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Exeter Times, 1914-12-31, Page 7-1176- o i » 9 e mtai a :. and The C� Ire. THE C iJS. Too i rakid eating, eating to h, and .000ften,improperly chewing the food, eatingtoo much stimulating . food, and indulging in improper diet generally. THE SYMPTOMS, Variablet appetite, randsou souring- of s d, heartburn, wand in the stomach, .cling of weight in the stomach, in feeling that your stomach, klas gone and that the food yoi. eat does, to agree with you, CURE,. it- as RAE BLOOD BITTERS* i�?illiamson, Z\rizeelei, 011t"r writes: "I have been a sufferer for years from dyspepsia, and could scarcely eat anything, I tried Burdoek Blood. Bitters, and 1 am. entirely eared, I have »not been troubled since I took it, and that is two years ago. 1 can now eat any- thing w I•sh,"' wish," B.B. , isanufae toed onlyb The #li t y T. Milburn Co; Limited Toronto, Ont, L. A..\.1' STA2�$�'KG cold Not .„ i gethey l lkfa or al. t ?~ n to righting. . tc5 'rig. t�,'£ tit. WAR AS VI 15- 5 1 �� 'ci '''��C:':'ua°.�.'E.�^v.�':'c✓6;�U:�k?''�ci:''..w�''h?R.;�:'(i9:^c%�u°r�v:'C,;f, � �.��.rx3r,..�p:=•,..+ a with fright-. n thefollowing s, r of a simple they fled on all steles �� � � , tEs� y 1? � 7t `x 'wake =' ':. ';,. ; ...� t & ce .'�i CS : 1 SLit F F A^ 6 more. As cc a n wdr.. 'that and getitlY d d:'t s/i htie lo.k at -the fit e tina,ke invad d our refute and Others took care -of ,that. iniman, then h: r nd }l'4 1 fan l✓i:�Cx}!J.. e tia T^Jrna loud vC,Ees: made tl_l<F..un of tcEani� � qg ��q�� filo, !t ielc iged t,9� Axl_°, talcl;got-he other s>ce rf the gar -tended as Yak{'3 in prayer above G. [� maker, and 3t s 1Oie woodenPhos,,} den, and. heads in spiked helmets tie o r tener. And 4.z`it as cof a tiy woman, as ear at 4 e e<e r i,s. ii .ae s �tr ,t v sa horri- ble, si Ur1i_b)o$t at_ Kr; Ci.eS0 women, dzoa s of wounded, the incessant noise of volley firm, made a, terri- , .. and the city weed with whichthe appeared over the wSi"n oaczti= (rr 1ci officer t 1a r;iellenH.f S rA as Ibs m her words' by a house was filled th,tet, burning, (liars ehr€1 over thew 1 1> ,t.; cera late the priest, azcretired. feel that. I wouldh .g you d•newspaperman,h As revealed Hied e this crackling', this fusillade broke c?os the doors. worthe 4Vc went OR our At night your great remedy, Dr. Wood's NorWa3 Inoro of the horror,andwickedness I had heard, sE!"aers were orchard was IrS-acecThal' mashed we reached tiancw. Our miseries Flue Syrup. W gross injustice if 1 did not ofar than we haveknown,We fiing aecom, animeat to the roaring (. fire and the crasho£ fallingbuild.- . uil - - <. c•alae ' _ c)i movingabout the fire, and in #,Je. , with their r.fle butts and out a� :seIe atan end. .se-iteaAz ie you. know the wotr'zFui , use, "Last sibinsIhappened to contract Fee]nothing of the meaning o£ war results f?a_iave obtained .49111its ing's The irlhabitants sought refuge 111 heir cellars, twenty or thirty, of- ten more., crowded together, They .heard in; the street the pattering of thetries 4:if . &L,dLer&, the the firing; fir. e , headlonggallop animals esmptdr a ao many as we read 1: t� tis 1 � 1 sieges ".a advances 53: many retreats,. and surrenders, so nta'i1y tllEt1~sarld dead, so many t3tiou:'enid wounded. We read our papers aic1 pat 'them down, I .atm at unmoved, It is a lk, 1 , 4, o { A dream,;t ' fictio• 'so colossal that ,v 1S Tl, we can hardly believe it true, Suf- i a in oiw'h our £fritts, mass ddaes not to {. '. its - butthe story of >na ,c0r hearts,- li � poor mother er_ ,, ,.