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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1916-12-7, Page 7ad PneuIflOflia OR WOOD'S 11 NORWAY • PINE SYRUP CURED HIM. r 1 A cough is an early symptom of pea- , atonia. It is at first . frequent and hacking, and is accompanied with a little tough, colorless expectoration, which loon, However, becomes more copious ind of a rusty red color, the lungs be- come congested and the bronchialtubee filled with phlegm making it hard for the ;offerer to breathe. Males are more com- mon4 attacked than females, and a previous attack seems to give a special ha1ilit:ir to another. O141.he first sign of a cold or cough you should get a bottle of Dr. Wood's. Nor- wae ..7,jws Syrup and thus prevent the cold from developing into some serious lung trouble. Mrs. E. Charles, North Toronto, Ont.. writes:!"Two years ago my husband had a very bad attack of pneumonia, and the doctors said he was getting consumption. A friend came in to see me and told me to get Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. I got three bottles, and they seemed to quite clear his chest of the phlegm, and now he is fine and well. I shall never be without it in the house as it ij a very valuable medicine.'' e Dr. Woods, Norway Pine Syrup is put up in a yellow wrapper; three pine trees the trade mark ; price 25c. and 50e, The genuine is manufactured only by Tse T b't tcrxx Co Lrau'rsn, `Toronto, • Dainty Dishes Egg Plant Recipe, -Peel rind cut in slices less than one-half inch thick.. THET Y `n TL 9) teealls one of the curiosities of by -1 dates for office.,Of course white is t r� y gene criticism, the discovery of the' symbolical of heaven. A new dame • INTERNATIt)NAL LESSON DECEMBER 10 Lesson XI, Faithful Unto Death-- -.10. The devil -Not a' mere synonym "1 ubir►gen School" that the phrase is -Christ himself has a "new name" a bitter .allusion to Paul: Itis just the (Rev. 3. 12), for it is a new world converse of the prevailing use in the - that is corning, and in it all is now. fourth Gospel, where "the Jews" are Even here he is "`new every morning,' the leaders .of the nation that has re- and those who understand him sing. jetted its Messiah. '..IIere the bonen ever a "new song." Compare Rev. able name is not allowed to such en- 19. 12 for the one, Rev. 14. 3 for the mien of their God. other. On all these letters students should and so it is better to use occasionally Rev.� 2 % 17 . Golden of Satan, which is not a real propel read W. M. Ramsey's Letters to- the we claim, with - That grand old remedy, .Burdock a eustaxd or pudding and Text -Rev. 2. 10, name (as it was not in the Old Testa- Seven Churches, which are c euQiiorly on the market i p Blood Bitters, has been themilk in l I,D • " 1 d er' valuable in showing how r, due gy for over forty years and AO INDIGESTION. BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS CURED. give gra p e'uice,' lemon or orangeade Verse 1, The angel, as stated last cent) . evil means s ear er . r some' other fresh fruit brink in its week, is the spiritual counterpart of see Rev. 12. 10. . The earliest ap- p lace, the church in'the unseen world. It eearanee of the idea is in Job, where 'Phe sandwiches should be cut thin differs from our impersonations of a the Satan (adversary) is one of the brings out the vividness of the illus- out any fear of contradiction, that there trations used. is not another medicine on the marketImmerse in salt and water half an to -day that can compare with it for the hour, 'drain and dip each slice in egg batter. Fry nice brown in olive o'1 and with the edges neatly squared off collective unity -as when we speak of , sons of God whos t, y, cure of all .disturbances of the stomach. r . e function it is ' Mrs. 5, Turpin, Colborne, Ont., writes.; and butter. so that they may look attractive when' the achievements or` the failures of to test pretensions to virtue. But an PRICE OP RUBBER DECREASED. „ Coffee IcingTake four table- I am writing to say :that I have used •- unwrapped from the paraffin paper .in "Methodism" -in its suggesting a . eye that is always looking for evil your Burdock Blood Bitters, Fora long spoonfuls of strong black coffee and which they should be Xnelosed. And real existence. Ephesus, like tends to become transformed: in this Average Man Hasstthe British Gov- period I suffered with indigestion, and one cup of granulated sugar. Boil. here, too, variety will certainly add a Laodicea (Col, 4. 