HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1903-3-26, Page 7. o
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A GRE
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Pl, . O.
A. ... Isof E
,
(via Wants. He Wise "had come!
peeeinn on 'the multitude because
they had nog to eat" would neve
, have closed his ears to the cry of
4 famine stricken nation. If we
would be hie him, we, too, should
feed the hungry and succor the
homeless, the wiciow mud the or-
phan. How better can. we' make
known the grandeur 'and beauty of
the Christian faith than 1)y proving
to other nations its beneficent in-
(Memo ? As the hand of Christian
America is stretched out across th.e
seas, bearing broad for the etarving,
OW See Christ living again iu US
and bless his deer name. Itaving
accepted from us the bread that
Perishes, they will listen as we tell
of the Bread that eame clown
from
rom heaven, of which if a man eat
lee shall live forever. Were the viral-
co:ming doors of. heathen India. over
ore w'
m widely opened for the gospel
message than when" the shiploads of
American brestdstuffs were floated
„os ..1
ac-' s the 1:1 the
eAtlantic, through e
Mediterranean, clesvn the Bed sea
and over the Indian ocean until they
were safely landed in the harbor of
Bombay during the awful Indian
faMinoe of 1807 and 1900 ? I have
seen it estimated that hundreds of
thousands of starving and dying
natives were physically saved.
through American generosity during
those two years. But no oise save
the recca ding aagel of heaven will
ever be able to keep track of the
multitudes of immortal souls . who •
will ultimately be brought to the
feet of Christ through the contri-
billions' and the prayers of those
who tried to some extent to allaY
the horSors of that awful famine
plague. '
THE CRY OP FINLAND.
Though the religious and daily
newspapers have been for weeks
with the accouuts of I" I
1 in and
sufferings, the horrors and agonies
which those sim le mo rle of the
w P 1 1
north are going through. will pro-
bably never be fully told, Starving
IP -Inland is stretching her arms
across the Atlantic. Dare we, can
we, refuse to heed the cry ? Dare
we, shall we, stop our ears to this
gospel call ? Remember that solemn
question of the apostle, "He that
hath this world's goods and seeth
his brother have need and shutteth
up his compassron front him, how
dwelleth the love of God in him ?"
As you love your children, think of
those children that are starvires"
as you love your wife, think of
those wives and mothers and sisters
who are now tottering upon the
brink of the grave because they have
nothing to eat 1 Ma.y God lead you
to see your duty in rtference to this
call which comes frorn. across the
seas ! Then, to some extent at
least, we may be able to cancel a
part of the national debt which
Christian America owes to the
modern "Greeks and to the bar-
earians.'t
4, •
r .
• • • * • * '
XIMUNATIONAX,
IVIABC11 29.
---
Text of the Lesson, (al
,
view., Golden Text,
. , 20
Lesson I. -Paul anti
Philippi (Acts xvi, 22-34),
Te31, "13elieve
xt, Acts xvi,
Lord Jesus Christ, ad.
Th
be saved." e•principal
is. lesson are the sun:m:111gs
apostles and the salvation
jailer and his household,
no salvation apart from
Ings of Christ, and,
by His suffering's in our
must be willing to seffer
as Ills witnesses in
gospel to thers (I Pet,
1.H ; John vi, 33;
Di, 10.
Lesson .IL-Ohristian
iv, 1-18), Golden Text,
4, "Rejoice in the Lord
Tiro great feathres of
Christian are joy and
these should be very manifest
elle 17. xv, 13) but in
, -
trials and sorrows of
seems impossible to
either joy or peace.
that this most joyful of
tles was written from
the aim of Paul may be
See also 1 Con i• 9
, ;
ea.
Lesson 111. -Paul at
xvia
and 13erea (Acte"
Text, Ps. cxix, 105, "Thy.
lamp unto my feet." Christians
expected to be filled with
and the Spirit (Col. iii,
v, 18) and by their lives
mony proclaim. Jesus
only Saviourf .
o sinners.
Lesson INse-Paul's counsel
Thessalonians (I Thess
Golden.
Text, 1 Thess.
fast that which is
„ ,
truth is here emphasized
spirit, soul and body of
ed are all for Christ,
man in us, 31 allowed
will ever pray and rensiee
, 3
thanks, controlled by
but if .t1)o Spirit is quenched
His word rejected there
portionate failure,
Lesson V. -Paul at
xvii 22-34). Golden
x•' 1 -Ss "He preached
Jesus and the resurrection."
are prone to worship,
to anything and any One
living God, and this has
case siace the serpent
and Eve away from God
leis lie.
