Loading...
Exeter Times, 1907-09-05, Page 3CURE Sok Bes irobe and rolls,* all the troubles ted Mat to a billows state of the system, suds as Disadtw.r, !Messes. Drowsiness. Distress after eating. lata to the aide. &o. While their moat tecaartabeia wcc.a kas been shown la costae SIC ReadacbS yet Carter's Little Liver Pills ars equally .atoa.ls in Conattpatton, curing and pre- *eatt this annoying complaint. while they also to 1alldlaorder.ofthestomach.attmulalatba lire add regulate the bows's. Zees lt tory aealgl -eque4 HEA Ache they would bealmost prloeluastothosewho anger trout thisdt•tressing complaint; but fortes stately theirgoodnesadoee uoteudhere.aud those who once try them will and these little pills valu- able wil- ling 111 a wit o wade t hat$ t after1a11 sick lased lode without them. ACHE le the bane of so many lives that hers L where 'growths our great boast. Our pills citron while others do not. Carter's Little Liver Pills are very email and very easy to take. One or two p111* mako a dose. They are strtotly vegetable and do nut gripe or but by their gentle action please all who them.nes Wait ¥ZDIC1311100., MIT 702Z. IzZ Dm Pia Kidney Disease And Its Danger. Kidney disease comes on quietly - may have been in the system for years, before you suspected the real cause of your trouble. There may have been backaches, neuralgia, sciatica, rheuma- tism, etc. Perhaps you did not know 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 of kidney trouble. Doan's Kidney Pills should be taken at the first sign of anything wrong they strengthen the kidneys and hep them to filter the blood properly -help -them to flush off, and carry away with the surplus water, all those impurities which the blood gathers up in its cir- cuit. of the body. Mrs. Alfred LeBlanc, clack Cape, Que., writes : "I feel it my duty to say a word about DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS. I suffered dreadful pains across my back -so had I could not stoop or bend. After having used two boxes I now feel most completely cured. I highly tr- eommend DOAN s KIDNEY PILLS." THE SONGS WE SING. Il may or may not he the case that n t'aco's fei nt:eranlent can he judged from its fotlese,ngs. but it is interesting 141 tit •te illt, difference of subject !natter in se songs of various peoples. The Irish - um. fur instance, ,ee'ns:, to sing for -the lull putt11bou1 his lady-1ote. hal,bly ny of his .songs are not addressed to his 'Somebody Nlayourneen." Tho Scot, on lite other hand. sings about his country find its history-, its a rule. "Scots \\'ha lbw." "Ye Banks and Braes u' Bonnie Dexon," "Lech Lorl►ond," and so on, iiilgght be taken as examples. The Eng llshnnan, it is interesting t4) !Kate, sings stigm l himself til! 11e lime. His songs are about his own glory, his ships, his mien, his power. Ile refers e►ceastonally tc old Englund. but only as a place he made famous by his otwn prr)fwess. Un- like the Irish 81141 the Seeker. he sings utile of his %Willett and his country's t e.autiful places. 'i'IIE TAi.I.EST TREE. Tho highest tree in the world. so far :IS has been ascertained. is an Auslra• Min gum tree of the specie's Eucalyptus re gnat's, (which stands in the (:apt? 01- ssay rnnge. It is no less Ilnn 415 feel high. Gum -trees grow very fast. '!'her,' Is one in Fkerida %% tech shot up in feet ,rt four years. and 1111 dlier in Guatemala which grew 1281 feet in twelve years. 'Phis eorresp4nuls to a rise of 10 feet in a year, or nearly 1 foot per Monti' A Grand Cure FOR SUMMER COMPLAINT T AND CRAMPS 18 DR. FOWLER'S EXTRACT OF WILD STRAWBERRY It is nature's specific for Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Cramps, Colic, Pain in the stomach, Cholera Morbus, Cholera In- fantum, Sea Sickness, Summer Com- plaint, etc. Rapid and reliahk in its action. Its effects are marvellous, and it is pleasant and harmless to take. It has been a household remedy for silty -two years. liefuse substitutes. They aro danger- ous. Mrs. Wm. Flewelling, Arthur, Ont., writes : "I find it much pleasure to recommend Dr. FOWLER'S E\TRAcr OT WILD ST$AWr.ERHHY as a grand cure for limner Complaint. My little toy, one year old, was very bad with it, and :t few doses cured him. 111154) used it on my other six children for cramps and still have half the bottle left. I o .nnot prs.ie s h too numb." HAPPINESS. Nothing Praises God Better Than a Happy Disposition. "He that is of a cheerful heart has a continual feast." --Prov. xv., 15. How did your Puritan forefathers dis- !t,se of that text? In their day it read, s merry heart is a continual feast.' Dai they exp'girt it away by saying tl:at the 1118n was made anyway fur fie.ting and not for feasting? Perhaps urderneath their austre exterior they, niter alt, knew something of det'p jo)s and uI fulling sources of refreshing hap - pi mess. In thein• teaching tteey made the tuts - !eke of insisting that it was necessary to seen) sed in order to please the nio.t Leigh. We snake Idle mistake of being sad in order to please ourselves. Their misery at least had the grace of a high receive; ours is horn of a shortsighted st•llishness that grasps at the shadow of a fleeting satisfaction and loses the substance of lasting joy. lluppincss is the highest nim of life, heeler than holiness or usefulness, no - cause it 111115t include both. 