16) and perhaps book"the devil"is conspicuously the ernntent t4 Thank for It, nothing) took ever gave me any relief, until a thread appears. Then pour' spice, and the child will be tempted some others of these Asian churches, deceiver, who prompts the evil that he If, tenyears a o,•any rubber man- onlybottles for a short. time. I bought several' slowly into the beaten white of an egg, to inish them all if he or she knows' shared thirt years before the circular then accuses us of. Here there may g an order Mr.Griffis,t. B. ca hoc tl say druggist, our ca beating constantly. Spread immedi-!here is a probability of different fit -:letter from Paul which we call Eph- be allusion to the false charges of re- ufaeturer had been givenG drink n honestly y 1 ately bewteen the layer and on the top lin s. Besides, this is an excellent ter the He that holdeth-in each let- volting crimes, under which Chris- for 2,000,000 pairs oof rubber r booth of eat or ng any bad after-effects. titouI layer. The result will be a delicious g ter the desert tion oft Lord is part tians were so often martyred in the , the hip le g h v t3', y say that it is the only medicine I I way of using very small portions of p the f tof h rder, aun v ma y y i creamy icing, leftover foods which might otherwise of that which is gathered together in early days. Tried -An unfortunate- been once , re use e o ever got any relief from." Nut Bread. -Four large cups flour, I go to waste. Rev. 1; see the last note for Decem- ly ambiguous word in this conncetion: less he were privileged to farm it Burdock Blood Bitters is manufactured four tablespoons baking powder, one A custard or other milk pudding ber 3, Wallceth-For he is on earth road tested. The reference is to Dan. out• Seven thousand tons of rubber only by Tee T. Mzravxx Co., Limited, cup white sugar, one teaspoon salt, put up in an individual cup will travel still, as well as in heaven. Lamp- 1. 12, 14, where the hero "provedof the book and other materials are necessary to Toronto. Ont.. one and one-half Cups sweet milk, one quite safelywith a of paraffin stand mar m -The great lampstand and his companions are ten manufacture 2,000,000 pairs of rubber cup chopped walnut meats, one egg aper '°astened down piecever the top with of the( temple, so often described in days." As they came forth fairer boots and ten years ago it would have beaten; allow the mix_ tune to stand for a rubber band, and another container; the Old Testament, and pictured on from this short testing of their prin- been next to impossible for a single thirty minutes, then of thb same kind can hold a .dainty the Arch of Titus, was to hold seven ciples, so shall the Smyrna confessors manufacturer to lay his hands on that amount of the crude product. To -day, however, it is a differentI�y matter -so different, in fact, that such an order has just been given to �'9 a single manufacturer by the British forty minutes or longer; this quantity salad. But rho desserts can be varied lamps, one at the top, and three on from their trial. Faithful unto will make two loaves. - I almost indefinitely by having cakes, each side at the extremities of three death is the same phrase as obedient Pumpkin Cheese .-Cut some pump- break, sandwiches spread with jam or • serni-circular concentric branches. unto death in Phil. 2. 8, except for ;kin' into two or three inch squares.jelly,candies, cookies and all kinds of There were also in the temple, "be_ the adjective, which is nearly equival- Drop into boiling salted water. Sim fruits. foie the oracle," ten lampstands, five ent. The crown of life -So in James mer for a quarter of an hour. Drain I An egg boiled quite hard, not by on each side, and evidently single. 1, 12, where there is a strong sus- Government for boots for Britain's - - well. Heat some fat in a pan. Fry ; putting it down in boiling water and The symbolism here is that of the gestion that the phrase comes from a army. The name Britain appears Keep the Henhouse Clean. the pieces of pumpkin for about five cooking it with a quick heat; but put lampstand with seven branches, each saying of Jesus. This would account still further in the transaction. It The farmer who would allow his cat - down minutes, turning them from time to down in cell water brought slowly to a lampstand itself. This brings out for the incorruptible crown" (1 Cor. was through the foresight and saga- tie or horse stable to go for several time. Place in a dish, season with a boil and then left standing in the well the unity as well as the diversity 9. 25), the unfading crown of glory city of the British Empire that this days without cleaning would be eon - salt, sprinkle well with grated cheese boiling water for fifteen minutes, is in the church. That Christ "walks in (1 Pet. 5. 