Sem-- a -------------- ; ec ---- BED SPRINGS Be Fair To Yourself The bed you sleep on determines, toa great extent, your mental and bodily efficiency during the dav. Whether your duties be heavy or light you owe it to yourself to take proper rest, and the dealer who would consult your comfort before 'all other con- ions, will. be quick to recommend the. "Hercules" spring bed as the best made. The "Hercules" embraces every up-to-date im- provement in its construction--a most important one is the Basket Edge; which keeps the mattress from spreading and the bed clothing from slipping. The '""'Hereules" will fit any bed perfectlf--the "Héreules"" weave is unsagable and gives natural support to every part of the body. The "Hercules" is known as thé '5 times" weave strong resilient --and restful, The Gold Medal Felt Mattress Mude of pure Cotton Felt. will com- plete a wholesome, healthy bed. Manufactured By ' "The Gold Medal Furniture Mfg. Co. Limited Montreal Winnipeg Ask Your Dealer 3 JAMES REID 254 Princess St, will prevent the little illness of todity from becoming the big sickness 'of tomorrow and after. For troubles.of the digestive organs you can rely an BEECHAM'S PILLS Sold everywhere. la Loxes, 28 cents' TREASURER'S SALE OF LANDS FOR TAXES poRavINCE OF ONTARIO, COUNTY socue of a warrant under the hand of the Warden, and seal of th County of Frontenac, bearing date the twenty-third day of July, 1914, and te ne directed, commanding me to levy upon the lands mentioned in the follow - ng Het, for arrears of taxes thereon, together wit 1 costs incurred, I here- by give notice that unless the arrears and costs . 1 shall pro- ceed to sell sald lands, or as much thereof ay shall b to discharge such Brrears of taxes and charges thereon, at my offi the Court House, hn the City of Sngeion, by Bublie auc on Tuesday, ee seventeenth day Now per, ¢ hour of 3% 'clock the fored l ce t Tho statutes in ine Sour o eleven o'clock 1 orenoon2 complian with Torento R. J. REID - 230 Princess St. ? Ar Contractors, Attention! PHONE 1473 a Sn ICI SC, Get Prices From David Marshall Gusleeing sud Flaws ¢ atiention reason. able rates suaramtecd 101 Queen Street OF FRONTENAC, TO WIT.: DESCRIPTION Lot. | Con. [Acres Txs. [Cost/Tot'll Pat. or Unpat, 9 160 1 Patented Unpatented Patented Unpatented Unpatented Unpatented Unpatented Unpatented Unpatented Unpatented Unpatented nd Devil Lake sland Devil Lake Erin Is Pinley CLARENDON, ! $ | { ! ¥ DESCRIPTION Lot. | Con. Acres. !Txs. [Cost|Tot'll Pat. "or Wupat Patented Patented Patented Patented Unpatented Unpatented Unpatented Patented Patented Patented Unpatented Unpatented Patented Patented 5.21/82.10/$7.31) 13 is MILLER, 1 1 {Lot.| Con. JAores. |Txs. | 'ostiTot'l | | i { 100 19.69 rat it 8 Patented 'atented Patented Unpatented Unpatented Unpatented 9.858 100 8.88 5 8.40 2.10410.98/ 2.10/10.50 HINCHINBROOKE, | | 'ost Tot'i DESCRIPTION Con. JAcres./Txs, i ' 2.41,24.56! 1 10110.05 2.20015.15 2.20015.14 Unpatentee Unpate el 'Apatented Patented LOUGHBORO CostiTot'l] Pat. or Unpat. DESCRIPTION , Con Acres. Txs i | Patented Unpatente Patented # Patented Unpatented 100 60.588 10 14] 124.00] 13) 260 [33.18 131 125 13{ 200 OLDEN, ' i i | {Lot Con. jrcTes ITxs( {Cost Tot"l i ! } | tees or Unpat, Pat. Unpatented Unpatented Lupatented Unpatent. od | } SBVSS = re ht ot Bm Da WA sds B ON BAITS Ise DAMS mire Ei et ih BD 1m hh ok kk ek LTP PAP WADED WD Tis = SNSVD Hn PALMERSTON. fot Con. JAcres {Txs [Cost } { { Tot'll, Pat. or Unpat. w w 1141.70] 15.30 31 85! ie 20, . KENNEDY, Warden. Patented Us bg | ghisann 3 8 ! is Exeter ree guia P------tr » rp THE DAILY THERE IS NO CUT-AND-DRIED CODE. Amongst Both Women and Men, Te- lephone Manners are Bad--A Few Pointers To People Who Use the "Phones. If some one could lay down a cut- and-dry code of telephone manners, fewer discourtesies would pass back and forth between friends and neigh- bors every day. But the telephone is asiyel--a-fairly. new , convenience. When it is as old a social institution as afternoon