Exeter Times, 1905-05-11, Page 7ABS�LUTE
SECURITY.
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
Must Bear 8lgnature of
Sas Pw£ladt. tVrapper Below.
Very wean ..d as ear,
Se fats as sugar.
FOR DEADACK.
no FOA DIMNESS.
FON BILIOUSNESS.
•
FOR TORPID LIVER.
FOR CONSTIPATION.
SKIN.
0
Mf
FON =Au
may -1 &TN[COMPLEXION
A Owb 1.orial7e!'et is- ;• vG
CURE. HICK HEADACHE.
KIDNEY
Diseases of
numerous, from t
organs act as filte
and form oue of th
;, for the removal of i
the system, which,
remain, give rine to
kidney affections, sec
Diabetes, and Bright's
The following are so
,symptoms of kidney
• Backache, sideache, err
the feet and ankles,freque
puffiness under the eyes,
' specks before the eyes, and
l orders of the urinary syste
as frequent, thick, cloudy, s
or highly colored urine.
DOAN'S KIDNEY PIL
( are exactly what the name sugge
They are not a cure-all, but
a specific for kidney troubles onl
Price 50 cents per box, or 8 f
DISEASE.
the Kidneys are
he fact that these
rs to the blood,
great channels
mpurities from
if allowed to
the various
h as Dropsy,
Disease.
me of the
disease :-
elliug of
nt thirst,
floating
all die-
m, such
canty,
LS
sts.
are
y
or
$1.25. All dealers, or
Tait DOAN KIDNIw PILI. CO.,
Toronto, Out.
Treated by Threo Doctors
for a
Severe Attack of
Dyspepsia,
Got No Relief From
Medicines, But Found It At
Last In
Ordo k Blood Bitters.
c
'THE LESSON OF TRE BIRDS
the writer believes it does In this
verse, then the rendering "out of
the world" would seem to be the
litter.
From the evil -Tho word when
Immortality is a Reality Which
used with the artinle, as ine this case,
refers rather to an evil {x•rsum (Sat-
an) than to evil in the abstract.
lienee we might tranelato from, or
Instinct Proves. out of the hands (or power), of, the
evil one. The sense of the whole
verse would thus be, "1 pray not
that thou shoulttest isolate theta
from the Fociety of their fellow mien,
but that thou bhuuldest keep them
from the power of Satan."
17. Sanctify -To sanctify means
literally to set apart sacredly, con-
rccrate. dedicate. it means also to
cleanse. from moral impurity.
In the truth -Marks tho sphere or
clement of coieecralion.
Iffy Nord -The revelation of thy-
self in any form.
18. '1 hot didst send -Thou didst
send on a sllecinl mission. As the
Master. so the disciple also has a
special mission in the ;voile.
19. Sanctify -Set apart, consecrate
as in verse 17.
20. Them also that believe on Inc
through their word -Those who have
not themselves seen or known the
Christ is the flesh. but who through
the spoken and written tastim
une of
eyewilnosse4 of Ills life and glory
A despatch from Ilrooklyn, N. Y.,
says: Rev. Dr. Newell Dwight Millis
breached from the following tett:
For we know that if our earthly
house of this tabernacle were dis-
retolved, we hnve a building of God,
all house not made with hands, eter-
nal in the heavens.
In one of his letters Columbus
speaks about an undiscovered con-
tinent. The new world was out of
sight, but for him it was a real Professor Curse's judgment in rain -
world. So he turned his little ship um the morning atter he announced
toward the setting sun. Day after his discovery was worth more than
day Columbus sailed steadily on. His the judgment of all the other 1, -
sailors were full of terror; again and 500,000,000, and not otherwise it is
again three mutinied. For many with this hope.
days Columbus concealed tha real Many ignorant people have no
distance they had sailed. At last he thought of Immortality. But there
saw a golden bough floating in the never bus been a [(set or man of
waters. On the bough rested a car- supreme genius or philoso!•her that
dinar bird, with wings tired through .has not cherished this; faith. Tho
the long flight. higher also he had .limbed the
In that hour Columbus exulted and , brighter his hope. Socrates was the
pis heart sang for joy. With instant wisest teacher that ever walked the
vision he leaped from the bough to streets of Athens. Slowly Socrates
the great forest, from the single bird constructed his arguments for itu-
to flocks of sweet songsters. Just mortality, and on the raft of his in -
behind the red clouds and the setting stincts and his faith rout out into
sun was that "undiscovered coun- : the darkness and the storm and
try." And so he sailed on. the long sailed the sea with Cod alone.
