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Exeter Times, 1905-07-20, Page 6K ^,K K8 K K&K K&K K rt icR1.K SINFUL HABITS IN YOUTH MAKE NERVOUS, WEAK, DISEASED MRN. THE RESULT of Ignorance and folly in yoeth, overexertion of mind and body Induced by feet Gad exposure are wutantlJwrecking tb." . and future happiness' of thousands of promising young mea. Some fade and Willer at as early age, at the blossom of maehood, wbtls others are forced to drag out a weary,frunleuadd malanchel1 existence. Other* teach matri- mony but fled no enlace orcomfort 48.4.. T8..l.Sie are f...4 In all stations of lute -the farm the oiece, the workshop, the Qn1fit t, (SS trades and the proftNioma. faerv,Ms,IMIi, sed LIMN1 WNYsesa are ',iteration"! cured by osr Ow reita.N M IN 1).t. You ran no riga IS years In Detroit. ask Warily. CURIO WKS All tilt ►61110. IN somas seed w111Nt wrlites easMN. "I am T) years of are add married. When your 1 lad a gay ?Ifs. tarty Indl.crettoas and later a :comes evade trouble for me, 1 t.teame weak and nervous. 44y kidneys became affected 1st: 1 feared Bright's Dinettes. Married LIN was unsatisfactory and .' my home anhappr. I trled �everything--a11 felled till 1 took / ✓ trnatmeat from Kennedy &)sergan, Their New Moulted built me up mentally, phy.kaIIy asd N*Sall I fast awl set nice man In every re.pett. ?bey treated me sax years ago. They ass honest, skilful and resp'nsibin fl-:anclafly ,ao Irby r•Siron11e Quacks sed Fakirs wkea you 1hn t.ecorrd by reliabledoctors. W, A. Mitten. CIES G9!R!riED OR 110 PIT. WW1 Free- tor3 Free- Dm Bile Ffee b1. tie IMRE Drs. Kennedy ti Kcrgan, I' tf N " • • ABSO1UT THE ONLY TRUE RELIGION SECURITYI Cenutne Carter's Little Liver Pills. must Soar Slencituro of Sea P.o•Slmllo Wrceper Below. t oy saaall and as easy UP Hake as sugar.. FOR HEADACHE. FOR 0111111Ett. TOR IIIUOUSMESC. FOR TORPID t1VER• FOR CONST(PATION. FOR SALLOW SKIM. FOR THE COMPLEXION arraealLr Erni bri Yu s r r ., IMeV ■ Iltl Ostar 1 Peaty rsaatanl..,i...tc CARTERS CURL SICK HEADACHE. TIM LAMPS. Should be filled every day and rho chimneys, shades, and burners clean- ed whenever their condition (Ien:ulds it. The lamps should be filled near- ly to the top of the reservoirs, leav- ing just space enough to allow for possible expansion of the oil. If too large a space is left air may enter, mix with the gas collected there, and cause an explosion. The wick should Find Out Whom You Have Wronged and Then Stand Before God. "1f 1 have taken anything from any roan by telae accusation, 1 eta store hirl) fourfold. ' F:very day we sec how difficult it is to repair evil. It is easier to tend a twisted limb than to repair llruug, when justice and truth have lu,ln distorted. It is not only in the case of ordinary possessions and the common honesty that appertains to n,0nev and nlatterial w(•ulth that reparation is painful. It is especial- ly in spiritual possessions that it is difficult to repair the evil that altar does to 1114111. 1'ou have been calumniated, lits have been circulated about Nam, at first in small (natters, then whole- sale; nothing is done with greater ease. Have you noticed the impati- ence of public attention to learn of some scandal and its paticn_e when waiting for the hour of reparation" When 1 h n1 a man i8 executed, condemn- ed, u11c,eur ed, %then he fat's within the grasp of a 10) rapid justice, whether it be the justice of individuals or the jus- tice of lhu State, «ith what fury- his poor honor is torn to pieces. But what trouble he has in finding the different bits when he wishes to put it together again! 