HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1906-08-23, Page 7I 1OLUTE
SECURITY.
Genuine
Carter's
4tt1e Liver Pills.
Must Bear Signature of
Sos Pat-S:mllo Wrapper Dat.w.
Tory small anl as easy
to take as sugar.
FOR NEApACNE.
CARTERS FON Diu1NEUS.
TLE FON RILIOl1SNEUI.
r1 1/ ER FON TORPID LIYEN.
FOR CONSTIPATION.
FON SALLOW SKIN.
FON TNECOM*LE><ION
/tee../
M asrls � �'.zy .,...o..
CURE. SiCK HEADACHE.
IR WOMEN
ONLY KNEW
,rsr1111sas11l
THE WORK THAT ENDUI(ES
The Spirit of Divine Beauty Gives
Eternal Life to Our Labors.
Thousands of women suffer untold miser-
ies every day with aching backs that really
have no busigoss to ache. A woman's back
wasn't made to ache. Under ordinary
conditions it ought to be strong and ready
to help her bear the burdens of life.
It is hard to do housework with an ach-
ing back. Hours of misery at leisure or
at work. If women only knew the cause.
Backache comes from sick kidneys, and
what a lot of trouble aick kidneys cause in
the world.
But they can't help it. If more work is
put on thein than they can stand it's nos
to be wondered that they get out of order.
Backache is simply their cry for help.
D OAN'S
K IDNEY
PILLS
"And establish thou the works of our to realize that the aspirnlion preceding
the
I
tis
two.
hands upon us:' --i's. lifts
is the text answers the. ques t r
In every mon tvho Itfls his eyes and spurt of divine t ser -
7.
vice
above the road on which he walks
lies the deep longing for a share in
eternal 'Hing.:. Ile dwells in an atmos=
phare of the transitory ; hourly does na-
ture remind him of the II►SLstent les-
sons. all flesh is grass and all the
goodliness thereof as the flower of the
iield. But tie is the child of eternity
and looks away to find somewhere that
• is old,
change,
or
which steal u' wa1.
l �L ,
pass away.
Ile spends his years in toll, labor that
seeins as futile as a child's building of
block castles. Ile sees in the melan-
choly ruins of the past the ease with
which the greatest achievements are
forgotten. Yet ,tilt, for all the cen-
turies of vein endeavor, there burns In
his Invest the passionate longing to do
some work that shall Inst.
This is ono of the motives That built
pyramids, led hosts, wrote books. and
sung great songs; this, with the larger
recognition of the fact that we are under
some great moral obligation, some law
written on the fleshy tablets of the
heart, more imperative limn any cn
stone, to do the best we can with all
ourselves, accounts for a large part tf
human progress.
This desire to accomplish things that
shall endure is
will help you. They're helpingsick, over-
worked kidneys -all over the world -
making them strong, healthy and vigorous.
Mrs. P. Ryan, Douglas, Ont., writes: "For
over five months I was troubled with lama
back and was unable to stove without
help. I tried all kinds of plasters and
liniments but they were no use. At last I
heard tell of Doan's Kidney Pills and
after I had used three-quarters of 'the tot
my back was as strong and well as ever."
Price 51 .:.eats per box or three boxes fug
=1.25, all dealers or The Doan Kidney Pill
Co., Toronto, Ont.
J.tP.%N FORGING %HEAD.
Repid Strides in Industrial Pursuits of
Mikado's Subjects.
"Japan is innking rapid progress,"
saga the British Curunsercin1 Attache itt
Tokio in Itis report on the (rade of Ja-
pan for 1905.
In 1902 „bee Import: and experts
amounted to -0:,1.107.5:,2. in 1905, to
ltnw cotton of Ilse t:due of LI1,153;
1011 w'ns imik)rle,l in 1905. as against
Sel.2!kt.01)0 in 1901, find 1i0.i»t spindl 5
Are being lithe 1 to lite native cotton
The Iwo new giant battleships 41 t9,-
t19.s loo.: ripe' being built with Japanese
:Seel. and n lending Jnpnuiese shim
Luilder has :haled that ships can he
1-11111 as cheaply, if nil cheaper. in Ja-
1•on than in the United Kingdom.
The native nil industry has nearly
doubled in one year. "greatly assisted
t'y the eetrn war duly."
