HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1906-09-27, Page 7MSDUJTE
SECURITY.
dOilY{AO
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
f1
IIlust:ear Signature of
4,24
ass PeaSrIMrwras0ee Dslow.
Ten wean sad as essay
to talus se stiles
4 F'O� Yjf.ADACNL
CARTERS Meter BUZINESOie_
n s1ueu111110.
l?'OR,TSRPIO UIIE�.
ATION.
TI►
N COi10
FOE SALLOW SKIN.
FON TEECGMPLEXIOII
os erwione esw.,,.rsy• oasis,
Il!tarif
•
CURE. SICK HEADACHE.
A BAD CASE
OP
KIDNEY TROUBLE
CURED BY
REGULATORS IN RELIGION
DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS'
lan Should Grow In Religion as
a Child Develops.
"Except t ye be converted and beconte
is little children, ye shall not enter in-
to the kingdom of heaven. - Matt.
\viii., 3.
Nowhere do the regulators abound
more titan in religion. Ecclesiasticism
seems 10 breed the worn) of criticism.
When religion becomes only a profes-
sion its followers feel their first duty
t : be the discovery of abnormalities in
others of their craft. Those to whom
religion means certain formal state-
ments generally are convinced that, it
the church should be reduced to those
who absolutely were orthodox, there
would be but one member, and they
know who that would be.
Kidney Troubles, ne matter of what
kind or what stage of the disease, can
be quickly and permanently cured by the
ase of these wonderful pills. Mr. Joseph
Leland, Alma, N.W.T., recommends there
to all kidney trouble sufferers, when he
as s: -I was troubled with dull head-
aches, bad frightful dreams, terrible
pains in my legi and a frequent desire to
urinate. Noticing DOAN'S KIDNEY
PILLS recommended for just such annoy-
awes
nnoyantes as mine, it occurred to me to give
them a trial, #o I procured a box of
them, and was very much surprised at
the effectual cure they made. I take a
great deal of pleasure in recommending
them to all kidney trouble sufferers.
Price 50e. per box. or 3 for $1.25; all
dealers or The Doan Kidney Pill Co.,
Toronto, Ont.
mast High. 1t is marked only by one
steady, unvarying characteristic, its
general trend toward larger lite and in-
to the Father's likeness. No certain set
of features prevails here, no set cut of
garments, no undeviating routine of
conduct and formal acts, no forms it
words. But through their play and their
ti ars, their schooling and their toil, the
children grow into larger life.
The narrow heart always feels called
upon to gauge the things that are in-
Ihhite. it is the shrift of laziness to set
up mechanical standards for things that
are moral and spiritual. The caste spir-
it that cannot base itself on blood or
breeding proceeds to create its little
clique on lines of belief or ceremonials.
He is his disciple who learns of hire,
who lakes the child's altitude toward
This new life. He is not a philosopher
who carefully would set out a logical
statement of what this way of lite
means; he is not a mechanic who would
set up enginery by which its purposes
should be accomplished; he is a child,
learning, living approximately to Its
ideals unconsciously.
"if Smith undertakes 10 pull my
ears," .said Jones, "he will just have his
hands full!" The crowd looked at the
man's ears, and thought so too.
A well-known judge dined at a res-
taurant where the man who takes care
of the elMa is celebrated for his' mem-
ory about the ownership of headgear. though the time and place of its writing
"Ilow do )'011 know flint. this Is my cannot be determined with absolute cer-
lhal?" the judge asked. as his silk hat tainly. The probability is that it is to
was presented to him."1 don'! know it, be counted among the earliest of the
Mr.' said the man.. "Then. why do you Pauline writings. and that Its author
g! 'e it to tae. sir?" replied the be- addressed it to the Galatian churches
Christianity is a trend rather than it
type. It is the life that goes toward
tite things infinite, wholly good unit
true; its ideals move higher as the ages
g., by. Life enlarges before its children.
11 conies back to God. It is a lite not
a philosophy; a life eternal and there-
fore unending in its development.
