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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1913-3-27, Page 2Cut Down e Meat Bill. ....,AHCOLID• •.floWeVe.r Slight ......MAY.H..T0RN....INFPr • GOOD ROAD FOR 'ME FATtlIER. The Split -Log Drag Will Sole the Problem, One of the greatest difficuittea hich the farmer in Ontario has to face to -day is that of bad roads. One- cf the ariost effective instru- ments in aolving this problem, is the not be made too heavy so that it can be lifted by one man and man- aged by one team of horses. When to Use the 1,/rag• The -best time touse the drags when the soil, is moist, but not too "sticky," as 'then the earth is loose And runs along the faces of the slabs, spreading smoothly. The road can also be treated when the split -log drag,. and just As the bad . earth is very wet and slushy, as ondation of the roads is amos• during a rain, or immediately after_ 1 2e high p/iC,Q (,)f meat has been You should never siegleet a cold, hew- costly -Problem, so the drag is the wards- If anY dragging is done., one of the most difficult pi-obleeis ever slight. If you do nos treat it, in, time ehea nest of remedies, , , , , — , a a however, when the roan. is 4771Y Pa•r- for housewives to solve, 1:31,4 It a' i ;'.'t will, in all pessibility, develoP4m* le It is undonbtedis true Pia. ,-,0-.7 tiara- di v and sticky the earth will . . woman undeestands the cheaper ' oronehilis pneximoaia., asthma, or some Ih,itainion and Provincial Govera- roll 77P in lumps instoad of spread - cuts 4nd, instead of buying eXPerl- other serioas throat or lung trouble, meats will take np m the near fu- sive roasts, steaks, or ehozia, she will buy put roast,5, Sboulders of lamb or perk, reand or flank steaks, ' er choput from the shaukler she W ill at least find her promem mueh For this purpose there is nothing to less difiltrale. eaual Dr, Wood's Norway Pine F.yrup, These euts can be PrePare'd in •A, relnedY that.has been universally used lano ways that make tliem so sweet : for the past twenty-five years, d tender it would be difficult for, 'You do . , . ,,.., , . , GU 0 no, ex,,,eamea. Or eel-, 3 ea, get • any one to believe they were r -l&" er , ee. i s vie expensive eats. The first, eon- e -ors. t-sas Laleiede,Pene.terageti$liene, n aid'eration i$ to buy Meat in whichl,, �..wnt,es;.--:':IIIeti, my little boy v. -as „ds a there Fs, no wa$te. When inki,,ing at two Yet11-4 Q4L AO sh1 a C°34 Whk'h WV!! Octile45441“1101t1,Yr, 413(1 11 4h0,11434S'I' Of 14411:t have the be re- tamed nate bronchitis. I tried every- a recent addrees,- ilti Toronto ilia - 'an& use it for so.t11- AV,I4en Wing to erehim, even to doctor's mo.l.i- ion. mantin 13areell, declared that g beaper cuts et enoPsil glue? bat, it did lira no good, Oe day any 514bs-o.quet help which would shonlder) cut off the 1 waa advited to giveDr W A' N'' • - be - ffered would be --iie= de upon a , .„, Q S _ orriaN - o , , , the work, of extensive road b down 011 the first siga of a Cold or cough it is/ --- ru es c e -a1 as fc • construction throughout the coun- the xxumber -ewes a good shtion civisable to care it at ()nee; and -et , os • -p z-,"7 L 'ale -tare has -a oarn 4 .4t. rol,incie., a = road .5hould be dragg„,-„„. run on for an laae nIza priod. animal -teed the ex,penditure of a roads do not stay in condition a,s least five. millions dollars in, a 1onasthoe made of, day„ Then, short, time, and, the 'Minister of agam, .local grade conditions and PuhEe 'Works has stated that this ill be hut the beginning of gratey xaPneds lir- repeated et: t ehdi 1 1:tjtdeen tINt'-ians,h will de - es in the way of highway eon- If a i•oad ,shows a tendency to he - alma The bominion Govern- come, too high in the riaiddle, it Can a!,so anneances t,h,e4t tile as he dragged tw1ee, towards the eerie e promised thaw ago tre and <nice awa.Y from'ltZ A Al 4.1 'Of these through thet ye_ c.: ,syrap a trial .oad b,?foroti,:,140,1 hot, ,,-osi generous hasis, IS en be la that W107 thert -1 '1 1" — -- .9 '„ ' i f . i 4 0 ,. ' , r, D 4b9tItlk used, ho .wa, eereil, 1 ViTnnild, WI- ,“;4.:.j '''./4, 1 C''re."1?'