Exeter Times, 1912-10-24, Page 3BECAME SO WEA
FROM DIARREA
Had To Quit Work
Diemlima, especially if aft to run any
lenetb of time causes great weakness,
so the only- thin ereveut this is to
check it ox as firie appearance, YOU
• will fled the- s few doses of Dr. Powler's
Extract of Wild Strawberry will do this
quickly er.d effectively. Mr. Jim. R.
• r Childerhouse, Orilla., One, writes: -
"'When in Port William, last summer,
• was taker sielo with diarrhma, and
became so westrand suffered such great
pain, II had quit work. Our Manager
advised me te ter Dr. Fowler's Extract
• "-
of Wild Strawberry se on my way home
I bought bottle, and after taking four
•doses 1 was cured. We always keep •0,
bottle in the house. We haVe also used
it for ottr children, and find it an excellent
• remedy for summer complaint." •
Price 35 cents. When you go to get a
bottle of "Dr, Powlera," insist on being
given what you ask for, as we know of
many cases where unscrupulous dealers
have handed out some other preparation.
The genuine is manufactured only by
The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto,
Oht.
CZAR OF RUSSIA.'S 1VEA.LTH.
He Is One of the Wealthiest Men
• In the World.
• One of the few hard-working offi-
cials in the Russian Empire has just
died. This was Count Hendrikoff,
master of ' ceremonies at the Rus-
sian Court and the Czar's financial
advisee As the Czar is one of the
wealthiest men in the world, it is
an immense task to supervise all
the sources of his income.
The Czar's income is estimated
M $37,600,000 a year, and is made
up of the civil list ani revenues
from varieue indastrial undertak-
ings, crown lands and private • es-
tates. The civil list amounts to
about $8,000,000. Of thisdblie Czar.
spends $1,000,000 on an aenual stab-
sicly to the theatres anal academies;
• $260,000 is granted to the Czarina
• and the Dowager Empress as pin
DadheY; $500,000 goes to the Grand
Dukes and Grand Duchesses; $20,-
000 is put a,wa,y yearly for each
daughter and $50,000 for the heir to
the throne until they are of age.
The rest the Ozer keeps for himself,
and it is well known that he spends
• only a. naafi] part of this and saves
the rest.
The Czar's) pereonal savings, ac-
• cording to a report published in
• 1906 then amounted to $45,000,000.
allow they probably amount to $60,-
000,000. The greater part of this
money is deposited ist • various
banks, particularly in the Bank of
England. So•me of it is invested in
sugar refineries and other under-
takings es, well as in lend. The
enormous private estate's 'in Siberia
and Turkestan cover an area as
large as Germany and include SOITIO
of the richest ores, gold, silver,
platinum and so forth, an the world.
But the mines are worked in a
wasteful wav and the Czar's in-
come from this source only amounts
.to $7,500,000. • The crown lands,
• whiph toyer an area, the size of Ire-
land, are also badly managed and
yield a, revenue of only $20,000,000,
of ,which $6;000,800 goes • to the
Grand Dukes.
POIliTF:D PARAGRAPHS.
Be good-andyour wife may be
happy.
Street car conductors are not ne-
cessarilydfond of jam.
Perhaps girls kiss each other
merely to keep in practice.
• A man dislikes faint praise al-
most as much as he hates abuse.
• An ounce of intuition may be
. worth more then a pousdd of tuition.
There's a, good deal of haman na-
ture in woman's inhumanity to wo-
',a me mile
M
FOR THE LIVER
• SO GOOD RIS
• MILBURN'S
LAXA-LIVER PILLS
They will regulate the flow of bile to
•. act properly on the bowels, and will tone,
renovate, and purify theliver, removing
every result of liver •trouble from the
temporal y, but disagreeable, bilious head -
•ache to die severest forms .of liver cont.'-
Olaine.
Mrs. johe R. Barton, Milt Cove, NS.,
auffered, more than tongue
can tell, from fiver troubles. I tried
oeveral kinds of medicine, but got no
relief until I got Milburn's Laxa-Liver
• Pills. They are a wonderful remedy,"
Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 26
cerits per vial, or 5 vials for $1.00, at all
cicalae, or moiled direct. on receipt of
price by The T, Milburn Co,, Litnited,
ebrotittk; bait ' '
7,
110115E110UP
DAINTY DISHES.
