iat cars and Canal or river barges. : : the : salvage. dumps you can see wrecks 'sowing Fall. Wheat? per. bushel makes good profit certain. ERS insure a strong stand and pay- $2.15 "SERTILIZI ing yield. 1111 TEMPLE BLDG. Four Experiment Stations show an average gain of 13.2 bus. per acre from using fertilizers, Act Now - Order Fertilizers and good seed, Soil and Crop Improvement Bureau Of the Canadian Fertilizer Association. TORONTO | Kaercaeg 8 CUTTING CHEESE TO WEIGHT. Nan Art Attained Cnly By Long Prac- : tice. "Qne pound of old English, please." i Thus a customer at the cheese coun- ter. The salesman put a one pound weight on one plate of a counter; scale, while upon the other he laid a tidy strip ef white paper upon which ; to lay the cheese. Then he removed the wire screen from over an English cheese that stood 'near on the counter and picked up a large, sharp knife. Without a moment's hesitation or deliberation he set the edge of the knife down on the cheese and then crowded the knife down through it, cutting off a wedge shaped piece which now he laid on that paper on the scale, and the piece of cheese that he had thus cut off weighed exactly a pound, not close to a pound, or anything of that sort, but exactly a pound; the weight and the %.| cheese just balanced. His customer had once before seen this salesman do precisely the same thing, and now the customer ventured gg to ask: Walked on by an Elephant : An African wanderer gives an in- _ teresting account of the reckless dar- ing of the natives in moments of ex- citement. Late in the afternoon he shot two elephants and early the next morning sent some of the attendants "out to bring in the tusks. So many hours passed without any tidings of _ the party that he began to be anxious. In the late afternoon he saw in the distance several men, some mounted, : and others on foot, while one led a _ camel with a curious-looking load. He had a foreboding tnat something was wrong and in a few minutes he @early perceived a man lying upon a makeshift litter, carried by the camel, while Dan and Suleiman accompanied ! the party horseback. _ They soon came up. Poor Dick, a plucky and active ally, lay, as the man thought, dead upon the litter, - They removed him gently, adminis- tered spirits, and on examination - found his thigh broken a little above the knee. fracture. g Dan now explained the cause of the | -- accident. While the camelmen _ others were engaged in cutting up the dead elephants, three He was tracked to a position within two or three hundred yards of the dead elephants. As there were no guns, two of the men resolved to ride throvgh the nar- row passages formed by the large game and take their chance with the elephant, sword in hand. Dick, as little | ' rushed away. Fortunately it was a simple | and | | phant and Dick, aggageers | found the tracks of a "wounded bull} _ that had escaped into the thick jungle, usual, took the lead on his little gray mare. With the greatest difficulty he advanced through the tangled thorns, which had been broken by the passage of heavy game, To the right and left of the passage it was impossible to move. Dan had wisely dismounted, but Suleiman followed Dick. On arriving within a few yards of the elephant, which was invisible in the thick thorns, Dan crept forward on foot, and discovered him standing with ears cocked, evidently waiting for the at- tack. As Dick followed on his little gray mare, the elephant caught the white color and at once charged. Escape was next to impossible. Dick turned his mare sharp round, and she bounded off; but she caught in the thorns and fell, throwing her rider in the path of the elephant, only a few feet behind in full chase. The mare recovered herself in an instant ana The elephant, occupied by her white color, paid no attention to the man, but trod on him in the pursuit and broke his thigh. Dan, who had been between the ele- had wisely jumped into the thick thorns. As the elephant himself passed, he sprang out behind and followed with his drawn sword. Jumping over Dick's body, he was just in time to deliver a tremendous cut at the hind leg of the elephant, that must otherwise have killed both horses and probably Suleiman also, as the three were caught in a passage that had no outlet been at the elephant's mercy. MINING BATTLE. FIELDS OF FRANCE _GREAT-WAR AREA BEING MINED FOR STEEL. German Prisoners of War Do a Large Amount of Salvage Work and Allied Troops Have a Good Share. Since the armistice, salvaging of metal on a large scale has been going on in all of the war-areas of the West Front. Thousands of tons of scrap steel have been salvaged from all the battle-fields. A good share of this sal- -vage work has been done by the troops of the Allied armies, but also a large amount of it has been done by the German prisoners of war. At practically all