*v,<■ ; Tested Recipes. Mexican -„ Pickles.--Select four quarts green tomatoes, six large pep pers> three onions, all chopped fine. Note: It is now asserted with con- Put? a layer of this mixture in an fidence that these painful effects due to earthen jar, then a layer of salt al i ^ tuB system ar© BDtlrôly crjidl* . tôrnatôlv anti 1p| Tpmain ovérniriit cated, A new remedy, called «Anurie ■ m. , y ! let , Tein l in overmgnt. has been discovered by Dr. Pierce, and la T" 611 drains the water off, and add one the cause of c drainage -outward of tha tablespoon each, of peppercorns, mus Mthln C the W K hl îwilîTfMSa CO bi£?k.' >= rd s . ee , d ;nd whole cloves. Simmer ache, headache, and the darting painc and t " e whole for twenty minutes in three aches of articular or muscular rheuma- pints of good vinegarj and set away in 9 1T h i c V re cause ? . a cool place. After three weeks pour by too much uric acid, such as gout, Æ ,, . . , , asthma, sciatica, renal calculus «An- | off the vinegar and add aa much fresh uric " prolongs life because old people usu- In another week the pickles will be ally suffer from hardening and thickening readv for use of the walls of tho arteries, due to the ; ^ excess of uric acid in the blood and 1 Fresh Pineapple for Occasions.-- tissues. I Take a very fine ripe pineapple, pare Dr. Pierce, who is director and chief ,> P1]t par pf„nv nil the eve«»- then physician at the Invalids' Hotel and ltand cu .* care f ull y all the eyes, then Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., has with a silver fork strip all the plup been testing this wonderful medicine for from the core. To one pint of this the relief of over-worked and weakened nm> »nd nne frvnnth nmmd« nf -kidneys. The relief obtained by sufferers , one an d one-fourth pounds oi il m lump or crushed sugar and stir occasionally occasionally until all the sugar is dis solved. Put in glass fruit jars and screw down the covers as tight as possible. possible. This keeps a long time and is delicious. Rhubarb Marmalade.--Wash and pare rhubarb and cut in one-half-inch . package. If ! pieces; there should be two quarts. •Anurie" is building up a renullition as uj . - ^ , • 6 v r known Add one quart of sugar, cover and let has been so satisfactory that he determined determined to place «Anurie* with the principal principal druggists in town where people could get this ready-to-use medicine. «Anurie* Is not harmful or poisonous, but aids nature in throwing off those poisons within the body which cause so much suffering, pain and misery. Scientists Scientists assert this remedy is 37 times more potent than lithja. Send 10 ceints for large trial nackaee. 'è good as Dr. Pierce's other wi medicines which have been pr able during nearly fifty Vy ears, Doctor Pierce's Favorite Pr< for the ills of women, I^ctoi Pleasant Pellets, the liv and Doctor Pierce's Gol Discovery for red blood. ed rell- such as icription Pierce's 'egulator. Medical His Status. "What are you, my man, a plain tramp ?" "You might say so, mum. Or if you wishes to follow the plan so prevalent prevalent these days of giving éverything a special name " "Yes?" "You might call me an inefficiency expert." Complete. "Do you mean to say you only paid ' are tender but not mushy. Ê50 for that frock?" _ "Yes; but that, of course, was with- )ut the trimmings." "How much were the trimmings?" "A hundred and fifty." > * $1,000.00 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. PROMPTLY SEGUHEDI In all countries. Ask for our INVEN-- TOR'S AD VISER, which will be sent free. MARION & MARION. 364 University St., ^Montréal, Cook's Cotton Root Compound* A safe, reliable regulating medicine. Sold in three degrees degrees of strength--No. 1, $1; No. 2, S3; No. 3, $5 per box. Sold by all druggists, or sent prepaid on receipt of price. Free pamphlet. «, Address ; THE COOK MEDICINE 'CO* TOKONTO. OUT. (fsnwty Water.) Wife Cured by Lydià E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Des Moines, Iowa.--" Four years ago I was very sick and my life was nearly spent. The doctors stated that I would never get well without without an operation and that without it I woulieiot live one year. My husband objected to any operation and got 6ie some of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Vegetable Compound. I took it and commenced to get better and am now well, am stout and able to do my own housework. I can recommend the Vegetable Compound Compound to any woman who is sick and run down as a wonderful strength and health restorer. > My husband says I would have been in my grave ere this if, it had not been for your Vegetable Compound."