4), and the "crown of and other manufacturers of rubber sidered slovenly by his neighbors, and 4 t' 1 the immense supply of Ont. , andplace in a hot oven or under the luncheon. The slow cook- their midst' is no difficult in this righteousness (2 Tim. 8), which, ar is es have an excellent y;et the men who, are very particular grill until nicely browned. I ing does not make the albumen tough, book symbolism` cares nothing for like our text and that in James, re- the crude article with which to meet Y calls the Lord's promise. Perhaps he the demands of the public. about keeping their main stable clean Graham Bread .-The following re- which is the reason that hard-boiled pictorial limitations. What artist «allow the henhouse to go for months ripe has been tried with very good eggs are so frequently indigestible. could put on canvas the description of said, I will give the crown.of life to The why and wherefore of this results' One and one-half cups ofJerusalem?d b k to 1893 when wise men in without removing the litter and excre- sour milk half teaspoonful of salt,When making egg sandwiches, mash the New ; h B t h Government quaemilk, of sugar, of the egg up with a fork and mix in the 2. Toil -Characteristic of life on quarter-cupuls f soda,quarter-cupr,twooteaspoon-abutter so as to form a paste and then earth: it ceases with death, when half-cupfof wheat flour nd twol cups spread on the bread. They are very works continue -see Rev. 14. 13; 1 much nicer in this way. Nuts, dates, Cor. 15. 58, where `labor" is the same 11. Second death -Explained in tions of rub er ees Give it a thorough cleaning rn the of sifted graham flour. Mix thor- raisins, figs and almonds run through Greek word. Patience -Read en- Rev. 20. '14. What the awful figure wild flight into fancy in the minds of fay. Sprinklethor a little cleaning over the oroughly and bake forty minutes in a the mincers and spread on crackers durance. Canst not bear -It is tempt- implies is left in mystery, but "the the average rubber man, who believ- floor, which tends l Ilei lime and it k slow oven. Perhaps some reader are delicious and of considerable food ing to connect with verse 3, and under- dread of something after death"is ed that rubber could only come from Bagdad, Viennese boulevardiers, un- en - knows of another recipe. value. stand that the hated burden is borne deeply set in human instinct and made the wild trees of Brazil but these does no harm to whitewash the inter - Po o`exs.-One a one cu of rr �� b erevelation an assurance of retribu- Englishmen ' w differently and to for, This can be applied either with sophisticated Macedonian mountain p egg, p The sandwiches, calces, etc., can be after all for my name's sake, as he has Y h British h the brush or a spray pump If COSMOPOLITAN CAMP. De.ere;tt Nlitionalities Among Pris. a- cis Held at Kiev. Tie great Kiev concentration camp, in R'ussis, ;where prisoners are quar- antined end sorted before being sent into the tterior, is becoming amazing- ly cosmcpolitan and picturesque. Stout Bavarians Turks from mysterious them that love me." Four of the dis- ciples thus independently quote a say- ing of the Master which is not in our Gospels. ate ac , cent, It is not necessary that the authority n the 'British henhouse, where no dropping -board is conceived the idea of fostering the used,be cleaned every day, but it rubber industry by subsidizing planta- should be done once a,month at least. b ti This was a eers, highly educated Czechs from flour, one cup of milk, pinch of salt. e • •ed the eveningbefore wrapped said wheat and tares must grow to-' tion for evil. Prague, former Albanian bandits,Sift the flour into a bowl with the salt, i th p raffin • paper and epi nn t e get ei ti arves ry- n then add slowly the milk, mixing thor- oughly. Separate the egg, acid the slightly beaten yolk, then fold in the white after it has been beaten to a stiff froth. Fill muffin pans only two- thirds full and bake in a hot oven for ten minutes. They should be served while hot. Use no baking powder with this recipe. This quantity will make isx popovers. Almond 'Soup. -The ingredients re- quired are a quarter of a pound of almonds, ground, one quart of milk, two: cloves and a blade of mace, one large onion, two ounces of butter, salt and pepper and one tablespoonful of cornflour. Place the milk in a saucepan with the cloves stuck in the onion and the blade of mace. Allow it to simmer gently for half an hour. Remove the onion and mace and smooth the ground almonds and corn- flour with a little cold milk. Stir this into the milk and heat gradually until slightly thick. Fried or toasted sippets should be served with the soup. Ginger Nuts .