HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1905-08-17, Page 3ABSOLUTE
SECURITYII
Christ Loved the Poor and Cast His
t
e.cnuIne Lot in With Them.
GREATEST SOCIAL RHORMER
• darter's
Little Liver Pills.
Must Dour Signature of
See Fac-Stmlle Wrapper Below.
Terry watt and as etury
to take as sag ar.
FOR HEAIIACHE.
FOR DIZZINESS.
FOR t'IUOUSNESS.
FOR TORPID LIVER.
` FORCZiiSTIPATION.
FORFOR iAILOW 011.
TtfNt.E COMPLEXION
y O=RVIIRL r
�6tts1 1►m d7 Tegetable�i..G
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
CARTERS
TAILOR'S LIFE SAVING COAT.
A London tailor has invented a
new life saving coat and gaiters,
With which it is possible for a per-
son clothed therein to maintain an
upright position when immersed in
the water, even if not possessing any
knowledge of swimming. The coat
resembles in appearance an ordinary
pilot coat, but it is fitted with an
air bewhich is inflated with air
through a tube. The gaiters each
weigh two pounds and are fitted with
two brass wings or blades fastened
to the back of the heel. AR the
wearer moves his feet in the water
these wings open lful shut, and not
only propel the wearer along like
oars but enable him to maintain nn
uptight position from the waist up-
ward In the water. A practical rlc-
m
onstr•ation of the utility of the in-
•ention was recently undertaken in
ne River Thes by the. inventor
rad ' is Oki
icy and life saving
qualit' s clearly shown. even when
moving against he tide.
GIVE HIM THE SACK.
Two noblemen in the reign of Max-
imilian II., one a German, the other
lipiga Spaniard, who had each rendered a
reat service to the Emperor. asked
the hand of his daughter Helena a in
marriage. Maximilian said that as
he esteemed therm bot h alike, it was
impossible to choose between til4ni,
and therefore their own prowess
must decide it; but, being unwilling 1
to risk the loss of either by engag-
ing thong in deadly combat, he order-
ed a la_ ge sack to he brought, aro
g 1
declared that he who should put his I
rival int,, it should have his fair
Helena. This whintiscal combat zees
actually performed in the presence of
the Imperial Court, and lasted nu 1
hour. The unhappy Spanish noble-
man wns first overcome, and the
German succeeded in enveloping him
in the sack, took him up on his back,
and lai•I hint at the Finperor's feet.
'!'his comical combat is said to Le
the origi:l of the phrn..c. "Give him
the rack," so common in everyday
Ilan V))tge. .
SUi'i'S HIM 14EST.
A despatch from IIrooklyn, N. Y. THE WORKING CLASSES,
says:-I(ov. Dr. Newell Dwight Hiijia Isnve that Martin Luther conics from
pceuched from the following text- the collier and New from Che
And the common people heard him Y
gladly.''home of the seanitress and James
Luring Ilis lifetime Christ's name {trot from a bare kitchen, while the
was music to His generation. The peers, the merchants, the states -
common people heard him gladly, men and the jurists have not dwelt
and the C0111111011 people know their in that chine named riches, but rath-
friends. The multitude is not always ler have been reared in the unfriendly
right, but, given time, the :uultitudc izunes where poverty rules.
is seldom wrong. Every generation i But tvhile these are reasons, they
has its hero, but the people who 'are nut the reason. Christ loved
crowded about the carpenter's son 'men as men, an.1 not as either rich
to have been very wavering in their
s. 1lpathy. The action of the king
In destroying the book of the law is
in marked contrast with the conduct
of his father, Josiah, when the newly
found book of the law was read be-
fore hitt (comp. 2 Kings 22. 11-111),
Josiah on that occasion was sorrow-
ful and dismayed, rent his garments
and sent at once to inquire of Je-
hovah concerning his will and ob-
taining thereby God's mercy and
favor.
All these words -That is, the words
o1 Jeremiah's prophecy.
26. Tho king's son of llammelcc:h,
the expression in the original being
capable of both renderings.
