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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1907-04-11, Page 7ABSOIUTE SECRITY1 Genuine Carter's 1Little Liver Pills. Must Bear tBlgnaturo of Sae Pm -Shane Wrapper Beers. Veit•i entail and as easy (e Saks astragal:. CARTMEr. EERS FOR HEADACHE. FOR DIZZINESS. FOR BILIOUSNESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. Foil CONSTIPATION. FOIL SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION IM Bask i ='•aet7 VagttaUro. ,..W .r.G CupF netE. Many Women Suffer UNTOLD AGONY FROM KIDNEY TROUBLE. Vey often they think it is from so-called "Female Disease." There is less female trouble than they think. Women suffer from backache, sleeplessness, nervousness, irritability, and • dragging -down feeling in the loins. So do men, and they do not have "female trouble." Why, then, blame all your trouble to Female Disease With healthy kidneys, few women will ever have "female disorders." The kidneys are so closely connected with all the internal organs. that when the kidneys go wrong, everything goes wrong. Much distress would be saved if wee en would only take DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS at stated intervals. Price 50 cents per box or three boxes for $ l.2tl, nil dealers or sent direct on receipt of prise. The Doan Kidney Pill Co„ Toronto. Ont. KILLING COMMANDERS. ' F,ondemned to Death for Attempting the Inipxossible. Other limes, other manners, even in Kussin, Admiral Niebogntoff Inas, it is true, been sentenced to death for not achieving the impossible by retrieving with the shattered t•emnanis of n broken fleet itozhdest•ensky's defeat tit the bat- tle of Tsushima; but the dent ' ••enally Inns been commuted to one of en years' imprisonment in a fortress. There was no such commutation in the case of the British Admiral Ryng, who was condemned 10 death for his failure to accomplish nn equally impossible lash -the relief of Minorca tigainst over- whelming odds --and duly shot in Ports- mouth Harbor, on board his own flag- ship, by at Zile of his own marines. In ext•'nuation of this barbarous judi- cial murder it is generally snid that from that moment dale the invincibility of the British Navy. Maybe! Rut it is the feet, nevertheless, that long prior to this historical event Britain adopted similar menetds for "encouraging others" in eitinhir positions to do their utmost. For instance, so far heck ns Ihi year 1703 Captain Kirby. of H.M.S. Defiance, and Captain Wade, of 11.%I.S. Greenwich, were executed after a pike fashion on the quurter-eleck of H.M.S. Bristol in Ply- mouth Sound. their offense biting n lack of zeal in not sufficiently supporting Admiral Renbew when that grim old sea• dug at1nrkid the French fleet under Du (:asst off Jamaica. In the sister service, trio, things stere Hutch the sante. Neither Marlborough nor Willington Ihotlght twice about hay. j Ing an officer shot for proved incapacity. And the French, it will be remembered. itentenced Marshall Razaine to death for surrendering Metz le the Germans, so Isle as 11174. Ile escaped his punishment, it is True, nail ,lest peacefully in this bell in Madill, whither he hail Ile.t from his persecutors. Rud tint his (lid so was due to the brnvery and devotion of his noble - hearted stilts. and not to any eonhpunc- tlon fell Inwards hint by the Government of the Republic. ILBURN'S: HEART nNf> NE RVE PIL -)r2 WEAK PEOPLE - Are a True Heart ionic, Kerte Feel and Bleed Enricher. They erne op sal renew ail the wore est and wast -0 Usa•ea el tke body, and restore perfect h.ait1 Mil ester to the enure ereeetw, N.rvesseeaa, 5leeplettees., Nervous Pr'.. ranee,. Brain Fat. lack et Vttstlty, Al. re tfectt of Is Gripe.. Anemia, %week end 11.r� Spellal.of of 'lrraory, !'alp, aitch of Os Mort Leos el !nervy,shortness of Beast% etc.. cant ail be cared by nein Milbarn's Newt and Nerve Pills. 1?rieepe at>eeor3hxft.Y... A'1dealervor ??�. Misavaa Go., Lauren. lambs, Us III LEARNING TO LIVE If We Grew Up to Be Good It Was Due Either to Accident or to Miracle. ilappy is Ibe man filet 11ndeth wisdom and the "hon Iluti geticth understand- ing. -Prov. tri., 13. Literally the text says that he is hap- ly who , draws forth understanding, who is edu.