ARTERS ITTLE IYER PILLS. CURE S 1 gick Headache and relieve all the troubles ineL dent to a bilious state of the.system, eucli as Xhariness, Nausea, Drowsiness^Distress kite* gating, Pain in the Bide, &<S. WMW their most retasrksble success lias been shown in ourlng SICK Saadachs, yet Carter's Little Lire» Pin* M® squally valuable in Constipation, curing and pre- ten ting this annoying complalnt.whlle they also -ôorrec t all disorders of the stomach,stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels. Even if they only cured X x HEAD With Grapes. Uncooked Grape Juice. -- Pick Concord grapes from stems, wash thoroughly, and crush. Squeeze and strain the juice through double double cheese cloth. Drink at once with or witiiout sweetening. 'Two or three teaspoons of sugar to a glass of this most delicious juice brings out its flavor. This is far better than orange juice, and, like it, must always be freshly maae. After squeezing, out the juice the skin and pulp may be put in a preserving preserving kettle, barely covered with cold water, and cooked till whole grapes would burst. Strain and use this juice for jelly or to drink. Grape Jelly.--Use any kind of fine, purple grapes. Half ripe grapes make a jelly much preferred by some people, but from any Concord Concord grape, this early in the season may be made a jelly almost as light, red, and clear as currant jelly, although although if not carefully made it will be a dark, dull purple. Prepare Prepare the grapes just às for cooked grape juice, but cook them for a few minutes longer, since the jellying jellying principle is in the skin • and cooking develops this. Quite as satisfactory jelly, and more of it, can be made by using a little wa- 'Preferrcd Killing Prisoners to Tak- I ter, although some people crush the ing Them Captive. grapes and cook them in their own juice. Use about fourteen ounces Reports that the Germans have SU g ar t 0 each pint of juice. Do been giving "No quarter" t-o any ao f. coo ^ OV er twenty minutes, and of the Belgian peasantry who op- ten ma y do. Gentle cooking is posed them are, it is to be hoped, muc -] 1 more effective than stronger, exaggerated, but such methods chili Sauce.---Twenty-four large, commend themselves to Bismarck. . tomatoe . s . six gre en peppers ; "Prisoners! More prisoners ! fo X ] arge onions. Chop these in- exclaimed at Versailles after one of g. rediente then add three table- P rince Frederick Charles' victories. victories. "'What the devil do we want with prisoners ! Why -, don't they make a battue of them V' To Pure Blood Is Absolutely Necessary To Health U Ache they would he aim oat priceless to thoee who Buffer from this distressing complaint; but fortu- iiately their goodness does notendhere.and those Who once try them will find these little pills valuable valuable in so many ways that they will not he willing willing to do without them. But after all sick head ACHE lathe bane of so many Uves that herd is where we make our great boast. Our pills cure it while others do not. .. . Carter's Little Liver Pills are very small and very easy to take. One or two pills make a dose. They are strictly vegetable ana do not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action pldase all who use them. CA2TSS miCIHB CO-, SBW YOST. Small ?2L. Small Bc& • Small fries» BISMARCK'S WAY. Francs-tireurs be strongly objected objected to mercy being shown, and stormed because Garibaldi's "free company" of 13,000 volunteers were granted" terms of surrender. "Thirteen "Thirteen thou so nd prisoners who are not even Frenchmen !" he cried. "Why on earth were they not shot"" Bismarck may have objected to the taking of prisoners, but bis prejudices prejudices obviously had no effect in the Franco-German War. According According to Moltke, who wrote the official official history of the campaign, the French prisoners reached the extraordinary extraordinary total of 21,508 officers and 702,048 men. But of these nearly nearly 250,000 were the Paris garrison, who were only nominally prisoners. prisoners. and over 90,000 represented the French troops disarmed and interned interned in neutral Switzerland. Still, with these deductions, more than 380,000 officers and men were actually actually imprisoned in Germany, and were released only when peace was declar •ed. j PROMPTLY SECURED! In all countries. Asie for our INVEN TOR'S ADVISER,which will be sent free. MARION & MARION, 364 University St., Montréal. These Wonderful Tablets, Made of Fruit Jûioes, Are The Best Of All Tonics To Purify And Enrich x The Blood. Pure, rich blood can flow only in a clean body. Now, a clean body is one in which the waste matter is regularly and naturally eliminated from the system. The blood cannot be" pure when the skin action is weak, when the stomach does not digest the food properly, when the bowels do not move regularly, when the kidneys are strained or overworked. Pure blood is the result of perfect health and harmony of stomach, liver, bowels, kidneys and skin. "Fruit-a-tives", by their wonderful action oh all these organs, keeps the whole system as clean as Nature intended intended our bodies to be clean. "Fruit-a-tives" tones up, invigorates, invigorates, strengthens, purifies, cleans and gives pure, rich, clean blood that is,, in truth, the stream of life. "Fruit-a-tives" is sold by all dealers at 