HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1903-5-21, Page 7•••••••••••••••••••••••.•
Oenviiine
t rYs
Little Liver Pills.
Meet Bear Signature of
sea FareSheife VI/sapper Below.
Vesy emesa mate eo aw• e.
to tuko as stigma
FOR HEADACHE:0
DIUIREVEk
FOR DiLEOUSNESI.
RN TORPID LIVER.
pomSTIPATIOV.
FOR 8ALLOV! SKINIIV.
17.-atg FOR TIM COMPLEXION
iter
CURES. SICK HEADACHE.
CARTERS
PllLBUKN'S
HEART AND NEKVE
PILLS
Make Weak Hearts Strong.
Make Shaky Nerves Firm,
THEY COPSE
trenrOnellOSa — Sleeplessness— Palpitation 01
the Heart—Nervous Prostre.tion—Faint
and Dizzy Spoils — Drain Fag —After
Effects of La Cfrippe—Ancouda—And all
Troubles Arising from a Ran -down Sys.
tom.
••••••••••••••••
Read what T. L. Foster, Mineeing,
Ont., has to say about them:—I was
greatly troubled with palpitation of the
heart, a sudden .blmciness would come
Over me, and floating specks before my
eyes caused me great inconvenience.
Often I would have to gasp for breath,
and my nerves were in a terrible cpndi-
tion. I took MILBURN'S HEART AND
NERVE PILLS, and they have proved a
blessing to me. I cheerfully recona
miend 'them to all sufferers from heart
and nerve trouble.
Price 50e. per box, or 3 for $1.25; all
aeS.-'ciealers or The T. ilburn Co., Limited,
'Tcronto, Ont.
"',1Z,..=5GISZ121/ZGALSYCJI0
BRECI5-11_7, A MANON
LADY.
TELLS 01? HIR EXPILRIENCE
'WITH
DOH'S KIDNEY PILLS
- The Great and Well-Knoun Kidney Spada
for the Cure of all Kidney
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_taits. P. Bertrand, Breche A 1V/anon,
writes :-1 tbink it nothing but
right for me to let you know what
DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS hare done for
rim. For five months I was badly troubled
;with a sore back, and such severe pains
in iny kidneys that I could scarcely walk
at -times. I got a box of DOAN'S KID-
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taken I was greatly relieved, and with
another box I was completely cured. I
cannot help but give them all the praise
I can, and will never fail to recommend
theniAo all kidney sufferers.
DOAMS KIDNEY PILLS.
are 60e. box, or 3 for $1.25; all dealers or
The Doan Kidney Pill Co., Toronto, Ont.
C',4,
4,A4A-A40'
Turns Bad Blood into
Rich Red Blood.
This spring you will need
something to take away that
tired, listless feeling brought
on by the system being clogged
with impurities which have
accumulated during the winter.
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.
ILF,At is PROOF.
Mrs, J. T. Skims of Shigawake, Que.,
writes::- "I have .used Burdsick 13Iood
Bitters -es a spring medicine for the past
four years and don (Wok there is its equal,
When I feel drowsy; tired and have no
desiee to cat 1get a bottle of r3.14,13, It
purifies tIie. blood and builds up the cons
Stitation better then au mit4el •
THE II
NEST LAWYER
Never Uses False Means to Plead
for a Justifiable Cause,
(Entered according to Act of the Par -
'lament of Vanada, in the year Ono
Thousand DI ing liun(lred and Three,
by Wm. Bally, of Toronto, at the
Department cif Agriculture, 'Ottawa.)
A despatch from Chicago says:
Rev. Frank Do Witt Talmage preach-
ed from the followiug text: I Tim-
othy ie 8, "The law is good if a
man use it lawfully."