. Lesson VT. -The church
in oun e c s
th f d d (A t
Golden Text, I Oor. iii,
foundation can no man
that is laid, which is Jesus
e believingo.
and some
-.
is the record everywhere,
whom the Father hath
Christ shall come to
elect church shall be gathered
presented to Himself
church.
Lesson VII. -Christian
(I Cor, viii, 4-13).
Rom. xiv, 19, "Let
follow after the things
for peace." In the daily
seeking to live wholly
manifest the life of Christ
mortal bodies, we are living
ly before God, who reads
and never misjudges us,
also living before people
being able to read the
very apt to misju.dge us
over us.
Lesson VIII. -Christian
Cox.. xiii, 1-13). Golden
•
xiii, 13, "Now abideth.
lave, * * * but the
these is love." It is still
trast between what I myself
and that which Christ
However much I
seems good, it will count
ing if it is I that do
who is love and was
Clarist and has come to
believer, desires to
through us, and that will
Lesson IX. -Paul and
vim, - , ,
(Acts x - 94 to xix
Text, Luke, xi, 13, If
.
g evil, know how
ing
"fts unto your children,
gl
more shall your Heavenly
Holy Spirit to
give the •
ask Him?" A man mightyin
Scriptures may be instructed
perieztly by very humble
-
however much people
there is a very great lack
,
are filled with the Spirit.
Lesson X, -Paul at Ephesus
9-20 Golden Text
xix' 1' )•'
17 "The name of the
' ,,
was magnefled. The
Lord Jesus that worthy
' •
ii, 7), that glorious
name, the Lord thy
xxviii, 58), is not to be
or mocked or despised,
can use the devil himself
such, and Ile will overrule
mockery and blasphemy
ed to promote His glory.
Lesson XL -The riot
(Acte xix, 20-44). Golden
xxxi 23 "The Lord preserveth
' ', '
faithful." 'When the
the gospel takes away
the pockets of the ungodly,
quickly hear from them,
will want no more of us
pel, But this same thing
seen among those
name Of Christ, and the
der has been turned upon
ary lest he might want
I, ti 1 W seem
i om ie peep 0. e
nothing of the love of
gave Himself.
Leseeet xes.-Paul's message
renetesians (Eph. ii, 1-10).
Text, Eph. ii, 8, "By
saved through faith,
one thing we tail to
the grace of our Lord
who. became poor for
viii, 0), and. therefore,
be saved by Thin, so few
to be used by glin, to
all that Ile has bought
precious blooicl, to lot Ilim
in us and through us the
I -Ie has prepared for
heart, Ism. i, 18, 10.
-
ZZSSOINT,
1, x r y
a te 1
Xatt,.
.
.
Silas
Golden
en
thou . shalt
fats
of
of
There
the suffer-
being saved
stead,
with Him
bearing
ii,. 24;
Phil -se 29
living (Phil.
Phil.
always."
the life of
peace,
(Rom,
the man
this life
be full
But remember
all the epis-
a prison.
ours •(1-20),.
1 T hess.
Thessalonlea
- e ,Golden
1 19)
word is
the word
Eph
16; ,
and testi-
.
Christ as
to
-v 14-28
9'
v, -1, "Hold
good."
that
the redeera-
and the new
to control,
and give
g
the Spirit,
must be pro-
Athens (Acts
Text, Acts
into them
Men
to bow down
but
been
turned Adam
to believe
at Cor-
xvin, 1-
- 11)
11, "Other
lay than
Christ."
opposine
but
given
Him, and
a glorious
self control
Golden Text,
us, therefore,
which make
life, while
for God
in
not
our hearts
but we
who,
heart,
and stumble
love
Text, I Car.
faith, hope,
greatest
the con-
may
will do
may do that
for noth-
it, but God,
xnanifest
live in
- r -
a o 1 in a.nd
stand.
Apollos
6 Gold=
),
ye, then,
to give good
'sow much
Father
them that
more
people, and
may believe
until they
(Acts
Acts xix,
Lord Jesus
name of
name (Jas.
and fearful
God (Dent.
trifled with
for the Lord
to chasten
even
he wick-
of t
at Ephesus
Text,
preaching
'
money from
we shall
and they
or our gos-
is often
who bear
cold shoul-
a )111StSIOD.-
an offering
to ICT1ONV
•
Christ, who
to
Golden
grace are
That is
understand
Jesms Christ,
us (II Con
while glad
are willing
let Hine have
with
work
good works
no. Lay
4
F.
