Exeter Times, 1907-02-07, Page 3ABSOLUTE
SECURITYI
Cenulno
Carter9s
/Little Liver Pills.
Aust Bear Signature of
;7?
See Vac -Simi* Wrapper Besse.
'Vary .,Halt sae as oast'
ile take easy -ear.
FOR IiEAQACNE.
FON 01II$NL111.
ION aluauswEss.
FOR TONFID MIEN.
FON NeISTIPATION.
•
FOR SALLOW SKIL
FON rimCOMPLUIQN
CARTERS
Au!
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
Dr. Wood's
ATO rwa.y Pine
Syrup
Lures Coughs. Colds. Bronchitis.
Hoarseness, Creep. Asthme1
Pain or Tightness In the
Chest. Eto.
It stops that tickling in the throat, fa
pleasant to take and soothing and heaI-
Ing to the lungs. Mr. E. Bishop Brand,
the tve11-known Galt gardener. writes: -
I 1 ad a very eerere attack of sons
throat and tightness in the chest. Some
times when I wanted to cough and could
not I would almost choke to death. IL
wife Rot rnn a bottle of DR. WOOD
NORWAY PINE SYRUP, and to ay sur-
prise I found speedy relief. I would
not bo without it if it vest $1.00 a bot-
tle. ani I can recoirmewl it to everyone
•t,othcred with a cough or cold.
Price Ed Cents.
MILBURN'S
LAXA4IVER
PILLS
are mild, sure and safe, and are a perfect
regulator of the c: stem.
Thoy g-ntly unlock tho secretions, clear
away all effete lied waste matter from the
eystem, and give tone and vitality to the
whole intestinal tract, curing Constipte
tion, Sick Headache, Bilio•.ts:Ices, Dyrpcp•
eta, Coated Tongue, Foul Breath, Jaun-
dice, Htartburn, and Witter Brash. Mss.
I'. S. Ogden, Woodstock, N.B., writes:
"'t;y hcsband and myself hive used Mil -
burn's Laxa-Livor Pills for a number of
years. We think wo cannot do without
the in. They aro the otlly pills wo eve:
take.'•
Price 25 cents or five bottle,: f:,r $1.110,
sit all dcelere or direct on rec.•,`,t of price.
The T. Milburn Co, Limited, Toronto,
Unt-
IF WOMEN
ONLY KNEW
Thousands of women su1Te r untold mi-er•
les every day with ..eddies backs th.tt. rely
h:e.•e no business to echo. A woman' her: •k
wasn't mado to ache. Under or, i;try
eon.litions it ought to bo Iltrui g and ready
to help her beer the burdens of life.
It Is hard to do housework with nn ach-
ing back. Hours of nil o,ry at leisure or
at work. If women only knew the noes,.
lltckacho crus e3 from sick kidneyy, awl
what a lot of trouble sick ki,lrleys cause in
the world.
But thoy met help it. If more work is
put on them than they can stand it's not
to bo tv.milered thtt they get out of order.
Leckaeho ie simply their cry for help.
DOAN'S
, KIDNEY
,PILLS
will help you. They're helping sick, oval.
worked f i,lneys -- all over the w erld -
,neking them strong, healthy and rig ,cons.
Mrs. P. Ilyan, Douglas, Ont. , writes: "For
twee five months I was troubled with lame
bask and woe unable t , more without
I tried all kin is of plaster% and
Itersoents butthey were n, use. At beat I
j)IIMM tell of Dean's Kidney Tills and
sllile I had used threeee •artery of the ls,t
U back was al strong and well as ever."
tres10 :.seta per tins or three belies for
dealers or The Dona bide., rat
to, aMa,
BusINEssid..,:,,,,,..),:.„.“.V„VInelip;Intut(1),Ii;
rive5i front a root meaning "Into lhs
RELIGION D
A
In
Questions of Conscience Man Cannot
Afford to Lose the Great End.
Providing for honest things. not only
in the sight of the Lord but In the sight
of nn'n.-11. Cor. vii., 21.
