HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1903-7-16, Page 7L!jTESu
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411.41
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arter�
tle
LIver Pillso
Must Bear Signature of
See Pac-Sitallo Wrapper Below.
'Vary small and cs ocoy
to take as euger.
n..._ FOR !i&A17Ai31En
4iA TE�, FOR t31ZZli1ESSi,
ITTLE FOR BSitlt USNE a.
VIVA FOR TeRFIU Liver.
PILLS. F®R CLMSTlPATI€11d.
FOR SALLOW SM.
FOR THE COMPLEXION
PCC & I
NV E „UGTHAV/C %1 aHATUf, C,
25 'Eat Purely 'F'egetres e,/f -e.-
'�raTrxr.OZam-; ..-.'
CURE: SICK HEADACHE.
14. HAVE you
been smolt.
ing a good deal
lately and feel
an occasional
twinge of pain
round yourheart?
Are you short of
breath, nerves
unhinged, sensa-
tion of pins and needles
going through your
arms and fingers?
Better take a box or two
of Milburn's Heart and
Nerve Pills and get cured
-heese before things become too
serious.
As a specific for all
heart and nerve
troubles they can-
not be excelled. A
true heart tonic, blood
enricher and nerve re-
newer, they cure nervousness, sleepless-
ness, nervous prostration, smoker's heart,
palpitation of the heart, after effects of la
• grippe, etc.
Price 5oc. per box or 3 boxes for $1.25
et all druggists, or will be sent on receipt
of price by
The T. Toronto. OntLlmited.
THAT'S 1IIE SPOT!
Flight in the small of the back.
Do you ever got a pain there'
If so, do you know what it moans?
ft is Backache.
A s sign of Kidney Trouble.
Don't neglect it. Stop it in time.
If you don't, serious Kidney Troubles
ire sure to follow.
DOH'S
KIDNEY PILLS
cu?e Backache, Lame Back, Diabetes,
Dropsy and all Kidney and Bladder
'Troubles.
Frioo 50e. a box or 3 for $L25, all doalora.
DOAN KIDNEY PILL GO.. •
Toronto. Ont.
THE KING
OM OF HEAVD
Like a Net Cast Into the Sea and In=
closing Multitudes of Fishes,
/Entered according 'to Act of the kar-
llanment of canton), in ,the year. Ono
Thousand Nine •Hundred and Three,
by wm. Hotly, of Toronto, at the
i)epartar..ont of Agriculture, uttawa.h
A despatch from Chicago says:
Rev. Frank Do Witt Talmage preach-
ed from the following text: '`Behold
my hands and my feet, that it is 1,
•myself."—St. Luke xxiv., part of 39.
The above words suggest the snfb-
joct of our recognition of deported
lot -ed ones in the world to come.
11 'his subject is of • interest at all
times and . touches well-nigh- every-
ono,
ver y -ono, Hardly any there aro but have
buried their dead; hardly aaky. • but
have strut, oft from the daily . activis
ties of their soluls a •consecrated
void; hardly any but at tin es a,re
earnestly asking: "Shall we see
these dear absent ones again and
will there be some bond of recogni-
tion
eclognition between us?"
'Now, on this question we could
hardly expect tho word of Gold to
say much. God would occupy us
hero with duty rather than with
speculation, however. tender and
sacred. 'Not what heaven is, but
how toget toheaven is the groat
problem before us. ' Wo aro given
little of description, much
of direction. No map of
that Golden City is provided, but
on the harrow road the cross ever
and anon is set up . as a guidepost
to point the way. But although
the burden of inspiration has to do
with the privileges and the require -
Meets of this world, it gives us no
empty consolation with reference to
them who are fallen asleep. In the
first place, there is that pervading
undertone which we detect every-
where. We cannot explain it, -we
cannot point it out; but somehow,
I open the Bible whore wo may, it
i "comforts us concerning our bro-
ther:"
But again, the recognition of
those we have known on earth is
implied in many of the fundamental
declarations of God's toot+d. We
are to 1:e hold ieccauutable, for in-
stance; for our dealings with those
around us. Can it then bo Possible
that wo are not to know those
whom we have influenced for good
or i11?
