* ✓ ( ... - ~ --■ --ru - r ' ■ •■- ■ ■ • •- y "■' ■■■ i-'--:-- S' ' : " ; v -V : •' • • - . .. " \ : •X'- Every 10c x ^ Packet of WILSONS FLY m. ps will KILL more flies than \$8°-°WORTH OF ANY V "■ - STICKY FLY CATCHERv Clean to handle. Sold hy all Drug- gists, Grocers anH r,r nera l Stores. SNAKE GARDEN. as DOMESTIC SCIENCE AT HOME. First Lesson--Food Constituents. Venomous Serpents Preserved Subjects For Scientific Study. At Butanta, Brazil, there is the most ! a little practice. remarkable and repulsive garden in the world. It is seven hundred acres in extent, and is a garden of venomous venomous serpents, which are maintained for purely scientific purposes. There are laboratories which produce serums serums for the cure and prevention of the effects of snake-bite. The snakes are kept in a small park in order that their habits and the best methods of escaping their attacks may be studied. Chokf.d for Air. Some little irritant irritant becomes lodged, in the bronchial tubes, others gather, and the awful choking choking of asthma results. Nothing offers quite such quick and positive relief as Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Asthma Remedy. The healing, soothing smoke or vapor penetrates, penetrates, clears the passages and gives untold untold relief. Usually.it completely cures. It has behind it years of success. It is the sure remedy for every sufferer. The law of booty governing the Israelites is given in Nun. xxxi. 26-47. Booty consisted of captives of both sexes, cattle and whatever a captured city might contain, especially metallic treasures. Wood's Fhosphodine, The Great English Remedy. Tones and invigorates the whole nervous system, makes new Blood ,, in old Veins, Cures Nervous Debility, Al entai and Brain Worry, Despondency, Despondency, Loss of Energy, Palpitation of the Heart, Failing Memory. Pric$ *1 per bor, sir for $5. One will please, sir will cure. Sold by all druggists or mailed in plain pkg. on receipt of S rice. Neic pamphlet mailed free. THE WOOD 1 EDICINÈCO., TORONTO, OMT. (Firmrty Whiter.) The secret of success in successful cooking lies with tiro housewife who knows food ^constituents, their. value and the'proper method of preparing,' as well as how to plan a diet for invalid, invalid, child or grown person. Many women read technical terms and become frightened and bewildered. bewildered. This is very foolish. Just remember remember how hard it seemed to do decimals before you mastered them, and how quickly you understood after It is just the same way with food terms. Learn the few simple principles and become mistress mistress of the finest profession in the world--become a practical and scientific scientific housewife. The five principal elements of food necessary to maintain the health are: Proteins, carbohydrates; fats, mineral salts, water. . Proteins.--The source of proteins are meat, milk, cheese, butter, eggs, fish, grains, and legumes. Proteins contain carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, sulphur and sometimes phosphorus. Containing about sixteen per cent, of nitrogen, their chief use is tissue building, repairing waste and making muscle. They also supply the same' amount of heat as starches. Carbohydrates.---Their source is in starches and sugars, and they are found chiefly in green vegetables, grains and fruits. Carbohydrates are composed of carbon, hydrogen ^nd oxygen in small granular grains inclosed inclosed in cellulose coverings. Carbohydrates Carbohydrates are used to supply energy or power to do work. They enter, to a small extent, into the process of build- ee ing tissue. They also furnish heat. Starch, by the process of digestion, is converted, into a dextrine, and then màde into s a convert sugar. This change takes place in the intestines. Fats.--The source of fats is in beef, lard, chicken and other compounds of an animal source, and "in olives, corn, peanut and cottonseed oil of a vege table source. Vegetable oils are from all disease. Corn oil is superior tp all domestic oils, it is the by-product by-product of corn from which cornstarch is made. In composition fats contain carbon, hydrogen and oxygen, ^ats in the body furnish a greater amount of heat than starches. They are used also for building tissue. A large amount of fat must be used during cold weather than in hot weather, for the heat radiating over the surface evaporates more quickly in _the cold, oi, in other words, the cold oxidizes this' body fuel. Mineral Salts.--The source of inorganic. inorganic. salts is principally in green vegetables, grains, milk, meats, eggs' and fish. The salts found in foods are - calcium, iron, chlorine, phosphorus, phosphorus, magnesium, sodium, sulphur and potassium. Salts are used to regulate regulate the body; they are also needed for the formation of bone and teeth structure and appear in tissue building. building. Water.