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Exeter Times, 1907-03-21, Page 3E BRAND MARKS Hypocrisy Is the Saddest Fallacy in All the World, 1 bear les my body the marks of the 'Lord Jesus. -Gut. vl., 17. In the moral world one does not have to w•at' a button to show where lie be- longs, Ile is branded so plainly That tit •' seldom is any mistake. The ei "s of eharcler are more reliable 1h e d11 any other means of classification. The tvul:es May go into the church, but That does not make Weir hair curly. And there are sheep outside whose characters speak louder then any other confession of faith possiely could do. You may gel all kink of indorsements from others, but your real teller of cre- dII on 1111. batik of character you write for yourself. Character seta its inde- lible record un the features, the term. the very fashion of the life. 'There are fro secret sins, nor are there secret vir- tues. The Things done in the closet cry aloud from the housetop; they proclaim themse'lv'es in the physical appearance. end still inere in the unconscious moral atmosphere and entanali to of the lite. A bad nmol may have 0 clear eye and a firm chin; but the brand Mots c f character will be seen in She mouth cr the Mimi. Above all, they will be felt bi every sensitive soul that approaches him. The separation between the sheep •end the goals does not have to wait for some Onul judgment day; the judgment `s now rued the marks of differentiation •are FO plain that all may Seo Ihent. The scars of sin never wash out, nor does the passage of time wholly eradi- -cale them. Despite all the good of each life, David still hears the marks of his fall. Pelee of his denial, Burns of be- hauchery, Byron of lust, Coleridge c f Indulgence. ul b CICe. ntl lost wesus do not re- turn; our wasted opportunities conte .no more. The tracks made in the soul by habits. though no lunger used, are 'there still. But the side of degeneracy is not all. The law that inner character stamps Me outer life works for good as effeclu- -ally as for ill. Ile who thinks high thoughts will lift up his head and in his . eye the tight of heaven will shine. \\hoso love. 'Mug. noble shall leeonle noble. There is. ne hiding the geed in elan; 'l, too, cries Mood. An fleetest Iran needs he advereeitig; he cannot wholly hide himself. The experlaton That von actually ran it one thing and appear In be another is doomed to tii-appnlnl1nen1. '1'11e die - guises of the pretender are so thin that the simplest see through them. \\'hat you are speaks so bald as to drown al- together any declar:tiiuu, you may make of what you 4 h men to think you ore. The deceiver deceives no one but himself. Hew ninny there are who recognize This law working in others wh3 yet hope to escape it themselves. They seek le creel a wall between their life in public and in private. On one side they exhibit the upright. respeclahle citizen; On the other is the man of devious w;ays, of devilish imaginations, of foul thoughts and base. sordid greed. or in- justice and oppression. How long does duplicity appear as sincerity? How bang is it before bolls sides are known t , all who know either one? Before his dreadful crime became known sten felt that there was some- thing fearful hidden in the breast of Eugene Aranl. You are known, and your whole destiny is determined, by your whole self and not by that part alone which you prepare especially !or publicity. Ile does well who guards the door of his heart, who keeps the springs of character from pollution, who builds up in strength and beauty the sources of life. Ideals, aspirations, secret thoughts, hll , imiginatious, habits, and companion- ship determine character, and charac- ter Is destiny. \\'ell for us if the world nifty truce in us something that reminds (; the gond and great: see marks tet having corupanied with such an one es the son of man and having learned cf him. (HENRY F. COPE. THE S. S. LESSON INTERN1TION.11. LESSON, J1.1Rf.I1, 24. -'Lesson XII. Wore of Drunkenness. Golden Text : (los. 4. 11. THF. LESSON WORD STUDIES. Based on the text of the Revised Ver - em. A Nation Rebuked. -Tile chapter from which our lesson verses are token is one of the greatest of Old 'Testament prophe- cies. Isaiah 1; addressing the aristocracy -and political lenders of Jerusalem, and refers in the first part of hie address to the rnndltien of affaires at Samaria, the and with another tongue -Or. for with stammering lips. etc. The quotation has ended and the prophet replies to the mocking interruption of his hearers by pointing out that his unwelcome and oft - repented message will he followed by a severer word spoken by Jehovah him- self lo this people in a still more un- couth language. namely. the harsh and barbarous accents of the Assyrian in - enders. 