A Note from Alice. ! wished that I could show John his Straw Fill your caddy Hats After John left me I looked again | letters. with LANKA you gather for tea. growths, WM. BRAID & CO. Vancouver, Canada In compliment to your friends, to do true justice to your hos- pitality -- serve Lanka when Each cup embodies the perfection of fla- vor achieved through skilled blending of Ceylon's finest Cc ATS SS 3 The wages of women office work- ers, embracing stenographers, typ- ists, file clerks and general clerks, average from $12 to $25 per week, stenographers being the highest paid, according to deductions drawn from replies to a questionaire sent to 70 employers by tle industrial bureau of the Merchants' Assoclation in New | At the general conference of the | 'HAD TO GO TO BED Methodist Protestant church held at Greensboro, N.C, it was decided to allow the ordination of women in the ministry. well to see our stock. , 187 PRINCESS STREET Screen Windows | and Doors if you require Screen Windows or Doors you would do We have all sizes anfl styles and our prices are right. LEMMON & SONS 3 t KINGSTON . The Serbian Relief Commi Appeals To You To Pay Your Tribute To-Day To the memory of the many thousands of Qeroic Serbian men who died that Liberty Might Live. They have left behind them Rp i 600,000 HELPLESS, STARVING LITTLE ONES For humanity's sake will you n ot answer the call from these desti- | at the little string of pearls in the box and I thought that I had been unduly nasty about them. I Bad no feeling in accepting a gift | | from Kar] Sheppard. In fact I had | a very pleasurable sensation when 1 read in his letter that he was going | | to send the baby something. This | being true, why should I make a fuss | | about Elizabeth Moreland's gift ? . | Elizabeth was sending her remem- | | brance to John's child and Karl Sheg- | pard"s gift was for my baby. | | However, 1 -still felt that Karl! | Sheppard's love and affection for me was very much different than 'that of Elizabeth Moreland for John, Karl's | had been particularly selfish. Since | he had told me he cared for me he! had made it impossible for me to write to him by never giving me an | address and he had told me that if }! HEADACHES SO BAD | MILBURN'S LAXA-LIVER PILLS MADE HER WELL. When your liver gets sluggish and fnactive, your whole health suffers. | Your bowels become constipated, your 'head aches, your tongue is coat- ed, breath bad, specks float before the eyes, you are bilious, have heart- burn, water-brash, pain under the right shoulder, muddy and brown spotted complexion, etc. Help the liver to resume its proper function by removing the bile that is circulating in the blood and poison- ing the system. Mrs. E. Bainbridge, 30 Maple Ave., Amherst, N.S, writes:--"I take plea- sure in writing you of the good I | received by using Milburn's Laxa- Liver Pills for headaches. I was so bad I had to go to bed, and could not sit up. A friend told me about your wonderful medicine, and two vials have made me as well as I can be." Milburn"s Laxa-Liver Pills are small and easy to take, do not gripe, weaken or sicken, do not leave any bad after-effects. Price 25c. a vial at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Ca, Limited. Toronto, Oat. [Comfort Skin With Cuticurs mars the perfect aan, Permanent d= ectively troubles are ef concealed. Reduces un- greasy skins. Highly antiseptic, used with beneficial results as Karl Sheppard seemed to think that it was joy enough for him to {care for me and he wanted me to understand that his love for me was rather impersonal or at least I took it so. On the other hand, Elizabeth Moreland had tried and 1 am sure that she is trying in every way to compromise John with her in sucha' way that I would divorce him. "It is surely a mix up," I said to myself. I wonder if other married couples €0 through this life with no adven- tures in the fields of romance outside their own little fenced-in domain. Every man seems to think that he has a perfect right to pick the flowers across the hedge, but I am sure that he is never quite satisfied if he finds his wife looking with admiring eyes at wild roses. "It John would always be as good to me--ag sweet to me--as he had | < been to-day," I said to myself, "I would show him Karl Sheppard's let- | ters to-morrow and tell him that I' wished in some way he would make | Karl understand that he must not | write me any more." Men sometimes give us credit for | being human and sometimes, alas, | put us down for a little less. We are quite as apt to succumb to | the flattering voice of temptation as | a man and the sooner all the world | comes to find that women are not any | different from men--that they are just 'human beings with the same temperaments, emotions and desires ----the sooner will this old world go | round and round with less unhappil- | ness for those who dwell upon it. John stack his head in the door | a moment as he went downstairs and thrusting out his hand with a letter, said, "Oh, Katherine, here's another thing I forgot to give you. Alice wrote this letter and told me to be sure and deliver it into your hands. 1 am going now to see Goodwin and | 'you can read Alice's nonsense while I am gone. It may cheer you up." "I don't need cheering up, John," I answered. 'When you are with me and are as sweet as you have been this time all' the world is filled with sunshine even though it is cloudy out- side." "Yes,"'answered John, is going to rain. my umbrella." I was hoping that he would come back and kiss me, but he didn't. I| think he 'was going to do that when my intimation of rain sent him away on another track. I smiled to think | how true it is that John could only | think of one thing at a'time. | I opened Alice's letter with great | | anticipation. | "Hurry up and get well, Katherine | | dear," began Alice's letter "for I am | | going to introduce you to the time of your life. "Women help make presidents |now, you know. You are such a | home woman that you probably have never thought about what advan-| | tages wil be ours in the next few | years. | | "Fam very much interested in poli- {'tics. You know Tom is one of these | {men who think the government | should run itself." I have told him | many times that he is a traitor to his country, but he just simply pays no | attenflon to me. Someone has said that "the greatest menace to this country is the bad citizenship of good citizens." I told it to Tom the other night and made him think it Was my own smartness.' | (Copyright by National Newspaper | Service) Toymorrow--A Wife in Politics. 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