J Positive Relief from the suffering caused by disordered disordered conditions of the organs of digestion and elimination-- from indigestion and biliousness-- always secured by the . éafë, certain and gentle - action bf Beecham's * PiHs Sold everywhere. In boxes. 25 cents. National Sept 13 TORONTO $150,000 $150,000 << PATRIOTIC YEAR" Model Military Camp Destruction of Battleships Battles of the Air 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 ABOUT THE HOUSEHOLD Dainty Dishes. Tomatoes Fried in Cream.--This is a German dish. Peel and cut fresh tomatoes into thick slices if tomatoes are large, or if small let them remain whole. Season, flour, saute in hot butter, then sift a little more flour over them (if needed) and add a cup of cream. Stew all together until the cream is thickened and the tomatoes are well cooked. Orange Mint Salad.--Sprinkle-^fche carefully skinned and divided pulp of four oranges with two tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar, two tablespoonfuls You can-finish your wash earlier and easier--just let Sunlight Soap do the work. Sunlight saves the clothes and the hands, because of its perfect purity. Sold by !j ^ all grocers PATENTS In all countries. Ask for our INVENTOR'S INVENTOR'S AD VISER, which will be sent free. MARION & MARION. 364 University St., Montréal. Woo&'sPhosphedLine, The Great English Remedy. Tones and invigorates the whole nervous system, makes new Blood . in old Veins, Cures Nervous Debility, Mental and Brain Worry, 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 -- ! -- * T -- 1 pamphlet mailed free. THE WOOD E CO., TORONTO, OUT. (Ftmrly Wledw.) . price. New MEDICIN W ROYAL MAIL STEAMSHIPS To Liverpool - Glasgow - London To take the Allan Line means that the Ocean voyage will be one of the pleasantest memories of your trip abroad. Large, comfortable steamers, steamers, replete with every convenience and luxury-- the beautiful sail down the sheltered waters of the St. Lawrence--the courtesy and attention of the ship's attendants--are not easily forgotten. A 2 For rates, sailing dates and beautiful descriptive booklets apply to local agents or THE ALLAN LINE 95 King St., West, Toronto. M. A. JAMES, Steamship-Agent, Bowmanville* FARE $322 DAILY BETWEEN BUFFALO & CLEVELAND of finely chopped, fresh mint lëaves and one tablespoonful of lemon juice. Chill thoroughly and .serve in glasses ornamented with, sprigs of mint. If. the oranges are very juicy, pour off a portion of the juice before serving. Fruit Charlotte.--Use what fruits in season you like best. Make individual individual cases of light puff pastry. Whip up two cups of thick.cream, sweeten: and flavor to taste and have the fruit ready, raw or stewed. Put a layer of fruit in the case, then a lâyer of cream, then morq fruit Arid top "with cream. Decorate with bit of cherry or other bright fruit. ' • -Apple Cake.--For apple cake sift à pint of flour with a teaspoonful and a half of baking powder and half a tea- spoonfül of sâlt. Add two'tablespoonfuls two'tablespoonfuls of butter, rubbing it "in thoroughly, thoroughly, and then add a beaten egg arid milk enough to make a thick batter. Spread the batter in à buttered tin to the thickness of an inch. Over the trip spread quarters or eights of peeled peeled and cored apples, and sprinkle with sugar and cinnamon. Bake in a hot oven. Cream of Rice Soup. -- Rinse two tablespoonfuls of rice in a sieve under under running water. Drop into a pint of boiling slightly salted water and boil for 20 minutes. Then add a quart of scalded rich milk. When it boils add "two teaspoonfuls of cornstarch cornstarch rubbed smooth in a little smooth-milk, a teaspoonful of salt and onion juice and pepper to taste. Two teaspoonfuls of grated cheese may also be added and will much improve the flavor to most tastes. Cook for three inimités and then add a tea- spooriful of butter and serve. Lemon Rice Pudding.--Wash three- fourths of a cup of riçe and put into a double boiler with three cups of boilirig water, adding more water if needed. The rice should take up all this water. When cooked set aside to COol. Add three lightly beaten yolks of eggs, salt, a bit of butter and three tablespoonfuls of sugar, "grated rind of- lemon and milk enough to make very moist. Bake forty-five minutes. Beat whites with liberal half-cup of granulated sugar until stiff, add juice of one lemon, spread over pudding, and brown slowly. Carrot Soup.