Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1916-10-5, Page 3Had Weak Beck and Kidneysa COULD HARDLY MOVE IN BBD. When the back becomes weak and starts to ache and pain it is a sure sign that the kidneys are not performing their funetions properly. On the first sign of backache Doan's Kidney Pills should be taken and serious kidney troubles prevented; Mr. Francis McInnes, Woodbine,'N.S., writes: "I deem it my duty • to let you know the wonderful results I have re- ceived from the use of Doan's Kidney Pills. For a long time I had been suf- fering from weak back and kidneys. I used to suffer the most at night, and some dares could hardly . move in bed with the pain. I could do no hard labor on adlie,,,account of my back. A friend advised nae to give Dome's Kidney Pills a trial, and I am glad I did for the pain in my kidneys is gone; my back is strong, and 1 can perform any hard labor and get my good night's sleep. I only used three boxes of the pills." Doau's Kidney Pills are 50ents per box, or 3 boxes for 51.25; at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. When ordering direct specify "Doan's' Rush Your Pullets. May -hatched chicks, when properly handled, will mature by November and will make splendid winter layers. The trouble with most of the May -hatched chicks is that they are not properly grown, so that by November they are far from being matured and ready for the laying house. They then go into winter quarters in no condition to do any laying much before early spring. If you hatch chicks out in May, see to it that they• aro kept growing every day without a setback. When keeping poultry in long houses where straw is used for litter, there is always the trouble of having the water fount and the grit and shell boxes filled with the litter. It is surprising how high the bird will scratch the litter. The thing to do is to make a platform about a foot or so high and then on the wall above this platform hang your grit and shell boxes, your dry food hopper and your water fount. Here the birds will be able to get at the food and at the same time will not be able to scratch the refuse of the coop into the various. boxes. This will save you money, to say nothing of time.— Canadian Farm. Hints For Poultrymen. Sour milk is valuable in any ration. Even a chicken appreciates kind- ness. Remove over -active cockerels to a separate yard. Tame, young stock make the most profitable fowls. Never permit unnecessary excite- ment in the hennery. Clean up the incubator,, remove the lamp, and throw away the wick. Soft, fresh dirt is an insurance against leg weakness in chicks. It requires brains and muscle in the poultry business, as in everything else. Add to the grain feeds with a mix- ture, such as bran, shorts, and corn nidal. Do not keep unnecessary male birds, An extra hen eats no more and may lay eggs. When range is limited spade up the • runs or move the brood coop a short distance daily. Spoiled or decaying flesh, if eaten, will surely cause limber neck. Burn or bury the dead. Watch for bead lice on the chicks. If fount, rub top of head -with a small piece of lard free from salt. Avoid crowding by keeping in small flocks and by providing roomy coops. Thin out if there are too many. Broody hens should be removed to slat -bottomed coops as soon as dis- covered. Leave them there until they forget ib, but feed them well. Clean, fresh water lessens disease. Filthy drinking water is the source of much trouble. Clean the drinking Pans frequently. KEEP THE ROWELS REGULAR AND AVOID CONST1 r i11ONI When the bowels are not kept regular they become clogged up with waste and poisonous matter, causing constipation, biliousness, sick headaches, piles, and all kinds of liver troubles. Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills will regu- late the bowels so that you they have a free and easy motion every clay, 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 mobile with constipation, and tried many different remedies which did me no good. X happened to try Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills, and I have found them most bene- ficial." Milburn's Lara -Liver Pills are 25 cents per vial, or five vials for 81.00; for gate at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. ehas Selected Recipes. cheese ou the top and acid the rest of the Margarine 'cut into small pieces. The pie may be baked in front of the fire or in the oven, and will be ready for the table when thoroughly brown- ed. Sailor's Ple.