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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1915-12-30, Page 117 - Could Hardly Breathe. BRONCHITIS Was The Cause; The Cure Was DR WOOD'S Norway Pine Syrup. Mrs; Garnet Bums North Augusta, Ont„ ;writes. ,"1' caught a dreadful cold, going totown, and about a week after I became all clioked up, and could hardly breathe, and could scarcely sleep at plight for coughing. I went to the • doctor, and he told me that I was getting bronchitis. My husband went to the druggists, and asked then if they had a cough medicine of any kind that they could recommend. The druggist brought. out a bottle of Dr, Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, I started using it, and it com- pletely cured me of my cold. I cannot tell you host* thankful I was to get rid of. that awful nasty cold, I shall always keep a bottle of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup on hand, and I shall only be too. glad to recommend it to all others." Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is a remedy that has been on the market for the past twenty -Ave years, and we can %;•:ommend it, without a doubt, as being die best cure for coughs and colds that you can possibly procure, ',)`here ate a lot of imitations on the market, so when you go to your druggist. AtxY dealer see Vint you get"Dr. Wood's, par puu--, ^'is• a�ylow wrapper, three pine trees the trade meek; the price, 25c and 50c. The genuine is manufactured by The T. Milburn Co.; Limited, Toronto, Ont: Recipes for Simple Dishes. I and of vanilla, and a quarter tea-. Baled Finnan Iladdie.a--Wash had-, spoon of salt, 'Put the baking ow theput flesh side down in dripping der dederand the salt (or use cream tartar an cover with cold water and let ' instead of baking powder) into the t �d b 1 f n e for° ten =min -1 flour, and sift it seven tirees. If you use cream of: tatter, a last sifting. Sift tike sugar `( times. Beat the whites of the eggs to a very stiff froth, and add the sugar gradu- '9°xlE STORY OF BARBED WIRE, anention of a Bey Named Latta, Aged Tan Years. Barbed wire, says the Manchester Guardian, the oxigixa of which Sir lan. Hamilton • eeently attributed with unhistorical picturesqueness to the devil,' was actually the invention of an ingenious lad named Latta. Fifty-four years `ago, the boy, then aired ten years, saw on a farm at some die - twice from his home in New York State a novel kind of fence, with .a boarding atthe top and another at the base, two strands of thin wire rt cad it yore ie b t een s gin on ac c o is g I h t1 0 his asking the reason for that peculiar arrangcaneaat, x ho was told that it .permitted thefree passage of the wind and prevented snowdrifts in wintertime, . On the boy's sugga,tion, his father - adopted that sort of fencing on his. own farm. Then a neighbor allowed his hogs to roam on the highway, and they found Mr, Latta's pasturage et - tractive. The thought then occurred to young Latta that small barbs in- t serted. in the wire strands at distances of six inches might discourage them. The hogs did not mind the scratches much, but the owner of them object- ed and kept them at home, The first patenttakenout for barb- ed • wire was registered in the harm- less naive of Smith in 1867. utes. Drain and rinse with cold wa- ter. Place on ',flatter, cover with mills and bake twenty minutes, Cream, Raisin Pie, -Make custard of -half cu su- gar one level tablespoon flour, lump N +,RVES FROM NEWS Everyone Should Keep - as. Normal as y Possible. are man folks, especially Thele y women, who allow themselves to lapse into a state of nervous depression owing to the tumultuous times through which we are passing. None would seek to under -estimate the seriousness of the great issues that are being decided, but everyone owes it to the community to keep as normal as possible. On the face of it, it appears cal- lous, but. if we go about our work and our play in the ordinary'way each will be doing his or. her little bit towards keeping the I,; ` .mness• And normality so desiralire, - Above all, \ rk. Although not al- ways appreciat. ;d, work is tlxe ggreat givenmankind", especially o mai�tl,. est boon n , in a period oft type €hrough which, we are p Every woman can T t. _. heroust and _ s c n ,.y, --_ .,,,: �.