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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1903-1-29, Page 7a Clenktline rter..'s ,ittle Liver ills. Must Bella Signaperce of - Seo Pee -Simile Wrapper Below. 'vary small em.d es etlGy to tasse as sagara CARTER:8 MTH!, LLS. rON LIEADACHts FOR BIM NESSk_ Fail BILIOUSNESS., FOR TORPIO LIVER. TON CONSTIPATION. PON SALLOW SKIN. TNE COMPLEXION edai IGYsINVJIMMI IYIUGT 11AVE HA•Nra, es esee 'Purely eseectsene./...efeeseesee. -,7=reaserrease--- CURE. SICK llEADAGHE. 01-1, MY HEAD: HOW IT Acelessi PIMPLVOUS BILIOUS SICK PERIOBICAL SPASMODIC Headache is not of itself a disease, but Is generally eaueed by- some disorder of the stom- ach, liver or bowels. . Before you can be cured you must remove the cause. 1 HEADACHES« Burdock Blood Bitters will do it for you. It regulates the stomach, liver and. bowel°, purifies the blood arid tones up the whole byte -tenet° full health and eeeeser. • DR. WOOD'S AY PINE SYRUP Stops the irritating 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 eases of Coughs, Colds, Bron- chitis, Asthma, Hoarseness, Sore Throat and. the first stages Of Consumption. Mrs. Norma Swanston, Cargill, Ont., writes : "I take great pleasure in recom. mending Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. • I had a very bad cold, could not sleep at • night for the coughing and bad pains in ray chest and lungs. I only used half a bottle of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup and was perfectly well again." • Pelee 25 cents tiotiba 'Make Weak Hearts Strong. Make Shaky Nerves Firm. , They, glee a Sure Sure.fee NerVOUSneSS,SleeplesSnesS, Lo of Energy, Brain Fag, After fects of La Gri pe, Palpitat tL . •ene THE EVILS OF JEALOUSY It Is. Nothing More Nor Less Than a Fatal Monomania0 eEntered eccordlng to Act of the l'ar. Itatnellt of Vanada, in the ;tear Ono Thousand rimeiluadred and Tinee, by Wm. Betty, of Toronto, at tee bepartaient of Agriculture. Pewee'," A desPateh from Chicago Says: Rev. Frarik -De Witt Talmage peach- ed from the following text: Pre - verbs vi, "Jealousy is the rage of a man." „ What does rage signify? Righteoue indignation? A calm, dispaesionate arraignment or castigation? A dee nunciation, indieiously planned and yet overwhelmingly a,nd scathinglY delivered, as when. Edmund Burke exposed the misdeeds of Warren Hase tinge in the famous trial at •West- minster? A rebuke such as Jesus gave to the Pharisees, .who had dragged a poor, helpless, friendless, sinfui woman to his feet, when he turned and said to the accest3rs, "Let' him that is without sin cast the first stone at her?" • Is rage merely ,a blind remonstrance, eui earneet and yet gentle expostulations a hortatory admonition, a Christian iiinj given.With the holy de- sire to save and redeem the 'meson who hae sinned or unintentionally done wrong? Oh, no! - 'Rage is not a well composed censure. Rage is unbridled fury; rage is a • fierce, wild, all consuming, fiery passion burning at the he.art, and mine; rage is a de- mon etabbieg at the vitals of all true love; 'rage is ct Satanic iconoc- last shattering every sacred serine of the intellect; rage is an ineanity, a dercingernene of moral sensieilities. It is an unreasonable and mlieason- ing frenzy, glorying in absurd hallu- cinations. Rage's throneroom is a madhouse; rage's: courtiers are the inhabitants of a chamber of horrors; • rage's only music is the echoing shrieks and sobs of the eternally lost and of the destroyed who can never die. - THE EVIL SPIRIT. Maddening jealouey would destroy every successful rival who might stead in its way. It is tho. evil' sphit which made Saul's eyes flash fire when he gripped a javelin i and hurled it at David's head, inerely because the maidens of his kingdom had greeted the returning warriors with the song, "Saul has slain his thousands. but David his ten thou- sands.' It is the spirit which made the French generals betray the shepherd girl, Joan of Arc, into the hands of the English, sfo that she shaved be burned 'at the stake in. the streets of Rouen xaerely because she had won victories they could • never have achieved. It is the stpirit, which inade the Spanish courtiers compel Columbus to die in otscurity and sent Sir Walter Raleigh