Exeter Times, 1914-12-17, Page 2D BLOOD
s The Cause of Bens arid Pimples.
When boils or pimples start to break
out on your face or body ye,y. may rest
assured that the blood is in au impure
state, and. that before you an get rid or
them it will be necessary for you to
purify it by tieing a good medicine that
will drive ail the impurities out of the
system.
'Station- Blood Bitters is a blood pull.-
fYinr. remedy. One that has been on the
market for the past forty years. One
that is /clown from one end of ths'=nonatrlr
to the other as the best blood parifier
in existence. It euree boils pimples and
all cter diseases arising from bad blood.
BOILS CURED.
Mr, Andrew b. Cellier, River Glade,
was troubled 'with boils for years,
in fact, did OA know what it was to be
rid of theta until he used Burdock Blood
:ters. It cured him.
MPLES CURED.,
b. Otto Boyce, Yorker, Ont., had
jis riee and neck brea1r. out with pimples.
rea several kinds of medicine with
.ottt success, Two bottles of 1'3firdoc1
Blood Bitters banished them.
13.13.13. is neauttfaetured otily by The
Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Out.
()range Dainties.,
In this wonderful age the orange
is an all -the -year-round dainty. and
it is hard for us to believe the
stories of our grandmothers about
the days when oranges were a
seareiry. That if we do not believe
them, we have only to look at the
beoke we ourselves use -d to read in
our 'Childhood. to rea'Aze that the
times searee oranges are not
very Ler away. Don't you remem-
ber about the orange one good eihild
was aiwaye raking- to anolhel. goo
<17,1'1<-'1 when it was no t was tJte
rreatest mark devotion and kind -
Well, toedm Qranges are as usual
aimo,st, as potatoes. Virtually all.
us have them all winter long. We
azs get them. too, in summer, al -
'ugh rhe summer oranges are not
geed as those we get in winter,
reover, summer is so overladen
h good things in the way of fresh
s that we forget the orange,
sir fruitless winter
until the rst froet makes its
form ad delieions flavor
s for the
o gee in •eilys that
delieious than
Progress
Thee
ARK
ev
range (ustnte
g intoeubes
wu
Ove
with
ed
era! elerma and Austrt
$ have te-4.eaped from Ce
)ehar ferry route.
a etion vemmeneed Mond
neweeteneion of the Go
,
V'
—Cut sweet ore
mi place them,
in a &ass dish.
very thick ells,
nilk in which a
skin has been
eyed. On tp of the eusterd
e ui1ngues browned on a
ard in the et -yea. Chill thorough-
ly and serve very cold.
Jeflht Ones.—Ralve large or-
aeges and take out the pulp; al
wIth lemon jelly., and place a neer-
ingue on the jelly when it has set.
The meringue must be cooked in the
3°Phie'ne 11'"fte" 141"'"W' oven on a hoard in little heape and
Falti . plaeed on the jelly eilen void.
W. S4ellesele. eeetoe `01 4 °ranee two heaping
5letuoria1 deereh, tabIespooduls coenstareh
5t b$L two brothers iu , little water and pour a cupful
net 'pre. bU milk over it, stirreng eon
d Cenid- 1 etentbe (irate the rind of one
ont , orange
Ry in ; large
va pinch A4 sr
milk. Then e
Waled sugar or
range is very sw
undererust.
etereney baked custard.
eel with a thick meringue,
(eel and serve cold.
ge and Prune SaInd,—Stear
I • -
el, amt remove the pits.
lad nem it with the etnee .of
ge, A beaten egg and
withethe starch and
* in a ettpfid of gran-
t so much if the
Pour it into
Ice until the
mituort 1.•
13nti
-erne in
plough
k reeo the
elephone system CCM-
nore with GoWen on
tt is
'411; puebed ahead,
unbta
vherf,
taking
ted
the number tlif alien
to the pollee once
to their under -
mailer than
there.
ie wives and
'n who are on the wee
ont rum Fernie will be re
psards a $1110 per month
it tbe e Fund.
PL Lng. chief of police and
Aloe &ewart, police officer, have
redned the pitiens et Rossland
pted appointments of chief
and pence sergeant, re-
spetuely, at Nelson.
