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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1909-11-18, Page 3LUTE ECURITYII Cenulne Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear alienaturo of See Fat -Stas]]. Wrapper Blow. Yen imam .ss as may is take as snare. + Fe* 1lEAuACNta CARTERS FOA 01/11111111.►el Qlut1USIESS. tellTIRPIO LIYER. feel CJ11:$TIPATION. re_ EALLCW SKIN - ovum. r••.� ersi CURfr. f+(r'" . • • ' ^►'i, FOR'1'V VEIRS 1\ EXILE. (rapt. O'11eagher ('ondon's Reeep- lion in Manehe,aler. Manchester Irishmen in their thousands gave a welcome recently to Captain O'Meagher Condon. who 42 years ago was sentenced to death fur his share in the Manchester Fenian outrage in which Police Ser- geant Brett was killed, but was re- prieved and condemned to penal servitude. After eleven years of this sen- tence Captain Condon, who was an American citizen, was released on condition that he did not return to Ireland for twenty years. It is eleven years since this ban expir- ed, and now on his return he has been received by L•ishmen with open arms. Captain Condon was the organiz- er of the plot in 1167 to release two uoted I'enlans, Colonel Kelly and Captain Deasy, from custody at Manchester. They were being driv- en -along Hyde road in the prison van, when a band of armed men appeared. The horses in the van were killed, and two constables in charge were wounded. Sergeant trett, who was inside the van, re- fused to open the cloor, and he was shot, it is believed, by a bullet fired through the door. :1 female prisoner in the van handed out the keys, and Kelly and Deasy were released and got clear away, and, 80 far as the public is oncerue(i, were never heard of gain. Twenty-three persons were arrested in connection with the crime, and, of these five, including Captain Condon, were sentenced to death. Seven ethers were sen- tenced to penal servitude. Maguire as pardoned, and Condon repriev- ed, but the other three -the "Man- chester martyrs" --were executed. --"-4: DIVISION OF LAND SURFACE. Asia comprises 32 per cent. of the total land surface of the globe, and has a population of 120,000,000; America comprises SS per cent., population 125,000,000; :Africa 22 per cent., population 130,000,000; Europe 7 per cent., population 380,- 000,000; Australia 6 per cent., po- pulation 5,000,000. Three-fourths of the area of Japan is mountain - ons, and less than 16 per cent. is under cultivation. DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP. is SFeciaily Calculated To Curs All Dis- eases of the Throat and Lungs. Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Sots Throat averseness, Croup, Pain or Tightness in Ike Chest; and all Bronchial Teenblec yield quickly to the curative powers o: thus prince of pectoral remedies. it contains all the virtues of the wort(. famous Norway pine tree, combine(' iiii.with Wild Cherry Bark, and the soothing , eating and expectorant peoportiss o; .celtent herbs and barks. Mrs. John T'elcl +"++++++. ♦ Windsor, (Warn. ♦ writes "1 es. * troubled w ith s nss ♦ ty harking cola ♦ for the past si months and used : + ♦♦♦4 + * lot of different it medics; but the'. lei me no rest. .1t last 1 ea.� adti,.n b' a friend to try 1)r. W sett s \on:,t P, S + rl andwth t the ir,r v I fat ,I(wr. I found cre,t relief and to ,tray lily hack- ingtough has entioel disappeared 11101 1 tn otter without Dr. 1Votxl's Norway rine a rip in tie how." The price of Pr. \\'nod's Norway fine k I-iip is 1,:5 Celt)) per bottle. It is scut ui. in s y ellcw wrapper. three rine trees the trade mr.rk, so Le Aare end acte,t neve of the many substitutes Of the origin•tl "Norway Pine Syrup." Ms•ui+set•ire•l only by The 1'. Milburo o., Lineted, Toronto Oat. Nasty Hacking Cough. Cured. 1This experience w•as so a f I ARE Paul's weakness, iu its ali,c til and igo- aunii ny, fur in I)an►aseus "the per- secutor became the pers,euted." In Luke's account, it is said "the Jews watched the gates." Itut, as there were 10,000 of thele in Da- mascus, they could easily influence the -governor to have the gates watched, which is the sante thing. :betas IV. was king of Arabia from For the Child. the Man, the Family, the State, the Church, - B. C. 9 to A. D. 40. Their angels always see the face anti all that is godly. The powers Chapter 12. verse 1. I mast needs u notexpedient-- Matt. rent -- of my Father who is in heaven.- on the other aro champions of the glory, th u) h it is ex1i dr Matt. xyiii. 