.1erentialt the prophet -Jeremiah
was burn of priestly family in the
priestly city of Anathoth, in the
territory of Benjamin (comp. Jer. 1,
1). The city is mentioned also in
Josh. 21, 18 and 1 Kings 2. 26. He
therefore enjoyed the hest possible
training in his youth for the office
which he was called on in early man-
hood to fill. His cell curare in the
thirteenth year of King Josiah's
knI ew with swift intuition that hero .or pour. When the likable man was reign, and his public activity extend-
ed frotn that time till some time af-
was the leader for whom the people ,named Lazarus and poor, 110 Wont ter the final fall of Jerusalem, cov-
long had looked. And, now that tho ;to his house, because he arts likable.
ering in all a period of more than
nit
inhave come and gone, all :When the likable tnn was rich like forty years. I'orseeing the Babylon -
Will confess that in this friend of (Simon, He tient to his house, not ian captivity, ho urged the people to
iublae yield to it as a decree of God. When
the !)nal struggle was over ho was
deed, the history of social progress is beggar's coarse cloak and the rich topermitted to choose between going
the history of His spirit dwelling in man's purple and fur, and laid His remaining Babyon with other Captives or
institutions, as man's soul within his finger upon the naked soul of elan- at home with a small rem -
burl Want of his people. Ile chose the
Y, :hood. Among the great qualities of latter; but when, after two months,
Tho secret of His influence over the ;Christ we mention His sanity as a a rebellion arose and the 'nen of war
multitude is this: He was burn of social tencher. You shall know the fled to Egypt Jeremiah, against his
the common people, Ile walked in the truth and the truth shrill make you wish, was taken with them. 'l'rudi-
common pathway, He bore the coin- free. He taught the law of social tion says that he died at the hands
111011 burdens, He learned from those sympathy and service. He said: -
of his own people. His message to
common teachers -work, events, 10en, :"Men qre in darkness, and you can
his people being necessarily the foie -
necessity -that
is the mother of in- lighten then,. Men are oppressed, telling of an impending doom, he was
Ventiun; responsibility -that sobers land you can relieve their burdens.
t never popular with the rulingclasses
and chastens. Living the universal `Nen are wandering from the path, and was little estecintsl whie ho liv-
life, Ile came to think In the univer- inn(' you can' lend tarot back into tho e•el but luter generations and ages
sal language and put the universal ;highway of peace. Men sit in the learned to appreciate his character
and eternal truths in terms of the shadow of death, and you can String
time. The poet, the philosopher, the them life."
•
teacher who loves a class lives with
that reigning class, and with that
class doth clic. Horace was a typi-
cal old Roman gentleman, and said:
"I hate the vulgar crowd, and hold
them at a distance." And even -
Thonlas Carlyle was seduced away INTERNATIONAL
front his confidence in the people to AUG. 20.
a trust in the aristocratic class
alone seduced by dinner parties and Lesson VIII. Jehoiakim Burns the
drawing -rooms and friendships with Word of God. Golden Text
men who dwelt in king's palaces. Jer. 26. 13.
LESSON WORD STUDIES.
Note -These Word Studies aro bns-
fidence in the pcoplo, wise and ignor- ed on the text of the Revised Ver- city which the prophet here threat -
publicans ans rind sinners were held the because he was rich, but because:. ho
intellectual life and tho political lib -I was likable. Ile peeled off all ex-
erties of the last 2,000 years. 1n-;terior considerations named the
THE S. S. LESSON
LESSON,
HE NEVER FOI(GOT HIS KIND.
Born In poverty, Jesus remained
poor. To the last He held His con
and regard him as one of the very
greatest of the 'Hebrew prophets.
Jehovah hid them -'Their search
had been a thorough one, and the
fact that the prophet and his ,scribe
were not found seemed) providential.
27. At the mouth of Jeremiah -As
Jereminh dirt ated.
