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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1903-1-15, Page 7ro O1UTE RITYL Certuine 's 0 Foe r Little Liver Pills lhu:it.Bear Signature at' See Fac-Simiio Wrapper Below. Yb 7 sxuarl and as easy to take as sugar. q ' FCR lIEAaARRE� CARTERS FOR DIZZINESS. 1111E Fake 01LIUUSNESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. P9LLS. FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR 'ala COMPLEXION bice OX111WUII1 uVm NA\'c NATu\[. i S Calls 116 ]i' u oly. �7cgetaIDFo: .. ie. _ CURE; SiCK HEADACHE. J WE ZILIVE SINNED IN Pito know► that over= tfnxe I opened ' my mouth nay words tsrero being x•e- corcled as a human voice spoken into the phonograph makes its in- dentations upon. a revolving cylln- i der. Months • after my father's death I can now hear his voice repe.ttine the Lord's I'rayer,as he once did in one • of those instruments at, the national capital. But, oh. how much more; ovortv'ltelming the thought that every word Wo utter is spoken di- rectly into the ear of, our Divine Father. I 'low much more tremon- deus to know that when "ere spend otic* years • as a tale that Is told" we can never get beyond the reach of God's ear I Ought not this near- ness to God make us strive by divine grace to live better and purer lives ? I once read how a great king of old used to confine his prisoners within a chain of dungeons. Iavery ono of those cells was connected by a whispering gallery with the king's own bedchamber. Thus the slightest word these state prisoners .might utter during their confinement was immediately echoed tb the king's ear, and if the prisoners said any- thing against their king he heard it and these prisoners were immediate- ly taken out and executed. Shall not you . and I be more careful, • to live tho right kind of lives when we fully realize that each word we utter is heard by our Divine leather? Shall we not be more careful• -=not because we fear the anger of a tyrant, but because we do not want to, wound God's loving heart any more than we would say a berth or sinful' word before a loving earthly parent ? 0 my loved ones, will yint not get down upon your knees and ask God to make ' this year a year of divine pardon and triumphant hope? There Is None That Doeth Good, No, Not One." (Faltered according to Act at the par- liament of c:anada, in the year one 'Thousand hie klundred and 'three, by Win. natty, of Toronto, at the Department of Agriculture, Ottawa.. A despatch from Chicago says' Rev. Frank De Witt Talmage preach- ed from the following text: Psalms ice, 9, "We spend our years as a• tale that is told.'' • T•Tow the years are flying away! . :ITenry Clay once stood upon the top and uicicsands and precipices ane of the Allegheny mountains in an at -.1 q titude of listening. Whoa some one as„eri its murderers and highwaymen the great statesm i asked him to who:: ho. was listening, as well as its cities of refuge and his deep,•gardens of Eden' and Utopias and a x i rescuers and, :f I might reverently powerful, resonant, oratorical voice, use the word, its saviors or redeem - mighty 1 tin . listening to the ers it may have its Frankensteins, mighty tramp of the coming genera- ti "' To -clay we may not have its Wandering Jews and its merciless ons! disaster upon .every life with whoirl that hero comes in touch, Our liven are all lntwijiiod with other lives•... LIa TS AND SHADOWS. Every tale, whether fictitious or no, has its depressio�ls' as well as its elevo tions. It has its disappoint- ments and heartaches and sorrows,, and often its graves, as well .aa its joys and re -unions and happy mar- riage altars. It has its darn nights Blood Bitters has the most natural action on the stomach, liver, bowels and blood of any medicine known, hence its effects are prompt and lasting. It cures, without fail, al such diseases as Dyspepsia, Constipation, Eiliousness, Bad Sick Headache, Bois, Pimples, Ttunors, Scrofula, Kidney Complaint, Jaundice, Coated Tongue, Loss of Appetite and General Debility. The fact that it is guar- anteed to cure if used according to directions warrants any sufferer in giving a fair trial to Burdick Blood DR WOOD'S • PG A. Pleasant,Prompt and Yerfect Cnro ter COUGHS, COLDS, HOARSENESS, SORE THROAT, ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS, CROUP, and tall Throat ©end Lune 'Troubled. Obstinate Coughs yield to its grateful, soothing action, and in the racking, per. sistent cough often present in consump- tive cases it gives prompt and sure