--Water is the most necessary necessary of all foods; it forms a part of all tissues and is the important factor factor in the blood stream. It is pre- It x carries nourishment to the blood and regulates the bodily process of elimination. Advise*.The, Ùe» Ôf "FRUÏT-A-TIVÈS". Fegww* Fruit intiro newspapers about the position of the kingship in this -country-- spèScrL ulatlons by people; who, I apa dsure*, have not thought of thé wider issues that are at stake; You cannot make a Republic of the British Commonwealth Commonwealth of Nations." D?- NEW SOURCE OF REVENUE. 71 Grenville St., Toronto, Ont. Toronto's Select Family Hotel. Centrallylocated just off Yonge Street. Convenient to Shopping and Theatre district. Rates: American Plan--$2.50 up per day. European Plan J Sing-Ie, 11.25 up per day. ^ Double, SI.50 up per day. Write for Descriptive Booklet. /-fWjB QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY KINGSTON ONTARIO ARTS MEDICINE EDUCATION APPLIED SCIENCE Stiniqç, Chemical, Civil, Mechanical and Electrical Engineering. HOME STUDY Arts Course by correspondence. Degree .with one year's attendance. Summer School Navigation School July and Auya*t December to April 15 GEO. Y. CHOWN, Registrar T Canning Gooseberries. To can gooseberries, stem and remove remove the tails, then wash in pléhty of cold water and drain. Pack in jars and fill with boiling water or a heavy syrup. Place the rubber and did in position and process in a water bath for thirty minutes. Remove, and test for leaks, then store in a cool, dry place. Label and date. Canned Gooseberries for Pies.--Prepare Pies.--Prepare the gooseberries by aijtd tailing. Place in a preserving kettle and add one cupful of sugar for every pound of prepared fruit. Add one-half cupful of water to a cupful of sugar. Place the kettle on the fire and bring slowly to a boil, stirring all the time the berries are cooking, Boil for five minutes, then pour in sterilized sterilized jars. Place the rubber and lid in position and process for ten minutes in hot water bath after -the boiling starts. Remove and cool and then test for leaks. Gooseberry Jam.--Use two quarts of gooseberries. Stem and tail them and place in a preserving kettle, adding adding one and one-fourth pounds of sugar sugar and two cupfuls of water. Cook until very thick and pour into sterilized sterilized glasses. Cool and cover with paraffin. Store in the usual manner for jellies. Gooseberries may be combined wit]) other fruits when making jams, such as strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, blackberries, huckleberries or currants. English Gooseberry Jam. -- Two quarts of gooseberries, two cupfuls of water. Place in a small preserving kettle jand boil until very soft, usually about one-half hour. Rub through a fine sieve and allow a measure of su gar to each measure of fruit pulp. Restemming Restemming j turn to fire, cook slowly until thick 1 Pour into glasses or pots and cool. Cover with paraffin. MR. ROSENBURG 589 Casgrain St., Montreal. April 20th, 1915. "In my opinion, no other medicine In the wotid is so curative for Cotistipa- iion and Indigestion as " Fruit-a-tives". 1 was a sufferer from these complaints for five years, and my sedentary occupation, occupation, Music, brought about a kind of Intestinal Paralysis--with nasty Head- : aches, belching gas, drowsiness af^er eating, and Pain in the Back. I tried pills and medicines of physicians, but nothing helped me. Then I was induced to try " Fruit-a-tives ", and now for six months I have been entirely well. I advise any one who suffers from that horrible trouble--Chronic Constipation with the resultant indigestion, to try "Fruit-a-tives", and you will be agreeably surprised at the great benefit you will receive". A. ROSENBURG. v 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25c. j At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit- a-tives Limited, Ottawa. Utilization of Waste Materials Practised Practised in Britain. Britain is finding herself in many ways owing to the war. One source of much revenue, as well as of a requisite requisite in the preparation of explosives, explosives, is found in the camp refusé. The Yorkshire Post, in describing the results secured under a process for utilizing the camp refuse by the Quarijermaster-General's Department, says: N "While the English-made glycerine was $290 per ton, the United States fixed their figure at $1,200 per ton. During the first month the scheme was put into operation, a weekly return return to the Army for camp Refuse was made of $9,0,00. In January of this year, the weekly amount increased to" $47,500, representing approximately $2,500,000 annually returned to the Army for waste rations. The production production of glycerine from these waste camp products enabled the Ministry of Munitions to dispense with over 1,000 tons of foreign glycerine at a saving in cost of $900,000." (Foregoing figures figures on basis of $5 equivalent of £1.) |i hé m. ~er not el, Toronto "A Real Hotel Without à