Loading...
Exeter Times, 1913-4-17, Page 7T OUSANDS FROM SUFFER kiNT 0 yspe1 ;.scam It is one of the most prevalent troubles' of sivilzel life, and l# poor dyspeptic cannot even eijoyaiealAtOnt distress. ing aftereffects, for nearly everything that SeteCted llc°ci}res, Gems.-- �3i:� tsize cupfiEl of enter! a weak dyspeptestomach aets as cod chopped meats cupfulful nil irritant. ,Baxdgek;Bleed Bitters wit', of bread-erembn;: add one .-te tab le - •egtlate the eteleneli, stinilstS-ecce• sponsAi of melted hnttera salts time of the salivawild gastric lake tc oen}eiand enough nit. `to bind facilitate �e� irn,r remove �c?d1�y, ane.tp r All well -greased toile up the entire system. nswith ,...Ae bre* 3 Iris- Pen nehert,: St. Boniface; gem -Pa a _ he 'ne k i e, lx Mane Sratsem- have used Burdock, egg on the- t� eaeh, h seasonn.sox Blood Bitters, witli greet success, foi with salt and pepper, and bake d e sin indigestion tiled our Stomach eight minutes. 1 psi? rn � remiss * u led With my oto 2eb.: ,n _ n I as .. � $�___ _ I. iti^�',s1 ?� ra4�« C'lio}r -eery iAi'Q. one,. for mots s nt a lot rnon3 , e months. , olid � � � •• guy l lief, until I ha quarter o$ poi,xici 4- vrangQ p e without getting , 1' oz e - r . rf d Ze:tltia te_ of a pound o.. cit Beast together for fifteen ;xrin- 'ee eggs and two cupfuls of , To this mixture add the hopped orange -peel and citron and taened to see about a woman using rt. and her trseible seemed the same aat. pine. I tried •one bottle, and Baa r ' onich relieved, lieu ht five more, OW now eau eat: aan hale takes emu, end now 3 k13n4 " u,.one and tdtee-sanrters t af ls or atnitfiettge oat�11}aburlotir"Stir therlss until no flour ..i4tiodT.00)444.irriCit leen de see; form 2t into balls tha f{� size of walnuts. Bake thenen until yellow on greaeed tins in odea• � a� to n £f ra, (Ae odd Peetryst ta4ne eu .fall of i#er eetepfelsofa added a, pinch soft: denugh 'wit d of iev-water,. Bell farrll? tlanrn, f ,egg beaten e thickly 'with Cant in WIT- bake iiiabaake :other quiek ogee, anfterneen `l' 0 oven and remove when-colort bright yellow, Cream Cake. --into' a pint of warm water on the stove place one- la.rP>iid of butter and �o_1 straw- y. Stix in three-quarters of a pound of flour and bail one minute and .allow to cool.. When cold stir in eight eggs, beaten separately. Drop on buttered paper and bake for tip ,minutes. For a filling for t11s cake take one quart of Milk, two eggs, lour tablespoonfuls of cornstarch, two cups of sugar, -one teaspoonful of butter, one teaspoon- ful F full of vanilla. Boil the milk and add the sugar better and even - ,I starch. Beat the eggs and, having to -e littleof h o r s ar allowed a o cont r,l. ft and milk mixture toc oof st. r i n with tie eggs. Then add this to the 'fling mixture mixture and boil all for ten *mutes. Allow to cool. Now split cakes with a sharp knife and fill ith the cream. Tips to ILousewives, Theironing of woollens is more. ike pressiis � and slaoeld be done with a warm Aron when the gar- henit'is almost dry, leo not r an,. t nth, de haat wring, do nest boil vsrco leee. The twisting and rubbing produces shrinkage by knotting the fibres. IN Nein ,beating the u'lnit-es dk' eg,gs lth 4. rotary, egg heater, Ars hold - beater at an angle instead: straiight up and down m the howl. act rarniplishes the work Ranh TWa:eZa;er, o r;move milk or cruaril , 3 woolen goods, pour cold water re .spot;s until the wauter rurough, '.l'hee n^ab *with n clo ,i_ that has x o lint. a nz When arranging pillows ter an i valid, place the first pine►;c leag,t wise with the person and the herein Pone aeress the upper half of the Errs. p'sticnit Coitus ehou',cl net be plated in; +sold f41aee or sat"rain opus ;suck*; to 'tool. The steam will condense an Uialte them heavy. Very small cakes recd tiree a Ktatieka !orcin, spa that they set ;right through and the :11161 4 is baked lay he time J the outside is browned. It makes sponge cake x wand spa ►�tgY if ; tanblestrclri atter,_ with Om +hill off, is pitBake mixture directly after i the eggs. event stave pities from rns en put away, rub meet di n with a cloth, Then wra paper anis antero the see. lacafxie shard eye are plat". d at the sands ol; t1t4 a'abhor around w knee of little l nvns' blcictnner. the rubber is crawly removed the auit,a are washed, and the lrlcao4rrc+rs carxn then be ironed out B_'Aco f'anslaliarg.