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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1916-6-8, Page 7A COLD Settled On Her Lungs causing Great Pain. THE CURE WAS 1M < SOD'S Norway Pine Syrups .J61`ts D. M. Pickering, St. Catharines, Ont,, 'writes: "Having derived great benefit from Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, I thought I would write and tell. you of my experience. When I first cause out from England I contracted a severe cold, owing to the change of climate. It settled on my lungs, and caused me a • great deal of pain. I tried every remedy 1 could think of, but got no relief. My father, who had heard a great deal about the good qualities of Dr. Wood's Norway • Pine Syrup, advised,me to try it. I did so, and I am pleased to say, found im- mediate relief, 1 .only took one bottle and it cured me completely. My mother had a severe cold also, and Dr, Wood's Norway Pine Syrup cured her, so we never fail to keep a bottle of it in the house." See that none of those so-called "pine syrups" are handed out to you when you go to your druggist or dealer and ask for "Dr. Wood's." It is put up in a yellow wrapper; three pine trees the trade mark;; price, 25e and 50e. Manufactured only by The T. Mil- burn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. r�.. ��..,......�.,.....a...a..-.._,..... IT CAN BE DONE. Tackled the Thing That Couldn't Be Done, and He Did It. "Somebody said that it couldn't be done, but he, with a chuckle replied that `maybe it ,couldn't,' but he would be one who wouldn't say so till he tried. So he buckled right in, with a trace of a grin on his face. If he worried, he hid it. He started to sing ' as he tackled the thing that couldn't be .clone; and he did it." Somebody scoffed: "Oh you'll never do that at least, no one ever has done it," but he took off his coat, and he took off his hat, and the first thing we knew he'd begun it, with a lift of his chin, and a bit of a grin,• with out any doubting or quiddit; he start- ed to sing as he tackled• the thing that ouldn't be done, and he did it. . • • F "There 'are thousands to tell you it cannot be done, there are thousands to prophesy failure; there are thousands to point out to you, one ,by one, the dangers that wait to assail you; but just buckle in with a bit of a grin, then take off your coat and go to it; just start in to sing as you tackle the thing that "cannot be done," and you'll do it. • HIGH -FLYING EAGLES. They Can Soar to 40,000 Feet Above Sea Level. There are two animals that puzzle • naturalists more than any others, says Pearson's Weekly. They are nature's submarine and aeroplane, the whale and .the eagle. It is known that whales occasionally descend as Dainty Dishes. Rhubarb Cream Pie. --Stew rhubarb as for sauce and sweeten. To this add a little cornstarch made into paste with cold water, and beaten yolks of one or two eggs. Bake in one crust and use whites of eggs for Meringue. Tomato Tapioca Soup. -To one pint of strained tomatoes; add one-half tablespoon extract of beef, one ounce butter, two tablespoons minute tap- ioca, one and one -hall pints hot water, salt and pepper to taste, and boil for fifteen minutes. Serve with fried bread or toast. Harvard Salad. -Scoop out centers of small tomatoes and fill with follow- ing mixture: Three tablespoons creamed cheese, one tablespoon minc- ed parsley, chopped mushrooms to taste, catsup, salt and pepper, six chopped olives all moistened with French dressing. Serve on bed of cress. Rice and Tomatoes. -Butter baking dish, put in layer of boiled rice, dust with salt and pepper and dot with tiny bits of butter. Adel layer of canned or fresh tomatoes and season with salt, pepper and butter. Proceed in this manner until the dish is almost full. Make last layer of rice. Pour one cup of tomato liquor over all and bake in a hot oven twenty or thirty minutes. Scalloped Eggs. -Boil six eggs un- til hard. Have ready three-fourths cup buttered cracker crumbs and one pint white sauce. Sprinkle bottom of buttered baking dish with crumbs, Cover with one-half of eggs, chopped fine. Cover eggs with sauce and sauce with meat. Repeat and cover top with crumbs. Bake until crumbs are brown. Ham, chicken, sausage or veal may be used. Bacon Roll Stuffed With Chicken or Turkey; -.Spread thin slices very cold bacon with minced chicken or turkey mixed with the left -over gravy. Mix a little cream and dust with finely minced green pepper or parsley. Roll and fasten with wooden swekers, dip in batter and fry in deep fat. To make the batter beat two eggs, add one-half cupful of tepid water. Add slowly to one cupful bread flour silted with one-fourth teaspoonful salt. Beat well and add one teaspoonful olive oil. ,Creamed. Potatqes.