1 hose who slake such haste %%hen it was a question of dishonoring and ruining hian are somnolent and 1luw when it is a matter of giving. him back his good reputation. I'uI lie law 19 not eluitablc on this point. The reparation offered to a Ulan for an error made in regard to his person is not equal to the harm done, and dors not take into account his tormulta and suffering. That is a rotten spot in the conscience of men, in private as 4011 as in public Ilf. - •t.00Hc upon 1.hls chief of the them hack into camp, and thus hon- or h insanity in its 1)001. Bated children, it is very tine. What would become of us in this life if there were 804 sunx to repair the harm dune by others, to cleuensr• what has been boiled by others, to 11111•se these who have been struck down by others, to raise up what others have cast down? Nothing is more difficult for a man than to ncknoeledge that he has dune wrung and then to humbly en- deavor to repair it in the very place where he has cunu11ilt, el it. It is a strange thing t1 Sue to what an extent we resemble those great kings whom the sight of their victims autovs and exasperates. 11'e do not wish to see our wrongdoing. Yet duet is the only true and great reparation. A FINE1. ESSON The chief of the publicans cave no thought to anything, neither to the wistlu:') of the world, or what would be said. lie determined to climb in- to the sycamore and then to ri80 still higher in the moral wor•I11 and to break through the harriers of or- dinary conventionality and to do what is not usually done. In his ac- tion there is a great and line lesson. This, my brethren. is a sten 1ma`5- sage I wished to bring to you to- day. There ave some great difficulties in life that proceed from the obscurity of our intelligence, problems that we cannot. solve and against which our poor heads are battered as against a hard tank. There are mysteries that we cannot penetrate. although curiosity and the thirst for coli ht t i I COTTON GROWING. Results Obtained in the British Colonies. At the. imperial Institute in Lon- don there is un exhibition just now who8e purpose is to shote the result.. ohtaine-1 su fur in the experinm•nts in growing cotton %'hich art• iu progress in various purls of the British Eta- pire. It clops sot appear that very great practical Advance has bee) made yet, but. s Prof.u - a l u 1. Wyndham Ihu1) 1 u11slun •x y , t plains, several years of careful exper- iment :it elapse before a country new to cotton cultivation can be- rho future joy of %ion reuuitvd to comae a successful and permanent con- Jehovah in a 114'W sod eve•lusting t•ilulo. to the supply of the raw co4emarit, which is one of the fruits material. Broadly speaking. the ex_ of the snit'utiun brought by rho M,s- hibitiun indicates Oita the cxperi_ slab. Ile now proceeds to cull upon mints for the revival of cuttun (alai_ :Heathers of the ntttion as individuals vatiuu in the West Indies give prom- inviting then, to lautkC the fruits of 180 of .9(1(•658, 4'11110 801118 ad1811(0 this glorious redeutptiuu their own appeur•s• to 114448 been 1118410 1n ver- by personally accepting the blessings bolts other directions. :of this 9aivatiuu. st valuable el' 1111 eotunter- ` \'er8a 1. Ifo, every one that thirst- Thecial cottons, the sea 881.11111 prosiest, eth—('olnpare• the similar figure its which derived its name front the 12.:3, "Wells of salvation," and in west Indits but was allowed to die' 41. 18, where a proulise i8 given of out when it was introduced into the a rnira(+uluu8 fuuntuin opened by Ju- llniteel Slates, may be exec:Ted to' hovah for the relief of his people, be('onre a feature in reliving the ('owe ye — l.iturully', Cu. �u drooping fortunes of the Caribbean throughout this chapter. islands, and in India the chief pro-! No mloney—in some parts of the Orient, blein is cultivation ( t til • lull l fas '1 t c Its ul ) a titer t H Palestine. water is staple suitable to the 'wads of the 'scnrcu An(1 therefore 8n exceptiunully manufacturer. I great buou. :lccees to a well bus In the course of time it is ex -i ofleii to t0 paid for. This salvation pected that India