Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1905-05-25, Page 3ThQ Home 1444444•14444444 BSOIUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter's ,Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of W-z-eee•--74:;-ze See Fac-Sttelte Wraeper Below. Tory scan eau es easy Is take as suer. FOR HEAOACNL CARTERS FGR Di1111iEfi. VON BILIOUSNESS. FON TORPID MN. FOS CONSTIPATION. FON SALLOW SKIN. FON TNECOMPLEXION :tem pit[,st r Vtgets:c]:e, .�.6, Ft. CURL SICK HEADACHE. A WARNING NOTE FROM THE BACK. Profile oftett say, " Mow are we to know •u'he)1 the kidneys are out of order f" The location of the kidneys, close to the small of the back, renders the detection of kidney trouble a simple matter. The note of waru:ng ceutes from the back, in the allape of backache. Don't ueglect to cure it imme- diately. Serious kidney trouble will follow if you do. A few doses of DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS, taken in time, often save years of suffering. Mr. Horatio Till, Geary, N.B., writes :—" I suffered for about two years with kidney dis- ease. Had pains in toy back, hips and legs; could net sleep well, and had no appetite. I took one box of D oan's Kidney Pills, and they cured me. The pains have all left, and I tow sleep well. Price 50 cents per box, or B for $I.25. All dealers, or Tux DOAN KIDNItY FSIs, Co., Toronto, Out. • MIL BURN'S Heart and Nerve Pills. THE LAWS OF JUDGMENT They Are Justice, Sympathy and Charity. • ) N A despatch Y. t,t h Brooklyn. 1 from 1 v says:—itev. Dr. Newell Dwight Hillis preached (rutty the following text.:— Judge righteous judgment. In a monarchy the rulers are chosen in ad%arlce; in a republic, of neces- sity, every citizen must sit. in judg- ment uu his fellows. The first law of oro criminals; nevertheless thcru aro elective government is Lh0 law of n111ltitudt:5 of rich mien whose every Judging men, putties mud tneas'►r,.s_ dollar Is an honest dollar and who Once every four years the citizen are patriots and o0ru(st. The law et must it. in judgment upon two ten- justice forbids judglInalton u pitr- didatee fur the White !louse and tial hearing. Oh, if we could only judge their fitness to carry out tho g('t all the people into a jury box and compel them to hear both sides on the strike in Chicago, the riot in Waesaw, Mr. Itockefeller's gift, the looting of Niagara halls, the legisla- tor's coining of his voting power in- to cash, what a change of sentiment there would be! the second law of is 'I`h', seen judging I(tw of sympathy. This law asks you to put yours=elf nal . se', s good nuthin it any laboring sten: nevertheless there are multi- tudes of trades unionists who aro patriots and heroes. Contrariwise, there are anon trades unionist lead- ers who can seer nothing good in a capitalist and to whom all rich men platform which each represents. Every two years the citizen must judge between men who aspire to 4o mayor or governor or cnngressnr.ul. Every ,Horning the editor sits in judgment upon yesterday's events and upon the then and women in the public eye. Every day has one outstanding mean or woman who is in the lime- light—now a philanthropist, now an orator, now a physician, now a wo- man criminal, 1, 11 v u hero. Every night the citizen reviews the new facts and brings his judgment up to date. This necessity, also, of judging men and measures explains the assimil'i- tioti of new immigrants and their swift development. The very fact that patriot must judge and pass on social truths, political truths, econ- omic truths, is a kind of university education. (';very judgment upon men or measures is it revelation of one's self, one's standards, une'u mo- tives and ONE'S C1fAltACTh:R. What kind of a man are you? Whitt kind of a man do you admire? For nothing measures manhood liko the quality ot man that you count praiseworthy and admirable. The first law of judging is the law of justice. This law asks for a con- sideration of all tho facts in the case. It recognizes that there Fre two sides to every shield. It forbids partiality of statement, a fragutan- IN ANOTI1!R'S PLACE. It asks you to cuusieler the mutt's circumstances, temperament and temptations. You must judge, Out let the golden rule color t ho judg- ment. Judge your frail i,rother elan as you yourself