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Exeter Times, 1913-6-19, Page 3ti Not Flushes,, PALPITATION OF THE HEAR; SHORTNESS OF BREATH. Mpe. y. Cor, l'sloitet .View, Ont,, t ,rhea:,- "T am eu. elderly -soman now, . nd about foto y' ears aro T became faint,, was subiect to hot fi shies, palpitation of the heart and shortness of breath,, I went to a doctor but seemed to remain the eame,c until one cif *Emyr neighbors re- commended Must's I?axr a 2ggjr.vg ;Pitts, 1 gladly faro -sed the advice, and an to -day a strong, robust woman, and 1 thank Mir,I3T,TRZ,eS HEART AND NURV FILLS for my present state of health,, and have recommended them, to all who 'have learned of suffering from Pelee 50, cents: per I;CM or 3 boxes for l'.5 at al dealrs, or mailed direct on :debet of rete b r• The T. Milburn Co.,, inti ed T. t Toronto,tint heart trouble,"' FsoM BONNIE SCORANO 4t` INTEREST 'P 1i.1'1KS tlD IiR.%ES; Going on in the Ifi hlaar and Lowlands et Scotia, There are 00 Palen. shire Sanatorium, Loral Raidaue has i?e ar , night Of that. Thistle. The Dumbartonshire V, are to ;tratin, this ,year at near Stirling, It is proposed tan rt rraeg'hill barna, roxbur, aAaaiit ir+alclirrgse ban ,utter Town Conned have .. M alar ^ l the price of gas from $1,44 tro d•, 0 per 1400 feet, "T}ae Ring ,is to be invited to vi 1 'evthrin: the autumn to op r; , a wo antaxA arair^,y. Iothomy pavi]"atrn nftcrn v:e ren astructiooa as .lar 1 rAvire Theo re, Ora; month school ho rd have resolved to provide ,tor books fu all scholars in the parish. 1Yar,wick town eouttelt have cd to lay out the ground aaroun. R awl& Mout as a public park. The .Earl eaf Ancestor prop ose?s to open to the publle the famous Drummond Castle and gardens. The city of Edinburgh estimates indicate that there willbe a; eoas- sic]eraable increase in the midi this y greater portion of Carstairs n%station Jnui ben .removed xVitlarrstt interfering with the traaf• Strawberr ' Iteeittes.. fitrOwherry Cream Pie.—Lin pie plate with a good erust, pn nutmeg And, put oner trig ice for hal# Tlir i L L 11 1 an hour before serving,- t;sel~ul'lints. Lace veils nra, be washed an as INTERNATIONAL LESSON, strong lather of white soatp and, lukewarm water, Let them- soak - 20 minutes, then squeeze the dirt out of them, softy. and rinse in seg>era± waters., '' lie final one - should have bluing and: just a slash e a of boiled :starele to stiffen the lace, tw . ,cups oa hulled berries, st With sugar, eaver with a top ern abed bake.- When done, lift tippet crust and pour in a cr t au Country housekeepers, can dye rew articles bra beautiful shades of fast ast1,1 brown, by drying and using the Elie - green and brown- lichens from rocks, earns tree$ and fences. oil thernos in t .mss __ water to more than cover it. Strain a and: pati ira the goods. o r To bleach handkerchiefs a&1 some Ila- slices of lemon to the water they are boiled in, ' Another method is red to wash the handkerchiefs and then soak. them over night in. k 21.r -I ch waterwith, t b t$e In hanging up a a aslrxftg be, izre the ' to trot clothes inn ' I%pins in, w}ipre the„ by putting the beaten -r-h of two eggs with a cup of oreana AUX 22. Lesson XII. The Blinding :Eff t or.Sin, Aiuo 6, 1$. Goidt*n, Text, Ames , 14. Verse 1, Wae-,^The Iiebrew word l' is an interjection indicating die, cess, which in its Present conte_ is' uttered in the spirit of warning At ease—Indift'eaent, and care less, Zion-Teruhaleni the ea i, the southern kingdoan, tatal of The wetAnta.in of S.arnaria--- he.. plateau stronghold and capital of he northern kingdorrr, The pro - made phet - tablespoon or sugar, hall teatsp of cornstareh, conking all togetli to a .double boiler until thick, place the crust, sprinkle powde sugar over the top, and serve. SIraaaaherr =es in Ambush. raarage hulled strawberr'ie; iii lr stra t&'`ht sided nappies, sprinkle