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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1902-8-28, Page 2A Standard Reirritlidy Used In Thousands•of Homes in Canada for nearly Sixty Years and has never yet failed to give satisfaction. CURES Diarrhon, Dysentery, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infan- tum, Cramps, Collo, Sea Sickness and all Summer Complaints. Its prompt use will Prevent a great deal of unnecessary suffer- ing and often save life. Pero°, Sea. The T. Milburn Co.. Limited, Toronto, Ontario. FAMOUS TIME -TABLES, ERFECTIO) IN OTIIE ,soat or We Demand It While We Ourselves Are Imperfect. ‘Antere4 according 0 slot ot the ferlitnnent ot °emote, at the rear ono tf housatid Nine Hun• drett and Two Wilnaut Bony, or Toronto, at thoDeVartmook of Aortoultute, Ottawa.) A deepatch .from. Chicago says: Rev. Frank De Witt Tabu -ego preach- ed fromthe following text: Mat- thew vii. 1, "Judge not, that ye be not judged.'" The sia of censorious cri.ticisee • is almost universal because one is apt to commit it at first unconseiously and without premeditation Or fore- thought. If a party of young peo- ple are together, it is uot hard to fled fault with the minieter, aud the doctor, and the dressmaker, and the tieiglibor's wife and child and house and all ehat, he has. It Le not difficult to lay the reputatioa of an .absent member upon the dissect- ing table of traducemeet and cut an'cl hack it iiito pieces. with cruel, 'sharp, merciless to -agues. It is not alwaysa. clisag*reeable OPportuniey to repeat the slanders and the vili- fications and the defamations and. the wholesale condemnations which have been • circulated ab -out the neighborhood in reference to other _people's characters. Now, my text is a divineprotest against the hasty and the unjust judgments with which we condemn our fellow men. It is a .divine pro- test to briug men and womee to the realization of the awful datuage• they are doing themselves, as well . as others, by the pernicioes habit. of censorious criticism. It is a, pro- test to prove that, though we honor linen end love men and • praise men :and help men, yet we raust not hate !men or deride meneor condemn men. Incidentn the 'Pour of the Con.demnatiou is a. divine prerogo.- Prince and Princess of Wales. tive. Condemnation is a. thunder- bolt. which will shatter,' every human In all probability no single in- hand that tries to grasp It and to dividual has collected a more elab- huriit. Condemnation is a poison - orate series of -time-tables than the-:ous fang which will destroy- out Prince and Princess of Wales did iu ; own lives as well as lacerate and the Course of their famous tour last ?instill the fatal year, rn which they -covered 88,423 i • miles by sea and 12,295 Miles by POISON INTO THEIR FLESH.. train, or altogether a total of 50,-: Personally we should uot condemn 718 -miles. linen, because, having imperfections Especially beautifuli was the de-; n ourselves. we have no right to ex - sign of the cover of the time -table .I pect and demand perfection in oth- for the journey on the New' South ;ere. If We were holy. perhaps we Welts Government- Railway from ;might have a right to expect other Albury to Jennings, a, distance of !people to be holy. .If we were pure 862 miles, that was covered in ;minded, we might hove a. right to exactly twenty-nine hours, notwithHe.xpect other people -to be pure mind - standing the fact that, the train had ; ed. If we loved the Lord our God to pass. teem praetiteilly the sea- wieh . all our heart • and soul ane lee -el Ovee'a mounteixt range that is mind and strengths it..WC were -per- 'et feet higher • than the highest fect husbands and perfect wives, per- raountaiii.in this.:eapirtry (Ben Ne,.1.e feet .parents and perfect children: 4.406: feet;) • perfect in our love for nue fellow • Appropriately enough the • Station,' men; we might expece,- ethers .to be at the slanmit was called Ben LomH perfect. But what right htIS the ond, but its altitude, 4,473 feet, is raven to croak because her young rractically 1,300 feet higher than its have wings as black as the night? namesake in Scotland. To describe l What right has the Pharisee to this beautiful