Bar" Bright atffl attractive. Fireproof. Every bedroom bedroom -has; a. bathroom. . Elegant füriüshlngs. Splendid cuisine. Easy access to shopping districts, districts, and theatres... Free taxi service from Uniom Station and wharf. Ask for Provincial Motor taxis. BATES : Single* ; room, with bath, $1.50 to $2.50.. Breakfast, 25c to 50c. Luncheon, 35c to 50c. Dinner, 50c to 75c. Inclusive rates, ; American plan, $2.50 to $3.50. a day. Write for • booklet to 240 JAB VIS STBEET, TOBONTO 4451 W Most infants are infested with worms, which cause great suffering, and if not promptly dealt with may cause constitutional constitutional weaknesses difficult to remedy. Miller's Worm Powders will clear the stomach and bowels of worms and will so act upon the system that there will be no recurrence of the trouble. And not only this, but they,will repair the injuries to the organs that worms cause and- restore them to soundness. Floor Fillers. Cracks and crevices in old floors may be filled with the time-honored paper pulp, made by boiling newspapers newspapers to - jelly, draining, and mixing- with glue. The. substance is jammed in with a knife, then painted over. But sawdust, mixed also with glue, is more satisfactory, and saves time. Cornstarch, moistened with, turpentine or linseed oil, makes an excellent filler for porous-grain wood, to be applied before paint, stain, or wax. If desirable, desirable, tint with ocher, burnt umber, or lamp black. Commercial fillers ready to apply may be bought at any paint store and; of course, save time and trouble. FUTURE OF THE BRITISH EMPIRE EXCERPT FROM HISTORIC DRESS BY GEN. SMUTS. AD- / Be Glean--and Safe. Think of the germ-laden things your skin and clothes must come into contact with every day. Then remember that there is a splendid antiseptic soap LIFEBUOY HEALTH S B A P Use Lifebuoy for the hands, the bath, the clothes, and the home. Its rich, abundant lather means safety. The mild, antiseptic odor vanishes quickly after use. LEVE1 METIERS Lia* ti TORONTO At eU good Grocer* 173 The "Orator of the Empire" Made These Important Statements About the Future of the Empire. General Smuts was a Boer General and President Kruger's State Attorney Attorney in the Transvaal Republic. He is now a loyal and enthusiastic soldier and statesman of the British Empire, and performed a signal service in driving the Germans out of Africa. ^ The following speech is one of the jg finest and most statesmanlike utter- " ances that the war has produced. It was delivered before the British House of Parliament in London. "I thinîTThat we are inclined to make mistakes in thinking about this group of nations to which we belong, belong, because too often we think about it as one State. We are not a State. The British Empire is much more than State. I think the very expression 'Empire' is _ misleading, because it makes people -think that we are one community, to which -.the word 'Empire' 'Empire' can; appropriately be applied. Germany is an Empire. Rome was an Empire. India is an Empire. But we are a system of nations. We are not a State, but a community of States and nations. e -^re far greater than any Empire *3vhich has. ever existed,, and by using this ancient expression we really disguise the main fact th^t our whole position is different, and that we are not one State or nation or empire, but a whole , world by ourselves, ourselves, consisting of many nations, of many States, çmd all sorts of communities, communities, under one flag. A System of States, "We are a .system of States, and not, T think", à stationary, system;. but a system always going forward to new destinies. Take the position of that system to-day. Here you Ijave the United Kingdom with a number of Crown Colonies. Besides that, you have large Protectorates like Egypt, an Empire by itself. Then you have a great Dependency like India, also an Empire by itself, where civilization has existed from time immemorial. We are trying to see how East and West can-work-together. These are enormous problems; but beyond them we come to the so-called Dominions, almost independent in government themselves, which have been evolved on the principle of a European constitutional constitutional system into almost independent independent States* but who all belong to this community of nations, which I prefer to call 'the British Common Wealth of Nations.' "You can see" that no political ideas which have evolved in the past will apply to this world which is comprised comprised in the British Empire; and any name we have yet found for this group is insufficient. The man who will find a proper name for this sys tern will, I think, do real service to the Empire. Our Future Government. "The question is, how are you going going to provide for the future government government of this Commonwealth ? An entirely entirely new problem is presented. If you want to see how great it is, you must indulge in comparison. Look at the United States. There you find what is essentially one nation, not perhaps in the fullest !