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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1906-08-30, Page 3'"'""'""" a AB$OIJJTE. SECURITY, Cenutne Carter's . Littt Liver Pills. Must Rear S:gnature o: ss^ Pac•5tmrb wrl'rseper Bctt>rw. • Teal atsa*1I aaa a. espy tit taiga au %agar,.. FOa CA RTE RS MUNE* FOR DIVINE$$.OYM FOR !RUMNESS. FON TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIM. FOR THE COMPLEXION ,°� V CURE SICK HEADACHE. THE THORN AND 11113 FIR Best Way to Get Rid of the Tares is to Sow Good Seed. Turns Bad Blood Into Rich Red Blood. Instead ( t the thorn shall corse up the heart k as dangerous as an empty hour. fir tree, and in• -lead of tite briar At , i1 Emptiness is not holiness, it is idiocy. 1' There cannot IS art empty iu•ctrt. 7'o • tulip e maters 1, , The ancient law that 1 vise thing Pgl' I1 ON.tL I'OIIYI't It L Interesting Gossip About `(outs Pront- Iuent People. The King; of the 1lrllene.' ct,llect, deo!, Pantiles, of which h•' has some neer- sands. King Oscar of Sweden laves nothing more in his quiet and lei:arc n►unicnt: than to improvise on the organ-- an in- .Iru bleat almost unknown in private circles abroad. The German Emperor is very fond if M: xicau coffee, and now chinks none other. A large' supply is sent to t►itn every year from a German colony on the Pacific coast of Mexico. curve up file III elle fere.-- isivall It . S. � Where are now five British peeresses take a 1 a 1 thing away from a man t w;teuum holds True: in the moral realm. bite• an og,pul tun►1} for a %w g 1 who %ever,. actr,ses, namely: Ma) the heart of Marl is never long empty. to enter unless you simply choke the i ring;ton (i.ad} de Clifford), Nelle 13011on lad t'y u1 (tltIiiig the gguad. Some t f (e:uunte.,s laancarly), Connie (,ilchrl,t And yet the ttgula scheme of modern , the itt' st dangerous people are three Countess of Ori nes), Rosie Boot i\lar- eccle iastical regulation of life is built !7 I ! (Countess on the plan of making a roan holy by who feel pious because they can say, cluoness of iloactfnrt), and Anna Rubin - We neer did any harm. soil (Countess of fio:.1}n). ‘ye du not object to the pain and pri- 'roll' favorite amusements of Qti.','it emptying hint of all et it and stopping there. leaving a negative coed.lion, w,itt ut a thought of the necessity of tilling the void. So lung have we been trained in this that w,• are all ti gu�,ti deal more con- cerned about the things we ought not to do than about the things twe ought 1, do. \Ve spend our days nipping off the buds of evil inclinations, pulling; tip the weeds of evil habit~, eondering fast, 1 ti l% s o , how it u ► ens the gnu to h multiply IP y forgetting altogether the wiser plan we bound would ucio;:t with weeds and briers in there are thousands of things wo 'tight ►t t tfet rid wulurnc, doutg, c%e n the wati,,n Provided [hey Itat•� their purpose'' \V►Ihc•hnina of Holland are skating; and [alt +.31 nature object, to a course of riling;, but as a child her h,►t►by evl,s the' life that maims, [,inches, and re�lricts keeping; nt poultry, her Majesty is de' - v. ilhuut e'orrespontiing and compensal- voted to animals, and is averse to sport, Ing; slrtelnpntcnt and liberty sc,tnea•het'e' 1 u, ,lie cunn,,l bear 1.) think of the t\'c tight u�ninst tvt,ry law of life and,,nitnal. in her preserves being staul;lt- courl the ways of death so tong; as %t"`'' te•t'ed. Count Tolstoi has lately added book- binding to the t►unter'uus skilled trades which he already practises. ile spent dill' ti �tt binding winter 1 g, e first 1111f last ih . in leathern library of 1t ) paper -bound , rythin ', frog staking of ttte covers to the gilding and lettering, with his own hands. \'i;count Carlton, tvho recently cel''- brated itis fourteenth birthday, is the eld- est son of the Earl of Wharncliffc, who bears one of (tte most hypenatcd sur- names in the peerage--Montagu-Stuart- Wortley-Mackenzie. Carlton, the place from which the title is derived, is a small hamlet in the West (tiding of Yorkshire. The Earl of Seafield is a representa- tive of the Colonies in the perage. Burn ill New Zealand. the son of the noble- man who evotlaed as a fencer and r►avvy. he has lived the ordinary life of the col- onist, and eight years ago married a Colonial ['ride. 110 is entitled to a sat in the 'louse of Lords -whenever he may care to claim it -as Boron Strath- spey. The Czar has a habit of spending endeavor to develop character by put- ting it into bandages, leading strings, atiel legal restrictions. -rN 11 :D \11 EVIL I BE I .i.I. �l� SF "1'111.1 I. I our gardens. not to de. But the hest way o There are many who still think of the or the tart's is to stat good wheat in pious ratan as one who succeeds in ac- abundance. The flay to avoid itto cornplishing the largest numtber of re- things we ought not to do is to do the pressi.