HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1906-03-08, Page 7{
CenuIne
Carter's
Liver Pills.
est sear Signature of
See Pwfilaslle Wrapper Below.
Very seall end as eep
to tante as sugar.
FOR NEADACNE.
FOR DIZZINESS.
FON uuousNEas.
FOR TORPID LIVEN.
FOR CONSTIPATION.
FON =ALLOW SKIN.
FOR THE COMPLEXION
CARTERS
0>awUa,ra „ULT
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
Every Hour Delayed
IN CURING A COLD
IS DANGEROUS.
You have often heard people say: "Its only
a cold, a trifling cough; ' but tunny a life history
would read different if. on the fir. t appearance
of a cough. it had been remedied with
DR. WOOD'S NOR-
WAY PINE SYRUP.
• It is s pleasent, ante and effectual remedy,
that may be confidently relied upon aa a specific'
for Coughs and Colica of all kinds. Hoarseness,
Bore Throat, Pains in ('heat. Asthma, Bronchitis.
Croup, Whooping Cough, Quinsy, and all /fieo•
Com of the Throat and Lungs.
Mra Stephen E. Strong, Berwick. N 8.,
writes: "I have used ne. Wood's Norway I1ne
Syrup for Asthma. and have found it to be a
grand medicine. always giving quick relief. We
would not be without a bottle of it In the
house."
1)r. Woods Norway Pine Syrup is put up in s
yellow wrapper. "three Pine Trees is the trade
mark and the price 25 cents at all dealers.
Refuse substitutes. Vosua•d Dr. Wood'. sad
gnat i,
SUFFERING WOMEN
who find life a burden. can have health sod
rtrength restored by the use of
Milburn's
Heart and Nerve
Pills.
The present genoratien of women and glrta
have more than their share of misery. With
some it is nervousness and palpitation. with
ethers weak, diary and fsinting spells. while with
ethers there is a general collapse of the system.
Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, tone up the
serves. strengthen the heart and make it beat
'trona and regular. create sew ref blood 'ser-
enades. and impart that sones of buoyancy to
Ibe spirits that is the result of renewed mental
acid physical vigor.
'1 '
writs:
On
lu
e Ont.,
a. D. 0. neeoah
u.
11r
'• For over a year i was troubled with Der.ouse
mess and heart trouble. I decided to give Mil -
►urn's Heart and Nerve Me a trial. and atter
slog five boxes I found f was completely eared.
I always rerteunend them to say friends.'•
Price (.0 cents per box or three boxes for $1.25,
--gig dealers or The T. Milburn Oa.. Limited
Toronto. Ost.
FATHER'S CA1'FCIIISMt.
Little Willie ---Say, pn, what is n re-
mote period?
Pa -A remote period, my son, is the
i•eri.il due at the end of .your moth-
er's remnrks. iterneniber, however, j
am giving you this information in strht
confidence.
"One more quc.stion, pa," began Mlle
Willie.
"Now, see here," finned his pa.
i, Willie hastened t
) ask. .
vhnt
kind of glass are glass eyes made of?
"\\ by--er-looking glass, 1 suppose.
Now go to bed."
MILBURN'S
tAXA-LIVER
PILLS
are aril.], sere and safe, and ate a porkies
regulator of the system.
They gently unlock the secretions, clear
away all effete and waste matter from the
system, and give tone and vitality to the
whole intestinal tract, curing Constipo•
tirert. Sick Headecbe, Bilioueneae, Dyrpep•
eta. Coated Tongue, Fnul Brretl , Jean.
dine, Heartburt.. and 1Veter Brsah. NIr•
R. S. Ogaden Wu..l.t•' k, N.8., •rite]:
"MMv hnebarel anti n.T-cif have uiorl Mil -
burn's Lax. -Liver fill.. for • number of
ye•ro. We think we cannot tlo *about
hent they ere the only tulle we er'•r
1kr ..
t 1'riee Y:'t.•nti tw tike 61(1 !P4 for $1,00.
at ail'l'•eler...r Arr,•• r ori rr-ei ,t of pries.
The I'. elilb'irn l'ax, Landed, I' *routs,
Oni.
