have stood the test of summer sun for 65 years. They durability, will not crack, blister or fall away. \\\\\ _\\\\ ht \x' ntaud for economy and .. .,v,‘,:cl.\\ The preserve your house and keep it beautifu throughout: the lifetime of pure paint. eas to work, last anger, at mat the right price. Write us for Post Card series , showing how some houses are painted. 'j mun NOT ONE PLACE, NOR ONE COUNTRY, UT THREE testify to the Reliability, Simplicity IN EUROPE, * Q§\\\\\ ~~f-=\\ I. IAIISLY & SON ($0., ION!!!"- IN AUSTRALIA, AND on all sides, Russell Renowned Reliability has become a by-word. And this is the Car made here, in this country, at your own door. emancizmtrssslaâ€w BUILT FOR CANADIAN ROADS ON CANADIAN HONOR. Bein made right, they are look better and Ask your dealer. tic†Established 1842 PAINT CONTINENTS and Durability of Russell Motor Cars. IN AMERICA Embodies the latest features of automobile excellence. Metal-to-metal Disc Clutchâ€"Shaft Driveâ€"Selective Sliding Gear Trans“ missionâ€"Engine under Bonnetâ€"Powerful Double Set of Brakes on Bear Wheelsâ€"Nickel Steel in all Gears and Shafts. Write for Catalogue and Book of Letters. Model Dâ€"18 H.P., 2â€"oyl. Light Touring Car . . . . . $1,600 Model Eâ€"â€"25 H.P., li-cyl. Touring Car . . . . . ..... . ........ 2,500 Model Fâ€"40 H.P., i-cyl. Touring Car ............... 3,750 Canada Cycle and Motor Co., Limited, TORONTO JUNCTION. CANADA. BRANCHESâ€"Ottawa, Winnipeg, Vancouver, and Melbourne, Australia. ' Wfl'I'MMW-I'IW‘ “monochrome! SELECTED RECIPES. oysters, delicious with steak, Chop Mock may be made from canned corn. :half a. cupful very ï¬ne, add salt, pepper, and a tiny pinch of mace, the yolks of fthree eggs and three tablespoonfuls of (prepared flour. Beat the whites stiff. L=fold into the batter and fry in deep fat until golden brown. Drain on brown paper and serve upon a folded napkin. Marble Cakeâ€"Beat to a cream one cup of sugar and half a cup of butter; add three eggs, beaten very light; a cup of milk, a leaspoonful of vanilla, three cups of sifted flour, two icaspoanfuls of bak- ing powder. Beat the batter smooth, then divide into two equal parts, keep- ing one for the light part and mixing with the other portion ground cloves, nutmeg and cinnamon to taste and quar- ter‘ of a cake of grated sweet chocolate. Fill the pan by pouring in a little batter at a time to get the marblcd effect. Poached Eggs with Tomato Sauce.â€" Butler some very small moulds, egg cups, and into each drop a raw egg with a little salt. and pepper, being careful not to break the egg yolk. Stand in the moulds in a pan of water and bake un- til they are set and turn out on a small .plattcr; surround with a cup of tomato sauce. prepared as in the rule for toma- to and shrimps. Cleaned Hard-boich Eggs.~â€"B0il and slice six eggs. Make some squares of mice toast and cut. off all the crusts: make a large cup of white sauce, using cream instead of milk, and spread each slice of toast with some of this, well seasoned with salt. Lay slices of egg evenly on the toast, lapping the edges, and spread these lightly also'with tho sauce. and serve very hot.' Another way of crcaming hard-boiled eggs is to cut them up into bits and put them in a baking dish with the white sauce, adding flnc crumbs and butt-er over the top, and browning the whole in the oven. Eggs and Cheeseâ€"Butler well a shal- low baking dish and cover the bottom with very thin slices of cheese; sprin- kle with salt and cayenne and drop over the cheese half a dozen raw eggs, With- out breaking thc yolks; add more salt and pepper and half a cup of thick cream and half a cup of grated cheese. Cover the dish and Duke 1:") minutes in a hot oven. For Potage Rougc.-â€"Twclvc tomatoes, peeled and sliced, one small onion sliced, three ounces of butter, one table spoonful salt, one leaspoonful of sugar, one small cup of boiled rice, one quart of boiling water, and one ounce of flour. Fry the onion in two ounces of flour, add the tonmtooa and parsley, and stew for one of chopped parsley. pepper, hour in the water. Rub through a Sieve, add the flower, one ounce of butter, pep- per, salt, sugar and boiled rice. Simmer for ten minutes and serve. Chocolate Meringue.