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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1903-3-5, Page 7oquisa.K.VF41 Genuine 1 arter s Little Liver Pills. ifflust!ear Signature or 04-7-Zeacieelef $ee PaceSimito Wrapper Below. Tery email Baia as ewer to mice as elegem FOR ilEAOACRE0 FOR DIZZINESSI, FOR 311.110USIIEit., FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION, FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR TR COMPLEXION CARTEKS iTTLE E R LL. villa; 02:q3/II.Td2,021 Si ItAN't "50 HATURC, 15 14353 I rawctile Vegetatlea..0area, CLINE SICK HEADgkCHE.. ITT" S - MAKES PE MANENT, CURLS, Of such severe diseases as scrofula, running sores, salt rheum or ec- zema, shingles, erysipelas and can- cer, as well as boils, blotches, pim- ples, constipation sick headache, dyspepsia, and all disorders of the stornach,, liver, kidneys, bowels and blood. Burdock Blood Bitters always does its work thoroughly and com- pletely, so people know that when B.B.B. cures them they're cured to stay cured. • miLBug..N's Arc; a combination of the active principles of the most valuable vegetable remedies or dis- eases and disorders a the Liver, Stomach and Bowels. atiek Headache, Jaundice, letearta Burn, Catarrh or th a -St enas.ch,Dizzle nese, Blotches and Pireplea. larspepole„ sour 8ton2aeh, Water Brash, Liver Complaint, Sallow or, Muddy' Complexion. - Sweeten the breath and clear away all waste and poisonous matter from the system, -Price 25e. a bottle or 5 for 31.00. All dealers or Taut T. iliatentri Co., Limited, Taranto, Cot. Backaches of 11omen Not one :woman ir wentY has a strong back. Backache le the cry of Weak Kidney° foe help. Baokeehe is the wizening note of numb more a vetoes trouble to come, If not ati. tonded to immerliately. Backache earl be ured quiokly and eitivnimeontly by using DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS. ,The great and well known Kid- ney remedy. They have cured thousands of women. They will cure you, ; Mrs. R. le Dane, Mapleton, N. B., Writes "1 VMS grealy troubled. with kn.che and pain ie my sido. SaW Don's Kidney Pills advertised, So thought 1 Would give them a trial. .A.fter the fuel) box 1 began to feel better and 1 took two mere to make a complete cure, 1 eoneider Defin's Kidney Pills g0001, haessla reliable nualicilie for all kid- ney tree -hies mad can highly reconnueed them." 1500,j)er ea or 3 for 01.25. .M1 dealers el' Patei .4neugir Co„, Toronto, On1.. l'E'irER RUN IMO DE T. Avoid It As You Would Pe4ilence or 'iamine. fEntorett according to Act or the rale .ieese One -teeth et his income, Thous/lad NM° Hundred (nut Three . liame4t t411"1"' th the 't3e'r Qii° Debt is riot .oniv the offspring of by Win. Bally, of Tomato, • at the Pride, but is often the parent of a )epartment of Agriculture, Ottawa. , large family of criminal children. The study of genealogical tables 14 A despatch from Chicath saYs among' the most interesting of Rev, Frank De Witt Talmage peach- studies. Certain families nearly al - ed from the following text e-Romane ways have good ehildren ; yot1 can xiii, 8, "OWe Pio man anything." Ono day a fautous scholastic clergy- trace them down froin generation to generation, Other families nearlY ale man was talking to a rioted practi- ‘veys have bad children ; there is ape oat preacher, "How is it," said he, , parently something in their blood "that You can collect each gre" that is diseased and contaminated audiences to Ihear you preach ? I As the waters falling down the cas- have one of the best -private lib- cedes near Duluth show the dieeolor- reales in the world. I spend at least ations contracted in passing through ten, hours a day in my study with forests of cedar and, tamarack miles my- books,' held yet the people prefer awey, so the blood of some children to hear you preach instead of me, is tainted with, criminal tendencies, They want to hear your sermons, inherited even before they are born. although you do not work a third They axe born with a propensit3r for as hard upon them as I do. Hall 01 lying, for „ stealing, for inebriety, your. days are- spent in calling and which they aro sel•dom able to eradi- io veandering about the streets and cate. But, thougia those cbildren in the stores." "Ali," answered 'the may not be able to overcomes their practical nilaister to his seimientic evil teedeeciee in their own strength, friend, "the difference between us ie they can overeome there by the help that you read books, while I study, 01 a s u p ernatural power, which is the stuff out 91 Willett books are offered to all who are tempted. made, You breathe the atmosphere WILLFULLY RUNNING- INTO