NOTES AND COMMENTS
Two directly oposite agencies are e1
work upon the English speech, one ex-
cited upon its furor, one upon its sub-
stance. The 1u•.1 is the movement to
secure a system of spelling which shell
more adequately represtent the sound tit
words, the second i3 a tendency to adapt
the sound of the word 10 the spelling
end to reduce idiomatic expressions to
the dead level of logic
The spelling reform movement re-
sponds to an elm..st universal feeling
that the spelling of English is needlessly
cumbersome, Mutt it makes the way • t
the child and the foreigner too hard, and
that it causes a waste of time. Yet the
feeling is held back from any great en
ft ctiveness by the coexistent converse-
Itsm of the educated mind. The power
of youthful memories is such that the
sight of a word spelled differently from
the way one has been uccustomed to
Groot childhood is n distinct shock. The
movement is extensive, but not strong.
Indeed it seems now to bo on the de-
cline, practically, however many theo-
retical adherents it may I-.tve gained.
The British reading public have not
taken kindly to il, and the better Ameri-
can publishing houses have dropped
u'nny of the reformed 'spellings which
have for years distinguished American
usage. There is a stronger realization
of the unity of the reading world.
Ori the ot _.and, the pronunciation
3f English words in America is drift-
ing farther from the traditional slnnd-
etrd. The lenge number of immigrants
from European countries is partly re-
sponsible for this, but the ultimate re-
sponsibility rests upon the schools. if
it large number of teachers come from
Fumes where English correctly spoken
is not the home language, and if their
vocabulary has been gained lergely from
reading. without any consciousness of
the pitfalls that lurk for them when they
transmute the visible sign into tate au-
-
word, it is also true that the in•
t;eritor•s of English speech ton often dis-
trust the authority of their own know-
ledge, when challenged. Tennyson
speaks of this strange abdication of
n.emory at the moment when it should
assert its sovereignly:
As when we dwell upon a word we
know,
repeating, till the word v.e know so
well
Becomes a wonder, ant we know -lot
why -
So the child that has always pronounce
ed "forehead" correctly till she learns
to spell, in awe of the spelling painhilly
accustoms herself to say "for heed." The
tyranny of print stakes the child f e-
vcrely formal with such words as "boat-
swain" and "forecastle." There is an
awkward hiatus in such a combination
as "not at ell," as the slaves of formal-
ism pronounce it, none in the natural
utterance of the words. The sante mis-
taken zeal corrupts, instead of improv-
ing, many phrases. The descendant of
English speaking people says uncon-
sciously "Hadn't you better?" until un-
wholesome brooding over the phrase,
hided by suggestions from a half bred
teacher, substitutes the artificial "Would
you riot better?"
Too many students of the language
go on the principle that whatever is
wrong. Too many of there teach others
so The language loses its spontaneous
grace and becomes a lifeless thing. Un -
spelling becomes phonetic, and that
day seems fur off, spelling [Must not rule
pronunciation. The phrases which na-
lirally rise to the lips of those of Eng-
lish blood are not to be too rigidly con-
trolled by those ignorant of the origin
and history of the spoken language.
Etymology has no standing in court
sgainsl usage. if English is nut to be
as dead as Julius Cresar and his Latin
sl.e eh. it must remain n mother tongue,
the language of mother and child, not
a thing of ink and paper only.
NO TICKET.
"i shall have to ask you for a ticket
ma'am," insisted a con-
ductor,
-
n
� that boy, lot 1h
ductor, speaking to a quiet -looking wo-
man seated beside a boy on a train.
"i guess not," :she replied with decis-
ion.
"Ilk's too nh1 to travel free. Ile occu•
Lies n whole sent, and the ear's crowd -
tel. There are people standing."
"I've never paid for him yet." the wo-
men retorted.
"You've got to begin it sorne time,"
persisted the conductor.
"Not this trip, any'wny.'
"You'll pay for that boy, ma'am, cr
I'll stop the train and put hitrt off."
"All
u himt( you
right, put o ft think
deal's the way to gel anything out cf
me."
"You ought to know wliat the notes of
this road are. mann. ilow old is that
toy?'
I don't know. 1 never saw him be-
fore."
Second lo duellist, who. on renfront•
'ng his ads ersery, has suddenly grown
Nilo. and is only just prevented from
falling)- -"Take courage. Oran. 1 know
vour opponent Is going to fire in the
Duelliet--"That's just what makes
me afraid. Iles such n notoriously bad
shot."
The proprietor of an hotel, hearing of
the whereabouts of a guest who had de -
crimped from his establishment without
going through the formelity of paying
bill. sent him n note: "Mr.
(tear Sir,- -Will yen send amo•int of your
till and nl.ligef" To which the delin-
quent replied "The Amount is $40 --
1 o-'1 a respectfully."