'l'o us it is so unfamiliar that we do not know :t front frivolity; we seek the excite- na.fnt of some pleasing sensation, and, r.. ing to its stimulus, we fall afterwards inti) ttie reaction of misery. happiness is the poise, calm, strength, and spring of the life fully in harmony with all things good and true. Many have Though: to give God glory by learned treatises on HIS MAJES'T'Y AND MYSTERY. t ul a little child, so happy that he only can kick and crow, praises the Al- mighty more effectively and even de- wc utly than sloes the theologian who only can offer his bloodless speculations. The great Father gives his children a world brimming over with jay, with laughing meadows, with smiling morns, tvitlr rippling bird song, and to man he gives faculties of immeasurable hap- po.css. life is learning the law of leap- t iness and practising its use and ser- vice, lint what is the secret of happiness? flow can we learn to be happy when ::fe bas so much 10 make ns Sad? '1'110 1.18ise of happiness clues not take a'vay It e fact of sorrow 01solve its dark pro:) - lea -I. There remain the million aching harts and all the grief:; of a world. '!'rue. God forbid that we should lase our .sorrows; that were to rnnke this :, sail world indeed. Our cares are but fart of joy's curriculum. Learning their lesson, leering thee• koad is essential to deep. lasting happiness. 1l is not Ihe life of the butterfly ex- perience that is lirms, calm, serene :n tines of storm and stress. It is the He that by kuids of caro hus been forced Si strike its r4>ots down to the ruck. There are snnle lives that seem to run of er well a happiness that is full of re- freshing to all whe, know them. anti these have conte out of great tribulation. At first the multiplication table is a L''rtien; later, \then mustered, it be- comes a wonderful bearer of burdens. -) wear a careworn, fretful look, to go Ihit.ugh life shedding lutsery, is to CO11- f",; that we have not learned our Son, that that \,e are dunces in life's school. '1'Ifl: sI?CIlET OF HAPPINESS is in grasping the significance of liv- irg, to earn that we live for things ether and higher than those mad follies and failing prizes for (which n;en sell their bodies and .souls and fret out their serves and pearls. No loan can le happy whose t.eart is set on the chang- ing fashion o! things or who looks for sali•fuetion in things. a die- ,' because he has bee a s The loveris h 1n) 5 i . covered a prize and is enthralled by a pursuit that inithes all other things seem mean and paltry. Men are happy in proportion a•; they yield themselves to the best, as they tune their hearts to strike the key of their lives. Paul is happier in the dungeon. where he can be true to his ideal, than Nero on the throne without one. There is feast in days of famine for talose who have the inner eyes for tee r:e)1es of life. You always can find in Ibis world what your henrt is locking fere But you cannot satisfy your henrt of everything you may chane to find, end until the heart is satisfied and the deeper needs of the life are met utero 15 ilo happiness. The search for happiness is not alto - p -tai r selfish. Few things can we do that \\•ill help others more than tate cul- t:(8tin11 of serene estreng;th and cheer in ourselves. Not the sout!ess, set simile, lent ths strength and sympathy that now Erten a life fixed in confidence !n eIcrnal right and good and unfailing love. HENRY F. COTE. TIIE SUNDAY SCHOOL INTE11N.1T10\:%i. LESSON. SEPT. 8. Lesson X. The Itratzen Serpent. Test: John 3. 