Exeter Times, 1916-10-19, Page 71
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FROM DRINKING
DAD WATER,
People moving from one place to an-
other are very subject to diarrhoea on
account of the change of water, change of
climate,. change of diet, etc,, and what at
first appears to be but a slight looseness
of the bowels should never be neglected
or some seriousbowel complaint will
he sure to follow:
The safest and quickest cure for diarr-
hoea, dysentery, colic, eholera, cholera
morbus, cholera infantum, pains in the
diallbemach and all looseness of the bowels
is Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw-
berry.
Mr. lamest Jeffery, letoose Jaw, Sask.,
writes: "A few years ago, when I first
came out to Canada, I went to the har-
vest field to work Somehow or other
the water did not agree with me. I had
the darrhoea so bad that blood was
comingfrom me, and
I thought my
last
days had come. One of the harvest
hands advised me to take Dr. Fowler's
Extract of Wild Strawberry, and before
I had used the bottle I was able to go to
work again, My advice to all is always
keep a bottie.of this wonderful diarrhoea
cure on hand,"
Dr. Fowler's" has been on the -market
for the past seventy' years, and has been
used in thousands of Canadian homes,_
during that time, and we have yet to
hear of a case of bowel complaint where
It has not given perfect satisfaction.
The genuine "Dr. Fowler's" is mann-
lectured only by the T. Milburn Co.,
Limited, Toronto, Ont.'
Price, 35 cents.
THE VISION OF BIRDS.
They Can See a Speck a Mile Away,
It Is Said.
If our airmen possessed the vision
of birds it would, perhaps, be well for
Many Uses for Peppers. are clone, brash over•with beaten egg.
When we say peppers, do we think Brown in the oven. When done ,slip
of the green shiny pod as a possibility a knife under then and. slide . them
fo'r delicious pickles, used only ab one l upon a hot platter, Garnish with.,
season of the year, or do we think of paraley and serve immediately,
a vegetable which can appear on our Casserole of Duck,—Onefive-pound •
tables more frequently? duck, one cup mushroom caps, one -
It is from the hot countries,par- half can peas, one-half teaspoon on-
tieularly Italy and Mexico, that the ion juice, one teaspoon di•y powdered
morenorthern housewife is learning mint, one quart well-seasonedsoup
their possibilities. In the first place, stock, flour and drippings. Singe,
all members of the pepper family are clean and disjoint duck. Roll each
distinguished by excellent stomachic piece well in flour and brown quickly
qualities and naturalpungency, which in beef drippings. Pack in layers in
is good for increasing the flow of gas- very large casserole, alternating
tris juice and inrgeneral, "toning up." with m�izshrooms and peas, mixed, and
Another point in favor of the pep- cover wibh soup stock containing on -
per is that it can be used both raw or ion juice and mint. Bake slowly for
cooked. As an addition to salad, itis three hours in moderately hot oven.
constantly growing in .favor, owing Add more salt and pepper, if liked,
not only to its delicabe flavor, but its Hash With Brown Gravy.—Mince an
attractive color and the possibilities onion or two and fry well. Have the
which it presents to the salad -maker's meat cut in small pieces and turn this
knife or scissors. Many an other-. into the frying pan when the onion is
wise unattractive salad can be made brown, turning frequently with a
different by the addition of strips, sec- fork until the meat, boo, is cooked
through and well browned. Then
sprinkle meat and onion with flour,
stirring until the flour browns. Add
enough water to melee a smooth, thick
gravy: Let bubble up and serve pip-
ing hot on triangles of toast. The
flavor may be varied by adding at the
last moment a dash of Chili or Wor-
cester sauce or catsup, 'ter a little cel-
ery seed.
Pie—Gold and Silver.—For the sil-
ver part take a large white potato,
peel and grate it into a deep plate.
Add the juice and grated rind of a
lemon, the beaten white of an egg, a
cup of white sugar and a cup of cold
water. Stir well together and bake
in a single crust in a dish deep en-
ough to hold twice the quantity of the
silver part. Make a custard of one
cup oe milk, teaspoon of cornstarch,
one egg, sugar to taste and flovor with
grated, nutmeg or sherry wine. Pour
over the silver layer and return to the
oven and cook unbil set. When done
you may finish with a meringue if you
wish or serve without.
tions or chopped pieces of pepper.
