m S m :? S If •Vf WOMEN OF CANADA. Fort Coulonge, Quebec.--"I am happy to tell you that your medicine 'did me wonderful good. I. waa troubled with weakness and I tried wines and ? other things but received very little benefit. i was ' young at the time" ; and knew very lit- ' tie about medicines till a lady friend came to me with a bottle of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. I became strong and a year afterward had, twins."--Mbs* J. Brady, Fort Cbulonge, Quebec. woods, and" in the background was the gradually rising foothills of the Babfoe range • with the glistening snow-capped peaks about 20 miles away. In front (west) was about 50 miles of the .Bulkley valley with the river winding its way along, looking in the distance like a huge serpent. In the distant west the Roche de Boule peak seemed to touch ; the -heavens, while to the left the Hudson Bay rangé seemed to be equally as high on account of thé fact that they were so much nearer. Then to the left and partly behind was the >Telkwa range,, just as beautiful as the others, and these-seemed tb* gradually taper down: to meet the valley to the east, where Thousands of women ri^hfc ^here in the Bulkley river could he seen winding winding its way down through the broader valley which with its few clearings with the farm houses dotted here and there, giving one the impression that he was not absolutely alone in this vast territory that in such comparatively comparatively recent years has been settled by the white man. The whole valley, and the foothills seemed to be just one great variety of color, about half the evergreen Canada who aire now blessed"with robust health cannot understand why thousands of other women continue, to worry, and suffer when they can obtain for a trifling sum Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, which will surely and quickly banish all pain, distress and misery and restore the womanly health. Young mothers who preserve the charms of face and figure in spite of an increasing family and the care of growing children are always to be envied. "Favorite "Favorite Prescription".gives the strength and health upon which happy motherhood ABOUT THE HOUSEHOLD -Dainty-Dishes. Pineapple: Tapioca.--Soak four tablespoons pearl tapioca overnight. Cook in double boiler .until clear, but not eritiréîy dissolved/ Add one pint can grated ' chopped pniëa pple and sugar to taste. Stir well, pbxir into molds and chill. Waldorf Salad.--P x eel and cut one apple into dice and sprinkle with two tablespoons* orange juice. Add one cup of finely cut celery, one cup broken broken walnut meats, one-half teaspoon salt and grated yellow rind of one orange. \ Mix thoroughly, moisten with one cup mayonnaise, place in nests of lettuce leaves and garnish with candied or Maraschino cherries. Cabbage and Cheese Salad.--Make French dressing of four. tablespoons snruce and Taek-ninP and tha rpsf ' oiI * two tablespoons vinegar, one-half depends. ~ It enables the mother to nour- f i-j -, K ; teaspoon salt and one-fourth teaspoon ish. the infant life depending on her, and fche different kinds octrees and bushes , *-■ enjoy the happiness of watching the de- ïiOD] velopment of a perfectly healthy child. A GREAT BOOK THAT EVERY WOMAN SHOULD HAVE. Over a million copies of the "The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser" are now in the hands of the people. It is a book that everyone should have and read in case of accident or sickness. Send fifty cents (or stamps) for mailing charges to Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., and enclose this notice and you will receive by return mail, all charges and customs duty prepaid, this valuable book. BRITISH COLUMBIA. pepper. Add one-half u of canned pi mento chopped fine, one tablespoon chili sauce, four tablespoons cream cheese and one-fourth cup finely here and there a soft, white, fleecy : cabbages " Serve on hearts of cloud which so wonderfully matched * ~ gradually taking-on. the most beautiful beautiful color effects that the eye of an artist could ever look upon. Overhead was a deep blue sky, with Pineapple With Cheese. -- Drain slices of canned pineapple and marin- Work 10-cent There is. nothing more healing and soothing than Sold in glass bottles and sanitary tin tubes, at chemists chemists and general stores everywhere. Refuse substitutes. Free booklet "on request. CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO. (Consolidated) 1880 Chabot Ave. Montreal Novelties on Spring Counters. Even the most skeptical among us must be thrilled and interested by the attractive novelties Fashion is. now placing on her spring counters, and in her spring shops. For instance instance 'there are the. quaint bonnets which are being displayed'at the md-. .ment, in our millinery departments, as a logical' sequence of the modish gathered and flaring skirts. Fluttering about one of these bonnets, bonnets, a fascinating creation of garnet braid and white gardenias, in one of our smart shops the other afternoon, was a quaintly smart little person, dressed all in gray. She wore one of the_ new faille suits, made with a rather close fitting coat, flaring widely widely at the lower edge,'combined with the most modern of old-fashioned skirts. It wa^ a veritable "pullback," "pullback," having all of the fulness and Refreshing is composed of clean, whole young leaves. Picked right, blended right and packed right. It brlngs.the fragrance of an Eastern garden to your table. ! square of cream cheese with sufficient Some Natural Beauties of the Canadian Canadian Sunset Province. We are so near the borders of civil- . ization, where * one only need travel a short distance out of town to feel really really and truly lost." the dazzling whiteness of the moun : tain peaks. The effect of a scene like that is not a ^ e * n Fiench dressing soon lost, and as I took off my hat, and did some talking to myself and to ! bu * ter to soften well > add dash of the horse, I knew how Peter felt when' Ied P e PP er and teaspoon of Jamaica he said to our Lord--"Let us build r V m (this ma y be omitted). Lay three tabernacles, one for Thee, one ! Çî ne J apple slice on lettuce leaf for in- spoonfuls vinegar, one-half tea- dividual service, squeeze softened j-spoonful sugar, one-half teaspoonful a salmon'" loaf, to be steamed in a quart mold: One can flat salmon, picked from bones; 2 eggs well beaten, 4 ounces fresh white. bread, % teaspoonful each of salt, celery salt, .onion juice, one teaspoonful chopped parsley, 1 cup of milk. Mix thoroughly and steam in buttered mold. Deviled Salmon. --- One-half can salmon,. two eggs, one and one-half teaspoonfuls of mustard, two table- salt, one-half teaspoonful pepper, one and one-half teaspoonfuls butter. After emptying the fish from the can pull to pieces with fork. Boil one for Moses, and one for Elias." , , , As one worships, amidst such won- ! ? eese over throu ^h confectioner's derful scenes, one surely feels like bag , or arran g e it with spoon. Top staying there for some time, and I ] vitn ™ ara schino or preserved cherry suppose if one had lived in the days j * or ccdor effect, and serve, of the patriarchs, one would have! Custard Raspberry Pie.--Line pie- egg hard, mash fine, well butter, mix felt like erecting an altar to the God plate with plain paste and build up ! ingredients together, adding but- of heaven, as did Jacob at Bethel, and Anted rim. Beat two eggs slightly, | ter last. Beat the other egg in, put saying "Truly, this is the house of add three tablespoons sugar, one- God, and the gate of heaven." eighth teaspoon salt and one and one-eighth teaspoon salt and one and one-half cups milk. Strain mixture into plate and put in quick oven to set rim, then reduce heat and bake until firm. Milk and egg mixtures ___ But the missionary, like the dis- We have been here at Smithers, B. ciples of old,.has to get back to the C., now for seven months, so, of, valley, and must not forget that he is course, the "tenderfoot" or "chech- | here 13 miles from home, but both aco feeling has pretty well left us, ; man and horse feel better for the and while we could not yet be classed! short pause, and so we lope along! must be cooked at )ow temperature, with the "old-timers" as they say j down to Smithers, if not to literally s Cover top with raspberry jam and here, or as "sour-doughs," as they j cast out demons from a child, yet ' s P read - Over this spread layer of there is work to do, a Sunday school j whipped cream flavored with vanilla, to take charge of and a class to Garnish with whipped cream forced say farther north, yet this country is beginning to feel a little more like "Home, Sweet Home." The climate here is very fine, and many who have travelled quite ex- ! from getting in to the lives of tensively, say it is one of the best in fine Canadian children in this the world. The summers are not as warm as Ontario, and the nights are always cool. Winter does not come any earlier earlier than in Ontario, and usually teach,-'so perhaps that in some meas- j ure may help to prevent the demons these : great empire of ours, on which the sun never sets. through pastry tube Macaroni Recipe.