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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1905-11-30, Page 7SOLU'ft SECURITYI Cenutne Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Boar Signature of Fer.Statne %eleg nce Cetew. as av cam at<,agar; . ids FOR Rcj&DACI'tl':'e FOR IS!hZIRESS. FOR Oft:OU$ItESS. ER ;TR TC;r11D tlY£hll. FON C=i k TIPATION. FON !ALLOW $MN. FOR THECCMPLEXION (U---rrvr. NZ: 4 V.. ... t i(L.Ar:,r tt. Pared Yegt)tr_rile./hsr..r(T+.G sagrra URI?. SICK HEADACHE. AN UIIUENT CASE. ing loudly in want of money. a .ler sent his son to collect a all bill which had just bcccauc (Inc •nt a neighbor. rriving at the debtor's house, the y asked that it might he paid at 0. Ile was told that it was not to convenient just then, but if he ( led in a few days he could have This !arrangement did not suit. the boy, so he requested again, wi more earnestness than befor the account aright be Its ,. who said, sonteWitas ...._ "You need not be fi.ight.eni t, 111103a not going to run away at present. . "I don't suppose you are," said tho boy, without moving a step, "but my father is, and he wants the money before he starts." • AN ANCIENT OFFICE. The oldest office under the Crown is that of Lord high Steward, which was in existence before the time of Edward the Confessor; in- deed, nom;' authorities say that it was instituted by (Ma in 757. For a long period this official was sec- ond only to the King. and the olli- ce was for sumo time hereditary in ow lc ur od? ce you go you hear the same d. that there is nothing so neglected cohl1 w that a neglected cold will tonic llronchitia, Pneumonia, (Catarrh and the most deadly "W'hito Plague," Consumption. life history would read dilteteat rst appearance of a cough, it -(1 with Wood's rway Syrup fol cough and cold medicine hose very pine principles the pine woods so valuable in 1of lung affections, with this are Wild Cherry the seething, healing and es. properties of other pectoral rks. , Colds, Breech:Cis, Pain in Asthma, Croups 1Viote ping oorsen ;ss or any atfsctiou of the or Lungs. Yon will find a sure Dr. Wood's Norwsy Pine Syrup. O. N. Loonier, Berwick, Intl., • "I hive used 1)r. W'ood's Norway yrup for coughs and c olds, aml have found it to give instant relief. 1 mruended it to nae of my neigh - she was more that pleseied with ta OP ood's Norway Pine Syrup 25 eta. le at all dialer;:. I'm up in yellow . ami throe pine trees the trade Refuse s'thsti1UteS. There is only way line byrup and CAL 'tae u s. R COMPLAINT. t is the terms., gland in the bMly; its 0 (a:C from the bt,x>,1 the properties oro bite. When tl.e liver is torpid aced it enni et furniiil bile to the bowels, m to tx•rome le eine amt costive. The • fc-ting of fulness cr weight hi 0. and 'bootee; pains in tee same t between the shoulder.. et ;lowness and eye., b wtls irregular. coated taste in die n.orning.etc. IaTR;'Sa PRINCIPLE OF REVOLT No Man Should be Allowed to Rob Ls of Our Just Rights. Skin for skin. yea, all that a man hath will he give for his life. -,lob. ii., 4. The audacious highwayman who, pistol in hand, confronts you with the grim alternative, "Your money or your life " knows that you will surrender the former, which he in- finitely prefer::. instead of the latter, andgrateful you feel •r c o. to hinte u nln at .a t 1 f. fur the privilege of choice. The equally (audacious political plotter knows that h(• can oppress and de- fraud a patient public for a very long period. because tho people, easy-going, (hill of - vision and short of memory also scour to be grateful that the elan in power leaves thorn at least in possession of life. The sinner who by repeated trans- gression is trade at times to feel the eternal bat. of suffering which thud has placed upon sin• will offend again ant' again, conlident of his ability to stop just short of (hat point of punishment a -hereat his life is forfeit.. The highwaymen's vie - tint, the politician's dupe, the per- sistent Sinner evidently behove in the word which