--Mrs. Blanche Jefferson, Jefferson, 703 Lyon St., Des Moines, Iowa. Before submitting to a surgical operation operation it is- wise to try to -build up the female system and cura its derangements derangements with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Vegetable Compound ; it has saved many women from surgical operations. Write to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for »dvice--it will be confidential stand overnight. In the morning put in stewpan. Add grated rind and juice of one orange, one-half cup seeded seeded raisins, cut in small pieces and one-half cup English walnuts, broken in pieces. Bring all to boiling and let simmer until, thick. Seal in jars. Chutney Sauce.-- : Select twelve green, sour apples, two green peppers, six green tomatoes, four small onions, onions, one cap seeded raisins, one quart of vinegar (if strong dilute), two tablespoons mixed spices, two tablespoons salt and two. cups brown sugar.. 'Remove seeds from peppers, add tomatoes and onions, chopped fine; raisins, spices, sugar, salt and vinegar, vinegar, Put on and let simmer slowly for about three-fourths hour. Then add the apples and cook until they Put in bottles and seal. Delicious relish for meats. Honèy to Keep Without Candying.-- To keep honey all the year round without honeying, it is only necessary to place, the -honey, which has been strainqd previously, in a pan or pail, which may be placed inside of another one, putting two or three bits of wood under the pail containing the honey, to prevent it from burning upon the bottom. Then fill the outer one with water and just bring it to the boiling point, skimming off the wax and foam which gathers upon the top. As soon as it comes to the boiling point remove from stove, and after a few minutes skim and pour into jars to cool. Cover tightly and place in a cool cellar. It will pay for the trouble. Cucumber Pickles.--Over one-half a peck of small cucumbers pour a boiling brine made of five pints of water water and two cups of salt. Stand twenty-four hours, drain and wipe and cover with five pints of boiling boiling vinegar. Again stand twenty- four hours and drain. To fresh vinegar vinegar add two green peppers, chopped, one-half pint white mustard seed, one- half ounce each of whole cloves, cinnamon, cinnamon, allspice, ginger root and alum, two pounds of brown sugar and one tablespoonful of celery seed. Scald and pour boiling hot over the pickles. Do not tie the spices in a bag. The cucumbers will shrivel up when the hot vinegar is poured over them, but after standing Tor a fortnight they will be plump, firm and delicious. They will keep indefinitely stored in a covered jar or crock. Canned Sweet Peppers.--Cut off the stem end, remove the seeds" with a pair of shears and cut the pepper round and round in a long strip, one- fourth of an inch wide. Put the strips into a deep dish and pour over enough boiling salt water to cover them. Close the dish with a cover and let the peppers stand all night in the water. Turn them , ou,t into a colander and let them dram dry. Put into a quart jar and pour over them one and one-half cups of boiling hot vinegar, to which has been added one cupful of sugar and two small pieces of cinnamon stick. Let the peppers stand for three days, then drain off the vinegar, heat boiling water and pour over them again, then seal. Use mostly the red peppers with a few of the green. It will take two dozen peppers to fill a quart jar. These canned peppers are much superior to the imported "pimento," and should be used more generally than they are for salads, sandwiches aiyl Spanish rice. It is well to wear rubber gloves in preparingThe peppers. Watermelon Rind Preserve With Orange and Lemon.--Take the rind of one melon, pare and cut in small -pieces through a coarse meat or fruit chopper. Place in a preserving kettle, kettle, cover with water and boil-about an hour or until fruit seems tender. Scrub four large lemons thoroughly and thé same number of oranges. . Cut in pieces, remove seeds and run through chopper. After fruit has'been boiled boiled rather tender add oranges and lemon. lemon. Measure up two-thirds the amount of sugar in same measuring cup in which the fruit was measured. Add to fruit, boil for one hour (not too fast) and stir fruit occasionally so it does not stick to the bottom. Lower the flame at the end of an hour* and if the syrup seems to boildown "FruMves" Soon .Relieved This Dangerous Condition 632 Gerbard St. East, Toronto. "For two years, I was a victim of Acute Indigestion' and Gas In The Stomach. It afterwards attacked my Heart and I had pains all over my body, so that I could hardly move around. I tried all kinds of Medicine but none of them did me any good. AtTlast,-1 decided to try " Fruit-a-tives ". I bought the first box last J une,' and now I am well, after using only three boxes. I recommend " Fruit-a-tives " to anyone suffering from Indigestion". FRED J. CAVEEN. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25c. At all dealers or sent postpaid -by Fruit- a-tives Limited, Ottawa. too much add a little water now and then. Stir all thoroughly, mix water water with syrup. This preserve will require often lifting and stirring to keep juice evenly distributed with fruit. . The proper proportions of sugar to melon rind are twelve cups of sugar to eighteen cups of rind. When preserve is finished if rind is not sufficiently sufficiently heavy one cup of sugar may be added and boil a short time, stirring stirring well. Pickling Wisdom. When pickles are under consideration consideration the most important item is vine- i?ar. All things taken into account, it is best to use the vinegar obtained from cidar, since "many of the color- ess varieties are often made with an acid" that is injurious to the stomach. The difference of cost between the cider vinegar an dthe white is not much. Nearly all vegetables that are made into pickles, especially gherkins, cucumbers cucumbers and onions, require a preliminary preliminary soaking in brine. Half a cupful of salt is usually allowed to four quarts of the pickles. - These are placed in a stone crock, the salt strewed over them, water is poured in until it covers them, and a weighted plate is laid on top to keep the pickles from, floating. This is left forseveral days. When the pickles are removed from the brine they should be looked over to see if there are any soft or spotted ones. All pickles should be closely watched watched after they are put up, at least for a month or so. This to ascertain if they are keeping well. They should not be eaten unless they have had at least a two months' mellowing, although although longer than this is safer still. Sweet pickles are usually made from peaches, pears, plums and watermelon watermelon rind, and, except when the fruits must be peeled, they are less trouble to prepare than the tart pickles, pickles, since they do not have to be laid in brine before preparing. Spiced currants, gooseberries, cherries and grapes may be put up a little at a time, as one has the fruit and the leisure leisure for the task. Other fruits may be spiced. Here is a good recipe for spiced grapes : Remove the skins from the grapes, put the pulp over the fire and stew gently until it can be rubbed through a sieve, thus removing all the seeds. Weigh the pulp, arid to every five pounds of this add a pint of cider vinegar, four pounds of brown sugar, four tdblespoonfuls of ground cinnamon cinnamon and two of ground cloves. Stew together until it is very thick. Pour into jelly glasses arid seal. freshly grated from a loaf of stale bread! . - T; ; . Tired, aching, feet may be refreshed by soaking in v hot water. One of": the secrets of successful coffeë is to wash the pot every time it is usef. v Enamelware- can be cleaned with soap-.and whiting rubbed on with a damp cloth. Never dry a silk blouse before ironing ironing it. It is a good plan to oil stout walking walking shoes with kerosene and vaseline, half and half, before going on a wet tramp. ' Fresh fruits and green - vegetables supply the iron and mineral matter necessary to the general well-being of the system. ( " A simple salad is made with any kind of seasbriable fruit sliced, served on lettuce leaves and sprinkle 1 with chopped- nuts. When you want to thread a sewing sewing machine in a hurry, remove the spool already on it, but do not unthread unthread the machine. Put a new sppol in place, tie the two threads together and pull -the thread gently through to the eye of the needle. Break off the first thread and thread the needle. gum ■J& A JEWISH ARMY CORPS. British Plan Inducement to to Enlist. Hebrews A middle way has been found toward toward the solution of the problem of what to do with the many thousands of Russi&n and Polish Jews living in Great Britain who have escaped military military service in the Czar's army an do not come under British conscrir. tion laws. In London, Manchester,- Liverpool and other big cities are huge colonies of these exiles, a large proportion of them béing of military age, who naturally have come to be regarded with no favorable eye by their English neighbors whose menfolk menfolk are engaged in war work. . After some agitation the Government Government proposed to enact a law by which Russian Jews of military age should be forced to enlist in the British army under threat of being sent back to Russia, where they wouM be liable to heavy penalties as defaulters from military service. This project aroused a