tine' -table, with its stand up and condemn the poor pub- Von might to get down on your elaborate decorative work introduce limn, who stood afar off and beat knees and thank God that even ing the royal arms. the 'flag of the :his breast, moaning, "God be mer- your lesser temptations you have Ophir with its York ruse, a crown ;ciful to me a sinner," when the been saved solely by an inspiring and several examples of the char- Pharisee himself was so sinful that faith in a divine love which may ver • yo anteristic flora cif the -Colony. would :he was like a whited sepulcher, nehave been kindled inur ' occupy ea least. half a column of "which indeed appeared beautiful BROTHERS SINFUL HEART. space; it must suffice to say that, ' outward,but was within full of No human being should condenni following the example of the geed_ dead men's bones and all miclee.u." bis neighbor because it is only the bordered time-tablesshowing thelAnd what right have you, 0 hearer, loving tear- of pleading sorrow that mileage, time of arrival at and de - to say your neighbor is a bad man can quench the fires of sin and not parture from, and the height .above or a bad woman and should be con- the sharp tongue that "hreaketh the the sea -level of the various; stations bone." It is only the warm, gentle- ferent from that which towed in the veins or those eleildren? •. We are Iffereat in the surreimd- ings of babyhood and boyhood and young Manhood. Some men never knew the love of a parent. Thei7.^ father and =thee died when they were very young. instead, of beteg able get an education, as you turd I have been, they were- pushed Out into the great world unprepared for the struggle of life and told to shift: for themselves. We are as different as flowers are different. 'Some are planted in rich. soil,. others in poor. Some- are cared for by loving hands, others' have to fight for their. lives among the bristly' thorns and the overehadewing weedse • Some have enough sunlight to incnbate. end de- velop them and just 'enough showers and dere to slake their thirst, Oth- er flowers , are continually beteg .scorched by the drough-t and DELUGED BY. THE FR.ESHETS. We are eel diffeeen.t in our iuherite ed. temperaments and our power , to resist temptation. Oliver Wendell Holmes, the quaint poet and Ono-- sopher„ once wisely said, "Every Child's training should begin tet least 100 years before that child is born," Have you and I any right• to .conderini a man's actions - unlese we can put oureelves in that umeee . • plate ? Then, after we have put otn•selves in our erring brother's place have we a right to affirm that we. in our own strength, would • have done differently than he has done ? If we do thus affirm, we are not honest and true tie ourselves, for some of the mightiest' and best men of God have testified just the opposite. 'Glorious John Newton; 'trumpet throated • John Neettore Holy Spirit inspired John Newton, once declared that he never saw •a murderer being. led. away to the gal- lows but he always said to himself, "There goes john Newton unless he had been saved by the grace of God." Horatio Seymour, twice governor • .of New York, in a large religious meeting once soleranly de- clared., 'In my time .as the chief executive of New York, I_ have had to -examine hundreds of applications for pardons. After 1 had carefully examined them and billy entered in- to the lives_ of the convicted and realized the influeuces which caused those crimes, I am free to. confess that had I had .the sante influence about about Me as those inen hied in' every case- I -should have-. committed : the same :Ames,' •if hot :bleaker ones: niy- .brother„ instead of • condeniti- ing your brother- put yourself your erring' brother's place.