HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1903-1-22, Page 7;
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Loss of Appetite
Salt Rheum,
Erysipelas,
Scrofula,
and all troubles
arising from the
Stomach, Liver,
Bowels 07 Blood.
Mrs. A. Lethanguo,
of Dallydafr, out,
e I
writes: "I believ
would have been in
my grave long ago
had le not been ler
Durdoek Mood Bit-
ters. I was run down
to Buell an extent
that 'I could scarce-
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bons°. I was Gabled
to severe headaches,
beekaches and dizzi-
ness; my apnetite
was gone aml. I was
housework. After
using two bottles uf
B.11.11. 1 foetid my
health fully restored.
I warmly recommend
It to all tired and
worn out women,"
INS IR
I .1LIVIN
11441.101.44.1.$.00.0.0.6101.401111514.100114116.11191
Rev. Frank Talmage in the Role of
a Gospel Prophet.
(Entered cteelereing to Act of the gar-
lianien pi Loam's, in the year Une
I:nut/sand IN ins Iiiineeed teal 'ihree•
by ainflatly, at eorente, et the
bepertuient of Agrieurture, (it LaW tt.. ,
..---.
A despatch from Chivago says:
nev• naleek, DeWitt Talmage preac/h-
ea from the following text; Pro-
verbs 9, ]i, : "The years of thy life
shall be increased,"
I am going to be a, gospel prophet,
this morning. I am not only goiug
to tell yoe that this new yet' is to
be the Lest year of your life, but it
is also going to be a precursor 01
many other utieful years. I. am. goe
lag lo say to ythi, as Solomon said
or old:, that on account of th:s. com-
ing year ceneecrated to Clod your
earthly longevity shall be lengthen-
ed. "The years of thy life shalt be
increased."
My great expectatiens for your
spirituel'? welfare and your conserra-
ticm of the new Year are not oely
!mended upon my own faith, but also
upon the faith of an earnest band
of scores and scores of Preying men
end womea who are loyelly seeking
your gnod. This band is composed
of your friends and your loved ones
It is an all conquering band which
shall •soon, eye, I think to -clay, cap-
ture your soul for Jesus Christ. We
have read what. Garibulili did for
Italian freedom, What hod he to
offer his followers? N'othieg but
hunger and pains and wounds and
exile. But above all these 'neva-
tiona „ Garibaldi lifted the standard
of liberty, and the young men (lopes-
, ed to his side by the hundreds and
the thousands. Heaney not be an
easy task to capture your sinful
heart for Christ. But the gcspel
preie is so great that the earnest
...bane of workers surroundieg me,
like the Italion patriots, are avillirg
to go through any privations if they
eau only bring you a repentant sin-
ner to thr foot of the cross.
Now, as a gospel transrormalien
is soon to take place in your life,
I am going to tell to -day seme of
the new resolves by which this open-
ing year is
TO INsrirtit YOUR LIFE.
I am about to tell you hove and
pow how you are going to forget
thoee things that, arc behind and
reach forth unto those things that
are before and press toward the
mark forthe prizeof the leigh call -
of God in Christ Jesus.
:The psalmist , tells us that Goa
'keeps the tears of his loved ones in
a bottle. Last week God lifted one
of theparental a tears which :were
shed "•ever your cradie. He placed
the -sparkling 'treasure • upon the
White wing of an angel cif mercy -and
cried, "GO, angel,. and. drop that
tear upon that young :nan's head
and annoint him with the Spirit's
power." Last night God sent an-
other white winged • messenger with
another tear out of his bottle, shed
by your father on the day you joined
the church. One white whined angel
after another did as they were told.
`They all dropped those parental tears
upon. ,yaur bead and heart Dis-
couraged man, t9 -day wearied of the
sinful world, _as you sit there with
the tears running down your cheeks,
yoii. think they are your 'tears. They
are not. They are the tears of your
dead and redeemed father and mo-
ther, which God has long been pre-
serving in his sacred bottle. 'they
are the tears of }t/Y which your fa-
ther and mother eve now vhedding
in heaven, because the white winged
angels have already down to the
Celestial City to announce to them
that their boy is nONV ready to cast
himself upon the love of Jesus and
1. he ,saved. Oh, to -day the sacred
band•Of Chr1etia:11 worsbipera about
Inc can ' -hardly, keep: frOm. clapping
their hands in joy,
., Motile' was nee lend of society,
She was 0, homebody.. She lived'
inoetly for father .and us children."
