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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1907-03-14, Page 3ISO See B,,tatiTE SECtilITY. ilmmonotawl Cenu:no Carter's Little Liver " tt 8 LiVV�� Pills. Must Cour Ctrr',aturo of 8a Vac -Se -elk Wrereer Below. Vary saaall sad as easy to take as saga:. FOS iiELBACRE• FOR 01_IINt:SS. FOR GILIOUSNESS. FON TOIiPIO LIVER. FOR 681,1$TIPATiON. FOR F, ALIBW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION just ✓•seeress CURLSICK HEADACHE. NAVAL NIf.KN:1MES. Strange Transformations of Names on .leu -,i -\Nero Nieknnrnes in the Navy aro governed by iron rules of tradition ; they never titter, and custom ordains Mal indivi- duails blessed with the more popular pa1rnnyntirs shall become known by something entirely different•. For inslance if you store n sailor and your name were Wright, it's quite pro- bnble, That you would never hear it men- tioned throughout your career• le the rerviro, save, perhaps, by oaken upon a ft w special occasions. Your shipmates would know you as "Shiner," and "Shawl.' you would re- main until promotion placed you beyond tho reach of pleasantries. Similarly all (:tn,kes are culled "Ned'ly." all Greens "Jimmy," rind all Whites "Knocker." Why tris should he ::o, nobody knows; tlo• usual nests of antiquity veil the ori- gin of these strange Transformations. There does seem to be some reason, however, fur the "Spud" Alurphys and the "Dusty" Millers; and the "Lefties" and ".Short(''" need no explanation. • Jar 1, -lutes of the brunette order are al- ways dubbed "Nigger," the reason being obvious, while -t Tailors of heavy build are called "Bergey" or "Tubby," 10 lusts. -', TIIE PATHWAY OF TRUTH Men Are Judged Not By Their Views But By Their Actions. "If any man will do Ids will he shall know of the doctrine." --Jelin viii., 17. Practice alwuys conics lx•tore philo- sophy. A boy arrives at an understand- ing of the laws of mathematics by work - Mg out many examples. The . wise teacher gives Iho rule only es the sum - 'Mug up of the experiences already cc• quited .by the pupil. Faith is not the ecceplance of dogmatist statements con- cerning unknown things; it is confi- dence acquired concerning some things by reason of extetrience in (hent or in oUler things. Tho great mistake of most of the 1 reaching of religion is that it urges men Ir. accept a philosophy of religion instead 0t inviting theme to an experience; it places the symbol, the rule, or the &.e- Irine before the fact. But filen do not accept other things in That way. We learn by doing; it is tate practice, not• the philosophy, that ntokc•s perfect. Tho only religion any man has is that which he uses. Faith is slot to be mea- sures! Ly fer•niulas. \Inny' a man who is enplable of platting out the theological heaven in manner satisfactory to the theorists is utterly unlit to live in even ars earthly city because he has allowed his philosophy of Iho city of God to be - mine a substitute for the practice of the duties of the citizen of God. THE THEORY OF E1'EIINAI. LIFE will save none from the grave; the acknowledgment of the hi tort ity of the life of the savior of the world will not save your life from sin and death. The only thing That can give you life and stake your life right is tate learning of his way of living; the experiencing the possibility, the beauty, the glory of such t1 life as his ; no ono can believe on hint except by following hiu1. Once in it while the world is shocked ley the uncovering of n life of hypocrisy In high places, the ratan who is a lender in the rewrote a guide, and teacher of others. and who at the sante time is rob- bing Ilttb falhorie s and the widow, or stealing from the Slate. Thal man is In r measure typical of all who look on their Bibles us tickels to Heaven, their professbns as passports to glory, and forget that Toth these arc empty and herons until translated into living. Emphasis on creed lends to neglect of deed. It is easy to be holy when ortho- doxy is Ilse thing denrande.I. (light opin- k•ns more cots ty are adopted than right practices. Yet marry hope to 'arrive ut right practices by the blind acceptance of opinions properly labeled and in- dorsed as right. As well might one hope lo acquire meet:Mar vigor by memor- izing the rules of c•allslhcnics. The 11 it'll is that dr,'ol is n dooreelo doc- trine. If you would kuru the lutes of the road you must travel in it. If you are anxious Ito know the truth of reli- gion you must begin leo iIVO ilea life. Here you know nothing except that which you know experimentally. TIIE LITE OF THE LEAST CHILD gives a larger vision of Truth Than the bargest theological libraries in the world. Many of us will