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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1909-10-28, Page 3Hints for Busy Housekeepers. Recipes and Other Valuable Information of Particular Interest to Women Pulks. DESSERTS. 1e ur pie bill not run ower or bub - Carmel fiance. --One cupful el bre. Is this not worth the trouble light brown sugar, butter the size tai an. egg. Boil butter and Sugar thre/l..:tes, then add glumly two tablespoonfuls of flout, then :Jow- l; boiling water enough to thin. Good and easy made. New l'enfection.-Select, ripe ba- nanas and cut into thin slices. Melt confeetioiit rs' chocolate by steam- ing it, and into this dip each slice WORTH KNOWING. 1)o not attempt to use sour or moldy flour. Dry it out in the oven and bate it fur starch. The white of one egg "cut' with shite vinegar ivakes an excellent furniture polish. When white goods are grass stained, saturate them with paraf- of banana. When thoroughly coat- En and put them out in the sun. ed lay the slices on oiled paper anti No soap on. window panes! Rub set in a cool place to harden. The them with either alcohol or ani - result is both a delicious and a not' moria to snake them shine. d confection. To keep tvoodcn bread boards in Steamed Blackberry Pudding. - geed condition scrub them with Sift one cupful of flour into a basin, ! sand or salt instead of soap. After scraping fish, rub the steel knife over an old lemon peel, and it will destroy all fish calor' and grades of thread. Alsorun in The addition of n beaten egg to colored safety and fancy pins. A useful present. Handy Screen. --Buy a small clothes horse, cover the outside with flowered chintz, line the inside with white oilcloth, on which stitch various oilcloth pockets of For burns, apply thin slices of many sizes and shapes designed to raw potatu, or if you have time hold waseliuc, boric acid, sponge scrape it and bind tightly. Change soap. etc. More convenient than often.• add cone saltspeouful of salt, one teaspoonful of baking powder ;then gradually add two well beaten eggs and one pint of milk. Stir in one pint of wit es which have the mashed potatoes used for po- been thoroughly dredged with flour. tato cakes will bo found well wort, P4,111 at once into a greased mold,�t.hile cower with a greased paper, and .\, splendid cement for chinaa is steam steadily ,for two hours. Serve made by mixing plaster of partsni wit h hard sauce. into a thick solution of uarabic Sponge Padding• -`Two heaping ar.<I water. g tablespoonfuls of flour. two even tablespoonfuls of sugar, one pint of milk, one tablespoonful of but- ter; rub smooth arid cook to a boil - HEADACHE. In all cases of headache the first thing to do is to unload the bowels and thus relieve the afflicted organs or the over - full blood vessels of the brain; rind at the same time to restore tune to the system. re-establish the appetite, pro- mote digestion and invigorate the entire body. will renove the cause of the tro dile and restore the system to healthy action and buoyant vigor. Mrs. J. Priest, Aspdin. Ont.. writes:- " I was trou:.led with headache for several years and tried almost everything with- out results. until a friend aelvised me to try Burdock Mood Bitters. 1 got two bottles, but before i had finished one 1 was completely cured. I can never say too rnuch for 11.11.11." For sale at all dealers. Manufactured only by The '1'. Milburn Co.; Limited, Toronto, Ont. ing polus. Add yolks of six eggs 1\•lien making seedless jam, For the Traveler. -'An apron and then the beaten whites of sin with tickets to hold toilet articles. eggs. Bake one hour in a moderate fruit ley crushing the fresh berries small seeds may be removed from flake of blue linen, have the pock - oven. Set the dish in a pan of hot, through a sieve. ets bound with white tape and the water chile the pudding is baking Stains and discoloratiuns in tin- pocket (laps• fastened with small + and remove only when ready to scare can be removed by dipping a white buttons ; pockets for soap serve. Use any hot sauce with ei damp cloth in common soda and should be lined with rubber- and they lemon or sherry wine fur flay- the powder case with chamois. In Hay - rubbing briskly. taring. 