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Exeter Times, 1915-1-28, Page 3r) • As The Result of a Neglected• Cold He Contracted SEVERE BRONCHIAL TROUBLE. Mr, W. T. Allele, Halifax, N.$e writes "X feel that X would be doing you and your greet eerateey, Dr. Wood's Nonvay Pine Syrtis), a gross injustice if X did riot write and let you know the wonderful, results that I have obtained froni its use, "Last spring I happened to contract a cold. Of course, this is a conanon oa• curence, and I did not take any particu- lar notice oC it at 014 time. However, it did not break up as quickly as colds gstgrally did with me, so after two weeks, at' 'no sign of improvement, X began to get alarmed, and went to my local physicians who informed me that X had contracted severe bronchial trouble as a result of neglectingmy cold. He pre- scriged some medicine for me, which I took for about two weeks without any sign of improvement. X was getting pretty much discouraged by then, but one day a friend happened to be m to whom I was relating my trouble, and he advised me to try Dr, 'Wood's Matey Pine Syria), saying that lie had obtained very beneficial results from its use in a similar cas, . X took his advice and procured several bottles from my sten- gist. After taking it, according to direc- tions, f9r about two days, I noticed a decided improvement, anct from that day on X began to get better, and in ten . days I was in my usual health. I con- sider this aa excellent showing for your remedy, cuut can highly recommend it to anyone afflicted as I was. 1 shall always put in a good word for it whenever the opportunity offers itself." You can procure Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup from any druggist or dealer. Price, .25c and 50e. The genuine is manufactured only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. "DEAD" MAN TURNS UP. Sergeant Reported as Killed Comes Back and Asks For Pay. Officially altered th the. War Of- fice rolls as dead over. fouas months ago, Sergt. 0, Bennett, of the 'Nor- folk Regiment, has had to prepare docnmentary proof of being alive in order to obtain his psate. The sergeant was wounded at the outbreak of the war. On his dis- charge from the hospital he went home to regain his strength. A few dayago, he took atrip to his regi- mental headquarters and applied for his back pay. His major, who knew him well, regretted' that he was unable to do anything, since it is no arm g .custem to pay dead men.. men. Bennett is now .obtaining affidav- its from his former employer, his pastor and •the police to convince the War Office that, he is still •alive and entitled to Day. Story of "Bobs." Many,stories of Lard Roberts are current to this day in the eanton- meats o IThdia. This is one: The captain of a regiment had outrun the constable, and his - debte, amounting to ehmesolls.8,000 were reported to the Comma,nder-in- Chtel. There was an interview and the young officer was told sternly enough that he had a month in which to square up. The days went on and ,he was hopelese. He decid- ed to send in hie repel% and had ac- tually enbered upon the formality of doing so when, lo I one fine morn- ing on his return from parade, he found a bulky parcel. ,awaiting him. Opened, it was found to contain discharged bills and promissory notd. tB,obs" knew his roa,n and decided to save him. And the man who was saved has since died glor- iously for England. Battles of the 1911i Century. During the nineteenth century 586 battles were fought. This is exclud- ing allethe smaller engagements, whith, if reckoned along with the rests bring the total up to 8,102 -r- -that is, 81 bakble,s per year, oe La fraction over one and a half every week during the full hundred years. British battle -grounds were .sprea.d,. over the following nineteen coun- tries :---France, India, Austriat' Rustle, Belgium, Egypt, America,. Ashanti, Soudan , Afgh4.nistan, Ohina, New Zealand, Zalulahd, Persia, Abyssinia, Burmah, Ma- sihtenalandr Corea, and the Trans - The Causb of Dyspepsia The Symptoms and The Cure. THE CAUSE. To rapid eating, eating too much, and too often, improperly chewing the food, eatitig too much stimulating food, and • indinging in improper diet generally. Tat SYMPToms. • Variable aptetite, rising and souring of food, heartburn, wind in the stomach, a feeling of weight in the stomach, in fact a feeling that your stomach has gone /ally that the edges will be perfect- all'wrong and that the food you eat does A t hot ,semn to agree with you, rendee pork eaustages TnoT e di gestible, thoroughly prick the