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Exeter Times, 1914-12-10, Page 2
ews ted . .. . ry people who have been reading the terrlitle war news from day to day, rase who, stave relatives at war., have become so nervous t;tt, ii is impossible for them to sleep. The, nerves have become unstrung and the heart prhais affected. burn's Heart and Nerve Pills will tip the unstrung nervous system Rud strengthen the weak heart. Mess l ildia Dicaire, Martiitoawn, Ont., writes "In August, 1914, 1 was out of school for tray health,.. 1 was visit - friends an London, and heard of the war. It made me so twat"'! ora that could not sleep, but after ,using ;Mill - burn's Heart and Nerve Pills 1 imfitoved greatly, and could take my school again. 1 have recommended them to many o; nay friends," 'Mill urn's Heart and Ne ve Pills are 50. per box, 3 bows for x+1.2.5 at all dealers, or mailed direct en receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co_, Limited, a�ronto, Oast. SO.t. <]k ;1 cttei.gd, It d.f;ccl. 1 rifle Tin. --Is for the Rome, Veal, 'M aatritive and 1)eth`haus. Veal, de1rcit us in taste and deli. rate in texture, is often condemned as unwholesome. But if veal is well and thoroughly cooked it is whole- t some and.go;.d, Here are some of the good ways in which it eau be i e,>o .ed. litddre l Yea/. --- Rub fine some state 'bread, the inside of a loaf, Mix whip dry with chopped pars- ie;,° and pow dei' xi thyme, Then add pep'pe'r, salt, and a little _ nutmeg. ;,r {.� to w r.dted butter and add'. .,_a a. rt with ems. �c'. 3. az beaten egg. Have the bone re- *r:ti �dd front a sitaulceer or other piece of teal and ati4 the cavities with the dressing Ro',I and tie with a cord sr fasten with skewers. Put it is a baking t; ii in a very hot dtt*aa ,rain n 10 minutes baste with r' Baited weter. Cook until tknorough- 1, daze, t, loci egg the beat of the even efter the fee: aninutee and is z 'jag fr ceinkt m time with salt. •ii Veal Chops—The k bre-filed veal chops in the oven is a ee ere 'for l ,,,matter, Then renaaw'e aaacl dip them in beaten egg.; ail. fiche bread rne:tbw. Rave r sl�i@let in which there is hast' fiat arc. cook the aligns in thi , are brownand tender, c'rad t=:nuc,Remove from a ai rsaelc 1p, he oven tor:, aro iliafire, skildet, :rn e"d t�)nwaatea- �o rar th; irninate very much from the diet, but when the price per dozen is in the forties and the fifties, every wise housekeeper is, keeping an ere open for menus and recipes that call for few or no, eggs, . One is justified in serving an egg - ss cake instead of all at?gel food bei the family in the winter,;. when eggs are high, It takes a little fore- thought and planning to give good, nourishing meals with few eggs, but it can be dotter After alittle "eg fasting" the' family Swill ap- preciate #hem all tim nore and eat. them Wrt]a s little keener relish, When eggs ,are omitted to a large extent frond, the diet, more meant must be supplied; but the cheaper cuts will answer as wieil as the more expensive ones. 'When eggs are high, although Your recipe may call for two egg,, just use one. For instance, in, unakingt Nvalea ttSt: ' only one. It will be enough, .al though you. may be aecustoaned to tt$inga two. The food value will not be so high, but the result will be 4atsts pProbably thei,afable. Probably family will never notice the differ- enee, Whenever making croquettes, dil- ute the eggs with water. and ix will o much farther,'Use only one egg art making, hermits. 'Suet pitddinrs, which require no gs,,art, nevertheless, rich and wtngbiy ei .raring the, oaths Tlity- are heavy but we acre- ablerto digest t*a° serve; t" then, with pork; sed to gapadt ..both from add zila ndp itiC t~t. w "Thio Maass and'n toId to cleat daaad.Eaa aa chairwtet. ba aaw 'zipper and paprika, ;. ;lie chops. utlet with llrowda ti a tahlespv.inful, tgs fan:a , skillet, an ant h as veal. wiped es until it Then 'add at ta the pan, v for half .nit "his'time the #ender. R:t aid thicltfe IV Turn [et8red eful ]Tints, )est r+'gitits on the Itaaat gas 4d to bah MN unci. by the c cif sugar per 1v cooked toe° d` is one rat ti eronciraieal food markets, ' dies