,
at
the
ie
the
the
is
we
the
iii)
;
iv.
a
and
Y
it
of
and
v,
a
are
.
the
the
)•
The
the
and
the
the
.
all
to
His
and
and
our
on-
are
not
are
(I
of
do
in
in
the
be-
the
•
the
the
Ps.
the
of
the
the
ye
the
-
to
Its
oUt
to
'
..
9.
Are many
derangements.
They are
,
4are
,
,er"•••••
...jeer,-
.....•
k'•e--
.--,.
. , .
. .
N R • • E N
E
ell6 ,,,,
. . •
.tmies anindlcation or symptom of functional
inmost eases due to functional, wrongs, to WI] ipie
.e... women only are subject.
. ".OUT 00 NBM$' voirien
the nightmare of doctors:
'e,
.. .‘• e
"CRANKS" is often thdesignation
„e-eeeee of those patients by physicians unable
he
lee ee to understand the cause of their
. ,.
, _ :0 irritable condition.
-- ,
--' '1 S. jAilIZS WAPERS have rendered
-----,
. -.--- . . .
? great service to such physicians 1,0.
......;\
Wealthy Nations Should Help the,
• .."'
Afflicted of Other Countries,
.0.1....mAalasiswer.vaamgemogrow....f.......W.4
xrstered aecordiag 1,o Act or to nate
name= os thwack'. in the year une
Thtiousand Nine Isemered and esee.
s oreeta ea, tee
by Wm. Daffy, oT
INipartmout re Agrcuiture.'iOtawets,
A despateh frone Chicago $tye:
Rev. Prank Do Witt Talmage preach-
ecl from the following , text; Rome
ane 1, 14, "I am debtor•both to the
Greeks and to the barbarians."
A national debt! It is popularly
understood to be a financial oriliga-
tion which a, Government has pled g,..
ed itself to pay. Sometimes this
is 'contracted in the interest of a
single subject, About thirty years
ago the English Government assume-
ed a debt of over $25 000I 000 to
liberate a single man, Captain. Cam-
eron, who had been unjustly endun-
geoned by the king of Abyssinia in
the rocky fortress of Magdalae It
took six months for the news of the
outrage to travel to .England, but in
lees than eleven days afterward
Bewail army of 15,000 men, under
General Napier, was on its way. It
not only crossed the seas, but also
Illatare d- a terrible . journey o.f 400
undert • ' 1 in until the
miles a lopree se ,
troops reached Masedala and batter-
ed down • the fortress and rescued
their incarcerated countryman. . ..A.
civilized country is usually ready to
begin any undertaking, assume any
financial responsibility, in order to
protect its own from the tyrannical
clutches of a foreign foe.
ligation Sometimes an extra financial ob-,s
is assumed by a government
in Mines of peace as well as in times
of war. .A. government can awe to
foreign lands more than money,
Such definitions as we have given
are right as far as they go, but they
are too circumscribed, When the
Hebrew Paul wrote, "I am debtor
both to the Greelxs and to the bar-
barians " I do not believe he had
,
any idea of a financial interpreta-
tion. Re -erring to Greece, he was
alluding to the intellectual infleence
of the lat'aionian capital, Which made
itself felt throughout the world.
That city swayed the scepter in the
domain of intellectuality; it ruled
the world of culture with the sculp-
tor's chisel, the poet's pen and the
Demosthenean oratory of a patriot
ruining the people to wage war
aehinst King Philip. When Paul
si/olce of the barbarians, I believe h 0
-
was alluding to the strength and the
virilit which the world had absorb-
ed froYm the different provinces. As
•dissolving
h ' el bt d
a. inan of learning e svas in e e
ose peep e to whom e was
to th 1hon
about to present Jesus Christ.
TN TIM ASTRONO1VIICAL WORLD
we find that stars generally travel
in constellations, or in. groups. Thee
in
we also 11nd that every great ad-
vancement of the human race, spirit-
ually or mentally, socially or eco-
nomically, is in touch. with other
events, though they may be seen or
unseen. The sweet voiced village
church bell of to -day is not entirely
church
of American ma,nufacture. It was
cast in tlfe hot fires of the Covenan-
ter's persecutions; it was cast
among the flames which wrapped
their fiery tongues about the shriv-
eling bodies of John Huss and Rid-
ley i and Latimer and Crammer; it
was cast among the burning logs
heaped about tho dying body 01
Savonarola when the Italianpries ' t ,
Elijah -like, was about to go to hea-
yen in a chariot of fire; it was cast
centuries back among the Nerodian
persecutions in the days of the apes-
toile martyrdoms.
