ACE TEN Felt Wretched Until He Started To Take "Fruit-a-fives" 594 Cmamprain Sr., MonteRAL, "For two years, I was a miserable | sufferer from Rheumatism and Stomach Trouble. 1 had frequent Dizzy Spells, and sleepy. matism dreadfully, with pains in my back and joints, and my hands swollen. A friend advised "Fruit a-tives" and from the outset, they did me good. well and 1 can truthfully say that | | Ivy-covered | father and {and wife, and when I took food, felt wretched | who united them I suffered from Rheu- | bonds which | together read in his quavering voice | the measure of our love," the same they had |neth at | listened to with Re = --/ -- (Copyright, 1916, by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate). married in the little church where my own mother were made man nd the same minister in the sacred them so firmly We were held service which throbbing hearts. Sverything about us contributed to Jr | the holiness of the occasion and of After the first box, I felt I was gelting | the rites. This was"a real union of hearts, of souls, of lives. It was a "Fruit-a-tives" is the only medicine | veritable sacrament of which no one that helped me". LOUIS LABRIE, 60c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 250. Atall dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit: a-tives Limited, Ottawa, Pr rm - HERPICIDE % | does not change the color 2 of the hair one particle i | vi WILSON'S FLY PADS WILL KILL MORE FLIES THAN DIY Ad CATCHER Clean te handle." Sold by all Drug. @iste, Grosers and General Stores. For Picnics and Lunch Pails Bolled Ham, England Ham, Ham Loaf, Bologna, Beef Bologna, Corned Beef, Paris Pate, Deviled Tongue, Potted Ham, Potted Beef, Potted Veal, Choice Ripe Tomatoes arriving daily, J.R.B.Gage, Montreal Street PHONE Bde. AN Roast Pork, Ham berm, after meals reward the daily use of Abbey's Salt -- eat and enjoy a square meal without fear. Take ABBEY'S for slug fish bo wels, inactive lives and upeet stomach. This delightful tonite clears the intestines, and e you shee | and feellike a top. © RUPTURE APPLIANC SPECIALIST HERE lavention Retains Rupture Danger nd or Pain, trusses . Kingston, Rando iph Hotel Wenosday, Thursday (all day - night) 2 days only, Sept. 26, could | better for it. P | formed face and beheld there the | same ight which I knew were shin " Ux } ing from my own. ed as if in a dream. HE about us faded into insignificance |W other, cept each other and our love. ever had known. | veritable earthly paradise. world never can Cooked | last fringe of red again," said Kenneth cannot remain away from long. ed what love really is, ground for. us." his, miliar path to the beach. partake without being the And as we passed down the aisle looked up into Kenneth's trans- Both of us walk- Jverything such ex for mattered ewere all-sufficient Nothing else which followed real joy that I Pleasure, happi ness I thought I had experienced, but it was as if I had seen a dia- mond after having viewed only dull glass. The transformation which love had started was completed. We were made over, refashioned, mold ed again into forms each the com The two weeks contained the first plement of the other. The quite little seaside resort where we had gone proved to be a Every thing was tinged with blue and gold and gorgeous red. It was as if we were looking through a prism. "I cannot bear to leave it all." It was Kenneth who spoke. It was dusk. Seated together on the long veranada of the hotel we had watched the sun burst into glory and bury itself behind the far dis- tant horizon. It was our last day-- the last evening of our honeymoon. "But we shall go together and wherever we are the world will be as beautiful," I said. "That i8 true," he agreed. be now, but "The anything but beautiful I shall always think of this as the most beautiful spot of all. our life, Roxane, and it shall be to New | me the most blessed place on earth." This is where we began I'pressed his hand in silence. The melted slowly from above the trees in the west. and finally. "We it very This is where we first learn- It is holy '""We shall come again yet He rose and drew my arm into and we walked down the fa The sea Lerrons Prepared Specially for This Newspaper By Pictorial Review For the Maid Who Affects Gingham. A very smart development of a Dine