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Exeter Times, 1907-04-04, Page 7ABSOLUTE SECURITY Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of Sae Pae-Sloile wrapper Below. Vary amen sea as tame M tante es „agar. + FOR HEADAcNL CARTERS Fi3R DIZZINESS. sen r FOR BILIOUSNESS. V ^ Hili T?RPiD LiYER. = i Fi?R Ci3I1STIMTIOM. PI t F s SA.LGMI SKI3I. c 4's• FO : Tii%C9MPLEXIOi1 Uw.s.v,:ws, u,.. ova, r t,p.PLE Imo1 Pnrtt7 Tere:1Ele./6•. las. sG ESS CURB. SICK HrADACHE. MILBURN'S LAXA-LIVER PILLS -are mild, sure and safe, and a.o a perfect regulator of the system. They gently unlock the secretions, clear • away all effete and waste matter from the system, and give tone and vitality to the whole intestinal tract, curing Conitipa. tion, Sick Headache, Biliousness, Dyrpep• aia, Coated Tongue, Foul Breath, Ann. dice, Heartburn, and Water Brash. Mrs. R. S. Ogden, Woodstock, N.11., writes: My husband and mysolf have used Mil - burn's laza-Livor Pills for a number of •years. We think we cannot do without -them. they are the only pills we evor take." Price 2.5 cents or five bottles for $1,00, -at all defilers or direst on receipt of price. The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto. Ont. GOLD IN ENGLAND. 'Reel Not Far from London as Rich as Ihe Rand. A gold reef. equal to (hose of the Rand. it is claimed, exists in England, and within 200 miles of London. Where this second Johannesburg is only five people known. They are the directors of the (:linslon Gold Syndi- cate. which was founded a few months ago for the purpose of developing it. The latest rumor as to the where- nixluts of the reef places it in Glouces- ,lershire, where it is staled collages built of gold qunriz stood above the reef, the cottagers little knowing that their humble abodes may contain gold worth runny pounds. The shares of the Chastens Syndicale are nearly n11 in private hands, and the public merket knows III11e of them. At present the $5 shares stand at 827.50. Jl:V I;LLEIIY. \1 1hrr : "You should (real air. Mick - ((1n better Than you do. \label. Ile is a diamond in the rough." Mabel : "1 know 11. mamma ; lent is wvhy I cul prim." Rurrnwcll : "11 doesn't pay to strike a man when he is down.' Ilnrduppe: "No : the chances are he hasn't any- thing. anyhow." IF WOMEN ONLY KNEW Thousands of women suffer untold miser- ies every dry with /telling blacks that really Rave no business to ache. A woman', back wasn't ma.lo to aohe. Under ontinary °auditions it ought to bn strong and ready 1p her bear the burdens of life. Iris hard to do housework with an wir- ing back. Yours of misery at leisure or at work. if women only knew the cause. 113ackache omen from lick kidneys, and what a Int of trouble sick ki lneys cause in the world. But they can't help it. If more work i, pot on them than they can stand to lie wm lered that they get out ..f order. Laekache re simply their cry for hug.. DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS will help vnu. They're helping sick. otot► sleeked kidneys -all over the world -- tanking then strong, healthy and vigorous, sere 1'. Ryan, 1)ouilljs,Unt., write.: "For over live months I was tremble(' with Ism. Kick an•i was unable to move without help. 1 tried all kinds of plasters and (iii mcnt t batt they were" n nes At last I heard tell of Penns Kidney Pills and after 1 hal rase.' tlerre.el eartert of the bot ley hack was a -e ,teens and well aa ever.', Price L) eat-+ per Sex or three boxes for $1.48, all elsalers or Tho Doata Kidney P111 )o., Toronto, Out. THE CONDITIONS OF PEACE There Must be Some Things Certain and Dependable, Else All Is Chaos. "Thou wilt keep hlnl 111 perfect peace whose tnind Ls staid on thee." -Isaiah► xxvi., 3. - 11 is possible for the properly adjusted wheel to revolve so rapidly its to acorn not to mere at all. That is peace; not inaction, not sentries. ant the dcalh of desert plrtct:s, but harmony, calm. free- dom from fret antifear, from friction and foreboding, from the discoid and dispersion of powers. This is the desire of all our hearts, to come to a calmness et self-conlrul that shall put us in full command of our powers. • But how cull one find such pence in Ilse whirl of modern business. in social dislrarliolls, in to life where unknown C\ils await, and where the heart often is turn by mysterious sorrows and disap- pointments? Hew can pence be fount) with the manifold demand; of life upon one, ' u►I h asp iralicns rnllntg higher and sin and sloth trnb down ? Ili+ battlefield of being any place for pence? 