10. right of the Divinity, and protec Ho unwillingly resumes his boast Always, and net less now, loan Ing in 1108 ow•u defense, but i cuu g + tors of all who rely upsu their nuc scieua of cert in disadyeutuges in consciously or unconsciously, Pato cot. God's commands are being ('x such a course. Peened inquiring glances toward eroded with mule than aerial swift Visions (thing; seen) were only that other world where the Deity oras, and nu mortal is unsafe, save one method ofrevelations. reigns and His cohorts deploy their the one who refuses the blessed Of the Lord here, is the activity in His service. ministrations of those uho were � Author of the vision, not, as in This curiosity has never been faithful from the dawn of time. ' other NewTestament cases, the Ona shaken off. It is an inheritance of If the child has his angel, how ; revealed. our nature, and, be be religious or touch more certainly has the mart, I know a man in ('heist 1 tvpi- irreligious, every one is helpless for the mean needs hire more. 1 cal Pauline expression fur a Chris - against its resistless fascination. It Much and everything needful does liars mon Though speaking of him - is all no weak proof that this Scripture tell «s. Its pages are i self, Paul is to himself as a third haunting desire springs from the vocal with the melody of the person. And he treats of himself, fact that we have not been made for not. as a natural man, nor a delud- this world, but are destined, thanks RUSTLING OF ANGEL. WINGS. ed man, but as u ratan having a to the gracious God therefor, for a goal higher and more lasting. In fact, the uplifting and helpful C'ltristite experrenc` . obstinate of stains. Gaud fur fruit .tor • is narrated in its entirety,as Fourteen years ago -Six or sev- sc .loco a d rte tancredentialecf oin soiicitings r those spirits energize in those last en years after his con.ersion, when stains of look r.tanding. stretches of duration from the ho was in Tarsus or Antioch. Ho Lace ('ultnos. Cut strips of acles fur sante utterauce to satisfy angel of the flaming sword to the evidently dues out inenn to connect strong, unbleached muslin, about this restless, chafing curiosity, when bright one who came to John and it with any other experience he one and one-half inches wide the with Bible in hand, every reveren-g ever had. It is u solitary ex peri desired length of curtains. Sew unveiled all the glories of the New by seri >5 ontoplain edges of curtains ditatiDal uarlcantstian ralt thatay in r it� behooerful ves Jerusalem. There is no story, save date vouched for as a fact b the ) �g uith a long machine stitch. Pin to know, and more than frustrated that of Him crucified, more satin- Whether in the body, 1 know not curtains into frame the usual way, attempts oar blatant charlatanry can fying, more consoling, more invig- -The event was thoroughly ;neon,_ and when dry the stitching can eas- g ily be ripped, (while still in frame) ever reveal. orating. Why search elsewhere than prehensible to Paul. He was caughtwith sharp i I INNETMERABf.I: PASSAGES rnAscearlyre as Deuteronomy, t.►o tip out of himself in a transcendent method the rcurta r eing dges alre y ter - is m holy writ give the story of that world was warned against trifling the spirit, her is unable to tellor 'M in g thus avoiding the fectly straight, superanntndane sphere. Therein is with those realms so near and yet Even to the third heaven -It is "points"always matte in pinning recounted the rebellion against the so far away. "Neither let there be 1 omnipotent, the deaf, the punish- found one among you that seeketh went of the guilty and the reward the truth from the dead. For the unspeakable of those who were tees- Lord abhorreth all such things."--- son proof. \\'e read of the unseen Deut. xviii. 12. stairs the angels are climbing and The attitude the Scriptures urge Hints for Busy Housekeepers. Recipes and Other Valuable Information of Particular Interest to Women Folks. 1N THF, LAUNDRY lone -half cupfuls 0f flour and iw., Laundry Hag. --Take a piece of teaspoonful; of baking p..wder and linea about twice the sire "f a c•oai- I add slowly to the mixture one cup- ' moil laundry bag. f',ld it and :cal- fu: of finely chopped walnuts, light - lee it around in light blue or pink. i ly ]loured, one teaspoonful of va- Work the monogram in the centre t►illa, and lastly add the stiffly hen - of the bag. Pad both the ii .n.