Exeter Times, 1914-10-22, Page 3rR
5;1
T
inglit She u
or LiIt(e
ir7
is
"
furs for, .the Home
Freta Severe Attacks ef S „tiger
Ceilipiaint
Mrs. Wea, Hirst, n 1 Palmerston
Avenue, Toronto, Ont., writes us under
date, :of January 23rd, 1914;
The T. Milburn Co,, i ed
Toronto,
Ont,
e r Sirs:-"Lasto
� a �a
szz zzn r
e 1 .d
P'!�, grave
anxiety for any little girl, who was just
one year old in July last, She had con,
Stant and severe attacks, of summer
complaint,
n '
a d it,seemed to drag; on her
so long despite the many remedies f
tried. My neighbors toll me she had
grown so weak they thought I would
loose her. One night wiziat m i
z 3rs ng her
an old friend of pine happened tocome
to see me and atter telling, , g, Inch � about my
baby's lingering illness she asked m.
g g me to
try Dr. 1<owlet's Extract of Wild Straw-,
berry. I sent a little girt to our ;drug
star, and bought a bottle, and after
having given the baby one dose 1
noticed a remarkable bPe chat
Se, and after
ez
giving her three or four doses she was
well again, and began to wa k, which
she had not been able tab de prior to fter
attack. She is new a Ane healthy child,
and f Qawe her life to that .kdndly advice
o£ an old friend. Iwould, advise- all
mothers to gine "Dr Fowler's" Pranxaw
inent glace in their medicine chest.'»
a'antTS trials,
(S4:4.) M.
When you a* for Dr. t''`owler's Via«
=roo.tt of 'Wild Strawberry A.'m that you
get .
lx l: js 4113a:.r n xttu tilarsrx iron NCAg,.
t Sa:r a B as YgAnS, t)o '-r Accl:Px
$1.1tts`'axa,'aaR,
The' prise of the orir,;inat is er) ceryls,
.^d le anazaefeetured only by The Z
Alilburn Co-. Limited, 'pronto. Quay
i 'tit.tp k"i'NNtl .`i PATRIOT.
kinin ,ttrair ..tt'a= t."endo tf in Lee
lanai. 11 to 'fate at 'War eiels.
An ain't ng yory tbst iken: w'
ll:•'r& °SC&)t-O a V C. .D NO
In„a°eel dur'ie g as
to Fanta England to
entlemen at lou
aasad talo ,t ai
Desat wrote t the
nth, offering lois b
f lois 'country.
iaatrAide abIl,r
letter.
power boat tea
meat a rc wet
d,:t wail loot bo
smite `a formal
i etre sad is
oval farces.
eperi�etaoerl err
a nders,tandat
adaacl
you
arviee
a; fo
Old-fashioned (ginger'br'ead.
'er'e blasp robaubly one origin
method of g aat.aki nY this deleetabl
-sweet, dark bread, ur platin cake-
whichever
t l
s
tri
. F z e a'. v
F you � �� � cal] t.
5 in
b
3
se
here have z ., ben devised _.. s mei
1. been ed U
variations on the one original rn
#lrvd that it, is :almost lost in o
scurity.
The l til. fiasl►xttaaeai hind. ,-- tie
is: 1 familyo
am old _a nx y receipt tor ia"rtaga;
read that has been tried and
found wanting by several gener
a
Cons: One half cupful f s ga
one. half cupful naolaeses, one ha
cupful of sweet milk, one half' te
spoonfatl of soda dissolved in o
tablespoonful . 'water, one tab/
sneeniul of butter ex lard, tnel T
slightly, one teaspoonful jai groan
ginger, one teaepooefatl of gro.iu
sugar, one teaspooeful et cir<dana
noon, one half teaspoonful of W
fang powder, d�, Gtapfaale of fleas
Dne beaten egg. Siff 'the day i
gredieaats<together into as bawl. A
a molasses, #ng➢k anti shortenie
Beat well. Theta acid the egg, Bal.
ctrl, + in a loaf, in a tient pend 'x a
all para eaake pans,
'th ;bre Egge llea a ns
ft+r .aa sponge giaagerlatred
e eggs in .esaaaapar9 ra.