to the block. It is the evil spirit which made Charles H. Spurgeon and Row- land Hill hated by some of the Lon- don ministers of their day and which made Harvey and Jenneaand James Y. Simpson encounter their greatest opposition from jealous men of -their own profession. It is the spirit which made Voltaire denounce Bacu- lard d'Areaud and which sent the bullet of Aaron Burr straight through the heart of Alexander Ham- ilton. Jealousy in the heart pro- duces strange hallucinations in its victims. The jealous man feels that the success of another is in some way a robbery of himself. The jeal- ous politician will not support the ndmince - of his party, because he wanted the nomination himself; the jealous surgeon cannot rejoice that another surgeon has cured a cripple if he has never performed the opera- tion himself; the jealous minister cannot rejoice at betueng that an- other church is crowded if his own is empty; the jealoue weinan cannot bear to hear praise.s of the beauty of another woman. Thus no sooner does any man or woman win success in any depart- ment of life than many, jealous, un- successeul rivals become beside there - selves with rage. As a monomaniac may be rational on every subject but one, so the jealous man may be fair and just on every question, but be .absolutely insane and unjust when the works and lives of his successful rivals are discussed. If you are a jealous man, you will turn upon them all your batteries of scorn and denunciation. You will magnify their faults and gloat over their imperfections, you will loathe them, with an unutterable loathing, and when, on account of your un- just criticisms, you nia.y have over- thrown a successful rival, you, as a jealous man, will join in the pande- monium of a demoniacal • joy in Which all the evil spirits of 'the in- ferno join in the chorus. You will gleefully clap your hands and shout: "Alm, we have destroyed him! We have d stroyed the man who has -tand in our way!" T WAY.' TO SUCCESS. Inlosophy of the Golden and that men help eelping instead of bo- thers is. illustrated in it L, Moody, What 'li some respects no mail pow - s s ) of VO 10 individual characteristic, i one re- sPect e believe he wae the peer,, • if notelhe king, •of them all, 3 do not believe Mr: Moody had one infinitesi- mal particle of jealousy iu his make- up. Instead of trying ,to focus all - the attention of the religious worl upon hiinself he spent most of hi life in pushing other religious work ers to the front. The bigger th man. the, more anxious Mr. Mood was to call public attention to him lfo breught across the water Nene Drummond and, John McNeill and F 13. Meyer and G. el, C. McGreeo and Campbell-Morgen and many others. He invited to his own plat- forms tbe. mightiest religious work ere of his generation. Fa place them by his side as be Wel: "Bre ther in Christ, win a. mighty gospe • victory. I am praying for you. The bigger success you have the happier I.will be." WHY MOODY S U 0 CEEDED. Nebat was the inevilabie result? When eft, s Moody tried to advance those Christien works, whom some. people 'Might have called his rivals, he adveneed himself into the hearte of sinful men and women as well as into the chief human leadership ef the Christian world. Many contem- porarres raay have excelled him. in individual and particular gifts, but in mighty, masterful leacieeship. in the fame and eminence which will cause his name to go clown through the coming centuries as a Christian •worker, in his induenee upon the men of his day, Mr. Moody stood head and shouldere above all • the Christian workers of his time. He won this enviaele si tittle because he did not have a particle of jeal- ousy in ids makeup. He won it. be- cause he tried to eelp his rivals in- stead of to destroy them.. No man ever successfully bunt temple of fame upon the ruined foundations of a good man's li'l fe. ee javelin of jealous hate has a. poisoned handle whieh is more deadly than its veno- mous tip. It will more surely de- stroy -the life of a num who • at- tempts to hurl it than the life of the rival against whom it is thrown. Maddening' jealouey will make its inful victim turn upon his best - friends. Many pathetic scenes are daily witnessed in the insane asy- lums of the