+gram I ten whites of two eggs. Hake in a loaf tin, in a moderato oven, fur one-half hour. When cool enough ice the top thickly, either with boiled icing or any other kind de- sired. and the border heavily. Work Targe eyelets about tsu and one-half inches from the tap of bag and run through these a curd to match the work. It makes a useful as well as dainty gift. RouiotStet Obstinate Slums. ---Put a teaspoonful of powdered sulphur in a saucer and add a few drops of alcohol and ignite. Place a funnel t•ver this, point upward. Wet, stain - el linen and hold over point of fun- nel Fumes wi11 remove the most descending with messages from Gud to man and with praise and thanks- giving and prayers from man to God. The Son of Man in His eternity saw Satan and his minions fall like lightning from heaven. There is flashed upon us that reign with its two kingdoms, the kingdom of light and the kingdom of darkness. In one the powers are set against God is so simple, so sublime. Tnat atti- tude in one of prayer and worship. Such an attitude takes so notch away from the loneliness of our pil- grimage. Wait, and be contrite and humble, and our angels, when the summons sounds, will lift us gent- ly from our couch of death and place us in the arms of the loving Father, whose face they always see. REV. P. A. HALPIN. THE S. S. LESSON INTERNA'T'IONAL LESSON, 24. Of the Jews forty stripes save one -A Jewish punishment. Only thirty-nine were given, as a precau- tion against violating the legal number, forty. Luke gives no ac- count of the five times Paul endured NOV. 21. this torture (compare 2 Cor. 4. 10). It shows how fragmentary is the history found in the book of the Acts. 23. Thrice ... beaten with rods - Roman punishment. Only ono is mentioned by Luke, that at Philip- pi (Acts 10. 22). See Word Studies for July 11. Once . . . stoned --At Lystra, at the instigation of Jews (Acts 14. 19). Thrice I suffered shipwreck -Not mentioned in Acts, as that describ- :;: in chapter '27 came after the writ hip of this epistle. hive other sea journeys are recorded in Acts. Probably there were still others. In the deep Another unrecorded experience. On a raft or piece of wreckage, is meant. 20. The ungrammatical toms of Chip verse shows the deep emotion of the writer. The eightfold repetition cf perils indicates that he was se - minds his disciples of what they cure nowhere. In his journeyings have he -gotten -0o independence he often had to cross rivers at the and sacrifices of his service, upon risk of his life, and in many parts which his authority as an apostle of Syria and Asia Minor he would are bused. encounter robbers. The account in Disparagement, as though we had Acts abounds in the hatred which been weak ---Paul waives all right his countrymen bore him for his to the exercise of such arbitrary: teaching, and shows how they stir - authority as the false apostles leave t red the Gentiles to violence. Hard - claimed and the Corinthians have est to bear, and so last mentioned, blandly endured (verse 20). He is, was the apostasy of false brethren willing to concede his own weak- :(Phil. 3. 18). ness if their high-handed actions; 27. Labor and travail -In 1 Theses are the measure of strength. Still, !e, 9, and 2 Thess. 3. 8, these same though seeing that to speak in such words are used together in refer - a way is foolishness, if they have ring to his plying his trade. He any ground for their bold prete's- worked at tent -making by night as Mons, lie has ass !Much ground. well as by clay, which may explain 22. Here the boasting to which lie his watehings often, though we is compelled begins. His foes rest know lie gave up his sleep for their case upon their Jewish Ori- !preaching and prayer (:Acts 20. 31 : gin. Three terms are used in a ; 1 Thess. 3. 10). rising scale. Hebrews refers to their nationality, together with the greatness of their past. in Israe- lites are implied the peculiar privi- of eourse•' gives the clearest mean - leges of a people called Gd's ing : as we would say : "Not to (corn pa re Thom. 9. •t, 5). Seed of speak of identical matters." The Abraham is a way of describing the i.erils lie has nis'nti•,ned are only a direct and exclusive interest of the pert of the outward troubles which Jews in the fulfillment of the prom he Ieaves unspecific 1. isea (John s. 39). Pride of race was 29. Weak HudI Hot weak ?