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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1907-01-31, Page 18ABSOLUTE SECURITYI tonulno Carter's 44ittle Liver gills. (Must Be., Signature, of See FwSenile Wrapper mow. ,err eauai stag as ewe 1 talcs as saga& FOR NEADACHL FOR DIZZINESS., FOR IItLIOUSNISO. FOR.TORPID LIVER. 1$01,CONSTIPATION. FO{ =ALLOW SKiN. FM THE COMPLEXION AvoRti» MVer$MI •yrVe vegetable., CARTES CURE 81CK HEADACHE. B BB AT THE TOP Burdock Blood Bitters 'holds a position unrivalled by any otheft blood medi=ine as a euro for DYSPEPSIA, BILIOUSNESS, CONSTIPATION, HEADACHE, SALT RHEUM, SCROFULA, HEARTBURN, SOUR STOMACH, DIZZINESS, DROPSY, RHEUMATISM, BOILS, PIMPLES, RINGWORM, or any diseatte arising from a disordered state of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels or Blood. When you require a good bloc 1 medicine get BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. THE DIVINE VOICE SPEAKS It Is Ever Speaking Through the Things of Daily Life. 'God, who al sundry limes and 'n d.ver•s manners spoke in time past unto 1l': fathers by the prophets."—lleb. i.. !, Through the. age, inen have watte.1 for v,i.es to speak from out the great enknown. Answering to this universal „longing for larger light. to this search for truth, there has been the conviction I,1at, where our own scanly knowledge ended, !herr something akin to revela- tion would give us Tight. We have been listening for voices that would speak with an authority transcending that given t0 our fellows. Cold reason may mock at revelation. but the soul struggling in darkness, 1 anted by it problem, lot in the nigh, Mill looks up and hopes. For what awaits us but despair if the mysteries 0' the universe are forever sealed, our questions forever unanswered, and ao higher appeal to be known than that le our own selfish interests? It is not strange that Wren have heeded those who, though often mistaken or but int- posotors, have cried, "Thus sail!► the Lord!" It would be strange if in a world • 1 spirits there might be no coni►nti' ica- tion of spirit. 1f the fairest thought cf our era is that which was given us when man was taught to Think of the omnipotent as father, it would be n(. way by which such a father might speak to his children. Such a world would contradict all our best Instincts. Such a world would mean that man was better than his maker. Till: DIVINE VOICE SPEAKS, but we too often listen in the wrong di- rection. It (tills not from the skies; it conies not in strange, unusual watts of visions and portents. But it is ever speaking through the things of daily life; it Is ever revealing trot and beauty to the inner ear, for it conies not from without but springs up \villin; heard ly the heart rather than by the ear. The best things have not dropped down; they have grown up. Life is not from w about, but froth within. God speaks not in thunders, but in the hc•pe; and the longings of hearts. Even the voice we hear in the sighing.; of the wind or the message we read in the rays of selling sun must be in us before it means aught to us. The ten commandments owe their THE SUNDAY SCHOOL t ."11:11N \TION.►i, LESSON, FEB. 3. • Suffered Terrible Agony FROM PAIN ACROSS HIS KIDNEYS. DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS CURED HIM. Read the words of praise, Mr. '1. A. HelnnIs, Marion Bridge. N. has for 1A.an'+ Ki.:uey Pile. (He write+us): "For the pa+t three years I have suffered terrible agony from pain acnes my kidneys. I was w bad 1 could not ewer) or bend. 1 conee114e.t and ha•l several doctors treat roe, but could get no relief. On the advice of a friend, 1 procure,! a box of your valuable, life-giving remedy (Doan's I(idney Fills). and to my surprise and delight. i Immediately got bet ter. In my opinion ?Man's Ki'ln•y Fill. have no equal for any form of kidney trouble." 