} .; `:`1,..:a','ife'. - a.:cLh,.. �a.JAtr11111� her ',-Er10, Al F. her husband, Gdees. And dl so the story o pc.or woman who has £, cite. 4' known war affects Its terribly. Its simnlic't,y... a'id cli»eetne,, is "elrerb. c-1: '1`raak"..ated b�, l�t.E7be': t• Z�,, Snedldtil,1 5 ) War was hardly declared before German soldiers appeared in No- aaagTll`, 4~444'' day all the village was yorking in the fields, It accts harr- .9' a`ES ` .: {, and t.h�, rrA`�a7, with Iteltt. t 4444 backs Were cattily,' the corn; the a women were b,n(ding' the sheaves, ke Glat'1 2 i<s•c,a tie`}?:',:.d 'them inadde p tl ,`x t sta. _re i ", iK seen the 'French? - 1;'e. i l...dd round. There t'fiO('�d -a , e. � ttG. ef#r.ed OP. ., £. :';LCI :..a< red-facedka. •3" ;irla'11F5. ","tEurope kms. II �.•' 041(11 d:iJ,,'ltsults Ika old'. ..x_ `� , 3'A '*Clnl hit 'g:3,^.2S'(i nano 'tl"i tht' 4n. on b_;-ii•t1 a � P:'4 `3dt. '➢1,� ,d:,, a, .ara ll *� and �1 (ifil ,at :>�� x whit ,1 sults YxT f'ELCPt ,d. to :eat, t�ti�' ��� ;11 to keep it going they tbretis• Inti out. I fell ag'uia at their knees 1'rdo it .'tEhe 10 in ' embers which and implored theirpity. }�,. `)IL't5','•f ... i? � toiled at their feet (11»klnr lot- them the cryixtnr oliiidren an(t cat,' 11,,:.{.1 led z, 1 �, - � r m i thin, fi n<. a.1 'tier... little ba} were ,. . l around t:.. I 41r. 'fi tie .e ,s it a � 1 `3 .'� l pole, a ,t t : l `fig - #, trace. wasted to a shadow, but they u.,,,_Z Then . •e feat that r h rkEe. was ed and led us out, They ied as to za .. felt tl :a o31 burning too, , fie knew it by the before the cemetery and -;note us ;rq & ).' } ��: p >ria'iltFill heat t ' c 77�.•:':a,St, the wall 111 t'll«?2c_rca\i ��.: 1 >.- r di -red: not � , a�„: �b14�kat�as around al,:, s sit a front, their They t 1' C, e1r n io'es. x, 1 .elom,� e •t t t F •:x 'Xga.ia t ea. •�i Above � >' they 11'E'1',' in kiy the choking .�.^.E%xC,. in K,I:ar ,131r ",.:y�,, .d.a5+., 4,A•:L.'Yi,+tl *.r,,.,,.1 a �,.i.II. It. .� iO4 L, all tIa k +-. f = with }. and thl�va,.,, the noise of falling plaster ether, packed. with the ba,.ks 41F r Of lit3?? discovered, s`i•d �l trP•.Trl' F,c i s werefor- How _• ,, : , }, .Ge and ;,toz�et t„�.4p1"-z�, d,o,anr E,t=I�el� Axl 413 x ch, t., e 1, �. Witt: i8,ra1, t_,ea cleat. cic... X ,:. t 1 s .,1 u, e ivl t..a;'l .� a � 3 E> lvals of the !vex::iu:Asp Y:atl }A1St gz�"en ov>a t� e��, a hours, days, d;d this ,-, , and ; 5 e a' -I 'w-ir f f fscl• V'e a�,ele d,.n t�_ last. don't _ z,9aX <llz<d liv #..; 1..?_ �,a aA hw,z ,w � " z, bell a :t. £ ta,> A t I.t o5. was Out en: o Fa c+.^,i our x aaltry tumbled into tlull,ger, t £ were l k k. t'aaiAE�laa t 'a�a� r�-�ti1 �:z '�t�lP(�les as?rl; fz A sera r, �_Ld tm_ 4aeop.le, >y is ads i5ed alae tot 141'. '1',, Oil i $ t, ' ;talk �. 1 �< to ,< dlw , ,J$ �(, S i '� ,., � 1 �. 27i -� la E> w a, t � a �� 1$ a a � ,IIs, aidd 5 a,t dt saki 1 e E a 1 1 1 alt t a rl til e ? � ka � L' ) t 1 'Y) c;lat �� e .SiFnti it :3 _w"i_;' 2 IlEIISE? 