Exeter Times, 1915-12-2, Page 3....rte ,_....,-,., ...,.. •.
Was Not Much of a be$icknr
in, Patent Medicines
But Milburn's Heart and Nerve
Pills Are All RIght,
Mrs. Wm, McElwain, Tetnperanc;e
Vale, N.B„ writes: "1 dui trot :much of a
believer in medicines, but I must say
Milburn's heart and Nerve kills are all
right. Some years ago I was troubled
with smothering spells. In- the night I
would waken up with my breath all one
and think I never would get it back. I
was telling a friend of my trouble, and be
advised me to try Milburn's Heart and
Nerve Pills, Ile gave me a bos, and I
had only taken a few of tll cin when I could
sleep all night without any trouble.. I
did not finish the box until some years
after :when I felt nary trouble conning
back, so I took the rest of them and they
cured vie.'"
Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills
have been on the market for the past,
twenty-five years. The testimony of
the fusers should be enough to con-
vince yoit that what we claim for therm
`‹ is true, IL and N. fills are 60e per box, ;3.
boxes for $1.25; at all druggists or
dealers, mailed direct on receipt of
price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited,
Toronto, Ont..
FRgM OLD SCOTLAND
NOTES OF INTEREST FROM HER
BANKS AND BRAES.
What Is Going On In the highlands
and Lowlands of Auld
Scotia.
Some 600 cases of disabled soldiers
and sailors have been dealt with in
Glasgow up to the present.
Six members of the Glasgow Mu-
seums staff, and over 200 students,
past and present, are in the army,
The Aberdeen Electricity Works
have been insured against damage by
aircraft and bombardment for $600,-
000.
Lord Inverclyde has presented the
89th Argyll and Sutherland High-
landers (Dumbartonshire Territor-
ials) with a set of bugles.
Mr. John. Ferguson, professor o£
Chemistry at Glasgow University, re-
signed after an unbroken connection
,of sixty years with the University.
The Royal Hotel, Bridge of Allan,
has ceased to exist, the furnishings
having been sold by public roup, and
the military having taken possession.
Saltcoats Town Council have agreed
to proceed with a scheme for the re-
clamation of a portion of land adjoin-
ing the North Pans bathing pond.
Coalmasters are now boring .for
coal at a spot between. Lime Wharf
Chemical Works and Lock 16, on the
bank of the Forth and Clyde Canal at
Camelon.
Dumfries County Council have
agreed to strengthen its police force
by the addition of thirty constables.
The new men will be stationed in the
Gretna Green district.
A Curtis biplane, piloted by Lieut.
Hai+, who was accompanied by
Captain Arkwright, fell from a height
of 300 feet into a field at Montrose.
Both men were instantly killed.
The coal merchants in Dundee have
assured the magistrates that so far
as the working class people are con-
cerned, no advance in price will be
made during the coming winter.
The carters in the employment of
Messrs. Wordie & Co., contractors,
Leith, to the number of 140, recently
struck work, demanding the dismissal
of several men who refused to join
the Carters' Union.
The motormen and male conductors
employed by the Glasgow, Tramways
Department have sent a petition to
the Tramways Committee requesting
an advance of five shillings ($1.20) a
week, to meet the rise „in the cost of
living.
An abstract of the accounts of
Paisley Town Council just prepared
shows that the liabilities of the. burgh
at the close of the financial year to-
talled -$7,675,020,
o -tailed -$7,675,020, and that the assets
provided a surplus over that figure of
$1,757,655.
The meal mills of Messrs. `James
Simpson & .Son, Inverboyndie, near
Banff, have been completely gutted by
fire. Oats- and oatmeal to the value
of $1,250 were burned ani the value
of the building and machinery de-
stroyed amounts to $2,500.
•
Suffered Awfully
FROM
BILIOUS HEADACHES: ifi4CS■
Whet' the liver becomes 'sluggish and
inactive the bowels become constipated,
the tongue becomes coated, the stomach
'foul and bilious headaches are the upshot.