Can we ever reach the day when
we shall feel that our religians lib-physician,Robert••Is•
erty is not a natural outgrowth of
the Christian heroes and heroines
who dared to defy "Bloody" Alva,
the persecutor of the Netherlands,
or Lord Claverhouse, the persecutor
of old Scotland, or dereenaic C.ath-
nine, tbe fiendish female instigator
of the St. Bartholomew . • massacre,
or the bloody Queen Mary of the
English throne? • When that •grand
old man. Hugh Latimer,. then -over
eighty, stood. .aincing-. the burning
logs that wore cremating hi m, he
11 sy-
turned to Bishop Ridley, his fe o
martyr near. by, and said, "Be of
good comfort, Master Ridley, . and
play the man. We shall this da Y
light such a candle by God's . grace
in England as, I trust, shall never
be put out." Aye, they did; they
did! They not only lighted a gcs-
pel torch for England, but a torch
.
which would blaze en America cen-
tulles aftoward,
OUR ARTISTIC DEBTS.
America is indebted to ,foreign
lands in a commercial and an artis-
tic sense as well as in a moral and
spiritual sense. Some political
speakers love to boast that coin-
mercially we are independent of the.
world, They assort it would make
very little difference to. us whether
or no foreigle countries held any
trade relations with us at all. But
• •
t t Ywealthy this is no • rue. ou are a
man. You invite me to your home
s° me night to a banquet I 'accept.
As 1 sit waiting for the other guestsd
to arrive I sars "Mr. So-and-so;
this is a beautifully designed hoine.
-where did your architect get the
idea?" You answer: -"The plans of
this house are not his ideas. He
merely worked them out in detail
After I had described them. Some
years ago, while I was in .England,
e came across a beautiful country
.hat if
home. I then said no myself t
I should ever have money enough I
would build a house upon that
plan. This home is the result of
my resolve made at that time."
Under my feet is a rug of exquisite
workreanship. Where was it made?
In the city of Damascus, It is an
imported rug. 'When yotir wife
comes in to geeet, rile, she is dressed
in a beautiful costume. It came
from the silkworms of Erance; That,
diamoad glittering -upon your finger
was deg out of the African mines.
That beautiful porcelain voese 'upon
your mantelpiece has a foreign name
,Stampod upell its bstee. This beau-
tiful tablecloth Which isespread irt'
your dining room came from De1-
fast. These grand pletures upon
-
your walls were painted by artists rly-'
who rose to be masters by ette
in in foreign ochools and sitting at
the feet oI the old masters of En-
roPe.
-
1 -TOW WE MAY BEST REPAY.
How, then, is America to cancel
the national debt in a moral and
spiritual sense which ehe owes to
.
the modern Greeks and to the bar-
barians? '`Well," answers some one,
0..1 eeppese the best way to repay
to make our goods better and theap-
the debt we owe to fore,ign lands is
er than they earl make them read
then go forward and capture their
°lax lots for our home industries."
Ah, xny brother, 1 ant not here to
fritter away my time answering
lewd
these selfishpropositions prone
,
by 1210r0 eonunercialisrm •I am here
to -lay to tell you how, in the len-
gUag0 SAC.1 th0 spirit of the aphstle
Paul, we are to eancel the national
debt we owe to foreign lands; I am
here to -day to tell you how best we
can pay the debt as individuals as
.
.well as a nation. We eon repay our
national debt first by conveying to
foreign lands the sweet message of
the Calvary eross. If the religion of
Jesus Christ is the beneficent thing
that we profess to believe it, are we
justed in keeping the knosviedge of
it to ourselves? • Are we not bound
ot 0 world •
as debtors t the nhol to.
•11 tions makingitfilled
repay our ob ga. by
far and wide?
The medical profession sets us an
exa.mple in the performance of this
duty. No sooner does. a physician
discover a means of alleviating phy-
sierra suffering than he pla.ces it at
the disposal of his professional
brethren the world over. When. Ed-
ward Jenner demonstrated the mar-
velous imnaunity of a human being
who was vaccinated with cowpox,
did he keep his discovery from the
world ? Did he refuse to advocate
it lest he night be persecuted by
such medical authorities as Dr. In-
genhousz and Dr. Pearson ? Oh,
no ! As an intelligent man he de-
plored the awful destruction made
by this terrible scourge of smallpox.
He k th
new at whole countries had
been almost depopulated by the
•
pest. Mexico was not conquered so
much by Cortes ' as it was made
h 1 1
fe p ersis. by the invasion of this king
o ho eeble plagues called smallpox.
