Hamilton l y Railway and Steamship Ticket Agent. M. C. DICKSON, 8 James St. North AOEHTHEHOUEEH UAAAE HHHHHHHITNINIHIA Reliable information as to Passâ€" ports, reservations for Single or round trip, Ocean ‘Tickets, Money Orâ€" ders, Travelers‘ Cheques, "Ask Mr. Dickson, the experienced Railway and Steamship Agen about these trips." To England, Ireland, Scotland, Cuba, Mexico, Souht Amrica, West Inâ€" dies, Florida, Jamaica, Thousand Isâ€" lands, Alexandria Bay, Montreal, Quebec, Tadousac, Chicoutimi, The Saugenay, Murray Bay. UbHEENET EPAAA Â¥IWWUdStl Hamilton A good living wage to beginners which materially increases with experience and proficiency. Write or callâ€" f Clean, airy, sunlit workrooms. Short hoursâ€"a 47â€"hour week, with Saturday halfâ€"holiday. Valuable training in agreeable work for the inexperienced. GIRLS WANTED Robt. Duncan & Co. _ _ Remember always satisfac» tion or your money back. Eaton‘s ° Highland Linen See Rouse 6 Better facilities than ever for efficient and propipt service. Shell Rimmed â€" Spectacles and eye glasses in every varieâ€" ty and style. 62 King E. 4 Doors West of P. 0. Hamilton : Established A. D. 1900 24 sheets of paper and 24 velopes in a box. Correspondence Cards in same colors at 75¢ per box Made in vhite and the followâ€" ing colors, chamois, blue, pink, lavender, Scotch grey. N Elegant Corresponence _ Paper at a moderate price. / Jas. Crawford â€" Shell Rimmed all shades either white, black, wine o1 brown, put on your own glassâ€" es while you wait. VACATION TRIPS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1919 or repair (to those yoi wearing ? MERCURY MILLS Manufacturer of Wedding Cakes, Ice Cream and Fine Candy. *PAINTS" James St. and Market Square Hamilton. f Weddings, Receptions, At Homes and Entertainments upplied. ; Go to H. Bull‘s Shoe Store. Me:‘s Fine Shoes, Women‘s H. BULL LUNCH COUNTERS CATERERS 14 King St. W., Hamilton. Pumps and Oxfords ,and also a complete line of Flee Foot Boot Repairing promptly atâ€" tended to. For Seasonable Footwear Sporting and Tennis. goods Prices and goods are right REPAIRING A SPECIALTY Shoe Store Next Door to Post Office No DO YOU NEED « GLASSES I. B. ROUSE CONFECTIONER 448 a e s io n e o n o t t io o P Tt ts LIMITED 75¢ Ontario Ont. re Ethel. Barrymore, known heré and abroad as America‘s foremost actress, has added fresh laurels to her already long list of successes in her latest screen play, "The Divorcee," a Metro production which will be the attractiOn at Moore‘s Theatre on September 6th. i Fill the ice cream scoo equal parts of _ cremecak pistachio ice cream. Turn ir sherbet glass and serve with nish of whipped cream, sw an dflavored with a few sl toasted almonds. or tne fruit or vegetable that you have been canning that you will nev. er so long as you live be able to relâ€" ish it Aagain. If you work only a couple of, hours over your canning you may be able to reclaim your hands with a few minutes‘ attention. There are cuticle bleaches that will restore mild cases of. stain. And you will still be a fairly pleasant mem ber of society instead of the poor nerveâ€"worn creature that you would be if you ‘kept at it all day. Aoaimâ€"nerxes.will he on _the ra edge ,you will be. on the"verge tears, your hands will be so far ; that it will take weeks for them retain their natural color and will be so saturated wiht the fl of the fruit or vegetable that Always read your receipts very thoroughly before you start preparâ€" ing the fruit for canning. It may be that you need some ingredient that you have not on hand and you should assemble Aall needful things before be ginning. Next, dress yoursel! as coolly as possible. If ever a houseâ€" wife was justified in‘ instructing â€" a maid to say that she was not at home to visitors it is on canning day. Do not attempt to see casual callers if that means that you must leave your canning at a critical point. Anyone who has benn through it her self would understand if you sent word that you were not able to see anyone ‘because you were canning. It is usually best not to attempt to can more than you can manage in two or three hours at a stretch. For canning is immensely. fatiguing. If you make a day of it the result will probably ‘be that you simply won‘t be good for anything when it is over WWWe rassed edge you will e. on â€"the"verge f M : Mrs It is all very well to say ‘"Choose a cool day to do your canning." You usually can when the fruit or vegetables that youâ€"intend to can are available at the lowest price or when the farmer with whom yâ€"u have placed your order brings them to you. And it usually happensâ€"does it not?