s ;< i x < Z < V > i' r - t < C - .ï\6 V. r - x V' : A.V- G 7 Lf Tried Recipes. Minced Egg and Lettuce Sandwiches.--Mash Sandwiches.--Mash hard boiled e<gg s with a little salt, paprika and a few drops -of vinegar. Spread liberally liberally on thin slices of bread and place a -crisp lettuce leaf between. Bread may be buttered, but to be economical butter can be omitted- Mock Oyster Soup--Ingredients: One Spanish onion-, one cupful of diced celery, two cupfuls of diced potatoes, one tablespoonful of kid* ter, salt and pepper to taste, milk as needed. Method: Use ^ outer stalks of celery., reserving the 'hearts for table use. Skin and slice the onion, then place three first ingredients ingredients in a saucepan and. cover well with water. Cook until very tender, then rub through a sieve or fruit press. Add butter and as much milk a-s will render soup a Season to creamy consistency, taste, then bring to boiling point. Hot Potato Salad with Bacon Dressing.--Ingredients : Three cupfuls cupfuls of diced potatoes, one table- spoonful of diced onions, t-hre 6 slices of bacon, four tablespoonfuls of vinegar, one teaspoonful of su gar, salt and pepper to taste. Method--Cook onion and potatoes until tender, then drain. Cut bacon bacon into cubes, fry until a golden brown, then add vinegar and sugar. Season salad to taste, then P 0 ! 11 - the dressing over. Toss up well and serve hot. Fresh Rolls.--Easy Method.--Ingredients Method.--Ingredients for sponge : One and one- half cupfuls of sifted flour, one tea- spoonful of butter, one-half teaspoonful teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonful of Sugar, one small cake of dissolved yeast, one cupful of warm milk and water. Mbthod : Rub the butter and salt- into the flour, add sugar to dissolved yeast, then add to liquid. Beat this into the flour, then cover and set aside about two hours or until light and full of bubbles. Now beat in one and one- half more cupfuls of sifted flour and beat hard. Cover and let raise until until double in bulk, then divide into greased roll or gem pans, filling two-thirds full. Let- stand half an hour, then bake. Pan Baked Pears or Apples.-- Method : Pare, half and core the fruit, pack close together in a deep pudding dish, sifting sugar over each layer. Cover at first, then bake in open dish until tender and slightly browned. This is . good either hot- or cold. Corn Souffle.--Made of left-over corn on the cob. Method : Scrape the kernels from tlhe cob, season slightly with salt and pepper. To two cupfuls of corn add one cupful of milk and one egg well _ beaten. Mix thoroughly and bake in a pan of water in moderate oven until the souffle is set. To be eaten at once. Lima Bean Salad.--Young lima beans cooked slowly twenty minutes minutes in boiling water. Drain. Dry- in napkin. Season. Keep on ice until ready to serve in 'bowl lined with crisp lettuce. Sprinkle with one tablespoonful finely chopped mint'; pour over dressing mixed of one-half teaspoon each salt and celery celery seed, one salt spoon white pep- pr, one teaspoon Worcestershire sauce, four tablespoons olive oil, ode tablespoon vinegar added last. Cucumber Chutney -- The cucumbers cucumbers should be ripe, chopped very fine, put- in a cloth and all the water water squeezed out, To a dozen large cucuntbers, peeled and seeds scraped scraped out- before chopping, allow six large onions, six green and red Household Hints. Bë sure^to boil soda in the coffee pot once a week.- Squeaking shoes may sometimes be silenced by rubbing with oil. _ Lace continually cleaned with' gasoline or naphtha will turn yellow yellow quickly. Iron the button side of a waist on a folded bath towel, buttons turned turned downward. It will prevent them from breaking. When serving hot bread or pastry pastry of any kind use .hot plates. The most delicious pastry can become soggy when served on cold plates. Paint can be removed from clothing clothing by .saturating the spots two or three times with equal parts of ammonia and turpentine then wash out in soap suds. Tea is used for giving laces an antique tint; coffee for ecru. Use both in clean, strong solutions and rinse in dean water till the shade desired is reached. Gold and silver jewelry may be washed in a cupful of warm water with a teaspoonful of amonia in it. Dry with soft doth and polish with chamois leather. Place new gloves . between the folds of a damp towetl for an hour before being worn. They are muen easier to put- on ; the damp makes the kid more pliable. Cabbage should never be boiled longer than 30 minutes, for when the time is lengthened, the leaves lose their, tender crispness and become become soft- and dark colored. Lamlb, if fresh should be of a bright red color, with white fat. It should be used within three days after killing. It is unwholesome if not thoroughly cooked. Kitchen uit-ensils made of wood may be kept clean and white by rubbing with soap and lukewarm water t-o which is added a little common soda or household ammonia. ammonia. After embroidered sheets and pillow pillow cases have become worn, the monogram may be cut out in a circle and used again by neatly feather-stitching it on ■ the new material. A lump of soda dissolved in a little little hot water and added to the bluing bluing water on wash day 7 prevents the bluing from -settling in the clothes and makes them