THE FATHER'S CARE
Like All Things Deep and Sublime His
Love Passes Comprehensisn.
like as a father patent his children
so the Lord pihcth them that fear hien.
-Nide)
Formol creeds have little 10 say of the
tetter in the overruling cure of the All
Father. Perhaps the belief is so nearly
universal as hi be without the range of
debate so des'. to creed makers. Yet at
all times, in all lands, ratan, tvheteher
the savage, the oriental mystic, or the
cool header Christian. in various ways
dill %•ith head/
phrases, has recog-
r.ized 'the hand that, from behind the
scenes, touched his affairs and often
seemed to order his life. Wheteher it le
the hand of force or of friend, the fact
has been felt.
True. the laziest man Is apt to have
the readiest sense in the intention of
Providence to care for him, to send hint
bread well buttered; the foolish mid
thoughtless depend on heaven to do
their thinking, and ninny court bank-
ruptcy while praying for solvency. But
the improvidence of Irian does not dis-
prove the providence of God. So far
ITnut encouraging sloth and recklessness
this truth provokes to progress by the
assurance of the corporation of infinite
powers with
OIJlt BEST ENDEAVORS.
11 is a thought we cattltot escape; the
all wise must be the all loving. The
spirit rat the centre of all must embrace
al; within tete circle of his love; and that
love will not lie quiescent, helpless
when its objects are in distress, in per
piexity, or need, when it Wright succor,
save, or suggest the way of success. If
there is It heart of love there is a hand
cf help.
Yet it seems too greet n thought. \Vhnt
ere we but duet on the wheels on the
universe. Often do our fainting hearts
question whether there be any, outside
our own little circle. who caro whether
WE suffer. whether we succeed. Can it
be that the petty affairs of a life That
*:asses like the hoar frost before the
morning sun can even interest, still less
call forth Our aid, of the one In tVI►om
Svc ell live and stove and have our be-
ing?
Despite all questionings men will ever
go .on praying to that one; they vill
turn to tin ear That hears, they will t ek
a heart that feels, and look for le 1s
reached out in lours of necessity. "n v
p.crience indorses their foltit.
Ott can look back and see where des-
tiny has seemed to breathe upon them;
their old plans wilted, end new ones,
new ways sprung up, bearing other and
fairer flowers than they had ever dream-
ed; a mighty, mysterious power had in-
tcrevened.
went does it all mean? That we are
tut puppets in these strange unseen
hands; that we can neither will nor
Mork for ourseh es? No; it but means
what poets sang long ago when,
st eking after that v rich far transcends
all thought and all imagery, they cried.
"Surely thou art our father." That
which was beet in them. the holy [1113
or fatherhood became a mirror in which
THEY SA\V THF; 1'IFINITE
From the source of all life hurnunity
has learned the great lessons of family
care and provision. All that is good :n
our families is true of this great family
of all mankind. '1'1te great purpose cf
this family, as of all fnnnitiec, Le the de-
velopment of the highest. fullest lite in
Its members. Fatherhood regards the
provision of food, clothing and shelter
hub as incidental to the great purpoies
of training the children
This Is the purpose of the father '1
us alt, to develop the hest in us. When
our weak hearts cry for ease. for rest,
for pleasures, he sends the task, the sor-
row, the loss. \\']len we think all lire's
lessons well learned he sends us up to
higher grades with hander tusks. Yet
ever over all is the pitying, compitsston-
etc yearning of a father's heart that
never forgets the weakness of the child.
Wisely the father's love seems to hide
its working. All the child can do is to
Lend every effort to do his best, to work
cut the father's plan so far ns he knows
it, to know, through all, that God is
good. 'Then. when the child grows to
the man. the men toward the divine.
the things that seemed strange are made
plain in the light of the father's fere.
HENRY F. COPE.
THE S. S. LESSON
IN7'ERN,ITION t1. LEsSON,
\1.11tell 11.
Lesson X. The 'Tongue and the Temper.
Guido Text, Psa. 111. 3.
LESSON WORD STUDIES.
Note. -The text of the Revised Version
Is used as a basis for these Wort
Studies.
"I say unto you." -Perhaps the most
pronouitced characteristic of the teach-
ing of Jesus was the authority with
which he spoke. Ills was no borrowed
philosophy of life. his no conception of
the kingdom of heaven to which he had
fallen heir as a member of his own gen-
eration and nation, his no wisdom gained
from books or hurnnn teachers. His
teaching was his own, and his knowledge
of men and of God he obtained first-
hand; the former. largely at least, from
sympathetic contact with and keen ob-
servation of men; the latter, from the
hidden wellspring of divinity in his na-
ture. In contrasting the fundamental
principles of his teaching with the Old
'Testament law and tradition. as he does
In verses 21.18 of this chapter, and es-
pecially in asserting the superiority and
higher authority of the principles which
he enunciated, Jesus placed himself on
record as one who believed in the pro -
h.
