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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1905-04-13, Page 3ABSOLLJTU SECURITY, Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills Must Seem Signature of Sus P."41611° Wrapper Below. Ytsr7 email east ea 0e. N talke as syraa FOA NEAeAClli[a FOIE DIW LU. writFOR OiUO SNEil. FOR TORPID LIVEN. PON CONSTIPATION. ON. con SALLOW s1uN. roN THE COMPLEAION rest.-�._ RTENS • CUR fe•or The King of Terrors Is Consumption. And Consumption Is caused by neglect. Ing to cure the dangerous Coughs and Colds. The balsamic odor of the newly . cut pine heals and invigorates the lungs, and even consumptives im- prove and revive amid the perfume of the pines. This fact has long ! • been kuown to physicians, but the essential healing principle of the pine has never before been separ- ated and refined as it is in DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP. It combines the life-giving lung - healing virtue of the Norway Pine with other absorbent, expectorant and soothingHerbs and Balsams. It cures oughs, Colds, Hoarse - nese, Bronchitis, and all affections of the bronchial tubes and air pas- sages. Mrs. M. B. Lisle, Eagle Head, N.S., writes :-I have used Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup for coughs and think it is a fine remedy, the best we have ever used. Anual- ber of people here have great faith in it as it cures every time. Price 25 nets per bottle. - (.!'rj A FOUNDATION OF TRUTH Against Every Temptation the Youth Should Stand for Honesty. A despatch from Ilrookb n, N.Y says:-ltev. Dr. Newell Delight Hill preached from the following text: Thou shalt nut te11 lies one to an- other. -Leviticus xix. 11. it is a striking fact that the lower o tt •rl4 of animal:: and aura live by lying anti treachery and deceit. All things that creep and crawl practice fraud. 'rite spider's nob is spun ou ! of deceits fur unsuspecting (lies. '111. fox dmul:Jes on its track and by pr t.• , e eseeapes. The wolf, Inure cu eine si(11, leaps from its hiding plat upon the young fawn as it stoop to drink. Not otherwise is it. wit 1 ho hover orders of men name, thlecees. gamblers and all Whos stock in trade is the passion of thci fellow men. Deceit is the 'troteetio of the petty criminal. Indeed, th t% hole W 1 tt> u .r world ' n its rank file is made upal an StOC in trade is some furn,t ofe frau,} whose Dant tells 115 that the realm that lies jus below the world of hard work an honest industry is the realm of lies This realms of deceit is the realm poverty, tagrancy and human wreck a fie. lint the great world of industry and trade has journeyed away from deceit and fraud. Tho factory, the store and the bank aro founded on truth. Remnants of the era of lies remain, just as our earth shows hero and there a pocket of tire, named VESUVIUS 011 310N1' PELEE, • is DI:PENDI:N'r UPON 111M. After much thought he turned the little faro, into a ,fairy. From the beginning tie had the idea that if ho lhad healihy cows and never told lies, and sold good milk, and i( he puri ed his milk and aerated it, it wou ( be appreciated by the mothers of li 1 tie children, and oxo the time woul come %then his honesty would give 0i hint the trade. For two years the 0-1 boy struggled fur bin footing. The n- second sitting some kind of disten - e;per broke out meting his herd of s! cows. lie did not know hut it might h ; prove serious. Nuw to tell his cus- I, tomere the truth was to lose his trade and see his competitors gain r it. After a sleepless night he went 11 into a printing office and brought e outt a little circ %larx ,laiuin th of g e d k situation to his customers, saying he, jcould not honestly sell them milk. I e In a single fortnight his trade was tone. But a lending physician in the d 1 g town, whose pructice was among • children, upprectated the boy's hatred - oI of lies- One due. this doctor wrote an article advising all the mothers in the city to guard again impure milk during the heated summer months and told the story of this boy's honesty. The physician said that the youth spent money to keep the milk clean and sweet, and that he had a right to charge more. THEN THE REWARD