1'.ace is wholly a mailer of Ilse mind and heart. A mind at war dill itself will find only conflict though buried in it monastery, while peace of heart will carry a niott through the maelstrom of a triol with the calla of heaven on his face. Thal kind of balance and equipoise of life is ss , ' p 0 rble only when the life is cen- tered Cif on things lhaldu net nr1 change, when it has a centre of equilibrium That is stable. \ellen through all the changing course, TIDE BUFFETING AND TACKING, Ilse contrary winds and fierce storms, the mariner has ever the undeviating compass before hint, he knows Mat though sails be rent and spars be bro- ken Ire shall come at last to his desired haven. - Inagine what our physical life -would le like if there were nothing certain, no uniformity in the laws of nature. We depend with perfect confidence on the principles which science and experience demonstrate as prevailing in the realm of things. Yet (here are many so foolish as to imagine lhat in the higher realms ' of thought, motive:,, character, there aro no laws. There conies a wonderful measure of calm to the life when al last one is able tJ set it down us 0114' of the indubitable, uushukable fuels of existence that the peewee Ilial is back of :ell being is a 13)wet• for good and not for i11, 11tat whatever we may mean by 1110 olivine we mean 1101 something evil but some- thing Ment Iicenl. worthy only of oorship because it is working out worthy, noble and glori.,;us purposes. If through all that stems ill, through the defeat of our little plans. the crossing of our purpose;, even through our losses and pain. we may know that gout is working, and That this is infinite, ultimate, eternal, and all wise good, what measure of strength, of willingness I4', endure, to wail, of calitiness and peace comes to us. One -1 be LS willing 't endure,o Ila towwnt,ln b patient if only it be''w•erlit while, if some geod and great end is to be served. The thought 4'.f the one w"I,o is al the heart of n'1 being, who culls himself '►'IIF: FATIIEh OF Us ALL, gives assurance Met no toil, no tear, no weary watching nor long waiting is in vain, for infinite goodness governs all feeg ood. S0 a man halls into harmony with the spiritual laws of the universe. Ile finers peace h,y concord will) them. Ile is no longer the lone soul struggling with life; tie is part of the great soul of all, learning. developing. moving out into larger life through living, finding peace, ). progress, clear,(klinilc, and increas- ingly comprehensible. No roan can set God al Ihe centre of his life and think nlwway'.s of 1he things of rho Most Ihgh, selling his life in tho light of the eternal, without being lifted into its alntosphere of calm, clear pence. The consciousness of the divine may be itnfornntluled ; it may seem beyond ex- pression in lernis nI our Thinking, and still It may become the very centre of life and the secret of peace. HENRY F. COPE. T HE. S S. LESSON INTERN.tTfOx%f, LESSON... APRIL 7. Lesson 1. Jacob's Vision and God's Pro- mise. Golden Text: Gen. 28. 15. THE LESSON \WO111) STUDIES. Based on the text of the Revised Ver- sion. • The history of Origins Resumed. -The Temperance and Easter lessons to which we have given our attention on the two preceding Sabbaths have broken into the continuity of our study of the early beginnings of the Hebrew people. To -day's lesson picks up the thread of the Genesis narrative exactly where we dropped it three weeks ago. no recorded events intervening belween the lesson for \larch 17 and this one. Itehekah, 1110 wife of isane. after counseling tier son Jacob to flee from the wrath of Esau to Laban. his uncle. in distant fusion, pro- ceeds to enlist the cooperation of Isaac in furthering her piens and enabling Jacob to make the journey inn the guise of n suitor, rather than as an acknowledged fugitive from Iho just zinger of a deeply - wronged brothel.. To accomplish her purpose Rebekah resorts to dece'plion and by its practice succeeds in \withhold• ing from her aged husband the real rea- son for desiring flint Jacob shall without delay proceed upon the long journey suggested. Apparently also she succeeds in keeping Esau froin suspecting the real purpose of the journey upon which, slimily afterward, his brother sets forth. Verse 1 . 'sane called Jacob -Soon. if not immediately. after the petulant out- break of Ilebekah : "1 am weary of Any life because of the daughters of Meth : if Jacob lake n wife of the dnughlers of Ilclh. such as (hese of Ihr dnughlers of the land, what good shall Illy life do me 7" Thou shalt not lake -Mere than a sine pie request of father 14) 5440, the parer. la1 aulhorily of the Orientals in ancient tin's not being ahrdgnted ns in !wider' lintel when 111.' sun reached hw•entyone years of age. 