night through, knowing that when Paul is the greatest philosorher
the day dawned and the shadows flee[ the Hebrews have produced. Turn -
away he would behold the new world. ing away from all gospels of doubt
"Let not your heart he troubled,"
while Paul added, "Wo know that if
the early house of our tabernacle be
dissolved we have a house Horn God,
not made with hands, eternal in the
heavens."
The testimony of the greatest
minds also is another witness to im-
mortality. It is a problem that the
man who has the one last fact in the
case outweighs all the millions. 'l hos
have been or may yet be brought to
faith in Him. Christ's intercessory
prayer, then, was for IIis disciples of
the present generation also.
31. All be onc-It is not an ex-
terna: unity of organization to
which our Lord here refers, but a
unity of spirit and life in Him. The
more closely the individual disciple
clings to the Master, in perfect
All know 'the result; this is history, and despair, l'aul said: "I know obedience to (lis Word, the more
For the explorer the bird of hope that 1 have a house eternal," and closely wilt he be united in spirit
alta that of the golden bough told looked forward to depth as to the with every other believer.
no lies. They were the forerunners hour of victory and supreme happi- In us: that the world may believe
of this splendid continent. ness. Other great wren have been -Only as the lives of the professed
And not otherwise is it with the clouded in their faith, but to their followers of Christ reflect the higher
deep longings of the heart. At home best moments they have cleared the divine life of their Master will their
your wife or chid is ill. In the mind of cloudy. lives influence others to believe on
night you awaken full of fear. And What a word is this: "I had ra- the Christ as Indeed the Son of Cod.
then n great, sweet hope springs up, ther be wrong with Plato and Socra- 22. Glory -The splendor or radi-
The child shall not return to tes than right with those who dnuht ranee which as a halo surrounds a
you, Lut and deny." Therefore in his last and spotless character. This, then, is
YOU SIIALL GO TO !nu. crowning book Professor Fis,;o re- the precious heritage of every be -
Suddenly the hope immortal sings in cords his faith -that immortality is Bever.
the goal toward which the world That they may be one, oven ne we
Process of evolution has been strug- are one. --'this glory emanates from
gling from the very beginning. For God, and those who possesat it in
science has become a prophet of int- unity with Christ must of necessity
mortality and all the arguunents are be in one in spirit -a unit among
cumulative. themselves, sin''e all who are in
After years of reflection and mu' h Chris( possess the selfsame purity of
study we have found the rock. Trope life and character -part of the divine
has become conviction and immortal- life --front which alone that glory
Sty the solace and springs
(ILOitY OF DAILY LIFE. 23. Perfected into one -By becom-
ing partakers of the divine lite which
would be worth the living. Tho 1s in Christ, as the preceding phrase
statesman plans the people's good Indicates.
and receives criticism. The publicist 24. Where 1 am -When I shall have
teaches the people and receives
blame The merchant Fives and re-
ceives ingratitude. Often the best
men are cast aside and the worst
climb to place and power.
in hours of depression public men
long for the dreamless sleep; over-
wrolieht, one would be unequal to
the battle of the morrow but for the
imuxit tal hope. (Tours there are
when the doors open into heaven;
knowing that soon he must leave his
task and drop the tool, he looks
longltegly toward the sky.
Must the books be closed forayer?
Must we leave the home and the city
never to return? Will the hunger
for beauty and goodness never bo
satisfied? At hest this world is a
little rage. In tho zoological gar-
dens in the autlunn the golnen-erest-
ed cnglo stands always on the south
side of the cage with its head be-
tween the bars, straining and
strnining with its head toward the
South. 'Then when the spring again
is upon the land the eagle stands al-
ways looking toward the North and
straining toward the land where
coolness; hath her abiding places.
And oft the soul xtnnds expectant.