Pepper combines well wibh sweet
fruits, such as oranges or pineapple,
and also with cabbage and tomato.
As a container for other salads, the
pepper pod takes rank with the toma-
to cup. The lower end may be cut off
neatly, the edges decorated, and this
cup befilled with other mixtures in
which the pepper pod itself need not
be eaten.
In cooked dishes there are many
ways of using left -over peppers.
There is no limit to the number of
stuffed dishes which can be made. For
all of these it is better to parboil the
pepper in boiling water for. two or
three minutes after having removed
us, the seeds and stern.
No animal—certainly no man—pos- The pod may be filled wibh mixtures
sesses one half the power of vision of cooked rice, breadcrumbs, ham,
given to a bird. cold mutton, tomatoes, etc. The pep-.
It is said that the eagle can look pers should then be laid in a casserole
straight at the sun. But this is hard or baking dish, partially covered with
to decide, inasmuch as it seldom falls
to our lot to see an eagle.
Small birds, however—which all can
see—can notice a speck a mile away.
Notice the "alarm" on a line day
among the birds in a locality. One
minute all the choir is in full music.
Then suddenly a disturbance takes
place! Not a bird is seen, or heard
bra minute.
Ab last the human watcher sees a
tiny speck in the sky. It conies near-
er and nearer. It is noticed to be a
sparrowhawk.
The birds saw it long before the
watcher, Unerringly, too, they put it
down to be a hawk. Hence their al-
arm.
fi-
WHEN BUCCANEERS REIGNED.
St. Thomas, West Indies, Was Once
Headquarters.
The importance of the island of St.
Thomas, Danish West Indies, arises
from the fact that the harbor on the
south side of the island, on whose
borders the town of Charlotte Amalie
is located, is one of the finest in all
tropical America. From the days of
the buccaneers its strategic advant-
age has been realized, for when the
Spanish Main was the happy hunt-
ing ground of the gentlemen of the
black flag this harbor was their head-
quarters.
Behind its outer Stills the pirate
' craft found shelter from the open sea,
and were well screened from the
sight of passing ships'; until the mo -
stock, tomato sauce or eni'ugh butter
to make a slight juice, so that when
baked the dish will be not too dry.
Another mode of using peppers is bo
slice and fry them as an accompani-
ment to steak, or the peppers may be
fried and then creamed, A most de-
licate flavor is given to ordinary vege-
table soups by adding a few strips of
green pepper.
Some one has said there is nothing
the matter with the flavor of any one
stew. The trouble is that all stews
,generally "taste alike." This cannot
be said of the stew, hash or other
"made dish" in which pepper is the
flavor, for a combination of 'pepper
and tomato will make even the most
ordinary leftovers appetizing.
Chili Con Carne.—Two pounds low-
er round steak, three green sweet pep-
•perpods, three cups of red kidney
beans, one clove of garlic, butter, salt
flour, one pint of strained tomato
stock. Remove stem and seeds from
peppers and cut into thin cross-sec-
tions. Cut . steak in inch pieces and
saute in butter. Dust with flour, then
add the tomato stock and the peppers.
Simmer about two hours or until the
meat is very tender, adding more wa-
ter if necessary. When done, the
meat and sauce should blend together
and the whole be well seasoned and
served hot. The cooked kidney beans
are' added about the last half hour in
order to blend thoroughly with the
gravy, but each bean should be sepa-
rate.
Stuffed Baked Peppers.—Six green
sweet peppers, one cup strained toma-
to sauce, half cup boiled rice, two
nient came to pounce down upon tablespoonfuls of butter, one table -
them. In more recent'times ithas spoonful of chopped onion, half tea -
played the role of safe harbor for the spoonful salt, two-thirds cupful moist
thousands of vessels bound. from Eu- bread crumbs, half cupful of cold
rope to Panama and surrounding minced meat, half cup of mushrooms,
territory, or vice versa. paprika. Cut stem from peppers, re-
move seeds and parboil five minutes
in a quart of water to which has been
added one-eighth teaspoonful baking
soda. Melt butter and saute onion.