5i.<: „ _ : ,.,;._ [ , F ,. ,.,. , :. , .Q! #' `� .. I.;• a: r �7 ., . ;" . +" .�,, ..? ,... � . :cf:n Rt ?.. t.r' fiL°c. tofi7k�13s ^ , , ,, „-,n L<ai� 13 2:it __ <*,;;I;t'* L't> fTl't a'. 1-�: .. :' ,,. ... ,.. A .. ' -tl� .„ ; _ a •or �m„Ie11 oa1c,<,11 . e, . s �, :, ,, d to 433,3 <(, .:• �,,.-,n v' Y - wee rev,,..,"., hi s:c,.,ar,s, a_.1d rant �v rk �sr ewio,, .w, _tea# 11*favd 1? � ,' , � � _ ' '• }n a.,a<;=, � 4'.32!1 :lA:ri, hit:`i.aa=�dl, '_`''I'[1 1a? � i tit. Stl ci,{il)a-,dl t„Elle, �.. , ,:t..• 1 , y.. -1 r; #. J dt �?%n {1 114a#Tdn> ft�l ak t it 3443 JC51S A n r ^. 3.... l Q td a :, o , � ' " } n '#�G°3S £oY =.rout Gt c „l wt ''r kat ,- .,i 3' .. �la"�1; illi a t x � „ - .r , - e. hr(„d� tie alt. move or r,,c .a. _'find n , , �. � , x Q; .17 4i: d e a5< -`A C? 6t. eat dEr?il '. ill 73 i)> - , I to eac1A e.th,r al,;�l a5<.,t,,c; aor �l.at �, et nry nalao. iwent --nye o ue sse �e r' in al(s r. :fna >ly' e w�caxao a: c1a;I- the cellar, Aka ef'i r . a n, �liA.t til a t;E,.ar, na, n, 1 1"? a ; „•R. 4: f s-4 • � .. „ -= - _l,t.,e r4lAand 3,E�ce .> a Sxe�d � C11'Q'Il d3)4I �}lie 1I3 �'llt 15'17eIa It 1i lir t: "6 da l4 C,. ltdeli', � �,rl fi . l3 '�,� *` . 1-. mad? up pill minds to We ;S r ' have 2r,,..+- 1.,, Ps «z.., 3,a ' -_ . himself • 1 a t, m eiders $• , ver beneficial ia, reslzl; t ft4w its, e a daybreak to l< ,, ai_insE}_i on tiptoe •. 1 < la1 ,^1.,�1. IIS ail tl,e days d.c� kthat ksllt tat<1 eak t �' c crowed. •Fl,..;,,> 1.d x la ,1 . , looked a° Os a . ,ala i m;e as' if lit it s td h a zr , .4341 _ la .. the reel.. sa AY 9I� ♦TIONAL LESSON LI:N JAN il`m.R " . r $ , cold. Of course., this is a common oc. t a .M l . didnot ?. u Ye n 9,a particu- lar e 11 , lar rlotire of it at the time, However. t ' did not b; eaa; u s quickly - colas P � f generally did with me, 50 after two weeks. a and no sign of improvement, I began. ; to get alarmed, and went to my.'loeaz - !, llhysicaa€a who informed me that 1 had contracted severe bronchial trou;hle as a ,result of n,egtecting my cold, �1�? pre. L $c-ribed some redieitae for z .j.,, q:aztclt 1 took zor ak1-oast t:3vo 5n-ee?:s �.,t?�ts:r a:z sign was '.n ��-„ - 2.7-11). � '; s,^,, of improvement. , I ge.�. sthany<� Golden 'pr�'tty A114da. discouraged 1i .el:, but u one day a t`rtettd happened tp i;e in to Text. Mos. 14. A #.,?,3 E? .l.ti.. Effie, 2 (..rA t; 3: ll tdlk. Gta "'". : +E ..'4 at ,.. dr"' "^""l'd.?..,,aa 31°a.t 44417' ^ ♦ : ,T ,,,,,-,°> ::.: from` that < _ 7 } { Lk?p1 a. u' -»'ax. aK �r�± t N t<9•;1 her "Cdr x �., ,�a t' 1, r'� �' a �`$S7'.ra z5;:u.r�'rw �a.t, -'.oi .�. ' (> were :�� en, and Zw"'[ '� .. � i':'cd. , L•!� t'tl R R -+a ',n [['' R y p- S SJunga .. � n ., :.: , $ �", F } 12a, 1 <, 9.1 y01.,,. :uNpqyy,,'.bv-„ ail.l.f>.. °r;"'S:4yn MY 115110 $_ea4011. 'c , . � .. •i , ,. 6'^ix`>' t' i1 c.'j,,t1 1i:5 has)) AA 1',,. PF A. ',�: ', »a �Y ' " .^ 4 l�->r: with to Y ,.c.S Mnrm ta... ♦r,•11 n+ to x ,** a 5R ..t , And t ,.t,,.. 1x,44 4M1 kept the p€( 4._. Israel on he s z to get sett-, 3kRdd ulna, za C u4', 0 l ' II< 14^5 r C 't k 1 OKI, the tB7;, r�rtr *;s ��12'&' Mir 'tlal$ ta;� en#cf!exltm skloairlg Ter ;�a+,3r' 3; � at tree but Fere,: Yfrm.s'.a2 tdt t ketch stand.5 oat 12 ' be ani: e"rl i'a had i ,ehz : -ah that. tlis: l>t'G'.'6k Ga ib tw1`+� s'i1a1;n dl 4344 : hands '»s ,. x, } S ,-.II, »: , k,.,,+... 