Exeter Times, 1907-12-19, Page 6ABSOLUTE
SECURITY
ITY OF THE wicKEDLI,,,PLILS0711,1 PAIIAGRAPHS.PROSP Rg About Suite ul the
World's Famous People.
No one has the welfare of the rising
get►Pruaon mere al heart than Lord
Int betas, w•ho recently celebrated Itis
AreNotatan IndextoChar-
acter
1•
acter or Worth.
a Riches Al! I d Cl ar seventy-fifth birthday, "Healthy games
healthy foods, and heulthy homes" is •
what the famous Field -Marshal 'says he'
would like to see every youth in the 1
country enjoying. "And keep young,"
cc -Mentes the herrn of Kandahar. "1 hate
kept myself young on perpcse. 1 newer
e
1
dela 1�e and 1
ant really
a.
drink and 1 r` n' smoke, J
don't 1
sell? Can any other than yourself !lake n4't a day older than after Majuba in
you essentially either richer or poorer? ism...
'fhis is not a plea for men to he con-
,
.ln The Archbishop of Cuaterbury is a
tent with poverty ; to every man helengs skilful, and in some respects a weeder
that share 01 taus world's th:lib, WIri.h fel chess -player. Once when on a visit
Cenulno
Carter's
ill
Little 1�
C
�
Meet Bcr- £iGrcturo of
yes ['c.• to", wrarrcr Wow.
Ver, email ,end av arsy
tO lake aD -agar.
pp f"R itiAOACNE.
IC
.RiiTLE iER� MGN DIZZINESS.
1 ;' FOR SILUOUSNE$$.
FCR T"PID LIVER.
FRS C ..t3TIPATlOII.
FOR.81.LLCW SION.
FOO THE COMPLEXION
+: 1 tit'+ ��e'-+ A�',.v." ";1--L
t e�tgttsr
MILBURN'S
LAXW-LIVER
PILLS
are milt, sure and safe, and area perfect
regulator of the system.
They gently unlock the secretions, clear
away all effete and waste matter from the
system, and giro tone and vitality to the
whole intestinal tract, curing Constipa-
tien, Sick Headache, Biliousness, Dyrpep-
ais, Coated Tongue, Foul Breath, Jean -
dice; Hoa:[burn, and Rater Brash. t,lra.
R 8. Ogden, 'Woodstock, N.I3., writes:
"My husband and myself have used Mil -
burn's IAia-Liver fills for a number of
ytera. We think we cannot do without
them. They are the only pills we ever
take.'
Price 2.5 cents or five bottles for $1.00,
at all dealers or cirect en receipt of price.
The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto,
Ont.
ETON DOVS' EXTRAVAGANCE.
Parents and Headmaster Endeavoring to
Stem the Tide.
There is trouble at Eton College, Eng-
land, between parents and Headmaster
Lyttelton over the luxurious and extra-
vogant habits that have been introduced
be a large number c.[ pupils who are
millionaires' sone, some of thele Ameri-
can.
Though more exclusive than now,
Eton has been conducted until of late
yeots on the same simple, frugal lines es
other t ublic schools. But recently a
riwaTry in extravagance has grown up
pairing the hcys. Money is beginning to
tell more than brains and character. An
el filmic for games. rather than books.
is determining a boy's standing among
his fellows.
Ileadniaster Lyttelton has been person-
nlly apprenched by influential patrons of
the school, who have implored hien to
cieek this demoralizing inflt,ence.
Owing to the reports of the extent to
which this influence has already gone,
many (entitles that for generations have
been Elonlans are sending their sons to
Rugby, Winchester and other schoe:ls
hitherto considered not quite on the
sante level socially.
+
WOMEN IN I'17ILIC (Hi -B E.
In Cngland and wales 2.t!0e Women
Iluld Office hl Public Bodies.
There, are, it is estimated, sone thing
like 2,000 women on various pubhcly-
elected bodies in England and Wales at
the present Ifne, and of this number
Mout 1,200 are meineers of boards of
ie.:miier's. Of the Eli unions in Eng-
land and Wales 407 now have lady
Rhardians, the proportion cf worsen to
sten being one in every twenty-one or
twenty-two. In London there are 1e0
wemen guardians distributed amongst
thirty-one 1111b u s. Whitechapel alone,
like the counties of Rutland and Radnor,
l.r.ving none. The new qunliflctalk.►1 bill
will open up 117 more public bodies to
women -namely. 3.26 town councils,
sixty- three county councils, and tventy-
ei'ht London borough eolotepa.
Turns Bad Blood into
Rich Red Blood.
No other remedy possesses such
eerfcct cic^!sing•, healing and ruri•
lying properties.
Externally, heals Sores, t'icers,
•1hscessee, end 01 Eruptions.
internally. restores the Stomach
- Liver, Bowels and Blood to health.,
pion. If your appetite is poor
ur energy gone, your ambitio.
t, IB.11.I3. v..itl r•,:staro you to the
enjoyment of happy vigcrou:
"For 1 was envious at the foolish when
I saw the prosperity of the wicl:ed."-
I'e. laxiu., 3.