the railroad sta- tions in the neighborhood of Etain and Bar-le-Due train-loads can be seen of the crooked, rusted barbed-wire en- -tanglement rods, stacked up like cord- wood, waiting for shipment. There are small mountains of miscellaneous serap-iron, and piles of havy corru- gated steel sheets are a characteristic sight in salvage dumps and railroad yards throughout the battle regions. In the centre and toward the eastern end of the line this work has been car- ried nearer to completion than at the northwestern end. In the northwest, along the British front, the salvage work has proceéded a bit more slowly, erhaps, but certainly not less oroughly. Prisoners at Work. In the past winter and spring Ger- man prisoners of war were going over the shell-shot battle-fields which had been a part of the British front, tear- _ Ing down the corrugated iron shelters, picking up 'duds' or unexploded shells, tlearing the thickets of barbed wire and chevaux-de-frise, storing and _ pil- g up all the salvaged metal in the mps and loading it on the freight In 'camions, tanks of all descriptions, great piles of 'metal helmets, rifles, bayonets, knives, shells and shell- cases, machine guns, and, in fact, theymetal debris of warfare. But the one lasting impression made on most observers is that of acres of corrugated steel sheets and barbed wire and the twisted rods around which the barbed-wire entanglements had been made. In a good many areas, the artillery-fire had been so in- tense that the soil has been ruined for agricultural purposes. In such cases the salvaging is simply to remove the dangerous explosive agents and re- cover the metal junk. Im the agricul- tural districts, however, in cases where the shelling was comparatively light and the land had been dug up to make trenches, the salvage work is closely tied up 'with that of agricultur- al reconstruction. RSH RS Sebi aL A Famous Fountain. There is a picturesque little spot in the Temple Gardens, London, which, although only a few hundred yards from the roar and hustle of City trat- fic, is really wonderful for the peace- ful solitude of its surroundings. The famous old fountain there, which dates back as far as 1681, is once again under repair. It was dear to the heart of Charles Lamb, who used to relate that many a time he has made its jet of water rise and fall, "to the astonishment of the young urchins, my contemporaries, who, not being able to guess at its re- condite machinery, were almost tempt- ed to hail the wonderous work as magic." Charles Dickens, too, loved the foun- tain, making it, in "Martin Chuzzle- wit," the rendezvous of John West- lock and Ruth Pinch. -- An Orkney Surprise: A large number of mines which have become detached from the minefields in the North Sea around the Orkney Isles have been seen floating quite in- shore. One went ashore at Deerness, and a youth who had journeyed sever- al miles to see it amused himself by throwing stones at it from, as he thought, a safe distance on the cliff above. : A stone struck one of the horns, and the mine exploded with terrific force, tearing hugh boulders and fragments of rock from the cliff face. The youth was flung skyward and was seriously injured. ' fsa notorious knocker C of, ill-health! TRY IT. Oe 'contains the vital 'mineral elements and all the nutriment of ase wheat and baney:, % and would have | all | '| as canbe done iw "Do you do that very often?" "Almost always,' the salesman said. It seems that experienced cheese cutters come to "know" cheese. Of course cheeses vary in size, in their thickness and in their diameter, and cheeses of like dimensions vary in weight, but by long experience the ex- pert cheese cutter comes to know the cheeses so well that he can cut from any cheese just the right sized slab to make the required weight. He cuts with, astonishing accuracy. The only cheese that baffles him at all is the Swiss, this on account of the holes in it, or rather on account of the peculiarity of Swiss cheese holes. THE MAN WHO WINS Is Always Full of Life and Energy--Failures Are Weak and Bloodless. Some men seem to have all the luck. If there are any good things going these men seem to get them. They make other people do their will --they are leaders. If they are busi- ness men they are successful; if they are workmen they get the foreman's job. They have the power of influ- encing people. The same thing is true of women. Some have the charm that makes men seek them out; others are always neglected. But this is not luck. It is due to a personal gift--vitality. Men and women of this sort are never weak, puny invalids. They may not be big, but they are full of life and energy. The whole-thing is a matter of good blood, good nerves and good health. Everyone would wish to be like this and the qualities that make for vitality and energy are purely a matter of health. By building up the blood and nerves sleeplessness, want of energy, weakness of the back, stooping shoulders, headaches and the ineffectual sort of presence which really comes from weakness can all be got rid of. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have made many weak, tired men, vigorous and healthy, and many pale, dejected girls and women plump, rosy and attractive, by improving their blood and toning up their nerves. If you are weak, ailing, lowspirited or unhealthy, begin to cure yourself to- day by the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. You can get these Pills fuecuek any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. Se ee Brainy Bees. What a bee does not know is sup- posed to be not worth knowing. That may or may not be true, but two fol- 'lowing incidents--one of which was witnessed by the writer--testfy to the remarkably sagacity and efficiency of bees. On one occasion a hive was being "spied upon" by a wasp. When a wasp ascertains that a hive is worth attacking, he carries the news to his friends, and sometimes succeeds in ousting or severely worrying the bees, While the wasp-scout was nosing around, the bees stayed in the hive, but every time the wasp approached the small entrance hole a bee came out and walked round in a circle, do- ing sentry-work till the wasp departed. An hour later a wasp--presumably the scout--was found dead on its back on the top of the hive, and the bees were busy again. Cathedral as War Memorial. The Anglican Church Authorities in the diocese of Wellington, New Zea- land, propose to build a cathedral as a memorial to the New Zealanders fallen in the war. It is proposed to erect, in connection with the cathe- dral, a military chapel, dedicated to _ St. George, which will contain the col- ors of the Alles and regimental flags. Its great windows will symbolize all the Allied nations who have fought in the war. The walls of the chapel will be panelled in white marble tablets, on which the names of all New Zealand, soldiers, sailors, doctors and nurses who have fallen in the war (irrespec- tive of creed or denomination) ,will be inscribed in letters of gold There are some 17,000 from New Zealand' who have lost their livés in the war. rea hey <2 -- See fy Gut Glass With Scissors. Often an odd-shaped piece of glass will get broken, as, for instance, in an electrical instrument, and it is very difficult to cut an odd-shaped piece of glass without special guides. Ordin- ary window glass, says a writer in Popular Science Monthly, may be cut -to almost any desired shape by hold ing it beneath the surface of a pan of 'water and cutting with house shears. Of course, it cannot be cut Accurate- ly straight across the piece, but it may be "chewed out" very much the same ith cardboard. Saleen +" A Frenc: inventer menoplane from & J winged maple seed, 4 has modeled a'. Fast Transeo tia Train! Now that Gia era of reconstruction been taxed to the limit, bought bonds to his capacity and given until it hurts is to be considered again. He is to be permitted to get from place 'to place quickly, his freight is to be handled' promptly and he is to be ' given every assistance to revitalize the business of America. The rail- ways are the veins and arteriessupon which a healthy business body must depend, therefore normally much of his help must come from them. The Canadian Pacific, a privately run road, is the first of the railroads to help the business man. On June ist, the first '"Trans- Canada'"--the new _ transcontinental express of the C.R.R.--pulled out: of the Windsor St. Station ih Montreal filled to capacity on its three thou- sand mile run to Vancouver. This is the fastest transcontinental train in the world, making the trip from Montreal to Vancouver in less than four days, to be exact, 93 hours and 30 minutes, and from Vancouver to Montreal in 92 hours 15 minutes, the run being made without change of cars. A whole business day is thus saved for the Business-Man-in-a-Hurry. An interesting point in connection with this train is the fact that more than half of the passengers are gen- erally registered from New York, Philadelphia, Boston and other Ameri- can cities, a considerable number be- ing booked for Banff, Lake Louise and points west. One thinks of a transcontinental train as a single unit, but in reality it is made up of a number of com- plete units. A daily service, the trip being four days, requires four trains running each way simultaneously. The equipment of the new de luxe train has an estimated value of $6,000,000, using for the daily run eastbound and westbound, 59 sleeping cars, 5 com- partment cars, 15 diners and 24 loco- motives. - hd FIGHTING THE HAILSTORM. How European Countries Endeavor to Prevent Storms. Hailstorms are just dreaded by the Canadian farmer, though he suffers