HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1902-10-2, Page 7MtS�LUTE
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Genuine
ar er s
Little Liver Pills.
Faust gear Signature of
Sea Fac-Shrtito Wrapper Scioto.
'Val *Mall ale as emo-
te take as sugar.
ilEABACH Est
FOR DliZESti,
FON eiLIOUSNEtt.
FOE TOMO LIVEN.
FON CONSTIPATION.
FON SALLOW SKIN.
Volt THE COFSPLEXION
praesa.z.ar4ferre
CARTES
ITTLE
IVER
PI LLS.
CURE e 8101( HEADACHE.
_
TEE TOOTHSOME OYSTER.:
It should be remembered that oy-
sters require very little cbokirig.
' They should be put over the nee in
their own liquoiand removed as
soon as they are plump or the gills
are curled; more cooking than this
makes them tough.' Oysters panned
in their own liquor aro savory. For
thirty oysters allow one tablespoonful of butter, one of cracker crumbs,
salt and pepper to taste, one tea. -
spoonful of lemon juice, a, speck of
cayenne pepper. Put the oysterson
in their own liquor and wheel, they
boil up add seasoning, butter and
• crumbs. Cook ono minute and serve
on toast.
• Broiled Ctirsters.—Dry the oysters,
heat the broiler well and grease it
by rubbing it with salt pork. Dip
the oysters in melted. butter or oil
• and lay them on the broiler; broil
them on both sides for a few =dil-
utes over bright coal. Have ready
some toast cut in uniform' shapes
and moisten with oyster juice: on
each piece of toast place three or
toile oysters and pour over them a
little melted butter. •
Oyster Saute.—Two dozen large
oysters, oue tablespoonful of butter,
four of fine cracker crumbs, salt and
pepper. Let the oysters draM in the
colander, then season with salt and
pepper and roll in the crumbs. Have
the- butter very hot in the frying
pan. Put in enough of the oysters
tc cover the bottona of the pan; fry
crisp aria brown, being careful not
to burn. Serve on hot wisp toast.
Roasted Oysters.—Wash the shells
Well with a brush and cold water.
Place them in a pan with the deep
half of the shell down. Put them
into a hot oven and bake until the
shell opens. Remove .the top sbeil
carefully, so as not to remove •the
liquor. .Arrange them on plates
and on each oyster place a little but-
ter and pepper and salt. Be careful
not to roast them too long, or they
in.ay be tough. .
Little Pigs in Blankets. ---Season
large oysters with salt and pepper.
Cut fat bacon in very thin slices,
wrap an oyster in each slice and
fasten with a little wooden skewer.
Toothpicks are the best things. Heat
a frying pan and put in the little
pigs just long enough to crisp the
bacon, about two minutes. Place
on slices of toast cut in small pieces
and servo immediately; do not re-
move the skewers.
Fricasseed Oysters.—Two quarts
of oystees, four lame tablespooefuls
of butter, one teaspoonful of chop-
ped parsley, one tablespoonful of
I3our, a. clash of cayenne, salt, yolks
:of three eggs. Brown two table-
spoonfuls of the butter add to it
the: pcirsley, cayenne and salt • and
the oysters well drained. :Mix to-
gether" the flour and the remainder
of the . butter and stir into the oy-
eters when they begin to curl; then
add the yolks well beaten and take
immediately from the fire. Serve on
a hot dish with a. garnish of parsle
and points of toast.
"Don't you ever tvorry?" •"Nev
"How do you get out ell it?
"In the daytime I'm too busy, an
at night I'm too sleepy."
:TM
l•
ISTRUST ON 1)0111 SI ES
Capital and Labor Show Lack of
Sympathy
ainteree aoeording to Act of the Porno:Bent or
Clannalt Iv the 902r Ooo Thousand. Sins llual
dre d and Two, by William Bony, ot eoronta
th. Department of Agriculture, wows.)
the, biggest salary. The big officers
Of the 'treat get tlieir mililous,The
little men, who do the hard work,
receive pittances Which are hardiy
enough to allow them to eke out
4 despatch from Chicago . soya: bale physical existence. The cepa,
Rev, Prank De -cut To,linage preaeh- talist ought to see that the Money
ed freea the: following text: Luke he Pays for labor reaches the men
'Thou shalt love thy neigh- who work and that it is not lost on
bor as thyself." the Way to their poakets.
