HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1905-04-20, Page 3•
BS�LUTE
SECURITYI
Genuine
Cartor's
Little Liver Pills.
Must Boar Signature out
See Pac-Stetika Wrap.,;c: Below.
Tars email sea as easy
le take as eager.
• FOR HEADACHE
FOR GlLitIGSME3
FYI\ ;ALLOW SP
♦ FOR �rFCae',PL
CARTERS FOR DIZZINESS.
u S.
Ft,R rdFlMD LIVER.
TE
i.
FOR Ci'i' TtPATION.
IN.
EAIO!! 20. Gr
cks-Hellenrs %cltl:h in the
LOYAI, TO 'TBI•. LEADER.
THE (RFAT TEST OF LIFE
14. Having found -in the sense of l
having sooun'd. 110%% Steam secured I
the ass's colt i8 to111 by thets.uup-
tists (comp. note on wen se 12 above).
As it is %%rotten -1e Zech. 9, 94
---------- which ready: "Itejui.. greatly, 0
daughter of Zion; 811001. a dau, hter
Loyalty Is Essential to the Success of J•rusalt•r14: beh,.hi' thy king "m-
eth unto thee: he is just and hating
seIwation; lowly, and riding upon an
of Everyone. ass, even upon a colt the foal of an
ass."
15. 1'nughter of V.ie11-The city of
Jerusalem is personified and a(1drees-
A despatch from hrooklyn, N. V.• Aomattox a miil.lion men return- ed. The sti o_hold of Zion was the
says: ltev. Newell Dwight Hillis ed home. Suddenly, a new spirit de- castle, or acropolis, of the city of
reached from the following text: v •lo , n Men began the .1ebusites .1ud . 19. I l k
P k e { ed in the country. 6 ( g ►, taken
"Be thou faithful unto death."
Must words are leaden. souw are
silver and a few words are golden:
Tho Home
1141.1.E..S..1.S.pt04414'I-J-,
SELECTEDRECIPES.French '(bast -Iteral. leo eggs into
a shallow dish; then beat %cell. Dipstale or fresh slices of bread in them,
to plan huge things, railroads across by David (1 ('been. t I . 5), later part and fry the bread in hot lad or but-
thr continent were roncoicetf and of the city of Jerusalem,though the ter to a nice golden brown. A table -
1 MIL\'est factories were erected. exact location of the ancient Zion spoonful of Milk 1u each egg clay be
among these the word LOYALTY. Alen united their eat -nines and or- 4411.11144 the city %culls ht►s lung I eeii used,
"The great thing is loyalty," said gashed great broths and gieitl ne of the most iutpuutan( of the• A Baked Apple I'udding.-'I'ako
the 1•:nglish cunuuuuder in his ad- stores. \Shot is the explauulion? fi'l'l 11•41 points ro111114t,•d with the (ae111a1 quantities of hreadcruutbs,
Chess to the young Wren of Oxford. !Simply this ---the experience of war . tope.-r.ph.v of the Ilo14 1'11' .' chopped apple, and suet, st%eeten to
"Write the word in ink of gold and bud 'I'Af)(•1I'•' \1leN LOYALTY TO 1(i. 'These things -The fulfilment of taste. add the grated rind of n demon.
let each letter be two feet high."
Experience fully justifies. the high
estimate placed upon this virtue. Dis-
loyaltyturns a soldier into a trait-
or; disloyalty in the partnership will
ruin the commercial standing of the
t•
house; disloyalton the part. A( the
clerk can defeat the wisest plans .oword was loyalty to then' general.
the chief. Our word will explain With that watchword thee marchr(1 they stet about the grettness and
many feiliires-the word (disloyalty.. power of .1. sus, with the result men-
Cunttariwise•, tvhut enterprise over tsccess. 1.uter, returning to the boned in tho next verse.
failed where the 1111111 in e6har re had lbuosiueuss life, t ho soldier began ('o
Iwork in indust regint...ids. Again
loyal followers who bucked hint up 1 they Were
a1 every point?
I =.
oe.e•rsvxt •...ST11.4 .iwruer. "'Don't praise; rte," exclaimed
to a group of
LEADER.• prophecy involved in tho scene trans- Ikat up an egg in a very little milk
On the div of the battle of y'
hiring before their even.
burg Query soldier in a wing of 100,-
When •l esus was glorified -After' his
000 men receival his command and resurrection and ascension.