—Many years agothis pie wan papular. The ingredients re- quired are one pouna of scraps or. fresh uncooked meat, four onions, Meat Puffs, ---Make a puff -paste with' dripping or, lard, roll out about a guar. ter of an inch thick and in oblong pieces; place a spoonful of cold meat of any kind, chopped fine and well sea- soned, on each piece of paste, roll up and brush over with egg, and bake in a quick oven. Cheese Sauce.—Take three table- spoonfuls of butter and add four, of three pounds of potatoes, a little pow-; flour when the butter is bubbling hot.. "red thyme, one pound or so of suet • Mix well and add a half teaspoonful of or dripp!ng crust and a seasoning of salt, a few dashes of paprika, one and • salt and pepper. Clean and slice the a half cupfuls of milk and a cupful vegetables and cut the neat in small 4 of chopped cheese. Cook the sauces pieces. Put all into a saucepan wit. well before adding the cheese and the thyme and seasoning. Simmer � serve a,, soon as it is melted. until the meat is tender and then coy - Stuffed Beet Salad.—Bail several er with pastry rolled out to the size medium-sized beets without removing of the saucepan. Fitit well tato the the skins. When tender plunge into saucepan and cooly for about an hour cold water and rub off the peel. Cut and a half, after which cut the crust out the centers, leaving shells to be into medium pieces and ea -range them stuffed with a mixture of peas, nut round the stew on a hot dish. meats, breadcrumbs and mayonnaise. Serve on lettuce leaves with brown- Things to Remember. bread sandwiches. Have a day for everything. Curried Cauliflower.—Break a cauls- Cracker crumbs are better than flower into flowers and put them into bread crumbs for scalloped oysters, boiling salted water. As soon as Sinal: children can eat bananas if they are tender drain them in a colan- they are thoroughly baked. der. Dust them all over with curry All fruits should be peeled and powder and fry them in hot fah; then put them in a stewpan, pour over them a cupful of stock and lot them cook for five minutes. Squeeze over the juice of half a lemon and serve with or with- out rice. Rice Croquettes With Cheese Sauce. —Cook a cupful of rice in two and a half cupfuls of milk. Season with a teaspoonful of salt until tender, add- ing more milk if needed. Add two tablespoonfuls of butter, a dash of paprika and mix with two beaten egg yolks and then chill. When cold and stiffened mold into cones, balls or cylinder forms, dip in crumbs, then in egg white and in crumbs again. Brown in fat and serve with cheese sauce. . Peanut 'Soup.—One cup peanut but- ter, one cup chopped celery, three cups milk, one tablespoon each butter, flour and chopped onion, one and one-half cups boiling water, one teaspoon sail, one-eighth teaspoon pepper, three tablespoons minced red or green pep- per. Cook celery and onion in water until tender, adding water as it evapor- seeded for very young children. Olives, a small quantity of minced �r red peppers and a spoonful of capers THE increase the savor of potato salad. l • gives us a glimpse of the Perpetual ficial report last week. Sweet corn should never boil more Between fifteen and sixteen acres of than three should es. If it boils longer self-discipline which alone can pro-, city property, formerly waste land, is it will lose much of its sweetness. • duce the conscience of "a workman naw under cultivation as a result of When a baking dish becomes burnt needing not to be ashamed" even be- glna's "Vacant- Lot Garden" cam - wipe it off with a damp cloth dipped fore God. We see another and deep -,pan•• in salt. er glimpse of it in 1. Car. 9. 