the good book con- tains. "Skin for skin; all that a man hath will he give for his life." Our surprise, however, nt fielding a biblical adage made the ruling creed of such poor specimens of bu- tnanuy will be on. t. lessened if we look u) (ho passage !quoted and find it the tier clown ash an ut- terance 1 none other than 'Al AN HIMSELF, inn ctive enemy of hor of -foil patienco nd linen - the evil s\ "All all1W nv a e a man iguth will .Jie give tar his life." This is simply a satanic sneer. It Is not true The .Ietvieh law pre- scribed that a elan should rather surrender his life than transgress the second, sixth and seventh comtnand- ments, and multitudes have headed it. The unwritten law of the Chris- tian martyrs, too, dictated the same defiance of wrong clothed with pow- er and demanding allegiance; while the annals of religious tyranny are red with the blood of those good wren and saintly women who .offered denth rather than be talo to the principles of their honest faith. '\'herr have been and there aro those who will surrender a!1 they prize to prolong their. life. 1 Even we of this practical and :in - poetic ago at times have an inkling that there must and shall be more than the baro enjoyment Of life in our earthly existence. To allow ')ursel•es to be crowded to the wall and unrighleously deprived of what is our due is not 0.ily to place a p1eu.iuia upon robb •ry and violence, but needlessly to take the sunshine from our days. Laver and again the people revolt against such tyranny when it is on a communal scale, and then there cones a bitter clay -alas! of the tithes too short -for the op- pressor. ! Should we not carry this principle of revolt into our individual lives and there slake a stanch and de- termined stand for personal rights and individual justice when we aro (ouscious that they are being with- held? To ten)puries Willi dishonor is to spare it, and we are ourselves the guilty ones. too, if we supinely si.bntit to wrong and give "all that 0 man hall" FOR OUR BARE LIEF:. :. We want fairness in our lives; we want the "beauty of holiness" and justice; we want a share of happi- ness; Wo want. n portion of the en- joyments that life affords, spiritual !and Material, and no man or body of then should be allowed to rob 118 of them, depending upon our cal- lousness. The similar thing holds true in the moral world. Weak and fallible as we all are, let us be warned against pushing the margin of safety near to the p . •hnuent line. "Sin," ,aid the rabbis, "is at forst as slender as n spider's web, lout it grows; it grows ta the caliber of a wagon rope," and hefoi•e we know it we aro dragged across the danger limit by the whilene. gossamer. itnnlunity frota sharp punishment and satisfac- tion that we aro at Ienst left with our lives are poor cubstitutes for an unlarniehed conscience and ab- sence of Merited self-reproach. •Satan night rule a world upon the principle the poet makes him enun- ciate. but what a troublous, tor- mented anti (iieaetrous world it. would be. Cod has appointed other fundamentals for the governance of the world we are in; they aro that we shall "do juetico, love kindness and walk humbly with Clod." And basing upon these, pen may yet make the; life a very hap:)y one indeed for all if they but sincerely try. THE S. S. LESSON rho when thecast.y first Ashdo(lites-Thr people cf Ashdod and vicinity. Ashited was the strong- est of the ancient Philistine cities, and lay almost directly west of -lee- 'melon near the shore of the Medi- terranean Sea. Thus the n••i.;hboring nations on (-very side of the little Jewish colony united against it in its efforts to re- 1,iSSON WORi1 STUDIES. establish itself and rebuild the walls Note -'!'hese Word Studies are based of its capital city. 