-- To one rico hoiled soft in water, pint of cold milk, a piece the sin Of scan egg, the Ise incl the ;grated and bake oligos of r4 print of �4 lepton. by stack ad= four bgl to lemon. aur, Be ui stir julee ASt+o s�wac sugar pudding 104 �rcarr tial rise tiny era: eh interest: 4,111,}R %S t ' the incl pincer geettna racl of Toshio 'Lake 9re his dun which is being the Bratislr Columbia E oyspany a Jordan `',fdg apace. work ort the build-, t1e Valley Rtailavtay IL s t^r)t1ne Fraser at Hope "ism ,. he next few days. beat twitsbe ex- irr... n and New, ely, khis summer t can Pavia°. 10 , •a. ooti nny the b week to. !shim a totals a to ax►rtse f ► yr ' nstinitzst4rltaa*eacaoranges Stilwell fnr4ar.4Seieet a news, cured ham, if possible. Boil it aslo i ntrxtil it is so thoroughly' .loth the boner can be re. may be taken out or not, ase. For the stalling,' pint of toasted bread or, kers, -two tablespoonfuls of'. ry-seed, one-half teaspoonful ul of lr pepper, one-half tablespoon Elul zal cloves, one tablespoonful of mustard, the yolks of three eggs, three onions chopped fine, and ax lit,, tie vinegar; unix n11 thoroughly. Make incisions to the bone all over. the ham, and press the stuffing into'', the incisions, forcing it through the lean part` eif the ham; then spread the remainder over the top •of the ham, and glaze with the 'whites of the eggs. Bake slowly kr abort an hour. ,OSSES BY TIXE)! IS NOW AN ANNUAL I VENT. flet Roosevelt Iden If t'arried. Would e Out'4'ioufrt T'rev.ei,i. the Catastrophes, �.; While ix- z loss of life in the e flo4d s the Middle States is much lees than was as cstimated when the panic was at its height, there could be liitie erag bor at i ort thevalue of the property de t oy rr, It might easily reaeh $7.0,0.0O,OOt or even tee tnnes this amount, vet we shall fled, in all probability, that the ground will net be dry before the people will be busy with new build inge to take the plash of those de- stroy^et lis• the 'caters. They have r been .aptly compared;T with the dwellers at the foot of Vesuvius end take the disaster ,r of the district a philosophically as the people White i1te °Rin;ei• uc^eelit, the cold. it 1e probable that the �4ran itnde of the r„ . presents cie..c t.,.c.{'QUu, diad the feet that the eanees that produced it are enera,ll ; °knr :T e, ,:°All ane sire? come lnnago r;orle tin it will prevent a re: cinrrQrtetn of tiA,r tints, Buetsevele"e. idea that the ;real:` force now one, omni 'should be Feint ?hayed at '• nut° the alas: ie=,ppi Valley to be;'d arms, eenstruct artificial lakes that 1 Bold serli/is water, ;Ind plant on the hsllsxde:e may be ear- cult, It: i9 to the credit uf' ib srtn,a.nthat be made the sugges- g before the 4'2eeeet eaten.- oc erred, ens t.',alvestaira, I`draoii, s a auaztterr of 'facet, iaowevr aro hoede in Ohio, 14ici< d other States every year. WI of dollars' worth of proper wiped ,arra beside the alsetssip=. ear, .nand an Mtn there was. 1100413 in K'cW.3sand else - that Const hundreds of lit -es. alt- ton decd in Texas oar- Six'' thousand Jive l,ui1 buildings deg this great ,;abaaranity. Gal- roniptly rebuilt, increased tangtb ,of hot breakwaters doubt feels es secure gut the thno as does Guelph. The of all American fleets wa.' �ut at Johnstown, Pa., in 185it. This hood was not caused by