11, '1'1Ii: LESSON \V0111) STUDIES. Edom, proeeedetl northward, cast of FAom and Steele until opposite the mouth of the Jordan Hirer. Arad -An un:nlg orient ciiy or place ni,oui twenty miles due south of fiebron. The mune still survives in the modern designation of an ancient hill 01. (mound kl►cnt n ns 'fell Arad. In the Slulll-i.it., ns elsewhere, "in the Negeb" (comp. \\'ord Studies for Golden Septenrt)er 1). IThe twiny of Atharirn-Or. "of the spies." The meaning of the original is not clear, and no place bearing this name has ever been found. flen:'e the suggestion of the marginal rendering printed in quotations above 2. Israel vowed a vow --The represen- tatives Of the people gave a formai pledge or promise, probably al the sanc- tuary and with suitable religious cere- monial. Utterly destroy -- Hebrew. "devok'." The verb is the same as the one trans- lated elsewhere "lo consecrate." and is here used in a very customary sense, that which was consecrate(! to Jehovah tieing as in the case of sacrifices wholly' destroyed or consumed in his honor or upon his altar. :t. The name of the place was "nlled liernln11--Probably the Sallie place men- tioned in Judge. I. 17. as (having been again utterly destroyed by Judah and Simeon. 4. Mount llor-.1 memorable land- mer•h in the course of lsrael.s journey to Cnuaan. shunted In the mnuntnin rang•, imase(1 011 the text of the IUevised Ver - Sion. Unworthy to Enter. -As we read of the cowardly fear and pante which sei7c'(1 upon the Hebrews at the report of the spies who told of giants and strongly fortified cities, we must ever bear in mind that the steeple (whom \k►scs lel forth from Egypt had been all of then abject slaves, unacsustomt5.I either• to freedom er to a fair lighting chance to obtain their rights. Ilt'nc4• the persistent report of a majority of the 111('n tient to investigate tate country. that its inhabi- tants were a people mightier than 41►e Hebrews might well. arurt from the as- surances _et Jeliot•ati's assistance, in- spire them with fear and trembling. The problem OI leadership confronting Moses rlilLst have been one which taxed both hes unusual ability and his great pa- tience. At one time clearly the thought suggested itself to hint that 1e might abandon this eontenliuus and unwieldy horde and substitute his own de';een- (1:lnlcs ns the rho,'•n 1,t'4►ple. Mit strong 144 the temptation may have !►erns it was nobly put wide fur tti.i' greater burden o: the origginel mission which 14' had undertaken. 1. rn - t5• 1t Nevertheless, 1h( nr• t dice, 01 the reeve 1►nJ pewee their un- fillieSS 14) undertake iln invasion of the country, mei 'ewe Moses announces 10 1110111 that Jehovah Will 1101 lend them into. (:nnann until every adult among them who tins known slavery shall have died in the tvitderness. Grieved by this nnn4iuncenint, the impulsive peorle, re- penting of their co\wnrdice. slake a hasty ntlnck uf►en the Cannnnilc's, catty, however. to he steeliest with great less. For thirty-eight years they remain in the desert of Perim. with their headquarters at Kadesh-Rris•nea. Here there was plenty of tenter. and feel] this common renter the people wandered Willi their flecks for pasturage, and to it they re - gelled for worst' p. fnr ..4)4'ia) life. and for the ndjustrnent of jeediein1 matters. The chapters infest..•nilug 1el\ween our last lemon 8841 this ane re('nrtt, in addi- tion to the events connected with suer cessi5•e petty rebel Hon against the authority of \loses, additional reguln- ti'•1iw with regard to 1110 duties of the Levities, the priests' iw)rtions of Me sac- lit' 4leserl.Ruuth o[ nuts in the ritiees, tithing . and the c•ereln"ny of Sinailic peninsula serpents of various prrilicatirtn. The deaths of 5hri:►nl ,and kinds abound. Very few of those, how - 411' Stele about hnlf way between the Rend sen and the Gulf of Ahnhnh, and al Utile east of a straight line connecting the ex- tremities of tIio»o Iwo bodies of water. The mountain is Stil I:neoft•n as Jel►el Ilaroun and is identified to Arab truth - liens ,till current in the vicinity (with 1110 death of Aaron. A small mosque marks t►h' suf►f ()sett sacred site of Aaron's sepulcher. The st,nmmit ed the mountain is 4,)41) feet nhove the (;alt of Ahall►a1, and about 6,072 feet above the Dead Sea, which, as is well known, is far h4'lott• sc:i level. Discouraged because of 11e way -The country wns desert and rough. 5. Against tied and against Nfo.ses- Never to their murmurings ego the Israelites seem to have accused Moses of tu.fnilhfulnt•.ss In Jehovah. His policies 4f n(1111irli,tt'alitoit are constantly WNW - lied by the people with bit.' laws and will of JetioNali. This light bre'nd-•-Or. "vile. worthless teen. -111e reference is to the ninnnn which hnd now for so many years been the principal article of food of the Israel- ites. 6 fiery serpents --Fiery in the settee, g.robat►ly. 111111 the inllanlrnalion pee (bleed by the bile of the serpents cinema' an intense' burning sensnik►m. Roth in ,\nran al's ere reeorded. while the chapter imme'eliately pre'eling this ane i= d.'ye.tet1 largely 10 an necount of the eten14 cenneet•'cl with the depariure of lite people (eel leade`h and their Ilnreh 1: Mount Igor. it wns nt this pinee that Aaron died. MEM 41•II.