Concrete," Canada Cement mener fane to eke sstisfartoor result#. Write for the book. It not only tell» you how to mi* and plaça eoonrets. nut will alee euseeet eaeree ef ueee for it on your farm, every one of them valuable •e you. la aekiag tor die heek you do not incur the alighteet obligation. There ia a Canada Content Daeler in Yocr Neighberheod - Address: Farmers'.Information Bureau Canada Cement Company Limited, Montreal im • < l L.i< •■'r