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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1917-12-6, Page 70 rer he lria ;yh ra- :sh, Sae zed up l i ^ titin. rs.. ate, she els sod ore ill - 14, . the '45th rang re Rad ia+'na (ill fish hat rem the heir his rent sand om- 4 of tine ,1n tint]], ring that l'111 t- Inon re - the' # e -°the';' °the 3ueh mel, 4 has itish at ac t of lit - and ilete on Calle. un Thp mule flnYf if he with .f..a Ile,'. )f an hilo- until him tro not` mule' 221ashu italS' aq -MANY TIIEO ES ADVANCED T O EXPLAIN THEM -011owledge of Shoot: ,-, tends Back t Tiaai es. g. Stars. fix' i ehistorle 4. You have p obiy wondered as:vou have watched] a L all!!ant shoaling star' burn its way through a summer n!',."iit ',elaere. these:strange visitors.come. from and where they go, A'recent k publication of the Smithsonian losti- ttttion deals; 3v^^itli the origin of_ shoot -i, ing stars and fireballs, both included -in. the term meteor. The expian ationi 18 put forward at different titres in the past to account for the ,, striking •t,» phenomena ai i_t.. eu ss45d *' tial the lau.- thor then takers-vlip the present ideas ;, d the most probable theory' as to their origin. The knowledge of stone which lnt€,y4 fallen from heaven extends into the oldest history of ll maanit>. back: in prelasstorie times. Among the Chine °tie: oris nt;ora e heaven stones hack 6,045]451 v e r rs, asal f Ilia 9 e� v ial llit;€zn'r LY tkl0;" rite e <tn t7� heaver:" "vire gifts. rn ti nity ctt other ictoa of nleteoa . es las 1;a0 tzre q lent, tin•<acsl n?by t12ea'% as lost: Oriental .eo, eeption of hien] as gx, lout though tit; a bole !` � s anti at no.,t 's r n to the da the fisllaa:i* t1i ! +ergo. tvwa co r You Can Do Your Bit:. In preventing waste by de- n ` rlullant r-ianding the whole wheat in Great breakfast foods and bread. cine of the vvworld's Shredded °Wheat- 13£'a-31£afaetoars, who .. lied in;a THE 1), ClcO e as 0 etaa:9:or's. 'e 8.• bene - ng home is 100 per cent. whole wheat -m Sv atrealand zn ila� el l ty-tizixcl I e year„ was Ileal„ t 13unapt, veho had livwct gram prepared in a digestible cl aato long enough to realize hi form—contains more real nu,1$,happy though' had brought un of a �. n ri32?ellt than iln�lt or eggs or''*P0t to ma_z rind, an,d he;n d mor Qkrols of ;i'az. *hePa'1n facttha potatoes and. costs much less.; krn any one ti na, to aunafoe a to Serge with milk or Crean, a. , erry ?fed Cross train, every Sliced peaches, bananas 0e Qro..s alnloulaoce, au a'ter lied C nurse and soroenu and helie',.', 3 F monument to this man with a ]heart, Ile became a 4ata tow ai?4! yv. ' on a le tri;) m Italy .S 133 ii:.'the r(eat of Soles rano took palace. Ile essed the tan: able sti fer:logs of the• ittled lest, oritst,1:e„) taxa testi~ field. called the "sw'oarena of the district to his aid and had the wounded carried to lrci ghboriog. ohu:eh,: Isile •e..he teride nem. This This terrifiic e.er¢enlee,he Crimea, gat Florence Nightingale iia the" Crimea, 'ed him to- "` nit_ate an inter- natioral agreement or the better, ca.•e of the wounded in battle, .=.7d the frllfl other fruits. ate in Canada. G'r taxBO Sl.l3ES. i -Comedy between ti Lines of IJu one. ciiolt to conceal mz ,_ nin etn4_wge as it 1s tn1.0018-0K paint. bei ' t to a f eta$ ± nt it is p' horse; rorpores, •taentel vv itl}''tltt ros l6 as tilts Red Crena i e eakior - `as the Battles re,"="atlt"„ If vias signed at Gene^:t. h eprer e <tatr es of is elve • 1864, • OP When Elte , Win€ wri ? • lea r:n?•osn:; t4,e. 4afdllic'sh51,3$fiAs 4a{,� 't.3tF;' nnnQt t1t0 <, �C Rl&1iaOaa ,a n�sl inti of al ra'nn hit 0 CI#3a 451'=i 418'»n y9't"so1 moon, ^aY1 al11 which seen, and not until i.° +ilii+ a Volcano tO the). . sutliciean:t e;y8 zta:1 ejected bloc]+ of.:atone i,zaitilal velbcIty t:o reach,. typothettis of 101481' o 1 +01; The idea tiut 'n1 tl out of con;>titucallts of $11 n held only :i The yrr gu€n:; e girl- mteCrri,_ k Dressin 1; sires;:. ceats. es 4;r. ,11own. JZ ',,n 3 fi Soon sf, 717eke!, ehrom.im , silica, &.0. nan (,ontained in the air, a1 nittafy other reasons withalre :upport from the hypothesis origin of nfeteorie rousse:: in t1 =sphere. Two t111llosinZ; ',i'itcaria. e .