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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1916-8-10, Page 3• -44 eye Was Camsed y Change of Me% Etz, Diarrhoea arises from many causes such as, change of diet, change of water, Change of climate, catching cold, the eating of unripe frultseor anything that will cause or induce an excess of bile. 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 complaint may ensue. Mr. Geo. Smith, Victoria, B.C., mites: w. • "It is five years ago since I first tried Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild strawberry. was then on .a timber survey, and suf- fered greatly from diarrhoea, caused by change of cliet, etc. A friend in the party gave me a few closes -which gave me great relief. Since then I have been in 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- man's best friend." Dr, Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw- berry has been on the market for the past seventy years, and is universally etiown as a positive cure for all complaints erising from any looseness of the bowels, • When .you ask for "Dr, Fowler's" be sure you receive what you ask for as there are many rank imitations of this keeling remedy placed on the market to try and fool the unsuspecting public. The genuine is manufactured by The r. Milburn, Co., Limited, Toronto, Dnt. Price," 35 cents. HEDGEROW NOMADS. Gipsies Are Soul of Honor in Their Personal Relations. 0 e onter Eggs for 11ot Days. Nature is a pretty good judge of what is the best for us, and so when the really hot weather Conies we gen- erally feel a distaste for meat or other heavy foods, and naturally turn SUisiDAY 114,Tg R NAT 10 NA le 1...E3$;aN. AUGUST 13, • Lesson VU, -The Grace of Giving, 2 Cote 9. Golden Text, - Tested Recipes. Acts 20, 35. Peanut Vilma-Pub a thin layer of • Verse 1. The Saints -"God's people," freshly cooked rice into a shallow ba'k- as we have paraphraued, in Jerusalem, ing dieh. Sprinkle it with salt and where Improverished largely by the dots of butter. Top it with a layer famine (Acts 11. 28), which had 00 - of finely ground peanuts, then add an- casioned the former gift of the gentile How to Correct Failure of Lights. Open circuits -usually come from broken wires or from loose or discon- nected terminal wires at one or more cif the electrical units of the system. In most connectors the wires are sold - to the lighter clishes; at the same time other laver of rice, then one of pea- . ered when the system is fitted, and if it is very poor policy not to look after • Chrietians. But we must not forge; n Its and so on until the dish is full one of these became dislodged due to their nutritious qualities, for extreme , . Bake it twenty minutes and serve it in 1 communism, undertaken in the en - the consequences a their experhnent the solder having become crystallized heat is likely to lower our vitality with tomato sauce. thusiasm of their conviction that the or jarred loose, the -wire does not e• e sta ices eggs ed, and provision for wally needs ac- to -work its way entirely anyhow. Cheese and Rice Croquettes. -Add advent 'would be speedily accomplish. take long Under these e'r-ume '-- one-half of a cupful of grated cheese free of the terminals. Often it is come to the rescue, and we turn with to a pint of bailed rice; season it with cordingly was needless. hand to find such defects unless the man -about other people's good deeds. terminals are each carefully examined pleasure and relief to some mono novel cayenne and salt, and add a wellebeat- I 2. 1 glory. Paul was a very boastful ways of serving them wen the incesw'with this thought in mind, says Motor sant boiled, fried, poached and Stram- make the mass properly moist, Mix Ile kept the unstable Corinthians up I en egg and enough cream sauce bo Age. There are many instanees bled. The following recipes will give it well; form it into small rolls or , to the mark by committing them in ad -1 where a connection looks to' be all enough variety to add a zest to the balls; roll it in bread crumbs wet with vanes, in talk with other Christians toirighte but which in reality is no con - food and stimulabe the jaded appet- egg, and fry it in deep, hot fat, , I a generosity they had promised, from , necticrn at all when investigated close - Apple Syrup