4
LIKED t'r.01'I.F. '10 TALK.
"Impudent fellow, isn't he?" remark,
the fleet num in the crowd. "I do de
wise sissy people, don't you?"
"Oh. dent know." replied lite othe
'l tile'' people to talk brick."
"You do?"
"Yes; I'm an nuelinneer?"
.1
r.
MAIM 1/ %VS.
beauty that vires e e
nal life to our labors, the beauty of
vice and of reverence. The builders t t
their own monuments have been for-
gotten, but the doers of true ministry
for others are remembered:
Thera are Maas, tt•Ii0, for
glory
nes
renown. build empires;their
have perished. There have been the
lowly lives Iliahave leapt to some
height of sacrifice, some peals of love,
that have done some deed perhaps small
in itself but magnified manifold by its
motive, and these who never stop to
think of glory, these humble ones the
world never will forget. -
ABOVE THE TIDES OF TIME,
the storing of criticism, the changes of
our fads and philosophies. the towers t 1
sncrilice, of deeds made great by love.
of the ministry of men, stand Orta and
imperishable. Steel and stone conte
alike at last to dust, but that which is
wrought into life, into character, en-
dures.
This is the day when men are mea-
sured by their ability to build great for-
tunes. when we are likely to become
dissatisfied with our own lives, because
we cannot do these great works, can-
not all be known as the mighty men of
our times.
A BiGHT PASSION.
It lifts above the lust for fame, the am-
bition to carve out petty and meaning-
less names on the skies ; it sets the work
above the reward ; it makes a man de-
termine to do the_ work that will stand
whether its worth be recognized now :r
later, whether the reward come now cr
consist only in the permanency of the
work.
But how shall one find the task that
shall produce an enduring piece of
work ? How may a man know that his
work is the best he can do with his
powers? What are the works that
abide, standing firm --in all the passing
procession? What workers of the long
ago have so wrought that their work
abides to our day?
To answer that question a man conies
DELICIOUS FROZEN DESSERTS.
Frozen Buttermilk. -Put 2 qts. butter -
the
into
•n•
Int red
butter-
milk, eaten
and 1
t sweetened
Geezer and let stand until very cold;
then add 1 qt cream titut has been
whipped,• mix theiuugitip end freeze.
11 is a delicious frozen dish.
Cocoanut Cream. -For this take 1 qt
create, 1 pt milk. 13- cups sugar, 3
eggs, cup dtssicated or fresh cocoanut
grated told the juice and rind of a
lemon. Ileat together the eggs and the
grated lemon rind, aild this to the milk
in a double boiler, and stir until the
mixture begins to Thicken ; (hen add the
cocoanut and set to cool. \\'then cool,
add the sugar and lemon juice Mixed
together, then stir in the cream, and
Geezer
Kentucky Cream.- Make 3 gallon
rich boiled custard, sweeten to taste,
and 2 tablespoons gelatine dissolved in
X cup cold milk. Let the custard cool,
put in. a freezer, and as soon es it be-
gins to freeze add 1 lb raisins, 1 hitt
strawberry preserves. 1 qt of whipped
cream, stir and beat well. Blanched
almondsDuds
Or
grated
cocoanut t ea
Y
be
added, it preferred.
Let no man be so foolish as to turn
from the work That can be established,
that is enduring, to this chaos play t t
piling up yellow dirt. Ilere lies the sat-
isfaction of the teacher, the true
preacher, and of all who give their
lives in service 10 one another or in the
service of ideals and truth; that they
alone build in lite enduring material.
And every life that Ls given away,
every life that follows the true light, the
light of love, that seeks the best in
thoughts and ideals; in deeds that cost,
every life lived as seeing him who is
invisible, every lite that serves the lives
about it, has established the work of its
hands. has found the life that is eter-
nal, the crown of glory that does not
fade and cannot be lost.
HENRY F. COPE.
THE S. S. LESSON
lNTEItN t'TION:AI. LES.iO�I,
ALG. 26.
Lesson IX. The ltich Volum Ruler.
Golden Text: Mali. 16. 21.
*I'I IE LESSON W0111.) S'I'UDI ES.