Milburn's Laxa=7iver Pills will stimu-
late the sluggish liver, clean the foul-
coated tongue, do away with the stomach
gases and banish the disagreeable bilious
headaches.
Mrs. •,,.C. Kidd, Sperling,
B
.C,,
writes: ;,I have used Milburn's axe -
Liver Pills for bilious
headaches. I
suffered awfully until I started to take
thein. They were the only thing that
ever did me any good. I never have any
bilious headache any snore.
Milburn's -taxa-Liver Pule -are 25c
per vial, vials for $1,00, at all dealers,
or mailed direct oil receipt of price by The
T. Milburn Co:, I,isnitnd, Toronto, Ont.
��ee
use/rile.
�or�ter
Selected Recipes. when packed for travelling will keep
Cream of Chestnut Soup, --Peel and ! it fresh.
blanch one quart of large chestnuts, 1When greasing a pudding mold al -
Cook for one-half hour and rub, ways grease the cover as well as the
through sieve. Add one quart white , mold,
stock, and .a little chopped parsley, When making puddings with eggs
Blend one tablespoon flour with one beat the yolksand whites separately
tablespoon butter.Add to soup, stir- and mix the whites as the last in -
ring it briskly. Pitt through sieve gredient.
again andserve with croutons :of To turn out a pudding from the
fried Dread, • mold easily and without breaking
Nut Custard Pie. -Beat two eggs t plunge the mold into cold water for a
with one-half cup sugar and pinch of moment.
salt. Pour two cups hat milk over I Before home-made•bread is put into
mixture. Stir until sugar is dissoly-'the oven brush the tops of the loaves
ed, strain, add one-half teaspoon or a ; with butter and the crust will remain
little more of vanilla and one-half cap I moist,
finely ground English walnuts, pe -1 When making cakes add glycerin in
cans or almonds. Pour into pie pan i the proportion of one teaspoonful to
lined with pastry and bake in moder- each pound of flour. This makes
ate oven, Nuts rise to top and form I them light, '
tender crust to pie. A. use for cabbage water -Allow to
Vegetable Soup. --Boil until tender cool, then pour on the ground, It is
an excellent fertilizer for trees and
in enough water to cover, one-half I rhubarb bushes.
cup each diced celery and minced Several tablespoonfuls of peanut
onion, and one cup each diced carrots butter creamed with the shortening
are recommended for giving a novel
and delicious flavor to cookies or
any dark cake.
Good beef is of a rosy red color,
with cream -colored, firm, elastic fat,
It should be scarcely moist to the
touch and s'houlcl not be wet and flab--
by,
lab-by, either pale or purple in color.
To remove cakes easily from the
tin, dredge the latter with flour after
greasing. When the tin is removed
from the oven stand it on a damp
orange and two tablespoons butter.
Butter two -quart pudding mold and cloth for a minute, and the cake will
put in alternate layers of crumbs,
berries and sugar until dish is full,
using layer of crumbs last. Dot with
butter, pour orange juice over and
and tomatoes. Press through sieve,
add one cup each green peas, diced
potatoes and diced turnips. Add
more water if necessary and simmer
vegetables until tender. Season with
salt and pepper to taste, and add
two tablespoons butter and a little
milk.
Cranberry Pudding. - One quart
cranberries, one quart stale bread -
crumbs, two cups sugar, one-half cup
orange juice, grated rind of one
slip out quite easily.
When washing colored goods add
vinegar in the proportion of a table-
spoonful to a quart of water. It will
sprinkle top with grated rind. Cover , goods brighten blue, green, red and pink
and bake thirty minutes. Uncover arid the color ffromich arurinve faded,, and prevent
g.
brown. Serve with hard or liquid' A substitute for horseradish sauce
sauce. • -Boil a moderate sized turnip, then
Salmon Chowder. -One can salmon, mash and beat in two teaspoonfuls of
three potatoesthree tablespoons made mustard, a little lump of butter
butter or drippings, two slices onion, ' and thin down with a little milk. Heat
one-half teaspoon salt, one-eighth tea- t' in a lined saucepan. Served with `
spoon pepper, three cups milk, three ' roasted meat it cannot be distinguish -
tablespoons flour, three crackers split. ! ed from real horseradish sauce.
