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Exeter Times, 1909-06-10, Page 7ABSOIUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Sear Signature of See Pae -Simile tt'neDer Below. Terry saaalt sad as easy M talcs eta awns FOR IIEADACRE. CARTERS FOR DII1INr$S. FOR 61LIOU3!lESS. Fin LIVER. Pill. FOR CLSTiPATION. sass roR $ALLOW SKIN' FOR THE COMPLEXION purelyTer.t. 1^.moi.-•.. /. kby. teer.r.tr----Qt CURE SICK HEADACHE. 1 TR.\NSPLANTED TRIBES. MAN'S GLORY AND Ay' HATS AT 1$10.000 APIECE. That of the Cardinal's is a {'ery Exp. ueive Affair. The cardinal's hat, which a re- cent death has placed at the dis- posal of the Pope of Rome, will cost, whoever may be its recipient, certainly not less than +310,000. This includes a variety of disburse- ments to all sorts of people, but the whole of then[ centre round tho all-important hat. Thus custom decrees that the of- ficer ficer of the Papa! Guard, who is responsible for its safe custody while it is in process of delivery to the new cardinal, shall be pre- sented with $1,000 in cash, and a gold ink -pot worth $200. The actual bearer of the hat re- ceives $2,000 in money, and a cross and missal of the value of $200. The secretary of the mission which ac- companies it gets $300. The cost of the registration of the patent is $4,400. And between 81,000 and $1,500 has to be distri- buted in compulsory presents, when at the Pontificial Court, the recipi- ent balances it on top of his head for the first and only time. For a cardinal's hat cannot be worn like any ordinary piece of headgear. Indeed, it is not really a hat at, all, but a flat, pancake - like square of red cloth, destitute alike of either brim or crown. The first thing the now cardinal has to do, therefore, after paying out the $10,000, is go out and buy himself a hat which he can put on. Even this one is pretty expensive, for there are only about half -a - dozen shops in Europe which stock them, and the proprietors natural- ly keep up the prices to a remunera- tive level. It is, too, exceeding;y heavy and uncomfortable, being composed of a kind of thick cardboard material, covered with the fine cloth used for billiard tables, but dyed, of course, a brilliant red, and it is ornamented with gold cord and tasselss. It costs about $40, and four or five of them are needed by the cardinal every year. Tho 810,000 hat hangs above the altar in the private chapel of His Eminence during his life, and at death is buried with him. Preacher Says Conscience Does Not flake Cowards of Men. Ott[ glory is this, thetestimony of our conscience.—ll. Cor. i. 12. Paul's statement is the answer to the question. Does conscience make cowards of us all I it is an emphatic no. A gift of God, con- science could nut be the curse It would be if it made its owner a victim of abject fear. It may n.ake one afraid of the punitive sanction of the law. if so it is a salutary check, but does not unnerve. The best among us, when the blood burns and greed goads needs to have the awfulness of an offended Deity fleshed terrifyingly upon him. Such a warning engenders a caution which implies courage, not pusil- lanimity. Ile of Tarus when Ho calls conscience our glory lifts that faculty up to the orgnity which is its by every right, divine and Ghastly 'Tragedies Resulted in Two instances. A commencement has just been made in a most remarkable and long -talked -of enterprise. This is nothing less than the transplanting of the Lapps from Lapland, where they are a dying race. to Labra- dor, where it is hoped that they will flourish and increase. Whether these hopes will be jus- tified or not, remains to be seen. [Similar experiments in the past have seldom been wholly success- ful, and some have resulted disas- trously. The Doukhobors, for instance, who, in 1899, were transported, to the number of eight or nine thousand, from • their homes in Southern Russia, to the Canadian Northwest, were for a time in dire straits. They also behaved erra- ticy, marching naked through the snow, and abandoning their flocks and herds to the wolves. They are now, however, reported t(,1be settling down, and doing bet- ter. On the other hand, the attempt made, some eighty years ago, to transplant. the Iloskolnikis of the Don country to a new home that was supposed to have been found for them in Eastern 'Turkestan, re -1 �tilted in one of the most ghastly tragedies recorded in the annals