7•h • religion that will nol stand the
s beam of modern business may have
1•cen good for some other age; but it is
valueless in this one. The lest of your
piety is 1101 peace in the pews of tate
church, but power and direction in the
stress of Ilio market, lis adaptability to
your activities as well as your medita-
tions.
Religion is built for hesinees. The
only creed Ihul is worth u moment's
thought is a working creed, that is, one
that gels into action. Iteligion is not
the mere acceptance of a- speculative
philosophy of this and other worlds. It
consists in principles, ideate, and mo-
tives which dornlnate conduct. It is
more concerned with the kind of a world
you are making here ttian with the con-
ct'ptions you clay have of a world be-
yon,i,
Religion Is more than an institution:
it is n course of life. It ha to do with
the church only in so far as the church
serves its purposes. it is more concern-
ed with what a roan pays his employes
than with what he puts into the plate
at the collection. The man who can pill
ali his piety into the prayer meeting
and the services of the church never
has enough seriously to embarrass hltn
UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES.
If for your religion you have adopted
principles of high living; if you have set
the worth of the soul above all other
things; if you have determined to frame
your life according to the golden rule
ef the great teacher, and. with him as
hero and idedl, are seeking 10 do good
to others and snake this world a better
place for us all with less of sin and sor-
row and more of joy and love, you will
make your business as well as your
praying the servant of these ends.
But if you have said that you wish
to do these things, That you wish to live
the pure and beneficent life while in
your heart your sole desire is to get
riches, to gain fame, to secure power,
then there is bound to be conflict be-
tween the religion you profess and Ilse
business that possesses you. The
truth Ls that fortunately there always
w ill be a cnnllict between a passion for
Ihc gains of business and a pretense cl
re digin.
Everything depends on the purposes
of living, on the things a man really
and deep within himself stets first in his
life; he will follow those things no mat-
ter what other professions he may
mel:••. Business as a servant deserves
our allegiance and devotion; business as
a master is the most evil and soul de-
vastating thing in this universe.
There is the most perfect harmony;
there is relatively easy settlement (.l
problems and difficulties If but Ibis prin-
ciple be adopted; that you have taken
as your chief business in life
THE ENDS OF TIIUE RELIGION,
the development of character and the
service of humanity. and, with this pur-
r.ose, the daily toil, the opportunities and
erginery of your trade or profession
shall be made to serve these higher ends.
Religion then become the motive cf
blis'ness and business the manifestation
of religion. A pian serves the Most
[Ugh in his ofllce wills the same devo.
Pen end elevation of spirit as a priest
al the altar. Ile is doing a great wol
becaue the spirit is great. In questions
of conscience he can afford to lose eve-
erylhing except the great end; he will
not seer:flee the lesser to the greater.
When our work all Is done and our
business a ei;thed in the balances our
work is to Le judged and our satisfac-
tion insured not by having been sharp
or shrewd or successful according to
passing standards. but by having made
the world richer. lives lighter, hearts
happier, and whether we have found for
ourselves those riches of which death
and the grave can never despoil us.
HENRY F. COPE.
THE S. S. LESSON
INTERN.%TION %I. Li:SSON.
FEB. 10.
Lesson V1. Abram Called to be a Bless -
Ing. Golden Text : Gen. 12. 2.
THE LESSON \VOIiD STUDIES.
Based on the text of the Revised Ver-
sion.
Still Other Beginnings. - The Flood
narrative ends with the account of the
covenant of the 1•uinbow which God made
with Noah, that' not again should "all
flesh be cut off by the waters of the
flood' (Gen. 9. 8-17). in the closing verses
of chapter nine we find the first sad re-
ference to an example of he curse of
Intemperance. Chapters 101 and eleven
present in brief summary a genealogical
table by means of ss Welt the nulhor
traces the descent of the different nations
known to him from the sons of Noah.