â€"Scald a pint of milk in double boiler. Beat up to- gether half a cup sugar, a large table- spoonful grated sweet chocolate, a heap- ing teaspoonful of corn starch and beaten yolks of three eggs. Add the hot milk, return to the ï¬re and cook inl double-boiler‘for twenty minutes, or un-l til it thickens. Pour into a fancy dcs- sert dish and let get cold. ‘ Beat the whites of the eggs to a meringue with powdered sugar and heap over the top of . the pudding. a delicate brown and serve Without cream. New England Fire Cakes.â€"â€"l\fakc a pic , crust not quite as rich as for puff pasteâ€"â€" a good half and half paste Will be aboutL right. Cutoff small pieces and roll them with out to about the size of a breakfast plate ; and as nearly round as possible. Have the cake griddle well greased and hot,. bake the cakes on this, one at a timic,I turning when done on one side to brown . on the other. As each one is baked lay it on a heated plate; butter well and spread with a layer of preserved straw- berries, raspberries or stewed and sieved dried peaches. Fresh strawberries, well sugared and Slightly crushed. are ï¬ne. of that dreaded affliction. As each cake is baked pile one upon the too much in favor of Dr. Williams’ Pink ntllel‘. butter and spread with the fruit Pills and I urge all rheumatic sufferers or preserves untilyou have used up all to try them." yourqmstry, or have at least. five cakes Dr. Williams' Pink Pills curcd Mr. Serve hot, cutting down Forbes because they struck straight. at in the pile. through the layers like a pie. This is. similar to the Scat-hero fried pile.- In our grandmother‘s time this was a great New England favorite and was baked in 'don’t act on the bowels. They do only iron spiders propped up before the open one thing, but. “my ï¬res, hence the name. It. makes a nice fruit Shortcake for luncheon or supper served with good cream. BITS OF KNO\VLEDGE. Orange peel, dried and grated, makes a ï¬ne yellow powder that is a delicious flavoring for cakes and puddings. To remove ï¬nger marks from door knobs and locks use pure soap and old cheesecloth. Fish are scaled and fowl are plucked more quickly if dipped into boiling water for an instant. Matting may be cleansed with salt Water and a small brush. Rinse and dry thoroughly. Bread which is to be kept long should he kneaded longer than that which is meant for to-morrow‘s use. The skimming of fat from off soups, etc, should be saved for frying pur- poses. Wash goods when slightly stained with fruit, the marks may be removed av. follows : \Vct the places, than light a COmHlOn SUIDIIUI‘ mate“ and 1101a it over was the commandcr-in-chicf of the Pa- the spots; when the match has burned ciï¬c Squadron from 1896 to 1809. out replace it with another and continue ’unlfl tlie'stains disappear. When Willow Chan‘s l‘emaifl .VGHOW to possession of what he thought to be iliit‘l‘ Wing “’85th Wit-h Snap and \VR- the secret of the buried treasures of the . Mid “1011 dl‘ieCl in the famous Cocus Island, and on board her sun. they can be bleached by means 0i |Majesty’s ship Imperieuse made the ï¬rst. fer, wipcd wcll sulphur fumes. Light a sulphur candle ' pign. ,Thcn near the chair."and cover both with a large dry goods box. This should be done before the chair is perfectly dry. A table cover for a simple bedroom table is a. denim square edged with white fringe. If you have any material in a solid color left over from sewing; uti- ‘lizc it by cutting it in conventional ileaves and couch them as a border on a ‘linen square. This makes a charming 'lablc cover. _ A white plume that has become soiled may be cleaned by dipping it in a paste made of flour and gasoline. Rubitlightâ€" 1y through the ï¬ngers after each dip- lt should be hung out of doors until the gasoline has evaporated, when the flour can be easily shaken off,and it will be found that the plume retains its curl. If it should not be perfectly clean, repeat the operation. When working a butlonholc in a heavy clothwor one that pulls and [rays â€"it.savos much trouble to work the hole to this on the machine, putting in two rows just the length of the buttonbole to be. Cut with a shorp pcnknif-c be- tween these lines and work closely in the ordinary way over the machine