'I'l,i, recipe serves eight pen- After greasing puns for small the different pockets place a bot- rile• cakes dust with flour thickly, steak- tle of toilet water. a manicure set, Delicious Dessert. - Make a illy out all that is loose. This a paper of pins, powder box This cake with following recipe: treatment prevents sticking. puff, soap and wash cloths. This Four whole eggs beaten light, one Instead of parchment for jam apron will prove a blessing in a teacupful of granulated sugar, one covers try tissue paper dipped in crowded sleeper dressing room. A and one-half teacupfuls flour, to milk. If pressed down neatly it kimono could also be made with which add one and one-half tea- will require no string to tie it on. pockets. spoonfuls of baking powder, four When making plum butter leave tablespoonfuls of water. Put into a few seeds in the butter. They sink a floured pan and bake about twen- ty minutes in a hot but. slow oven. to the bottom of the vessel and 'When cold split through the middle %hen stirred, prevent scorching. . and spread 'with cream filling of h the tops of young turnips are followingrecipe : One cupful of thoroughly cleaned, they can be sugar, one heaping teaspoonful of used with the diced turnips and be flour, cup and one-half of milk, two boiled the same as cabbage. They make a very good dish. whole -eggs. Tlavor and cook in . double boiler until thick. Whip ens• pint of ere:un and serve on top and sprinkle with chopped nuts and not rasehino cherries. Banana Parfait.-- Peel three '• rt nanas, scrape off the coarse threads and press the pulp through a sieve. There should be one cup and a feui•th of the pulp 1'o the pulp add BOERS ARE FOR BRITAIN. South African denimIitct Makes Strong Statement. Perhaps the most striking fea- ture of the Imperial Press Dcle- Broken orris root has more of gates' tour was the speech made by the odor of violets and is better Mr. Fichardt, one of the South Af- than the powdered variety. When rican delegate., at the banquet placed in bureau drawers it int- given by the Lord Mayor of Shef- parts a delicate fragrance to the field. Mr. Ficharot is editor of contents. "The Friend," of Bloemfontein. To clean a sponge dissolve a He fought with the Boers in the we learn that ie was with Paul dur- handfnl of salt. in a pint of water. South :African war, and was made ing the first imprisonment. In this soak and knead the sponge a prisoner. Replying to the toast 3. Sidon --The important sea bice fourths of x cupful of sugar for some time. there rinse it well, of ''The Guests," at a very late tette twenty miles north of 'Pyre, nd the juice of half a lemon; cookand it will be as clean and sweet hour on 1Wcdr-esday, he said: and the oldest of the Phoenician c mixture Deer hot water until as when new. "England brought to my tune- cities (Gen. 10. 19). it figured in ,erou hly scalded, then set aside When changing the sheets and try war and devastation. She con- the shifting fortunes of Assyria. bece me cold. Beat one cupful pillow cases on the bed, put a little quered the flag of the country, but Babylon, Persia, Greece, and d a half of double main till firm. dried lavender leaves in the pillow she did not conquer the heart and Rome, and during the Crusades Cut tine citron, candied apricots or cases.I'he leaves can bo used over spirit of the race. After the war was a continual bone of contention. pineapple. and Mlaiaschino cherriesand over. since the fragrance is there was an afterms th of hitter- Often mentioned in the Bible. The t . fill a cup; pour over these three levy lasting. ness-the bitterness of a sullen and modern town has about 10,000 pee- , tablespoonfuls of Jamaica rum and :% damp room or cupboard may be discontented people, who waited pie. let it stand an hour or. when con- dried by keeping in it a jar contain- the opportunity to strike another 5. Cilicia (Paul's native country) venient, over night. Have a quartins quick lime. The lime will ab- blow for that freedom for we, and 1'amphelia formed the coast weld lined with paper and tholesorb the damp and keep the air dry they had given ',c► much. But that country of Asia Minor, opposite 1- tingly chilled. Stir the fruit into and