Custard. --One-quarter which it is clear not a few of them 1Y, pometimes, when the connector of a cupful of apple syrup, one and were in danger of receding. Mace- is all right, the fault lies in the bind - three -quarters cupfuls of milk, two donia-Including the far more goner- ing posb nut having worked loose or eggs, one-quarter of a teaspoonful of 011$ and high-minded Philippians. Paul fallen off,with the result that the salt, one-half of a teaspoonful of van- , used their generosity as an incentive terminal can move around on the post, lila, two tablespoonfuls of sugar. for the Corinthians in the previous causing a very poor contact, if any. Beat the eggs just enough to mix the chapter. Stirred up -Paul uses a term Do nob mistake simply a. burned whites and the yolks. Add the oth- 1 capable of a bad n.eaning, just as the out lamp filament for trouble in the er ingredients, and bake the custard in1 writer "to the Hebrews" daringly system. Too often the driver will cups for fifty minutes in a slow oven.1 speaks of the "provocation of love." examine the bulb that does not light If you bake it in one dish, use three (10. 24-see,last week's note on 1 Cor. eggs.13. 5). It is the one field in •which Potato Turnovers. -This is a good rivalry is a good thing, for love steri- lizes all its. microbes. way to serve meat and potaboes. Boll 3. The brethren -Especially Titus ite: Creamed Eggs. -Use little fireproof pans for this, and proceed as before, but pour a tablespoonful of cream over each egg, If a more substantial dish is needed, boll some rice in stock, season it well, and half fill the pan with it before adding the egg and crea.m. Creamed Eggs and Potato. -Place a layer of smoothly mashed and well - seasoned potatoes in the dish or lit- tle pans (previously greased), and then an egg on the top as before. and, failing to notice the broken m- oment, will cause himself a great deal of trouble tracing the connec- tions throughout the system, whenin reality there is nothing but the lamp Creamed Eggs With Fish. -If you and mash enough potatoes to . and "his brother" (so render 2 Cor. 8. itself to blame. If you cannot see flake them carefully free of skin and egg, sufficient salt and pepper, an have any remnants 0 cooked fish, pint measure. Add one well -beat and i 18), who from that verse appears to be plainly whether the dark bulb is broil, none other than Luke. The notable en or not, try a. known good one, and bone, add 'salt and pepper and mix with some white sauce and add a lit- tle mashed potato. Line some little Quite a number of gipsies are in the greased pans with this, add an. egg as armies of Europe, both as allies and before, and pub into the oven to set. enemies of Britain, for they are inter- Fricasse of Eggs. -Boil the neces- national and know no country as their sary number of eggs hard and cut in own, says London Answers. Their half. Remove the yolk, and add to origin is a mystery, although it is it any tiny remnants of finely minced certain they hail from the East. It is meat, a few bread crumbs, salt, pep - generally thought they come from per, a very Utile chopped parsley Egypt -hence their name -but it is by and grated lemon rind. Stuff the eggs with this and put the remainder aside. Make sufficient white sauce (using half milk and half stock or water). Grease the bottomof a cas- serole, put in the eggs, stir the re- mainder of the stuffing into the sauce they are soul of honor, and a gipsyand pour over the eggs. Make very may be trusted to keep his • plighted ' hot in the oven, and serve boiled rice in another casserole. A very little word and to stand by his friend. They . bacon cut into dise improves this dish. possess a certain lofty pride, a cer- ,. tain proud code of honor which a crambled Eggs.With Rice:, -Have . ititc, season it with saliil pepper and even if they did meet the need. Hence gipsy would rather die than lower. ready some boiled rice, allowing half m buttedr, add about one-eighth of a the wise provision of the weekly gift, Daughters are more useful than I a teacupful to each person. For poun of grated cheese. Pour the a regular sacrifice hallowing the Lord's sons in gipsyland and the parents people. allow twoeggs, and cook them sauce over the cooked cauliflower at day. John Wesley was wise as usual often put obstacles