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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1916-6-29, Page 7D1AU Was Caused By Change o Deo Etc. a. Diarrhoea arises from niariy causes such as, change of diet, change of water, change of climate, catching cold, the eating of unripe fruits, or anything that will cause or induce an excess of bile. \On the first sign of any looseness of the bowels it should not be neglected, but should be looked after immediately, for if not diarrhoea, dysentery or some other serious bowel compliant may ensue. Mr, Geo, Smith, Victoria, 13.C., writes: "It is 'e years ago since I first tried Dr, P i1'er's Extract of.Wild Strawberry. ona timber survey, and suf- fered•�n � was Y greatly from diarrhoea, caused by change of diet, etc,. A friend in the party gave neea few doses which gave the great relief. Since then I have been m survey work, and would as soon think of 'starting out on a trip without my compass and blankets as without my supply of Dr, Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry, which I consider the woods - need's best friend." Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw- berry has been on the market for the past seventy years, and is universally known as a positive cure for all complaints arising from any looseness of the bowels. When you, ask for." Dr. Fowler's" be sure you receive what you ask for as the,4e are many rank imitations of this sterling remedy placed on the market to try and fool the unsuspecting public. " The genuine is manufactured by The r. Milburn, Co., Limited, Toronto, dna ' Price, 35 cents. a. "WAR MAP" FAVORS ALLIES. British Official Shows Germans Have Lost Vast Territory. Lord Newton, Under-Secretary for Foreign Affairs, has no quarrel with Chancellor von Bethmann-Hollweg - for the latter's suggestion, recently made in an interview, that the war map should be used as thee basis for peace. "1 am much surprised at the Ger- man Chancellor," said Bai^on Newton recently, "for on my war map I found two points which I should judge would be highly distasteful to the Ger.. mans. "In the first place my war map shows that in Alsace„ Turkey, Togo- • land, the Kameruns, Southwest Africa and Galicia., the armies of the allies are occupying 676,000 square miles of Teutonic territory, or al- most six times as much as the arm- .cosi ofthe'Central powers are occupy- ing in territory of the allies. "In the second place my war map shows the, •sea and the ships upon it, .df which only an exiguous quantity, I observe, are German. "The late Rear Admiral Mahan. made it plain in his books that com- mand of the nea in war times has a perinanent effect; while command of the; land has an effect which manifest- ly is transitory." T Selected Itegipes. Sardine Sandwiches.—If sardines are mashed to a paste with their own oil and a taste of lemon juice, they. may be riiade into delicious sand- 'wiches. This is much more enjoyable because they are easier to handle than the split fish sandwiches. " Strawberry FluIL—One cupful strawberries clot in halves, one cupful marshmallows cut in. four pieces each, one cupful heavy cream whipped to stiff froth. Fold in three tablespoon- fuiss sugar, one-half teaspoonful ven- ire with fruit and marshmallows. Chill thoroughly and serve in dry glasses: Smothered Mutton Chops. — Put chops or sneak in bottom of covered bakingdish or casserole, sprinkle with salt and pepper and cover with layer of sliced potatoes. Sprinkle with flour, salt and pepper. Repeat layers of potatoes, slicing onions in through the layers if liked. Almost cover with hot water and bake one and one- quarter or one and one-half hours. Uncover the last half hour to brown top. Veal or pork may be used the same way, Parsnip Crognettes.—Season one pint cooked and mashed parsnips with one-half teaspoonful salt, one-eighth teaspoonful pepper, one teaspoonful 44 LEECHES ARE "UP." They Are Expensive to Buy Just Now, Because of the War. .dors. Julia Hen T 1e not often that a woman t1 elected a' t.'e110w of the Royal Geographi- cal Soelety, but -the explored one made in the Can. etd1an Rockies crosswise, with a cork fixed on the top .l u N o a r e h o f ofwild flowers by each stick. polishknives splendidly. Mrs, Julia • Hera Coils .also 1 spew deserved ex - Pot the knife polish in a saucer, ceptlonnt recogni- dampen .it and dip in the cork rising it , tion. IIsi book as a rubber This method never "Wild Flowers of scratches the knives and soon bright -1! tern Noriountaius,tlr Arnei i" ons them ' 1 winits beau* rdTablecloths cut down into small : fold eo1ore trayeloths sheets can become dust plates should be - sheets and shabby towels make good come a classic, dishcloths and household cloths gen-! with the further 'eraily Old stockings and vests make advantage of be - good metal polishers They can also ing a popular be cut up to line homemade quilts, classic owing to Old newspapers polish glass and area ° arrangement, The good substitute (rolled up tightly) for• flowers are group- firewood, a capital pad for stair car- ed by colors, one pets, and are of manifold uses in the ! section being do - kitchen. i voted to White, No fruit jar that has been stand- 1 Green and Brown ing for weeks is free from germs. Be- !ink fiinvers, another Red fore putting fruit in them they should j flowers, a a nd third be thoroughly sterilized by boiling in i Bette to Purple soda water. fi o n• e r s, and a When marking lin1 en handkerchiefs i f o u r t h Yellow with indelible ink, first starch the i to Orange. Mrs. handkerchiefs and iron them smooth, , Henshaw, in addl. ion to her Then you can nark them clearly with cal studies )stann one ease. of the 1eadiing When making egg custard pies, al- spirits in the ways heat the milk to the boilingDaughters of the , point before mixing it with the eggs. • Empire, and was sent last December by Sir Sam Hughes as a Captain in the d the under• the method of aw table sauce, two tablespoonfuls melted If this rule is followe butter and dash of cayenne. Add two crust will always be crisp. h beaten eggs and enough railed cracker When You l t one to hold the crumbs to make stiffenoughto shape;• Canadian Army on a special mission to England and France connected with the distribution of Christmas gifts to the troops at the Front. Our illus- tration llus tration shows the authoress in her mountaia costume with her favorite pony' h Canadian Pacific Rockies. at Lake Louise in the ant an ac c oc es, Ti E SUNDAY SCHO INTERNATIONAL LESSON JULY 2. Lesson I,—Paul At rf1iessalonictt And' RER(EA-.-Acts 17, 1-15. •- Golden Text, Acts 5. 31 Verse 1. Passed through--Theerre• ginal verb suggests travel ,along the great Roman road from the west, the via Egnatia. ApolIonia was about halfway to 'Thestalonica, thirty miles sonthwe:'t of AmphipoIis, which was near the mouth of the Strymon River, ' Th esalonica, still called Salc,niki, is, of course, a very handier place to- ` clay. It seems to have been the only one of the three pines to possess a synagogue. Verse 10 shows how, even after such terrible danger, Paul' clung to his principle of going first to the synagogue. He must at any cost find men prepared for the gospel i by loyalty to the Old Testament. Such when convince that Jesus fulfilled prophecy, would be mature and zeal- ; aux leaders for the infant church, fl R� i 3. "The Messiah must suffer" was .I MNS si n the one great doctrine which divided p the Jews instantly into two camps. The royal Son of David was the n. `�CI`� nn,`tional ideal, and therecognition oflsa.' 53 in such a connection was very bit - i - i ter to the Jews, In preaching this RASPBERRY LEAVES AND THYME doctrine the disciples were only en- SUBSTITUTES:STITUTES FOIL TEA, • i forcing the Lord's own "must" (Luke, 24. 26). Psa. 16 was mainly in mind! as the proof of the resurrection. It' ,ar Butter" Is Made by Adding was a true application; how could God "allow his Beloved One to see coo Flour, Milk, and Eggs to have no i rtaption?" And well might the apes-; Ordinary Batter. yarn while you wind it, place two flat ; ties apply that first to the Beloved, form into cones; . let stand one-half irons the proper distance apart, on _ _ _. _ _-.-_ ---- -- • and through him to all whom God 7 We are indebted to the Berliner hour, dip into beaten egg dluted with the table, stretch the yarn to them DIFFERENT KINDS OF FENCES. kinds of trees and shrubs that make loves. Tageblatt for much curious iiifoxma- one tablespoonful water, roll in fine and wind it conveniently. the best hedges. The chief fault 4, The large following of prosely- : tion gathered from learned authori- crumbs and fry in deep, hot fat. Lean meat has nourishing sand re- ' v- If Proper Care Is Taken the Wire with hedges is that they require a lot tes it to be noticed everywhere. They s at the Ministry of the Interior, d't SEP r' BOWELS EG L8I! ANI Avow CC I '� p N. When the bowels are not kept reeulat they become clogged up with waste and yaoiso:aous matter, eats ins constipation, biliousness, sick, ircadachei, piles, and all kinds of•Iiver troubles. Milburn'e Lane -Liver Pills will regu- 1.Lt:: the bowels' so that you may have a free and ca:y //l free every day, One pill every' ni,,ht for thirty days will. cure the legt s cases of constipation. Mr. john J. ,Smith, ilgirlbutg„ Ont., y: rills: "1 had been troubled for a great ~.