9. eE::€a` was cJ�. a", as b A '� l -a .01 sides "Get 9atit ...<. s-. .;natfwd'...t. `'"n '1,re.,4edw. rtdcan logIlt r+t1a1.1Y11Mrld'O'3,".�,',h •� �--�--.^".•" . ka M . a<, tee � lr % t. H ."_ And L i,2 . E^t t araa,a. I a w, a r d 1( tae t e .w he w,rtr^1, 3L1@:, 4,'i"aa- , sz.,.. 11 in g l word WI it 4d e: ,.0 .a 1 This, �. x11At„:;7c< s"3• Fs .�<Ldc."n;D4,p dl r' t . p tom'. .. �°'�etf"..,'a 't13a;�. $9 � t< the is heart was .£113I hen i hae4; did a .a tt,,1e• %gid. aaa5`0743M 131,et3e4 S I Batas, dealt atv a,r 7 , 2 ( a5 Ykf t E5 f : .. 1/1 t.1l:..i;5 101'll'.F;^S(E £ .t,}4Gn ftp.. X e [eft kin rv. 4 !Other 110 iadEated o al ka tiiac : En r ra» a.=. 1:»01t1t c116 is not a14 111- S este ii I'`llri#}ie' Wklr`St' r ea he ' for tz1 liti'sr4 o A�.l ti'onx nret°ail:f ill alatun2n, "xilcll i laal?aal:ll 1S lt,t, its IAnaa�x.mitalll, (-d i,the x '4,e1.5 the roads. inabbes. 1 ,•141s practicable for march - bridge,, over lault er, Only111 the 00111- :x,' 5 . r -e these Ia,dv eta o1, la, 31 { b4 it ,ti1Aal doe to fa the interior of the C " r t n the ba#St Prussia-. MU frontiers -hew, l °1 00eur , ti i,, 31 {ll'$q' and lowland , .araC (af2lac, a+e - 1 iel� to .laailitaa',r the %4xt0al5e ell freezes #1#1 t+r a avers 1 thus the Vie- p was i'.1 21 at .NI, a %air"± . 11311•,at ri,, i Into December ,earl' all"ela;. 4 naaat, OP. 1414 tither lu nd, �klika21 notfrozen t tbein f'ae'1 1 •ever but filled with Bloat 12g ice,; st„ km. 3•e. streams become impatsa.ble "' IIy nava' G1UId.R by nowt. One 44. the a11U, it br, dffficat&t tAr iara sidll' !The ilah bit tri a renebes in freta +Ri21 #;2a��lt l fzlh 1 with , t on hefound in the ci kid a7. �s`zaaw tin the interior of the 'dtatinellt, threw flowere 0n' Sifter `.ireb el) dltlons;trmies 11av'e'. them' aFltll 4'ltii! < :r, SO: alaes at ed blocks ,,,r 1 1.; 0'Ue» 31ead ,:lilt ;,. 1 ,hake ill#D#+(llilt , 3101, old Dow •' push .4 hewn WO .<d112 re I; :r"or of 2. t. it mt thct an. im• rt, 41,'. y 'da zo11- na_,s rag, len �14 at 't 4t ?aai the' an c .., brown r• a r ande - y; 11 arts•. �meb, ef` e t)ie>s uttd.e. 411; • id , won. . ence 3I1. 'There.;'. tial fr mai n 1-1•0 'ram inttl k. reernit they n.F de be: ti �,� klfr*.ii'0.l E*#1 fg tl"� ��4'kk 33.34 . b'�tA e.1 Ram ,1 t•:�, a ,ilk ta,€t aal Y i . S(1$i,10i ."" �r �~ i t,1tr i'.(a.:("k * .'t{S:`.y"i'El, a..., 6-i"#''ehilag, And l d as ,, ltirc � "Fi, 44434 t t' ,k , s � la, lx t i-, the 'tf 1ttils">" tea" s. l ir1:w taa?r t..., earl +Sa a.7i17•1•';;1 it,:. it< x 1.11,0 1k,ti v t..;a 4 a.slat.'.,•rig and •tl;tl.il rt t"arkl. anti disz� I auto w i' -d t t ,d; rtml for •da, I ri{`» i£ y oiti' ci 1 i lk Y' !" 9a !f •k r - f4. ,,a r ,� lr�d,1 caz:1 4'dl 111 514141 t'he e• •i<-1115 e,"ow' rx arks X'011 'lentUl'c d! t 111:'Id the Baroria' ' ` 4A fc ^T 1,, l:. �;., 1111..0.0 1'1 4` lss l e re -alas as over the in ``nix is nora < t-4 isked X11 Tit i i11 a, too t 1•k 1 i`rtl 1111, the 1 'z1K 31st: a}, a °1 l'. 