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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1902-9-25, Page 711101=0..1.1011111 VIRAiltZ art es Little Liver Pills. MUSS or Signature Of afe9z9*". See Pee...Studio Wrapper Below. Vaty sicaru wee as easy to take as sugar. HEABACHE.1 DMUS& RJR BILMUSIMit. FOR TOPill WEE. 6co. CON8TEMT1010. FOR 3ALLOW tliL THECONIPLEXION , _,,,zkrtusrm ecut3,IrtrF017.74regetalge\e"Veel, os.STC.1 s AUER: cuRa SICK HEADACHE. PREPARINGPOTATOES. There are fow houses in which the potato does no't form part of the daily menu, therefore it is of first importance to consider, says Emma J. Gray, in the. LaSlies' World. The befrecklecl, sodden condition in •'which this vegetable is often placed on our tables teStifies to the • iln- aarortan.ce of care. The average cook peels the potato evith the one thought of get- ing through with it as soon as possible. She cuts the peelings Usually from • an eighth to half an Ench. deep and the result is a. dogged, ill -shaped potato. If an eye happens to be Cut out, a quarter or half the potato has been sacrificed. Her next move is to throw them into a pan in which they are part- ly covered with cold water. Whisk- ing them around a. moment, she gatherthem in both. hands, and ,with the dirty water trickling from her 'fingers she throws them into a pot. Her duty is now over. When the dinner is ordered on, she will take the potatoes up in whatever oondition they happen to be. A few overconscinus cooks will test whether the potato is done through, an.d-when boiled to their r,atisfe,ction will pour of)" part of the water and set the pot where the pc- .tatoes will soak up the rest of the 'water and keep warm until served. A. Standard Re ady Used in Thousands of Homes in Canada for nearly Sixty Years and has newer yet failed to give satisfaction. CURES Dlarrhosa, Dysentery, Cholera, Cholera, Morbus, Cholera Infan- tum, Cramps, Colic, Sea Sickness and all Summer Complaints. Its prompt use will prevent a great deal Of unnecessary suffer- ing 'and often save life. Prima ISSp. rt r. Milburn Co.. Limited. Toronto, Ontasio. • Are a sure and petmarteht cure for all Isldney and Alacider Trouble, E ACHACH is the first sign. of Kidney Trouble. 33on't segleet it 1 Cheek a in time! Serious trettble will follow if you don't, Cure your Kaekache by taking DOAN'S KMNEY PILLS. SC FF AT TH. Multitudesin the Palaces of the Rich and Great Ilave Perished From Indifference Metered Recording to Act or the Parliament, er other physical body when the latter Cana"' in ehe year °fle Thuu"'" lci"'Hu'' teed ee b'Minr. Toronto. ' is in £1, condition favorable for the and Ty im iq the Department of ,essicultuse, Ottneb) •development of ' A despatch from Ceicago sears:. Rey, Frank De Witt Talmage pree.eh- ed from the following text: II v, 1, "But he was a leper." The Syrianeation was a military nation, with all that the word im- plies, and Captain Nacianan was the tommander-ineobief of all its armies, the headquarters of which, were to be found in the Damitecus capital. /oat Nartanan \Yielded a higher influ- ence than. that which belongs even to the greatest soldier of military kingdom. The phrase used by the inspired histurian, “agreat man with .his master, and honorable," implies that he held a position more powerful in the kingdom. than the head of the privy council, the prime minister or the secretary of state or Secretary or the treasury, and he may have ,held through the prestige of his militarY elleCeSSCS, SOULS or all of •these offices in his own. per- son, as great pashas often do in Oriental lands, •lie occupied ,prea- tieally the same position in the Da- mascus capital that the Duke of Wellington occupied; after •the bat- tle. of Waterloo. The Duke of Wel- lington, .by the overthrow of the Na- poleonic dynasty, not only became the prime minister of England, but for awhile the most influential statesman in all Europe: Leprosy, humanly speaking, is an incurable disease. Scientists ever since history began have been study- ing the onward march of this fatal destroyer. Although most preva- lent in the east, it is confined to no climate and is peculiar to no age, race or condition. A, man who has the leprous poison in his system has no hope from medicine, Be must grow worse and worse until he COMES TO THE GRAVE. It is as ineurable as that disease which we call cancer and which is only a. little less fatal in its hideous and repulsive results than leprosy. • How terrible are these diseases