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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1906-11-29, Page 7Mr. 1 e ter►,- �,.. • ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Cenulne 4 - Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must !sear Signaturs et 4' ase Pst:.effeslte Wlrsp,sr Below. Tors slavetw se say so emir, slam MIMS its 111Zi S nt: 111WHIS IEtf. m mina LIY[se TOR ESKSTIPATIOM. FAA SALLOW SKIN. fO!! TidECGMPLUIDN at. *Zara CURT. SCK HEADACHE. LIVER COMPLAINT. The liver is the tar t the =►ndin fwd 7. •Iia office is to take from the blood the properties which form bile. when the liver is torpid and fAIIstmed it cannot furnish bile to the bowel. causing them to become bound and oostive. The nye ton. are a feeling u of fulness orw' g weight in >s the right skier, sad shoaua= pain, in the sacro region. pains between the shoulder., yellowness of the skin and eyes, bowels Irregular. coated tongue, but taste In the morning, etc. MILBURN'S LAXA LI VER PILLS ere p! aeeet and easy to take, do not gripe, weaken or sicken. never fail in their effects. and are by far the attest and quioke.t remedy for ail diseases or disorders of the Liver. Price 25 cents, or 5 bales for 11.00, all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. ANSWERING A BOY'S QUESTION. Lawson' "What do you do when your little boy asks you questions you can't answer?" Dawson: "fiend hits to bed and gel out the encyclopedia." Il': "And won't you give me n kiss?" She: "Certainly not. f never kissed a ninn in hiy life. • Ile (emphatically): ele ither have 1." af"'Miss Smith (decidedly plain): "Are you en admirer of beauty, Mr. Brown?" Mr. "Really, (inspired by desire to be polite): Really, Miss Smiths if 1 did like beauty --1—er—couldn't be ungallant enough to say so." WEAK TiRED WOMEN How many women there are that gut no re- freshmeet from sleep. They wake in the morn- ing and feel tireder than when they went to bed. They have a dizzy sensation in the head, the heart palpitates; they are irritable and nervous, wink and worn out, and the lightest household duties during the day seen to be a drag and a burden., MILBURN'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS are the very remedy that weak, nervous, Coe' out, sickly worsen need to restore theist the blessings of good health. hey give sound, restful sleep, tone up nerves, s tre pRth e n the heart and rich blood. \m• C. McDonald, ,!ortt�ela Prairie,Man., writes: • was troubled with shortneet of breath, palpi- tation ,i- tation of the heart and week spt Ile I got four boxes of Milhurn's Heart and Nerve ('ills, and after taking them I was coini)lctely curet!. Price 50 rentser box or three buses for 31.2;, all dealers or the The T. Mil- burn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. 4+ — CURES Dyspepsia, Bolls, Pimples, Headaches, Constipation, Less of Appetite, Salt Rheum. Erysipelas, Scrofula, and all troubles arising from the Stomach, Livor. Bowels or Brood. Mtt A.Let henget, of 1tatlydulr, writes: • 1 t•elievo f would bar, been In my genre long afro girl It not been for llnrdo, it 1110.41 Nit - lora. f was run dawn to such no extent that I cunt 1 s4'. r" . ly !novo about rho bones. 1 ,e r s n tj r•'t he eaves he Bache. b tciachea and dlrzt. n.• 1s tar apx;ite sesta gone and t lame unable to do my heoiew.rk, After using tt,•, botttri of H, it t. t . I tomtit n, health , r t. t e• . r1 tto• eta 1 wean!, It W a'l ltrevl and wen out *0ZeNe TIIE ALL - SEEING EYE It Is An Eye of Sympathy, of Tender Kindness, of Loving Wisdom. "Thou God set me."—Gen. xvI., 13. There are few who cannot call to mind many limes in childhood when this text wag quoted to them in nwe-inspinng tones. It :nay be you remember these words printed or worked to worsted hanging in your roost al home. The in- terpretation supplied by parent or teacher served, for a time, ns nn effec- tive, invisible, and omnipresent pnbee 1(o forcebo fearedTh, . e Almighofficer ty became an ocer Once nervous natures could hardly find a moment of quiet comfort so filled were they with vague alarms al the thought of the eye unceasingly search- ing their secret being. To tell such a child that death would thrust him into the full presence of the one whose eye thus unremittingly watched hien had at least tha wholesome effect of making hits determined to live as long as possible. The mottoes have gone and the child hears less of the supremo spy, though !bene rertrnin parents