â€"that that day is a scorcher. For the sake of the fruit or vegeâ€" tables you must do the: canning at once, and, besides it is a great inâ€" convenience to have the fruit and vegetables around. If you prepare it for cooking and boil it up you might wait till a cooler day to put it . in jars ,but you know what a distressâ€" ing th‘iï¬lg it is to have the canning things left about. No. the best thing to do is to roll up your sleeves, don yoru thinnest bungalow apron and see it through. If possible, do §rour canning in a basement or summer kitchen and not in the kitchken where you do regular meal preparation. A â€" twoâ€"burner gas stove or oil stove is all that ycua will need, and this you can have sec up in a woodshed or a laundry. The laundry stove or burner will probâ€" ably answer the purpose. ‘ The Best Way to Can and Keep Cool in Warm Weather is to do the W‘U‘rk in a Basement or Summer Kitchen, or on the Laundry Stove COFFEE PISTACHIO SUNDAT WARMâ€"WEATHER CANNING 1sS MALINLY FOR _â€" WOMEN H PAID UP LIST () ET H E L B A°R R Yâ€"M O E Wviie erve witnh a garâ€" ream, â€" sweetened _ few shredded. :rimsby scoop . with necake and irn into the manag stretch. fatiguing e result 11 : D Dec ‘anning. ittempt to anage in ) V fla on vou or L to mm mm 1P mm t wes~» Sungaes are always served indiâ€" dividually. Fill a sherbet or frappe glass moderately full with vanilla or coffee ice creaim or a combination of both, preferably using an ice cream scoop. Pour over coffee marshmalâ€" low sauce, which should be ice cold, and serve at once. 3 ‘a inio which one cantu ck one‘s fingets that the muff does not seem necesâ€" sary. Perhaps you have an old muff that was made when muffs were very large. If so it is quite likely that you can have a neat little neck piece made of it. If it is an entire skin, such as a large fox skin, it will be just the thing. If there is only a small amount of good fur in it then that may be used in connection with plush or some other pile fabric for the neck piece. COFFEE MARSHMALLOW SUNDAE And while you are at it getting out your autumn and winter coats to have the tailor do them over before he becomes engrossed with autumn orders, get out your old furs and have a look at them. It is well to have fur repairing done for next autumn now that the furriers are not too busy and when there is no dangâ€" er that you will need those furse for warmth. Fur of all sorts is going to be very high in ‘price, and if you have any fur on hand ~you should make use of it before, it becomts dried out with long lying unused in L will not charge so much for the job. His work will consist then in having the fabric thoroughly steamed and cleaned and in slightly modifying the cut to suit the present mode before putting it together again. _ ; It was an old device of the thrifty to maave their dresses and coats turn ed by way of renovating them, but you probably never went to that trou ble yourself l «cause you felt that the time involved was ‘ worth more than new ma.teril.? would be. But time changes and ‘old ways and old customs ‘become _ new. And so it happens that there is quite a demand among the bettre sort of tailors for this work of turning coats. The best sort of woolen material is exâ€" tremely high price, and any real wool is at a premium. A man‘s tail or whose ‘high grade of work makes him rank wiht the be?t said recently that he had a number of orders . to rebuild men‘s overcoats and that man of them came from men. who could very easily afford a dozen new overcoats if they chose. But they are unwilling to ~buy a new one when teh price is as high as it is and when it is quite possible to have an old one, turned. Women, too, who have top coats that contain really good material ‘are having them ripped and turned. A good deal of work is involved in the ripping and it is quite g possible to have this done by the little seamâ€" stress who comes in by teh day, or to do this yourself, so that the tailor will not charge so much for the job. His work ‘will consist then in having the fabric thoroughly steamed and in illiamson w THRIFT HINT®S PAID UP LIST 1gn there are women thye cannot dispense a measure, pockets in scarfs have taken thei: M( )OTC L1 rimshy )1 M m men B1 smm 1 mm 0 mm« t m i caABEPEANDPENT,. sRIMSEHy Sept.. 1|1GQ imsby Mar. 31120 ..._.._‘.uâ€"-â€"\ entre June 1|20 Dec.