eau - sages and plunge into boiling water for five minutes, after aihiali they may be fried in the usual way. years from dyspepsia, and could scareely Heho Isas ex.o°14.011t tvaY kooP eat anything. X tried Bardock Blood varnished peint sbeight anel clean - Bittere, and I am entirely cured. I have looking : Fill a cheesecloth bag with not been troabled since 1 took it, and that flaxseed and eoak it in water for a iS two years ago, 1 cati now eat any- few houre, Then wipe the paint thing X wish," . with it. n,n.n, is manufactured only by The svatheo (lathing '866°6"gs inn a T. Milburn CO.r 1Unit d Toronto, Oat, IlIntsr,t0t: Salad Suggestions, e ginning. and draw untAl the edges lie Ott. This makee the bole ap- pearmel smeller, end it will be much easier to mend, 'When washing f5 ru b b or hair brushee, if they .are put to dry with. he bristles downward they will last tsvice king.. If turned the other way, the water isoaks into the wood. and rote the bristles. The best way to warm uP rottst Rontain and A5naragus Soloik--1 of meat is to wrap it in thickly - Wash and Celli tender romaini leaves,piace three eanned aepeaegue in its hallow and pour .a• few tea- spoonfuls of chiffon*. or piquant dressing over, . Wax Beau Salad in 0111011 Rings; —Parboil the wax. beans orhuse eon- ned ones. Skip and ,sliee large Spa- nish onions,' then .stearn or boil care- fully in flat dish. When tender drain and remote half of the eentees of each elice. Place on plates or on salad plotter: Dre,st the beans with French dreesing or mayonateise and pile in centre of each ring. This is aiee with cold meats and French fried. or sleeted potatoes. Potato and Onion Salid.—Pare and -cut p4otaboes bite thin slices, parboil until done but not mashed. Drain and pour on shallow dish. Now 'take centres of the boiled on- ion rings from the wax bean salad, mash with a folk, add a eating- cif ealt and pe,pper, then mix with enough boiled dressing to make a smooth, rather thick emulation. Sift salt and pepper over the potatoes, then cover, with the dee.s.sing and let, it stand, for en hour to ripen. This is a nice hincheon dish and can be served with rings of hard boiled eggs, curled bacon' or boiled harne Flower Salad.—Separate, wash and drain a rime white cauliflower, drop into a kettle of rapidly -boiling water and 000k until tender. Take up carefully and 000l on a platter. For each helping have a blanchesi cup-eha,ped lettuce leaf. Place as 'many of the little seetions, flower I up, sae will form a pretty imitation of aoflower, sift lightly with a little ealt and pass a fancy dish of thick boiled eream dressing to pour over at the table. " Boiled Cretun Deessing,—Ingredi- Nets': Two tablespeonfuls of flour, two tablespoonfuls of yellow mus- tard, tIN10 ta.bleSp 0 011fIlh of .sugar, one teaspoonful of salt, yolks at three eggs, one cup of milk, six ta- blespoonfuls ef eider vinegar, Mix all dry ingredients, adding the well - beaten yolks, and when smooth addi mlk gradually. Cook in double boiler until smooth and thickened. Adel vinegar gradually and cook. only until at hulling point. Remove from stove and, beat with a revolv- ing beater until partly cooled. Red Wine Vinegar Daessiag.—In- , gradients : One teaspoonful of su- gar, one-hatf teaspoonful of salt, one, teaspoonful of onion juice, two tablespoonfuls of olive oil, four ta- blespoonfuls el red wine vinegar. Method: Ruh first four ingredients togethersm until. ooth, then stir in the vinegar slowly, -beating all bhe time. Useful Hints. Beans are the most nutribioue of all vegetables, Whiting and ammonia are best for cleaning nickel. 'Every cellar should be aired and SIM 'led often. As a rule, meats eontaining muck fat are.not wholesornei Dates can be stuffed with cream cheese filled with nuts. .Potato water is good to remove roud• stains from cloth. Good mutton should be bright red in color, with firm, white fat. Fine net of the sort used for cur- tains can be out up for boudoir caps. 0 If yen eprinkle alt on mushrooms before they are cooked it will bring out the juice. Nite little rounded aprons may be out from the good back of a man's worn out shirt Te keep white paint bright, rub it with a clean kerosene cloth a,fter the ordfetary eleaeing. Sprinkle the tot of the pie 'with cold water before baking e it will make the cruet more flaky. Water in which 'potatoes have been, bailed- is the best thing with which to sponge ad& revive a' silk dress. ' Remember apple jelly can he made at any time throngh the win- ter, and is particelatiy good in the ohildrents school sandwiches. Tongue for