When the pilgrim fathers landed up-
the Massachusetts shores, they
found that the Indian tribe whith
the year before had been inhabiting
that part of the country had been
entirely obliterated, with the excep-
ception of one man, by the fatal
ravages of smallpox. So, in the
face of derision and persecution,
Jenner proclaimed the gospel of
vaccination. Though he might, and
to a great extent did, destroy his
private practice, he kept crying to
suffering hunse.nity : "Here is a.
remedy for this dreadful and mange
nant disease. Take it and live !
Take it and live !
When James Y. Simpson perfected
his investigations in chloroform, did
he keep them to himself ? Did he
t th d
pa -eat ens an say, You come to
me or suffer and die" N
? o. He
freely gave the anaesthetic to the
world And to -day thousands -upon
thousands of .men and women who
have been com elled t 1'
. p o le upon an.
operating table have risen up to
call him blessed Is the German
l.i.btf Koch, wor eng in
is a ora fry or personal gain ?
his
°I1' no. He is trying, purely on
philanthropic grounds, to cure con-inc.
sumption, which causes at least
one-fourth of the total annual mor-
tality among the human race. If
he ever perfects a germicide for the
tuberculosis bacilli he will
. , at once
he knows He is strugeli e
tell all , -- n-
and working and analyzing purely
to .save a dying' race.
'• ". PREACH THE GOSPEL.
. What a lesson do these illustrious
enefactors of the human race tea
b ch
us 1 How they study and investi-
gate and labor to alleviate suffer-
ing and increase the longevity of
mankind ! And when any of them
discovers a remedy for disease or a
means of removing deformity how
eagerly he makes the discovery
known that all the worm
-- may
' the 1
share in e aenent 1 In our hands
we have a revelation of infinitely
greater value. Their discoveries can
at the best prolong life only a few
years, while the gospel of Jesus
Christ is the gospel of eternal life
and the remedy fbr the universal
malady of sin. Yet there are among
us men calling themselves Christians
who make no effort to publish the
knowledge of that remedy. They'
say, "If the Chinese are not willing
g
t • ospel
o receive our gmissionaries,
then. let those missiona • .
ries stay at
' •
home. Let the Chinese hordes grovel
and die I Let the human. streams of
he th n life becomeh ked with
a" e • • . • c e - -
moral veinam 1 It is their own
lookout, not ours I" I tell you to- day that Christian America's
•
1 d • J C •" •
ee e until esus hiist le preached
reign obligations can never be can-
to alt people.. Where we have now
one missionary in the dark coriti-
nents we should send a thousand;
where We have one gospel messen-
,
ger 210W for a hundred thousand
people we should have so great a
number that -every foreign town and
village, as well as every city, should
be persuaded to receive the open
Bible and to study the Word of
God, Christian America Will not be
. .
free from. responsibility until the
gospel of the Lord Jesus is preached
unto all peoples. If • those peoples
receive ft hot, then they, not we,
must bear the responsibiliter,
The nations of the World have also
other claims upon us as a, Christian
people that must not be ignored. If
we have the spirit of Christ, We
shall aot be unmindful of -their Ma.
" '
'ess
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neein r‘i
non.-- n Bos " l'o.
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, Great Britain, who prescribe them to '
nervous women.
$T. AIMS WAVERS afford great
relief, simply by strengthening every'
organ affected by the functional
wrong's in women such as weak
StOmaele- weak back—and weak
nerves.
S. TAMR8 WAVER$ help stomach,
es digest food. and send the nutriment
ei
through the blood, and this is the
- honest wa to et ea t nd t
-4 y g h 1 ha streng 11,
the kind that lasts, develops and
reeds the energy which amain..
1' h s ch
p is e wtch.
"Rave used St. lasees Wafers
0 witis stieh suecees as to peace
MOM Ot7. my Het oerenableeeP
----
Wee mean (MI 14S 01:457i
to take as sugar.
CARTER9S
. • wi,
vut
Pi LEIS.
OF R REARAONEe
FOR IIIZZIREDU
FOR RILIONSNEtt
FOR TORPID LIVER.
FOR CONSTIPATION.
FOR $ALLOW SECIN.
FOR Ilir COMPLEXION
..e . Vial/AC
6aroaroxprxa MO St HA RA ,
Nisi I seeSv sees4
mantle Putenenvagetsede. , . ,
lit:AT PRICE
"•••• BR 4 AS/0-
.n. RAIN /-111ERIC
-
all Co' ' f 601 *e'''9
Dr. Chas. 11. Springer*
Zondote Xngirata.
CURL SICK HEADACHE.
Ir.
, ..
ne), e, .