Several important nations are intention,
ally mottled by the author for special
mention at a later point in his nacre•
five. The genealogical lists are aLso In.
tended to cunvep an idea of the length
and general chcrncter of the period in-
tervening between the Flood and the
commencement of Hebrew history. A
careful s: ruliny of the ages assigned lo
the several pntrinrchs reveals the fact
thnt the normal years of human life
gradually' diminished (luring (hese pre-
historic periods. 111 verse; 1-9 of chapter
I 1 the diversity of languages is account-
ed for In the story of the Tower of
Rubel. Since Noah it has been the lino
of Shenk, rather Than that of 1larn or
Japhelh, in which Ilse knowledge of the
h•uo God has been perpetuate.I ; and
(innlly atter nine generations this know•
ledge reaches a higher stage in the per•
son of Abram, Ilse progenitor of the.
Hebrew race. To Abram are given fuller
rind more distinct revelations of (iod;
and, (hough not wholly faultless, the me
ceslor of the Hebrews becomes, never-
theless, an example of faith in and
obedience to Jehovah the one true God
n the midst of idolatrous and pnlytheis•
' r surroundings. it Ls clear from tho
antic) narrative That the author Is still
accounting for beginnings, and his ob-
ject, after showing the origin of tho
nations and the begirning of the diverse
I:Ingtngert, Is to set forth more in de-
i;til the earliest beginnings of the chosrn
station through which Jrhovoh purposed
• le reveal himself and his will more per -
teeny to mankind. The closing portion
rather as heard within Abram's impost
soul.
Get Thee out of -Depart from.
Thy country, . .. thy kindred-•Abrain
was to leave both Itis horse and his rela-
tives. This command to sever his family
ties and wander forth into an unknown
land was no small demand or test of
faith.
2. The promise, however, Ls as great
as the requir: meat. In this unknown
Tend to which he is commanded to go
Abram is to become a greet nation and
an example and a bl(vssing to many
nation,.
Be thou a 1'le:ening-According to the
llellrea- idiom the impersonation of
blessing, blessed ed (e
o
mp
.
Psa.
Y
6;
isa. 19. 24 ; Zech. S. 13).
3. 1 will bless than that bless thee -
Thus Indirectly will Abram become a
, will
who 1 Cels t I
- toot
' Ilha.4
n blessedness •r I
source
bo blessed with prosperity or visited
with misfortune according as they are
friendly or unfriendly to hint,
Init
thee
shall all the families
of the
earth be blessed -The reference here
seems clearly to be to the ultimate ex-
tension of the religious privileges enjoyed
by Abraham and his descendants to the
Gentiles. The Hebrew, however, per-
mits of another rendering and interpre-
tation, according to which the sense of
the verb Iranslnied "be blessed' becomes
reflexive, "bless themselves." The ren-
dering would the become "all families
of the earth shaftt bless themselves by
thee.' that is, in blessing themselves
They will use thy name as a type of
supremo blessedness and wish for Them-
selves the blessings recognized to be the
special possession of thy descendants.
According to the first interpretation
Israel Is to become Ihe organ or channel
through which great blessings are to be
communicated ultimately to the world;
according to the seems' the great bless-
ings which Jehovah will bestow upon
Israel will attract the nitenlinn of other
nations and awaken in them n longing
to purlicipide in those blessings. In
either case the promise rehnains in Ihe
wider sense of the term a Messianic pro-
mise.