sandwich filling should be mixed fine and rubbad to a paste with mashed boiled eggs, seasoned with vipegar and butter. For milk that hae become scorched the taste may be restored, wain by standing it in Wpm of cold water to which a pinch of salt has been add- ed. The guiekeet way to atone raisinis is to place the retains on a tin in the oven until they are heated through, then split them open and the stones are easily removed. When ironing circular centre - Pieces. or tableeloths see that the iron moves with the straightai grn of, the oloth, for it is in this Way THE CURE. BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. • Mee. E. Williamson, Wheeler, Ont„ writes. "X have been. a sufferer for thread round efieli, hole .befere be greased paper, and keep it eove•reci 'while in the oven. By having it Cove. sired ' the Otani will prevent the meat from becoMing hard and dry, and it will become heated through to lees time, WAlt INVENTIVENES§'. „ A Feenehman Perfected a Pinecess foe IVInking Maegnrinea, While - war is undeniably the greatest curse to civilization, it, is not without sotne ecompensations. It ads as a decided stimulus to in- ventive effort, not necessarily in the interest of destruction, bup of eco- nomies. One of the greateet. boons of to -day, synthetic butter, or, as it is more commontY hailed, mar- garine—was directly attributable to war. Napoleon IIT., realizing the position of his numeroue pooree subjects, and the fact that they could not afford to -purchase but- ter, conoliided that it would be bet-' ter for them to consume a whole- some and nutritious substitute in preference to a dangerous and adulterated article., The ,outcome of this was the cpncentration of the efforts of Mega Mouries upon the solution ofethe problem, whichs chi - mulcted in the perfection of a pro- cess for the manufacture of mar- garine from animal fats. To -clay one is able to appreciate the signi- ficance and economic value of the illustrious Frenolimaa's disoovery. Margarine is in favtir throughout the world, and its production is one of the rnost, prosperous industries. The manufacture has undergone ex- traordinary development, and has led to still further remarkable con- quests of science, espeoially the su- perseding of ,animal fats by nut oils, which have been rendered tasteless and foclorless. At the pre- sent time there are possibilities quite as golden as those in 1870. The man who succeeds in reducing the cost of manufeeturing sugar, even by a cent per.pound, will be appreciated by humanity at largd. If he can evolve a. pra,ctiean and inexpensive means of manufactur- ing this, commodity from the oom- mon root vegetables he will ha,ve achieved a greater success; while the discovery of a synthetic sugar which can be sold at half the prioe of the natural ,articlesevill bring him a tremendous fortune and an im- perishable record on the rell of fame. The diecoveaw of a non-ine 'toxicatiug beaera,ge that may be sold profitably atone -half the pi..tce of f be ordinary beers, and 'yet have the characteristic flavor of the lat- ter, will also bring tanking fame. Mercerized cotton has wrought a wide -spread revolution in the tex- tile trade, and an equally striking effect will be produced by the man who perfects the means of produc- ing a, cheap artificial wool. The margarine of to -day is as dissimilar from that of 1870 as chalk is from cheese, a result due to the wonder- ful concentration' of energy for which the achievement of Mege Mourie-s wan directly responsible. , , CLASS DISTINCTION: What the Wat ,Has 'Wolin to iiIa,ke Britaite -*moor a t ic One certain' result of the war will be a, more dernocratioBritain. Con- stitutionally, we have been subject teethe Will elf the musses since.1882, but the class spirit ha,s survived to an amazing degree, and this war is 'going to endit, writes Ella, Hep- worth Dixon. . .An army in which everyone has volunteered, fro-ai colliers and shopmen, to aembers of the Bache- lors' and -the Wellington, in which all these heterogeneous- elements are fighting side by side in& shar- ing good and evil alike—this anit is not coming home again with quite Mae same ideas as when it started: The poor- will assuredly lose some of their absurd preju- diees ,about the rich; the rich etAl be more understanding about the difficulties and temptations of' the popula.ce. You cann•ot lie shan't - der to shoulder -with another man in a wet trench fordays arnsPnights on end, facing hourly dentth.Ovithe out finding out his.gpods"petants.'' The classes and, Mama,' Britain - and India, the, home