HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1906-09-13, Page 3s
ABSO1UTc �
SECURITY.
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
(milt Bear signature of
W -Z4
ass Fac -Slash. Wrapper Below.
/111 Tres small r..ad as oeuy
le ta'se as sagas.
CCARTER'S FOR KEAOLCHL
e�7 a■ `��/ fol! DIZZINESS.
Fr:111l10USNISS.
FOR TO PID LIVER.
FOR Cf. TIPATION.
FOR SAL )W STUN.
�. •�� COMPLEXION
_ FOA TtiECt2tlf'
!suety 0 � �/�'j�l�e4DJAVAllnianliy_ iiJ� Iw.►�/
airs
CURL 8ICK HEADACHE.
Kidney
Disorders
Are no
respecter
of
persons.
People in every walk of life are troubled.
Have you a Backache? If you have it
13 the first sign that the kidneys are not
working properly.
A neglected Backache leads to serious
Kidney Trouble.
Check it in time by taking
NTIDOTE FOR MODERN EVILS
The Best Things Are the Least
Expensive.
DOAN'S SIDNEY PILLS
"THE GREAT KIDNEY SPECIFIC."
They cure all kinds of Kidney Troubles
from Backache to Bright's Disease.
SOo. a ho* or 1 for 51.35
all do:..,ra os
TRE DOAN KIDNEY PILL GO..
Toronto. Ont.
MOURNEART'SH
NERVE PlLls
WEAK
PEOPLe
In a recent address, Rev. Dr. Newell
Dwight Hillis, of the Brooklyn Taber-
nacle, stili: --Il is often said that our
generation is more avaricious, pleasure•
Irving and immoderate than any of its
predecessors. But he who reads the
history of the 'eighteenth century will
be cures of depression over the excel -
.es of the nineteenth and tweritieth. In
medicine it is a proverb that ide cures
like, and That a little drop that causes
disease will also prevent it. And cer-
tainly one page out of the history of
Walpole 'nukes the history of the "cast
set" of to -day seem tame.
What! Our generation a race of spec-
ulators? in the days when the stock
waterers in London were promoting the
Mississippi Bubble the tradesmen and
citizens o[Lo London upon
Saturday
night so as to be the first in place on
\londay morning ready for the Stock
Exchange to open. Fuithful wives car-
ried these men warm drinks of tea and
whiskey during the two nights. Some
men fainted In their places, others were
trampled to death, and all that the citi-
zen might be the flrst to exchange his
gold guinep for a piece of paper that
represented nothing.
H[GiIEST WELFARE INEXPENSIVE.
But the best antidote to the evils of
nur time is the love of simplicity and
the essentials of the life that is more
than meat or raiment. This wise King
who prayed "Give me neither poverty
nor riches" understood the importance
of the golden mean. Ile knew that ton
much rain of wealth and loo much
drought of poverty were alike injurious
lo the fruits of the soul. Ile knew that
God hod ordained that the swele;t
pleasures should be within easy reach
of the shortest hand.
Theme pills ours all diseases and dis-
orders arising from weak heart, worn out
Reeves or watery bleed, such se Palpita-
tion, Skip Beate, Tlu•obhieg, Smothering,
Dizziness, Week nr Falet Spells, Anaemia,
Nervoteenoas, Sleepleemnsss, Brain Pas,
General Debility and Lack of Vitality.
They are a true heart tonte, nerve food
and blood enricher, building up and
renewing all the worn out and wseted
tissues of the body end restoring perfect
health. i'rles Soo. a bore sr 1t for $1.8.1)s
St sll druggists.
'• VP: .1ANS DYING-OFI'.
Veterans of the American Civil War
are dying now al the rate of 100 n day,
a'c ,rdulg to the recons: of the United
State, Pension Oflice. The reports fur
several months i•ast have shown the
death rade eluting the aid soldiers to ie
111 the neighborhood of 3.000 a month.
Pen -ton 011lre officials who have
wat•h,•d the figures closely and know
the tendency of the death rate are of the
opinion that the -number of Civil War
pensioners Ilas reachedthe maximum
and that hereafter each succeeding
(InOntl will show a dta rease.
CURES
On architecture we have all learned
hi eschew ornament. The Corinthian cap-
ital has just enough leaves, the Ionic
column has very simple lines. In liter-
ature we know that nothing destroys
the ornation of the book like verbosity.
