NAVIGABLE WATERS : PROTECTION ACT RiS.0. CHAPTER 115. Tho 0 pers oof cai, i tit has under Seeti Si ie Se Qotkya y of Junder the Mi of Publ in the City of Ottawa, for approval of the site and and for leave to lay the said marine 9 a at Montreal, this 14th day of February, | THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY F CANADA, LIMITED, W. H. BLACK, : iF HAIR 1S TURNING GRAY, SE SHG TE ', That beautiful, even shade of dark, glossy hair can only be had by brewing a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the face. 'When it fades, turns gray, streaked and looks dry, wispy and scraggy, just an lication or two of Sage and Sul- phir enhances its appearance a kundredfold. Don't bother to prepare the tonic; you can get from any drug storeia 50 -cent. bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," ready to use, 'This can always be.depended upon to bring back the. natural color, thickness and lustre of your hair and remove dandruff, stop scalp itch- ing and falling hair. Everybody uses "Wyeth's" Sage and Sulphur because it darkens so - naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair has disappeared, dnd after another ap- plication it becomes beautifully dark and appears glossy, lustrous and abundant. DRINK MORE WATER HONEY BIT. Fat Less Meat And Take Salts For Backache Or Bladder Twouble, Uric acid in meat-excites thé kid- neys, they become overworkéd; get sluggish, sche, and feel like lumps of lead. The urine becomgs-cloudy; the bladder is irritated, anf you may be obliged to seek relief twp or three times during the night. ben the kidneys clog you must help them flush off thé body's urinous waste or you'll be a real sick person short- ly. At first you feel a dull misery in the kidney region, you suffer from backache, sick headache, dizziness, stomach gets sour, tongue coated and you feel rheumatic twinges when thé weather is bad. Eat less meat, drink lots of water; also get from any pharmacist four ounces of Jad Salts; take a table- spoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts Is made from the acid of grapes and on juice, combined with lithia, and been used for generations to clean clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal acti. vity, also to neutralize the acids in urine, 80 it no Jongier is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder weak- ness. . Jad Salts is inexpensive, cannot in- jure; makes a delightful effervescent Jithia-watér drink which everyane id take now and then to keep the kidneys cléan and active. Drug. ts here say they sell lots of Jad Its to folks who "believe in overs coming Kidney trouble while it is only trouble, Stained Glass Memorial Windows fms orating Honored Names and Historic Events. # Am interesting Book- let upon request. Designs and prices cheer fully furnished on receipt of detailed requirements. Robert McCausland Tog Be * 141-143 Spadina Avenue Toronto COPYRIGHT IME at ; 4 {Recognizing that hairdressing is al very suitable occupation for women, the London city council has institut- ed several classes where women are. now learning the mysteries of curl) ; ing, crimping and waving. v | HOMEMAKERS LACK TRAINING. | a saving basis. I Sg « ---- " Lh i. 4 | . ) u AGAIN ho : ---- ---- 'The Vogue of Running a Household on 'Bome of the Principles a Man Ap- plies In His Office~Bookkesping le . Ae First Step. Every housewife is anxious to run hes home on the most efficient basis, but it Is not always easy. to know just what measures to introduce in order to insure efficiency in the home. The woman who models her house manage- ment after the same pattern as her husband's business finds that there are many little savings made which were overlooked in the former days of un- businesslike negligence. Real economy can only exist in the' homes where business methods are used. The old slipshod ways of house- keeping are rapidly going out of vogue, a8 women all over the country are waking up to the fact that only by ex- efficiency can the home be run on The trouble is that only half a dozen out of every.score of women have had the necessary training to run a house in an efficient way; the rest marry and take up housekeeping without any ideas on the subject at all. Many of these women would be only too glad to improve their Jax methods if they only knew how to go about it, but lack of training engenders ignorance. The introduction of bookkeeping is one of the first steps toward bringing business methods into the home. It is the only way to keep any track of where the money