teas or saddle horses, there may be definite rules regard- ing its use. Among both women and men tele- phone manners are bad. We make little effort, in fact, to be courteous over the telephone. : "Hello, who is this?" is the insis- tent call that comes over our wire day after day. The courteous thing to say, of course, is this: "Hello, is this 711 Main?" And, if an affirma- tive answer is given, "This is Mrs. Blank. Is Mrs. Brown at home?" The method of most women--of calling the numer they want on the telephone and then rudely demand- ing the name of the owner of the voice that answers them is remin- iscent 'of an experience business men sometimes have. One busy man was consulting with a very important business associate. He gave word to the office poy that] he on no account could be disturb- ed. A man called to see him and heard the office boy's statement that Mr. X was engaged. The caller wait- ed five minutes, and then, seeing no chance of getting an interview in the near [ufture, went to the switchboard connected himself with the office of the man he wanted to see, and had his conversation ovér the telephone The office boy, overcome with un- acustomed timidity at the visitor's "nerve," sat quietly by and thought of the scolding he would receive pre- sently from his employer. He was not disappointed. The employer, right- eously angry at the boy for connect- ing him with any telephone call, would listen to no explanations, and the boy had to suffer for the man's rudeness. A good way to greet the insistent demand on the other end of the wire as to who vou are is to say, "This i# No. 711," or whatever your number may be. Maids should be taught to answer the telephone in this same way. Or they may say, Brown's residence." But it is better not to give your name over the 'phone util you know who has called you up. The person who has called you has taken upon herself the res ponsibility of giving her name first, 'This Mrs is Invitations And Regrets. The telephone invitation is so us ual. to-day that there no use preaching against it. And, indeed, it is in no way harmful. It saves time trouble, and worry, and when ans: wéred it is in every way good. But somehow we do not regard telephoned invitations with the same reverence we bestow on other invi- tations. Few of us would fail to keep an engagement which had been sug- gested to us by means of an engrav- ed invitation. Few of us would neg- lect a written invitation But many of us will say, at the last minute, it we are too tired to feel enthusiastic about some sort of gathering to which we have been bidden by telephone, "Well, she got me on the 'phone; I'll just telephone her and tell her I cannot come and she can get some cne else on the 'phone." 2 Of course, a telephoned invitation deserves just as much consideration us one engraved on gold, or a form- al summons from a king. is Love Making By Telephone. Letter writing----love-letter writing _has degenerated into a despised necessity to be made use of when one is without the zone--either geo- graphical or financial-- of the tele- phone, local or long distance. A fluttering "Hello" traveling over hundreds of miles of wire now pro- duces more ecstasy in the manly breast than did the old-fashioned scented note, written on pink paper {P. O'Connor's; and filled with pressed forget-me- nots and -hearts-ease, | And the mpaidenly heart, too, is London's stirred more quickly by the thought that sorhebody cared enough about her to spend $5 on a telephone call from the ends of the world than it is by the sight of a pile of letters two inches high. There is no use bewalling this sad state of affairs. Doubtless Cupid can balance on a wire as well as he can hide in a scented envelope. But, seriously, many men and maidens, too, take unfair advantage of their privilege of using the tele- phone. A girl will telephone a man and interrupt him thoughtlessly, per- haps in the middle of an important contract, which he Is trying to put through, or a man will call a girl on the telephone and corner her with questions as to her engagements and her willingness to make engage- ments. 