CAME. !suspected the traitor long before his true character was openly revealed. Ilug-Or box. Took away -The Greek verb some- times times means "to take away with, "to steal," which is d•.,ubtless ,John's intended use here. 7. To keep it against the (lay of nay burying -Perhaps better as in the marginal rendering, it wast that She might keep it, etc. 10. Chief Trieste took counsel -So reutarkeble had been the demonstra- tion in honor of Jesus at Bethany thatit attracted the attention end determined opposition of the au- thorities at Jerusalem. ti- IdI THE ONLY PAWNED CITY. t -I d; Swedish Town Has Recently Be- come German. Wismar, a port of 18,000 people on the Baltic, situated in the Ger- man (lathy of Mex•klenberg-Scheerin, but belonging legally to Sweden, has recently become a German city. It was pledged to King Gustavus IV. for a loan of $1,000,000, and, the h ing of Sweden having failed to re- deem it within the century, it has e pase d to tho Duke c of bt k ec 1 h• en ,r - g Schwerin, from who'e ancestor the money was borrowed. in the early part of the eighteenth century Denmark, the most powerful enemy of Sweden, after the destruc- tion of the Hanseatic Leag•ne, a kind of trade union established by certain Gorman cities for safety and com- mercial purposes, captured Wismar and razed the fortifications. After- ward peace was declared, and the city reverted to Swden, but with the Provision that she should not re- build the fortifications. The place thus lost. its strength and impor- tanco, and became, instead, an ele- ment of weakness to the Swedes. its great yea trade was ruined and its inland trade lost. as reminders of an age when the earth was a ball of flame. Modern ei'iliention would break down utter- ' ly if men were to return to the an- ictal era of leing. What if the pre- nident of the hank had to end each day with running the bookkeeper i ' down? What if the merchant tossed a all night lest his clerks were hand- P ing in lying reports of the stoek7 1 V,hat if every manufacturer had to 1 1 j stand with a scourge above the t) weaver and spinner? d Now and then a man has _ w 4 aUCe(rd t ed for the hour by a skillful lie, but Id hence urih .ter merchant five on Inc liar's track. The history of the great firm of to -day Is the history u1 an holiest trade -murk. The whole theory of the trade -mark for the packing of sugar or coffee is that rho people can depend upon the truthfulness of the packer. What is it that sells a certain grade of wool- en or Cotton cloth? 'I'h For years the boy sold his milk for 6 ce..ts a quart as opposed to the other men who had 5. At 30 the man went from tho dairy into a moat prosperous business in the city. 'cm tho history of his great success s the history of his hatred of lies lid his love of truth in tho inner art. Macchiavelli exempted the diploma- ist from the law of truth. He urged tut the spy must i Ile, the lover use eceit, rho gamater show courage hen he had a pour hand, and the iplomatist say one thing when ho menet. another. For that f • 'y ant iy a detec- reason, when John Milton became foreign secretary to Oliver Cromwell he al- ways won out in diplomatic matters i beca,•se he always told the truth, while the diplomats thought he was Under these circumstances it was not surprising that the Swedes tired at last of their white elephant. So in the reign of the incompetent and extravagant Gustavus IV., with ter- ritory lost to the French in one war, with Finland lust to Russia, w•itlt'de- teat in a war against Nonvav, the h4 Home i444L1-ae.1-1 44 SO 1f 1: DA i N'l'Y DISH l :S . An Orange in ink is a good eliangto from lemonade. Put One ounce of cum of tartar, six ounces of loaf sugar, and four and a half ounces of vrunge peel into a large basin. four over these three quarts of boiling water, strain. and allow it to get perfectly cull bedore serving. Cream Cakes -Take our, pound of sifted dry flour, a teaspoonful of bilking -powder, and a pinch of salt. Mix with sufficient sour cream to make into a dough. Form into flat! cakes, and bake on a griddle on the! tai, of the :'tore. Add currants, and sugar to taste. Devilled Masi 0 Is very fashionable just now with