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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1909-09-16, Page 7Th Homej ..�ahaAaaaaadaaosaparA44141 ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter's Little Liver fills. Must Dear Signature of Sec 141c-S;t:01:, 1•.•r_ rper Ik?ow. Yer7 email and a .. :y to talo as sogsr. FC!1 HEADACHE. CARTERS FFR t' Zt?iESS. ruR EllICUSKESt. fC9 TQR?10 LIVER. Ft%il C614STI"ATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. Ffl;l THE COMPLEXION (sr.nt iYT. uJ.1r...rsy- .•U r. .n HlhCerro larat7 ,X CURL SICK HEADACHE. 1TTLE IVES PILL*. Suffered for Thirty Years With Catarrh of The Stomach. • Mr. John Raitt. 71 Coursol St., Mont- real, Que., has used atilburn's Laxa-Liver fills and recommends them to all his friends. Ile writes:—"I take pleasure in writing you concertino the great value I have received in using Milburn's Laxa- Liver Pills for Catarrh of the Stomach, with which I have been a sufferer for thirty years. I used five bottles and they made me all right. I also had a very severe attack of LA Grippe, and a few doses acted so quickly that it was un- necessary to call in a doctor to cure me. For the small sum of 25 centa wo have our own doctor when we have Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills." Price 25 cents per vial, or 5 for 51.00, at all dealers, or :nailed direct on re- ceipt of price by 'f ho T. Milburn Co. Limited, Toronto, Ont. {SHALE SRTANGI.ED ITSELF. Cause of the Trouble to the Tele- graph ('able. From Seattle comes a remarkable story, brought into port by the cable repair ship Burnside. The Burnside had been sent north along tine coast of Alaska to repair the cable, because during the last win- ter difficulty had been experienced in sending and receiving messages. The vessel picked up the cable connecting Valdez and Sitka a few miles off Cook Inlet not far from Sitka. The crew never had such a time hauling a cable on board as they did that day on the Alaska coast. Finally the cause of the great weight was found. Some time during the winter a whale. feeding on the bottom of the ocean, with wide-open mouth col- lided with the wire rope. Unable to shake the big wire from the mass of whalebone in its jaws, the big fish "turned turtle," rolled over once, turned round, rolled again and dived. In these few moments the fish proved himself his own hangman, for the cable was twisted tighter about the head of the whale than any mortal could have twisted it w it h the most powerful machinery. The whale drowned and the car- cass was devoured on the bottom of the ocean by other fish. The stew of the Burnside hauled up an immense load of whalebone, and found a great twist in the govern- ment cable that had been the cause of the unusual difficulty in sending messages to and from either end of the rope. Fo(t i PIMPLES, ANI, DD stoop UBE B. B. B. i1tnples are invariably dart to bad of unpovenaleed blood and wu.;e not at- tended with fatal resells. are net•crthelesa I•e. oliarty distretaittg to the average person. Miss F. I, fang, I•:+'erhasv. Sisk.. rites "My face end neck Kerr rov'rd with pimples 1 tried all kinds of reme- dies. but they did me no g'xxl. I went to n.anv doctors but they could nut sure int. I then tried Burdock 11100-.1 !titters and I moat say it is a wunAerful risme-1)- 10r en.e.ivfor the mire of pint:es.'• 1 or wile at all dealers. Mannfart,trt•rt only by The T. 11dburn l o l listed iuronto, (tut. TO MAKE A BETTER WORLD Proper Solicitude For Others Is the Duty of Every Christian. We that aro strong ought to bear tte infirmities of the weak, and nut please ourselves. Let every one of lir please his neighbor for his good to edification, for even Christ pleas- ed not himself.