Some saints have lost a lot of sleep
worrying over the presperily of the
wicked and soma limier; !rate trade
Ihenlseh'es ridiculous boasting over their
immunity from adversity. It has selling
strange to the suinte that the Omni-
i3Otenl, eh() Butes sin, stauuld allow se
many 4,i Cie geed things of this world to
fall into the hands of the unworthy ; it
they had u chane they could tell where
they wewld be u11uclt better bestowed.
It is True that there are many bad men
who have plenty of money, lands, aid
other possessions; it is true that there
nue !many UKrouglly good lien and
women who do not have even as nisch
a; they seem to need. lent it ulso is
hue that ttie snarling, clamorous voice
of envy ever• is ready to assert that a
luau roust have sold his so11 t.) the evil
one because he has secured some mea-
sure of success.
The salute are not all poor; the sin-
ners are not all rich. The moral order
of the universe docs not have to jtlslify
itself by the precise and equitable divi-
sion of dollars. The Indictment of Provi-
dence on account of the providence of
the wicked sire 1 indi^n1es the tendency
.
ref us all to mea ure all things by the
looney standard.
,:
t
WHO IS THE IRO.1f41 OL. MAN?
'!'here is a world of difference between
being personally prosperous all beim;
the nominal possessor of things that aro
prosperous in tlIt'Inselwes. A poor kind
n)
of a man may to • on n rich farm and
rout may be rich in hinself while get-
ting his living off a poor farm or al a
poor job.
Prosperity trust bo measured by the
person and not by his possessions. We
answer the question, "flow much is a
roan worth?' by quoting figures and
bank account. But we know well that
41auty a man saki to he worth millions is
netually not worth 10 cents in himself,
it not in his own character adding one
unite to the world's wealth.
What are you, the real self, worth? Is
your life prosperous? Is your heart get-
ting richer? Are your sympathies
broadening. your ideas and top's be-
ccming worth more to you and to the
wend? Even though you had all those
things which ycu envy others. would
not your prosperity still depend on your-
11e'shall earn by 1111 ineestment of tum- to India ho stayed with an OMetal in
self to the world. Religion does not charge of the laying of a new railway
eucall the lore of poverty nor elle lazy file and in the daytime he made long
spurning of life's duties and rewards. tc,u+-s with his host over lit:.' route. On
The enlarging and enriching of this there occasions the two . constantly
world of things is lite sacred duty ("ii pliytl! chess without either 1:oard or
every man. men. Alt hr. rooves were mode werhnlly.
Itut hoe foolish are we who judge They neveIr forgot a ;nov' or a cubit of
only Ly that which is on the surface, the game, and each could tell tit any mo -
who talk about the injustice et a world mein what was the exact position ..f the
in which had men eau gel so n11111y good hr.aginary men on the intuginary board.
things and fail to see that no Lad man! Sir I Laney Johnston, the famous ex -
ever rill; in sight el the real good of poorer, has n weakness for keeping
anything, awhile no good man 01111 be strange pets, and tells an amusing slaty
huldci•ed (Cool 0r deprived 01 the end"' of ti monkey which he possessed when he
inti and•teed at. Zanzibar. Alas! Jacko is no
SA'I''SFYING GOOD OF LIFE. more. his demise being brought about by
The neva 'Attlee!! Ls the secret of pin.;- 1►is utischtewousn0ss. it seems that there
deterutines was a warding at the house of n resident
perils. or adversity. Ile
whether his life shall be rich or Poor. whose gardens ]ncko had r(5idexl lime
Into the great game of life no element :tier lima, and nratnst whom he seemed
of choice' enters; we are act the Puppets to have a particular grudge. A mognifl-
c! blind (--tees which in Innligiinnl sport cent wedding -breakfast hid been pre -
hr. us up or -tees u.. down; we will for pared, but just as the party returned to
ourselves whether we take the g'v)d or eurlake of it. Jacko hopped in through
lose it, whether we will have ben'111 or the French window, seized the corners
Ica It go. ! of the tablecloth, and sheet*up the whole
No man ever lived toward things, that
set-up till everything. from eh:on abme
am Letter, really sought the things that to pickles, wets inextricably mixed.
an- best. e note enriching himself. No •lien he sat on the debris and in monkey
dee(
, quiet joys of lite
ever ad reason gun
of
Ile infuriatedbridegroom
e roo
m culnn1k't 11 friendship, beauties, and lite ler uu c addressed lite company Lithe
to envy the one who had set his heart on short his career.,
thin ks and Thus hot txaught them. Britain's noble families are apt to nd-
The an
thing fIo
be
coveted isaria•acler. here to one ChristiantstIanu
name
(et mune-
'
isthat t um
The prosperity first to be sohi,hl Ih • centuries. i4AS. Patel is the chosen I
which is personal. The standard by 1 r f the \I,•thuens, and is borne by both
which to meesure. men and their sue-; the present peer and his eldest son. The
ccs is a spiritual one. '1'o -day ie. not a Dukes of Beaufort and of Norfolk ire
sentence from Jesus or a thought from Henrys, the Dukes of :\bercorn tee's
Emerson worth more to us than any Jetties, the Dukes of Westminster favor
cheque that can be signed on Wall, Hugh fund Iticha'd, lite Dukes of Buie
Street? cicu h Winter or \Villiam, the Dukes of
Pity tee prosperity of any to whom Hamilton Alexander and Archibald. and
life consists in the abundance of things al! the children -sons and daughters -of
possessed. Poor, destitute, naked, such the Dukes of Leeds bear the high -sound -
•t ratan walks unioug his palaces and ing name c1 Godolphin. Then the Earls
treasures; empty and soon forgotten he of Shaftesbury are Antonyns, the Earls
goes from life. Incl► indeed is he who,' o' Kennta•e Valentines, and the Earls of
though he have not where to lay his Courlown choose the name of James.