27. � The old Winnipeg Court House has Chic Hat and Smart Collarette For Autumn Wear. OVI:'LY new Smolin "Blue Bird" model of. the new shade of oerise panni velvet, the. facing of which is of Alice Blue. The shirred Tam-o-shantee rown and ornaments of jet add to the attractiveness of this charming at. Collarette of Kounsky and ermine which will be so very popular this ;owing season. SUNDAY SCHOOL From the Middle West tErTWEEri O11TARIO. AND BBI, TISLI COLUMBIA. items From Provinces Where Alan Ontario Boy, and Cine. Are Living: It le reported that theme is a scien- title "booze ring" .i`n operationat Me- lita, Man. Over 20,000 plea were away from Camp Hughey on harvest leave during the harvest season. It is just ten years ago this month since the cities of Regina and Winni- peg were. connected by telephone. Broomhead, Sask„ a little town of 800 people, was completely destroyed by fire. No lives were lost. Out of 5,000 teachers in the Pro- vince of Saskatchewan 8 years ago, only 1,000 are eti11 in the old profes- sion. WYnuipeggers are very generous in sending great quan'titiee of garden flowery to sick soldiers at Camp Hughes. Half the town of Brum, Sask., was destroyed by fire. It is situated fifty miles northwest of Saskatoon. Edmonton merchants are looking for a "lady in pink" who bong''. t of their goods lavishly and paid with wo'rthiess cheques. The 239th Calgary Battalion arous• ed great interest in their recruiting by having a ventriliquist along to keep the crowd amused. The pawnbrokers and secondhand dealers of Alberta have suffered most from the result of prohibition, and bank managers have profited. Rich deposits of copper and gold claration of Acts 23. 1, and, softening are indicated in the mineral belt north its seeming self-assertion. Here he of The Pas, Man., according to an of - INTERNATIONAL LESSON OCTOBER 8. It is a wise precaution to put a Lesson I i. Pani Before Felix—Acts 17. Paul's last visit is retarded in been entirely renovated and is now Acts 18. 22. Alms—Tho Gentile in the hands of the university authori- quantity of sand in the bottom of a 24. Golden Text.— churches' gift, of which we had so ties ready to accommodate 600 very tall vase. This will prevent its much in the lesson for August 13. Of students when school opens. topping over. 24 i 6During one of the recent wind Of- ferings—Those of Acts 21. 26, where'• storms, a panel of glass was shattered Preserving jars should always be Verse 10. A speech always began the same word is used, i and one of the fragments struck the kept from direct contract with the a coptosis, or conciliation of the 18. Amidst which (offerings) right eye of Sidney Hardyment, clerk bottom of the preserving kettle, other- person or persons addressed, In con- These particular sacrifices were offer- of public institution, Winnipeg, so wise they may break. trast to the barrister Tertullus, who ed at the suggestion of the leaders of that he lost the sight completely. Use cold milk to soak the bread or had dwelt with audacious fulsomeness the Jerusalem church. Their pur-! W. J. Black, Dominion Commissioner mark, Austria and France. The ar- caice for Budding; the Budding will be on the "peace" the administration of pose was primarily to conciliate Jew- of AgTlculture, says that the crop mare light.Felix brought the hotfoot, 'Paul says isb feeling: to the Jews Paul became con- ditions in Alberta were excellent and prin- cgumeiples this: Prussia'sz cipolicy To hurry the cooking of anything in the only true thing he could say in fav- a Jew, that he might win Jews. Of that there would be more than the an "Interessen clink" a policyof a double bailer, add salt to the water average yield of wheat. In Saskatche- a• �� p l �� or of Felix as a judge—that he had: course for Paul anything with relig-; wan the craps will be slightly below Interests. An Interest confers a in the outer boiler. "right." "na- A experience of many years-�abaut • Sous associations could became a the average, and in Manitoba a little The satisfaction of na- A slice of potato is an excellent seven. means of grace. But in him the re-! better than at first expected. tional interest" is therefore the tiling to clean white oilcloth which 11. Thous canst take knowledge -1 vulsion from utter dependence on Jew -1 Over 6,000 men will be needed for achievement of "national rights." If Felix will know how to verify this' ish rites to rest in the One Sacrifice' work in the woods of Northern Sas- these "rights" can be achieved by a statement, and as the alleged crime is was such that we may well doubtlratchewan this winter, according to compromise—that .is, by the complete so recent it can easily be investigated, whether he ever practiced Jewish W. J. Heinrich, who is in charge thof he The ritual bath had been in all histom e surrender of Prussia's opponents to Twelve days—This involves mkain piety far his own sake. Purified—:the employment departmeht of the demands based on these "rights" t"five