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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1903-12-3, Page 7ECUM 11"Matiainr Genuine Ar W to e1 .LittleLiver Pins. alji t Dear Signature of See Psu.Siui.io Wrapper Below. yore rasaall end as May to taco tstt sugar. CARS 1TTLE t FOR 4 ITZIi ESSat•. FOR 'MIND LIVEN. ESN CONSTIIPATION. .�AtA.tDk SKIN. F911 TOEiCMPLUXION rAto O2'" nam auarrramg unT )R . Yt Co±ts 17 iVeeiS t°afb7 srsa ti'saa-.-.... �...�.,... CURE-. SICK HEADACHE, 'SYRUP Eeala and Soothes the Lungs and Bronchial Tubes. Cures COUGHS, COLDS, BRONCHITIS, HOARSE- NESS, etc., quicker than any rem- edy known. If youhave that irri. Latin' Cough that keeps you awake at night, a dose of the Syrup wil] stop it at Ince. USED FOR EIGHT YEARS. I have used DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP for every cold I have had for the past eight years, with wonder- ful success. I never see a friend with ms cough or cold but that I recommend M. Ellsworth, Jacksonville, N.B. PRICE 25 CENTS. i*oth Chidethe the ,eerie 1� i 4 Don't scold the little ti c )(1, ones if the bed is wet in the morning. It isn't the -child's fault. It is suffering from a weak- ness of the kidneys and bladder, and weak kinnayt need strengthening—that's all. You an't afford to risk delay. Neglect may entail a lifetime of suffering and misery. KIDNEY PILLS strengthen the kidneys and bladder, then all trouble is at an end. Mrs. E. Kidner, a London, Ont., mother, living at 499 Gray St., says: "My little daughter, six years old, has had weak kidneys sines birth. Last Fob- ruary I got a box of Doan's Kidney Pills at Strong's drug store. Since taking them she has had no more kidney trouble of any kind. I gladly make this statement be- cause of ho benefit my child has received from this medicine." -- Mart Palpitated. FAINT AND DIZZY SPELLS. FELT WEAK AND NERVOUS. MILD SCARCELY EAT. TWO BOXES OF EVIILBURK98 EART and NERVE PHIS Cured ens. Edmond 5roean, Inwood, Ont., when she had almost elven up hope of Deer getting woe again. She writes : "I was so run down that I was not able to do my work, was short • of breath, had a sour stomach every, night and could scarcely eat. My heart palpi• tated, I had faint and dizzy spells and fell weak and nervous all the time. My husband got me a box of Milburn's Hear: and Nerve Pills but I told him it was,nc We) that I had given up hope of ever re e b cured. He how verp ersuaded :t me to take them and before I had used hall the box I began to feel better. Two boxes made a new woman of me and I have beet well and have been able to do my wort ever since." Milburn's I-Ieart and Nerves Pills arc 5o cis. box, Or 3 for $1.25, alt dealers nr THE t> E ILBUR 1 CO., Lies iced, „ttµ� ff�wy,RTtjf, Write T }: ESSEMIALS OF LI We Must Abstain Frow All Appear. ance of Evil ;(Entered according to Act el the r'ata siemens of Canada, in ilie year One Thousand Nine Uundrea and Three, by Win. Bally, of Torouto, at the Department of Agriculture, Ottawa,.) A despatch from Chieago says: Itov. Frank 1)e Witt Talmage preached from the following text: %echariali iv., 10, "Who hath despised the *day of small things?” Seeming insignificances may bo vi-. tar essentials. Some years ago,. when crossing the Atlantic ocean, the companion with whom I was traveling one day suddenly Hung op- en my stateroom door and cried: "Como on deck! Something has happened to the ship!" .When I ar- rived on deck I found scores and hundreds of passengers excitedly watching the strange ntovomnents of the ship's course. Instead of plow- ing ahead, we were slowly moving around to the right in a perfect cir- cle. Just then an officer passed me, and I asked: "What is the matter, lieutenant? Is the rudder broken?" "Oh, no," said ho. "We are merely testing a new compass. In order to find out whether it is per?eet we had to wait until we were fits away from the magnetic effect of rocks and land. Those influences may not seem to be much, but they may entirely de- fect the accuracy of the compass' needle." Many years ago a large ship was wrecked because a small piece of steel from the point of a knife was driven into the wood near its compass box and made