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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1900-7-26, Page 3V.44„1, MISSIONS OF •The Divine PowerMakes Illnesses of the World Fall Back. CHRIST THE GREAT SURGEON, I°Ye 4.0)(1, wo,rshiP And hosanna of all the earth and halleluiahs of all he,q- NPAL• "ThQ biled receive 'their sight' and the lame 'walk; the lepers. are cleansed, and •the.deaf hear,,'' I notice this surgeon had a fond- ness for chronic cases. Many a SOX - friend Peter, naturally high temper, ed, sa-w OPriSt insulted .1),),a iiaa by the nartie of MatIchus, ,a,nd „Peter let, his sword fly, aiming at the manit,i bend, but the sword slipped and hewed on: theOutside ear, and ,our surgeon. .touched the laceration and A CHAT ABOUT CHER 1 • .LiI 4J 001v 4e Canp Preserve aSP nd ICe Theot-Cherry Pie, Ete. GREAT MORTALITY EXPECTED IN When the riCh crimson globes hang THE WET SEASON• in Clu$ters and visions of the good ' ungs et our ehildilOod riSe before us, goyim nore LoAfirr0 S6110100 Must be renod goon,when he has had a patient anotlict cat bloomed ia the plec(, of WO turn to cookbooks to help us serve Than Tint*. Offered by it opegted brouedit to him has said: ''Why WkIS lhe 0110 that had been slashed away, not this attended to five years ago'? But it is not the ou 5 of recuperation is gone. A'eti have gathering s',0atalci and pouring it 111to •writtar in '1The Ladles' World offers 4 comes that the famine in India. is all t id° ear that them. But we do not alWayS Ift,enadsolnuSat repot You bring him to, me after all power hears. Tha..-4' is only a funeel for what we Want: and for- this The sEtticaOY of Cho Divino Power, „in Wait(q1 until there is a complete con- the hidden and ni()re elaborate cox, 'Variety of tried recipes, anion,r which but over; that froM Aow the mending traction of the nruscles, ond false. ()Fee the beachof ;Lake Galilee our neenr the .tantio.„1„.,,,. process begins:, so that we shall soon th° wthi'b Wunndl and "e" ,ligatures CLVO fOrtiled, and ossification Surgeon' fount' a inan deaf and (1111111), sur;rorl, and TheoluF:y. been attended. to long ago.' But deaf CCU'S agitated thorn and R.ept tWo ellPftlis Of Sugar to one quart of nc. LouiS KlePseh,' proprietor of the Term ties -Tile lotOatt$o Relationo of has taken p'ace. It ought, to have The surgeon put his linger§ the To ()nn CherrleS.---Mgke a sirup Of find the natives in prosperity again. Christ the Surgeon seemed te Pre[er on agitating' them until the -vibration belling -,-elin kettleadd ChKistian Herald of New York, 1)rj,ng5 • , , "Washlniton, jnlY 29.—In this dis- inveterate cases. One was a hemorr- gave vital energy to all the d eaa two quarts of pitted clres ----------------------------- 1 ! k course j Dr. 9.'itlmage, (who is nciw lige of. 2 -ears t I i t. K Coo back • ,from India' a different story , ,, - 1 ' S 01)Pe( l'partS, and .they reSpOrLded, and when together ten mint -des. Seal up hot. According traveling in Europe) puts in an un- to him the raortality of the shows how divine power will Yet a cripple of 38 years, and he walked' sound were clear for ail sweet vole, s-1,13,alir. ° I ' , ' and mast "assume tremendous ProPer- q'Calletillyes It)irb)Istestle'\dec'sli-eri'N'iSeTesirilltild.berciolani- wet seals{3n in India s just "nunencing Ah°ther was a'cur \:ature- of 1 8 years, our surgeon withdrew Pis fingers usual light the mission of Christ and and he straightened it. 'Another -Was from the ears the two tunnels of make the illnesses of the world flail out wen; .13 rijuo. 11 81 -3:leall-_ pbctitelentif '\;,:oriisi,',, es of 1yllisic. and: frin.rids, hip,. For ,ti,ie 01.