In vision hours comes the immortal
hope. Looking upward, the Foul
beholds a rift -voices fall, whispering
"Come up hither." 'Then hope
springs triumphant in the human
breast. With untroubled heart nian
fora severe attack of Dyspepsia, : _. _ __
your heart like a bird. It tells of
the undiscovered country of Shakes-
penre, of the happy hills of Paradise.
For, as Columbus found for us
America, Christ discovered the City
of God.
But can thoughtful men trust
this hope? Do our instincts deceive
us? instincts tell no lies to other
(ventures. Already the robins are
in the park. Soon they will build
their nests and hatch their young.
In September the robins will start
south. When the young bird is but
4 months old it plumes its wings
for the flight to Florida. When a
few weeks have passed by, after the
long flight by day and the feeding by
!night. the young birds will reach
their new home -the forerunners of
Unman pilgrims, who tiro of tho ice
and snow of the North and make
their way to the; orange groves of
the South.
Now. from whence dirt the rol:in
get that instinct about Florida? (low
did a young bird that opened its
eyes in Prospect Park know that
there was a palm tree and a cool
spring in the warm tropic Jam!? Well,
any thoughtful man can answer the
question. Florida is a real land.
long ago the robin made its way one
any's journey north and then turned
south again to escape the winter.
The next year the robins went north
once more and again returned south.
But the memory of Florida was in
the mother bird. At last these an-
cestral memories crystallired into
what we call instinct.
• The erre-evisting T'lnr Ida developed
the hope in the little tird horn in
Prospect. Park, That is what our
Mrs. Frank Hutt, Morrlsburg, greatpoet means when he shy» that
Ont., was one of those troubled are exiled from h(•nven; that the
hope of immortality is a ;mince we
with this most common of stomach have left, tho
troubles. She writes :-" After GLORIES Wt' ITAVE KNOWN.
being treated by three doctors, and 0f the millions of tarda nature and
using many advertised medicines, l'e1(I never have deceived one by lo-
using instinct. 'Therefore Christ said' goes on toward the end.
and receiving no benefit, I gave! �. who shrill ever believe on him (verse
up all hope of ever being cured. ! THE S. S. LESSON '-'0): that they all may be "one"
Hearing Burdock Blood Bitters so
4. (verse 21); not merely confederated
or joined in a brotherhood. not
highly spoken of, 1 decided to get i INTERNATIONAL LESSON, merely united in any sense like that
a bottle, and give it a trial. Before MAY 14. of the confederated provinces of
Canada. but netiinlly one. 'That
1 had taken it i began to feel better, L,sson VII. Jesus Frays For His His weaning may be unnnistakahle
and by the time I had taken the Followers. Golden Text, our Lord gives an example, As the
second one 1 was completely John xvii., 0.divine Father and the So, are one,
so we may be one in them (verse
cured. I cannot recommend Bur- '1.111: LESSON STATi?MlENT, 21). If such language originated
dock Blood Bitters too highly, and 1. Christ's "Own" tet Apart its with n theological professor it might
t.e regarded w ith suspicion; but tjnese
would advise ail sufferers from This 1Vurld (verso.; 1-19). are the Wolds of the Lord .le.us,
re. True Christians are "not of the 1
dyspepsia to give it a trial.rend he toilet -ales area emphasizes
MILBURN'S
Heart and Nerve Pills.
Are a speetft' for all diem r. and die -
ardent arising tram a rundown condi-
of the heart nr nerve eyl,tem, .wch
f�iItr Palpltatinn of the. $.art, Nervous
Proitr.tion, t:.rctm.ne..n, t;loopi.a.-
ne it, relief ani i)1,,, Spells. Bain Iraq,
etc. They are r.pe lady beneficial bo
women troubled with Irregular e.t.a.
'duration.
Awe IO cents per but, or a for 11,2&
All &el.rs, or
Ran T. tlltsrau Co.,trr'ttso.
