The Exeter Times, 1920-1-1, Page 2aoking
Persistent Cough
Should Never Be Neglected.
The constant hacking, racidng, per-
ahrtent emigh thet sticks to yea in spite
of everything you have done to get rid
eft, aneans eager.
The longer the cough sticks, the more
eerious menace it hecorees to Your health.
It ie a very easy matter to get rid of
the cold at the outset by using
Dr. Wad's
Noriiray Pine Syrup.
nearly every cue it will allay the
inflammation, soothe the irrita.tiort, heal
the diseasied mucous lining a the lungs
road bronchial tubes, and till's rid the
eystem a all the bad effects of the
lingerirtg cough or void.
Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup haa
been universally wed for the past
80 years, and so .great has been its
success it is only natural that a great
e many imitations have beeu placed on
the masket. -
Doiet aocept any of tlaese, so -celled
Pine •Syrups, Get the original "Dr.
Wood's,"
Put up ha a yellow vrrapper; 8 pine
levee the trade mark; price 25e, and e0c.
Manufactured only ley The T. Milburn
ehe Limited, Toronto, Ont.
ParCiard15:111511intIIIIMINSINIOISNMYAMMIttli
T• hi* is the Remedy. .2. -
When ver arrendivienal goes on a
uth nature presents her bill.
wild de
The individual is compelled to pay be-
fore he is restored to n.ormal condi-
tion. Whenever a person suffers from
eing run a fever due to internal or
external causes nature presents her
bill. The patient has to pay in suffer-
ing and. anguish. In neither case can
the patient expect to be restored save
after a keg, tedious and heart rend -
The Marc
of the White Guard
By SIR GILBERT PARKER.
CHAP. IV.—(Cont1,)
You have come to save me—to
sai mei" said the weak voice even.
Yese 1 have come to save you."
TL s voice was strorig and clear and
true.
"I seem to have heard yoar voice be-
fore—somewhere bees --I seem to
have—" But he had fainted.
Jespar Hume poured a little liquor
down, the siek man's throat, and Late
Carscallen chaffed the delicate hand—
delicate in health, et was like that a
little child novv. 'When breath came
again Jasper Hume whispered to his
helper, 'Make Cloud-in-thet-Sley and
get wood; bring feesh branch,es; elear
one of the sleds, and we will start back
with him in the early morning,
Late Carscalleu, looking at the skele
• etonelike figure said, "Be will never
get there.
"Yes," 'said easpar Hume; "he will
get there."
"But he is dying."
"Ile goes with me to Fort Prove.
deuce,"
"Ay, to Providence he goes, but not
with you," said Late Carseallen, sadly
but doggedly.
Anger flashed lin Jasper liume's eye,
but he said quietly, "I shall take him
to his wifeget the wood, Carscallen."
And .Taspar Herne was left alone
with the starving Indian, who sat be-
side the fire eating voraciously, and
the sufferer, who now mechanically
was taking a little biscuit sopped in
brandy. For a few moments thus,
and his sunken eyes opened Ind he
looked dazedly at the man bending
above him. Suddenly there came into
them a look of terror. "You—you—
are James Mune," the voice said in
an awed 'whisper.
"Yes," and the hands of the Sub-
factor &geed those of the other.
"But you •said you were a—friend
and cone to save me."
"I am eorne to save you."
There was a shiver of the sufferer's
body. This discovery would either
make him stronger or hill him alto-
gether. Jasper Hume knew this, and
said: "Varre Lepage, the past is past
and dead to me; let it be so to you."
There was a pause.
ins period of rectipeiation. The price How—did you 1:none—about me?
of exchange is the iirice of an inter- "I was at Fort Proeidence; there
came letters from the Hudson' Bay
national spree—nature's bill for the Company, and from your -wifel saying
wild debauch known as war, in which .
g 3 eei
several nations have recently in -
and were six months behind—P'
dulged. It took four years to burn up "My wife, my wife! Rose!"
eand destroy half the wealth of Europe. • "Yes, I 'have a letter for you from
'not reasonable to suppose that her. She is on her way to Canada.
the per of restoration will be less
than theneee . d of destruction.
There is no some). -melon for the -
alarming cry ef "chaos in e world's
business" because of the unprAcedent.
ed. fall in the rate of internatioireeekee
change. Nothing can be gained—th
patients will not recover any sooner
y agitating them and alarming their I
We are to take you to her."