have to give on nes (Clint of lila" wasted in foolish specula- tions on the philosophy of religion. Nieto are judged not .,y their views bol by their records. Do not think that ability 1 o unravel the mysteries of tho infinite as one m:g;ht take n lay puzzle to pieces will satisfy the law that demands that every life shall give itself at its best to the. world, nor dare we hope to present our petty solutions and so satisfy infinite justice. Do you desire truth? Then livo the beNt trolh you know to -day and larger light and greater truth shall be yours to- morrow. ik, not wait to know all tho words or comprehend all the syntax in the great language of life before you be- gin to spent: it in living. There Ls only one way to the paradise of the Most High, and that is to trend each clay in s) much of its pathway as we may see, doing daily the deeds that seem to us likest the divine, finding new truth by the full -living of the best of old truth. HE\til• 1'. COPE. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL OL INTERl.‘T11O1\Al. LESSON, MAR. 17. Lesson XI. Jacob and Esau. Golden Text: Prov. 12. 22. THE LESSON WORD STlUDIO:.S. Eters Its(' bright pnrficular stars of the Rased on the text of the Revised Ver- sion. quarter-deck not not exempt from the dictates of cusloin. The rapinin is invariably ellliee the "Owner" or the "Skipper," whilst the conuutnder to the fewer deck Is the "Bloke," and the first lieutenant "Jimmy the One." T Departmental oMeers are known by departmental names; thus the gunnery lieutenant Os either "Guns" or the "Gun- nery Jack," the loopedo lieutenant "Sparks" or the "Torpedo Jack," and the nil igetimf officer "Navvy." Them, again, (here are names existing in the Navy to -day which were extant long before Nelson's lime, for in every ship yell 11 ill find "'I'oninly Pipes" the bootee am. "Ohips" the carpenter, "Jimmy Bungs" tate (eloper, and 'Sail;" the eail•nuoktr; while last, but not lensl, that autocrat of the upper -deck, the chief boatswain's mole, is still designated by the almost majestic title of the "Chief Ituffer." SEElNl; PLANTS GROW. to is now possible Io hear anti see plums groes. In foe appnrnhos of Iwo lierlllntts the growing plant is connected with a disc having in els centre an inch. calor whirl) move; visibly and regularly, nod lies movement, magnified fifty times user a 511)11', shutes 1lut progress in arowlh. Does Your FOOD Digest Well ? Concerning the Hebrew Birthright. -- The story of Esau and incob brings into prominence the right of possession, inlo which among Hebrews, as among all Semitic peoples, the eldest son of the family was born. According to the old Israehltists view the firstborn son was the ablest and best among his brethren ("any first -horn, my might, and the be- ginning of my strength." Gen. 49. 3); and consequently ns In case of the first - fruits of herbs and of the soil This first- born son was considered sacred unto Jehovah. In harmony with this view the ancient bow claims all the firstborn sons for Jehovah ("and every firstling which thou hast . . the hales shall be Jeltoval►'s,"-Exod. 13. 12; "The first- born of Illy sons shell thou give unto ate,"-Exod. 22. 29.) This meant That the firstborn son was to he sol aside as an offering few the deity, hit it became cus- lontnry (ram earliest limes to offer in- stead of the child, some animal (comp. Gen. 22); and the later law obliges the (alter to redeeht the child for five stie- kcls ;Exod. 13. 13 ; 34. 20; Num. 3. le; N. 15.) Figuratively, Israel is spoken of as Thr' Orstlx,rn unto Jelowah among all the nations (Excel. 4. 22; Jer. 31. 9-11.) According to 'Talmudic tradition the first - Worn of each family acted as Its' oflleia- ting priest In the wilderness unlit the erection of the Inhernacte, when the office was transferred to the Tribe of Levi. The firstborn son thus occupied a prominent place in the Hebrew (omit•. and took rank before his brolhers and sisters. In the early days the will of the fattier fixed the part of the inhori- lance of the iiistborn, and it wn.s cus- tomary for the father to bequeath to hien the grenter part of the inherilnnr•e, ex - wool when. as in the case of Itcbeknli, the s\ ife s41cee'ded in obleiniog it fol uis11ier of her sons. The Inter law lues he portion of the 0rsl1sjrn's Inherilnllce at twice the amount given It. each 01 lee other sons nlhl forbids favor being hnwn to younger soli 1Deul. 21. 15-17.) Plots birthright, however, enloilel rots° le responsibility of providing fnr the w ,,loves and unmarried sisters in the ,unity, sinee these uldinnrily did not i;tt/' heritage ram's. The chief 1istinc- eel of the Ilrslborn son was Ihnl he be. 