(lead, sees the face of the infinite The l-nrls of Bradford aro Orlandos, and
Father, wins his brother's love. and to tee Earls Fortescue have been called
whom belongs all the treasures of the. 1!1igli throughout the centuries. The
ka:gdum of heaven note. 1'ottiniores-boys and girls -are all
HENRY F. COPE. \1 nrwicks, the Gcrmanstons are Jenicos•
and the Scarsdale.; are Nathaniels. In
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
DEC. 22.
Lesson XII. Christmas Lesson. Golden
Text: Luke 2. 11.
THE LESSON \VO11D STUDIES.
Rased on the text of the Revised \'er-
ebon.
Alis Star. -The star seen by the wise
men in the East, and again at Bethle-
hem, must be regarded us an astronomi-
c"! phenomenon, the exact nature of
which \vitt doubtless never he known by
eel). Kepler ns early as IGLt calculated
that a ronjunetion of Jupiter and Saturn
occurred in the year B. C. 7. Later as-
tronomers have repeated these calcula-
tions and have shown that no less than
three such conjunctions took place be-
tween May and December, B. C. 7.
Chinese astronomical tables, morcc.vcr,
me said to record C appearance of a
peculiarly colored, esitnesccnl star in
February. B. C. 4. Either of these phe-
nomena would present n splendid and
unusual spectacle, which w•ou ' natural-
ly be of seecial interest to Meuse engaged
in a study of the stars. 1t 'nus( be re-
membered that the Jews et this time
were expecting and anxiously awaiting
1114• appearance of Messiah. This ex-
pectation of a conquering Jewish I'rince
was widespread outside of Palestine as
well, and especially in the Far Eitel
where Jewish colonists, Use descendants
4:t earlier exiles, were to be found in
large numbers. Any unusual n,troi o-
IRkal phenomenon would therefore very
enterally be interpreted as the sign cf
!Messiah's birth. This noturnl explana-
tion, however, leaves unaccounted for
the very definite glielance of the magi
first to Jerusalem and later to Bethle-
hem by means of the slur. '111e direct-
ness and simplicity of Matthew's nnrra•
tive at this point, too. is such as is
chnracterisli: of all New Testament pas•
euges in which miracles are mentioned.
Verse 1. When JCOIS was torn -Some
Bene. probably a year or more, before
the death of King tiered. which occurred
in the year of (tonne 750-751. correspond-
ing to the year which we now des:gnat's
n • 11. C. 4-11. C. 3. The consequent error
:It our present system of chronology is
act -emery' for by the (set that that sys-
tem was not ineugni•alcd until the mid -
de of the sixth e•enti.'.y after Christ, at
which dile it nms•ake was made in
reckoning tale( to the year of Christ's
birth.
Item' -Later known as north' the
(,rent because "f the founder and his•
t. really the noel ,onspicutets end Int-
i
',slant m,'ti ler of the Venetian Gamily
11114 dynasty. Ile ens n descendant of
Anlipater, stn Edclnile governor. who
rami. into pr'anut.(('nce in Palestine
affairs severity after Syria became part
of the Kenai' empire at the time of the
imesi en et , 'la by l uiiIlxy the (;real.
II was Mott: Antony. the friend and
at iIger 01 11111115 ('1l'-ar. who in the year
Il. C. 37 planed Herta! 4.n the throne of
1, dose. Jeeeptius crow rates eight wives
' heard. and tie Is le • en to hese had
11'1 Iwvo steno. 1' ha;l gh1 r•ens
.1r.1 to daughter-. II \Ares .. 'rite! u11 -
I, ,;:. ,,t, nlld r1 r111•" _ ,,! w\IN'Se
1: r'. 4 r.'1111.t•41 a ; •`!';elutt�
t, ! ! 1 ,.• 1l . .1 \"1, siv 111
\, s , . .,',1 'I It.` i n 4, 1. t\',.
11,•'I. 1'• 1:' . 111 1.1 ',11
.11 ! 1
tics eeiela . •,11 4,i tie • t-. 1 tee Le, ata tf•'
the Orannore peerage (lie names of
Greek word "Magi" was a title given to Geoffrey and Dominick have alternated
learned men, priests and physicians of without break for three and a half cen•
the: Persians, (Babylonians, and Assyr- Juries.
