Exeter Times, 1913-4-24, Page 7SUFFERED FO
Catrrh oL the mach
Catarrh of the Stomach is generally
-caused from some interferenee with th.e.
Setiou of the liver, and is a malady that
affeets the whale body- ,
t Some symptoms are burning pain in
ihe.stomach, constant vomiting, abnet-
teal thirst, incessant reachiug, eta. On
the 'brat signs a any of these symptoms
Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pala' sheuld be
takert. They are a apecifie for all dis,
orders arising from wrong action of the
lIr. Michael Miller, Ellerelie, Alta.,
tae pleasure in writing you
eoncernirig the great value I have received
by using Milburn's taxa -Liver Pilis, lot
eatarrh el the stomach, with which 1
have been a sufferer for thirty years, 1
used four'rials and they completely
cured me." .
Price, 25 cente a vial, 5 vials for $1,09
At all dealers IA' paled direct op receipt
ef Price. by The 1: ,Milbura Co-, Limited,
Tomato, Oat.
FR
RRY 01.0 ENGLAN9
' Y MMF ATIOLIT JOHN
ILJLL ND HIS PEOPI.E.
in 'I'he 1,4
prente in'the Gain-
Worlil.
In London, there were 2,172 birth
d 1,526 deathe last week.
The King's birthday will be eele-
brated on Tuesday, June 3rd,
Sailing- very low, the airship
Gaintrar passed over Windsor Cs
th recently,
Lord, Roberts says the Tta1
Force, aa at present eonatititte
eaft tieve' he ellieient,
Mrs. Macaulay. widow f
[ay' s youngest brother,
died At Bath at the age of 92,
Owing to the dearth of agricul-
tural laborers, women are bei
outplayed in narrowing in Huntin
donshire.
speetal effort to raise X703,000
for Charing' Cross Hospital is being
made by the Earl .tti Lansdale.
In a golf competition at Cover -
sham, Oxfordshire, Ifr. Y,Mtin-
nings killed a greenfinch in the air
with his ball.
The death has occurred of Colonel
William Chester :Master, an Indian
Mutiny veteran, at the age of
ninety.one.
Precautions are being taken by
the. Board of Agriculture to prevent
the introduetion of the potato moth
from Franco.
Ex -Sergeant Major Wm. Berry,
a Crimean, veteran, who has just
(•elebrattsd his 80th birthday at
exediton, has nine soldier sons.
The death has occurred in his
ilft4V-tilird „Veer of Mr, Clifton Bing-
)), the song writer, who has writ-
ten ever 2,000 lyries and ballads.
The Union Castle liner Walmer
Castle, which arrived at South-
ampton from the Cape brought
home gold to the value c,f 4860,000.
An oak tnee. has been planted in
a proininent part of Epping Foxes
in commemoration of the visit of th
King and Queen ta Chingferd.
The Moat Farm, Cleivering, Es
-sex, where Samuel H. Dougal mur
dered and buried :Miss Holland ix
1903, has been sold by auction fo
X3,770.
Private WiUiam Boon, who ha
just died at Pinningtort Colliery a
the age of seventy-eight,, served
with the 28th Regiment at the siege
of Sebastopol. ,
By its retent self-denial week the
Salvation Army raised £07,062, an
increase of £9,229 over 1912, when
thecollection was taken during the
• coal strike:
A fine 'bronze Roman hanging
lamp has been found near Thetford,
Norfolk. The British Museum au-
thorities describe the find as one of
the greatest rarity. •
Queen Alexandra, has sent $500 to
fund to establish the Queen
Alexandra Nurses' Home at the
Lord Mayor Treloar Cripples' Hos-
tal at Alton, Hampshire.
-Miscellaneous, Recipes.
Rhubarb Sauec.—Fid, on the rhu-
barb filet enough water to cover
the bottom of the pan. Use from
one-half to three-quarters as much
sugar as rhubarb aud a pinch of
eoda if you want to deerease the
acidity. This keeps the sauce. from
being waters' and unpalatable.
Raked Xaearoni atoll Cheese.
Cook the macaroni* until tender.
