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The Exeter Times, 1918-2-7, Page 7Us GLASS IN ! ATIS A MYSTERY OLDEN TIMES This `1Traghi is Rooted in the BIoo 4 and Can Only be Cured • ia= Enriching the Blood. EXQUISITE ARTICLES CANNOT REPRODUCE. • sed Two sap ars Ago. "It was a great speech, Mai An- 'rtainlY seirte orator. But orae diseases give immunity from rlother' aLtae? , but rirg1.1I • work ust the other way. F,lp attaci of uetunatisin invites another; -worse has t1a,at, it reduces the body's power R tat each attach: is worse than the i£ �refore. LZY disease aiee(ls curing early it reurnatism; but there is scarcely ' try° disease that phy=sicians nd ,mor;e. difficult to treat successfaliv. When uu medicine does cure rheumatism therefore ;t is Lverthy of special notice, atedical authoa•itiet agree drat the blood ',teem -ries thin with alarming rapidity as rheumatism debelops.,, s s2 inta,'ning the quality of the blood is therefore: a reasonable way of Prevent- ;mg and cunibatiug D;i t auratisiu. 'bat ' it a}orlts out in fact is sbown by the beneficial effect; .arch follow the • treatment of rheumatism, arnratism, aerate. Inas. a lar ar<I articular, -With that', great Pod tome, i?c.; Witipams' Pink Fills, That thousands of people who have and I want a drink. Slave, -.bring, me a small bottle of the old Falerniars-the stuff with cobwebs on etdistinga amen Senator eat demise of, J. ' CaeSar. He was Bat how about that "crystal cup' It was a Very beautiful goblet — exquisitely fashioned, thougl iflo Sem 00:04 pal. touch mo a table nearhyt was service of glassware, vie vhieb---though this was 0 o—wetild be regarded o -day is to be,conirtered surpris, pig. in .s as there was no norce- 0 e table in these days and • ft was taken by glass- - a- drinking initsin, have been cured et beyond -dispute. ' That rife -it- 'll/ doe- net retura as long as the 4 '-eful red is el • the walls we used 11 was than 'ed for X. stet \vire liad suffered for years from rheumatism !she suffered greatly, eare of sea - day talking o tier sister ha e trouble by "Pita Although net say wt o Ss she said ,11 The Weekly Fashion ilea . etr4e:.1dise'Ni;erlsOl:leilded ;111,TiPssres' Set's' ired of this 20 years, Ptak Bills- : i hopeful lei pia ifs Call f Price, 2 qu ern No, 4 sizes Van MODELS OF RUM Exultation over the ravages of the Teuton arinies in France and Belgium entered largely into the German chil- dren's l'iristmas this year, as shown by numerous toys from Germany which have fallen into the bands of the French. Samples of leaden models of cities destroyed by German troops ere recently seen in rat a cor- respondent of the Assoeta d Press in the library and musettra 61 war, founded by the French Ministry of Public Instruction and the Fine Arts. The models showed m oetall the heaps of brick and mortar and stones whicla were all that iemained in hundreds of towoa of northern Praloce and Bel- gium, faithfully reproduced for the delight of German's rising generation In addition to these objects, there ave been gathered picture books fill- ed with illustrations 9f military oper- ations in which the German em.perox's troops have always had the upper hand, their enemies invariably being annihilated, The Library aud Museum of War in Paris is assuming such. Pro- portions that a large institution will be necessary to house it, The betdo- nirig of the collectien was furnished by lienri and :Madame Leblanc, 0 Paris, who had brought together re from the hattlefields The altiSeltra bas been phi un spector of the Prerieh National 'aides and Archives, and he bus an nouneed his intention to make it biter- ational by appealing to all -the - to furnish him with dacilinents 1 exhibits. The collection to eon ournals, works of n• gl le .13. ,ens of paper wa on medals, , gnia, ration cards, war s a, and,1 fact, everything that ha, ...hearing! The French overnmertt Chamber of Commerce appropriation, and vario d gifts for the 1 rfro ne eq 11 rk al her ex et as; ranSpnrent glass free ibbles, but they could fi blood -red, el 0 y day. I- 2000 years B.C. has trying tif a man blow- -absolutely A1111111stakable. r ilting seems to have originated _Egypt, and at the period when rrist lived it was utilized for Mere arposes than nowadays. 1 s of rich people in ancient , he ays or the Caesars, had windowpanes of glass set in frames et bronze. They were uneven and full of defects, so that the view of iings outside, from inside must have been rather unsatisfactory. But at that time they were doubtless regard- ed as the height of luxury. Such tes were not blown, but cast on stone. When used for public build- ings they were set in pi reed slabs of COAL cap .1, those x in medicine, n a box six boxes Dr. -tnis" eine FO et! a t‘44 n or Will letiu the expectation of pickin p food waste that is thrown overlmat They will even hover about the wake of a submarine that is travelling submerg- ed. From aloft in the air they can see the underwater craft at.