nearyr she continued, looking from the window, while Mark walked about the room and made notes of glass, putty, a door latch, and such little matters. tri "Well, I am not afraid with or without a cause. A child would not be afraid in this quiet place," said Rosalie. "How still! No sound to be heard but the rustle of the leaves and the Jipple of: water, fhat must be 'That fearful souls will not be an. swered so; They are not ever fearful for a cause But fearful for they are fearful.' " “Afraid? Of what? Is there any cause of fear?" ' "No, dear, no cause for fear; but as Emilia said of jealousy, 'one might say of fear: "Why, you see, my dear, this house is too remote from the village for any one but a farmer, and as it stands upon the reserved school lands, of course no farmer can cultivate the ground."' "Will it not be too far for you?" "With me it is different. I like to walk, and do not grudge my steps. The three miles' walk, morning and evening, will do me good. My only anxiety will be in leaving you. Will you be very lonesome, dear?â€r V r"Lonesorilet I don"t know. I should be lonesome anywhere without you, Mark." "But will you be afraid to stay all day long alone?" am .35 m»; tNt “an,“ G, h a a P y 3: 1E. Ei, v Wigs 9GNK' th"' 3% 3%? it tsNt "jiHlfs? Wig n 5‘, wi, wry ' ‘ 'Egh h†>5 Lu. Mr, - Wi, ,5 (:cii',isi,4 is a 3% 1 b?. ' § iR M,),' fs' all ‘3: tlt, P a _. 'er% IMF" - IB, " Fa',, * (A tb' h i"& am: 3%" aim“ Eihdi wa -, "I know it is; and I only wonder that it has been left so long untenant- ed." "A very different abode from that you have left for my sake, dear Rosa- lierand yet, Rose, it is a palace com- pared to some." - - - Mark Sutherland and Rosalie alighted, and entered the house, while the driver secured his horses and gave them water. The cabin was unusually large and well built, being nearly thirty feet square, and con- structed of huge logs, well hewn, andl well cemented. The cabin fronted south, where one door admitted into the only room; opposite this door, in the north wall, stood the large, open fireplace. The room was lighted by! two windows, fronting each other, east and west. The house was in good repair, with the single exception of, the broken windows. l NOW mu) m TWO was ONLY, FULL SIZE, Pricel.00 TRIAL sug, Pricetioo - Half a mile within the Grove, where the trees were thicker, stood the cabin originally built for a school and meeting-house. There was not a foot of cultivated ground around it, nor a house, nor a field, within three miles of it. Wolf's Grove was not what its name indieated--an isolated piece of wood. It was rather a portion of that vast, unbroken forest stretching back and back hundreds of miles, and even to the banks of Lake Superior. Here the old primeval forest trees were of gigantic size, but thinly scattered, and standing singly apart, like the out- posts of a vast armv._ _ _ "No, they ain't nyther, but they've got a heap o' sense. We are driving. Now, if I had o' been ti-foot with a gun, or anything that looks like a gun to it, why, it would ha' taken wing in a minute. Same case with a deer--it'll stand right still and look at you going past with your team; but only just let it catch its eyes on you when you’re walking 'long o' your gun, and it's off in an instant." _ "It's a prairie chicken. It won't take the trouble to move--you'll see," said the man, driving slowly mast, and leaving the bird, standing still... . it y' -Fiiit'y'Gua" "be; - iiéerryutame,†said Rosalie. CHAPTER XX.--(Cont'd). A little farther on, the sprightly eyes of the girl lighted noon a large, speckled bird, standing still. "What a beautiful bird! What is 383i Remedy have lost tone. Mother Seigel's Syrup is made from the curative extracts of certain roots, barks, and leaves, which have a re- markable tonic and strengthen- ing effect on all the organs of digestion. The distressing symp~ toms of indigestion or liver _troubles soon disappear under its beneficial action. Buy a bottle to-day, but be sure you get the genuine Mother Seigel's Syrup. There are many imita- tions/but not one that gives the same health benefits. 1015 I51: Indigestion, bilioi1sness, head- aches, flatulemee, pains after eating, constipation, are all com- mon symptoms of stomach and liver tioubles. And the more you neglect them the more you suffer. Take Mother Seigel's Syrup if your stomach, liver, or bowels are slightly deranged or llkiLtijiit:t:; Biihioutiness, Indi,arestidii' The P'ianter's Dasrghter J' MOTHER SYRUP yytiW'iwEW.t,it?st.t"iara'rAWyMet0al%tWrS. as; iSrarAii':rt'at?'cb5yit 'iiid:iiis:sw.sit:tyirif?,5 is the .mmmm...mwwm‘_.fl___,‘.