days" of verse I count from y! Prints Albert Lumber Co. Sixteen men and one woman, in ad- 'Paul's d- —that is a proof of her peace -loving A good soft icing is made with two Paul's leaving Jerusalem. The days a most effective parable by which Mian to a huge furniture van of nature. But if her opponents refuse, cups of granulated sugar and three are thus accounted for: First, Paul men learned the deeper lesson of pre- machinery, merchandise, groceries, then the war by which the "rights" quarters cup of sweet .. milk. Boil arrives at Jerusalem; second, meets paration for God's presence. By this bedding, etc., comprised the haul of are secured is a war "forced"on James• third takes his vow• seventh • time even a "pagan" Greek poet could the Regina police last week in con- Prussia. She has not "willed" it. It is a "defensive" war to prevent the robbery of her "rights" by others. Bismarcic, not without difficulty, con- verted his sovereign to this argument. In each case -1864, 1866, 1870—Wil- Iiam I.. was ultimately convinced that Denmark, Austria and France were resisting the "rights" of Prussia, and that war to secure them was "de- fensive," "forced" on the King, and w. 1 DIARRHOEA Was Caused By Chane of Det, tc.1 Diarrhoea arises from many %MOPS. such as, change of diet, change of water, change of climate, catching cold, the eating of unripe fruits, or .anytl,tipg that will cause or induce an excess of bile, Qn 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., writes: "It is five years ago since I first tried Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry - I was then on a timber survey, and suf- fered greatly from diarrhoea/ caused by change of diet, etc. A friend in the party gave me a few doses 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 consider the woods- man's best friend." Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw- acrry has been on the market for the past seventy years, and is universally rnown as a positive cure for all complaints arising from any looseness of the bowels. When you ask for "Dr. Fowler's". he sure you receive what you ask for as :here are many rank imitations of this aterUng remedy placed on the market to xy and fool the unsuspecting public. The genuine is manufactured by The r. Milburn, Co„ Limited, Toronto, Dnt. Price: 35 cents. esiezzaassrereareinseemoreragnesesseseceasseams "DEFENSIVE" WARS. Prussia's Contention That "Interest" Confers a "Right." G. Grant Robinson, writing in the London Times, says: • Bismarck repeatedly and explicitly in the Reichstag justified the wars of 1864, 1866, and 1870 as "defen- sive"—that is, as not "willed" by Prussia. On the contrary, they were wars "forced" on a peace loving state deified its "rights" by Den - has become disfigured by hot cook- ates to keep to one and one-half cups frig utensils. liquid. Add one cup milk to peanut Whenever the rubbers on cans of butter and blend. Heat remainder in fruit "bulge," they should be remov- double boiler, thicken with flour and ed, the jar of fruit resterilized and butter, creamed together, add stock fresh rubbers put on. and peanut butter and milk mixture, season and serve, garnishing with pep- pers. Apple Croquettes.—Put one dessert- spoonful each of water and butter. in enameled stewpan, add three cups tart apples which have been pared, cored and sliced. Cook slowly, avoid- ing scorching, until soft and dry. Mash or put through vegetable press, add any seasoning desired and pinch of salt. Mix one-third cup cornstarch with a little water, and use to thick- en apples pulp. Just before taking from fire, whip in one beaten egg. Turn into wet mold or dish, and set aside to cool. When oold, shape into any form desired, roil in egg and breadcrumbs and fry in deep fat. Dust with powdered sugar and serve hot. Oyster Pte.—Forty large oysters, two hard-boiled eggs, two tablespoons 'flour, four tablespoons butter, one-half tablespoon each chopped onion and chopped parsely, a little grated nut- meg, salt and pepper. Put oysters on to cook in their own ]lquor, thicken- ing it with the butter and flour mix- ed together. Add egg and season- ings. Stir until butter is thoroughly melted and pour in deep dish lined, bottom and sides, with half -puff paste. In the center of the dish set an invert- ed cup to support the top crust. Cover with paste, fasten edges tight, slash crust a bit to allow escape of steam and cook in quick oven about one-half hour. If crust browns too quickly cover dish with paper to prevent burning. Tasty Ples. Beef and Tomato Pie.