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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1907-08-08, Page 3• ..t CURE Illek *aadache and relieve all the troubles Mad- dest to • bilious 'Woof the system. such as propos, ]Nausea. Droweiuea., Distress after eating. Fain in the Silo Le. While their most sa0ashablesuccess has been shown in outing SIC BMdaeb♦ yet Carter'. Little Liver Pills ars equally valuable in Constipation. coring and pas. venting thteannoytnacomplslnt.whlie the else correct all disorders of t he a t or•acb,sttmulst. the Jiver regulate tate bowels. iron if tbey only HEA Asia they would be almost priceless to thew who Mae front this distressing complaint; but torts. mat* tbeirsopdnessdoes notend ke»,and those whs ekss try than will and those little pills valu- able is so many ways that they will not be wit - ha (a without them. But atter all sick bead ACH the base oe .o many lives that hers to where we stake our great boast. Our pills cure it while ethers do not. 2tir$.r'. WU laver Pills are very mall and very es r to take. One or two pills makedoe,. %ay are strictly vegetable lid do not gripe or perm but by their gentle action plass all who UM Uig= 1111211113111 O0.. FIT TOOL sa_maa. rni. as Weak and Bun llown - WOULD VERY OFTEN FAINT AWAY Mrs. J. H. Armstrong, Port Elmaley, Oat., tells of her experience with MILBURN'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS. llhe writes : "It is with gratitude I felt how your Heart and Nerve Pills beaefltted inee. "I was very weak and run down, had headaches nearly every day and very often would faint away, in fact, my doctor said that sometime I would never come out of the faint. It was through nae of your travelling agents that I was i>sdu to try Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills and after taking three boxes I am glad to relate it has been a number of years since I had a fainting spell and scarcely ever have • headache. Too Mauch cannot be said in praise of Mil - burn's Heart and Nerve Pi1L, for in me they have effected a perfect cure." d Price 50 cents per box or 3 boxes for $1.25, at all dealers, or The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. POINTED I':1ii.1GBAPIIS. Beware of mad dogs and 1 ackb►ting eopi(. It's us(1t-ecs to forgive an injury if you Ain't forget it. There are many large talcs connected with small fish. When some people fell the truth others are unable to recognize it. Slane men are so nice to their Wives that it arouses the suspicion of their neighbors. The peach crop will probably be .. failure_ this yvnr. 'Phis docs not apply to ttte milliliter girl. It (14). sill necessarily follow that 'i marl is any good Piet because lies vs good as his word. Of course it is nh-ent-lnin(iness when you forget, but it is gloss negligence • when your wife fe►rgets. About being carried away with 4.n- thusiasnt the worst feature is that we nearly nlways have to walk back. Never judge 11 nl11n 1ey the patches "n hat- ckillie . Perhaps he had to filly spring • :Allis for a wife and seven daughters. Don't place te)o much confidence in a mon whio boasts of 1 eing ns hornet as the day Is lung; wait until you meet i►irn at flight. A Grand Cure FOR SUMMER COMPLAINT AND CRAMPS 1• Dit. FOWLER'S EXTRACT OF - WILD STRAWBERRY It is nature's specific for Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Cramps, Colic, Pain in the eIsmacb, Cholera Morbus, Cholera b- faatoar, Bea 8ichoose, Sommer Com- ylaist, etc. Rapid and reliable in its action. Its effects are marvellous, and it is pleasant and harmless to take. It has boss • household remedy tot apathy -two years. Rehm substitutes. They are danger- Ot�' i firs. Wm. Fleweiling, Arthur, Ont., etreittes : "I find it much pleasure to likecommend Dr. FOWLER'S E1tnucr of • WILD 8T1Awl$URRT Y • grand cure for Ennemer Complaint. My tittle boy, one roar old, was very bad with it, and • few dose cured him. I also used it on my War sin &dren los «amps and still • • love boli 1 battle lett. 1 asset praise <r. TBE LIFE AMONG MEN Christ's Passion for Humanity Is Evidence of His Divinity. "I and among y(eU as one that eerv- ett."-r.ukt xxii., 27. One of the defects of the Average re- ligious man is that he seldom is a 1;0041 ti.ixer. 110 either lacks the ability to r.,ake himself genially at twine with hi, fellows, or he fears that smelt inter- course would involve spiritual cull- tr,p►irlalion. The monastic, ascetic Spmr- it of separation still too generally pre- vails. 