\ uw «¥ PERFE T HEALTH DUE 10 THE BLOOD Nature intended every girl and every woman to be happy, attracâ€" tive, active and healthy. Yet too :fle o: t-ht;r; find their live:h sadâ€" n y sufferingâ€"nearly ays because their blood is to blame. All those unhappy girls and women with colorless cheeks, dull skins and sunken, lustreless eyes, are in this condition because they have not enough good red blood in their veins to keep them well and in the charra of health. They suffer from depressing weariness and periodical headaches. Dark lines form under their eyes, their heart palpitates violently after the slightest exerâ€" tion, and they are often attacked with fainting spells. These are only a few of the miseries of bloodlessâ€" ness. Nothing can rescue girls and women from the inevitable decline that follows anaesaia except a genâ€" erous supply of new, rich red blood, ard nothing has ever proved No Girl or Woman Need be Conâ€" stantly Ailing and Unhappy. so successful in creating red, good blood as Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills for Pale People. Thousands and thousands of girls and women owse their good health and charming complexion to the use of this mediâ€" cine. Here is one example of its power to cure. Mrs. Rose Ralli, Toronto, Ont., says: ‘"‘For a long time I suffered with anaemia, nerâ€" vousness and general debility, in fact 1 was beginning to feel a posiâ€" tive wreck. I tried several mediâ€" cines and emulsions. For a time I would feel better for taking them and then the effect would wear off, leaving me worse than before. The continued drain on my health alâ€" tered my appearance, my friends telling me I had a haggard and worn appearance. â€" This naturally did not help to improve me, as you know no woman likes to be told she looks "worn out.‘"‘ Finally Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills were suggestâ€" ed and my husband got me a supâ€" ply. I used them and found the result goodâ€"not only good, but the benefit lasting, and I am now enjoying perfect health, have a good color and have regained my natural buoyancy. I trust my letâ€" ter of gratitude may be the means of helping others who are suffering as I was." Kioskâ€"Hydro Introduced at Engâ€" lish Scaside Resorts. â€" "Come down and see the fish," may be a greeting this summer at some seaside resorts. Sevoral Engâ€" lish wateringâ€"places are negotiatâ€" ing for the installation of the kioskâ€"hydro, a new _ invention, which enables sightseers to descend into the soam. The kioskâ€"hydro, which is the inâ€" vention of an Italian engineer, conâ€" sists of a circular steel observation chamber, in the walls of which are double watertight windows. Above these windows are electric lamps of 10,000 candleâ€"power, fitted with reflectors and capable, it is claimâ€" ed, of projecting light a distance of 1,500 feoet when the water is clear. The chamber has a sloping roof, which narrows into a stsel tube, through which two staircases, one New health, new strength, new vitality follow the fair use of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. You can get them from your medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. for descent and the other for asâ€" cent, lead to the water level. The upper part of the kioskâ€"hydro. may eithor take the form of a fosating kiosk, rising and falling with the tide, and connected with a pier by a gangway, or it may be part of the pier itsolf, with the observation chamber suspended just above the bed of the sea. (Ga«s half an inch thick is used for th> windows, and the steel shell is of the same thickness. However, the woman who marâ€" ries a preacher doesn‘t have to nag him in order to get him to go to church. SIGMTâ€"SEEING UNDER SEA. Caf#dian Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., A good cook? Certainly, but she couldn‘t have cooked the Indian Corn, rolled and toasted it to a crisp â€" brown, waferâ€"thin flakes, as we do in preparing Grandmother Didn‘t Know They are delicious with cream or milk, or sprinkled over fresh fruit or berries. From the first cookig:ll the corn until the s ¢ airâ€"tight packages of deliâ€" cately toasted flakes are deâ€" livered to you, Post Toastâ€" ies are never touched by human hand. Post Toasties Grandmother would have Post Toasties â€"â€"sold by Grocers. During the hot spell the health of baby must be carefully guarded. Diarrhoea, cholera infantum and dysentry carry off thousands of preâ€" cious little lives every summer. Baby‘s Own Tablets are especially adapted to keep the little ones well during the summer. They regulate the bowels, sweeten the stomach, and an occasional dose will prevent the dreaded summer complaints, or if they do come on suddenly the prompt use of the Tablets will set baby right again. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Mr: ‘Asquith‘s expenses inâ€"the recent byâ€"election in East Fife amounted to $1,710. It has been decided that no picâ€" ture shows ?AIL be allowed on S‘:m- day at Buckhaven and Methil. * A start has been made with the preservation scheme of the old Church of Buittle, near Dalbeattie. At a meeting of the Glasgow High School Club it was decided to proâ€" ceed with a scheme for the acquisiâ€" tion of an athletic ground at Anâ€" niesland. Builders‘ laborers at work in Blackfriar‘s Street, Carlisle, unâ€" earthed two skulls, which are supâ€" The annual report of the Zoologiâ€" ecal Society of Sootland states that there has been a surplus of $7,000 on the year‘s working of the Zooâ€" logical Park at Corstophine. _ _ By order of the schools‘ medécal inspector, Benwhat School, under the Dalmellington School Board, has been closed for three weeks, owing to the prevalence of scarlaâ€" tina. Milngavie Town Council has sent to the parks committee a proposal to construct an openâ€"air swimming Dr. J. I. Craig, Kirkcaldy, has been appointed certifying surgeon under the Factory and Workshop Acts for Kirkcaldy. _ The statute labor committee of Glasgow corporation has approved of an important scheme for the widening of Stockwell Street. _ Altogether 1,140 passengers left the Clyde on a recent Saturday for Canada and the United States, a total far below that of the corresâ€" ponding week of last year. 3 A broker‘s establishment and villa, owned by G. T. McArthur of Chryston, near Glasgow, were deâ€" stroyed by fire, and eight inmates had a narrow escape. At Dumbarton, Henry Brand, a farmer, was fined $15 for frightenâ€" ing a pony by fixing a pail to its tail and causing it to run a distance of four miles along the road. The death has occurred at Arrow River of Mr. James Mitchell, a naâ€" tive of Hawick, at the age of 84 years. He was the inventor of the wellâ€"known Mitchell life boat. BABY‘S HEALTH DURING HOT WEATHER Mr. James Christie, chief conâ€" stable, Greenock, has recommendâ€" ed an allâ€"round increase for the loâ€" cal police force. In Egypt He Vaccinates as Well as Shaves. Some interesting facts are conâ€" tained in Lord Kitchener‘s report on the condition of Egypt and the Budan during the last year. This is from the section on barbers: What ts Going on in the Hiâ€"**+nd> end Lowlands of Aui~ A serious case of sheepâ€"worrying is reported from the Arrochar disâ€" trict, where 16 lambs were killed by a dog that is still at large. s Friars." ‘"‘The ordinary village barber of Egypt bears a certain resemblance in so far as his profession goes to the barberâ€"surgeon of ancient times in England. He is authorized by law, after having passed an examiâ€" nation, to perform the operation of vaccination, _ application _ of leeches, cupping and simple dressâ€" ings, and is foxgyidden by the same law to order or prescribe medicine. XOTESs OF INXTEREST FROR# HEB BAXES AND RBRAES turned all my presents ! "‘Every barber must attend a course of lectures of three weeks‘ duration at the Mudiria Governâ€" ment Hospital and pass an examiâ€" nation for a certificate. In each village one of these barbers is apâ€" pointed by the public health departâ€" ment as its representative. ‘‘Barbers so appointed are called sanitary barbers, and among their special duties are the following : Vaccination, exaimination of ‘deaths, issue of permits of burial, render reports of deaths involving suspiâ€" cion of infectious disease. Millieâ€"So you loved and lost, did your ~>> oo e A lady who kept a curly poodle dog lost her pet and called. upon the police to find it. The next day one of the force brought her the dog which was very wet and dirty. The lady was ovï¬yed. ‘"Where did vou find the r little darling?