•ilii. ,,'ith cu.r..trp:.tti: n, and tried many dill'.:~ .t remedies winch did erre no good. 1 ir::,a ,r :r:eci to try Milieurtr'e .Laxa-Liver Pills, and 1 have found them most bene cladl." - .. 7:111burn's I,axa-Liver Pills are 2.3 cents per vial, or five vials for $1.00; for ;le at all dealers, or mailed direct on , r: let of price by The T. Milburn Co., + :l. Toronto. Ont. Serve with tomato sauce. building qualities m ie , Baked Spiced Ham.—Freshen two should not neglect fats in our foods. pounds of ham, cut three inches thick, The best and most \thease digested two hours in cold water, if salty. way to take fat is innthe form of Drain, place in baking dish and pour olive oil. over it one-half cupful grape juice, Be sure that the kitchen table is the proper height. If it is a little too one cupful boiling water. Add two low, ora little too high; the position cloves and one -inch stick of cinna- in which o,, staz<d to accommodate Fence Will Last Indefinitely, of attention to keep up, and unless were of necessity peop e w io grey a mperia ysrco- Ithey are pruned' and the weeds and hungered after a Living God; for the ; tute, and the Health Institution of There are many kinds of fences, but grass that accumulate around them Jews gave them small encouragement: ; Bonn on food equivalents and food they may be divided roughly into `are mowed cons`.antly they become a' it Seas a very secondary place the' substitutes. These are nob synonym - four kinds; (1) stone fences; (2) live fertile breeding place for all kinds of proselyte had to fill. Being without ' ous terms. A food "equivalent" has fences or hedges; (3) wooden fences; pests. the Jews' great hindrance, their racial ian equivalent for almost the same value as the food it and (4) wire fences. _ All these fences' Where timber is cheap„ wooden pride, and attracted by the universal- . replaces. For example, margarine is have their good bad points, but ! fences can be profitably used but the ity of the gospel, which stirred the!butter. .:_..� .: there is a growing tendency with up- ;increase in the price of good lumber Jew to "jealously," they naturally' tute" merely imitates the taste of mon. Cover and bake gently untilyourself to its height will cause your to -date farmers to go in for wire fences. back to ache. 1 Never put the sugar from lemon Stone fences are of greatest use on I peel into calces. It is likely to make hilly rough country where the stones f them heavy. Save it. for sweetening are plentiful and it is difficult to drive i mills puddings or custard to either of in fence posts. Where the stones are' ' large and heavy they do not need! tender, about one and one-half hours. .Remove from liquid, add to liquid two tablespoonfuls chopped raisins, and thicken with one-hailf tablespoonful arrowroot dissolved in a little cold water. Fish Loaf.—One pound and a half of white fish,.. half cup of bread crumbs, two tablespoons butter, three- quarters cap milk, two eggs, one tea- spoon chopped parsley, three-quarters teaspoon of salt, one-fourth teaspoon pepper, three drops onion and one tea- spoon anchovy sauce. Boil fish, re- move skin and bone and chop. Mix with bread crumbs, butter _(melted), parsley, seasonings eggs -ell beaten and milk. Turn. into buttered mold, cover and steam one hour. Decorate with shrimps and serve hot with Dutch sauce. Casserole of Lamb.—Fry one onion in butter and dredge while frying with flour. Have ready one pint of cold, cooked lamb, diced and free from fat. hi h t a great improvement• makes them almost prohibitive except in a few cases. The old zig-zag rail fence served its purpose in its day, but wherever finances permit it should be ripped out and a modern fence put in its place. At the present time, when a new 1 f th proved good soil for the see o e world. Chief women—Compare verse 12. In Macedonia women had a far better social position than in Greece. Compare Lydia's story. 5. Jason—A well-known name in i what it replaces, as saccharine does sugar, but it is valueless as food. 1 But, in addition to these, there is an intermediate class of articles which are called "war foods," in which genuine food is "stretched" by Greek mythology from the Thessalian adulterating it with a certain pei.