"To take me—to her!" Be shook
his head sadly, but he pressed the let-
ter that Jasper Hume had just given
him to his lips.
"To take you to her, Varre Lepage,"
"No, I shall never see her again."
"I tell you, you shall. Y311 can live
if you will. You owe that to her—to
e—to God!"
eighbors. Nothing in the world but! "To her—to you—to God. But I
te, ' patience, economy, thrift, pro- I 1.1-aAbneseenityrtiou dt
oontiloyn e. nTd o wionn gh e r
el
ed
duction ane enemy willcure the dis-1 I
!her, too.and wronging—both of you,
ease and restore international health. I I yerongedeThat Other One. I have
Health will come, provided specula- I been punishee. I shall die here."
tors, traders in "internationalism" and I "You shall 'go to Fort Providence.
quack theorists permit the laws of i Do that in payMent of your debt to
trade and COM131073. sense to work out .' me, Varre Lepage. Idemand that."
a sane and complete solution 1 In this sinning mane .there was a
'latent spark of honor, a. him
be n rise of jus -
that might have developed
Ito great causes, to noble ends, if some
Odd Facts About Eggs. strong nature, seeing his eaknesees,
t had not condoned them, bt had ap-
The Academy of Science in Phila- 1 pealed to the natural chivalry 'of ean
delphia, some years ago, lost an egg. !impressionable, vain and weak char -
Presumably it was stolen. It was the I acter. He strpggled to meet the eyes
egg of a California condor, and worth ' of Jasper Hume, and doing so he gain -
a lot of money. i ed confidence and said, "I will try to
Only seven eggs of that bird are hive. I will do you justice—yet. But,
known to exist in collections. It fre- ! ele my wife!"
'Your first duty is to eat end drink.
quents the most inaccessible peaks in I
Southern California, and hatches its r We start for Fort Providence to -mor -
young at dizzy hefghts in caves in the, The sick row Ilan stretched out his
tikes of cliffs. Thus the task of pro- ' bane. "Food! Food!" be said '
- t
curing an egg is one iavolving utmost 1 In little bite, food and drink were
danger. 1 given to him, and his -strength sensib-
• The species, a gigantic vulture, has I ly increased. The cave was SOM. aglow 1
been almost exterminated, Cattlemen I with the fire that was kindled by Late ,
;
and sheepmen poison carcasses to de- Cerscaliell and
I There was little speaking, for the sick'
troy wolves and bears; the condors ; man soon fell asleep, Vane Le,page's
eat the bait and die. I Indian told Cloud -in -the -Sky the tale'
That an ostrich egg may be slane of their march—how the other Indian,
gerous, if overripe, was discovered a and the dogs died; how his master be -I
while ago by Doctor 13aner, of the came ill as they were starting toward.
Smithsonian Institution. While he was ; Fort Providence from Manitou Moun-i
boring a hole inane, it exploded, the ' tain in the.summer weather; how they,
gying fragments cutting him badly. I turned back and took refuge in this r
The eggs of some orioles are mark- how month by month they had ' 'cave; -i
esl. with grotesque figures, often re- ed on what would hardly keep a,
1 rlieviabit alive; and how at laet his mac -I
sembling Chinese characters, Experts 1 ter urged him to press on with his
In Oriental languages have on occa. 1 papers; 'but he would not, and stayed,
sions been asked to read them, but no until this day, when the last bit of f
satisfactory translation has been ob- food had been eaten, and they were
i
Mined. found!
he way, He looks at the sun. Ho ie
not sure. He consults his tompass, but
it quivers hesitatingly, and then laterite
dewnward! leer a while wild be-
ailderment which seizes Wen tlie
minds of the strangest, when lost,
masters him, in spite of his stggles
against it. Ile moves in a maze of
half -blindness, half -delirium. He is
lost in it, is swayed by it. He begins
to wander about; and there grow upon
his senses strange delights and reel-
ing agemies. He hears aura bells,
he 'catches at butterflies, stumbles
in new-mewn hay, he w ers in a
tropic garden, But in the bay a wasp
stings him, and the butterfly changes
to a curling black snake that strikes
at him and glides to a dark -flowing
river fun of floating ice, and up from
the 'river a white hand is thrust, and
it beckons him--beekons him! He
shuts his eyes and moves toward it,
but a voice stops him, and it saes,
"Come away! come away!" and two
arms fold him round, and as he gees
back *tam the shore he stumbles and
falls, and . . . What is this? A
yielding mass at his feet! A mass
that stirs! He clutches at it, he tears
away the snow, he calls aloud—and
his voice has a far -away unnatural
sound—"Gaspe Toujeurs! Gaspe Toile
jours!" Yes, it is Gaspe Toujoers!