--Two cups of peeled and chopped carrots, one-fourth cup of rice, two cups of scalded milk, two cups of water, two slices of onion, two tablespoonfuls of flour, four tablespoonfuls tablespoonfuls of butter, sprig of parsley, parsley, one and one-half teaspoonfuls of salt, pepper to taste. Cook carrots in water until tender. Press through sieve, saving liquid. Cook rice in milk in double boiler. Cook onion in butter, add flour and seasonings. Mix carrot pulp and liquid with rice and milk, and pour upon butter and flour. Bring to boiling point, drain and serve. If too thick, thin with cream or milk. Garnish with chopped parsley. parsley. Leg of Mutton in Blanket.--Make deep, narrow, gashes in the thick end of a clean leg of mutton. Crowd in a mixed seasoning of salt, red and black pepper. Add a little minced onion, a little dry mustard and powdered herbg. Brush all over with melted butter or soft bacon fat. Then sprinkle sprinkle lightly with salt, set on a rack in a roasting pan. Put in a very hot oven. Let brown, then rub over it a tart jelly melted in a little hot water and envelop in a crust of flour -and water, made very stiff and rolled half an inch thick. Pinch the edges tight together, lay back in the pan, cover and bake in a hot oven. Take up, break the blanket carefully, lift out the meat and pour the gravy from the envelope into a small saucepan. Add to it either hot claret or a spoonful Sirs. Corbett Read the Mveffisement and Tried It . y ï - v Avon, May 14th, 1914.' "I have used 'Frui.t-a-tives' for Indigestion and Constipation with most excellent results, and they continue to be my only medicine* I saw' 'Frùit-a- tives- advertised with a letter in which some one recommended them very highly, sol tried.them. The results were more than satisfactory, and I have no hesitation in recommending 'Fruit-a- tives" ANNIE À. CORBETT.- Time is proving that 'Fruit-a tives' can always bei'depended. upon to give prompt reliefm all cases of Constipation and Stoinach'Troubled 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25c. At dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit- a-tives Limited, Ottawa. THE AURORA BOREALIS. Looked An of tart jelly, a drop or two of tabasco, boil up and serve in a boat. § I U § The largest and most costly steamer on any inland water of the world tiona for 1GOO passengers. "CITY OF ERIE" 3 Magnificent Steamers Sleeping aecommoda- CITY OF BUFFALO" BUFFALO- Leave Buffalo Arrive Cleveland BETWEEN Daily, May 1st to Dec. 1st--CLEVELAND - - • 9:00 P. M. Leave Cleveland - - - 9:00 P. M. * - 7:30 A.M. Arrive Buffalo ... 7:30 A.M. - (Eastern Standard Time) Connections at Cleveland for Cedar Point, Put-in-Bay, Toledo, Detroit and all points West and southwest. Railroad tickets reading between Buffalo and Cleveland are orood for transportation on our steamers. Ask your ticket agent for tickets via C. & B. Line. I Beautïfül^œîoredsMtional puzzle chart, showing both exterior and interior of The Great I Snip SEEAJSDBEE sent on receipt of nve cents to cover postage and mailing. Also ask I for our 24-page pictorial and descriptive booklet free. g # But Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Vegetable Compound Restored Mrs. Bradley's Health-- Her Own Stateméfit. Canadian Northern Railway 30,000 Harvesters Wanted EXCURSIONS to Winnipeg $ 12.1 THROUGH SERVICE Between Quebec, Ottawa, Toronto and intermediate points giving good connections to the West. Choice of destination left to the excursionist. Half-a-cerit a mile from Winnipeg Winnipeg west to Regina, Saskatoon, Warman, Swan' River, Calgary, Edmonton, Edmonton, Red Deer, Tannis and to all other, points on the Canadian Northern Rail- wzy. Returning, half-a-cent a mile from all points on C.N.R. to Winnipeg $18.00 from Winnipeg to original starting point. Aug. 21 and 26.- GOING DATES -From Toronto, Yarker, Mavnooth, stations on Bannockburn, Kinmount Jet., Picton and all intermediate the Canadian Northern Railway. Aug 1 . 24 and 28.