Well, , my at -Other, if, yonr,. Mother
was a homebody clad lived mostly
for her children, do you not see that
if you refused to repent. refused to
consecrate your life to the cross, re-
fused to be a good man and live a
pore life, that your sinful acts would
be damming back a greet part of
her prayers and the good resulis of
her life? 'When your mother theca
you - gathered- up all the kind, sym-
piahetic letters which were written
to you about her past kindnesses.
•You also had the officiating minister
write down his funeral' address.
Then you had those letters and that
address all printed and booed to-
gether into a booklet, which you
called,
"MY MOTHER'S MEMORIAL."
Bleb, Man, the mightiest and most
triumphant memorial you could ever
make of your mother's life is your
own life consecrated to the service of
Jesus. She put her blood and her
lire alto your iife. So, elan, this
ought to be a happy year for you.
It ought to be happy beceeise by
your own consecration to the ser-
vice of the Lord Jesus you are here
and now ready to Jet your mottle:Cs
prayers echo and re-echo and re-
sound in aour prayers. . Her good
deeds will find a true continuance in
your good deeds. lier Christ shall
hel Gabor Le worshiped with a sweet-
er look because he is also now her
boy's Christ, •
„ s;
rree holy endeavoe to flatlet toe,
past pledges which you have made
to God shall be another desire in-
spiring you daring this misfiring hap-
py new year. All your. past days
have not been bright and 'happy
days, The Meadow larks do net
sing when: they hear the norcilese
growl of the destroying eyclone..The
tad roses of jimo do not like to aget
their blushing cheeks against a Jane
Italy snowbank. You may have wel-
coined the many coligentulati one
.WhiCh 00107 friends. showered upon
you in your younger cla.ys of tri-
umphs. tot you huge Mee had your
defeal,e end heart cello; and diettp-
a
LIN/MENT
FOR
Sprains, Strains, Cnts, Wounds, Ulcers,
Open Sores, Bruises, Stiffjoiiits; Bites an
, Stings of Tasecta.Cenglasa Calds, Contracted
Cords,. Rheumatism, Nenralgiaa bronchitis,
Croup, 'Sore Threat; Qu'inscy Whooping
Cough and all Painful Swellings.
LARGEAOTTLE, 25o,
A WARNING TO
BACKACHE SUFFERERS._
Backache may strike you at any
time. Comes when you least ex-
• pea it. Comes as a warning from
the kidneys.
A sudden twitch, a sudden paln• .
The Kidneys (muse It all,
If you don't heed the warning,
serious Kidney Troubles are sum
to follow.
Core vont Badiescho by taking
DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS.
Them is not a Xidney Trouble,
from Backache to13-right's Disease,
that Doan's Kidney rills will not
relieve promptly and cure more
quickly than any other kidney
remedy.
50e,or box or 3 for $1.9.5. Alkclealorts
or Ton DOAN* Minna' PILL Co., Toronto,
Chits pondmerils. You have also had
your days when you lay upon a 'bed of
sickness. You have Lad clays when
your ihe was hanging by a sleialer
thread, ready to Le snaireed by
ceath at any' =Went. Your wife
and mother nuaiiing ou at the time
did not think that you fully realised
how s!ck yea were. .4 did. You
knew it by the anaiout way the doe -
tor Watched. You answ by the care
the nurses took 10 gining the nrol;or
medicines at the exact time.
oh, then in that dark hour you feit
es did the poor fellow a hum I bolded
some weeks atko. one Haturdny tto
wits at work in seeminglyfall heulth.
The next Monday he lay. u oa the
°reveling table as a last resort for
his hip. Alter the operation they
told him
HAD TO DIE.
He looked up in a pathetic way and
said ; "'I do not wind: to die. I am
afraid to die, , eh; do not let MO
CUP 1" Wlin d .0 you do m that
hour of saner dangerous sickness ?
