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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1916-5-18, Page 7Nis Face Was Covered 'b Pimples. Pimples are riot a serious trouble, but they are very unsightly. Pimples are caused wholly by bad blood, acid to get rid of them it is neces- sary to purify the blood of all its inn- purities, Burdock Blood Bitters has made many remarkable cures; the pimples have all disappeared and a bright, clean, coma piexion left behind, Mr. Lennox D. Cooke, Indian Path, 'i $., writes: "I am writing you a few lines to tell you what Burdock Blood Bitters has done for me. Last winter my face was covered with pimples.. I tried di,fTereiit kinds of medicine, and all seemed to fail, I was one day to a friend's house, and there they advised me to use B.13,B•, so I purchased two bottles, and before. I had them taken I found -1 was getting better. I got two more, and when they were finished I was completely cured. I find it is a great blood purifier, and I recommend it to all," Burdock Blood Bitters has been on the market for the past forty years, and is manufactured only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, '?oronto, Ont. • FREEMEN OR SERFS. In Germany the Individual Belongs to the State. Early in the war German professors took it upon themselves to instruct the uninformed people of the United States on the beauties of the German government, says the Wall Street Journal, Harvard's German professor slid .some especially notable work of this kind. He showed wherein the Empire differed from the Republic of the United States, with everything in favor of the Empire. One of his prin- cipal points was that in Germany the individual belonged to the State. Germany's compact strength and united front is a tribute to the ef- ficiency of this form of government: It makes for strength. The individ- ual "belongs to the State" as much as the feudal vassal who knelt before his lord and swore that he was hence- forth his man "of life and limb and earthly honor." The callous indifference to human rights or human life shown in the whole war is a complete answer. The rape of Belgium, the ruin and devast- ation wrought in Poland and Serbia, the cynical sneers at civilization's horror for the Armenian atrocities, • furnish an answer. Louvain and. Rheims aro answers. Verdun has Sele ted R i zisewih.: eor,er Ginger Nuts. -Three cups flour, one- third cup sugar, one-fourth cup batt- ter, one cup molasses, one tablespoon allspice, two tablespoons glister. Mix together in order given, roll 'with hands into small, flat nuts as large as a quarter and lay on pans lined with. brown paper. Bake in very slow oven. Prune. Charlotte. -Stew one and one-half dozen large prunes. When cold removestones and chop very fine. Whip pint of cream stiff with three tablespoons sugar, then whip minced prunes into this, line glass dish with ladyfingers and fill center with prune cream. . Or serve in individual sherbet glasses. Leave in ice box until time to serve: Grape Cornstarch Pudding. -To one pint boiling grape juice and paste made of two tablespoons each of cold water and cornstarch. Cook until starch taste is gone, then adcl one teaspoon butter, two tablespoons, sug- er,,juice one orae -half lemon and one- fourth teaspoon salt. Lastly, fold in one stiffly beaten egg white and pour into mold decorated with split almonds and citron slivers, . When cold, turn out, and serve garnished with grapes, Fruit Wheels. -Sift together two cups flour, one heaping teaspoon bak- ing powder,, one-half teaspoon salt and one tablespoon sugar. Rub in two tablespoons butter. Mix to soft dough with milk and roll out one-half inch thick. Spread with soft butter, dust with one teaspoon flour, four table- spoons sugar, ane teaspoon cinnamon and sprinkle over one-third eup each of chopped, seeded' raisins and clean- ed currants. Roll up, cut into one- half inch slices, put one inch apart on greased pans and bake in hot oven. Swiss Steak. -Three pounds bote tom round. steak, flour; two teaspoons walnuts and zaisins. x so drop from a spoon. These will keep 1 a long time. Sour Cream. Filling for Cakes.- Whip a hal:'t cup of sour cream and add half a cup of powdered sugar and_ I half a eup of blanched almonds, chop- , ped fine. Flavor with vanilla, Pancakes.