50c. a box, 6 for $3.50 trial size 25c. or sent postpaid on receipt of price by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. of apace should be left between the lids of the - stove said the coal. To tfemôVè thé r odor of fish or onkms ;from -tihe -frying pan put in vitiegâr Mid heat until scalding, and then w&ah oufc. . • À bake Y that a cupful of liquid yëâsb is equivalent to a half compi'essed yeast cake or whole dry yeast cake. When cleaning ebony brushes, rub a little : vaseline over the backs. This prevents the ammonia or soda in vthè water from injuring the ebony, . . On the tread of your eewing machine' machine' fastenpiece' d»f. carp^. Brussels carpet is'best. You will find it much more comfortable and easy to run. . , - Toothache that is caused by some acid penetrating a cavity "may frequently frequently be relieved by rmsihg the mouth with ft tittle; bicarbonate of soda and water. , , If the bright parts of the kitchen range turn black from the heat, rub the mackened parts with a cloth dipped in vinegar, when the blackness blackness will disapnear. , Drive a nail through an empty spool. It will make a handy peg to hang damp towels on. The spool will not tear or rust the article up- If you are making a cake with a wooden spoon, beat the mixture with the back of the spoon. It is far easier and becomes beautifully light in half the. time. To prevent onions from sprouting let the onions drv. heat a poker red hot and with it singe the roots. Put in a dry place and you will find they will keen perfectly. In the shampoo avoid using strong soaps, strong alkalies, such as ammonia and soda and too hot water. All these take out much of the natural oil of the hair, leaving it dry and harsh. ^Wood's Phosphodino, The Great English^ Remedy. Tones and invigorates the whole nervous system, makes new Blood in old Veins, Cures Nervous DcUUity, Mental and Brain Worry, Despondency. Despondency. Loss of Energy, Palpitation of the Heart. Failing Memory. Price *1 per box. six For $5 <8 One will please, six will cure.® bold by all druggiAti or mailed in plain pkg. on receipt of price Xpw pamphlet mailed free. THE WOOD MEDECINE CO..TORONTO, ONT. (Fereerty WIsdter.) 1 Quit Dosing Your Children with strong Cathartics-- Chamberlain's Tablets are most effective in regulating regulating stomach troubles and constipation constipation for the little folk--one tablet going to bed means a sunny" face in the morning. Pleasant to take, they never fail. 25c. a bottle. Druggists and dealers or by mail. Chamberlain Medicine Co. Toronto 4 CHAMBERLAIN'S , TABLETS . OVER 66 YEARS' EXPERIENCE y Trade Marks Designs \ " Copyrights Ac. Anyone sending a sketch and description may lulckly ascertain our opinion free whether an Mention Is probably patentable, Communica- ions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents it free. Oldest agency for securing patent*, ratent* taken through Mann A Co. receive 1 notice without charge, in the % •5. nitrated weekly, of any scientific journal. Terms for Si.76 a year, postage prepaid. Sold by, :est ctr- f< 363 Broadway, W 4m t St, WasfclpgtMC ZX.' spoons of salt, two and a half cups of vinegar (or five teacups, which hold about half a standard cup), one-half cup of brown sugar. A little little more sugar than this can be added, if to taste. Cook slowly from one-half hour to two hours. Watch carefully, and stir toward the last, if necessary. If the fire is low enough after the boiling point has once been reached it will not stick on. If a spiced sauce is desired, desired, add one tablespoon of cin namon, one tablespoon of allspice, one-half tablespoon of cloves, and one-half tablespoon of nutmeg. Grapes Dipped in Fondant.--The Tokay grapes are perhaps the finest finest for this purpose. So préparée they resemble a liquid filled bonbon. bonbon. Wash the grapes and with the scissors cut each one from the main stem, leaving a little stem on each. Thoroughly dry every one on cloth before dipping it in the melted melted fondant. Dry in little fancy pa per forms or on a greased plate Make the fondant of two cups 01 sugar and three-fourths of a cup o water with a pinch of cream tartar or a few drops of lemon juice add ed when the sugar begins to boil Stir the sugar and water together until thoroughly dissolved, bring slowly to a boil, and boil over a low fire to soft ball stage or to 240 degrees degrees bv the candy thermometer. With this amount of water, over just enough fire to keep up the boiling, the cooking will take ten minutes. Remove from fire and when bubbling ceases pour on a wet or a greased platter. When half cooled through and through commence commence to work toward the centre and keep stirring and folding until the whole is soft and white. Let stand an hour with a wet cloth over it before using. If it is not cool enough when the stirring begins it will harden too soon and be unworkable. unworkable. There are a great number number of precautions to observe in making fondant. For dipping anything anything melt fondant in double boiler boiler with cover. Glaced Grapes. -- Since glaceed grapes show through their cover they are preferred for certain decorative decorative purposes to those dipped in fondant, and little bunches of them may be dipped instead of the single grape s. The single glace ed grapes are sometimes served in a nest of spun sugar. Cook the sugar as for fondant, only longer ; that is, to the hard ball stage, or 340 degrees by the thermometer. After the sugar is taken from the stove and has ceased boiling dip in .the grapes and remove to a greased plate to dry. They should be com plete-ly covered with the sugar. If the fruit is not thoroughly dry or the day is moist, or the sugar is not cooked enough, it will drain off. No kind of wet fruit can be glaceed, and nuts glace best of all. Cooked Grape Juice.