R. Reading, Canadian Pacific
eallway agent at Fernie, has again
received the $50 prize for the best
kent station garden in the Alberta
division. This is the third year ia
uere,,,,iwa that Ur. Reading has
aon ibis honor,
t.bief of Police McLennan, of
Vancouver, stated that his city is
being flooded with hoboes, as many
as forty of whom come in on one
train from the interior. Brakemen
refuse to try to turn theni off the
trains as they are all ruffians in
appearance.
Aug. 15 to 1 will be the dates for
Vancouver's Exhiloition next year
instead of in the advanced fall as in
past. years. The association decid-
ed that although some agricultural
features might have to be dropped
better weather could he assured.
This year $15,000 was dropped.
alf711===.4,
The Old Fashined Purging
and Griping Action of Pills
is Now one Away With.
1111lb-urn's Lava -Liver Pills gently
unlock the secretions, clear away all
waste and effete matter from the system,
and give tone and vitality to the whole
intestinal tract.
They do this by acting directly on the
liver, and making the bile ,pass through
the bowels instead of allowing it to get
into the blood, and thus causing consti-
pation, jaundice, catarrh of the stomach
and similar troubles.
Mrs. L. M. Ratchford, Peterboro, Ont.,
writes: 'Paving been troubled for
;years with constipation, and trying many
:diffeAnt remedies which did me no good
whatever, I was asked to try Milburn's
Laxa-Liver Pills, I have found them
trfost beneficial, for they are indeed
splendid pills, and I can gladly recom-
mend them to all people who stiffer from
constlpation.
Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 25c
vial,.5 vials for 81.00, at all druggists
or dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of
price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited,
Tovoufo, Ont.
arge piques until they are
The Teo Great Str tegists of the French limy.
polean izi lus days was a great strategist but, aectirding to the rank and file of the 1,•ench, the
and the Belgians, Napoleon never howed the qualities displayed by Gen. Joffre at left), tl'w
)uf France, ttroolnwn „e„e 41, btrategiet when the war broke out, he has risen t‘i stteh a height tht‘t
n. Kitehenee, commender-in-chief of the Driee.h, has said of him that Gen, joffre is not onlya great
but a great elan. On the right is Oen, de C'aetelnau, whose distinguished wk has raised him
atrategist.
high
runes in two and mix with
equal quantity of orange pulp.
-ve. on lettuce leaves with Freeelt
re. s tea.
Ornuge Stattee.---Parboil the outer
yeirow rind of two large oranges,
drain and eta in thin strips. Add
the pnce of the two oranges, a.
glassful of port wine and half a
glaseful of white stock. Cook for
ten minutes, strain and serve very
hot with meat. This may also he
used with fieh,
Compote of Orange and Apple.—
Slice four seedless oranges without
removing skin, in thin slices, and
dust with sugar. Pare four large
apples, eore with an apple corer
and slice in thin slices. Dust the
apple slices with sugar and ar-
range the two fruits, first a slice of
apple, then one of orange, in rings,
one above another, in a glass dish.
Chill thoroughly and just before
serving pour over all a glassful of
white wine. The dusting of sugar
should keep the apples frorn turning
black. As an added precaution pilt
a layer of orange on top, as this
also helps keep the apple from the
air. A little grated cocoanut may
be sprinkled over the fruit.
Orange Jelly.—Soak two table-
spoonfuls of powdered gelatine in
cold water until soft. Then add 11/2
cupfuls of boiling water, the juice
of one orange and sugar to taste.
Heat and strain and add a tea-
spoonful of sherry. Cool half of the
jelly in a cup. When the other half
begins to harden, add a stiffly beat-
en egg white and beat again. Pour
this frothy, half stiff mass into a.
mould and turn out the little cup-
ful mould of jelly, which should be
quite hard. into the eentre of the
other. Let all harden in the refri-
gerator and serve with custard and
whipped cream.
I'Vorth
If a little salt is put on the dish-
es in which eggs are served the egg
will wash off easily. •
Linen is easier to write on when
naarldng if dipped in cold starch.
Then pen will then write without
Scratehbax.
When serving hot bread_ or pastry
of any kind, use hot plabes. The
most delicious pastry becomes "aog-
gy" when served on cold plates.
