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Exeter Times, 1916-3-30, Page 3
Wa 'Could iiiartilly Breathe. BRONCHITIS Was The Cause; ; The Cure Was DRi'`*D9 Norway one S Pr 4 Mrs. Garnet Burns, North Augusta, Ont., writes: "I caught a dreadful cold, going to town, and about a week after Jr I became all chokedup, and could hardly breathe, and could scarcely sleep at night for coughing. I went to the doctor, and he told me that I was getting bronchitis, My husband went' to the druggists, and asked them if they had a trough 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 clued nie of my cold. T cannot tell you stow 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-five years, and we can recommend it, without a doubt, as being the best cure for coughs and colds that you can possibly. procure. There are a lot of imitations on the market, so when you go to your druggist or dealer see that you get "Dr. Wood's;" put up in. a yellow wrapper; three pine trees the trade mark; the price, 25e. and 50c. The genuine is manufactured by The T. Milburn Co.. Limited, Toronto, Out, URGES U. S. TO ENTER THE WAR. Sympathies of Republic Should 13e On Side of Freedom. Dr. Charles W. Eliot, president emeritus of Harvard University, in i an article in the New York Times, says: The American people -of all the various stocks, English, Scotch, Irish, German, Austro-Hungarian, Polish, Slavic, Swiss, French, Dutch, Flem- ish, Scandinavian, Finnish, Russian, Italian, Greek and Syrian -have now had ample opportunity to make up their minds, if they have given atten- tion to the subject, what the gigan- tic war is about,, in what spirit or temper it is conducted on each of the two sides, and what the desires or hopes of the several belligerent na- tions are concerning the settlement when peace comes. `c Relying on accomplished facbs and revealed tendencies, thinking Ameri- carry have concluded that the great combat is between autocratic gov- ernment and constitutional govern- ment, bebween rule by persons and classes commissioned by God or some Church, and rule by persons elected by the people to be governed between political systems which exercise a strong centralized authority over the individual as free as possible. In such a combat the sympathies and interests of all America, North Central and South, are necessarily on the side of freedom. If these are the opinions and judg- ments of the great majority of the American_people on the conduct of the war and its rightful results, have the people any corresponding inter- ests to maintain or duties to perform? In view of the unprecedented horrors and destructions of the present war it is undoubtedly the interest of the Americans to protect themselves at all costs from invasion by Germany, sup- ported by any possible allies, even t if the risk be very small and the price of insurance high. The prompt- est, surest and most advantageous s method of accomplishing that result is entrance by the United States into a permanent offensive and de- fensive alliance with Great Britain and France to maintain the freedom of the seas for these allies under all circumstances, and bo oppose attack 0 by sea on any one of them. It is time for the deepest rooted and strongest of republics to bring direct help to harassed and bleeding France and Great Britain. But an heiress never has cause to doubt her husband's love for her money. Dainty 1)islusse Emmy Sauce'. -:-.Crean one-ltal cup butter with 'one cup powders sugar, add one teaspoon vanilla an one-fourth teaspoon lemon extrac and just before serving add thre !fourths cup of boiling water and sti fly beaten white of one egg.. Cocoa Cottage Pudding..--Crea one-fourth cup butter and one cup s gar, ad beaten yolks of two eggs an eat until very lig'ht.. Add thee fourths cup milk alternately with o and. three-fourths cups sifted flow mixed and sifted again with two .te spoons baking powder. Stir in 'third cup cocoa, beat well, flavor wit two teaspoons vanilla, fold in stiff beaten whites of eggs and bake in bu tered small parts. Potato Au Gratin. -peel and sli raw white potatoes very thin. P in layers in buttered pudding dish an sprinkle each layer with salt, pepp and bits of butter., When all the o tatoes have ben used cover with c of hot water or milk and sprink top layer of potatoes with eraok crumbs mixed with salt and bits o butter. Bake, covered, for one -ha hour, then uncover and brown. Rock Cookies. -Cream one cup bu ter, one and one-half cups white su gar and one-half cup brown suga Add three eggs, well beaten; on quarter cup water with one teaspoo soda dissolved in it, three -quarte pound of chopped and seeded raisin one pound of chopped walnuts, one half teaspoon nutmeg, one teaspoo cinnamon, one-quarter teaspoon o salt and three and one-half cups flow Dough must be quite stiff. pip wit spoon on tins quite far apart. Cream Tea Biscuit. -One cup thick sweet cream, two teaspoons cream o ! An olcl piano »tt'ol is very good fits f a sewing machine Beat, because it a can be raised ..uid lowered at will. d hard boiled eggs should be cooked t ! 