—Slices of cold beef should be arranged in a pie dish with layers of thickly sliced tomatoes and onions, then add seasoning. Con. tine the layers till the dish is full; add sufficient gravy to moisten the whole cover with parboiled potatoes cut in slices and bake in a moderate oven for one hour, Beef and Potato Pte.—The ingredi- ents required are one pound of beef- steak, one largo onion, two and a half time in the army and am a pensioner pounds of potatoes, salt to taste. Cut since December, 1882. If you will let the meat into small pieces, also the me be a woman in this show I shall onion. Put it to stew for about two hours, then add the potatoes, which have been cut into pieces about the same size as the beef. Cover over with a pie crust made from half a pound of lard and half a, teaspoonful of baking powder. About forty min- utes should be allowed for the bat- ing of the pie. Cheese and Potato Ple.--This le an unusual dish, but will be found savory. The ingredients required are three- quarters of a paund of cheese, one pint of milk, .three pounds of potatoes, three ounces of margarine or dripping, pepper and salt. Mashthe potatoes with the milk. Add three-quarters of the fat and cheese with pepper and salt to taste; mix well and stir over nine minutes; cool, heat and flavor. ' is eighth, faces Sanhedrin; write, "He must be pure who enters' vection with a series of wholesale In cutting the string binding a arrested; g ' ; the incense -breathing shrine; but to ` robberies in Regina and Moose Jaw. ninth, leaves Jerusalem for last time; package piolc the knot up and cut im- re tenth, arrives at Antipatris; eleventh,: be pure is to have holy thoughts"; 1 mediately below, and you will release �" the string entire, unless it has other at Caesarea; thS.teenth, stands before for Paul its purpose was only tender- FOR SOLDIERS. F.,�;;Y ness for the feelings of others. Jesus ESTATE had once deliberately omitted a rim -1 A tablespoonful of turpentine, ad-. 12. This answers verse 6, but con- filar ritual, to give himself a text fors 12,000 Acres in Scotland for Settle- finesded to a capperful of water in which the issue to what Felix had to boiled will cleanse whiten try, stripped of rhetorical generality. a most important lesson (Luke 11. 38). ment After the War. Here a challenges enges proof that { ni ft being used for he tried to profane the temple or in in the city with the Gentile Trop clothes aro o But certain Jews from Asia (saw me and disinfect the garments. 13 H P ul h 11 ha An estate of 12,000 acres on which Steel knives, after ng i soldiers and sailors can settle after any other way endangered the peace bimus), he was gaing to say; but the: the war has been given to Scotland. just. The successful issues confirmed fish blades peeling onions, should have the of the city. This was of course, the new point swept away the intended The donor is the Duke of Sutherland, William's conscience and proved that meput in the . ground fora short conclusion of his sentence. We are time, eas the earth removes the smell. only point in counsel's brief which who owns large tracts of fine land in, Bismarck principles had the Divine Cheese will not become mouldy 1f Felix had any proper concern with always finding this characteristic of i northern Scotland. It is the first sanction. you keep it covered with a cloth. 14. Paul now frankly admits the practical step in th d'ttd Luke wrung out in vinegar. This will keep the cheese fresh indefinitely. IP your cake looks baro and tough, knew from experience. A much high- ma erre v nesses e n They i River Never, in the county of Suther- set in a deep dish with a bawl of hat would have collapsed under cross -ex - water underneath and leave. The er official, the Proconsul Galho, had amination; afid even if their well-, (land, in the extreme north of Scot - decided that Roman justice was hatland Paul's vehemence in his written (ori he United Kingdom part of the indictment about which ra • er• tc a e) letters: has getin a movement to provide small farms his master to the life. The San- ; the Jews really cared, but a Roman for veterans of the great war. The judge would care nothing, as Paul •hedrists hadt 'very wisely left