:4 1 You know it's "good tea" Red Rose Tea RED LABEL 25c. ilb. We say i^s the greatest value 3rou can buy Your Serve? Teaching Your Dog To Carry Things L. E. Eubanks in "Animal Life." Carrying is one of the most popular accomplishnaents of the trained dog. And it is useful too; -anine messen- gers were invaluable during the war, and evtry years many lives are sav»ii in remote sections by dogs that have been taught to carry letters, objects, etc. Not infrequently we see dogs helping in various kinds of work; I knew a shoemaker who had but to speak to his spaniel to have an able and > iUing assistant. The old gentle- man would say, ''Rex, get the broom," ard the dog would bring it in a twinkling. He knew just where to take hold to balance it in his mouth. His master told me that more than once th,> span- iel had done his best to sweep; he knew the broom's use perfectly, but he was a little fellow and found the necessary manipulation a physical im- possibility. The old man was par- tially paralyzed, ani that animal's ability to bring things to him was of great practical value. I think it is generally understood that puppies learn most anything more readily than mature dogs; but in teaching this work of carrying, ticere is another reasc , one we might term physiological, why you will suc- ceed more qu'oUly with the youngster. Begin when he is teething; his gums arc sore and he gets considerable re- lief from holding things in his mouth. At this period of life he will often "mouth" hard objects for no othsr purpose than to help nature in de- â-¼eloping his teeth. II is instinct. Certainly, dogs will le.".rn carrying at any age, but it is far easier to teach then, when they are .eething. Perhaps a glove is the best object to start with. Drawing it through his mouth makes his guns feel better, and secondly the scent of his master on the glove makes it more interesting. After a dog has his teeth, too much carrying of particularly hard objects, like stones, will injure them, and make him "hard mouthed," that is, careless about biting too hard on delicate pack- ages. Sportsn-.en, in training of re- trievers, have to guard particularly against developing of hard mouth. Movement interes'ts animals of all kinds more than anything else. Even an object unattractive in itself will secure a dog's notice i thrown a litile distance, with a gesture for him to go get it. Sometimes a pretence to race with him for the object will awaken the djsired response; and it is very natural when he reaches the object to grab it up in his mouch. K the run-after-it method fails, you must open his mouth forcibly. Pass your hand over his jaws and with the thumb on one side anil fingers on the other, press his lips against his teeth. This will open his mouth, and you s'.ould be ready with the other hand i.o place the glove in it. Now slip jour hand under his jaw and hold the mouth shut while you stroke his head with the other hand and speak kindly to him. Repeat the lesson two or three times, but do not tire him. Conclude by giving him a bite of something he likes. After two or three days try leading a few steps, still holding his mouth closed. From day to day work ycur hand gradually back until it is on hii neck instead of his jaw; then you can transfer it to his shoulder, and a lit- tle later walk at his side without touching him. Your talk to the dog while he is learning is important When you be- gin to use various articles he must understand your caution of "Gently, boy," etc. I read of a dog's bringing a freshly laundered collar to his mas- ter without soiling it. It had fallen from a desk into a waste-basket, and this observant dog knew that it did not belong there, and that it was something he should handle with care. Any reasonably apt dog will .earn i thus to discriminate â€" more quickly I than you may believe. ! The only way â€" at any rate, the besi ; way â€" to train a dog to go aft^r things alone, or do any tricks without your supervision, is to go through the i performance exactly with him many, many times, always using the same words to start the thing. In this way, with patience on the trainer's part, a smart dog may be taught to take a basket and go I'fter some article. Gen- erally, too, he will know whether he is being given the usual thing, though of course he cannot ask for it. If you have the merchant instructed to put what you want in the basket, the dog, if well taught, will do the rest, and bring the basket, to you. You shiuld teach the carrier dog not to giva up his package or message to any stranger. Have some pepsin with vhom your pet is not acquainted start to take the object from the dog's mouth then change his mind. Let this be repeated a few times; then come up yourself, take the object, and praise the dog. This method was first recommended