Taranto, ~nil.
world." even as Christ is not of the
world;;they are a class by then:sal es
(verse 10). -o foreign and "other-
worldly" are they in their sympa-
thies and views, so evidently flu
they belong elsewhere, that our I.ord
explains why they are not at once
token "out of the world" --they have
(,len "sent" here (verse 18). and not
them: "i in 1110111, thou to me, I In
thee. they in us." Such a unity
will persuade the world that God Int»
sent .(esus (verse 21). 1'jssensions,
mutual criticirnis, :rick of charity -
these cause dnuht; but unity tit t1 nets
and wins. The true followers o:
Jesus( are one in destiny (verse. 22)
Ile well as in sv1111)at11V and mission
yet line their mirainn .Seen fully per- anti character -a thought. more fully
formed. '1 he word "Fent" 54)1111(14 (levelol ed in the following verses.
the keynote for a large part of this 111. Christ's "Own" Kept for the
(Sent
Jesus is pre-eminently The li'orld to ('once (verges 24-20).
( Sent (hte--the titan of n11 men who our 1.4prd wilts that we shall be
had it mission. And as (Sod had ;there ile is -in this world 10 take.
ret Ilim, eo Jesus had sent up our cross nrel follow )lint; in the
eeephs, 0nd for their sakes Ile next to sit en thrones end behold
l.s 11inlst11 apart from the glories
erg I coaeforte of this world (verse
19., and prays that ilis disciples al -
!nor be "sanctifled (kept npnrt')
it rough the truth" (verse 19), kept
front the world's evil (versa:. 15). But
by what means shall the hither lee)
them apart fron, the world? '1'h••
truth of God is first ntmntioted as a
e;.0 of sanctification. If we in -
Precisely tthat is (Sod's truth?
►h.• :u swcr is given in verse 1 7: "Thy
'•v ora is truth." Ana if we inquire,
1lhitt. is God's word? the answer
aromas in .1e;hn I., 11: "'The Word
was n:ndu Retch. and dwelt among
els...
lIL Christ's ' Imo" Kept Together
in 'l his World 1ve1•':(2o1-2:t).
in his prayer our l.ord includes all
His glory. The pi (Dion of verse 21
links itself in our memories with the
exclnnwtlon of the psalmist: "i
shall he satisfied w'Itch 1 awake in
thy likeness." Our Lou (1's plan, In
its boat ennlysis, is for justice. ile
does not say. "O tear father," as
well he might. Let. "O righteous
Father" (verse 25); and claims what
Ile requests as of equity to 1tlti'eelf.
Verse 15. From the world - The
mere correct. English idiom. 1f "the
world" ike tnken to mean the earth.
(hut if "the world" refers to ulnre•run.
crate liftmen society, rev th' mettle
expression undoubtedly does In
many •iohannine passages (comp. vii.
7; xiv., 17; xv., 18; xvi., 8), and (Ls
returned to the fullness of glory
with thee. (Comp. John xii., 26;
xiv., :1.) •
'25. The world knew thee not -In
the Creek the word indeed, precedes
this clause --"the world. it is true,
knew thee not that thou art right-
eous."
26. Thy na►ne-In a special and
peculiar sense and degree the nano of
a person among Semites stood for
the person himself. Thus, to say
that a man's name had been blotted
out meant that the man was dead.
To the Hebrew mind the name of
God was therefore very sacred, so
sacred that it was never spoken,
SENTENCE SERMONS.
Whining piety wins no one.
faith always gees forward.
The worst sins have many- aliases.
Shortening the face lengthens the
lite.
it. is easy to be resigned to an-
other's woes
Weeping over your weeds only
waters them.
'I he best why to keep itis day is
to do h(1(x)8.
Tho lifnsteris4
is always with those
who seek to Iuinister.
'fhe church that docs not look for
the lost is 1(181. itself.
Onit a soft ratan finds any pleasure
in sl'renrling himself.
Salve.tinr is more than a sense of
sat.ishiction with ourselves.
1Vhipping a boy to Sunday school
never yet drove hint to heaven.
1Vhcnt religion is only a tool you
are sure to get hold of it by the
wrong end.
A man needs something besid Ls
faith in (God when he toel.lcs a
hornet's nest.
There's no use crusting your bread
on the waters if you keep your cake
to yours, If.
Angels cony have wings, but that
does not indicate that they will wel
conte n man milliner.
Where there is no faith in the pos-
sibilities of man faith in the power
of God does little good.
1f fou know enoagh to help you
will have ton many contracts to
waste any breath in criticism.
Peot,le who protect themselves
from the world's problems are Cho
first to suggest its pannceas.
Some teen could reconcile the bible
and science if only the hilile would
be reconciled to their sins.