-- one of the strongest sparks of the fiy st n., salty, he identifier; himself apostle, and it is with hot passi..r' bit• tiisciplcs, and feels for their he says "So nm 1" to men " weakness as if it were bis Oren. charge him with being faithless to his natural prerogatives. Hurn not-- Withiuchgnntion. 23. Ministers of Christ --Paul docs 30s. i will glory 'Phis is, fsrst, a not admit that they are, but, ns vindcation III his ' l - Anne- up to they rate Ihern+.lees as such, he is this point, inasmuch as he has glori- willing to make a comparison, even ed only i•i shot he has suffer.~, not if his boast (toes seem like that of in what he has dont not in a roan bereft of his senses (beside strength. but in weakness. The himself). verse els.. looks forward to the next more - 1f, es a .Tcr,•, he is equal chapter, where, in verse 5 and 9, t.o his enemies. es a minister, ho he reasserts the same principle. claims superior authority. ,1s a 31. The best explanation of the matter of fart, though he speaks of introduction of this solemn doxol- labors and prisons mote abundant- ogy rat this p'ilnt is that it looks fur- l•, there k no ceniperlson. and the ward to the statement: about to be apostle neglects to mak,. any. His made, the supernatural experiences service is unpnrnllcled, t f the next chapter, especiallybe- 1n deaths - - Variells 'occasions when he was in danger of death (Acte 11. 19). ''The ntosf Livid light we have on the np0stelic age and the lie career." Lesson Vlll. I'attl's Story of itis Lite, 2 Cur. 11. 21 10 12. 10. Golden Text, 2 ('or. 1.2. 9. Verse 21. I speak --Paul has been making a defense of his ministry (chapters 10.13 cornprising the full statement) re•ainst charges of weak- ness and cowardice. In chapter 11 he enters the lists against. the false teachers of • Corinth. They have glorified themselves before the church, and Paul, though deprecat- ing such a course as folly, to which he is only driven by a desire to rout his adversaries, adopt their tactics, and begins a forced com- mendation of himself. Thus he ex- poses the emptiness of the claims rnade by these Judaizers, and re - 2't. Besides those things that are without -The second rending of the ma rgin, "the things that co1111' out ing almost incredible. it world he necessary to eall to witness the liv- ing God, who, to ]aim in secret. had n'.enle(1 Jesus as Lerd. 32, 33. Compare Acts 9. 23.23, and see Word Studies for .lpril 18. idle to speculate as to Paul's con- ception of the heavens. "It adds nothing to speak of an aerial, side- real, and spiritual heaven, and to suppose these are meant by Paul; we can only think vaguely of the man in Christ rising through one celestial region after another till he came even to the third" (Den- ney). In the next two verses he resumes, does not repeat, and Paradise (4) signifies a further stage ie his passage through vast spaces. The Jewish abode of good sottls who await the resurrection (Luke 16. 23), can hardly be meant, but "the paradise of God" (Rev. 22), "far above all heavens" (Eph. 4. 10). 5. On behalf of such a one (a man in Christ, fourteen years ago, un- able to say whether in the body or disembodied, rapt to the third heaven, hearing in paradise things too sacred for human speech), he will glory ; for, the events were not of his making, and belong, there- fore, to his weaknesses. 7. A thorn in the flesh was giv- en him in order to keep hire hum- ble, victorious over the constant temptation to spiritual pride which such revelations would ,aturally give a man. The stain conclusions which have been reached from the endless controversies about this affliction are these: it was painful anew bodily ; was connected with his special revelations; was extremely humiliating (Gal. 4. 14); was re- current, if not chronic; was per- manent ; and cannot easily be iden- til'red with such maladies as head- ache, sore eyes, and epilepsy. 9. He hath said --A solemn way of asserting that n final answer to his prayer has been made, Christ refusing him freedom from suffer- ing, but assuring hint of grace (di• vine help to meet human need) to endure it. Rather glory in my weaknesses - Than complain of them; for through them becomes possessor of the pow- er of Christ. Thus, his glorying, ,which he began with such diffidence, turns out to be to the honor of Christ, for the exaltation of his weaknesses brings out in contrast the strength of his Lord. ALWAYS ON THE GO. Mayme-"i understand the man EIi•ira is engaged to is a great traveler." 