13ut here in this one, who is the ideal 0t the religious roan, was one wino, while filled with 1lloughts of God, breathing a spiritual atmosphere, a being to whom lt,ings (living were far more real turn hey are to us, still chose to live among r;:eel; wile. seeming to belong to nn - other world, deliberately chose to stay i11 this or;e, %rho steadily sought to !nix with c(eiiiinon people. \fang have tried to establish his di- vfnity by showing that Le CLI110 into this world in a peculiar manner. They are missing tho point. itis divinity manifest in the way he lived in .he world, by his residence here rather Hsi] by any arguments as to his origin Beim over there. Ile lived, ate, and slept with people, with the poor, the needy, with working- men; Ile broke bread with 'I'11E HUNGRY MULTITUDE. or dined with the rich. it was alt one to Hun whether they wore purple or coarse linen, whether they reclined at banquet tables or ale the, fish fresh caught and broiled by the lakeside. Ills passion for humanity is evidence (f His divinity. Ile loved meet more Ilan creeds and ceremonies, forms and traditions, inslilutions or customs. Ile si)attercd ancient laws to (lo good to one poor needy being. Ile would ra- ther look into the face of a fellow be- ing_ at any lime than listen to a serirwn, or even to the songs of angels. The religious leaders of His dry se- verely denounced ibm because Ile ap- parently \'vis what wo WouId Call a "good fellow." His presence gave cheer to any company. He chased the clouds and gloom from faces and hearts. \len renewed Ilu11 b:causo looking into His ('yes they saw there a new light, and hepe, and love. Velma! mla! re'lig:e►n in His clay haled 1lint btcause His religion was SO simple,%I- ll.!, practical, and of the present. To Han it was something to bo mixed with 1.f•• all the way eking, sonretliitg With which to permeate the whole and not a thing separate, icmnote. and occasional. 11 aa: the habit and the trend of His life rapper thanany series of acts el'atlitudie. He knew no better way to express His religion, or of Oleg itis life for religi- eus ends than that of simply living with Ilis fellows, working; a'ilh tbenl, sit- ting by the roadside with theca. not poaching, but conversing, going about with sympathetic ears open to their sorrows, coming close 10 their daily lives, and manifesting the spirit of love et the Father of all BY BEIM; Bf1O!'IIE11 TO Alt.. His was tho gospel of the good neigh - Ler and friend, that the, eternal spirit that broods over all creation is near and ever true neighbor to every man, kving rind helping; th1at ttte highest privilege of roan is to come near to his fellow beings, to lie among them with g(ntie heart and helping hand even as Ile was doing. - 11 wouldn't make a whit of essential daft ranee if the cnrious should demon- strate that there never. had been such a life; somehow the world has this ideal picture, and it never can be taken away (porn us. Ours now is the vision once unknown, that lite noblest life is that which gives itself, and nowhere is the ('fume better rnanifesl'd than in the itc .of common everyday kindness. They help us most who come closest to us; we all need living teachers more ,. than the most. logical teaching;. \\e are hungry not for syllogisms, but for routs, for flesh and blood folks who wili let their henrls out to us. The world is hungry for love, the grentest rad the sinlplst of till things. It a peer heart that cannot learn this les- sen, that the best we Clap give this e e►r•ld is just our simple selves in every - tiny ways of kindness HENRY F. (:OPE. THE S. S. LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON, AUGUST 11. i.esson YI. The Sin of Nadal' and Abi- hu. (:olden Test : Prov. 20. 1. \VOI11) grUn1EC. Based on the text of the Revisivl Ver- sion. "And lie !Jehovah] (:o1ltvl."-Thus did Inc Jews designate the third book of the Pentateuch by the opening phrase 0f its first '4'nlenle; We cannot say its tir•st hwier, or even verse, for the ancient Writings of the 1Ieln•ews 13:1(1 neither chapter nor verse divisions, nor yet pl:n(1'110 m marks Of any kind. \VI. lutist remind aur -elves: again and again 1131.1 the putietuiltien, paragraphing, chapter di'. isions, ne ek, chill ler, nnel page headings of Dur Bibles are cern- partitively recent a(1diti(rl5 to and 115)111- bodk►1►s of the original 101111 of the text. TI:ti, 111-4o the (hnignahon "The Third ii 4)1'0 of \1,e.es, Commonly Called Le"i- licus," found al the beginning of Ihi- hook. The hook u( Leviticus was early known he that name from the tact that ► e 1 . I ler tweeting n it (1(hneelt the I g I n t g. (1ulits of 1.evit..-'. For a (similar 141154en 11 Was (,fled Called "1114s 1.30W of pile Priests," and Sometimes also "the Hook or Offerings." 1t is generally 11(11111114st 1:► i'c' a singly document, the ' intents (►f which fill naturally into four parts, namely : i1) 7134' taws of Sncr►ti•'e (chap- ters 1-7; 2) (:ereImu,lial for ( 4)n54ecre- tint) (f the I'ries1l10o11 IR -10) ; (3) Laws 1)►-ting'i'ssht ng the Clean from the Un- clean. a ilh npletxli\ 1110 1)ny of Af(me- nierlt (11-11;); t) Laws !t4•laling to Holi- ness. 