• 'In' 11° ilae n all methers to try it ci, 1 the -verge of a iii"W era or road - a a t., e )--o 11 follow. My home hi itbbidg, whi'..e ali this may be Atflle, however.It cannot be 4,ierped years •-,riP, pass permanent iraProv,--rm‘llls heIliad.. on all roads. Eve:t i = = com1 a s,w7,.ta tee p:eosin of the most 25 and eio. 'eompeeliensive scheme of read tam - Y Tito T. i struetion, the greater per cent age Oat. i mileage in the Province wi',', re- in as COMAXIOrt earth roads \ bile FuppOrting the general move - t„ therefore. tONV4,145 read ihi- cm.pt throughout the Pro t:o r , the farmer cannot afivrd ta aeet the dirt roads that pass his in4 nanor, To look after these. k he must find sortie method of Ifli 111Ore or less inexpensive ei bro ;"assee u he do , sea.sonatne numerous' it be-; (4 tile they btain- pot up ns, con1,4l- the trade with them.: vegle„ A1.4orgr four Milburn Geo Llreibr towed good 'Dr, Wo d — en fo' st ‘ot th seareh he •will And nth' ti the her and more efiee. dve tbu be honee-mado 4 4 'weed. - 31:-Iep I Twit hi pbkrn in deal 1 roadwaysF thatI of maintai , ‘ i ;' -'0 hard, jnoth wfae. To ensure Ikze nnwh1 this, ,of •co r tbe first two essen- L. draining and pro- ; are pro %ding. It the roadsbow be kept h eve, bavo leceived any permanent tng it ill be necessary to M- 4 ., b 1 . up god oconstruction with eon- tt attention to 'the condition o , and in keeping this i .the road draF wiD b 4. rk wonders. st place. the draa,ging of ad bas the effect of freeing it 1 1 ruts. This is par - tae of clay. rowls. The x a any rond is water, and the of travel on elay roads is to hat It 'a it go64 Ploll' frm 11 paste on the surface, whieh he hooks and loops prevents water from running away. 4 biiimets• OE course. if the road were properly asily removed by , graded it would present a rounded watet li tin the scales' surfaee to water and the mud now. scraPe (Itliek1F. Wash 1 ble woidd be eliminated. If used ters, the last one salt, at the proper time the drag p . h windows while the 'pares the surfer*, which, AS s in the centre of the road SA, ,oute,1 be removed, The drag itselt ill-aven down any other inequaii- ties the surface. By dragging up on side of the road and down the ohr. the edges of the log plane off edges and -obstacles and draw ooseited material sidewise and rd, thus iUlipg the holes and and crowning it at the middla oi he road. SysLem:*.'leeded l'or Sliecess. The eflieieney of this simple se in making e earth road as - an earth rad ean , Ims been proved over and over again. One thing, however, is ab- S4llutely necessary to success, and that is thoroughness in following pp_ the practice of dragging, the roads. Spasmodic effort is useless, and it is not very encouraging for one far- mer to put time and labor on the slyay past his farta if Lis neigh- br is neglecting his share of th 1- The split -log dtag, isdwaply and easily operated, but el the concerted 4114 axatema- *la 010 reads throughout n iveu dittrict, OPA1 that district , ho attain satisfactory results. diem the 4tIraglIAS been 1 4u ths vay ibe results have marvellous, and not only b;ive roads been kept in good Order, btth the cost or maintenance has MADAME POIN CARE. Wife of French President is Pond of Roses, Birds, 31,usic, Books. Although a_1,xeauty of repute and socially anibitibus; the PredoMin,- ant note in the life of Madame Ray- mond Foineare 3s domesticity, In fact, the wife of the new French Lesson ood, of our ,President has a profound,iaterest in her home life„ and the new wof tadters---A.Miely. man -movement attracts her oali in text, I'Su. 2. 4. the sense that "there's music in the sighing ,at the reed, there's music QUESTIONS FOR PUPILS. in the -rlishing of the 7.in,there'a 1 -"•sol& 1.