would wish to be judged. The third law of judgment is the law of charity. This law bids the judge remember t hut some Wren aro born with passions that are like the steeds of the sun, and avarice or ambition that carry theist away. An- other man is born with the love of simple things. Int one 1111111 temper rages like a Vesuvius and his brother is as cold as an iceberg. It is a greater sin for this phlegmatic man to say "Good gracious!" than it Is for his brother to swear like a trooper. Tho child brought up in Fagin's den must be jitelged by the law ot charity, and the child brought tip in a beautiful honln must bo judged by the law of severity. These aro the great laws. If obeyed they would reverse many criticisms and touch flattery would bo overthrown. tary review of the facts: it deinanrls Multitudes of men aro overpraised, that both sides have an impartial multitudes are overeriticised. Judge hearing. This law of just judgment no unjust judgment. (Lod judges, also forbids prejudice. A twisted but judges righteously. Christ window pane can twist a Aunbeatn that has moved in a straight lino for ninety millions of miles. There aro soma capitalists so prejudiced against trades unions that they can judges. but judges with sympathy and charity. .fudge not unjustly, Christ says, but judge with standard of truth. with the law of sympathy, with charity in the heart. THE S. S. LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON, MAY 28. Lesson IX. The Crucifixion. Gold- en Text, I. Cor. 15. 3. LESSON WOIU) STUDIES, Note—These Word Studies are bas- ed on the text of the Revised Version. Sequence of Events—John does net record the fact. that. Pilate before de- livering up .Jesus Lo be crucified sent his prisoner to Herod :Antipas, whose jurisdict' extended over Galileo and Peraea, where .!esus had been during nicest of his life. Herod tees in Jerusalem at this time, and %v,ts glad of the opportunity of seeing Jes- us, of whom he had heard much. lint Jesus refused absolutely to conver.;o with Herod, with the result that both Herod and his subordinates Ailt a specific for all heart and ner•vs mocked and ill-treated him before troubles. Here are rime of the symp- sending hint back to Pilate (Luke 2:1. touts. Any one of them should be a 5-1(3). Another' incident omitted) warning for you to attend to it inn- from .John's narrative is the earning s J mediately. Don't delny. Serious break- of l'ilnte's wife to her husband to two others. Not now considered good English. 19. Pilate wrote—in the sone, no doubt. of "causal to be written.'' Jesus of Nazareth, the King .•f the Jews—John, having been a;( eye witless, probably records the eruct wording of the title, the other even- gelist.s giving only the substance (comp. Matt. 27. 37; Almrk 15. 26; Luke 2:1. 38). 20. Hebrew . . . Latin . . . Greek —The title was thus intelligible to all, .news, Greeks, and Humane, alike. 23. His garments—Together with those of the two malefactors crucifi- ed with him. '1'he action Was vc- cording to well established custom. Coat --An undergarment er inner tunic, reaching from the neck to the knees, or possibly, ns 501110 me5, to the ankles. Woven from the top t.hro'fltO 111t— An expensive garment, and unr such as the high priests wore. 21. Vesture—Clothing collectively. quotation is from 1.':. I. 29. 1 t 25. His mother, and his mother's ister, Jfa ry the wife of ( lopes, and lary Magdalene —Literally, ills neither and his ther's sister Mary down of the system 111Ay follow, if you do: Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Dizzi- ness, Palpitation of the Heart, Shortness of Breath, Rush of Bloot! to the Head, Smothering and Sinking Spells, Faint and Welk Spells, Spasm or Pain through the Heart; Cold, Clammy Hands and Peet, There may be many minor symp- toms of heart mrd nerve trouble, but these are the chief ones. Milburn's Heart and Nerve fills will dispel all these symptoms from the system. Price 50 cents per box, or 2 for Si .25. WEAK SPELLS CURED. Mrs. h. Dorey, Hetnford, N.S., writes have "nothing to do with that right- the (wife) of ('lopes, and Alar Lhe.! coos loan" (Katt. '17.1'9). tlolh of Magdalene. We note, first, that the these events precede d'ilate's 1 nal woe ! trite is in the Greek left to ho su o ,lied.1 1V til v nal I t J l it is not absolutely certain that wife] was the noun intended here, since "daughter" or even "sister" night In accordnnco with linguistic usage have heen ltitcnded. We Ante also presentation of .Jesus to the .letve and also the cruel mockery and scourging at the hands of the band of 1241111811 sel4lers 1119!110 the Praetor - 1 (John 19. 