# CARTERS ITTLE IVER PILLS. Z CUR Sick Headache and relieve all the troubles inti- dent to a bilious state of the system, such aa /Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after eating. Pain in the Side, <fco. While their moat remarkable success has been shown in curing Headache, yet Carter's Little Liver Pills are equally valuable in Constipation, curing and preventing preventing thisannoyingcomplaint,while they also correct all disorders of the s tomach,stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels. Even if they only cured 'Ache they would Le almostpricelesa to those who suffer from this distressing complaint; but fortunately fortunately their goodness does notend here.and those who once try them will find those little pills valuable valuable in so many ways that they will not-be willing willing to do without them. But after all sick head ACHE Is the bane of so many lives that here 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 and do not gripe or purge, but by thoir gentle action please all who use them. OAETBB HlDIsma 00.;, UBW YOBS. liai PÜL . U ta i Snail te In some parts^of^NxfFwaÿxcorn vsed as a substitute for mono* is Woocl's Phosphodiao, The Great English Remedy. Tones and Invigorates the. whole I nervous system, makes new Blood in old Veins, Cures Nervous Jjehilit//, Mental and Brain JVoi'ry, Despondency, Despondency, Loss of Energy, Palpitation of the Heart, Failing Memory. Price $1 per box, six for $5. One will please, six will cure. Sold by all druggists or mailed in plain pkg. on receipt of price. New pamphlet mailed free. THE WOOD MEDICINE CO.,TORONTO, ONT. (Formerly Windsor.) 'niljjjrnminiiiiiiiniiniiniiinniiiniinimiiiiinininie ' \ Why not give your § ' boy and girl an | opportunity to g make their home | study easy and j effective? Give | them the same | chances to win pro- | motion and. success 1 as the lad having the I advantage of ; ; 1 NEW INTERNATIONAL * 1 Dictionary in his home. This new i | creation answers with final author- I | ity all kinds of puzzling questions 1 f§. in history, geography, biography, 1 I spelling, pronunciation, sports, arts, 1 1 and sciences. 1 •= 400,000 Vocabulary Terms. 2700 Pages. ; ; - ; Over 6000 Illustrations. Colored Plates. §§ - The only dictionary with the Divided Page. : : E The type matter is equivalent to that 1 H of a 15-volume encyclopedia. E § More Scholarly, Accurate, Convenient, g j and Authoritative than any other Eng- |j lish Dictionary. || REGULAR | AND = INDIA- | PAPER = EDITIONS. | WRITE for | specimen pages, == illustrations, etc. = Slika set of Pocket = Maps if ybu name this 1 paper. \ g G. & C. MERRIAM CO., g SPRINGFIELD, MASS. | ii/mjifiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii/| Sept,| 13 Canadian National EXHIBITION TORONTO 11 $150,000 $150,000 66 PATRIOTIC YEAR Jl Model Military Camp Destruction of Battleships Battles of the Air About the Household Seasonable Dishes. Banana Ice Cream.--To the crushed pulp of six bananas add one cupful sugar, one-half tea-spoonful salt. Pour in a quart of milk and pint of cream. Mix well and freeze. Fruit Iced Tea.--Steep some fresh tea and put on ice. When cold pour in the juice of pineapple, strawberries, strawberries, apples, banana and any other fruit you like all mixed together. Huckleberry Pancakes.--Sift to- teaspoons butter, bit by bit, and one tablespoon lemon juice. Peach Cake.--Mix together two cups sifted flour, two teaspoons baking baking powder, one heaping tablespoon butter, one-half cup sugar and milk enough co make soft dough. Roll out half an inch thick and lay on flat, buttered baking pan. Have-peaches ready, peeled and cut into lengths. Press these into dough in rows. Sprinkle with granulated sugar and gether in a deep bowl one quart of >«**• c "t in squares and serve hot a. With sweetened cream. flour, two teaspoonfuls of salt, three tablespoonfuls of sugar, add three well-beaten eggs and four tablespoonfuls tablespoonfuls of milk. Beat to a smooth batter, then add one pint of cream, one pint of milk, the grated rind of one lemon and two cupfuls of huckle- beiries. Fry and serve very hot with powdered sugar. Baked Stuffed Cucumbers.--Wipe and peel cucumbers, cut in two-inch pieces crosswise and remove seeds. Mix four tablespoons bread crumbs, two tablespoons finely chopped cooked ham and two tablespoons" grated cheese (Parmesan is best). Moisten with tomato sauce and season with salt and pepper. Put cucumber cups in shallow pan, fill mith mixture, surround surround with hot^Water .or chicken stock and bake half an hour. Then cover with buttered crumbs and bake until own. / Peach Fritters.