1':dyth---"\'es, indeed ! He's a street car conductor." M rs Newlywed --"It's just brutal (.f you to call it 'this stuff.' You said you'd be glad if I baked my own bread, and-" Mr. Newly- wed ---"Yes ; but I didn't say I wanted you to bake mine." HEADACH AND Burdock Blood Bitters. The presence of brad 'elle nearly always tells us that there 14 another disease wh,cit, although we may not be aware of it.. is still exerting its baneful influence, snit la :haps awaiting an opportunit% t0 ,assert itself plainly. Burdock Blood Bitters sae, for years, been curing all kinds of bead: hes. and it yo•i will only give it a trial We are sure it will do for von what it has done for 11,ou- sande of others into the edge. The saute strips cau ba used year after year. Tliis idea can also be utilized in laundering centerpieces on which it is difficult to obtain a straight edge. Peach Stains. -The best way is to pour boiling water through stained article before washing. If this pro- cess is neglected, however, there is another that takes the stains out after article has been washed. Dampen and lay on ice in refriger- ator with stain next to the ice. It may require two or three freezings, but is a simple and sure way. For Irons. -Place a piece of a ce- dar hough upon the ironing table and occasionally rub the hot iron on the Cedar, especially when ironing starched articles, and you will be delighted with the ease with which you complete your ironing. Any kind of cedar will do, but the prickly kind seems best. The cedar thus used is far more satisfactory than parafflne or beeswax or any- thing else we have tried. Soutache.-Stretch the embroid- ered parts to remove all wrinkles. Iron over the braid to smooth it. Yoe will not be pleased with the ap- pearance of the linen beneath, but turn the garment, lay the embroid- ery upon a double or triple thick- ness of a white Turkish towel which will permit the braid to sink into its soft surface and the back of the linen, following it with a medium iron. Iron all parts perfectly dry or they will wrinkle again and be unattractive. Iron embroidered scallops in the same manner and clip any loose threads that may es- cape from scallops or edges. .1 pair of manicure scissors is good fur this purpose. (':1 K ES. Apple Cake -One cupful of sugar, ane -half cupful of butter or lard, one cupful apple sauce with ono tea- st,00nful of soda stewed in it, aro cupful of raisins, one teaspoonful cinnamon, one-half teaspoonful of cloves, pinch of salt, 1% cupfuls of flour. Economy Cake. ---When a cake has been a failure on account of being to., rich, do not throw out, but take on- half cupful of sugar, one small tablespoonful of butter. one egg, and two cupfuls of milk. Break cake up in small pieces and stir all thoroughly until sn,ot1,- To one cup of their add one heaping tea- spo,nftd of baking powder and flavor to taste. This is especially good as nut cake. frown (rake. -For a delirious and inexpensive cake, especially when eggs and butter are high, the fol lewirie' recipe will be found most ncceptal.le. No eggs are required : Cream together one capful brown sugar and •me-I.ulf cupful butter, add one cupful thick sour milk, one teaspoonful soda, one teaspoonful cinn,uuen, one-half teaspoonful c•I..%es, one cupful er more of seed- ( :I raisins or any other fruit desir- ed. two cupfuls 1.1 flour. Virginia Fruit (rake. --One pound butler. two eggs beaten separate, two pounds dark brown sugar, tw,, pounds flour, sifted, two puun•ls gcedc.l raisins, chopped, two pounds citron, chopped, one pound cur- rents, two cups molasses, •,ne cud of c'ear, strong coffee, one (up •,f brandy, two tablesjs.on;'tis , f el. .e:. t tablespoonfuls of all ♦♦♦♦♦+♦♦ Mn. John Conners, sl .cc, two tableApoonfuls of einna ♦ Headache ♦ Ti u r 1 i n g t o n. N.!;., pion, two teasp.,ons of bakinr, pow-- ♦ + writes. "1 t.stebeen der. Cream,agar and boli r; 111.4N Constipation♦ tmuhled with Lead sI' together: white of eggs la .t fiiit Cared. ♦ oche and constipationfl„Ire Ill slow I.akr in s �I•. t . :en ♦ ♦ for a Inn)( time. After fe,r two hours. This will net ie Iwo 4 ♦♦??♦♦? ening .iilTerent dor ]serge :ekes . tors meth, Sill' a friend PIES. Vinegar Pie.-Twe cupfuls of st►- gat, scant ono -half cupful of vino - gar, heaping tablespoonful of flour, water enough to fill pie, a little nut- meg on top; have top and bottom crust. Pio Crust. -One and one-half ottp- fuls of sifted flour, one-half cupful of lard (or butter), one-third cup- ful of icewater, one even teaspoon- ful of salt. Knead as little as pos- sible, also as dry as can bo knead- ed together. This makes two crusts. Lemon Pie Filling.