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The Wingham Advance, 1919-11-06, Page 37-1 I Ask Your Druggist For Dr. Miles) Calendar For 1920 T is. FRE and the best large -figure J•I• Calendar published, It gives the wea- tiler forecast for each day in the year, also time of Sunrise and Sunset and phases of the Moon, "An exceptionally complete and uspfui Calendar!" That's what everybody says, The edition is limited, It is there. fore very important that you call early so that you, will be sure to get this splendid free Calendar at the beginning of the year Jot go to our druggist, tell him your name and address, and that you want Dr. Miles' 1920 Calendar, Ile will do the rest—FREE. enforcenient of the reStilations, per- tieularly upon the Hebrews. They were net reletteed event the provisione re the lais" until 1871 an. multitudes Of the:A were preeeettted for insisting upert obeerving their Owe 'elabbeth. In the thirteenth century, It is, reported, a slew of Tewkesbury felt into it sewer on a Saturday. Al- though ,almost Bubmerged, he Would not permit himself to be drawn out, believing that to do $o would be to violate the sanctity of the holy day. On the following morning he Was quite ready to be removed from his periloue plight, but the maturities, out or reverence) for the Christian Sabbath, would not permit the unfor- hinate man to be rescued WW1 after sunrise on Monday, when he was found - to be dead. , As late as 1880 there were persons to English prisons whose only crime eiewas refusal to attend divine service. One of them WEB a young num, who had been convicted at the instigation of his OWIA mother who appeared against him. In 1817 Sir Montague Burgoyne was haled into court to ex - Main why he disregarded his religi- ous duties. Rigid Sunday observance in Engla.nd began during the reign of Edgar, in the tenth century, when the Sabbath clay was ordained, to be kept holy from three o'clock on Saturday afternoon until sunrise on 'Monday. The most Innocent actions were con- demned, ancl death. was the extreme penalty for continued,violation of the law, About three eenturies ago Par- liament passed a few imposing a fine, or one shilling for remaining away* front church on Sunday, unless some good excuse was forthcoming. Thiel act remained in effeet until compara- tively recent times, and inability of unwillingness to Pay •the fine re- sulted in a prison sentence. .411111114,, Presbyterian Facts. The Presbyterian Church in Canada 3is.de(1918) 343,433 communicants and 10,535 families in 4,563 Churches and Stnissione. e The Presbyterian population in Can- eatirn.ated at 1,200,000. The pro- Obihaeon of the Preebyterian denonshia- OM to Canada's total population was 0.48 Per cent., according to the cen- ietinf 1911. Increase of Presbyterian. • woeulation in Canada, ten years, 1901- lelne,32.29 per cent. • :TletePiesbyterian Church in Canada titer (191e)-2,015 ministers, 11,668 -dd. .ine, and 4,563.tongregations, viz., 1,1355 !f -supporting; 638 augmented; 2,070 loMes Mission stations, The Presbyterian Church has help- ,idetoebuild more than 1,000 Churches land eeettnses through its Church and .Mineile Building Fund. egeeries on over fifty centres of w3ele in Canada, -among Indians,.in aki,iw Homes, in Home Mission lios- Otale, in Redemptive Hotness and in SoelaleSettleinextts and Evangelical institutions. Is It has property valued at e24,274,- e4e. Itecoaducts 15 hospitals and 26 dis- tens/Li:lei in its foreign field, in which, deeidees 1918, 94,e14 patieees received 20,616.trestraeats, . • ejt has a Foreign Mission staff Of apt) Canadians. and 1,149 native work- er,', -tie pastors, catechists, teachers aid-nelpers, a' total Of 1,450, Or one leocent/Pa./0,900:nef the 15,000,000 allot - td .to the•Church under the Comity of -30sions. R.maintains in its Foreign Mission ;fields three theological colleges; helps apieleh,ehtese other's; 'supports one arts nfellege, ewith 187 students; 'shares in. (etre otters and tour medical colleges; eneestintiiins several leig'h, Normal, 130Iteding, Industrial and pay Schools. efteonee for all e above work, $400,000 Miele ,dirig the grants:a:se the WaYI,S.) ThenPiesbyterian Church in Canada is siensile for 3,000,000 people, in 12,e00evillages, in Central India. Its attief of 26 is 'at .work in 13 of,the 44 • ,-ateesteege,c centres in this field..leighty- -•four axe need,ed. 4 • 4. IIPNNING NOSE COLDS 'STOPPED INSTANTLY -Thettai le Oleared, Headache Stops, Sniffles Go For Good. CAT.AfaRHOZONE NEVER FAILS. Aeripping _from the zwee is one of •eebenbelest and mOst disgustiag eneepeoras of a Catarrhal cold. By unitige Cattarhozone you euro thie enitickly --torte it because you bathe stba. lining et the nose and throat with .that powerful antiseptic of the Bette t um of Australia. Bohealing is ratarrhozone that Yoa feel wonderfully benefited in five minutes' use of the inhaler. NOthidi ever devised curee a cough, e61.4 pi, sore throat so quickly. No to take, nothing to 'upset the h --- you follow nature' s own plan in using Catarrhozone whicb. euppliere healing. eseentee and sooth- • ing baleams in vapor form to the nlace e that are