-Peel enough pot- atoes to make three cupfuls, cut into small cubes. Mix in one tablespoon- ful of butter, one of flour, salt and pepper to taste, and one tablespoonful of parsley. Cover potatoes with boiling water, adding a teaspoonful of salt; boil until just done, but not broken. Heat milk in double boiler, tub flour smooth, do same with butter. Pour on some of the hot milk, then add to milk and boil until thickened. Season to taste, drain potatoes and slide into hot milk. Let bubble up once ur twice. Then pour into hot serving dish and sprinkle parsley over them. Strawberry Sponge Pudding. -To yolks of two eggs add two table- spoons of cold water and beat until very light, using egg beater. Add two-thirds cup of sugar gradually, still beating, and two tablespoons lemon juice. Mix and sift one and one-third cups flour with two tea - much as 3,000 feet below the surface spoons baking powder and one-fourth of the sea -a depth at which, by the teaspoon salt. Combine mixtures and cut and fold in whites of two eggs beaten until stiff. Turn into butter- ed mold, adjust buttered cover and steam one hour, never allowing water to fall below boiling point. Wash and hull one quart berries, cut into quarters and put into bowl or brush lightly and sprinkle with one-half cup sugar. Let stand in warm place un- til serving time. Remove pudding to serving dish and pour around pre- pared strawberries. nrossure of water they ought to be hushed flat. Why they are not in- jured scientists have yet to discover. It is this pressure which prevents a modern submarine descending even 300 feet, let alone 3,000. Eagles have been seen through tele- scopes to fly. with apparent east from 80,000 to 40,000 feet above sea level. At that height no human being can live, owing bo the rarefication of the air. How the birds live and fly at far greater heights than man can endure for long is a question still to be an- swered. Never place a good piece of furni- ture very near a fireplace or register. The heat dries the wood and glue, of- ten causing cracks where the parts are joined together. HALF THE ILLS OF LIFE Are Caused @1y CO STIPATOtPJ, hen the bowels become constipated the stolnach gets out of order, the liver does not work properly, and then follows the : violent sick headaches, the sourness of the stomach, belching of wind, heart- burn, water brash, biliousness, and a general feeling that you do not care to do anything, Keep your bowels regular . by using Milburn's Laxa=Liner Pills. They will. clear away all the effete matter which collects in the system and make you think that "life is worth living," Mr. 13. W. Watson, St. John, N,B,, writes: "I have been troubled with constipation, for the last three years, and during that time have tried several remedies, all of which failed to help me. A friend recommended Milbturn's Laxa- Liver Pills, and after using three or four vials, I felt like a new, man. I am now still taking them, and am positively sure that I am on the road to recovery. I strongly recommend Milburn's taxa- Liver Pills, Milburti's Laxa-Liver Pills are 25e per vial, 5 vials for $1.00, at all drug stores or dealers, or will be mailed on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co,, I,United, tbronto, Ont. Apple Sauce, Right and Wrong. Judging from the results seen here and there, one must come to the con- clusion that there are many wrong ways of making a simple dish of apple sauce. We may cook apples so that each piece shall remain whole, but this is not a true sauce. For the latter the more completely the apple goes to pieces in the cooking the better - that is, in the end it shoudi be per- fect "mus" or puree. Another advantage of sieving the cooked apple is that it need be neith- er pared nor cored, both the seed and the skin adding flavor. It will not take as long to sieve the apples as to pare and core them, so time is actual - e er through the stained part boiled water in which a little borax has been dis- solved. A piece of charcoal placed