„a considerable This circumstance is said to have cost the Germans a number of sub- .ina-rines, the presence of which was betrayed to patrolboats and destroyers by flocks of circling- gulls, An American inventor Er D Pentz, has hit upon the idea of train- ing gulls to follow enemy U-boats, us- ing for the purpose a friendly sub- marine provided with apparatus for distributing minced fish or scraps of food waste of any kind. The stuff floats to the surface of the water and THE FUTURE, the birds pick it up. 13y this means the gulls are to be Available imited Supply Must Be I are well-informed persons io confidently assert that fifty years from now the utilization of "raw" coal for burning furnaces, kitchen ranges and other purposes will be con- sidered almost a crime. There is just so math coal in the crust of the earth economically ac- cessible. Every ton taken out dimin- ishes the coal capital by one ton, and nature does not replace„dt. Manifestly the av3Trabfetstock underground must be conserved to the utmost. ,-When coal is burned for fuel in our ‘.41„i'resent wasteful way, great values in possible by-products ate lost. The time will arrive before long, it is believed, when no householder or man- ufactin•er will. be permi te to bran "raw" coal. They -will burn coke—represeraing the residue after all possible by- products have/ Veen extracted _from the coal. COnSPiellOUS among ,tliese by-products are illuminating gas and coal tar. From the latter are ob- ,t tabled an enormous number of useful 1 things, including all the colors of the rainbow (in the shape of dyes), and no end of drugs valuable foe medicinal purposes. From coal tar is obtained carbolic cid, which is the basis of all the is toluol, -which, by treatment with nitric. acid, is made tO yield the fam- ous. T N . fora filling shells and other purposes of military destrnction. lave a breadboard and breadknife on the table; and cut 'a slice of bread n demand tor it'. YY portant war explosives. A by -pro - (met of gas manufacture Loin coal enlisted as our allies. We shall edu- the Hun U-boats are. Then we can drop a few depth bombs where 'they are most needed. 8. PORTABLE DARK BOOM Photographers Will Find This Inven tion a Convenience. Weighing but seven and one-half pounds when completely collapsed and ready to be carried about with the con- venience of a small suitcase, the port- able dark chamber recently perfected by A. Benito of New York City should prove of interest to photographers having need for such equipment. The portable dark roan, says the Scientific American, can be used equal- ly well in daylight or artificial light, indoors or outdoors. It obviates the i darkening of a room Or the fitting up of a special room for photographic s work, hence does away with objection- a 11 1) 1,7 little dres, pe ff very lit. .ss III .510t4ezes 6. Pl°"11.51 .TNI‘lielie°iPica button 11 pliinin f the sin e tD ON LITTLE ONE But the ancient Peravian Columbus landed, ry conimonly. Of 1,00 skulls, recently obtained by the ,7) States Bureau of Ethnology from historic eaves and eemeteries, net two per cent. bad been trephined, c' The early Peruvians used clubs' and war -hatchets in battle; also slings for throwing stones. Skull -fractures must often have resulted. Bur apparently they trephined also for brain troubles. anti possibly for other diseases. The ',ccorgeon of ancient Peru held the head of his patient between his knees, and with a sharp flint :sawed out the button of bone—zin agonizing ' proeess, surely. Sometimes he filled the hole with a button of silver, cot of hut mere often he was content to cover it -simply with the flap of scalp. hard on the health of Utile ()ilea, ph weather is mten so severe that the mother cannot take tho oue out for an airing, The eonsequence is that NOY is confined to overheated, badly ventilated rooms; takes colds and be- comes cross and peevish, Baby's Own Tablets should be g,iven to keep the little one healthy, They regulate the stomach and bowels and prevent or cure colds. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 125 cents a box from- The Dr.'w, Williams' Med [dine Co., Brockville, ()et. SUBS AS "FAKE" STEAMETIS. Believed fiat Germany is Using Sub- mersible Cruisers. It Is believed in England that Ger- its attacks upon allied shipping, and that these, plying as "fake" tramp steamers arethe boats which Admira William S' Bensma chief of operations in the American naval board, describ- ed last autumn when he said ai Ger- man engineer and inventor, Dr. Groe- ben, some time ago perfected a diving cruiser of ta000 tons displacement, and capable of bearing heavy cannon and between twenty and thirty torpedo tubes for the laying of mines and the discharge of torpedoes at enemy craft. Its engines were enormous, driving the, boat at twenty-six knots 'on the sar- face and sixteen knois under water. It cduld cruise 25000 miles. England joins Benson's statement with Goeben's invention and with re- ports of attacks made by German cruisers on the,seas and believes' that the diving cruiser is now an tictual- If; carries a thin wooden shell out- ide its iron sides and to all appear - able gases and vapors arising from c kerosene lamps' and other illuminants s apt to prove injurious to sensitized s para los is the fact -that' tine operator 3 need not put his head inside the dark chamber, hut can work freely outside S of it, performing the necessary mani- 4 pulations with his hands simply in- h seri ed through` the light -tight cuffs ,t that afford ample elbow freedom--; g ountry's name painted large on, its ide aiding, this impression. Its peri - cope is hidden in a fraudulent sinolte tack old its every, line 'indicates -its ommercial purpose. When seen ap- rroaching a merchant shin it is cm: uspected anc-i allowed to approach. uddenly -the wooden hull colla.pses nto the water, the smoke staek is allied down by the sailors and heavy arras bristling with flaming 6-lneh uns appear. Caught unawares, the If tirsited. by allied cruisers faster tit, inten ed o operate un er water, 1 this type posseases IS' -ohvionS, and ,Now Is a good time to, get rid, of all unproductive farm ,stock. t kept at a loss had better not, he kept at all, but -turned into 'roman ood. aa -only 'been 'hy*tiftaoaclinary Ira-, ti tiiItittY that Entgland,j a kept -theft Are Very Popular in Mr, M.. Arseneault Tells What Dodd's Kidney Pills Did For Hint They Gave Him Quick Relief Front dache and 8ackache—He Re, commends them to All Sufferers. -. (Speelal.)--Dodd's Kidney Pills have ainnerous friends in this tight little isinod. and Among the most enthual-. aatic of them is Mr, Mathurin Arsea- eault of this plaee. "I recommend Dodd's Kidney Pills to all who suffer," Mr. Arseneault ' says. "I had been. troubled with bead; ach..9- and backache about two years till I read in Dotid's Almanac how raany sufferers bad benefited using Dodd's Kidney Pills. but he suttinly would make a majab, a, ainecure, and a humorous ex, change hits off the idea by this story of an ambitimis colored troopex in the United States: "1 tiggahttreee via' to get a bataiele0,4,P9,Y41400 soon," Wm' to de adjut.ank#bout somebedY tenant, 'cause a lieutenant dean, knew do felt a captain, 'cause a captain Probably nes, fore was tl e seed corn situation worse; never a greater scarcity of seed corn with satisfactory germinating powe.r available for plant - mg. Coen grown in the year jus closed cannot be depended upon e. cept by ear test. Iclot "I decided to send f boxeta ' Fly , was feeling as well es ev "IL gives me :ft -few Words fOr. over ell Of- Kida fze of li Th 1 Bear its buffet If the drop a'erflows your Quaff yoar portion grave beY eep good Else itt, • ect peopl te A Ole a tonic vont niedielite lItte Leen d Ito f do mpetito, and 'a In ear. Dummy Plane targets. France has adopted, a novel met! ot training. Its gunners to shoot et ',- Lively at Boche airplanes. It suspe 1,on wires a dummy plane, quite small, hung twenty or thirty feet from the gunners. machine is wobbled about, elevated, lowered, thrown into ti sumulattoo of tne nose spin the t'failing leaf" and other e , Heart Troiib i , Faulty digestion CAUSe5 th* generation of gases in the stomach which inflate and r s down on the heart and interfere faintness and pain. 11 to 30 drops of Illother Seigel's, Curative Syrup after meals bets digestion beat full ana regular. 9 MONEY 0 ERS ' Put of Pe supplies With EXP,reS.§ Orders„ .osts three cents'. 