chops, steaks, etc. Mince two shallots. fry in half ounce of butter t• Lt,r till a golden color, (( ail half f 't u pint of brown gravy, a table- spoonful of mixed utustard, a des- sertspoonful of Worcester sauce, and a good pinch of red pepper'. Stir until the sauce boils, 14in' it and puss turuugh a fine strainer, add a tt'itspuor:fel of finely chopped par- sley, anti ecru.. Stewed Steak, -Cut one pound and a half of beef steak into nice pieces, ( put it into a stewpan, cover with stock or water, and when it shooters add three c.ninns, a carrot, a turnip, a stick of celery, and two tomatoes cut into pieces, let sitnr1Cr for an hour and it half, thicken the liquor with flour, add curative coloring to snake a rich brown, season with pep- per and milt, and serve. Any other - t'egotah:es, parsnips, n►uehroonts, etc. c may Tie added if liked. Holiday lluuld.-'fake a teacupful a of jam, the same quantity of bread- crtunbs, flour, and suet. Mix all g thoroughly together. Dissolve a C small teaspoonful of carbonate of s first one side and then another • acres' the hot stove 'l o tale grease out of teat her ap- ply tile white of un egg to the spot and de'. in the sun. Repeat the ap- plicattou till the stain is removed. For brushing a silk petticuut use a pad covered with velvet instead of a brush. A brush wears the silk and tin' velvet pad does not, though it removes the dust just as well. After baking a cake always let it remain in the tits for about bice min- utes to give it thee to settle, and then turn out carefully on to a ai . •. '1'o restore the ivory handles of Knives to a good color get some line sand paper and rub the ivory handles with it, and they will be- come white. To remove rust /run, knives, take a little paraffin and some eatery powder, rub this on to the knives, and after a couple of home scour the„ with a raw potato cut in half. After a few cleanings the rust marks should have quite disappear- ed Scouring drops for cleaning the collars of coats, etc., are excellent if made from this recipe: Mix one tc s► a om nfu ! I of essential 1 nl o' nl of le- mon with a tvineglassful of spirits of turpenliii,'. Keep in a I:ottle tight- ly corked, (trop a little on a flan- nel, and well rub the greasy parts. 'e co. can be kept fresh a long while by rolling it in brown paper, sprinkled with water, then in a damp cloth and stored in a cool, dark place. actore preparing for table• the stored celery should be plunged into cold water and allow- ed to stand for an hour. It will then he as crisp its if just dug. Treatment of Bruises. -A braise should be immediately bathed with very hot water to prevent swelling anti lessen discoloration. If the bruise he serious. a cloth wrung toren hot oil should be applied, hanging when cool, or a cloth mist ened with arnica be hound bout the bruise. Persons with Delicate Feet should Ivo them a brisk rubbing daily with old salt and water. 'those who Wier- from pore ti oda in u little warni nitlk and add to the other ingredients. 'Throw two ounces of stoned and chopped Miens, and set all In a greased ould. Cover very carefully with ittcret paper and steam for three hours. Turn out to serve, and dust caster sugar over. A Good Sponge Cake. --Take a tea- cupful of dry pastry flour and pass it through a sieve, add to it the sante quantity of caster sugar. Work into these ingredients the yolks of three eggs, and beat foe ten minutes in a good, steady oven. The baking is the most difficult point in spongo- t coke making. so would advise your !using a rather flat tin for your first two or three attempts, anti do not !bang the even door or open it often. !the hest lum ► sugar,pounded, ,'.. o 1 g into ! n sauce -pan, and over it pour halt a pint of water. Let this stand for half no hour, and then Place on the stove, and allow it to cook for five or six minutes. Remove the scum, arid boil the sugar until it is thick and white; then stir into it a quar- ter of a pound of fresh cocoanut, finely grated. Stir uneeasiegly until it rise's iu a mass in the pan. 