-Three-quar- tors cupful of sugar, one heaping tablespoonful of cornstarch, one cupful of cold water, grated yellow and juice of one lepton, one dessert spoonful of butter, yolks of three eggs, white of one. Cook carefully till it becomes a thick paste. Turn into ungreased pan and then cover with meringue. Mix the cornstarch with the sugar before adding the water. Cream Peach Pie. -Mix well one cupful of sugar with one table- spoonful of flour. Make bottom crust for pie and spread with half this Sugar mixture. Fill with peach- es sliced thin. ('over with remaining sugar and enough creast to cover the peaches well. Bake. - USEFUL HINTS. Verdigris on metal can be speed- ily removed by rubbing with liquid ammonia on a cloth. Bottled fruits and jam should bo stored in the dark. A dry cupboard is the best for them. Pads for stair carpets can be made from pieces of old blanket. Lay them smooth under the carpet. Beetles can be got rid of quite easily. Sprinkle their haunts with borax and they will speedily van- place food cooking starts to burn, place at once in pan of cold water; it will remove all scorched taste. Greasy plates are much more eas- ily washed if first wiped with soft paper. This also applies to frying pans. Muslin window curtains can be trade non -inflammable if alum be dissolved in the last rinsing water. To cleanse the collars of garments dlsselve one part salt in four of al. collet. Apply with a sponge, and rub well. After washing the lamp chimney polish it with dry salt. 1t makes the glass bright and will prevent it breaking. For corns -The milky juice of a dandelion stalk if applied will of - ter give relief, and cause the corn to disappear. A vanilla bean kept in the sugar set Dmitri Constantinovit(h has de• liberately chosen it. Suffered Terrible Pains Prom Ear Kidneys Tor Nine DEoatbs. For Backache, Lams or Weak Back --f one of the commonest and most distreaein. nucyptotns of kidney ivaotiou, there is tk remedy equal to Doan's Kidney Pills fo laking out the stitches• twitches ap twinges. limbering up the still back, an giving pe rfect comfort. A medicine that stren't,ens the kid- neys so that they ate ens:,led to extract the poisonous uric acid Isom the bloat and prevent the chief cause of Rheum*. tis(u. Mr. 1)oug.t!d 1. Melsaae, ilroad Cove Banks, N.S., writes: :.I was trouhhst with my kidneys for nine months. and suffered with such terrible pains aer•os,t the small of toy back alt the time that 1 could hardly get around. After taking two boxes of Doan's Kidney Pmts 1 began to feel better, and by the time I had taken three I was completely cured." Price 50 cents per box, or 3 for 111.241 all dealers or .nailed direct on receipt or price by 'the '1'. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. When ordering specify "Dean's." STERN AND NARROW LIFE. Grand Duke ('onstantinovlteh iso• conies a Mock. The Grand Duke Dmitri Constan- tinovitch, cousin of the Czar of Rus- sia, has suddenly announced his in. tention of abandoning his immense fortune and entering a monastery. As son of a Czar's brother, Dmi- tri C'onstantinoviteh was born in the midst of unlimited luxury. His higl rank gave him the usual benefits of an army of servants, courtiers, and slaves, the richest of rooms, the heaviest of gold plate, and the most splendid of jewels. Large tracts of forests were his; trines filled with gents and farms populated with thousand slaves belonged to hint. Dmitri Constantinovitch enjoyed his wealth to the utmost. But it it said that satiety has brought a dis- taste for things worldly. Were he an Anglo Saxon, he would talk about the simple lifo. As it is, he choses to retire front the world altogether and live as a monk. He takes no evidence of hit wealth with him. The endowments len will give to the monastery are not for his use, but for the poor. His earthly possessions are to con- sist of a wooden bed without a mat- tress, a blanket of coarse brown wool to cover him, a pillow of wood, with a niche carved for the neck, a rush -bottomed chair, a wooden can. die -stick, one pair of wooden pat. terns, one haircloth shirt, one cas- sock of coarse wool, a cowl, and a rosary. During more than throe months i.