And beside nim lies JeT Hyde, and
alive! ay, alive? Thank God! .
Jasper Hume's mind is itself again.
It had suffered but for a moment
'what conies to most men when they
recognize first that they are being
shadowed by the awful ban of "Lost."
Gaspe Toujours and Jeff Hyde had
lain down in the tent the night of the
great wind and had gone to sleep at
once. The staff bad been blown down,
the tent had fallen over them, the
drift had covered them, and for three
days they had slept beneath the snow;
never waking.
Jeff Hyde's sight was come again to
him. "You've comeback for the book,"
he said, "you couldn't go on without
I it. You ought to have taken it yester-
day;" and he drew it, from his -bosom.
I "No, Jeff, I've not come back for
that: and 1 did, not leave you yester-
day; it is three days and more since
we parted. The book has brought us
luck, and the best! We have found
him; and they'll be here to -night with
him. I came on ahead to see how you
'fared."
In that frost-bitten world Jeff Hyde
uncovered his head for a moment.
"Gaspe Toujours is a Papist," he said;
"but he read me some of that book
the day you left, and one thing we
went to sleep on: it was that about
1 Sig.htenin' the darkness, and defend -
us from all the perils and dangers
I of this night.' "Here Gaspe Toujours
' made the sign of the erass. Jeff Hyde
, continued half apologetically for his
I comrade, "It comes natural to Gaspe
,1 Toujours—I guess it always does to
I Papists, But 1 never had any trainire
that way, and I had to turn the thing
over and over, and I fell asleep on le
And when I wake up three days after,
here's my eyes as fresh as daisies,
and you back, Captain, and the thing
done that we come to do."
He put the book into the hands of
Jasper Hume, and Gaspe Toujours at
that moment_ said, See! ' And far
off against the eastern horizon, ap-
peared a group of moving figures!
That night the broken segments of
the White Guard were reunited, and
,Varre Lepage slept by nEe side of
Jasper Hurne.
(To be"continued.)
. .
ad BOILS
g„
CHAPTER V.
The next morning Varre Lepage -
was placed upon a sled and they start-
ed back, Jacques barking joyfully as
he led off, with Cloud -in -the -Sky be-
side him, There wge light in the;
faces of all, though the light could
not be seen by reason of their being
ed so. All day they traveled,
halting, Varre Lepage's In-
trong again and marching
corpse -like bundle on
rbed and biscuits I
reserved
A.eriall Freight Line for
Mexico.
Down in Sinaloa, Mexico, it is pro-
posed by a British company to use
aeroplanes in the transportation of
mining supplies and ores. The aircraft
would be used to carry machinery and
supplies to the numerous gold and
silver mines in the State of Sinaloa
and to return with bullion for the mar-
ket. The particular idea is new, al-
though flying machines already have
been adopted for certain forms of com-
mercial usage.
Inquiries already have been made
to the British Vice Cousin at Mazat-
lan as to the feasibility of the plan.
Such an air service would operate be-
tween the mines and the railway sta-
tions, and Mazatlan would be made the
distributing point for machinery and
supplies and the concentration- point
for local mining products destined. for
shipment to the United States by rail
and water. The planes -could not be
expected to carry but a few tons each.
Nealy all of the mines are located
in the mountains frona thirty to more
than one hundred and fifty miles from
Mazatlep, and due to the absence of
roads the mining companies experi-
ence mucb difficulty in trausportation.
A problem to be considered is the lo-
cating and putting in order of landing
fields for the aircraft, because almost
all of the mines are sithated in rough,
hilly or nmentainotis country where
level spots large enough for the pu -
pose of establishing landings a
gars are scarce. *
TURKEY'S SHARE OF
WAR COSI SMALL
DEBT INCREASED LES.`.
THAN OTHER NATIONS.
Ottoman Empire•Spent Oally
$600,000,000 in Its Fight
Against the Allies.
