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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1906-10-04, Page 3ABSOLUTt SECURITY, Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Mus ear Signature Of Ser Fac -Simile Wrapper Below. Veryatasall aid as te5y de take sta gneiss. FOB MEARACNE* CARTER'S ma DIIZINESS. FOR BILIOUSNESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTiPATION. FOR IILLOW SKIN. _iron TEE COMPLEXION .)talUlreL MV.TtA..�aA1V.t. Ira: cit oegctabie./6,... i.vG CURL SICK HEADACHE. MILBUR.N'S Bre a oontbinat ion of the, active princip�les d asses Vie Most disorders of the Lia Stomach anted Might )(R�ee{{�a�'� c. Jaundice, Heara- sSa...., Blot kee and cP el mats b. Dlstd•• CORE B11.10U5NESS Wienspela. Soup illioasaeli. Witten be OeseplesolCosenaln$, w Sweeten the breath and elate away all wash aid poisonous matter from tho system. Price 25c. a bottle or tor S1. SAll deadeye Was T. itusWan les LiaW, Toroth% 41117F.W DISH ON LONDON MENUS. Hundred of people dined off roast Russian bear the other clay at two London restaurants. The bears had been imported alive from Russia and slaughtered in England. The bear steaks were so much nppreciated that roast bear, it is stated, will in future be regu- larly included in the menu of theso and other restaurants. Good-looking girls are born. but most ;good-looking women are self-made. CURES Dyspepsia, Bolls, Pimples, Headaches, Constipation. Loss of Appetites, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Scrofula, and all troubles arising from the Stomach, Liver. Bowels or Blood. Mr.. A. Letbaefaq of 1isl1tIl duf. tint. writes: I believe would have been in my `rave long AEO pad it not been for burdook Blood lilt - tem. 1 was run down to awl an wriest that I could scarce- ly move about the bowie. I was sub eel to severs headaches, backaches and dizzl. eras ; my appetite wa1one and 1 we.. unable to do my boueawork. After using two bottle. of 13. 13. n. 1 found my health fully restored 1 warms rerou1n en It to all tired woes out womei MILBURN'S heart and Nerve Pills. Are a epa•:ae for all Afs.aas4 and i11• orders arising from a run down condi- tion of the k'.art or n.'rre eyehem, an. h as Pilpttast"n of the heart. Nervo•u 1'rosiration.�farvoaan..a, t+h•r •erl► no e. Faint at,1 [stray Ni1ell+, Ar•)to Fag. ode They ars '.perlally 1.-e••fidal 10 volute tronhie.1 whit Irrerculat mew- sturatton. Tr Ic• d) cents p•r brit. or 3 for 1113. All dealer's. c r Tax T. ltn.at-n• C,• , Lrarrrn. "foroot°, • ,: THE LAW OF THE HOSE Parents, Leave the Memory of a Good Name; Children, Honor Thy Father and Mother "Honor thy father and mother, that thy days may be long upon the land which the Lord Thy God giveth thee." - Ex. xx.. 12. Take the roots of reverence from the home and the flowers of truth and humor fade. For here are rooted the things that are best in all our life. Here also Tics tine solution of more problems than we are willing to admit. The home is the soil of society, central to all its problem, and possibilities. Before church or school the family stands potent for character. We are what we are not by tate ideals. held be- fore us for thirty minutes a week or once a nionth in a church, nor by the instructions given In the class -room; we are what parents, kin, and alt the circumstances that touched us daily and hourly for years have determined we should be. The sweetest memories of our lives cluster there. The rose embowered cot- tage of the poet is not the only spot that claims affectionate gratitude;r many look back to a city house wedged Into its monotonous row. But, wherever it might be, if it sheltered love and held a shrine whew the altar fires of family sacrifice burned, earth has no fairer or more sacred spot. Stronger even than the memories that remain are the marks of habits, ten- dencies. tastes, and dispositions there acquired. Many a man who has left no fortune worth recording to his sons has left them something better, the aptitude for things good and honorable, the memory of a good name, and the heri- tage of a life that was WORTHY OF HONOR. There Is more than a command to the children in the statute; there is an ob- ligation on the parents to be worthy of being honored. The wise lawgiver never contemplated the honoring of the dishonorable. it Ls folly to -day to prate about the decline of reverence on the Fart of our children; there is no league on their part to be irreverent toward their parents. Give them things, ideals, and a life