The wise housewife will see that
the kitchen is frequently flooded
with fresh air. One can work fast-
er and with more ease in a well -
ventilated room.
Delicious batter eakes are made
ofstate
mix
withsitaliebr oiit g
.Se,os, rniik,api
Soak thebreadslti
of salt and baking powder enough
to make ligiht.
'Po make the beaten egg in which
you dip croquettes go further, use
het water, beating all the while.
The proportion is three tablespoon-
fuls of water to one egg.
Newly baked bread should be
lightly coeered with a elean cloth
while it is ecoling. If it is not
aired when it, is taken from the
oven it is apt to be soggy.
For a baked euetard ginger sauce
is delicious. Make it by eimmering
tupful of syrup to which a quarter
of a cupful of ehopped preserved
ginger has been melded. Serve hot.
Cayenne pepper is excellent to rid
cupboards of niece. The floor should
be gone over carefully, and each
hole stopped up with a pieee of rag
dipped in water and then in eayenne
pepper.
Perspiration stains may be re-
moved from white blouses without
arfr trouble if they are soaked be-
fore washing in oold water, to which
a little carbonate of soda has been
added.
To color icing pink, use strained
beet juice, and mix with powdered
sugar, using the juice in place of
milk or white of ego-. 13 oil beets un-
til the exact shad; of pink is se-
cured.
To make wet shoes look like new,
remove immediately, wash off all
mud, and wipe thoroughly. Then
rub in plenty of vaseline and set
aside, away from the fire, for sev-
eral days, so that the grease will
restore natural oil.
Brass beds that have become tar-
nished may be cleaned by applying
a mixture of olive oil and whiting
or rottertstone. Rub clean_ with a
soft, dry IlanxieI or chamois skin.
If the brass is NVOrnt off have it re-
finished.
Why Germans Are Abusive.
The violent and extr cordon y
vulgar abuse of Great Britain which
appears day by day ha the German
'newspapers ,supplies conclusive evi-
dence -alai, our intervention in the
war has completely upset Ger-
many's calculation.s, says The Lon-
don Express. She proposed to de-
stroy France and to work havoc
with the Russian army. She had
confidently anticipated. Great Bri-
tain's neutrality. The venom now
turned almost exclusively on this
country is at once a tribute to the
effectiveness ,of our intervention
and a proof that Germany has little
hope of averting final defeat. We
accept the typically Teutonic de-
nunciation as an honest because an
unvvilling compaiment, and the an-
gel,' 'of the Ge rm an n ewspap cc s re -
doubles our confidence that right
will conquer might.
"Feyther,", said little' Micky,
wasn t it Pa.thric ini,y that sale
`Let us have peace lerver.
said old Mickey. „`Nobody be th'
name of 13,a,thrieik iver said any-
thing loike
ITIE SUNDAY SC11031 STUDY
TERNekTIONAL LESSON,
DECEMBER 20.
Leeson The Reign of Peace
(Christmas Lesson)---Isa. It. 1-10.
Golden Text, lea.11. 6.
Verse I.. And there shall come
forth a shoot out of the stock- of
Jesse—This same idea is expressed
in Ise. 0. 13. Even though the tree
may be felled the stock will remain.
The new Israel will spring from the
old stump of the house of David.
The vague use of the term "Jesse"
Louniteness of the origin of the Mes-
h.ld seem to indicate the indefi-
2. The. Spirit of jehovah shall rest
upon hin1—(See Luke 24. 49 in last
week's lesson). From the begin.-
nine- be will be overshadowed by the
Most High. The supernaturalness
of the Messiah's endowment is
clearly indicated. This Spirit of
Jehovah is indicated in three sefia-
rate pairs of virtues:
Wisdom and understanding—The
ph -e'er not only to know, but also
to discern right values and rela-
tionships, a very necessary quality
f •I- •j..
or ude
Counsel and might—A rnan of
discriminating counsel is necessarily
a man of peculiar power.. He will
know how to frame right intentions
and bring them to pass.
Of knowledge and of the fea-r of
Jehovah "The fear of the Lord is
the beginning of wisdom." The
knowledge of Jehovah is an under-
standing of his character and of his
claim upon men, the fear of Jeho-
vah is the ordinary old Tekament
term for piety. It is significant to
note that even the Messiah, with
his supernatural endowinents has
not only an insight into the nattdre
of God, but an instinctive desire
to love and obey him, which in
essence isthe very heart of religion.