—Romans xv. 1, 2, 3. Certain capacious critics have ob- jected to religion on the ground that it chiefly has to do with the world to come and not with our pre- sent work in this world. This is untrue. Religion has not chiefly to do with another world. It has chiefly to do with right living now and here, our present duty to ourselves, to Cod and to our neigh- bor. We all know that it is not an easy thing to live as we should. At the best it is hard to order our lives aright. Wo need the aid of every- thing that can help us to this, and then, even, we will sadly come short of MIR WHOLE DUTY TO GOD, to ourselves and to those around us. We certainly cannot afford to dis- pense with any help to holiness. To lessen or destroy any assistance to gond conduct would be to lessen the safety of society and the value of life. Now, it is certain that "the fear of God" is a restraint and a powerful restraint to many peo- ple, as it should be. To lessen or destroy in one's mind all fear of "a certain looking -for of judgment" would seriously imperil the secur- ity of society. As to this there can he no question. Nor can there be any question that to rob human kind of the consolations of Christi- anity would be an irreparable loss, us was so pathetically admitted by John Stuart Mill. No, it would not be better, or anything like as well, for people to give time and thought to temporal affairs without any regard to their eternal well being. It might as well lie said that it would be better to bring up a boy without regard to his ever being a man. His whole training has reference to the fu- ture, and what he is to be and do. Nor should it bo planned only with reference to the brief years of his mortal life, but with regard to what he will bo THE S. S. LESSON INTERN:1TION.1L LESSON, SEPT. 19. Lesson \11. 'third Quarterly Re- view. Golden Text, Acts 19: 20. SIMPLE PLANS FOR REVIEW. Not very long ago Bishop Quayle, with great wisdom, advised the Sunday school teachers of Method- ism to regard each Review as a bird's-eye view of a large land- scape, not as a process of analysis 01 dissection. In travelling along a road we aro taken up with first this and then that; we see things by fragments. The Review cones to show us that we are not study- ing things, but a thing, to give to us the vision of the whole. The bish- op described a learned man who scold break up a human life in all its fragments; physiology, anatomy, neurology, psychology, nerve, muscle, valve, gray matter, white matter, thought, affection, voli- tion. But what society and Cod need is not the fragments of a man, but the living man ; and what wo need from our quarter's lessons is not eleven bits of lessons, but the one great, vital truth. That truth in this case hangs on the little word which our Golden Text be- gins: So—"So mightily grew the word of God and prevailed." These words were first written in connec- tion with the story of Paul's ad- ventures at Ephesus, but they ap- ply equally to all the lessons. If we ask, "How did the word of Ood grow mightily and prevail 1'' we may find in our eleven succes- sive Golden Texts the gist of our replies. Christianity grows, in the first place (Lesson f.), by God's direct impulse and guidance, by the obedi- ence of his servants, and by the hospitality of honest inquirers. Clod sent the message. "Come over into ?Macedonia" : Paul went "immedi- ately"; Lydia attended to his teachings and was blessed and made a blessing. In the second place (Lesson 1i.) the growth of the word of God de- pends on saving faith in the Lord Jesui ('hrist, which, as we have previously noted, consists of three things: belief in a doctrine, depend• cnce on a premiss, and fidelity to a Person. Lesson Iii. shows how the study of God's written Word, searching the Scriptures. brings about the progress of his cause. The essential spirituality of all true worship come, to our notice 1.' Lesson iV. Ttere cnn he no real worship except "in spirit and in tr eth.'' The story of Lesson V. is a bean- tifid exemplification of its G•.1den Text - a world full of tribulation : r Saviour Pell of helpfulness and cheer. Lesson VI. g;:ves in detail inslrne- t ions hew to live an effective l'hris- ti to :ire by doing n,• evil and /'ter hit which is good. The 1 ',editions in Ephesus n hi' It Lr„ne t r.h..nt the merit Bring of the na.?,p .,f /he i.•,rd .trans (Lesson Vll 1 1. i:1 brinst al o::t +i r.ilar re sults vter%tl ,••re. T.ess,.n VIII. slu.ws !.,w apparent 1defeat is turned by God into real SEASONABLE RECIPES. Muskmelon Punch.—Press the pulp of fine flavored Musk melons through a sieve until you have a Some marry for money, sonic for quart of juice. Add half the gator- F g beauty, but an eccentric old gentle- tity of ice water and the juice of b man named Tasino, who lives in a two leptons. Sweeten to taste, village hard by Naples, Italy, cares strain, and servo with cracked ice. i two of chopped ca'idied pineapple. for neither !auks nor beauty. Tired Pineapple Punch.