'Then spread it ns: quickly as possible over shotes of paper which have been dried before the fire. Remove the paper before the Ice is quite cold and let it dry. Chutney. -'Che necessary ingredi- ents are half a pound of garlic, half a pound of green ginger, one pound (.f sweet almonds. ten 1)011049 of stoned tnisins (voighel after ston-I ing), one pound of mustard seed, a quarter of :t round of flied red chil- ies, i fight polo:tie of finely chopped, unripe, juke', baking appies, and six quarts of vine: i'. Previous to )lending these, soak the ginger in he vinegar for ten (Inert. Pound all Swedes sei'ed an opportunityto te-, it Here e e I betas. t• 1 cs of the burden rho of!in pusscssion. r The Motet opportunity was given sin by rho cancelation by Gustavus of, 6 of Duke Frederick Franz I. That person not etnnuturnlly resented the insult. !and threatened dire things. Finally i his threats crystalized into a demand for an enormous indemnity. The. his engagement to the daughter lying. money had to be raised at once. The Society still believes in custom-' Duchy of Mecklenburg wive/iced 1, - house lies and in diplomatic lies, but 258,000 reichsthale•r and took Wis- e mere fact ! every form of lyine is a form of fall-, that the people of tho country have j ure. Character leaks away through 1 discovered th t thi a s menet acturer a tio as thet 11 i h never weaves lying threads or sells cotton under the name of wool or Treated by Three Doctorshonesty expresssser site. Tho rited in ods.al is his The for a Snore r Attack of Dyspepsia, Got No Relief From Medicines, But Found It At Last In Btyrdock Blood Bitters. Mrs. Frank Hutt, Mo-risburg, Ont., was one of those troubled with this most common of stomach troubles. She writes :—" After being treated by three doctors, and using many advertised medicines, for a severe attack of Dyspepsia, and receiving no benefit, i gave up all hope of ever being cured. Hearing Burdock Blood Bitters so highly spoken of, I decided to get s bottle, and give it a trial. Before I had taken it I began to feel better, and by the time I had taken the second one 1 was completely cured. I cannot recommend Bur- dock Blood Bitters too highly, and would advise all sufferers from dyspepsia to give it a trial." MILBURN'S Heart and Nerve Pills. inc a se•' pifle for all die'n.a. ant d,.- order* aN•Ing teem a run dw on condi• steno( the heart ,or nerve .rst,m. sn ae palpitation of the ifeait. Nt' I'restreNon. Nrr%wl.n,.er. ae•e. Faint sal Direr spell et.•. They are ear.'r:sl women trou'.,lal ..1 ah 1`riee S) ten T s T. ch Toone Irnp,. -s . Nra,n Fag• v beneficial t„ . (rr,:;ular men- ra'•on. to nr: i•'s, or J for !I ' . Al? drn'cr<., r S111,111•9%s i n ,r•,. .,1. ✓ .nay nt truth also is ti ,e way of pr os{•erity and wealth. honesty promotes prosperity. Many years ago I knew a youth who has since climbed to high position. His father was n farmer who lived several nines from a growing city. One morning the boy of 18 wakened to find his father dead and the family qor n e cask is Iwasted for the wormholes. Against every temptation the youth should stand for the truth. Honesty turns' the politician into the statesman. A name for honesty is better than great ! riches for the financier. stetter than( beauty for woman is this praise: "She alwats np(•nks the truth.” Young man, if you build your life on lies you beild on sand Fraud is a bubble that soon bursts. 'Truth in n foundation of rock that shall not be removed. THE S. S. LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON, APRIL 16. Lesson III. The Supper at Beth- any. Golden Text Marian xiv., 8. LESSON Wi)RD S'I'Ui)11*3. The anointing of Jesus by Mary of Bethany is the last. recorded event in the life of our Lord preceding the e•rowdel scenes of passion week. It occurred en the evening preceding the triumphal entry of Jesus into Jet usnlern, and is recorded by three ;owl..of the four evangelists (Matt. vi.. 6-13; Mark xiv., 3-9; John xi., 53 to xis., 11). Several weeks hurl inter- vened since the raising of 1.a'arus, du►•lug which time Jesus hod retired with his disciples to "a city called Ephrata%," several hours' journey northeast of Jerusalem.. Departing th, neo he i'ad crossed the Jordan, precceded southward, recrossing at Jericho, through which city he pass- ed accompanied by a great caravan mt pilgtime on their way to Jerus- alem for the great simnel celebra- tion of the pnssovcr. Much of that which transpired by the way on this hist journey of Jesus to the nation- al capital is recorded in the synop- tienl 'pope's Hiatt, xix., :1 to 20, RI: Mark x., 2-•'i2: Luke evil., 11 to 19, 2'(,. 