Wifeâ€"â€"Do you like this pudding, dear! Mrs. McBryde gave me the recipe for it. Hubâ€"No ; but I guess you can get s quare with her by giving her your recipe for mince pies. Mizard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows. Scratching Made it Pain so Badly Lost Many Nights‘ Sleep. Could Not Do Work at All. Cuticura Scoap and Ointment Cured. HAND FULL OF WHITE BLISTERS Box 695, Valleyfeld, Que.â€"*"My hand would get #ull of little white blisters and when I would scratch it would pain me so badiy I lost many nights‘ sleep. My hand was one MWPA mass of sores. 1 more than Sn .. am suffered and talk about itchâ€" There is a sweetness of the child, and a sweetness of the old. The sweetness of the child is largely inâ€" dependent of his personality. It is in his ways and in his looks, and the same thing is true, though not quite so much, of the young woâ€" man. . But when sweetness comes at sixty it is the impression of the very nature of the soul. J. M. Barrie, somewhere, we believe, has said that no woman is really beautiful until she is fiftyâ€"three. The beauty that is worth most is the beauty that is connected with the characâ€" ter itself. "‘The teacher said she was glad to see me there.‘"‘ .‘Yes 3# "And she said she hoped I would come every Sunday.‘" "Anmd was that all she said * ~gm band it would burn. 1 4 had it about six years. I \IA _I‘o' could not do any work at bp__/s) all. If you had seen my tw w " hand you would bave said thero wasmne cure. 1 used to cry and get so discouraged. 1 was never troubled with it in the summer but as soon as the cold woather started my hand got sore. "I tried all that was given mo and was treated for three months and every night 1 washed my hand in â€"â€"â€". It had spread all over my hand. I started to use the Cutiâ€" cura Soap and Ointment and I got relief. One cake of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Cuticura Ointment completety cured me.‘"* (Signed) Mrs. Sarah Mercier, June 11, 1913. Provent dry, thin and falling hair, allay itching and irritation, and promote the growth and beauty of the hair, frequent shampoos with Cuticura Soap, assisted by occasional dressings with Cutleura Ointâ€" ment, afford a most effective and economical treatment. _ Sold throughout the world. Fora.Hiberal free sample of each, with 32â€"p. Nourish your nervesâ€"that is the only way you can overcome life‘s worst misery, nervous exhaustion. The fits of depression and irritation, the prostrating headaches, the weakâ€" ness and trembling of the legs, the ansteady hand and the imperfect digestion that mark the victim of nerve weakness, must end in nerâ€" rous breakdown if neglected. Nourish your nerves by the naâ€" mral process of filling your veins with rich, red, healthâ€"giving blood. Your nerves are crying out for pure slood and the mission of Dr. Wilâ€" iams‘ Pink Pills is to make new rich blood. This explains why these pills have proved successful in so many cases of nervous disease that did not yield to ordinary treatment. For example, Mr. W. H. Weldon, Annapolis, N.S., says: bordiist®r chaintat Brictcracant Brly it ThatPicciae Wisier knb "In the strenuous life I have to lollow the drain on my system was w great that my nerves became shattered, the blood impoverished ind my whole system undermined. [ tried a number of soâ€"called remeâ€" lies without deriving any benefit. Finally having read so much about Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills I decided to try them. The result was beâ€" yond my expectation. I regained my energy ; the blood and nerves were rebuilt; I lost the sense of constant tiredness I had felt and was filled with new life and energy. L have since used the pills with sencficial results in my family and will always have a word of praise lor them.‘"‘ "What did they say to you?"" askâ€" ed little Harry‘s mother after his first visit to the new Sunday school. You can get Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills from any medicine dealer or 3y mail post paid at 50 cents a box »r six boxes for $2.50 by writing The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. A NERVOUS BREAKDOWN N t we object to our eves. iost n Be Averted By Feeding the Starved Nerves With Rich, Red Blood TO REMOVE DANDRUFF Courp.. Hept. D, Boston, U. 8. &« Beauty of Character. ill was that all she said * : She asked me if our family to that abomination.