A 'tai tlieg Wear= was lying
MEN AND WOMEN.
upon ray desk as 1 sat down to
write this :sermon. It was direct in-
formation, sent to one of the Chi-
cago newspapers; and it read: "Fif-
tythousand employes of Pittsburg's
mills and factories fee° loss Of Work
though a famine in feel as e result
el the prolonged minors' strike.
Coal and coke stocks are nearly ex -
Waisted.' :It is assertett that some
of the lergeet ,plants will be forced
to elose in a few days."
Terrible IS the suffering which is
being caused in the little towns and
villages where the Pennsylvania mill-
ees live, .A lady who just left the
village of Shickshinny, which is sit-
uated in the heart 'of the coal re-
gion, told me that there the men
and the Women .and the children
'were :practically starving, Even,the
dogs, gaunt and haggard, were run-
ning through the streets like famish-
ed wolves. More .serious to the na-
tional welfare is it, to think that the
hundreds of thousands and even mil-
lions of men, women and children all
• over the ease are being indirectly
affected on account of this miners'
strike in addition to those who di-
reetly earn their laity wages In the
mines.
The troubles between capital and
labor on account of this strike are
no. worse here than in foreign lands.
John Burns, the labor leader and
a member of tbe present British Par- ments are wrong. The eospel and
'lament, told me that during the business do financially nn well. The
fanaous London dock strike a few
years ago the men under his leader-
ship were so pressed by hunger that
at times they became almost uncon-
trollable. It was only by the most
letrel-headed leadership that anarchy
and riot were averted. One day he
saw a large crowd of strikers as-
sembled together. There were mem-
mitring's and curses uttered upon ev-
ery side. He heard an calarchist in
a nearby wagon pleading with the
strikers to end their hunger by the
torch and
THE MURDERER'S_ WEAPON.
Then John Burns, the labor leader,
cried out in a loud voice, "Stand
back, men! Stand back and let me
pass!" The men stood back. John
Burns passed through the open lines
until he wane to the wagon and
climbed up. Then be turned - and
said: "Men, you lamas I am your
friend. , You know my wife and
children and myself are suffering
hardship, just • as you are. But,
men, if you will hold out a little
longer in this strike you will' surely
ivin—eot, however, in the way my
anarchistic friend wants you to hold
aut. • He" says for you to use the
anarchist's torch and the murder-
er's dagger; he says to use that
means which will surely tie the
hangman's noose around your neck
and turn the artilleryman's guns up-
on your homes. is he willing to do
whathe wants us to do?" With
that John Burns took a daily news-
paper out of his pocket, twisted it
up as a torch, struck a match and
lighted it. Then he turned to the
anarchist and said, "Now friend,
take that torch and burn yonder
building if you dare." The man's
face .beceme as white as death.
"Then," said John. Burns, sI lifted
my fist and knocked him down as a
butcher might fell an ox. With my
foot I thrust him out of the wagon
asthough he were a mad dog, froth-
ing at the mouth, teying to bite my
bed."
Capital has sinned and helped to
cause the present social agitation
because it has ceased to make the
laborers' interest its own interest.
The present social conditions pre-
vailing between capital and labor
could not have existed fifty or a hun-
dred years ago. In olden times the
employer associated with his ma:
ployes. The small factory towns of oily hold, a few shares you say you
El rid nave are not responsible for what the
ne
whole canoeist may do, You . are
like the Members of an execution
quad who have been detailed to
shoot a spy caught within the mili-
tary lines. You say no one indivi-
dual is responsible for the execution,
because twenty -live bullets instead of
olle strike the doomed man's, heart,
but every- capitalist who has his
money ineested _in a, corporation
where
STARVA.T1ON SALARIES
•
are being paid to it' employes is
responsible for the damage that his
; money helps to eta. He is respells
I sable if child labor be engaged in
his feel:pry. He le responsible if Men
land womert, on account of his ins
!difference, go to their mental , and
!physical and perhaps Writhe' deem,
:He is his brother's keeper en se far
as that he is bound to eee that the
man whose toil adds to his Weelth
has fair wages.