land; but, to me, the pa- tients who am to be pitied the most, are, not the driveling. e• or • the men and women whose minds • have crumbled into inuch ruin • that they can sit hour after hour making doll dresses or .with glassy eyes vacantly staring for days at a time at some crack in the wall. I believe the insane patients who should be pitied the most are those whose diseased' minds make them think that their wives or husbands or parents or children or brothers and sisters have been untrue to them. I pity the young girl who has gone mad because she was jilted the night before her wedding • and who sits by the window continually denouncing the recreant %lover and the woman for whom he broke his vows. I pity that old gray haired mother who for twenty years has been denouncing her only. son be- cause she thinks he wants to poison her for her money. I pity that in- sane wife who will never allow her husband to enter her room because she thinks he has been false to her. Ah, these are • the • insane patients who are to be pitied ! Never did John. Fox in his famous "Book of Martyrs" depict more excruciating agonies -than some of these poor in- sane wretches daily seller, who brood over the idea that their friends hae-e been turned into - emies. • Maddening jealousy, often. baseless, is the cause of innumerable domestic and social infelicities, causing misery alike to its victim and its object. It makes the wife suspect the - hus- band of wrongdoing. It makes, the husband impugn the motives aad actions of his wife. It is the eause of most of the quarrels of lovers, which have wrecked the happiness of many lives for time and eternity. It lashes Othello. into a frenzy until the murderous fingers are clutching at the throat of his innocent wife and the suicidal knife has made an end • of the swarthy Moor. It was the cause of the horrors in the last earthly clays of Ivan the Terrible, who in a fit of jealousy with an iron staff crushed in the skull of • his eldest born and favorite child. It is the heaving, destructive earthquake which has, rocked to ruins thousands of family altars. It has shattered many a domestic wall under the eeaseless bombardment• of tempos - teens .denunciation and the irresis.. tible flood of remorseful tears. A CAUSELESS FRENZY. The saddest part of these insane afflictions, where men and women will sometimes turn upon their best friends and brood over the idea that they are untrue, is that often their frenzied surmises are without any laegitimate cause. • They may only be the strange halleeinations of a dis- eased intellect. Their loved ones may be doing everything in their power for their sick minds ; they may take them to the most expen- sive bf asyhims and have for them the best • of physicians and nurses• ; hey may continually visit them and ve their rooms Med with -flowers have carriages alwaye at their al.'I7hese Mende may • stint ves and lavish their money in ssible way for the comfort ak I/eluded relations, yet mtients can never • be theh friends are . Though husbands ildren may be • do- t can be done for they will • keep ngs and foul t 'ions until at last they will drive those who r nearest ead dearest to there e their sides, Ro impresSion will c,ause a husband to despise a. Wife gleiciter than 'the• 1)010 that seie dietruste him and Will net credit what he says ; IftIONVIedge on earth will send a young woiriaa to destruction sooner than. the thought that the mam man she arkied has dropped the role of e loser for that of a sneak- ing detective,. Gontinual fault flee- ing e nd false ac au sations and frenzied distrM ust ul venm oous SUeerS 11.114 eaultitudieoue reproaches and • sulky breedings elwaere defeat their own enes with or loved ones as jealousy also ni defeats its own ai in our treacherous .dealiags with d hated rivals. The rattlesnake's c fang is a poor it ceptacle in which - to store the honey of an orange e blossom. Fathers and niothers and older , men and women, I would not for • a y mornent nast a slur on your paet usefulness or belittle the respect ✓ which the world ought to show to gray hairs ; but, honestly and frankly, do you not feel that the _ young folks ought to have their first d lessons • of magnanimity from you ? - When your time comes to go, would