3. And his delight -shall be in the
Lear of Jehovah—Not only on his
own account, but on thc a.ccount of
others. Wherever he sees mon ex-
ercising a fear of Jehovah there will
his heart rejoice and be glad.
And 'he shall not judge after the
sight of his eyes, etc. The king
according to the Hebrew idea of
kingship, was to have a twofold
function ; first, he was to lead his
people irt battle; ,aairl second, to
administer justice in time of peace
(See I Sam. S. 20). As the prophet's
emphasis is entirely on - that of
peace, he ,overloo s or ignores en-
titely ,the first functions of the
King. Or Messiah. The precursor
to a reign of peace is to disabuse
the minds of autocratic kings to -day
at the idea that their chief function
is to lead their people in war.
4. But with righteonSness shall he
judge the poor, and decide with
equity for the meek of the earth—
His especial eare is to be the de-
fenseless and the oppressed, those
who are not hawing an equal chance
in life's race because of the ruth-
lessness of stronger men,
He shall smite the earth—The
word for "earth'in Hebrew is
erec, the word for "oppressor" is
aric. It is quite likely that the Orie
was written for the other, and that
for "earth" we should read "op-
pressor." He shall smite the op-
pressor with the rod of his mouth,
and the wicked with the breath of
his lips,
5. Righteousness .shall be the gir-
dle of his waist—As the girdle
bound men at the waist and hence
gave them freedom of action and
eesultive strength, it became a sym-
bol of sturdy and resolute expres-
sion. Compare the "girdle of
0-8. The idea of the prophet is
that in the reign of peace even the
brute. creation shall be subdued and
become doeile. A Garden of Eden
shall again aiipear on earth when
the wildest of beasts shall lie down
with the tameste---the wolf and the
lamb, the leopard and the kid, the
calf and the young lion and the
fatling. And abbve all
A little child shall lead them—It
will understand the animals and
the animals will understand it. In
the reign of peace there shall be no
advantage of brute strength.
Strength shall be counted in terms
of the innocence and winsomeness
of•chhel
iiilc1O1,n°Ods
Tiall eat straw like the
ox—He will beconae domesticated
and not,prey upon other animals or
man for his meat.
Most astounding of all, the suck-
ling child shall play on the hole of
the asp, and the weaned -child shall
Put his hand on the adder's den—
The suggestien is that of a babe in-
advertently cciming in contact with
a poisonous reptile and not 'suffer-
ing injury. Merely to touch such
an animal was sure death.
The w-ord den probably means
the glittering 'eye of the serpent,
which would be especially attractive
to a child.
9. They shall not hurt nor destroy
--``They'' means universal man-
kind. No one will have, the desire
for aught th.at would be unkind or
wantoit
In all my holy Mountain—Not
only in Mount Zion, but in all Pal-
estine; and, as Palestine then, to
the prophet, was the whole of the
known world, so to us "all my holy
mountain" must mean the world to
les laet p o ssib I e, lern its . The uni-
versality .of 'the reign and „infiue.
nnn
of the MesSiah is thus clea,rly indi-
cated.
For the earth shall be full of the I
knowledge of Jehovah, as the wa-
tens cover the sea—There (mai he no
vanuum in -the waters which oover
the sea. Any track that is made ie
imMediately oovered up and its
place unknown. So there can be no
failure anywhere of the knowledge
of ttho Lord comiug bo the last hue
man being. The mass of humanity,
like the sea full of water, io to be
completely immersed, in the under-
standing and' fear of God, And this
means allegiance to and worship of
the Almighty. "
10. Unto him shall the nations
seek—The Messiah shall become an
ensign of the peoples. He shall
stand as their leader, but not in
war. His leadership „shall be that
of peace. It seems strange that the
prophet should have used this mili-
tary expression as iudicating the
emblem which would cal/ all people
to Messiah. While emphasiiing
peace he inadvertently turns to the
usage of war. This is suggestive of
the difficulty with which mart will
diveSt himself of the idea of war.