'Hutt tribes el: tributory to the sante king shnuf•I on the Revised \ ersion. , I thus be at enmity and war with one Introductory Nota -After the. time (Mother is quite in harmony with 1'ie of fasting and prayer referred to in actual conditions then existing, es - our lesson for November 10 Ndr •- peeially on tho frontier of the great miuh, the king's cupbearer, laid toe Persian empire. platter of his deepest concern, name- 0. But wo mode our prayer un'•) ly, the desolate condition of Jerus•t-I our Cod -Nehemiah is himself relat- letn, before Ring Artaxerxes and re• ing the story, and the pronoun refer:( ceivo(I permission from hila to go in to the Jewish colony of which he person to .Jerusalem for a period of was now the governor. years to rebuild the city and itc ! 10. And Judah said -Tho orae wa':s. Tho king also gave to :Celle- "Judah" here refers to the whole :lull letters addressed to the gayer Jewish conununity, which, through noes of the provinces through tt•hi:h, the elders and representative men, he was to pass. together with an es- i communicated with Nehemiah. ('ort of horsemen and foot. soldiers, Bearers of burdens -Referring pro - to insure his safe and unhinder(••1bably to the whole working class of journey. while a letter to Asaph.; citizens. "keeper of the king's forest," securest Rubbish-Debila from tljc walls for him the necessary building met- which had been permitted to fall Iwo nein! for "beams for the gates of the: decay and to crumble: also, probably castle which appertaineth to the; referring to the accumulation of rub - house, and (or the wall of the city, 1 bish in the unkept streets and open and for a private dwelling for hitt-• places of the city. self (comp. Neh. 2. 8). Arriving at! The whole of this verse must be Jerusalem, Nehemiah first made a taken together with the nett. It. 14 secret inspection of the condition Of iutcnded to point out thatintertal affairs and examined the walls. '1'h'a obstacles as well as external hin•l- he called together the nobles are; rances wort encountered in tho at - priests and elders and encouraged tempt to carry out thi, work. 'The them to undertake the rebuilding of people themselves %fere tired out duo the walls and the renovation of the discourng(d. entire city. No sooner was the work 11. Our adversaries said -Compare begun than neighboring tribes units. this verse with verse 1(t. which ro• against the Jews to hinder the utl- curds what. ".Judith said." 'i'he sec- t Intuking. Their attitude itt first ret plotting of the enemies and their w•os ono of scorn and conteuq)1. hit plan of general attack upon the city, as the work progressed and npprosch- added to the discouragement of the ed its successfut completion their p(.,yrle themselves, incresed the di111- • contempt was changed to interne culties which Nehemiah found it tit• - jealousy, hatred. and active 011110(.' cess(u•y to overcome. lion. Who these enemies were and 12. The Jews that dwelt l)y them - Scattered both ideate acid fared ies lit ing far from the city in the terri- tory of one or the other of these en- emies. They said unto us -'flint is, those) nt Jerusalem. Ifo app.,lrs to baro scattered Jews front all places said been nn officer of his rank in Samar- unto Nehemiah and those with him. in. which was 'Ilio n province of the 1'e mustreturn unto tis -Many of Persian empire. the able-bodied men of these scene... '1'014011 -The leader of the Atlnnoo•- ed families had been sutnnoned tr •i in their opposition to the Jeeps ' Jerusalem to nl(1 in building the at 1 row I m walls in their Absence fr m h entered Cannan from INTERNATIONAL LESSON, DEC_ 3rd. Lesson X. Nehemiah Rebuilds the Walls of Jerusalem. Golden Text, Matt. 26.41. how Nehemiah prepared his people for their intended attack on the cit) Is told in our lesson !ext. \'erse 7. Mnnballat-The chief op - pellet)! of Ncheminh in all his wore , C . a t•• H 01'le Arabians -it is not certain whether the defenseless members of their font- terse, as in this country. Wee w•' s were harn.9ed h rho tribes referred to were thoRer y the enemies u1 'There Are more telephones in pro - 1;1% eoing 11. tin. 8,400, .