3l<i tit lit�' asti�� old baby WilIck had My 001 f"i oae",7 need pot•hit' `t itf �" L; R Il s w14diel s:' �l r(.d like Ow f(al�' Uy, ,;"4145 a;>t1 ;ap;aR11,: 2 4011 Witaa fz tigtte a211d s ir head n the "oak, ani hardly out ;9d 3i 9k4° 3344> d.ldll by a1 for <la,;ts <sz,. abas a 4.no t ♦ i'@:+ r"i1 o S u,t, f..,-> l a Ptah' 12" aR Al .0egna to Cry.: £"1" - (s hoo; ar, '.atP; sod 111011 (11 F,f^1T1Ity, tk%92 l414 1'* the Vii`oukd '0111 Ytnli reting. T4W .t iind. S ° his t ?! th1s"'i',~ i ldad4 II lkfteen» a6e t.Tia:: a ruouthtaii R:'< 4'`latder, :ki,, eyes a Biel tI tae Biel na t Frerelt 1313(1 lit 41114 114^ rkb 'd 1fi 051"11 c ... n -ia fit 3 f2' 1 s 1. 'd (a t _ a2 t 121 4 114 hen at. 31'11 bre 11 to them. The were l)ett't, abandon us.” 1.11d they ;taw ered eny ship to detect an attacking su marine, or to know that she is a Any with you." tacked until the torPedt; is fireti, Alas! they. bad to leaee u raw, well doend „ rice t totpc o is fired the game i Ten away, beeause submarine • only be delivered in lives by the bubbles that they on the water. A name General. tyl-bye.. Mick. God guard And if yen heat the Germane well 'LIS you beat me you'll becoming home a general." were the farewell words cf Irish Fuel - der s wife, which eerrespondent es he oyerheaed. "'Which Oat of the Ten Command- ments did Adam ;break when lie ate the apple 1" asked the Sundae School teaeher. "13e didn't break '"Ca.use thereewasn't any then." Teacher --Tell me what lesson can be learned from the parable of the prodigal &eon ? Small pupil Oinking o.:f the lausks)--It teaches people to stay where they are com- Don't hilow Your Boi, To Become vonstipated. On the ”14,11 of August For ne time artillery rumbled ar No- meny and fuel. line she' . 111011 110'" 01)1 Or. fell on the hoo141ouse, transformed into a hu2pitel and protected by tare ed Cross flag. Thc Germans were ntharding the town. It 13,71.1, Vi imati on that they were coming vi4,it the Lowe. They eame 500 and began to pieces came to I ig•ht, an inborn an- cestral mania,. They d em nd ed inade. There weren't, twenty-five watehee in No ny. After trouble four were fo• tnd at the watch- maker's, pee • steel watches, old and we.ary. They were given to these dange ous maniacs who were satisfied ar d t-ook them. Then in the wre ed house,s they took the halides' s prepared for the woueded and all the medicines. They drag- ged ten reach goldiers out of their beds an took them away in spite of thei cries of catering. "W e'll come back for the others to- • orrow," they announced. ut next day the othe,r wounded ere one Some good people had tiro truth was only known you would 'di:it-we-Pet half ,otlite-ills of life are caused by allowing' the bowels to get into a ,constipated condition. When the 'bowels become constipated the stomach gets out of•erder, the liver does not work -properly, and then follows the violeet sick headaches, the sdurness of the stomaeh, belching of wind, heart - *eater brash: biliousness, and a feeling that you do not care to do a_ reCning. 'Keep yeur bowels regttlar by tieing nit e,res's I.axa-Liver Pills. They will clear fr-.-ay all the effete matter which. 01110,1 the system and Inake you think Hans ITTakefield, wi111 .:0•12. stomach and bilious- uf'd get relief until I used Laxa.