- • Get down on your knees and offer a I prayer of gratitude that you have not been tempted. as he is temeted. Go'd forgive tie our OMR trespasses. ,My Lord and my God, if thy Pardon is to be dependeet upon our willing- ness to foegive and Pardou others what chance have most of us for thy( forgiveness t • But I have orre thought more to develop, • and then ani done. No man has a right to condemn his •brother, because after the reondemeee tion'is ono spoken it often leepPeils that it • can never. be recalloe, • no matter how much he may repent. Our :judgments are lieurly alwaye sPoken judgments ; therefore • those evil words, which speak to others about an • absent friend or enemy Will in all probability DO repeated to a, seeond and a third and foutth party until those censorious criti- cisms aro carried everywhere. Aad then my brother, the damage which we do unto: others will be past re- call. Ob, my brother eed sister, can we, shall We not. here and while we offer the Lord's Prayer, say with: sincere and truthful hearts, "Forgive us our trespasses as • we forgiye. those who trespass against us ?" that were always placed in the royal saloon when our late Queen travelled to %Mater from Windsor, the New South Wales time -table omitted the inclines and sections of hill and dale that were alwaels a feature of the borne railways' royal guides. demned when you yourself have an evil eye and have not yet, by the protecting, outstretched arin of -a graca. of G ad, plucked it out? When friend that draws the sinner toward you -yourself have- an evil hand or :God and heaven; not the clenched foot arid have not yet amputated it? ..fist of an enemy. Did you ever see When you yourself hate tM evil a minister who became a better min - tongue to speak or an evil ear to ister through the fault finding of his listen against the deeds of your congregation ?. Did you ever know neighbors? of a wife who became a better wife • When the royal tourists at a later And the sad fact about human condemnation is this: • Tho more we .: because her husbaud talked against date tra.velled from Quebec. to Van - 'ourselves have gone astray, thee her to his neighbors ? Do you know couver and back, a distance of 3,078 of one human being who was .brought. Taw .eftch.lYa3r,• no fewer than three more we ourselves have followt ed too closer o your heart and to God by notes had to be given in the time- I much the devices and the desires - . table respecting the difference in our owe hearts, the more we our- ' being demeaned in the eyes ' of hie .time, :with the result that there were . n net :fellow mee theteug,h. bitter denuncia- selves have sinned 4a mind or i apparently see-er-al straege enamel. and not yet been foiled out .by the , tions that you hurled nn•ainst hint?- world. t e . t SC tr -04- • No I No .! Slander ancr vilification -les • For example on the • outward .. I and traducement -anti disparagement Sourney the royal train seemingly demi]. the shortcomings and wcalf- t . left Port Arthur an hour before it nesses of others. even as Lord .Tef-!tilad evil ru.mor. repeated by your never softened or purified a readied ' that town, the explanation freys. the unjust. Eteglish judge, was !"'''' being that up to the time of arrival merciless toward those who were :sinful heart. They only drove the Eastern time was observed and on brought before him, although he 'Pinner farther away from you and farther from God. departure the clocks were set by himself at that time wes the greet. ; Central, time, which was an hour est criminal' in all Eugland. It th I It is possible to criticize even the earlier. not the good father who 18 hardest i best of men. The story is told that !Zell:cis, the famous Greek artist. -Ton the daughter that has gone as - ...4— tray; it is the bad father who is not I painted a wonderful picture of a boy apt to forgive the wayward child. It ih°hling a disb of grapes. The -pie- is not the good brother wee is ma I ture was so wonderful that the willing to save the wayward 44ister: ;•birds flew through the open window it is the sinful brother. who. would • and with their bills picked at the and does demand that- his sister g1-11'; wIllen the artist had drawn. should be morally all reght Wiliiq he 'But thoegh th.ere were thousands MAY BE MORALLY ALL WRONG. de melee- censorious Critics who csotri1171 himself ready to praise, there were and brush. He has no little talent for painting, and his sketches have emed the picture. "For," said .ettracted considerable attention in l‘io man should rashly condemn the evil minded critice, "rf .e boy the profession. another; because it is often imposia had been painted as perfectly as the ble for him to