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Exeter Times, 1903-7-9, Page 7
to +uine r .r s Little Liver Pills Must Rech Sfonatur© of See PaceSimile Wrapper Below. Very small and as easy to take ©s sugar. ^� 4— Fan IIEAQAC} CARTERS ERS FOR DIZZINESS. 1TTLE FON BILICUSFDESTL I V RFOR TORPID LIVER. P1 SLS. FOR BQiaS`f1PATrnt&. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR 'SHE COMPLEXION Nee comm./Arm 1.11, .7 RAT. RATUR , 25 caht Pommy Yegetisi,lE. - CURE SICK HEADACHE. IMPORTANCE OF NEATNESS. Neatness is a good thing for a girl, and if she does not learn it when she is young she never will..,It takes a great deal more neatnesto make a girl look Well than it does to make a boy a ,pear passable; not because a boy, to start with, is better look- ing than a' girl, but his clothes aro of a different sort—not so many col- ors in them—and people seldom ex- pect a boy to look so pretty as a girl. • A girl who is not neatly dressed is called a sloven and no one likes to look at her. Her face may be pret- ty, her eyes bright, but if there is a spot of dirt on her cheek,. and her finger ends are black with ink and her shoes are not laced or buttoned up, and apron is dirty and her col- lar is unbuttoned, and her skirt is frayed she cannot be liked. Learn to be neat, and when you have learned it, your appearance will, so to speak, take caro of it- self. PHILOSOPHICAL BITS. The egotist is always the other fellow. Most men would rather fight than eat their own words„ • No, Maude, dear; the wife of a gov- ernor is not necessarily a governess.. The dentist doesn't deal in perfum- ery, but he is an authority on ex- tracts. It is easier for some men to talk all day than to keep their mouths shut five minutes. You can't convince the father of twins that there is nothing new tan der the sun. The fellow who makes a fool of himself is seldom satisfied unless he works overtime at the job. Even when poverty pinches some people insist .upon adding to their misery by wearing tight shoes. Many a man who has the reputa- tion of knowing. a lot manages very successfully to conceal his knowledge. —Philadelphia Record. TOLD THE.TRUTH, Edyth—"Aunt Margaret used say she wouldn't marry the best man on. ..e rth. ". , Mayme-- "And did, she keep her word?" • • Edyth-"Yes; but she got: married just the salve.,, to SIMMFR VACATIO\ Evils of Some Summer Resorts Un- sparingly Denounced, - Miss Vane ---,"I know he was talk- ing to you :about vie, Now, wasn't he?" 'Miss Spei'tz,"Well, ` yes." Miss Vane—"I thought I heard him remark that I had a thick head of hair." Miss Speitz-"Partly cor- rect. Me didn't mention your hair, however." :(Entered according to Act of the re ' times in the horse when the dance iiament of Onnada, in the year One 'thousand Dane Hundred and Three, may be a harmless. amusement. It Young, Jones, at a bazaar, had re- cited ,once or twice, and the people were sitting .about chatting, when he heard one of the committee go i p to the chairman and whisper. "Ilacln't Mr. Jones better give us another recitation?" Chairman — "No, not yet. Let them. enjoy themselves a bit longer." ' Sial✓,, headache, Bjllousness, Dya- '3aia, Coated Tongue, Paul Breath, Begat Burls, 'gator" gash, or any Disease of the Stomach, Liver or Bowels. Lara -Liver Pills are purely vegetable; neither grips, weaken nor sicken) are easy to take antsprompt to act• by Wm. lia!iyy, 01 'Toronto, at the 1)eppaxtment o1 Agriculture, O(tMW ) A despatch from Chicago go say s: Rev, Frank Do Witt Talmage preach- ed from the following text: Num- bers xxxii, 28, "Be sure your sin will find you out." What are you going to do this summer? "Take a vacation," you answer, "I am going away to the country. There was once a time when I dict not believe in summer vacations. 1 •• thought they were Merely lazy men's excuses for shirk- ing work, But now I know that X was mistaken. I have been gradu- ally breaking down under the cease- less monotonies of business. I want and need a change. I am going out among the green hills or down by the seashore. I will leave word that all letters and telegrams at the store as far as possible must re- main unanswered until I get back. I ani going to rusticate. I shall turn mvs'elf out to grass and let my znin.e'run ✓allow," SABBATH DESECRATION. But, my hearers, before we separ- ate for the summer,, as your pastor I would like to ails you another question: What do you expect to do when you aro in the country? 