•Paul had all the mental qualifica-
tions of a great lawyer. When he
stood before Felix and as his own
advocate tore into pieces the charge
made by the prosecuting attorney,
Pert:anus; when he argued before
King Agrippa until the king ad-
mitted he was "almost persuaded;"
when ho pleaded upon Mars hill' with
the jury of Greek scholars until at
last even that central seat of Athe-
nianculture was shaken to its very
foundation by his proclamation of
the "unknown God," we find the
highest development of forensic
training and legal acumen,. As one
schooled in the law, Paul knew the
mighty and majestic power of the
law, both e spiritual and temporal.
Therefore he lays down the broad
proposition that law is good for the
community and that it is needed
not only for the vindication of the
right, but for the punishment of
the wrongdoers, whether the laws
that they break are Malian or di-
vine.
The noble profession of the law Is
often unjustly maligned. Like other
professions, it has in its ranks un-
worthy men who disgrace it, and
there is no profession in wh/ch
trickery and rascality reap so rich
a harvest. But it has also in its.
ranks noble, honest, sterling men;
whose knowledge and talents are de-
voted to the cause of right and jus-
tice. I want to say to all young
men who are entering that profes-
sion that if they set before them-
selves a lofty ideal and hold fast to
Christian principle they may win
success in it. serving God faithfully
and keepiug their character unstain-
ed. Let me try to give you briefly
my conception of the principles of a
Christian lawyer.
THE CHRISTIAN LAWYER..
Sele will never champion a cause
that he knows to' be dishonest. Why?
Because he would be aiding one man
to deprive another of his rights. Ob,
the wrongs that are perpetrated by
the rich and powerful! Oh, how
many there are who suffer all their
lives at the hands of unscrupulous
foes! How many men aro trying to
deprive their brother man of his
rights? The lawyer who helps them
in their nefarious attempt is a par-
taker with them in their crime. I
am not here contending that it is
wrong for the lawyer to defend a
criminal in court. Every man s
entitled to a fairetrial. Even the
wretch Czolgose had his rights be-
fore the law, and justice required
that those rights bo protected. A
laWyer ofteu does a hernic part in
defending a criminal or in pleading
that mercy be shown him, but there
is no boroism—in aiding a client to
cheat or defraud another.
Yet there aro a great many law-
yers who affirm that they have
nothing to do with the honesty • or
dishonesty of a client. Al]. that
they must do is to present the best
Fide of a civil suit, and then the
judge. or the jury will decide wheth-
er a. cause is just or unjust. If a
drunkard by his own carlessness
fal:s• off a itinving. electric car, they
will bring suit against the street cite
corporation for $10,000 and not
have one qualm of conscience. If a
distant relative by a technical flaw
can break a will, they will help him
to do it and divert the money of a
rich man into a channel where it was
never intended by the testator to
go. This was the way the estate of
a famous •- lawyer statesman was
Legally stolen. Every one who read
his will clearly understood what the
dead statesman wished to have done
with his property. He wanted to
have built a great public institu-
tion. Yet some distant relative
with whom he never had any close
affiliation, by the aid, of scheming
lawyers, broke that will. It was
only because one of the now heirs
was intrinsically honest that part
of the 'estate was placed at the dis-
posal of the trustees who were ape
Pointed to carry nut the scheme..
LAWYER'S TEMPTATIONS.
But, though this may be all true,
the temptations before honest crim-
inal lawyers are very great. Believ-
ing in the innocence of their di-
ents, they know as no other class
of mon how many innocent victims
have been sent to the penitentiary
or the gallows through an unbreak-
able chain of false circumstantial
oil:deuce. In one of our largo cities
of the oast a reale was aroused ono
night by a noise. With lighted
candle and cocked revolver, • he de-
scended the stairs and was shot
dead. An ex -convict was arrested
and charged with the crime. Ills
lawyer believed him to be innocent.
He did all in hie power to save him.
