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Exeter Times, 1903-9-3, Page 7
r• nuine cartrs �. Littleriver 1i � Meet Boar Signature of Seo Fac.Sitn!i(o Wrapper Beloit'. Vary ordeal camel as cnaa' totate aeor,.pr. RR 9• i IVO1 PILLS. LLS. reR FOR DIMNESS& 1•e€i @lf,11111&gESt . 11lNVIO LIVEN. FON CONSTIPATION. FON SALLOW SKIN. • — FOR THE COMPLEXION conezaw.'zon !Myra:wit sn tomonc, siz'e'a„t',;'t a vis©, •, . OUR SICK' HEADACHE. LIRDOC) Ij Is a purely vegetable System Renovator, Blood Purifier and Tonic. A medicing 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, hingles, Ringworm or any disease sing from an impoverished ea mpure condition of the blood. Vol. Sete by nil Eregpinie. THE CIIRXSTIAN • THAT'S THE SPOT! y the Weak Things of tills World God Shall Confound the Mighty. lasat.ezafi according to Act o! tha Pate study of the I3ible. Suddenly, aye, lianlent ox Uanitda, in tho year One Thousand Nino Hundred. mad Thieo, as a flash, Me. Moody was struck by Win. tidily of Toronto, at the down by the death angel, One 'day 11Departiuent of Agriculture, (Mama.). clay on his way to hold great even - ••••••.1.n.• • gelistic services in Kansas City, the A despatch from Mileage says :— ley, b'r'ink De Witt Talmage preach- ed from, the following text : Joshua 1, 5, "Ats I was with Moses, eo I will be with thee." Ono of the greatest novels ever written, so considered by many of our best critics, is Victor Tlugo's masterpiece, "Les Miserablos." Amid all the art gallery of that treasured tool' the most wonderful description is the word painting by wheal the denuneiator of "Napoleon the Lit- tle" pictures the downfall of "Napo- leon the Great at the battle field of Waterloo, When this great mas- ter of literature topples ova the French colossus, the earth trembles and the dead centuries come forth out of Moir musty tombs and look on in perpetual wonderment. Yet after all in reacting 'tho thrill- ing story I am impressed not so much by what happened as what did not happen. For many hours the eagle of victory seemed undecided upon which standard to alight. Slio fluttered this way and that. as though awaiting some one's expected advent to help her to decide. Napo- leon himself was waiting, anxiously waiting, for the sante helper, Every little while he would take his field glass and scan the surrounding hills and valleys. Every littlewhile he would turn to his st=uff orlti+ers • ata say : "Do you see him ? Have you aeard any news from Grouchy ? We must have re -enforcements or we are lost." In the meantime over the hills nzarchecl Marshal Blucher with his German re -enforcements. That was the decisive event. 'Victory hesi.ated no longer. $he flew to the standard of 'Wellington and perched there. The Napoleonic star set in gloom to rise no more in this world. It was the lack of re -enforcements at a critical moment which destroyed the French army. It is the lack of divine re -enforcements which may de- stroy us in the battle of life. &tight in the ssaaa11 of the back. if 3o you ever get a pain therm? If so `'trio You know what it meana'l It isackache. A sure sign of Kidney Trouble. Don't neglect it. Stop it in time: If you don't, serious Kidney Troubles Pre sure to follow. DOH'S KIDNEY PILLS 'cure Backache, Lame Bach, Diabetes, Dropsy and all Kidney and Bladder Troubles. Price 50e. a box or 3 for $11.25. all deltic:lei ..44SAN 8'lF.II. co.„ Toronto, O. FOR "I WILL 13E WITH THEE." The text tells us of another gener- al who also needed re -enforcements. To Joshua was committed the task of conquering a country held by war- like people. To hinx at the supreme znaiuent conies the assurance of the Lord of Hosts, "1 will be with thee.' Now, any friends, the scone kind of divine re -enforcement which camp to Joshua when he took command of the lsraelitish forces may also be given to us. When .God gave to for that family of little ones. IIS him his com,mission he said, "Josh - became the staff upon which his if you will be true to me and mother leaned. It was the death of fight