5 DOS YP SAS TIY 7) J ee -- 4 | Ek Raspberry lemon extract, Tapioca. Put 3-4 cup tapioca into a kettle, ps boiling water and of good vinegar, let it stand 24 hours Stir into! then strain through a flannel bag and this 1 pint of fresh raspberries, add-, pour this liguor on another quart of Pour into a% berries do this for 3 or 4 days suc- The Recipe, The fruit is prepared in the ordi- nary way, the jars are cleaned and scalded while the rubbers and tops are bofling. The fruit is then placed in the jars, In which COLD water is placed. When the jars have been, sealed air-tight they are placed in a| Boiler filled with cold water and| brought to the boiling point. Berries! will do it removed when the boiling point is reached, while large fruits, such as peaches, cherries, plums and apricots, should get 20 to 30 minutes boiling. Keep cover of wash boiler, on tight. A Good Substitute for Can Rubbers, | When about to close a jar of pre- served goods, the housewife very of-| ten finds herself short of a rubber band, or else the last one breaks. A good substitute can be made from newspaper. This is better than oth- €r paper, because, as plumbers say, | "it packs better." They often use it to make small pipe joints air and water-tight. Cut several layers of the paper the required size, put them on the can and &crew the 1id down as tightly as possible. If preferred, rings of soft leather, cut from the| tops of old shoes, may be used, but| they are not as satisfactory as those made from newspapers. Raspberry Crown, Two tablespoons water, Spoons corn starch, 1 cup Pn cover with 4 eu | cok until transparent. {ing sugar to taste. mould. Serve cold with cream. Raspberry Cake. Buy your Cherries now; all Peninsula grown are Have your grocer rive in a few davs. the basket. guarantee of fruit, Niagara Note the Grower's nun Guarantee of Good Fit | Nuniber. tahle-| boiling, DOSES AT NTS WO WINS Lb) PN \® EX raspberry fuice, 1 egg,, pinch of salt, Cook until creamy. Put into moulds. When cold serve In layers. es or whipped cream. One cup white sugar, 1-2 cup but- ter, 2 eggs, 2 tablespoons buttermilk, | 1-2 cups flour, + teaspoon cinna~| FRUIT BULLETIN Red Sour is the par excellence for preserving. se- cure your needs at once. Raspberries begin to ar- Look for this label on It is your Honest Grown. 6R Insist on the label with the Map and Grower's EAT MORE CANADIAN FRUIT. = REPRE CIN Psi A) / Ce oS W) ~ pA, 25%. LCV into a teaspoonful of raspberry jam to form a thick paste; roll it into a ball between the palms of your hands: Put a lump French Cream into a teacup and set it into a basin of boiling water, stirring it until it is melted; then drop a few drops of chochineal coloring to make it a pale pink, or a few drops of raspberry juice, being careful not to add en- ough to prevent its hardening. Now drip these little balls into the sugar cream, giving them two coats. Lay aside to harden. Raspberry Ple. To 2 cups raspberries, add 1 cup of red curantg and 1 cup ghanulated sugar, with which a teaspoonful of flour has been mixed; stir together. Line a plate with flaky pie crust, put in the fruit, cover with a tolerably thick sheet of paste, make several in- cisions for escape of steam, and bake until the crusts are nicely browned. Serve cool. 4 wy -- s TX h TY 1 ESS SR mon, 1 teaspoon soda, nutmeg, 1 cup raspberries ( to be added last). Bake Raspberry Vinegar. i Put 1 quart of raspberries into a | suitable dish, pour over them a quart cessively and strain it; make it very sweet with loaf sugar; bottle and seal it. ---- Raspberry Creams. Stir enough confectioners' sugar White, Black, Red Sour, now most plentiful. The Raspberry Shortcake. | Bake sponge cake in 2 layers or split 'ore thick cake; put in between them a thick layer of berries, and on {top pu' whipped cream and more ber- 'ries. | NIAGAR, Raspberry Fruit Backet. Bake pl {ty pans, roll paste 1-8 in. thick, and cut in strips 1-4 inch wide. Twist { strips in pairs and bake over a 1-4 1b | baking powder box; thus { handles. | sprinkled with sugar. | whipped cream. | Somewhere in France, Jan, 10th, 1916. ub, - . 