stitching. This buttonholc will keep its shape and remain intact as long as the cloth holds together. Everyone does not know the secret of washing a chamois skin so as to make it as good as new. Wet in a weak solu- tion of washing soda and water. rub- bing plenty of white soap on it; let it lie for two hours, then rub between the hands until clean. Rinse in a weak solu- tion of soda and water with a litlle soap shaken in. If rinsed in pure water it be- comes hard. It is the small particles of soap that give it the silky softness. Wring in a rough towel and dry quickly, pulling and brushing it well. The simplest and one of the prettiest of treatments for a floor is as follows: Wash the floor well and let it. dry. Then go over it with a cloth dipped from time to time in coal oil, which not only cleanses but penetrates the floor so that loss of the boiled oil is required. In two quarts of boiled oil put beeswax the size of half an egg and boil together till melted and thoroughly mixed. The ut- most care must be taken in doing this, as, both materials are inflammable. While the oil still is warm apply with a wide paint- brush. If the wood has a handsome grain the oil brings it out beautifully. It only requires dusting - from week to week. __ w A RIIEUMA'I‘IC \VRECK. After Hospital Treatment Failed Dr. \Villiams’ Pink Pills Curcd Him. “I ,‘suffercd the .. greatest agony from rheumatism. Leading physicians pre- scribed many medicines, but with un- satisfactory results. I was compelled to go to an hospital, but even the treat- ment there failed. Then I took Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and toâ€"day I am a well man." These words were spoken by Clifford L. Forbes when interviewed at his home in Port Maitland, N. S. Mr. Forbes is a fisherman and had always been very healthy, until some three lyears ago while fishing oft Newfound- land he was scizcd with a very severe attack of rheumatism. In his own words he says: “I was ï¬shing on the Grand Banks in the spring of 1903 when l was stricken with ' rheumatism. I could not work or sleep, and the pain was almost unbearable. My case be- Place in the oven to color icame so serious that I had to he landed or and for weeks I lay in a Cape Breton [hospital as helpless as a cripple. The hospital doctors prescribed different le- mcdics, but they did not cure me. I then left the hospital and was taken home with rheumatism apparently com- pletely fastened upon me. Day and might. ,I suffered. Nothing I did for the trouble seemed to help me, and I he- cumc dcspondcnt and down-hearted. a friend advised me to try Dr. Wil-' liams’ Pink Pills. I was skeptical. but my friend praised the pills so highly that I determined to try them. with the result you see to-day. I am fully cured and have not since had even a twinge I cannot say the root and cause of his crippling rheu- matism. They don't act on the mere symptoms like ordinary medicine. They do it wellâ€"they actually make new blood. In that. way ‘t-l'.ey,root. out all common blood dis- eases likc anaemia, headaches and backachcs. rheumatism, sciatica. ncu- ralgia, and the secret ailments of girls and women who suffer unspeakany when the richness and regularity of their blood becomes disturbed. Dr. Wil- llams‘ Pink Pills are sold by all dealers in medicine, or sent. by mail at SOCents a box or six boxes for $2.50 by writ- ing The Dr. William's' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ____.._.1._.._.._ SECRET OF COCOS ISLAND. An English Admiral “’Ilo Believed in Stories of Buried Treasure. Admiral H. St. L. B. Palliser died sud- dcntly at his country house in Chichcs- tcr, England, recently. He served in the Baltic and Black Sea during the Crimean War, and in command of a squadron watched British interests throughout the Carlist War in 187.1. I~Ic It was during his command in the Pacific that Admiral Palliser came in- of a long series of ineffectual efforts to by hosting thread, then stitching close ~ â€"â€" IN TOUCH WITH Hover Believe That Christ Is Right and Set Yourself With Him. “Sirs, what must I do to be saved? . . Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved."â€"Acts xiv., 30-31.. The answer that satisï¬ed that parti- cular man at that particular time may not satisfy every man lo-day. At any rate, when the honest inquircr comcs With such a question and receives an answer in the same terms, it is likely to him to seem like no answer at all; nc_turn5 away with a puzzled look, as It instead of helping him out of his dif- ï¬culties the answer had but increased them., The man who asks this, question in any _verbal form whatsoever means certain deï¬nite things by it. Ignoring theological definitions of salvation, he seeks to ï¬nd freedom from certain habits; he would wipe out a torment- ing, haunting past; he would prepare for a better future. He is not shaking with apprehension of a yawning pit; he is ï¬lled with loathing at an unsatis- factory life. With the true man to be saved is something other than being taken as he is and lifted to some sheltered spot where he may be protected from the m the consequences of his own evil doings. I‘lc desn~es A CHANGE IN CHARACTER rather than in condition; he would turn life from its briers and tangles, its pas- sions and sorrows to Some way that is lifted clear above the fear, follies and failures of the past. lie. is not worried about doctrines or opinions; he is not fearing punishment for intellectual vagaries or crcdal short- comings. So if you answer his deep questioning with a demand that he ac- cept certain doctrines, that he force himself to faith in certain facts about even the greatest of the sons of men, your remedy seems unrelated to his disease; he turns away empty and un- helped. And yet the answer that satisï¬ed men long ago has in it all men need to-day. int it contains more than wc‘realize. It means something more by far than tlzn formal intellectual acquiescence with certain historical statements. No man ever solved the problems of his life or found ï¬rm places for his feet by seeking his way through any«intellec- tual propositions. ' But if we can but see the signiï¬cance if that life lived long ago: if we~can but receive its wonderful message. then we ï¬nd life, we overcome the past, and enter upon our own salvation. It is _____.____â€"_____._â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"_â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"- l not words about Jesus that save men: it is taking Him and all His life as the word, the message, about. God and man, about the way of life, and the truth of all things, that leads the life out. into FULL GLORY AND FREEDOM. Here was a life, lived on the plane rf Ollf own, mcctingour nccds, sorrows, and assaults, yet marvelously clear, un- inicrruptcdly in touch with heaven, rc- vraing supernatural sources of spiritual strength, touched wilh the feeling inf our inï¬rmitics, but showing the possi- bility of overcoming them by yet Closer touch with the Infinite. Here was a life that ever turned its face to the Father of all; a life that looked up and lived up. Sin is living down, missing. and falling away from the mark of man's possibilities. Sal- vation is living up. growing, going for- ward, rcaching toward the mark. Catch the trend of that life, look on life with His eyes, turn in the direction He faces. In other words. believe that He is right and set yourself with Him. Here was a life that never believed possibilities of better things. thsus bad faith in the possibility (i goodness; He believed in virtue, honor. truth. He may not have seen much of these things in others; but. He believed there could be more, and He looked on the virtues as, things not unattainable for Himself. A man indeed is lost when he has ceased to believe in the possi- bility of goodness for himself or in his i fellows. i NOR WAS THIS ALL; here was a life in. the beauty of bar- mony and helpfulness with all other men. He was hated by the breeders of discontent and prejudices because He was by His own life leaching men to live together as brothers. His was not only a face turned toward a Father in heaven; it was a tender face and a helping hand turned toward all His fellows. ‘ To believe on Jesus Christ may have little to do with questions of history or of philology; it has to do with seeing in Him and in His life the best inter- pretation of life, the secret of our living, the message for our own manhood; with seeing life