What clic) .you do in that hour of
trouble, When ;yoit knew that no
Man aid could reeeue you I Did you
not patietically say at that time,
"Oh1. Clod', if you will make mo well
and come to my rescue I will give
UJ) all my life to thee and thy eer-
;vice '?" Yes, shift)]. inua, God made
You well, fled rescuea you. Have
you kept yogr pledges to him ?
Have you given up your small heart
to be porged from its past sins ?
These broken vows are to -day driv-
ing into your bleeding, • repentant
heart the sharp, keen dagger of re-
morse. As a man of honor and
diameter, by the grace of God, you
to -day are going to be true 1,0 these
past pledges. I feel it. 'I know it.
1 can see a new • and holy purpose
making your cheeks flush and your
eyes flash with a coneecreted en-
thusiasm. You would not break a
pledge with any man to whom you
gave your word. Your boeet hereto-
fore has always been teat your
word is as good as your bond.
Neither will you to -day, oh, man..
continue longer te break these old
promises you made to God. .
The joy of a self sacrificing Chr'e-
than life does net appeal to the aver•
age unconeecrated men. He says ts
himself, "What is the good of sacri-
ficing ftr other people ? They nev-
e/ appreciate la My doctrine is to
look after munber one and let num-
ber two look after himself. • The
world will always ride a willing
horse to death Then the only obse-;
eades that willing horse will ever
get is a scavenger's cart for a
hearse and a glue factory. for
crematory. No, no, no. The bean::
ties of self sacrificing do not 'appeal
to me. The more 1 nave the more
people respect me. The less I have
the less they respect me. The more
am willing to serve Others the
more my motives will be misjudged,
and I will be misrepresented"
But though I•made thetadeduction
mealy years ago I have noWeentirely
ochatuheebiche
gd
emiryrnsitan11.0. The willing men
f
ALWAYS THE HAPPY MEN.
The self sacritleing men are always
the rich men spiritually. They are
not the selfish men. They are not
those who will grab and keep all
that they can. The Dead Sea is
bitter and acrid and saline and re-
pulsive merely because it has no
outlet and only inlets, while the
waters Of the mountain brook laugh
and gurgle and sing merely because
it lets all its waters run towards
the'sed. Who 'do you think:was: hape
pier. Herod, bloody Herod, loath-
solhe in mind and spirit, 'or Paul,,
who had. given. up his Whole' life to
Jesus ?. "eleeed, with jewels • on .his
fingers, or the apostolic tentmaker,
with his hands greasy with rope -
making ? Who. de you think t� -day
is happier, the *MEM who is !only
living far social conquest or the Sal-
vation Amy girl, going with a loaf
of bread in one band and a Bible in
the other hand to carry the gospel
of Jesus Chriet into the slums ?
!Yes, my repentant friend, the ensu-
ing year is to be a happy year for
you. It is to be a year when you
shall quaff a chalica filled with the
sweetest nectar. You shall drink
hereafter Out of the golden goblet
filled by those whose sorrows you
have, alleviated and whose sobs you
have turned into songs of eternal
rapture.
h-January
we all make fresh
resolutions. Some years ago I
preached a serillon called "New
Year's
Resoluti
Sermon from the aesevers I re -
ons,'' I made up
ceived from friends whom I met.
Every one I would accost with the
scone senlence, "What is your New
Year's resolution ?" Some" would
say this, same that and some the
other thing. But many answered me
thus ; "I have not got any. I have
made so many New Year's resolu-
tions in the past and broken ehem.
that I do not intend to awes° any
more." 'But I did not then and do
not noW believe they were toiling
the truth. X do not believe there is
a num or svoniaa or child who dees
not make
SOME NEW RESOLUTION.
But the trouble is after you have
Made your New Year's resolutions
you go out in your oWn streegth
and try to battle with your old
temptations. and then you are flung
aguin and again, But, my brother,
Olio year is going to be a different
year froth all others. You know
yoer weaknesses and Milures. e You
know you canuot spiritual
success in pcitie own strength, There-
fore you ere ready ta• conscientious-
ly ask Gini to 11e11) you in the sling,
gin of life, ITe will do it. YeaSeshe
Will give you the divine titOiegtit
which will /lever, nevee fail, Cling
to MIL my brother. CEng to
as .4e0b wrestled with the angel in
prayer, and he will bless yoi. and
never let you fall.