--Pick Concord Concord grapes from stems, wash and put on to cook in a little water, almost almost to cover. Bring slowly to a boil and when the grapes have burst strain, bottle, and seal in thoroughly sterilized bottles or cans. If bottles are used, buy only the best corks and cover with paraf fin or sealing wax. If cans are used it is easier to sterilize by boiling the juice on three successive successive days in order to sterilize tihor oughly, but nine times out of ten it will keep without this trouble. The juice will perhaps keep a little better if a little sugar is added, but it cannot then be very well made into jelly later. . ' Time-Saving Hints. Cream cheese into which chili sauce is mixed, rolled into balls and served with lettuce, salad, is a most piquant relish. For creaming butter or butter and sugar a perforated spoon will be found more convenient than a fork or the hand. There is economy in buying soap in quantities ; naturally, the longer it stands the dryer it is when used and the further it goes. When ironing, sprinkle orris root under the ironing sheet. This imparts imparts a delicate perfume to freshly laundered clothing. In testing the oven for cake baking, baking, remember that greater heat is required for a cake baked in layers than for a single loaf. The kitchen range should never be packed full of coal. Two inches TREASURES OF LOUVAIN. Handsome Edifices Contain Fine Specimens of Flemish Art. In the Middle Ages Louvain was the capital of Brabant, Belgium, and one of the most flourishing cities of the Low Countries. Its University ranked as the best in Europe. Louvain is said to ha ye had 150,000 inhabitants in the fourteenth fourteenth century. The chief ornaments of the town are the Hotel de Ville and the Church of St. Pierre, both in the late. Gothic «style. The former is a rich and beautiful example of late Gothio architecture, resembling the town halls of Bruges, Brussels, Urhent and Cudenaarde, but surpassing surpassing them in elegance of detail and harmony of design. It was erected in 1448-59 by Matthew do Layens, and has -recently been restored. restored. The building consists of three stories, each of which has 10 pointed wand© ws in the principal facade, and is^ covered with a lofty toof surrounded with an open balustrade; balustrade; At the four corners and from the centre of the gables spring six-, slender octagonal turrets, terminating terminating in open spires. The three different facades are lavishly enriched enriched with sculptured. The statues statues in the niches represent persons prominent in the history of the town. The corbels which support the statues are. embellished with reliefs reliefs representing scenes from Old and New Testament history, in some cases with medieval coarseness. coarseness. - ' The Church of St. Pierre is a cruciform cruciform structure of noble proportions. proportions. It was begun in 1425 to replace replace an earlier building of the tenth century, and finished in the early sixteenth century. The west tower lost its wooden spire in a storm in 1606. The choir is separated separated from the nave by an elaborate elaborate jube, or rood loft, in the Gothic style, made in 1488, consisting of three arches adorned with «statuettes «statuettes of the Apostles, John the Baptist, Baptist, etc., and surmounted by a crucifix. The church contains some glorious specimens of early Flemish art). There is a "Descent from the Cross," by Roger van der Weyden --a winged picture on a golden ground, with the donors àt the sides. In one of the chapels is the masterpiece of Dir ok, or Dierick Bouts, the "Last Supper." The "Last. Supper" was painted about 1467 and is in admirable preservation. preservation. It is the central picture of a large altar piece of which other por- eions are in Berlin. Another picture picture by Bouts is in the same church. It is the "Martyrdom of St. Erasmus." Erasmus." In the background is shown the Emperor, «richly attired, with three attendants. In the wings are St. Bernard and St. Anthony. (This beautiful city was recently destroyed by the Germans). * : ' Utilizes every heat unit. Flues arranged so heat is forced to travel over top of oven in v> down behind it and twice under under the bottom before escaping escaping to cMmney. See the McClary dealer, si INDICTMENTS AGAINST WAR "Peace on Earth, Good Will Among Men Is An Ideal Which flust Be Realized Misled. The customer in the grocery store, having ruined his clothes, was hopping mad. "Didn't you see that sign, 'Freslh Paint' ?" asked the grocer. "Of course I did," snapped the customer, "but I've seen so many signs hung up here announcing something «fresh that wasn t that I didn't believe it." Small But Potent.