upon the shelves of the refrigerator will absorb any unpleasant odors and keep it sweet smelling. Window shades that have been streaked can be cleaned by taking a hard crust of bread and rubbing the spots where the shade is streaked, Wind wrapping twine into balls when taken from parcels. It is an easy way to dispose of it and it will be found useful in a great many ways. When doing a little home paper- hanging the amateur will find the pa- per much easier to hang if the paste is applied to the wall instead of to the paper. • Burning the fingers can be avoided. by equipping the metal knobs on pot and kettle covers with good-sized corks, wired on with bits of picture wire. When sewing stiff material have a piece of soap handy and occasionally stick the needle into it. ' You will find the needle will go through much easier and will not break. -uI 'dol agq. wog eau u anod awing/ sert the poker at the bottom, and raise gently, leaving the poker in the fire for a few minutes. This causes a draught, and it makes the fire burn brightly. To remove creases r• ent clothes which have been packed away for some time, hang in the bath -room, then turn on the hot water tap. The steam will entirely remove the creases. Press afterwards. When popping corn put in enough corn to cover the bottom of the wire popper; then drench with water just before placing over the fire. Every grain will pap, and much more quickly. than without the added moisture. For mud stains on dresses dissolve a little carbonate of soda in water and ('1) Orchards and mighty fleas, with it wash the mud stains. Another plan is to rub the stains with a cut . of blossom -embowered highways, raw potato, afterward removing the LOSSOM Sunday"; have you ever potato juice by rubbing it with a heard of it -that Sabbath day of flannel dipped in water. enchantment and poetry in the To prevent dust when cleaning land of Evangeline in early June, when rugs, instead of sweeping with a' mile upon mile of fruitful orchard - broom, use a carpet sweeper or a , lands is white -and -pink with count - small vacuum cleaner., and then take ; less millions of apple blooms, and a a cotton cloth saturated with gala great seventy -mile long valley is filled line and rub your rugs over. They' from end to end with intoxicating fra- will Iook like new, and be perfectly ';prance that recalls the orange groves free from lint. of Florida or the glorious heliotrope Embroidery of very kind that has of Del Monte? been washed or cleaned with petrol i Santa Barbara has a Flower Festi- val, and the happy dwellers in the ants Clara Valley revel in the beauty rand their peach and luxurianceof 'prune blossoms, but only in Nova Sco- tia is there an annual feast of blos- soms that is worthy of the name. The tourist in Nova Scotia, linger - ;r should be ironed on the wrong side to throw the embroidery into' relief. There should be a soft pad of several thickness of flannel, so that the em- broidery can sink into it without be- ing flattened. An improvement over boiled corn is 1g graptures over the. until mid-Semarellous color- tember, goes into toasted corn. After boiling the ears mosaic that fills the valley during the six minutes so as to cook them partial- harvest time; but he little realizes the ly remove to a bread toaster and feast of color and of fragrance he has place over hot coals, turning until missed by not being there in early they they are browned evenly. The June. What so :are as a day in June, delicious flavor thus imparted is well 'indeed, when it is spent in the Anna - worth the extra work of preparing. polis Valley. If your white shoes have become t the ekend excursions are arranged by railroads, in order that the too dark and dirty looking to be clean- :dwellers in the cities and larger towns ed they can be turned into smart look- ing brown shoes by rubbing them over with a mixture of twenty drops of sal- fron and two tablespoonfuls of olive oil. Two applications will be requir- ed to make the color dark enough. A useful addition to the kitchen table is a cross -bar for, hanging up spoons and other utensils. Two ver- tical laths are nailed to the side of the table, one at each end. The trans - Sowing and Reaping (Temperance verse bar is fixed to these. This is provided with hooks, and forms a Lesson). -Gal. tt. Golden convenient rack, The hooks may be Text Gal. 0. 