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Exeter Times, 1903-6-11, Page 7
C S 1 Y. Cenuine P r:••..>.. .rte r s Little Liver Pilled Must Bear Signature of See FaceSimite Wrapper Below. very small arta as easy to take as finger. FOR HEADACHE.) Fall DIZZINESS. F'OR BILIOUSNESS. FOR T6i1P10 LIVEt3o F M CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION .•@��'. Ci7aiVWin'e>1I i1UUT IIA,•C WATUR L, go 6c70I Pi rely vegetable. n s.> -6 CARTEFS ITTLE IIVER PI LLS. CURL; SICK HEADACHE, Aro a combination of tbo active principles of tho most valuable vegetable remedies for dis- eases and disorders of the Liver, Stomach and Bowels. • Sick Headache Jaundice, Heart- burn, Catarrh of the Stomach, Dizzl• nese, Blotches and Pimples. Dyspepsia, Flour Stomach, Wotton. Brash, Liver Complaint, Sallow 61' IlIuddy Complexion. r• Sweeten the breath and clear away all waste and poisonous matter from the system. tl Price 25o. a bottle or 6 for 81.CC. All dealer! Tux T. Micaonu Go., Limited, Porontos Ont •. Was So Nervous She - Coixlcl Not Sleep At Plight. 'Med alpitation of the Heart and Loss of ppeii e— 'ou One of Those Troubled in this Way? If y are MILBURN'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS will Care You—They Cure Nervous. nese, Sleeplessness, Anaemia, Faint and Dizzy Spells. General Debility, and all Hoar{ or Nerve Troubles. Read what Mrs. C. H. Reed, Coboconlc, ifiys about'thein-Over six years ago I was troubled with palpitation of the heart and loss of appetite. I was so nervous I could not sleep at night. I r took MILBURN'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS. They cured me, and I have not been bothered since. Price 50e. per box, or 3 for $1.25; all dealers or The T. Milburn Co., Limited, ICoronto, Ont. LOADED UP WITII IMPURITIES. SPRING THE SP . �G THE SYSTEM TEM IS LOADED UP WITH IMPURITIES. After the hard work of tho winter, the eating of rich and heavy foods, the system becomes clogged up with waste tend poisonous matter, and the blood becomes thick and sluggish. This causes Loss of Appetite, Bilious, ness, Lack of Energy and that tired, weary, listless fueling so prevalent in the spring. The cleansing, blood -purifying action of DU .... �B t OD RD �0 L BITTERS; 0 eliminates all the pent-up poison from the rYsterib starts the sluggish liver working, gl stets on the Kidneys and Bowels, and renders it, without exception, The Desi S];i'lIlg Medicine. THE FLEH poTs F EGypT 1 the Bread d of m wlmu God gives. l Then instead of murmuring we shall ► * find the song of praise and rejoicing rising to our lips and instead of the backward glance toward the country of sin out of which we have Stand for the World and the Things been delivered by the mercy and greet, of God we shall be looking forward as the Lord loads out of the wilderness into the fullness of blessing of the promised land, of the World. (Entered according to Act of the Par- liament of Uanada, in the year One Thousand Nine ]:hundred and Three, by Win. Hairy, of Toronto, at the. ,iepartment of. .11.gricuitiu•e, Uttawa.) A despatch from Chicago says' Rev. Frank Do Witt Talmage preach- ed from tho following text: "And 'the children of Israel said: .Would to God we had died by the hand of the Lord in the land of Egypt, when • we sat by the flesh pots, and when we did eat bread •to the full! . Then said the Lord:- Behold, I will rain bread from Heaven for you." — Exo- dus 16:3-4.. "Now these things were our ex- amples, to the intent that wo should not lust after evil things, as they also lusted." — I. Cor. 10:6, Tho record of the children of Israel lives to this day, that it maty -teach us of the waywardness, stubbornness and blindness of the human heart, and the faithfulness, the patience and the generous caro of God for : Itis children in .all ages. Israel is a mir- ror which God holds up for us • to look into. It is a mirror which Inas the penetrating power of the X ray, and reveals in the Turman heart and life that which lies beneath the sur- face, and it is a mirror, also, whose polished surface catches the light of Heaven and reveals God in all His fulness. Let us look into this mir- ror that we may drink in the pic- ture which God paints of the redemp- tion of his people front bondage, of His leading, of His deliverances, of His care for thorn, and of His wonderful patience with thew in their waywardness and rebellion. And as we sit before the picture we may learn its lessons, for "these things were our examples (or, as the mar- gin of the revised version puts it, 'in these things they become figures of us'), to the