17. (fare wit/tens-Testified to the
fulfilled his task. "Theirs not to fuel of the ruining of Lazarus by
reason why: theirs but to do and Jesus which they had witnessed, pro -
die." For these soldiers the great liable speaking f tele to all .'hunt
19. Ve prevail nothing-. 11 your
bitter opposition of this man is fruit-
less.
isttb ]I'arelyOe►Se:,►pia/...aG Prtsideut McKinley
N;whether he wee merchant. or mann- Greeks as distingulehed (rem "110-
ew Testament means always (lenUlo
getetlemen congratulating hon upon lecturer, or editor, or statesman.
lenlsts" or 1 i'ecisc.l Jews. The Stet
CURE. SICK N ACACHE. his first four years, "praise my crab- Men of achievement crown lovaltv that these Centiles had come to
.�..lR,.-.....o..- ii.ot." 1'he umrt}red (emir' meant • its one of the first of the virtues. Jerusalem to worship at the feast
shut he hod been surruundrd by lay-
•••••••••••eeee•••eeeeeeee !diae:si:
('parity ►oust ho a divine roil, iu- indirut,:5 that they were proselytes
• • al counselors. But the modest, un if it is greater than faithful- of the .le'tish faith.
:•
assuming President ens himself a
: The soldier's worth is in his 21. Bethsaidtt of Galilee.
• C 0 N S T I P A T I 0 H. •
notable illustration of our theme- 'adherence to duty. The test of the 22 Philip Andrew -Mentioned
• • he wits loyal (1.n Iris tuinb, after jurist Is kiss((}' to the client. 1 h
• Although generally described as • all the thurdtar of life's batt le, • Lest of the pupil is loyaay to his
• a disease, can never exist unless • should he written (Wee. words: "Ile
• great Wurster. The two great books
atonic of the or ans are deranged • wav faithful alai() denth."
which .nen 1 Above ancient ' `' c'
4-
• ' • i in un ' t literature are the '.Iliad"
• ing yfoundto be the • ne all other eras. out pge asks and the "Odyssey." The "ilmd"
• liver. It consists of an inabilityto • t 1 , the fickleness and disloyalty
• • or oval nteu In the old regkn(• expos(•
regularly evacuate the bowels, and business Was indiyi'Iun1. One mon
• • • „f ll(Ln, whose infidelity tinned a
• as a regular action of the bowels is • had a 111114, show:shop: oar sold groc-
absolutely essential to general • curies, another s.ild 'dry oods, and city int o a heap. The "Odyss 'health, the least irregularity should : for a hundred articles ilii re. tore a celebrated the loyalty of Penelope,
• never be neglected. • hundred shops. Then came the who kept her palace and her heart.
• i•:RA OP ORGANIZATION.
%• • Young man, scorn the very thought
• of disloyally to your employer. If
• • Inch mon. no longer complete in you can't work with him. resign. lout
• • himself, became a wheel in an indite- fleo from the very thought of disloy-
• ori g •C pa i • trial m•echanism that had a hundred alty as you would Iles from the edge
• • parts. So complicated is a watch of a precipice. Disloyalty belongs to words for lido are used in the Creek
• • that if any one wheel is unfaithful a serpent that bites. the wolf that the first designating individual phy-
• • to its work the whole which is ruin- rends and the lion that slays. 'I'o be sisal life and temporal existence, the
� b� • ed for purposes of time. Not disloyal is to join banes with the second designating life in the ab -
devil himself. street, including the thought of the
MILBURN'S
LAXA-LIVER PILLS
have no equal for relievingand
curing Constipation, Biliousness,
Water Brash, Heartburn, and al
Liver Troubles.
Mr. A. B. Bette., Vancouver, B.C.
writes :-Por some years past I was
troubled with chronic constipation
• and bilious headaches. I Wed
• nearly everything, but only got
• tetnporary relief. A friend induced
• me to try Lava -Liver Pills, and
• they cured me completely.
• Price 26 cents per box, or 5 boxes
for $1.00, all dealers, or mailed
• direct on receipt of price.
together John 1. 45; 6, 7, 8; Mark
3. 18.
23 The hour is c•olan•-The verb is
placed first in the (Greek for ea4-
p11asis-"I1. has come, the all-im-
portant hoer."
'That -literally, in order that. In-
dieatinr- divine purpose.
Be glorified -Return to glory -even
though it be through untold suffering
and agony. Ilia work as public
teacher was at an end.