29. The king of Babylon shall cer-
tainly conte and destroy this land -
It is probnble that the king of Baby-
lon had already once appeared before
Jerusalem, and his departure, with-
out having destroyed the city, had
lessened the fear of the king and his
advisers. It is the greater disaster
which was soon to come upon the
in the good and had; in the integrity ant; in tho people, rich and slop,
poor; Jehoiakim.-King Josiah had as w
learned in a former lesson, been kill
of their intellect and the soundness ed in battle at Mformddo,er
ILC, fi ll
of their heart, and the certainty of Ile was succeeded on the throne by
ovthertures.
final response to the hivine his second 8011, ,lehoahaz, who, how
overtures. The ascetic, the scholar, ever, was almost immediately (after
the leisure classes leave the dusty
f
either side of the throngedthree months) deposed by Necho
highway and build bowers of rest on king of Egypt, the victor of Megid
►11th
I
do move; du, and carried by him into Egypt.
i along which the multitudes
, not so .Jesus. It other teachers read Necho thereupon placed the older
books, He road the heart, with pages brother and first son of Josiah Elia-
; blotted with tears and blood. if kine, on the throne, changing his
others nurtured their religious life flamO to .Jehoiakim, this change in
name being a sign of vassalage. The
ens. The utter destruction of the
0 city did not, however, occur until
- during fesedekinh's reign, 58(1 II. C.,
Zcdekiah thus being the Last of the
kings of Judah.
- 30. He shall have none to sit upon
the throne of David -Itis son Jeho-
, inchin was indeed placed upon the
- 1 hrone, but Nebuchadnezzar immed-
iately besieged the city and after
three months carried him away cap-
tivo to Babylon.
32. '!'here were added beside unto
them many like words -The second
roll, therefore, the contents of which
are still preserved for us in early
chapters of the present canonical
hook of Jeremiah, was even fuller
than that which had been read to
the people and before the king. All
similar efforts to destroy (Sod's
!Nord have .inevitably ended in con
tributing to its larger circulction.
amidst cloistered retreats. Ile fed religious rand mural condi( ions of
His soul in the marketpines, loved Judah during the reign of ,Jehoiakim
publicans and sinners,
, and crime
eating and drinking. Once they tin- scent to have been more helpless and
derstood Ilius, the enthusiasm of the degraded than at any previous per -
people for their hero was beyond iod, and of the nation itself Jehola-
all words.
'!'lie Carpenter wns and is the most
ovnble and fascinating figure in nil
history, In his memoirs Lord Itose-
bery recalls Napoleon's last days.
Ton) Knox -"I know your eldest
tlnuahtcr plays and the middle one
kiln, the vacillating, cruel, covetous,
and godless monarch, Wus the repre-
sentative man. In the fourth sear of
Jehoinkirn's reign the Egyptian ariny
was defeated at ('archeseish, on the
One morning. climbing the steeps of Euphrates, by Nebuchadnezzar, and
St. Helena, the emperor stet a hear- came
supremacy of Egypt in Syria
11 laden came to an end. Not, long after
y porter at a point whore the this Nebuchadnezzar invaded Pales -
path wnS not wide enough for two. !title and appeared before Jerusalem.
Hurrying forward, the aid asked the To hint Jehoinl:int submitted, but af-
laborer to give way for Napoleon. Iter three years, incited and encour-
"Not so," said the emperor, "it is 'aged b' the Egyptians, he again re-
fer UR to step aside. Respect the 'belled, wi I. ut Nebuchadnezzar
burden I, once more entered i'alestine and took
In that hour the ruler remembered Jerusalem Concerning the death of
�, I in Corsaca. And (heist, who tau ht 111 osephus reports that he
sines; what. accomplishment has the g
ungest?"
bor-"She neither plays nor
the poverty and toil of his childhood I lehoiaki .1
i was slain Iry Nebuchadnezzar, Nebuchadnezzar, ho
the fatherhood of (dud, never forgot 'commanded that his body lie thrown
sympathy and the brotherhood of
•
WI yr A (GOL.i►i•:N .JIMMY.
"lime did old I'scadds ever break
ntu soricty?"