Do the laboring clasees, always
13et though the relations in olden , map their Miployer's inteeeee, their
, times betWeen the employer ,and tee own altercate ? Oh,: no. There ate
44,ariep1oye may have been very Mead- ;thousands of them who , 'Show little,
;1,y and traeornal, I do not believe ;if any sense of moral reeponsibility.
fleet the heart of the Capitalist to- I When engaging their serviees to '
day is naturally any lese kited and mare they de not foe one instant
'ovine and helpful that that of .his stop -to think of the anaemia,' vials he
predeceaser. .-1 :believe that most of ,is rennine, of the seven years Of' fa
the trouble between the employer crepression which may come
and the employe is directly attribu- to him when he May have to reit
table net, as Many suppose, to the ,Ine works at ti peactieel dead loss,'
eapitallstaa hardness of heart, but as when the seven years of famine
to the Minute itisfOrtune thee now I came to Joseph in the lima Of
the employer rarely if ever 'comes in !Egypt, They do mat seem to realize
direct touch With his employethat when they. shirk their week they
• 13y the time the capitalist's money, lard steeling their einployer's money,
Which he gittee for labor, reaches :for 'Wee in the busieess' World mewls
the employee the money as well • 06 'money. And eallia on ,the slighteet-
'IT1 the Meets -that ought natueallylprovoeetion wull le,00 theie SitiPleaa
to come me c result of that labor is et s in the lurch ne auiekly as a bird
scattered, right and left. The super- would Wing her way to the Woods if
inteedent 1io Col rue the mill the cage deer ehould be inadvert-
01 fottaciry af, tho 'WIWI, cost laS,8 ea 47 lett open.
of the capitalistic' class, these labor
agitations and troubles will never
be settled Auld' yo:u arewilling to
share your prosperity with, those
who aro working for you so 'faith-
fully to make a living. The labor
troubles will never be settled until EL
man willing to .work can earn en-
ough money not only t� carefor his
children while he is alive, but to
fit them for becoming lf-supporting
after he is dead. :
answers .Come wspitalist,
"you are advocating a lot of . high
sounding nousenee. You are precti-
cally saying that every capitalist
should become a philanthropist. -He
should turn his business into a co-
operative coecern tad let. his PM -
Noyes share as much as possible Of
his wealth. •'That does not go in
business. Religion and business,,
like oil aud water, do not mix.
Business is not run upon the prin-
eiple of the Golden Rule, but upon.
the law of supply and demand. We
hire where we can hire the cheap-
est, so we can manufacture the
cheapest. We sell where we can sell
the deerest. We make all the money
we can. Then,' if we want to be
philanthropists, aud not business
men, we give away as niuch as we
please."
My capitalistic friend, your state -
capitalist who practices the Golden
Rule in business and lets his era-
ployes share in his prosperity will
"win out" every time. What was
the history of George W. Childs ?
There never was a man who received
happier financial results front prac-
ticing the Golden Rule than did he.
When Mr. Childs, a e 'younman, took
hold of the Philadelphia °Ledger, it Tbe good houseworker makes
was a financial failure. All employes plans over night for the work which
of that concern were placed upon the must be done the following day.
lowest possible wages. The trusted Probably a considerable share •falls
men were deserting- at every possible to a. special day in each week, but
chance and finding other plahes. there will be a number of taiegs to
What did George W. Childs do ? He do which are out of the regular rota
gathered his new employes about tine, and for these she must plan
him and practically said : "Men, 1 so that she will not have them all
cannot Pay you much in the begin- crowding upon her at once and eith-
ning, but I promise you on,e thing-. er being neglected because they are
es I prosper •so many or taken in hand and car -
YOU SHALL PROSPER. tied through at the cost of health
and spirits. .
A desire for economy .sometimes
will incite a woman to e most fool-
ish expenditure of energy, which, is
really a very bad kind of extrava-
gance. For instance, she has been par-
ticularly busy all day and is feeling
tired, when in .comes a neighbor,
who tells of the great flannel sale.
In a moment she thinks Of little
Popsy's flannel petticoats — the
child really must have new ones •-a
and off she rushes to secure the ma-
terial and return, delighted to have
got it a few pennies under. the , us-
ual price. As a xnatter of fact that
flaneel was a, dear purchase. It was
like the proverbial straw which broke
the camel's back, for the next day
the housewife is either mooing
about, feeling inca.peble of work,
or she ie prostrated with a severe
headache. Planning would • save
this kind of thing and prevent the
crowding into one day the work of
'ay laboring friend, if you came:it
reech the eigh Obristian etandard of
loving y9111' employer as you would
love yourself, you are eiMply head-
ing toward the social cc:anomie wild -
()mess, The greatest inspiration foe
future naeional peosPerity ie net to
be found in tb.e gold bricks whieh are
stored away in the "vaults of our
national banks, it is le the mettle'
trust witich the capitalistic and la-
boring classes ought to Int've in aah,
other. If the average business arin
could not trust its customers or was
isi sueh condition that the whelesele
business hotesee could not trust it
that avOrage business house would
be wrecked, within thirty days.