of history. The huge caravan lost its way in the terrible Desert of Gobi, and was never heard of again, the probability being that hunger and thirst, combined with the attacks of nomad robbers, were responsible for the deaths of the entire party. Equally dreadful was the fate that befell the 10,000 Jutlanders transplanted to the east, coast of 111 Greenland by Queen rgaret of Sweden. At first they flourished exceedingly. Villages were found- ed, churches and schools were built, and a bishop was appointed. Then, one year, the ice pack broke loose from the remote northern seas, and carie to a standstill along the coast opposite the settlements in a belt fifty miles broad. Ail com- munication with tho open sea was thus cut off. The settlers were un- able to obtain supplies, and in tho end they perished down to the very last man. • DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP is A Remedy without An Equal For COUGHS, COLDS, And All Affections Of The '' _1ROAT grid LUNGS. C - ughs and ?olds do not call for a n. rote r'.•ital of rymi toms as they are kno• a to everyone, but their clangers are not understo«i so well. All the most ser•tc:s affections of the throat, the lungs an i '.FI., bronchial tubes, are, in the begin. ping. but coughs arid colds. on mu. h strew cauuot be laid upon the plirr. ad•mutition to all persons affected by the in.idtous earlier stages of throat and lung disease, as (*lure to take hold at once will carne many years of suffering, and in the end that terrible seoinge of "Consump. tion." Dr. H'oc t -s Norway Pine Syrup la not Sold as Cure for Con..urnptfon but for affet•ma tributary to, and that result tr that disease. It combines all the lung Vetting virtues of the Norway pine is stronger than corporations or trusts or any of the associations of men. r \\'1►at has fortified such a man so is the courage withso which he has followed the sugges- tions of conscience. As it bade, he gave to (sod what was God's and to Caesar what was Caesar's. No man can do more. Such a one, whether confronting the terror of unpre- cedented adversity or riding on the highest wave of prosperity, whether in war or in peace, in health or in sickness, in life or in death, whether summoned by God or by his fellows, is sublimely unafraid. THE HERALD OF LAW. Before the bar of unpurchasable justice the testimony of a man's conscience is the umpire of his fateb, man. no matter what his creed may WHAT CONSCIENCE. DOES. As he has treated his conscience here so will it deal with him then. Conscience makes us cowards? Yet conscience is only the herald No 1 But it unmasks cowards. It of the law. It gives light, but the reveals every character of which the fiber makes not for intrepidity. Where manhood is, conscience in- spires prowess; where cowardice is, it exposes the aspen trembling of him who dares not battle for the right. Man's glory and man's shame come from the evidence of conscience. By its declaration he is acquitted or condemned. Its ver- dict garbs him with a glory which dazzles in the dark ways of life or accuses him of backsliding from ideals into the slough of mean as- pirations, corrupt desi-es and dis- honest practices. The noblest thing we can say of a man is that his word is his bond and that his bond strength which tha will needs to obey its behests must descend from above. Here religion comes to the rescue. That religion must be heaven -born. No religion can prove that its charter is divine un- less it make it irrefutably clear that it holds within its gift a light which so i11.. nines conscience as to make it. inerrant and endows man's will with a robustness which makes it indomitable. A man whose conscience is so en- lightened and whose will is so panoplied can never be a coward, but always and everywhere a hero. REV. P. A. HALPIN. THE S. S. LESSON INTEIINATIONAL LESSON, JUNE 13. Lesson XI. Heroes of Faith. Golden Text, Heb. 11: 1. Introduction.—Why is our lesson from the Hebrews studied at this time 1 Because, perhaps, of its possible connection with the church in Jerusalem, which will not again come so prominently into the history as in Lesson Vlli. Tho theme of this chapter, also, is illustraUed finely by the missionary activities of Paul, our study of which is soon to bo renewed. Froth is the great cornerstone of missions, as of all theology and Christian living. I. The Book of Hebrews.