-Dissb'ive half a teaspoon- ful of soda in two cups of sour milk and add one and one-half of bread - crumbs, one tablespoonful of melted butter and two or three eggs. En- ough flour must be added to make the batter the right consistency, Housekeeping Helps: One pint of lard weighs one pound. Oil of turpentine will remove tar stains. Stewed rhubarb is an eexcellent spring food. Oatmeal makes a very good thick- ening for soups. Eggs when scrambled should be stirred constantly. A wooden box is better for keeping bread than a tin one. There is no finer polish for tinware than wood ashes. A sweet red pepper should always hang in the canary's cage, Never buy spices in large quanti- ties; they lose their flavors. Beeswax and salt will _-make rusty flatirons as smooth as glass. Coarse sandpaper is better than sandsoap to scour kettles with, Fruit grows more important at breakfast as the spring advances. To remove shoe blacking that has been spilled on clothing use vinegar. Toothbrushes should be dipped in boiling water occasionally to disin- fect them, The good housekeeper goes over her food supplies every day, to avoid KAISER'S CHANCE FOR PEACE MUST BE CONCESSIONS OR SURE DESTRUCTION. Gleameny's Return of Belgium and Alsace Would Avert This Fate. Under the caption "The Might- }lave-Beens of history," Mr. Wetter - son says in the Louisville, Ky,, Cour- ier-Journal "There is reason to believe that Germany is approaching,if it has not reached, the point which tho Soubh. faced when Sherman .marched across. Georgia to the sea and Grant moved through the wilderness upon Rich- mond. "It is only a question of time when the Kaiser's wondrous fighting ma- chine, set for world conquest, will come to • its Appomattox. As God smote slavery in America, and struck down the war lord of France, will IIe find a way to circumvent the powers of darkness in Germany, Be the time limit long or short, the end is sure. "The medieval spirit must die. The Prussian militarist must be crushed and will be crushed as the Southern confederacy was crushed, as the vault- ing ambition of Napoleon was crush- ed, else the century that is sinks back into the feudal ages that were, gov- ernment but an armed camp, the earth a universal battlefield, The "Might-Have-Beens. " "But what :may Germany do bo be Sir Max Aitken, M.P., saved? Except the Kaiser, there is who is the author of the best record none to speak for her. Will the of warfare since Napier's "Peninsula Kaiser speak -can he speak? Or War" -his book, "Canada in Flan - must the end come to Germany as it dors," being the official story of the came to Napoleon, to the South, in Canadian Expeditionary Force. Sir bloody, all -embracing conflagration? Max Aitken is himself a Canadian by "Let us give even the devil his due. birth, as he is the son of the Rev. There are those who believe that the ` William Aitken, who was Scotch min - Kaiser did not want to go to war. Aster at New Brunswick. Sir Max Their theory is that the sword was Aitken has sat as Unionist member thrust into his Unwilling grasp by for Ashton-under-Lyne since 1910, salt, one-fourth teaslioon pepper, small, In using canned vegetables for the war party -that is, the Prussian 'and on the outbreak of the war he piece of suet, one-fourth teaspoon cream soups, the liquor should be dis- General Staff -using the bellicose was accepted as bhe official "record - mustard. Wipe steak carefully, dust carded. Crown Prince as a monkey wrench er" to the Canadian Force. on salt and pepper, rub in as much Worn table napkins are useful for bo open his hand. it that flour as it will hold -at least one cuAugust 1, 1915, the first Certain it isrsary P drying the lettuce, when preparing it tion, the earth and the heavens meet-; -using edge of saucer to help grind for the salad. • of the war,the Kaiser issued from flour in. Fry suet, add mustard, and Thick blotting parer under doilies army headquarters a manifesto in ing in dire combustion as they met for i 1 l h d Napoleon ,tltei Waterloo for the Con brown steak in it on both sides. Al- will prevent hot dishes from marking which he said: „ - most cover with boiling water, boil the table. "`Before God and history my con- federacy after Appomattox. ' shows that tradition has made an ab -1 surd inference from 2 Cor. 10. 