from them only occasionally. In Europe, however, they seem, for some mysterious reason, to be far more fre- quent, and the damage they § do is enormous, especially in the grape- growing regions. France alone suf- fers from*this cause an annual loss reckoned at $20,C00,000. For centuries, over there, efforts have been made to prevent hailstorms by various ingenious means, the lat- est of which is what is called the "elec- tric Niagara." This contrivance is in effect a much elaborated lightning rod--an enorm- oously tall and extremely slender tower of light steel rods, which is ex- pected to carry off from the clouds harmlessly a veritable cataract of electricity. Robbed of their lightnings, the clouds are supposed to be render- ed incapable of forming hailstones. Tall poles of steel, or wooden poles carrying lightning rods, have long been in use for the same purpose in France and other European countries. They have been set up literally by the hundreds of thousands, whole land- scapes being sprinkled with them. Another idea persistently tried has been the bombarding of clouds with explosive missles or sometimes with rockets. Yet another, more recent, consists in discharging smoke-rings from mortars. The smoke is supposed to mingle with the cloud vapor and interfere with the formation of. hail. Scientific bodies here and abroad, including our own weather bureau, have made elaborate experimental studies of these methods and have de- clared thém worthless. But the Euro- pean agriculturist believes in their effectiveness with a faith that is al- most religious. a pe et "What's In A Name?" Naming a plant or flower after a celebrity is a delicate compliment, and one that no doubt adds something to the market value, says a writer in the London Daily Chronicle. But there are exceptions. The beautiful variety of the lobelia, for instance, known as "Emperor William," would perhaps hold up its Imperial head a little more proudly just now if it had had a more fortunate: christening. Stray thoughts on these lines may have been flickering in the mind of a vendor in a London market-place the other day as a likely looking buyer, while examining a box of the old av orite, asked what variety it was. W.thcut deranging the muscle of an eyelid the coster (and she was a "lydy," too) replied:--'"Douglas *Aig! Four-and-a tanner a box." GUARD BABY'S HEAL IN THE SUNMER The summer months are the most dangerous to. children. The com- plaints of that season, which are cholera infantum, colic, diarrhoea and dystentry, come on so quickly that of- ten a little one is beyond aid before the mother realizes he is ill. The mother must be on her guard to pre- vent these troubles, or it they do come on suddenly to cure them. No other medicine is of such aid to mothers during hot weather as, is Baby's Own Tablets. They regulate the stomach and bowels and are absolutely safe. Sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents-a box from The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, One. To Mark ae eae Bottles. A good way to mark bottles con- taining poison is to push pins into the side of the cork. Two pins would be sufficient, and they should be: placed at tight angles to each other, aS es Minard's Liniment Cures Dinh r » four chev: 4+ fo year, and t d ithe subsequent years of service, is here, the business man, who has | o SSUE No. 35--19. st enusoe's ISLAND. sohdos: Near the Mouth of the Orino- / co, Probable Scene of Great Adventure. The name of . Robinson asda is forever linked in our memories with a desert island. No particular island | comes to my mind as we think of this castaway hero, yet Crusoe himself, or rather Defoe, tells us exactly where his island is, and all but names it; writes Niksah. , i For many year Chilean island off South America, Juan Fernandez, a he eastern coast of was known as Cru- soe's Island because another adven- turer had spent five years there in solitude, and it was thought for some _time that Defoe had recorded this her- mit's 'experience. But following Crusoe's directions that he landed on an island in a lati- tude of eleven degrees, near the mouth of the Orinoco river, and in sight of the island of Trinadad, 'we come upon the island of Tobago, the only one answering the description. An interesting discovery which gave prominence to Tobago as the real Crusoe's Island occurred some years ago, when the skeleton of a goat was unearthed in a cave on the island. This coincided remarkably with Cru- soe's statement that he found a dying goat in a hillside cave and later buried it there. '"Crusoe's goat" became for a time an object of great popular in- terest and figured as a prominent ex- hibit at the Chicago World's Fair. Tobago's failure to obtain greater ecognition of its importance as the "only authentic Robinson Crusoe Is- land" is doubtless due to the fact that it is a retiring little island, concerned chiefly with its plantations and trade. Leaving Crusoe out altogether, Toba- go has had an eventful history, from the time it was discovered by Chris- topher Columbus, on his third voyage, until England took it from France in 1803, and started to turn it into a pro- fitable colony. Its present estate after a century of English rule is less that ofa desert island than of a partly wooded, partly cultivated and built-up isle of the, tropics. i e--o--0---0--0---0-- 0 --0---0--0 0 --o- --@ Laugh When People Step On Your Feet Try this yourself then It along to others. It works! pass pe bee eS Ouch! ?! 