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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1902-12-4, Page 7- A•SOL TE Genuine, artOes Little Liver Pills. reilIast Bear Signature ar See FeceSletile %trapper thaw. maucicars-vailra.sman 14127 19/31 .04 tend as ease' to take) engar. CARTERS FOAcu4 B olnuant,,, ITTLE Fea oniousnita vEk veft TORPID LIVELI, fert NHS -finnan. FOE SALLOW SKIN. Filn THE COMPLEXilifl 43S3112.1211 Mt147µ,WC. yaNA.7.- P/TrOlYTeg02.351e CURL SICK HE:ADAC-I1E, WQ0 D'S NORWAY NNE SYRUP Stops the irritatint cough, loos- ens the phlegm, soothes the in- flamed tissues of the lungs and bronchial tubes, and produces a quick and. permanent cure In all cases of Coughs, Colds, Bron- chitis, Asthma, Hoarseness, Sore Throat and the first stageS Consumption. Mrs. Norma Swansten, Cargill, Ont., writes: "I take great pleasure in recom- mending Dr. Wood's NorwayPine Syrup, had a very bad cold, could not sleep ea night for the couglaing and bad pains in eany chest and lungs. I only used half a bottle of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup and was perfectly well again.", Price eents a bottle. DOAN'S MONEY PILLS The original kidney specifie for the cure of Backache, Diabetes, Bright's Disease and all Urinary Troublds. Don't accept something just as good. See you get the genuine 9s They cure when' all others fail. Not a Cure Ala but ettraly,a Magee Pill hex, e 'for 01.26. .AII dealers tor Ahrs Do eer EmJA s= Pah'', Co. Toronto, Ono. e-a-a-e-eareeiraaa,reeeeanemeeavieee-ep Make Weak Hearts Strong. Make Shaky Nerves Firm. • They are 0 &IWO flare far Nervousness,Sleeplessness, Loss Eriergy,". Brain rag, After Ef. fets of La Grippd Palpitation of the Heart, Arnernia, General De- bility and all troubles arising from a run down system. They regulate the heart's action and invigoKate the nerves. This is what they have done for others They will do the same for you, - ORMAT ammo*. ' 1 have taken Milburn's Heart and Nerve i1hi for palpitation of the.. heart --and shattered nerves had for both trembles folviareord4.-umW Atkorb, Xagelelaia tubl. 5 rilt0 sPL'1Ii41'?1D NOW. ' Before Wang Milburn's Heart and '1erYOP1134 I Thrit an rail down, could net slop Eit night and'was terribly troubled vti to Ply loatb. • Slat% tt•thing theta ,L fool I sleep Well at alglab and my heedit dew not Cat:hie mo at all. They rive delete hie a world of good.- hs, el,ted, Hartsville, GOSPEL INVITER)) Should Bc Presented By Members of the Chula to Their Friends, !Steam according to aet ot tbe Pereament et be polite, but. he does not, wept me C18ad.'4, tho ,year oto Thoneatei Itileo tO COMO HO did not • eets a "date. teed tail erne by witneei rata, ot Samna es , me, hepartmeate et gerieteture, mama But when a friend, conies to me and says, "Mr, 9.'a1mage, willyou and your wife ;take supper with . us next Thursday night; we • are poor folks., but we will give you the best We have ?" I generally accept.Why ? Because I think that man wants Me to come, He set a time and a piste() where he wished to entertain me. So when the Minister of the Lord Jesus Christ preaches a sermon .and gives a general invitation and says to the sinners,. ' "COME TO CHRIST," and then.diemisses his audieace with a benetliction 'anti goes home, as a rule, that ectmon has amtainted to but very little in its evangelist:1e re -- sults. But when- the minister of the. Lord Jesus Christ an go to hie church nionehera and soy, "Brethren, we Must gather in the sinners who us church members, •"Go out into are liVing arouncl. this chetah, the highwieys and, aedges •and compel We intist go out into the high-. them to coat° in." The purpose pi ways and the hedgesand cent -- this disco -terse is to show how, as pel themt� come in, We Will to- iudiyidentl .church members, .WO eau betiome heavenly. Constrainers and Present the gospel invitation to sin- fulmen and women whom we meet in our daily walks of life. It is to show " how, by - gospel conaecratoel work itmortg individuals we can ange chan empty