the suckler melting of the snow .;and the rising of the rivers in spring fresh, t, for it took place on the last day ol; 11Iay, and by that time the snow had long since malted in the Stats of Pennsylvania. e Xellestown Warnings. own is situated in a narrow rtll:ry, with a'river on either side. The land is lore -lying and Pat. two up' the valley was z rtificial lake, held' back by^. dans, That this dans xti sranne' day burnt and over Mani the people in; the valley was common. knowledge in Johnstown, but familiarity with the possible danger bred r:ontennpt of it, and the yao*pie were not much more alarm- ed over the prospect of the clans. bursting than the people of Toronto are over the prospect of the neW building eollapsing.. There had been several !stares over the dam, alaiid since, these proved groundless the people were indif- ferent to the warnings that were closely followed by the calamity. Indeed, one faithful watcher who had examined the zda:m. every ,cloy vwas disereditod when he warned first his employers in the Sports- man's Club and then the Mayor of' the town•that the structure was giv- ing beneath the weight of:the wa- ters, and might collapse at any inoment. • When the disaster actu- ally occurred, and the waters were beginning to rush doyen the valley, the mounted messengers 'who has- tened to warn the inhabitants were laughed .at, When the Dam Broke... The clam broke after dark, and all night long the waters roarocl; and surged over what hand been a thriving little town. No one saw any great part of the tragedy. The destruction ' was , wrought in the dark, ' for the lights were whin= guxslaed by the firs r ,sh 4, thena- Pers. brie can on y imagine what scenes of horror, of heroism and self-sacrifice were enentetl n;rle;• the iZutien sky, but in the morning, when light eaui�', there was a lake twenty miles long, where the day before there had.been a twenty mile stretch of cultivated ground. In some places- the land' was cov- ered to a' depth of forty feet. Bodies of men, women and children. and the tarcrtises of cantle floated anon ;the surface of the water, and the wreckage of a thousand houses iostled .thein. Here and there" was a sxir ivox' tinging to the wreckage of his iom�e.1N�iwi?the work of res cue bad been complete.-, It W,a4S found that there were 2,22q«�a- fiod cleat. >5aine of the estixnaisod t the, number.' that had perished reached 5,000. Millions Lost in China, Four years later 'there was other flood ire. South'Carolina, which :30Q people lost their lives. This disaster took',mace early , in June, and was'pie,cip±tat�ed by a cloudburst that suddenly gorged the .a'aeoletr Bivor, and eaused it: to buret a `huge dam, As in Johns- town sleeping families -in SSpartan- burg had awakened -to find their homes afloat. They had absolutely no warning, andnprobabiy,' half the victims were drowned, ie their own homes, A somewhat similar disas- ter occurred in Oregon in the s same 7 year, 300 lives, being lost.: In mod,• ern times the greatest floods have been in Japan and China..in 1887 ;odsRonan kin � n ere said a i ato have eost millions of lives 0 i -e .. . I A3s zlI i'e as n were ., 2 r v '� Ooo o la d rJT 1 'i i i a p p ed �. iia in Japan, "` andl 4 dF ast, year the t'eports'froin China were to the of-' znhada t at people e, r- . 100,000poo_pc fished, 1) li AND 'FJSI ngero e Seamen,. fit Ne e THE JMM CI. LESS *r NATIONAL LESSON, APRIL 20, ,f;.essoiR j1.1.—.l acob's Exalt, Oen. a, golden text, Eph, 4. 32. 