perfectly 7 white. Kerosene will do -the work of any 7 of the cleansers on the market and is much-less expensive. It is excellent excellent for cleaning the tub and tiling in the bathroom and equally good for the oiled floors. Curtains or stair linens .to be w-ashed should first be laid in cold water, then wrung from -the cold water and placed in very 7 hot water, in which a goodly* allowance of kerosine has been poured.. When cleaning in gasoline, set the container with material and gasoline in a tub of boiling water out of doors and use white soap and a brush in the process, unless soap would take the color out. Many housewives find it- convenient convenient as well as healthful to substitute substitute a good brand of condensed milk for cooking purposes for use during the summer. In most cases it- answers the purpose just as well as fresh milk, and is always more healthful -than milk not perfectly fresh. AGREEMENT PROVIDES FOR HUMANE TREATMENT. Confinement Is Only Provided Indispensable Means of Safety. as $1,500 SHELLS. \VA PERRINS GONDOLA ----a biscuit of most delectable flavor, short, and light as a feather. At tea-time, or any other time, it is sure to be a success. THE PERRIN "SAMPLER" PACKAGE will delight you. A box of delicious fancy biscuits send 10c. (coin or stamps) and your grocer's name for it. B. S. Perrin & Company Limited LONDON - CANADA What It Costs Britain to Keep Up a Dreadnought. Every time a big gun is fired, $1,- 500 goes in smoke and a splash, and there are 372 such guns in the British British Home Fleet. Torpedoes cost ten times as much, but they have the advantage . from the taxpayers' point of view, that they can be picked picked up again after they 7 have been fired in practice. Many of the big ships burn oil fuel as an auxiliary to their coal, or at least are fitted for that purpose, but there are 127 'torpedo craft beside beside the submarines which burn oil fuel alone. In the aggregate their tanks and double bottoms can accommodate accommodate 10,315 tofis of fuel, for which Britain ha-s to pay $25 a ton. Coal is not so expensive, but it does not go so far. If the twenty- seven Dreadnoughts now in . full commission were sent on an eight- hours' full-power coal-burning run they could consume 4,320 tons of fuel, ' running up a bill of some $15,000. If a -single Dreadnought battle squadron of eight ships were ordered ordered to steam at full speed for twenty- four hours and to fire each gun and each torpedo-tube once, the cost to the nation would be approximately $1,000,000, allowing nothing for the depreciation of material. Take Notice. A specialist claims to be able to make hair grow on a bald head by rubbing it frequently with a Turkish Turkish towel. It is barely possible that fuzz off the towel has given him false encouragement The prisoner of war has been a conspicuous figure in the news that has come from, the seething caldron of Europe within the last few weeks. If the reports that passed the censor be true, many thousands of prisoners prisoners have been taken from the contending contending armies by their adversaries. For them the average Canadian, reading the war .news in the comfort of his security, from .-the-great, conflict, conflict, has felt perhaps a grain of sorrow and wondered vaguely the horrors that befell them after capture. capture. Recently the German War Department Department sent broadcast a -statement that 30,000 Russians had been taken prisoners by the German soldiers after heavy battles in East Prussia, Prussia, particularly around Ortelsburg, Hohenstein and Tannenburg. The statement mentioned the fact that among the prisoners were many Russian officers of high rank. What is done with these prisoners, how they are handled and treated and whether high officials are punished punished more severely than mere privates privates are questions frequently asked asked by readers of the war news and seldom answered, for the. procedure followed in such matters is but little known; International Law. The international laws of warfare, embodied in The Hague conventions, conventions, the Geneva convention and the Declaration of London, contain provisions that provide expressly what manner of treatment shall" be accorded prisoners of hostile nations nations who are taken in battle.. If these provisions of international law are lived up to, the lot of the prisoner of war is not so bard as many people have been led to believe. believe. There have been interspersed interspersed in the war news from biased sources insinuations that the soldiers soldiers of this or that nation have ruthlessly violated the provisions of the international laws governing warfare and the Kaiser has been accused accused of treating The Hague convention convention as so much waste paper. The news from abroad has not revealed revealed any unfairness to the many thousands of soldiers who- are prisoners prisoners of war, so it must be assumed assumed that with respect to them, at least, the laws are being observed. That such is the case may be assumed assumed also from the iact that the nation which captures its enemy's soldiers and makes prisoners. of them is held entirely responsible for whatever happens and shoulders at once a responsibility that is commensurate commensurate with the number of. prisoners prisoners who are taken and detained. The law of