‘_,._.... - ce _ _ _ _"iNeT te"_-_h__N'rre-e_-ee"_"_-" 7W?“ @©%©$'MJ©MWW®M©$®Q©$©¢©®©$©$©®MW It}: Or, The Queen of' Belle giver. FORE51ErrrasFa! and Mark busied himself with the win- dow sashes, trying pane after pane in the empty forms. But at length, turning around, he smiled and said: “It's no use, Rosalie; I'm not a woman could not stand upright in it. Then they began to arrange their furniture. It was very easily done, they had so little-a bedstead, with its appointments, a table, a half-dozen chairs, and almost everything else in half-dozens. The bedstead had al, tready been put up in the corner, and the table plaged in the corresponding corner between the door and the east window. They set the chairs in their places, and then Mark began to un- pack the china, while Rosalie arrang- , ed it on the shelves of the corner- (cupboard. There were several things C'-"y-F:,ii,ii,i,i,i,i.t,,s, of past refinement-out of keeping with their present condi- tion; among them, the French china, that looked upon their rough pine, \shelves as the elegant Mark Suther-‘ iii) and the fair and delicate Rosalie Hooked in their made log cabin, and ‘the superb white Marseilles counter- :panes, whose deep fringes touched the rough plank floor; and the tester and valance of fine and beautiful i1i(tfl work; and, lastly, the tamboured cur-i tains that lay upon the chairs, ready'; to be put up when Mark should havel mended the windows. These were; certainly out of place here, but it) could not be helped; they were Rosa-' lie's little personal effects, endeared, to her by long possession, and by) their having been the property, and’ some of them-the tamboured cur-! tains and the net valance, for in-' stance-the handiwork of her mo-l ther. By sunset all was arranged.) Now the young master of the house! began to employ himself, taking out; the sashes and laying them upon thei table, and laying pane after pane in' their places. 1 It The room, as I said, was large and Isquare, with a window east and west, (facing each other, and a stone fire.. ‘place north, facing a broad door south. The walls were unplastered, (hut well planed and cemented, and gray with time and use. The floor lwas of rough but sound pine plank. A broad shelf over the fireplace served for a mantel-piece. In the corner between the east window and the fire.. place stood the step-ladder leading to the loft. In the opposite corner, be- tween the west window and the fire- place, were three triangular shelves, that did duty as cupboard or buffet» Finally, the sashes of the windowsl were good, but the glass was alll lbroken out of them. This was the' ‘state of the room when Mark and; Rosalie looked around it. Mark went‘ up to the step-ladder to examine the loft, but found it so low that even i) lwornan could not stand upright in it. "Never mind, dear; you will be one of the honored pioneer women of the West. And now, let us see if we can- not get this place into a little order." And Mark and Rosalie found them-i selves standing, looking at each other," alone, in the forest cabin. It was a moment in which flashed back upon each the memory of their whole past lives, and the intense realization of their present position. A doubt whe- ther to weep or smile quivered overl Rosalie's features. Mark saw the, tremoroof her lips and eyelids, and) drew her to his heart; and she droop-? ed her head upon his shoulder and smiled through her tears. He whis-; pered, cheerily: l At two o'eloek the capacious wagon of the hotel stood before the door, laden with furniture, trunks, provi-, sions, and so forth. A tolerable seat was arranged for Rosalie among the baggage; but Mark, on foot, accom- panied the landlord. The horses never got out of a walk, so that it was nearly four o'eioek when they entered Wolf's Grove and drew up before the log cabin. Mr. Garner assisted Mark to unload the wagon, and take in the, furniture and arrange the heaviest] part of it. Then, having watered his' horses, he wished them good luck, jumped_upon his ~seattand drove off., All the forenoon of the next day Mr. Garner, the landlord, was absent with his team; so that our young peo- ple were obliged to defer their re- moval until the afternoon. In the evening thehunters returned from an unsuccessful _ expedition; fatigued and mortified, they gathered around the supper table. But the curiosity of the hostess elicited from them the fact that they had not even hit upon the track of the wolves. The afternoon was employed by Mark Sutherland in collecting to- gether necessary provisions, to be taken with their furniture to the cabin; and by Rosalie in hemming napkins, preparatory to her house- keeping. A __ "I am sure my wife prefers it to an inferior cabin nearer the village." "Yes, indeed, I do," said Rosalie. "Well, every one to their taste," observed the landlord, cracking his whip and making his horses fly. They reached home in good time for dinner. "Why, of course." I have already taken it." "I knowed that; but I thought when she saw how lonesome it was, she'd object. 