worthy of their honor, and there will be no need to demand it. If by the love that truly educates, that denies, disciplines, and trains as well as indulges. protects, and provides, if by the devotion shut clearly sees this as the supreme thing in life. before which all others must give way, we rnnke the home truly a holy place, the question of honor never will arise. Ilut Il must be holy simply because It stands ever in the mind for all the things that answer to our deepest sense of hap;ti- ness. truth end aspiratioi. Things thus holy w ill be honored. We are like people who would purity the well by painting the pump. We seek to remedy the derecls of society by patching the finished article. We hesi- late to apply the remedy where it would count for most because we fear it would cost the most there. It is so much easier to regulate the church and the school and perfect them in the business of remedying the defects of our home lite than to begin with those defects and remove them. It is an expensive thing to keep a home where honor, the honer of joy and love and high ideals, dwells ever. It costs time, pleasures, and things called social advantages as well as money and labor. IT DEMANDS SACRIFICE; it is loo sacred to be cheap. The build- ing of a home is a work that endures to eternity, and that kind of work never was done with ease or without pain and loss and the investment of much nine. Most hones - rather are accidents; therefore society becomes a catastrophe. Is there any other sight over which angels might better weep than that of the feverish energy and often even patient devotion which we have applied to straightening society after it has gone crooked compared with the calm indifference with which we have re- garded the means by which it might have been kept from going wrong? No nobler social work, no deeper re- ligious work, no higher educational work is done anywhere than that of the man and woman, high or humble. who set theinselves to the fitting of their children for life's business. the equip- ping them with principles and habits upon which they may fall back In try- ing hours and the making of home the sweetest, strongest, holiest,, happiest place on earth. Heaven only knows the price that must be paid for that ; heaven only knows the worth of that work. Rut if we aro wise we will each take up our work for our world where it lies nearest to us, in cooperation with parents, in service and sacrifice as parents or kin, our work In the shop where manhood is in the making, where it is being made fit to dwell long in the land. IIF,NRY F. COPE. THE S. S. LESSON INTERN4TiONLESSON, OCT. 7. Lesson 1. The Two Great Command- ments. Golden Text: Mark 12. 3N. THE I.ESSON WORD STUDIES. Note. -The text of the Revised Ver- sion is used as a basis for these Word Studies. Mark's Record of Passion Week. -Our lesson passage for bo -day picks up the thread of Mark's narrative where we dropped it in the lesson of Sunday, September 16, in which the triumph of Jesus over the Pharisees and Sadducees, in answering their subtle questions concerning tribute money and the resurrection was recorded. The order of events of passion week as recorded by Mark it Is well to keep in mind. rt i, as follows : Sunday -The Triumphal Entry and Subsequent Retirement to Bethany (11. 1-11); Monday --The Curs- ing of the Fig Tree, the Second Cleans- ing of the Temple, and the Retirement at Evening to Bethany (11. 12-19); Tues- day -The Lesson of the Withered Tree, the Deputation of the s I edil the Parable of the Wicked Husband - nein, the Questions of the Pharisees. eadducees, and that of the Scribe. the t'niniter-question of Jesus, the Lesson of the \r idow's Mite, and the Prediction of the Destruction of Jerusalem and the End of the World (11. 20-13. 37); Wed- nesday -Spent by Jesus in Seclusion at Bethany. The Compact of the Traitor (14. 1. 2, 10. 11); Thursday --The Events Centiected with the Celebration of the Passover, tine Agony In Gethsemane, and the Arrest of Jesus (14. 12-52); Friday -- The Trials of Jesus. the Denial of Peter. the Crucifixion, Death and Burial (14. 53.15. 47); Saturday -Jesus In the Tomb 116. 1); Sunday (Easter Day)--F.vents Connected with the Resurrection (16. 1-20). Verse 28. One of the scribes --One of those present during the discussion with the Pharisees and Sadducees. which had just preceded. and one, doubtless. who was pleased with the answer given by Jesus to (hose who sought to "lake him in his speech." Apparently an earnest quiver. What commandment is the flied of all ?