� 0, not c' °c ,9 ttaela((1 t,1°{1110' sn VOl' bac' t11 :fit n1orn 1' 181(1 tile c;er911talas ma "corpse„ :591(1 sho 9 into it. Of eoursi that their observer'woua night the Commas seat every once in •t while and sh 10th]£;, a21(1 the h`remit could de thing. Later, when the flares and the shooting ceased, the French dragged i their observ'er:'back behind the lines;; but vv'aaen they came to examine hint they found, not their comrade, but an. irate :and very much alive Geranan eel-. They crawled back to the pile of rocks where they had left the dead German the night before and found only a Prussian uniform stuffed with straw and cotton and capped with a red wig! The Germans had been doing a little 8.10 :a longer duration was the theory o their. ,e1 restrial origin. According o that ..y are said to have been thrown out of tie interior of our plan- et in the dim early ages with so great force that, they were carried beyond the limit of its -attraction to ,forret a ring around it, like that of.Saturn, out of which fragments fall to the earth again. Astronomic hypothesesas to the origin of meteorites did not devel- op until much later and took their rise from the idea that meteorites, sooting stars and comets were all of the sante character. Say studying the orbits of comets and meteors the the- ory was formulated that cometsavhich Ace= periodic; split t1p into periodic swarms of shooting stars winch re- volve in the courses of the mother comet. 111 opposition to this theory a hypo- thesis was proposed in 1875 based upon a mineralo-geological basis, upon the study of the' component material of the meteorites and upon the times of arrival of meteorites of like cont position. ' According to this theory, which is -generally accepted ' to -day, from the shape and the:sliclnen sided surfaces of ` meteorites they are frag- ments rag -melt s' broken from small planetary 2 5Ses by volcanic explosions. s Such. explosions can only be brought about by sudden expansion of gases and. stem, among which hydrogen may have been in the first rank. Vulcafism as a cosmid phenomenon is the destroyer of planetary masses, as yip learn from the constituents of meteorites, in harmony with the solar development of stars, which all go through a volcanic phase. The brolaeli bits after their separation are arrang- ed in swamis which cross the orbit of the earth in accordance with a definite law. Meteorites then, according to the autnorlty quoted, undoubtedly . comes from vii`ihin our solar system and are broken bits of a world body destroyed by, voleani events. le to crumbs, 2 teaspoons, egg' and add Tedie‘hts, add 11 2 alaey 1,1<teect :a11n Idaho inaitan� strei corpse ° they hive 11(1.1*eoallal in these a eat; £ l' Hing. your of t tlaair ilrtil" of he ; 1:is r bullet heal. eb tllought,;liaam That i Yon en hates , medici(Io ntitnncd ` a box or 180 '}'o11', tn14e 11, y ( 11. brii;ll,ttl ssfil''ATI Ayr "faking” of their own. The - first ("corpse" was not really a dead soldier at all. The observer inside had crept out and made his I-way back to -the German lines. The Germans had then captured the French observer shot up the imitation corpse, and between flares the next night had put one of their own observers in his place. To make typewriters less noisy a Cleveland inventor has patented a platen core that changes the loud - click of the type to a dull thud. Cornstarch Puddling with Fruit. - 1 pint of milk, 4 tablespoons corn- starch mixed with a 'little cold water. 