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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1908-01-16, Page 7ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine, Carter's ;Little Liver Pills. Must Boar Signature of See Fac-9(mtie wrapper ee)ow. Very small glad as •aey to tarso as auger. 7.FOR HEADACHE. il+r�111 tiR0 FOR DIZZINESS+ FOR IILIOUI ESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. FOIL SO1tATIPATION. NI SALLOW SKIN. FOR THErOk1[LERION Prise , Orr Estes t,v.r 110, 1 *4* **rv... IS cuffs )Purely VegotnJ' :t... SUFFERING WOMEN who Gr. ! life a burden, c+u, have health and sireotah revtorel by tare use of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. Tho present generation of women and girls have more than their share of misery. With some it is nerv'usne-a and palpitation, with others weak, dizzy and fainting spells. while with others there is a general collapse of the system. Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills tone up the nerves, etren„ then the heart and snake it beat strong and r:•xulcr, oleate new red blood cor- puscles. r.r:.1 impart that sense of buoyancy to the spirits that i. the result of renewed mental and physical vigor. Mrs. 1). O. Donoghue, Orillie. Ont.. writes: " For over a year 1 was troubled with nervous. nee- an' heart tmuble. 1 decided to give Mil - burn's heart and Nerve Pille a trial. and after using five boxes 1 found 1 was completely cured. 1 always recommend tbtin to my friend.." l'rice 50 cents per box or three boxes for $1.25, all dealers or The '1'. Milburn Co., Limited Toronto, Ont. VAGRANCY IN ENGLAND. 11as Greatly Inereated During the Last Few 1'enrs. In spite of the greet couintercial pros- perity and the comparative cheapnesis 01 ti:.• tteceseities of lite beggars and vag- rant, have therm:led enormously during the last few years. Tho tato,' records of convictions bring us down only to the year bef(tre last. but they show that to he the w-otst year on towel. In the criminal statistics lately published we fled the foiy)wing very startling figures bearing on this question. Persons convicted for begging and sleeping out l�^-t 17,513 1900 1895 11,986 1901 1.90 16,450 1902 1897 15,519 1903 1898 16,321 1904 1899 I4,1z6 1905 12,631 16,074 17,766 20,729 21,966 .27,496 'raking these In four-year periods 11 will be seen tont vagrancy Increased 50 per cent. In the lost its compared with the preceding period. These aro the convklions only. If they included the entire vagrant com- munity the figures would give no cause fel alarm. But they represent only a small fraction of the men who live in idleness. Nearly ten thousand vagranls are relieved lit public institutions every day in the year throbglwut England and weirs. Perhaps n majority of them are fn sean'h of work. or would do work It they could get it. But tete nutnber of chronic ix'ggers 'Host bo many litres NIP ties twenty -:oven thousand cenvle(ed in 1t'O5. And the fact which ntnkes the problem of dealing with them so urgent is that during the lest few years of un- p1eeedenls:d prosperity they have doubled to numbers. -fall Mall Gazette. elh 'AI '1'Y. Sarah Jane : "Well, tell me smear, And 'ow did you henJoy the hall r MArier : "On the whole I liked it very well. i didn't think mach 0' the lancin . taut the'uggin' wens '.evenly." MILBURN'S • LAXA4IVER iiir PILLS are r^:• ',sure aria safe, ane area perfect regulator of the ay stern. They grotty unlock tI:e seontlons, door away all el.ete and waste matter from the system, and give tone and vitality to dine whole into,tinal tract, curing Constipa- tion, Sick Headache, Biliousness, Dyspep- sia, Cnateel Tonaae, Foul Ilreetlt, Jaunt diee, Hcattbarn, and Water Brash. Mrs. it S. Onion, \Void*Mck, N.B., writes: "My husband end myself have used Mil - burn's Lase -Liter roils for a number of years. \\'e think we cannot do without them. They aro the only pills we ever take." Fria' 21 tents or five betties f -,r g1.a0, at all dodders of dtrret art rn-s'ipt of pr.eo. The T. Milburn Co., Limited, 'Toronto, one FAITH FOR THE FUTURE The Largest Faith May Be 1'lanifest in the Lowliest Places. "By faith Abraham when he was called to go out . . . . went out not knowing whither he went."