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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1909-09-09, Page 7CARTERS VER PILLS. CURE SURE CURE FOR TIMIDITY A Faint Heart Is Often a Confession That Its Owner's Soul Is Not Yet Engaged ea Headache and relieve all the troubles bled, Be!•troll and of ood coura e.— dent to a bilious state or the system. such&$ g g g Divines', Nausea, Drowaluet,s, !Mitres* after JC'Iltla N. 25. satin la the Ride, ke. while their most 1eAasYa�-fbooc.0has been shown tocurtail' It was observed by an ancient i SICK that "faint heart no'er won fair lady." Not only so, but "faint heart" never won anything an thinrworth th Headache, yet Carter's Llttlo Liser ruts are v. inning.It stands before life's Malaaluab,eineklun uii..0 curing audppe- seating till. auaoyingcomplatnt,whllethey also open doors hesitant, at the foothills mrrectel►die:,:derectltiiiht..mach.stimulate the of great possibilities, in the pres- 1,rer and reg •iL.le t1:e 1.•.r• c1;. 1: yen it the:omy lured enc a of some supreme achieveulent HEADafraid. 31any a man is poor chiefly be - Ache they would to almost prla•les•tnthose wh0 cause he has been afraid to trust starer trim this diatrcasiugco:,,plains;Lntromp his monP in other hands than his i gn stately theirodueasdees neteud Irere,aud those y who oncotry t 'nwi►ldadtheselittlepillsvaru• OvIt. %hat uninvested millions lie stile insomalyways that they will not be w14 hidden awssy in gunnysacks and ling tOduwithot.tthem. But atter allarekhead tlildOr floors! Al! we need to start ', AC H E a panic is to suddenly increase the number of commercial "faint lathe bans or so many Urea that here 1■ where hearts." All the longed -for corn - we make ova great reale Our pills cure itwhila others do not. nerclal revival waits is a restora- Carier'a Little Liver Pills are sera small and tion of confidence. So great cam very easy to take. one er two pills make a dose. They are strictly ve,;etablo and do not gripe or palgns remain unwaged, great do- syols. Lai, by their gentle action ploaaoan who liverances unwrought, splendid ' bsethe III . continents tinaC uired and unsub- { urea atra 1tZ CC., WA !CIX. q t small Felt L1 Doiel ll hiCh dued because of our faint hearts. A census of such timid folk would doubtless make a long list. but such a list is never quite so depressing Troubled for Years Withas when it includes �whom we have thhthose from e right to i EXPECT BETTER THINGS. CONSTIPATION. "The worst thing about some good reople is that they are such cow - Constipation or costiveness clogs the ards." There is a species of cow- bc►welA, chokes up the natural outlet ardico which goes with respectabil- of Impure !natter, and retains in the ity and belongs to great decorum. system the poisonous effete waste pro- It is not by any means the cowar- d -nets of nature, thereby causing Bilious- dice of the wicked who flee when ness, Headache, Piles, etc. Avoid this no man pursueth " neither is it the serious trouble by the use of cowardice of the pure craven. It MILBURN'S TAXA -LIVER PILLS is the exhibition of those from They act on the bowels and promote `thorn we expect a different spirit— their free and regular action, thus curing ' f a Nicodemus in the council cham- constipation and all the diseases which l.er; of an Erasmus in the reforma- arire from it. tion. Mr. Henry Pearce, 49 Standish Ave., It is said that certain enraged Owen Sound, Ont., writes:—"Haying beasts invariably wait a sign of been troubled for years with constipation, terror in the eyes of their victim and trying various so-called rentedics,, and with the first intimation of which did mo no good, whatever, I was persuaded to try Slituurn's Laxa-Liver 'ills. I have found thein most benr.- ficial; they are, indeed, a splendid pill F and I can heartily recommend them to all 1. • Se LESSON those who suffer from constipation." Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 25c. per vial, or 5 for 51.00, at all dealers, or will be !nailed direct on receipt of price INTERNATIONAL LESSON, by the manufacturers, The T. Milburn SEPT- 12. Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. System in Sewing.