-nted through living. With al, our learning the greatest lesson be- fore us Is this one of living tight, of fir:ding our full heritage and filling our places as men and women in this world. If our systems of nine:dein fail to teach us how to live they fail altogether. The great need of our day is that we shall train the conscience to right mor- al judgment, that we shall educate all for the business of living, and That we shall SO educate all that we shall nol only have n generation of bright, smart, moneymaking or lawmaking machines, but that we nuty twee clean, upright, truth loving. self -reverencing, God fear- ing then and women. There is little likelihood that Canada will fail for lack of abaitity to do busi- ness. We have brains and we have brawn. Never was there, on the whole, a healthier people nor a more intelli- gent. The danger is that we shall fail at the point of character; that we shall fail where failure is falai to every other kind of success. TIIIS 1S THE CRUCIAL. POINT. \\'e do well to perfect the plans ny which we teach sten the encyclopedia el their bodies, their country, the world and its history. But wo cannot forget, ah:d recent events have reminded us with a terrible note of warning, That no amount of knowledge constitutes any sort, even the feeblest kind, of gtaran- tee as to rectitude of life. If you neglect Ute heart, the will, and con,science, if you neglect the knowledge of and traitli ig in right relations with sten, reverence .and right relations to the most high,yiwr culture of the Intel - !eel is worse than waste; it is the per- fecting of the poison of our social life; 11 is the whetting of the edge of a man's venally and grossness. Above all things, the most desiranle is that then shall love truth and hate a lie, that they shall love honor and truth so inuch more than fame, power, or possessions that never for an instant will these weigh in the scale against the former. But for long it has been thought that This choice !lower of no- bility grew by chance; the culture of the s.:ul teas so mysterious as never to 1'•• brought under scienlilic 1uw, The realm of character has been tier last to cone under the reign of late. New we recognize that we must learn la live as Iruly as we MUM learn to rear, and that the culture of the soul must prulll by the wondrous stride, that all educational science has 1118.1e: that all our efforts to produce cl►arac- 1 , must be so w.sely tliretcted Iltat we slutll leeu'e the best and most endur- ing results. One message conies front the lips t every seer, from every page of history. It is that the man or the nation alone i: wise, ALONE FIDS ENDURING LIFE, who sets before commercial supremacy or political power or fame in learn- ing the glory of righteousness, tee beau- ty of practical holiness... Their wealth lies beyond corruption and their days know no end who are wise and rich in the things within. The greatest service we can render our day Is by giving it the riches of worthy living, by setting before our- selves the production of high character through all life's processes of learning. and by bringing in every way we may .te an age engrossed in selfishness and commercialism the significance of the call of character. No wonder it sometimes seems to us that the have forgotten to smile; that our faces are se drawn with the tense struggle of life that we have lost sight o' the meaning of happiness. flow can we be happy unless we shall set our whole live; in harmony with the things that are fundamental and eternal? We must learn to order our lives, nit n; machines to be driven in the money mill at the top of their efficiency, but as port of the great life of the spiritual world, as inheritors of things divine, sublime, and glorious, ns lxesscssors ..f the joy that made the morning stars sing together and the beauty that paints the evening red. HENRY F. COPE. THE S. S. LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON. ARIL 11. Lesson 11. God Gives Jacob a New Name. Golden Text: Luke 10. 20. TIIE LESSON WORD STUDIES. Rased on the text of the Revised \'er- sem. Jacob in Ilaran.-The sojourn of Jacob in Ilaran is of importance in our his- torical narratives at this point because of the fact that i1 was here that his eleven sons, from whom descended the twelve tribe, of Israel, were born. Mention is also made of the birth of a daughter, Dinah, to Leah, the first and older wife of Jacob. Jacob's life in Ilaran is im- portant also because here he acquired independent wealth, which later greatly augmented the inheritance which he re- ceived from his father, ;snow. 