--Ilebrews. xi., 8. You cannot fell much about a inane faith by Itis willingness to deal nt fu - hires without any foundation in fact. And yet no man is ready to fuce the future unless his heart is nerved by a high and worthy faith. This alone can give strength to look down the oomutg days and to take up their tasks. None of us can know what these new days hold for us; fear readily conjures uI pictures of disaster. But because of certain subs:lie coulidenees we hold we banish our fears, shuke off our sloth, and gladly step out into the unknown and melodeon country of to -morrow. Faith is the force of all the ages. It accounts foe the past; it enters and de- lermines the future. Because certain men in days gone by believed certain things intensely; because they were thrilled by great visions, by glorious ideals, history was wrought out in the forge of their convictions, Wider the hammer of their wills. !i No great things are done except by Ute power of faith under glowing hopes and compelling convictions, it is her faith in her toy's future that makers the mother willing to suffer, keeps Iter pa- tient, that buoys up the father in the strife and WEARINESS OF i.IFE. No man or woman is doing anything that stakes the world richer for mere bread and butter; scute purpose and vision is behind lite worthy work. It is because somehow we believe, no matter how we may phra.se the belief, that destiny Is behind this strange weaving we call life that we are content lo seem to be the shuttles jerked hither and thither. We bear the ills of to- day because we dimly see the glorious goal of the good of all. \Ve do a full day's work only as we see somehow an eternal wage. It may bek.ng to few of us to be her- alded as heroes, and the judgment of history may confer on none the mar- • tyre's crown, but the hero's joy and the inarytr'.s glory are in the heart of every o ne who boldly reaches up to and lives cut the highest ho conceives, for he will not do that without sacrifice and paint on his side nor without unreeling for mankind on the other. When all the work of the ages ap- pears, when the teeming of the cot - hales is turned with its finished' side towards us, we may see that the man Wis has laid the brick or fed the fur- nace or the woman she has washed and cooked and tended the little ones, (Icing Ihcse things for love, has shot the most glowing colors into the gloat fabric. 1l Ls not the thing you do so mice as the spirit in which you do it that stakes it GREAT Olt SMALi.. Faith determines this spirit, for faith is thut which fashions the ideal of the one we love, the ideal we serve and for which we joyfully suffer. The prophet w•hw:ae burning words we cannot for- get lives by the faith in a vision broad and sweeping; but not less is the Mite of the humble loiter who lives each day by the vision of his home and fire- side. Nor is this all. It is faith that draws on life's invisible sources of power and refreshing; it is faith that finds inner contact with the invisible. ifow empty is life if it hold nothing but things; how hungry grows the heart fed oniy on cold facts. For each day as it costes we need to be able to draw on the deep springs of the water of life, the springs from which our fathers drank tend found strength to lay lite foundations of our day. Faith is not the Wind confidence that somehow, Providence will send us daily bread. It is the faculty by which the heart eats of the bread of heaven, by which it conies into felktwtship wilt the great and immortal of all ages. by which it walks with Jesus of Nazar:tit and every spirit like his and learns ►o rend life as love and paw and see .t as leading to eternal good. iIENIIY F. COPE. THE S. S. LESSON IN77:ItN.1TIoN 11, LESSON, JAN. 19. Lesson 111. Jesus and His First Disciples. Golden 'Text: John 1. 15. THE LESSON WORD S•TUDiES. Bused on the text of the Revised Ver- sion. Son of Man -Lamb of God. -\\'e find in this chapter several different titles applied by others to Jesus, 110 is spoken of as the great Successor of the Baptist, ns the. Lomb of Geld, as the Son of God, as the Messiah, and as the King of Israel. The title "Son of man" is used only by Jesus himself in speaking of himself. 