by Bruette, one of the best "dog-ologists" of this country, and I have never known it to fail. A dog, like a person, dislikes being fool- ed, and clings to the person who seems to appreciate his >ifforts. Do not ask impossibilit.e.? of the dog. Let there be a definite end to his search for an object. Some fine dogs have been injursd by staying in water too long searching for «. duck their master had or jught down. Never send your puppy into dangerous cur- rents and whirlpools and do not per- mit him to wade the marshes too long. A dog is naturally so faithful and per- severing that he will well ni^'h kill himself t". obey orders, but his uaster should not -jomiit this. Owl Laffs That "the eariy Bird catchea the worm," Is something we've oftea been taught. And yet (ve may state. It the worm bad slept late. It surely would not have been caught. Jasper â€" "Vou say you are going to marry a woman wutb tlOO,000, and you try to make me believe it's a love match?" Casperâ€" "It certainly Is â€" I love money." Harold â€" "Let's see, you're an optim- ist, aren't you?" Geraldâ€" "Somewhat. I believe the world Is getting better everji day, but I am not so sure about the nights." She â€" "Aren't you a little worried about your affairs back home, John Are you sure that new clerk you hired i is trustworthy?" He â€" "I'm not in the least worried about him. I always know wtiat he is going to do next." She â€" ".\ud whafs that?" He â€" 'Nothing.'" SMOKING FLUG TOBACCO SAVES MONEY WITHOUT ^ '" ANY SACRIFICE OF ENJOYMENT, WHEN USING DIXIE - THE BIG QUALITY PLUG â€" 20<^ Back Cashier â€" "This check has your husband's name signed to It. but he has not filled In the amount wanted." Mrs. New Brideâ€" "Oh, that's all right You just fill it in and give me all that he has to his credit." On a .Manchurian tenuis court Henry Pu Yi, deposed 'boy emper- or" of China, recently placed at head of new Manchurian state by the Japs, forgets the dislike o( his new subjects. What New York Is Wearing BY ANNEBELLE WORTHINGTON Things I'll Never Understand Why anyone rides in i rumble seat. â- Why they call them "permanent waves. What a woman driver means when she holds out her hand. How a centipede keeps Its t^et from getting tangled up. Time tables Greek wait- ers. Chinese laundry marks. Musical terms. How sailors get into those tight pants. How they get out ot them. Scri-en grid tubes. And wo- men. Hubbyâ€" "What in the world do you call that? A vase or a bowl or what?" Wifeyâ€" "I don't know. The sales- man just called it a bridge prize." Japanese Barberry Rated With Most Useful Plants Although not as famous aa the rose or lilac, the Japanese barberry ranks with the California privet as one ot the most useful garden plants. The common or European barberry is the only other one well known to gar- deners. This other species Is notori- ous tor its part in the dissemination ot the wheat rust and the consequent drastic means to eradicate It from farmlands by the government. Berberis vulgaris has longer, less persistent fruits in drooping racemes. The flowers and fruits of the Papa- nese species are usually in clusters of two to four, the fruit persistent and with the yellow pendant flowers in early spring and the showy scarlet fruit staying on all winter. It is a valued standby for dooryards, hedges and many other garden uses. The grewis, named In honor ot Nehemiah Grew, an English physi- cian and vegetable physiologist, con- tains about seventy species ot shrubs, mostly found in warm cli- mates. A few species like parvlUora have been tried under cultivation in temperate zone gardens and found to ba reasonably hardy. Classified Advertising WXEKLX KE-WSFAPEB WA.VTCS. Ail Luui<l.SO FDH WliKKLY MiWS- P.\PER Id Ontario wnlch 1 could icuse for a lerro with Durcbase In view. Send particulars to Bnx 12. Wilson rub- \shlng Co.. Ltd.. Toronto. HOTOB BOAT FOB 8AJ:.2. Johnâ€" "Do you know the dlflTerence between a woman and a telephone?" Jack â€" "No." Johnâ€" "Well, both repeat what they hear, but the telephone repeats it ex- actly as it hears It." Illustrated Dressmaiitg Lesson Fur- nished With Every Pattern Summer Afternoon The silvery-shaded birchen-trees Toss coins ot sunlight on the grass; The feathery winds from clovery seas, Trail wings ot perfume as they pas.s In summery-soft white furry flocks The clouds are bunched against the blue; The far-off shimmering steel-faced rocks Are flashing blades ot burning hue. This glittering globe of crystal heat. Holds song and silence in a swoon; To flery rhythms the hot hours beat. All down the summer afternoon. â€" J. C. Sr. Duncan. LOST 52 LBS. UGLY FAT So Fat that People Stared "Puffed" to"mik 10 Yards Some people suppose that fatness Is necessarily constitutional â€" a natural â- V^te against which struggle Is In vain. Ttils