Add tomato sauce, rice and bread
crumbs, meat, mushrooms, Season
with salt and paprika, stuff pepper
cases and set upright in baking dish.
Cover with buttered crumbs. Add
remaining half -cup of tomato esauce
with a little water and pour around
base. Bake slowly, basting with
sauce for 30 minutes
In modern Greek marriage cere.
mony two rings are used—a gold one •
for the bridegroom, and a silver one
for the bride.
Brides in Greece must first visit the
oven in company with her father, sal -
tete it, and then obtain leave to set out
for the church.
HAD KIDNEY THULE
For SEVERAL MONTHS
DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS
CURED IIIM.
4r. Fred, Stevens, Raymond, Alta.,
writes: "I am writiug to bear my testi-
mony of your wonderful me tielne. I
Siad suffered for several months with
khi ey trouble. I had been under the
44 tor's care for two months, when I
read your advertisement. 1 at once 1chased four boxes of Doan's Kidney
.$ and when la had used two boxes of
talfig I was cured, I have reeomimended
e treatment to several of my friends."
When you ask for Doan's Kidney pills'
see that you get "Doan's." The wrapper
i frcy and our trade mark "The Maple
fie f" appears on every box.
Doan's Kidney Pills am 50 cents per
bail, or 3 boxes for $1.25; at all dealers, or
qt�t`aaled'direct on receipt of price by The
x: Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
When ordering direct specify "Doan's."
Things Good to Eat.
Giblet Sandwich,—If there are
chicken giblets' left over grind them
to a coarse paste with a meat chop-
per and season with mayonnaise.
Spread between buttered whole wheat.
bread for unusual and delicious sand-
wiches.
Short `Bread. -Sift one cup 'of flour
Things Worth Remembering.
Do not allow fish to stand in water.
Very good fish chowder is made wit
haddock.
When the top of the stove is red
hot, the oven is not hot.
Put a little ammonnia in the warm
water used to wash paint.
New stockings should always be
washed before being worn.
The best fish for baking are cod-
fish, haddock and poilock.
If the closet where you hang tins
and cooking utensils is badly lighted.,
try painting the hooks and nails white.
Chamois leathers should be washed
in tepid water and dried with the soap
in them; they will then be nice and
soft.
Camphor will remove fruit stains
from" table linen. Before the linen
goes into the wash, go over the spot
with camphor.
If the hair is dry and brittle, give
it a. good application of vaseline or
pure olive oil on the scalp the night
before shampooing.
A wringer that is stained from
wringing colored clothes can be
cleaned by rubbing the rollers with
a cloth saturated in paraffin.
Cold mashed potatoes from yester-
day's dinner make very nice cro-
quettes bythe adding of one egg.
Shape them, roll them in crumbs and
fry in fat,
A serviceable way to serve cold
boiled potatoes is to put them through
the sieve. Season them with butter
and salt; form into cones and brown
in oven.
If a boot or shoe pinches, damp a
sponge with very hot water and hold it
over the part that hurts. The eath-
er will expand and so afford relief.
People who feel the cold very much
should see that their beds are pro-
vided with ample covers and a hob -
water bottle before attempting to
sleep.
Put white washable skirts on to
their stiff inside belts by means of a
strip of snappers and there will be
no belts crumpled and ruined in the
washing.
Almost any cereal is good with
dates stirred into it and the whole
served with cream. The dates should
first be well washed, dried and chop-
ped. ,
To remove fruit stains from cloths
and napkins apply powdered starch
and leave for several hours until the
mark has been absorbed by the starch.
When you get anything in your eye
do not rub it, but if possible plunge
the eye into water, winking when the
Bye is full. The speck will probably
and a quarter cup of sugar oyer half fleet out.
cup of better, Work with the lingers Sliced oranges and grated cocoanut
until smooth. Pack in pans to three_ make a very, good winter dessert. A
fourths of an inch depth, mark in layer of oranges and a layer of cocoa -
squares and bake the short bread in a nut, and so on until the dish is full,
slow oven until light brown. This is ending, with thd. cocoanut; add en -
not as easy as it looks. ough sugar to sweeten and it is ready
Boiled Apple Puffets.—Three eggs, to serve.
one pint of milk, a little salt, suf-
ficient flour to thicken as waffle batter,
one and a half teaspoonfuls of baking
powder. Fill teacups with alternate
layers of, batter and apples, chopped
fine, Steam one hour. Serve hot
with flavored cream and sugar.