intent that we should not hist after evil things, as they also lusted." Some Bible. exegetes, in interpret- ing the history of Israel's bondage, deliverance, wilderness journey and possession of the promised land as figures illustrating the spiritual life, have held the wilderness journey as a type of • THE CHRISTIAN WALK in this life, the crossing of the Jor- dan as a type of death, and tho pos- session of the promised land as set- ting forth the soul's• eternal dwel- ling place in Heaven; but there are so many diflibulties in the way of such interpretation, and it fails to harmonize so many essential details with the teaching• of.Scelptu:re re- garding. the .Christian life And of. Heaven, that wo are inclined to ac- cept the interpretation of other com- mentators, who believe that the wil- derness journey is a type of the re- deemed but unsanctified believer in Christ ,Jesus, and that the crossing of the Jordan typifies full 'surrender to God, and the possession of tho promised land •illustrates the sancti- fied and victorious life of ttar saint. Some of the difficulties which pre- sent themselves against the reason- ableness of the first-nauied interpre- tation are that the crossing of the Jordan, narked the beginning of real conflict with evil and the enemies of God, while death marks the passage of the soul from the scene of conflict with evil and the enemies of God in this world to the I h bliss and mace and joy of heaven. The promised land was filled with the enemies of right- eousness. Heaven cannot be such a place. The promised land was the scene of 'desperate fighting, but no 'such conflicts await the saint in Heaven. while on the other hand .in this 'lifeet he sanctified -saint • is the one who hits the most desperate fighting to do against the enemies of Cool. Satan is not troubling very much with the saints who aro wan- dering around in the wilderness, but when they cross over into the prom- ised land of the consecrated and sanctified life in Christ Jesus then he begins his bitter and relentless warfare. The promised land wit- nessed the wanderiug from God of His children, their indulgence in idolatrous worship, their punishment by famine and pestilence and war, their captivity, but none of these things can bo true off -the HEAVENLY EXPERIENCE. Paul in the seventh of Romans draws a faithful picture of the saint who is struggling through the wil- derness experiences, and when at last in utter • despair he exclaims: "0 wretched man that I amt who shall deliver nue from the body of this death?" he suddenly lifts his eyes and the vision of the promised land of the higher Christian life bursts upon his soul and he tri- umphantly cries: t "I thank God, through Jesus Christ our Lord." Anel.. then in, the eighth chapter....,he gloriously unfolds . the life of. the saint .who has entered• -the promised land of full blessing hi Christ Jesus. Ile scales height alter height until at last -till the passibilitits• of that promised land lie spread out in their rich beauty and wide extent before him and he shouts:. "We are more than conquerors.. through Him. that loved us, for I am persuaded that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the Jove of (rod, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord." The redeemed but unsanctified be- liever stands before us. 'The blood of the Lamb, Christ Jesus, has been sprinkled upon the lintel and door posts of his heart and he has gone out of the land where darkness and death' reign. He has had some blessed e-icrietices. Oh, the sweet- ness and joy of those first days of the new life. Jesus' presence has been felt, He has led unerringly, He, has delivered 'mightily when the Devil ltas pressed hard. The bitter pools hft`v6'4'b"n made Sweet. end, the soul rias tested in the shade of 'the date patine of Mini rand, drank o4 ,hor refreshing waters, but the Lord leads the soul out into the wilderness again, and there in the palace of dis- cipline the soul falls to lusting after the flesh pots of Egypt. Tho faith which has delivered and the hope which • has led out towards the pro- mised land of a better life, have been obscured and forgotten as the strong impulses for ?he old life, its pleasures, its associates; its unre- stricted activities gain the upper hand. The most unhappy person on earth is the • WILDERNESS CHRISTIAN, How could the children of Israel murmur so ? wo ask. We wonder with exceeding and inpatient amaze- ment that they could think that death amidst the flesh pots of. Egypt was better than tho feeding of the Lord in the wilderness. And while we