realize what were dish of fruit, the birds would have, the miti gati n.g, circumstances in been afraid to approach the dish th the sin was conceived. If all which the lad is supposed to hold in men were born free and equal, as hie hand." It is possible to harshly the American Declarn,tion of hide- pendeuce optimistically decl arcs, you could judge them in the bulk. You could judge any two men as you might test two bars of steel which come from the same mold. You could judge them, as you might say that a pound of -coffee ought - to weigh as mueh as a, pound of tea; but all men' are not born free and equal. We are (heels:lit inelhwedes uttercondemnation •against our they tendencies. Only a short thee brothers 'our brethren will hi teen age at a eonerention of the •Women's Christian Temperance Union. a dee- gate read the • record of a wormer, -with criminal tendencies' who 'died In 1827. The name of this woman, for obvious reasons, Was not told. This wornau of criminal tendencies had had up to date over •800 eCertattilts , Seven .hundred of ' tbese descendants havebooneriminals, ami all, were convicted at. leriet °nee and meet of thorn more then °nee for crime.' Thirty -Six of theee deseend•;. ants :have been murderers, "And," Said the speaker, "the blood .61 that one woman .of criminal tendericie$ has cost the nation in- eighty years over. S3,000,000fop trials. and .05e- entions. and for the property stolen Rickman John Godlee, Hon. Surgeon -in -Ordinary to the King, is not only a skilful operator and a man of wide professional knowledge, but is also very clever with pencil Are a sure and permanent cure for all Kidney and I3ladder Troubles. BACKACHE Is no first sign of Kidney. Trouble. • Don't neglect it! • Check it in time!. Serious trouble will follow if you don't. Cure your BaCkaelie by taking DOAN'S KIDNEY ?ILLS 4 THE S. S. LESSON, INTERNATIONAL LESSOE, AUG. 31. Text of the Lesson, Num. xxi., 1-9. Golden Text, John iii, 14, 15. 1-3. He fought against Israel and the eine Of the Wiwi& and He SO Spoke of it to Nicodeinus in our GOlden Text foe this lesson (Jelin iii, 14, 15), That old serpent; the devil, by his has bitten oer rhea and multitudes are perishing, but as the ilkeness of that Which had bitten Israel Was put upon a 'pole for their 'deliverance so the Lord Jesus -was On the croes made sin for us that; we Might be: Inede the righteousness .of God. in Hine (II Coe. v, 21). • The serpent on the pole was suggestive of a dead; not living, serpent. • So In Oiliest oe the cross we see sia rendered harmless to injure those •Who are in -Christ. "The sting • Of death is sin, a,nd the strength of sin is the law; but thanks be to God, who giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ" (I Coe, xv, 56, 57), As quickly a,s the eyes •of a bitten Iseaelite fell upon the ser - Pent on the pole he lived, and the moment a sinner looks to Jesus 011 the cross, suffering in his stead, there is life for him in °hetet, as it ih written, "Look unto me and be ye saved" (isa. kiv, 22). The serpent on the pole was no thought .of Moses, feet the Lord's own provision, GRAINS OF GOLD. •No day so long but has its even,- ing.---French proverb. . The middle' Patheis the' Safe path. —German proverb. What three know everybody knows.—Spanise proverb. Fools 'build houses, wipe men buy took 50215(5 of them prisoners. This is: the story of Avad the Ca- them.—German proverb.. . . naituite„ Who.. dwelt In the south. He Teli -everyone your •busineee and the devil- win do it, for you.—Italian seems to have remembered the visit time. did Some talking 'and threaten- Ile IS not a thorough wise man proverb. of the Spies and poesibly at 'that lug, but now it is ne handful of men who cannot Wily fool ou occasion.— Who have come; it is a whole ea- Italian proverb, • • . tion that he sees approaching, aud Better a salt herring on your own • 1118f II, h ti • ik e • resist them . pike on another for he kutews not the Lord nor His table than a fresh purposes. When Abram iii•st came Man'seadlanisix pro -verb. to the land, the Canatentes .were in If we, keep our souls in patience, it the lend, , and 400 years later_ we we held' fast to our faith aud. •hope Raw them there in last week's • les.