11 eliag with 3 1;. Twenty ^ ears had a :ci ince l � � ss i Jacob h a d eldated tthea i o_er a.d ed r out of his birithright and had then fled to a distant land, Now, iia -returning tTith bis family nd a S S *Abraham pox e sons t� the lal,n�d of and el Isaac,, he was about to pass through the borders of the e3untry- IAN- l in which Esau lived. Fearing that the w' brotherig t rouged. might still tie. f+ By '"nel1 angry with shim, he sent nesse tigers n Waters. �o t- tell Esau of rhes a3a •�aa : and x z c^A azn p The life of the French fishermen who 'spend the seeeon off the eo sst e,f Icela=nd is a terra of desperate endurance, The,work is dime in, all weathers, and during the seasor;, :Jet -green April and latp_,Septeinber, a` ranee loses one 't a£que, ei teeei two, every week, Iia the coast v -it_ 'ages of Brittania^ the liteie buryn ciaznds are full of empty g crosses bear the names lost at sea. When the tempest over - urns a barque the men cling to its s, thrust their knives deep in es tiaa epterned hull, and bang ou the hurdles untiltheir h Arda let go heir bold, When a wreck as found nivel ats king in this hall are ed And •t sae r miather is report, the first station. The chips are aleen,e tinder earl ben not forced to say' to. The first aoaats xeeeh the gronnds about the St of Murch er the lied of April, ►n the Troi,,t, storms rage, so the p1kiu.ed by exhausting FEL9. AWAY T1 � SIVA Ai tier People Thought She Na .„S -MPT Mrs. m, its stip, 1 ower Ship Harbor' t r_. c' ending Ears '_1.;y. .At ,,_ Z, M w a li es, aaxv ��z n , you �r as testimenial ii>son al of my curt! by Dr, 'i�°sell'! Norway Pine Syrup, Last Ma�. I took a a cold, and t $et%led on mylenge. got g I so atnight, bad/ ccuasl Vet rest ns�ltu, ;~ load two dot:toas to treat rim but got no relief. "All of Hazy people thought 1 had � 3 Consomi tion, T had fallen away to a 3 abadow. I hard given up all hoes of erer netting better iia etilmy p ra o �$ 3i dsugh„' _ Tire ter went to a aatore ease da and bought to ask for his favor, r`,ie messen- Y . T, . : me a bottle.ef lir. Weed's- N:e135ra it a zips returned and reported t.iat, � I'r.F. n rp �.d they had seen .i sa11 and that he, tie- Syrup. After tatdng half of it. I fen; es n by better, got c m anieil feasor hundred ease, , so 1 to fnwa rrxoge and thsaii� to was eoroii g to meet aneob, "Thera them I eat well today, and able to do was �aicoia art ails^ afraid and was iso lAos e wort . I come sa3* too hooch disiressed» (Gen. �"_ F . Bis rrrond in its praise, sad 1 s all l p , li z?=T",ayeleepr,In x rAeark was 19u14113,C'd. He c1a,6:A"3F,,,w-1 the la®ITSE','� e`d that ire woes tinviorillY epi the D 3” , 4, oat t4 ko-^a3= Idue • ai eons of ,�e13eT°'3Sk `k lC,�'yli�` 3"i�tdi1`r5e� �. � �' ` a" ' , t.1;as a r ho Itkug healing a�ifituen of tliss hiss lAE';;`.lessu be 4i"at 4l tt? d of his ss e for ^deliver -.r; rinser! tiiblir Ay* I;izxe trete::1:1 h n3o,kes: it fathers _oi thtf ve,r laeai fo asci his wrestling aloe intori y Fie azatatxcA r ou�lis, O o,olus a and all Temaat and Lung Troubles., See that you get "Dr, 'Wo's7' when you ask for it. Thera axe many unit . tions on, the market, Price, 25 arra, 50 cote. eco that the carve, Tb T. ;'tlwld,ts theeta, is oa the yellow wrapp ', 1 OW ton reel ion 'Aro ed Y by d together N Di 'fry - 0 fill of flour to hot as pee- rved with the 4111 (Or the people to The Premie the Legislature that ment will net establish frege in the province, A special by-law for borrowing $575,040 for reed improvements, for riperiod of fifty- years at 5 per cent. interest has been approved by the South Vancouver Council. Vietoria shipping men fail to re- call a time in the past four or five / years when the deep-sea. bueiness in connection with this port was quiet and dull as it has been for the past month or six weeks. The new steel trestle bridge which is being erected on the Esquirrialt Namaimo Railway line at Arbutes Canyon in place of the wooden structnre which spans the. ravine at -the present time, is maldng excel- lent progress. Immigration into the East root- enay and 'Elko districts of British Columbia, during the cothing season is expected to exceed all past re-, cords, and at least nine out of ten of the 'newcomers wills be interested sonio way in the fruit -growing in- dustry. three eggs, two tablespoonfuls of eseene sweet cream, one-half pound of cur- rants, dredged, and one and one- half teaspoonfuls of extract of cin- namon or a tablespoonful (or more if yen bhp of pow,dcred, china - mon. ' Put info .feet"teend allow to rise for twenty minutes. Bake one-half hour. Jetables.