so morally twisted ur so mentally indolent as to attempt to coerce their children into goodness by cowardice, by dread of their God. But the typo of mind whose religion con- sists either in the tear oI that all -seeing eye or in dodging its inspection, is by no meat's extinct, Gone is rGod hi watched the jam in the pano pantry or the apples in the collar, who seemed delight- ed 1 u record against tuts! us 1,the petty Y MISDEEDS OF CHILDHOOD. Vet there remains to perhaps nearly all an impression (hut the Almighty over- sight is principally !y exeeel s^d in detec- ting our wrong doing and our short- comings. One of the most singular things in the history of religion is the nssiduily with which men have le trill's Into elnbotate errors rsand theted its ttde- votion with which They have been pre- pared to defend with the last drop of their blond the errors which worked dao age to their whole lives and to de- nounce as traitors any who nssumed to recall to sten the simple bettuty of the truth which they had buried with their traditions. Here, says this old world story • was a woman, cast out, lily treated, alone itt us. the desert. Man had betrayed her and God seemed to have forgotten tier. Well (night she despair. Then, when things seemed darkest about her, in the soul's night, carte the visiva from above. lite messenger of the Etctnal, with a picture of the goodly /huge awaiting her child. When alt seemed wrong there came this reminder of the power working for the right. With bead refreshed the woman turned back, naming the place by a word moaning "Thou God seest me." Think you that place to tier was to be drearkei because of the all -seeing eye' \Vt.at a triumph of jey and peace was in her tones, as she cried, "After all. i know that Jehovah does not forget us at any lime; his eye is upon me for good." Long ago. in simplicity of heart, men thought of one who was ever near, coning and dwelling among them as a friend, ENTERING THE TENT DOOR, silting at the evening meal, knowing all the cares, fears, nerds, joys. hopes, and desires that were theirs. Of the best of Them it was said that they walked with God, so clear was (heir sense of the int- minence of the Father of spirits. As Hagar cried aloud with joy at the thought of one who could always see her, so did they; it was the strength and cu cs li t ala t) n of their lives!tut neither t enemies nor adversities, nor even their own follies and wandering could !tide them front him, that desert places and lands remote were not far from hits. IL4 I thet• e e of a ri • thatoohs friend 1 down, an eye of sympathy, of tender kindness, of loving wisdom; behind it the all-pervading, controlling (night that binds the universe into a unit and brings all its motions under the sway of law. Every source of infinitude is for our aid; the Omnipotent is man's ally. Tillss i the faith that makes men strong, that sends them forth to endure, to per.Sist in the right. to fight the wrong; this makes heroes in the silence as well as in the blare of publicity, the knowledge that we are ever in the light of Infinite love and might, that the eter- nal goodness xnows, deeply feels with HENRY. F. COPE. THE S. S. LESSON INTERN ATION1L LESSON, DEC. 2. Lesson IX. Jesus Before Pilate, Golden Text : Luke 23. 4. is Stu THE LESSON WORD STUDIES. Note.—The text of the Revised Version used as a basis for these Word dies. 'slate's Title and Office.—The fact (lint gospel narratives uniformly speak Pontius Pilate as governor makes it per for us to inquire what was the 1 position which he occupied i ed under liftmen government. and whnt his ver and authority. in the tines of Roman Republic the highest two gisirates of the capital city itself were ed consuls. These consuls were! tett for one year only, but while in e they exercise,i a power and an levity almost equal to that of the s whom they had supplanted• er the later empire, however, the e of consul, while still maintained, me of iiiueh less importance, de -i»(1 - to the mere presidency of the le. Of public games, etc. Al the limo twist the larger provinces of the an Empire were governed b)' offi- called proconsuls, who exercised inertly of consuls In their respcc- provinces. They were also called lelors, or go'crners. Subordinate hese proconsul.,, or ['retire -eat sort;, again, were the procurators, hod charge of the imperial revenue. Ir i e c e n nisi red justice ' t cases ' . . n cn. e. t 1 r I► t e , 1 to In S 'etit, smaller