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Exeter Times, 1914-7-16, Page 3Hill) SALT RHEUM ON .HER. HAHOS SO GAS SHE COULDI' WORK Burdook Blood Bitter, Cued Her �. Mrs. B. Bell, Box 104, Newboro,. Ont,;, writes: ---"Some time ago 1 wile tronbie4 with Salt Rheum on my hands, and it Was so bad 1 could ,not do my work. I tried several medicinesbut ""they all failed to help me, ` One :day `a friend told ane to try Burdoek Bleed Bitters, so I got a bottle, and before I had taken it any hands were better, 1 aAa . a act afraid to recent zaend BB ,B• to rub-_ bod y. " There is only one way to get rid. of all those obnoxious skin diseases, such es P zetna, Salt "Rheum, Boils, Pimples etc„, and. that is by giving the blood a' thorough cleansing by the use of Bur- dock Blood, 33itters, "fhaa sterlb% remedy has been on the market for close on to forty years and Yon will frail that, it will der it we eiaiin for it, See that ozr name appears ea lsettle. label and wrapper. The T. Vistas Cape. i uulted Tomato. Oat.. T4 CR 91 EN, owo of 14. 'r In Estop Tball Baa Com. tat \l*achi, ni °l��rrk= g grim'ar s icy fire wazn l.r~i• Hints for the Home With Currants. Currants, in spite of their rather insignificant place on our bills of fare—savein. the form of jelly --are decidedly beneficial to humanity, For their chief constituents', pot- ash, tartaric aeid-- which give the'm their sharpness --anti grape eugar, an easily digested substance, all have value. English eltetteians, .es- peoiall,, harp on the health -Pre - qualities of this small fruit, Perhaps the reason for the limit- eci rase of currants is that most cooks haste a limited way of pre- senting -them. Currant jelly, o£ coarse, that is known in e er household. It is one of the main - toys of life, Yoga remerhber the fastidious sehool teacher who de- clared that a teal lady would know instinct that the proponn- paanievoit of roast lamb was currant jelly? When anyr tiele of food has reached the sage where it .i considered a test of la txhood i mast be widely aecepted. And some ecoks l;aai tangy cy or currants-, chilled tan zoved .from their steps a tzcl rn ice-cold syrup of to water red oven° them, In faslarsria. Qceas}onu1 methods o sea"vita rile, ° Dot an tlne l'►y served ral state when incl in a�>i inecc itheir season : has mut Jelly.—Cu.z. sleen'iesl, ad boat it is ever""fin? 0 irecipe- f^ y cashed resecloth t the Anel le To make wall paper stick over calsimined or whitewashed ovalis get a large brush and some ochre and paint the walls, first: Jelly bags, pudding cloths, and strainer cloths should be thrown into clear warm water immediately after using,. All rubbing and wringing; by twrseting is harmful when washing' woollens; be mire to rinse out all the soapsuds. A chicken for broiling .should be wrapped in a buttered paper bar, This will keep the meat moist and yet aiz, the fiasor, Try the plan os" al/owing a day to intervene betX eert the washing and rroraiag, And e e if it. does not prove 4 strength -saver, Hair brushes eau be cleaned by Emitting ammonia in cold :Ater and dapping the brush in, being careful rot to allow the wood to go in the, rVater ; then rinse in eleer Bold wa- ter. Nothing is better” tban a largo pair of bellows for blowing dust out off the piano. The front roust of course be taken off to get to the triugs. x o dzive .a nail into plaster first .'. a hole about twice, the .;nandliar owf€hrhsoofntnplasrterevofwIds. fl1 11 t sert the Tomb„ And when the plaster inns it will hall like ja:oaa, moat .a natural plied lrrprg gee so as to preserve its beauty, irou 'it ,only when it is perfectly this with an hon ,rn iy moderately AS nothing scorches quite ..so say as silk. Do not sprrni4e pongee, ,es the ;pater spotA never 4t, reed charirs S Coy TION:L L ON 40-52 "Golden Jeaie zl., t?qe t a wailed eity, thee) -il Aman military road, r in which Hero re �a, It s .Igsa xted b n gh- a dies h'raon n. Jertesalebu wird e - rales. f'a•+Qm The Jordan Riven went out t Jr�rieta ua ozaly time of 'Oda we has eeord that Jesus tarried i i la, though he wast have pas ns iI raarn tkeen in goair .lilhee to J rzpsale .baa t t jarat ' se , this r egos ar Ier nnftenv roar]-r'.l orad tz h which 44,e, passe riling Unisons t rz'af 49`n QWµ 1eM 'u+irata� rzuTe e na1r «isle n i th alp nand to dsman lne CHOLERA INFANT my Cl tl ron. fror ` ottbje;o .They 0,:1 be cu b ''lth Use TRACT OFW STRAWBERRY reared, ' vtadoai . w 41$' igg ,ean' A'gAme 3s :a, 4e4n41p4 raia .0 angiog for Then ruction 2 2 very cupful rt, flat pan An the ove , but do Aown it or melt it, Boil the cleat 'nice for