- w s r rs much repairing or nttenclir,g to,but p gfence is beim put up in nine cases Food carelessly exposed invites light small stones, are used the I + t; hero Jason (see William Morris's tell -,tentage of substitutes. Prof. Neu- ing if oto- of ten it is a wire fence. There g of his story). But sometimes mann, of Bonn University,has some cattle or sheepvery often break' y a 3 , are many reasons for this. First of ing g all, a w ire fence is a goo i deal thea Jews named Joshua (Jc suer) used rills interesting things to say about a It Makes a Difference: through. cheap - for a Gentile substitute, and this Jason' number of foodstuffs. White bread, Live fences or hedges are a charas-; er to put up than any of the ether may have been n case. he says, has disappeared altogether, —To a milk pudding if you let it teristic feature of British and especi- i kinds. With proper care it will last y taken stand between cooking and serving ally English farming. Nothing will ; a lifetime, and it is hog -proof and : 6. Rulersof the t exclusively 'well well-known I -br ead.en Amongbyother for an hour on a rack in a warm place beautify the landscape more than to sheep -proof. politarch is a and well covered with a cloth. It have the fields divided b bed es and . Although a wire fet.ce ° p reeled with Thessalonica, several kinds of bread which have arisen ow- that g •1 tion, show it. Turn ing to the exigencies of the w + nee it is put tom war the makes it taste creamier. it is these more than anything else', u needs practicallyno attention it of whose inscriptions - p ' ed . . . upside down—A colloquial best known are "Cologne bread," —To the shape of a boiled pudding that make the rural district of the :should be made a rule to y;o around 7bread," i€. it'stands for a minute or two be- Old Country so attractive to Ameri-'every six months or every year at herb, used by Paul in Gal. 5. 1 ,and ; "straw -flour and bleed fore being turned out. It makes it can visitors. • For a variety of rea- 'some definite time and tighten up the in vernacular documents, but appar- ;bread. "Cologne bread"is made of less liable to break. sons, hedges, however, have found ;wires ncl do any other little i el?airs ently beneath the dignity of classical a mixture of maize, rice, and barley. --To anything containing baking comparatively little favor with Can necessary.If this is done regularly, a Greek; it is characteristic oft fieia] Newe to ?Ott percentur .ofdpowderedot nssfrat,m; it 15 powder if it is put into the oven with adi n and American farmers. The (day in most cases will be ell.the time Testament freedom from artificiality.' lightning speed after' mixing. The , climate in America is mosti contin- ` ken u in making the repairs, and The World, as in Luke 2. 1, a term is very moist, rather sour, leaves a powder begins to work as soon as it ;ental, that is to say, there are ex-' the fence will last twice as long arid , for the Roman empire; the rest of the bitter taste in the mouth, contains touches the moisture, and the quicker d ld duseful.—Canadianf' world was hardly known. much waste matter, often produces Acld this to the cool,ang onion. When 1 cit that sent cooking begins the lighter the Cremes of heat an cold, an this is : be twice as Colin- ; irritation or inflammation of the not favorable for the growth of the ! tryman. 1 7. Another king—The; e Jews are reviving the city the Master bowels, and is in general not to be f to the cross (Luke 32, 2). If the em- recommended. "Blood bread" is ob- well mixed and seasoned • turn all into pudding or cake. _ casserole. Add one tablespoonful —To any cheese dish if grated stale butter to pan and two tablespoonfuls cheese is used rather than sliced fresh, flour; brown and add enough water, no matter how thin the slices. It is lamb broth or left over gravy and digestible and more delicate. �'- The leech, the vampire' of the water to make sauce for meat. Sea- —To the success of an omelet if a worm tribe, is both scarce and dear.son with one-fourth teaspoonful little fat is melted in the pan until This is due in part to the vastly thyme, one-fourth teaspoonful sweet increased then poured out and the pan increased demand for them, but more marjoram, one-half teaspoonful celery !rubbed with soft paper before putting to the fact that in the pre-war days salt, and pepper and salt to suit, in the mixture. It makes the omelet nearly all the best medical leeches Slice two good-sized carrots over meat less likely to stick. came from Hamburg, and that source in �iseld. casserole, pour in gravy, and cook —To all batters if they are let of supply is now, of coarse, entirely one and One-half hours- Add. one • can drained peas, cook fifteen minutes Turkey also used to send out occa- longer, and serve. sional consignments Smyrna pro- Potato Salad.