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Exeter Times, 1903-9-17, Page 3
rtEC ,: b`y.r r ' Little Liv r Pills. Must Dear St(arrriture or See G'cc-Stznite Wrapper Mow. ' Yore moan and ao ewe, ........._ se tae as eager. CTE ITTLE ��,q `ppinn yamy. tE�t► F J HEA®ktCfil&e F•ti ©iBll€�Eu�a eon Blintl$Nl Sgsa FSR 'TORPID LIVER. FOR GefialP ttTI01u. FFM SALLOW SKIN. : FIFi 'lir OWN -UM PardiH14a\"57 w�sTNava3 uATun.. le eat e I ,` PS1r e?g' Y7egetanee.,o me i �tsi CURE SICK HEADACHE. Are a sure and permanent cure for all Kidney and Bladder Troubles. �•"w.'�ACKACIIRE is the first sign of Kidney Trouble, Don't neglect it ! Check it in time! Serious trouble will follow if you dont. Cure your Backache by taking DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS. r:et e11tl'ee s.. vee es to , rums Bad Blood into itch Red :,Iced. 0 other remedy possesses such serf ct cleansing, healing and puri. Eying properties. Externally, heals Sores, Ulcers, Abscesses, and all Eruptions. Internally, restores the Stomach, Liver, Bowels and Blood to healthy action. If your appetite is poor, your energy gone, your ambition lost, B.B.B. will restore you to the full enjoyment of happy vigorous life. A Standard Remedy • ,Lsed in Thousands of domes in Canada for nearly Sixty Years and Pas newer yet felled to give satisfaction. CURS Dlarrbcea, Dyiientery, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infan- tulm, Cramps, Collo, Sea Sickness and all Summer Complaints. I14i1-prompt use will prevent a great deal of unl eees$ar1 suffer- ing and often save life. Pr1oo, 3So. Vile T. Minima Co., Limited. Toronto,ft)ntasie. An Object Lesson of the Divine Attitude To ward all Kinds of Lies (Entered according to 'Act of the Par- ltanlent of Canada, la the Year One Thousand Nine Hundred and Three, by Win Deily, of Toronto, at the .Pepartu1ent of Agrieelture, (Ottawa) A • despatch from Chicago. says :— Rev, Frank De Witt Talmage preach- ed from the following text : Acta. v, 8 : "Teri me whether ye sold the land for so much." Morbid curiosity is to the eye what gossip is to the oar. .The grewsomc. the hideous,. the diseased, the appall-' ing,• aro objects at which some of us never tire. of looking. All day long e steady stream of sightseers passes in and out of. the Parisian morgue. The znore bloated and deformed the corpses the stronger the fascination and the bigger the crowd. Such is the scene of my text. There is groat excitement in Jorsalem. Tho agitation is spreading everywhere_ As the. people are rushing along to- ward a common center some by- stander asks a Winner,. "What is the matter ?" • "Why," answers he, "haven't you heard the news ? 'Ton, know Ananias, who used to live next door to me ? Ito was my dearest neighbor. Well, Peter was preaching this -Morning near the tem- ple. Ho took up a. collection for the poor.Ananias came forward and laid his contribution at the feet of the apostle and pretended that he had given •— ll his money to the church. • He wanted to appear well before his fellow church members. But Ananias told a falsehood. lio had not given all, as ho had pledged himself • • to do, but had kept back part of the money for his own use. Then Peter raised his finger toward heaven and said, 'Ananias, thou hast not lied • unto men, but unto God.' Immediately Ananias clutched' at his heart. He gave one shriek and dropped dead. Come on; let us go up and see what is next going to happen." r.aES CANNOT BE CLOTHED IN • WHITE. These' two men rush on toward the temple. They come to the outskirts of a great throng, There the multi- tudes are crowding and pushing and jostling their neighbors and trying to get near to the speaker. Sudden- ly the cry is raised 'Make way, make way !" The sea of human faces surges to the right and to the left. Every head uncovers. The murmur of many voices is hushed to the sil- ence of the tomb. Slowly and sol- emnly down through the open path- way come the pallbearers, carrying between them a shrouded form. For, "the young men arose. wound hint up and carried him out and buried him." Hardly had the noise of the shuf- fling feet ceased when a newcomer, a woman, began to elbow her way through the crowd. She asks the people as she pushes along : "What is the matter ? is any one hurt ?" No one answers. They pretend they do not hoar her, but they do. As soon as she passes along many an eye is moist, many a lip quivers. 