'ante the recognized head of the family. --- Verse I. PC111knh -- \Vire of Isaac. .lt• ci[and daughter of Bellow! l he nephew of Abolition]. A careful res d u; of the attic,; Hai -relive reseals the cry prominent part which ltelx:kah Flayed in the deception pi ne1icel upon sant. and incidentally Ihmw•s much earl on the kind of Reining which she evidently gave 10 her favorite sun, for hutch of whose unscrupulousness she se('ms to have been dlrerlly responsible. Goodly garments --- The hest suit re- served apparently for spe'in! occasions. Eenii, her elder sem-The Orslborn of loins. The name nllernntes with Ednm in lotto Old Testament references. This holler or surname is explainer nee mean- ing red (comp. Gen. 2.1 25, 30,) As lie grew up lieau became "a cunning hum - ler, n man of the field.' Ile scents lo have been a Thorough ':son of the desert," impatient nt Ilio reslrninte of settled or civilized life. The slur} of his life Is closely interwove!' stilts that of hie brother, Jacob, and is given In gene. cis. chapters 25, 26. nod 33-3ei. 10. the skins of the kids of the gongs upon his hands- \\ ith the fur side out apparently. to make his hnnels nppear hairy as were deist' of his brother F.',nn. The einoolh of hos neck--'fhe Merles%{ 1 portion. I [ • s 4Mhen the food is imperfectly digested the full benefit i-: not derived front 1t t'y the holy :and he purpose of eating is de- p felted ; no matter how good the food or how csreholly adapted to the wants of tho body it may lie. fhua the dyspeptic often beonmes thin, weak and debilitated, energy is lacking, hrigrhtnexs, snap and Tint aro lost, awl in their place tome dullneae, fest appetite. d• ren,t on and Ian baur It takes 11'40 greet knowledge to know when one has , i Indigestion, .onto of the ((allotting temp- 4oma generally exist, viz.: conatlpation, your atonlseh, variable appetite, headache, heartburn, gas in Uo'• stomach, ete. 1 Tho great 1„'int it to cure it, to get beak to it bolo I 1K health and eig,or. BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS M con+cantly effecting curve of dyspepsia because it acts in a natural yet tffcetive way upon all the organa involved in the rectos, of digestion, removing all clogging %purttioe and nuking{ easy the work of digestion and aatimilatuon. Mr. R. 0. Hervey. Amelia.Lurg, Ont., ` writes: "1 hero been troubled with dye- *epaa for several year[ and after uaine Ursa bottles of Burdn:;k til'e'd Bitten i woe wmpletely cured. I cannot praise HRH enough for what 1t has done fir ms. I bare not had a sign of dy epepmia IIaso.r Do not eeoept a substitute for D.B.B. !'here le lathing "jest as good." 17. Savory food --Isaac had asked especially for a dish of venison prepared in his favorite manner. 1t was 111 111)11a - tion of this favorite dish that Rebekah prepared the substitute. IX. \Vho art thou, my son? -This question is explained in verse 1 of this chapter; ")sane wn.s old, and lois eyes were dim, so that he could not see." 19. 1 and F,snu--A deliberate and inde- fei.soitl' falsehood. our condemnation of vwioich must, however, be mitigated by a consideration of the universal leniency with which the stn of deception was re- garded, and is still regarded, among Orientals. 1 have done according as thou boldest me -Isaac's request to Esau had been, "Take Thy weapons, thy quiver and thy bow, and go out to the field, and Joke ole venison" (Gen. 27. 3.) • 20. Because Jehovah, thy God, sent hie good speed -'Phe boldness of this flolsehotld shosi's how well Jacob had learned Ilse lesson of deception from his mother. 23. So he blessed him -Gave to him the forme! and parting patriarchal bless- ing which it was customary to bestow upon the firstborn. 7'his blessing was regarded in pah•iaretia1 times as directly determining the future destiny of the son, 'hough, as the language employed by Isaac in this case its. 28, 29) indi- cates, the school source of the boon con- ferred is regarded as being God. The blessing given to younger sons was a promise of inferior grtnlness, if not of actual servitude. 4L - The intervening verses not in eluded in our lessen text should be care- fully studied. They contain the account and wording of the blessing received by Jacob and relate the incident of Esau's Inrdy nrrivnl and great disappointment, as well ns giving also the substance of the secondary blessing pronounced upon Esau n1 his earnest supplication. The days of mourning for my father rare et hand-- Apprirenlly The time of his death was not far distant. Ihten---:\iter 1110 dealt! of the father, Isaac. 12. Th' words of Esnu were Ilfld to Itcbeknh--Ikonblless Esau had uttered his threnls in the presence of other mem- bers of the flintily. 101110 of whore re- p( rted what he said It! 1tehekatl. 