--From Toronto and all stations west and south in Ontario. The richest country in the West is served by the Canadian Northern Railway. The demand for Harvesters along its lines is very heavy and the wages high. Write for Hcmescekers' and Settlers' Guide, showing 35,000 free homesteads awaiting the settler. For full particulars apply to nearest C.N.R. Agent. , Winnipeg, Canada. -- " Eleven years ago I went to the Victoria Hospital, Montreal, suffering with a growth. The doctors said it was a tumor and could not be removed as it would cause instant death. They found that my organs were affected, and said I could not live more than six months in the condition I was in. _ ' 'After I came home I saw your advertisement advertisement in the paper, and commenced taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I took it constantly for two years, and still take it at times, and bbth my husband and myself claim that it,was the means of saving my life. I highly recommend it to suffering women."--Mrs." Orilla Bradley, 284 Jôhnèori A vë., Winnipeg, Manitoba, Can. Why will women take chances or drag out a sickly, half-hearted existence, miss- itig three-fourths of the joy of living, when they can find health in Lydia*E. Pinkham's Vegetable Vegetable Compound ? For thirty years it has been the standard standard remedy for female female ills, and has restored restored the health of thousands of women who hâve ueen troubled troubled with such ailments ailments as displacements, inflammation, ulceration, tumors, irregularities, etc. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medici Medici in e Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a* woman; and held in strict confidence. Household Hirits. Slice tomatoes with a bread knife with saw teeth. Wash yellowed linens and bleach them in the sun. Never put away a garment in need of mending. Wrap cheese in a cloth moistened with vinegar if you would keep it moist and free from mold. Lunch sets of large and small doilies doilies are one of the best ways out of the tyranny of the tablecloth. Use milk instead of water for making making pie crust, which is to be served cold. It will keep crisp longer. If rice and vegetables have to stand after cooking, it is best to cover cover them with a cloth under the lid to absorb the steam and keep them from becoming sodden. To utilize the tops of old stockings and also prevent the color of your preserved fruits from darkening, wash the tops and draw them over the jars after sealing the fruit in them. A milky jug should always be rinsed in cold water before being washed in hot. If the hot water is used first, the curd becomes set and the surface is not so easily cleansed. Fold a piece of emery paper in the centre and draw the knife rapidly back and forth several times, turning it from side to side: This is an excellent excellent sharpener for pàring knives. Cucumbers make a delicious sandwich. sandwich. Take vegetables out of the water the moment they are sufficiently cooked. cooked. If underdone they, are indigestible, indigestible, and if overdone their appearance is spoiled and their flavor lost. When purchasing a roast of veal have the butcher lard it with salt pork. This will make the meat juicy instead of being dry, and it will have a fine flavor that can be had in no other way. If a cake tin is greased lightly and flour sifted over it, all surplus flour removed by a sharp tap of the tin, the result will be quite as good as using a paper lining and is more easily and quickly done. . It is wise to wipe over the cords of the porch shades occasionally with an oil-soaked rag. The constant friction on the cord is what wears the strands and causes the cord to break. A little oil will lessen this friction perceptibly. perceptibly. If you do not have ice and wish to keep fresh meat every day, place on an earthen dish and cover it with a cloth wrung out of vinegar, covering with a pan to keep from drying out. Set in a cool place. This will not injure injure meat. Take about eight fair-sized potatoes and scrub them clean with a vegetable vegetable brush. Cut them in halves, spread each half with a little butter, sprinkle with pepper arid salt and lay a thin slice of cheese on top. Place on a slightly greased pan