'Tain't many women who'd agree to live out there in that lone- some place." “Well, are you goihg to tale it?" asked the driver, looking around as he took the reins and started. "If you’d like a drink, there's one of the finest swings in the whole country down there," said the land- lord, taking a tin cm) from the wagon and handing it to Mark. Rosalie was already going down the path. They reached the spring, and found the wa- ter cold and clear as crystal and then rfgt, up; and, as their host was in a urry to be off, they entered the caygxall to return to the village. CHAPTER XXI. I forgotten." l, "Go back to Shelton and back this l evening and sun already down? You ywiu be tired to death!" ,[come to maturity!" T (be-so/nets; I wonder who it will! " "Well, don't laugh yours off your‘be that will wake ? Not I, as I am, v' shoulders, bu’t tell me what you’relnow, or it wouldn't be waking, and: :latl‘%‘lrnn% at! t br ht h _lnot I, the old I of -before the war;: _ a tiahest,).',1,ve no ioug a mate n01 Ahat I, my dear, is as dead as if she' "Oh, no! You don't say sol" had been shot.. I want to be happy} "It is a positive fact." and jolly again, yet when I think. of 1 "We have forgotten soap and I the old life it seems no more possible', brooms, too; we have forgottenito take it up and live it than to go I everythmg!†. " I back and be a little girl. I have died,‘ 1 Only a few things that makel or grown up, or been born again since jeverythlryig useless. , lthen~l don't quite know which! " l What s to be done? We can t cook) _ . _ , . \ l supper to-night, or even breakfast to- i {it}? ..lf,y1v, tlh‘tlt I Idm’ Aâ€: “13$ rlb‘e’l lmorrow morning, without a fire." l 1 event, am iat . 2111110 even 'vishi l "No. Let's see-l think the surestlto be the same again. _ _ way will be for me to go back to Shel-l Sometimes to lose a self IS to find l ton this evening, and get the matches, ( a soul. ‘ and then I can also get soap, a broom] -----,-'F------. and my pistols, which were likewise; Wmir"N NW" “A“ "i__ei__----, "No, dear; I can walk that three miles in about an hour, borrow Mr. Garner's saddle-horse to ride back, and take him home again in the morn- ing, when I go to the office. And my brave little girl will not be afraid to stay here a few hours by herself?" "Afraid? No; surely not." "You can fasten the door with this wooden pin." "Oh, I shall not wish to fasten the door. I shall sit on the sill and watch the stars, and see if I can read our future destiny on their orbs, and wait for the moon to rise, and for you to eome." l Mark came in with the pail of wa- ter, and said he would go and get I some brush to kindle a fire. And lwhile he was gone, Rosalie put water in a basin to wash her hands prepara- tory to making the biscuits; and then lshe discovered that they had forgot- l ten soap also. And while she stood in ldismay, wondering what else might lhave been omitted, Mark re-entered 'with a pile of brush on his shoulders, ', "like Christian with his bundle of l sin," he said. He threw it down (upon the hearth, and began to look 2 around, and then he broke into a gay, prolonged laugh. T "What's the matter, Mark? Are lyou daring to laugh at me, with my) i sleexes and shirt tuclied up?" I "Oh, no! You don't say sol" "It is a positive fact." "We have forgotten soap and brooms, too; we have forgotten everything!" " "Only a few things that make everything useless." Rosalie, observing the floor littered, looked for the broom to sweep it up; and then laughed to find that, with all their getting, they-had got no broom. Blushing, Rosalie withdrew herself from his now yielding clasp; and, to cover her girlish embarrassment, she took the new bucket and put it in his hands, requesting him to go to the spring and bring her fresh water to fill the tea-kettle, and adding: "You shall see' what' riids"biseuits ang what nice tea I can make." "God forever bless you, you deli- cate, beautiful creature; and God for- ever forsake me, if, ever