HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1913-9-11, Page 7DEQ
OT
T
S
WALL
When the bloodbecomes impure, it.
is only natural that boils, pimples, or
some other indication of bad, blood should
break out of the system. There is only
one teiaag to do, and that is to purify the
blood by using a t eeeugh blood cleave-
hee Medicine sech as Beenecie B1,00p
1 Me. ANDRgIV £$. CoLLrki&n R$QCr
Ciade N,1e., terites:—"For years I was
troubled
x.
r d ri
t
h Bons. $did not renew
what it was to be rid of them unfit I
began to use Be nocs Itt.00n ler reties,
1 only used two bottles of it, and it is
nen: over. feu rears, and I eau honestly
say that $ have never had any boils since,
I can always recommend B.13,13."
Bu pact Beam Bsrsuxs is a remedy
indicated for the purification of the
beeped, 1+04 and hasbeen
used by thous. tam
dt.4ripg the past 39 }ears,
It is manufactured by The T. Milburn
Co„ Limited, Torento,Ont.
FROM
TS op
w•es-a.
pit°`altf&I If
tilt NKK :t+ ll IiixAES
What
fine tin in the
Lowlands of An'
.a mala Ites added ie. (24 cents)
week to the pea' of the roadmen.
Dogfish re eauein r'eer batvOe
among
`c
talc ng cattier• fish ; on the we Vit, coast,
__--'Q less than le its tie the
Loth
-
re
idle'. through tide Leith
iter.
Anite5, Wilscanw, Whither%
r #ewcci taaat he suffering.
:to his acaaldiaag s'njuries.
canaanred
that .l:" riateess
nil
visit the C'ounteess of
Cawdor Castle this seca,-
osohold
I?eaelies I est Fruit for Dessert.
There is perhaps no other ;fruit of
which so many delieious frozen des-
serts van he"coneoctedf a:; the peach,
The, strawberry may rise up on its
vines and argue itself red in the
face trying to prove Haat it 'holds
the place given to the peach, And
in strawberry season perhaps we
will .all agree with it. But for the
present let rte see what claim the
peed: has to the place of the most:
freezable fruit.
To begin with, there is plain
peach, ice cream. One way to inake.
it is this: 'soil a, pint of cream iii, ,a
0
dt utile boder and When it is 'teat
add 10 heaping teaspoonfnls <tl
.sugar. Stir until the sugar is .d1ie-
solved, take from the Are, add at:e-
otlher pint of cream- cool nod'
freeze, When, yowt feel the dasher
cranking be tvti,y, attniekly add
smart of peaadh pwflp. Tura the'.
dasher for five minutes more, thea
n^emove it, peek the cream, anti
at ripen for two hours,
Another Ice Creeni Reejpe+ ren
bther way to make peach tee o1r
ao itai. a >ealt cif €reatacle#llee 1.
tit rz eDnnnan't of milk, two eggs,
,n ra•.'.ra�'
peach pulp: if the
Sset enraugh, 444
pweY
and p'ipeaa,
led if the milk awl
Diane}milia• CehtOirs 0
Si)tuotinie$ '
hes ela)(Ni eztrc.4e
griudiug and .
turztat it smooth s
leis curdling;
eaches an -e often:
of the mixture'
tnnlp, Paras Op
small neee�
aangka a weegs table
nude
pounds pie plant, throe pounds
sugar, one pineapple, two oranges,
the 'juice of one lemon cut in email
pieces; let it stand oyer night; ie
the morning boil slowly one hour
Spice Cake. -Cine cup granulated
sugar, one-half cup butter, one
half cup milk, two cups flour, two
and one-half eggs, one heaping tea-
spoon baking powder, one-half tea -1
spoon each of cinnamon and cloves
and a little nutmeg. Break eggs in
batter after flour has been put in
Oatmeal Cookies. -- Cream two
thirds cup of butter (or shortening}
seaet, with one cup sugar, Add tw
well beatee eggs, sift three-o;zartee
teaspoon of socia_ into two scan,
cups of flour, one -halt teaspoon o
salt, one good_ sized teaspoon citing
Mort. 'I'o this mixture add two
cups uncooked oatmeal and one cup
raisins. Soak the r aisius in hot wa
ter a 'few minutes before us:tig
Flatten out in the tins ' with
spoon and bake in a moderate oven
ii. s> Dints.
