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Exeter Times, 1913-11-20, Page 7lytui,.. Effected A Cure tiou Obstinate coughs and colds yield to to greatful,• soothing and healing power of Dr, Woad's Norway Pine Syrup, and Orthe racking, persistent cough, often present in consumptive eases, it will be Poured exceedingly beneficial and pleasant .-"' to take, The use of it is generally in - disatt- wherever symptoms ef throat. or hang troubles appear, bat especiall so -with all persons of a consumptive or catarrhal tendency, as its prompt curative properites speedily remove the dating r ad; gesture the throat and lung 4 lieuldry state if rued in bane. card PatteaSOn, YQung s COW Road!nave had or, casaoaa ttx aha: Dr. Wood's No ;ay Pane Syrup, ctad' mat say tbat it is e r ait3G5 a geed me4lcaue. 1boet a yam' ago, li C041,teeted a ,e rte cold maid settled, on 1111,1, IMP/ aY1 a fc' 4tent► la a " wed state, be emut'la racked RC terribly, and 1 a,vas rat dr•snair until a friend ad* vise() me to ,;ave Dr. Woptrs isle/sway Tine Syrup a trial. I get a bottle, oval! befa“ 1 frac it fart!; goee 1 found relict; i teen t c: o betties, and have never been bother •d since, 1 wails stat be without it in the home," Price, 24e.; faatxti4 dee, CWF, ;,lana• lhetnred only 3b} The T. lenlbure x ani test, Tweet°, Oen tlit AL :1ACif, 'antcling For Levan Family. Unconsciously or with fore thought, writers on household s mat - show t soaa leaning toward teaci . ing the yoanng housekeeper "how to butter, • t4Ii2t• •tlbe chopped chieken and, bread sauce and spread over iw"matoes. Now put on rest of to matoes, crackers enough to forma a. crust and dot with butter. Bake in moderate oven to wheat well and brown top, Peatth S tgu f,►tudifi Bents : Three and one- half eupfuls of hot Water, one- half erapful of pearl Eago, one Can of pea,._hes,, a pinta cf salt, .tagaE as needed. Metlte:d 1_Teat water :tt double et, add silt and stir in the `ago. When shite clear place a .can of peaches in a: g;' t) eldang dish, cook for two," and tate perplex:se" ai.`4 Sjb" *` to fi?:ste then r`olir ©n the ties of the little cook are so aPpp eat i ng that we lose sight of the st'-'.l more serious problem that confronts the mother or a large family, espe- cially if the family ii ecnbe has not kept pace with the inereas. d de- mands aoade Capon it or the higher, 'S m cost of 1' tmay:e, t i� n # be thatz take it for granted Haatyears of ee- perienee precede the gradual ash' vent of fails• large family. gowever,. 111Qtlier's tinter aseeess,abni1y .dh id - ed among many, brawdtes of borne- k uaakinig. and Warless ebe be well c trained in domestic ee000ra y the ecrokintg .and serving of threemeals a. 44.Y is iikeiy to be subjeet tax doe - t )))bons when the family will ho; either trader or over fed, Of +uree 1' the quality and variety tat food must be determined by irndlvicloal taste and meane, Inut ta;uay good. dishes suited to every parse sone palate eau be mode by ludicrous marketing and tntaanagemeant.: r 1?Itic+lten cttnontty, • -To naPn0011 Vlikkeats artcl evononsy . ti the same Ime may seam rather far fetched, ut if all parts are used to edvwtn.t- e, you will faire chickens no ,[morel. xpeneive than chops far stook, For fartafiy of six or seven two u ed.aumi Ide ears, eagle 'weighing. frown four pounds* will be liber.; t'iaag for one or two unade follow. To curable you to; he birds, proN'itle a few j inrtarnitags. They will take edge from the zn opetiite ally to the eojj ' When the mar. can M aaw` t'ut ttn"s for 1parts fried he. Mow $ttlsti,4s tilde boiled sago (. -i 1 ..c and dal.r of sugar over zap), and cake until peaches are tends <-. (Do not use to imieh .of the liquid on llze „peaches, but reserve for other uses;) 1-f cream is tors ,pea sive to serve as sauce, male a* t iI Dastard. to pour Ovei This fs r^l1 serve eight t persons, tate ca~t s dry as k !Bang n reline, car e€ore geeing lee lead west, west, 4+f airs Vhit baw•11.: ov.'se thealbilot initn cAd:. tlnsr a,gbisdfle, tnrtd'c>otreo 'l?.is� named Iaim to carr king in T,, Iea 1ttaci, Jack ea me tot Id be foolish apie in his 1 nrti tt and fart ottt ' a emit After 0 the vsI ad to 'ape and wash th trot', smut of the win , , at elc and ld iblets; cover well with water acid !miner slowly with ,a few sprigs: celery, a carrot and an anion ea meat is tcuder strain and set k inside for further use. Mint 11nnl ttti Qhieken.