' THE AMOUNT OF MONEY
whieh is in circulation to -day is as
nothing when compared to the bil-
lams upon billions' of doliare' worth
of business done in AmeriCa every
year, I was once told by a keen,
shrewcl business man that at letist
98 per cent, of all businese is done
upon trust—upon the promise to pay
or to do.
Rich men, are you ready to have
the words of my text translated and
brought home to your hearts ? Are
you ready to cease lifting up the
golden chalice of selfish sin ? Are
you ready to be ciaanged se that
your lives view become a blessing,
like those of Peter Cooper ancl Wil-
liam. E. Dodge and Baron Hirsch and
Montefiore ? If you are, then you
will look upon your money, as a, gift
from God for the helping of man-
kind. Capitalists, are you ready to
do that ? Workers, are ,you ready
to feel that you can never be true
to your employers and giee to them
the best ;service unless you do Ed1.
in your power to develop your phy-
Mead, mental and spiritual lives ?
Are you ready- to say, `1: will wqrk
and be true to my earthly employer
because I am ready to work ard be
true to my Heavealy King." lf you
are both equally ready to surrender
your lives to the influence of the
Golden Rule, then the words of iny
text will have accomplished their
mission upon earth. Then the dark,
wide,' yawning, fathomless gulf be-
tween the employers and employes
shall be bridged over by the straight
beam of the cross. Then this land
shall see its greatest era of tem-
poral and spiritual prosperity. Then
the mileeniuni shall be ushered ie.
Then the capitalist and the laborer
shall clasp hands as Christian broth-
ers.
4-
SYSTralee IN HOUSEWORK.
Furthermore, mace any of you be-
come disabled • by advancing years
from Work I will pension you for
life, so that you can live ia Gape and
support your " children- If you will
be true to me, I will be true to
you. We shall go up together or go
down. together. I will consider the
Ledger staff a big familynand as far
as possible I shall find' my future
head men from those who are now
working in the ranks."
Did the Golden Rule mean a fail-
ure to George W. Childs' life ? As
soon as the new employes heard the
ringing words of their chief they
went to work with a will. The sub-
scription list of the Philadelphia
Ledger doubled .and trebled and
quadrupled. Why ? Because when
George W.Childs prosPered the em-
ployes knew: that they would prosper
also. Because of their own pros-
perity as well as of his they Worked
as they never worked before. Those
employes made thousand's of dollaie
for thenaselves. They made Millions
upon millions of dollars for Mr.
Childs. The. magnificent results from
practising the Golden Rule in the
Philadelphia Ledger can be duplicat-
ed in every other big -business cor-
poration in any part of the world.
But the trouble with most capital-
ists of the present day is that they
refuse to do as Me. Childs did. They
shirk their, individual responsibility.
As your moneys are collected into a
.great treat or corporation and You
• Sick Headache, Biliousness, DYs'
pepsia, Coa,ted TOLigue, Foul Breath,
Heart Burn, Vlrater Brash, or any
bisease of the Steleach, Livee or toWels.
Laxe-,Liver Pale are purely 'vegetable;
neither gripe, Weaken nor sicken, are easy
kri take and prompt ea ack,
In planning and estimating a
day's work some allowance should
alwae-s be made for interruptions and Lord Jesus Christ, and was never
for the work taking longer than, was 'fully manifest in any other. Yet ev-
anticipated. With too 'many "trans ery redeemed person should manifest
in the fire" such hindrances as a vis- that seine life as fully as possible.
itor or hiving, to coesole . a crying The life of Jesus. should be seen in
child in some little trouble, make es (II Cor. iv, 10, 11). This • :can
it difficult to keep that calm, sweet only be as we let His word dwell
temper which is necessary to the in us richly and meditate on it cou-
woman who is not merely the main-
spring • of the machinery of the
household, but its good angel, who
makes it home indeed to all who
dwell there. .
THE & S. LESSON,
IN TERN.ATIONAL
OCT. 5.