that physicians confess themselves unable to cure! . How startling, then, is the divine statement that the soul may be afflicted with such a disease similarly beyond human medicaraent. Sin is a leprosy. Sin is a cancer of the soul gnawing at its vitals. Sin is the forerunner of eternal death. There are men to- day within the sound of My voice who in their own strength hav,e been fighting sin for the last twenty , or thirty years. But as you grew weaker the power of your sin is growing stronger. God have pity upon you, for you are a doomed leper. You are doomed by leprous sin. But though from our standpoint' leprosy is incurable, yet the leprous scales were eleaned by a divine pow- er. Therefore, it is to Christ • and to Christ alone, that we must look for the cure of sin. The moral lep- er may go with coaildence to Christ, who cured the physical lepers by a word. When the ten lepers came to the Savior pleading for help, Chriat turned and said: "Go show your- selves unto the priests, And it came to pass as they went they were cleansed." Naaman, the great cap- tain, was helpless in the hands of his human physicians. On account of his wealth and fame Neste= must have had the best doctors the royal court of Damascus could sum- mon; but when Naa,man, obedient to the divine command through Pasha, went and dipped -Seven times in the river jorclars his flush became like the flesh of a little' child. - 0 • my. brother and sister, you who are cursed with leprous sirs, will yeti not Genie to the, divine fountain? Will you not bathe in Christ's ta,00d? Will you not to -day by the Calvary cross seek supernatural medica- ment? Leprosy may take a very long time in which to fatally develop, al- though such is not always the way the disease progresses. Sometimes the scourge in a few months may change a beautiful body into A HIDEOUS CORPSE, but the quick result Is tate exception and not the rule. At this first touch of leprosy usually there nuty only be a hardness, or rather a numbness, of the skin ina spot about the size of a. ten cent piece. The skiu at that one place merely turns as white as snow. If you know nothing about the disease, you may not worry about it, You may, for a long time, be indifferent to the numbness. Then, some day when you are in a physician's office seek- ing advice for some other cause, yoU may turn to the doctor ard say: "By the way, doctor, 1 hava a very peculiar something the matter with my hand. It Sloes not hurt me, but it ,is numb in one place." Then the physician with a grave face will look at yonr hand. Then, he will take a pin out :of the lapel of his coat and prick that spot. • Then he will turn and say: "You aro a lep- er! You are already doomed, al- lhoogh death inay be years away.y' But, though leprosy may corn in a seemingly harmless way, the dis- ease for four, five, ten,' even fifteen years will keep on steadily spread- ing. • It will spread until the fingers fall ofT from the hands and the toes from the feet. It Will keep on spreading riatil the skin bloats and cracks and the hair falls out. So leprous sin; comirg in a seemingly harmless Way, will keep on spread - Mg until it makes the face hideous, the body 'deformed, It may keep on spreading for years until at laet •the fatal leprous sin will destroy the body as Well as the soul. , Leprosy is an infectious disease, 'It is infectious as the scarlet fever germ is infectious.. It is spread throughout a community only by the T -IT LEPROUS GERM, Tiaire in the lazar house established in New BrunSwiela Canada, in 1865, it was found by investigation • that every one ef the ninety patients con- fined within that leprous hospital had contracted the disease of lep- rosy within. a radius of seventy Miles from the point where the first case of Canadian leprosy was dis- covered,' ConVinced of its infectious character, Dr, Emerson., who was for many years in the employ* of tlx Ha- waiian Government, gave as his tes- timony that it is utterly useless to fight the leprous disease, i.n any oth- er way than by isolation. "To ese; periment," said • he; "with this scourge on any ether theory than the infectious theory is dangerous, reckless insanity*." As the disease of leprosy .is ly • infectious, so are the leprous germs of sin. The evil which is within shall dwell within others. The wrongs we do against our own selves arotruly apt to beeome the sins which others shad do pato themselves also, and as this infec- tion implies that to scatter the germs of sin we must come