'tJli appendix 17-27). Taken is n W114410 .it may well (,e regarded as the standard book (if W)ti trip of the nncienl ite•l,rewe, describing their :411'1'11h:4'S, f.rl'4t . n lid fasts. In its1_elaborate ritual 4.1 sa'rsIi i it fort' lino d.w-.s this gospel trent of the re'c4►'eiy of guilty man to the holinees of (rod by Means of the 3)14)nernent. \'(1's4' 1. Nadal) and A1dlu.-- rt4"peYe- titely 1ht' first and second suns of :\neon. Who W1111 111em' rimier Hod seventy y ..f the elders (t (( 1.1a 1 had lie. coal, allied ‘beef 14) Sinai. (11)41 ti►4.r( 14//4.101 special manifestations id the pre - sem. 0 01 Jehovah. \\ ilia their '-o►m►ger I.n,l130•I:. I'.IcnZar (311,1 Ilhtnnnr' rine) their father they were admitted) 14) 1113' priccl1) office. 'their 41estrIr lien in 'pni�lnm''nt for their gro.. II 4I)i opm'ieety and 41i.1)• 1.v1ienee e4.111:c 114.!1 the 111111111'.4• 1(3 133434' I(rken pin"e she'll) after 11 not 0n lite 'cry day of their consecration 14) the '1 ieslhood. (tenser- l.it., lire pan. Any vessel used for burning of inrens.e. N0 de- scription of ih•' censers in use in the Regrew sanctuary are given. 11 has loch coup', 1tred 111111 they were email, 'hallo'• pan: mole of copper and al. teeth -41 to handles. menet 'strange hie.-- Perhaps c.ont- 1114111 fire 1)01 11114 n fr.emi 1130' S0(m41 1111,11'. 01'• not lighted in tit'' 'r•escrils.41 cere- monial any ; or, it may 1►e (hat the o' pression refers sirup ly to the offering of semi, 1.n11311hrn ized sacrifice. Beth inter•- p1c•Inti4ons have the support (.f prurnl- ne nt biblical expositors. \\'hirh 11e had 114.1 com11)0141,541 11)0111 The specific command is given In Lev. 11; 12 : "And tie shall take a censer full 4)f eoal.4 of Tiro from uff the altar )►(rorty Jehovah, and his hand full of sweet incense benten small, and bring it with- in We %ell." 2. Devoured milI em - billedthe11. That they were not consumed k evident hem) verso's 4 and 5, in which their brethren arje cenini311(1(d to carry their nodi(•: hem the sanctuary. 3 This is it that J(13nvnh spake---.\n illustration of the kind cif irreverence rind desecration of the sanctuary against whic11 Jehovah had spcc'fIcally warned them. 1 will be snnctilbsI in there that conte 111)111 1110---"Ane1 let the priests ra154), that ciente 11011r 1e) .10114.vah, senility them- selves. lest J4•hoe a lt bred( forty' upon 1hi 111" iExod. 11). 22). Aaron held hie pe ices -1)01 not r4.nton- strrltt' or complain in the presence of s4) manifest a judgment of .14.110'1111. 1. `eons 4)f L•zzie1 the uncle of eaten -- And thercfure members of the ',nest!). family .311,1 tribe. (lie of the camp-- B4'rnn(1 11)4' limits of whir!' the burial could necessarily lake Wilco'. :t. In their coats-- The burial of the priestly garments along with the offend- ing: priests was r1 sign that 111.') 100 had Non po•tllul.vt l•s the sin of the melt a ho wore thein. G. I•:Ie(za1• and llhanlar•--The iWo re lluliling sons of Aaron. 1.l.'llznr, after hi.. father's (10.11111, 1*5411mle high priest x11141 :seems, eve'l) •111 an earlier time, 14 hi, '1' 041111)1(A flip position of chief (3r 1111. 1,e•.ile's. As high priest be later As - 51s1111 J4i.hun in 111,11'11;111 01g 1110 land of Canaan running the tripe's. His hula' place is mentioned in Josh. 2t. 33, and from him Were 414:.c••nded all o we...sling !ugh priests down to the Marcnl►ncan period, with'the exceptions only 0t the high frieets of the po i-k.cl between Eli and sidemen. During Thee bole! period 1131' high priestly ofiiet aas held 11) ruernh4•rs of the family of Itilamlar. Lel n4.1 the hair 4)1 your heads go loose, ne11114'r rend your cle.thes--''-W4) 1 4) rusl0nmry and familiar . Igtn f extreme prier 111141 mtlut•iling, '10 have thus pub - 11.1y lamented the catastrophe Would Iln'e been an 0•+1111'aIott In (li5pltting Ii4.d's justice in this visitation of dire punishment. and hence the strict p154)hi- biti4)n of tiny such (1111wnrtl de'tnonstrit- liot. and the appended a nutting, 111x11 ye (1i4• 114,1. new" the bluffing "111(1) J4.h4)'tih 1lrllh kinlllo•d--'rhe people were exhorted 14► lament rather 1110 fall that 5mc11 e('4•rlfy of judgement had been neee•- ":Irv. 7. Ye shall not go out from 1130 door 4) e 11.111 The ►1t►hlhitlon not t4) ert'4. f th I i 1h.- f-.•ulclu11ry hereby 1111 348%4541 upon the p1 i1:sts must not (34' Iiiketi literally or 1)1selutti) . :\ nl(111' 4141ni1(541 and sp►dc'i- II eonllm:1ntlrment re•ver'ing Ute Prune [f(1111 1- given in 1.••v. 21. 1(1-12. The sense of the remittent, is That the 1 riests while on duly in the 511111 1ltnry „ere not 14, ('4)1114' 11110 00118(1 with seemar affairs, n(•r for the 5r1ke of ihose i4) anareten the service mn)nmlt411 14) thew hands, 9 ')rink 11.e Wine nor 4111 ng dont; - 'rhe irmpll• ((lion of this x)0454 ilio command of total abstinence from in10\icat►ng IdI1i(ls din leg the period of tftk'iiiI seel•- 'icc in the 5arn'tuar), Seems fn Itt' that 51rc11 indulgence had had 5nn3((lling 10 (ho with the llnprlr41en11t•le action of Nadal) and \lellim. 