(701c. untOileodotiiev,er3'slowly In a ston.e . tions: Twe,-rity mi 100 0 blankets in...us,t back; ,text, Matthew xi, 5' '"The a woman en a, 0 os , (,otL • ill'St tlitu., 10 hi S WO Ile nearo the „ spic.ed oborries.7,r0 any quantity of at once be orovided, or else India s a'nd the deaf hear." a • • . r - . " ' f combined skill . could not ell e that, cherries picked with the stems on add greatest bles'sing, the ,monsoon, will hal as muCh sugar, one-fourth aS Prove an appalling disaster. The blind receive 'their sight+ and ...."Ile could call a convention of all the ' dash Of the waves of 0 athee. lame walk, the lepers are cleansed surgeons of all the centuries their , 1 [ 1 1„ t 1 : . ' . a . i 1 irotn,i t ie ( eser • 0 'painful silence "Doctor," I said to a distinguished body.. s6 :dvawn ,nut . of snepe, rei._I had bean built a king's, highway °I , ' , , resonance and acclamation. Brit Yet Much "Vinegar and spice S of all kinds. deaths will probably number more 1 as dumb, No word had ever any worse, perhaps flee' might con- 1 e surgeon, .you. not 'get worn out /with constantly seeing so many wounds and broken bones and (Us- . tortions of the human body?" "Oh, no" he answered; "all that is over- come by my joy in curhig them." ,A sublimer and more merciful ;art never haps th,ey.r.might stop 31 dram getting - tri ve "braces' by 'which she relight be icaPecl Speech was made mare comfortalh!,.. liot it is, I chained under his tongue. Vomit - humbly speaking, incurable. 'Yet this '..ati°1) and accentuation were to him divine surgeon put' both his hands 00 an' iraPossibtlitY. Ile c.ould . express her, and from that doubled op pose.' neither love nor indignation nor -wor- 'Came down from Reaven than that of titre she began to rise, and the ent- -b.) Surgery. Catastrophe and disease Purpled ' face began . to take on a ' Our ' surgeon, 'hating 'unbarred his„ „enteredthe earth.; So eurly-tbat one healthier, hue, 'and .the muscles,' began ear', Will now unloose" the shackle :Of of the firet „'wants of the- world Wp,S to relax from then' rigidity, and the his tOngue. , The surgeon Will Use a doctorOur crippled and agonized spinal column began to adjust. nadir, the same liniment or salYe that he ' .. human race called for- surgeon and and the cords of the Leek began to use.ch on two occasion's for . the , Ore familyphysitian for many, yearS. lie- ,.. oe. more supple, and the eyes, that Of blind . peopleL-nainely, the moist - ;tore' they came,. -. The first .sui'ge°ns could see Only the ground before, now tire of,' his. own mouth'. The apeill- whp answered, this .call Were minis- looked into"the face of Christ' with cation ismade; and 10.,,.the rigidity ; ters, of religiouH.-tainely,' the Egyp- gratitude and •up toward heaven in of the clurnbtongue is ,relaxed', , and a tiair priests. And what a grand transport.. ' Straight!' After 38 weary between the.tongue' and teeth .:yoas ' thing if all clergymen were also doe,. and *exhausting years, Straight! The .born a -vliolo vocabulary and words tors, , all P.D.'s Were MI. s1 feir poise, the gracefulness, the beauty of fleW into expro5sion. , He had ,2101:, there' are so many cases where body healthy • Wornanlioed reinstated':1 .onl , heard but he talked. One gate ! ,, , and soul need 111 L'' at the same the' 04111 541441 gatt; s'cung out.; .olon'y qnd therapeutics. AS the ErSt /. Ianst c60icler .hini -0 '''''n 6culist cir eater' aild ol ng of Christ as a surgeon of, his body ..sivang in to let sound , time, ConsOlation and medicine; tho In sPe surgeons of the world wore also min_ eye doctor, and an aurist or ear dm:- to let sotuul depart. Why is it ieters ot religion, "may these two pro- .tore' . Was 'there. , eyer such another that, While • Other surgeons Used octilist?' „That ' he eves particularlYpoiives and foreeps and prohes 'and' • fessions always he ia lull SymPathyi. But under what disadvantages the sorry for the blind folks 1 •take froin stethoscopeS,- this. surgeon used Only -' early surgeons worked, 'froth the fact the fa6t, that the most of his works the ointment 'of his own liPsT To. ' , -.that the dissection of' laie Itinnan were with 'the diseased optic nerves'. showthat all the Curative power we '- a,,, body was forbidden, first . by the . pa, 1 lanve, not titrIO.to count ttl) the ntlil'" her of blind people mentioned who!' ever feel cOineS straight from Christ. galls and then by the early Christ- And if he touches us not we shall be ;Mils! Apes, being the brutes most got his cure. Two blind men i.11 0110 deaf as a reek' and dumb' as a tomb. like the human race, were dissected, - house; also one who was born blind; Oli, thou ' greatest' of all artists, but no human body might be unfold- .so that it was not removal of a vis- compel rte to hear and 1101p . ns -to • ual obste acti on, but the m eati on of speak! , the Cornea..and,' ciliary Muscle , and But what were 'the surgeons fees crystalline lens and retina. and op- for all these eures 'Of eyes and earS. tic nerve amid -tear gland' • alsio' the 1 t d ''. 