re- lief. Mrs. S. Boyd, Pittston, Ont., writes: "I had a severe cold in niy throat and head and was greatly troubled with hoarseness. Two bottles of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup completely cured me.". Prioo 25 cents per bottle. EIave Restored Thousands of , C'saka.dia.n Women to Health and Strength. There is no need for so many women to suffer pain and weakness, nervousness) Sleeplessness, anemia, faint and dizzy spells and the numerous troubles which render the life of woman a round of sick- ness and suffering. ' YounJi giris budding into womanhood, who suffer with pains and headaches; and whose face is pale and the blood watery, will find Milburn's 1`leart and Nerve Pills help thorn greatly during this period. Women at the change of life, who are nervous subject to hob -lushes, fooling of pins and needles, palpitation of the heart, ete,, aro tided over the trying time of their life by the nee of this wonderful remedy.. It, has a wonderful effect on a 'woman's system, makes 1 and aches vanish, brings color to ti ...5 check and sparkle toe the eye. They build up the system, renew yo. vitality, improve the appetite, make rich lad blood and dispel that Yank, tired Wakes, no -ambition feeling, loo. ern nor, on 3 kon•.t.ga ALL beALEAS, `Clic T. Mitblurn C)., Lt'rinited, T (onto, :!)it 4 en imaginative ear keen enough to hear the thunderous echoes of • the moving feet whish shall walk this. earth '.twq centuries or a thousand ,years hence, but we can now hear the pattering feet• of tho multitudes of school children. We -may hear, too, the rumbling of the hearses, which shall sooner or later carry out • our dead bodies teethe newly dug graves. We hear the inexorable warning that in it few years or perhaps even in the coming year of 1908 we shall look upon the rising sun for the last. time. Then our bedrooms. where we lave often slept and laughed and cried, hall be called the chambers of death. The inspired psalmist, considering the passing of an earthly life, uses a beautiful simile. Moses, to whom the psalm is ascribed, was not only a great legislator, and a powerful leader, but a poet. He not only opened a path across the Red Sea with his rod, but he cut a sure path into the gratitude and affection.affection.of all good men and women by the sharp point of his` pen. Thus the ancient author, who was a pioneer in the making of nooks, compared the earthly 'existence of every hu- man life "to a tale that is told." The seconds are the letters. The minutes are the words. The hours are the sentences. The days are the paragraphs. The weeks are the pages. The months aro the chap- ters. The years are the books. The whole number of difTerent books of the human story of life, like the five different books of Victor Hugo's great navel, "Les Miserables," are bound together in one big volume, with a slat from the cradle to serve for one cover and a tombstone Sled for the other cover. May God help me on this last i:4abbath of the dy- ing year to interpret aright how "we spend our years as a tale that is told." sU: , BEGINNING OF THE TALE. Every tale, whether fictitious or no, has a bright or a sad beginning. In almost the first words ' hich the narrator speaks he introduces his listeners to the hero or the heroine. Sometimes he rocks that hero's cradle down among the plantations of Louisiana, or Georgia, sometimes among the snows of the New Eng- land hills or in a palace of Europe, where the prince or princess was born. But, though many heroes and beroines of fictitious tales may have had unhappy childhood influences, I do not believe it was thus with us. The brightest passages of the "tale of life" when applied to our . own biographies are to be found for the most part in those first days which we spent in the old homestead. 'We never had those huge monsters, the sons of Tartarus and Terra, to storm our nurseries; We never had. murderous guardian, a King Rich- ard, to incarcerate us in a dungeon or a fiendish • Martha of Goethe's ''.'Faust" ,for a nurse. Our 'infantile playground was more like the Delect- able mountains of Bunya.n's • "Pil- grim's Progress." Therefore, as most of our lives have started amid such purified surroundings, it is no more than right to expect that our stories . of life should be pure and true and noble tales. • Every true story of lifer must rep- resent it as mixed up.. in the lives of many • others. This is always so. You may have seen in some art gal- lery a picture of the "Three Parcae," the fates that are supposed to de- cide the destinies of every