--Take one-hali pound of suger, a. quarter -pound of butter and four eggs beaten light. Stir the sugar and butter to a light cream, and the eggs, lemen, or va- nilla flavoring and sufficient flour to make the mixture think enough to roll out. yin- together,, and roll out in powdered sugar in a- sheet a quarter ineh in thickness, Cut into riegs andhake in a quick oven on buttered tins. Harie's Tea Cakes.—Fet upon the pie bard a ponnd sifted. flour and mske a hole an the centre an ,,chich. place one-half pound of but- ter, six ounces of powdered sugar and four eggs. Mix all well 'together and roll out the paste extreme.y thin, get out in rounds or. seuares, put in a pan that has been buttered slightly. brush the cakes with beat- en, eggs, sprinkle on top wli one- " Voteed of eurrants. Put in the a dry bl For Tea and Luucheon. Drops. --Mix two cups f powdered sugar, one-half cup of butter, one cup of milk, the whites of four eggs, a tablespoonful of ex- tract of lemon, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, and flour enough to make a soft batter. Bake in patty tins and cover with a simple icing When cold. Bread Calte.--On baking day take from your dough when ready for baking two cups of dough, add two cups of sugar, one cup of butter, 01,11.0 WO LET ANYCHE VALK, PEN SHE- viAs so' ifkiVa;s. Diseases of the nervous system are very common. All the orgaus of the body may be sound while the nervous 441 troubles ancl-worry which fall to the lot system is all upset, on a,ccount of the' of el-mei/110 has to look after the troubles -incident to houseliceping, and 'when the nerves become unStrung the heart is also effected. ' In Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills is ,combined a treatment, that will cure all forms of nervous disorder as well as act on the heart itself, and for this reas,on we 'would highly recommend them ,to all run down women. Mrs. Wm. Smith 'Terra Nova Ont writese—"I wish to tell yell that I have 'used Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. 1 -was so nervous I creed hardly let any- one talk to me Until a neighbour told me to ti.y your Milburn s ..Heart, and Nerve Pills. I. got three boxes; and did not, have to get any more as they completely cured my nervous system." Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are foe sale at all dealers, or rnailed direct en receipt of price; 50 cents per beii',-3'boxes" for Tlke, Diilbe.•3. Co., Limited., Toronto, TO Or ome the odor of nionkl, which sometimes rises in damp wea- ther in spite of the best of etere,, stetter a few drops of oil of Jaren- shelves and the odor will in wint roasting ,ken for stewing, steam it in ler kr three hours, or until tender ; then, put it in the oven #1n4 roast it. When it is done, it will be brown and tender. Before baking potatoes, let them Wald in hot water for fifteen min- ites. They will require only half the time for baking, are more mealy and palatable, and if they are baked in a gas oven the saving in gas is taepact banks Queer Ironing. A writer the Wide -World Mag- azine says that the most eurious sight he saw at Cairo was men iron lag clothes with 'their feet The men were employed in the native tailoring establishments. Except for the long handle, the irons were shaped like the ordinary fiat -iron, only larger. A solid block of wood rested on the, top of the iron, and this4 the men placed -one foot, guiding the iron in the desired