This, then, is the only pos.ible test
of my religion, a vital test, a deep lest
AM I GROWING?
HOUSES MADE- OF CLASS
■
DUILIDLNG MATEIl1ALS YOU'D NEVER
'HUNK oF.
-w
Paper Ruitctlinge Are Becoming Com-
mon -Palace of oI pure daft at
TIIE ESSENTIAL TIIING
about the child is that he is growing.
developing. Things with him are not
set, determined, formal. There only Is
one Thing that always is the same
about the child; that is the trend of his
life, lis upward, outward. enlarging
movement. A child lives not by rules
but by unconscious forces, not by efforts
at certain results, but by the outliving
of the life within. Vitality is the chief
virtue; the others take care of them-
selves because he is too busy growing
even to think of the vices that are but
forms of death.
So is the life of the true child of the
Salt Lake C3tY•
M Netley, England, you can see a
whole town built of nothing but paper.
'!'here are forty-five of these paper
buildings, with accommodation for fully
five hundred men, and they were erected
for the use of convalescents during the
Boer War.
!'aper buildings are becoming more
rid more common every year. There
are several paper bungalows along the
Thames, and they are warm, dry, and
very comfortable. Perth, the capital of
Western Australia, has a whoa row ' t
paper houses, which lel for live dollars
a week. The largest and most costly
paper house in existence is one belong-
ing to a Russian gentleman at Savin-
owka. in Padolia. It was imported
practically ready made from New York,
and cost about $t0 000. It is fireproof,
and furnished aunost entirely with
sc bles
�l •e m
papier-mache furniture, which re
fine ebony, bul is touch lighter. It is
said that the Emperor of Corea is hav-
`ing a paper palace built at Seoul. Its
chief advantage will be that it will be
earthquake -proof.
Architects tell us that the days of
brick and stone and mortar are num-
bered. All these materials are heavy
and cumbrous to a degree, and entail an
immense and unnecessary amount of
labor. Worse,
THEY ARE EXTREMELY POROUS,
am i moving toward larger life" are any
sympathies broader, finer? conmpassiohs
deeper'.' knowledge and humility, power
and pity growing side by side?
Gone are the days when a man could
reach his ideal in a single moment;
when tie was saved holt second to stay
a' that point. To stand still is to die,
even though one be standing on a mount
of transfiguration. Alas for the still
born Christians in the world! Gone
the old ideal of a type to which one
might by niceties and oddities of speech,
garb and custom speedily conform. A
lite is not made thus mechanically.
ileligion is larger and deeper than
that; it is the learning of life's great,
unsearchable lesson as a child by living'
is learning the laws of life. The larger
the life in all the things that are noble,
sweet, and beneficent the more truly
is it religious, end only as it ever, un-
ceasingly rooves toward higher things
Is it religious at all. Begin to learn 10
live, take a child's place before the great
Master. and you shall find the way of
life. Not by their buttons or their
badges shall men enter the kingdoa,
but by their being and becoming like
the best.
Tho Home
SELECTED Its:CIPES.
Sauce for Stewed Fruit. -Soak halt an
ounce of fine sago in a hint of milk, and
then simmerr 11 I
ta grain
uoaldisap-
pears.
ts3 •pears.
Sweeten and flavor to taste.
Serve in a separate bowl to the fruit.
Powdered llorseradiel,, - Slice the
horseradish rather thin. Set in the oven
till thoroughly dry, then pound it and
store in a bottle for use. If the horse-
radish is properly dried it wilt keep a
long while.
Try Chocolate Choesecakes.-=fake one
ounce of butter and beat into a creruu
with three ounces of sugar. Add halt
a pound of grated or powdered choco-
late, 0110 ounce of ratatla biscuits
crumbled, and three eggs. Beal all into
a smooth, rich substance, flavor with
vanilla essence, and use at once.
Scalloped Onions.- Cook a dozen
onions in boiling salted water with a
sprig of parsley, a stalk ot celery, s bay
leaf, a sprig of thyme, and two cloves.