Note. -The text of the Revised Version
is used as a basis for these \\'ord
Studies. '
The Lesson Setting. --Jesus was nn
hie last journey to Jerusalem. Ile had
tit for a short lime in retirement be-
y. eel Jordan with Itis disciples. Know-
ing all That was in store for hint, and
the brevity of the time still at his dis-
posal for instructing his disciples con-
cerning the great work of establishing
and spreading his kingdom among
amen, which was so soon to devolve
upon Them. he must hate had many im-
portant mailers upon his heart and
Ind to sae totem•
To gem' linen without the help of a
polishing iron we should advise wing
this ,.tnrrh-gl„::. Taken quarter of n
pound of w h.te starche hall an ounce ,1
borax. one mince nt yen.,w snap, one
a rnthll ..f 1 �rer int . the sena
dust rt. f►o g >
quantity of turpentine. noel a teaspoon-
ful of common salt. First dissolve the
soap unit' borax In one pint of hot water.
Iden IMx all together :and add half a
pint more wal r. the great advantage
Of this preparation is that it keeps tor
All these things have I observed from
my youth -Actually, and in the most
conscientious planner, the young man
had ordered his daily life in accordance
with these commandments. That he is
keenly conscious of a deeper need is a
strong commentary on lite inadequacy
of formal obedience and worship io
satisfy the deepest needs of the human
soul.
21. Looked upon him -Ills earnest-
ness and evident sincerity challenged
the more careful attention of Jesus, who
loved hien for that earnestness, sincer-
ity, and longing for better things.Whatsoever thou host -itis dress and
demeanor indicated his wealth find
social standing.
Come, follow the -Part with your pre-
sent manner of life and become one e f
my disciples like these other men about
ue.
1
22. Jesus had rightly judged the case,
and had frankly pointed out to the
young man the barrier whirlt existed
between himself and the goal which t e
sought ; hence the young man's coun-
tenance fell at the saying. His disap-
pointment was caused by his failure to
obtain the object of his quest ; his go-
,,, 11 But naw the time ing away by what seemed to him the
of privacy and retirement was at an end impOseibility of fulfilling the conditions
and Jesus was once more in company set by Jesus.
with his disciples on the public highway 21. For them That trust in riches -
leading to the capital city. He was ap• Words explanatory of the sense of the
proaching Jerusalem from the north-
east. and was probably still cast eI
Jericho and the Jordan River. The road
on which the little crimpnny was tra-
velling was a much frequented high-
way. Just previous to the incident of
meeting the young man Jesus teed been
approached by ninny others among
whom were worsen who brought their
little children In him. Filled with love
and compassion he paused to bless then)
and to declare to those of maturer
years, who were present, and especially
to the disciples. That of such as (hese
little ones was the kingdom of heaven.
Proceeding further. the progress of the
little company was again interrupted
by the hurried epitome)] of a young
ruler of wenith and sneial standing, who
addressed himself directly to Jesue. nfier
paying hien the homage given only to
the greatest at teachee^s. The burden f
his errand w•ns to know the way to life
eternal, and to the method by which
Jesus met his earnest inquiry we now
turn our attention.
Verse 17. As lie was going forth into
the way -prom some stopping place en
route to Jerusalem.
There ran tine In him -This "one" is
described by Luke ns "n certain tiller."
by which is prnbnbly meant nn Official
in fi local synagogue. It is more than
probable also That the Hann was it Phar-
isee. and further on In our narrative we
Ienr•n thiol he possessed great wealth.
Kneeled In hint -Hoe Hutch it meant
for the young Pharisee anal ruler to do
This publicly we can 1'c11cr apprecinle
when we remember that at Ilii: lisle all
the Jett ish nnlhnritice were nlreedy
Mog'u'l agninet lhie leacher from Naza-
reth. phoning his deslrection.
Hand 'trencher --- the customary re-
sts -01M address of n pupil to a
linguishevl rabbi.
18. Why tallest thou me good! none
is goal save one, even God-\Vortls
spoken preparatory to referring the
young man to the divine command.
meals Themselves in nnawer to hie
question.
19. Thou knoweet the cnmmnndmenll
--Them comtnnndm4'111s whirl belonged
a 111
nl
..nue
e one
only3'
n
Of l
Inez to (h4'
gond Being. For Irvo torsion+ of the
dernlogti4' see Exod. 20. 12-16 and
Dent. 5. 10.20.