'these passages include men- tion of the following important and f,intil:nr persons and events: The ten I les honied: the Pharisee and the en. ;sem. Christ blessing little clttl- til,0. the rich young ruler: the ambi- tion of .lames and John: the blind men near .seri( ho heaied and the visit to ?arch -awe. Vet se 1 Six Drip: Before the I'ass- over--(`n the eighth of Nis •n. since the p.esanvcr festivities began on the four t•cnth. It is generally accepted that the year was A. D. 30, in which case the eighth of Nisan fell on Friday. March 81, that is, began at six o'clock p. m. of that day, and was a Sabbath. We nre to think of Jesus ns nrriving at Bethany helore the Sabbath commenced, or early enough not to have traveled more than th,• lawful distance on the Sal,- hath iso if. The tenet prohnbly oc- curred tventp-lour hours later, atter the (lee. of the Sabbath. on Settle- d/it.Settle- d/it.et ening. Bth•:ny-'l'o be Went1eeel Wit h the nee! n "A;a.-•;, h" or "let,ariy('il,:' 'h 1.. re of 1 .• ileum, on the eastern 1,• • of \I. ;+ ! Olt tet. shout t wo 1.••^, .t, r- Salem. A place in : 1 h ..n a „ :•.t of it . lonely citr,- . , , in' :",I cow:reenlcd. 2ti in.c ,,• , , . •,. nom,. '•hm►se . ;, , 1 •'1 • .. tn-tlay con- i , i eel {,, „1 Nemo in - leer h, lege :„s .. 2. They -Clearly referring to a larger company than the little family rut sill i1144 of Lazarus and his two si-terse Siete the raising of Laver - us no doubt there tvere many in Bethany who believe on .}esus and would be glad to publicly do hien honor. A supper their -In Bethany, though not in the home of l.a'arus. Matthew and Mork both explicitly state that it was in the house of Simon, who had been a leper. We infer that this inun had been heeler) by .1.•%ns on some former occasion, and t hat therefore he would have a special and prominent port in this reception tendered the Master. 8 A pound -A weseht equivalent to our New, (troy) of twelve ounce.% ointment of pure nerd -The Greek phrase is very rare, occurring only here anti in Mark eke. 8. its mean - Ing, therefore, is not quite certain. It may mean (1) "genuine (pure) nerd" as distinguished fron, adulter- ated nand, which w'ns cheaper and more common. or (2) "drinkable (liquid) nerd," and ointment% were sometimes drunk mixed with wine; or 1:1) "1'bttic nerd," in which case "i'Istic" is to be taker, as a proper ad e.•tive derived from the name of he place from which the ointment an obtained, though no such place ow appeals to he known. All of hese men nlign find support in the nolt•sis of the (:reek phrase. Of he three. the first is to Is' preferred. The nerd itself. was an aromatic oil xtrnct,•d iron, nn 1: a -t iodine plant. he Need :taches •rntautnnsi, and •as. .:s th,. evangelist explains, veryil tr,x sous -qua. verse 5 below). i� 1. ,s - n Alahew and Mark both it et eel • n't an onointing of the rail. wh:eh douIitlees preceded this tithing of the feet with the remain - greater portion of the preci- us 11 •111(1. 1)(10V—The (rn i ra nro, 4, Judas Iseariot- 'rhe treasurer 1 the apostolic company. who ee,•rl most naturally he interested 1 mew tnl,:es more than the th, re. ('oneerning himwe know 1) of his cull i Matt x., 4; Mark iii.. 9: Luke vies 16); (2) that .Jesus rly foretold his treachery (John 7(1, 71i; (3) that he betrayed cans 'Matt. xxvi., 14-19; (•1) of s s'rh,e.lecnt remorse and suicide Melt. yell., 3-5), b. 