1-4; Matt. 27, 27-30; \lnr•k 15. 10-19). Robed in purple. but wearing a that no conjunction occurs betwc•eu firmly against the bulwark, and to- of nach•5 use crown of thorns, and bleeding from the phrase "his mother's sister" rood plied with passive resistance. A rope 1 tg juin an(1 f ant, head to tout as a result of that car- the following noun 'Nary," which was passed around his hindquarters, n°11.141 nd stew with a rueful of sugar, aldd ()nation end of most crud scourging, would stent t0 indicate I hat the two and numerous dock laborers harness- th" dissoly, d gelatine, 0n11 when KEY TO MOST MARRIAGES. Result of Investigation by An English Professor. New theories of unconscious selec- tion on the part of man and wife— liko mating with like --as opp,ttetl to Darwin's idea that 111011 and women' depend upon their perceptive and in- tellectual faculties in choosing each other, 114.0 propounded, by Prof. Karl Pearson, of University ('011040, London, England, recently at the SI:LU:C'i'1:U ,tI. clpt* . Royal rstitution. •, 1 8 Instil 1 J r t —) t the Leitch l sk t. a n h a. e r•d to 11e• nutiutuu t that t mtutt has at wake an appreciated addition to the unconscious tendency to select a witty lunch basket, either plain Or stuffed. of his owe height, with eyes of his •hhry must. Itowev(r, be washed 811(1 own color, it proportionate sprat well washed; 11. n they may be dried feremnger to forefinger, a fore- so as not to be� arm corresponding to his own, and of the daintiest a constitution of like physical vigor' is to steam th These theories he expounded bymeans of tables 81111 diagrmuts. thousand men the es is dilidod as fol - Among every color of the eJ lows: Blue Green 1lazel Brown The eyes of women are generally darker, only 286 of them in every thousand having blue ones. It these blue-eyed people m►urried at random the result would be that. they would 303 312 .........127 t)4 ticky to handle. One 'aye to prepare thein u alter washing un- til they aw •11, flten roll in granulat- ed sugar. Or cut open on one side with a penknife, remove the stonel and replace with salted nuts or fon- dant. New Way to (-'nok Peas. -1150 either new trcen pens 01' cannedi. To the latter this method will add a delight- ful flavor, which will make theta seem as good n5 the new. !)rain the leas into n snurepnn and cook thein gently about ten or fifteen nintites with n small net. union and tiny mate at the rule of 101 per thou- bunch of fresh mint. Remove Mon sand; but ho had discovered that and 11,1r.d and season the peas •i111 the acLnal number of Marriages 1•er salt, popper and butter and a little thousand of blue-eyed persons was rich cream if you wish. 11(1, or 36 above the randoms aver- Stewed I:huhnrb.—A nice (dish for age, thus proving that the blue- desert. Slice lhn peel 01 one large eyed nen and the blue-eyed women orange into thin strips and cook are unconsciously attracted toward until tender ir, n rich syrup. Remove one another. them and put in one layer of rhu- Lt (ho sumo way, Hien with green- barb cut into tht•e• lengths and stew ish grey or hazel eyes tend (0 marry gently until soft, but not to break. When clear, skim out and cook an- other layer; do this until all the rhubarb is cooked. Put into u shal- low, clear glass dish and garnish with puff paste, cut in fanciful shape. ithubarb Shortcakes—Make a rich women with eyes of like color. The average height of a man he gave us from (17 inches to 68 inches, and that of 11 woman as 621 inches, end he contended that the average tall Ilan has it tail wife. and the short man a short wife. "Ono could hardly imagine a man shortcak0;topen,split it open, butter and choosing a wife by measuring Icer spread with .:nveotenel rhubarb a,teW- 11018 forefinger to forefinger," said 041 in a double boiler without a drop tho professor; yet his diagrams deur- cf water a(hled. Garnish with tvhip- onstrated that as tho spats of one ped cream and serve