NUMBERLESS SIMILITUDES.
Perhaps, however, the strongest of
the indirect teachings of the Bible
on this point is to be found in those
numberless similitudes which des-
cribe our state, hero and hoifeafter,
as one of association. The king-
dom of heaven is like a net cast in-
to the sea and inclosing a great
multitude of fishes. It i's like a
supper furnished with guests. It is
a fellowship, a communion, a fami-
ly, a household. Surely, knit to-
gether by such ties, the members of
that kingdom Hurst know each oth-
er.
Bet we are not left to mere in-
ferences and implications. The Bi-
ble asserts directly the doctrine of
mutual recognition hereafter.
"Many shall come from the east
and from the west and shall sit
down with Abraham and Isaac and
�y��ii��E ,��jj FOR
DIiilfr 0 1Y, DYSF 4TERT,
COMIC, CRAMPS,
PAIN FN THE STOMACH,
AND ALL
SUMMER
ITS -EFFECTS ZAIRE IhAI'IVELLOd9S,
n' ACTS LIKE A OHAG11111^
BELIEF ALMOST BP.1tib'P6dfrl"6AMECES,
Pioaga; Reliable, Effectual.
!V!«nY HOUSE SHOuLb i4AVC IT,
a1R yowl DRUGGIST PON r•r. TAKE NO OTHSSa.
to. Have riuiu (dtn'i.ng wheat harvc5t,
PRIDE, andandthat the people might hearr
, SCa God's own voice disapproving of
Jacob in the kingdom of God." Of
course- there would be no signiticanc e
in this statement if the p.atriarclfs
aro not to be known ,as Abraham,
Isaac and Jacob. Agaln.: "Ye shall
see Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and
gll the prophets in the kingdom of.
God." Says -St, Paul to the Thes-
salonians: "What is our hope or
joy or crown of rejoicing? Are not
even ye in the presence
of our Lord .Jesus • Christ
at His • coining?" Again • he
says .to them; "Now wo beseech
you, brethren, by the coming of our
Lord Jesus• Christ and ottr gather-
ing together unto Hint,." And once
'Moro: "I would not •have you be
ignorant, brethren, concerning them
who are asleep, that ye sorrow not
as other who have no hope." The
hope referred to here is obvionsly
that of meeting again,
MANY MORE ALLUSIONS
of like character might be drawn
from the Epistles of St. Paul. • But
it will suffice us to turn from them
now and to consider only the further
.statement of our text. And were
that statement. - alone. it would be
ono...,h, for it tells us that the glori-
fied body of our Lord was recogniz-
ed, and IIo was our first. fruits, and
as He rose so shall we rise. There
was, indeed, about Him -an unearthly
lustre, but the wounds were yet
visible, the same oyes looked out up-
on the apostles, the same lips spoke
to them, the same hands blessed
them—albeit a wondrous glory illum-
ined. all. There was that about IIim
which dazzled and bewildered.
Not at first did Mary and His dis-
ciples know Him. While they sought
gardener or would go a -fishing or
walked sorrowful and hopeless by the
wayside, their eyes were darkened;
but when they turned their spiritual
gaze upon Iiim, then they knew
IIim; then Mary said' "Ra»honi;"
then St. John cried, "It is the
Lord;" then Doubting Thomas be-
lieved; then repentant Peter sank at
His feet. In like manner it shall be
with us and ours. We shall bo
changed, for corruption there shall
be incorruption; for weakness, pow-
er; for dishonor; dory; for 'the na-
tural, the spiritual body, and may -
hap, too, tho unseen struggles and
sufferings of the past shall be -regis-
tered upon our faces and thus our
real character's express themselves;
the things which were hidden come
abroad, and the good deeds done in
secret be forever rewarded openly.
But • our identity, our appearance;
our immortal individuality shall yet
remain and wo bo known to each
other. by infallible proofs. Abraham
shall remain Abraham, Daniel shall
still be Daniel, the Good Shepherd
shall still call Itis sheep by name,
and they who have nut in this life
Shall meet again in that. An Isaac
shall rejoin Rebecca, a David shall
go to the child who could not conte
to him, a Mary and a Martha shall
greet their brother and the tears. of
a. Rachael weeping for her children
shall be wiped away.