20. Teneher-\V9 note Ilint the re-
cpeelful bearing of the young man to-
ward Jesus Le maintained throughout
preceding statement of Jesus. bonne
ancient manuscripts of Mark, however.
omit this clause.
25. Through n needle's eye-Doubl-
less the iic•lunl eye of a needle Is
meant. \\'e have here then. nn Orien-
tal proverb setting forth. in the form of
rhetorical Itvperl'nle, the extreme difll-
cully o1 the thing referred to.
ell. Astonished exceedingly -Lit., ex-
ceedingly beside themselves, that l:,
with amazement.
Unto him -Some manuscripts rend
among themselves, doubtless both was
the case.
'filen who can be snved? - The
nliruptnesi of their question regecls the
eller amazement of the disciples.
27. All things are possible with God -
Slot. simply !•,cause he can employ
other than ordinary 8geneiee find per-
fortn mirneles, but oleo. and pore
etpeciallee because he has absolute and
unlimited control over every natural
agency in the physical and spiritual
world.
2K. I.n. w,' -In eontrnst with the
young than, tint', left all. and have fel.
lowed Thee-\lnithew reconls that Peter
added Ihe very unlual question
"%\'tent then shall we have?" (\Intl. El.
2S).
29. Ilnu5e. or brethren. or sisters, or
another, or father, or children. or Innds
--In recognition of the peculinr sacri-
fice of each disciple Jesus enumerates
all these things some one or snore 11
which, ench of them had parted with
in order to follow hint.
30. Ile shall receive a hundred fol.l
now in this lithe -'[tent N. he slsnll re-
ceive that which will replace all these
things to that degree. "Jesus tend no-
where to lay his head, and yet he ons
conscinu+ of n lordship mei possession
of all the eat tit, Indo which every true
disciple of his can enter." -Gould.
11. lint many that are first small be
last ---Wants of warning to the diseiples
not In build ineir hopes for eternal life
too strongly upon the initial sacritlees
which they had made in becoming his
disciples.
-7
taste and add the beaten whiles of two
or three eggs and freeze. For lemon
mousse allow 4 lemons to 3 oranges.
and the sante quantity of water. Serve
itt glass cups, with a cherry alup.
•
HINTS FOR THE HOME.
When stewing fruit add the sugar
after the fruit is cooked. In this way
only a small quantity of sugar- will be
required to each pound of fruit stewed.
Preserve ferns or grass in their
natural colors by placing theta in blot -
1 ,ti- aPer
for forty-eight
i
ht h
our:
and
then pressing them with heavy weights.
!Maidenhair fern can also be successful-
ly treated in this way.
When scrubbing floors and tables do
not use sada, for it slakes boards a bad
color and does not cleanse better than
soap and plenty of cold or tepid water.
The boards should be scrubbed the
way of the grain, and not round and
round, as so many young people pre-
fer doing.
For the coffee -stains on your grey
dress try an application of fullers
earth and eater made into a paste.
Apply this just on the stained part, and
when dry brush off with a clean clothes
brush; if necessary. have a second ap-
plication of the paste.
Brown Bread Cream.- Thls has a
nutty flavor that is simply delicious.
Any one who has tried the effect of n
thin slice of brown bread. buttered with
sweet butter as an accompaniment to
ice cream, will appreciate the combina-
tion. A cup and a quarter of dry
crumbs are 10 be soaked for 15 min-
utes in 1 qt create, then add 1 pt create.
< teaspoon salt, small cup of sugar,
rub soaked bread through sieve, stir in
the other Ingredients and freeze. Half
milk will answer it cream is rich.
Two Toothsome ices. - Watermelon :
Scrape the pulp from a large ripe
watermelon and squeeze out all the
juice, sweeten, mix with the whites of
3 eggs and freeze. The whiles of the
eggs should be beaten to a stiff froth
before adding to melon juice.
Fruit Ice : To 4 cups water add 2'/a
cups sttgnr, bring to boiling point and
let boil 20 minutes. Add % cup lemon
juice and juice of 3 oranges. Cool.
strain and freeze. •
SHERBETS OF MANY KiNDS.