-Take four ounces butter, one-half pound flour, three ounces sugar; one-half ounces ground "Well, jump in," he said; and when ginger; one egg- and a little milk. she had climbed in and deposited the: Rub the butter into the flour with the bundle on the seat beside her they tips of the fingers; then add the sug- ar and ginger. Beat the egg until it froths and add to the dry ingredients, together with enough milk to make a smooth soft paste. Roll out to about one-quarter inch thick and cut into small round biscuits. Line the flat baking tin with a greased paper and bake for about ten minutes. Very probably the oven was too hot for your shortbreads. They are very hard to bake, because they require very lit- tle heat. Macaroons. -Fill patty tins -with short pastry made of the follwoing ingredients: One-half pound flour, five ounces butter, one ounce castor sugar, one yolk of egg, cold water. Rub butter into flour, add sugar, mix water with egg and make into stiff paste. Before baking make a mix- ture for filling of the following: One egg, one yolk, two ounces sugar, one tablespoon cream, two ounces crushed and sieved ratafias. Beat eggs with sugar, add ratafia crumbs and cream place a little of this mixture in the lined patty cases, then a piece of any crystallized fruit which may be lik- ed and then more of the mixture. Sprinkle a little sifted sugar over and hake from twenty-five to thirty min- utes in a moderate oven. Pr p`1 , 13. Throne -For he is "the prince n e a k h h 'll theharvest. Try -In the ice box and in this way there will be no Lord's own way, "by their fruit." of this world." All through this sight of these men. destroying the vermin. No one can unnecessary rush in the morning when Apostles -2 Cor. 11: 13. The word . book we must notice how the writer ! This year's production of rubber afford to keep hens that are infested getting the children ready for school, is used in the more general sense,! makes Evil caricature Good. Thus' will be well over 200,000 tons of crude with lice or mites. Fresh straw should and the mother who takes the trou- much like our "missionaries." in "the devil, the beast and the false rubber, while the South American ble to see that the luncheons are care- 3. Bear -"Thine own load"'(Gal. prophet," we have hell's trinity, relat- production, which satisfied many, still be placed on the feeding floor every month; it should be from six inches to fully planned and neatly put up will 6. 5) and "one' another's burdens" ! o p reap a quick reward in the improved (Gal. 6. 2), unless we are to take the appetites and consequently improved suggestion made on verse 2. The health of -the children. tense rather implies some special trail. 4. Didst leave -"Has left" would be better, implying a recent declension. The charge is profoundly suggestive -how much we, can possess in spirit- ual wealth and yet lose the fullness of the one thing needful! Of course they had not lost all their love; but the con- dition of Christian life is that we must increase in love, and not diminish or stand still. Thyatira (verse 19) shows the ideal. mer till tender.5. The first works -The "labor of Never let dishes stand, but get love."Out of its place -In the one united lampstand. farmers rom Alsace and the banks of the Rhine, Trentino Italians, Germans who haul spent most of their time among elle Pennsylvania Dutch at Bethleheti, Pa.; Armenians from Palestine . Poles, Bulgars, Hungarians and Hareverians are to be found in the crows of men streaming into the . camp free Volhynia, Galicia, Buko- wine, Mddavia and Dobrogea. 1 Great Convenience. . About three miles from his place of ,,business lives Mr. Jones, and he goes back andforth every day in his auto- mobile. :Now, Mr. Jones has a kind, •,1' generous heart, and when he sees a pedestrian trudging his way he will often offrr the man a "lift." One mprning, shortly after leaving ITreee, he saw a large Iri$hwoman str,.ggling along with a huger bundle. He Stopped his car and said politely: 1.Mayr.'b I give you a lift, madam?" "In that thing?" she said. "I never rode in one in all my life." started on. After they had covered a mile, Mr. Jones became a little uneasy; but he "kept on for nearly another mile, and then turned and said, "Where do you want to go, madam?" She gave him a broad smile' and a gracious nod of the head, and replied, "Anywhere you wish; it makes no dif- ference to me." "But where were you going when I t okyou in?" asked Mr. Jones. 