storm of disapproval, though ably defended by Home Secretary Samuel, himself a Jew. The basic fact upon which the opposition rested was that England had always harbored political refugees, and a large number of the exiles iri question came under that broad classification. Mr. Samuel, while not withdrawing his original proposal, has now hit on a compromise. Reason and persuasion, as the Manchester Guardian puts--it, are to be substituted for threats and force. A responsible leadership of the Russian Jews, Samuel announces, has been formed, which will conduct an active recruiting campaign in London and other centres, and definite inducements inducements will be held out to the Jews to voluntarily enlist. Alinost all of them are aliens and the high naturalization fee of £5 ($25) plus-law fees is as a rule quite beyond their resources. Mr. Samuel proposes that any- one who enlists before September September 30 shall, after three months' service, have his fee remitted if he desires desires to be naturalized Another part of Mr. Samuel's new proposals is even more interesting. This is the idea of forming, a special Jewish Corps. This has already been done in a limited way with the Zion Corps. Something of the same sort also has been done in France. Flavor and the Sealed Package are three big reasons. ' And the Value it gives in long-lasting, beneficial enjoyment is a point that people appreciate. The air-tight package keeps the flavor and quality as fine as wonderful Wrigley when made factories. in the ►2s Write for the Sprightly Spearmen's funny Mother Goose book. Address Wm. Wrigley Jr. Co., Ltd., Wrigley Building, Toronto, Ont. THE MAN WHO SAW RED. Chew it after ' every meal Two Flavors Made in Canada Sealed tight--Kept right C42 Kitchen Measures. It is so much easier to'measure ingredients ingredients than to weigh them out that the housekeeper saves time and work by acquainting herself with certain equivalent weights and measures. Without staggering her with an array of items and figures, which nine women women out of ten forget, here is an equivalent equivalent table that any housekeeper can keep in mind. A cupful of flour or milk means half a pint. Two scant cupfuls of butter packed tightly make a pound! Ten èggs of ordinary size make a pound. Four even cupfuls of dry flour make a pound. A gill of liquid is a half-cupful. Two cupfuls (one pint) of water or milk make a pound. The juice of an rdinary lemon is about a tablespoonful. A breakfast cupful of bread crumbs equals about four ounces. Useful Hints. : The cleverness of a cook is gauged by her use of leftovers. Stale breadcrumbs are crumbs Minus Rifle, Scot Went at Enemy With Bare Hands. A wounded officer now in this country says that when his men attacked attacked a number had their rifles shot or blown out of their hands, says the Edinburgh Scotsman. Yet they went through, and "to see those chaps of mine tackling the Bosche with their bare hands was worth living for --or dying for. It was meat and drink to me. They just tore their men down, and wrenched their own rifles from them. One big section commander commander of mine was just like a terrier terrier with rats, except that he didn't wait for killing. He was too busy. He went for his men like a blooming lamplighter, smashed 'em down, grabbed 'em by the slack of the breeches and the neck, and chucked 'em back over the parapet, to roll into the remains of their own wire. 'Fall in there! Fall in!' he kept yelling, yelling, and goodness alone knows what he meant by it. But he put them out of business all right." Sickness is often a mask worn by lazy people. HEALTH The Lesser Evil. Old Grump--Why doesn't Ethel marry that young idiot? I am getting blame tired of his coming here so much. His Wife--I believe I'd prefer- to have him comd here--if she marries him he will stay here. Thousands Take this mild, family remedy to avoid illness, and to improve and protect their health. They keep their blood pure, their livers active; their bowels regular and digestion sound and strong with Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the World. In boxes, 25 cents. Far more effective than Sticky Fly Catchers. Clean to handle. Sold by. Druggists and Grocers everywhere. " Concussion of the Brain. Concussion of the brain is a very slight matter, or a very serious one, according to the part of the head that has been struck. It is an accident that may very easily happen to children children in their play, and therefore those who have charge of the young should understand its symphoms. The blow that causes the concussion is very likely to be at the back of the head; that is the case when the child falls backward from a chair, or slips and falls on the