'Tribal and family govern- ment was so closely interwoven that the aulhnrity of Ihe fatter over the son was in purl the aulhorily of a Tribal superior over an in inferior. The dattghiers of Canaan --Daughters of the native inhnititanls of the land, !:ere apparently referring to Ilillitr use neon front among whom Esau had deo 'eft Ion of Itis wives. 2. I'nddan•arnm - Elsewhere referred le simply as Aram. the prefix Padden signifying acre or tract of land. In the Old T(:demcut Arnot includes the north- ern port of alesopx)bunin, Duran being the mime loth of a city and of a smaller pr •%ince. 4. The blessing 0f ,\1/rahnnt--The di• wine promisee oft -repealed to Ahrnhnnt. ll:silt'ing 10 h,a pos'enly es a per -figment inlreritanee Ihe land of (:anann. here re- fcrrrd in ev tome in speaking In Jacob ns the Intel of Ihy seajourlting.. leroh, lit.,' team- his father and Abraih:lu' his grnndfnther. wee to 1'e bol n sojourner In lit' bend of which his descendnnls shout(' in Inter limes lake hill pusses. cion Ve.rses 5.9 inclusive rewor,t the effect nn Esau of knee's sending Jncoh into l'ail- darearant Io secure n wife; for "Esnu saw It'ttl the dattghters of Canaan weasel not isanc. his lather ; find Esau went :into I.hmncl and look besides the wives IPA !ee had, etahniallt, 1Ite dawg;it. true • f 1 -tufts... .\teahnms son. the sis• 1.•' • 1 \el':'r.t'1t. l0 be his wife.' 1.'. I'-, 1-114,0- - the name means/ liter - 111% "v. eI. ..! its• ,all." 11 Was here That el.ra!ses e e t nl. reit into covenant vitt, w 1• a,: S. ie.. king of (k'rar (Ot'tt. 21. ::1). "\\ :n'a, i., -r ire celled Itr Fraser Ih'er• Glider ; bee .arse there the scare both )s hoi( Mem." A different derivation, however, i, suggested in Gen. 26. 33 : "We have found water. And he called it Shibnh : therefore the name of the city is Beer- sheba unto this day." 11. One of the stories of Ilse place -In the vicinity of Beilin, the site of ancient Bethel, the ground is covered by large sheets of bare stone with here and there a rock in upright re/salon, while a little 1) the southeast 0 hill rises to its top in terraces of stone. 12. Behold tt ladder -The physical fea- tures of the pla•x, especially the Ier.aces of stone referred to in the preceding note. seemed in the dream to constitute n huge slaircnse or ladder set up on earth. and rho tap of it teaching 10 heaven. 13. Above it -Or, beside him. as the marginal reading of the Revised Version !ridicules. • 14. As the dust of the earth -Compare the similar promises in which the count- less s'aas of heaven (Gen. 1a. 5 22. 17 26. 4 ;) and the sand (Gen. 22. 17 ; 32. 12), which serve as figures to describe the great number of descendants which are promised. Thou shalt spread nbroad-Iteb. break forth. To the west. and In the east, and to the north, and to the south -In the days of i's greatest prosperity the united king- dom nclually did extend as far in every direction 116 (hese words of prophecy could possibly be interpreted to indicate. 15. Bring thee ague' into this land -- The word "again" in Old English k con- ,cfantly used where we should say "back." The archaLstn in this case does 1401, however, as sometimes, create am- biguity. 16. 1 knew 11 not-Appnrenlly Jacob hast been accustomed to think of Jeher gal's presence as nssocinled especially with certain sacred p;nces at which his forefathers had dwelt and wor.-ltipeel " 1i' seems to be surprised 1.1 find Jehn- ypalach's presence in this strange and lonely e, 17. Dreadful-lil. "to bt' feared." The house of God--'l'lie place of Jeho- vah's own abode and consequently (he gale of heaven. 18. For a pillar -Lit. "a standing stone," that is, n sacred monolith such rThc i61.60i144 -1 Home \VITIf U11Lh.0 (:UItItAN'I:S, Danish Dumplings. -3 Ib. beef suet, 3 it•, soft brcadcrando, y ib. Ikon•, 2 ties. castor sugar, :i ozs. currauh, y., It'USI uat- ft:' baking -powder, 3 egs, 1 pinch salt, 1ya pints milk. Method : Free Ihc suet from skin and chop it finely, then mix it will' the hour in a basin, add the re- mainder of 111.4 dry ingredients, includ- ing the currants. Beat up Itie eggs and mix with % gill of milk. Pour tree gra- dually into Iho basin, stir up the mixture and Ihtls work it into a smooth hauler. ve ducepc<mtainu p►laial ofreamilky aand ea%pint►nt wwul0r, sia'geec1 t- enc11 with sugar. When toiling, drop in the prepared d utixture by n►eruls off ti sp eon. Buil the dumplings for three- quarters of an hour.