Exeter Times, 1902-8-14, Page 6RI
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FOR TnacompLExion
cOlowcrxwora susrilast ,CIAATURC.
Parcae Yeastasaga4"-assesses-4
tri7ST
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
jACIE SHEPPARD'S ROUSE.
Recently Destroyed on Historical
Thoroughfare.
Wych Street, a quaint olf thor-
oughfare at the city end of the
Strand, has now finally passed out
of existence," says the London
Daily Mail.
It was in the area of the Strand --
Holborn improvements, and its de-
struction had for some time been
decided on. in a few months' time
gigantic buildings of the most mod-
ern type will take the place of the
(pallet Old houses, rich in historic
memories, that made it oae of the
points of interest in London.
On Wednesday Jack Sheppard's
house in this street was finally- dos-
ed and handed over to the house-
breakers. Jack Sheppard lived there
when serving an apprenticeship as a
oarpenter. His name was carved by
Wiesen on a beam in the kitchen,
where it remained until a few days
ago. The beam is now being trans-
ferred to the Museum of London
Antiquities and Curiosities beiug
gathered by the London Ocamty
Council.
Wych street had many other asso-
ciations besides this. The Shake-
speare Plead, 81, at one time had
its landlord Mark Lemon, the fa-
mous humorist, who in after years
became editor of Punch. At the
Globe Theatre many chapters of
modern theatrical history occurred.
The Globe is best known to modern
theatre -goers as the scene of Mr.
Penley's triumphs, and as the birth-
place of Mr. Pinero's "Gay Lord
Que."
.Almost opposite the Globe eves the
gigantic Olympic Theatre, a house
noted for having ;crimps more runs
of bad luck than any other London
theatre. Its great size and its un-
fortunate position gave it little!
chance. In recent years it was rare -i
ly occupied. Charles Dickens was
associated with .enany revels around]
this street. A more tragic memory
lies in the face that Biehop Hooper
Was taken from the Angel Inn, then,
at the bottom, to his death at
Gloucester. •
Wych Street, a quaint old thor-
Drury Lane, of which it was a eon-
tinuation. In old times the lana
was known as the Via do Aldwych.
Among other houses of amusement
which in the paSt have centered
there was Astley's Amphitheatre.
GAMBLING DEN PRECAUTIONS
"Follow Ile and 1..Will Make You
Fishers of Men
ineekoroe;teeter, to ao o els attainment et
cates4s. ie t s yea ono TIIOUVD.U1 WiDa
sae And gee, by winista astie, o TOTOtItS, at
the Dinartsseet st aarisuatas, °tame/
A deepateh froin Chicago says :-
Rev, Frank De Witt Talmage preach-
ed from the iollowing text -Mat-
thew iv, 19. "Vollaw me, and 1 will
make you fishers of Lirien." .
Are you A fisherama ? "Ob, Yes,"
you atiswer; "I have been a flshere
man all Lily life. As Izaak Walton,
the father of angling., used to say
that true fishermen, like poets, were
born, not made, so. I was born with
a love for the rod and the reel. As
a little boy, many and many a time
I have been late for school became
1 loitered on the way under the
shadow of the old wooden bridge to
cast a crooked in used for a hook,
Now that I am. grown I love to go
back to the scene where I was
born. I love to take a boat and
pull ' out into - the river which flows
through the valley where my father
is buried and try to wax to my
'hook the black bass and the timid
perch."
There is just as much differenee
betweea the man who makes his
living by fishing and one who fishes
for sport as there is between.' the
man who farms to make a living
and the Mall who farms for recrea-
tion. It is the difference between
work and play. It is the difference
between the man who sets eail in
the fishing smack front Nantucket or
New Redford and spends six long
months off the banks of Newfound-
land, facing the dangers of tempest
and collision, and the man who
paddles about in a canoe on a
quiet stream. It is the difference be-
tween the man who is ready to defy
the • clangors of Lake Galilee -the
most treacherous inland sea in the
world -and the man who stands up-
on e rock on a sunshiny afternoon
ati,l casts his expensive line 3nto the
brook for •
1 A FEW HOURS' PASTIME.
INow the two brothers, Peter and
Andrew, to whom. Christ spoke the
, words of my text upon the shores of
! Lake Galilee, were real fishermen..