and bake in an even hot oven until soft and brown. THOUGHTS FOR THE DAY. Upon_.By Barbarians As Omen of Slaughter. Many people .believe that the aurora aurora borealis is a pheriomenon peculiar* peculiar* to modern-times. But this is not true. The ancients "used to call it chasmata, bolides and fcfabes, names which expressed the different colors of the lights. The scarlet aurora was looked upon by the superstitious barbarians as an omen of direful slaughter; so it is not unusual for descriptions of bloody battles battles to contain allusions to northern lights. In the annals of Cloon-mac-noise it is recorded that in 688 A.D., accom- panying a terrible battle between Leinster and Munster, Ireland, a purple purple aurora lit the northern skies, forë- telling the slaughter. To the Latins and Greeks of southern southern Europe the phenomenon rarely appeared appeared and therefore their writings are almost,, if not entirely, silent concerning concerning it, yet it was not unknown to. them. --* HAWKS PURSUED GAME. Cry for Fletchèr's Birds Trained to Win Their Master's Prey. Falconry, or hawking, was a favorite favorite sport with the nobility and gentry of Europe down to the 'first half . of the seventeenth century. Hawks were trained to mount and pursue game and bring it to their masters and mistresses, mistresses, coming and going to the call of the latter with marvelous docility. The hawks were tricked out with gay hoods and held until ordered to pursue "the quarry," or game, by leathern straps fastened with rings of leather about each leg just above the talons, and silken cords called "jesses." To each of these leathern straps, or "beWets," was attached $■ small bell. In the flight of hawks it was often so arranged that the different different bells made "a consort of sweet sounds." Bells of this description, but of the cheapest kind, were among the most popular trinkets used by the early explorers explorers and traders in bartering with the natives of America. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of No sitting accommodation for the congregation was provided in churches before the 14th century. People sat on straw or rushes laid on the floor. The church porch in former days was the place selëcted for the payment payment of dowries, legacies, etc. Marriages Marriages were solemnized in porches; fairs held there; beggars plied their calling; and great persons were buried in the porch. Every Id Packet of , WILSON'S ! FLY PADS \ w £LKIU mope flies than X$8°-° WORTH OF ANY \STICKY Fly CATCHER INKHAM Learn to say--No! and-it will be of more use to you than to be able to read Latin.--Spurgeon. Humility is a virtue all preach, none practice,"arid yet everybody is content content to hear.--Selden. Earnestness in life, even when carried carried to an extreme, is something very noble and great.---Humboldt. Whatever the occupation of a man is, to it. he should give his first and greatest attention.-- Blackstone. That state of life is most happy Where superfluities are not required, necessaries are not wanting.-- Plutarch. If the world seems to us to be upside upside down we may toe sure that it is due to the fact that we are standing on our heads.--Dr. Coley. National progress is the sum of individual individual industry, energy and uprightness, uprightness, as national decay is of individual individual idleness, selfishnèss and vice. -- Smiles. * .•-' . No man is borne into the world whose work is not born with him; there is always work, and tools to work withal, for those who will; and blessed are the horny hands of toil.-- Lowell. Cook's Cotton Root Compoand. A safe, reliable regulating medicine. Sold in three degrees degrees of strength--No. 1, $1; No. 2, $3; No. 3, 35 per box. Sold by all druggists, or sent prepaid on receipt of 'price. Free pamphlet. Address ; THE COOK MEDICINE CO, TORONTO. ONT. (Fermerly WJatar.) liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiininiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiKiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiimnmiinmmng = « Here is the Answerfin 1 WEBSTER5 1 New International | Thé Merrmm Webster § Every day in your talk and reading, at gg home, on the street car, in the office, shop