Remove bones of salmon, scale and ' Ground cereals should be cooked
flake fine. Pare potatoes and shce i with five times as much water- as
thin. Fry onion in fat, add flour, t meal. Rolled oats and other rolled
cook three minutes. Add two .cups grain should be cooked with only
boiling water and potatoes. Cook tin-' twice as much water. Cereals arebet-
til tender, about fifteen minutes; acid i ter if cooked at least one-half hour.
seasoning, salmon and milk. Boil Oat meal should be cooked at least
up once and serve garnished with' three-fourths of an hour or one hour.
minced parsley and crackers clipped ' The shells of eggs should be came -
in hot milk. fully washed before they are broken
Graham Muffins. -One and one- � and then they can be saved for the
quarter cupfuls of Graham flour, one, clearing of soups and• jellies. Crush
cupful of flour, one cupful of sour i the egg shells, put them on a plate
milk, one-third of a cupful of apple . at the oven door until they are dry,
syrup, three-quarters of a teaspoonful . then put in a glass jar. Before us
of soda, one teaspoonful of salt, two ing, soak in cold water for 20 min -
tablespoonfuls of melted butter. utes. Four shells will clarify a
Sift the .dry ingredients and mix quart of gellatin or an equal quantity
then; add the milk to the syrup, and of soup. -
combine the mixtures; then add the
butter. Bake the muffins for twenty-
five minutes in a hot oven, in butter-
ed gem pans.
Boiled Apple Dumplings. -One pint
flour, one-half teaspoon salt, one-half
pound finely chopped suet, one-half
To clean a cheap alarm clock -Take
off the bell and the two feet, and un-
screw the keys used for winding,
Then take the movement out of the
case, dip a feather in benzine and
with this rub out all the dust and fluff
from the little holes where the axle
teaspoon' Oda and sour milk enough works. Wipe off all dirt and benzine,
to make stiff dough. Roll to one-half carefully oil with a drop of pure
inch thickness and cut in squares. sperm oil on the feather, all the ar-
Pare and quarter apples, place four hors, but avoid letting .oil come in
quarters in centre of each square, contact with the balance spring, or
sprinkle liberally with sugar, and the clock will run irregularly,
gather dough around apples, pinching
together. Put. in cloth and boil for
two hours. Or steam without putting
into cloth. Serve with hard sauce.
made of one cup sugar and two table-
spoons butter beaten to cream, flavor-
ed with cinnamon. This is real Eng-
lish recipe.
Candy. --One and one-half . cupfuls
of sugar, one-quarter of a cupful of
water, three tablespoonfuls of apple
syrup, the white of one egg. Cook to-
gether the water and -the sugar, with-
out stirring it, until the mixture.
reaches a temperature of 248 deg.
Fahrenheit. That is known as the
"hard ball stage," at which a little of
the syrup dropped into water forms 'a
hard ball. Add the syrup, and reheat
the mixture. Pour it into the well -
beaten white of the egg, and beat it
until the mixture • will hold its shape.
Drop it by teaspoonfuls on buttered
paper.
Walnut Bars. - One-quarter of a
cupful of butter or two tablespoon-
fuls of butter and two tablespoonfuls
of lard, two tablespoonfuls of boil-
ing water, one-quarter of a cupful of
apple syrup, one-half of a teaspoonful
of soda, one and one-half cupfuls of
flour, one-half teaspoonful of salt,
one and one-half teaspoonfuls of cin-
namon, chopped walnut meats. Pour
the water over the butter, then add
the sugar, syrup mixed with • soda,
flour, salt, and spice Chill the mix-
ture, soli it one-quarter of an ' inch
thick, cut it into strips three and one-
half inches long by one and one-half
inches wide, sprinkle it with the nut
meats, and bake it ten minutes,
Helpful Suggestions,
Topreservecheese-Wringa cloth
p
out in vinegar and wrap round the
cheese.
A pail of boiling salted water
should be poured down the kitchen
sink every week to prevent its be-
coming stopped.