IThey were not dilettanti. They did
not go out into the Country for a
few days with a hundred .dollar pole
to catch a 'dollar's Worth of Ask ;
but they made fishing their life's
business. They belonged to what is
perhaps the bravestclass of mea on
earth -the fishermen. ,Christ, when
130 saw them mending their nets,
turned and said: "Come, leave your
nets and follow me. Give up your
work of catching fish and I will
teach you how you may use your
4 energy and bravery and censurer
i tion and will make you fishers of
i men.. Come with me and I svill
I make you fishers in the great trou-
t bled sea of hmuanitsr and will call
l'you my gospel eshermen."
The true gospel 1fisheriman is a. one
purposed man, whose a is dedicat-
ed
. .
.
to the single objec of saving
f ROWS. Every sportsman knows that
it is an impossibility for a success-
ful fisherman to think of anything
else but his fish at the time of -fish-
ing. He cannot plan about business
and attend to his line. He cannot
read a book and watch his bait. He
'cannot dream of the woods and
troll at the same time. When a real
fisherman fishes, he concentrates his
entire attention upon his fishing and
excludes every other thought from
his brain. Because fishing is so
faseinatbag and absorbing, some of
the greatest men of the world have
found their recreation in the sport.
The true gospel fisherman is a
brave man. We have been taught to
regard the soldier as among the
bravest of men. True, it needs a
brave heart to stand uhlalanched
amid a storm of snot and shell and
to walk up to the cannon's mouth
when the bullets are falling araund
like hail pattering epon the pave-
ments. But the soldier never has, to
face great dangers continuously like
those the fisherman has to meet, I
suppose that among all the different
classes of men there is not one
among which the destruction of life
proportionately is so great as
among the men who make the har-
vest of the sea their avocation or
life work. .
DURING A RECENT JOURNEY
across the Atlantic and after we
had been out a couple of days from
New York harbor I saw two men
pointing to a dark cloud ahead. I
heard' one of them say: "We are
going to have a bad night. That, is
the Newfoundland fog bank." Soon
the thick mists began to settle
around us. All that night the
gloomy fog horn blew. 'I said to
the commander of the Ounarder :
"Captain why do you blow that
terrific fog horn ? Surely the
danger of collision with a passenger
steamer is comparatively small."
"Ah," answered the captain, "we
are blowing the fog horn chiefly to
warn the fishermen All about these
WC ters are hutdreds of little fishing
smacks. The fishermen come here
and anchor. ,They stay month in
and month .out entil they catch
their eargo, end scores and scores of
these poor fellows are run. 'down
every year. We want to sateen them,
if possible, that we are- coming
along." Go to any of the 'little
fishing te-tens along the rocky (beet
ol old Scotland. There .you will
ilnd women, who have loaf; fathers
and brothers and husbands and
sons in the awful dangers of a
fathom -Ian's life. Every seaman will
tell you that the perilof a sailor's
life are comparatively nothing if
there are .0tily sixty fathoms Of 'wa-
ter under the ship't keel. But the
fishersaan rarely puts 'ant tce the
deep sta. He must fish coniparative-
ly neat' the ehore. Then the storms
come up and threaten te drive the
fx•all craft upon the rocks, 'Then
the foge settle So thickly that the.
steereman can haecily see the proW
of the boat from the stern. Yes,
the true fisherman'e. life, whether it
is found on Lake Galilee or off the
•
The uses to which electricity ca'n
be put are well illustrated by a dis-
covery which the New York police
have jest made. it stems that some
of the gambling dens in New York
are protected by an extraordinary
net -work of electrical attachments to
provide against an unexpected raid
on the part of the police. All the
passages and entries are 'lined with
secret push -buttons, and there are
even crose-wires by which the en-
trance of anyone could at once be
signalled to the gambling rooms.
But most clever of all is the 'fact
that the rooms are lit not by elec-
tricity, but by gas, and the connec-
tions are so arranged that, should
any unauthorized person enter, the
gas would at once be cut off and the
lights extinguished,
THAT',a THE SPOT!
Right in the Small of the heck.
Do you ever get a pate there?
if eo. do vote know what It meane?
it is a Backache.
A sure sign or Kidney Trouble.
Don't neglect k. Stop it in time.
If ycu don't, Serious Xidney Troubles
are sure to follow.
DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS
cure 13ackaehee Lame Back, Diabetes,
Dropsy and all Nidney and Bladder
Trouble.
tattoo 50o, a bet er 5 Zoe $11.2S., all 46410114
DOAN ICIPNET PILL 004,*
Toroaio, On..
'
coaSts of Scotlaud or in the New-
foundland togs, is a life of over-
Whehnieg danger. Brave must be
the man Who would foliose
SO PERILOUS AN AVOGATION.