in con- tact with others, is it not a start- ling reflection that the people whom we are most liable to destroy by our sins are those who may be near- est and dearest to us? It will. .,be the inother, herself stricken, with leprosy of sin, who will destroy her own daughter; the father, his own son, the brother his own 'brother,. the wife • her sister. Kindred ties and companionship will only serve to facilitate the transmission of the deadly infection. Leprosy is to be found in the homes of the rich and the poor alike ; in the palace and in the hovel ; at the king's • banquet table as well as in the gutter. For many years the world supposed that lep- rosy was able to . thrive only in the pestilential alleys and filthy dens of the east. That supposition was totally wrong. Leprosy may origin- ally start among the low social out- casts, but the leprous germs , can live and thrive under the dazzling lights of a brilliant ballroom as well as in tha-stifling air of the dark hovel of • - A CRIMINAL'S RETREAT. By handling the coin which is nub - Holy used in • India, a traveler may become infected with leprosy, some leper having handled the same coin. By .simply touching a rock at the foot of which a leprous beggar had crouched, a prince, arrayed in all the brilliant robes of 'royalty, may be- come, o. lepea.•• Recklese and indifferent was the at- titude of the people of London dur- ing...the greitt..plague about two cen- g ef the cause of Neamene treat - We. So olio day she timidly pulls at her mietress' skirts aud says r "MiS- UOSS, whY do you not have master seek the Prophet ef Israel ? would cure him a his leprosy I" Then the horses' were hitehed to the chariots. The the journey was tak- er!. to the far-off prophet's hoer!). Here, my brother, is the OariSt- ian's duty, 'Dire humblest child 01 God can perform it. The service ren- dered to the great geeeral by this ca,ptive child, you earl render to the moral lepers around you. aro do- ing no more than this from. the pul- pit. I am telling' you where there iS a, cure forathie fetal disease. How - over great you may be, if you have in your nature •. THE GER1V1 SIN, I say, as did the :Hebrew maid "Would God you would go to jesue. fox'yHe as h d1 that' lit'eurnyboleacli u.'relcesrY t ., who one stormy day, started Char- les I-1. Spurgeon upon his glorious work when he cried : "Young man, a,filicted with doubts and troubles, look to Jesus ! Look I Look 1" Will you bathe in • Christ's blood ? Will you. bathe now ? Will you go to Christ and be apiritsaally cured? The second fact about the cure of the • leper Newnan with, which, I would impress you was that Elialuh the prophet, told. hind to go and bathe in the river Jordan. He did not tell Natimaz to go and bathe in e, pool. He did not tell him to wash out of a small basin. Elisha told Newnan to go aud dip in the Jordan. There he would have plenty of room. The river was so wide and deep that Nauman 'could wade into it up to • his thigha, his shoulders, his chin. He could dip into it again and again and again. So to -day, as with Naaman. I would bid you who aro Covered with the scales of lep- rosy, to wade down into the river of life. I would bid you to dip into that river which flows from out of the throne of the Lamb, because it is a Wide river, it is a river ao wide and deep that all of us ,can enter it at once, side by side and therewth yet be enough water to cleanse us all from our sins. I would have you wade to -day into the river of life because I want to take your hand in mine, and, as your pastor and friend, 'X want to enter this Savioar's rivea, so that I also can be cleaned of my own sins by your side and have my flesh and yours, like Naaman's become as pure as a, little child's. My dear friends, leprous with sins will you let inc lead you to the sriver of eternal cleansing ? FINE FLOUR AND TEETH. a Why .do colored, peoRle s a rule have such fine teeth? Mostly be- cause they have lived on coarse food,, which made demands on the teeth. People as a rule now do not want to do any chewing. They de- mand meat which is so tender, that it will melt in the mouth, etc. Na- ture, prodigal as she is, never be- stows anything where it is not used: and. the result is that the civilized races are losing their teeth. Jf the style continues :to forbid our teeth to do any grinding our progeny of say 2902 A. D. will be born tooth- less,' or with ,only rudimentary turies ago. Ainsworth, the histor- teeth. As individuals we cannot ian, 'tells' "us