Brother and sister in Christ, tho
work before the ehureln is stupen-
dous. 'ills gOspel bo.ttio is to be no
child's play. We have Welcomed you
into 0111- ranks by the nurne or
.JesnsNow close up the ranks.
Now kneel,. and Make one earnest,
new gospel, cazimaign. Now, are
intense prayer'before we start on our
you ready !? Foeward. in the Mune'
oue Oapte in 1. Poeward;agaiiist
the citadel of sin 1 Forward for the
redemption Of our loved !Mae ! Fora
ward to capture (!hieago fax Christi
Forseard, March ! Forward, march I
LOrBOIT'S FOGS,
Amount of Sunshine Lost in the
, Metz op olis.
11 112 pop td arty eupposed that
smoky skies are eblefly due to those
huge Manufacturing chimneys which
from a distance give London tile ap-
peavanee of spine monstrous dock
filled with Tituois steamers. ; Slut
it has been snown that the or -liners, -
domiciles of London get rid of some-
thiog like ."three hundred tans of
Fond refuee every duy by throwing
11, op the chimney. 1 he first Cort -
01 this, 11 has been pointed
out, is the loss of sunshine, and eveu ;
in summer London loses one-sixth of
its proper 0111011111 of sunshine, while
in • winter it maned supply 3.8 re -1
dueed hy oneehulf, says the Leaden
Globe. The aunmet of smoke -laden 1
air 113 Londcia is set down by the ,
clerk of the weather at 7,000,000 ;
tons a cloy. At Kew Sir Thiseitoo'
Dyer has found tha1, after a fog a ;
deposit is lett behind eft U el to sk
1.0112 Of tarry matter oven a square ;
mile. These floras may bring 110100
to some people's minds the result of
our present system of catnhustion,
but, as the writer in the Morning
Post points out, it will need a re-
turn to the dreadful winters of the
eighles to make the mass, of the
public realize the full importance of
1 this subject. In the meantime we
trust that the authorities aro en-
quiring into the process adopted by
an electric lighting company- in the
lake district, to which we referred a
few weeks ego, by which, it is
claimed, the smoke neisance is corn-
pletely got rid of. Nothing should
be le.t undone by those in authority
to remedy the present condition.
411113 S. SLE'
4 se
0.14
Xls117-011NATTON4.1. XXSSOZT,
JAN.
Text of the Lesson', / These. v.,
14-58. Goldn
eT2e xt Thess
v., i
14, 15,. • Even follow that wbich iS
good, both tunong yourseiyes and
to all meta
r[1300 words seem to include ,all
the exhorattions of these two verses
eoneeruieg the unruly, the feeble
nilmed, the weak an(1 tee being pa-
tient to all. 411 are semmari,cd la
VerFe 10, where we are tanalit that
under v11 circumstances, 110 :410111.11
"live together with Ilion" 113 chap-
ter iv, 17, we have set before us -CI e
beautiful prospect of lenng "'eyes
with the Lord" in otir glorited bett-
ies, but while we Sojourn in the
nmetal bodies. •II° is war with us
, (Matt. =calla 20) and ohould 1;e to
(ilyiff
1(5 (1)0 reality in all (air
; 1647, ll'eioice evermore. Pray
;WI t hout.• ceasing. 121 eve ',Vtliir,q*
;give amnion for this 11 the will of
{Clod in Christ; ,/ °sea coneervirrX y 011,
_ Fee thcsc precepts reiteritted 111
!Phil. iv, 4-7; v, 20. Tiri law
!taught (Brawl to rejoice before. tt
:Lord their God and to rejoice in
, their feasts (Nut: -xvi, 11-15). The
esalter said, "Serve the Lord witn
gladness; come nefore his rresence
with einging" (Ps. c, 2), end taught
that od is our exceeding joy"
(Ps. x1/11, 4). The prophets tangiat
to rejoice in the Lord end joy in
Clod and pointed onward to a time
of everlasting joy and gladness when
sorrow and sighing shall flee away
(nab. ili, 1.8; 1211.Icsxv, 10). If be-
fore the great reclempticn was fin -
18130(1 11e0910 could he thus joyful,
how much more now that Jesus thee
`crucilled hae risen from tee dead
and by flis preeeace at the right
land of God makes all things • sure
to His redeemed! 'How to pray
• without reaping is illyStrated by the
Scrvant who assochtted orayer with
every act in her life — 111 her wash-
ing, drashig, cookirg, ete., thenkines
'of His blood, His righteousness,
,Hiniself, the LivingBread. Always
i
!thankful and living n HiS will is 31-
; lasti4ted by one of Mrs. Bottorae's
!stories of a waiter who, accidentally
jOStling another, received some hot
water on him and pleasantly said to
the one carrying the Water, 'Never
mind; it is all in the will."