20 minutes to be easily digested e- Less coolant makes them tough. f-: Irl mixing fruit or nuts into a cake !they should be aded before the floor. m They will then be evenly distributed. A square of wire netting, hound dand mounted op four little feet, is a le !goad thing .for the cooling of cakes, ire ! etc. r l To insure smooth cornstarch Mud - at f ding` you must stir the cornstarch and !milk constantly while they are cook- !mg' ook- img. iy i No baked potato will be light and t_ fluffy if it has to wait to be eaten, It should go straight from the oven ee to the table. Do not allow the top of the range Pt to become red hot. It will cause it to er warp, and a red-hot stove always p- means a cool oven, To remove dust from steel, cover lc it with sweet oil and let it: remain covered for a day. Ther. rub it with e a lump of :fresh lime. if All small pieces of laundry soap can be put into the boiler in which the clothes are boiled. In this way t- they are not wasted. Boiled or roasted meat that ;s to 1. be cut cold should be wrapped in a e- clean moist cloth. It will then slice n thin without breaking. rs A photographer's paste can he made s' of ordinary starch not cooked so much as for stiffening. If you need a paste in a hurry, it le a good thing to re- f member. Fertilizing Roses: Save your coffee grounds, dry them out and put around your roses with equal parts of • soot. It is a good fertilizer and insecticide. tartar, three-fourths teaspoon soda one-half teaspoon salt, one and one half cups bread flour. Sift soda cream of tartar and salt with one cu flour. Beat into cream enough ad ditional flour so that dough can b handled easily. Roll to one-half inch thickness cut with small round cut ter, and bake about twelve minute in hot oven. This makes two doze small biscuits. Spanish Rice. --Wash one cup ric thoroughly and cook ill plenty of boil ing water. Drain in colander; pu Cut your lard into small pieces and ' run through the meat chopper before rendering, and you will have almost all lard and very few cracklings when P through cooking. - Apple pie made with a layer of e finely shaped cheese over the season- ,' apple, and baked in the usual way is liked by many who are fond of s cheese served with apple pie. n Cooking utensils should never be allowed to dry before they are wash - e ed. After drying they are twice as - hard -to clean, and the chances are t then will not be thoroughly cleaned three or four slices of bacon throw food chopper, then lay in frying pa and fry until light brown. Also pu through chopper one' good-sized onion two cloves, garlic and one larg green pepper, after removing seed and white fiber. Add onion, one c stewed tomato, garlic and pepper t bacon and cook thoroughly, seasonin with salt, pepper and one-half tea spoon chill powder. When sauce i done, add rice and one-third cup grat ed cheese; cook until blended and serve. Potato Loaf. -Cold potatoes;.. one onion; parsley and thyme; salt an pepper; a little butter or dripping Mash the potatoes, boil the onion for 15 minutes and chop very finely. Chop the parsley and thyme to a dust, melt the butter and mix all together. Add the seasoning. Heap on a greased tin in the shape of an oval 'mound, brush over with beaten egg and bake until quite hot and well browned on the onside. Slip carefully onto a clean hot dish and serve. This mix- ure may be made into small individ- ual mounds or little rissoles, which are very good and look well when erved round a meat dish. Orange Bread. -Delicious recipe for fancy bread is the .following: Dis- solve one-fourth yeast cake, broke in- to pieces, in one-fourth cup of luke- warm water, and add one egg well beaten, one tablespoon melted lardee ne tablespoon salt, two tablespoons ug^r, grated rind two oranges and three-fourths