the com- pass' finger a false guide. Thus, my friends, I would take for my theme to -day the "Small Essen- tials" of life. I would try to show you that many of tho seeming insig nifrcances and the despised inonads are pregnant with large broods of influences, every one of which will have large progeniem;. A cholera germ may be so small that it is not ,visible to the naked eye. If, how- ever, it is let alone in its work of devastation it can soon crowd the wards of the county hospital with invalids and keep the undertakers' wagons busy by day as well as the nurses by night. I ask the striking question which Zechariah put in times of old, "Who hath despised the day of small things?" PERSONAL APPEAL. Small essential the first: Appropri- ateness and neatness of personal ap- parel—appropriateness and neatness in reference to the coat a man wears upon his back, and to the shoes on his feet, and especially in reference to the cleanliness of the purities upon it or upon him, So,. Christian workers, if wo go forth in ,Christ's name, some of us must be moro careful about our personal ap- pearance. Ilemeinber, 0 minister, when you ascend the pulpit, that your clothes may not be expensive, but they should bo neat. Remember, O Sunday school teacher, that When you expound the Bible lesson your scholars are learning from you what it is to be a Christian, • They are learning with their oyes as well as with their ears. Remember, 0 than of God, that wherever you go your clean 'skin and pure linen as well as your lips preach in Christ's name. CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT. , Small essential the next: The little kindnesses and courtesies which we should extend to those with whom we come in daily contact. Tho little acts of deference .which wo should show to ladies, such as taking off the hat when we stand with thorn in an elevator or allowing them to precede us through an open door, The "Thank you, sir,' with which a. lady should acknowledge a gentle- man's action when he rises in • a street car to offer her a seat. Tho little social calls by which we should welcome a new neighbor or her friends into our community. The lit- tle gifts of delicacies which should be sent to the invalid's room of our neighbor's house. All these little attentions and courtesies may not seem to be of much value at the time, but they are mighty in the de- velopment or the depiction of hu- man character. They are mighty in deciding whether a roan is to live a selfish or an unselfish life. 'How a selfish life? Simply enough. Hose, for instance, is a man who en- ters a railroad car. He places his satchel in one seat and his overcoat by his side. Then he stretches out his long legs, puts his feet upon the opposite seat and begins to read a newspaper. After awhile the train tills up, but he does not remove his incumbrances. The man is an in- carnation of selfishness. He carps only for his own comfort and -is ob- livious of the rights of others. He has paid for but one sitting. Tee has a right to occupy only a seat. Yet he is monopolizing four sittings. When the poor old woman with a heavy bundle coniee down the aisle, timidly looking for a plass to rest and to deposit her load, he buries his face yet farther ie the newspaper and pretends not to :VC' her. The old lady hesitates a little by his side and then passes on. You say : linen he wears about his neck, and "That man is not a Peine man, He Ito the modesty with which he is at- is not a gonileman." I say Chris - tired in public. God would never tian courtesy means more titan the have condenrned the "cauls and the two words "mere politeness" imply.. chains and the bracelets and the ref- That man- is laying the foundations des and bonnets and the ornaments of an - the n evil future. For if he is dis- of the legs and the headbands and courteous to his fellow men, if he is the tablets and the earrings and the willing to crowd his feioow 'passer - nose jewels and the changeable suits gers in a railroad •train out of the } of apparel and the mantles ana seats which' rightfully belong to y the wimples and the crisping bins them, he is developing a dicpor,itiou which, th h i n > f not