- and love, the soft etreams .of healing son (Gen, xii, 6; Num.. xiii, 29). power -will fie* MO us and through 'There are about thirty-eight years as,. We -shell receivo. and give out one, for iu chapter xx,' tbhies-i the Whale • Good would it be for men if, re- good.—Charles G. Ames. between the last lesson wantirielh. gins with the .deiteth of Miriam trudi we membering that life •is somethiug ends with the death of Aaron, read in Verse 1 that they are back! inore :than toil and struggle, they at Kadesh, where they. Were in chitp-11 would snatch an hour from their la- ter xiii, 26, when they'vent the spiesIbors, and. seek in the stillness of awl we • know from chapter meau.itheir souls that voice which only the 38„. that Mixon died in the fortieth- hurrehle . can hear, that strength year after they lot Egypt. How which only .the meek can obtain. — I • D • . d. little is known of those thirty-eighti " years. It was time. lost in wander-; The universe is as. full of truth and ing because of unbelief, for they are goodness as it is of light. And no I lie nearer the promised land uow more surely does the constant day than they , were •in the last lessou. retiree alike to the "just and the. Hole many believers thus •wander -- :i. unjust" than tette lives- wilI'-retitike 4 ifetisne : . on: the .bordet•s • . -of a lend! o'er • untruthe earliest' oppertenities etheY never- enter, and all hecasse of i•ebukeeour 'rehretant sloth of -spirit ;unbelief l. -•rility do .realle's Put -.. their i by their 'brave.- and. chtierfid soiicit- truSt, in..the. Lord .Jesiis .and: .accePl!f ings.-a-Heirey Wilder neeetee • • .. Him asetherr • 'SO:WOW', but • bee-eye:el- 4 • .Thrift..• sobriety,- industry, these they cannot. obtain emue one .-oisegi (lie• good; but • 'these alone do . not experience' and- will- not :take eloil- al His word they wander on. lacking as- Mitice a. great ' MAIO ri orpw- sur enee. ple. Nor can they ever be securely where courage, self-sacrifice, 4. And they'. journeyed from Monet; taught ' Hor by the way of the Red sea to devotion to - conntry, the consecrat- compass the land of Edom, and the ed service due to freedom and to soul of the people was much dis- truth, are not taught alongside . of courage(' because or the way. them as part of the equipmdeonft: °aro: Mount Hor is iiiemorable as the citizen of earth and a chil place where Aaron mete Keses, —Richard A. Armstrong. Aaron and Eleazar went up into Mount Her in the sight of all the ' NEEDLEWORK. - congregation, and Mosee, stripping To enjoy needlework thoroughly Aaron of his garments, put them. one inieds proper tools, writes E. J. upon Eleazar, and Aaron died there Mackenzie. The large frame, which. (Num. xx: 27, 28.). He was not sick, can be screwed 'to a table is, of but hie time had come to go home, course, the. best for holding. the work; but the large-sized hand hoop is all that is really. necessary. Extra fine pointed, polish, cast steel, che- nille needles are the best; and, when once used, they would never willieg- iy be exchanged for any others. . All cotton goods, excepting Turk satin, which,. though expensive, is always satisfactory, will facle and soon bring . . disappointment. Woollens keep 'color better: but •the relentless moth is apt to claim. them for her own, and .is sure to choose our fa- vorite treaseyes. Many silk fahrics are enduring; but, when oneeiviehe§ to do a piece to be- left as an heir- loom for coming generations to ad- mire,. she had better select a linen At the present day there is an almost endless 'variety, in color and quality, of linens—Irish, German and Aapan- ese. For threads there are silks, crewels, chenilles, Scotch, flourishing threads, and the German cotton flosses. All arc excellent, alone m- in combination. Choose the Russian., the Byzantine, the old FInglish, and the tapestry stitches. • With these the design is executed rapidly, and tshideethread is all upon the upper Do not waste time in braiding or drawing skeins of silk into a book or case. It sim.ply means "much weari- nes.s to the flesh." Such precautions call for little, ilnicky split -thread bits which overtax the eyes and wear out. the patience. Choose de- signs and stitches in