provinces, stere, so to spent;. appendages of realer proconsular provinces, the ✓ otors also sometimes discharged 'tenons of the governor or the pro- of the province. Judea was one smaller provinces which Imgether Med the proconsular province of Pontius Pilate held Ilse position uralnr of Judea and was subject e governor or proconsul of the province of Syria. Perhaps the for the fact that he is uniformly gnvern0r in our English 'tihte, is e Greek word so translated, like tg(lish equivalent, is used in a • sense, to designate any person executive aulhnrily in rl state or e. The Jewish histnt rut, Jou our of pro rea the pots the 1110 call Glee offic null king ('nd u11ic btca tiug Senn of C Rom cors the n live propr le 1 Hover alio and a in 11 width the g peach the t'1 rrntsul ,f the conslit Syria. .1 iroc t:r lta larger reason coiled !!tat il; Ei br0ndei !laving erovinc Sanhedrin, and the right to pass the sentence of death or to execute the same was absolutely forbidden it. This fact made it necessary for the Jews to bring some formal charge against Jesus before the Homan procurator in order to oblate from him the sentence of death which !hey desired. Verse 13. Pilate called together the chief priests and the rulers and the people — Pilate's official residence was the palnce of Herod at (iesarea and only at the time of the great Jewish feasts does he seem to have resided in Jerusa- lem, occupying during his stay in each case apartments In the palace of Herod in that city. tented his own verdict by the public announcement of that of Herod which coincided with his own, !3) Ile .sought to release Jesus in compliance tt ith an es- tablished custom. (4) He proposed to the Jews to make scourging a substitute rot' the extreme penalty of death. (5) As a last resort Ito appealed to the compassion of the accusers. 23. But they were urgent voices. asking that he might ba •--11 is at this point in the nacre Matthew adds the word-,, "So t late saw that ter prevailed nonrather that a tumult was arising, water, and washed his hands multitude. saying, I ata innocer blood of this righteous malt; s It. Ami all the people answt said, !Its blood he on us, and children" (elan. 27. 24, 25), 2I. Gave sentence that wh asked for should be door'—lt is evident front the entire retreat Pilate is determined not to socr favor of the people merely for 1 of rescuing from their hands a p whom he had no special interest25. But Jesus he delivered up will—Matthew records the fact 1 scourging which Pilate had at 11gusted as a substitute for the de: ally was inflicted before Jesus livered to the Jews to be erectile with laud crucified five flinthen Pi- few times. Puy good patent leather and it will last longer them almost any tend and always look well. Varnished watl-papers have many ad- vantages. 'These are must advisable for passages and the children's bed room,, being very durable. and they aro easily washed with soap and water. After in- fectious illness, walls thus papered can be washed with disut(e', tants, ani thus the expense of nepapering is saved. When shabby, another coat of yarn eh may always be ermine C1IOICE RECIPES. ting. but Kentucky Pudding.—'T'hre'e eggs, 234 he took cupfuls of simile, '/a of a cup of butter, before the 1 cup of cream, 3 tablespoonfuls of it of the flour. 1 teaspoonful of lene» essence, ee. ye to Irish Potato Pic'.—prepare line trashed red and potatoes the sante as for the table; add 011 0111' half cup of milk, I.) a quart of lite mixture two eggs, one sweeten to taste; pour at they into the paste and grate nutmeg over deur!). tho top, (lake without an upper crust. We that Friedl Cakes.—Three eggs, two and ince the rete -half cups sweet milk, two cups su- ite sake gar, three tcuspouIAiis of baking pow- erson in der; spices to taste; roll out and cut in shapes, and fry in boiling lord ; while t▪ o their but dip in One sugar. hat the Fairy Toast,—Cut stale sponge cake in rst nog. inch slices, !oast golden brown. and cut ,lh pen- in two inch squares, tient to a froth !vas de- one-half of a tumbler of quince jelly. d. and when very light add gradually the shitty whipped whiles of Iwo eggs. Heap this on the pieces of toast, and lop each with hal( of a candied cherry. Servo welt cream. Crullers.