12. This, the course of action advo- cated Qirviousiy by the prophet, is the rest, the only means of averting the impending disasters; and this alone is It►e one possible mens of bringing re- freshing to the exhausted nation and city. 13. Therefore -Because the warning of the prophet has been disregarded Ute punishment and destruction foretold will surely come upon the city. Fall backward- Itelreat from their haughty position and be cost down, capital of the Idndre(I nation of Israel' Broken, and snored, and taken -Defeat .f Ile basal sill al Israel was its apostasy and u captre and tiller desolation will be from Jehovah to the worship of Boal and the Iniilre a outcome of the conflict Astarte. haughty pride and moral de- hich ww•their apostasy farm Jehovah will gradation, disregard of the poor, end in the end bring upon them. general self-indulgence end Intemperance accompanied this apostasy, and the downfall and tiller ruin of the kingdom was Ina halite. The repeated warnings of Jetlot•nl►'s prophets had been disre- garded and the long and merciful delay of threatened judgments had only served to harden the people in their indifference and wickedness. But the day of reckon- ing was at hand, and to !saint' the greatest of Hebrew prophets it was given to announce beforehand the awful cala,- trephe. Rid Judah else) was corrupt, mei drunkenness was a preweiling %ico In Jerusalem as well as in Sammie, espe- cially nn:ong the nobles. Hence after porlrnying in genphic terms the Impend. ing doom of the northern kingdom. the prophet turns abruptly upon his, audi- tors and changing from the third to the second person in his speech. lriwt's home his message of warning ('e the scoffers of his own city-, Jerusnlern. verse 7. %m{ even the -e The men al Jerusalem, among whom YI priest and the prophet are .,specially referred le le- Catlde of their being the spiritual leaders or the people. 11 was They who opposed Isaiah hi the name of Jehovah, and claimed to have -the nuthorlly of divine revelation hack of them in this opposi- tion and in the euppnrl of the politicians. Iteel with .,,rang drink --Judah on the whole still 04)1)1sted favorably will' Israel. but even here the beeetling tiro had for a long lime been drunkenness. Swallowed up of wine--Perlinpe Metter . "confused with wine." or "wholly ab-; rartwd in their ear ousings." '1 he mean- ing in the original is not clear. Err in w•ieion- receive Iheineelves with regard to supposed divine r,'selatlun., which they chimed to hoe received. 8. Full of vomit and filthiness -titer - ally iter - ally so. these words of the prophet re- flecting vividly the awful stale of things e existing in m•i;Mcrfllic social rir.lcs of the capital rile. \Ve are reminded 113 wee rend of the similar slate of affairs in the Roman enpital-lortl• M'fore the dome fall of the empire. ninny ccnturtee later. 9. \Vh"m will he tench 1,14 vletge The prophet i; here quoting Ilii' nu,rkiig retort of nobles a'd priest. 5511001 hi' 1141 tbua seserely t 411 uked. and who npp11r- enity Interrupt hint with their sr4Rrng replies. 'rhe .ph.1:41(4.11 conti►1111', through the newt seise. 10. Precept epee precept ; line 1111(172 Ihle-The Lebow „f this worse gives a Write, 01 repealed minnnsyl!ildc., the exact tense 411 wheel is not enlir(ly cer- tain. They are 'Wended lo Inti':,t:• I;e • mocking stammering words sef drum: , t; fl'e 11 ae Ibeee Moak 1110• wean- .1, e :epel11k)11 of the prophets wanting speech. I-ile meaning til Ile: whole 141- torl i, : "Who are we (lull we .!m,,;,i I• teetered le this men ? \I w e 1411 5, tern Memos? Is it n••e,+,no 1 . tope.. mer ani 05Cr again Ito us Ili , ilns.ng.• 11A 0110 W01114 I41e:11 a (;lite''" II. Nay, tat by men of strange Iq .p QUAINT YORKSHIRE RE CUSTOM. A quaint custom is still in vogue in winter at Bninbridge. a Yorkshire vil- lage. Every night nt nine o'clock a huge horn is blown on the village green, so that 11nw'Ot10 lost or rambling on the sur- rounding fells may be guided he safely. Very welcome has the sl,und often been to 1111111y a wayfarer lost in ...new or fug 011 Iho che'erle s moors. Some then are unable to save money 1>reattse they haven't any in prnelice on. Some men treat (heir wives kindly be- cause They are afraid to do otherwise. The live stork of England is valued a. 1151 millions sterling. it includes 5 million 00111.' and 18%:; millions of sheep. a COLD, C T'S ONLY A s A TRIFLING COUCH" Thousands have said this when they *aught cold. Thousands hove neglected to euro the oeld. Thousands have Flied a Consumptives grave through nag leo t. Never nogleot a cough or °olrl. 11 can have but one reenit. It leaves the throat or `ago, or both, affected. Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup le the medidne you need. It strikes at the ver fmundetion of all throat or lung very g complaints. relieving nr curing Coughs, Cohrs, lir•enchitie. Asthma, ('roup, Sore Thr>.e.t, and preventing Pneumonia and Comsat rept ion. It hes atevx) the teat for many years, and in now more gem -rally owl than ever. It contains all the lung )^sling t•irtaues of the pine tree eombine d with w'dd ('hem hark and oth•r pectoral remedies. It stiontiatelll Iho wumkened br..n• lual meson, allays irritation anti 4 411ti 11es ineammetlun, soothes and heals the irritated (Oust•, loosens the phlegm reel rnsretel, anal aids nature to easily It ho.Ille th) m ,i hid ac- cemul.uions. Ilom't be humbugged into nccept0rg an imitation of lir. \Vee.xIi Nor. way lino Syr1p. It le put up in a yellow wetruer. three pine trees the trade (nark, and 1)1 .) 2.i ell. Mr. Julian J. LeBlanc. Belle Cote, N.4., mites : " 1 w.13 troubled with a t..):l cold and set aro coug'r, tt hi -h aRe11med .ne•h an Pttit•lclo as to keen me emeine..l to my Lena.. 11.1031 sovcral rami',tics mit art i'at th, ., t. c re of 1;n eel I. -.s n last Maori 1 trie•l Dr. \Voett'a Net'.say rune leyrup led one tr, ntle can .el rtes completely." FARMERS DENIED RIGHTS! ABsoLuTE . _ CAUSE OF TIIE PRIr.SE NT AGITATION IN 11'EST'LEN CANADA• How the Grain Grower Was Shut Oct From Testing Whether Ile Was Being Cheated. When people in Eastern Canada see accounts of the meetings of the commis- sion inquiry Into the grain (rade in Western Canada they wonder whet it is a;I about, and turn 10 some other part of the paper. But it is worth while to know something about a husinees which is the busies of Western prosperity, ity, and which so profuu0dly affects the prosper- ity of the whole Dominion. A FIGHT EVEBYWIIEIIE. In order les understand the present situation it :s nectssery 10 know sonte- llting of the pnst, and since this light between grain dealers has been common all over the Western part of the rum ;, is g Conti - r r.c'1, wherever • room a little story from Minnesota, where 111e light began before it etarled in Manitoba, will he in place. The story goes that a grain company owning a large number of e1e- vat0l's, as the grain w•areltouses aro usually called, hired a young former to buy wheat at a. certain point. Now, in order to protect themselves against lass the grain buyers always "dock" each load of wheat of a certain amount to cover the shrinkage due to drying, hand- ling mei dirt, i.e., weed seeds, etc. The young man "docked" the mads of those who brought grain to his elevator what he though: woo n sufficient amount, but was sharply reprimanded from the head office for being "short" in weight when the cars lie sent out arrived at the ter- minal elevator. Ile "docked" more, weighed the next carloads carefully, but was again sharply reprimanded and told lo take more weight from the fanners. CHECKED UI' THE WEIGHTS. was In • tut •nc`el 1 Al this time the kraut w public or semi-public elevators at Min- neapolis and Duluth. and it was the law or' custom that the weights of the cars as weighed by the public weigher should be open to the. public. The newspapers used In copy 111.s register daily and publish the figures. There were columns of figures showing after the number of Iho car, the grade and weight of the grain it con- tained when it got to Minneapolis or Du- luth. The young buyer wits so satisfied Butt he had not cheated his employers, that he looked up the numbers of cars the had sent, and discovered that instead of being very "short" in weight, as re- ported by his firm, that they alt ran gen- evotsly over weight. ile kept his own counsel all flint season, but daily kept account of the difference between what tin firm credited him with and the amount which the car actually contained. Then. when he shut up business in the spring, he was able lc show that the ele- vator company through {,mining some- thing omathing on the weight of every car had secured in one season from that one ele- vator forty cars of wheat fur which they had never paid. 'this was sea,•cely what would be termed news to the farmers, but, along with olhce: instances, it caused the repeal of existing raitwny regula- tions, and the allowing of farmers to Inad their own grain on cars if they so desired., '1'11e last. sentence will perhnpe not bunderstood by the general reader, but it will be explained presently. 1'IIOUl3LE BEGINS IN eteNITOBA. in Manitoba the facilities for levelling grain were in u rudimentary state prim' le; 1887, and there was no talk of trouble. But in 1'0+7 there was reaped the then enormous harvest of 14,0110.000 bushels (Inst year, 1906, it was 19:,(100,000). There were fete t•levnloio, the railways were unprepared, and touch of the grain, after lying out in heaps all winter, ,vas mois- tened by the spring rains, began to sprout. and was 0 total loss. 