1)oan's Kidney Pills are 50 cents per box or three hoses for Z1.25. e Can bprocured at all dellen or will he mailed direet on receipt of plies by The Doan Sidney ('ill Co.. Toronto, Ont. I)n not accept a spurious substitute but be glen and met "Doau'a" THREE TRYING TIMES IN A WOMAN'S LIFE There are three p{. ri•slt of a'.woman's life when she is in need of the heart strength- ening, nerve tuning, bluoxl enriching autiuu of MILBURN'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS Tho first of these is when the voting girl (s entering the 1■.rtala of womanhood. At this time ahe is very often pole, weak and nervous, :end unless her health 1+ built up and her system strengthened she may tall A pr"" to...moonlit ion or be a weak woman for life. The second period is motherhood. The dram on the system p great and the ex- ha11ctee1 nerve lone and depleted blood require replenishing. Milburn ti Ilesrt aril Nerve Pills eapply the elements needled to do thi+. Tho third petite' is "change of life" and this is the peri:xl when mho il tenet liable to heart and nerve troubles. A trent^odious change is taking Oise* in —the system, and it is at thio time m.tny hronw diseasee manifest themeelve+- Fortify the he.srt and nerve +ystein by the use u( Mlh•.aro'a Heart and Pills illsand thus tide Doer this dangerous Aerial. Mrs. Janie. King, Cornwall, Ont., writes : "1 hive been troubled very much with heart trouble—the cause being t•) a guest ettent due to "change of life." 1 have 1'• on laking Mtllburn'm Heart sod Nerve 1'alls for some Mine, and mean to ( 0(1000 doing so, ter I Noah Saved in the trk. Gulden Text, Psa. i7. 39. TIIF: 1.I•:SON \VOilD STUDIES. Based on the text of the Revised Version. God's Alelhod of Inspiration.— The (title account of the Flood, viewed in the light of the increased knonIedge \which devout biblical scholarship has furnished for its study, has an import• one lesson for us touching the method which the Divine Spirit employs in in- apiralion. And This lesson. while not as important as some other things a high the Anr•ralive i. intended lo leach, is still worthy our earnest and most careful attention. During the long ten- , furies which 1111/S1 have elapsed between ! the lime of the Flno41 and the lime v. hen the Book of Genesis was \written . the memory of this cp.—II-making event • wSa.S kept alive for many generation.; 1 by means of oral trndilions, the ',Mei- tuella]1 I each head of en n ouseh•rld rcpt,n .• l• 10g! the story again and again in the presence of his sons, and these, in Turn, flossing the story on to (heir children rid through hent to succeeding gener- :.lion,. After a time some. possibly many. wi•illen aceounls login, to ap• 'ears among which certain ones came i ultimately to be regarded ns standard o • elnssle. In their ,rdin ndevelop- !: e: cul these written nccnunt were guard - I I • the Divine Spirit against enrrup- • i: .lel Title! more and more with ' • .1'. i • •..'lution of his purpose rind .4 ' !on . t i 111811. force not to any writing on stone, but t t their writing on our 'motels; to them the soul of roan answers affirmatively. The only moral code we can follow is that which speaks with the authority of a conscience convicted, That docs not mean that man is his own God, aur that lie knows no law higher than hi111 sell, it docs mean That by the laws e,f spiritual development the Iuw is being written on every heart. Every real revelation i, a divine toe veltttion. since all truth is divine. Once we thought the scientist the enemy' t religion; now we know that whenever science lays bare one of the facts of the universe we but look on what the finger of the infinite has written. When le- ligion fights truth simply because truth speaks an unfamiliar Tongue or fail% 10 respect her traditions, she is fighting against God himself. Our need is not some strnnge, awe- inspiring voire that shall tweet( the silence ut the midnight sky; our need Is %AN E \It TRAINED TO REAR. n spirit to understand and reverence the sublime voices that are ever sp.