in the way of the i very lightly, adding the Tice and stir - girls taking the man of their choice. ring it well in with salt and pepper to Thus elopements are common and season. Serve very hot, easy. There are no windows to climb out of and no ladders to scale. Probably the custom of destroying everything that belonged to a dead to cubes, allowing about half a cup- gipsy is dying out, as it is a very ex- ful to each person, and to each serve pensive custom, but it is still done ing of bread about eight little pieces with the bigger families who are the nobility of the Romany people. no means certain. They have been thought to be the Ten Lost Tribes also, and they certainly speak of all non -Romany as Gentiles. Gipsies are regarded as a nuisance wherever they go, as pariahs and out- casts, but in their personal relations one tablespoonful of flour. Turn bhe discovery of an inference from the mass on a well -floured board, roll it Greek, obvious when once pointed out, out carefully, and cut it into disks incidentally shows us why Titus is not the size of a saucer. On each disk named in the Acts. We must go to place a large spoonful. of cold meat the Epistles to see how important at the light switch to see if there are chopped very fine and highly season- these two brothers were, modestly any defective connections there. Then ed. Turn the potato dough on itself having suppressed their record where examine the wires going out of the and pinch the edge together as if we should have expected it to figure if that, too falls to light, it is time to delve deeper into the wiring intrica- cies. One of the first points to look is making an ordinary turnover. fat the turnover on a flat greased pan, brown them in a hot oven, and serve them with brown or tomato sauee. Cauliflower With Cheese Cream Bounty, here and in verse 6, is, literal. Dressing. -Wash a fresh cauliflower ly, blessing; see note there. Extor- or as many heads as you need. Boil tion -The word usually rendered water in the kettle in which the vege- covetousness. Even though they had tables is to be cooked, salt it well and promised this gift to a good work, add the cauliflower while the water Paul was acutely sensitive to the pos- is boiling. Cook it until it is tender. sibility that by postponement and hur- ried collection themoney might be got To prepare the dressing, heat one cup - ultimately by methods unworthy of the ful of sweet milk in a double boiler; thicken it with a level tablespoonful of high privilege of Christian giving. It might come as an irksome duty, and cornstarch dissolved in a little cold God would know those coins again, largely. 5. Make up beforehand - Superin- tending such arrangements for collec- tion as Paul sketched in 1 Cor. 16. Eggs With Fried etread.-This met- hocl,. of serving eggs and bacon is economical. Cut some stale bread in - THOUGHTS FOR THE DAY. Let iis be of good cheer, remember- ing that the misfortunes hardest to bear are those which never come. He who does wrong does wrong • a - gainst himself. He who acts unjustly acts unjustly to himself, because he smooth and very moist with some makes himself bad. -Marcus Aurelius. white sauce, salt and pepper. Line Wit must grow like fingers ; if it.be the potatoes thickly with this. Break taken from others 'tis like plums an egg into each, cover with potato stuck upon blackthorns ; they are for 'and' bake until the potato is lightly a while, but come to nothing. -Selden. browned. When free from conjugal and par- ental ill -temper the love of wife and CEufs Mollets.r-Have ready boiling mother will preserve a woman's water and put the eggs in, and keep charms and endow her with mannew the water boiling for five minutes. At ones. . once place the eggs in &Id water and A man cannot speck but he judges leave them for 15 minutes. Then himself. With his will or against his shell very carefully. The object is will, be draws his portrait to the eye . of his companions by every word.