Ito 5 'vola' .lin tt, ,
fiaouldl a child fall on the beach o
elaewher•e, afi rag steeped ie ray:
qgg' rd pla,oed on the bruise,will
eras � the pain ,almost immed atrl;,
When' washing pudding cloths,
row some orange peelings into
water ; this eolleets the grease
helps to make the cloths white
and: ciente,
Ti keep liftee lnitoett as a distance',
iseine a small pec of mann
til spt1Pge the Peen aaetl
ww tie it end tai;,w todee'.
not, he aruaabled with r`,t
3
FAMOUS WOR ..-
I .S. L. ��.�[[jCCxfele�A�lvtr BI ISIIEiD •
? o riure Worthy Exploit of tiie
Ethel Inas .Been bone By
Woman.
The .'loyal Qeo aphical' Soclety
o s' -ort time ago voted to admit
n
nt women
s to fellawasltfip ort yiaa'ual terms eel
t wee. This Was only a timely and
e dust recognition of fire fast that tlao
ranee of the explorers ieclude neatly
women ww worthy who aro o ,;h
1
o t 3 to be clr
4
ssed
whit such a lventerous travellers as
�, Henry Sa.yage-Laandor, writes P. L.
- Weide, fellow of the $oval (eograph-
teal ;society, Ono of the tuost re-
rcarlrable journeys ever uedertal eu
a i by a, woman was that c£ Mrs. Leon;-
- idas Hubbard in continuation of the
bees ooreuiene in wr'izlch her lutsband lost
bran lite h 1903.
,.
l' lz
r
Their rsaarz =age had ccezarred: at
F3ewdiee Ont., on ,fan ;dry 31, 1901,
It was en June 29 19,,,,, that he sailed
:roe=a New -o awlwas pot argil':
the ol. n ."a et: r, t l 'Rabe
to .rel r� d7� c d ' . a a zusssa e,
u'ia. Iann,I7;i:;. $ d huL ca flctob:r $t�
in +tine :$'"tcr':e,,.- of 1 eradore„ 11f
a
pia haat been to arm til the crim-
e t river to Lae ar e?ajhanan n4t1
:11f,-41, go drab; n tsha. G mere thrgt" tcE
t ng:sv a baY OPa#1t7i14 i to Hyrtl on
retell' thee Melanie; the laittrrdott. d.
!eaernese that lie, nneea.t of the erast-
o end W the preletnce of Quebec,.
-Vie :n tted tn. nd tlia Northwest river
zcl tea the wryer' river ineteazd, and
a*^n ayeelt woe that ipzstead'of ceinteg
c afi the !eke he eeuelit. bo wale-
, ar e ei: olveei le the graze or
la ee4s ;an}o a then great Ialatenu. W'ihea
at aai:,t h eamc iii sight of iieliatltat
;�;a , it ww°, �: ton trate, lie,' had Pot
to e:sett Nod eliough, de ending Mien
' gun to support him, wed he .lowly
„i a'ed ts;a death. Ilia body •was re,•
e.o, cad dairing the winter.
!n the Sumner ,of 1943
4
5
ref tns e
the e.stUlalaslh
bakery,
;ebe for r aatyT 1°
grr��;tie+re of the C
tnf L azanrlfishire b
rtil
seamen.
Perth Town Coag
con.linended by the
tho price of
,,00tl l east.
(''carina
of 'gird
(rota iiaaw leeaclizag' granas moo
S'e'#lanae'.
"1'biw death hal encranrrand of one
Letltaant's 'lest -known resident in
the , ar„retoaw of iJiss. Jess n a1w"iehol,
better known as "Goatie Jess."
st `Mi year the employee or has
tw°call Lennox ;Foundry", A1exen-
ep
tiria . disburr ed among the members
of their holiday fund the sum: taf
bane"tn eonnment is heard tritely
about the damage done to the ""en
wiek road by heavy nnotor traffie
plying between Glasgow and Ayt-
ehire:
The 1an.rge, :ittnintl't�abinn;at Cleeland
Junction tin the Caledonian Bail -
way, hos been destroyed by fire and
the :signal system rendered useless,
The Montrose aeroplane squad -
ton of the Royal Flying Corps will
be almost completely transferred to
Conttaty Limerick, Ireland, for six
„weeks.