4. Lol Can cf (loran and nephew of
Abram. The story of lits Ilfe will he
found In Ibis end the two succeeding
chapters of Genesis. In character a
strong contrast to Abram in that Ire was
selfish, weak, and wor,u►y, though rein -
lively, in comparison with his henlhen
neighbors, he WAS still nccountcd
"righteous," his personal character be-
nig
eung suffleicnlly free from reproach to
render hint worthy in the sight of God
of special deliverance. Ile stands in the
flible narrative as n type of Inen who
Think too exclusively of worldly advan-
tage and present ease. •
t I I important h cornice -
Hen
enc Ilaran-Tho name both of a city and
c tap 11 ) eleven
Is (0 t o cif a district in the norlhwe'tstelli part of
isle vvilh our present Ieraon since R
e es details about the inintafinto once,- Mesopotamia nn n tributary of Ilia
rs of Atwell'. fernh, the father of E'hplirates. A long range of mounds
te rant• had three sols. Abram, Nnhor, sill nu)rks Ihc sltc of the a►cient cily,
:Ind Ilnrnn. The family dwell in Ur of
On the slope of one of these mounds
Iho Clialdees. in the southern part of (here is a modern village of small huts
Rnhylonta. Isere, Ion. Lot. the son of end near by the ruins of n very ancient
Ilaran and nephew of A1•rn►n, was herrn. ensile, or lnrlreee. The city of Reran !s
Abram and Naber n1>,c "look ibem Inrnlinnal in some of the As yrian in-
wivee," and n Iitllt Inlrr the whole_ lam- s(ri)'tie,ns recently brought to light. On
IIy, or rather group of fnnsilies, w:111 the I one ..f 1110(0 Snrg:m, king of Assyria,
' I left boosts flint Ire :sieved out his ,shadow
exec p1ran of Iterate who hell dled
over tit,, cily of Ilnran. and as n soldier
the hind of their nalitily in Lr or the
Cha!dees to ..p) into Ihe land of of Ann and flagon wrote its laws.„
('nn inn " To nu,iJ the de;u t Ihe/ S'en aeherih ntso mentions Harem as hnve
jMll,leyed firs, nU. t':wnr11, iihleltd`ng mg been de•lroi td by hie predecessor+.
g'. thence weshvi:id 1111.1 melt '401 l.wsrd I lie rely of Ib•unn sti•) 1lourisl►ed under
nerd!) into Palestine. Arriving in math- the Ilerrins and tis inhabitante were
ern Babylonia. lieeseer, ttieey c.nclteloil nlnong die Inst to give Ill' the (iialdnen
Io settle dawn. "anal they came unto
Ilarnn lerolstl.1y ee enroll by Them; and
dwell there.' Ilse Ternh died.
Vere I. Noe/ echo%ets )aid unto
Abrant These word+ •;is:• tho 5,9111r1 of
tete fast t-ersis of the 1,1 • stele e hailer,
I'1 , coulter! wee, it %1 I ...it es r•1a1111n1 ,1eYl
1 !envie being 1.•.' 1 . I uI II eels Stet
h et. a;-.1 mote, to et•:.,i,i ie , :•r•• not
!.1',1. lilt voice 14 to 1-,• Ilw,ughl of. holy
es.r. not ►a something esteniai, but
language and Ihe worship of Chaldnean
dellies.
5. All their sub+lance-(.insisting prin.
eipnlly of cetile, sheep and horses. elolh-
inu silver and gold, and other teems -
heti! posse -Wong,
'Tho soul, that they hail gotten - in-
cluding children. ren ante and slavers.
\ 11111e later :\oi•►hani 1.+ sat 1 1u !lave
tie.! 310 trained eerrante hien. 1t. 141.
11 woe t1:.e:ofors , •1ei't,' ,1 rnmpany. et*
ir:t•.o. utile') usgra'e.1 we;:wer1 hinder
Ili b'ader.hes of et.ram-
(:ansea-11te name "Canaan' It tie -
coast region of I'alestin, ; later and
scconderily, to 1!:e Jordan valley ; and
Iinally it came to be applied to the w'hula
country including the 111ountu1nous dis-
tricts a; well as tho 'lowlands.
6. Shecheu►--A place and later a city
ie Palestine situated between Mount Ebel
and Mount Gerizu11 west of 11,e Jordan in
Ihe territory allotted to Ephraim, sone)
dietanco ttotth of Jerusalem. One mean-
ing of tho name is "sat.dle" or "eltuul-
der," and the name of the city nm,
therefore well he derived from its love -
lion on the meddle -like vale between the
Iwo mountains. Another suggestion is
that the place receival cls name from
Shechem, the son of clamor, the 1livite,
prince of the land (Gen. 33. 18, 19). The
former suggestion, however, seems the
more er•obable.