1 ' ' * , ..! and tongues an -witherec hands and. failed in any surgical operation, they ,blind man of Bethsaida, cured oy the crooked backs? . The skill And , the were persecuted and driven out of „ Saliva which • the Surgeon took; from painlessnesS of the 'oPerations ', werti the • ,city, ,as., was 'Archagathus 136- the tip .of his own, tongue and put , , :Worth hundreds and 'thousands of cause of his bold but tinsuccessful at- also two :b1;111' dollars. DO !not think 'hat the upon the eyelids; cases . he tool: were all trioneyleSs., men who sat by the wayside. ; ., . Dict he not treat the no-bleniaWs- eon?. Did he not doctor. the ruler's 'clan,gli-e ter? . Did he not effect a cure in the house of a centurion of great wealth who had out of Tits owri. pocket , built a synagogue? , They. would have paid,. him large fees, arid there were liandreds of wealthy people. in jer- arch, stepped on some crackec a - business. But in the lands where this tisaleni, and among the merchant cas, ticework in the palace, and it broke, divine surgeon operkited the cases Of ties along Lake Tiberias. who would and he fell from the upper to the blindness were Multiplied beyond eve have given, this surgeon houses and lower floor, and he wag so hurt that ervthing by the 'particles of sand ' , . lands and all they had .for such .Cures cis he. could effect, T,h'is greatest surgeon of all the denturies gave all his services then -and offers ,all his 'With - his Worship- at Pergamos; and Epid- , services now free. of charge. putAnoney, , arid without price" , you aurus and TOdelieius intrOduced for .totallY' blind. Amid all that Crowd ankle 'of.,King ,Darius and, the cancer that -More than One 'out ' of a buti. n--d- n yOur.dtinthtongues loosened, and ed for physiological and anatomica explOration,!'and the Surgeons' .bad to 'guess what, was inside the temple by 'looking at the outside of it. 11 they SialMer slowly together for 30 minutes than two million.' and seal up hot. A GREAT PROBLEM TO SOLVE. Cherry Pie. --Line a pie tin with rich Puff paste, 1111 With pitted cherries, Again there is an appeal to allay the sprinkle over a tablespoonful of flour, sufferings in India, and again there a few drops of vanilla and a etMful 01 comes up for solution the same pro - sugar. Cover with the paste and bake blem which has for many years defied . a moderate oven. Sift P°wdered Many of the enapire's ablest sta.tes- sugar over the top. ' men. Cherry Shortcake.. -Make a rich Ins- cuit dough, just stiff enough to mold APPeals say that in India it costs five cents to support a man for one ; with a spoon, and spread an inch thick in a long pan. Sprinkle with sugar and day; they further Say that 6,000,000 bake to a light brown. Split with a -fferers are receiving relief. The warm knife, butter and fill with a lay.- vast sum. of $300,000 then, is expended er of sweetened cherries. Sauce: One every day -and for -what? Not as an cupful of cherry juice, one of water, invesfment in seme great scheme of ono of sugar, one teaspoonful of vend- commercial enterprise; not as a • remedy for the causes which produce In and one large spoouful of cornstarch, added when the sirup is boiling. Pile • famine; but to preserve the lives of cherries on, top when serving. those who otherwise would , p erish, Cherry Puddiug.