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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 24 Aug 1916, p. 3

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Success of a Her Remedy toi BieueilE, jÙMOT, Rieiwiwe r Dear Mr. Editor--I suffered for years yith backache. Last March I tried «Anurie" and have used this new kid- ; nay medicine récentiy discovered by >Dr. Pierce, and it was wonderful the 'way it eased the pain and gave me relief in such a short time. I have tried several medicines, but «Anurie" is the only one that gave satisfaction. - Miscellaneous Recipes. I feel it my duty to recommend f . , .. Take «Anurie Tablets" to any one who suffers For a new dessert, try this. as I did. ! sponge cake and cut it into squares. ( Signed ) Mrs. Margaret E. Snïder. Pare, halve and core some large pears. -- _ _ _ i Boil in a syrup colored with hall a Note : Folks in town and adjoining cupful of cranberry or other red fruit counties are delighted with the results j u i ce# When tender remove from they have obtained by using « AN URIC," the " and place 0 ne of the halves the newest discovery of Dr. Pierce, who J p _ square. Decorate is head of the Invalids' Hotel and on eacn sponge square Surgical Institute, in Buffalo, N. Y. with cranberry jelly and serve vt Those who started the day with a back- plain or whipped cream or wivu ache, stiff legs, arms and muscles, and sauce. an aching head (worn out before the Here is a Belgian recipe for vege- day began because they were in and out table soup; Take four celeries, four of bed half a do*en times at night) are leek tvfQ turn j ps , a cabbage, two appreciating the perfect retit^ comfort nn . nns a few bones, pepper and salt Boil for with a and more stock, if needed. Serve from the. casserole. The vegetables may be browned in one-foùrth cupful of drippings before being put into the casserole. For this style of cooking round steak gives a richer dish th-.n does a sirloin steak. / Useful Hints. Celery and pineapple make a delicious delicious salad. Jt is better to cook carrots whole and then skin them. After a whiskbroom has become ragged, trim off evenly and use as a sink brush. Prick the small end of a potato before before putting it in the oven and it will not burst. A salad of onions, sardines, tomatoes tomatoes and peppers is properly served with brown bread. Never hoard old clothing or house Felt Wretched Until He Started To T 3ke "Fruit-a-tlves" 594 Champlain St., Montreal. "For two years, I was a miserable sufferer from Rheumatism and Stomach Trouble. I had frequent Dizzy Spells, and when I took food, felt wretched and sleepy. I suffered from Rheumatism Rheumatism dreadfully, with pains in my back and joints, and my hands swollen. A friend advised "Fruit-a-tives" and the machining and assembling plant*, ( no small tribute to the part that mun- But these,. also> have been , unable 'to fition workers are playing in bringing ~"i'" J ~ 1 " scheduled, even the war to à successful conclusion. with make deliveries as when they are fully _ supplied forgings and component, part*, largely largely owing to the shortage of labor. The Provincial " Committee, therefore, therefore, in bringing these facts to the attention of^the public, desires: 1. To call the attention of all those engaged in the munitions and alliecf industries to the. importance of their service and the great"' responsibility resting upon them as individuals to co-operate and do all in their power power to secure a steady and increased The Officer Commanding a brigade of Canadian artillery, who returned from the front last week, said,: "The Germans will never bredk through now. Before, they had , munitions, guns, eqùipment --everything but the "nerve". All we had was "nerve". But now we have good guns and plenty of good ammunition. Whereas formerly wè were limited to 10 to 15 rounds a gun a day, now we use 500 to 1,000 a gun, and one week lately we kept going all week night and day. «HEN USING WiLSONS supply of munitions for our forces at It » a aU i mpor tant that the supply of the front. J munitions be kept up and increased." Efforts to use women in munition 2. To urge upon all those who are i ineligible for overseas service and 1 who are anxious to voluntarily do their best in this great struggle, (es pecially those now engaged in non and new strength they obtained from onions, a Dr. Pierce's Anuric Tablets. To prove ; and five quarts of water that this is a certain