—Beat two eggs until light., add one-quarter of a teaspoonful of grated nutmeg. one cupful of sugar, and heat hied. Gradually beat in a half cup- ful of thick sour cream. Dissolve a half teaspoonful of soda in one tables poonfu1 of waren water, and add to the mixture; •as an i then stir in sufficient sifted four lo nuke 1, and n .soft dough. (toll out a portion at a of the time, cut into nny desired stype and fry nice golden de brown b tort• lure a n in deep. smoking hot fel. Oatmeal Crisps. — Carom one-quarter ted lo , cup of butler with one-half cup of sugar, add the yolks of two eggs and heat well. n Sas-! Mix two cups of oatmeal with four level gat the teaspoons of baking powder and n salt - front m S .spoon f salt. Add Adl t O , the C first ri•t ! �t x urs, r front and fold 1n the stiffly beaten whiles of etile ttvo eggs. Drop with n tenspoon on to, a buttered sheet and some distance apart. fluke in a slow oven. ._01.0 GIRL DRUGGED, TEETH EXTRACTED. Police of Berlin Mystified by a Remark- able Adventure, A child of 1:, named Frida Wagner. has had a singular adventure, about which all flerlin, Gerrnitny, is speculat- ing. She was visited at school by a young woman, tvlot said she tt opera singer named von Sassct Fridet's aunt. She fold the rector school that she had not seen her for nine years, and wished to 1 talk k with I h he r. Frida w. aS permit leave lite school for Three hours. Together, Frida and Fraulein vo sen drove for a while throw streets, rel. s, then went to n dentist's, site was druggt.'ef, and two of her teeth extracted, Von Sassen an dentist wished to extract three nior , but the child, who hnd conte to her senses, grew alarine.1, and resisted. Von Sassen and Frida Then walked about. Frida was shown beautiful articles of female apparel in tite shop windows, and was toki that after a while she would wear suet, clothes and ride In n carriage. Von Semen promised to train her as an opera singer, and praised the child's voice. Frida at this point took fright and rushes! to a passing tramcar, board- ed 11, and made the best at her way home. The police are investigating the story, but the child's statements are so con- fused and her nerves so shaken that it is impossible to get a really coherent nate native from her. They believe it is some new development of perversity, regarding which it might be wen to have medical opinion. Von Sassen Is evidently n false name, as no opera singer with this nnme ex- ists. The sot-disant von Sassen is n girl of about 19, quielly.dressed, with a win- ning manner. WOMEN'S THREE STAGES, England's Cltancdl r of the Excheq Says Last 'Welcome." 11. And said unto them— His address Mr. As•iuith spoke recently In a m to the people and the members of the god-naltired manner about Ivan Sanhedrin was a formal one delivered The occasion was the opening from his customary seat of judgrat Dundee, ment. n o '1'Ile public examination of the prisoner was�1a preponderance of women res which Pilate had jest held had convinced "We are all delighted at all links 1 the procurator of the innocence of hien in all places," said Mr. Asquith, "lo whore the Jews had so vehemently ac. ludies upon golf links. cused. This fact he does not hesitate to "t have watched the process of fent slate as lie faces the company of Je3u3't3 emancipation going through its sure accusers with the words, "Behold 1, site stages. It began with exclosic having exegetic(' his) before you, found then, I think. passed to toteralien, a no (affil in this man touching. the flings noW 11 mmnunls fo wet whereof ye accuse him," come. \1se y Wray draw any moral you please fro That chapter in the history of fetna effort. "I will only venture to say (his—Ili it is to me a most gratifying proof • how b; process of what 1 may can pelt lid persuasion woman can nitays extci her own legilinate domain." Dealing more particularly with gol Mr. Asquith spoke with some amount regret. "There was ranee," he said, "n famous Lord (:hanccllo', who said to one of our English judges, that if he had a 111t10 more experience be would be the worst judge that ever slut o0 n bench. I think one is , O i . I. ellen (Cn 7 Ie n )le diol think l k lit e same of gulf, as one proceeds steadily by assi- duous pus practice fo r n bac I to • t arse. "1 tens calculating the other day nun I myself might have learned n new lan- gtu,go in the time 1 have devoted to be- eomutg a very indifferent performer at the game." Loaf Cake.