Every June bride knows enough to wear
one color -white --and one spray of
blossoms on the bosom. The physicians
tell us that walking is far more health-
ful than riding, and we need no physi-
cian to tell us that it is less expensive.
When the poor boy Is making his for-
tune he does not realize that his
strength, his energy and his happiness
are largely due to his plain living.
Grown rich, he eats eight or ten courses,
Kids two or three kinds of wine. That
Is, tie eats the courses for a short time
-then the courses carry him into tie
graveyard. The achievements of Words-
worth, the old German Emperor or Leo
XIIi., of Gladstone and Tennyson, are
fi ,
[ extreme abstinence
the achievements n
In old age. A little fruit, s little cer-
eal and wheaten bread, a gloss of milk -
these are within reach of all, even the
f.00rest laborer; anything more is at those Scriptures teach. Jesus deals first
the peril of the eater. The express coin- with the second of the two points.
)nine: ►nark certain packages "til the 25. Neither marry nur are given in
among the people, which would be in-
volved in his failure to answer satisfac-
torily.
19. Moses wrote -In Deut. 5. 5 "If
brethren dwell together, and one of thein
die, and have no son, the wife of the
dead shall not be married without unto
a stranger," etc. The purpose of the
law was the preservntlon of families
and family names, which under the old
tribal division of the nation had been
highly desirable.
Ya,. There were seven brothers --Prob-
ably a fictitious or tivs,lhelical case.
pealed rin.sings would take out the slight
alifhiess.
Hard water. alt ads prejudicial to
washing, is, of course, especially objec-
tionable to perishable dainty garments.
\\'ith huffs and grays, either in linen or
muslin, it seems to have n spotting ten-
dency. Thee colors are a little hard 10
+ wee,' in any ease. Black pepper is said
to lowed). their tendency to fade out
and spot, and U slightly softens the
BREAD NO\'ELIII . water. Use about a teaspoonful.
A method of permanently fixing the
Tea Rolls. -\\'hen your bread is ready different shades of blue from the palest •
• ,cri.liuUl
Jurk
o much less
21. Ye know not lht• scriptures nor rho W put in pans set aside enough dough up to lite {
power of God -Their crier Was a two- in u bowl for a good sited lural --titre and shutes is by soaking fur a few hours 10
fold one : (1) Ignorance id the Scrip- one -halt pounds will he sufficient. shave a pail of water into which an ounce 01
tures ; (2) Of the profound truths which ready one-half eup lard, which has been sugar of lead has ,been dissolved.
warmed, but not melted; to this add one- Mt water starch is mixed in the fol -
warmed,
cup sugar; ,nix these ingredients, lowing proportions : One tablespoon of
together and work them thoroughly into march. a quarter teaspoon borax di:-
{
owner's rick." In lite:, feast Motors marriages -The carnal relations of this the dough. Have your pastry board,
sulted In a little Uuilipg water before
stamps the last eight courses of the rich life are not to be thought I,f as extending well floured and transfer your dough,' „hone,laking care out to pour in the
man': dinner with these words. "At the into the future tile, or as being repealed which will be in u sticky condition, 10
dregs; a quarter inch of tallow candle,
owner's risk. All responsibility die- there. Compare Paul's argument (1 this; now knead gently into it enough two tublc.Ouuns cold wafer, with enough
claimed."
HAPPINESS AND CULTURE..
The! the highest happiness is inex-
pensive is seen also In the fact that
roan's chief pleasure conies from mentalwhole area rat their tmbelief.
culture. Upon reflection, we all discover 20. Iluve ye not read in the book of
that our happiest moments, day by dug, Moses? -The ) • had quoted Moses in their
are those when we are conscious that
we have grown in manhood or woman-
hood
question,
u gtlheut aro the sxnmotaulhorll�. refer-
we
through the compnuionshlp o[ great In the place concerning the Bush -
books and conversation with wise Exod. 3. 4-6.
friends. Nothing exhilarates I rs like
a
g
of
27. Ye do f,
n1ly err -The answer of
den hour of personal growth. What, a
glow pervades the mind when one ap• ]esus to fife S+ulducees was thus as
preaches the last pages of an inspiring
story, Poem or oration! The pleasure
i, not fiery, nor consuming. It is a
gentle pleasure, like that experienced
when we listen to high music, or look
at a rich sunset, or behold it mountain
side golden with autumnal splendor. It •
need not be college culture, for the lime
is gone forever when culture is limited
to colleges.
