HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1906-10-11, Page 7BSO1UTE
$ECURITY1
Genuine
Carter's
lethe Liver Pills.
uet Bear 13lgnature of
Ser Pac.flmfl. Wrapper Ret:w.
Ion small sae as o.e�
to take so sagas.
fON N tDLPii[.
CARTERS
In RITZINESS.
fRR BILIOUSNESS.
TORN0
LIVEN.
CONSTIPATION.
ralksau sw
NI IUECOMPLESION
eaOe ,. Me.ale,t .ave
tlt� .
CURE SICK HtAOACHE.
r
CURES
Dyspepsia, Bolls,
Pimples,
Headaches,
Constipation,
Loss of Appetite,
Salt Rheum,
Erysipelas,
Serofula,
and all troubles
arising from the
Stomach, Liver.
Bowels or Blood.
Mrs. A. l.ethaagne.
of UallydutT, OOnt.
writes: "I believe 1
would have been la
my grave long ago
had it not been for
Burdock Blood Bit.
ten. I was run down
to such an extent
that 1 could scarce-
ly move about the
house. I was subject
to severe headaches.
backaches and (limb
noes; my appetite
wasono and I was
unable to do my
housework. After
using too bottles of
B. D. B. I found m
health fully reqtored.
T :mlyrecommen
1•to all tired
worn out womea,
GR. \1\t.\I1 AND FACTS
A sr a. superirtlefilient. %viten mak-
ing the este lit his school.;. put the
A
.J!.o i ewstion to a scholar:
"Ilow do you passe ',Mary milked the
cow!'"
Pupil --"Cow" is a Ls a noun, feminine
gender. singular number, third person,
and stands for "Mary."
"Stands Dor 'Mary'!" exclaimed the
superintendent. "Ilow do you ulako
(hal otil?"
"Because;" replied the pupil. "if the
cow didn't stand fur Mary. how could
Mary milk herr"
Threw pills erre all diseases and dte-
erdertsarising from weak heart, worn oat
Reeves or watery blood, such u Palplta-
Won, Skip Beata, Throbbing, Smothering,
Dizziness, Weak or Yalrtt Spells, Anaemia,
elervousuean. Sleeplessa.es, Brain Fag,
General Debility and Lack of Vitality.
They are a trite heart Coate, nerve food
sad blood earloker, building up and
renewing all the worn out in wasted
themes of the body and restoring perfent
health. Triee tette. a bozo ee e for $1.9111
at ail druggists.- - -
)
Kidney -
THE RING OF SINCERITY
The True Man Would Rather Be a Sincere
Sinner Than a Hypocrite.
"Good master, what good thing shall
1 do that I may have eternal lite?"
Mutt. xix., 18.
Religion rises within; it Is not ap-
plied from without. Therefore it is an
individual platter, and its nr►nifc'la-
lions beur individual characteristics.
There never yet were two living things
exactly alike. Only a dead creed can
t'0 shapeduniformity.
A mates
religion will be manly, a wornan's wo-
mtuuly, a boy's boylike.
Yet, strange to say, the religion whose
greatest teacher was greatest of all as a
than ahnost uliiversally has given em-
phasis to the womanly type of character.
Il loo often has demanded of the men
who would follow the than of Nazareth
shut they should conform to the type of
Mary of Bethany, with the result ct
creating the impression in the world
d
that in a man faith meant effeminacy.
But the men who long ago followed
the great leacher were by no means
weak or womanly. Clear cut concep-
tions of their rugged virility have conte
down to our day. The Master won
men by Its manliness. His lite and
words led thein into nobler, stronger
manhood. And men carne, like Nico-
demus and the rich young ruler, not
begging -a promise of paradise or look-
ing for the philosophy, but seeking His
s(.cs•et of the enduring, satisfying, full
life.
The inquiry of the young ruler has
f* it the elements of every true man's
religion;
THE PASSiO:i FOR TRUTH,
the desire for action, and the worship
Of the ideal. Like him, men seek the
teacher who shall shoe them truth;
they ask not so much for things to
know as for things to do; they set he -
fore themselves the ideal of the life that
endures.