uric acid solvent about three hours keeping the vege and conquers headache, kidney and table always well covered with tne bladder diseases and rheumatism, if wa ter. Take up and rub the vege- vou've never used the « Anuric/' cut ^ ab j e through a sieve or cloth and let Pierce U f^Urg e e n 8ample C pa?ka%, °fhj£ th ^>f Qinge/"BrwI^One pound thirty^Teven^timea more active °than dry, sifted flour, one-half pound fresh I b^artides^ive them to somebody lithia in eliminating uric acid--and the butter, one-half pound granulated su- | who can UBe them, most perfect kidney and bladder cor- gar, grated rind of one lemon, one j yellow will light up the, gloomiest rector. If you are a sufferer, go to you* ounce new "ground ginger root, one- _ < UB t ag . green will cool and best druggist and ask for a 60-cent box halt grated nutmeg, one-half teaspoon j th ' _ ogt ~ ar t s h Of "Anuric." You ran no risk for fir. soda " 0n8 giU milk. Rub flour and aof " n the most garisn Pierce's good name stands behind inis ... together add sugar, lemon wonderful new discovery as it has for . . ® Warm the past half century for his « G<lden rind, ginger and nutmeg. j their nutritive value. Medical Discovery," a general Ionic milk slightly, stir in soda and mix to ~ rine smooth paste. Shape, according to fancy and bake .fifteen, minutes. To make croquettes of boiled-meat, mince ÿour méat' and put it into a thick, white sauce well spiced with salt and' nutmeg, and let it for two hours. Then pre- frbm the outset, they did me good, j productive work or in the proruction After the first box, I felt I was getting j of .commodities which are luxuries well and- F can truthfully say that • more or less,) to consider employaient plants are meèting with good success. In a number of places women have registered, registered, and are waiting to be called to work as soon as necessary arrangements arrangements 6an be made. In Welland, for instance, 95 women responded last FLY PADS f? DIRECTIONS ( AREFULLY AND FOLLOW THEM , - Yv EXACTLY/ ' vK v Far more effective than Sticky Fly Catchers. Clean to handle. Sold by Druggists and Grocers everywhere. be such as to attract a large number of workers. Four to seven, and even ten dollars a day is not uncommon, "Fruit-a-tives" is the only medicine that helped me". LOUIS LABRIE. 60c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25c. At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit- a-tives Limited, Ottawa. a* Skim milk used Instead of water in the cooking of cereals adds to made from roots with pure gl which makes the bloo'd pure, h| vorfte Prescription" for weak and «Pleasant Pellets" for liver FRUITY FACTS. Fruit Is Principally Composed of Water, Sugar and Acid. For those who in the summer fruit season like to know what they are eating, it may be of interest to learn that you "eat"' very little, for fruit is practically nothing but a lot of water water and a 'little sugar! Strawberries, for example, are ninety per cent, water water and between five and six per cent, sugar! The small balance is accounted accounted for by a little protein and acid. But strawberries are antiseptic -- a valuable quality--and are deservedly favorites. Grapes have twice the quantity of sugar compared with strawberries, aiid not so much water. In currants we get a change--a fourth of the sugar and four times as much acid as strawberries. Oranges have five times as much fügar as lemons, the same sort/ of acid, but only a sixth of the quantity. Prunes (dried) - have twenty-six parts of water, sixty-six of sugar, no acid, and some protein. Their excellence excellence is apparent. But for value as food, the apple easily comes first. r Now, when you "eat" fruit, you know that water, sugar, and acid are what you are really eating. pepper, remain Pushing screws in common soap before before using will cause them to enter tiie wood .more easily. It's always more economical to measure materials in cooking- than it is to guess at them. , It is the greatest economy to purchase purchase the best spices; poor ones are on munitions as their next best ser vice to going overseas; 3. To urge Women's Emergency Corps to register women for munition + Wore* work. or for work which will release e8 .f men for the munitions industry. K There is no need to emphasize the importance of the highest possible production of munitions. The lives of our boys and the success of their endeavors depends upon it. Statements Statements