have as tat the lame rieties the aldnost ,stasis An.e, lane i;t kac"lf tWe p ,13a"tassels s+'tC� Clea dneu nlr to riniyts. Tae wd',el;age of alt °eft inti** fa.at"d`ltd•6aau wwe e raiataiirng tr n ra attad and sb v eizcln.t feel the frail move the liganicl i minished, clil raga wit.,salt the ,idea finely fins aaaaAdg tlariaaagh na ache, _1 tad mil - aaraplea i ppea: • aaa Oval oda ail ��# c , , a� itailata'a;w` ti s" le :i ?:a"lgiddud, - ckt great baat•tle. This ictaaae ndailenss, Keene farinhoreet "iintd ec. Meat is Iyiiig about, tg c. is reduced OJ • N,IT1iIN_tL 1,I • 1.)E(EM,i3Eft 13 tan ':i :l. The Gr'eraat 2h. 11/.20 Loh nzmiss 73fi•;n (ohleta Teat: Matt. 2"I, 24., 13adt, the el cele.—e the ,ober show a that. ,alt fit tide zeadr,aiaaiaug; discalwlcs were .rile xaadd tdrfl + f f lith. 1lti ilia altdetlaatan where .Jesats gad appointed t.lretn WWJlaat nsciunt- . ► ls mot .l;,uowri. 1d>rwbably the winch JOstia had deelared if w his disciples before be to Jcrussaledn. I)oubtless i town rendezvous, rdnd'fo defied no eioser des', 11 religion t;e..'. t d la pineta ad needed 1 the Christ to giv applre t ;on and fd. 45Ye are wwitanesses of these things-11 --'Seriptttres, iia c"faect, were confirmed before the eyes of the diseipies. They had seen end heard and knew, Jesus is careful to emphasise this feet,. 49.1 send forth the ptror 1= thea' upon. you ---The Spar ketd of in prophetic oracles (. rr] 2, 25), tarry ye in th4' City, tddlti lied with power. from fiats' 1 of %vatting and meditate highly desirable until the did+ pies could bring their eelves in tela an attitude of devotion a,, lite that they could be endna it power,fron on high, tl, And hes led them nate-Jeraaa t, leave hiss cdiseiples alone as is lie had given them their siren, He wept forth with csaatinuing his companionship 1 tltoy were over against Beth - ow many days he was there win we do not know. \Ve sure that it was a tirine of sed ec>tmnunion, 5., While he bles ed tht m'-- it would seem that Jesus did Da' leave his disciples willingly. He remained to the last moment. Aud when he finally departed, he gave them a special blessing. 'This parting <lf Jesus from lits close ' a`;sc e aces is d'eeeribed so naturally that one feels he is in the presence of an actual raccurrence, 53. And were e;antinually in the temple -Not only in the equal temple, but; in the temple of the soul. They were worshiping God in the inmost depths of their souls, carrying about with them always the blessing of God. CEREMONY OF F.]lI] N»S1ia.P. 1 Missionary's I xperienee With an .frit an Chief. In the little African village of Maduda, Dr. Gabriel R. Maguire, missionary and lecturer, underwene a crass-etaminttion, and tock part in a state ceremony that probably has few counterparts in the modern world. Doctor Magaire, rhe'stery of whose adventure appeals in For- est and Stream, .reached Maduda after a long march through the jungle and across the first plateau. On my arrival at the village. he says,- I was met by Munkamaduda, the chief of the tribe, a sinewy fel- low, seven feet in height, who had never before seen a'white 'face, He first asked, through my interpreter. whether I was a white man.' Al- though the reply is obvious, the chief did not appear to be thorough- ly satisfied with it. He seemed to be under the impression that I was a spirit, and he was very much con- cerned whether'I had ever hada mother. When he had 'satisfied him- self on that score, he asked if I had a father. He then wanted to know- if nowif my lather was as tall as I, and on being informed that he was about the same'height, he was _equally ,so - lie -items to ascertain the relative height of my 'mother compared with my father. He 'next Asked my in- terpreter if I' was not the great white spirit that men said would one day Tags through his territory. I replied that 1.was not a spirit, but that'I had come to teach. the black man about the Great Spirit. The result was hardly what l had anticipated. The chief `gave a pro aligious leap into the air, and when he- alighted, started' to run ; -'Go `rise the vernacular, his: feet touched only the highs places as he sped from my presence. My