Put in a baking pan and pour over
it a thin white sauce, using the pro-
portion of two tablespoontuls of
flour to one enp of milk, this 'sauce
having been previously made, If
the cheese ia put into this mixtnre
when it is off the Are, but still hot,
t will melt. Crumbs should be put
ver the top to prevent, the tough-
ening of the cheele in the baking
process.
Englielt map scald -
,i milk, one cup hot water, ono
ablespoon butter, one tablespoon
one teaspoon salt, one tztble.
owi sugar,One, egg, four cups
•r . cake com-
pressed yeast or ene eake yeast
foam,Dissolve the salt,5.4gar'fat
in e hot liquid. In water whicli
feels ncitber hot nor cold to your
Anger mix the -"oast. Add this to
the milk and water when that i
of the sante temperature. Ad
flour. Beat well, then cover eloae
The world i5 watching witb uriositY and, posib1y, some little anxi-
„ ClermanY's fresh efforts to make her any supreme in Europe, and
her aro those, even in his own country, who 400M to think that the
erman Emperor is perhaps dangerously zealous in his desire to en-
urepeace by preparing for War.-111ustrated. London News.
ad Jet 'ise overnigh' the but will keep niee fresh "'n THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSO1
Morning fill muihrt rings half it is all used up,
and let rise until they are entirely Salt makes an extra nue powder ;
ML Bake oneshalf ilOtti” in a mod -lit keeps the gums hard and rosy
erate oven,. Liquid ;PAY be al
water instead of part milk and part
• t r.
LtO
Sauffle.---One cup •of
id potatoes, -fourth cop of
k, two .eggs, •one teaspoon salt,
ighth tablespoon pepper, one
• Ablespoon a butter. Ar. potato,
us melted butter and beaten
g. yolks of eggs, fold in the stiffly
1:lavtialdnemakes the teeth brilliantky
i To make a patch almost invisible
plaee en the wrong'side and stick
;down with - seccotine. When dry
put a heavy weight on the patch and
j leave it for the night,
l . lace requires very careful
11
cleaning fur the fabric is ger
l:
'ally very tender, And easily to
1
• Olive ail is an exeellent oleauser,
„even after a long time, the stains
'aided by gentle hand rubbing.
,
If fine linen is stained with tea,
can be •removed by applying glyes
()rine. A little of the best &year-
ine 'should be rubbed on the stained
parts before washing.
When tot required for humedi-
‘ ate use put the yolks of eggs in a
basin and just clover them with
f cold water; place a plate on the
• basin to e,xelude the air and stand
in a dark, cool place until wanted.
Kid gloves are dry-eleaned on a
wooden* hand with benzole, benzine
soap, or spirit of turpentine, They
are then wiped as thoroughly as
possible, and dried in an airy pia
at as low a temperature as obtai
able.
White doth • is washed witho
any preliminary soaking in pota
water, lukewarm, and then rins
in clean water. The potato wet
is made by peeling raw potatoe
grating them up, and making the
to a thin paste with water.
Leather chairs often becOme
greasy looking where the arms and
head rest an the leather. To re-
move these marks try linseed oil.
Boil half a pint of ail, and let it
stand till nearly cold„ then pour
in half a pint of vinegar. Stir till
it is well mixed, and bottle. To
use, put a few drops on a flannel,
and polish off with soft dusters.
beaten whites„ bake in a moderate
oven twenty-five to thirty minutes.
Chocolate Cookies. ---One ettp of
brown sugar, one-half cup of melt -
.4.1 butter, one-half atip of sweet
milk, one egg, and one -halt,
cups bread dour, one -hall teaspoon
soda, two squares chocolate, one-
half km:spoon vanilla, one cup chop-,
peds, Mix sugar and melted
butter and milk, eggs and melted
chocolate, then flour sifted with
soda; add vanilla and chopped
nuts. Drop upon a greased pan,
Bake in a moderatenoven. Icing for
ookies One-half egg, three table-
spoons cream, one and one-halfj
clips powdered sugar, a square of 1
melted chocolate. Mix materials to
a smooth Paste, spread on cookies.
This recipe makes three dozen
cookies.