from the highest authorities in Great Britain and from the front bear week to the call of a factory there , £ or men employed on the piece-work which needs 150 to 200 women. Fifty , bag - gi per cent, of those who answered the ' call had never been in regular employ- re. in munitions plants should "If you can't be the man behind the gun, be the man behind the man behind behind the gun." ✓ $1,00000 REWARD For information that will lead to the discovery or whereabouts of the person or persons suffering from Nervous Debility, Diseases of The Mouth and Throat, Blood Poison, Skin Diseases, Bladder Troubles, Special Ailments, and Chronic or Complicated Complaints who cannot cannot be cured-at The Ontario Medical Medical Institute, 263-265 Yonge St., Toronto. Correspondence invited. In all countries. Ask for our. INVEN-: TOR'S ADVISER,which will be sent free. MARION & MARION, 364 University 8t., Montréal. febilit Itncy Wood's Phosshodine, The Qreat English Remedy• Tonos »n"d Invigorates the whole nervoue system, makes new Blood in old Veins, Cures Nervous in. Mental and Brain Worry, Desvon- , Loss of Energy, palpitation of the Deart, Fading Memory. Woe $1 per box, six for - One will please, six will euro. Bold by aU druggists or mailed in plain pkg. on receipt of Su^N'^cÔf.TMmf«!«î^1vS%w!S2S Constipation tie bios cf aid ege is not to be cured by harsh purgatives; purgatives; they ratner aggravate the ouble. For a gentle, j* sure laxative, use hamberIain's Stomach and liver Tablets. They stie mp the liver, tone nerves and freshen tne stomach and bowels just like an internal bath. CHAMBERLAIN'S ; TABLETS . Woman's best friend. From girlhood to old age, these little red health restorer# restorer# are an tinfailing guide to an active liver and normal a clean, health; stomach. Taka Chamberlain's Stomac x>3! .--..-- _ --.--,--,cS. Tablai at night and the" sour stomach grid fermentation, fermentation, ana - the J headache, have all fiotys by raonyng, druggptfs, 25c., <U> bread crumbs. Put ft piece of butter butter in the saucepan, sufficient to take all the croquettes, and let them brown in it for about 10 minutes. A white sauce served with them is a good addition. Egg Salad.--Cover the eggs with boiling water and reduce the heat at once, cooking the eggs slowly'from 25 to 28 minutes over the simmer burner of the gas stove. When the eggs are done, cover them with cold water. Prepare mayonnaise, when thick, add four or five sardines that have been skinned, boned and pounded to a paste Cut the egg engthwise, lay on chilled lettuce and serve the dressing. Pickling Brine.--A "universal" pickle--that is, a pickling liquid that may be used with nearly all kinds of vegetables and fruits--is made like this: A cupful of sugar added to four quarts of vinegar, two dozen whole black peppers and a handful of cloves, a few blades of mace and IS whole allspice. Boil all the ingredients, for five minutes and pour over the fruit. Cream of Spinach Soup. -- Two quarts spinach, six cupfuls cold water, water, two cupfuls milk, one clove garlic or two tablespoonfuls chopped onion, bit of bay leaf, one teaspoonful salt, cayenne pepper and celery salt, three tablespbonfuls each butter and flour, one-half cupful cream. Cook spinach spinach in water thirty minutes. Press through sieve, scald milk with onion and bay leaf, add butter and flour, cooked together, strain, add seasonings seasonings and spinach mixture. Cook five minutes, and serve, garnished with beaten cream. Baked Apple Pudding.--Butter an agate baking dish. Slice into this tart apples enough to fill the dish; sprinkle with salt and pour in two or three tablespoonfuls of water. Sift together a cup and a half of flour, three teaspoonfuls of baking powder and one-fourth teaspoonful of salt. Into this work with the tips of the fingers three tablespoonfuls of butter.. Beat an egg, add three-fourths of a cup of milk (scant measure), and stir into the dry ingredients. When thoroughly mixed spread over the apples. Bake in a quick oven about 25 minutes. Invert the dish, so as to have the apples on th/top. Serve hot with butter and sugar or syrup. Mixed Conserve.