43. To Horan- Whence Abram had set forth on iris journey to the Promised Lund "not Woo ing whither tie went," and where since that early lime, how two generations ago. the other doscen- denls of '1ero11, father of Abraham, had dwelt. 41. Unlit Thy brit bel:s fury hunt G away --- The mother well kiiew the I. chnngenble and impulsive nnllll•e of her _ eldest 5011, ns also Iris lack of an nde- ` finale apprecintlon ler the real value of the birthright of which he had been de- prts (•d. 45. And he forget- The subsequent narrative seems In indicate, ►1' however, cr, that Esau did not forget very quickly the wrong thtit hod been perpetrated against \\'hy should 1 he bereaved of you bolt in one day? --The reference Is til hus- hand nisei favorite son, and Ihrowi into a strong tight the partiality nod (mewl- listn of the 1114111er. S ane commentators mute thought Ihn1 the words "yell Ruth" trier to the two stns 18 .1,1) nisi Enol, since. hotel Esau murdered his brother Jacob, the current Ines of vengeance would have required That someone else avenge Jacob by slaying Esau. This. however. seems to the writer for -fetched and contrary to the sh'tnle mcauing of the text. DR. WOOD'S doubt a messago from his accomplices to Lachinski. Macy a lase has teen teed of (Mils a;leloipts on the pert of Nihilists to is - cape the p, nutty of 1 rokcn uulhs. IlElIt: IS ONE FROM IBE.V. LIFE. 11 was nolht'ig but a 1.111e black pel- let That Ivan Dcrust•wk=h found in his coal pocket as be undressed one even- ing in his little back mean in Soho. Ye! lie turned pale when he saw i1, and, It eking lite doer, sett down and waited NORWAY PINE SYRUP :ill n.tilt ngf. 'Ten. pule and ltnggaad, h,• w'eut lu hi: work 1►1 nn Al,1ersgfate fur strop. On It s way home another Hack p Ile( found its way into his pock- et The loan olio slept in the roots below Wald 1) ruse.sich pacing Itis floor sourly all 11 ght long. its the niornin others noticed that Derusewich's face had aged ten years. Two mornings later the wretched man's dead 1 way was found on bis bed. stile de by sinal:owing t'russic Held wn the verdict. Se It wee. LW su cede koro et' upx)tt the utforhnla'e creature wo nerve hod fo1lel him schen, in Sep[rnt- lis bcr, 1st:n7, Ire Ilad lx'en otdercel by the chiefs of tato Socli.ty of the Iron 011111 et fire the mine in the Now•y Selo!, \\'ar- row, and so destroy Russia's young Tsar. 1)'rusetv'ch had escaped at the tone, but for five long years he ha, Leen rel'Jillessly hunted by the ends caries of the swede., until at last I. was tracked down in London's heart. In January, 1903. two crushed ho man bielies were found by a mule driv er at the I othein of the Ilarra11:a, n deet ravine near ALtdr'<1. (Me was idenlif o nl that of Col. Banco, a Spanish 0111 ccr lately retired. The other was 1 rnwtt-skinned mon whose ankle win lonely teals d in the rigid hands of the soldier. Plainly the nulive had pushed the other over the unprotected edge ,f the path above, and had been seized 10 his victim's death grip as he fell, so That nnudered and murderer had gone 1.. a conunin doom on the crags a hun- dred feel below. A SEVEN SEWS' CHASE. The brown man proved to be a I'loil- ippl•e from Luzon. Colon.•! 13 anco had seryed in Iho Ph 1ippincs for years, al'1 had corse home u rich 111011, Il was no- terious Ih.tt h:s dealings with the nae tis had been none too scruuulous. The true secret of the tragedy remains unknown. But that it was revenge can hardly be doubted. If this was indeed the motive, then the native nn•st have teen following his intended victim for nearly seven years. Col. Blanco had returned from the Philippines in 1897. One more cnso of long -deferred and terrible vengeance. Outside the Argen- tine town of Santiago stands a lonely building, !towered in trees and avoided by all. It is the small -pox hospital. rhe last of a severe epidemic of this dread disease had boon crushed out in June. 1902, and the building had been empty for some weeks when a cowboy, riding by late one night,' heard dreadful screams proceeding{ from the !,lace. Pul- ling spurs to his horse, he galloped Lack to town, and informed n police- man. But the latter, supt'rsliliuus and frightened, made n4 investigation t'il daylight. KILLED BY FRIGIi'I'. Tied to a bed, meaning null delirious, ay nn italiren named Arditi, who had leen living in Santiago Inc some months past. At first It was supposed that be aclunlly had small -pox, but the doctors leclared that he was dying of fright. 