Chocolate Bread Pudding-r-Twe
'cups stale bread crumbs, four cups
scalded milk, two squares choco-
late, two-thirds cup sugar, three
egg yolks, two whole eggs, one-
quarter teaspoon salt, one teaspoon
vanilla. Soak bread in milk for
t half an hour. Cook chocolate, half
e of sugar and water together until
a smooth paste is formed. Add
- mixture to remaining sugar, salt,
- vanilla and bread crtunbs, add to
yolks of eggs slightly beaten. TUrn
✓ into a buttered dish arid bake one
hourain a', moderate Oven. Make a
s meringue of beaten whites of eggs
t and powdered sugar°, using. two
tablespoons powdered sugar to the
white of one egg. Drop on top of
pudding and return to the oven to
brown.
Italian Eggs.—}lard-cooked eggs,
• salt, pepper, chopped meat, milk.
Cut eggs in half, remove yolks, mix t
with apasoning and chopped meat, ' d
refile eggs level, place together in h
tlteoriginal egg shape, dip in flour, t
'egg and cracker crumbS and fry in
deep fat until brown. Serve with
tomato sauce.
Tomato Satiee.—One cup of to- p
mato juice, two tablespoons of flonie p
one tablespoon butter, one-half tea- p
spoon of sugar, one-quarter tea-
spoon salt, speck pepper, few drops
of onionjuice. Melt fat, -add flour,
salt, sugar and pepper, add toma-
to juice and heat to the boilin
point, stirring- constant ,
Rock iluelt.--Three pork tender
loins,- breae -crumbs, salt, pepper
butter and celery. Split tender
bis; sew sides together so as to
make a flat piece of meat; mix
bred crumbs, easoning and melt-
ed butter ; moisten with a little
•-iNater'; spread on meat, fold to-
getlie-r and sew, thus Making' it re
semble a duck. Roast in a moder-
ate -oven. Other kinds of'ineat may
be used, such as flank steak or
round steak. In the4 case, prepare
as in case of tenderloins; dredge
with flehr, brown in hot fat covei
with'water and coal; slowly enough
that the water never boils. (,)ook
until tender.
the
tibled With
• Weak Heart..
',Was All Run 1),ow,n.
Many people are unaware of having
anything wrong with their heart till some
excit,ement, •overwork, or worry. caus• es
thern,sliddcaly to`feerfaint or dizzy,'and
have an all -gone sinkingsensatioa.
• On the first sign of any tirealiness 'of the
heart or nerves, you should not wait until
- your case liecomes so desperate that it is
• goingt� take Years to cure you, butavail
yourself of a proMpt and perfect -cure by ,
• nsing Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills.
' Mr. Thomas A. Stevenson, Harris,
'Sask., writes: --"I was troubled with
weak heart, and Was all run down for a
long „while. I was almost in despair of
ever getting well again, until a friend
recommended me to try Milburn's 1-Ieart
and Nerve fills. After the first box, I.,
was much better, and three boxes cured
• me. -I am now, as welbas ever, and will
-
highly recommend them to any one.else
• troubled with a weak heart" •
• The price of Milburn's Heart and
• Nerve Pills is 50 cents per box, or 3 boxes
for
For sale at all dealers or mailed direct
00 recciol of price by The T. where Co
lnaited, Toronto. Ont. 1
NAT10:',;AL LESON.
.ess IV. — ',Joseph in
Egypt, Oen, Chap, 27. ,lolden,
text, 1. CM'. 13. 4.
The portion of our lesson ebapter
receding the .printed. passasna vc
aids oseph' Al remits . and faco 3
•oritista, The story is perbapsthe
iuost familiar one in the Old Tes-
tament. It should be read again
in its entirety.
Vere 23, The coat of many nolors
The ,marginal reading in the Re-
ed Version for this phrase in
verse 3 above is "a long garment
with sleeves," the exact meaning of
the phrase being uncertain,
25. A caravan of Islunaelites---Ali
the inland ;cOntrnerce, of the anci-..
ent world was carried on by trad-
ers, who earried their merchandise
on camels, and for purposes of mu-
tual protection traVeled in large
companies from one place and
ce
from one land# to another.
n- Spicery and balm and myrrh —
Products of the desert and highly
ut
prized in Egypt, where they were
t°- used in part medicinally, in part f
ed as incense, and in part in the pro-
er cess of embalming,
S, 27, 28, Ishmaelites „ Midian- f
itesaeThree solutions are offered for, f'
the difficulty raised by the mention
me of two different peoples. Some
have thought the different names e
were intended to .rather loosely
designate the same people. Other
commentators have suggested that
probably it was a mixed eompany
of traders to whom Joseph was
sold, there being both Ishmaelites
and Midianites present. To this
explanation the Bible narrative
lends much plausibility- since ac-
cording to that narrative as we r
Sheol—The Ecbivaw wide .tirld
or abode of departe,,d, spirts with-
out distinction as to their !noral
qualities. Th 4 New test..14:wmt
egItivalent is "1.4de!'” rronl do- CfMWETIAVON T
scriptions of Sheol g.iven ISA, 14.