When tender, drain and cut in quarters
and put into a buttered baking dish.
Cover with while sauce, breadcrumbs,
and a few little bits of butter. Bake in
a sharp oven.
Potato Crust. -Rub through a wire
sieve halt a pound of cold potatoes, and
mix with thein halt a pound of flour,
THE S. S. LESSON
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
SEPT. 3e.
Lesson XIV. Temperance Lesson.
Golden Text: Prov. 20. 1.
THE LESSON WORD STUDIES.
Nobe. -The text of the Revised Version
Is used as a basis for these Word
Studies.
The Epistle to the Galatians. -The
Pauline authorship of the epistle to the
Galatians has never been doubled, al -
moldered judge. "Because you gave it to
me. sir." replied the )nam, without mov-
ing a muscle of his face.
from Ephesus, probably about A.D.
57-58. The churches to which it was
sent were composed largely of Gentile
members. '('hey' had been founded by
Poul himself. The purpose and content
briefly and well
Ex-
positor's Greek Testament, asfollows:
is scarce. or needed for food, use luke-
warm water, to which has been added
half a cupful of keroeetle oil or 501110
good furniture polish. \\'ring the cloth
rather dry from this, and go over the
liu.ileuni after sweeputg, and it will tie
quite new and bright, and the finish un-
injured."
A tittle girl came into tier 11101100' with
a plaint that her Mr.es hurt her. The
caller looked at the little fool and sed
the child where i1 hurl, and then do -
mantled alcohol. This being at hand,
she thoroughly saturated the child's
shoe over the pan +where the hurt was,
using her fingers and pressing them
firmly on the shoe. The remedy eased
tho child's pain, and !ha caller said that
slio always used it to loosen a tight
shoe. For either kid or canvas shoes
the treatment was the best where the
shoe could not be put on a last.
\Vhen boohcaees are to be closed for
some time a pruikle a few drops ot the
oil of lavender on the ejgplves to pre-
vent the moulding of the books.
The shine that show's a serge skirl or
to the level of the author of the law. ot
whose will that law is but an expres-
sion.
19-21. The fact that all the works • f
the flesh here enumerated are evil is method of its constructor was most
not to be taken to mann that everything ingenious. A framework of timber was
erected, the surface of Which was coated
with certain chemicals. Then brine was
pumped out of the Great Salt Lake and
apra}•ed by fine hose nozzles over the
and bricks, at least, will take up their
own weight in water. Steel, glass, and
paper will be the -materials of future
dwellings.
The forst in which glass will be em-
ployed is in bricks of ceramo crystal. In
this form glass is harder than granite.
and not brittle. It is lighter and less
expensive than bricks, is absolutely
watertight, and capable of being col-
ored to any desired tint. The possibili-
ties of cer•anto crystal were demonstrated
at the Paris Exhibition of 1(100. Them
was exhibited a palace of glass. with a
staircase composed of blocks of crystal
glass. The effect at night, when the
building was electrically lighted, was
extremely line. -
Another most exquisitely beautiful
building was seen a few years ago at
Salt l..ake City. 11 was a palace of pure
salt, apparently all in one piece.. The
jacket to be no longer new can easily be
t y+i
removed by sponging the garment with
blueing water such as is used to (aur- ddoown: Nervouaneasoftheays,t
, sm Sleepleunemaytallowss,, i»1u1o
der clothes. While still damp press the nese, Palpitation of the heart, Shortness
goods under a thin cloth.of Breath, Rush of Blood to the Head.
To slip the rod of a freshly laundered I Smothering and Sinking Spells,>�b
Curtain into place try moistening the and
Heart; ColdSC my ata hr and
outout
i The rode will go in cosily with -Peet. There may be many minor symp-
oul injuri the rboic. tonna of heart and nerve trouble, but
' acid
as a
disin-
1c
•a bol ones.
carbolic o
usingtet
1 neh
\\ tothe
ase are
[octant, mix it with boiling water. these
Heart and Nerve Pills will
dispel all these symptoms from the
RENOVATING NECK RIBBONS. dispel
Neck ribbons and those used for bells Price 50 cents per box, or B for 51.25.
t
and as srsties are best cleaned by wash-
MILBURN'S
lilloart and Nerve
Pill.