under my standard I will be ) is father that developed ]lam. It With thee as I was with thy prede wn.s the hillock of a paternal grave cessor." That divine succor which by which the son was able to find God gave to Joshua he gave 'to our ste in stones to a throne. Goll, Christian fathers; that divine help he Pp g will give to us if we will trust hint I believe, often uses the sharp prun- and believe on him and live for him. ., hook of death to spiritually de- T,iereiore I would inspire every velop his undeveloped children. He Christian to prayerfully go forth and takes away his Moses in order to do what God wane him to do. I throw the spiritual responsibilities would inspire all Christians to live upon his .Josl.eas. He says to us and work with a brave heart, be- one and all : "It is not right for cause the results of our future con- you, oh, young man, to learn to lean flic'ts are as sure as God's promises upon your father's and mother's are sure. spiritual life ! You must learn to mine lean upon my GOSPEL WORK NEVER DIES. 'divine arum, anis alone. And in tine leaning I will God is with living Christian work- protect thee and care for thee, as I ers in the continuity of service. He did for your Christian parents." will never allow the gospel work of THE SWEETEST NOTES OF GOD. past generations to die. Christian work has immortality. Lilco the gov- The sweetest gospel music is more ernnxent• of England it goes on unin- often found to bo the echo of a. terruptedly from generation to gen- dirge than to come from a fantasia oration. When Ring William • 1V. or a serenade or a dithyramb. Moz- breathed his last the archbishop of art's "Last Requiem," composed for Canterbury immediately hurried to the home of a young girl. He knock- ed at the door of her palace until it was opened. Then he summoned this young girl 'to arise and come First, God will he with the Chris- tian workers of this present genera- tion. R o fight under his glorious banner. David had proved it by experience wnen he wrote, "Thou hast given a banner to them that fear thee, that it may be displayed because of the truth." Under that banner the church of God has won victories in all ages. Solomon saw it on its march and pronounced it "terrible as aai army with banners." Ilse saw it later, triumphant over all evil, entering like a bride into the hone of a bridgroom and her lord leading her into the banquet hall and placing over her the banner of love. down and meet hinx. When sire en- tered the parlor be bowed to her, of •our spiritual hearts wizen we seem saying : "'The king is dead ! Long to' be the most weak and helpless. He often develops his children by the pruning hook of trouble. He makes us lean heaviest upon the divine heart when our own hearts have been gashed open lar 'the gravedigger's spade, and when the dark nights of sorrow have obliterated all constel- latians save, the one star 'which gleamed over the Bethlehem crib on the night that Jesus was born. N]]VER TOO OLD. next day upon his death -bed. • :What her side a drunken blast>and Said two was the result of Mr. Bloody' death?� filthily dressed children, The ses- Ilas any great -evangelist been found y to take his place ? "Ah, na," you sion talked with herr and at last de - answer; "not one, not one 1" Well, cided to place her on probation for y friend; if no one has been able six months,At the end of six m to rake Mr. Moody's place- I can months she agate•to join tell you this one truth -elle. Moody the tt milted liar, and A ofcourse we ad- time after When living was' never as Powerfulliliac woman .xr,oved away and left as Mr, institute when 'lead. The .our church A couple of years ago Chicago innstitute anti Moody church that woman called upon me. At have never been so great as they are to-day.The institutions at North -first I did not know bel. Not only field iwero never doing better work )rad the grace of God. z:leant'eit her than at the present time. And, face, but the warlcs of dissipation What is more, the very s1 l summer af- he'd entirely lefter coun- ter ter Mr. Moody died the mightiest tenance. Though she. had not what Northfield conference ever known up the average pellet might call a beau - to that time was held, in spite of tiful face, . she certainly bad a good, the fact that the most eloquent ton- Honest, noble, Holy Spirit inspired guo and the hest poised brain and face. Her whole life was changed. tho biggest hcart Northfield ever pro- It was now a Obristian life of con- duced were lying silent in the grave, con- secrated usefulness.. 