"leasant In conversation with one of our ' physicians we believe what é #aid to us worth the space in this sariment. In part he said: be do not think a person should Teaton when a man falls asleep he is i the shop for repairs, as ths rails men say. His frame and all the fricate machinery is being over- and made ready for ths next 8's work. The wear of tia pre- day is being repaired. Nature pie that herself She knows as blood coursing : veins. Then she take: £ | frame, lays it down on a nds it with the refreshing of night, covers ft with the soft : darkness and lets the man rest. Tir- nature's sweet restorer, balmy ep. it him, and as the hours wear by his energies are renewed, nen morning breaks and the *mun- steals through the lattice, he opens his eyes and is himself again. Or if he is early to bed he wakes With the cock's erowing. Now who ol BO to that man's side an hour re he opens his eyes and say to nature, stand aside and let him get 2. He has had enough rest? 'Well,' ture will say, "you can take him 3 you will, but I will charge him 'with an hour's loss of sleep and I'll ©ollect it out of his bones and ner- ves and his hairs and eyesight. You 8 For Women waked at morning, and for the{ Reading | The length of the skirt from . the waistline to within two inches of the floor should 40 or 41 inches, but fashion has dictated shorter skirts for this season. The "perfect thirty-six" should measure 1% inches inside the sleeve measure. The line down the back from the base of the collar to the waistline should 'be 1314 inches. These figures are for the average, but the measurements, of course, can vary. For instance, the "perfect thirty-six," according to tailors and dressmakers, ranges from 36 te 38 inches, although 37 is the ideal. Seventy-five per cent., of women are below the thirty-six standard, and the rest are over. This ig be- cause they have permitted their mus- cles to become flabby and loose from lack of exercise, and have either taken on weight or lost it. Some Up-To-Date Fashion Hints, Patent Leather Collars-- A new collar and cuff set is made of ratine and patent leather, 'There is a col- lar, flaring and high, of blue and white ratine, faced with black leath- er. The cufls are made of the ra- tine faced with leather, with leather turnback portions four inches deep. Peacock Poplin-- A striking gewn is made of silk poplin with a blue ground on which there are peacock's feathers--the ends or eyes of. the can't cheat me, I'll find a property to levy on." \ { "A baby should kleep with its . Mother, a child should be sent to bed | arly and be allowed to wake of its Wh accord in the morning. As for! school girls, many a girl who has a 3 onan, studies would be better oc ae chasing butterflies or training ~ flowers or galloping a pony or danc- | * ing. 1 would prefer to have a daugh- | healthy, sweet-temperéd, sensible | and beautiful, without Latin, Alge-| . bra and Grammar than to have one ~ ever so advanced in her humanities ~ with her health ruined or perhaps . ing under a marble urn in the cem- etery; and as for man I would rather be able to earn $2 a day in the vigor and glory of perfect health than to draw rents from property for which © I have exchanged the blessings of a ' sound constitution: : Home-made Rag Rugs. . Save all your rags of various col- ors, cut them in strips and sew them together. Some evening when you "have nothing else to do go through © your rag-bag, select rags of differ- . ent colors, and put them in separate Then another evening cut these Tags in strips, sew them together, Wind them in balls. Then some sunny afternoon when you are sit- ting in the window and wondering ~ what to do, you. can begin to make ~ one of the oldfashioned rag rugs in ~ blue or pink, with a border of white or black. Stocking tops make splen- ~ did black strips for the border, ~ Purchase the largest bone crochet ~ needle you can find and crochet as you would a round doylie in the us- ual manner. These make attractive rugs for the guestroom or bedroom. Yh 3 A Perfect Thirty-six. 1 am certainly going to have a per- fect figure if Hortense can manage it. We have had a discussion as to what a "perfect thirty-six" is and here are . the measurements which Hortense "says I must acquire. Neck, 13% inches; bust, 37 inches 'waist, 26 inches, hips, 40 inches. Simple By 0}, Amsdell, y Bach week ir mand most Londc ty culture. Xpe! and instruct in methods most efficient for enhaneing or re : I oi yYlae 1 append herewith a few storing beauty of face and figure. lei rd English publications. Any of Bints next week. 1 shall endeavor to Hair on Face, Neck or Arms, Any woman wishing to rid herself of an obstinate hairy growth will be glad © to know that plain powdered pheminol will completely and quickly banish the polirsest, thickest hair, as well as the poftest dowr, without injury to any As pueminol