—The Creation. — Who THE SUNDAY SCI1091. LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON, .r 31_4.11CH. 30. annsie an, all thins if people ha4 lived, before the world was ereated? „ Row did God create, the universe? Sinee she laid aside her widow's Hthoelve ?m,,anAcths taatgev,e. a so t.i.:reeaatriseth tiing awse weeds, i''11:..9°I;esehee—N11;e3)7 4's e widow as\1.11the six-th Say of creation/ What husband Geo created? What the °- t was e was an aged a'id wealthY 13"1.78- did God say a everything he ere- oise named Bazeu—Madaine PoMe ated? what dki,o,„„.1 do when the carols chief conceru in her home ,,reation was finisheko has been her accomplished hnsbail-d-Lesson 11.—Man the Crown of A bard -working lawyeaaand pas- creAtiorn„,—„iji whose image was mentarian, he loves good &limners man made? Or what dkl God make and likes, good friende at his table, maws body4 what ,did he breathe ha:Nad sftilea:nileP al/,(iineThaereeflorsaeldstht eeoAt4ig ii,),I•ta°e,):13tahlle'irtan35fik,aln7;-?, lAit,14•7:aet, a(.1i(d1 G91 io/fottasheehodlannue-orutiadbilineakel iall;cl-Polijs71dr; glaiiline for naiQhetpn%e-el??°111'1dVEhdath,ewgehi:ee 1 of iriAnite ietyand tharIII,Z Tar, eir tisti Lesson ---tlan's First Sin, — , i horticulture. ritey seem 1V4 •-•.'e God's intentiOns for man? arrangement must be a constant. la- What, was thp only prohibition God ber of love for Madame Petite -are. are Adam? Why did God give him The flora, etnues from two Sources, 41)y prohibition ,? Who to -opted , i ; namely, the garden attached to Eveds' ; .he iorn,f,iden 0413'4 their private bonse in the Ilu owd„,:. sl_w hreoci,aliiidae, t 1,:lyant irstotos len, s C:M olonel archand, and the garden ow did they feel when they had e' . — . .. , from God I Ilow- did God pun -m4A,ciclian7.tA hoparul prOphe begh0 them c esson IV,— cain and Alw.1.--Wha re Cain and Abel ? What we'tie eir eeonnalionS 1 What sae did they offer to the Lord l Why did God accept, Abel's and reject Cain's ? How did Cain feel toward Abel beeause of thisl What did Cain do to Abel ?. Irow did aed punish Cain T How did he protect hint iroal the revige'a hi,i icilfAv 11,040sso; V. ----Th ,NolOcaltded ittfili&%04-lf *mine todo to did Gad plan to N dh take i Wha4. id oato ppcned when :7$Ottli bad enter(' he ark 4 How long dila it rain Vhat bean e of the earth's inhab . 11114on 1/1.----Oca's Covenant with Neah.—Ifow long did Noah rentilta in the ark 1 How did he know when it was snit to leave the ark I 'What did he do as soon as he otone out; f the ark 4 What aid God give !oar to do? What promise did he eke Noah 4 What was the token band and herself stood on the bal- oz this covenant'l cony to acknowledge the greetings Lesson VII. ----The Call of Abram. ot neighbors after his return from , where had Abram been born'? the National AssemblY ab Versailles, Where (lid be emigrate with his •fa - which elected him President, they ther iTerah 1 What did God eall seemed as though they were in the him to do when 'rerah died 1 'Where midst of a rose garden, .And, Mad- did Abraham go? Whom did he Mlle POLOCare'S favorite flower is take with }inn 1 'Where did they that beloved by the Empress Jose- stopl Where did Abraham build phine, the delicately tinted Mal- a Ittilliteal,gotheic000ldap 6y:rigtIpri m3 masion rose. Even when her lady, friows Lessen VIII. ---Abram and Lot.-- ealied to offer their cong,tattilations How dld the wealth of Abram and Lot increase while they were in upon the election of her husband they filled her salon with flowers. EgYllt,1 What eaused strife be - Her given name is Henrietta but her husband ,calls her familiarly "Riettc," just as Napoleon the Third used to call his Empress Genie" instead of Eugenie. When, however, M. Poineare wishes to em- phasize his appreciation of his wife's floral taste, he refers to Iier as "Om• Lady of the Flowers!' Madame Poineare has a St. Fran- cis of Assisi -like love of 'beasts and birds, particularly of domestic pets. This, is shared by her huthand, who refers to beasts as "our inferior change 0/ name signify. brethren." Their affection seems Lesson - X.