which a whole strand can be used as a needleful. The work can be just as well shaded. I have in mind a flight of sea -gulls, Where the lights and shade in ohm -r- age match natures, own, and the strand Was used throughout. judge the actions of even the best Therefore it is very easy by bitter criticism, to destroy thous - :mils who might be saved. by the gentleness of ,a loving, forgiving, CHIlTSTLIKEI TONGUE. But the text tine deeper„andwid- er meaning • than merely the Biter- pretation which • implies -that. if we speak similar condemnations against no. It means :that if we condemn our brethren, • Christ will condemn us. ,Iiemeens -that ere do not .SPeek kiudly of theee, Who have gone wrong, Chriet will not become our divine advocate and 1)10(1(1 for our forgiveness. What does the Bible eay in order to impress this truth upon oar hearts ? Christ gave. • us the Lord's prayer as the raodel of our . (teeth:at-lees. "Our Father which. art in heaven, hallowed be thy name.. Thy kingdom come. Thy Will be dem in earth as it is in heaven. Forgive us our trespesee as bee:Vete Forgive us' oer trespasses as we , forgive those Who trespass against 'In other Words, we Or destroyed." Ts ii.ot the blood must, pray that we are ready to the.f, nova in your veins happily di f• forgive lhe sins Of others so •may ' FOR THE RomE 0.40 . • " 9 Ropes for the Kitchen. hygiene and Other Notes •for the housekeeper, ; 0010efrott llfilfoe90Fatlele el1101120 HOT pumiNcs. Swiss Pudding—One ib 'pared.•and sliced, apples,' hread crumirs, .2. oz suet,' 'oz auger. :Mix bread crumbs, suet and sugar together. Butter a pudding dish arid pat lay- ers of apple and inixtute till dish is full. Then pour Sauce over and bake three-quiu.ters of an • hour in moderato oven. Sauce—Two oz flour oZ butter, 1 pt milk, 2 eggs. "Melt butter in pan, stir in' flame Add milk and let et boil. Albew to mot: Mix in yolks of eggs, Pour 'this ever pudding turd beim. .Beat whates•eteT and sweetea. Fut on top of • mid - ding and brown slightly. Apple Tapioca—Soak 1 cup teagoca in 8 'cups warm • water four hours.. Pare and remove Ceres feoill 0 or 8 apples that will cook easily. Place in pudding dish that has been well • buttered, and • put , sugae lend 5. sprinkling of cinnamon in • each apple; Beat 3 eggs very- light, add pt sweet rink 8 tablespoons sug- ar. Mix with taPioce, and pour over apples. :Bake Slowly until:tipples are eoft. Eat with sweetened cream. Snow Balls—Wash 2 tee.cups rite and .boil until Medea. Pare and core 1.2 'large sour apples, leaving them Whole, Fill the apples: With the cooked rice, and put it around the , outside. Tie each one in it separate cloth and drop in boiling water. Cook until soft. Serve with this sauce : One cup sugar, 1 table- sPoon flour, Mixed thoroughly. Add a small piece of butter. Put on the 'stove and turn on boiling water en - til thick and clear. Flavor with nutmeg or cinnamon. •- Apple indlau Pudding—Take 1 qt boiling milk,- stir- into it 1. cup corn meal. Add to this 1 qt. sliced sweet apples, 1 cup molasses cir Sugar, 1 teaspoon sale .and Os milk.. Pour into large .pudding dish and bake slowly four hour's. • May be eaten hot or cold. When cold, a clear, amber colored jelly will be formed through- out the pudding. - I Chartreuse—Boil 1 teacup rice in 1 igt milk ,until soft. Pare and core 8 'apples. Put them 15 55 buttered pud- ding dish, and. place some red cur- rant jelly- and'coarsely-chopped Itaig7 'llsh walnut meats in the center • of !each. apple. Fill the spaces between the apples with the cooked rice, mid 'pet layer . of it •over • the top 1:Btgrelittlxvialth,stitlaklie • three -quartets of. an hour.. Delicions, 'sugar. J3alte in a mederate ovenlo. with Nein- ire Whipped creeni and sugar. and this the biaef account of it. It was gain to him. It was very far better i, 21, 28, R.V.) The reason they had to compass the land of Mom instead of going threugh it wire that the king would not allow them to pass thi-ou,sh (Judg. le, 17). 5. And the people spake against God (511(1 against Ineses. , They loathe • the marina and ,i4thath t ere is no-hread and no water. So they are full •or trouble because they' are rebellious and .umnanage- able, The record don:mailing them is felted in Ps. IxXviii, 17, 18, 19, -22, 87, 40, 41. 