country and the Dominiome, are being brought together in the hour. 9f trial as they, have never been helve., .There is now but one Ehepitegani.i.iv,e should be able tit forgeV'eut eras& Aistinc- tions as Welleas thadivitienatV eolt or and ra4et:Nht It is the sholtes ,with the women at home, They "'Wye gives of theft best, and haveshown a eare ' and sympathy for the\;e0iseen of the lowL er classee which Wtheld not have beeri possible a few years agoetslien charity and district-vleithig were the only form of social eervice which we practiced. a It is not too mileino' say thsakein 1916 .sve shall find ourselves different world. A, Two heitds ase better than one— in a kissing xnateh. ' .5 THE SUNDAY SC11101 STUDY :r :rINIEENATIONAL LESSON. • ;IA NE API at. • Leseeis V. The irbit of Samson, Jild.g, 1.3. 846; 24. 25. Golden Text, Judg. 18. 4. Verse a. Let 1J man of Clod whom thou didst send coma agaiii auto us, and teach us.—Manoeli is particularly concerned about the visit, whieh his wife ree„eived from the angel of the Lord, Be is a, de - vela man. Hie faith is stirred, He has a real desire to learn more about the wonderful thing that is to happen, He de's not doubt that a child will be bern hate him and his wife who will take a, prominent place in the history of his people, and he wants te know, long before the coming of the child, how he is to be taught and what particularlt is to be done that he may properly fulfill the functions that are to be his. This desire .ofsthe futere father to be thoroughly ireformed, so that when the them arrives he will be ready imraediately to begin the training of the schild, is a splendid instance of the importance which the Jewisth father plaoed' upon his duty to his ohildren, axed also ehowe the implicit faith- the ancient He- brews had in God,. who is the crea- tor of all human lite. 10. And the woman made. haste 'a,n,r1 ran and told her husband.—The wife of Ma,noa.b did not desire to be alone when the angel spoke. She knew the concern of her husband and also the importance of the duty that would be laid upon her; hence she wanted 1VIanoah to be present, so that he, too, could hear and would be able to help her in the days of preparation for the coming of the child and his proper nurture, 11. And he ead unto him, Art thou the man that spakest unto the woman 1---Manoah wanted to be sure that it was the sestne, visitor. He wanted to have the same message direct from him as his wife had re- ceived it. 12, Now let thy words eome to pass: what shall be the ordering of the child, and how than we do unto him7—Manoah insisted tha,b the whole story should be retold; the inetruction shouldagain be given with explicitness, so that he, too, would know what had been said in the first- instance to his wife. 13. And the angel of Jehovah said unto Manoah, Of all that 1 said unt to the woman let her beware.—The former Message is here assumed, and the warning given that all that the woman had heard in the first in- stance she should take heed to ob- serve. ' 14. She may notteeat of any thing that -esaineth of thine, neither let herdrink wine or strong drink, nor eat any unolean thing.—These are the outstia,nding things that the an- gel had eoromended and which he again emphasized particularly. These -were lute all -of the things, however, which he had said to the wife. lie add e again therefore,— all that I commanded her let her ob eery e Samson was to be a Nazirite, as Samuel later was (see Sam. 1. 11). Naziritism was the outcoase rte.: - tion against the disastrous influence which Canaanitish heathenism hied exercised against the • Hebrew ,reli- gion: It was particularly a reaction against the worship and customs of Canaan. (See Num. 6). In later times the prophets looked upon the Nazirites as a class of men whom Jehovah especially raised up to keep alive in Israel the true religion of Jehovah. (See Asmoz.2, 11). 15. And Manoith said . . . let us detain thee, that we nte,y make ready a kid for thee—The Hebrew instinct of hospitality shows itself strongly in this passage, as in so many other similar,passages in Old Testament history, - It. Though thou detain me.