r ipgraed erste : One coop"
ne enpful of melaassex
f milk, three t:atpfuls. o
ableepoonfula of 'nalain
e half teaspoonful
well beaten eggs
afar.5Ses
Ifl * receipt, that goe
tlao tome of aa2c,+a5 .5 cake
'cher tban either of the otkae
i^te�n: Ane rat, caapital.
half �eaaptaa; oP sup
ggs, two cupfuls
teaaspxonful citeh
epice and,eloiee, bn
milk, one cupful.
eaaspoo dui of stela
u billing water
end _ 'anger and
wi
e,
e,
tat
1a
ob-
re
t
t
dao
tt-
al f
on
the absolutely needless curtains
and garments that are crowding
the store Town. There is a .,slogan
is most homes that nothingroust
be discarded. "It will come in good
some dal'," says ,the average wo-
man, Why Rot make the curtains,
he old Suits, the, old linen conn in
good now! Give them to any of the
organized societies for aiding the
poor. It..Is `t'hxi,ina.l -to hoid ii'ek
that :,rich i . ttnusi e' ' your home
S ate 3n
and which can help a,less fortunate
done, Think tha:.t over.
4
r
'ed
now �! cleared
a
And a O that you �a a i,
�l�
out the unnecessary things, inves-
tigate
n^s es
tigate •the paints, ,elves and f s-
tun es e home, A onman with
of t11 ae, w .
a, can oaf fresh sunt bru51.4 and
l� �
th house-cleaning i an do.
e ,. n ang spirit, o_
wonders, Ila e • i" paint whiter,
�. white ,
,give as glossy .coat to the water-
�t
stained zv' d
in � _ ., 11�, k1 r ab
shelves, After soapand water;+.
there is nothing so a~eju renating as
fresh paint.
Things Worth linoat iatg,
Obstinate whitewash aGaiaas
he removed with a few drops of
'lnegar
Rat alcohol ataaia,s.
mediate/- with a. elo'
°a,seline•.
Borax will take off tme ?ea,the. '
tains ti ade by shoes on light=color-
toeings,
/4st "ad taf hOilinc- beet
in tlak\•aven. alae oN
prati
amino 1 "smoked: iRa
mutes be}.,a"e ,1n -
1ne ,rat "Fora Fuad
way to nue old tonna
at G1tem it soauaar�es an
make a butting
=weight eoort,
Ts the price of
pudding cloths an
s sla ann1d. be washed la xeax
when they have beer,,
tang tap to dr where
acal til a good draft.
sung aa, epoead it on a
er and place in a a�
as
for tet, or tatteeu
111 greatly itopreem
in oho go much
5
o
� aaaaaa.
the t1
further.
d Great s:av
the use of
GENERA J,Otf BO'
e s atLilting the Union, of Soaath
Erica a Reality.
d,.Cis Ort of General Louis
-d
Premier of 1snz..�eti 5str.t'u
to take Command ofthe
1frican forces,, following, the
`T' of (Jsrier a.l B•ey-er s; \v ho
ac3 aunt= . �o.., 4.^ to t`sxe
Biiti`:;who „.•i' the
and z � U fightr ,
fi i s, [y.tt.C3
Germansin Africa. -rounds out the
tea;j_x man who ..a:
a.
r
4
_'Fflag-loyal
7
_ g
� J3r ' .,.i
- 1
uQ
a -
�n
z , .�,, dt> faze
Boer Rept l �;
General 1 ot..
d
i 1.k`pI
.(' `tO
t4.'"x: V. Jt s@". inti Jt s�.<.s t
2=' f g
-r y d�
,:t3w s�..=_i� ^:, "+it�� �=A<> +]^34Fx �aaid�°.$
Text, M 2. >
�..
�t m �1.i, k,, Judas, on.