=III Verse 1. when nnaliy the long so. journ at Knd0e111 5181 waling ing 11 1 one, and the lime had (sone ewe more 10 nttenlpt to enter the Promised !emit. the lentil/es sent messengers to the king of ?tl'nl, ware's lerret'ry Iny just east of Kadesh, and asked to be granted n pcne't'- f 11 1'assngn' through hie, country. their 1)):rpose being to appnnne'h 1;1,11,1111 hits lane from the cost sidle 'ef Jorden. 'f)14ir prtilN111 not lasing el -netts!, i11e'y marched ,. Iit11 to the head of the Gulf 4,f 11.a1hali. and passing around etre souWcrs' cud of ewer, are i)Oisonotis. 8. make thee n fiery serrenl--Or, sim- ply. "slake thee a serpent." A slnlulard--The word is used of any Meer! round which the ls'4►ple. especial -1 t: troops. gathered or were musterd. Here' it scans to mean simply a pole► sufficiently high 1e1 be (4►napicuoi4. 9 Of brass -Not hrnss ns we knew i1,1 but a nalurn1 metal. 1,r•nlobly eee,pfx'r, alloyed with seine strfenger e,r tinnier• metal other than zinc. ltronze, which is an alloy of copper and tin. wee well known among the u1) ients, while brass, as we know it, 1111 alloy of copper and t!nc, Ae(1119 m)t to have been eotnrn41nly known, if at all, at this time. 1.to4ek*v1 unto the eerr4'nt 4.t braes --In Ila' time' of ,ting Ilezektah during the eighth century 11. C. the "bronze ser- pent," popularly believed 10 be the sate. which Moses had made in the witcler- less, had become an object el idolatrous worship in Judah. Under the influence of Isaiah s earnest preaching the king was tweed to (lestruy the local sat'ctuarls i'rattered Throughout the kingdom. In the words of 2 Kings 1$ 4, ''les removed ,hr high plaoei , and brake the pillars, and cut ck►twn the Asherah : and he brake in pitt't's the brazen serpent that Moses hast made; fur mita antes*' days the children of Israel did burn incense to it." FORGOT M4.111t1.AGE LICENSE. Predicament of Bridegroom Who Was Absent .Minded. Walter N. Stevens, of North Dana, 1ltussachusetts, is a lumberman, and tlli., is his busy season. tit, when he alto EIsio L. Graves, of Royalslion, decided to awed the young woman agreed to set the welding hour at whatever lisle Walter (4.111(1 Banal► work and drive the steen- Iec n Hailes beaveetl North Dana 811(1 Itoyalston. A minister four stiles he•- yc.nd Il0yalston agreed to be ready when they appearxl, Tuesday night was the lime ngr'eed on. anti Walter hustled home from work ft nth a gladness which would not d0\wll in spite of the feeling that he had for- gotten something. 'flits feeling wore eft before he reached Miss Graves'; house. Felt it came buck with It rush when his bride-to-be inquired : "1)id you bring the license?" "111 go right back after it," said Wal- ter; and his horse travelled back to Pe.yalslon faster than it had ever done before. T'he're Waller aroused the Town Clerk and got the license and started ltnck for the third time to cover the seventeen -sola! trip. It was 12.30 a.m. when he reached the Graves home again. Ills bride greeted taut as cheerfully as 1x ssible tinder ate circumstances and then began to get herself ready. This look Iwo hours more. Tlhen tvillt lite Graves family waving good-bye and good luck, they were off for the rni11Ls- ter's. The llev. Charles Burt \Villiams is a roan of his word, and he was still awake. A: 4 o'clock, as the early rising musters were crowing and the birds twittering, he joined the hands of Waller and Elsie and trade them one. "1 hope, young man, you will be will- ing; to do as much for your wife five years from lo -clay," was his parting mes- sage to the couple. OUR DAILY ROUND. flurry, Worry, Thus coo go. Toiling, Moiling, Blow for blow. Raging, Ageing. Speeding fast, Sinning, Winning At the last. Rapid, Vapid Pace two set. 'fainted, Painted Gauds we get. Sighing, Dying. Maybe fame, Dust 14) Dual. `o Ends the game. TOY TO UNDERSTAND. Ise us riot judge another life By what it s4w111s to be, 11 may have fallen in the strifo For lack of sympathy. Seine pains are footholds alp the sleep, TO heights of lite tnigu('ssed ; flail other griefs aro hurried deep Within the aching brt'nst. Too often. 'nealh n merry smile A \voted lits bleeding still, And eyes (those light our heart beguiles Willi hitter tears 111ny 1111. Jtedge kindly. for 5\•e cannot know What Wits or alight have been : 'I'1c• linppinesS ow must. foreg41, Tho joys one might not (yin. 