"1;y lending money to some of its
!Impoverished leaders."
DO YOU KNOW
THAT BACKACHE
IS THE FIRST
SYMPTOM OF
KIDNEY TROUBLE.
It Is I and you cannot bo too
careful about it.
A llttlo backache lot run will
mall cause ser:aus kidney
y
trcublc. Stop it in time.
TAKE
ROAN'S
10.ciaN EY
PILLS,
They ‘uro where a!1 others
111. As a specific for Backaches
ind Kidney Troubles they have
to equal. Hero is what I (
MR. GEO. H. SOMERVILLE, I
4'' N h., writes: "i Was s0 e
tr:1.!.-.i with a Moro back I e'ou1.1 not Ret
at of he,l in the mornings for over a year. c
get n Lot of Patna na Hinny falls and a
!(oro I ha'l then, half taken I could 900
wet deriving some benefit from them,
fel !s -rise 1 lit fialli• en them all my back
3A (1 i:. alai 1 havo net Leen treublod
see "
MOM. 11'hcu public honors were pour- I before the teeth; without burial, thus
ed out upon Ilia► like a flood lie fulfilling literally the judgment pro-
'turncd the more sedulously toward pounced against the king by the
the lame, the blind, the publican, the mouth of Jeremiah, "Anti his dead
sinner, the heartbroken. indeed, Elis i body shall the be
sfrost"o It inthe
e•lie
miracles are only the outer rovcla-night
tions of I (v'erse an).
Verse 21. Jehudi-1n verse 14 he is
1115 LOVi: 1:O1t 'l'fdh. NEEDY. ; rnentluned as n (Iescendant of ('cshi,
They are benefactions, hints of His %%filch, while strictly a proper name,
deep
r. individuals -
love sn}prtthy with individuals lovo;eeems still to point to Ethiopian do
tokens, not miracles, not signs, not 'scent, since the word Cushi means
wonders. Eur .11•sus never forgot also Ethiopinn.
the depths of sorrow that Ile Him- i To fetch the roll -That is, the roll
self had sounded In the days when of the Inn' from n -1.4,•h Baruch the
lie was despised nn.1 in poverty r:nd'scribe had read to the princes (comp.
loneliness. Ile loved the common 1 verses 12 and 13), and concerning
people and gave Himself in nn abaci- which they had spoken to the king
i (100 of affection to (hem: in return ! (comp verso 20
they gave themselves to I1im. And i 22. in the hinter house in the
so, as He marches up the hills of 11in111 month -The HebrewI
year .e -
tine', t he people throng and crowd gnn tvillt our month of April; the
amt t month therefore he our 1►ecmn-
the people as Apollo's lute could ter. The winter house referral tc,
never charm them. linty have been simply the inner er
Confessedly, Christ was the great- lower an.1 more sheltered apartment!:est of social reformers. Plainly, al- o1 the palace. the upper and outer
set, the reason 18 that Ile has loved 0p1111t1e•IItN being known tis the gum.
the t and Inst His lot in with mer house, since they were more op.'n
tl , 111. Mney reasons have been urged end cooler Still, in the case of the
a
f, this. It is said that the poor aro king it Is quite probable that he had
after the Christ who has charmed 1
in the majority and that ile allied separate residem'cs for sunlmer nrd
Himself wtth the multitude, 110 per winter, the winter residence being in
rent of whoa► are in shops, mins, the city mid the summer residence
forests, fields. It is said that the somewhere mashie. in common
poor are the neediest. Do the rich set ech, however, the lower apart -
hunger fur wisdom? 'I?n;y can ! u%' dents of every house were called slat-
books, 1.arhern, travel -but not the thy el brit, the house, arta :to. uoner
{
1
111 the rich hunger for the npnrtmrnts ulliych, which is the nam- r
beautiful and the sublime•, its siren in new house. In the winter months
mountains, in foreign cit len, in gal -'most of the time was spent in the
lerie9 and embeds -alit? They tan letter.
hay 1rnvel 1(11.1 1eisu,e. Not the 'There wns n fire -Words omitted In 1
u;•r. Dutra the rlrh man toss upon the original, an the italics indicate.
s:s fevered couch? He can journey Brazier -A fire pan placed in a de -
to some soft southern climate or Sind pression in the renter of the room
es way to the seashore, but tho in which charcoal was burned. There C
'or 11141st die in their garrets. It is were no fireplaces, stoves, or chins- f
said that the poor tarnish the lead- neys in an Oriental house.