Caramel Pita -One (rep of eour
cream, one cup of sugar, half a cup
of ohoppe.d raisins, a pineh ef
soda. Put over the fire and cook
until the Mixture is 'dark. 11;lake
a paste of a tablespoonful of flour
with a little cold water and stir in-
to the caramel. Cook until it thick,.
ens, Flavor with vanilla. •
Bake
with top and bottom crusts.
Calves Brains with Scrambled
Eggs. -Wash the brains carefully
and boil in .salted water for twenty
minutes. Plunge into cold water.
With a silver fork tear apart into
small pieces. Put one onion with a
tablespoonful of butter in a hot fry-
ing pan; when •sizzling add the
brains, and four well beaten eggs.
Scramble all together. Flavor with
mushroom catsup, seasoh and serve
very hot on sounds of buttered
toast.
Salt Pork with Cream Gravy. -
Slice the pork thin, put it into a
frying pan, and cover with sweet
milk. Set it upon the stove and
bring slowly to the boil, and the
pork is freshened. Drain off the
milk into a saucepan and keep hot
While you fry the pork to a stiee
brown. Take up the meat and keep
hot in the open oven while you
make the grevy, Stir flour into the
fat in the pan until you have a
smooth paste. Then add gradually
the milk in the saucepan in which
the pork was heated. Bell up once
and pour over the meat, You could
not tell this from fresh pork.
Macaroni Croeuettes, Cheese
Sauce. -For the croquettes take
enough cold boiled macaroni to
make two cupfuls when out into
small pieces. Add to this one tea-
spoonful of lemon juice, one-half
teaspoonful of onion juice, a little
celery salt and seasoning to taste.
Mix with one cupful of white sauce
made of two tablespoonfuls of but-
ter, two tablespoonfuls of flour,
seasoning and one, cup of boiling
milk. Let the mixture cool. Form
n cone-shaped croquettes, roll in
egg and breadcrumbs and fry in
deep fat till a very light brown.
Stick a small spray of parsley in
the hop of each. croquette. Cheese
Sauce -To one cupful of white
sauce add one-half cup of grated
cheese and one heaping tablespoon -
fill of chopped walnut meats.
Roney Cake. -Three cups of fieur
sifted twice with two teaspoonfuls
of baking powder, one-half of a
cup of white sugar, and the same
of railk ; one-fourth of a cup of but-
ter, one egg, and a. cupful of
strained hoaey. Rub and beat the
butter and sugar to a cream, stir,
and beat into this the milk and
beaten egg. Do this gradually,
whipping light as you proceed. Now,
add the honey in like manner and
when you have a light, smooth bat-
ter, work in the flour with a vrood-
en spoon. a There should be flour
enough to enable you to make the
• ingredients into a soft dough, suf-
ficiently consistent to be rolled into
a sheet a little over a quarter of
an inch thick. Out into shapes with
your biscuit cutter and bake for
eighteen minutes. Keep the pan
covered with thick paper for the
first half of the time. The cakes
should be light and puffy.
Genuine Sancritraut.--Select fine
cabbage,' and take out the hearts
which are not required for the
ea,urekraut. Put all the outside
leaves through a cabbage cutter.
When they are minced fine put a
layer of them about four inches
thick into a stone jar, or barrel, or
keg, end sprinkle salt and white
sugas over it. Now porriad with a
wooden mallet Or pestle until you
have a compact raass. Put over
this a seeonel layer of cabbage,
salt, and sugar,. and potted this
fiat. Proceed in this order until
all the. materials are used up.
Pound hard to 'firm' all. Salt and
sugar to your. liking. It is nob well
to make it very salt: Do not add
water it making:- If you pound
long enough there will be enough
liquid to cover the cabbage. Set
in a orner of the kitchen, cover
the barrel or crock with a cloth,
then with a board, and lay a heavy
•weight upon the top of all. If dur-
ing the winter the liquid settles
down and leaves the cabbage ex-
posed, pound all down with the sai-
tato beetle. InthiS way you may
keep. the seueskteut nicely until
Jute.