•f l'.tie.,tIna in , whose cuontry they dwelt nu(1tthn port ton to the pepulat ion than in the desert or the smaller colony ev• looked with disfavor u;lon the. re any other city in the world. s 15. Our enemies heard that It was known unto us -The pronoun rt•fe: s to the secret plan for their combined attack upon the city. Of this the Jews had been informed. Cod had brought their counsel to nought -Through the means employed by Ncheatiuh. We returned all of us to the wall -- This statement implies what is not explicity mentioned, namely, that th • work had been suspi•adc.l in anticipa- tion of nn immediate !Mack. 1(i. This and the remaining verses of the lesson are devoted to an ex• planation of the standing order o! defense maintained after the it ••- diute danger of an attack was over. The rulers were behind-Superire tending the !fork of building anal ready to direct the defense in the case of an attack. '20. Our (iod will fight for us -Ne- hemiah was well aware of the infer- ior numbers at his command with which to resist a determined onset of the combined enemy. llo knew also that the Jews were conscious of their own weakness. Their only hope was in Jehovah, in whom Nehemiah himself explicitly trusted for assis- tance. IIe seeks to inspire the sante !lust in Jehovah and hope of victory in the hearts of the people. AFRICAN MONARCH. The Little King of Uganda is an August Person. The king of Uganda, in British East Africa, rejoices or grieves in the somewhat picklish and chow•- chowy name of Dandi Chun. This august sovereign -may hie tribe in- ce-ease!-is now "y•)ine on" eight. '1'o benefit a colored sceptre bearer ho has a highly colored court. Ile sits on a throne of scarlet, and pro- bably the court carpenters have made it a world too long for his chubby little legs. Ilnder the Brit- ish protectorate folks have to be economical in Uganda, and a king must grow up to his throne, and can't have a custom made one every time he has growing pains. We can remember when a king of Uganda was every inch a king, no matter how few his inches. So sacred, so supra purple was he that the re- mains -mains of his food had to be buried lest its .aeredness strike dead some unhappy subject.. The British have changed all that. Daudi-we wich we had n photograph of hien-ilaudi sits on his scarlet throne, a leopard skin under his baro feet, a toy gun in his hands.. Probably not a hit more absurd and many times more "sympathetic" in the eyes of the heavenly powers than many a whits ruling czar or kaiser that has been, is, or shall be. MINING FOR A METEOR. Arkansas Venture That Promises Great Wealth. A remarkable !mining project is be- ing o-ing carried out near 1)iabolo canon in Arkansas by the Standard tree Company of New York. '1.11e obi., t. of the company is to unearth and smelt a gigantic meteor which lies buried there. '\'his meteor probably I struck the earth ninny ages ago. The Indians who hiller it that region have no legend of the wonderful i event. Thu location of the meteor is; marked by a hole in the earth three -1 fourths of a utile long and six lune I tired feet sleep. The surrounditl;, country for a radius of several mils:, is covered by 4he fragments of tlii.; heavenly visitor. They have furnish- ed much interesting material fur in-' vestigations for mineralogists. Souse' of the fragments weighed many tons+ and brought rich returns of silver, gold and lend when shipped to the smelter. All of the fra„Ment it 1 hat have been analyzed run high in lead, silver and gold. 'Ibis remarkable mineral in MIS acquired more than a year ago by the Standard Iron Company which began the work to locate the meteor by means of a shaft which it is sinking from the bottom of the great hole. 'l'ltis shaft has reached a depth of more than four hundred geed, or more then on3 thousand feet from the original earth's surface. 