is new so much for this purpose, must druggists Bt y it in the original package. A 3 of it should be mixed into a paste © With water and applied directly to the 'hair. In two or three minutes when paste is removed, the skin will be hd entirely hair-free, smooth and us. ' Gives Mair Natural Wavy Effeet. Mince the virtues of plain lquid sil- as a hair curler became Known, chemists, as well as dr ists skin. used 1. Armlessness--especially as com- i with the ruinous curling iren-- Xs have been responsible for its £3 use for the purpose mens the curliness is in evidence be > One to two weeks, a small 3 ¢ Aqui silmerine lasts a long 2 One uid with 3 tiring and in the morning the Will have that utiful wavy ap- which bears no marks of ar. In Powder N tr no! here is a ay emphatically, . lotion which can be easily and made at home and it fs at the ' London's Beauty Writers Weekly Selections from Noted Beauty Experts Writing for the English Press, careful cliping from the London papers, to keep my Co- londal readers informed on the latestiand best the London beauty experts. devoting much space to the thined from Canadian chemists or druggists, so I am told, feathers, to be exact---- woven in na- tural colors. This gown has a long, wrinkled basque nade of deep blue velvet, Durable Brussels Net-- Some new neck ruffs are made of Brusséls net, instead of tulle. These ruffs are made just like those of tulle. The net is left with a raw, cut edge, and it is gathered or box pleated and beld through the centre with a band of velvet or taffeta or satin, that sometimes ends in a bow, sometimes under an artificial rose. The Brus- sels net is decidedly more durabie than tulle, which always loses its freshness and collapses almost to no- thing in moist and rainy weather. Are Shawls To Return? At the fashionable European resorts during the past few weeks a return of the shawl has been reported. Thege thawls, which are worn as evening wraps, are large squares of ¥ich Ug | with an 18-inch fringe lending grace and suppleness to thelr folds. They are highly suggestive of Spanish mode and are especially effective when draped about the body or when worn with the empress Eugenie gown. Plain Sports Coats-- Some of the new silk sports coats are made in large plaids. Plain checks, too, of white with a bright color, are used. On those checked and plaid coats there are collars and. cuffs of plain color. Others of plain eolor have collars and cuffs of checks and plaids Crepe De Chine And Lawn-- A smart new crepe de chine blouse is made of white, with a trimming of yellow lawn. Narrow bands, about half an inch wide, of the lawn edge the fronts of the blouse, the cuffs and the wide collar. The same idea could be carried out with violet, pink or blue lawn with very good effect, Such a blouse would look well with a white skirt or with a 'suit of . deeper shade of the color of the lawn Jet Sequins-- A green satin even- ing gown is simply made, and de- pends for its trimming solely on a little jacket of black net, covered with tiny jet sequins. The jacket is finished with four tassels, which are attached to the pointed seetions un- and Effective Methods, Special Correspondent, London, Eng. iv this department I will endeavor, by y advice of Owing to the persistent de- m newspapers and periodicals are now serious consideration of Many of them now employ high salaried clippings from the dngredients mentioned could be ob- Look out for more Keep right up to date. Scanty Eyebrows and Lashes. © What a wealth of expression can be €lven to an otherwise plain face, by fine arching eyebrows and long curling lashes! Much care should be exercised, however, In choosing a pomade for pro- woting the growth of either, as it is practically ¥mpossible to keep the lids Ughtly tlosed when treating the lashes. Mennaline has the advantage of being perfectly harmless, and at the same time a healthy stimulant to the hatr follicles. Its use tends to darken the new growth, which is what most wo- men desire. Soni Don't Rub Your Mate 5 Scalp massage is a very good thing only & it is done properly. But the us- ual method of rubbing the scalp causes the hairs to grind against each other, thus bruising and often destroying the outer casing of the hairs. p. method is to press the finger tips firm- on the scalp and wi tion work the scalp gently about with- out Jetting the fingers slp over the sux face. 