Ü and school you likely question the mean- = îP.fJ* S0n ? e new word. A friend asks: g t makes mortar harden?" Yon seek b the location of Lofh Katrine ov the pronun- -- £i a ,rioa of jujutsu. Wliat is white coal? Ü Tills New Creation answers all kinds of Ü Questions in Language,History,Biography, =, s Fiction, Foreign Words, Trades, Arts and s s Sciences, with flnalaiithcrilg^ *-- **" TT * *=* 1 !fW,opQW<tir$. i SSflttBfc- I 2700 Pazei. H The only dictionary with - g tile new divided page,--char- § actepzed as "A Stroke of 5 Genius." ' -v- - Not Much. "There's not much petticoat nowadays, in spite of votes for men,' was said. : : "No," smiled McFee, "there's much petticoat." . rule wo- not g India Paper E^itlom I -- On . thin, ôpadïïcT, strong, India paper. Wliat a satis- . = faction to own theMerriam g Webster in à form so light B« mid so cojivenicnt to use 1 ~ One half tho thickness ana H Regular Edition. H Regular Edition : = On strong bdtfk paper. Wt. m 14% lbs. Size 12% X 9% X = 5 inches. 3 Write for specimen pages, 5 illustrations, etc H Mention this = publication 5 and receive g FEEB-& set = Of pOcltet 5 maps. 1 G. Si C. i MEHRtAM g COaj | Springfield, Mass? SuhwiiiiiiiuiiuwhuiiuuuuiiiuuiG The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has heen in use for over 30 ycai-s, has homo the signature of and has been made nndër his personal personal supervision since its infancy. A -1 r T Adow no one to deceive ÿou in this. AxL Counterfeits, Imitations and 46 Just-as-good " are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children--Experience against Experiment. Castoria is â harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Paregoric, Drops and Sootliing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opitim, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it has heen in constant use for the relief of Constipation. Flatulency, Wind Colic, aU Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea--The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS •Bears the Signature The Kind Yon Have Always Bought In Use Fdr Over 30 Years • ! V M H CB-NT.un CpMPAN Y„ N K W YO.K C ITY. German Helmets. Despite the heavy appearance of the German soldiers' helmets, says London Tit-Bits, they are exceedingly exceedingly light. They are made of steel, but they are nearly as light as a straw hat, and far more comfortable. The large military-looking spike is not placed on the top of the helmet for ornament alone. There are several large holes in it* which ventilate the wearer's head. The steel from which the helmet is made is exceedingly thin,--almost as thin as paper,--and all round the inside, where the helmet touches the head, there are a number of springs. These springs, which are covered with leather, serve to keep the helmet firmly on the head, without without any great pressure. Higgs--Crooke is a criminal lawyer, isn't he? Diggs--He's a lawyer, J>ut as to his being a criminal, I think he's too careful to quite overstep the line. . Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Western poitr London 1. dll Canada Sept. lOtli - 18th 1915 $30,000*00 in Prizes and Attractions Prizes increased this year by $8,000.00. Excellent Program of Attractions Attractions Twice Daily Two Speed Events Daily Fireworks Every Night New Steel Grandstand Midway Better than Ever 1 Music by the Best Available Bands SINGLE FARE OVER ALL RAILWAYS West of Toronto, and Fare and One-Third from outside points Prize Lists, Entry Forms and all information from the Secretary W. J. REID, President A. M". HUNT, Secretary your dishes with Put a dash of 60M Dust into the water, and it will go to the bottom of things, drive out every bit of dirt, every germ, every hidden particle. 1 Gold Dust cleanses as well as cleans. --t'-wit «4**' Vp- ' We promise you this, if you use Gold Dust; Your dishes will be sweeter and cleaner than ever before, and you " will save at least half .iSET- /V?/- : the time ordinarily consumed in wash- 1 ing themX ' v --' "- r ..^G<il4 Dust does'better does'better work than soap or any other dishwashing dishwashing product-- and saves half the time. I u n } r the GOLD DUST TWINS do your u)ork'\ THE N. E. FAIRBANK COMPANY LIMITED. Montreal, Canada