of musty tomes ; I, by close a§so- DEBT. dation, studs/ the hearts of the mon Wililul cl bt ' that kind. of debt alai ;women with whom, I cone . t le is 11 tl 1 t 211 0. W le many a, ow' lemse VCS contact. You translate epitaphs of run through useless and sinful ex - dead men ; analYze the troileles tces, While 'the young man and temptations and sins of . rave • igal is being 'financially ground to pieces men ; I alt With them -at the table ; by the upper and nether millstones I go with them to their stores; then, of this kind of debt what is often whenT begin to discuss their trials ,. s TAO IXIOSt ,Zlatural thing for hun to clo and temptations, they naturally ? .Ask that young collector who, want to come and hear me preach." . is taking some of his employer's moa bFFSPRING OF PRIDE. ney to wine as he 'foolishly thinks, 'a Debt is generally. the offsprieg -- fortune at the gambler's wheel. He pride. The barenecessaries of life is not at • heart a. bad Young man.. are very small.. Nearly every man He intends to pay that money back. chn make enough money to provide se me expects to use it only for a for these necessaries if he will only little while and then. return it with work hard, do his best and not interest after he has escaped waste %is . income on usaMse ex- from the clutches • of merciless travaganes. Henry Ward Beecher debt. Ask that young em - once made the declaration that a bezzler who has just felt the heavy man could feed himself and wife and hand of the law placed upon his a family of growing ehildren upon, shoulder. Did he over expect that $1.50 per week. For making this the late suppers, the theatre tickets statement Mr. 13eecher was sharply and the attendance at the races arraigned by thousands of critics, wduld yet end in a prison cell? No, Many newspaper editorials affirmed no He was led as a lamb to the that the Plymouth pastor was ad- slaughter by the evil worryings of ;vacating the reduction of the la- debt-rtccumulating debt. borers' salaries to 25 cents a day. When a man needlessly and will - Ile was not attempting any such fully runs into debt, he opens the thing. What kr. Beecher tried to sluice gates of falsehood. Ile pro- rove- was thie : The bare neces- lasses his, willingness to clasp hands .aaries..of We are very snaall ; teterp• with deception .and deceit. The' debt-, fore most people can provide for or says to his creditor, "I have no their actual needs it they will only money this morning, but I will pay be energetic an.d at the same time you next- week." Els words'. are be frugal. . false; he bas no intention of paying next week. The debtor says: "i am now trying to sell some land. The deal. is almost closed; then I will send you a check." The debtor knows he is a falsifier; he has go land to sell. -, • One of...the dearestefriends I ever had by this curse of.' running into debt became a moral degenerate. He went to another friend and borrow- ed $600 and ga.va as security some cattle which he professed to own at that time in Kansas. Inefact, he did not owls a horn or a .hoof in ell ethe world. So the perjury habit, which is often the offspring of debt, will creep into a man's heart as a 'worth" timnels its way into the heart of a great tree and leaves there nothing but death and corruption and filth. "All liars shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brilnstone, which is the second death." Beware, 0 man, how you nourish this destroying child of perjury, which, is often the offspring of accursed debt! H.ELrLtsS AND INNOCENT VICTIMS. Willful debt is the fiend who cares. not how many helpless and •iamocent victims he may destroyin his own mmihilation. The pirates of old used to raise their black ,flags and prey upon the ancient shipping. The robbers of Scotland usea to place false lights upon the shores so that the ships would be decoyed upon the rocks and the wreckers conks col- lect the broken cargoes The man who willfully runs into debt is a human vampire who is sucking. the lifeblood out of his butcher and. bake s er, his tailor and landlord, hifriend a.nd his enemy alike. He tares not how he gets 'money so long as he gets it. Be cares not who has to suffer so long as his present desires are satisfied. What is the natural and inevitable result? There have This tyranny cif debt, which is the been thousands of small retail mer- chants driven into bankruptcy he- offspring- of false pride, makes its cause their cnstomers, supposed to But this frugality, in. many cases, 'pride will not permit them to prac- tice. Pride, with the smiling, super- cilious face and bediamoeded !lager, usually comes to the young - man's li om e evith