—One cup sugar, one-half cup butler, one egg, one cup sweet milk, one pint flour, one cup raisins, Iwo tea- spoonfuls baking powder. French (tolls,—One coffee cup of milk, two large tablespoonfuls of sugar, two large tablespoonfuls of butler, two tea- spoonfuls of cream of tartar. one tea- spoonful of soda (bi-carbonate), one-half teaspoonful of salt; flour enough 13 make batter stiff enough to take up in a spoon and drop in your pens, which must be hot and buttered as t r gents. Bake in a hot oven. \'unity Cake. —T'wo eggs, one cup flour. Roll thin as a wafer; cut in pat- terns. Moil in lard, Graham Gems. — One quart Graham flour, three teaspoonfuls of baking pow- der, Iwo eggs beaten light, butter the size of an egg melted, one teaspoonful of brown sugar, a llllle salt, and milk enough In make a batter, Crumpets.—Take ono quart of dough from the bread at nn early hour in the morning. Break three eggs se anent yoltee f!U written, 1.?(h to tic whippet] to 1 n light froth, 'nix lltein into the douMth, rite add ncilk and warm tv P it1C II ' tet' i; a butter, the consistency of buckwheat cake.;, Ile`! +� )t'e�l, and lel it rise till est breakfast time. (lave the griddle hot I len, and nicely greased. pour nn the batter golf t in small brown calces. Bake a light, here , brown. int, Nut and Potato Creque(Ics•—Conrsely Iltd clop sufficient black walnut merits to eee measure one cupful. i Mix them with I I h one cupful of mashed rind seasoned potatoes ale and one cupful of soft bread crumbs. es- Stir in Iwo well-lx'aten eggs. Add a in: high seasoning of salt, pepper, and nd onion juice, a tete drops of !emelt juice, ou and Nu•ee tablespoonfuls of beef stock. ( m When cold mould into croquettes, dip 10 each into beaten egg. roll in line crumbs and fry in deep smoking -tint fat. nt Checkerboag•d (:eke•—I,i �+ht p¢f•t: Brat of Ili,' whtleeS of 10111' t'g gs ifc n stiff fealty, Fer - Mkt 1 i ly, raps while sugar, y, cup melted I t1r id butler, cup sweet milk. tis cups sifted nut 1 pour, 1 teaspoon amen! tartar, and t der tt 1, teaspoon soda. Dark pnrt: \\'ell beaten! horse of yolks of 1 eggs, brown or maple sugar, 1 the b 1 cup, melnsses ee cup, soda e4 lea - 15. Nor yet Herod—lien-oil Anlipas, called in the New Testament also Herod the tetrarch, the same who had put Jnhtt the Baptist to death, ile was the son of Herod the Great. The wanting• lion of Jeasus by Herod referred to in this verse was presumably only an in- formal ono and (Inc which constituted' no part of the regular trial. 11 is re- ferred to again in Acts 4. 27. A careful reading of Luke's entire gospel indicates That he apparently possessed specinl In. formation concerning the dvnnsty of Herod, and the facts which he records concerning that dynasty are apparently most t ac carat o. 16. 1 will therefore cltnslise hint --:1 Innst cruel and gratuitous 1(I II hmen1 whirl' Ile proposes to Inflict ey wry of emu -Mating the. men who were accusing the priknrter. This otter of Pilule !litotes niucli light upon the disgraceful illegal - fly nerd horrible brutality which Ronrau officers were often guilty of. We note That the Aim ;lean ='tandard Version of the Bible oriels verse 17 of This chapter. The fact that i1 is printed in parentheses (0 the Authorized or King James Version indicafs ; lent it is 0 clause Thrown in by' way of explann. lien. The sauce explanatory fuel which ii stated in Ibis verse Is found, (tory ever, in two other passages: "Now at Thal feast the gsvernor was wont to rte lease unto the multitude one prisoner, :ems, however. is careful to 'peak of whom they would" (hall. 27. 15), Coln- I'i.lote only bt his proper title, proeur•a- pare also Mark 15. 6). !•,r, and in the German and other trans- 18. ltarebbas—:111 That w Inlfnns of Thr iidde Thr Dile n , ,lie is c knew con- i'ilale also i.: one tthiett mote Icnrefully told tin Ihetnext lverse.sfrom tmer of Ictt 11 is distinguishes his (Alive front that of his plain that he was political which it r, +ulrrriur, Nee g t.ernur of `tris. 1 A i nllltca! sgitntor, i wo 1 and ono actually guilty of the crime „titer Itnntnn .rocura1 tr.< shaken of in charged unjustly against Ieslts, !he' \t'tt 'I'es'art 2n. I>r'ciring to release Jesus manifest hypocrisy' and vindictiveness of the .Jews strengthened i'llate',s vietion of the prisoner's ineocence. con - 21. Crucify, crucify hien--(;rucgflxion was the customary Roman method re punishment inflicted on persons of de- pendent melon; not pn.MMtlssing Ramon C1117•Cnshlp, 2r'. \Vhy. whnl evil hath this man (one-- The fudge condescends to argue the Cheri t illi the pltinliff, n gent ant under the Idle of gc.venmr are Felix !.1il.s 23. 