‘‘ she cried. ‘"‘Why, ma‘am,‘‘ sgaid the officer, "a fellow had him tied to a m and was washing windows withk him." "If the sanitary barber is unâ€" able to read or write, the work of registration is done by the village tax collector.‘"‘ THIS BARBER IS VERSATILE. be those of two "Black Her Lost Pet. Consolation. beans, and some other vegetables. They are practically the sole source of the nitrogen required by man‘s body, neither fats nor carbohyâ€" drates containing any. [ If we take a man of 154 pounds in weight as the normal type, we find that when doing little or no work his daily output by all excreâ€" tory processes is nearly oneâ€"half an ounce of nitrogen and seven ounces of carbon ; and it is therefore conâ€" sidered that at least this amount is required to be taken into the body during a day. As, however, this makes no allowance for waste or for expenditure in the shape of heat or work, nor for the storing up of reserve in the shape of muscle or fat, it is necessary to provide a somewhat â€" greater ~ supply. _ An amount of more than half an ounce of nitrogen to nine ounces of carâ€" bon in the daily food is shown by experience to be what is necessary, and this for a man of average health and condition would amount to about oneâ€"hundredth part of his body weight in solid food. This Solid Food, however, can evidently be adtminisâ€" tered in different forms. Oatmeal, which contains nitrogen and carbon in about the right proportion of one WHAT PEOPLE SROULD EAT Physiologists tell us that the food of man should consist of proteids, fats, carbohydrates, mineral salts, and water; but that these are not of equal importance. The proteids, mineral salts and water are absoâ€" lutely necessary to maintain life; while the fats and the carbohyâ€" drates (or sugars, in one or other of their forms) can, in case of need, both be manufactured within the body when proteids are supplied to it in sufficient quantity. . i0 These proteids, of which eggâ€"albuâ€" men is probably the most familiar example, are the chief source of energy within the body, and are employed at once in the repair and replacement of the cells of which the bodily tissues consist, and of the protoplasm which they contain, and which forms, as many think, the seat of life. They are broken up mainly in the muscular tissue for the production of physical work ; and it is said that some part of them is excreted from the blood as urea without forming any part of the cellular tissue. Where Proteids Are Present. The proteids are present in varyâ€" ing proportion in all fleshâ€"foods, in milk and its derivatives, and in eggs, as well as in cereals, peas and to fifteen ought, theoretically, to suffice ; but the large quantity of it which would have to be taken would throw so much work on the digesâ€" tive organs as to make it impossible in practice. Hence it is necessary, in order to get at a proper miniâ€" mum, to combine with it some food, such as bacon, eggs or cheese, which give a higher supply of nitrogen with less strain on the digestion. Bread, again, which contains a proâ€" portion of nitrogen to carbon as nearly as high as oatmeal, makes an excellent staple of diet and is open to fewer objections otherwise. According to Dr. Waller, in his "Human Physiology,"‘ an ideal diet for a man in good health would be a pound of bread, half a pound of meat, a quarter of a pound of fat, a pound of potatoes, half a pint of milk, a quarter of a pound of eggs, and an cighth of a pound of cheese every day. PROTEIDS ARE THE ABSOLUTE NEED. Here Is an Ideal Diet for Healthy Man Described By a Doctor. It is probable, however, that neither this nor any other system of diet based on scientific principles would keep a man for long in good health. The organism demands vaâ€" riety, and if it does not get it, reâ€" sents the fact by Refusing to Do its Work. It is a wellâ€"known fact that with most people any form of food inâ€" dulged in day after day ceases to be digested, as witness the wagers still laid in America as to the number of pigeons that a man can consume in the course of a week. For the same reason, the prospect of a future in which tabloids, or very small quanâ€" tities of some jelly, will form all our