through His eyes. set- ting the face in the direction that He lived, seeing God and man as He saw them, ï¬nding in Him our teacher, fol- lowing Him as our master in the art, at living. HENRY F. COPE. unearth the buried millions. The late admiral received the “secret†from Capt. I‘Iackctt when the latter was on his death-bed, and was so impressed by it that despite all failures, he remained a ï¬rm believer in the existence of the treasure. The story of the Cocos Island trea- sures is one of the most romantic and thrilling character. One vast hoard r‘f valuables is supposed to have been de- positcd on the island which lies 500 miles south-west of Panama, by a Brit- isl‘. ship which had turned pirate in 18:21. The second and more valuable treasure was buried there by the crew of the barkentinc Mary Dier about 1835. This board was supposed to be the bul- lion and jewels of the Peruvian Town of Callao, which was threatened with revolution and pillage. The national treasure was put on board the British ship for safety, but the crew betrayed their trust and fled with the rich cargo. The value of the two treasures is sup- posed to be many millions. At. least £6,000 worth of valuables: were taken from the island by a man called Keaton: This man died and be- queathed the secret to llackctt. Since the latter conï¬ded in Admiral Palliscr some half dozen fruitless expeditions have been ï¬lled out and have searched the soil of the island. One of the latest was led by Earl Filzwilliam. in 1005. but his party met with a disaster in th- shape of a. landslide during blasting operations, and seven of them were in- jurcd. Several companies have been formed to equip expeditions, but need- lcss to say none of them has ever paid a dividend. ..._._.. 531,â€"..â€" WRONG FOR ON CE. "Sir l†exclaimed the injured party, “you stuck your umbrella in my eye." “Oh, no,†replied the cheerful offen- der, “you are mistaken.†“Mistaken ?" demanded the irate man. “You idiot, I know when my eye is hurt, I think.†“Doubtlcss," replied the cheerful fel- low, “but you don‘t know my umbrella. I borrowed this one from a friend. Rickets. entire system. Simply the visible sign that baby’s tiny bones are not forming rapidly enough. Lack of nourishment is the cause. Scott’s“ EmuIJion nourishes baby’s . Stimulates and makes bone. Exactly what baby needs. ALL DRUGGISTS: 50c. AND $1.00 eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee g DRUGGING CHILDREN. All so-callcc “soothing†Syrups and most of the powders advertised to cure childhood ailments contain poisonous opiates and an overdose may kill the child. When the mother uses Baby‘s Own Tablets she has the guarantee of a government. analyst that this medi- cine contains no opiatc or narcotic. They can be given with absolute safety tn": a new born baby. They cure indi- estion, constipation, colic, diarrhoea and’othcr minor ailments of children. Mrs. G. Collins, I~lirkclla, Man, says:-â€" “Baby’s Own Tablets arc the most sal- isfaclory medicine I have ever used for the minor ailments of children. I al- ways k-ccp the Tablets in the house." Sold by medicine dealers or by mailot 2.5 cents a box from the Dr. Williams'. Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. 3_._. LIVE ON CRIME. African Tribe Utilize All Their Convicted Offenders for Food. Writing from the South Cameroons, a correspondent of the Cologne Gazette, who is with Capt. Dominiic's expedition, . says that the Maka, a negro tribe in- habiting the territory between the second and sixth degrees, north latitude, are canibals, and not only eat captives, but criminals who have been condemned to death. Recently a caravan of negro traders fell into their hands and all were eaten. The correspondent observed hun'ian flesh regularly exposed for sale in the mar- ket-s frequented by these tribesmcn. The smallest offences are punished with death in order to secure a constant sup- ply for human consumption. After a recent tribal ï¬ght thirteen bodies were cut up into Convenient joints to serve for a festive meal. ..x._ All men love power, but few know how to use it. No, Cordelia, a married woman isn't necessarily up to date because her. hus~ band happens to be the latest thing out. A ' “3 ‘14 345/ v.