warn. increased, so did that of the other. Sour Cream Dainties—In every fain - A like result was produced in the fly where cream is used there will be measurement of thousands of fore- small quantities left, perhaps only a amts, hie figures showing that there tablespoonful. Board it up and was it distinct tendency on the part you can make some toothsome Moh- o( mess with Long forearms to merry es. Tit our funnily a sour cream lit - wives with proportionately long fore ling for layer cake is moFt welcome. arms. A cup of sour cream and ono of ♦ granulated sugar aro blended and put over the lira When it will hard- en in water it is removed atxt Neaten until of tiro right concis-tency to spread. This filling has a flavor pe- culiar to Reelf and quite agreeable. Nuts and raisins aro sometimes ad- ded. A nice pudding sauce is made by beating sour cream, adding sugar to taste and flavoring with lemon or vanilla, Sardine Canapes.—Cut thin bread Several of the mad Mullah's spear - into cresCe s and toast then!. 'The. men who fought against the Braise crescent is the true canape shape. -are now a feature at the Crystal ('lake sardines line with n fork, work Palace, London, where it Somali vita into theca a teaspoonful of melted Inge has imen built with the adjoin- , butter. a teaspoonful of Lemon juice, a pinch of salt, and four or five drops of tobacco sauce: SI rend the toast firet with butter, then with tho sardine mixture, place on a tin f.Iate, cover and set Wu the oven until very hot. c Neese Canapes—Cut stale broad halt an inch thick lett) crescent shapes, dip cacti piece into melted MAD MULLAH'S FIGHTERS FUZZY WUZZY IS NOW IN LON- DON, ENGLAND. Village of Desert Fighters Has Been. Transported to the Capital.. . fug jumgln in which are several .1f•i- can wild animals. Most of the men aro fully six feet high, and although, to the European eye, very thin, they gave evid.•nce of enormous physical power. They aro of a dark copper color, with bushy hair, carefully parted fit the middle. All are fine looking fel- lows, and several aro strikingly butter, roll in grated parmesan handsome. Although it was part ica• ctiee e, not cover one lido of (ho tarty cold tho other day, tho entire bread with grated cheese and chop - clothing of uuvt and women alike"Ihanr, mixed in equul parts. Set consisted of a sheet and a blanket 1 rho latter of which was discarded on tho canapes in the oven, brown light- tho slightest pretext. lY. and seine. A pair of plaited sandals, a smell Creast Pie.—Line a large granite slick about six inches long, and the Pie plate with rich pastry; b.(ke. inevitable throwing spear complete Pilling—One pint of t hick sweet the Somali's costume. The sandals cream, whipped to Still froth, one - ha usually kicks off whenever ho half 1. nspnonful of vanilla, and wants to walk, but the spear is set- three ta' l.,spconfuls of granulated duan relinquished. sugar. Fill crust; dot with black- LANi)ING THE CA,AIELS, berry jelly. The Somali has enough of the Arab Friedl Cabbage.—Select a nice big In him to make him splendidly digni- cabbage; chop it very fine. Put in - bed art well ns handsome. He (1001 to a frying pan two or 1licen slices not corm t0 work until others have of salt pork; fry until done, then triol and failed. Tho landing of 1113 turn in 111e choppctl cabbage, sprinkle dromedaries from, the vessel eventual- with a Tittle salt, and fry slowly un - roused h 'v 1 the natives to action. yThe animal* allowed themselves to bo lett quietly t•) Lilo guugway, but nothing would induce then to c'r'oss it. ilu7etlm of dock laborers tried force. The first 01111101 planted his forelegs r until yon are inside your home: then you wet Snow what sort of plc - ter. s. hangings and nick-nacks you aould like to invite to cotyle and para their life near you. "Minutely ie the ono absolutely fl(Ceasary thing in a house, and this apples just as touch to the decora- tion of it its to th,• spirit of the folk who live in it. "Tho wrung sort of picture') or curtains in room is quite (Hough lo make the occupants fee 1 i11 at ease without exactly knowing 1v hy. Don't forget 11 hen getting a bowie to- gether (hut good taste is worth far more than golden mouldings. A piece of cretonne in harmonium. colorings is far more beautiful than at