- to cook the egg sufficiently to shell Emerson. them without the youks being hard. There is some help for the defects Thus cOoked, drain well and place of fortune ; for if a man cannot at- them in a casserole, and cover with tain to the length of his wishes he may shrimp or tomato, onion or curry have his remedy by cutting them sauce, and serve with plain boiled rice. shorter. -Cowley. •Poached Eggs With Onions. -Take --- -e. two or three onions, peel, and par - "No, you won't," exelainiecl the boil them, slice, and fry until quite brown. Fry some squares of bread, patient as he rose in his bed. "There's spread the onions on six votes to one against it. Gimme these, and serve lay clothes." of bacon. Fry the bread and bacon in hot fat in a frying pan, and break the eggs in, stir and cook until be- ginning to set. Dust with salt and pepper, and serve very hot. Surprise Eggs. -Choose pobatoes all of a size and bake them: Cut off a piece lengthwise, and scoop out as much potato as possible. Mash it illBOIVELS REGULAR 'ANDAV0113 CONTIPATION. When the bowels are not kept' regale: they become clogged up with waste and poisonous matter, causing constipation, biliousness, sick headaches, piles, and all kinds of liver troubles. Milborn's LaxaeLiver Pills will regu- late the bowels so that you may have a free and easy motion every day. One pill every night for thirty days will cure the worst cases of constipation. Mr, John J. Smith, Elginburg, Ont., writes: "I had been troubled for a great while with constipation, and tried many different remedies which, did me 130 good. I happened to try IVIilburres Laxa-Liver Pills, and I have found them most bene- ficial," Milburies Laxa-Liver Pills are 25 emits per vial, or five vials for $1.00; for sale at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. the last minute before you serve it, after draining the water from the vegetable, and serve it on hot buttered toast Household Hints. Lemons will keep fresh if stowed in dry sand separately. Tomato juice will remove ink stains from the hands. Never allow fresh meat to remain in paper; it absorbs the juice. A dish of cold water in the oven will prevent cake from burning. Dry flour applied with a newspaper is an excellent .and easy way to clean tinware. Salt will remove the stain from silver caused by egg when applied dry with a soft cloth. To get cake out of pan whole when taken from the oven set it on a wet cloth for five minutes. Never keepvinegar or yeast in stone crocks or jugs; their acid at- tacks the glazing, which is said to be poisonous. Put a silvered spoon into the most delicate glass and boiling hot liquid can be poured into it without breaking it. • A delicious salad is Made of boiled beets, scooped out, filled with sliced vegebables and served on lettuce leaves with French dressing. Don't go on the theory that the less you eat in the summer the cool- er you will be. Eat moderabely of rather dight but nourishing food. Corn should always be cut from a poached egg on each. By parboil- the cob very carefully -slitting the ing the beim before frying tho flavor middle of each row of kernels with a is rendered far more mild. sharp knife and scraping out the Little Egg Pies. -Have ready two pulp. hard-boiled eggs chopped and half a pint of white sauce well flavored. Stir the egg into the sauce. Line the required number of little fireproof pipkin s with mashed. potato, fill with the sauce, cover with potato, rough up with a fork, and bake until the potato is coloeed. Birds' Nests. -These are generally made with sausage nteut, but they are cheaper if mashed potato is used. Boil .the eggs hard, and cover fairly thickly with smoothly, mashed and welleseasonoi potato: Egg, crumb, and fry a golden brown. Cut in two with a sharp knife, andserve very hot. Spanish Eggs.7-Three-parts cook three large, ripe tomatoes (bake thein or boil them, whichever is most con- venient), rub through a sieve. Put 1 oz. of dripping in a pan, add the toms to plup, season with pepper and salt, Add the eggs, stir over tho fire un- til the eggs begin to set, and serve very hot on squares of buttered toast. 'This makes an excellent centre to serve in a wall of savory rice or spread on boiled alumni. CURIOUS FACTS. Water rolls off cabbage -leaves be- caune they are covered with a very fine dust. Dark clothes ere the warmest be- cause they attract more heat from the sun. Dusty shoes are always the hottest because polished shoes throw off the heat. A negro has black eyes because that color defends them from bhe strong sunlight. The bubbles in a teacup follow the spoon because it atteacts them just as a magnet attracts steel. It is in the lungs that mei; blood be - domes red. Before it gots there it is of a dark purple color. Plants grow quicker on bright moonlight nights because such nights produce dewr which is very geoci Lor plants. A kettle "sings" becatise the air in the water escapes by fits aril starts, and so makes the '"singing" noise. when he ordained the penny a week ! 