will become the olfrres in the prophet's nuesaage, principal contributor of raw cotton though in value like unto that which to (:rent ISritain, although at pre- is most precious and me'(•ssury, is sent it is nutciassel, in quality at $till to be obtainable without money least, by the 1?gyptinn product. The 1(11(1 Without price. experiments carried on in the Sudan' SPend mousy—Literally, weigh suggest that it will soon take int-- silver. portant rank as a producer. Egyp- Your labor—Or earnings. tial cotton presents certain features 'Pint which satisfiet11 not—Tho life which render it more valuable to the apart from (rod and his salivation in manufacturer than the ordinary pro-' a life of cuntinuad spending without duct of the Southern StuteH. Any Oral antisfnetion or lasting pro- d) West and East Africa the condi- lit. lions of successful cotton cultivation Let your soul delight itself in fat - are being ascertained by carefully! nes•—"And in this mountain will planned experiments which are nixes-{ •J hovahf of hosts tuttke unto all peo- sarily slur, but, us }u other parts 1)188 a (4,1484 of fatit things" (Isa. 25, of the empire, the recent tests show:6; (f; comp. also Iso. 58. 14). that cotton of the Egyptian type 3. Incline your ear—Give-heed, and THE S. S. LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON, JULY 23. Lesson IV. The Gracious Invita- tion. Golden Text Isa. 55.6. LESSON WORD s'runfl::i. Note.—These Word Studies for this lesson are based on the text of the Revised Version. u d e Hi n. :\n Invitation toIndividuals.—lit chapter 5I the prophet has Het forth euncn unccas ng y will probably be successfully germ n come unto me—Jehovah; hear and on a large scale in several localities. , your soul shall live—The message Placed conveniently in one large' 1um1 invitation are of vital impor. frarne are the products of the cotton 18860. The offer made is that of an plant from all the cuunt•ies where it everlasting covenant. is being laid down; the older estab-i '17ie sure mercies of David—The }Shall countries are also repreSenteI,!mercies promised to David and his with th s' simple find clear duties. even Peru, hut the Argentine repro -j seer) (comp. 2 Sam. 23. 5). Them)One would think that it was a tial- HCrl?lttiV6 is n notable absentee, I, sante mercies which were promised to ter of (linlbirtg up to the stars. We though a neighboring clap shows' David are here offered to everyone cannot be spared that Ci:orf; it is that the ronmlodity is Already being, 4110 thirsteth• "Blessed nre they that to the assault of such practical and almost tl 1 1 be soft and leoosely woven, anti must publicans. Iie realizes %%hat repara- impel our souls toward them, and we fill the bunter, but nut crowd it. It tion means and 111• also understands cannot prevent them from putting loosely fitted it will admit air to the what it is to become converted, those 8(5140ns. But there are Siur reservoir. q The chimneys, if smoked, should be wiped with soft paper and then wash- ed with ammonia and water or al- cohol and water. necause soap is likely to make then, cloudy. They should be thoroughly dried or they will break when heated. New chi uuleys alt) made snore dur- able by the following treatment: Place them in a keetle of cold water and add one tablespoon of salt to each gallon of water. The water should completely cover the glass. Bring the water slowly to the boiling point, then remove the kettle and let the Let us take care! 'There is a cur- pie things of everyday life that are fain reparation that is taught 118 by under our hand, and yet we see un - the Old and New Testaments, a 80- sura:ountalle difficulties in coping parntion accord:ng to which the man who has done evil to man also wrongs God. Nothing is more true. But %that. conclusion do we draw from it? We confess our sins to God, We go to 111111 in public or private confession, and we acknowledge our- selves to be guilty. That is right, but it is not enough. To ask God's forgiveness after hav- ing ill-treated men and not to at once proceed to repair the evil Ore pe y o is at cs that the ( os- pel leads us, first. of a11. This story is great and magnificent, as well as natural and simple. 