24. Verily, verily.
Abideth by itself alone-ls not mul-
tiplied, produces no fruit. -
25. life --life eternal -Two distinct
• perishable, will gain life tee, nal. Tripts-Get a piece of tripe26. 'Where I am, there shall also largo enough to fold into a pastry.nty servant be --Nothing, not even Next make a stuffing witlt onions, aphysical death, can separate the little sage, brenticrumbs, pepper anddisciple of the Christ from his Mas- salt, not forgetting a little lemon -
ter. rum cnoepett nee. Itslijr• f bird:layer of the stuffing on half of thetripe anti fold the ether over. Sewthe edges so as to keep in the stulT-
ing. Place the roll on a baking-tin.with a few slices of bacon on thetop. Bake for te.o hours, bastingconstantly. Arninge the roll on avery het dish, divide it into slices,but still kteping its shape. Pourgood gravy round anti serve.Alarzipan.-Buy cooking almonds atabout twenty-tiVo Cents a pound, andthen this sweetmeat will not be ex-
pensive. illitech half a pound of al-
monds and a few bitter almonds,pound them very finely in a mortar,moint en t% it It a lit Go rosewater.When the paste is line and smooth,put it in a china lined twice-panwith the same quantity of caster su-
gar. Stir over the lire till a pasteis obtained. eltich does not stick tothe Mimes %then touched. Then turnout on to" a well sugared pastry -
board. dredge this roller with sugar,and roll out thinly, cut into shapesStet ensue. of Edinburgh. Their place on %heels of white palter andprepoeils include the remota' of the hake In n ver3 slow oven until a Palesandstone (ialli 01' bill' which has Yellow color.formed across the river a little be -
The first dose will convince you that it the Lord Jesio. Chriet nectesarily low (Somali's Quay. the ettension ofplies following him. '"I'aiking tip the the elistise training WrilIR. the re-
pair of the river banks, anti the pen- Housecleaning will gowill cure you. Miss Hannah P. FlemingNew Germany, N.S., writes :-"I con. cross' • has become a hack nes (el it easierphrase. but an absolute necessity. (If Oration of the Neil's. bank in order if only half a day is devoted to it,tracted a cold that took such a holt) ona willingness to follow (heist en to give tt direct course to Mottle!' and that preferably the morning;tine that tny people thought I MIS goinghstniliation and seetesieg for fee. Ihset• The navigable channel woule though frequently it will be conven-
t° die. Hearing how good Dr. Wood's Inter the walls iif the same old town sake of others. , be dredged to a detail of twenty feet , ient and agreeable to clean the atticNorway Pine Syrup wus, I procured two rang eith the cruel cry. "Crucify isms m.,,ssox go" s mays. ' up to Seltney and Chester. mid ad,. on a bright afternoon, and, by thebottles and they effected • complete cure." • Verse 12. On il • quittely buoyed and lighted.ii• SkePtical CrIticlmn (verse II)t• folloWing tho wat , that is the place to begin thePrice25centsperbottle. Do notaccepl From the stories of the Triumphal b hi Sunday, April 2, The enginvers• report wee (tot -welds ((((( seeleaning. All the clothing3:1•0.1 °-! received by the Count•il, and a sub- sholild be taken out in the sunshineEntry given lie- the four evangelists n. Yx great multitude -Ore as home committee was instrecttel to obtain for a thorough airing. Old books,it became plain that the host ilePharisees of Jerusalem %%ere for a ancient nutherities seed, the common fui.ther particulars bearing on the paPere and magasines kept in tho at -
people (comp. teree 91. re% enue likely to result from the tic should be covered to pretect frontmoment paralyzed. Their plans hailg o • er itch of the suggested improvements. dest. If old print is not available.not succeeded; their subjects had run saway from theite the wheat. world `Ylinl'ithlts ln'erts the story of howthe colt tthich Jesus rode then paste neespapers to make aseemed going after Jeses. A few%%es onteived for that pur- curtain to put over the shelves.!Loire. however, proved to them the ettYthnt they were as mistaken iv their paint with nodule's may be removedon. then with ebitieg and washingwith soap and water.When hnnging up a picture it is agood plait to attach a piece of corkon either side of the bettom edge, nethis prevents the accumulation ofdust by holding it Retie. from theThe smell of fresh paint con Ira re-
moved by leaving in the r allnight a pail of water contaiiiing sev-
eral sliced onionsNo better %%ay for dusting the %%elleof a room ran be suggested than tocover a br..oni with a bag of heavyCanton flannel made with De fuzzyside out. A drawetring at the topalloes the bag to be driven tightlyabout the broom.To remove paint or simnel) frontfurniture, use t••n parte of peer' ashto one part of qiiicklime. Flinching thelime in het water: then add thepearl ash rind have the mixture ofthe consistency of paint, adding wa-
tei if necesean. Apply the !mintier)eith an old paint hrush 'it will ruinn nee one) arid allow it to remainin the wood for twelve hteire. whenthe varnish (An be easily scrappedNot soap. but ninneanin elmuld beused in the water with which win-
dows are entrited if clear bright gleesie desired. ft in titated that lampchimnees rubbed with dry salt after
tial and ethical. and hence the higher
spirit ttal life. The , termer form of
life is perShable, and he who exalts
anti seeks only to possess and enjoy
this life will eventually lese it anti melt down. Next day turn the mould
Itl FO doing will lose all. But he of fat on to a plate, and wipe off
that rightly estimates this temporal any )))) iStnee. ThiS is excellent for
life as of relatively inferior value, frying, basting, and when mixed
:driving rather for a fuller tnensure with other dripping is excellent for
of the higher soul life width te int- cakes and pastry.