6. Bountiful -Paul applies the thought. of Gal. 67 7 to one more of its many fields. That large -handed bounty is a "blessing" (see above) may be il- lustrated by Shakespeare's great line about mercy "It blesseth him that gives and him that takes." '7. Giving is to be (J.) calculated, not socket, for thig is a very common point of open circuiting. Watch the Battery. Shaking of the wire due to con- tinuous road work will often work the wire end loose from the binding screw, which Is a none too perman- ent econection, anyway, due to the space limitations. So far, we have devoted our atten- tion entirely to those troubles that come to the lighting system when the engine is running. Having bouched upon practically every pos- sibility that could cause this condi- tion, we can now turn to the things that might prevent the lights from behaving properly when the engine is not running. The first thing to expect when they go out or get dim under these condi- tions is that the battery has become discharged through some cause of causes. Besides short circuits, bat- teries can become Idischarged in a number of other ways, the most com- mon of which are the result of over- loading the starting or the lighting system, the electrolyte being too low in the cells, or the battery being loose izi its container, so that it can 'Move around and become damaged, Current Leaks. Another souree of annoyance is battery discharge due to lighting or starting overloads. Naturally if there Is leakage of current due to a short circuit, somewhere, the genera- tor and the entire system are called upon to furnish more energy than, would be -required normally, and this overloading results in battery drain- age, A good way bo tell if there is cur-, rent leakage is to note the position of the indicator handon the ammeter when he engine is not operating, and no lights are on. The hand Should point to zero, since no current is be- ing demanded, nor any being put into the battery. 'Unless the instrument is oub of calibration, if the hand indi- cates that current is being usedothen. it Is time to look up leakage pointe. To make sure if the ammeter is cor- rectly calibrated. disconnect one of the battery terminals and see if the hand then swings to zero; if it does there is leakage. But if it remains one side or the other of the zero mark, the trouble is in its calibration, and it is well to remember how much it is off, for futiare refefence, in reading the instrument. Use Care in Starting. Most all of us have gone along the street at some time or other, and. heard a motor churn and churn under the power of an electric starter with- out any apparent results. This is one of the most frequent causes of storage battery trouble ac- cording to a service representative of the Willard Storage Battery Co. He explained that very few motorists seemed to realize the immense amount of electrical power which is required to turn a motor, and what a consid- erable amount of driving at charg- ing speed is necessary tcr restore same amount of current to the battery. A little care in operating the self- starter will obviate this trouble. The driver shoulrl always make sure that the starbing switch is thrown before attempting to operate the self-starter. Somethnmes the gasoline tank is em- pty and under such conditions no amount of cranking would start the motor. The ignition button should always be pressed in firmly and all wire con- nections should be tight. Occasion- ally the gasoline mixture is too weak and on most cars this can be adjust- ed from the dash. The coil and dis- tributor should be kept perfectly Try in order for the current to reach the spark plugs. Had We lie COULD HARDLY MOVE IN When the back tW-COintS Teak •4lid arts to ache Med pain, it is a sure eigei that the kidneyeeire nut Performing thelt funetioes properiee ,, Il e now:er3vti°vtiId; ' the:t til:.:::::werdioss°ttimtres el :::i. r: el* i Pli ne -fro; ref bs ;ua4cikots::::/b;1 