cup orange juice. Beat horoughly, using egg -beater. Add flour to make of right consistency to move, amount required being about three cups, and beat until smooth. Turn on slightly floured board and knead until elastic. Covuv and let throng A new way to cook cabbage. Cook n some new cabbage delicately by keeps ing it under boiling water for 40 , minutes only; cut it up, season well. e Cover with crumbs and butter and. s bake brown. cu When cooking cauliflower always o place the vegetable in the pan with g the flower downwards and pass a - meat skewer through each side. In s theis way it can be lifted out when - cooked without becoming broken. To remove water stains from varn- ished furniture, pour olive oil into a dish and scrape a little white wax c1 into it; this mixture should be heated until the wax melts, then rubbed sparingly on the stains. Finally, rub the surface with a soft linen rag until it is restored to brilliancy. Use RIELBURETS LAX -Li itER PiLLS Fi A SLUGGIISH LIVER. • When the liver becomes sluggish it is an indication that the bowels are not working properly, and if they do not trove regularly many complications are liable to set in, Constipation, sick headache, bilious headache, jaundice, heartburn, water brash, catarrh of the stomach, ete., all come from a disordered liver. Milbura's Laxa-Liver Pills stimulate the sluggish liver, clean the coated tongue, sweeten the obnoxious breath, cleats away all waste and poisonous matter from the System, and prevent as well as cure all complaints arising from a liver which has become inactive. Mrs, John V. Tarlton, Dirriant. Ont.. writes: "I take great pleasure in writing you concerning the great value I have received by using your Milburn's taxa Liver Pills for a sluggish liver. When my liver got bad, ); would have severe head- aches, but after using a couple of vials, I alp not bothered with them any more." Milburft's 'taxa -Liver Pills are 25c. a vial, 5 vials for $1.00, Itt all dealers, Or mailed direct oft receipt of price by 't'!:t' T. ivtilhuru Co., I,itmiitecd, Toronto, (1 rise over -night. In the morning shape, put into slightly buttered pans, cover let rise once more and hake in hot oven. Best eaten fresh. Fine sand- wich bread for afternoon teas.. Household Hints. All fruit jars, that have been used l'c 'ehbur{' he sterilized before they are used again. Food cooked its; vessels. that are not thoroughly washed cannot have a good flavor. Housewives should regard nuts, raisins and dates as foods rather than luxuries. As soon as the spring opens give the pet rosebushes all the soapsuds you can come by. An iron stand which can be fasten- ed to the ironing board is a great help on ironing day. Never' turn out a boiled pudding the minute it is done. It is very apt to break if this is done. Boiled rice covered with grated cheese and baked brown in the oven makes a good luncheon dish. 'Vegetable soaps depend largely for their nourishing qualities on the milk t cream that is in them. Sift a little flour into the fat he- re frying mash; it will prevent the t from sputtering and frying. 0 fo fa Garden on a Table. One does not usually think of rooms in a fiat in connection with any form of gardening, says the London Chron- icle. All the more remarkable, then, is the list of vegetables which a friend of the writer grew last season on a table in front of a window. The list included French beans, lettuce, rad- ishes, and even carrots and onions. All these plants were grown in pots, but abundant crops of mustard and cress were produced on pieces of damp flannel stretched across the sides of a box. In addition, regular supplies of watercress were obtained in the following manner: A penny bunch of the salad was bought, and the bits of the plant inserted in pots were then placed in bowls of water, and kept there. Quite soon the watercress started to grow, and the tender shoots were picked off as re- quired. -.. p,,,wn Act N'�, 1THE SUNDAY SCHOOL INTERN 1`lft)N,1 t LESSON, 3ON, APRIL 2. k'vo'ul ('�tlai'tt'r: Letson 1.-••-t.'oni'et•uioP'.i cf 5'+•airl- et 9. 1-31. (Golden ['cacti'' c 1 Tim. 1: 15. Verse 1. Threuteniug, by which he ,c.. , .fret^c' to melte them blaspheme„ (A.cts 211. 