Potato Pubs.—Prepare lightly-beat-
en
ightly-beauen mashed potatoes and while hot
shape Into balls the size of an egg.
Have a bin sheet well buttered and
place the balls on it, As soon as all
It takes all sorts of people to make
a world, but every one imagines his
kind ought to be in the majority,
"Penny weddings,". formerly so
popular,,in certain parts of Scotland,
were those where the guests were each
charged the sum of one penny—equi-
vatenb to the present shilling—for the
privilege of being present.
Turned Down at Home She Succeeds
In England.
Mrs. Kathryn M. Stanton, aglow
with the triumph of selling the centri-
fugal gun for which she stood spon-
sor, to the British Government, has
returned to the United States.
The new weapon which she sold to
Great Britain is operated without
powder and is noiseless as well as
smokeless. It hurls missiles with _
deadly aim, the missiles may be any- Christian—The familiarity of the term haps, more. As to CorPa
-
thing from an egg to a lump of dyna- —see lesson study note for May 7— marine hunting, one cannot gain much l
mite. There is no barrel to the gun —makes it difficult for us to realize idea of its exigencies from the little : The twelve interned prisoners who
and it may be operated by any un- what it meant as a new word. "Christ- sop that is being given to the curios -
trained man or woman. It is simple man" above attempts to suggest this, ity of London,
bf made -construction and cai of ats pwirtsth
has The Authorized Version makes A a g
cost of less than one-tenth of the Pa speak seriously, but the
be made at any machine shop with a gz P- Submarines are elusive thin s.
• l yen- '°Rousting" one out from a stretch of
II SUNDAY Y SCHOOL
INTERNATIONAL I t':S3ON
OCTOBER 22.
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Lesson IV, ---Paul's Defense Beier
Agrippa ---•Acts 26. Golden
Text Acts 26. 19.
Verse 1. Herod Agrippa II was the
last of the Herods and (which is say-
ing little) the best of them. His title
of king meant about as much as that
of nawab or rajah in India: he held it
during good behavior. We have four
generations in the New Testament --
Herod "the. Great" (Matt. 2. 1), his
son Antipas (Mark 6. 14), his nephew
Agrippa I (Acts 12 1) his son here
"HUNTIN�I G DOGS"
OF GRAND FLEET
ZEST IN THE. WORK OF SUB-
MARINE CHASERS.
They Kill 14Auch More Often Than
They Capture—Some
Surprises.
Generally speaking, official names
are frigidly unimaginative concep-
tions. Only those who know the navy
from stem to stern can tell from its
title what special duty any particular
unit of our fleet is entrusted with.
Jack holds in small esteem this
Stretched forth his hand—Compare'
Acts 13. 10 and Arts 21. 40. 1
sonorous indefiniteness in nomencla-
ture and corrects its shortcomings by
giving to various bits of seapower
the designations which he deems
most befitting them. And he has an
infallible knack of "making the label
describe the contents of the can." For
example, the craft employed inseek-
ing out enemy submarines are known
among bluejackets as "the hunting
doge."
This is both terse and explanatory,
since hunting is their job and they do
it in pack -like fashion. One of their
24. Loud voice—The tone suggesbs
impatient interruption; Festus was
afraid they were to have a theologi-
cal lecture. Mad—Perhaps enthus-
iasm or franatieism is nearer the idea
than "madness." Festus is immedi-
ately conscious of rudeness to a pian
who he obviously respected, and he
hastens to add that it was great learn-
ing that was turning his head. Luke's
report of Paul's defense is, of course,
only a brief summary of a speech that
may have lasted an •hour; Paul doubt- "catches" now lies alongside Temple
less quoted law and prophets largely Pier, whither all London is craning
to prove his great thesis. This pro-
duced on Festus the impression that
Paul was "a great man of letters," as
the Greek for much learning literally
suggests.
20, Paul's appeal to the notoriety
its neck to get a look at it.