interpreter under - :stood the meaning of this perform ance, and informed the that I hacl made a grave mistake. It seems that the, African native regards spirits as being essentially 'evil. My at- tendant informed 'me that the chief had gone to get his foreman;, and that he wvold be back directly: Soon he returned, accompanied by his' SAD A BAD COLD WITH PROLONGED COUGHING.. TRIED NEARLY EVERYTHING, FINALLY • OD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP CURED FUS. Mr, Wallace H. Grange, 'Vancouver, B,C., writes: "During a cold spell here about the middle of last October (1913), T caught a cold which got worse despite ail treatments I couid obtain, until about. November 22nd, a friend 'said, 'Why not try Dr, Wood's Norway Pine Syrup?' Really, I had. ito faith in it at the time as I had. tried. pearly every other remedy I had heard of, to no avail, but I ghwusive thi; ast reared �thoua trialt, 1 I purchold ased l a, 9 east bottle, and iii three days I was feeling a different man. My cold was so hard, and the couglaine so prolonged, that v©tnitine occurred after a hard spell of coughing. T carried the bottle in my poei;et, and every tinea I w,as seized ww�ittt. a eouglrinr, Spell Ie N'e}1t14 tae ra SrilUie ll fir e,, I rail most heartily recotnrneml Dr, Wood's ;\orw ay Piny Syn;p to anyo to wit a severe cold, ris itS powers are ;na;e't tn;trvelous, and 1 never iatend eeiae without it at all times." When roti ask for. "Dr. 'lw,'ood'S" see that you get what you ask for, It is TT+ put PP l in a }•ellcaw wvrapperQ three pike givers andro- t the conning of their tiniVersal 1 ptaarsley x two well. lddn f as cupfnd of a adtcd:haalf .a and a third C'hop tern pry fat, with iwion it wvith he meat with net wvlwcrn the ftc. it intda alts. 1'ta.t thezii nit fiver them d done The "1'unune' d officers aas "a Icer: cif hl+ heroes " He added "One cleay we collared a Gertrnia tt•a"neh, and I, sees in one end a nidi fc'ather,bed, all cosy -like.' with hide; (dwn °a�n top which some German: efiieer bad rigged up, -1 went to �raar .lusher and says, 'Nice feather ittel sir. to .left of trench, would' w°inu li#e it, sir rr .Get, awe.y `Pith you,' ire say jovial -like, 'g;o and turn inx y 1`Il send a chambertiraid with' as c^u °? tea to wake :you nt + ' ,So when the wasn't taking aur spell me ;atn' ink,. mate slept in that feather bed. with c,ur bdectts ,on, like a couple of wel �r rig bt little+ b baitingg pan a potty two tablespoonfuls of utt "r ztnd half a cupful of ehieke ver sand bake for about ante half a dozen times, adding more stock. hT tematot sauce. t:gut fret oaa slut•' mrd c kis -° tier', If lie: disccavers e«ta lir•a' l;aartaare aaa,'tl u g he o#fea sada be t<'he dudnpgirr; many' unsalable gcaid; To make flaky pie tittanr sand shortening are. __..... take. out sever,,. spoonfuls acid. io one sidle before adding wv T,hen.' when top _ crust is roll(' sparinkle this over :it and r ►1:1 wt+ry lightly, k tea land 'wvdnen they- saws lailaa %tl1 sasrne distance away , He "ca•me ue recognized him net worshiped him, Others paeriisrpas were not so sure and douttcd. llut wwlredi Jesus haad tonne twiong threm no further eacpressions doubt were made. Nearness to s dispels doubt. 18. Say °in , Alt a�utitisrity Bait., been ivon ug'nte line itt heaven and fi a.renrth--As otne of the di ciples appearedd doubtful at first, Jesus ave, thein: au sign. of rceognitioo by epeatmg to them what+ they had heard hairs say before. He was not boastful of t;dis _power. - It was a statement for the assurenee nf, ilne disciples made when he wwas living with thein.' It> was doubly assuring to them now aas be came from the dead, and was in the mature of a password which wwould authenticate his identity. i9: Go ye therefore--A.s Jesus had all power,"and as he was i eady to eomrnunieate this to his disciples, there was only one thing to do— spr.ead this power over the whole }world, baptizing them into 'the name of the Father- and of the Son `and of th.e Holy $pirit,�--A1l the peculiar and special Jewish ritesby which communion with the church was to be secured are taeitly negatived by Jesus when he emphasizes baptism only: 20. Teaching them—Not ortlrodox opinion, but right living. No :opin- ion or creed can' be orthodox `if it does not constrain men' to observe all things 'whatsoever which Jesus commanded. And .lo. I am with you always, even unto• the end of the world The ("teaching'` was to be continu- ous'present participle): and Jesus was to be with his disciples forever. Hence a:n ever-rene weed power to teach. rigiht living (and. tb piactice it) was to come from the continual presence of the' -Master. Hence also the' power of the< gospel and its world-wide'pnrpose. 