So the gospel fishermen, too, Meat
he brave Men! They must be 'AS
courageous as Peter and Andrew,
Who, to become gospelfisherniere
devils their 'lives for Christ,
They Must be as brave as the he-
roic. Father Damien, who in order te
.ixeinister to the sick and the dying
.went to Molokai, the Leper island of
the Panific, and hintself bene n.
leper and died. They mastoe tie
brave as that Salvation Army girl
who stands send sings aad prays up-
on the street. Weiler amid the scoffs
and • ridicule at passersby,
and who pellets -Estes the dark alleys,
humanly unprotected, to seek catt
souls for Christ, They have to, be
as brave as that yolong Christian
clerk who goes' from Saloon. to sa-
loon giving . out gospel tracts and
leading in prayer where the proprie-
tor will allow him to pray. Ale it
takes courage to be a gospel fisher-
man! It takes courage to launch
out into the deep and to let down
the gospel net and become fishers of
Men When the hurrierthee of persecu-
tion are strewing the rooky coasts
With the wreckage,'
The . Christian believer must be
spiritually inspired if be is ever to
become a successful fisher of Men.
My mother used to impress this
Clove:lit woo me all my life, and es-
pecially did she ,try to de so after
had entered the gospel miuistry.
There was hardly a, letter that she
sent elle after my ordinatim. that
did not read. like this: "My dear
boy, it is !important for you. to be
mentally equipped for your 'church.
But, remember; a true gospel Min-
ister is essentially one who is in-
spired by the Holy Spirit. You
cannot lead acsuls to Christ" unless
you have been much la communion
with God, unless much upon your
knees in prayer. You must plead
at the mercy seat in your own home
if you Would plead aright for Christ
in the pulpit.' The mother cat -Mot
become a. fisher of men, and lead her
children into spiritual lives unless
she herself has experienced
THIS DIVINE INSPIRATION.
The Sunday school teacher cannot
lead his class to the feet of ' Christ
unlese he himself has first beets bap-
tized by the Holy Spirit. .U.'he min-
ister cannot truly preach Christ
unless he has .first taken Christ in-
to his own .heaat and life. Petei.
and Andrew became gospel fishermen
because they themselves had flest
seen the Master's face and obeyed
his voice when he said: "Follow.
me, and I will make You fishers of
men."
But the true gospel Sisherman is
always Working under the Master's
eye, 'whether Christ's face is visible
to him or no. After Peter and And -
'row became Christ's fishermen he
never left them. One night when
these brethren, with John the be-
loved, who was also a fisherman,
and same of the other disciples,
were tossing about on Lake Galilee
they thought they were going to be
drowned, but Christ was watching
their struggles; and in the fourth
watch of the night, or just about 5
o'clock in the morning, Jesus was
seen wedking toward theni on the
waves of Lake Galilee. And, after
the crucifixion, when peter and his
brethren wept bank to their old avo-
cation of fishing, Jesus again ap-
peared unto them by the shores of
Lake Galilee and told them to cast
their nets upon the other side of the
boat. The time gospel fishermen
can feel that Christ is alvtaya ready
to help him; that Clitast Neill -always
Coles to his rescue when the' waters
of trouble begin to, roll too high and
the mists are eettlingtoo thickly
-
around the gospel lifeboat.
Christ's care for the gospel fisher-
men is a constant and tender. care.
'In the Scotch fishing villages the
mothers and wiyes and daughters
illustrate lele a beautiful .custom
which prevails among them their
care for their soils and husbands and
.brothers who have gone off to fish.
When the fogs settle down upon the
coast and the lighthouses can no
longer be seen, the Women go out
and
SIT UPON THE noaKs.