elturell into a croWelet1 sanctuary mid by depleting the place of evil resort eve can elite - mately make a full heaven. When some one asked Mr. Woody ; "Ilovi shrill we reach trie nutsset for Christ ? Bow shall ,We give the gospel invitation to those sinners who are out in the highways and the hedges ?" he bluntly anawered his questioners, "Co after them." But how are we to go after Ahern ? First, as Christ's disciples, we shaluld begin our personal work among individuals by presenting the gospel of Jesus to those hill° are closest to us. We should present Christ frst to our fathers and moth- ers, to our husbands and wives and brothers and sisters and childrep, to our dear friends and ta all who are bound to us by the TIES OF BLOOD AND LOVE. A despatch from. Chicago says Rev, Frank Det Witt Talmage preach- ed from the following.text xiv, 28, "Go out litto the highways anti hedos aud compel them to come. ia.' elitist was comparing the kingdom of heaven to a great banquet which God lutd peepared, 7.v•ve hia invited guests, who 'would not ceine. But, as the divinely invited gueeas Would Pot comp, then' God eiractioally "I will have, my banquet hall filled notwithstaading,'• If the guests for \them the banquet Was prepared will not .coaw to no. then I will send out for those who will aPPreeleta it. I will comael them to count in. SO the .14ird. in the parable said to his servants, as Christ pow says to We should do just the same as .Ane drew, the brother' of Philip, did when he was cone -cited. No sooner did he see the „face of Christ than be practically said to himself '""Why, I attest ..D.nmediateiy go and hunt up my • dear brother Philip. I -love happy I cau make him 1 We have been side by side in all our joys and sorrows from the timewe were .born. He must share to -day in my new hope." It is upoigthis ac- tion of Andrew, who at °nee went and carried the ,gospel invitation to his brother, that the great "Brother- hood of Andrew and Philip" has been established. • But, though the eternal salvation of our unrepentent"loved ones ought to be a perpetual cause of anxiety for us day in and day out, yet there are thousands of church members who payer think it obligatory for them topresent _the liehe 'of a living Ubrist-te those who ought to be as dear to theta as a Jonathait was to a David, a Damon to a Pythias or the memory of a murdered king of Denmark was to an avenging son. These church members are ready . to invite those friends to their homes, but they are not willing to persoa- ally invite them to esit at the holiest of all tables -the table of the' Wess- ell communion, They "are ready to talk with their friends upon politics or buseness, but theyare not ready to discuss with them the greatest of all questions,- "What shall' it profit a :man if be should gain ihe whole world .ainl lose his own sol ?" They are ready to sound the Praises of their friends - to their other friends, but they : aro- not Seedy to -stoned forth to their earthly friends the praises of their Heavenly Father. They are: uleartys ready to iatroduce one earthly friend to another, but they are. not anxious in make their earthly companions acquainted with that Divine Companion who is over willing to be our • -helper and guide along tho• TROUBLED JOURNEY OF LIFE But the gospel invitation ought to be given to the strangers who are withip, a Christian's gates as well as to the loved ones who baste a right by the ties of blood to live themit is nonsense kw us to sup- pose that alter we have :gathered our fathers and mothers and wives , tun one soul a. year for .Christ, ;yet and husbands arid children,• and a !Dr. William Morley Punshoo, tho very IOW dohr persohal friends lute the gospel lifeboat we have a right to hand in the plank and cast off the hawsers and set sail for hon,Yem deeming Ma- Christion responsibili- ties fulfilled. No. Emphatically no. The , Christian's obligations are so arreach 1 ng. • toward- his'. teilow inen that in the. light of the gospel ehe poor traveler who was