'Phis usage is in Harmony with That of the synopties, where the tern occurs more frequently than in the Gos- pel of John. We have in this phrase, "Son of man," the expression of the self- censciousnees of Jesus as losing related le humanity as a whole, and denoting lue real participation in human nahae, end dusignaling himself as in a peculiar sense the representative of the human race with relation to his redemptive mission. It emnplinsizets the human ele- ment in the naluro of Jesus, though not excluding bit divine nature. this being [other regarded through the medium of his humanity. As the Son of num he 13 able to become the Iamb of God which tnketh away the sin of the world. We n,ey, perhnps not irrevevently, permit our fancy to paint for us the scene as it tratispirtel on the sloping bunks of Bre Jordan. end imagine the Baptist address - lag n great multitude of people. Prove- ily he has just reached a climax in fear- less denunsintion of sin, or in an earnest eth•trtatlon k, repent, when cm the out- skiris of the ihreng appeals the One wh., is greater than he, and who is to be the world's redeemer. blotting nut sin. but how is he to 410 Hits? in an instant the napes' hee'c it all as in a Vision--tho lamb of the daily sncrince. the Passover lamb. and the symbolical signinennce of lith expressed by the prophet Lsstinh in the words. "Ile is brought as n lamb to the slaughter" (ise. 53. 7). By hearing the iniquity of all, lo giving his life n ransom for many. This Son of man Ls to accomplish the redemption of the race. And, pointing hcyond his immediate In avers o the quiet, gentle, unassuming figure of Jesus in the background, he cries out in n pa innate outburst of prophetic utterance, which is nt once an aj'pen) : "Deltoid ! he hes wine --the Lamb of Goal that ldk elh oy the sin of the world." verse a5. Wet slanding-'rhe verb In - chutes perhaps the flea up wailing gr Mending in exprelation. Two of his discipk's- -One et thee, Andrew. Sinton i'eter's brother. is stile lemoiety mentioned (vers.: 41) ; the other is the esnnggellst himself. who rind±oasly refrains throughout his .'n - tiro Compel from mentioning lois ew n runt., 'The •intts'iou of his own setae is the neer 43gnuflenut because he hahitual- I detinese ex:telly the names of enters ht )e,s uarreL e, (•outp:u•e his references to Slave" Peter (1. 12: 13. 6: 21. 15). to Thomas '11. 16: 21). 14: 31. 21, to Judas 'senile! 46. 71: le. l: 13. 2). end to the other Judas (11.221. \\'e :Jen sole that he neter speatcs of the (Baptist except by the t'niple nntne "Jelin." it not being l,eressary for bion as 11 was fee I+.4' other e.aneelt=ls re, di;lingnlleeh tote -ton John the 1laplk' and hinr.elf a; the wilier of thi tinrrntive, 36. Looked uo+(m Jeri e --e. ilh a fixed nn,Lsteady gaze, wrapped in conlempla- !Jeff 37. Heard him speak -Apparently not eireclly to them, but to others who were ptescnt. Followed Jesus -The Baptist had been successful at least in this, that ho suc- ceeded in directing the thoughLs of his disciples away from himself to ilim for whom he had conte to prepare the way. 38. Whitt seek ye -Jesus challenges tient to n confession of the fact that it is he whom they seek. Had he asked, "Whom seek ye?" the answer would have been self-evident and the response of the two men not as significant as it now !s. Rithbl-A title of respect used by Jew- ish pupils in addressing their teachers. The fact that John thought it necessary to explain the mooning of the term as he (Ices in the parenthetical clause (which is tc say. being interpreted, leacher), seems le indicate that the Gospel was intended for a non-Jewish circle of readers. 40. Simon Peter's hmther-Andrew thus from the very beginning of the Gas - eel narrative takes a position subordi- nate to Hint of his brother Simon, and is heneeforth known in Gospel and early church history alike only as the brother ..1 the disciple who soon carne to be the spokesman and most prominent member of the enliro apostolic group. 41. Messiah -From the Hebrew nuts. check, "lo anoint." The equivalent of the Greek title from tvhkh we get Ibe Eng- lish word Christ. We note again the fact That John is careful to explain the mean- ing of the pointer Jewish expression, which would hardly have been necessary had those far when i►e was writing themselves been Jews. 42. Cephes- Front the ilebrew, Keph, (Aramaic, Kopha), denoting "a piece of rock." Peter -'That is. "rock" or "stone." 4.1. Galilee --The northern province in which Jesus had been born rind in which h' spent the greeter part of his life. I'indeth- The verb Implies discovery nfleg' diligent tsenrch. Philip -A Grerk name glen, possibly, lu honor of Philip the tetrarch (Luke 3. le For other references to this disciple compare Matt. 10. 3, Mark 3. 18; Jotstt 0.5. 12. 22; 11. 8. Philip is referred en by i'(•lyrrak's, bishop of Ephesus in the let - t part of the second century. os "tone f the great lights of Asia" (Asia Minor), where John wrote his Gospel. 