checked,may lea nim h fine linead n theglasses and the f mt d Y A land the hoods and the veils" of the. by andsby to defraud his neighbor of ;haughty daughters of lion, "wee the dollars and cents which by right f!walk with stretched forth necks and belong to him. When Paul said, wanton eyes. walking and mincing as Be courteous" he meant more than ;they go, and making a tinkling with to be merely polite. He meant "be their feet," unless there wee a direct honest, be fair, be nohlo in the little connection between n meat's inner duties east atteittlons which you character and his ' Sartor Resartus e should show to your fellow men." of "Phtlosoplty of Clothes." Paul CHRISTIAN COURTESY. would never have commanded the 4 Character is not born; it is devel- wonmen of the Corinthian chtu'cii to epee}. It spriegs not up in a night, veil themselves in public assemblage as a Jonah's gourd. It grows grad - mf he had not been convinced that a ually.. Every act of our present day woman's disregard of the social cus- is dependent in more ways than one toms of the country and the time upon the actions of our past. When implied a lack of modesty and pur- a woman peels out of her window ity. There is, there insist be, an un- to see the furniture van unload 'her' breakable spiritual link binding a 'new neighbor's furniture and then man's personal apparel and his refuses to call upon that neighbor heart. "Cleanliness is next to godli- ness" is a trenchant statement not ; found in holy writ, but the substance of its teachings is certainly within tho ,leaves of the Holy Bible. The elaborate directions which God gave to the Israelites for Careful and frequent ablutions of the body acrd the clothes show that he is not in- different to the cleanliness of those who come into his presence. We have, therefore, a right to doubt whether a person who is in public chronically dirty in person or slov- enly or immodest in apparel can of- fer acceptable worship. HIDDEN TALENTS. Yet to hear some slovens tali' one might suppose it was asign of men- tal degeneracy for men and women to he careful 01 their personal ap- pearance. They pretend to believe that a well groomed and neat man is essentially a weak nm:An . There- fore they practically say that one of the signs of genius is a disregard of the decencies of life. There arc more ways than one of interpreting that passage of Scripture which says in reference to the one talent man, "And I was afraid and went and hid thy talent in the earth." Some of "the earth" in which many men hide their talents of life is to bo found ie the filthiness and in the unkempt Conditions of their Wardrobes. If it is necessary to he clean and neat in personal appearance in tem- poral work, how much more is this neatness essential when we are con- secrating our lives to the service 0f Jesus Christ? The dear Saviour wants us to go out and labor in his name in tiro scone way as he used to work. Ile was taunted with many reproaches during his earthly life, but these, who hated him most newer charged hint with ttacleanlinoss or .slovenliness, and we may bo sure that the Pharisee who invited him to his hoeso and the other hosts wile eitter•taineci hint. Would nev- i, d. sir hove Nei otnod him 'as a guest if and extend to her the rightful social respect of the neighborhood, she is schooling herself to refuse to extend a welcoming hand to her humble Me- ter when she eaters her ehurch. When a man is twilling to hush his tray through the crowds blocking the aisles of a int,cfe dry goods :store, forcing frail women to right and left and shoring aside the little children, he isnurtuti:tg the spitit which is shown by a criminal chauffeur who drives his automobile •at frightful velocity through the crowded streets of a large city. 13e drives it ahead, caring not what horses he may frighten or what Person he may strike because he knows that, like a full speeded Cunarcler strikinga fish- ing smack, it is the other person who will be hurt and bot himself. Christian courtesy is of the tree of ighteousness, and discourtesy is of the tree of sin. Let us beware how we ignore that apostolic command- ment, "Be courteous" (.1 Peter 111. 