Inns, who were also versed in astrc.logy,.l "I am very proud of the honor.' saki
soolhsnying, end the interpretation of Sir John Bell, when congrnialnird 1/••414,
dreams.' In Jeremiah 39. 3, 13, Ner•gal- his election to the oMee of Lord Mayer
shnrezer, one of the Chaldean ollieers of London for 1907-8, "and have oi.y .one
sent by Nebuchradrezznr to Jerusalem, is regret -namely, that i shall be unableSo
given the title "Rib-mng," "chief of the spend much time in the country:' it
Magi." It is Pik early caste. or, possl- John has hitherto resided for the greater
sly, race of men who gave their name; part of the year at Stoke Pcges, where
t' magicians end the art of magic in h:: has a beautifully timbered estate of
general. That the wise -leen were three 2(te acres. Hero in hours of leisure he
in number is a mere tradition rgsting on. enjoys the life of a country gentleman
very meagre nalhorily, i studying the science of farming, preserve
3. 'troubled -Fearful lest some usure ing on n large scale, and working out his
per or pretender should rob hint of his own Ideas us to the breeding of cattle.
throne. Herod knew also of the expec- Sn' John is practically a self -►node num.
talion of the Jews ccneerning Messiah Ile commenced his comnier•cial career in
who was to be their King.I the dike of a London accountant, and
All Jerusalem -Especially those inwas afterwards for a considerable pen`
authority, whose position was ondan-t lo•. Identified withn lending firm in th
gored. I
Australian trade. •Then he joined the
4. Chief priests and serines -Men Into Mr. .101111 Glover in the prnpr!etor-
versed 111 the Hebrew Scriptures, and ship of Ihu \Venodc Brewery. now con•
who therefore Wright be expected to be ducted as a limited liability company. of
fnnsilia• with every prophecy concern- the board of which he is the chairmen
inn the promised national deliverer. I When he first associated himself with 1!
The (:heist-l.il.. "the oncintd" tenet', i th ! business was n srnall and struggling
that is, Messinh. one, whereas tc-day the brewery ranks
5. it is written --In Mie. 5. 2. which as one of the Host prosperous in Lon-
reach::
on-
readh : "But thou, Bethlehem Ephrata, don, theshareholdersreceiving . Qrots nn
which art little to 1eL among the thou- Bat dividends. This development ming
sands of ]urian, out of thee shall one ba attributed nhnost entirely to Sin
ovine forth unto me flint is to be cuter John's personal efforts and business en•
in tweet."tcrprise.
S. Sent Them -in accordance with the
11 M11)1alion gained Roil the priests and
scrbes.
'rig Ilelhtehem-lelw•ren flee and six
miles sou.h of Jerusalem. pie Bethle-
hem of today is a small Christian vil-
lage noted for the peculiar customs of its
iihnbitanls and th.' whiteness of all Hs
buildings. The Church of he Nativity
wilt an attached monastery is the chief
ettract 4.11 which the place now offers to
tourists and Christian pilgrims. It is
perhaps the oldest church in eeistenee,
parts of the present huilding dating
hack to the time of Constantine in the
early part of the fourth century. The
(:ave of the Nativity under the choir of
this chore!' was originally n stall's for
collie and is supposed to he the actual
pin.'e where Jesus was born. It 1'"••
sesses a rock -cul recess sinsilnr 1.. the
niniigers of other cave -Tables found in
the Judhenn hills to the south. The Ira -
(1111(1n fixing this as the place of Jeei s's
birth dates Lack to the second century
A. 1). aid luny well Le considered
trustworthy.
11. 'I'Ise house-- Not necessarily the
sonic in which the Bribe had been hone
sc.ns.' days if rat weeks itouleleee hav-
ing teepee(' since the birth.
Frank incen-e and myrrh -'leen resit -
toms gains obtained from trees tomtit in
Arabia and usc.1 hn111 for lHnlicn1 pts•
p•tses and for end :tiling• -w cry cxpr0n-
siwe.
12. Another way --Possibly giving s(tulh
hvm Rethlcte1 i. pest Hebron. and
Iain ugh 1(11'11i(I l eastward. Still an-
other tinsel. ,e- route was to proceed
ncrthensl repose Jordan, lowing Jeru-
salem Ie the west.
T00 MU(1l.
"Teomas A. I-kFse,n has t.crl•.ciel
n
w•'+l.rtiid n II.I•e •te.trt'y hoose lit
tv''we h•1a:r: nl n a. -t of elsre).
"N• ,.. i:' Lc 11 IN .'.': a en,. 1
,•'can its t\tlwe haloes he'll Le n e;
N0'I' SO C11\(Fitt l'.11h1.1:.
..!
I;ro-� Brun :nl clat'ri nit.';
1.,, ee't' num.L' up of water.'
.. • , .1 " -'eek
ek to tniuu-
l.(..-..t 1: to lie ta;ler
Stint %LINE CAIII.lee ENR\SY.
1.1111e Creature of the ee a That is Forel
of Gh!ta I'errha.
The viclsstlu.tes of a submarine cable
are many. 1l may be torn by of an-
chor. crushed by a rock or serk,usly
duinng:d by n coral reef such ns air and
in the tropia... Some of the growths
often found on a cable tend gradual-
ly to decay the iron sheathing wwites.
Then, again, a cable is sometimes sev-
ered goy a seaquake. 1l may be fatally
attacked by the snout of a sawfish ur
i.y the spike of n seordllsh, says the
Mai/nine of teem:erce.
But perhaps the little menet that
)rakes 'beef most objectionable font
the (ae'c ( ligineer's standpoint is the
insignift and looking teredo nnval's.
This little beast is intensely greedy
wiesre gutta perchn is concerned, wort;•
inn it- way there 1etween the Iron
wires and l:cttcen the selling yarns.