Oak of More+h-The reference appears to
be to a sacred tree, the word "Morels
conking from "floral'," the word used
regularly of the nuthoritutive dire) ion'
given by priests. Tho word translated
"oak" is rendered in the margin of the
Revised Version "Terebinlh." The Tree,
which is one resembling the oak, is still
common in Palestine, as is also the oat:
proper.
Canaanite -Lowlander.
8. 1301h -el -The ancient i.uz inti►na'ely
connected with the history of the ptttri-
achs. To be identified with the modern
Retia, about twelve miles north of Jeru-
salem.
At -Tho name means "heal." Tho loca-
tion of Ai was a little more than two
miles southeast of Bethel on the road
between the latter place and the Jordan
Valley. Apparently a city of importance
at the lime of the conquest of I'alesiine
by the Hebrews (comp. Josit. 7).
W!I eT iBEvSSEMEIR STEEL IS.
Is a compound o: Iron With a Suta11
Percentage el Carbon.
:Vest persons are unaware of the irk -
votuton created in industrial circles by
the introduction of the Bessemer pre -
cess of making steel. This process be-
k•nge in the sante calegory with the in-
vention of the printing press and the
introduction of the steam engine In its
eels:Ion to tu:man progress.
Steel is n compound of iron with a
small percentage of carbon, which is
rendered malleable by being cast while
in a slate of fuslou. Cast iron is iron
with a cutch larger percentage of car-
t on and other Impurities. Ifessemer's
process converts cast ire,► into steel by
blowing a blast of cold nir through melt-
ed cast iron. The oxygen of the air
burn; out the carbon, silicon end other
unwelcome elements until the right pro -
pe_ rllon is reached, and then the steel
is cast.
The effect of the process was at once
t: chea)'en steel and to increase its use
enormously. In 1853, when Bessemer
took out his first patent, steel sold in
Englan.l for five limes its present price.
Sir Henry Bessemer shared the coin -
men lot of inventors 1n encouraging :n -
credulity when his discovery was first
announced, but he was more fortunate
than most inventors. Ile lived to enjoy
the rewards of fame aid fortune and lo
witness the world wide adoption of his
process.
The first Bessemer steel rail ever laid
down was at Derby, England, in 1857.
1t was placed at o point where it had
been necessary to renew the iron rails
once In three month.; because of inces-
sant wear. It was not taken up for
sixteen years, during which time a mil-
lio t and a quarter trains passed over it.
1T Is to the Bessemer process that we
owe the rapid development of our great
rallwny syslems. The giant locomotives
that draw long trains across the conlin-
ent ani the steel rails upon which they
run are due to its discovery. It is es-
timated that the itessemer process has
reduced the cost of land transportation
Iwo -thirds and it has also greatly cheap-
ened transportation by water. it has
opened great tracts of fertile country
which could not have been reached
otherwise and has given the former
grad markets. in the development of
Cedric railways fl is all the time bring-
ing t ge'her scattered villages and giv-
ing row• opportunities for intercourse.
We '.w; to Sir Ilenry Bessemer the
improvements in our modern steamships
the strength and lightness of the bridges
whirl' cross our rivers, countless mod-
ern forms of Innchlnery and !heir cheap-
ened products, and the skyscrapers of
large cities, which could not have been
built save by the use of steel.
d•
AN i:VICTiON SCENE.
Sheriffs Officers Ghen i.isely Time in
County (:ork.
Live'y s'e=ie= were witnessed al Ban-
d nh, (:county t: ilk, o short time ago in
c ftne.•tiun with the efforts of n large
local landowner In enforce against cer-
tain of his tenant.' eviction decrees fen•
rien•pnynlent of rent.
Early in the Ironing Ili, Sherif('. of-
ficers and a Inrge force of police Inn•Ie
a descent upon the di.tricl in the hope
ef Inking the tenants by surprise.