Apple: Press 1 pt unseasoned cooked
apple pulp through sieve; add 1 pt
cranberry juice, juice of 1 lemon, 1
teaspoon vanilla and 1 pt sugar.; cook
10 minutes, cool and freeze as for ices.
Serve in crystal glasses.
Raspberry : Measure 1X pts rasp-
berry juice, 1 scant pt sugar. l% pts
water and the juice of 2 lemons. Boil
the sugar and water together for 20
minutes, then add the lemon and rasp-
berry juice, st•a'.n and freeze.
Pomegranate : l'eel and squeeze the
juice from 4 large oranges, mix with 1
cup powdered sugar; 2 tablespoons
gelatine dissolved in (lot water, 1 pt
powdered ice, and 1 teaspon fruit color-
ing. Mix all together, flavor with 1
teaspoon of nectarine. turn into a
freezer and freeze. Serve in glasses.
T----=
To Render China and Glass Mora
Durable. -Wrap the pieces separatele in
hay bands. or some soft material, place
Them in a large pot and cover with cold
water. Place the pot on the stove and
heat the water very gradually, until
near boiling point, then lower the
ire
and nllow the water to cool gradually.
To Keep Fish Fresh. -Clean the fish
and sprinkle the inside with brown
sugar. Keep the fish in a horizontal
position, so that the sugar may soak
into it as much as possible. Half an
ounco of sugar will be found guile sulil-
ctent for three pounds of fish. If fish is
treated by this method before salting
and smoking, the ilavor is much Im-
proved.
A Danish \Vay of Washing Delicate
Fabrics. -Boil three pounds of potatoes
in a gallon and n half of water for ten
or twelve minutes, strain the water and
lel it cool. Wash the garments in This
without. soap. put the same potatoes in-
to another gallon and a half of water
and repeat the process. The fabric
will then be clean; hang in the open
air in the shade and iron while half dry
with a moderately hot iron.
Currants : To 1 pt currant juice al-
low 1/, pts water, the juice of 1 lemon,
1 pi sugar and 1 tablespoon gelatine.
Soak the gelatine an hour or two in n
little cold water. and then dissolve it in
i pt boiling water. When the gelatine
cools add the pint of cold water, the
sugar and the lemon and currant juice,
and freeze.
Banana : 11011 together for 5 min-
utes 'X pt sugar and 1 pt water. Let i1
get cold, then add the juice of a small
lemon and of an orange, and ) dozen
bananas plashed fine. Freeze until it
begins to thicken. then pour In 1 cup
cream and freeze to the consistency of
mush. Servo in punch cups.
Pineapple : Boil together 1 qt granu-
lated sugar and 1 qt water until a thick
syrup is formed. and pour this, very
hot. over a can of grated pineapple er
n fresh pineapple grated. Add the juice
of 4 lemons place the mixture In the
freezer. add 1 pt cold water. Just as the
sherbet begins In freeze, add the wen.
beaten whiles of 3 eggs, and finish the
freezing.
Mint : Bruise the leaves of a bunch
of fresh mint ; odd the juice of 2
lemons, cover and let stand for 20 min-
utes. l'ut 1 pt granulated sugar and 1
pt water In n saucepan over the fire and
stir until the sugar is dissolved : then
cook undisturbed until syrup will
thread when drilled from the point of
n spoon. Itenieve from fire and add .'f,
cup grape fruit juice. cool and strain.
mill if you desire abrigl.ter green. color
with spinach coloring. Freeze in usual
ONl.l , \ SUSPICION.
'
1 .IDV
Mrs. Pneer : "I heard that Mr. Tyle-
I'hist gave a dollar to the San Fransic-
co sulterera. Is it tete?"
Mr. Pneer : "Nobody knows. Hr was
auspected of II, bid they couldn't prove
Y _ _ - -
wv. y. • °
Orange : Orange sherbet is delight-
fully refreshing and very effective when
lilted a pretty pink. Itlnde by the fol.
towing method, it will he found very
excellent. Juice of 3 oranges and 1
lemon, n henping cup red sugar. 1 '
pts water, 1 tablespoon gelatine, which and the wonderful wage, tett,' (here. fine
leas been softest for nn hour in the re- I could
get over for elm".t nothing, for
-4
SLAVES IN PACKiNGTOWN
SERFDOM NOT LESS ABJECT THAN
IN DAIIKEST RUSSIA.