waylaid thieves On the tear' to jericho was jest as mach a btother to the good Stainaritaa as if he bad bean born An tho seine, cradle, sung to sleep by the sante tate reared. ite . the sanie liontestesed. e . . , Again, it is absolutely necessary in order to earry out the Tomo:mud of my text 'for:the average china" Mem- ber, to give the gospel invitation to hiS . triendS and to strangers %then they are gathered insidc the chtethh walls as well its when they are scat- tered Without, arid it is also neceS- easy for the church members to ex- tend ibis inititation. for 'a epeciOed time ttnd place; • i. general inaitation th come to supper is, as a Ade, worse than no invitation at all. When 0 persod coulee to lite end gushhigly eayS, "Olialtfre Talmage, X men lived near each other, but his Christian fricad never spoke to him about. religion. After awhile they separated. Mr. Trumbull to, came an engineer in Hartford; • his Christian' friend went to Yale, but during his last year at college sent a letter to his old 'chum ,pleading with him to Warne a Christian. That letter was the means of say- iag H. Clay Trunibull's eoul, In his engine room, upon the receipt of it, he then. and there gave ids heart to ode ' • • Ea. immediately said to himself, -Iffrthe personal work of a layman can do so Much in the salvation of an immortal soul, •I will' never make the mistake MY. friend made *with me by ,postponing for so long 'a. per- sonal, invitation to another.'' So, the same • night which he was eonvetted, Mr.. Trambuil event, to one ef his fellow. workmen and told him he had been converted. lIo urged, his frieud also to accept Christ. Tbis friend turned to him. and said: '"Prumbull, . your words cut me to the 'mart. You little know how they rebuke me. 3 have long been o profeesed follower of Christ, and you havo neher suspected this, al- though we have been in dem aeso- elation in house aped office for years.; May God forgive me for xny lack of faithfulness." Aye, may Cod to- day forgive as all, ministers and lay- -men alike, WO have shown the same neglionce these two young then who came into II. Clay Trum- • bull's life. May Clod teach up, one and all, the power' persoanl testi- mony for Christ. And nifty we one night as soon as the benediction has and all, the power of personal teete- been, pronounced have an after meet -Tuthill D. L. Moody made a. short ins-. .As members of this church we tbne after his conversion -"I here will distribute ourselves through the I wad now promise that no day here - aisles. and buttonhole every mom womtda and child, so that Ana one shale, lea.ve the building without hav- ing ti epecial invitation for'this after meeting," there will be no disap- pointment the spirituae results. Why? 3ecteetse the church members themselves are asking their Meads and the strangers tie' meet :Jesus Christ in a specified place at a 8/paci- fied time. General invitations 111 reference to the goepel banquet as well as to an earthly home, as a. rule, aro woaso than no invitatiens at nal. So, to -day, I lay the blame for the lack of spiritual results in our churches far •more 'upon the pews than. I do upon the pulpits. God knows, I do not. belfe'Ye- that o-ur ministers are perfect. men, but most of tb,em are earnest men, intelise men. They would do anything in their power to bring immortal souls to Christ. But the trouble is when the average minister of the gospel announces an after meeting, where sinners can be brought face tto face with Christ, nine-tentbs, aye, ninety- nine hundredths of all the church members will get • up and put on theft. hats and go home. They will not only by -theii 'actioas refuse '• to personally extend an invitation in the men and women who are sitting by their side, but they will abso- lutely refuse to go into the after meetings and talk with sinners who. sae ttying to find Christ. This charge which I Make against the church members, I make not only against the laymen, but also against PHD CHURCH OFFICERS. I make it against the