News of their Intentions had leaked
out. however. and during the dark hour;
of the morning bonfires blazed on the
hills. and Inter In the day the hells ef
n'i the Etonian Catholic churches were
tolled.
opl:rnncli of the police. shortly
b. fors no en. was further notified by the
blowing of horns by then stationed .st
various strategical )feints.
The crowd also Pinned n ring round
the h•,use of a tenant named O $ullivnn,
while men messed with stnnes, buckets
of mud. and vats of boiling water man-
na) the Interior of the house, and shout.
(t1 dcllance to all comers. So violent
and menacing was the nititude of Ihe
people that the police found Ihnl they'
unlit do nothing to assist the Sheriff):
officers waived using their arms. which
have be.n contrary to their inetruelinns.
During flee hill in the excitement. teen
Barnett C:ithollr prieels come fere riel.
and offered lherneelvee ass tnedinl"ri,
and, after a parley, their .ervie'cs were
accept.sl by beth partite: to the dinette.
soh the result 111. I, after prol.nig:et
reeg lllethorie. a comments:: :els af-
fee.tegl.
i'ort 1enee!m, sett! II lutrnha• !vests
the largest ofalees hi the world.
THF.
Every b
vele. hut ext
with %%sunders
tiro not so tunctt
tit the stnrtil g fai
us from (111" to day
of the most surer: '•
upon u- in the tiekees 111
of tin! ;:•;cecpuh;!. 1 'hey
yond rx ,meat)): et,:
I•elicf it they
lien: tut as
hnve L• -t ei them t
, !accept tee ., ev } - •,.e:nu .1,1
show of ho• 1! •1
'fake 011 . r, ) of•.
kete;'inr-co .6 n' e,. r . 1
50111• 1'•„' r ;14. is 1.4(1 y s
11/4 1-, , : e es . .
house
thirty :Itis• y a.)
servant. and I:1:d e: ch
11110r•lite.I IIS. "h:•!:.:1 1%.• > r••!
sur." Co tsrqurnt.y '., n.e, .ie ,
tis''lr_s of 'rte 1.:::.:; ha, t,
1•akcd in IMO ,'.,18: ! .: I;: 1 1 ase;
Delimiting 240 !.ir
absence of the u t ,. e : ; •:w-
fine°, for elle
w•• cit (r 1m) 11
limos bit 1!,., ,,..: •.n•' Iv.' i„Id
baked b, .+
She u,c' . 1 ! 4 • ,•.
wee. rove:' end
Christian s......
II tv t e
9 t•. 'o t ! t" •
( 1 I 14 •
'1- 11 t'.
l,;.11 .
Is:. and 1 e•
hake it ? I i
111.•
greet!'.
lint::? 15
Imam ,1 of tutor ,
da 0 badly. She e.
age good sense, :leo ... ei• c• 1,.,•
tions,
Another seonnn, sloe.
age. has cta:ked. ei •
was 12. She 115.<
lamb chops, and hes r .:.',
many limes. And
up liver-colotr41 cho .s.
ming in a grtessy i5.1 41)1 \I 1'
al them will give. ,, t •f• • ,i .
Ihe dyspepsia,
lamb chops cis w•
19 the tats! c!e 11 .:• 1 1;
praised them, Fut • • n '1
serenely to her fi • 4 .
Now. upon svltn' h, l.•,!';. • II
explained? Ci'n i' se ::s :! • , !n'1 Ih r
me human b.•in' •
their minds rind 1 . eseo is. d
l; so that the ' n,:;fi11u of las'.• !:I,- ••
mental effect w!, vier? For in the
ins•ances the re_,ii1 ., et ere not the rest
of carelessness or in ,.(termcee- '•. y 1'• ,;
thought (heir leer .1 ahemtine! .,ns -wen
feasts for the e!..
•.'