-th- ing in our world. the voices of the tenuity of nature, the joy of living, the stories of everyday divine heroism, the forces that are making a new world to- day as truly as ever one was n.ade long ago. l'Im life of our clay has not less of the divine than the life (t long ago but the message is harder to rend; it is for an educated race; 11 is spiritual rather then merely material; it is from within; P. is found in ('very good impulse. in every outgoing sympathy, in the kind- \ )w• comes Kingston with it.: awful ling of eye as friend greets friend, in the earthquake, near enough .to count as a gewd that men are doing, in the Intern- part of tl►e United Slat:;, al least ill the tom that is becoming wider, the love ne;essarily vague words of an oracle. stronger between roan and limn. While on the very same day •Dues God speaks to men now as Ile .spoke news noun Ifaowii of an eruption cf to Moses or lo David, though the mon- the volcano of Mauna Loa, It is a Wer may have changed. But the poor ling reach, but it is of America. I)e• le spirit, those with whom( petite of the spalches from Iona sage that 1110 Ala• post has not served to nuke Them un- I:uatwcowa) crater of (team Lon erupt - willing to learn, these hear the voice; e•(( on Alonluy, and That the lava is de- file pure in heart see llim; the seeker; sr.•cndltg the mountain side In the di - after truth find flim, and to all Ile rection of South Lona, the garden spot comee in the thrilling moment or in the of the island. quiet hour when the voice of the heart 'There are four streams, the first rt crakes itself heard. which Iia, already entered the •seas TheHENRY F. COPE. lieephone line has been destroyed by the la%a and! the roads aro blocked. 1• is helievrd That greet damage has hilted, having regard for his needs and I:eetr (14/1•0 In the Norris ranch, \vinicl► welfare. :: high up the slope. In the former The Fountains Also of the Deep— i:rant outbreak of the volcano 60,000 Fountains bursting forth on the eat•tlt's ncca, of the ranch were overflowed by surface from the great subterranean !Iv lova. Fitly earthquake shocks have ueep upon which the earth was supposed been felt. At Katt one house is in to rest. ruins. The earthquakes have (!ono no \Vindow.s of (leaven—Openings in 11m damage on any of the Islands of 'he firmament through which at times (ler group excepting Ilawntl. • rain descenued !coup, ‘‘.."(1 Studies (01 Kilausea, situated ne a 1,00 -foot ele- Januarw G), vation on the side of about,' i.oa, Is 1. The seventh month—The Ilebrew the largest active volcnno in the wield. month Tishri corresponding to our Sep. Its urea is 4.11 square miles, or 8,&51) leudx'r-October. Heirs; circumference. 7.135 mjles; ex - Ararat—\ lofty peak on the mine trente length, 2.93 miles; extreme width, trillions plateau of Armenia, 17,001 feet 1.95 miles. Molten lava i4 emitted from in height. for 4,000 feel from Its sum- orifices, Inking the form of lakes bun - mit cowered with perpclunl /mew. deeds of feet in diameter, and from small 5. Nut until seventy -Three day, nflei cone.; like clinineys outside the lake the ark's keel first rested on Arar,al, bul•d Ts. that is, in the tenth month, on the first Alokuuwaowen, the summit crater el day of the month, were the tops of lin, Alumna Loa, is far less frequent in erup• ordinary or lower mountains seen. lion than Kilauea. During its last 6. Forty Days—.\flee the rain first great outburst German seienhsls visll- censed to full. cd the scene, and in danger of life snw 7. Sent Forth a haven—The raven all outlines( 01 marvelous twenty and was amonk all ancient peoples regard- splendor. They saw• two 111 fountains 0.1 as a hint of ill omen, and was not• playing en•••a.ingly h1 II:•• ..litre of e• es1:ccially for its strength of ruing. the. crater, and cyc!•ua•, fnrnie,l by the !t le reported that the \ ikings (on Thee' intense heat tearing; the crater floor voyages. were in the habit of cum ing 1111) fragment: and revealing 11 turbu- rnwens \with (110111 twht h frown lime to hid !..sit of while -hot lata beneath. 