'Oh," she said, "only to the next house!" And kind Mr. Ji nes had to turn back and take her tw�i miles to the "next house." Lets Georgiana Do It. Mrs. Exe-I make it a rule never to ask another to do what I would not do myself. Mrs. Wye -But you would not go to the door yourself and tell a caller you were not at home. H WEAK HEAR' ULD NOT WORK COULD NOT SLEEP. School Lunches. Many women are kept in a state of In the first place, a suitable contain - fear of death, become weak, worn and er should be provided. Lunch boxes nuseerable and are unable to attend to are not very expensive, even those tbelr.holisehold, social or business duties, I which are fitted with the invaluable � one fount of the unnatural action of vacuumbottle;'but should there be so the `roheart. such suirecers Milburn's Heart I many children in the family that such aad Nerve Pills give prompt and per- I an expenditure is impossible, a very. manent relief. good home-made substitute is within Mrs, J. Day, 234 John Street South, the reach of all. • ' Take an ordinary Hamilton, Ont., writes: "I was so run' shoebox and cover. it neatly with dark down With a weak heart I could not even paper, glazed muslin or self oileloth. sweep the floor, nor could I sleep at. Line the inside with• white oilcloth se night. I was so awfully sick sometimes that it can be kept spotlessly clean. had to stay in bed all day as I was so Inside the lid stitch a strap of elastic Weak, I used three and a half boxes of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills and I to hold 'a spoon, folded paper napkin am a cured woman today, and as strong and fruit knife. A small vacuum bot- • as anyone could be. T am doing my own tie or a. bottle such as is used for root housework, even my own washing. beer and a folding cup can hold the doctored for over two years but got t liquid, milk, fruit syrup or. whatever is no help until I used your pills. planned in the day's menu. And here 1• Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are be it remarked that though milk is 50c, per box, 3 boxes for $1.25, at all popularly and rightly held to be a oY Yg very dealers or mailed direct on receipt of necessary food .fin..' children, milk as rice by `I`r'a T, ma,Buxx Co.. Immo. mo Toronto, Ont. i a drink dity after day is itpt.,to pall, sa - car - day, not only the rt is Empire, belie acid, Zenoleum, creolin, or some but the world is profiting by the fore- other disinfectant is used it will aid in Household Hints. A good chicken pie: makes a good luncheon dish. Good lamb is of bright red color with white fat. - Steaks should be cut from an inch to an inch and a half thick. . When boiling meat, start it only at the boiling point, then let it sim- them washed up the moment the meal is over. Desserts must be used with judg- ment or they • will spoil the entire meal. When snaking a cake, never beat the butter, sugar or eggs in a tin basin. Prunes cooked without sugar are last of the twelve: there might also be 6. Nicolaitans-An antinomian sect (verse 15), presumably followers of a Nicolas. It is often suppoed that he may been the Iast-named of the seven in Acts 6. 5. It would be a curious coincidence if the last-named of the seven was unfaithful like the more wholesome than when sugar is added. To keep flowers fresh, clip the ends significance in his being isolated among the seven (as a proselyte), as Judas was among the twelve (the only of the stems every day and change Judmart). But there is absolutely no the water, add?zig„a little salt. . proof, and the name is common. Note To take match marks off paint rub it is the works Christ hates: not wrong with a bit of lemon; apply a little doctrine, but its issue. vaseline and rub dry with a soft 7. This recurrent verse, which tells us that these "open letters" are meant for the whole church, is an echoed say - cloth. Do not soak fresh fish in water be- fore cooking. This treatment only ing from the Lord's earthly ministry. ruins the flavor and makes the flesh If Matt. 13. 9, etc., had not been pre - soft. served, we should never have known it Corn breads are always heavy when a quotation. Probably there are many sweet milk is substituted for sour and unrecognized sayings of Jesus in the the soda is not changed to baking- latter half of the New Testament. The powder. Before you put the -old coat in the ragbag, see if there is not some poor fellow in the neighborhood who could has won back the victory, he will "eat tree of life -From which man was driven away (Gen. 3. 