you not rather that your sons and daughters • should weep about your dyinge bed and feel that they have lost a dear, helpful friend than that they shall be glad that you are dy- ing, because you, are holding with a selfish grip to all that .you have ? TUy azed friend, y,ou should not only be willing to live, but you sbould. also be willing to let live. Every old merchant should try to help the young merchant. Every old pity - skean sbould be ready to lend his medical books to the young physi- cian and speak a good word for bena in the neighborhooei. Every old law- yer ehoulci he willing to give .his advice to • the young lawyer, and every old minister to encourage the young minister. Ye older men, you should not only be proud of the fact that you have made a success, but you should also be proud of the fact tliat you have helped some younger man to climb the difficult heights from which you are now able calmly to look clown upon • the thousands struggling in ascent far beneath. * SIN IS l'HE CHIEF CAUSE. But maddening jealthiser has a die reet personal ceruse. All insanities are the result of some 'organic or functional disorder. Sometimes in- sanity may be caused by a faU or a blow. Part of the skull may be crushed in, and a piece of tbe bone will be found,• by postmortem' ex- amination, to be pressing on the brain. Sometimes; insanity is the re - suit of overtaxed nerves ; sometimes the disease is -inherited from ances- tral .causes ; so maddening jealousy has a direct cause. That spiritual diagnosis can be spelled in the one fearful ,word of three letters,. Is only cause is "sin," The same kind of sin which to -day fills our jails and reformatory institutions and lifts the bang•man's noose is the fiendish, maddening evil eagainst which, in his day, .King Solomon lifted his voice in protest. ' Now, my brother, as the insanity of jealousy is caused by sin, wit/ go u not come to that Christ whoefe willing and able to take this sui out of your life ? In the Bible we read that Christ was and is able to make the evil passions come out of a man. • So great was and is Christ's divine power in this re- spect that Luke tells us there was a man afflicted not only with one, but with a legion or four thousand, devils. This man was so goaded by this demoniac possession that, though he was bound in fetters of chains, he would snap them as easily as a lion might brush aside a spider's web. He was so distracted that in his frenzy he would tear off all his clothes. 'But when Jesus spoke the word of deliverance the man who was once insane immediate- ly became clothed and in his right inind. 11 Ohristcould do all that far -the insane man of old, will .you, not let Jesus cure you also of • the awful insanity of jealousy ? Oh, my sinful friend, you have hated men and despised men and found fault with men long enough 1 Will • you not here end now, by Christ's help, learn to love men and try to help men instead cif trying, to destroy them ? WINNING A TCHULTA.N BRIDE. Among the Tchulian Tartars a cur- ious mode of “popping the question" exists. The Tchulian bachelor in search of a wife, baying filled a brand new pipe with fragrant to -1 Naze°, stealthily enters the dwelliug of the fair one upon whom he has bestowed his affectione, deposits the pipe upon a conspicuous ,artiele of - furniture, and retires on tip -toes to some convenient lading place in the . neighborhood, local etiquette, requir- ing that he should exectute this strategic movement apparently•un- detected by thc. damsel of his choice or anyother 'Amber of her feenily.1 affectation of secrecy and looks into s Presently he returns without further! the apartment in a caetial sort of ! way. A single glance at the pipe j be left behind him enables him to Ill learn the fate of his prosposal. If it II has been smoked he goe$ forth an al accepted and -exultant bridegroom; c if not, the • Offer of his hand and heart bas been so irrevocably tected as not to be even worth a T pipe of tobacco. • • PLE.A.SING Trm A scientist once put on aetomatic music box on the, lawn, and• emit s many• hears watching the birds a wither about it. A looking -glass a put up where the birds can see them- selves in it, is also very attractive, rt, THE S. S. LESSON. IZTTRITATIONAL XXSSOZT, Text Of the Lesson, Acts xvii., 22-24, Golden Text, Acts =vie., 18. 