8). AVOID A.PPI AItANC.E OF EVIL. Small essential tee next: The ab- stinence from all appearance of evil. The taking care of your life's actions so that they may never be false lights luring your neighbors and friends upon the fatal rocks of sin. The refusal to eat meat, if by the eating you may cense ,yotlr• brother to offend. "All things may be law- ful, but all things are not expedient" was the substance of the Pauline in- junctign to the Corinthian church. "To seem" many sometimes be almost as great a cin as "to be." 'Mark you this : No man can afford in any way to bate his influence cast upon the wrong side of any 1n0ra1 goes- fieri. ]clearly all our groat religious teachers have recognized this truth. We must abstain from all appear- «nee of evil on account of our in- fluence over others. Wo must ab- stain filen all appear'b,iices of evil on account also of the reactionary' evil inlinenco upon ourselves. One of the greatest bulwarks against sin Is the he had been careless ni ut .}tis per- Clod implanted desire to be thought The, son or fits dress. .lite, aalfty of his well of by your neighbors. A man, robe may have been tor, but wo on account of principle, ought to be may bo sure that they were no im- ready, if necessary, to def , the scorn irJ `� and time sneer and the opprobrium and the persecution and the misre- presentation and the. r'idieulti can the hunnan rano. But every than may desire that bis neighbors and friends think. well of him; that they should regard his name es the synonym of honesty and truth and probity and re=titude.' And whoa any mean coined to the dangerous condition in which he does not dare what his neighbors think about him; when be intention- ally and recklessly stirs up a bane nets' nest of needless critieiz'm: when be tauntingly boasts that it dues not matter what others may say, as long as he is not doing wrong, then that Man's feet are troacling the soft quicksands of temptation and wenn ing along the narrow edge of the precipice of death. KI Ili' ENGAGEMENTS. Small essential the last : The in- exorable duty of keeping an engage - Ment. The necessity of doing what you promise to do. If you say to a friend, "X will meet you at such a place, at such and such a time," you should be there, If you cannot be on time, according to promise, for your engagement then you should notify the person with whom you have the appointment. But the groat trouble with many people is that they have no moral sense of the duty of keeping an engagement urn less they wish to do so. They will promise anything, like a dishonest politician just before an election, and like the same dishonest politician af- ter election they Will forget all their promises if it suits their cont enience to forget. The result is that the man's character and re'igious life will be eaten out by these little fail- ores and sins, just as one little worm can tunnel its way into the heart of a great oak and eat out its heart until at last the monarch of the forest will have its backiseno snapped by the onrushing winds. THE S. S. LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON, DEC. 6. It Is written that "Go4 gave Solo- mon. wi.stiona and inidoi'standing • ex- ceeding much and largeness of heart men as the: sand that is on the sot1,- shore,,' but this strange measures et mt isdonm is explei 1ed by the fact that Judah and Israel are spoken of as being many, as the sand width is by the ecu in multitude (1 I£ings iv, 20, 29). Selsnton was thus promised wisdom for every Individual case be =Wit have to deal with, aucl an il- lufit ratlon Is given la the record wi:i; It follows our lesson, As to Solomon's request pleasing the Lord, our Lord Jesus said of Himself, "1 do always tho.e things that .please the Father," a'd the Father tontifled of Jesus, "This is Illy Belot ed Son, in whom 1 amp well eleased" (Jot n viii, 29; Alatt, iii, 3 7; xvil, 5). When wo ale so fully yielded to God that we can truly say, "1 live, yet not 3, but Christ liveth in me,-' Ile who always pleased the Father in the mortal body prepared for Him will also Please the Father in our mortal bod- ies (Gal. 11, 20; 11 Oar.. iv, 11; lieu. xiii, 20, 21; Rom.. xii, 1, 