Ts for the people. 2R. Leaves -Literally, folding doors °
From the shepherd's cote comes referring to the parallel perpendicu-
tnvid, the sweet sieges-. from the lar columns of writing un t he scroll.
low comes ,turns, baptizing the field hooks with leaves such as we have
louse and the daisy with the int- to -day were unknown.
mortality of sung. from the poor Penknife -Literally, scribe's knife.
omen the father of poetry, blind, 24. -Not Afraid -The princes had
god and a beggar. The father of trembled nt the first rending of the
philosophy, Socrntes. has but ono law. "Now it come to pas, when (i
h
FACTS AllOU'r YELLOW FEVEII.
An neat,' specific disease.
It is infectious.
I'revails in the West Indies, west
coast of :Africa, Central America and
southward Along both coasts of
South America. and northward to
the South Atlantic and Gulf States.
The mosquito is blamed fur the
spread of the disease.
Prost stops yellow fever.
Survivors of one attack of yellow
fever become itritnuno from further
attacks
The yellow fever germ has not yet
been discovered.
Yellow fever develops usually from
three to four (lays after infection.
Sometimes it takes seven (toys.
The attnckn comes on with severe
chills or rigors, when it comes sud-
denly. It may come on more grad-
ually, with languor, henduche un(1
malarial symptoms. '1'i:e tenq:ern-
tur•c goes to 105 degrees. se:n."times
higher. The fever lasts from three
to five days, attended with pains In
the buck, limbs and head. '!'here is
anuses and vomiting.
The yellow tint of the shin, from
which the fever gets its Horne, begins
on the second or third day ']'here
is bleeding at the nose, mouth end
gums. Delirium usually follows,
then unconsciousness nn(t (tenth.
Mortality varies. in some epidem-
ics it 1108 been as (high as R5 per
cent. i0 others as low ns 10 per
cent. In others as low as 10 1 er
cent.
Hent, moisture, bad drainage, un-
cleanliness and unhygienic conditions
favor the disease, but the mosquito
is most of all responsible.
Experts seem to agree tint, the
first step to combat the spread of the
evil is to nttnck the mosquito. They
also say there Is no danger whatever
that nn outhrenk of yellow fever in
the north would he followed by nay
crime: results, principally for the
enson that
the variety of mosquito
which trnnsmits the disease is not
mind in this section of the country
1. Is also sold these mosquitoes
never g•) more than ensile from their
,reeding place, unless curried by the
wind.
Complete rest nn(t careful dieting
onst 11 )it the principal treatment
or yellow fever. Different drugs nre
ise(1 to help, assist the body nrd
rgans lownrd a natural condition.
CONSOLATION.
"What's .the :ratter?" asketl the
Obbing child's mother.
"'istnie .1 on. 19 having n lilt -th-
ey I arty and didn't invite nie, bon-
oo!"
"Oh, well. never mind. May'hn the
lee cream tt111 be poisoned and
make them all sick."
g
1
9
of our Indebtedness to (boldness reassured thein. They seem
nrnent, and that worn Ihreadhnre. they 110.1 heard nil the words thew
•:pictetus, the greet moralist. is a formal in fear ono toward another"
lave, And what shall we more say (verse 10). The king's audacity and
44144444+4444
LTneHome I
DOMESTIC RECIPES.
Velvet Cakes -A delicate summer
breakfast dish, appetizing even on a
warm morning. Add one tublcspdua
of melted butter, to 01)0 well beaten
egg, one-half pint of milk, one-half
teaspoonful of salt, one-half pint of
flour, with which is sifted one tea-
spoon of cream of tartar, one-half
teaspoon of soda dissolved in one
teaspoon of hot water. Ileat and
bake tit once on soapstone (or oth-
er) griddle.