2:: , 2\h(nntti 8v,Ifoun:refoieye an alit:nroralleltitiyh this inecriptien, To the UnelloWn a 0 aforehip, Ham declare I mite yen. The Thesseloeimi persecutors fol- lowed the apoetles to Boras, and stirred up the people againet them so that Paul went en to Melees, leavieg Silas and Timothy at Berea: Those who conducted Paul to Athens brought back wOrd to Silas and 'Timothy to follow quickly, which they did. While Paul waited for them, seeing the city wholly green to idolatry, he did not fail, to preach Jesus and the resuigeetion in the synagogues and ia the market as he had • opportunity. So they brought him to Mars hill, the Areopagus, end asked 'him to tell them of this new doctrine ; hence • thi$ discourse in whieli he speaks of their great religiousness and takes as his topic the enseription on the attar to the unknown God, ae . 24, 25, Cod that made the world and all things therein * * * giveth to all *life and breath and all things. Ire takes them to the fast verse in the Bible, they being probably wholly ignorant of the Scriptures, and tells them of one who made sun, moon and stars, the mountains and the sea and all living ereatures and therefore needs not be pro- pitiated nor any gifts from man, J 'Teeing that He Himself gives to all creatures all that they possess or • need. • In one •of tne oldest portions 1 of the Bible we read that in His hand is the soul of every living thing and the ereath of all man kind" (Job sal, 10), yet there are many who possess the Bible who do not seem to believe this and act as if God required something from them before He would do anything for them. They do not know Him as the one who "giveth to all," w.ho "gave His only begotten Son." 26-28. And hath made of one blood all nations of men, * * * for nusrlfebieningwe live and move and have o • The great Creator and sustainer of all things wants us to know Ilini I and reveals Himself sufficiently in inature to make people want to know Him better (Rom. i, 20, 21): and where people are living up to , desire more, as M the case of Core I the light they have and earnestly minas and the queen • of Ethiopia's 'treasurer, God will take means to j enlighten theme His nearness to us 1 ie strikingly descrihed in Rom, x, !u -cu, -tete it speaks of those who have His word and in verses 114, 1.5, raises the question .01 how can those who have not His word hear at tailless some one take •it to them. 20. Foe as much then as we are the offspring of Cod we ought not to think that the Godhead is like untee gold or silver or stone, graven by art and man's device. Since God created us, how can the things which we make be our gods? The folly of worshiping idols is fully and simply set forth in Isla ad. 18- 26, and eleewhere in the prophets. But what shall be said of tease ohurcth of to -day, which seems to put such trust in idols of men ad m rid etal rath- er than in the living God? Is not the cry heard, If we had the man or 1 the men or if we had the money, how I much we might do! Whereas the Spirit of God says, "Them is none that calleth up -on Thy name, that starreth up enneelf to take hold of Thee." "The silver is Mine and the gold is Mine, saith • the Lord of Hosts" (Isa. lxiv, 7; Hag. ii, .8). If the ch.urch would trust in Him and not in men nor man's wisdom nor MEW'S works, He might have oppor- tunity to •fulfill et:o her Chron- xvi, 9; , Iii, 10. ••1 80, 81. But now commaneeth all men ,everywhere to repent, becauee he bath. appointed a day in, which Ho will judge the world in . -righteousness by that .nian whom he hath.ordain- ed.. • • God is long suffering, not willing that any should perish, therefore. for the time, passing over much •that deserves puniehment, although the sinner, because of the. hardness of his heart and his natural enmity to God, takes advantage of this mercy only to • do' worse (II Pet, iii, 9; leech viii, 11). The book. just quot- ed from seys, "God shall bring every work into judgment with every secret thing, wbether it, oe good or whether it he evil" (leccie ail, 14), and this is abundantly confirmed in the New Testament. Our Lord often spoke of the judgment to, emir , e. se • o •"') 24; 86; xxv, 84, 41, 16) and