1.1110 they set at and from (heir Vette Mug to Arnie. Thebes, her pre- !! gbl determined the direction in which (mesons regarding America for 1906 land lay. Greenland k said to have \\ere: !leen discovered i � in this way. •n Y. 1t is also to t (RISES. X \I \f OF Bl.f -. reported that Alexander the (Serol cm- \h\ 1 l IIoyed ravens to guide hint in t1►e same •'The second g eriod (Sprit, hilly. June) mrinner• will liuve 111e maximum of crises. • • ' Unlit Ilio Waters \Vere Dried Up— In foreign Inn is there will be physical Sufllriently to permit its alighting. troubles, notably in South An1(•rica, 8. Sent Forth n Dove --The Babylon. n'd North America will also be her - inns seem 1 ohove used the dove as a nsseil by Them. 'I'Iie latter ,season cf sort of marine colnpnss in the sa010 1106 will bring hurl; to the United way ravens esaid to hove been Slatesl:s 1111 I1n rx Irel , . n.k. used. Every ship going to sea had Oa April 144 came the San Francisco dote; os board which were let loose earthquake. and arae Valparaiso diens• whenever it was desired 1, ascerlatm ler came near en•.ugh 10 The period to the direction of the nearest lond. hl in the pru'ler}'. !1. Iti l (be Dove being n far weaker Ilcr vague in furls is distinctly (ash- i•si:0l ie, and her following in'ltdes •• .d the famous tames of France. \ •••cinder Mimeo "Ills" first brought KINGSTON LATA I11:N VI lb tni.f: PINN'lll:t'\' 1\ I'%MS OF \ILII'.. l)1: 'I'lll:tlla. 1 1'urrca-ter of Quakes Foretold 'I'll.•51 al \ 0II 0I ti3O and 1'raurisr•u, Kingston., e't.• i.; a startling con- firmation of Iles prediction of a Paris paituis1 Or Ito. romancer. Mine. de Thebes. \\ 1 they it is by mere chance (.r not, she has had vonturtathle suc- cess in at least guessing righl. She foretold lit a way the San Francisco and \ralparniso earthquakes, going In- k 1al•ly minute details months before the uccurrenee. Long before 1ho be- ginning of 1:107 she forecasted for the United Slates as follows, in u curieu; almanac she publishes annually, fere- telling the flltlire: "For the United Stales 1 do not find much to reassure toe. While my ob- scrvalions and calculations do not, as in the i,rt.,t two years, give eurlhquakes, 1 see tire and water, and more water. i110nda '•..11S of unprecedented churac- ler. "Not all America will suffer, :.f course, but there will be emitter:Ms, sinkiugs of constlino, iuundalione. 1n the hand, of America u., by the thou- sand., I have noted a mark of violence. C i course, they may not refer to the same cataclysms, but they indicate that some sort of a shock is shortly due there. I fear some terrible con- vulsion on ttIe coast or along the ocean. "lite South is marked to suffer es- pecially, because 1 have seen the signs It the palms of many Americans coin- ing from that region." There. f; an encouraging mile in Mine. 'Thebes' forecast, for she adds that n thing can stay the triumphal 111.11 li uI the energetic American:. \t last. under the guidance of Ile bled than the raven found no rest for I, 4.1,0 Spirit. the acrounl of the Flood. the sole of her fool and 59011 become::! weary of fight was compelled to retard again to tin ark or perish in the' • 1 forward during; a per Ati ,1 ,I:.t•l line; . crakes and custard ore Frill warn. writers. I mailers spleno:uli'lle. one when t! 'fulli Friuli Filling;.--lloil half n • '10. Braced—•\\'((40rf. 1 •r hit off his li .r.1,.• w n111 a •!I fur of water with Three cupfuls of Yet other seven dn)•. -The r, •r t,,..•,,f ' n.g lid• IIS to Ito e".111• 114 4411: 111111 it is Blick rind waxy: pour 04,4 II. Ilius phrase would seem lo 1,1. tort(' 1 I 191.1, h•' wrote Iter tip in Figaro, whiles of Iwo eggs. be11100 obit stiff.. • well ns In its origin, the over -ruling. 01 period of seem' (ley, hind int. i n.ed ; 1 . • ' ' • , :1' . r .I l;rlx'nlh. v . I . 1 •liunnl and whip until cool. 'then mrd half n I.' !lel!cent hood of Ge4L and to mak, els° between the lithe of sending f 'Oh ' 1:: ' 0' • \L1r•quis d \I ' .• .tnl:•s pound of almonds chopped tine, rl scrim his ehnr,irlcr and will known to menthe raven and the lisle of sending; i .r:!1 ' . l' •', \.1 •;i'11 Miss.'''. 