If people were n8 ready to put in
the offering ns they are to pass oro
the sermon the dwelt w. uld soon be
rich.
4
TiIINGS WORTH LEA1tNiNG.
Iearn to laugh. A good laugh is
better than medicine.
Learn how to tell n story. .l well -
told story 19 ne epitome r.H n sun-
hente in a sick -room.
Lenin to keep year own trout.lcs
to yourself. The world is too gutsy
to care for your ills and aorr'ws.
Learn to slop croaking. If volt
ranee( ser any .mad 1) this at erld,
keep the had 10 yourself. Learn 10
attend »irickly- to your otwu hnsi-
Lenrr to hide your aches nn(1 pains
mete! n pleasant einlle.
Lenrn to greet your friends with a
smile They carry too many frowns
In their awn hearts to bo bothered
with hey of yours.
•
it will case the soreness in the most
marvellous manner.
Ceius should never be placed in the
mouth or between the teeth, for bear
hg Home in mind, that money is handless by
allnever
ckmue;eJsuety. of people, and is ae
To Clean Velveteen -Try wiping
the soiled hien of the velveteen gown
with n piece of flannel dipped in
bcrrzine. This will pi ol.a'..ly remove
the dirt.
When soakingbre. forboil*d
1
sod
-
lb ([laze (tolls and Runs. -Dissolve ding or any kind of cooking, always
dente sugar in milk with a little break it small and -'soak in cola
amt'ttt butter. Brush the rolls with water or milk. If snaked in water.
Mit" as soon ns baked, then return strecec very dry before adding to
thorn to the oven to dry and glaze. the other ingredients.
Haricot, Soup. -Soak a pint of No blacking is required for boots
henna all night, boil theta for four if they are cleaned as follows: Bruslt
hours in t wo quarts of wetter with the boots free from dust with a Croft
n sliced onion, and celery it you brush. then rub a little glycerine
have 1t. Press all through a sieve. well into the leather, and when ncar-
fietteon to taste, add one pint of ly dry, polish with a very clean, bolt
'talk. Let it boil for five minutes brush.
whilst it is stirred and serve. '10 remove Stains on the Tfands.-
I'ennsy'lvania Tea Cakes.. --Mix thor- Try rubbing with a piece of lemon-
oughly three cupfuls of flour with a lemon that has been peeled and
two teaspoonfuls of raking powder. used will do well for the purpose.
Stir In gradually one well beaten Ilefore wetting the stains try this or
egg and two cupfols of milk in a little ammonia. Soap is apt to
which has been mixed one ounce of fix the stains.
oiled butter. Beat nil together for '1'o Cleanse the (fair from Scurf. -
ten minutes. Bake in a quick oven Take a drachma each of borax, sul-
in small nnu1iu
n rings or small tins. 1)1111)- andglycerine, add to this
eight
This cheese dish is always; popular. ounces of rose-water and inix all to -
Cut up hill a pound of cher:,e into get her. Apply to the scalp three
thin slices anti put it into a lance- times a week. This lotion will also
pan with a little beer. Stir over strengthen the hair.
a clear fire till the cheese is melted, Don't bite cotton when sewing, for
then add a little made mustard and apart trent the fact that biting the
cayenne pepper. 1'ou• tic mixture cotton is injurious to the teeth, the
into a deep small dish, cover with trick often results in a very sore
breadcrunlbs, and brown in the mouth. When silk, is bitten, the
oven or before the fire. Serve very danger is greater, for it is usual to
hot with thin slices of toast. soak the thread In acetate of lead,
StulTed pork makes a nice change so the result may bo very serious,
at this time of year. 11 the log is and even lead to L•lood poisoning.
used, take out the upper portion of Chilblain Cure. -'fake a piece of
the bone, fill the cavity with stuff- alum shout the size of a nut, and
ing and roast the Joint. To make melt it in enough hot water to cover
the stuffing, take half a pound of the hands. When the alum is melt -
nicely boiled onion and mix into it e(1, soak your hands in the liquid
two ounces of brcadcruntbs, and one for nearly a quarter of nn hour. Tho
ounce of finely chopped suet: add hands inust then be covered with
sage, Tepper. and salt to taste. Mix gloves, which should be worn all
wejI, rend press together. Servo with night and as much as possible dur-
a
pple sauce. ing the (lay. Repeat this night and
Snowdrift. -Dissolve halt an ounce morning.
of gelatine in half a pint of water. Carpets. -Can be cleaned and reno-
Add half a pound of sugar and the vnted by snaking soapsuds with good
strained juin(' of four lemons, end
let all just Himmel- for ten minutes.
strain and set 1i11 it. cools and
begins to thicken, then add the well -
beaten whites of two or three eggs.