pure. It roust be frequently was a wo►derfal day. A wonderful Ceprus. the banana mixture, fold the fruit renewed. as it loses its power. thing happened 1n spite of all )►lyra- •A noteworthy hasher in mixture and cream together. and if food is scorched in the cook- the cost. in spite of all the mil- the corn trade between Egypt and turn into the mold. filling it to ing remove the pan from time stove hens of money that had been ex- Home. overflow; cover with paper. press and place it in a larger lean of cold Fended. and the precious blood 0. A ship of Alexandra sailing for the co% er down over the paper, water. Then place a dish towel tl.at had been shed, you curve to «s then pack in equal measures 0f salt over the pan : the towel will absorb e,pen'handed, gracious, and kindly, and crushed ice. Let stand Ihiee all t he scorched taste from the and presented ss with the freedom he.nrs. .1-auu which we nskecl for (cheers). And THE S. S. LESSON 0111i 1,11MONR nynnisa INTERN 1T10N.t1• LESSON, OCT. 31. Lcseou 1'.. Paul a Prisoner --- The Voyage. Golden 'feat, _ _ l'•a. 3.. 5' And after the fire, a still small! All this modern material progress THE LESSON \VOH1) STUDIES. `nice.- 1. kings sit. 1�. 'is of very little calve unless it helps We have u great Many things to snake better men and women, Time: From late summer of A. 1). that the meta and women of 3110 unless it enables and in<pires us to t5lf. till about November 1 of the years ago did not possess, but are live larger and nobler lives, unless surae year. Course of the Journey w'e any hotter este and women than it brings us into closer fellowshir to lto!«e : Caesarea to Sidon iii dreg were ? with God and makes us more wor- Phoenicia ; thence northwest, to the We lite a great deal faster than thy to enter iutu the life eternal. tee of Cyprus, stepping at Myra in they diel : but do tae lead any better It is significant. 1 think, that a Lyria, for a change of ships; con- 01 more useful lives1 \1'e have swung society woman should have tinning close to the shore until off made a great many improvements announced recently her dissatis[ae- Cnidus in ('stria; then south and in our manneS• of living, 'but have tion and disgust with a life devot- west, around Cape Salntouc, on the we made 0 ny great improvementcc1 to the extreme eastern end uf Crete, until '1' our characters 1 PLEASURES OF SOCIETY. reaching Fair Havens, hull way I'H1: Il1;AL TEST. "Nu life is so monotonous and along the southern shove uf the is- These are the questions we ought dull as modern society life," she thelhen; thence, out to sea. south be- to be risking ourselves if we are to says, "and I ani determined to little islandbaccel i duds, k : make any comparison between our- make something differe:lt of my- ing driven by a fierce wind. Links: selves and the men and women of bell." Paul was pronounced uncondetuned 300 years agu, for spiritual and not The young woman's sense of dis- hy Agrippa, and might have gnus material development is the real satisfaction helps to reveal the e►np- f ee had he not appealed to Roine• test of progress. What does it mat- tiness of a life given over wholly to Point of the Narrative: Journey- ter if soldiers ago march in splen- selfish pleasure. life is empty and toward home, with other prisoners, c;id array along the streets if they barren of any real happiness with- in charge of Julius, a centurion, are not good soldiers in the battle out something worth while to do Paul is accompanied by Luke and of life? 11'hat does it platter if fop the glory of God and the good Aof therchip He warns the muster omen do learn to fly in the air' 1Viu et our fellow Hien. the ship not to leave the she)- they ever be able with their air- God. help us to listen intently for ter of a certain harbor, called Fair fillips and aeroplanes to fly up to tht still small voice in our souls, Havens, as the autumnal storms heaven ? What does it matter if we the voice of duty, the voice of tin- ed. The ship encounters a terrible were approaching, but is unheed= are richer than the men and women selfishness, the voice of the spirit of long ago if we are not richer to- of God. storm, and is barely saved by ward God? throwing overboard the luggage Rev. J. Lyon Caughey. and cargo. Paul, receiving a vis- ien at night, reassures all on board of the words which formerly were of deliverance. rendered "lieth toward the south - Verse I. We should sail for Italy west and northwest." It is a nau- Traffic in hair is a big business. -This story of the voyage to Rome tical phrase, meaning, "to look for it is estimated that well over goes into minute detail, and is the down the southwest wind," which. 