Text of T.,esson, Josh., a., 1-11.
Golden Text, 3-oehe i. 9
1, 2, The Lord r3pake unto Josh-
ua, the eon of Nen, Mose e' miniee
ter.
This is to .1110 ilio eeert oS these
two verses and of tile wiloie leaaan
and of the whole Bible -,-the Lord
hath spoaen. Note the thrillieg
words in lea. I, 2, "IIea,r, 0 aea-
voile, and give ear, 0 earth, for the
Lord 'lath spelt:en," and compare
Deut. XXXII, 1; ?:3. 1, 1; 1 -lob z 1,
2. In Isa. lxvi, 2, we learn that
the auari whom the Lord regards
with atvor ie the man Witb 13, poor
and contrite spirit, who trembles
at his Word, not those who with
the boldness of elm devil dispute
d criti Wze and minimize His
word. Reiterating the aseerence
that he had given the land to Is-
rael, Ile bids Joshua, as their lend-
er to arise and cross over Jordan.
Gesi is their leader,, jeshua, His
eervant.
3, a.. Every place that the sole
of your foot shall tread upon that
have I given unto you, as 1 said
unto Moses.
Arid again he defines the boundary
as in Gen. xv, 18. The purposes of
God aie, like Himself, eternal, His
couneel stands, tuid He does all Hie
pleasure (Eph. 111 1.1.; Ps. xxxiii, 11;
Isa. xlvi, 10). He who from all
eternity saw just what He would
do and when He would do it desires
men and women who will let Him
work in them both to will and to
do, having no plans, a.mbitions or
but just to be good clay in
the loving •and all wise potter's
hands, believing His every word or,
in the language of this passage,
teeing possession of all that He
says is yours.
5. As I was with efoses so I will
be with thee. I will not fail thee
'Atm forsake thee.
Joshua had seen as leaoses" minis-
ter some of the Lord's dealings with
Min, and he would doubtless feel
that this' gracious : assurance cover-
ed all he could possibly need or de-
sire. •Unto all Israel and to Josh-
ua Moses had ^given -very similar
words. of encouragement • (Beet.
xxxi, 6-8), but now God Himself
speaks to His servant Joshua as
He bad previously spoken to him by
Moses, and the words are the same
as we shall see in these -following
verses. Some say, "Oh, if I .could
only hear GO speak to me!" not
believing that in His word He is as
truly speaking • to them as if they
heard an audible voice from heaven,
• 6, 7. Only be thou strong • and
very courageous. s
• See this command repeated in
each of these -verses, with the • as-
surance that what God had sworn
to do Ile would accomplish through
Joshua. So there was nothing for
josima tc; do but to believe and go
obediently forward. Hehad no
strength, but God, who sent him had
all strength, and Joshua. had learn-
ed or was learning to say, "In the
Lord have I righteeesnese and
strength." and that it was his priv-
ilege to "be strong in•the Lord and
in. the power of His might" (Isa.
:xlv, 24; Eine vi, 10). There . is
much comfort in the assurance of
Ps. xxix, 11, -The • Lord will give
strength unto His people, the Lord
will bless His people with peace."
8. This book of law shall not dee
part out of thy mouth but . thou
shalt meditate therein day ,and
night.
The first two psalms which form a
palace to the whole book of Psalms
or, rather, to the live books of
Psalms, begin with "Blessed is the
man" and end with "Illessecl are all
they that pet their erupt in Him."
The life of the godly man as set
forth in the First Pettlin was fully
manifest in the man of Nazareth, the
WELL WORTH KNOWING.
To take rust from steel cover with
sweet oil; let it lie a day or two,
then polish with unslaked
A pleasant imusehold deodorizer
is made by pouring spirits of laven-
der over lumps of bicarbonate of
ammonia,.
A heavy broom should always be
selected in preference to a light one
for thorough sweeping, as the
weight aids in the process.
Bamboo furniture may best be
cleaned with a, small brush dipped in
warm water and salt, as the salt
prevents it turning yeilow. The same
treatment should be given to •Ja-
paneee and Indian matting used as
floor covering.
Milk is an excellent Substitute for
soap in washing dishes. It not oe-
ly softens the hardest water and
gives dishes a clear, poliehed lOok,
but it prevents • the hands from
chapping. It also prevents , e
greasy -seem from appearing on the
top of the water.