'This prevents the hairs being forcibly rubbed together {i the tnjur- tous pner Suectibed. randruff, greatest enemy to the hair, is best removed By a simple tonic Which can be easily made u pat home, and need be onl occasionally applied to the scalp at night with the finger tins "through the rind. L Lerrons z= nw Prepared Especially For This N by Pictorial Review _ WELL-LIKED Separate waist in snuff brown char- meuse, with vest of whité peu de soie. A bit of color may be introduced into the lace yoke. As illustrated. SCUTTI! this waist is made G GUIDE 5945 SLEEVE J § rv of 111 FOLD OF 44 INCH MATERIAL WITH Pictorial Review pattern No. 5945 1st Price 15 cents der the arms that the hips. hang down over Fashions Make Wheels Go Round. Textile manufacturers are not at the mercy of fashion makers, but the latter have much to say as to what the faetory output shall be. Accord- ing to a fashion expert, last year's style of short and tight dresses re- duced the amount of goods required in a dress by from twenty-five to thirty per ceat,, a factor which must bave been directly productive of! some of last season's distress in the textile industry. Through the in- troduction of the Russian tunic, man-' ufacturers or modists, or possibly | a combination of the two, have con-! siderably more than offset last year's loss, This double costume will affect most favorably every textile manu- facturer in the country. The vogue of velvet hats during the middle and later summer gave velvet manufac- | turers the biggest summer boom they | have had for years. | Linen collar manufacturers have been rejoicing because of the new style calling for linen collars and cuffs for women's costumes, an in- povation to which the laundryman offers not the slightest objection. ! Silk manufacturers, in turn, are made happy by the prevailing fash- searon"s favorite underwear ag lin- | 'gerie fabric. and who reap the largest benefit from most to say in these fashion Shauges, | them, are those who, through judi-| --Frances Frear In Leslie's. { Hints For Housekeepers. A few drops of ammonia in the dishwater will brighter the glass and | silver. A sallow skin is sometimes caused | by an undue consumption of tea, cof-| fee or cocoa. If you spill ink on the carpet, put | remove the spot. To do away with the sound of af watch iw the sick room, place the! wateh under a tumbler. Suet may be kept fresh by chop- ping roughly and sprinkling it with a little granulated sugar. Wrap cheese in a cloth moistened with vinegar if you would keep it! moist and free from mold. { Button loops will be much strong-| er if the loops are crocheted over! with a fine crochet hook. : Condenced milk is cheaper and as good as fresh milk for the making of cocoa, puddings and ice cream. { Bread and butter spread with | chopped dates make excellent school | sandwiches. To pad the edges of doilies before embroidering them, work them in a coarse chainstitch. To slice bacon properly, slice down to the rind; do not attempt to slice Paint the handles of the garden tools a bright red; they will be hard! to lose and easily found. A long-handled buttonhook should! be kept in the lafindiy to clean the lint from the tub outlets : Broken rice is that which is sifted from the higher priced grains, and From vour druggist get one-fourth pint bay rum shout an ounce of 'Pure bDorapivm and mix together. This Pleasant solution is very beneficial to the hair. It qu clears the sealp of the injurious da ft, and immediately stimulates the hair roots. Ahout Shampaeoing. b Even fhe beat shampoo is somew hexion, 7 Be nite 3 ® drying and If the hair is not a tute for ge. powder, fy, Suggest that just before the y battom Cay com. ou apply alive ofl to the af Whgees aout Tain, SHOR Ike 8, Bouts Jl Sach nmiay SR beige BRE ipo H 7 er. a wi ¢ 1 eek or a t hair very clean. soft and flufty. | C 5 10 Hid) : Jr : he b Peult asta" aff" ad7 URE PILBNTA the most trying 5 THe GREAT NOL ON or he, Rext dance - . SANSEL ald, DR Adve, 3 ou : Yh what '¢ is is equally goed in flavor. Shakespeare's Debt to America Ruston Transoriot, A Berton tourist who was staying at Straiford-od-Avon said to his dandlady one woiniag: "Who is this Shakesneare of whom one hears so meh fn Mais tewn? Was he a very great man?" "he "Lot, mir," was the reply, warn't thought nothin' of a few ago. Ie the Americans as has made ry & Practical | Home Drerr Making Knocks cious advertising, popularize fabrics. |'® ® Position underneath lasted with water. {and towers were built upon them. | by local applications, ee . . 4 There is only one way to cure de salt on it immediately; it will help and that is by constitutional r | Significant Prose Poem Handed In -{poverty--of thee 1 chant. 