I FROM SCOTIH girth near Dollar, for their annual f Rame another veseal Amphion it outing, provided by Messrs. Alex- | *y be difficult to get a crew to SOTES OF INTEREST FROM II ED BANES AM) BBAES. IHiat Is Goto* oo ta (be Highland* nd Lowlands o! AuM Bcotla. The strike of joiners at Dumfries is causing dislocation to the trade. The new shelter on Greenock Esplanade is rapidly nearing com- pletion. Of 400 members of the Shoe- makers' Union in Kilmarnock at one time only four now survive. For sending tuberculous meat to the market, John Se-arl and T. Bry- c die were each fined $250 at Edin- j burgh. Mr. Andrew Carnegie will unveil 1 the Burns statue presented to Stir- j ling by Provost Box^ne, on Septem- ber 23rd. Port Glasgow's new railroad sta- tion was constructed by the Cale- donian Company at an estimated . cost of $100,000. Mr. James Xiven Campbell, a na- ! tive of Aberdeen, kas been appoint- i ed Chief Constable for Bacup. Lan- cashire. Angus Cameron, -who has been superintendent of Dumbartonshire constabulary for 2T years, has re- tired on superannuation. The Duke of Argyll's deer forest in the Isle of Mull will again be oc- cupied by Lord Eglinton. The ex- tent is over 30,000 acres. A memorial of the Battle of Har- law was formally inaugurated by the Lord Provost and town council of Aberdeen on the site of the bat- tle. The children's playground in Huntingdon place, Springburn was formally handed over to the Glas- gow corporation by Lord Glen- conner. At a conference at Tobermory, on medical service in the Mull district, it was stated that a patient in Loch- buie was twenty-seven miles from the doctor in Salen . David Martin, aged thirty-nine was electrocuted at the metal works of Messrs. Ball, Yoker. He fell off a roof and in falling caught hold of two electric power -wires. The inadequacy of the water sup- ply for the burgh of Breohin, which has given much anxiety to the au- thorities for some years, has now issumed an acute position. As a result of a "demarcation dis- pute with engineers, about 150 plumbers employed by Scott Ship- building and Engineering Co., Greenock. have come out on strike. A motor car belonging to Messrs. Lea-k and Co.. Inverurie, went over the embankment at Gushetneuk, Oyne. A'berdeenshire. The occu- pants escaped injury, but the ear serve without being impressed. ander R. Peacock and T. Morrison, two Dunfermline millionaires. A boy named Mclnnes, of Tran- ent, Scotland, was killed on the ! P<|j||fi|| ^ \\>jl in 8p ot, the greater portion of his face tU!ljKl ' ' i!!l! being blown away, by a terrible ex- plosion caused by his having ap- plied a match to a barrel of paraf- fin oil. was smashed. The King's Picture Theatre, Methven street, Perth, was totally destroyed by fire. The theatre was reopened only a few weeks ago, af- ter having been reconstructed at a large cost. Charles Davidson, a member of the city fire brigade, and son of James Davidson. Balmoral road. PRIM i : OF SCHI.ESWIQ HOI.VFEIV Reported killed in action. Such Troubles Now Quickly Rubbed! Away by Powerful Remedy. If you have any muscles that- are strained and weak, that are frequently subject to rheumatic pains ; if you | have any painful swellings that re- fuse to go away get busy with Ner- viline. This is the very sort of trou- ble that Nerviline is noted for curing quickly. "I have proved Nerviline simply a wonder in reducing a hard, painful swelling. It followed an In- jury I received in my left leg and caused me great pain and discomfort. The muscles were strained and sore, and no other remedy gave the ease and comfort I got from rubbing on Nerviline. There is a sootning, pain- relieving power about Nerviline that touched the root of my trouble. Ner- viline reduced the swelling, it destroy- ed the pain, it brought my limb back to perfect condition." The experience of Mr. Bowen, whose home is in Mid- dlesex, is not unusual. Thousands are proving every day that muscular pains of every kind, chronic rheumatism, lumbago, neuralgia and sciatica will yield to Nrvillne when nothing else can possibly cure. Nervtline Is an old-time family pain remedy, used nearly forty years with great success. The large family size bottle costs 50c., trial size 25c. at all dealers. 