1 ih••-1 11,;n 11111 a cupful of clopped raisins. and n r , n• . ((nee•, •,f I' , , tette citron sliced thin. Spread al 0111'0. Orange filling.—Iteral the obit.- .,f three egg; to 0 stiff froth; add the juice and grated peel of one orange; stir in , sugar until the right COnSISteney is reached; sprend the filling between the were reassured regarding a rnntter like layers and add white icing 011 top, h11i,n4,' an heir 44 hen it required a bnitr Apple and Lemon Filling. --'Poke ono g r p11••1 t.. hold out hopes. Shit' d'on. grated ripple. one lemon •jai• a and tome 11 dell d•' \to1ilesglrieu cl1ttus grated rind ). and one cupful of sugar. Ir omit throve, the charily bezoar Giate the apple and rind of lemon, place 11 a inr w 11110111 a Ir'emnr because cf them 011 the Ore with the juice and aline. 1 (:.'les' hurcnst that he would sugar. and boil for live minutes, not die by Tire. Seo Crennt filling.—i'•loil three rupfure of sugar in ora' cupful of water until the mixture thread+; pour slow ly. while boil. Ing hot, over the whiles of Iht•re eggs beaten stiff, stirring briskly the while; beat until coed. flavor with rose or lemon and sptroei between layers of v1 coke. • : ••11 (torn these older written nnrrn- •; was woven into the larger itook f Origins which has come down to us ; ut Thr forst of our present Genesis. The particular work of the 11111y Spir- it was In leach the inspired writer.; to ' .sec In the pad history of the race. as ging low- : 1' 0uu.,•s 411 hwu pounds worked into a,• into u shlf paste out, cul into biscn a 51044 oven. Apple Alarmulude. C01'0 nod divide into qt have eight pounds; add water. Let all cook 11;1 eight pounds of loaf sugar and juice of one lemon. St stonily elite it boil, until q and linin into 11100116. 11 wyi11 months. ilrowning for soups and gravy he made thus : 'Take half a Po tonne sugar (brown), a tablespoon salt and nearly half a pint of ww !'lace the salt and sugar in a feeing with it very small lump of [!ripping ,lir over a clear fire till of n dark bio then add the wider .1. Ming), boil and, when cold, bottle he use. Irish flashed blullon.—Fry slices o cold mutton in dripping till lightly browned and hot. Dave a bunter of na..hed potatoes on a hot (wish and brown it before the fire. Gave ready 1 some good onion sauce, in which chop- ped parley is mixed. Stir This into the merit and pile in the centre of the potato. Scatter chopped capers or pickles over and .erre very lot, 1'u Cook Unrrow hones.—Make some fluor -and -water paste, roll it out and place a piece over the ends where the marrow is seen and lie a clol11 tightly over, then plunge into bol ing water and cook for half an hour. Take off !le' paste before the bones are sent to laIlo and serve upright in n napkin with sliceti of dry (oast. 'These are really very easy to cook and form a delicious dish. I luddock and '1'onialue'"—Scald a dried haddock by pouring boiling water over il. Leave for an hour. then remote the skin and bones and flake the flesh. Dissolve an ounce of butter in n pan, cook in it gently n liner -chopped onion, and two sliced tomatoes, odd the llsh and coolc far len minutes, seasoning will pepper and salt and chopped parsley Serve with a border of nivel) boiled rice end garnish with sliZes of lemon. 1Iolchpolch is greatly appreciated in cold wealhcr, especially at the i arly dinner. Take a piece of the scrag end o' million. cul it in pieces and put on the Ore, with two quarts of wafer. Then add the following vegetables, cut in small pieces : carrot. turnips, cabbage, and onione. 1.et it on boil gently to- gether until the yegetebles are cooked. Skim as touch Int from the stew ns pos- sible, season with pepper and sell. and serve, \\inter Sunday Padding. --Now that 1111• w• alter is colder marry housewives will be glad to be reminded of n mishit Sunday pudding. This has an advan- hige that it can, if necessary, be made several da)s before it is required. Take six ounce; of each of the 1.1144 iig in- gredient; : flour, chopped suet. ,toned raisins. currant. and bread, earth.:, two ounces of chopped peel and one of mixed spice, i1ix with a cupful of milk and hall n cup of treacle. When well mixed poli• into a greased Inoutd nnd.b ,i1 for eight (lours. If the pudding is to bo kept for a few days. tail it six hours the day it is made, and two hours the day it is eaten. • (:.