elders and the deacons and the trustees. I make it in the strength of the overwhelming fact that you derelict church mem- bers cannot -find a great evangelistic preacher who is accomplishing any great good for Christ who is not backed up by a praying, consecrated band of earnest, church workers. Yet you can- find to -day church after thurth in our land that is nothing more or less than a slaughter house for ministerial usefulness. Their pa.stors will win great spiritual suce cesses before they come to them, and those pastors will win great spirit - gal successes efter they leave 'them, but while they are in those spirit- ually dea.d churches the pastors will stumble about blinded and helpless, as did the mighty Samson, bound with fetters of brass, with his two eyes but, grinding about in the pri- son house of Gala. Those evangel- istic ministers are help - loss in such churches because the peo- ple, the common church' members, Will' not unite as a, working force and personally present the gospel of Jesus Christ to the strangers who come among theme, Inetead of de- riding and underestimatMg the 'pow- er of the ministry, it is high time for some one to thunder a philippic against the indifference of the selfish church. members who refuse to spire itually support the pulpit, as the peat always ought loeeally to deo, If all church members were to be-, come earnest' and con -secreted evan- gelietie it would not take very long for this whole sinful world to see tile senrise burst of the millenica dawn. Surely it would not be too much to expect that one such evangelist as Mr: Beecher described should at least great English Methodist, once made the startling statement: "If every disciple to -day were to call one per- son to Christ each, year axed that ono were to call one other, how swiftly the world woold be converted, for there are rittillions of true believers in the world. But if . there were only 100 see how quickly the work would grow.. To less than ttventy- eve years the world would be con- verted, for this. would double the timber of sliscIplses each year." Af- ter euch an IMPRE'SSIVE STATEMENT, will any one say that the gospel in- vitation wItich can be given daily by the church members evoulsl amount to but little in the 'salve, - tion of a einful world? , To show the importance. of a Christian laymanas work I cannot do better in Closing tale serinon than quote tveo ineistrationa from. 'the personal experience of Clay Trum.. bull, the hvell-knoWn editier of ' The ,Stineley School Times. Mr. Teton - bull's early. life Was Spepl, Stone ington, There a great re- Vival swept the toevn, and nutny of the' cotepanions Of 'his ye -0th joined do wish you would wale and vlsit the dowel), amorga them 'wee a. us, coMe any thrie you Cati and stay ittoting hista 1010 WAS 0110 01 HS Ws long as you plettee," 1111gyro Mon iethante friends, Foe mann of 0110 factLethat person Wante to years these,. tive 0s boys toed young after shall pass unless I have per- sonally presented my !Savior to at least one ithmortal soul. So help me, Jesus, in iny vow! .Amen!" --a. THE S. S. LESSON. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, DEC. 7. Text of' the Lesson, Ruth i., 16- 22. Golden Text, Pone. Xii.) 10. 16, 17. And Ruth said : 'Entreat me not to leave thee or to return jrom following after thee, for whith- er thou goest I will go, and where thou lodgest I will lodge. Thy peo- ple shall be my people and thy' God my God. Tbis and. the next verse give' the declaration of Ruth concerning her determination to cling to the God and people of Naomi. It is seine - *bat paralleled by the declaration of lttei to David in II Stone xv, 21, "As the Lord liveth and as my lord • liveth surely the. king in what place my Lord the king shall be, whether in death .or life, even -there also will thy ser- vant be." That these words should be the utterances of gentiles to -Jews - is all the more interesting. The. whole of this book of Ruth,. ,wrilien by the .Spirit of .God, as were 11 other portion's of thealible, is ti ary.of tho kingdom a. be u•" st attractive set - when b V lo are UOW the weary gleaners shall possess the Meld (the' world. Matt. xiii, 31:1), having be- come the bride of Him who owns the field, our kinsman Redeemer, the mighty man of wealth. Every name and incident in the rook is most suggestive and has an inexhaustible mine of Wealth for anointed eyes and ears. 