Every True man seeks truth. To him
the false whether in word or deed, the
sham, is the worst rat all sins. No re-
ligion can meet his needs unless it sets
this firs) of all, truth before tradition,
above timeserving, at any cost.
The man who asked for the truth con-
cerning himself, his past, this world, les
story and laws, who refused to take
blindly the legends of long ago no mat-
te.' how venerable their testators, who
turned to science snying. Show us the
naked truth, was not seeking to destroy
i
religion; tie was but giving expression
to his own religion as is man.
It was not irreverence that made hint
bring the c!aburale structures of past
thinkers to crumbling ruins in the dust;
it was but reverence for that which is
holier than their tradition, truth, the
object of his search. Ile overturns
some ancient error, not to gloat at its
falsehood and pretence, but to glory in
the truth thus brought nearer. t
The true man demands leuth in the
ewpression of religion. Ile rather would
be a sincere sinner than a holy hypo-
crite. Men never aro to be wen to any
faith by fooling them. But they will
listen to any voice ha ring the inimit-
able ring of sincerity. The preachers
who are debating how to get men to
churchlwould nanswer t
ter
r
own
ques-
tions if they would only be natural, for-
getting
professionalism, phrases, and
phylacteries, and being just their own
selves for a few months.
THE 11111 YOUNG MAN
Wanted to know what he could do; the
man of to -day must express his faith
in action. U religion only be cate-
chisms and contemplations it never will
content men. They were not made for
that sort of thing exclusively; it lakes
a long while to train a roan away from
action and make him sntisfled w•itt)
the life of the Ileal milliner minister,
and fortunately the modern minister
again is rebelling; he, too, de►nunds
roost to move and do.
The finest. noblest things within us
die if we continue to weep over this
world's woes and lament its injustice
without lifting a hand to soothe sorrow
or right wrong. The business of the
church in This world is to touch men
with such emotions, fill them with such
aspirations that they shall go out from
tho meeting to clean tite market, to
lift the burdens of the oppressed and
build up the broken in heart.
There is a religion for a man; -it has
been writing tis records not in priests'
books alone, but in all the story M our
progress, both In wars and In works
of tenderness and good. 1t is the spit-
P that makes us forsake our slothful
ways, endure hardships, strive, toll,
and suffer that somehow we may serve
our world, that leads us, often perhaps
unwittingly, to follow him who went
about doing good.
THE S. S. LESSON
INT::INAT1Os.iL LESSON,
OCT. 14.
Lesson 11. The Ten Virgins. Golden
Text: Malt. 25. 13.
THE LESSON \WORD STUDIES.
Note. -The text of the Revised Ver-
sion is used as a basis for these Word
Studies.
A Longer Discourse. -Our lesson pas-
sage for to -day is part of a longer dis-
course of Jesus recorded in chapters 24
and 25 of Matthew's narrative. This
discourse contains (1) n prediction of
the fall of Jerusalem, (2) a prediction of
the end of the world. (3) a group of
'tumbles related to these predicliens
end to each other. In the parable of the
ten virgins the main point is the ex-
hortation to Christian disciples to per-
petual vigilance and w'atclifulness in
view of the certainly of 11►e end of the
world and the second coming of Christ,
and the equal uncerluinly of the lisle
when these things shall occur. The in-
terpretation of the details and lesser
incidents of the parable must be kept
subordinate to this plain purpose.
Verse 1. Then -The Inst day, just re-
ferred to In the preceding verses. '111e
kingdom of heaven -Isere. the company
of all (hose who hope for salvation
through Christ, some of whom , ns tete
parable tenches, may hope in vain. 1l
is the condition of the citizens of the
kingdom "in bolo" which shall be
:Soiled unto the condition of ten vir-
gins. the ten again being simply a con-
venient number. as we might say a
dozen or a score. \
Lamps - shallow bowls containing
oiled rope or cloth. and fastened on
sticks. making n rather crude torch.