10, rapidly five minutes, reduce heat and Blotting paper saturated with tur science is clear. I did not will this d� war. One year has els secl since I when it describes him as short, bard-; DESPERATE DIET. simmer three hours. Thin is good Perone may be placed in drawers to P WAITRESSES IDT BERLIN. fireless cooker recipe. Before serve beep away moths. was obliged to call the German __ j headed and bowlegged."Chief speak -'.'fireless ITHESUNDAYSCHOOL'HONESTLY BELIEVED INTERNATIONAL LESSON. MAY 21. Lesson VIII. -'rhe Cripple'at Lystra -Acts 14, Golden Text.-Isa, 40, 29, Verse 8, . Lystra-Six hours south- southwest of Iconinum, on a tableland nearly four thousand feet above seal level. Renee came Timothy (Acts 16. 1). Sat -In some public place,' where presumably he begged his liv- ing, 9. Heard -The tense may imply re- peated hearing, or it may be pictorial, l of listening throughout a discourse. ! Fastening hio eyes -A favorite vivid , verb of Luke's (Acts 1. 10; . 13. 9; 23, 1). To be made whole ---"Saved,"! in body, or soul. Paul has the gift we, call thought -reading, often found still in men who have the faculty of evan-1 gelistic preaching in a preeminent de-' gree. 1 10. Loud voice-Psychologically,l the effect of this sudden and utterly unexpected shout would be to pro-, duce a thrill of conviction, leaving no time for questions. It produced the initial "leaping up": when the power; was recognized, he "went on walk-, ing"-note the force of the tenses. 11. They talked the Lycaonian patois among themselves, but could, use and understand Greek in dealing with strangers. The apostles had no, idea what they were saying: the' "gift of tongues" did not help them. ! 12. Zeus and Hermes (margin)- of which Jupiter and Mercury are: Latir,equivalents-must be understood; as the nearest Greek equivalents of. the local Lycaonian deities. In'' Phrygia, not far away, these two gods were fabled to have come down to earth unrecognized, and to have beenoldhospitably entertained by an ol couple, Philemon and Baucis, who re-', ceived a blessing when they depart- ed, The people of Lystra were deter mined not to be caught napping this'. time! Ramsay well remarks, "True. to the Oriental character, the Lycaon- naris regarded the active and energe-', tic preacher as the inferior, and the more silent and statuesque figure as, the leader." That Paul was here taken for Hermes, and in Acts 21. 38 for a brigand captain, sufficiently RE WAS COMM INTO C N UMPTI N. DR. WOOD'S Norway Pine Syrup CURED HIM. Mr. Prank E. Anthoay, 69 Ellen Street, Winnipeg, Man:, 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 r 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. AU 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 dire for all those troubled in u like manner." When you ask for "Dr. Wood's" see that you get what you ask for. It is put up in a yellow wrapper; three pine trees the trade mark; the price, 25e and 50e. Manufatturcd only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. stitution is sufficiently proved by his surviving such experiences as he re- cords in 2 Cor. 11. A thin and wiry fraxne is quite consistent with the "weak bodily presence" his detractors described. Entered into the city - This casual notice is very character- istic: almost anybody else would have given Lystra a wide. berth! But Paul even returned there from Derbe: how overwhelmingly striking in such a connection is the address he gave the Lystrans then (verse 22) ! Derbe- Probably near the "Cilician Gates," through which they would naturally have returned to Antioch in Syria. Compare the journey sketched in Acts 155. 41 and 16. 1. • been presenting the obverse side of ing add, if liked, one-half teaspoon = the medallion, where another answer is written -that of the State's appre- --• dation of its omen vassals. Wave after wave of humanity breaking upon an almost impregnable i mushrooms are also good to add. defense shows the value of an indi- Crown Roast of Lamb: Mutton or lamb may he used for this handsome roast. Have butcher prepare it, and be sure that he sends home all trim- mings., as they constitute half the weight paid for and make up well into stew. Cover ends of bones securely with stripes of salt pork. Rub flesh with salt, or salt when partly cooked. Set in\hot oven ten or fifteen minutes, then reduce heat, and, if necessary to keep drippings from burning, add hot the piled -up heaps of their comrades water. Baste often and cook from the French cannon again blazed, and forty-five to sixty minutes. • Press celery salt and one tablespoon Wor- cestershire sauce to gravey, which should be rich and brown, and not need more flour to thicken. Chopped vidual in the eyes of the master. In the columns of a recent issue of this newspaper a description of one as- sault as seen by an onlooker was pub- lished. The Germans were moving forward in mass formation, when: "The French guns opened, and mangled humanity was piled in wind- rows. 