2), Although this was a dream, yet it was a real communication from God, who in former tinier• often revealed Himself in visions and dreams, as Me diel to Jacob, Joseph, Nebuchad- nezzar, Daulel, Joseph, the husband of Mary, l'ilate' s wife and others (Num. xii, 6-8; .Job xxxiii, 1:i). Even to this day (loci does sometimes re- veal 'His wi'1 in a dream or vision concerning special guidance in un- usual matters or to a seeking soul among the heathen who have not heard the gospel; but, as a rule, Pie speaks by TI]s word to those who have His word and never in conflict with it. Before the ark at Jorsa- lent Solomon offered up burnt offer- ings and pease offering«, tl:e former typifying our Lord Jesus offering Himself wholly to God and the lat- ter our fellowship With God through Jesus Christ. 4. TIIE PYGMIES OP AFRICA. A German scientist has recently brought out some interesting con- clusions in regard to the pygmy race, of which specimens are still met with in the central part of Af- rica. It is probable that the pygmy races have existed also in Europe. This conclusion is arrived at from. the examination of numerous skele- tons which have been found in the region of Dm -shuts in Silesia. Their height is considerably below the ordinary average, being about 4 feet 9 inches, which represents the mean figure for a whole group of skele- tons. Kollman describes the re- mains of pygmies which have been found in Switzerland. In this case the average height reaches as low as 4 feet (i inches. Gutmann has de- - 'b the tmvgmV remains wmmich Text of the Lesson, I. Kings iii., 4-15.''Go1den Text, Prov. ix., 10. The statement in verse 3 that "Sol- omon loved the Lord" is about the best thing that could be said of him, but it is not so grand as that in H. Sam. xii., 24, 25, "the Lord loved him," nor is it so great as the significance of his name Jedidia:t, the beloved of the Lord. Our love to God is so poor compared with His love to us that it is neither worth singing about nor taibing about; it is too often something- like Solomon's, who, though he walked in the statutes of David, his father yet sacrificed and -burned Incense in. high places and made af%nity with Pharaoh. There is little !chole heartedness for God notwithstanding II. Citron. xvi., 9. • The arlc of God was in a tent which David had pitched for. it in Jerusalem, but the tabernacle and altar • of •burnt oieciug were at Gibe - on (II. Chron, i., 3; 4), and thither Solomon and all the congregation had gone to offer sacrifice, and there the Lord appeared to Solomon in a dream by night, h God said to t, acl n ltiin, Ask what I shall give thee. The Lord's appearing to Isis servants li a most interesting and inspiring study from the time when Be cloth- ed Adam and Eve (Gen. iii., 21) and onward, but as in the olden time so now His usual method is to reveal Ilimself by Iris- word (1 :lain, iii., 18). The Lord's offer to ;'lolomon at this time reminds us of Est. v., 8, 0; I. Kings x.. 13; Luke xviii., 41; MAtt.tii., 7; xxi., 22; John xiv., 13, 1.4; xv., 7; Isa. , 11, 1, c, But what do we know of the power of such words? I4ow much do we ask and receive, or what do we know of the great and mighty things of Jer. xxxiii., 8? Solomon's reply to God begins with an acknowledgment of great mercies to his father and to himself, a thing most appropriate in all our approaches to God (Prov. iii., 6; Phil. iv., 0). Notice the words "thou hast" in five different connec- tions in this prayer—thou hast show- ed, kept, given, made, chosen, giv- ing all the glory to God in all these things. We aro reminded of David's prayer in I. Chron. xtix., 10-19, where he acknowledges so humbly his own nothingness and God's great- rtess and bounty, using the pronouns Thou, Thy, Thine, Thee, at least• twenty times. Our highest place is lying low at our . Redeemer's foot,. glorying not in wisdom nor ;night nor riches, but in knowing Him who is in Himself all wisdom and wealth and power (Jcr. ix., 23, 24). His conscious weakness and ignor- ance Solomon sets forth in the words "I an. but a little child;' i know not hole to go out or come in" (verse 7), reminding us of Jer. 1., 6. If he had always remained