such. ensinuating words as -these : "My friend, you have no eight to rear your family as you are doing. You should not allow yotir wife to stand fiehind a counter or to live in the back room of the store with bar two la -pies, as your mother once did. Thi5 is a different age from that in which your father started out, If you do not let 'your children grow up in a aespectable neighborhood and go -Co refined and expensive private schools, then their youthful associates will be bad, and refilled people will have nothing to do with them.' So the young man, who was making a humble income and was cai the bighroad to ultimate financial success, hires a private home on the boulevard. He moves his family away from the neighbor- hood of the store. ITe hires a clerk to do tile, work formerly done by his wife; while he himself is visiting the wholesale departments. The in- come, small before, becomes less and less ; the expenses 'of the family sus- tenance are doubled and quadrupled; a. haunted, Worried, anxious look comes over the young man's face. Instead of there being a balance 1.n the bank, now there is a deficit ; in- stead of the wholesale stores allow- ing the young man all the credit he wishes, now they begin to push him, and one day debt, the offspring of pricic calls at the store to see how the young man is getting along, but instead of debt now coining with the Obsequiousness of a visitor he strides into that young man's store and home with the mien and the heavy step of a tyrant and a mas- ter. -* TRYANNY OF DIFIBT. conquests over those who have large incomes as well as those with small. Only the other day there was buried in one of Chicago's cemeteries a man who forten. years had a Wary' of over $.9,000 per year. Yet that man was always in debt.. While he had an income of $2,500 he was trying - to live on .the scale e of those who had a 84,000 income. When. he was appointed a general superintendent of a large corporation, at per month salarY, he immediately moved his family into a new neighborhood and. tried to associate with Chit, cago's millionaires. That mail, when he died, did not own the home he lived in. Ile did not even Own the bed on which he died. Every parti- ele of real estate held in his name was plastered over with mortgages. Last fall he even allowed bps life in- surance p'Olicy to lapse because he could not afford to pa,y the few hun- k: iza.,tfars necessary to keep it tip,. triougn, he had a salary of $9,000 per year. So we find to -day that many a man who lives in a fine mansion is in the inercileas clutch of debt. The financial curse of this, age Is that meitittaleS of people, on accomit ()I false pride end. per- nicious , extravagance, are eking out a miserablo existence. These pooplo may move in the best society, so vetted, yet they nre far poorer them 1110 billable clerk wi th a paltry sal- ary of $1.0 a Mak Who 'saves at llberately enter a store and run up , be honorable men, would riot pay their bills. There have been hun- dreds. and thousands or poor widows and orphans and aged and helpless depositors of small stuns in tho banks who have lost all merely •be- cause the cashiers have become dee faulters and cared not whom they dragged down with them in their own moral and spiritual destructien, It is a contemptible act for a maa to steal, from a millionaire. It, is infinitely meaner for a woman to steal from her poor dressmaker, her cook or her washerwoman, or for it man to rob his groceryroan or ice- man or his coachman or the garden- er who sells to him his flowers, It is 'meaner because those who are rob- bed under such circumstances must perhaps lose their all and be driven to starve •and die, • A WELL DRESSED V/LLAIN. Willful debt, is often a well citessed villaia who Pretends to be an hon- est man. I11 olden times if a matt could not pay his debts he was looked upon in the same sense as a thief and sent to jail. Under the old Helium law, after' spending a certain time in jail, if he was still unable to pay hie -creditors, he was Sold into slavery and had to pass his llfe as a serf. Some one might say thatsueh e condition is very hard and unjust, and so it is. But, In many cases, when a Iran will de - a heavy bill, which he has no inten- titre, of paying,, he is jeet as muell a: robber as the enealc thiefwho rushee into the bakery and steals a loaf Of bread, arid he eliould have, little merey shown him. The debtor not only eteals the grocerysnan'S goods, but he steals les time and his ser - Vice. • • Many a man who for yeers has dee liberatelsorun up all the debts he can is to -day walking around our streets chzinzing . that ' in the eight of the law he