—The Destruction of to extend not enlY to flowers and Sodom, (Temperance ' Lesson), -- animals, but to everything, that is Why did Gd destroy Sodom? Whoin humble. or. weak. A big Siamese did he forewarn of Scdom's doom? imuy di hem *I served a veek ie it k e 11 y rd i 4,1as4*8 t 11' F In one nntiy af iuuv -the bnteb- ers bill was ent dwn $2 a we eluding both tneat and fish, :N4 enesa stinted in the least. The faraily I d all the meat it wanted. Even chic • was served. Dut the housewife was "Pitrrfd'. in. her bur- , Instead et purehasing thrs mvst expensive cuts she would get 2-'evera -the cheaper ones and prepare theral in such a way that not enb• the' suns untnll 1, lily but frequently a gti K' t "e but this is potid. w."11 the el,towehi eiul be dyed In to make go er the ' dens. others' u hirts ean ut ,t) y 'well c Lor little boys. An ensv way to find a puncture is r a little bluing water into, The bluing v,•111 intlieatet, 1 )t Ofl the outside, e mid bonnet strings 31- ftritrf C4. attach tte ea 1hit 15 it ' S44metimes' it would steak. whieh ninel0 In ironing embroidery. PSPeeially cheaper tha ot.hpr } handwork, the ,embrolderY should Iserptently less dusty (hem otherwise 111,dries, is paeked troeol and b ,ealV ; comes harder and more. imio pervn vdw1 with every dragging. Then, too, in the :summer the same hard surface far harder to break up and, cons s. It would be stuffed, rolled lap. er tia., lialeleldd.:IN„cel:gc4"..d,In ttilijeckwer",..`:at - 'making a 'D. r a g. tied se --rely and bake 1 Pi•epared we ui this ,,vay it was abundant for two p,hex white mile I The construction a.log-drag is fer 'allay of four. being; ;.td, t•hnriveivint.l. niSnr C{1('n 11"°111PliShe44 rhe hest", Ina - served het the first day and 'enliit ;;;;;`,.,'„ terial to use is a dry red cedar log the next. Or it would be put awa.N• Igor!, niaple: in the icebox for the second day, when it was sliced and served with a brown gravv. In such a case just before serving drop the slices of 2 "ik b P pia tn. - w. a beaten egr- - meat into the hot 0 -racy. ti • fd d' are placed parallel to each other, an a piton salt are a ue , an Gravies Instead of Meat. — In-: Trrixm. fiat face to the front, and. the stead of using: steaks amd 'Atolls for wheh trimming a hat always put' heaviest base slab first. On the breakfast, delicious thick gravies a piece of muslin round the band front slab at a point four inches can be made and served with pota-; underneath the ribbon or silk. This from the end that is at the middle toes or on toast. Among others saves the hatpins from breaking the of the road, there is located the are codfish gravy, chip beef gravy, straw, centre of the hole to receive a cross - cream is and baoon gravy. The Dried fruits a.rei often made pain - latter is made by chopping the ba- table by the addition of a fresh fla- con into small bits and frying it vor. Orange juices improves straw - brown. Add one-half cap of boiling berries, lemon improves prunes, water, then one pint at sweet milk zinger roOt with pears% Season and thicken with sufficient • If a candle is blown ant in an up - flour to inake a thick gravy. Then pour over toast and serve. There are many delicious, whole- some, and nourishing soups, which requiee very little or no meat, ow however. willco. „ m Vnt. • A gacil hreakin.$b t 'made five to seven feet in Iengthand from . . 14. dinpins the slues .el bread in a, ten to twelve inches in diameter, is • I—in two.The halves Ward direction, the wick will not smolder away, and the next, time it is wanted ib will be found suffici- ently long to ignite properly. - iratTOZ."31,,,MMIN These soups, made -thick and prim- skin itgae cipally of vegetables, when aervee.1 Eztk016.1%)%94,0 for dinner, materially reduce the ' amount of meat necessary for that meal. Besides the ordinary -vege- table soups, such as ,cream of cel- ery, erearn of onion,. creain of po- tato, and cream of rice. Puree of pea and puree of lentil are very ARE OCOASIONED, BY LOOD. BAD wholesome and nourishing, especi- No one can expect to be free from some • thick and four inches -vide should ally vehen served with croutons. form or other of skin. trouble unless the b pidoeel at the ditch end 1,uuni,,g The housewife of te-dav is too a,pt blood is kept in good. shape. diae.omaaa,. m frotile ,o,nd of ilia stake. and n inches from the other end, the ,centre of a hole for an- other cross -stake. The hole for the middle stake will He on a line con- necting and half -way between the •other two... On the back slay, 20 inches is measured from the end which is to be at the middle of the 3'0341 for the centre of the cross - stake, and six inches from the other end is to be the centre of the out- side stake. The centre of the mid- dle hole is found as before. When these holes are brought opposite, one end of the back slab will lie sixteen inches nearer the eentre of the roadway than the front one, thus giving a ``seb-back.'' The two slabs should be held 30 inches apart, connecting stakes being wedged in place. A brace two inch - ITheet hcILSe 01 vegetables, The blood can easilV he ,Purified and front' slah:to the 'angle 'between file 'This is 1-10(P-tunatei net en-IY '.be- the skin 'disease ured by -the use" of back slab and the end stake, and oause f' the losf nealishmeat I Burdock Blood Bitters, that old and should be fastened an inch from the they coati , at b thfur , os o •, • widele,know• a blood medicine • gr -011n<1. ATI iron blade., three aitt a e c se 'ey ..sh the best • so lutain for cutting i" b • f -half , feat long in aye bo' bolted on th . We' all know, that -the butehet year ''" '"ar'saaed 'low -the lefw,er edge an .slab been greatly reduced. A great many' suggestions' have been offered as to what Plan ttbetthl be fonewed to secure the best results: One of he best thnt has been suggested is: 1. That township touneils take tenders 'and the "job a dragging and ke,ving in good tondition ,see - tions 4.,q earth roadway throughout the township ; these sections not to xceed four miles in length. being referably two miles in length, and at less than one Mile. That 0401L person taking a eon tract be paid tt cash on somo of his tenders, which will probably be a nail amount, An average of $5.00 a mile will be found an induce- ment in most eases. 3. The work of using the split -log drag ,should he inspected from time to time by the township road eoin- • missioner. When any person in operating -tile drag is foiled, to do inferior work or to neglect the roads, the work can be taken from him for the ca- ning year. The results attained by the long drag are so immediate, so apparent and so beneficial, thatif it is once triad out in a community its use is sure to spread. The farmer who is in earriest.about the road problem should get a drag and use it. i. down the, meat bill. ' t eon on t eve/ , • iront ,slab as tc..) be lialf,-itich like the baker and the eroeer r ant -1 Mrs Tillie 1\litebell Guelph -Oat the ditch end aed the to sell us the highest "priced geode writesi--"I was troubled with eczema. edge of the, slab towards the middle. lie carries is it is more profitable 'My body was covered with awful itching - „ , for him to do so, and as long as 'skin eruptions. Although letried ma' ny . A 'platform. of. boards should be. pla,ced On, :tile. stakes .befave,,en the- killed' his 'wife as S'13; lay fast slabs, .antl''•:.'well sPacied, ••A chain- ',asjeeP"in bedWhen ",a*akaa'neel he 1-fi,tch is a,tfaclind on stieh a -manner knew absolutely iierthing-'ef what he:, as to ipaline the drag at' the de hod • done; ye -think we. inust liave notineg, but ei iffexent remedies 1 coald get rotting to lie hignaprieed steaks and eliePs) (dye me relief. Finally -I got a bottle oi meat hill will he -larger ' thall Bursiock Blood "'Piers —hell completely re is a, neeassita for. le yeality d e • - , . ,. . ier cut of beef,: nc s no sweetthan . ,.. -. wo... .,. Alanufaitured only bY,The T. Milburn and ye P '' 1 . `(.1 ' T orea at 0 'Co ,,,- Jim/t -e, , , nil• . 151 55 11 44 STRANGE SUICIDE: Somnabulist Arises and, Deep in Slumber. 