7h, nay broth - Mr. Moody's gospel seed planting er and • sister, no matter hots old yielded,forth some thirty, some You may bo and how many• wasted sixty,- nd some a hundrefl fold. It years are behind, shall not God in- was God's work, and God's work spire you and lift you up as he alone. changed that woman's life •t Shall • GOD WILL BLESS OUR 3'JURS, not the 'divine. power gutted your re- maining days as Moses and Joshua's God will bless the lives of modern lives were protected ? • Christian workers even through the Nearly every royal order, has a death of his servants. Death is often royal insignia. In Germany one of a spiritual pruning hook. It: lops the most honorable of orders was that started by King William called off certain. branches of the great tree "'the Order of the Iron Cross." In" • the hem an race, in prdor •- that other branches nay betted' e'ere>afr RRang, ould.instead hat tofdan ea a Heavenly and grow. 31 a axe all really to re - tate, xnieht .instead —carer your heart cognize . the usefulness of a pruning "the sign of the Iron Gross." May hook in a temporal sense. Why can itrove that in bis name you have n e not do this in a spiritual sense ? worked and will continue to work To the spiritual weakling the death ilitiao wonders. Saved by grace, of the strong Christian is not al- may you always continuo to spirt- ways pirtways a misfortune, but a blessing. tually bless the lives .of your Follow Let me illustrate this truth in a men. simple way : Some years ago there lived in your 'town a noble, true —Y man, who was the father of a large1 E family. Suddenly he 'lieu. The Lt e Set; ®IL L I friends who came into the bereft home not only sympathized with only, 'throw ourselves upon his mercy a mission of Christian usefulness, Ile has it even though we may be old znen anis women., with many years of wasted opportunitiesto our 'dis- credit. Dy an ex -member of my church I sail peeve bow God cazi bless a re- deemed life which has been cursed by many years of sin, • Some time ago a poor woman attended the services of the church of whirls I was pastor. She wished to. jofza, but the members of tl e session were very much in doubt about letting her in. She had been for fifteen years a dissolute character. Her face was scarred and seamed with her past debaucheries. She hail by the widow because she had lost her INTERNATIONAL LESSON, SEPT. 6. have no visible means of support. —. Her eldest son was a nothing. ETe Text of the Lesson, I. Sam. xxsi., was a hothouse plant. He had :cle- 1_13. Golden Text, pended in the past entirely upon Prov, xiv , 12. his father. Mentally and morally be seemed to be entirely unfitted -to Alter the events of the last lesson assume the responsibilities of the David and his 600 went to Achish, home. But hardly had the father king of Oath of the Philistines, and, died when a change came over the receiving Liklag from Achish, he boy. Instead of being a clinging dwelt there a year and four months, vino he stiffened into a stalwart oak. nxakiug continual raids upon neigh - He went to work to supply bread holing tribes (chapter xxvii). The next chapter tells of Saul's visit to the witch of Endor and Samuel's last message to him. In chapter xxix. the lords of the Philistines object to Achish taking David and his men -with them to battle. In chapter xxx. David and his (300, returning to Liklag, find it burned with fire and no trace of their families. Then followed one of David's greatest trials, when even his 600 turned against him and talked of stoning him, but David encouraged himself in the Lord, his God, and' in due time, through the young man of Egypt, he recovered all and more and rewarded all, making it a- law in Israel that those who tarry by the stuff shall share equally with those who go to the battle (xxx., 6, 19, 24, 25). 