11); slaughter, when he • failed, as thin irnper'feet tense in that p tse ige sugl e.,t:> he generally did. The high p, feet _-Caia hats whoa , adroit subservience toth , n s the Romans kept him in office till A.D. 3.7; he was the Jewish "'Viten. of Bray." °2. By imperial decree, the high priest and !Sanhedrin heel iui:acl.ir:tion over Jews yin foreign cities to the same extent as they had in Jerusalerie T11 Way ---Marcfully tithe 1i�ay of the Lurd," " " I‘ or of ; t;cd , t �t salvation," Often in Acts, as here, it has become a tech- ! nical terns standing alone, appropri- ate to a religion which consisted in 1a pilgrim's progress to God along "a true and living way" (eompave John 114. 6). ! 3. Paul's mut story mutt be care- fully compared, in Acts 22. 6-1'2 and t26., 12-19. The surface differences are I absurdly easy to h:„ n l i ' '. if Luke i had been writing fiction, he would have had the eense to be obviously consistent. The repetition is due to the special purposes with which the story is told. Shone -The verb means !literally lightened. That the other !men knew of nothing but a 1jjphtning flash and peal of thunder is likely enough: it was only in Saul's case that they shaped themselves into a i vision and a voice. A light --"Above the brightness of the sun" (Acts 20. 13) at noon (also Acts 22. 0). 1 I4, He fell„ with the others (Acts 20. 14), who, howe.ar, quickly recover- ! ed (verse 7). Saul ---The Turin of the !name is not Gia:eized at all, Sc in Acts 26. 14 the voice is "in the He- brew (that i;, Araiaaic j la n uage." The doubling of the name is quite !characteristic of Jesus. Compare his I"Martha, Martha," wievusalem, Je- rusalem," and ratlike e milarly "Ver- ily, verily," "yea, yea." Me -Compare I Luke 10. 16; glee John 15. 20. ! 5. Who art th',n?---This is con- ! ,sistent with the probable fact that !Saul hacl seen Jesus on earth, and joined in the "pee ss cation" which had its climax on Calvary. He might !well fail at first to see that the glor- ious Face was really the same as that one "marred beyond any man's" on which he had looked "with what bitter triumph" so lately. 6. It Acts 20. 10-18 the Lord's words are expanded by incorporating his own commentary i eeire+l by Paul in his own within the days of darkness and heart-searching. Must -It is deeply significant that this great little word begins Paul's new life. Even as persecutor he had followed what he thought to be duty (Acts 26.9). for him truly the "stern daugh- ter of the voice of God." The (Greek) concordance will strikingly show how the human life of Jesus was ruled from first (Luke 2. 49) to last (Luke 17. 25, etc.) by the must. 7. Hearing the sound (margin)- The noun is the same as voice in verse 4, but in n different case ( which in I this context is significant. They i thought it had thundered, like the meltitude in John 12. 29. 9. Three days -Till the appointed, time for a resurrection. 10. Behold, 1 • l literal rendering of the Hebrew idiom, used by Luke from! his fondness for Old Testament' phrase. 11. Straight -There is still a street in this ancient city which goes straight: through from the eastern gate. f 17. Laying -A favorite Jewish symbolic action, adopted early „in Chritianity. It suggested to the mind -as it does among all sorts of people rn all times -the passage of a quality p f or gift from one man to another'.! 1 Thus it could signify the transference l a of sin to a victim, as in the ritual of; the Scapegoat. In this case it Bug -.r GA13RIELE D'A.NNUNZIO, Italian poet, injured in at. aeroplane accident, people who were specially susceptibl to such appeals of the external. Eve among Western people they bay great effectiveness, and the cnntir wed use of them .justifies itself by thi fact. There are those to whom the do not appeal and this purely prat tical reason for using symbols doe not make them essential 'to salvatio AIR REPRISALS. Prof. J. II. Morgan Says Britai Should Retaliate in Kind. Professor J. H. Morgan expresse the view that a concerted raid by th airmen of the Allies on undefende � , ^ U S ARE , OT WANT` I BRITAIN ALTHOUGH THE ('•(4IINTR' D4 PROSPEROUS. Sliorfa :e of Ships Will Require 1 hibitien of the Irtpc:'f o!' Many '1'Itin ,;. reg-. A far-reaching Order -in -Council; wili�•h will totally prohibit impor•ta- tion into the United ling;loft oi' a large miming of at eicle'e which come under the, general hoarlieg of luxuries, will be issued by the British Govern- ment et an early date. Among the things which will be r'!need under the ban will be auto- mobiles for private use, mueical in- struments, cutlery of all kinds, hard- ware, yarns, chinaware, fancy goods - and soaps. The order will apply equally to all countries, including the British dominions and colonies. e! n j Vi misers Well Off. e Walter Runciin.an, President of the r- Board of Trade, in outlining the above, s said there had never been greater an- y; ivity in the larger industries, that -1 wages were higher than ever before, s iand that the percentage of unemploy- ment had never been so small in the 1 history of the country. The only i trades relatively quiet are the build- : INTERESTING INCIDENT OF THre $ 'art Would re. Uye Nerves Seemed toBe Out o Order. 