'The size of the met- eor has been carefully calculated by scientific experts, who take us toasts the size of the holo which It made in the earth. It is estimated that the gold, silver and lead which the meteor contains will amountto $18,000,000. It is believed, that the shaft will strike the nteteur at about 12,000 feet. • IN SAWN. Everybody trusts you, and you are expected to trust everybody. You get a bill every (lay at. the hotel. Thin permits you to correct any Mistakes at. once. Women shine your shoes, shave you, cut your hair, even give you it bath' unless you relict. I'olicenlen salute the street car conductors, and are saluted by them. A servant who brings you some- thing says, "So good." You say, "'End:" (thanks). Yon take off your hat when you enter n shop and return (ho shop - man's low bow. Although drinking is conlnlon, one seldom Sce9 a drunken than. 'Pips are everywhere given, but they are small. 'reit ore (2cents) is the ordinary tilt to a cabman or purler. A lady alwnys waits for a gentle• man to speak, instead of the re- lnblt bed by tiarr;on in Namnrin of • builQing .•f the walls of Jerusalem. i 1 Ire request, st t e't 9 Aa P� ter Ile Q.wulatlon in the .year e1 . 1 c em to be for a return PILLS t an -t ea y to take. do net grips, ir.ker.. refer fs.ii;n their effects. and L sa:e at and gait keel Mandy for r d.orders cf the 11 cr. cents. or 5 bottles for 81.00, filed direct un re eipt of ho T. Mi.t'lrn Co., Litnited, 1w 11. l'. 'Their nllir.nce o oh the Saun- ' bottle of these able-bodied incn to do- nr;inns under Siiulutllat would seven ca(I their own homes and families. to indicate that the latter rather 13. '111erefort'-eThis sent('nce refers. Conn the former are referred to. not Io the prceding term( n►c•rely, An,monite•s-1'11e Ammonit s were but to the entire preceding pnsonge. the inhnhitunts of the country jus., including versos 7-12. it is in view cart of the Jordon between the rieery of the allele 'situation that. Nehemiah .'trnon on the 14001 t and .1abhok on snakes the further provision for the the Borth. South of their territory defense mete bitted. floe!! the llunhiThe people After their families-tirouping the ferret! to herr wer.' 1 he descendants defenders by remitters rind clans. of the ancient Atnumonites, who op 11. I Ioukeel-'That is, inspected the flrosed the progress of the Israelites, means of defense when completed! King Oscar of Sweden is n poet of no mean order, and his sonnets have been translated into most of the languages of Europe. lin is an accomplished musician, too. his nau- tical souge, met to his own ankle being very popular in the Swedish navy. lift hos written histori,8 arid drmmn9, Iran-lated rlu9alem, and Is the author of some hymns which en- joy the highest. popularity. Fin illy, as a tenor flinger he is always wel- COtpo at concerts, (. DAINTY DISHES. L'ritter Ilattcr.-Ileal an egg wile - out separating the tthite anti yore. Add half u cup of milk ie x) stir gradually into three-fourths a cup of flour silted with one-fourth (t tea- spoon of salt. Lel stand an hour hu- foro using. Potato Cako.-Mix together on.t pint hot mashed potatoes, one spoon salt, salt, one tablesi.00n butte, , two tablespoons milk errough to roll out like pasta Cut in squares and cook on greased pans in oven. 'This can be prepared after noon meal Sect just before tea time can bo put in oven. I'op Overs. -Ono cup sifted floe three-rlunrters cup milk, ono -quartet - teaspoon salt. !Blend flour, salt, and milk to a smooth paste. Break in egg and beat for five minutes with an egg beater. Pour into butter.,d dishes and bake in hot oven. Marmalado Tar!.-I,iuo a pie -plate with pastry. Fill with peach or ap- ple marmalade. Cover the top with rings cut from pared and cored apples, sprinkle with lemon juice and dredge lightly with sugar. Buie about half an hour. Serve hot, plain; but for a company uish, serve with whipped cream or ice creast. Cake with Fruit billing. -Make a layer cake by any {•referred recipe for white cake. For the filling boil nuc pound of sugar with (t half cup of boiling stater until it will shin a thread. l'our slowly on to the white of two eggs beaten stiff. Beat for :t few moments, then add one-half CuO of shredded citron, one-half cup of blanched and chopped almonds. Stir the fruit into the icing gradually and beat until cold. Spread between the layers of the cake. Graham (!riddle Cakes. -At noon dissolve one yeast cake in w-arnl Wa- ter. At night odd one level ten - spoonful of salt, two cups of graham flour and water to make a batter. In the morning add one level tea- spoonful of soda dissolved in warm water. Save one cup of batter to bo used each night in place of yeast cake. Quick lliscuits.