marvel we forget that Israel is but a figure of us and plainly illus- trates the spiritual conditions which prevail in our own lives so often. Hankering after the flesh pots of Egypt prevails to the present 'day. God's children don't got very far into the wilderness experiences of the Christian life sometimes before they begin to long for the indul- gences of the 'old life. They fei•get that their hunger can bo satisfied by the Lord who is leading -them, that the manna of God's bounty is as much better than the leeks and onions of Egypt as is life better than death and Heaven better than earth. Esau was willing to sell his birthright for a mess of pottage, and the Christian sometimes is al- most ready to give his soul's hope for the indulgence and pleasure which the world has to offer. Lot's wife, hankering after the luxuries and pleasures of doomed Sodom, looked back, and with the longing look came lagging footsteps until the brimstone and alkali which were raining upon the city fell also upon, her and encrusted her, and sho was lost. Why was it that the children of Israel fell into this sad condition, this yearning for the flesh pots of Egypt ? If we had gone into that calnp and passed from family group to family group and talked with the murmuring people we' would have discovered at least two reasons for their discontent. First they had forgotten the glorious land for which they had sot out, and second, they had taken their eyes off the cloudy pillar of God's presence and wore looping into their meal hags.; And the Christian to -day FALLS INTO AN ERROR similar to that of the children of Israel when •ho forgets the high calling of God in Christ Jesus for which he has set out and which is realized in the promised land of full surrender to God, and when he takes his eyes off the Lord and begins. to look into the meal bag of his own paltry, mean possessions and then lusts after the things of the old. life. Human nature is ever the same. • Israel is a figure of us. The dreary wastes of the wilderness made them utterly forget the pro- mised land of fullness towards which they were journeying, and the back- ward ac -ward look shut out the vision of tho glowing cloud: And with us the. temporary desolation and weariness of the wilderness jouriey, the cross we have to hear, the trial we have to endure, the failure 'we experience and tile:. disappointment .and dis- couragement we . have to face, all• drive from mind and heart the good land toward which the soul is jour- neying, and then, instead of looking upward towards the hills from whence cometh our help, we look within ourselves for comfort and satisfaction, we turn our gaze heck- ward ackward toward the old life with its indulgences, and is it any wonder that like the children of Israel we fall to lusting after the flesh pots of Egypt and murmuring against God? But God's voice sounded out over that robellous camp. Oh, what a God we have 1 Instead of abandon- ing those ungt'eatcful people 1 in- stead of chiding and punishing them, He says :."Behold, I will rain bread from Heaven for you." And that is what God says to your soul and mine. Bread from Heaven 1 Feeding from the hand of God 1 Daily sup- ply ; enough for the day's needs the gathering of the manna the first business of the day. Egypt's flesh pots could no longer nourish Israel. The world can no longer feed and satisfy your soul's hunger. GOD MUST FEED YOU. It Will bo a daily supply, it will be ,only .,;enough for the day, and the gathering must bo done beforethe heat of the activities of the day have Ttzelted • ' the= manna and robbed you of your portion: Oh, how sweet and blessed it is to hear God say to the Soul : "I will rain bread from Heaven for you." Listen 1 oh, soul. Is the murmur of discontent upon your lips ? Aro you hankering after the flesh pots of Egypt ? Lis- ten 1 God is speaking in the pre- sent through the experiences of the past in His dealings with Israel and saying to you that He will feed you abundantly. Tho needy Samaritan woman at Jacob's well was promised Living Water that would satisfy forever. The multi - tucks that had eaten of the loaves and fishes were pointed to the Bread of Life which could satisfy u r' the soul's hungerings, e rn and the t o g g, h Liv- ing Water and the Living Bread from heaven are for you and for me, Let es stifle .the' hankerings after the old life and the old he dulgefices by deep quaffs at the well of Living Water 1' Let us .for- get the flesh pots of the old life in. tlto abttntlant and full partaking of THE S. e LESSON. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, .TUNE 14. Text of the Lesson, Acts xxviii., 16-24. Golden Text, Rom. i, 16: 16, And when we came to Rome * * * Paul was suffered to dwell by himself with a soldier that kept him, The opening verses of this chapter toll us of two illustrations of the power of the risen Christ through Paul during their three months' stay on the island. of Malta, where they had been. ship -wrecked ; Paul's de- liverance from a viper and the heal- ing .of . • tho. fn,ther of .Publius and many others, We may be sure that Paul did not fail• to preach the gos- pel and tel]. of Him by whose power these things worn done, and we have' learned froffi past lessons just how and what ho would preach (ix. 20; xiii, 88, 89; xiv, 15 • xvii, 22- 31). The incident of the brethren coming to meet him as far as Apii forum and returning to Rome with him helps us to understand how it will be when our Lord returns to the earth. The church will meet flim in the air and then come to the earth with Him ,as He returns in power and glor(I Thess. iv, 16, 17; Col. iii, 4 ; Matt. xxv, 31). 17-20. For this cause therefore have I called for you to see you and to speak with you because that for the hope of Israel I am bound with this chain. After three days he called the Jews together and told them the story of his arrest and imprisonment and hew he happened to be now in Roine under his present circumstances. Before Agrippa ho had spoken of the hope of the promise made of God unto the fathers, as the fulfillment of the promises to Abraham. Isaac and Jacob concerning the twelve tribes. In Jer. xiv, 8; xvii, 13, the Lord Himself is called "tho hope of Israel," and we know that the ful- fillment and restoration of all things concerning Israel are inseparably connected with the return of Christ and the resurrection of the just (Acts 111, 19-21; Ise. xxv, 8, 9 ; Dan. xii, 1, 2). In Eph. iii, 1 ; iv, 1, he.speaks of hizielf as..he prison- er of Jesus Christ, prisoner of the Lord. 21, 22. Wo desire to hear of thee what thou. thinkest, for as concern- ing this sect we know that every- where.it•is spoken against. They had heard nothing against Paul, but they had heard many things against Christ and His fol- lowers. It may have_ been soma COM - fort to Paul to know that tongues in that part of the world had not yet opened fire on him, but he had enjoyed his share of it elsewhere and had found some pleasure' in it (II. Cor. xii, 10), and he knew well that since his Waster was being spoken against his turn would come, oven inRome, and the fellowship R he prayed for would be surely his (Phil. iii. 10). 28. There came many to him into his lodging, to whom he expounded and testified the 'kingdom of God, persuading, them' concerning Jesus, both out: of the lav of Moses .and out of the Iit'ophets,' front morning till evening. Unlike many prominent teachers of our day, Paul believed all things which were written in the law and in the prophets (xxiv, 14) and be- lieved the Scriptures to be in truth the' word of God and that it effectu- ally works in all who believe (I. Thoss. ii, 13).. He also believed ful-I ly and flrnily that Jesus of Nazar- eth was all that He said He was, the one of whom all the prophets had spoken, the Son of David, the Son of God, Isrricl.'s Messiah, and that Ho would restore the kingdom to Israel and bless all nations through her (Jer. azcxi, 31-40; E, ek. xxxvii, 21-28; Isa. lx, 1-3). That the kingdom' of God or of heaven is to be a kingdom filling the whole earth is plainly taught in such pas- sages as Num. xiv, 21; Isa. xi, 9; Hab. ii, 14; Dan. ii and vii; Rev.. xi. 24. And some believed the things which were .spoken, and some be- lieved not. We are nowhere taught that tho good news will be universally re- ceived in this age. Some seed will fall by the wayside, some on rocky soil, soiree among thorns, but a per-• tion will find good ground;' some will be saved,': and the church will be completed (Matt. xiii, 18-23; I Cor. Eph. v, 27). Even in the next age; when' Satan shall be bound in the pit. there will be de.. ceivors who will yield only a feign- ed obedience and will follow Satan When he comes forth from his orie son • at the end of the thousand years (Ps. xvii;, • 44; h vi, 13, mar- gin; .Rev. xx, 7, 8), 30. And Paul dwelt two whole years in his ownhired house and re- ceived all that canto In unto him. Doubtless he accomplished the will of God and glorified God as ?such as when journeying through Asia and Ittacodonia•.' Being no longer•al:ile to go to people.,. Ca o(1 'brought people ,to him, and, though he was bound„. he rejoiced that the word of f God' was not bound ()'I. Tint. it, 9). The verses we have' omitted, 25-29, "whey --agreed not among 'hem. selves," "and hadgreat reasoning ani,ong themselves" (for thus they begin' and end), tell us how Paul 'quoted • Isa. vi, 0, 10, and reminded then.'that eontttfies before. the :Rely �p]ri t through. Isaiah 'had: written those Words about theta. 