needing treatment. " Results talk—there Why thoueende rely Ercsiely upon Catarrhezoue to „pre- vent arid curs their winter ill. Gee the comieten too outfit. it laete ego months; small size 50c, eample *tee 25e, all dealere and the- Catarrh - creme Co., Kingeton, Canada. BELFAST. One el the Most Distussed Cities ••" of Ireland, "Of all the cities and towns of leg - lend," Capt. Stephen. Gwynn has writ- ten it his book, "The Famous Cities or, Iteeand," "Belfast has least inter- est it any history before the .Act of talon. She is enorn-iously •occupied With •her present, enorniatisly and justly proud of What her citizens ate isktd of what they have aceome /sleeked." It Is the summing up of a mast •Out of sympathy. With the Bel- ted ideal, it is true; of an. Iriehmart who loves tbe great city at the foot of Cave Hill becauee it is one of the fairions cities Of Ireland, bet wholteelack of sympathy makes it dif- ficult for him to be mores than ace- detalcally just. And, yea somehow, Celia Gwynn htte 'caught" Belfast, for ilelfast, with the single exeeptiOn of the One grand biteksvard look to the Beene, is enorinously oecunted With her ,present , and is enorniouely end justly proud of what her citizens are attd of what they have accom- plished. No one could, of course, ever MIS - take Ilettaet for anything but an Irish city, artd no Irishinase no matter where he came from, eOuld ever land there without feeling at home; but, where the background' of the Irish- man of the south or the -west is a wonderful visto of a thousand anyths, deeds and dreams, the background of the Irishman of Belfast is one gteat deed and one great stand, from Derry, Aughrint and. thb Boyne until now, The Irishman of Belfast, moreover, takes his background for granted. His great pride is that it never changes, and so, whilst the • Irishman of the south or the west iS • day -dreaming .on the hillsides, joy- ously exploring the past, and neg- lecting the present in .the grand • make-believe of. an • oftentimes •de- • lightfully impracticable future, the • Irishman of Belfast, untroubled by Such fancies and fantasies, is building things of solid worth. • And he Aloes it all with sueh era .ergy and in such numbers! In the •'flint light of a summer morning, he • Pollen forth from every side street into every; main street, whether., in the city itself er far out in the sub-, urbs, and, boarding long reeve of trani cars, mades his way thereon to some great cotton mill or faetory, or to the shipyards: The massing toward the shipyards is always the• most dense and themostimpressive. Hein, indeed, is Belfast at work strenuously •end clangorously. All :great shipyards are much the sarae, of course; the huge hulks of inchoate liners or merchantmen with their gaunt ribs showing up sharply 'from below against the esky; the great travelling crates; •the almost absurd. immensity ' of everything, seen at close quarters; and, above all, the • ceaseless rat+le • of the • rivetters at work. It is all there In Belfast, but in Belfast, for the Irlsluhan, it always has this added wonder, that it is so Ceokli Colton Red Compound. A safe, reliable rerhtlatinp rzedietne. Bold in three do- gEees of strength—No. 7, $1; No. 2, $at No. a, $5 per box. Soldaity call drcuertst4s,1,or sent pa:411J, Adirrel;::: THE cook tfigmciriE Co.; TORONTO, ONT, (Fmbel/ Wisher.) unlike the rest of Ireland. Thus • Stephen Gwynn finds in the ship- yards "a spectacle atrange to him anywhere, but ten timesmorestrange In Ireland." . "However the ,light might change," • he writes, "the sounds neeer altered. Hammer, ham- mer, hanatner—that, I thought, is the noise we want to hear in Ireland; money, money, money, bread, bread, bread—stay at home and earn it— that was the tune it went to. The heavy dredger keeping the channel open, the dirty little launch passing in the , cold, gray -blue water, • with gray, •respectable, busy -looking people on board—all this was life, and the life we need most in Ireland." • But Stephen 'Gwynn does not leave it here. The real Irishman, whether he comes from Belfast or from Cork, niust ever seen. the rtone in its set- ting, The only difference is that the • man from the south. or the west is too apt to have eyes- only& for the setting, and the man from the north only . for the stone. Belfast has a wonderful ceding, and so Stephen crwynji goes on to tell how "mciutn -Men and lough and seagulls over the 'water" are there, and to describe how, from the top of Cave Hill, as it shoulders its way up int -o the sky to the north of the city, a man may gain one of the views of the world. Practically the whole of what men. think of when the speak of Ulster lies spread ottt at one's feet, from the Derry }lilts to the Mountairis of Mourne. nees The Dowels misst Act Healthily,— eu Most ailments the first care of the medical men io to see that the bowels are open and fully performing their functions. Parmelee's Vegetable 'Pills are so compounded that certain, ingredients in them act on the bow- els solely and they are the very best medicine available to produce healthy action of the bowels. Indeed, there Is no other specific: so serviceable