‘‘ A Sure Revenge. us are A Full Report. WILFRED GAGNE. ind Central Hotel, Drumâ€" Aug 3. ‘04. ured a . valuable hunting e with MINARD‘S LINTâ€" several veterinaries had without doing him . any od. After iment (o ur out for the dust, having it thrown Dust. Limited _ ‘‘Doesn‘t_matter, just so they don‘t butten in the back." As it was a fancy dress dance the revellers at first thought he was a late guest, but they soon discovered their mistake and ran for the doors, while the orchestra stopped playâ€" ing.. Without taking the slightest notice of the excitement bruin exeâ€" cuted a pas seul, with ragtime movements, and seemed genuinely annoyed when his keeper arrived and led him back to captivity. ‘"‘This way, â€" sir. What kind do you wish, sir?" 3 Tommyâ€"And you‘re the crabbed est, ugliestâ€" s Fatherâ€"Boys, boys! You forget that your mother is in the room. . ‘I want a.pars of ~button shoes for my wife." a Dancers Think He Is Guest, But Soon Learn Mistake. Having escaped from his cage at Neuilly (France) fair, a bear took a stroll around the neighborhood. He was attracted to a private house by strains of music and made a sudden appearance in a crowded ballâ€"room. Johnnyâ€"You‘re the â€" meanest, hatefulest, spitefulest thing I know. Fulton Brylawski, a young Washâ€" ington â€"lawyer, used sulphurous language when he was nearly hit by a golf club driven by Woodrow Wilson at the Suburban Club links. When the lowyer found out whom he had offended he sent a note of apology, which the President acâ€" cepted. It was said at the club that no warning shout of "fore" was given by Mr. Wilson. f At Pittsburg police raided a cockfight and seized _ seventeen game birds, which were ready to do battle. _ They were offered $1,000 for the birds, but refused, and turned them over to three hosâ€" pitals, which made them into stew and soup. Valuing the fowl at ta;(l),ooo the soup worked out at 87 a wl. A tube containing $2,000 worth of radium was lost in Philadelphia the other day, and substantial reâ€" ward offered for its recovery. A young man entered police headâ€" quarters, laid the tube containing the radium on an official‘s desk, and and disappeared without waitâ€" ing for the reward. Eminent physicians at the second day‘s session of the American Mediâ€" eal Association advocated standing on the head to relieve rheumatism, gout, insanity, nervousness and dyspepsia. One doctor said: "If poor, go to a doctor ; poverty is due to illness." While standing near a gas tank in the Peekskill Hat Works, Edâ€" ward Wilson, a captain in the Peekskill Fire Department, struck a match to light a cigar. In the explosion which ensued the captain was mutilated beyond recognition. For twenty years Patrick Farley had conducted a cafe on the Bowâ€" ery. He entrusted the business to his three bartenders, and, when he died recently, left the whole of his $109,000 estate to them. Irving Ramsay, a Brooklyn chautâ€" feur, is suing for $50,000 for the loss of a spoonful of brains in an explosion while repairing a gaspline tank owned by Emanuel J. Weil, at Cedarhurst, L.I. Julia Lowenstein an East 77th Street, New York, music teacher, finished* a lesson to a pupil, and then went and jumped off the roof, committing suicide. Mrs. Catherine M. Nolan, who died in New York, left a piano, which will go to a niece when the latter gets married, but not before. She is not even keeping company at present. BEAR ATTEXNDS FANCY BALL. Peter Barker and William Dunâ€" kerloot, N.J., were going on a vacaâ€" tion on motorcycles,. They were held up for speeding, fined $50, and had to abandon their vacation. Bands will play in fifteen parks in New York this summer, and arâ€" rangements have been made to have big singing societies coâ€"operate with the bands and orchestras. A sevenâ€"yearâ€"old Los Angeles girl called on President Wilson, and asked him to kiss her, saying she "wanted to carry his kiss back to California.