Te was hanged. Some years• after
the' execution.. a dying convict con-
fessed to that crime and thus prov-
ed that an innocent Man had his
life choked out by false circurne•tien-
tial evidence. In the same weir a
few years ago a woman in the far
west was murdered. An innocent
man, proved so by later develop -
n en ts , was found to have suffered
for that crime. No lawyer in any
capacity ,is called upon to lie. 'A
falsehood is a falsehood, no matter
how it is told. If you believe in
fustiee; your own bands must be
dorm when they touch hers, nor
must you contaminate your own lips
when you Would woo her to protect
the life of your client. If a lawyer
is willing to lie for o. good cause,
the time will not he very far dis-
tant when he will be willing to tell
a falsehood to win a bad. duse.
The' 'righteous sawyer trice to keep
his client out of litigation if reset-
. ,..
We. That moans he does for his
client exactly what the honest doe-.
tor would do for his patient. The
faniily physician, coming to the bed-
side of an invalid, does not say,
"How long can I keep this man
sick, so I can make as much money
out of hini as possible?" He says:
"How soon can I make this man
well? The sooner. the better. Der -
ter for me; better for the patient."
Neither does ;the holiest lawyer try
to force his client into litigation.
He knows that often the best way
to settle a legal difficulty is outside
the court, instead of inside.
TUE YOUNGsLAWyEa'S DUTY.
Tho high principled lawyer pro-
tects the weak as well as the
strong. The young graduate from
a legal school is likely to take any
case which comes in his way. It is
not so much then a question of
money as of getting something to
do. He will spend as Much time
over the case of a pet dog which has
been poisoned in a back yard as he
avillstwenty years later on a $100,-
000 suit. But after awhile that
young man works his way up the
legal ladder. his brain becomes
keener, his experience greater'. He
stands in the front rank of his pro-
fession. What is the result ? He
ceases as a rule, to deal with cases.
involving small fees. He is a rail-
road attorney or a. rich man's advo-
cate,
My legal friend, now is your op-
portunity for heroic self sacrifice.
Do you know 01 a case in which a
poor man is re.enaced with injustice?
Do you know of „ a man
who is charged with a
CriMo of which ho is innocent ? Tho
glory you win in championing his
cause is better to you than a 51,-
000,000 fee. Tho great corporations
and the wealthy men have reserved
for their services the strongest legal
brains of the country. I ask, who
are going to look after the legal in-
terests of the peer- and the helpless?
You know just as well as I that the
critical time in the young man's life
is just after he has committed that
sin which he did thoughtlessly and
without realizing its heinousness.
You know that if he is once con-
victed and sent to the penitentiary
and herded in with a lot of old
criminals he will become one of the
blackest of the black. Will you
leave him to the care ofone of
those legal incompetents who aro
found banging about every court
ream,- waiting like vultures to
pounce upon the helpless and the
slain ? Or will you, in the front
rank of the legal profession, give
your time and services to save that
young man ? Yon know as well as
I do that that little child who had
her legs cut off by the cruel wheels
of the electric en.r through the care-
lessness of the motorman will get
nothing unless a man of your brain
plead her cause. You, with your
legal ability. could win Inc her a
verdict of $20,000 cash, Will you
let that little child bo sent to a
cripples' home and pass all her life
there in poverty because you, a
successful lawyer, are not willing to
plead her cause ?
FOR HUMANITY'S CAUSE.
Shall the strong' lawyers only look
after the strong clients and not
after the weak ? No, no. That is
not what they ought to do. Surely
the lawyers should he just as self-
sacrificing in caring for the helpless
unfortunates as their le other pro-
fesAionals,••the surgeons end the doc-
tors. The poorest in our cities can
have if necessary the services; of the
very best surgeon or. oculist or
aurist or lung specialist. All a man
has to do is to go to the hospital
clinics, and. the best medical Mid
surgical skill is at his command
free. Can it be that the lawyer is
not ready to sacrifice as much for
inunanity's cause as the physician
or the surgeon ? Besides that, my
able legal friend, you know your
success has brought you plenty of
money. You know the reason you
do not retire from practice is simply
because you cannot bear to bo idle.