consciously- weak and had leaned wholly on the Lord how different would his record have been. Uzziah, one of his successors, was marvel- ously helped till ho was strong, but then his heart was lifted up to his destruction (II. Chron. xxvi., 15, 16). Not inpride, but only In hu- mility, can wo walk with God (Mie., vi., 8, margin). His reque::t as given in verse 9 is stated in 11 Chron, i. 10, as fol- lows : "Give me now wisdom and knowledge !bat" I may go out and come in before this people," Wis- dom is the principal thing, better than rubies arta all other things that might be desired, and can be obtain- ed when risen honestly desire it (Prov, 11, 3'0: iv, 7; vilI, 11), It tali be had for the asking, but it mist be sincerely asked far (Jas. i, 5). It is hart of. the fullness that dwells in Obrist for His people (Col. if, 9; I Cor. 1; *24, 130). Because Solomon made such a re- quest and did not ask for himself riches or long lite the Lord was p1r,aFecl to grant him what ho asked abundantly and also an abet:Id:t,Ses) of the !&lungs ho had nit ;iskod for, Were found in lower Alsace, near Colmar. These ars: still smaller and the height of many of time specimens is but 4 feet. The peguty seen must he considered as coinposcd of well - formed specimens and not et any way degenerate or pathologic. They semi to have perished in Europe un- til a comnpar t+ rt'ely recent The pygmies! of Silesia appen'. to have been the contemporaries of the -i IRomans and to have existed until the year 1000 A. D. SECRETS OF SUCCESS. Sri q 3TR!<NGTH TO •Yid '. Y t}JRItH iliE GLgi 6 5tRal 1 TNt CONSTUTUTiON Malta 3ondoran$ ice •re "Bost°..-; iBRrrA! M / metzJCfa e1I Orli i s Choi u 9Q 5 Price in Canada: $1.00; Six bottles for .M06 Debility of system calttt ecia, and whatever tgtixds to pr(x4t P erzfeebiements indttct ', 4. .this affec- tion is undeniably due to 1ack of vitality, and its very existence is evidence of deficient strength. Remedial measures should. there fore be directed to improve the whole system, for when strength returns to the system, the neuralgic condition of the nerves will disappear. - Tiais now is supplied by ST. JA ii WA 'rens; they seicfota fail to relieve; their effect is a general up of the system. ST. 1A1112,S WL1;1tRS help stomatclr, digest food and send the nutriment through the blood, and this is the honest way to get health and strength, the bind that lasts, develops and breeds the energy which accom. plishes much. "`:St.I'astuisw(afe, ores' terries. 'they tate a tenet "without a peer, w thot-t {i r vale? X>a elv vel e� noble a d true ellhy:<aept4- Dr, Patrick Beaie13+ tetblits• rfOl ettd. st.,,lar,tes FAGINcard 8019 cerfi rturtd-y:leasenuu erousda l.9sre- cer.ame-sdit.,4, thein to t.},eir patients tee maii tfie,,rmuta $1;+49 ;yeses!. Where dealers are net seilingthe safe!•«, they are nailed upeu re - bra ch : pt of St. James the 118 St, Catherfno St., kiontrsol. k: THEH.E ,.....OM.ji_a al 0 Recipes for the Kitchen. Hygiene and !:Other Notes a for the Housekeeper, O 0 DOMESTIC RECIPES. Sally Lunn. --Two eggs; one half cup sugar; one cup sweet milk; t}u'ee cups yellow meal; three tablespoon- fuls butter; three tablespoonfuls bak- ing powder. Bake in a rather quick oven twenty minutes; cut in squares. Fruit Pop-Overs.—Four eggs beat- en light; butter size of an egg; two caps of sweet milk; three teaspoon- fuls of baking powder; ono cup of raisins and currants mixed ai:d flour- ed, and yellow meal sufficient to make a- medium thick baiter. Bake in gem irons. Nice for breakfast. f Coin Meal Waffles.—Quo pint of thick sour milk; two eggs: ore l tablespooi.ful melted butter; one tea - !spoonful soda, one tablespoonful su- ga: meal sufficient to make a good battee. flake in waffle irons, They should he a ri^h golden brown. Chocolate Feather Cake. --One well - beaten egg, ono cup sugar, :3 table- spoons Melted butter, half cup street mill:, 14 cups of St. Louis (iota', ono teaspoon cream tartar, half teespoorr soda. Take one-thmrd of tee dough, stir in two tablespoons coco or choc- olate, and lett iu the tin as you would marble raise. Bate a quick ot•en. tint Candy.