~ . DOMINION TIRE DEPOT Your guests will praise _ your homeâ€"made mustard pickles [ Tess | l §X > f e s e e avik s ; (~RAR 5 % w *4 e l ‘ a .. 3 ‘E: l ,/\ l sB [ \\ : 3 o.f\ \ | Aids Digestion M Colmanâ€"Keen (Canada) Limited, 1090Amherst St., Montreal KEENS MUSTARD TLVERY year, more and more women are making their own mustard pickâ€" les, and with Keen‘s Mustard. They know it‘s a mark of distinction and good taste to hiwe homeâ€"made mustard pickles on their tables. Decide now to make mustard pickles in your own kitchen this year. By doing this you can select the comâ€" bination of vegetables you like bestâ€" assure high standards of quality, purity and flavour â€" practice true economy â€" and win praise from your guests and members of your own ;r;niâ€"{w instructions on how to make all inds of mustard pickles. FREE â€" Send for a copy of the booklet we have , containing many r«_ecipo@_ Not one Royal Master .i;; thousand will ever wnrture. Not one in ive thousand will blow out under two years of service. WATERLOO plies energy that lets you carry on with iess food and safely reduce WRIGLEY‘S is eure chicle. sugar and flavor. Chewing the chicle dissolves the sugar and releases In this prleasant way you get needed body fuel and reduce *THE GREATEST TIRE _ , THE WORLD HAS EVER KNOWN ROYA L4 The Royal Master was built without regard for cost. It is the finest tire that can be built. Its massive tread is double thick, cured by a new slow process. Its carcass is made with extra plies of web fabric. Sideâ€"walls are guarded against scuffing. ‘The Royal Master is made oversize. Or rather, the right size for real tire economy. If you want tires that will last as long as you keep your car, then buy Royal Masters, On sale at every /he Heppler and Sehi of cauliflowers into flowerets and cut 8 seeded green lï¬:’. pers into small dice. ce them all together in a large kettle. . Pour a gallon of UXBRIDGE MUSTARD PICKLE Slice 1 quart of large cneumâ€" bâ€"»s. Hafve 1 quart of tin vreen tomatoes. Oml-r{ green tomatoe quart :nl large tocs. Separate 2 them and allow the mixture to come to a good boil. Mix 14 cup of salt with 3 cups of sugar, I ounceof urm«h;')i pound of Keen‘s Must and 1%4 cups of flour. Molsâ€" ten with a little cold vinogar. Then stir into the bot mix« ture carefully so that it will '-7':'::;"«.:-::â€"‘5-â€"'." _ _Let come to m comâ€" .un:Iy. -loul; het in warm sterilized jars. ture carefully so that it will not lamp .-_5 add 1 quart of arrived at five minutes till cight. 1 mnwamauâ€"umn-‘{ veal a marked likeness to his elder brother. He was a couple of inche» shorter than Bernard, his hair several shades darker, his complexion less ruddy. Also the training of their proâ€" Mns. Percival was a plump, pretty, fair women, twelve years yonncer| thar her husband, with a bright, rather birdâ€"like manner. At thirtyâ€" nine she could still count herself as young and attractive, although she and Perciva} had been married for nearly twenty years, had a daughter of @ighteen completing her educaâ€" tion in Paris, a couple of sons at Eton, and two younger girls of thirâ€" teen and eleven at home. The only fault that Percival, in moments of confidence with his brother, had ever brought against his wife was that she was extravagant. As a lam'i ily the Fyttons, if a little reckless in ; living up to evem a trifle beyond } their means, always got what they couted as good value for their mo-: sympathy, in his dealings with‘ the muititude that momentarily touched his life and was the source of live lihood. But when the two brothers were seen together, their resemâ€" blance .to each other was more marked than the difference; such things as the tone of the voice, a trick of lifting the chin when asking a question, the expression of the eyes, all showed a strong family likeâ€" mamnners. The barrister had learned ney "I suppose you are not going to join the party in Derbyshire toâ€" morrow, Maud?" Bernard asked as he greeted his sisterâ€"inâ€"law. "Yes, she is," her hueband put in before she had time to reply, and Berard noted the quick frown of disâ€" pleasure that momentarily disfigured Maud Fytton‘s face. "My dear Maud, you know perfectâ€" ly well," ber husband remonstrated. It is simply because this time I think the