•,ns in his life, the ideal being the things that ought to be done. The colorless life. never doing a thing that empty lite is a standing invitation to is wrung or subject to criticism. The temptation; the busy than seldom finds energy of many a life is being spent the devil's card lett at his door. in a campaign against a certain list of Live the life above the things you PROSCRiBEE) DEEDS. would overcome. It never has b lomat necessary to pass a law {rnit ifing the president front playing marbles; larger interests till his life so that these things do not even occur to [tint. Give a 111118 a great work to du and you will save bite front a thousand temptations to do 518011 and unworthy things. iloliness of life is not in innocence of evil but in positive forcefulness for good; not in doing as little harm as we can, but in tilling the whole life with worthy, helpful, uplifting deeds. The good life not only has no debts -It has large assets, deep and lasting value; it more time in his study than almost any enriches ati lite. 11 offers to the world other ruler in the world. The (:.•aritza not barren Land claiming; the virtue of front the thorn and the trier, is always sealed with hien while he is freedoma+ work in Itis room. in this respect he 11 crowns all with the abundance and stands alinost alone among; great mon- glory of fir and myrtle. HENRY K. COPE. archs, as nearly all of them prefer to have women out of the way when they _- - are immersed in the business of State Blessed Is the man -according to their beatitudes -who has the largest number of things he does not do. But if rightness is abstinence trout evil, (hen a Iritnppnst must nitvtt} s be better than t roan. fur it justly can lay claim to ail the negative virtue'~. What an easy sway of life is this, simply to find vat the things we know other peo- ple like to do and to determine that it we only can leave them undone we are holy in the sight of heaven. But not only iS this a way of folly, it is a way of positive harm, n way fatal at last to the true life. To do no more No other remedy possesses such login to turn out one set of devils only perfect cleansing, healing and puri. is to invite other and worse devils into the heart. To seek emptiness only is Eying properties. i to invite yet more inquiry. An empty Externally, heals Sores, ulcers, Abscesses, and all Eruptions. Internally, restores the Stomach,' SC1IOOL THE SIJNBAY Liver, Bowels and Blood to healthy action. If your appetite is poor, your energy gone, your ambition i INTERNATIONAL LESSON, lost, 13.13.13. will restore you to the SEPT. 2. full enjoyment of happy vigorous life. A BAD CASE OF KIDNEY TROUBLE CURED BY DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS.' Kidney Trouble?, no matter of what kind or what stage of the disease, cats be quickly and pet etanently cured by the ate of these wonderful pills. Mr. Joseph Leland, Altna, N.\\'.'1'., recommends thein to all kidney trouble sufferers. when he sat, :- 1 was troubled v. ith dull head - eche,. had frightful dreams. terrible three narratives in (hese points of dy- er frequent desire to The differences ere such as we pair.: '• my legs and a fr 1 tail. pal.. in n �i urinate. Noticing DOAN'S KIDNEY might naturally- expect in three inde- PILLS recommended for just such annoy• pendent accounts of the sante event, anc•ez as ,.nine, it oeeitrrc.l to me to give given by three different persons several tem a trial. so I precured a box of !decades after the event itself had taken them, sail was very mach surprised at ? {►lace. \\ e' have here a good example of the fact that divine inspiration in ito ease rules out or de'troys the human element, and it Is only a nal row view of Inspiration anti its effects which is concerned to reconcile these differ- ence:, and stake each of the three ac. counts tally word for word with the, other,. The fact. moreover. that such differences occur in the gospel ncrrative is n strong argument in favor of the authenticity of that narrative. \Vere the gospel slnries concerning the mira- cles wrought by Jesus the product of the ililagination of mein Living at some later time, nt' were they the cunningly de- vised fables of ingenious sten. lye might expect harmony in detail inffie narratives of different writers who to- gether conspired 10 deceive those ier whoni they wrote. With the attempts which have been ninde to harmonize the three accounts of the healing of the blind men. or men, we need not con- cern ourselves. 