Then why not give n, part of your
time to helping the weak and down-
trodden 9 Why not be a good Sa-
maritan in the profession in which
you see only too often the bruised
and bleeding travellers who have
fallen among the thieves on the
Jericho road and who have not one
strong legal friend to come to their
rescue ?
The noble Christian lawyer Is most
anxious to' serve aright his asso-
ciates in a spiritual and in a tem-
poral sense. Why ? Ho knows that
some clay all the stets of his life
shall be passed upon by the greatest
of all supreme courts, the great
jcldgment seat of Christ. • A lawyer
is always more careful of a case if
he thinks that case is going to bo
appealed to a higher court. Ono
misstatement in a brief or the lack
of *tho sworn testimony of a witness
may mean the reversal of the lower
court's decision. How 'much more,
then, should tho fact be ever pre-
sent to him that ho will one day
have to standat the bar of God.
The true Christian lawyer is the
mae who is prayerfully careful of
every word and deed and act of his
life. All these acts 'aro to be re-
corded In the Book of Life and read
at the great "assize of heaven,"
Will you, sras legal friend, live and
work with We ono thought before
your mind ? Live with the idea that
some day the Christ who once Meted
as a defendant before Pilate is the
Christ, who as judge will have Pil-
ate as a defendant before him.
REMEMBER THE (MEAT Assrxm.
$0mo young lawyers in the impule
sieeness of their youth d� not stop
to consider this. One day a profess
sor said to a wild catlego lad, "My
boy, what do you intend to make
out of life •?" "Well." answered the
boy, "I intend to spend. four years
at college." "What then 9". "Then
I intend to enter the maw schooi and
work hard and make my mind a
great respository of legal lore,"
"What then. ?" "Oh. then I shall
throw myself. body, soul and mind,
into my work, 1 shall force myself
in the front ranks of the great law-
yers of my time. I shall be known,
I hope, as a man with eloquence and
power. My fees will bo largo ; my
'circle of friends greater." "What
then ?" "Why, then I shall turn
my attention to politica. I shall
stand upon the rostrum, Perhaps I
shall be able to plead in the Senate
or sit as chief justice upon the su-
premo court bench,!"‘What then ?"
'Thenein my old age I shall retire
from work. I shall have. a country
end a city home. I shall be known
as a sage and live in quiet and ease.'
"Vhat then ?" said the professor,
"With the way you are living in
sin shall your life never be brought
into review and passed upon by
God ?" Then the young man hung
his heads for he could say nothing,
So to -day I force this truth upon
every one here present. I will state
not only what 'the noble Cnristian
lawyer believes, but also Watt we
aro all compelled to believe. Evevy
act, every deed, every hope and
prayer and sin of .our earthly exist -
elms must some day be pussed in
review by the great assize. So livo
that, with Christ as your Advocate,
you can win the verdict, of ever-
lasting life.
THE S. SO LESSON,
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
MAY 24.
Text of the Lesson, Acts xxvi.,
19-29. Golden Text, Acts
zxvi., 22.
19. Whereupon'0 King Agrippa,
I was not disobedient unto the hea-
venly vision.
Our hot lesson gave us Paul's tes-
timony before Felix and his wife.