When the returning fishermen begin
to approach the shores and while
yet unseen, they start, a fisher's
song. The loved ones waiting upon
the rocks listen until they hear the
femiliar notes wafted through the
fog. Then the mothers and wives
and daughters and sweethearts also
begin. to sing, and the fishermen
hearing the voices of their loved
ones; knowwhich way to steer. So
whert. the gospel fishermen itt. times
of trouble call to Christ, he always
answees their call. And the Sav-
ior's voice sounding' Clear amid the
voices of the loved MOS who have
one beYond, ultiinatelsr guide
the gospel fishermeit from the trou-
bled san of life tato the great harbor
of eternal peace. '
Are you and I willing to „become
gospel fishermen? Are see ready to
be one:peen osed Christi a ns, ready
to be ,fearless, ready to be spiritual-
ly., inspired, to become Christ's. fish-
ers of Men Are we ratiely to sur-
render ourselves, body, mind and
Souls to the eerviee of the Lord/
When Ds -Nott, who for years labor-
ed among the South Sea islanders,
was one day askieg a native to giVe
his lifnup to the seievice of the Mas-
ter, the missionery explained: "I
can only tined to pny you '15 shil-
lings a month foe your services„"
With. that the native seid, "Sir, ' I
cannot afford, to give up iny time for
15 shillings a month, but I can af-
ford to give it up fee Christ." Like
the SOutIt Sea islander , have Yeti
aide love for Cheist that you are
efeady to conseeinte your life to the
Master's eeferide regardless of rennin
-
oration, so that you May bedobse one
of his fishers of mea/
••• • • • • • • • - ••• •
irrrgTsomor, zEssoN,
AUGUST SEVENTEEN,
Text or te.sson, Num, x., 11.48 ,a.nd
25-36. Gold= Text, Ps.
xxxi„, 8.
11-18. And they first took their
journey accordieg to tho roixiinAucl-
Troelsietsof the Lord by the hand of
in the third. nsonth of the first
year (hest came to Sinai, and on the
tirst day of the first month of the
eeconci year the tabereacle was er-
seised and accepted: by God aacl filled
'With His Glory (Ex. Nix, 1; xl, 17,
81). New, just fifty days later the
cloud lifted, and they joureeyed from
Sinai the o t,wilderaess of Paean ia
the OrdOr, described in this chaPter.
Whether it Wile the tabernaele and
its erectioa or the priesthood and'
the sacrifices or the journeying
through the wildernes.s nothing was
done and rib step was taken, except
as God Commanded or guided by the
'Pillar of eloud and fire.. On the part
of Moses and Israel it. was simply
a. matter of obedience.. Concerning
the cloud and its geldings and their
obedienee, see carefullsr chapter ix,
15-23.
29. Come thou with as and we
will do thee.good. for the Lord hath
spoken good concerning.
Thus said Moses to .1Cobab, the son
of Raguel, or 'Reuel, or Jethro, the
father of Zipporah, Monis' wife
(Ex. ii, 18; iii, 1). The Lord.had
truly spoken' good concerning Israel,
as la Ex. vi, 6-8, that wondrous
sevenfold, "I will," beginning and
eliding with "I, Jehovah." Moses
believed the word of the Lord, and,
menus it:set:et unto the recompense
of the reward, he forsook all his
prospects Egypt and fully icleuti-
fled himselt with Israel as their leade
er lustier God (Heb. xi, 24-27).
80. And Ile said unto ITim, I will
not go, but I will depart to mine
own land and to my kindred. '
This was what Naomi 'afterward
desired Ruth and Orpah to clo, for
she did not say to them, Come with
nie and I will do yen good. Rehab
saw no such prospect as opened up
to. the iniaci of Moses, and as Inc as
appearances went -he felt that he
would be better off with his own
people. It is difficult to many be-
lievers to esteem the approach of
Christ greater riches than the visible
treasures of this world, yet Jesus
and His sufferings now. with eter-
nal glory hereafter. Is the pro-
gramme for the Christian..
81. Leave us not, I pray thee,
forasmuch as thou knowest how we
are to encamp in the 'wilderness and
thou inayest be to us lestenal Of
eyes.
It looks as if, for the moment.
Moses was. forgetting God and His
cloud and His unerriug guidance. Sb
unstable is man. even at his best.
We think of .Simon, Peter one' mo-
ment coniessiug that Jesus was the
Christ, the Son of the living God,
and the next acting as Satan's
mouthpiece to tempt the Lord to
pity hiniself and tern. from the
cross (Matt. xvi, 16. 231.
82. And it shall be. if thou go
with us, yea, it shall be. that what
goodness the Lord shall do' unto tis
the same will we do unto thee. .
Moses now talks more correctly,
for we are fully authorized to offer
all the riches of God's grace and
glory, to all who svill accept Him
through Jesus Christ. but WO are
not authorized to seek either help
or guidance from those who .are not
His. It will help us to remember
that Jesus said concerning His own;
"The glory which Thou gayest Iffe I
have given. them," and "as Thou
has sent Me into the world, even so
have I also sent them into the
world" (John xvii, 22, 28). See
also John xvi; 15; I Cor. iii, 21-
23.