4. AFTER THK WAR IS OVER. Thick, Fine and Red. Agonyof Itch- ing and Burning Frightful, One Cake of Cuticura Soap and Box of Cuticura Ointment Cured. HOT WEATHER AILMENTS A medicine thai will keep children well is a great boon to every mo- ther. This is just wihat Baby's Own Bip Shift in Colonial Possessions | Expected to Follow. When the war clouds of Europe i are dispelled and the last shot in the conflict now raging has been Lower Otulow, N. 8." "At first w thought my child's trouble was bis teeth. Th..- whole body was a solid rush and at th arm pits and elbows and thighs the skin camo off a* if he had been scalded. It was a very thick flno rash, red hi color and Intensely Itchy and burning. The akin just wiped off leaving a raw sore wlih little specka of yellow matter In them. The skin on every finger split do-.ro on <-..<-h side and looked like a ruffle. His toe* broka out In Ilitle yellow plmplea and the bottom of his feet did the same and be would say he could not walk, that there were pin* sticking In bis feet. " The agony of Itching and burning was something frightful. If he got a chance be would scratch the skin right off and make a. ore, but to prevent that 1 made mittens for him out of cotton. Every night from twelve o'clock until three in the morning be would have to be taken up out of bed and rocked, bis sufferings were so bad. " With no permanent cure in sight I go* the Cuticura Soap and Ointment. Tba first night the child slept the whole night through, the first night for four months. I am thankful to say the cure was complete and I j us t got one cake of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment." (Signed) Mrs. Samuel Hlgglns. May 17. 1913. Cuticura Snap ami Ointment sold every- where. For liberal free sample of each, with jB2-p. book, send post-car'-i to Potter Drue >.. Dept. D. Boston, 17. 3. A. daughter of a rich Hungarian fam- ily of high position. Blessed with unusual good looks, at IS years old she was married to the Baron von Schonberg. Youth, beauty and wealth soon made the young Baron- ' es von Schonberg one of the most , honored hostesses in Vienna. She became involved, however, in politics, and lost the Emperor's fa- i vor. E r fortune was confiscated. so the story goes, and she was ban- , iahed. Her husband, the Baron von ' Schonberg, quickly divorced her. and sihe went to Switzerland. She won the beauty prize at Monte Car- lo and at the Concours Hippique at Brussels ; then went to London, where Count Hohenau fell in love with her, married her, and was sent by his relations to a "sana- torium" ! Now the lovelv ex-poli- tician of Austria is a Berlin dentist. Tablets do. An occasional dose fire< j the rearrangement of bound- keeps the little stomach and bowels right and prevents sickness. Dur- ing 'the hot summer months sto- mach troubles speedily turn to fatal diarrhoea and cholera infantum, and if Baby's Own Tablets are not at hand the child may die in a few hours. Wise mothers always keep the Tablets in the house and give their children an occasional dose to clear out the stomach and bowels aries and frontier lines will not be confined to the continent of Eu- rope. With the exception of Aus- tria-Hungary and the Russian Em- pire, all of the principal nations in- volved in the great struggle have colonial possessions, protectorates a,nd dependencies, which are scat- tered all over both hemisphere*. The redistribution of many of these possessions consequent upon and keep them well. Don't wait; the succe ss of the arms of either the till baby is ill the delay may cost a precious life. Get the Tablets now and you may feel reasonably safe. Every mother who uses the Tablets praises them, and that is the best evidence there is no other medicine for little ones so good. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. TIIE NAME "AMPIHON." Second Vessel of tho Same Name to Bo Blown I'p. There seems to be a fatality about the name Amphion as used for a British warship. The light cruiser Amphion, which was blown up by a floating mine in the North Sea on August 6th, was the second of that Triple Alliance of Powers or those of the Triple Entente will entail great changes in the map of the world. The most radical changes will proba/bly be made in Africa, whose map presents a remarkable picture of the juxta position of pro- tectorates and colonies belonging to Great Britain. France. Italy. Belgium, and Germany. Great Britain's colonies and pro- tectorates encircle the globe. France h'as possessions in Africa, India. China. South America, tre West Indies, one North Atlantic, the Pacific, and tht Indian oceans. in Africa. Germanv has an<1 colonies pa<nftc While several of the foreign hold- ings of the powers engaged in war are without adequate military strength, few of the principal pos- sessions of Great Britain and ' , t StJSSlUUS UL VJICttl ui i name to be blown up and on each France , are unpr , lt ected. occasion the loss of life was oon j n Afr i ca British interests are siderable. | paramount in Egypt bv agreement The first Amphion was ,* frigate , of thirty-two guns, and she becarae j quite famous in the wars of the end | eighty thousand English and 165,- 000 native troops. The Common- wealth of Australia has a military force of 175,000 men. The French army in northern Af- rica is about 95,000 strong, of which force 18,000 are natives. In Algeria she has about 25,000 men and 17,- 500 in Tunis. his -death in the duty at a fire at William Brownlee, Dumfries, met course of his Bladdley. Ex-Provost Dundee, lias died in a nursing home after an operation. By his death Dundee has lost an outstanding public man, who for nearly 40 years was foremost in municipal affairs. The old weavers of Dunfermline, numberinif ab France af the beginning entente France has a proteot . over Morocco by agreement in command of Captain Israel Pel- lew, and on September 22nd, 1796, England. sessons Her Algerian nos- the Mediterranean THE NOISE OF BATTLE. Carries Farther Than the Thunder of Hi.' Cloud*. The sound of gun fire carries far and the thunder of a big battle travels farther than the thunder of the clouds. Sometimes the booming of guns over land or sea has been mi&taken for thunder, and often when men are nervously listening for the sound of war thunder rumb- lings have been mistaken for can- nonading. Before and directly after the opening of hostilities between Ger- many and the allies person* know- ing that French. British and Ger man cruisers were not far off the coast of the United States reported the sound of cannonading at sea. Many people in the coast towns of England reported hearing firing in parts of the North Sea where no ships were fighting. Perhaps, as coming events cast their shadows before, they also cast their echoes before. But the sound of the booming guns goes far. During the siege of Paris the sound of the German guns was heard at Dieppe. 