1110 inference i•eing that these men e.'14 under Ihc imflu4'tt^4' of strong drink when they (lisregat'olosI- pie la'.v of the canchtnly. This is net al. 01u1My n nec41r;-vlry inference. b11t the probabilities: seem 14) be in favor of snnch an interpretation of the Command. Me111. ommand- Me111. it shall be a statute forever --That is, tie.' ahsolule prohibition to priests, while serving in the 58l):tunry, of the use (41 strong drink in any farm. 11. That ye may tench the children of Israel --'111e Wor4i5 Are n(letlr(•sst'41 to 111e priests. Fruia Deut. 33. 10, we kora morn specifically about the twofold office of the priesthood : '"1'lteey shall teach Jacob thine ordi- liftI) 4'S, And Israel thy law : They shall put incense before you, And whole burnt offering upon thine altar." PRISON F011 DEIl'1'OItS. tidied States Citizen Parlors Adoption of British Law. it. Newlon Crane, (1 well-known Am- erican 11414 yrr in London, explaining to one of his countrymu'tl the statement it:at them were over 11,000 peuplo 1111- pris4►ried for debt last year 111 England. :aid: When pe1SSons are imprisoned because of debts It is due to the fact that in the j•aignleent of the court su0)1 persons, al- though quite utile to Ingot their obli- gations, wilfully and contemptuously refuse to (10 544. "It is like ttli.5. '1110 butcher or b-.ker gels a judrieent against a customer for say, £5 ($25). The customer has :►o visible property en which to levy an execution. The debtor is summoned, and the court makes a careful inquiry into !Os circumstances -his wages, the numlx•r in his family, etc. if, in the court's judgment, he is able to pay, say, 5 shillings ;$1.25) a week, he is ordered to pity il. If he fails to do s), and, en a second inquiry, is unable to prove his inability to comply with the court's or- der, he is sent to prison for uuntelilpt .of that order. "It is ply experience that the judges are .very lenient - toward (k'htors. No honest malt is ever embarrassed or im- prisoned by them. Possibly the deb- tor will be ordered to pay apply a shil- ling a week and then it the can show that the taxes upon his resources are so great that he is not able to pay even IIw shilling he is not locked up, but is set at liberty. 1f it is true that when - (.1 er dishonest then escape !their pest debts, in some way or another, honest leen must make good 11x; deficiency think it will be recognized that phis so- eal:ed survival of .110 evils exposed by Dickens is a first-rate thing for the de- cent members ref the community. - "In Iny opinion it is unfortunate that America has not the same practice as has England in respect of deadbeats. '!tie deadbeat injures himself by his in- jury of others; his degradation is deep- ened. 'Thele -'ore, if it clearly appears that he refuses to prey a debt out of what the Americans call 'pure cussed- ness,' there is no doubt in my Mind teat he ought to be locked up as a pen- alty for his wlnngdeing. In America even a a i[e who has eAlabli5htd lel' claim to alimony against a delinquent husband canm)t collect tier (money Un- less the husband has property upon whet'she can levy. � . '1 h(. husband may 'ave plenty of i•esd►urce.s, but 111e'y may be ;so fluid, se 'ungelatal►le,' that the wife is unable to obtain at law welt the law has said belongs to her. Again. 1110 practice that prevails in America of putting property in the name of one: wife in order to escape just debts is cm- that it ought not to be possible for a plersen successfully to pursue." IIO((ND UP WILD HORSES. There are %lore Than Two Thousand Animals in the Bands. Ham -hers rubel ptoslec14114 1114)11g the leounclary 1II'O gone into the hiiis of ti4t11110111 111.111,11 Columbia to runnel l:l0 aevrral hands of %%nil 14erses which Ih( 1.1gl.:lnt1'e A5�elthly 0f the pro- vince 'hare branded ns pirates, 1111- th•)rizing any one to eh<K)t 4)t• capture. them at slated periods of the year, at - 14.1 n4111fym,g 1101'Se 4n0itIs so that tante 111111 1111s may be claimed. (tango liners . 11y Ihelr' are mere than tau thousand wiled animals in the lands. 'I Ile roe 1•us of the herd was formed 4n 030 !Wive totem!) horsemen say, when 4•xplui't•ts and prvl4p►ectors rode 4.11 10r5chacl4 1r4,m (115414111 to s4)utll- ' 11) 54tal(s. Many pi0neers.pel'ish(•tl in 1h.