goes, and no economy is possible unless each penny of the weekly expenditures can be accounted for, "Keeping books is a step toward elficiency, Dut only the first step. The greatest waste in almost every house is in the buying. It is bard to Judge exactly how much food is needed from day to day. Left over food is all too often allowed to go to waste when it might be served "en casserole" or in some savory form or other. Many of the household provisions can be bought much cheaper in large quan- tities. Of course most foods cannot be purchased in this way because they are apt to perish before being used. But the housewife will find that it will save Gaite a bit to buy all the nonperishable goods in big quantities. Soap, for in- stance, is several cents cheaper when bought by the dozen or score than by the piece. All scoufing powders or cleansers bought by the case, Then there aré' many cereals, canned goods, etey, which will keep indefinitely and can be bought by the case. Flour, sugar, etc., are so much cheaper by the barrel that. every housewife who ean find space should buy in that way. If the housewife has a fairly large larder she should try buying bacon; ham, etc. by the piéce instead of by the pound. . Whole hams will keep quite as long as necessary, and the sides of bacon are good for an indefi- nite period. In buying linens for house use it is much cheaper to visit the semiannual sales and lay in a sufficient store then than to buy as it is needed. Linens go down almost to half price at certain periods of the year, and the wise housewife keeps an eye open for these sales to replenish her stock. After the 'first step of keeping ac- counts comes the next very important 1 move of learning how and when to buy. Efficiency in the home is not to be reached at a bound, but can only be achieved by close study. ------ RE ---------------- Graham Bread. Materials: Two and three-quarter cupfuls of graham four, one jeaspoon- ful of salt, one-quarter cupful of sugar, one teaspoonful of soda, one-third cup- fui of English walnut meats, cut up; one-half cupful of molasses, ene cupful of milk, one egg, one tablespoonful of shortening. Utensils: Mixing bowl, spoon, meas. uring cup, eggbeater, knife, buttered bread tin. Directions: Mix dry ingredients, beat egg and add flour, add molasses, milk and shortening, stir thoroughly, put into tin and bake forty to forty-five minutes in slow oven. If sour milk is" not at hand use sweet milk, one tea- spoonful of baking powder and cut the White Mountain Cake, Orange Filling. One-half cupful butter, two cupfuls sugar, one cupful - milk, three eggs (whites), three and one-half cupfuls and two rounded powder. EREF TFT ECONOMY. Fear to spend what we have, nobly and on fit objects, is a mean kind of thing, but fear to squander and to waste is whols- some and righteous. - Economy is nét miserliness, and there is 'a grandeur about moderation which is wanting in excess. Practice sconemy, but be sure it 'Is of the right sort. --------_---- Never chase a le, or try to ex- ; it away. Let it alone &od it L rust itseld to death. A son can't take alter bis father | them A MEMORY OF RACHEL. . The Great Actress After a Night of Triumph on the Stage. = Lord Glenesk gave me an account of his first meeting with Rachel, He bad gone to Paris for the first time as a youth, and for the frst time his father bad taken him to the Francais to see morning Bois with bis father, and on the way his father had said, "We will turn out of the avenué a moment, down this street; 1 want to show you the house of the marvelous woman. 4ve saw act last night." olga it was barely sunrise, and as they pulled their horses up outside a high wall inclosing a small villa they were astonished to bear, proceeding from within, what appeared to be the react ing of the very sCenes they had wit. nessed the night before at the theater, but spoken in dead tones, as if by a somunambulist. Dismounting from their | horses, they entered the garden. There they found Rachel, clad in loose gar- ments. dull eyed, with disheveled hair and wan face, utterly void of all the flaming magnetism that a few hours earlier had filled her frame. To the questions of Lord Glenesk's father shé answered wearily that she had been rehearsing there under the trees since it was scarce day, trying in vain to find means of expressing cer- tain passages in which she had "failed at the night's performance"--that per- formance which had so thrilled those who witnessed it, markjng an epoch in their lives.