‘‘ The President comâ€" plied cheerfully. NEWS ACROSS THE BORDER At Harrisburg, Pa., Pascal Hall, a negro, condemned to the gallows, refused to sing a hymn on the mornâ€" ing of his execution, but sang "Casey Jones." Former Police Licutenant Charles Becker has been removed to the cell in Sing Sing lately occupied by Reâ€" bacei, the Italian murderer, recentâ€" ly executed. Charles E. Whalen, one of the keepers at the penitentiary, Blackâ€" well‘s Island, was arrested, chargâ€" ed with selling drugs to prisoners. Nine New York firemen, who disâ€" tinguished themselves by heroic serâ€" vices during the past year, were presented with medals by the Mayâ€" WHAT IS GOING ON OVER IN THE STATES. Latest Happenings in Big Republic Condensed for Busy Readers. John D. Rockefeller and his son have given $10,000 to the New York police fund. Mrs. Morris K. Jesup, who died in New York recently, left over $8,â€" 000,000 of a $20,000,000 estate to charities. At Holly Springs, Mass., L. P. Matthews, under sentence of ten years in the penitentiary, went on a hunger strike and died in his cell. Had Experienee. Forgot Mother. The cost per cup of both kinds is about the same. ‘‘There‘s a Reason‘"‘ for Postum. _ Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. Read ‘‘The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. Postum now comes in two forms : Regular Postumâ€"must be well boiled. 15¢ and 25¢ packages. Instant Postumâ€"is a soluble powâ€" der. Made in the cup with hot waâ€" terâ€"no boiling. 30¢ and 50c tins. ‘‘That was at least ten years ago, and Postum has, from that day to this, been a standing order of father‘s grocery bill. ‘‘When I married, my husband was a great coffee drinker, altho he admitted that it hurt him. When I mentioned Postum he said he did not like the taste of it. I told him I could make it taste al} right. He smiled and said, try it. The result was a success, he won‘t have anyâ€" thing but Postum." ‘‘One day father brought home a pkg. of Posturm recommended by our grocer. Mother made it accordâ€" ing to directions on the box, and it just "hit the spot."" It has a dark, sealâ€"brown color, changing to golâ€" den brown when cream is added, and a snappy taste similar to mild, highâ€"grade coffee, and we found that its continued use speedily put an end to all our coffee ills. ‘‘Mother had coffeeâ€"headache and dizziness, and if I drank coffee for breakfast I would taste it all day and usually go to bed with a headâ€" ache." (Tea is just as injurious as coffee, because both contain the drug, caffeine.) ‘"Ever since I can remember," writes one woman, ‘"‘my father has been a lover of his coffee, but the continued use of it so affected his stomach that he could scarcely eat at times. Knocked Out Tea and Coffece Ails. There‘s a good deal of satisfacâ€" tion and comfort in hitting upon the right thing to rid one of the varied and constant _ ailments caused by tea and coffee drinking. ‘‘Every day?" ‘"Yes, father.‘" ‘And how "long did you practice toâ€" day ?"‘ ‘"‘Three hours toâ€"dayy faâ€" ther, and twoâ€"andâ€"aâ€"half "hours yesterday." ‘"But, â€" ~Johnâ€"â€"‘" ‘‘Yes, father.‘"‘ ‘"Next time you practice be sure and unlock the piano. T‘ll give you the key. It‘s been in my pocket the last fortâ€" night. Now, mother, will you bring me the strap?" "John‘! Do you vractice reguâ€" larly on the piano when I am away at the offise!?" ‘"Yes, father." Little Johnny had been naughty all day. At last, to cap the climax, he slapped his small sister. When father came ‘home from the office the mother told him of his son‘s misdeeds. ‘"The next time you tease your sister you go to bed withâ€" out your dinner,‘‘ the father said sternly. The kiddie sat in silence for a few moments. Then, all of a sudden, he turned to his father. ‘"‘The next time I want to hit sister I‘ll wait until after dinner,"‘ he remarked. "A deaf mute,"‘ says Mr. Robinâ€" son, "will be conscious of all the noise in "the room which he occuâ€" pies. He will feel the door slam, the fall of a ball, an apple, an orange, a key, or any other weight ; the footsteps of persons in the room, if it is not carpeted, or if they do not have on rubber shoes or alippers ; also the noise which he makes with his own knife and fork when eating. A New Yorker has an alarm clock attached to the foot of a brass bed. Hoe feels the vibrations when the alarm goes off just as plainly as if he could hear them. ‘"A deaf person never feels the sound of a bell, as its vibrations are confined solely to the atmosphere. I think there is no way by which the sound of such an instrument can be imported to our feelings.