pater‘s fliness may be really serious." "Percival insists," she explained with a little shrug and a amile. "I don‘t know why." "We know from Caroline," Perci val explained, "that he has undoubtâ€" edly had a touch of influenza, and it ssems to me a very bad sign that he should suddenly be so much worse. It indicates the course taken in so many cases of this last epideâ€" mic, with old people more especially. If 1 could possibly get away early toâ€"morrow, I would. But there are two comsultations I simply dare not "You do, eh?" Bernard put in Why‘s that, old chap*" "But why take me?" Maud proâ€" tesied. He‘s got a nurse. What can I do?" "He obviouly wants you," Perciva‘} returned. "Caroline‘s wire asked us both to come." "The pater has always liked to have pretty women about him," Berâ€" nard remarked. Maud‘s smile of acknowledgement . was a trifle rueful. "Is Manette going?" she asked him. | "And Mary," he«said. ' "Well, surely that should be| enough," she pleaded. â€" "Besides,‘ Caroline says that the nurse they‘ve | got from Derby is a ‘very handsome young woman." i ‘"No, no, it isn‘t that at all," Perciâ€" val interrupted testily. "It is that the pater‘s getting uncommonly crotchâ€" ety and capricious, and if it gives him pleasure, at his age, to see you, we must humor him. The last time that we wereâ€"erâ€"summoned down there, you didn‘t go." Oh, well, oh, well!" his wife re turned with a gesture of her plump white hands that appeared to sigâ€" nify capitulation, but with, Bernard thought, a curiously stubborn set of her firm round chin. It occured to him that there had been something under the surface of that argument which had been kept carefully out ;ol sight. Both his brother and his ‘vlte had seemed unusually impatient with each other. But Manette and Mary came toâ€" gether at that momentâ€"Manette with no trace now of her recent tears, though wearing rather more powder than was her customâ€"and he thought no more of it, until his brother touched him on the elbow as they were going down to dinner and He was alone in the drawingâ€"room profecsional advice. Can you give me half an hour or so presently?" "Lord, yes," Bernard returned genially. "We‘ll stay downsstairs whem the women come up. But I say, old man, it‘s nothing serioug, 1 the manner or comversation of his| were serious this time â€"or just anoâ€" brother and his wifeâ€"the taik perâ€"|ther of the oid man‘s rehearsaie for petually aswung back to the condition |the final exit. And in Harley Street dmmm?mmunuulmum "I don‘t know, yet. 1 don‘t know," was Porcival‘s disturbing answer. Bernard reflected uneasily on that dnee or twice in the course of Destiny â€" | _ By J. D. Beresford and when he and Percival were alone with their wine, the story that his brother opened had apparently noâ€" thing whatever to do with the rela tions of husband and wife. It‘s an infernally apgnoying aftair," Percival began. "It only came to a head yesturday. To put it briefly, I‘ve been threatened with an action for damages for negligence and false diagnosis. The damnable part of the iut,urhv.hgt.ldi.-ilnkotlnm.tn. Patient I‘d known on and off for years, man of sixty lots of money and no occupation, hysterical about his health; he‘d worried me for noâ€" thing a dozen times before, and, to be perfectly honest, I took him a bit too lightly, overlooked 'Qu turned out to beâ€"after an operationâ€"an intestinal growth. The point is that I might have him Xâ€"rayed, and didn‘t, and I presume that the claim will be ‘thst be‘d have got off much more lightly if he had been operated upon a month earlier. Now what I want to ask you is has he got a case that he could bring into court?" visit. as if none of them could keep that subject out of his or her "Couldn‘t accuse you of criminal negligence?" "Impossible. If one X:rayed every patient that had a stomachache, we should be accused of criminal ignoâ€" rance." . 