—One cupful of , rind two of chopped almonds. When ri single blessedness, he offered his chopped pineapple, three sliced le- i the sugar is dissolved set back on hand and purse to the lady who mous, and one large orange also the range and let it cool slowly half could best cook his pet delicacy, sliced. Add one heaping cupful of an hour. When the apples are macaroni. granulated sugar and pound well ; . done put in little glass saucers, tak- ing care not to break the apples. n:an in the village, so.a great flut- and strain. Chill thoroughly before 'Fill with the cooked sweets and ter was caused by his announce serving. pour the syrup over them. Serve went, and no fewer than 120 ladies Hann (Southern).—Slice of ham cold with whipped cream. entered the contest. Tasino him - one inch thick. Have the skillet sc If acted as judge, and a week 'at- one AND EVER. smoking hot. Put in haat and sear CLEANING. rr led the prize-winner—a respec- both sides; turn constantly until a table middle-aged widow—to the The supposition that Christianity golden brown. Lower the fire, add Uses of Milk in Cleaning. — It altar. has to do only with the life of the ere tablespoonful sugar; spread it sill clean piano keys beautifully. AN HEIRESS PREFERRED. -� aurid to come is altogether a min well over the top of the ham. Cover It will take discolorations from gilt taabove all, knows, the the teachings ertise- tightly and let cook slowly for mirror and picture frames. It will rrerlttudwill y of matrimonial lonsoruev queerA SECRETS OF WINE -TASTERS. Bible—andtwenty minutes. � take out ink spots of longstanding. el Jesus Christ—abounds in god Ice Tea.—Steep required amount! Used in stareb til give glues like lands "wants" in the sshape Thisf is from us Can Tell the Region Where {{'ire tciyice as to right living now and that obtained in laundry. UsedWas Made by the Odor. here in this world, which if fully ; el tea in boiling water for five min- with blueing for lace curtains will Bengal journal : "Wanted for mar- A recent French writer onumer- utes. four tea off the leases and � nage, a fairgirl Hindu, kayastha, • in practice would make human make them look like new. g ' ales some of theprecautions that dilute with amount ofe cold wards Picture Frames. --For gilt frames for a graduate student. Very re life a thousand tines better, safer Imust be observed bya good wine- tandea sweeter than it is. Take the fulnecl with cracked ssa.ry. Fill gice. SC3Put oa }slice use the water in which onions have speetable heiress apparent prefer- teaching of the text as an example: t. sprig been boiled, as it will restore their red. Address sharp, confidential taster. He must, in the first place, I limon and a s ri• of mint in each " have been lusting for some little "Let every one of us please his glass andpour in the tea—a most: Loose dust that has 15, e�c „ time,and he must not be a smok- fo• r even for his good to edification, settled on picture frames and mold- • Tho word kayastha refers to eel even Christ pleased not Him - Cool drink. caste but the idea of n "fair Hin- et. Certain powerful flavors alter Cool Drinks.—Make strong coffee ings may best be removed with a du" who is an "heiress the taste of the vino entirely, and self." by using one heaping tablespoonful broom covered with flannel or is distinctlyamusingto apparent"sh must be avoided. Such are the salt Think what a blessed thing it tit coffee to each half cup of boil- cheesecloth, as it will cling to the relishes used to revive a jaded would he if every man, woman and ingwater. Let boil, then add half cloth and not be scattered over the ideas. thirst,and even the nuts and child the world over would begin a upful of cold water. Strain and, The following requisition appear - cheese room. cheese recommended by some to doing this to -day. Why, in such add to it an equal onion o[ boil -I To Clean Silver —To clean silver td in a paper hailing from the \Vest _ lovers case every house and home on earth ing hot milk, sweeten slightly, and on dressing table, jewelry, or any af withngla°d: to\matrilmony,ediate hand taster mf igood roes his, taskwith would be lightened and sanctified grefrigeratorkind 'ver or gold, take one-halfit in palate. He must try and glorified, and God's will would chillrpack by standing in a glascu f ,mmon bakingsoda. Put some, sporting young man. hard g only begin to be done on earth as it is with in ice. cream. in thin glass, inpsa. and have a mall hand rider, but not drinker; must own cue wine at a sitting, and mush g whipped cream. hunters.,, drink water after each taste to pre - done in heaven. Refreshing Drink.