11.angs 1Liinsel t. A fine, muscular young fellow, "fond of life," as his grieving mo- ther describes him, committed sui- cide in his sleep; the rerna,rkable case is reported from Donca.ster, England, recently. • , The lad's name . was Thrustle, eighteen years More than six feet tall, who had -been jolly and vivacious. Alone in his bedroom, perhaps tortured by 'some terrifying drearn, he arose in his sleep and hanged him,sell to the,, Ted rail, making a noose of his necktie. Perhaps he awoke -too late be re- lease himself from the twisted cloth that choked .out his life. -If ha struggled, his another, 's eeping nearby, was not awakened. When she went to arouse him in the, mo r Rio g she, found , dead. She -told the authorities that one night while he Walked in his sleep her ,son carried- all the--furaiture from his bedroom to the garelee.- When she awelee him he was eel to ,se,e what he had done. Medical evidence -at the inquest showed that . sleepwalker may, unknowingly, commit a crime, against anOthea than himself. The case was cited ,of a lifelong sormiaMbulist in Washington D.O, One night in,1008 he dreamed a bur- glar was in his bedroom. :He arose iu his sleet), get his pistol and shot NEWS FROM SUNSET CORI WILIT THE WESTERN PEOPLE ARE DOING, Progress of the Great West To14: in a Few Pointed - ParagraPhs. The McBride Government has1 turned doWn the petition`of Van- couver and South Vancouver- for legislation fusing them into one city, - • Last week in Kaslca Bb store was burned down. His body was found, irt the ruins -with -the hands and feet buraeel off. It is proposed to construct a train. line from New Westminster to Port- Alood3ah.v the 13, Electrie. Sure are already being taken - e hardest fought civie earn - in the history of Victoria. has. es in the election for the sixth ime of Alfred. J. Morley as Mayor of Victoria, This spring 010. Cariboo Thinher 'o, build a eawamill on the vicse, to, ,$‘4auth Fort 'e that will have -a eapatity t daily, te explosion occurred Oree'k the other day in Northern Railway 0),71- ructi 411g, One was killed and rNowiicittml9inn"s:;i1-ir:e big to pleaint4t,„,ssuiptarliole„ifco4renreying en , halte,thlowr,xtinfiepIrvoNy-oentar7t, work durinw Four hundred caies of dallaulite and three hundred keg black (Pho,awiditelfi,5belvoon4ittiratuetto040. M, Wer- varitpat lk. sraasls- in"ttlZgve4;:ow11, WI I -view Ot the alge 1-.1:KVillittLs114,14ttelPV3141t 11VP t ion NaKiviatiore3 arti of ("ontrol ban decided to 'A 1, 111411 Of aro grounds, 14 dredge owned by the Yu - 44 vm(.:norif ‘pvaatsi:,4•IsantaTrillitov,:iatitro hy 6.Cp1110- 11111:1111W11 per- t) framo work of the top use was smashed to splinters« lliti.e;',11.4ryqrglilni;v:,4,4n ‘;‘1.-erini-td;itgfgee,‘rv* wats U'ea Ile put in a charge or dyna, die at the bottom or a well that he was digging and a, prematnro, explosion Wow him to pieces, it is proposed by the chief fruit Iof Th4 t? sslir nttor fiVis a tke $11411n°t v 0411:et(' f from foreign states and eountries Which are infected with such blights as San Jose scale- and the Codlin By an explosion eoal oil whiell( she was beating on a, stove at her residence on Fifth Street, a well- known resident or New Westtnins- .ter,r, Mrs, S. uolt, was so badly burned 1 hat shedied of her injuries. As this 'Season merits. the regular four-year extra large run of -sock-- .„ eye salmon, much activity is being displayed in and around the various canneries on the Fraser River in preparation of the anticipated big ealf°ollr'e of the early Vancouver iandroarks will come crumbling to - earth to give place to a rule new fifteen -storey building at the corner of Hastings, and Richard st:reets, that, will be replete with all that gees to make, a twentieth century office structure. The report boines from Whito' Horse that the White, Pass Com- pany has m.en cleaning the machin- ery of the old steamers Tyrell and Victoria, preparatory to installing it in two new steamers to be built by the company this summer,- to- - compete for the Fairbanks