is honest, After deliberately ewiadling all the meri he could be puts the little $nottey he had left in his wife's ,natee. Thea be entere the bankruptey court stud asks the juc,14e to free him from all . these financial obligations. Now, I care not what the bankruptcy court may say in sueh eases, no honest man, in the sight of God or man, can ever be morally freed from a fiearzeial debt until that debt is paid. It is a man's business to pay what he owes, no matter bowthebill was contract- ed, One of the first signs of Zac- chaeus' real eonversion was when he turned .to the Saviour and said, "Behold, Lord, the half of lay goods I give to the poor, and. if X have taken. anything from. , any maliaibi fourfold." In other words false accusaticm I restore tohe lj "If I have cheated any man out of his just clues, 1 am ready not only ?o restore to him the full amount of' money taken, but I will restore to him do.uble andtreble and quad- ruple that which I have taken." A.ncl-no man, in the sight of God,' can be a Chrietinn ratil he first sig- nifiee his intention. to repay to the utmost, of his ability all the money herrowed by hira and to cancel his fulnibligations to every one of his financial creditors. You Cannot loe-e God and at the same time signify a willingness to ' Cheat your fellow men, A PERTINENT QUIISTI_O„ In closing I would like to askirly hearers a pertinent question — Is not the chief reason why you are unwilling to publicly confess Christ because you have not been living right with your bellow men are try- ing to pay your 'honest debts? My friends, is the awful realization that you have been financially unjust . to your fellow raen. keeping you away from the love of .Christ? Will yen not try to undo that' wrong? Will you not follow the command of Paul, who tells us to "owe no man anything," tli'd same. Paul who tells us to "press toward the mark • for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus?" It may only take a small speck of dust in the eye to blind the sight and shut out the light of the noon- tide sini. It may Only take one bill which we refuse to pay to our neigh- bor to shut out all the glories of heaven. Paul does not ask of us an impossibility, but he does demand that we, one and all, should not only love God with all our souls, but also love our fellow men enough to be financially just to there as well as merciful. THE S. S. LESSON6 INTERNATIONAL LESSON, MARCH 8. Text • of the Lesson., Acts xier., 13-20. Golden Text, Acts xix., 17. .18, IA. We adjure you by Jesus, whom Paul preacheth. Thus the unbelievers though pro- fessedly.epriests of God, used that beautiful name as if it was a charm or carried with it some magic spell that anyone could use, • like people who now say concerniag Jesus, I'll try Him and see if He will do a/w- ilting for me. Ile is to be known and trusted, whole-heartedly re- ceived and relied. upon, for He is worthy and true and faithful, the •liring God. He is not to be treatecl as people treat a patent medicine -- try iteancl see 11 11 will do you good; but because he . is indeed the only Saviourof sinners and the Judge of all mankind 1 -le is to be honestly -re- ceived as such. 15, 16. And the evil spirit answered and said, Jesus I know, and Paul know, but wile are ye ? These Jews had called the MOM of the Lord Jesus over a man pos- sessed with an evil spirit, resisting and opposing Paui'somewhiet as the magicians in Ehypt withstood Meses, but God permitted the evil spirit to rebuke them and by the man possessed by the spirit to overcome them and cause 'them to flee from the house naked and wounded.' It could hardly be *ROS- sible that they would ever again attempt to play tricks zvith that holy name. What shall be said of those who now used that sacred name in every thoughtless and evil way ? And because no judgment falls upon them they wax worse and worse (Ecci. viii, 11). - 17. And this was known.to all the Jews end Greeks also dwelling Ephesus, and fear fell on thenakall, and the name of the Lord Jesus was magnified. In verses 8 to . 