• eeareh for gold, but their Horses 1.ur'Ivcd. \\:11H1t 1114' gold fever was nt t cig;ltl in the' Caribou ou (Ii'triets in the ••1\(1054 many !terse; Were brought in 1r'int the gutty for prick and eolith. purpe45405, and as three were ne roads it was the cite est thing for these 0111- Inr11e to leave the mail and join those enjoying the freedom (31 the wilds. The horses seen in the trills along the bonnier little resemble the .lock teem which tipsy sprang. They are long. haired. )avnge (matures, x111O show 1 4(1 11111 wouldUl(cause lV11c tit k) (F11 1 1 a race colli -e. "I hey weigh not more than seven hundred neuters, all brine, I,1us•'le and sinew. The r3neher4 131'0 41••)'!•rrevl tsar ng;iinst 11►e pirates as n means of pro- i(eti.ng (heir own nninlnls. Whlctl 11r.r -frequently lured into the hills: ----f- - \\'Ii:VI "(:Ai.11111E" \1EANS. There is sur.'ly no Word in the :semen - 4 8lure 0f guns. big rind little, which has caused, clad is caucing. 14) n►u(h t.c.nfuxion in the lay mind as; the w(.rd "calibre." The cord "calibre" ns rip - plied t0 arlil10ry . ignifk•s e -sent ally end at nil times the dinrneter of Ili•' Lore of a glen. A gull. theft, of six- inch eahbre is a gun avhose bore is just six inchc:4. For convenience, and be- c•r►use the plower of a gun, when ionise its bore 111114 been decided upon, depends •o glicnlly upon Ile length, artillet'iets nr. in the 1)r+bil of defining the length of the glue in 14.11115 of the cnlitre. In the case of sn1811 arms, the (1li1r4' 1.54 expressed in 111111111'4'(I111S of nn inch. as when we cry a 22-cnlilere 0r 32 -calibre piste!. meaning that the tore is 22 e r hundredths of an inch in diameter. w -r T TitEE IUt'\ I•:\I\. An ('511 a. m.Iinary • oIrlosily is 10 ',4' Fern in 1110 SWi'. '111111.' of (;,intens a Leto. Thum 11 lakes the form of a natural Tree fountain. the Willer now. nig continuously fruit) 11 Sp0111 high t.p in the tree. Ai■out twenty years age the water from a 'p►1•ingt was (opine -eel It;tnugih n 541)1111, (1114 1114' •up►poly Was (101'4 (l' d i)ll4 ug;ll 1114) rut Irunk of :1 young; pKep1111' Ire(' W111ch W15 rnrn• Rl,eel in Ih.' )!l. 11 )4. %ftrr r1 short liens 1h. trunk r' (13'4), 1eran4'110S followed, /ind now there (4 n splendid lop growth. -# in the matrimonial library 1I14" Most Important book is the bank -book. • The Home 94'irt* C.}It)ICE LOOKING BI:cIPI.S. \\'allle'5,--One quart sour or butter- milk, two eggs, 0110 qual't 110111, 0110 tell- '110on call, (►110 Icasp 444 1 sugar, (1130 tea- spoon butler. Bake in hot atilt well- gl•enscd vault' iron. ( 001 Surmnl(r Dish. --Take one quilt 111 e'lirrant juice, a 541111111 piece cif slick c•umlatnon, put nn Ilre. \\ igen l.niling 5111 in ('• , -11,311 -:up of 51114. ; ecoal( fh e 'unites 111141 stir all the time: s\e1tell t taste. heir in fruit dish, put ill ice- box. Whenculd serve will' milkor C1'1'0111). Jellie(1 Chicken. -Alleve jelly to cool in a ring mould. \\•1'(•n ready lei Ser'( turn out and 1111 the centre with a salad made of celery, cucumbers and radish(':; cut lip in 51111111 pieces and thoroughly mixed with mayonnaise. Beats Salad. -Cook string buns until tender. \\'hen cold cut in email Pieces, rel(, 0 good-sized elision and laviket Eng- lish walnut pleats. Mix with French (11 i"sing and Serve on lettuce leaf. With 1w4 t'ilp►s ul 1.(11115 a(1(1 1:11( -third of 0 •_t1p o! nut meals. F.conamical Cake.-- One cup granu- )n1esj Saghir, yolks of two eggs, white of one egg, one-quarter tcnsp(x►nful salt, one -tial! 1,11)1 of ('1'011111, one 81141 0130 -dull cups of I1►ur, Iw<, 14've1 teaspoonftI of baking powder. heat welt and lade( in rnoderafe oven. Use 1•a•rnuiling while for plain white frosting. Liver Bash. -One pound beef liver, Dat slice(!. 1'ut on to hot \•aper with rill onion; whelp tender r•1'muoy(e from fire. Cut out all pipes and chop lino, re- turning to ixrt, in which one cup of the water in which it has been boiling re- nlains. Add bolter Size of a11 egg, and serve with mash's' potatoes. Young (thicken. -}'repave the slime as for fry. 114.11 in 'flour, have ready roast- ing ran, with part Intel and butter. Put in chicken, t tilt and pepper, and pour two cupfuls rich creaser or milk over it, and put in oven. When bioa•n(d turn. When dune remove and make gravy (roes dripping;. Milk `hake. -Fill a glass one-third with cracked ice, add one teaspoonful of vanilla and too of stlg11t', lilt a ith milk and shake with ordinary tin shaker. tinkle a little nutmeg on 1130 top, if ltkt'd. Hut \\'aper Cake. -Four eggs, well beaten separately; two cups of sugar, Iwo cups of nein., three teaspoonfuls of hiking powder, one-half(-13nlf teaspoonful of extract of lemon. \\'tail ail ingredients ars' well stirred together edit one cup 0f ',oiling water, stir and hake quickly. Makes feeur 1(3)0(s or two c31kee. \lent BoII.-Two rounds beef, One pound of pork, chopped fine; add on•' 1 flannel garm1t111s, to keep thou soft and cup of lolled crackers, one and one-half woolly as when new, is to put a tea- cups of sweet milk, three eggs, I1epl"'1' 111141 mall ; moil(! 