costly silk that is out of keeping tvitlt the remainder of the room. "And, ubove all• when you are making a home. Meer straight for comfort. Von 111 have to live in , while a stranger will only glance occasionally into it. And to sacri- fice a thoroughly cozy lounge whore a tired man can throw hie weurV limbs, or that invites tho exhausted housewife, to lake a refreshing nap, to sacrifice this for some piece of furniture that may look smarter when a visitor calls it; the height of folly. Because.it is an error that anxious beginners oftenfull into. �, take w'urni114." A BlAUTII, IMPRESSION. A lady called at the house of a neighbor on an errand; hut, as the family were away, sh(i asked the hired Hien to tell hie etiployer that site would cull again. (Being in a hurry, and not thinking but shot rho man knew who elle was, she did not leave her name. The lady of the house returned heron, the rest ofel.lto family, and the uran told her that a lady bud boon there who lid she'd call again. "Who was it?" inquired firs. If.—. "Oh, I don't know her name," re- plied the man. "But you should have Mired her," said 'tfrs. III—, "no we could know who had been here. Cant you tell too anything by which I can know who came? Where does slie live?" "I don't know," said the man, "but she's the one that alwa s smiles when aIle 51 cakg," SENSIBLE SIM(f`.STIONS, To ('lean Lacquered Silver.—Make a strong solution of hot water and washing powder, put the articles♦ that aro tarnished into it, and cook on the stove until bright. The pineapple's erowu should be twlsteti off if the fruit is not to he WW1 at once, as them leaves,if left on the fruit after it is ripe, will ab- sorb both flavor and Juice. The )Mixing pan- eon be, quickly a Only a Trifling Cold Ilas beta the Lullaby Seas as Maay to Victim to their last Long Shop. A cough should be hxuened as speedily as possible, and all irrita- tion allayed before it settles in the lungs. Once settled there Bron- chitisaud Cousuwptiou usay follow. DR. WOOD'S N WAY PINE -SYRUP 0 R is ju=t the remedy you require. The virtues of the Norway Pine and At il,1 Cherry 1141k, with other standard pectoral Herbs and Balsams, are skilfully combined to pru:luce a reliable, safe and effectual remedy for all forms of Coughs nod Colds. Mr. N. 1). Macdonald, W'hycoce- .S. writesI think it my duty to let people know what great good Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup did for me. I had a bad cold, which settled in my chest, and I could get nothing to cure it ti11 I tried Pr. W'ood's Nor- way Pine Syrup. The first bottle helped me wonderfully, and the third one cured me. NitmPrtce 25 cents per bottle. odAim may be presented they died from sta- tural ca11505. Strange as it in serol, there ex- ihtcd in England until quite lately a regular community of llluebeards. In the Rssex Marsh's it was no un- common thing to meet men wino had married frons six to twelve wives. Occasionally that number was far ex- ceeded, as Itwas by a native of Canvey Island: at man who had led no fewer than twenty-five different women to the altar, while his sol. who was only thirty-five, had been wedded fourteen times. These marsh men invariably mar- ried girls from the neighboring up- land::, who, tulacclimntirc',1 to tho marsh (lamps and vapor, u1uull/ sickened and diel In a few months. leavine their husbands free to so- loct other uninurcd brides, a pro- ceeding that in some C11900 was al- most annually repeated.—Lou ton Tit -Bits. MODERN ROMAN ARENA. Martyr Torn by Lions Will IA Common Spectacle. Seldom has a more interesting drama appeared on any - stage than the death of a Christian martyr,. which was recently produced in Paris. ' Real lions took part in the cleaned if a little boiling water is performance, and they tore to picots poured into it for a few minutes and a realistic representation of a Chris - a clues' rover put. over. The steam titin nuut;lr. This aeries of spectacles was ar- ranged solely to give its originators the opportunity of securing sensa- tional cinematograph films. In a tell, glass -roofed building just out- side Paris the firm of Pathe Brothers built an imitation Roman arena. In STRANGE DESTINY GAVE thio ceutrl of tho great tiers of *CALM SEVERAL HELPMATES_ - sat Nero, the Emperor, crowned with