81. Preaching the kingdom of God and teaching those things which concern the Lord Jesus Christ, with all confidence, no pian forbidding him. The adversary cannot hinder be- yond God's permission, and it was the Lord's pleasure that for these two years the word should have free course. This book opens with Jesus Christ between Iris resurrection and ascension preaching the things per- taining to the kingdom of God and with the question of the disciples, „Lord, wilt thou at this time re= store again the kingdom of Israel?" (Acts 1, 8, 6). It closes with Paul at Ronne in a Hired house still preaching the kingdom. A TOUCH OP SENTIMENT, How Mr. k'innegan Helped His Wife on Wash Day. Mr. Finnegan had been ill all win- ter and was just getting about. It had been hard for Mrs. Finnegan, who had to take in washing. For- tunately the family was small in number and well grown. As Mr. Finnegan began to get his strength back ho tried to help his wife, who let him stir about a little and then sent him again to his chair, where he was allowed to smoke ono pipe every three hours, "Tis long between smokes," said Mr, Finnegan. "'Tis good to see you enjoy them," said Mrs. Finnegan. "You must let me help you wid tho clothes," he said, one morning, as the basket grew to a heaping white mound. "Sit still where ye are, Jim, dear." "Anyway, I can put up the line." "If ye like. 'Tis a fine day, and 'twill not hort yo to stay out a min- ute. But put on yer hat." She watched hizn through the win- dow as ho pulled the line taut and tied it round the top of the post. He seemed very active, and she was glad. When he came in he had a good red spot in his cheek, and he Hoisted ono end of the basket as far as the door with a great show of vigor. Mrs. Finnegan hung a table cloth on the line, pushed down the pins so they straddled the rope hard, then stooped for another mouthful of pins and a bed spread. Soon that fiap- ped in the wind. When site had filled the line down one length and back on the next turn, it slipped, and the white clothes lay in. the mud. Mrs. Finnegan turned quickly and looked through the kitchen window. Mr. Finnegan sat with his feet on 1 the table, looking the other way. i With a few quick sweeps of her bare t arms Mrs. Finnegan pulled the clothes off the line, rolled them up i and put thein in a pile on the side • of the basket away from the house. 1 Then she strung tate line again, and; hung the. rest of the clothes from.the i et. i The soiled clothes she lly into the bottom of the bas- flattened! ` ket, and taking it up lightly went' into the house and slid the basket; under the. table. "Jinn, dear, will ye go in the room; while I sweep up here, and ye, needn't come back, 'cause I'll be cookin' dinner by 'n' by, and I'll have the winders open." "How are the clothes?" asked Mr. Finnegan. "Fine!" said Mras. Finnegan. A CRIMINAL'S POSTERITY. A professor of Bonn University, in tracing the posterity of habitual found 834 descend • lcards has drunkards, nants from a woman who •for forty years was "a thief, a drunkard, and a tramp," and whose miserable life came to an end in the last year of the eighteenth century. The pro- fessor has traced the lives of 709 of this wonian's descendants from youth to old ago, and of these 142 were beggars and sixty-four more lived on charity, There were in the family seventy-six convicts, including seven murderers. The professor esti- mated that in seventy-five years this family , has cost the German au- thorities in almshouses, law courts, I prisons, and other institutions about $1,250,000. ondon,E"yHolltrealAt) Basic—% 'PRICE E its A TAIN // AM all Druggistz et Cheri Price in Canada: $1.00 ; Six bottles for $5.00 Debility' ofsystem causes ueur 1c ga, and whatever tends to produce enfeeblements induces it. This affec- tion is undeniably .due to lack of vitality, and its very ` existence is evidence of deficient strength. Remedial measures should there- fore be directed to improve the whole system, for when strength returns to the system, the neuralgic condition of the nerves will disappear. This now is supplied by Sr. JAMES WATERS; they seldom fail to relieve; their effect is a general building np of the system. S'r. JAMES WAFERS