-Ono quart of flour, two heaping tablespoonfuls of lard, two cups of sweet -it you can get It --new milk, one teaspoonful of soda, two teaspoonfuls of cre(un of tartar, ono saltspooeful of salt. Rub the soda and cream of tartar into the flour and sift all together before they, re tt t• n e , then put in the salt an 1 next the lard, rubbed into the pre- pared flour quickly- and lightly; last- ly, pour in the milk. Work out the (lough rapidly, kneading with as fee • strokes ns pOssiblc. If properly pre pared, the dough will have a rough surface and the biscuit be (laky. '1'11.. dough should also be very soft. It the flour stiffens it tod ►much, a(1I more ►Wilk. itoll out lightly, cut into cakes at least half an inch thick and bake in a quick oven. Imitation Maple Syrup. -Boil oe • dozes clean corn cubs in !!rater enough to cover for th►•co hours. ,tilt- ing more !water as it boils away. Then strain the water and rot I enough sugar to make a syrup. L: e;, it just boil. Light brown sugar is best, as it floes not granulate as readily as coarser grained sugar. Custard Pie --Line a pie pan with, rich crust. ikat. two eggs slightly; add a pinch of salt. three heaping tablespoonfuls of segue and ono and one-half cups of milk. Flavor, pour, into the crust and bake in a slow 00(00). Chocolate Ietng.-One cup of sugar, four tablespoonfuls of unsweetened chocolate. Stir and boil until a lit-• flu dropped in cold water can ba gathered up into a ball. Stir until slightly cooled, then spread over the cake. EGGLESS IIECIPES. No. 1 -Water ,\tufl!ns-One pint of flour, one tablespoonful of lard, one tablespoonful of butter, one salt - spoonful of soda, one Salt spoonful of salt, ono tablespoonful of verist, and ns much !!rater (milk ware)) as will make a stiff batter. Work the short- ening well into the flour, then add the water -Inst of all. the yeast.. • \Then well risen, stir, drop from a spoon, and bake. No. 2 -Doughnuts. -'Take one quart of flour and three teaspoonfuls of baking powder, and sift together; piece of butter sive of un egg, utte cup of sugar, one pint of milk, a lit. tls nutmeg, one dessertspoonful of cornstarch, !nixed in the milk. Rub tho butter in the flour and powder, put in other ingredients, mix to a soft dough, toll more flour if needed, roll one -hall inch thick, fry in hot lard to a (Ielieat° brown, No. 8-Crentn Griddle Cakes. -One quart of flour, two tablespoonfuls "1 baking powder, one teaspoonful (,f mode, salt end /:our to make a bat- ter. No. 4 -Splen Cake. -One cup of su- gar, one-half cup of butter, one-ha.f cup (rt molasses, and one scant tea- spoonful each of cinnatnun, allspice,' cloths and towels. If these can be dried in the uir it is a great udvuu- tage. 'Po remove a blot of ink ora figure from accounts, use a pitee of tiw• sand -paper pressed tightly over the forefinger. Rub this on the spot 1'11 completely erased. Salt for table use should bo dried, and when cull mixed with a little cornflour. If the salt is nut per- fectly cold before being put in the cellar it is apt to coke together in lumps. Does starch rot clothes? Yes, if it is left on them Very long. It is al- ways advisable, if clothes are to be kept some time unused, to was!) them and put them away rou._;l1 (trityl. Washing dish -clothes without sea•). -Pour some boiling water on a bag of bran and then strain; add to the water equalu al parts 1f powdered alma and powdered chalk. (toil the dirt,/ 4ish-cloths in this, rinse well, and bleach on the grass. 