--Remove skins from three or four peaches and cut in small pieces. Mix and sift one cup flour, one and one-half teaspoons baking baking powder, three tablespoons powdered powdered sugar and one-fourth teaspoon salt. Add one-third cup milk gradually, gradually, while stirring constantly, and one egg well beaten. Then add peaches. Drop by spoonful into hot fat and fry until delicately brown. Drain on brown paper, sprinkle with powdered sugar and . send to table on folded napkin, with lemon sauce. Lemon Sauce.--Put three-fourths cup sugar into saucepan, add one- fourth cup water and let boil five, minutes. Remove from fire, add two Sale of Farm Lands. Estâte of Jonathan Channon, Dèceased. The undersigned auctioneer has been instructed instructed by the administrator of the property of the above named Jonathan Channon, deceased, to offer for sale on Thursday, the twelfth (lay of August, 1915, at one o'clock p.m., at the residence residence of the said deceased at the time ' of.his death on lot two in the seventh concession of the township ofDarlington.in the County of Durham : All and Singular the north half of lot number two in the sixth concession of the said township of Darlington, containing one hundred acies more or less. *■ The lands lie about one and one-half miles east of the village of Tyrone and about eight miles from the market town of Bowmanville, and about five and one-half miles from the railway station at Bowmanville.on the C. N. R. On the lands are said to be erected a large frame barn on a stone foundation with stabling underneath. Terms : The property will be offered for sale subject to a reserved bid. The purchaser shall pay ten percent of the purchase price at the time of the sale to the vendor or its solicitor, and the balance in thirty days thereafter without interest. The purchaser will search the title at his own expense and the vendor will not be required required to furnish a Registrar's or other abstract of title, and is not to produce any deeds, copies of same or evidence of title, not in its possession. In all other respects the terms and conditions of of sale will be - the standing conditions of the Supreme Court of Ontario. Further particulars may be had from The Trusts an l Guarantee Company, Limited, ad- ministiator, at Toronto, or the undersigned solicitor anct_ auctioneer. D, B. Simpson, L. A. W. Tole, Solicitor for administrator. . Auctioneer Dated July 14th, 1915. 29-1 Potato Soup.--Pare four medium- sized potatoes, quarter and boil with small onion and two or thrèe stalks of celery. When done, remove onion and celery, mash potatoes, add enough boiling mille to make of creamlike consistency (about three cups), one tablespoonful butter, one and one- half teaspoonfuls salt and one egg until light, put in tureen, strain soup through colander into tureen and serve. Mock Venison.--Make a sauce of one tablespoonful brown flour, one tablespoonful butter and one cupful stock of water. When thoroughly cooked and smooth, add one tablespoonful tablespoonful currant jelly, one tablespoonful tablespoonful mushroom or Worcestershire Worcestershire sauce and bring to boil. Heat thin slices of mutton in this until hot, but do not let the mutton cook. Breaded Parsnips.--Wash and trim parsnips, scrape (if large, split them) and boil ten minutes in salted water. Take from fire, drain, lay in cold water half-hour. Wipe dry, roll in beaten egg, then in bread crumbs, set aside for about an hour, then fry in deep, boiling fat as you would doughnuts. doughnuts. Take up in wire spoon and serve in hot dish. Oyster plant is good cooked in the same way. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of for for MAMMOTH Military Display MARCH OF THE ALLIES Farm under Cultivation Millions in Livestock Government Exhibits THRILLING Naval Spectacle REVIEW OF THE FLEET Belgian Art Treasures Creatore's Famous Band Biggest Cat and Dog Show WAR TROPHIES Field Grain Competition Greater Poultry Show Acres of Manufactures One Thousand and One New Things to See REDUCED RAILWAY RATES FROM ALL POINTS MRS. MABEN WAS MADE WELL " 1 ' By Lydia E. PinkhamWeg- table Compound and Wants Other Suffering Women To Know It. Murfreesboro, Tenn. -- "I have Wanted to write to you for a long time to tell you what your wonderful remedies have done for me. I was a sufferer from female weakness and displacement and I would have such tired, worn out feelings, sick headaches headaches and dizzy spells. Doctors did me no good so I tried the Lydia E. Pink- ham Remedies --Vegetable Compound and SanatiYte Wa§h. I am now well and strong and can do all my own work. I owe it all