�• nix) yolks of two eggs, one p r um of butter and one large cup - sweet milk, Mix in order given and cook in dpuble boiler. When done add one cropraisins, Fill baked, crust and coer with beaten whites of eggs. Re- turn to oven to brown: Porcupine Apples (Baked).—Pare and core without breaking six large apples. Cook in sweet syrup, boll down syrup and roll apples in it. Place apples on oblong dish. i'i1l middle of every apple with finely chop- ped nuts and on top of each place tea- spoon of red -jelly, Into apples stick blanched almonds or pine nuts. Make and place on ice the morning or the Foamy Sauce For Plain Pudding.— Beat one -tablespoonful of butter with one cupful of powdered sugar. Add two beaten yolks and little by little a small- amount of light wine or vanilla. and if you" use the vanilla flavor sea- son with a small amount of grated nutmeg. Set the bowl' into the top of the teakettle of boiling water and heat for a minute or two. Serve at once. Vegetable Dressing.—Six large car- rots, three onions, one egg, five crack- ers, one-fourth cup butter or drip- pings, one teaspoon salt, one-half tea- spoon poultry seasoning. Chop car - rats and onions very fine. Break crackers in mixing bowl and add as • ally, Mixing very carefully,:, Then add the flour gradually, beating all the while. Lastly add the .flavoring ex. -1 tract, Pour the mixture into ;an an- gel cake pan and bake for 45 min- utes in a moderate oven. Test with a broom wisp, and handle as above. Hints for the Home' Put fruit jars away a. A. clheater mcleeansn aand warn)dry house One waeany to save work is to keep things in order as you go. Sponges are great germ collectors and should be scalded frequently. Begin at the root of an onion, peel- ing it upward. The juice will not fly in your eyes. Always heat the butter and milk for the mashed potatoes. They will ibe much lighter, The filling in roast fowl will be bet- ter and richer if you moisten it with a little white stock, • Never hang a silk; garment out to dry. ' Roll it up' in a clean white cloth, for about an hour, and iron whilst damp. When makingplain raisin pudding use a grated carrot instead of an egg. It is just as good, and effects a con- siderable economy. To find the right side of huckaback towelling, .feel it with finger and thumb and the rougher side will proove to be the right The only way to insure -a return of the small person's handkerchiefs when he scatters them over schoolrooms, friends' houses, streets, stores, etc., is to write out his whole name plainly. Sometimes the writing looks blurry and blotted. Try this:. "First make your letters with an, ordinary lead 1, and then trace with ' ink over. the pencil marks.. The pencil will much boiling water as they will ab- sorb. Add remaining ingredients, mix thoroughly and pack around meat roast. Dressing should cook at least one and one-half hours and may be. added either before or after meat has browned. Mock Oyster Soup.—One Spanish onion, one cup diced celery, two cups diced potatoes, one tablespoon butter, salt' and pepper to taste and milk as needed. Use outer stalks of celery, re- serving hearts for table use. Skin and. slice onion, then place three first in- _gredieats in saucepan and cover well with itatefie, Cook until very tender sieve or fruit press. �lz nd 1 -'ty: I a ue s k 'mis as much milk•as will p reamy. consistency. ri17. bringt o bo c then Ts ABO BR AI 9F A PROMINENT GERMAN'S CAN'-' I)ID CONFI1SSION., Says His Country Bras Ilaa,dly Inflicted a .Scratch aan Britain, • _ rami xont pan -Ger- manic active and pro x 1 manic polit clan, y li Flamm,who is also recognized as an authority oa naval matters, being among other things Professor of Mar- ine Architecture at the Charlottes burg Technical College, has published a grave warning to his fellow -country- men in Germany not to underrate Bri- tain's efforts in this war nor the mag- nitude of the task of breaking the British Empire's power, says the Lon- don 'Standard's Switzerland corres- pondent. After pointing ,out how small the British losses have been in proportion to the population of Great Britain, Councillor Flamm continues; LQRU AL' T;RSTO•,"n e termer Chief quselee of England WAR'S FAIRY GODMOTHERS. price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Now Numbers in England Nearly 'Toronto, Ont. Fifty Thousand. The League of Fairy Godmothers Wean Would Beat 1ioIent Nerves Seemed to Bo Out of rder� The heart always works in sympathy with the nerves, and viness tine heart is working properly the whole nerve systeirk is listbie to become nw,strung, and the la. -,!art itself become elected. 