41. Relhsaide-Not Reno:<nide. Julies. whielr was emit of the Jordan and north of the Sea of Slant+r, but a town west of the Jonlnn, near the nnrlhern shore of the lake is -on -there Mall. 1. 13). 45. Nalhnneel-The new mean.,, lit- erally, "gift (,f Gee" and occurs in Num. 1. 8, and 1 (:horn. 2. 11. Nalltanael Is to Ire klentifled with Bartholomew, ey v:filch name he Ls alcuys mentioned in i)ir ;ytioptic (-;osp'Is, The haw-RMerrhtK to the Penlnleuch iu general. The oro he It Perrin T h to e lh per - lien K fw' lien of the Old 'fcstnntent 4o designated in the Hebrew text. end including the historical tx»ks known to us ns propheti- cal. Nave -elle- In the vnthweelern part of Cr,ltlee, the' plaie of the I) )yItnod life and (raining of Jesus, 17, :1n Isreelile indeed--Thnt is. in character as well ns in flesh. The guile- hrssness of Nalhennel is irnnte(linte'ly exemplified in that he makes); no mock •.r portended repudinllon of the rharec• le r attributes' lo him. "Ile is free from th+ pride• Ihnt nt1' humility 31, \.oily, verily -i'h � vume exp'rs- ,e)n translated elsewhere by our Eng - belt wont "agmen." and in alp +•n•t'c tnoed for solemn emphasis of that which im• n,ediately poke -Ace er follows. I. Angels ce feel ascending and de- ereno'ing--A Cgtrrntl'e expre'slon refer- ring to the perpelnal communion next intercourse e Jea,s ns the Son ef nod with the Father, of which the disciples were henceforth to be witnesssets. The figure itself may have been suggested by the historical associations of the place neer which Use meeting of Jesus with lalhanael rntot have occurred, which was prof,ubly in Ilse direct lone of Je.,h's jt urney rows Bethel I. iluuran 'Gen. 28. 10-15; 29. 1), near the place where the Otter had his wundrrlul vision, CANADA'S FORESTS. Fires Are Destroying Large Areas Al. most Eeery Year. Timber hats been anti wt ill be, so long a.: mite requires houses to shelter taw, hmpleutteds which he slay use for agri- culture or industries, ono of the groat needs of the world. In oouhtrics where the forests have long been festal, such a, a great part of Europe, and they um no lunger capable of supplying the needs of the inhabitants, cflorls hove been Made to take stock of the world's timber supply to ascertain from what serum-ce the deficiency Ls to be supplied. As a European writer has said, "1l is profoundly disquieting to ascertain Ural 2:5 millions of inhabitants; of Europe conslitireng the nations where com- merce fled industry have attained the greatest Fewer do not Lind enough of weed for manufacturing putexises in the Wools of the territories width they occupy." No country In Asin, except Russia, is able to furnish more Than its own re- quirements. Neither from Africa nor Scull' America can an adequate supply he ublained. Australia can furnish little. The countries which have a great excess of production are only seven in number; five in Europe: Aug- tria-Hungary, Norway. Sweden, I'in- Iand and Ruse; and two in North America: The United States anti Canada. The increase of population and the de- velopment of industry in Austria-Hun- gary. in Russia and in the United Stales will soon reduce them to the level of non -exporting countries. Sweden, Fin - lend and Canada are the only countries that have a certain future as limber producers. in the Dominion of Canada the forest area has Leen estimated to high as 8(10 million acres, but large extent& have been burnt over and carelessly deslroy- esl so that it is doubtful if halt that area is really covered by forest. 71te Canadian forests are, however, produc- ing a great deal More timber by year- ly growth than is yet cut team them. If this could be kept up perpetually there would always be a su!ncient sup- ply; but fires aro destroying (+onsider- able areas almost every year. anti, as the forests of Europe and the Lasted Slates become depleted. the quantities rcquireJ for trade will inerem.se every year. To meet iles demand will require that the forests he thoroughly protected Imre fire, and that every effort he made tc assist n new growth to follow that. which is being cut away. TYPHOID FEVER. Disease May he Communicated - Ger. man Scientist's Opinions. Professor Kirchner, of Ilerlin, has written a monograph it the present ps.sitkin of the crusade against typhoid fever as a protest ngainst t'ellenkofers theory that outbreaks of enteric fever are determined by , peciai conditions of the suis, and endeavors. to justify the views formulated b -v Koch tie the result of his investigallons in 'Trier. The danger of transmitting the di -ease