NERVE-RACK CHILDREN , Made Bright and Well by Dr. Casseil's Tablets. Used fo Scream Terribi§ for no : reason whatever. | Just a bundle of Nerves. Weak, Wasting away, and Digestive Troubles. Thought she could never recover. Now-cured and happy through DR. CASSELL'S TABLETS. ot dren. Do not let them remedy that has saved bered is ready wo your Casseil's Tablets. This for the people has been in the treatment of weak- wasting, whether in old or Save the oh suffer wi k life in cases hand ip Dir great medicine most suceess1 ness and young. WASTED TO A SKELETON. "Nerves" and Bowel Trouble. Mis Lewis, of 14, Lyon-street, Vernon- Bolton, Lanes., England, says:-- Dr, Cassell's Tablets saved my baby's life when he had been given up, and 1 was just waiting for the end. He was a fine baby when bornobut very soon" he was taken with bowel weakness, a began waste away. The food he had either returned or set up severe diarrhoea, Canadian mothers of little weak nervous children should read this testi mony to Dr, Cassell's Tablets, given out of simple gratitude by Mrs. Worrall, 32, Alt-street, Liverpool, Engisnd. They will then see what a valuable health-builder they have in this great remedy. : Mrs Worrall "says: " Dr. Cassell's Tablets have quite cured my little girl © Gladys, of extreme nervousness and digestive troubles, and 1 think right you should lish the story for the benefit of other mothers whose children may be delicate "(Gladys began to ail when she was only two years ol and steadily grew worse, though we did all we could think of to get her well, She was very peevish, and cried dreadfully. Sometimes she would scream for no reason at all that we could discover, and nothing would it oniy | | pacify her She was just a little bundle of nerves. Her appetite was very poor, and naturally she got quite thin and weak, and her litile cheeks fell in dread fully and seemed just wasting away. We tried a lot of different things that did no good at all. Then we had advice and treat ment for Gladys, but that, too, was of very little use. We were told she was sufiering from nervous breakdown and er Hyer After that we thok her to au institution, where for nine she was treated as an out-patient. Perhaps she was a little better for a time, but was soon ai ill as ever. Next we took her to Ireland for three months, and that seemed to help her. "almost at once she relapsed into the old weak state. * For four years this had gone on, and Gladys Worrall, the child was as far from health as ever. In fact, she was 50 ill that we thought she could never récover. ever, | was advised to give her Dr. Cassell's Tablets, and then, what an im- provement! The child became stronger and not nearly so nervonis. Her appetite returned, she brigh up wonderfully and rapidly put on.flesh, Now, in her seventh yeap~ He is completely cured. She goes wool, and is is as well and hap 1y ¢hild could be." Pn i fhe mag COPLEY in the bhone 987 10 13 Pins styeet when done in the carpen- given on allk new work: also h ichith all LAS mincing : for other p . ener X attention. Shop "sons SOQ. made in nadian plates (or, § NUL ETRIET) Rp--t-- ders the Mees see A Book of § Ml ------------ittly Dainty given Free on EL Indeed, she hardly ate anythiog, | mouths | But | One day, how- | kinds. All orders caused the poor little le pain, - He cried a lot, and his sleep was very disturbed. He would wake up suddenly with violent attacks of sickness, and evidently in great pain, and I was at my wits' end to know what to do. Poor baby had wasted until he { RECIPES FOR LUNCHEON Devilled Oysters. Select large oysters having deep lower halves to shell. For a pint of oysters make a sauce by cooking a tablespoonful each of finely chopped onion and parsley in 13 tablespoon- fuls of butter. Add 2 tablespoonfuls of flour and ¥% of a cupful of thin ¢ream, % teaspoonful each of salt and made niustard, a few drops of Worchestershire sauce and a few grains of cayenne. 