man. Clotho is there pictured as a beauti- ful woman, bolding the birth spindle out of which the thread of Life is to be drawn. Atropos is a beauthiful 'wo- man pulling forth that thread, and thereby. deciding what the man's life is to. bo. Lachesis is an old hag, with a pair of sharp shears cutting that thread and making an end of that mortal life. But I want to re- mind you to -day that in the story. of life every men's lift is intwined in other lives: Before that. thread is cut it passes into the 'world's loom, among and . around. other threads, adding its textile strength to the warp and woof. In the nursery the J•averts as well as its Bishop My- riels and its Jean Valjeans and its "Christians" and its ''Eternal Cities." It has, always been so. An auditor would not, sit hour after hour, as the ancients used to do, list- ening to the imaginative story tel- lers of old if lights and shadows had not continually chnsed each other across 'their fictitious heavens. But, though every story, whether fictitious or no, nmy have .its' ups and downs, yet the general rule is, the greater the danger and the blacker the sorrow and the more, .overwhelming and imminent the threatening destruction the nearer is the appearance of the deliverer, the savior or the reueemer. it is when all hope seems to be forever gone that we are relieved by the entrance of some character who is able to chase away the black winged demon of despair and lead forth the white robed angel of hope. • You may re- member an illustration of this rule tri Lord Lytton's famous historical novel, "The Last Days of Pom- peii." While old Mount Vesuvius was writhing in agony and belching forth a reservoir of burning lava and while the heavens were raining a tempest of fire and the midd•ty was as black as the darkness t.f• the Egyptian pluguo did not the blind girl Nydia take her lover by the hand and lead him forth out of the doomed city, out past the Roman sentinel who stood by the gate, pre- ferring to die rather than to desert his post, out to the blue waters of the Mediterranean, in which there was safety ? Is not this statement true of the beautiful story of Dick- ens' "Tale of Two Cities" or of Scott's "Ivanhoe," of Cooper's "Pathfinder," of Shakespeare's "King Lear" and true of almost any of the works of the ancient story writers as well as the stories writ- ten by the authors of the present day ? ALWAYS A. FINISIHED TALE, Fictitious stories = are often unfin- ished. but the human tales about which the psalnxist wrote are always ultimately finished tales. These bio- graphies may lead many of us through• the school -room to the marriage altar. They may lead us to great honors in life, but they will always lead every one of us to the grave. When the epitaphs have been inscribed Ttpon our tombstones, what has been doe° will be done forever, what has been left undone will be left undone forever. The story of mortal life will then bo ended. The earthly covers of the volume will be forever closed. We have often heard of aged authors recasting and re- writing the, stories they had written in their youth. The publishers of the "Reveries of a Bachelor" asked its author to rewrite his most fa- mous book. They asked him to re- write it long after Dc Marvel had ceased to be a bachelor and when he hada wife and a crowded nursery of his own. But the tale of human life after it has once been finished. can never bo recast. We have heard how one of the sweetest and purest poets of the west at great expense gather- ed up some vicious and impure stories which he had written when he was a college boy. He gathered them up to destroy them. But when the human tale of life has been once told it can never be silenced. It shall be told and retold again and agaih as it was last told at the grave. Dives in the parable begged Father Abraham to send back td earth the redeemed Lazarus to warn his five sinful brethren. Abraham would not. ° "Nay, nay, nay," he answered in substance, "Lazarus' earthly talo of life has been forever finished." Another word could not be added thereto. A SPOILEN • STORY. But there is yet one overwhelming thought we roust not overlook ,The tale of file is a spoken story. We cote utos,I sores, ego,„ ,peo.t Sean Aegean," "The Tales of a Wayside Inn," "Tire Tales ' Out of School," "Tales of New England" and "Twice Told Tales;" but, after all, fates are not alone the three tai the the true definition '01.a tale.is a picture, but a multitude whirh are story spoken by a human being ,into 1 the ears of one ' or more listeners. Sometimes