Ground coffee sprinkled freely
Amongst the fur or feathers of game
r4
ANTI -TYPHOID VACCINE.
How the Preparation Is Made at a
French Institute.
A recent article in La Nature de-
scribes how anti -typhoid vaccine is
prepared in Frahce at the Institute of
Val -de -Grace, where Doctors Chante-
messe, Vidal, and Vincent have done
such remarkable work for humanity
in the great field of protective medi-
cine. The vaccine is polyvalent; that
is to say, it is a blend made, not from
one, but -:from many different strains
of Bacillus typhosus. The vaccine is
sterilized by the momentary applica-
tion of ether, and contains no living
elements. It is put up in small am-
poules, or glass vials, in sets of three,
each of which contains one billion
dead typhoid bacilli, At every stage
the preparation of the vaccine,
aseptic methods are mort vigilantly
enforced. The article warmly praises
the workers: "Only those who have
lived at the laboratory from Septem-
ber, 1914, to the early months of the
present year can have any idea of the
activity that prevailed there, and of
the indefatigable zeal of all, men and
women, mobilized and voluntary
workers - directors of laboratories,
preparators, Red Cross ladies, hospi-
tal orderlies, all working together."
Pat's Position.
Sentence was about to be pro-
nounced on an Irishman for theft.
"And it is upon the oath of them two
witnesses your honor is going to con-
demn are?" asked Pat. "Certainly,"
said the ;judge. "Their testimony was
ample ;to convince the jury of your
guilt." "Oh, murther," exclaimed
T
Pat. " condemn me on the oath of
two such spalpeens who swear they
saw me take the goods whin 1 can
bring forth a hundred who will swear
they didn't see me do it,"
91115
Fur Set 9149 ]
PRINCESS DRESSES SMART.
Princess dresses have a clean-cut,'
smart, appearance, and although they
look well on slight people, they are''
particularly adapted, with their long,
graceful lines, to stout figures. The t
one shown herewith is Ladies' home
Journal Pattern No. 9115, is illus-
tratccl with a delightful fur set, Pat - j
tern No. 9149, consisting of a melon"
muff, collar and hat. The dress is
•
e
HAPPY YULE FOR
TOMMY ATKINS
CHEE.lt. FOR BRITISH SOLI)URRS
IN THE TRENCHES.
Many Funds Started in Ragland lx-
'pected to Reach Total of
$8,000,000.
Santa Claus is• malting ready for a
dizzy whirl to the lines of the British
soldiers at the front,. His thousands
of •agents in Great Britain are busily
at work now, accumulating the things
Santa will leave for the fighters on
the battlefields, writes a London cor-
respondent.
He starts his gigantic trip by call-
ing on the soldiers in Belgium, and
from there goes on through to France
and the Balkans. He won't skip any
of the men in khaki.
Christmas in the trenches• is to be
the biggest thing Britain can make
it. A score or mare of organizations
are hard at it getting funds with
which to buy: all manner of things to
cheer up the British Tommy and let
him know the folk at home are al-
ways thinl'ing of him.
Newspapers are running Christmas
funds, and the public response has
been'hearty. Already, with the funds
scarcely two weeks going, approxi-
mately $150,000 has been raised; but
a tremendous lot more is needed to ac-
complish all that Great Britain wants
to do for the soldiers in the field. It
is calculated that approximately
$8,000,000 either in money or articles
contributed will be needed to round
out a proper Christmas.
While a fend of $8,000,000 may look
formidable, it won't be so difficult to
get. The newspaper funds, it is esti-
mated, will produce well over $2,000,-
000 of it, while private cash donations
to the various organizations, together
with contributions of articles that will
begin to flow in within a month's
time, will make up the rest.
Queen Alexandra, always alert in
every move in aid of her countrymen,
is patroness of one organization that
is devoting itself to accumulating
articles of wearing apparel, such as
stockings, mufflers and handkerchiefs,
badly needed by the soldier in the bit-
terly cold weather. This organiza-
tion, of which Lady Paget is a mem-
ber,
em
ber, has already obtained enough to
fill 10 carloads- of stuff for Santa to
carry along with him.