- Then take them up will a strainer. Dish up, and pour over a ldlle of the liquid 111 which the dump - n 600 Ix,ilrd. Do n dulin►pgsli.ngs1til One 111114',ot cook too many Black i r - - ('t Cap I' tU<l11 t i )b. fluor, 2 1 b Y eggs, % pint of milk, 3 to 4 07.6. (ur- 1•1111 , 11 pinch of sail. Method : Sift the tk.ur into a basin, add Ilw salt, heat up the eggs, and stir gradually into the flour, adding fire milk by degrees, and work into it batter. Buller one large or ttu small pudding basins. Sprinkle in the currants, and pour in the prepared batter. Cover the basins with buttered paper, and steam for one hour. Currant Cookies,- % lb. flour, 2 oz. butter, 3 oz.s. currant, 2 07-S. sugar, 2 eggs, y., teaspoonful baking -powder, a little milk (aboutout ltablespoonful), 1 lea - spoonful cinnamon (ground). Method : Dub the bullet into the flour, mix in the. Hiking -powder, then add the sugar, the currants and ' nl I 'u Um cinnamon. bent up the tggs with u little milk, and add to the dry ingredients. Mix info a fairly stiff paste, and put fere mixture into a greased hiking -fin, or flat, square cake - lin. take in t► moderately healed oven foe about 25 minutes. Cut into finger - shaped pieces, and dredge %vier sugar. Moiled Currant Pudding. -'X lb. cur - nulls, % lb. beef suet, finely chopped, 1 lb. flour, % pint milk. lemon, fresh bul- let or creno], sugar. Mclhud : Mix all the dry ingredients in a basin, add the milk, and walk into a fairly stiff dough. Put the mixture into a floured cl)Ih, lie up. and boil gently for 2% hours. Serve with quarters of lemon, fresh butter or creams, and sugar (nioLst or Castor). Currant Suet Pudding.- S 07.. beef suet, 8 m_s. flour, 2 ozs. sugar, 2 oes. currants, 1 egg, 1 level teaspoonful l.tllc- ing-powder, a pinch of salt. Method : Remove the skin from the suet, and chop it yery finely. Put it in a basin %veil the flor. sugar, currants. Laking -powder, and ball. • Beat up Iho egg with a Mlle milk, and stir in. Work iuln et smooth paste, and fill into smell, well -greased liunl,ale or deriole moulds. Cover each with buttered paper, and sleurn for ata,ul an hour. Turn out and .serve with a sweet sauce. Rice and Curran! Pudding. -- 2 ozs. rice, 2 ois. currants, 1 pi,l milli, 1 egg, 1 tablespoonful castor sugar. X(1z. beef suet. grated nnlnieg lo tido, Melhod : \\ "ash, drain, and blanch the rice, then drain again, and cook 11 in the milk for Iii minutes, add Ihr curious and the su- gar. Shred lite suet, or chop it finely. and stir info the other ingree11e11lc. Beal u!) the egg with the milk, perm' this gradually into the dry ingredients, and make into a dough -like neixlur4', Make ib up inlo email dumplings, and Roil or sham them for about 2 hours. Dish up and serve eilaia or with gulden syrup or ttaney. Italian Seminole Pudding. - 2 oes. Seminole, 1 pint milk, y, a lemon, 2 cies. currants, 1 oz. beef suet. 1 oz. sugar. aletttod : I:hop, the suet finely. I'ut the seminuln to soak in warm milk. Mix well in a basin with the suet, currants, and sugar, and pour over the milk, pre- viously boiled with the thin rind of lemon. Pour the' 11116111re into n buttered pie -dish, and Luke slowly in a moderate- ly healed oven for abort an hour. A Mlle nutmeg may be grated over the lop before baking. if liked. Disown brad Podding. -y, ib. stile 'sown bread, 4 nes. flour, 4 07.5. mold ugur, y ib. currants, 1 ozs. chopped reef sue!. se leastonnful ground ginger, oz. finely chopped orange peel, I len. prnulhll baking"powder, 2 eggs. and n ittte milk. Melted : Itlntote the crust nom the bread. and cul the soil part nlu sere;, then soak in milk -anal -o titer ill guile sell. ►'res, out Ree moisture, nd put the bread into a basin. adding 10 1 Ilii nls.ve-named dry bitgre,tierds. Ileal ugt the eggs with r► Dilute milk. and mix hatroughly with the nerve. Fill Ihr 11116 - Inv 4110 Buttered moulds. lie over with wetted 4'11,111. and boil or Mean, for bond two hour.. Serve with currant sauce. Fro.t,sl 11104141 and Buller Pudding. Prepare it cu.lnrl with 1 pint of milk, 2 eggs, and sugar to haste. (at 3 In 1 stale trench rolls inlo thin slices. and utter them. Besprinkle (1 buttered pie. oh with cleanest currants, then line it eh a layer of 1)1111(10d slices of bread. ext odd more Clarlutts. and continue his until the dish Is full. Between each aver (1( bread pour at 1111le of Ilio cus- tard. hoer inn moderate oseu fn about :viol)• minidas. \\'hisk up 611111) glee whiles of 2 eggs, add to it 1 oz. of icing or calor sugar. and pile this roughly 011 Ihes urface of the pudding. so as 10 s 1 s 1 as in en, ly (►td 'I•e.