'Having but • one brief les- son in it, eth• can .only hint at the riches herein. 18, 10. When she saw that she was steadfastly minded to go with her, . then she left peaking unto her. So they two went antalr' they came to Bethlehem. • We are reminded of the way Eiitha clung to Elijah and how "they two went on," "they two stood by j'or- den," "they two went over on dry ground" (II Kings ii, 1-15). We think 'also of Barnabas, who exhort- ed the believers at Antioch to cleave inetO the Lord with " purpose of heart, and of Stephen, who looked un •steadfitatly into heaven and' saw the &fry of God and Jesus '(Acts xi, 28; vii, 55). It is this that we so much need, this cleat iug to • the Lord,. this steadfastness, this seeing - only and always God. and Jesus. In the last lesson it was the Lord -and Gideon. May it ever be in the case of. each of us "mg Lord and I," for "the eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth to show Himself strong in the behalf of them w(hnosechhreoaniit x perfect tIoweaeoil.d. chicken or turkey that e.re left from For the first, use the remnants of xv, 58, we are exhorted to he stead- previous meal. Make a rich pas - fast, unmovable, always abounding in the word of the Lord., knowing that our labor is not in vain in the Lord. 20. and she stdd unto them :OaJI me not Naomi. Gall me Mara, for the Almighty hath dealt very bitter- ly with me. As her townspeople looked upon her after her ten years' absence Zverse 4) they seed, Is this Naomi And thus she replied .to- therd. As one has said, She blamed the mighty . when all Ea -did was gra- ciously to bring her home again. For her , troubles she had no one to blame but aerself. It is good that Mon.b proves a :Mara to the wanderer, else the wanderers might, like to die and, be buried there. Al- mighty is Easha.dcial, the mighty God who is all sufficient (Gen. xvii, 1), and • had they, knoWie Him as they should they would never have •left Bethlehem to sojourn in Moab. When. the Lova allows bitter:16Se to come to Eis people, it' is aiways to. wih them back to,IIimself, hliefort I was afflicted weat • astray, but note have; I kept thy word" (Ps. exier, 67). 21. I ahent Out and the Lord hath brought me home again emptea She is right this titan I Went out; the Lord brought ine henta. The Sheep Wondered., . but the Shepherd Sought aud found. Wanderiag Wive costs, us dear. Ai any whe, read have wattlered, let them return: quickly,' for Ile cries, Return, thoU blackaliding Itraela and 1 will not muse mine anger to 1 all 'Upon you (Jr. 1.11,. 12), Before we earl know Ilia fUlile$S WO roust learn our emptiness. TbO 00,me • 'Almighty" Is found more times in the book of Job than in, all the rest of the Bible, and it WO.$ OnlY a.f•ter Job WAS thorough, ly emptied of himself that he was filled as 'toyer before (JO)) Xlii, 541). 11. .1vaS..0,1tOr the disciPles confeesed that theet had nothing with which which to feed the 5,000 that the Lord abundantly filled them all with the lad's loaves and eishee. and it was after the disciples eonfessed that they -had taken nothing, though they bad toilecl all night, that Ile scat to their hots , 153 great fishes. 