Other organizations working along
the same lines have the support of
the Duchess of Manchester, the Duch-
ess of Marlborough, and many other
wives of titled Englishmen. When
the final accumulations of all of these
aides to Santa Claus have been com-
pleted it is expected that every sol-
dier in the trenches will find some
useful gift of wearing apparel deposi-
ted in his dug -out on Christmas Day.
That is not all. Every soldier at
the front is to get a Christmas box
with these things in it: 'Ilalf a pound
of tobacco, two pounds of candy, a
plum pudding, 100 cigarettes, and a
box of chocolates.
It may be that the boxes will be
even more plentifully filled. All de-
pends on how much money is forth-
coming. The Christmas box as plan-
ned now costs each donor $1.26. That
is the rock -bottom, wholesale price;
to buy the same thing at retail would
cost $2.25. The wholesalers have put
the figures down as their share of the
Christmas fund, and all of them are
giving handsome cash donations be-
sides.
Christmas fund matinees are now
making their appearance at the thea-
tres, and a good deal of money is ob-
tained in that way. The actors not
only give their services gratis for
these matinees, but are sending along
cash contributions as well.
Sir Herbert Tree heads a group of
actor -managers who are helping the
Christmas project. Hairy Lauder is
another. In sending his "bit" to the
fund the Scotch comedian wrote: "If
any Britisher this Christmas deserves
a good Christmas, it's our men at the
front."
Churches throughout the British
Isles are having sewing bees and tak-
ing up collections for the various
Christmas funds. Business houses,
department• stores, small shops -all
are helping swell the flow of; silver
and gold to buy the huge stack of
gifts for the men fighting for the
colors.
It is reported that to assist Santa
in getting the many tens of thousands
of Christmas boxes to the trenches
the railroad and steamship lines are
to be put at his disposal. Boxes will,
so it is said, be started to the Bal-
kans and the Dardanelles within a
few weeks, so Santa will find them all
there, ready to drop into the trenches.
novel and attractive in its diagonally
cut waist fastened high at the throat
and finished by a deep turn -over col-
lar. The sleeves are long and tight.
Pattern cuts in sizes 34 to 44 bust
measure, size 36 requiring 6% yards
of 36 -inch material.
Patterns, 15 cents each, can be pur-,
chased at your local Ladies' Home;
Journal dealer, or from The Hoare
Pattern Company, 183 George Street,
Toronto, Ontario.
THE SUNDAY SCHO L
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
DECEMBER.5. .,
SENSES OF TREES.
Perseverance of -a Poplar in Sur-
mounting Obstacles.
Mr. James Rodway who is the
curator of the British Guiana Museum
and an eminent botanist, declares that
plants have at least three of our five
senses -feeling, taste and smell -and
Lesson X.-Uzziah's Pride and Pun- that certain tropical trees smell water
ishment, 2 Chron. 26. Golden from a distance and will move
straight toward it.
But trees not in the tropics can do
as well. .A. resident of an old Scotch
mansion, says a writer in -the Scots-
man, found the waste pipe from the
house repeatedly choked: Lifting
the slabs in the basement paving he
discovered that the pipe was com-
pletely encircled by poplar roots.
They belonged to a tree that grew
some thirty yards away on the oppo-
site side of the house.
Thus the roots had moved steadily
toward the house and had penetrated
below the foundation and across the
basement 'until they reached their
goal, the waste pipe, a hundred and
fifty feet away. Then they had pierc-
ed a cement joining and had worked
their way in. There seems something
almost human in such unerring in-
stinct and perseverance in surmount
ing obstacles.
Text: Prov. 29. 23.
I. The Fame of Uzziah
,(Verses 8-10).
Verse 8. Gave tribute -See 1 Kings
4. 21; 10. 25; 2 Chron. 17. 11. Part
of the tribute which the Ammonites
gave Uzziah was evidently a right to
pasture his cattle in the Ammonite
country (see verse 10).