10 We read that Paul continued at Ephesus over two years, not without much opposition, but. also with marked results to the glory of God. In verses II and 12 we read of special miracles to con- firm and emphasize the gospel mes- sage, and now through the devil's own children the naine of Jostle is magnified. Ina: his letter to the Philippians Paul said, "Some indeed preach Christ even if envy and strife and some also of good will, The one preach Christ of contention not sincerely, supposing to add klic- tion to my bonds, but the other of love,„knowing that I am set for the defence of the gospel." Yot Paid said that as long as Christ was preached, whether ia pretence or in trait', he Would rejoice (Phil. i, 15- 18) The "all things" of Rom. 28, must include the opposition of the devil as Well as the manifest blessieg of God, and whatever lire permits the adversary to do must'in soino way be overruled for His glory, the highest, good .of Ws peo- ple 'and the hastening of Ms king - "3.1811: And many , that believed cantle 'and confeseed and allowed their deel'irdhiele salvation is wholly oi grnce thruugh faith, where faith is real there will be good works manliest a's 80. eridence before men of the faith that is really ip the heart before God (Eph. 11, 8-10; Tit. ilia 5, 8). The faith that is not manifest in works cannot' be a livirtg faith. Not any amount of works Ca/ our part, however good or great, ean save us, but being saved by Hie work alone (Jtom. 'iv, 5). He having been re - Caved by us, have cOMe to live in us, must Work out the salvation which he bas wrought in us (Phil, ii, 13; Rob, xiii, 20, 81), Hoaxers who are not doers are only seif-de- ceivere (Matt. VII, 26, 27; Jas. 1, 22), 19. Many of them also which used curious arts , brought their hooks to- gether and burned them before all men, and they counted the price of them and found it so,o0o pieces of -aiaver, What an illustration of "unto you, therefore, which believe Be is pre- cious!" (I Pet. 11, 7). So preelaus had the Lord Jesus become to theim. that things which were before of Much value now seemed worthless and were at once committed to the flames. lest they might ensnare and injure others. Their Affections were now on things above, not on things on the earth' (Col, iii; 2).-- -Like Paul, they • could testify "what things War° gain to us those we counted loss for Christ” ii, 7). This bonfire cost perhaps $10,- 000 and was a glorious triumph for Christ over the actVersary. It was like the 'edetcfry on. Mount Carmel over the priests of Baal. The day. will come when all that is e.galast Christ shall perish and the people, who resist Ifint and their leaders shall be given to the, lake of fire (Rev. xix, 20; ix, 15). 20. So xnightily grew the word of God and prevailed In chapter xii, 24, it, is written "the' word. of God grew and multi- plied." The work of GO is done by tha Spirit of God using the word of God.As we have seen in former studies, the preachers used the Scriptures, and all the Scriptures, and preached from them the things concerning the Lord Jesus and the kingdom of God. They do not in the !east discountany portion of the word of God; but, like the Lord Jesus in . all His teaching, they honored it all. It is safe to say that those who in our day make light of any portion of the -word of God are not causing it to .grow or multiple/ or prevail, and they are certainly not for the time being folloWillg the Lord Jesus. When I hear the word of God dis- honored or any portion of it made light of, I cannot helpthinking of the devil, for the first recorded utter- ance of that old serpent is, "Yea., hath God said?" (Gen. iii, 1). He began his evil work on earth by questioning the word of -God and the love of God and by making Cod ap- pear to be a liar (Gen. ii,. /7; iii, 4). Let us in the name of our Lord and by the Spirit of God resist him, WOMAN AT FORTY. Should Be the Happiest of Human Beings. The object of a woman's career should be to be beautiful till she is 40 ; after that ehe should become a power, is the way a Frenchman sees the question. Another Frenchman said that after 40 a woman should either take the veil or be abolished. Mias .A.church, an actress, lecturing on the subject, inclined to the for- mer view. She said : "The woman who has passed the confines of youth has come to be regarded as ofrrauch greater ilnportance than she was twenty years ago. This change can ba seen in words and in life. From the period of Fielding to that of Thacteray the girl of 17 was al- ways the center of attraction and she always disappeared after " her wedding day. After Thackeray came the long inning of the woman of 30." The woman of 40 ought to be the happiest of women. She has pe- culiar privileges possesse oy no other woman. She is not troubled like her younger sisters at the el OSP, ing- of the 'borderland of youth, for she is already on the other side. Her future is more clearly defined, for at 40 has she not chosenand settled down in her career 7 A professional woman is at ber best 'at 40. he can act better, paint better, write better, not only because her powers are more ma- tured, but also because she will not be interrupted by love affairs. Tbe age of 40 should be looked .forward to as an inheritance rather ,than be dreaded by every woman. GRAINS OF GOLD, Originality is simply a pair of fresh o Avoid cps Higginson. Many snares and 310 real beuefit.