In Edinburgh Dean of Guilt]
Court the Edinburgh .School Board
were granted a warrant fair the re-,
construction of Cannon Ball Bouse,
Castlehill.
The. sum of $2,700, which consti-
tutes a record, was drawn at the
show under the auspices of the
Perthshire Agricultural ,Society,
held on the a South Inch, Perth.
A pair of owls have taken up
their abode near the top of James-
town Parish Church steeple, and
rho young ones can be seen at night
flying about in the gloaming.
In one week the quantity of fruit
sent from Blairgowrie Station was
242 `tons, df which 18 went by pas-
senger trains. About 150 tons went.
to England.
DOCTORS SID
COULD NOT GET CARED
have
he milk, hast
treeeie Areas
again It is b
process thrat,
wattled after t
Partly fs'uzi
To prey,
peaches,
dud. press therm tial
press, If they €ar
trey, they eau lit
w
'tit aa. silver. Ior'1t,
taxlale press anaetilot
aeh slierbet is
iait cse of peaches;
>alaned peaches, if
t.11anVOr, van �.e
jlnicta razed bugur: n
r„T2N,
;li;fly t B.l'',`j:`s,f:
s�nusliti 'lilt+ec 1 01 t: es,xen udcI
be) un in the ae htry < n
ed the meat, ,l hi �w ^ l ;a.eep rt fr ::
1" the hi:attsed weather.
Very thin. ntaiasiiaa gee ,:1e need not
Le a,tr .ehed if'ir riot' ^it;i.l. ti.,1 .wez.
Mr G
They willhies' evenally t n, b
*tiff eI o ugh and war n -a -h 10 -it -4 `r
than z at41rOted. Sareheii gods
,hen Ter, thin
easily,.;
12r
lou nd
led a gnat
juice of a lend,"
mixture is utd retalo e lee d sh-
- and add the stif ly beaten. whites`
two eggs, i?uek taai4k allow it to •a
How for tw h airs. Reels this
erbet, like all other sherbets, well ,n
acked in zee.
"zdiltin Sherbet. -,Sicilian slaty-!
a?t is rich and should be made cif l
and juicy peaaelnes. To make
a dozen big .peaches, stone
and crit them in small pieea+s
with a envoi' spoon: Add tw cup-
fuls of granulated sugar and two
cupfuls of orauste juie , and stir l
until the sugar is thoroughly dis.
solved. Then turn into a freezer o
unci freeze. 'When you, remove the Z
dasher add a, meringue made of a'
t
Beaten egg yolk rand to tablespoon- .l
'el of powdered sugar well mimed. 1't
Park and stand in a tool place fur It
two hours.
For peach pudding maike ri;_rh w•a=
Idila ice cream. Made according to
the following recipe it will he of the
right consistency: and flavor:
Scald a quart of thin cream °and
a cupful of granulated sugar in a
double boiler' and cool thein. Add
a tablespoonful` , of vanilla. and
freeze hard. Line 'a mould with an
inch -and -a -half layer of the vanilla
cream and quickly fill the centre
with peaches cut in cubes. Carver
the top 'with a laver of cream and
peek in ice and salt for two hours.
If a more elaborate pudding is de-
sidear, mix the fruit with whipped'
; ,,:df
dna fife l^s<h
gethox exiankal �a t .
lit
apt to te4t'
.k beetles
.°A.T
po
vegeel
award plaster
tinder in
w>A here the b
to short thee
"ppe'a,re d.
Instead, of pili
ttWee n void .w
i4kws been addedi t
iter way i$ to
first, wwThie"it thoroughly
w:tsn. :nn1y washing itn.
r.
Washing' vegetables''
vate"n" makes ineeete etiele ot.
bait is good for lusth e►cess hair.
cnit it well into the roots of the hair
t night, then tie the hair up in a
,angel handkcerehief e.�r wc.er ,�w::tight-
ap, 1 rueh out the n1v , rnni the
awning. Several aii�aiictttinats of
leis treatment will bring aibunt. ti
Mreat improvement in the pp�c
nee of the heir.