'firer hundred shillings-Liternl- • thr. e hundree donate. The de - trete ens a Roman diver coin the Leo of which Armee to have variedfromail, from time to tlme. Prot,- )% about seventy -taro dollars, mild be n Lair equivnlent in ow one;., which was a fabeleU4 sur, r one nt tuorlernte circumetnneees s eien(ter in this way. Ire was a thief --A personal recol- r(Itott of John. who had doubtless w n t n 1 e w it h b it O O w it 0 1 en vi .1 hi ( ly ti. `• al '41i rn 'o Ito I mar, leeukloster and the Island of l'oel as security. Under the conditions of the loan the City of Wismar and the two Government districts were to remain in pledge for one hundred years. At the end of the one hundred years 'k Sweden would claim and obtain th pledged city and land by pay ing bac the original loan, with 3 per cent compound interest. A further pent l Mon, however, of the loam was that should Sweden fail to take any no tic° whatever of the expiration o J the 1line, tho contract would become renewed nutotnatically for anotheri one hundred years. The SUIII Which! Sweden wnrtld have had to pay if i she wished to claimWismar and the two Government districts is figured as amounting to S27,0('0,000, and this alone, quite apart from consid-, .rations of policy, operated doubtless as n bar against the assertion of herr rights. Time we see that, while immediate freeness transaction dates back but about one hundred years, any diplo- matic squnhble:s over the city now would have to revert to the surren- ders and armistices of the 'Thirty Years' War (1018-'04). Aid the fact 1 that Wismar heretofore really wee: Swedish territory explains why Ger many has not fortified the port, i I which is ten-idered the finest harbor' t Cocoanut ice. --Put site of 11.,' entire il(tltic roust. '1'IIE DUKE'S PAYMENT. When Sir William Allan, the emi- nent ltislurirel reinter, had Ib,ished' hie picture entitled "The !tattle e f Waterloo, from the french Side," which the Duke of Wellington agree,I � (' to purchan,', the artist culled upon; c tho Duke one day by appointment to; b tee(Ivo tee money. ile was usheredn info the study of Apsley House,jn where the Duke proceeded at once to T pay him. , lu Taking Ino a roll of notes, the Duke t began to put then down in a slow 1 and delihornto manner, calling out k the amount ns he did 90; tie., "One ti hundred pounds, two h•nrlrod w pounds," etc. This was tedious work hl and Sir William at lust contrived pv to blurt out in his S,t,leh manner fi, that his Orrice s!•ould not take all ei that 1routee-a cheque would do. to Ilut the Duke went on: "five hon- ti Bred pounds, six hundred pounds." The artist, thin ing the Duke had et not heard hien, raised his voice loud- er and louder at each hundred, ex- clniming• "A cheque %t ill do -n cheque will do." "Pleven h::ndte'l 'mends,- said the Duke. "A cheque will do. ,ebur Grace!" "Twelve hundr ed pounds.'. "A cheque, really a cheq'us will do!" repeaters Sir William once more. "No." the Duke thundered at last. "a chorlue will not do. Do you sup - peso I am going to' let my hankers know I have teem such a fuel as to pay £1.200 for a pictureo Why, they'd think me read. I wish you good morning, Sir William" the ingrcdieets separately in n mor- tar and ',widen with vinegar. When thoroughly rounded, mix ail in a stone jeer and stew in a !urge panful of water mer a slow fire, for ,t day. If nut. quite soft, cook ngnln the next doer When cold glare in Ono; hottictt f use. Thirke►dne •t th Cornet/it-eh -When ornstarch is used to thicken boiled weevils. cake !fillings, or ether com- motion, whore sugar Is used, it is etch the ,pricker and better way to nix the roger and cornstnr(•h dry. hey may oe (I',Irkly blended 1111 no mils remain. We all know t!fnt the ilk to he thickened must. be close o t�o boiling paint, and trtnny of its now the .rear, waiting for the ac - ,al Iiibbline after thickening !nixed ith cold writer has been andel. But end the s(tgcr and cornstarch even - in a howl, .Ill• n'.t a large 'poon- I or two of the het milk and emir I motel), rind you may ret urn all the l,.,t milk and Iind its tempera_ :re lowered re) very little that alt 11 boll with but a few nunnents' urine. f'horn)ate, when weed as a flat ochre. can he grate.} into the dry sugar, heron,/l t, 'en even tint by a little stirring. told waste and writhing of d•.ho9 nvobkd. TELE(IitAI'IiJNG I'llO'i'OGRAPHS. Professor Korn, of Munich, has pre- sented a report to the Bavarian Aea- deiny of 9ciencee stating that he has perfected a system of transmitting phatographs. sketches ,tn,l fe,esimlles nt signnteres over or,Jtnnr, telegraph wires Any photograph, he says, can be transmitted over a etre 1,000 miles long 111 twenty minutes. 