t kel i exelDe1 tt I, al,i4Y0. riey;1 Kidney Pille Should be taken and seriong kid ey troubles prevented- ,, e ! Pills, 14'0 a. long time ,ha e.ea suf.; feriae fro in weak baek arid ki neye, I Used to salter the most at night, and eel* tines eoulet harellY inove in bed with the pain. 1 could do no hard labor gill EkeeOtlat of my back,. A. friend advise me to give Dciants cpiner Pi% a tris rd,idneys is gone; my back is stretig, and at n glad / di for the polio In tria‘ eau perform any hard labor and get iny eeeti. night's sleep. I only Used three boxes of the pills." Doan's Itid.riey Pills are 50 cents per box, or 8 boxes for $1.26; at all dealer, 0i mailed direct en receipt of price tier The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. When ordering direct specify "Dome's," rrt NEWS FROM ENGLAND NEWS 13Y MAIL ABOUT JOBRI BULL AND HIS PEOPLE Occurrences In the Land That Reigns Supreme In the Comm, - cid World. The Sisters at the West Ham Hose pital are said to be paid $16 a year as a war bonus and the nurses $10 a year. It has been decided by the City of London School Committees of the core dew.poration to instruct classes in Rus- sian. Warvvickshire have been declared areas infected with gooseberry Bedford -on -Avon and Burton, both Mr. Henry Goodger, solicitor, who has been clerk to the'Burton-on-Trent Justices for 60 years, has died in his 87th year. • A Chobham man, blind in one eye, rejected by a medical board, was three days later passed for garrison duty abroad. Mrs. Norton, widow, af Altrinham, Cheshire, who has seven sons in the army, has been granted total xemp- ton for the eighth, Col. David Davies, M.P., has given 600 acres of land, valued at $75,000, in Montgoraeryshire, as a farm colony for discharged service men. The Council of the Union Jack Club, London, has decided to erect a new wing in a memorial to Lord Kit- chener, who was keenly interested in the institution. Mr. George Gardiner, high bailiff of Banbury County Court, has just died at Banbury. He was over 90 years of age, and had attended almost every court for 60 years. The death has occurred at Chel- tenham of Admiral Henry Christian, aged 88. He was, in the navy from 1 1841 till 1865 and commanded the merely impulsive; (2) an act of commentary. The fruits of your 14. Grace, the same word as thanks Royal Victoria and Albert. righteousness -a reminiscence of Hos. 10it 1,rality-As in Ram. 12. 8. The . noun. is derived from the word single (as in "the single eye"). The sugges- tion is that niggardly giving is from trying to look at two things at once, personal advantage as well as the neighbor's need, where the "single- minded man can only see the latter. Through us -Paul is to have the privi- lege of telling the recipients how much that gift meant 12. Ministration of men who remem- bered his corning "not to be ministered unto, but to minister." Service -Greek liturgy, a word originally used of a service to the state, but now beginning to be applied to the service of God, which colors its use here. Aboundeth -"Overflows," again : its secondary effect is beyond its Kimary impor- tance. Note what stress Paul lays on the enrichment that comes from grati- tude to God. 13. Proving -A favorite word, also rendered proof and probation. Thus in. Rom. 5. 4 it is the outcome of en- durance and the producer of hope. Obedience -The Corresponding verb in 1 Cor. 15. 28 speaks of the subject- ing of all things to Christ. Confession -Compare 1 Tim. 6. 12 ; Heb. 4. 14 Contribution -This rendering misses the great feature of the word, fellow- ship, sharing. A true gift brings giver and receiver to a common meal. "cheerfulness," not of "grudging" (lit- erally pain) ; (3) absolutely spon- taneous, not enforced by any kind of pressure. God loveth-Quoted from the Greek version of Prov. 22. 8, where there is nothing resembling it in the ordinary Hebrew text. It is a, good illustration of Paul's regular use of the Greek Bible. He does not call it a quotation, and he knew the Hebrew may well have remembered it was a mistranslation. 8. The figure calls up a flood of divine bounty, which after satisfying I every need flows over into the mani- fold activities of good men. Sufficien- cy -The everyday use of the word which in Phil. 4. 11 Paul has with the sense content, common in the philoso-1 pbers. 