'Then arose :t cry fur elevn►ors, but people did not believe In the Canadian West In those clay's. People believed there alight not be another blg harvest for ten years, and were canny abtult }netting their money Into elevators, which might prose fait- ures. 'flsuse were hard yencs In the West whet1 a half -dollar Wetted as hlg as a dinner -plate, and the 155,000, which un elevator then cost, was a fortune, To gel elevators the (:anndinn 1'acife Itnil- a ay- made an inducement in the form of n regulation that if ally than or com- pany erected a "standard" elesoleir of a umlaut capacity, t11 with cleaning n - {nlnlusestanyPeint the. the contently, would refuse to receive tiny grain into their cars tit that point. except through that elevator. '1'11E SHOE it1a;INS '1.0 PiNCII. '('here cause a cycle of (herd years and pour clops, and it was not until Is:K) or I4 91 that Iles regulation began to be op- prc.eslse. The farmers got protrt•l14111 fos their grain they had no granaries al home!, and the aha:•ge of rine and one- linif cent.e per bushel bur weighing,clean- ing and "binning' Ili.• grain wa, not er- e, SSIVe. Itt:';ides, (111 farmers were poor. and I\.eerty ha. to I.eep its moult' Ain't. Bid ns the grain crop increased there: be- eini 1.1 be the same 1rouhle over W'tgtil mid grades That there l,nd been in \lin- neoita and Daketll sold California. ilnt+trate: :\ fainter would bring whet h • verily helloed 10 be 5001 bushels of he ' and No. I hard wt•hr•nl les the Mender, 1, I 111 "wine' be 1)141 Ise. teal only 4:0 bushels of No. 2 wheel. 11 he ruler hnwe leaded with hie own halide n car of wheat. and Ihnl ohne had been d•rinred No. 2 wheal ley the Gov eminent' Inspector :t! ('ort \Vllhem he would hive twee "tie. feel. Ile woo. reiuly Io nceept 111.' Govern- ment weights. but (here wane i1.) way of putting his- l.etief lo the le' -I, l,e•cause all the tr,►in hn(l In go through th.' elevator. and there its ,lentil} wee lost. F.\It\11:iti undris I)I•:.NII:It. Yid for seven or eight yeah the leer MITA of \lanile.ba begge 1. petitioned aKt4.bsI. voted. fought for the /0111plr right to load their gra111 from their we- enie, erni , 47) enr�. 11na 111a1 right ton: denim them by the raiiway. .\(1d to this the ewceas.5'1'. high Height rale, and i1 win I melie stood 55 hal railway and eleven 1-'. 11 °nnl'n1y mime!. 1'el many gond }s•o,'l' w the I•.;t.l iti mgiet \innst*)han- vsere n diseonlented. n`stlesa lot of ngi emir... Mien They were really gronnin) meter tow rolgs that lis Opulent Lae! SECURITY. Clenulne Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Sear Signature of See Fat:-Stdb Wrepase dew. Tarr assail and as 41.07 tie take as sager. FOR NUOACNL FOA DIZZINESS:, FOR BIUOiVSNEI$$. FOR TONPIR LIVER. FON CONSTIPATION. ' FON SALLOW SKIN. FON THECOMPLEKION CARTEKS e;s�ra>nv r.uar,ura .*ruse *Ms 1 car l7 r, retar1., .. ee6 0l104 s.,.-.. . nwnNC'• LIVER COMPLAINT. The liver is the tartest gland in the body; its oNce 1s to take from the blood the properties which form bite. When tilt liver Is torpid and inflame( it cannot furnish bile to the bowels, causing them to become bound and costive. The orht in lin of fulness we • feetg • m tote are g Y D the right side, and shooting e ains in the same region, pains between the shoulders. yellowness of the skin and eyes. bowels irregular, coated longus. bad (sate In the morales, etc. 1VIILBURNS L,AXA-LIVE R PILLS are pleasant and easy to take. do not gripe, weaken or sicken, never fait In their effects, and are ly far the safest and quickest remedy lar all dtneases or disorders of the liver. Price 25 cents, or 5 bottles for SIM, all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto. Qat would not have endured for twenty-four hours. Before the Northern Pnciti' Rail- way carne into Mnnitola the rale on grain was 24 cents per hundred prt}Inds from the nearer grain points to Fort \\'illiam. After the Northern i'ncifc carne in the rale was reduced to 21 cents, and so remained for some years. To -clay it is 1) and 12 cents. Wheat, it must be remembered, waw in some of those hard years selling for 3:1 and 40 cents per bushel for No. l hard, and about 1891 or 1891 a prominent Winnipeg merchant 111040 the assertion from the platform, find it was not challenge!, That for the preceding five years the railway w•oukl not lake the grain, including the coarse grains, out of the country at the rete of bushel for bushel. That 6 In say, that it cost more than one bushel of grain was worth to take another Lu;hel