Are a specific for all heart and nerve
troubles. Here are some of the symp-
toms. Any one t th ttm should to itbin•
warning for yos.
u
Don't delay. Serious break•
WEAK SPELLS CURED.
int in tepid water with suds of caslilo or Mre. L. Dorey, Hemford, N.S., writes
as 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
eo much good that I got two more boxes,
and after finishing them I was completely
cured. I must say that I cannot recesses
mend them too highly.
some pure toilet variety, though many
two ounces of butter, a quarter of a women prefer cleansing them in Baso -
all Into a light paste. Roll
or even ices of water, so us to make line.Whether freshened in water or
loil tightly with benzine, after the ribbons aro dry
on a board to u quarter of an inch they should be ironed free of wrinkles
thick, and cover the pie with it. This 13 and creases. To do this successfully and
a light pastry, and suitable for sweet or keep the silk or satin from getting stilt
savoury dishes. the ribbons should be placed between
A French Stew. -Put a little butter two or three thicknesses of brown paper
into a frying -pan and, when it is hot, and pressed smooth with a moderately
add a sliced onion 10 brown. Boil car- warm iron.
rots -and turnips (cut in fancy shapes) Laces for the neck, as well 88
101 tender. .oke some gravy from the doilies and (tat trimmings. :should first
roast joint, add to the onion. etc., and be soaked in lukewarth water and dis-
cQok for a few minutes, then strain. solved in soap, then carefully washed
Have slices of cold meat ready. lay in in the hands to keep from breaking or
the gravy, simmer for ten minutes, add straining the meshes. When thoroughly
the canals and turnips. Pour all on to rinsed through both tepid and cold wa-
ft hot dish, garnish with sippets of toast, ter these materiels may be quickly
and serve.dipped through a solution of guru arabic
Baked Minced Roll. -This is quite a • and water and then carefully stretched
dainty s.tsh, which can he made out ot out to dry. The stretching is the most
scraps of cold meat, ham and tongue,difficult part of freshening laces, for
etc. Pass all the meat through a mine each little part of the design must be
ing machine, and add to it a third of gently pulled into shape and fastened to
breadcrumbs. Season this with parsley, a clean board or piece of cardboard with
pepper, and salt. Beat an egg and work a pin. When the whole piece Inas been
it into the mixture. Make some nice pulled out in this way it should be put
short crust. roll It out, place the meat nthe sun to dry and bleach.
on i1, fo.et the pastry over so as to make
a neat roll. Bake for twenty minutes,
and servo with thick brown gravy.
appertaining to the flesh or its action is
wholly wicked. 'rhe apostle has just
shown that the flesh also has an ap-
pointed function, and that it is essen-
tial to the control of the human will. woodwork. As the water evaporated
The evil works mere enumerated tn.,'the salt dried solid on the wood. The
rather typical of the evil effects wrought -1,j objection to salt as a building material
by an excessive indulgence of the:objection
is 11181 it won't stand rain. So the Sall
natural appetites when no due centro{ I.ake l'alace was naturally a temporary
is exercised over them by the higher structure, meant to last only during the
spiritual powers. dryseason.
Lasciviousness -A term which in ust as Canada lives by hay and grain,
classical Greek signified insolent con -so the thief source of Australia's wealth
tempt for public opinion, bol which n is wool. To commemorate this fact,
the New Testament is used only in the
sense of shameless outrages on public A MAGNIFICENT ARCII OF \VOOL
decency. spanned one of the Melbourne streets
Parties -Gr. IL-TeIs, on the occasion ot the inauguration of
Forewarn you -Tett you plainly. the Commonwealth. Seven thousand
22. The fruit of the Spirit -The not pound.,-' worth of baled wool went to
Ureal result of Its control in the lite of make this arch, which was decorated
an individual. '1'Ite enumeration of vir-
tues which follows. includes only such
as affect man's relation to his neighbor,
the object of the passage being to point
out the harmony between the restrain-
ing; influence of the law and the result
of the guidance o to Spirit.