4-23 and Ezor, 17-32 and, else- OF THE WORK,
GETTING BETTER
where we learn that the dead •in
Sheol were thouzht of as "still
conscious, but living a feeble, °cal Government Will A p poi n t a
shadowy, ghostlike
Potiphar----Au Egyptian name Conmaission to Go Into the
ommon in later inscriptions from Whole, Problem.
the tenth century B, 0, forward,
Captain of the guard ---Chief of
the executioners. Another trans-
lation. is "chief of the butchers,"
--Compare "chief butler" and "chief ,
baker" in the subsequent Darr, -
cos'
Ontario 45 getting down to the
road building. business in earnest.
Announeements made since the be-
ginning the year state that over'
a million for roads is to be spent
iv in taree counties aloue,---Oxford,
Wellington and Middlesex, ---and
other sections are also, doing some
figuring on their highway problems.
The Province itself has declared
s intention of making a thorough
dy of the whole question and of
appropriating at least $5,000,000 as
a start towards improving the itglar
1(0'W 001_,LS ARE :11,..4,DE.
Ln Interesting Process in the Ger-
luau Factories.
The making of the air;
dolls as seen in the Germanfacto
iea is an iateresting process v
hough some of the roova.s. are ho
eerily p!aties where oue does
tre -i-JaY long at, a time, Firs
re is the ktiouding whe
big mixieg trough is eat rap, az
in this all sorts r; -hag materi
e to ha found -old gloveii, rag
bits of. eardboard, ett„ end gn
agacaeth. This mixtere is kneaf
ed ,) haat to the consistency. of
heated, and carried ieto ti
mould -room. There it ls
by wOrn en, and pouted into pa t.t/erP
which are set up in rows. The
moulds are put away until they are
cold enough to handle, when a
(Orman", by a dexterous move
merit of his hands. separates th
The Needs or the c
emand tremehdons end ,
t the funds at its disposal are
t, ,.1 through the prevailing,. vs-
r'f.' tern Q
id on her hapd, woukl be able
al to meet the harden, but in many
5, eligf`:i are adverse to talcitig ern, ae.
rri tion th'ey- only the Can
I- meet eat) nedertahe the taske4"
a higbv,nly construction in a manner
comprehensive and systematic
IP- enough to inept the demands
$ modern traffic conditions,
leaden and the doll's head 4
aled. The polisher then trim
t.44 tgAeollitseera mrosQtrai rt:1 1,417 en.rdis
th
ib
the eyes are out out. Thi
treme1y delicate task, as al
t kets must he of uniform size
The work is done by hand,
,iharp knife being used. The heat
• next painted, waxed ordepglazed
mate:J.111g! rouPZVeileVthl7sit;er: ntaVel
rms, egs and ham s
Wed in the same !manor as tit
for t ceial machine being used
ening out the hands
Thest parts are painted in licsi
tor, while the heads must have
rosy becks, red. lips and dark
light eyebrows, as the color of the
eyes used may Putting in
the eves is a simple operation, un-
less the eyes are to open and hut.
rn whieh ease the balancing of the
lead become -s a matter of some skill.
many possesses a secret formula
for the enamel used on the Macs,
nd the dainty, natural flesh tint of
the better grade of dolls is the re-
sult of this process. The making of
The difficulty thus, presented can
only be solved through the elosest
co-operation between the central
anization provided by the Pros
"al Government and the 01112er,
P
The pnbi le road a 1001 COtaVe3lli'
e me, hut it is an asset of even 143.,
e tional importance, as well. The
5, road question teaches every one,
d solvi theP can r
Ar nct
° back the growing tide that has"
eityward; Inaugurate a now era
„nrieulture development,
various bo lies
b he benefits of more efficient
"it al facilities to rural Wm-
.
and reduee the cost of
mg to the oily dweller. The neees-
0 shy for preaching the gospel of
good roads is passing, The publie
•, re beeoming converted to road iTtl.
provement and the problem dims
ediate interest is. how hest sueb
ovement can be effected.