berries With Powdered &ka ,y $„ pour, t overthem .lzeaa a ° aaple 4f t peons of sherry - to, each, n,a Heap then with whipped cream afore they go to_ table and h... laer'ar calci. It is well to pkat th a lett a cream 'of tartar in it., t phet _s uttering a no ,g .. tt et w2ryann aaktt} ..q not 1 will leave ,.. aertrr ` i r na. . &l wars M a fshottld be hung !rein), the Nott malt, nI' -'and }shirts from alae belt., Mastc Cereals with fruit make very: ha Tit g, In vie lee. for an hour or tis, ;ore serving, iia;„. ai"Ee%vb rr`y` i tuni eery,• Soak sniuil pup Of pearl taipioea o3 night in two enp of cold. wat then art i of tire a P t over ,r{ firs itst.r ; of boiling water and; stir t-1 clear, Add a half carp of gra ;.listed sugar, and get i o e bas ,d obit t, teteri kit' lab a 0taart of b oanical a Ileo The,, e',.+,`n l nc.. , . # desserts, , o to the notable men oeenpy°ing poi* - i t apz . * . - zs bpi ,e,tt.rnrsxz_n ark both nations 2. C"alraele—l'rhobably an ass; rias ity and possibly the same which n Isar.- 10- 5 is Balled ca ino, 'der Babylonian city called 04,- taeia is mentioned in Oen, 1i1 pal* here referred to is not certain. frailiathn—i- the Orontes riv . ek^k 50 miles north of Darn a'. ^hauor- a 'ant city share verg' aascie;at tiartes, the naoderu araat ha 'iit;!sa a , t 3[ atioll of approximately Cada , hath Irl ora :h.s:ester tilt r Pal'estin✓e tar the Mediterranean, The pro Qt chaadenges has hearers to leek kingdoms of the east, and to: • cereal should be . be rent lcdr l and sntnarils- tbough the iderttzir;atfon of , tri 1 ,t -e4:1 irn taut--eitlrea' Crean or ;atrii' a ed in a syrup, as Hells wN; bort salt ail Make Tr rusty flatir ons elear as glass. -tttao a er, the irons first With a Wax, then I o, t Wax, 'tIa n t v ,Se par with paper or cloth sprinkled , tafa with salt, , 1 i.la Tillie e oils that :}aa van become limn zl i nmr be , it l "''',','''ii•- - pr; ss • with n "aa-m m a aa, 11 he t ing sraareful to put a layer of thin ? es, ltii}lecl:, put, the *.fish an ,t aliicl lean e it there until c,414, t with rrreare And ,sugar, 3teawiter ?y . out ee-D+eat froth the whites of five egg lightly the ,pulp gal as baa, ;wherries* which you . ad sweeten ,libera liberally. e• dash, set am as modem catty anfaautee,'and ear Ane between the t'onn'e and. the .ren, Oraege;.. ea%lo4 .is anaiti... lanae of the apt'e}eel. oraal. 111 sliced celery' aara+d eater Serve on }cottage rtaaia t?, When mayonuaise eine` h veld whipped ere the eenfile le allow M become heavy. ISou' e, e-Crezat titer 4 spoon of buttery zu. 110'0,04% t up of powdered l the ., LF 1A ' iUwt of One e taiw e aw 1r tcAn t diff froth, and a map of ripe be Aci ' s, raiais]aet] to as t}aexeugtayy ads n< rr .fig+s, , tar it ei ;staanetimee lb M atale fie.( rene]A Bald; hale been _. aadde-, to saran e s or the oal may have iii ed dropped too fast, k, ae of the north and to .base of he gout}), and to draw a lesson 4 lr +m the ':iaa ellataoaa Azad disaster whieb have befellen theme 3., 'Ye that pitfar away the evil "re .}rat, eenekler ydurselie R aaeeata'e ag!iinst the deo Pf reekou easter. eat +ol l+u]eai asedg:roeaat seam wbiclt ndglit las superseded "glad', 4. Stretch th:,,selvea In idlai Bas nodi iicxure: The mads.; tiff trio stab}}' The trilled ff 'central portion of the taa}mioraai ldery c r s e d for iaranbs aa, 'i calves, d aarl aa, eat the roiling and tender of the ek was itself a ➢nxury. 