Wtashing•blaaail.eta i:x oabily t
well done ran this way : Pt,ur int
etb half a pint elf • 2u u'eheld r
uzonia ; cover imeitedi ately with
takewarnn water, This sends the
limes through the blanket and loos -
ns they dirt. Stir the blanket with
stick until the dirt is in the we-
er. Rinse in zL tub el clear water,
le same temperature as the first.
un lightly through a wringer and
an out to dry.
and
and the
Who 1.
THREE VMS OF
CURED HIM
MR. DAVID Breeme-e, Claremont,
N.§., writes: -"I have had indigestion
for some yeers, and' could hardly eat.
It then turned into a sour etomach, and
• ehe electors said I mild not get cured.
1 used a lot of medicate until at last one
of my friends told late to use Mienmteee
' 1,,exa-Liveet Plats, aid after I had used
three vials, I was completely cured, and
I always keep them in the house nowe'
wonderful remedy far all diseases or clis-
orders of the liver, and lia-ve been univer-
sally used. during the twenty odd years
they have beeri on the market.
price 25 cents aevial, or 5 for Sh00,
at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt
of price be- The 'Ts .1e/ilbertt Coe Limited,
sirs. Hubbard organized the expe'di
ion to llutslt his work. $he got to
he Northwest wive, -;pes t on 'Mann
a inlet en Jun 5th, tend fount' she
ti Gni), 'miles to go through unknown
brasier* two menthe, for the iiud
Bay,' Company's ' atemeec 'flea.
" ided the onlonlya ',nee of returnin-
tsa etvatltzetion before the pittleSs l
� lerrndoa" winter came down tike a well
! ou t.�ne field, rind the little ship would
ix tQ
plague.
(ea
(e
n 1nd 1 gthe
ih t day
smote to +escape
.a- :no escape. In
diene were twk.
plate -when I, bed
Face To Fa
BAR WATER WAS THE
'MLS; I DWR$D T INQSXo? , writ
Alta,, writes:--`" Coming, to the fiiosih
west from B C, in the summer of .t910�.
we were face to face With. the serious pro..
item of being able to secure good drink-
ing water; this we could not get, so were
obliged to dnuk water containing a great`
deal of alkali, with the result that 64'e
were all troubled with, Diarrhax;a, For:
innate' eve hado
sr
abtteo
? of fc, :VOW-.
ER's Ex reecer or 'Mao ,ca. raewJimart !.
in the house which soon relieved our
ufferings. I have always kept a. bottle
in the house since ohtainiztg such bene-
fici;ni resultsfrom its use. ewhez¢ zsty boy
baby was sinnilaxlr tronbieci, "It
always proved a fdend in geed.'"
There are many imitations of "Dr-
ove
"Da
ove "a", When you ask for the well-
-e insist oa be ,,. given if.
s era oat than parker ts,,r aver sixty-
,
ars; ant las at a'°s i,wen the
, It cures wltes;r
Tu rks
I tried
Ceetgltilttlswa�laa• lnlef of the t1atl,.ar.iens.
recent a
c . .t phQi�aga^ap'h def Gf ne.,a, haw Uff, the <s>r tahrx Cm -e-
lderl l' .�
n of of the ul avian az' yy, and, his beautiful awl charm,
e After baling a; anixiplished the diilleult task of driving
°enm Europe baek_to Asia a feat that bad been unsuocess-
ry various nations in the Asia,
centuries, this modern Nu-
tamed for the reee t nnrnlooked-for losses of the Bele,aelaus
ins"eln broke out annatenag the Balkan allies.
as
rapper
w ludo
subtle _
against
zn the det
sT;
of °. he ni., 'filletira
ea the ye:low
arice
Oven bee
5.
Mutes .
Site had two CaTIVAI3 CIMaet$, nine
feet long, Aboard, them, with
artieles, she Stowed two hal
k teats, a SWIM canvas and
!bege, 89a pounds of lieur, 200
gar and salt. Airs. Hubbard curried re-
volver and hair:tine knife, and ineaddi-
cream before putting it in the
mould.
for tho filch tried hard to prevent
the award.
Two Couplee, 3Iarried, Ob.
Jain Famous Filth.
The historic filch of beeen whieli
is given every year at Ininmow,
England, to married couples that
ean convinee a jury of six. bachelors
and six maidene that they have
lived together without a, cross word
for the Nvhole of the year previous
pile• ernated pairs -and to both it was
awatded• In tho ca -se of William
and Agnes, Hewitt, of York, counsel t
FaVorite Recipes.