food is an illusion, and not all the talent of writers like Mr. Wells can make us believe in its realizaâ€" tion. Man‘s excessively complicatâ€" ed digestive organs evolyved from his beastâ€"like forefathers would cerâ€" tainly rebel with fatal effécts against any such ethereal fare. | _ _ The upshot of the whole matter is that man deminds a varied as well as a sustaining diet, and that: no one form of food should be adhered to for long. Hence even the oécaâ€" sional excesses of seasons like ithe presert probably have their ukes, and if sufficiently infrequent y even beâ€" bencficial _ rather tf:n otherwise to the healthy body. | . It should not be lost sight of, ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO I8S8SUE 26â€"14. Relieves Fullness After Meals. "When L.was working around the farm last winter, I had an attack of inâ€" flammation," writes Mr. E. P. Dawkins, of Port Richmond. "I was weak for a long time, but well enough to work until spring. But ~something went wrong with my bowels for I had to use salts or physic all the time. My stomach kept sour, and always after eating there was pain and fulness, and all the symptoms of intestinal indiâ€" gestion. Nothing helped me until I used Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills Instead of ‘hurting, like other pills, they acted very mildly, and seemed to heal the bowels. I did not require large doses to get results with Dr. Hamilton‘s Pilis, and feel so glad that I have found a mild yet certain remedy. Toâ€"day I am wellâ€"no pain, no sour stomach, a good appetite, able to digest anything. This is a whole lot of good for one medicine to do, and I can say Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills are the best pills, and my letter, I am sure, proves it. _ _ _ however; thatâ€"1 per cent. of one‘s total weight in solid food is quite sufficient, not only to. support life, but to provide one with all the energy one needs for one day, and that we should probably all be betâ€" ter for keeping as near to this limit as.â€"we can. Ont in a@ll the churches of the British Empire and the United States. This date is the nearest Sunday to February 17, 1915, the centenary of the ratification of the Treaty of (Ghent. s ada. Tableaux and masques are in course of preparation which will also be sent to the schools for proâ€" duction upon a date to be hereafter arranged. A somewhat unique proâ€" posal is that schools in Canada and the United States in places bearing Refuse a substitute for DB; Hamilâ€" ton‘s Pills of Mandrake and Butternut, sold in yellow boxes, 25¢. All dealers, or The Catarrhozone Co., Kingston, Four Main Features Proposed by the Association. The movement for celebrating the Hundred Years of Peace beâ€" tween the British Empire and the United States is, judging by a cirâ€" cular just issued by the Canadian Centenary Association taking rapid hold in Canada, Great Britain and the United States. The general proposals contain four main feaâ€" tures, (1) Monuments and other memorials, (2) Thanksgiving Serâ€" vices in the churches, (3) Educationâ€" al Propaganda, (4) Festivities. The circular enumerates various sugâ€" gestions regarding the erection of monuments,, and states that the matter has been referred to an Inâ€" ternational Committee. February 14, 1915 has been selected for Thanksgiving Bervices The education propaganda) inâ€" cludes several important features among which may be mentioned the preparation of a series of pamâ€" phlets dealing with the various treaties which have made the long peace possible, which it is intended to send to all the schools in Canâ€" Will Quickly Cure â€"â€"â€"â€" Any Sour Stomach prizes the same name should be invited to exchange Shields. It is intended to arrange for the writing of comâ€" petitive Essays on Angloâ€"American prelations iand provision is being made for Provincial and Dominion About 100 centres have been chosen for special celebrations in Canada and strong. local Comâ€" mittees have been arranged for in majority of these. c Eo N NC Sae oo The circular also reports the progress made in Great Britain and the United States and contains replies received last Christmas from World Rulers to a message sent in connection with the celebration by the American Committee. The Dominion Government has arranged for an appropriation to meet the preliminary organization -'i"l;;".]