5. The t iy,ns of andelenee, self- clulgenee, and dieoegaard fair the mous respaoneibilities.of life are ultiplied. They include idle age, improvised for purposes of musement, Faang to the;e a ceorpaaan. ani of all manner of instruments music, 0. Drink- win© in bowls— ex- as, out of lastly vessels need etch -1 on in eonneetion ' .n with divine ' Tay, ,prrevent a olees •er cep from A r .O cracking when a boilingmixture 1 t s. +4 ,,poured on it. try nutting a silver' n r,I pulp. Serve cold. titt:iivlrerra• auee TI, i'}alp nal. pilot of cream light arid add }ra]f pint of crushed etraagi berrie tr°e:}1 sweetened. Beat all well to gather, Either' one of these eaanc ai delie'rous dish of 1aa plar.i atarch padding, served cold, o plain Mine merge. aatvberrles Preserved 11`botr. Cap the berries, saving all ti pima from them, and weigh th upoon nal and pouring the mixture' lyra it. v" If aaata:las, hew gotten into a ear- f et, work rtawdere i, 1y ],•d laoraax into the ewaarpret wherever there is ,av elan of fie no the .insects nod scatter at under the a furniture. ill S' There is nothing tetter' than Se as sernbbrzaag t1 e d td hot water for l kitchen table. 0 n 11erYoaene applied with a brush or ,i cloth ' ak m cs as good silver eleaner. na , Rinee in scalding water. of Rail' ribbons may he 'stoned to,, while still dawmp if one wishes to ca Under the proposed, reorganized. seiteme, the Glasgow city police would cost .550,0410 afore in,itnereases of pay„ Seven Seren hundred and ton cooks and waiters are leaavi,ng for Canada and of thea, ' 160 sni:led from Glasgow reeen tly, Teachers of dancing in Greenock are eomplaining that the past ,sea- son was a poor one. The picture palaces get all the blame. A movement is one foot to develop bacon curing in Scotland. Already a prosperous concern :has-been es- tablishecl in Dumfriesshire. An earthquake shock of consider- able onsider able severity was felt in the centre of Scotland. At Dunblane and Stirling the tremor was felt in the streets. At a, meeting of Pitlochry Special, District Ctinrmittee is was report- ed that there is a total daily leak- age in the water supply of 103,368 gallons. Constable John Hadden, Leith, has been presented with 'a purse of sovereigns and a pipe and case by members of Leith police force on leaving for Canada. A fine halibut, scaling 168 pounds, got entangled in Buckie salmon stake nets close- to the shore and was captured. It took three men. to lift it and n -as sold' for $5.04. Lindores Abbey, founded in the twelfth century by David, Earl of Huntingdon, is to cotyle under the hammer shortly in the sale of the Mugd rum' estate. A• fine specimei of the wild cat, a ;species thought ` to be extinct in the Highlands of Scotland, has been shot en an estate on the. west of "loss -shire. It weighed over 9 bs. and measured ovor 3 feet. The Town Council of Rutherglen, c e'lt •argh offieials,• and ethers, re- iy observed the ancient custom of "riding tithe marches" or encirc- ling" the totvn on horseback as a sy ibol 'of 'their ancient pr.ojjer ty _rights. I o; rruit. To each pound of it Alio a pound of oraoulated sugar. Coto gar and juice together in the pr serving kettle until the sugar i iliseolved, then lay in the berrie carefully, Cook etuietly at a gent! simmer for seven minutes, the transfer to shallow. stoneware disl es and set in the hot sun, Cove each dish ivith a pane of glees o with netting and put the dishes h the sun every doy until the siru is thick. Turn into preserve jar and keep in a dark, dry, cool choset of hulled berries allow four and half pounds of sugar. Crush th berrien with ehe back of a weeder spoon and pat pulp and juice ove the lire in a preserving kettle bring to a boil, and after this cook for half an hour, stirring often • Add the sugar at the end of the halt hour? cook twenty minutes mare, and put boiling hot into jars Should there he more juice than you wish, dip out part of it and convert it into jelly. Raspberry Puddings. A hearty raspberry pudding, which is wholesome enoUgh foh• children, is made thus: Thicken a quart of hot milk with a table- spoonful of flour rubbed smooth in a few ta.blespoonlyds of milk. Cook it for 10 or 15 minutes. Then add ful of vanilla, a cupful of fine bread crumbs the beaten yolks of four eggs, half a cupful of granulated sugar and