The vocabulory of warfare will long
continue as a large part. of spoken
and written speech.
His resting -place shall be glori-
ous—Wherever the Christ $pirit
abides glory abounds.
TWINS "RUN"
lie„SANT Ville PA 31ILY OF
ROLI)S RECORD.
Two LanOaShire Tivifts nall 17
Children Before They
Were 21.
CONSUMPTION A CHANCE
To Get a Foothold al Your System.
Check the r3Firs_utssi;sn of a c°1d
yirg
R. WOOD'S
HORWAY Pi 'E SAFRUP.
A cold, if neglected, will sooner or later
develop into some sort of lung trolible,
so we would advise you that on the first
,sign of a cold or cough you get rid of it
immediately, Por this purpose we know
of nothing better than Dr. Wood's
Norway Pine Syrup. This preparation
has been on the market for the past
twenty-five years, and those who have
used it have nothing but words of praise
for it5 efikagY.
Mrs. H. N. Gill, Truro, N.S., writes:
T. "Last January, 1913, I dc•veloped an, -
awful cold, and it hung 011 to inc for so
long I was afraid it wolild turn into
consiunption. I would go to bed nights,
,.Intodi(eiliogit.lrilenooilitta
ggei„xiatoy..stlieleropaat
throat
foriAlilute
ti;,
and sometimes I would cough till I
would turn black in the face. A friend
came to see me, and told me or your
remedy, Dr, Wood's Norway Pine Syrup.
1
it I could see it great ehauge for the better,
to I got VUlOtiler, and when 1 had teen
the two bottles my cough was (Ili gone..
411(1 1 have -never had 411 attaek of it sine,
and that is now a year ago."
Dr, Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is put
uptheitnrattil;'eTinli)a sr'kivnttPdP;n-riect,112“i'iepine treee sind
, It is inanufactered only by The T.
got a bottle of it, arid after 1 /tad take!)
Medical men and other e who have
made a speeial study ef tee subject,
entertain no doubt -estrange though
the assertion tees soued---thae twins
rue in families, says Peareon'e
Weekly.
Seene years ego ler, Cory, of St.
homas's Hospital, investigated the
history of 17 Cn‘aeS of twins whieh ,
eame under his notice professional-
ly, with the result that he discover-
ed that in no fewer than 13 of the
caeca there had been previous birth'
of twins among neer relations of
either the father or mother.
As the proportion of xnuttiple
births to single births is ordy a lit-
tle over 1 per eone., it is, of course,
quite leconeek able that this could
be due to chance ttwr Ely ; so that
we should be compelled to assume
that there le in certain families a
he tendeney to multiple
,births, even Dr, Cory's figures
stood alone, ,
Boe they do not. Other do('tt,rs
have made similar investigations
and these have been attended with
very similar results.
In a ease mentioned he ler. Mae-
,phail, twins were born in four out
of five consecutive generations;
while in yet another instance he
traced a history of multiple births
for four consecutive generations.
Itt thie latter ease, in the first gen-
eration a woman, whom we will call
Ann, gave birth to twin daughters,
One of whom died. The other mar-
ried, and likewise had twin daugh-
ters. Both these lived to woman-
hood and married. One had twins
once, and four single children ; the
other had twins twice and triplets
enee. In the fourth generation one
set of twins was born.
! milburn Co„ Limited, Toronto, Oat,
,
'
niore boes, And tben e )1 lowed t wo
Etete of triplets and a quartet. By
, this time all Italy wa$ interested.
I Visitors from everywhere Rocked to,
f the little cottage,' and gifts, both in
motley and kind poured iti upoe the
'. proud pareete. Men royalty it,
iself, iu the pereon of Queen Mer-
gherita, her -,elf then newly me rried,
'. came to see and admire, leavieg be-
hind her a substantial nelnoi'utUt
of her visit in the shape of a puree
filled with gold pieces,
i "You bud better rest on your leu.
i role now, eignarbta.- remerleel Iler
, Majeety, laughingly rth f -lie t „ 1,, Fer
/departure, But this Mrs. (1ee‘ate
apparently wee net at all ine7ined
to do.