9. The corner gate -Probably the
gate at the northwest angle of the
city where the north wall approached
the Valley of Hinnom (see 2 Kings
14, 13). The valley gate - The modern
"Jaffa" gate which leads to. the Valley
of Hinnom.
10, Built Towers - Primarily for
defense from marauding bands.
The wilderness -To the south and
southeast of Jerusalem, extending
from the western shores of the Dead MEANING 0} I•I:1L1'-3
Sea toward Beersheba.
Hewed out many cisterns - Reser-
voirs cut into the natural rock and
covered at the top except for a small
aperture. These were for storing the
rainfall. Many remains of such are
encountered by the traveller in Pales-
tine to -day,
Tire lowland - The maritime plain
to the west of Jerusalem between the
hills of Juclma and the sea.
The plain -The rich grazing land
beyond the Jordan, on the plateau of
Gilead.
II. His weakness (verses 15-21).
15. Marvellously helped -See verse
7.
16. His heart was lifted up -His
pride became strong.
To burn. incense - None but the
priests were allowed to celebrate this -
rite. Hence Uzziah's transgression
(verse 18), ,
17. Azariah the priest -The high
priest (verse 20).
'With him fourscore priests-Uzziah
doubtless had a iarge retinue with
him. Azaeiah, therefore, , takes a
strong following, to withstand Uzziah
with force if necessary.
19. The leprosy brake forth in his
forehead-Gehazi was •thus suddenly
afflicted (seen Kings 5. 27),
20. They thrust hint out quickly -
Iris own men thrust him out, for
death was the penalty (see Num. 18.
7; 16. 31-35). And they ` wanted to
get 'him away ft•otn the incense altar
as quickly as possible, so as, to, espaRe
the penalty.
A. Sign That the Dead Man Was
Worthy of Universal Respect.
Perhaps you have noticed that
whenever a prominent person dies;
especially if he is connected with the
Government, the flags on public build-
ings are hoisted only part of the way
up. This is called "half-mast." Did
you ever stop to think what connec-
tion there could be between a flag
that was not properly hoisted and the
death of a great man? Ever since
flags were used in war it has been the
custom to have the flag of the super-
ior or conquering nation above that
of the inferior or vanquished. When
an army found itself hopelessly beat-
en it hauled its flag down far enough
for the flag of the victors to be placed
above it on the same pole. This was
a token, not only of submission, but
of respect. In those days, when a
famous soldier died, flags were low-
ered out of respect to his memory.
Th `custom long ago passed from
purely military usage to public life of
all kinds, the flag flying at half-mast
being a sign that the dead man was
worthy of universal respect. The
space left above it it for the flag of
the great conqueror of all -the angel
of death.
•
Review.
"You mustn't comment impolitely.
You might be heard. That lady is
Mrs, Ludley, the great philatithr•o-
'pist and society leader!"
"What if itis? I can look just as
Wh t �
cross, as she does if I try hard
' enough l"
Just to Encourage Him.
A man on a walking tour in Ireland
on a hot summer day accosted two
laborers working in the woad with,
"How far is it to Ballyslithereen?"
"Sure it's just a mile and a half, your
honor," said one of the men. The
pedestrian passed on, and the man
who had not, spoken said to his com-
panion, "Sure, Pat, how could you
tell him it's only a mile wind a half
when you know its' six miles?" "Oeh,
well," replied Pat, "the poor gossoon
looked so tired that I told him it was
a mile and a half just to encourage
him,'
HONESTLY BELIEVE.
HE WAS 4GOING INTO
CONSUMPTION.
DR., WOOD'S
Norway Pine Syrup
CURED HIM.
Mr. I+rauk I:. Anthoni, 69 Ellen
Street, Winnipeg, Matt., writes: "having
taken several bottles of Dr. Wood's
Norway Pine Syrup, during the past few
weeks, to relieve a chronic cough and
general throat trouble, allow me to ex-
press my unbounded satisfaction and
thanks as to its sterling qualities. A
short time ago I became :suddenly subject
to violent coughing fits at night, and
directly after rising in the morning, for
about an hour, and found I was gradually
losing weight. All my friends cheerfully
informed me that I looked as though
I were going in consumption, and I
honestly believed such was the case.