• HOUSEHOLD HINTS,
Soap setaps put in a little bag
cite be. used for dishweshing,
, Maatard will not get dry if it is
mixed with milk instead of water.
'Exeellent for eleanieg braes is the
Water in which potatoes are boiled,
Rub the top of the snarbisetepped
washeitatd• wifh tutPenidne ;; it vnlT
keep it in perfect" order, •.
Stains eat) lie removed froth a
CROWD IN FRONT 01' THE CAPITOL A.T SOFIA,
tstJLGARIA.,
The flavor of creamed potatoes
will be very pleasing if a few pieces
of -chopped green peppers are ad
-
elect.
• aDinp salt will take off the dis
colerations on cups and -saueers
caused by tea and careless washing.
„ If white kid gloves are rubbed
gently with breadcrumbs efter eaeh
'wearing ixng they will keep clean much
kg
If cream is whipped in a pitcher
instead of in a bowl it will whip
more quickly and there is no waste
in spattering.
• Equal parts of linseed oil and
cider vinegar mixed thoroughly to-
gether makes an excellent dressing
for linoleum.
If a little ginger (about one-third
of a teaspoonful) is used when mak-
ing doughnuts, they will keep frail.
longer.-
-
Always lay a damp cloth over a
skirt before pressing it, so that
the iron will not touch the materi-
al and naake it shiny.
• Put apiece of bread through the
meat chopper after chopping meat
or raisins. You will. find no diffi-
culty in washing it clean.
• Mark the children's clothing with
different colors. By this method
much time can be saved when sort-
ing and putting away.
Beds should never be made up
immediately aftea they are vacat-
ed. It is not hygenic ; beds should
be aired at least two hours.
The odor from boiling cabbage or
cauliflower can be lessened by a
piece of bread put into a muclin
bag and dropped into the pot.
A spo ge should occasionally be
washed in warm water with a little
tartaric acid or soda; afterward
rinse it in clean warm water.
To Wash a White Wool Sweater -
Wash in lukewarm suds until it is
clean. Then rinse in clear water.
Squeeze out the water; spread the
sweater upon a clean•Turkish towel
and roll the two up tightly to-
gether. When the towel is wet
through, exchange for a, dry one
and roll up in this as before. Re-
peat until the garment is dry:. It
will look like new.
-
• SEAWEEDS AS FOOD.
•
In Some Localities They Ire Popu-
lar Medicines.
Seaweeds having been suggested
as a possible source of future
wealth, especially for food pro
ducts. Perrot and Gatin, two
French oceanographers, give some
facts Concerning present uses. In
Europe they are collected for their
alkalies and iodine, for which they
are -chiefly valued. In some locali-
ties they are popular medicines.
one kind being employed as a ver-
mifuge in Corsica, and others, on
their account of iodine, being given
in goitre and sorefulas In Brittany,
where some of the poorer inhabi-
tants have employed seaweed as
food, about twenty tons in a year
has been collected of the variety
known as Ic,eland moss. In the
north of France a little seaweed is
gathered by the peasants as man-
ure. To the Asiatics these plants
have been more important, and in
Japan edible seaweed is not only
the souree of a, number a food pre-
parations, but is even extensively
cultivated to give a sufficient sup-
ply. Gelatines and glueeare among
the produots. These gelatines art
not very nutritious as food, and it
is suppoeed that their popularity
may be as an aid to the digestion
of the great quantities of fish and
rice eaten by the Japanese.
D IIIN KIN H I IV At G EMU.
An Algerian regiment will empty
As many as a thousand pitchers of
wine Without losing half a thimble-
ful of liquor. It is a 'system which
permits a 'genetal use of one vessel
for drinking purposes in en abso-
lutely 'cleanly way. It dispenses
with cups or glasses, a great con-
venience when troope are oe active
Service. A large piteher with a
Remit to it, filled with vine, is pass-
ed horn hand to hand, tech soldier
lifte the pitcher high over his head
Rad tilts it until the wirie pours in
a steady stream into his open
(iota teller by rubbing at gently mouth below, When the wine
with a eietai dipp,e(i th amirnehill, eplashes inside the drinker'e stern-
• Ribboms a:yid silk- etim be ssonged ach for abont a minute the soldiet
Al
valerl: him takes possession of the
rith mixteles eohdl rectirre'6c ne ra"I'ct arld reP"ts 'the P"f°'"
manee. Not a drop 'is *bated.