—The sewing Lesson XI. Paul's Third Mission - for a family is accomplieshed by sys- ary Journey. Acts 21: 17. tem, as is every other department (;olden '1'exl, Acts :A: 14. of hone economics. Making dress - c:; is not of much importance when I. Homeward Bound from Miletus compared to the necessary stitches —Vs. 1-3. In our last lesson we to be taken every day. A friend left Paul and his companions at of ours works it in this way and it Miletus where he had a long Gon- ia fine: She has a sewing bag in fe.rence with the Ephesian lidera. every roost of her small home, sup- After a sad parting Paul's company plied with necessary articles. In embarked again, on Sunday morn - the kitchen a muslin bag with a ing, May 1, for they must take tho draw string so it can bo launder- vessel when it was ready to sail. ecu easily and in it towels and dish Coos their first port, was forty • towels ready to hen or ironing i mles south of Miletus. It is a small holders ready to make, with thread, island off the coast of Carta in the thimble and needles ready thread -southwest corner of Asia Minor. ed In her bedroom a batt to cor Tho next day they sailed fifty ' respond with the cretonne drapings miles to Rhodes (v, i.), an island of tho room ; in another a bag with southetst of Coos, off the South- all articles for crochet or knitting. ern coast of Carta. Here they The one point she emphasizes is to have everything ready, for we all know how many idle minutes are spent because "nothing is ready to sew." If you say that the mak- ing of all these hags is quite an item, then get pretty baskets at the store, also thimbles at the same price. In this way all you church and common sewing is done and you hardly know it. Had Stomach Cramps Would Roll on the Floor in Agony. GROSSED THE CHANNEL) "Although I am confident that I can continue fur au hour and a half, _ that 1 night indeed return to Cala- is, 1 cannot resist the opportunity HLERIO'T TELLS 'fHE !+TORI' 0)' to make a landing upon this green ins multi'.spot. "Once more I turn my aeroplane, and, describing a half circle, 1 en- ter the opening and find myself Gives a Vivid Picture of the Mid- again over dry land. Avoiding the Air Trip Across Englishred buildings 4311 my right, I at-- Chauutltempt a landing, but the wind . ht,t h terror the animal springs to catches me and whirls mo round the attack. Thus the forces of evil "It is more important to be the two or three times. watch for some sign of weakening first to cross the L'ha.inol by aero- "At. once I stop my motor and in ';' the part of those who are set to lane than to have wu,► a prize of stautiy my machine falls straight defend I the right. The mere 1,OJ0. Nevertheless, l mst tips! upon the land from a height of 20 metreswothree (65 feet. Int or ' st ( Mir ,mo ' 'he cheek,s enterprise ►•' of ! Lunching of a acknowledge the en e p iso seconds I ata safe upon our store.I evidence of faint-heartedness, is all Loudon Daily Mail and its recog- 1 y I Soldiers in khaki run up, and • the signal the enemy needs. i ration of the importance of aviation But to say that men and causes in the oiler of the prize which 1 a policeman. Two of my co:upatri- are defeated by faint-heartedness is have had the honor to win. cts are on the spot. They kiss my like ascribing death to "heart fail- "1 am glad 1 have won it. I am cheeky. Tho conclusion of my flight ure." Thequestion still remains everw•helms me. I had nothing to more than happy that I have cross - as to what induced the faintness• cd the Channel. At first I prumis say, but accept tho congratulations "Conscience," perhaps which l cat my wife I would nut slake the of the representatives of The Lc1n "makes cowards of us all." There attempt; then I determined that don Daily Mail and accompany is no moral weakener like a sense if one failed I would be the first to them to th c Lord 11'nrden Hotel. of personal demerit. Few of usconic. And I am here. "Thus ended my flight across the can carr • comfortabl • and jauntily Channel." y a guilty soul. That state f mind PREPARATIONS FOR START. which needs no accuser acts like an "At. 2.30 on Sunday I rose at the 4' inward paralysis upon Terminus Hotel, at Calais, and at BABY 1•5. BATTLESHIPS. three o'clock departed with my friend, M. Le Blanc, in a motor car to Barques. On our way wo noted that the weather was favorable to my el:(leavor. We therefore order- ed the torpedo destroyer Escopette, generously placed at my disposal by our Government, to start. "At 3.30 a.m. we went to the gar- age and examined the aeroplane, which is my eleventh. I started the engine and found that it worked well. All was ready for the start. "At `our o'clack I took my seat the aeroplane and made a trial night of. one quarter of an hour around Calais and its environs. The circuit was about fifteen kilometres (9 miles). Having completed it, I descended upon the spot on the cliff from which I intended to start. "Here I waited for the sun to cone