—When liar n tering than stock, add the back of he chickens to the other less'desir. hie parts and let this slowly come o the boiling palmi. Then place the in ted Jessie on top, toyer tightly d let cook 'until almost done., take out and season with Ur salt and pepper, roll each piece in !lour and lay closely together in a 'buttered rnastiog pan. Dot top with lbuttorine or a little of the fried out chicken fat and ;set iu oven until it begins to brown then ;strut one cupsful of stock ever top, place back in oven and add one ox tiro cupfuls of milk when almost tender. When done the ohioken should be a light brown tinge a,snd e gravy must be rich and creamy.. This can be'poured bver the ehickcn or served separately. A good ac- companiiuent much liked by child- ren is a celery and bread sauce, Celery and i.3read. Sante.—(This is also good with roast or fried birds,) Trigredients : Three cupfuls of celery, two cupfuls of bread crumbs, one small onions three tablespoonfuls of butter, two to $ three cupfuls of milk, salt, pepper and celery to taste. Method—Wash and out celery into small pieces, skin and cut up the onion, then cover with water, and simmer until very soft. Drain through .a, fruit' press, then add the butter and the bread; which must be stale and rolled or picked ibrto small bits: Now add the hot milk, and season to taste. Place in a double boiler and simulor until soft enough to mash the bread. The amountof milk must be determined according 'o the kind of bread used er the eon - -latency desired. JIot Chicken Saudwiehes.-In= :redients: Two to. three cupfuls of ?iced or chopped chicken, three. eupfuls of chicken stock, ono green ;pepper, one tablespoonful of but- .; er, rut,+ser, four tablespoonfuls of flour, salt and 'pepper to taste. Method --Heat the stock, moisten the flour with . the softened butter and enough. stock to rub smooth, then stir into stook and add the minced pepper and chicken. .Stir and cook`: until thickened, then heap onto toasted >bread, A little parsley garnish will be an improvement, This is a fine luncheon dish for hun- gry children. i,eftover Sauce andCuia>i{esti. If some of the settee as well as chicken is left for a second day, try to scallop them 'with the addition of a cupful of canned, tomato pulp and rolled crackers. 'Method Place a layer of the seasoned tome- a.. toes in pudding dish, cover with a layer of rolled crackers and bits of pni The allow cut, clic not appeal, t abbot wit) 'amended that cleric .,bonld lit rn Sneaky. .awyer -Ho'a n :sneaky nen, you say, What du ti' ar? that 11 Witness—Well, ell, soy.", he's the sol t of man that'll never look ye straight in tho face until yer back's turned. sort of su mean It was the class in the second reader, and little Willie bad just teen called upon to rise. andtake up the reading where Martha had left off. Willie _stood at attention, his book held in the proper position before him, clutched the corner of his desk with his free !bend, swal- lowed hard, and read: "This is a warm doughnut. Step . on it." 'What!" gaspedthe teacher. e Wil -1 lie, that is not correct. Read it again_.'" Willie did, with ilhe same result. Moreover, he maintained soutly that that was what his book sail. So the teacher fiat! hire bring 'i± to her. Perhaps there had been a " misprint, and— But this is what -the teacher read in Willie's book: "This is a worm. Do not step on it:" COJa D OT STRAIGHTEN UP For Lase Back. 