CLAMORING FOR WAR.
If.'01.1010010aWWWWPONOWAIMPOOmmillie
THE STIOA1 SC11331. ST1131
INTIallINA.TIONAL LESSON,
' OCTOBER 27,
Lesson IV. -Wanderings in Deus -
polls, Mark 7. 31 to 8. 10. GoI•
den text, Nark 7. 37.
7. 31-37,
Verse 31. Through Sidon unto
the sea -Sous and his disciples
passed out of the district about
Tyre, going northward into that
11,bollt Sidon. Then, turning east-
ward and southward, they made a
detour which finally brought them
into the region of Decapolis south-
east of the Lake of Galilee. It is
quite probable that from Sidon they
traveled for some distance on the
Damascus road, which leads emit -
ward over the hills and aeross the
Lenotes River.
32. They, bring unto him -- The
reception aecorded Jesus by the in-
habitants of Dempolis on this oc-
casion was quite different from that
of his last visit to the eastern shore
of the lake, when, because of, the
excitement resulting from the heal-
ing of the demoniac, they urged
him to depart quickly from their
borders (Mark 5. 17).
• An impediment in his speech -
The man was not only deaf, but
partially dumb, a condition which
mteasy
s. have resulted from his deaf -
Ley his hand upon him -Simply
another way of requesting Jesus
to heel him. There are many in-
stances in the Bible of healing
through prayer acoompanied by
laying on of hands.
33. Took him aside -This was for
a two -fold purpose -first, as the
man could not hear or speak intel-
ligently, it was necessary for Jesus
to secure his attention that he
might know what was being done
for him; secondly, there were un-
usual reasons for desiring secrecy.
The object of the tour was retire-
ment a,nd special fellowship with
the disciples.
Put his fingers into his ears -Ras
ther, thrust them in, as a sign to
the ma,n that Jesus intended to heal
him so that he could exercise faith
and thereby have a personal past in
this healing.
He spat -A second sign designed
to arouse the man's faith. It was
thought that spittle possessed me-
dical virtue, and magical incanta-
tions often accompanied its use. In
this inetanee, however, it was simp-
ly the medium through which Jesus
imparted healing.
34. Looking up to heaven, he
sighed -Better, he groaned. The
look heavenward was to inform him
of the source of power which would
effect his healing.
• Ephphatha - The actual Greek
word which Jesus spoke to the
man, the opening of whose organs
would make him sensitive to sound
and recover his 5peech.
35. Bond of his tongue -The deaf-
ness, or whatever obstructed his
speech. Once the difficulty was re-
moved, he could speak rightly.
38. The more a great deal they
• published it -The object of the acl-
monition to secrecy was to prevent
such publieity as would arouse his
enemies and tompel him to prolong
his retirement. Nevertheless their
excitement knew no bounds, so
that the news was scattered broad -
east. It is an example of how ex-
Ultati011 and zeal lessen the sense
of the more important duty of
obedienee.
37. Beyond measure astonished-
Liter6,11y, they were struok out of
their SOPkoa.
8. 1-10.
Verse 1. Again a went multitude
-Thia earries with it the inferenoe
that there was a second occasion
when Jesus fed the multitede. In-
asraueh as the feeding of the four
thousand is secorded by Matthew
and Mark only, and the feeding of
the five eleortsand is recorded in all
the Gospels, some have thought
that there was only one such oscine
raise concerning whieh Matthew
and Mark give twe ace -matte, He cv-
ever, a cermet understanding of
Jesus's motive in eerforming tni
acIe whieh was fleet of all to 'meet
human bead, easily melees wav,fol.
two similar miracles whith -grew
out of the need of the saulthede iri
the desert places ea two distinct
occasions. A careful reading of
the two narratives reveals nein.
ber of points of clifferenee ':etweee
them. (Compare Mark 6, 30-44.)
• 2. Continue with me now three
days -'A sullicieetly long tune to eze
haust their supply of food.