‘" Some of the devices employed by deaf persons to warn them of the ringing of the door bell are most ingenious.* One household has a rubber ball suspended from the ceiling of the living room, and the ringing of the bell causes this to swing back and forth. One man has a flag that drops when the bell rings. Another has the bell attachâ€" ed to an electric lamp so that it lights up when the bellâ€"push is pressed. Not only do the deaf hear sounds, but they sre often greatly annoyed by them. They feel soungs through the concussion on the diaphragms of their ears and the vibrations reach the brain, according to Mr. Robinson, through the nerves of feeling rather than by way of the auditory nerves.. A deaf man feels the motion of a passing truck, through the vibrations it causes on the pavement. He does not feel the passing of a rubberâ€"tired vehicle on an asphalt paved street, because this causes no vibrations. He feels the footsteps of a horse if nearby and not on the soft earth. He does not hear a stamp upon stone paveâ€" ment unless it is quite close to him. But Not the Way Others _ Doâ€"Fcel Vibrations. That the deaf can really hear and do hear, but in a different way from ordinary people, is a fact that few persons who are not deaf underâ€" stand. Stanley Robinson, who beâ€" came deaf at the age of ten, tells in the Scientific American just how they do it. Manufacturers are constantly writing us for new Sou. $45,000 paid for one fnvention just w'mud and sold by uuxo.ooo offered for another. Send for complete list. us turn your money. One good invention and your fortuné is made. g:u dev d; Inventions perfected. Send sketch and description of your i for Free Patent Office Search. KAROLD 0. SHIPMAN & CO.,. Dept. W. Patents Sold Or No Uhargo PRA mhcaiccs. wrast Blog. Ottews, Ont. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO DEAF PEOPLE CAN HEAK. WANTED NEW INVENTIONS HIT THE SPOT After John. He‘ll Wait. â€"sold by Grocers. ture the emotions of any audience, and melt the most obdurate antaâ€" gonism into momentary admiration. Borden does not try to melt or move. If heâ€"did he would be unâ€" successful. He addresses his arguâ€" ment solely and wholly to the reaâ€" son. He is a great advocate, but he never relies on rhetoric, or senâ€" timent, or emotion. He is practiâ€" cal, argumentative, logical, ausâ€" tere, and stern. ~Intensifiecd Characteristics. Everything in the new knight‘s career has intensified his natural shaped a.nd c 1&&’;“1.“:†ie & 4 and mou the acadeâ€" mic tradition of the staid seats of to say. He is not an orator in any sense of the word. In this he is the antithesis of Sir Wilfrid Laurier. The Liberal leader is far his superâ€" ior in all the arts that dazzle and fascinate the popular imagination. Sir Wilfrid on the platform can be irresistibly moving. He can capâ€" Another Borden quality is taciâ€" turnity. The Conservative chieftain knows how to keep his own counsel. He is the embodiment of reserve and reticence. He never thinks aloud. This gift of silence is often the cause of irritation to his more emotional followers. Yet Mr. Borâ€" den owes a great deal of his success to his power of holding his tongue and saying nothing he is not forced is never a permanent majority of extremists. They may supply the driving power for the political maâ€" chine, but it is the moderate man who controls it. Appeals to Modecrate Men. It is these homespun virtues that have helped Mr. Borden to hew his way to the highest office in the gift of the Canadian people. It is a notable fact that he has built up his prestige by appealing to the central mass of moderate men. And whatâ€" ever may be said by heated pertiâ€" zans, it is certain that in Canada, as in other Englishâ€"speaking counâ€" tries, the moderate men are, after all, generally in the majority. There rash experiments. He profits by the impetuous haste of less prudent naâ€" tures. He would rather rise upon the mistakes of others than upon the speculative daring of his own choice. He is never in a hurry, for he knows that most problems solve themselves if they are left alone. And whenever he is forced to act, he prefers to err on the side of cauâ€" tion, rather than on the side of temerity. He realizes that moderaâ€" tion in politics is a virtue, and that