-A quart of flour,,a and wlao may yet again be endanger - pinch of salt, a tablespoonful of baking e,d by the advent of another drought, powder, a hall' cupful of lard or butter for these famines are constantly re - and the same of sugar. Mix all togeth- er. Stir up with milk or water so as to marring and with every fresh appear - handle well and roll out in a thin,,long ance seems to galn in virulence. And Sheet. Spread a thick layer of pitted when the afflicted districts havebeen cherries well sweetened over it amid, be restored to their normal condition by ginning at one end, roll tip into a long the fall of rain, the' results of the roll. Put a tablespoonful of butter into famine will still be very visible. The a pint 01. hot water in a deep bread tin. • • operations of trade suspended in Lay in the cherry roll and bake two ' troublous tim.es will not yet have re - hours Man even heated oven. ' covered; the domestic life of the peo- Cherry Tart -Line deep tart shells With puff paste thud bake brown in a Pie will be upset' Farm inaPlements quick oven. Just before serving half and the indispensable plough -drawing fill the shells with cheeries that have oxen were long ago bartered for rico, been well sweeteneil. Cover the top and the means at purchasing either with meringue and slightly brown the vanished in a like manner. Even the top in a quick oven. ' tempt ,to save a patient. But the world from the veryl)egin- fling kept calling for surgeons, and their first skill is spoken , of in Gene- sis, where they employed their' art for the incision's of a Sacred, rite, God making surgery the predecessor • of baptism, and we see it again in II Kings, where Ahaziah, the mon- In our* Civilized, .„ lands we have • blindness enough, the, ratio fearfully increasing, according- to the state- ment of European, 4na Anterican lists', because of the reading of Morn- , ing and evening newspapers on the jolting cars .by the enilltitudeS. who live !mit of the city and come to he sent. to 'the village of Ekron for and .A.eseulapiu,' who wrought: such wonders of surgery that he was deified and :temples • were bull ifOr' floating in the air, and the :night dews falling on the eyelids of ;those who slept on gie tflp of their hbeses, and in some of these lands it is esti- ted that 20 but 0L1.00 people are for, 'may spiritually have' Your blind eyes the relief of the world' phleboto,my,, of visionless people,' what work wounds 'healed; and your soul of his queen, and Hippocrates put •dred of .that stirgeon's, cures were re -1 and, Damocedes cured the ,dislogateclean! oeulisf.!' And Iedoi ijosee,'ei opened,, and, your deaf ears unbarred, successful biaad on fractures andin- rt,d • • 1-1e -went up and 7croWn saved. ChriStion people get. hurt troduced amputation, and Ira-xago- ras removed obstructions, and I-Iero- philus began dissections, and Erasis- teatus removed tumors, and CelSus, the Roman surgeon, removed ca.ta- ract from the eye and used the Span- - 1h fly; arid lieliodorus arrested dis- ease of the throat, and Alexander of Tralles treated the eye, and Rhazas cauterized' for the prevention of hydrophobia, and Percival Pott came to combat diseases of the spine, and , in our own century we have had, among others, a Roux and a Larray . in Fra-nce,' an Astley Cooper and an Abernethy in. Great Britain and a Valentine Mott and Willard 'Parker and Sainuel D. Gross in America and a galaxy of living surgeons as bril- liant as their predecessors. But notwithstanding all the surgi- cal and .medical skill of .the world, -with what tenacity the old diseases I hang on to the human rate, and most of them are thousands of years ; old, .and in our Bibles We read of among those people wbo were„ feeling of body, mind or soul, let them re- s;lowlY their wfLY by staff; oreled by Member that 'surgel'-.Y is apt to hurt, the land of Man or roPe Of deg, and, but it cures, and you ,tan 'afford pre - introducing! theMe to the- faceS 01 tbeir sent pain for firture glory. Besides own household, to'the sunrise- and that, -there are Powerful 'anoesthe- the 'sunset' and the evening star. I -1,e tiCs "in the tlivinti promises that just ran his hand ov,er• the expression- soothe and, alleviate. ' No ether ,or less.face, and the Shutters of beth chloroform or cocaine ever made cine windows were- swung' open, and, the so superior 'tea distress as a few. restored went home. crying, "I see.1.