willingly I g1te, WY? a mfmept's pain or sorrow!" And he gazed down on her there standing within his arms-so small, so fair, so perfectly helpless, so ut- terly in his power; and all the wan- tonness of youth fled from before her helplessness and her beauty, and a flood of unutterable tenderness rush- ed over his heart; an, still gazing upon hyr..with infinite love, he said: Mark laughed, and bade her re- member that when she was "unele's" housekeeper that her housekeeping duties and responsibilities consisted in carrying the keys and ordering what she pleased to have for dinner. And he further advised her not to snap up her liege lord in that way. Whereupon Rosalie bade him mind his own business and his briefs; for that she would slap him, and box his ears, too, whenever the spirit moved her. Mark snatched her, laughing, to his bosom, and half suffocated her with kisses, and then, holding her tight, bade her do her Wickedest. I Everywhere-from coast to coast- you will hear the praises of Usit. I This wonderful complexion restorer is bringing the freshness and smooth- ness of youth to the faces of thou- sands of Canadian women. Everyone who has used it consistently has ob- tained splendid results and recom- mends it highly. The woman who is seeking a perfect complexion will find Usit an inestimable aid. All good druggists carry it. Manufactured by the Usit Manufacturing Company, Limited, 476 Roncesvalles avenue, Toronto. - “Yen teach me [to cook! I, my unele's housekeeper for two years!" exclaimed Rosalie. "And now, dear, I believe we are as well fixed as we can be for the pre- sent. Nothing remains but to get supper; and, as I was out here in the West two years before you ever saw it, I shouldn't wonder if I hadn't to giytyou some instruction." And he replaced the empty sashes in the window frames. Then, seeing the neglected barrel of flour, he wheeled it up against the wall, near the door, and said it must remain there for the present; and Rosalie took a coarse, clean table- cloth and spread it over the beef, that still lay upon the top. -- glazier, and so carefully as I thought I measured the sashes and the glass, they will not exactly fit, and so I suppose they must be left until to- morrow." , . . gm T? 't - {g " gg r cN g ' , IW, I 8“? â€a q , Sr, Ct _ 5% © "' w" lim . F " ‘ IN ‘ - - '= r. re a Highly Recommended For the Complexion. There were 100,000 fewer visitors to the London Zoological Gardens last year than during the previous ewelve months. Did you ever have a cold you could not get rid of? No-lt I did I'd still have it now. The land offered contains principal- ly an ore ‘called scheelite, yielding tungsten whigh is used principally in hardening steel. The deposit, ae- cording to mining engineers, should yield 30,000 tons of the metal, worth about $75.000,000. New Zealand Woman Gives Mining Land Worth $75,000,000. It is announced by the Government that a wealthy Woman resident of New Zealand has offered to make the colony a free gift of one of the most valuable pieces of mining land in the island, the only condition being that all profits from the sale of minerals shall be used for the support of wounded soldiers. l The great war of to-day, although Wit demands of many of the noble wo- â€men who have answered the call ‘igreater ability, responsibility, and :ithoroughness of training than has l ever been demanded of women before, ihas also offered opportunities of ser- (vice to others, hitherto merely women ’of fashion and the gay world, which I many have eagerly accepted. Women used only to organizing balls toil on committees; women who have shone ,in foreign capitals interpret for hap- less refugees; women who have play- -‘ed with petted children in charming jurseries establish orphanages, care ‘for destitute mothers, or adopt war babies. Other women, of the modern athletic'type, untrained in nursing, devote their nerve and muscle to slav- ing in hospita1s,-hastily improvised, ,ill equipped, overcrowded, under-l manned hospitals,-where they fag) (for the real nurses, and turn their; {hands to anything from writing iiiii/ (and messages for dying men to men-l ‘ial and often horrible tasks of wash.. iing, scrubbing and disinfecting. i fire, and not one of them has flinehed. "If ever this terrible time, which seems an endless nightmare, does really end," the American wife of an Englishman of high social position, who has been loyally working with the rest, wrote home recently, "and if I wake up to peace and pretiy' clothe; and Tay doings, and life as