'Too -often In l..,s world of ours Hearts ache llur,ugh li'e none. Foe human hearts are Hie the flowers - They Of e'n to the 5111 One woad of tenderfees can thrill A heart in sore distress, Anal loving ministry can fill Tho world wills happiness. TEHIIIFIC SHOCK. In elle :simultaneous discharge c ighl of 111e len 12 -inch guns of the llaeatinoughl. a Shock wns given flint Neese! 4;f 102),001) tons, more than c1)uh)e teat of ally broadside ever !before fired. The vessel of 18,50) tons skidded side. earl fevers!l yards, listing Many de- grees. The guns are 53 feel, and each shell of 14511 pounds is discharged by 265 pounds of cordite, with n muzzle velocity of 2,1)00 miles an hour. - (:. LEND:1R CURIOSITIES. October always begins en the same day of the (week n.1 January, April 03 Jt:ly. September ns December. February, March, and November begin on t11t' snore 4111) •1. May, June and August always 1►c- gis► on different days from each other and ('very other smith in the year. The first and last days of the year aro al- ways the same. These rules do not ap- ply to Leal) year. '!'REI: `;'r:\NPS \\'fl ltOt'T IIo(Ts In Ta-oll.),lia. :%ustralia, a large gum tree Waa, to be cut down, and Ihe• \lark• me11 sawed across the trunk two lest „hive the gtre:und. \\'ht's i11.' cast \t as finished the trt'.' slipped tiff the base, but ittStend 111 falling n'nlailled upright. Il remained In this remarkable paeilk►n for severnl days until a windstorm toppled i! over. cumous Probably the most curious 1tible-class In the West of England is that of e1eaf- luute; which meets near (:hnlfot•t, Gloucestershire. All the members aro' deprived of their setrse.s of hearing and s f•eech, and have to ci)gnmunlcnte anti ''talk' to (Itch other by means of the deet•rnute alphabet. SOME D:ttN'1'1' DISHES. Mock Cherry Pie. -Otte sup of cran- berries, cut in halvt.�s; one sup of se'e'ded raisins; 0110 carp of sugar; one cup of cold water; one tablespoon of ti►ur; one tea- .l.0un of s•uniIla. Rake in two crusts. Woodford i'udding.-'I'o ono cup of blackberry jails add dart'' eggs, olio cup of g;iZulue'ei, esuuf Ilour, (110laalteaspOi,nsugarspinalte disso hffIv4cd p o111 three tablespoons soul• milk; steam 0114' 14: taro hours and serve \\ lib harts enlace. Fruit Pudding. --One cup of flour; add • l , ane -half cup osugar, ootlt1110' e culuble�paoofnfulrmilkof Latter, hyfo ten- se tec,n(uLs of baking fk,wde'r, and llllx tc getter. Fill hukiug 41i.h one half (11it1111 o' at'y kind of fruit., I,.,ur 1110 uliX111(0 of C1, anal Labe 10 a Iii. e hri con. tic[ t'e 1.11111 milk and sugar. 11 is 111:0 1118(1*' tvitlt any kind of berries, apples and pt'acl►eS. Apple Relish. -('hop fine one medium- sized onkut and two medium-sized, mildly acid apples. Put one cup e►f weak vinegar on to boil in a granite pan. :fix (.11.- teaspoonful eac;1 of mustard, sugar and cornstarch. half a teasi ►4nllul of salt and one well beaten egg. Stir nee into Iles boiling vine..tur mei c,►ok until creamy. Then mix i1 with the apple;. 1'11( salsa(' mixture may be baked in n conn en pudding dish end served hot \vett whippc'4l errant. 11 0 (1 Custard Filling. -SS i n,.-\\ 1► 1) stiff one pint of thick, sonar cream: add well beaten yolk of one egg, ono cupful of ixawdered sugar. vanilla to taste, one- half gwui(1 of sheltie! almonds, blanched anal choPred, and lastly the welt -),eaten white of one egg. Spread between layers and also on 'lop and sides of cakes. Orange Ice. --Use six oranges. two 11'1110115, 011e pint of sugar, and Iwo ratans of boiling Coater. Boil water and sugar together, skim, add orange juice and strain. When it begins to freeze ads: oleo cup of cream. Chocolate Pie. -To two tathlcspoonfuls of flour add three-fourths cup of sugar; mix 1horoiighly and gradually acid one cup of comer and batter size of an egg. Roil and stir until it becomes a smooth paste. Add two well beaten yolks to. mixture with one -halt square of melted chocolate. Bake crust and add choco- late filling. Cover with frosting made from whites of two eggs and browned 11' nexlC1'ate oven. Spanish Fruit Pudding.--i.inc a bak- ing dish with light puff paste. add a layer of sliced peach(:;, one of sweet orangos and one of banana. Stray with sugnr between mei layer. Cover with a light puff paste and bake to n deelicai' br'oty11. English Plum Putlding;.--Uses. suet, three pounds; rni;ins, live 14,urlds; nut- nu'gs, two; cinnamon, one (*'asl (4ulful; flour. two quarts; baking powder, fot.r ier.spo(inflils; salt, one teaspoonful; dark brown sugar.. Iwo cups; breitd crumbs, one handful: eggs, one. (lozl')). Sift every- thing with the flour That can he sifted and stir in the rest of the ingredients. Before adding raisins, ink ft•ith lknsr to keep then trim settling. Mix all 1It or- (eigllly. and add enough sweet milk to make a halter of elle desired eonsielency. Have queries or r4,unt1 pudding cloths and dip iu hot water, :mel leen dredge OM Hour, Pill in pun' pudding. 