And+.a. .. cin i- .n t''1• •
A
Ill not he !. CII 1
cars is. that these pent- r• , • - n;
eyes for the banes ef a ,•h
the baker. 'i'he hu veer ' new, 1 , , .
n steal, r emelt chos
ci 'e•
Than to otter o,
No. 2; and if the b:;:.♦:• were to sere
No. 1 with such bread as she n,nk(s ti ;
sCH. she would refuse to pay for it, tin
a e , • io "s'
11 t s v
r'uu. of 1► r eller r he would cobs ..
cast upon herself.
\Vo hnve suggested but a C ti
things That happen !o occur, tmd ' , se
only to ono branch of house!:='•• 4
but if we were to pursue our inquire
into other departments, we shelled I
met at every lut a with phenomena s�11
lar to (ho above.
'•ei•
EASY DESSEI:T`,
Rice Custard. -Break up half a cup of
enokn l rice: and soak it in one ri! n
hot milk until sold. Ileat the ye.;
two eggs. and Iwo rounded tables
sugar, and when well mixed add Ute
hot milk, Turn back into the d able lee!,
e:' and stir constantly until the . pfi e.
cooked and the custard smooth. e'er el
one-quarter teaspoon sell. 'ken n int,! n
dLsh for serving. nett who' .' llgltlty
cooled spread (half a Cup of anple jcl y
or strawberry jam on lop. Peal the
whiles of the two egg; mill. '1:(1 and
dry. odd two taI'lespuons i.1.,vtb•red su-
gar and one lea -Toon of lemon juice and
lulu it lightly over the lop. Color n deli-
cate brown and serve cold.
(torn Starch Pudding with 11.15.--P111
one quart of milk on to boil in double
Iwiher. infix Iwo rounded la !spoons
Cornstarch, half a cup of sugar, and half
a teaspoon of salt and moisten it with n
little vett milk. Stir it into the Boiling
milk and 1e1 it cool: len minutes, s te-
ring often. (teal Ilse yolks of four eggs
mill light colored and (hick nil ''1r
Unlit into the boiling starch. As c •
as well mixed remme from the Oro. as
Ihe egg must be only slightly ce eked.
Flavor will: one teaspoon vctntlIa. into
n pudding (Iistt turn shout one-third of
the cooked mixture. then put in n Inver
of cleaned .figs cul in smell pieces. then
another layer of the pudding. Birt the
whiles of the egg: stiff. Then heal in four
rotndal Mpoompd
nail Iwo lnbteaspsoonss Mrnoofn jnwuice.err.l fifesu;mr it
lightly over the surface of the pudding
Hud color it n delicate brawn in the
oven. Let it become extremely cold tie -
lore serving. Use Ilse elude fig. which
carne in bag:. \\'ash them In lukewarm
anter and slot' them illn tilde aalrr or
s:enm Ihc`nt unlit lender.
uIr11rshnhnl!mv Unle .. (al tonrink
nhnll)tvs in thirds, u41ng hoth Ilse pink
end white '1111 tics. Tick aft I!4:' scale
end wipe the dates, remove Pie seine
and Insert In its place a piece of the
inar,hmalln,ty freer Ingelher. letting a
line of the while or pink show, and roll
them in powdered sugar.
SENSIBLE SUffE.MTIO:
I'ieli.rer flaf;rs.-stub
dipped In rre•1l.
pettish
in Ih,'
Aline nd Oil.
1..adi', skin a
ehe,uid 151 toed Inn
T•, I'oltvh Mirrors.-
rl�lh wt nng out of rot)
) 'd it) dry a httlug ; Ihi
dry dueler.
Varnished Wall Taper
vv
irst rub with •
waler• sed dip.
n polish with •
.--To wash
;u
'lea
11ry
SileTL
!eel Leal '.t
•I; d o! !I
'1 !o' ... - some
of r�rtarkablb S nuns prc-
:.ande in Englund,
o them was a menagerie of
:,.cal olid animals, constructed
11 cteildten al a big country hoose.
zee, x was built to the home to nc-
sene d:lte the collection. It consisted
• :.evcral roans at.d each was decorated
d furnished to repreacnt a scene in
Irl' drta'' nn.. -1 of the world. One ss -a
in Arabian eserl. another tut African
orest and another nn Arctic glacier.