1When restlees at !tight and sleep- less, u loot salt bath just before re• tiring will bo most soothing and con- ducive to sound slumber. Wax candles become yellow a11(1 dirty by exposure to the air; thet way be cleaned by being rubbed with a flannel dipped in methylated spirits. • Clean the nickel -plate of stoves with sole, and amenenia in pow•(Icr, using a moist woollen cloth, and pol- ishing it with a le(ither. Water marks on furniture are often white and unsightly; apply unseal oil and turpentine, in equal parts, rub with a soft rag, and then wipe off the mixture with a clean duster. Yinegur will remove the disagree- able odor of paraffin from earthen and tin ware. 1)ip a rug into vin) - gar and scour the vessel with it. Potatoes should not bo eaten by those who are disposed to get stout, and those who sutler frons liver trou- bles should give thein up entirely. When boiling salt meat or pork, allow twenty minutes to each pound. Salt nx'nt should always be put on in col(! water. For fish, allow tai ►minutes 1.0 tho pound, and when thick tett initiates over. 1Vhen cutting a tin loaf for toa•tt it is best to commence taking slices off .the bottom of the loaf instead of at the ends. What is left over after the toast is done is the top, which is useful for table or breadcrunbs. To remove stains from inahunguny. -'11)0 following recipe was sent m) by a correspondent who says it is well worth a triol. Blake a solution of a little oxalic acid and water, and, with a cork dipped into it, rub the discolored parts until the stale disappears. Then wash the wool well with water; dry and polish as usual. (loose dripping should be clarified three tittles in boiling water and when cold scraped free from any kind of sediment. This will be found , very useful for rubbing on to the chest its case of Croup, severe Coughs and may also be useful in cookin;, Ment for savory stew, or curry Mari be fried in it little goose dripping. Clean your white felt hat as fol- lows: itrush the surface quite free of (lust, get some powdered magnesia, and, with some water, make it into a stiff paste. 11'ith n small brush smear the whole hat with this paste. Dry thoroughly and brush off Ha. powder with a clean clothes brush. If necessary, repeat the process once or twice, hats cleaned in this way will look as good as new. HINTS ON BOILING. Boiled Inerts (except for soup and boiled ham) should be plunged into boiling water to soar the outside ant: keep the juices in. After it begins to boil it should cook very gently f. 1- several hours. hive hours Is none • too long for n Targe piece of corned beef, three hours for stewed beef or • old fowl, from three to fuer hours for stewed (so-called) Iamb, from: four to five hours for an old fowl. boiled whole• and for boiled ham. Ilatn should bo covered with cold water and brought to boil, to draw out sono of the salt and smoke. Then pour off the water and cover with ladling; add spices and her!es, If desired, and boll gently. dant or whole fowl should enol in the water in which it is bolted, to le juicy, and when cold, if wrapped in a cloth wrung out of cold water will not get herd. Meat for soups should be covered with cold water and brought to boiling very slowly to draw out the juices. '\'hen it. should boil very slowly several hours. Halt should not be added to treats until they have boiled to within nn hour of serving time (stews mostly), as 1t toughens the pleat if put in at first. Pot. roasts, should be browned In a kettle nn top of stove on all side(; then add two or three tablespoonfuls of water -just enough to "start" it; cover closely and set where it will cook very gently five or six hours. '\'urn often; season, and, if fleece -tart, odd a very little water from time 1u time. The water should not be e, !.!