in keeping the digestive organs in healthful action. A RIGID SABBATH. Britain Only in Recent TilneS Ended Blue Laws. Numeraus laws in the 'United States, Canada and Great Britain forbid vari- ous acts of work and play on Sunday, but not since the lapse of tlie ."blue laws" of colonial days nave Americane been forced by legislation to go to ehtirch on the Sabbath, an 'exchange ears. In Englaud, however, it was not until the middle of the last century, eluting the reign of Queen. that all penalties for nonattendance at religious servieee were abollehed. Some enusuai intidents attended the Aktlitela, Hey fever end Cattirrh sufferer*, Write to-dtty and geta triad treetresent of the we Hells oreatest remedy, Buckler* two bottle mixture; nothing ever made like It.. One bottle giseee in* tient relief. while the ether d rivet the pOlson from the spite/rt. Segtetteing Oil/greet; fi, burnt rig oh ROMS wrecking drugs, but two Melentifie •mixtures thet will conquer *Fly Of the above eilmentle Don't hesitate a minute longet. Flit out the •blank below and get Itieted on the road to health. • W. K. SUCKL"Y MANUFACTURING ellaM1S1'. OY t;Wreaew St. East, Toreffte. aile—Pleese sehd me two 'battles of Your mestere. 1 eoolose ten Cent* to teeter eoet of initiates srnd usterring. De thie to-dayzor Mi 'ltedtImC ; 11g74 vital milyjrnince this offer. OO • t ***** 61*.“1. ** ... Catarrh Cannot ea Cured by LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they can- not reach the seat of the disease. Ca- tarrh is a local disease, greatly Influ- enced by constitutional conditions, HALL'S CATA.RRII IsIEDICIlsal will cure catarrh. It is taken interna.lry and act s through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the SystemIALL'S CA- TARRH MITID/CINE is composed of some of the best tonics known, combined with some of the best blood purifiers. -The perfect combination of the inoTedients in MALL'S CATARRH lsEEDICINIS is what produces •such wonderful results In colt, tarrhat eenditions. Druggists 75e. Testimonials free. 1" 3. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, Ohlo. MOULD IS LOVELY. That On Preserved Fruit, Under Microseope, Mould over jelly or preserved fruit Is justly regarded as a pest; yet scientists, who have studied it under the mieroscope declare that the mould plant is a most lovely creation. These plants are associated in our minds with death and decay, and so an unreasoning prejudice has de- veloped agairst them. In many cases they do -accompany decay, but, as the lily rises above the foulest pond, so a mould may develop its frostlike daintiness and cleanliness, its exquis- ite coloring, In the midst of putre- faction. Mould. plants will thrive also in. the cleanest soil, and they are wholly 'harmless. The most consmon ef the moulds is the Patio:Ilium glaucum, well known to housekeepers as the fungus against which a fight is made at canning time. Itefirst forms a greyish green mat and, if removed, gives forth a fine, powdery dust. Under tbe micro- neope it Is a wonderful thing, but housekeepers are probably less in- terested In its form than in methods of combatting it. In their strugglee for existence the plants are very hardy and obstinate, and nature ham provided them with a way of upsetting the most careful plans for their undoing. The spores, which take tee Mace of seeds, some- times for a reason thus far unknown to science, pass into a resting stage. Instead of sprouting at once, they lie dormant for an indefinite period and germinate apparently at their own will. One scientist 'me found that a spoke.may lie quiescent for two years and then, under favorable conditions of heat and moisture, develop into a sturdy growth. OF INTEREeT TO WOMEN . 6014:11(11(61013 411,4t.:111 DR. MARC ALIRELEeS .A.IPoosi- TORISS AND sUPPORTERS • the most scientific and successful Home Treatment ever offered . SITUERING WO:MEN. Quick relief from inflamma- tion, bearing down sensations, falling Sr displacement of internal organs, backsi aehe, extreme nervousness and such •PB- MALM TROTIBLES, in the privacy of your home. Dr. Marc Aurele's book on Women's ailments sent FREE, enclose three stamps for postage. HOME TREATMENT REMEDY CO., • Box 125 Hr Windsor, Ont. Needles go through many operations -IL the course of their manufacture. Tbey are first cut in suitable lengths from coils of steel wire. After •a bath of such bits as have been cut out. they are placed in a furnace, then rolled until perfectly straight. Next. the needle -pointer takes up •a dozen or so of the wires and rolls them be- tween his thumb and finger, with their ends on a turning grindstoneetirst one and then the other being ground. The little steel bobbins ate next fed into maohine, which flattens and gutters the heads, after welch the eyes are punched. They are now complete needles, but rough and easily bent. Careful heating and sudden cooling give them the neeessary temper, and nothing remains but to give theat their final polish. On a Coarse cloth tee, dies are spread to the number of 40,- 00 or 50,000. Emery dust is spreae over them, oil is sprinkled on, an soft soap daubed over the cloth, Whion