4"God pity her 1 Cod pity her 1" This is Sapphire., the wife of the dead perjurer. She is her husband's confederate in the premeditated lie. As soon as Peter sees her he points to the pile of silver and gold and says unto her. "Woman, tell me whether yo sold the land for so much ?" And she says, "Yea, for so much." Quick as a flash the lightning of God's wrath struck. "Then fell she down straightway at his feet and yielded up the ghost, and the young men came in and found her dead, and, carrying het' forth, buried her by her husband." Such is the Biblical description of two • capital punishments. BUSINESS FALSEHOODS. Flasehoods in the. business world: They nest and thrive especially well in the haunts of barter and gain. They, greet you at the opened doors of our large department stores. They pictorializo- themselves in circulars and newspaper advertisements which etre sent broadcast over the cities and country districts. They, pose in fictitious reports of our large cor- porations and exaggerate the annual dividends. They have for their .pass- ports white slips of pe .•r, purport- ing to represent bona tido stock, whereas the gold and silver and copper mines are purely imaginary. They enthrone themselves in the "pits" of the produce exchanges. They finger the keys of the telegraph instrurneuts, when the breadstuffs aro about to be cornered. They aro just as much at home with the wholesome manipulator as with the retail dealer, with the great-cap?ia- list as with the humble trader seat- ed' behind the counter of the little country store. We haves all felt upon our hot cheeks the baleful touch of their infectious breath. They ride down with us when we go shopping in the morning. They come 11ome with us when we turn our backs upon the glass offices at night. Falsehoods in the business world! They figure not only in the transac- tions ransacttions of buyers and sellers, but in the declarations - of the taxpayer. Here comes the county assessor. ITow much is your property worth ? "Oh," you -answer, if a farmer, "not much. I hardly made •:t living off the place last year. My crops bare- ly met expenses. The house is sim- ply a 'white elephant' on my hands. :f would get ricl of it if I could. Put it down, say, for $8,000." no as - About ser departs. About six months later n. railroad eorporation wishes to • have the fight of way through your property, The representative of that road comes to you. "}1ote intich is your property • worth?" "illy" .you answer, "I do not want to sell under safer; conditions, This is the freest farm land in all this region. Besides, the place has for ins a sentimental as well as (+:n in•' tr'insie value. kty father Iva born here, My children were bort hem Well, if I must, I must. That farm and Vint olcl homestead aro worth at least $10,000. They are cheap at that." There are your two an- itwcrs. Why the discrepancies ? Why did you make one statement to the assessor and another to the railroad corporation? Did yoo lie first ? Did yott lie last ? Did you lie both tithes ? GOD ABHORS LYING, Falsehoods in the political world! Oh, how many ! Like the seventeen year locusts, they never entirely de- part from a region. They, however, swarm most at certain seasons of the year. They are especially num- erous and virulent at elections. The ballot box is their footstool, Poli- tical falsehood teal take the record of the purest and best public man Heat ever lives and absolutely be- daub it over with scandals and false accusations. 13ut, though the con- cocters and titterers of political false- hoods may never tire of blackguard - leg and misrepresenting our public nen, the acme cf meanness is only reached when, without just cause, they drag into the political mire the wives and the children of the men whom they would indirectly attack. In this generation the family of any public man is never able, 1i'se Caesar's wife, to 'live above suspi- cion. Ah, then, I wonder not that some of our public men become bit- ter and lose their faith in mankind. I wonder not that natty a public ntan is tempted to carry his political hatreds down to the grave. God pity the honest roan who in public life is having his ]react gashed open by the attacks made upon the char- acters of his loved ones. Truly, then as at the cross, an ungrateful people are offering him a crown of thorns instead of a crown of treasured gold. UNTRUTH IS COWARDLY. A lie is a lie, against whomsoever told. A ]ie is especially cowardly when it is told