'There is nothing impossible in it, nothing that belongs to a domain to which any age cannot be initiated. We have dons and heal their wounds is cannot say, we the men of to -day, chimneys cool in the water. It is not right—it is taking God fur what that our way of tut:n'.ing refuses to wise to buy several chimneys at a ife is not. This is what lie says:— asshnilate these facts. time. and thus have a stock against "If you have done evil toward yolrr The luminous end flaming honesty accidents, nei; hbor, go and wipe away his that detours darkness and dishon- The wick should he cut only at tears, and then conte to ask My for- esty, as tire devours ail lnlpur the corners. 'then open the burner, giveness." We like to go above the had sprung forth from that r turn the wick down ahnost level heads of men. That is not giving heart, because it was brought with the brass, and wipe It with a honor to Goal—it is rather t.ratnpling contact with Christ. When that piece of old cloth. 'Turn the wick ills first cotnnlaminient under our Herby's gave fell on hire, his a little higher and wipe it again. He- feet that had taken pleasure in cosi out gold, awl perhaps even ill -g gold, were filled with shadows. could no longer blew the idea e jos Uig these riches all alone. above all, the thought of rely anything that was not worthy u infinite goodness of the gaze • rested upon him. As soon as (* had shown hint the greatness oil life, "salvation cause to his h We are nil strayed souls so our snlvat.ion in certain conlpro fuel wretchedly trivial contbin- th:t alight at titres be commit' theruses of animals. We ilo no Ilse that n man's salvation is i freedom of his soul. it co'islst� breaking away from sll.umeful I that. nre unworthy of us; it cut) in living under the gaze of the who gives us true life, in the lice of honesty, justice and good My I•re•thren, I wish von to this nutny ..4 illi you in your li',e ts. t moo . detail suggested by reference to "the not as n platonic impression, Mo n, j More than thirty years 1) 0 1110 hent ens" in the preceding verse.. a virulent Ienven Ihot will work into iname of '1'ippnu Tib first renehe,l the' I1. \'aid—Entpty, in the 801190 of your deepest feelings and will end by ears of Europe through the fatuous leaving achieved nothing (comp. 2 Rankin!, you n new creature. Amen. explorer I,Ningstone. -Sara. 1. 22) —Charles Wagner. p»orlint d in thnt republic. hungel• rind thirst after righteous - 1n the frame can be seen at a- netts" (Malt. 5, 6). glance what is wanted. It is the 4. 11i111—David, for a witness to long fibre, the fine silky lint; told the peoples—A mon after Cod's o8u here we see the great advantage PUN- : heart. David occupied in the heathen • Yc (PRONOUNCED S! -KEEN) LAGRIPPE • 1, •n t That Psrcul� •,••' ' , P ne.y cures 1..l fon:-': cC LaGrippe, Coughs, ('olds, and Pneumonia, • is abundantly vouched to by sc•nress e f ti:c► and women in different parts of the Dominion v. -ho h.iv. teen restored to health through this really remarkable rented'. "1'shcn:s:;" is not a patent medicine in the trua`sense of the word, but a regal!: r professional prescription prepared after carefully •1.