83. And they departed from. the
mount of the Lodthree days'
journey, and the ark of the covenant
of the.Lord went before them Meth()
three days' journey to search out a
resting place fpr them..
This was infinitely better than the
eyes or the wisdom of Rehab. How
could Moses forget ,er seem to that
God had led them out and would
surely lead them all the way ? How
beautiful and all sufficient the pro-
mise in. Ex, xxiii, 20. "I3ehold. • I
send an angel before thee to keep
thee in the way and bring thee into
the place which I have prepared."
84. And thaeloud of the Lord was
upon them by day when they went
out of the camp. e
The cloud was the visible symbol
of the Lord's presence with them,
and He by was their' guides their
light, their shield, their oracle,
th.eir avenger, their covering (Ex..
'aid, 21: xiv, 19, 20, 24-28; Num.
ix, 15-28; x, 84; xiv. 14); in fact,
all they needed for all their jour-
ney.
35. And it came to pass when the
ark set ,forward that Moses .skid,
Rise up, Lord, asid let Thina en-
emies be scattered cued. let them that
hate Thee Bee before Thee. •
David, by the Spirit, aftersvard
embodied this in at lest two of the
Psalms (lxviii, 1, 2; eXxxi, 8).. le
Josh. iil, 18, the ark is called "the
ark of the Lord, the Lord of all
the earth," and before it Jordan
was 'dried up and the wails of
Jericho. fell down. When the •people
relied .upon God, who dwelt between
the cheetabirn, their enemies fled be-
fore them, bet When. they relied up-
on the ark (Which was only the sym-
bol of His peesence), then their en-
emies obtained, the victory (.1.. Sem,
iv, 8, 11), '
86. And wheel it rested he said,.
Return, • 0 . Lord, Otto the many
thousands el Israel.
Thus, whether cei the match or at
rest, :the great , reality of Israel's
lita Was Jehovah in their midst. In
proportion SIR they realized this
and acted accordingly they prosper-
ed, but when they fotgot Him, they
failed. It is so with us, 1 -Te says,
"Lo, I am with yon always," and
whet) We believe thie and thus re-
alize Ilis presence (for the •ohly way
to realleo. anytbies the spiritual
life he to babsel'; it) and .seitertt on
Him we have ley aucl peade and vie-
tory,but when we forget Ilre'preseeee
We fail.
Osl91001c14.6.61101/10000(1400 0
FOR THE 1101VIE
_ e.
2/ (0
Recipes for the Kitchen, 0
1.1„ Hygiene and Other Notes
to for the Housekeeper,
et1
ttleS0110000600(00(03 clelaa@cf
APPLE .VARIATIONS..
Apples with Sweet, Petal:oat-Boil
good-sized sweot. potatoes. Whoa
serape and cut .iato slices
lengthwise, After dipping, each Plege
in melted butter, lay into ft, baking
Pen. Pare and slice 4 poet. apples
Piece on top of the potatoes aad
add a , .sPrizialing of sugar, Thee
pour over ,uthe apples and, potatoes
1 cup milk and bake in a sloe! oven.
Apple Salact-POrm baskets of welt
shaped rosy apples by cutting off
the tope and with a spoon scraping
out the inside so as to leave
the shell oS the apple. Refill the
apple •cvitik a salad composed ei
equal parts apples, hickory huts said
celery chopped fine .and seasoned
with Salt. CoVer the tops of the
baakets ' with salad dressing. Are
range Oa mint1i plates, garnish with
celery leaves and red beets eut itt
fancy: shapes „
A Novel Way of Baiting Apples -
Place a layer of thinly Sliced. apples
in the bottom of an earthen ware
pudding dist.. Cover with finely
chopped raisins,' walnuts, grated
nutmeg,. a generous amount 01 sugar
and a tablespoonfed of Water. Con-
tinue' the layers until the 'dish is
full with the apples Oil 'top. Cover
and cook in a moderato oven until
aloft, tern into a glase 'dish and let.
.become, cold. Just before seeviag
pour over the Mixture' in custard
Made of the yolks -of a eggs, 4
tablespoons sugar, . 2 ceps Italia
thickened with a. little corastarch.
Flavor With. nutnieg.
Sour Apple Juice -At any time
(hiring the year appleade is a de-
lightful drink. To make it you Will
need to wash and cat into thick
'slices 1 dozen sour apples., cover
with water and allow to simmer un-
til soft. Strain, sweeten to taste,
bottle and ice before serving. .