against public men— especially cowardly because for the most part the victims must writhe and twist under the insinuating and poisonous attack and suffer in sil- ence. The nature of a. lie is not changed by harnessing it to a qual- ifying adjective, nor is a political lie less heinous than other lies. A lie told to besmirch a political can- didate or to benefit a poltical party is an offense in tho sight of God which will have to be accounted for in the day of judgment. "All liars" —there are no exceptions to this rule—"all liars shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone, which is the second death." Falsehoods in tho social world 1 Why ? Because few people can ac- curately repeat any statement they hear. Without intending to misquote they make verbal changes which slightly or seriously affect the mean- ing. If you would prove this state- ment T • would have you play a sim- ple game which we children used to play in my younger days. We would have twenty or thirty people sit about the parlor in a circle. Then we would have one person, who was the leu.der, whisper a simple state- ment or tell a short story to the person upon his right. That person would in turn whisper the same story. And on and on the story would go until it had made the full circle. Then the last person in the circle would tell the story as ho heard it. Then the first person would tell the story as he told it. And the two stories would be no more alike than the striped fur of a panther is like the white wool of a pet lamb. DESTROYERS OF CHARACTER. There are many social falsehoods floating about every community, not }Amuse neighbors have deliberately lied against neighbor's, but because when gossip starts her work the statements made in reference to a man's character by oft repetition of- ten unintentionally become malform- ed and satanic and character de- stroying monstrosities. Social falsehoods are prevalent ev- erywhere. Iiow are we to guard against them? First and foremost, by not making ourselves a medium for their propagation. An aspersion co a man's character, once started, is passed from lip to Hp until the whole community hears it. But the calumny, often undeserved, might be stopped by the observation of a sim- ple rule. "Never believe any evil rumor," my father said, "you may hear against your neighbor. Never believe it unless you have positively heard the evil confession from the man's own lips, and even then you must hope there is seine mistake about it." Never allow yourself to listen to any maiigner of an inno- cent man's life and thereby make yourself a party in the crime. Never allow your imperfect memory to tranemit what idle gossipors aid scandal mongers may revel in. PARENTAL DiSHIONESTY. Falsehoods in the parental wor]dl.. We would have broadened this head- ing and called it "falsehoods in the domestic world" but for one reason: When a husband deceives his wife or a wife her husband they do it delib- erately and premeditatedly. They do it with their eyes wide open, and they fully realize the enormity of their sins and toward what destruc- tive rocks they are heading. But though a father.' never tells a false- hood to his marital companion with- out forethought, that parent May thoughtlessly -fall into the habit of rleceivin f3 • his children. The are so They young. He thinks they do not re- member and do riot understand. The isame law applied to the wife as tvo1l as to the husband, 'The mother some day, wearied by the perpetual racket, Says to her child, "Now, Harry, if you will go to bed this jiZEternoon and take a nice long nap T will "tako you out for M. ride this ti C Tree cm evening." The child goes to bedruE e without a, murmht. =minor, Wn evening o comes the mother wishes to do soanetiling else. The ride is post- poned, What is the result? She de- liberately ai sly bn enlcs her pt atlrl+ a SheSEPT. 