4. Wh.enee shall one be able to
fill these -This in general is ,ie
same sort of question which the dis-
eiplas asked on the former occa-
sion, and is proof of their stupidity
end forgetfulness. The enlphasis in
She first instance is on the amount
necessary to supply sufacient quan-
tity of food, while here it is on the
incredibility of being able to se-
cure a sufficient quantity in the
desert region,
6. Sit down on the ground -The
highly picturesque details of the
narrative of the feeding of the five
thousand are lacking here. (Com-
pare Mark 6. 39).
• 8. Seven baskete-On the former
occasion there were twelve. The
basket was a sort of hamper,
plaited of reed or rope, such as was
used to lower Paul "down through
the wall" at Damascus (Acts 9.
95).
9. About four thousand --.Matthew
(15. 38) adds'"Besides women and
children." (Compare Matt. 14. 91).
10. Dalmanutha,-As this place is
net meetioned eieewhere, its loco,
tion is uncertain. Probably it was
a small village near Magdala., on
the west shore of the lake, in the
southern part of the plain of Gen-
nesaret.
*-
DANGER OF EPSOM SALTS.
Poisoning Through Absorption Into
the Blood.
Epsoni salts has always been
looked upon as one of the most
harmless of medicines, and one that
can be taken if necessary in huge
quantities. It 'comes as a shock,
therefore, to hear 'that it raaer some-
times act as a deadly poison.
Its toxic effect is known as mag-
nesium poisoning. Dr. Boos, of the
Massachusetts General Hospital,
has made special investigation into
the subject, and has had under his
dare at various times ten patients
suffering from the affection, Frain
his observations of these patients
and experiments on animals he o011 -
eludes that it is when the salts are
absorbed into the blood that they
became injurious. In the case of
a healthy person this does riot hap-
pen, but if the dose is repeated too
frequently and in too concentrated
a farm or in cases of mechanical ob-
straction of the bowel, there is dan-
ger of the medicine being absorbed
into the blood stream.
The virulence of Epsom salts
when once it has found its way into
the blood may be gathered from the
fact that a dog will die if a fraction
of a grain of Epsom salts be injected
into its veins.
Of the ten ettses seen by Dr. Boos
six died, Ile recoraraends that
where such isoisoning is suspeeted
large quantities of normal" salt
solution should be injected into the
veins, or lime salts should be given
in very diluted solution hypoder-
mically.
OUR FURRY FRIENDS.
The season for furs is approach-
ing-, anti fer some time past the an-
nual Siberian slaughter has been
going On in order that the require-
ments of Dame Fashion may be
properly met. Despite the advance
made by Canada in the fair indus-
try, Sibesie still takes first place.
Siberia grey squirrels provide a
particularly profitable braneh of
She industry, nearly five million of
these sportive ereaturee being
killed it the woods of Siberia last
year.• The money value of the ex-
ported scmirrel firs was nearly
$9,500,000. Toll was also taken of
rnillio-n white hares-feseinating
little: anneals whose skins, when
dressed, very nmeh resemble the
rare white fox. Ineidentally, there
were also killed tor the favorites
of fashion swine two launched thou-
sand testate, nearly as many skunk,
end ever sixteen thriller/11d f.itey
wolves. Sables are becoming mere
scarce in 'Siberia; and hist season
oely some twelve tboitsaral werh
killed, bringing td- he traders- A,
return of about $500,000. '
NEWS FROM SUNSET COAST[
la,s1 TICE WF,STERN PE orL4
ARL D ()IN Gs
Progreem of the Great Weat Told
in a Pew Poieted
At Yale the hopes are reviving
for a mining boom.
The Government is building side-
walks in New Den eer, '
InRupe, Lee Boe was fined $50
for having opium in his poseession.
Steamboats are eaw carrying
freight from Seattle to Skagway fer
$2 e ton
About 700 carloads of potatoes
will be hipped frem Armstrong this
season,
In one week three earloads of
ripe tomatoes were shipped from
Cresten last month,
A grizzly bear weighing 900
pounds was recenly shot about 20
miles south of Coleman. .
John F. Mercer, of Helena,
Mena, has become interested in a
• gypsum claim at Granite Creek,
It is estimated that during the
past two years, the ice at the Bitter
creek glacier has melted 400 feet.