--Six , pounds of the large blue pliims, measured after the pits are removed and the plums halved. Four pounds of granulated sugar. Two pounds of chopped raisins. raisins. Half a pound of English walnut meats, chopped fine. Juice of one orange. Skins of four oranges, chipped. chipped. and parboiled fifteen to twenty minutes. Pour boiling water on the raisins and, let stand two minutes. Mix all -the ingredients and let simmer simmer fifteen minutes. Add sugar and cook ten minutes in double boiler or until- jelly-like. Pour into hot sterilized sterilized jars apd when cool cover with paraffin. Do not peel the plums, as the skins give the conserve a pretty color. Do not stir the plums to pieces ; keep them in halves. When done the mixture will thicken on. a cold plate.. Beef Stew.--Use two pounds of round steak cut from one to one and * half inches thick. The steak may be left whole or cut into pieces two inches square. Heat an iron fryin; pan, rub over, the surface with a bit of fat from the meat, put in the steak and cook, first on one side, then on the other, to harden the meat on the outside and thus keep in the juices, Put the meat into the casserole with a dozen and a half places each of carrot and turnip, cut. in similar shaped shaped slices, cubes or triangles/ Add a dqgen very sipall peeled onions, oqe talblespoonful kitchen bouquet and > generous pint of browji stock or bqil- ing water. Cover grid let èoçk gently gently in .the-even, ijtoufr an.; hodrvgihd' £ half. After cooking an hour add FARE $3 22 DAILY BETWEEN BUFFALO & pare your croquettes by rolling the j ugually adulter ated. mixture in white_ of egg and fine j If a sma n piece of velvet is glued inside the heel of a shoe, stockings will not wear out so fast. Split a clothespin down the centre, and you" have a good tool for scraping scraping pans and kettles. • Always rinse black stockiflgs in blue water, and they will keep a good color right on to the end. If sugar is too high-priced to preserve preserve fruit, then dry it. You can't starve to death very well on dried fruit. Before cleaning knives on a knife- board, damp them slightly. They clean more quickly and gain a better polish. A few drops of ammonia in the water in which silver is washed will keep it bright for a long time without without cleaning. To prevent carpet from unravelling, unravelling, when cut, run two rows of machine machine stitching with the machine where it is to be cut Grind a and. give them to the canary, birds relish the little tender pieces that are found among the seed*.. Stains in table linen are easily removed removed by plunging the articles in pure boiling water. The addition of soap or soda would have the effect of fixing the stain. If new enamel pans are placed in a pan .of water and allowed to comp to the boil and then cool,'they will be found to last much longer without burning or cracking. Watering Boston ferns with weak tea instead of water will cause them to thrive wonderfully. When lice appear on ferns, stick some sulphur matches head down in soil. For waterproofing boot* and shoes, equal quantities of white wax, olive oil, and dectified lard, melted down make an excellent mixture but a little oil of turpentine should alqerbe added. To wash brushes and combs, put a teaspoonful of ammonia into a basin of hot water and dip the brush up and down in it letting the comb Remain in the water for a few minutes. : Afterward Afterward rinse in cold water. * V Heart Disease. Diseases of the heart are sometimes organic and sometimes functional; in some cases there is a material change in the tissues of the heart itself, itself, and in others the symptoms give evidence of some disorders elsewhere in the body, or of a constitutional change in which there is no apparent alteration in the heart structure. Organic diseases, again, may be divided into two groups ; those that are caused by an inflammation of the membrane that lines and envelopes the heart and those that are owing to j the slow degeneration of the cardiac j muscle. The inflammatory affections of the heart occur usually as complications complications or accompaniments of rhumat- ism, scarlet fever and other acute infectious infectious diseases, whereas the degenerative degenerative diseases may follow typhoid fever, diphtheria, influenza and other depressing diseases, but especially occur occur in consequence of overwork, worry, worry, overeating, especially of flesh foods, athletic pursuits carried to an extreme--the same things that are often often responsible for high blood pressure pressure and arteriosclerosis. The functional disorders are usually marked by a disturbed heart rhythm-- a pulse that is too rapid or too slow; intermittent or irregular. They are the least serious of all the