• great bank. a great newspaper, aabsolute fullness of life, hoth essen-
• government of city or state, means
• several hundred men working under
• one leader, and the success of all 18
• through the loyalty of each one.
•
• Only as the workers go toward toy-
* alts does enterprise go toward pros-
•
• Tax T. MII.BURN CO., LIMITED • perils.
Toronto, Ont. • '+'hat is why the war between the over, let this be sum's judgment up-
• North and South was followed b a on you, "ile was faithful unto
, great Indust, el development. After death."
Pride yourself on your loyalty.
Learn to follow that you may be
worthy to lend. Life may bring you
gold, office and honor, but it will
bring you nothing comparable to the
happiness that cones from the con-
sequences of having been loyal to
your ideals. And when it is ell
Obstinate Coughs and THE S. S. LESSON
Colds.
The Kind That Stick.
The Kind That Turn To
Bronchitis.
The Kind That End In Con.
sumption.
Co . tnption is, in thousands of cases,
nothin mon or less than the final result
of a neglected cold. Don't give this
terrible plague a chance to get a foot -hold
on your system.
It you do, nothing will ave you. Take
hold of a cough or cold immediately b�
using
DR. WOOD'S
NORWAY PINE SYRUP.
substitutes for Dr. Wood's Norway Pint
Syrup. Be sure and insist on having the
genuine.
Tau T. MIi.BURN Co., LIMITED,
Toaolero. ONT.
imeeteituse*t9tee am*
Nerve Racked
Men end Women
will find Balm for their Terrible
Sufferings In
r
MILBURN'S HEART AND NERVE
PILLS.
They tone utr and strengthen the
the heart, and purify and enrich
tial oo:T. They put the nervous
system in perfect working order,
and restore health and vigor to
both body and brain.
Mise Edythe Lindsay, Strom -
nes,, Ont , writes :-
" It a T .r4' me great pleasure to say
freat 1 m your hearys t an 1 Norsrfencee e fills. o at f.lief
For
over t wo year. I suffered from vtol.•nl
palpitation of the heart. was very
nervous and easilystartled. 1 was in
an extremelyweacondition hef-'re 1
started to lae the ppills, hot four t>ns(u
effeeted a complete cure. 1 cannot
prates thews ten highly to these suffer-
ing
uffer
ing from nervous tweediness and hear,
troubles.''
Price 6o cents per bog, or 5 for S1.l1.
All dealers, or
Tna T. Ytrert-ne ('0 . inxtTsn.
TOAnsm. Oar.
nerves, hull. up the mnscles of
iss4141** ****as41►tt*t
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
APRIL 23.
stood in the light of the cross. The
eelf-sacl•itice of love is the kernel of
holy living. Evers thing that .(.twos
did and said was appropriate to the
present crisis 4411(1 climax. His cruci-
fixion is but his glorification. A
grain of wheat lives by dying. Its
Lesson I'-'. The Entry of Jesus 11mltiplitd life depends upon its in -
Into Jerusalem. Golden Text, dividunl (ienth.. Self-::teritict. is the TO RIVAL LIVERPOOL.
Matt. 21.9. test of all holiness and goodness. We' _
U: LESSON �t'1':►'1.'1:9H•:N'i'. are all of us dying to some (depart- Old Town of Chester May Become
meats of our lives, that we may live a Seaport.
Our lessen presents the 'Truth of to others. This paper has no read -
Rather incarnated in the Lord Jesus ers who are not deliberately sacriflc- itnth. r more than a hundred years
Christ. Men sometimes applaud the ing some delights for rho purpose of ago the ancient sir) of Chester WO
truth, sometimes sneer at it, some- securing other delights. and this en- a seaport of no mean distinction, hal
tines honestly inquire concerning it. tirely aside from religious motives. during the pest ..story the silting
The Lord Jesus reveals it. Jesuz teaches that like the grain of up of the River Dere and the (tense-
(went
i.