THE S. S. LESSOR
INTERNATIONAL- LESSON
JULY 19.
Text of the Lesson, I. Sam. xii.,
13-25. Golden Text, I.
Sam. xii., 24.
18. Now therefore behold the king
whom ye have chosen and whom ye
have desired, and behold. the Lord
hath set a king -over you.
In verse 1 we hear Samuel saying
"Behold, I have hearkened unto your
voice in all that ye said unto me
and have made a king •over you."
Now ho says that the Lord did it,
for 1'e was the Lord's representative.
If believers would accept the truth
that we aro hero in Christ's stead
our lives would tell more for Thin
(II. Cor. v., 20; John xvii.; -18).
Israel now had a king, like other
nations, but they had put a man in
the place of God, for Samuel remind-
ed than, "Tho Lord- your God was
your king" (verse 12). When we
remember Ron. vi. 16, "To whom
ye yield yourselves servants to obey,
his servants • ye aro to • Whom ye
obey," wo should be able to see if
wo aro putting any person or thing
in tho place of God.
14. 15. If ye will fear the Lord
and servo Him and obey his voice.
+� * * But if ye will not obey the
voice of the Lord, but rebel. * * *
Althouglithey have sinned and God
has given them their. desire, yet
here is a way of blessing still left to
them. Jehovah must and will be
magnified either in blessings ulps&
an obedient people or in judgment
upon tho unbelieving. He redeemed
Israel. from Egypt that they might
keep His commandments and serve
Tiint and be a peculiar treasure unto
Him above all people, a willing and
obedient people enjoying ITis good-
ness (Ex, xix. 4, 6; lsa. i. 1.8, 19).
Obedient service Was the way of
blessing, disobedience the way , • of
the hand of the Loid against them.
]Ifoses called heaven'and earth to
witness against them that he had
set before thein life and dcat.h, bless
ing and cursing, and ho 'entreated
them to choose life (I)eut. xxx., 19).
• 1.6-18. Now therefore stand and
see this great thing which the Lord
will clo before your eyes. +r * * yo
Samuel- called unto the Lord, and
the Lord. sent thunder' and rant that
clay, end alt the people greatly fear-
ed the Lord and Samuel.
A drop conviction and hatred of
sin is a grand thing for any child
of Gocl, for otherwise one May light-
ly 'tamper With sin and grieve the
Spirit. It was n. 111051 unusual thing
let their minds dwell upon the
groat things the Lord had done for
thein and thug ho constrained to
live in )Bs fear am& serve Irizn with
the whole heart. In, verse 7 he
seuixl:
IiStand still that I may rea-
son with you before the ;Laird of ail
the righteous acts of the Lord,
which He diel to you and to your
fathers." Compare Detuet, viii, 2;
Josh, xxiii, 1.A. To use the ward
would be, Consider the love of God
to you in the great reidemu)tiun IPc
has provided and let His love con-
strain you to receive Thins and yield
fully to Flim for XJds service, a rea-
sonable .service in which wo prove
-the good and acceptable and per-
fect will of God (Roza, xii, 1, 2),
their action and not think .of it as
merely Samuel's disapproval he said
he would ask -Cod to speak by send-
ings thunder and rain that day,
which he did, and God so answered
hint, and the people saw Samuel's
oneness with God, and they feared
greatly. It was something like
1•.lijah's prayer that the Lord would
show His oneness with him by send-
ing fire (I Kings xxiii„ 36-39). 'Wo
remember also that on one occasion
when the Lord Josus spoke to His
Father the Father answered Him by
a. voice from heaven, but the people
said that it thundered (John xii.,
289).
19, 20. And Samuel said unto the
people: Fear not; ye have done all
this wickedness. Yet turn not aside
from following the Lord, but serve
the Lord with all your heart.