After two years Fostus succeeded
Felix, and Paul was still a prison-
er. The hatred. of the high, priest
and the Jewish rulers was unabated,
and they were still longing to kill
Paul. Fostus told them to come to
Caesexea and give their testimony
against him, which they did, but,
as before, could prove nothing. When
Foetus asked him if he was willing
to go to Jerusalem and be tried
there, he appealed to Caesar. In
due time Kaig Agrippa and Bernice
come to Caesarea to visit Festus
and ho tells them of Paul the pri-
soner and how the woole trouble be-
tween him and his accusers seemed
to be about "one Jesus, who was
dead, whom Paul affirmed to he
alive (xxv, 19). King Agrippa de-
siring to hear him, and he, with
Bernice and all the great ones be-
ing assembled, Paul is brought be-
fore them and is permitted to speak
for himself. He told of his early
life, his zeal in the Jews' religion,
the appearance of the Lend Jesus
to him on the way to Damascus and
His commission to carry to the
gentiles the knowledge of tho for-
giveness of sins and inheritance in
the kingdom through Jesus Christ,
20, 21. That they should repent
and turn to God and do works matt
for repentance.
These things he preached as he
was commissioned at Damascus, Jer-
usalem, throughout 'Judea and to
the gentiles, and because of this, he
said, the Jews wanted to kill
Well, they had killed the Lord Jesus
and Stephen and James and others,
and Paul himself had taken a hand
in SWIM of it, so he knew just what
it meant and why it was, and no
one knew better. But his eyes had
been .opened, and now the risen
Christ was to him the greatest real-
ity in the universe.
22. Having therefore obtained
help of God, 1 continuo unto . this
day, witnessing to both small and
great, ,saying none other things
than those which the • prophets and
Moses did say should come.
All could See that there were cer-
tain writings and a certain person
spoken of in those writings in which
and in whom Paul had absolute con-
fidence. It was certainly a great,
privilege thus to be permitted to
bear witness to Christ and the
Scriptures before such a congrega-
tion, but it was a very serious mat-
ter for the congregation. Better for
them never to have heard the good
news than to hear and reject it.
Yet wo are commissioned to pro-
claim it to every creature, and God
will take care .of the results.
23. That Christ Should suffer and
that 1 -To should be tho first that
should rise from the dead and should
slew light unto the people and to
the gentiles. '
Christ Himself taught that it be-
hooved Him to suffer and to rise
from the dead the third day and
that repentance and remission of
sins should bo preached in
His name among all nations
(Luke xkiv, 46, 47). The gospel
which Paul preached was that Christ
died for our sins according to the
Scriptures, and that He was buried,
and that He rose again the third
day, according to the Scriptures, and
that through Him is preached the
forgiveness of sins, and by IIim alt
that believe are justified from all
things (I Cor. xv, 8, 4; Acts, xiii,
88, 39.)
24-26. And as he thus spake for
himself Fostus said, with a loud
voice : Paul, thou are beside thy-
self. Much learning doth make thee
mad.
Paul said that he was not mad,
but had only spoken Words of
truth and soberness and was per-
suaded that Agrippa knew the truth
of the 'things whereof he had spoken.
fli Isa. lix, 15, margin, it is written,
"Yea, truth (Oath, and he that de-
Parteth 'from evil is accounted
mad."" In lIos. ix, 7, wo road, "The
prophet is a tool, the spiritual man
is med." They said to the Lord
Jesus, •"Thou art a Samaritan and
hast a devil" :John vIi, 2:0;
48); so wo need not wonder when
hard things are said of us or to us
for Christ's sake,
27. King Agrippa, believest thou
the prophets 9 X know that thou
bolievest.
Paul was persuaded that the king
MO not ignorant of the events
which had so. recently transpired. at
Jerusalem or of the predictions thus
in part fulfilled. If the question
should be asked of believers now,
"Believest thou the prophets ?" the
answers might be very varied, but
no doubt many would have to plead
ignorance of what the prophets had
written.
28, 29, Thee Agrippa Feld unto
Paul, Almost thou persuadest me to
be a Christian.