'Wooten are coming to understand that weak, ;lame, and aching backs from 'which they suffer are due to wrong action of the kidneys, • The kidneys arc overtaxed -given more • work that they can do, a.ad when the da;, back aches and pains it is almost im- possible to to her housework, for every ia,rnoye and HI= means•paiu, On I.' -;first sign of any 'weakness in ae ba Doan's Kidney Fills should be la td`; thus do away with any, ufferib, rout kidney trouble. Mrs. A. J. Lalonde, Kingston, Ont., writes :--"I Baan writing to tell -you what wonderful cure Doan's Kidney'Pills, =`#fid for bre. I was suffering with a lame ack, and for about seven days could 1tardly. straighten up for the pain. I ad; used ',quite a few of other kinds of pills, and received' no relief. Just then tny;sister came andtold are about Doan's Kidney Fills, and what they had done for er, so I decided -,to try them. ,bused zee boxes, : and 1 air completely cured, do' not hesitate to `recommend Price, 50c. per box, 3 boxes for $1.25, dealers,_ar mailed direct an receipt 'cc b The T. Milburn Co., Limited, $ the ere is a Is In we ereens t,in %'Nary alta veer el to let thein he pat dry. If they are soar a•e will be great. danger ,cif t eraeking when next brought on: use, To toughen glassart� chin u eys, immerse t gla cold water to which some Gln salt, has been added. Boil we then cool slowly. The ;lass. resist a sadden ohmage of t tr im. taro, To clears white paste with nnagnta>. Cover the aatiele t mixture, ,afnplyiog Leave this sans until then trams!) of WW1This coffee a 'Ill: ROYAL CO E :.1 O,JED OJ3 TEERTN (, :1E.OLLESS ''. i'1.'ElliSAT1Ci NA.,'t LESSON,. NOVE3113Eit 23, tssott % t I. Joshua, the New Lead Josh, 1. 19. txtrlden Teat,. Joslt, Verse 1 after the dear° of o.. les---Tbe Israelites are•„fill en- aped in the !arid of !sleab, east the lowest Jordan, in Dent, , we are told that "the eh;ore,n. Moses' for in weptt2 4bt Of ' oai::i thirty days,” after, Inieh it appears that Joshua took r"tiaMedia;te fionerband, of a:: the ad ihs'tto4r,� aatbivespaakffcil-)-°1t ofs the tatian tdirJc, verbal r,aF, tzntntnt4lf,"dtion from Jehovah to a in: this eotarneetion,;Joshua ilong .tezel%eetteutieloiAel, raundmotndo natural!, defanntaded that up imnaediatel� thea reins &nn to r itaistrataon and proceed nit tine plans,. f` Moses, iahieln.' taut hire. RIO 'rtateet°gtntr Arthur of Co nraa.lGf?. epFaired 'he, the bride's Ivo .a ed tbe?nr and foreee 0I'Do Rousewor T WAS SO HAL ville tlt ts, $ss tit my duty to wt and tell you Trow uch 's I eart ud Neave Pimils didyo far,rar rate.ilburxtlihy heart was so quad I conid apt sleep, est' nor w�atlr atpout the hoose, I, round xbla do qty housework at all, what, my hum band could not do had to go undone. F had two malt children depending on me besides three men to cook for, and it worried me tca'not bet abte tos de an.yttdn . ilvf y husband !tad taken soave of your a pals, coxae years agea> and s"nsisted ou, ane trying thein, so s ,s,a,�t d, -Sand be.. fore 1 had taken lean two #cs � seas eansira ly � - ,,,.yy {, fo,r- ( g J J 4A 4a1xN>L ne eaYk 1'+i�-,i, ee A F'.niLR taken. two boxes S utas doing myoma work again. P nyane s�ifesing from heart or nerve trouble of any kind should just give your pills a triol, If anyone cares to write to axe I will gladly give hem all the information € blow p»,(AA- cernirg yo;!; wonderful medicine." genre aDd Nerve Pills ,sfc per box, er 3 1 s cs €o $1, 2,5, at aPk;. dealers, or mailed d rest• MI receipt' Limited, price by The T. Milburn Co., Liite••.ry.'. Toronto,. to. O at. g1e>ar, In Mork 1#f �i11C:�ttfi o� a ins BY le soft fik. bThe oroaj , itna a°t ai b' r 1 eee s �1 a van,*I iw d has cls rlssa exl lotabuns!; fit the reeen rat�nntttr'as tali tFra ratcaaaanabaua Trd%ns r ss. Teri er 4 et .tit! a b Festern't'o2ret gbsx'riettee on the )noes; "Andrew ' .. 