warfare says that a prisoner must be as fair with his captors as they are with him. . He must be humanely treated,..so it is prescribed, and when he is questioned questioned by his captors lie must give his true name and the rank he holds in the army which has been defeated and of which he was once a part. Contrary to general belief, he is not stripped of everything and thrown into a dungeon and fed on a- crust of bread and a mug of stale water. His captors do not deprive him of his personal possessions., except weapons, horses and military papers. papers. Furthermore, they must give him complete religious liberty, and it is specifically decreed that he must be given opportunity to.attend a- church of the denomination to which he belongs. And there, he may pray as much for the success of his own nation or the much desired desired relief from detention as the state of his mind dictates. The Prisoner of War be interned in. a town or a "Frujt-a-lives" Healed His Kidneys and Cured Him Hagers ville, Ont , Aug. 26th. 1913. "About two years ago, I found my health in a very bad state. My Kidneys Kidneys were not doing their work and I was all run down in condition. I felt the need of some good remedy, and havingseen ' ' Fruit-a-tives' ' advertised, I decided to try them. Their effect, I found more than satisfactory. Their action was mild and the result all that could be expected. My Kidneys resumed their normal action after I had taken upwards of a dozen boxes, and I regained my old- time vitality. Today,.! am enjoying the best health I have ever had". B. A. KELLY " Fruit-a-tives " is the greatest Kidney Remedy in the world. It acts on the bowels and skin as well as on the kidneys, and thereby soothes and cures any Kidney soreness. "Fruit-a-tives" is sold by nil dealer's at 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25c. or will be sent on receipt of price by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. may fort or even a, camp, according to the convenience of his captors, but the enemy may not confine him, except, except, the law says, as an indispensable indispensable measure of safety, and then only as long as the circumstances make it necessary. Of course, the law gives the commanding officer considerable leeway in such matters, matters, for he is left to determine when, the indispensable occasion arises. At other times when the prisoner is at liberty, he is subject to all the rules and regulations of the army of the government that captured him, and if he refuses to obey the rules or acts in an insubordinate insubordinate manner toward the officers officers in command he may be punished punished and disciplined according to his offense. And here it is again left to the discretion of his captors as to what- measure of punishment shall be inflicted upon him. If a prisoner of war attempts to escape and his captors are vigilant vigilant to the extent of retaking him before he leaves the territory they occupy or before he has a chance to rejoin his own army, he may be severely punished. On the other hand, if he eludes his captors and makes a clean getaway and his army is again unfortunate, and he is captured the second time, the perfectly good escape from previous previous captivity must 1 go unpunished and he must be treated as a prisoner prisoner of war, just as though be had not made the successful dash for liberty and further glory. The government that holds prisoners prisoners of war is chargeable with their maintenance and must provide provide them with food, clothing and shelter as good as that provided for its own troops. The officers of the captors are required to keep records of a-lil the prisoners "under their charge, and if relief societies, which have been extensively formed by the women of Europe and many American women as well, wish to minister to their needs and comforts, comforts, the officers in command must afford them every possible facility*. And if the friends of prisoners or the welfare societies see fit to send them . presents and clothing, medicine medicine and other necessities, such goods must be admitted to them Free of Any War Duty that might be imposed by the nation nation holding, them, and the railroads railroads owned by the government are bound to carry such supplies free of transportation charges. Prisoners of war may be put to -work by the government that captures captures them, and the duties must, be assigned with a view to their apti tude, fitness and rank. The tasks must not be unduly-severe, so as to border on cruelty and they must have, no bearing whatever on the operations of the war. The prisoners prisoners must be paid for the work they do, .moreover, at a rate equal to thv-u being paid to the soldiers of the national army, and prisoners may be authorized to work for a public service, for private persons or on their own account. The wages of these prisoners, the law says, must go toward improving their condition, and the balance must be paid them after their release, release, with the proper deduction for their board and keep. When officers officers of hostile armies who are captured captured are put to work they must get the same wage rate as is paid to the corresponding officers of the government whose captives they are. All these moneys must be ultimately ultimately refunded by their own governments to their