20. falsilles because she does not think it necessary to be honest with her child. The father comes to the side of the invalid's crib and says, "Now,' My son, if you aro patient and gnocl and will take your nredlcines as you ought, when you get Well 1 will giro you a bicycle or a watch or a print- ing press or a scroll saw," The sick boy thinks and dreams about that coming present. But when the child gets well the bills begin to come in. The doctor's bill and the druggist's bill and the trained nurse's bill stagger the father. Ile neglects his promise, or he says: "I cannot afford that bicycle now. You n wait awhile." Thal night the 1nu.ucr says to her husband: "Hus- band, clo you think it is right not to give the boy bis present? Re- mena}"r, you promised him." "Oh," says the father, "he is only a child and will soon forget it," Will he forget your promise? Neter, nian, never! FALSE TO 0011. INTEENATIONAI+ LESSON, Pnlschoods in the church! That means many of us are weekly and daily breaking the public pledges wo have made to Clod. Take for in- stance, that promise which you made when you joined the church. Nave you kept it? Every Sunday night at tate close of the meetings the members of hundreds and thous - cede of Christian Endeavor services. are 'capating tho Chriatian Endea- vor pledge, "I promise flier that I will strive to 'do whatever he would like to have me do; that T will make it the rule of my lite to pray and read the Bible every clay and to support my own church in every way, especially by attending all her regular Sunday and midweek services unless prevented by some reason ' which I can conscientiously give to my Saviour," Do all the young peo- ple read the Bible every day and conscientiously try to attend the midweek church services? Are they simply perjuring themselves to God with their lips? Are they trying, conscientiously trying, to live up to the teachings of the beautiful mot- to, "It is better to be than to seen?" Remember, the perjurers of my text were destroyed because they were making a false statement to the church. Many and many church members who deliberately at the church altars continue to lie to God and continuo to break the promises which they aro making Sunday after Sunday must answer to clod for their sins as Ananias and Sapphire had to- answer. A SUGGESTION. Thus, my friends, the whole trend of this sermon is to prove that every word we utter, whether true or false, that word shall novel; die. It shall at last meet us at the judg- ment seat of God and make us ex- plain why we ever let it come forth from our lips. It is to prove that God does not have one language for the weekday and another for Sun- day. Tho Bible distinctly and em- phatically states that Christians must come forth out of the sinful world and separate themselves from it. In no way can this bo done bet- ter than by speaking the Christian language of straightforward truth. Aro we ready to speak that truth wherever it may ho found? But there is just one little sugges- tion I would like to make before 1 close. Remember, a lie is• not al- ways told with the lips. It can also be spoken by the hand and the foot. The last words my father ever wrote in his study were these, "The Language of Action." They were, to be the caption of the next sermon he intended to write. Beware, oh, man, that when you attempt to speak in this "language of action" you shall not only have an honest tongue, but a truthful hand and a truthful smile, a truthful shrug of the shoulders, a truthful foot and also, very imperatively, a truthful silence. There is a time to speak. Thero is also a time to keep still. But if a man keeps still when he ought tc speak then silence itself may speak in the thunderous tones of the loudest affirmatives or, of the loudest negatives. Let your life in all its parts be "yea, yea," and "nay, nay." Some insects have a thousand eyes. The Turman being by the "language of action" may'have a thousand tongues. These worship either at the altar of truth or 'at the satanic shrine of endless falsi- ties. • ..-o NOT TAKING ANYTITING. "Have you taken anything for your trouble ?" asked the doctor of a long, lank, hungry -looking man, who complained of being . "run d(5wry." • `Well, I haven't been taking much of anything; that is, nothing to speak of. I took a couple of bottles of ]?inkgam's bitters a little while back, and a bottle of 2uickem's in- vigorator, with a couple of boxes root bitters. I've got a porous plaster on my back, and I'm wear- ing an electric belt, and taking rod clover four times a day, with a dose or 'two of salts every other clay; ex- cepting for that I'm not taking anything." 'PIPE KING:S COFFEE-MAIKER. Wherever Bing Edward goon now- adays he is accompanied by his own coffee -maker•, an Egyptian named Jamin Abraham, who serves his ma- jesty with the beverage in small cups. The attendant, of course, ap- pears in all oriental costume. Fav- ored friends have been privileged to taste .the carefully prepared brew, but none of them line gone into rap- ttu'itl over the inky looking fluid ; of which leis majesty has become so fond of late. Text of the Lesson, I. Peter iv., 1-11. Golden Text, Eph. v,, 18. 