out to the lake ports. NO NEED FOL( MONOPOi.Y. it should be ronhembel'tel that in the meantime the capacity of the country to produce wheat had been tested. reeve - lore were very prolltnble, and Individuals and companitte weir erecting them by Ilits score. sir Ihnt there was no longer the need of the regulation of the railway to Induce Wren to build theta. Yet with all these Things eo light was the grip of the railway and elevator monopoly In 1110 West that it was nttt until after 1896 That the fanners gut the simple right to load grain on ears without pelting it through art elevator. Nobody grumbled at pay- ing I% rents per bushel In the elevator uinn, but they deg want the right to find 0111 he wee cheating Mem oil the grade and 1111.wyeighl he allowed 1hull. This w•as the first great. Injustice re- moved front the hard pn111 of the prairie fernier. but (here were others 1'emnining. -d' Queen \Vllhehl!ine of Itollnnd is nn excellent 1 nguist, for she speaks French, German and English as fluently as her native i itc`t, and she keowe something beside.; of Italian and Russian. WEAK now many women there are that get no re - TIREDfreshmcnt from sleep. They wake in the morn - WOMENing and feel tirr`der than when they went to bed. They have a dirty eensntion in the head, the heart palpitates; they are irritable and nervous, weak and worn nit, and the lightest holusehold duties during the day seem to be a drag and a burden, MILBURN'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS are the very remedy that weak, nervous, tired out, sickly women need to restore them the blessings of gond health. They give sound, restful sleep, tone up the nerves, strengthen the heart, and rn:skn rirh blood. Mn. C. Mir1)onald, Portage la Prairie, Man., writes: " I tons troubled with shnrtnews of breath, palpi- tation of the heart and weak spells,. 1 •7�o•f four boxes of Milburn's Heart slid :terve 1',111, end after taking them I was .•oenpletely carrel. Price N) retitle per box nr three Wee* for $1.21, alt (feelers or the The T. Mils (,urn Co., Lingle'', Toronto, Vale C11010E RECIPE. Spotted tic ;' teem 6 oz. . Dick. - 11) chopped beef su:el, 4 oz. currants. tea- spoonful spoonful baking powder. !Method : milt the 1knm•, add a pinch of still, and mix with the; sIi'l, add 0110gh wvltet to ulttko into a fairly stiff past,`. (toll it out and sprinkle the currants \\'et the edge; and roti up 111e paste. Dip a pud- dutg-cloth in hot water and flour one side, then wrap the prepared cull into the cloth (111(1 tie the ends. Buil and stead it fur about two hours, remove the cloth and dish up and serve hot. Currant Fritters. --3 egg,, 3 en. flour, 4 Oz, currants, 4 tablespoonfuls boded rice, sugar to lade, a grate of nutmeg. '/, pint of milk, u [hill of salt. frying fat Method : \take the bitter by mix- ing the gulls of eggs with the talus, and adding mill: gradually till n smooth and light butler is obtained. :\dJ the salt to the whiles of eggs and whisk ..1ilfly, stir then) lightly into the• batter. add the cur- rants, rice, nutmeg. and enough ca+tor sugar to sweeten. Drop Me mixture in spoonfuls into hot (tit and fry to a light brown color. Drain the killer,: nn a cloth or paper and dredge over with castor sugar. Serve piled upon -a (tot dish. Norwegian .apple Cal:O. - 1 tis. sour cooking apples, 4 eggs, Si 115. brown or u►oiet sugar, ya ill. h►•eudcrumbs. 2 oz. butter, 2 oz. currents, 1'/., oz. cornflour, 1 teaspoonful ground cinnamon. Me- thal: ('eel, Dore, slice, and cook the apples with the sugar and very little -water. Drain them when tender. and rub through n sieve and add the butler. \Vork in the yolks of eggs whilst the apple pulp is still warm, then add the breads umlbs and the cinnamon. \Vhisk the ere -whiles tostiff r rmix 1 a 1 all and f ► t egg -whiles and the cornflour with l41 ur - shooButler and flour a flat cake -tin o. two of moderate. size, pour in the mix- ture. and bake in a moderate oven for about 35 minutes. Turn out the cake on l0 a dish and dredge with castor sugar, and serve hub or cold. German Currant I'gneakes, -- ee brown breadcrumbs, 2 oz. butler, 1 oz. currants. 4 eggs, 1 lb. cooking apples, 2 oz. sugar. ground cinnamon. Method : Peel, core, and slice the apples and cook them to a Reece. Melt about 3; oz. of butter in a pancake pan, sprinkle in about 1 oz. of breadcruntbs, mix the apple puree wilts the currants and sugar, and put n layer of it on top of the crumbs ; beat up the eggs and pour in just enough to cover the apple puree. Sprit -title over 801110 mere breadcrund).s and n little ground cinnamon, then hake in a fairly hot oven for about ten min- utes. Turn out on a dish, besprinkle with sugar and serve. Continue to cook the remainder of rnnleriel in the same manner. The obey., quantity of ingre- dients will make 6 gond-sized pant -ekes. Dutch Currant Cake. - ee le. flour. X Pu. currants, I oz. mixed peel, 2 oz. rai- sins or sultanas, 1 oz. castor sugar, 5 oz. butter. 