by means of the water eupp.:v is ad- n:theft, but while it is stated that this possible .source of infection must never be overlooked. it 13 asserted to be a serious mistake to suppose that this is necessarily the only or the principal Canso of epidemics. The diseasn, as hospital experience nhrn:lanlly stows, is frequently acquire:I by direct person• at conta'I, end therefore the first ob- l.c! of preventive measures should be to prevent the 'allent front becoming a possible fo'us of conlagk,n by isolat- ing hint and systematleally disinfecting his excreta end clothing. This is often a: troabinseme matter, particulnrly with Ilto.se !:ersons who eorttinue lo excrete the excite long atter !Ley have been restored to comp'ete convalescence. The danger is still greater noel more diffi- cult to prevent in the case of people who have ingested typhoid hacilli through living in pinces where the dis- ease is prevalent, but have developed either no disease at all or symptutns which have been so trivial as to escape dMort on. Professor Kirchner quotes an Interesting case in point. A com- pany of musicians Iravcile. from 'frier to Bergen in Norway. Shortly after (heir arrival -nn outbreak of enters: fe- ver occurred in the hotel where they were Moving; this was ntlributatee, it 'hornet out. to one of the nttLslcituts who hod come from n lyphold-infected k.cnlily in Trier and had brought Ihr hncllli with him. Feast an .lilt • , analysis of recent statislic\s. 14 i. leirohener endeavors to show that '? preventive nsensures ndopteJ in Gee many nre meeting with nn eneourag,+• 'ng degree of success.-RrilLsh Medical Journal. 4 IIOW TO GET Poon Qt'irK. 1)o not try to sate your lees a change, It is too small nn (interne to put in tete saving, bank. 11. would not nonnent In fort in spending it. Just wnit until yen' much. anyway. noel there greet enm gr' sufficient worth white before y)it de- posit 1t. Do not try to eennornize. It is en infernal nuisance In ntwaye try to seee a few rents here end there. Re• aides you will get the rep:llatintt of being mean rine stingy. Yoh went everyt•ndv Ir. Ihou (' rous. kx) b r tn•dinkayy, ilnv"1rgenen good limeJust as yoku gooil n14mgt. Just use yew money yourself. Don't deprive yourself for the sake of laving up rcemething for other people In fiCResides.t re sure of davght (v. 1'nuer. might notovon altas. tn-morro\Io- v, --Sheers% Mngtnzine. ASA (dl \N( E. A{11v : "P"rhfpc yet, are right. Mies l solus, hilt sometimes t enw•n't hell. thinking-----•" !eltec Tetttin : "lenn't try In help it, Mr. Stmtptlyle. 1 ne exercise will do you Rood." 41.0.‘t4160•61141114.4,414.14,144, Th4 Home 444444444 44.11.11044 SOME DAINTY litellES, Potato Salmon t:ukts,--A good way to toe your "left over" mashie, Iwlatot', Mix Motu thom,tghly with a can of sal- mon and just enough Dura meal h, 'nuke Them stick together in flat cakes and hey in not lard. Baked ilam.--Ilavo a slice of hem cul le two inches (hick. 'Place in skillet. (.ever with cold water and lel Loot for lin minutes. Itemove, front water, sprin- k,e flour ever lop, and Mlle in the oven for half an hour. Escallop of Corn. -Empty one can of cern into a taking dish; add one egg, two-thirds of a cup of mile. sail, and pepper to baste. Place cracker crumbs and bits of butter over the top; put in moderate oven and conk until cracker erumte ate slightly browned. Substitute for I'rt.il Cake.--'two-thirsts cub butter; one cup hlaekls'rry jam; one- half cup sweet milk; Three eggs: Iwo cups ll sUl; Iwo teaspoonfuls baking powder; one teaspoonful each of closes, cinna- mon and allspice; one-quarter cup of chopped citron; ono cup of walnuts. Bioko in layers. Spure ltibs en Case. -Two poem's spare ribs; toil 1i11 tender and brown in pen; ane large: cabbage; boil till lender in sent water; remove centre of cabbage, 1)i; with spare ribs, reoovering with cab- bage. (lake one-half hour, basting with cream end molted butler, seasoned with pepper altd salt. Turkish Preserves. -One quart grope juice; one pound seeded raisins: three oranges; one-half pound pecan nut meet; one-half pound English walnut meals: one-quarter pound dates; one-quarter pound figs. Bring to a Boil, then add one geart sugar, theft boil fifteen Minutes. stirring Constantly. Oatmeal Drops. --One eup sugar. two- thirds of a cup of butter and lard mixed. Iwo egos, a gond half carp of sour milk, .i teaspoon soda dissolved in the milk, enc teaspoon nl cinnamon, pinch of salt, one cup ruhtus, ono cup nut meals (either walnuts, hickory, or English wal- nuts are good), two cups of (lour and three cups oatmeal. Drop sty spoonfuls on greased pouts leaving a little space all around to spread. Creams \Vutnut Cake. --One cup of su- gar. one cup whole wheal breadcrumhs, one-half cup farina breakfast food, one cup English walnut meats (chopped), one teaspoonful baking powder, yolks and whites of six eggs, beaten stiff. Bake in slullow pen about twenty amniote.; in n,oderate noon. When cold cat in small suuorls fond serve with whipped cream to which hes been added one teaspoonful of v81131111 and three tablespoonfuls of !s tt i).'rirl sugar. tieutheni Potato Sttlad.