1,2. For as much then as Christ hath suffered for us in Ilio flesh, arni yourselves likewise with the Stine mind. In this epistle the Spirit bus much to say ao the elect concerning a holy life (1, 15, 16; ii., 9, 10; lit,, 1.5), because of redemption by the prod-. ous blood and the inheritance to which -we are tbus horn again tl., 2-5, 19-25). Ile emphasizes Christ's death for its bearing out sins (ii., 24; iii„ 18), and in these opening :words of our lesson confirms what Ile had also said through Paul, that all who by faith in Christ have died With Tlint should no longer: live unto themselves, but unto Mint who died for them and rose again • (Rom, vi., 4-11; 1I. Cor, v„ 15). Thee believer is no longer to consider bis own will, but in all things the will of God, even as Christ never sought His • own tvill nor Tlis own glory, ]rut always the will of Ilim who sent Elm (Ilom, xii., 1, 2; John vi., 88; vitt„ 50). Being born of God we. have now a. divine nature which can- not sin (I. John ill., 9), and while this nature controls wo cease from sin.. There is, however, a self life remaining in the believer which might sin, and to this we aro to die always (II. Cor. ir., 10, :11). 8-5, Pim the time past of ouw life may suffice us to have wrought the will of the -gentiles. We were servants of sin all too long, for to whom we yield our- selves servants to obey his servants we are to whole we obey, but now as servants to Cod we seek fruit un- to holiness, Walking in newness of life (Rona vi., 4, 16, 22), The un- saved think it strange to see a com- panion turn away from the old life, for they know not the love of God and are wholly self centred. The re- deemed. seeing the love of Cod mani- fested in the gift of His dear Son (1. .John iii„ 16), and that it was for their sins II'e died on the cross, suffering the wrath of Clod due to them for sin, have learned to hate sin and renounce it and all their former life. They see also 'that while they shall not coin into judg- ment for their sins (John v., 24; Ise. xliii,, 25), they must ppear at the judgment scat of Christ as IIis redeemed to be judged for their works since they became His and be rewarded accordingly (Rom. xiv., 10-12). 6, 7. The end of all things is at hand. 33e ye therefore sober and watch unto prayer. The gospel preached to the dead, of which verse 6 speaks, can only mean ono of two things in the sight of all Scripture. All unbelievers are said to bo dead in sins (Eph. ii,, 5), and during this hour or ago all such who truly hear the gospel' live, all who receive Christ have life (John v., 25; I, John v., 12). Again, all who ever heard of the way of re- demption by the blood of the sacri- fice (all true sacrilires pointed to • Christ) heard the gospel, so- it is written that the gospel was preach- ed to Abraham (Gal. We 8), and in chapter i., 10, 11, of this epistle it I is said that the Spirit of Christ in the prophets testified beforehand the sufferings of Christ and the glory that should follow. The antediluvi- ans, and doubtless all others who heard the gospel and rejected it, were, when Peter wrote this epistle, "spirits in prison" (chapter Hi., 19). All who hear the gospel and receive the Lord Jesus are expected to be filled with the Spirit and live the gospel (Eph. v., 18; IT. Cor. iv.; 10, 11). It is a small thing to be judged of men, but to remember that we must appear before Him who will bring every work into judgment (Ecol. xii., 14), will great- ly help us to live uprightly. P11e thought that our sojourn in the mortal body may end any day and that the end of this present age is surely fast approaching should lead us to great holiness of life. 8, 9. And above all things have fervent charity among yourselves, for charity shall cover the multitude of sins. The word charity here, as in I Cor. xiii. should be "love," and while no amount of love on our part will cover any of our sins, for only the precious blood of Christ can take away sins, true love will cover up many sins from the eyes of others and will take all to Him who alone can forgive. He who turns 0 sinner from the error of his way (Jas. v, 20) does not ever his own sins thereby, but the sins of hint whom he turns to God. The love of God who by the sacrifice of His Son huts away all the sins of nil who receive, Him should Constrain all the re- deemed to 'live to make known such love, that all who will may have tho forgiveness of sins. Not only so, but as all we have is from God the should remember the words of our Lord, "Freely 'ye have received free- ly give" (Matt. x, 4). 