The special manifestation of God
in the thu.lvder and•t•he rain at such
unusual time seemed' to convince
the people that they really had 1
sinned in asking for a king; and
they entreated Samuel to pray for
them that they might not be p)tn-
jellecl. The power of the interces-
sion of Moses and SanAuel is scan in
Jar. xv, 1, where the Lord speaks
of a time .when even such as they
could not avail. That time had not
yet come, -so Samuel urges biotin. to
turn to the Lord and, being forgiv
eh, to serve Him henceforth with
the .Whole heart. What precious
wards for us are those, "If we con -
foss .our sins, Ile is faithful and
ju;&t to forgive us our sins ad to
cleanse us from all unrig1 teou4s-
ness" (I. John i, 9).
21, 22. For the Lord will not for-
sake His people for Htfs groat
name's sake, because it hath ploas'ed
the Lord to make you Iilis people.
-When once wo become the Load's
redeemed people, no - power can
pluck us out of lilts hand (John. x,
27-29), and where he begins' a work
lin will ftn.is,h it (Phil. i, 6; Ps.
cxxst•iii,•8).• Ito knows ue thor-
oughly before He chooses us, end,
having chosen ue, will perfect
us, and that Ho 'twill not fail 1.,0 do
as Ilso sees that ore need it, Con-
sider Antos iii, 2; Heb. xii, 0, he
tdi tifies repoateidiy conrerit.ing ilis
rebellious Israel that all heaven
did or Will do for them is all for this
name's ,aloe (Eck. xx, 9; xiv, 22,
44; xxxvi, 21, 22). Jere doh pray-
ed, "0 .Lord, though our iniquities
testify against us, ,do Th,on it for
Thy Annie's ;fake!" (Joe. xis', 7).
For IIlis named's sake we have the
forgiveness of sins ('I: John ii, 12).
23-21. Only fear the i,o•d - and
servo IIim in truth with all your
Wart, tor contsl,der bow great things
he hail' done for you.
Samntel nssures them that it
would be it Sin: for hint to cease to
ps'ay for theta and that he would
ro'itlinzne Icy teach them the good
and Lille right way, but they nuusrt
• •
PRESENTS FOR JQOICEYS,
Money and Gifts They Receive
From the Patrons of the Turf.
No public man comes in for more
presents from persons lie has never
seen or heard of than a successful
jockey. Many of these gifts are of
a highly valuable order, while oth-
ors speak plainer than words for the
eccentricity of the donor, says Lon-
don Tit -Bits,
Fred Archer was the most for-
tunate jockey in this respect that
ever lived. On ono occasion $50,-
000 in notes was sant him anonym-
ously, and he is said to have made
$15,000 a year by presents of this
kind. But nowadays big gifts of
money aro rarely betitowed, al-
though it is said Watts 1 eceivcd
$10,000 from an admirer four years
ago.
Anchor, however, set greater store
on some of the more trifling sou-
venirs he received.. For instance,
after 11e had ridden Silvio to vic-
tory over the Derby coluree in 1877,
a tramp cane up to him, and pre-
sented him 'with a tll,rce-pmmty-•
niece, which frinu that day for-
•ivaaid he always wore as a talisman
in every race. On Derby Day an-
nually, too, he was the recipient of
a dozen linen shirts from an :" ony-
m.ous admirer, while among the oth-
er • trifles received by hum were a
grand piano, a yacht, a. litter of
young. pigs, and a share in a ltorth-
cotnitry public house.
One of the most cu:ri'ope talia'n'uns
ever worn by a jeci ey was 1 ne t ul-
let always inseparable front the tato
I31a'zy G'rint thaw. Jost before one
of his big races a powerfully huilt
man calve up and, showing hint a
bullet, said: "If you lose, I'll put
this through you, but if you win
you shall weal it for life." Grim
s'haw won, and a few days later the
bullet set in gold as a withal charm
arrived. and ho wove it till the day
of his death.
Every successful jockey receives, in
the course of the season, sufficient
jewelry, hi the shape of gold
watches, rings, and tie -pins, to
stack a smell shop. Some jockeys
distribute these souvenirs among
their friends, but Tom. Campton got
together a collection of all the
queer gifts he received. Aanong
them was a pair of boots which had
been sent him by a man who walk -
cd from York to EIps.oin and backed
his mounts.