Frozen Apple Meringue --It in pos-
sible now to buy that queen of cook-
ing apples, the duchess. It cooks
rapidly and yields a fine, white
sauce, bakes in a style to tempt an
epicure and is a delight to the
housekeeper who knows
Frozen Meringue -One pint of thick
stewed apples (press through sieve if
other than the duchess variety), add
one-half cup of sugar, is few gratings
of nutmeg; stir in the stiffly beatetn
whites of two eggs, and beat until
light. and foamy; add one-half pint
of milk (cream is better) and freeze.
Cauliflower Pickles -Two caulifl tW-
ers, broken up, one pint small on-
ions, three meditrtn-sized red peppers;
dilute. half a pint of gait in water
sufficient to cover the vegetables;
and !e: stand over night; drain in
the morning; steam the vegetables
until tender; heat two quarts of
vinegar with three Level tablespoon-
fuls of mustard (less if preferred) un-
til it boils; pour over vegetables;
bottle and seal.
Chili Sauce -One hundred ripe to-
matoes (medium-sized), twenty-four
peppers, eighteen large white onions,
one pound of brown sugar, eighteen
teaspoons each of ginger. cloves and
allspice, nine tablespoons of salt, one
gallon of vinegar; remove skins from
the tomatoes (pour boiling water
over then,), chop peppers and onions
very fine; add to the other ingredi-
ents, boil gently, stirring often, one
hour; strain and boil again it not of
sufficient consistency; set aside in
closely corked bottles or in fruit
jars tightly closed.
Biscuit Glace -Make a custard of
the yolks of four eggs. a half pint
of cream, to which a pinch of baking
soda has been added, and of a syrup
which has been previously made by
boiling a cup of granulated sugar
with a gill of water. Stir in a
double boiler until it coats the
spoon. Let it get entirely cold and
beat hard for ten minutes. adding a
little vanilla flavoring. When stiff
beat in a pint of well whipped cream.
Pack into biscuit cases, sprinkle
with crushed macaroons, and freeze
for five hours.
Pistachio Glace -Make a boiled ic-
ing of one cup of granulated sugar
and five tablespoons of water boiled
together until it threads. Pour it
gradually upon the beaten white of
an egg, stirring until it becomes
stiff. Stir into it some finely ground
pistachio nuts, tint it slightly with
light green coloring, and set it into
the ice box. When ready to freeze
mix into it a pint of cream that has
been thoroughly whipp.(l, .uu1 turn
into the, freezer. Serve it on slices
of angel food that has been iced with
chocolate.
Mot Chocolate Sauce -Molt three
squares of grated chocolate. Stir in-
to five tablespoons of powdered
sugar and a tablespoon of water.
Slit over the fire until s th and
glossy, and nd(1 a half pint of rich
cream and the yolk of an egg, beat-
en. When it has thickened like cus-
lnrdl, remove from the lire and add a
teaspocoful of vanila flavoring.
Peppermint Creams -Half pound
of granulated) sugar, half cup of
water, rout one-fourth teaspoonful of
create of 1ar•tar. Roil together until
it can be rolled between the Zingers
into a soft ball. Take from the lire
and add one drop only of peppermint
oil. Stir until it begins to look
creamy, and drop on flat tins.
PICNIC LUNCIfi•:S.
packing the Lunches. -When plan-
ning your lunches study to condense
them as much as possible and so
prepare them that you will need few
dishes, forks, knives and spoons
%chick makes your boxes and baskets
heavy. With the exception of a few
drinking.; cups, teaspoon» and small
knives which can be carried in a
small ling, there are no acceanoriel
whichea -n u,not tie thrown away after
lunch idisposed of. raper dishes,
napkins, even drinking cups can be
had and pasteboard boxes instead of
baskets. Salads, fruits, etc., ran be
carried in the folding bores er cov-
ered paper pails lined with :tarn (lin
paper. Be sure and take a can open-
er if yon take canned or bottled
goods unopened,. A few rstrut paper
pails for carrying teat. r from a
nearby spring will b.• ionnd very
cem'enient. Ten and eofTee. made
very strung. can be duty(• 1 rat 1101-
1108 and diluted with cold spring
water. it you cannot rarry o lump
of ire with you in a pa1.••r p(►11,
wrapped up well.