'we dltye later he del df.', but in n lucid n'erval he was ably. to explain that his light was the work of the l'icchioti, a colli 118:hut brigand moiety. Ile hint - elf had been a spy in the service . f he Government, and had succeeded Iwo years previously in bringing to justice he nnlyderers of the deputy Silveri:). .ver since he had been flying or Ifid- ligg. It was because he had given them •1 much trouble to find that his nlur- Iercr:s had condemned Idm In so horrib'e deallo. The criminals were never aught. Stops the irritating cough, loos- ens the phlegm, soothes the In- flamed tissues of the lungs and bronchial tubes, and produces a quick and permanent cure In all cases of Coughs, Colds, Bron- chitis. Asthma, Hoarseness, Sore Throat and the first stages of Consumption. Mrs. Norma Swnnston, Cargill, Ont., writes : "I take great pleasure in recom- mending Dr. Wood's Norway fine Syrup. I had a very had cold, could not sleep ab night for the coughing and bad pains in my chest and lungs. 1 only used half a bottle of 1)r. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup and was perfectly well again." Parke 55 seats a bottle. AVENGER'S LONG CHASE SOME RECORD JOI'RNEI'S WITH GRIM ENDINGS. _ I Strange Gases of Round-the-V'orld ite- vengges Which Have Come to Light. A nurub.r of miners in a Seuth \Voles colliery had a very narrow escape from drowning a few years ago. An old working was lapped, and Ions of water' flooded the lower galleries. A man r.ctiietl Sellers, olio was working in the end stall, woos caught by the flood and only saved his life by clinging In the timbers of the roof and hanging there in pitch darluless for live hours till the water was pumped out. \Vho was re- sponsible for tate accident was not known for certain. It wits put down lc a new hand, Evans by name. ' A few ditys later a second accident happened in tate sante pit. A great mass roof ort,. •o el from the rn f in f coal rock fell n nl h of tate workings. Sellers was again the victim. He was kilted on the spot. But Evans, the elan whose pick had lapped the Ikxxleel Workings previously, was also caught by the falling rocks and was terribly injured. They carried hint la hospital, and there, before he died, 't told a strange story. It appears lh:11 be and Selhrs anti four other lnen had been in pa►1nership 111 smuggling din - mends out of Kimberley. Sellers, whose real sande was Alleys, esus caught by the 1. 1). B. detectives, and to save his own skin had hullo.' Queen's evidence.' AMPLE TIME FOR PLOTTING. The others had time to hatch n schema (.1 vengeance during Ove years' hard labor on the Cape Town breakwater, 1 and when their terns was tip Evans 1 Mall been delegated to carry it mit. ile told Ifow lie had tracked Alleyn first to Tasmania, thence to Perth, in Western c Australia. and from (here beck again, 7 via San Francisco and Boston, to Eng- i hard, and finally rite him lilrrally "lo earth" in South Wales. s Sev€cal similar and equally strange' e cases ih1 lung delayed revenge have conte t to light during the past few years. liere is a very strange one. a 1 On a day. in 1902 the following ndver- 1 tisenlent in is Sydney paper met the eye 1 of Pollee Inspector Piskersgill. "To A. s L., See Judges iv. 21." The inspector turned up Inc 111e reference and found, a 'Then Jnel, lleber's wife, took a nail of c the tent, and look a hummer In her lined and smote the nail into 1118 g • e • n temples." TIIE MYSTERIOUS SEIIVIAN. The • mnller slipped the Inspector's nneInore until Footle weeks later a man ores found deft I in lois hod in n lodging. house In Clarke Street. and n post- mortem proved that he had carne to his end I:y the driving of a long, One needle through the temple, dolt into the brain. Al once I'iekersggill belhoughthire of (1 the strange advertisement and began an s Investigation. Very Boron he discovered o that a Scrvian, named Anton Lachinski had been straying in n house only Iwo it doors front the one in which the moor- s' der hail been committed! hill hnd just "4 left her \telleennie Laho s•. kl was n r i n hocked front place to place, and finally 1' arrested at Ballarat. IIP confessed his sl MM.', bill inure he W011111 not tell, es- 11 rcpt that the Yellen had deserved his fate. It is believed Ilial rho murdered in Irian was tone of those w110 gate evi• dente concerning the stalling of Mons. Its CI 01 113, 111 hn 511 Its st 111 do SI'O'r•IED FI:\'1•:11 EPIDEMIC. Disease Spreads in England- Prof. Osier 1 r Makes Diatlnosiv. "It is absolutely necessary flin1. the Government should organize an (official K inquiry info what lids fair to beenme particularly virulent epidemic of cerebro- spinal meningitis in England." Phis remark was made by one of Lon - ons lending physicians, who bus !em - elf devoted many y'llI s of study to cases f spoiled fever. "It Is, of course, much more prevalent 1 America limn it is in England," he