1,000 tons of human tresses are best account we have of the art of owing to the feet that Lutro looks dealt with every year. And as the navigation as practised by the anti- toward the east, Ibis been taken to heavy styles Of coiffure, ironing, ents. indicate the direction in wbicb the too frequent dressing, the use .tf Julius -This narrative gives us wind blows. and this here would he wire and leather supports, etc., are mit- only information about him, northeast and southeast. tending more than ever to make and shows him to have been affable, 13. The south wind blew softly-- the fashionable lady's locks insuf- open to religious influences, appre- A complete turn about of the wind. tnrent, the price of artificial hair cuttive. Close in shore -Here. overhang- is. naturally, on the up -grade. The Augustan band --A detach ing mountains protected them. Italy, Russia. India, and China ment of Imperial troops stationed 14. Euraquilo-A wind blowing contribute to the hair market, but , a'. Caesarea, and named from Oc- from the northeast. far the largest contribution is sup- , tavianns Augustus, the adopted 15. Could not face the wind -Lit- plied by the women of Brittany. On son of Julius Caesar. singly, could not look the wind in the north coast of France the wo- 2. Adraniyttiurn--:1n important the eye. teen have always worn quaint little commercial seaport of Mysia in 10. Cauda -The modern none is round cloth raps. and this habit.. Asia Minor. In going thither. sev-' Gaudho, or Oozzo. The island lay combined with their active ort of sial ports would be lunched, from directly south of Phoenix, so that door life, has gone far towards giv- which it would be possible to take they scudded before the wind about ing t he Breton woman long and twenty-three [Hiles. luxuriant tresses. These they sell another ship for Italy. Aristarcl►us-Mlentio rd in Acts The boat -Small rowboat carried to travellers who annually tour the 19. 29, as seized by the hostile mob in tow and filled with water by the country. lately, however. Bretons r hphes«s, and in 20.4, as n cont- ur sudden storm. rave allowed the cheapParis hat patron of Paul. From the Epistles 17. Helps -Strong cables, passed to displace their picturesque caps. around the hulls to keep vessels Ae a result, their hair has dimin- fsorn foundering. This process of ished both in quantity and quality. "trapping" is now -a -days abandon- Now. therefore. the demand for cd. artificial hair considerably exceeds supply. Progress Is of Little Value Unless It Works For Good. H.\IR-RAISING. 1'11•:5. Apple l'ie Hint. When baking apple pie. put a tcaepo(nful or two of r,trong cold tea in the filling. Al- t., try the saint. in your apple sauce of baked apples. and notice the im- proled flavor of the apples. Old Fashioned Apple Pie. --Fill a . creep dish with the sun. thinly street pared nought,, but this 1 can promise. apples. cuter with a 911hstatltial New shoes are often difficult h' that if ewer a foreign foe attacks to the East, past FSalmone, the ex - crust of rich baking ptitcder biscuit clean. Try rubhuiig them oei with tl•e iEnlpire in South 'fa it will tre•me promontory of Crete, and dough, and bake When browned n cut lemon. or even wish a cut Ise the unerring rifle of the Corr then to the south of the island, so to a turn slip a knife around the rate potato, IeltinR them dry, rind chick will give Great li�it;tin's an• that they w ere partly .ltellered inner edge, take off the cower, and then blackening them. They will ewer on the wild and lonely tells. from the rind. turn bottom tote ards on a plate. tai the p h.h beautifully. (Loud cheers). s. hair Havens --Sc called to this 'I': en add a generous supply of su- clay, though unknown in literature. gar, cinnamon. and cluyes to the -- - - Lasea---Also uiiknmvn until dis- apples. mash all together and SEWING li(iUJI revered recently llr+:rt;) by its ruins. spread evenly on the inverted Palpitation of the Heart.: bite miles east of the Ilatens. crust. Serve with cold cream. Sewing on Hook. When sexing P n. The fast was . . . gone by - Pineapple Pie• .