'Che ac- count of the birth of Jacob's sons is found in Gen. O. 31 to 30. 31, where the meaning of the name of each is ex- plained. The ramie. of the eleven sorts horn in (loran in the 9rder Of their birth and the meaning of each name as given in the narrative are as follows : Reuben, meaning Sce ; a son ; Sint - eon (fel'. "Shhneor"1. meaning he (Jehovah) bath heard ; Levi, meaning a joining or binding; Judah. meaning the celebrated; Dan, meaning he hath jrdgel ; Naphlali, meaning sty wrest- ling; Gad. meaning fortune; Asher. meaning happiness; Isiucttar, meaning to will bring reward ; Zebulon, meaning hnhito1inn ; Joseph meaning adding, or the added one. There is an ethical side 10 our narra- tive bmugh( cul especially in the men- tion of such incidents its the struggle of Leah and Rachel for their husland, which illustrates Indirectly the evils of it.lygumy and the jealousies and rival- ries to which it gites rise. . ue character of Jnculas uncle, Labatt. as portrayed in these chapters is anything but nitrite - live. !lis shrewlnc"s, duplicity. and nc- quIsitivenese are inherited by hi, laugh- ters and reflected els„ in tie action of its sister Jacob's mother. Self-interest and unparlanable deceit are conspicuous irnits in his character. Lnbnn:s Ireat• men( of Sarin, naturally has a bearing ori sur estinwle of Jaa,W:s behavior towards It !Attain n t ho first hostiles his uncle. 1 i . t 1 w li. ,Ili it is milli with J t t and I Blit tl the chief offender ; and it seems fair to infer that had 1.41lsui ;rented Jacob hon - telly and generously lace& would net linve lawn guilty of practicing deception against !tint. see - e e. My father ,\broharn -'Chis Alit -ace Throws light on the use of the Nates "(weer- and ".on" in the (ltd Testament. The (caner Las often the meaning )(imply of "atwealor," n, the latter has the meaning id "descetulmtt." The beating of this fact upon the chew nelogy of the (Ill Testament in tthive 11►e tepee of lion' 1• couWe'.1 Icy genera• lions. is. apparent. : least mite me. Itttutii- '1'!te` ,,prof command of Jeiotnla le Jami is given In le ;11. 3. (Inc remai kalda trait el old - :intent heroes i;* their leant of anti- -wiling r,11 mese..,, anditers celiiet•ee- f, men!. evc•t the l't nte/ttllg, to good and m'ttahh• me.t ,taking•, to the direct enderee met teeital're of J. -ht alt. while the eel,- ewe ,' tit pr•tetice \torkmg to 'h••• 1.ey !him;: nl'..nl ne itdns- .. rete n- if tit ,I'taellae'el tin Ihril L•. I aa, Imo worthy -Jacobs prase( breathes a spirit of humility and thank- fulness, and presupposes a consciousness of sin, while not containing a direct con• fession of such. There is in the prayer n. clear note of penitence for the deceit by which Jacob bud once grievously thronged his brother. .11. Deliver ate, I pray thee -the re- quest following so closely upon the ac• latot•ledgment of unworthiness betrays the element of selfishness, the instinct toward self-preservation inseparable, perhaps, from the nature of any normal man. The mother with the children -A pro verbial Ilebrew expression. 12. And thou saidsl, 1 will surely do Thee goad --it is clear from incolis in• sistence in claiming the promise pre• viously made to hint by Jehovah tial that promise, referred to in Gen. 31. 3, was certainly more titan a mere trental impression 'or inner conviction that. God would prosper hire. A definite revela- tion and communication of some kind from Jehovah trust have been vouch. stated him. After pleading thus earnestly for di- vine assistance Jacob again proceeds to slake all possible provision for n favor- able oucome of tae itnpendtng sleeting with his brittle -le sending largo presents of flocks and herds in advance to ap- pease If possune the ringer of Esau, rhos, 113 in the lives of most Old Testament heroes. here also fitlh and emits tnani• fest themselves together. 