64 ber, It is his personal it from top to bottom. Garnish with | Presdent Canadian Cl | Hamilton, Ont, | Dear Sir,-- §° On behalf of the N. C. and men of ee ee News From Easte rn Ontario Points Ea = PROMINENT CITIZEN DEAD. Business Ltd. Mat- best Was Founder of Packing of Matthews-Blackwell, Lindsay, July 17.--George thews, Lindsay, one of the ITS ALDERWAN-HERO. NEWS FRON THE DISRCT "=--525. CLIPPED ¥ROM «Thousands of Citizens Turned 8 Out To the Splendid Home- Coming. | _ Belleville, July 17.--Capt. E. D. { O'Flynn, of one of the infantry bat- | talions of the First Canadian Con- tingent, who suffered from shell- shock at Ypres in June, and was the last remaining of the original offi- cers of this unit, was given a grand reception on his arrival here on fur- J. C. Jamieson, Picton, left Wednesday for Winnipeg, several months, on to remain' | ws known and most highly respected men of this part of the country, pass- ed away on Friday in his eighty-se- cond year Mr. Matthews was born | | | : | $ | | 4 Gananoque | in W rickshire, England, in 1834, + t and came to Canada in 1851 In } 1860 he settled in Lindsay and has | |been a resident of this town since Sa : {that date. He married Miss . July 1 y Court Thousand Islands, | Smithson, daughter of No. 66, C.O.F., celebrated its memo- | Smithson, of Peterboio County, who rial day yesterday, when the graves [survives him with five sons and four | of departed brethren at b yth Wil. | daughters. He was a personal friend (1 -- Kk 1 Gi 2 11 of the late Sir John A. Macdonald. | owban anc Zanahoque cemeteries | np, Matthews was well known as the | were decorated with bouquets of [founder of the business of Matthews. flowers. An impressive Ty bral | oander of Limited, with large pack- service was also conducted at the ing plants in Montreal, Toronto, Hull, ain paste over inverted pat-, making | Fill cases with raspberries Ann | William | Mr. and Mrs, BE. R. Thomas, New York, are occupying their summer home above Rockport. Mr. Richard Hadden, Picton, on Monday for Toronto to enter Curtiss Flying School. Robert B. Goodwin, Cherry Valley, has purchased the property of J, B. Shaw, East Lake Road. - Judge McDonald, Brockville, has a hen which a few days ago laid an egg which measures eight inches in circumference. left the The stores and equipment of the | that nothing that Belleville had was) 3rd Prince of Wales Dragoons, Peterboro, have been turned over to Major W. W. McCullough, Welling- ton. Miss Sara Marguerite daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Moore, Picton, is one of a class of eight nurses who graduated at the Oswego Hospital, Moore, Laura Ann Scott, widow of the] late John Scott, died in Belleville on Saturday. Surviving are two daugh- ters, Mrs, Dr. Tucker, Oromo, and © Miss Gertrude, at home. The home of Mr. and Mrs. A. Brown, Milford, was the scene of a very pretty wedding on June 28th, when their only daughter, Magy O was married to David H, Mckee. William Dyer, Calgary, Alberta, has purchased part of the Soper es- tate on the river bank east of Brock-| ville and = will erect "a handsome bungalow. The death occurred on Friday of Catharine Amelia Hawley, wife of William Ryan. eased was horn in North Fredericksburg on July 6th, 1840, thus being in her seventy- sixth year. Percy Wanamaker, who has for the past five years been acting as n and assistant engineer at the Picton Electric Light and Water- | s Plant, has been promoted to | Angineer. i Captain Lafferty, of Calgary, mem- ber of a family well known in Pem-- broke, and who shortly after the out- break of war joined the Imperial army, attached to the Eighth Lin- colns, has just returned to London with a wounded arm. In St. Peter's Church, Cobourg, on nday last the marriage took place Miss Nora Ottollle, Wark, third ter of the late Tt ) of Mrs. Ware