out, the conditions of 'tile London Daily Mail prize requiring that I should fly between sunri::c and sunset. "At 4.3C wo could see all round. Daylight had come. M. Le Blanc endeavored to see the coast of Eng- land, but could not. A lig`lt breeze from the southwest was blowing. The air was clear. THE SOUL'S BEST POWERS. Faint-heartedness indicates also want of conviction. Some one says that a bank never succeeds utast its president takes it to bed with him. But this is, only another way of saying that a man must believe tremendously in the work to which he sets himself. "He starved his business," explained a mutual friend by way of accounting for a certain commercial failure. "He never put himself into it." Nor can a man put himself into his task until he believes in his task. But the fundamental cure of cowardice must be had from God. To be convinced of His immense rnulence of resource, to know that He has a greater stake in us than we have in ourselves, to believe that He never sends His children on fools' errands is one part of a sure cure for timidity. "The secret (.t the Lord is with those that fear Hint." And those who in the best sense fear the Lord are not afraid cf anybody else. George Clarke Peck. D. D. standing, R. V. "early," who re- sided in Jerusalem. but seems to have met Paul and his companions at Ccsarea. This was a wise plan, for they would be under the protec- tion of a devoted Jewish Chris- tian well known and doubtless prominent in the Jewish church, but who also bad been brought up in a Greek country. It is also pos- sible that at this crowded festival the travelers might not easily have obtained comfortable lodgings. The brethren received us gladly, referring to private and personal greetings at Mnason's house, which trust have been very affectionate and enthusiastic; while the more formal reception took place the next day at the home of James. 4 WONDERFUL ROCK GARDEN. Englishman ifas a Reproduction of the Matterhorn. The largest rock garden in Eng- land is that. of Sir Frank Crisp, at Friar Park, Henley. It is a faith- ful reproduction of the Matterhorn changed vessels, passed along the ('tl a scale of about three acres• shores of Cyprus, where Paul andSeven thousand tons of limestone Barnabas preached the gospel in was brought from Yorkshire to their early clays. There were make it. Christians there even before Ste -The snow sapped peak is repre- phen's martyrdom. (For incidents acnted by quartz. Below it are see Acts 11: 19, 20; 13: 4; 15: 39.) thousands upon thousands of a.pino 3. And landed at Tyre, the con- flowers growing :n pockets between rrercial emporium of Phenicia on the rocks and filling every chink in t}.o northern borders of Palestine. the trails that ascend the noun• II. Paul's Experiences at Tyre.— thin. There mast bo two hundred Vs. 3-6. Tyre was about three hun- different species in bloom at once. dred and fifty miles from Patera, M the base of the mountain, says and could be reached in three or Country .Life in An erica, is a minia- f( ur days. tore Swissv s chalet, where one may After the seven days the people so. and enjoy the scene, compering bade Paul and his companions n nlthe main features with a little most affectionate farewell, accc►m bronze model of the Matterhorn passing hits to the ship. 1t is in which Sir Frank had innde for the trresting to note that even the chil- entertainment of his guests. A dren went with their parents to brook courses down the mountain the ship. It reveals a new note in side and just before it reaches the Paul's character, that the great chalet it forms a pretty cascade and nen, busy with world wide and then spreads out at your feet into centuries long duties attracted the a miniature inks decorated with Mr. Wm. Krsnth, contractor and pygmy, primroses, gentians and love of the children. builder, Owen Sound, Ont., writes:—Ili.—Paul's Experiences nt C'csa- other alpine flowers, "Having read some of the testimonial. lea.- Vs. 6-14. 