'How are you going to spend that vacation? You. hear° been working hard during your life. In one sense you have destroyed your ability to play. .Therefore when you go to the country and do not know what to do temptations will there assail you which would never tempt you when you are at home and at work. Now, the purpose of this serziuon is not to talk of libertines and loafers and dead beats. It is not to up - raid the social outcasts and the• sin- ful vampires who as human leeches try to suck the life's blood out of their fellow men at the summer wa- tering places. That class of people are not those whom I want to talk to now. But I would to -day, as a pastor, earnestly and prayerlul]y, give a few words of practical ad- vice to hard working people who will spend their vacations away from home. I would try to warn you against the temptations which will confront you and which, if • suc- cessful, may destroy your entire Christian character. The leprous gernf absorbed into the spiritual body in a day may continue to work its malformations clear on down to the grave and change yopr• whole eternal destiny. Summer red light the first; Be- ware of Sabbath desecration. That' means beware that you do not un - armor yourselves - by ono false move and leave your beating hearts de- fenceless before the poisoned arrows of the Satanic archers. Beware that you do not practically say to the evil tempters: "Here am I, off on my summer vacation. I have left my religion at home. I am ready to let you lead me where you will. For two or three weeks,- or' one nfonth at least, I will enter no church, listen to no sermon, utter no public prayer and ask for no de - vine protection. I will take a holi day from religion as well as from business, and as a beginning' I will disregard the Lord's day." NOW TO START A VACATION. " 11`hat do you mean by such .a warning as that?" some one asks. "Why do you place such emphasis•. upon Sabbath observance?" Be- cause, my friend, the way you gen- erally start your summer vacation, as the • way•. you - will end••it:.-.'The Sabbath .desecration. is .the • keynote,, as a rule, or the forerunner, of a long series of spiritual .backsliding: How? In all probability your suin- tiler vacation will start; on a Satur- day, •afternoon. '.How will yon spend your first day in 'the ' coitittry ? WiI1 youdo , it with prayer=•arid, const-. oration?. ,Will you -do. it by • taking your children to the Sunday school and joining the Christian workers of that neighborhood in public *wor- ship within the four well's of the little village church, or will you do it by coming down in your fishing togs or by waving your golf stick or with your baskets full of food for a rollicking time in the woods on a Sunday picnic? Here are the two extremes. ' Which will you choose? The one heads toward spir- itual renovation; the other heads toward spiritual death. N.o man or woman ever lived who could suc- cessfully resist the temptations of our summer resorts who started their vacations by breaking the law of God's sacred Sabbath. Such a chuz'eh member always comes back to his church home a moral cripple after ho has spent the Sabbath days of his summer vacation in handling the tiller of a sailboat or in hitting the little white bells over the golf links or in looking at the bobber floating at the end of a line attach- ed to, a fishing polo. :,tart your varatio•n aright for God audit it will end right, Start it by praying in the village pew for divine guidance. Start it, if possible, by helping the village choir sing in the choir loft. Start it as you would start it if the first Sabbath of your summer vacation was to' bo your first Sab- bath in heaven. EVILS OF PUI3I:LIC DANCING, Summer red light the second: Be- ware of the hotel ballroom and the summer public dance hall. I am not now discussing the question of dancing in general; 1 am not con- sidering whether it be right or wrong for the young folks, within the quietude and the sacred pre- tincts of a horde, to have ono of their number finger tho ivory keys of the piano; then, while the state- ly strains of the Minuet or the Ian,• eers sound forth, to have the boys or slower beating of the music. We do know that Miriam danced before