There it lies ringing in the nimble
sixpences while the "hunting dogs"
continue their quest for more "game"
of similar kind. Now a word as to
the "dogs" themselves. One finds in
of the facts is made to Agrippa, since the "packs"quite a motley collection Local wheat is selling on the Kani-
Was Tr sb ed With
COMMA 'M.-
Fi; OVER FIVE YEARS.
Unless one has a free action of the
bowels, at least once a day, constipation
is sure to ensue, then. ie the wake of
constipation conies sick headache, bilious
headaches, jaundice, piles, and many
forms of liver complaint.
Milburn's Laza-Liver Pills will regu-
late the flow of bile to act properly upon
the bowels,' thus making then active
and regular, and removing the constipa-
tion anti all its allied troubles.
Mr. Phil. G. Robichaud, Pokemouche,
N.B., writes:, "I have been troubled
with constipation for over five years, and
I feel it my duty to let you know that
your Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills have
cured me. I only used three vials, and
I can faithfully say that they have saved
me from:a large doctor's bill."
1VIiiburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 25 cents'
per vial, or five vials for $1.00; for sale
it all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt
price by The',!'. Milburn Co., Limited,
tor
onto. onto. Out.
FR
M SASH COAST
WHAT THE WESTERN PEOPLE
ARE DOING.
Progress of the Great West Told
in a Few Pointed
Paragraphs.
Festus was a newcomer. In John 18: of "breeds." These are heavy lurch -
20 Jesus similarly emphasized the pub- ers which beat over the ground with
licity of his work. It was he himself untiring persistency; pugnacious lit -
who determined the publicity of his tle terriers which nose around the
last act. His enemies wanted to kill him holes and when they have "found"
"in a corner" (Matt. 26. 5) : he forced call up the bigger dogs to the "kill -
them to do it in the sight of the sun. ing"; alsd' greyhounds, keen of eye
27. Agrippa was a professed Jew, and swift of movement, which pounce
and through his great-grandmother with deadly spring upon any quarry
the ill-fated Mariamne, had Maecabean that may show itself in the open. But
blood in his veins, Paul had that whatever the "breed" all work hard,
within him that "believes all things" and it is no secret that their hunting
(Cor. 13. 7), and he gave Agrippa has been remarkably successful.
credit for a seriousness foreign to his The People's Debt.
nature.
28. It is very doubtful whether the Very little had been heard about
Greek of this verse is capable of , their doings, but, all the same, every
translation. The acceptance of a man, woman, and child in the United
very slight change found in one impor- Kingdom lies under a great debt of
tint manuscript, or an equivalent con- obligation to these toilers on the deep over.
jectuie by Dr. Hort, gives the sense who have done as much towards keep-� Chief of Police F. Wolfe Stevens,
adopted in the paraphrase, "thou per-ing our tables well laden as any part of Port Alberni has resigned to 0
suadest thyself, art confident." A of the fleet, and in . some ways, per- g g
the work of sub to the front with the Army Service
loops market at $40 per ton.
One death from infantile paralysis
was reported from Kamloops.
In South Vancouver sewer work-
men were granted an increase from
$2.50 to $3.
Mistaken for a deer, a logger was
shot and killed by a local sportsman
at New Westminster.
The Cameron-Genor Mills ship-
builders recently laid the keel for a
new vessel at Victoria.
Vancouver is shipping to Vladivo-
stock for the Russian Government
177,000 tons of steel rails.
Patrol boats have been withdrawn
from the Fraser river, indicating
that the salmon season is practically
escaped from the Vernon internment
camp on the 2nd instant are still
at large.
Introduction of the municipal
water system at West Vancouver
proved a real boon owing to the
Paul's answerenoughsearchingdry summer.
It is expected that the new Gov-
ernment road between Port Alberni
the officers present acclaimed it as and the Summit will be completed
the weapon of future warfare. The his voice! marine may be discovered with rim- P
ilarly unpleasant i within three weeks.