`I 'drops of that MognifiCent' anodyne: see! Thank God. I see!" ' "All things evoiek together for good That is!the oculist, We all need. Till to those who, love God-' t ., "Weeping he , touches our - eyes. • ' evel are blind, may endure for antight, but 101' com- Yea, we -were born blind: 'By...nature eth in the. morning." . •, we see things wrong, if we ,see:rthem ' What a , grand thing for our , poor at -all. ',. OM best -eternal interestS are human race when this surgeen shall put 'before Us, 'and ' we 'cannot see have completed. the treatment of the them. The glories of .a loving; , and world's wounds! The day/will come Pardoning '„Christ ;are ,projectede and when there Will be no 'more hospitals we do not beheld -thein, Or, w'� have for ."elhere. will be no more sick and a defective sight which makes i e the °no' 'more dye and ear infh•maries, things'of •this -world larger -than the for there -will be no more r things of the future, titne bigge. than blind or . i deaf, , and . no more eternity. ' Or, :we -; are eplOr. blind and deserts, , :for , the, round earth eannoti ' : see . the .ditTerence be, shall; , be brought under arboricul- ' . the blaekness , of 'clark:. itire ,i'l•I'd in, more bp e: ..1 . • them --- the carbuncles oi Joban ness forever and the roseate,morning t I - for I,117atmol4s-Pahlecrse!olwill b ut3;- ' Ilezekiali, , ;the palpitation of , the of. an -everlasting ' day. ..B.rit.. Christ sekit7u1-egsa'tcad of '8corch and 'chill, and ,:!. .11&,, et: „epokeri ef in Denterenonty,. the the . sui.g.eon .coinee..4m, !aildr, 'though 1)0 iobrb .. war, for .the swordg shall sunstroke. of' a child carried froni the ,,,ve 'shrink back afraid to, 1.1a. Ve.,, *him come ,,ou,t, of the fotindry, „bent intO !. fields of Shunem, crying, "My ,head, touch us, y e t lie pi, t, his fingers 011 ,uninr, hooks while ' • tl hoax a, 1 ,. 1,! -feet,':' which .a.w4 , ndthing ;lint' g614; midnight ;becomes., inidnoon, Wild we' '-aei.dell't...' or' malformatiOn or .herec•Ii- ,, defection ' °V teeth, that 'Called fdr, understand something .,‘.f tlie ibY of tary ills o'nearth. become the athe, almost equal to 'anything. modern, :is the 'Y°1111' though he had 'never been able `fo. eep},m4 man of the Bible who lutes. in •Elysian, fields. Who is that i dental ,surgery, the skill of' which, still seen in the filled molars , of the see his hand be'fore his face, /IOW by" . g whom the .prowds are, goal - i, admir ing looks and ,unrolled, :Egyptian mummies; he t-- the touch of Christ had twd Icieleti,dc tei.1„,..ittnuti,sg\i‘,1,,itt,14- 'and cries of "Oh, what e tthe iieWly ripe fig; leaving' the people ,11"11'ts in laneaia,%e thet clnifoMilied t(l'i i i r lie did for mole 011,,,what, he did for , opfithalinla„ caused, by the juice • of kindled 'un -der h'is brow • blind by the rOadside; epilepsy, as in .°. ut eer Mg crok'd gwho 'were deriding II e"I' )1 y 7! i. i family! 1 .011, wit he , did for the case of the youag man often fall-' That' is inc surgeon of ing into the fire and oft into the wa_ ,jChrist that had effected the culreg a 'ide,.1-1i,ie ..t7hPe,1,d,ntttries.,,,, the, .oetoist,, the e'vanted ib 'make him out a 1 ad in -an ',, ,raqt ,, ter; hypocliondria„ as of ,Nebncha4- „N•vbetinne. ,11'e „lec ..1 sinner ..i:/.'.., '. li -1-- ---, ' the emancipator, the sa,,i_ riezzar, •whd -imagined laii4elf -an ox . f ,.. ,,, , ; `. ;..„. .4) e ,k le r , , ()Ur. . , No , pay'. he ,took on. earth. e and going out to the fieds -Lb pas- lu)0.‘" .1":1C)1" `-''')e th?ng '.-1 k001 -v,' Ttl?.alt, ',COMO, li3ONV, pAld:,let ,a.11 heave„),, pay ture; the witheeed hand, which in , wl'u:3reais' I w`as!*:1)11'17.(1! 1:kw Sf see. " ; . ' ? h fine 111 1-11 worshi 0, that shall never , 1 Bible times; as now, call froM the ' But tl'is surgeon ';.wai:'' ins,t '1,5 ."011- die, On liie, head ,be all the. crowns. ' destrucCion ..- 'of' the me ' .). •ti‘ deriful as an aurisfe , .erY' ic\L'. ;Peo- in his heeds he all the scepters end )3 1-IA0 two e00( ears. 1"1,12 out at his feet be all the worlds! , • How Me* "Coort.", in the "NOrth.' . ' my: heitd!"1Kino" Asa's .disease of the inc dosol „ayeleds, of the arid ' '11k '"11 al E - • • count:1.v' we shall see the vietims bles lies in one of two direa10064 13ither some moUns. 