• To take grease out of Wall paper
mix pipe clay With water to the
corisisteecy of weal= spread it on
the spot arid leayo it until the next
day, when it may be easily brushed
Or scraped ofr: If' the grease has
not disappeared entirely repeat the
process.
When the handles of steel knives
beeome loose or come off they woe
be easily mended with reein. :Pour
a little powdered 'resin into the
handle of the knife, then heat the
part Of the knife which fits into the
handle until it is red hot; and then
thrust it (Mettler into the handle,
and when. it, is C001 the handle will
be itatind to be thenly fixed eat,
tmually and are able to say,:' Oh
how love I Thy law, it is my medi-
tation all the day" (Ps. cxix, 97).
He has said that if we love Him
we will keep hie word (Jolla xiv,
23), and the only place to keep •it
is in our hearts.
9. Have not I commanded thee ?
Be strong and of a good courage,
'Be not afraid, neither be thou dis-
mayed, for the Lord thy God • is
with thee wiaithersoever thou goest.
The assurance that God' sends us
and that Ile te with tte covers et-
erything. It is 'the greatest that
mortals' can have. It was God's
encouragement to Moses, and now
to Joshua, and later to Gideon and
to Jeremiah (lax. iii, 10, 12; judg.
vi, 14, 16; Jer. i, 7, 8). It was
also the great encouragement of
Jesus Himself • when here in Ris
.(,John viii, 29), and be -
tore He retaaned to heaven He essa
mined His followers that He had all
power in heaven and on earth and
that He would be with them all the
days (1Uath xcviii 18-20). If we
believe Ms words we shell neither
be afraid nor dismayed nor die-
couraged.
• 10, 11. Within three days ye shall
pass over •this Jordan to go in to
possess the • land WhiCh the Lord
your God giveth you to possess it.
• Thus joehua, commanded the offi-
cers of the people, for he believed
God. The laud 'was theirs aS a free
gift from God, but they beet to en-
ter into it and appropriate it. Jor-
dan Was before them to be crossed,
and the Walled cities and the gia,nts
were still there, but there are no
icliiktleieul,Tine:hutoa God d ocraltcosb‘ ,thosseee MiGhoOei
Only. In Our own case as helietere
th Jesus Christ, redeemed by ins
blood it is our privilege to appro-
peittle lath prondee,s tend 'by feith
in Itim liv iive5 of victory over
self and sing to Ma gloi y Wray
the encouraging words Of 0111. lesson
Come "Mine to each of ue le the
p,ower 01 the Sptvht,,t, •
Hints for eak Siorriaeliss
tat slowly, taasticatillg the food thoroughly, even more, if
poSsible, than Is required In health. The more time the food
spends itt the mouth, the less it will spend in the Stomach.
Avoid drinking at meals in general,
dyspeptic stomachs manage dry food
better than that containing ranch
fluid, Eat neither very hot nor cold
food. The best temperature is that
of the body. Be'careful to avoid
excess in eating. Eat no more than
the wants of the system require,
Sometimes less than is really needed
must be taken when digestion is very
weak. Strength depends not on -what
is eaten, bit on what is digested.
Never take violent exercise of any
sort, either mental or physical, either
just before or just after a meal.
Never eat raore than three times a
day, and make the last meal very
light. Par many dyspeptics, two
meals are better than more. Never
eat a morsel of any sort between
Mea.ls. Never eat when very tired,
whether exhausted from. mental or
physical labor. Never eat when the
rnirtd is Ivorried or the temper ruffled,
if you can possibly avoid it. Bat only
food that is easy of digestion, avoid-
ing complicated and indigestible
dishes, and taking but one to three
wc o uAApr sufetRse sra, ti nate, all al( sbe ae tIkvee stwot 3. asu r .6 JAM
urslj '4s
then a are the most completeecomloinen-
b. a 1 L. 'Hon of drugs for streughthen big
giassfilwtbietian.e„rvous system X ever met
Price in Canada: $1.00 ; wo fa theort. liar. Robert Moral:de, .
Ban:burg, Scotland.
Six betties for $5,00 The y
help stomach, digest food and send
the nutriment through the blood,
and. this is the honest way to get
health and strength, the kind that
lasts, develops and breeds the energy
vvhich accomplishes much.