United States did not care to par. 29. I would to God—Literally,"1 abruptness. When , The telegraph service
chase the invention, so Mrs. Stanton could pray to God"; but the verb is not this happens there follows a breezy' between Port Governmentntrteni and Cameron
sold to Great Britain. This is tyle the deeper compound that is used of time for the finder. Underwater
second invention in a short time that Christian prayer. It appears in craft are stalked in strange ways !Lake is being improved with the in -
price of a weapon using explosives. tence is incapable of such meaning. open water somewhat resembles has
Mrs. Stanton financed the building of alone is to in for
a needle in a hayrick.
the model and personally superintend- show that the king was not a hope- There is always the chance that one
ed the making of the gun, The wea- ful convert; what a different ring may find the needle by sitting down
pon was tried out at Sandy Hook and such a hope would have brought into
p upon it unexpectedly and the sub -
was turned down by the United States
and later accepted by Great Britain.
While Mrs. Stanton was abroad tier
husband died unknown to her. The
glad tidings she expected to convey
to him were hushed on her lips when
Acts 27. 29, and is the ordinary word and with methodical persistency.; stallation of lou new poles.
for prayer in pagan vernacular. If Those who go out after them have ! Thirty-two Austrians in the Cum -
Paul had cherishedireal hope of Agrip- much skill in the use of snare and gun, Berland mines were arrested at the
pa, he would have used the stronger and "work" the "dogs" which they un- beginning of the week and placed in
verb and in the indicative, "I do pray." leash with the thoroughness of a , the provincial jail to await intern -
her sister broke the sad news to her. With much (trouble)—With a tithe of poacher overhauling a handy covert. ment.
______� the encouragement the old version of No need to reach for your blue pencil iEleven ships, all told, are now on
Agrippa's remark implied, Paul would Mr. Censor. No "indiscreet revela- :order in Victoria and Vancouver as
HAVE LOST ALL CHANCE. have eagerly pleaded all day ! tions" are coming. All the same one ! a result of the ship -building legisla-
30. Bernice—Agrippa's sister, a cannot expect the people who are ! tion passed at the last session of
noted beauty who changed husbands flocking around UC 5 to believe that I the Legislature.
with some freedom. submarines are taken in a hair spring • Members of the fire department
31. We have to assume that Luke or coaxed into captivity with lumps ; of Vancouver have decided to again
heard of this conversation ultimately of sugar! i send Christmas hampers to former
from one of the assessors. No Aimless Wandering. 1 members of the department who are
When trackingdown U-boats the +now on active service.
1 A Kamloops soldier in a machine
Conclusion of Danish Expert Regard-
ing Central Empires.
The military correspondent of the
Christiana Morgenblad, Captain Nor-
regaard, whose work as a military
critic during the war has been high-
ly appreciated, expresses the opinion "hunting dogs" work perspicaciously. , gun section will go into action wear-,
that the developments since the be- NOT DRUNK, MERELY DEVOUT. Anyone unfamiliar with their meth- ing the charmed buckskin shirt of a
ginning of the allies' offensive prove ods,who watched them beatingover
that the Central Powers have lost all Welsh Town Crier's Queer Actions at in Indian warrior chief, who was famous
chances of winning the war. a patch of grey and apparently empty I in wars in the United States.
a Funeral. sea, might think they were nosing j In Vancouver a proprietor of
The Central Powers, he says, have
everywhere had to leave the initia- William Williams, town crier of about rather aimlessly, when the truth candy store was fined $25 and costs
Llanrwst,Wates, accused of beingwould be that they were hot upon
tive in the hands of the allies, and for
I upon being convicted of not keep -
even if they regain the initiative , inebriated at the obsequies of a local them oncecent. theydo pick u said much can be scent ing his soda fountain clean. The px$-
locally they cannot accomplish now' soldier, made this defence before the P secution was laid by the city health
Lianrwst Board of Guardians: they seldom fail to kill, and they kill j department.
what was too much for them in 1915, "I am innocent of the grave and more often than they capture, as one
when their military power was at its serious charge brought against me. would expect from the nature of their I The man, Frank Scherle, upon
zenith, and when the allies were in The funeral referred to, when the hunting. Perhaps one may be per- 4 whose premises the tunnel came out
every respect less well prepared andmated 1 t saythat the do not do through which twelve alien prisoners
g that I had indulged organized than they are now. vicious tongue of gossip spread its mt e also
o y ,
Captain Norregaard, however,poisonous rumormuch aimless wandering, and that; escaped from the Vernon alien in-
ternment camp was points out that immense difficultiein potent fluid, was a military inter -to sea it hasnce an ny versusmaliine puts fairly ,
chance of get -
their
t the charge of assisting these acquitted
alien
still confront the allies, and doubts ment, and as such appealed to the3'
latent militarism I had inhaled while ting back to its harbor again. enemies to escape.