2 He will be far more persistent and insistent 'than he ever would dare to be if he were talking to her face to face. Yards and maybe miles of wire stretch between them, and give him confidence and, to a certain 'éxtent, rudeness. WHEN FOOD TAXES YOUR STRENGTH You Need the Tonic Treatment of Br. Wiliams' Pink Pills, When the food you take fails - to nourish when it causes you pain and often a feeling of extreme nausea, the cause, is indigestion. Your stomach is too feeble to do its work and vou will continue to suffer until vou strength- en your digestive powers. Your di- gestion has failed because your sto mach is not receiving the pure, red blaod - of health to give it strength for its work. 1 The tonic treatment of indigestion by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People succeeds by building up and enriching the blood supply, so that the feeble digestive organs are strengthened, appetite - is' restored and tone given the whole system. ~ Thou- sands have proved this by personal experience, as is sh6®nu by the fol- lowing typical instance. Mrs. James Joyle, Dartmouth, N.S. says: "For years | was a sufferer from indiges tion I- could not take food with out feeling terrible distress after- wards, and in consequence I was bad ly run down. Sometimes after eat ing I would take spells of dizziness with a feeling of numbness through- out my body,'and at. other times my heart would palpitate so violently that I feared I would die. Naturally [ 'was doctoring continually, but with. out getting better Then my hus band got me a supply of Pr Wil fiams' Pink : Pills and before long 1 found they (were helping me, and 1 continued to take them wumtil | was cestoredl toc health!" I was never in better health than I am pow, and I owe it. all to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills." These Pills are sold by all medicine dealers or you can get them by mail at 50c. a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The De, Wiliama' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Sangster Notes. Sangster, Aug. 12.--Fakmers are har- vesting. Peter Murphy is able to be around again after a severe ill- vess. Miss M. Davidson and brother, Howard, Kingston, dre spending their holidays with their grandmoth- er, Mrs. P. Brennan. Miss 'M. and W. Geobel, of Syracuse, N.Y. and Master Eugene Frawlev, of Watertown, N.Y., ake visiting their aunt, Mrs. N Murphy. Miss Minnie Younge and Nellio Barrett, at M.,.J. Cochrane's; Mrs. Magnet and daughter, Helen, of Kingston, at W. Ryan's; John Mad den and .T. Fitzgerald, at Thoma: Barrett's; Mrs. Thomas Ybunge and Miss Helena and. Mrs. 8. Hickey, at Mrs. T. Byrnes, of Burridge; at M. Daly's; P. Welsh, W Hart, J, Smith, _ Elgipburg, and T Babcock, at Thomas Yofinge's; Mr and Mrs. M. J. Cochrans and Joseph Barrett, at P. Cochrane's, Glendower; Edward O'Connor, at ,J. MeNicholas, Glendower, In The Early Hours. Mrs Clubleigh (as hubby for office )---And you will home early, won't you, John? Clubleigh--Yes, dear; I'll try hai not to be late for breakfast.-- Phil adelphia Ledger. Beauty Writers leaves come Weekly Selections from Noted Beauty Experts Writing for the English Press. Simple and Effective Methods. By Oiga Amsdell Fach week careful Colonial of the pe cile are readers ir London now dev Many of sideration of beauty cudty i method s perts to advise and inst storing beauty of face and leadfug Eaglish publications tained from Canadian chemists « 1eXt week I shall « *A VOT A Strange Shampoo A young woman entied for her besu itu) gigesy hadr declared she never washes It "with soap or artificial sh pou powders. Instead she makes own shampoo by dissolving a teaspoon - ful of stallax granules in a cup of hot water, "1 make my chemist get the stallax for me" sald she 'It comes only in Sealed. packages. enough to make up twenty or thirty individual 3 , and it smells su good I could almost eat it." Certainly this