2?! ! This kind of rough | talk will be heard less here in town 4f people troubled with corns will follow the simple advice of this Cincinnati authority, who claims that a few drops of a drug called freezone when applied to a tender, aching corn stops soreness at cnce, and soon the corn dries up and lifts right out without pain. He says freezone 1s an ether com. pound which dries immediately and never inflames or-even irritates the surrounding tissue or skin. A quarter of an ounce of freezone will cost very little at any drug store, but is suffi- cient to remove every hard or soft corn or callus from one's feet. Millions of American women will welcome this announcement since the inauguration of the high heels. The Welsh Emblem. It is hinted that a scheme is afoot to secure, if at all possible, the repre- sentation of Wales on Britain's Royal Arms and coinage. Leading Welshmen. are holding a national conference in Cardiff to dis- cuss the matter, and to choose the armorial bearing. The question is naturally asktd will it be a leek, the daffodil, or the Red Dragon? As Premier Lloyd George appears to have personally adopted the daffodil as the emblem of Wales, this leads a cynic to suggest that it might be called the "taffydil." LEMON JUICE IS FRECKLE REMOVER Girls! Make this cheap beauty lotion to clear and whiten your skin. Squeeze the juice of two lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of | orchard white, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle and tan lotion, and complexion beauti- fier, at very, very small cost. Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will sup- ply three ounces of orchard white for a few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day and see how freckles and blemishes disappear and how clear, soft and white the skin becomes: Yes! It is harmless:-- 2 *e The County of London, measuring 116 square miles, is split uy among over 88,000 individual owners of land, nineteen square miles belonging to the Crown. Minard's Liniment Cures Garget in Cows The clothes in which Lord Nelson died on board the Victory are still preserved at Greenwich Naval Hospi- tal. : Central Ypres As War Memorial. "The Anglo-Belgian commission, ap- pointed to consider the question of the reconstruction of Ypres, has recom: mended that the central portion of the town: be not rebuilt, but remain as a historici monument, 'says an Ypres despatch. That area includes the ruins of the Cloth Hail, the cathedral, de Justice and the adjoining cloistefs. It is bounded on the north by the Marche de Bois, on the east by the Rue de Dixmude, and on the south by the Grand. Place, with, however, in- cluding any-.ruins on the opposite side of the square, and on the west by the Rue des Hailes. Nearly 1,000 civilians\already have rerureed to dwell amid tho ruins. Seme fifty-four auberges and estami- nets are open, nearly all temporary weoden structures, which do a thriv- ing business with British soldiers, ii ete ee BAS GENUINE ASPIRIN HAS "BAYER CROSS" TABLETS WITHOUT "BAYER CROSS" NOT ASPIRIN AT ALL. a Get Genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspir- In" in a "Bayer" Package, Plainly , Marked With the Safety "Bayer Cross." There is not a penny of German money invested in "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," nor will a German citizen profit by its sale or ever be allowed to acquire interest. The original world-famous Aspirin marked with the "Bayer Cross" is now made in Canada and can be had at your druggist's in handy tin boxes of 12 tablets and larger "Bayer" pack- ages. : Genuine Aspirin has been proved safe by millions for Pain, Headache, Toothache, Earache, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Colds, Grippe, Neuritis. Aspirin is the trade mark, register- ed in Canada, of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. a The late Sir John P. Mahaffy, prov- ost of Trinity College, Dublin, was brilliantly witty, and many of his good sayings are in general circulation. But he occasionally met his match. One of his encounters was with the late Dr. Salmon, provost of Trinity before Dr. Traill. Mahaffy was one day in- veighing against corporal