44. These a;re my words which I spike unto you, while I was yet` with you -Much of Jesus's teaching while he was yet with ,them wvas in- comprehen�sible to them. Now he calls their ' attention to 'what he said to show them. how it, conformed to all that the law, the prophets, and the Psalms said. of him. . 45. Then opened he their mind, that they might understand the scriptures -With the concrete back- ground of his dee• and, resurrec- tion Jesus could talk with a great deal more: particu,la.rityy amd clear- ness than he wars able to do before. Now the disciples could understand. him from an entirely dafferent point of vieww>. 47. Unto all the nations, begin- ning fron Jerusalem—The p•ur.port of. the Scriptures from the begin- ning was that the �.Oluist message was to be:without~reference to race and world-wide., Repentance and remission of sins were to i be. the cardinal points of his teaching.. These points were drawn from the w'Ser, a Saw c �ha (rd I a n that I was to be pant ti rough ananother trees the iral.e ,nark;; the price, 5o and 50; naanufaetatred oniy� l)y' The T. enols e amrnratat n, Lae fun t man Alilbura Co,, Limited, T oreete, Ont., wvas first to come to as definite con, eetee" elusion regarding ni,° diSSintidavity turned other nnen he h ,d sc ee, He mad, remarkable discovery that the feet of the white nnan were blaick, and that he did not have any dies, 1n order to disillusion him,w1 re- moved my Shoes and stockings, re- veeliia£ the` fire tcaes fist t°neh !ui!t. lknth the chief a and foreman, wwho en bolding a serious discus- ut my pedal' extremities nfeetly sati,isf ed• -after aa, tion, Assured '.;hart, niy peaceful one, flee pi- s henehma�n trade are is for eating the dish of a 'Tae- ,following day°, d bye his followers, the ppeared at the appeinted and the natives, foran1n: eyes into; a eu,rele round the and myself, waited :w'ith great vanity for the veren'awrty 'to be unnnaateet. The '.first. gianee aat ne dish of peace wars nearly enough make one prefer war. It was analan c>,d of cooked field r;tie they wrere not fresh field •at thait, They had grown l>utrid welt ago, attt<d they were surrounded by i ,,nese of beans that: was almost, c<lwially uninvit'in*g. I etee]ed my e]f ft).r the ordeal. "I'he chief rni:s ed st)me of thtr hears to his mouth, rand, smaeking his lips with pleas- ure, said something which my in, terpreter informed me meant, `•Peace to the ww hite man : peace peace! peace:" In sheer despera- tion, 1 rte scone of the beans, and replied, "Peace to the Meek man peace', peace !' laeaee „' The chief then ate some of the meat, and waited for me to d a the settle ; but' at was tt little more than I could stand. even fir the sake of peace. 1 told him, through my interpreter, that the white man never ate rats, bet that he would drink the cup of peace. To my ,great. relief, the chief was willing to 'accept this compro mise, and the cup of peace was rluaffet ; thus,ending the ceremony, f"in;tnces a€' l.iw ing. Alfred J. L.otka, in the Scientific .lmericnn, makes an interesting. calculation of a roan's chances of When the kidneys get ill the back gives out; But the back is not to blame. The ache ',comes from the kidneys, t'vhich lie under the small of the back. Therefore, dull'pain in the back, or sharp, quick twinges, are warnings of sick kidneys—warnings of kidney trouble. Plasters and liniments will not cure a bad back, for they cannot reach the kidneys which cause it. Doan's Kidney Pills reach the kidneys nd , bladder inedicine. They heal the diseased surface of kidneys and bladder, nci help them to act freely and naturally