4104 ,rsans O, tail °antsnraotne aro Ps the tai°a no torment, tob:eh tb raaa3crn,'Nov. a, 1% soda int of water and bo while, then bet water. To preps, am perhig, wash it first of half a pound of washing ganon of water and then glue dissolved in writing on volve pins or needles to ;pin Aire toe pile AIM wne s essential do not dra Clip each stitcb r before out the hpuld follo d speaks t trod n:s clea x1 we do ant wnrbai eomtt ,n .,.a etatri ordiu Ire men, it 00 feet. L,. baggage :Landry, of P112t4011 for trial on, P n letter oouin liita to m eVora, XS. " l#t , Nal., pci1k nap lebarged Milt hod found a... bleb its was et" easel meted Genesis." .2,455, um anntplahaed that slsopting on Sun- 4 vitt"; to church ata ant danger" of s !avant. ba bests Tho measure the ordinary French dressings e: Three table- spoonfuls of oil, tablespoonfuls of vinegar, a fou h of tables onful of salt, n eighth of a tea- spoonful a pepper. This is ;enough for a pint of salad. Wash leather furniture very gently with warm wate.r which there is a little vinegar, wipe with a, dry 'cloth and then reetore the polish by mixing the whites of two eggs and a little turpentine which is applied with flannel. After thoroughly washing white lace curtains, put them in a solu- tion •of one teaspoonful of ehloride of lime to three quarts of warm wa- ter. Let the eurtains stand in the solution for about an hour. If the seats eaned 'chairs sag, turn them upside down, wash well with -soapy water soaking 64) as to thoroughly wet them, and in drying ley ne eti en to almost, if not quite, their normal condition. A few pieces of large macaroni inserted in the top crust of a, berry pie will prevent the juice running over into the oven. The juice will force itS way up into the macareni tubes. When the pie is baked and the steam escapes the jpice will fall baok into the pie: A very fine spool holder is made with a brass obtain. red. Select one small enough to allow the spoofs to slip over it easily, Place on, the red as many spools as it will hold, then faeten with small brackets watch come with the rods and place in a convenient position en the sew- ing room wall. The piano, to be kept sin good condition, should not stand a,gainet, an outside wall, nor should it be pla,ced very near a fire. It should be kept free from dust inside and out. If the keys become yellow, make a paste of whiting and potash, lay it on them and leave kr 24 hours, then polish. Heavy articles on the top of the piano disorder the hotel in the world, containing 1,800- roorns, at a cost of $12,500,000. Greek athletes of old trained on new cheese, dried figs, milk, and warm , water, but never touched "You knew old Dempster, -who was said to be so well off? y,oe know, he died the other day, and now the stor7 goes that his one and only possession was an old grand- father's clock." "Ah, Well, there's one good thing about that. The truStees won't have much difficulty in a hiding op his esita.,e,s' str Thera is on or ever sees, ere votalre that 3 As a matter ,et feet. tile Crania' pa ro those co. ocatle of elr siege. valets, . uncles' 'Will i ii cd vt°ritition 11.c 1 speetor of lite soli I, vho suffers troll Taal Tiro sehool nurse wei hi eavli week. lir no visitor to Niue. pled brother, that is the vast ttlearo poseible siege. lint to-iloy .they ere put to mare pet\ enable. versions anti aro need to store matey 'the 'wealth et the palace dux:lust the aosonto of the court. Horse of theta form vast strong rooms., end It to in therm that the fantalis gold Plate la Rept that RI eleoleyed en Ile oeoasson kindergarten, . he en first week at the uncI scales showed that Moak% gained tos the, ether ehildre Ai, the next day's luneheon fondant watched her BO see b food and milk she really die to lie saw the child. when elo opportunity refer 4, which r on the a hell be you he bin ur border. The boundaries ise, The uew ho med nation, were 1,0 he tl ss on the eouth, the of tein ranges of Lebanon north, the great. river, th Euphrates, on the east, and, great sea toward the going down the sun. that is, the Medker-1 await, on the west, For otheri ifie designations of these" boundaries, eompare al,so the fol., lowing references: Oen. le. 13-21; The land of the Hittites—North- ern Syria, extending westward ind to Asia, Minor. The Hittites were, neither Semites nor Aryans. but probably Mongolians, whom they resembled most nearly in physlog-' orn,y and dress. Their facial type said aril to persist in the peas - entry of Cappadocia. Their most prosperous national period wae frem abont B. C. 1600-700 after which latter date they- were ab- sorbed by the Assyrian enapire. 