The silica in the tauter vette cote:sound
t, Isd c to defeat the IcrcJ')s efft is et
pinking a off the core end this
clefent is further effected by the e..1re
timhtg enveloped in n Hain !opine of
f ries.
But where the 1Otton) Is ki)- t• n 10 1
badly Infrete:l with these lillle tome
Mere of the deep the insuin'or is often
r•ornrosiel of (nein rlLtcr. elech ho-
rn. attraction f.•r Me terries and
nesse..4 tnighties,, n:oreower. tt hicit
less suited f'r its leering idol than
the eompnrnliv''ly cheeselike galla per.
cha.
teem one corse or another faults 41
+.44+11410 444•4144•44,41 444
Tll1 Honie
44+ .+fill-i~IWe4•0ll1
(:1(1)11..1: I(Gt.11'i: .
Ilot e.h(.se Sandwiches.- Ince white
Li,•ad 11,111. Lein a Ilii:: Ingo of grated
cheese 'eleven slims, sprinkle with salt
aid a utile mil pepper, alai press 5114.cs
together. Fry them Io a nice bri\tn in
holt lord and half butler, and serve hot.
Salmon Nuns. ---One pound ettimv11,
twee eggs, three tablespoons melted but-
ter, two Iatlespcons lemon juice, enc•
small cup of bread cru►:bs, pinch of salt
and pepper. Stir well and put in cups;
IOn
steam twenty-five minutes. Sauce
lablespxoon flour, two tablesplxuns butler,
I shake of celery salt, and salt and pep-
per; cook and pour over puffs and serve
oil lettuce teams.
Chile Coterad.-Cul up a chicken as if
to slew. Boil until nearly dome. Add it
little chopped parsley, on' onion, and
three chillies chopped nller removing
scads. Cook one-half hoer longer and
adc a tablespot.nful of flour rubleel with
a tablespoonful of butter, and salt to
taste. Serve with a border of carefully
belled rice. This is n favorite dish on
tht ['twine coast. and may be made of
beef, pork, or mutton.
Ct•aekiicl l'nddiug.--l'hree cups sweet
milk. two eggs, one-half clap sugar, four
cracknels. Beat together two eggs and
one-half cups sugar, add the three cups
of milk. Grate the cracknels on it rough
grater and pour the other ittgredienls
over them, but do not stir• or mss with
spoon. Putter pudding pan and pour
the Inixturo lite it, grating a little nut-
meg on top. Bake in a hot oven 1t ho ► none-
v
to u• or set and nicely iccl brown.
own.
1
Serve with or wwilhoul cream.
(:hi kin Pudding. -(:til up n young
chicken and pint in n saucepan with jus
enough waver to cover it. Pent until
lender a1ld season with gall, pepper and
celery snit. Place the cllickei in a well•
buttered pudding Weil, and twc Mit ie
af,00nfuls of minced parsley, toe leu e
boiled eggs sliced; a teaspoonful cf einem
juice. and enough . chicken broth to
ntcisten. Pour over it the fealcwing
Tbeaten tight ad
mbatter :ixed wbhwo oneeggs cup of milk, u pinch n:,f
,ult, a tablespo onft.l of nneltt'd butter.
and one Ieaspo ,nful of baiting powder
mixed with two cups of sifted lioin•.
'hike in a moderate oven.
Roast Ilam. --Place a hal skin upper-
most in a large pan. cover with water.
and soak overnight. In the mori.ing
scrape and lay on a white cloth Inrge
enough to cover it perfects, laying it
with the skin down. !Hake a stiff paste
of Ikiur and cold water and spread over
all the skinless portion, half an inch
thick. Bring the cloth up over the whole
keep the paste in Once, and sew firm -
le. I'lnce in a large neat pan, with the
skim uppermost, and bake in a moderate
teen. Allow (141 quite twenty tninulos
per pound for cooking. Put a little wa-
ter in the pen, and if meet' fat lakes
out turn toff and add more water occa-
sionally. When taken front the oven
,eel off cloth. paste and skin. stick cloves
in the top, and brewvn slightly.
Bo -Peeps. -Cut Iamb chops thin, trim
.ell int and bone, c'1 in melted butler.
make rich biscuit cough. roll In n half-
inch thickness. cut us for biscuit, place
...hop between two of these, press edges
livelier, brush with while of egg to
•a•evenh them from spreading apart:
place ihem In buttered pan, cower and
',eke fifty minutes in moderate oven.
!'bey may be Galen with preserves or
11. 'Tie the Bo -Peeps separately with
low of oil paper, white or colored. and
-crit on lion plates. A alis)) of green
,gas 1140) so be val with them.
'I'l:cy arc delicalious 1141(1 serappropriate for
:my luncheon or for a child's party.
I'risrilhrs Pudding. --Gee large cup
etch of stewed pumpkin and stewed lar(
,t•ples, one-half cup sifted bread crumbs,
•cue -half cup of sugar beaten wills the
yolks of Iwo eggs. one-half cup seeded
Ind chopped raisins, and one-half len-
4poonful each of cloves, einnamen, nut -
:eels and ginger; nllx all together with
en. eup of cleanly milk end add Iwo
'nt:!e'l,eeo,as of brandy if yeti use it; hake
ue.hnlf hour in a quick oven tied spread
atilt a fmsting mnndt 4.f 111e twhites of
'oro eggs, 11 small cupful powdered au-
,nr. (5u few• nsgml n'phis
(1elickuts11(1and wut,ill b0. rrouclishilie1 bye. Rlose
who consider pie crust uulygtenic.