—Cold meats and po- duced a large jet-black leech that was tato salad make a typically delicates- highly esteemed by the medical fra- sen dinner, and nothing tastes better ternity Naturally, now, this supply on a very hot day. Real German has also ceased. potato salad is delicious, here is the The leech is a slow-growing crea- recipe; Cut boiled potatoes into slend- ture,. At two years of age he •cloea er slices and mix with them two raw not average more than an inch in onions, minced, and a tablesoponful of length, and it takes from three to chopped parsley. Season with salt five years before he is fit fore-attes- and pepper to taste, and two table- tation, as a fully qualified medicinal spoonfuls of salad oil mixed with a bloodsucker. dessert spoonful of vinegar. Toss True, there is the British leech, still and turn, and put into the salad bowl. to be found in fair abundance in and Set in the ice for two hours. Just around the Norfolk Broads, and in before serving stir into the salad ,a parts of Kent, Surrey and Sussex.1 But he is practically useless from the doctor's point of view Had Weak ack; and Kidneys. COULD HARDLY MOV lF- 1 L II. )-' "When the back 'becomes weak and starts to ache atid pain it is a sure sign that the kidneys are not performing thcir functions properly. On the first sign of backache Doan's Kidney Pills should.be taken and serious kidney troubles prevented. ne N. Mr. Frauds McInnes, Woodbine, S , writes: "I deein it my duty to let you know the wonderful results 1 have re - Delved from the use of R'oan's Kidney Pills, For a long time X had been suf- fering from weak back apd kidneys. I used to suffer the most atAtlight, and some times could hardly move in becl.witi, the pain. X could do no hard labor on account of illy hack. A ,friend advised me to give Doatt's KiciJteY Pills a trial, end I,a+n glad I did for the pain in my kidneys is gone; my back is strong, and I can perforin any hard labor and get MY .good night's sleep, I only used three boxes of the pills. Doan's Kepley Pills are 50 cents per box, or 3 boxes for :1.25; at all dealers, or {nailed direct ern receipt-of-price=by' The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Termite, Ont. When ordering direct specify+' "Doau's" HOW TO OPERATE ;LINEREPT ' pire had realized the rivalry of this tamed by mixing 20 litres of fresh Told by C. W. Sakes, of the Ontario Agricultural College. •+ 1 "other emperor" as soon as the Jews blood, 10 litres of water, and some f did Christianity might have been salt with 120 pounds of rye -meal and !than a tiny sect. But Providence mixed, with the addition of yeast and !deferred the war between the two em-; leaven. Dr. Neumann describes the t'1 the church was too num- result as tough and leathery to cut, 1 quencher in blood before it was more ; 15 per cent. of potato starch meal, Aires until e v erous and too universal to be killed of a "neutral" taste,. and difficult to in digestion fumes get nixed with a certain pro- etf, assimilate » To the farmer who owns a gasoline portion of air that it becomes a pow-' g. Troubled—As slsewhnre (for ex-; "Stretched' Foods. stand for at least an hour between engine, and never has had the time orf erful explosive, and this is the source ample, John 14.1), this word is much Butter is one of the articles to mixing and cooking. It makes it opportunity to make much of a study i of power in the gasoline engine. too weak a rendering. ;which the process of "stretching" is lighter. If there is to be stiffly beat -of the troubles and trials of his will.- Assuming that the piston is right 9. The actual accused being out tr' applied. After being stretched it is en white of egg in the mixture, ing helper, we hope to give some in- , up to the cylinder Bead when the fly ;reach, they could only exact bail, pre- !called "war butter." The stretching though, it must not be added until the last moment before cooking. Pure Air Blue. Pure air is blue, because, as New- ton tells us, the molecules of the air have the thickness necessary to re- flect blue rays. When the sky is not perfectly pure the atmosphere is : tion of its master and ills or accidents blended with perceptible vapors, and to which gasoline engines are subject the diffused light is mixed with a remedied, it is unable to give ffeicient large proportion of white. A man writes in to point out that formation, gained from practical ex- I wheel of the engine is revolved, the sumably for their tieing sent