these; estate is situated to the west of the steam will moisten the cake and make it soft. - To clean white gloves in a hurry, drilled story had stood, Felix would concerned with such things. But not condemn Paul for profaning the In making the announcement the Paul feels it necessary to dispel the Duke said that there would be abso- temple unless as an it in the' 'scrub them with a mixture of powder- impression that he belonged to a tur- charge of stirring up a riot. II lute to the state, ne r. ed alum and fuller's earth. Brush off, bulent and bigoted faction. The Way, i serving conveyanceto himself and his successors —ilio term doubtless started from the 20. The Sanhedrists were no cam-� only certain fishing rights on lochs and sprinkle them with whiting. patent witnesses o1 the fact alleged, Tar spots, if they can be removed at Lard's description of himself in John but Paul challenges them to confess `and rivers. A provision is that the all by the amateur, should be rubbed 14. 6. It is "a way of salvation" in that their only verdict against flim land is to be settled by soldiers and with clean lard and let lie. This, in Acts 16. 17, both words there being was on aroligious charge. g Just as in' sailors who kava been on foreign ser- twrn, should be removed with gasoline reminiscences of phrases constantly the trial of Jesus, the accused was' vice, have enlisted voluntarily, and on Paul's lips. The term meets us have good records. or hot suds.condemned on charge which no tRo-he .---- After washing oilcloth and linoleum outside Christianity (compare the man would look at, and before the be sure to dry it properly. If left Buddha's "Noble Eightfold Path"). civil court there were flimsy atter-!Feeding Skim Milk to Calves. damp it will speedily rat, and finally sect—Derived from a verb meaning thoughts ready. become totally spoiled. It is a great choose; it suggests the pigheadedness 21. Paul is not hone admitting tilos Separator mi is not a balanced mistake to use too much water for of people who choose their own way he was betrayed into a wrong line as I ration for calves. On this feed alone, washing it, The cloth should be and care nothing for the opinion of some commentators have very absurd -i and the way it is usually given to merely wrung out and passed over the thus the run mad. It is ly inferred Th ti f them, they are liable to get indiges- thus the exact antithesis of the great J The resurrection surface. Veteran Begs to do Woman's Work. So eager Is a British army veteran, living in Wallsend -on -Tyne, to help in the war, that he is wilting to do woman's work. He writes to a news- paper which has appealed for 10,000 women to do Red Cross needlework : 15. This verse moires it plain that "I am not a woman, but I have knitted the high priest as a Sadducee was in a two pairs of socks. I am 73 years of age in November, and have served my small minority on the deputation. The Once Was Enough. Pharisees might be tinned against the The wounded "Tommy" was relat- Sadducees in h debate, but when. thy ing his experiences. "Yes," he said, left the Saner It was .P they "I was in a bit of a hole once. There hated, not Ananias. They had sup were two German snipers at me, and plied all the power behind the scenes I'd only one bullet left. They were when their unconscious tools, the a good bit apart, too, so I couldn't Sadducees, did Jesus to loath; it vas, work round to get them in. line. And they who took the real lead now. Both o the real ait at issue and tion, as hewn by a bloated condition, Christian word catholic, which has un- happily n esus as p ice, ricrous appetite and diarrhoea. happily been monopolized by the least the Jews, had deviabed into candor, Most of this trouble can be avoided catholic sect in the world. The Gad would have confessed thie. So Festus : addinga handful of oil meal, corn of our fathers—So that the Way is no clearly saw (Acts 25. 