—A cool, re-' brush and pan of warm water and If this advertisement is not a 1•are himself for the next. REV. A. W. S\YDEIi• freshing drink is made by using two snap. Immerse brush in water, then I joke,Ifit must have brei. written by Some tasters even go as far as teaspoonfuls of any fruit vinegar to In soda, and scrub in the usual wayladywho knew her own mind to rinse the throat first with Vichy a glass of water. To make the vin- until perfectly clean. Nash in cls r and then with pure water. The victory : "My strength is made per; venter, dry on towel, and polish Tretty thoroughly. It is seldom it inn is then firsinspected, then feet in weakness." eager, berries, two quarts of any kind 'lith a ince of chamois skin. This. that you find so many requisitions P Froin Lesson IX. we ]earn (what of or grapes, in a truck. P succinctly set forth in throe lines. smelled, and finally tasted. The covered withgood cider vinegar, process will not scratch the finest inspection may show various things. may be illustrated also by nextg silver or gold, or any stones in ABLE TO COOK AND WASH. New red wines, for instance. aro Sunday's lesson) that the kernel of I and let stand for twenty-four hours. j Then bring to the boiling point. , Leos!''}• They are practical folk in Austra- bright ; older ones aro more yellow - the Christian religion is lova. Mash the fruit and strain through: Paint Brush Uses.—Ono of the' Lia Listen to this from a New iah. Old wines are always clear Lessons X. and its each in its a ^,loth. Measure the juice and add most practical articles for the :South Wales journal: "Wanted a N: hen good, but slight cloudiness is own way and by story, teach an equal quantity of granulated household is a new paint brush• wife; must be able to cook and not necessarily a bad sign in new how genuine adherence to Christ sugar. Boil fifteen minutes and can Keep three different sizes on hand wash. Lady preferred." This ones. brings real victory to the Chris - ori B —one small round bristle brush for bottle while hot.man, at any rate, was honest, anti The odor test is very important, tian. Salad Dressing.—Ono tablespoon cleaning articles or window pane tic doubt many girls would much as the bouquet reveals "many sec - All these stories studied Sunday fol of flour, three tablespoonfuls of corners where the scrub brush gen- sooner trust themselves to an ad- i rets to the expert., who can often after Sunday during the quarter sugar, one teaspoonful of salt, one seal!} falls; another larger brush, vertiser of this kind than to one tell by it the precise region where may be recalled by the words of P of dry mustard or two of prepared two inches long and one inch thick, who angled for looks or money. the wine was mode, besides detect - mustard, • Golden Text: "So mie vat round, of hair, for cleaning hats grew the word of God and prevail - together, get he , a dash h red yolks of t mix and it goes in all the smallspaces Japanese matrimonial advertise ing adultration, if any has been ate • „ together, beat the of three ments are the very antithesis of the tempted. The tasting proper, which eggs light, add a teacupful of vine- between the flowers or feathers and hard practicality of the Anglo- i comes last of all, also depends very 4, gar. Cook all together in double gets all rho dust out ; and one small Saxon announcements. The 'Rana- largely on the sense of smell, as we boiler until it thickens, add a heap- hat brush, one and one-half inches waza Shimbar,' a Japanese paper, are told by the physiologists, and COOK'S GREAT JOURNEY. ing teaspoonful of butter, beat well. wide, for greasing the bread and had an advertisement from a lady also on that of feeling, by which Let cool and if convenient add a cake tins. Three such brushes who, after describing her own per- the expert's tongue, for example, little either sweet or sour cream, should he bought for about 30 cents. sonal charms and fortune in flow- distinguishes between a