-- .\ (mullion gnesllnn of debate (miring the Seethes and teemed doctors r.1 Iii Ines. and one of great importance in view M the superficial leen' eoncep- ,; which the Jews hail of the telalinn \.'•'en (oat alai man. They seem to . ee imagine ...at (sol kept smile sort of a balance sheet on whfrtt was re- eortled the record of each man's obedi- ences and disolxdiences with referen•'e In earl of the vnrfous commandments. The keeping of the all-impelanht cone rllnmliitenls was thou Colrreived as co'ini. rbalaneing the orl►ission et ninny lesser points of the lnto. aid the con- cern of the Scribes was simply to gel es large a Iwhlnnce n: possible with Jelovnh al the smallest expense of 1130181 eivienvor. : is. \Villi -Gr. From. :11. \fid no clan after that durst ask Ino Inv queainn. Thio ex)tlan111ory eLaterut ut is plated by Matthew atter the counter -question of Jesus recorded in the next verses. The expression "after heat" refers to the entire conflict with the Pharisees and Sadducees and the successive questions That had been put to Jesus by different persons on this same occasion. 35-37. These verses, while not included in our lesson text, should be studied as part of the lesson. They Include the ac- count of the manner in which Jesus still further augmented his triumph over the PharLsees and Sadducees by asking them the unanswerable question concerning David's relation to Christ. It will be well to read Matthew's ac- count, Matt. 22. 41-46. which is some- what fuller and records some details omitted by Mark. 38. in his teaching he said -Luke points out that it was "in the hearing of all the Scribes." Jesus proceeds to warn the people against their false re- ligious leaders -these very men with whom ho had been disputing. and who were still within hearing of his voice. They had come to "catch hire in talk" and discredit hint as a leacher in the eyes of the multitude. But they had been utterly routed, and were now forced to listen to a most scathing re- buke of the whole class of men to which they belonged. 1t was they instead of Jesus who were discredited as leachers in the eyes of the common people. Long robes ---The professional garb of leachers of the law•. Salutations in the market places - Fornial salutations given in recognition of the honorable stale or official posi- tion of the person thus saluted. 40. And for a pretense -Or. even while for a pretense. In verses 33-40 Mark has stnnmed up very briefly Christ's re- buke of the Scribes which in Matthew is given in much fuller form, together with additional explicit warnings against the Scribes and Pharisees. (co►np. Moll. 23). 41. The treasury -Money chests with trumpet -shaped mouths for receiving voluntary contributions of the worship- ers were placed under the colonnades of the court of the w,enen in the temple. These chains were thirteen in number and were referred to as the. treasury of the temple. 42. Two mites -The mite was the smallest copper coin in use. ' Its value was about two-fltll►s of a cent. which wmv approsimntely one-forlleth of the daily tt•nge of en ordinary laborer. A eontributlon of Iwo utiles was the s►nall'st amount which could lawfully be put Into the temple reasury. 43. Cast in more than all they that are casting in -A suggestion that God's standards of notion and of value differ from those of men. .NATIONAL. ENEMIES. "Really, yet ktrnw," said the snobbish Mrs. Wo. dby, "1 do detest tradespeople reo. Von may think 1l strange. but•-•" "Not at all." replied Miss \Wise, "it's very natural for people to hate their cre- ditors ' 11X1Fg TOLD OF TREASURE. Superstitious Cornishman Digging for the Buried (:old. Superstitious beliefs still linger in the remote villages of Cornwall, and the tenacity with which many of the (r- nish folk cling to them Ls strikingly il- lustrated by a remarkable story of a search for hidden treasure which conies from Waldron, says the London Chronicle. Nearly half a cent':ry ago an old lady named Varker lived in a cottage at Low- er Bodilly, in the parish of Wendron, which bad the reputation of being haunted by ghosts. One night she de- clared that two pixies had paid her a visit and told her that vast treasure was hidden beneath the cottage. \With the reputation which the humble dwelling had for being haunt- ed, the story was received with consid- erable credence in the district. It made such an impression on her two sots 11t^t they immediately commenced