their abilities to expel the Central in the police force, but since sub- In this connection it should be re- j
Powers from the occupied territory membered that a dog cannot snap up ' U
1' 1 within dued.
tart' prey- b h through repute- its hole. Quaint tales are accumu-
i not the onlymeans which the time when the full
by military means alone
wz n a "0 t this occasion I was execs- a rat until the rat has come outof,
reasonable time. Still, mill
sure s sively sober when rung my r p
tion as a musician I was asked to lead lating against the
allies can apply to crush their oppon- singing g I story of the anti -U-boat boat campaig
.�., subsequently complimented on the may be told. When it is, we shall
manner I conducted the singing and •hear of submarines that fought sub- I
Not That Sort, on the beauty of the melody I emit- marines, albeit not altogether de -1
It was ab the baptismal font, and ted, signedly, of others which bobbed up
the minister had the baby in his arms, "Yet some vicious, soulless impor- confidently expecting only an easy
"What is the name?" he asked of the ter declared the melody was inspired victim and found themselves grip- I
mother. "Josephine Newton." "Joseph by over -indulgence in whiskey—a Ped in jaws that crushed them re-,
E. Newton, 1baptize thee in the name t t t I d' rni s with the contempt lentlessly to death. Also, there will;
lase 7" Sleep ...,,
Or Do Any Work.
thein io by the graveside. was n' SUFFERED f RO bI HER NERVES. I
ents.
" "No, no," hurriedly whispered
the another, in great alarm; "not
Joseph E. Newton, Josephine New-
ton; it's not that kind of a baby."
Waste of Cash.
"My wife is afflicted with a wasting
disease."
"Washing disease?"
"Yes, she has a bad case of shop-
ping habit."
Odd.
If about debt you think a bit
This paradox you'll find,
The faster you run into it
The more you get behind.
s aomen is s be tales of unwary boats, which camel
the
mighty lion hath for the crawling
g unwisely and unwittingly to the sur» i
slit face in the midst of British squad -1
"'I have travelled thousands of miles
and visited • strange places, mingling rons, and thereafter only heaven was
with weird people; yet no finger of left to help them. You must know
scorn has ever been directed at me." that the submarine occasionally be- 1,
At this point a board member in- haves like a mole bird creature and I
terrupted: blunders into places it were better to
"But the question is, were you have kept out c11, and thereupon suf•
drunk at the funeral?" fers the usual fate of those who leap
"No, sir," answered William; ei before they look.
was merely devout."
The self -admiration of some people
--- - -- - - �- proves that there's no accounting for
It is an old belief that the bride
should stand vary close to the bride-
groom to prey io: anyo;'e coming he -
'Ween them.
tastes.
Gilt frames may be revived by rub-
bing lightly with a sponge moistened
with turpentine.
Mrs. Thomas Harris 8 Corrigan St.,
Kingston, Ont., writes: "I had been a
constant sufferer, for many years, with
my nerves, and was unable to ,sleep at
night, or do any work through the days
I at last decided to consult a doctor and
find out what was really the trouble.
The first one told me I would have to go
under an operation before I would be
well, but I would not consent to this. One
day I took a fit of crying, and it seemed
that if anyone spoke to me I. would bay
to order them out of the house. I must
have been crying two hours when in
insurance agent came in. He advised m
to trya box of Milburn's e
Hart an
Nerve Pills, and 1 at once sent to thh
drug store and got two boxes, and before
I had them taken 1 felt like a different
person. I have told others about them
and they have told me they would no
be without them. I am very thankful
started to take Milburn's Heart an
Nerve Pills." ,
Mllburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are
50 cents per box, or 3 boxes for $1,25, tit
all dealers or mailed direct on receipt
of price by The. T. Milburn Co., ttrnite ,
Toronto, Ont.
A