gingham frock is pictured here. The a1 | THE END OF THE HONEYMOON. { was calm. | long time. = _8Sary &Practieal | Home Dress Making collar and cuffs are of white lawn, . Aemstitched, while the pockets of Not a wave so muca as murmured on the shore The only sound came from some belated fisherman or pleasure seeker as he drew his boat to the pier or dropped an oar with careless eagerness to be home. We stood facing the ocean for a "I like to look at it because it is said Ken length. "It the only thing which seems 'so large, for everywhere it appears to meet the earth, But the sea does not It seems that out there is infinity, eternity. "But what is the matter? You are trembling. Are you cold?" He turned and in a moment I was eveloped in his arms. "No," I murmured: "But you were 'trembling," sisted Kenneth. "Yes," 1 replied. 'Oh, Kenneth, it was because I cannot believe that love like this can last." He seized me roughly in his strong arms and strained me: to his heart. dt was his only answer fears. is per- to my (To be Continued.) Count Von Bernstorff former Ger- man Ambassador to the United States has arrived at Constantinople and presented . his. credentials there as German envoy. A movement to standardize the loaf of bread throughout the United States at Chicago 'Monday at a meet- ing of the National Association of Master Bakers was begun. Ar ar ero --y Eating for Health and Strength calls for intelli- gent food selection. It is easy to keep in top-notch vigor of mind and body at | low cost if you know Shred- ded Wheat Biscuit. It is 100. per cent, whole wheat-- nothing wasted, nothing thrown away -- contains more real body-building nu- triment than meat, eggs or potatoes and costs much less. Full of nutriment, tasty and toothsome. Most people like the nutty aroma of the baked wheat, especi- ally when served with hot milk. Delicious with sliced peaches, bananas and other fresh fruits. Made in Canada. seif-material. -------------------------------------------------------------- There is nothing smarter than ging- ham for girls' dresses, for their styles always reflect the modes of their el- ders and gingham is enjoying a triumphant career in the sphere of women's dress The little dress is in Empire style and is particularly ef- fective in plain blue gingham of soft finish. It closes at the left side front and there is a square collar of hemstitched lawn to finish the open neck. Cuffs of the lawn establish the close .relationship between neck and sleeve arrangements this season. The attached one-piece skirt is gathered at the top and finished with large pockets. If desired, the pockets may bé-omitted and a sash substituted: In medium size the dress requires 3 yards 36-inch material. ® The lesson for the home dress- maker today deals with the cutting of the dress. First, take as much of the material as will accommodate the plecing for the skirt, pocket, sleeve and cuff and double Wo THE CONFESSIONS OF ROXANE (By Frances Walter) Is Is Now Autumn Along the Bat- tlefront. 3 ip Gibbs, + ji War Correspondents' 'Headquar- ters, September, 19 ---The harvests of France and Flanders have been gathered in, and already the plow, driven by men to old to fight, or boys too 'small and young, or by peasant women whose men are somewhere near St. Quentin or Verdun, is turn- ing up the stubble in the fields and ANmaking a brown landscape where three weeks ago it was all gold and bronze. The trees are turning brown also, deepening to' a reddish tint in all the woods between Bologne and the battlefields, where were are only dead trees. Round about Poperin- ghe the training hops have been pull- ed down from the poles already strip- ped-in places by last month's gale; and the sticks are all bare. In the wind there is a smell of moisture and mist and the first faint sniff of rotting leaves. It is the autumn touch--the autumn touch of a war in which some of us have seen four harvests gathered into French barns and four winters come. een WAR MENUS How to Save Wheat, Beef and Bacon for the men at the front. Issued from the office of the Food Controller for Canada. By Phi N MENU FOR THURSDAY Breakfast Wheatmeal Porridge Marmalade Milk Sugar Fresh Frui Toast Tea or Coffee Dinner Pork Chops Mashed Potatoes Vegetable Marrow Johnny Cake Syrup Luncheon) "orn Soup 1 Whe