man's experience disproves that â€" and on his own description ho was an extreme case. "I w.is 220 lbs. tw^o years ago. I am only 5 ft. high and I looked awful! Through diet and Kruschen, I am now 168 lbs., and as nimble as a two-year old. I am well-known as a fat man and people always stopped to look at me. I could not go hnywhere without a stare. And atter walking 10 yard* I puffed awful. Lite was a misery to me. Nov I am all right. There never was such a difference In a man." â€" E. W. R. Kruschen la a scientiflc blend ot Tarlous mineral salts found in the waters of those Ehiropean spaa which kaTO been used by generations of over- stout people to reduce weight. Krus- chen combats the cause of fat by as- â- toting the Internal organs to perform tk«lr functions properly â€" to throw off •ach day those waste products and yolsons which, it allowed to accumu- late, will be converted by the body's chemlntry Into tatty tissue. Tak» a half teaspoonful of Kruschen Asked for a definition ot the word futile, a youth said: "Well, it would be something like trying to pick up a flea with a pair ot boxinj, gloves." Barker (at the fair)â€" "Now, ladies and gentlemen. I've sold this tonic for 25 years, and never once heard a word of complaint. What does that prove?" Skeptical Listenerâ€" "That dead men tell no tales." . U you feel wicked and examine the ten commandments, you'll find that Moses in those few short paragraphs succeeded in working everything in. .Before they were maivieil he whis-i pered to her: | "Were I drowning in the middle of the Atlantic cean â€" going down for the third time â€" you would be the last per- son I would think of." It made her feel very happy. After, they had been married several years, he made the same speech. It didn't seem io have the same meaning then. Uesidos, she didn't like the way he suid it. t-o ~ht ti<'. him. She â€" "Yes, 1 was sinking for the third time when he rescued me and brought me to land." He â€" "And then I supose you 'landed' him." Salts lu a glass of hot water beforo breakfast every morning. There will be â- no rapid and alarming loss ot weight, but Just steady decrease ot that flabby tat which Is as unhealthy as It Is unsightly. You will also find that Kruschen builds up remarkable new strength and energy while you are training yourself down to a point of normal weight. Its tonic Influence reaches every organ, gland and fibre In the body, bringing good health to all who put their faith In It. Kruschen Salts Is obtainable at all Drug Stores at 48c and 75c per bottl*. Herc':^ u charming black velvet dress with lace trim. Its wearable sophisticated simplic- ity makes it an economical choice. The neckline is particularly becom- ing and slimming. And don't you like the moiiificd puffed sleeves? The curv- el hip seaming is slenderizing. The paneled front and back of the skirl gives the figure elegant height. And it's as simple as A, B, C to put this model together. Canton-faille crepe is effective in black with Persian green trim. Style No. 2-753 is designed for si^es 16 18 years, 06, 38, 40, 4'2 and 41 inches bust. Size u6 requires 4 yards 39-inch, with *s yard 3J-irch contrasting. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plai'i- ly, giving number and size of sudi patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in stamps orToin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West .\delaide St., Toronto. Quebec Leads in Bachelors It raust have come as somewhat of a shock to the older generation of this province to learn that, accord- ing to the Dominion Bureau of Statis- tics â€" which ought to know â€" Quebec has the highest percentage ot un- married people ot any province in the Dominion. We lead with 62.19 per cent of our total population. This is accounted for, of course, by our large families of children. Ot the total number ot single per- sons, 5.951.411, no fewer than 3,179,- 443 are males, so that the girls have a battle for choice, as they are out- numbered by the mere men by 407,- 475. There is no indication as to the cause of the election for single blessedness by so many Canadian males at the present time. It may be taken for granted, however, that the depression has playod « very large part in their decision. The figures may be somewhat dis- quieting, but older folk can solace themselves with the soothing reflec- tion that sooner or later the bachelor i state win be found less interesting than the married, and that the un- wedded of both se.