1vlilburu's He u -t and Terve fills will build up' the unstrungxiervous f,yyterct.•. and strcxigtheu the weak heart, ;;o that the sufferer will enjoy the very best of health for years to come: Mrs. Joann N. Dicke, Iiuntsville, Ont.. writes: "Iam sending you my testimony for the benefit I bave received from using Milburn's Heart and Nerve kis, As a nerve and heart builder they have done wqqeders` for me. At times say licart would beat violently, and my nerves seemed to be all out of order, but after using a few boxes of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills I feel like recommending thein to others that they might receive benefit as I did." Milburn's eeleart and Neave Pi',is'3rfvo`-' ` been on theenexlset for the past twenty- , five years; and are universally considered to be unrivalled as a medicine for all disorc:ers of the heart or nerves. Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are 50c per box, 3 boxes for $1.25, at all dealers' or mailed direct on receipt of BtztF� ySUNDAY SPFOOL in is the only country whwhich ich ,.started in England soon niE great increase of territory. Since the wife of Gen. R. F. Johnson now num- - _-- was has so far achieved through this war a after lane beginning of the war bth y e to 1 outbreak of hostilities last year Bri- hers nearly 50,000, The object of the _se_ - " tain has won territories in German organization is to establish a link be - SEA. MIMES. South -West Africa, Caxneroons, Togo - tween those at home and the gunners , th Sea Islands, Egypt, at the front. INTERNATIONAL LESSON. JANUARY 9. land the Sou and so forth, covering an area of Because the heavy siege and moue Toronto Wessels Seized Become the Property square kilo- i b leerier are recruited from the London something like 2,000,000 q tan aLesson II The coming c_. of the • prevent the ink from spreading and giving the ` linen 'a :,b'iotted appear- ance." ' TO WELCOM AN ALLY. How English Cav �e leased tc •ksieinla Crown. metres or more than 'five thnes the whole kingdom the gunners have no ' What becomes o f vessels which are size of the German Empire. Britain local societies to look after their in- Spirit, Acts 2. 1.13. Got:.t'- seized during war time. Theoretical- has gained all this without being sex- terest at home. During the first th soldiers Text: 1 Cor. 3-16. the nation captux- iously injured erre a moat , over her land in other departments were receiving Verse either retained alien armies sweeping Ty, they belong to herself. Shehas no the of the war when e ing .them, and they by that nation or sold, and the profits as' we Germans had the Russians over- little tit -bits through the various so - derived. among the Impaling our provinces of East Prue- cieties at home, the gunners felt very derived therefrom n rynen Were Re - Franca. of the war, when o first landing iii n gr eted by -bion— An '-a- officers and crews: of the ships respon sia, or as the Austrians suffered the devas bombs and shells *dropped en-l3ra- tain by isolated warships and air cruisers have been as nothing cone - pared with the sufferings of all the her belligerents, No, we have hard- ly g ly inflicted a scratch on Britain. British Naval Supremacy. There is very little increase in the cost of living in Britain, and so far as the working classes are concerned any rise in the price of food has been $2;000,000, and the other $1,500,00 d more than counterbalanced by higher The whole of the.money was divide wages and liberal war allowances. among Anson's crew. The working classes of Britain are It is "interesting to know'that the actually more prosperous: now than }s a a 1 object of attack at sea if that individual is sibie for their seizure. In Great Britain, vessels that are seized become the property of the Crown, and it is the custom for the men