the Lord Perhaps there may be may bo the means of a harmless frolic and the means of keeping the children at home, where the fathers aad xnotbens and grandfather and grandmother may bo participants in the diaznestic Merriment, But, though I am not now denouncing the harmless social enjoyments which take place in the home, I do most vehemently protest against the promiscuous dance ball at our sum- mer watering places. I know of what I am speaking, I am not a stranger to the social etiquette of this world. Men and women whom I address to -day, I defy you to find one man or woman of noted spirit- ual, power who will contend that the summer ballroom is a safe place in which to allow our sons and daugh- ters to pass the summer months. I defy you to find one young Haan or woman who over learned the lesson of Christ love in the fetid atmos- phere of a public dance hall. AVOID GAMES OF CHANCE. " Summer red light the third: Be- ware of all games of chance. What does that mean? 13ewar•e of joining the gambling table, which will be played every night in the side room of the hotel which opens into the hotel bar, which gams will be. kept up until 8 or 4 o'clock in the morning, Beware of com- mingling with the "plungers" gath- ered before the booknutkers'• stands at the famous summer. races? Oh, no. I would no more expect you to bo found in such flagrantly com- promising positions than you would expect to find your pastor there. But beware of the insidious beginnings. Beware of wagering the box of candy upon the game of tennis or quoits which is played in the hotel grounds. Beware of betting the penny upon the simple game which is played upon the hotel porch. In other words, beware of taking your first lessons in one of the awful, the most facinating and the most de- structive of all evils, the gambling evil. When the poisonous desires of a game of chance are once inoculated into a young man's heart there seems to bo no human power to stop him from committing mental, physical and spiritual suicide. The race track and the roulette table are the threatening rocks where thousands upon thousands of human drafts are wrecked for time and for eternity. Trite not with the games of chance, however : small the \ager, any more than you would play about a rettle- snako's -fang or toy with a boa con= strictor's coils or a tiger's claw, FLIRTING DENOUNCED. - Summer red light the fourth: be- ware of trifling with human affec- tions. Oh, the fascinations and yet the hellish malforming power of a summer flirtation! Have you ever sat upon a hotel porch and watched the insects gather out of the dark- ness and buzz and play about the electric ,lights? Those lights have for them the fatal spell that the glittering eye of the black snake has for the mother bird sitting upon the edge of her nest. These insects will circle round and round the brilliant light. They will disappear for awhile, as though they know the hot tongue of death is ready to touch them. Then at last they will make one plunge and in an instant the wings and the legs are gone. Then the poor suffering creature falls to the ground, wriggling and twist- ing and dying, to <be• tranipied'undsi' the• foot of man. ,•Such are,the•aw- fel_ results which follow. when the human insects play about the hiss-' ing, blasting ' fires of a summer's flirtation ' It may be pleasant •awhile to . feel the .hot flush upon' the Cheek, •It may seem only fun, to pass •a few hours as• a coquette, -tear- ing- and inflaming the tenderest' feel• ings of a true man in a summer row- boat or in romantic walks through the woods. It may seem to be a glorious act to boast how many you can conquer in love, as an Indian warrior boasts of his prowess in war by the number of scalps he carries at his belt. But by the scorched and bruised and multilatod hearts of thousands which have been malform- ed for time and eternity in the glowing flames of a summer flirta- tion I denounce trifling with human loge. I denounce it before the young people who may be participants dur- ing their next summer vacation in this merciless, heartless and damn- ing universal evil. PEEEL OI , THE WINE cur. Summer red light the fifth. Be- ware of the serpent which lies coiled up in 'the bewitching wine cup. Men carry their bottles of intoxicating beverages when they go fishing or dancing or taking