Popular Applause. 44het►t not only moa he dor 144 bring (went loss of navigable depth have
Why did the crowds at Jerusalem forth the full fruitage of his life, but causer( it to delis% to a port of
welcome the :saviour'? ((lien bands wit holt his death his lift would hare small importnlace.
of singers %went forth to meet the been an isolation, larking world-wide ialiutshire ('Quints Conseil
Ihnssover pilgrims, so that these pro- influence. A11 his followers are un- linte considered an important scheme
pie erre following a custom already der the same Ince. Verso 25 gathers for the 1101004 44(4(44* of the naviga-
nuarked out for them. But the rens- :tp in a sentence the experient..• of tion of the !titer the 'at an expendi-
ture for this exceptional outburst -for the world. ife that seeks happiness ((Ire of C4140,o00, who •h, if curried
the carpeting of the road with gar- finds it nut. Ile that srek8 usefutuss out, will open up great possibilities
menta and palm branches, and the orgood for others finds happines.,. for the future of Chester.
reception of Jesus as if he were a Ire that seeks his life shall lose it. The engineers responsible for the
conqueror, is to be found In rho he that disputrnges h;s lite in the n(•u project are Messrs. 1). and C.
conviction thnt he had fulfilled the %ideation of the things that his life
swords they sang; that he was in his obis secure. shall lied that life again.
ewe person the fulfillment of law and Verse 2(i directs attention to the
i.rephet.s. lieu• thorough was that man who follows. True service of
i-Jtillnsent wan not revealed to the
dn-ciples till utter our Lord's death,
or, as .1nhn would ee%. his glorifica-
tion. it is sadly• true to human na-
ture that this applause and popular-
ity were el-h.•uu'rnl-that five dot
in 1898 earthquakes were felt in
forecast am were the appinn({{ng '-' tette s:•. s:r-a.,f. Austria on 20'.) days.
people. 13. 1'te lir/inches of the palm The average depth of the sea le
III. honest inquirytrees-The art 'cies used Lefore the about 12,1101) feet. the average
Alen brought up In pn.gonisnl. 441- nouns w..111(1 seem to indicate that height of the ;and above 91`44-Ieyel is
ferto•1 by the truth pnrtinlly reveal- reference is made to well-known paint about 1,500 feet.
• (1 In the worship at •leresnlem. leave
branches, that is, the branches u( In Central ('bona there in n prow-
• pn nn trees known _ _
h• it loherital superstitions and to grow there, „r
a'her to worship the 'frith of God Possibly, as some think, palm ,i(- hmtants.thcolae nirend(children,
es Hebrew teremo ninl sets it forth branches countnonh' used in conniv-
es
'Ith f('slivnis. tut'(4 hopelessly given to hetopium
i. d ns Jewish rabbis11tilhave explained ('tied -The ([reek im ,%erect indicate habit. Tho poppy is cultih o in
• But here in the temple collies
t.,nds t roan Who embodies In himself ing continued action. hence kept cry- almost every uvnilalrle patch ui m-
nll that the Hebrew ritual s, niboliies ing, that Is, greeting hits with long- nhle land, and the inhnhitAnts aro
nn'I more 1hnn all rho hest specula -
.1.
p cula. continued shouting. absolutely d(mornHral and lit for
i• ns of the rubhis. From the outer Ho�rnnn-Meaning, O 8(awe' nothing by reason of their abuse of
r: le the ((reeks hear his stllwrnatur- illessed-The perfect participle „f the drug.
• 1 tenctin)_s and. hones'1. desiring the %telt "culogeo." 10 iijs' k well of, The Kea Is a greenish -Brown parrot
more, n..k for stn introduction. Why to prni,e, from which conies our .,t New %catnip(, whl'-h 1s ns (Innger-
'lid Philip hesitate to take these 111(411 Fnghelfword .stogy. The word one to the sheep of that country as
p llroctly to Jones?"Itl••s•.ed' '180(1 In the beatitudes wolweq would be. These carnitorous
iV. incarnated Truth. (Malt. 5. 3-12) ("mnknrios") 8P- birds fasten themst'I%es out (ho backs
Jesus eagerly r ands 10 theme lies rather to character, this rather ► `� p of grnrinq sheep, tear through wool
men's quest ioninge. That he sew -
n, their approach the beginning of
the coming of the Gentiles to his
) sway, and that that proslect brought
with it the conviction of the death
that must fest he en(lared, cannot
be doubted. IbIt all our i.ord's
teachings 'the Sermon on the Mount.{ the rnnversetioi•s With \oro.:eine•
rind the Snrnarltan women, the con-
; flirts with the 'crihe". tho ,.verities
.•
sp„ken age in't the I'harises, and
the tender minable" give', to the
common people. all must be under- H(.esnn44
• 1114 (%oris of praise are and skin to the khlney-fat, which
taken from 1 118. 25, 20, A 1h'y devour, leaving the unfortunate
psalm originally eo mposed. It is
thought. for the first celebration of animal to perish in agony.