a silver wreath and surrounded by One Man Led No Fewer Than his favorites. Once the s'ene. was set the cinenlalographi was started and the drama began. First Homan soldiers Tiarched round with a C'lu•is- t.ian captive in their midst and sa- cotld wish for fuller details. One luted their ruler. Then tho guards contained in the register of Brant s•'irel the captive and dragged hits. Broughton, l.inrolnvhirn, makes turn- resisting. to a strike in the centre of tion of 'l'homns Watson. who un the arena, to which h was securely April '23rd, 1678, burield his eighth hound. wife. '1110 other, alluded to in Icor n few minutes the cinetnato- "Notes and Queries." refers to graph was stopped. and a (bunmy James Gay, who died at Bordeaux Iigtlre was substituted for this cap- on April "nth, 1772, atter hating, live. Attached to the dummy were in the course of u idle of 101 years, Barge pieces of ,raw meat. espoused nu fewer then sixteen wives. Ih n earn(• the s0naat.inn of the Ihrr Grille), of Berlin, espoused drama, More striking than had ever two 1110.1 118 since his ninth wife. He been preeeeteai In any theatre. At a is atilt bat •'y fifty, and his matri- signal front oro, .Juliano, a lion ntoni I ^x �.•rieltc, s li v been 0011- tamer well > n on the continent, n t IlaV0 entered driving before hint into tho tented within the comparatively r a en four teat 1in118. The n, K h0 nn was short space of thirty years. In no clad in armor, and rooked like one inrlance hum a married spell lasted of the gladiators of Nero's (lino. 'i'he lions roamed round the arena for a lime until one of them view the food awaiting theta on the stake. With a roar he rushed At rho "nlnrlyr," and savagely attacked his prey. The lielphss man way asp- parl'luI1y torn to pieces, and the cine.- n)ntogrnpli secured a u,o-,l realistic Tea of pictures representing the Ina: tyriont of a Cliris-Mtn, softens tho dried dough so that it will readily wash otT. MEN OF VERY MANY WIVES Twenty -Five Women to the Altar Two old records exist, of which one Peach ('ream.—One can of poaches, over three ycarr,..ehis first wife. orae cupfni of sugar, one ounce of gelatine, half a ciiiful of cold water, whose married lido was longer titan that. of :ley of her seccesw)rs, de ing nn pint of crO*nl. Soak the geld- within aro month of t.hn third anni- versary in ro:d hater until whip the ve-sary of her wedding day. Herr cream. Maeh and sift a pint can Grubb is 13131(1 to he. a most affect1on- Joeus was led once more into the were to he Identified, thus urnkine (01 themselves. to it. '1 ho cannel felt caul stir in the whipped cream. presence of his etwmniel, only to I:', the number of women mentioned doter in a heap, and nearly went \Told. greeted by them with tho cry."cru- uv0reoar(1, Beat en Biscuits.—fine pint of flour. g' three rather than four, as some coni - eta as follows : -" I was troubled with eify Mm, crucify him. And (1,011' tnrntators think. The question sun- Then one of the tulles,t men of the dizziness, week spells and }!uttering of voices prevailed" over the .uwnrdlp not, however h0 postively settle•1. desert ster,d up, IInng off his blanket the heart. I procured a box of 4ilhurn's and weakling governor, "and 1 date F'or reference to other teal I»l1 •Ichu end twisted his sheet around his Heart and Nerve Pills, and they del me gave sentence that what, they asked wt,t•,u also present at the (rosy (► m0,1111_ lions. ., dnz0n others fnit41wc(l his iuch gook that 1 pint two more boxes. for Weed(' dune" (Luke . :':i, pato Matt. 27. 56; Mark 15. 10; and exanlp1 ', and! all, with wild cries, and after finishing them 1111(On3pletely 24). John adds srnno vafuahlu l0- Luke 2:1. 49. (:lopas here metui•mrd rushed At the passive camel. 'Th', big tails of the closing scene of our 111tls4 not be content el frith tJlr,, ons mon teak the essivl ca the nose) and Lord's trial before Pilate (John 19. mentioned in Luke _ 1 lift A c,m1- simply lifted pini up, w•htlu too duck 7-15), incite .r g the mention of the pnriseen of Matt. 10. 3 and Luke :!•1. hands gasped. Then all of thein iisls!llsii�iiiiil��(11! fear that. cultic over Pilate upon his lU W 1It John 1S). 