22. So Naond. retureed, and Ruth thealthea,bitess; 1301.' denghter-halaw, * *- and they came to leethlehem in the beginning' of barley barvest, The Moabites came from •drunken- ness and crime. Bethlehem suggests God's house 01 bread, It is better far to come from Moab to Bethle- hem than to go from Bethlehem to Moab. If any have in the beast,de- gree wandered from God, let all such return quickly and whole-beartedlY to Eim and henceforth follow fully, mains, Lite words.of Ruth in verse 16- their hearte' motto. In a.eklition to ail the precious and comforting 'woads of this book, such as are found in ii, 12, 16; iii, 18, etc:, the book is moat iraportant as showing the ancestry of David, whose thiorie the Lord Jesus ie, yet to eetablish. ancl occupy at Jerusalem (Isa. ix, 7; Luke J. 82, 88). The title, "Son of David," is the first and one of the last given to Christ in the New.Tes- tautent (Matt. ia 1; Rev. anii, 16), and Ruth is one, of the four women mentioned in -His genealogy in the first ••chaseter of Matthew. Know unto God 'are sell Ffis works from the. foundation of the world. All perp•osed in Christ Jesus, our. Lord and sure of fulfilment for every purpose of the Lord shall be per- formede both for His people and against His enemies (Acts XV, 18 ; Eph, 11e Jer. ii, 29). EXIT THE TRE:A.D-MILL. Prisoaers Will No Longer Endure This Torture. The tread -mill of our fathers - of some of our fathers, that is - is no more, andthe up-to-date criminal Will no longer be able to tell grim storiee of his experience on "the wheel," says the London Daily The report of the commissioners of prisons, just issued, gives the record of the last days of that notorious instrument of discipline. The sue percession of it as a forni of hare la- bor was commenced some years back, and now it has 'peen finally abolish- ed ia Our prisons. This has render- ed necessary the revision of the standing orders relating to the em- PloyMent of girikoneee senterfeed'' to hard labor. "Oakum picking" is still retained, but other forms of in- .dustrial labor have been introduced, and 'after twenty-eight days •of "strict eellular separation," if the prisoners behove well, they are al- lowed to work in aseociation. The tteacleerheel,was condemned, on van - Ouse grounds. It is held to have'been both trying to health anti ineffective as a punishment. The large rooms and spaces which the abolitiont of the wheel has set at the dispbsal.'bf the prison authorities are being utilized as workshops, mare particularly' for associated labor. ,2'he passing of the tread -mill must be regarded as another • proof of the growing hu- manity of our criminal code. - But it shoulh.l not be forgotten that "the wheel" has had its apolo- gists, even its enthusiasts. Prison- ers have been known, when sentenced to go upon it dor a giveri thne, to offer, iix more lightness of heart, to perform the allotted task "on their heads. And- we can imagine that conservative criminals - who prob- ably form the great majority- Will complain bitterly of its disappear- ance; just as the galley -slaves of old Wile would bave objected strongly to the introduction: of sliding .seate and swivel rowlocks. And who can forget, the inspiring.. I:teed-mill song to Dr. 'Oliver Wendell Itolnies? The convict, in, .those lines, tells "how tileaaant 'tis to ramble:To:mid among one's honest friends," and concludes with the declaration that, when he is at large and has made his fortune, '"enato hang me, but I mean to have a. tread -mill of my own.1" TWO GOOD THINGS.. Ter° good things for the house- keeper to know about are individual chicken pies and apple ginger. try, and line patty -pans with it. Mince the chickenseason it well, aud fill it into the pans, moistening it slightly with the gravy. Put on a covei of the crust as for any pie, and bake. Serve . with them the gravy left from the chicken. Some- times children like these little pies for lanai at school. Apple ginger is a delicious pre- setve hest made this month of nice, firm sweet , apples. To make, it, Pare, core and slice the apples very thinly and weight eight paurido after preparing theinl. To this quantity allow eight pounds of sugar, six lem- oas arid a otnerter of a poande of green ginger root, Slice he yellow part of the lemons Very thin, squeeze the juke and mit .it; With .one gimes of water, with the apple and the ginger root, which editet be scraned and eut up very film. Cook in a double boiler till clear, stirring free queatly. It will requiee two hones or more. -The resift is "something delicious," either With meate or to Serve with ide cream or With 'cake for dessert. NOT A SMALL BULL, Tommy (in egarch of le -limitation), "Is a streamlet 0.sinall strewn ?" Iis Father---"YeS, any sem," . "Is an otelet a entail ONVI ?" "Yes, Tentity." "Is an egglet a Small egg'?" "YeS, .yes, you might dull it that.'' "Ihen What iSo. buliot ? 