'Tie story of the visit of Jeste to the home of %aacchrrtls is pecu- liar to lathes narrative e. Lesson X. Bartinnru4 and 7,alrch:ells. Golden Text: Luke 19. 10. TI11•. 1,L• S.SON WORD STUDIES. Note. -The text of the Revised Ver- sion is used as a basis for these Word Studies. Three Accounts. --Parallel accounts of the healing of blind Bnrtitua.'us at Jer- icho) will be Poon.. in Matt. 20. e9-31. and Mark 10. 46-52. The three accounts of this event differ in detail in many respects. Matthew mentions two blind men, while \Inrk and n Luke speak ,f only one. NItllbew ad Mark, again, 4. A sycamore tree -1.11. 1 fi g -nt 11 o rrw• . 'l'hi; tree, which is common in Pales - when the miracle as taking place when Jetts was leaving Jericho. while `line, was related to both the lig and Luke represents it as taking place when twith mulbereither.ry. i iougrest' n t idea %cal he was approaching the city. Accord ing to Matthew Jesus heals the than the fig tree. its leaf that of the mut- with a touch, according to Mark, with berry; hence the name. a word of comfort. and according to 5. Zacctla'us, make haste. and come Luke. with a word of command. 11 is down -We need r cnnne'c un assume t Christ's mica- ttselcss to attempt to harmon:zo lhn recognipower ion of %acchu'us. and his call- ing turn by name. When. however, we note how thoroughly Jesus Underciloo•J the man's heart and life we roust lake into account the supernatural know- ledge which he possessed. and which was necessary for his work. For to-day-i.it. this very day. Both the choice of the word. and its position at the beginning of the clause heighten the emphasis. 6. deceived him joyfully - The de- spised publicans were not as a rule thus honored by rabbis of acknowledged standing. 7. They all murmured - Apparently those who composed the multitude. nil of whom. douhtleS_:. shared the eon. tempt for the man with whom Jesus hod consented to speak and sojourn. The Home 414}4+4- - ' \tit l).\IN'1'i {loud vt'Hi fAiti11;.1 lit: fit4e , grs►int'+1 fil'nt and 11„t ttvurt;rt'\vtt: 'left t' large. Well is LIP! to II* @aures' glti't t;t1;glit 11113 it loo ,,% ttl►11g is equally paw hole some. t,'enl sltu,ul:t ttevef Ito lioltt tnng 111 eunt- tnrt', foi' 1t, like t►Ihrr tithhi I'f �`t'ltrtg tI ►d t•• 1) ,tt � 1 e � to tt11 11 bt 11 , 1. nt tool , Id nr t In Ihc+ +liallie,t tainted L t t,i'd it 14 Cooke+l. Sltolvhalla.- -\\ ash n lrneupfu1 of ►';''h end boil It gently In new milk. ilttvore•+t with a piece of lemon rind and :' toad" of cinnamon, till rialto thiel, mold r'n0 ounce of fresh butter. stir all thorough- ly. and place in small greased Claps. When cele turn out on a deep blah and pour boiled custard round. Male very cold and serve. To preserve cream during hot weather the following recipe ie useful : Dissolve in water an equal weight of white sugar with the cream to be pre'serveil, using only just enough water to ntc;lt the su- gar anti make a rich syrup. Boll dole and while still warns add the trema, stirring all together. \\'hen quite cold. place in a bottle and cork tightly. gd tomato tilslt prepared as fallA offs :oo['our bailing; tw•isaiter over the fruit to loosen the skins. Let them stunt for five minutes, then peel and put into a stewpan with a little salt and bull,.r. Stew all very slowly for half an hour, and add a very little tarragon vinegar. 