25 nugget •s r,lther fastened themselves tit rho bowild- hearing of the claim of .1R,us to he that ('topaz is to be i(10811 ie.l vith ^red crone!, and practically carries ii , th Son of God (v0rwr 8) ;end els,) ,\Iphnrus, fnthty of .lames the 1.e95 hint an to the gallgwdy and into a SufferedForANumber d) the threat of the Jews; to proclaim ,(.,,Irl )• Stork :1, baht that *lour! waiting. W 1 18; Luke O. 15; Anti t* Pilate nn slimly of Caesar v if he, 1. 13), AlphAeus being Ino t:r,•l•k, 801110 of the cntnels kicked :tu.l should release twos (verso 1: 1. and 1'Inpns the Hebrew or Syriac bit fur ions ly, but the nntivrs np- Dyspepsia dr • Corse 17. '19hey—Toe Roman sold- n,ut:e „ 1 penrrd guile oblivim►s to danger • f tor. sane ,ers41n. For other cured I must ray that I cannot recuuls mend than too highly. _ of Years From and roared with laughter as they Mary ..... _�....,.-, �,- emit - * (Luke 23. 27). par.• Lnke 8 2; :Ia.rklir. !1 I.i.10; (uuGht the frnntc nninnls. wISrxring the Truss for hims4(—;'utt lel 1- and Jon 2O. ! 1-18,WuMI:N AND C11II.1)It1:N.That js what bits. \fury Parks, r ..i the any oar. Sitnon of l:yr:ne Rn5 :ti.Ih:ci ,10whom hr I rieil— Among the natives are six women. Cooper, Ont. saes, and there ale W compelled to carry the (rues 111 '1110 writer' John, who nowhere teen- and several children, all pretty, nal thousands of others who can say ,, .1msus,but whether this ens the first 1„1115 Ills OW11 lintlte, with largo wistful 7. -est„ J1eii mei the same thing. • clear from or the ttho o►gospelt f 1nnr►ati nhe way arrative not. Women—Thr Greek equivalent is a women nliko aro o smile at ab i lit1 of r(npect. any enc on the slightest. enrournct0- • Matt. 27. :11 . :i2: Mark 1 5. , el. •' 1 , meet. 'I hr 1r chief occnpatiun is cdrinlr- ! BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS 0' Luke 23. 25, 26, John 19. 133. 171. 27 His own hoer—Thr Greek, the ing their heir with n tv(.n Is twn- --... cured her, and will cure any- se� The place of a skull—bions the own (things or plea 41f the person (b prong01 comV, and cleaning their one and everyone troubled with eb'oval shape of the kW. Inst t plied .e,l) leaves the noun to Dyspepsia. Mn. Parks writes as 'k (lulgntha—lith. golgolc•lh, ft 1i^ supplied lienee n house owned shini,g teeth with a piece of st:ck. w 1by this (hI' iple is not n.�eca.u'.ly Ll disposition they oro wonderful- ! Ib skull, cretonne from "Rill," 0r ••sol,' 1 sutfer,d for a nnmb•r of years • i to move 1n n circle, to revolve Lat. meant The meaning is a:nllel• 11:.1 from Dyspepsia. and tried many rem& W i "re -dentin," skull, whence our ('al-' ' from that hour' Al,t,y d'etiattn0 a diet, list wlthont any rebel toad. on 'ti very. The exact silo of Calvary is nlr►nber of rho household of .John. the *driest of a friend 1 started to int I ; Itnrd•vk !Coed Ret:ere. After tisk ' still a nuttier' of toevition. i rent , 8 -\iter this—('ompare Mark 15. ono i'ottie 1 v a• ple•sw.l to flnl that i was relieved et the dreadful Ialai I 'b suffered. 'give all praise to 11 R iI for the benefit 1 have owlets -M. and i hnp5 W all entYerere free' 1)espepos w111 try this wonderful reined . if they do 1 'h the N ew Tr/dement narr*tivo a3, a1, And ',millet passages. kern that the place Ivo') outside the 29. vinegar—A sour wine In ordin- gate (tree 13. 12). near tho city are' use among the common people. T (John 19 20), and near a public Hyssop—:\ hollow reed. am sore that t:u• 1v 111 have the rime highway (Matt. 27. :i9): neer to 30. It is Iildshed—iloferring to his oaperiPeen that T have het," M sepulchersw and gardens (John 19, hole work of redemption. Tho neat Tait T. bftt,ttCtttr Co., i,tvttTrn, tar •18) wages of sin motto remained to he iii 19. Two others—' male/act 're" Paid, in death. Toronto, Ont, '1' il,nke), "two thieves" (\intthew and Gave up Ills npirlt —A t'olentary net 18iEiFEigE,FEFEifFitEff(ft!•6LkIn the midst—That is, b� Mark). on the part of Christ (comp. .lobo otw.x:n the 10. 1e), ly effect lonate, and it is difficult to Ininglne that grimmer side of their, nature which has caused the British Government so much perplexity. 