Whisk briskly till all Is very light
and spongy. Iieap up in a glass
dish and set in a cold place till re-
quired.
'1'o Clarify Home-made Wine. -Dis-
solve two minces of best isinglass in
a small quantity of the wine to be
refined, and set it. nen'r the tire for a
day or two. '('hen bent the whites
of two eggs to stiff froth, take out
half a gallon of the wino, mix all
together and put into the barrel.
I_et this stand for one day, then
stop it up and after three weeks it
will be fine. The above is for nine
gallons of wine.
Salad may be Preserved Crisp and
fresh for several days 1f it is kept
in n box prepared by the directions
given below: -'fake tt small empty
wooden box and line the inside with
several thicknesses of newspaper.
Sprinkle this lining well with cold
water, place the salad in the box,
cover with more. damped paper, place
in a cool place, and be mire to keep
the top papers droop. The salad
even in a hot climate should be its
nice when taken front the box as if
cut fresh.
Bath Cheese. Cake. -Line an open
tart tin with puff pa':te, ornament
the edges. 1ioi1 a teacupful of milk
with a beaten egg till it curdles, re-
move from the fire, stir in one ounce
of breadcrumbs, two ounces of but-
ter, two ounces of canter sugar, and
two ounces of currants. heat all
these ingredients into a creams -like
consistency. whisk two eggs, add
them (;t'adunlly, and, lastly, add n
dessert-t:poonfall of brandy. four
into the pastry lined tin, grate n
little nutmeg over the mixture, and
ornament with a few crumbs. Linke
to a moderate oven. erve cold on
a dainty (1'Oyley,
3loonshino Cake.
SOIIIf DAIN'T'Y DISHES.
rake -u moon-
shine cake by nemcutia made after
this recipe: !teat the whiles of ten
eggs, 10 which hnt'e been added one-
fourth teaspoon 8a1t, until light. Sift
in seven -eights teaspoon crennt of
tartar. and heat until stiff. (teat the
Yolks of seven eggs until thick and
lemnn-colored, and add two heaping
tablespoons beaten whites. To the
rcmnining twhltes. add gradunll•y one
and one-half cups granulated' sugar
measured after five siftings, then add
one-half teaspoon almond extract.
Combine the two mixtures by cutting
and (online: Gem add one cup pestty
flour, measered after five eiftings.
Bake 111 angel cake -pun, first (Bitted
in co:t1 water, in n moternte oven
fifty lunettes. For this prepare the
icing ns follows: !toil two cups
sugar, six tat,lespoons water, nn:l
one-half teaspoon creat', of tartar un-
til syrup threads. four unto Cho
whites of 1 eggs bentcn until stiff,
continuing the beating. Beal until
of right consistency to spread. Flav-
or with elnr•asehinn, (Id rad a few
grains salt. S1'rend over ca',e and
st'r)n' l,• with almonds, Han.)). d aid
shleuld,ed, 1121!1 take until delicately
browned
111':'I'S roll 'fill 17n%TF.
S41i1crt roef for hoots con be made
1w noising a litho Atlet and beeswax
together. (tub this on the soles of
the huote, rend lightly over the (glges
where the t+citnlies are.
T. remove super9uous hairs apply
fuel.-p(nsderid puede stone, wvhieh
should be slightly damped, and well
rubbed on at night to the di.etigured
i.arts.
On Exercise.-i'cople 'who 410 not
tnke time foe exercise will shot -nob;
breve to nunke time 10 he ill' It Is
e.11 known that eeerclee in•rraset
tl•.• phtt:iced pnwers, and 0%es krone
strength to resist sicknees. Metn1
rusts if not need, and the hotly be -
entre': theins(e if rent exereieed.