15.., known H.1�,
as was one of the twelve,
sheat
to the hardened ba'�s�t-aatde
latack to think of hiaAa.. s
tC
se's -of Jesaae and
laeta^aayer, Bence
,anis Of: Jazdaa as sono ,of
dcu4r"�f'+�t�a on �.���
eau ex aaaaati,ara of soar-
en he is found not with be
and Iesus, bat ixa;
�d rS iaao' t poxxa Etta
la
n < a
laor w. `et'�
°3 ,, �zk
e
town, Natal, r F
r Bis -
�3, and �lsert tine
�s<s
)hoer war beol.e vat a, ., , `�
4 it �.i, t.ialana�ire'T,� +'�s a,
private to Kron, .en's alley,. anal-. :lea uc��e as �3es
to be :> :^
eott�..��. r ta%.t.bac�f' of the desa.aua
Boer "or • .
a
a ce ant ne�ca .s .•;c •,. � . ; : ,
teDke
atm unrl ratlaea 1aa s* Izuarz cu
When rn in 1010 rent Britain,tet : t
eordance int t fit$ w $a4n a�"y ea
lowing elitiot' *r1A t etve "
colony and dominion. In ale 'wail AIM'
.si R
auxo as po,.srlD.e, formed the, Union
of truth Africa,, with the Bolas. be
ling given absolute freedom of a
on, Botha w.as elected the eia
' to er. e bee been 7 re eft
er siatce and � position Inas lean
vex. dnd'aeaBIltaaae. 1Aaat in aaeu*
isas hairdo d can Ilse 'teas : chi debdn
rcaagtla,visdapaa nand lP"raaa that
of re
yen
,
? other lands d,`t'inn,,", anii.'uze2Tt
Y6 passover time.
s 39, Then. wino faFifilzd
s hien was si7Ui3:en throng h
miart the prophet -.The words Kik trn
a r.3
a
F
text which U�,
e follow are not from
jeremiaitlh, but from Zeeharinh
(chapter. ? 1 verses 19, lee, The er-
rot' is slue to the fact, doubtless,
thr t s niila textsJeremiah
from �x.n,e';araaala
:72 .. 4 weite in the
4?3 and _n
mind
�p
. The force
el'
not r• t a
3• t
r
� as �.�F
tR'a t P tit T..
pt^�„aka On u.-�4 0:��. ,r<,__�.1 and..'.
4ether Int- _ Ftry.�.
the
lt�rc
apo a p e
� F � -�.I Ott
�.
,,
.a x,l_ ua_�. �a
s
g
aa'
a�t���t�T�aaanca: b4 esu... G
�. end-.`
y t rtov
�' aan h w Ana;d a1:
power of dad:,,
p
Il ti
i
that
Jere -
a
guarded
quit owl o
lutcreutu
but tae 'lana
doiRai
ea ue ,tui
1f g orume t, u
Is soonest lad the bap,. .
et a lonctr tar neon Donald jive
f:r aa2 Praatiea� otlaaa,
eats �of both
aateh
adutry
that
tl'rd+~,aa�
Ila
together and
th the milk
a 11;e boa
ere Zire
one: One
ter or
OHO
the
own -and o
ght 1
While terms of penee
dieetesed at the dose 4
War. there WOIV several interviews
betneen Lord Kitehener and Oen-
oral Botha, before a working basis
for -a treaty was agreed upon, says
Pearsou's Weekly. There was still
geed deal of skirmishing going f.„)n
aed at the end of one interview
Oceeral Botha got ep with the re-
mark, "Well, I'm amid I meet, be
off a"
"There's hurry," r..plied Lord
Ritchener, pleasantly ; "you have,
General Botha. tautthed.
"Perhaps uot," he answered
Bidding Lord Kitchener good-bye,
he hurried off. The next morning
-came the news of a successful, Boer
raid on a British armoved train on
the Delagoa
"Ali I" Lord Kitchener com-
mented, when the news was brought
to him. "So General Botha did
ealch his train !"
A man told his daughter that if
she learned to cook he would give
her a surprise. She learned the
art, and he surprised her by dia:,
Suffered w4itlo Palpita-
tion of the Heart
and Nervous Trouble
Mrs. John, Dennison, Comberniere.
Ont., writes: -"I cannot 'Praise Milburn's
Heart and Nerve Pills. too much, ror
years I suffered with palpitation. of the
heart and nervous trouble, so that I
could not lie dovvn to sleep. I tried al-
most all other medicines, and got no
relief, until I was advised by a friend,
Who had been benefited by your pills, to
ifry them, I did so, and after taking four
boxes I found I was almost cured, and I
am going to continue taking them, for I
never got anything to do me so much
good. I would advise any one troubled Y'r)
with their heart or nerves to do the satne
Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are be
at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt ty
of price by
dt
Tile. T. Milbu ited, fie
Toronto. On
ad
sit
ix the spiees,
mooth and bake.