'T'llc! heart !always works in sympathy with the nerves, and unless the heart is.. working properly the whole nerve system r liable to bi.:tevrmi. unstrung, and lite boort itself become affected. Milbttrn's Heart auii Nerve Pills will build up the unstrung nervous system, WO strengthen the weak heart, so that the sufferer will. enjoy the very best of health for years to come. Airs. John N. Hicks, Huntsville, Out, writes: "I am sending you tuy testimony for the benefit I have received from using Milburrt's Heart and Nerve Pills. Aa a nerve and heart builder they have done wonders for me. At times nmy heart 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 - them to others that ;ley might receive benefit as I did." Alilbut-u's heart and Nerve Pills have steep on the market for the past twenty five year,, and are universally considered to be unrivalled as n medicine for all diem .et•+ of the heart .or nerves,. Mtlbam's heart end Nerve Pills are lido per box; 3. boxes for $1.25, at all dealer; or mailed direct on receipt t lake by `the' T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. LITTLE 14 S �� �� 'was ��,'��'..5 REGIMENT'S S DAM N ling, linen, and some of the luxury - GREAT WAR. n !producing trades, but even in these the workers have found employment !elsewhere; or enlisted. Longer hours se are being worked in nearly all the e trades, and it is estimated that this overtime represents an increase of places in Germany is legitimate. Sue raids are justified and salutary, be cause they would hit the civil popula tion of Germany hard, and becaus Zeppelin raids are largely, if n principally,. designed to gratify th civil population of Germany with sen sations not only of military prowess but of sanguinary dehgltt. Inspitec articles in German newspapers be tray a ghoulish satisfaction in th feeling that the war is being carried into every village and every home The only way to deal with this is t convince the civil population of Ger many that their lust for slaughte will recoil on their own infatuated heads. The article continues: -Far be • from me bo advocate that we, or ou Allies, should we get the chance, prac tise the same barbarities an the en emy as they have practised upon us Gocl forbid! But I do say that th consideration of a military operation designed not to avenge the Zeppelin raids, but to put an end to them, should not be obscured or deprecated by a misplaced tenderness for people who have shown anything but tender ness themselves. Until we realize what the French have realized long ago, that the German people are bes- tial people, whose only conception of international law is "heads I win, tails you lose," we shall be fighting with our hands tied behind our backs. I confess that Canon Sanday's solici- tude for "the whole world which is looking on" leaves me very cold. The greater part of the civilized world is already fighbing on our side. Evidence has come into my hands h 41,�a per cent. in bhe number of persons employed. A few firms have had to - shut down, but among the active firms e only seven per cent. of their machin- ery was idle during December. This is a better record than for peace times. ,I Wages Increased. About 5,500,000 people have reeeiv- • ed raises, and the increase in wages e has been roughly a million pounds a week. An example of the rise in • ' wages may be seen in the case of the 0 . seamen. Before the war they got about four pounds ten shillings a ✓ month and their keep. Now they re- ceive between eight and eight pounds !ten shillings per month. Exceptional mt men in the engineering brades, work - ✓ ing overtime, have earned from five -,to ten pounds and over per week. - One toolmaker in Coventry, by great • ; efforts, made more than sixteen e pounds in a week. Employment for Women. It is estimated that/ the number of women'who have been substituted for men in the metal trades is 77,000, in - the leather trades 