-Cul up as many cold Isel(d potnlnoe as desired. with Is generous amount of onions cut up tine, tool one 01. two stalks of celery calf up fine; unix all 1 gel Iter into n large (:ut up oenud of rin ube�s and fry nice ann,:Jpbrown; whitebaon Ihal is frying mix nee lenspeon of suit. Due .•1 mt»tard. and one heaping tablespoon 4 1 sugar, mix with a half a cup of warm water and add to becen and fol; toren add one cup of eider vinegar and stir with bloom. fat end mild. 'Then pour ever pole - tots. (onions and celery. Left Over Supper Dish. --Soak half a p and of brand in warn sealer, squ'('zc it dry. put a piece of butter the size of ten egg in a stew pun, and when bol ilex in a shall onion finely chapped. :\s seen a, ft 'woollies a little colorer) then put in the bread with a tablespoon - PO of parsley clopped, pepper and salt to taste. Stir it until it leaves the skies. then put in two egg.. I'ut into baking dish and hake for ten minntce. This is mice served with baked fe • I u,..±,. Spindled Oysters. ± • Pike Iwo dozen large „t, . of bacon. and six an! SIX s14'11d4r sleep <le • , •Ir tot. Cut two dozen waft, .I1 I . .,u. 1 I the skewers with bncun ami ,,. stems alter- nately. miming the skew re oross grain through Ill.' Inueele of the eyelet. and stringing the loom by tui.: corner, ,.o that each slice may overlie an nv.ster; du not crated theta. Lay the skewers across a baking pan and cook under gas or in a quick oven for five minutes. 1y,, not lake from slower but lay eurh one on a slice of tenet, pour over the drip from pan. and s.'rvo at once. Raked Moans.- \Va'!o ;veil one wilt 4 1 navy home and put hl n kettle with one primo' of salt pork )tad plenty o1 old water. \\'hen they ,tart 4) toil add one-half teaspoonful of baking stele, one- half teaspoonful of dry unwtard and the smote antnunt of salt. Let hest until when you blow on -them the akin; wt ill peel up. Try there by taking a few out en a sjZoon. 'Then pout them hi nn eat Then dish and mix in one and one -hall btblespa„tfuls of m•)Insses (brown or while :sugar can be used instead). cut the perk rk itt pieces, and spread tielaseees of .:.gear ens lop of each piece. raver lit. t ,h and bake six home in Flow oven. .t ail belling water ocen-innnlly to keep moist. Remove cover one-lunlf hour he fore ready to serve and allow to brown. ns 'i'HINGS \\'Om'I'It KNOWING. enndpnper Smooth, Cakes. -- To re- meve the burned edges of layer or loaf cake. use fine sandpaper ns soon as the .tike is "set." but torero It gels enid. A piece of parent n paper,cut the shape a o! cake, will prevent the Nuke slicking to the plate on which 11 is to be set away. Keep Skewers In flare. -After pin- ning them all in place. dick the points in a hit of cork. The iint eorks from jars are good for this purpose. This enrolees one Io turn n mast over wilh use danger of I unsling open find Icing Its shape. K' ep Friel in C',eke Jnr, --Put nn orange or lemon in the jar with your newly trade sweet cakes or cookies end you will find it will give them n (feli:ale and delirious flavor. Dried orange or kaon peel will sN) the same. ('ere ter Jelly Glasses. -As sx)nn ns j. sly susses'e are emptied wneh carefully end rent covens. Take off covers. park gflasset in paper boxes wide enoug), for ton tiers of glasses. Put Myers In some I.nx and eel on high pantry Moll. When r.ee.ted, glasses and covers aro Mean anal really for use. safely Shelves. -To keep kettle cavus and galvanized pie plates from dropping • from sheet:; and table's in pantry gel 1Irco laths and two setts al4+ut one inch Mill a half thick iu,d eighteen Inches Ong. Nail tine lath at the end of slats tea ettlter lead, terming the bottom; the two remaining luthts about (tor iii 1a's toper'. Nail it anywhere it would be con- venient. 