22. And passed over -He probably ac- companied his family to a place of safely eta the other side of the stream end then recrossed alone to the place of his ter- mer enclunptnent. The wording of the narrative nt this point, at least in Eng- lish, is a little ambiguous (comp. lite t'xpresskms "sent them over the stream" and "was left alone,' verses 23, 21). The fowl of the Jabtnk-The Jabbok flow:, into the Jordan from the east about twenty -live utiles north of the Dead Sea and only a fe'w• ntite..nulh of the Sea of Galilee. For al least ttenly-live or thirty miles of il. coulee buck from the Jordan it flows through it deep chasm. or canon, with sleep and Lofty -Ides and with only here and there a possible forehng place. The ford herr referred le Stns in all pro - liability ane about three miles east of the J.ordan, 'by %which one of the cus- tomary refutes from Palestine to the northeast still cn,s,e`s the stream. 21. There a resited n men with hint-- \ heeve'nly 1'silan! in Intntan 101'rn, w•h.ese identity 1, nal Italy revealed to Jowl. 2:r. Ifolluty of his thigh- That is, the st•ekel of ht- Ihtlth Ione, r , tall o el t„wept. • 3f, I all II e e tet e . \t a ,l Iho 11 1 hues. me- Jew!) perceives now dint the person \viiia ahem 11 ha, been wrest - more then mortal and seizes the iteportunily to ask of hien it blessing. 2e. No there beide loll Isl'nel-es s0 often in his dealings wall) his chosen representatives among min. Jehovah emplieeizes the special crisis in Jacobs life and the renewal of a Premise of future blessing by a change ut nettle. 11 this case the change is from a Heats meaning "1 he supptanhr" to elle hell - eating hie succes:'ful wrestling will, God, end suggeetiwt' else of his sltcee'ss in Ilte approaching etteoun1er tt th Lem. Striven with Gott and with then, and hest prevaitted -- Jacob's persevering wrestling in prayer milli Jehovah is just endrvl. lint +thng men elect he hos per- s.`%rred in the past. His contest with l,alenn tine turned owl favorable to hint; and while flint with Bann is not yet sums to nn end, still the swords "hest prevailed- are worts of genet nmeen for tit successful outcnntt' e.f this encounter nt•o. tt, Peniel-Lit. "the ince of !loot," ell tltat can le. said will, regard to the' site of this pin , wt na•nternble nt the lite of Jacob, al if ao eeutbt..lical of victory in do.' Does Your FOOD Digest Well ? When the food is imperfectly digested the full bonetit.ii not derived from it by the body and the purpose of eating is de- feated ; no matter how good the food or how oarefully adapted to the wants of the body it may be. Thus the dyspeptic often becomes thin, weak and debilitated. energy is lacking, brightness, snap and vita arc lost, attd in their place come dullness, lest appetite, depression and langour. It takes no ;rest knowledge to know when one hat indigestion, some of the following sy-uip- ents generally exist, viz.: constipation. tour storuaoh, variable appetite, headache, heartburn, gas in the stomach, etc. The great Flint 13 to cure it, to get back bounding health and vigor. BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS Is constantly effecting cures of dyspepsia because it ants in a natural yet effective way upon all the organs involved in the process of digestion, removing all clogging impurities and malting easy the work of digestion and assimilation. Mr. R. 0. Harvey, Ameliasburg, Ont., writes: " I have been troubled with dye. pepsia for several years and after using three bottles of Burdock Blood Bitters I was completely curvet. 1 cannot praise B.B.B. enough for what it has done for nae. I have not had a sign of dyspepsia sines." Do not accept a substitute for B.B.S. Morels nothing "just as good." every soul -struggle of God's children to- day. is that it must have been some- where to the north of and near the ford of the Jabbeih referred to earlier in the narrative. THE MIDDLE AGED .'MAN, Dull Ills Lite Might Seem to the Young, But It Yields Him Enjoyment. "1 find as 1 grow older," said 'he middle aged man, "that 1 ant more and more a creature of routine. "\Vtlen I was a young ratan routine Irked me and 1 liked variety, but now it is change that irks ate. 1 like now le do my appointed work in the regular way, always the same and to spend sty leisure hours in like manner. "My work is routine and 1 would not have it varied if I could; in fact. vary- ing it %would upset ate more or less. As it is I work along through the day ty regulnr, successive stages, coming at- Ivays to the same things tit certain regular hours and minutes, and at night i go home at a fixed hour, pees the same buildings, the sante show