captors after the war is over, peace is declared, and the intricate problems of indemnities indemnities come up for solution. A prisoner of war may even be paroled by his captors, and this is done sometimes when he is disabled or there are circumstances that prompt his enemies to let him go to these who are near and dear to him. When parole is granted to a prisoner he makes a- solemn .pledge and promise that he will live up to the terms under which he is released, released, and even his own nation may not ask him to perform a service that is inconsistent with that pledge. It goes hard with the prisoner prisoner on parole who is caught fighting fighting against the nation that released released him, for he is not entitled to be treated as a prisoner of war, and the judgment meted out to him is as terrible as it. is sure. Certain Codes of Honor are supposed to be observed even in international warfare, and, a soldier who breaks his word of honor is considered the most despicable despicable of men. No matter how long the military authorities of a nation decide to detain the prisoners they take in battle, they may not put them to death or even wound them. The procedure of taking prisoners. is only for one purpose, and that is to weaken the opposing armies. When soldiers .are declared prisoners prisoners of war they surrender their arms, and', if they obey the code, do not try to overpower their captors. This particular feature of the rule of war is usually lived up to, for the effort, if it fails, is punished by Utilize» every heat unit. Flues arranged so heat is forced to travel over top of oven in M c Clar/s Pandora ^^3 rjfi/y down behind it and twice un- ^ derthe bottom before escaping escaping to chimney. See the McClary dealer, si " MADE-IN-CANADA " Sold by R. G. STURGEON & CO. A PHOTOING THE KAISER. Poses for instant slaughter, and if the despatches despatches from the scenes of the operations operations now going on are anywhere near the truth the reason for certain certain acts described as barbarous cruelty is made apparent. How* Emperor William His Picture. Herr Adolf Baumann has been court photographer to European royalties for a quarter of a century. century. His latest experience in photographing photographing Emperor William is described described in the New York Sun. While Herr Baumann and his assistants. assistants. were waiting in the anteroom anteroom of the - royal palace at Berlin, the. Emperor entered, saying: ^ "Good morning, gentlemen! His voice was resonant, commanding. commanding. His gaze devoured us. When he speaks, he looks directly and deeply into your eyes. You feel that he reads y-our mind. "'Where is the court photographer photographer ?" he said. I came forward. "Where shall I stand? IVhe re is the light best?" he asked.. It was as if he were giving a military order. order. 'When he is photographed, he voluntarily assumes the poses desired. desired. He alters his expression as he wills. He refuses to be photographed photographed sittinig. That position, bethinks, lacks, dignity. He likes photographs that reveal hira^with a tense, commanding expression. Before Before the camera, his main thought seems to be of the effect his picture picture will have--first, upon the army, and then upon the people. The Emperor assumed one ; position position after another, turning this way and that. He had already thought ? t HEALTH Army Automobiles. Motor vehicles of all kinds play an indispensable part in the European European conflict. Cannon, even of large calibre, are mounted upon heavily armored motor trucks, and moved from placé to place with far greater speed than could possibly be obtained from horses. There are also trucks for carrying previsions, travelling kitchens, motor ambulances, ambulances, water-tank trucks with apparatus apparatus for distilling water that carry the water to the men on the firing line, motor vehicles equipped with wireless telegraph and telephone telephone stations, tractors with a winch and chain . for hauling heavy guns into position. Upon the outbreak outbreak of war, army officers requisitioned requisitioned taxicabs and motor carriages in every large city, with which to hurry the troops to their rendezvous, rendezvous, and from there to their places on the frontier. The generals generals and staff officers of all the leading armies use high-powered automobiles to travel from place to place. Many of these machines are travelling war offices. ana max., xie nau antuu,» oiu: the poses he desired ; he knew exactly what he wanted. He was very particular about the curl of his moustache ; -often between the exposures he would give the ends a stiff upward twirl- with his fingers. It was like taking a moving picture. picture. Plates passed between me and my assistants with sleight-of- hand dexterity. "Enough!" he finally declared. In forty minutes I had taken thirty- five photographs, all in different positions. "I hope the photographs photographs will be the kind I like," he said. "I will then "give you an order." order." When I received the proofs back, I found that lie had personally made the most painstaking directions directions for retouching. He was particularly particularly urgent that every vestige of creases be touched out of his clothes, especially the- sleeves. Most of • the photographs _ showed him serious, not to