The war debt of the Ottornau Em-
pire is said by experts to have in-
creased less than that Of any other utt•
tion, leer bonded indebtedness was
increased by only one new loan of
about $80,000,000, and adding to this
other increases in obligations such as
home military requisitions and ad-
vances from Austria and Germany,
b.er-war expenses Tien to only $600,000,-
000. "Consequently, allowing for vari-
ous offsets, her post-war indebtedness
amounts to about $1,000,000,000.
This would make it appear that Tur-
key "ran the war on a shoestring,"
financing, as compared to Great Bri-
tain with her $40,000,0001000 war debt,
or France with $30,000,000,000, and the
United States with $25,000,000,000 and
Italy with possibly Q11600,000,000. It
will be recalled that on aper the Otto-
man Empire mobilized nearly 4,000,-
000 men, yet she escaped with some-
thing like the war expenses of a coun-
try like little Rumania or Bulgaria.
How Turkey Met War Costs.
The record of the Terkish war in-
debtedness is unique. Tbe empire met
war costs by requisitions and by print-
ing in GermanY155,000,000 Turkish
paper pounds, or normally „about $680,-
000,0000, but this, according to the ex-
perts, cannot be considered a govern-
ment liability.
It is not a flnancial burden, as l'es
bears no interest, and also the proper
administrative body of the peace con-
ference can at will have it cancelled,
Turkey's paper moeey, it Is claimed,
bas not depreciated as much as that of
her allies. Counterfeiters do not seem
to have operated bere extensively,
due to the lack of Bolshevism and
good printing presses. In Mesopo-
tamia Turkish peper naoney is re-
fused since the 'British occupation,
which the Turks do not consider fair
since the paper money was issued for
tee whole of the Ottomau Empire,
which made war as a whole.
The amount of Turkey's war repara-
tion is- yet to be determined.
The First Silk Hat.
What is it about a hat that causes
popular interest and excitement out of
an proportion? A straw hat worn a
week or so earlier In the spring than
the date on whiel2 they are generally
adopted? Or a "stovepipe" in a fron-
, tier community? WhicalleNed it make
any diffetence to any Une else whit a
person wears on his head? Every
man's hat is, apparently, a matter of
public concern, and a small -sized riot
can be started almost anywhere by
some one wearing an unusual head-
gear.
On the 15th of January, 1797, John
Hetherington, haberdasher in the
Strand, London, put on a new style
hat which he had decided to introduce
to the public, and stepped out into the
street, Instantly the first silk hat and
its wearer were surrounded by an ex-
cited crowd, which soon grew to such
alarming proportions that the authori-
• ties were compelled to take a hand
and disperse it. Next day the haber-
dasher was brought before the Lord
Mayor, charged with "walking down a
public high -way wearing apon his head
a tall structure having a shining luster
and calculated to alarm timid people."
Gorillas at Home.
Gorillas live in family groups—hus-
band, wife and one or two babies. The
mother carries her offspring on her
hip, Just as does the native African
w°Finoaon.
dis always plentiful, consisting
of fruit and nuts supplied bounteously
by the tropical forest. Home is a sort
of nest built high in a tree, a few
branches being bent together so as to
form a platform over 'which leafy
twigs are distributed.
It is alleged that the father of the
family spends the night customarily
at the foot of the tree, against which
he places his back while keeping guard
against possible attack by eneinies.
In a stand-up fight there is only one
foe that he has reason to fear, and
thee is the leopard.
The males often light each other
with dire ferocity, the prize of combat
being usually a lady gorilla, who
views the strife with .flattered In-
terest, cheerfully accepting the vic-
tor's cleim of ownership.
.
Britis Shipping Loss.
ape, at a 'recent meeting
ular and Oriental 'Steam-
ckholders, recalled that
0 tons of British ship-
nle* by the enemy In the
re -war total of 21,000,000
ondon despatch.
e said, "has not effect-
uation of British ship -
teen their position, nor
-the seagoing opielt of
0. Given fair play and
government interfer-
e the British menu -
11 come out on top
to
Blouses for Nothing.