those ancient story tell- ers were able to excite their nearers to a mad frenzy. It has been re- corded that when the Greeks used to listen to the recital of the "Adventures of Ulysses" or the story ' of "Helen of Troy" they would weep and cry and shout as they climbed from the lowest depths of grief to the highest pinnacles of joy. What would be the sheet on the hearers if the tale of otir 1iveS was told ? Would it excite thein to a frenzy of sin or would it draW from them triumphant and holy ejaculations ? But this Was not the chief thought which' I :desired to impress upon you. When our tales of• life are told, they .aro not only spoken into :hu- man ears, but,also the all hearing ear of God. :It used to be a ter- rible tie:night for .me to foot that in when the. hero sloes wrong, it bririgir heaven there was a recording angel, weaving that thread. What a mo- ther does may decide to a great ex- tent what her children will .do. In the dining room there are more than three fates influencing -the lives of young men. What the father. does may decide what his boys will do. A wife's position upon the temper- ance question may decide whether or no her husband shall die' of .deliritij i tremens. The talo of the human life is a plot in which the happiness of a mother, a father, a brother, a sis- ter, a wife, a child, a friend, may be dependent upon the purity and the nobility of one ntan. When the heart of the old oak is oaten out, not only does the mighty tree fall, but also all the clinging .vines which have clateb,;recl+,,pp the sides of the tree; all the bird;5 nests in which the feathered mothers have laid their eggs; also' all; of the leaves Whieh are kissed el the sunlight and two mat - ling with joy. In the story of life,. • THE S. S. LESSON, ly sent awe e" 'Paul and Silas by right unto I epee., who, coining thither, werit into tlst synagogue of the Jews. One Jason, who had received foul and Silas into his house, was meds to beer the heavy end of the perse- etition at Thessalonfce, and thus have special fellowship with .J esus ' Christ, (Phil. 1, 29),, and we next find the' apostles fifty or sixty .runes away at Berea," where, as their eus- toxn Was, they began with the Jews, "To the Jew first" (Rom. 1, 1ti) be- ing the principle on which they al- ways worked: • ' 11, 12, These were more noble than those in 'Thessalonica, in that they 'received the word with all readiness of mind and searched the Scriptures daily whother those things Were so; The Thessalonitens did well. for they received the word in much af- fliction, with joy of the holy Ghost, and they received it not as the word of men, but, as it is in truth, the word of God, which effectually worketh in all who believe (I 'Tess, 1. 6 ; ii, 18). The Bereans, however, excelled in the matter of searching the Scriptures daily, preying for. themselves that the truths taught• by the apostles were really so. The be- lievers included both men and wo- men, and of the latter rnany honor- able women. Contrast these with the honorable men and women of Antioch in Pisidia. who expelled Paul and Barnabas from their coasts, Some choose life and some death, but in each case the faithful' preacher is unto God a sweet savior of Christ (II Cor, ii, .15, 16). If all who re- ceive . the word with. readiness of mind, like the Bereans, would, like them, become searchers of the Scrip- tures, we would have many more teachers of the word, but it is now even as it was long ago, for • when for the time many ought to be teachers they have need that one teach them again the first principles of the oracles of God (Hob. v. 12). INTERNATIONAL LESSON, JAN. 18. Text oife.the Lesson, Acts avis:, 1- 12. Golden Text, Ps. cxix., 105: 1, 2. And Paul, as his manner was, went in unto them, and three Sabbath days reasoned with them out of the Scriptures. From Philippi they had traveled about 1,000 milts, probably spending a night each at Amphipolis and Apolionia, as that would make each day's journey about thirty or thirty- five miles, and now at Tnesealonica there is a great center, for Paul says of the believers there, "From you sounded out the word of the Lord in Macedonia. and Achaia" (I These. i, 8). The first question which Paul asked the Lord Jesus after ho know him as such seems to have become the motto of his whole life, "Lord, what wilt Thou nave me to do?" (Acts ix, 6). As our Lord after His resurrection expounded in all the . Scriptures the things con- cerning Himself and opened their t n- derstanding that they might under- stand the Scriptures (Luke xxiv, 27, 44,•45), so Paul's habit was to preach the kingdom of God and teach the things which concern the Lord Jesus Christ both out of the law of Idoses and out of the prophets (Acts xxviii, 23, 31). 