1tIN'1:s F'O1t TitF: Hour.. A ('love or Garlic introduced into the knuckle end of a ieg of mutton wild be found a great lut►rrovement by those who like its flavor. A simple remedy for neuralgia is to Squeeze the juice of a lemon and nu orange into a cup. odd hot water. and drink at once. "he importance of Iloiling Milk.- 'lhts process Is no doubt tedious to many houserkeepors, but it need only be done once a day. 'rake in the morning the ne!ceesary ntilk for the day and scald it in a double hni;er, and you will be surprised how easy it is. i)iseast. genres live in milk more freely than in other Id ;olds. A linseed poultice should be ap- plied next to the skin. The 011 front the meal containing heatil,g pro- perttos. in cutting fresh bread heat the black of the bread -knife by laying should wash thorn daily withtuseet oap and to n water, r the , n sponge tient with tepid alum water fur a feta minutes. This will take off any unpleasant odor and harden the akin. Two COLu:ot.: Iti:CIPES. CofTee Cako-One cup molasses, 1. cup sugar. 1 cup strung hot coffee, 1 cup chopped pork, 1 cup raisins, 1 teaspoon soda, salt, cloves, cinna- mon and lemon. S cups of flour (or lass), Four the hot colTee over the pork. Bake about an hour in mod- erate oven. CotTce Soothe -fake J; cups co.f.e, 4 cup milk, 2-3 cup sugar, k ter. • spoon salt, :3 eggs, 1 teaspoon vn- nilly, 1 tablespoon granulated1 - ge n tin. Mix coffee, milk gelatin, and half the sugar: heat in double boil- er. Add remaining sugar, salt stud yolks of eggs slightly I•oaton; cook until mixture thickens. Remote from range and add beaten whites and vanilla. Mold, chill and serve with cream. TOO WARMLY WELCOMED. ITe was sprucely dressed, and no sooner had he pulled the bell than the door opened. "I've called—" began the yew man. "Oh, yes, of nurse." broke in the matronly lady who had opened the door. "Come this way, please. I'm delighted to see you." And she led the way into the tastefully -decorated drawing -room. In utter bewilderment the young Irian allotted the servant to remove his overcoat, stick, and hat before he found his tongue. "l:xcuso ones madam," ho said, "but I'm afraid there's some nils-" "Oh, no, not nt all! Mary has told mo all shout you. Sho raid--" "Itut, madam," stammered the young man, jumping to his feet, "I- 1-er-don't know Mary." "What?" fairly screamed madam. "Aren't you Mary's young man?" "No, madutn. I'm tate tax collec- tor, and I've called for-" But madam did not wait to hear any more, and n few moments later the young man Grind himself on the footpath outside, so daze) that he scarce knew where he was. TOWN LiPP. AND COMI'LEXION. At the Cambridge meeting of thn ltritish Aasovlati•,n sante singular facts were presented about the in- fluence of disease auo of town lite on the prevailing complexion of the po- puiation of iengint..i. Dr, F. C. Shruhsall said that blonds are found to envier more than brunettes from' rheumatie isorders, bat less from tlberculoeis. Blonds also suffer more from disensc In childhood, and consequently their number in pro- portion to the brunettes ditnh,ishes in the crowded areas o? cities. Nle. H( Hey Balfour said that it nppeatrd thnt town life, ily encouraging ,,,,a brt.n• ite population, is altering the inherited characterist n of the Eng- lish nation at the expense of the traits; which the pe%epic owe to their binn.l ancestry. 'I'lii.11t OI'i'01('I1'NI7'Y. rYr KIDNEY DISEASE. iseases of the Kidneys are • erous, from the fact that these ns act as Alters to the blood, • form one of the great channes he removal of impurities from system, which, i( allowed to ain, gree rise to the various ey affectionssuch as Dropsy, etes, snit Bright's Disease, The following are some of the symptoms of kidney disease :-- Backache, sideache, swelling of the feet and ank les, frequent thirst, puffiness under the eyes, Boating specks before the eyes, and all dis- orders of the urinary system, such as frequent, thick, cloudy, scanty, or highly colored urine. DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS are exactly what the name suggests. They are not a cure-all, but are a spectfic for kidney troubles only. Price 60 cents per