that during those hex- grow good teeth in our heads by eating coarse food. We are begin- ning to get bad teeth by heredity. But there is almost no. tooth or. bone -forming material in Else white flour, and' tbe avoidance Of coarse foods undoubtedly hastens the de- caying of our teeth. Perhaps the millers and the dentists aro ina sec- ret league towork for mutual inter- ets. Who knows? rowing and gruesome months the London storesswertanearly all closed. The doors of the private homes were nearly all barred and bolted save when they were opened at the .ap- preach of -a, bell ringer who was seated upon a pile of stehchful corpses because he was out driving the dead cart and collecting the dif- ferent bodies of the dead. Yet at that time in London there were men and women who whistled andlaugh- ed. and danced and sang and blas- phemed under the very shadow of these horrors. The noted wine cel- lars of the aristocratic homes were broken into and rifled. The churches - and the cathedrals were robbed of their pews. and pulpits, and turned into 'dance halls There the young men and young women would ca- rouse- during the long hours of the night and day as though this awful London plague would never strike them. They would dance and sing and .blaspheme even :while the driver of the dead cart was wending his *ay through the deserted street ringing the bell a.nd crying : "Bring out, bring out your dead. 1" They would laugh and sing and blaspheme even. when one of the -dancers would drop at their feet with the fatal mark, of death on his brow. They would laugh and sing and blaspheme even while they were throwing the dead bodies of their late companions out of the open cherch windows where they would fall into the gutter end lie there poisoning the air until the dead ,cart made another round. So there are men and women spirit- ual lepers living in the homes of the rich and poor alike who are as ut- terly indifrerent to the approach of eternal death caused by sin as were some of the inhabitants of England during the wholesale slaughter • of human life in the great London plague of ABOUT TWO CENTURIES 'AGO. • But, though the leprosy of the soul, like the leproigy .of the flesh, be a disease beyond the 'reach of the human soul, I would again ' draw your attention to the fait that it yields to the touch of the Divine Physician, as the afflietion of Naam- art yielded at the Jordan waters, And there are espeeially two or three incidents about tbe physical cure of Nanmen with, Which I would drive thiS truth home and lead yoa to the fountain of life.. The first was that he was induced to travel from Da- aurseus to the home of the Prophet fr,lisha throtten the influence of a little captive Jewish slave lying awake upon her humble couch as night after night she hears the great Syrian general tramping up and down ie his palace rooms. She hears him groan When he is awake. She hears him moan in his sleep be- cause he is a hopelese leper. She hears him tose restlessly about upon his bed. She hears him the mare readily becauSe she is Sleeping in a nearby room, at the feet of :Kaamen'e Wife'S. bed, or in an adja- leprousgerm on 'cose physical body cent room, to her mistress. Then she )0 btouvit o contact w ane Items re lir' • 1 t ^ tl eneral and his wife talk - FROM TREES TO NEWSPAPERS. A trial was recently made in Aus- THE S. S. LESSON. INTERNATIONA.L LESSON, SEPT, 28, Text of hviii. 18. e Leasers, Quarterly Review. Golden Text Deut Lesson L—The giving of manna (Ex, xvi, 1-15). Golden Text, Matt. vi, 11, "Give us this day onr daily bread." 1f we would as the people of God please Hier, we must remem- ber that in Him we live and move and hat e our being, that Ile giveth life and breath and all thines aad that in bit haud are our breath and all our ways (Acts xvii, 25, 28; Dane v, 23). Therefere without a murmur we should gratefully accept day by day all He seeds or pdrinits td come and daily feed on film ia His word (John vi, 57). Lesson II.—The Ten Conamand- meats—duties to God (Ex. xx, 1-11). Golden. Text, Luke x, 27, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart." Because 1 -le de- livered them from the bondage of Egypt by His great power that they might for their owe, happiness and the happiness of -othera. be a special people unto 1-Iimself He asks their holo heart, and no true lover would like less from one he loved. Lesson •11I.