3. Opening and alleging that Christ must needs have suffered and 'risen again from the dead, and that this Jesus whom I preach unto you is Christ. So also taught our Lord Himself in Luke, xxiv, 25, 26, after His re- surrection as well as in all His earthly, ministry (Matt. xvi., 21; xvii., 23; xx, 19). A sample of Paul's preaching to those who knew the Scriptures, the Jews, is found in his discourse at Antioch in Pisi- dia, recorded in Acts xiii., 16-14, in which he summarizes Exodus, Num- bers, Joshua, Judges, and Samuel and quotes from Ps. ii and xvi and Iso. lv. I think perhaps he would sometimes go back to Gen. lii., 15, 21, and show how all the .'Tabernacle ritual in Exodus and Leviticus was fulfilled in Jesus •of Nazareth, and that while the first part of Ica_ liii had been fulGiled in His sufferings, the last part and all other prophecy would be as truly fulfilled. 4, 5. And some •of them believed and consorted with Paul and Silas, * * * but the Jews which believed not, being moved with envy * * * * set all the city in an uproar. The believers were from Jews and gentiles, the opposition was from the Jews, but it was the great ene- my of God and man working through them. I• Ie who turned Adam and Eve away from God has been in the same line of work ever since, and this is his great ambition. The Lord Jesus Christ humbled and emptied Himself to exalt God; the devil and his followers exalt themselves, and would, if they could, dethrone God; but, being unable to do this, they do their utmost against Him and Isis people. 6, 7. These that have turned the world upside down are come hither also, * tr * staying that there is an- other King, one Jesus. The cry at Philippi was, "These men, being Jews, do exceedingly trouble our city (xvi. 20), but now they arc accused of turning things upside. down generally. Later, at Ephesus, they seriously affected the business of the silversmiths (Acts xis, 25-27), so they were continually in conflict with the world lying in the wicked one (i John v, 19). Our Lord had said that it would be so (Jghn xv, 18; 10), but times loom to have changed now, and the World and the chui;eh seem to be on good terms, and those Who are represented ,by the silversmiths of Ephesus Wray be found as trustees or even deacons or elders' in the churches. But let the word of God Ue as faithfully and fully preached, as it was by Paul, and the faithful preacher may be led to think -that the world has not changed at all and that the Phari- sees and the Worshipers of Diana aro riot only in. the pews, but even in some of the pulpits, and that the person who is really worshiped i?t very often Caesar. '8-10, And the brethren immediate- - �a TORTURING SOLDIERS. The German military authorities are determined to put down with a firm hand the torturing which men have been subjected to from non- commissioned oncommissioned officers, and in one 'instance from an officer. At Stras- burg three cases have been, lately tried by court-martial, each offender receiving the full penalty. A. non- commissioned officer of the Twen- tieth Battalion of Pioneers has been sentenced to eight months' im- prisonment and degradation to the ranks for having forced a young soldier to sit fifteen times on the lighted stove. in his room. His vic- tim was badly burned. For turning the men ot his company out of their beds with a stick and making them drill with bare feet during the night a non-commissioned officer of the Twelfth Saxony Artillery has been sentenced to two months' imprison- ment and degradation to the ranks. Finally, Lieut. Richter, of the Third Bavarians, has been sentenced to twelve days' imprisonment for bad treatment of his men. "ARE YOU THERE ?" LOUDLY. A loud -talking telephone has been recently invented. Neither party to a conversation need disturb himself to to go to the telephone, and when communication is open between two points it is not even necessary to ring up. You have only to speak out, and ask if your pian is there. Or perhaps you are in the midst of a discussion with some people in your office, when a new voice rises above the many voices. in the room, . begs pardon for interrupting, but desires to know if that bill of lading has come to hand yet. You recognize a. customer over at the other end of the town the moment he breaks in upon the conversation. Probably