7 he Author of "The Jungle" Tells About
the Workers its the Meaf
Industry.
In the hubbub over the wtsanitary
methods in the preparation of packing-
house products, says the Literary Di-
gest, Upton Sinclair complains, public
attention has entirely neglected the
''wage -slave," as lie calls him, the im-
migrant, the laborer whose lot in Pack-
inglown is by all accounts a hard one.
His plain purpose, She Sinclair says in
an article in the New York Evening
World, was not to expose "the con-
demned meat Industry," but rather to
"make the average American sympa-
thize with the story of the foreign -born
wage -slave , „
in 1 nckm town." Ido not
6
wish to be ungracious," he add, "but
i fear that 'The Jungle' would have
Leen rnuctt longer iu doing its work
had its appeal been simply to the hearts
and conscience of Its readers and not
at all to their stomachs.' Ile goes on:
"And yet we are lied up in the same
country with these strangers, and their
(rale is our foie; the way our country
goes in the future depends upon what
opportunities And what life,we Clive then
i hey are coming dere at the rate of a
million a year. and it we think we can
allow then) to be beaten and degraded
without limit, and not pay a fearful pen-
r,lty for It ourselves, we make a great
mistake.
"The whale country is at this mo-
ment struggling against the power of the
trusts. You yourself are suffering from
their encroachments and are lighting
1•, free yourself. And it is the piwer of
the political machine which holds you
down: nth' the power of the machine is
0,undeel upein the foreign vote which
, bought
"About twelve years ago. old 1'. i)
Armour, at the close of a great shrike,
tend declared with nn oath that Iwo-ould
fix the population of Paekingl.w•n so
that it would never call n strike upon
him again: and se he tend sal his agents
a' work to bring out horde: of emir
grants from E ist1•rn Europe-l.ithunn-
fans, Poles. ltnli.'nrinns. 111111 Shooks. 1
met dozens of Hien tt•Iln had cone 114 e
direct result if his eneleuvor. Strangers
find come to their tillage -amen who
spoke their own language and were fa-
miliar with (heir ideas, and who told
wonderful Imes about free America
and about the great packing -factories
•
...EOR...
Diarrhoea, Dysentery,
Colic, Stomach Cramps, Cholera
Morbus. Cholera Intantum,
Seasickness,
Summer Complaint.
and all Looseness or the bowels In
Children or Adults.
DR. FOWLER'S
Extract of
mild 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. GEORGE N. HARVEY, Rosencath, Ont., writest
Straw-
berry
Wild t aw-
,. of \V,1 1 r
• is Extract
I can recommend Dr. Fowl,
berry as the best medicine I have ever used for
Diarrbcea and all summer complaints. 1 always keep
it in the house and praise it highly to all my friends."
flaor will be rented by a family, which
will then take in boarders 1:, help make
expenses. Single men, of whom there
are large numbers occasionally rent a
flat for themselves. Most of the Poles
and Slave with whom I have talked
said that they were saving money up
to get away from America because the
work was too hard for them to stand.
They live sometimes as many as thir-
teen in a room, renting a I'o0111 and em-
ploying a woman to cook for them co-
operatively. They have mattresses spread
on the floor, covered with blankets
which are never changed until They
wear out; and frequently a mattress is
owned by a day man and a night man
and thus never gets a chance to get
cold. The filth and vermin in these
rooms are. of course, beyond any words;
and, needless to say, in the winter time
no fresh air ever gels into the building.
Living in homes such as this, and work-
ing len or twelve hours a day under ter-
rific pressure -and liable to work four-
teen in rush season, the amen have very
little vitality left, and know no way to
spend their money except in drink.
mnining % pt water : stir over fire until
all is dissolved, then ren11'we front the
hent mut add the orange and Eamon
juice and strain through a cheese
cloth. Freeze the mixture when colds
and when Iialf frozen add the whiles of
eggs beaten stiff. Lemon •herl'et can Le
colored lit the twine way and is equally
touting•
- Grape Juice Frappe. --One pt of grape
juice, 1 cup mange juice and the juice
of 2 Ielitnrls are required. Add 2 cups
granulated sugar and 4 of wafer. Boil
tite sugar and wide`15iiuiitadd and
tadd
the fruit juice. l
water and more auger if necese.ry.