7. screwed to the edges of the table. To wash woollen 'stockings so that There is a single thread uniting the they will not shrinkis quite easy. I whole paragraph, the right relations First shred some yellow soap into -a. toward• •the other man" (verse 4), small tin saucepan. Cover it with who belongs to the Christian family. cold water, and let boil slowly on the , They are all centered in the duty of stove till a jelly. Take some tepid using the microscope for our own water and, with the boiled soap make 1 faults, and looking at the other man a good lather. Wash the stockings I mostly to see how we can help him. in this, rubbing well and using notVerse 1. We seem to hear the echo other soap. Rinse in tepid clear of a boast that they could not be tot- water,.wring out, and set in the air erant of "trespassers." The whole to dry quickly. verse is reminiscent of the Lord's ncounter with men who brought him - - a woman overtaken in a grievous trespass, when he bade "look to them- selves." Restore -The idea of the verb is that of putting something in order so as to be ready for use again, like tumbled nets after a night's fish-' ing (Mark 1. 10). Note the corres- ponding noun in Eph. 4.112, of the "fitting of the consecrated for work of serving." It is God' work to estimate and punish guilt: our only concern is that one of God's tools is out of re- pair, and we must see it in working order. again. Spirit -Neither here nor in verse. 8 do we use the capital. It is, in fact, usually impossible to dis- tinguish in such phrases between the Divine and the human spirit, for the latter is the part of man where God dwells, In an "unspiritual" man (called psychical in 1 Cor. 2, 14 --one who has nothing higher than the mind in him, the psyche, or "soul," being in this context the man on his im- material side) the "spirit" is asleep; and the'sleep may deepen into death. Gentleness --Supremely seen in Christ (Matt. 11.29; 2 Cor. 10. 1), The word meek is an unfortunate rendering there, for it now suggests a man who cannot resent or repel an injury, in- stead' of a strong man who will not do so. SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSON. JUNE 11. When the Bard Becomes Lame 1T &3 A SIM OF KIDNEY TROUBLE Doan's Kidney Pills cure the aching back by curing the aching kidneys bc- neath-for it is really the kidneys aching and not the back. Doan's Kidney Pills are a special I saved and additional flavor gained. kidney and bladder medicine for the y cure of all kidney troubles. Vol Plain apple saucer Wash and Mrs, Louisa Gonshaw, 083 Manning quarter fruit and just cover with Ave., Toronto, Ont., writes: "I take boiling water, which hastens cook- ing. Mash the fruit as it -softens and stir so that the uncooked top will get to the bottom. When all is soft put through a strainer and sweeten to taste, No two varieties of apples require the same amount of sugar, and in general too much is used. The sauce may be cooked after it is sweet- ened weetened but if it is to be eaten at once this is not necessary. Household Hints. Just try drying the wool blankets on curtain stretchers if it is wished to retain their usual length and width. To remove tea or coffee stains pour great pleasure in writing you, stating the benefit I have received by using Doan's Kidney Pills. About, three years ago 'I was terribly afflicted with lame back, and was so bad I could not even sweep the floor. I was advised to try your pills, and before.I.had used one box there was a great improvement, anct my back was: much better; However, I kept on taking them until my back was completely cured. I highly reconmend 'Doan's' for.lame back,"• • Doatt's Kidney Pills are the original pill for the kidneys. See that our trade mark the "Maple Leaf" appears on the wrapper. Doan's Kidney, Pills are 50c per 1'c+x, 3 boxes for 81,25; at all dealers or mane,' directon receipt of price by The '.1' Milburn Co., Limited, 'Toronto, Out. When ordering direct specify "I)ran u's ' (2) Automobile traveller is never out of sight of blossom -)glen orchards. (4) This tree has a record of 32 barrels of fruit, may have an opportunity to share with famous not only for their quantity but Young trees begin to bear five or for their fine quality. Every farmer six years after setting out, and one in this long, sheltered valley raises farmer has packed 32 barrels from a this delicious fruit, even