H. B. Burgess, of San Francisco,
is planning te) build a large sash
and door factory at Port Alberni,
Pat Buina.s, the cattle king, has
subscribed. 500 to help build a mon-
ument to General Wolfe at Green-
wich.
A large crop of potatoes were
grown this summer at Port Good
Hope, eight miles north of the Arc-
tic Circle.
Holden & Kelly have let a con-
tract to build a cold storage and
1.97000ak.ing plant at Penticton for
$
The, Royal Alexandra Hotel, now
building at Edreonton, will be six
'storeys high contain 200 rooms and
cost $350,000.
On a farm near Chilliwack, E. A.
Manville and his men recently put
over 47 tons of hay through a hay
press in ten hours.
This summer 800 tons of fruit
have been shipped from Summer -
land. In August, 33,500 boxes of
fruit were shipped from that town.
The first regular passenger ser-
vice in British Columbia of the Oa•
median Northers) railway will be-
gin in November between Port
Mann and Hope.
The farnous Yukon steamer, Tyr-
rell, has been dismantled at Daw-
son. This boat had the only steel
hull on the Yukon, but was too
deep far running on the upper
river.
Up the Skeena river a townsite
of 1,800 lots has been laid out at
Lakeside lake. Hot springs have
been discovered at that point, and
a large sanitarium will be erected.
F. G. Farquier sold, five years
ago, 1,600 acres of land on Arrow
Lake, nearly opposite Edgewood
for $1.95 and acre. Some of this
land is now being sold for $300 an
acre which shows the rapid rise of
land value in the west.
Dunea,n Ross has finished his con-
tract on the long tunnel for the G.
T. P., six miles east of New Hazle-
ton. At the long tunnel he also had
a contract for several miles of grad-
ing. The six miles of work, in-
cluding the tuenel, cost $1,000,000.
The tunnel is ,the longest on the
line, and some of the cuts the hard-
est. Ross is moving his outfit to
Bulkley eummit, where has bas a
new contract.
RISE IN FUR PRICES.
Cat Skins Call Be 'Worked Into
Imitation of Any Rind of Fur.
Society woraen of London., Eng-
land, WhO 'cannot spend magnifi-
cently are loudly oomplaining of
• the soaring eost of hers, and they
derive little eoanfort from learning
that the increased price of sera
skins is due to greater restrictions
on hunting in American. waters.
Eighteen years ncyears aao a seal sjaaket
°oat $200, but at the present time
they cannot buy one in Landon un-
deThis rapid rise in the cost of all
kinds of furs has greatly speeded
up the trade in imitations, and inci-
dentally called into existence a new
business to supply the demand.
Some widea,wake furriers having
cliscovereel that 'catskins could be
worked into a. telerabIir perfect imi-
tation of any kind of fur, there in-
stantly arose the profession of cat -
snatcher -a lucrative ono, as a
good skin now fetches' a dollar,
Consequently the possessors of
prized felines are living in daily
fear that their pets ,will be abdect-
ed, arid speeial watch has to be set
over them lest they gray into the
hands of the thieves who ride
around the suburbs on bicycles
with baskets attached for carrying
thei r prey.
No fashionable woman, however
hard -up for cash, would knewingly
wear e,atskin furs, bait tlea skins are
so well made up to leek like the
real thing, that the glib.tongued
rti rider who effete her a bergain can
mostly foist her off with the imita-
tion goods. As it as estimated that
the •cet population of London is
750,000. it will he a tong time be -
fere this souree of •supply is ex-
hausted.
VETE:RAIL,
BOER WAR,.
rESTMES AS TO TDB n'FICACY
PURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS
FOR THE CURB OF
BOILS
aar, D. M. MaBlaite, Niegara Valle
Out„ writes: -"It is with pleasure I
Itstify to the sterling qualities of your
Burdock Blood Bitters. After the Boer
War, through waich I serverl M the
ist I. L,, I suffered from boils, cons
stipation, and sick headaches, aml
tried many preparations, but got relief
i;eta none till au old comrade of mhos
got me to try the, Burcloek Blcod Bitters
To say 1 got relief is to put it mildly. It
made me myself again, viz., a Ulan Wila
kno-r,,,i: not what it is to be sick, and who
has been, and is still, an athlete.