•tnn►ent limes condi- a Oiled the distinguishing mark of n accred place. often standing beside an altar. In Kxod. 23. 24.. and in 2 Kings , 1 Its, 26, the "pillars" of (lie (:ananniles are„ t ordered lo 1/u destroyt'tl, end in Deli!. ! a 111. 22. it is forbiuuen to ere. t pillars Ia a the near of Jehovah. Poured oil upon the top of it -Thereby consecrating it and setting it apart sacredly ns making n place of worship. 19. Bethel - earring literally "the /louse of God." The nitdern Bcitin is n p small tillage will) ruins of early Chris- 41 liar and crusaders' buildings. altnut ten ee antes north of lerusnlein and n Mlle east N of the stain highway lending from Jerre salery northward 10 Shechcnt. The city was Luz al Ilse lirsb-.eppnr• rently the sacred place "Bethel" wens ofd• side the ancient city ; but later the fame of Iho sanctuary lett bo the city being known by the same name. being called L'elhel in place of Luz. g 20. Vowed n tow• --As was Cnnunnn (1 nnnsng ancient Oriental peoples, bitla c eoee c'eneisle(L -1 n solemn promise In sl render Io Grid some service In the event n eft n particular boon asked for being o gt'mtleel. 21, 22. And Jehovah will be my God, Men this alone -Or, "then shall Jehovah le my God and This stone." in Shall be God's house -Not in an idols - trot's sense but meaning simply that in 1, the place of the stone there shall be s ereettsI al some fulure time n permanent cin l 1 ,worship 11(1 Ifir e f r Ihr yof Jehovah. be 1 will surely give sue Ienlh unto Thee-- 7.1 The dielincl command to set aside a Ii tenth as J''hovnh's pot -lion is given in Lev. 27. 20.32. In Gen. 14. 20, however, rn Abraham Le referred le as paying Ilthea of 'Ihnt ie. fennel) unto Melchizedek, king Of t,. Sa legn. Sad he it a rocky` appearance. Sprinkle ter a few currents, and dredge with nstor sugar. Nike long enough to ighlly brown the egg mixture (called reringtte), then send hi Imbue dished up u a folded napkin or dish-pnper, t'sf:FUI. I IINTs. To clean a keblle, fill with potato par- es and boil fast until quite clean, When making n pudding don't forge) make 8 ileal in Iho (10111 al the lop i ns to ellowv the pudding to swell. Grease marks on pages 0f Hooka nee - removed by sponging Mem with b, n4'. placing between Iwo she'e'ts of 1'!t:t• rig -police, and preeising with a hot iron. To mend n crack on the inside of n lige, use n fining ntnd,r of crpuil earls worn) nshes'mid connnr,n sell. eerie - fling with wader. Thi. will prove hard lasting. MILBURN'S Heart and Nerve Pitts. Are a speetlte for all diseases and dis- orders aridng from a run-down condi- tion of the heart or net ve system, such as Palpitation of the Heart. Nervous Prostration, Nervousness, Sleepless- ne a, Faint and Dizzy Spells. Iirain b etc. They are (-spocially beneficial to women troubled with irregular mew sttsratton. Prico 87 cents per box, or 8 for 81.28. All dealers, or Tr1E T. etionvaie Co., Lrxtrs), Toronto, Ont. Apple stains on IMt • hands can be re- moved by rubbing; with a Mlle lemon - juice or the imide of the nppte-peel. Rinse in clear %eat tit Neater and use no Soap, '1'o Ke.ep Soup e'en' 'Turning Sour. -- Heat to boiling point ; do nut leave in the saucepan in which it has been boiled, but turn info u clean unoovered basin,t c and set aside In cool. In the case of a severe cut try the 1111 - Mediate use of finely powileie rice or (lour to the wound. This pias been proved 0 'real success in almost slop- ping the flow of blood from a very se- vere cul. When fat splutters us it is not r io b , Ibis condition is only renchcd when it becomes guile still. If the hit Le alxso- luteiy ironing, lisle neral, or sweets may lie cooked together without iatnsnt11Iiug (heir different flavors. if (here has been anything; Iitnnl in She oven Throw salt in and Ilte smell will disappear. 