5 "You examined him, 1 suppose?" "Thoroughly, although I belifeved it was wasted time, but the growth was too small then and too deepâ€" seated to be spotted by manipula: tion." B Bernard nodded gravely. "Unâ€" doubtedly," he said. "There was a case in court last year of precisely the same kind. But look here, Perciâ€" val, what about expert testimony? Would the profession stand by you?" "Unquestionably, 1 should say," Percival replied. "He‘s spiteful, my dear old chap. Wants to prove that he was right, wants to humiliate me in public for not having taken him seriously enough. I‘ve told you he‘s a hysteriâ€" cal subject." # "H‘m! Soon turn him inside out if I had him in the box," Bernard commented thoughtfully, and {ddved: "If he got a verdict on technical grounds, no jury would cast you in damages." "What‘s his reason for bringing the action if he‘s a rich man?" "Confound the damages, Bernard," Percival returned. "It‘s the injury to my reputation I‘m afraid of. No good disguising the fact, a case of that sort would lose me patients, and â€"â€"I can‘t afford to lose them. I don‘t know how you‘re situated, my dew chap, but I‘ve a mighty expensive family to educate. No, I‘d give a thousand pounds to keep the case out of court. It would pay me. But of course I can‘t offer it." | "No, I‘m none too well fixed at the moment," Bernard returned with a ‘sigh. He looked away from his broâ€" ther as he apoke and Percival on his part appeared to be intent on the color of his port. They were both conscious of the thing that must not. be named between them. The silence was broken by the entry of a servant to say that Mr. \Charles was upâ€"stairs. "No, no," Bernard agreed. "Not yet, in any case. Have you instrucâ€" ted your solicitor?" "Sent him the letter," Percival said, paused and then added: "As a matter of fact, I shouldn‘t care to curse if I had a certain income beâ€" hind me. It‘s this dread of not being able to make both ends meet that plays the devil with a man; the everlasting worry of it all." * "I know, 1 know," Bernard agreed. ‘"You, too? But I thought . . ." Perâ€" cival said. Charles Fytton, whom his two broâ€" thers found on the drawingâ€"room hearthâ€"rug entertaining his niece and his two sistersâ€"inâ€"law, was the youngâ€" est of the Fyttons of that generation. He had come more than eleven years after Caroline; and seemed to be of a different type from the other three. Charles had none of that effect of robustness which distinguished the older memberse of the family. He was slight and dark with a clever, rather eMish face, had a perceptible stoop of the shoulders, and was caréless in his dress. He had come this evening in a blue serge suit, worn a little shiny at the more salient angles, and his collar, al though it might have been clean that morning, bore the marks of twelve hours‘ wear in the grimy London air. Bernard laughed. "That completes the party," he said as he got up. ‘"Hullo!" he greeted his brothers cheerfully as they came intq the room. "Sorry to turn up in these things, but I hadn‘t time to get back to my distant suburb acrose the river. Haven‘t been home in fact sinee nine o‘clock this morning. Tertia rang me up from the butcher‘s pater, so 1 thought I‘d just cal} on P. on my way back and find out if it were serious this time â€"or just anoâ€" ther of the old man‘s rehearsale for the final exit. And in Harley Street here. Well, I‘m pretty busy in my own little catchâ€"penny way, P. What d‘you think? Is it necessary for me to go all that infernal way or not*" "I should go if I were you," Perciâ€" val returned gravely. "Ob, dash it, why?" Charles ex: postulated. "B. can look after my interests @ll right if it comes to a final willmaking." Charles whistied softiy under his breath and looked round his audience before he replied, his gaze, afterâ€" lingering for a moment on Mary, settling finally on the face of his elder sistersinâ€"law. "Yeu‘ve no feeling about the pater himself?" Bernard asked, with a note of reproof in his voice. CHARGED WITH MANSLAUGHTER, An echo of the recent alleged porll on Mquor deaths in Guelph was heard in police court on August 28, when Giacomo Carere wellâ€"known member of the city‘s Italian colony, was taken into custody on a charge of manslaughter after he had been convicted and sentenced to a term aggregating 18 months in the Onâ€" tario Reformatory on two charges of keeping liquor for sale. The serious charge preferred against Carere was prompted through evidence given by four men to the effect that David Ray, one of two recent victims of alleged poison alcchol, had been ‘drintklng with them in Carere‘s home the