1'our on to buttered toast, dust over with \elute pepper and serve. This is very good with cold ,.neat or u broiled steak. To bottle peas for winter use. Pick and shell your peas when quite dry, and .scald in boiling water. Drain very dry. poor into bottles or 'ars, and cover with saturated brine. (lave a film of oil on tap to exclude the air. Before cooking the peas soak them in tvnrrn water for an hour or two to extract all the salt. This method has the great .id - vantage of simplicity. Herb beer is excellent if made as fol- lows : Boil for three-quarters of an hour one ounce of dandelion leaves, two ounces of sliced ginger, a quarter of an ounce of hops, in two and a half gallons of water. When the mixture has cooled a little add one attd it half pounds of brown sugar and three-quar- ters of an ounce of Spanish juice. Ver- ntent with yeast and after twenty-four hours strain and bottle. was the Mesa:ah. and lint this probably in their own private ruomS. tt its his one chance to be healed of ,its The Archbishop of Canterbury, on one blindness, the ur►furlunate man refuses occasion, when addressing the membe'r's to be silent. of a chess club, said that though he 10. Jesus stood -Stopped and gave at- "was not a distinguished chess plater, hellion. That urgent cry could not 1►e he could claim to be the representative a try fur alms simply. hilt betrayed a of chez in an unusual degree, for he deeper longing and faith. had seen a good deal of king., and Commanded him to be broil ht--- q'1eens. hard lived in two castles, and \lark records the change of altitude of was the ot►ly living ratan who was 'mall the multitude town rd the blind man as it was perceived that Jesus took a knight and a bishop, so that h.' reg, Snntt as resented all the pieces except the pawn." notice of hint. 41. \\ hat will them -A question asked. Count Leo Spannochi, once a spoilt not for information, but to lest and child of Viennese society, has been but'i- draw out the faith sof the n1an, ed as a pauper. On coating of age Santi►ee' 2. %acchas-- Nul mentioned else inherited a considerable fortitne, which where in the New 'testament. In the he spent in reckless fashion. 'n Talmud mention is matte of a 'Zacchteus cr` his bels are still spoken of. Once he made a wager that he would ride who lived at Jericho and also of his son, his Arab stallion Sultan from Budapest the celebrated ilabbi Joclu►natt• to Vienna against any coaching team Chief publican -A superior among, the o' four. ile won the match by nearly tax collectors having subordinate col - half the distance. The count was also lectors under him. a famous wrestler. After running through all his money. he took various c'ir'cus engagement.;, always tolling low- er, owing- chiefly to the habit of opium smoking wl►ich he had contracted. appearance. drop in shale quicklime. urtd then pour in a 11111e 1,0104 water. Strung tobacco wider poured in their haunts will also t•ffecliwely deatt'uw ants. l.gge cooked geelly and just long enough to coagulate their albumenwithout toughening it are the most digestible food lit the li'l of animal pro- ducts. if cooked in u low temperature for ten to fifteen minutes the a hit,' t t the egg is delicious end Is like u tender jelly, which is appreciated by the wulid and robust persons equally. !1'►t w%ater as a beverage is greatly ap- pri c iale'd in China. It would be well if ont e. were tor v 1 � ' such a simplet diink papular with us, for, %vhile it is not un- pleasant to take, it promotes secretion better Than cold, and is at all times it e e' stiutu,,.. , rtl_t,t no mean value. Token the lust thing at night tend in the early morning hot stater greatly relieves those who tt;,ve g ettty '.yutptants. Are a specific for all heart and neer To (ram Wall -Paper. -Use the bread troubles. Here are some of the sputa - that has stood in u dry place for nearly . toms. Any Due of theta should be • a %%•,'t.k, As ;(toff as the surface is soile.t warning for you to attend to it un- cut it off. Wipe 'lively down the pa- mediately. Don't delay. Serious break. per. about halt a yard at each stroke. down of the system may follow, if you until the upper part of the paper is do: Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Dizzl. completed all round. Then go round ness, Palpitatlpn of the Heart, Shortness uguiti, commencing each successive of Breath, Kush of Blood to the Head.aid att•ukcs ri little higher' than where the Smothering Werai $palls, Spasm ud or Paint through t upper stroke finished, till ntl is done. y. If you are short of bread and your the Heart; Cold, Clammy Hands and Peet. There may ix many minor syrrt{,- oven is difficult to heal, you can bake toms of heart and nerve trouble, but biscuits on top of the stove in .Spiel •r hese are file chief ones. or