the Feast of 'Tabernacles after the The natives of Kikuyu in the East
Completion of tee tempt'•, the words African Protectorate go nboitt well -
of the twenty-fifth verse lasing ming arut'd. They curry a stout, are -of -
during that feast, "when the altar spades -shaped wl''er. a reel 1 While -
of beret offering WAS solemnly ("one_ hide shield, a heavy, double-edged
passed; that 1-, o-,ce on each of the short sword. a club, nn(1 • everal
first six dace of the feast, and seven strong sticks. Their principal "gar-
tImes pn the seventh day. This men," is a plentiful cont of terra -
seventh day Waa called 'the (treat cotta earth. and they wear muss'e'ls
articles of metal as ornaments.
and add to the other ingredients.
Bake 1n a well -buttered pier -dish in a
moderate oven for nearly one hour
and a half. Turn out on to a hot
dish to serve.
Curry Pasties -Take some cold
meat and free it from skin, fat, and
gristle. Chop the meat ver; finely,
season it with pepper. salt. and curry
powder, anti moisten all :.lightly with
good gravy, or melted better saute.
Line some patty pans with puff paste
place in each n tablespoonful of the
mince and (ewer with pastry rolled
thin. Idako in a nharp oven t111
cooked.
.\ Soda Cake. -into one pound of
fine ilo•u• rub six ounces of currants,
a teaspoonful of ground ginger, a
quarter of a nutmeg, and four
ounces of sugar. Mix these ingre-
dients with two well -beaten eggs and
hal( a teacupful of warm milk, in
44111(h a teaspoonful of carbonate of
sods has been (lissolyed. Place in a
greased tin and bake in a moderate
oven for nearly two hours.
Orange Tart -Line a shallow pie-
dish
itdish with short crust, 0) ita11wnt the
edges, and bake in a quick oven.
Meanwhile prepare the tilling. Crate
the rind of a sweet orange into a
basin, add the juice of two oranges,
two ounces of sugar, one ounce of
butter and a pint of water. (toil all
together and then pour over a table-
spoonful of cornflour, made into a
smooth paste with cold crater. Stir
all together well, add the yolks of
two eggs, and pour the mixture ittlo
the tart. hake in a quick oven till
quite set,
Mutton Dripping. -This is excellent
if cut into pieces, platted in a large
basin and covered with boiling wa-
ter. When cold remove the fat,
scrape off all sediment and repeat the
above process. Two or three wash-
ings = trill be necessary. Then place
all the dry dripping in a basin, and
washing 44111 acquire unusual brit -
liens.
One very capable ho i eket'pc•r status
%hut the most "restful" way to clean
house is to begin at the attic, then
clean the beiroouts, sitting -room,
cellar, dining -roost, pantries and kit- -
chen in the order named; and she E
makes it a rule never to begin till ■+
the furnace lire is dumped for the =
.esu•, cleaning the (enlace the first w•
thing. She never cleans over four
roo1148
(t week, even %lith extra help,
t
(,cc' +{ ;Ing the int/4'14'1110g diiys with: r
washing curtains, tarnishing furni-! =
Dire and straightening bureaus and =
closets. And ev,•r, day she cleans =
house site has sante pleasing enter- =
tainment at night -if only tin hour at E
a particular friends' or the library.
It rt -1h tires ski:.( anti pat101ce to
sweep a room proin•rly. The chief =
mistake made by the novice is (n O
taking long, heevy strokes. Short C
light strokes which are firm do the ee
work as it should be done. It is al- e'i
ways best to sweep a heavy Brussels
carpet or one of similar mike once p
%%ith the grain and then across it, 3
going over each three or four yards
in this way untiC..the entire carpet is
swept. When a carpet is old and =
worn evenly this is nut necessary,
but1if i is new ( s perceptible
Utile
t ► ,r ha c
1 1
ridges b1 the tveawing, this method
should l.c followed,
SWEEPING A ItOOM.