also Said th Matt.at the Father judgeth no mare but " lath• committed all judgment unto the Son (Jolla v, 22). I do not find in Scriptere that whieh •some peak • of as a general judgment and a general resurrection of all, good and bad, cit the same time; bet I do nd that the dead in Christ 10(3 first,, a thousand years before he unrighteous, .11-(1 1..l -rt our Lord alls the first the reu srrection of the ust Thess, iv, 16; Bev. xx, 5, 6; P. 1, 5; Imke xiv, 144. The judge- nent of ail believers for their sins lstivr; `4. atjorl Saturgo uo xliii, 25). Their judginent for vice will be at the judgment seat el Christ at the first resurrection. 82-84. When they beard of the re- erreetion of the dead, some mocked nd others said, Wo will hear thee, gain of this matter. They had their gods and herbes nd great leaders, but that olio bad isen from the dead was folly in the ight of their wisdo:m, simply an inpossibility; so they twilled away, riving heard enough of such • non- ense, and Paul', having borne faith - testimony, torned away from hem. But hie testimony IVA'S not O rino tor S01116 believed, both men ncl women., tend that le ail we ean '.poet in this age ot gatherieg out he church, 'There to eomfort in while a• eombniabon o1. a musical box and a looking -glass pleases the birds more, than anything elSo one could Put out fpr their canuselnent, ' • Spain's now gavel: programme in, chides the building of 12 large iron - clads, 8 cruisers, 77 torpedo -boats, and,10 submarines. Spain lost 411, Mo.st all her navy in the lute war With the United Statea • fl TQ t.11'Eth 1-1:c t T Rill:: or °513411-6T9i TReijorialtUC:C11:110etdAL:111.117' eses, • ME CONSTITUTION esa e•e' 4°nd°11'Erlefeetreal'Cl"BoS fs. '',:irRta BRITAIN r AMERICe all Drugqis 5 a Chem Pero In Canada : $1.00 ; •Six bottles for $5,00 blaimmmt•••••••••••••••••14,0, Nervousness predominates in wo- men, but men are also subject to it. V,..lccess of various Idnds eatlee$ it, also intellectual toil and anxicky. ec3T. JAMAS WAVERS are peculiarly indicated in any form of nervous de- bility, as they tone up the entire sys- tem and restore the nerves to their normal condition. They are indica- ted in exhaustion, mental inertia and senile weakness. They containno alcohol, not being a liquid remedy. Their effect therefore is not that of a mere stimulant, but tonic and permanent. ST. JAMItS VT.Anns helnstomach, digest food and send the nutriment through the blood, and this is th,e honest way to get hea and strenght, the kind that lasts o s and breeds the energy much. con partiettlaele 'Please St. James Wagers. They b. been specittlly usefttlin Ityy tice when emp,Io3re4ntrvoli, trouble." tie, Atti4„ Stjarnes Wafersare not a remecty : tolite nutneraus doctor:re- cummendiag Them their fiaients we moil Me formula Itlope request. • Where dealers are not sellingthe Wafers, they are mailed. upon re. .ceipt of price at the Canadian branch: St. Amu Wafers CO.. nee St. Catherine St., Montreal. John vi, 8—"All that tbe Father giveth Me shall come to Me," etc. PASTRY HINTS. Although the making of. good Pas- try requires real skill, by closely ad- hering to the following rules, even cess. enovice can scarcely avoid suc- s. Be sure that your flour is of good quality and perfectly dry. Whether 'butter, lard, drippings, or suet is used, be careful that it is of stihbeIebest quality •and as cold as pos- . Have all your utensils and hands ireproachabey clean. Melee the pastry in as cool a place as you can. A light cellar, with a clean stone slab ia it, iestead of a board is desirable. Sift the flour, not only to remove the lumps, but to get in the air 'which lightens pastry. It is ofteii peace(' tightly in bags, and the air pressed out in consequence. If there is no sieve available, let the flour fall lightly from your fingers into the basin several times. Mix with ice water. Dee a knife to mix with, being cooler than your hands. Add plenty of water when begin- llnagt Thee menixdture, but very sparing - The less flour used for the- pin and board when rolling it out, the bet- ter; much makes it hard. Do not turn the pastry over. The side that lies against the board af- ter the first roll must remain there, as the side that the p1n. passes over is the best looking, and