To rare a ('o'•11 --Itch a lilt:e oil
of pepperment over a sensitive cora,
white soap and hot water, and add
fuller's earth to this until it is of
the consistency of thin cream. Have
plenty of clean drying cloths, a
small scrubbing brush, a large
sponge, and a pail of fresh water.
Put some of the cleaning mixture in-
to a bowl and (lip the brush in it.
llrush a small piece of the carpet
with this, then wash with the sponge
and cold water. (try as much as
possible with tlic sponge, and finally
rub with dry cloths. Continue this
until all the carpet is cleaned, and
then let dry.
GREAT DOCKS OF LONDON
BUSY SCENES ARE WITNESSED
THERE.
15,000,000 Square Feet of Floor-
ing to Handle Products of
the World.
Thc, Londe, and India Docks Com-
pany rule over an estate of 1,700
acres, with twenty utiles of quay and
15,000,000 square feet of flooring for
the handling and storage of 800,000
tons of goods. 'l he largest shits of
all the world, says the London Daily
Mail, enter England through the
gates of the 'Thames, and make their
way to these London docks.
You look ahing the quays and ite-
hold steamers from China and the
East Indies, from South America and
Canada, from Egypt and New Zea-
land, rigid there and quiet now,
niter long buffeting with stiff sas,
Hundreds of London dockers "swarm
over them like egg laden ants, while
enormous cranes rattle their swing-
ing chains over thein and the scrap-
ers get to work on the cracked and
faded paint of their sloping midi's.
There 18 no idlene s in the docks.
The brown-fac,,d sten who have
brought these steel monsters across
the seas are snlokiug !toxin' pipes
at home, dnncitig children un their
knees, taking their wives to music.
11811 and theatre, and, not a doubt of
it, spinning yarns about
'1'111: WONUiatl'UL WORLD
(hewn tinder; but hero in the docks
aro shabby, pale -faced, thick-ained
Lenefoners. running to and fro with
packages on their bowed »boulders,
swentii,g to empty the veseels that
ile their,. herr, too, are engine driv-
ers, steeling thin trains front (lock
to dock, and carriers driving away
with vuttloads of merchandise-evcrY;
where Lottd011 's idling un tees()
huge ships. t5'he sailors ere liko
ggenlleim 11 w hu have thriven t heir
csiuipage to the stable ntr:I left these
grooms of the docks to clean up
reedy for Theirtext excursion.
You get soe idea of London's
trade by iuovil g through the tall
warchouts's of the docks. Consider
a few figures. 'Thirty-six 1hnustna
tons of tea are stored) here in a
/single year. in th' vaults, with
their tw'ettty-ci,tbt ti il, » of gang-
way, ('1111 be «Lorca 1(n,.)(,() pipes of
wine. Two hundred and lefty thou-
sand tons of wool, worth $1.Q0,0011,-
000, arrive annually at the port of
London. Twenty thousand tons of
tobacco are here in bond, valued at
e!");:!:04) 1,11(1(1,
i is arcominodst.ion in the cold
storage warehoueos for 801,000
sheep. . `sixty thousand pounds of
ostrich fenthers have been stored
here at one time, and several mil-
lions of bird skins arrive annually,
too numerous for computation. In
addition, (he i.onden locks have ac-
commodation for sugar, ivory, spices,
hark. gongs. metal,, mmarble, drugs,
tintew. pepper, rice. int err, cocoa, Ls-
inglnsa, cont, grain, furniture. wood,
timber. 1 ,rpe'ts, better, cheese, poul-
try. even fee son shells, sponges.
musk, 1 u,berggris nrel beeswax! In a
$11 nub, 'mill ease nu,c• lank at ele-
phants tnsl,s worth nearly a
Illi\111([•:le 'I'Iit)l,SANI> POUNDS.
'I he gardens end the Iaetories of
The Sing of Terrors
Is Consumption.
As. Cease =Woe is ceased be. asgtect. .
Ns secure the deuterons
C.14a.
Z'!le balsamic odor of the newly
cut pine heals and invigorates the
lungs, and even consumptives im-
prove and revive amid the perfume
This fact has
of the pines. long
been known 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 lite -giving lung -
healing virtue of the Norway Pine
with other absorbent, expectorant
and soothing Herbs and Balsams.