Women are frequently taxed with
being hopelessly extravagaa mat'
ter s ef dee*See letre I think many men
are equally eulpable; and my brother
Jim is one of them, 1 readily admit
that les taste in ties and socks and
shirts is perfect, and it is a long time
since I gave up buying- Anything, even
in the way of a present for him, bee
cause he is so difficult to please; There
is one thing wheel I have often envied
him, and that is the dainty colorings
and soft material of his shirts, '
"Mab," he remarked the other
morning at breakfast, "these colored
shirts of mine must have shrunk in
the washing, or I have put ou flee&
Whilst I've been in .the Army, for
tried to gut on three this morning and.
failed, You bad better bestow them
on one of your many proteges, or give
them away to the raggnan."
"It does seem a pity to waste them,
they are so pretty," I replied.
"Why not make blouses out of
them?" he cynically suggested, know-
ing my wea,kness for a big stoek of
that form, of garment.
"Good idea, brother mine," 'said I.
"It is the most sensible thing you have
said for h long time?,
No sooner had he left the house,
than went upstairs to his room,
where he had left the shirts lying in
a heap on the floor. One -was a pile
rose color, the other an azure blue,
and the third a faiet, fanciful stripe in
blues and green, my 'favorite shades.
I unpicked the neckband the sleeves
and the side seams, and, with the aid
of a good ,shirt pattern, experienced
no difficulty in cutting the blouse out.
The fronts were a. eair width, but a
few pin -tucks put that right; the box -
,pleat, the buttons, and the buttonholes
answered the same purpose as origin-
ally; the -back, with its saddle, requir-
grees can be used. Such a thermo-
meter may be purchased from almost
any hardware dealer,
The terapeeature of the box 'should
be kept as near eighty-six degrees F.
as possible if bread is being made in
the quick way. HgWelner, if the sponge
is set overnight, sixty-five to seventy
degrees is the better temperature un-
til the dough is made in the morning,
after which the temperature may be
increased to eighty-six degrees. The
temperature in the box may be varied
by raising or lowering the flame of
the lamp, or by using warm or cold
water in the shallow pan. "
To avoid all dangee of fire, the box
should be lined with asbestos or tin
when a kerosene lamp is used for heat
ing the box. If an electric light is
used, the lining will net be necessary.
A sixteen cane -power light will heat
the box nicely. A small and inexpen-
sive night lamp is placed in the bot-
tom of the -box and a tshallow pan of
wmaotet,
rhis placed' on the lower -ehelf so
that the air in the box will be kept
is
The door is hinged end fastened
with a thumb latth Or hook and staple,
Nuts in the Children's, Diet.
Concerning nuts as food, doctors
disagree. Vegetarians rate them very
high—too high, same physicians think.
Interesting experiences vvith nuts as
feed for children Were reported at a
gatheeing of physicians by Dr. Scott
'of New York City.
Nuts contain water, protein, fat,
sugar, starch, crude fibre/and. ash in
large proportions. Each kind of nut
baseits particular value. Dry nuts are
very high in nutritive -value and con-
tain more fat than any? vegetable sub-
stance known. In nutritive value, he
,aid, nut butters are far above ordin-
ary 'cream butter. Dr. Scott has given
ed to -be cut rather smaller; and so 'nuts to children as a substitute for
hacl the sleeves. I quickly ran up the meat became of the imtritive value in
seams on the mathine, fitted the shirt intestinal fermentation.
'
on, and enade a few trifling alteeations. The discomfort of eating nuts is due
The original 'cuffs and the pearl but- to faulty mastification and to the er-
tons were requisitioned, and saved all roneous habit of giving them to chil-
but the work of stitching them on. dren after 'a hearty meal, between
A cutting of the material was utilized
for the collar, Which fastened at the
back; another scrap served for the
slot at the back for ehe drawstring,
and my blaase, of which I was very
proud, looked quite smart.
I fell heir to his under -vests for the
same ;reason, and, elated by the suc-
cess of znii fornaer experiment, be-
thought me of turning them te account
for winter. slip -bodices. They were
iittle the worse for wear, and were
made of fine white, flannel. 1 unpicked
an old bodice -which fitted well, also
the flannels, and cut the different
parts quite easily.
Few men wear white shirts nowa-
days, and there were a dozen or more
taking space up in my brother's ward-
robe, and Jim's suggestion of blouses
occurred again. Why not make my-
self a few new ones, and trim them
differently and according to fashion
and fancy? I had a well -fitting pat-
tern by me, and it was the simplest
thing in the World to cut the garment
out from the body, and the sleeves
only required 'reducing. I applied a
sprawly design of marguerites to the
front, for I had cut At with a back
fastening, and I worked the pattern
in white, with a touch of yellow silk
for the centres. I tucked the cuffs,
and an uncommon blouse was the re-
sult.