'a, As I was with Meses--The nar-1 naive is designed to impress upon the reader the eense that the eon- tinuity of the nationt and of its high purpose was independent of, and not broken by, a change in the person ef the leader. I will not „fail thee, nor forsake thee—A promise quoted bv the au- thor of the Epistle te the Hebrews: "Be ae free from the love of money ; content with such things as ye have for himself hath said, I will in no wise fail thee, neither will in any wise forsake thee" (Pleb. 13. 5). Compare also Dent. rose go! ; the bulk or it Is only sliver do „so unobserved, eirip down fron. stoat it000rn output, her seat, take lier bowl of eerea" brain. the ammal errs of the Itor9:il and milk and her spoon, go otiq nastier or eottle produced. pit previous to the. kindergatten room, There &nee ere during the year. and that brother Bobby es- num er exceeded the highest praviousi • ure of ld *eine, exceeded that 4.41911 by about, tb ktoh in silver has oaly -once been exceeded. viz. y bowl on the ta.ble in frent 401100 pieces. The number of preees struck w" 'ac er P ar'h Pu " 1 in 191.0, though the value of the coinagil f her and sat demurely until the any proviouo year. The eatertge in bronze . Children were dismissed. Then she numbered upward. tit 71,C00,01i0 'ai'cca ar a I returned to her class-rooni hungry, value of $1.2670210. figures again wheet are , . unprecedented for any year. The home's' i t.t.u.t, happy in the thought that her -were tendered, and only i,ome 8 50.000 Of I had been doing. the saane thine in tide metal, In 1932 wao greater than sir i° to undertake all the Clolornal ordens .whioh ittle brother had been fed. She Colonial ceins were striae's, a. smaller num- day—which explaine.r1 quite ber than 1,ti any previous year since 1890. every The total coinage of the year a.ntounted well why she had not stained ip to over 171,000,000 pieces of a currency value of upward. of 5182,500,000, the high- weign-T, fignro on record. audition to the output of the Royal Mint, 16,800,000 pieces of Imperial penoe and 44,30E1,000 coins for Colonial Govern- ments were struck by a Birmingham firm. In addition to these ()pillages two outside eompanies supplied the Royal Min t with over 515 tons of ainstamped toins for pence and farthingo. Washington's Home For Sale. Sulgrave Manor, the antestral home of the Washington's. is open to the purchase of any one who has 540,010 to spare. It is hardly necessary to Point out that Waehington himself never lived there. the last of his family to inhabit the ola home being his great -great-grandfather. Rubber For street Paving, "Facts and Problems et the Rubber In. duntrY" was the title of a leeture delivered at the Northern Polyteahnie Institute, Rollaway, this -week, by Prof. Wyndhem Dunstan. F.R.S.. director of the Imperial Institute. Dealing ;with the question of eynthetie rubber, Prof. Dunstan said that, artificial rubber tould be produced by the chemist by elaborate procensee without the aia of the living ,plant, but it could not be produced artificially as cheaply as it could be gro-wn. With the prosnect of rubber being produced shortly at less than 25 cente ft pound, the chances ot sYll- thetic rubber competing against the real product commercially were becoming more and more remote. In 'his opinion there Is tt big future for rubber, rwhich,, be believes-. will in the near future, be ntilized for the flooring of ehurelfee; chapels, halls, and other amb- ito buildings, , if not for istreet paving purposes. Ono thing now accecsary was to ascertain and define elite and for all the eharaeteristicei -whieh the raw ma- terial should possess in order to adapt it most effectually for manufacturing Tau,. New Mistress of the Robes. Queen Mary liaS appointed tho stately Duchess of Portland mistress af the robes, the only one of the queen's "ladies" who has to go out of office with a change of minleirF, The mistrest of robes, always a