On one occasion an anonymous
gift to a jockey led to a pretty ro-
mance. The jockey had been for-
tunate enough to . steer an Oaks
winner, and on every stubsequent an-
niversary a box of eggs arrived from
Ireland. As the •parcel was always
addressed in a lady's writing he
eventually nnvde inquiries and found
the (Amor to be an Irish lass en-
gaged in poultry farming. The dis-
covery led to a meeting, and the up-
shot. of the matter was that the
parties soon entered for the matri-
monial stakes.
Very often a succeeePtul jockey is
presented with the saddle and whip
used in the race, and these are al-
ways snapped up by collectors of
sporting trophies. At a Derby
meeting a few years ago 'the win-
ning jockey sold his whip for $2,-
500 before leaving the course.
de ;0 eQ5o�et'eetm
eg�ese a'01,1+
FfiR THE
Nit
0a
0
Recipes tor- the Kitchen. +.a
• hygiene and Other Notes
Eli for the Housekeeper.03
04$000. eeoeoeci i'io ootoor.
SAVZI YOUR ENERGY.
The great: physicians all say that
the strength of women is too often
a strength of nervous energy, which,
'while it keeps them up at the time
of need, is constantly burning. up
their vitality. Some day the cord
will snap and the woman be made
to realize that injudicious expendi-
ture of her nervous energy day after
day has snapped her physical
strength to the point of collpaso.
One excellent way to prevent ''•'this,
and the best way in the world ' to
keep the roses of youth, is to rest
wisely ---to rest the mind as well as
the body. If you aro too active to
sit idly at rest a certain porti4n of
each day, keep a happy, sunny book
in which you aro interested always
at hand by your bedroom or sitting
room couch, Make it a rule to lie
down from fifteen to thirty minutes
after overy period of eating. Road
your pleasant book, or, better still,
lie idly still thinking over the very
happiest things you can bring to
your Never thing out the
s•ad, perplexing problems of life
while you aro having this "rest" if
you can help it. Tliis may eeem
hard to do, but you can train your-
self to it. Think.out those hard
things when you are up and about.
In other words, work hard when you
work and finish it up. Then rest
thoroughly when you rest. A. wo-
man who leads a life of almost mas-
culine activity. fn mind and body
says she finds nothing so good for
tired nerves as "eating," not neces-
sarily taking much, but eating some-
thing the moment you feel all tired
out, eating something wholesome—a
glass of milk or a cup of tea and a
flaky piece of bread and butter—
whatever your fancy seems to crave,
so lung as it be wholesome. This
simple and attractive rule seems to
be proven by tho fact that the main
aim of all "rest curls" is to enforce
eating upon the patient every two
hours.
Never get too tired at any ono
time. When you think you are
"tired enough" stop, no matter
what it is, rest fifteen minutes, com-
pletely, then begin again. You'll
find that • you are not one-half so
tired at bedtime if you follow this
method.
BIRDS AS SURGEONS.
The Snipe Makes a very Credit-
able Dressing:
Some interesting observations re-
lating to the surgical treatment of
wounds by birds • 'were recently)
brought by M. Patio before the phy-
sical Society of Geneva. I3e quotes
the case of the snipe, which he has
often observed engaged in repairing
damages. With its beak and fcath-
ors it makes a very creditable, dress-
ing, applying plasters. to bleeding
wounds, and even securing a broken
limb by means of a stout ligature.
On one occasion ho killed a snipe
which had on the. chest a large dress
ing composed of down taken • from
other parts of the b6dy and securely
fixed to the wound by the coagulat-
ed blood. Twice be has brought
home snipe with interwoven feathers
strapped on to the sito of fracture
of one or other limb, tithe most
interesting excunple was that of a
snipe, both of whose legs he had un-
fortunately broken by a misdirected
shot. llo recovered the animal only
the day following, and he then found
that the poor bird•had contrived to
apply dressings and a sort of splint
to both. limbs.
Ib carrying out this operation
some feathers had become entangled
around the beak, and, not being able
to use its claws to got rid of thein,
it was almost dead from hunger when
discovered.
In a case recorded by M. Magnin,
a snipe Which w•as observed to fly
away with a broken leg was subse-
quently found to have forced the
fragments into' a parallel position,
the upper frit Olen reaching to the
knee, and secured • thele there by
means of a strong band of feathers
and moss iriternlingled. Tho obser-
vers were particularly struck by the
application of a Iigature of a kind of
flat -leaved grass wound round the
limb. in a spiral fornf, and fixed by
means of Fl, sort of glue.