*Ginger Sponge eith
tames brown sugar
gerbread, as it is in
Two cupfuls or brown
eggs, one pint of flour,
sixtonfels baking. powder, 01
epoonful of extract of lemon,
tertspoonful of ginger, 'ground
extract, two thirds reurata .ot cold
water, Beat the eggs and then add
the segar and 'beat for ten minutes.
Then add, alternately, fhe water
and the ffour, with the spiees. Add
the extract, and mix until smooth.
Bake for about half an hour,
Brewn Sugar Molasses. - The
foregoieg receipt used browu su-
gar, but no molasses, This receipt
calls for both these ingredients,
One cupful of butter, one e.upful
brown sugar, 'one cupful of milk,
e half cupful of 'Molasses, 1%
pints of flour, 134 teespoons of bak-
ing powder, one beaten egg., Cream
the sugar and butter! then add the
egg. and -cream again, next add
the molasses and the flour, sifted
with the bakinfr powder. Mix well
and bake slowry for 35 or 40 min -
With Sour Cream. -This is call-
ed oldtime gingerbread in the fam-
ily where it is made. As calls
for four eggs and a cupful of sour
Cream, it is ha,rdly ahardtime re -
But it is a reliable receipt
or good timeS, at any rate. One
cupful of dark brown sugar, one
quarter cupful of butter, one cup-
ful of sour cream, one Cupful mo-
lasses, one tablesnoonful each of
soda and ginger, four egg yolks,
three cupfuls of --flour. Cream the
butter and Sugar and then add the
egg yolks and cream again. Add
the ginger and the molasses and
mix well,' ,Dissolve the soda in a
talblespoonful of boiling water and
add to the sous cream. Then add
the exeain and the Roar. tO'the cake
batter. Bake in a.long cake.
Arc You Housecleaning?
First of all be .bh?.)rourrh. And
secondly, don',d-, make a,„ fetish of
the process ancl a slave of yourself.
Take your house-cleaning easily
and smile. Rest between -rooms It
u that aPpalling store room
2 'o'clock next Tuesday be sen -
We and rest during the remainder
the day. Don' r 'begin the hall 1
tiro= and lose all poise and tem-
r.by 6 o'clock. Take things sane-
. You owe' it, to yourself to con-
ict the work of the home in an et- .1
ihis -year to throw away s
he b
be re
ti
with paraffin
1
and about four e
FOla eat enough vegetebi
crease. 1.habetes, Bright's dis
rheumatism and kindred tro
caused kr diotetie errors are
ting to be common diseases.
Women as a rule eat too u
starelt mixed with sugar au 00k
ed butter. Men eat too much meat,
and almost everybody eats too high-
ly sea toned food and more than die
stomach can assimilate.
A quantity of eeything
)N(111;0214'. Try it yourself
1,aut ootee staple things elan
bought in bulk lallteh eheaper arid
better, and do not deteriorate with
altitude with s v
The ,indeandteuess .,
"great altitude
na axtatiutn free t$01:11)0:70
of die erowd1. i
ll fan rtur be is Clear
ikorda ' also ,a*
� waaanFd' t
la.
Tlrt
TY and $fetor
1a� 1e ' �'
1t ud eder4
aadiQuat 1aa
d a at'r
!s et bo.
ud warnuld fat
a ansa. , e travesty in ibe be
aya1f ,Jesus ueco mei nTM-
Ru. acc'eaataa�.�
�' ie 9o�a' : 3".r... 5•, t to 13a,:
� than .I
d ns ota,$dere ,
TE
If you 'Ms:4 to be
the F..
boawels open., .€4
bowels is always
ell you *lest 1
2 egoLa ity
ra;1 Das, and • s
to
�.L4
tit � o ,
haat r '
� f�Y n
Se to work property all tau nth
s bye ,derasd.