inaction is a pardonable sin. es 1. Abte Lo ceb The Dominion Premier Is a Hardâ€" ‘ Headed Man. Bir Robert Laird Borden, K.C.M. G., is a Nova Scotian of United Empire Loyalist stock, and that fact is the key to his character. The Nova Scotian United Empire Loyalâ€" ist is very hardâ€"headed and very longâ€"headed, and there is not a harder or longer head in politics than the present Prime Minister of Canada. He has a cool judgment and a faculty for foresight which make him a formidable rival and a dangerous opponent. He has no imagination and no emotion. ~His intellectual power is solidly masâ€" sive. He is a genuine Nova Scotian and Britisher in his adherence to the prose facts of politics. Bir Robert is not a pliable being. He does not try to please for the sake of pleasing. He has the abilâ€" ity to go his own way without conâ€" sidering the feelings of others. Nova Scotians, more or less, seem to possess this quality of selfâ€"isolaâ€" tion. They do not deliberately tread upon corns, but they are not easily wheedled or managed. They have a preference for going straight ahead and cutting through obstaâ€" cles, rather than circumventing them. If they are confronted with insuperable difficulties, they bide their time without falling into a panic or a passion. They are an imâ€" perturbable people. They know how to wait. Sir Robert‘s career since his entrance into the political arena is an illustration of this Nova Bcotian Loyalist patience. He knows how to wait. He knows how ito conâ€" trol the petulance of deferred ambiâ€" tion. He has learned to avoid those errors which disqualify a statesman. He is no flexible opporâ€" tunist, but on the other hand he is a master of nonâ€"committal itactics. He has always been too cautious to immolate his reputation upon a forâ€" lorn hope or an extreme enthusiâ€" asm. His mind instinctively drives him along a middle course. He preâ€" fers to allow other men to make SIR ROBERT LAIRD BORDEXN. Bir Robert Borden, G.C.M.G paid for ona r. Send for Pigeon, Pigeon & Davis, patent solicitors, Montreal, report that 171 Canadian patents were issued for the week ending June 16th, 107 of which were granted to Americans, 35 to Canadians, 21 to residents of foreign countries, and 8 to residents of Great Britain and colonies Of the Canadians who received patents, 13 were of Ontario, 8 of Quebec, 8 of ManitobA, 2 of British Columbia, % _ofk Alberta, and 2 of New Brumsâ€" wick. ‘ ‘‘Bay, old man, you‘re looking a hundred per cent. better than you did a year ago." Persisted in pasing his corns with a razor. Foolish when cure is so painâ€" less and sure with Putnam‘s Corn Exâ€" tractor,. Use Putnam‘s onlyâ€"it‘s the bestâ€"guaranteed _ and painless, price 25c. at all dealers. "I was worrying about my debts then."‘ "All paid now, eh?" ‘‘No; but they have grown so that I know there is no use trying to pay them.: I tell you it‘s a great load off my mind."‘ Lnotheg ,Ggse of Blood Poisoning to by higher vrï¬Ã©ti‘\;és,.-yt'liz;ep:re plenty of selfish reasons for your helping the helper. You can carry this analogy beâ€" tween your men and your machinâ€" ery as far as you like. Really they are both machinery in a way, and how much more important it is to be patient with human machinery, for that can manifest appreciation in return. _ If you are not appealed work than before. Now, how about the oiler or the fireman who is not doing the kind of work you expect!? If he has not got it in him to be a better workâ€" man, you do him a service in disâ€" charging him, with the advice to geot into some line for which he is betâ€" ter fitted . But be sure you give him a chance if he deserves it. Show him why this or that way of doing something is not right. Then teach him to do the right way himâ€" self. Incidentally, you will get a loyalty in that man which money eannot buy. â€" Another thing, do not be unreaâ€" sonably harsh with your men over their faults. Cursing them is just as foolish as banging a balk pump with a hammer, and does a.