19, 20. Quench not the Spirit. De-
spise not prophesying's.
VVhile unbelievers resist the Spirit
believers may grieve or quench the
Spirit (Acts vii, 51; Eph. iv, 30).
33y any sin or unbelief we grieve the
Sptrit. By refusing to fisten to
Him or by refusing to utterthat
which He gives us to say we qUench
the Spirit. Ile has spoken 111sro-
phecy as well as in other portions
of Scripture, but many Christians
tures away from prophecy altogether,
giving 00 heed to Rev, xix, 10; II
Pet. i, 10; Rom. xv, 4; II Tim.
16, 17.
21,22. Prove all things; .bold fast
that which Is good. Abstain from
all appearance of evil.
The only way to prove all things
is by the whole word of God.. Con-
sider all that the Spirit has written
upon any and every subject, believ-
ing every word and remembering
Ps. exix, 89, "Forever, 0 Lord, Thy
word is settled in heaven."In these
days of many doctrines, of Christian
Science (so called), theosophy,
spiritualism and the much .false
teaching from • supposed orthodox
pulpits it is indeed a time to prove
all things and try the spirits wheth-
they are of God (I John iv, 1).
Test every doctrine by the incarna-
tion, the atonement, the resurrec-
tion a.nd the return of Christ and
hold fast the faithful word (Tit. i,
9).
23, 24. And the very God of peace
sanctify you wholly. s• *,* Faithful is
He that calleth you, who also will
do it.
How ,beautiful is this name ofs our
Father ' in heaven, "The God of
Peace." See also Rom.. xv, 83 ; xvi,
20; Heb. xiii,. 20; II Thess. 111; 16:
The experience hene described seems
impossible,and it is indeed to sin-
ful men, for all that God asks of us.
is impossible to us. Ho demands
righteousness and absolute perfec-
tion, and we have neither, nor can
we obtain them by 'any works of
ours, but He provides all fully and
freely in Christ. ITe has called us to
a partnership in which He provides
everything, and Ile asks us to ac-
cept freely and just let Him be the
doer of it all (I Cor, i, 9; x, 13).
The R. V. teaches that it is at the
coming of our Lord Jesus Christ that
spirit, soul and :body are to be
blameless, not before that event, for
Wo cannot have our immortal bodies
till Jesus comes as taught in chap-
ter iv, 10, 17. In Christ, as the
Father sees us in Ilim, we are even
now washed, sanctified, justified and
perfected forever (I Cor. vi, 11 ;
Pleb. x, 10, IA), but we wait till the
resurrection of. the just for the full
tOalivation of it.
25-27, Brethren, pray for us.
Paul loved to be prayed for. So
nmy we. ITe knewtont the
Lord Jesus was ever praying for
him, yet he also knew that it is the
will of G od that We pray for each
other. See Rom. xv, 80; II Cor,
11; Eph. vi, 18, 10; Col. iv. 8 ; 11
Mess, iii, 1.; Hob, 18. The
more we pray the more we are like
the risen ascended Christ, Who ever
prayeth. Let me suggest three inost
important pro yers which 11 Chris -
1 iens woehl do well to pray con-
tinually—Matt. ix, .88; 381.1, lxii, 6,
1.21(.‘ ‘;1%7::xir'raT
8h:ige of our Lord Jesus
Christ ha with you. Amen 1
We greatly need to understand
grew, for by it we are saved. in it
we stand, and the fullness ;of it We
shall See when Jeeus comes (13ph. ii,
8. 9; Rom, iii, 24 ; v, 1, 11 ; I Vet.