ice. When such a fall is followed by a period of unconsciousness, unconsciousness, however brief, or by dizziness dizziness and headache, watch the sufferer sufferer carefully for a time, for the condition condition is one of shock, although shock may be very slight. When a child falls and hurts himself, himself, he is inclined to cry vigorously; when he does so, his elders may feel reassured, for loud crying and serious serious accidents do not often go together. together. But when the child lies still instead of rising, and is unconscious, or nearly so do not make vigorous efforts efforts to get him to speak, or shake him in an effort to rouse him. Carry him to a quiet room ,and let him lie there until the doctor comes. If it is a inild concussion, the unconsciousness unconsciousness will soon wear off, although although the child may complain of headache for some time, and show unusual unusual irritability of temper. In more severe cases the unconsciousness is prolonged and deep, and when consciousness consciousness returns "there is often nausea with vomiting, dizziness, pains in the head, and even convulsions. The other symptoms are those always associated associated with shock--a subnormal temperature, a weak pulse arid slow respiration. . Whether the concussion is slight or seridas, the room where the patient lies should be darkened ard kept very quiet, the sufferer should rest on a bed with his head kept low, and cool bandages and an ice cap should be ap- 1 plied to his head if possible. Warm | applications to other parts of the body are often useful. On no account talk to the patient, beg him. to speak, or try to get from him an account of the accident. He will probably never have any remembrance of it.--Youth's Companion. Health Notes. One teaspoonful of glycerine taken in a wine-glass of water three times a day for a fortnight will cure the most obstinate case of indigestion. This is a valuable hint when the skin of the back has become sore through long lying in bed. Beat the whites of two eggs for a length of time" with a desert spoonful of spirits of wine until it thickens.. Put it into a small pot and tie it down for use. When wanted spread a little of this the j on linen and apply it to the part where the skin is broken. Pat on a little fresh mixture when the ointment becomes becomes stiff or dry or uncomfortable. It will give the greatest possible relief. relief. Instructions Obeyed. "Why, Freddie!" exclaimed the mother mother of a precocious five-year-old, "Aren't you ashamed to call auntie stupid ? Go at once and tell her you are very sorry." "Auntie," said the little fellow, a few moments later, "I'm awful sorry you are so stupid." Wool's Phoephodias, The Or eat English Remedy. Tones and Invigorates the whole nervous system, makes new Blood t. } a , old . Veins, Cures Nervous Debility, Mental and Brain Worry. Despondency Despondency Lobs of Energy, Palpitation of the Heart, Failing Memory. Price $1 per box, six for $5. One will please, six will cure. Sold by all "druggist» or mailed in plain pkg. on receipt of E^VwpznpMet mailed free. THE WOOD MEDICINE CO., TORONTO, ONT. (Femeriy Whiter.) FLEXIBLE SOLES OF WOOD. Hungarian inventor Has Solved a Difficult Problem. Barna S. Kohlener, a Hungarian captain of cavalry, whose military usefulness was ended when he lost an arm, has devoted himself since his • incapacitation to inventing a Wooden-soled shoe that shall have the virtue of flexibility, and announces that he has solved the problem, the hardest that has confronted wooden- sole d shoe enthusiasts. His invention is a sole that, instead Of being made of one solid piece of wood, is constructed of a number of layers joined together by heavy oils or fats that thicken and grip the pieces of wood together. After countless countless experiments C-apt. Kohlener declares declares that wooden soles constructed in this manner have the elacticity of leather soles, and, in addition, can be made of old and worn material worked over. You should always keep a bottle of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets on the shelf. The little folk so often need a mild and safe cathartic and they do appreciate Chamberlain's instead of nauseous oils and mixtures. For stomach CHAMBERLAIN MEDICINE CO.. TORONTO jo CHAMBERLAIN'S . TABLETS . Do you want to earn $10 a week or more in your own home ? Reliable persons will be furnished with profitable, all-year-round employment on Auto-Knitting Machines, $10 per week readily earned. earned. We teach you at home, distance w ' s no hindrance. 'Write for particulars. particulars. rates of pay. send ac. stamp. AUTO-KNITTER HOSIERY CO. Dept. 183 257 College St. - Toronto (Also at Leicester. England.)