—Who wrote the Epistles? The author is unknown. The title, ascribing the Epistle to Paul, found in the King James version, "forms no part of the original document; but it must have been given to the hook at a very early date."—Westcott. II. What Faith Is.—Vs. 1-3. How does the writer define faith? Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen. Faith is not hope, but underlies hope and renders hope confident. Faith is not the vision of mystries, but that proof of them in heart and life which asures tis of then without any sight of thein. I11. Seven Guide -Posts on the Way to Faith.—Vs. 4-16. How does the writer proceed in his illustra- tions of faith 1 With a series of pictures, showing different aspects of faith, taken to order of time from the book of Genesis. In con- nection witti each illustration the writer points out some characteris- tic of faith in terse and 'beautiful phases that have became guide- posts on the way to faith for all God's children. IV. Abraham's Great Test of Faith.—Vs. 17-19. What is the point of the writer's next illustration? The value of tests of faith. The writer now passes to particular events, and begins with one of the finest t samples of faith in all his- tory, the testing ("trying' ) of .\bra - ham. Think how many eager hopes were centered upon young Isaac. what long waiting was rewarded by hint. what glorious promises had their fruit in him. In Isaac should his (Abraham's) seed be called ((,en. 21: 12); that is, Isaac and his des- cendants were to be counted especi- ally as Abraham's seed, inheriting she went to the box and there was the promises made to him. And that kitten : She was surpried. for now his loving fatin r t as offered she had given the kitten to a friend, Isaac up (I1. V. margin)—for Abra- who lives out in the country five ham's submission to (cod's will is so miles. it seems that the old cat entire that the sacrifice is as good had gone and lugged her kitten as completed and the lad as good as hone. dead : so that. when the ram was + sub.t ituted ((len. 22 : 13) for the boy, A GOOD FOUNDATION. Abraham may truly he said to have Faith.— Vs. 23-31. How many con- spicious instances of faith does the writer note in connection with the exodus from Egypt and conquest of Canaan'? Seven in all—not because seven is "the perfect number," nor because there were not more than seven, but because (v. 32) time failed him to recount others, such as the victory at Rephidim, the healing wrought by the brazen serpent, the report of the two faithful spies. VII. Heaven's Honor roll.— Vs. 32-40. How does the writer close his examples of faith? So many crowd upon his mind, from the times of the judges, kings, pro - pacts, that he despairs of going on with even the condensed sum- mary he has been giving. He in- stances the faith of Gideon, who with only a handful of men turned to flight the armies of the aliens (Judg. 6-b) ;of Barak, whose ex- ploit was similar (Judg. 4, 5); of Samson, who stopped the mouths of lions (Judg. 13-16), as did David (1 Sam. 17 : 34,35) and especially Daniel (Dan.6); of Jephthah (Judg. 11, 12), who turned to flight the Ammonites; of David, who subdued kingdoms (2 Sam. 8, 10, 11); of Samuel, who wrought righteousness (1 Sam. 12: 3 4,). Then follows a crowding rush of memories, the triumphs of faith in escaping fire, as Daniel (Dan. 3); receiving the dead raised to life again, as the widow of Zarephath (I Kings 17 : 22,23) and the Shunam- mite (2 Kings 4 : 35-37 ; holding to the truth in trials such as stonings (Jeremiah, according to tradition), or being sawn asunder (the tradi- tional fate of Isaiah). Many of the trials here enumerated occurred in great violence during the times of the Maccabees. MAIN CAT THAT ('AN COUNT. Missed One Kitten. Went After it Five Miles. A resident of Lewiston, Maine, has a cat that counts her kittens. A few days ago the old cat left her kittens in the box by the stove and went out, to catch some mice for them. When she came back she looked into the box, nodding her head along the box as if counting. Suddenly she turned from the box and went to her mistress and meow- ed most pitifully. The cat then went back to the box, the mistress fol- lowing. When the cat reached the box she again went through the form of counting her kittens, and meowed again. The woman bad given one of the kittens away, and as if talking to a child, she told the old cat to whom she had given the. kitten. Then she thought no more of it until the next morning, when twee wit% other absorbent, expectorant and recei: cd his son hack again from soothing mevLcines of rec•agniral worth the crave. and is absolutely harmless, prompt and V. How Faith Gives Clear Vision. safe. ices great has been the sue, ess of this _if,. 