23. Self -control -This wordgives us
the essence of Paul's conception of tem -
GOOD INTEREST.
Cocoanutt'udding.-stall over a slow)
fire two ounces of fresh butter and four' There are loyal hearts, there are spirits
ounces of sifted sugar. Pour out atter
boiling two minutes anut �dd o netvou ounceof, Then
r are give toulthelie pure
rbesttrue, you
finely
desiccated coca grated rind have,
nnely shredded citron, the g '
of halt a lemon, and four eggs. When And the best will corne back to you.
these ingredients have been well beaten
together add the strained juice of the Give love, and love to your life will
half lemon. Put the mixture into a flow,
mould and bake .0 a moderate oven A love strength fent in and a rcures oft heartsneed; will
for three-quarters of an hour. Orna I showai
went with apricot jam. Their faith in your word and deed.
To snake green tomato piccalilli, wnsh
and cut half a peck of green tomatoes, Give truth, and your gift will be paid In
and one quart of white onions in slices; kind,
sprinkle over ono cupful of salt; let
over night. Next morning drain And honor will honor meet,
stand 6 And a smile that is sweet will surely
the vegetables in a colander and put find
them into a kettle; add three fine chop -A smile that is just as sweet.
childless, 103 had one child. 151 had two
children. and 125 had three. The bigger
the family the smaller is the likelihood
that the father will desert it. Of the 574
runaway husbands only two had eleven
children.
Tho majority of desertions occur be-
tween the third and fifth years of mar-
ried life. A couple who live together for
five years aro probably proof, there-
fore, against all temptations to part.
intemperance in wives drove 43 ot the
574 husbands from home. One left be-
cause his wife spoke so slowly that she
made him nervous! One (hundred dis-
appeared just before or just after the
birth of a child.
with rams' heads and nags, and a great , green )e cess two quarts fine
inscription : "Welcome to the land of 1 ped rcabbage, e, one cupful of sugar.
the Golden Fleece." chopped
The walls of the newest bank vaults one eltab"ipoo fol of celery
lx►t{ halt cover
an
of the epistle has been re y in London are being constructed of thebarely Frederic Rendall in the i:x• g ' 1 I m oddest materials globularniinanaIfleIcannon-ballshouhour.
mu>4Mix
1anf`+Willhtablespoonfuls
le.Sp capful of colg-
soled I y old-fashioned.
' I is bedded in .cement. The idea is that the vinegar, add It to the kettle. stir and
Eng -
"The Galatian epistle was hrised by un tools of burglars will slip upon the cook three rnii'I,tIIs'lite kettremove le.
jar; cover fill
and
Insidious attack on the Christian free- penance which Is that of evil ten mal- rounded iron surfaces, snaking it en- glass jars or
dam of Greek churches, and its tone is fiery over all appetites, tempers, and cssible for them to pick through the keep in a cool plata•
horoughiy controversial. It insists on
passions, and over every evil tendenc •. P Apple oplat --Thickly huller a
the futility of seeking justification by 25. It we live by the Spirit -If w•o have tvnlis.
obedience to the law, it judges that Jew-
.spiritual lila we should permit that life lir' echoes and deer bones are among deep baking dish. Take smooth slices t
ish Christians have all confessed them -to be the controlling influence in our tl1C most peculiar building mnleri/a\I,h so f the dash Fill it with sliced
daily conduct. be seen to this country. Near
selves guilty sinners, and owe to ,,tCthet lny, England there is a forge, the en -
be seen
from the curses o[ the . 21{. Provoking -Or challenging. in' the trance to tv
their re frau
taw; it &oubliettes the provisional char- original Greek there is no sense of wan- old horsostinee. There are over two
Turns Bad Blood into eater of the timnahc 1 p tons of lhesn nil of
dispensation, 811d tont provocation, but rather the thought which have been
4 reduces it to a mere preparatory disci- of challenging to combat. The term
Rich Red Blood.
hicI) is composed entirely •
plata ,lest red for an age of spiritual thus "describes .the spirit 01 defiance collected by the patient bincksmilh. A
g floor ntnde entirely of deer bones can be
No other remedy possesses such ''Imildlh°ocl and wholly unfit for Chrls-
lihns, seeking they have attained to Earl Brow aloes s .
perfect cleansing, healing and puri• spiritual manhood ; it dwells on the
which animated rival parties amid the
heated atmosphere of religious contro-
versy."