'r * *.In a short time another line in solid formation was sent for- ward; as they started to pass over the pile of dead and wounded looked like a solid wall. The sight that fol- lowed I think no man ever saw 'be- fore. High explosive shells began blowing into pieces the masses of dead and dying. "It seemed fiendish. I wondered .that the French were so insatiate when, horror of horrors! I discover- ed that the high -explosive shells were from German guns, blasting the walls of dead and dying that another line of German troops •• might pass through!" Why should they not do it, when these individuals belonged to the State? There is a classic story of one w1To, reading of the happiness of a future state, jumped into the crater of Ve- suvius that he might the sooner en- joy it. After the story of Verdun even the hyphenated American might be excused for hesitating to jump into the crater of pro -Germanism in order to bring about in this country a government where the citizen "be- longs to the State." fi Suffered Awfully hits FROM - BILIOUS HEADACHES.i When tate liver becomes sluggish and Inactive the bowels become constipated, the tongue becomes coated, the stomach !foul and bilious headaches are the upshot. shot. Miibtirn 's S,axa-Liver Pills will stimu- late the sluggish liver, clean the foul- rtoated tongue, do away with the stomach gases and banish the disagreeable bilious headaches: Frs. J, C. Kidd, Sperling, 13 .0;, is: I have used Miilbun's Laxae IiiYer Pills for bilious headaches. I e • Ifered awfully until I started to take )tern, Theywere the onlythin that e c•litl me good. I ehave any !� Cr any nevery bilious headache any more," 1tfi1biirn's Laxa-Liver Pills --arc 26o per vial, 5 vials for $1 00, at all 'dealers, mailed direct 4•,1t t ecl <.hr,�.ct on receipt of price by The 'lc, Milburn Co., Limited, 'Toronto, Ont, cup in center of circle of meat to ira sure its shape. Before serving fill center with peas or blanched chest- nuts, cooked tender in stock and glaz- ed, or with Saratoga or French -fried potatoes. When Milk Turns. The best cereals are whole natural people to arms.' grains, steamed -in a double boiler for The Hour is Striking. 24 hours.• "Germany has but one friend in the world, and the German leaders both in Germany and in America have done their utmost to alienat this friend. Except for the pro -Ger man propaganda, making quasi war upon our industries whilst threaten ing civil war, if we went to war with the Kaiser, public opinion in the United States would have been divid ed. ' "At no time have the American peo- ple been hostile to the German people At all times have we recognized their virtues as citizens and neighbors. We have resented with proper emphasis and spirit an organized intrusion fin- anced and directed from Berlin, which has subsidized American newspapers printed in the German language and let loose among us a horde of secret service agents who defy our laws, dis- turb the public order and flour our dignity as a nation and a people. "Concurrent with these offences a campaign of frightfulness has been If the housewife will paste these There was a good deal of consterna- pursued at sea in contravention alike recipes in her cookbook, it will not tion when the testing of the line ; of humanity and treaty obligations, be a catastrophe when she finds the milk or cream has soure 1 She LURED GERMANS OVER A MINE. Canadian Troops Trick the Enemy at the Front. How the Canadians have once more done the Huns is told by officers re - burning on leave to London. The Can -1 adieus have long been top -dog in their 1 conflict with the Germans and it is said tliat in the trenches opposite the men from North America there are 1 twice as many sentries as elsewhere I along the line, for the Canadians are! forever thinking of some new thrill for their enemies. Not long ago, so -the story goes, the Canadians discovered that the Ger-1 mans had, in some way wholly unex- pected, tapped a Canadian. trench' telephone wire. . A connection had been made which led to the German ! trenches. Thus the Germans were able. to hear all of bhe orders passing on the telephone in that vicinity, • er Hermes was the inventor of How Wives May Cure Grumbling High Priced Cafes Are Forced to 1 speech: god of eloquence. ( Husbands. Employ Women. 