wtudows, the sante signs, the same everything, to ley home. "Tiresome? Quite the contrary. Some: tittles somewhere along my route they pill in a new storm front or Some one sells out and it new tenant comes in and it new sign goes ftp, and really these things interest me very much be- cause they happen in my streets. -Really Iliese things seem quite like events to me, and they are all the events 1 want. "Then when I get home I 'to eujov my dinner -for That matter. in sty way. I enjoy everything- and after dinner i like to sit down, always in the sante chair, find smoke and read, and here, again. I confess, I don't like to be dis- turbed. "1 get my • mind fixed and my enjoy- ment started on whatever I am rend- ing, and 1 don't like to be inlerrupte.l. Somebody speaks to me and 1 turn lo the speaker, but it must be with a little vagueness; certainly I don't fully un- derstand what the speaker has said. When they see that look they say good humnardly: "'Oh, pct him read.' "Whereat i politely protest, with now every evidence of attention; bub They say kindly: 'Oh, go on with your reading,' and they mean 1 shall do so, for el my age 1 ant a privileged !tote '. "Sometimes They try to get me to go 1.1 n concert. Nott•, 1 like a concert, hid I don't like to go, becnu.e the going breaks in on my routine; and then they lantglt at hie and call nto an old fogy and leave me !mole; and really lint AuilS Ise hest, because 1 do like to get to bed cninfortally at my regular hour nntl gel my regular night's sleep. tits Ilse routine life soils me best. True. if all men were tike ills there w•nulit he no progress; but 1•'1 the rest - !este yunng popple Miele! 1.1 That. in\1 nnrr..w view•, Ihlfls,s1r; rinfidrth the ps osnld, t sent-, sly Think sel- s. 1 grnw the snore do I think ihnl na- trre is very kine) to us in letting us fln.l within such narrow but Mellon). limits very great enjoyment." A I'IlEFEt1E\i E. The work was over for Ihi any, and .' e 'feast\tlllell the farmer t,1 e 1l I 1 r K' • th'• r was go ing to all hu farm hands 11about t , coutnienct'. plus tette flilltd about e\eryt-here85, do• tag her l.ea to !Mike es eremite feel 1,01.. folly al h„tate, rind. in order to be,ttw especial honor on the head men, she grete•inusty 1111 lied line to sit on her tight hand. Itil1 Itrondb'y, however, remained bileni for imbibe 10 all appearances quilt' owerthchued with this token of esi ee1►L "(fume," said the Met '-s encouraging• Iv. "dun" be bashful, funic a right to the place of honor, yeti know." "Many thanks, Mrs. mind Farmer Gotel- ntnn," he said ; "but if its all the sante I:e you, I'd rather sit opposite Ilam pttd• etre." "\liss Short sit): she's thirty, int len sere she is the tt .,:1, every year of 11.' •'\\'ell, you are•. Abe W13 six before elle learned to count." Cassidy : "thefts, Casey. heat': Thine. tt al ye (hese days'" Casey . "Oh, busy. eery busy. indnde.'' Cassidy : "le don -1 1.11 me!" 1 Ltse•y : ".\} r. Sure I% ry lune 1 m at laysure I hov sonlettun' to p414444440641**114141414 The Home 44 SOME DAINTY DISIli:.S. (linger Snaps.-- Bub a quarter of a 'pound of butler or dripping into (),x) pseud utd of 11<1tr, a1141 httf a pound of sugar, half a pound of warmest Treacle. awl one leaspxmful of carbonate of da di„()tett in hot stater. When all a, well Hexed per on a bullerrd tin, and lake in a steady oven. Roiled Apple Pudding. -- Chop finely half a pound of apples. half r► p enilel of heat suet, and mix t\ith half at pound of breadtruuibs, two owetes of flour. n quarter of a pound of !typist sugar, Iwo eggs, and, if necessary, a very little intik. Boil steadily in a well -greased mould for three hours. Serve with sweet melted Millet• sauce. Stewed Cheese. -Take four ounces of grated cheese, which has become too hard and dry for table use. Set this in a slewPun with one gill of nett' iitilk,half an ounce of butter, and stew the whole ti 1 it is dissolved. \e Ilea it is nearly cold add a beaten egg. Set in a pie -dish, and brown in the oven, Inexpensive Icing for (sakes.