the stiffly beaten white of one egg. Butter a baking dish and put the batter in it. Cover it thickly 'with fresh raspberries and sprinkle them generously with sugar and a few fresh, stemmed currants. Bake it in a moderate oven until it is firm. Then make a meringue of three egg whites beaten stiff and sweatened wiik four table- spoonfuls of granulated sugar and brown ic in the oven. Serve either cold or .hot, with cream. ' Another raspberr,y pudding is made in indivielual portions. Have ready -well buttered individual pud- ding or -custard cups. Make a doegh. of two cupfuls of flour, a teaspoonful- and a fialf of baking powder, half a teaspoonful of salt, all well sifted, togethei; and enough mill; to make' it of the. edisisteney, to (lion from a spoon. Fill' each of raspberri -2,s and eover them with - to ,within an inch of the lops ie cups. Steam it, tightly eov- , over boiling „water for '5te ites. Serve immediately with r the sauee cream a cupful of 'plated sugar with half as much er. Beat the whites of -No stiff and add them the buid rid sugar and beatta' few re ' 4,ndy and If by accident soot is dropped on se the carpet, sprinkle salt over and 20 e' eweep all up together. auix i dor very t ba mill ag elm leeks. the neer ' - sta lab dining .het the Tarot Arg ,estitan a ac n , of the young lady to be, writes a.raed L6oxt'doia; correepotadent, Yeast Ac ording to all, aacconants Pei; uvea, _ ban , coo d t , as ss:L. Mary wee -r• a 1 e r. " ' a:i detl r, °er . a o T_ ,T / the fresh arrangement of }Aer beast itiful treeses, for putting up the e ate r,.h l iirrce;sa Given 5aiito is Ili l togl am I'aa}aace. ileing aAow in her sevaenteentl ar, I'riocess Mart; Maas .putty up he ir, though not quite to the crib. tense, It naaade into ,'plait' taco: ed nip with. a !ergo bow o£, . ribbont a bur; ,lea, And ban iRu f SUNSET caaSY pD A TRMLE ATTAtK Of QIARRH A, Became Very Weak.. WIIKT TBE WESTERN EE. PEE tit DOING, . i'r'ogress or the Great West Told In a Pew Pointed` Pategrepnhs. A .brass band..has been organized irk Tolson, Public ze A p„lai, ,.chooz' :Baas been opened t Dragon Lane. A swimming el*ab has been organ- ized in Port Alberni, Bearer are plentiful between I n L a r view and Dog Lake. Post urice money orders are non issued in Bridesviiie.. Nearedley work has been s, n re untied On the Oregon ?'aline. There, are, ' k _ names a , n e, o. z tiZe .voters list in the Okanagan, The Icelanders have started eo!onr on Graham Island. Nine murder charges Clintonbeard at the 3'tn, , "ss" csa work has been _resumed Dittman )dine in the Slogan - arises are being moved On frosty Skagw ' to Juneau. More than 200 men are workli- the br.7pyaard at Whitehorse, Diiarnccea, especially if allowed. to ratre arty length of thee,, eauses greatH : a ; mess, and the only thing to dab..ta#a it on its first appearance. You will find that a w does of a. °{ass s TsA " ar ;"ir.o Srrtawagaitx will do tlds gniekly= and effectively. RS. JAcon SMITH, Manor; Sask., Frites -e t' art. pleased to express my gratitude for your remedy, In my,. case, I had a terrible attack of die.rncra, Just. ` about every=: three minutes, R, would have 4' a gassaoe, and it would keep, this rip for - a week ata tune, caning the assin of bloodye water. 1 was so pained an at weak„ 4 , ukd opt d anything. 4'at V y n my ,S./lre your iAfa. L"A+'3T+AFi ' s eogo r o Wrt.n ST*ewnna t recommended, T ae T dura;>- will present the narSSiOn ploy =.rn British COlurohia this t incr. The bag sawadil at Chase 5s'an- tried it and it thororxghly cared nae. It the only ;medicine for this complaint nt Ysv` a , ?ll tc u - e "Ppd Itta sj u'e ' has been, on the mer- l:et for over st7cty-tibio yearr, and is,,with- 1 Fait a doubt, the beer remedy l adl e; fee the erase of Diarrbo a, D.y- aateree c ratsms, Pain in the SWIM* leholera ,',forbars, Cholera Infanturn, and all nwet COMplaints, ben yen ask ter "Tyr, F0wt, ,art see that you. s pot handed. oae of tht. many ,atntes for this old rvliabtu a remedy, tano shifts And etitTxltay`iia btl Get the yella c ovr en. pesra the name. of Ti Alrrarat &,00.4 {a^tait tP w" I.ixa hied, Toroaato, Ont, s alk b Price 35_ cents.. 