any ordinary dripping pan. If lee tebl sillnun's Heart and Nerve Pills will latter is need you need a grate ras- dispel all these symptoms from the system. beaus rout tattler the. pun to prevent m MILBURN'S Heart end Nerve Pills. the effectual eure tlov male. 1 take a great deal tfleacure in recommending them to all ki,�ney trouble ,utTerere. Frier 50e. ger bete. or 't for $l 25: all des; r' or The Doan Kidney rill Co., TPruutO, Ont. LACK OF Si' as I'. Th• re are 'oma trials „ It h b el one It an early age. 13ubb3, \ iattrtg: !, grandmother. suffered one of thorn. "Diel you have a good timer 1 Akre! Hobby's mother. The small son hesi- taled before he answered. "Not so very." he said, sadly "You see, grandmother kept telling me to eat ell the dinner I wanted, and 1 couldn't r Verse :1:5. As he drew nigh unto Jere it•ho-F ram beyond Jordnn re the cart o mere for a short tine he had been itt retireinent with Me diseipl's. \ certain held man -Mark records ►1,- name. which was 13nrtituteus. 1. glen :-- [bind beggars ‘.11 ling by the ' WO)side are shit a ceetition sight in the acquired with a filth white] wits re- quired. q uire d. :t.. 181111lt'e1 swhaf tills meant ----The 9. 1 sem of Abraham - 'lac'chnrus • l,lintl nem'• shaves for gain depended proved himself to be this in a twofold targfe't) u;,o11 tee aril'',.•.• ,,n'i ,•h;tra,.te'r Se'i1te, Though despised. he was 51111 R flesh: is l „g the elrevd e .: • 11 t+ i ;,'••I,g;. en her of lite Jewish tai e, and there- • '37 - they will Came to tat'• work for 37. 1, -,t, ''1 \ ; ;:. ' ' "" to est t (1111.1 f..t-e a son of Aheromnt after the.' i.► 1'! tear Lard 1111' m,: the t•t't,l'h�i white his penitence and faith proved ss„rk'a sat''. and that that may be hap - mon Irl at this .lime. It had tl••ublte��i Peen hint to be a true son of the "father :,t pw•, bar, afier n11. 1 loll }�'u. the most given 10 hila at first le tests ['hatisoes the frettl►ful." cndurtngg phot►=►ttt' Itt.►t life'. atf',rels is that 10 he t�,und in labor." and outer, of his enemies who wide •1 10 tkIl, 113' hint. To the agleam people p.-.•����" it had now t�"Name a magical terns. SORROW OF IT. ;t'1. Je..11 • M. .1 Son cf [►avid--.\ clear i,w.,,rti. limn On old hnchelnr herrn n "Qua -.'r thing, i:n't i1 �' queried the indication that the 1,3 n:t roan bait come I,eil'y ery he ta{;e' a fr''ih gtl•ip on hl.i ah.eut•111ineleet g►^t,,►n. who asks ques- ta le 3iewe in .Pius as the \fete fele n„4.11111►►n to eemnin aingtl' nto.e on the inclnhnenl lttnn. :1!). It''lntl.etl Itim- Ilio elft, i y d,+uhtic« Mee hut s ►laser'' asked the other `write sten rue h,s'et1 for the cncnrM� " ,litt•rte`ll the allentit,t► '•f ih,• ntulliltrele. ' party In the dialogue. tr..:n hews. and war til.+•Iv to intrmtpt Ih''y hatwe n,iulr, tali moll men etre tee t' ►rat+'rv"ttion in twlnch he might be los ed ler the in iter they have made. "that putting! n plain Roel ring o', n i t►gtag:,�t. It r1't'► 11ad teetotal n 1 homograph 11 wtnnnn'a [bleb finger chnuld lilac ;bee I n*►n' 0 teat deet--- wwetirld trove 5.'t%eel 10111 :1 1o1 of, fiddling nem meter her thumb explaline`d the cried 111 the 1great I'i'i iniictl by the cOm'kti.'n Itisl Jesus white 'tome was bunting. pee ut tots pre:ude . A maxi that is a sinner -The accusa- tion of the multitude was beyond daul,1 just and founded on facts, the publicans its n class hawing the reputation of be- ing extortioners atnl oppressors of the pe►iir. 0i 1'+'hotd Ler(' - 7acchirus cnnnnt to anti- (►NE BLESSING OF POVERTV. Son►ctw hat - it'ggit►lar Worriment of a Man Once I'.,or Rut Now Inch. ONE burning. The pan lutist be covered closely and the biscuits must be turned. Potatoes can be thus baked on top of the stove in an asbestos mat and close- ly covered. 1'h►'y too should be turned. -f------ ROMANCE ON DESERTED 1)VEA. Price t50 cents per bot, or S for f1.25. WEAK SPELLS CURED. Mrs. L. Dorey, Hemford, N.S., writes us as follows : " I was troubled with dizziness, weak spells and fluttering of the heart. I procured a box of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, and they did me so much good that I got two tnore boxes, The Once Famous Alaskan Town Now and Ifinishing must sthem I was y that I cannotc t completely Has a Single Inhabitant. mend thetn too highly. I* has been just ten years since George Cannock, a "squaw man," and itis two --- Indian companions, "Shonkun► Jint" and "t'agish Cha►rtie," discovered gold on the rite of what is now known as Bonanza Creek iu Lite Yukon territory. There was but one way to reach the gold fields, and this was ovet•lend froth otic head of the Lynn Canal. One on each of the two tongues of this canal and only a few miles apart, the towns of Dycu and Skagway sprang up and competed for the trade of the treasure seekers. The name Skagway means "[tome ,f ills: North Wind." It opened be \\'bite Boric route; shorter, but more danger- uus, lu the goal- Dyea, an [belga word, tlteaning; to pack or to load, %was the headquarters fur the Chilkaot ('a�S. 