6. We took ship. — of tures effected by Dr. Fowler's Extract The first day from Tyre brought of Wild Strawberry, I thought it advis-the travelers thirty !sties to Ftole CHINESE EATING -STILLS. able to say a word of praise for its merits. n.ais (named from Ptolemy), the The eating -stall is quite an insti- t3orde years ago I was much troubled ancient Accho, the modern Acre. tution in China. says a writer in with stomach trouble and cramps. I Here they greeted the ('hristians, the Wide World ,Magazine, and the used to roll on the floor in agony, and on and the next day they sailed thirty average Chinaman thinks nothing onoa- ,n I went into a faint after or forty miles to Cesarca (named of stopping and having a feed at a sufferA,, intensely for four hours. A from Cesar), the Roman capital of street restaurant. The proprietor short tine alter this. in driving to town, Judea and the official residence of Carries the whole of his stock in I was attacked again and had to lie down its governors. Here lived the Ro- 1 1,8(10 on his shoulders. The stall in my rig, seeking relief. man centurion who was led to i,aelf consists of two cylindrical "When i reached the drug store I Christ by Peter.d visitHere were the loxes attached to a yoke or pole. asked the druggist for a quick remedy headquarters of Philip, the es -tinge- One of these boxes usually contains and laid behind the counter until relief came. The remedy I received from the list fur this region. This was the a fire, on which John cooks weird Paul had pai druggist 1) was r. Pewter's Extract of thir<ininti0s into the composition of Wild Strawberry. Whenever, after that city. Not long after this Iie was which it is unwise to enquire, for time, 1 felt cramps coming on, I found here for trial, and retrained for two the l'hinaman halt a scientific appe- spcedy relief in the above mentioned years in prison before he was sent tite—that is to say. he will eat any - remedy, and 1 am now cured of this to Rome. thing wayreadfumalady. The bottle is small,thing that in any forms food. IV. Arrival at Jerusalem. Vs. 15- Squeamishness is a sensation un - but its contents effect a marvelous cure. 1 15 11'o took up our enrriaRPs, known to him. The keepers. of the., I can recommend it highly for the cure1 of cramps." •►n early English word foul the street stalls sell good fruit, excel - Dr. Fowler's Eetraet of Wibt St taw. verb "carry' of (,t.r modern ward lent pasteries And simply delicious berry has been on the market for Gt }Faro. baggage is fron. " ;c hag," or lug- ss at a price so low that it It is not a new and untried remedy., gage from "lug." To Jerusalem a would a.tonish even the proprietor Ask for it and insist oa getting what you jt.nrne% of r ixty (our nmil"s accord- ( 1 an It alien re•'tniirant. . ask for. llefuse substitutes. They're inz to I:n.nsay. dangerous. Here they 'tnot as gn".t to the .-` +'I' `— —' !'rice 35 cents. tlanufae'ured only by house of Manson of ('yprus, an old it•s .i toss-up between the brag• Chef. lllilbiu.uCo., Limited, Toronto, Oat.. disciple, not aged, but of long ging man and the nagginj woman. Princess Juliana Worth More Than Dreadnoughts to Holland. Little Juliana of Holland is great- er than any navy as a peace insur- ance policy in favor of the Dutch. Let the other nations build Dread- noughts and pay war taxes, writes Frederick Palmer in Collier's. Com- fortable and unchanging, richer in the per capita wealth they draw. from their colonies than the Brit- ish, all the Dutch ask is to keep or wearing wooden thrice. washing the pavements, starching the door- steps and knitting while the clocks 41111141410•44.410#44 Th Homej 161444.11441.64414116.0000 VEGETABLE DISHES. In boiling beets great care must Le taken not to let the vegetable "bleed" out its juices until it has a palid and uninviting appearance. Wash the beets, rubbing them care- fullyt • hand to withal of the the to dislodge dirt, but not so hard aa to bruise the tender skin. Drop into fresh, cold water as you clean tlletn. Put into a sauce pan of salt ed boiling water and cook briskly for an hour. Drain, scrape, slice and serve iu a deep dish with melt- ed butter poured over them. They aro best when a tablespoonful of hot vinegar is added to the melted but- ter. Creamed Beets.—Select the smal- ler beets and cook with two inches of the stenn on to prevent bleeding. Have ready a cupful of cream, heated, with a pinch of soda. Rub the skin off, top and tail the beets, and slice them thin into the cream, setting the saucepan containing it to a pan of boiling water. When all are in stir in a tablespoonful of butter rubbed into ono of flour. pepper, salt and a teaspoonful, each of sugar and onion juice. Sim- mer two minutes to cook the flour, and dish. Stewed Carrots.