'r ofrevelation. f
gresstvt: cttnractc
old law and the ancient tradition had to
be superseded Py These higher standards
of life and action set by himself and ex-
onlplifled in his own life. \Vhen now
we cnnsidt;r what is implied in this as-
sumption by Jesus of authority superior
not only to that cf all other teachers of
the Jewish nation in his day, but el
authority superior to that of the Old
Testament tow itself, we are confronted
by an alternative from which we cannot
escape. Either Jesus was all the( he
claimed to be, divine Son of God. and
only Revealer of the Father. or he was
self -deceived and a deceiver of others.
Rut the ethical purity of his life and the
ur►naralleled qualify of his teaching, to-
gether with the historical fact of the
great Christian Church, representing the
rich fruitage ot that life and that reach-
ing, make it impueslbl' for any candid
and thoughtful person to accept the
Litter of the two altern,dites.
Verse 33. Ye have heard that it was
said -The e KreutbulkIk of religious teach.
h-
ing among the Jews consisted of oral
traditions and rabbinical infer relations,
p
written Old Testa-
ment
u 1 en
clustering about the
law. 'Thu meaning of the written
law on the points In which Jesus was
about to refer had been distorted by the
amplification and misapplication to
which it was subjected at the hands of
]life oral tradition.
There of old time -The Old Testament
pa Marche.
rche.
Forswear -Swear falsely. summit fa, r•
jury. Special reference to the third coin•
uinndment may have been intended
(romp. also Lev. 19. 12; Num. 30. 2;
Rout. 23. 21).
31. Swear not at all -The Oriental even
of to -day makes constant use of native
In the following verses are mention's)
sante of the things by w Welt the
1'-.•t" in the habil of swearing. Even ' •
div the natives of Pet, stint and adjoin-
ing countries are given to the use 4.1
similar oaths. none of which except the
oath in which the name of God himself
fv beet. tieing •'onsidered binding. 'The
prohibition intended must be understood
OA applying to those frequent rash and
cer''Iess oaths in daily conversation. not
to the solemn usths taken in courts .1
juetiee and which in those days were re-
quired as they are in our of n Irmo.
It • r:se 37 pr0-CTlt:: the pns.11te side of
unr lnr'T- teaching of which we herb
have the it/ lante side.
Neither by tyo heaven One ol the
•
rabbinical sayings was, "As heaven and
earth shall pass away, 80 passel!' away
the oath taken by them." Jesus intended
to point out both that a false oath by
whatever thing taken is we nig because
false, and that the false oath taken by
heaven. by the earth, or by Jerusalem
is, because of the necessarily intimal:
thought association between these an'I
God, n profaning of God's name.
36. By the head -One of the most
common forms of the oath.
37. Yeti, yea; Nay, nay -A straight-
forward yes or no is suflicienl. These
in God's sight are ju,t as sacred and
binding as any form of oath can he. The
stere repetition of the word Is a suffi-
cient empllasis of the promise or refusal
involved In indicate that it has not been
spoken carelessly.
. The evil one--Snlnn, the father of lies.
38. An eye for an eye ---The law !n
Exod. 21. 22-25 exacts "life for life, eye
for eye. tooth for tooth, Land for hand,
foot for fool, burning for burning.
wound for wound. stripe for stripe,"
from the person inflicting an injury or
death upon his fellow. The principle of
equivalent retribution was recognized by
the laws of all ancient peoples. The
scribes, however, falsely inlerproted 1h •
law when they made it an excuse fey
the gratification of personal vengeance,
and deduced from the law Met it was
morally right for individuels thus to
execute revenge.
39. Resist not Min That h evil -There
is a great difference between the reels -
lance which Jesus here prohibit% which
is a resistance against the evil wrongly
brought upon the innocent -ns, for ht•
slm)ce, the suffering and death of Christ,
which he resisted not -and meek sub-
mission to all forms of personal indig-
nity heaped upon one L•y the vulgar and
the wicked, ns is indicated by our Lord's
personal example In resenting the action
of the ofllcer who in the presence of the
high priest struck him Mille on trial
(comp. John 18. 22, 23).