90 miles away. One of the historian* at Waterloo vouches for the statement that the roar and din of that wonderful bat- Up to Britain. Canada, Australia and England's lesser colonies must send forth their bravest and best if the German ai gre&sion is to be repulsed. Kitchen- er says tha.t reinforcements of the British armj will steadily and sure ly increase until thore will be a Bri tish army in the field which ''in numbers will not be less tha*r in quality and not be unworthy of tho power and responsibility of the Bn iish Empire." Although somewhat indefinite the words of Kitchener ran only mean the British trcop-- will be thrown into Europe until the tide of invasion is swept back. The Tnited Kingdom cannot afford ti) ^i TT let Germany win this war. Her The child's delight. The picnicker's choice. Everybody's favorite. POTTED MEATS- Full flavored and perfectly cooked make delicious sandwiches. FA.B.2IS FOX SALE. H. W. DAW SOW, Nln*ty Colborna ScrMfa Toronto. IP YCU W.AJJT TO BUY UK SKI..L A Fruit, Stock. Grain or Dairy Farm, write H. W. Colborne St.. Dawson. Toronto. Uramvton, W. DAWSO9T, Colbom* St.. Toronto. SALE OoD WEiCKLl' IN LIVE . York County. .Stationery and tfooK business In connection. Price only t,UU. Terms liberal. Wilson Publish- ing Company. H West Adelaide strt, Toronto. [ Bros. TOR SALE. TEN PAIK* ~> *;j pj; ^- :OT* dja.>puoaw.uoj Bothwell. Ont. CANCER. TUMORS. LUMPS. Internal and external, cured wlth out pain by our home treatment. Writ* us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical national prosperity and greatness Co. Limited Oiiinirwood. Ont. demand that she exhaust every ut- j termost resource in punishirur and chaining up the egotistic military autocrat that bristles and roars in Berlin. ' * Death My Claimed Sew Brunswick Lady Was Restored to Her Anxiou* Fam- ily When Hope Had Gone. St. John, N.B., Dec. 15th. At one | time it was feared that Mrs. J. Grant, '. ot 'i White St., would succumb to the deadly ravages of advanced kidney ; trouble. "My first attacks of back- acne and kidney trouble began years ago. For six years that dull gnawing i pain has been present. When I ex- erted myself it was terribly intensified. Didn't (i*-t His Money's Worth. "Lkey, vaj, is dot book you're reading, 1 ' asked Ikey's father. "Aboudt Chulius Caesar, fa- ther.' "Und vot business vas he in 1" "He vos a soldier, and ven he von a battle he writed home, 'Veni, vidi, vici.' "I bet he vent bankrupt such extravagance ! Vy. he could send seven more, words for a quarter.' 1 LOW COLOMIST RATES TO PACIFIC COAST VIA CHICAGO, UNION PACIFIC AND NORTH WESTERN LINE. Tii-kets on -a;.- daily from Sept. 24kh to; October 8th. from Ch.oago to Salt Lak* City. Ogdi-n. Los Anffeles, San Fr-im-mco. Portland. Ta-onm, Seattle, Victor .1. Koot> enuy D'.strit-t and Canadian NortJiweat. OorrrepondinflFly low ra.tee from Canad- ian point*. Through Tourist levp*rw and If I caught cold the pain was unen- i rre* reclin;n .-hair oare from Chicago. 1 Variable uc?mc routes. Liberal etop. overs. For full particular, a* to rat* routes and literature, -wrrite or call on B. H. Bcnnftt. General Agnt. 46 Yung* St.. Toronto. Ont. durable. I used most everything, but nothing gave that certain grateful re- lief that came from Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and Butternut. In- stead of being bowed down with pain, to-day I am strong, eujoy splendid appetite, sleep soundly. Lost proper- ( jj e _ ties have been instilled into my blood Cautious. -Marrv me. dear, and I will . . * , , rc uw.miiu<rvi vti me C*CTI.' w & ifi-u while plying in Plymouth harbor, an IuUan dependency . O n the Red she caught fire and blew up. The g<?a &nd eontiguous to Egypt is the cause of the accident was never j rtaUan d epen dency of Eritrea. On placed. Captain Pellew and ten out of 312 officers, men and visitors on board were lost. It has always been customary in the British navy to perpetuate the visited Sols- names of vessels that win distinc- ; tion, and so another Amphion was British on the east by Tripoli. I t) e was heard 125 miles from the firing line. It is said on scientific authority that the limit of the range or the carrying power of thunder is fifteen miles. At least that is the greatest the A{rican east coast are British Italian F.a<t Africa. Flaked Corn Sweet food the year round when you have Post Toasties. Delicious bits of choicest Indian Corn, rolled thin as a leaf and toasted to a golden brown. Brought to