five minutes, then add the ligar and stir until dissolved. Just efore it reaches the boiling pliirst the srigar is added, remove tile fire and pour into g-iasses have been scalded. When the • it well -with pax spon righly liandful ir to dry. This if the seats bay I they become the altd it I:a apse Is ea tee wee:mien n. Coe embran who' Aver all -ounce of tapioc fire until it eoraes simmer until tapli -e1011ted. Flavor per, When cool ,g well be the egg he it Avlti mus n made v sliould well dried e ng over tit rs ed 14 'it loin QV pounds r sugar and a pin 1 good eider or wino vinegar. Sim- er gently in a porcelain pan until hiek. Then add a teaspoonful of a teaspoonful of ground and tho same amnia of pper. Boil five minutes, d bottle. he clay of our grandmothers is not dilfiettlt 40 prepare, and it is, in- deed, a delicacy, To make it wash four pounds of currants, stems and all, and put them in a large kettle. Add a, gallon of water aud put it in g.00d eau for three days. stir from time to time, Then press the currants through a cheesecloth and strain the liquid. Add three pounds granulated sugar and stir. Pour into a cask and stand away until it teases to ferment. Then bottle. Currant Desserts. — There ttre y delicious turrant desserts, aud one of them is shortcake. This can be made either with cake r biscuit crust, The currants, care- fully washed, stemmed and dried, should. be crushed and sweetened and spread between the layers, meringue or whipped cream ean be added to the currants piled on top. Currant No.—Wash and stem enough. currants to measure three cupfuls and pat them in a deep pudding dish, Cover them with enough sugar to sweeten them. If they are very sour they will need a good cupful. Then pour over them. half a cupful of boiling, water and put the dish in a slow oven to sim- mer gently for half an hour. Re- move from. ithe oven, cool and cover with pie CTUSt. Bak -e until brown, and sprinkle with powdered sugar. Currant Iec Cream. — To make eurrant lea cream, partly freeze any good ice cream mixture or.' frozen custard and then add a cupful of washed and stemmed cur- rants to a pint of cream. Finish freezing, pack and let stand for two hours, Red Currant Fool.—This is a, very red uneonsc to (Airport ave Government Board borrow $31,000 for man mpherd placed head on the me in front of a tr at Portsmouth and was de - capita in the presence of several Several cases of typhoid fever, eatesA through drinking water from the River Trent, have been reported to the Gaiusborough Rural Council. For driving a motor tar rat Ramp - u Court at a rate of thirty-four miles. an hour, Prince Maurice of Battenberg, was fitted $15 at Pat- han) Polite Court. The death has oceurred at Mar- ingham, Surrey, of Sir JosephWil- son Swan, the ioventor of the in- candescent eleeteic lamp. Re was eighty-seven years of age. }ferns and belies of a wild ox and the antler of a red deer, both pre- historic animals, have been found while dredging in the River Thames at Marlow, Baekinghamshire. car end a motorcycle .at a sharp bend between Shields and Morpeth, Coloeel Hudson of North Shields, who was driving the motorcycle, and Mrs. Hudson, who was in the side -car, were both' serioesly in- jured. Art under and m SUFFEREDFORFOURYEAIIS From Neert Trouble and Nervous Prostration Mrs. John Hewson, Caledonia, Ont., writes:—"I feel it my duty to let you know of the great benefit your Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills did for me. I suffered for four years with heart trouble ' and nervous prostration. I was so bad that I could not go upstairs without sitting down at the top before I could go to my room. I couldn't sleep dor lie on iny left side, for it would seem as though my heart would stop, I thought my time had come. I was doctoring with the doctor,. but didn't get any benefit. I was advised to take Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, se I gottwo boxes, and after I had taken one box I began to feel better, and after I had. taken two 1 could go tip and down stairs ;with- out resting, So I took eight boxes; ,and am enjoying good health 'again. consider it a Godsend to have your Pills in the house," Milburies Heart and Nerve Pills are 50 ceets per.box or 3.boxes for S1.2.5 at all dealers or mailed direct. rec.eipt price by The T. 11,1ilhurn. Co., I,imitecl, Toronto. Out. inty dessert if it is .served very -old. Crush raw or' "stewed -cur- rants threngh a sieve, to remove skins and• seeds. Mix them with, a ne‘latirie• dissolved in hot milh Chill thoroughly and serve in glass- es with a .141.1 e whipped era= .C.th