11 Bean Loof,—Tla cold baked beans, °tie egg, beat cup bread erumos, salt and pepper; one thble- spoon finely minced Orden and two tablesPoens tomato pnip or catsup. I CoMbine the ingzedients and Shape the 5 ds made from Several, d,f far gramei eoble rahase Ore ANY QRN LIFT UT, your NS Totritifo a). ourett ,atment, write oilman edieat h. e Soul Plano 19 Action. nsist on the PIANO AOTION The Cause aviation tricks. Considering the size of the machine and ,the. rapidii,y with as difficult to hit as a real machine up which it is moved about it is exactly It is usually possible. by- eaantana- in the heavens. The officers operating tion one of the trephined skulle, to the wires call Out the range to the find out whether or not the victim gunners exactlY as they do when 01, - survived the operation, because, if he serving:Fenton Plort'esi did so, a new growth of bone shows it. From evidence thus obtained R. 17-hlarirs Liniment enree Celan 'lc' appears that tile operative mortalitV sew Atha Reguiatioue. exceeded 50 per cent. ingTittibsewl-aasckraotpcssl-lielitrbliotabilnes,tcroutmlsciductis--, ' Food Controller has limited th amount winen distributors of 1 II aMisepties, etc. But, on the whole: mav add to the actual cost of the pro - an ancient Peruvian who got through duct delivered at their Premises. Inc without, baying a hole bored in his Since Januar - 1st f -tb ant un tu mind -box was rather fortunate, notice the amount thus added MaSt Dot _ exceed such cost by more than 514. 2 Saskatchewan, Albert and British z„,...16 re tAee,, Inflamod bv pbe.r quart; anywdiere n Atti5iiitoba, %AUK CA IL NoSinarting,ind EYe Comfort bee' Neya Scotia' New Brunswick ur ;Ills marine El.; Remedy Co., Chicago d Vegetable chowder makes an el- •---- lent meal in itself if served with some The Gray Loaf. - bread and butter. A contributor to an English weekly says that persons who look with a -k- LEMONS MAKE SKIN favor upon the, gray loaf that ha's dis- WHITE, SOFT, CLEAR placed white bread, and think of the dingY edible as something new—Owing see for yourself. nee this eauty lotion for te the war—should remember that fifty years ago the white loaf was a rarity. English millers had t , tbeir.lives when they discovered _the whiteness of foreign floun fbe Brit- ish mills could produce nothing to sat- isfy the baker, who in turn had ' to please his customers with white heead. Imports of, flour increased alatmingly, and air because the British public de- manded white bread. Rumors of wonderfut machinet•y producing white flour in Budapest caused English millers to visit Aus- tria-litinftarV, The result of this de- putation was thaa in 1-878 Gbe fir81; complete plant to reduce Nv. ikt.„Nite stalled. i/V white b) -en The neop e,k alien Inyade:h TI or 4 relOtrb Ginau hasn't heart: a juice t remove emplexion aleinishesni to whiten the skin and to bri-ng out the rosee the freshness and the hidden beauty? 13ut lemon, ,toiee alone is acid, t.herefore irritating,. and should be mixed orchard white flits way. Strain ,thirough fine cloth. the juice.,, tW.ct fresh lemons bit° a bottle comtaining about three ounces ot orchard white, then .slialte well and ybh. have a quarter pint of sltitt., and c,canplexion fettero al, about the'; af. ordinary oold crenin. Be sure to s,train, the lenion juice 50 no pulp gets inito the bottle, then this lotion will re= main pure aad fresh for months. :When- applied daily. to the face, n k, arms and hands It should help to sy druggist supply three des of orchard wiate at very little pet and thegrocer bas the lemons. its regular action causing right,whicla allows the heart to lik g, uningS ee hot bath with 'Soap lowed by a gentle application of ieura. Ointment. Peace falls on, cum rs. Trial free. T sE ,.AWFuL 1 . , Su stions that may save Much Suffering Marysville, Pa.—"For twelve Team suffered with tweiocruibicliehacjeantlops.st6iy.r. in bed -several days every month. I, tried all kinds of remedies and was tinued until one day I read about Lydia E. Pinkbam's Vege- table Compound and -bat it bad done for others. I tried it and now am never troubled with cramps and feel like a clifferant woman. I cannot praise Lydia E. Pinitham's Vegetable Com- pound too highly and I am recommend- ing it to iny' friends who suffer as'? did.'" :Marysville, Pa. Young women -who are troubled with nainful or irregular periods, backache, headache, dragging -down sensations, fainting spells or indigestion should take Lydia E. Pinkham's Ve,geta.ble Compound. Thousands have been re- stored to health by this root and herb remedy. 'Write for free and helpful advice tO Lydia E. Pinklant. Medicine Co. (con- ] ficiential), Lynn, Mass. Only women ' open and read such letters. Rheumatia Aches Drive them aut with Sloan 8 Liniment, the quick -acting, soothing liniment that penetraten without rubbing and relieves the pain. So much cleaner than mussy plasters or air:tr.-writs; it does not stain the skin or clog the pores. Always have a bottle in the house for the aches and pains of rheumatism, gout, lum- bago, strains, sprains, stiff ioints and all muscle soreness. Genet our; size bottles at all th uggis ts. ,,1 c n e ry New Atriomatio V41ve 'Typo, Complete -..Arlth supply end h s pip! , 14 Inc