Tho realised version says, "With
but little persuasion thou wouldst
fain make me a Christian." Paul's
reply that he earnestly wished before
God that all who heard him that
day were not only almost, but al-
together, Christians seems to me to
indicate that Agrippa was much
moved thereto. But, alas, almost. a
Christian is to lce, lost, Baleen' and
Judas Iscariot were perhaps as near
to being Christians as men could
be, yet we have no reason to think
that either was saved. There is
great reason to fear that many
church members, moral, religious
people, In good standing, are only
"almost Christiane." This 'certainly
fa true; that if any are draeficiing on
their morality, church membership,
haptiem, knowlettge of Scripture or
anything short of actually receiving
Christ they aro not saved, for "ho
that hath the Son hath life, and he
that hath not the Son or Clod hath
not life" a Johnv,
ARSENIC VERSUS G -OLD.
Poisonous Mineral Is the More'
Valuable „of the Two.
Gold miners in Hastings • cotmty,
for years sought for some means to
rid the ore of the arsenic deposit
which in that region is found in
combination with the gold. They
offered reward s, tried numberless ex-
periments, and did everything they
could to get rid of the poleonous.
troublesome stuff that lay between
them and their precious gold. But
now a wonderful transformation has
taken place. Instead of separating
the gold from the arsenic, the min-
ers are working to get the arsenic
away from the gold. It is much
'the same thing, but different. The
difference is that the arsenic and not
the gold is *hat the miners are af-
ter; they -do not throw away • the
'gold, but the arsenic is the prize.
The miners were still swearing
vainly at the arsenical deposits that.
buried their gold from them when
a party of scientists came over
from FIngfand: They asked the min-
ers how much gold a ton they took
out 'of their rough ore. The miners
replied` that the ore ran all the way
from $4 to 560 worth of gold. They
said the trouble was that it had so
much arsenical pyrites • in it. The
scientists investigated and • informed
the miners that the arsenic in one
ton of. their ore was worth some-
thing like $90. Then the miners
quit swearing at the arsenic.
This strange tarn of the wheel of
fortune- has been caused hy the vir-
tual exhaustion of the former chief
source of supply of arsenic in Ger-
many and England, together with.
the superior quality and purity of
the Canadian product.
Tho companies in the Hastings.
county. gold fields have successfully
introduced the bromo-cyanogen pro-
cess in treating the preciously • re-
fractory mispidkel, as the ore in
which arsenic is contained is called,
and aro now turning out eighty tons
of arsenic it month, The arsenic
can be placed on the Cara at Mar -
'horn, in Hastings county, at a cost
of 520 a ton; it eels at 570 and
frequently as high .as $90 a ton.
This arsenical ore... also carries from
54 to 860 worth of gold in each
ton, which is a handsome profitin
it7isr.
Arsenic 'is a -metallic substance,
extremely brittle, of - steel gray
shade, and is one of the most pois-
onous of substaares.' It is used for
mixing with lead in the manufacture
of nhot and is also added to iron
and steel in the manufacture of
chains and ornament s. • It is indis-
pensable in the manufacture of glass,
being used for •• reducing the iron
oxide contained in sand.
•
NO ONE SAFE NOWADAYS.
"I see that the author of this
poem on freedom is accused of
plagiarism now," observed Jones,
dropping his morning paper on the
floor and turning his attention to
the buttered toast.
'• "It is something 'awful," replied
Mrs. Jones, with .the severest kind
of an expression upon her face, "the
Way these men go about, the country
marrying innocent women."
"Plagiarism," said Jones, loftily,
'lmeneis a literary thief."
"Stole some books, did he ?"
"No, no ; he simply pirated ideas.
They claim that some women wrote
the poem. years ago."
"I don't see what they Want to
'bring it up against her now for.
She may have been. young at the
time and be trying to live it down :‘
but no one is safe in these days of
ha'penny papers."
And tirs. Jones helped herself to
another piece of toast as she Con-
tinued to look severely at her hus-
band, as if it was all his fault.
MOST ESSENTIAL vIrtTur s.