di- rection by means of the handle. For the sake of convenience, iron- ing -boards were raised only a few inches from the.ground, and, how- ever strange the method may seem to us, the work was done very well and very expeditiously. new to Live to Ripe Old Age. Halve your food. Double your drinking water.; Treble your, exerciee. Live to learn and 'you'll learn to Success to -morrow through sense nian is often put out by 'what he takes in. Don't mollycoddle your stomaeh but be decent to le, , n Shoes IIie Majesty Rears. Tbe King keeps from three of various kmds in, regu ar wear,. and .'is eXtregiely particular about 'their Citt and fit. The' nionareli's made of :glace' kid, perfeetlY plain pattern with the exception of cap. For theSe boots the :King pays $15. 60V pair. Eor patent leather boots His. Malesty .neys fenne $25 'to .020 s.a legatee eor ioes, ram .10 te 01 be interpreted a�1.' of wrestling' ;: .ith herd pruyyr. Verse 1, Dir'sded--•Iaeob had ad - ready divided Ins sei'vaiits, l�,r•ks, horde id camels into tw r pilose!, thinking tont if I^^,`,aiet tacked one, the other inigln escape (Gen. 32, 7, 8), Ile had. also se-- --rt fected a large number of animals and sent these en before hini es a prespot for:Esau, Rachel and Joseph hindermost Thee he loved most in the eafeet caro As as masaalt sloW li:calaeif to the ground Ttneo war Servinn tow en tirnes---A eustr noaary eabeta- dotted with strange wo :fxered tet kings. meats erected to the u Exacta ran to meet him '" The ten heroQs, irnionuti spirit with .whiele ! ;Throughout Servia amt aeired the bnotllex Who had' lean kingdom the enstosra. weonged aim is womtlrg prevatted 4aacaa t lire-peaiaaan Ise: stung Oriental p' rtesy;, the e and the ra later aece ,Rosi sae r i s cif daily he brother ra thus honoring in war. The wood, represents relataves in meat, last y single Mock of Lhi:ry.:Leomartoanr146;:p4at7t4,14:peeinseit.)3101; puleie reccwed bo 1.0. LIS native country. and im- Aa the Servinn hereee are falling where he fell, if that epot it 'a erlier, weedel in the enemy's territory; the mown lead- 00e A.0 gtve to his words a. molts are necessarily raised in th-ir deeper meaning. In accepting the homes, and very few fermi to gift Esau really places himeelf un- be found to -day in which orie at le der obligation to Jacob, awl Jacob of these crude carvings is not to be fwriiseiniezsitilptis. further proof of Eean'a found. They are usually p etterifteed to ,Cargo The "ea - However a may need air, he is t allowed eck for any Jun: - but lode his work. Two verti- adders lead from either end of leek. to the den where tho me $1cep and suffer, an pray. The bunks hang another, two by two, strew -with straw or holding eath a lean mot- rees. Two men sleep in a bunk, ited in. his bunk every man keeeps everything in daily use. The oheete and in line ander the hunks. In most ships the cabin is pro- vided with 41 little east -iron etove, where the fire burns night and day to maintaiu the iemperaterer need- ed for drying elothing• and "thaw- ing out," The forecastle is lighted be, a cod-liver oil lamp. The first fishing period closes in April or in Mag. When the work is done the barques run into the fiords, take on water and dispose of their catch. The second fiehing is done in the sea to the north of Ice- land. There the boats disperse and 10. FOraSr/Theil as I have seen thy face --Revised Version margin, "for herefore have I seen tliv face." as e seetb the lave of God, referring subtless Peniel Men. 32, 30). le. "bleesinge" the present beiug regarded as at eie, pression of -good wishes. lie I will go before thee ---The way ' better known to Beae. and he volunteers to escort, Jacob for his Jaeob's reason for not cc - plausible orte, but in refusing the offer of the help of some of Esau's men, there seems to bo a desire to have their association come to an le. Until I come unto my lord un - n vivid reds and blue. Above head of the wooden figure is an inscription giving the soldier's name, and sometimes a few details of the man- ner which he met his death. 