1( salt is rubbed 0n silver. china, or earlhenwvaro i1 will lake off stains of tea, etc. Salt will also kill weeds if sprinkled on gravelled walks. Varnish on the hands should be re- moved with methylated spirit ; paint or lir by rubbing in butler or lard. When the :stains t, ► acvn e ' I os ncd, wipe the hands n., clean as may be with soft piper or ring, and they► gine phi nt a gout! wash- ing with 6011p utd warm wales. Use old newspapers for cleaning. They are good for window -cleaning and fist - rale for scouring tinware and polishing stoves. it pati of newspaper is kept handy by many people In case water or grouse should he spilled on the kitchen More, for it enables one to keep the sloe clean with far Tess than the usual (rouble, An old housewife. says Ilial if bacon is soaked iu waler a "few minutes before frying. Ibis will prevent. Ilse fat from running. She also says That carrots should always be cul in slices and never in cubes, ns the darker oul-idc part is richer in itavnr than 1Ite centre, and if cut in cubes some of lite cubes will he lacking in flavor in consequence. If a child, or, indeed, anyone else, rtectwcs a blow over the eye which is likely lo become black, (here is no reme- dy superior lo nor noire likely In pre- vent discoloration than buttering the parts for Iwo or three inches itrnund the eve with fresh kilter, renewing it every few minutes for Inc space of ata (tour or Iwo. This remedy is equally good for any bruise not broken. The best way ki remove grease stains front silk i, first 14) scraper off as much of Ihe grease as possible, and then to tub the spots with a cream made of fine Fr(nch elm \0(1 with lavender wider. \ex 1, Illy Iwo 1Id(knesses o1 blotting paper over the stain, and iron it with a medercd(ly-hot iron gilt Iho spots are quite dry, proving the Moiling proper once or twice, 'rite powder sh%tuld I!nnI- I� Tr Misled off with a clean handker- chief or soft brush. Leather goods, if their appearance Is to be preserved. should nal lee kept in places ghat are too dry, as the heat will cause the IeulIi'r lo erii•k. Nor in damp ptaees Iho, evil make it mouldy. To f e:hnt leather Chair seals. [ravelling hags,. book covers, etc., Ihun Irnye he - m111. sl' ably or spoiled. rub them wall Il'•• well-bAdeu while of an egg. Sole 11 ether bags are best clerineil 1 y ncnig ordinary russet shoe polish. cteanitig Ilient in the same way Ilial shoes are cleaned. '1'o prevent insects from infesting bird- cages great cleanliness is necessary. An occasion/II scrubbing with honrsehold ammonia and water will purify the cage wonderfully ; but to ter this (1110 must hnve.nnollter cage in which the hind may he kept 1111 the washed ens is iserfeetly dry again. 1t is a good pilon to keep a Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup Cures Coughs, Colds, Bronohltla, Hoarseness, Croup, Asthma, Pain or Tightness In the f Chest, Eto. 1 Tt stops that tickling in the throat, U 6 peasant to take and soothing and heal- , Ing to the lungs. Mr. E. Pi•h• p firand, the AYell•knt stn Celt gaelen.•r, writes: - I 140,1 n t t ry ' vcre at ta. k of sore throat and tichteeoi in tl:c cheat. Some tints when 1 t' ant' 1 1 ,n10711 and could ref I weal l al m" •t ''ink' to .Ira1'i . l►l to ifr gist ne a bottle :,( DR. WOOD'S R NORWAY PiNE SYRUP, and to my sur - joie., T frond speedy relief. I would w net he wit!,out it if it not 81.00 a bate 1 t1e. and I can rrmmmend it ') overload Dotbere3 with n rough nr cold. race 24 Csnt& small bag of powdered sulphur hanging in the cage. This will not herrn the bud, and will keep off Iho vermin that are apt to be troublesome in cages, coven when one Ls careful as regards nesse Grained and varnished imitations of hardwood lure best cleaned by rubbing well with chilies wrung out in lorax soap slide. never belting the wirier touch them. Arturo antis they should be rub- bed with a ttunnel barely moistened with kerosene. It there Is boo much key - 060110 11 ss111 chissolwe and 1/111. 111ee (.11 ors. Clean hut'dVeo.si with n 111uuIrl wet i•r lurpeulinr, end rub afterward, light - Iv will' boiled linseed oil. 'Take off slots with ling sand mixed in nil. Apply it with a Dialler and •t•uli with clean lea- ther fifterw•tu'ds to bring back the polish. d' - MILLIONS OF SPINDLES BOON IN I:OT[ON SPIN\I\I: IN GREAT BRITAIN. Over a hundred New Mills in Less Than a Decade Hie ►'rout on ►- Every Pound t Spun. n nd 51 un. New mills for the manufacture of cot- ton cloth are springing up like mush- rooms in the t.apcashire district, if which this city is Ilie commercial cen- tre. II is plainly apparent that the es- timates of a record crop of American cotton this year is mainly responsible for the present boom. Nearly a score of newhave s b4'en begun this year, , and u review (if the last seven years shows that more than a hundred new mills have been established in this vl- cinily. '1'lcsenw factories,e vtogether Ther withlar • �, a go number [ extensions and additions to existing mIll.s, when fully completed, will have increased the nuititifachiring capacity ofthis districtt by OVER 10,0(10.000 SPINDLES, This increase in seven years exceeds the Iola) number of existing collo, spindles in Germany, France, Russia htdja, or any other country in the