Quince add Apple Pie -Line a deep
pie dish with flaky piecrust. Cover
the bottom.with. a thin layer of
quince marmalade -and spread apple
sauce thickly on top of the quince,
-
then another layet- of the marmalade
and so proceed until the dish is
full. Bake slowly,, and wheti done
top with a meringue made of 4
tablespoons powdered sugar, the
beaten. whites of 2 eggs flavored
with lemon essence. Spread smooth-
ly and brown sligtttly..
Apple Cake -Three eggs,. I Cap
sugar, 1 heaping Mao A.our, 2 table-
spoons, hot water and es -teaspoon
baking powder. Mix the dry 'agree
clients together and rub through a
sieve. Add the egg's which have
been beaten, and lastly the water.
Beat well. Bake in layer tins in a
rather hot oven. and spread while
warm with the following filling -
Pare and .slice 6 large, firm apples.
Put into a saucepan, cover with wa-
ter and 'cook until tender. Then
rub through a colander and add 1
teaspoon butter, thca white of 1 egg
beaten. to a froth. Sugar and flavor
to taste. Cover the top of the cease
with frosting.
Sweet Apple Pickles -Take 1• lbs
sweet "apples. Pare but leave whole.
and stick itt every apple 3 or more
cloves. Steam until tender but not
soft. Into a preserving .kettle pour
2.fr .pts .vinegar, fr oz mace, -1 oz
green preserved ginger, a sliced
lemon, 1} lb sugar aed 1 teaspcion
each allspice and cinnamon, tied in-
to separate bags. After the syrup
has .. boiled 15 minutes put in the
apples and simmer five . minutes'
longer. Fill cans with the fruit and
'seal. •
- Apple Chili Sauce -Pare, core and
Cut into small pieces 4 Ms sour ap-
ples, '8 tomatoes, 8 onions finely
minced, and 2 red peppers. Put, into
a porcelain -lined kettle with 1 lb
brown sugar and 2 qts vinegar.
Cookuntil thick. Turn into a pan
and addto the mixture chopped
raisins, 1 oz .each ground mustards
ginger, salt and teaspoon pepper.
Stir thoroughly and when perfectly
cold put into wide mouthed bottles,
seal and keep in a cool place. This
recipe makes a 'delightful accom-
paniment toemeat, and is just , the
thing for many kinds of salads..
HOMEMADE GRAPE WINE.
Bruise the grapes, which must be
perfectly ripe. To each gallon of
grapes put a gallon of water; Let
the whole remain a week without
being stirred. At the end of that
tenie draw off the liquor very care-
fully, and put to each gallon of
liquor 3 lhs granulated. sugar, Let
it ferment in a, temperate situations
When fermented, stop it up tight.
In 'the course of six months it , will
be fit to bottle. Fine results will be
obtained if directione ase carefully
followed.
When the grapes are jest half ripe
gather, then pound in a tub, and to
every quart ma,shed fruit add 2 qts
Water. Let this stand for two Week
then' draw oft Benda and .add 8 lbs
loaf sugar. When the sugar is dfse
solved, cask it, and when done
working, bung it (Iowa, In six
months bottle and wire corks tIght-
ly. This wine will bit found equctl
to fine .champagne.
Piek the grapes from the steine
aridpound them, to a pulp with
pestle, in a large stone Let
them' teinnin for 48 hones, without
adding any water. Then strain the
juice through a cheese Cloth bag,
and add 3 lbe sugar to evety gallen
of juice, in a wickambuth jar, tied
tater with cheeeecloth. Skim the
ferment every day for one weak;
keep the jar covered with the
cheesecloth, and continue to skim it
twice a Week for six weeks longer.
Then strain the wine again, through
a flannel bag, which will make, it
perfectly clear. Bottle ups cork and
seal, and if fermentatien is over
when, bottled, this wind will keep for
20 years aud more.
Thie recipe is for 'wild grapes,
Pick off the grapes, measure and
mama with .a Pdtato em,shor (an old-
fashioned woOden elm is hest). , To
every. gallon et :grapes add -f4 04.
wci.ter, .044 put all together in ea
earthen or granite lecal vessel. Net
.on the book of the stove, where it
will get hot but not boil. Stir os'
easioaally and keep het fer from
tWo to, three hours. Pour hite11,
muslin Nig, 'lot drain but d not
s'qlteese. Sweeten the luice to taste,
Go a thin cloth over:it and set in
Wtirl'a aloeuntil it ferments, then
bottle said cod, and keep le a cool
Plape until :wanted. This wine is
excellent, especially in sickness.