—The Ten Conunand- mentssaduties to men (Ex. xx, 12- 17,) Golden Text, Matt. xix, 19, "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." The Golden Text tells as the Islay way in which we can show to man tha,t we love God is by lov- ing our fellow men. Lesson IV.—Worshipiag the gold- en calf (Ex. xxxii, 1-35). Golden Text, Ex. xx, 3, "Thou shalt . have no other Gods before Me." One of the most arnazing things recorded in Scripture is the love and the long suffering of G od„ and another is the great 'sinfulness of man. These people who had said to God, "All that Thou sayest we will do," are seen in a few days Making an idol and calling it their God; yet He bears with them. tria to decide in how short a space of time lacing trees could be convert- ed into newspapers. At Elsenthah, at 7.35 in the morning, three trees were sawn down ; at I/ .81. the wood, having been. stripped of bark, cut converted into pulp, became pa- per, and passed from:the factory -to the press, whence the first printed and folded copy was issued at ten o'clock. So that in 145 minutes:the trees had become r.ewspapers. INGENIOUS POSTAL BALANCE The most recent triumph of the French rostal admirtstration is an ingenious little machine which not only automatically weighs letters and samples, but records on an in- dicator at the side the amount re- quired for stamps. Wheu the tuticle deposited on the balance exceeds the regulation weight the indicator promptly hoists the sign "Too heavy." SWEDISH CHILDREN. The Swiss show the world a geed example in their consideration for children. Geneva there iS a Chil- dren's Holiday Homes Society, As soon as the schools break up in July the poorer ohildren are sent off to lovely spots in the SNViSS hills • and valleys to lay in a fresh store of health and strength. THE PARADISE: OP ROSES. The "paradise of roses" is not in Turkey, Bulgaria, or Persia, it seems, but at Sceaux, near Paris', 'where, in his garden of L'Hay, M. Gravereaux has collected 6,000 dif- ferent SpecieS from all parts of the Tia clambering roses are particularly tina, and are trained over espaliers as well as arcades, 4 llikX]r,13,0 THE •BIRDS THRIVE,. The birds are not forgotten by the Swedish peasantry. At the doer of every farmer's house is erected a pole, to the top or Which is bound a large, full sheaf of grain.. There is not a, peasant in all Sweden who Will sit down with his children to dinner until he has first raised aloft a meal for the birds, Lesson V.—The tabernacle (Ex. xl, 1-38). Golden Text, Ps. c, 4, "En - tea into His gates with thanksgiv- ing and into His courts with praise." Although they were such as they were and He knew them thoroughly, yet He commanded a tabernacle to be built that He might dwell in it among them. The Lerd Jesus wa,s indeed the true taber- nacle, God manifest in. the flesh (Heb. viii, 2; I Tim. iii, 16), and now each belieaer is a temple of God (I Cor. vi, 19, 20). Lesson • VI.---Nadab and Abilau (Lev. x, 1-11). Golden Text, Thess. v, 6, "Let us watch and be sober." ,God has sent from heaven the fire to C0119UMO the sacrifice (chapter ix„. 24) and had appointed the way in which everything should be done, but these men, like Cain, disregarded God's way and preferred 'their own way before the Lord, and before the Lord they died. All in our churches to -day that is not of God may be counted trange fire. Lesson VIL—Journeying toward Canaan (Num. x, 11-13, 20-86). Gol- den Text, Ps. xxxi, 3, 'for thy name's sake lead me and guide Inc." God never left them although they oft provoked Him to do so, but the pil- lar of clond by day and of Ere by night was their faithful guide and oracle and shield. Moses seemed in- clined to lean a little 'upon. his .fa- ther-in-ia.w, but " in that he was wrong. Lesson VIII.—Report of the spies (Num, xiii, 1-13, and xiii, 25, xiv, 4). Golden Text, Ps. xi, 4. "Bless- ed is that man that inaketh the Lord bis trust." This looking to see if God was as good- as His word and if the land was what He said it was gave no eyidence of faith in C.a. But because they desired to zend the spies God permitted them (Deut. i, 20-n3, and we see the re- sult. son IX.—The brazen :serpent (Num. scat, 1-9). Golden Text, John iii, 14, 15, "Ansi as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilder- ness," etc. There are many fore - shadowings of God's way of redemp- tion, such as tho. shedding of blood and the coats of skins of Gen. iii, 21, and the sacrifice of Isa.a.c in Gen. xxii, but none more suggestive than this of the serpent upon the pole to whith our Lord ref -ss. -- Lesson X.