If any one desires a cup of hot
ten or coffee the least troublesome
Way to get it is to pine in their
little work bng one of the little
folding nit ohol pails, a small bolt le
of nIc•ohul. the little sm:ee pan for
the damp. n box of coffee rind match-
es. All taking up little R,Ince and
making little bulk and giving the
Inst straw of comfort rind enjoyment
to the ►n(mhery of the party who
mast have their tuft ten or coffee."
Wrap snndwich(8, eggs. deviled or
pickled• and cake, in pnrnflin paper
and line your box s with saltie, this
keeps evtrything fresh and in good
condition and makes the food look
inviting nr. I dainty.
1f loot t•r• layer t rake is rut in slic-
es or •.qu0r,-s rind each piece neatly
wrapped an pOrnllin 1,8(4.1 and all
!packed tm a box separate from other
• food, it carries nasty and dues not
have to be cut ' when served, thus
doing away with necessity of carry-
ing a knife for the purpose and the
bit of paper serves as a dish or
doily fur holding it on while eutiug.
Ll'I"1'LE HELPS.
Borax and water will brighten oil-
cloth
Beeswax and salt will make rusty
flat -irons clean and smooth.
'I'o clean insets tnins from black
dress goods rub with a slice of raw
potato.
A good cleaner for gold or silver
jewellery is a teaspoonful of ammon-
ia in a cupful of water.
A few drops of oil of lavender
poured into a glass of very hot wa-
ter is very refreshing, and will quick-
ly purify the air of a sick -room.
A pinch ut salt added to the whites
o; eggs when beating will make them
froth quicker, and the froth will bo
stifTer.
Boots and shoes, however damp,
will polish in n few moments if a
drop or two of paraffin oil bo added
to the blacking. It also prevents
the leather cracking.
White and delicately tinted leather
may be cleaned by rubbing with a
soft. clean piece of flannel dipped in
powdered d P
umice-s onc. Alwayss rub
the leather one way.
Tobacco smoke, or water in which
tobacco has been steeped, will rid a
plant of insects.
By adding a few drops of vinegar
to the water when poaching eggs
they will set more quickly and per-
fectly.
Rubber shoes, when wet, should be
stuffed with newspapers and loft
several hours to absorb all damp-
ness.
1Vhen not in use, blankets should
be neatly folded and placed between
sheets of soft paper, with camphor
to keep out the moths. Air the
blankets frequently,
CROQU RT'FES.
Are one of the most acceptable of
ways for utilizing the left over that
is always with us and which the pro-
vident housewife never casts aside.
If a croquette mixture sticks to the
palms while it is being shaped, dip
your hands in cold water and begin
again.
Never fry croquettes in a draft;
they will crack.
When working up left overs in
croquettes season by taste rather
than by rule, as the food has al-
ready been seasoned and le easily
made too salty or peppery. The
flavor of all croquettes is much en-
hanced by serving them with to-
mato or some other savory sauce.
Do not use cracker crumbs for cov-
ering croquettes they will not
brown. Stale bread which has been
dried, rolled, and sifted is the best
thing for crumbling. It ought to be
a delicate brown and about as fine
ss cornmeal.
A bund bladed spatula is the
handlest of kitchen touts for lifting
croquettes for nn egg mixture. -
"Weak
eart"
- Palpitation and Irregula v
action of the heart are due largely
to a thin, watery condition of the
blood.
The
heart
and nerves
refuse to perform their proper work
for want of support. Palet weak,
or arta-role people should use
"Pl,VCI(INR" and avoid heart
troubles, " PSVCHINE " makes rich
blood, tones the system, regulates
the heart action and restores vital-
ity, All weak people should have
a bottle handy in case of sudden
heart troubles.