22) when he was "overcome" by evil. When he wear it and get lots of good out of it. When cooking sauerkraut, to pre- vent scenting up the whole house cook it in a covered dish in the oven. A bean jar is just the thing. When making gelatine it is better to allow a little more than a quart of water to each envelope of gelatine. The result will be a tender, delicate dessert. A very good and inexpensive meat dish is made from hamburg steak to which a portion of ' minced ham is added; to this add a little onion: form into a loaf and bake. Hard to put up a stovepipe without getting some soot on the floor. Be- fore you touch it scatter a little salt over it. Then go ahead with your sweeping. If a basket with sewing material is kept 1 the kitchen many odd jobs of sewing can be done while waiting for the dinner to cook, or the men to come .to it. When you accidently spill hot grease on the .bare floor, clash cold water on it at once. This hardens the grease so that it can be scraped up before much of it soaks into the floor. Do you know of many cellar steps that have a railing along the side? And yet it would be an easy thing to make, and would save many a tumble, and perhaps some broken bones. After some people learn the value oat 'looney, they •forget all about the good they can tib with it, too, and live for ever." Paradise -The Persian word for a park, used by the Greek translations of Genesis to repre- sent "Eden." 8. Smyrna -The only town of the seven that still flourishes -so far as a city uz_der Turkish government can!. 9. Poverty (but thou art rich) -The exact converse of Laodicea (Rev. 3. 17). See Matt. 5. 3; James 2. 5. Reviling (margin) is perhaps more probable. This verse (and Rev. 3. ed to one another in a manner re-! remains the same and constitutes only sembling that of the Divine Trinity. � 23 per cent. of the total world's pro- Antipas-The "uncertainty of text" duction of crude rubber a a foot dee in order to give the hens plenty of exercise searching for their noted in the margin is only a matter. I But, this is the interesting part for grain feed. There is no better way of We have no record of Antipas: his the average person. Britain's rub- getting the blood in circulation and "Acts" are written in heaven. Dwell-;ber foresight has brought the market I heating the bird's body than by vig- orous exercise in the morning. Con eth-Taking us back to the opening! under her control andshe has forced phrase: the church and Satan "dwell"! the price of crude rubber down from together, not merely "sojourn." No -1$3.00 in. 1910 and $1.25 just before the thing could more vividly illustrate war to about 67 cents to -day, In these John 17. 15. 1 days, when all prices are mounting, 14. A few -Since these antinom- this is glad news for the man of ordin- ians were in a minority and had not' any means. infected the -church as a whole But' He is the man who buys rubber necessitates a de -ening of the pen. If the '"angel" impersonates the whole several times a year to keep himself the droppings are left to accumulate community, and is responsible for all dry shod -perhaps to keep the feet of underneath the roost, they commence who have not been expelled. Balsam' a wife and one or two children from to heat and the moisture given off is -The text of Num. 25 has no hint of the damp and slush of winter. He is not good for the brids. Clean the this fiendish method by which Balaam the man who knows what the increase pen in the fall, and aim at keeping it is said to have "cursed" Israel after, in price of other articles means and clean all winter. It is as important all; but Num. 31. 8 tells us they slew; welcomes the news that, at least, one as keeping the main stable clean. him. Since, then, Balaam had not; article is decreasing rather than ris- Poultry will not de well in filth any gone to his "place," or had returned ing in cost. more than will other live stock.- from it, Jewish exegesis naturally con- a He is the man who also knows that Farmer's Advocate. come.ed the business on which he had: his shoe leather and that of his wife come. and children is mounting so rapidly Vegetables for Poultry Feed. 15. Paul's teaching on "things that the buying of shoes for the fam- In gathering the garden stuff the sacrificed to idols"will be remember - ;fly is 'a problem. Winter is coming hens should not be forgotten. Im• ed, and the collocation of this and; and rubber and overshoes come with "fornication" in Acts 15. 