--~Princess Lazarovich in. Century. The Daughter's idea. Mrs, Brown was in the habit of in- troducing ber big daughter as: "This is Jane. 'She's only fifteen. You'd never | think it. would you?" At last the girl protested. "It's mean of you to tell everybody how young I aur. I could bave a lot better time if you didn't." « "Perhaps you could. But I don't pro- pose to have people saying after you've been out in society a couple of seasons: 'Don't tell me Jane Brown is only twenty. Why, she was a grown girl years ago.' "Just the same," retorted the daugh- ter, "you wouldn't like it if I intro- duced you to my friends as: 'This is my mother. She's only forty-eight You'd never think it, would you? ™ Shooting Humming Birds, To shoot & humming bird with the smallest birdshot made is out of the question. for the tiniest seeds of lead would destroy the delicate plumage. The only way in which the bird can be captured for commercial purposes is to shoot it with a drop of' water from a blowgun or a fine jet from a small syr- inge. Skilifully directed. the water stuns him. He falls into a silken net and before he recovers consciousness i§ suspended over a cyanide jar. This must be done quickly. for if he comes to his senses before the cyanide whiff snaffs out bis life be is sure to ruin his plumage in his struggles to escape. Humming birds vary in size from spec- fméns perhaps balf as large as n spar. row to those scarcely bigger than a bee, Pi Steady, Mike Reagan applied to Mrs, Stone for a position as chauffeur and gave the name of a friend as reference. Mrs, Stone sought the friend and asked: "Mr. Brady, your meighbor, Michael Reagan, has applied to me for & place AS chauffeur. Is he a steady man?' "Steady!" cried Brady. '"Indade, mum. if he wuz anny steadier he'd be dead™ ---------------- Locked That Way. "1 want a man who doesn't smoke or drink." "What are the wages?" "Six dollars a week." "Guess you want a man who doesn't eat, either." Not Guilty, "How many times have I told you that you must not answer me back, Norah?' sald Mrs. Housekeep. "Sure, mum, an' Of a't answerin' yer back," sald Norah,. "Ol'm answer in' your face" : Tiresomeness. "Don't you get tired of playing the Same part night after night?" "I should say not," replied the actor, "What makes me tired is closing shows and learning new parts."- - i: v Favors. "Be careful about asking favors of "Why? "Because once a man does a favor | for you you are in his debt for life." @ . 1t'Makes Tracks. : One day small Harold came running | into the house, and, holding up a horse. shoe, he exclaimed: "Ob, mamwa, some poor horse lost ote of his tracks, and 1 found it." _ 'Keeping Company. "They kept company for an awfully long time befgre they finally got mar ried." : time since. Her relatives seem to live on them." - | ---------- Temptation dogs noi make a man baad. ' It mierely shows him what be js. | Wickedness may prosper for a time, but in the long rum, he who sets all knaves at work will pay if his father leaves him nothing to hae © rian "Yes, and they've kept it most of the | i SERERE HE ial git i iit 1 § 'Naturally they want a goal is exactly what gives zest to the game. . And having a goal is both easy and delightful. To study anything with interest, from logarithms to caterpil- lars, gives one fun and profit at the same time. Try it PROVED ITS WORTH. Dramatic Test That Was Made With a Bullet Proof Shirt. "A well known war correspondent, who is a personal friend of mine," writes a correspondent of the Manch ter Guardian, "tells an amusing story. While in Paris at the, beginning of the war in 1914 a French inventor per- suaded him to obtain an opportunity for demonstrating the usefulness of a thin chain armor shirt, which he claim- ed would resist any bullet or bayonet. "A sample shirt had been hung up and fired at with satisfactory results, but it was with a certain journalistic skepticism that my friend attended the official demonstration at Hendon later. Anyway, to oblige the inventor he put on one of the shirts to show its com- fort and flexibility. It was then that the French inventor achieved a dra- matic effect, for he whipped out a Webley automatic and blazed away straight at my friend's chest. "He is still alive to tell the tale" adds the correspondent. "Before he had recovered breath a war office offi- cial grasped him warmly by the hada, "'Sir/ he said, 'you are a brave man! "My friend disappeared with becom. ing modesty. He had gone where he could get a stiff brandy and soda! Logical. N "What seems to be the matter, sir? asked