-(•p roved sciei:ticc methods. Its efficacy has been tested in thousands of t.C4 ere c::' :•�, READ THE PROOF Hoeg tM"R..bHARRP.4 out a year ago 1 writes,wSe tkpt .4t5 • . allout t.1.iremarkable recovery frcm arurc Grippe, tarn Pneumonia a.J T)pl:,,;J 1 mei. which soon affected my lungs, 1 wat undrr treatment ,'f:everal ph,si ians and also in a1 c h...rit,-,1 at Ilalifax, but the disease gained soca he.,dway that 1 wa. regarded as a /optica• sue. Word..anr."t. ewes. my Rratit;Je for what the Dr. SI,. nn, k:ntedie., part.o. any l'sv.hine, 5.e8 d.rue for am daily giving my testiwunial (o friends and acquainWucu. Bos aa7 Springhill, N.S. Jet'.. IIE: EEt.t_ GREATEST OF ALL Tongoo ALL DRUGGISTS -01%11Z The Dr. T. A. Slocum, Limited COLLA.-.- TR:;.i,, rn_E 179 Itiop; Ctract West, 1cmr.t`9 PIES AND PA'1'I'll•:S, Mince Patties—Chop a cold veal kidney and some fat. Add an apple, orange, candied lemon peel, fresh cur- rants, a little wine, cloves, brandy. and vinegar. Fill the patty cases, bake, and serve cold. Ox Cheek Pie—Line a deep pie dir5h with puff paste. !Soil the ox cheek with seasoning, cut into email pieces; lay in the dish and throw over them one ounce truffles, the yolks of three hard boiled eggs, one cup mushroom pickles, one-half cup asparagus tips, and several force meat balls. Season with pepper and salt, and fill up the pie with the gravy in which the cheek was boiled. Cover it with the crust, and place 111 the oven. When clone allow to cool. Princess Patties—Fill the cases with this mixture: Place one pint stock broth, one-half pint milk, sea oning,' IL little grated nutmeg and thyme in a saucepan: boil live minutes, add a little soup and the liquor from one tin mushrooms; boil until it becomes ,!lick. Chop the meat of a fowl, ase• by l ruled States, sen island' world of his tirne a representative ole -half pound lean haat and mush - and tho Egyptian. They lead their position as the standard bearer of rooms finely, add to the sauce, sim- rivuls distinctly. The sea island Jehovah. the (los of righteousness mer a little while and cool. apeci►nens average two inches In. rani nler•cv, and ns such became Also Yarn and Veal Patties.—Chop six length, the )Egyptian 11, while the a lender, or prince, end commander, ounces lean teal, three ounces ham, others range between £ inch and 11 ` that is, an example and ruler, to put ht a stewpan with one ounce inches. the peoples (rump. Psa. 18. 4:3). butter rolled in flour, two table - Ono of the most Instructive object' 5, Behold thou, Messiah, shalt call spoons teal Mock, nutmeg, a little �: �, lessons of (ho whole exhib�iti p is a nation that thou knowest not—A lemon peal, paprika. salt, and lemon te'r- nation that thou hast not ackn0W-, juice. Stir over lire and when cold of ledged or dost not now acknowledge fill the patty cases. Plea as thine. "I never knew you: depart Chicken fatties—Cut the white Garb- from 1)111" (Matt. 7. 2:1). meat of a chicken into small Pis'-: The Iloly One of Isis-ad—Jehovah- 1001141.18s this phrase being in opposition with onrhalf 0148 the preceding. The O. While he may he found—In the Toss, "Ac(•c•ptuble time," in the "(lav of peat the process until all the charred portion has been removed, than Wipe all parts of the burner and put the Sloth in the lire. Oily cloths should never be left about the house. 'I hey may be safely kept in as covered tin pail. If lamps give out ft incl odor when lighted it is necessary to cleanse the wick and burner in n more (•nrrgetie way. 4:ftntimir8 it is best to replace the wick with a new one. If there is enough of the old wick left to make it worth while place it, with the burner. in strong soda water rntl boil them until the 0:1 and dust are removed. liin8e them in hot water and place the wick where it will dry. Hub the darkened portions of the burner with sand soap and rinse it again in hot water. The clearness of the light entirely repass one for lb's added labor. It is important that the perfora- tions around the base of the burnsr should be keit clear. or the necessary supply of the air will be cart off and imperfect combustion result, DO YOU KNOW THAT BACKACHE IS THE FIRST SYMPTOM OF KIDNEY TROUBLE. It is! and you