21) and Ft's - Its •. els 21.:71, Jir•Ie;tn proem -Mops ns t matter of 10.1 exerei.r•d a 1111e'h Higher nulhoit% Ihnt officers of the sane t.+nk in other Hunan prutiret'•; in Ji,(l 0 nl matters their went ons supreme. except in rages involving Persons tt Ian here Unman citizens. where appeal was t os- sible In the enip••r•m• nt teems. lfrncc the remark of Aggrippn (n Fesloss rerccr'n- ng Paul. "This num might have (tee), al liberty. If he had sol al,l,cai•'d e re - int., 1 :Tsar ',Acts _'n, :le), fiueor'tlinnle I d.nee ofon nithe (urnori the lin Ono end gdepe e tt, • 1lotnon pro,•uralor Pilule. I thing tor he the noted in this cnnnrclinn. however, is - ,tri"'.teat tyros p r:1111',, to etereis,' the l the lac! that Pilate dad netunlly take emotions of se ermee ( mart nl the no -1 narcissi'e steps which he hoped would Ifs st n) c e'c Ili n 1 a; civil .'r not 1 1 nlfalra. Itt yr), noel cnse,t, rum 11et%' pr s, ner'geacc concerti : (1 the Jews lo the fewer pn rogat,tt's nen• ahlow(t(1 in lho Allred his innocence.) lir Ilea le - (2) supple. C ' - THE DRE -1D OI (aiT'S TR1tLS. British Battleship~ Cued tit,' Severe Tests SafisheiorOy, In spite of dismal prophecies the monster battleship Dreadnought has conte through her speed and gunnery trials in excellent fashion. Stir, developed a speed of et knots per hour without forcing her engines, 'late sant! feeling of eeta_,(ucliun was the result of her gunnery trials. Furs trail been widely expressed beforehand that the concus- sion of her huge It -inch gluts, which ere rho most powerful weapons ever' put into a battleship, would cause serious injury to the structure of the ship• and possibly even to her crew•. These guns, when fired with full charges, each develop a force capable of lifting the Dreadnought bodily nearly three feet in the air. or 47.697 foot tons, la technical language. Eight of them COD lire on either beans. nett six ahead or ustern. They can pierce 51 inches of iron at the Iouzzk, or 11 inches of Krupp steel at 6,000 yards under battle cundi- tiats, 1'ho first lest was to Oro each glut singly. Next, lite pairs of guns in the burbetles were discharged together. Filially came the severest test of nil, the simultaneous • r, discharge hat • . t, of r g, all ► e fit nn the broadside with the full servieeilof 265 pounds of cordite per gun and an )350 pound shell. This dual salvo a( eight great gulls, exerting ar force enough I i t u lift Jfl the Dreadnought 21 feel In the air. is slated by those on board her to have produced an amount oI concussion that was terrifying. But the great ship stood the test well and without any serious in- jury to her hull. As was expected, there was some injury to her lighter fittings, and the glass in several of her port lights was broken. "She came through marvellously well was the verdict. of one distinguished nal ct'r. "1(te fusillade of all her eight guns on the broadside only made the ship rock slightly." WORLD WALKERS. India Seems 10 he a Stamping Ground Just Now. The Allahnbad (India) Pioneer reports tete start, from Karachi, for a wall: round the world, of a ratan named Thomas Lorimer, The wager was one of 16,000 rupees, made with two bookmakers; the con. dition being that Lorimer was to star) [nom Kurnchl without money; tont he teas neither to beg, borrow, nor steal en the journey, but would earn his liv- ing by honest means, and return to Karachi within four years. Lorimer set out in fit condition, carry- ing, only a waterttr Sof she,'! a nnnte _ -..ran CUua,i111 ttetlSlls 01 otunitnuill, and a few other necessaries, Ile Is not new to such adventure; and he,, hopes to get through his present ex. pedition by giving performances en route. He is n society entertainer as nell as a gn•ld athlete, ilts route will 1-e through India, Up- per BurnJah, to China; through Japan t ; the Philippines; to and across Aus- Irnlia; then by sen to New 7..eeland, and thence to and across America. He will cross to the British isles, rind continue onward through Franee, Germany, the Balkans, Turkey, Palestine, 0n lo Egypt, through Abyssinia and Samolitand; anti return to Karachi by sea. HIS TERRIBLE' PUNISHMENT. The noise made by the b,n•gtar in the atsgo iterltry, slight as it was dis- cd the light sleeper in the bedroom ar away, and the midnight marriu- •as surprised a moment later to lied If revered with a big revolver, in ands of a determined -looking mean long white robe. ham 'l done within' but eat n few victuals, mister," stammered the 0 r. ee," sternly replied George Fermi - yeti hate; ln eating , ' ul IItt,' ma tc • '► S teak •ck and kidney plc. Do you know 1 stn going to do with you?" ren me over to the police, i s'pase," 1 the helpless Thief. use Ihvn Mat," said Ferguson, FORTY 1'1:.