—The prophet like Moses (Deut. xviii, 9-22). Golden Text, John vi, 14, "This is of a truth that' prophet that should come into the world." Every prophet, priest and king, as well as every saerifice and the. 'whole tabernacle and its ritual, all fereshadowed. the true Prophet, Priest and Bing, the true tabernacle, the true and only Lamb of God, of whom the Father said, Hear Himl Lesson X1.—Loving and obeying God (lieut. xxx. 11-20). Golden Text, 1 John v, 3, "For this is the love of God that we keep His corn- mandraeuts." The New Testament comment upon this lesson in Rom. x points us to Christ, who is the end of the law for righteousness to 'every -one who believeth, the only one who ever truly loved and obeyed God and who VeComes the righteous- ness ard the life of every believer., Lesson XII. -,-The death of Moses (taut. Xxxiy, 1-12). .Golden Text, E. xxxili, 11, "The Lord spoke an- te Moses feee to leae." The great- est of earthly prophets died; all kings and palests die: it is appointed unto men once to die, but our great High Priest; •Prophet and Xing tasted , death for every masa died, vose, from the dad, is now at the tight hand of God in heaven, crown- ed with glory and honor, and Wili come again to restore all things ef which MOses and all the prophets have spoken (ilO. 1, 1-8; it, 9; Acts 111, 19-21), „. Every believer is one With Rim 111 the glory,shall take part in. the first resurrectioa ahd teign with Mill tn nit kingdom, . , Paris , has double the number of firemen, and flfty more engines than London, ST. •;•.`. ""•,. gieer i)-e4kV GPNG .„ TO V l'M STU°I1ACH.V/E41O1EARTSi,E'' .4,, CURE flINCTIONALWOu'uffr ENRICii IKE BLOOnaSTROI Tit CONSTITUTION Apiraaseeditk/C4dasa a_sa- B to' ORITAIN t- AM ERIC/S kaa. ail -Druggists a oleo Price in Canada: $1.00; 51a bottles for $5.00 No remedy covers so large a fic:Id of usefulness as ST. 3-A1b1D$ VITAVO,RS. They are indicated whenever there is a weak condition, as they toue • up Abe different organs and bring strength to the tissues. Palpitation a nue heart, poor di- gestion, sleeplessness, weak nerves, armtnia, and chlorosis, are quickly relieved by Sas. jAmzs W,APARS; they also repair the waste caused by hard • work and fatigue. JADMS WArRRS help stomach, digest food and send the nutriment through the blood, and this is the holiest way to get health and strength, the kind that lasts, develops and breeds the energy which accom. plishes much. , "$t. James Wafers furnish a ti1013t POWertni evidence of the vastly increased power of medi- cament by combination of jtsdi. cloris Phartstacentic prepara- tions. I have used them with good snecess when my patients needed strength," " Dr. Charles Hall, • i•iverpool, Eng. St. James Wafers are not a secret rente0; to the numerous doctors re- commending The, to their patients we maxi the formula upon reovest. Where dealers are net selling the baWer ias tpnf tee? t hspter!rici aea mr eao :11 1 avifeeerdsc %leap: .Cinduira218.• St. Catherine St., Montreal. SOME GOOD RECIPES. Cream Oysters.—One pint cream, a little more than one plat oysters; oae tablespoonful flour, salt and. pepper to taste. Let the cream come to a boil, mix the flour with a little cold milk and stir into the boiling cream. Let the oysters come to a boil in their own liquor, then sldra carefully. Drain oil all the liquor, and 'tarn the oysters into the boiling. cream. - • Sweet 'Corn Pudding.—One pint corn, two tablespoonfuls melted but- ter, two tablespoonfuls granulated sugar, two eggs beaten light, two cups milk, saltspoon salt, a small pinch of soda. Chop the corn fine, add eggs, sugar, butter, salt, and milk, in which soda has been stir- red. Bake half an hour in a cov- ered pudding dish, then uncover and brown. Tomato Catsup.—Cut and boil one peck good ripe red tomatoes and then press through a fine sieve. Add one cup strong vinegar to one gal- lon of the tomatoes and two heaping tablespoons ground mixed spices. Boil again. and bottle. This will keep a, year ff placed where it is cool.Gape Sweet Pickle.—Ilse full grown green grapes. Take seven pounds grapes, four pounds sugar, one pint vinegar, two to three ta- blespoons cloves. Scald the vinegar and sugar together, cut the grapes once and seed them. Scald. them in the vinegar and sugar. Skim out the grape; bring vinegar to scald and pour over the grapes two morn- inge. Scald all together the third m o Taiani inig. G Apple Pie Crust.