—Penn. The greatest and sublimest potver is °TOD, simple patience.—Bushnell. .k life of pleasure even makes the stri-angest mind frivolous at last. — Dulwer politeness is as natural to delicate natures as perfume is to flowers, — De Vinod. Most people judge others by the company they keep, or by thelis for- tur.1-811nooctiziotuleieaulidliac a that maketh • the person, but the person that mak- eth the place honorable.—C icoro, Nothing can bring you peace but yourself; nothing can bring you peace but the triumph of prinelples. —epthmoersorrichti co tins ef conquest are al- ways easy. We have but to toil asehil„ believe alWaye, Wad never turn baelt.—Simme. Maninia •(to Flossie, who hes been hmcbing with a little friend) — hope you were .very polite, Ploseie, at the table, and said 'Yes, please,' end No, thank you.' Flossie — "Well, I didn't say 'No, thank REPARING FOR RA s'sla GIVE STRENTIY TO WEAKI----- .1-1,1-Fvk STONACHAVEARIIEARMEA 4-34-Y Cstik ful'IVIONALWROI-10506 ICH Th BLoco &SON .TIIE CONSTITUTION het ati nclortEn9 ealCo Mortr • 41101—__-- '-eaeker BRITAIN 4/- AM ER len prgB9I5TS &Choi Price in Canada : 81.00; Si, bottles for $5.00 3 When a baby is coming. the pectant mother needs to take special Care of 'herself, for upon her health-. depends to a great extq-nt theeaIfli cd the u;aborn babe. If diet, etc:, etc., etc, is not watched, the start in life of the future offspring- will not be a satisfactory one. It is a naktake to take liquid medicines at this dine, for they alt contain alcohol. Their steady use has the same effect as habitual liquor taking, construing the vitality and hardening the tissues. 0, If you are weak you need a tonic, not a stimulant. Don't take medica- ted wine or alcoholic Medicines ; but take*ST. JAMTeS WAItZR8, they are a tissue builder and a reconstructive. S. jAlinS WAMES help stomach, digest food and, send. the nutriment through the blood, and this is the honest wayto get health and strength, the kind. that lasts, develops and breeds the energy which accom.. plishes much. A41 have useerSt. tames Wafere Lor years. Nolte better.d Dr. R T. liradalle, London, Eng. St.jizmes Wafers are flat a secret rentetiy ta the numerous eactorsre- conemeorditeg Mem ea their patients we mail the formula upon reqaest. Where dealers are not selling the Wafers, they are mailed upon re- ceipt of price at the Canadian branch $t. lames Wafers Co., 1728 St Catherine St., Montreal, $otaasseesee ogisiteeie ta@eae FOR THE HOME 0 Recipes for the Kitchen. S Hygiene and Other Notes for the Housekeeper. SeRefalvese ogiegeaofas ieet DRESSING LITTLE GIRLS. The love of dainty and. becoming clothing: is a mark of refinement, and is inherent in most little girls. This trait in children should not be condemned, but guided in the pro- per direction. Our clothing has much to do with •the opinion people form of us, and while extravagance is net commendable, carelessness in this matter leads to oven worse re - ,5.141 -1.:e. Dresses for school wear need hot be expensive, for rine materials and trinimings are not in. good taste, and a healthy school girl would, soon ruin them. She will need two or three woolen dresses and half aaalozen White or light col- ored aprons to keep her neat and dean. These aprons should, be made by different patterns so she will not tire of them, and trimmed with lace or embroidery. Let them be as nice as you like,for they will last a long time and can be washed when they need it. In making the dresses the prudent mother plans to length- en them so they will not be out- grown. Madny a good garment has been cast aside because this has been neglected, and it soon becomes too small: for the wearer. Plain full skirts are tucked or deeply hem- med. Gored skirts are often ruffled, and all that is necessary when you wish to lengthen them is to piece tisern'out at the bottom and moetn the ruffle down. Plain sleeves may be hemmed at the bottom or pieced out and tile piecing covered with some kind of trimming, while those anade with hal upper portions gathe, ered into cuffs, are lengthened by replacing the old cuffs with dedpor ones. New dresses may be made of remnants, or if the mailer has the knack of making clothes over the best parts of some she has cast aside may be ,used. A package of Dia- mond dye is a, great help in malting dresses over, fol.