\Vent forth to meet the bridegroom -
According to the Jewish custom the
frien.ls of the bridegroom conducted the
I ride to her husband 5 home, before
the door of which the bridegroom him-
self met the procession and in person
reantltMed the bride across the thresh-
old. In earlier trines (comp. Judg. 11.
til) 11 ling teen custonnry for the pri
Disorders n-
cipal welding feast and celebration to
be held in the home of the bride. Front
the imagery of our parable it Is not
Are no ( quite clear from which home the group
of maidens "went forth to meet the
respecter bridegroom." Some commentators in -
of siert Ihitl we are to think of the home of
the bride as the scene of festivities.
persons. while others speak with equal confi-
dence of the home of Ilse groom.
People In every walk of life aro troubled. 2. Five -The number is not Intended
Have you a Backs. ••' If you have it 'ie indicate anything a.• 10 the nelual or
snot proportion of foolish red wise
Is the fir•at sign that tl ' kidney• are not \\'e lento that logits duets not
working property. ,y had nml gond, but simply Point.;
A r..•gleetr,l Rackawhe le•a,i' to serious ,ill that five were prudent end exercised
kidney Trouble. forethought. while the other five were
Ctte:kit is time by taking I imprudent and Ihouglilless with regard
' • future.
DokN1, Topaol:rate oilveswithsel+fotheler' use lamp=- 'that fling
S KIDNEY PILLS ire;sein cas:
`TME GREAT KIDNEY APEc1r1C ~ 'nuel'g(eney.5. The bridegroom Iarrieel-•.A state-
ment reflecting the Ince Orientalism of
the scene, puncttuality not being an
Orlenlnl trait.
Tl: •y all slumbered and slept -There
i3 nn censure attached to their sleeping
in Itself.
7. Ti mental ile'ir lamp.: which mean•
whtle> Ord burned low. The trimming
consisted in refilling then with oil and
cleaning the wirers.
9. Peradventure -Perchance, perhaps;
IL may be.
Not enough for us and you -The
bridal procession and feast were still to
be held and for those lite light of the
torches would be needed.
The door was shut -While they went
to purchase oil the procession arrived
and the guests entered the house. The
door was then closed in order to avoid
the danger arising from violent men.
13. Watch, therefore -This Is the im-
portant point and principal teaching of
lite whole parable.
Ye know not the dny nor the hour -
"The Lord of that servant shall come In
a day when he expecteth not. and in an
hour when he knoweth not" (Matt. 24.
5111.
They cure all kinds of Kidney Troubles
Orem Barka, it,- to pnght's Disease.
Soo. a boos er 3 for 31.23
MI dealers ore
TRL DOAN KIDNEY PILL COie
Tweets. Gust.
SELECTED 11E1:Il'ES.
u
To make "piccalilli." Wash half a
bushel of green tomatoes, and half a
peck of green peppers. Iseui.>v,- the
skins from hull a peck of onions. Peat
vegetables separately through a meat
chopper, using the large knife, or if a
nieut chopper is not at hand, use 1 chop-
ping knife and Tray; Then chop up two
medium sized cabbages. Put u layer
of tomatoes in a large preserving kettle
cover with a layer of cab'agt then
with a sprinkling of peppers bud nano',
and a generous sprinkling ►.i salt. So
DO VOL SlI' VE?
Physiognomist Declares Moustache to
be an Index to Character.
A few points as in the inoestache be-
ing an index to character were given
to the Daily Mirror by n wen -known
physiognomist. "It is one of the most
voluable guides as to the tempermnent
of a man. Vanity or neatness is shown
1.y the carefully waxed or curled mous-
tache. \\ hen aggressive it shows the
owner to be a num of active tempera-
ment.
"Neatly cul and stubby shows a mitt
inclined to economy; straggly and un-
kempt a span 01 untidiness in thought,
dress and action; overgrown and pushy,
vitality and independence; thin and
spat se, vitality low, Inclined to be weak
In character. r Fane faces
"And so one could go on.
ore incomplete without a moustache,
ju.1 as strong features. with genii nese,
he'nd and month are complete. without
11. The weak type of face should always
have either a beard or moustache to
hide 11, and many men who now slay -
1 Oily follow the fashion by taring (heir
hetes would be comet -re 1 handsome
with a beard or a ni.ee-r.., ..l motls-
(Hehv.