In the Paris Presse there has just
been taken a plebiscite on the ques-
tion, "What are the six most essen-
tial virtues in a, woman?" The
readers of La. Presse voted for the
following virtue's in the order given:
The numbers aro the votes according
to each. quality: Economy, 1,420;
fidelity, 1, i57;8modesty, :IM57;
kindliness, 1482; maternal love,
880, Cleaulines,s and patience aro
last on the list.
•
1.1
ALCOHOLIC' DFONKS
AND MEDICINES,
Several European and American governments have glade
comparative tests of alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages for
Soldiers on forced march. These tests have invariably mulled
in the withdrawal of alcoholic arAnks
during all strenuous workrchocolate
and other sweet beverages being
given instead.
The result of these scientific re.
Searches is applicable to the only of
feeble and overworked people seek-
ing strength. Liquid medicines are
necessarily alcoholic; they merely
stimulate and their effect is only
temporary.
Weak people should taa St.
JAMES WAFRItS, which are a recoti.
structive and a tissue builder ; their
effects are lasting, and a permanent
improvement will always follow their
steady use.
al,
S. JAMISS WAFERS help stomach,
digest food and send the nutriment
through the blcod, and this is the
honest way to get health and strength,
the kind that lasts, develops and
breeds the energy which accom-
plishes much.
4-14,k 5IVe seeeNGTflgg'fis",;'11.-'1.;
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Price in Canada: 51 .00 ;
Six bottles for 53.00 6
"I consider St. Tames Wafers a
most excellent preparation for
the nerve o andollall recommend
them geticraliy.t
Bt. Thos. Brooks,
Manchester, Ittig.
St. fames Wafersare not a secret
remedy to the numerous dodors re-*
commendinr them to their patients
we mail the formula 140/I request.
Where dealers are not selling the
Wafers, they are mailed upon re-
ceipt of price at the Canadian
branch : St. James Wafers Co.. Ina
St. Catherine S., &sparsest
TRIED RECIPES.
Short Cakes.—The season for short
cakes is now with us ; that is, the
real shortcake, for although cakes
called by that name may bo found
at many tables at any time of the
year, our thoughts instinctively turn
to t • ..•es as thefruit par
ex-
cellenca for this delectable dessert
and supper dish.
The cake of course, is always, or
should be, the rich, unsweetenedbis-
cuit dough, make light with baking
powder, tendele with a little lard,
and of a rich flavor from the but-
ter used as shortening. Milk is used
to moisten the ilbur to the. proper
soft dough cOnsistentY, and.- the
shaping end baking may he as
varied as you please. It may be
soft enough to spread on the pan
Or to he dropped in muffin pans and
baked in the oven, or in. muffin rings
on a hot griddle. Or it may be lit -
stiffer, just so you can toll it slight-
ly to fit- a shallow pan, and put two
thin layers in each pan. The pans
may be round or square. Or it may
be cut in biscuit form for conve-
nience in splitting and serving.
If baked in one rather thick cake,
it may be served more like a pie, by
cutting a circle in the crust, one inch
from the edge, reinOving the top
crust and a portion of the soft part
beneath and filling with the sweet-
ened berries ; replace the corer and
when serving it, divide it like a pie..
The crust should always he buttered
generously while hot, and the cake
is richer- to many tastes if the fruit.
is divided, or mashed and sweetened
some time before serving, that it
may bo full of rich syrup. Some
whole berries, or halved if very
large, may be used for the top de-
coration, and 'Amity of the -fruit
syrup should Ise ready to serve with
each portion for a scathe. If the
cakes have been well buttered and
have been made rich with shorten-
ing, it Seems superfluous to add
cream, either plain or whipped ; but
there is such a fad for serving whip-
ped cream on evesything, that many
think it must be the only way to
do, but to my mind many things are
better without it.
Shortcake made hi this way should
be served immelliately', as long soak-
ing does not improve the crust.