day prior to his sudden death. BOY SOAKS CAT IN OIL, THEN TOUCHES MATCH Deseronto citizens were startled at the sight of a blazing cat speeding down one of the main streets of the village recently. Crazed by pain, the animal dashed under three cottages, creating a fire scare before death put an end to its suffering. On investigation, an eightâ€"yearâ€"old boy was found to beâ€"the culprit. He had soaked the cat in coal cfl and then «ouched a match to i. The young offender was handed over into the custody of his father on susâ€" pended semtence by the court. $50,000 DAMAGE TO BRIDGE Damage estimated at $50,000 was sustained when the hundred foot span of a new bridge on provincial highway No. 21, two miles norx‘heut‘ of Petrolia, crashed.into the bed of Bear Creek on Wednesday. The caunse of the sudden collapse of the structure, which was being built by the Ryan Construction Company of Windsor, had not been determined. DPDrMWMlliams‘ PINK PHILLS "Lfl e bran With all th P ire whole wheat h ?hc of With Shredded Wheat in the home foe Ainergencyâ€"a guick broaktast arn-.b-":a"md":flanm work or worryâ€"a delicious lunchâ€"a satisfying supperâ€" and :hm-llkmdb-fluordlcdhn::-:. INh not -tfl?h anen * is not as great as it once -.-lï¬m‘â€"-h m thinned and deâ€" anaemia easily lays hold on the system, At first, then become a wonderful aid. oxygen to the blood, increase "and was in a very bad state. As a girl I had taken Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills for a runâ€"down condition and deâ€" cided to take them once more.. Again the result was marvellous. In a little while Lambert of Port Hope, Ont., I was fully well again." Youcmbo.'-.oulz to check anaemia. Dr. W liams‘ Pink Pills are sold at your druggist‘s or by mail, EASY TO SERVEâ€"EASY TO DIGEST paid, 50 cents, from The ""Aa nousenorp namum IN B4 coumtm®s ** (To be continued) meaaeao nneskeaaamenl F I § oi | FIRE ‘ | | | ‘ C. A. BOENHM INSURANCGE AGENCIES, LIMITED ‘ District Agenta. Phones 700 and 701 Waterioo, Ontario. | W. G. WEICHEL _â€" Vieeâ€"Presigent i. Howard Simpson Oscar Rumpel! Jas. Stauffer P, E. Shants ARTHUR FOSTER â€" â€" Manager W. R. BRICKER and JOHN FISCHER â€"â€" â€" ©inspeotors C. A. 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"Yes, dear," replied his mother. "Well, then," said Jack, picking up a saucer, "I‘m going to milk the cat." > Hubâ€"I can‘t eat this stuff. Wifeâ€"Never shind, dear. 1 have some fine recipes for making up leftâ€" overs. Pat: "Kelly called me a loir but Oï¬ got satisfaction out avy him. Mike: Ye did?" Pat: "Oi did. He knocked out two ay me teeth that had been troubling me for a month." He: "You haven‘t said a word for 20 minutes." She: "Well, I had nothing to say." "Don‘t you ever say anything when you have nothing to say?" "No." 5 ‘"Well, then, will you be my wife?" Bechtel& Dreisinger FUNERAL SERVICE Phone 2308 â€" Kitchener "In that case I‘ll eat it now." Day or Night. Home â€" 178 Queen St. S. ABSETS OVER $1400000 _ |A. L BITEER, BA The Making of a Man Smiles Pat?" D. 8. BOWLBT, BA., LLB., Barrle trfl.ltld-.rl'hyhhl..b DR. J, & HBTT, SPECIALTY, Dis eases of the Har, Throat and Nose. King St. Hast., Kitchener. DR. 8. H. ECKEL, Dentist, Office in Bauk of Montreal Bidg, Waterioo. Phone 174. DR. G. E. HARPER, Dentist, Office l_lo_ddlouonnlock.llmu DR. W. J. SCHMIDT. Dentist, King St. K., next uo Post Of Kitchoner, Ont. FIRST MORTGAGES on city ant farm property. Reasonable inter Accountants and Auditors Authorized Trustees, Assignoss, ote. Income Tax Counsel 206 Wober Chambers. Phone 1995 Toronto Building, 19 to amage TSE icz en tor, Notary Public, ote. Money to Queen St. South Phone 638, Ki St. N. Rhone 790, Kitchener, Ont. AUDITORS & ASSIGNEES R. J. W. HAGEY, Dentist, Room 110 Weber Chambers, King St. W., Kitchener. Phone 1756. WALTER D. INRIG & CO. Bring in your harness and have It repaired and oiled ready for spring use. Office 44 Wililam St., Waterics. Phone 64M. Money Loaned on Your Car Pay back in 12 mouthly payâ€" ments while driving, present payments reduced, private sales financed. All dealings confiden tial. Open evenings. Motor Loans & Discounts Ltd. 129 King St. W., Kitchener. Phone 4126 D. T. Brown _ â€" _ ‘Branch Mgr. 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