\ pineapple, it, hooks on a wash dress or a frock •The clay of atonement. which fell on weight in sugar. half its weight in utfilch will need frequent pressing. One of the first danger signals dist an- the 1en111 day of the seventh month watt heat is •� wrong tt the t t hi ru c something no tnc g year. butter, one cup of cream. Beat the try sewing the eyes on the. upper t5 Ie.f the Jewish butter to a creamy froth, add sit alp and the honks on the order in the irregular beat or violent thiol,. Often 10. The voyage e ill be with in- star and sulks of three egg.. beat ....Id of the reterse ft he 11511111 (he Kis(titlye a sorter n 8e rugo sensr an ation. jury-,and much loss Paul hod hat, until cert light. Add the errant The outer flap may thin he am.+y be a most tiolenr healing, with mucexperiencc n. a sen traveler, and pie tpple grated. heat white- smoothly and the closing Wahines of the skin and yisalile pulse• and had already written to the e! (ho -ares to a froth. bake in tare e ei, truly int isible• , tiunsut the erteries. The icer.on may es- ('tirinthiane. "'Thrice i suffered crust. and eat cv,ld. Tai.', Linen Help. - •When buying lterienee:I stnothering sen+aiion. gasp for seamstek." It was now time for Pecan l'ie. I,ine n pie pan wit i► tahle :i nen. rut tiff a entail strip tat breath an.l feel as "'wit' about to die, jthe autumnal equinox. and ntariu- crua, and bake. Filling. rook enc is ;4 Illi keep. :-o that the u11E8%04.e In each meet the scrims of Milburn 'a er+ reckoned it a period uf 3tcrtf. Ileart en 1 Neer Pills in, quieting the cupful of cr. am, ones cupful ..f su- stoic ad ern% be used for denting tie heart. reetorine ise norrnal beat and inn. peril. ear. four eggs, sating the• %bites of tlthte.•:,,tIiy or napkins when eerie pert in tone to the nerve centre.. is, 11. Owner of the s=hip He mould 1140 for meringue . ...le cupful of In this -was a mend can be made al- cbeplied pecan meats chipped fine. most indiecernihle. Curtains can Minot this mixture thickens fill the 'hr darned finely with the some. crust and put on the mciingue of Sewing Silk --When sewing en the tete whites of egg' beaten stiff, the machine with silk it often tin - and sweeten. Sprinkle over seer• winds and tains around the spool rogue a few finely chopped pecan Brindle in it ttying manner. To meats. Brown In oven. Fruit rise•-.11waes in mak ing berry pies cut a tiny stole in the Italy --Hume was dependent. to a great extent, upon the corn brought from Egypt. As verso 38 of this chapter shows. this was one you then, for the first time, and 1,tif the corn -ships from Alexandria fc, prevent n pie crust nem hope fur ♦ter, congnercei the hearts on its way to °rein or Puteoli. piet king while hclng baked, turn of the South .1f ican people (luud 7. Sailed slowly Retarded by the pie lin Iroftum up and shape dough , alert•,). s. over it, instead of inside. Bake ice it. of t he future 1 INC, in strung west aineie it. quick 4i% en. and pie crust will my eount1 �, lune watched with a (nidus --In ancient limes. a fan: - retain shape perfectly. in eold certain anv,nnt of ehwy what the our seupiiit 14M ii. seat of the w•or- ailed water tereline anahour,c/and fluent- great sister clouninious aeross the these ,f%nteu,, in c11,singaul lnhis ad sthird seas have been able to do, 1SC missionary journey lets 21 wash in strong white soap and hour- mea )urge country and we are ( )' rug water. If white guvds, put in poor. \1e cannot present Dread - Undo r the lrc of ('rete --The mod- el n island of Candia. They passed avoid this make a hole in a stnall piece of felt and slip it on the spin - the before the silk i• pert en. centre of the top crest. and when Needle Beek. -.