"Thal ns in the matter of ileo., one
•
cup.; of sugar and a le\ el teaspoon each
of cinnamon, clow es and mace. Tie the
apices In a muslin bag and cuok in the
vinegar and sugar. (toil the syrup un-
til quite thick, then cook the cucumber
In it for a few minutes.
Chopped Cueumlels.-Chop after par-
ing two or three quarts of eueumlers.
Sprinkle overt' them one cup of tine salt
and let stand over night, Then drain.
Put with it as much vinegar as it will
Moons one tablespooulnII of mnislard
and arty other spices liked. Grated
Muse radish improves the flavor and
snakes it keep well. 1'ut into jars and
seal without cooking.
PituI ' CAKES.
German Apple Cake -One pint of
flour, one and one-half teaspoonful
baking powder, one-half teaspoon salt.
mixes ru►d sifted. Put in two table-
spoonfuls butter, add one beaten egg,
and milk to ln:ike a thick batter. Spread
one inch deep in greased shtilluw tins.
have ready several pared, cored, and
continue until all Is used, cover, , and quartered to uph;. Press point; with
lel sound over night. In the t•,orilit. 1 dough. sprinkle thickly with sugar mix -
drain, ielurn to the kettle cover wipe ed with a little cinnamon. (lake ul hot
vinegar, and add three pewit's of 1 row!' oven.
sugar', Iwo pounds of white illusion; Dutch Peach Cake --Make a soft bis -
seed, and two ounces of ;elt;p►:e Ler- cult dough with one quart flour, two
ribs, three ounces of whole el item un,l tablespoons bullet, one half teaspoon
six ounces of slick cinnamon; the hist saltsall, two teaspoons baking powder.
three spicesiceso belied In luese smalland sufficient cold milk t
n nix. Roll
bags made of cheese. -cloth. Bring stuwly out taro -thirds of an inch thick. lay on
to the boiling point, and lel shunter for flat greased pans. Have ready some
six hours. !lenitive the spice bags, turn peaches pared and quartered. Press
into glass jars. and adjust the covers. (hese into the top of the dough m rows.
For pickled gherkins. take 200 to 31)0 Sprinkle with granulated sugar and
small, unripe cucumbers, wipe them belie in a hot oven. eta in squares
thoroughly. lay them on a dish ani salt while hot.
well, and let them retrain eight or rine Slructed Cake -Mie one quart flour,
hours, then drain, lay them in a jar, and ono teaspoon salt, one tablespoon sugar,
pour enough boiling vinegar over thein two teaspoons baking powder. Put in
In cover them. flare near the lire, coy- four tablespoons butter, prix to soft
ered with grape viae leaves. It they dough with milk, roll out one-half inch
do not become sufficiently green. pour thick. Have ready mixed one cup chop -
oft the vinegar, reboil and pour over the Twit almonds, one-half pound seedless
cucumbers and cover with fresh leaves; raisins. one-half cup grated maple su-
continue to do Ii1Ls until they become gar. Cut dough in two pieces; on one
a; green as you wish. Then pour off spread nut mixture, cover with other
the vinegar once more, and to one gal- piece, roll together with pin. Cut in
Ion add six small red pepper's, Iwo foto• inch squares, brush lops with milk.
slicks cinnamon, two tablespoonfuls of sprinkle with maple sugar, bake in quick
whole allspice, two tablespoonfuls oven.
cloves. Boil up and pour over tite pick- nuclilels.-Sill together one pint flour,
les and cover closely. cno tablespoon sugar, one-half teaspoon
And this for (:hili Sauce: -Peel twelve salt, one heaping teaspoon baking pow -
medium sized ripe tomatoes, and cut in der. Put in two tablespoons butler,
slices crosswise. Put in a preserving mix with milk to soft dough. (toll out
kettle with one green pepper, finely one-half thick, cut in four inch squares
with jagging iron. In centre of each
place two stewed and pitted prunes
and pinch of grated lemon rind. Draw
corners of dough together, pinch, place
nose together in greased pan, brush
with white of egg, sprinkle with gram -
toted sugar, and bnke in tont oven.