—Pill a pie plate -with apples partly cooked and prepared in the usual way for making Pies, cover with a, crust made M the following mamier, one cup Graham flour, half teaspoonful salt, one teaspoonful baking powder. Add enough* sweet cream to make a dough that can be rolled out on the Are a Heart and Nerve Tonic, Blood and Tissue Builder and Constitution Renewer for all troubled with weak heart or nerves. As a food for the blood, the brain and the nerves, they cannot be excelled. If you are troubled with Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Nervous Prostration, Pal. pitation of the Heart, Shortness of Breath, Weak or Fainting Spells, Anmmia, or any form of Debility, take MILBURN'S. HEART AND NERYE PILLS. Their curative power is quickly man'. tested. They purify and revitalize the blood, brighten the brain and steady and strenghten the nerves from the first few doses. Price sec. per box or 3 bores for Sx.e3 at all dealers or The T. Millnirn Co., Lirotteitl&, Toronto, Ont. Turns Bad lood into Rich Red Blood. No other remedy possesses such perfect cleansing, healing and puri. Eying properties. Externally, heals Sores, Ulcers, Abscesses, and all Eruptions. Internally, 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 vigorowt UL. board. Co -ver the apples with this and bake. Ginger Snaps.—Take one cup sug- ar, one cup molasses, one cup lard, well beaten, one tablespoonful soda dissolved in cup boiling* water, one tablespoonful ginger, flour to mix soft. Roll thin, cut small, and bake quickly. Plate them an inch apart in the pan to bake. .--s. DATES ON COINS MADE PLAIN. Most boys 'have an old silver coin of some kind which they are keeping as a relic, either for seatimental reasons or because they think it worth more than its face value. In some instances the date or the in- scription has been worn away and it is impossible to read it, even with a strong glass. The following method, originally practised at the Mint to discover the genuine coins when. silver was called in, will en- able anyone to read *an obliterated insatiption: 'Make the poker red hot in the fire and theii place the silver. coin on it; the inscription will be plainly visible in a greenish hues which will fade as. the cola cools., In 1881 Cardiff, Wales, with a population of 80,000, had 62 con- victioas for Sunday drunkenness., Last year, , with 170,000 people, - there were but nine cases. The ex- planation is that the public -houses are now closed on Sunday. One of the oldest clergymen in England is an earl—the venerable Earl of Devon. He is one of the few members of the House of Lords who was born before Waterloo be- came a name in history, and who has lived in four reigns. It is interesting to recall that the news of the fall of Sepastopol. reached England on a Monday, 10th September, 1855. It was conveyed by express to the Queen. at Dal - moral, and she caused a huge bon- fire to be kindled on the saranlit of -Draigowan. The Leading Specia ists of America. 25 ?earn in Detroit. Boni( Security. Nino out of eery tett Men have beets guilty of transgression a.gainat mature in their yotttls. Nature stayer excuses, no matter how young, thoughtless or !suasion lie may be. The punisinneut and stiffering corresponds with tile crime. The only escape from it rumons rdanits is proper scientific treatment to counteract its effecta. The DRAINS, either by nightly losses, or secretly through the stritmontist 00 stopped—the NERVES must be bttilt itp and invigorated, the bleed must 00 purifi4, the SZNITAT., ORGANS must be vitallaed and developed, the DRAIN must be nostrished. Our New Method Treatment proiticies all these requirentents, 'Under its inflitetice the braia becomes active, the blood purlfted tb that all pimples, blotches and tticere disappear; the non.voo beconie strong es Steel, to that nervous- ness, bashfulness and despondency disappear; the eyes become bright, the face ull and Clear, energy returns to the boda, and the stioral, physical and sexual aye. tenth are invigorated; all drains ceate—no 11.1,0M -vital waste front the system. The The various organs become natural and manly. We invite all the afflicted to call and egannult us confidentially mut free of charge Coves Ostatasstoed es' rib Pay. We treat add curet Vtarleocolto, Blood Dizestee.s, Staieturee. Enstesions, titienry Ibriatided, Stiez,adatotirhata$ Vadtlelittv, 'rail X315harireet, Midway add Fti.dtitiotp 1134seasftt§,, OGNSCITATtori FTalte. BOolate matt. • 11 uttable,to tall, write for -b, allZaTTOIS BI4ANIC fot Idattto Tfeatiiiittd. , r)FIS KENNEZ-DY KERGANfB *AS STIELIDIt rosbrraorr„ wort.