Cheap Coke.- One clip granulated au -
ear, 0110 cup 01111 wake', one-third eup
shortening, two cups flour, two rounded
e.asp;4eIII tasking powder, one level tea-
spoon ells, Ilnor to taste. Dissolve sir
gar in the water; lent the slmrtening
mid salt together, add sinal Ikon• lillle
Is little unlit one ('tlpful i.; used, beating
all Wel tile. 'Then teal in nl:.'n►ately
the di«ot•ed sugar :mil nest of Ik,ur,
needing Laking !.4wder to Inst quarter
cup of flour. (take in layers er germ
pans. 110S1 with (54.4.1111(11, chocolate,
enr,ple or Cil111mt1 Ittltntf or isoileel frost-
ing To mike n colored rake.: Roil one
: u:, Moen sugar in cite and one-third
ops water for- 111(enl live minutes mid
', 0 arv.l. Then pr4w4dd ns stbnve, using
Its bxeil.-,l liquid in phage of dissolved
'leo clean and freshen up leather goods
is ll as trunks, handbags, etc., hive
them a wash with milk.
If baby suffers from earache, a little
vuseline rubbed behind the ear affected
will give ease at owe.
For rheuntulism, try the very simple
cure of hot water. Take at hast a pint
lettere retiring at night.
\\'hen your pen conedes with ink,
h it in a rnwv ix,lato sewei-o1 tunes.
!
las will make cur pen like new.
\\'1►cii slnx s get "run over" al the heel,
pu1l off all the half -worn pieces and like
the nails off elwe to the leather.
1)0111 lift your child up by the urns;
it is quina dnttgerous, besides being most
unoonuot•tabkr fat' the little one.
White kid gloves slay be rubbed with
cream of tartar, and if very' stiehey
*died it will -make them look like new.
\Vishing to shorten n skirl when ui`eut
tiousework, try n wooden cluih•'s pin.
This will 1101 tear nor muss the shit1.
Combs scorn split if mashed. \ stiff
nail brush is a geoxl thing Lir chewing
then1. After using the crush take a
damp cloth and with it swipe 1 & tet en
each tooth of the comb.
Air the Iot,se thoroughly if you (le=ire
i! ; inmates to he healthy; especially in
:winter open epposile doors for five to
fifteen minutes.
In mincemeat or any juicy pie insert
a pastry chimney or funnel in upper
crust and there will be no rnoye trouble
over a leaky pie.
To iron n shirt waist with buttons in
reek, fold towel three or four livres, 1ny
iirdc:r buttons on right side, iron over
back on wrong side.
If you want boiled meat to les tender
eerie tallow it to boil after the Met len
:climates. After This it should be moved
Leek and allowed to just simmer.
'leo clean braes excellent resells may
be obtained by robbing first with a
paste made of powdered bu1
'rick
and
pantile), and then with balhbrick alone.
When pulling up curtains draw a
Small-sieee rubber nipple over the end of
will u • without
e rod and it 1 I s111 through fll
1 6
catching and tearing the lace.
al' 0 acid is-
�nls' worth fox tt . d d
Ten c 1
e
sctett inn (pram of boiling water will
tt,kc oil stains from a floor. Afterward
w• i tt weal with soda (net soap and
wet, r.
- ;p._. -
1111\\ 10 kine!' EGGS FRES11.
\t.•ihod Which Is Said to Preserve
'Them \h-olutely for 'Months.
11 tray be ii ' s to many housewives
that at the cost t,i only cone cent a dozen,
plus a little time and trouble, they can
keep fresh eggs for several months and
still have them "strictly fresh."
The spoiling of eggs is declared by
scientific 111011 to be due lo the entrance
o: air, carrying germs of decomposition
through the shells. Normally an egg
511011 has a coaling of mucilaginous mist -
ter, not perceptible to the touch ltd quite
sufficient to make the shell airtight.
This coaling will keep out germs for
quite a while, especially if the egg is
cuiefully handled, but it is sure to be-
come softened in time, either by washing
111 by friction with a case cr with outer
eggs. Then the germ -laden air gels in
and the egg begins to spoil.
This explains why eggs packed in lime
or salt of placed in cold storage are very
fir from being fresh when they conte
on the market. According to experi-
ments made at the Government station
in North Dnketa, there really is one me-
thod of keeping eggs fresh which does
preserve their freshness.
fly this method eggs which were
packed in August were opened three and
one-half months later and "still ap-
peared to be perfectly fresh:' In most
packed eggs offer a little time the yolk
settles to one side and the egg is then
inferior in (flintily. But in these three-
month -old eggs the yolk was in its nor-
mal position, and 'in taste They were
not to be distinguished from [resit, un -
peeked eggs." This is worth knowing,
if it is true. And there are other reports
le the same effect.
German experimenters tried twenty
methods of preserving eggs. The three
which were found 'nest mingled( ry were
mating them with vnsclinc, preserving
(hent in lime water. and preserving them
0' wuler glass. The vaselino was tedi-
ous, and the line enter gave the eggs
r disagreeable odor and taste.