1-3. Now the Philistines fought against Israe], and the men of Isra- el fled from before the Philistines and fell down slain in Mount Gilboa. This was the battle from which David was hindered, and thus again God delivered David from having husband, but because she seemed to the land of the• Philistiners round about to publish it in. the house of their idols and. among the people, Thus what Saul feared canto upon 171irn, and these xtneiretuncised Philis- tines abused his body. But wordt of all, it was published abroad among than idolatrous deflate: of the lig•^i'zxg and true Go Whezi. one Who bears the na'uze of Jesus is in any. way overeozno by tie world, the flesh ear tab nevi], tams holy and beautiful- name is b1a5,lhemerl land dIslioeored: by the Sins thus coxn- mitttetd. Our great business hero is to magnify that naive and to sliow forth His Drawee, The defiers of God cannot do enough to s'^ow their hatred of Iain and ITis people, Tho devil never made anything good or helped any one to•be godly. 10. They put his armor in the house of • Ashtardth, and they fas- tened tits body to the wall of Both - than, - The poor body that might have glorified God (1 Oor. vi. 19, 20), the armor that was no use to David, or to Saul either, .May we be skill - full in.uwiirg the armor that will never fall into the idolater'' hands, the sthieh't of faith aria sword of the of . r hemhelmetsalvation a4'l helmet Spirit (EDh, vi,) •- :11 11i. '.All 'the valiant men arose and went all night and took the body y of Saul and the bodies of his sons front the wall of BekIuslian and. came to Jebosli and burnt them there. Thank God far the faithful' in al] ages who will not tolerate an in suit • to Bis name if tdey can pre- vent it 1 • The enemy to -day is in the camp and is raking the book of God arra holding it up to riioule arid is every saying wicked things about our Lord Jesus Oblast and therefore about Goll Tfimself, for wi;oever disisonore Christ or the word • of God dishonors God the Feteere But 'Ubere is no morning for smell as cling not to tare law and to the testimony (,Isa. viii, 20, R. V.), and tl ov a.sfball sum v be- overtl)r w f.• I et• us mfr a What we can, or, nether, Iet God work in us to do all Ho can, 't'o• br'xing Honor to His Holy n.anle and •remember that to obey is bettor than sacrifice. The Lorca make us willing and obe- 'dient to His glory 1 DIARRHOEA, DYSENTERY, , COLIC, CRAMPS, PAIN IN E STOMACH, AND ALL. SUMMER C.OMrLAflTS5 tFI"'EIT1I ARE MARVELLOUS. IT ACTS LIEF dA 6;HA611111. RELIEF ALMOST INSTANTANEOUS. Plea Taut Rapid, bilabial Effectuai, E'UCftis t•IOUSE L•iHODUi1 Matta IT. mitt VOtil) fSRU0016T 1? FOR . TAKE NG>0Tdila. PR@.(:Iia .. 380e his own obsequies, was his .easter- anything to do with the death of piece. A beautiful legend teaches Saul. It.is sad to see the people of this : Many years ago a German God falling before the defiers of God ofai wanted to change the towerss castle into a great Scotian instead of one chasing a thousand of le narp. When the strings were first and two putting 10,000 to flight strung from the towers no sound (Dent. xxxii„ 80), but the best of came therefrom. No note was men are nothing if God is not with r struck, because the slender fingers of them. i It makes ones eat ache to , the spirits of the summer winds were read in verso 2 of the death of Jon - not strong enough to bend the athan, and we cannot be astonished' l strings, although the/ were able to at the depth of David'samentation lightly touch then. But when win- over ono whose soul was so knit ter came, then the blizzards bad with his own (II, Sam. 1., 17-27), wrists bunched with muscles. With but we wonder as we read that it the strong touch of musical masters