it used to Others give themselves, with their automobiles, to the Red Cross, and drive their own cars, filled with wounded, over war-torn roads and half-wrecked bridges with skill and daring. Often they run them under fire, and not one of them has flinehed. _ "Three wounds he received in this battle, whereat he laughed; but the Paynim~who shore his tall plume he cursed deeply, and rested not till he ihad, with his good sword, shorn off '; his head." ’ i That was in the day when every l gentleman who was not a priest must be a fighter, and could be a dandy only by the way. It was many years later that another type arose, dandy, first and fighter afterward: the grace-i ful idler, the society fop, suddenly, transformed by patriotism, at his country's call, into a hero. History' proved him, fiction adopted him; he became one of the most popular fig- ures in drama, story, and romance. But until now neither fact nor fiction has supplied a corresponding type of heroine. l Did Mark Sutherland-did Rosalie --did either imagine the grim horror of the next few hours? It was a night that one of them never, in after life, forgot-whose fearful memory jhaunted thought by day, and visions (by night, when the dreamer would start from sleep, and, with convulsive shivers and cold perspiration, gaze around in terror that could not be i reassured. What Fashionable Women Are Doing in the Great War. Centuries ago a chronicler of the crusades recorded quaintly of a cer- tain vain and valorous knight: She went to a box and took out two sheets, each of which, doubled, was tacked against a window, and be- cause the breeze still lifted them, a few "tacks were driven in the sides and bottoms of these temporary blinds to keep them down. Mark put on his coat, kissed Rosalie, bade her keep up her heart, and departed. She stood at the door watching him un- til he disappeared, and then entered the 1arhemythoyse. BIG GIFT FOR WOUNDED. "No, you must not do that, Rose, The woods are damp, and the evening air chill. And, now I think of it, this cabin will be too cool for you with this draught through the open win- dows. Let's see if we cannot do some- thing with them. If you had any- iching to tack up against them, Rosa- ie--" WAR AND BUTTERFLIES Sure He Would (To be continued.) l , i -si4-t1, U RH/Eï¬mfaé/ï¬ï¬f‘iï¬g I -iiitiht.iiitiiliiiiiilge:?)s, gpgï¬szgï¬ï¬‚flg ; E Tii' 'iir'i"5A' 4aiiiti2;iiiie somi/fiosssiiiijj/ijj,ij' i Imim000aoi0o0i0iatmsaiaims,miiomlilil I The butter should be gathered until the grains become about one half the l size of wheat. Then draw off the but- termilk through a strainer and wash the butter in cold water two or three times or until the wash water is re- moved practically clear. In washing, care should be exercised not to bring the grains together in one mass, but rather keep it in the granular condi- tion. The washing of the butter re- moves the buttermilk and makes the butter keep fora longer time. It also puts it in better condition for salting. The butter should be taken from the churn in the granular condition and the salt sprinkled over it before it has been worked together. Usually, a scant ounce of salt is added for each 1 pound of butter. i One working, at the time of salt- ing is usually sufficient, providing the butter is hard enough when removed Strain all cream into the churn. This will remove all clots and particles of curd, and there will be no danger of white specks in the butter. Do not fill the churn over one third to one half full. Give the cream room for agitation, which insures quick churning. Turn the churn just fast enough to give the cream the greatest amount of agitation. It is often advisable to save some of the buttermilk of one churning to be used as starter (the same as yeast in bread making) for the next batch of cream. Add a small amount of this buttermilk to the sweet cream when enough has been gathered for a churning; thoroughly stir it, and it will ripen very much more rapidly. Care should be exercised to keep this old buttermilk in as good condition as possible. or ripened. To ripen the cream warm it to a temperature of 75 to 80 de- grees, until it is sour enough; then cool down to a temperature of from 55 to 60 degrees, which is right for churning. Let it stand at this tem- perature for an hour or so before churning, if possible. This will cause the butter to come in better condition. Cream that is being ripened should be thoroughly stirred several times be- fore it is ready for churning. water-allution method comes last. The cream should