The idea, in my estimations was too
good to keep to myself, so Iconfided
it to my cousin, who confessed that carmine lake, -which is a fine, rich
she had made some time before several crimson, The word Is given, and the
-dainty camisoles from old white shirts, two men begin to daub. Being usual -
also two lovely little aprons, which ly strangers to each other, and without
find favor with careful housewives the least cause of quarrel, they cam -
when they are wearing a nice frock monly show at first a great deal of
and must undertake a little work. She caution and consideration, not to say
trnnened them, either with a tiny frill
of the linen or else with lace.
A married friend of hers hised her
husband's shirts for babies' dresses
and pinafores, and also for pillow
slips.
meals, -Or tate at night, whereas they
should form En integral part of the
meal. Probably nut protein is not as
easily digested as meat protein on ac-
count of the water content of three to
eve per cent, in meats. It is there-
fore, fair te assume that the finer nuts
were divided, chopped and mashed,
the more rapid would be their digasti-
bility. Salt does „net make nut food
more digestible. Mothers should under-
stand the fobd value of nuts better,
giving a variety of nuts to stet the
individual child, but it must be under-
stood that they are given as an addi-
tion to the iet.
Colorful Duels.
The most curious of the many prac-
tical jokes perpetrated by the art ste-
dents in the Latin Quarter is a kind
of initiatory ordeal which the two
newest comers of a class are some-
times compelled to undergo by their
fellow students of the Beaux Arts. It
is a painter's duel, in which neither
combatant, no matter how small his
experience nor how great his nervous-
ness, need fear for a fatal termination.
The reluctant duelists are provided
with tall -stools and seated opposite
eaoh other at armseength. They wear
old clothes, and in the hand of each is
placed a large paint brush charged
with colon the one dipped in the deep-
est of blues, tho strongest and most
vivid of azure tints, and the other in
Sponge Box or Bread Raiser.
In making bread in cold weather the
housekeeper often finds it difficult to
hold her sponge or dough at the eight
temperature so that it will rise in
the required length of time. She will
find a sponge box or bread raiser a
great help an keeping the proper heap upon the floor. The duelists are
temperature. then assisted to their feet, shake
sua a box tan be made from an
ordinary dry goods packing box. A
convenient size is 26x20x20 inches.
About ten inches from the bottom of
the box, a shelfenade a slats or strips
of wood rests on cheats fastened to the
timidity, and do not make much effort
to inflict conspicuous streaks or to
touch each other's face.
Soon, beiveven one or the other gets
a smear which he does not like, and
attempts to retaliate upon his op-
popent. Then the contest waxes
warm. The spectators hasten to take
sides, and urge on their favorites with
shouts, cheers and endouraghig cries.
The tall stools totter, the wet brushes
patter, the antagonists daub more and
more fiercely and• furiously until fre-
quently men, stools and all go down
together in a struggling red and. blue
hands, laugh at each other's appear-
ance, and adjourn to the lavatory,
where they. good-naturedly help each
other to remove the traces of the con-
flict. The knight of the red brush is
found to have smeared his adversary
sides of the box. A second shelf is until he might pass for a hero of the
plaeed four. 'Anches above the lower goriest field of history, tvhile the vic-
one.e The shelves an be removed
when cleaning the box. On the under
side of the lower shelf, a sheet of gal-
vanized iron slightly wider than the
shelf it inserted. This piece of metal
is 'curved, in order to make it slip in
aid stay in Place securely. This pre-
vents ,scorching of the lower shelf
when the lamp Is Plated below, and
also helps to distribute the heat more
evenly.
Several small holes are bored in the
lower and upper parts of the 'aides The citizen standing in the doorway
mid it the top of the box to promote of his home, contentorl on his titres -
circulation Of sir. A cork whieh has hold, his family gathered abont his
been bored through the centre to ad- hearthstone -while the evenine of e
hitanta of Papua, are mit A straight thermometer te inserted well -spent day closes in scenes erxd
t taxation withoet in one 'oe the holes in tbo ton Atig eremite that are deareet • be eave
the Australian pan. Fahrenheit chemical lesintitneter that the tegiou ;viten I lie aenn tep is
registers as high wi one horeired de- arid the barraeke are exbentiel,
tim of the blue brush, if tally blue
blood were a fact instead of a figure,
might pose for a survivor of an equal,
ly desperate fight.