3 eggs, X gill milk. 1 dessert- spoonful ground cinnamon. 1 teaspoon- ful baking pe;order, Method : Work the sugar and yolk+ of eggs in a basin to a cream. Melt the huller, sift the flour and baking powder. clean the fruit. shred the peel. mix all the dry ingredients• with the sugar and egg -yolks. \Vlli.sk the whiles Of eggs to slit( froth. add them , grndunlly. Pour the mixt•e into abut - hied caktelin and bake in a moderate oven for :Meld IX hours. (lock Calves. -y, ?b. Mime 1 egg, :3 oz. butler or dripping. 2 oz. sugar. 1 oz. mixed peel, 2 oz. currants. 1 teaspoon- ful baking powder, a little grated nut- meg. not quite % gill milk, n pinch of sill. Method : Sift the flour into n basin, add the salt and a grate of nutmeg, rub Ilio butter „r dripping into the !lour and mix well. Shred) II►e4,eel and add This with the currants, the sugar, nutmeg, :all, and baking powder lo the flour. Beat up the egg oil!' Ilte milk and mix gradually with Ike dry ingredients into u fairly eel( mixture. Put this in rough heaps on to n greased balking -sheet, and bake in a fairly but oven 1118)ut _o min. utesB, nbn Cakes. -les oz. flour, L, oz. Ger- man yeast, 1 lableepeonful sugar, 2 oz. butler. a oz. currants. 2 egg, 1'; gills milk. runs syrup. Method : Sift the flour Into n tarsi, ereo111 the yea;! and castor sugar will' a little tepid nlillc Cor eater; Mt the butler in a sn11reI )am, add 10 it m the milk made lnkewerns ; team This on l„ the yeast and sugar. then pour it into the centre of the tk,u•. Add the eggs beelen ; work all well together. and heat up, lidding the eurruuts. Ihi!, the mix- ture into well-grc:l,Pt1 11 ilri1 en141•-Iles, railed {baba mould,. 1'ut Ihenr 111 a w•urnt 111101' rise fur 4,)5,10 evenly Iulnntee, then Luke 1, 44 fairly (tot owe', bnluvl.1‘)1 11111 out the shop., 4111(1 baste theirs over tow illi 111111 syrup, Serve bol or cold. Ligetrnullins depend u{.111 1110 wry in which the ingredients ore put Ingrther as well as on the recipe tlself. A house- keeper who is loom It for her fluffy 'treelike' mutthls, which are elo,tye ns light as the pruverbinl feather, use:; emir mill: in making them, but derric, Ilse old time way of using a. According 10 tra- ditional prncea0s the soda is mixt(' with sour milk before the flour is add.vl. This r ed, argues the housewife in app's. lion, nik,wws the cffcrveecenee lu be over before the Dour goes in. 1I'r one. is to i !ilk will► Iho ,our hill: the Oour, salt 01141 sugar end Then to nail soda die. solvnI in n little hot water. 11y this means 111e entire mass vier.. 'rhe lust thing before the better is turned into 1141 Inane a beaten egg in folded in, This is her recipe : '155 n cul,fub 4)1 Itt.ur, n00 cupful of sour milk. a half Ieas{rs•nful 61 soda, one 10aap„on1ul of sugar. a half teaspoonful of salt, and one egg. A 'I111CK \VOIt'TIi KXo\\ IN(1. 1 teemed something w'•rlh while •Ilse „Hier any by gsong will' to, 1,1 the' noel r, eks to Indy 41 soil 01 chile.,. w vitt'. 1111'' 1:esek. \\ lien the saic11nu I::se1 seen 1,01(10 It wt .'s fnlln.l 111,1 1111' Il'i'ti t - were Inn long sinal had I . Is` .h)rlene ! It the tailor of the estnhhshrnent. 110 saga it vc0 1111 hike hue is few minutes, so we de- Cided to wait. it so happened Ihst 1 sat where 1' could see the operation, which was a revelation to nm. I was surprised to see 0 common, old•fashiolud flat -iron, 10 stead of the LL,ual tailor's "geoee" put to heat. Then he cul off the needed amount, ming a curved Measure as a guide. (lite could make such u measure out of heavy pasteboard. taking 1In' bot- tom of a pair of Irotsers'to get the shape. ile then proceeded to lura up the Item over at strip of "tissue," wrlu:h h. had on a large spool, and basting it i'1 place. \\'11411 lt►is Iva, (how he look it felt pail an inch thi: and about 11 Melte; 1„ng. the o idlh of the bottom of the garment. slipped it inside and laid ii on the Werk ruble, .spreading over it a coarse cloth, emitter 4o the duck used for dresses, then passed a wet sponge across where the hem carte and pressed it with the hot iron. changing the purl about until every purl had beeti reached. Lastly, he turned the legs fold pressed the hem on the other sine in the sans` way, excepting that he dei not (tempo then. S4, 1111101 kg' pre,; .4) lung. '11115 gave ole a new idea et.l ircly ae t , the way to use the tissue, and press - Mg in general. 1 never had much *sue.. ease C a in using (11P II.