'Tien't a 4.ma3l bell, is, it ?" seereeteareserarege AMES WAFERS tee. STRENeTHTO SAS' tifieTSTOMA(ii,WEAltilDlITat orge kiSkeCeti4G 'at • .-41C11.Tile BLOOD a 010- THE CONSTITUTION qi14111/01‘ii4 .orp:100145 • al C.td, Montre Bos '`.--07272PRie• pc, • 4- C „A zee,. /-AfeSiti PrihefaBt5 &Choi Price in Canada ; $1.00; Six bottles for $5.00 taverscespanememassuameakam No remedy covers so large a field, of usefulness las ST. JAMES 11,T,A.r.ait.. They are indicated whenever there is o weak condition, as they toue UP the different organs ad bring 'strength to the tissues. . Palpitation of the heart, poor di- gestion, sleeplessness', wealc nerves, anmnia, and Chlorosis, are quickly relieved by $T. JAs WAhlene ; they also repair the waste caused by bard work and fatigue. $T, jA106 WAXERS help stomach, digest' food and send the nutriment through the blood, and this is the honest Way to get health andstrength, the kind that lasts, develops and breeds tbe energy which accom- plishes much. "St. !antes Wafere furnish a Most powerful evidence of the vastly increased power of medi- cement by combination of Jodi. cions .plearmacentic prepara- tions. X, leave used Omen with, good selectee when My patients needed strength.r, Dr. Charles MID. EiverPool, Eng. iStJaver Walerz are trot a secret reetaly. : to the numeroas doctors, re- eommenetiste Them in./Weir patients we mail the formstia upon request. Where dealers are not selling the 'Wafers. they are mailed,upou re- ceipt of price at the Comedian branch : Si. James Wafers Co., t7211 St, Catherine St, Montreal, 41,1PM1612,1•111,13..1:8.11.0,11R.OSIt- 00(5 isee aa era' it 0 a0e 9,o0e0.1e , FOR! HOME t, e 0 c @ . , 0 Recipes for the Kitchen. e o ttygiene and Other Metes e 0 60 for the Henseiceeper. .) el 04,0*01,1644•Soactfteeefliefk- , TURKEY 1VAYS. Turkey 'Patties. - Mix three table- spoons each of butter and flour,eadd one salt spoon salt and. one-half as much pepper. When melted,' pour in one cup rich Milk. Cook and stir until thick. Then . add one cuP chopped turkey, let sinutter five min- utes, then stir in one pint oysters and eook watil they are plump. Fill the patty shells and serve. to thelo a lump of butter tho size of a small egg, salt to taste, and one pint of sifted flour. Mix 'thorough- ly. Flour the melding board and turn out to cool'. Have apples ready, also a large iron pot of boil- ing water: As each dumpling must be tied sep- arately, have six or eight squares of muslin and string ready for use be- fore beginning operations. 'Take a piece of dough and roll or pat it in- to size a a, saucer.' Put three or four quarters of apple in center, and then shape the dough all 'around the apples, making it look rotuid smooth. Flour each cloth and tie. up tightly. The pot must be kept . boiling froni start to -finish, one hour. Any good cooking apple may be used, but an. inferior one spoils the dumpling. When . serving- them, plunge -each cloth into,. cold water, and with a of turkey must be • used for these. be safely landed on a plate without .Turkey, ,elleees.