'What a' record Of enmity againet Him who loved them and sought only their welfare I See His heart toward them in Ps. brxxi, 10-16, !`x am the Lord thy Clod, which brought thee out of the land of Egypt. 6. And the Lord sent fiery ser- pents tuning the people, and they bit the people, and much people of Israel died. The New Testament admonition in this conuection is, "Neither let as tempt Christ, as some of them also tomoted and were destroyed of ser- pents" (I Cor. x, 9). Leal any one might think that he never would be thus guilty, it Is writteu in the (=- text, "Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall," and lest one might think that his trials aro unusually heavy and too much to be borne 'see verse 18. 7. Therefore the people came to Mosesand said: We have sinned. for we have spoken against the Lord and against Thee. Pray unto the Lord tha,t He take away the ser- pents from us. And Moses prayed For the people. Many a, time Moses had prayed for them, and it is written of lihn that "Moses, • His eliosen, stood before HIM the breach to turn eviler His Nemeth, lest Ho should destroy thein" (PS: evi., 28). Moses and Samuel and Daniel and. other great interces- sors are types of Ulm who ever. liv- eth to make intercession for es (110b. 25; Rom. 84), and there is exceeding great comfort .151 such words . as I John 1, 0, and Prove xxviii, 13, 1, 2. Yet the time tame when neither Moses • nor Samuel. bloah.• Daniel. nor job could aV:ail for 1E31'0.01 if. they should pra.,y for them (.fer. xv, 1; Mak. Xiv, 14), 8, 9, 'And the Lord said unto Moses, Make thee a fiery serpent end set it upon a pole, and it shell come to pass that every one that is bit- ten, Nebel' he looketh Upon.,it, shall Thus Moses did, and it camp to pass as the Lord had Said. He 1,vho told Moses to do this. salt' in it a symbel of on the crOsS Lor UNBIASED. ,A Texas judge was robbed of a horse not long ago, and the thief, being apprehended, was brought be- fore 'him for trial. The 'judge 'eyed the prisoner with deep satisfn eti on for a minute or so, and thendeliver- 'ed himself' thus! • • "Owing to a personal prejudice the Court will not hear the case. • It will be tried by the bailiff, who will find a verdict in accordance With the 1 a ts• the er `ii.iMithne," added Hie Honor, impressively, "the Court will go outside arid prepare a rope and pick out a good tree." • 4- -- Debt Collector—"Is your master a.t home?" Servant (curtly)—"No, he isn't." Debt Collector (suspicious- )y)—"But 100.21 gee his hat banging •up in the hall." Servant—"Weil, what's that got to do with it One of Any' dresses is hanging on the line in the ,bacir. garden, but I'm not therel'y• APPLE. DELI C &CIES. Whipple—Beat the whites of 2 eggs to EL stiff froth, add 8 tablespoons powdered sugar, 1 large tart apple grated,. 1. teaspoon grated lemon rind. Whip 1 cup sweet cream stiff, add a pinch of salt, 1-3 'cup sugar, aud spread over bottom of glass dish. Drop spoonfuls of the apple mixture (wee the crease. • Serve very cold. Pudding—Upon 'alternate iaYers of sponge cake slice apples very thin, after they have been first pared, and then steamed- until soft._ Pour: over this a custard made as -follows- : Scald 1 pt new milk; remove from, stove and addyolks of 4 eggs (beaten with 1 cup sugar if apples are sour). Set again over the -lire, aud allow to thicken: Cool and flavor to taste. Beat the whites of the egg's stiff and heap over the whole, Apple Sherbet—Pare med i.u.m.- Turns Bad Rich Red lood into iced. No other remedy possesses such perfect cleansing, healing and puri- fying properties. Externally, heals Sores, Ulcers, Abscesses, and all Eruptions. I n tern ally, restores the Stomach, Liver, Bowels and Blood to healthy action. If your' appetite is poor, your energy gone, your ambition lost, B.B.B. will restore you to the full enjoyment of happy vigorous life. em••••••*.4.1•••••••••••rolown EC (Oen viiine Carters Little Liver Pills. Must Boar Signature of See Sic -Shull° Wrapper Below. TOY Onton end as Geol. to take assegai. FOlfahrti)LIVE terCOONSTIPATION. fYilliALLOW4IUN. reitYIDICOMPLEAlDil ,• ommussm soar issa idaPPIsiiretrt041.104 