\Isis 1'11.1.t\Gs, (:rears Filling. --\hake n boiled custard of half n pint et meant. a tablespoonful of pulverized sugar, the yolks of three eggs, and one tablespoonful of corn- starch. Spread while ,oit, ftnw•oring with rose or wnnilia. To give variety, add chopped mute ur raisins to the l!Ilingf, Almond Filling.-131nnch and p..nnd One in a mortar two puunds of almonds; beat two egg. lightly, add n cupfulSul nee one-half of sugar, beat for fifteen ,rain• aces. stir 111 1110 nhnmuls. (!oven' ttilh wr►uio, nd spread tit n \\'Idppllan1 (t•ean1 1114oFraceil Filling.— \\'hip one fool of thick cream until it resl'ulIt I 4••'• d ream in npJxnramce; make (lute s\w.•. 1. then flavor with van- illa. Spread the foyer of eake Oral with grated 'iln ,apple. 5110(5] 0rangte, OI kilotons.11 n cover Ih1 kt 4il c icon. he throe h nit., combined will be found dehrlons. This filling should be freshly nutdc. Nut Custard l•'illiti.--MnI;e a bed's! mistrust of on.' 'tut of milk, hwo half a rueful of sugar. and n table ; fel of corn starch; stir In Iwo .,,; ' ca hopped nut meats nd sproel `.... loth in his umnifeelnlions of Inve rand Tho lira dove. Perhaps the expression o,e'r. y nisi in his severer" ud menta, after seven due's." or the expression t .' ..r. u ! ' 1 ., I: t• u' _: 1 h•• •l•g'ree to whir) en Old 'Testament and Ire strayed seven drays" has in 1 g( 1`1il-. se • 101. 1,.• •ii al Ir:.+1 forts a halratiwe arronupli.sties this hrndn1n0n1111 54 111e wily dropped out of the first pal (lid,. tai 1eui;; lucky 1n quarters whet of verse 8 above her ,II .•e;s w•o1111 be .cell advertised. The tsiosen and the Czar, for example. relieves of re4enitng God In Ili; essen- I.11 thararler fn men. must it taken I, til.• measure of 11: inspiration. Other ver- ,r. _ rr !I, • : ,•,,,' Flood tradition Hirt 111bolnnian, \sleet( • II, An Olive I.enf Plucked Off-- The (•live dries not grow on the higher mountains. and the fresh olive leaf therefore indicated that the waters had 1, 01' . 1 1 hong contact fallenf considerably; so Nenh know Ihnl with i, . \ „ -ni. n l I r,iw'tl nl their the wottels were nbalcd from off the Lle:siiee from (; 1 t. , .n. nut in the r.udli• presidents', of t; 1 tt , .• cerrupte(I ver. 13. In the Rix hundred And first year signs were not permitted to become r.f NOah.s life. in the Ilrsl month, the woe •1 the enrr.•d rs•rnr.1 of the Jewe, first tiny of the month, or just one year V r- • I. And (;nil i •.•••rnhereJ — mill eleven days after the Flood hegan I kb.. F;IOhilu. ThronitioiII the Flood! (romp. (Sen. 7. 11) the waters were variative. chapters fist inele,o-e• wee n1,' .erre the use of frill the name "Pilo- t:an" 'r.(xl) one 111e name "Jells -eh" 1• • \ .l`. rfterrtng to 1)1n,. The 1146 . r t :01• mime 1n n given verse or ore 11011 of 111e narrative is one of the grin• (vat mean; upon Mitch scholars rely t'i deleiiitininu to which of two origin. ie.tlsuthfullvsa • they are the best remwly 11 nart0114es Iheught to be, ii.tereeow•el ever used for budding up the system. 1 if Thi• Weikel ereou11l of the flo(„l the at liberty to use this statement 4,‘ en terse or section belongs. One IAeaetit of other pilferers." f .,' 11,0 14w(1 sont',•es use, "I:Iohnu" vow )Trkie 50 era. per het, three boxes fee 1, ,I. 1'1'1 Ilrrnngh0ut as the other uses 415, all dealer*, Or Th. 1'. M,Ihur Oat I ••1 ,'.v i " 'elm Nerd "remembered* seek Toronto. Oat. !egg 1110104 kept in mind with henigrt dried up from off the earth. 11.. but not untll n month and !wen- ly-sewen (10)5. n1.0111 eight wwev'ks, later was the cn►•t!t dry. ``ons -.Steen). Ilam, and bp- i -oil. This disembarkment is here de- scribed in ns great detail e• had be^n the embarkment In Gen. 7, 10.16. 