-vi;b of members is a most representative one and contains the names of all the Lt. Governors all expenses the Ministers of Education and nearly all the Premiers of Canada. Among those prominent in this Province who have identified themâ€" selves with this movement may be mentioned :â€"The President of the Canadian Peace Centenary Assoâ€" ciation is Sir Edmund Walker® of Toronto, and the Honorary Secreâ€" tary Major Hamilton. or K A poraâ€"dige e _ PThose desiring copics of the Cirâ€" cular should address Mr. E. H. Seammell, Organizing Secretary, Hope Chambers, Ottawa Thinks Swearing All Right Providing the Brovocatlon equals the offence of Jones:" stepping on Smith‘s corns. Far better to use Putnam‘s Corn Extractorâ€"it does cure corns and warts in one day without pain. Try "Putnam‘s," free from acids, and painâ€" less, price 25¢. at !l dealers. Marriage is a success when the woman providneï¬ adequately for the inner man, and the man provides adequately for the outer woman. Minard‘s x.m-d;:xmhmmu'- ‘Priend Pat‘s Will. ; An elderly gentleman, who knew something of law, lived in an Irish village where no solicitor had ever penetrated, and was in the habit of arranging the disputes of his neighâ€" bors and making their wills. At an early bour one morning he was aroused from. his slumbers by a knocking at his gate, and, zutï¬ng his head out of.the window, he askâ€" who was there.. ‘‘It‘s me, yer honâ€" or, Paddy Flaherty. I could not get a wink of sleep thinking of the will I have made.‘‘ ‘"‘What‘s the matter with the will?" said. the amateur lawyer. ‘‘Matter, indeed !"‘ replied Pat: . ‘"Bure, I‘ve not left myself a threeâ€"legged stool to sit Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house PEACE CENTENARY. 3 Practically â€" Abolished â€" in Every Civilized Nation on Earth. There are some relics of slavery yet in certain colonies, says the Christian Herald, which the home governments are striving earnestly to sweep away : It is reported that the French Colonial Office has at last succeeded in abolishing _ the slave markets of Morocco. A Paris paper charges that 3,000 slaves are imported into Morocco every year. Recently Premier Asquith, of England, received a memorial signâ€" ed by such . names as Lord Cromer, Lord Curzon and Mr. Bryce, asking for some government action to supâ€" press this traffic, which is conduct ed over boundaries controlled by England. Nowhere has our mod ern civilization or our modern Christianity more powerfully maniâ€" fested itself than in the destruction of physical slavery and the guaranâ€" tee of intellectual, political, moral and religious liberty. God abolishâ€" ed the slavery of Egypt many cenâ€" turies ago, when he took his people from the bondage of Pharaoh. Goodâ€"Bye, Old Backache Nerviline Will Fix You! Every trace of lameness, every bit of stiffness, every sign of weakness in the back‘s muscles can be rubbed away for all time to come by good old "Nerâ€" viline." Stiffness is Rubbed Right Out; Every Sign of Pain Disappears. Gee whizâ€"think of it! No more stomach dosing necessary to cure your lame back. e No other liniment can do the work so quickly, can penetrate so deeply, can bring ease and comfort to the backâ€"weary sufferer as Nerviline inâ€" variably does. T Backache isn‘t the oniy malady Nerviline is quick to cure. For lumâ€" bago or sciatica you would go far to find relief so speedly as Nerviline gives. For chronic rheumatism there are painâ€"destroying properties in Nerâ€" viline that give it first rank. The way it limbers up a stiff joint and takes soreness out of strained or rheumatic muscles is simply a wonder. If you have an ache or a pain anyâ€" where, if you have a sore back, a stiff neck, a stiff joint, a strained muscleâ€" if you have lumbago, congested chest or sore throat, just try Nerviline. Rub it on plentifullyâ€"it won‘t blisâ€" ter, it can‘t do anything but cure you quickly. The large 50c family size bottle is the most economical, of course, but you can, from any dealer, also get the 25¢. small size of Nerviâ€" line, the king of all painâ€"relieving reâ€" medies. o onke . three months she did not go to school and