Bebo g, fo T.'C. n Las, sop of Mr, and n, nd herly Love, is the guest of Mr. Mae. Jonathan Talcott, Te hare, Bloomfield. Mr. Bughv has 'made several visits and is delighted with the ar. months. } on Thursda we an illness of in gclence > 1911 at MeGill ty, where he had taken af > tion course, going from the A ity to Havelock. Ont. as train- master with the C. P. R. : ty Vincent, N.Y. at the Pres- E nm Church on" Thursday even- , the insallation services were held ced Rev. George A. Perci- was graduated from the Au- 1 Seminary in June, of the church, which has splendid water supply. ed that the work will be carried out aN vei no John | 1 | THIRD as Wark | climate and} G. McLeod, B.8c., Montreal | 3nd one white rose, and there are; eased gradu. | Fegular pastor for the lough on Saturday afternoon. Thou- sands of citizens were at the G. T. R. | station to welcome him, and many | decorated cars joined in the proces- | j Sion along Front and Bridge streets | {to the home of the captain's parents. | | As the captain stepped from the car | {in front of his home he was cheered. | He ascended to the balcony and ad- | dressed a few words of appreciation | to the citizens. Mayor Ketceson thanked the public for the reception [to the returned officer, and declared too good for Capt. O'Flynn. F. BE. | O'Flynn, father of the soldier, ex- | pressed his gratitude to the citizens | of Belleville for their kindness to his | son. The gathering broke up with | cheers for Capt. O'Flynn's mother, Capt. O'Flynn has been on active {service since the first week in | August, 1914. At time of enlistment he was an alderman of the city. He {is a lawyer by profession. He has | gone through every engagement of | note with the Canadian from Febru- ary, 1915, to June, 1916. SERIOUS FIRE AT RENFREW PLANT. | O'Brien's Munitions Plant | Burned--Loss Is Estimat= ed To Be $175,000. | Renfrew, July 17.--Fire, known to have been purely accidental in origin, broke out at the O'Brien munitions | plant on Saturday evening and de- | stroyed four of the company's series of bulldings, entailing a loss of about | $175,000, which is covered by insur- | ance. The loss would have been {much less had not the fire pressure | at the time been weak. Explosions occurred during the progress of the fire, but only one man was hurt and | he not seriously. Work on the re- construction of 'the buildings de- stroyed will be begun at once and work will be rushed. {of workmen regularly employed {the company will probably not more than ten days idle. The fire, which was the company's third, oc- curred just as the daily output had reached the maximum, { by A Wonderful Rose Bush, Pembroke, July * 17.--J, H. Bur- rit | bush which has given him a real sur- i prise, It has bloomed for the first | time and when he went to it this | out, presenting roses of variegated to Prince Edward shades, though the coloring is uni- | form on every stem. Each stem | boars a cluster of two pink, two red clusters on the Burritt does not strange yield. hundreds of these bush. Mr. | how to account for the New Intake at Cobourg. { Cobourg, July 17.--Plans are out for a new intake pipe to be installed {at Cobourg by the Ontario Hydro- | Electric Power Comuiission, Central: {Ontario system, It is to be a 24- {ineh pipe, extending 900 feet into 'the lake. With the filters now i {use here this will give Cobourg a It is expect- this summer, I'town park at 3 p.m., when addresses | Peterbord, and Brantford. | were given by Revs. C. E. Kidd, W.