Bttle lady's hatr did look wonderful even if she haw sirange ideas of a shampoo. Wonderful Growth of Hair Long 480 I made a resolution to try and comcort a real hair grower My own formula, now perfected after ted- igus exparimenting. has had the effegt of giving me a wealth of hair that is ising Obtain from your drugeist ighis package of boranium, and 3 thia 1-1 pint of bay rum, Rub this into the acatn night and morn ing with the finger tips Tt sets the badr-roots tingling with new life. Secret of Beauty Toctors. It now transpires that the myster. jous white paste used s¢ wuccessiully by many peAuty specialists for ridding the sk Jectionable hairy growths is noth] more: than powdered inol, be found in any drug store. © Pheminal and water make enough te tO cover hairy surface: apply, apd in owo or Shree thule rub oft, 5 and it w ree i or blemish. To Lengtihen Eyelashes. hints phéem- i Bema, oe writ 5 beatified Special in this department clipping. f rom append B Correspondent, London, Eng 1 will endeavor, by papers, to keep my latest and best advice Owing to the London the the formed vn beauty experts ~gietent demand most London newspapers and periodi- ting much space to the serious con" m wow employ high salaried ex- most efficient for enhancing or re. herewith a few, cHppings from ingredients méntioned could be ob- s0 I am told. Look out for more keep right up te date with thumb and forefinger A few such treatments make thom grow long, sitky and curly, Thi, straggly evebrows will grow thick and lustrous by merely rubbing mennaline on, but be careful, and don't get why where no hair is wanted No Powder Necessary, Yes, powder Bas ruined more com- plexions than it has alded, and while you vse it you can hapa for nothing better than an fadtatioa of a real complexion. Take my advice Get from your dry st som» ordinary cleminite and dissolve fo a Mttle wyt- er; then you will have an ideal yo n- eXpeasive lotion. Wn "1. seems a part of the skin. The result lasts all day long, even under the most trying cone ditions. To prepare the face and neck for un evening in a hot ballroom there i= nothing to equal this sémple and harmless lotion. Goodbye to Curling Irens! Don't burn the life out of your hair with that instrumeit of torture, the curling iron. You can keep your hair beautifully wavy and curly by using a perfectly harmless liguld known to the dp trade as "silmerine." You need apply 4. MWe with a clean footh Srush ore retiring and in jue morn You Will. most reeably surprioed with Rees And ihe of - fect Jawts fora ng er, So. a bottle t and 1s" quite econo . Pure sitmerine is really 1 to the Mair and it leaves no or et PILENTA COMPLEXION BOAD, 1 a Siuri.exion R. 'ALL DRU Advi. BY. DR. DAVID STARR JORDAN A YEAR AGO. Prophesied Origin and Cause--Work Also Gives Good Figures of Fight- ing Strength of Nations Involved and the Carnage by Aeroplangs. Readers of "War and Waste" (Doubleday, Page & Co.,) a recent book by Dr. David Starr Jordan, dis- tinguished peace advocate and presi- dent of Leland Stanford university, are wondering, in view of the re- markable verisimilitude of certain passages as demonstrated by recent events, whether Dr. Jordan is en- dowed with the gift of seeing into the future. Here are excerpts from tbe book which read more as though they were written following the beginn- ing of the European war than a year before: "What shall we say of the great war of Europe, ever threatening, ev- er impending?" "It may be that some half-craged archduke or some harrassed minister of state shall half-knowing give the signal for Europe's conflagration. In fact, the agreed signal has been given more than once within the last few months. The tinder is well dried and laid in such a way as to make the worst of this catastrophe. All Europe cherishes is ready for the burning.' Dr. Jordan gives credit to. Profes- sor Charles Richet of the University of Paris for the following table indi cating the strength of the armies the séveral powers could put in the field Men 600.000 La00 000 2,400,000 1L.400,000 ;, 800,400 300,000 7,000,000 . dens ¥ % 21,200,000 Dr.