1 13. The famous Cambridge menu-' The Berliner Tageblatt discourses ; script reads Zeus Propolis, that is,l There is naturally much talk in half mournfully, half jocularly, at the changes which the war is effecting in e the capital, and especially in the cafes and eating houses. The first signi- ficant change was the bread card in- _ stead of bread ad lib. Then the table h d'hote was suppressed, then the limit- ation of hours, the "verbot" about: _ schnaps after 9 p.m., the fleshless' days, the fatless days, the shrinkage 1 of beer, the shrinkage of potatoes, 1 the diminution of the sugar supply, , and, finally, the disappearance of the waiter. Instead of "klops" and "beaten" the waiter is now handing bombs in the trenches; instead of offering pro- found remarks on various comestibles he is discussing machine guns at the front. And in his place is the wait- i ress. Waitresses have been long known in Berlin, but they were mainly con- fined to establishments which sported a red or a blue light over their door, establishments which were not visited by ladies. In more reputable places the waitress did not make her ap- Zeus the defender of the city; and; war -time of rations and food supply, !this reading is very possibly eight the possibility or probability of 1 Garlands -Used in Asia Minor as to starving out one or other of the belii- Pee - day in India. Gates -Of the temple, gerents. But it is amazing what pee- near which the apostles happened to, Pte will eat at a pinch. I be. A recent Arctic explorer seriously 14. Apostles --Note this wider use advised the wearing of skin clothing of the word, without restriction to the; in preference to woollen, simply and twelve. Rent -A well. -known and' solely because, if the worst came to universal sign of grief and horror. ` the worst, one's outfit could be stewed 15. Like nature (margin): so read.. for a meal, or at any rate given to the Vain things -Pointing to the sacri-j doWelI when a man findsn' fice which would produce no effeet.t , enjoyment The classic picture of this "futility" and a sort of inward satisfacbion in a is the great description of the priests; stew made of his vest, his shoelaces, of Baal at their worship in 1 Kings and his sledge -gear, he must be pretty 18. 25-299. That passage also vividly; "peckish," and when he gets back to illustrates the contrasted thought of, civilization he will make a model Kus- a living God. Who made, etc.-Paul;band, never likely to turn up his nose lapses naturally into the familiar; at cold mutton an washing -days. language of the Decalogue (Exod. 20.' The Bishop of Yukon thinks nothing 11). But almost the same words can of eating his boots. He had probably be quoted from the great monument' declared he was ready for that opera of the. Persian Kings on the Behis-; tion many a time when he was a boy, tun Rock: many "heathens" had a' but he has actually done it since he complete doctrine of God as Creator. i cam To this germinal knowledge Paul great gold -field of arctic Alaska. showed that it had been tapped and a campaign undiscriminating, urge- ance, for the simple reason that the makes his appeal -a true missionary,' r c. may even find that the family likes the new things better than what she had planned. Cake. -Cream one cup of sugar and laid a deep plot to profit by bhe cir- woe be the consequence bo that Ger- appearance at decent establishments, gument, it would have been on the one cup of shortening together. Sift cumstance. • many -to those Germans that heed and according to the Tageblatt, she lines of Acts 17. 