\ trip of satin ready to hake make n cornucopia Ib►ee bt twenty inches: fold t we c•f 1,rew'n 01' 8113 paper without inches at one end ,old stiffen with !,tinting and slip aper into hole c•arell,oar' . Line remainder with and '.s'f way into the berries. This - scented velvet tar Runnel. let'• it 38 au escape fur all of the air, and { run threaded needles of many sizes ,eyoml all question. ,0IrVelluu.. 11,ev go with his cargo of corn in order give such prompt relief that nu one need (o sell edempnlageously upon their suffer. snivel in Italy. Mrs. Art►sur Mason. M.riusnk Oct., 12. '1'o w inter in --For nbo11t four writes:--" Just a few lines inlet you know what Mtilhurn's Heart ata Nerve fills I months from this time navigation have done for rue. 1 hese been troubled ' was ell'nended• with weakness snit palpitetio:e of tho II l'hocntx i'rofessor !l•Im•as iden- heart, would hive severe choking spells f tikes this bather ttith meclern tett. and could scarcely he down at all. 1 ' 1•,,, (see article in Haste,se.s tried many remceliea tett get none to . Bible I)ietiennre.) Paul feared the aneYe•r my ease like peer pills did. 1 t sire ngitie fc wind tl►nien .tthreete ther seaeWitohf can n•rrnntnren highly to all with terr+ire tauted ire lime or nerve thisolate. ' Price. eel emits per box. AT 3 hoses for the' gulf of Mlcssaria, which would :1.2.1. at. all dealer.. or mailed direct nn I Ove to be crossed. receipt of perp. by "11* 1'. Mdhulu CO., Li.'1d upu r'•rtiica?t end southeast Limited, Toronto, Vat I .t• la thea,c a,'cd translatien The Syrtis -The "Greater Syrt- the is," or quicksands. lay to the south- west of tho island, on the north coast of Africa. Lowered the gear --They probab- ly drew down the rnaiusais part way, but left up the stormsail so us to take ad%antage of the wind. Ili Tackling --- Either spars, ropes, ete., or articles of furniture, such as beds, tables, etc. Angie thing which could be removed from the decks and hull. 21. \Without food-- An enforced abstinence. due to the excitement and the condition of the sessel. '22. And now --In spite of their re- jection of his counsel formerly. 21. Goal hath granted -Implying that Paul had been earnest in prayer. though the fact had not : been mentioned. j 20. Upon a certain Mand- Paul ' has spoken in the tone of a pro- phet. and these words show that the angel had revealed to hien some of the details of t he method Iof their pi ♦servation. WAY OF THE \1'U11I,1). ''1 understand the Neweds are hawing trouble," ren irked the spinster boarder. "Some people take her tart, and some others side with him." "And 1 suppu.,e," growled the scanty -haired hnehelor at the pedal ext rent,ty of the mahogany, "there are n few eccentric people Milo mind their own business." Suffered More Than Tongue Can Tell From Liver Trouble. A lary. slow or torpid livet is a terrible affliction. ea its influence permeates the whole system. causing Itilieusness, Hes rt• horn, Water (trash, I.angour. Coated Tongue. Sick Heartache, bellow Dyes. Saute (oi.iplexioo. etc. It holds nark the bile. which in required to thole t; • bowels, and lets it get into the i 1 •.•d instead, tints musing Constipation. Milburn's Lasa -liver fills will retro- tete the flow of bile to act pmpetly tat . n t,j'�� -7.- 1 lie .- 11ee Ixtwels, and will tone. re1105SIP 1.1 ,1 purify the liver. Mrs. J. C. Wool err Swan River, Man., writes: -"1 puffer;d for rare more than tongue can from l;trr trouble. I tri.'! 'torts! kinds of medicine, bit etmld get no rigid until 1 got Miilh.trtl's 1.1\a -lacer rills. 1 can- not praise them too highly for what they have done ter tile.•' Milbnrn's Lassa Liver Pill. Sri 2.1e. per vise nr 5 for t11.('0. st x11 c!ealrrs, or mailed direct en reeeil.t of price 1 y The 'f. Milburn Co., Lin.ited, Toronto, i "tome' o:,. fry. in u. he, •• OOL 1 who taut meet his .1'Attn. i...e. HEALING EXTRAORDINARY. Mr. Finnigan was out of sorts, and Mrs. Finnigan sent for the doc- tor, who came, examined the pati ent, wrote a perscriptiun, and said: "Just taste that and yo•.t'Il be all right," and departed. Next day he called again, when Mrs. Finni- gan opened the lou: to him with a beaming face. "Sure that was a wouderf►tl wee bit of paper ye left yesterday. sur," she exclaimed. "Terence is quite better to -day." "1 ant glad to hear that," said the medical man. "Not but what 1 hadn't a job to get hint to take