I cared for it during that time without result. "I was told to wash it and to make an ointment of â€"â€"â€", but after washing it she was worse, ‘One evening when reading the paper I saw the advertisement of Cutiâ€" cura Soap and Ointment and I wrote at once. After receiving the sample I imâ€" mediately washed her head with the Cutiâ€" cura Soap, then I put the Cuticura Ointâ€" ment on. I did that twice a day, evening and morning. From the time I commenced using the Cuticura Soap and Ointment that night she did not scratch any more. 1t stopped the itching from the first evening. After buying some Cuticura Soap and anâ€" other box of Cuticura Ointment, in ten days she was completely cured." : (Signed) Mrs. Arthur Polrier, July 5, 1913. f Outicura Soap and Cuticura Ointment are sold by druggists and dealers everywhore. A single set is often sufficient. For a liberal free sample of each, with 32â€"p. book, send postâ€"card to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Dept. D, Boston, U. 8. A. Mrs. Black woke her husband one night and whispered, ‘‘There‘s a burglar downstairs. I heard him bump against the piano and strike several keys.‘" ‘"Is there!?" said the husband, "T‘ll go down at once." ‘"Oh,"‘ whispered the exâ€" cited wife, ‘"don‘t do anything rash!" ‘"Rash?‘‘ replied the husâ€" band. ‘"Why, I‘m going to help him! You don‘t suppose he can move that piano from the house without help, do you ?" 69 Rue Derazilly, Ville Emard, Montreal,; Que.â€"‘*"Cuticura Soap and Ointment cured my little girl, aged eleven, of 1tch of the head. ks It formed a pimple and that oR pimple broke and the matter CÂ¥ § spread and wherover the matâ€" € ter went another formed. She s had large scabs on her head tA F) and at night she scratched Czâ€"4 until the blood came. I was II*Tiv\\}\ obliged to cut her hair all Miss Wyseâ€"And I may really keep this photograph of you, Mr. Simpkins! Simpkins (fiattered)â€" Delighted, I‘m sure! Miss Wyse (later to her maid)â€"Marie, take this photograph and whenever the original of it calls, tell him I‘m not In. m it P vao ns tatiads. Aran Andh npedieps ait oR pimple broke and the matter CÂ¥ $ spread and wherover the matâ€" € ter went another formed. She s had large scabs on her head A [) and at night she scratched Czâ€"4 until the blood came. I was |li -\\'.‘\‘ obliged to cut her hair all + \f' *‘ around the eruption. For Wls manihe sha Ai4 unkt on Bheâ€"‘"Don‘t you think this dress is very. becoming to me!?" Heâ€" ‘"I‘m thinking of the bill which will be coming to me.‘‘ ERUPTION ON HEAD HAD TO CUT HAIB Formed Pimples and Matter Spread. For Three Months Did Not Go to School. Cuticura Soap and Ointâ€" ment Cured in Ten Days. Dr. Morse‘s s o i 2 e sn e oos o l ME Indian Root Pillse %1."?2?;.1 zeplied Tommy, " We the which so often |"** ® Jon in our school. m{.’:,e:fy ndf“. n.:dm “W!ut s that ! To open up and ngulare fox bovale: â€"|..‘Oh, we gep Rep in and Hood up Ask for Minard‘s and take no other. Fidt oalg are they éffective in all eases of ( m but they help greatly in breaking up a Cold or La SUPPRESSING SLAYVERY. She Heard Him. tw _A kerosene torch has been inventâ€" ed for thawing frozen ground into which post holes are to be dug. _ In Tasmania dentists are forbidâ€" den by law from any form of adverâ€" tising. The governments of Italy, Belâ€" gium and Uruguay have officially adopted 24â€"hour time. | rel: MAE C olsc pes «h uNP I Motorâ€"driven â€" windlasses have been invented for raising poles of cireus tents quickly. * _ The inside bark of a tree, with no other preparation than cleaning, is used for blankets in Ecuador. _ An aged couple in Norwich, Ct., have eaten no break{fasts for twenty years and credit their robust health to that fact. Italy is drafting and will inforce a series of regulations covering the width of wheel rims to be allowed on highways. . Â¥ $ _There is a telephone for every 15.2 persons in Canada, according to official figures. â€" s ~ A railroad bridge in Bwitzerland is being given the largest masonry arch in the world, 205 feet high, with a span of 330 feet. © In a London church tower there is a clock which strikes the hours and quarters, but has no dials nor other visible evidences of the time. of pnp;r for cigarettes last year. Salt water