However, after having taken several
bottles of 'Dr. Wood's' I am pleased 'to
relate that the cough has entirely dis-
appeared, along with all the nasty
symptoms, and I have since regained the
lost weight. I have no hesitation in
recommending Dr. Wood's Norway Pine
Syrup as a sure cure for ail those troubled
is a like manner."
When you ask for "Dr. \rood's" see
that you get what you ask for. It is
put up in a yellow wrapper; three pine e
trees the trade mark; the price, 25c and
5Oc.
Manufactured only by The T. Milburn
Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
FINED FOR MISSING WORK.
Munition Workmen Must Pay Dam-
ages to Employers.
That certain Sheffield (England)
munition' workmen have not realized,
their line of duty in these times, was
evidenced at the, Sheffield City Police
Court, when ,Mr. W. B. Esam and Mr.
W. R. Carter had to deal with many
serious cases of alleged slacking on
the part of employes of Sheffield
firms, now engaged on work for the
fleet and the army.
B: Burdekin, solicitor for one of
the companies, stated that in three
months 370 men lost 15,000 hours.
Allegations of periodical drinking
bouts were not infrequent, while it
was proved that the men were often
wont to take time off as they pleased_ ,
Dr. Hadfield (Doctor of Metal-
lurgy)' gave evidence in support of
his firm's cases, and appealed to the
bench to deal strictly with the delin-
quents.
Horace W. Walker was summoned
for 27 4s. damages for neglect of
work on eight days. The bench
awarded daunages amounting to 25 7s.
6d. Mr. Burdekin stated that the
damages were not the point in the
summonses. The money went into
the firm's war funds.
Charles Smith was summoned for
losing 1.04ta hours, and the company.
asked for 98 4s. damages. Mr. Burde-
kin stated that the defendant had
periodical bouts of drinking. De-
fendant said' he had been suffering
from gout. The bench awarded 25
and costs. William Hem -y Wake was
summoned for £4 9s. damages for 81
lost hours, and was ordered to pay
22 2s, and costs. T. Townton, a
blacksmith's striker, for neglecting
his work through drink, for eight
days, was ordered to pay the 91 with
costs, 7s. Gd. John H. Howson and J.
Green were each fined 21 for losing a
day's work. George Neill was order-
ed to pay 25 damages. Charles Cha-
ple was ordered to pay 24 damages
for aime lost. Samuel Coidwell, a
moulder, was ordered to pay £3 and
costs for losing time, and Robert Jen-
nings was ordered to pay 95 and costs.
. Walking Sticks for Wounded.
Over 21,000 walking sticks are be-
ing made for the wounded weekly in
the Surrey village of Chiddingfold,
England, Eighty persons are em-
ployed on the work. The sticks are
mostly of bent chestnut wood.
1 London is seven hundred and forty-
six piles from Berlin by mail route.
His Faces Covered
MTh Pimples.
Purples are not a serious trouble, but
they are very unsightly.
Pimples are caused wholly by bad
blood, and t get rid of them it is neves
sary to purify the blood of all its im-
purities.
Burdock Blood Bitters has made many
remarkable cures; the pimples have alt
disappeared, and a bright, clean, com-
plexion left behind.
1'!,', Lennox D. Cooke, Indian `Path,
N:S„ writes: "I am writing you a few
lines to tell an what. Burdock Blood
Slitters -has done for roe. Last winter my
face was covered with pimples.' I tried
different kinds of medicine, and all
seemed to . fail. I 'was one day to a
friend's house, and there they advised rue
toese B.B.13., so I purchased two bottle,,
and before I had uteri taken I found I
was getting better: I got two more,
and when they were. finished .1 was
completely cared. I find it is a great
blood purifier, and I recotnntencl it to
Burdock Blood Bitters .has been cm the
andis
past forty years,
t rket for the�i
< t a t
n an r :d byThe T. Milbtuii
altar niacin e only
Co., Limited, Toronto, Out.