help stomach, digest foodand send the nutriment through the blood, and this is the honest way to get health and strength, the kind that lasts, develops and. breeds the energy which aconin• plishes much. "St..Tamea Wafers itevervaries. They are a remedy '4 without a peer, without a rival." In all cases ofneuraigla they have pro. ved a noble and trite a11y." Dr. Patrick Boyle, Dublin, Ireland. St. James Wafersare not secret remedy; tv the numerous doctorsre- comn:ending Mem to ttiefrpatie its we mail the formula eon request. Where dealers are not selling the Wafers, they are mailed upon re- ceipt of once at the Canadian branch : St. James Wafers Co., 1728 St. Catherine St., Ilontrasl. 0e0o 0$0®0=:e© ;;•a!iJe 06.0 ® FOR. 41E HOLE O 0 • Recipes for the ICitchen. Hygiene and Other Notes 6 for the Housekeeper. • 0 oteeee(Dego fl Oe®el3mee0008 SOME RECIPES. ITashed Potatoes Browned in Oven.—Old potatoes that are a little wilted will do nicely for this dish. Pare and cut up into small cubes and soak in cold water for an hour; then boil until they are tender but will not break, in slightly salted water. Drain and put them into a pudding dish, well buttered, and dredge them with a tablespoonful of flour. Break a tablespoonful of but- ter utter intobits and spread over them ; season with salt and pepper and add a cup of warm milk. Cover and prace in oven to bake and uncover just 'long enough before they are done to brown thein nicely. Baked Ham,—Soak- the ham.. in cold .water over night (old ham re- quires two nights and a day.) After soaking, scrape well. Make a quart of flour into a very stiff paste and cover the entire skin side ; place the hart perfectly level in a roasting pan and 1111 pan with cold water. Replenish occasionally with 'hot water while baking. For a seven to eight pound ham bake about three and one -hall hours ; for one weighing eight to ten pounds four to five hours, and for a ten to twelve - pounder five to six hours. Leave in water until cold, then remove paste and skin, cover with bread or cracker crumbs, and place h' baking pan. Dissolve in a large coffee -cup one tablespoon of brown.. sugar in one-third cup of cold water. Fill cup with cider and baste with this fre- quently. Bake thirty 'minutes to ono hour according to size. If a spicy flavor is desired stick in a' few cloves. To 'Roast Veal—The breasts of veal, a part usually scorned . in this country, can be made into a de- licious roast by boning _it. A great many of the bones do not need tak- ing out, but become tender when cooked. Remove only the larger, firmer bones. Flatten it and season it thoroughly. Make a stuffing of forcemeat, including about a pound of lean veal ground fine, three small skinned sausages, the crumbs from half a loaf of bread, soaked in water and then squeezed ; a tablespoonful of salt and a teaspoonful of pepper, with a little sage and chopped pars- ley, and finally two onions chopped fine and fried in butter. Grind the dressing as fine as possible and rub it through a sieve. Stuff the breast, roll it up and either roast it or braize it. If braized it will be ne- cessary to slice an onion and a sar- rot over it, and add pint of rich 'stock to baste it with. In the oven the ;neat should he cooked until it is, thoroughly browned, and frequent- ly basted while it is cooking. It re- quires a groat deal of intelligence in cooking to ` use'veal as economically as the French do. Not one piece is ever used to disadvantage in their 4 "That fellow Jawley is a broker, 'isn't ho ?" "Yes." "Has he got any money ?" "Yes ; he's got mine." We own 15,000 acres choice oil land at Fossil, Uinta County, Wyom- ing, worth $1,000,000. We are capitalized for 2,000,000 shares. Par value $1 earth. Land values alone therefore make stock worth 50c. per share. We have one oil well which will pay 5 ker cent. dividends on all outstanding stock. Any 5 per cent. stock is worth 85c. Total value of our stock, $1.35. We aro selling for short time only at 20c. flat. Wo Have two rigs. one work- ing night and day. Officers, direc- tors and management thoroughly competent and reliable. Our presi- dent is worth over 1100,000 and there is scarcely a man connected with our company but what is worth from 8810,000` up. Our oil fields will prove best in America. We are surrounded with oil wells, derricks and oil springs, and expect gusher within 60 days. Telegrams coming constantly ask- ing us to hold stock for someone. Every 20c. you invest now should reasonably net you $25.00 when we get gusher. Four governors, five U. ,5 senators, many millionaires anti