'Tickets were sold front all points t,; Dyea ; and as early as May 1, 1897. more than 1,000 people were in the little Indian town preparing to pack over the mn,untuins. Soon a steel cable tramway was built over the Chilkoot ['ass, the 11111111 ollice of %vhieh was in hyea. "Then the tents gave way to substan- tial frame buildings. Numerous hotels stores and banks opened for business, and the once Indian village became a thriving city of 5,000 people. Skagway also continued to grow, but from a different cause. The! White Pass xa-s a failure during the summer cf 1897. Scarcely 10 per cent. of the men who used it ever reached Lake Bennett. hundreds gave up in despair and re- turned to their homes i1► the States, while many settled in Skagway and en- gaged in various business enterprises. Finally the railroad was projected, built, and is now being operated from Skagway to \Vhile Ilorse-a distance of • at s tart- 112somewhat farei ssom miles. The ling --$20 one way -the trip from the terminus of one steamship line on the Lynn Canal to the beginning of ano- ther just below the \White Rapids is made in fewer hours than it took weeks in the days of 1497 and 1898. This ftxed.the fate of Dyea. Its s:rug- gte ogninst the city with the iron horse was brief. Thousands of dollars had been invested- in land, buildings and merchandise; a few saw quickly the im- pending doom and sold out at a smell loss, Where lingered In the hope that -something unforeseen might happen to turn the tide of fortune. c�111y to be over- whelmed in financial disaster. The end soon came. and Dvea, with its former streets dimly marked by in- dentations in the sand heaps, its ware- houses still bearing names of mer- chants, hotels, banks and dwellings slowly yielding 10 the ravages of the elements and the vandetlisnt of the Skut;- I)eevonshire S•ivab }'ie. -Cut into neat pieces about two pounds of the best end of neck of mutton. Flavor these lightly tsilh salt and pepper, place a layer . t them in rattier a deep dish; on this put a layer of apples and onions. sliced, with a good sprinkling of brown sugar. Continue with alternate layers of meat and tipples. etc., till the dish is full. Put an uo water or liquid, cover w ill' :e good short crust, and bake in rani •r a slow oven. !limbed) Wine. -Into one gallon cf boiling rain -water cut eight pounds c t rhubarb In thin slices. I'ut Into a tub, cover closely with a thick cloth, and add four pounds of preserving loaf sugar, the juice of two lemons and the rind 01 one. To fine it lake one ounce of isinglass dissolved in one pint of the liquor in a china -lined saucepan. When this is quite cold add it to the test of the wine and cask it. \Vhen the fer- mentation is over, bung it down. Giblet Pie. -Prepare and thoroughly cleanse two sets of giblets and throw into tt saucepan. cover with water and bring to the boil. Skim thoroughly. add salt, and simmer very slowly for one hour and 41 ho.., removing each piece as soon as tender. Cut the giblets into pieces of regular size. dip into seasoned (hair and mix with halt a pound ► 1 beefsteak cul in thin slices end thickly floured. Pour in sufficient thoroughly seasoned stock to cover, and over this. it convenient, lay slices of hard- boiled egg, seasoned and c�sa11.with Covdrped iheie par- sley. pepperp with a nice short crust, pierce a hole in it, decorate with leaves, and bake slow- ly for an hour atter the crust is set. Vegetable Roast. -Roil 1 pt chestnuts until tender, remove the shells and pound the nuts rather coarse. Roil to- gether 1 head celery. 2 tut nips, 2 pota- toes. and a sprig of thyme. When the vegetables art' lender remove the chest- nuts and vegetables together, stash and add 2 tablespoons butter. j<, cup sweet creast, 1 cup stale breadcrumbs. 