will | cleanse willowâ€" ware and prevent it turning yellow. Several â€" French artists have agreed to sign all their works in the future with thumb prints to preâ€" vent frauds upon purchasers. In a tank car built in SBaxony to transport living fish long distances an electric motor is used â€" to keep the water aerated. Anger, fear and other forms of mental excitement, it has been learned, may stop digestion entireâ€" ly and cause serious kidney disâ€" eases. For stringing beads quickly an ingenious German has patented a crankâ€"operated machine which feeds them upon the point of a threaded needle. _ Sixteen new railways are being built in Switzerland, some of which will be completed this year. Argentine telegraph companies are bringing into general use a sysâ€" tem whereby messages are receivâ€" ed automatically with printed type. English society women have esâ€" tablished an institution in â€" which nurses are given three years of training in the care of dogs and other animal pets. Two novelties to aid gardeners are a hoe with a seed box near the blade with which planting may be done and a ehover with a second grip part way down the handle. In France there has been invented an electric furnace in which all the operations of making and refining glass are carried on continuously with the same source of heat. A sanitary milk can is fitted with valves permitting its contents to be poured out, but preventing the enâ€" trance of anv liquid after it has been sealed. What are believed to be the oldâ€" est printing blocks in the world, dating back at least 800 years, reâ€" cently were discovered in an old building back of a Buddhist monasâ€" tery in Corea. To prove that a parachute of his invention was an improvement over former types a Frenchman dropped 1,000 feet from an ameroplane with one and landed safely. 3 The Australian states concerned and the commonwealth have agreed on a locking and storage system for the Murray river that will open a navigable waterway 1,000 miles into the heart of »roducing Australia. A schoolboy was given a sum to do. When it was done he took it to the teacher, who looked at it and said: ‘"‘This answer is wrong by two cents. Go back to your seat and :io it correctly." Motorcycle cars are being tried for delivering mails in rural disâ€" tricts in England and it is predictâ€" ed that the horse soon will disapâ€" pear from the postal service of the United Kingdom. "If you please, sir,‘" said the youngster, fishing in his pocket. ‘"I‘d rather pay the difference." ‘‘What is the best «ress improvâ€" er?‘ ‘"A pretty girl.‘"" "Why is an author more free than a monarch ?" ‘‘Because he can choose his own subjects.‘‘ ‘‘Why is the author the queerest animal in world?‘ ‘"Beâ€" cause his tale comes out of his I was cured of Bronchitis and Asthma by MINARD‘S LINIMENT. MRS. A. LIVINGSTONE. Lot 5, P.EI 1 was cured of a severe Attack %r Rheumatism by MINARD‘S LINIMEN * Mahone Bay. JOHN MADER, I was cured of a uverel* sprained leg by MINARD‘S LINIMENT. ern s _ _JOSHUA A, WYNACHT. ‘‘Bless me !"‘ said Tommy‘s grebt uncle. ‘‘Do you mean to eay that your teachers never thrash you?" ‘‘Never,"‘ replied Tommy. We have moral suasion in our school. in corners, and locked out and locked in,. and made to write one word a thousand times, and scow!â€" ed at and jawed at, and that‘s all.‘‘ Spain Bridgewater NOTES OF SCIENGE in exported 4,000,000 pounds Not Worth the Bother. *"*Moral Suasion." Lucky Grace. und her ideal.‘"‘ blisters. â€" iA skin food ! C ic McA Y 1 All Druggists and Stores.â€"505. . W. DAWSON, Minety Colborne Street, K. W. DAWSON, Colborne St., cR 2 AGBLSL ~emsecromg +4 w AP LJ York County. Stationery and Book Business An connection. _ Price only $4,000. Terms liberal. Wilson Publishâ€" ing Company, 73 West Adelaide Street, CANCER. TUMORS, LUNMPS, ETC, internal and external, cured withâ€" out pain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr. Beliman Medical Co.. Limited. Collingwood, Ont. Ir YoOU WANT TO BUY OR SELL A Fruit, Stock, Grain or Dairy Farm, write H. W. Dawson, Brampton, or L Colborne St., Toronto Toronto. WANTED FOR BEST ALBERTA Oil proposition yet_ organized. AREC P TT EOCTT TT PEIUICD W Oil proposition | yet_ organized. Apply for 8.rtlculu'l to W. B. Leitch, Bank