to e.cavate for the treasure. Taking up the floor- of the rooms, they sank a shaft to the depth of several fa- thoms. Water invaded the shaft and pumps and other applinanees were erected for draining and hauling. The premature death of one of the brothers led to the abandonment of the opera- tions without any Treasure being dis- covered. Now, after the lapse of forty years, the search for tate supposed hidden trea- sure has been resumed by W. H. Varker, a resident of Goldsithney and grandson of the old lady who held communica- tion with The pixies. In the interval the collage has been demolished, but Mr. Varker has located the site, and with the help of another man from the neighborhood is engaged in sinking a shaft. The excavations already extend 10 a depth of 24 feet, of which 17 feet is ver- tical and the remainder on an incline. Pumps and machinery are in course of erection and the explorer is sanguine of success. Some of the older folk in the district entertain the belief that the cottage marked the site of a smugglers' den, and that the sinking of the shaft will lead to rho discovery of underground passage,. AND ITE TOLD IT. "Ah! darling." sighed the lover, in the parlor,. "1 love you more than tongue can tell---" "Net more than mine can tell." shout- ed her little brother, as he dollg•'•l out from behind the sole and made oit. SENTENCE SERMONS. Life grows as love is given. Ilis.loss is greatest who refuses loss. The hardest fortune of all Is to find fortune easily. You cannot attain eminence by ing on the fence. Temptation seldom on a full heart. Present achievement of full po,-sibility. it's easy to think when you are soured. Charily becomes bribery as you use It as a bail. A little practice of religion to! of philosophy about it. Faith is not faith until it gets your fingers and your feet. The largest moral muscles those that move the tongue. It lakes more than a heroic resolution to resolve one into a hero. The appeal to conscience will not save the intellect from its activity. A man's contributions are apt to be in the inverse ratio to his kicks. 'rhe strength of the vertebra does not depend on the starch in the collar. The mon who tears down reputations always gels most of the dirt himself. A man does not establish the tender- ness of his heart by the softness at his head. The crime of heresy is that it would make some men do (heir thinking all over again. Environment may determine charac- ter, but it depends on you to determine environment. all elimb- wastes any time often you Is the foe are serious soon as cures a into are not rThg1,11011.011WR Home thick ['Ices. Mince 2 large onions aril 3 green peppers, and add 2 cuts vine- gar, 3 tablespoons of sugar, 1 table- spoon salt and a little cayenne pepper. Cook slowly for 1 hour, stirring 10 keep from scorching, then add 1 lou - spoon ground cu►nln ten, cook a few moments longer and bottle for use. Green Tomato Pickles. -Slice I gallon green tomatoes, not too thick. 6 surge white onions and 4 large green peppers. Place each by theno,olves in cheesecloth sacks, sprinkle a ith salt and let drain over night. In the morning scald the mixed ingredients in 2 qts water and 1 qt vinegar until the tomatoes can be pierced with a straw. Make a pickle of 1 g'.l vinegar. 2 lbs brown sugar, Y. -Th mustard, 2 tablespoons clines. cinna- mon and ginger, y teaspoon of cay- enne pepper, tied in a cheesecloth sack and boiled in the syrup. Pour this over the pickles which have been drained from the vinegar and wider. and scald for t0 minutes. Warranted to keep well. Mixed. -One qt cauliflower, 1 qt very small cucumbers, 1 qt large cucumbers quartered and cut in Inch lengths. 1 qt smell while oDIons and 1 pt nastur- tiums:* Scald the cauliflower and onions in salt water until tender, then drain; take 2 qts good vinegar, 2 cups brown sugar, 2 tablespoons mixed spices, ye. Ib mustard and 1 teaspoon of turmeric and bring the vinegar. sugar and spices to a boil; blend the mustard and tur- meric with a little cold vinegar and add slowly to the boiling liquid and cook until it thickens. stirring constantly to keep from scorching. Add the other in- gredients and heat thoroughly and seal in glass cans. -- Chowchow.