1,6 cup sugar, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1 well -beaten egg, 14 teaspoon salt, ';•' cup chopped cooked PeaChes, apricots or .pears. Scald milk; then sim m corn -starch mixed with a little cold water, and cook five minutes in double boiler. Place upper Part of double boiler on fire. let corn -starch boil, re- turn boiler to place, add sugar, egg and salt beaten together, and cook two minutes, stirring continually. Flavor with vanilla, add fruit, and pour into mold. Chill and serve with sugar and cream. An excellent way of using up small amounts of canned tO the Blood "Fifteen' to thirty drops of 0 ji Extract of Roots, commonly 4, 5yrep, may be taken in water with meals and at bedtime, for ate cure c)f indigestion, consil, pation and bad blood/ Persist. ence in this treatment will effect a cure in nearly Ge:t the genuine at &leg& n: fall e aL' tY 1;" ;2 0 §�ng al* wnc e, 045 f hopolors ed to new Dr. Wil"- Beautiful Fnhrl:a %31 tO e A Dep or: -8 ,ie fog t 1;PR f) ' 1<�vtRAL Cs EN. en' Buy, Coating $2,`00, #','ea' To iiia r he tawraI scho=ol f. money t'rzey rs nr'seated the 1 ;die Ho bus -ft S L, o T0C23 ti 00 tl+ p" ztal e a� en d a PX o 1 rion hos c xra training, r S!_ ent i teo- big a.' 4r sol " tr Bosp,t their zla3 for the c a <lzea wlz wee „aast1 n -go °°off e vehicle is valued at $2,500, and whish too 4tee.are is the finest gift they, had r THE ON an r,f°n,aaeG' Faa1;''. U ztaa rine 6u t4 ($'042 Cie ;.:4.o e Table, 114 r fi Aber j medicine 1 -know tof 11 011. telle :4 3p„0n to PPQM•Ptitv 0OW i gira1 storce£a 104§'„. The Tf rets .n; 0 f35.1 etO ey ▪ few aau '?-Tie,great 'C en 5ra0113 ' that the e sweet, *3. 4533+ art e.bi_rheoencx. a> lar Z$£ r 1 105- x.etx a.e and,; h a p 45c;! c,1 ' lin. T his lets the air at the same ?'%3453451 ee; snotless. ninarn cares xs„rA t ere s tor $"2.50 from pine Islands 's People Medicine Cu., Dro ple.al fruits, aml very 11tAle 1e4 heard Of \von.tin littow5 Abut le the great native industry—the weav- to bleach and removo or fabrics from pineapples and us freckics. Sallownost-, r 'mall Jig 1612,4 Of bananas. Olio ideal skin softenei cl fully The lining of the skins is used , tett, me ot the bes , looms not unlike those familiar to u Just try lt! nre employed. The finest material is; robard for sheep, The rapid increase in fled, cloth., It is very soft arid close up a q I cent years has resulted in ti more Pena f i t d f its ih 1 'in texture, somewhat resembling mull- grant lom lot food for all classes of live stock. muslin, and is the color of champagne,. daily into the It is not, as a rule, dye(1. and is beau- hantis, cattle feed, but tiow it is used as a ii•ftlilY• en11)1.6dered* feed for horses, swine, and -sheep. Pena cloth is expel sive—a blouse • When alfalfa is pastured, great care length C)'"itlrtg "bout $.12 -5° --hut it I NT should be taken to prevent bloat. If ' bandueg, nein, fire washes mid wears well and is exceell- the alfalfa become woody or is ingly graceful and artistic. 'Iasi cloth ,guishers failed I,o niixed with other grasses the danger s heaper and coarser, and i ro s few days later at the 1, - 'g lets know that you are at hand eo WIC NE, letra ing three , cover' tile prfs ti is 'used mishes in and is es of store and c r and make weetly Alisgeanitit ir.on the of rerY I. l'1011 en he pa s sre put into ter a rs spent - much time with he possible, a your movem multi be 'quiet; when feeding:, encotsr- o age them to eat from your hand; it reey a. town will not be long before they . into a pen unannounced, let the pul- is' somewhat lessened. Before turn- &need from bananas. This is the na- ing :the sheep on alfalfa they should - - '. ' ' ' ' ' on hay, fodder, or other the native women. be 'filled up - roughage, and turned out only when The best kind, liowever, Is made in the alfalfa is i'ree "from inoisture oi.' the natural shade—exactly the ' color some citizen tried to learn the rev. After they had freely discussed subject, one of them, said: Chairman, 1 make a motion that the fire extinguishers be eaamin- five dress Material nmd i- worn by -11 Sheep should never be allowed t ,,erribroidered in a finer woven mesh of mariefactured Train bananas. r'erhaps first day. The length of time should the t ie skin, and trimmed with a lace also TORONTO FAT STOCK SHOW pasture more than a short thne be increased a little from day to day offer e r, so fe. P I- g.leaci One of the coming ermits. which all until the sheep aie acCustomed to the er of t e world ,of fashion will intro - feed. Flockmasters have found:that duce these cloths into it is never safe to give 'sheep free Th ,'d ° d access to an alfalfa