14,000, and in the miscellaneous trades 274,000. Besides these, many are in the Government employ, an increasingly large body are in commercial houses, and a great number are employed in the dilution of labor and in agricultural work. More women are needed badly on the farms. Two hundred thousand could be used in the south of England alone. Women are performing every kind of work which is not too heavy for •their strength. In one firm they are making electric motors; in another they are doing all the wark in mane - lecturing two-inch howitzer shells, in - eluding the testing of them. i. When Peace Comes. "On the return of peace," said Mr. Runciman, "the men will leave the army gradually. There will be a the- a appearance of overtime work and a reduction in the number of hours of work, which will call for the employ- ment of more people. The whole ques- t tion hinges largely on the restoration of our export trade and tonnage to `. cope with it." quite recently which goes to show that the cruelty of the German troops to our men, ferocious as it was in the early stages of the war, is even more ferocious now. The French un- derstand the import of these things. The more I see of that great nation the more profoundly do I admire it, and in nothing more than this, that the most idealistic nation in the world refuses to be under any illusions as to the character of the enemy with which they and we have to deal. The Frenchman is generous, but he is above all clear sighted. I sometimes fear that our own idealism is only a• orm of stupidity. This is a time of, deadly peril. Things- are what they re, and will be what they will be. Why, then, in the words of the wise Ian, should be deceive ourselves? gested that holy Spirit, manifestly; L possessed by Ananias, would pass to ° Saul; and the symbol helps the de- velopment of an appropriating faith. Saul --Again the Aramaic form. The Lord -Saul had thus addressed him (verse 5). 18. Scales ---One of Luke's medical ' k" ca t"i! ..1 0 terms. As sigh:; eame to his physical, is .' ',,,.t I two y�;.J pjt.. ' o 0.tl n eyes, his spiritual being was illnmittat- j p • ___ ed by the Holy Spirit, and he recog- 0 t • h: had been in ed hn.. .. rar;; o niz p-, T �1s�: HE bitl�s?i.ui•`li TURNED posing Christ. Wasbaptized.--An-, p IJP HIM TOES. other symbol that helps faith. The e prominence of these symbols it not unconnected with the temperament of et us by all means do nothing which. ffends our self-respect, but let us ook facts sternly in the fact'. Mineral Output of i3.('. 'l.'lle annual mineral output of Brit- ish Columbia is valued at approxi- metely 430,000,000. The figures for 1913 exceeded that amount, while the roduct last year was some 44,000; , ofthatn r 00 short . t tl., previous l.tus yeae he decrease in the value of mineral, reduced in the province last year, as omparcd with 1913, was clue to the +luropean war which disturbed the metal markets throughout the world.! Burdock C Bk1©t 1 Bitters C;G�I D HIM. Ivlr. H. N, Manderson, Stettler, Alta., writes: "About twenty-five years ago, in the Province of Quebec, I came pretty near turning up my toes with dyspepsia. A cousin of mine persuaded me to try Burdock Blood Bitters. In about two weeks I could eat anything from raw fat pork to unleavened bread. Three bottles 'slid the job, and 3 have never been troubled with my stomach slice. You 'would say that this is wonderful if you could only see what we sometimes have to live on in this Country; bannock, half croaked beans,:.etc," Burdock Blood' Bitters has been on the market for the past forty years, and cannot be excelled _as a mecliette for all diseases or clisorder.s'of the stontat•lr. B.B.I3, i>; tua'mttf,rcteirt'tl rely h The y T. Milburn Co., Limited, 'It sent.", Out, • Wee Waif Adopted by British Sel- diers Played in Safety on Parapet. The story of how a little girl, found in the firing line, was adopted by a British regiment has been told by a soldier back from the front to a tra [yeller who relates his experiences ire !the Northampton, (England), Daily Echo. "About eight months ago," he said, "the company were trudging along for the first line of trenches when one of the men -his name was Philip Impey -found the child in a ditch by the ,roadside. No one could go back, and the soldiers took the girl into the trench i and made her as comfortable as pos- Bible. In a few days she had recover- ed from the ill effcts of the wet and !exposure