41. Conipel thee to go one mile --The
verb in this sentence is of Perslnn ori-
gin. and signifies literally "to press Into
service. as n courier" for the royal post,
and in its niore general usage also "to
force to he n guide." Thus a mart tra-
velling past a post -station was liable to
be seized by the officers of the sl ,tion
and pressed into service of the king .:r
emperor and (oi'eed to Carry 'a leiter or
accompany another person back to the
next st-lion along the road over venni'
he had Come in his journey. or in some
other direction, and (his to the delay ant
detriment of Ids own errand and busi-
ness. This custom was one of the me-
llow; suffered by the Jews udder the
floii ens, by whom it had been borowed
(rum the Persians. Jesus exhorts to it
cheerful suhmisslun to the mew of the
land, arid general wdlin nese
to serve
c
even beyond the legal requirement.
43. Neighbor -This is one of the many
words to which Christianity rind the
New Testnmeut have given n broader
and a higher meaning. In the partible
of the good Samaritan 'Luke 10. eil-37)
Jesus makes plein this bronder meaning
of the word as used by himself.
45. Sons of your Father --Sons 'n
truth, having hie spirit and akin to tarn
in chnrocter.
46. Publicane- -'that Is, lax collectors.
though not In the sense in which that
word is used in our country and in our
day. It was curanmary for the central
government of a large empire in olden
times to sell the revenues of the different
individual provin'•es composing the em-
pire 10 the highest bidder, who then ap-
pointed his own officers It) collect from
Ilse people net much as possible. The
publieens mentioned in the New Testa•
rnenl ore the lower or subordinate class
of laxgalherers to whom the !higher
oflleers or contractors sublet the r.)11e:-
tturt of laxer!. These omen as well es
their su'teriors airier( In become wealthy
ht exacting niore ihnn the ntnnunt
they hail paid for Slur privilege. end Thus
the system resetl.'.1 in great cruelly end
npprsssion r'f the common neopli', ca-
p0,felly of the welter properly ewmu•s.
A Jew who coo filed to Niconie a tag
officer of this kind and to extort taxes
from his fellow cuuntr•) then to ler paid
to the haled Human authorities was
above all men de'spfeed by his fellow
Jews.
48. Ye therefore shall be perfect- No-
thing less, no national 1,4 other stan-
dard short of God's own standard .,t
right and of lova, shell satisfy you.
Al your heavenly Father is pt•rlect-
Not, however, in absolute knowledge awl
power, nor yet in absolute ethical per-
fection, in sintessness: but in purpose
and aspirations rather. huving the ideal
of God's own goodness ever before you
as the ultimate goal of ]hut purpose ons
of those aspirations.
T•---+
LOOK AT YOUR FINGERS
titE rill•:l' my. Lucia 011 lilE EN -
LLCM( KIND. •
Long Fingered People Love Retails,
Short Fingered People
Don't.
Even the lines and the mounts of the
hand makes the science of pahnistry
loo complicated for you, still you can
tell from the shape of the ringers solve -
thing about your subject. The digits
alone are considered by tnuny u very
good indication of character.
Long fingers indicate love of details,
exactness in all small matters; worries
ever little, unimportalnt things. They
era, in n bad hand, a sign of deceit-
fulness and cowardice.
Short fingers, on the contrary, mean
neglect of details, tendency to hake
Things for granted and not to examine
them closely enough; belong often to
People rather . bohemian in dress and
'4111)113.
Thick and puffy at the base are the
characteristics of fingers that belong to
selfish per; ons, overfond of the good
things of 11;e, great eaters, drinkers,
etc.
Fingers narrow at the base, unselfish -
nests and also close mention to cleanli-
ness, daintiness of food, etc.
Curved inward, excess of prudence.
even to poltroonery; often stubornness
anti sometimes avarice.
Easily curved backward, good, plea -
sent company, but gossipry and inquisi-
tive to excess; often extravagant in
money matters.
Twisted and malformed fingers, nntur•
el cruelly, even to murder.
Smooth and transparent finger's. lack
rd discretion and love of useless talk-
ing.
Fingers ton close to each other, avari-
cious disposition.
A short first finger means love of
activity, and n very tong one a ten-
dency to tyrannize over others.
if the second finger is long end flat,
melancholy in indicated, or if long and
square, sternness,
\\'hon the third finger is as long es
the second, the gambling instinct will
be found highly developed.
A long little linger means love of
r:ental improvement anti vet sutility, and
r. short one quick perception.