29: see note `winter as a means to help solve this mature cabbage make excellent winter on the passage (Lesson Text Studies,; high cost of shoes, and he has to feed. They should be pulled and put May 28) . On the former act in itself;thank the British Government for the in a convenient place and covered with Paul and John rniay well have differer: control it has of the rubber market straw and earth, or even coarse man - Paul regarded nothing as unclean, fort and the help it has been to the manu- ure. They will freeze somewhat un the earth is the Lord's, and an idol is facturer, who might otherwise have der suck covering, but not enough to nothing. :But Paul abstained because had to put rubber in the same class as injure their feeding value. Mangs of other men's consciences,John for or other beets also make excellent leather. -G. chicken feed. They can be put in a his own, as a Jew who had not been corner of the cellar and covered light- ly with sand or earth to keep them fresh and crisp. A convenient way to feed them is to cut them in halves and nail them up where the birds can reach them; or if they freeze toc quickly that way, they .may be chop- ped fine. When chickens acquire a taste for beets they will eat a great many of them, and they are very good feed. sequently, many poultrymen make a practice of sprinkling grain in the lit- ter after the birds have gone to roost; so that they are induced to scratch, the first thing in the morning. This straw becomes cut up and more or less dirty in a few weeks' time, which emaneipated through fire, as Paul had been. Paul's teaching on anti-nom- ianism must be recalled on this verse: Fre comes, a poor decrepit form, Who plods the pathway on a crutch. And 'cause his garments are awry, We cast a glance and pass him by Without attention overmuch, LIFT YOUR HAT. see Rom. O. 16. Report -The church had hesitat- ed to expel them, and for their own sake as well as others' that was the A hero we have looked to see act of love. "Cold or hot" is theAnd In so oldwe andfail thiso rectrionicogniparts;ze only alternative: Hien who thought In this, his pitiful disguise,. they were Christians and denied its A man whose valor tluilled our hearts. ethical foundation were only a nause- ous mixture of church and world. 17. Hidden manna -It had never been seen since the day "the manna ceased"; and the memorial pot of it was hidden in the ark where none could see. But John 6. 32-35 tells us how the true manna wasoffered to all. White stone -Like those on which voters wrote the names of the candi- Making It Quite Plain ER.GE,A.I�l'x-IN,STP.tTCTOR (to rather dull reortilt) : "In this movement fshoulder; i l le t t1 en to the n the 1f1e amen I'rXvkte Smith, you brings x y kite you don't know which Is the left shoulder I'll tell you for your ident.i- r ication as the sayln' le, that It is the opposite one to which you shakes 'dtl w1t r-•-�Ziolltg0 O n iltlo ! p This ragged coat conceals his wounds. We see not in his abject state . The glory he has bled to win - A crying shame to German sin - The treason of his halting gait. These should more terribly than words - This shattered limb, this livid scar - Tell how he came at duty's breath And laughing mockery at death, Was broken on the wheel of war. So we, who play the passive part And know by name alone the strife. Must learn to look and see beneath This humble, un -presuming sheath The hero as he Is in Ilre. <tnd lift our hats to him who faced With lion heart the belching guns And thus, in feeble measure show The debt -the priceless debt -we owe To these our valiant British sons. Trench Dog Invalided Hoine. A story of a mongrel Irish terrier, "invalided home through the overeat- ing of rats in the trenches," was told at the Bromley (Kent) Police Court. Witnesses complained that "Tiger" had bitten them, and the owner, who was ordered to keep the dog wider control, stated that it was formerly the mascot of the Rifle Brigade. oti-• Proportion of Cream. Every quart of milk yields about an ounce of butter. The proportion of cream to milk from the average cow j ranges from one -twentieth to ane -1 but in the case of the famous Alderneycows it averages from three to four -tenths, Advice is cheap, but if we could all sell at half price the wolf would be kept far from the door. FOR `LIVERISHNESS" USE MILBURN'S LAXA- L I V E R PILLS THEY NEVER FAIL TO DO GOOD. Mrs. J. Shellsworth, Halifax, N.S., writes: "I take pleasure in writing you concerning the great value I have re- ceived by using your Milburn's Lena - Liver Pills for a sluggish liver. When my liver got bad I would have severe head- aches, but after using a couple of vials of your pills I have not been bothered with the headaches any more," q Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills clean away all waste aid poisotious matter from the system, and prevent as well as cure all complaints arising from a liver which has become inactive. Mllburn's Lana -Liver ?ills are 25e, :a vial, or 5 vials for $1.00, at all healers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by r rp'Toronto, 'I'iaa T, Mzt,xuis'rr Cu., I,zati t+ , Ont, 1 4 4 A 4 1 1 4 111 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1