Two 'Valuable Assets
the eyes is a dreary task, for it must
)e done away from the sunlight,
and in some parts of Germany the
yemakers work in the cellars. It
•s said that one -town supplies three-
ourths all the dolls' eyes used,
riolet is the most diffieult color to
six, and few violet -eyed dolls are
011714. The wig is the final touch,
nd this is usually made of real hair
mported from China. The hair
sed for blond dolls is the same
xcept that the color is extracted. ,
In ironing ga,rments on which
there are hooks and eyes care
should ,be.'taken not to press the
hooks .together. so that they have
to be prized.open in order ,to use
again. The best way to prevent
his is to place a •folded towel un-
erneath the part on which the
ooka are sewn. When ironed on
he folds of the -towel the hooks
will come mit as good as new.
Onions, if treated in the follow.
ng manner, will be much more ap-
reciated than ,at present. After
eeling them pia into a basin and
our over them ,boiling -water, into
•vhich put a piece of soda say, the
size Of a filbert. Let them reman
a tew -minutes then wash in plenty
-of water., If this is done it will ex-
tract all indigestible matter, and
will not „leave a disagreeable taste
in the mouth.
When eggs are scarce various sub-
stitutes are available. Thus when
ari egg is required to ceat fish or
meat with breadcrumbs, when the
food is to be fried, a little flour
,made to a stiff:, paste' with or
even water, answers quite well. To
glaze a .pie Or bun dissolve a tea-
spobnful of sugar in a tablespoon-
ful of milk, and 'use it instead' oi
an egg. • Custards can be made
quite cheaPly by - the use of ens-
tard powders. , ;
An old fowl can be made as ten-
der las 4 chicken if cooked in this
way 'After the fond has been
plucked, the hairs singed. off, ete.,
it shOuld he -tied up in plump -shape,
and Ititt into a -Pot with a 'anion oil
boiline• water. `A few leek; cup up
pieces a pound of Patna -rico,
and Sal,G tO SeaSOn.,, should be:ad-
ded. Boil the whole very gently
for throe hours, The fowl should
then be divided up and eaten with
the soup. This i3 a most nourish -
50
• e old ts:
The tone 'el a piano, is best- when
the insti'unlent, is 110 --/next
'spirinkle elotliOs ,quickly'.. for
ironing use a sma,11 brush dipped in
of 1-1-1.1c-tl-'svarin- Water.
ured with Mil*. 'instead of
.1rYn
Fact and Fane'.
Never run yourself down. That's
your friends' job.
A whale's skin is in. some places
two feet thick.
While you count the thorns, the
ese is withering.
Ants' eggs, spread like caviare on
read, are a Siamese delicacy.
a..ii.tefociel and his rich wife arc soon
Besides the silkworm there are
200 -other silk -producing insects.
A good reputation is as hard to
gain as it's easy to lose.
A miser is known by the money
he keeps.
now have it in Genesis, Ishmael
.
and Malan were both sons of Abra-
ham. Their descendants -would
therefore be closely related and, in
,the earlier generations at least,
have 'many interests in common.
The same biblical narrative, how-
ever, makes Joseph a cousin of the
inen to whom heaves sold. Still an-
other explanation and the one fav-
ored by a majority -of Old Testa-
ment scholars to -day is that the oc-
currence of the two separate
names is one of many indications
ho
, . .
pointingto the interweaving of two
as
different accounts of the same
sa
ot
"Why did you 'break into the.
use in the middle of the day 1"
ked the Magistiate. "Well,"
Id the accused, had several
hers to cover that evening."
1 event from which the Genesis nar-
rater drew his informa,tion, one of
these accounts meationing the Isla-
maelites as the People to whom
Joseph was sold, and the other
meutioning the Midianites.
Twenty pieces of silver-alleb.,
twenty shekels, two-thirds, • the
ptice of an adult slave.
Into Egypt—INhither they were
bound to dispose of, their products.