•1 R9 A CONVICT. Pardon at Last for Man 1Vho Shot :it a (ear—Now a Lunatic. Antoine Rerezottski, a Pole, who was sentenced to penal servitude (or life for atlempl'ng to assassinate the (:znr Al• eolueler 11. on June 6, 1867, on the ac - casein of his Majesty's visit to Paris, 1'a; been pardoned. lterezowski, who was eighteer., and ap- prenliced in nn engineer, fired into a carriage in which the Czar. the Emper- or Napoleon, and his two sons were driving in the Bois de Boulogne on !heir tray to the exhibition, The occlpnnts of the carriage were uninjured by the first shot, but ere • the equerries 00.1 a horse were wound- e,l Itereauwskl fired again, and the barrel of hi; pistol exploded and seri. ot:.;ly Injured his hand and a worn;,n who tt•ns close by. I1'-rezewski ens erresle,t, ere avail dilfit'ully saved from being mobbed fey the crowd, it is said 'hat the Emperor Napoleon turned toward the Czar end sine with a anile, "Sir, we lnve been tinder fire together." Alexander replied greedy. "Our destinies nre In the hands of Pro- vidence." The ('ale was tried, entitlement, end shipped io \:•t•: f'tl•donin, After some lei arsIt .• . r , nk , 1 le lt. . h1, v to seeuro•1 n retie -seen of the hang ins. bor. Inst was teeter 1 Io reside u lee cr•lOny. Ile pt,tctinel a farm al 'lore Rall, in a spoon, sweet milk/; cup, cream testae J l ! teaspoon, 2 teaspoons ell kinds of cold little spice. 2y, cups pour or sometimes a btu'gl I I mart. for this part, as flour differs. s Prepare Ihts in sante wry ns the light 1 son' .. part, hen' n(n. h r Y ! ng thoroughly nod drop first ail even spoonful of the light Then The tt'flnt dark into the pan, which snakes the 1e"I r squares. � n tile. Bakec ina ,.Inv _ 6 1 n. This t c „ eeipt has been in my fancily for yenfs, \10 one of mothers favorites, and a never - failing rule. iiINTS FOR TiIE Ilft\N?, Serve crisp celery with cold meal, 11 is always appreciated, and is a fine nerve tonic. Fur washing coarse cloths soft sone is best. and will go further than the herd yellow soap. \Viten boiling common starch sprinkle 10 a little One salt, This will prevent the march from slicking. 1(lcr nailing down a enrpet and be- fore pulling in the furnittnr•, sheep the whole surface well. and then go over with a scrubbing brush slightly wetted 1111ts nnnnonlo, Try steundng. fouls rend meat instead of betting. And you will find ihnt, by following Iles process, one tterit•es the full benefit of the fowl or meal, besides retaining the delicnle flavor which we notice is often lost in boiling. per chapped hands taker emelt (inan- ities of sweet oil, limen juice, and gl,- erine. Shake all together before using, ted apply a few drops after washing to: hands 011 ,' or hurt' daily. I'n Iioil a Rou),--lb•fure cooking, sone tic haul in warns water for Iwenly.four ours. l'ut Ibis info 9 largo pot, cover with water and let it simmer ler threo r four hours ncetnling to the site. enve It in the liquor till cold. This 11r1 improves r, flavor. Nev.' patent leather lioott situate be ightly warmed by 111.' fire before They e put on; Ibis will COlten the leather i l prevent its ereckteg• as til) els° rubbing with salad oil alter wearing It wEu KNOWN IN JARYIS, ONT. h nd County Con id .r tett bow Psychtne cured ltls Lung Troubles "I contracted a series of colds from this changing weather," says Mr. Bryce Allo a well-known resident of Jarvis, Oat., at14 a member of ilaidimand County Council for his district, "and gradually my lunge became affected. I tried medicine and doctors prescribed for ate, but got I ry relief. With lungs and stomach disease:di nervous, weak and wasted. I began to me. Psychine. With two months' treatment f regained g red my health. To -day 1 am as sound as a bell, and give all the credit la Psychiese," ere is a proof of what Psychic's does.' It not only cures Colds and kills the germs oft s :rippe, Pneumonia and Consumption, but it helps the stomach, makes pure, rich blood andspreads general health all over the body. You will never have Consump- tion if you use PSYCIIINE (Prw«rwoed Ei-keest) 50c. Per Bottl� Larger Wass 51 sand $2—all rs a tsfa. OIL T. A. 8LOCUM, Limited, Tomb. , with a ferocious grin. "I'm going to make you cut a quart u ar t of