'Luere isn't welch hope for those e,lei 1(.ok upon the chisels e..1i ,'Mora 44 a hold-up game. either pr.,hheeiOA for 1IW)7, partially weri0'd and yet In be heard from, fore- Cra.•t n war for France and "latent po- pular angers.- which littler might easily be the Church alai stale !roe. tilos. Other poltirn1 pt 11, air prom- ises for her eounlry, hal 411e eny5 that honor all oars 81111 pts'1. France will emerge lliumphnnt. 10 England Venus i.; I . Ire a dislurl- lug; !Amor. but the King will calif( the to ipe,l. Austria will be in commotion. Sur I:oall 111 .\u.(rtnn lands tell Inti so, [Hint Ilongary will grow to gr•Pafne.•s by Lei -este The N.ethorl•tnJ; are at bugle emnrg.• frnat I1Olr long "1ud•ognildr" rand hu,sls 1s 1, drop nal of popular are tale for s Irate, 111\'I ON 18 TIPS groin d.tntpenir art idles ore all rlottio; oaf;• fha articles w•4ile they ling is don water. woo roll dupins are : ltlnnlhr+l 41 Lind laid Otte 1•0 \\ hen all are in Ih 1lv rolled and \\lopp'd in • t Towels are fo1,1e( in Ila middle, 441115 the cdg.ts drawn perfectly lectly straight and the fold (eerily laid. One towel i54 placed on another and all rolled up. Sheets and tablecloth. must Le foiled in the middlo and the si(It., anti corners matched with great care. 11 neral: two 'ereons 10'(10 this properly. Pillow rases require but slight dampening. Sheets nerd more. '!'able linen ,should be quite damp, starched pieces exr. ally so. Underwear needs be only 'crately damp. 1 The irons 011151 be perfectid elean, both on top and on the bollon4 If they are at all rough they should be rubbed with eatery paper and a little salt. The cake of beeswax is a great aid to smooth irons. 'There should he n couple of sheets of 010111144 paper on the side of the ironing table to rub the irons on be- fore faginning le press. The iron Siund+l move wtlli the gfiain of the cloth, lightly tt ilia. then more heavily. The greeter the pressure the more gloss. Sheets are honied tir.,t double, and doubled in half and ironed, doubled again and ironed. \\'hen I110 doubling 01141 ironing have been repeated the third time the sheet is done, TO PUT ON A SKlll'I'•It.l\la. One of the most difficult points with which the (amateur dressmaker has to contend in making n skirl is the sewing 0'.1 of the w•aisl•band. "The band is a straight piece of goods. cut Moog the selvage edge. and shnmld be put 00 be- fore the steel is finished around the bot- tom. Divide it in halt and fasten the centro in the middle 0f the frond gore of the skirl. The band sh Wild be basted on, holding the skirt 11'sI 1,• you. and allowing a very little fulln••ss, \vhirli will make it Ol easier over 1h,' hips. The buck widths may be gallery.; into the band or plaited, as one prefer.;. then sew it on the machine, and turn 11 0501' o'1 the wrong side, hating agem lefure the linnl sewing, finishing it wail. looks and eyes. NE\V \\'A\' 'I'O \L1dl: CLOTH. An ingenious (vny of marking clotin has just cone !n, 'Tile licale paper pit• tern is bastes! ..n 1he cloth. 44hic•11 is then placed in the seeing mnrhinr. Three is no thread in thy needle. tial the piper pattern is stitched Mom; the line of the i, de.ig,n. And when Ihe i,r.U•rrn m• Jr-:g;l. 1, lifted (here is a leindeonie pattern (11hiiied nnderletith. The little ti •, ••-dl.• has nuu•ked it out et the prettiest spirits . 0 inl.r.,i.lerv, it and brush .lint is reniowett. 1d defined by rub dipped in equal pat tvuler. Dry 11 1 fterwtl 'T111: s.\\II: I Jack Robinson looked ' indeed as be stood in the s illt blacking the eye of nutn. "I'm sure Fin very sol happened:" lie said to 11 "but Ila quite %Oiling to pi as compensation." "You hear what he sn; the 'iµ►gistrale. turtling 14 tor. live soot willmg to hire? •' ":Int I willing;"" cried 1 cigerly. "I should rate Ilete, 1 say. old chap. con black the other eie 1" Dr. WOO NORWAY SYRUI Cures C0110114 HOA EX LUX Alai I had bad foto to DR. W I had i tak ' BLOOD DI Guaranteed Cur If yon aver had hereditary blood the virus system. ago,bat Some aft r$ .�v Y, ; Alms