7. God is not mocked -God's judgment
is unerring and sure, for whatsoever a
man sowelh. that shall he also reap.
8. The crowning fruit of the guidance
of the Iloly Spirit is the inheritance of
eternal life.
seen in a .aunmer-hnuse In Belton
Park, Grant11au,
fyttt �// �, t• : bondage of Israel after the flesh, and
Eztdrnally. h their present p
roper les.
heals Sores,Ulcers ' i,lrnitttet unbelieving Jews with lshnhae
' in c temper and future des -
Abscesses, and all Eruptions. tiny." Chapters 1 10 4 inclusive are de -
Internally, restores the Stomach, ivoted to this controversial doctrinal
y' ,teaching. discussing end Illustrating the
Liver, Bowels and Blood to healthy principle of justification by faith. in
5 an 6 the apostle gives some
action. If your appetite is poor, chapters
your energy gone,your ambition 1"•cich"•nl exhortations based on this
preceding doctrinal tenching, and ex-
iost, B.D.B. will restore you to the 1 giants the Galatian` 111 sland tall in the
full enjoyment of happy vigorous higher liberty which they have attained
through faith. lie further points out
• that this liberty must not be abused,
-------- - — I since it is not an exemption from law,
but n fulfilling of the law in love to
amus neighbor. At this point in the
exhortation of the apostle our boson be-
gins.
rx
• .y
a•
,
Y ••.
• •,.t •
Is Man's *pectic Ion
DIARRMMA, DYSINTBRT,
CRAMPS, PAIN IN THS VOM.
ACM, COLiC, CHOLERA MOR.
SUS, CHOLERA INPANTNM,
SBA SICKNESS, sad W SUM-
MER COMPLAINTS la Caildrss
or Adults.
Its .Race* are M►vdies
Please* ad Hsrstsi* to lake.
Rapid, RWable sea Vastest Is IM
seals.
IT HAS OBEN A HOUSEHOLD
REMEDY /OR NEARLY SIXTY
TEARS.
'MOIL as LISTS.
larva Iltar11v ry Tear■e Dai8aeeea
Verse 15. Bite end devourStrong
figurative expressions of partisan hatred
and strife.
Consumed one of another -The inevi-
table result of discord in a Christian .
cmmnuunity. it lung continued. is the dis-
501ut1011 of the community itself. "A
house divided against itself cannot
stand."
16. Walk -Order your conduct.
Ity the Spirit -Guided by same. A
higher lite principle Than earnn1 desires
is to cnnlrol the conduct of n t'hri,li;)n.
17. Flesh Spirit- Under one of
these Iwo categories Paul pincce all the
varione motives whirl, operate nn the
mind and will, and determine action. In
1 Cor. 2. 14, a similar line of dit kion Is
Yawn. Ihnl yr may
These are eOnhlary .
nol do-Antagontatic by dit ine appoint-
ment. this antagonism being intended
to exercise a controlling influence over
the human will.
1R. Not under the law -Those whose
fsnuJuct IS dire• led by the guiding in-
tlu,'lscec of the !oily Spirit are thereby lnon',nand th.!l ixthCusedh Ls under
shoobena
raised in thsr umbras and aspirations )
nl;St'l;r OF
-b
ICOM \NC.E OF A BELL.
One of the sighs of the Sliwe Dagone
pagoda, in Burma, is a gigantic hell of
bronze. weighing 1!3 tons, and said to
he the third largest bell in the world.