hundreds of other well known men aro financially interested in our fields. Our list of references, which include many banks, will satisfy any man living. We will prove wo have everything. wo claim if you will write us. Get our larospectus and If Telegraph all. references. them replies aro not favorable draw on lis for cost of telegrams. Price may advance or we may get gusher any minute. We sold 150,000 shares in five'.tnanths. Write us and we will satisfy ,you .Idaho -Wyoming pit :Co,. Loan and Trust Bldg., Mitnicapolis, Mine, kitchens. The toughest ends are carefully saved and seasoned and made into as delicious a dish of meat as the imagination can well conjure up. ' In Ainerica the piece used chiefly is the fillet veal, as veal cutlet, and because this is an expensive piece it is used continually, and the bonier pieces, which are cheaper, but more. difficult to use, are dispensed with. HANDY HINTS. A cover of dark calico fee the ironing board to slip on like a pil- low case, when the board is not in use will keep the cloth clean. One made the same way of bleached muslin, to put on when ironing fine white clothes is very nice. Make it so it will fit snugly ; pull on from the small end of board and pin to the cloth underneath. Keep a piece 'of beeswax in a' cloth to rub the irons if they are inclined to stick ; a sheet of fine sand paper tacked to the end of board is good for smooth- ing the irons. A small brass hook screwed to under side of board will hold a bag for the iron stand and holder. Nothing else makesv the ordinary woman look so downright hideous as a dusting cap. Wear a nice bonnet of a becoming color and note the difference. Lamp burners may be made' nearly asbright as new by scouring them with sand paper. Clean perforated part with a brush. Soak wicks in vinegar before using them. • Cool a hot oven by putting a dish of cold water in it. If the oven bakes faster on top than on bottom, set the bread or cake paras on bot', tom of oven and lay sheets of asbes- tos paper on the top of the grate. JUST A COLI SETTLED IN THE KIDNEYS, BUT IT TURNED TO DROPSY. IT WAS CURED BY DOAN'S�jK� _t=NEY PILLS. ` Read of This Wonderful Cure. It May Do You or Your Friends Soma Good to Know About It. Miss Agnes Creelman, Upper Smith- field, N.S., writes :—About 18 months ago I caught cold. It settled in my kid- neys, and finally turned into Dropsy. My face, limbs, and feet were very much bloated, and if I pressed my finger on them it would make a white impression. that would last fully a minute before the flesh regained its natural color. I was advised to try DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS, and before I had used half a box I could notice an improvement, and the' one box completely cured me. I have never been troubled with it .since, thanks to-DOAN'S KIDNEY -PILLS. Price 50c. per box, or 3 boxes for $1.25; all dealers, or The Doan Kidney Pill Co., Toronto, Ont. SINFUL HABITS IN YOUTH 41AKE NERVOUS, WEAK, DISEASED MEN. THE RESULT 0! lgaoraneo and folly In youth, overexertion of mind and body induced by lust and exposure are constantly wrecking the linea and future happiness of thousands of promising young men. Some fade and wither at an early age, at the blossom of manhood, while others are forced to drag out a weary, fruitless and melancholy existence. ()them reach matri- monybat find no solace or comfort thero. The victims are found in ail stations of life—the farm? the office, the workshop, the pulpit, the tradee and the professions. Nervous Debility end Seminal Weakness aro guaranteed cured by our flow Method Treatment er No Pay. You run no risk 25 years In Detroit, Bank security. CURED WHEN ALL ELSE FAILED. Na names used without Wrltted cement. "lam 33 years of ago and (married. When young Z led a gay life. Early tndiecretione and later excesses trade trouble for me. I became weak and nervous. My kidneys becatne affected and i feared Bright's Disease. Married Life was unsatisfactory and •a my home unttappv. I tried everything—ail failed tial I took treatitieut front Drs. Ttennedy & J ergan. Their New Method built mo up mentally, physically and sexually. I feel and act like a•inan in every respect. They treated me six years ago, They are honest, skilful and responsible finanelally$ to why patronise Quacks and Fakirs when you cau be cured by reliable doctors."—W. A. Belton. CUES RUARINT•EED OR NO PAY, W11011011 Fraa••BooiS FrCe••Ouoslloo Black Froe !or B4mo lraotmoil, Drs. tinn. ederg to 14805heitby 5, ergot , fi4ich.traet ,� .. m&1K `k rat ,r?,"�"fr'D. i"':•: .,r�.;�G�i' fi�":i�f\ 8c), "C'K • r1