'ens pound in each. Tie perfectly tight, 1e'av- iltg plenty of room for swelling. llitte water boiling, put platers 1111(141' 1'11dding in bottom of the boiler to keep 1110111 from slicking. Let boll rapidly for live I1CUrs and serve hot. 13iIEA175 AND CAKES. Blitz huchen.--To the- yolks of four eggs well beaten. add one-half cep of butter, one cup of sug,nr. and heat to n cream. Add one and one-third cups of flour, one heaping teaspoon of Faking powder, ono teaspori of vanilla. and the \t•ilMI; of four 4'ggA, well ls'nten. Sprinkle over one rap of chopped al- monds. \\'Ix'n baked sprinkle with 1 owde're:i sugar. Sour Cream Cake.-- 'I'n one cup of sugar add one cup of rich lour creaum, two eggs, one and a half culls of flour. one even lenspex►n of soda, one-half cup chopped raisins, one terislx•e,11fie of cinnamon, one-fourth Teaspoonful of grimed cloves, one-fourth teaspoonful of nutmeg. and a pinch 4)f salt. 1'ul all the ingredients i11 mixing I►4ett'I, in older named, and bent lite minuteo flake in k.af or in iayers. l'•e• ami •Ie.ired frust- Il,gl', Aiwa)S a(tc1 Bloat ease f•)lirth sls)onf))1 0l cream of turliir 'with the soda. Dainty l)iscI,il;.--into a quart of filar sift two heaping te'asi►00n3 of baking powder and a pinch of salt. \\'uric fn lightly with the linger tire one-half cup cold Inr1, anti mix In a sett dough with fresh milk. Du not knead the dough, but roll out niel cut one-half itl t1 thick Hud prat into shallots pan:. Slip immediately into a hot oven and hake quickly. Orange Cake.- !teat 14o a cr•enni the yolks of seven ('gg s and two cep.; of granulated sugar. '!'tarn acid 1110 juice of Iwo oranges. having grated the rind tear icing; add the whiles well beaten, (syn Cups of flour, into wl►icli 0110 leasp.ioetft,l of baking powder has leen stirred; hent until light and Luke in threw layers. \taken boiled icing, adding the lanes! nl.s! rind of ewer oranges. 110 1►►Irtk'ulur not l) grate the skin of the (eruslgl0s, OA it :1,111)111;0111:11 ako the Icing; hiller. 13i.scutt.- =1'u gest) cul)41,10 s of situ'(! dd Iwo lahle::Is uIlflll. 1,f 1►nkitlg; powder, 11 pinch of salt, one rued a 1►n)f cusps of milk. ik'ut till 1' gether quickly. Have pans buttered, dr4111 tact sf..eem into pan, leaving mum for the 111. -lits to spread. Rake in het uveal. serve hut. \\'ulmit Creast Cake.-'ro seven table. s)•xonhlla of rolled crackers add Iwo len- d (w►114 of baking powder, one' pe►).nd ref English walnuts, one pound (►f (17114 ., one and ane -halt cups of sugar. rind live eggs, put yellows in ant) hent whites separately. Pok.' thirty lalltutes In n slow oven. Molnss•s Drop Cakes.- Iloil together Iwo cups of ni4►iasees, one cup of ancon sugar. one-half cup .,f lnrd, end one - belt cup of wilier. Ileful•e boiling, 11s- ti411y). 111 11.4' 11+11f cut: or wigter one 1e'a- sesset of girlies.. one of (levee and n little snit. After Loilirig 11)4 s' ug;l►ly, bet' - in}' c'ateful not tel hese-!, and 1.1)14 n '4,1.1. &Jt: two eggs, beaten light, one table - f er s1o:)n of soda in fig -bur; sift and stir (tette 'tusk. Deep on t'e'ver.4 side of baking pan. Nut cleats 31k1 raisins may added. Cocoa Macaroons. --Pass through a sieve, together. one cup of sifted flour. half a cup of granulated ,►Iger, two level tablespoonfuls of coe00a, half a teaspoon- ful of bakusg powder, one-fourth tea- spoonful each of salt and c'uuutulnn, one- eighth teasgoolif el each ot. eknes, mace and nutmeg. Willi these unix Ute grated rind of an orange and nue-fourth of a cup of chopped cilit►n. Break ono egg and the yolk or \t iniac of another into the mixture, ndtt also a teaspoonful of vanilla extract. and mix the (whole tO a Stitt dough. \\ ith buttered hands troll Irl^e mixture nut,, balls about the sizt' 01 hickory nuts. Dip one sick' in granu- lated sugar and set seine distance afar: in buttered i►ans. the sugar side up. Bake in u quick oven. The recipe makes eighteen macaroons. Fruit Cake. --Four eggs, beaten cepaa- raetely; one cup of sugar, two cups 01 molasst's, one -Half cup of sweet mill: on' and one-half cups of butter, .)n pound tech of lig:, dales. raisins, cur- rants and mils; u11r-half !band each ' f& candied t orange and let'1'11 peel; one--' hall* ps►und of citron; one teaspcx►nfui er.ell of Cinnamon, spice, cio\'es and nut- meg; one teaspoonful of baking vela. sifted with live cups of flour. Chair and flour well se'parate'ly all !suit. mixing as little at a lime in the batter. i'ut in a wt•II-gs•t•ased pan and hale' in a Mots overs two and One-half hours. 