'planteda. Duck Cxt'ek anal W than Price* nae del thio 4 coir. dIteeezAtky S jitter $1,200, ;veto shipped 'Wand, T}ae: epi n 4.aia cage» As summer eomes on it saves a ie esserts of fruite. 1" ' camphor gt4111 and ground coffee r 1 rued together. r Roomy arm °Ware for the porch 1 made of Preneh willow and I? ve a pocket on one side. 3 A small Clear vegetable brush • 'should be kept bandy to brush out 8 the fringe on doilies. a The most economical -way to buy • hair is a great event in a girl's Me, It is nearly as important as putting on her Arst trailing dress or re- 141ehing her first love letter. Of all the royal family none takee a more hearty interest in airships and air loeroes than Priueess Mary, whoee great ainbition, it appears, ie to flv. She made a tour of her own of the tursheds at Aldershot end was faaem' ated by all she Say. Princess .1fare. has her own elute , rooms now at Buckinghem Pal- ace, They are those which former- ly were occupied hy ber aunt, Prin. cess Victoria, and have a charming The chief oibre-Those that ere thel most prized and expensIVe. this seemed like shameful extrav- agance to the frugal shepherd and prophet accustomed to simpler ha, - bits of life and industry. Are not grieved lor--Do not worry -about the afflietion of Joe- . anasseh, provinco named after the sons of Jeseph, eomprised the heart of the northern kingdom, and eeemed at this time at the height of prospee- ley. But although unnoticed h the onto Ephraim a 1M 1 n milk* ts Chinaman vioe '1 for euptilyin lie Id; °it was when we Grosvenor Gate, WI 'a brought tip I Was eXt o mood I said to Lady Bea 1 , dear, you must re itlernan for me.' <mg that Lady Beaconsfield of of seeing remarkable pea - and said to her: 'My clear, know he is a remarkable mate; I ennot tell you for what he is re - a rkable. but you may take it .trom e that he is remarkable.' Lady Beaconsfield tripped downstairs and I was tureing to my work when rushed down; Lady „Ileaeonslield had fainted. She thought' she had •ero Moltanna, the veiled prophet, hoot his veil STRANGE MALADY, e route between agd Fort Fraser, Res from Lillooet, and 16 00 trees will he planted th Retail clerk/ aO Women,. the ministers to flown to wan their view up Coustetution Mil, ',Obey efforts te secure a duce have been considerably altered for her, made ell pruk and rosy with' white walls and woodwork. There' is a schoolroom where she pursues her studiee and does her reading ts and delightful room it is, with I. chintz covered chairs and boo eases filled with volumes all bou in rose leather with the princes own book plate within, Ruskin is one of the authors the queen approves far her oapoetetee perusal, and every one of los works finds a place on those shelves. Princess Mary is as fond of her camera as the rest of the family, and she does not shirk developin her pictures herself. In fact. sh regards it as the best part of the 'Lli"ne Prince of Wales, if custom and etiquete allowed him, would reside with the king and queen T. Gyr was given six months in jail for running a blind pig in Prince Rupert. Ife appealed Oil , ease and is out on $500 bail, Sir Saville Crossley, Bart., who k- had just arrived at Victoria ram orl, the Orient, was knocked down by s an auto driven by a woman. • An enlarged photograph of the first Mayor of Victoria has been' placed in the council eharnber„ gift of the Native Sons' Soeiety. There is no truth in the report that the Ikeda, group of copper claims on Moresby Island has been soap is large.quantities, then let eyes blinded by extravagance' and it dry before