a tramp in the woods, and men drink everyr$hore. But this is not the greatest curse for which our summer resorts aro famous. They are noted as places where women get drunk as well as the men. To me the most abjectly repulsive creature on earth is a. drunken -woman. when I see one I know not which feeling predominates most in any heart, that of pity or of horror. In our summer hotels women now drink everywhere. There- fore, friends, I beg of you when you are in n mariner party where wine. is passed around do not :touch it, For ayour• Christian example's sake do not touch it. For the danger Of inflaming your own evil tastes do not tench it. Stand back from tho evil wine cup though it main be offer- ed to you by the jeweled hand of a hostess or by the companion who pro -toads be is your friend. The. tempter may not baable able to enslave i re in ac- tive of a you it a cit; where jot i yy work, but he, May bo able to' dig for you a .drunkard's grave among the many sinful summer tux - oblations of a hotel piazza, I''AMIVV SEPARATIONS. Summer red light the last: Be- ware of 'thio fancily separations which take away for any length of time wives from Husbands, 'husbands from wives, brothers from sisters and parents from. children. Mark thls, inY friends, and what 'l say. I speak calmly and deliberately: Nine -tenths of all the evil toinptations of our struxnor resorts are directly or in- directly due to the separations of families,. These separations lay temptations, awful tempatations, at the feet of. the men who are own - polled to stay at home and work, They lay temptations, awful tempta- tions, at the feet of the women who are off its the summer hotels. Go to a summer resort near to your home. Be in a place where all the members of the family can get together every few days, Never let your husband learn the lesson how to be happy without you and the children, Wives and mothers, never learn yourselves the lesson bow you can be happy without your husbands and tho chil- dren by your side. As far as you may bo able, during the years of your earthly life, never bo separated from your loved ones for any length of time until you are compelled to lay them away- for the last sleep in a new made grave. In closing I would speak to you words of congratulation and good cheer. Before we separate for the summer months I would say, men and women, I congratulate you be- cause you have well earned your rest: I congratulate you hecatise you have finished a hard ,wintor's work. I congratulate you that you are going out among the trees and the flowers and the mountains and the valleys; that you are going • to drink out of the cool spring and see the' cows gather for the evening milking, And I also congratulate you thatthe same Christ whom- you worship bore you can worship there. Take along the Savioui•'scompan- ionship. Pray: during the next few weeks fordivine protection and help. Then, if you have Christ along, there will be no fear that you will succumb to the evil temptations which beset every one during a sum - tear vacation. fliE Se Le LESSON. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, JULY 12. Text of the Lesson, I. Sam. x:, 17-27. Golden Text, Isa. • xxxiii., 22. 17. And Samuel called the people together unto the Lord to Mizpeh. The people persisting in demanding a king that' they might be like other nations, Cod selected the man and brought him -to Samuel in a remark- able way, and Samuel, himself en- tertained hire and. kept him over night, anointed him the next morn- ing and sent hint on his way. This lesson tells of the Lord's public elec- tion of him to be Israel's king. The story of how God led him to Samu- el, as recorded in chapter ix., is one of the most interesting of all Bible stories. The weary, disappointed, hungry man going to tho prophet to inquire: about- the lost asses and finding an unexPected welcome and feast and communion and rest for body and mind and then to be told that he was • cHosen to be a king— who ever heard • of such surprises? And yet it is all a foreshadowing of the way by 'Which every child. of God is led in unexpected ways to share with Christ His glory. 