-Liver Pills. had only lwo weeks when my trouble eeiee he 'Vise T. i\lilintra , iparr inane el iron and fire, dfd ieet put t,hena in a safe pla,05 during the night. Three days later, the cannons be- sean to boom easeain This time it ',vas our own big guns talking; The inhebitants Nomeny hiding in their ,cellans,, listened with mingled hope and fear. Towards the, close the day our seildiers re-entered Nomeny. They we,r,e too few, and hours later they retreated, to return the next ,day 0,-od again re- tire. Anti (the Germans r,eturneed and they too retired» This hide aered ,:oele lasted five days, Frenth ,and ,and patrols meeting- exchang- ed ,shots. At last -on' the morning of the 2oth the'great blow struck us. gu,delen- ly the air was split and the earth shaken. Cannon thunder -ed. Sh end German shrapnel screamed in -phee fell upon Nome -iv. was. Ian .avalanche. 1hey ki-Docke.d .-.10-wn walls., tor -e off roofs :split or i3O mailed cm receipt 1,:he inhabitants, terrified by this, att r. eiten ti1 a i .11 s"3 tite g4ilA�sr. d hd'Aiw. utt a'tnir:'(1 them. 1 pre' la:fir 141e thinl,g'.-=alit' c1-a^t a t*,4zl2'2g.. ‘Ve d*7q>ee # a'1 `I t an «„<t 5 ! d' a31tlt , , .1 1 as. 2714, a. 1 at . One a.i ra t,,frttlt:t r IP , mouth 1934,, aaa .. r a �1a4 3 as litasflallrr. who lsa. to f d10 4'44`4" d4s�,e.. ;tnke ;6. 4It ayaA<, I tl, lar, d 1135 1 adtI43,0 11+A4 1t taBit mss.'', A 7 the EIt.`e 131Yetlltt.. jet t 3 , at 3,1A- l.t £w7➢:, d 44x44 dila"pre>?l "Pp1.411t41% lilt' To en lneny where the 4i"#a tine saved us FrcIl4 German perfectiy. the (A{ll('s»I'4 and suer peeQi.11:t9 them. 531 1{ lar ''21 1 a as a le;a x-_ dtralh. afL; A 11 ala,, x 1:. t *i i r na kit! le %;421s. the 3° to ;l(1 tisfat aeM, ' art?(t 171,'1," hurl (1. It t talked with p .".t d in ala_, Iango On %d5�l It la`t "a O. ho afraid : MA • 'lra t flat dray we heard great<. heavy 6i11t('.12. w�, al They posh.. t k444 t Pistil 124 r(F1:4. 4Af aur :1.a 1.',an1?. wo slowly 4Jr.1041. A shaft 44 lite (hre 110t 111111,11, ; hly breast as. tight as 1‘ 11'04'0 lb to kfep quiet. so1414er elute down the steps eykere4 with mud, firtit o' ten lee grey MS th1311 t 1/ Ws erribkh boolded face. e bottom "'k.2t, the. steps he stopped, .and. came forward a little in the dark with his Arms out, then he tad I If turn, went hook to the it spoke to bis emnrado wbo had remained above, w Only then did we dare to breathe. Thou after e, little whet: lve thougltt the soldiers were far enough away determined to leave our eelfar. gued for half an hour, myself, my dauF41ster and my husband. In ter, h 4,f us went to the stairs, bu opped on the first stop and came k. We were afraid. Finally the old man ventured, mounted the irs. looked about him and die - appeared, We heard his footsteps erms, no firing. He Was safe. Our eourage returned to ns. There was no more reason for de - 'lay. I went out first ettriiing, the !ruby in illy arms, my daughter fol- lowed with the other two thildren, then my husband. We took a fe,w steps in the street. My heart was beating with joy. We ran at full speed to a. big orchard at the end of the town. Two or three hundred in- habitants of Nemerty were- lying there Flat under the trees.. We lay down beside them. We said noth- ing. We hardly dared to brea.thr. From Lime to time bullets whistled over our head,s. Some shells burst beside us. We never