was over Saul as well as Jonathan. they began to run the gamut of David saw •not- his enemy, but the every. scale. Accompanied by the Lord's anointed. Saul had known shriekings of tl.e tornadoes, the much of the mercy of God, but now stnings of the castled towers began ho is in the hands at those who to vibrate and send forth the sweet- know no mercy (Prov. xxix. 1). est. of melodies. God sounds his 4-6. Saul died. and his three sons, eeeetest notes upon the harp strings and his armor bearer, and all his men that same day together. What, then? Where are the dead? The words of the Lord Jesus in Luke xvi. and other words of the Spirit as plain,y recorded in Scrip- ture teach us that, if we are redeem- ed by the precious blood of God's great sacrifice (Lev. xvii,, 11; Hob. ix.; 22), "To die Is gain." "To de- part is to be with Christ, which is far better" (Phil. 1., 21, 28), and when the spirit leaves the body our conscious personal life continues, and tho' angels who minister to tho re- deemed guide or carry us to perfect bliss in His presence, where we await the resurrection and the king- dom of God. 7. Israel e * * forsook 111.0 cities and fled, and the I"hilistines canto d an(welt in them.Here a,re not only ,th'defeat efeat arid slaoughtei• of the Lora's people, Is - earl, but their possessions taken and enjoyed by their enemies. 'When (]hristiaazs refuse to walk humbly with Gear, in simple reliance upon li5,n, and turn Their backs upon •thin in order to fellowship with theworld wluc;h hates • flim, menene- mieses of Godwill conic in like a flood, anti the bodies, widen ought tui be templets of the holy Gthnst, Veil with love arid mid jos*, will be anim iaee' by suchenemies as; envy and liatr•ed and fc ollea thoughts and sante' heats fled thus Ca•oil's property be sadly defiled. 8, 9. They out oft has l.es'l and for you and nue. ff W0 sttiripped all ale arra* old Qent into live the queen 1" )Nhen teat young girl, after she had grown to he an old woman of eighty-six, lay dying the watchers stood anxiously about her bed. .As soon as she had 'breathed leer last, and the attending physician pronounced her dead, her eldest son, Edward, was greeted with the acclamation, "Long live the lying 1" Rulers may comp and rulers may go, but the government goes on, no matter what human hand may grasp the scetxter. Tn. the fourth chapter of Mark, Christ compares Christian work to a sower going forth to sow. Some of that seed will surely fall upon good ground, which will yield thirty, some sixty, some a hundred fold. It must reproduce itself inultipoteiit- lyr in the human lives of the suceked- ing generations. When • Dwight L. Moody died did his work die ? With - oat doubt Mr. Moody was the -great est evangelist of the past eontury: His am sonality not onljt appealed to sinners, last also to the greatest Christian workers of his day, Xis voice and pen raised vast sums of money for 'Christian work. ITe was a gospel •messenger who stirred Eng- land and America on his evangelistic tours. 1Te built the Minims Moody fns(itete: at :Malan). Y•ie built the fatnolis institutes at Northfield. Ifo gathered among the Massachusetts hills college. men as well as minisiters In annual conference for prayer and WM1'00niol1 • with god and for th(t How Old was Moses when he be- gan to lead forth the children of Israel into the wilderness ? • Was he a young maxi ? No. Elis hair must been been white. His skin must have been wrinkled. Michael Ango- lo's wonderful chisel, has cut him in stone as a giant. There Moses sits in the Ronlan capital to -day, with ernes and back knotted in muscles, with beard 'tossed of a tempest, with features swarthy enough tc frown down any niob and with fists like a sledge . haxn.nier, But with ail of Mttahael Angelos genius he could 'not change the facts. Tris chisel had t make Moses an old man. 