1, 13). Perheps it, is nowhere more
fully set forih 1 hi3O in II Cor. 111,
0, and its applivation to us in II
Om, Ix, 8, See eke/ joim
17; 1 Tim. i, la. Note how it hes
gips and ends nearly all the epistles'
and let 118 0000 rejoice in His word
OLD HEN WORKERS. .
Wonderful Work Done in Their Old
Age.
'of thonght have always been
distinguishcu lan thage,eir says
Chanibers's Journal. Solon, So-
phocies, Pincher, Anacreon and Xeno-
phon were' , Octogenarians. Kant,
ii3uffon, Goethe, Fontenelle and .New -
l tem Were over eighty. -Micheliingelo
lancl Titian Ware eighty-aine and
ininety-nine respectively. • Harvey;
'•the diseoVder of the ciroulation of
;blood, livecl to be eighty. Many men
have done excellent work after they
have passed eighty years. Landor
;wrote his "Imaginary Conversa-
tions" When eighty-five; Tzaak
Wal-
ton wielded a ready pen at ninety.
Hahriern enn marriedateighty and
was `still working at ninety -ore.
Michelangelo was still painting his
!giant canvases at eighty-nine, and
!Titian at ninety worked with the
vigor of his early years. Pontenelle
was as light-heartod at ninety-eight
as at forty, and Newton at eighty-
three worked as hard as he did in
middle life. Cornaro was in far
better health at ninety-Rve than at
thirty, and as happy as a san.dboy.
At He/lever Dr. Du DolSy Was Still
practicing as a physician•in 1897, go-
ing his daily rounds n.t the age of
108. William Reynold Salmon, M.
R.C.S., of Cambridge, Glamorgan -
shite, died On March* 11, 1597, at
the age of 106.. • At, the time of ;his
death he was the oldest known in-
dividual..of indisputably authenticat-
ed age, the oldest physician, the old-
est Member of the ,Royal College of
Surgeomls, England, and . the oldest
Free .Mason hi the.sworlel.
. .
-
•
43
PROPOSED PLYING BOAT.
Herr Gustav Koch, of llerlin, pro-
poses to constructs a boat which will
Pc able to fly. The experiments. - he
says, will bp conducted on water, by
means of which the dangers of cross-
country triantrips would be avoided.
PIe recently showed to the German
Society for Aerial Navigation his
invention, whicli. consists of. a ,10-10,
flat, and light motor -boat floating
on the -surface of the water. It has
adjustable steering- apparatus and
horizontal sails. He states that in
his experiments with the boat he
found he could left it entirely out of
the water. by aid of -the -motor • mid
horizontal s sails. Healso said he
couldstem' et to any direction and
attain a groat speed as it skbained
over the surface of the water,
PROFITABLE WASTE.
"All that glitters is not gold,"
and, on the other hand; not all that
finds its way to the dustbin is
worthless. Foe instance, 10'Salford,
England, in one year 208,620 miner-
al water bottles, 15,700 other
bottles, and nineter-seven ions of
P1011011 glass, estimated to represent
650,000 broken bottles, worth $15,-
000 at retail rates, were picked out
of tho iefuse at the destructors. The
marked bottles were returned to the
makers at per dozen, while the
other glass was sold for A1150 to be
used in making mortar. In Glasgow
the corporation issue bags to Inali-
ness houses for the collection of
waste paper, the contents beim
gathered periodically. In (MS wily
eighteen tons of paper are collected
weekly, and a prof% of $4,000 per
;areas is realized. Satter is eXtranted
frein old tin cans founel among the
fe/fttee and is Meld for a fair price.
ese.'1:111:E\1;"i1-14;ilit'FAPItIlliTielltifitiOA:115,1ir:::r)IseF'
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Price Csaada :
Six bottles for $5.00 0
Women and men who suter frost
weal: back or pain in the lumbar
region should take $T JAMES WA.
FRISS, whieh possess reinarkable cura!
live influence on functional deiange,
ments of the kidneys, and exerJ
special tonic. actior, 01, the whole
urinary system.
ST. jAMY.S WAFPRS cure 'Wady
troubles and pains of inicturitioi,,
helping the flow of urine and clear
ing it troll' any sediment, ST. ,;ADIESS
ViArmns are alio a pate1i'. eexm.)
strengthener.
j.tvmEs WAamr•ts help stoma&
digest food and send tile nutrimeili
through the blood, and this is thi
honest way to get health and strength,
the kind that lasts, develops and
breeds the energy which acaora«
pli$13.es much.