So that of all the twenty tnelltods em-
ployed the use of water glass seemed to
L+s the lest. There is one lest of pecked
eggs with which most cocks are famil-
1411•. Such eggs de sol beat up web for
cake mucking ur for frosting. By this
test the eggs kept in water glass solu-
tion seemed quite equal to the average
fresh eggs of lite market.
Water glass is 0 cheap prorinct Ihnt
should 1101 cost we're then 50 cents a
gelion. One gallon would snake eitot.gh
sc,iulion to preserve fifty dozen eggs, so
that the oost would be only one cent a
don.
\\zeenter glass k a sodium or potassiurn
silicate. '1'o make the solation use ten
quarts 4)1 pure wile- that has been Ihor-
(tuKhiy boiled and then cooled. Add one
g:of water gla's
1!
unrt wa,dcn kegs ire (1s(5I in which K.
pack the eggs they •should first be Iltor-
os•ghly scalded with l ittig enter. Of
course any vessel. jnr or keg used for
'hie purpose must I." nesolutr;y clean.
I'nck the eggs eart'fllly In it mid pew
11. welt's n over 1tu'nl, covering them
e -annulated suKa. ,1 (l4IeI•n►1 nw1.11. Kccp their in a dry. (so1. dark
It -)l enc cup bruwvn stigtr unlit it .frostipinge: p,l+sre, Un not wash flu: +Llgs Lenore
thecae: pac!(httf.
1 1 11 beat.
11 jeer: w•1111 111 saying Ihnn only per-
hv !!w teeth eggs en -1 Is, •(epi frtele even
1., 1:i. mel hod. Nothing will freshen
tlnte :'Kgs. and if They are peeked with
ft Pell ems they may contaminate the
•!'--
l'Ii11'iIVG.
It• tell. wtlh h rnny surprLae ninny
,1 ley Leal:uti-is have been oar
, I •.n the Weenie' Fruit Penn in
It 1,-s term (t,-crvrd chit Ihr
is pruned nh•' larger
;;• e 1•r4:nec, even when el-
. n 1. 1••1. b r wood rensevc(1 In
metal 'einem:nl inen:nt Irt'es. The
it -crops 1.10 ; .- 1 hacren'e,l es lee
n ve:ntl v! t•runit a Iv 4117:) n s',:(d. Th•
), ( neliIs:on la 11:'it 11ie Ice-
(r .r r.1, •1.1 )! . 1) .th nv rrt,nr•,l•
I (re 1. "hes n1 lees. hero.
\.• '0 leeithc reel feet jlets''i
t , fo eti \t etet ties it; 1' !'ern ',t
1 • •mel: lithe from tire'; bent white of
;10 gi=g and pour liquid intoand
1101 1:11)11.1) I I I Nle'.
i:erot'n;' nr i• ra\ iu 5181(1 will k'.q,
1.0
-`t;, 1;' o egg-rl.!iur,l lith(.• I.n. it
11 ,,' l 1: 1 n t.1 r1ix.II tit'!:
,•i ,. r 5.•i •: .
I.;, , knillin 1: d /II It' . ,
'..•king: t .mel Y.'" w 1',l 1
;lir 554;1'..
\lick t.taatn, (testi 1.111g•: -
• :1-:;1 than it wield if kept ,
e .t In tnoet cables from 'Pee to Itnp . 1 1 14
7'h0c4' i.i;u!re to iv' t I"etrically Teel If t. lI.' It 3 - :.r•I I wile. hell 1 '.i': ,
! r la. en Ice : I use, try an insole ;'!•111;
iyal h• • . I' , rn .fe I('ttreg hu, nn..l •r
se: t e e eupposeI ('•
ti ,t .t;•!` 'ode. hien ill td41 eleeys les p11tera
rt•(nit. 1 •'
•, tense Ir4;link water if Opined with
: 1 I'''ralioll chi:'.t
Ctr`tr! ,et l., a nr evert
11 orb- !n emit t f : fnvr,r.tl r' 55• •
ih''r the i ' •• 1;r/v1 al tee 1••
:eel re-, I'm!1 1-111 •' •
4..., n , , r •
Ir
:it ttt • a , 1: , ::..1 c:..cin 1.
t: '1IilnsI•li.itl,of. In! .'le 1 ne'l oil.
,4,1 11'0'414.'11* 1.1.4101.41a :114,;'1.1 ! her. nr:` lan,':afod 1y cruet's.
1'.0 nt:::• a 1,)11 .t,.r.,. it ,Lemli.. •11 .4 0. 1'. 1 - .•1.. ^ ..._•
, , w, i!- tit,i; i; ;111 1 h ',. t.:.r 41..•• 1 `1.1.
. '1'..4+ •a,l, 1 It "\\ t-,• 11:111 I(, -IH(; . n!y fact-.
a ..;:tArt n 4•! ' I n, 1011 it In • t', . .h.'
. ,1- C .1 6..ii41;: . 44. (bee. rinse enol i se - '• w' • t - e.
•. .1.pq 1. ...e . , e::y. i lit:. 'hill yr..,, c• i1:.'... ,' i; 1..