lid, "although 1t has almost always 'en present herr in mild forms, and the : 'e tt ,Irl• o deaf 1 [ lnuto:e 1 not born so. rolabty owe their 11lfiiehein to an in• dious nit0elc of this hilrnetnble disease. "Spotted (ever shares with the plague le doubtful honer of being the most tat of a111 malndics. "Prof. Oster, the Iiegius professor of r,1ir ink of Oxford, whose experience .room many tl'nisnrlds of (uses, pointe 1l Boit sufferers from sp011it1 fever arc coolly delirious 11.0111 the start, 'eine Bin of pain at the back of the head, ve a high temperature, and are efl(n :1. The • npuselcs 'grow stiff, the Pa- • it. shows n desire to avoid light, noel n Pa- ige, (1's' n i oat cause gloat o al i •oil f3 1 ill lull In • nerve'., "If the patient gels over the first fisc ys he is pretty sure to rescuer. "The disease is not direetly Infectious. Lal is due to an nrgnnisnu discovered 20 year, age) by Professor Wneheelbaum, which 4.s ,1ese1'11041 toy e:ei'nlisie nc the dtplococ4us inlraeollulnt'is nunutggllidis; Il resenthhes 1114' torga11150t responsible for plellffein111. noel is usunity found no close mpnny with Jxdynwrphonllrlee. while Mood corpuscles." oorgevilcit. Servian Minister In Paris H9.1. The advertisement was 1.0 \IONt•MENT '1'O A RCI4GLkIt. 'the town trusty's of Sheldon, \'ere motto have solved the problem of Iegal- t disposing of .t24 (mind on the body of a burglar who Was shot deed, by eredL int; n monument with the following in• seriptem : "To Din 11nkntm•n man who sae dint 1 inales/ars. Ocionie n and (;r11• k.p:e sf`)1r while nllcutp,Ung lo gurgle he safe "lo the night of October 13111, Many Women Suffer AGONY UNT LD 0F FROM KIDNEY TROUBLE. Vary often they think It is from to -eared "Female I)isea•e." There is le.. female trouble than they think. Women suffer from backache. eleeple.sne.., nervnuanese. irritability• and a dreggina-,1•,wn feeling in the loin. . So do men. and they do not have "fetnale trouble." Why, then. !.lame all your trouble to I'e'uale Die'ea,v 1' With healthy kidney.• few women will ever have '•female disorder.." The kidneys are Flo slowly connected w;:h all the internal organa. That when the kidney. so wrung, everything goes wrong. Much duress would be saved Y women woul.l ncly take DOA'N'S KID NEY PILLS • et of A;0,1 ra-rial.. 1',,ea bri rant. par box or three holed for $1.25 CI d•'ater. eg cent .stege ..,. rereip• of prim, Tao Dose Kidney Pii1 Co., Tomato. oat. ru PVJUST •r0 JLI)Y. There is an innate sense of jusliec in hlonint beings which rebels fit seeing one person punished for another's fault. A little girl, who made ton much noise in the early morning in her sick mother's totem, w es put nal Into the dull, and soon after a miserable rng doll, of which she was very fond. was tossed nut In her. 'chi: was the last slinse. S110, 111111; up her behoved, and hug- ging it lightly in her drone. with sl,rnul• lug eyes she sobbed out to her grand• nee her : "I wouldn't '4i tared for nlyaelf, leo! whnt brig Judy done?" • 1444-14444 I4UI'bM SOME DAINTY DISHES. Egg and, Alolk '1'uast.-'l'uke stslie slices of ble0dtoast Item, and dip 01.111 in;u boiling milk thickened with a late. Iluur and seasoned with pepper and still. 'Take some hard-[,soile el eggs, chop lltent, end st3''altcrrthem 110(1; y over the toast. Servo very hot. 'Phis makes a good sup - All EXecilelt flaked Pudding. --Mix a pint of milk w011 six ounces of flour and Iwo eggs, after having rublx'(1 four ounces of suet into the dour. A tut- epoonful of baking pxowtter may also be added. Place in a greased pie -dish, and Lake one /Intl a quarter to one and a coal( Hour's. fried Potatoes and Fish. --The drier kinds of Iislt should be used for this pur- pose, such as std, haddock, whiting, etc. Puke cold fish and cold potatoes, pick out all the skin and Ione from the fish, hen utast the potatoes and lists toge- ther; add a little dissolved butler, with pepper and salt to taste. !slake into rolls, fry in deep fat until Ihc outsides err brown and Crisp. Ox -tail stew is a very savory dish, an uy no means expensive. Coil the to oto joints and fry with an onion, et nes slices, and seusen all with Peep :old salt. Put the pieces of ox -taut int 11 stewing -jar, dredge with flour, cov with Witter or stick, and stew very elm ey' for three. hours. Place the tail on hot dish, strain, thicken, and color 11 gravy, lidding a tablespoonful ketchup. Stir the gravy while it bob :ast'for a few minutes and pour over th _meat. Garnish the dish with (toiled pari cot beans and chopped parsley. Moiled Ilam. --Procure n small loan about six or eight pounds, let it soak fo 'wenly-four hours, then put it into a pa with cold water, and with it a Head o celery, a Targe bunch of sweet herbs, few pods of long pepper, six ter eight al Tice, and it small piece of mace. Le the harp simpler gently for about Ihre Mews and an half. Itemove the pan heel he fire and leave the ham in the 11(1410 lilt it is nearly cold. Before serving slri jiff the skin, cover with bread raspings, pal a paper frill round the knuckle, and garnish with parsley. Meat l'allics.