the clerk in the hotel. "Were you expectipg some one?" "I should say I was," said the man angrily. "My wife wis to meet we bere at 2 o'clock. I just got here, and now it's 4 o'clock, and she isn't here yet. Never knew a woman to be on tim@anyway." A Dickens Character. Smike, Charles Dickens' character in Nicholas Nickleby, seems to have been drawn from the life. Said the author in a letter apropos of that novel: "The rascality 'of those Yorkshire schoolmas- ters cannot be easily exaggerated. I have kept down strong truth and thrown as much comicality over it as [ could rather than disgust the weary reader with its fouler aspects." How Cripple Creek Got Its Name. It was the cattlemen who gave Crip- ple Creek its name. There are a dozen traditions, but the best authenticated is the story of a cowboy whose bron- cho balked at the jumping of a rivulet, balked and stumbled and fell, breaking a leg for itself and one for its rider. There was no surgeon nearer than Col- orado Springs, and the rough anatom- ical carpentry of his mates made a cripple for life of the unlucky range rider, wherefore he named the rivulet Cripple creek, and the rivulet named the region.~Exchange. A Bloodsucking Earthworm. South Africa is the home of a species of earthworm, a creature closely re- lated to our common angieworm, which is not only a giant among the denizens of 'the soil, but which is reputed to have a taste for human blood. There are two speciés of this umeanny wig. gler--one of a dark red ¢olor and the other almost black. * They are larger than one's finger and from thres to four inches in length, 1 -- A Clever Woman, | "I never deceive my wife." "You deserve credit for that." "No, The credit belongs to her." know whether she believes it or not. I ------------------ "This time she is positive she is in ove" y "What convinced her? "Hisincome." .. % To forgive a fault » another 1s more sublime than to' be faultless oneself -- George Sand. = Se & "Growing about 'to-day's clouds never, makes to-morrow any bright er, "Revenge is a common passion, and the sin of the : : -Cheertulness is: rest, be hands and feet ever so busy. Bese A Fv 'i not tuvn into a boarder: lover showid-remain a lover, and | Re sR RX 40, iY : SLAUGHTER, I When Dogs Threatensd Paris During LE he Reign of Terror. : It is a curious fact that the French wis once threatened by a horde of hungry dogs. This event was associated with many other and arrangements for the care of their animals when they hurriedly left were adopted against the Champs Ely- sees pack. * Two battalions of the national guard surrounded the area, leaving a gap toward the Rue Royale, while hun- dreds of men and boys "beat the cover." The game was driven up to the PI Royale, where troops made a battue of it. Three days consecu- tively was this repeated, and more than 3,000 dogs lay in the place. It is said that one Gaspardin, who was ordered to remove the carcasses, being short of means to effect this, ap- plied for the royal equipages. To the revolutionists this appeared a timely jest and the application was granted gleefully and with applause. So Gas- pardin packed the dead dogs in the gilded coaches and made a state pro- cession through i ; An Atrocity. Captain von Altheim was quartered with his lieutenant of reserves--a col- lege professor in civil life--~in the house of a Polish priest who bad ne living language to his tongue but Polish and Russian. The captain rubbed up the dusty memories of his own school days and made shift to converse with his reverend host in Latin. Afterward he asked his comrade what he thought of the performance. The ex-professor's expression of pain was hardly dimmed by the thickness of his spectacles. "It was only one more of the hor rors of war," he said resignedly. Cape of Good Hope. Due to the cowardice of his crew and his own somewhat, timid nature, Bar- tholomew Diaz discovered the Cape of Good Hope while seeking a passage for India, In 1487 he rounded the cape, but did not know it at the time, being too far out to sea. When the crew dis- covered they were on the wrong side of the mainland they became. panic stricken and insisted on returning at once. Fearing mutiny, Diaz turned back and soon caught sight of the cape. Thus did he discover Good Hope while on his way homeward. Human Ignorance. Speaking of his life, the aged scien- tist, Fabre, said shortly before his death: "Because I have stirred a few grains of sand on the shore am I in a position to know the depths of the ocean? Life has unfathomable