away. is clone by mixing butter with flour, perience, that may enable him the piston;is drawn outward and acting' 10. Bercea—Some forty miles milk, and yolk of eggs. This is nour- better to understand the afflictions of drawssouthwest. ishing enough, but it does not `'keep." like the piston of a pump, air , his almost human servant; for 31: across the surface of, or through the! 11. Readiness- A strong word, ,Other mixtures of larch, milk and many ways the gasoline engine has f gasoline iM the earborator. The air suggesting eager attention. mashed potato contain so very small a human - carries the gasoline with it partly in 12. The influential position of th proportion of fat that they can hardly cannot and will not work unless its form of a mist into the cylinder. ladies of the upper class is character - 'be recommended even for frying pota- health receives the careful erten- Gasoline is vaporized and the mixture tinctly suggests that among the Greek toes. With regard to fruit, the ex - of air and gas forms the charge which population the trend of public opirtiar? cellent harvest of last year favored Operates the engine. The return depended largely on them. As se' the production of enormous quantities stroke compressest this mixture in: often happens; they were more sri- of jam. But the stocks are beginning the clearance chamber in the cylinder ously disposed toward religion than to give out, and "stretched" or "war heed, or that part of the cylinder far- ' the men. jam" is taking its place. In this ease these removed from the fly wheels. ! 14. Throughout this narrative We ; the "stretching" is done by adding The mixture cannot escape because see the effect of the Master's corn-' beetroot, . carrot, and turnip. An the valves are closed and held there' mind (Matt. 10. 23). To stay anti; "equivalent" which had a great vogue by the pressure of the gas against face the danger would have been fool -110r a time was a curious mixture of them, and it is squeezed into a small , hardy: Paul could do more for th- ' nia:.heci potato, ground herrings, -and volume Just as the piston almost istic of Macedonia. This. verse dis- various spices, but it was filially pro - reaches the end of its inward stroke gospel at Borne by Ieaving for anoth- ; hibited as being dangerous to health, an electric spark, caused by the auto er field and so sating his life. The ' For whipped cream, so beloved by and satisfactory service In doing this we shall treat the matter in three short separate arti- half" cupful of mayonnaise and pour there must be something seriously cies, intimately connected, because one the rest f the dressing over the salad: wrong with the law' of gravitation, naturally follows the other. In this The mayonnaise may be omitted with' geeing everything is "going up," one, first of the series, let' -tis then dis- cuss that which each operator must dressing. first become familiar with the prin- 4 ciples of operation. Perhaps the How to Do Housework More Easily. To accumulate a lot of old rubbish, letting it lie undisturbed and lumber up the cupboards, is a thing no good housewife will approve, But the war has made us all more thrifty and taught us to make.instant use of things we used to throw away --not to hoard them •up, but to turn them to account as soon as possible. - Old lace curtains,. too ragged to use. make first-rate window polishers. Cut them into squares and -tack the edges round to prevent fraying. Odd bits of old velvet polish furni- ture, silver and plate as well as chamois leather.. Small scraps of soap should never be thrown away. Collect them' in " a jar, add water and stand jar in oven until soap is melted. On washing day that jar is a welcome ft`iend. Soap- suds are a good fertilizers fol cab- bages and other vegetables, Nutshells, died orange peel and burnt match ends are useful, mixed with small coal, for fires. Capital fire- 'lighters etut be made from fire- ‘ thin~ sticks bound together in the,center, COULD NOT SLEIP llo res Weib'e So Bade To the thousands of people who are tossing on sleepless beds night after night, and to whose; eyes sleep will not come, Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills offer the blessing of sound, refreshing slumber, because they restore the equilibrium of the dct"anged nerve centres, thus restor- ing strength and vitality to the whole system. Mr. Arthur McCutchcon, Mt. Pisgah, N.B.i writes: "X have been much troubl- ed with my nerves; and could not sleep for hours after I would go to bed. I woulct toss and turn from one side to the athei efore I