--Cook one cup macaroni, broken into one-inch 1 pieces, in boiling salted water until ! soft (about twenty - minutes), drain in strainer and wash off with cold water. water. Put in buttered baking dish. What a privilege it is to feel in these days, that one is a part of the 1 Have two cups milk heating dish in finest empire on earth, one of the : double -boiler. Add gradually to three comes more gradually, and we do not ( largest and_ best of her colonies, and. and one-half tablespoons peanut but- get the cold fall rains, nor the wind; j what is best of all, a member of that t er - Add one teaspoon salt. Pour in fact, it is on very rare occasions j kingdom which is above all kingdoms, ! over macaroni, cover and bake in slow tba ^ We have mac î 1 wind> _ | the principles of which are destined ! ° ven forty minutes. Remove cover, There are occasional cold snaps in ' to be the prevailing principles of this I sprinkle with three-fourths cup but- winter. The mercury went down re- 1 whole world, when the visions of pro- 1 tered breadcrumbs and bake until cently to 30 below, and once it was a phet and poet are fulfilled, and there ' crumbs are browned, few degrees colder. However, these . is the reality of Tennyson's vision of Chicken Scallop.--Pick meat cold spells do not last more than a day or so usually, and really one feels the cold more at the coast when there is from 20 to 30 degrees of frost than you do here that much below zero. There" are a few settlers scattered through the valley, but unfortunately, unfortunately, the best of the land near the rail- With" the standards of the people plunging through the thunderstorm thunderstorm ; . Till the war-drum throbb'd no longer, road is held up by speculators, and and the battle-flags were furl'd this is a great hindrance to the devel- l n the Parliament of man, the Feder- opment of the country. The scenery a tion of the world, here is very fine indeed, and in the ! fall when the leaves were turning, I Not in vain the distance beacons/for- think I never saw such magnificent j ward, forward let us range color effects. One Sunday, instead of ; Let the great world spin forever'down carefully carefully from bones of cold chicken and chop fine. Put layer of bread crumbs whisper | in bottom of buttered casserole or of the south-wind rushing warm, j baking dish, moisten with milk, add the future where he says:-- 'Far along the world-wide | in baking dish and bake for 30 rnin- ! utes. Household Hints. Meat should not be salted before cooking. Never leave stock to cool in a saucepan. Never apply hot water to -frostbitten -frostbitten flesh. Ammonia water is excellent for cleaning white paint. Earthenware utensils are best adapted to oven cookery. Orange and celery salads are good used with meat or game. « Stock should be boiled every day and put in a clean bowl. If boiling water is poured over apples the skin will come off easily. If the broom is worn unevenly, dip it in hot water, then trim even. When one is tired, "V sponge bath ' in either hot or cold water is refreshing. refreshing. A good cereal coffee is an excellent excellent thing for the school children's breakfast. The Coming 1 of Religion MORALS ARE BEING INJECTED INTO BUSINESS AND POLITICS AND EVEN INTO RELIGION. 6975-6508 House Coat of Cotton Corduroy. drawn to the back and held by a tape fastened at the side seams--fitting as smoothly and plainly across the "Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to themtvfor this is the law and the prophets."