IIsi --"May I kiss your hand?" She
',r i
.... c is
—"Certainly; �' nt ; • if nt cid ir't3-
C'elitun y. l t y
in.al,ed that you preferred hands, I
would not have removed Any' veil,"
COLLAR SUGGESTIONS. -
A Kid Stock • Collar—White kid
gloves may be cleaned either with 1
milk or gasoline, and the arm pieces
converted into a very pretty stock.
The kid is smoothly drawn over a
piece of collar stiffening cut the de-
sired shape, and Machine -stitched
with blue silk, a double row at top,
centro and bottom; while French
knots worked with the same blue
silk appear between' the rows of
stitching. Another of black un-
dressed kid, made of two pairs of
short gloves, was sewed together to
•form a crush collar, and the scants
concealed by means of steel beads.
A collar of White Huck toweling,
darned solidly with yellow wash
silks, is a durable dress accessory
for a child. The collar is cut. round
with large scallops at the edge. Tho
needle is run under the raised threads
without taking the stitches through
the cloth, which gives the same ap-
pearance as -the darning stitch, but
does not show on the under side
and is much simpler and quicker to
work. The ocean wave sofa pillows
are made somewhat in the same way,
except that the thread at intervals
is carried along for a short distance
without being brought under the
raised loops on the toweling. The
edge of the collar may be bound
around. with a narrow piece of yel-
low silk -or velvet on the bias, or
merely turned under and stitched
down by machine.
French Knots and Featherstitching
—Starched white linen collars are
decorated with a row of French
knots or featherstitching at the top,
as they usod to wear them years
ago, when even the men appeared
with shirt fronts and cuffs decorated
in the same way.in black or white
silk, Tho knots and stitching com-
bined form a very effective trimming
for a blue and white striped ging-
ham shirtwaist, using thick white
linen floss for working. The work
is dono on the blue stripes, three
feather stitches, then three French
knots, and repeating down the
stripe; the next being worked in the
knots alone, and the next in stitches
and Into, and so on over the whole
waist. The body of the waist may
be done after it has been sewed, but
the sleeves are easier to work just
after they aro cut. Tho turnover
collar and cuffs to wear with the
waist are of blue linen, starched and
decorated with French knots at the
edge,
MELON DESSERTS.
Hints for 8x Vtefflac,en
h / ,
Eat slowly, masticating- the roodthoroughly, even more, if
possible,. than is required in health The more tide the food
spends in the mouth, the less it will spend in the stomach.
Avoid drinking at .ideals hi general
dyspeptic stomachs manage dry food
better than that containing lzluch
fluid. Vat neither very hot nor cold
food. The best temp tratu><e is that
of the body. Be careful to avoid
excess in eating. Sat rio more than
the wants of the system require..
Sometimes less than is really needed
must be taken when digestion is very
weak. Strength depends not on what
is eaten, but on what is digested.;
Never take violent exercise of any
sort, either mental or physical, either
just before or just after a meal.
Never eat more than three times a
day, and make the last meal very
light. For many dyspeptics, two
meals are better than more. p• Never
eat a morsel of any sort between
heals. Never eat when very tired,
whether exhausted frau mental or
physical labor, ..Never eatwhen the
mind is worried or the temper ruffled,
if you can possibly avoid it. Vat only.
food that is easy of digestion, avoid-
ing complicated and indigestible..
dishes, and taking but one to three `
courses at a meal. �.
After meals take two S'i. JAMI S:
KSTOE SIREt Tit' oW '
CURS TUNCf10 ALWR N6s°°"
� Ey ENBICH THE BLOOD & S1t1.
TME CONSTITUTION
ondon,E.ly res1Caa i
P1ont BOO
A:INiR156-
Price in Canada : (x' .00 ;
Six bottles for $5.00
vYAP1It8, .tr believe 8t. Jantea'Vafers
then a tlorn of drnost gs complete
strenghthesi g
hal f fhe aerwous systsni I ever met
glassful with,". �#
O f h O t Dr. Robert McXatyle, °.