5, 1914. "MY AUTO "PIS OF THEE." by Experienced Sufferer. My auto, 'tis of thee, short cut to I blew a | pile of dough on you two years ago, ewspaper. WAIST MODEL. of charmeuse satin, trimmed with revers of the same material and a ves! of plain white peau de sote.. Above the vest is a tiny yoke of all-over lace. Re- quired to make the.waist are 2 yards of 38-inch or 1% yard of 44-inch material, with 13% yard 26-inch lining, 4 yard 18-inch all-over lace for yoke and % yard peau de soie for vest. In cutting out the satin it Nret should be folded; now. place the hack and collar, marked with triple "TTT" per. forations along the lengthwise fold. The vest is arranged very near to the fold, but is on a lengthwise thread of the satin. Sleeves, cuffs and outerfront and rever are likewise on a lengthwise thread. Tuck front, creasing on slot per- forations; stitch 1 inch from folded edge. Pleat lower edge, placing "T" on corresponding small "0" perfo- rations and tack. ' Adjust vest to posi- tion underneath front, bringing cor- responding double small "00" perfora- tions together and stitch back edge of vest along line of double "oo" perfora- tions in front section. Center-front in- dicated by small "o" perforations in vest. Close ynder-arm seam as notch- ed and shoulder seam. Gather lower edge of front and back between double "T'T" perforations and if desired gather 2 inchés above lower edge. Sew Di- rectoire collar to neck edge as notched. * + .. . ° o FRONT Ron REVER F NAP Patented April 30, 1907. Sizes 32, 34, 36, 38. 40, 42 and 44 inches Ee A A AA A AAA AAA ArmA A A NEUTRALITY. I Jones, in New York Life Ia fellow-steals your purse; Be neutral, down or Silis O you worse, Be neutral Should a burglar impolite Empty out your house at night, Do not bear him any spite-- Be neutral. something Should a bully roam the land, Be neutral. Be quite sure you understand, Be neutral. Should he strike you with an axa, Judge not harshly such attacks, Wait until you get the facts Be neutral. Never stoop 'to taking sides, Be reutral, Good 'neath evil often hide : Be neutral If a person, seeming Fine: Mixes poison with your food, He may do it tor your good Be neutral Huge Barges Float Spans. Huge barges, towed by a river steamer, floated spans of the Mississ ! ippi river bridge of the Wabash rail ; ¢T¢ a | ber | | road into a new position when the fon which makes silk and crepe the Structure was being rebuilt at Hanni- bal, Mo The draw span, it was as traffic. Fhe four barges used were floated | 12 the draw span, each one of them heavily bal- each thirty feet in height, were then built on the decks. time other barges were floated neath the fixed span of the bridge be- Deafness Cannot Be Cured as they can reach the diseased portion of the Deafness is caused by an inflar ition of the mucous lining of the e tachian Tube. When this tube § flamed you have a rumbling sou d or imperfect nearing, and when it is en- tirely closed, Deafness is the result, dnd unless the inflammation can be tak- en out and this tube restored to normal condition, hearing will be troyed forever; nine cases out of are caused by Catarrh, whieh 48 no ing but an inflamed condition of mucous surfaces We will give One Hundred Dollars for | any case of Deafness (caused atarrh Cure F. J. CHENEY. & CO. Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 7c. , Take Hall's Family Pills for const'pa- ton. A ct | and. now you quite refuse to go, or | won't, or can't. Through town and | countryside, you were my joy and pride, a happy day. I loved thy gau- dy hue, thy nice white tires so new, hut now you're down out for true, in every way. To thee, old rat- the bos, came many bumps and "knocks; for thee I grieve. Badly thy top 1s torn, frayed are thy seats and worn; the whooping cough affects thy horn 1 do believe. Thy perfume swells the breeze while good folks choke and wheeze, as we pass by. I paid for thee a prize 'twould buy a mansion twice, now everybody's yelling "ice" -1 wonder why ! Thy motor has the grippe, thy spark plug has the pip snd woe is thine. oo have suffered chills, ague and kindred ill§, endeav- cring to pay my bills since thou wert mine. Gone is my bank roll now. No more "twould choke the cow, as once Fefcre. Yoot if T had the mon., so help me John--amen, I'd buy myseli a car azan, and speed some more.--Ex. How Peace May Come. Peace! Will the very fierceness of the war in Europe force its speedy end? Some predict that this must oe the resuM. Perhaps this accounts or occasional rumors looking to- ward a reconciliation of Germany with France, Possibly it also ac- 'ounts for the impression that pre- vails in some quarters that Austria may prove to be the heaviest sufferer and thus find good reasan for urging the discontinuance of the war before the slaughter and desolation go any farther. 1t is well known that the pope is xceedingly. anxious for the restora- tion of peace and that he has great influence. at the court of the aged cmperor of Austria. It is not con- ealed that Russia has struck a ser- ous blow at Austria's strength and that Germany has found it difficult 0 oppose the Russian advance in \ustria while carrying out its super- wuman campaign against France hrough Belgium. What would happen if Austria, un- der such compelling influences, hould suggest an armistice so that he contending nations have a brief noment of repose for thoughtful onsideration of the awful consequen- ¢s of carrying on the war to its bit- erest end? An armistice would open the way for an appeal to the aeutral powers, and especially to the i'nited 'States, for helpful arbitrati- on so that there might be peace cith honor for all involved. Is mot : among the possibilities -- per- haps of the near future ?