-
Norway
Syru,
Cures Coughs,
Hoarseness,
Pain or
Chest,
It stops that
pleasant to take
Ing to the lungs.
the well-known
1 had. a very
throat and tightness
times when X waited
not I would almost
wife got me a
NORWA.Y PINE
prise I found
net be without
tle, and I can recommend
bothered with. a
Price
k :ou
1
..
,
, f
„ 4)14. NOW.
Colds, Bronchitis,
Croup, Asthiria,
Tightness in
P.c.
tickling in the
and soothing
Mr. E. Bishop
Galt gardener,
severe attack
in the chest.
to cough
choke to
bottle of DR.
SYRUP, and
speedy relief.
it if it cost
it
cough. or cold.
25 Cents.
....,
s
-sunknown.
• •
sne
the
throat, is
and heal-
Brand,
writes:-
of sore
Some
and could
death. My
WOOD'S
to my .sur-
I would
$1.00 a bot-
to everyone
-en. ...,.
a Ness 5 ena -0
-- 5.."
enn, --40.
..- --, eilliF0 le?.
eee
St. James Wafers. are 'sot a secret
remedy : to thenumerous doctors re -
, 3 lel
`tt.-- - •-•
commending Mem to their patients
we mail the formula tepees request.
t
ee•
Net -
---
-
Where dealersare not sellingthe
Wafers. they
Price in Canada: $1.00;
Sirs bottles for $5.00
are mailed upon re -
eeipt of -price at the Canadian
nranehi St. Jamas Wafers Co., 1728
St. Catherine St., Montreal.
a 0 00 e 0, 6 0 0 ei 0
ce
oR THE
a 40.
114
0
nl., 0 0 0 041 n
, -
,,
, f,
11,
ei
is realizing what will combine well;
but most any kind of vegetables,
flesh and grains will unite aceepta-
bly if rational proportions are used,
and attention given to the fact that
Much flavor
/9 .
0 0....
Recipes for the Kitchen. qa•
0 Hygiene and Other Notes A
1:5 for the Housekeeper.
0
0
0000230(D dee@ 0 e e e@e@fe 6
BEAN PORRIDGE nos'.
as had a boiled dinner
When one h ' `
the liquid in which the meat and
vegetables have been. cooked should
be left closely covered irl. the kettle ,
and set •
away over night in a cool
Place. .Loole over and put to soak
for. a. night 1 quart beans, or two -
tlnrds beans and one-third dried
split peas.
In the morning skim 'all the fat•
from the top of the boiled dinner
kettle and set it over the fire with
with
the beans added, to eteek for four
hours. By this time the beans
should be very soft. Water should
be added fro= time to time as it
boils away, to keep the kettle about
so full all the time.
Prom this point on there are sev-
eral methods which may be pursued,
each one giving different results. The
beans and the liquid can be passed
through a colander, pushing all the
beans, except the hulls through the
openings. Small bits of meat from
the boiled dinner of the day before
are added, and the smooth, thick
mass seasoned with herbs and "hot
stuff," and served after thinni 't
ng 1
a little with water.
In the second method the liquid is
not strained; the soft beans are left
some are of stronger
than others.
Next is the cooking - always so
slowly for meat soups, so as to cook
out all of the nourishment and keep
it dissolved. Why, when soup is
boiled it's about like churning; it
tosses the liquid strouied so that the
-
little particles begin to adhere to
one another arid grow into granulat-
ed bits, leaving the water between them - something like curds aud
whey.
Of course for meat soup cold we-
ter must be used. That helps the
process, Rot water seals
up the little cells ort the outside of
the meat and holds in the juices.
Then there's the seasoning, where
"
real art may be developed to a high
degree' for there are any number of
`
•pt savory results obtaina-
nondescrihe
e. It's a good plan to keep an
ever-increasing stock of seasoning
material on hand. But it requires
some real study and observation to
become Skillful in their use. When -
ever hearingf f • '
o an un somber pow -
der or liquid just get some. After
a while it will be a deli htful sur -
• t the g '
prise to noto le prangent variety
which has accuanulated; and then be -
sides, they cnn be used for gravies,
croquettes and all sorts of things.
Like most any other foods, there's
a diversity of opinion upon soup
eating - but then, there are many
soups. To my mind one (the ap-
petizing, nutritious kind) makes a
good meal without anything else.
—
MIL 'URN'S
•
IlEART AN, % NEIVE
..-
PILLS
Make Vieak Hearts Strong,
Make Shaky Nerves Firm.
THEY CURE
Nervousness - fReeplessnoss- Palpitation el
the Heart -Nervous Proatration-Faint
and Dizzy Spells - Brain Fag -After
Nffects of La Grippe -Anemia -And all
Troubles Arising from a Run-down Sys.
tom.