WEARING HIGH COL- the largleet being in Moscow, and the
LABS, next largos! in Mingih. also in Burma.
For life is a mirror for king -and slave,
'Tis just what you are and do ;
Then give to the world the best you
have.
nd the best will come back to you.
A
CHINA iV TIIANSITION.
The old and the new mingle in China.
The newspapers from the East tell of a
jail mutiny in Canton in which thirteen
prisoners escaped. The aulhoritits
failed to chpture them, but issued orders
that all their relatives should be arrested
and imprisoned until they could give in-
tormation as to the hiding -place of the
escaped prisoners. But before long they
were offered their freedom on condition
that they paid $200 to the police, $120
for the chief and $80 for the rank and
tNe, Tite bargain was clinched, the
money paid. and the circumstances duly
chronicled as a news item in the native
press. In nastier' preparations were
under way to celebrate the birthday_of
their idol Saen Kai. But an opposition
party arose. They urged that if the
money were to be spent at all, it had
better be spent in cleaning up the drains
in the neighborhood, since, it there
should be anything in the Western
theory of cleanliness, the community
would benefit more than by propitiating
Saen Kai, who did little to stay the
plague, in spite of the festivals in his
honor. The opposition won the day,
and the money intended for Seen Kai
went to lite drains.
\ViIY HUSBANDS RUN AWAY.
A lady who hos made a deep study
of the problems of horne life investigated
bread and huller and line the bottom 574 cases of wife desertion with the ob-
and sides o ' Oct of finding out what led to the
sotir apple, sweetened and flavored 1$ trouble. She discovered that lack of
telisp
taste, and a lenspoon of bolter cut infol
rnonev had generally snore to do with
little bits. Soak enough slices of bread 1 such ). had ge than k
!'hal high collars tend to producenet,. After conquering Burnie, the Britishvolts headaches among both men and I undertook to carr)' line great Rangoon
Beit to Calcutta as a trophy, but drop -
well -known
is the most recent discovery of a ped it overheard in the Rangoon Inver,
well-knownll•knm+n Wtenne.:e physician. Quite where it defied all efforts of the engi-
neers to raise IL Some years later tine
Burmese. who had not ceased to mourn
Its loss. begged to be allowed to re-
cover it. Their petition was granted.
and by attaching to it an incredible
number of bamboo lion's, the unwieldy
mussy (metaldnd gtriumpl►antly restored
ly lifted from its
muddy best,
to its place.
accidentally the doctors attention was
directed 10 the very (high and very light
style of collar worn by a patient who
was always complaining of headaches
and giddiness. The colla' was laid
aside. thus r'nmoving the compression
of the neck, and Ute patient's head-
aches and giddiness disappeared.
Slruek by this result the doctor paid
particular attention to the kind nt Col-
lars worn by his "headache patients,"
and In very many instances the change
to lower and easier filling collar•
brought immediate relief. In the case of
women wearing high stiff neckbands it
was found That doing away with theac
had a similar heneficial result. The
doctor (lectures that nobody with nny
tendency l0 headache should wear high
collars.
A man who was plinlogrephed
police hnd been photographed
different position% and the pictures were
duly circulated among the force. The
chief of one of the departments wmle
to headquarters. a few days after the set
of porlreils had beef) issued, as fol-
lows: ---"Sir,- i duly received the por-
traits of lie- six niis,rennls, whose cap.
t is desired. 1 have arrested five of
by the
in six
doserlionsdisagreement. The
for a cover. fora minute, In milk or It
ter, and fit over the top. Put on al man who has an established business,
tan for instance, very rarely abandons ,
puponthat will lig closely, and a weghty however harrassed ho may bo by his
upon Ihnt, (lake h+o and a hall oro wife. Mothers-in-law are not so often
three hours in a moderate oven. IL
the cause of di.S caftan between roan and
Should turn oil whole upon a platter. Wife ns might be supposed. In only 2`•1
Servo hard these. A peach ah of the 574 cases inquires( into had the
lotto is made in the same way, leas ing tulle's mother joined the family circle.
it a few of the peach stones to flexor,
Of the 571 deserted wives. only 20 were
sty.