using. luxury, a cloud was alreadv gath-4 • Cheese balls to serve with salad ering on the horizon and 'the day lire geod made.. of Parmesan and of dire affliction was already im-, ottage cheese. with hot vinegar. If paint sticks to glass remove it 7,. Go captive—In ,34, en y a few Soften hard water for toilet use years after thoprophet had uttered • by a pinch of borax. Linens aredbest bleached on thick ed Gilead and Galilee, carrying,the foremost of the inhabitants 'into ades i.G' lllo k .Napoleon. ti Yis The beler , .,f W ra.bness Church, of. on?tl rt St ,• n lEstex looks more like an aneient-e's ed zuzntner house than " a, belfry.- Its-niin;i ief interest lies in the fact that it' hard antains,two huge saws made at the- Po tine when Napoleon was,„ supposed gran ' e on the point of invading Eng- butt ;•.Those saws; were to be used eggs Utzng IdoVcrn treed ith which ter; ' u ock e i dean Captivity. 8.- The Lord Jehovah—An nr.us- tall combination, used, perha.ps, for emphasis. The excellency—Or, pride. Either as in Hos. 5. 5 and elsewhere, the Electrocuring Timber. A French process of "electrocur- ing" timber is stated to give per- fect seasoning in a single night. With lead -plate electrodes on each side, the timber is placed in a solu- tien containing ten per cent. of borax, five per cent. of resin and a little soda and application of the cuirent 'expels tlie sap -and fills the wood cells with borax and resin. Many a man complains that things are not corning his way when it is really the .fault of his way. Get Next To Your Liver, IF YOU DON'T Something Serious May friappen. At times everyone is bilious, the Liver. becomes overworked, bad bile is ac.ett. mutated, and enters the blood, arid causes a general clogging up of the secretions. When this happens no one can e.scape Constipation`, Jaundice, Headaches, I, Ileartl3tirn, 'Indigestion, tiver Com- plaint, and those tired ,Weary ,feelings whiCh follow the wrong action of the late the sluggish Liver, clean the coated eongue, sWeetee *the breath, and clear away all:the waste and poisonous matter from the system. - MRS: H. A. MCCLARAIV, nimbey, Alta., writes •--" I have used \I • ' T...vre." PILLS, and am greatly pleased with the results. 'I' had Indigestion, and such a bitter 'taste in my mouth after retiring that was so unpleasant I could not sleep' well, and also had a deathly sickness sometimes after I had 2,3 cents p.er vial or ,t vials for $1.90: See' that you get,them when asked for. Co,, 1;irrated,,TOronte, Out. vainglorious temper of the people, or the things of which they with their distorted vtsion of things weie proud. Jacob—Referring again to the southern kingdom and to its _capi- tal, Jerusalem. Another permis- sible explanation of the phrase, the excellency of Jacob, is to regard the expression as a whole as refer- ring to the capital city, Jerusalem, the palaces and general symbols of pride and. luxury of which are an abomination unto- Jehcivah. Deliver up the city with all that - Eller ein---The northern capital, Samaria, was taken and its' eiti- smis exiled in 721. The scorthern , kingdom snrvired until 587, When Jerusalem was destroyed and its eit3-.ri^ carried into captivity. Soet-Pall 650 Tons Per Mile. - It will Come as a surprise t:f) the general public to learn that on each square mile of the city of London, ti England, no less than 660 tons th soot falls ,,. in the twelve months. st An influential committee has - been at work for a yea.r Pas& using a ape- rif test ;the actual amount of the solid ve contents of the air from day to day. in soutb-west London the amount r°t'lualed, at 460 'tons Per sclua're until he marries. He is repute to be very shy on the stittject matrimony. Indeed, it is Said him that the less he has to do with ladies the better he is pleased. He will -balk eloquently about war, about aeroplaning or sport of any