he wishes to ask 'you something pri- vately ; then he has merely to say sot You press a button of the switchboard on your desk, and the loud -talking telephone is chaxiged back into an ordinary, discreet, VI Give bTRENUTH TO W5 • ,'f�:Eyndit:rugoNcy:toNrelALeetaticio4018056-5,i2_,,,,,," il�� 9�(N,WEAKHE}tAT,W1Ar 7._ jT1 f �O 5 UTIO"tib NTIT --`0 -' PRICE, BRirAIw4/-AAIERICR��' I Drugglsrs & Chem i Price in Canada: $1.00 ; Six bottles for $5.O0 Debility' f systems ceases neural - and whatever tends to produce enfeeblernei is induces it. This affec- tion is undeniably due to lack of vitality, and its 'v ry r.xistelzee z f evidence of deficient strrugti, Remedial measures should there- fore be directed to improve the whole system, for when strength returns to the system, the neuralgic condition of the nerves will disappear. This now is supplied by $T. JAMAS' W.& Rsa; they seldom fail to relieve; their effect is a general building up of the system. Sr. JAMAS WA>~IRs 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 olid breeds the energy which accom- plishes much. "5t.James wafero =ever -mice. They are a remedy "without a peer, without a rival" Xn alt cases of neuralgia iht y have pre', ved a noble and true al:y.i1 Dr. Patrick Boyle, mnblih, Ireland. S1.j..vnes fVafersare not a secret rene..y:Lithe name, ous et..efors r e. cnrnmer:d(':gthem t, their patients we mail the f.,rmzfa upon request, Where dealers are not selling the Wafers, they at a retailed upon re- ceipt of price et the C' nadian branch : St. James Wafrrs Co., 1728 St. Catherine St„ Montreal. '903o®ai'sioaos's cyee FOR 1.,2 HOME a a 4 s 4 eases Recipes for the Kitchen. G Hygiene and Other Notes 6 for the liousekceper. dI GOOD BUCKWHEAT CAKES: There must be milk, a little sugar or molasses and graham flour with the buckwheat to get the best re- sults. It is almost impossible to buy pure buckwheat, nowadays. Use proportions of one quart of fresh buckwheat, one level teaspoonful of salt, three tablespoonfuls of sifted graham flour, one-half yeast cake, and one and one-third quarts of milk and water warmed and a table- spoonful of molasses. Mix the gra- ham flour and salt with the buck- wheat, slowly' pour in the milk and water and molasses, beating the bat- ter hard for ten minutes. Have the yeast perfectly dissolved in a table- spoonful of tepid, not hot, water, and beat it in last. Use a wooden paddle or large spoon for the beat- ing and a tall jar or pitcher for the sponge. Cover and place in a mod- erate temperature until morning. Then dissolve a level teaspoonful of soda in a tablespoomfiul of tepid wa- ter, mix it lightly but thoroughly in, but do not beat down the bat- ter ; have ready a smooth, hot, well- greaseci griddle, fry the cakes a nice brown and serve, a griddleful at a. time, on a hot plate. Butter and eat at once with maple syrup.,The remaining hatter may be baten down, and kept in a cool place through the day ; put to rise at night and use for breakfast cares the following morning, a scant half tea- spoonful of soda being added before baking. The cakes should be tender and full of fine bubbles, which the griddle should be hot enough • to force to the surface as soon as they are poured on. By the time the last cake, is placed the first should be almost brown enough to turn. In whispering 'affair. To hear what Serving griddle cakes place them in a your customer. is saying now you pile, the first side baked uppermost. have to , tlut-your car to the re- The more quickly they are baked the ceiver, „ better they tests, provided they are not scorched. If they are too thick, •on a properly heated griddle they A TIMELY COMPLIMENT.will scorch before they get baked in the centre. "Then you accept me, Ethelinda Oh, what happiness i" "Yes, but you must see father and mother, George." As regards your father and moth- er, .Ethelinda," said George, who had been frequently snubbed by both during' his courtship—"as regards your father and mother"—and he curled his lip and threw out his chest. "Speak low, George," she said. "I think they are both listening." "As regards your father and mother," continued the wily lower, raising his voice, "I think your father is ono of the most gentleman- ly xnen I ever mot, and as for your mother, sho is one of the loveliest of women. I tern not surprised ' that you aro so good, so beautiful, so sweet, when I remember you are the offspring of such a pair." "George," said the father, burst ing into the room, "she is yours," "And you have our blessing," said the mother. And