iluckleberry Shortcake -'two cups
sugar, one-half cup butter, one tens
spoon salt. one pint milk, two heaping
teaspoons baking powder, sifted Into
three cups flour, one quart well washed
and drained huckleberries, more flour to
slake a thick batter. Basco in greased
dripping pan. break in square;, serve
hot with butter.
chopped; one onion, finely chopped; two
cupfuls of vinegar, three tablespoonfuls
of sugar, one tablespoonful of salt, two
teaspoonfuls of cloves, two and one-
half teaspoonfuls of cinnamon, two tea-
spoonfuls of allspice, and two teaspoon-
fuls of grated nutmeg. fleas gradually
t, the boiling point, and let simmer
two and one-half hours.
Scalloped omelet is a novelly. Soak
three tablespoonfuls of stale crumbs in
a cupful of milk for Iwo hours. Beat
rix eggs -whiles and yolks separately-
Icry Tight. Into the yolks stir the soak-
ed bread et'urnbs and season the mixture
with salt and pepper. i.nst of all stir
in with a few light strokes the stiffen-
ed whites. Butter a deep pudding dish,
Four the mixture into this, set it on the
lower grating of a quick oven and bake
until light and brown. Sift brown
crumbs over the top, and serve the
omelet as soon as it is removed from
the oven.
An Egg Souffle -Scald a cup of milk,
pulling in a tiny pinch of soda. (teat the
yolks of six eggs until light mad
creamy, ling Ilse whites unlit stiff enough
le stand alone. Add one-half teaspoon-
ful of salt, a slash of pepper, and one
rounded tablespoonful of butter to the
milk and stir it into the yolks; then
heat iu the whites very quickly. Pour
Into a deep buttered dish and bake in
a moderate oven for ten minutes. or to
a delicate brown. Serve immediately
Li the bake dish.
Itice Snuffle. -1'o cne-half cup of cold
boiled rice add one cupful of warm milk,
one taldespoonhil of melted butter, one
teaspoonful f.f snit. and n dash of pep-
per; mix well, and ndd Three well beat-
en eggs. Ileal a tablespoonful of but-
te.' in a frying pan, and, when hot, pour
in the mixture and sel the pan in a liot
oven. When it is thoroughly cooked,
fold it double, turn out an a hot dish,
and serve at once.
A "jellied sponge cake" makes an at-
tractive looking dessert ani is nice for
o change. Rake n shallow sponge cake
of pretty shape and prepare two or
three pints of orange jelly. Into a flat-
bottomed nionld put about a quurler of
the jelly, and when it is nlinost firm
place the cake, freed from any hard
crusts or raged edge: upon 11. Cover
illi the remaining jelly, which should
b.• rapidly growing Thiele. \When all is
firm. turn (Into to dessert platter and
g:'rnis11 with whipped cream.
Another pretty dial► in which sponge
cake play; an important role Is made ns
follows: --Prepare either a lemon or an
orange jelly. anti while It is cooling
hollow out the centre of n ,quare sponge
c eke, leaving Et.' hotfoot and side" Pie sake of his aid and sympathy. and
1h:rk enough to 1114141 Itte j,•'1,'. \\ !iter
Pie jelly is beginning to grow thick re meltrslands it to be so. it is another,
it in, nml set the pin!e ns 'tear the dee mailer. In this ease he come, for your
c•enlfort. and not for his own pleasure..
But if he visits you nal of pure friend -
ENTERTAINING GUESTS.