kind, but the moment the fair -sex is mentioned he is boyishly reti- cent. There is one exception, how- ever. The tactics of the suffra_ gettes are said to cause a merry twinkle in his eye. The prince is to pass another year at Oxfoid and not go to Trin,ty College, Cambridge, as had orig- inally been contemplated by the king. The heir apparent, who has been enjoying' the best of health since his return from Germany, will remain at Magdalen until the end of -the summer term of 1914. As soon as he leaves Oxford pre- Parations will be made for his pro_ Posed visit to Canada, but how far it -will be possible for him to visit other parts of the British em- pire remains to be seen. son a few miles west of Green- -wm;d, Earl Walker and Earl Hurst, are washing out a little over an ounce of gold daily. Ore trus,hing will begin- next d month at the Coronation Mine in °I the Lillooet district with a 10 stamp °I mill. Thirty or more men will be employed at the mine a,nd mill. Dr. F. L. de Vertreuil, of Victor- ia, brought suit against, a jeweller for $1,000 damages, claiming the latter had lost the 154,000th part of a grain of radium belonging to the doctor who won the ease. 1Pirst Ma telt ee 3-f, Lucifer matches ---that is, ma tches pped with an explosive subStance at bur_sts into flame on being firSt used .abotit 1834. Any .improvements have been fide in matches shiee then th ost important of which. was the int g the box only. annuallY ',the total fer the Li the. Hands et His Friends. The conductor of a Western freight train saw a tramp stealing a ride on one of the forward ears; He told a brakeman in the caboose to go et and ut tl p p ie man off at the first stop. An exchange tells what happened: When the brakeman approached the tramp waved a big revolver, and Cold him to get away. "Did you get rid of hire V' the coedector asked, when the train MR, JOIIN BRIGGS, Whitewood, Sask".; writes:— I ain sending you this test - .das motion again. ply. "He tuened out to be an:old School friend of Mined' English doctors are puzzled b new disease which has appeare the west eonntry and spread with almost the rapidity of an epidemic. The chief symptom of the disease is the appearance on the tonsils and back of the throat of a mem- brane resem.bling tha.t et diphther- ia, together with a swelling of the lymphatic glands in the neck, very high temperature, severe erysip- elas, swelling in the joints and heart failure and other symptoms. t The heart weakness often persists indefinitely after all the throat Symptoms have disappeared. It was first thought the disease was diphtheria, but exudate from the throat was forwarded to the Clin- ical Research Association in Lon- don and no trace of the diphtheria bacihus -was found. Since then it has been suggested that the dis- ease may prove to be a non -typ- ical variety of scarlet fever or measles. Paris is suffering from a similar epidemic, and there the death rate among children affected averages 15 to 20 per cent, which is worse than the mortality from diphtheria before the days of antitoxin. If Your Rao s Oil YOUR KIDNEYS ARE RESPONSIBLE. conductor., as he started over 'the When he came back the bralre- man asked :, "NO, he turned out to be an old school friend of mine, -too, .rep.lect They are wor_t1 - the condrietor, teo\eVi.tfe, tie eel- Pt; ssY ilie'ettbd tag -3 to -1; got a nett- attachment f or the , p°rr derietajetihr..,';;; e Stunt,. 'Relief la Sight. "Hang. it Mary jiist let the d went 'not a believer patent medicines, but I got so ruu down, that I became quite' willing to give anything a trial. I paid a visit to our local dniggist, and told him I was suffering intense agony with my back. He told me I had/kidney troulple, and handed rue a box of DOAN'S KioN-r,v PILLS, saying it was the hect thm e could possibly give me. I tried/ t e , and the effect was certainly marvelous.,