rough and cry language, ended, "If there is smooth or velvety taste. The real a gentleman who is clever, learned, sense of taste tells the taster whe- handsonle. and of good taste 1 will' titer the wine is sweet or hitter, Buy an ordinary blank book with join with him for life, and share the and enables him to make other simt- stiff cotes, costing 10 or 15 cents. pleasure of being buried in the lar distinctions. From an old magazine find a pie- same grave." The wine is well spread over the Peach Dainties. --Froze Peaches tore of a young woman with a sap LITTLE RUT GOOD. mucous surface of the mouth i4� —Remove the peel from firm, ripe and apron on dressed as a cook, and tasting, and is retained until peaches by dipping them for a min- paste this on the outside of the Workhouse guardians not infre- warmed. It it is retained lowed too uto in boiling water, then rubbing cover. Number each page through quently receive applications for soon, much of the effect is lost. them with a rough cloth. Quarter the book and index the front page, wives. The Eccleshall Board con- Often. too, a young wine that tastes York- tho fruit, removing the stones, and leaving several pages for each sub- sidered one which, in which a York scmew hat thin and rough at first re- Fi;rinkle with lemon juice to pre- jcct, shire workingman, who described teals after an instant that it has vent them from discoloring. Boil For pies paste a picture of a pie himself as "steady, very homely, no body and gives promise of delicacy. a pound of granulated sugar with at tho top of tho page and below drinker, and not quarrelsome, set half a cupful of water until it forms write out the different recipes. forth his requirements in a letter. 'S' a thick syrup, thea put the peach- For meats use a picture of a roast His chief anxiety seems to have Hicks—"I owe you an apology. es into this and gently simmer for beef or pork chops so often seen in been that his bride-to-be should not The fact is, it was raining, and I a minute or two. Put in the freez- magazines. be too tall. "If you would be kind saw your umbrella. and supposing er, removing the dasher, and pack Follow it through with candies, enough,"he wrote, to supply mo vitt had gone home for gond, I look about with ice and salt., and freeze cookies, breads, pu<Idings, etc., with her name and height of body it. Wicks—"Don't mention it. I to the consistency of water ice. having groups of pages for each sub- —I mean she should not be taller owe you an apology. You left your Surprise Peaches—Select large jest with a picture at the start of than five feet or so—and with age silk hat, you know. and wore your peaches' peel' halve, and stone, each. and respectability, I would provide old one. As I had no umbrella, wouldnintroducefindsthe dishea hisIthen fill the stone hollow with va \\'hen looking for any special her with a very new, comfortable and as I didn't want to sec m, :tea London friends, and at once enter rills ice cream, covering with the thing you can find it more readily home." hat, I put on yours. Hope you td into negotiations with Harvey other half of the each, holdingThe opinion of an Irish tramp up- didn't mend." to come to Lundin and do the cook- i • P it by the picture. is place with a wooden toothpick Try to have all pictures either un the ideal wife is distinctly emus- ---.-.-- - . - - - - --- ing' I with a bow of baby ribbon tied to all colored or all print, for the book iiig• She should be, he says, "be- Nnrv1 y named his price, and it the end so that it can be drawn out is much neater if dune with each loser forty and fifty years of age, The Dangers was accepted without a murmur, al• not handsome but temperate. She though it was a stiff one, as he was I before the dainty is eaten. These pi int of the same color. surprise peal hes should he served This makes an attractive hook tar should be able to walk twenty of Summer• a yens portly man, and did not like at once and on paper napkins, and home use and also it made neatly miles a clay, and be good at beg - makes a useful gift for a bride. '! ---- beautifully, beautifully, and is harmless. A 1 ADVERTISING F fue way to preserve summer ap- ples when they are plentiful and in a inter apples are known to be scarce in the orchards. PECULIAR It1:Q1'1REM1:NT$ OF Fancy Baked Apples. --Peel and core medium sized apples. 