The rarest and finest of all is the hand
with pointed lingers; they are n{nost
always the natural complement of a
Thin, delicate flexible palm, of a finely
shaped thumb, and the knots on the fin-
gers are hardly, if at ell, noticeable.
This is the hand of the poet, the artist,
composer or philosopher.
Square fingered persons are perse-
vering, foreseeing, orderly and regular.
The spatulate -fingered person is nc-
tive. energetic, quick and in constant
movement.
The thumb is of great importance in
character reading. The possesor of a
large thumb Is self-reliant. often des-
potic, is ruled by the head, not the
Pearl. The possessor of a small thumb
is the opposite, one of ideas but not of
action.
A thumb that bends back easily de-
r.otes extravagance and adaptability.
A stiff, straight thumb is a sign of
stubbornness. caution, secretiveness, a
wealth of common sense, but little feel-
ing.
eel•
in .
g
The first, or nail, phalanx of the
thumb represents will power, self-relI.
tince. Too long, despotism; short, en-
ergy of a passive kind; very short, weak-
ness of will; long and brond, ungovern-
able temper, furious impulses.
The second phalanx represents logic,
reasoning power. judgment. Full and
clumsy. low grade of brains; wnsi,-like,
with centre slightly concave, n brilliant
intellect, quick, sharp and deep.
\\'ilh n long second phalanx and a
short llrst you have the talkers and
arguers. \\'ilh the opposlbe condilinns
yon hove Ih.ise w•hn act %dhoti] prof,er
reflection. and often run re kliese ri+ke.
Wenkenlnded and week -willed Nr -
sons carry the (hand, inside the fingers.
DROWNED Ili BROTHERS.
1Rn
Crime to wave Reputation of n Family -
Feared Insanity.
A young man named La Mergueresse
has been nrrested at Lorient, France,
forleis Your er hr l e s
O I 1
K
Joseph and Francois. The ixrii.'s W( -re
found in the river recently, and it ons
generally `opposed they had (ellen in
%•hile playing
on the brink. Al the fun-
eral
m-eral the behavior of the eldest brother
was so extraordinary that the suspicions
of the parents were arou-cd, and they
questioned hhn closely.
Ile adrniited throwing the boys ink
the river, and said he did so bfcau:•r
Francoi.e was an idiot. Ile was elreid.
he added, that Joseph might grow up tin
imbcale niso, and that a stigma would
always be attached to the family.
Francois sank immediately, but Joseph
swam ashore. Itis brother pushed trio
back and held him under water until he
was dead. • When the news of ttle con-
fession spread the pollen had great difli•
cult' in saving La Nlagueresse from an
angry crnv:d. who wonted to lynch him.
♦ ^-
INSIDE INFOI1MAFION.
"Did that dein ..y:tnt 1011 you
thing true about t ourself?"
"She certainly nly did. Before I'd Lee
n
there ten minutes she told me some-
body one trying to get aiy money."
"Was fiesta"
"Yee. She wok
lli Home
s 4■1 }S4÷dl.4if $4-I 1144
COOKING ItE(:(t'ES.
Doughnuts. -Take one quart of fioul
nod three teaspoonfuls of lurking pow-
der and sift together; piece of butter .,Sze
of an egg, one cup of sugar, one pint ..f
milk, a little nutmeg, one dessertspoon-
ful of cornstarch, 11112: in the milk. Itul
the butter in the flour and powder, put
In other ingredients, mix to a soft dough.
add more flour if needed, roll one-half
inch thick, fry in hot lord to a delicate
brown.
Spice Cake. -One cup of sugar. one-
half cup of butter, one-half cup of
molasses, and one scant teaspoonful each
of cinnamon. allspice, cloves, and a ...t,4'
nutmeg; heat well together, then ad.1
one cup of sour milk, with one teaspoon-
ful of soda stirred in until it is quite
foamy. Flour enough to make it quit,
stiff, and one cup of raisins, floured.
Bake slowly and h'e when cold.
Raisin Crake. -One cupful each of su-
gar, sour milk. and chopped and seeded
raisins; two of `lour, one -tint( cupful • 1
butler, one teaspoonful of cinnamon.
one-quarter of cloves, one-half gritted
nutmeg. Rub butter and sugar until
crenn►y, then add other things. Bake ill
a moderate oven.
Scotch Woodcock. - Six hard -boil' I
eggs coarsely chopped. two lablespoo:)•
fuls of butter, one tablespoonful of flour.
one tablespoonful of anchovy paste, hall
pint of milk, pinch of cayenne. Cook
butter end flour together until they
bubble, add milk and stir until smooth.