•a-eThe nicest pieces i•knife .and. a, little dexterity they tan Cut in neat slices, spread each . one breaking. This, however, does take 1 with the dressing that is left, roll some practice. Some prefer hard up tightly and tie or fasten with a sa.u.ce made of three parts of sugar skewers --Dredge with flour, salt and pepper, fry slowly in hot butter•un- 111 a. goldeu 'brown, then half cover . with milk or :cream and let simmer 15 minutes longer: • Removesthe strings or Skewers and serve on hot toast. Turkey Scallop. - Make a white sauce with the proportions of .one tablespoon butter, cum of flout, half cup broth and -half cup milk„ season to taste.. Grease a baking dish and rin. • with alternate layers of finely chopped and seasoned turkey, bread crumbs and sauce. There shou/d be one pint of -sauce- to eaeh cup of meat. The top layer should be of bread crumbs mixed smooth' with yolk ce: one egg; two tablespoons: milk and elle of butter-. Cover the baking dish and bake in a moderate °nen 85 minutes. Turkey Timbales. - Cook together in the doable boiler one rounded -.cup bread crumbs, oho cup cooked tur- key chopped line, one teaspoon finely Chopped onion. seine of chopped cel- ery leaves, Ile cups inilk. Add this mixture tothebeaten white of one cgs's, tie-- which has been 'added • arm- qoarter teaepoon salt, one-eighth tea- spoon pepper, a pinch of celettiasalt.- Allow this to...cool. Grease nine seneSi.. -Withesifted'bread' 'crumbs, thete with the timbale mixture: Filt with the following:. Heat. one cop milk, melt -one tablespoon .butter, add -two teleeepeone (lour an& then the hot railk a little at a Lime. Chop fine ana add three-quarters cup tur- key, one hard-boiled egg aed Mx me- dium sized mushrooms. Season with pepper and salt. Bake in a pan of hot water 20 minutes. Make a sauce by heating one cup each of milk and turkey stock, melt half ta- blespoon of .batter, add tablespoon of floor, then' add the .hot lignid -little at a time. Season with salt and - pepper. Just before serving add one beaten egg.. POTATO APPLE DUMPLLNGS. This recipe has come down through three generation.% and is a favorite Wherever it' goes. For a family of -six, pato nearly half a peck of good potatoes. Boil, being careful not la Id t them get oierclone, but pear water off as soon as they break eagle iy, : Rub through a, colander so they will come out dry and- mealy. -Add rt.), r : c 1910USAN11O of men are prisor,cre of dieeese as securely s as though they were &whiled behind the bars. 'Many leave forged their OWLI chains by the Tiede of early youth, eapoeuee to contagious diseese, or the excesees of ate.aitood.„ They feel they are uot tbe Oo,o they Ought to be or deed to bo. vide vim, vigor, and vitality of manhood, are lacking. Am you nervous aud deepeudent? tired in the morning ?have you to fotte yoursele ti., eoetrit the day' s work /leave You little am- bition and etteggy? am You Irritable arid excitable? eyes conked, depisised and haggard looking? memory poor add ibeitin fagged? have you Week back vita dream'; mat teesee et night? deposit in urine? weak eetualiy ?-yea nave • , rieFICOUS Debility End Seminal Weakness. Our mg* tivraon TEREA.TiKEIVP la guaranteed to ; Cure or No Pay. 38 yenro Ira Detroit. It3surstr Bccetarlity. Beware of colacks-,Codsult otd tetablielled, e reliable _physicians. Cosi toteettion Pete. latabIXO rece. Write for Quettioa Blank for Rome Treatment, gariAg 16#12119 dif 11 to oue of butter, but, with good cream and sugar, a little nutmeg or cinnamon, theL-S- h .s MEDICAL HINTS. All wounds in which the flesh hs.s been bruised should be bound at once in a plaster made of camphor and sugar (brown sugar is best.), using fifteen drops of camphor to ono teaspoonful sugar. - Sprains may be cured by using mullen leaves wrung out in strong, pure apple vinegar. Bind the leaves to the sprained parts and replace them as often as they -becotaa' dry with others until relief is obtained, This treatment is more successful . and more agreeable to the patient than. the usual way of encasing the sprained Member in plaster of Paris. CH, MY HEAD! HOW IT ACHES! PIERVOUS ISILIOVS SICK PERIODICAL SPASMODIC j- HEADACHES. Headache is nob of itself it disoaao, but is generally eausec1. by some disorder of the stom- ach, liver or bowels. Before you ambit cured you must remove the comae. Burdock Blood Bitters will doll for you. It regalates the stomach, liver wed bowels, pnriflea the Wood and tones up tho whole sys, . tom to full health sod -vigor. ,..A.4a4V44.0W611444ft.* tac (sunray aTIZBET, wog 1.O11' ''../AMM46tc,'414,11ftr: .1? s