punishment for boys, which, he declared, never did the Church of St. Martin, the Palais' FOR GALE. N 2 sParer. WEEKLY. IN BRUCK or County. Splendid opportunity. Write -- i8 Adelaide St. W.. Toronto. W "in EQUIPPED NEWSPAPER and job printing plant in Eastern Oxatario, pesucaueg earried $1,500. Ay ; fo for $1.2 uick sale. Wilson Publtchiog Gores. taee "Po POULTRY WANTED Wort HAVE NS OU FOR SALE IN Live Poultry, Fancy Hens. Pigeons Exes ete.? Write I. Weinrauch Son, 10-18 St. Jean Baptiste Market. Mont- real, Que. ; <= HOME BUILDERS. RITE FOR OUR FREE BOOK OF House Plans, '. information tell- tng how to save frori Two to Four Hun dred Dollars on-your new Home. Ad- ress WHalitday Company, 23 Jacksom '.. Hamliiton, Ont. ----= MISCELLANEOUS. LASSY RABBIT MAGAZINE, copy; - 60c. year.' Fur Monthly, Brantford. CFaNCRe, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC. internal and external, cured with- out pain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medicas Co.. Limited. Collingwood, Ont 10c, © and Food om -------- Drink Tea From Goblets. The natives of Paraguay, in drink. -- ing tea, do not pour it from a teapot into a cup, but fill a goblet with the | beverage and then suck it up through a long ornamental tube. MONEY ORDERS, It is always safe to send a Dominion Express Money Order. Five*Dollars costs three cents. No hurry about laying by the po- tatoes. It is well to keep up shallow cultivation as long as the vines will permit. To prevent blight the foliage should be kept covered with Bordeaux until the crop is matured, _ Minard's Idviment Cures Colds, Eto Of all the kindly things God made One of the kindliest is shade. His glorious company of trees Throw out their mantles, and in these The dust-stained traveler finds ease 'Invest Your Money | 544% DEBENTURES Interest payable half yearly. The Great West Permanent Loan Company Toronto Office 20 King St. West 3 E have numerous inquiries from prospective purchasers for Western Farm Lands Send full particulars of your land to UNION TRUST COMPANY LIMITED any good, "Take my own case," he exclaimed. "I was never caned but} once in my life, and that was for, speaking the truth." "Well," Salmon retorted caustitally, "it eured you." Lachute, Que., 25th Sept., 1908. Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Gentlemen, --Ever since. - coming home from the Boer war I have been bothered with running fever sores on my legs. I tried many salves and liniments; also doctored continuous- ly for the blood, but got no perman- ent relief, till last winter when my mother got me to try MINARD'S LINIMENT. The effect of which was almost magical. Two bottles com- pletely cured me and I have worked every working day since. Yours gratefully, JOHN WALSH. Nobody is ever glad to see the man who comes round when you have just made a mistake about something, and tells you what he would have done in your place, Minard's Liniment Cares Distemper. When drying seeds put them on blotters. 'The seeds will dry more quickly and are less likely to mold, because the blotter soaks up the mois- ture. SINCE ' 1870 30 si8Fs COUGHS Winnipeg, Man. SALT All grades. Write for prices. TORONTO SALT WORKS @. J. CLIFF - . TORONTO FACE DISFIGURED WITH PIMPLES Itched andBurned. Scarce- ly Slept. Cuticura Heals, "Pimples affected my face. They were large and always festered, and they were scattered all over </s my face. They afterwards NJjturned into scales and 'J when they fell off they left big marks until my face was disfigured. They itched and burned so that I scarcely slept at all. "T had been bothered for nearly two months before I started using Cuticura, and after I had used three boxes of Cuticura Ointment with the Cuticura Soap I was completely healed."" (Signed) Miss L. Burns, St. Bazile, Que., June 6, 1918. Use Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum for all toilet purposes. For free epee each of scschawer Soa oD f Oint- T net st-car ticura, Dept, ree U. 8. t Post card patel th csr A ral " For Sale by FLOOR WAX Keeps Hardwood Floors beautiful All Dealers oc tia E AN Ww x WK WE W. % PEON 8, c0 PREPARED CORN FOR CULINARY PURPOSES, ee SS SSN SANS XN SS SY mts ne most delicious of all : CMANG UDDINGS CUSTARDS, Ni is S.CUST ARDS, ertally ac any preparation tae Unites States or ~~ Ss ON'S Corn STARCH -- Desserts--Rolls Sauces JENSON'S is pure prepared corn starch, delicate and nourishing, unexcelled for all "cooking purposes. It. improves the texture of bread, biscuits and rolls if . one-third of the flour is substituted with Benson's Corn Starch. It makes pie crusts light and flakey. There is a recipe for the most delicious Blanc Mange on the package, together with a dozen other uses. - Benson's is the best corn starch for making sauces and gravies smooth and creamy. Write for booklet of recipes i " YT. Wilsen Publishing Co., Limited, 5