trade. One of the mysteries of life is why ignoranee always possesses a loud voice and a set of leather lungs. "Put that tan of coal on the - slate," directed the customer. "Wc have no slate,'' said the dealer frigidly. "Oh, yes you have. I got 300 pounds of it with the coal."' atta nal of the Cita Le. (lois, their court- . try seat mpiguy, in the de- partment of the Atadame Poiecare seems to p t flowers everywhere. When her hus siec1,triglea say , 40 -•degrees, 'the an Nvan:11.1 oi the t • ad, 4 tween their followers 1 'What, did Abram think .was .best for them to do 7 What did lie offer Lot 7 Why did Let choose the cities of the plain? Where did. Abram make his home ? a Lesson IX.—God's Covenant with Abraham.. --For what did Abram earnestly wish? What did God promise him. as to his descendants? . How was his race to affect the world? Where were they to ma'ke their' home 7 How did God -change Abram's name? What did the cat, called Gris-Gms, is 'Madame Poincare's -particular pet, Recent- ly, when the number of their visi- tors becaine a throng, •Gris-Gris What did Abraham -do when he heard of this?. - Why did his plea Lan Sodom fail? . Hew was Lot sa.ved? To. what, city did he flee? was locked the bathroom lest How was Sodom destroVed?• What some one might trample on it. But becaine of Lot's ,wife 7 . Madame :Peincare consoled :her pet 1 LesS'on X1:7—The '-Test.:of Abra- by saying: " "Never ,Paith.-----How old was Atira- Gris Sooll shall ',come to ham when Isaac was born 7 What had been promised to him e.,ncorn- Elysee, with \ you shall eat ortolans." 3ng Isaac? What supreme Le,It SUFFEFO D Catarrh of the $temach �rThiry Tears. his faith did Crod make ? Whete did Abraham take Isaac for sacri- fice? What questiiiii did Isaac ask rd t$41 V019 on the way? How did Abraham answer?, Ho did God proeide a sacrifice What was God's teal purpose in ,moving A.Intali,arn to of- fer up Isaac Lesson XII.—The Empty Toni . (Easter Lesson). Fcir what did I ' womenraiends - go to the t-orrtb on Easter morning ? Why had this errand_ been' delayed so lori'ag Wliora did they find at the terto -N\-\\7,1h"-oadd tirkela,'re,,f1.,a/e3efilyorbt.lblr-?In J\,‘,!1°)„<,1) 'going ,o.take -years to cure on, tit apeared her there 1.1 it yourself Of a eroimit, and perfect cure, by tei using Milliare's, Heart • anxl.Nerve 'Pills. esu f make himself 'knowii.. to het? ', Mr. 'Theina' A. Stevenson, Harris, , 'What the think when I Sask.., Write,se—'-',1 was tronbled with What disI the; :tlisciieS lwoena,„ heatb, endwas di run down for a ' wit° is- false -69, Present' arid Nerve Pills. ,,' After the -first box", -1: while 1 was almost in despair of - bnegt.rt'yeir, 'sa 1 -ili,rse,ee peof7asucei , " ever getting well aoain, until a frien cli nell recommended me, to try Alilburn's Heart 5n, 11 ,ree6M4endl,hein to any one elser, ldr,gotteivill, AotthThe led'w'it11,t1ti:1%.:eak heart,'" ' erve or;,,81,',111611Eiii ebeiti Catarrh of the Stomaeh is generally mused from some interference with the letion of the -liver and is a malady that affects the whole body. SOMe symptoms are burning pain 111 he stomach, constan;., vomiting, abnor- mal -thirst, incessant reaching, etc. On the first .signs of any of these ‘,.vinTitrinis Milburn's taxa -Liver Pilis should be taken. They'..ltre a specific for all dis- orders arisingefrom wrong action of the , Mr. Miehakl" Miller, Ellerslie, Alta. writes:—"I take pleasure in writing you, cot -teeming the great value I hate received by using 14ilburn's Laxa-Liver PiII, fm catarrh oN he stomach, WI 1 which haVe' b‘eeiir"."sufferer for thirty years. 1 d they eompletel Pare vieek par Was Mi Ruin Down. Many - people are unaware of having anng wrong.with their heart till some exc.itement, overwork or worry causes theni suddenly to feel faint or dizzy, and have' an all -gone sinking sensation. • On the first sign of any weakness of the heart or nerves, you shduld uot wait until' your ease becomes so desperate that it is. vials for .09$1 VeebOa.reeein la 0 ts$gtf :Si