—It will be remembered how Jacob wrestled with the angel, trying to hold him, and suceeeded to the point of suffering physical injury, It would eeem as though here again the angel of the Lord indicated that he might be detained by Mane- * but even though Manotth clkl Peess the prerogatives of the host to their limit anddetain the guest, yet he would not eat of the bread which thould be prepared. If thou wilt make ready- a burnt - offering, thou mast offer it unto ivould seem that a cer- tain seal of authority was to be 'placed. Upon the words which the 'stranger had .spoken by the wards whieh he now spoke ooncernteg the burnt -offering; which would indi- cate to ,Mandah that hebad laeett entertaining a heavenly visitor. We teed in verse 22 that Maaoah heessine fearful when he diseovered that he had been in the presence of theUgel of the Lord, and he said, sti"great trepidatien to his wife, nfWe shall surely die- because we have seen God." But the intuition tiefshis wife led her tee oboe more ludgment, f,cr the said, "II Jeho- vah were pleased to kill us, he 'Would not have received a bunt offering and a meal offering at our hand, neither would he have show- ed us all these things, not would at this time have told midi thinge as these," 24. And the woman bare a son, and ealleth his name' Sartison.—The IfebreW of "Samna& is Shims.thein, ',Whieh tomes from the word "She- Fringe Albert. Anew photograph taken just before he rejoined ILM:S. C.ollingwood; mesh," and means "the sun," This name given to Samson would indicatethat he was of a, sunny and happy disposition, • All Hebrew names, as indicated in a former lesson; have appellative meanings. -Jacob means "supplanter"; Benja- min means "the son of the eight - hand"; Serubbaal (Gideon), "Baal contends." See also 1 Sam. 25. 25, where the foolish husband ce Abi- gail is named Nebel, whioh means 25. Ma.haneh - clan. — Mahaneli means ``caimp." Mahaney- den, therefore, means the camp of Dan_ This camp 'was between Zorah and Eshtaol. These twe places, Zorah and Eststeol, were two of the towns of the tribe of Dan, ahd they were far from the sea. THE CREUSOT WORKS. Guns Turned Out Are Most Deadly in the World. The -gems used by the French army are turned out by the hundred at the famous Creusot works. The his- tory of these warks, ELS well known as those of Krupp in Germany or Armstrong's in England, says Pear - son's Weekly, reads like a non:tepee. The first mention of Creuset, tin- der the name of "Villa de Crosot," occurs as early as 1253. It was then a simple farm,. It is now a, town of 30,000' inhabitants. In the sixteenth.century coal was discovered at Cxeusot, though it was Met until 200 years later that a. company was formed to mine it. Gradually iron works ev•ere erected there and the manufacture of guns started. In 1838 the works were bought by -the Brothers Schneider, and it is a sigeificant fact that the German name of Schneider was to become the great rival of Krupp, the great Gerama,n gun makers'. From that date down to the present time the Creusot guns began to become tarn- ous. The great superiority 'of the French gun lie' in its stability and in the fact that it will stand ex- treme hard wear. To allow its won- derful stability, it may be men- tic/led that a glass of water placed on the rim62 thee wheel of the gun remains unspilled 'after the shot has been fired. This extraordinary feat, impossi- ble in the ease of most guns, has been made possible by the clever application of a special -recoil brake which Krupp always, declared could not be fitted for field artillery. It was adapted at the, Creusot works, however, and that is one point where the .Vretich guns are superior to the German. Another feature of the Creusot guns is what is khown as the recu- perator, which causes the gun to return- !to its firing positions The force used is compressed air, pos- sessing the advantage over many of the Krupp guns, in which springs are used, that it never weirs- but or loses its "spring." Creusot guns were used in the Balkans, and .army officers declared afterward that the guns were a,s good ab the end of the eampaiga as before it. Only a, short time before the German experts had criticised the famous gun as being too oomplit teed and delicate for use in actual war. The accuracy of fire of these guns, is simply marvellous. Oncen„th ' angle is set the gun coatinues to belch forth death With unvarying aim, French officers, too, are so expert in their use that they can split a. trpe three nines away after a couple of shots to get the range. Taken aJi around, the Creusot guns not only fire more quickly than the Krupp weapons, but they are legietee and easier to move about. They are far more accurate and they last longer. There are four Creusot guns in a battery, each gun firing an average of twenty rounds a min- ute. Occasiorially we eimet a, man who looks as if he had tried to peeseeveso his dignity in alcohol. GERMAiiY'S GR'ATESI 1111.1) liras Troubled Wifh PLANS TO INVADE I.:NOLAND IN 