30. Nations -The together one andone-half cups of At a certain point, the Canadians not; that hesitate to heed; that fancy, has come to stay. After all, he says, marginal Gentiles is better, for the flour and a teaspoonful of soda, cloves, had finished a mine under the Ger- as the foolish Mexicans fancy, that is not the waitress a purely Germanic word normally excludes the Jews, and cinnamon and nutmeg and add it to man trenches. Its explosion was de- the Gringoes will not fight. institution? Was it notone of the Paul certainly did not regard his own the sugar, alternately with a cup of (erred. Then the Canadians arranged minor duties of Wotan' s daughters, people as having been Ieft to the light sour mills. Chop a couple of raisins, a fake set of orders. With the Ger- Germanys Only Chance. the Valkyries, to offer the drinking of nature. They were for him a horns to the heroes of Valhalla? They missionary nation, trained to take' sprinkle them with half a cup of flour mans listening in orders were issued "Yet• the solution were so easy if are therefore in place when they serve God's truth to the world. and add to mixture, Frost with a for an attack. The Germans did not the Kaiser, -even the Kaiser -could Berliners with the national beverage, soft chocolate icing. know, of. course, that their trick had only see the opportunity. It is such 17. Note the instinct by tivhich Cherry Pudding. -Beat one egg with been discovered. The orders were an opportunity as Napoleon was of- But it is not a jovial crowd, they serve Paul goes straight to the one ten a third of a cup of sugar. Adda that the attack should be made on fered by Metternich, as Jeffersonand the tables seldom dissolve inlaughter tral fact of religion which can be re-' e to man's estate -in his case, the he fi ^ t rn 1 T l Ientint and barbarous beneath whose average Berliner never knew how to instinctively starting from the truth' t n s impulse se tt as to cut the Ger-1 g , conduct himself towards a respectable that these man wire. A Canadian colonel, how- cruel sway our citizens, helpless andpeople did know. ever, had a better notion. He took unarmed, have been slaughtered. Now girl. 16. In the. "generations gone by- thei matter up with headquarters and ! we demand -nay, we command -and But war has at last compelled her Had he been, able to complete his ar-' Ban on Fortune -Telling. The military authorities of Berlin have placed a ban on fortune-telling. It appears that women and girls with husbands and sweethearts at the front have been mulcted by crystalgazers, palmists and card readers who claimed to be able to tell when the war would end, whether men would be killed, lo"e an arm or a leg, gain the Iron Cross or 'suffer other fates. Not all the foolish things are done by the fools; the wise men contribute their share, too. cup of sour milk in which a fourth of the very point under which there was Davis was offered by Abraham Lin- . alized from "natural theology',' the a teaspoonful of soda has been disc a Canadian mine. The Germans solved, and a teaspoonful of melted didn't know about the mine, either. butter. Then add a cup of flour and rrofitdng by the information obtained a cup of stoned cherries. Bake in a over the telephone wire, the Germans hot oven and serve with vanilla smite, in turn, planned a surprise for their Sour Cream Pie. -Beat two eggs aggressors. They literally - packed till light, then add a cup of sugar, a • men in the trenches where the suppose cup of thick sour cream, half a cup of ,ed attack would take place, two deep raisins and half a teaspoonful each I they were aw,tmdddni '-sfl,..y of cinnamon and nutmeg. Bake be-! they were, waiting for the Canadians tween two crusts, bo come on. Dressing for Cold Claw. -Whip a When time had been given for the cup of sour cream till stiff, then add Germans to make ample preparation half a cup of vinegar, .slowly, half a for effectual resistance, the Canadians cup of sugar, and salt to taste„ exploded their mine and then made sugar with half a cup of shortening. were killed and it isn't likely that Add one egg, well neaten:, a cup of the Germans will ever again believe molasses and a cup of sour:. milk in anything they hear over a' telep hone: which w c a teaspoonful I of .soda has been. dissolved. Sift a half teaspoonful each of cloves, cinnamon, ginger and. Making Headway. nutmegwith a cup of flour and add. "Malting any progress toward get - Then add enough. more flour to make ting acquainted with those fashion - a rather stifle . batter. Bake in gem able people next door?' pans. • "Just a little. Their cat invited Hermits. -Beat one egg and add a our cat over to a musicale last night." cull of sugar creamed with a half cup of butter. The add half a cup of Our idea soda cream, a teaspoonful of soda, two Ot i of true faith is that . of a . man who advertises