--St. Matthew Matthew vii., 12. We to-day see the breaking, up of creeds, because we are at last realizing realizing that they are mere human statements. statements. Idle tradition is no longer allowed to hold sway. Precedents are without without authority unless they can justify themselves. Only as past tradition or precedent has intrinsic value today today can it live. Only now here and there is humanity humanity preparing to welcome the new old religion of Jesus and the prophets. This religion of deed, of righteousness, righteousness, of character, is the twentieth century electric light type of religion. We have passed through the candle light and gas light stage of the Christian religion. The pressure today today is toward the electric light of the noonday sun. A Glorious Day is Ahead for real religion--the religion of deed rather than of creed; the religion of moral character rather than of dogma. dogma. Religion is a living force, not a dead principle. It is something for seveni days in the week, and something something that affects human conduct! every hour of the day.^ This, we to- ! dom, of real justice, of real demo- day believe, is the religion Jesus stood cracy, is coming apace. The Golden f° r a religion that is fundamental : Rule is to replace the rule of gold, and non-sectarian and this is just j "Our God is marching on," "His truth the religion that the really civilized ! is marching on." and progressive world is looking for. j It is only a question of time when Men and women have been crying ignorance and blindness must pass fear. This plays the largest part in the determination of the conduct of men and women. The love of pleasure and ease and comfort is a great human human weakness that produces no stab- ility of character. The lovo of money or avarice is a widely prevailing sin, but the most widely prevailing weakness weakness is moral cowardice, due to fear. Men and women fear because they have no- practical faith in God. The rank and file of men and women do not know God. He is the great reality reality in religion and in life. What We Need To-day is a great compelling sense of the reality . and nearness of God. Jésus had a wonderful sense of the reality of God, and Jesus knew no fear. Moral cowardice was not in His makeup. makeup. What is left in the great modern transition from theology to religion? God is left, Jesus is left, a glorious, rich, full life, here and hereafter, is left. Everything of value is left. The Golden Rule, above all, is left, and the Golden Rule is Jesus' summary of the very essence of religion. This sums up man's duty to God and man. This is the law and the prophets. When men really live this principle principle as their religion, then man's relation relation to man will be ideal. Thank God, the day of real free- for bread--the bread of religion. Humanity Humanity is to-day hungering and thirsting after God. A great controlling motive to-day is and we shall have real religion--the religion of the Golden Rule, the religion religion of deed. God speed the day!-- Rev. William Milton Hess, Ph.D. ably mixed with pink and the other front as the narrowest of skirts did j soft tones which have been gradually some seasons back. From belt to ! coming into favor for underwear the _ hem in back, the skirt was stiffened j last few seasons. There are the dain- Hang wet curtains on the wooden i with haircloth, causing .the fulness to j tiest possible combinations, chemises, curtain poles as soon as washed/and fall in several outstanding folds. At ! camisoles, and the numerous other taking the shorter road home, I came down from Telk-wa on the north side of the Bulkley river, by the Hazelton road, which is four miles farther; and I shall never forget the view-. After riding up from the river bottom on to the higher ground, I stopped the horse and just sat for a few minutes entranced by the wonderful panorama panorama of nature. On the right (north) there was a pretty little lake about three miles long nestling- in the - valley, valley, partly hidden by the surrounding the spinning grooves of change. (Rev.) W. C. FRANK. Smithers, B.C., January, 1916. Worms in children, if they be not attended attended to, cause convulsions, and often death. Mother GraVes' /Worm Exterm V inator will protect 'thé* children from these distressing affluons. An egotist is. a man who thinks if he hadn't been born people would have wanted to know why not. ■HHHHXHKHXXXXXKHHHXXXXHXB * ---- = X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X layer of chicken and chicken dressing (if there was any), dot with butter and season with pepper and salt. Repeat Repeat until dish is almost fhll. Add a little hot water to gravy that was left from the chicken and use this too. Take two eggs, two tablespoons milk, one tablespoon melted butter, a little salt and enough, cracker crumbs t.o make mixture thick enough to spread with knife ; spread over top of dish, dot with butter, cover and bake three-fourths" of an hour. About twenty minutes before serving cover and let brown. un- Does Pain Interfere? There is a remedy Sloan's Read this unsolicited grateful testimony-- Not long ago my left knee became became lame and sore. It pained me many restless nights. So serious serious did it become that I was forced to consider giving up my work when I chanced to think„of Sloan's Liniment... Let mc say : -- less than one bottle fixed me up. C/ias. C. Campbell, Florence,. Tex. With a Can of Salmon. "What shall,we have for lunch?" is often as serious a plea as "What shall we have for dinner?" The solution is frequently found in the emergency can of salmon/ which should be upon. every housewife's shelves. Canned salmon is a good, wholesome food, and while many may utilize it to 'some - extent, it is really capable of wider use. Canned salmon is a most concentrated concentrated food equal to meat, and also containing considerable fat. It therefore therefore combines best with starchy food, either bread or potatoes, or milk. The most quickly prepared dish is, of course, simple creamed salmon, which can be laid on toast or served on open, stale rolls. But where a little more time is available, it is better better to prepare the salmon as a steamed steamed loaf, or a baked dish. ' . Such a loaf can be combined with bread; crumbs, eggs, seasoning, placed in a buttered mold and steamed" steamed" about half an hour, or baked a little little less time/ It can "be surrounded with a garnish of plain boiled rice or mashed potato. Another way to use salmon is to make it into a creamed puree soup. Have ready a thin white sauce; pick the salmon free from thé bones and mash fine. Add this salmon salmon pulp* to the sauce, season well and serve. Children generally enjoy this salmon soup very much, and it Is extremely wholesome. ~ Sometimes a. housekeeper is heàrd to say, "Oh, we have only, a can of salmon," thinking it does not contain much nourishment. But Government figures^tell us that salmon, contains the following food units: Protein, 21.8 per cent.; fat, 12.1 per cent.; compared with roundsteak, 19.8 per cent.; fat, 13.6 per cent. * - Here is : A good: feeipe for - making 7 they will dry gracefully. In washing greasy dishes wipe each dish out with newspaper first, and save your dish-water. In making boiled starch, leave a small piece of soap in it; the irons will slip along more easily Do not rub soap on a stain in cotton cotton goods. First wet the cloth and partly wash it out in clear water. Dry sponge cake toasted and spread with sliced oranges like the involuntary upward and down- sandwich makes dish. a good luncheon Travelling in Ireland. An English tourist, while travelling travelling in Ireland, was. one day accosted by a beggar. He felt in his pocket for a sixpence, but finding that he had nothing smaller than a shilling leave it to the woman, with the words, "You must give me the change the next time we meet." "Oi will, sorr, replied the beggar, "and may yer honor live till ye get it!" CARTERS ITTLE IVER PILLS. CURE Blok Headache and relieve aU the troubles Incident Incident to a bilious state of the system, such ss Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after eating, Pain in the Bide, &e. While their most remarkable success has been shown in curing SICK Headache, yet Carter's Little Liver Pills are equally valuable in Constipation, curing and preventing preventing thisannoyingoomplalnt while they .also correct all disorders of the stomach^timulate the liver and regulate the bowels. Even it they only cured Ache they would be almost sniffer from this distn nately their goodness Is the bane of eo msny lives that here is where we make ôur gàeafrboast. /Our pUUoure it while others do hot. Carter's Little Liver PUle ere very small and ve*7;eesy to take.-. One or two till» make a doee. They are strictly vegetable ana do not gripe or but by their gentle action please all who r: 1 : :/!