3 Add the oysters, slightly chopped; remover from fire and stir in 2 beat- en egg yolks. Put the mixture in deep halves of oyster shells, allow- ing 2 oysters to each shell, spread with buttered érumbs and bake until well browned. Two shells are suffi- cient for each portion. Serve with the small ends of shells touching, and at each side place a thick slice of !omon with a sprig of parsley set in "ite center. Escaloped Scallops. Wash and pick over 1 pint of scal- lops. Melt % cupful 'of butter and add 1 cupful of cracker crumbs and 1% of a cupful of soft breadcrumbs. Put in a thin layer of crumbs in a buttered baking dish, cover with 3 the scallops, sprinkle with salt and pepper, add % of a cupful of heavy cream and 2 tablespoonfuls of milk. Repeat, cover with remaining butter- ed crumbs and bake until crumbs are brown, the time required being abeut thirty minutes. Cadillae Crab Meat. Cook 3 tablespoonfuls of butter | with 1% teaspoonfuls of finely chop- | ped onion three minutes, stiring con- | stantly. thing | ; he {'eurry powder and Add 4% tablespoonfuls of flour mixed with 1 tablespoonful of stir until well blended, then pour on gradually while stirring constantly 1% cupfuls { of chicken stock. Bring to the boil- | ing point, add 1% cupfuls of crab was only a frame of bones, and he looked | | in buttered individual baking dishes, | sprinkle with grated cheese and run | under gas flame to melt and brown almost as though he would fall to pieces, he was so appallingly thin. We could | count every rib, every bone of his back- | bone. ! | "Of 'course, T tried everything T could think of, snd igocd at all, By this time he was s0 {far spent that we were waiting for {the end. Once I was told that | could not live till Monday--that was on a Saturday. But in the end we got Dr. Casseil"s Tablets, and the improvement was immediate. The f gicknese cersad, and from that time my child never looked back. Now, at thirteen months, he is a fine, big bealthy baby. He has cut five teeth, and is just a picture of health." LARGEST SALE IN BRITAIN. Popularity now World-wide. Merit, and real merit only, have placed Dr. Cassell's Tablets in the forefront of 9 the cures lately publi merit up to the hilt. Guaranteed free from all noxious drugs and suitable for young and old alike, . Cassell's Tablets are a reliable remedy for Nervous Bre down; Nerve Failure, Infantile Weak: . Neurasthenia, Jleeplessness, Anmmia, titidney wirouble, Jepepsia, Stomach | Disorder, 'Wasting, Palpitation; and they and girls approaching womanhood. druggists and storekeepers throughout the Dominion sell Dr. Cassell"s Tab at 50 cents. People in puting districts should keep Dr. Cassell's Tablets by them in case of emergency. A free sample will ne sent on receipt of 5 cents for mailing and probing by thé sole agents for Canada, 1. F. Ritchie and Co., Ltd., 10, McCaul: | street, Toronto. Ont. | GET OUR PRICES For plumbing work, or gas piping. {Have your Tepairing done by us. Sat- |isfaction guarantee | A. AND J. JAMIESON, | I Plumbers and Gasfitters. also took baby to an insti- | tution, but no sort of treatment did any | ne | meat and season with salt. Arrange cheese Serve at-once. SALADS FOR SPRING. Haricot Bean Salad. Soak the haricots for six or eight hours, and then boil them until ten- . | der, leave until cold. Pile them in the diarrhea and | center of a salad bowl and surround | with shred tomato or beetroot and { some shred celery. Cover with whipp- {ed cream, | white pepper. flavored with salt and If liked, dip the hari- | cots in oil and vinegar in addition to the cream. Decorate the cream with a little coraline pepper and arrange the beetroot so that it makes a red border to the white pyramid of | cream. world's really reliable medicines, and | d prove this | { { | Banana Salad. Choose sound, unblemished bana- nas and remove the peel carefully in halves; take off the strings. Slice the fruit with a silver knife, add chop- ped celery or Brazil nuts, fill the ba- { nana skins, cover with mayonnaise are specially valuable for nursing mothers i All | sauce and stew with grated pista- chio nut, place on ice.. This salad should be made just before it is wanted and served one portion to each person. Salad a La Duchesse. Choose apples all of a size, wipe, slice off the top of each, and scoop out the interior. Chop one dessert- spoonful of apple with twice that quantity. of celery, add some beet- root, cooked peas and French beans. Toss in mayonaisse sauce and fill the apples with the mixture. As Cauliflower Salad. Trim the broccoli, or caulifiower Your 3 Best Recipes Pandora Range ut 200% in Cash (Given as Prizes for the Best one of Canada's | ermine of Women Readers of Homes. us how you Big Cash Prizes Recipes Received. 1 ently; boll in me to stop. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, MAY 1, 1915, the 'ushal manner, drain and put into cold water; take out, drain, arrange neatly and mask with mayonnaise sauce, using shapes of beetroot or tomato and sprigs of watercress or parsley as a garnish. Potato Salad. Cut some cold cooked potatoes in slices and arrange them in a bowl. Dress with seasened mayonnaise and deeorate with capers and little shapes cut out of beetroot. IN THE - SPRING Nature Needs Aid in Making New In the spring the system needs a tonic. To be healthy you must have new blood, just as the trees must have new sap to renew their vitality. Nature demands it, and without this new blood you will feel weak and languid. You may have twinges of rheumatism or the sharp stabbing pains of neuralgia. Often there are disfiguring pimples or eruptions on the skin. In other cases there is merely a feeling of tiredness and a variable appetite. Any of these are signs that the blood is out of order--that the indoor life of winter has lessened your vitality. What you need in spring is a tonic medi- cine to put you right, and in all the world of medicine there is no tonic can equal Dr. Williams' Pink Pills These pills actually make new rich, red blood -- your greatest need in spring. This new blood drives out the seeds of disease and makes eas- fly tired men, women and children bright, active and strong. Miss Edith Brousseau, Savona, B. C., says:--*"I was as pale as a ghost, Huffer from headaches, severe palpitation of the heart at the slightest exertion. I had little or no appetite and seemed to be drifting into a decline. I was attending High School in Vancouver at the time, and the doctor advised 1 did so and took his treatment for some time, but it did not help me in the least. Upon the advice of a friend I began taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and in a very short time they gave me back complete health, and enabled me to resume my studies. 1 have -en- joyed the best of health since, and owe it all to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills." - These Pills are sold by all medi- cine dealers or can be had by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medi- cine Co., Brockville, Ont. Street Etiquette, It is not considered good form for a man to take hold of a lady's arm in walking at any time except to as- gist her in alighting from a vehicle or over a crossing or in some place where assistance is absolutely neces- sary. In walking on the street during the day a man should walk beside the lady, preferably on the right hand which will prevent her gbeing jostled in meeting those going in the opposite direction, but always on the outside of the walk. He does not take her arm nor does she take his, unless, as said, for the purpose of as- sisting her in seme way. In the evening a lady may take the arm of the man she is walking with that he may be a support and that they may he better keep step, but he should not take hers. The exceptions are where a woman is feeble or ag- ed, when any support and assistance that can be rendered should be done in the easiest and most inconspicu- ous fashion. Goo New Bordered Foulards. Borders, which were just a trifle out for the last season or so, are coming back into favor. The em- broidered flouncings are always more or less in use, but just at present there is a showing of rich colored foulards with riotous borders of black and colors. One silk in a dark American beauty has a border of large, black roses, about ten inches deep. The same border 'ap- pears on a white foulard. A Bel- gian blue silk has a border of nar- row vertical stripes of bright ma- genta, almost fifteen inches deep. On another. blue foulard a tropical growth of yellow and red and green flora and black ferns springs from a narrow black band, while small black "stars" are scattered over the blue sky. Suggesting the far East is still another blue, not quite so deep as the Belgian shade, the bor- der of which is an oriental and con- ventional pattern of dull tans and greens and black. Cleaning Spots on Heavy Clothing. This method of cleaning heavy skirts and Uresses, especially light colored ones, is very successful. Dis- solve one teaspoonful of shaved white soap, one teaspoonful of borax and one teaspoonful of houséhold ammonia in a little boiling water, Then add a pint more of hot water. Lay the skirt on the ironing board and go over the entire skirt with a soft cloth wrung out of the prepara- If there are any spots, clean a second time whole skirt. A weman's antidote for love is too much of it. 3 ----- COL. BUELL'S EXPERIENCE ---- His Shoulder Blade Was Very Se- verely Shattered. Lieut.