Cor. 15. 39-44), based on th • endless i flour to make the dough just stiff enough bailing water to make irate a stiff jelly.
variety of the creative power of God.
es angels in heaven --Tie existence • f
angels was denied by the Sadducees; in
his reply. therefore. bees embraces the
conclusive and final as hod been his
answer to the Pharisees. Still another
quaslion put to Jesus by n more sincere
Inquirer is recorded in this connection
by Mark In the verses following our
lesson text.
The aerial highway Is for all, pen"
and weak, bond and free, high and low,
alike. All that is asked is the hunger
for the feast of beauty that Nature
and God hath prepared. For the foun-
tain that bubbles on the mountain side
i:• free to lark and eagle alike, and '0
the wild deer. And the fountain of hap-
piness is a spring That will bubble in
every human heart. \Vhat a word !s
that "the well of water That I will open
up is a well of eternal life and happi-
ness."
HAPPINESS OF LOU.' AND SERVICE.
A higher form of happiness Is the
least expensive -the happiness of love
and service. The keenest delight that
ever ravished the soul of man is the
delight of serving the poor end weak,
That wealthy Englishman who look his
art treasures to Sheffield was a wise
man. He had marbles that had come the pearls had twenty of them.
from Greece, pictures from the galleries The pearls belong to a necklace whiet
el Italy, examples of the French and Princess Falconieri lost some time ago
Dutch schools. He did not lake them to and tor w'hiclt she offered the $300 re
a gallery that would spread his name ward. It was worth $5,000, and th
and fame. Ile founded a school of art number of q,earie which have been no
for the working people who made knives found (thirty in all) represent only hal
its value.
'Cite children who had luckily foun
the precious stones were given $120 b
Princess Falconieri.
1'ltINCI- 4'y LOST P1:\RI.S.
Beggar Boy's Story of a Roadside Dis-
covery In Rotes.
Recently a notice was posted in the
streets of Rolle to the effect that a sum
of $300 would be given as reward to
the person who found a pearl necklace.
A few days ago' a boy begging on the
Corsa was driven away rather roughly
by n policeman, whereupon a gentle-
man ran after the lad and gave hire n
few' "sulli." The boy turned to his bene-
factor and said he would stake him a
present of some pretty little glass
balls" he had found. anal saying this, he
took out of his pocket and handed to
the gentlemen nine pearls.
Questioned as to where he hod found
the valuable stones, he answered That
he had gathered them in n country road
rrttside the walls of tate city. Another
boy who teas with him when he found
•
0
w
d
y
not to stick to your Bunds; replace in
the bowl and set aside to rise. When
light, roll out and cut into cakes with a
biscuit culler, mold these into balls. and
Dissolve the starch in cold muter, add
the borax and tallow candle. diswtvtee
before Adding the boiling water.
A Cheap Floor Stain. -Mix one part
set close together in a Ann. I[ wanted of Brunswick black with seven parts of
hot for tea, set in a caul place to rise; turpentine. Apply to the wood with a
when they have sloud about an hour, ilat brush. Next day polish with bees -
brush the lops with sweetened water, wax and turpentine. Use more or less
\vhlch will make !hent a rich, glossy turpentine to make a lighter or darker
brown. slain.
Spider Crakes. -Take some dough from Brass Chatting, -powder should never
e e,
,wroughtchased
I
fr • t r c
hi
• and0
+.clean
yeast 'aaha)
,,rid t into anyused o
, cu t pbe i
with butler enough to keep spider from gross. Wash the articles well first and
and forks and spoons. He taught Them
how to spread beauty over the walls of
the dining -room and parlor, and gave
them models for beautiful rugs. His
gallery is empty, but his heart holds
something that it has never held before
-happiness-that the world could not
give and couldnever
lake away..
This
is the joy of knowledge that the wise
an can teach.
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL
INTI:RNATION \i. LESSON,
SEPT. te.
Lesson XII. Jesus Silence% the Phari-
sees and Sathlucees. Golden
Teel: elark 12. 17.
TIIE LESSON WORD STUDIES.
hedi in, ae long as the Jewish state ex-
isted. But with the downfall of that
est
state nt the Bute of the d l•tic udo n of
Jerusalem, their power and influence
canis to an end, and they soon disap-
peared from history.
\'erre - 13. And they send -The exos-
petalesl priests and scribes, namely.
who had been angered by the pointed
Partible of the Unfaithful Husbandman
spoken by Jesus, and recorded in the
preceding verses of this chapter.