Muflns Apple Sauce Oatmeal Cookies Te: Butter 1 Milk 3 Sugar The Muffins ment recipes for Whole Wheat and Cream of Corp Soup, ned above, are as follows Whole Wheat Mufling-- 1% cups of whole wheat flour 1 cup df white flour 2 tablespoons of melted dripping Mix and sift dry ingredients; add milk to the molasses, and mix Last of the with the dry ingredients all add the melted dripping. Cream of Corn Seu 1 quart of skimmed milk 2 cups of corn, 2 tablespoo of butter, 2 tablespoons of flour Seasdn to taste with saM, pepper and grated onion. Make thin white Bune) of the milk, butter, flour and seasonings If corn on the cob is used, cat from the cob and cook, and add to the milk, etc. Reheat and serve very hot y (Wheat and meat saving recipes by Domestic Science Experts of the Canadian Food Controller's Office). \ J ALSACE-LORRAINE MUST BE RESTORED The Unalterable Determina- tion of France Is Reiterated by President Poincare. Washington, Sept. 19.--France": unalterable determination to restore Alsace-Lorraine to the Republic was reiterated in a cablegram receivec here from: President Poincaire, by Daniel Blumenthal, former Alsatiar deputy to the German Reichstag, whe recently came to this country at the instance of the Fremch Government to lay the Alsation situation before President Wilson. The message said: "The Government of the Republic firmly is resolved to obtain fo: Alsace-Lorraine her return to the French fatherland--a restitution fully justified by the sufferings en dured for forty-six years and the] heroic sacrifices of her sons who have died glorignsly for the cause of liberty." President Poincare cabled in re sponse to a protest of Alsatians ir Hoboken, NJ., against the Germar propogal to make Alsace-Lorraine ar independent duchy. ' ' Despondent over the deaths of his wife and baby, which occurred within a few months eof each other over a year ago, Austin Warner, thirty-six years of age, a well-known and popular Guelphite, committed suicide on Monday. It is authoritatively Provisional Russian Gdyernment will not take revengeful meMsures against Korniloff, who will be tried and will recelve every facility to defend him: self tated that the There's a slump in the marke: when you try to dispose of experi- ence. that cost you deep. Only a fool gat will waste time looking at a king when there is a ouse in sight. t is just as wellito look out for man who is always looking out for himself. | coast, i Twilight ThE PRE (Continued from Page 3.) Mrs. John Carson, Villa St. Claire Apartments, Barrie street, returned on Saturday from her summer home at Dead Man's Bay. Miss Mildred Horsey arrived in town on Tuesday from Cressy, and is the guest of 'Mrs. C. E. Rayson, Uni- versity avenue. Capt. Alan Bland returned to New York on Monday after spending a week in town, Miss Warde Finkle, Earl street, Spent the week-end in Napanee with her aunt, Mrs. Martha Finkle. Miss Dorothy Chown left on Mon- day for Battle Creek, Mich. Mrs. D. G. La'dlaw, Earl street, and Mrs. David Murray, Frontenac street, left on Monday for New York to visit"Mrs. J. A. McKay. Miss E. Thompson, Clergy street, who has been visiting friends in Richmond, Que., has returned home. * ® 43 Miss Honour Lett has been spend- ing a few days with her sister, Mrs. R. J. Gardiner, Bagot street, before returning to the Royal Victoria Hos pital, Montreal. Mrs. J. Sissons, London, who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. W. J. Paul, Clergy street west, returned to her home on Sunday. Miss Grace Pail, Clergy street west, left on Sunday to visit in To- ronto, 'Mrs. Walter J, Plewes, 384 Brock street and her nephew, Mr. Reid and Mr. Smith of the B.N.A. bank, took in the last trip of the season on the steamer Toronto, Mrs. A. Dickson, 116 Ordnance street, has returned home after spending the summer with her daugh- ter, Mrs. Mallott, at Ogdensburg, N.Y. . * . Miss Katherine Hart, the clever young vocalist of Kingston, is in Ot- tawa for a few days on a musical tour and is the guest of her aunt, Mrs. A. D. Cartwright. Miss Hart has adopted as her stage name Miss Kay Carleton. Miss Rose Keenan, Montreal, has come to Kingston to visit Miss Kate Diamond, Mrs. Kenneth Fenwick, Kingston, is visiting her mother, Mrs, Penning- ton MacPherson, in Ottawa. Miss Dupuy, Kingston, is the guest of her