4 Indeed, as a matter of feet, i
, had at the time of the Queen's
i only about a tiara part or hr eutn-
I Mete family about her. f 1r after a
1 long series ot ones and 0,, e this
I extraordinary women lent the
'proud eatisfaetion, in NM, ,"11111
leer), of presentieg her bueband
with blur honey boys, therebv
bringiug her living famile up el ee.
Startling Single Cases.,
It is, however, when we cease
dealing with statistics extending
over several generations, and con-
centrate our attentioxi upon single
eases, that we get some really start-
ling examples. For instance, dur-
ing the recent agitation in France
which had for its object the induc-
ing of the Government to ,refrain
from taxing the fathers of large
families, the ehairman of one meet-
ing announced that he had 33 chil-
dren, his quiver -full including three
sets of triplets and five of twins,
while of three of his sons who had
married, one was the father oi two
lots of twins and the other of ' a
quartette. ,
Another well-authendeated case
concerns two Laneashire lasseS
(bWirls) n am ed Deno ode,y . They
were married on their seventeenth
birthday, and by the time they
were 21 they had brought into the
world no fewer than 17 children,
their joint record including -seven
sets Of twins and one of triplets,
The classic ease of all, however,
and one which seems to clinch the
I matter entirely, concerns an Ital-
ian peasant -couple named Gravata,
living near Rome.. Mrs. Gravata
was one ,of twins,eand the daughter
of a mother who herself was a twin
She was not married until she, was
28, an unusually late age for ar
Italian peasant girl, and there wer.-'-
many sly jokes among her friends
and relations as to whether she sea:,
going -to carry .on the 'family tradi-
tion
Gave Birth to Six.
As a matter of fact she did not in
the beginning. Her. first child, born
a year after marriage, was just an
ordinary little baby girl. The fol-
lowing year, however, she re-estale.,
lished the family record for fertility
and astonished not only her own
people but practically everybody in
Rome, by presenting her hubby
with six boys—sit-tall, but healthy.
The next time there were five
l)i'rEs) p4_,eR.A GRAPHS.
Cats and eandidatos love to Fey
on the fence.
Silenve is golden, yet etnne people
won't, shut up
Were it not for women all thc
men would he savages.
Some men are even too h
dulge in guesswork.
A homely girl .ean :Jay Om pretty
things are useless, and mean it.
The more the big fellows \sant the
good.odi.
less we little chaps seem to get.
Might may not make right, but 't
frequently succeeds in making
When our spirits are en the ebh
we think we haven't the ghost 4.4
shHo‘orieing against hope is too nmeh
like 'betting against another man's
garlibiee morning after is an oceasien
many a man would be glad to dis-
remember,
-It's far easier foe many it man
to declare his opinion than to prove
that he really has one.
A man doesn't worry because he
isn't clever, provided he knows that
he's good looking.
A woman's new hat brings more
.satisfaction to her milliner than to
her own husband.
Love is considered the ruling pas-
sion, but occasionally the almighty
dollar administers a terrific jolt.
. There is nothing in the theory of
the survival of the fitte.st. Tailors
'aver thatlhe misfits stav with them
lo n gest.
NERVES WERE BAD
Hands Would Tremble So She Could ieet
Hold Paper to Read.
When the nerves become shaky the
whole system seems to become unstrung
and a general feeling of collapse 'occurs,
as the heart works in sympathy wild the
nerves,
Mrg. Wm. Weaver, Shallow Lake, Ont.,
writes: "I doctored for a year, for my
heart and nerves, with three different
_doctors, but they did not seem to know
what was the matter with,. nie. 'My
nerves got so bacl at last that I could'
not hold. a paper in My hauds te read,
the way they,. t:-e---0-0?-1- g-
doctorinse thimung I could not: 6.`..t„Jo-
A lady living a fe',v door.; from nieval-
vised me to try a boxsof Milburn's 1 -1 -e -iii;
and Nerve Pills, so to please her 1 tlid,
and I am' thankful to -day for doin,; so,
for I am strong, and doing iny own Nor::
without help.”
Milburn's Heart and 'Nerve -
50 tents per box, 3- boxes for 34.25';',at
-all:druggists.cirdealers, or mailed riireet.
.911 ri...teipt:Of;priet'IDY' The T.Miiburtt
Co., -Limited; Toronto; Ont.
eerie