has to •be placed outward. The richer the pastry, the hotter the oven Must be, Lay a scrap of pastry in the oven. If it takes long to color, tbe oven is too cool. If it blackens, the oven is too hot. When done, remove quickly from the oven or it gets hard and chippy. Let all pastry cool gradually in a team. place. If put at once into a cold pantry, the steam pondenees i0 it instead of escaping, end causes it to Meanie heavy. Small pastries are best cooled on e. sieve, or tilted against a plate -for the some reason. Pastry with baking powder in it should be baked immediately; other kinds may with advantage be kept in a cool place hours or even days be- fore using. • Handle the rolling pin lightly Do not use more pressure than is neces- sary to make the pastry get Targer and thinner with each, roll. Short 'Crust—Weigh out half lb. eour, sprinkle on it half teaspoon salt and the same of baking powder. Pass through a sieve. Now take es Th. butter, lard, drippings or clarified fat. If the fat is hard, shred it — that is, cut in thin flakes with a knife --J.. and add it to the flour. If the fat is soft, it is best to lay it on the top of the flour and cut it up with a knife into quite small pieces. Nov rub the shredded fat well into the flour with the taps of the fingers, until the whole looks like fine bread - crumbs, Make a hollow in the mid- dle, pour in some ice water, and mix it with two fingers or a knife till the whole is of a soft but not wet paste. If by accideet you make it too moist, you must knead in lightly a, little.more lightly .1, rollthg o use a should along, Sprinkle the pia over t pastr the fl end the whole is ready for is proPerlY, in, which ss all e ends. oard, eever e the to "r • ou flo wit Mix This seen possi the ese care that through. Fol the edges. Put ice 15 minutes, rolling and folding ti rolled and folded seven it away to. cool between eadli rolls, and always keep tbe side o the pastry whioh has np edges to your right hand, for the same rea- son. This pastry 13311St be baked in a very hot oven. "Well, Willie," asked grandma, "have you had all the dinner you. -want ?" "No, answered the • boy, "but I have had all I can. eat." The Origines.tor of DORN'S KIONEY,PILLS, The original kidney specific for the cure of Backache, 'Diabetes, Bright's Disease and all Urinary Troubles. Don't a.ceept something Just its good. See you get the genuine N' They. cure when all others fall. Not a Cure Alt but purely a Kierecy Pat _500. Tier box, or 3 for $1.26. All dealers or SUD DOAN ItIDNNY PILL CO. TOr0140, Ont, eleeet'e,e, Rs. ark ir'EgeqtlfritcA The Leading Specialists of America. 25 Years in Detroit. Dank Security. Nine out of every ten men have been guilty of transgression against natttre in their youth. Nature never excitses, no matter how young-, thoughtless or ernortut he may be. The putileameut and suffering corresponds with the crime. The only escane from itti ruinous results isproper scientific treatment to counteract its effects, 1.'he DRAINS, either by nightly losses, or secretly through the urine, muet be stopped -the IsMie must be built up and invigorated, the blood xttust be eurieedt the SEXIIAT.4 ()SWANS atust be vitalized and developed, the BRAIN must be nourished. Our New Matted Treatment etovicies au these requirements, tinder its in fluente the brain becomes active, the bioiticli pi:trifled so that ail pimples, biotcnes and ulcers else -epees; the net-Vasi beCenie strong* as steel, SO that nervoliS- ness, basefitiness and deseendeuey disappear; the eyes bccOniti bright, the face full atm clear, energy reettrivi to the 'body, and the nteraU physical and sexual sys terns are in vivre ted; ail drains cease -no more vital waste tow the system. The The Various organs become natural and manly. Wa invite. all the afiliCteci to call and cousuit us conildetaleity end free of ciiarge, Cures OustrOuteeitt or no Pay. We treat and etre: Votricoetic„ 1oxci IDinconnis, Stricture Gieet. EmIaton.a. Uriranry Firstins Sometuntorrhoets, Uttuutint.. Ditiebarges4 1{itlireex and Htutthtor 1101shosen. CONSULTATION PRIM 11001(Uft rtenE, If tumble to call, Write for a QtYZSTION insatlIX for Soklie Treatment, DR. KENNEDY & KERGAN.. 148 StIEL1111?" iL3T., )ETIO1T, ratCLL „gee. eliedge ' t',Akterri