-- Parme! ee's Vegetable Vegetable Pills are small, but they are effective effective in action. Their fine qualities as a corrector of stomach troubles are known to thousands and they are in demand every where.by those who know what a safe and simple remedy they are. They need no introduction to those acquainted with them, but with those who may not know them they are presented as the best preparation on the market for disorders of the stomach. (1) Thus saifch the Lord, Ye shall not fight (against your brethren. II. Chronicles x«i., 4. (2) God hM-h made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on the face of the earth.--Acte xvii., 26. It was a s/tern command which the Lord laid .upon Rehobo am, the King, as recorded in the Book of Chronicles. He had gathered together, together, so we are told, no less than "!a«n hundred and .fourscore thousand thousand «chosen men, which were warriors," warriors," and with itheisc 'he was proposing proposing to invade and conquer Israel, Israel, which had^xebeiled against his fuie. But no jsooner had he mar- tialled this great host for the campaign campaign tih'an there came the word of the Lord forbidding him to "fight against (his) Brethren*' and ordering ordering every man to "retilrn to his house." And behold 1 the narrative tells us (that the King and -his men "obeyed the word of the Lord and returned." Regarded as Brothers. Now «we only have to extend this early conception of human brotherhood brotherhood in the way that Paul extends it in his speech to the Athenians, as recorded in the Book of Acts, to have a «perfect understanding of religion religion ' s indictment against war. "Ye .shall not fight against you-r brethren," saith the Lord. But where in this age of ever-extending ever-extending relationships shall we find men who «are not our "brethren" ? In the primitive ages of the world -s history our "brethren" were the members of our own family, or, at the most, our own clan. Gradually, Gradually, as intercourse was w.dened and acquaintanceship broadened, fraternal fraternal relaltionslhios were joined between tribe and tribe and between city-state and city-state. By and by nations were formed-- rent and torn full often, to be sure, by. civil conflict, but still nations--and nations--and all men within the borders borders of each nation were regarded as brothers. At the -worst, it was Greeks against barbarians or the Jews against the Gentiles. . But now, in this later age of civilized development, the sympathies- of men are overleaping the more or less artificial and accidental -barriers -barriers of nationality and entering the field of internationalism. Dimly, Dimly, but Still surely, we are coming to recognize (the essential Kinship of Humanity, the common «membership of all nations nations and races in the one great family oif God, the universal brotherhood brotherhood of man. To-day there.are no separate families or tribes or nationalities. We are "maae of one blood" ; we are dowered with one spirit ; we are brothers, and love is the law of life. Just here do we haye the divine truth which is destined, sooner or later, to make wars and rumors of war impossible. God's word, "Ye shall not fight against your brethren," brethren," which applied of old time only to Judah as (toward. Israel, today today applies to each nation of men "on the face of the earth" as toward toward every other nation. Brotherhood Brotherhood is now seen to be universal, •• and therefore "peace_ on earth, good will among men" an ideal which must be realized. John Haynes Holmes. Rev. Time Has Tested it.--Dr. Thomas* Eclectrio Oil has been on the market upwards for thirty years and in that it has proved a blessing to thousands. It is in high favor throughout Canada and its excellence has carried its fame beyond the seas. It has no equa] 111 the whole list of liniments.. If it were double the price it would he a cheap liniment-. Sufficient Reason. "Why don't you -brush : your hair V' asked the man of the boy with the frowsy bead. "'Ain't- got no brukh." "Why don't you use your father's brush V ' ,, "He ain't got- no brushy "'No brush Ï Why hasn't- lie a brush 1" "Ain't got no hair." girl > ? Madge--"Don't you think a should marry an. economical man 1 Dolly---"I suppose so ; but it's awful awful being engaged to one!'.' THE BEAUTIFUL CITY OF LOUVAIN, DESTROYED BY THE GERMANS A vi-w of the Town Hall at Louvain, Belgium. This lovely city was. utterly destroyed by the Germans in reprisal for'the shooting, of .some German soldiers by civilians. Buildings centuries old, filled with priceless relics of antiquity, were levelled to the ground by these modern Goths and vandals. >-ix hundred hundred years- ago this x city, with its population of 50,000, was the most important industrial centre m this nlrt If ELow " Enormous quantities of woollen and linen cloth were woven here and exported to all part of .Bi ope. . there was a riot in this square and thirteen magistrates of noble family were killed ° The building shown here was, when erected,;-practically;a huge illustrated Bible and town history history spread open to the eyes of all the people before there were any printed bocks. Housekeepers ! B uy only goods MADE IN CANADA and keep the factory workers employed. KELLOGG'S TdASTED CORN FLAKES is the only article of food under the KELLOGG name that is of CANADIAN Manufacture. All others are imported and do not help our work people Keep Your Money at Home Battle Creek Toasted Corn Flake Co. CANADA LONDON