rolled. tightly, le thrown into a pot vrith. Others, where it rolls sibout for twelve hours or more. When taken from this friction jbath the rieediss require only a rinsing in dean hot water, when they are retitly to be sorted .and packed. in imuninnint•Mnilani* It Eaten Pain. Ask any druggist or dealer in medichtee what is the most popular Of the medieltial oils for Milne in the joints, ht the muscles or nerves, or for neuralgia and rheuma- tism, and he Will tell you that Dr. Tholliinte ficlectrie, Oil is in greater derriand that any Other, The reason for thie le that it elotteesees greater healing quantitiee than any other ell. xxotining railing of Leaves. Tee ettedding of leaves In autumn may be due to physiologieal drought. The soil tante-Ins sufficient moisture, but the temperature of the soil may be too low to enable the trees to absorb it. "June drop" of orengee and Many simila violates may be due to similar costume, a year, but entiet ePend aholle £400. The Lord Mayor gete 410,000 stud spends ee, least twice that in 'norMal tintees. Willem a mossereign dies he at - (tend e the Privy Coupon and is a Alp. ner -of he preelamation see the new Ismentereh, Aluminunt Gotha. Africa, has adopted the elemental coin. Nearly 32,000,000 coins of that metal have been struck from the Brit- ish mint for circulation in Uganda and the Nigerian protectorates. Eaeh coin bears the value either of 1 Cent Or of 2 Innis. "...hey are perforated in the centre like Chinese coine, in order that the natives ".3.! tiering them together, Bronze t .4 are in wide circulation on the west (Tacit of Africa. In the interior small [shells known as cowries are used as fractional cur- rency. It is to replace the cowrtes that the new coins have been struck. Heagng the House. The proper temperature for various rooms of the home are as folleiva The living room should. be 70 degrees, no more. It does not become close, but the doors sliould be kept. cleeed into the hall. The dining Wont and kit- chen should be heated to 65 degrees. Most kitchens rise higher than that. Tee bedrooms should be heated not at all, except for the little time that the •occupants use them for dressing. The bathroom should be made as warm ea you choose and the halls should be given no special heat, as -we are always exercising when. we are going through them. 7jOillinennninnnninown There is no poisonous ingredient in Holloway's Corn Cure, and it can be used without danger or injury. Oil Reservoir, With the enormous capacity of 60,- 000,000 gallons, the Admiralty's new oil -fuel reservoir ha e been completed at Rosyth. The reservoir, which is to be used for the storage of fuel for H. M. shipS in the Firth of Forth, is built in con- crete on a rock foundation, the site being the bed of a sandstone quarry, known as Howe Cove, from which stone was quarried for the purpose of building the new deckyard. The use of concrete as a material of construction of oil reservoirs of large size is a novelty. The amount de- posited totalled about 98,500 cubic yards, and the rock excavated was upwatds of 300,000 cubic yards. The area occupied by the reservoir and surrounding roadway, pipe track, etc., is 11% titres, and the roof area 7 -13 acres. The final testing of the reservoir was carried on by pumping salt water into it from the Firth of Forth at the rate of 4,004 gallons per minute, by Means of a section dredged outfit and a temporary pipe line 24 inches in diameter and 2,400 fret in length. BUNIONS NO JOKE Not to the man who has to move about, but a slight application of "Putnam's" softens the thickest tis- sue and oures the bunion quickly. Just as good for warts, lumps, and callouses is Putnam'S Painless Corn Extractor. Use no other, 25c at all dealers. THE LORD 1VIAYOR. : Something About London's His- toric Civic Head, The offiee of Lard Mayor of Lon- don dates from the twelfth century ord 1he first held .office twenty-five years. It then became annual. The firet two tows tette% remain mirey. However; John Carpenter, town clerk, wrote hee copious book in 1419, giving n full account of tho Corporation. It 18 interesting to ob- serve up to What priviligea the Ilona don Mayor fought. He was a °eatery and a eralf gettang Itike Me of lord, with all its meautng.' Mast neuters will te ,seeprieed with what be has vaned. "Within the city proper the Lord .Mia•yor ranks next do the King. He is el -en tbn1cnily;More the Queeli Centeot, Mat .to menden • such digni- lerige as the Premier (who has no heraldie rank), the Lord Ohlancel- lor, and the Arelibisfect.p of Canter- bury. The Lord Mayor takes arecedence of the Lord Celeancellor as Finst Judge of the Criminal Court. Neither of them -eaters upon "details" there, but It muse be remembered what the eta - ranking means when liberties had to be fought for. The Lord ntaydr of Londoe cannot jump up ,easily. First he must be a member of one of the ivery compan- iPs, Next elect ed alderman. Then eheriff. Anybody refusing to be an alderman is liable to a fine of 4500 a he cannot prove his wealth to be under 430,000, The sheriff gees £700 THIS WEAK, NERVOUS MOTHER Tells How Lydia E.Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Restored Her Health, Philadelphia, Pa. -9 was "forgone% always tired, my back ached, and 1 felt sickly most of the time. / went to a doctor and he said I had nervous indi- gestion, which ad- ded to my weak condition kep Me worrying most of the titne.-- and he 'aid if I could not stop that, I could not get well, 1 heardsomuchabout Lydia E. Pinkbamni Vegetable Com. pound my husband scented me to trytt. I took it fora week and felt e. little bet- ter. I kept it up for three months, and I feel fine and can eat anything now without dis trese or n ervouen este " —M rs. Westerner:en, 2842 North Taylor St., Philadelphia P. The majority of freathere nowetleya overdo, there are so many demands upon their time end strength; the result is invariably a weakened„ run-down, nervous eondition with headaches, back. ache, irritability and depreseion— end soon Mere seraluit ailment* devel It is at such periode in life that Lydia J. Pinkhamli Vegetable Compound will restore cis 'normal healthy condition, ae It did to MEL WOrtbline. A Coated Tongue? What it Means A bad breath, coated tongue bad huste ha the mouth, languor and debility, are usually signs that the liver is pouRtooFf. u order. METER says: • 'The liver is an organ secondary in importance only to the We can manufac- ture poisons within our own bodies which aro as deadly as a snake's venom. The liver acts as a guar d over our Well-beiug, -sifting out the cinders and ashes from the general circulation. A blockage in the intestines piles R heavy burden, upon the liver. If the intestines are choked or clogged up, the circulation of the blood becoMea poisoned and :the system becoMes loaded with toxic waste, and *e ;mire- from headache, yel- low -dilated tongue, bad taste in moutti; nausea, or gas, acid dys- pepsia, languor, debility, yellow skin or eyes.. At such times one should take Castor oil or a pleasant laxa- tive, Such a one is made of May- apple, leaves of aloe and jalap, put into fready.to. use form by Doctor Pierce, nearly fifty years ago, and sold for 25 cents by all druggists as Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. ANCIENT COINS. Money Was in Circulation in Asia and Europe in 700 B. C. • Coined money was in circulation in Asia and Europe as early as 700 B. C. • But the ancients did not put dates on their coins, and so it is not always easy to flx the exact period of their issue. They were, of course, not struck with dies, but merely cast in molds, so that they had not the smooth sym- metry of modern coins. Neverthe- less, some of them possessed a very high artistic_ merit. Even nowadays people bury money. Itt ancient times, when a. man's pos- sessions were far lees safe, the prac- tice was much more conunon. Largely owing to 11 18 the fact that such great numbers of- early coins (mostly dis- covered by -accident) exist to -day iu. collections. . There is, indeed, hardly an an- cient coinage of which specimens ere not extant. -Many of them Lave been. 'derived from the hiddeit hoards of sacredotal establishments. The earliest known bronze coins of the Romans date back to 335 B.C. They issued silver coins less than a -century later. But doubtless the gold and silver money of other countries was largely used by the ancient Romans, introduced among them through the aggressive commerce to Greek and Asiatic states. There was no lack of the precious. Metals in those days, Dr. T. L. Com- parette, mumismarist of the Philadel- phia, Mint, says that in ancient times the supply of gold ancl silver was as 'great in proportion to the population 'using motley ceined of those metals 'as it is ho -day. All Night With Asthma. Everyone knows how attacks of asthma often keep their vied= awake the whole night long. Morning nude him wholly unfitted for a (ley of business, and yet, business must still be earried through, All this night snffeting and lack of rest* can be avoided by the prompt use of Dr. D. Kellogg's Asthma Remedy, which • positively does drive away the attacks. Sleepless Eyes. All fishes which sleep do so with their eyes open, as they are not pro- vided wit heyelids, and cannot there- fore, dose their' eyes. From experi- ments made it was discovered that some tidies have no preferenee for the night time, but sleep equally well during the day, says a writer in the Post-Intellinger of Seattle. They May he observed resting quite motionless for periods, appar- ently in sleep, except that, having no eyelids, tney are enable to close their eyes to exclude all influence from without. The hare also sleeps with its eyes open, for the simple reason that its eyes aro unprovided with "eyelids. Instead of these there is a thin mean - brews which with certain birds folds like a curtain in the corner Of the eye, and by an instantaneous action, flies back when sight is required,. leaving the eye inchedietely and fully open for the exercise of sight. Some bite's, suclt as the eagle, also have this membrane, evhich, when at rest, Iles in the corner of the eye, fold- ed up like a dritwo eurtain. Worms, by the irritation that they rsUee le the etomielt end intestines, deprive infants et the nourlehment that they