++Ile, 11114 ! new RCC why, as 1 did not use a damp cruet or pad to press on. The pad keeps the mark of the rough edge (rem showing ,ul, the outside. Occasionally we women folks !lave a job of this kind to do aMl 1 N.-43 no reason wily we could not Make 4 n substitute for the pad. as Ilion' is not enough of such work in an ordinary family to buy 0110. An old, faded (able scarf of fell wrap- ped smoothly around a thin board, such as con be got nt any dry good, .,lore anti fastened at the edges, would answer Ike purpa.o or one 'lade of old flannel would be almost as good. I fancy such a pad would be a great help in praising 1 the seams and pockets of the men, suits, doing away with the shiny marl:, so often resulting from home pressing. 1 feel very much elated 0501' this ethid " iu ray few moments of wailing. iIOUSEIIOI.D iIIN I SS. for Nothingbetter thanvinegar 1, l C givesr cleaning window•.. It a first-rate rate polish. (tub it on with one soft cloth, dry the glass with another, uid polish with a vwashleather. Furniture needs cleaning as much as other woodwork. 1t may he walled with warm soapsuds quickly. wiped (try, and then rubbed with rottenelone and swweet- olloil. Clean off the oil, and polish with chamois skin. 'I'o prevent stains on china rinse out well the cups, ale., in cold water first, then w•nsh thein in hot water. 'l'he cold water lensing prevents the aloins from the tannin in the tea or coffee becoming flied. which they otherwise would it plunged into hot water. Dampen two cloths with kerosene and shut them up tight in a large tin pail. Leave them Thus for twentyfuur hours or more, when Ifley will be ready for use. Cee one for dusting furniture, doors end casings, the other one for linoleum, (hardwood or painted floors. They thole °uglily take up the dust end prevent its 'fo cook turnips daintily a Mlle sugar must be added to the honing water. The improvement is marvelous. being again shaken into the room. They d•, not leave streaks as a freshly damp- ened chilli is apt lo, our do they injure woodwork of any sort. if your kitchen table or your bread boated i; discolored and scrubbing with soup and water doe, not whiten it, take a piece of LalhIrich. wash the hoard with hot, soapy water, and Then rub it thickly with the buthlirice. Then use a ge.l scrub brush and more hot water, give a thorough scrubbing. rinse it in clean water and put it out in the sun- light to dry if possible. Fine .:old used instead of a Windmill: swill usually. 111 cwnjnnctfon w'itll soap end viler, iti move the most obstinate stains. f A hill' -1:1111. 'roil:E'. The Cleser Impersonation of :t Girl al 13w•erpooI. The recent history of "Hailed" Barnes. the girl errand "boy.- who i; now under vent:m.I :it Liverpool 011 a charge le theft from her lust employer, sloww' that she is 1111 uncommonly clever int- persnnatur. It will be remembered dant her sex was only discovered when see was or. rested and taken to the worklietse. girl -tier real e For :i whole year did the g haute is Emily Berne', -pass herself off 11 1 was al is believed that f boy.t I as :t 1'`41 instigation of her mother, who was sent !u prison un \\,'dnesdny- on n charge of receiving money frons her daughter. Ihnt Emily donned boy's clo- thing; but having once Marled the de- c'pljon, sire diepinyevl eetraordinary (•;evel'ness i11 maintaining 1t. She hne successfully h•un.110.1 0 hand- cart while in the •'mpte,> •,1 a firm of ccntrtllctors in leverpoe 1. abtt`nde.I .1i page-Ix)y in *lie minor twanl.; of diner:; al a restaurant. and performer) 111e du- ties of an errand buy al :l Neil shop. • The manageress 1,1 she' last -nailed el- lablisluntnl described the girl es "the model of an errand bey," "'!lee was working side by 514' wi111 n mal' em- ployee 111 my place fur throe na,nths wcithoull the slightest suspicion being moused," she added. "Respectably ihrs,- il to knickers ani wearing n iMllllrr and emelt peaked rep. 'h.' wets a groat favorite with 4111 the girls in 11141 shop. I alw•aya regardr.1 'hint' tie the essence (1 honesty, w elle 1annerP'l, and of nice ept'(Ch. 1 een.ldered 1 hod a teal jewel 111 ein errand hay." Efforts are being made to get the l!irl h•laecd ill n borne. SULTAN'S St Ili LN. .Ictinh' of Firs Honored by 11 1v hill l heir Skin. ♦Inde 11110 a Screen. The .. story Intl of a f.nuous end curio,:- - ..•n s'Iich ne.espies n 1)001'- 11.010 p1:en the menage of Iter Sultan oI 'Fork.). 11 Sa made. so rumor h0;h t,, of hues nn akin. per•fsctlw tanned mrd e'tabornlety tooled 011(1 cn't.....ed. end it ha. been in the real quarters for noire Doe 1w.. renlur:e,. Thio remark - eV(' scr.rn is no! nn eyideitee of Cruelly cr barbnr'ly stn Ilse part of Turkey's SCORED ANOTHER WONDERFUL VICTORY (Sae pose Added to the Lead tat el Cares selected U Pairshlao. This young lady,�who lives In Brownie Mlle, near Woodstock, Ont., tells her owe story in a few effective worda of bow alts obtained deliverance ce t romtheterrtb le t grip of weakness and disease. 