Certain of the Pharisees -(:learn lead-
ers learned in the technicalities of the
Note. -The text of ttte Revi'ed Version law, and skilled in debate.
is used as a basis for these Word And of the Herodlans-The combinn-
Studtes, tion of these two antagonistic parties
i'herisres Ilcrndiens Sndducees,- against Jesus Is a significant continent high n slnnd:uJ as to-day.Inc nation
The Pharisees were a separatist -religious Th
aratist-religious on his power and influence at this call with thankfulness accept the tissue -
party. They represented the religious Ihne, twee of the "Naval Annual" that "the
111. Teacher. we know thnl Moll net British navy hes never been in en
views. practices, end hopes of a r earlier!.rue. and rarest not for anyone -Words strong n position as at the present
and ins of
generation, and of a spoken. doubtless. with a fine show of Mine.
sremnant of zetelou4 ]ewi of the old incerity, but the held Ilntlery and hypo -
orthodox sehuol in their own time. As Br) heitPe esus.
rigid legelisls they were scrupulous ob- \\ilxal thratese wPhariseesichdid sainotd Inesny Le Jtoken
servers of the lav as mgt's re'e'l by their 111 indicate what was the general repule-
learne•d scribes and rabbis. end of the lion of Jesus among the people al Ibis
ceremonial regulations touching 'evillest lime.
puri!)•. They were pledged by 1ha
secret vows of their men order to run- 1. Is it lawful to Live tribute unto Ow-
secret
•ntlous payment of tithes and temple sets ?-.A subtle question from 111e snore
dn.<. and In the literal nlxservtuu•r of of w•hieh there seemed to be no escape,
rule- and ordinances established by the, since
i nnswerft negative or fill!hienliinnnelive
li elitinnnl interpretation of the )raw.K
''t ' • were It e 1 ittrr n pnents of 1(111) for Callse
proceeding against Jrtus by pi-oce
GOOD OLD BRITISH BULWARKS.
illustrates th
table
The following
changes in the positions of the titre
chief navies of Europe since 1891, an
shows the rapidity with which German
has forged ahead to a position
being dry. Fry slowly and eat when
fresh spread with butler.
Squash Bread. -One pint sifted
squash. one-half cup lard, one-half cup
nota-- s. two-thirds teaspoon soda, salt
to taste; !lour enough to knead it stiff,
rise twenty-four hours; bake in cakes cr
pans as you would ginger bread.
Brown Bread.-elix one-half cup each
of corn meal and graham flour, add one
and one-fourth cups graham flour. one-
half cup molasses, one leaspoonful.sall,
three teaspoonfuls soda, and one and
three-fourths cups lukewarm water.
Mix thoroughly, pour into a buttered
mold, and Menet three and one-half
hours. Attractive loaves of brown bread
are matte by stemming the mixture in
ono pound baking powder cans. when
two hours is sufficient for the cooking.
Morning Bread. -four oae cup cf
boiling wafer into one cup of milk; when
cool stir in one cake of compound yeast
(dissolved in two tablespoonfuls of luke-
warm water-, one teaspoon salt. Add
flour to stake a stiff dough; turn out on
a kneading board. and knead twisty
minutes, or until it will not cling to the
board. Let it rise for three hours: kneel
thoroughly, put in pens, and let rise one
hour. Bake forty -live minutes. This
will snake three loaves, and is intended
for morning bread making.
e
C
d
y
t
dry them. Then rub over the surface
with half a freshly cut lemon. When
quite clean, rinse thoroughly in warns
water, let it dry, and polish with a cl►a-
rnois leather.
Mildew and Linen. -Take equal parts
of soft soap and fine starch and lemon
juice, mix into a paste, and spread
thickly on both sides of the mildewed
article, and lay on the grass day and
night. In a day or two the mildew will
disappear.
Kitchen Towels, -The most soiled of
d
LEFT OVERS.
Mad limn Soup. -Take the cold
beaus left front Saturday's baking, put
in a stewpan will' one onion and three
or tour whole cloves. cover 'them with
cold water. and boil till soft, then press
thein through a strainer and return to
stove; season with salt and pepper to
taste. When afoul In serve have ready
Iwo or three hard-boiled eggs, sliced,
and a lemon. sliced thin; add when send-
ing
thin-
nerto the fable, if one prefers a
soup omit lepton and eggs, using
hot milk. Serve toast in small squares.