sec- rets, Human knowledge will be &ras- ed ftom the archives of the world be- fore we possess the last word that the goat has to say to us. Scientifically, nature is a riddle without a definite solution to satisfy man's cupiosity. Hypothesis follows hypothesis, the theoretical rubbish heap accunmiulates and truth ever eludes us. To know how not to know might well be the last words of wisdom." Very Annoying. "I can't bear these mien novelists" made of or how it was trimmed." y Untrue, "Your leading lady is not true to life." "What's. the matter? "In the first act she receives a tele gram, and you.have her open it with- out fear or trembling" Jt 1s said the Tgutons, anticipating England's blocks action, has rushed two years' food supplies from 'Seandinavian countries. y a man of séventy asks a £irl of eighteen to share his lot, does We refer to his lot in the cemetery? These Three Women Tell How They . Escaped the Dreadful Ordeal of Surgical i Hospitals are great and necessary institutions, but they * should be the last resort for women who suffer with ills Jeculiar to their sex. Many letters on file in the Pinkham boratory at Lynn, Mass, prove that a great number of women after they have been recommended to submit to an operation have been made well bf Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable" Compoufid. Here are three suth letters. All sick women should read them. - J jo | Marinette, Wis.--"1 went to the doctor and he told me I must have an operation for a female rouble, and I hated to have it done as I had been married only a short time, I would have terrible pains and my hands and feet were cold all the time. I took Lydia E. Pinkham"s Vegetable Com- pound and was cured, and I feel better in every way. I give you permission to Foblish my name because I am so thankful that T feel well again." ~--Mrs. Frep Benne, Marinette, Wis, Detroit, Mich.--" When I first' took Lydia E. a. | Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I was so run down with female tronbles that I could not do anything, and our doctor said I would have to uadaigo ai operation. I could hardly walk without help so when I read about the Vegetable Compound and what it had done for others I thought I would try it. I got a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and a package of Lydia E. Pinkham's Sandtive Wash and used them according to directions. They hi me and today Iam able to do all my work and Iam well." --Mrs. Tos. Dwyer, 989 Milwaukee Ave., East, Detroit, Mich. Bellevue, Pa=z*1 suffered more than tongue can tell with terrible bearing down pains and inflammatipn. I tried several doctors and they all told me the same story, that I never could get well without an operation, and I just dreaded the thought of that. I also tried a pn gen other medicines that were recommended to me and none of them helped me until a friend advised me to give Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound a trial. The first bottle helped, I kept taking it and now I don't know what it is to be sick any more and I am picking up in weight. Iam 20 years old and weigh 145 It- will be the greatest pleasure to me if I can have the oppor- tunity to recomiriend it to any other suffering woman."--Miss IrExe FroeLicHER, 1923 Manhattan St., North Side, Bellevue, Pa. If you would like Speuial advice write to Lydia E, Pinkham Med. (confidential), Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. There are three sound reasons for buying & using Table Salt -It's absolutely pure and never cakes-- dt ¢omes to you in sanitary substantial packages, with the most convenient pouring device ever invented-- It is the best table salt, yet costs more, no 4 ASK YOUR DEALER ETS SUNS Orange Delicious 2 cups sugar 1 cup water 2 cups orange juice 1 cup heavy cream ¥ cup shredded candied orange peel Boil sugar and water eight minutes, then add orange juice. Scald cream, add yolks of eggs, and cook over hot water until mix- ture thickens. Cool, add to first mixture with heavy cream beaten stiff. Freeze; when nearly frozen, add orange peel. Line a melon mould with Orange Ice, fill with Orange Delicious, pack in salt and ice, and let stand one and one-half hours. oup cream olks 2 egys Order sweet, juicy tender, delicious nkist 'California's Selected Bider now. Allgooddeal- ers sell these fine seedless navels. : ¢ Write for free book "'Stn- kist Salads and Desserts." Save Sunkist tissue wrappers for 'beautiful silverware. California Fruit Growers Exchange 105 King Street, East, Cofaer Church, Torsnts, Onfarie