11 will give ample apace for Covers, etc., bad bave! wear. COOK'S CON\'ENIE\"1' Four even teaspoonfuls make one even la blespoonful. Twelve 'tablespoonfuls dry material one cupful. cupfuls make one pint. One dozen eggs should weigh one and one-half pounds. One teaspoonful of salt to two quarts of flour. One teaspoonful of salt to one quart of soup. One quart of water to each pound of meat and 1.01te for setup stock. Four pepper corns, four cloves, 'm,' teaspoonful mixed herbs to each quart et. water for soup stock. One teaspoonful of flavoring extract to enc plain loaf cake. One- quarter pound salt perk to a pint of beans fur "Boston bakt'el beans." One cupful of butler (solid) stakes one- half Doane. One cup of granulated sugar one-half pc and. GOOD CAKE FILLING. Lesion -Two small lepton rinds grated and juice, one cupful sugar, one-half cup- ful of water; heat almost to boiling, then add ane egg, well beaten, and let it boil. Add toe olnlsltspoons cornstarch with ono -gunner cupful of water. Mock Ilnnanus--Apple sauce cooked in usual way, sweetened and fktvored with banana flavoring. Add the white of beaten egg. This makes a delicious fill- ing. Caramel --Ona cup of sugar and one cup of sour cream boiled slowly till it thickens. Whip till almost cold, then st:read on cake. Almond Custard -\\'hip one pint of thick sour comas stiff: add the well beaten yolk of one egg, one cupful of powdered soigne vanilla to taste, one- half pound shellol almonds blanched and chopped. and, lastly, the well beaten white of one egg. Mock Cream --Wel one-quarter cup) of flour with a little, milk; let boil until thick, stirring carefully. When cool fla- tter w•illt vanilla. KAISER BAYS MILLINERY GERMAN L311'I:It0It IN\'IsIS IN IIVI 1'4)11 \\ Ii L. \\ ould 'Take Notting 'Willi Osprey: Phonies -Empress 44ays Ills Taste is Good. The Kaiser proved again that he is the most versatile of monarchs by person- ally ;selecting 011 Ike hist (lay of his recent visit in London. England, a nutii- bet of hots for Ute Kni-erin, 'there are very few sten indeed in this wield who can douse '.uecesslully a lady's lint. It is the Gentian Empress's proed boas) that her husband's eclectic haste int millinery is as good ns her own. Leaving his task of choosing to the very last monad, in order, no doubt, to secure the latest possible fashions, the Emperor requested that n selection of hale sttould be sent to the German Em- bassy by the firm of Paquin. :\ tlumlxer of specially designed hats. made In London, were nt mire sent, and tt••. Emperor chose several of the smart- "pietus'i" model, to take back to 1;, i lttt, OSI'Ri•:1'S BANNED. Ills Majesty w•nukt not look at any hat wide!' had osprey plumes, thereby pr(a- it:u his inniranity and his Leve for the beautiful bioses that err: butchered at the very time of nil others, when they Mould be protected, namely, in the note ing sermon. But of ostrich feathers he es ldently appr-tees. For s4)1ne of the baba sero nleolutely laden with the richest examples of that becoming plung11. 'fhotnGerman 'improves has n fair and very pretty complexion and exquisite silver -white hair. The hats bought for her by her husband wore evidently most carefully selected to enhance the beauty of her Mooring. llis Majesty Ls uppnr- smlly favorably hmp.r.:*se4t by the large Mils That are being %torne for earl) rine That Ito tonight is of gigantic eize, though by no means mushroom in shape. On Ilse contrary. the brims are diver- sified exceedingly in form. One is turned lock completely fust the face to abut III! hair. nnother Ls rolled upwards ell 111way around with an accentuating rim of geld; atwitter 1111 top at one side, end seeress with n most an estic line down- ward' to the other. SOME OF CHOSEN ONES. satin was chosen as the material of one model, a huge lint• very benullfully 'nude, with a trimming of black plum- age and a little relief of gold deftly In - Ir. attend. This the empemr approved and set aside for purchase. Anolh'r that specially pleased hint was it while alfa model, with :t smithery of Hell toown fur emoted the crown. and while ostrich feathers branching away from tee centre of the front, above the sweep- ing In-irn. Ile twilight that, toe. 