11110 1111, place in pian, with older 14) baste. After bilking use teeth for bma n gravy. 5teur Cream Lake. --One and one-half cutis o! sugar, 4.110 -half cup of huller. three eggs lung whites le be insert, Which roust be beaten thoroughly). Ihree-tluar- 14.1: cup of morel 111ilk, ad4ling eggs last with one and one-half cups Recur, filter - wifely; ems te1ISpoonflll 441 lathing pow- der. Filling :-'fake one ease of sour clean) 111441 boil will) one cup of sugar until char; add Bene -hill( cup English Willnu's. or hickory nal.•+. chopped fince, 11114! Tread between lavers. Salad i)I•cneing.- Int() the upper part 4)f a 410111.1e la,il.ur put 4)110 tale14:s)1(K1n(ul '.1 mlustard, 41r115 of salt, A half -clip of sugar: mix 1114.ro►Ighhy, null fi'r table- spoonfuls of olive 0i1. four eggs. break- ing: and a hipping each one in separate. ly +11141 one cup of mill:. Hare in leev:er pall of (14.tlblc toil,•1• aver lir.', stirring conlinuou'ly. \Vbon scnld((1 11(1(1 ung cup of 'ineglm•, slowly, stirring at sante ,this is not the omen with salt, however. tune. \\Igen its thick ns sweet cream It cannot • 14' ridded to cooked dishes or lake from fire 3011(1 stir 11131)1 cool. ''Ince cakes, nor ran it be taken away when in I4 [i ige:111er, where it Will keep mid once it is added. nu always ready for any unci all kinds of salad•. \\ Ile ut Flour Gruel.- 1'!aee nne-half pint of flour on a clean (1011) whtett tins leen pr'0'ieusly dampened. Over 1110' fk,tir spray one (01111ce of cold water, he lire (14(111 seseirely ar•uun(1 the 11411r. forming a 144111, then roll in flour to form :1 paste on the (1)11154' gill' -ids. Boil for ten Lours. Bentovc 1h•' cloth Mid place in a n:4.(l. rale oven to be dried for ten to ups ; reinose, grate two twist -ex -flaws of awn- from the dry hall and alis with enough wafer 10 fonn a mnniemolh 'mete. Stir itt 4111e -half pint of Railing milk . he eland from three to five 1uinut4:s. A4111 One-half teas) oeriful of sugar 1111(1 se•1''e 1541. (,ince of muslin, wring it nut of (edit Willer, 1411(1 lay 011 ii•ming Tear\l, ullclrr 111.3 article that has b eC orale• dry; 1 rtsv W1111 31 111411111111 W11i911 111011; re1110V0 the wet piece of muslin, and iron in the usual planner. Ironing Day. -Stretch a clothes line tierces the kitchen 11e:(1 front t1115 $115 - pend several wile or wocxlen coat hang- ers. As you take a starched shirt -waist or either garment frim the board, place it ttIi54c.•tly on the form. Use trouser hungers for the skirls, folding the band into four p;►r1: n1141 inserting lot ween the clamps intended for the trtiltl 14'1' herr. :4-ih waist and skirt ft ruts will 4,11011 .old several garments. and small -sized Inngets may be had for Ihi tin)' dresses. pave a narrow curtain pole put into •10(144'ts in the t'14.the's closet 811 Viten he ironing ►, ceeplpleteo slip this pole I:rough the hooks of the garment hang- ers on the line, and the entire ir(nulg Ihus,can be carr•itd upctgjir :11 one trip. ail the 1.010 .lipped into its brackets without disturbing the ekilh(s. If there lir.' a 11111111"•!: 4)( 1Yt4)1r1S ttl'1(i4le a Sep a- rat4' pole for each aparlrnenit or each person. Wash \\•itttoi t tiul,l►ingt.-Conk clothes over night; hove n Boller turn'('-f(Utihs foil (if water. Into it cut up 0114' and 0114'- 11111! bars 01 son)) and hive bab1051xr3ns of kerosene oil, and let hall. Wring 014 then out of cold \;goter 1111(1 put in the toiling water for fifteen minutes. 11i1►se through two waters and hang out on ill' lute. \\'aslt lace curtains in the sa1110 way. LSEI'L'1. IIINTS. a little charcoal mixed with clear water 111)41 thrrn'n into a sink will dis- infect and deodorize it. Vaseline slants are very obstinate, and the hest thing for Ilien1 is to Soak either ip spirits of wine or kcroeenc. Newspapers nfle►nt excellent protec- tion again.•t moths, which have a decided aversion to printer's ink. \\'rap each garment in newspapers before storing. The lest wav to freshen home-rnade ')read so that if ire as good as new is to dip the loaf in cold water, put it in a prep, 111141 bake until it 15 heated through. '''hen wrap in a damp cloth. and when cull it is as good us Wht't first baked. A lel•uuslI supporter (made 0f 5pcxoLS a simple and convenient device. S'rew two large emp►Iy Sp0(41s high up 0n the middle [raphe 0f a doer, just far enough apart to .alkety the handle of the broom t-) blip 011. The broot►1 part rests 011 U10 1pxx)Is. Before Meting knives oil them care- fully and wrap there in paper. This is to keep Urn from rusting, but it will lee well to inspect them oc(acienally, fur they. 11111' Heed ailing again, and with rust p•r•eventiolr is certainly better than cure. To scald milk place 1h(' required amount in the inner vessel of a douhle- ix•1111 ; partly till the the gully