to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Vegetable Compound and want other suffering suffering women to know about it,"--Mrs. H. E. Maben, 211 S. Spring, St, Murfreesboro, Murfreesboro, Tenn. This famous remedy, the medicinal ingredients of which are derived from native roots and herbs, has for nearly forty years proved to be a most valuable valuable tonic and invigorator of ' the female organism. Women everywhere bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue virtue of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Why Lose Hope. No woman suffering from any form of female troubles should lose hope until until she has given Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a fair trial. If yon want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential) (confidential) LynnyMaas. Tour letter will >e opened, read and answered by a jomatf and held in strict coiifldence* Household Hints. Bran is far better than soap cleanings paint. Charcoal powder is excellent cleaning fine knives. Pie crust should be rolled in one direction--away from you. Bread should be kept always wrapped up in a clean cloth. A cloth moistened with alcohol is effective in cleaning piano keys. Housewives will find the butcher's apron a great convenience, as it covers covers even the sleeves. When a bedroom floor is to be washed, see that "it is thoroughly dried and aired before night. Never leave a package of coffee anywhere near butter, eggs or milk --they will absorb the flavor. To polish a black marble clock rub over "with olive oil and finish with a clean chamois leather. Soups suffer less than anything else by being heated a second time, but they should be re-flavored. Raisins kept in a covered or other dish with a small cup of water in the centre will keep moist and fresh. Salt curdles new milk, so gravies, etc., should, not be salted until the dish is prepared ready to serve. If you have an earthenware bread pan with a cover, the loaves of bread can be put in it without wrapping up. Kerosene will soften boots and shoes that have been hardened by water and will render them 1 pliable as new. Finger marks are best removed from furniture by washing - with water colored with vinegar, then' wipe with a dry cloth. If you spill ink on a carpet, soak it up immediately with blotting paper, then wash out with warm water and clean flannel and dry with a soft duster. A solution of salts of lemon and warm water will remove iron-mould from linen. The article should be well rinsed afterward in clean water and allowed to dry. A good way to get rid of a mouldy smell in the cellar is to dust well over the walls and floor unslacked lime, leaving it on for a day or two then brushing it off. When making small cakes sprinkle a little flour over the tins, instead of rubbing grease on. This answers the purpose just as well, and is less expensive. Close - green vegetables, such • • as cabbage, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts, etc., should be soaked for a short time in vinegar and water to drain out any slugs or insects. Wild flowers can be transplanted successfully if care is taken to put them in places with about the same exposure and character' as they were in before. It is well to move a great deal of the natural soil with the roots. After using cold water starch many housekeepers throw it away. This is wasteful. Allow it to settle and pour off the clear water. Put the basin in the oven and leave until the starch is dry and a hard cake. This should be put away for future use. It is a mistake to think that married married men lie from choice, but their wives persist in asking them, such ticklish questions. THERE'S A DELIGHTFUL 'SOMETHING F about the flavour of ofn* ?- y be produced by the skilful blending rL A f 'h'gh-grown- teas. This peculiar charm of flavour makes it unique among teas B 80 Wise Man. Farmer Stack--You say you went through an agricultural college? Then you must know all about nitrates? nitrates? Stranger--Sure thing! Where did you want to telegraph to? German helmets are nearly as light as straw hats. Goldfish in a globe usually swim found to the right. LIST OF-FALL FAIRS Blackstock. Sept. 28-20 BOWMANVILLE.... Sept. 21-22 Cobourg.., Sept. 28-30 Colborne Oct. 5-6 Lindsay Sept. 23-25 London Sept. 10-18 Markham Oct. 6-8 Millbrook. Sept. 30, Oct. I O ron o Sept. 23-24 Oshawa. Sept. 13-15 Ottawa (Central Canada).... Sept. 10-18 Peterboro Sept. 16-18 Port Hope ...Oct, 5-6 Toronto (Can National) Aug-28 Sept-13 Scarboro ...Sept. 28-29 i Every IOc Packet of WILSON'S FLY PADS Wi^KIU MORE FLIES THAN $8-WORTH OF ANY STICKY FLY CATCHER pr Cook's Cotton Root Compound. In all countries. Ask for our INVEN-: SOR'S ADVISER,which will be sent free, i . MARION & MARION. 