18, 19. Ye have this day rejected your God, who Himself saved you out ,of all your adverserics and your tribulations', and ye have said unto Him,, -Nay, but ,set_ .a. king oyer• us: •• They are reminded of all tho • Lord had 'done ' for them in the great' de- liverance from Egypt and in His wondrous care of them and are toid plainly that their• present conduct is ;a , ,deliberate rejection of.•-Hinr :,no r-• 'Withstanding all that He • had 'done.' It .was only. a . short • time before.''the events of our lesson that they were. ,gathered at this same Mizpeh en- treating Samuel to cease not to cry unto the Lord for them that He would deliver' them from the Philis- tines, and, being delivered, they set up the Ebenezer stone, saying, "Hitherto hath the Lord helped us" (chapter °vii.,• 8, 12), 20-22, When they sought him, he could not be found. Therefore they inquired of the Lord further if the man should yet come thither, and the Lord answered, Behold, he hath hid himself among the ,stuff. All Israel presented themselves be- fore the Lord by their tribes, and the lot was cast for the tribe and for the family and for the man, with. the result that Saul, the son of Kish, of the tribe of Benjamin, was chos- en. But he could not bo found. God knew tho kind of man whom they would like, and - no was going to give them a man after their own heart, and now I•Ie guided the lot to bring him before them, • for "the lot is cast into the lap, but the whole disposing thereof is of the Lard" (Prov. xvi., 83). mall knew through Samuel that God had selected him (x., 1), and, knowing this, it was a. becoming thing not to put himself forward, but let all ace that ho had no hand in the election. 28, 24. And they ran and fetched hila thence, and when he stood among the people he was higher than any of the people, from his shoulders and upward, and Samuel said to all the people, See ye hila whom the Lord hath chosen. In chapter ix, 2, we read that he was a choice young rnau and not a' goodlier person in all Israel. Fatah and blood, and plenty of it, even of good quality, is not everything, . else Goliath and other 'giants might be envied. • Neither is outward appear- ance everything—that which people call presence eta Salm ;l after- ward learned when ho an ointod' a man after r ocs heart in • tead of 1 case thepeep' . (chapter one to p e I. ,p ( p xvf•, 6, 7), Contrast the youth and probable slight figure of David (xvii, 33); also that which is writ- ten of another Saul of the tribe of Benjamin (II,'Cor, x, 10), 'rho people are pleased with their Visible• king, a choice roan and one of no., ble appearance. 25. 'Then Samuel 'told the people the manner of the kingdom and wrote it in a book and laid it up before the Lord, and Samuel sent all the people away, every man to his house: Ile would doubtless write Deet xvii, 14-20, with perhaps additions, If the king would consider himself the Lord's representative and act for. the Lord toward the people, in all things consulting Him, obeying and honoring Nim, all might yet be well by the mercy of God; but if he, like the people, turns away from God, lives to please himself or the people and relies an human wisdom or strength all will be lost. The Lord alone must be exalted (Isa. 11, 11, 17). 26, And Saul also went hone to Gibeah, and there went with him band of mien whose hearts God heel touched. God . would help him by giving him helpers and friends. He does everything to mai.e it easy for us to do right if wo are only willing to serve Him in sincerity and truth. He is the same God who saw that. it was not good far Adam to :be alone (Gen. 11, 18), who also sent the 'disciples out by twos (Luke x, 1), and he always in due time pee - vides helpers for such as are wiiliixg to dwell with Him for His work (I. Chxon. iv, 28; Isa. x11, 10) 27. But ?ho children of Bella' said, 'Mow shall this man save us? And they despised him and brought him no presents, but ho held his peace. When, God works. the adversary also .works, and: if wo are orx the Lord's side, while we are sure to have friends, wo will also have many to despise us. When ouch rise up against us, it is well to do as Saul did end act as tho'u'gh we were deaf. See the margin and also Ps. x,xxviii, -13. When later the friends of Saul cried out for the lives of those enemies, Ne would not allow them to be harmed (chapter xi, 12, 13), It is very interesting to note all the good points in Saul, and they are many up to this time. } DOMESTIC RECIPES. Johnny Cake.