| S. Lennon, and Walter Cox, as well as | by prominent members of the C. O. F. The Citizens' Band furnished a nice musical programme, and the Ganan- oque Male Quartette gave some selec- bary &Practieal The big force! be | t, K. C., has at his home a rose | | morning the blooms were all blown! tions. The park was crowded almost to its limit. At the home of her daughter in Berryton, on Friday evening last, | Margaret Snider, relict of the late | John MacFarlane, of Leeds township, | passed away in the seventy-eighth vear of her age Deceased resided | for a number of years in Gananoque | after the death of her husband, and | only went to her daughter's a few | weeks ago The remains were! brought to Gananoque, and the fune- | ral was held yesterday afternoon | from the home of her son, Mark Mac i Farlane, Charles street, to Willow- | bank cemetery, and was quite largely attended. : | At the Driving Park on Saturday | afternoon Gananoque's semi-profes- | sional baseball team and the Gouver- | neur, N.Y., team battled for twelve | innings for supremacy, victory finally | coming in a local direction hy a score | of 11 to 10. There was a fair ats | tendance. The game was good and | snappy throughout { Walter Cotton, Toronto, is hollday- | ing in town with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cotton, Hickory street. | Mr. and Mrs. George W. Scott spent | Sunday at Atkinson with the former's | sister, Mrs. Johnson. The popular Sunday evening services at Half Moon | Bay have been started for the season, | and the service last evening drew out | quite a large attendance. Miss Léita { I. Douglas, Strathroy, has been én-| | gaged by the Board of Education to fill the vacancy on the High School staff occasioned by the resignation of Miss A. A. Howson, teacher of mod- erns in that institution. Miss Doug- | las was chosen from some fifty appli-| cants, and comes very strongly recom- | mended by Inspector Wetherell, who for many years was principal of the Strathroy C. I. Rev. I. E. Pringle, who with his mother has been spénding the past two weeks in Gananoque, have left for their home at Plevna. Miss A Ap Howson, Peterboro, former mod- erns teacher in- Gananoque High School, has accepted a position in| North Bay. Miss Nellie Lake, for the past year and a half teacher in| the Sudbury Public School, is holi-| daying here with her parents, Mr. | land Mrs, Schuyler Lake. | SUCCESSFUL.CANDIDATES. | They Have Passed the High School | ! Entrance Dxaminations, | Athens, July 17.-- Successful can-| know didates for admission to the high | j &chool : Maria Alguire, Hubert! | Beale, Clifton Cassell, Garfield Clax- | | ton, Hubert Cra"g, Cecil Earl, Har-| old D. Eaton, Manford Flood, Mary | *Flood, Francis Flood, Gordon Gib- son, Katherine ' Heffernan, James, Heffernan, Trevor Hollingsworth, | Douglas Kendrick, (honors): Yeron- | ica Leeder, Hatiie Moore, Nina M.! Mulvena, Norma _Riehards, Albert Scott, Hope Swayne, Hubert Top-! ping, Roy B. Wiltse. i (*Under consideration by depart- | ment.) : » Home Dress Making, Lerrons Prepared Specially for This By Pictorial Review A Graceful Back View. \ \ AL A lovely frock of satin arepe fea. turing a three piece skirt with cas cade drapery at the sides, and a Lod ice with surplice baek. Nothing more graceful could be conceived than this frock in satin erepe with draped skirt and fitted blouse, the back of which is pped in surpliee style. The front of the waist is shirred belyw a round neek and finished in a point below the waistline, the belt appearing only at each side. The sleeves have inset puffs of lace to mateh the guimpe. In medium size the design requires 6 yards 44-inch satin orepe, 134 yards 36-inch all over lace for guimpe and sleeves and 1 yard 36-inch lining for the waist. The skirt will be taken up as the subject of today's home dressmaking lesson, because of the great demand for a draped effect ' that is simple enough to be generally worn, * It is a three-piece "model, closing to the RTPA Kndan ". kJ "B" section, 6th Field Ambulance, Capt. W. F. Nicholson, Temporary Commander, I wish to express the deepest appreciation on the foresight of your association in forwarding for our use, fresh preserved fruits, which we received quite recently, and which are being consumed with a relish that gives testimony to the splendid re- sourcefulness of the Canadian Club of Hamilton. As far as we are aware the consignment was