• it will freshen the goods and make it bright and pret- ty. These dyes are'easy to use, and the colors produced. by them are per- manent. School dresses should be quite plain, for an apron will not /it well if the dress is trimmed with ruffles. Tight -fitting waists or those made with a yoke of any shape de- sired with the lower portion. gather- ed and joined to it, are pretty. The trimming may consist of braid put on around the edge of the yoke, col- lar and sleeves. CULINARY CLIPPINGS. You can make rice traffics the same as plain waffles, a.ddixig two-thirds cup cold boiled rice, one and a half cups milk, two tablespoonfuls sugar, and one egg, Dressing for Boiled, Beets., --Three- fourths cup vinegar, ote-fourth cup -water, tablespoonful each flour, but- ter, salt and .pepper; molt butter, add flour, pour over the vinegar; cook until thickened and pour over the sliced beets.' $ alad Dressing.—Two eggs, well beaten; little white pepper and just a dash of cayenne; one heaping tea- spoonful of dry mustard, tablespoon- ful sugar, little salt, one-half cup of viaegar; boil all together tmtil thick; resnoete from stove, add butter size of an egg; when cool thin with milk. This is as smooth as velvet. Chop a head of cabbage fine, and serve with the above dressing. To make a Holland salad cut into small cubes an equal qua-ntity of pickled beets, potatoes, dill pickles. and raw tomatoes. Rub yolks o/ four hard boiled eggs into bowl, mix carefully and gradually to a cream with oil and -vinegar. Season with salt, pepper and a tablespoonful of essence of anchovies. Add to vege- tables and toss lightly until mixed, garnishing with lettuce and sliced eggs. To make cheese souffle, melt two tablespoonfuls of butter, then add one-fourth cup of flour, one-fourth teaspoonful -each of salt, soda and paprika, one-half cup of mills, and - ono -fourth pound of cheese, grated, or one cupful; when the eheese is melted add the yolks of three eggs beaten light; when cool add the wlaiteS of the eggs beaten stiff; bake. in individual china dishes, buttered; place in the oven -until puffed and delicately colored; serve as soon as removed. USES Or GASOLENE. •,„ A woolen cloth dampened with gas- tilene will make the dirt disappear as if by magic. ' when used for cleaning porcelain sinks, bath tubs or marble wash bowls. Gasolene is also a sovereign reme- dy fin: bugs. 11 can be literally poured en the mattress, springs and bed without injuring the most deli- cate carpet, and every bug will die- s, appear. The daintiest neckwear, which it is impossible to wash, if left over'night idnrieadu. 'carefully air -tight -vessel of gasolene will look fresh and new when ERVgDPILL FOR WEAK PEOPLC They regulate the adtIon al' the heart and invigorate the riervea. They httild up tIril wan down are. tom a.s no other remedy V7112 do. They cure NertrouoneesOleoplessitess, Brain rag, Palpitation of the Heart, After Effects) of La, Grippe, Palht Or Dittey Anuernia, Catena:alai l3obillty and all trou'eles caused. br the era. torn belrg PUll down. They -have loured others. 'They will cure you. Mo. per box or 3 for $1.2.1. All dealore or The t fitilbura Co., tinitedi Torotto,Ont, sit,asor rettarnslea =Mtn= g et Mr orit lt4PffaftMifl.M1KIWni, It44MWW Wervous, iseased Men. Thotisalids of rousse and A/7dd%, .Aged Mei/ are mutually swept to a premature grave through early indiscretions anti later excesses. Self abuse attd.ConstitutionaiBlobd Diseases have ruined and 'wrecked the life of many a proinising young mail. gave von any of thefollowing syntptomus m Nervoand Despondent; ,rired hi Morning; No Ambition; Meinory Poor; Easily' l'atigtied; Excitable and irritable; Eyes Blur; Pimplcm on the Wade;, Dreams mid i)rains at Night; Resiless; Itaggard Looking; Blotehee; Sore Throa.t; Nair Loose; Pains Itt the IJody; Sunken Eyes; Lifeless; Distrustful and Lack of Energy and Strength. Our Ne7,11 Ateekarl Preatment will build yon tip mentally, physically and se:Wally. Curer, Oluaraixteed or 00 IPtly, as YEARS IN nett:oda Matt ntOUBITY. BZ -No Nantes Used Witheat 'Written Coasentb Ja DT. ERvotS war:A:At —A ri.A.P.P ft tarn. at P. Snunsou has a enerrovs 4treeza "'live on a Sarin. At school I learned an early habit, *which wealretied me physically, sexually teed maratuly. Paella -Bache% said I was going Into aileclinea (Consemptlota, rinalat, " The Ooldeit Moniter,,,eritteday Drs. Kennedy St Nergan fell into my handt, 1 learned the &Oh end cartse. Self abuse had sapped My vitality. I took the New hfethed Teeatment aud wee cured. My friends think I was cured of Consittuption. I have sent them many patients, all of whom Verdi cured, Their New Method Treatment supplies vigor, Vitality add manhood." consultation Salo, tanks Net VitItti for Quo3tite Meek for tiomo Vattlient, Drs b Kennedy litertan$ t4ge?rheeitytet' 13a3M*