29. 'tent his clothes --A custom.-
ary sign of CliStreSS and mourning,
•• 30. The child --Better, tho
'The same Hebrew word is used
sometimes to designate a servant
'and sonic times a young child, as
Well as a youth, as he're.
32, Sent the coat—Perhaps by
one • of their number, whom they
, followed sh,ortly ; 'hence the expres-
sion also they brought it to their
-father.
33, An 'evil beast liath devoured
him--Jaeob ,draws the desired in-
ference at the sighb of the blood-
stained coat.
Saakeloth—Coatse cloth worn
as a sign of mourning. •
35. His. daughters—Only One
daughter, Dinah, has been men-
tioned in the ,thu s far.
(Coriijiai•-e 34,)
.1,...72M4.1r39121,2,4=FIMM.ti
All Skivi iseases
ARE OCCASIONED By
A LILO D.
are already at the disposal of the
Province, and eaa be utilized in
shaping any further road activity
it undertakes. The first is a well
rganized Department of Highways
and the second is the Highway Im-
provement Act of 1901. Under the
first, the comity •road systems al-
rently undertaken are receiving at-
tentive snpervision and edueai.
-
tive .%•;;ork in practical road building
has ben extended to all mumei. a
palifies. Under the second, the a
rough outlines of a rudimentary
road •system containing the possi-
bilities of a splendid development
have been evolved.
COLD
However sii
MAY TURN INT°
soloNclirris
YOU ,13.1auld never neglect cokl, how-
ever slight, If you do not treat, it la time
will, in all possibility, develop into
bronchitis, pneumonia, asthma, or some
other serious throat or lung ,trotibie.
On the first. sign of a cold or cough it is
tdrviunsaobalefotor acnutiendiat antiteont;e;iaocia:1not !e
For this ..purpose there is nothing o
equal Dr, Wood's 'Norway Pine Syru,
L remedy that has been universally use
'or the past tweaty-478 years.
You do not expeziment When you get it.
Mrs. Lows Lalonde, Penetangu6hene,
Ont, writes: ---"When my little boy was
two years °lel he caught a cold which
turned lilt° bronchitis, I tried every-
ilng to ClirO tlitO, even to doctor's midi,
but it did him, 44 geed. One day
dvised to give Dr, Wood's Norway
up a trail, and before be had half
a bottle used, be irk13 cured. I would ad-
vise tnotherS to try it, as good results
will follow, My home is never without
See that yOtt get r Qd $," as
there are numerous ni ions. It is
up la a yellew wrapper, 3 pine trees
rade mark; the price, 2.5 and 50
Bfanufaetured only by The T.
bur a Co, Limited, Toronto, Ont.
•oadway
tract i.
best
ef th
k.
the see
third,
enance.
wir, have
for it.
ds will
inputs'
it pro-
ost ene
what 1)180 W11
Orient
when
it sks
tioni
whatsystem of
e ener je:ffic: ad. e:
de for
r.
-
co-operation
with a central
sary
prow -id:
maintenanee o
f these three steps,
1 • 1 authorities
lclnrd will be neces-
Satisfaetory Results.
Those aequainted with local train°
conditions can speak with greatest
anthority an local needs, but th,e
influence of a central board with
the requirements of the whole Prey
-
ince in view will temper,purely lo -
eat influence, which 4.)ften locates
roads for private rather, than pub -
le interests, for highway improve-
ment is a business, not a political
n•aposition, In building the roads
•ikewise, the local municipality is
etter able to supply the necessary
abor material and capital. In fin-
ncing the highways, there has been
tendency to leek to the Province
or increased assistanee, Under the
reseneAct, a third of the expendi-
tire made •by the counties is sup -
lied by the Province. It has been
epeatedly suggested that this
hould he increased to a half. On
Ise other hand, it must, be doted
hat the municipalities have an ad-
antage over the Province as re -
aids their source of income in
tat their direct method of taxa -
on is flexible and responds to the
bility of the ratepayers, Here, al -
o, the greatest service can be per-
rrned by the Provinee a. super-
isory capacity, by ensuring the
quitable distribution of road costs,
rid by insisting on certain fixed
andards in road construction.