—Two eggs, two- thirds cup sugar, two level spoons shortening, good teaspoon salt, two cups sour milk. two level teaspoons soda, three slightly heaping table- spoons flour; cornmeal to make bat- ter to run or spread out well in tin. Gooseberry • and Rice Pudding.— Butter a pie -dish, and into it put a shallow layer of green gooseberiies. Scatter sugar over it, and if you have it, a little grated lemon peel, then a thick layer of boiled rice, now another layer of gooseberries, rice, etc. Scatter breadcrumbs over the top, with a little butter on them: and bake in a moderate oven, allow- ing sufficient time for the fruit to: cook. Dried Beef Frizzled.—Melt three tablespoonfuls of butter in the spid- er, add two tablespoonfuls of flour. and a dash of pepper and stir till it` is a paste, then add two cups of rich milk and beat until it is creamy. Add three-fourths of a cup of dried beef which is cut thin and has been freed from fat and "strings" and cut fine. Let just come to a boil, and serve on triangles of buttered toast or with mashed potato. Nice for breakfast in hot weather. Baked Beans, Camp Fashion.—To bake beans according to the cuisine of ' the camp, soak the beans over night in cold water and parboil. Put into a beanpot with half a pound of pork on top; pour over them warm water to which has been added a tablespoonful of sugar, a teaspoon- ful of. -salt. and mustard and pepper to your .liking. Cover the top with a 'piece of cotton and fit the lid on. Now you can bake it in an ordinary oven or in a stone -lined baking hole by your woodside canip, fit 'which you have`•kopt'a• fire fax two'or'three hours, setting 'the beah'?pot aniong. the hot coals and ashes and cover= ing to' •keop the heat'in.' Lemon Tartlets.—Take a dozen raisins and split each, remove the stones and stow the fruit in a little water. Mix a. dessertspoonful of cornflour with a little cold water. Stir in the juice of two lemons and the grated peel of one, five ounces of caster sugar and the raisins. Beat all together. Line some patty pans with a thin paste, fill them with the mixture, cover each with bars of pastry and bake for ten minutes. N. B.—It is an improvement to cook the filling for a few moments over a pan of boiling water before baking. Brown Broad.—Weigh seven pounds of wholemeal (or if you prefer bran - bread, two pounds of bran to five pounds of wheat flour), put it into a: pan, and make a Bole in the cen- tre. Mic two ounces and a half of yeast with ono quart of warns wa- ter, pour this into the pan, and with a spoon work enough flour into it to form a light batter. Dust some flour over and set to rise for one hour near the fire. After this time the dough will have risen, and the meal will be cracked. Then work in more water and a dessertspoonful of salt till you have kneaded all into a light dough and all tho paste has worked from your hands. Set this to rise for an hour, covering with a cloth. Make into loaves and bake an hour. If this makes the btvacl browner than you like, put one pound of wheat flour to six pounds of whole meal. IION1+.STY TOWAI1D CHIL1711EN, All the best and kindest mother can do for her children is to rear tholrx up in the love of Cod and mart, and leave them to their own choice, whether their life shall be an Indus-' tri.ous, helpful one, or an idle, worth- less one, ti xamplo is more than precept, and actions more r than 'words, It is a t• dangerous thing to deceive a child in oven atrifling matter. It is the 1000 ,ig, ,, ttASTRENGTH OWh,, ter !EYeilit°R,HAtcoal,WEADIER000,1:5,:l FEH, �'THD ,`�`, 111E CdNSTiTUT{fhb! .-"* i,/ ndofl "g treai.Cc„ o' f i'top Bos ZR RTAIN CA (RICA i ' �s; 4. ail Pru9glsis&CJ iefl . 0 WAFER`. No remedy covers so large a field of usefulness as ST. JAM]r.,s "GVAnats, They are indicated whenever tlaere is a weak condition, as they tom. tip the different organs and bring strength to the tissues. Palpitation of the heart, pooz gestion, sleeplessness, weak nerve; an; lids, and chlorosis,. are quickly relieved by ST. JAl a,s WAVI R8 , they also repair the waste caused by hard work and fatigue. ST, Jnnfirs WAr tRS help stomach, digest food and send the nutriment through the blood, and this is the- honest he-honest way to get health and strength, the kind that lasts, develops and breeds the energy which aecoms plishes much. .cgt. James Wafere fureisb ew mast powerful