—Prepare any or all kinds of nuts, place them in a greas- ed pan. Take 2 cults granulated Su- gar, or more if a larger quantity of candy is desired. Put it into the spider without liquid of any sort. Stir coestautly. It will stick to- gether, and you wi.1 think it will amount to nothing. Still keep on stirring, and soon it will be syrup. Then turn it over the nuts, cool, and mark into squares. When you come to eat it you will have brittle candy, clear as glees. Graham Apple Dumplings—Pare 4 good sized tart apples and put them in a sauccpau with about one quart Crater and half cup sugar. When they are about half done have ready some dumplings made in ti a fclow- ing inaneer : Two culls graham flour, two teaspoons batting powder, half teaspoon salt. ltfoisten with just enough milk to make a Clough that can be shaped with the hands into balls about 1 •; inches in diame- ter. Boil them in the syrup with the apples ten minutes, and serve with soft brown sugar and cream. If desired, spice' may be added to the apple t.auce before the dumplings are put in. (1i: gerbread Pudding.—)'i11 a. com- mon sized baking dish little more than half frill of apples cut in thick slices, scatter over them a little sugar, salt, cinnamon and nutmeg and pour over them half cup of wa- ter. Make the gingerbread of half cup molasses, half cup sugar, half cup butter, one cup boiling water, ons teaspoon soda, one teaspoon each of giuger and cinnamon, floor enough to make a thin mixture. four this over the apple and bake. Serve with swiss. Raised Doughnuts.—One cupful of sugar, one-1ta]f cupful of butter, two eggs, one pint of warm milk, one yeast cake dissolved in. one cup warm water, one-half teaspoon each of soda and- salt, and dash of nut- meg. Mix with flour like soft bread dough, let rise over night.. Turn out on a floured board, roll out one inch !Hick (vito,tt molding, cut into Tinge, let rib0 until very light. Fry •in hot fat, turning often.. When cold, - roll in - pondered sugar. If those doughnuts arc kept its a jar and heated and rolled in sugar as they aro needed, they will seem like freshly rooked deal hums. Another way to have fresh dougl:nets every day- is to snake the dough as direct- ed, irected, and cut off enough Poch morning to roll - out and fry- for breakfast, keeping. tl:e rest of the dough on -ice, which chills the yeast plant and re- tards ris,irg. The cook must lista early to rise the dough. The :first method is easier cud the cakes nye about as good. This recipe • hakes about four dozen medium-sized douglnmuts,. What is the secret of success? ask- ed the Sphinx. Push, said the button. Take pains, said the window. Never be led, said the pencil. Be up to date, said the calendar. Always keep cool, said the ice. Never lose your head, said the clock. I)0 a driving business, said the ham ncr. Aspire to greater things, said the nutmeg. Make much of small things, said I the microscope. Never do anything oft'httnd, said the glove. . Spe-uti much time in reflection, said the mirror. Get a good pull with the ring, ,aid the doorbell. Find- a good thing and stick to it, said the glue. • Strive to make a good impression, said the sent. Turn all things to your advantage, said the lathe. Make the most of your gond points said the compass. SAILOR'S' LIFE SPAN. If one thinks of sailors es being •short •.lived .we would probably give as a cause of early death drowning, or, in the matter of diseases, r•heu- matfsin • would he the disease which would most readily suggest itself to our thoughts. I)r. Collinridge, a great English authority on all that concerns the health of the: sailor, says it is a tact that consumption claims the largest number. of vic- tims from the seafaring class, and he attributes this fact to the small portion of air allotted to each berth in the sleeping arrangements on board ship. 'Phe maximum space al- lowed sailors is seventy-two cubic feet, while Dr. Collinridge points out that, from a moderate sanitary point of view, one hundred feet should be provided. 