19), and Paul ! by reiterated before Agrippa (Acts 26, 7), meal or cottonsed meal, to supply,in by-path, but in a straight line with the "It is for this Hope that I am on my1a way, the fat that has been removed past. Law . . prophets—Atrial, and actually accused by Jews." `in the skimming. The milk should frequent and comprehensive term for be given to them warm and never the Old Testament as a whole. when it is frothy. Never allow a calf to drink all of the milk that it wants at ane meal. It is bad prac- tice to allow several calves to drink out of one trough, some of them will get too much. Care in feeding calves is of vastly more importance than. "cures" for calf scours, :• feel much obliged." Always One Left "It's no use to tell me to look f or - ward," said one in great trouble toglust and unjust- The doctrine first ii' I r+trot at one the other tvouia et his friends who had come to try and clearly laid down, some two centuries me sure. What diel I do? Well, comfort him. "The worst of my iron- before, in Dan. 12. 2, The Sadducees, i my knowledge of mathernablcs saved ties, I know, lie ahead. And If I look typical conservatives in religion, re-ime. 1 got behind a stone, and work - back to the time before this great fused it because they could not find ed out a few calculations and angles trouble came upon me the contrast it in the law. Hence the point of the' on a scrap of paper, stuck up my bay - only seems to make matters worse. answer Jesus gave them—Mark 12, l onet, in the sand with the edge to "There Islalways one way left," re 26f. !wards me, took careful aim at it, and plied the friend gently. When we can 16, IIerein -In all the life purpose, let her go• And, boys, the plan look neither forward no' backwardjust describes. 1 also- I+]mphattc. worked, for the bullet struck the bay - we can lift our eyes and lookup- "They accuse me of rudely trampling, onet, and the bullet was split clean in ward." Try the upward look. on my brethren's religious suscept. halves, and one hit and killed the Ger- .s. • ibilitiob. I am at least as careful. as , man on the right, and the other. hit Our forefathers deemed it to be they to wound no man, so Tang as I blotted out the blighter on the left. tits mtxttire into awell-greased pie very unlucky if the bride did not dish. Sprinkle the remainder of the weep on her wedding -day: can keep my conselence clear toward i Another time I /vas---- " lint his God." Conscionte. -Repeating the do- audience had lied. Same In The End. "Will you be mine for ever and ever" he timidly asked. "No, Bob, now that I am a Suffragette I can never be yours. But you may be - cense mine when youwill," she replied in a matter-of-fact way. es --- i Not Rieh Enough. Randall—Is Delaney a vulgar per- son? ! lingers --No, he's ton poor. Only a rich person can be vulgar success,. fully. I .. LA baby cuts his teeth before he is altin terms with olxs speaking elem. p g "EAT ALL THE CRUMBS," Order That Has Been Issued to the German Troops. The Paris Journal says the following is extracted from a circular intended for distribution among the German troops and found in the possession of a captain taken prisoner an the Somme :— "England and France ane making implacable efforts to stop our revic- tualiing from overseas countries and to starve us out. The duty of every military man, officer or soldier, is, consequently, to eoonomize and hus- band the food and forage, Thus we will counter the enemy's efforts. "Satisfy your hunger, but no more than the natural needs. Eat up all the crumbs it is possible to use. You have a right to a generous portion of rations, but you are not obliged to eat it all. Therefore, claim all that you are entitled to, and if you receive other food from home use it to vary your meals. But do not eat for the sake of eating. COULD NOT SLEEP Serves Were So Bad. To the thousands of people who are tossing on sleepless beds rught 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 deranged nerve centres, thus restor- ing strength and vitality to the whole system. Mr, Arthur McCutchcon, Mt. Pisgah, N.I3,, writes: "I have been much troubl- ed with my nerves, and could not sleep for hours after I would go to bed. I would toss and turn from one side to the otherrbofore I could go to sleep. 1 would then wake up iii the debt,and lie awake a long time before I woud get to sleep again. I thought I would try Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, as they were recominended so highly. I now get to alcep without any trouble; my nerves seen/ quieted and when 1 Ile down I go to sleep quickly. Anyone who is both- ered with their nerves, should keep e box on hand," Milburn's Heart and Nerve' Pills are 50 edits par bofc, 3 boxes for Si':25;• at all dealers or mailed direct en reuetpt of price by The T, Mfibdrft Co, Limited, Toronto, Oa.,