15 Great Culinary „ M, Cedard, the chief chef at Barkinghato Palace, has a, world- wide reputation and is admittedly one of the greatest living culinary artists. He has a salary of 812 500 a year, while his assistant, M. 'On- - ear Ferry, is paid 84,000 4 year, and under them is a staff of 10 highly -- trained male coOks. Cold Heat at Royal Dinner to Seir—jaeob 'intimates that he * -will follow Esae te nes home in In. Reyal establishments most, 0 Seir. As a matter ef fact, hckwever the dinner 'menus alwaye contain he takes cmite another aireetiom It from three to four cold roasts, sach may be that he still mistrusts Ezell, 8's 'e°14 1"th, e414:1 bee! 8.414 e°14 or possibly, remembering how he ellicken, and the Czar and Queen fish Avide stretebeS apart. The ee- had wronged his brother, Esau's Alexandra neually partake( of 001 cond fishing season ends in Septem- kindness rebukes him e he feels ill roast meat at (linnet. in, Pridereneis bete at ease in his presence and is Unable to hot and other .Royaltios fre- d hi If b i nentl do the same thing,. Pollee Suspeeted Cruelty but YoUnd It Was a DolI. In the gutter outside one of the great Parisian (France) shops stood a beggar woman, incredibly dirty and shabby, with a bundle in her arms so wrapped up that no one woelci have known it to be a baby but, for an occasional ;sue-yea/lent end at intervals an ear splitting wail. The woman s importunities be- came so intolerable that she was ar- rested and taken to the police sta- tion. Throughout her ieitert.3,e:4t,c222e, the bundle wailed spa,smodic,ally. - The inspector noted a curious fact —that the wail coincided with a movement ef the woman's hand. ,Suspecting that the heartless mo- ther was pursuing a policy of pin pricks, the officer sna tched the .bundle from her and threw off the The maggyree intent proved no: thin,g, but a doll, and amtOle, ordin- ary dell at that, for it \ bellow and contained a 'varied assortment of articles, stolen, no doubt from shop fronts ---:feathers, ribbons, mencli-danf and shoplifter has benej sent to jail., ve just react that meiltiply 'ad thought they might heip me. with my gnathe'ilii4tios,:" cepting Esau's hospitality. 10. Seire-Practically the same as Edern, the land given to Esau for a possession (Deut. e. 17. Sueeoth—The exact site is un- known, It was east Of. the Jerdan and south of the Ja,bbok. The word is the Hebrew for "booths" and was given to the Place after Jacob had settled there and made booths for his cattle. Jaen later removed to Shechem. The people who jump out of the frying pan into the fire had no busi- ness in the frying pan in the first "Do you believe that all men are . created equal 1" ,"I used to before "New I find that ,I ean't begin to compare with othee women's hus: Suffered With A Lame COULD. HOT STRAIGHTEN. W7-4-,, Many peOple fail to understand the significance of a lame, weak, sore or aching When the back aches or becoines wee it is a warning that the 1.-,Idneys ar affected in some way, , 'Heed the warning,,cure the back and dispose of any chances of serious ddney trouble following. , ' Mr. C. Grace, Hamilton, Ont., write -s: ---``I.was suffering with a lame back, gad for two weeks was not ,able to straiiihten to,Nc.z.1.1t, and hardly able teeS't de. for the pains in lily back:. hipin,Th, any relief. ' One day I read qineut Doan s Iqdne3,f Pills 'And • decided` to try Before I had half a box used I felt a great , deal better, auti,loy,ith§:time ha usei. two boxes, I was etiOfh-i-4 have no hesita- tion in recoinrueAdiot Price, 50 cents perihoe 'or 3 boxes for for $1.25, et all dealers, or inejled direct on