20,22 What is the point of the wonderful remedy, it is only natural that netts three illustrations, those of num-row prre.ms have tried to imitate it. ibm't be humh':`ged into taking anything lease, lacob. and .losrph ? in each 'et " Wools:. put ap in a y't1' w case. the clear vision of the future • three toe urs. ttte trade markt rt (a'th ices. ries :Scents. l \•i. Moses' Great Ventura of wrapp-r, p th R M re. Voungwed—"This is the first bread i ever made. darling." Vonngwed---"\\'ell. dear. you ought t., build up an excellent re- putati as a hams keeper on it." Mrs. Youngwed - "Why ?" Von ngwed--"Brea it se you have started with nn almost indestruct- ible foundation." GAVE BACK $53,000. Money 'Taken From Illinois Home Restored in Tao Lots. David Myers of Mount Vernon, 111., who recently lost $53,000 from an iron safe he kept at his home, has had the entire amount restored to him. The money carie back in two finds. The first was discovered in a cellar at Lie home of his son, Clarence, who made the find. The first intimation that the money might be buried in the cellar came to the son when he noticed the earth disturbed in the cellar, and ni digging about the place he unearth- ed a package containing $18,000. It was announced that the search for the rest of the money would be given up, but it develops that the search was coninued quietly and persistently, and resulted in un- covering the missing $35,000, but where it was located has not been made public, and an effort will be made to keep the particulars of the find a secret. Myers is a farmer living about ten miles from this city, and also is engaged in money loaning. It was when he went to his safe to deposit a payment that had been made on a mortgage that he discovered his loss. The money was taken while a family re -union was in progress at the Myers home last fall, and in spite of the efforts to keep it secret the story leaked out about as soon as the money was found. Myers kept his money at home, because he did not believe in banks, but he has changed his plans, and the banks now tate care of his sur- plus thousands. He was thought to possess only an ordinary amount of money, and the disclosures brought about over the losing and finding of the 83,000 caused inuclr surprise in his family and among the residents of the district in general. Detectives have been working on the case since last fall. An average orange -tree produces about 20,001) oranges, and a lemon• tree 8,000 lemons. COULDNOTCOTO'NODK BACK WAS SO WEAK: w Tii Home DELICIOUS CAKE RECIPES. Pittsburg Fruit Cake. --Take one- half cupful r.f butter, one cupful of sugar, two eggs, one cupful of New Orlear a molasses, one cupful of chopped apples, one cupful of sour milk with which two teaspoonfuls of baking soda have been mixed. Add flour enough to make a batter the same as you would for any ordinary loaf cake. Bake in a square pan with a slow bre about forty-five minutes. When baked it Is moist. Frost if you like. Fig Fruit Cake.—Six figs chopped with one cupful of raisins. Dis- solve one level teaspoonful of soda in one cupful of boiling water and pour over figs and raisins and cool. Cream together one cupful of sugar, one-half cupful of short- ening, three eggs well beaten, re- serving t.ue white of one for frost- ing; two cupfuls of flour, flavor with vanilla and one-half teaspoonful each of cloves and nutmeg and one level teaspoonful of cinnamon. Fruit Cake.—Ono and one-half cupfuls of flour, one cupful of brown sugar, one cupful of sour milk, four tablespoonfuls of melted butter, one cupful of chopped raisins, one cupful of chopped nuts, one tea- spoonful of soda, one heaping tea- spoonful of cinnamon, ons -half tea- spoonful of cloves, citron if desired. Stir the dry ingredients together, then add milk to which has been added soda and batter. Blackberry Jam Cake.