Chicken in While Jelly. -One -hall cup
of creast sauce, white meat left from
equality with France in battleships cold roast or boiled chicken. one-half
actually in commission and instantly- lensponnful gelatin. Cover Iho gelatin
or almost
lanlly-ready fur action : will' cold wnter and lel stand while you
Gant matte a half -cup of cream sauce, Then
Britain. Germany, France odd it to the sauce end Mir 011111 slis-
17 - 20 solved; odd a few drops of onion juice,
21 strain, and when nearly cool pour It
;u 14 over lite chicken, which has been cut
15 into neat pieces or sliced and well -
15 seasoned. Serve cold on a tender let-
tuce leaf or garnished with young cel-
ery. The top sometimes may be sprink-
led with rolled toast crumbs and finely
chopped posey before the jelly has
firmed. 'I'1►e jelly also may be cid in
thin sliees and served with Thin bread
and butler.
Bread Pudding. -Take Hares cups of
stele breadcrumbs and one cup raisins,
four cups of milk. one cup of sugar.
flavor with vanilla. put into a pudding
pan, and balte from Thirty to forty min-
e
1;ggless Veal Lonf.-One pound of
cold veal choiepi st tine, one cup sweet
milk, a good sized cup of cracker
crumbs. season with salt and pepper
and bake one hour in a slow oven.
1801
1 il')')
1903
1905 28
1906 45
The present position of the British
fleet -the. Iluseian navy having been
prnclicully moils;aled-is not one to
occasion a moment's anxiety, pnrticu-
teel)' as there never writs a time since
steam Was introduced when the gun-
nery of British men-of-war reached as
kitchen towels will become f.weet an
Mille with I::is Irratitienl: Cover with
cold water. put them til tite back of the.
stove. add one tablespoonful of shaved
cosine soap and the juice of half a
lemon. Let it come to a boil gradually,
and repeat the process. Rinse first in
tepid then in cold water.
When Polishing Furniture. -11 is not
generally known that wringing out n
cloth in hot water. and wiping the fur-
niture before pulling on furniture
cream,, will result in a very high polish,
and will not finger mart.
7
128
13
t.t t . i P
Saddurces and Ilerodians. In contra.! of law. 11 was n question, however,
with the former. they believed In a fu- which In their own hearts They answered
lure life and in the comingof the king -with an emphatic negative.
100,000
dont of Heaven in visble e form on 1 15, 16. But he. knowing their hypo -1 I'e'si Irs India's $98.00(i,000,2
98.t1(Kt IX10,Xother col- water with the yeast dissolved in it,
earth. Compared with the common edgy. snide The answer of Jesus was once. of Great Britain expend 81x.006,- and three cups of lot water add•ed to
fat lleill' 1 In all.
---♦
MILITARY EXPENDITURES.
According to the British I'arlinmen•
Lary paper, the. world's nurmni annual
miliary expenditures are as follows:
Itussin .... 81e5.fxx►,0ii0
Germany .... .... 157.000.000
Great 13ritnin .... .... 153,1M10,(M10
Fre nee .... .... 133.000,(M)0
I'iiiles States .... .... 112.(X)0,000
India ...... .... 9'4.000,000
Austria .... .... .. 81.0(1►,000
Italy .... .... .... .. 5:e,1X10.000
NO TURNING NO BURNING.
"flow is it you nlva)'s have such
beautiful r.b"Sourtm ilks nand a breaked a d
housekeeper.
mixer," tens the reply. Asked to ex-
plain, she said : "1 'mix my bread with
te6ur milk inverinbly. Thal is, i allow
four cups of mull:, one cup of lukewarm
• --4
Does Your
FOOD
Digest Well?
When the food is imperfect! digested
the full benefit is not derived frons it by
n is the body and the purpose of eating
de-
feated ; no matter how good the food co
ttow carefully adapted to the wants of the
body it may be. Thus the dyspeptic often
b000mes thin, weak and debilitated. energy
is tacking, brightness, snap and vim ars
lost, and in their plans Dome dullness, loaf
appetite, depression and lsngour. It takes
no great knowledge to know when ono has
indigestion, some of the following *yelp.
;oma generally exist, viz.: constipation,
your stomach, variable appetite, headache,
heartburn, gas in the stomach, e1e.
The great point is to cure it, to get back
bounding health and vigor.