'Ho had almost passed his eightieth milestone of life when he went forth to liber- ate the children of Israel from Egyp- tian slavery. Blew old was Joshua Viten the maiitlis of the dead Moses fell upon his shoulders ? Ile had already passed his fourneorc years and five. il'e was already pressing On toward his ninetieth milestone. So God ha Gi !fltK(^ ..411e4111 {C13:11 SI:q1V1 ENUThTa"-' l fiE&fC}(cAA e N G• kC G fU 9kOfl N 'i T OK NRGFH6EHF6iGOflhSTRiC0TION S5"ITU ondon,AmMi En�Montre&Cea B 113RITAIN'/-AMER!t? Y`all Driss ff Chi► Price lra Cnnsda a $1.00 ; Six bottles for $5,00 Nervousness predominates in wog seen, but men are also subject; to it, Excess of various kinds causes it, also intellectual toil and anxiety. Sr. JAlms WAFERS are peculiarly indicated in any form of nervous de- bility, as they tone up the entire sys- tem and restore the nerves to their normal condition. They are indica- ted in exhaustion, mental inertia and senile weakness. They contain no alcohol, not being a liquid remedy. Their effect therefore is not that of a mere stimulant, but tonic and permanent. Sr. JAMES WAVARs helpstom tch, digest food and scud the nutriment through the blood, and this is the honest way to get health azrd streught, the kind that lasts,t s, develops lOpS and breeds the energy which. accomplishes much. "X am patCcinarlypleased with St. James Wafers. They flava been specially useful to shy prac- tece whets employed In saervotte tro'iables." Dr. A, 7, crate nirmtasghsr,t, gr3g. St. fames Wafers are not a secret remedy: tothe numerous dectorsre- commending them to their patients we mail the formula upon request. where dealers are not selling the Wafers, they: are mailed upon re-, ceipt of trice at the Canadian branch : 5t. Jamas Wnfera Co., 17£S St. Cathorine St., Montreal. VICTIMS OF NrAGA.RA. A Few of the Many Tragic Stories That Are Told. Tho Indians held that Niagara claimed its yearly quota of victims. ]iiven tie -day, when the wind is its a certain direction and the roar of the falls has a peculiar, thunderous sound, they say, "Niagara is boom- ing 1 It is calling for another vice tin 1" And long indeed is the '^old -call of the lost. All guides paint out the spot where the French. lady; stooping to fill her cup from the rapids, fell, arid was 'whirled away in an instant. Nothing was seen of bee but once; then for the space of a flash a hand toaasol'above the waves. They show you the rock to wlxiceh Avery clung for twenty hours, for half a day in view of the frantic crowd, wire sent raft after raft to reach hizn,, yet Saw him swept like a weed to destruction at last. Perhaps the most tragic story is that of the young man who was walking with his 'bride en Luna Is- lamcl, Just at the brink of the falls they stopped to greet a party of •friends. The young husband, in merry mood, took in his arms a lit- tle girl of the party. Teasikigly he held her out o''er the brink, never 'ciotubtun,g the security of his strong grasp. The terrified child struggled and screamed, and in the struggle slip'ed from his arms and fell into that whirl of foaming wafer. • Overwhelmed with the awfulness of his act, and 'doubtless actual ea by a wiled thought of saving the child, the young man lea,pe;d after her to his own death, and the two were swept away before the horrified ga.ze of their friends. T'erli�tps that bride's fate, who stac(d anal s>etiv this awful tragedy, was sadder than the lot of the other ill-starred bride, who went rowing in a little boat with leer young hus- band cm the river above the fulls. ware not 't AlthoughAlthoughn l t o ven trUre too fax, they rowed On and on over the smooth, treacherous, fair -seeming 'aatois, till the terrible current seiz- ed their little skiff and whirled it into the rapids. •Tile Iast glimpse of them showed thou. standing up in the re/Skiing boat, clasped in cagh other's arms. Then boat, bride and bridege'oom were engulfed in the re- lentless waters. • WELL ARMED. "Mamma.. didn't you say last week you wanted the carving knife and the chopper sharpened ?" Mrs. Suburb : "Indeed 1 diad, iile'w cold waster two or'three 'Ulnae,: left, his little heart ! How thoughtful, ting them stand in the last water Por half au hour. Drain an']lour and pack in jars with spices, using red pepper pods, whole cloves and a little mace, Cover with hot vine- gar and seal. Cucnnnber 11,3a.ngoes,-1leluote a So@eGafae@o0oeht egkaeo':ttatto FOR THE h. SIO A tat t Recipes for the Kitchen. a Hygiene and Other Notes es for the Housekeeper. 