—Ono cup- ful of sugar, one cupful of black- berry jam, one-half cupful of but- ter, two cupfuls of flour, three eggs, one teaspoonful of soda in one- half cupful of sour create, one tea- spoonful each of allspice, cinnamon, and nusnreg. Cream the butter and sugar, add the jam, and mix ; then add the eggs, well beaten, flour next, then spices, then the cream with the soda. Put together with white caramel icing as follows: One pint white sugar and one cup- ful of sweet milk. Boil it until it drips from spoon ; add butter size of hickory nut, and whip to a cream; put between layers while hot. t Backache is the primary cause of kidney trouble. When the Lack a:hca or becomes weak it is a warnirg that the kidneys are liable to become affected. Heed the warning; check the Backache and dispose of any of a:cca of further trouble. if yon dot:'[, sstions complicatinna aro very apt to arise and the Bret ting you know you will have Dropsy, U:abetes or Bright's llfaeaae, the three most deadly forms of Kidney Trouble. Mr. James Bryant, Arlc-l•st, N.A., was troubled with his Lack and used f)oau'e Kidney Pills, es writes: --" I cannot ay too mush elm .1 he benefit 1 re.:eivecl after using three boss d tka►rr's Kidney Pilk I was greatly troubled with an ac bing pain scrams the anal) of soy back. 1 could not go to work acrd my hock was en weak 1 world have t.. 53.lown. It would gra away for a few dans but wnrrld ciliate return. 1 was advised to try Hess's K•thie Pill' and I keit Ray they completely cum! tri.." [frim 110 cents per but cr % holes lot $1.25 at all Jea err. or ',steed &ret t on receipt of price b) The Doss Kidney P111 0o., Turootc 'be CARE OF CARPETS AND RUGS. To spoil a carpet sweep it with a stiff, half worn broom, but to save a carpet dip your broom in clean, hot suds once a week, then shake it out and hang it up to dry. This will make a broom last almost twice as long as it otherwise would. Rugs should be beaten on the wrong side, then swept on the right side. Spots may be removed by the use of oxgall. or ammonia and water, using a sponge or flannel. Slightly moistened bran is equally as good as salt in brightening rugs and carpets. Vinegar will remove lime spots, soot from an open chimney or the careless handling of stovepipes can be removed by covering thickly with salt, and this afterwards can be brushed up quickly without in- jury to the carpets. Spirits of ammonia, diluted with water, if ap- plied with sponge or flannel to dis- colored spots will often restore the color. Remove ink stains with milk and after soaking up all triat seems pos- sible, either sprinkle thickly with salt or wash with a pure white soap, a clean brush and warm water. For grease spots use powdered magnesia, fuller's earth, or buck- wheat flour. Sprinkle on spots and let it lie until grease is absorbed. Renew the flour or other absorbent material as often as necessary. Housewives are cautioned to look out for the carpet moth early in spring. When carpet moths are dis- covered. after removing all arti- ficial lights in the room, saturate the cracks in the floor with benzine. Wash upper edge of the carpet with solution of corrosive sublimate and alcohol, sixty parts of poison to one part of the alcohol. Ile extremely careful about using this if there are childrahuut. For ien ngrain or three-ply carpets wring a cloth out of hot water and lay it over the edges of binding, and iron with an iron as hot as can he without scorching. This destroys eggs. moth as well as the \V- i it ton and the heavier carpets must be tablespoon of cream to your butter and sugar and the work will take only one -halt the time and makes cake smoother. Save the pieces of tin that conte out of the salmon cans, as they are ofttirnes of such a shape that they can be got into any kind of corner or crack—their uses as a scraper aro unlimited, puts pans, pipes, furniture, molding— anything that 'weds scraping. USEFUL. HINTS. The Cure of Bread Boards.— Bread boards shoud be occasionally scrubbed with a little salt. This helps to considerably whiten the boards. To Clean Dirty Sponges. --Put a piece of soda the size of a walnut and a tablespoonful of salt into a basin, and pour on boiling water. Allow dirty sponges to stand in this for a short time, when they will be quite clean and free from grease. Rinse in cold water. When Buying a Broom.—Heavy brooms should always be selected in preference to light ones for thorough sweeping, as the weight aids in the process. In buying a broom test it by pressing the edge against the floor; if the straws bristle out and bend the broom is a poor one, for they should remain in a firm, solid mass. A Substitute for a Hot -Water Bottle.