There is one important thing that
shoukl not 1.e overlooked in the enter-
tainment of guests; treat them with
equal courtesy. Bu also careful to trent
your poorer and humbler relations,
whom you have invited to your house,
with due respect and cordiality -neither
\wilt any shute of patronage, nor any
marks of neglect. \Whoever else may
Its your guests, let there l'e nothing in
your mtutuer to indicate that you are
ashamed of the good old aunt That is
visiting you. and Itie truest way to ac-
complish This is not to be ashamed of
h, r. She may not dress in the latest
fashion, and her talk uny be of country
mutlet:;; she may ask slime queer ques-
tions. and shoe her familiarity with n
style of life Ant is somewhat foreign
t) that of your other visitors; but if you
are not willing. under all circumstances
to. treat her with cordial civility, you
should net hove asked her to your house
No pian ever loses caste, in the opinion
of the truly refined and cultivated, by
showing courtesy towards such ns move
In a Wolter sphere. Neither sh'►uld the.now?" he finoliy
rich visitor.: be treated with over-nl>.s0.-) 'yet course. 1`erfct peace is Jho idem
quinas attention. They will not thank for which the strive."
you for f1, or respect you any the morel "And we should strive for lint ideal
for your excess of deference. Above all in private and public affairs, shouldn't
never allude to the fact of their visit-) wee
ing you as an act of condescension nn
their part, or, by any word or look in•
Ws a
1.IFII: ON raw sttM\1ER 1 LFA.
WIsere There are no Taxes -Only Roses
and Lilies and Onions.
The tourist agent speaks of Bermuda
a. Ilse "Land of the Lily and the Rose,"
v.hiclt is eorre.•t enough, SIIICa lilies are
grew!' by like acre for Iho bulb,, which
American Iii,rists force into Eastern
brooms, and of roses (here is plenty the
year urounel, says World's Work. Real-
ly the onion and the potato extract the
most wealth from the land.
The fanner grows from one to four
crops a your • d ninny of her products.
1:ulte at:on is confined chiefly to the hol-
1,:wa where the soil has accumulated in
p. ckets over the coral beds which form
the islands. This soil in most places
is not more Ilion ten to eighteen inches
deep, a mellow loam which looks like
Iinely powdered cocoa.
Truck fanning is scarcely considered.
,raters and onions ons and lilybulbs
u ite
loo easily raised unit several hundred
and even a thousand duelers or more
!.root may be made front a single acre.
But with prices falling and the 'Texans
growing vast quantities of onions Ber-
muda will eventually have to turn to
other crops.
The working fanner here is the Portu-
guese. lie was imported as a farm lab-
orer but by thrift and good ntanagetnent
has
anti tend of
a hired
become ns
sec e a ten
man. and now raises certainly half if
not more than halt the crops of Ber-
muda.
Of the 17,000 souls on the islands
about 60 or 70 per cent. are negrues.
They are law abiding and remarkably
Industrious citizens, on the average very
well educated by the colony, and they
surprise n stranger by speaking with
the accent of an Englishman, with lit-
tle or no negro dialect.
\Vhen the Bermudan wishes to build a
house he rentowee Irani the site the lop
soil which will probably be not above
ten inches thick, perhaps lets. Under
this is a coral limestone, a little harder
to cut than cheese. Instead of digging
this out with pick and shovel he saws
it into blocks. sets it in the sun to dry
and by the time he has excavated nis
cellar the Yatoelts are hard stone fit to
be made into the walls of his house.
Iie mixes a little cement and lime
with his shavings and nil his materials
arc at hand. These cool stone houses,
lintew•ashed a dazzling while, slain out
through the deep green juniper -trees
and stand on the rocky shores above
the wonderful ultramarine blue water
aria► its thousand iridescent hues, a
picturesque feature in the panorama of
besul v
(ledges of oleander which grow In be
veritable !roes divide the farms as
stone wells or rail fences do those in
New England and in April the islands,
tram the sea, appear to be buried under
pink bloom.
The affairs of Bermuda are practically
lit lite hands of a house of assembly,
elected by the people and serving with -
mit pay fora term of seven years,
though they do receive a fee of eight
shillings for carriage hire -there being
neither railway, trolley nor automobile
in this peaceful land.
SUBMITTED TO AIIBITiIATION.
'l'hc boy had been in thought for .sev-
eral minutes. At last lie said:
"Father, it's -rung to light, isn't it?"
"Yes, my son," replied the father,
pleased to see that het lessons on that
subject had not been wasted.
"It's wrong to try to settle disputes
Cy resorting to force, isn't it-"
"1t is, indeed," returned the father.
"l'he whole tendency of modern civil-
ization is to do away with fighting of
all descriptions."