—Wash, scrape off the skin, cut into dice and lea"e in cold water for half an hour. Put in the inner compartment of a dou- ble boiler wit:. no water upon them 1 Caa Do Her Own Work Ncw. Doctor Said She Had Heart Troubie. weighed 125 Pounds. Now Weighs 183. \trs. M. Mci;ann. Debeo Junction, N.B., writes -"1 wish to tell you whet Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills have done for rue. f hree years ago I was so run down 1 could I1 )t do my own work. 1 went to a d.,:tor, and he told me 1 had heart tr„i.1,ie ant that my nerves were all unstrung 1 took his medicine, as ha ordered me to do. but it did me no good. 1 then started to take Milburn's heart and Nerve Pills, and had only taken one box before fended to feel better co I con- tinued their use until 1 had taken several boxes, and I am now strong and well and able to do my own work. When 1 co•nmenced taking your pills I weighed 125 pounds, and now weigh 185 and have given birth to a lotely daughter, which was a happy thing in the family. When 1 commenced taking Milburn's Heart and Nerve !'ills, I could not go up- stairs without resting before 1 got to the top. I can now go up without any trouble.” Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are 50 cents per box, or 3 boxes for SI.25, at all dealers, or mailed direct on re •eipt of price by Tho T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Out. place this in the centre of the dish. To a pint of the water in which the beans wee boiled add a gill of molasses and e. saltspoonful of French mustard. Mix well and pour this over the beans and pork. Cov- e- the dish and bake in asteady oven for six hours. MEAT DISHES. Delicious Veal.—rake a steak from the round bone, cut off all the fat, and cut out the bone. Cut in- to pieces the do:.ired size, then dip first in crumbs, then egg, then in crumbs again. Fry in an iron spid- except that which clings to them af- er till a light brown, cover and tick in their anus little neutral eor- ter washing. Cover closely and turn a low flame for a few minutes, ver behind the dikes as they gaze cook tender. An hour should be then pour in enough milk to cover nt the picture of their little Juli- long enough for this. Turn into a the meat, place in the oven for one ana on the lap of their 1''ilhelmina. deep dish, pepper and salt, and hour. The milk will all be absorb - They are the happiest pooplo in cover with a good white sauce. eel by the stent and the meat will Europe. Mashed Carrots. --Scrape and be so tender only a fork will be Tho Orange stood in little Juli- slice, and boil in two waters. Drain, needed to cut it Always season ana is about as thin as that of the rub through a colander, and mash bread crumbs before breadening Stuarts in Edward of England and with a potato beetle. Beat light any pleat. the 'dayflower blood in some of the with a tablespoonful of melted but- Beefsteak Pudding.—Lino a dish 10.000.000 descendants of the ori- ter, add salt and pepper and serve with thin suet crust, cut some steak ginal passenger list. Her father is plot into slices, prix a little pepper and Lerman, her grandmother is Rus- Cauliflower au Gratin.—Cut a salt together, and dip slices into Sinn, but she is all Dutch to the large cauliflower into eight pieces it Then place around the dish in Dutch. The;' have made her so by and boil te-ider in salted water. layers till nearly full. Fill the mid - law and by faith. Drain, lay iu a deep pudding dish, dle with oysters or mushrooms, tie "BEGINS THE FLIGHT. In her Looks and acts they see a sterns down and pour over it a cloth over it tightly, and boil for "Everything was prepared. I was Some of their national traits, plain white sauce into which two three hours, but do not let the am the Silent, which is no comli dressed as I am as this moment, a Sine even find a likeness to 11 pli hard boiled eggs have been chop- water in pan reach to top of dish, 'khaki' jacket line. with wool for - ped. Sprinkle with bread crumbs which should bo a deep bowl. Ment to her beauty, er,rding to warmth over my tweed clothes and t!3' standards of outsid and bake to a light brown. Baked Steak.—Butter the drip - beneath my engineer's suit of bl:.e refuses to sit ld her rattle nt the nurse's commend and stiffens her different celery may be utilized for half inch thick, in pan, cut an on - this dish. Cut into half inch hits ion over top season with salt, pep - lips and sets her chin firmly. That and put in ice cold water for an per, and butter; bake in a quick is character—Dutch character.. hour. Stew tender in slightly salt- oven for about fifteen minutes. Then * ed water. !)rain and transfer to make sauce by straining the liquor another saucepan containing a cup- from a can of tomatoes, thicken li- ful of heated milk, thicken it wtut quor with a little flour, season with a tablespoonful of butter, rubbed in salt, cayenne pepper, and a tea - a teaspoonful of flour. and stir to spoonful of sugar; bring to a boil a boil. Mix the celery well with and pour over steak when ready this, season with pepper and salt, to serve. A club, round, or sir - heat all together for one minute, loin steak may be prepared in this and serve. way. Corn Pudding.