George, as he adjusted his collar, thought to himself that an ounce of timely compliment is worth a pound of argument. Past experiences give good cottnse-1 but make poor patterns. A great riot occurred in Londeal'. on Christmas Eve, 1782, because many people were refused atlxnittnnco to Drury Lane Theatre. cannot understand. air. why sett per•tnit ynux daughter to sue Me for breach of promise. llamember that you . were 'bitterly opposed to arm engagement, because 1 wasn't : end enaugli; for} lief' 'and would disgrace the faxrtlfy?' "Young man, that Was sentiment;' this is business. ,SOME GOOD PUDDINGS. A delicious orange pudding can be made with crumbs. Scald two cups of milk and turn it over one-quarter cup of dried bread crumbs, letting it stand until cool. In the meanwhile heat the yolks of two eggs to a cream with one-half cup of sugar. Mix together the milk and bread crumbs, eggs and sugar, a teaspoon- ful of melted butter and the juice of ono orange and half the grated rind. Turn into a buttered dish, place in a pan ofboiling water and bake until arm. Cover with it meringue made of the whites ' of two of the eggs. Brown slightly and serve hot or cold. For a soft custard pudding line a custard Dish with lady fingers or slices of sponge cake. Make a soft` custard of one quart of :milk, yolk of four eggs, and pour over the whole ; beat the whites to a 'stiff.— froth with one half cup of sugar, spread over the top, set in the oven and brown • slightly. The custard should be flavored. Bread crumbs 'are also used in ap- ple charlotte. To make it, butter a deep pudding dish thoroughly. Sprinkle the bottom with: a layer of chopped apples, over these sprinkle sugar and a little cinnamon or nut- meg, bits of butter and breate crumbs. Continue in. the same way until the dish is full. Let the top, layer be bread crumbs and butter. Cover the dish, place In a pan of hot water and set in the oven and cook for forty-five minutes. At the end of that time remove from the water, uncover it and brown quickly in the oven. Serve it with cream and shaved maple sugar, or with any sweet sauce. The proportions are a cup of sour apples chopped, a cup of bread crumbs, one-quarter cup of sugar and a heaping tablespoon of butter. — Eggs and Celery—The yolks of hard boiled eggs chopped fine with celery make delicious changes for a supper dish. Make a cream sauce vell seasoned, and mix with eggs . and celery. Pour over pieces of buttered toast. Garnish with the white of eggs cut in rings, and some green celery leaves. Puff Eggs, Baked—Toast uniform slices of bread and butter well. Place in a shallow pan. Beat. the white of an egg until it stands alone. Place in a square on the toast and carefully drop in the yolk. Sprinkle salt, pepper and dots of butter oveb' the top. Brown in a hot oven and serve at once. Garnish dish with parsley. seed idlabteaeree i 4 "i" D! WOOD'S y PINE 1h Pleasant, Prompt and Perfect Curs Ser COUGHS, COLDS, HOARSENESS, SORE THROAT, ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS, CROUP, and call Throat timed Lung 'Troubled. t Obstinate Coughs yield toits grateful, soothing action, and in the racking, per- sistent cough often present in consump- tive cases it gives prompt and sure re. lief. Mrs. S. Boyd, Pittston, Ont„ writes e "I had a severe cold in my throat and head and was groatly troubled with hoarseness. Two bottles of Dr. Wood's. Norway Pine Syrup completely cured tno... Woo 25 cents per bottle. rn,rnMneocrtnt,Inlwatrn ,,,,� �. .._, r6N> 44tr" r]Y�'fi • v B °%i0USAND5 of men are prisoners of dioease as securely as thoughthey were confined behind the bars. Many have forged their own chains by the vices of early youth, exposure to Contagious disease, or the excesses of manhood. They feel they are not the men they ought to be or used to be. The vim, vigor, and vitality of manhood are lacking. Are ? yon nervous and despondent? tired in the morning? leave you to force yourself through the day's work? have you little am. bitiou. and . energy? are you irritable and excitable? eyes annken, depressed and haggard looking? memory poor and brain tagged? have yea weak back with dreams and losses at night? deposit in time? weak sexually?—yea Marro Nervous debility and Seminal Weakness. Onr mew ME'raon vas s A.Td 55NT Is guaranteed to Cure or guctoi$sliedury. a No a qki-Cont oldetablish reliable physicians,hysicians, Cr►tneu'it*ttion Free. Bedka t Free. Write for Question 331ank for 2ionte xroattnent. } t 1,. Kora 1l ata t8FZI"LBV t5 il' B . TYtTROZO4 S','1Ckif. •A yy nk ,s.