Nut Bread Without Yeast. -One
egg, one cup sugar, one and one-
half cups milk, one teaspoon salt,
-three and one-haIf cups sifted flour,
three heaping teaspoons baking
powder, one cup chopped nuts. -Mix
in order given. Pour into two
bread pans. Let gtand twenty min-
utes in a warm place and bake in
hot oven thirty or forty minutes.
It is the best nut bread made with
white !lour.
. Apple Dumplings. -Two cups sift-
ed flour, two level teaspoons bak-
ing powder, one-fourth teaspoon
salt, one-fourth cup shortening,
about three-fourths cup Milk, four
apples, cinnamon and sugar. Roll
dough into a sauare sheet one-
third inch thick and cut into four
pieces. Layea cored and .pa,red ap-
ple on each piece, fill the leentre
with sugar, and cinnamon, then
draw up the paste to cover. apple,
melee smooth, and bake on buttered
dish, Serve hot with hard sa,uce
Potato Doughants.-One large
cup cif hot mashed potato creamed
with one heaping cap of granulated
sngar, two-thirds ,exip of sweet milk,
and two table.spooes of melted lard.
Add two well beaten oggeanelth'ree
pinch of salt, and nu !meg to taste.
Use flour enough to roll, cut in
ringso and fry ite hot lard, They
remain moist)
Ptcplant Marmalade. Three
"now Comes it, sir," he thunder-
ed, "that although you haxe been
married twenty-five years, you wait-
ed till bacon was fourteen pence. a
pound before putting forwaael your
claim 1"
The Yorkshire man admitted that
he came from a -thrifty cou:.1.y.
"I'm making the claim new," he
said, "because rin going to cele-
brate my silver wedding tvi' that
side of bacon."
"How ean you represent yourself
as an ideal husband when. you admit
that your ruling passion is the col-
lection of caterpillars and other
reptiles ?'' pursued 'counsel . "What,
I ask eve is the position of a wo-.
mae who must boocontene•to share
her' huebend's love with a cater-
pillar ?"
The claimant murmured that his
wifeededn t mind ie.
What finally won the filch for tho
Hewitts Was the husband's recipe
for married
"Similarity of' tastes, readiness
to help each other in the little difil-
eulties of married life, and"-Itir.
Hewitt paused improssively--:-``no
nagging at home."
If we a, dollae had te pay-
'. Ah, friends', this is no -gentle jest -
For ev'ee- , smile we ,wore: each .day.
Thou e
r eking to reg
fuegitoef
e..had to step
el what eouid eeen; hut. .did
!my mind dwell ••On the 'Proha
drinldng, eVen while. -the cup
if deterraireief to Ate."' Vie
created by these 'winged pests
:mous which every .explortir has dtve
feelleUlle Them were fresh .bee
ate
The lo
Me to a.couple of cameras, a ttextant
with artifitiel horizon, a barometer
and a thermometer. saPparel
Atolaste :after passing magailleent
Tie
word
lys; then
maunment
be ent:re
bucks all about, and the uteu did not
lthe to let their tentee feral:nine leader
venture far from camp.
who carap out or intend. 10 emulate
her example, "1 wore a short shirt
over knickerbockere, a short Sweater
tad a belt to which. Avere attached
cartridge pouch, revolver and
ng Unite, My hat was a rather
na ow-brbrun'ed soft 'felt. I had one
pair et heavy leather moceasins reach,
almeat to rhy IMeefi, one pair of
high tiereekin booth, one Pelr low ones
and three pairs of duffel. Of under-
wear bad four enits and live paha
of stockings, all wool. I look also a
ish dogskin coat, one pair leather
gloves, ono pair woolen gloves and a,
blouse -for Sundays," she nalveltt
adds. For my tent I had an air mat-
tress, crib size, one pair light gray
camp, blankets, one light wool com-
fortable weighing 33,1'3 pounds, one
little feather pillow and a hot-water
Soon 'After the Start
came tumultuous teaming rapids. The
four men plied their poles till it
seemed that the strain must surely
snap them and leave the laden craft
spinning helplessly la the raging tor-
rent. When Mrs. Hubbard scrambled
along shore at the most difficult
places, the men warned her that she
ninstret stand on the great robks gaz-
jug into the' maelstrom.,
"Why not?" she asked, longing, like
Eve, for that which was forbidden.