5 CULINARY HINTS, Soft Gingerbread, Stix one one) of molasses, one • level t ablespooi. of butter, 'two cups of mill:, two naps of flour, one level teaspoon of soda dissolve in one-third cup of boiling water. 'lake in Shallow pan in a moderate oven. Squash Pic.—Aad four clips of xntilk to two cups of cooked and sifted squash, one egg, two crackers rolled fine, one and ono-quasater cups of sugar, two level teaspoons of cornstarch, one-half level teaspoon of cinnamon, a little salt and eut- meg. Bake in one crust with high rim. French Rolls.—Scald one cup of milk, an one-quarter cup of butter, on the mangoes, adisl a feta pieces of horseradish root, which has a ten- dency to keep the vinegar. Put on a close-fititing cover anti set in a cold, dry place. ._._., USEFUL SUGGESTIONS. Leather chairs and leather bind- ings can be brightened by being ruibbed with a cloth which has been dipped in the white of an egg. It in covering kitchen table wide oil- cloth a layer of brown paper is put on firust, it will prevent the oilcloth craokiaig and make it wear `Gtiree tunes as long. A little paratlin-oil rubbed on with flannel will clean a greasy sink. To o]een silver spoons knives and forks in every flay usse,• rub with a damp cloth 'dipped in baking soda, and polish with a piece of chamois leather A bit ot blue in the water in -Which glass arc wa$ihed Skids murk to its brilliancy. If new tiztwear• is rubbed wit3t fresh laid, and thoroughly heated in -the oven before it is used, it will never ruse, no matter how much it is put in water. Oil cloths should never be washed in liot soap -studs. Tfhey elsould first be washed clesal with cold water, then rubbed dry and wlien lultowarni adia one yeast with a cloth dapped in milk. 'I$zis cake dissolve(' in two level table- i may seem eagrenstve, but it pays in spoons of water, two level table- the end. Table salt anti a wet spoons of sugar and one-half level teaspoon of salt. Add one cup of flour to make a thin batter, set aside in a warm place for one hour, then mix with flour enough to make a dough. Knead well, put back in a bowl and let riga very light. Shape into small long rolls, lay in a French roll pan, cover with a cloth, let rise about twenty minutes then brush ovor with milk and bake in a quick oven. Chocolate Cream Layer Cake.—Use one cup of sugar, one-half clip of milk, one and one-half cups of flour sifted with two level teaspoons of barking powder, one rounding table - )eon of butter and two eggs Stir the butter acrd segos• to a cream, add the eggs one at a time. then alternately the flour and milk and bake in two layer cakes. For the fulling cook three-q,uartcrs cup of milk, one level tableepaon of butter, tido tabieepoone of grated ch000- late, onehalf cup of sugar and one level tablespoon of cornstarch wet with a little Cold water. Stir until cooked thick and smooth, then add one hearten egg, remove from the fire, add one 1yaIf teaspoon of vanil- la. Spread between 'tie caikes and pour a chocolate glaze over the top. Place a small saucepan on the stove with two cups of sugar and one- quarter poound of chocolate grated and one eup of water. Stir and boil until it will form a thread. Take from the fire and boat until a titin skin forms on top, then spread evenly- all over the cake ankl set for a few minutes in a• very slow oven. Onion Pickle. Peel small omiens of uniform size arid let them lie in salted water for twe +ty 4our hours. One cup of salt is sufficient for four quarts of water. Rinse in clear you are 1 They are both so blunt as to be unlese. "Well, 1'11 take 'em rot(rid to tale cutler's for you." "How rnvoot of you to offer to do such things for your mamma, my little cherub I 1'11 wrap them up."' strip an inch wide from