Put in the anchovy paste and cayenne
and one minute later the eggs. Simmer.
three minutes and serve on toast.
Ifominy Grils.--Soak all night; cover
with boiling water, slightly salted, in
the morning, and cook for an hour. A
delicious preparation of hominy effected
by cooking it in plenty of soiled water
and supplying its piece with cold milk.
Bring to n boil and serve.
Drawn Butter Ponst.-Prepare a thin
drawn butter sauce by blending a heap-
ing teaspoonful of butler with one :.f
flour, cooking till smooth. ridding then
a pint of hot water, carefully stirring
and keeping the sauce smooth. Sall to
taste, dip in it slices of carefully toasted
bread end serve very hot. it niay he ac-
companied with a berry, lain or spiced
cherries.
New Chicken Pie. -Butler a three -
quart pudding pan; in ft place the Great
from a cooked, seasoned chicken cut n
pieces of suitable size; add a layer et
poteto balls Meanie(' till tender, then the
whites of six hard-boiled eggs cut in
rings. the yolks cut in halves, and the
mushrooms from one can. Season each
layer lightly with salt and pepper. Make
a sauce from one cupful of strong
chicken stock, one pint of milk, and the
liquor from the mushrooms, thickened
with three tablespoonfuls of flour cooked
with three tablespoonfuls of oil from
the chicken stock. Cook well, season,
then pour over the contents of the pan
and place in the oven to heat. Make
rich baking powder biscuits, cutting
Ihetn small; bake and cover the pie with
them when it is thoroughly hot and send
to the table. For Sunday dinner the pie
may be prepared. the sauce and biscuit
made on Saturday and reheated and
put together before dinner.
Quick Nut Bread. -Slit together four
cups of flour, four teaspoonfuls of Link-
ing powder, one teaspoonful of salt, one
cup of sugar and add one cupful of
chopped hickory tort meats, not very
line; stir, then add one cup of milk and
one well-benlen egg. Pour into two but-
tered breed tins and let stand twenty
minutes; Then bake half an hour. This
Is a delicious bread and very easily
made.
Apple Sauce Cake. -Ono and one-half
cups of apple sauce (stew as for table
use, mash fine), one-half cup of butler
Ione cup of sugar. two cups of (lour, one
teaspoonful of soda, one cup of raisins.
Spice to suit; bake one flour.
any.
HINTS FOR IIOME LIFE.
Borax and water will brighten oilcloth.
Beeswax and salt will snake rutty net -
irons clean and smooth.
Rubber shoes, when wet, should he
stuffed with newspapers and left several
hours to absorb all dampness.
To clean mudstains from block dress
goods rub with a slice of raw potato.
(!so lemon juice and salt to remove
iron rust, ink, and mildew on white
goods.
A good cleaner for gold or silver jew-
ellery i3 a teaspoonful of ammonia in a
cupful of water.
Before boiling milk rinse out the pan
with cold water; tins will prevent it
burning s;) quickly.
By adding a few drops of vinegar 'o
the %viler when poaching eggs they will
set more quickly and perfectly.
A few drops of oil of lavender poure
into a glass of very hot water is very
c r win quickly urlf • the
rcfre_hlnq, and wtl q y { y
air of a sick -room.
A pinch of sell added to the whites .f
eggs when beating will slake then
froth quicker, and the froth will :e
stiffer.
Preserves maybe prevented elfin
l reser i gelling
Ise
La Grippe
Cured
Twelve times and out!
Doctors gay that LA GRIPPE
R ilI collie t v.'0 or three years
more and disappear again
for 50 years. It has a
periodical run of 12 years.
Each time it conies it is
worse than the time before.
This time LA GRIPPE is
prophesied to have terrible
neuralgic and rheumatic
pains as a symptom and
afterclap. These pains are
the most excruciating -
worse than the rack and
torture. Avoid LA GRIPPE,
Lprevent LA GRIPPE, or cure
A GRIPPE, by taking the
specific, scientific remedy
CHINE
(PRONOUNCED 81=KEEN)
told by alt Druggists, for t1 per bottle.
*AMPLE AND TREATISE rims
Amas.ese, "sample Dept. M"
Or. T. A. SLOCUM, LInalt•d
Offw and Laboratories
179 King *t. W.st, - TORONTO
mouldy by putting a few drops of gly-
cerine round the edges of the jar before
covering.