health h f u od It's a new kind my trite heard of, and prepared for us yesterday, and It's pret- ty dry enling; but you'll eat every par- ticle of it, or I'll here six holes through you. There it is, in that big bowl. Turn yourself loose on it:" With grins determination, the indig- nant householder stood over 111m till it was fln(hed, after which he picked up the ltickle.:S scoundrel, who had fallen exhausted to the floor, end threw him icul of the open pantry window. "it may kill him," soliloquized Mr. Ft rgttson, somewhat remorsefully, as Ito mewled bark into tied, without disturb- ing the rest of the fancily, "but a man who breaks into nnother mans house takes Ills life in his hand, anyway." "Fs ONLY A COLD,! A TRIFLING COUCH" Thousands have said this :heauftw.heya eaught cold. Thousands hav••'- 'meta. to cure the cokLe Tho••-_riee Consumptivesrr • Mu tine Never n,.gre t e 0000uge or cote. It eta h ve *re Qn result. It leaves the throat or I' I bock, aflrected, Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is the medicine you need. It strikes at the very foundation of all throat or lung oomplainte, relieving or curing Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Asthma, Croup, Sore Throat, and preventing Pneumonia and Consumption. It has stood the test for many years, and is now more generally used than ever. Its contains all thy 1 healing virtues of the pine trco con) fetn king \Vel hetry Bar)( and other pectorateaedioa. It stithuiaies tho weakened bronchial organa, allays irrit1�tion and subdues inflammation, soothes and heals the i-ritatedart loosens tho hl and and t' nature to easily m mucous, them slid ac- cumulations, Don't be humbugged into accepting an imitation of Dr. Wood's Nor- way Piuo Syrup. It. is put up la a yellow wrapper, three pine trees the trade mark, and prioe 23 ate. Mr. Julian J. LeBlanc, Belle Cote, writes : "I was troubled with n bad cold: andv so ere cough, wit1_ 1 assumed ed au ch as attic cd e as to keep me confined to my house. I tried several remedies advertised but they were of no avail. As a last resort I triad Dr. 1Vood's Norway I'inu �byrup and one bottle cured me completely. NERVOUS MAI KEW slr:Tlton DEBILITY of you, under Its innuenco the bait b gimes active. the b) antl OI purified maks a ryas all pimples, Llo;rhes and ulcers Beal up; the p•:rves bec,ms strong el, so that nsrvousne,., Gar/quints, an.l despondency rItaap;ear; the fire become bright, rho face full and clear, energy returns to the body, cud the moral, physical and tcsua) a),tlrna are invigorated; all drains cease --no mere vital caste from the system. Tne various crgaea become natural and manly. Tou feel yourself a min ani know mar,ia a cannot ber a fatiure. uta Invite all the *Rllcted to consult us eorndentlany and rte. of Charge. Don't let quarks en) Ialias rob you of your hard -,)rued ehuarc. tt'a IS'IL1, team YOU On NO PAY. 117250 NA)ICtl LIMP WITHOUT St1HITTEN CuNss:;r, THREATENED WITH PARALYSIS. refer r. hummers, aiamasoq atich., ,.late, his .x Per;afCeofKt "i wait trouuled with Nervous De- / t bully ger many years. I lay it to In- discretion and excesses In early youth, I became "try despondent and dl4a't care whether I worked or not 1 Imagined everybody who looked at m., 7e,eel my. *stet. imaginative a~�. amt at nisw ta eakened me—my back e. ed, tad piing In the back of my d, Ae heahands ani fret wee. cote, tired to the morning, poor appetite, Angers wore ihaLy, 1711 blurred, bait loose, memory po)r, etc. Numbness 0, the fingers ..t in and the doctor told me Ins feared passlysls. I roof ail kinds of medic:no. ant trkd many Aril -clan Physicians, wore en erectr(o belt for + atr011f trtgatrgllt lhrse mon;h., went to Mt. Clemcna forbath,. r•c•Itsd at lit. Clemens i was Inducedtto cor,ut(illtrs. Kennedybenefit. A: )iers n, /MkthoMuari1 had tort all ralth In d,;tors. Like a Crowning man 1 commences the N., ?rithol Treatment and It saved my Ills. Th. Improvement oat Ilk* mag�le-1 could feet the elicitgoingthrough my reties. 1 was cured menially, phyitetl)r and e.guarry, t tare stet them moo, ttailents and wet conttnus to do so. '- CORM tills O.sNTF,F1) On NO PA!'. We treat ant ours ' ARrce(aLF 8TRICTt'n111� NFAt'nr;9 1)tnf ,lTTT, FLOOD DISE 0E3, URINARY COMPLAINTS, ICIDNII Y AND fLADDb:t I)IS- I:AteF.9. CONSCI-TATiON P1ER. BoOK3 ruse. It enable to can write kr • Qw,tloa Blank for (tome Treatment, DR&KENNEDY&KERG 148 SHMLBY $TAUT, OSTROIT, MICtt: : KtPCKripK RIK Pt/.K - -;K