Beiinburg, Scotlatid.
water.
They
help stomach, digest food and 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 accomplishes much. 2
St. James Wafers are not a seere4
remedy: to the ?tumorous doctors re.
,
commending them to their $atiertta
we snail iheformula x s
f m. pen request.
Where dealers are not selling the
Wafers. they are mailed upon re-
ceipt of price at the Canadian
branch : St. James Wafers Co., 1728
St. Catherine St.. Montreal.
changing their doufinating tone.
Grapes may bo peeled, or peaches
pared and cut small and mixed with
the melon, and a snowy mound of
cream, whipped and frozen, can top
the attractive dish.
Charlotte Russe with Melon—Chill
and whip -' pt. cream. heat the
whites of 2 eggs until stiff, add gra-
dually, beating all the time, cup
powdered sugar and 2 tablespoons
maraschino. Soften , 1 tablespoon
gelatine fn 2 tablespoons water; set
the bowl fn hot water and when
melted, add to the cream. Beat oc-
casionally until it begins to stiffen.
Have ready 1 pt. cut up melon,
sprinkled with powdered sugar. Take
a. 8 -pt. mold, line it with lady fin-
gers, cutting them off evenly at the
top. Pour half of the cream mix-
ture in, add the melon, and rover
with remainder of cream. Set on
ice to chill. When about to serve
turn out of the mold onto a pretty
oisn.
Melon Cheese—Cover oz. gelatine
with ; cup water; add ; cup boiling
water. and strain onto 1 pt. melon
pulp that has been run through a
vegetable press. Whip 1 cup cream
to a stiff froth, add i cup sugar, 1
tablespoon brandy and the melon
pulp. Beat until it thickens`,` turn
into a mold and set on ice. Serve
in thin slices with sponge cakes.
Melon Fruit Salad• --In the prepara-
tion of the dessert, the melon plays
an important part, and it is prepar-
ed !n many styles. A favorite way
to serve is as a fruit salad. The
pulp Is cut in cubes and set on ice
to chili: It is •then sprilikled with
,l- cup powdered sugar to every quart
of fruit. Pout• over it 1 lablospoon
each of Inanely and curacoa. Let
stand half an hour before seeving.
'The • pal's may have been scooped
out of the rind, leaving a shell in
semen to repl.tce the salad, and
front which it is served. A few slic..
ec1 oranges or a Cup .01 orange jeice
will give a new flavor. hreeeently
blanched almonds, finely chum -ed
nuts, or chestnuts, in vunilla syrup,
aro 0(1(10(1 to the salmi. With .this
F.h'rs 't vatad, .' Serve some dainty
wu1•rvs. 1111,S0 fruit salads nee very
r,.
F }
c N. r 1. ll pre-
pared,
r - lu.v �r y
pope I
I 1
pared, tinct are delicious and these
is an infinite variety of ways for
TWO CiOOD RECIPES.
Sun Burst.—Melt in a frying pan
, lb. rich cheese. When soft, add #
pt. thick, sweet cream, , teaspoon
salt and a pinch of pepper. iVlien
thoroughly blended, break into this
6 fresh eggs and cover for two
minutes. When the whites begin to
set, remove cover and beat the mass
briskly with a large spoon, for a few
minutes. Then it will rise in a yel-
low foam, tender and delicious.
Serve on fresh crackers that have
previously been heated and buttered.
It is nutritious and digestible.
A. Good Pie.—To enough stewed
pieplant for one pie, add the yolks
of 2. eggs ,ncl 1 cup sugar. Bake
with one crust, and beat the whites,
add 1 tablespoon sugar, spread over
the top and brown the sante as for
lemon pie. •
ODD ERRORS IN BOOKS.
Curious Mistakes By Old. and New
Authors.