could go to sleep, 1 would then wake up in the night and lie awake a long: time before I would .get to sleep again. I •thought X would try Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, as they were recommended so highly, I now, get to sleep without any trouble; my nerves scevn quieted, and when I lie down I go. to steely quickly. Anyone who is both- ered with their nerves should :keep a 1 box on hand," Milburn's Heart and Nerve.Pilis are 50 cents per box, 3 boxes for •$1.25; at all dealers or mailed direct en receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co„ Limited, r'orouto, Ont most important thing of all is to have * sea—At a place called Drum,, pr ob••tbly•; German women, a `•substitute" Iran a thorough knowledge acid under- noetic breaking of the current from 15 Pauls decisi n to remain at standing of just what to do to start the cells. is produced right in the' ° been found consisting of :Alger, water, ins and why it is donee So midst of this highly compressed gas. Athens alone for a time is referred to vanilla extract, and gelatine --a most the e in I. Thess. 3. 1,but this implies that "take ` +_ many engine operators know what to The result is a forceful explosion, Timothy had tickly responded to deceptive thing that cannot take. in all right, because they have been and the piston is shot outward at ter- • m , y q • , ` a sciioai girl. do l g rifle speed, due to the rapid ex ran- Pauls reguest, Silas presumably stay- Of the numerous plants either al - told and shown by the expert at the p , p expan- ing on at Beroea, -unless the "we"' in' time of installation, but it wasn't ex- sion of the gases ignited by the spark. ready used as equivalents for tea or pl1 to them why such a thingwas It reaches the eixd of its stroke, and that passage is to be referred to Paul strongly recommended, dried rasp - the impulse transmitted la the is-' and Silas, instead of to Paul alone. berry leaves and thyme are far away' done. Therefore, when anything goes! + y pperhaps P ,rime favorites. Gere far t ie - wrong they haven't the slightest idea 1 ton rod to the crank shaft and fly which is aerha s more probable. the 1 " start to look for the cause wheel carries the piston back again, , Paul's craving for companion hip is minds its readers that in view of the where to and an expensive delayThis time it forces the burnt gases out strongly marked throughout.; there scarcity of tea there are many "iia of the trouble, a� c p; c eon the k was something in his temperament, er teas" which though lacking the is forthcoming before an expert ar- of the cylinder through ie o haunt livet g g rives. Gasoline, as a liquid, is very vola- tile, that is, in the presence of air it will easily evaporate into and mix with the air. If an open vessel con -1 taining gasoline were exposed to the ' air in a small room for some time, This is called a four-stroke, or four- and c. ur an d then a match struck, an explosion cycle engine, b'ecau o it. takes four of an intense heat would occur that strokes of the piston to perform the would probably destroy the building, complete cycle erg operant ' is neces:- sar. to produce one e, sion. This duo to the vapor from the gasoline 'y p ,,� type, for various tarter valve, which is mechanically opened, ,his cii cunistances (of health far in- ;alkaloid theirie, are very agreeable and the return outward stroke draws stance), that made solitude peculiar- drinks. Among these are the young in a fresh charge of gas, the next in- ly hard to bear• t dried and chopped leaves of the weed stroke compresses it, ignition strawberry, blackberry, bilberry,. w...-.. _. ...- takes place an the action is repeated ." ! marshberry, cranberry, black currant; all over again, holly, cherry, birch, elm, willow, wild ,; . 'Ilse, blackthorn, and inoirrttair a h. Mec'rsthatnri, out of which pipes,': he a'iitioiincement naively states cigar and cigarette holders are cut, that it depends on the taste of the itt.' is a mineral found in irregularly' dividual which leaves he prefers. rounded lunipe scattered through j drift material washed down from i l"ltr Cruelty sof Justice, mountains, The largest deposit of ' ,fix. risoner•-•-.Surel you' ain't go- it� la. P y y is in the plains of Eskishehr, Asra in to turn me out of gaol in weather Minor.g like this, combining with the air and creating an exceedingly conibustible mixture. Gasoline in itself is not more danger- ous than coal oil; it is only when its Countryman, seems to be preferable to the two -e pie engine for ordinary farm use,- '(,'anadiian ` 1 Mcerschatim.