—Make a bag cf linen or cali- co to measure. 'When made about 16in. by IOin. 511 with nice clean sand and sew up at the end. Place in the oven until thoroughly hot, then slip into a flannel bag. It is then ready for use, and will retain the heat much longer than an earthenware heating jar. In Place of Firewood.—When fire- wood is scarce in the home it is a good plan to eke it out when fire - lighting (or use instead of it) a sheet of newspaper, rolled very tightly and then tied twice, if possible, in a hard knot. One who has tried fire -lighting in this way declares that five or six of these knots will kindle a fire without any firewood. How to Relieve Choking.—Rais- ing the left arm as high as you can will relieve choking much more rapidly than by being thumped on the back. Very frequently at meal times, and when they are at play, children get choked while eating, and the customary way of relieving them is to slap them sharply on the back. The effect of this is to set the obstruction free, so that it can bo swallowed. The same thing can be brought about by raising the left hand of the child as high as pos- sible, and the relief comes much more Babyrapidland its Thumb.—If the baby persists in sucking his fat little thumb, here is a way to in- duce him to stop. Make a pair of light -weight white flannel bags con- siderably larger than the baby's hand, and, when the small child be- gins to suck his thumb, put the lit- tle hands inside the bag, fasten the top of the bag with a shield, and pin to the sleeve of the dress. Baby won't like it, of course, but it will cure him of the habit more quickly than any other method. Many babies wear the little bags until they fall asleep at night, and then they are taken off. SENTENCE SE':RMONS. Half a mind to is equal to a whole mind not to. The glory of love is that it never knows its sown cost. Shifting the blame fur sin does not uproot its sowing. No man can feed his soul who is starving his servants. Only a clothes rack will let dig- nity stand in the way of duty. It takes a tremendous lot of re- ligion to convert a man's pocket. The straight truth would often save a lot of crooked travelling. So many mistake anxiety to wear a crown for endeavor to win cyne. Sotne people get so close to the facts that they cannot see the truth. Nothing costs legs than encour- agement and few things are worth marc. The people who know all about the mind of God aro not always of a good mind It takes more than manicuring to make hands clean fur heavenly in- spection. if our justice were only more even cur generosity would be a good deal less strained. The best way to wait on heaven for bread is to work for your bread in a heavenly spirit. Sot:te men seem to think that the only way to handle straight truth steamed on the under side. A good solution to use in wiping is to make a dagger of it. up the floor befor, putting down There is no harm in desiring to the rugs or carpets is as follows : ( get ahead ; the danger is in our A quarter of a pound of red pepper anxiety to keep our competitors steeped in n gallon of water, to back. which are added two drams of To make the life a serious search for happiness is to lose sight of the strychnia powder. happiness of simply being alive. HAD GIVEN UP ALL MOPE OF LAVING. Heart Trouble Cured by MILIWRN'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS Sire. Andrew Savoy. (irattan'e. N.D.• 'intro : 1u the year of 1`r_h 1 war taken alek and did not think 1 could live say leor;th of time. My trouble was with w heart and people Whites that nothing coup be done for • ease like rniue. 1 coneoltsd the very best doctor. but tLey could do nie nJ good. Vol. seven weeks 1 could hardly cross the door. 1 had no pain, but lira so weak nobody in the world can believe how 1 felt. 1 had ghee up ail I:opes rat lib log and had given my little girl to my meter in- law. t tug day a friend came to tee me, and ran- i -g 015 by name, said, ' l.i.r:e, if 1 were you 1 would try a dose of Mtleurn's Heat and Nerve {'ills as they are good for hent ttoub:e.' My husband got toe a box. but for Iwo date 1 was not feelingany better. but ou the fourth day any husnd said. 'I believe thaw pille are doing you gad.' I list able to say ' Yee. I ri el a good deal batter this morning.' 