elsoutd derive trent food, and mai-penitent Is the result, Mil - !ere Worm Fenders destroy worms ante correct the fnarbM cenditione itt the stomach and bowels that are fay. orahle to worms, mo that the full nu- triment of the child is *fluted and de- veksp.' i ifs every way eueourtsged. COMFORT LYE Speoially Good Sandwiches, Try mint and cucumber sandwiches. DIP thin slim of cucumber in French dressing. Put these on slices of buttered bread; sprinkle with chapped fresh mint. — Fig'sandwiches aro tasty and whole- some and may be made witlt fig paste. To prepare the paste, use one-half Pounds of chopped figs and one-quarter cup of granulated sugar. Ana water barely sufficient to cover; cook in a double boiler, and when done add one tablespoon lemon juice. Delicious fillings for sandwiches are made by mixing orange marmalade, chopped nuts and cream cheese; or by chopping a small bottle of stuffed ol- ives, two sweet peppers and one-quar- ter pound English walnut meat, and adding to cream cheese. • Worms feed upon the vitality of cbildren and enda,nger their lives. A simple and effective cure is Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator. Islands in Pawn. The Orkney Islands do not really belong to great Britain in the sense that they were ever ceded by treaty or acquired by conquest. They were Simply transferred by Denmerk to Scotland in 1468 in pledge for the Payment of the dowry of the Princess of Denmark, who was married to James III., King of Scotland. In the deed of • transfer, *Inch is still in existence, it is specially men- tioned that Denmark shall have the right to redeem them at any future time by paying the original amount of the dowry with interest to date. There is uo likelihood, however, that Denim k will ever attempt to exercise her right of redemption, be. cause 60,000 florins, the original Moonlit of the dowry, 'would amount to perhaps a trillion of pounds etre.- ling, and that is a bit more than the nniimaininnOnfnElini-nninnn • Dr. Martel's Female Pills For Women's Ailments A Scientifically prepared „Remedy, recom- mended Iv physicians, and sold for nenr- ly years for Delayed and Painful Menstruation, Nervousness. Dizzineso, Backache, CoustIpation and other Wom- an's Ills. Accept no other. At your aruggist, or by mail direet from our Can- adian agents, Lyme)) Bros & Co., Ltd., Toronto, Cen„ upon receipt of price, $2. - .4.40-4.44-4.++++1 • 0. •44 r-ri• Seasonable Recipes 4-4-11.4-.4-4-4+4 -* • 4-0 ++40.1.-•-t-•-•1--, (1OOT) HAM HASH For ham hash have ready two cup- fuls each of -chopped cold 'boiled or fried haat and inc same quantity of chopped cold boiled potatoes. Cook two tableepooufuls of •minced onion in half a tablespoonful of butter instil the onion le yellowed. Add a table- epoonful of flour and stir and cook for three minutes. Turn in a enpful of hot water flavored with beef ex- tract—or of meat etock—atir until thoroughly blended with the flour, seasora with pepper, turn in the ham and 'tato .mixture and cook lay about ten minutea. • ' RASPBERRY SPONGE One-third box of gelatin or one end one-third tableepoonfule of unacidu- laeed, granulated gelatin soaked one - hall hoer in one-third cupful of cold water; then ,dissolve hi one-third cupful of boiling water. ;Amin and add One cupful of sugar, ,one table- epooeful of lemon juice, one c,upfui of (strawberry juice (fresh or canned, not preserved). Chill in .pan of ice water. When quite thick beet with a wire span or whisk until ,frothy; then add the whites of three eggs beatenenntil quimaRRAIRIAORmioneRummounawooRMINRO stiff, and fold itt the whip front three eupfilla .of cream. Wet a mold, turn in the strawberry MiXtilre, smooth • evenly and chill. Never use., tin mottle for melding diehee eontffining fruit; juices, coffee or chocolate, be- eauee the acid In the lento will net en the tin and produee a poieon on the surface a the food. smmoN SALAD The beet branda of canned salmon may be used for salmon salads, but in it; tseasion cold boiled. salmon Will make it finer. Do not 'break the fish up too finely, but flake it with a fork, Sescacling any bones or ekin, Place • in a bowl and mix lightly with a dressing formed et: a saltepoon of salt, half as much pepper, three table- spoons of oil and ,one of vinegar, Set away to chill. At the time of eery - Ing arrange the fialmon on a bed of lettuce leaves and garnish with may- onnaise. The 'reference Is now for individual salads arranged on small plate's, and the pink and green of thie particular ealad le most 1.11APLE BISCUIT To four cups of elfted Pastry flour add five level teaePoons of baking older and one level teaspoon of sale Rub one-quarter cup of butter into the flour until like meal, then mix with about two cape of milk, Stir in one ,catp of maple sugar that Is cut into snutil bits. Turn on to surging through your veins—isn't thie the floured board, pat out about one inch thick, and cut in small rounds, Set in a buttered pan 'just a little way apart and bake in a Mack oven. STORK 'WINDOWS &DOORS IZES to suit your be' openings. Fined with glass. Sato th., livNcco erisituafrarputerc edi, vn Lht fee Cut down.fuel Gills. Insure