41T3te valv.e of St. Sanas eIdefere
easistetal ocorestIvietee. th.e
most c",?:.,titi al ed. easesofkideleye
and ummary. tray:hire 'rimy have
rendered me re:tiaras:toe ecc88.
see:
Dr. Chatlea 11.r'ewsli,
Vitagsrald, ScoCar.d.
Stionies Waters arenot43 secret
remea5, ,Theetoteruea ere 44*a rt,
Wending 111C3*) to thr ir tot:lc:as
ln ail the formula :qua rtquest,
Whets cleat ersare not Felling the
1.7.Fersthey are inared upen re-
cetztt of Trice at11e Caradiati
-branch : St. James wears es., fees
St. Catherine st., Monne'.
to Paul, "My grace is sufficient for
thee" (II (lor. xii, 9).
VEGETA.RIA.N 'COOKERY.
Potato Pica—Slice potatoes and
onions and stew with a little water
until nearly done. Put into deep
dish, flavor with any herbs fancied,
salt an(1. pepper to taste, Add a
little soaked tapioca and a small
piece of butter, Clover with a whole
wheat or graham flour crust and
bake one hour. This can be eaten
with some nice boiled green veg-
etable.
Vegetable Batter—Cut fine any
kinds of inixed vegetables, such as
carrots, turnips, onions; parsnips,
beets. and celery. Add 1 oz butter
' and cook slowly in small quantity
water. When done, put into deep
pie 'plate or a pudding dish aed
strain off any fluid that may remain.
Make a batter by mixing 2 eggs,
milk and graham flour together with
pepPer and salt to taste. Pour this
batter over the vegetables .and bake
for an hour. Eat: with 'Whole -Wheat
'bread. .
Tomato and Onion Pie—Cut toma-
toes and: Sparish onions in slices,
place in deep dish in alternate lay-
ers, add a little soaked tapioca,
pepper, salt and butter to taste. Put
in sufficient waser to make gravy,
cover with whole wheat crust. Bake
one and one-half hours. Eat with
baked potatoes and bread.
Macaroni Savory—Fill a pudding
dish two-thirds full of boiled ma-
caroni. Fry some Spanish onions,
and mix these with.macaroni, pep-
per and salt to taste. Pour a. whole
wheat batter over this and bake. •
This snakes a very tasty dish to eat
with green vegetables.
Peas Brose—Put some pea .flour
into a basin and pour boiling water
over it slowly, at the same time
stirring and thorouphly mixing the
meal and water together. Add salt,
pepper ahd butter to taste.
Bean Pie—Have some beans well
boiled. Mix with some soaked tap-
ioca, • and , a. Jew Raveling herbs.
Pepper, salt • and butter, to taste.,
Then 1111 a pudding dish with this,
add 1.• cup water:to make gravy.
'crust .of whole wheat is then placed
on top and baked for an hour or so.;
This is very tasty as well as nutri-
tious.' Mashed' beans ,flavored .with
ground mace, ,pepper. and pelt, and
well mixed, then put into pots make
an excellent substitute for potted
meat.
CII0coLATro DESSERTS.
Snow Pudding—To make the pud-
ding, cream one-half cup of butter,
add one cup of sugar and beat until
very light, then add alternately one-
half cup of Milk and two and one-
half cups of flour sifted with a level
tablespoon of baking powder. Lastly
fold in gently the stiffly whites of
four eggs. Turn into buttered mid -
ding mould and stean two hours.
Turn out and serve with
Chocolat &MCC—Moisten a round-
ing tablespoon of cornstarch with
one-quarter cup of milk. Put one
square of unsweetened chocolate in a
saucepan and set over hot water un-
til melted, add one-hali cup ef sug-
ar and gradually one and three-
quarters cups of hot milk rind ....the
moistened cornstarch. Cook •ten ,
minutes, stirring constantly until. •
thickened. Flavor with va.nilla, and
8eChocolat e Blancmange—Mix one-:
ball cup of sugar, one ounce, or one
Square of grated unsweetened choco- !
late and three level .tablespoons of
cornstarch ; moisten with one-half
cup of inilk. Put one and one-briff
cups of milk in a double boiler when .
hot add gradually to the first mix-
ture ; stir until the minture 'thick-
ens, then stir occasionally. Cook 15
minutes, remove from the fire, add
vanilla to flavor and turn into cups
or individual moulds that ha,ve been
'rinsed in cold watein Set aside to
chill and harden.. At serving time:
turn out on plates, dust liberally
with powdered or granulated sugar
and pour a generous quantity of ,
rich, plain cream round each por-
tion. This is a, simple, but nutris
tious and delicious„ „dessert.