Lamb Sandwiches. — Share the
lamb,which should be boiled until
!very tender and allowed to he -
come very cold, into very fine slices,
mere shavings, and always across
the fibres. Chop some fresh mint
very fine and cover it with lemon
juice, then work it into the butter,
which should be creamed the same
as for cake. Spread the thin slices
of bread with the butter, then cover
one with the meat and put the two
together and serve.
Baked Potato Puff.--Herdoee the
inside from, sir hot nicely baked. po-
tatoes, season with salt and pepper
and boat them well. Boat the yolks
and then the whites of two eggs, add
the yolks to the potato, and when
beaten light add the whites, and
pour the mixture into a baking dish
suitable for serving. Dot the sur-
face with bits of butter (two table-
spoons -in all) and brown it quickly
in a hot Oven.
OW•
Nut Loaf Clake.—Creamn a scant
half cup of butter with one cup of
sugar, add two beaten eggs, one-half
cup of cold water, two level tea-
spoons of baking powder, the meats
of one-half pound of English wal-
nuts chopped fine and ono and ono -
half cups of flour. Cover the cake
With a white frosting' and ornament
with unbroken halves of nut meats
on the top.
Circle Cake—Cream ono cup of
butter, add two cups of fine granu-
lated sugar, four cups of flour in
which five level teaspoons of baking
powder, or two teaspoons of cream
of tartar .,and one level teaspoon of
soda, have been sifted. Flavor with
one teaspoon of tvanilla,
DO YOU KNOW '
That you can clean plaster orna-
ments, vases, etc., with clear starch
mixed with water ? When dry brush
off.
That equal parts of water and
skimmed milk, warm, will remove
fly -specks from varnished wood -work
or furniture, and make it look fresh-
er?
That a strong solution of alum -
water pourod over places infested
with ants, cockroaches and spiders
will disperse those troublesome
visitors ?
That milk is an ex-aellent substi-
tute for soap in washing dishes ? It
softens the water, and at the same
time prevents your hands from
chapping. A smallquantity will
answer.
That hot water wilt: take out ev-
ery kind of fruit stain Pour the
water on the discolored parts before
washing, and .the tablecloth, or
whatever it may be, will come back
as good as new.
re Wood's
A k
CA.
%IP
AUZ ;
•••••••, -
rwey sne
Syrup
Cures Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis,
Hoarseness, Croup, Asthma,
Pain or Tightness in the
Chest, Etc.
It stops that tickling in the throat, is
pleasant to take and soothing and heal-
ing to the lungs. Mr. E. Bishop Brand,
the Weil -known Galt gardener, writes
:—
I ltdd a very severe attack of sore
throat and tightness in the chest. Some
tinses when. 1 wanted to cough and could
not I would almost choke to death. My
wife got me a bottle of DR. WOOD'S
NORWAY PINE SYRUP, and to my sur-
prise I found speedy relief. I would
not be without it if it cost $1..00 a bot-
tle, and I can reconunend it to everyone
bothered with a cough or cold.
Price 25 Cents.
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/THOUSANDS 01 men are prisoners of disease as securely
as though they were confined behind the bars. Many
haVe forged their own chains by the vices of early youth,
exposure to contagious disease, or the excesses of manhood.
They feel they are not the men they ought to be or used to be.
The vim, vigor, and 'vitality of manhood are lacking. Are
you uervous and despoudent? tired in time morning? have you
to force yourself through the day's work? have you little am-
bition and energy? aro you irritable and excitable? eyes
stutken,depressed and haggard looking? memory poor and
brain fagged? have you weak back with dreams and losses et
night? deposit in urlue? week seettally?—yoe have •
Nervous Debility eld Seminal Weakness.
• ,eas Our NEW 11IIITIEICAD TMEATildillifT gum -withal to
Cure or No Pay. 28 years ill Detroit. DoOk
h,„,7,77, Security. Beware of quacks—ConSult old established,
',0111/• reliable _physicians. C coaultritioni Bros. Books
Free. Write for Question Blank for liomse Treatment.
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