USEFUI. I IINTS.
When starching toilet covers or any-
thing that has fringe trimming% double
the cover into four and gather the fringe
lightly into the hand and hold 0 firmly
while you dip the middle of the cover
into_thestarch. When dry. shake the
fringe well. comb carefully with a Rage
toilet comb, and i1 will tall as softly and
prettily as when new.
To clean glass glebes, wash them with
soap end water in which a little !.alts
of lemon has been added. The grease,
selling in the roughness. is very hard
to water
or
even mby the oby sum t alone, help 01 soda. Atter the
globes have been carefully w: nailed ID
the manner recommended. do not dry
them with a cloth, but after allowing the
water to turn on (hem for a while. lel
them drain dry.
For ink spots on leather chaise, try
washing the spots with milk. renewing
the milk 1i11 it ie no longer cleaned and
the spot on - leather has disappeared,
then wash with warn) water, rind when
dry polish with boiled linseed oil and
vinegar. mixed in equal proportions.
Bre-
moved vedassoonsos possible it
nn
irase aly be tis
made. 1f it has dried and hnrdenel1 11
is doubtful even if with .everel applica-
tions you will be able to remove it en-
tirely.
A hottsehold economics authority
says :-"In caring for linoleum do not
use sosp511ds e.5 for scrubbing a Door.
11 stands to reason that soap Is going
to injure the varnish and finish. On s
farm where there is plenty of milk, a
cloth wrung out of akin, milk is the
tbe dual and
breeans 01 ek■htn g the liolunt Where milk
NF;W USE FOR LOCOMOTIVES.
In a small town in Massachusetts
recently there occurred what Le proba-
bly the first instance of time kind on re -
fart le n
The establishment run to
factoryry lindout-
grown
grown the power developed by its old
plant of holler% and. not wishing to
shut down long enough to install a new
haltery, the proprietors conceived the
plan of availing themselves of one of the
surplus locomotives from the shops of a
near -by railroad. The engine used was
a small freight. engine. 11 was .side-
tracked near the factory. TyII
leading to the cylinder heads ere dis-
connected. and one of 1h•'m connected
to the steam dome of the locomotive,
leading therefrom to, the engine -room of
the factory. The plan was perfectly
successful.
A teacher was instructing a class of
boys, and had spent half an tooter try-
ing to drive into their heads the differ-
ence between )aman t find withthe
ltlolower
� rani.
mals, but apparently
"Tommy," he said, coaxingly, to a little
chap, "do you know the difference be.
tween, say, me and a pig. or any other
brute?" "No," replied Tommy. inno-
cently, but another leacher standing by
laughed.
1
D I SEASEB OF MEN
DRS.
K
K
Thousands of through hand IMI'RUI)ENTeHAIIITR, EXd men are CF'RSEmR AND BLOOD
premature gnaw. R
ta-
t)iNgA:1F:9. It you has any of the following symptoms consult us before
to a
it 1. too Tate. Aro you n.•rvous and weak, despondent and gloomy, specks
before al nation ofltheheart, bashfurcles leexcitaer ble dreg i, aek dlm my niurine,
Ole, D D
poor memory, litotes*, distrustful, rock en•rRy and etrecnRth, t re, mora-
gs, restlesiti�nlghts, changeabes sunken,
e moods, nerveow eks. wracareworn
snoei op�eaiiture Ids-
Pn g..
say, Doss pains, hair loose, sore throat, etc.?
YOU ARE SUFFERING FROM LOST,VITALITY.
We rare ♦arleoee/e, 04Netave. 1111oN Pole's Nervosa Debility. 1[Isaey
sea MaM t Msesoes. ('esssttatfos Free. Ir unable to can, write for
Questlos Moak for Hone Treatmont.
WIGANDRJENNEDY&
fes 1111111111.DT iliUNI/ t'. Oehl lltBt, tttittAL •
+