TO STOP" MOUSE HOLES.
One frequently s, sees the acted:Eel
to stop mouse'holee with hard soaps
bits of cork aod. other substances.;
A method which has been tried for,
yesua and never known to fail is yet
so simple that the wherewithal ears
be found in every house. Crunaple a
section of newspaper, and thorough-
ly saturate it with turpentine. The
paper bunch should be /arge enough
to require stuffing into the bole, and
as it dries it hardens and will not
be disturbed by rats or miee for,
years, if ever. Mice will never diss
turb a hole stuffed in this manners
though tbe mice of after years may.
gnaw a new entrance into the pan-
try. These little animals are re-
sponsible for much ruined food, ,;and
should not be allowed to carry an
their work of devastation when so
simple and effectual a remedy is at
hand. •
'
. • • .
)
Are a True Heart Tonli;',
Nerve Food and Blood Enricher. Thor bond
up and renew ail the worn out and witate41
tissues of the body, and restore palest health:
and vigor to the watt re SySt Ctn. '
Nervousness, 5leep0rssness, Nervoua Prose
tration, Brain lag, Lack of Vitality. Atli
Effects of La Grippe, Ancemia, Week an.
Dizzy Spelts,_ Loss of Memory, Palpitation o
the Heart, Loss of Energy. Shortneas
Breath, etc., cattail bo cured by using A
Milburn's llea.rt e-nd Nerve Pins 4
Prim/ 60e. a hex or 3 for $1.25. All dealers 01
Thu T. mita-caw 00., JAMMED, Terentet Oiski
manmormamme,seinow.warr..artemorawlerrmeesewomme. emnstroireszi
•
Weal; Nervous, Diseased Men.
Thousands 01 roung and 11.fatle Aged 4ien are autittally swept to a premature grave
through early indiscretions awe later excesses, Self abuse and oenstitutiottallIteed
Diseases have ruined and wrecired the life of mealy a promising 70111110 011111. Have
vo)1 any of thefollowitig symptoms; Nervous and Despondent; tired in Morning;
No Ambition; aletnery Poor; Easily Eatiguect; Excitable and Irritabie: Eyes men
Pimples on the 11acin Dreams and Draine at Nigia; Res Iesst Zaggard Lookiny;
Inotchel;. Sere Throat; riair Loose; Pales in the. Ilody; auneeli
Eyes: Legless; Distrustful and Lack of Pmeray and Strength.
Our New Areated 2'perr1n:ent will build yon up mentally, physically
andsexually. Cialrt'S Guaranteed or 170 Pay.
08 V2A110 iff DETROIT. DANIS etCuSITY.
.0140 NetteD Use." aVitheat 1/Valtten Goiszatt
A ealareeroala 1ttD3T LI1113111.
T. j, I.I,MEREOIT nos a Narrow Zscape,
"I live aSarin. At school / learned ae earls lad& whieli
le; IZ weakened me senually audrnettally. Vaiiiiiybolors
sold X wntr as goitufo "decline" ( Oonsuxnpt(oit) Fitially, "alate
Goldeu iNtottlier," edited try Dot Keintedy a Kergan fen tete my
hands. 1 lettrurd the ertala tied earmr, Self abuse had -seeped ley
vitality. X took the New Zfeibed 7i•tatmild and was cured, Sty friends tbins I wee
cured of Consumption. X bare seat them 11111117 95110310(, all of whore were cured,
Their New Method Treatment cuppllt.s -cigar, Vitality 10111 mattased."
Consultation free, iicolisPrea. Write for Quattion Mast for Soma Trestmost.
Drs. icennetly 4'; Kergan, 1420 8*IleirYIRS'trled'
e ro , itl 3.