'FILL' NEAR PUTUREn No Stieriliee Will Be Too Terrible by the Getman People to Attaia Their, Ends. Charles R. Wheeler, ,staff corres- pondent of the Chicago Tribune, has Written a review of the war eituation from. Aachen, Germany, in wbiole he says : Military experts, attaches, jour- naliste, authors, short story writers: sendtrenohee have diecuesed the futur f.atb6"war ,e As an Amerioan reporter, otie who has observed the change that has taken place in Geirnany in the last few weeks, permit me not only to disease the new objective of the German army but to indicate about where the first great battle may rtaetlt kseipslarnybe. place and What its immediate Thie•foreeast is based on things I•have seep, movements of troops, change of ',bases, preparations for the big battle, and the sieve domi- nating motive of all general plans of the German empire—the all com- prehending motive of terrible hate for England. Plans to Itivade England. Germany plans to invade Eng- land—a plan that wiui be supported by a public opinion in the father- land without, regard to the hazard, the ultimate result, or the slaugh- ter that must reaoh a bewildering total. The da,ta,, based ore personal ob- servations and interviews through- out Belgium and iu th,e frontier towns of Germany, and a, certain alleged intuitive sense suggest that the supreme battle of the c,onfilet, beside which t•he clashes already occurring will be secondary, both with respect to the number of men engaged and the easmalties, may be fought exenaewbere within the tri- angle -described by Ostend on the Flemish coast, Calais on the French front, and Lille as the apex. Plans No Longer Hidden. To the so-called military experts 'this foreea,st may appear -presump- tuous. Yet it may be here set down with perfect propriety that the aver- age reporter's prediction of events not far off in this Armageddon is about as good a guess as any. Mili- tary ecienee, as the experts would understand it, in a measure has been thrown to the four winds by the German war leaders in the last three weeks. That is, the general plan is' n 0 longer hidden. To understand this one has to know by personal experience the awful hatted that has turned all public.opinton in Germany into one channel and with but one objective —England. After New Submarine Base. Germany has announced boldly that it will stake everythirg on a dash to Calais and Dunkirk from the east a,nd south and to Nieuport from the north with the avowed in- tention of establishing a new sub- marine lease at the narrowest point of the channel with which -to attack the English fleet to whittle it down. Germany will not fight the Eng - ?sigh 41, eet with German battleships under tline.pressent iieistive arma- ment. Germany definitely fate -ad.. to pit its underseas craft against English dreadnoughts hoping for such successful raids in, tirhe as will seriously cripple the naval power of the hated antagonist and bring a,bout a more nearly equal strength. \ To croes.the English ehannel, de- stroy English shipping, invade the istand, raze the coast towns, reduce London—to do this the German na- tion to -day -would make any sacrifice humanly possible. 'Stich a program may be untenable, but it will ex- plain the movements of the last three weeeks and movements that will be made in the next three or four weeks. However, a recurrenee of the daring raid successfully made on the east coast at Searboroug,h and Whitby may be expected or at least attenapted. ' Hatred iEx'eraordinary. „, The' hatred felt toward England by 'the Geranan people pa,sees be- y:wad the mere en,eaning ofathe word ato used in the ordinary conversa- 'Jaen. This feeling • toward Great Britain pervades the fatherland and finds lodgment in the breast of all the people in the great family'of 70.- 000,000 souls. You ean't ,always ,tell, Occasion'. anY the toughest boy in the neigh- borhood grows lip and tbecornes minister. Aboat three weeks after marriage a. Woman discovers that the eapital priee in the oiatrirtordal lottety is still itneleaevn. POINTED PARAGRAPHS.. Optimism is a good thing when Cot overworked. But a note never falls due at the proper time. A cynic is a person who laughs while pretending to shed tears. The more relatives a man has thti more he appreciates hit -friends. A man isn't \necessarily even a heartgenius because he wears his hair kng. The ideal husband exiSto chiefly in the ininds of women who never married. Rich eelatives are used iley poor men as objeets at which they can point with pride and expectaoey. Before a wise girl attempts to manage a husband