Remember that ices are sweeter ls'fere
they nre frozen than afterwards. I)o
not freeze too hard.
Pineapple Mousse. -Very dainty are
Ise desserts mete of fruit mousse, and
in summer nothing seeins to equal
them. Attune( every variety of fruit
may 1N' tieed. with this recipe as a
foun'latinn. lidding more fruit or sugar
ns the case requires. Many prefer to
strain the fruit. except 111 case Of pine-
apple. enmity tieing the juice. And of en.
more fruit will be required. For pin&
apple mousse chop 1 (Inc large pine -
sank. add 1X ata wider._ sweeten to
"When I had finished The Jungle 1
went through it and cut out everything
that sounded like preaching. Here
is one of the paragraphs which t cut -
the best statement 1 can make upon
(hie question:
"'Once upon a time a great-hearted
woman set forth tate sufferings of the
black chattel -slave and roused a con-
tinent to arms. She had many things
in her favor which cannot be counte'l
or: by him, who would paint the life of
the modern slave -the slate of the fac-
tory, the sweatshop,
and the olio. The
lash which drives the latter cannot ei-
ther be seen or heard; most people do
not believe that it exists -it is the cant
o' the philanthropist and the
convention that it does n
slave is never hunted b
he Is not Is'nlen to
esque villain, nor
of religious fililt
another snare
the bitterest_,
Thoundls that 1
accident, and f villain who murders
him 11 merely the prevailing rale •.1
wages. And who can thrill the reader
with the tale at a man -hunt, in which
the hunted is a lousy end ignorant for-
eigner, and the hunter.: are the germs
of consumption, diphtheria and typhoid?
Who can tnnkc' a romance out of Ike
story of it roan whose one life adven-
ture is the scratching of a finger by an
Infected butcher -knife. with a pine box
and a pauper's grave as the denouement?
And it Hurst be just as painful to die
of blood -poisoning as to bo beaten to
death; to he tracked by bloodhounds
end torn to pieces is most certainly a
merciful fate compared to That which
falls to thousands every year in Pack -
arrangements had been made with the
steamship company. and so that they
had sold out all Item they owned and
cone. snmelinles whole families of (hem,
sonn'tnies halt a 410zen families from
n single tilinge. They had premed in-
to P+tckinglot•n. one swnrtu neer an-
other; and ns n result n141 1'. D. \manor
Ind tend rill the Ialcnr Ise cnul.l 1154' and
tend Lenlrn 11mvnt wages to the alnn•n•
lion point and made himself sine of file
richest mess in Atneriea and his son
one of the half-dozen masters of the
destiny of the American people.'
STK\NGEitS PLt'NDEItEl.
"These iemnrnnt strangers," he add,
"tend been plundered from the ninment
(hey left their native tillage." on
every hand they are cheated end preyed
upon by grafters, real estate sharks,
and tt•hat net. Mr. Sinclair condenses
a section of The Jungle. showing how
homers nre sold In immigrants on the
instalment plan and
then
I±it en from
n
them »iter hundreds of dollars hire leen
paid u1, f.er inability to pay an instal-
ment nt n certain time. He c•)nllnuee:
"The typical tenement -house in Pack-
ingtown is a two storey frame building
having lour Kroll rooms OS a 04se. A
ingrown -to be hunted for lite by bittt.r
poverty. to be awakened by starvation,
cold and exposure, to be laid low by
sickness or accident -and Then to lin
and watch while the gaunt wolf of
hunger creeps in upon you and gnaws
out the heart of you, and tears up the
bodies and souls of your wife and ba-
bies."
SERFDOM IN AMERICA.
The Appeal to Beason (Socialist), o4
Girard, Kan., in commenting along the
same line upon the scant attention paid
V/ the laborer in Packingtown, observes:
"i1 seems that the public becomes en-
raged only when deliberate murder is
planned and actually done upon itself.
eeridom not less abject than in darkest
Russia. 11 such n slavery were possible
in packing houses under our blessed
capitalism, then it is certainly possible
in all our corpornte industries, and the
contention of Socialists that there does
exist under Ilse present system of
gages and profit a tyranny as oppres-
sive as ever welded shackles to limbs
of freemen is justified."