Weftc The HALLIDAY CuiViAkarL iY, Lim itbd HAMILTON FACTORY DISTRIBUTORS CANADA FIL.LING Beat two eggs, add one-quarter cup of sugar and the same oa flour made emooth in a little cold milk. Beat all and pour on two cups of boiling hot milk. Cook five •minutee, stir be two level teaspoons of butter, and flattiilia vol. With one-half teaepoon of y ROAST S.WEETBREADS Two sweetbreads, one egg, bread crumbs., clarified butter, one lemon (the juice), cayenne pepper. Soak the sweetbreads for two hours, then plunge them into boiling water, and when they have -boiled briskly for ten minutes take them out and throw them into cold water. Then simmer them gently for twenty: minutes; take them out and draM them, fasten them on a epit, brush them over with the youlka cf egg, sprinkle the bread crumbs over them, then moisten them with a little of the clarified butter and sprinkle them again with more of the bread cruntbe. Roast them gently before a clear fire, basting them well during the cooking. When done, which will take about 20 millet* send, hot to table with a gravy made of the butter, a little of the lemeest juice and a pinch of cayenne, and pour around the eweetbreade. MAMMOTH POPCORN BALL Make a syrup of two caps of .granu- lated sugar anti one-half sup of water cooked together to the thread stage. Pour slowly on to four quarts of pop- per tore which le warm, Dip the hands into told water and rapidly form the corn into oue large ball. Dust it with powdered sugar and eot It in the middle of the Male for a centrepiece. Break off pieces with a large fork when it is served. This le an attraction for a birthday party for a -child. 4 Many a paperhanger goes to tha wall because his wallpaper doesn't. ' CORN SYRUP The Syrup far Pancakes A golden stream Crown Brand Corn Syrup is the most delicious touch you tail give to Pancakes! In the Kitchen, there is a constant call for Crown Brand Corn Syrup for making puddings, candies, cakes, etc. Sad the clay when youllare too`big to enjoy a slice.of bread spread thick with Crown Brand! Could that day ever come? Ward it off I Grace your table daily with a generous jug of Crown Brand Corn Syrup, ready for the dozen desserts and dishes it will truly "crown". tee Sold by Grocers eVeryWhate—in 2, 5, 10, and 20 -pound tine. The Canada Starch Co. Limited Montreal 11. Chats With the Doctor (By a Phyolchia) leteLeteille es•ND 1lEAter11. In the first Wage we should be careful not to eonfuse leisure.. with idleneall, hi truth, they ale pales apart. And no lees different are they 10 their influence on the physical welt -being of man, idleness Is one of the great enemies of beatnik; a. very large proportioli of the almoat Obronie state of 111-nealtli which Is the lot of so ,arge a intinaer Or poor people, la tlirectly tracertb.e to the absence of true alaure In their lives. It is of the very els- :Le:see of letoure that on shall be and feel ereice. It Is In thia freedom and Ulla ti five to e.tereiae just ti th Poe eulitieg Or ' toe body or mlnd wide i etill out for ex. ezioneo ea.ereise that the pleasure giving quality of leiaule lies; ttect herein is one ei tee great Vtlitle$ of tree education, .isie ,ati found and justly proporthmed de- us.'uLtill.;e1p1sNI'vn. :Nr,e, etly tot:1.11110110z Mcp(1:71,1, pocosdlytioanndt 0 V: The illiterate rately make gee) I.Se Or ei:suie. "When they happen to have It. ...or want of training and want er email - „lent they, above alt, are apt to eoLiftese. .. with lateness, which. Is wa.aterel in eeety way, We must 'nearly ell of tia • Aave observed and actually experienced • she almost infinite difference between the p.easure yielding and health yielding touslity of forced and uncongenial eerie • and these voluntary ,pUrsuits..which we • ..o.Low in our houra of leisure. arid the .,a.nto differencefeels good betWeen ex- 1/4.,,ciacs and habile whiell We deliberately •,.,tirsue In obedience to the order of doe. .•.ro or for a conscious hygienic end, and ..iose sports or hobbles which we prat - .Lee out of the fulness or our intenecte and our spirit, for the pleasure ;rid sat-, • isfa.ction Which inunediatelY mutt fro:o them, The one serves but as tha tread* mill in the cage of a squirrel, the ether may be likened to the free activities Of • the squirrel In its native wood, Much useful work provided tt is not too lorg forced on us has Much of the quality ard true virtue of leisure. Previa:id t la in- teresting it Is often capable of givieg us pleasure and health for the same joints-, namely that it gives scepe for eXercitli of faculties that call out fee exe-clse, . It is only when. work ii unmet° les .tnti performed without co -incident mental and emotional activity, or when oL LI top Jong continued, that it bectr.nes +leads ris tug and hostile to true health. The lictlt is, that routine and enforesd walk. thongh in toren doses it may be hystmic • and in the total result ples.suethle, is. to inost peop:e too lengthy and too contid* uous, seeing thatin a complicated cont. munity such as these of modern Oa- zation much Work of a more or lese mechanical type lois to be performed. It is Just and desirable that this necessary