"Muscle doesn't count for so much as
it used to, (foes il?" -
"No, (11)• boy; physical prowe..s does
not rank so high as mental ability in
the world of lo -(lay'."
The toy again relapse:l into thought
for a few minutes, apparently ponder-
ing his fathers words.
"Then. of connw, we're all for peace
MOTHEL SISJER
AND BRI, R
Died of Gens nption,bW Abdo
lady used Psychine and is
strong and well
"My mother. brother and sister d:ad el
consumption," says Ella M. Cove, of Lin-
den, N.S., "and I myself suffered for two
years from a distressing cough and nd weak
Junks. [ suppose 1 Iuheriled a tendency
in this carectionr
"But thank God I used Psychlae and it
built me right up. My lungs are oow
strong. 1 enjoy splendid health. and I owe
it all to Psychine. '
Cousumption, whether hereditary or con.
tracted. cannot stand before Psychine.
Psychine kills the germ, no matter how it
attacks the lungs. Psychine builds up the
body and makes it strong and able to
resist disease. Paychire is an aid to
digestion and a maker of pure, rich blood.
The greatest giver of general health is
"Always."
"1'hAt's what i thought," said the toy,
dienle Ihnt. In your opinion, they hold i,•floclively, "Don't you Think (lint we
a higher pcslliun in society than sotshave a good opportunity to apply it
do. It you fall in with all their pre -1 naw.?"
judice.,, and echo all their senliients, "in what wn':. my boy?"
and hung upon their lips, as the hews; "Why. let's arbitrate the question of
cling to "every opening flower." they that licking That you are going to give
will probably se, Ihruugh it all, and 111e after dinner. Everybody arbttrales
place you accordingly. Last of all. who- now."
01 er may be your visitors, keep the eke- Il was arbitrated.
setons out of sight. Family woes and
PSYCHINE
(Pr000uaced Si-asea) )
50c. Per Bottle
Larger Mass ei and e2 -ail druggists
OR. T. A. SLOCUM, Limited, Toronto
triols and mistarinnt's, if they are !undo
the slope. of cnnversntion, will cause
the visit of your guest to be very dls-
agree•,hle. If you have invited hien for,
man's suit 1, another man's fancy-dress a; possible. \\'hen it i• tenets 14) he
sent In 1110 table pile some w•hipp>cd
cream in a mall p> rnnlid over the top.
(:hopped nuts or Nils of candied fruit
arc an ntlracUe addition In the jelly,
and n fey Lright bits of candied fruit
ns a decernli(et for the lop, surrounding
the whipped cream, give a festive touch
t. Ilre' dessert.
See••1 Cumin ter Pickles. -Pare ripe,
fires ructtnh'r.e, serape out nil the seeds
and cut ihent in lengthwise strips: cut
these into Iw'o or more pieties. Alnko
a syrup of one quart of vinegar, two
costtmne, so In 11113 mutter of facial
adornment one rnnn'3 ntous',•tche might
be another's social r11111."
t.
AS SHE DID iIERCEi.I•.
11 was lithe Dot's first visit to a farm.
and she eons villa her Hunt to see how
the pigs were fel. The little ono gazed
in astont*I i'ient at the young porkers
for it moment, and then, placing her
hand on her curly hair, she said. re-
flectively :
"Auntie r'
"Yes. dear."
"Ones 'on put nil the piegn',s' taile in
curl papers?"
HOPELESSLY 1.Y COfi1\ION.
Mrs. \Vv lkyns--.\re they fashionable
people?
Mrs. \\'ntkyns---Nu. indeed. \Vh,v
they don't eters call their kitchen girl
a maid.
TRMITil COMES OCT OF PLAY.
Mrs. Skinnum-\Why 331'e you all hid.
In from Tommy?
Mille Lizzie- -Tommy la the butcher
cordo with Ills bill,
"It ae m.s." gays the barber, "that
my whale Ilio Is to he spent getting
out of one scrape Into another.
ship. and exUeeting 10 113110 n gond time,
lock up pew closet ebur. you keep
your skeleton:. The deepest sympnlhy
will not endure 0enslanl .1raug lits upon
its water without running dry.