Someone has been hunting for er-
rors in the writings of old and new
authors. ITe has run down sone
'funny mistakes. In vIvanh,oe' Sir There has recently been effected at
Walter Scott makes a knight of Trieste a blasting operation which
Richard I. converse with a contom- is believed to be the largest on roc-
poraay of William the Conqueror, oral. Thirty tons of dynamite were
who was Richard's grandfather. The used, and almost as entire mountain
now moon flypears in the western side was removed, the mase of ma -
sky and sets from the moment it be- tenial loosened being 8'00,000 tons.
comes visible; but in ''The Children The spectacle, as viewed from ship -
of Clibeon" Walter Desan'L• caused a board in the Bay of Trieste, is de -
DOW /noon to rise in the cast at 2 scribed as ono' of te'rrifi'c grandeur.
o'clock in the morning. Trollope The appearances were those of a
makes one of his characters, Andy great volcanic upheaval.
5
Is a purely vegetable System
Renovator, Blood Purifier and
Tonic.
A medicine that acts directly at
the same time on the Stomach,
Liver, Bowels and Blood.
It cures Dyspepsia, Biliousness,
Constipation, Pimples, Boils, Head-
ache, Salt Rheum, Running Sores,
Indigestion, Erysipelas, Cancer,
Shingles, Ringworm or any disease
arising from an impoverished or
impure condition of the blood.
Foss Gale by all Druggists,
Scott, come whistling up the street
ttith a cigar in his mouth. In "Don
Quixote" Sancho continues • to ride
on his donkey after having lament-
ed the animal's death. Inz "The
Reign of Law," by James Lane Al-
len, one of the characters refers to
a book which was not published for
ten years after the time the refer-
ence was said to have been made.
H'arnlin Garland wrote in 1896 "The
Rose of Dutcher's Coolly," aitld one.
of the characters in the novel is
given about three different -nates.
Jacob Riis tells in "The Making of
an American" that while a young
reporter, in giving the particulars
of a river's over low, he described a
stone floating on the waste of wa-
ters. Beit that was not more won-
derful -than the case of ou'r old
friend, Robinson Crusoe, who, after
taking off his clothes,. to swim to
the wreck, took the precaution to
fill his pockets full of biscuits.
'Neither was it more surprising than
the discovery by a Paris reporter,
who found in the Seine "the node
corpse of a man with ten sous in
his waistcoat pocket."
- BIG BLAST.
otk. ^
:'i&. ; a`""" Y•riGr• •ia�i"1'�r'f ca tit
Wea'c, hervous, Diseased Men..
Thousands of Young and Middle Aged Mee are annually sweet tea premature grave
through early indiscretions and later excesses. Self abuse andConstltutlonalBlood
Diseases have ruined and wrecked the life of manya promisingoung man. Dave
von any ofthafoliowitig symptoms: Nervous and Despondent; Tired in Morning;
No Ambition; Memory Poor; Easilyi'atigued; Excitable and Irritable; Eyes Blur;
Pimples on the race; Dreams and Drains at Night; Restless; }laggard I1ooking;
Blotches; Sore Throat; ,fair Loose; Pains in the Body• Sunken
Eyes; Lifelces;' Distrustful aid Lack of 1♦5ergy and :Strength.
Our New slfetltad Treatment will build you tip mentally, physically
and sexually. Cures Oten artst;rd or no Pay.
26 YSARA 1N DETROIT. DANI( OEOURFTY.
JefS No Noinos Used Withotut-Written Consent.
A rinnvOUS 'WRECK.— 3, rl.AVPY LIM.
1' T. P. I itSnsov • has a Narrow Escape.
1/l live oil afarm. At school X learned an early habit, which
„. ,' weakened Inc;Atypically, scximel and mentally. Family Doctors
i , `set'•'e e e said I was goiiui�Leto4 'decline” y(Consumptiontr Finally, "The
t , Ooldeti Monitor edited b Drs. dicanedy St lfergan fell Otto my
6 ,
hands. • X learned the tt^tu�rtucl cause. .Self abuse had seeped my
vitality. X took the Nero Method T,'eeAnsut and was cured. ltiy friends thinly X won
mired of Consumption. X Stave soot them many patieuts, ail of whim were cured. 1.
Thede 2.ow Method Treatment snppiics vigor, Vitality and manhood."
Consultetine Pro, Bodo froo, Write for Question Monk for Hems Yrratracnt. ' t
,^ .. . i�lg 011eIii ,,4tco4 �;
or, is l c) -' 'k`f "+t� 1
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