world except the United Tales. it is, how aver, even greater than the total nuts Per of spindles in the Southern slates, and equal to about ('tit per Gent. of the spindlage of the Northern dales. A tabulated list of these new mills shows that about 8.,000,00(' pounds in money ($40,000,0(0) has been involved as cnpitat. The year 1905, nt the time of a record-breaking American crop saw the greatest Loom of recent years in British spinning. Forty large fiictories were added that year, but in 1902 the Increase was only two mills. One of the mills about to be opened is claimed to be Iii' quickest built still of equal cnpacily in the world. This Is the Drake spinning Mill at Forme -wilt, near Bolton. It will contain 110,000 spindles from the production of fine yarns spun from Egyptian grosvlt cot- tons. The tuilding was begun just a year ago ---it is six stories high and 30 ,4'r more windows in length -and it is slow filled with machinery and will be running sewn. It is noticeable lhat all of the new factories tire in towns around Manches- ter. rather than in the city itself. Man chester, touch to (hi' satisfaction of the majority of its residents, is becoming more of an emporium and less of an actual CENTILE OF MANUFACTURING. \\'pile all this boom in British rniton- spinning is going on the crop estimates ..' American cellon arc incrcnsing, sonic leading rutlliorilies believing that the yield thLs season will le close upon 11,- (14,003 hales, or 500A00 holes more than Iho record year of 1901-05. If this be the output, Manchester manufacturers say it will be a good Thing for the morel, for mon spindles ore going down to consume Anterlcun e+,lton. 11 is father :strange that while st'pplids all over the world ere increas- ing to n rather larger extent, prices are simullal eerisly going higher and high- er. The consumption of col kin is al its height. Every spindle in the world is running at full speed, and there 's. notably in this di.lricl, a big profit nn every pound spun. PASTOR AND PEO PRAISE 1NE (PRONOUNCED oricccN) A Marvellous and Triumphant Record of Vktory Over Disease. No medicine has ever effected as large a number of wonderful and ahnoet mar- vellous cures ae Psychine. It has had ono' continuous record of victories over diseas- es of tho throat, chest, lungs and stomach. Where doctors have pronounced tsaes incurable from consumption and other wasting diseases Psychine etepe in ands rescues numberless people even from the, very verge of the grave. Coughs, Colds,' Catarrh, Bronchitis, Chi11,, NightSweata,l i.a Grippe, Pneumonia, and other like,' treuhlee, all of which are forerunners od Consumption, yield cjuickly to the cura- tive powers of I:'sychlne. Mrs. Campbell, one of the many cared,► makes the following s en t8 '!1 t. t1t •1 1 cannot refrain from telling all who suffer, of my remarkatle recovery with esychine. Int) April. 1902. 1 caught Is heavy cold which settled: 0111.1y lungs and gradually Ind to consumption.: I could not loop, was sukjt, t to night ewe..,a, s my Lungs were,,dLscasee, my doctor eonsldereed, key. favorable. ev. SIr, Mahaffy-, Port Elect' Presbyterian Church. recommended Dr. Bloeum'sl Psyehine to me, when I was living in Ontario. After wing Peychine for a ehort time 1 ale ands w slept well, the night sweats and cough ceased. Months ago I gypped taking Psychine, as I wee, perfectly restored to health and to -day I neves' rot better ttt r in m life. Psychine e ens been a god- send Bead tU me. IS IIs. A\Da►,w L. . Cottonwood, N. W.T.I PSYCHINE never disappoints. PSYCHINE Eh has no substitute. There is no other j medicine "Just se gooAt an dealers, 50c, anti 81.00 per bottle. IS not wafts to DE T. A. SLOCUM, Limited, 179 Slag St. W., TOAOi1TO Dr. Root's Kidney Pills are a sura and permanent cure for Rheumatism 1 Bright's Disease, Pain in the Rack and: . - all forms of Kidney Trouble. 25c per box, at all dealers. ELEPHANT H NT AND ENGINE INL A 1''1GIIT TO TIDE PEAT►► ON % itell.- WAY IN INDIA. Locomotive and Sit Tony of Elephant Met (lead on - Phototrophs lo Prove It. A visitor in the Loudon oll!Ces of the Chopp-Nagpur Rnilmad of India the other day noticed a big framed picture in an obscure corner. It seemed different iron others on the walls, which were mere designs of 1 ridg..s and tricomo- lives, with plane and gradients 'on blue linen. Ile walked over and beheld six photo- graphs, eeetning to tell in interesting story. They were mounted together in one large frame. 