cannot be careful about it. A little backache lot run will finally cause serious kidney trouble. Stop it in time. TAKE Woe to the religion that hushes the conscience (o sleep! Woe to the men who have said to their brothers words that have wounded their feel- ings like a poisoned dart and who regret it afterward before God, but who (70 not speak of it to roan! Odious hypocrisy! Duplicity of the conscience! Untruth of the moil! Til T' ONLY '1'Itub: ith:LICION, '111e only true religion is, first of ail, hum:rtn. if you have trantp•led upcn Your fellowman you must, first of al). raise hie) from the duspt; if you have deceived hint you must ask his forgiveness. 'Phan present your- self before the I.sternal l'alh.•r. Other- wise ile will streak to you ns the Odd prophet Isalah spoke to the men ho brought sucrilices MEI tilled the temp ie %:8th holucaustr.:—'1)b %that purpose is the multitude of your mac- rifce unto lire? seith the Lord. Bring no mote vain o1,1(ltions, ineenSe is an abomination unto rue. And when ye spread forth your humus I will hide mine eyes from you, yea, when ye make ninny prayers 1 %t 11 mit hoar —your hin Is are full of blood. 1\'ash yea, rnnke you clean." Li8lcn -also to these wards:—"When ye conte to appear before Inc, who have required this at yo'1r hand, to toad my to':uta?" %t hat stern words! For it is not fat • blood of the innocent victims that is 1)n•anl, but the presence of evil omen. The sacrifices bullock cannot soil the temple; the on. thn4 soils it is the un lean m.nn a ho has entered the temple with his pride and wickedness; it is the man who enters 1 he temple as the great lords of the 311ddle Ages W ere wont to rill,8' it, un too horsel-ark, With all their parapher- , nalin 1111 this train, sometimes a !shameful cn^. My brethrtn. th. re is a wily of be - ng religious that should verily be that 611idt 19 des:ribed by the pro- phet in the chapter I h rte rend to % 011 to day, "un nl'nnllrinti,ln unto the Eternal Father." Make repnre- lion! 'I'Latt is the beginning of true Worship: n►hkc up your accounts. land out whorl you have wronged, and then conte nisi dons 1, fore (:oil. lay a deep psychological lute num is more inclined ter forgive the evil that has bent done Miro than to re- pair the evil he has committed!. The one re) whom }4111 h81r dune burin is your enemy because he is n witness.; of your wrongdoing; even W hen he is silent he IS A dumb witness to sour t. nanny, ..pan' oppression, your untruth. ile Is a victim, and tor- turers do not love their victims. There are some noble hearts among us who repair the evil that has been wrought by others. I consider that n br8:utiful thing—it i8 a sign of magnificent and •rent human soli- darity. \\"h• n volt see tears shed through the (null of others and you wipe them away. ah.n you 'goo the dowitrodden victims of the injustice or unkindness of lunnkind, with their bones broken and crushed, and yon raise therm up. us the Ile nutters of the iHeel ('cross SociAly pick up the he_ nuts .remains os a battlefield to bring DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS. They cure where all others tail. As a specific fJr Backaches and Kidney Troubles they have no equal. Here is what MR. GEO. 'I. SOMERVILLE, of Stewart -n, N B., writes: "I was se troubled with . sora hack I could net get out of led in the mornings for ov.•r a year. I 6t.t n lox of 1)oan's kidney Pills and Wore i had them half taken I could see I was deriving stones benefit (rain them, dna before 1"bs•t taken them n'! rev Leek was (l.ti. s•1(1 I have not boon trvubied sinc4". . .7._ ..._. �4 0 is salvation" (comp. .ler. 211. 12-14; With 1141*, 49. 8). is itll 7. The unrighteous roan—Literally 8810 the man of evil. v11(1- His thoughts—'Thoughts, determine for ichamet cr. As a mon "thinketh in his heart, so is he" (i'rov. 28.7). 