"You will get dizzy and fall in,"
they said.
"But I do not get. dizzy," she in -
''Maybe you think you don't," they
replied. "It is all right while you
are lookink et the rapids, but it is
When you turn that you will fall. It
is very dankerous. If you are going
to do that we will just turn round and
go back to Northwest river."
The warning was typical of their
watchful care and loyalty.
At one of the portages the IT1611
thought they would save themselves
trouble. . Two got into a canoe, con-
taining half its usual load, and poled
it, while the two others hauled from
the bank, just like boatmen • ine the
treacherous rivors of China. Sudden-
ly, at a big rock round. which the
water furiously swirled and eddied,
over went the' canoe. One of the men,
still clinging to the submerged boat,
was wept down the river likce so
inech drietweed, When PA last lie
and his prectouti 'charge came io the
sliallo).ver water and they got him out,
it :was found that all the aees, the
etove, the frying -pane and other en:
valuable articles gono.
seemed Tor a moment as though the
loos epelled failure, put the brave
womae had no such word in her vo-
All tlie time them was the harass,
tng anxiety -would they reach tie -
for the one am!, only ship? Some
days they made only two milee, amid
rotten logs and promise:nous bould-
ors, wet and slimy, With moss,
Threatening Wrenched Ankle*,
ykk.. that trackless 'wilderness an' in-.
jury' to -a limb may, be' an irreparable
or even a fatal misfortune. Mosqui-
waterfall% they came to Lake AMU -
Immo:, and to celebrate the tweet
there was rice, pudding for cupeeri
just as they mine to the end or tho
'lake the wind rose and the big wares
threatened to upset the eancies. But
the fates were: on their side. For the e
1103:t 50 Miles the country was alive 't'"
with the caribou; great muses of the the. It!
Golden Text,
nor
at sight of human heitge, means that tow eueseque
Airs, Hubbard wae ultneeelng what no
other white woman probably had ever
seen before -Ili all migration
ah 'al f th fit t four root
iteeoes or o •e
ed pilgrims. Tile indieus kill them
by the hundreds, and If they do not
meet them at the proper time ie means
starvation. The wolvee follow them,
choosing a single animal aud
Pitilessly Running Him Down.
At the outlet of the lesser lake into
which Mit:hike:man opens they found
the 800 -mile George river beginning
as a tiny rivulet, There were signs
of camps desarted by the Indians,
The little party was anxious, tor its
reception was a matter of uncertaintY-
Mrs Hubbard got mit her revolver
and began to polish it. It was the
sixteenth of August and they had still
about 270 miles to go to meet the
ship. They saw a dark huddle of what
they took to be caribou on the bank.
After an exchange of shots they found
out their mistake. The 'valiant In-
dian hunters had departed, leaving the
women and children to await their
return. They were waiting and shout-
ing, "Go away, go away! We are
afraid of you! Our husbands are
But when they saw it was only a
woman their fear turned to laughter
and . entire friendliness,
They told Mrs. Hubbard it would
take two months to get to Ungava.
She gave them a little tea—worth- as
much as line gold to them—and de-
parted, though they had offered to
bestow wives en all her. men if they
would but remain.
More Indians were met, and an-
other invitation to tarry among theni
had to be resisted.
Then came a wild race down
through the rapids for five days. "When
at lase they came out at the sea there
were the tiny buildings of the trad-
ing post and Mr. Ford, the agent. Alm
Hubbard s _first question was, "Hae
the ship been he -e9" •
"Yes," was the answer.
"And gone again;
"Yes -that is -what ship do you
mean? Is there any other ship ex-
pected here than the company's ship'?"
"No, it is the company's ship 1
mean, the Pelican, Ifas she been
"Yes," he replied, "she was here
last September: 1 expect lier in Sep-
tember again, about the middle of the
month Or later."