--Cul up four ounces o meal, season with pepper and salt aro some chopped parsley ; put it all on plate and moisten with a Mlle gravy !tub four ounces of clarified dripping int Night ounces of pastry Hour, add a pinet of sell, a &male teaspoonful of baking powder, and make into n stilt paste with void wafer. (toll out the pastry. stamp it into rounds; line smote small putty tins with half the rounds of pastry. ,tricking; the bottoms. Put a portion of the ,vent in each, wet the edges. and cover with a round of paste. \lake a small holo in tho centre of each patty brush over with beaten egg, • electoral with a fele small fancy leaves of postry, and bake in a noderale oven from twenty to thirty minutes. Serve hot or Bold. - Sheep's !lend 1'lc.--Thoroughly clean the head, removing the eyes 11nt1 nes- Irils, and wash well in emit water wile a i1 1t Pelee u er sv- a to of Ls e 1raOMOYM0ao al-sgaq Used in Thousands of Homes in Canada THOSE WHO don't know what Pmvehine ie and what it does are asking about it. THOSE WHO do know what Psyehino is and what it does are ueiog it. They regard it as their best physician and friend. THOSE WI10 use it are being quickly and permanently cured of all forms of throat, chest, lung and atotnaeh troubles. It is a scientific prepare. tion, destroying all disease germs in the blood and eyetem. It is a wonderful tonic and ayrtem building remedy, and is a certain cure for COUGHS, LA GRIPPE, Colds, Pnnssonla, Bronchitis, Catarrh, Weak Vola, Sleeplessness., Breackial Coughs, Chills and Fever, 1 DilDcslt Breathing, General Weakness 1smalo Tresbles, Fickle Appetite, Hemorrhages, Night Sweats, Nervousness, Consumption, Malaria, Catarrh of the Asaemia, Stomach. All these diseases are serious In them- selves, and if not promptly cured in the early stages aro the certain forerunners of Consumption in its most terrible forum. Peychine conquers and cures Consump- tion, but it is much easier and safer to prevent its development by using Pay- ette). Here is a rtistnple of thousands of a o vo u..tary and unsolicited statements from 11 ver Canada : A. Slocum. Llmlted: n, neutlemen,-I feel 11 my duty to advise yon some remarkable ewe erected by your Paychlam and Oaomulseen. tehich have come under my n pe,aonal observation. Three men, well known to [ Inc Albert Townsend, Hazel Hinson and John r McKay, all of Shelburne county, were pro - pounced by the beat mcdteal men to have h ameemption, and to be Incurable anon beyond the reach of medical aid. They u•cd I'ayehiue and O:wnulslon and they are now In goof health. e 1 feci it a duty 1 owe to suffering hurnantty to 11 stale these (nets for the benefit of other sufferers from 111F1 terrible disease. Yours very tndy, L6ANn>rx McKANZIE. J.P.. Greet! harbor, N.9, Psyehino, pronounced Si -keen, is for sale at all up-to-date dealers. If yonr druggist or general store calnnt p � you, write Dr. T. A. Slocum, Limited, 179 King Street Wcet, Toronto. It d n 0 0 little salt. 'Tale' out the brains. 1eare the tread for a few hours in cold molted water. 'Then put it in a pool o swarm water and n Ieaslx)onfll of salt. ilring it to the Toil, skint it ; rl•peal the pro- cess. Now odd a large: onion, two car- rots steed, 104, turnips, a dozen pepper- corns, and a Lunrh of sweet herbs. simmer gently until the meat is so len- ,ler That the hones can be slipped out. Take a pieelish, grease it, and line it with line brendcruntbs mixed with chtop- 1ed herbs, pepper and salt. :\rrnngo the meat !cut h1 neat pieces) in this, sprinkle brealrrunths between each layer, and put quarters of hard-boiled egg here and there. (aver all with bruadcrundes. Sprinkle some pepper and soul and a few pieces of butler over the lop, and bake. Phe longue can be cul In slices and laid o4I the lop, or form the last layer before the hradcrunhs are put on. The brains should be 5enlded, mixed 'illi nn equal quantity of breadcrimers, 111111 seasoned with pepper and sill. \fix with an egg, form into shall Oat cakes, and bee These may be used as a garnish for the USEFUL HINTS, If suet Is sprinkled with ground rice it rout) be shopped more easily. 1n tilling 11 will and jacket lit upwind from the wnisi line, as 111 filling n bodieo \\'ht's lienling Irons.