~Jordan also quoted Dr. Richet in' estimating at $49,950,000, the daily expense of nfaintaining the ar- nies of a modern war of such propor- tion, giving the following table: 1. Féed of men ..$12,600,000 2. Feed of horses 1,000,000 3. Pay European rates 4,250,000 4. Pay of workmen in ar- sensals and ports (100 per day) 1,000,000 Transporatation miles 10 days) . Transportation ef pro- visions Yio supe Munitions: Infantry, 10 cartridges a day. . Artillery: 10 shots per day Marin day Austria 3 England . . . . 1 France . Germany .. Italy. Roumania Russia Total (60 2,100,000 4,200,000 4,200,000 : oe 1,200,000 2 shots per 400,000 Equipment : 4,200,000 Ambulanees 500,000 wounded orill ($1 per day) vv» . Armature Reduction of imports Help to the poor (20 cents per day to one in 18RE. vw . Destruction etc. . 500,000 500,000 5,000,000 deine ern wy 800,000 of towns, aie ee svaen 3,000,000 Total per day .$49,950,000 On the subject of expense Dr. Jor- dan concludes "To all this we may add the hor- rors of the air, the cost of aeropian- es and of burning cities which this monstrous abomination of murder may render inhumanly possible. The nation which uses instruments like these against a sister nation can boast no advance over the red In- dian and his scalping. knife." PRODUCE AND PRICES re 3 What Is Charged 'For Food-Stuffs in iKngston. Kingston, Aug. 15.--The clerk reports the following : Meat, beef, local, cakcase, 1lc.; cgprease, outs, l0e. to 2de.; mutton, 124c. and 13c.; live hogs, $8.75; dress- ed hogs, 13b.; veal, Sc. to 12¢.; lamb, by caroase, $6; western beef, l4c. to 15¢c., by carcase. Dairy--Butter, creamery, 33c, 35c.; prints, 17c.; eggs, 25c. a doz. Vegetables--Onions, 5c. bunch; pars- ley, 10c. a bunch; beets, 50c. doz; cabbage, 50¢c. per dozen; rs dishes, 5¢. a bunch; market to bers, 5c. to Te. each; potatoes, 81 to $1.10 a bush. R. HO Toys quotes fruit thus: Bananas, 10¢c. to 20c. doz; oranges,15¢ to 60c. doz; tomatoes, 3 lbs. for 25¢.; cantelopes, two for 25c.; watermel- ong, 30c. to $1 each; California peaches, 30c. to 40c.. a dozen; pears, 30c to 40c.v a dozen; harvest apples, 10c. a peck; black: berries, 135c¢. a box; thimble berries, 18¢. a box, J. A. McFarlane, Brook street, re ports grain, flour and feed selling as follows : Oats, 353c. per bush.; wheat, $1.15 per bushel; vellow feed corn, 90c. per bushel; bakers' flour, £3.10 to $3.50; farmers' flour, Si to $3.50; \ Hungaripn tent, 5 oatmeal, 8.75 owt: rolled oats, $2.78 per 90 Ibs; cornmeal, $2.10 cwt.; bran $26.50 ton; shorts, $28; baled straw, #9 per ton; pressed straw, $9 a ton; pressed hay, $15; ground and cracked corn, $1.75 owt.; molassive meal, $1.- 90 owt; buckwhent, $e. Bah kis The Dominion Fi y the following prices Whitellsh, 18e. 124c. Ib.: blue fish, 15c.; 80, per pound: rhubarb, a doz.; peas in pod, 5c. quart; cucum- TO THE FRUIT JUIGE SERIOUS "Fruit-a-tives" Is the medi quantities of fresh fruit.. "Fruit-a-tives", the bitter materi and made into tablets. fruit juices, and the practical use within reach of all. Like fruit juice, ' Fruit-a-tives' of the body--the liver, bowels, kidneys to renewed activity. the world, and Jy it the kidneys and bowels are destroyed. Rheumatism and Rheumatic Pains, and all indications of Impure Blood. Remember, that "Fruit-a-tives" is made of fruit, There is nothing el price -- b0c. a box, 6 for A HEALTH M The Discovery of "Fruit-a-ti Health and Happiness People all over the Dominion, from Fruit Juices. It is and Acts Gently on the Whole System. or increase and thus a stronger fruit juice is created. stronger fruit extract is mixed with valuable tonics and Thus, sve have concentrated and intensified preparation anything like "Fruit-a-tives'. If right in your neighborhood, we will send ye 50 WORLD " Has Brought ! to Thousands of CURES MANY DISEASES Only Medicine Made leasant to Take » RUIT Juice consists of 91% water and 9% solid' material. This solid material cousists