',
�' 'pills tvost„ cn„t•
hovel candy and tuaiutty. cud wi
*0.'11rtr t 0.es taf C as 'atf Eta . m
i did am
A,. �"r..,. 24 aT ylR�.
ftp; ` I have been *retitled with
dl; tion for.inVear aiQ y rs arid f
feel fi tui. duty to let:>ye r lmOw that
�'C1E�` ��±lt,D�.t's..,'x"d':,�d'0�'s°"_" 'ia Fv;t*a
Cured an4e. 1 Only S 4 hr.a fel- r,ed
I au faithfully,say t t'ibe r Imre sn-ee
c from l Ixazge dgcto' bill."
1tilbaartes 'L,0;4 -Liver
aade'rtad'rea remedy' f'or all „dsiise ire';
era a e fay t' ate' bevels.
aces., ids. per war ,hr �. .
at all dealers or =tile le d n,
"lurr
to, Qat.
lla l f on
1010
a ter
and the headet
pai.p. last the
other t he obi
ave., The
hori
e.
are
STY
rp in France Two or Three
Months Before the lien..
box .last May the advertising
France b there and eestern
to be- deeorated with
lored posters of
''Bonillon Cubes,'" whieh purported
to he a new German preparation
for makipg beef tea. No one had
any suspicion that, the posters were
not exactly what they pretended to
be until after war had. been declar-
ed, and the German troops had be-
gun fo overrun Belgium.
Thee in the fighting round Char-
leroi, the Preneh captured a Ger
man officer, in whose pocket- they
found a code book that proved that
the Bouillon Cubes posters were,
really cleverly designed Means of
secret military information
to an invading army . Nea,rly every
poster differed from the others
some detail of coloring or in the
worcls it bore. For example, the
"3 Teller 10 Pfennin." on a. poster
meant -masked bateries or en-
trenchments a mile and half south
of this road.' "6 Teller 20 Pfen-
nig" meant "roads and bridges
mined about here.'' Other words
gave information .abent the num-
,ber of horses that could be seized,
the possibility of getting food sup-
plies, or the, condition of the, roads
and byways in the neighborhood:
The French soldiers were at once
set to work to tear down every such
poster they saw. So they have not
been of as much value to the in-
vaders as they expected them be.
It is' an intere,sting fact thaethe
advertising space, for the posters
was taken and paid for in the
spring, and the contracts we,re to
run for a year, That was two or
three months before war was de-
clared, and more than a month be-
fore 'the assassination of Prince
Franz Ferdinand,
Correct.
'Papa (concealing something in his
hand) --Willie, can you tell me what
it is with heads On one side and
tails on the other ?
Willie (triumphantly) - Oh,
tnow It's a rooster on a fence!
hear the captain is in hard
uck. He married a girl ,a.u.d she
'an away from i'Yes; he
took her -for a male. but she was a
tau tand
kiss.' The
the parade an
tiona
3. Then
.1k ttal.S
eitt tint
forma 1
ludas ie
thou
tt
orr..e rya
a lit
It i
ure
et
Id
is
bet
, back the thirty e.
He repented to ext
he brought back "er. u
the silver no longer
do with the bet royal. ht t wati
dame could not be ;nylon The re.
pentanee .s genuine, e
4. Betra fhb,- weld eon al-
ways be n by -delivered
What is that is s h
it -The nriests Vt was
away the 0-1tio- uda,, Had
•
been able to, they v.ould uot have
been concerned with doing Let
Judas stand the full brunt of his
act. Thai was their thought. And
they doubtless wonted over his dis-
comfiture as much a S 11,CY did over
their good fo rt 1,1 TIC' when hP came
to -them to say he would. deliver
3esrts in their hands.
5. Cast down the pieces of silver
-die Could not hold them. They
were searing his flesh.
Into the sanctuary -The unclean
money was even to defile the tem-
ple, for it was thrown into the very
and hanged himself -He is still
pursued by the furies. As an evil
spirit which ran hither and thither
in the earth seeking rest and find-
ing none, so Judas was hurried by
the lash of remorse until he is
found han,ging on a tree. It is sup-
posed- that he strangled himself,
the rope having broken. But see
Ac6b.s.Alnd'18the chief priests took the
pieces of silver, and said, It is not
lawful to put them into the treas-
ury, since it is the price of blood -
The word for ``treasury" is cor-
banas and -means the "sacred
treasury.'' The ,exclusion
."blood money" from this treasury
was an application of the law
against harlotry (see Dent. 23. 18).