you fresh, crisp and sweet, in mois- ture proof packages al- ways ready for the table. Open the package in a jiffy, add cream or milk maybe a little sugar. For breakfast, lunch or supper Post Toa-sties sold by grocers. Canadian Poatum Cereal Co.. Ltd.. Windsor. Ont. East Africa, and the eastern por- tion of British South Africa. The entire southern part i>f the African continent comprises the Somaliland, Portuguese j distance ever estimated by -ibserv- built. She was of the same size as' g ritisn South African union, which ing the flash and counting the num- ber of seconds between that and the arrival of the sound. the one blown up in Plymouth har- pmbraces Rhodesia, the Transvaal. bor. At one time she Hew the flagj the Oran8e River Colony. Natal, of Vice- Admiral Nelson, and was in | an<] c&pe C ' ukmv . Qn the west from British are German command of Captain Thomas Har- 1 coast dy. When on the way to the Medi- terranean to command the British fleet there, in 1603. Nelson shifted his flag from the Victory to the Amphion in order to save time. Men Swear Women Complain Just because their corns at'he easy to core them with Putnam's Corn Extractor. \frica '' a< ' ts P ilillleea! ' r in twenty-four hours, there are German Southwest Af- rica, Portuguese West Africa, the jeajen, Belgian Congo State. French Con- For corns, warte and callouses the only t limit is ' Putnam '; try it. 25c. at all go. German "Kamerun. the Niger FROM PALACE TO UKM'ISTRY. , Territories. British protectorate ; When he transferred again to the, French \ Ves . t . Africa. German Togo- Victory he with' him. Captain William took Captain Hardy land. British Gold Coast, and the Ivory Coast, a French possession, is in Africa that the must ratli- to Host e charge of the Araphiun after that, j ^i"^^'^^,^- changes are likely t and took part in several engage- ^ e made after the war. merits, the most important of which , c oncer ning the armed strength of \vas the battle off Lissa. in the Adn- - - ~ atic. four when a vessels, . i i. ic colonial possession of Great British squadron "f : B,.j ta i n% outside of Canada, in the the largest of onlyi linion O f South Africa there are regular troops thirty-eight guns, gave battle to aja^Hi.t ten " ' of ten French and Venetians, j am , T5 000 iUlx iH a ry troops, includ- The Real-Life Romance ,>>' Royal Family's Relation. It isn't often that a favorite of kings and emperors comes down to the level of middle-class medioc- rity, 'but it does happen sometime?. I'laire von Wallenstein. Baroness von Schonberg. and now Countess Sternau zu Hohenau. has had a rno-st remarkable career. To-dav the Countess draws teeth The British .vessels carried in all l-2-l guns, against 280 on the oppos- ing fleet. In Capt. Hos'.e's squadron were 88(3 men. against i.'iUO. TRie British were victorious, nd the liattle was made the subject of a famous painting, while Capt. Host* ami other officers received gvld me- dals. Before the British had an Atn- phion there was a vessel of that name hi the French twvy, whicli was captured in the battle off Osk- ant on July 27. 177H. After the second Atnphion had finished her career of usefulness there* was no Aniphio.ii until the cruiser wa< built in 1912. She could make twenty -five mile an hour, btU had little opportiraity to distinguish ; herself after she sank the German iinne -laying vesiwl Koenigin Luise. Sailors are superstitious, and should the- British Government the burghers of the Transvaal River Colony. In .if India there are about ED. 7. ISSl'K 37 under the shadow oif the 's palace in Berlin, and the German royalties must be intensely chagrined to find one of their own ! relations actually earning her liv- ing under their very eyes. Nor can I they be ignorant of the fact, for [on the door of the flat in tihe Nu remburger Pla-tz there is the bold j inscription in brass: "Hohenan. ' Itentist." As "Hohe" signifies royal des- ; cent, just as Fit/ does, in a less i degree, in Great Britain, the bra^s ! plate excites no end of interest in | \\\t ladv bearing this illustrious handle.