2
iIV
V 7'11 cHU NUC:E TOA 0 uL D .Y1 re; 05° Ni 14 GRSO 41 'r; Pr;;'.*:
.4114}icsurn ono R.14- :Sc AHT t,Qt INvEEr, n Aliro :I 7.0 cAA 41(np., :41* 11111:
ite410
oRn..mpirpiadHi..priicimqpoirimstriscea:LcacilheBmosti
St James Wafers are nota secret
emedy: to thenumerous electors re-
commending them to their latients
we mail the formula ulhon request.
Where dealers are not selling the
Wafers. they are mailed upon re-
ceipt of price at the Canadian
branch: St. James Wafers Co.. 1728
St, Catherine St.. Montreal. Gra
• LONGEST BRIDGE SPAN YET.
,Near Quebee a railroad bridge
across the St. Lawrence River is
about to be constructed with the
longest single span of any bridge
yet in existence. It is of tbe cau-
Weyer construction, and the length
of the great channel span over the
river . will be 1,800 feet, more by
200 feet than the span of the
Brooklyn suspension bridge, and by
1.00 feet the chief span of the cele-
brated • Forth bridge in Scotland.
The towers will rise 360 feet above
tbe high -tide level of the river. Two
railroad -tracks and two electric
railway tracks, besides roads for
waggons, will be included on the
bridge.
"I notice that you don't call ott
the 33yngs girls any more. Why id
it?" The last time I was there X
asked her if she had anything
could take horae and read, and she
handed me a, book on how to keep,
house on $600 a Yeaa• -''
Creamed Oysters.—Make one cupful
of thick creamed sauce; season with
salt, Pepper and cayenne, wash and
pick over one quart of oysters and
parboil until plump; skim ca.refullys
drain and add them to the sauce.
Serve on toast and garnish the dish
with points of toast, or the toast,
ina.y be omitted and bread crumbs
browned in butter sprinkled over the
oysters. When served in patty
shells or'in a. vol-au-vent ease make
the cream sauce thicker.
ri EMMPIS RfS
el.'*1 (net-Y=11.40e, .7404
eaktreas
Tray liers and. 0 rists
Travelling from place to place are subject to all kinds
of Bowel Complaint on account of change of water,
diet and temperature.
r. lees
Ext. of
Vila %Tar e
is a sure cure for Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic,
Cramps, Pains in the Stomach, Seasickness, Cholera,
Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantum, Summer Com-
plaint, and all Fluxes of the Bowels in Children and
Adults.
Its effects are marvellous.
It acts like a charm.
Relief is almost instantaneous.
leave the Bowels in a constipated condition.
Does -a
1110...MS
NOW
•
•
SINFUL HABITS IIN YOUTH
INIAKE NERVOUS, WEAK, DISEASE:ED LINEN.
THE RESULT of ignorance and tally in youth, overexertion of mind nulberly
induced by lust and exposure are coastal:11y Wrecking tbelives
and future happiness of thousands of promising young:nen. Some fade and wither
at an early age, at the blossom of manhood, while others aro forced to drag out a
Weary, fruitless and titelaaeholy.ezietettee. OthoOs reach Matti -
snotty hut find no solace or cornfort there. Tho victims aro found
in all stations of tite—the twee the office, the workshop, tim
indult, the trades and the: professious. Nervous Sobllity end Seminal
Weakness are ffnarauteed cured by our AIOW MothoO Trott:neat or No
Pay. Yeti run no risk 25 scare la Detroit. Sank security.
CURED WHEN ALL ELSE FAILED. NO astnto usoti without viralon aotsent,
'1 oat 33 years of ittiSCI and married. When, yottog t led a gay
life. Sarly lad iscrations and later txcesses made trouble for oie.
berarae weak and netvorts. My kidneys became affected turd
feared Bright's DiseaSe. Married 14qo Wes unsatisfactory and
My home unhappy. 1 tried everything—all failed till 1 tocift
treatment fronalles Kennedy & ergatt, Their Now Method'
.<4 built me up raentally, physically and sexealle, 1 toet awl act
slikitiailatlittrund,irttATtirktibtaiespnetaikricicatiipi, eigewebteydixt:othigoggeatitaetkaegiton. dTrillititsf uteeilayd8oitt,
can be cuted hy reliable doctors." --W. A. Setter:,
0011t8 0141RINITED 011 NO PH. Consoliallog rree-Doolig Free-00811ou Blfita FAO ki ROM IterMaL
Dr's Keinietly K Et;
6 er cttg,148 Deby troit, blialt,
ShelSit ta
511