1)O\IES'1'IC IIINTS. Always keep carbonate of •-oda In the house. l' 8' lawns 111111 scalds it is an excellent remedy. '('lie surface of the tn.rn should be covered with 11, either dry or just dumped. It relieves. the pain caused by the bites or slings of insect:. small sal}spieinful in half a lunlblci of water will relieve heartburn and in- digestion, and if taken tt•tth tepid wane last thing at night will frequently induce sleep in restle:..s persons. \\'teen washing a new blanket for the first time, begin by soaking it for twelvt 11,111:, in ('4)111 viler, then rinrct in cleat wall''. This will remove ill the sulpliu: used in the bleaching;. After this wnSI) the blanket in a lukewarm lather made 01 boiled seep elle water. Inns(' well 4,1 clear water, shake thoroughly, and hale out et dry. Cake tins. fatty tins, etc.. are easily cleaned by boiling. Put them in a sauce pan with some song extract and water. buil there for abed an hour, and they will be found clean and new -looking. Soap and 50(111 01' b011\ may be used instead of .soap extract. if preferred. Certain lamps. irrespective of the amount of care bestowed upon them in tho way of cleaning, always seem to burn dimly. This may be remedied by dropping small pieces of cnniphor into (1.' bowl with the oil. To use bacon fat, clarity the fact le touring boiling (water on it. This will b•' found In be fur better than lnrd o: butter for pastry -making. 1t is N.A. to ull)w c•ilstar•ds. blanc- nnanges. etc., 1e, cool n little before add- ing such flavorings as vanilla and twine. or the strength will evaporate. -4• CAPITAL CITY OF KOREA DEATH STOLE OVER iT BEFORE JAPAN'S 111.14:. Seoul the Same for Past 300 Years - Building Where Queen Was Murdered. Seoul, the capital city of Korea for more than a thousand years, is enmblc- ilmaatic of the death that bas gradually 51001 ower the. \elute of the land and Ihe poopI('. 11 ties ut ilte lioll4)ty (11 bleak hncntl cliffs, rt's'mbling, when viewed from one of Ihe surrounding heights no thing so ntticll ars the mushroom growth 111111 gathers inside a hollow slump. The city is mud colored and sprawl- ing' it crnwls over the alienedncite walls on all sidle; and dwindles into ilte swamps of the Ilan itive'r on the north. 'i'he 1i4uu5es, 111e palaces and the gabled gaele\ways through the walls are as the; have been fur 31)4) years past. \VIiKIIE QUEEN \IL I' ltnck of the royal library in the trees of the deer park. then' i., n long bun• ggrlow which the Korean guide will point out 14) foreign visitors. 110 twit slam] at Sir singe and indicate one of the poncho- !!! feint of the building, leta no amount rf ,elver twill induce) hint to a►ocates al)- If 11e vieitlr climbs the porch anti ap- plit's lies eye) to a hole' that hes teen punched in the paper screen or the door he may see the room in which the ()uecn Was hacked to (tenth by Jnpanern" swords.. Not a thing has been touched in the at,ont since 1110 Queens holy cons carried out and burned by the nsens- sins. e IIOME 01' QUEEN'S SPIRIT. :\ sprig of withered flowers strife'sit' n bronze 5.810. (ate half of a lamp shade which 113(1 bran shornin two by n st5ord-stroke, dangle.. ore its la^quer sl11ft, Here is the' horse of the murdered Qi;4v'n's restless spirit. Because) 11" spirit roams tlr.81)11 the palace park nl night nnd calls for s-41)geance, the ancient sent 411 the tangs has been uc• c111l'C'l at haunted place by the Emperor that was, and from the day of the ns- sasaination unlit the present he hues lived in 0 new palace built outside 4)f II►o old enclosure. \\ AS I'I'I'Ir'1'f. \\•tien (inc remembers the equipment and the rldicuiuua liUtIiary semblance .,f the I'orcan soldiers, the fighting at- tending their disarming iv -stones the as- pect of pitiful heroism. The Japanese press repots ndnitit that ti,'%01.81 Jatpnn- es•' were kilkxl--t10 wonder is Uual flares. 55 ere 11ny coMllIIIttcs art 1111 un liar► Japan• use side during the slaughter of the Korean's, Afteer'11t little training item 1.11)1 1111- tte.ns, the K4lrcnn .\I11(sold to sail fie it• elf when Japan line ltusesin Ix ggan 14) eerie b) grips ever the land. and the re- sult was that the Kievan soldier slipped rick into something between 11 scar' - clow and an iii 5.nte comstnh!e. SENTRY \\E\4"1' 'r0 Was Weak and Run Down WOULD VERY OFTEN FAINT AWAY Ain. J. 11. Armstrong, Port Elmsloy, Ont., tells of her experienoa with MILBURN'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS. She.writes : "It is with gratitude I soft how your Heart and Nervo Pills aenefitted me. "I was very weak and run down, had !