1 ut WOULD -LIE BENEDICTS. them in a baking dish and pour half a cupful of mater over thein. Set in a hot oven and when the apples aro heated sprinkle with enough sugar to cool each and bake until tt nder. Make a syrup of one cup- 'I't►u. fol of water, half a cupful of sugar, the juice of half a lemon, and tea- spoonful of rated rind ; add two tablespoonfuls of chopped raisins, two of chopped candied cherries, R WIVES! Could Not Sleep in the Darl Irishman Wanted One \Vho Vas Able to Fight a Round or HEART AND NERVES WERE RESPON- SIBLE, 80 THE DOCTOR SAID. There is many a man and woman tossing night atter night upon a steeples/ Led. Soma constitutional disturbance, worn or disease has so debilitated and irritated the nervous system that it cannot b• quieted. Mrs. Calvin Stark, Rossmore, Ont., writes:—"Aboat two years ago I began to be troubled with a smother••_ sen- sation at night. when I would lie down. 1 got so bad I could not sleep in the dark, and would have to sit up and rub my limbs, they would become so numb. !11y doctor said my heart and nerves were responsible. I saw Milburn's heart and Nerve Pills adver- tised and got a box to try them. I took three boxes and can now lie down and sleep without the light burning and cars rest well. 1 can recommend them highly to all nervous and run down women. Milburn's Ilcart and Nerve Pills aro f,Oc. per box, or 3 boxes for 11.25, at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of rice by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Out. Tr:welled 6,000 Miles to ('ook Ter- rapin for English Epicure. George W. Harvey, the inventor of steamed oysters, and a famous restaurant keeper, who died at Washington recently, was once the hero of an incident that in some respects trade the exploits of Lu - calling and other noted gourmets of ancient Home look cheap and com- mon -place. He made a six -thou- sand -mile journey to cook or super- vise the cooking of a single course et a dinner. A wealthy Englishman, noted for his love of good living, while on a visit to Washington, was given a dinner at Harvey's, at which ter- rapin formed tale piece de resist- ance. It was the first time tho Eng- lishman had encountered the fam- ous Maryland delicacy, and it made an instantaneous and profound bit with him. He decided that he not milk. This dressing poured over finely chopped cabbage has made more than one dinner famous. PEACHES. HOME COOK BOOK. to travel. At the appointed time 1 are indeed delicious. 1 e engaged his passage fur Eng- Peach Cobbler.—This is a dclici- land, took a sufficient number of I pus dessert. Nearly fill a pudding live terrapin tilting aith him. and dish wit h pared halved peaches. sailed for London. He supervised Cooler with a rich biscuit dough TAXING DEEP COAL. ging bottles and potatoes, and al- so at ballad singing. She should not bo quarrelsome. but able to fight a round or two, to defend her husband when in action." rothe preparation of the turtles in • r,,,;nr1c an inch thick. Plato on top A very curious question in poli- �{ I1.LING FOR A FOURTH. the kitchen of his generous employ- 1,•r range tightly covered with a lid tical economy has arisen in Eng - et, saw they were cooked and eery ,o that the crust will cook by steam Lund, in consequence of the govern One is driven to wonder whether NI properly, collected his $1,000 of fruit. When done (test antiti iiient's declared intention of levy- there were any replies to this cur►- tlo kt rium and his expenses, and broom straw) cut a slit in top big ing a tax on the capital value of pus advertisement, which appeared took the next rteamer hark to New enough t° pour in a syrup made of t'ndcteloped mineral., meaning i► a London daily paper: "\Panted. York. cupful of sugar, rine-half cupful of especially coal in !nines which has a respectable gentleman--aidoa•er pilin water. and egg -sized tum not. yet been touched. This calls referred- to marry the house• + EXT. OF WILT) of butter. 'Then place a cobbler in in expert seientific judgment con- keeper of an aged gntleman, whom STRAWBERRY f 1 oyer until crust is brown The cerning Op amount of coal deep im i }.e would like to see happily mar- .+4+.+.44,f ♦+ ♦ rho u s at n d s of BEQI'IT.