be kept in as nearly a sweet condition as possible until enough has been gathered for a churning. This should then be soured ii.iipaMM'sm)gmmoammsniioiauamamamirgig lil . l War upon Pain! , V Making Better Farm Butter. Nearly all butter sold by the farm- er is of poorer quality than it should be. By more careful handling and better methods there is no reason why this product should not only be improved in quality, but a betterprice should be received for it. By carry- ing out the following conditions and methods a very much better grade of butter should be produced: Hand separator cream produces bet- ter butthr than that separated by any other method. The deep can surround- ed by coldrwater is second best; pans and crocks are third best, and the water-dilution method comes last. f rs . b - 's' th ( Ci, EL gr, Rf ' . F/lj,?,": [i)) - "x, iilMi le L 'f,??: f,), iiiiiii2iiiti'i""f, 'ilti - :63] 'dirt,;gh ' UM “$4.5? 4 we: kt, g ,. \ -'I ar: - fic,' Eimi?i%lirik, _ g 3 ' 'ft, ' beau., I ‘.A i8itit.t,a l . m i)it' E El ' 1li,tlit'; .. $25 a Ei-ttiii)""'; _ 0’33ng JV (eil - ri-k-'-",-",-')-?),--',-?,--:'-,'-::--- = ." "rt-tr.-- ".a":ea=zs, - 7 v\"‘“~'r-' are _ _., "rut We:':..:,.:"-'. 25,-- " "ct2-ssc'e.'7-rrtiFE-t-.'5 'r." f5%ss,gs., aga9F-tt.5, t-." "C.:,,iirtg “Eva" " w' N\,. I .... blends, Every leaf is fresh, fragrgnt fail ot its natural deliciousness. Sold in sealed packets only. B 107 O Only Fine, Flavours, Teas are used to produce the famous ï¬g â€is sr",:.',':',"':",),'":':";.',-,':),-),',":";,),':'-: 'i'ii,m',',i'ii'_i'ii'i' t'iil iii") 'ti"ii'iifs,,,sl'i's1 t'iti'i"','ii':ii'ii: ii):):,'), Irii'i-(jiid Ei, i'l's'i! “9% ttt L@?' 's?ii'j?,f t" = lg, , ' : ' ,qyp R I,' P.' ' ','t','rPPet'tR, numb: _ “V‘s N7T',"4 Ft . â€in .-.'~ Ea" Ke'r,':8tts?,a itE h-ky? m 51’Ea . r3; m Kt WE x 3. w. ' no > tr 'igEts' > Etitiiihttit Gila? 51A §~~ 3&th 353%; Pain is a visitor to every home and usually it comes quite unexpectedly. But you are prepared for every emergency if you keep a small bottle of Sloan's Liniment handy. It is the greatest 15 pain killer ever discovered. ,'.jil Simply laid on the skin--- . iii-sri'--,' no rubbing required-lt drives ,, it, the pain away instantly. It is §% really wonderful. 3]. , (5iaoan's Liniment __ jiiiijiliilil2%iylllllll1 - - _ M r-2- , 25:: "w, in: May 9 iW,%r, ., ygv'js,'i,eia"M a RRI 2.22;. TWN, 'ttmis, t'jrat :92 til 'atm A , . 2.92.3; ik'v)'f3 'ist ' = $52 2‘22 c .33, Er2tl a Ifg, li% r-ttFa' - "V Ile; ' J ’ 'W' 2 .959 a §23 “ Eh', , s%t2' ' w g, tf kg? .%&:§u\ Mig 'Wtl 1tiN r 3:32:23 332% tret th" "m m, E , - .. IRtE 1.9 " 2 , _ .9 9999, 9,, illw, 'iti9, 12ii 333%. illiiiUia ItiEWh 2341-, _lgi)ice, ghar, BM. 2&2: 'l%Eiilll4 $8.11 922 “" wer 2 F I " B81, " 22222.22.» =' 22:22 , 'Eltmil tiltisiiiiiii%l,aii li'ttSl 22:92,: - 2 In order to make a uniform colored butter for the entire year, some color may be used. Very little will be re- quired during the spring and summer months, when the cows are getting green feed. Colored butter is not only more appetizing, but can be sold on the market for a very much better price than that which is not colored. The color should be added to the churn before starting to churn. Pack or print the butter as soon as it has been worked sufficiently and put it in a cool place until it is taken to the market. Remember that the appearance of the package, as well as the way the butter is packed, has a great deal to do with the selling price. from the churn. If the butter is some- what soft when taken out, it can be salted and set away for a few hours until it gets hard enough to finish. Butter is usually worked enough when the water has been removed so that it will bend without breaking. Too much working will spoil its grain and make it salvy, while leaving too much water in it will spoil its keeping qual-. ities. name, pmiis'giiii'o6ii'ir'iAN1fiti"?hiiiC' ING CO., Consolidated. For sale at all Chemists and General Stores. Free booklet on request. Petroleum Jelly. Made in Canada It is a, most effective antiseptic dressing tor cuts, bruises, boils, and skin irritations of all kinds, such as eczema, poison ivy and barber's itch. Also good for earns. AVOID SUBSTITUTES. Insist on “Vase- 1335’: iJ1,,g,r/,ti,y,?,,,r,oy,tty. karma?“ (Consolidated) - -_. 1330 CHABOT AVE., MONTREAL MV&§€EE§‘E€ Mark CARBOLATED WE it needs looking after. "Vaseline" Carbolated will help it to heal quickly and pre'- vent risk of infection. - First aid treatment with CHESEBROUGH MF', Just a Scratch iii}; C-ci., i?liitiif' g i-tcr/tij, '.‘