8. My thoughts_ The thong):(9 of .4ehervn11 include his purpose of re- (1cnlption; they are "past finding out .'. :fro not your thoughts—Their vast- ness and sublimity nre bc;vund the -.Poo !sneer of the thoughts of fuel to understated (comp. ]tic. 4. 12; .Icr. tut- '29. 11 ). 'The character of .lohnvnh'a \;u- purposes of redemption furnish n 100- 1•1cl4- i t ire for eager and expectant hope -taus : as well n8 for repentnnee. i':'t't' 1O. As 1 he ruin cometh down—A C'ON'i'IN1':N'T.\I, AII]IIES, '4'Iie 81.111ies o1 Cuu1111minl tries lire to first branch of the se.r- It was in the early nu:ntlls of .1807, 12. lie led forth in pence—ily that. Living;,lune, while travelling in hovah hinls,11 (comp. Iso. 40. thr 'I'tuig.uiy'iku bake uegiun, first 52. 12; Mie. 2. 1:1). made the ucquoiiaance of the great. The mountains and the hills . . fill slave raider, who rendered him eon- (he tee9 of 11:e field—A11 nature shall U ltc nssiStahit' 1':ventutlly, rejoice %tit/ yon. vice. Thu cost of the French army hsidoweelveblr, taw cruelt4's of the '.rill, 1:t. f•'nr n linn' . . . for n sign--Ais s1:+5,000,(00 per Annum. (krill 111.6 follewcrs forced the famous mission- nu•n11eried to Jehovah's praise. The can put into the field a vast, well- try to part cumpuny from him. glorious transformation of miters.. can army for .4160.1100.000 ti Shen Slnnley sturles un his quest l'hn lir trce8 tied the inert !e eros year. The Hussirn artily, another of 1:min I'a8h1a in 1887. he nut Tip- which have supplanted the thorns '- • - ' poo '1 lb at Zanzibar, and had a can- and the briers Shall remain lhrou rh- terence with him. The Arab chief ti agreed a tarnish 11(10 loners for out future ages as n (oa.ltm,my and >, d monument of .lehucnh'H g0osue$s t:ns the t1. sport of the Ivory collected mercy toward his people whom he ♦ by Emil, in the Eepiaturinl stations hath redeemed. for the Egyptian Guv(•rnment. BEER ('OXSI'�II''1'I(1\'. This even has n tra;ie sequel. Major hart telol, n ho commanded a sepiolite (adorn') of the expedition, .411- 1o; 000 it year. Including 11)111(4, (creat Britain is paying $''205,000,000 a year. The statistics of beer consumption, --_+ which are available Our only seven Was shat send in .1 u, ext, 18x8, by DON"I :S F011 110TIIKIIS, coinitr•ies, show it total con8uteotion of 5.44104 million galleua aunuully. In one o1 '1'ipp00'5 peep18' 8 vi' lin' of Tont try to make a baby It up 1!)01 Germany consumed 1,78:1 11)11- his perverseness," ns Sttusey put it. till it floes so of Its own accord. It lions; the 1]Ilited Kingduur, 1,:,Op 1:min 1'e+sin (nuns it neccSsury to will do this without any showing or ntilltuns; 1114' 4'r.itrd States, 1,14)1 e1mrto terms'elt11 the famous :\8111, teaching 4hen its ni.(ne i8 along I who fur lung exercises i `IISO ba millions; ) inlrin, 402 tuilliuus; a e nnu,:h. Dont take ) uung 18(8849 France, 2851 rnillinna; Hungary, ;181 tlucmce throughout Cent sal Afries. tea in n,ailearlM. 'i hey nre very millions; and Italy, 6: millions. III fact so great ens his power Ihot I'Ince in a saucepan Steck and two chopped Ine; let pieces. pint ounc(f lean hate simmer. Mix n spoonful butter and one of flour_ Boil the broth to 141)0:,1 half th • o"i- ginal quantity; 9tra'n into a half pint treasure Mud 1i11 up with cream.; stir this Into the four and butter; when thick add the (hit -ken. Keep at the boiling point live or six minutes. Set aside to cool. urban cold fill the patty casts. Garnish with s:)rigs of" parsley. Salmon Patties—Flake ons -half can: salmon, mix with one-hnlf pint (8081)1 thickened with a s!•ouffel of hatter rolled in cornstarch: sea'on with 8liAlf pepper, anchovy sauce, and a few olives chopped fine. Allow to cool and fill the patty cases, WITUI HONEY.8andw'iches.