"To anyone in moat of purified blood
and the resultant all round vigoroue
health, I can conscientiously recommend
Burdock Blood Bitters is manittaes
lured only by The T. Milburn Co.,
Limited, Toronto, Ont.
FROM MERRY 010 [NLA13
NEWS BY MAIL ABOUT 30,11/4
BULL AND HIS PEOPLE.
Occurrences in The Land 'That
Reigne Supreme in the Com-
mercial World.
• The Earl of Eldon presented 168
bottles of port wine to the Meryle-
bone Infirmary,
One man was killed, and four bur-
ied by a fall of a. roof at the Vivian
Colliery, Monmouthshire.
One man was killed and another
injured by an explosion which oc-
curred on H.M.S. Southampton,
e The Japanese Embassy, together
with its offices, has been removed
to 10 Grosvenor Square, London
Lord Furness has resigned the
ehairmanehip of Palmer's) Ship-
building & Iron Company, Limited,
The Woodcock Hayes farm. house,
near Tiverton, Devon, nearly 400
years old, has been destroyed by
fire. -
Mr. T. a. jarris, assistant town
'clerk of Hammersmith, is resigning,
after serving upwards of 31 years.
The Lady Mayorees of London
will shortly open a new ,shelter for
lost, strayed and unwanted cats at
Settle Road, Plaistow.
Miss Joyce Brown, a young'Au.se
trail= violinist,, made a brilliant
success at the Queen's Hall Prome-
nade Concert, London. s
Dr. G. K. Fortescue, the keeper
of printed books at the British Mu-
seum, retires under the agelimit at
the end of this month.
It is proposed to tonstract a new
motor road sixty feet wide between
Thornton Heath Pond and Purley
at a cost of $277,465.
Lieta-Colonel 0. R. Burn, Hon-
orary Colonel 2nd County of Lon-
don Yeomanry, has been appointed
as aide-de-eamp to the King.
The death has occurred at Folke-
stone of Sir Francis Outram, ari
aid metiny hera, aged 76, on the
anniversary of the Relief of Luck -
leo w.
A lady motorist named Miss Men-
der, was fined 21 and costs at Brox-
tonfor driving a motor ear at a
speed dangerous to th.e public.
Mr. Henry Whitson, of South
Park Drive, Seven Kings, was fa-
tally injured when his motorcycle
ran into a ditch at Shenfield, Essex.
Mr. Clement Mackeave, of Grove
Hill, South Woodford, was killed
on the level crossing .of the G. E.
Railway near Canningtown Sta-
tion,
A man named Carter was commit-
ted for trial at Dorchester, for re-
fusing to go to the help of a police-
man when called upon in the King's
nam e.
John Wilson was sentenced at
Bromley (Kent) to six months hard
labor for stealing nine altar vases.
from the Church of St. Mie.hael's,
Beckerrham.
Tbe Great Northern Railway Co,
has begun the work of extending fir
line from Ouffley to Hertford end
Stevenage. The work will be finish-
ed in three years.
uttered With -
Nerve Trouble
POR TWO Irian
FMPOSSIBLE FOR HIM TO q'
Mr. Chas, W, Wood, 34 Torrance St.,
Montreal, Que., writes :-"For two years
I had sullered with nerve trouble, arid it
was impossible for me to sleep. It did
not matter what time I went to bed, in
• the mornieg 1 as even worse than the
tight before. I consulted a doctor, and
he gaVe me a tonic te take a half 'hoot
before going to bed. It Was all right for
u time, but the old trouble returned with
greater force than before. One of the
boys who works with me, gave me hall
a box of Milburn's Heart and Nerve
Pills. 1 took them, and I got such
satisfaction that I got another box, and
before I finished it I could enjoy sleep
from 10 p.m. until 6 tem., and now feel
good." hese eeseaseee'dshessee
Milburnh Heart and Verve Pills are
50 tents per box, or 3 boxes for $1,25, at
all dealers, or mailed direct oti receipt 01
price by the T. Milburn Co.. Listitedp
Toronto, Ont.