{out as much good. Why Not Give Men Same Considerâ€" ation as Plant Equipment. Here is & thought: Just suppose you give the men who are on your staff somewhat the same consideraâ€" tion you do the plant equipment under your charge. Treat them at least as well, says a writer in Powâ€" er. You find a certain piece of apâ€" paratus not up to its proper perâ€" formance. What do you do, scrap it? Hardly; your employer would probably object if you wanted to. Bo you first examine it to see if it cannot be improved. Possibly it is only a little out of adjustment, or it is worn, or even broken in some minor part, when you examine into it. _ Alittle time spent in renewâ€" ing defective parts or overhauling, with little or no expense, and it goes on doing as good or better Because of their mild, soothing, and healing effect, Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills are safe, and are recommended for girls and women of all ages. 25 cents per box at all dealers. Refuse any subâ€" stitute for Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills of Manâ€" drake and Butternut. To give vitality and power to the kidneys, to lend aid to the bladder and liver, to free the blood of poisons, probably there is no remedy so sucâ€" cessful as Dr. Hamilton‘s Pillis. For all womanly irregularities their merit is well known. The dizziness, insomnia, deranged menses and other symptoms of kidney complaint can‘t cure themselves, they require the assistance of Dr. Hamilâ€" ton‘s Pills which go direct to the seat of the trouble. In the stores, factories, and on a farm are weak, ailing women, dragged down with torturing backache and bearing down pains. tz Such suffering isn‘t natural, but it‘s dangerous, because due to diseased kidneys. And it was while being trained to the law that Mr. Borden developed his power of mastering facts. His mind seems to have developed into an amazingly efficient machine for the digestion. of practical politics. t:hWiuuver l:.\"mkes he has made in region of emotion, unnlgumwm ination, and sentiment, he has walked with sure footsteps in the region of facts. On the morning of Sept. 22, 1911, he faced a task that would have subâ€" merged most men. . But the mantle of his great predecessors had fallen upon worthy shoulders. In one sesâ€" sion he convinced the skeptical and delighted his friends. The diverse elements in the ranks behind him were brought together, factionism routed, dangerous political shoals skilfully avoided. Three years have gone, and his power and reputation have grown. _ A _ comparatively young man, as statesman go in this age, he has yet before him many years of political endeavor.â€"M. Grattan O‘Leary, in Star Weekly. There is Trouble Ahead. Constantly on their feet, attending to the wants of a large and exacting family, women often break down with nervous exhaustion. learning in his native province, and brought up in the environment of a law office, he was taught to value clear thinking more highly than emotional exuberance, to aspire afâ€" ter balance rather than originality. When a Woman Suffers With Chronic Backache INTEREST TO INYEXNTORS. ABOUT "HUMAX MACHINE."~ A Great Relicf. Clientâ€"But who‘ll get the bitter endâ€"the other fellow or me Lawyer (to hesitating client).â€" Revenge is sweet, remember. We‘li fight the case to the bitter end ! _ ‘Yis, yis,‘"‘ said he, "and I will, but wasn‘t it injaneyous in me, now Johnny Brabison, a good Irish citizen, was so near the wall that he could not escape with the others. Bo, whirling about, he made for a door in the wall, burst through it, and came out on the other side safe and evidently very provd of his exâ€" ploit. Women who had shut their eyes and shrieked when they saw his danger now gathered round him in great joy, and cried out : ‘‘Praise heaven, Johnny Brabiâ€" son, down on your knees, and thank heaven !|" Following a disastrous fire in a Western city, many men and women gathered to look at the ruins. Some of the men, seeing that a wall near which they were standing was top pling, made haste to get out of the way. and narrowly escaped being crushed. % The large 50¢. family size bottle is the most economical, or you can easâ€" ily get the 25¢. trial size from any dealer. it." Don‘t suffer! Nerviline is your relief. Nerviline just rubbed on, lots of it, will ease that drawn, tight feeling over your ribs, will destroy the pain, will have you smiling and happy in no time. "I caught cold last week while motâ€" oring," writes P. T. Mallery, from Linden. "My chest was full of conâ€" gestion, my throat was mighty sore, and I had the fiercest stitch in my side