\L. sirup and peach juice combine and the earth. unci the practicability of - ried before he (Bea. She has had homes hroughout form a rich sauce—nn other is need- working it. In addition to the 100.- three husbands, but is n filling for tl,;outidntornotliexperimentng this iiiwhen you buy Noe. land so brand, no Qin so aide, et:. This can he made in the win 91h,0t►0.1ua1 tuns of "available'' coal ; a fourth." If anytime did sulunteer en old and tried remedy like this. Ask That. Passing o'er, I Luse nay ter. using canard fruit. If prefer in the prated coal fields of Great t. make "number fuer," he was your druggist for 1►r. Fowiet's, and insist thought of thee; 7,.,1 cream may be ►used as sauce ; Britain. a r„cal commission a few , certainly braver than the average on getting elm, you elk fur. Do not \o day 50 lung, or ever slow the add at !title, years ago estimated that there were' man. take stripe a•nistitate which the unl,rin- title, 3.23f►,500,tgdt tons below the 4,000 -The following, ahich is taken tattled drug: st swa is -Fist 51 gond.' But quicker is my pulse foot level. Since it is proposed from the colurnnr of a New fork 'These cheap i.nitatiuns are dangerous to 1 know tliun lowest Inc. Ai'PLES. your health. that the tax collectors shall try to paper, appears to form an atrpro• Mrs. .1. I Flaherty, Delfmmtain, Ont., To Preserve Apples.- -A simple levy on this. an important question i Priate conclusion to an article of ',rites .. In the month of Set terober, No darkness deep, no clay so bright and effective way to keep apples arises as to whether it can be eco- this kind :-- t,at. n,� c,..t t(ea chill took Summer ilut, passing b} • suggests a 1,esh indefinitely is to snlphnr Them. 11 inienily reroverrd. The average ".1 }unng man of n^reenh!e Arca- l.,u.l :.,•. n.1 i ii,e doctor h:.J }cry hale thought of thee : pare and (piaster them and 1.! we nominal temperatere at 4.000 feet enee, and desirous of getting mar hopes for her sly tleighiW► told me to Though deep the sea, though hig:i it clean market basket. Susi•nd i- put at I10 degrees cs Fahrenheit. A 1 ried, world like to make the ac - to Dr Fowler's I 'ctrart of Wild Straw - the stars at night : it by wire from a stick laid on t” ruiner can work the usual number tiaintnnce of an aged nod expert - °, x eri• cry, so that night 1 int my ,laughter hoer there wits a change for the Letter Each indicate. the love P q p to get 1t. and when she calve hone i of a bottoniless barrel. Slip a pan'. c hones nt loo degrees, with trisk:eneed gentlenman who cold demi; gave ttie bal.y one dose, and in half an of coals over ahich 5 cents' worth. ventilation and dry air. but these tide him from taking the fatal step." nf sulphur is sprinkled tinder the are contlitiens net easily maintain- —London Tit -flits. barrel and cover top closely. Let to at such a depth. go Many dangerous and distressing dis- eases prevail in suntlieer and fall, and s they occur suddenly. often termiuute fatally before aid can be had. Complaints, such as Diarrhoea, Dy- sentery. ('otic, Cramps, Cholera, Mortals, Cholera infantten, Summer Complaints, ete., are quickly cured. ♦ ♦ +++4 ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ This wonderful ♦ bowel complain$ + DR. FOWLER'S ♦ rosere marketrfor 64 years and It las been used la �K•_ - 1 know thou hast for Inc. Life is too brief- -eternity Will s.:erce give space. if thou stand all day: then remove to jars shottldst list to nie: 'lith a` little iulndliiig ria possible: l,i es% deo n tightly. tie up. and Eeep in a dry. cool place. They ar asailable f"r pies. settee, or mi neat when wanted. The au Arthur Gibson Morse. kills all microbes bleaches a For word and look —no, these tnay peter tell How deep the longing that. .fy heart ave Ito's!• for thee• f Woman thinks she will be man's 1'(i(111 1 ''I.I!1\I'' and after the third dose she was rnrn- lete!y etire,I. 11'e feel it is fa, and be- t Ind any other re poly for Summer a " I .;nt r.n I besides it saves paying* d'.•tnr. 1 ail . iae c.ervnne to use it. for when she eta her ri hls. 110.1 1 :•r'•r••,t a su�,s•11111e(or iir. Fowler'.. R R Olive is, a w hi:.• .1 ., : t. tir .,n.l an! uuly I owlet's Extract - ilroi,s' to heft ntei 1•.', 1 1-Irv.I.r•rr is manufncl•,rcll „nit a the alter effect of ex pori s', al,hen the 1.1.•% 11;1',.1:•1 145• 1• "•':1 ,:rtt'o.,1.imit(J,1urunto, that counts. has id-, is to go to work. , Vv:., ,:.et 33 clog.