nephew, H. 8. Dupuy, and Mrs. Dupuy, Brockville, Mrs. William Dewey, visiting Mrs, T. H. Gothard, in Trenton returned to Kingston yesterday. The marriage of Miss Charlotte Worrell, daughter of Archisbop Wor- rell, to N. R. Desbrisay, district pas- senger agent C P.R., was solemnized in All Saints Cathedral, Halifax, N. 8, on Tuesday. Archbishop Worrell officiated, assisted by Dean Lloyd and the Rev. J. BE. F. Foster, rector at Hubbard's N.S, . . . Mr. and Mrs. John Allan, Peter- boro, announce the engagement of their daughter, Dorothy Isobel, to Gunnery Instructor, Royal Flying Corps, Deseronto, and eldest son of Dr. and Mrs. H. M. Park, Peterboro, the marniage to take place in St. Paul's Presbyterian Church, on 6th October, -------- A Reformed Pirate, The flat sand shore of Tripoli, kissed by a sparkling 'sea, is fhe stene every Tuesday of one of the largest and most interesting open-air markets to be found on the African Thronging thousands of men, miles of tents, camels on the sand, and an astonishing wealth of pro- duce fills the view. A little tent among the others was occupied by me, where I offered for the merest trifle the book of God. My success aroused the spirit of Moslem Barbary, which expressed itself by a stone a few pounds in weight, which crashed into the tent, within an inch of my head. For the crowd to storm my tent, tear the books into bits, and smother me with sand and stones was the work of a few minutes, It seemed the end had come, when a wonderful thing happened. A lad of about fourteen years of age leaped between me and the howling mob and defied them to cast another stone. From defiance he fell fo entreaty, and gradually the knives slipped back to their sashes, the stones ceased, and there was a great calm. He then upbraided them in his clear boyish voice and told them I Was a servant of God, and the best man in the city, The little tent with the bopk of God was there next market day, showered with smiles and salaams. We began to respect ome another; they to pay tribute to my sincerity, I to marvel at thé epirit of self- sacrifice and ' contempt of death, shown by a lad to succor me in my need. That lad became a Christian and a devoted friend of mission- aries. I got to respect the children worthy. --World Outlook. 2 Tommies Spend Money. Seldom has Great Britain's share in the war been given just recogni- tion. As new acts of sarvice are made public, appreciation is, in num- erous instances, expressed, but there y femain many contributions to the cause of the Allies which -un- Doticed. Few people, for nee have given a thought to the im- mense amount of money which the United Kingdom pours into France, into Belgium, into Greece, to men- ®tries benefit through the troops that tion only a few lands, through soldiers. Nevertheless, these cou are stationed on their soil. So of the Barbary pirates, for they were 2 3 Spoonfuls of Red Rose Tea go as far as 4 and often 5 spoonfuls of ordinary tea NAA A AP J Een tT a A AC TW LCi Wear and Value are combined in our Mercury High-grade Natural Wool Underwear in two-piece gar- ments and combinations for meh, women and children. You cannot get gny oetter underwear at the price for which this popular line is sold. Men will find that the closed crotch com- binations afford every comfort. Women will find that all details in finishe ing are well looked after. : We guarantee the garments unshrinkable, and you will find them satisfactory in every way, particularly as regards wear. They cer= tainly have the durability. Remember the name--"Mercury," don't be satisfied with anything less. Mercury Mills, Limited + Hamilton, Ont. Makers of high-grade cashmere and lisle hosiery for micn and women and under wear for men, women and children g8 And ON'T handicap yourself in a business way or socially with a painful corn. There's no need to keep your mind on your corn. Riue joy- -the easy way--bri instant relief from pain. oY nes in are gone in 48 hours. That is the average corn. Some very stubborn cases require a second or third treatment. Millions upon mitions of corns have been remcved the Blue-jev war. Millions of fumiries keep @ supply op hand, and they never have corns. You, too, can be freed new and forever, Paring cons brings on'v temporary relief, Ana harsh liquids are Ea Blue- eS EL ri a