—Mix together two Smothered Chicken. — Prepare Cupfuls of finely chopped corn, two chicken l s for frying, roll each beaten eggs, a half a pint of milk, piece separately in flour, and place a pinch of soda, a tablespoonful of into hot iron skillet into which has melted butter, and a tablespoonful been placed two tablespoonfuls of of sugar. Grease a shallow baking melted butter. Salt and pour over tin, turn the mixture into this, all one-half cupful of rich sweet sprinkle with buttered bread cream. Cover tightly and place in crumbs, cover and bake for half an a moderately hot oven, bake until hour. then uncover and brown. tender, remove the cover from the Boiled Onions.—Peel and lay for chicken, and let it brown for a few ar hour in cold water. Boil in two moments. This is an excellent way waters until tender.Drain, to cook chicken, both young and sprinkle with pepper and salt ; put old. into a deep vegetable dish and pour over them a great spoonful of melt- THE SEWING ROOM. ed Nutter. To Mend Woolen Clothes. — To Pea Croquettes.—Hent n can of mend woolen clothing, use ravel - peas and while hot run through the Ings of same goods, and if neatly vegetable press. Beat to a smooth done the mend will bo almost iu- paste with a table spoonful of but- visible. ter and two of flour. Pepper and Veranda Work.—A pleasant oceu- salt to taste, drop in a dish of on- ration for the veranda is the de - ion juice; lastly, heat in a well cc,ration of bedroom towels. Boiling does not harm them as l 't. might a finer piece of work accidentally left in the dust, and it is industry that calls for little skill. Scalloping the hems in buttonhole stitch will add a daintiness to a plain towel, and the design can be quite easily marked by using the end of a spool of ootton and a pencil. Monograms or a simple conventional figs,re may be embroidered above the hems. The buttonholing alone, however, is pretty. cotton overalls. My close -fitting cap was fastened over my head ar.d ears. I had neither eaten nor drunk anything since I rose. My thoughts were only upon the flight, and my determination to accomp- lish it this morning. "4.35! Tout est pretl Le Blanc gives the signal and in an instant l ant in the air my engine making 1,200 revolutions—abnost its high- est speed—in order that I may get Quickly over the telegraph wires along the edge of the (.tiff. As soon as I ani over the cliff I reduce my speed. There is now no need to force my engine. "I begin my flight, steady and sure, towards the coast of England. 1 have no apprehensions, no sensa- tions, pas du tout. "The Escopette has aeon me. She is driving ahead at full speed. She makes perhaps 42 kilometres (about 26 miles) an hour. What mattersl i aro making at least 68 kilometres (t2 miles). "Rapidly I overtake her, travel- ing at a height of 80 metres (about 250 feet). "The moment is supreme, yet i surprise myself by feeling no exul- tation. Below me is the sea, the surface disturbed by the wind, which is now freshening. The mo- tion of the waves beneath me is not pleasant. I drive on. '"fen minutes have gone. I have passed the destroyer, and I turn my head to ace whether I am pro- ceeding in the right direction. I am amazed. There is nothing to be seen, neither the torpedo -destroyer, nor France, nor England. I am alone. I can see nothing at all — ricn du tout ! "For ten minutes I ant lost. It is a strange position, to he alone, un- guided, withc.nt compass. in the air over the middle of the Channel. "I touch nothing. My hands and feet rest lightly on the levers. I let the aeroplane take its own course. Iseare not whither it goes. FIRST SIGHT OF BRITAIN. HURRYING l i I M :1 LITTLE. Tho steamer was moving very slowly up the broad, swift river. Several miles ahead, where there was a bend, a sharp point of land projected a considerable distance into the stream. It had been in sight nearly an hour. On the r.pper deck sat a young couple, engaged to earnest conversation. "Lucinda," he was saying, "we've known each other a long time, haven't wei" "Yes." she answerea. "Five or six years nt least, isn't it1" "I believe so." "Don't you think a girl ought to know a fellow pretty well by that time 1" "Why, yes, of course." "You've never heard anything bad about mc, have you 7" "No." "And in five or six years a young man ought to know a girl pretty w ell, oughtn't her" "I suppose so." "We've been together a good deal, too, Lucinda." Then there was a long pause. "And, of course, you must have suspected—" Another protracted silence. "Anybody would naturally sus- pect—though I've never been in a position until lately --and yet my mind has been made •lp all the time —and I can't tell you how much I— r Tl,en Lucinda spoke. "Henry," she said, "(M you know you remind me of this steamboat 7" "Er ---how 7" "1t takes you such a long time to get to the point." 