work should be tts evenly as possible dis- tributed among all of ifs, Bur In a wisely ordered state this -forced or necessaey work would be kept down to a minimuna even at the sacrifiee of considerable mechanical luxury. No luxury is worth much if it Is ,bought at the price of lei- sure, and man has eTme so far astray in sacrificing so rnttay'*of those true luxur- ies and joys which. nature has placed at his disposal for the taking, in order by devious means, and endless drudgery, to produce feeble asal.lneffective substitutes, All our large cities •furnish us with thousands of examples of this stupid substitution. The poerest glpsy at no cost is able to breath ,purer air than the. millionaire furnished with all the !Meat instruments of ventilation: and the little child of the fa= laborer has at his di. posal floral and natural beauty which the wealthy' manufacturer is unable to rival even though he sacrifices the lives of dozens of gardeners and makers of glasshouses. The true use of leisure la it subject worthy ot wise contemplation. Pew subjects have greater bearing on our health, our Wetness an dour gener- al well-beInTgle. DOLORDOX. wT.n1111;icie 01:mitt! fo' ergligThsptonudseknedts me to .write a note on tne distressing condition tic U,Q10i SIM 'This IS a severe Lorm of neuralgia which manifests itself in the form of agonising pain, usually at a clearly matinee spot to the face, the nam not being 0:cline:gee by any visible —even microacepiettily yisible—organie eatisie. itis one of Inc most exerucia.t- Logo- painfut of ail known diseases and drive its victim even . to suicide; . •.., eive oniy gives relief for a. certain 11:11.,.aue,:t.11t.c: ... treaanent is unfortunately extremely ..1. istactory. Nven the 'comparatively. e ts 1 .Lperatien cf removing the offec* ..uomer of months, even if that. inc typical symptoms have been well ...e.,cribett by air, tmad. A man or a wo- emit oetween thirty-five and sixty years es. age, apparently in„fair health. Is sucl.7 een,y atutened with pain in the face. ..ins pain continues for hours or even .....yo. The teeth are attended to withoux .esiet, or if with apparent relief, of a ito:st temporary land. Gradually the at- -eicA eeetane more frequent and Increase .Li aeverity and work becomes almost ..iposaio.e. Tae eau.se caiiriot be found, •., ainds of causes, such as changes, of . ia,..lier, constipation, werry and shock ..o in turn heal re.mensibie., But one a.f. Ler the other haveto be dismissed. Sleep ...ecomes almost unobtainable. The pat, .ent dare not cat, talk_or shinefor fear of winging' on an attack.• The pain has isr . 00.11 comparttl to sudden thrust or a ..ed hot gimlet into the flesh.” All kinds of caused -similar to those maned above sulalee t� bring on an at- tack when the disease hen become es- MI:dished, though they in no way aceount Lor the origin of the disease itself. Na - .L. -..1.1,y enough a state ef melancholia. ..eveiepes, and every person stiffering from tic doloreux shoual be lOoked main as • a potential suicide, In the early stages a certain moonlit Of. relief is sometimes given by varieus drtigs such as quinine, anipyrin, asphalt and gel - :erratum but later on no drUg gives any relief whatever; the hypnoties which be.. .ome almost neceosary to life .centribUte to the depression of spirits which na- turally results from the disease. The nearest approach to a cure that has yet .)een discovered consists in the very grave operation of the removal of a .tervous structure called the Gasserlart !anglion at the base of the skull. Need - OSS to ray this is an operation reqttirlisg lie very highest Surgical skill. Name Dodged. At a certain Welsh railway station whieh rejoicee in the name of -eLlan- fairpwlIgwe.ngvil"—and about tWO— yards mare of it—a liONV porter was engaeed. He was only an Englishman, but be meant to do his duey. The first train came in. He tackled the name of the station, but failed miserably to pronounee mote than. about the that inch. But he was a man of brains. }Wa- tling along the platform, he pointed to the board, which bore the length name, and yelled out: "Ir there's anybody there for here, this io itl"—Exchange. Three Seasons in Year. The Egypt:an year was divided inn) three seasons, Meet were Shalt, the .leasoli of waters, being the time oceu- pied by the rishag, spread and rms. sion of the Nile; Plena the season of harvest. These seasons are suppose4. to have been arranged by the god That. Each season was divided into four menthe and they were known it Jffielal documents by numbers only. Thu e we bave the first, seated, third end fottrth months of Shalt, the months of each of the other ititSbflS be:ng designated itt the same materna Inieh month, how. ated a patron god and the people rainaeLy gave to it, Itt their daily tha haste of its god. These eity nanice of the Monts were tills. erib“1 into Greek, then into Arabia. And aro tow largely used by the Chr:e. ...t tk iehabitants of Egypt in preference tlie Muesli:Lae:le erspellatione. -I hear that the authoritiem took 01.1. Ile Wallette's child /silty front her." -Pact. They said he had too nuteh meneY to mime it property.", Life.