for the tablespoonfuls of molasses, spice to e lettrrn of taste, and half a cup each of chopped a lost umbrella, coin. America is not the enemy of fact that God is good. He does: not Germany, America is the friend of Experienced. suggest that the Lystrans might England. The true American hates Suitor -What makes you think,. sir, have learnt more from the bounties no land and no people, loving none, that I will not be able to support of nature, What they had actually' except his own. your daughter? inferred was the divinity of the sky The Kaiser could ask the intervene Her Father -The difficulty I have ("Zeus" , which gave the rain and the; tion of the United States and make had in doing it myself. plants that produced fruit, Hearts! proposals so reasonable that the -Used as in 1 Sam. 25, 36, where United States could compel a parley No Kick Coming. there is the sante combination with and in the end bring the war to a close Mabel -So you asked papa for my food and gladness. The last word, without the annihilation of the Ger- hand? Did lie you anyeneour• euphrosyne, is personified in Milton's man fabric. agement? givey L'Allegro, avid rendered as "heart- "Belgium heart"Belgium must be put where Bel- Arthur --Well no;s but he ga.ve ire cheer" -so the verb in Luke 16. 23. gium was. Alsace-Lorraine must be a drink and a cigar, so 1 had no kick 19, Persuaded -The fickleness of coining. returned( to France, Short of these Ginger' Rolls. -Cream half a cup of a small attack. Scores of Germans, ants of reparation there can be no lasting peace and should be no peace at all. Further detafis as to Poland and Serbia may be left to a congress of bho Powers. T naily, universal disatlnameiit, the four kingdoms composing the German Empire to determine their future as they please; no further war 'nden pity for n the erman to1� tl Staces, G y lily,. � ta S �� , to sb 'and rich, u � li potentnd y o Ger- man nlri and German industr. ee than pe i ) i h them the credit and the .Earns i money, their true friend. "The alternative to this is massacre and ruin; more massacre and more ruin; and Inst scene of all, annihila- a votier Safely Wounded. Mr, S. S. Kensington- ehave. such Cand news from the front! Dear harles is safely wounded at last, "Is he rich enough to keep an auto- mobile and a yaeht?" "Yes. He is even richer than that He keeps a lawyer." "What is the difference between t4v cit lightning and electricity?" a school boy was asked one day, "Well, you don't have to pay for lightning," he replied, these "Galatian"--they lived within the Roman province of Galatia, and in spite of all hot disputes to the co - teary are best regarded as ening the eddre ees of the Epistle -is well ll illus- nulcY ch �$'t a different ga- lstr to:h Paul's distress at -1+10r "so pelu(GAL 1. toned -See 2 Car, 11, 25. We may reasonably assume Oat a stone left a permanent scar on his face, to which he alludes in Gal, 6. 7. Since scars wore regularly noted few identification, we mayfurther i it , as - :Aline that this seal' prompted Clstu- clips I.iysias to iclentlf.y Paul with the "wanted" brigand (Acts 21. 28) whose official description he had byheart, 1 20. That Paul had are Iron con, - Was Not Much of a Wever in P2ifallt Medicines But Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills Are All •Right. Mrs. Wm. McElwain, Temperanes Vale, N.B., writes: "I am not much of ci believer in medicines, but I must say Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are all right, Some years ago I was troubled with smothering spells. In the night T would waken up with my breath all gone and think I never world get it back. 1 was telling a friend of my trouble, and kis advised me to try Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. He gave mea Woe, and I. had onl taken a few al thent,wheir I c"wtUit- • sleep al idght without stip tiettb1c. 1 did not finish the box until some years after when I felt my trouble 'coining beck ee 1, took the rest of thein and they cured ire," *: Nerve TBilis 1,•�libttzn's Heart and:Nc. rE haire boon on the market for the last twenty -five years, The testimony of the users should be enough to cote- vino you that wlutt we claim for them is true. H. and N. Pills are 60e per box, 3 boxes for" 11.25; at all druggists t,r dealers, mailed direct on re,ei fiof . - hatted.. rice by The 1'. Milburn tr ~e , .G , Toronto, Ont