vi;eel Willi 1101 Water, o-4lver•, and place on the fire, ll)- the tulle the Waley 1141114 rapidly' Ihi milk V. ill 1x' at the scalding point, and should be used at once. T114' hest way to Wish any kind 0f spoonful of liquid /1111111441in ill the -Water alien %trashing, rind again in the warn) rinsing valet.. If this 14' done. flannel of any kir.! Will in -ver hard a1141 spoiled 11s 0114. sometimes SeeS 1t. \rix ane' pound of powdered Ix:t•ax 111311 half -pound of granulated sugar. and when they are thoroughly. nle•nde41 ro11 ih•t wholt' Wilk a rolling pin. .1f this Inix'ur4' is put in t1►e cl•e'ices loun41 the parts frequenteel by blllckt►44l14's the)• will quickly disappear. It is not dare genie's and can be frtv'ly used. and is also 011(' of the cheapest and best 11'11('- (11e 5 that can be found. The cooks who use loo little still are gullet -1111y those who use lex) m45)3 5llgar. Just ill the seine wry as a 111114' swc.'lnes-i of 1nn1)11er is p►1eawift a little Sugar i5 p errmi5'.1n14 i11 (atanle;s, 1111(1 \herr the former lllnoclnis to sllg'arin(5r. il. i5 e•ente•ntplil►I.•. ari.1 the latter in tole great gllamfitiee 1. 5i) kly. Things trier - „etched ` ,, • . r enn ta� to ( 1 Il 1 sugar 1 d(Yl 1 "hull served, but (311)114,1 have the ca•4v'1- Sunday Dinner. --On Saturday pur- chases a 1v)851 or chicken which is inrge evetigh for two rn4'il 4. 1:00k It 1111(1 cer'(• for (inner Saturday evetul9!. '11.111) into :shape What is left and lay it aside for the next dinner. Sunda' Wenn it Ih•,r' IIghly noel serve. ,'r; i,•'^•e the vegetables n. 11)111h ns p► 514111le I,efnr. 131411(1. If piens, beans, or any vegetable which 11guir's much cooking; is to 1:4•_' served, have it on conking w11113' you wash the breakfast dirties 0110 diene for chun•h. feel 1x)11110:5 and 'ince 1tu'n► 813.1 the salad in water. soup is made beforehand and only needs healing. The dcs,er1 is 411a1ys• !Wide on Seim -day. Rinner 34 ready 111 tRt3,ut half an hour after (0111ing !Haile front cl►urcll. • was x011 ‘‘..‘sit 1):\Y. Ironing Board Covering. -040 Pram - ti( a(1.11 tacks 10 pelt ail coverings on your hoard. It is not nearly the Ilr,uhle t ► change the ironing !staid as when 111e common In( k: are used. lnundr Wash. Witch.h. 1411(1 411y curtains. I ay them 1114111 1(111(1 ready for use. 'rake one at 11 time; put in ac lr)t water ns hand can leer; wring; cite : put 011 stretcher, and yew* curtains will look like new. Ironing Embroidery \\ ui41s. -- First it on the Sleeves and then the hock, i'lnee a heavy 'rut kick !ewe: nn the lo•,d 81)4) '111 thin' Ir',of thte ai,isl on Iltis.ar'111(11 fi'en 4)n Inth•' 030enl 5401•'. 'rhi, will slake the embroidery slim' tip \%1'11. i1(►ning Fin•) I'i40(5. Ing!.-n,l ••f sprinkling flush the dry pail, lake A 140•(4 1'edlle(Y1 When once it is ,nd(h'l. SETTLING TIIE STIIIKiE. ilow a i'rofessor of an English College Managed It. If nil labor difficulties could be ad- justed with. the cele ►ty and decision &splayed by I'Ir.fesser Jewett, the fnm- 4)11S 11111Ster of Iialito 1, questions of e111 - 14.0y00 and employe would nut manifest the! )eivc's in 5u ' ►olent a planner tis 1, frequent. '1115 !amens teacher Was toiled for his brevity of speech and (k - shale!' of business, tout these qualities buyer shone to greater 111'aninge (hon en the famous occasion of Itis dealing with the refractory washerwomen of B,tlli',1. These wo1' ty dames struck for hith- er wag.:, in 0114' (1(ixirtnl(nt. 'twelve cellars for a shilling wits the statutory price. 'The), eauie to prevent their claim to the minter. "'the a aeli(1'Wornerg hove come to see e hull ' yeti." sal 1 said h � r. "Show Ilii holies up." Plitt the Ions - 14 r 'l'hcy clinit041 into .the room, to fled h►nl poking the lire. Ile turnedr.und. "Will you wash tw I'o collars for a shilling?' he 1(0krrl, rf lIie.ly. They hegnn to expostulate. He touch- ed the hell; in Caine the Buller. "hw d•s (l" *iSt:soenl1)'11;47 theiabieu11.-rl,a a'1n.).mred1 again. ".They seem very sorry, sir ---would like ev1114,3'14;111 "Shtoowsup," 'fire washerwomen found 114e 10)1151 ter intent. tis hefor', (en the fire grist°. "Will y4.11 WAS!' twelve collars for a •billing''" piped his ch2'ery little voice. A stnlw..1t speaker ts'gnn k) mak*, e\planntions. ile touched the bell. 'Show th(sladies d-►wn," he v1i11, Hill drown they went. Again the nutter reappeared, este) sling a hope that the master wo11141 se'e the \\Y)rnen again. "(:ortelnl.. Show the'rn up." They entered the room for the third tine. '•\\'ill \e.4I wris11 !wch•e collars for :l Fhilling''" "We will'" they cried. "!'hnrlk yea - good 41ny, geed (1ny!" Paid the plaster. "Knight, sh,,w Mea, ladies down," and the strike was o'er. Kidney Disease And Its Danger. Kidney disease comes oa quietly -- may have bceu in the system for yearly, before you suspected the real cause of your trouble. 