%nse, but what is more and more growing into one nation; one big State consisting no doubt of separate parts, but all linked linked up into one big continuous area. The United States had to solve the problem which this presented, and they discovered the federal solution-- a solution which provides subordinate treatment for the subordinate parts, but one national Federal Government and Parliament for the whole. Compare Compare with that State the enormous system which is comprised in the British British Empire. You can see at once that a solution which has been 'found practicable practicable in the case of the United States xyill never work in the case of an enormous enormous system such as we are trying to work out for the world. Towards a Greater Nationality. . "What I feel in regard to all the empires of the past, and even in regard regard to the United States', is that the effort has always been towards forming one nation--always one nation. nation. x All the empires we have known J Some Peculiar Wills. Among many curious wills may be reckoned that of the great Shakespeare, Shakespeare, who bequeathed to his wife his second-best bed with the furniture, and that alone; whilst an old Provost of Eton left a sum of money sufficient to give every boy at Eton a halfsheep halfsheep on February 27th of every year. Now-a-days, however, the threepenny-bit takes the place of the half-sheep. Gold Dust is such a marvelous cleanser that a little of the product sprinkled in your scrubbing water will save you most of the back work---and clean much more quickly and thoroughly than any other way. For anything and everything about the house Gold Dust «-- Protect the child from the ravages of worms, by using Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator. It is a standard remedy, and years of use have enchanced its re putation. Wayside Food. Not every green thing good to eat grows: in a market-garden. To the initiated the field and roadside are always sufficient for a delightful salad. The moskwholesome and deliciously deliciously flavored of these wild salad ingredients ingredients is the dandelion, that despised despised "weed" which we grub out of our lawns with such savage delight. A dandelion diet would be a little monotonous, but the young and tender tender shoots, either boiled as greens', or used with other things as a salad, are- tip-top stuff. If .one be troubled with corns and warts, he will find in Holloway's Corn Cure an application that'will entirely relieve suffering. suffering. is the best known cleanser. Try it once and you'll use it always. » Sold in 10c and large packages. e large for econ- The GOLD DUST TWINS Never "Break A Date" Buy omy s sake. And Rest on the 7th Day "Let the GOLD DUST TWINS dayourtoork" THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY LIMITED, "Montreal, Canada If We Lose. At the end of a war which cost Germany only half a billion dollars, Bismarck extracted just double that amount from France in an indemnity. Germany kept an'army in France ^until ^until the last dollar was paid. Guess how big an indemnity the Kaiser will collect from you and me, England and France, if he wins this war? It has already cost him more than twenty times wjhat his grandfather paid out in the Fjranco-Prussjan war. On that basis we are already sure of twenty billions of indemnity. Clean up the old coffee grinder,- or buy a new one, and grind your own corn meal for griddle cakes, muffins and bread. If you do not like bread made of corn meal alone, use some "frheat flour with it. Since home ground corn meal does not keep long, it is better to use whole com by the bushel and grind for meal as needed. Put up more food this |rear than ever when packing for winter use. Little Irene marched into the room breathless. "O mother, don't scold me for being late for supper because I've had such a disappointment," she said. "A horse fell down and they said they were going to send for a horse doctor, so I waited and waited, in the . past and that exist to-day are ' and what do you think ? It wasn't a founded on the idea of assimilation, of horse, doctor at all. It was only trying to force human material into i man." Little Had Eczema On Face and Hands--Local Doctors Treated Him in Vain--How Cure Was Finally Effected. Trenton, Ont. July 4th.,--This- letter will interest, all mothers of young children, children, because it tells of the best means obtainable obtainable of overcoming the annoying and torturing skin troubles which come to so many children. Mrs. Waldron had several doctors treating treating her boy for eczema, but all in vain. Finally she healrd about Dr. Chase's Ointment Ointment and her 1 letter tills of the wônderful results obtained by the use of this soothing, soothing, healing ointrtient. Mrs. Samuel Waldron, - George street Trenton, Ont., writes: "About four years