1411St 0 found to famine,Ptoreertlestreieasy s or sea-11)7)r emes(Torilis ‘tvtill'keenue ever and wherever it appears. In the first direction attempts are eomPielely baffled. Hon. W. W. Hun- ter says; -"No individual foresight., no compensating influences, ea n en- tirely .prevent those recurring per- iods of drought with which large pro- vinces in India, are afflicted." And again when he particularly diselISSeSa artifiCial "Water-WOrkS an thl. Scale adequate to guarantee the whole of India from drought are 110C only ;a bove the possibilities ot finan- ces., they are beyond the'reach of en- gineering skill.' This loaves abso- lutely no recourse, for the preven- tion of famine can only be ensured by, the arrangement of a permanent wa- ter supply. Fronde, the historian and essayist, rightly attributes the gre,at harm wrought by the famines to the huge-, ness of India's population. He iclenti-, fies the solution Of the famine cities - tion with the solution of the popula- tion question. 13y a reduction of the population to what it was at the be- ginning of the century matters would be undoubtedly simplified. At that; time there were 190,000,000; in India; to -day there are close on THREE HUNDRED MILLIONS. British rule has secured peace, ttbola ished child -murder, a.ncl in every Way; protected life. But British rule has at the same time destroyed nativtn manufacture by competition. The people are altogether dependent ou agriculture and it is easy to see that the difficulty .01 sustaining hie be- conaes yearly more marked. Here is what 'Fronde says on the matter; -"There are but tWO rerae- dies for an exc,ess of population as great as that w,hich now confronts u.f4 in India. If we are to find food for the people in famine time, we mustt extend MIT authority, or else we must look through our fingers while an- cient methods come back: into use for, preventing a redundant popula.tion; artificial means will be employed to prevent children being born, or they, 71 be deliberately destroyed, as t7;11:: have been for ages destroyed ha China." r DOMESTIC SERVICE PROBLEM. I the 'IV oUndS the loan whom the of ten l'e°Ple are Pa r r s(it' from paralysis of the chief nerve; thieves left for dead 011 .1110 road to, i'.011 this tor that side of ydjra when Jericho and whom the .;.good Samaris tho:Y sit, or walk or ricie•-'wl.th tan nursed, pouring in cm and wine becaitse 'they have. one di SabIed ear, —whit', to c,leanse,.the wound and ell Man:St have 'both oars damaged, d'od "/4-1, the eonst ant TiiCliet bf to soothe it. Thae--------------------4 surgery has. done for the alleviation and enre of human suffering'. But the world,: ev,:,a,nted ; 5urgery without pain. pre. Parte; , and, Hick )1 -Ian ;led 'Simpsoe and Warr tind .Tackson, evith their amazing genius, came forward and ,with their anaes- thetics benumbed the patient with vircotics and ethers es the ancients quieted him for avvhile; but at the re-'' the andiCory, apparatus, The inieditl- our f,rreat. Cities and tile catarAni. troubles that sweep through thii land it is reinarkable that there, are any goOd cora at all. Most wonder- ful instrament is the human ear. 11 is harp and drum mid, telegratoll and ;telephone and .Whispering 1ga,llcry 1111 in one. So. delicate and wondrouS; is ite 'do n s trueti On that the inest tin- ; did with intsheesheand „mandrake and cult of all things to reconstruct is turn of conSeionsness diseress x•eturn- est scion tistS have 'put their to ed. The world heli never! seen but itS retuning, and Sometimes ;they one surgeon who, could straighten stop thb progress of its deca.dence Or the crooked limb. euro the blind eye remove temiporary ' obstruetions, 11/11 or rooOnstroot the drum of a sound- not more than one really deaf ear less ear Or' reduce a drOpsy 'vvithout Out, of. 1.00,000 , is eVer evired. ,It any Nen at the, tune or any pain took a God to make the ea.r, and it after, nnd that surgeon Was Jesus' takes a God to' mend it, '/.1i(at makeS Christ, ,the Mightiest, veiniest, gen- me curious to see how chLriee 110, Spr- tlest and most sympathetic surgeon goon succeeds as an Walla .the world evet Fitov or ever will see, aro told of v Iwo , and he deserves the ' cohlidence 'and operated on as an ear, eurek„,oire ' 011 other -noblemen+ A Glasgow servant girl went home a, , fel,V 0V43)illgS ago with her head .Nrra.ppect ime,a, „ 1- Her young mistress asked her what "ailed -her, end WaS told that ehe \vas :sitiT8ring frOin,a!bad attack of' tooth, ach, Jerptiglit on by siaing !in the park'.' • 'But', you ought not to on such -11 colde chilly: night ,as this,'' Said the' iStresS. 