364 University St., Montréal A safe, reliable regulating ; medicine. Sold in three de- ' grees of strength--No. 1, $1; No- 2, $3; No. 3, $5 per box. Sold by all druggists, or sent prepaid on receipt of price. Free pamphlet. Address ; THE COOK MEDICINE CO., TORONTO. ONT. (Formerly Wialser.) A Graceful Hostess. There are ungracious persons, of whom a certain Mrs. Gomer is one, who cannot do anything for themselves themselves or anyone else without magnifying magnifying the difficulties of the task. If Mrs. Gomer baked a cake or prepared prepared a special dish she always remarked remarked at the table, "Land sakes, it ought to be good! It was a turrible job! I nearly roasted myself over the stove baking it!" If she sat up with a sick neighbor she spent the evening telling about what a "turrible mess" she had left her house in, and how difficult it was for her to get away, and how hard she would have to 1 work the next day „to make up for it. One afternoon while Mrs. Curtis, her next-door neighbor, was awgy, her sister unexpectedly arrived arrived from another city. Mrs. Gomer, seeing the visitor and her grips on the Curtis front porch, and knowing the Curtis house was locked, invited her to come over to her house and wait for her sister's return. That evening, when both families were oh their front porches, Mrs. Curtis Curtis called across: "Oh, Mrs. Gomer, I must thank you for taking my sister in! She says you entertained her all the afternoon." "Yes," replied Mrs. Gomer, "and it was a turrible job, too." * ' Fighting the Submarine. The warship of the present day, says the London Engineer, is a compromise compromise between what we deem best and what we deem essential. The torpedo-proof bottom has become essential; essential; therefore we must give up guns, or armor, or speed, or something something else, in order to get it. On the other hand, it is probable that battleships battleships and battle cruisers will not hereafter be supplied with torpedoes. Since actions are now fought at enormous enormous ranges, and since vessels can be sunk by gunfire alone, torpedoes on big-gun ships are now useless. Omitting Omitting the torpedo tube will save little weight, but it will leave space for more ammunition. The Engineer also suggests that high-speed rams with bows of proper shape and requisite requisite strength to sink an underwater craft will again come into use. IS USED BY THE BEST BAKERS AND CATERERS EVERYWHERE, ALSO BY CHEFS IN THE LARGE HOTELS; AND ON DINING CARS, STEAMSHIPS, ETC. E.W.G1LLETT COMPANY LIMITED TORONTO. ONT. I-- WINNIPEG MONTREAL At the outbreak of the war the Germans filled railway carriages with dummies made of straw, and dressed in French uniforms, in order to make people believe that they had captured numerous prisoners. FRECKLE-FACE Sun and Wind Bring Out Ugly Spots How to Remove Easily- Here's a chance, Miss Freckle-face, to try a remedy for freckles with the guarantee guarantee of a reliable dealer that it will not cost you a penny unless it removes the freckles ; while if it does give you a clear complexion the expense is trifling. Simply get an ounce of othiue--double strength--from any druggist and a few applications should sho.v you how easy it is to rid yourself of the homely freckles freckles and get a beautiful complexion. Rarely is more than one ounce needed for the worst case. Be sure to ask the druggist for the double strength ot-hine as this is the prescription prescription sold under guarantee of money back if it fails to remove freckles. 2 m flp... v .iv* v\ S W U ; V 81 x, m rfi' ..> ■ ffm, f A irm M§'â •;/' :sjj 4 <yv, $,:({ imM 1 w 1 Sw ' 1 Wi'J * Why buy a cylinder Gar, when you can possess this high-grade SIX-cylinder 1916 McLaughlin touring car for the same money ? No other motor car at any price insures its owner as great value, dollar for dollar, as this McLaughlin valve - in - head "SIX" for 1916. <( Twelve Branches throughout Canada guarantee a Service 7 ' unsurpassed in the Dominion. McLaughlin 1916 Models r Every one a Six" « ' Look for the Diamond Nameplate -This Model D45 is now on Exhibitional dm* Showrooms T. F. KNIGHT, BOWMAN VI LLE, ONT. ,t augBlyn Carriage Co /, Heed Office & Factories * V* O-SHAWA,Ontario., ^ Model D45--the McLaughlin Six-Cylinder, five-passenger touring car Famous Valve-in-Head Motor; 40-45 H.P.; Wheelbase 115% inches} Cantilever Springs; Full Floating Rear Axle;" Delco* System of Electric Lighting and Staffing ; One-Man Top ; complete equipment. $1,385, f.o.b. Oshawa. 164» > V ■Y TWO GIANTS: OF POWER > *1