pasture. The amount of alfalfa fed will al- svays depend on the price and the amount available. When it as cheap and -plentiful and other roughagesi are scarce, alfalfa, Could compose, the, en- tire ration of the flock. On the other hand, whenthay is scarce and high in price, the ration could be made up of straw, fodder, ahd like roughages. In experimental trails, averaging 100 days each, alfalfa woas compared to tiniothy and prairie hay. The lofs fed alfalfa, made greater gains and re- quired less feed per 100 iouncls than did those fed prairie and timothy hay. any 1-111-C1 of a corn, call harm essly b - of cypress (U. Samuel vi., 5), those of Solomon of the almug tree (11. Chronicles ix., 11). r ANY CORN LIFTS OUT DOESN'T HURT A BIT! 9 and calluses off with fingers Sore corns, hard corns, soft corns or ;tea rig it out with the lingers if you French inventor • has brought 'out a g•Liard to , be attached to ahoes •a - For little 'cost one can' get a small bottle 'of freezene. at any drug store' •swhicli. will pasitivelY rid one's.- feet The tontato is an excellent article of good, It-, is properly a vegetable fritit.' of .elrerY r°111 CI' callus without Pain. citric acid which it contains, and also it 18 applieCi alld does not even irri- on account of its Itirge supply of ate s am. N% tomato contains eit,oNgji iron. to supply *tiainounceinent y I the body needs Airs -971e day. The many of our readers. yg sous slifrering from a deficiengy surely get a small nottle for Y0 blood,. or blood coloihio• mattel Is Is holesiile rug house. ercst Potato chowder is not bad for sup- per on a cold evening. Cut into dice six potatoes and a quarter of a pound of salt; Pork. Put the pork, along with a sliced onion, into a pan and fry until golden bross-n. The potatoes, onion and pork are then placed in lay- ers in a and sprinkled with salt, pepper and parsley. Pour over this the fat from the pan in which the pork and onions were i_ried, add a pin( of' water and lot it simmer for twenty nannies. .-Scald a pint el milk, 'thicb-en it with two tablespoonfuls. of flour and one of butter rubbed to- gether. addihis to the chowaler when the potootoes are tender, cud stir un- til the flour is cooked. live stock men and farmers should not miss is the Toronto Pat Stock Show to be held at the Union Stock Yards, on Friday and Saturday, December ith and Stb. The Auction Sale always brings record prices, and it is Wen worth your time to see the competi- tion among packers and butchers for the prize winners. Entries for this year's show are larger than En -W.% Tree leaves as a rule are free front - 1 insects and disease and are valuable for piling up and rotting over winter for turniug under in the garden in the spaing. It is generally safe to use' tree leaves for this purpose when it! may not be safe to use potato vines I pea vines and vegetable tops from anv 'plants that show Indications of in- sects or disease Th eh Ind be gathered and burned, not permitting them to lay on the soil foe any length of time. Freesias are easily grown and deliciously fragrant. Plant five or s with thern. ,The -city Riga' is' the seat of gov- erritgent for thenP*Oviace of Livonia., .11141:a S'Liiiiine era 0111 Tha amed o Steep. a "My. scalp and pained inct•ssiiiiii. This: sceialerdletdo and a fine rasl .; destroy the hair rocts, causing my bait 60311.e. 011 8, which disfigured:he top of my head. 11 also caused loss of siccp. "The trouble tasted "four years. Then and Ointment lvhich encouraged me so 1 bought mom, and 1 had one cake of Cuticura Soap and one box of Ointment end 'VMS healed.'" (Signed) Iohn Curl - Why not make Cuticura your every- day toilet soap and prevent skin troubles ? Absolutely nothing better. , For Free Sample Each by Mail ad- dress post -card: Camara, Dep.. A, Boston, U. S. A." Sold eN cola. where, 17 7 Workers are subject to exposure ic 1,inds brings the rheumatic aches. Y ea Sionn's Linimera. Clean and con- venient F10 ne09 otains; Ise clumsy plasters au out pain Sprains. strains. neuralgia aches and stifr, emre muscles ere all relieved lay em cation of Sloan's Liniment.