though he single tree. The orchardists here fol - does it on a small scale. There are low the most approved methods of ap- scores of orchards with from 200 to plc cultivation, allowing about 30 feet 1000 trees, and the largest of all, Iocat- of space between the trees, plowing up Ing through thu petal -carpeted orch- ed near Kentviile, contains 20,000 the ground, and spraying on the most modern principles. Some of the finest of the Nova Sco- tia orchards are situated at the east- ern end of the Annapolis Valley, in the vicinity of Kentville, Wolfville and Grand Pre, so that the very ground which Evangeline and Gabriel are sup- e oricu ur possr is o posed to have trod in the happy days C forma were even dreamed of. The `and the apples from a blossom -cover -'before 1755 is stippled with the wind - first apple trees were planted there by ed' .tee which particularly attracted blown petals; and the mighty currents the early Frees settlers, about 1633, summer the admiration of a June bride last of the tide -vexed Minas Basin bear and there are still existing trees that summer may later have reposed in the thousands of them over the very are thought to date back pretty near to cellars of Windsor Castle, or been dis- course of the vessels that took the hap - played in the show windows of some less Acadian into exile. London fruiterer If Evangeline could only return to Gravensteins, whose pure white earth today and time her visit for the eral gnarled apple trees that must blossoms are the first to reach first week in June, what a new and have been at least a couple of hundred perfection, are a favored product strange vision of loviness she would years old. of the Valley, and Baldwins, Red As- behold. Even in those ancient days From the small beginnings of the, trichina, Greenfngs, Northern Spies, when "The Sunshine of Saint Eulalie" Non - peaceful Acadians has developed one Bishop Pippins, King Tomkins, Nan- Iived and loved in Grand Pre," "a foot - of the largest and most profitable ap- pareils, Ribston Pippins, Golden Rus- path led through an orchard wide, and, plc -growing industries on the eontin- sets, Ben Davis and Sweet Boughs, are disappeared in the meadow." cut, for Nova Scotia apples today are SUN� among -other popular varieties raised. (3) Four hundred males the orchardists themselves in the rare beauty of the landscape in King's and Annapolis Counties. Large numbers patronize these excursions, especially from Halifax, the capital city, and many find a double pleasure in waik- ards and highways or viewing the tre great ocean of white from the pearly The entire crop of the valley aver- hills. ages between 700,000 and 1,000,000 bar - Apple culture in the ?-nnapelis Val- role a year and nets the growers any - ley through which the now famous Do-, where from $1,500,000 to $2,500,000 ac - minion Atlantic runs, now grown to f cording to size cf crop price, and other such immense proportions, had its in- conditions. The greater part of this ception a couple of centuries before noutput is sent to the British market; th h t' It al 'bili+ f i that time. In a long -abandoned orch- ard in the lovely Valley town of Para- dise, not leng ago, the writer saw sev- 2. Burdens -A significantly differ- : ent word from that in verse 5, where the Toad is that which we must carry jfor ourselves. Here the thought is of times 'when . "Mighty love doth cleave in twin i The burden of a single pain, And part it, giving half to him." ;The law of Christ -Compare especial- ly John 13. 34. A better reading here I is the future, ye will fulfil. 3. Something -So in Gal. 2. 0. The man who thinks so much of himself could, of course, not stoop to do what in India is called "coolie work" for I his brother, especially if he had been caught in some lapse. Those who ,!have learned Christ's lawfrom see- , ing him at"coolie work.} for men I (John 13. 5; compare Mark 10. 45) i will count it their privilege. When 1 he is nothing -le, 2 Cor. 12. 