After going over a roost thor-
oughly, allow, the du ,1 to settle and
in ten or Iifteen minutes give it the
final brushing -sweeping once again
rather lightly. 'Phis can be (10110
With a carprt sweeper or dampened
broom. 'I'ea� leaves scattered over
the carpet. however, are better than
either. 'They should he wrung out
and loosely sprinkled over the car- find with a circv11tf(•rence of 40ft. a
Pet just. before this final sweeping. bottle so stout that seven tall men
It is a good plan to add a willful could barely touch lingers round , it:
while every minute of tho hour he
m t, to complete his task within
ted time, drain the ct)ntents of
111111UIIII111111111111111111111111IIIH
Little Boy Had ECserna
For Six Months.
Salves and Ointments
No Good.
Feaema fa one of the moat eortnrin¢
of the many it.•hlog akin direaaes, and
els, the 1041,1 prevalent, especially
og
iall
r
is
children. "!hesau,eleh 1blood, aided
1.) inactive skin, Inflammation, ere. 11
manifests itself in small, round pimples
or blisters, which later un break, and
form crusts or *cabs. The ekln has an
it,•hing, burning and stinging sensation.
'1'. get rid of IrALetu►, it is necessary to..
have the blood pure, and for this pur-
pose nothing can equal
Burdock Blood Bitters,
Mrs. Florence Henn, Msrlb8nk, Ont.,
writes:-•• My little boy had euxetna for
aix months. 1 tried ointments and
aalnn, but they beah«i tor only a short
time, when It would break out worse
than ever. I then decided to give
Burdock Blood Bitters a trial. I only
gave his, two bottle., and 1t Is now two
mouths since, and there is no id of
a return. 1 feel sure that as a blood
regulator. nothing can equal it. 1 can-
not say too much for what 1t has done
for ns.' =
Tus T. YII.nURY Co., Listrsn,
e• Toronto, Ont.
vilbill,111111111111111111111111111111111iva
deal of thinking. In fact, in order to
dispose of it, John must consistently
pour 144,830 gallons down his capa-
cious throat every hour, night and
clay, throughout the year; or, in
other words, ho must, every sixty
minutes, drain the contents of a
bottle as high as the Nelson Column
of salt to every two cupfuls of tea
leaves used. The salt seems to
brighten the colors of a faded cur-
ial-, as well as to aid in the remov-
al of Mist. When this second sweep-
ing is over use a %%hisk broom around
the corners and at 1110 edges of the
carpet.
Atter the walls aro dusted and the
carpet is thoroughly swept, some
housekeepers wipe off the carpet's
surface with a cloth dipped in salt
and water and then thoroughly
wrung out. This will remove every
atone of dust. A cloth used for this
purpose must be frequently rinsed
out in fresh water, and then dipped
again into salt and water, wringing
thoroughly. Other housekeepers rub
the carpet with a cloth wrung out as
dry as possible from water to which
two tablespoonfuls of ammonia have
been added for every gallon. 'lids
will also brighten faded colors.
It is needless to say that in sweep-
ing as thoroughly as this, every-
thing in the room should either be
removed or covered carefully with
dusting sheets. housekeepers who
aro buying heavy piece44 of furni-
ture should select only those that
can he set on casters, so that they
can be pushed out and the dust un-
der them removed.
It is a great mistake to neglect
sweeping as thoroughly ns this once
a week. Dust that becomes ground
into a carpet urea,., it nee
than anything else. Fortunately,
many houses of to -clay are built t nth
hardwood floors. so thatthis burden
of sweeping is materially lessened.
Wood floors are (nilly 84.11111 with
hair brushes or rubbed with crude
petroleums or simple polished with a
waxing brush.
SOME STARTLING FACTS
JOHN BULL AND HIS GLASS
OF BEER.
It Takes 1,268,7- 48,000 Gallons
Annually to Satisfy His
Thirst.
OVER 38,600 TI;MBLE.RS.
But ho does it, and Is quite ready
to tackle another bottle the moment
the clock strikes.
To satisfy his twelve months'
thirst for beer he spends at tho rate
of considerably over 510,000,000 a
week; so that it might well bring a
hundred millionaires to tho work-
houso to pay his beer -bill for twelve
months. Every minute, night and
day throughout the year, ho putts
down 51,005, to say nothing of odd
shilliugs and pence, for his glass of
beer.
Towards this great hill the British
working man alone contributes some-
thing like 5400,000,000, the sharp of
each working family being, roughly,
553.25 a year, or a contribution of
more than 56 cents out of every
pound of its income. 1f to this we
odd the cost of spirits, wo find that
the average family of the working
classes spends a full rixth of Rs
income on spirituous refreshment. To
supply John Bull with his beer keeps
nearly 6,000 brewers busy the whole
year round, and of these eight brow
over 1,000,000 barels a year and
ten produce over 500'000; while in
England and Wales alone there aro
over 108,000 houses licensed for the
(•"rots• of the beverage.