Mesta tho grapes, and put them
through ft OlOtie put the skins in a
tub after squeezing them, with bare-
ly enough water to cover them;
strain the juice thus obtained into
the first peation. Pet' 8 Ibs siestas
he one gallon of the meat -tire. Sdt. it
staad la an open tub to ferment,
eovesed With a, Cloth, for a, period LIS
from' thsee to seven clays, sidnaning
overy, more:Mg...Put the 'juice ia 0.
'Meta leave it Open for 24 hours
then bunge'at up, wad put clay eves
the bung to exclude the alts I.et it
!remain until March, when it ebould
be drawn off and bottled. reliable
recipa..
. The following recipe is for unfer-
me,nted 'grape wine for church (or
home) use, which I helped make
last feAl. Take half a hushel of ripe
grapes, etenuned. tend waSeted, put in
anatagate kettle with Water enough
tokeep from burning, cools till the
gra,pes are clone, .strain, then add
mOke .water, to the pulp and strain
Acid the:second .anIxture to the first,
with .8 lbs , white sugar. .Ssimmee
slowly for three-catarters of an hoer,
battle and seal.
A , COLD DINNER.
Really, a cold chance ette he eaten
With a reltsh very Afton: on Wall=
'days, especially. when we stop to
think Of the saving of labor and un-
eiedessary heat that it brings about,
°kik vegetables ' 'enough the day
before. You don't' need to have Po-
tatoeS, but peas, .heiene, beeta,. cab-
bage; onions, corn ana tomatoes
are all good eaten cold.' Of catiree
there .are numerous meats that are
frequently peeved (bed, and any num-
ber of drinks.
.The only diffeeence between this
sort o dintier tt114 any other is that
everything ie served Old ieStead of
only a feiv thing's. And, after all,
it is a good deal a matter of habit,
this eating'. so meals hot 'food. We
Can thsto 'food S that isn't smoking
good,too.tci.hniote 'stove,. end it will taste
After one begins to eat an •oce-
casioual cold dinner, it will ..he sur-
prising ' how many palatable dishes
can be served in that way.. There 'is
the list of cereals that are 'delicious
eaten cold e-ith milk or cream.. They
can ..be poured into a Pretty mold
when first cooked, so as to appear
i11 an' appetizing manner. .
Whatever can be served without
any cooking, even the day before, is.
a kill further economizing of este:
ergy. Nuts are (me 'of the nourish-
ing raw foods that are not always
appreciated.. Theymust be: thor-
oughly masticated, .so never eat
them when in a harry. Nothing is
better than plain fruit, as It le in
season, for dessert -iron° Must have
something different at the ead of a
dinner. We hardly need a great
variety to Make' an appetizing meal.
' •
--+
CAVE DWELLERS IN BRITAIN.
Troglodytes Not Yet Extinct in,
the United Kingdom.
Although there is nothing inher-
ently imerobable in the eirounistance
it is not generally known that the
race of the troglodytes is not yet
extinct, tend that there are at the
present time quite a number of
cave dwellers in. modern Britain.
The inhabitants are by no means
hal-savages. At Kinver Edge, near
Birmingham, are two rows of mod-
em villa residences, formed mainly
out of the "immemorial caves hot-,
lowed out of the hill," with stone
front projections. These dwellings
are said to be "far more comfort-
able an& luxurious than the less
original 'residences to be feend in
more pretentious neighborhoods."
The rooms. are "spebious and rain-
proof," and the peoiile of En.ville,
we read, "as the viuiogo farmed by
these houses is called, are justly
proud of their quaint homes, . and
speak with patriotic affection of
Holy Anstin Rock, the stone from
which their dwellings are hewn."
There are several remarkable cave
dwellings at Knaresborough, in'
Yoekshire, the "proprietor" of one
of which has adorned the various
levels of his hillside mese home with
battlements, and calls it ,Fort Mon-
tague. At Areley Kings, in Worces-
tershire; Seaton, near Exeter; Sea-
ham, on the 'Durham coast: Stour -
tan Castle, Castle Hill, Dudley, and
elsewhere are other homes of modern
troglodytes, and at Lodaig, near
Oban, ia a cave fitted up and for a
long time steed as a placeof wor-
ehip. The svelter of this interesting
article avers that "it is no exag-
geration or perversion of the truth
to eay that, there are many caves
in the 'United Kingdom which are
-mach bettee fitted for htunan Fabita-
Con, and would be far' healthier
and roomier for a family (assuredly
1100*.