tilts for tile Ilenie. .01:ape juice is a fine. -flavoring for 'Caramel. custard is an af,ree,9.1)1 es. to freshen,' it, and iron on 'the '1,611g, side When pale y ey. for ea be country. '1" IncludingAbet vo canals at salt other roilltors the cost of n a Some animals and also birds hav extraordinary tastes for dif- foods and drinks quite apart 2 those which Nature has pro- vided thern, mid it is in the know- ledge, of these peculiarities that th skill of the trapper lies. So -marked is a monkey's tasto fol intoxicating liquor made from e fermented juice. of rice that. this drink is invariably used for trap- ping these creatures. Bears are very partial to alcohol, and many of the performing variety find Weir highest, reward in honey and beer, or rum -and -water mixed with su- Canaries delight in eating let - ace, which is well known for its mreotie properties, and they will at it to such itn extent as to leav themselves staipefied for a long titne afterwards. Foxes ordinarily the most ctin- diecult to ea.pture of animals, readily submit to a trap baited with the body of a dead cat. Stoats, weasels, etc., are seldom proof against a trap sprinkled with oil from fish. AT LONDON'S pock's. Enormous Amount of Shipping "Which Is Done. As London is the world's largest, market, so, also is ,it the World's leading port. Yet few people seem to realize what maaivellous hives of industry are the docks of the metro - In the course of a year more than thirty-nine million tons of shipping use the -quays and wharves that con- stitute the Port of London; and the value of,,the foreign trade .alone is somethine like no millions sterling —about a, quarter, that is to say, of the annual exports and Imports ot the United Kingdom., It would, take a Million men a year to peednee the amount of tea that passes .annually throueh the ort. The figuYeserelateng to other imports, such as grain, timbee, Wool, meat, sugar, wines and tobac- eo,, are on the same enormous scale. In the wine and spirit, vaults at the Lenelon ' Docks the ',gangways Where, ,the wine is ,stored are 28X. miles in length. For the wool trade the Peet of London Authority , pro - sides space, el 'thietyetWe acres, and ,it .e.au stare at epee' time more than a mill ion frozen' mutton' and the 120,050 tons 'of heel that Australia, New Zeilia•,ici, and year. at „sure, The oted hint like di ., so Tililell so that when ves and tiler h ust be tito d . This to have Pets Ued tf new 'York Chamber of Commerce by it committee on foreign commerce in February, 1012 fix interest on bonds issued to build 'the canal at 01,000,000 a year; upkeep, operations, and COD- Ungeneles. $6,500,000; total, $14,600,- 000 a year. This does not include provision for amortization of bonds, which would require an additional rie aveller "Why do ask me that ? but there's something about yo perhaps you belong to the roya ourt at Madrid?'" "Perhaps you v himself V' 500,000 a year for fifty years, malting 'Anti what do yoa do a grand total ef $22,000,000 yeilr to asked the ohainbermaid. be derivcd from the revenues of the IN COLD S'I'07.1.1 Appeared Perfect! qu, ;;41.)telieldf *kept ior c.„ tcen year§ in cold storage was ex- posed to the public view for an honr and a half at the Smithfield (Lan- don) markets recently. No test 'was made of its eating qualities, but the meat appeared perfectly sound, al- though slightly laded, It was put bark into storage to remain an ob- jeet, of curiosity. the owners hoping it may be allowed to complete a century, at least. The quarter was shipped from 750,000 tons. The high estimates were canal in order to place It on the basis own way- This includes nothing tor profit; but the henefits popularly ex- pected to be derived from the oper- ation of the canal may he assumed to be acceptable in lieu of cash revenue. 'to So far us pUblished records discloSet no one seems to have thought of the expediency of investigating the tom- mereial prospects of the canal while the undertaking was under conside.r- ntion. Search through several ponder- ous volumes of reports of canal hear- ings before Congressional committees reveal just two pages ot vague gen- eralizations on the commercial out- look, including a summary of thirty- three estimates of possible traffic. These ranged from 400,000 tons a year, the estimate of 'Joseph Ninon°, Sr., tben chief of the laureau of Statistics, of the Treasury Department, to 15, - his k ner all from French sources, the highest being that of BunateVarilla. The French, it will be remembered, had a canal eoneession to sell, and Bunau- Varilla was trying to sell