and was running up and t down the trench, the pet of all the officers and men. "One day a bomb nearly filled in part of the trench. When the men Thad recovered from the shock the ser- geant -major asked a plan to go and see that the child was safe. They had .left her asleep in a snug corner, and there they found her, stilt sleeping. IOffered Chocolates from Germans. i "The German trenches were about '150 yards off, and the level, open - space between the two lines wasn't healthy. No man who valued his life would go there unnecessarily, or recklessly put his head above the par- apet. One morning, to their horror, the men, through the periscope, saw the child standing above the. trench on the German side. Cries came frees the enemy, but they were not hostile. The sight of the girl little more than an infant, had touched their senti- mental side, and she had offers of chocolates and invitations to go and see them. "After that the girl went over the parapet quite often. She was as safe in that danger zone as if she had been behind the lilies. No German would harm her, and once she went close up to the first line trench." The eight days trench duty ended, the little daughter of the company was taken back and was not allowed to get between the lines again. She was taken charge of by the company Storekeeper, who had children of his i. 'wait and was mightily proud of his skill in dressing and undressing the child and his strictness about the morning hath. All the men made a fuss of her, and she of them. The boys in khaki are her playmates and she goes up to any Tommy' with a smile of complete trust. Pet in the hospital. A nmenth after site was found Ilio amen thought that site ought ti' lupe: a name. Philip Impel, who- found Inn', Wats 110','" dead and they gave he has, ..urnanle, with Phyllis.as the nee eee etroroaeh to Philip. Aftek she had been six months t.ith the compute,- tri:'. sergeant -major was wounded 1 :1 came to a hospital in England. The- girl 'h y ;irl came With hint and v ayed 1;1 hu.-prtai, tt•U, the sat of patkats alit nursese- She has now been taken by her adopted "daddy" -the rgeant-lna,joi --10 Bedford, where she will have a lt'e+mrlan s Care and still 1'a'_ uttae'lleai t,. the regimeatt, The parentage of the child ale: hew ' ehe c.tnmr to be deserted in the flit! ii at La 11assee remain an unsolved m','. stery, She was too young to know her naive or to give any aced tltt .,t. herself. There is a suggeiction :.f terror stricken flight in the fact tlut she is afraid of a German helmet. t•'t:+ the khaki nntl bocapimd soldier esti, has an affection, but if a Tommy :;ue� a helmet on she shrinks away , . in fear. ! 7,000 LOST THEIR PARENTS. homeless Children in Serbia Placed j in Asylums. The saddest result of the war in! Serbia is the large number of c11i1- ! Bien who lost Their parents, 0 corre- spondent. writes ..rune Dish. Nearly , seven thousand waif„ whose ages j range from a :few weeks to fourteen years, have been gathered up i)v the (ierrnau, Austro-Hungarian and Dal - gavial troops and are now taken tart• is . of 1 hospitals 1 L im iia, dist temporary - lotus. The father and ta''ehei s of • annoy of the little ousts erre un'lommbt:dl, dead, but a majority of the children simply were separated :fronm their t ;,_k. ._,-„,--,-,,,,, parente on the flight to mountains " of o-tlbania. 1 1 ! i' eau•ly six huatlred of 11hc• children 1 have. died in the caln}ls and asylums � M1 '""",ti. 4." t� '��"�� i1'� 6�lrit'll they found temporary homes. 'I r tl NS onderful .1rtiticial Aries, Two stmt,• o pus Ur art ilk Lai am, with hands tie Shown at the Paris „Academy of Sciences. One is for heavy work, with fingers like claws of a lobsi.er, The otht r has artificiatl fing�c r s, enabling the hand to repro. (Tuve closely the action of natural fin- gors. Successful experiments were made in the preseee of members of is 1. to i the ;leadenly by two men, each of to whom had lost an at'nt. Otte of them "The Almied the Army! I'm fed up witi the .Brv' blest if 1 ain't , atvel through a beam of wood tvitlt- ex'ieet•in' any minute some old lidy'11 conte along and r.r'sk nit 'V h' , ain' out, dig ictllty and the other played t r. platy r rl a choo in khaki'?' " violin. • "Are you going to to r t: y Simple?" "No, 1.• thi:ac not I"tt't:,• isnot watiified with bis income, m.,tle..t• doesn't like his family. I don't tlti,,lr he's very handsome; nut, l,,,si,lt', it, hasn't asked me,"