-Col. Buell, of 'Brockville, Ont., is in the hospital at South Ken- sington, suffering from shrapnel wounds which almost shattered his shoulder blade, where a bullet is still embedded. He is making fa'r progress toward recovery. Col: Buell was wounded on Fri- day" while leading a resqrve battali- on of Canadians into action to cov- er the exposed flank of two Canadian battalions who were in the tren- ches. Col Buell, to-day, in describ- ing the scene, said the noise was ear-splitting, .with the German artil+| lery showing remarkable precision, pounding not only the Canadian frent, but also enfilading. In or- der to minimize the losses, Col. Bpell advanced his battalion by short rushes. His men, he said, be- haved like regular troops whose steadiness"could not be excelled by veterans. There was no faltering among them when they were ordered to advance, though all knew this meant almost jmmediate casualties. Col. Buell w wounded while he lay on the ground using his glasses between two of the short rushes He felt a heavy blow on his should- er, evidently the spent fragment of a shell. Soon afterwards in at- tempting to cross a ditch he fcH fainting from the loss of blood. Col. Birchell, who took command when Col. Buell was wounded and continued the charge, was killed. In the charge this reserve battalion lost twenty-three out of its thirts- one officers. DECLINED INVITATION Politician Did Not Like Funeral En- vironments. London Ti-Bits. A politician who had received an invitation from the leaders of his party in a distant village, before re- plying sought to discover what sort of reception he would likely to re- ceive, and placed the letter of invita tion before a friend whom he knew come from the same district. "Think I'd better accept?" quired the politician. "1 wouldn't if I were you," plied his friend, shaking his gravely. "Why?" "Well" replied the "other, 1 don't like the signatories of the let- ter of invitation." '""Aren't they men of influence "Yes, decidedly they have influ- ence in the party," replied the friend: "but of the four one is the local undertaker, but the second is the manumental stone mason, the third is a draper who makes a spe- cialty of mourning orders, and the fourth is known to gamble largely in life insurance politics." The politicians did not accept the invitation. "TiZ"A MY TO SORE, TIRED FEET "TIZ" for aching, burning, puffed- up feet and corns or in- re- head Good-bye sore feet, burning feet, swollen feet, smelling feet, tired feet. Good-bye corns. callouses, bunions and raw spots. No more shoe tight- ness, no more limping with pain or drawing up your face in agony. "T1Z" is magical, acts right off. "TIZ" draws out all the poisonous exudations which puff up the feet. Use "M2" and wear smaller shoes. Use "TIZ" and forget your foot mis- ery. Ah! how comfortable your feet feel. Get a 25 cent box of "TIZ" now at any druggist or department store Don't suffer. Have good feet, glad feet, feet that never swell, never hurt never get tired. A year's foot comfort guaranteed or money re- does not separate in the bottle -- it is the same all through--the last drop is as deli- cious as the frst. In order to enjoy life a man mnst be a little miserable occasionally. If you want a large bill for small change all you have to do is consult a doctor, ~------ The kind you are look- ing for is the kind we sell -- Scranton Coal i Is good Coal d we-| guarantee prompt de- ri & co. What was best a few years ago may to-day be practically worthless. New ideas are con- stantly displacing old and be- fogged ones. Tel an age of progressiveness. , We want you to know that--ga, °° LITT A Who infuse into our work the latest, most practical thoughts of trained hands and minds. 'Phone 335. Residence phone "56, David Hall. 66 Brock Street. NOW IS THE TIME To place your order fora Monument, and by placing your order with us you are uaranteed first class work, 'rompt delivery and mode- rate price. A call'of inspec- tion invited. J. E. MULLEN Cor. Princess and Clergy St Phone No. 1417. | In Patent, Gun Metal and Dongola Kid, latest lasts and heels. $250 & $3 LAL ANN = 2 A AY " oY 2 2 Zh Zh, \ 4 wi £ A EAT H. JENNINGS, - King Street ------ a A vas ymbol ~ of Merit | ghar Underwear | | Atlantic to Pacific. Made in Kingston for mie than' thirty) and known for sound quali ty and 1e » Sin # So