. !:e animals we`1-a ail housed amid tip-
to;)riate s''t•roundings. 'They all moved
are. or let by e;lockwork and all roared
I •etlow or barked more 01' less ike
it prololy::es. All it clad in the
)Iced skin of their 11�iii1 end gave a
)like effect. The tion alone cost 63.000,
•n(1 several other animals were alined as
nsivc. The bill for the collection, it
ed. exceeded $50,000.
no her notable Christmas present is
- reed as the gift of a distinguished
.:ty ofliccr to his sons, who are eke) to
urstre a m'lilnry career. The entire floor
t1 a targe room hes keen otnverted into
model of ono of the battlefields of the
orr War in tcnich the father partici-
:diet. Th. re ere hire and valleys, vil-
' •;:es. farms, fields, woods and a river
'owing with real water. The whole is
i1•fcd in natural colors. The armies are
r resented by 2.60 toy soldiers, with
•.sty -five toy cannon nod a complete
ran -port train. The cost of the elabor-
.1 toy is given al $1,400.
wo:k ug model of Nelson's flagship,
Victory. Ls quoted as costing 8500,
;1 1 a geelleman living at Wimbledon is
t to have surprised his fourteen-yesr-
1 .gym with a whole railway eyetern
vels yads of track and a complete
111.nt o` rolling stork ata cost of
r some little girls a little hoose
n
1' In their pleasure wrs erected. Thal
1•, :ay the dimensir:n.( bore the same
'stem to their height that an ordinary
does to the stature of adults.
til i e w••:tat six rooms completely
o 1,51 with children's size furniture,
• rel to real l tic -a -brae, table equip -
n1 and ell and water color paintings.
Cie .expense of building and furnishing
house exceeded $5 000. leder an
automobile garage was added to accom-
modate Iwo toy automobiles.
\\'GVI)EII Ul. BEETLES.
The mist retnehkable gold beetles in
the world ere found in Central America.
'The heed and wing case% are brilliantly
eoli'hed with n lustre 115 of goad llself.
Toss011(1 feud' they hnve nil the ap-
penraece of Mill metal. Oddly enough,
another sloe ties b ,n Ilse same region
looks like solid 511511, (ra-hly hurnblied.
eat o
ane. Albert To
McKay, all of
pounced by the
consumption, and to be
reach of medical aid.
Oxomutsion and they at
1 feel it a duty I owe
state these facts for the
from this terrible discus
Yours very U
LICAN
Paychine, pronon
sale at all up -to -da
druggist or general
you, write Dr. T. A.
g Street Went, T
COSTLY
The most mugnifli
necklace in the wo
perly of the Connie:::
o! three historical
which enjoyed corm
former times. One
SGo.000, wecs sold t
grandee of Spain, a1
"necklace of the \'it
second belonged tc
Naples; and the 11
necklace belie ng
genie, and byter I
don jeweller fur S10
MILLI
Heart and
Ara a spee111i, fav
orders aridns fro:
tion of the heart o
as Palpttatlon of
Pro,drannn, Nor
ne e, Faint and Drs
etc. They are asp
woman troubled t
star
Price 5) centts you
de
Tres T. 1t.i.a
li
!6),
4
MT:SUf FE'
CRET C
For twenty-five ye're we have devoted
diseases peculiar to turn. Our records ah
Il eve actually , used thousands. We hell
proof to most any man that ns phyelcl
u dollar need he paid for medicines or t
Vo cure on Link guaranty, Get hon
eonhe to as yea will be dealt with In
NOT .1 1)u1.1.Art Nt:1.D ism PAID
Inc from lost vitality or a-eakneail.
will cure you. Men who aro net
runt?. the result of errorsnt e
fatal' g memory. etc.. sh
drain upon your system
Our exl.erience and tit
retitle agent known
others fall.
%%e cure Y
tint;. No pal
cutting o1*
Our N
ulcers.
Byrn
tr