BURDOCK
BLOOD BITTERS
Is constantly effecting cures of dyspepsia
b luso it acts in a natural yet effective
way upon all tho organs involved in the
vin all clogging
to in
r digestion, ion removing rasa ,f R
ro K
S
pp easywork of
i•ltpuritiex and making the
digestion and assimilation.
Mr. R. O. Harvey, Ameliaaburg, Ont.,
writes: "I have bean troubled with dye-
pspsia for several years and after using
three bottles of flintlock Blood Bitten
was completely cured. I cannot praise
11.13.8. enough for what it has done for
roe. I have not had a sign of dyspepsia
since."
Do not accept a substitute for B.B.D.
There is nothing " just as good."
TIIE MODEI. WIFE.
Husbands, llere is Something for Volt
to Carefully Peruse.
She doesn't hnoty a word of French,
Italian, or German; • never reads any-
thing but "Hints to \tarried Women"
""Che Cookery Book"; doesn't play on
the piano; keeps but one girl; does half
the washing and Ironing; melte:: all the
cakes and pies; cuts her husband's
vests, her own drosses: mends all the
stockings; sloes all the niarketing, and
buys the wood and coal; never goes nut
except on Sunday; doesn't know whe-
ther nev-
e'.
are w
rxm
all or
bi
Unna
the g
c. sleeps in the daytime; always looks
pretty, never looks tired. Wouldn't
speak to any titan but her husband for
the world, but likes to see him talk to
all pretty women. Rocks the cradle
and darns the stockings in the morning,
Then darns the stockings and rocks the
cradle in the afternoon.
Slays at home In the evening and
mends her husbetel's old trousers,
people they formed an aristocracy s.[+ nlwm•s determined by the spirit of the
the learned end virtuous, despising , question put to hint.
heartily the ignornnl premiere which' tiring me n dcnoriius--.1s zealous
knew not the 1•iw� After the fell s:f patriots who haled everything that re -
000 a yenr for local purposes. The ... milk --eight carps
Germnu total does nal include Its 823,- Two table=spoonfuls of Iard or one table -
030,(X0 a yenr for colonial military ex- spoonful of butler and one of good beef
Aeneas, end the French total also ex- dripping go into the ligwd, and then
Jerllanleln end the deslrrictiolt of the minded them of their suhjerl relation to j eludes 818.000.000 a yenr for the army fifteen full cups of flour nal a smelt
temple the Pharisees again became the Rome. they would not he likely 10 carry serving ;inroad. The llrilish Empire handful of sill. Fnr a long floe i cads
dominant pnrly in Judaism, exerting a well them this little silver Ronan coin, !cede with its home turd rolnninl total nal he persuaded that any mixer could
Alreetie influence on its later chancier with its^ strange andimage ssnperscriptlon of of *Q71.0001)t0i. Inclueling $137,000,(Xlt►rt make bread as close and fine ns Illy hvo
1 -- ,- emperor .-d Stat... hinds could .,,alie it- r\uwadays the
year Inc pensions. the United
comes next with 8249,000,000.
Y '1 he Ilerodinne were n religious-polili by the stricter Jews abhorred as Morti-
ce' party in power In Jeru.nlein during bulls, and in deference to their religious
the reign of King .11ernd and hes sue. sensibility on this point. the Romans at
eessees. fly Jewish rnbliis they were one lime allowed a special coinage to be
culled hn.'Ihustarts a:,er I'aelh'1.e. teaser struck for Juden on which the imege did
Tatler h
nrienne. the murdered wife of the not nppenr. l lance Jesus snyv "hr Ing The teeth) of the shoemaker and fid.root ii comes oftener Ihnn It used to. by
of \IHerod. the succee- me,' 01 simply ic'mtend "shot',• roe."
dler La obtained from different species of reason of the tract Ihol the lovely bread
•.sly appointed the ewes of fle"ttnla to 17. Render nolo reneger the 'hinge the flr•Iree-as the Scots Ile, the larch, we Irnve gets eaten up .o quickly.