• the year he will eat neither meat, eggs, butter, cheese, nor fish. His fare will, at such times, consist of barley boiled in water, cakes fried in oil, arid black bread. At other tinges he will eat broth, a slice of boiled beef, or an egg. He will keep his own cell clean and cultivate with his own bands the little garden allotted to him. He will rise fur prayers at two in the night and get up at six for the day. Ile will nut talk to his bro- ther plonks in the refectory except en rare occasions, when called upon to do so by the abbot. His name, let alone his title, is to be left outside, and ho is to he known to the other inmates by a new one, chosen on his entrance. This life, to one who has had al( that wealth, birth, anti social po• anion can give, v.ould seem to bo somewhat stern and narrow, and box will impart a delicious flavor t•, the sugar. This is a bit of ad- vice from a French chef. Salt thrown into the oven im- mediately after anything has been burned in it. will make the objec- tionable odor less disagreeable. Place a box of lime in the closet in which jams, preserves, etc., are stored away. It will prevent mold from gathering on the fruit. A fruit jar rubber slipped over the projected end 0f a teapot lid will prevent the lid from dancing up rind down when the kettle boils. Felt hats may be cleaned by dip- ping a hard brush which has short hairs into spirits of ammonia. Itub well until the grease disappears. When buying table linen, cut 011 a small strip of it and keep, so that the unravelled thread may be used f'.. darning the table clothee or nap• kins when worn. To glaze a tart dissolve a ten - spoonful of sugar in two of milk, ar,d brush the pastry with the mix- ture. This is quite as eflic•a(•ietts anti much cheaper than an egg. When running dates, figs or rai- sins through the food chopper, add a few drops of lemon juice. it will do much tuwnrd preventing the fruit front clogging the chopper. For the sink, there is no better cleanser than two gallons of hosting water in which ha4 been dissolved tw( tablespoonfuls of soda and two teaspoonfuls of rock ammonia. Worn brooms or whisks may be dipped into hotmuter and uneven (dgei trinttned with shears. This makes the stratis harder, and the trimming russet the lireom :Littlest GOOD REASON. Hannah-"Yes'm, but if I (10 youah laundry work, ma'am, I musk have de undahstandin' dal my lois- ban' collects de pay." reflect lady--"But it '' lyyou yourself, Hnnnah1 Hannah-"Well, you see, ma'am, I don't want to rob de of plan ul (le only job he's evah likely to get. ' -�-t I3E1V:111 E. "Sharp words," said Uncle Eb- en, "is like razzers, useful new an' then, but dapj'ous playthings." ismommik_ Was All Run Down.Weighed Lbs. Now Weighs 186. Mrs. M. Niel:inn, I)r•bee Junction, N.B., writes:-" 1 wish to tell you what Mil- beru's Heart and Nerve ('ills have done for me. 'three years ago 1 was s., runt down 1 eonld not do ray own work. 1 went to a doctor, and lie told nos 1 had heart trouble and that lily nen es were all unci t ung. 1 took his ti edicine, an he onlered me to do, but it did n,e no g(x.d. I then started to take Milburn's heart and Nerve ('ills, aril hod only taken one Ina before 1 !tatted to feel Netter, so 1 emotion,' their use until 1 had taken several hogs, and 1 am now strong end well, and able to do my oat n w r rk `1 lien I conunen•'e(1 taking your i ,IIs 1 aei Fed 12.1 point is, and now weigh 1!(b 811.1 hats given birth to a lovely young eta tighter, which was a happy thing in the When 1 commenced taking 11i11 -urn's {Furt and Nerve Pills, 1 could not go ;en;ed r' 14, tri• Ituntw'k 111;,0•1 Itii1018. Debutante's (rake.- One cul►.•il f as good 35 new. upstiirs without resting before 1 g"t t.► t1 bn•t 1 am r•ontpletely (•:1101 niter hating granulated sugar and yolks of two Salt moistened w;th vinegar will trotf li^ 1 can now go up without any t. (n 1!ir'rv' lot ties. 1 ren safely r('cenn- egg 4 be'31en together to •t ahito remove burnt marks from enamelle`Ifheprierof Milburn'a heart amt Nene mend it 14) :all." crealil Work in slowly 0n ••tuft] :uicepans and dishes. but don't Pills is 5(t rents per hot. or 3 boxes for For sale by all dealers. ('lspfnl of melted hotter. Add tcty fidget. They should be s'r'kerl in cold 11.25 it all .b -;eters or troika direct an Mannfaeture'l only by Tho 'F. Milburn sir wlr• one scant cupful of milk water fur a few hours first to loosen remint of pries by The T. Milburn ('o., ('o., Limited, Toronto, Oa$. Sift together three times one and 1 the stains. Limited, 1orunto, Oat,. • 1