The problem of manitenanee has
yet been untouched in Ontario.
his, however, is the ultimate high -
ay problem, anti in many Euro -
an countries the only one for
hich highway officials now have
_make provision.
A. System of Maintenance
implies simply the supcunision of
the improved roads by section men
who are equipped to mend worn
surfaces, open drains and remove
obstructions, each having a given
Section to patrol and in which he
enforces traffic regulations. Vari-
ous countries have va,rious main-
tenance provisions on their statute -
books, but in this as in other divis-
m of road activity, close co-opor-
on between the central highway
office and the local divisions has
.
brought about the best results. Co-
operation implies system, and sy,-
tern is the secret of success in any
aek of
ous waste in road expenditure. A
gshyli,gestalle:mY:ac:refiaa:sd.:7isnulmisttoerladaet:i:n• nh.aast,Ir
•
glreadv
ieen expended on roads in Ontario,
and' al much` greater amount will
-e to be expended in, "the future:
la\
unless future expenditures are
under a More sv,stomatie 10 es
d than has prevailedth, s,,
on 1110
ziolesenevisiii: :c.tieary iNtNas:blesiiieizeiccneti aaadirti:41; nalat:estect ls:ieigistxtr i;pep, ta:ii:tecy:eze,
art of the Government ' be
nce
01
opos
plsrt of road improvement i.-11,4
come froul the, deYel,
vinee through Wl.Ach
will be directed into'
and With 41 vies •to pt?rhid:nn
Any extended plan of Provincial r
Highway improvement will necessi- s
tate a great deal of new and ex- t
periMental work, and two tried and t
efficient agencies will be found par -1 v
ticularly 'valuable -wader these eir-I g
cumstances. The Local Govern- tl
nient,lnis announced its •intention ti
of appointing a tontraission to go a
into the whole highway problem s
thoroughly, hear those acquainted fo
with road conditions throughout v
a
st
the Province, ascertain the location
and extent of the road building. re-
sources and collect data relative to
traffic requirements generally. The
new commission May be allowed a as
wide initiative in developing what- T
ever plans it evolves as a result of w
its investigation, but the lessons pe
drawn from the practical working w
of the Highway Department and to
from the Act of 1901, cannot be
overlooked. Briefly,. these are, first,
that the building of roads in con-
formity with
Sonic Intelligent System
and some adequate standard of
eonStruction can only be accomp-
lished through the intei•vention of a
government agency with powers of
supervision, and second, that the
initiative in road building is right-
ly placed with local authorities,103
PrOV1nClal OffieialS are unable to ati
say just what roads are necessary
to the wellfare of any given county,
but the. people of the county know
•peetty well what is needed most
ancl where improvements .should be-
gin. The Provincial Office has dono
0001.1 in directing she energies of I
oad builders throughout the Prov-
1Ce. The work of supervision is 11
ne which such a central organ-
; • '1 • 1 0 -
he other • hand, all matters of 1
ut
iridoal ti:p.,.1:ceiepnailietif:s y the High: ,tnt
sy Imploie ieat Act the tho
The work done under this sys- ten
era has not been by arry means
C(, but results have been attained
lat justify its contimianeer along
inilar lines:. Only through co -on -
ration between the ce tral offic
, No One Can expect to be free from some 1
form or other of skin trouble unless the r
• blood is kept in good shape.
o
The blood can easily be purified 'and •.;
the skin disease cured, by the use of t,
Burdock Blood Bitters that old and
P C
widely known bloo medic, e.
It haS been. On the market for oyez d
35 Years and its reputation is unrivalled,
Mrs. Lillie Mitchell, Guelph, Ont., I:
writes:—"I Ny,ts troubled with eczelna fel
lily body was COvered with awful itching
skin eruptions. Although I tried many s'
different remedies T could get nothing to a,
give me retie,. levelly I got a beat e ft
, Burdock Blood Bitters; which completely
id' the local 0\ 01 units With a
loll. powers of mitiative can a, -road
cured_ me."
` :Manufactured only by The T, Milbute
Co., Limited, 'Toronto. Ont,
stem evolved that is' ,at on ee Pro
p ellen SiVe 'and e ffee tly e ; • • • 'd
The,.first slop in, sgiVing.Qntariol-S'
eattltai• '
a v Probleni will be to lav °tit r
11