--'l'hor- ouglily beat the white of an egg, add to it one tablespoonful of toll water, and stir into it gradually sufficient sugar to Ilticken it, I,ay this on the cake and smooth it tt-itlt a knife dipped into boil- ing water. Set the cake in a- cool oven to dry. This icing cuts easily without breaking. Griddle Cakes. -'Puke half a pound of line oatmeal and add to it one teaspoon- ful of sugar and the mune of baking weeder, with a pinch of salt. Mix all :hese together, then beat into it enough skint milk, or butter milk to ntake a light bailer, and bake by spoonfuls spread on Me griddle, or on the baking sheets in the oven. Care should be taken that either is very clean and slightly greased. Savory Shoulder of Mutlott,-!tone a small shoulder of mutton, and place ration stuffing in the cavity. 11011 up the meal and make it into a firm roll. Slice turnips, carrots, and celery, and place in a baking tut with one pint of stock. Stand the meat on the vegetables, cook gently till thoroughly done, basting fre- quently, Dredge the treat well with flour, so that it will be frothed, and serve with the strained gravy round. Salt Beef liagoul.-Take some slices of cold boiled beef, two onions, a table- spoonful of vinegar, and half n pint of gravy. Slice the onions fist, and fry in •a little dripping, adding enough flour to thicken the gravy, \\filen all is a nice brown, stir in Ilte vinegar and gravy, and toil up. Place the slices of meat in this. and sinister gently till tender, fla- vor with a little ketchup and innde mus- tard. Have ready some well -(roiled and mashed turnips, nrrange a border of Larder of this around a dish, so as to forth a wall, pour the rollout in the centre. Garnish the dish further, if you like, with slices of hard-boiled egg. 'Ifo make Brawn. -Required : One pig's helot, two sheep's tongues, a leasptxon- ful of chopped sage, some finely chop- ped parsley, pepper and sill to taste. Well \cash the head fn salt and water t, remove the blood. rub the head w•illt common salt, end leave it for three days. ridding a little fresh salt every day. Put the head In a steepen, just cover it with cold water, and lel it simmer unlit quite fender. Then remove the bones from the meat ; cut up the meat into stnttll pieces and the tongue in slices. aid mix in the Chopped sage, parsley, pepper, and salt. Place all inn and pour over it half a pill of the ,lock in which the head w•8s coked. using n little coloring 10 make it a dark brown. Dripping Ceti:,. -The quantities for this are about six ounces of beef dripping t l one petund of flow•, a pinch of salt, and half 0 pint of cold staler, while many like to add Minot half a teaspoon- ( ll of baking pewdcr, tvlticlt, however, should not be added till the lint thing. Place Ilte fentr in it clean. dry liewl and add the salt, Rub this dripping in as described, snake n hole in the centre, and add the water graihttlty. Mix with Int' knife till all the emir gradually is incorporated -elite 1.utt•l should be quite clean anti dry -then their your hands and fill on to a clean, flowered pastry board. Knead lilt it kooks nice and smaMlh ; then flour the rolling pin and toll out lightly to the required size and shape, Itcf..r.e culling pt1.10' always put the knife in (lour. HO1V Tte MAKE .e el1Ii1T\\.\1ST, 'fie 'linking of the unlined shirtwaist or Mouse is very simple if the proper at- tention Is given In the little details. 11 ii must impxlrinnt That the 1.81111ti t,te laid according to the thread of the ma- terial. especially in waist' 1. t't t -.. Shirltwnisls are . usually unlined. al- though those of .irk and Ilatew1 are s4nt''IimeS made twilit a lining. I! the shitettat,l cyst's in the hone the right edge is generally Iho-.sl by n lox plait stitched on each edghe. Ilul- tonledee are worked Ihreugh the emir'. 1 e . sewe of this Bait, and I all cls .wit .I In Ihi left side, which is hemmed or finished be a lap.. French seams ore nese and tee genesis are put in nt the waist lint tweet•ding to the fterfor+tlion. in Ilse prel- t.•rit. The bell and plum that i. Hutt ne..I 141 fetish Ilse (ewer edge Ile away wilts any u1)tl d .n t} althea'. htk,ty the a hist and girt n trim appearourr and snhoe,tlt fit over the hips, Tit ranking of the sleeves is usually con'tdered ly the amateur a, the most difficult pare of the waist. Fire( the sleeve lining ►nn -I be accurately cul and haslet. care being Inken Ilutl the tor rr:pn0ndnage toteh•'• colas lop;ethrr. and in then tiro a 1" sit' Ileal Ilse theft i. Ile right 1 t,,ilinn. After the •,rune %r e sltlehed and presetel they •;toe,hl It' leitutd with the scent Lindmg. \n inlrr- lining of t'rineline 111,0111 Itvo 111A14“4 tvah .should Ixe pliteed in Ili' lutt'tr .Ig.', IM sttt•iug the shewe5 in Ih urtnlndr. hold the %%nisi so teat Ihi sl' '%e i, ',mind you and bind 11 i11, a lea • ship ed the lining. U'SI•:FUL. III\ I'S, \lis 81411e blarking twill. 