duchess,' starialig next to the Queen. on. state ecasions and eontrol-e-l-ite to lie of the same politios the party in power. There ,evas no Liberal duke left in the country, -s4 the 'beet thing' to wio in the view 'of the queen '4i' tO cboObe a duchess whose hunhand hea not been , Has Duchesses A-Plefity. Four duchoeses have taken up their re- ionable suburb of London, rind still con - CITY TENEMENT IS OLD IDEA. Poor of Ancient Rome Were Intim, itely Worse Off Than To -day. The tenement house is not a mod- ern institutism by any means. Se great was the number of such houses in ancient Rome, and so badly were they constructed, that A -.D. 69 EmPerer Otho, who Was marching against Vitellus, found his way barred for twenty retileS by the ruins of tenemeet houees that had been undermined by inundation. The spontaneous collapse of tene- ment houses in those days was so common an occurrence that little attention was paid to it. The ten- ants have been described by a writer of the times as constantly fearing to be burned sor buried alive. Companies existed for the purpose of propping and austaini»g eomparisen with the meclern tenemenos, those of Bowe were ex - obliged to mount 200 eteps to reach his garret. That garret" must have been perched nearly one *hundred feet above the level of the street. Em- peror Augustus, to make less fre- quent the occurrence of disasters, limited the height' of new houses that opened npon the streets to 7. Observe to ,do according to all the Jaw—qhe law is to be strictly and earefully observed if the °Teat work to which Joshua has '''been called is to be successfully aecom- pliehed. He, is to "read, mark, and inwaedly digest" that, law, carry- ing dub ite provisions to the letter. udeal wisely.'' S. This book rd the laws--"Thi,s obviously refers to the qaw' de- scribed Deut. 31, 9 as written 'by considerable nticlen al the per ta... teuelM1 legislation (including, of course, the hulk of Exod.- 20-23) fe°s- 9. Have not t commanded thee1-- For similar emphasis on tho per- sonal leadership of Jehovah, eel -P- tt manufact an, a milli Of Chicago, holidays in tonoton, N. t Miss Marion V. okenzie. October 4 Miss kenzie and Mr. wero arried in Boston. 3o0 Nova Scotian 1, engaged in the deep sea, eines this season, an increase of 400 men and $.,250,000 in capital. Throughout the province 30,000 peo- ple aro directly dependent on deep sea, fishing for a livelihood, At Moncton, N.B.„ a, pollee officer prevented a man from jumping over a, high bluff, intending to eommit suicide. He took the man to the station, and two hours later die- eovered. him in the aet of hanging himself with bis suSperiders. The threeenastad topsail whom- er Destinaea, from Carbonear, Nfld., to North Sydney, C.B., ran ashore at Gooseberry Cove, in a fog and was a total loss. One sea. Man jumped on the rocks with a line and saved. late lives of all tint Step Lively. Yeast ---".Nothing rnalr.e per- son walk. so quickly as geed cold Crintsonheak --- "Oh, don'S know. There's the. dinner ffer From dac es MAKES .LIFE miSERABLE. It takes a person. who has had and is subject to headache to describe the suffer- ing which attends it. The dull throbbing, the intense pain, sonietinaes in one part of the head, sometimes in another, and then again over the whole head, varying in its severity by the cause which brings it on, purely indicates that there is something amiss with the syste...na. The fact that Burdock Blood Bitters reaches the seat of the trouble is due to its success in relieving and permanently curing the cause of the headache. Mrs. A ndson, 416 1551.1 Ave, Ea.st, gary, Alta., writes: "For three years I was troubled all the time with sick headaches, and suffered also with constleatioe, and kept breaking out in pimples and sores on mY face. 1 tried everything tin last friend told me o, Burdock Blood Bitters. I took two bottles, and my shin is as clean'and pure Qs a baby's, and, 1 have never been troubled with the headaches sohnblyeurily0C11k,hBelo;„d. Bmilluerzsmis Cnoau, utaieuti litre! dr: promo, nt.