ie., writes: had been troubled with ore back for over four years, and could t nothing to do me any good until heard of 3 -oar Doan's Kidney Pills. got three boxes, and tool: them and ow I am completely cured." Doan's Kidney Pills are 50e a box, 5 boxes for 51.25, at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of price bY The T. Mil.' bitrn Co., Limited, 1.oronto, Pressed a Free two pounds of veal fro ne and fat, and water to eov it. Cool it and sleim off the fat. hop the veal very fine and add to it two hard boiled eggs, chopped fine, and a cupful ef boiled ham, eliopped fine. Season the veal liquor with salt, uutrneg, pepper and celery salt, and moisten it with the Iiqnid ao that it is very moist, and press it into a buttered bowl or mould. Cover it and bake for half an hour. Then chill it thor- oughly, turn it out on a platter, garnish it with stuffeel olives and tiny sprigs of parsley, and serve. Veal Birds.—Have. thin slices of veal cut from the leg, about a. pound and a half in all, and pound them with a wooden mallet until they are not more than a quarter of an inch thick. The small bone in eaeh slice should, of course, be re- moved, and so should all fat and skin. Now cut the slices into pieces about four inehes square, a little longer one way than the other and chop all the odds and ends of, veal into small pieces. Add salt and pepper four tablespoonfuls of melt- ed butter and a beaten egg-. A little anion juice and thyme ca -n be added if desired. Spread this stuf- fing over the sliee-s and roll them and fasten with skewers, roll in flour and brown them in hot melted butter. Then put them in & sauce- pan and cover with thin white sauce. Simmer until tender and serve on narrow strips of toast, with the sauce strained over them. For the sauce, in which they are sim- mered use a cupful and a half of milk, two tablespoonfuls of flour and three of butter. Baked Ham and. Vettl.—P ur chase two medium thick veal cutlets, ra- ther small in circumference. On one of them place a thick slace of ham and cover with the other cut- let—just as you would make a sand- wich% Place in a roasting pan and cook in a hot oven at fi,rst to sear the meat, then reduce tbe heat to a moderate one. Baste frequently. The gravy of this dish is delicious and the flavor of the meat combina- tion is sure to appeal. 110 ggs Are Scarce. , redress, far the housewife but 'econaMize their use. She mast, use some. It wOuld not' .be wise to take them from the diet en- tirely,, even to cut down expenses. 'Women are engaged to patrol th army camps in England. Russia's grand duebess is `ng as a fled Cross nurse. The suffrage eampaign in England as cost, the lives of 30 women. ndon suffragettes have formed wennen's volunteer polite force. NO woman except, qualified nurses 11 be allowed at the front in France. Wounded soldiers in France are being taught how to knit by the wo- men of that country. The universities of both Sedan and Russia are open to women on an equal with men. Since receiving mitnicipal suf- frage over 28,000 African women have registered in Johannesburg. Women in Norway are now repre- sented in every profession except the priesthood and army. French women have been offered the right of suffrage if they will al- low their sixteen -year-old sons to go to war. Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney has opened a hospital in France for the wounded soldiers of the allies. Worthing, England, is to have a woman mayor next year in the pea son of Mrs. Elizabeth Ohapinan, e a cousin of the late Joseph Chamber - recently.' ascended to the height of 83000 feet in a balloon, where she ate lunch with the pilot. Queen Wilhelenina is an expert on military matters and does not review a regiment as a matter of form, but is quick to notice any de - Dr. Regina F. Keyes,,, the first American woman. surgeon to volun-' teer for hospital ,service without re- muneration in the European war zone has sailed for London. Both men and women clerks in a New Haven department store have been forbidden to come into the store with the odor of onions or gar- lic on their breaths. A labor dispute which caused a ten -week