=31|IG $â€"RR i f e [ PÂ¥ Bd 3% Proof that Some Women do Avoid Operations YX > s < MAME C Every Sick Woman Shoï¬@}_‘g _ NYDIA T. PIN TT "*I suffered from female trowbles which caused picrcing pains like a knife through my back and side. I finally lost all my strength so I had to go to bed. The doctor advised an operation but I would not listen to it. I thought of what I had read about Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound and tried it. The first bottle b:rught great relief and six bottles have entirely cured me, All women who havye femalo trouble of any kind should try Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound." y Canton, Ohio.â€"*"I suffered from a female trouble which caused me much suffering, and two doctors decided that T vgb ulclil have to go through an operation before I could / get well. "*My mother, who had been helped by Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ham‘s Vegetable Compound, advised me to try it beâ€" fore submitting to an operation. It relieved mefrom my troubles so I can do my house work without any difficulty. I advise any woman who is afflicted with female treubles to give Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegeâ€" table Compound a trial and it will do as much Te for them.""â€"Mrs. Marts BoyD, 1421 5th St., / 1/ N. E., Canton, Ohio. | / 13 Mrs. Etta Dorion, of" Ogdensburg, Wis., says: How Mrs. Boyd Avoided an Operation. JOHN MACDONALD Chair No Repealâ€"No Government beer shopazâ€"No i ment beer and whiskey shops. Be sure you ar four ET ES > PQ aolf _ elf mnnltccin the eAE T. man 2l REVIOUS to the Ontario Temperance Act the drink bill of the P Province approximated $36,000,000 per year, an amount about equal to Ontario‘s share of the Annual interest on our National Debt. In the face of our financial responsibilities alone, is this the time to repeal the Ontario Temperance Act or relax a single one of its restricâ€" tions upon waste of money and man ‘power? To every question on the Referendum Ballot voteâ€" £ “NO!†Canada entered the Great War with a National Debt of $337,000,000, or $42 per head of population. Canada emerges with a National Debt to date of $1,670,263,691, which is expected to approximate $2,000,000,â€" 000 by the end of the fiscal yearâ€"or about $250 for every man, woman and child in the country. Interest charges alone will eat up nearly oneâ€" half our present national revenue, and soldiers‘ pensions will have to be provided as well. HE WORLD is staggering with debt. Some countries are verging on bankruptcy. _ Five years ago Canada had never dreamed of the fin: carries toâ€"day. 4 QN‘CA it Before The Legacy of War ntarto Canada‘s Dead and Missing Canada‘s Wounded â€" â€" . Canada‘s National Debt â€" Soldiers‘ Annual Pensions â€" Can Ontario Afford to Spend ©$356,000,000 a Year on Booze? °o "weyP airman ment beer shopaâ€"No intoxicating beer in Standard Hotel barsâ€"No Governâ€" hops. Be sure you are on the voters‘ list, Be sure you mark your ballot Xâ€"in the column headed No. Four Timesâ€""No! Referendum Committee & k L &A A D. A. DUNLAP; M<Clary‘s Pandora never dreamed of the financial burden she «34 w THE Boiler doesn‘t crowd the dinner off the f Pandora on washâ€"days. You can set the f)-/ boiler either way, across or lengthwise of the top. ' There is no guessâ€"work baking either. The oven Q has a glass door which keeps the baking in full | view. The thermometer tells whether the oven is hot enough or not.=The oven, as you must have heard, is very evenly heated. This dependable range has easyâ€"working grates; porcelain enameled reservoir, which may be removed for cleaning. The Pandora is the sort of range you have always wanted. See it, reasuser. Te esd TeP eE NHYTH LYD!IA E.PINKHAM MED Sold by Jas. A. Wray, Grimsby â€" _ $1,670,263,691 â€" _ $35,000,000 Kiays IAM MEDICINE CQO.£LYNN,.M2ASS. °[ ANDREW S. GRANT,; Piceâ€"Chairman and Secretary. (1001 Excelsior 1ife Bldg.) 635,0358 149,709 the leading * _A "! 61