-To 4 qts cabbage ground through the coarse vegetable cutter add 4 qts green tomatoes and 2 qts onions and 3 large green peppers ground the same. Sprinkle with salt and lel drain over night. Add 4 tablespoons ground mustard, 2 tablespoons ginger, 1 table- spoon ground cloves, 1 of mace. 1 cf cinnamon and 2 of celery seed and 3 lbs brown sugar. Cover with vinegar and coak slowly for 10 minutes. Pack in stone crocks or .,Bal in glass cans. WITH TOMATOES. Devilci 'Tomatoes. --Take two or three large, firm tomatoes, nut over ripe, cut them in slices halt an inch (hick end lay on a sieve. Make t dressing of one tablespoonful of butter and one of vine- gar rubbed smooth with the yolk of a hard-boiled egg; add a little sugar, salt, mmutard, and cayenne pepper, beat un- til smooth and heat to a boil. Take from the fine and pour upon a well beaten egg, whipping to a smooth cream. l'ut the vessel containing this dressing in hot water while the toma- toes are being boiled over a clear fire. Put the tomatoes on a hot dish and pour the dressing over them. Cooked in this way. they will be found an exquisite accompaniment with roast chicken. Tomato Preserve. -Peel the tomatoes and to each pound add a pound of sugar and let stand over night. Take the to- matoes out of tate sugar and boil the syrup, removing the scum. !'ut in the tomatoes and boil gently twenty min- utes; remove the fruit again and boil syrup until it thickens. On cooling put the fruit into jars and poor the syrup over. The round. yellow variety of to- mato should be used and as soon as ripe. Tomato Catsup. -Scald, peel, and core a peck of sound, ripe tomatoes; mash as if for stewing; season with a teaspoonful of red pepper, one teaspoon- ful each of cloves, allspice, and mace, and three large onions cut tine. with salt to taste. 1 ut all in a porcelain - lined kettle to boil and when the toma- toes are thoroughly cooked rub the cat- sup through a sieve to get out the seeds and pieces of spice. After straining re- turn to the kettle and Id it boil until thick as cream. Set aside and when cold put tete pint bottles, tilling each to within half an inch of the cork, and pouring in on lop of each a teaspoonful of salad oil. The bottles should be kept In a cool, dry place, resting on their sides. Tomato Soup with Onions. --Slice two onions and fry them in butler until brown; remove them and fry one dozen tomatoes Just suflictent to heat therm through; then put them into a stewpan with their gravy and the onions; add a head of celery and a carrot sliced, stew gently fur halt an hour; add three pints of gravy; stew an hour and a half; pulp the whole of the vegetables through a sieve; season with white pepper, salt and cayenne. Serve with sipplts of toasted bread cut in shapes. Stuffed Tomaloes.-Get them as large and firm as possible; cut a round place in top of each, scrape out all the soft parts; mix with stale bread crumbs, corn, onions, parsley, butter. pepper, and salt; chop fine and (111 tomatoes; carefully bake in moderately hot oven; put a little butler in pan; see that they do not hurn or become dry. Scalloped Tomatoes. -Turn off nearly all the juice from a can of tomatoes ;which juice may be used for soup). Put n layer of bread crumbs in Ike bottom of a buttered dish; then a layer of toma- toes, seasoned with pepper, salt. and s little butter ono sugar. Continue till dish is full, finishing with crumbs. Bake covered until trot, then brown quickly. Diu green stone sized with wiimsowis PiCKi.E SECRETS. Pickles. -Place a layer of fresh grape leaves in the bottom of a crock. then a layer of medium - cucumbers. Sprinkle generously salt and dill and Thep another If you want to lift people to stetter layer of leaves, cucumbers, salt and things. the best way is to begin to look dill until tate crock is full. Cover with for the best in them. cold water with enough vinegar added The rich would not be so willing to to make it slightly sour. Cover with a heir wealth If they realized how buy t cloth and weight down. These pickles long they would have to pay for it. are much liked. and are ready for use in it's a good thing for the man who looks at the corns on his hands to re- member that on Easy street the corns are on the heart. There is more religion in the sport that helps you lose your grouch than in The most spiritual meeting that strengthens it. -4 A MION:\RCII'S RESOURCE. if the Shah of Persia were to be de- prived of his income tie could still hake sure of being one of the richest men in the world. Ile would only have to sell his ornaments. gems. and precious stones to become possessor of about $35.000:100. the sum at which the mag- nificent collection is valued. A man Is always n bachelor until ne gets married -then he is anything his