put up by the women of Hamilton and dis- trict. For their benefit I might be per- mitted to say that the preserves are 80 superior to the usual ¢anned stuff issuéd, that those of us privileged to partake of both, compare them as syrup to vinegar. This comparison is not made as a means of deprecia- ting the quality of the latter, but merely to illustrate the vast differ- ence in home-made goods and the manufactured article, as we out here find them, Before closing 1 would draw your attention to the enclosed label, It was stripped from a jar containing black currants put up by the ladies of First Congregational Church. To | them as well as to the others engaged {in the work of preserving, ahd to | the fruit growers through whom this | was possible and to your wonderful | organization, the boys of "B" sec- tion again give hearty thanks, | Believe me, I am, i Most sincerely yours, A. F. PATTERSON, Staff Sergeant This is a glorious work. We hope the women of this district will not be found wanting. Preserve fruits for the returned Soldiers' Homes. A woman's teeth usurp the func- tions of her tongue when they chat- Township Councils | RE -------- LOUGHBORO, Sydenham, July 3 Council met at 2 p, m. 'All members present. Minutes of last meeting adopted. Bills ordered paid. $18, George Green, job on Hartman Hill; $14, Daniel Ryan, job on 2nd concession; $17.75, Willlam Van Koughnet, job on Portland boundary at Storm's school house; $5, Thomas Hogan, Job near James Lyons; $11.90, John Karley & Sons, hall supplies; $453- .10, 8. H. Alport, cement walks and crossings and job on James O'Brien's road; $1.65, Timothy Freeman, shovelling snow on Portland boun- dary; $100, treasurer Red Cross So- ciety. Council adjourned to meet Monday, August 7th, 2 p.m. Newspaper left of center front under the plain and may be in clearing or shorter lengths. For the stay 75 yard belt- ing will be required. The actual process of making is not difficult. First, study the construc. tion guide, becduse this is always important. Now. taking the sections which have been carefully cut, slash the front gore to the left of center front along line of double '"o0" pet- forations; finish edges for a placket. Form plaits in gores, and bring fold. ed edges to corresponding lines of small ""o" perforations. Stitch along folded edges, Join gores as notched, and leave the seam free above large "O" perforation in front gore. Bring the side edges of the gores (above the side seam) together and stiteh through both gores along line of small "o" perforations, If the drapery be de- sired tacked together, throw the drap- CONSTRUCTION Cor 6815 « by Pusented Apel 10.1909 ery forward, and cateh the 4 single small "0" perforations marked 2, 3, 4 and 5 together (see construction guide) to give the desired draped ef- feet. If the drapery be desired separited as illustrated, line the gores from the side edges to 1% inch inside of line of small "*0'* perforations; stiteh through the gores along line of small '"o" perforations: form a plait un- der the drapery bringing "'T" to corresponding single large "O" per. forations in front and back gores; and tack. Bring small "0" perfora. tions near the dormers marked 6 and | In Four of the Entente Allies have nged wW agreem ant. A There a over 1,000 meu ab- sent without leave from Camp Bor- Sen als was occupied by Italian troops, despite very unfavorable wea- te daughter has been born in London to Lieut.