the ince of r i t 1 I ' I nl Il 1 nre Cm • nr' I'm to lee em rand the balsam fir of Canada. 11 is 'Thirty -live minutes; no turning, no
lett clhieal ;u•uiry, es a ns n rightful n e i};• • e - k ten that a resinous Juice exudes
burning,' IS our recipe for Its
•e• Inset • aIlls's1 to the And intra God the illi
TIESIN COMES FROM TREES%
mixer does the eerie and if 1 um Ino
busy to make it myself. one of the chil-
dren can do it just ns well if the ingre-
dients nre measured into the mi::er. 1
longer dread the biking dny. though
while he goes to the show; sits up in
the rocking -chair half the night nurs-
ing young Snooks for fear he should
disturb papa; rises at five o'clock, lakes
out a clean shirt for Mr. Snooks. wash-
es the faces and combs the bends of the
nine little Snookses. scrubs their eigh-
teen little dirty hands, and nurse. the
baby while papa is shaving, for fear
its crying will make hint cut hie face
with the razor. Helps the nine and her
husband during Ineakfnsl-time, then
eats a cold egg and some burnt toast
when they are gone. Thinks her bus -
band an Adonis, m Solomon, and is per-
fectly w•illeng that Ite should engage
himself to be married coming 1►orno
from the funerat, and hopes No. 2 will
be more worthy of such a treasure than
ever She wast
WISDOM UNCIIANGED.
After it is all over, a man wonders
why he was worried.
The worst use that can be made of
success is to boast of it.
This is always a good world to those
who are doing good work.
Gossips have no use for people who
recuse to furnish material for them.
A man always making excuses braves
himself no time to making anything
el=e.
Sometimes -a man longs for to -marrow
because he is ashamed of what he didn't
do to -day.
Business based upon friendship
threatens both; friendship based upon
business strengthens both.
It Is a shallow mind that suspects or
rejects an offered kindness because It is
unable to discover tate motive.
The man who never made a success rat
anything in his life always wonders why
then du not heed his advice.
.' 1•,.1 n to • • 1' permuse."
syntl'alliies r 1 th 1ligitl ft every legal due.well n,1
1 e c >
Re that nre from these trees. which hardens into
Herne inn+ w I
Sndelucees. I GntFs-. 1'., -allay there is here n reference solid lenrs, The dell.
is"+► juice Itself. ,e -
Th.' SndJ11cm. wen, the nri:Mwratir.-, In Iher I•`nlle' ahek� I. ns well es to the fore i
priestly party. fewer in number. richer,! deeper spirihlal nbligntlons to Jehovah.
less rigidly legalist!.'. rind lees strict in They nlat•trlle•i greatly - Appreein•
their hnbite of life than the Pharisees. ling al tenet the skill and shrewdness rat
Dysentery, Diarrhoea, Cramp, Cb114 I'rnm the latter Thee differed also in his answer. i1 not also the deep splrlfual
h•' [net Ihnl they 111(1 not believe in a insight involved therein.
rafAslnth.StemaCb,ChOlerl►,Cholers 1 future life. nor in the existence , 1 18. The utter failure of the Pharisees
i.rbus. Ch'�lera li.tantual, Sea Sick. nneele. ale.. and did not wept the Ira• to catch Jesus In their net of wnrls must
mass, Summer Complaint, and all 1.' len intererelnlion rat the law as have given to the Saidueecs math secret
.1 -.-het upon by Amnia end rabble.. 3ntiefeetten. It is now their turn to
Flutes of the Bowels. t • i w. r•• in Iel''(ne v.1111 the Ileralian question him. Theirs Is. however, a
Ras been In MOtor mostly soyears .+and "-beer r'o'ots! familia-- and Iherefnre,dectrinal rather than a lege) gtieetinn.
•r • 1 11 .51civil
t has dried up by corning to the
surface. is known in commerce as tur-
pentine', and in the main composed of
oil of tnrpomine and resin. When the
juice is distilled, the oil comes over,
and the resin remnins behind. When the
dl:Milken Le citified on to dryness,
common resin Is formed. but when water
is mixed trill it while yet fluid, the re-
sulting mss+ 13 the variety called yellow
resin. w hick is preferred for most pur-
posee heratse it is mon+ ductile than the
flood bas nevelt tailed to give i allor. (m ,t n Il I in religion. noel (hough Neatly subtle. 11
a e sinned .1t t ernn`r, ,.wing probably to its Conlait-
altuirs, ha the councils of the San•; discounting his standing as a teacher tog some oft
USEFUL PINTS.
Some people prefer not to use so•+p et
all for deliente sit i line. though when a
mild, gnoel soap is used there scarcely
i any objection. The substitute used is
wheat bran. Boil about Iwo quarts in
moire. lel it cool. end strain the liquor,
which ieey 1,o need in place of soap,
taking out the dirt. keeping the color.