11. said. ' We11 1 will get you another box right away.' I took two boxes and three doers out of the third .ne. and I was perfectly well and have nut been sick since then. 1 will uevcr he without them in my home f .r Ord kt:uHe if it Lad not been for 9111 - burn's Heart and Nerve fills. 1 would not have been alive cow." Price SO cerate por box. S boxes for$l.'1. 'The T. Milburn Co., Limited. Toronto, Out. NAPLES'GHOULISH TRADE SHROUDS STRIPPED FROM BODIES NEWLY BURIED. Investigation Reveals Appalling Couditions—C amorra Back of Trouble. Astounding revelations aro dis- closed in the official report of the special commission of inquiry into the administration of the cemeter- ies of Naples, Italy. It is proved that, like other branches of muni- cipal service, the administration of the burial grounds is in the toils of the Camorra. Blackmail is levied on relatives of deceased persons, under the threat that the bodies will be removed. GHOULISH TRADE. The municipal contractors have quarried the soil for their own building purposes, and a wholesale traffic is carried on in the sale of floral wreaths, and marble slabs stolen from graves, and linen shrouds stripped from bodies newly buried. Families of position bribe hand- somely to be allowed to carry off their dead clandestinely at night. Bodies sometimes mysteriously dis- appear altogether, and bones and even whole skeletons are stolen by ghouls for the requirements of witchcraft. KITCHEN TIME SAVERS. When cheese is too dry to serve with apple pie, grate the cheese raid spread a layer over the pie when it is still waren (not hot), as that, melts the cheese and makes it tough. When baking individual custards if you will put a thin buttered square of bread in the bottom of INCOMES IS FR.\\CE. Vicomte d'Avenel says that leas than 5.000 Frenchmen have an in- come of $20,000 a year, 1,015 have $40,000. :t50 have *100,000, 120 re- ceive *200.000 and about 50 get 500.000. Although those possess- ing great riches are very few in your cup you will nvt,id the custard Franee, Fe% era, of the richest have being soggy at the bottom of the very large incomes, compared with tunprinces and kings of days past. When creaming sugar and butter Francis I. and Henry II. never bad Ift•r cake, n pinch of `alt will gi•.e rctenttes of more than tib00,000 a the cake s splendid flavor. Add • year. PRIESTS ACCUSED. The commission's report makes grievous charge against certain priests, who are said to be leagued with the Camorrists, and who levied extortionate fees for burial. Many bodies of poor people were doomed to be carried on filthy carts and tossed into n common pit with- out blessing or religious ceremony of any kin... Among the accused clergy is the notorious Camorrist Don Ciro Vittozzo, who Itas been in prison some three years awaiting his trial. The commission of inquiry owes its origin to a ghastly incident, which occurred in July, 1905, when the body of a little girl was secret - 1y removed from its coffin and the bones pulverized for purposes of witchcraft. The ..apses Municipal Council was prosecuted in 1907 as being re- sponsible for the safety of coffins in the municipal burial ground. MORE REVIV1NU. "Moe l" "\Vhatikis it, Pat 1" "Shupposin' Oi w as to fit?" "Yis,,, "Would yes kneel down and put the bottle to me lips?" "Oi would not." "Vez wouldn't 1" "No; I could bring yez to your- self quicker by standing up in front of ycz and drinkin' it meself !" {►ace a LIVER COMPLAINT The chief office of tho liver is the seer*. tion of bile, which is the natural regulator thebowels. of 6t4henever the liver becomes deranged, and the bile duet [dragged, liver complaint is producal, and is manifested by the pre- sence of constipation, pain under the right ehnulder, sallow completion, yellow eyes, slimy -coated tongue and headache, in art• burn, -auntie., e- ur stomach, water brash, catarrh of the stomach, etc. Liver Oomplaint rely be eurrri by avoiding theahive mentioned causes, keep- ing the briweli Ire), and arousing the slug- gish liver with that grand livor regulator, 41YtR COMPLAINT. Mr..1•a Fawcett, Haa.rit"n. :Ad .,it rte.: "Ifavtng sufe•.'1 with liver a pIsint for years and tried sill ..,rte of retn.dt,», 1 was advised to tr iti:to:ra's fats 1 iter I crust say, that after tak.ag two vials of them, i feel quite a new maw a. l rag strongly ro, osnewra theta to assn.,- Priem i °eats per vial or 5 foe 3. t10, at all dsal.•v or leaded attract br •h- T. T. Ili Mar u Ca . f,. m tot, Tvrie W, Nat 1