on board the ironclads that cap- ture them to be given a sum equal to $25 for each person on.board the "prisoners:" A good many years ago, however, British sailors fared better when ships were captured. Between the years 1740-7 Admiral Anson seized two vessels,one having on board station of Galicia,, The handful private -individual 1 wftt helping, in some_way or other, the nations that are at war. The Great Powees have acknowledged that any trading ship smuggling coal, or ra- war.It is absolutely gncorrect to tions or amznttnition can be seized, pretend, as ninny blind and foolish before the war. The moneyed classes of Britain may feel the pinch of high- er taxes, but the general commercial prosperity of Britain seems likely to be augmented by the results of the or ender. or sunk if she refuses to s Ina neutral country's water private T have • already demonstrated in an - ships eneroot ee.' ;interfered with, but • s Angiophobes axe doing, that Bittern naval supremacy has been destroyed. on the high seas, off the coasts, and other publication that : - ritish in the harbors- of the enemy, they can be seized. EVER VICTORIOUS GENERALS, ars Who Have Ne- gate ve much out in the cold, so much so that they become known as the "Homeless Hectors:'« �...w-- ,,,.._V. tieing a fairy godmother to one of the Homeless Hectors is not very tax- ing. All that,is required is the send- ing each week a copy of some weekly paper or magazine- and at stated in- tervals a small parcel containing a shirt, a colored pocket handkerchief, tobacco and a pipe, or some such use- ful article, which will' give the gun- ner the feeling that he has ;some one at home who thinks of him as art in- dividual, Fleet is stronger to -day than before. the war. British naval supremacy is so overwhelming that it has reached the superlative degree. British mari- time superiority cannot become great- er than it is at the present moment. It is only dangerous and mischievous when. Germans have a false impres- sion of these matters. It is afar bet - r` 'olicy to see things as they are. •t,l be more perilous to mato Britain's NAVAL TRADITION. 1. Pentecost—The "fiftieth" day after Passover, in Lev. 23. 15ff ordained to be a thanksgiving for har- vest, Was being fulfilled (margin)- the Jam t•sea, to.,.1adza.•,- fiat 'thomentous first day of the - week, which began at Sunset on Saturday, was now about half way through. Izt one place -Possibly in the "upper room°'; probably in the temple, as has been plausibly argued. 2. House—This was a recognized name for the temple, and there was no other place large enough to hold such a crowd as we hear of ''shortly, - 3. Tongues parting asunder, or margin, distributing themselves. Com pare Paul's rather similar phrase in Cor. 12. 11. The symbolism comes from a thunderstorm accompanied by a hurricane --one blinding lightning" -- flash, then a curling tongue Mementoes of Some of Britains flames isand seen for a moment on ft Proudest Deeds- head, It is the grandest of 01 Tc At Canedon a few. miles, from ment visions repeated with g Southend, . England, there stands a ence: "after the wind' :.. a. church dedicated to St. Nicholas, the Jehovah was in both, patron saint off, sailormen, It has closer connection `n -Elijah,wl seen the Brit'sh Navy doing its work meat on manyocca ions and even.to-day it greater Stine -les ea ,rltln�' i not entirely separated from war- with Hol .fer--a‘yamalitary officers have 4. recently climbed its square tower in tomes—a_. order to see bc" t'h'ings "were_going on astatic state p from the subs tional in its ' sp fulfilling according at the mouth of the Thames. It Meads' on the spot where Canute camped be- fore the Battle of Ashington. Just now when British sailors are pose of arresting' maintaining their fine reputation so found the Corinthian: splendidly, it is well to remember the great memories which lie behind them. They carry with them always certain wholly subordinate "e., the greater and more ch gifts of the Divine Spirit, an mementoes :of some of Britain's it back into the place it occupe proudest deeds. it is, as it were, the church b The three rows of white tae round gathers the congregation • x edee of the bluejacket',• collar nares them for higher thinge