'You should -walk, at a sinart Tbe guI loolced at her a' -minute as though, pitying her ignorance, and th en answered& , *Yon citmut coort right walking; you mnst eit ,dooal"—London An- swer. seed !is laelsing.! ' One sees, then, that the Indian Gov - A Convenient Trifle. ernment has work ahead yet; and al - The Designer illustrates a handy lit- tle court plaster case that .should be ready' the expenditure approaches the made just about the.right size to carry 111 l' million dollar mark-. In the great famine of 1876-78 only two and a half Millions were fed, yet the Government .paid out ‚over eleven million pounds sterling. What must now be expected with over double that number re-: 'Ceiving relief? COURT PLASTER CASE. In the pocket, It is made of very heavy white celluloid, and the edge is decorat- ed with narrow ribbon laced over and over,as shown, small holes being made in the celluloid with the blade of a pen- knife. There is an upper and under cover of the celluloid and several sheets of court plaster of different cOl- ors between. The under cover is deco- rated with ribbons the same as the up- per one, but the latter has thw little rhyme printed on it in color to match the ribbon. Dainty little penwipers or needlebooks niay be made of the same outer Material, with inner leaves of chamois for tha former and flannel with pinked edges for the latter. • . 111.1 '11) ')1 to.; ',rho Czar of _Russia's ;suite consists of 1.78 fierf,,tong, of, \\Th.' oi 73 are gon. erals and 76 extra aicles-de-carrip 'Po tee suite belong 1;".. ,anclatters of he Im periol 10111'1W, 17 p f t "r Ill 0 T10 0- retial 1)iTtli, 17 counts, 9 earons and The Feminized -Sailor Hat. The strictly severe sailor .hat is not very Much in favor this seaeoa; and if we had always followed Frenchtaste In this particular it never would have flourished to' any sueh extent as it has. It is suitable only for young girls deck- ed in outing garb, .but it has been and Is Still worn by women who have pass- ed the four comers of life. However, 'says the, NeW' Yerk Sun; there is 11 sub- stitute for this hat almoSt.as variable, in shape and trimming as the faces which it shadows,. There is the sailor shape in soft lacelike straw trinlined with a stylish bow ef velvet or ribbon, a huge chiffon rokeite with golden ial- looq or a, scarf of chiffon ,around the crown and, possibly folds of efildion facing the brim. Then there are tur- bans and toques of rough' straW. and pique covered with stitching and trim- med with soft silks. Rough i•ider hats we have bad all winter, and they are here again made of felt straw and linen duck. Pretty GONVIL For a Toting; Girl, Pale pink- batiste makes a charming gown for ,ii young girl jnst coming into her teens,,Suggests the New York Smin. Tnek the ',skirt all around the bins lit vertical lines to within nine inches Of the hem, which is cut in scallops and 1101000 with narrow lace. A straight gathered ruffle IS added below or rath- er attached underneath the scallops and is also finished with lace.„ The bod- ice, tucked down In the form of a peint- ed yoke back and front, is tucked again twe orthree inches deep amend the waist, iMproving the figut•e, awl the belt ls of bicked lawn with tworows of -narrow black velVet ribbon sewn a little way front the edge. MEN'S. DUTY AND MEN'S FOLLY. Not a man but should contribute his f.ive, cent piece cheerfully under pre - .sent conditions. Citizena of the em- pire are starving, without question of why or through whose fault they are etarving, one's manifest duty lies in alleviating their unhappy conditiOn, Wiliingly Canadians give aid to fire - visited countrymen in Ottawa; wil- lingly, too, the people of England give them aid; and with the same willing- ness, be -cause a: common bond unites them, all should combine to aid their fellow subjects in India. ' And yet, behind the whole matter one cannot help seeing the utter folly of such a position. Year after year i the same call comes, year after year .the same , liberal response. Every ,seenaing victory is but a calm before another and a greater struggle. GOW- erninent surely must