it," went on Mrs. Finnigan, "but Imre 1 just wrapped up the wee bit of paper quite small an' put it in a spoonful of jani, an' Terence swallowed it un'heknownet, an' by night he was better." -4 S1.0\i A1tT. "1 consider this painting a beau• tiftl piece of work.'' commented the art dealer contemplating the parlrait of the sleeping canine. "It's a dog after Laildseer." "Is that so 1" exclaimed Neurieb. "Well, the pup doesn't seem to be going after him te•ry indn-triuus- ly. „ sie aere CARTERS MEE CURE Fick Headschoa::1 n•irereall the trouble, teed. dent to • bilious state of the system• tush se yv:ueu. Nausea, ntowelutes, I,isereu suer ♦sting. Pain lu the Si le, Ar. wale their Mold u.,•ilaL:e au..... Lae L.vu t:Luwn lu ouriud SICK neadache, yet Carters Litilo Liver Pills srs equally vatualu f u Constipation. curing and pr♦ %♦rung ttlsannoylog complaiut.wbile they ales correct alldtsordereoftbeatotuaeh,atimnlalel • liter and regulate the bowels. Even if wey gaily cured EAD Ache tbey would be almost pricvtesa t. thew w 50 sudor from thisdistree.ing complaint: but fortu- nately theirgoodne.sdoes not end Lere,su l those whooneetry them will and these Lttlr 1 ill. nW ableinsowanywaysthatthey will m•t be en. nag todowithout them. But after altskkhead CHE Is the hens of on tunny Urea that here is where we snake our great bust. Our pills cure 1t while Otters do not. Carters Little Liver Pill. ars very small sad very easy to take. One or two 1111s wake a dose. 'They are strictly veLetable and do not gripe or pure, but by their gentle action please all who We them. Cai11i 1tinl:1 * Co , NIT TOL. ill ?alt Does ball ?rias THE APPLE CELLAR. How to Make and to keep It Neat and Sweet. An apple cellar should be the tidiest and sweetest corner of the house. Nothing else should ever be stored in it. Its walls should b at (east twenty inches thick and it should have abundant Tight. t: summer it, should be open tq draughts of air and kept free of any d Thereecay. should be no mouldy hoards nor any smell of mildew; fit oth"r words, the air should be ht to breathe. When the apples are stored the draught should be snip- ped and when steady cold sets :n you should shut the cellar tight and let it stay tightly closed until May. Von can place such a cellar as this conveniently under part of your barn or under your carriage house, says Outing, only there should be no stable adjacent. The floor overhead should be covered with autumn loaves spread thickly tc prevent any change of atmos- phere below. The thermometer all %inter should stand at about 33 - just above freezing• Put your ap- ples in shallow bins. cement the floor to keep out rats and if bar rels are used set them up some- what from the floor. e• - HOW 1T GREW. Mrs. A. (to Mrs. B.) "That Mrs. Newcomer is so fond of children. The other day when I called she was blowing soap bubbles with them through a commcn clay pipe." Mrs. B. (to Mrs. C.) --"That Mre. Newcomer is so funny. Mrs. A. saw her arousing the children %ith a common clay pipe." Mrs. C. (to Mrs. D.) -"That Mrs. Newcomer smokes a common clay pipe." Mrs. D. (to Mrs. E.) ' That Mrs. Newcomer smokes a horrid pipe. I don't see ht,w any woman in her sober senses could do that." Mrs. E. (to Mrs. F•) "That Mrs. Newcomer smokes a pipe and drinks awfully." esia 'Do you know, sir. that I am very partienlar with whom my daughter keeps company t" said it pompous father. "Then 1 suppose • you are very often away from home," retorted the snutrt• youth who was thus snubbed. Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic and Cramps Nearly every one is troubled with bowel complaint during the sumn.er months. But, do they know what to do to cure it. 'fho•ts.nds do, many don't. WE CAN TELL YOU! DR. FOWLER'S Extract of Wild Strawberry WILL DO IT 1 It has been on the market 61 yesis, and is srnivenally used in thousands of famitec. There are many irritations of this sterling re.cedy. so do not be led into taking eo:uething "just se gyral ' w!,irh some itntc•rupuleus dniggt ' tile* to tsar you into taking. Dr. Fowler's is the original. There a none not a gent. It eines Sum Complaint. Cliei•'re Morbus, Cho. fantum, geasii•knsse and t•L•unt t, frier 35 cents. [he .1'. MT/U.4