So the long race against time, the
long, hard .fight against adversity was
over. Mrs. Hubbard had kept faith
with her hesband's memory; she had,
finished his work; she had wrieten a
neeir chapter ef geography. It is not a
story that bristles with improbable,
hair -breadth escapes and "moving ac -
0
he
fifth commeudment as beading
second table. The reason fur
this has been chiefly that this divi-
sion seemed to make the amount of
writing on the two tables Mere
nearly equal. It has been defend-
ed also on the ground that the com-
mandment itself is moral rather ,
than religious, referring to a duty
toward others rather than toward
God. In aneient times respect for
parents was more a matter of re-
ligious obligation. Hence the
a liest grouping of the command-
ments was, "1 tO V, religious du -
That thy days may be long in the
land which Jehovah thy God giveth
thee -If we are to think of a sim-
pler original form for this com-
mandment, this attached reason for
obedience may perhaps lee a later
amplification. The wording of the
commandment in Deuteronomy
reads: "Honor thy father :and thy
mother, as Jehovah thy God com-
manded -thee; that thy days may
be long, and that it may go well
with thee, in the land which Jeho-
vah. thy God giveth thee" (Pent. 5.
16). Here the original command of
Jehovah and the later reason of
expediency are separated by the
intervening explanetery clause "as
Jehovah thy Gott commanded
thee," which seems to point speci-
fically to an earlier more succinct
command to filial obedience.
13. Thou shalt no't kill -An ap-
preciation of the sanctity of the
human life necessarily precedes a
seuse of other duties and obliga,
tions to our fellew men... Hence
e. moral precept ot 11118 C0311-
manchnent is, as we should expect,
jaeoePorated in: all ethical codes
which man has put into perman-
ent, written form.
14, 15. Not commit' adultery -
Next to one's regard for the life
of his neighbor is his respect for
family ties, and this in turn natu-
rally kads to a recognition of the
rights of personal ownership of all
things belonging to a '• family
household. The next oommand-
ment is, therefore, against steal -
16. Bear :false witness -The com-
mandment as it stands refers pri-
Marily to outright falsehood and
perjuey. It does not, hoe -ever, ex -
IA, taken To cover
) intern -bid,
end eee, being
•omplifying all
house." Hence alee
ve rsi on of the
whiel
the w
' that
leutero
n. *Neither shalt thou covet thy
eighbor's wife; neither shalt thee
thy neighbor's house, his
d, or his man -servant, or lee
id -servant, his ox, cr Lis aes.
anything that is thy neighbor's.''
HISTORY or MOUNT ST
London Thoroughfare Ras lied
Many Notable 'Residents.
Aleeant Street, where Prince Ar-
thur of Connaught has purchased a
house of the Earl of Plymouth,
takes its name from "Cheer's
Mount." a line of fortifications
erected. by order of Parliament in
1643. The street was built gradual-
ly from about the time of the re-
storation, and fOr long its most no-
table^ building was the "Mount"
toffee house.
Sterne was a frequenter of the
'Moent" in his late years, and liar-
riet, fleet. wife of.the poet Shelley.
was a daughter of John Westbrook,
proprietor of the coffee house in
Mount Street.
Among former notable residents
in Moent 'Street may be mentioned
Lady Mary Ceske, en: Henry Hol-
land, Fanny Burney, Josiah Wedg-
wood, Dr. Iran Butchell and the
Duchess d'Allgonleme. Practically
the whole street has been rebuilt
within recent years, and it is now
one of the handsomest in Lond-on.
Had Leaking Valves
Of The Heart.
Thought Nothing But Death
Would End Her Misery.
Milizuse's Hurt end Nerve Pills Cured Her.
Mas. 3, D. Teenon 1776 3rd Aveo
Bast, Owen Souhd, wrteese---"I have
been a kteat sufferer. front lieart disease
and leaking valves. I hatte had re-
source to every kind of treatment I could
think might help me, including the -skill
of several doctors. I, suffered so. for
u‘rYnnagat fs o dudt issadtei€.cina s leed:n: (6- ht't rNal: id! d'Is-
a trial, so I decided to do so. I am de-
lighted with the result, as' / aninew"corri-,
pletely cured, and can eat and'sleewas
have not done for years. You are at -
liberty to use my name at any time
as am eonviuced they are the best pills
on the market for any form of heart
$1.25 at all dealers, or will be-maiied
direct on receipt of price b`y The T.
wsiibarn co., 14mited, Tomato, cat.