THE GiIE,\T THOME.
"It's awful for a young than to lose
a gond npportnnily."
"Yes. because he doesn't do anything
nee the rest of his lits but lose time
bilking about it."
rt.!'_.:--,
3!
a 4. _ C
*EATING BE TWEL.r Ml«tL#L&
LEAIINED LADIES.
Mrs. Paton Fleming, a native of Dun-
dee, Scotland, who has just been
elected a member of the Royal Aptro-
nomicnl Society, is not the only woman
who has succeeded in comprehending
the transcendental mysteries of the Hea-
vens -perhaps the most abstract and
abstruse of the sciences. Miss Henrietta
i.eavitt discovered twenty-ilve new var-
iable stars some years ago. Lady Hug-
gins diligently helps her husband, Sir
\William Huggins, in his astronomical
observations. In their house in South
London they posses a very finely -
equipped observatory, which contains
the enormous telescope presented by
the Royal Society to Sir William in
recognition of the work accomplished
by Lady Huggins and himself in astro-
physics.
Does Your
FOOD
Digest Well?
When the food is imperfectlydigested. -
the full benefit is not derived rom it by
the body and the purpose of eating is de.
foisted ; no matter how good the food oe
how carefully adapted to the wants of the
body it may be. Thus the dyspeptic often
becomes thin, weak and debilitated, energy
is lacking, brightness, snap and vim ars
loot, and in their place Dome dullness, lost
appetite, depression and langour. It takes
no groat knowledge to know when one has
indigestion, soma of the following symp.
lents generally exist, viz.: oonatipation..
sour stomach, variable appetite, headache,
heartburn, gas in the stomach, etc.
The groat point is to euro it, to get bask
bounding health and vigor.
BURDOCK
BLOOD BITTERS
h constantly effecting cures of dyspepsia
Lacause it acts in a natural yet effective
way upon all the organs involved in the
procew of digestion, removing all clogging
Impurities and makings easy the work o
digestion and assimilation.
Mr. Pe. G. Harvey, Ameliasb.rg, Ont.,,
writta: "I have been troubled with dye.
p•peia for several years and after using
three bottles of Burdock Blood Bitters I
was uompletely cured. I cannot proles
B. B. R. enough for what it has done lot•
me. I have not had a sign of dyspepsia
sines."
Do not accept a substitute for B.B.L
There is nothing "fast as good."
r
DISCOURAGED MEN
15 LIFE WORTH LIVING
READER
MEN, you Leconte lisheart.
ened when you feel the symp-
toms of Nervous Debility and
declln• stealing upon you.
You haven't the nerve or am-
bition you used to have. You
fest you are not the man you
ought to be. You feel like
giving up In despair. You get
nervous and weak, have little
ambition, ►nil In the back
over des, danight,
hollowkifel
tiredrains ntortninge,
prefer to be alone, distrustful
variable appetite, looseness of
hair, poor circulation - yes
kayo Nervone Debility. Our
New Method Treatns.at 1s your
refuge. it will strengthen all
weak organs, vitalise the ner-
vous system, purify tho blood
and restore you to a manly
condition.
Pay When Cured.
Are .von a vlctim? Have you lost hone? Are Yost in-
tending to marry? ,Ilea your blood Leon diseased? Have
you any weakness', Our New Method Tr, atom 0t will cure you. What
It has done for others It will do for you• CONSIII.TATION F'i1) E.
No matter who has treated you. write for nn honest opinion Free of
Charge. Charges reasonable. BOOKS FRKI -"The ()olden Monitor"
(Illustrated), on Diseases of Men. Sealed Book on "Diseases of
Women" Free.
61TABI,Is11E:D 35 YEARS -NA ctrnt:-No PAY. Ke 1Me.11els. arse
C. O. D. No names e■ bootee or envelopes. Everrtiiag eoaaMatlat.
Oseetlea last and eest et treatsaest TMlbE1.
DiuKENNEDY& KERGAN
Cor. Michigan Ave. and M}`elby St.. Detroit.. Mich.
1