1 e visitor 0)11.1 see un elephant uhd n train off Rte (rack. "Dere," he Drought, "is s mtelhing worth investigating. I'll ash one of the direclOT5 about it." Ile did s<,, ind this i.s Ihe story the director 101(1: "We are hurt/dam pellple,' he s gld, '8041 care little for matters outside our night of sugar and 001101(1r, silk and enter and pilgrims. not those photo- rnhs record an umtsinl event. "One September night the up mail .11 (:hnrknrdnrpore for Nagpur et 8.2e. re i, a big railroad community here, • I the renin was well found in every "Ilore were three or four piseenger ee r< a.h ,a and sent•' freight cors full r f rain, oilseeds, slone, !pine, !no, fides, Ilk, coreone and snhhol gross. There ere also a few pilgrims on Ihe'ir way .i Puri. the city of It:m;-ennui-- CURTLY F16111INO KOitt.S, ' "All ww cot w, ll tir.:.1 (.(,ilkcra station was passed nt 9.15. This is one of ottr principal timber exporting stabk,ns, especially for railroad sleepers. "Reltvccn Goilket'u and \lnnhnrpur stations our line enters n district known c,...arancn of the Seven !Mildred !ills. These hills forst the'watershed between the rivets Brahminee and Subanrika. "They are heavily limbered and the whole country is as wild as it can be. it is, in (net. one vast mass of jungle, which extends alnlost continuously from the southern portion of the Stale of l' oonghur on the soulh to the edge of the Belicht plateau on the north. "Four miles from (',oikera the line. es you can see on the neap over there, passes through the Snranda tunnel, and beyond this is a paradise of big gamo -elephant, tiger, hear, bison, .61Nttt0.1 deer and sarnbhur. From the tunnel the grade is 1 in 100 downward to filo Karo River, on the opposite side of which is a high approach blink ending in n culling. Now i am going 10 get you our. engineer's report." So saying the director produced 11 from his desk and read: "1 wens proceeding steadily down the grade at 37 mules an hour. it was a pitch dark night as 1 ran through - THlE SAit:AND:A JUNGLES. "Immediately after I hod crossed Iho Koro Bridge 1 felt a violent obstruetivo shock. 1 tried to reverse and put on my I•rakes. My engine kept the rails at first, but n few seconds Inter she was ploughing her way through the leoso granite, and previdenlially slopped on the very lip of a bank 45 feet high. "Il was most fortunate that heavy rains hnd been falling aril the w•ny %vas very soft. So my engine had no sooner left the track than she was plunged up to her nxlcs in soft earth and loose stones. "1 got down and gropeet my way hack to sec what damage had leen done. Four cars, including that of aur. F, Iho d'ptuly )otvmtol ive snptc rinlrnddntaulds, hero also dcrniled, and our broke van was badly smashed, as ills.) was one of the third class Cars (e moiling pilgr•tms. • "Mr. Foulds joined me, and so did our guard. \\'e Thought Int first there must be cattle on the llne, but we could ser nothing. We procure' Innlerns and etarrfilly examined the engine. Sud• dent• 1 heard \Ir. Faith's cry: '\Vtty. what's this:" "Ile held in Itis hand n strip of est. 1.hnnl skirt. \Ve plied our lanterns this wary and dont. and soon sow• the huge telltale pa's everywhere. And we found the spot where our enemy had rolled oter the bunk after the Ireincendous im- part. 'These heavy jungle.% are full of wild elephants. and the big Itsker who al. larked us was evidently an outcast rogue, A FEI.i.O1V OFl il.\1) 'fE\let ; .611(11 n4' those that Ierr•nrii.e Iho tillog"s, lying up In dense jungle by dna and Coating( nut only 111 night to feed and destroy houses and huntnn lite. 11 'id not Inks' much search to Md Lim. Ile lay. a ntnnstaters inert mn1ss, nni,ne the 10011114 ;vel undcrgrnwlh, and his tuighly w,'igl:I• perhaps six tans-(nllingT nearly fifty fret, had driv- en n inst hole In the soft earth. One hind leg had been cut oft,- awl there wcr•e three severe injuries to the head end should"rs. "t judged that the hug busker, Anger - cif 1/,v our nppronching Nghls and the general uprnnr of the (rain, had stood full in the track. tend Indeed had ehnrg• eel down upon us, only M secure a ter- rific stroke, which slruck him dead. Ito punlsheel its pully severity, however, for he had done dnmage to the extent ci 14,1100 rup,e4'.t rip lens(, "1 sent word M G,,ilkt•rn, six miles aw•ny, and wr an(t0 hnd n gangs of re- cruiis nt work nn the dmmagrd train. we r h,, , ,ed nut the fallen mender's i( t t 10r's frisks. and trade over the cnreass hl Iho ►e4'ml•snvng,' Kh',ls." Such one Ih.' (lirCelor's (story of the photographs. 11 is tw s6iblo for n rune In have dol. fors In his pocket wine/lit having sense in Ills head, i.yl Iwy soon get arty.