- The 30 w famous ladv ! dentist of Berlin became a relation 'of both the German and British i royalties a year or two ago, when she was married in Lojidon by spe- cial license to Count Wenzel Ster 1 nau zu Hoheuau. '14. ' Claire von Wallenstein is th? ; maie it my duty to anticipate vour cheeks are rosy with color, and 1 thank that day that I heard of so ' Hamilton's ' 'he But are you sure that your anticipations weald be realized ( grand a medicine as Dr. Pills." Every woman should use thest pills regularly because good health pays. Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff. and it's good, vigorous health that comes to all who use Dr. Hamilton's Mandrake and Butternut Pills. Her Alibi. Much to the curious little girl's disgust, her elder sister and her girl friends had quickly closed the door of the back parlor before she could wedge her small self in among them. She waited uneasily for a little while, then she knocked. Xo re- sponse. She knocked again. Still no attention. Her curiosity could be controlled no longer. 'Dodo', she called in staccato tones, as she knocked once again. " Tain't me! it's mamma !" Fur Real Knjoyiuent. "Going to the theatre again I Why. you saw thai piece only the other night." "Yes. but not in my new frock." Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, Etc. Not An Even Break. Rex and Tommy had been inat- tentive the whole morning, and the teacher said that each must write his name 200 times as a punish- ment. Presently, when the rest of the class had gone home. Tommy was found crying bitterly. "It's not fair." he sobbed. 'Rex has only got to write Rex Dun -200 times, but my name is Thomas O'Slhaughnessy." Minard's Liiiuut>ut Co.. Limited. Dear Sirs. I had a Bleeding Tumor on my fjce for a. long time and tried a Hum* ber of remedies wi'hout any good results. I w a* adit*l to try MINARD 8 LINI- MENT, and .itJT using rsvvcr--.! nott'.ei it made a complete our*, and it healed nfll up and di--:.ppearl oJtogether. DAVID HENDERSON. BJleisle <;.IT:..II. Kiii{ns Co., N.B.. Sept. 17. 1904. He Hi. '. Oiu-e. "I never knew old Simpson to acknowledge that he had made a mistake.' ' "Ah! I <lid once.'' "Reaiiy. How did it happen I" "He put, the liafhted end of his in 1ii mouth." Minard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia. An industrious mechanic pinched himselif in personal expenditure in order to purchase a piano for two of his daughters. He was a^ked how his children appreciated the gift. "Well," he said. "I hard'y know. They appeared to be pleas- ed enough, but the first piece they learned was Father.' Everybody Works But YOtB OWN DHIGGIST WILL TElt TOO Try Murine Ky e Kemedy for Red. Wean, Watery Eye and Granulated Byeilds: No Smarting - Just By* Conxfon .'Write, for Book of the ; mall Free. Murine Rye &emedy Co., Chicago, Stiidenr toes from Student in. Simple. A How can I ke<>p sroing to sle'ep ? B -Don't let Uiem turn my Minard's l-iniment for sale everywhre. Elsie Maiiuii Mother That's . I ciou't feel well. too bad, dear, Where d > In school. you feel mamma. ~ie. OPENING OF THROUGH PASSENGER SERVICE BETWEEN Toronto & Ottawa uTTlON STATION CENTRAL (Grand Trunk) STATION EFFECTIVE AUG. 18, 181*. AND THE REAFTER OAiUY EXCEPT SUNDAY ss> bound Stations West- bound Eliot bound SUIions boT,nd P.M. plC ?.X. A.M. 1 M Lv. BELLEVILLE Ar. 8. H Lv. TORONTO Ar. OSHAWA PORT NOPE COBOURC 3 19 1:8 1.41 I.It 4 U US. NAPANEK Ar. " '""Ar. KINGSTON Lv. Lv. 4.30 486 4.41 8M ITH'S FALLS 1 15 P.M. 8.H Ar. OTTAWA Lv. 1J.16 U.J& Ar. TRENTON Ly_ (.n P.M. Central Station Noon lloctrlc-Llahttd CoaohM and Ca Parlor Car* on Through Train* tlckt and nU Information 9plT to naareet C X.E. Aetit or wener Dep*.. Toronto >nd jtoatrooJ. For Pwener