you could imagine. As a boy I was accustomed to have my mother use Nerviline for all our minor ailâ€" ments, and remembering what confiâ€" dence she had in Nerviline, I sent out for a bottle at once. Between noon and eight o‘clock I had a whole bottle rubbed on, and then got into a persâ€" piration under the blankets. This drove the Nerviiine in good and deep, and I woke up next morning fresh as a dollar and absolutely cured. Nerviâ€" line is now always part of my travelâ€" ‘llng kit, and I will never be without Pleurisy Pains Vanish ! Chest Colds Gured! In Zurish, Switzerland, there are three middleâ€"aged women who have a lucrative business of shining shoes for travellers as they emerge from the trains at that point. When they have no customers they spend their time knitting stockings. NERVILINE HAS NEVER FAILED TO CURE. a great many diamonds besides a léllagniï¬cent home at Chihuahua (ty: Mrs. Francisco Villa, wife of the famous Mexican rebel general, is only 26 years of age and married her husband when he was a bandit. She now has two automobiles and Under the French law a divorced woman is compelled to abandon the use of her former husband‘s name a certain time after the decree is granted or else she is liable to a fine for every day she uses it thereâ€" after. Mrs. Kudasheay, a Cossack woâ€" man, is now exploring darkest Rusâ€" sia on a horse presented to her by Czar Nicholas for her feat in ridâ€" ing from Vladivostock across Manâ€" churia, Siberia and English Russia three years ago. In a test vote conducted by a Paris newspaper, 505,972 women declared they wished to vote and 114 declared they did not. Miss Cleta M. Smith of Saint Louis, Mo., has entered the law office of her father, she having just been graduated f‘rom the Benton College of Law. Women teachers in the elemenâ€" tary and secondary schools of the United States average $458.51 a year in salary. Bixteenâ€"yearâ€"old Edith Jackson, of Vancouver, B.C., succeeded in landing a huge shark recently after a twoâ€"hour battle. Wanted a Little Praisc Himselt Miss Elizabeth Bradley has the honor of receiving automobile liâ€" cense tag No. 100,000 in Pennsylâ€" vania. * T Miss Fannie C. Clement is superâ€" intendent of the health teaching deâ€" partment of the American Red Cross Society. ht *n ETY Fashionable women in London have adapted the fad of having their bedrooms in black, even to the sheets. Germany leads all the other countries in the number of memâ€" bers of the International Council of Women. More than half of all the females in Germany over fifteen years of age are wageâ€"earners. ts t ExnA Women are more sane than men, as statistics show that more men go insane than women. _ _ go insane than women. In Mexico women and children pack their belongings and follow the husband ‘and father to war. The department of health in New York city employs 767 women nurses. Bpanish women will soon start a campaign for suffrage in that counâ€" fry. _" Ts 7 C o‘ Appledore, Eng., has a female team of bell ringers connected with the parish church there. _ the man of the house, and has a In Hungary certain sorts of miliâ€" tary service is compulsory for woâ€" keen business sense. Only seven weddings have taken rlwoe in Gloucester cathedral, Engâ€" and, in the last 25 years. . In Australia the women toil side by side with the men in the fields. The French woman as a rule is ACTIVITIES OF WOMEA ‘s Lin}ment Cures Colds, Etc. Important Point. . "*Is that a private figh anyone get into it !‘ Wanted to Get in. _â€"An JIrishman walked into a | and noticed two men fighting at far end of the room. Leaning . the bar, he earnestly inquired the bartender : Buperstition never keeps p from accepting 13 for a dozen. YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL THL! Try Murine Eye Remedy for Red, Weak, \ Eyes and Granulated Evellds; No timar Lun l{e Comfort. Write for Book of : y inail Â¥ree. Murine Eye Remedy Coâ€", Cl BUMMER TOURIST RATES To THE PACIFIC COAST. Via Chicago and North Western Ry Special low rate roundâ€"trip tickets on sale from uu!