In looking for arguments or .elate -
monis from the packers' side we have
examined Mr. J. Ogden Armour's re-
cent boolc, "The Packers, the Private
Car I ines, and the People," but Mr. Ar-
mour does not treat the subject of
labor.
HARD -WORKED SCIIOOLIIk)' S.
Those of fhtna Study Nearly Twelve
.y
(lours a Day.
The Chinese se
Milled into
ichrr-
ecstasies
gion is but
'essors, and
Misfortunes; the
m are disease and
coling.
rises, and offer dress-
ig . trickly as possible. Ile stark
bteakfostleis to school. He is given a
task, and atter it is completed he is al•
lowed an hour for breakfast. Again,
later, he has an hour for luncheon. but
he is at his study nearly twelve (hours
a day, seven days in the week.
All his time, when he is not reciting
this lessons, he is studying aloud at lite
top of his vo'.ce. He Ls under the eye of
his master both in school and on his
way to and from school. The lad is
taught rudimentary astronomy, physics
and natural history. but greater stress
is putt upon writing and his literary
studies.
"A Thousand Letters." a poem, is the
eludy that forms the backbone of his
literary education. In it are taught the
duties of children to parents, and all
such matters. Whatever the study may
be -history, classics, or science -every
lesson is learned and repented word for
word.
it
K
Q,
K
t•
I(
a a
_t( '.)Z K -.K K-kK KIL
1-
✓ ARICOCELE CURED'
IB NO tAI[ill USED WITHOUT WB1TTILN CONIKNT.
Confined to His Home for Weeks.
"Heavy work. severs straining and ev11 habits in youth Wooed
on a double vartco.ele. When I worked hard the ac.h{ng would
become. severe and 1 was often laid up for a week a1 a Om..
but iadrlly eaided It.cl1nttold
led seeveral in meciattists, bn ut soon only
but out
all they wanted was my money. I commenced to I•,ok upon all
doctors as little better than ragucs. One day my boas asked me
why I was off work eo much and 1 told him my condition. H.
advised ms to consvit Drs. Kennedy and Keegan, as h. bad
taken treatment fr,im them himself and knew they w � were square
e for m. Ss wrotere's was sthem omewhat sltho ow axltod dialoteat-
/he
ant forms My P •g
Brat month's treatment i was somewhat discouraged. Howl+rer.
I continued treatment fol three moatha Inner ant was rewareled
with • complete cure. I (nut .1 only .stn ill a wo.k In a machine
shop before treatment. now i am earning In and never lase a
sty. 1 wish all sufferers knew of year valuable
treatment. itIKu UST.
HAS YOUR BLOOD BEEN DISEASED!
nLOOD POISONS are the most ,revatent and most serious disease!. They amp
wi•ll
very Ilfaulks .erlour comp11 Itlotho ns. ant Beware sofnMerlcu y. I atonlyrom the s mpressesstthe
.y t ours
TOT N ms -our NEW METHOD positively ty cures all blood t dl fow
TOT NO On srltDt.R AGED -NAY. -imprudent seta or tamer sxres.ea have beaten
down your system. You feet the symptoms stealing over you. Mentally, physlcai.y
and dully you are nal the shin you used to be or should b.. Will you heed the
danger signals'
ft it A DER Are
rem.• victim" lays you tort hope" Ars you tauedlns
to mare)" Has your blot! been dises.ed? Rays you any weak-
ness? our New kf,thot Treatment will cure you. what 11 has done for others
it w11: do for you. CONPCl.TATiON l•R1t No matter who ham treated you,
write for an honest opinion Free of Charger. BOOKS t'ItC&--'Th. Golden Moni-
tor- ftltustrsted). on Diseases of Mott.
NO NAZI(?* VSZD vWi TNOVT twr�RitT1RI1 COYefl1lNT. PMt.
VATfW.
*omen as boon or en.
*PSI Of Westmont RT.n foe Homo Tre•tosost.thlog adNtW. Q•11110011 Ws Me
KEKC4ND
• Coir. Mich. Ave. and Shelby St., Detroit, Mloh.
.11
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t.
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