10, 11. That God in alt things may be glorified through Jesus Christ,. to whom be praise and dom- inion forever and ever. Amen ! The grace of Clod is manifold and each believer becomes a steward of the same. The Spirit gl,ves to each ono severally as He will (I. Cor. xii, 11), not that the receiver may en- joy the gifts of the ,Spirit, but that wo may bo channels through which the Spirit may minister to others and all that (God may be glorified tilrough Jesus Chnist iI Cor, 1•i, '�o, x. 81.), Pho devil hates all that is of God and will resist the godly end their works, but by humility and patience, by watchfulness and pray- er, by being Willing to. be ptttta:kers of Christ's sufferings we can resist aqui overcome the devil and glorify God. ,Seo earettttly the rest of the. epistle and also Phil. 1, 29; Col, 1. ade c Price in Canada: $1.00; Six bottles for $5.00 WAFEaS No remedy covers so large a field of usefulness as ST, Joints W ,ms They are indicated whenever there isa weak condition, as they tone up the different, organs and bring strength to the tissues. Palpitation of the heart, poor di- gestion, sleeplessness, weak nerves, ana°mia, and chlorosis, are quickly relieved by ST. JAI Zs WAPER$ ; they also repair the waste caused by hard work and fatigue. Sx. JAat>~s WA1trRs help stomach, digest food and seed the nutriment through the blood, and this is the honest way to get health andstrength, the kind that lasts, develops and breeds the energy which accom- plishes much. "031. James Wafers furnish a most powerful evidence of the vastly increased power of medi- cament by combination of judi- eiorta pharmaceutic prepare - tions. I have used them with. good success when my pabieuta needed strength.,+ 1)r. Charles nail. Diverpool, Eng. St. James Wafers are not a secret remedy: to the numerous doctors re- commending tlsent to their patients me mail the formula upon request. Where dealers are not selling the Wafers, they are mailed upon re- ceipt of puce at the Canadian branch: St. JonasWafers Co., Ii?3 St. Cathodes St., Montreal. FOR THE HOME g 0 e f Recipes for the Kitchen. 0 llyeiene and Other Notes g ® for the Housekeeper. o e �tfa eE)ofloOo@c6e n.eeoeeega . DOMESTIC RECIPES. Preserved Pineapple.—Pare the pineapple and cut in thin slices down the sides until the core is reached, making the slices as thin as possible. Weigh, and prix, gently, with an equal weight of sugar. Pack solid- ly in shrill ,tars, conning a spoon - handle down the sides to let the juice run down, seal, and keep in a cool place. No cooking is required. This is a very rich preserve, and only a little of it. should be sevt'ed to each individual. It "melts in the mouth." Sweet Pickles.—One rule will do for peach, pear, plum and apple i sweet pickle. For every seven 1 pounds of fruit allow four pounds of sugar, a pint of strong cider vine- gar and cloves and cinnamon to taste. half a dozen. whole cloves stuck into each pear, peach or ap- ple improve its flavor. Beef Ragout.—Melt two level table- spoons of butter in u saucepan and let it brown, add two tablespoons of flour, stir until smooth and add one cup of strained tomato, one cup of water, or stock, or water with a spoonful or two of cold gravy dis- solved in it. When the sauce has thickened and cooked thoroughly stir in two cups of cold roast beef cut in shavings. Heat the beef through but do not let it stew and harden. Season with salt and a little pep- per. Baked Rice and Tomatoes.—Cover the bottom of a baking dish which has been well buttered with a layer of cooked rice. Sprinkle with salt, pepper and bits of butter, add a lay- er of chopped tomato, then one of rice and so on until the dish is full. Cover the top with bread Crumbs and hits of butter and bake half an hour. Cheese and Celery Sandwiches.— Beat one-half cup of thick cream and add enough grated Parmesan cheese to make a thick paste. Spread this on sliced bread, then sprinkle thick- ly with very finely minced celery and serve the sandwiches at once. Ribbon Cake.