‘poim:‘ in Canada to Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland, Seatâ€" tle, Wancouver, Victoria, Edmonton, C:flnry. Banff, Yellowstone Park, etc. a l’lf July, August and September. Excellent train service. For rates, illusâ€" trated folders, time tables and full particulars, . address 1 H. Be tt, General Agent, 46 Yonge Street, Toâ€" ronto, Ontario. Jack â€"I was just bel‘s hair. How p bel‘s rivalâ€"Oh, sh tier than that ! A man who was very n hoarded up his stacks of ha; after year in the hope <f n double the price he was c for them. A wellâ€"known has straw buyer ih the district or asked #he price of a stack. A ormoruts sum was asked, whi« buyer accepted. ‘"How abou terms of settlement!" aske old miser. ‘"‘Well, you see,‘ the buver, "my terms are to when I fetch the last load a: ‘‘That‘s a bargain,"" said the 1 slapping the other‘s hand. T chap watched every load go except the last, and that the has never fetched yet. Boap is one of the few should be handled wit} has saved many thousands of dollars in | flesh by entirely curing these ailments. Garnet, Ont., Feb, 25th, 19 "I have used Kendall‘s sravin Cure t several jacks, and removed a bunch of standing, caused by a kick." $tD. Gran Don‘t take chances with your horses. K bottleofKeudun'lhnndy.;lâ€"dforu‘ Our **Treatise on the Horse® {ree at druggist> Dr. B. J. KENDALL €O., Enosburg Falis, V nes â€" aancdie CANCER. TUMORS, LUMPSs, E7pC) internal and external, cured with. out pain by our home treatment Write us before too late. Dr. Beliman Medica Co., LAimited. Collingwood, Ont NX York County. Stationery and Book Business in connection. _ Price only r.ooo. Terms liberal. Wilson Publish. ng Company, 13 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. g Yet your best horse is just as liable to develop a Spavin, Riny Splint, Curbor lameness as your poâ€" Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dipht» A Fruit, Stock, Grain or Dairy Farm, write H. W. Dawson, Brampton, or $ Colborne St., Toronto. K. W. DAWSON, Colbornme St., Torouto. Minard‘s JULY and AUGUST â€" G. Y. CHOWN, Registrar, Kingston, Ont KINGSTON, ONTARIO ARTS APPLIED SCiEnce EDUCATION includin MEDICINE CNGIN!(RTNG QUEEN‘s F YOU WANT TÂ¥ BUY oR sELL a oo0D WEEKLY IN LIVE Town Ix SUMMER SCHOOL KENDALL‘S NEWEPAPERS FOR SALE SPAVIN CURCE LAiniment Cures Distemper Not Paid Yet. UNIVERSITY w pretty it LLANEOUS. The Arts Course may be taken by corresponâ€" dence, but students desiring to graduate must attend one session. North Weste indâ€"trip tick in Canada t co, Portland, toria, â€" Edm wstone Park and _ Sept« e. For rates, tables _ and 1r Ho BR ENGINEERING HOME STUDY a it TD "There is somei gaid: "something "Itk aâ€"yes, it‘s ie what you saw By George! the 1 distress; scoms a Can you steer?" *"Becauee I‘m go :d. me if you «al e Jooks nearly ; â€" "Why way off can get "Why * â€" *pMH have 1 «aid, cheort hard. the dog was 1@ but Staifford 3 as he had do: Mande Faloon him with int stronger . thas eyes. He had his flannel «h arme were 6t« his lips were the man‘s fro brow. well forwa steady wor Stafford so row, and p «pet where strugagle. rerrier, an his chould« The wo comm and touch of her mind before e the to him with hie heart a "Purn the as the «kifl ewooped it said. in have go IT‘d some ferry. ( Ne wiped blazer, ther whirt and p ll:von firat . d y el'(g :mqt’:& "You‘ll d« alowly as y him move! trouble you chance of Sthe w glanced «tone thing "Why you?" the : of th black ment "Me Here had a 1 Ma ud to the me «ome D sharp." Maude # in the bea the lake a and Staffo and looke greeiing h Dist a nc Maude _1 fought ha man bein "Oh, a « hope ihe stret« warde, aud them . cad whe Khe said tha: poured out the into his eaucer wigr, «lowly, n tendernose and â€" "I wonder w my little man, werrier on the dn s A Foolis It etood uprigh moment, then pu ford‘s knee and appealing!y Not up to you d"'" -““Mon gently a wnt it Maude h&mc "Give it to me, no lap. Hell be He "But hes wet «t.ll spoil that pretty dre ‘"My pretty dress w ed," she eaid. "Give wet your tea." NU pir is sentmer dog from dhim an« her lap; but the a Rtafford and whin« ing him to det it ford stroked it an "it has hae @oor "It‘s a -.-" 1 afternoo She gli his chain, ie . crossed belore | "You lock ha faint «mile. "Oh, I am, fush and a eta of his wind, it tw lda, d Stafford rd looked eeling him ‘"What an Phen he n wn the do i me "Thank yoh irprice with ornful lang "Mere‘s the t« ike you fancy h I D« CnHaAPDER X\ at alle, Mis ndid 1 lit d That‘s befor« m K dow yPe hay ind Or, the ind u 24 and «ahe ked