-Col Kitson, whose wife is daughter of Lady Strathcona. D. W. Jamieson, of the law firm of Jameson & McHugh, Toronto, died at the General Hospital Capt. Fred. Howarth, who caught German spies at Vancouver, and was promoted from the ranks, is in Toron- to on Aeave from the front. At Laredo, Tex., Jose Anton'o Arre, Jesus Maria Cerda, Paulina Sanschez and Vinccente Lire, the four alleged bandits were sentenced to death, Lawrence Joseph Cosgrave, presi- dent of the Cosgrave Brewery Co. Toronto, a prominent citizen in the commercial life of Toronto for more than a decade, is dead. William C. Gales, an American traveller, while repalmng his own automobile near Hatley, Que., was struck and 'instantly killed by anc other car. on ene } been acquired by NorweBian soterents n in ts . Covert, of Chicago, told the Nn of Victoria Pres- | Dyterian Church, Toronto, that there | Was not one pro-German in his con- jEregation of over 1,500. © Spanish Government has es- | tablished a military sensorship 'of all press despatches. Martial law was declared throughout Spain on Tsay: 8s a result of the railway str! : a! a coy cHident of the ers M i mpany, was in- stantly killed when he either Jumped or fell from the window of his room in the tenth floor of the Hotel Bilt- more, New York. Samuel A. Kimball, paymaster of the Colonial Car Company, Boston, was robbed of a pay roll of $2,000 by two men, one of which fired a shot which struck him in the head. Prof. Ello Metchnikoff, the world- famous exponent df theories for the prolongation of human life, and dis- coverer of the sour milk cure and other treatments for old age, died in Paris on Saturday. The Canadian branch of the Ford Motor Car Co)\is reported to have earned $5,000,000 for the current fiscal year. Th production of the over 800 per cent. Rev, plant is inc it is reported, ' any musical instrument, and + the human veice--all absolute N . compartment, so absolutely essential VA te br en th with all other parts, that gives its superior tone--that malzes ly » W Thee ane { The Victrola brings te you the pure and varied tones of the beauty and individuality of ly true to life. «ihgpemmpaned. Such fidelity of tone was unknown before the advent of the Victrola--the first cabinet style talking machine; and this pure and life-like tone is exclusively a Victrola feature. "'Why exclusive with the Victrola?" k Because of the patented Victrola features, which have been \ perfected after years of Study and experiment : Cru" sound-box tube--~the flexible metal connection between the sound-box and tapering tone arm, which enables the Victor Needle to "follow the record grooves with unerring accuracy. Concealed sounding-boards and amplifying compartment of wood -- provide the very limit of area of vibrating surface and sound amplifying A to an exact and pure tone reproduction. Modifying doors--may be opened wide thereby giving the tone in its fullest volume ; or doors may be set at any.degree graduating the volume of tone to exactly suit every requirement. duced to the minimum and when not in use the interior is fully protected, Victor system of changeable needles--a perfect reproduction is possi- ble only with a perfect point--therefore a new needle for each record is the only positive assurance of a perfect point. You also have your choice of full tone, half tone or further modification 'with the fibre needle. Closed tight the volume is re- cag It is the perfection of every part, and its perfect combination the Victrola the Victrola the greatest of all musical instruments. Victrolas in great variety from $21 to $305. + Come in any time and we will gladly demonstrate them and play any music you wish to hear. © We'll explain our system of easy terms, t00. . 121 Princess St C. W. LINDSAY, Athletic Underwear (see instruction guide) to corres ponding perforations in gores and tack. Gather upper edge of baek | gore between double '"TT"' perfora- | tions; and make 3 rows of gathers below upper edge % inch apart. Turn hem at lower edge of skirt on small "'o" perforations, Ee When the skirt is finished, adjust stay to position and add the buttons, ' Pictorial Review Waist No. 6793, cents. » Sizes, 34 to 44 inchés bust. Price, 13 . Bkirt No. 6815. Bises, 23 to 32 inches waist, Price, 15 cents, Summer Headwear . . . --W. G. & R. make, . ... $1.00 per suit Cool Socks for tired feet, 25¢ to $1.00 pair Silk, Wool, Lisle, Cotton. ... 50c to $7.50 Silk Caps, Straw Hats, Panama Hats. ~ Roney', 127 Princess Street