GRKATEBT OR ALL TONICS
(PRONOUNCED 61=KEEN)
ALL DRUCCJtTS-.Q OOLW-TRUIL FREE
DR. T. A. *LOCUM. Limited,
171 King lig W.. Toronto. Canada
LAST HOPE IN A SEA FIGHT.
British Sailors Would Use the
Ram.
•
Nothing has surprised British sail-
ors more in recent years than the
fact that in the great Naval battle
which took place recently between
Japan and Russia no attempt was
apparently made to employ the ram.
In some respects the ram is consid-
ered an out-of-date weapon of of-
fence, for the use of long-range,
powerful guns has revolutionized sea -
fighting in touch the same way an
modern rifles have taught soldiers to
respect distance.
The ram, which is fitted to Brit-
ish warships, forms the nose of the
vessel, and, in the case of a battle-
ship, may weigh as much as forty
tons. '1'o employ it effectively is a
most difficult task; nevertheless, it
is almost an axiom among British
Naval officers that "When you are
beaten, and can't run away, ram
your enemy and try not to stay."
There is a good deal that is sig.
nificant in the lastfew words. The
ship that rants is faced with the
danger of "sticking," ing, ' and being cur-
ried dower as well. The captain who
decided to ram an enemy would do
his utmost to strike his opponent's
bows, and immediately swing his
own vessel round, so as to withdraw
and rend the hole larger. The bows
contain the largest water -tight comm
partmcnts in mostships, and should
the hole be torn sufficiently tho
rammed vessel could not possiby re-
main above water more than a few
minutes.
*74
...FOR...
Diarrhoea, Dysentery,
Colic, Stomach Cramps, Cholera _
Morbus. Cholera Infantum,
Seasickness,
Summer Complaint.
:J all Looaeneas of the Bowels flit
Children or Adults.
Da. FowLER's
Extract of
Wild Strawberry
is an instantaneous cure. It has been
used in thousands of homes for sixty
years, and has never failed to give
satisfaction. Every home should
have a bottle so as to be ready in
case of emergency.
MRS. Gr.ORGP. N. HARVEY, Reseneath, Ont., writes:
"i can recommeta) Dr. Fowler's Extract ot'Wad Straw-
berry as the best medicine I have ever used for
Uiarrh,ra and all summer complaints. I always keep
it in the house and praise it highly teal! my friends,"
LK&K
�
K& K.`'KF•(K K&K•`K t1Kic
K &+K
K
K
ARB YOU A PRISONER?
r?�
THOUSAND, of menus) prtton'rs of disease as secnndy
as though they were confined behind the bar., Many
have tamed their own chains by the vices of 'ally youth.
expov.re to contagious disease, or the ear . 1 manh„ .1.
They feel 111^y are not the men they onr(ht robe or need to 1'.'.
The %i,n, steer, and vitality of manir.,d are lacki•,r(. Are
fiOa vr.us and dcspoadent? tired in the morning? ha, a 7'.0
nernforceyourselfthrueahtheday'swork?haveyon 1It•la am-
bition and ener,l ? are you irritable and eacitabhe! e: es
aanken, depreasa.trand havcard I..,:c:nrr 7 memory t •..,r am
brain fagged ! have r,.0 weak back with 'treanig and lus!!s at
night? deposit au ur,ae? weak sexually ?-you bays
Nervous Debility and Seminal Weakness.
Oar NEW 8.1STRO1) TarartaRIIT la guaranteed to
Cure or No Pay. st»Io r)etrolt. tin' k
Kecurity. Beware of qi: ck.-Cn:-aft ell 'stal:Itsbe.1,
r.•t.a+tlo _f•hrsin,n'). Conauttrtlnrs Free. Hooke
Free. R rite for Qufaiea lt•,i-.b for Beate Treatment.
Kennedy Ir Korgenp
1411 O1:1? t.t1Y !STREET. InsTROII;', UMW.
K
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