How true is it that, Jesus was
counted with harlots and sinners,
to bury strangers in---Strahge that
this money should be so associated
with death and burial. Stranoters
doubtless meant the Jews Lorn
e go
me, the 'n r -General,
rm'anothor i This he
with Hertzog /eft ou and he has
been Prime Minister ever since.
Personally General Botha is a
very brave and very shrewd man,
whose vision is wide enough to per-
eeave the short -comings -of the largo
number of Boers- who have not en-
joyed the benefits of education and
ea. When he went to King George's
coronation he was persuaded to
wear knee breeches and the other
regalia prescribed for a levee.
Later lie was made an honcwary
general in the British Army. For
these things be was abused by many
of the men whom he formerly led
with such great courage, and skill in
the South African war: And in
taking hie present stand be
further abused by many of the older
gener'ation of Boers. But 'these old
prejudices die, and when they aro
practically obliterated, ,as far as it
is huma,nly possible to obliterate
such things, the chief 'credit for
bringing peace, and prosperity to a
ha,ppily united, well -governed South
Africa, will belong to General
Taj°1,vuihscEn°thro'tina met Sir Wilfrid
Laurier at the coronation a, warm
friendship , is 'said tc; have sprung- up
between them, and Sir Wilfrid has
often had oece.sion to make ,refer-
ence to his admiration for Botha's
generous and expansive nature, .his
eourage and his 'strength of purpose
in standing by his most generous
conviction,s, despite. the fact that in
doing so he incurred the displea-
sure of many of his compatriots.,
Swelled head is -the only disease
in which, the suffering is done 'by
other people.
54,
se ig the
This inedified
'dielike of War °Mee methods and , Cif
Lost Appetite.
! Turpin. however. used
*to War Office proerastina and
he therefore had a special gun
made 'on his own.' He had it made
in parts, in different factories. and
f- these parts were put togethei: else-
-!,‘ here under his personal super -v.1
SiOrt. SO, JOG., with the shells, In a
small 'factory eleSe to Pontoiee he
pers,mally filled them, 'and -then, in
selected and -invited officials, he 'o good to him"if•
eut sonic ,of his first, private
experiments on a deserted part of
the Atlantic coast. WAS ALWAYS TROUBLED
pe a, newly-ereated
time r all, this new act, to' be
effective, iply affords another in-
stanee of the truth of the oft -quoted
maxim : '`Eternal vigilance is the
tnThe merest chance enabled
to witness one. of these early trials
of his new explosive, afid I confess
that, although 1 was ravenously
hungry ball an hour before, I re-
turned to. my inn without an appe-
In order to drain two thousand'
a,cres of lowland from Which the Sea,
has becu shut. off by high embank-
ments, what is presuru,ably the
largest windmill in the world lias
been lately set up at Harlinoen, in
Holland. It is fifty feet in ''diame.-
ter, is monnted. on a ,steel tower,
and has ste,e1. sails. Some years
ago, ,infternal combustion engines
mills of Ihollati,c1; but lately the
steel windmill is being molt, and
more employed, especially for
Happiness depends half on what
we do and half on what we don't.
WITH BOILS AND PIMPLES
Could Not Get Rid of Them
Until lie Used
BURDOCK BLOOD BOTTER6
io All Blood or Skin Diseasei. are ca.used
it pure you must remove every trace of
the impure and inorbid matter from tthe
system by a, blood cleansing medicine
such as Burdock Blood Bitters.
Mr. F. Hopp, Kipling, Sask. writes
-"I was always bothered with Bells, an
could not get rid of theni, and also la
all kinds of Pimples on my face, iron/
early in. the Spring till late ill the :Pail.
One of my friends told me about your
medicine, and that 1 bad to get some-
thing to purify my blood. I got two
bottles of your Burdock Blood Bitters,
and in a short time I was cured, and
have never been troubled with Boils or
Pinaples since."
Burdock Mood Bitters is manufacture
only by Tbe 1. Milburn Co., Llaiited
Toronto. Ont.
o n to get t pure, and keep