11 Paul humbly uses this phrase (nearly) of ' himself, Deceiveth himself--Nct ;other people, who can generally take i tht measure of such men, I 4. Prove -To apply a rigid and impartial test to our own performance is the surest check to conceit. Glory- iiia• -The thought seems to he that { when a man has really tested his own work he will feel no temptation to compare it with his neighbor's achieve- ! ment: he judges it by an absolute, not a relative, standard. If then he "glories" in it, it will be with no sort I of pride, for he knows its faults, but only with thankfulness to God, who has helped him. Paul very often uses this word `boast' in quotation marks, as it were, 5. For his responsibility for this r share -he e -h e must work he can i r� lar e never bear it himself before God. What then has he to do with other people's I responsibilities and the possibly in- `ferior faithfulness with which they shoulder t'iem? ' 6. Communicate --A n unintelligible archaism. It means go shares `e i the "catechnmen"--for the word here I got a technical meaning before long; compare especially Luke 1. 4-4s to share meals and other things with ' him who has ben telling him the: gos- pel story, Compare 1 Cor. 0. S.I. 7. There is probably no immediate link with the previous vxerse, but the thought is not far away, as the return to it in verse 10 shows. Selfishness i is the "sowing to the flesh." God is t not mocked -This is the converse ,,of I , such Old Testament conceptions as Psa. 37. 13, representing Jehovah as deriding the creatures of a day who! dare to defy him. The New Testa- i ment would never say this, but it can picture man deriding or (Rom. 2. 4) despising the patience which man's folly mistakes for importance. Yet all the time wild oats are sown, by 1 God's inexorable law wild oats come i up and are harvested, unless the sow- er has grace to pull them up and sow :mother tardy crop in the enfeebled 1 soil. 8. Flesh here is the antithesis of spirit, and includes the whole of hu- man nature when God is left out, just spirit is man's highest nature in vital union with God. Corruption- ; "What are men better than sheep or goats?" --destined for nothing but the grave -if they deliberately starve the one immortal part of them? 9. Well -doing - See paraphrase Two different words appear for "the { good": here what is seen to be good has the emphasis, in verse 10 the em- phasis is on internal quality. Due I season -Rebuking impatience: har- t vest cannot come a month after sow - 1 ing. I 10. Opportunity -The same word { ; as season. The marginal while we have seems preferable. Household - An American scholar has lately sug- gested that here and in Matt. 5. 47 i and 1 Tim. 5. 4 there is an allusion to a lost proverb like our "Charit:' begins at home" (which in Greek wee "The shin is farther off than the knee" Ocean "Deeps." Fifty-seven ocean "deeps" of more than 18,000 feet, based on 500 sound- ings, are now known -32 in the Paci- fic, 18 in the Atlantic, 5 in the Indian Ocean. The total area covered by these deeps altogether is only about 7 per cent, of ocean floor. 3,000,000 Cossack Boots. Three hundred thousand steers will yield 4 their hides to make the 3,- 000,000 Cossack boots just ordered in London. Each pair of legs takes nine feet of leather and each pair of fronts two feet. After the Argument. Judge -Now tell tween yourself and Defendant -Well, wuz two pairs of seven fire -bricks, what passed be - the complainant. your honor, there fists, one turnip, a dozen assorted ! hard names and a lump of coal. Pies FT T1 OF THE Too Few. Hub (during the spat) -11 don't be- lieve in parading my virtues, Wife -I don't see how you could. It takes quite a number to make a parade. Ilemuted In. "Row did you let that stitch in your side?" "Oh, got I ot hemmed in a crowd 4; +" HEAR o sudden fright or emotion may cause a momentary arrest of the heart's action, or some excitement or apprehension may set up a rapid action of the heart thereby causing palpitation. Palpitation, again, is often the result 'of digestive disorders arising from the stomach, or may be the result of over indulgence of tobacco or alcoholic drinks. The only way to regulate this serious heart trouble is to use Milburn's }kart. and Nerve Pills, Mrs, J. S. Nicholls, Listowell, Ont., writes: I. was weak and run down, my heart would palpitate and I would take weak and dizzy spells. A friend ad- vised -me to try Ivlilburn s Heart end 1 Nerve Pills, so I started at once to use theist, and found that I felt touch stronger. I cannot praise your medicine too highly, for it has done me x world of ' good." Mrthatn's Heart and Nerve P ills are 50cper box 3 boxes for $.25; at all dealers, or mailed direct by 'rhe T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toreeto, Ott,