It cures Coughs, Colds, Hoarse-
ness, 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 itis a fine remedy,
the best we have ever used. A num-
ber of people here have great faith
in it as it cures every time.
Price 25 cents1K , battle.
•
•
the world empty thent»elves into this
lap of London. 'There is hardly a
little Island set in the midst of the
seas which does not grow something
or [Hake something with trown fin-
gers to send into the cold, gray port
of London. As you walk through
the warehouses your nostrils aro
filled with the scents of tho earth -
cinnamon, nntmcg, musk, vanilla,
coffee, tea, tobacco -everything that
once lived and drank the air in green
and beautiful grampus across the
seas. -
There at your feet lies Oiegntati<ing
torn from tea pa .ages on which
some Chinaman set strange .marks
with brush ,and ink, and there are the
red and green cases thont.lelves, with
the number and weigat cut in their
sides by a scribing iron. You look
at even the nails in some strange
package of goods out of the Eaxt,
and picture to yourself oho dark
hands gripping them while the ham-
mer struck home. All the hands
and all the feet of the Easrt.seemt to
be going up and clown the earth to
keep the larder of London full.
WHY IIE DIDN'T MIND.
A minister and a rather bumptious
traveller occupied the same state
room on a voyage across the Atlan-
tic. At breakfast on the first morn-
ing the traveller said: •
"I hope, sir, my snoring did not
disturb you during the night?"
"Oh, no, not a bit, air," replied
the minister, "not a bit. You sec,,
I Live on the coast near a lighthouse
and I'm used to the sound of the
foghorn on thick nights."',
+ t
THE COLOR OF GOLD.
Few people know the real color of
gold, because it is seldom seen ex-
cept when heavily alloyed, which
makes it much redder than when it
is pure. The purest coins ever made
were the 150 pieces which once were
in common use in California. All
gold is not alike when refined. Aus-
tralian gold is distinctly redder than
that found in California. The gold
itt the Ural Mountains is tho reddest
in the world.
T
LOGICAL.
Papa -"What have you been doing
sir?"
Little Clarence -"Fr -practising on
the piano, pa."
Pupa -"Practising, eh? 'Then how
is it your hands are so dirty?"
Clarence --"I played all on the
black notes, dal!"
GOING F(tlt GOOD.
"Well," said Mrs. Peppery, "I
heard that piano next door going
to -day and, for once, I was really
pleased."
"Indeed!" replied her husband.
"You must have been treated to
some especially good music, then..'
"It was sweetest music to tree. I
heard the installment dealer's
taking it away."
A woman doesn't love a man if
she wonders why she docs.
Knicker-"Didn't the doctor build
you up?" Docker -0"1'M but he seems
to think he built a hunk!"
Needed in Every Home
Always
Up to Dote
WEPsTERS
INTERNATIONAL
DICTIONARY
A Dictionary of ENGLISH.
Blonraphy,Goography,Elctlon,elc.
The New and Enlarged
Edition Qmtains
25,000 New Wo,i'ds
Now Gazetteer of Cho World
with more than 25,((0 tide•((, Intse,1 on the
;etc .t C01141:3 r'rtllrn.,
New Biographical Dictionary
eonLrinitnt 1111089 of riser l ),000natotcort lir
tee rtr".le. wIth 11.0 loon lit y.occupation, date
of n•Igne, Oat° of birth, death, etc,
}Alto,' l.y W. T. HARRIS, Ph.D., LLD,
Cnite.l Antes (•eenentotoner of 1;luentlun,
New Plates • 2350 quarto Pate.
Rich fIndlnt;-, 1000 Illustrations
• we aim publish
Webster'• Colles(pl. Dictionary
with filo...narrnf gTMI lrhtyordaand Nee r?.
11.3 Pave Iib. 11..,nt!n... 8:,e i Ahr t.
• FIrst-vines In goal ity, Kr,•nndrin•. In'i:e."
LtT US SEND YOU FREE
"A Test in Pronunciation" which rf'or.l. a
p{le1,.aet nod 11,'11,1 tisI' erenlntt'n enter-
tnintneet. hllustl;tted patnphkt ale, fns'.
G.00.MERRiAM COMPANY.
,Publlahe.s. Seigel/field. Nasa.
5