bon, or 8 foe $1.25. All dealers, or Ta )t IpoaN R 1D N6Y FI 1.z. Co. Toronto, Oat. .10 A MODERN MYSTIC. Evan Roberts, the Welsh Revival Preacher. }:van Roberts, the leader in t -he great Welsh revival no* in progress, is an unique personality. {While not in the least degree sensational in his ' methods, he has all the mysticism of the midele ages. Recently he was completely silent for a period :acting seven days. His experience in connection with that s season are related by' himself. One evening he was starting for a service when a voice said: "Don't go." "I felt some pressure on my soul," ssid the young preacher. "I went back into the room and sat on a chair. 'Twice again tho voice said to Inc. 'Don't go to -night,' said once, se anvden t .r hn: s.'1 ou are to he silent for daey From oro that evening until the end of the seven days tho revivalist spoke to no one. During the silence Mr. lioberts muds ninny entries in a small memorandum book, and some of the extrco'ts aro of great interest. The first item in the hook was an instruction . to Miss Annie Davies, one of the revivalist's singing assist- agts: "There is no person except your- self to see me for the next seven days -not even my father and mo- ther. I am not ill." Another entry refers to a Divine voice, which spoke to hint. "It was not an impression," he wrote, "but a volce. On the third day Mr. Roberts re- corded that about 11.30 "the sound of the name of 'Jesus)! Jesus!' ut- tered in my ears came to me, and I was ready to junip for joy. "I am going to bo ahnt God wants me to be," was an entry on the fourth d=ry, whlle on the fifth day tho revivalist wrote in }Welsh: "i have twat Lear to God this af- ternoon -so very near as to make me sweat." le the eventnq of the same day, eller having recorded a desire to go to Palest?nes he wrote. "I have a mind to ah(,ut three cheers for Jrtus." "You remember I said 1 would like to en to Palestine, but that I should have no money to go," he wrote on the sixth day. "Well, a lady has written to mo to -day offering to give me .£20 to- wards one of the delightfel trips to Palestine, i'iotch!" MAY TURN '1'111; CANALS. The complaint of high local rail- way freight charges cameo; a dls- cussio1) of greater utilization of British canals. They have a total length of 3,900 miles, but unfortu- nately the railwitys control 1,100 utiles thereof, and none of the can- als can carry hoots of as much as 100 tons. Continental canals, it is said, will curry boats of 1,000 tons, The British ennuis are so well 41 - trihutr'd that practically ovary im- portant town bus direct w'u!er e09- i101ion with the seaboard. Miss Fluffy -"1 made quite an im- pr,ssslon at the reception, didn't f? Everybody 'eemed to be talking about toe'" Candid i'rlend-"'I'hoy- tniked still more about you atter ' ori had gone!" i -- A nervous young man was intro- duced to an elderly gentleman at n party, and wishing to make a good impression said: "1 have just been talking to your daughter, sirs and tind her very charming." "That lady is mny wife," was tho curt reply or the elderly party, who was newly wed. "How stupid of me to make such a mistake!" hurriedly responded the young mnn• "1 might have known she was your wile by hor strong resemblance to you." ALL GOOD THINGS must win upon their merits. The International Dictionary has won a greater distinction upon its merits and is in more general use than any other work of its kind in the English language, , . A. 1t. Sayre, LLD., D.D.et Axford Cnlverslty, England, has rcoently said of 1t : it Is 111d... .1 a marvelous work; it is oil elat to emcee° of a dictionary more emanative and complete. Everything Is to it -net only what we might expect to no,) bt such a work, but also what few of u9 w,.u1,1 c err have thought of Melting for. A supplement to the new edi fon has tronrht 0 fully up to date. i have been looking thr' ugh the latter with a feeling of eitertshment.at its eompk•tene.., and the amount of I*b-r that hair been put into it. - LET US SEND YOU FREE "A Tett in Prone ctatien" which nlf(.r,i1 a loasnat and foatructite e'.enter, atn(nent. Mustn't/el pamphlet Akio free. 0.6 C. MLRRIAM CO., Pubs„ Seeinafletd, Mass.