It speaks well for the temper and
good comradeship of the students that
so rough e 'kind of fun ends where it
begins, in the mock duel, and never,
It is said, leads to resentment or
will.
The Corner Stone of Civilization.
'1=et
Fainting; Dizzy tipelis
Weakness and
Shortness of Breath.
1 Those feelings of faintnes ,s those dime
spells and "all gone" sinking sensations
which come en from time to time in,
dicate a weakened condition of the heart
and diaorderedetate of the nerve.. 4
IVItb Urn iS Heart mad Nerve Pills have
equal for strengthening the heart, and
invigorating the nerves.
Mrs. C. S. Drake, Paris, Ont.;
writes:—"I have used on towards the
second box of hitilburn's Heart anal
Nerve Pills and find they have done
me good. 1 had those fainting, dizzy
spells once in a while, and also weakness
and shortness of breath, and would be-
come so choked up at times I could
hardly, sleep without sitting up in bed.
When wallong too fast 1 would have to
stop and try to catcb ray breath. 1
feel a lot better since 1 have used your
pills and know that they have helped rae
wonderfully as 1 have bmproved V017
much." "
Price 50e. a box at all dealers or
mailed direct on receipt of price by The
T.. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Oat,
To Chase Hurricanes
by .Boat.
Weather reporting Is generally re-
garded as the mildest of occupations,
but it will become one of the most ece
venturesome and romantic if the idea,
of a Weath.er Bureau official is put in-
to effect. The plan calls for a utunber
of swift, .stteuneli vessels to pursue
tropical storms through Atlantic and
Mexican Gulf waters and report tb.ena
by wireless for the protection of tee
coasts. These storms frequently cen-
ter far out at sea, without affecting
land barometers until it is too late.'
Lots of men fail at a job, not be-
cause they can't do it, but because
they won't.
It is easier and cheaper to pick out
loafing from laying hens than it is to
pay their board with the present high
prices of feed.
•••••••••••••••••••
"It is better to follow even the
shadow of the hest than to remain
conteat with the worst,"
Eiger with which bread ennebe made
is being obtained from sugar beets in
France as tha. reitilt of scientists' ex- _
iieriment.s.
minarets Ilnlinent Cares Diehtherie.ipAli
IN NOT DIFESS
C NSTIPATIO*---
AS A TILE. It IS NrL
* Helf the ills of life are caused be
&Thawing the bowels to become,. con.
stipated.
When the bowels become constipated
elle stomach gets out of order, the livef
does not work properly, and tlien. follow
the violent sick and bilious headaches,
sourness of the stomach, biliousness,
heartburn, water brash, or the painful,
irritating internal bleeding or protruding
piles.
Keep your hovels regular with Mil -
burn's Laxa-Liver Pills and you need
never be constipated.
Mrs. C. Henderson, Trail,B.C.,
writere--"I have been troubled with sick
headaches and constipation most all my
life. Have not now been troubled for a
Long tithe. 1 have great faith in Mils'
burn's Laxa-Liver Pills since using them."
Milburn's Laxa-Liver Bills are 25c,
s vial at all dealersormailed direct On
receipt of. price by The T. Milburn Co.;
1inaited. Toronto. Ont.
All grades: Write for prices,
TORONTO SALT WORKS
C. L. CLIFF • • TORONTO
ras.6011.1110111.0=3:21921514f4.044.r.oroxramea Rau
eaegil ;he
•- 1. +
enie
erenettligiente egg
'You want him reed and healthy,
You want him big and strong,
Then give him a pure wool jersey,
Made by his friend, Bob Long,
Let him romp with all his vigor
He's the best bey in the land,
And he'll ahvays be bright and
smiling,
If he wears a.Eleb Long Brand,
—Bob Long.
0111111109,11L
1141tee''
1(
eee
BOYS' PURE 'WOOL
WQRSTED JERSEYS
KnotOra itOrn "Coast to CoOst.oft
kie HARD WEAR, de omrafer
AND SMART APPEARANCE
L a. LONG & CO. LIMITED
Tottowro CANADA
100,$)c Mt the /Aloof
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