say grim. He ordered a number of enlargements for his regiments. Those selected for that purpose represented him in the most severe and commanding attitudes. Without question,_ Kaiser is a profound psychologist. Care of Children in Autumn. Mothers perhaps do nut fully realize the necessity for taking particular care of children during the early autumn. A little _ extra care bestowed upon the child at this season will save many of the colds and troublesome ailments that tax the constitution and make children children more liable to disease duiing the winter. Autumn colds are particularly particularly to be guarded against, as these so often develop into chronic catarrh which-is very hard to cuie. The thin stockings and socks worn in summer should be succeedeu by ones that are slightly warmer, while the same change should be made in the -underwear. This should, always be of wool, except during the heat- of the- day . the colder evenings demand extra pre cautions in the putting on of warmer warmer coats and wraps. I do not menu that a child should be coddled, far from it, but a mother should see to the children having a light coat or cape which would prevent them catching cold. Woollen combinations combinations of light weight are excellent for children's, wear, and save many a- serious illness. Children take cold more easily or less readily, but if well protected there is less liability to contract a severe cold. Colds in children are best treated by keeping them in a warm, not stuffy atmosphere, and if possible, in bed. If a child is kept in practically practically the same atmosphere fur three days, and a simple cough or cold mixture administered, rthe cold will generally disappear without leaving leaving any serious effects behind.--A Phvsiciian. X > recognize An ounce of get-up-and-get is better than a pound of that tired feeling. Paw Didn't Know.- "Willie--P-aw,.are a man and his wife one ? . Paw---Ye-s. my son. Wil'lie-- 1 Then how many was Solo-. Paw--You go-to -bed, young man.. 'S the A Three Year Old. "Mother," said a three-year-old girl, "I don't think you know much about bringing up children, do you?" "What makes' you think that, dear?" "Because you always send me to bed when I'm not a bit sleepy, and make me get up when I am." Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills, Must Beer Signature of I Very small, and a* easy, to take as «agar* FOR HEADACHE. CARTERS ' Rkeims, French City Destroyed by. German Bombardment. A view of Rheimis, the beautiful French city which was laid in" ruins by the siege guns of the Germans during the bombardment of the city. In the distance on an eminence sta.nds-the S'even-hundred-year-nld Cathedral of Notre Dame, which was destroyed-during the bombardment. It was a prominent mark for _ German guns, and shelling it could easily have been avoided had the Germans wished. , vV* . - • ' See FaoSjmlle Wrapper Below. ITTLE IVER PILLS. FOR DIZZINESS. FtlR BILIOUSNESS. FOR .TORPID LIVER. for Constipation FOflfSALLOW SKIN; FOR THE COMPLEXION T - MU«THAVt ygHATUH»/ ] Purely 'VegetaMe./^KSw^Swm CUG-r SICK HEADACH5» The Rest Cure. It, is always easier to the need of a - rest cure than it is to put the cure into operation. First.of all there is the difficulty of deciding just where and how to give it. Then it becomes necessary to persuade the patient to take it. and every rest-cure patient is a problem . by himself, and usually a difficult one. It is quite possible to be in urgent need of the rest cure and at the same time to be more obstinate, vociferous, and unmanageable than all the rest of the family put together. together. That is why physicians advise advise against attempting the. rest cure in the home. It is very likely to fail there in the ease, of the patient, patient, and to succeed only in making making patients of the other members of the family : for worn-out people are hard to handle, although they ruay be perfectly, tractable and reasonable when they are m a state of health. That- is the. reason that a good sanatorium is the best solution of the problem. . The patient is at once removed from Ins o-vevso 11 c 11 ■ ous family, and becomes simply one case among other cases--although he may ! be tactfully recognized a-s a very "interesting." one. Furthermore, Furthermore, a life of gentle but inflexible rule and habit is established. The days glide bv. and they are made to glide and not to drag, which is.' perhaps, the most valuable secret ; of the system. But unfortunately, many people who need the rest cure cannot r-f ford ,to go to a sanatorium. It those cases, we must strive to attain attain as far "as possible the atmosphere atmosphere and methods of the sanatorium. sanatorium. Break the day up into periods, periods, and ! let them be punctually observed. observed. Try to get the patient into a mood of willing obedience to some one person, even-if you have to persuade persuade the doctor to play the ogre for that purpose. Let the meals be a succession of mildly 7 exciting picnics. picnics. Admit one visitor a day--no more--as a concession and a treat. And if you can possibly find the money,' have a professional «massage «massage the patient.at regular intervals. Remember that an impatient, • intractable intractable and thoroughly bored person lying in bed is not taking a 'rest. cure.--Youth's Companion. J Si jlifr