4' VILLAGE RULED BY WOMEN. "Fur ten minutes I continue, net- Tho village of Froissy, near Paris, furnishes arguments for the ther rising nor falling, nor turning. Suffragist cause in that nearly nil And then, twenty minutes after I the important posts are filled by have left tho French coast, I see !(omen. Passengers alighting at the green cliffs of Dover, the castle, the railway station are met by a and away to the west to spot where woman, who is stationmaster. I had intended to land. "What. can I do? i., 1.. e»iaent `1►b ir bart'slt}shopnben sd is nlthe y a gnotice that the wind has taken me out, of that "Mlle. Jeanne" will "hence - my course. I am almost nt St. forth shave her customers only on Margaret's Bay, and going in the Tuesdays and Fridays. as she has direction of the Goodwin Sands. undertaken other work." At the "Now it is time to attend to the host-off►eo the local telegraph nes- steering. I press the lever with my snnger and postman, Mme. Lcssob- foot and turn easily towards the re. is met. She walks on nn average west, reversing the direction in twenty miles n day. The munici- which i nm travelling. Now, indeed hal drummer is a woman in her i am in diffc•ultics, for the wind r.inetieth year. here by the cliffs is much stronger, and my speed is reduced as I fight —"—^'f against it. Yet my beautiful aro- THEN YOU LI, FIND OUT. plane responds Stilt steadily 1 fly "Tell roes" said the lovelorn a est wards, hoping to crass the har- youth, "what's the hest way to find b.•r and reach the Shakespeare out what is woman thinks of you 1" Cliff. Again the wind blow. i "Mn. ry her," replied Peckham, r (0 an opening in t ► c cliff. pl omptly. whipped egg. Stir in a vessel set within another of boiling water un- til hot all through and set away un- til cold. Mold into croquettes, dip into beaten egg, and cracker crumbs; leave on ice for half an hour before frying in deep fat. Drain and serve hot. Steamed Peas.—A most delicious way of cooking canned peas is to put them in a basin without any water and place in a steamer. It wilt require half an hour to conk them by this method. When tend- er season we'l with butter, salt, pepper and hot milk. Serve as hot as ossible. If dried peeve are used they shrnticd be soaked over night in cold water. In the morning put them on and parboil. Drain and put into fresh water. Cook until tender. Stewed Tomatoes.—Put n quart BE SURE AND SEE THE TRADE MARK: ee"The e. ;. Maple Leaf" ♦++♦++♦♦+♦ Mrs. A.:': ! ,,,re of tomatoes over the fire in an en- + + Mack foull 13. ameled saucepan—never in tin. i WEAK BACK + writes:"For • • .re Stew fast twenty minutes. Season .4.' FOR YE.;.:S. ♦ 1 was tr, , •d wit!. n lump of butter rolled in 4.-++4+.+4-44+0,tentimee1Lave flour, a tablespoonful of sugar, salt laid in Led for and pepper to taste. Stew five n►in- day t, sing scarcely able to turn rnv'clf Ides longer and servo. Home cooks any 1 have also been a great at.'`ercr substitute fine dry crumbs for v'!.ite tr•.'ia; to performenv hoese!.old flour. Unless some thickening is duties. '1 had doctors attending mew ith- used the tomatoes will be water • out avail and tned liniments and plasters, but nothing seemed to do me any grxlti. and thin. my was about to give up in despair when Boston Baked Beans. --Soak a y husband in(11►ced me to try Donn'- quart of beans in cold water all kidney fills, and after using two „ores night. in the morni'Ig soak then! I ani now well and aide to do my work. for two hours in warm water. Drain i am positive Dean's Kidney l'ilis are all that eonelaim for them and I would and rut into a pot with enough a•1vi•..' slI kidney sufferers to give them a eater to cover thorn and bpi rg th'm Lir trill." slowly to a boil. W.tit n t'''v aro Pr;re, 51) cent,! per box. 3 bores for tender turn them into a (1(,'p bake $1.2 At all dewier.. orwill be mailed dish. first peering •;rf •'.,:rp'i1 f.r."e(•ii. I cetpt.of'{'rice, I,yThe T, Mil- v.•afer. (rut gavlies Li:a a i i.,,.::,t, Ont.,. (►t;t. ,r pisco of par -boiled salt pork, and /u ui,.c,uig alccify "lh,an