LONDON'S SWELL THIEVES.
—
Pilfering at • Court Balls - and
Drawing Rooms.
of ornaments are lost
each year at the drawing rooms or
courts at Buckingham Palace, and
only a very small proportion is re-
covered.
A very strange story is still told
about a diamond necklace which
was found at one of the state bans
some years ago. It happened that
one of the late Queen's ladies -in-
waiting picked up a diamond neck-
lace from the floor. As she stood
i •
with t in herhand a lady came
quickly forward and claimed it.
The finder was very firne, however,
and declared, it was her duty to give
it in to the lord chamberlain's of-
fice, as tills was the rule with regard
to. anything found in the palace. The
lady Protested in vain, but the odd-
est thing was that this necklace
.
never was claimed, andis probably
still at the lord chamberlain's office.
The fact that it was quite a• cone-
mon sight to see ladies stuffing their
handkerchiefs with sweets and ca,kes
from the supper tables at the court .
balls may be regarded as an amiable
foible of doting parents; but, ac-
mg o some, a.ce an, sere ie s
cord' t 1 h ' dl h' f
and jewels are wafted away in this
fashi on, and sometimes fur stoles
and, lovely o era cloaks have been
y P
secured as spoil.
o C a saying in a
It used t b ' • • Indiat
se igba at le first
the b• , viceregal Ils th • the '
departure was sure of the best Ram-
pore chuddele These beautiful white-
shawls are always more or less the
• ' • '
same size, but the difference in
price is enormous, as the finest kind,
voluminous as they seem, can easily
be passed through a ring, and are
consequently very costly, while the
coarser ones are preportionately•
cheap.
-neS-
Read what T. L. Foster, Wfi i
--ng/
Ont., has to say about them: -I was
.
greatly troubled with palpitation of the
heart, a sudden blindness would come
me, and floating specks before my
eyes eaused me great inconvenience,
Often -I would have to gasp for breath,
and my nerves were in a terrible eondi-
Con. I took MILBURN'S HEART AND
NEVE PILLS, and they have proved a
blessing to me: I , cheerfully recom-
mend. than to all sufferers frein heart
and nerve trouble. .
Price 50e. per bore, or 3 for $1.25; all
'dealers or The T. Milburn Co., Limited,
Toronto, 'Ont. , .. •
in. it, and the left -over cabbage, po-
tato, and turnip from the boiled
dinner are chopped coarsely and add-
ed. Small bits of boiled meat are
also added, and the savory mass
whioh is a complete dinner in itself,
is fla.vored with herbs and seasoned
Mucilage has been found to be an
Mucilage has •
excellent rune y for burns. Apply it
to the burn and la an soft blank
aper. The ns,ucilya e any
tire
pain, while the paper excludes the
el,
*----% - • .
to suit the individual peeference of
each family
Still a, third neethod, and ono
intuele used in some farming commen-
ities, adds to the second method
from 1 to 2 quarts of hulled corn,
pmt. into the pot 20 minutes before
serving. The liquid is then thicken -
ed with corn meal or flour.. Milk is
sometimes added in this last xne-
thod, after the porridge is turned
into a large tureen and is ready to
be served at once.
A fourth kind of bean porridge is
made of 1 cup left -over baked beans,
put over the fire with 1 quart wee
ter, a small onion, and a, little beef
BRECHE A MANON
LADY
TELLS OF HER EXPERlee0E
WITH
1
The Great a d l'51 11 X X
n e - nowu idney Specific
for the Cure of all Kidul
and Bladder Troubles.
' eik.. ''"74.' is'
, „, ,
. -4, - '
4
4 -
li, k , `t, te
et • a ,
.
,' e
e re k. eeee ee ,,
extract, if there is any at hand, or
a few spoonfuls of gravy left from a
-
roast, a drop of tabasco, a bay leaf
or clove, a little kitchen .bouquet or
other perferred flavoring or season-
ing can. be added, and when the eva-
ter has boiled away nearly one-half,
strain the beans out of the liquid
'
and add 1 cup canned tomato.
Mrs. P. 13ertrand, Breche A Mallon,
•
Que., writes :-I think it nothing but
•
right for me to let you know what
DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS have done for
me. For five months 1 was badly troubled
With a sore back, and such severe paints
in my kidneys that I could scarcely walk
at times. I got a box of DOAN'S KID -
NEY PILLS, and before 1 ha.d them half
• e •
,P
''
•, ...e. e ,
•, ... ea, • ,.....e, 4s1'
Turns Bad Blood ;nto
°
kl.Ch Red Blood.