—Cream two-thirds of butter, add two cups of sugar and Leat, add three well -beaten eggs, one cup of milk and three cups of dour in which three` level teaspoons of baking powder have been sifted. Di- vide the mixture and flavor one-half with one-half teaspoon of lemon ex- tract. Bake in two layers. To the other half of the cake batter add one 'tablespoon of moieties, one cup chop- ped raisins, one level teaspoon each of cinnamon, cloves and one-half tea- spoon of grated nutmeg. Bake in two layers. Put the light and dark calces together alternatively, with a little jelly spread between. Put the light-colored cake at the bottom, as it will be more firm for a foundation to the loaf than the layer with fruit in it. Savory Ham.—This is a good way to use tip a little cold ham. Chop fine enough hang to measure one cup, acid one-half cup of fine bread crumbs, two or three dashes of pep- per and a scant leveleteaspoon of dry mustard. Chop one hard-boiled egg and stir in, then moisten the whole with milk and turn into a but- tered baking dish, Bake about thir- ty minutes and servo hot or cold in slices. This can he prepared for a picnic dish and will he a change from the usual ham sandwich mixture. Kidney Toast,—Gently stew three sheep's kidneys in a little water un- til perfectly tender, then remove all skin and gristle and pound them in a mortar with one ounce of butter till they form a smooth paste. Squeeze a little lemon into them. and season highly with pepper and salt. Spread the paste on nicely buttered toast and serve very riot. • Iligh.land $cones.—To one pound of dour allow four oun0e8 of fresh but- ter. Rub it in thoroughly; there a.dd, as much hot mills mixed with two beaten eggs as will make a soft dough. Mix quickly, roll out, cut into shapes and bake on a hot Brid- le or a thick frying pan. Serve bot, cut open and buttered. Surprise Sausages.—This is a nice breakfast dish. Halve some sausag- es (one-half pound) and remove their skins. Coat each piece with well - mashed potato, then egg and bread crumb each one; fry them in boiling fat. Drain and serve on a paper doily; garnish with parsley. Vegetable Chowder.—Chop one can of corn, pare and cut into small dice enough potato to fill two cups. Chop a large onion and fry until brown in one-half pound of bacon, cut into very small pieces. Put a layer of potatoes into a saucepan, put on this a layer of corn and some of the on- ion and bacon; season with salt and pepper. Repeat the layers. Add two cups of hot milk, one-quarter cup of butter rubbed smooth, with the same amount of flour. Cook five minutes. Lay split crackers over the top, cover and the chowder is ready to serve. SOME REAL RELISHES. Green Tomato Chili Sauce.—To be sure, Chili sauce is made with ripe tomatoes, but both can be used: Slice the green tomatoes and salt down, putting a weight on them and letting them stand until morning. Then rinse in cold water to take out the salt, and wash out the seeds and bitter juice of the green tomato. I'or 12 tomatoes take 4 sweet green pep- pers, 6 Chili peppers, 1 large onion, 1 cup vinegar, 1 teaspoon sugar, 2 teaspoons salt, 1 of pepper, 2 of ground allspice, , teaspoon mace, 1 teaspoon cinnamon. 1 of cloves. Chop tho tomatoes fine, boil 20 minutes;, strain and press through a sieve: Chop the peppers and onions very fine, first taking out the seeds of tho peppers. Boil all together for 10 minutes, add spices, then bottle and seal. Sweet Green Tomato Pickles.—Pare and slice 1 pk. green tomatoes; add 1 tablespoon each ground cloves and cinnamon, 6 tablespoons ground mus- tard, 1 lb. brown sugar, 3 or 4 cel- ery tops, chopped fine; then add 8 qts. vinegar. Boil 80 minutes. If the jars are not sealed, put in a lit- tle horse -radish. Cold Catsup.—Take 1 pk. perfectly, ripe tomatoes, 2 roots horse -radish, 2 large onions, 4 stalks celery, 8 green peppers, 1 tablespoon black pepper, 2 oz. mustard seed, 1 scant cup salt, 1 teaspoon ground cloves,. 2 teaspons cinnamon, 1 cup sugar, 8 pts. best cider vinegar. Peel and quarter the tomatoes and place in a sieve or colander to drain. Thom chop the onion, peppers and celery fine, Grate the horse -radish and thoroughly mix all the ingredients; then bottle and seal. A ,nian who imagines that he can curt the domestic end of the combine betterthan his wife is a fool mon, Are a Heart and Nerve Tan;c, Blood avid Tissue Builder and Constitution Renewer for ail troubled with weak heart or nerves. As a food for the blood, the brain and the nerves, they cannot be excelled. 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