1 have to thank rayrhlsofur m present health. Tau rears ago I was going Into • decline. 10)uld hardly drag myself across the floor. 1 could not Sweepttsea•p•L 11 1 went for a dow drive n 1 hadhen t0 111 w 1 canto backIf 1 went for • mils on two 011 my wheel 1 was too weak to 110 1t th.uuglttheate- way. •ud fast time 1 came In from having • sdropped oilpis styn1 helpless (nein fatigue. My father would sire sac met ,1 • until 1 higocured Psy- ctore shtre it kten w:lentlneIt for decline or weak- ness. I must say the results are wonderful, ant peuplo remarked my improvement. Instead of • little, pale, hollow checked. d. listless, melancholy girl. 1 ata to -day full of life, ready for • atalgb ride, • skating match, or an •venlrI5 [arty with anyone, and a few months ago 1 could not 'Woggle to church, 40 mads (rum my home. 1 have never had the slightest cause to fear any return of rho disease. ELLA NUNIEL WOOL), Brownsville, OnL Thousands of women are using PIJY- CITINF., because they know froru exper- ience that in It they have a safe friend and deliverer. Psychine Is a wonderful tonic, purifying the blood, driving out disease germs, gives a ravenous appetite, aids digestion and assimilation of food, and Is a positive and abeolute cure for disease of throat, sheet, lunge, stomach land other organs. It quickly builds up the entire system, making sick people wen and weak people strong. YCHINE (PRONOUNCED $I KLL 4) for sale at all dntggiots at 50e. and $1.00 per bottle, or at Dr. T. A. Slocum, Limited, Laboratory, 179 King St. \\'stet, Toronto. Dr. Root's Kidney Pills are a sure and permanent cure for Rheumatism, Bright's Disease, Pain in the Back and all forma of Kidney Trouble. 25c per box, at all dealers. neer two hundred years ago, but is a memorial to twelve faithful servants of a former Sultan. At one time during the Sultan's reign, two hundred years ego, n wing of the palace caught fire end during the eonllagrttion n melt loved member of blue Sultan's family was rescued by twelve serwunts. The twelve servants perished, some of them dying later of their wounds and burns. so his Majesty had their skins removed by an expert and had thein preserved in This touelming though remarkable manner. The screen is now looked upon as a port '•1 the ruler's inheritance, and it is snit that every Sultan cherishes it almost as he would his own royal skin. BRITISH COAST (:t'.11*D 4. Old Service Will Likely be Superseded by Another. The friendly coastguards, who are such conspicuous and familiar figures on British coasts, are likely to be shortly superseded by the re-establisll- meet of the pre\ e'ulive officers of Ilia 'belies. Their dose, are similar to those of the present -lay coastguard. In anticipation of the new order 1 f thing , the old stall of coastguards - men have already been withdrawn from seventy' depots, The coastguard, ore the general util- ity 'len of 11►e nation. Al present the Mgr numbers 1,3(0. the coast being di- vided Into secli.ms or divided e0r')t un- der a direct commander. 'rhe 1114.11 aro drafted from the nulls of the novo Navy. They Stoll the Holies of protec- tors against ermigt;lilg 00 heeall of the Citetom., act as wreck-recei'ers mid regist1aos of shipping. They lake a leading part in life-sav- ing operations in cite of ship•w•rerlt. At present there are 326 life-saving elm - lions. equipped tow iib m ' ket 11ppnrtllus, cliff la 1 e . I: wheel are ww,tlu`A by etc.. y the corselguards, During the last !.'n wears more luau i;,($W) lines have been sawved by the rock - el nppnrahts alone. wyhich speaks well for the ellie'iene:v of the men. Th: !lett staff w'111 Ise rw'rdled 1.1 R0111e assent from the present '11‘;'11:1."1111:01111;I :,ettg'nrel nnet llme.`x{,ir.'.1 navy men, and the picl'r- esque, familiar hllie-Jorkct•'ind erns will be di.senr.led in favor of blue i l.'bit and gill buttons.----�-`- CURES Dyspepsia, Bolls, Pimples, Headaches, Constipation, Loss of Appetite, Salt Rheurn, Erysipelas, Sero la, and all troubles arising from tho Stomach, Liver. Bowels or Blood. Mrs 5 i.e t hangue, of Banyan f', tint. write+: "1 txlievo 1 wou!J have boon In )iy gra%n long ego had it ne.t Leen for Ilurll,) k Blood )tit- ters. 1 was run down to such an estl.nt that l could scaren• Ir Him o •Lout the h•. i''. I war, .ab eek to .cset..` headaches, be•►achct mut glib nee4; h,y nipotito war gone nnel 1 was nimble to .b n.y henmwwerk. A ?ter noire teen bnitice of g 11. B. 1 found m health folly restore I warmly receinmw 11 tt tel all tired were out womtllo