good sized "No, ''don't wrap them up. I want i but green cue:umbers by eutt;iuug ilioni to show.. Tlleze's a boy out theta' waiting to lick me, but I fam.cy when he sees me conr.i,ng He'll go home," • l)EAT.II PLANT OF JAVA. The death plant of Java has hop- ers which continually give off a per- fame so powerful. as to overcome, if inhaled for any length of time, is, full grown man, and which kills all Teems of insect life that come under its •fnfiuence. Mrs, Aristocrat Z. "Did you Bear what Mrs. Nouveau Riche said to me at the concert this evening ?" Mrs, Wellborn ; "No, my dear; do ale all about it. hXl•s, Aristo- crat z crat ; ";Well, she informed me that she had decided to have !.t aloin de plume in her: hitt,," straight in 'towards the center with the point of a, knife. Take der+ the seeds and soft. part with a epoou. Put twelve cucumbers arid the slices token from them into a: 'brine of salt a.nd cold water which is strong enough to hold up an egg. Cover and set aside for twenty-four hours. Drain well, Mop fine one head of cabbage,. • and "three medium-sized maws chapped fine, onehalf level teaepeoOxx each of cir:matnon aid cloives, one level tablespoon of pett- ed horseradish, the salve of salt and a saitspoou of pepper. Ono -.half cup of small nasturtium weeds 'sill improve it. hli.x these ingredknts well, . then 1111 the encumbers • as cloth will remove egg -stain' on sil- ver•. To stone raisins, free them from steaks, place them in a bowl, cover wit`, boiling water, and leit them stand two minutes. Pour off the water and open the raisins, when the seeds may be quickly re- moved, A zinc )iatlatub may be polished with kerosene. Have the tub 'dry before urting the oil, cover one small place at a time with the oil rubbing it well with a brush and then with a clod.. When all lutea been gone oval , wash the tub with boiling water. Lan vwickte soaked in vinegar a shalt time be- fore u"Sng them will give a mural better light. To prevent the piano from the ef- fects of a damp room, place a small lump of unsiaked line in a bag and place inside the case. To obtain an enamel finish on your white "lothes, adscl half a teaclpoon- ful of borax to one pint of boiling starch. The best and easiest wad' tso toast breaicl is 'to lay the bre del on an albestos pad, wad place dir- ectly over a hot flee. Place a lump o gar f sugar in the tea-pot twhen put- ting tirzg it away. 'This Will prevent it from becoming nnuety. The gem e.ake<s, or large ones, either, will not stick to the pans if flour is alightly dusted over the greased cake pans. When washing blankets or tv'oolcns, iIiselolve borne in ache hot water, then maize a suds by us- ing any good laundry soap. Rub 'the article to be washed with 'the iran:ds; do not use the washboard. All woolens mat be kept soft:, and tvi11 not shrink by this znethiod. Al- ways rinse in wave. water. A tableotoon of borax to five gallants of blot water is about right for the raids. HAVE you been smote ing a good deal lately and feel an occasional twinge of pain round your heart? Are you abort of breath, nerves unhinged, senses tion of pins and needles going through your army and fingers? Better take a box or two of Milbura's Heart and Nerve Pills and get cured before things become too serious, As a specific for all heart and nerve troublestheycan- not be excelled. A. true heart tonic, blood enricher and nerve re. solidly as pos.xible. gross the ftlich' newer, they curs nervousness, sleepless- backin lttee and tie routed ^Situ tens prostration, smoker's heart, p , nervous white twine. 'Place all in a pickle jar 1 palpitation of the hearty aftereffects of la atxcT cover with vinegar for twenty grippe, etc. Price soc. per" box or 3 boxes for $t.s at all druggists, or will be sent 011 receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., i1m114 l;, Toronto. Out. four hours, theta simmer izx the Sarno vinegar for half ail hoar. Drain and again cover' with fresh .,vinegar` t>atrl stand Over night, Drain off this vinegar, t:cald it ankh on .back