wife chooses to call him. Of course it's all right to he born rt lender, but the man in the rear has a fetter opportunity to get away. ten days. Pickled Peaches. -Four cups sugar, 3 cups vinegar, 1% cups wetter, 2 table- spoons cinnamon, 1 stick sliced ginger root and 1 teaspoon allspice in a cheese- cloth sack. Bnil all together until 1t comes to a rich .syrup. Drop fn the pared peaches and lel cook until healed through. Lift out with a wooden or silver spoon and place in the cans, dropping in some small pieces of stick cinnamon. Fill the cans with the hot liquid and seal. These are very fine. Olive 011 Pickles. -Slice 100 medium- sized cucumbers and lay in weak salt and water for 4 hours. then drain. Slice 3 pts small, silver -skinned onions in water. let stand 4 hours and drain. Dissolve 1 teaspoon alum in hot water and pour over the cucurnbers. Put the cucumbers and onions together. add 1 oz ground white pepper. 3 ozs white mustard seed, 1 oz celery seed and 1 pt gond olive oil. Mix well and cover with good white vinegar. (:hili Sailee.-.Scald and peel 1 dozen large ripe tomatoes, and slice in rather W FORBID WW WATLUW. PAPERING A DELIGHT. I am only a young housekeeper with very little experience, but if I can help anyone 1 tun very glad to do so, writes a housekeeper. it has never been hard for me to do my own papering and 1 have never had anyone to help me. I follow the rules to be gotten from any paper manufacturer, except in a few things. If one has never done papering it is better to start with a room which has straight walls, as walls which have a slant are a little harder to do. I never tear off all of the paper un- less there has been sickness in the room or unless the room needs extra clean- ing. If the paper is loose, of Course, 't must come off; otherwise I think it makes a more solid surface upon which to paper. In making paste I have never found it necessary to add the glue. as the paper will slick all right with paste made of flour and water if it is properly prepared. it is easier to paper if one has a papering board, but this is not necessary. Newspapers spread upon a table and changed as often as they get soiled are good enough. One needs plenty of clean cloths; an old sheet torn into convenient sizes is good. 1 like to trim the paper in the roll in- stead of trimming after the strips are cut. The little circles on the margin cf the paper are to match it by, and one can cut all the long strips before begin- ning to paste. 1f there are holes in the plastering 1 fill !hero with calcined plas- ter, using a steel case knife. 1f the plaster is mixed with warn' water in- stead of cold it will not harden as quickly. I have never been able to put the border on whole. I prefer to cut In 6 - foot lengths end when put on neatly the joints do not show at all. Re careful when hanging the strips to get them smooth but not to stretch the paper. When it is wet it will wrinkle a little and when it dries it will smooth itself out all right; but if it is stretched it will crack when it Ls dry. There is nothing hard about paper- ing. It is the most pleasant part of my house-cleaning and 1 enjoy il. One can paper an ordinary room in half a tiny. and there is much pleasure in watching the change in the roost as one works. If 1 had to hire such work done 1 sin afraid it would be a long time before 1 could get anything done, as it costs more to hire such work done than it does to buy lite paper. i have found that i could do best by sending direct to the manufacturer for my papers. I have hal better paper for _ _. _... . • Diarrhoea. Dysentery. Stomach Cramps and all Summer Complaints take Don't experiment with new and untried remedies, but procure that which hu stood the test of time. Dr. Fowler's has stood the test for 6o years, and has never failed to give satis- Diction. It is rapid, reliable and effectual in its action and does cot leave the bowels constipated. REFUSS ALB. SUBSTITUTES. Tnar'Rz DANGEROUS. Mas. flaoxson Lusa, Aylmer. Qua, writes: "1 have used Dr. Foo'ter's Extract of Wild Strawberry for Diarrhoea for several years past and I find it is the only medicine which ireing) relief Is le atwft• ties' my stoney and a larger variety to pick from. My treatment at their hands hes been uniformly courteous.