strike aniong 800 em- ployees has been successfully set- tled by Mrs. Betty Kjelsberg, fac- tory inspector of Nyclalen, Sweden now .Thomson --"What, do you consider the most pleasant month, in' -the year'?" "1 haven't any, prefer- ence," said the disconted. man. "Bills come dhe in all of them just, men ear, .and'a 4,0 explain the meaning of it. -114141-:' rePlied the ti,tiherman, itnneweeible l" et wee he was coal, the lisbermas year after the w began, the western wi Neuter „from ...the Gulf (10141) 14 lee NeVa4„ In 1712, the 1100I,L5 , weNve, Was ImdismayA by ne and urged on the et..1 er suited to the dig- nity a national eapital, and St. Petersburg was proclaimed the capital of Russia. could not acerstem tinenselt regitr4 it as the capital. By ries treditiin they hed It is an ieteresting feet fikai the city as eaything but ['etre et was pulolkir, who, bemoarang bows leer head ite Bridge of the Dead. "Let me tell you an ineident which will give you some Idea how the Geemane respect their deted,'' said an escaped prisoner in Fra,nce. "Oa the second day of our captivity we saw with our own eyes a bridge which they lied made over a stream. There were no sappers with the party, and no wood or other materials out of which a bridge eould be made in, the ordin- ary way. So they sank the bodies el their dead to the bed of the stream, fastening weights to them to keep them in plaee. Imyself saw them put fifteen bodies in the wa- ter, till the top one stood well above the surface. Then next these another tiee, and so on, till the gruesoine causeway was broad enough for an infantry division ta cross, I give -you my word that, • ul as'it seems, that was what saw and my friend here, -who was with me, .will tell you that there is no word d exaggeraein in what I saw." 1703 Peter the Great GaVe Ore ders. for Its Erection. In the centre <if Admiralty Square, wjthin the seiadow of Ka- zan Cathedral, stands the eque.s- trian statue of Peter the Great, founder of St. Peteesburg, "The City of Czars." Perched on a huge granite rock that , weighs fifteen thousand ‘tons, the monument of Peter surveys the dream he con- ceived, whose naMe Czar Nicholas haa -changed from "Sankt Peters- burg," to Petrograd, in his effoet to purge the city from its Teutonic That little peninsula WaS a dreary, marshy waste, surrounded by thickete end forests and inhabi, ted by a few; Finnish filermen. On one of the isla,nds conimanding the entranee of Lake Ladoga., the Swedes maintained a str,ong fort- ress. Peter ‘the Great, realizing the advantages of the position, waged a relentless war f ox 'the -pos- session of _these little islands. In 1703, the Swedes were driven from was established 'Peter gave orders far the exection of the eity, which he named after_his patron saint. The building and, mai n Cc!. can c c Petersburg mark a Continuous struggle wi;th nature. ` The 'sail is a inareh so deep and 8pongy that. .a solid foundattion_in Laces can only be attained by a sub tem' ca:) scaffolding of piles. The hip;;:hst, fifteen ;feet above the sea. The winter and scourging heat in For six mionlihs ea oil year the Ne-v,a is frozen solidly. An old leeend hr 31l3 33 'Peter the Great chose the site 0; above, the tint' lf j If You Wish to Be Well You Must ICeelp the Bovdels Regular.. :If the bowels do not move regtdarly they will, sooner or later, become con.- stipated, and constipation. is Prochtctive of more health than almost any other trouble. . , The sole cause of constipation is an .inactive liver, and unless the liver is kept active you may rest a,Ssured that headaches, jauralice„ heartburn, piles, floating specks;before the eyes, a feeling as if you were going to faint, or catarrh of the stomach will follow the. wrong action' of this, one of the naost important organs 3 1‹..• .e.ep the liver active and working properly by the use. of Milburn's Laxa-. Liver Pills, • writes: "I was troubled' with consti-Pation for many years, and about to try Affithurn's I,axa-,Liver Pills, as they had cured' him. I got a vial. and i:nok them, and by the' time 1" had ta.keti hand, and when I nevi a mild laxative arc 2.5c a 5 vials for 00, at all dealers or -