1 in• _nr•; (lois eel make the Wareing .51ic1, 1'••11,'.•, end etbo gives a better p.c.ti&h. - TWENTY-FIVE YEARS' SUCCESSFUL RECORD MONEY can buy advertising ,pace, but it can't buy a quarter century's s sucxestni record of wonderful and allncet miraculous cure . of the moot difficult and intricate cases of throat, lung and stomach troubles. Such is 1'eychine'a record. Thousands of gees given up by leading doctors tier hopelees and incurable have been quickly at'1 ter- ntanently cured by Psychine. It is an infallible remedy for coughs, eolde, bronchitic, pneumonia, consumption, indigestion, loss of appetite and all malting digeasea "My sou hada terrible cough and was wanted to a shadow. 1, ,,tors Bald he could not live. He used Psy- chine, it cured him." -Mrs J. ltang- ert Brockville. ' After taking $1S.CO worth of Pay- chine aychine my lunge are well null 111a is again worth living." --Mn L Rich- ards, Marriott, Cove, N.B. "1iy Lungs are now Bound as Abell. atter using Psychine-"-H. Robbins,, liridgeburg, Ont. "Psychic's eared my Itfe."-A.Wa1-' den, 7 Cornwall Bt., Toronto. Psychine Never Falls Psychine has no Substitute AT ALL DEALERS, ace end $1.00 A BOTTLE OR. T.A. SLOCUM, Limited, 179 King St. W., Toronto. To prevent cheese from becoming mouldy or dry wrap it inn cloth dam- pened with vinegar and keep it in a covered dish. Starch and iron wide faint -wicks and wicks for oil stoves. 'Cltey will not then cause trouble in fitting there into the burners. Every saucepan that has leen used and flni-lted with should be tilled wilt cold water a lump of soda put into it, and set to boil out. \Viten an exlinguislter is not used in pulling out a candle, the best way is to blow it upwards. It will their neither smoke nor smoulder. To avoid the usual flat taste peltliar t) boiled water, pour it several limes from one jug to another, in order to let the air pass through it. For tired feet put a handful of com- mon salt into a quart of hot water, and while it Ls as hot as can be borne place the feet in il. Afterwards rub dry with a rough towel. Egg -stains may he removed from spoons, caused by using them with soft- boiled eggs, by Inking a little comnton salt between the thumb and linger and briskly rubbing the stein, Which will stxtn disappear. • The efficiency of n water filler may be tested by pasing through it a solution of Condy's Fluid (ten drops in n pint of water); if it comas out of the filter with any pink color or any taste it is a proof that the filler does not acj, at all, and that it cannot arrest the gertns of dis- ease; if it comes out a yellow or brown color it shows that the tiller poisons tho water. THE 11i: SNF ST MAN. flow Cy Matthews Treated a Han Who Saved Ills Barn. 'Che pioslmaster and propriclor of the general store glanced disparagingly after the retreating back of the last man t, receive his mail, and painstakingly adjusted a toppling lin that crowned it tower of tomato -esus, 'Jaen be drawled leisurely to his one lingering costumer Fes that feller that jest went out? He's• the meanest man to the county ; yes, sir I Show nu' a meaner man Than Cy Matthews and Ell advise hint In peal into it dime museum to tarn ttis living as a freak, 'l'wai., last summer, 'pout the middle o' the Tung drought, he and eleliudy went ()ter to his married sera's to stay the day mut overnight. Well, maiotly knows jest bury it dune stmt, -tramps. most like,-- lul the burn got afire whilst they was gone. Joe $allerieo drove by early, starting into town on his mills -route, and he saw the blaze just beginning. Well. there wa'n't any help auywhee s nett. and the well twits dried up, so there tenni any water. either, nearer Than Smith's crick ; telt Joe. hes real re- ...ureeful, au' he saw with everything dry as tinder. the \\•hole place was bound I,. go 0 sulking wane done quick. So out he lumps an' p.itr, on mills 1111 lie peat it out --took every drop he had in the tt•r,gon. but he squcncleed the last flicker 'fore he left. \Nell, you'd kind e.' '-peel i:y Mnllhcws ttould hu' its n grateful, considering notw, wouldn't y e? But he wen". n'L Said ewes jest sensational, pulling out fire, at we rente it quart ; seusrllitn, tinct nary • er d u 1 ha paid Ili o' ,. Said 1 taut n I g \'81110 of Joe', 4141 boa.