- ed for gravy until the treat. ie a'1 (Ione. \'egetnbles should always be pot on to buil in plenty of boili(14 water, and it "underground vegeta- ble," no salt in the water when bail- ed plain. But in swipe and slows, boiled dinners, etc., nitnys season before petting iri vegetables. cloves, and a little nutmeg; heat well together, then add ono cup of sour milk, with one teaspoonful of soda stirred in until it Is (pule (Homy. Flour enough to stake it quite stiff, and one cup nt raisit(n, floured. Bake slowiy and ice when cool. N n u-1 nisi ncupful t n (' ka e. -Oto each of sugar, sour Milk, and cho,)- ped and seeded raisins; leo of flour, one-half cupful of butter, one tea- spoonful of cinnatnun, oneuiuorter of cloves. one-half grated nutmeg. ituk) butter and sugar until creamy, th, add other things. ilake in a mode -- ate oven. iiiNTS FOR 'rill: doll\:. Salt. shnnld be added to n1l water for boiling fresh vegetnl.lns; a piece 01 stela the size of it pen Should be add- ed to a Targe panful of boiling w ater. After washing up dishes do not for- get to wash out, rinse, and tlr(s drk. s« K r GrJ Tonic'` - " Pst•i lase" is a is tonic. It contains me elements not found in an P" -.eat medicines. "l's is a regular practicing ph formula. A tonic for weal for inen of business worrier tired mother, the pale. girl. Young girls just buds womanhood ; elderly peon feel that weakness due to find it a remedy they ca without. It restores vital ates rich, new blood, rem impurities, strengthens the If you need a trial ask drill PSYC)I►NE." GREATEST OF ALL T CHI (PRONOUNCED SI=K ALL DRUGGISTS -ONE DOLLAR -I DR T. A. SLOCUM, U 171 King It, W. Toront, DYSPEP AND STOMACH DIS01 MAY BE QUICKLY PERMANENTLY CUR BURDO BL00 BITTEI Mr. P. A. Labelle, Maniwaki,, as follows:" I desire to thank derful cure. Burdock Blood Hi Three years ago I bad a very Dyspepsia. i trimd five of the. could find but they could do I was advised by a friend Blood Bitters and to my great taking two bottles. I was so pe that 1 have not had a sign of i I cannot praise it too bigh!y to my experience It i+ the best I ing for hie like D.D.D. Don't accept a substitute Bitters. 'Dare is nothing "i LONG I:\'ITV 01•• The familiar s'ittont found in Egyptian ' have been known to : produce their khat t once more called !' 1'rof. M. it. Brannon that De Cnndollo careful experiments,- few seeds retain God 10 or 15 years, and 30 years 13 1Ile limit` the most vigurotl.•( Brannon adds that fay eases, report sprouted, are be1i.• botanists to hav0 1 for purposes of der WEAK I there TIRED They WOMENgn They have a dizzy se the heart palpitates; and nervous, weak the lightest household day seem to be a drag MILBURN' AND NER • are the very remedy tied oat, su ; ly wo them the Lle sill 9 of g• They give mound, restf the nerve:o, strengthen make rich hhssl. Mrs. Portage la I'rtirie, Man., troubled with shortness of talion of the heart and got four boxer of �tilhu - Nerve Pills, an(' niter ta completely cured. Price 50 cents per bole for $1.25, all (healers ort burn Co.. Limited, Toronto N.K.' .114s. WcaK, Nervous, Diseased Thousands of TeentenS 11rr are an-1t:at±r 'meet Ina preen- tt.roagh early lndisc..tior.el and 1.1t •r cc,•e4-. s. Sc.f a':aacandCcustitut!• Di set -.en have ruined :utd wrecked t: a life of many a promising punt/ me .e) any of the knowing 'yntp+amt: Nervous and Despondent; fired 1n t.o Art, Ilion; Memory Poor; Ealy Fatigued; excitable and irritaSI•; i'. tat .• eao thoL�c. D .• nt p n Itlnlc11e1 More Throats-Ifatr�t oose;Patna 1nithe ar Eye.; LifNeset Dislr:'atful and f. ek of Energ our 7117, Mtg., ! 7reaenro( twill b•ti: i you ap m andsaxaall;. Corsa (3anrwntced or tI \Liss fv ez ac.r. EMS . + 113 -No frames used W0;h•:at Writ!:n Cc • . A 71111PVOt'9 WU1 crf.- �•�,� T. P.T.i(sx:0x hes a Nar "1Ilvoenafarm. Atsalon.1l warn weikr i' -d meephssteatte sexuallz ae1 et• (y 1 ,aid I wad gof+rvtn.n ••Iter ihoe" K1Cor:en Ootd-n :1oci;or," cdi4 ! b bra. Kenoe'y hands. 11.' treed th.• eerel'aa4 rads, he it Alt T. I took 1111 Nen Rr ,T, 4 ; reanar"l ao l wag coml. ru,. 1 of Censnmetion. 1 1: irsRent tile's many patients, al 'their Nc a Method Treat n1 ea:mi a vire:,'\ l:.tity La•1 re CersollelfilkFrssr 6e;k, Frei. Wrlto fa Cantles tlsok fet R Drs. Kennedy S; Kerga n, KIK -K& K&