OUSE SICK HEADAOHE. Are a Heart and Nerve Tonic, Bleed and Tisiiie Builder and. Constitution Renewer for all troubled with weak heart or nerves. As a fookfor the blood, the brain and the nerves, they cannot be excelled. If you are troubled with Nervousness. Sleeplessness, Nervous Preetration, Pal- pitation of the -Heart, Shortness of Breath, Weak or Fainting Spells, Anminia,, or any. form of Debility, take MILBURN'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS. Their curative power is quickly maid. tested. They purify and revitalize the blood, brighten the brain and steady and strenghten the nerves from the first few doses. _ Price soc.yer box or boxes for $:.15. at alt aeateie or • The T. Milburn 'Co.. Liinited. -Toronto. Ont. Sized apple's srtheY 'meet be' mellow Mash -there with aeh.eavy, spoon, and- when sugar has been added to help beat them, it must..be--e used • according to the tartness of the apples. Pour over the apples 1 qt sweet cream flavored to taste. Freeze and allow to set a few min- utes before serving. Jellied Apples—Pare and core 10 large, firg...4. apples' Fill the holes with red currant jelly, sprinkle all over with theme. juice, .and dust with grauulated sugar. Add a little water to the pan, and bake until candied but not broken tip.. Preserv- ed ginger may he substituted for the currant jelly. A Breakfast Dish—Pare and slice seyeral ripples. Put them into a, baking dish, cover with cream, and bake for 20 minutes. Another way is to cover them with well -cooked oatmeal and bake 15 minutes or un- til tender. Serve with milk, or we prefer cream. ana4ur, CAKES. . • Capp CO Fruit Cake. --;One •eup sugar; 'one-half cup- inoit-issee,, :one cup sour- milk, 2-8 cup shortening, one •cup seeded raisins, Ono teas14664. • soda, All kiads of spice •aticl• flour to make stiff dough. •This 'makes two loaves. Buttermilk tup sugar, one cup buttermilk, two cups flour with small teaspoon soda. sifted. In: a little nutmeg or ether spice to suit test% and pinch salt. This call be made with one-helf cupcleaned currants or not. Cream Cake Without Eggs --Three •tablespoons sweet cream and • one cup sugar creamed together, one cup milk, one teaspoon vanilla, two cups flour, two teaspoons baking powder. Beat well . and bake in two round tinS. Put whippeil. cream between the itt,varS and 011 top. r.mGAT) Some housewives use the bread board on the table. , These hoards are made attraCtive by. poker dec- orations of wheat heads, oat Sprays and rye tops. ;These decorations are only put upon the beveled edge, the top being left clear arid white for use. It rut-tart:1i 80/1.10 practice to cut the bread neatly, thus offering a new accomplishment to the lady pre- siding at the table. Ft3. atou.,Of - 150 The Leading Specialists of Metrics. 25 Years in Detroit. Bank ROlarences. rierNe NomasUsod•Withont Written consent. VARIEOCELE u you have tru,sgressed against the laws of e.' CURED• promising lives. Treat with scientific phy*icians , nattire%yett lutist Stiffer. Self abuse, later eN.COSSCS REDDA and prtiate diseases have wrecked thousands of NERVOUS TY and be eared. Avoid quacks. Si. A. sidney, of L.,,,,,,,--, • - • v,,T7,7, • Toledo, says: "At the age of 11, I learned a bad habit ap4 al 19 contracted a SciriottS clisease. I treated with a dozen doctors, who all pronlided to cure me. They got ny Motley and. X still ltad the diSeare. I had given tio hope when a friencj advised me to consult Drs. K. &IL, who had clued him. Without any confidence X called on theta, and Dr. Itennedy agreed to cure, Sue or no pay. After taking the Ne*Method TraeXtuent for hc weeks. I felt 11Ico a new man. The drains eeated, wormy Veins disappeared, nerves grew' stronger, hair stlped falling out, urine 'became clear and my sexual, organs vitalised. X VMS eat rely coed by Dr. /Cennedy and recommend him m frothebottom o? bottoof my heart." ' o Treat and Curia Syipmilo. Gleet, Varlonoole. lE11das3O2i11, Steleturo, Unnatural DiSoharttom 0,etninal Woaltneta5 1.0.driety abCOdbIUSIllaDdTdAcTit*IDOblisbc`ae RtX6.' rloOtre loRae.',onii er write fOr Question Blaali iii•I, or eionia Treatment. NO CURE. . NO PAY. DRS, ,KENNEDY 81, KERGAN, Cot. Michigan AV°, and Shelby Street Defroll,"