-scs will come to the conclusionâ€" singly, of course, not by battalionsâ€" that it is better to be married and comfortable than un- m-rried atui lonelyâ€" Montreal Dally Star. RICHARDSON DUU'BLE C.Uil.V cruiser, aocut thirty Ceet. In U3« aiiugeiher onl? four or Ave months in two seuaona: comij)«ta egulpment Incluia ing carpets, bed and Labi* linen, chlna^ glasswars and silver as well oa aU mai«- I • SHUlpmeot and ma.i; extras. Xbla crulsei wUb Its two cabins and Its .veil equipped galley Is an iinusuaJljr comfort- able boat for weeli-ends or iODgae cruises for four to six peopla. It Is ax- cepttonally seaworthy and haa oruued all over the Great Lakes, it baa a .ilga class and very economical 60 norsepowsr. six-cylinder power plant with complete electric lighting throughout ana jpeed of 12 to H miles per hour, it la a spe- cial paint lob and .ery attractive In ap- pearance. Owner will sacrifice for naif Its original cost. H. Watkina. 73 W. Adelaide St.. Toronto. NOTHING OF THE SORT An elderly woman rushed up to a railway porter, and slapping him (not too lightly) on the shoulder, demand- ed to know if he had seen her husband come off the platform. "Great Scott 1" exclaimed the aston- ished man. "No, he isn't," replied the agitated w.,ii.an. "He is an Englishman and rather small." Earn $35 Weekly h^c I CROWING MUSHROOMS FOR US all year .«una 'n \ our t ciiar. ?,a[)ip u, 8I1M]. Rap;u Brp»ere. Vi»id trm*h er*o fmrt dmf. No exi^rnetice nprtsMiry. W« ,uv0i|. S*««,n and contract to bur all ^au vra â€" at hiah prtcaa. Send lOr li't lwT« tlluMraU,! Fuldar (unlract ami tull parncutan ld«al MuthroomCa-. tsMnaton, Onl. •*>>â- < Two shipwrecked sailors were on a desert island. They were cold, ! hungry, and utterly miserable. "Say, ' Bill," said one of them, "can youj pray?" "No," said the other. "Well,! can you sing a "ymn?" "No." The | first sailor thought hard for a mom- 1 ent or two. "Well,"' he aald at length, "wed better do something raltglons. Let's 'ave a collection." j BABY'S OWN SOAP^ ISSUE No. 37^-32 Famous Mine to Reopen Brisbane, Queensl.â€" .in attempt is being made to reopen Mt. ilorgan. which, at its peak, was one of the richest gold mines in the world. The reopening is with the idea of work- ing the mine on i low-grade basis. Already 6S men have started work. As the work progresses more will lie absorbed. The work has aieant the salva. tion of the town ot Mt. Morgan, which, since the mine closed some years ago has been gradually de- clining. USELESS .\ raw country lad was on a visit to a town friend. Thinking he would like to attend some social function, his friend sug- gested a visit to a large hall where a whist drive was to be held. "I'm sure you'd be interested," said his friend. "You play whist, don't you? .\nd there's a £10 top â€" tho prize, you know?" "Oh. aye," replied the other. "But If Oi won It, Oi could never spin the darned thing!" ALARMING She sat on the beach at Bright- bourne, watching the sea swell to and fro. Something of Its grandeur shed its light upon her soul. "Oh, George!" she exclaimed to I the young man by her side, "isn't It splendid? I feel as it I could open my mouth and take It all In." ; Close by her was a small boy. He turned to her. a stortled look on his face. "I say," he remarked, "you won't do it really, will you? 1 only came down here yesterday." .J WHAT'S THE USE? The neighbour of a man noted for hi.-; extreme thrift saw hfm on a week day dressed In his Sunday clothes. "What's up. Jim?" he called out. "Why the glad rags?" "Haven't you heard the news?" "New^! What news?" "Triplets!" "Oh. so that accounts forâ€"" he- gan the neighbour, when the fnigal one Interrupted him. "Yes. that accounts for my wear- ing these clothes. What's the use of trving to be economical''" I * If lovo makes the world go round. ' It Is no wonder that lovers act dizilly. ; Stomach Sufferers; '.] Have you indications of Gastric, Ulcers, Gastritis, Nauseous Condi- \[ tions. Nausea of Pregnancy, Bad | Breath. Indigestion or other Stom- ach Disorders? If so send right awav for DIGEST-0-LAX Antacid Digestive La.xative. It reaches right to the cause and prevents unnecessary suif ^ring , ' $1.00 per bottle. ' ;; E. H. NUTTING LABORATORY,;; . 58 Wellington St. E., Tofonto. Ont. „ B • » P > < f SCIATICA __ asb the oainful pan wcli • with warm wa(et; then rub to plenty ot Vliaard'i and you'll feel better 1 Bad Gjnstipation And Sick Headaches Ended By Vegetable PiUs Formerly a "WTeck from Cons'ipation, Sick Headaches and Indigestion, -Mr. V. H. writes: "It was a red-letter day for me when a friend recommcndeil Carter's Little Liver Pills. Results have been marvellous." Because they axe PURELY \ EGE- TABLE, a gentle, effective tonic to both li'i'er and bowels. Dr. Carter's Little Liver Pills are without equal for cor- recting Acidity. Biliousness, Poor Com- pIe.xion and Indisrestion. 25c. & 75c. red pkgs, .-Xjk for Carter's bv .N'.\ME. HEALTHT COMPLEXIONS Healthy complexions come front healthy systems. Free tho body of poisons witft Feen-a-mint. Effective !a smaller doses. All druggists sell this safe, scientific laxative. Feenamint IFOR CONSTIPATION