stirred, with our noses to the ground. We pass- ed days and two nights like rub up a.gamet me softly. A small hand carecsed my face and a N.e,a..k. voice murmured : '`I'm hungry, I'm hungry, and my head is so sore.'' I turned my head, and rec.agoized one of my little nieces. there and don't make any noise. I will give .rou sometleing to eat, all goed time." as. QUI ray 3 la "Yes, eome in, the more the merrier din't know how many days %VP Were .,..42121. UP under ground. We heard the German soldiers emning and going, in the house above our heads. We knew their heavy lite1133, and withklut seeing WO guessed 'what they were doing. They wore taking out and carrying away my furni- ture, pillaeiug and clearing out my house. lid sale through 1b eracit that they had all my things outside, all my poor little things, my met - tresses, my pillows, my dresses and those of my daughter, all my linen, even the baby's little shirts and the baby terriage. T saw ,other soldiers busy pillag- iug in other hauses, top to bottom, in the kitchen, the bedrooms . . mg, shouting. They were filling their pockets`lo bursting eith mon- ey and jewelery that they found. They were carrying away every- thing -furniture, Sheets, bedding, linen, even women's underelothes, They were taking off t‘he window ehutters, putting everything in a 'We F. -etched them with tears in onr eYes, rage in our hearts. But what was it in comparison with the misery we were enduring in this black hole, in this profound night, wheee we could not see each ether, moving like blind people with our arms outstretched so as not to bump into each .other or bruise our- selves on the walls. We spoke in a whisper, mouth to ear, as if each word that we had to say wa,s a, E3- cret for our calls alone. We had only water to drInk. plums to cab. It, was enough for but tor clhildren My daughter' had 11.6mo-re milk, we lead .00.1y wa, ter to tieurili her 'idea one, and it 'Made thini.,sick. - Our" little girl kept saying, and orYinig• To oonsole her I said, ``Den't cry, these gen,t,leanen will come and bring -I staid' that, but, I wished ii; hea,rt thnse gentlemen 'W,011 1,C1 coque. live,d this way for da3s and days. One ,aftereeee heard a- st,rang sound in the street It was like volleys orf firing, tikes the God '1 I thought, French have come aild ,a re figh ti e in Nomeny." Then I fell -down and begen Porceita, Out. knerv -where to turn or what to do. Soon the heat became linsupport- 12 ;14.4414 add to tlun 1 13 le 1.1 Act,111fir gen v4a-?tic.'d-i'llTe"hul.C144;rtwel.1•' .at a time vrini1/41 14,141. ot4tir Yon 04n pireteere Pr- Wool's' Noma, ming riaik Wok to rig r stop, it you don't 1,41 open. .1 saw a French soldter ho p of the e 1 saw and pass alongside a roll' ( 13 thirty or the tity a.ong 31 At -the ,00rner of a etreet. six little phee were, Fucking a dead sow When we, came te the end or the wn, we were made to retrace eur rors, At 141S3t CAMP to a house 41 alter, 'Ellen the petty sltopped. M. Mu! • got up on a, mike tene and said: ' have seenred your liberty. They are going to put us en the wely Nancy. We are ping to RI, out. but nobody must turn baek or we shall he shot. Come along now." We went ou our way. M. Atuller led the wa.y, 4...arrying