of ttawa _ Bullding, Montreal, Via Chicago and North Western Ry Erechl low rate roundâ€"trip tickets from 1 points in Canada to Los Angeles San Francisco, Portiand, Seattle, Van couver, Victoria, Edmonton, Calgar Banff, _ Yellowstone Park, etc., during June, July, August and September. Ex cellent train service. For rates, illu= trated folders, time tables and full parâ€" ticulars, address, B. H. Bennett, Generl Agent, 46 Yonge Street, Toronto, Onâ€" Mr. Kellyâ€"An‘ how are mornin‘, Mistress Flyn! rheumatiz any better? Mrs. Flynâ€"Well, yis, I think it is, I thank ye koindly. The new doctor‘s treatment is doin‘ me a worl‘ ay good, I belave. He adâ€" vocates me to take Queen Anoe eternally, and to rub anarchy on me j‘ints. â€"Bo I‘m doin‘ it, an‘ I think it‘s helpin‘ me wonderfully. The human hand from the wrisi to the end of the middle fiagor is oneâ€"tenth of the total height of a man of perfect proportions. ‘OoURr OWN E Â¥ry Murine lyw m:.l&"fv?x?ï¬ Eyes and Granulated Eyelids; No smarting l;ut Eve Comfori, Write for Book of the %\ > y mail Free. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chivayzo Minard‘s Linitment used by Physicianas What do we live for if not to make life less difficult for each Mrs. Bauslyâ€"‘"Are you aware, Mrs. Shinbone, that your dog has just bitten my little Willle ©"" Mrs Bhinboneâ€"*"What, your little Wi lie, who has just got over th»e sca: let fever?t Oh, Mrs. Sausly, if a~y thing: should happena to Fido _ 1‘d never forgive you." A TREATISE Horseâ€" :z FRFEE! ‘*“3"“:‘.":’" JULY and AUGUST 22 G. Y. CHOWN, Registrar, Kingston, Ont. ) o sw QUEEN‘S KINGSTON, ONTARIO ARTS APPLIED SCIENCE EDVCATION includina MEDICINE CNGIN(IR‘NG 0O0D WEEKLY IN LIVE TOWN IN free book at Invaluable. cures C Splint, g'!!}!!wgfl.fl'me:ï¬â€˜l at smallexpense. Read what Loo Cadizan, 0f Eanisâ€" mz:.ayu "I usod y:r'hfl- (‘vnn.o;-l weeks time." Kendalt‘s Spavin Cure is «old at the unfform price of #1 a botte, 6 for §5. . If you cannot get it or our We offer you free w' m this book Jmt tells you all about horse diseases and how to cure them, Call for it at your local druggist or write us, Dr. E. J. KENDALL COMPANY Enosburg Falis, Vermont 81 } Highest grade beans kept whole retaining their full strength. Fiavored with delicious sauces. SUMMER SCHOOL NEWEPAPERS FOR SALE. KENDALL‘S SPAVIN CURE ATENTS OF INYENTION®S PIGEON, PIGEON & DAVIG They have no equal. _ : PACIFIC COAST. UNIVERSITY Panaceas. ;l"ehe kAr!l b;oumc may taken by corresponâ€" dence, but students desiring to graduate must atterd one HOME STUDY ye this in ver ie PE Eit s C0CC Mp#8 quivered, b the look of t ve her*face mg hers, seek which might » and suspense wi then he said i T BRRCA Jill £a.0 i Ti ;(h.'*v. he Et.hdned wit awwhich raged ®WII you not E"‘i Mitle i hmd shrunk as ! 1 know iz( 1 ought while you o you‘d natur away. _ But aneâ€"learn t MHe took h Angly near ! ww y d ‘“fle cat thinkâ€"to 1 a momeni, tant hills heights =h« whould exp wondertul her. At o is still in his a spoken t Me laugt for her n in her is! taining to 1 supp to laug? Jt is tri knit ~ *It se musing| first tin ful y the s not h are ® â€" Sh tooul thers ure 1 Jearr clust head check turni know it rgt mi you you you tea and and } I_l ps hilis fter 1 Ah, but made to mot be t "Once should He this man he sai give | hea Her 1i; u_ to 1 to } gon‘t 1 your 1 48 1i} "And sure CHAPTER X!\ No; d t0 k to b told H. up, hat ta in abe tha t then tras algds i t% touch walt. You and, let s won‘t _cor m‘t forget heart and #a IY â€"_Bhe Jo the face moyed fainuiy t feel that "Don‘t!" h "Wait! Lei me w“ know r , how can 1 Bhe drew her «deep breath you let me MHis own raise Inclined to «ta and | eventually the chestnut to where ida s her face pale his arm he put sisting even is the almost in her in this ari She murmured whe slowiy put 0 drew the other looked at him 4 to his lips and ti coat, over his h her face, but 1 ::.m former lo held out h« and the took 1t a then raised it t not kiss 1t. She in est, as «rateful his with softly i« softlv to the m DPonald and I%’u ter her. as if th ceedines extrams 24â€"E horse, and n ter her. his eves clight. graceful . of sight; then hy he were sudderf mysterious . 1 og1 the will FoO 1b clined he she unde : then le Or, wud tihi