Don't Neglect
a Cough or Cold
IT ('AN HAVE BUT ONE
RESULT. IT LEAVES
THE THROAT ur LUNGS,
OR 101'11, AFFECTED.
DR. W CO'S NORWAY PINE
S`IIIUP IS THE MEDICINE
VDU NEED.
•
It is without an equal as a remedy for
Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Soro Throat,
Pain in the Chest, Asthma, Whooping
Cough, Quinsy and all affections of tho
"throat and Lungs.
A single dose of Dr. goat's Norway
Pine Syrup will atop the cough, soothe the
throat, and if the cough or cold has Le-
oome settled on the hangs, the healing
properties of the Norway Pine Tree will
proclaim kr great virtue by promptly
eradicating the had effects, and a persist-
ent use of the remedy cannot fail to bring
about a complete cure.
Do not, be humbugged into buying act -
called ?\ort\ay Pine Syrups, hut be sure
and insist on having Dr. Wood's. It is
put up it a yellow wrapper, three nine
trues the trade mark, and price 25 etc.
Mrs. Henry Seabrook, Hepworth, Ont.,
writes : "I have used Dr. Wood's Norway
Pine Syrup in our family f.,r the past three
years and I consider it,the best remedy
y
known for the cure of colds. It has cured
all my children and myself."
KOWTOWING.
A Chinesenesc Custom to Which Foreign-
ers
orei n-ers liawe Objected.
The Chinese censor has uiemoralize(1 ,
the throne on the neces:.ily of abolish-
ing the degrading custom of high na-
tive :Ministers of the Crown kowtowing
and addressing, or replying to their
Majesties on bonded knees, says Lie
Not 111 China Herald. Kowtowing ties
been a fruillul thence for discussion
and controversy ever since the nal:ons
of the \Vest first invaded the shores
o' the great central kingdom. Hitherto
the question concerned only those who
came from foreign lands on diploma-
tic or other missions. No one for a
m0n10111 thought of suggesting that the
kowtow was a degrading custom so far
as the Chinese high officials Iheinselves
were concealed. Tho kowtow before
the throne consisted in kneeling three
timee and touching the ground with
tee head 'Mire at each genuflexion.
Western diplomats and ("there in
China have not been in the pest unani-
mous in their opposition to lite per-
forntance.s of the kowtow. but the Brit,
isit representatives from the first hove
censIstently refused to submit to 11.\.
Lord efacariney, who arrived In China
in 1793 as the head of the tint British
Enibassy. when presenting his creden-
tials would only consent to bend one
knee L1 the presence of the Entp eror.
Over twenty years elapsed before the
second (British inissfon arrived in
China. The question of the ko'Ktow•
was again raised, and as a result of
his refusal to perform tho ceremony
Lord Amherst was never officially re-
ceived by the Emperor, who issued an
imperial edi'I to the effect that the Brit-
ish Ambassador had not observed the
rules of politeness in vogue in the Ce-
lestial Empire.
The French Ambassador sent to
China in 1Eit received special instruc-
tions not to submit to the kowtow.
These ins(ruclio►ls, however, he ignor-
ed, as he held the opinion that Ambas-
sadors must conduct themselves; ac-
(ording to the wages of lee court to
whiett they were accredited. The
whole question (tearing the last half
century has assumed en altogether dif-
ferent aspect. For over one lewdest
years prior to the establishment (ef eer-
ntanent foreign legations h the (:hl -
nese capital in IMO European represen-
tatives were not n"corded nn Imperial
nudtence. Sincei that dote the kowtow
has never been insisted upon.
_--4-
EXPENSIVE 1.0\1111Y.
Miss Violet, It
to live."
drag`s, do you
Hon. RnI(il': "Y' `•
costs glee &Wei ° rt yenr
Miss Violet: "Oh. ilr.
think ifs worth 11.?"
The sins we hide in
ways get up into the
have oumpany.
ti►e basement al.
parlor when we
SUFFERING WOMEN
who end life a burden. ran have beaitt, ►r 1
etreattb restored by the use of
Milburn's
Heart and If ervc,
Pif1�.
The present eenara:ion O: ,.amen and rets
have m•1ry 'Lan their shire of misery. it .•11
some it is nervnu.ne.e ar. l.ip:tation. '• It
others weak. diary and faint.,:$ opera. whit! •' b
ethers there is a general eon .p••• of ,ha sy- 1,
Mil:,ura'a Rout ar-1 Nene Pills tone to,
nerves. strengthen the heart and make it l'
strong and regular. create new red t.lo•xt
p111414e. sad impart shat senor of buoyaney
the epints that is the result of renewed 4:.
and r..i •:cal t: ,rot.
Mrs. 1). O. Donoghue. Orillis. (toe. Fain
''1(1 over a year 1 ora• tremble.: with 1,4:
nest and Leant trouble 1'!!•.::,.•.1 to ni'• Y.
burn's ltesr( and Nerve Pitta a trial. ems alt
found 1 las cornalcle ur
rGist totes 1 jy s
as'r.
t
ti
1 ahrs;s recommend them to my frRndr•..
111 veepM)ertlepetboxof.: toxesfeJ.in:t*3itT.'
(*44'5' .oi.c Val T. /61.11..,/61.11..,s Cv.. s,al
4
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