evidence of the *vastly increased power of meds-. cement by combination of Judi.. cione pharrnaoratic pr4parle- tions. X have used them with good success when my patients needed strength?' Dr. Charles Nall, 74iverpcai, Eng. Price in Canada: $1.00; Six bottles for $5.00 S1.Janeer Wafers are not a secret remedy: to Me,iunterousdgctorsre- comm 'idicg these to their patients we mail the formula span request. Where dealers are not selling the 'Wafers,. they are mailed upon re- ceipt'of price at the Canadian branch : St. Jomcc Wafers. CO., 172, St. Catherine St., Montreal. .3 ;ES KfarIll G �ti x ER? TROUSANDS of men are prisoners of disease as securely as though they were confined behind the bars. Many have forged their own chains by the vices of early youth, exposure to contagious disease, or the excesses of manhood,. They feel they are not the mea they ought to be or used to be. The vim, vigor, axed vitality of manhood are lacking. Are, you nervous and despondent? tired in the morning? have you to force yourself through the day's work ? have you little am- bition and energy? are you irritable and excitable? eyes sunken, depressed and haggard looking? memory poor and brain fagged ? have you weak back with dreams and 'losses at night? deposit in. urine? weak sexually?—yeti have Nervous Debility and Seminal Weakness. Our NEW METHOD TREATMENT is guaranteed to Cure or No Prey. 25 yearn in Detroit. Bank g Security. rieware of quacks—Consult old established,. • reliable physicians. Consuttntion Proc. Books / Free. Write for Question Blank for Some Treatment. itr y at Morgan, 842 8I5IELli'$ STREET. II)ESTROI'i `s rig!Csa. seed of distrust which may grow to such dimensions as to poison the whole nature. If a boy or girl is called on to bear the pain of a slight surgical or dental operation, which does not require an anaesthetic, it is . always better to tell the truth firmly and quietly. It is wonderful how much courage it gives the child if he has 'darned to trust you im- plicitly. If you say "this will hurt you at first, but it will bo over in an instant," he feels instinctively that you are tellingthe truth. The indignation and shock to a child from the deception often practised at such times may have a permanent effect upon the character. It is no uncommon thing for a mother to • lose the confidence of her children in some such way, and once lost such confidence is not easily regained. A mother who retains the confidence of her children can guide and help them, though she cannot command, in their choice of life, without making them miserable slaves. One of the surest ways to make ',children good and useful men and women is to give them a profession or trade, It is becoming more and more the rule and not ,the exception for a girl to study for a life's work. If she is ever a wife and mother she will be all the better fitted mission if she,, has `a" earned to do some especial work well. However wealthy parents are, they do a posi- tive wrong when they fail to educate their sons and daughters so they can become self-supporting and self -re* specting. 1 Rooms. Ibfested With Flies.—Should have a plateful of this mixture plac- ed in each window: Mix one tea,- s000nful each of brown sugar, and black pepper, with a little cream., To Clean Black. Felt Hats, — A good rubbing with benzine will re- move all dirt and grease from felt hats. Hang in the open air after- wards to free from smell. Keep a Separate Sauce-pan—For cooking all green vegetables in, and do not allow it to be used for stews, etc,, for no food material absorb✓: flavors • more quickly • than green vegetables. s; 41, • rw, 1� ■CIOI[' v f: Atek ucgk 'immorr._ gyp,: amtrInEneem �.r 6vt: ti��,gYd d-iei'S!?r1,411.4=4:'..".1 a, d;As x.ii'asaanalear A fru 3 Travelling from place to place are subject to all kinds of Bowel Complaint on account of change of water, diet and temperature. 11 rs and Tourists r. Ext. of tr 11117 is a sure cure for Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic, Cramps, Pains in. the Stomach, Seasickness, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantum, Summer Com- plaint, faint and all Fluxes of the Bowels in Children and Adults. Its effects are marvellous. It acts like a charm. Relief is almost instantaneous, Does • tl condition. .e,�� n:it leave the Bowels in ..cons paled era • n.