FOR
MARI:U.10EL DYSENTERY,
COLIC, CRAMPS,
PAIN IN THE STOMACH,
ANDALL
SUMMER .C'OMPLAINTS.
ITS EFFECTS ARE VallA VELUM&
IT AGTS LINFII A eigAzeree.
RELIEF ALMOST INSTAItITALMIIIG.
Pleasant, Rapid( Reliable Effectual,
1.00•4••••••••••••••N
EI/ERY HOUSE SHOULD HAVE IT.
nett YOUR DRUGGIST FOR IT. TASK NO Calla&
PRICE,
360.
"roomier'') than are some of the
modern jerry-built erections thate
our crowded towns and villages are
• so familiar with at the beginning of
the twentieth century.
Mr. Pitt -"Since your friend Blin-
kins' married Miss .Doeds he has
'been leading the life of a dog." Mr.
Penn."Ifin sorry for him.''
not." "Don't you sympathize with.
him ?" "Not at all. He has no-
thing to do but to eat, sleep and
amuse himself. It's the life of a.
pet dog he leads."
Is a purely vegetable System
Renovator, Blood Purifier and
Tonic., •
A medicine that acts directly' at
the same time on the Storna.ch,,
Liver, Bowels and Blood.
It cures Dyspepsia, Biliousness,
Constipation, Pimples, Boils, Head-.
ache, Salt Rheum, Running Sores,
Indigestion, Erysipelas, Cancer,
Shingles, Ringworm or any disease
arising from an impoverished or
impure condition of the blood.
Fop gale roy all Druggist&
TJAVE you
fiam• been smok-
ing a good deal
lately and feel
an occasional
twinge of pain
roundyourheart?
. Are you short of
) breath, nerves
unhinged, sensa-
tion of phis and needles
going through your
arms and fingers?
Better take a box or ,two
s of Milburn's Heart and
Nerve Pills and get cured
before things become toe
serious.
As a specific for all
heart and nerve
troublestheycan-
not be excelled: A
true heart tonic, blood
enricher and nerve re-
newer, they cure nervousness sleepless-
ness, nervous prostration, smoier's-heart,
palpitation of the heart, after effects of la
grippe, etc.
Price sec. per box or 3 boxes for 81.25
at all druggists, or will he seta ori receipt
cf price by
• The T. Hilburn Co., Limittd,
It:manta Ont.
,
Ft
eageereseaesse tra
"ssfrsvase, ,css"s•Matergf,0411.'rtX1,-siN4301.1,',PaS2
The 1.,eadine Specialists of America. 25 Years ta Detroit. Bank Security.
Nine but of everylen men have beeu guilty of 'tranagression against nature le
their youth. istAture never eacases, no matter how young,. •thought GSEI Or ignorant
he may be. ,The putilaittneRit and sniteritir correspendb with ale ljxto. The only
escape front its ruinous results is proper scientific treatment to counteract its effects.
' The DRAINS, either by nightly losses, or secretie throne* the urine, DMA be
stopped -the eTBRVBS intuit be built up and invigorated, the bleed tnttst be purifiecli
the 551XUAT4 ORGANS must be vitalized and develOped, ststAIN must be
nourished. Our New Method Treatment provides all, these requirements. ITuder
its influence the brain becotttes active; the b 1 co cod purified so that all pimpleS,
blotches and ulcers Aidappeart the tterv'eis become istrOng an steel, 50 that neryons.
uess, bashfulness and despondency disaepea.s; the eyes become bright, Ole face
full and clear, enery greturns to the body, and the Moral, phydical rati sexual sys,
tems are invigorated; all drains ceaSe-no more vital waste front the system, The
The various organs beemne natural ancl manly, We invite all the afflicted to call
and COUSUI.6 Its conddentially and free of 'Charge. Ctitraie igletairsanteed or no
Pty. We treat and nitre: litarkcooele, Blood Ditiefedscs, Stefeitire,
Uritta*Y Elsretins, Sinertfasttoefeboett,. 'Coalmen.
rot DinettarmoO,.Ifidnoso, etritt,nletddesiTlisttetliee,'
-CONSULT.wriora reEn. 1600ae PRIEM
if tillable to cal'4 Write for a QUESTION STANIC ler Rome Treattleilt,
DRS.' KENNEDY eft, KERGAN
148 srit1:81( sa," DETRolots,
;NI
• . al.„e.
s**.