it for them. Old Routes Shorter. Panama is not on the line of any great commercial movement, but is far distant from any such movement. While the parellel of Suez runs through the most densely populated areas of the world, no less than 94 per cent, of the earth's populatiou lives north of Panama. The Suez route through the Mediterranean, the —. lvireiess rnessa,ges are sent much ned sea, Indian Ocean, by way of lu, more easily at night than in the dia, Ceylon, Straits Settlemeuts, and the rich East Indies is thickly dotted day time and in winter than in with ports haYing a large and lucrae summer, ,and the range under av- tive traffic. The Panama Canal will arable conditions et midnieht • connect two ocean solitudes. ing midwinter is ,sairl. to be several shorter, or for other -reasons, are More 11.110a1101(.1`Di7,1 nipidsummer. attractive for the greater part of the Brisbane. Aitstralm, in February. 1896, to a firm of military contrac- tors at Malta, who used it for ex- perimental purposes, When the Government recently took over the storag,e at Malta, the firm shipped the piece te London. The system of refrigeration em- ployed during this period was brine circulation produced by an ammo- nia compression maclune,i, Little Iftnewn "Wireless Facts. world's shipping than the Panama route. For the small portion for wIrich Silence, is goiclen--exceli'l when Panama is in a position to compete, Suez has 'the advantage, for it can cut its present, rate of $1.55, and still pay good dividends. The only way for us to secure even the small part of traffic which is competitive would be to make the canal free. In that cae we should le" ihe position of baying epent $,375,000,00e for the bone - fit of foreik-n ipowners. about somebody we do not particle. "Thothas," said the mother, se- verely, "someone' has taken a big piece of eineer cake out of the pan- try.- _I ern nay blushed guiltily. "Oh, Thornas !” she ex,clairaeOce. 'ere iinaCUS 'What wilt ti unto thee?—That I to do fo o 'tion 4,f jeeus. k.r.Wnrlatibc'bi.w4APaIr ay. used by Mary lene when s e ee. Rath nae *saved thee. And siraighte he received les sight, and feillowed him in the way— Jesus had said, "Go thy way." He had not suggested Bartimaenee fol- lowing him, but Bartimeaus doubt wanted to remain near the :Master, and he joined the company of pilgrims who were going ta,. Jerusalem, and Lnke adds, "glori- fying God." this thec. whole -0 vattli Qlittimed f and m ie oss Ault of the la 'Wing eon - of glaz the lead uniform window t rattle el off. PLOW NG WITII DOG Si. F specter Faemer in Yukon 'keit (1 Sueeess in Plan. A correspondent, while waiting for a steamer at Eagle, on -the Yu- kon, was attracted by loud howl- ings in several different keys., c companied by a, string of ileent oaths and curses,. writes the editor of the Engineering and Mining Journal. On investigating the source of the uproar he discovered an indignant prospector -farmer at, tempting tho plow a small field with a team of five big, shaggy "hnsk, Ms." It -wee July 5, and the, tem- perature was 85 degeees in the shade. The poor dogs, with swollen tongues hanging from their mouths, were struggling 'gamely in the hot sun, but were moving the plow by small, ireegular jerks. Every loW minutes they would throw them- selves exhausted on the ground, and then their excited master would assail them with whip, boots and Albovetheie it was picturesque 1.1 -it s op strip 1 la appeal to 'you. as o, voealist " •s. Buggins—"Not exactly. In , act,' it's tbe other way. When he begins to shag appeal to him." If you recommend a man for position and he acts badly it is doughnuts to fudge that You will be blamed for it all the rest oE eoer days. adSevere iintibiP ail[ Sick ileaaaCili P Could Not Eat Anything Without Agonizing Paira health is better now than, it has been for years, and I owe it Lo burn's Laxa-Liver Pills; ---writes Rose Doyle, Connaught, Ont., "I was for several years troubled with severe stomach trouble and sick headache. Could not eat anything without agmliz- ing pain. 1\ly sick headaches were most violent, and I could net testi night or day. I became emaciated and thor- oughly d.espondent, and no medicine seemed to help me I took .Mil- bern's Lasa-1„iver Pills. In flee mouths a doubt one of the best tbe Market to -day for all the troubles arl,sing druggist or general store, 11 they itav'-'11't • Less than eerrl of our forei,m didn' think it was in vo !'' "It ' plc) wing. Unluckile. rsloock „,..0,„"ii40-' trade is carriEltAm American vessels, ain' eeolied Tommy. "Part ether e was no local, society fe t' n't' -