\Vhen not in use, blankets should be
neatly folded and placed between sheets
of soft paper, with camphor to keep out
the moths. Air lite blankets frequently.
Boots and shoes, however damp, will
polish in a few moments 1f a drop •-,r
two of paraffin oil be added to the
blacking. It also prevents the leather
cracking.
When flannel irritates the skin, the
unnleasant feeling may be quite allayed,
atter a little while, if friction with '
towel he applied to the skin directly the
flannels aro removed at night.
Mashed potatoes left over from a meal
should be at once packed into n small
Fowl. \Viten wanted they should be cut
in slices, brushed over with egg, and
dipped in bread crumbs, and fried in
deep fat.
Few people realize the usefulru ss of
castor oil. its efficacy Internally is welt
known, but it may also be used exter-
nally with great success. flubbed on
hair, eyebrows, or eyelashes, Il increases
their growth.
Not until n man Is able to beat en
echo nut of the last word can he hope
to out -talk a woman.
A WOMAN'S BACK IS
THE MAINSPRING OF
HER PHYSICAL
SYSTEM.
The Slightest Back..
ache, U Neglected, is
Liable to Cause Years of Terrible
Suffering.
No woman can be strong and healthy
unless the kidneys are well, and regular in
their aotioa. When the kidneys are ill.
the whole body is 111, for the poisons whiols
the kidneys bo ht to have filtered out d
the food are
]legit in the system
The (ornate oonititsystema is naturally
more subjeot to kidney disease than •
man's; and what 1s more, a womelo's work
is never done -her whole life is one goes
tinuous strain.
Now many women have yon heard says
' • My, how my book aches 1' Do you know
that backache is ate of the first signs of
kidney trouble? It is, and should be at-
tended to immediately. Other symptoms
are frequent thirst, scanty, thick, cloudy,
er highly colored urine, burning sensation
when urinating, frequent urination. p_1.-
Isg uoder the eyes, swelling of the feet and
anklet), floating specks before the eyes, tee.
These symptoms if not takes in time and
cured at once, will erose years of terrible
kidney suffering. All these symptoms, and
its fact, these diseases may be curd by the
use ol
DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS
They sot directly ea the kidneys, and
make thea etrong and healthy.
Mrs. Mary (]alley, Auburn. N,$„ writeet
" For over four months I was troubled with
u bed
was !table to tura la b
•lame back
without help 1 was irxluoed by a friend to
try Doan's Kidney Pills. After using two-
thirds otahos a y
r
t back was as well mover.*
u r."
Price 60 Dente per boa or three boles for
$1.26 at all dealers, or sent direct on re•
coipt of prion The Doan Kidney Fill Co,
.forooto, Out
Kc•cK Kb< K K K KtarK K ra r\ 't.. K
' BLOOD DISEASED MEN
,2, if you t►vtreoatraeted any blond disease Tots are sever sate rotas the ileum
Creed'
lion has bee* etadicated item the system. Base Toa u,sale.of tits tattooing yntp-
fAtalore throst.ntceraoathe tongue orlathe month, a1e falling oat. •lef
K pales. ttchless'ef the akin, morn or blotch.0 en the body eyes red aad start, dye•
peptic stomach. sex eat weakees,-iedfuttone of the eecoedary star*. Doe't MIS
your e7et•et with the old fogy treatment -mercer, end potash -which oat, Isp
preetesthesymptonie for at.me salt' to break pat teals whoa happy I*dgeteatie
K ^ Ste. Pool tet quacks etao'.mint on yea. Our POW
Sst sd
hie.
to gaaraateed tC care yoe. Oei guarantees are bels
by bunk boadr, that the disease will sever return. Thoesssdi*
patients have beta already tured by tier New Method TeaetMe91
for over 30 years. he sows used wlllsoof I lel•a se*eeet.
Mr. L. A. C. write.: "Your remedies have done me mote gold
thaw Hot llprings and all the dot tore and medicines 1 had pre.
'lonely tried. 1 hare •ot felt ane of these pains or ewes slay
N:rersor hoot, he, for over ee;-a years and thsn'ttnerd avrnpteats
of the l..atbew'es disesae have entirely 11.. redN'idy half has genua In tulip agate and lam startled Sad happy.
R P01111S.9tU/Nrutr..4CuageasvagallTgs I 555 *y. aar'a4RS ogTI1M1K
Drs. Kennedy (1). Ker an,
1 1.9R1.
N til RTts T
OMR?. �s sblr rlc�
( K Kra ►S K K Kr`ti)•"C K
k 11
•