ago, my little boy had a rash on his fact and hands which the doctor called Eczema, He gave us a wash for it, but without benefit. I think we tried all the doctors here. Finally we tried Dr. Chase's Ointment, Ointment, and gave it a good trial. We could see that it was gradually healigg. At first it appeared to* burn the skin, then this skin would peel up, finally he got rid of it entirely. During the winters of the next two years we-noticed a symptom of the disease under the skin. Each time,we used more Dr. Chase's Ointment, curing it both times. For the last two years he has not had any return symptoms at all, so we think that he is now entirely cured." Dr. Chase's Ointment, 60c a box, at al dealers, or Edma nson, Bates & Co.; Limi ted, Toronto. one mould. Your whole idea and basis basis is entirely different. You do not want to standardize the nations of the British Empire; you want to develop them towards a greater nationality. These communities, the offspring of the Mother Country, or# territories like my own, which, have been annexed annexed after the vicissitudes of "war, must not be moulded in any one pattern. You want them to develop on the prin T ciple of self-government, and theré- fore your whole idea is different from anything that has ever existed before. That is the fundamental fact we have to bear in mind--that " this British Commonwealth of--nations does not stand for standardization - or conventionalization, conventionalization, but for thé fullër, richer, richer, and more various "life of all the nations comprised in it. "Even the nations which have fought against it, like my own, must feel that their interests, their language, language, their religion, are as safe and secure under the British flag as those of the children of your own households households and your own blood. It is only in proportion as this is realized you Will fulfill the true mission which is yours.. Therefore, it seems to me that v there is only one solution, - and that is a solution supplied by our- past traditions--the traditions of freedom, self-government, and of the fullest development. The King and the Empire. "The question arises, how are you going to keep this Commonwealth of nations together ? If there is-to be this enormous development towards â more varied' and richer life . among the natrons, how are you going to keep them together ? -It seems to me that there are two potent factors that you must rely upon for the fuure. The first, is your' hereditary kingship. I have seen some speculation "recently WOMAN SUFFERAGE. Its War Time Aspect. London, Eng. The women.of England are doing, their duty. They are taking care of the wounded, or if they cannot assist in work of that kind théy are adding their savings to promote the good work.. They are Knitting . and .sewing for the soldiers at the front. The suffragists have given so little trouble to the government that it will undoubtedly soften the hearts of those in Parliament, since the "militants" "militants" have .turned ell their energies to aid the fighting-, men of England; and so suffer age - may soon corné after this terrible war is over. Thousands of • women in Canéda have overcome their sufferings,' v and hayti been'Cured of woman's ills by Dr. Pierce*» Favorite Prescription. This temperance medicine, -though /started nearly half a century ago, sells most widely to-day, because it is made without alcohol or narcotics. It can now be had ini tablet form as well as liquid, and eveiy woman who suffers from backache, headache, nervousness, should take this "Prescription" "Prescription" of Dr. Pierce. It is ^prepared from k nature's-roots and herbs^and does not contain a particle of alcohol or any narcotic. narcotic. It's not a secret prescription for its ingredients are printed on wrapper. Many a woman is nervous and irritable.- irritable.- feels dragged dowB and worn out for no reason that she caii think of. In ninety-nine per cent, of; these cases itr is the, womanly organism that requires attention; the weak back, dizzy spells and bjack circles about the .eyes, are only mnptoms. Go to the source of trouble. When that is corrected the other symptoms symptoms disappear. A r< r* aC. r ^tt Itu. JAM Front-- Every day boxes from home are going to the boys in the trenches. And of t^e things they get, a great prize is WUGEJEJPS -- the Gum with Lasting Flavour. It takes the place of food and drink it* case of need--which is often. It keeps spirits up--gives vigour and vim. A packet in the pocket lasts a long time. The Flavour LasIs! Chew it \ " ■ ■■■■■ Mivi afterevery ji " Ont.-^I wish to say for other women who suffer St. v the benefit that .1 recommend Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription as a great help. I have personally recommended the same to many who in turn have been helped a great deal by its use."--Mrs. F. J. Bowden, 19 Oliver St., St. Thomas, Ont. Made Sealed Tight--K0pt Right 7 ■, V t ' / 1 -. a Svggt