Although the Deman e. o..,a(..a
With an abnormal thirst for beer, the
Briton can give hint three gallons a
year and still beat hint; while for
every glass the American drinks ito
consumes two and has made a goo,(
start on nutnber three. -London Tit -
Bits.
(o .
\VORT, D LANDLADY.dire. Mary .00, who has just died
at White Waltham, near Maidenhcae,
on the Thanes, England, was a re-
markable old lady. She was the
oldest public-houtse landlady in Eng-
lan.l, for she was ninety years of
nee. Over the fireplace in the tap -
public -house, the Ree -
of beer is such a vccll-cstahIIslyd htct . Ili%`., stands the notice: "No swear -
that one learns with astonishment ing or ford language permitted In
that during the year 190.1 he has this room, or indecent songs allowed
actually cut (leen his allowance of to be sung. Anyone infringing the
his f►%orite beverage 1)t', as nearly as above x111 be ..pelted." often the
can be estitnnted, 600,000 barrels, or
21.64)0,000 gallons.
These figures suggest quite an
alarming diminution in his thirst;
and yet. colossal as they are, they
really only mean that oat of every
fate -eight glassee, speaking approxi-
mately, with which he quenched his
Thirst in 19h03, Ile has dropped one in
the following twelve months, so that,
from u tetnpernhco point of view,
(hero still remains nn ample margin
for further retrenchment.
How much boor does •14,111 net wal-
ly consume in twelve months? The
question Iv nn interesting one, and
the figures are certainly Mewling.
'I'o soy that his normal thirst at pro -
sent demands 1,268,748,(•01) wahine
of beer to satisfy it conwe, s little to
the mind, tlthuuigh the (inures aro
vaguely lmpres ;ivu. licit let its in
fancy protide a vessel large enough
to contain a year's supply of beer
for the United Kingdom, and then
Wo shall get n striking conception of
what they really mean.
Let tin construct a reservoir 1,000
feet long, 1,000 feet tt fir, and 203
feet high, na(
1111 this tol,asnl
re-
ceptacle to the very brim; we Shall
then have just enough beer to keep
John Iluill going for
'I'W1.1,\'E MONTHS.
Our vessel is 80 deep that, 1f the
London Atonement were dropped per- known. It ne\'er refuses i he i11fOr-
pendicularly into 1t. it would be lost nation sought find it never .ver-
tu view; and the base of the reser-
voir Is so large that it Would pro- whelms one with a mai of In1S-
vide comfortable standing -rooms for information illogically arranged.
every mala, Woman, rind child in Liv-
erpool.
Or, if this mental picture fails tc
Impress, let us constru.'t an enor-
mous dock, of a depth raryirg from
ten to thirty fret, and fill it with
one year's beer. Our dock would bo
so largo that all the ships in the
ilritish Navy could float in it.
From it wo could supply each men,
woman, and child in the 1'nitod
Kingdom with 488 glasses of beer;
or, If wo eliminate abstainers and
all children under tflteen. there would
be the liberal allowunre, of nearly
fifty-three gallons es a year'- supply
for each person left to whom a glass
of beer might appeal.
Such an ocean of beer telies a great
old lady would milk into the tap-
room on Sunday evenings, hearing
her old Bible, and read the Scrip-
tures to an audience that listened
with respect to her explanations
comments.
1111(1
Mr. \ounghusband-"Your 91114411
Isn't like the salad my mother used
to make." Mrs. Young)iu9band -
"Well. your salary isn't like the sal-
ary my father used to make."
'AS•A WORKING•TOOL
for the student and the writer,
as an authoritative reference book
for schools, teachers, families,
business and professional men,
there is one book which offers
superior advantages in the solid
value of its information, and the
ease with which it is obtained .°
'`One's admiration for Webster's
International Dictionary increases
daily as it comes to be better
They St. Janie% Garet14' of London,
England, says: I•'or the teacher, the pu•
pit, the student and the lift' rateur, there
is nothing better ; it covers everything,
The New and Relented 1}litlnn recently M.
sue.( has Mono new wor•l4 and phrase*. a COM.
pletely revise( Blographi.al Dictionary and
(lazetteer of the World, MOO partes and 5((.)
Muerte tont.
our name 1s on the tltlepasv's of all thn
authentic dlrtlonaries of the webster aeries.
LET US SEND YOU FREI
"A 'riot Is Pronunciation" eh1, h affords a
pleasant and fnetructtve evening's entertain.
Went. illustrated pamphlet ale) free. •
8.A0.NRAAIAMc0.. Put..,9prtngneld,1( s,