9. Quoted from Psa. 112. 9, which, establishes the familiar Jewish idea that almsgiving establishes perpetual merit. See note on last Sunday's lee-' son, verse 3, for New Testament quali- fications. He who told the young ruler that it would save him -for it meant the abandonment of his own besetting sin -told also how limited was the "re- • ward" of almsgiving that was, preceded by "sounding brass" instead of love (Matt. 6. 2), 10. Seed to the sower and bread for food -Quoted from Isa. 55. 10. Paul turns It into a parable of spiritual hus- bandry. Seed for sowing -A single word, that of Luke 8. 11, which is its ; in verse 15. In this context the col -1 No men being available half -a - location is hardly accidental. God's1; dozen women villagers pumped =- free bounty -this is the essential idea 1 tinuallY with a manual engine for of grace -was evidenced by the Corin-Ithree and one-half hours at a farm- thians' generosity, which showed that: house fire at Colston Raleigh, Devon - they" knew the grace of, our Lord ' shire. Jesus Christ" (2 Cor. 8. 9). It wase Farmers and small holders in South God's grace, which never can stay 1 agifhte/a, rt unless it is always flowing in thankfulness for "his unspeakable , ' out-ni Monmouthshire are suffering from a : plague of foxes. Hundreds of poultry as fast as it comes. It pours out upon i killed. which in many cases were the chief God's people, and it rises back to God support of the cottagers have been 15. Unspeakable -The same sense ofl Factories and workshops in Norwich the inadequacy of language breaks out I were suddenly brought to a standstill rendered thousandseidlefor ofv s ewoerrkaihourspeo p l e 0 wwienrge in Rom. 11. 33. Compare Eph, 3. 18, er 19. Gift -"In the redemption of the . to an accident to one of the boilers at world through our Lord Jesus Christ." the corporation electricity works. It is the word of Eph. 2 8, and is In six months Reading Workhouse found in the Master's saying, "Freely ye have received, freely give." War and Words. England's sixteenth century war with Spain was responsible for sev- eral new words being added to the language. Embargo and contrabrand are two of them; while to the cam- ation that in the future it should be paigns in the low countries we are made compulsory for boys in the indebted for such words as freebooter, school of 14 years and over to join the furlough, cashier, leagues, drill, on- City of London School Contingent of slaught, aconce and domineer. the Officers' Training Corps.. Trees and flowers make the coun- try healthy because they feed on the bad carbonic gas in the air and return bhe good oxygen to it. officials have saved $650 on the food bill. The Board of Guardians have rejected a recommendation that they should be complimented, being of the opinion that they have merely done their duty. The City of London School's. Com- mittee are recommending the corpor- t Stores From Ordnance Station Being Loaded Onto Motor Trucks at Camp Borden with the wavarrungelpent speakers," COMA NOT SLEEP Nerves Were So Bad. To the thousands of people who are tossing on sleepless beds night after night, and to whose eyes sleep will not come, Milbunes Heart and Nerve Pills offer the blessing of sound, refreshing slumber, because they restore the equilibrium of the deranged nerve centres, thus restor- ing strength and vitality to the whole system. Mr. Arthur McCutcheon, Mt. Pisgah, N.B., writes: "I have been much -troubl- ed with my nerves, and could not sleep For hours after I would go to bed, would toss and turn from one side to the 3therbefore I could go to sleep. I would then wake up in the night, and lie awake a long time before I would get to sleep again, I thought I would try Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, as they were recommended so highly. I now , get to sleep without any trouble; thy nerves mem quieted, and when I lie down I go to sleep quickie*. Anyotie veho is both. red With their nerves should _keep a box oti hand." • Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are 50 coots per box, 3 boxes for $1.25; at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. 1VIilburti Co., Limited, Tomato, Ont. 4.7 • •eat,_ wfta0 tue onlY reason which had pre - tented Germany front declaring war on Italy. 4:0Atuditoks.., s 4", 2aa:,