11111 also stiffening slightly al the same
time. Thus obviating the need eel starch
tulles% the dre.eaes are wanted ex-
tremely stiff. In This case only one
rinsing water should be used, as re.
See
It's env to name the winner of an
argument in which n man's wards aro
palled ugain.st a woman's tet rs.
allaallEMMAIMMMINIIIMIMMEMM
- ---♦
DOGS AND TELEPHONES.
The first Instnnce recorded in Berlin
of a dug using a telephone occurred
there the other day, when a poodle
which had been lost by two provincials
during Iheir stay in the capital was re-
cognized means. It answered
rIll 1
nice
d 1
iy Ibis
co
6
owners as 11
'� by the own s )
, hflb
ri,tln
the ileac )
1
outward nppearance, and in order to
solve all doubts its probable masters
were rung up on the country lelefiholio
and asked 10 communicate with the dog,
against whose ear the receiver was
placed. On hearing itself called by its
1a111e the animal burst into joyous, ex-
cited bark, which was recognized by the
owners at the other end of the wire,
The dog was thereupon forwarded b
lbs maslcrs by rail.
ASIIES FROM \'E.U\'iUS.
On April 11, while Vesuvius tens etlll
pouring forth clouds of dust and rashes,
elons. Stanislas Meunier. the French
geologist. noticed n peculiar fog over
Paris, and upon exposing plates of gela-
tin on the roof of his house, prepared
Inc the purpose of catching atmospheric'
dust, lie obtained samples of volcanic
ash, which. upon examination, proved
to be identical in composition with that
shot out of the crater of Vesuvins dur-
ing 11►e great eruption of 1822, when, 8.4
on the present occasion. the conical
stinunit of rho volcano was blown away.
Tho never fulling medicine. Ilei.
low•ny's Corn Cure, removes all kinds
of corns, warts. etc.; even the most dif-
ficult to remove cannot withstand ibis
wonderful remedy.
E
DONTU.F,FtR WITH SECRET DISEASE
For twenty -Ave yearn we have devoted our lives to the treatment of
ha• nv11acti allyllcured men.Our
thousands.
Wehe
records believe !hat this during should that
time we
suA1c1 nt
proof to most any man that as physicians we must be successful. Not
n dollar need he paid for medicines or treatment If you fail to get cured.
Wo cure on bank guaranty. (Jet honest treatment. When you write or
come to us you will he dealt with in a strictly professional manner.
NOT A DOLLAR NEi:i) 111; PAID 1:Nl,FMM CURED. It y",1 ars suffer-
ing from lost vitality or w•rakni.s from any rails come to us and we
will cure you. Men who nre nervous. mental, physical and sexual bank-
rupts, the result of errors nr excesses; producing weakness, despondency,
failing memory, ate.. should come to us at once. and we will stop that
drain upon your system and re.itnre strength, vitality and nervi power.
Our experience and thorough knnwledre of every elcctrlral and thera-
peutic agent known to the mcdt•al world enables us to effect cure: after
others fall. •
We cure t'ARICOCRt.F., f1YDR(WEi.E and 1TattTVRt; without cut-
ting. No pain or detention from business. Before you submit to the
cutting operation. Investigate our painless and positive curing method.
Our New Method Treatment for Blood and OkIn I!ieeascn will euro alt
ulcers. sores. falling out of the hair, born pains, ernptlens and other
symptoms of All these complaints. (•e:ne rind tee rure•t by Mir s'Ientlfc
treatment. Patients that we trente.l twenty years ago hive never suf-
fered a relayse. 1f you have KIDNEY, BLADDER or 1 RETIIRAL TROU-
RI.6 or I'ROSTITI(7 AILMENT. or any Vl1INARY t'rAKNED or dis-
ease, come to us for e.lentlf,c and reliable treatm••nt.
our offices are cnriplets with the Intent and best electrical and meet.
mal nppllane-s and all remedies that are known to thn medical world for
the cure of these diseases.
if unable to rill, write for elri6:1T101't MAIM tor ROME TDtsAT.
MEAT. I:sTAR1.I3IIED 23 YICAHL Csaltaltatle* ir.. Netts lire* too
Dtseasen of Nes or V.•ers►es.
DRs.KENNEDY& KERGAN
145 Shelby Street, Detroit, Mloh
Ones Boors. 11 a. to. to . p. sa. Saalare, 10 fs 11 IN. u. 1 to 4 p. �.