1 tea- spoon powdered sage, 1ittbe tNlix alled onion. salt and pepper. to- gether, turn into a battered baking - dish and heat through in a hot oven. This dish tnny be served plain or with dressing. "Poverty has one blessing concealed in it. anyway." said a man now enjoy- ing a fortune he made himself; "it gives a man a proper' appetite for the enjoy- ment of Weal. - when lie does get il. Only a man that hos once leen acclrs,- tomed to corned beef ant, cabbage can really [:now the delights of turkey. 'I'lte man who has all his life eaten only fine toed can't Lind any particular enjoymetel in 11, he's always been used to it and it nlaay-s tastes the same; all he can do for variety is to spice thing►s up; a man must have lived pn chuck steal: to ap- preciate the tenderloin. "Speaking of contrast; 1 never when 1 was poor envied the rich; never. never thought of such a Thing; and you can take my word for it that ltie average man feels just the same way. Envy the t'ich'. Wily, he'd 'aught al you if you said steel a thing to hint. Ile thinks he's is good as anybody; and he expects In be rich himself some day. Envy the rich? \\'hy. that's n comic Idea; aid the only rich roan that disturbs him •.l all is Lite nrtn who has accumulated ni; have fnile•tt In hers,.. or at Irnsl not 1►y fair means but by milk - and the criticism of the multitude on tag the public; and he' doesn't worry the act cel Jesus, 111? conscience, more-, over hint as much as he ought to, he'b over. condetnnect ' him. and justified the so laky getting rich himself. charge of the multitude. "Really. now That I've got money. the It 1 have wrongfully exacted aught of only litittg that worries me is about my any mrtn-'this is just the charge which chitdreit, We were poor when tti.'y niers generally cllly t.inde against hen and caste along. but rich before they came all of his class. to under1tancl, and they hav' n 'v+'r I restore fourfold -"Ise law in ex- woemtnet! for anything; a1'.ay5 had every• Iretne eases of deliberate robbery some- thing they wanted; and they don't kttnw limeS excreted even a sevenfold rostilu' sw•hat it is to lack. find Ihe•y ean't find lirnt, but in ordinary cases only en the enjoyment in being rich that 1 do• amount equal to Itte' sum wrongfully el .hall hope that ►11i e l turn o nroitt to 01141 Iwo sense and t t+ it they do turn out so, why then :we with n small sponge. The effect et the shall Iia abl.' to put (heir toot down rnt et►d ut n mv►nl11 i•• esionichingt. {o the art�und anti 1►ringi Ihcni to kn'rty lo I'r•e►scat I'+ lisheel Ir,nwurk front he world with knowwkdg;t' nmol ender- ttie.toi1•--\lix Sense col►nl warni•h with Ila clanding(; and what 1 hope most of all as much ultse oil as swill mn a it greney, to which nib re arty :;y HMO ::pnrgxenti ,', and of►1►1v. 1)etxicitslorii.ioflngt GltOt'.-- Ai lea'g►'.:,nftit 01 saltpetre added to a l:rge tt'i r,f glue ww ill cffectu.►II)' reteewe its ogee oder : I e- aidts it e•uettsce the glue to dry faqeer noel harder than it would without the sa ilpet (:n}...tine pepper sprinkled slightly over lire [reel atenit rear plants will eft.-ctuelly keep cafe from serltlehing sip the In .15. The some preventive. 11 1.¢ S:agY{. ke'efte ttx,ijis aa.ay. if ss 4.11 spriiik. ied about the Mixes of carpets *ilei rugs when roti are closing the Mauer'. Ti, 1)estr'►y Anis.--\•'te the hurl.' c►r Crack through which they make (heir I "a discontinued post office with tele- phone c',iurnunication" belongs to a roan who has a homestead claim in the "suburbs" of the deserted city, and %vote raises a few vegetables for the Skagway uturkct. -•.4 CRYING SHELLS OF CEYLON. Sounds They flake Llke The Notes of an Aeolian Ilurp. Sir J. Emerson 'Tennent, having heard a story about musical sounds issuing; front the lake at ilalticalea, in 1:eylnn, paid a visit to the place, says Ch►ambers's Journal. 