►eaelaches nearly every day and very Jften would faint away, in fact, my .loctor said that sometime I would never rar11e out of the faint. It was through me of your travelling agents that I was ns.lueeej to try Milburn's heart and Nerve !'ills and after taking three boxes ung glad to relate it has been a number ,f years since I had a fainting spell and is:arcely ever have a headache. Too :loch cannot be said in praise of Mil - .urn's Heart and Nerve fills, for in the !hey have effected a perfect cure." Price 50 oents per box or 3 boxes for 31.25, at all dealers, or Tho T. Milburn Limited, Toronto, Ont. his gun, bayonet dosvil, bile the dirt and go to sleep on the road, oblivious of roasting; officers and certain of reil)t'Ct for 111, pr strafe hem from the lowly citi- zens. 11 was this motley array of half-bel:ei soldiers that refused to lay down ai'nt.t and staid up in open light against trained veterans of the Japanese with machine guns. After the Koreans had been beaten and cuffed ghoul, lobbed of their land and cheated in Japanese enure: for three yeasre without a luur- mur, there suddenly came to the asin1pl0 anen of tate Seoul regiments some Ihcke" n' the spirit that made their forefathers conquerors in the dire ages, and they died fighting. -4 YOUNG SCO1S'wl:Ol'R'11E: Y. Children Vied with Each Other in Honor to Parents. Says a writer in the Scottish Anteri- ean : "\When in Scotland lest year I failed to see any signs of degradation among my many relatives or- their Iuuneat)us friends, and I never saw ;s grander sight than I did in London, where I vilified some old Scotch friends. t'Itey have ten children, most of thein at home. All of them seemed as if they cotikln't honor their father and mother enough -the girls tacking charge of the house and most of the cooking, and the boys, In turn, taking charge of the carv- ing. Their father and 'nuttier were tak- ingt it easy in their old ago. Everything was harmony -the result of careful :raining. 1 have never seers anything like it in the United States, and 1 go ul'out a great d(`til." POWER O 1FALLING \V:\TER. .. 11. Is perfectly well known to eweryor,.i that water constantly dropping upon it Alone will wear it away, and there is as trite old proverb regarding this fact. 1'h•' force of a single dror of water fall- ing from a height is not great. but the results of this tiny blow when it is ninny lieges repeated are nskoun(ling. '!'here is a story of one poor wretch who was hound with his back 10 a stem) wall and had a stream of (water "of the) bigness of a slams finger" directed (8) 1e► his bare head, the water fulling from ►1 iteigght of ats)ut eighteen feet. The ee'cepta^_le frc,in (which this appnrently (limitless stream trickled \vas a barrel twilling only twenty e;dd gallons, but he - fere the water had more titan half run r,ut Isle Wean wee (leed. with a 11010 111 111.1 skt,lt wheat exposed the brain. USEFUL CANDLE NUT. One of the oddest nuts in file world is lett- candle nut, \vine!' grows in itis► Pacific islands. The Dante is derivist from the fact thn1 the kernel is so full .)f oil that when drioi it can be stuck in a reed and used as a eeandk'. Tho natives e;l llaWait roast these nuts, and after re- moving the shell reduce the kernel 14) a paste, which when seasoned with Halt and Peltier is reported as making an eppetizing dish. The husk of the nut and taro guts which exudes teen the tree have medicinal values, while the burped shell i; used in making an indelible ink with which tattooing is dine. ' i Illi \W L I.DO TIL%T. "Yes," said the voluble crank, "I used to be as lead as you, but 111)nde ty mind ho split smoking and drink. ti, tied I did it." Indeed?" remarked Manley, "I guess a man who can quit smoking and drat!:; 'ng could qui( almost anything-" "Obs, yes." "Except talking about IL" - -11.-- "She said i might kiss her on either sleek.," "What did you (111 ?" "I he's. tatted fora long lime bete e•• t 111e m." ��. _ --- -- - - --- -.- C000 OLO uV In puiiitr so WILL Bio BL000. The ono in a healthy body and ruddy complexion, the other in ill -health, blotches, pimples, bails and sores, aid frequently in intenser forms as ulcers, abscesses, erysipelas, salt nce'nn, etc. Every organ of the body depends on the blocs! for force and vitality, and but scantily served when the blood is impure. No remedy is so potent as rt blood purifier or more rapidly produces new and healthy blood than B URDOCK B LOOD B ITTERS which neutralizes the various poisons and restores the vitalizing power of this all importetnt fluid. As often as not a gentry w•�u1J Santa►' For eek by all druggist. and dealers, i