diseases of handful*of suriflower seeds [the heart, yetithey alarm the sufferer Th e J mofr becaW^he symptoms are so conspicuous; " They are often caused by an overloaded stomach, by acute indigestion, by excessive fmoking, especially especially of cigarettes, and by various nervous affections. . They are often useful danger signals, calling the attention attention of the patient to a disease that is beginning elsewhere iti the body, or to some hygienic fault that may lead to serious diseases of the heart or other organs. There is another form of functional cardiac trouble in which the heart is simply "weak." Such a heart has strength only for the everyday needs of the body, and has no reserve force to meet any emergencies that may arise, such as acute illness or unwonted unwonted muscular or mental strain. It is usually associated with general muscular muscular weakness and lack of physical tone, and -always with abnormally low blood pressure. The .low pressure is partly owing to the fact that the heart is too weak to propel the blood with sufficient force to fill the arteries, and partly owing to the want of muscular tone in the arteries themselves. Youth's Companion. Worth a Guinea a Box as a remedy for the evil effects of quick eating, over-eating and strenuous living. living. The medicine that meets this need --that tones the stomach, stimulates stimulates the liver, regulates the bowels--is Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the World. Sold everywhere. In boxes, 25 cents. ions for 1900 peste&gvs. 'CITY OF ERIE" 3 Magnificent St. BETWEEN BUFFALO-Daily, May 1st to Nov. 15th-CLEVELAhD Leave Buffalo Arrive Cleveland 8:00 P.M. Leave Cleveland - - 9:00 P.M. 7:30 A. M. Arrive Buffalo - - 7:30 A. I (Eastern Standard Time) m . Connections nt Cleveland for Cedar Point, Put-in-Bay, Toledo, Detroit-and all points Wort and Southwest. Railroad tickets reading between Buffalo and Cleveland are good for transportation on our steamers. Ask your ticket agent for tickets viaC. & B. Line Beautifully colored sectional pu«le chart, showing both exterior and interior of The Great Ship ""SEE ANDBEE" sent on receipt of five cents to cover postage and mailing. Also asK for por 2<-paga pictorial and descriptive booklet free. 1 THE CLEVELAND A BUFFALO TRANSIT CO. Cleveland, Ohio ja VI3.S 1 // y St // **Please send me seme Chewing Gum: ► '^2D1 , The War and Finance. First Traveller--"This era's a terrible terrible war, Bill." Second ditto--"Yus. What's the price o' beer now?" tieiTUlne Carter's Muet Bear Signature ef See Fiu>6lmlle Wrapper Health Note*. Careful mothers keep flies away from everything that the baby eats. There is no greater stimulating restorative restorative than a tumbler of hot milk. Anaemic persons should eat spin- ach^leeks, yolk of egg, beef and apples/ apples/ as all of these contain iron. Old age is rarely attained by the excessive feeder. Moderation and mastication are factors in long living. A glass of buttermilk drunk the first thing on rising and Just before going to bed is claimed to be good for tile health. Olive oil--just a drop of it--put oij the squeaky door hinges will stop the poise. This sort of thing is particularly particularly irritating to an invalid, and care should be taken to see that a sick person is not disturbed. MORE MÙNITIONS WORKEÊRS. i&j WRfGLEYS is the kind the boys all like. It's sealed in a wax-wrapper. Air, moisture and dirt can't harm it. The chap with some Wrigley's to pass around is 'cock of the walk.' It's so refreshing and thirst- quenching. Send some of both flavors. "The deliveries ef munitions from Ontario are "running far behind the quantities promised, and we qre seriously seriously apprehensive if the existing conditions conditions cannet be bettered/' Such is the statement of the Inv perial Munitions Beard to the Provincial Provincial Organization of Resources Committee which has been conducting a preliminary investigation into lafeq? conditions in munitions plant 8 onto* Hamilton arid other Ontario cities, f This shortage in production has fcVBE HteÀDASKS* liveries effective. This hag ed factories turning out gteèl find component pbrts, Tyhio have adversely affected., operation* ft The smoking eating." like and WRIGLEYS, PEAR MINT ► after after C40 MADE IN CANADA tièaled tight Kept right Write Wrigley'e Ltd., Wrigley Bldg., Toronto^ for free copy of quaint MOTHER GOOSE book.

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