--From Les- lie's Women Who Work. Woman has come to the front plendidly in the European war. When men answered the call to arms iving up their positions without. a moment's delay, women without the east hesitation filled up the breach. no Germany and France particularly thousands of women are doing the vork that fathers and brothers once performed. This willingness and ability of wo- nen to do the work in time of war tieretofore done by men, is_but typi- al to the change taking place in this egard in times of peace. Recent eperts of the census bureau of the nited States show that there are nore people engaged in gainful occu- pations than ever before, that this ncrease is more rapid now than for- nerly, and that the increase is far :rcater among women than men. From 1880 to 1910 the proportion of the male population ten years of age and over gainfully occupied in- sed from 78.7 per cent. to §1.3 cent. while among female work- rs the increase was from 14.7 per ' jeent, to 23.4 per cent. There are cer- when i! un rough forms of re rol : 55 ; {from which woman may and should Incidentally it should be noted moved, weighed about 550 tons and | afl b t in all other fields she is that the manufacturers who have | the change was accomplished in two | refrain, but in al ? ! 3 days with very little interruption to Quietly winning her way by adaptab- { Wooden towers, | nos on At the same | Prof. T. { collection, { { | r I r forms of footgear which show an | rrh) that cannot be. cured by Hall's | outside work ility and efficiency.--Frances Frear, Leslie's. Old Egypt Had Rag Dells. Globe. Strange discoveries were made by A. Whittemore, of Tufts College, while excavating in ancient Antinoe, Egypt. A portion of his Just arrived contains a scrubbing brush, a rag doll, a baby's tock, and over a hundred pairs of shoes, socks, boots, sandals, and oth- | dlmost inereditable present day styles. He shows the first and oldest boot with eyelits ever discovered in Egy- pt A party slipper is made of a fine grade of leather ornamented with gold, red and black thread. It has a very elaborately carved piece resemblance to ten | of leather on the instep. The serub- He bing brush which was discovered had a-wooden base and bristles on hoth sides. There is a rag doll with movable {arms and a head of wood. And there is a toy horse, made of wood, and ta toy spade, with a bone ornament lattached. in en Cylinder--F. W. Coates, 158 Princess Street, & A. K. Routley, 173 Princess Street. oT Disc~--T. F. Harrison Co. Limited. put regular $3.50 and $4.00, far $2.50 To make room for . winter goods we will HE tone of the Violin is excep- tionally difficult to reproduce. Its richness and lusciousness depend on over-tones, so soft, so delicate, so fleeting, that the ordinary "'talking machine" can neither record nor reproduce them, But Mr. Edison--the wizard the inventor of the Phonograph, the wonder of the musical world--accomplished the seemingly impossible in new EDISON PHONOG (THE INSTRUMENT WITH THR DIAMOND, POINT) TRADE MARK omas OL Edison, So perfect are the Edison methods of Recording -- so perfect are Edison instru ments and records (which you may have in your own home at small cost) that the violin records become the violin of Ole Bull and Joachim. fullness, softness -- all the throbbing, heart-appealing tenderness--all the luscious tones and over-tones---float from this amazing instrument just as the great artists achigve them om their price. lepd violas. The new Edison Phono. graph has the diamond repro- ducing point, usbreakeble and long playing records, superior motors aad oon- struction, concealed horns, end the Cabinets are made in true Period styles, in jas perfect harmony with the "finest furniture. All the richness EDISON DEALERS IN KINGSTON on sale men's boots, VN IMPORTED GOODS ARE BEST. "CEETEE" is manufactured from only the very finest Australian Merino Wool, scoured and combed over and over again until every particle of foreign matter is taken ovt and every strand is as clean as it is possible to be made.. It is then carefully manufactured on expensive and exclusive machinery, very different from the ing each garment to fit the human form. It has all selvage edges, therefore cannot come utiravelled; every join is knitted together, not For Instance YOU Cannot Buy : a : Better Underwear Anywhere Than style of underwear sewn as with ordinary underwear. People wear " CEETEE" LU because they kuow it to be perfect. - CANADIAN MADE FROM START T0 FINISH AND ALL BRITISH MATERIAL Made In All Sicés For Men, Women aud Children. The C. Turnbull Co. of Galt, Limiied For sate GALT, ONTARI0 Company. »n