.
This spring you will need
something to take away that
•
tired, listless feeling brought
on by the systein beino- clogged
b
with impurities which have
*
accumulated, during the winter.
4
Burdock Blood Bitters is the
remedy you require.
It has no equal as a spring
medicine. It has been used by
thousands for a quarter of
a century with unequalled
Success.
HERE IS PROOF'.
Mrs, J. 'I', Skine of Shigawake, Que,
writes: "I have Used Burdock lilood
titters as a spring medicine for the past
Tour years and don't think there is its equal.
When I feel nrowsy, tired and have no
desire to eree I get a bottle of E.B. It
purities the bleed arid builds up the cons
Ine-Y•°'
etitutf e bettenthae any other re d
—
A FEW SOUP SECRETS.
Not everyone that cooks knows
how to make soup. Inn convinced
of that, after partaking of some of
. . 11 meaning 'li-
the liquid attempts we g i
dividuals will serve in the name of
a writer.
cookery, says .
1 -re are a few' little
To be sure tl e
leSeles about soup making. The first
1 e
—
taken I was greatly relieved, and with
another box I was completely cured. 3
cannot help but give them all the praise
r can, and will never fail to recommend
them to all kidney sufferers.
DOAN'S KIDNEY PIUS.
are 50e. box, or 8 for $1.25; all dealers ex
The Doan IKidney Pill Co., Toronto, Onti
........ _ .. .e....,-,—............-.........,
NO DIPPGRENCE.
-"I hav
Young criminal lawyer . e
arranged to have the prisoner's wife
and babies sit in front of the jury
• .
and weep all through the trial. Do
you it advisable to pick bache-
think'
i • f r th '
ore or 33aarrle men 0 e jury ? '
Old criminal lawyer -Oh, it don't
make a particle of difference ; if
bachelor'sfo- -they will sympathize with
the woman and babies, and if mar-
ried inen they will syinpathize with
the prisoner.". '
+
a K4';'' ," ASSO ." We' .. - -.:illitti , otat -
• '
RS.
•
,.., 4
1 .'
• e
t
-
71...,
•
The Leading Specialists of Arne Ica. 25 Years in Detroit, Bank Reforeneee.
r....................1 es -No Names Used Without Written Consent.
YABICOCELE If you itaye transgressed agaitist the laws of
kk I NERVOUS DEBILITY natare,you =est ze 'lee Seif abuse, latereacesses
and private diseases have wrecked thousands of
4 L CUBED, promising lives, Treat with scientific physicians
and be cured. Amid quacks. B. ek, Sidney, of
ssententensteneenne--- Toledo, says; "At the age of 14, I learned a bad
habit and at 19 contracted a serious disease. I treated with a dozen doCters, whouli
promisedto care ma Ilsee got my money and I stet had the disease. I had. given
., up hope when a friend advised me to ecnista Drs. IL et E., who had cured itina
Without any coufidence I called on theist, and Dr. Kennedy agreed to cure me or
no pay. After taking the Neve Method Treatment for six weeks 1 felt 111ce a new
matt, The draies ceased, wonny veltta disappeared, nerves grew stroneerthair
stopped failing out, urine becaine clear and my SOXUal tVgatiS Vit.411Zeti. I was
eeb
entirely cured by Dr. ennedy and recommend Ulm froni the ottom of my heart,"
Vire Treat and Cure Syphilie* Glee*, Vatieocele, nokumeione,
Strinture, tharkatortal Dinehartges, Seminal% Weatanees, Itidney
and Bladder Ditarasee,
CONS131,14,AftiON VRAV1. 1100IS lereDt. Cale or write ior geestioli'lliarte
for Dome Treatment. NO CtIRD. NO PAY.
1 DRS, KENNEDY a KERGAN„,
Cor. Martian Ave. and Shelby SireeL Detroit, elich.
.
1
Inidigo was first used as a dye in
Lei in 1570. Cochieeal cam e
rope .
into us& about the same tune.
New York holds the record among
the world's great cities for mysterie
ous disappearances. Last year NRr1
---
people were absolutely missing.
Parent - "So you say that my
daughter 'doesn't make male pro-
gross with her music, eh?" Profes-
eor - "She does not, sir; she defiee
all rny instructions about time and
singaring, and runs the scales to s'uit
herself.' Parent - "Indeed! Now
T suppose people would be rude en-
°ugh to say she is just like her fa-
ther in that particular; I'm in the
'80011511e1.21088, you knotitti": •
' 0 e• n• A A : q,E.Kk '" 1, 4 ." t , ,