see, as everyman lof COE:1111On selaSe sees, that these "re- lief funds" are only temporary ex- pedients. The root of the evil must inc found ,and dragged from its soil. :The British Empire has almost un - 'limited resources, but,ne enapire could_ ,forever stand a strain like this. ,Poli- tital economy is outraged. TIIE SOLUTION. The usual method of servant train- ing is that girls secure a position first at general housework, then after stumbling through duties never be- fore heard of, and handling foods and utensils the value of which is utterly; unknown to them, desert their tea.ch- er-mistress and lake, a -place at high- er wages. Receiving further instruc- tions froar the new mistress theyt leave her also for higher wages and/ still f ur ther instructions elsewhere. This condition of things is a disgrace to the intelligence of housekeepers= The largest blame rests with the mistress, for her intelligence is great- er, and intelligence has its responsi- bilities. Servants themselves are not going to take the trouble or go to the expense of acquiring proper training if they ca.n be just as well. remunerated without. Therashould be education, first, for the mistress, for only from that can come education of the maid. A foreman in a foundry, Cr overseer in a building, knows how1 to'do the work of the, men ander him, otherwise they would slight it, part- ly because he could not recognize good work, and portly because he would not discover faults. Many per- sons have servants only for a part of the time, hence the greater neees- sity for domestic knowledge. The rem- edY for the domestic problern, is the school for domestic scienoo, an insti- tution which brings about the desired, results of making housekeeping a sci- ence, housework a trade. The most successful sehool for domestic science is simply a well equipped kitchen where about 16 pupils at! a tune ars The rational settlement of the tiou- taughtssystematic housekeeping. Rthbons deeorated Leorietously with d gold thread are used for corselet belts,: revere and Collars. 4- hin Ear est Are the People Who Testify “Below to the Serie. fits Derived' From the Use of.the Famous Dem& dies of Dr. A. W. Chase. Beth the Recipe Book and the great Family Reinedie.i of Dr: Chase attest his earnestness and sincere desire to benefit his fellow -beings. His just re- ward, is found in the grateful apprecia- tion 02 1113) grand work by persons who Parc been bene.fited. llere are three earliest letters ' • BAD CASE OF PILES.. Mr. W, E. Sheppard, travelling ex- cursion agent, Sutton WeSl, Tork County, ()T1t,„ writest-"I" must send a word of coannendation for Dr. Cimee'e Ointinent 1 11418 badly used up with pileS, arid in misery most of the Lime, when I heard of 1)1. Chase's Oinitinent. The first application had such good re_ .snits that I continued using it until thoroughly !cia rod ." ' SICK liEADACINE. Mrs, Den, 050 James street nerth, Hamilton, Ont., seys ;-"I lave been a martyr to sick headacle. Though I tried numerous eemedies, none seemed to bring relief: Al times I fotind my- self on 'the Verge of despair; nothing Met my case. I teeently procure, a box of,Dr. Chas's Kidney -Liver Dills, inicla thankfinl to a•ay that at laSt liave found the right medicine. At ()nee I 'obtained relief,. Dr. Chasei's 1<idney-Liver Pills have worlred won- ders for me, and I shall always recom. niend them." HEAL:111 FOB OLD ACE. Mrs ,,Iiiargarei. Iron Tower Hill N. B„ Nvr,ates:--"DT. Chase's Nerve Food haa; done me a world :of good. I was so weak that 1 could not walk twice the length of the house. My bands trembled so that Ioould not earry13 pi tit Of. water. I was too nerVOus to sleep, and \unable to' do work of anyi kind "Since using De. Obese's Nerve Food hive been completely restored, I eau walk a mile without any inconvenience. Though 76 years old and qiiite f1esby411 do my own houSe work, aed consider5 able sewing, knitting and reading be; side.s. Or. Chase's Nerve hood has proved of inestimable value to me," :Imitators of 'Dv. Chases Remedies 00 not dare to reproduce his portrait and signature, /which ere found on every lox of his geneine remedies, At all de.plere, Ildietamison, Date,s& tto..4 t9rosto.,