* VALUE OF BUILDINGS. Most civilized countries take a very reliable census of the number of build- ings within their dominions. Thus we fled that Russia heads the list in re- spect to the number of houses in any cctlnlry. She has 11,436,000, or as many aQ Great Britain and Italy combined, for she has but 7,100,000, and make a poor second to France with lis 9,080,- 000. Germany has about 6,000,000 hous- es, and Holland 729,000. But in point of value Britain is a long way ahead of any European Power. Houses in the Coned Kingdom are worth 812,120,000,- 000„ 12,120,000;000„ while Russia's are only valued at $3.505,000,000. France's building pro- perty is worth 88 5220,000,000, being about five hundred millions more than Ger- man. The United States is very rich in property, the value of her 11,400,- 000 houses being set down es 114,250,- 000,000. 14,250;000,000. A FRIEND O^ F GOATS. The goal in Europe has long had a bad reputation as a destroyer of vege- tation. 1l has even been alleged that the goat is responsible for the continu- ous sterility of the steppes of Asia and of Central Africa, since it devours the shoots of all plants, and iS able to live where almost any other kind of ani- mal would starve. But Mr. J. Crepin Thinks the goat has been misunder- stood and misrepresented, and that its good qualities so far outweigh the bad Thal a systematic effort should be made for the "recaprinisntion" of Eu- rope. One of the strongest arguments for the goat is the excellence and abun- dance of its milk, which pos esses the great advantage over cows milk that itis not affected with tuberculous infection, and can be safely used in a fresh state by children and invalids. JAPANESE CHILDREN'S CHARM. The Japanese children woor about (heir person a small Inelal plate or ticket, called a rnalgo-fuda, on which are Inscribed their name and address; thus to the authotilias and others it may at once be known where and whom they belong to, in case they should be found to have gone astray. Another peculiarity of Japanese child-cnsttnne, but less worthy of general imitation, is the kinchaku. or charm -bag. This is made of a bit of some bright -colored damask, and contains a charm, which is supposed to protect them from being run over or drowned. It's all well enough to advise people to look on the bright side of things, but so many things have no bright airs. pK K :� Krti.K i,K Ke.K KnrK KRK KR, AT STRICTURE CURED YOU CAN PAY WHEN CURED. 4 Mr NO NAMES U8ED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. STRICTURE AND KIDNEY DISEASE CURED. "1 had stricture for eleven years. 11 anally brought e. Bright's Disease of the Kidneys. 1 bad an uncomfortable shooting pain 1n tb• groin and feeling as though something was In the urethra. M back was week end 1 could scarcely stoop over. Urine was full of sedi• went. It ad•desire' tourinate tregnentl Pamilydtors scalled specialists, pa *nt medicines electric be«o- belts, ell tailed. `was dis- couraged. i had went hundreds of dollars in ,.in. Finally 1 con- sulted Drs. Kenredy & Korean as the last resort. 1 bad heard a `red deal shout them and concluded from the fact that they had been established Over as yenta that they understood their business. 1 aro delighted with the results. in one reek 1 felt better and in a few weeks was entirely cured. Have gained tirteen reminds in weight.' G. S. WRIGHT, tansiag. ESTABLISHED 25 YEARS. CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY. HAS YOUR BLOOD BEEN DISEASED ? BLOOD POISONS are d:a 'nest provident and crest rrr;ces di -cases. They sap the very life blood of the victim n..d ,Arse entirely erad•rat-' fr.= the sysletn will rause serious recnpli -.dons. Beware cf Memory. U only suppresses the symptoms -oar NSW LIST trot) p*s:tivelycuresaltblooddiseasesforever. YOUNG QR MIDDLE -MAD MEN. -tr rnsient acts or later eseesaaa have r:en r ,.,-o y nr System. Y m eel Oho symptcr.ts stealing over you. tietully, pbysiealiy a:.,1 a_aually )ou ars not the man yo. .s -c1 to be cc should be. ip f�1 R9 Afar n a vtc+iat 1 Have yon )cot h,pc 1 Are yam Wending `{>DGr!r Gt to msrrr i )ie.• pm' blood been d .ce+cd t Havo you any weaknrn 1 U,r l .w Meshod Ttctt s.ns writ cure y:+r. 'Mitt it has donator 011011 i1 will do for yon. C'»iSi'LTATION "'RES. No matter whohas treat d yon, wrtte for an hottest cp. nio Free of Charge. Chargesrsasouable. IIIOOKS Fett'.B-"The Golden Monit,,r" (iJatlratedi. e'1 Dimities cif Meer Sr..i.d Hack on "Di,esses cf Worsen" Free NO NAMES COED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. Beery - thing Confidential. Question List for Home Treatment Pre* DKENNEDY& KERGAN Cor. Michigan Ave. and Shelby St., Detroit. Mich? K ' K K` K. K K 1K Ft.