of about 8 parts sugary substance and one part of an intensely bitter substance, which is the. inal or curative principle of fruit, benefit of fruit in the ordinary way, In order to get the full" one would have to eat huge , By the discovered process of making® al in fruit juice is made to grow" Then, this antiseptics of Fruit as a medicine is brought ' acts on the great blodd purifying organs' and skin--and stinitlates all these parts "Fruit-a-tives" is the most powerful liver stimulant in skin are stimulated to do more work. The splendid nefve tonics and antiseptics incorporated in *'Fruit-a-tives' make this medicine the finest of nerve restorers, while germs in the stomach and _. "Fruit-a-tives"" will cure Indigestion or Weak Digestion] Dyspepsia, Kidney Disease, Constipation, Biliousness and Liver Sciatica, Lumbago, Neuralgia, Headaches Trouble, Backache, is the only medicine in the world that se as good, because there is no other you cannot get "Fruit-a-tives" ly postpaid, on receipt of -a-tives Limited, Ottawa, PATENTS Herbert J. S. Dennison REGISTERED ATTORNEY, 18 King Street West, Toronto, Pat- ents Trade-marks, Designs, Copyright, protected every- where; eighteen years' exper- fence. Write for booklet. A Residential School miles south of Montreal from Preparatory to High, healthy situation, outdoor sportd™ "Bpeety Music, Art, Languages and Physical Culture. Resident English staff." For Frogpectus apply MISS WADE, Princi- pal. for Girls, 60 Full course Matriculation ames and vurses in in. a a Ottawa Ladies' College RE-OPENS SEPT, 8th. New Building--costing $140,000.00. Absolutely Fire~prool. Every Modern Convenience. New Furnishings. Pure Water trom Artesian Well. COURSES; {crdemie Cautss from Pr to First Year ical Culture, Stamography. Werte for calendar, ™™ REV.J. W. KH. MILNE, B.A., D.D., President, J. W. ROBERTSON, LL.D., C.M.G., Chairman of Board of Trustees. 0.L.C. A rr A A SE Helen's School, Dunham, Que. | PLATING N leit Silver, Copper, Brass. We make all Kinds of fron and wire work. Get prices. PARTRIDGE & SGNS, King St, West. Clearing Sale Trimmed hats and reduced to almost half price. Mounts, flowers and feathers on sale at special prices. MISS HAMILTON Opposite Y.M.C.A, Phone 1267 I A AAA asi a "ONTARIO LADIES' COLLEGE 2 And Ontario Conservatory of Music and Art, Whitby, Canada, Stands For Effi- cient and Cultured Young Womanhoed The new $25,000 Gymmnssium, with swimming peek ole., together with a large and tractive campus, for r unequalled in any Ladies' School in (his country. The strength of the stall may be judged from the fact tha Sevem University Graduates, all Specialists in thele sive All the other Departments are equally well provided fom Send for new illustrated Calendar to REV. J. J. HARE, PH.D., Principal. Next Term'Be gins Sept. 10th , . 134e. per §¥ ; 1240; salmon trout, mackerel, 150. per 1b; a per Ih. ! pickerel, 15¢. per lb.; kippers, 60c. dozen. He Had To Kick. "I don't think Diogenes ought to be so pessimistic about honesty," said one Athenjan to another. What's your point?" "All he had was his lantern and his tub. I've been skinned out of threé for- tunes. Yet I'm still optimistic." The department of agriculture states that the farm horse nd half hours of work : one] ms of work: Ben r round. ¥ilteen' of the largest British cities. have agreed to join in smoke ot sud fuel ment He still bas those, while We guurantee to our students regular collegiate courses Albert 60 years of wsiccessful teachin has proved its value upon the mi women ng 1 our hal Albert Col wa n rates in the subjects or courses that spot Tor he invigorating, Sather ile § vi Fall te Commences on A : Write to-day for illustrated calendar and terms. ALBERT COLLEGE vcATORS, Our Rates Are Reasonable = instruction at reasonable thorough may select. Beyond the | they College speciatizes in commercial, music. art 'and elocutfonary courses. under the co-educational sy and morals of the young men ted on the outskirts of Releville--an ide y to wail students.