a. white hand- kerchief lake a deg tied to a sleek. Behind him mine the care of No- meny and another enre. The sot. frem t,he town. When they left ul they wanted to take the children from us and take them with them, but the priests intervened, and af- ter a long discession the soldiers re- tired. A little farther on see. ../111* 111Oaly Freneh wounded in a field. Hear- ing us pass, some of them raised therreelves up and sagned to ns, not go to them. Manoneourt, which was full of Gellman soldiers, we were stopped. An officer came up and made the cure step out of the ranks, He in front of a house., Yoy,„ could guess the drape of a, body under the, cover which was over it from head to foet. The face was. hidden. AN. that was, visible was the. cover stir- ring a. little, rising and foaling. then fro 12,e The --The lest v Temantent la, Baal nican,A owner -or lord bath gods nod men. 11,41VPV was more parttoularb,'' god of fir?, Ttrians. Ashtaroth the plural of Ashtoreth. who wa the principal goddess of. the Zidon- 14. And the anger of ,Telotvab kindled . and he debvered thev could liet any longer tand before their eneraies--Thk% visitor. Of euurse, when Isra bezel:ate 'weakened through re» rd corruption, they were not able any longer to AN itlIF1a.T14:1 their enewit.s, and „Iv, Jehovah 11.01.0d n 011111 11_1 ji longer have 1211V protection or in 8S rollutee fluenee over them, as they were exert:h.-lag- tlieir own free will Nervous Prostrati against 11;nt, it was 'natural that F,tripprd of au 0 t. y of Time. time ; Give me . they stititild lac beaten ho their minks, and weakened that theY Many people although they know of 'toultl, no longer fiOlt for their nervous prosteation do not know what honor 411,14 f.,a-r4-,t.y, We can well un- the. symptomS are. Time principal onea derstand that the atildreri of Israel are, a feeding of fright when he. crowded in ther t;nie of ra;serv -and cense. places, a drea.d of being alone, fear of ottani repentanee realized that -the boIng In a confined Place. a horaor of anger of Jehovah e,-tt pl.,.(yrk them. society, aigdarteladt otfmtheiinagags feaullbrigeofrrooarrid 'who 9-004 14101'1.- reurmrier refreshing sleep, often troubled with righteous is alwa.S.S an -1011" t i dreams. people. Tfistory Stnews no peried Mrs. George Lee, 1,Tictoria Harbor, when there was teta and abso late Mgt. wr...,......, ites: "I am writing to tell you apostasy. And out of this remtmat of the experience I have had with Mil - always has appeared a leader, burn's Heart and Nerve P II T • so stroner in religious conviction and nervous I could nabt do nirys'oevrii-w-il\oWisuoiarkT backqidden people to the standard go any insight, and eapable to raiii- q II,. Ithd:ede, nyoeaptiNravsaa,altactiol‘inisye:Iaaravresoin,,vcvas,pst. hail fo'; saved them because they toi413:nes•yf Your pills, and 1 never was bett,,,.. their people et eritical times. They bring them back to a belief in God. 1 Milburn's IleaetLal,...,nsd.o'D\t`;:-.1,,L2,31:illa•t aril te.:c.raa y-,.1. or sb ip of ona and, henoe. t, 5Tooaropne: boo: 3 f) ' ' ' 'r:ve' - ' 's a -e, I price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited streng,tlien their ,arens tk-i strike the dealers, or marled tareet oil rece.r[)t of