4-, FISH FLOUR FOR FOOD. The fisheries represent one of Nor- way's chief industries, ancl quanti- ties of fish are sold at very low rates, partfeularlp ' dw'ing'summer, One tt'ay in which these are utilized is by means of an invention whish quickly dries and pulverizes the flesh of fresh fish. The resulting product, called fish hour, is early to transport from one place to another, and has groat nutritive value. Anrit Susan : "Did the story you were just readin' in the newspaper end happily, Joshua V. Uncle ..Tush- ua. (approvingly) : 'Yes; the beauti- ful heroine got cured of an incurable disease, an' it tells the name and price of • the i'oilis that done the trick.'' - IN THE KITCHEN, The best thing for mending broken china or crockery is white lead, molt as painters use. This may be bought in one pound cans and kepi ready for use. Paint the edges oI the pieces with the lead mixed to the corrsistency of thick cream, •bind the pieces firmly together and let them stand three or four days until perfectly dry. It can be broken as easily anywhere else as at the old break if it has been mended proper- ly, and water has no effect upon at. Be sure to get the pure white lead and after it has been opened keep the paint covered with oil to keep it from getting dry until it is used again. It is almost impossible to get soft well or spring water in many places,. and as it' is not always convenient to trait until it rains, to do washing, we are compelled to soften the water before using it. Do not use lye or sal soda, which will ruin the color of the calico and gingham and make the white clothes look dingy.' A few tablespoonfuls of powdered borax dissolved in the water will soften it nicely. The amount required de - depends upon the kind of water you have. It is a great labor -saver and will not injure the clothes. If the water is 1101 clear, put a teaspoonful of alum in four gallons end allow it to dissolve. All the fmpnrities will settle to the bottom, and the clear water can be poured or dipped off. Tf you have a barrel1 of water that you wish to Ilse for washing, put the alum in the night before the washing is to be done, and it will be ready for use the next morning. If you have a zinc that needs creta;- ing, rub it with a sloth dipped in kerosene. It is a good plan to rather- the tinware together once or twine a week and giro it a thorough wa,l:ini* with hot suds, and it will Yelp to clean and brighten it. A'Ict a little powdered borax to the suds, and use a woolen rag. Be sure the tins are dry before they are put away. This is better than scouring, which wears the tin off. Never use lye or sal soda 011 tinware. A simple and convenient scouring box may be made by • fastening a small box to a piece of board with screws or nails. A cigarbox will do i:icely, and the lid can be kept closed when not in use. If the cloths and scouring brick are kept in it, one may be sure of finding them when they are needed. TITE1 WATER'S INVASIONS. About asquare mile of France has been worn away by the English channel in the last five years. In North Brittany has been noted a gradual. subsidence' of the land which has been in progress since 709, at which time the Channel islands wore joined to the coast by an. istlunus. HAD OVER 500 BOILS. This may seem an exaggeration to ymt2, BUT IT IS TRUE. All sufferers from Ead Blood should road about this miraculous cure by BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. S.. CURED IN 1886. Mr. David F. Mott wrote us from Spring Valley, Ont., in 1885. .He said: -- I suffered from impure blood. and had over 600 boils, but since taking BUR. LOCK BLOOD BITTERS I am entirely cured, and can reeoinmend it to any per. son troubled with bad blood. CONFIRMED IN 1901. Mr. Mott writes us from 02 Broad St., Utica, N.Y., under date of Dee. 81st, 1001. lie says:--SSonte time ago I re- ceived a letter from your firm, saying that some years ago you received a testimonial from me; stating that I had over 600 boils. Yes, sir, I had, and I must say that rliave never bad the re- appearance of one since I took the coarse ofour BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. I thank God that I have had good health ever since for I was a great sufferer. wish 13 world of success •tvhieli I v 1d,B, , a tv , it surely deserves. For sale at all druggistts or dealers. M T. t unless UMW' p1..�iri M x Co,,a D 'roam% Piltz.