{ CASUS HSBI8DÏ1 00., M1W TOSS. Small Ofltti * Small Pros. wvnékPMn ■■•ni 6579-6831 Jumper Dress of Serge. ward glance she induced, one expected expected to see a pair of extremely high French heels on silver-buckled slippers, slippers, or a îigh-crowned, flower-trimmed flower-trimmed chapeau. As the small person continued on her way from counter to counter, the skirt swung in true, hoop-skirt fashion, which it must be admitted was quite fascinating. The Annual Sale of White. At this season of the year, of courser one expects to find the shops veritable bowers ôf white; to find the most fascinating of cottons, suggested suggested for summer frocks, and to be charmed by the airy blouses, parasols, and other articles designed* as it seems, for wear in Fairyland itself. The white sale this year is consider - underfittings which go so'Tar toward the success of frock or suit. Silk mull, and other soft cottons vie for favor with the more expensive Italian Italian silk. All of these silks and cottons cottons wash excellently and require no ironing. While the silk garments are at first a trifle expensive for the majority majority of purses, in the end they are economical; they fit so well, wear so well and are generally so entirely satisfactory. satisfactory. The Vogue of White. White will be quite as modish for skirt, suit and frock this season as it has been for the past summer or two. Serge, gabardine and broadcloth are smart for those who can afford more than one white frock or suit, but for the practical woman cotton corduroy in 'its various cords will be far more practical; it may be easily and effectively effectively tubbed when soiled. These corduroys come in the pale pinks, blues, yellows, and similar tones for separate skirts, suits and sport coats or blouses. Among the season's novelties is the house coat; it closely resembles the sport coat or blouse, and could in fact be used for the same purposes, but it has been designed for house wear, to take the place, as it were, of the kimono, with the woman who does not care for, or who has not the time to indulge in, the luxury of so complete complete a negligee as a kimono, or similar similar loose-fitting house robe. These are being developed in the colored cotton corduroys, and in like corded cottons. They are finished with wide collars, deep, roomy pockets, and are loosely belted. Combined with skirts of white linen, duck, khaki, or cotton corduroy, they are excellently suited to morning wear and the house. Popularity of the Jumper. The jumper dress or blouse is one of the rAost satisfactory notions introduced introduced for many seasons; instead of losing favor because of .. its general popularity, it is, on the contrary, becoming becoming daily more in demand. - For business, street, and general daytime wear, the dark blue serge, jumper frock combined with an underblouse of crepe de Chine, Georgette, or black satin, is most satisfactory. The fact that the underblouse may be chang-ed, and the frock so varied, makes its appeal appeal to women who like a change now and then, but who cannot afford a great number of frocks. Satin or taffeta blouses or jumpers, with sleeves of a transparent or contrasting contrasting material are still being worn for afternoons and more dressy occasions, occasions, combined with skirts or taffeta, faille or satin. Patterns can be obtained at your local McCall dealer, or from The McCall Company, Department "W," 70 Bond St., Toronto, Ontario. ->*>- A Watch Runs Backward. A jeweller has devised a watch which runs backward, the figures on the dial being arranged in opposite direction to the usual kind, says Popular Mechanics. The watch was invented at the suggestion of a left- handed person, who complained that it was always hard for her to tell time on the average clock, because she thought "left-handed." With the new type of dial the process or reading the hands was easier. Other left-handed persons seeing - the new watch agreed that they could read it with more facility than the other type. VITAL. 9?J»gT10NS ijitc frycafodoQ ol <064 AFTER MEALS Stoaeoh scd chent e(£cr eatlni, with of Ism^ctiloa, MotSr Sente} s Synjp, the dvoat m And «I BANISH STOMACH 1 TROUBLES Li-~v-.v~.--i*.--- Mohtreti. INFLUENZA Catarrhal Tever Pink Bye, Shipping Pever, Epizootic. And all diseases of tht horse- affecting his throat speedily cured; coïts andhôrees in sarfie stable kept from havln* them by usiner Épohage Distemper Compound, 3 to 6 doses often dure; one bottle guaranteed to cure one case. Safe for brood mares, baby colts, stallions, all ages and con- dltlons. Moat skillful- scientific compound. Largest selling selling veterinary specific. Any druggist or delivered by manufacturers. ÈPO** MXDXÛAL CO., Xoshen, Tad, § I HR p hi 1 » 1 fc*5 I n I 1 I 1 -'"-••'tv