'l'Itc fishermen told him that the sounds, which resembled the faint sweet notes of an Aeolian harp, were heard only at night and dur- ing the dry season. were most distinct when the moon was nearest the full and proceeded, they believed, not from a fish, but from a shell called the "cry- ing shell." "in the evening," says Tennent, "tvtlen the Moon rose I took a boat and at'- companled the fishermen to the spot. \Ve rowed about 200 yards nnrtheHtt of the jetty by the fort gale; there was net a breath of wind or a ripple except those caused by the dip of our oars. On corning to the point mentioned I distinctly heard the sounds in question. They came up from the water like the► gentle thrills of a musical chord, or the faint vibrations of a wineglass when its rim is rubbed by a moistened finger. .1 was not one sustained note, but a aorta• rude of tiny sounds, ench clear and d15 - tinct in itself; the sweetest treble ming. Ione %%•ith til'' lowest bass. "On applying the ear to the woodwork of the boat the vibration was greatly increased in volume. The sounds varied considerably nt different faints as wo moved across the lake. as if lite number of the nnirnals from which they pro- ceeded was greatest In particular spots, and occasionally we rowed out of hear- ing of them altogether, until on return- ing to the original locality the sounds %were et once renewed. This fact hems to indicate that the cause; of the sounds, whatever they may be. are stet• tianary nt weveral points, and 1hi5 agrees with the statement of the nati\ ee that they are produced by moluaca and not by ash. "They carne evidently and sensibly from the depths of the lake, rind (hero was notating in the surrounding circutn- stances to support the cenfeciuret that they could be the rewerbe'rnUen of noises made by insects on the shore conveyed along the surface of the, water, for they were luude-et and most distinct at ,.Dulls where the nature of the land and that intervention of the fort and its build- ings furhnde the I,ns-it'ility of tt,:-+ kind ,t conduction." 111N1 rOR THE IIOMr. tlug;s sltntllet not be shaken. but hung on rt line in the open air and carefully beaten with a cane beater for the pure iros:e. 1'ura(iln s it( cin a stone hoar may btt rettiiivcd I►y rubath-brick ower the tiiark and lettinbbigg ingt stay 1111 next day, Then wash in the usual sway, and the flr,or dl be t►c'i't('ctly clone, Stnuwwple Tonic f ►r th'• [lair.-t't►t a lea- spuotiful of Salt in half a pint of water, tel rub n Bothe e'1* the scalp every day is •:at•.:re s s•, ec::.: for DIARRHOEA. DYSENTERY. CRAMPS. PAiN 1N THE STOM• ACH, COLIC, CHOLERA MOR• BUS. CHOLERA IN:'ANTUM, • SSA SICKNESS, and all %M• MSR COMPLAINTS in Cbi,,::eo or Adults. its a t'tcts ar• miens':an!. Pleasant ani Harn►:e,s 1.) take. Rapes, Reliable sod F7•ctua1 in its I r HAS PRE:4 A ilOUSEhl )LD Peetei►Y i OR NEARLY SIXTY YE A R S. PCC 311 CENTS. 1t�•.,. • .. t•i 1,;,, it5 t twtif wayans, its wharves, once laden with produce of immense vulva, fallen to de- cay, is to -day absolutely deserted. lis name remains on the map, and is mentioned in the Alaska directory es THE MASTER SPECIALISTS OF AMERICA We know tho discseses and weaknesses cf men like an open book. Wo have been c':r ing; them for 30 }'ears. We have given our lives to it, and thousane;s upon thousands of men restored to Vigorous Vitality aro today 11vine monuments to the skill. knowlerige and s'icc'.ss of Drs, Kennedy & Kergan. Wo never hold out false hopes, we never undertake a c: se wo cannot cure. We have male FO thorough. a study of all (ho diseases cf rn"n-of Varicocele, Stricture, Blood Poisons, Hydrocele, Nervous Debility, Paralysis. Bladder, Urinary and Kidney Diseases, General Weakness, L:ss cf Vitality, a-:'1 have cured so many ttin!,sar,r1s of c uses that if there is a cure, for YOUR disease you will find R here. \':3:en we undertake a case there is no such thing as falt,ir' . A W e chane nothing for consultation and o'ir knowledge, !;kill aril c xp'rience are at your service. We will expleit•'.o you How and Why We Can Cure You; why the dlseasea of men require the knowledge and skill of Master Specialists. We do not require to experiment with your ease ns we know from experience in treating thousands of cases exactly what to prescribe for y. ur symptoms. Don't be± discouraged if you have treated without success with Quacks. Fakirs, Electric Delta. Free Trials. etc. Yoe must get eTtre+t-and Doctors alone can cure you Our New Method System of treatment has stood the test for '5 years --why should it fall In your ease. I3h Should d your case prove incurable you need not pay us s dollar. We o any Bank in ihb; elty as to ear financial standing. If you cannot call write for a Ouesti' n Blank for Home Treatment. Consultation Free. Booklets sent Free DRsJENNEDY& KEROAN 148 SHELBY STREET, DETROIT, MICH.