'i'he decision to connect the ('hen- nel and Goodwin lightships with the shore by mtenna of wireless telegraphy hes given h s11tisfnctiun 111 Iiamsgnto and Dover, where the cor- poration and the (:bomber of Com- merce have urged this important step for several years. The admiral- ty wireless station at Dover will be ate and iu every way a model hus- band. Well caret for by his twelfth wife, Mr. ?Award Pomeroy is spending the ',teeing of his days at his home at one cup of water. one teaspoonfu; „f *1Iddle'irld, ('onn.'rlicut. As far salt. Afix into a stiff dough, trans- hack: as 18:13, when only in hie ter to a flo,reed block of wood, :snel twentieth year, Mr. l'onleroe loutish - beat with A rolling pin steadily for ed forth on ;'AS•A ; A WORKINGe TOOL ten nsinute•r shifting the dough often A MA I'IIIMONIAI, VESTURE. for the student and the writer, and turning. it over several times. Die first wife then in a few months, In the (•1den days half an hour teas and within a year he was married as anauthoritative reference book the regulation time, but ten initiates again. The second Sirs. Pomeroy for s.lhools, teachers, families,' are enough if one has a strict eye wee equally short lived, and the to Irusin•'ss. ('ut into round cakes, widower appeared for the third time business and professional men, prick with a st•atyand hake in a at the Altar ,with a lady who short - brisk 0.11). Sone• hnuise•wiyem add a ly afterwards di•aapp(str.sL '111 -et superior advantages in the solid tnblespeotiful of butter, ensued a series of mnrria.ee, all of g Wax Bean'.—An l:ng11111 tecip0 f0,•'which terminated in the Mt erre value of its information, and the wiring w•nx helps isfly ('purl.11:(4)1 s41 that et ono time Mr. Porn- ease with which it is obtained,, boons hrendlhwis' ►n half •.r (loom's.- ^toy hod •rix 11110') tieing . tie_ tunr- inch pieces and boil in stilted tenter rir')1 the Indy Who is now lihs wife (train well and Prepare the fnllnwin, 1v}:.11 In hi') eighty -11111111 your. snu(•e '1akC a roux ttitIt (51(301 qua n- As a husband M. Jean ISout11n:;0r, t it its of Onnr nd butter odd salt 41f 110urn, (0110 .11011 a year or so and pepper' and n cupful of sour since cu'l14 nut be regnrdet in f.he cream.Add the. henna and Allow ght. at a m.tacot. Ilia eight w I%''s there is one book which offers One's admiration for Webster's International Dictionary increases daily as it comes to be better known. It never refuses the ilifor then to boll up once. stile ing nil ell came to untimely ends. Itis first motion sought and it never over - the time. If no sour creamIs at 1 wile drowned, his .w•(•enl won kille:I \\'helms one with a mass of ini5- hand sweet cream or rich sweet milk in a railway railway with a tete drops of lemon juice will his third and fifth information illogically arranged. srrte. nyslet•inn'iy Rrrr, burnt to death. his fourth 11i+appeared, his ailtb Ras accident ail, I)olanlled, hitt net•- The 1, nayt:11(S Gaze,teat erof i.unen- i?ngland, says: For the teacher, the pit- ( nth succumbed to small -pox relight pit, the student and the litterateur, there while reining a sister who wee i11 is nothing 1 otter; it covers everything. with 1 clisra"e. Sidle hle eighth. who survived him caught n cold The New and Enlarged II.11tion recently Is- ON 1'I'115118)11NG A IIOMf. "Mlle/ twice 119 Relict► nu)ney as yon exp H•t you will need for furnish- ing and horn••-tnakbtg, and be ready to spend a lump sum above that," (Weigel an old housewife. "in a home yon always want a hundred and ono things that 110 one would Over drt hen of pal t inti thorn in the furniture lisle, anti which always swallow up a lot of mon ,y. •'Witmtlier you have roach or little money, rover eltenpt to get more than the necessities at first. Walt eftnlethal his ('neral. and in leas than a month urns herself I1ultN1: '1'O Tl1I: GRAVE. 1•'iftc•r•r. Rh•r:v wait the tale tnatri- emnial of an Italian workman nam- ed C'hicodo, who died! Irately near Milan in hie ninetieth year. llv)w his wives --of whom ho married the fin,t when seventeen and the Inst when eighty-eight years of age --met their death is not recerde•l, PO it ane:t his 21,10) new worts and phra /ze a ecen- pletely revised Iltographical Dictionary anti Gezettcer of the World, 9390 pag(s and bolt) illustrations. : 11 our name is on the title -pages of all the authentic dictionaries et the tycltster• reties. LET US SEND YOU FRU "A Tett in Pronunciation" which affords a pie•,uunt anal instrurttvo (.1 ening'. entertain. meat. 111ustnttcd pamp$,lot also free. G.gC.M!MIRANCV..Pul4.,Spstt ie1.,Nsas.