she first aequiree the at of managing a kitchen. Nervouctros Many people although they sfasew et nervous prostration do not knoetaweat the WrOPtollis are. The principal. one* are, a feeling of fright when in crowdedi places, 4 (treed of being alene, fear Of being in a confined place, a horror of society, a dread of things falling from above, fright at travelling an railroad 'trains, and disturbed and restless, un-, refreshing eleep, often troubled with dreams, Mrs. George I,ee, Victoria Harbor, Out., writes: "X am writing to tell you of the easperience I have had with Mil - bum's Heart and Nerve Pills. I was so nervous 1 could not do my ovvu work, I did not want to see any one, or would I go any place. My heaves were bad for three years, .and nay heart was so, bad it made me tremble all over. I took three boxes of yotir pills; a.rid1 never was better than am now, 1 weigh 20 ponrals more than I ever Milbernte 'kali and Nerye Pills are 50e per box, 3 boxes for 81.25, at ail dealers, or mailed direct on receipt a price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. FROM ERIN'S GREEN NEWS 131: MAIL FROM IRE- LANO4S SHORES. Happenings in the Emerald Isle of Interest to Irish- men. The Earl of Courtown has just died at his residence, Courtowit House, of aorolyy, years. Wexford, at theg The Limerick Constabulary re- cently seized all copies of "Iriall Freedom" which they found at the various newedea,lers in the eity. The death is announced of the Earl of Erne. the well-known Irish peer. His successor, Viscount Crichton, is at present a prisoner of war in Germany. s Eggs have been sold by weight in Ireland for many years, ever since the Danish method was introdeeed. It is stated that there are now 140,000 Irishmen serving 'under the British flag. . Lord Kitchener has been appoint- ed colonel of the Irish. Guards, as successor te Field Marshal Lord Roberts. One Dubiiii papei has been taxied and another has eteepe.e.dsel, in view of threats to raid it made hi the authorities. The death has ()teemed, at his residence in Cork. of Sir Daniel Hogarty„ Deceased was 65 years of age and was the first Load Mayor oi Cork, being installed isa 190a. A shunter at Waterford West railway station eamed Jahn les-itve was killed instantly during sininting operations. Last week one of the lengest of the Olympic's life -boats was wath- ed ashore onLou Dunree Fort, and wgialSs iral'rnIlei3i:anteealyr taken in charge by the, naval au- thorities. The King has approved Dinblin. 'Castle being placed at the disposal of the city of Dublin branch of the 'British Red (rots ,Societty as an emergency Red Cross hospital. While a number of boys were en- g,ageel in a mimic war in s 4%14 ja,eent 41.4- • ti the "tend ;to thee one boy, Franne motaeset to . . • eenches -to Mr. Henry MeFadden, ese.,„, eillor, was a-ecidentally sba. ,-u....., severely injured The Norwegian steam trawler. te.. ., Neva was taken into Fleetsetted un- der an armed naval eseert, *dialled with having been e»gasted lay.t.ig mines to the north of Ireland. A very rare bird. a honey hes:hied. (Pernis apivorus) has been sleet at Knock, Belfast, by Mr. Herbert T. Maleomson, of Knock. It tots a young male bird and in excelleat ccrnetemditoitrn* Amongthemany lives lost :ei the disaster to H.M.S. Bulwark, vas that of Captain Herbert Claude Morton, R.M.L.L. only ten sef the late Mr. John Ellis Me ream tif County 'Cavan. Don't Allow Your Bowels To Become Constipated. ' If the truth was only known you would find that over one half of tile ills of life are caused by allowing the bowels to get into a constipated condition. Wh.en the bowelbecome coastipated the stomacb gets out of order, the liver does ',Lot work properly, and then follows the violent sick headaches, the sourness of the stomath, belching of wind, heart- burn, water brash, biliousness, end a genetat feelieg that you do not care to do afitthitig, • " Keep your bowels reettlar by using Milburn's Lara -Liver Pills, Thee, will dear away all the effete matter which eollects in the systern and make you think that "life is worth living." Mrs, tiara Maititrick, Walsefield. Otis., writes: "Pot several years I wee troubled with sour' stomach and bilious- ness and did not get relief until I used Milburn'e LatasLiver Pills. I had only taken them two weeks whet, tey trouble was quite one and I will recommend them to all stifle -rite as 1 Milbitra's tam -Liver Pills are 25e per vial, 5 viols Mr $1,00 at all drue stores or dealers, or will be mailed on reeeipt ot price by The t. A/Mum Cp., Limited, Terento, On 4 1 1 4 4 4 ' 4 4 4