'Then n hal, of a very rich purple otic a wast Clea i notice, and) It •.e' Miracle' sLu 1 . a I nside for Berlin. and a fourth purchase was n perfectly beautiful hat in soft tones of brown and "old" blue. with two ver))' long and tory fuel osh ich plumes bend- ing backwards over the crown from a Nage end handsome cantor, set in blue end gold filigree.. that also supported the brim in a halo frnm above the coiffure. -4- Ot 1' Id- I31'sINI'e. There is no sternly weather 'flint has not its shiny tail; We haven't seers n skeeter Since the cold wave hit. S.1FE COUItME. Mother '1n future son-in-law) : "f nee 1e11 you that, though my daughter is'. ell ctlioah•d. she c'Ulned .nasi." Future Son-in-law : 'That doesn't matter much, so long ea she dazsn't try." Don't Neglect a Coiigh or Cold IT CAN HAVE BUT ONE RESULT. IT LEAVES THE THROAT or LUNGS. OR BOTH, AF'F'ECTED. DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP IS THE MEDICINE YOU NEED. It i.+ without an equal as • remedy for ('u+telie, (.'olds, Bronchitis, tioro 'Throat, fain in the Choat, Asthma, Whooping Lough, Quinsy and all affections of the Throat and Lunge. A dingle dos. of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup will stop the cough, soothe the throat, and if the cough or cold has he• roue settled on the lungs, the healing properties of the Norway vino 'Tree will proclaim its great virtue by pr)mptly eradicating fho bad effects, arta a persist - use of the remedy cannot fail to bring About a complete cure. Do not bo humbugged into buying se. called Not -way Pint; Syrups, but be euro and ivsist on having Dr. Wool's. It is put up in a yellow wrapper, throo pine groes the trade mark, and price 25 eta. Mrs. Henry Seabrook, Hepworth, Ont., writes : " I have used Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup in our family for the peat three years and 1 confider it the beat rotnedy known for the euro of colds. It, has cured all my children and myself." RFOM ERiN'S GREEN ISLE :\1:\\'s BI' M111. PROM Iola.\ND 811O111:S. Happenings in lite i:m(rnld Isle el Interest to Irish• men. All the wonting factories In Lurgan are working on short hours. Jamas Gallagher, a deaf mute, was kilted on the railway track near Clog- tta n. A gray shark, six feet in length has been caught off the Antrim coast al Whitehead. County Clare has built 614 laborers' cottages and now intends betiding 899 collages more. A woman Ranted Boyle, n native of Ciareutorr•is, died in fho workhouse at the age of 107 years. - John Lynch. of Kill, an aged temper- ance reformer, of Father Matthew's day, died recently, aged 84. Antrim police have boon scouring the ccuntry for Robert heathens, carrier. who disappeared on Nov. 7. • The grazing touch at !laments. neer 'l'entplemore, consisting of 1,700 Irish neons, will be divided amongst the peo- ple. An imperial service medal has leen granted to \Ir. Adan Thompson, Belfast, who for over thirty years has served as pcslmnn in the city. I'atrick Ilughes, Dunngarron, diel recently its the age of 9') years. Ile was--"'-‘-' nb!e_ to do work un his farm till the lust few days of his life. Tho Great Northern Railway Co). in- tend to transfer their largo locomotive works front the seaport town of Dun- dalk, County I.oulh, to Belfast. The best thing to do with nn Irishman when he been:nee offensive is to knock hint down and put 111111 in jolt. So Said Mr Justice Dodd at Belfast on Uto 19th The daughter and son of Jame Mc- Quade, Kilcreevy, was ixesonel by fines of coke burning in a bucket, which she brought hi to heat her sleeping mom. For throwing a quantity of vitriol at Agnes Jones, at Belfast, n mail named James Chambers was sentenced to five years' penal servitude nt Ulster Assizoa. Sport time le ls'Ing worked in all the st inning nulls in Belfast owing to the slump In the linen trade. Some 30,000 employees are affected, wages being re- duced by ono-llllh, in the course of recent reeenrches Mr. Tnyl►r, of NewMnbutkr, alt molest entlquarian, discovered another relic of the pest in the shape of a alone axe, in nn nld fort nt Keeraniroro. ee'hen the Incorporation of the Imper- il' Yl)nmanry of Great Ih•ilaht int) the Territorial i'oress takes 4•ffocl, lite Im- perial Yeemenry• in Ireland will be doe sugd o "Yoynry." inuate1\'mtltmeslliIrish the hantanks aro refusing In lend Money on the security of gra:. Ina farms, even as it nest mortgage. A timelier of grez)e'rs. who depended on bank accemneetatb.it, aro in de=spair. •i Turns Bad Blood into Rich Red Blood. No other remedy possesses such Perfect cleansing, healing and leuri• tying{ properties. Externally, heals Sores, Ulcers, bs,:es,es, and all Eruptions. internally, restores the Stomach, Liver, Bowels and Blood to healthy action. If your appetite is poor, your energy gone, your ambition lost, 13.11.B. wil! restore you to the full enjoyment of happy vigorovs