-ttlnnkct s.tItingly ,; Joe'd brat the Tire cul like heel oughte'r; lea n wngitn-load o' milk -no 1 Ile didn't either. Jur s.•orntvl to go to law for it, and '!ttould ha' been it dead Ica if rill his cuslonet'r- hadn't wen so It.gu,lil at (:y Moe paid jest as natal fn:• the milk they didn't get, \\.•11, everything's good In utmelhinpf. ••, my wife says. Meta.. Cy !Matthews is good for scoring off other folks from be - inti ns ntenn as Ire POOR 1- EI.LO\\' ' "Aly husband." sal.l Mrs. Gadabout, "it so careless shout hi, clothes. 1115 Willow: are forever Coining off" "1'erhapt, suggtal(4l Mrs. Knot, "they're not sewed on ter) well in (he first prince." "I hit's Just It. IM s dreadfully 14 lip - •11(,(1 eland his hewing. ' (Inc of the 111`31 IV'., of ttetEdcniel tS II. m ing en:retia the teen e'f soya:a har.h things of Whets. Slit \\'ILLItel RUSSELL. Reproached for Being a Dandy by the King of Greece. i'he late Sir William Howard Russell, the doyen of war correspondents, once confessed that the most unenviable posi- tion in which lie was ever placed was brought about by a little joke on the part of the King of Greece, \Vhen Sir William accompanied King Edward -- then, of course, Prince of Wales -to In- dia in 1b75 as private secretary, they stayed at the Palace in Athens. Desir- ing to have a talk with the fatuous war correspondent, the King of Greece made an appointment for half -past six the fol- lowing morning in the garden. During the night Sir William was much troubled with the mosquitoes, which bit hire badly about Ute hands end m•ms. Happening to have a pair of white kid gloves in his bag, he put them on, but overslept himself in consequence of his broken sltnntbers, "I awoke in the morning," said Sir William, when relat- ing the incident, "with the knowledge of having somebody by my bedside. It was the King, accompanied by his big dog. It was half -past six. I sal. up in bed. 'In half an hour, Mr. Russell,' said the King, smiling, as he left the room, '1 shall come back for you,' At brenkfast that morning, during a moment of silence, the Ding, addressing the Queen, with a sly glance in any direction, said, 'Well, I've tact a great ninny dandies in my tirne, but Mr. Russell IoeaLs them all. Ile actually sleeps in white kid gloves!' COURTSHIP iN !HOLLAND. "The Hollanders havo .one peculiar custom that ought to appeal to llto bash- ful young then of America who find leap years loo far apart," says Joan von I,eeur•in of Amsterdam. "When a fel• low picks out the girl he intends to marry he goes to see Iter for n few limes, and then ono evening puts on his 'court- ing dress, a gorgeous Derangement, 'tended down from falter to son for generations. Thus arrayed he calls on his chewier, and together they sit down before a fire. Of course the girl can tell at n glance from the amount of finery displayed by her ix'tut Ilial he has de. cided to. learn his fate, but she doesn't give hire any sign That she is wise. They sit and talk about the most corn;, tnonpinu+ !hinge until the fire dies down, Then 0 the girl gels tip and puts on more fuel the matt knows that lie is tic• ceptel. If, on the older hand, she al- lows the blaze to die out entirely mind m el e, no move to replenish it the 1111• (011 swain unuerslitnds that she is giving hint the twenty-three. There is nu use trying to persuade the maiden. It she doeetet put on inotee wood the man (night as well lake his that and go." Ire a gond deal easier to give a men money than to give tint charily when his name is at Make. DR. WOOD'S 1 NORWAY PINE SYRUP Stops the Irritating cough, loos- ens the phlegm, soothes the in- flamed tissues of the lungs and bronchial tubes, and produces a quick and permanentcure In all cases of Coughs, Colds, Bron- chitis, Asthma, Hoarseness, Sore Throat and the first stages of Consumption. elite. Norma Swan.ton, Cargill, Ont.. writes : "1 take great pleasure in recom- mending Dr. Wood's Norway Pine llyrup. I had a very bad cold, could not sleep ab night for the coughing and bad pains is ray cheat and lungs.` I only used half a bottle of Dr. Wood's Norway Pin* Syrup esti was perfectly well again." Pelee BS «mai a ftsnls.