—Cut thin slices or bread, butter every other slice with butter beaten to a cream, and spread the other slices with hon;•y. • '1'h, buttered slice is laid on thn e horyed slice, crusts removed, and -the sand- wich cut into triangles. Gingerbread—Sift on -pint. (lour and stir into this one-half pint sour cream ser milk. If the latter is uses 0114' tablespoon butter Should he ad- ded. Sift with the (lour one-half teaspoon ground ginger and the stone of fine cinnamon, then stir in two tablespoons sugar and two of retrain- ed honey. Mix and heatthe hatter thoroughly, and when ready for the oven stir in one-half teaspoon soda dissolved in a little warm—not hot —water. flake about three-quarters of an hour, taking care not to burn, and then cut into squares and save d with plenty of hot hon -y. ..FOR... Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic, Stomach Cramps, Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantum, Seasickness, Summer Complaint. Ind all Looseness of the DowellI he Children or Adults. 01,1:11 .Ar, viumf. N. One of the •t. curious (.1111)9 on record has recently been formed by society Indive in Berlin. The princi- pal condition of membership is that the applicant must he deaf. 'flu. (Mb ,ills Within reach of children. Child - has ove8 a hundred members,who, 'I'hry 4ere thoroughly del at, s, how- f meel re}nlnrly once n reek Int hnns- rver, 111111 thrix 1)01111' 1,801401. ish cl1r.osil,v is n thin(: to be re(•kon- 'Iy furnishes rooms in the N'il• '1 ippeo 'I'ih %roe 0'411,1) in %ntvihnr, e(1 wit h. nal (''es the re,),- Of pun- heblr 8vase', where they eun',•rse where he has )iced for ninny years 1'hnu,nt ttlll not deter them from by means of ear -trumpets and the past practically as a priruucr, ean11•lin•r the meteors of forbidden sign language and drink tett. SI li1'1V.11, 01.' CHILDREN. FI?1C 1'L0WfatS SMELi, SWEET. 11 ing Leopold, on the advice of foofor children overthree, but Stanley, wade him Governor of the "i tiger ones needn hn88inelte or Falls district, of the Congo i'ree per fu,lnior. Don't 04 young Slate. children pickles, cunlimentis 8tong With the ettcnxlon of Belgian len, or any kind of alcohol. Such dominion, however, the .lratl,s "Iu•-.lhin!rs Are very Injurious to litho came reetivc, and finally rose in "I'''''• 1'on•t. Irave holt les of 1111811- 1)41111,' against, the 1•'ree Stale troops. , rine, linbnentra. rtieinfertunl8, or 1ott1(s fI'41 hot(••, Don't give chit- (Iron mesh hie that hoe liven ordered for n frown -up. '1 h',, r a nl :a ars dangerous, ns what has on'v a very Out of leery thouSuts ,hilsren ilf 4,:300 species of (lowers anuli- mild erect ul�(n the system of nn born 881) survive their fifth year in toted in Europe only •12O pussies. nn adult si Is ufficbnt to upset a child for New Zealand, 8511 in New South agreeable perfume. Flowers with ;tit(tWards. \\roles, 811(4 8-1.1 in Victoria, ns white or cream cnlnred petals nre agninat 837 in Ireland, 762 in Eng- more frequently odoriferous than land and Wales. 7:4 in France, (114 others. Next in order come the yet- The Iles'—"So you nre looking fur in .\ustrin, and 571 in Spain. low llewere, then the red, niter theta n job, eh? What (nn you de?" The ♦ the blue. and, finally. the violet, of .%ppliennt—"Nothing In per:killer; Abort one million telegrams are which only thirteen varieties out of bot. 4ork is not ao much an object scut over the world's wires daily. 300 give a pleasing perfume. las good Gages." is an instantaneous cure. It has been used in thousand.; of homes for sixty years, and has never failed to give satisfaction. Every home should have a bottle so a:, to be ready in case of emergency, Mos. C,8one,R N. HAavev, Resencath, Ont., writes: "1 can recommend Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw- berry as the best medicine I have ever used for Diarrhoea and all summer complaints. I always keep it in the house and praise It highly to all my friends." K& I Bt- K K.& K K K ' K 8(i t K cL 14% r%