- An old lis tea- kellle will► Its' htillom eel out nuoke_s un .'xe.11enl cover t0 pia''( over trues heat- ing nn gins sloven. \euuish the kitchen linoleum thorn lint's it year and it ss ill last three limes as long as it would wilhn111 the coals of siu'mish. eller sweeping n room go over carpet with either a slxmgc or old Ilan. n'1- as They neither leave lint--1hat Ions been moistened well wino animeinin and tater. Us! n 'll tablespoonful lo 0 11111111 nI waren ss ler. The nicest way to mend n broken 001'- '1 5lny, or le slay in a rursel that has pee. eel through Its' casing at Thr top or '. to ,:e' 1 1 pm of the morsel, 1 ," t i t if d the to 1 t' p n! floc stny. urn • •. or where i1 be broken, . with a email piece of chuntuix ,kin. Jnpnncse fern balls make prelly eolith:Moos for occasional use if sus- pended from 11 chandelier by an invisible wire. '1'111') should be Hung In within nn 1110/1 of the Inh1' centre, and if n t'irt'ulor• tent of mirror glass is 'lnccd underneath 0 molly effect is sectiret1. The German instant) of cleaning knit es is simpler than ours and saves much ntnnunl Mixer. Take 11 stout cork from a wine bottle, dip it into Its' knife-papwder, which nusl he pre'iou-'ly moistened, ('Inco the knife flat and rub it will' me cork. In 11 1'w sere nd't the knife will he quite dean and polishe(1, and only require swiping with a duster. '1'o prevent making a greet dust in sweeping. 116P moist sawdust on bore thews. \\ hen Iho melon Is carpeted ►u slot' u n new:imp er. tear it into small ',lops, noel scatter these over the enrpu't when you begin sweeping. As you sweep h111411 I111' paper tilting by the termini. mod this will leech Hoa of tate dust alod hold it fust. just as the snw,lust dose on bare IMxtrs. IM 11(11 have PiVu'r the paper or the sawdust dripping wet, only melee 1'00111 rind nail brush's riles ayes should Le motel no such n po•ilinn that all water run drain (resin Item. Household brushes Iitsl much longer if taken terve o' and oashed regularly. They never should he allowed to rest on the Nestles. Long -handled ones 5hotal(1 be hung 111) by the heads, and short tones either propped upright on a shelf or suspended 1,y a piece of twine. IlearIH brushes will last nearly twice as lung if they fire hung 111). For cleaning; household bra: hes. innke'u solution of soda by dissolving one hound 1„ one quart of water. Stir over the Ore until dissolved, then bolfle for 1150, Add tone tablespoonful to a quart of mvnler- \\ash the brushes in Ibis, also using a litlle snap for the sett hat' ones. itinso ie dean ,old water. and dry in the open an. Rruah,-s whish have been used for panni 1.111 1•' el'aneel with hurq.enline, 4111,1 spoil, of W 1111• will ren to we Varnish. I'lIE 'I'IIUE WIFE. • A judicious wife is always nipping off from her hushtti d:s morn! nature little twig; flint are growing in wrung direc- ting.. She keeps him in shape by con- tinual pruning. If you say anything .illy, she will affectionately tell you so. It you declare that you will do sante ab- surd thing, she :'.ill 111141 50111e means of pretenlitlgl you from thoillig it. And by far the chief part tit all that corium's sense 11►ere'is In Ills world belongs ull- qucslinnnbly to w'mmu. '['lie wisest Things a ratan commonly docs are those which his w ife counsel.; hint to do. A wife is n grand %st'older of the mora[ pruning knife. 11 Johnson's wife had laved there would have been no 11011r41ingf up of orange -peel, no touching all the pasts in orelki1gz telling the streets. no eating and drinking stilt disgusting voracity. 11 Other Gteldsfiu111 load beets married he never would have worn that memorable 111141 ri(lit:ulcus real. \\ hen - ever you find n nun whom you honey Mlle ghoul oddly dressed, or talking; u1 ' :muddy, or exhibiting eccentricity of manner, you loony be sur that he is not at rnnrrieel loan, for the corners are rounded off. the Irllle clonts ;oared away, 111 married poen. \\ i',•s lane, generally, 111CI1e 1 P ( se Iha I tri 11 1 I 1111,141 Iii1S, 'wen Ihenig,h they finny be cleser men. The wife'.. advice Is like the baliusl that keeps the ship ;steady. It's difficult for a girl who Is unabla to get marc:e'1 to realize how lucky she is. . J M ILBURN'S HEART NERVEPILL S'1 FOR WEAK PEOPLE Are a True Heart Tonic; A Pierre Peed and Blood enricher. They brill) epe� Med hsmw AM dm worn ort end wmat,E Manes of eke body, and restore parted Imelda Mad vigor to the entire system. Her renames. Steeple Nerves* Primo teethe.In a P. Lack of Vitality. Ater grid* of o, ppe Anaemia. Week an pDire Epsomm M Epsom am Reneery, Palpitation e Om �finert, Lem of !Energy,Shortness nestle, etc., canal! be awed by using Milbw'n's Heart and Verve Pills. !'rice Mr. a Imo or for $I?t. All dealers or Tea T. mita Co., Likrrru, mato, Was