'There may have been backaches, neuralgia, sciatica, rheuma- tism, etc. Perhaps you did net kaow these were symptoms of kidney disease, so the trouble kept on growing worse, until disturbances of the water ap- peared, or there was gravel or retention of urine, or sorra' such sign o' kidney trouble. 1)oan's Kidney Pills should be taken at the first sign of anything wrong; theystrengthen-the kidneys and bel • theto filter the blood properly -help rl -helpp theca to flush off, and carryaway with the surplus water, all thoe impurities which tate blood gathers up is its cir- cuit of the body. Mrs. Alfred LeBlanc, Black Cap*. Que., writes : "I feel it my duty to say a word about DoAN'8 KIDNEY PILLS. I suffered dreadful pains across my rick --so bad I could not stoop or bend. After having used two boxes I now feel most corn 1etelT rained. I bight), TOP oominend )oA8 KIDNSv PILLS.' - RECOVERED BY MIRACLE YOUNG MAN WON SUIT, AND TIiEN GOT WELL. Get a *2&N0 Verdict -Dragged by Street (:au' and Jotting Cured Spinal Injury. Even the most dignified members of the State Supreme Court of Washington Territory do not disguise their rutinse- ment over a story that has recently cultic out about t114• apparently Inintc'.1- luus recovery of e. mnh who obtained . a large Judgment against a radioed cor- px'Iation for pcts0rlal injuries which 110 convinced a jury, a trial judge and a majority 0f 11141 highest court in the slate had rendered hire a cripple for life. The case WAS that of a email clerk, John \\illianls who was the victim of a wreck on the Spokane Falls and North- ern Itailway line a few years ogo. Williams was nearly killed in the wreck, om•erging with lou of an ('ye end bro- ken tortes, besides being paralyzed in the lower part of the body. Being; nn - able to obtain a settlement out of court, 110 brought suit against 1110 company ter $50,000. VERDICT Felt C13.000. The print on which the case hinged wn54 Whether the apparent perrllysi54 wr154 i•et'llanenl. fie seemed entitvly help - lief. in the k,wer pori of the body and expert medical tcst.in10ny WAS intro- (1uc4r1 14) }dove 111111 he Was paralyzed for life, 1,311 this was 'igerously coni - lotted (ty other medical evidence. The jury returned i1 verdict for $33,000 ;Igainst rho company, and tills Was efl'rtn(d by the Slate Court. S•Ken after - ‘i node the personnel of the Supremo c :, art changed 5011 00h Ill road a rehear - 111,1 oils granted ill 11115 CAM'. The.result of the rehearing was an order directing lt►nl \\ imams 1,1 given the' choice of ar- t -41401g a reduction In the judgment from $:4.1,000 or a 1)4 W trial 0f the 0115e. 110 accepted the $20,14*), The denouement came recently, when members of the Supreme Court received newspaper clippings telling of the scn- 5iIL•4ou(1l rtr'overy of the Pin 111Ytie. ACCIDE\'l g:C(1ED H1\f. According to the story told by tho father of \\anliiut►s. the paralytic had dragged himself 14► 1114. middle of the street in los Angeles 10 I•allot an ap- 'fY.a1f1111g Stroet ear. Betels- h( was on I4,ard 11►e car started. \\ tlliank dud not grasp the railings firmly 3)0 ass caught n)- the fender rind tarts dragged half a block. The onlookers weft' horror- stricken, nccon g► to the story. at the sight of this(se ly tie being dr • al liking the pavement hy'the car. Of a sudden the young darn juimp:ed up. Mood on his feet rand stepped nimbly 111)•ard the car. The peculiar way in which he 118(1 teen dragged along the (nl(eart, had, according to his father, jerked his spine into shape and cured his pornlysis. 'the matter has new 1►ce^0me a joke among IIWyer;4 0f the State., Even the supreme catart itself Was Ri ort 1110 case. Three tnrjority and lav► rn11)4,rity opiniollS Were written by the Justices.. They are all willing In admit the re- lent -Wilde nrltlli47 of they cr►Se .814 14)1(1 by the young 111nn:s father. and 11111lbtute their smiles when the platter is men- tioned t0 thein 14) the gratification they feel ower the young 111111'S amazing re- 0441y. e044 (y. Johnins : "I fiats' It picfir•e Of a group of children who will to rulers of men scene (113y." Bolton : "They were girls, of course?" 600D BLOOD n`;,,,;m,, so WILL ego 81000. The one in a healthy body and ruddy complexion, the other in i11 -health, blotches, pirnples, boils and sores, and frequently in iritenacr forms as ulcers, abscesses, erysipelas, salt rheum, etc. Every organ of the body depends on the blood for force and vitality, and is but scantily served when the blood is impure. No remedy is so potent as • blood purifier or more rapidly produces new and healthy blood than B URDOCK B LOOD'IP which neutralizes the various poisons and restores the vitalizing power of thio all important fluid. For sale by all druggists and dealea.