HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1903-12-10, Page 7rf.
ECUR1
Genuine
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ittkk Ivor Pills.
Ihfitlet Bait' Signature o1
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See Fac.51 iito Wrs,.per Below.
Vern small and ao oaci`'
go lake ar�il1 snge:.
CARTE
RTLE FoR Flux smEt3.
V
pn.rotwto LIVER.
pglTOR CO3l3 T lPL TI O( .
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MO MUM SEMI.
____ ICOR THE CO COMPLEXION
���'Y ( Q+SPi rC7�'Cf.G7 L14FTIN\`L 4A7U7�1C.—^-
atm m f 3'i<gt"eIy lydiirfl :,ZO, -•%+`"0-..
CURL $101( HEADACHE.
Are a True Heart Tonic,
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Nervousness, 5lecplosrnese, Nervous Pros.
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TiaT. MULDn12N CO., LIMITED, Toronto, Ont.
al ES
Dyspepsia, Boils,
Pimples,
Headaches,
Constipation,
Loss of Appetite,
Salt Rheum,
Erysipelas,
Scrofula,
and ail troubles
arising from the
Stomach,Liver,
Bowels or Blood.
Mrs. A. Lethangue,
of 13a11yduft, Oat.
writes: Bally
I believe
would have been in
my grave long ago
had it not been for
Burdock Blood Bit-
ters. I was rim down
to such an oxtenb
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ly move about the
house. Twos subject
•to severe headaches,
backaches and dizzi-
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unable to do rmy
housework. After
using two bottles of
B. B. B. I found my
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I warmlyrecommend
it to all tired and
worn out women."
A Kidney Sufferer
FOR
Fourteen Years.
TERRIBLE PAINS ACROSS
THE BACK.
Could not Sit or Stand with Eases
Consulted five Different Doctnrse
o n9s
idneya @Fills
FINALLY MADE A
COMPLETE CURE.
Mr. jacob Jamieson, Jamieson Bros,,
the well-known Contractors and Builders,
Weiland, Ont., tells of how he was cured:
"For•fourteen years I was afflicted with
kidney trouble which increased in severity
the last five years. My most serious attack
was four years ago, when I was completely
incapacitated. I had terrible pains across
my back, floating specks before my eyes
and was in almost constant torment. 1
could not sit or stand with ease and was a
wreck in health, having no appetite and
lost greatly in flesh. 1 had taken medicine
from five different .docters and also
nunierous other preparations to no pur.
pose. 1 finally began to take Doan's
Kidney Pills and before 1 had taken fiver
boxes the trouble left mo and I now feel
'letter than 1 have for twenty years. Those 4w o ow me know how I was afflicted
ern it is almost impossible to believe
That I have been Cured, yet they know it
Is so. I have passed the meridian of life
)rut I feet that I have taken on the rosy
hue of boyhood,"
Price -o cts per box, ors for $1.25, all
dealers or
'E'ER DOAN 1 IDNEV mu, CO.,
i10110NT'0, ONZe
EARING OTHERS'
URDENS
Some People Have No Thought for
Those More Heavily Burdened.
fEaterod according to Act et the Par.
Lament of Canada, in the year Oaa
1.\housand Nino Harnndred and Throe,
by Win. Daily, of Toronto. at the
t5epartmeat of Agriculture, Ottawa.),
A despatch from Chicago says :--
ltev. Frank De Witt Talmage preach-
ed from the following text :
Bear ,ye one another's burdens and.
so fulfill the law of Christ. --Gala-
tians xi.., 22.
I tette it that no man's life can be
consistent ,or can accomplish any-
thing worth while unless it follows a
law, unless it obeys some principle,
clearly understood, firmly grasped,.
faithfully adhered to. I take it,
too that no man's life is under-
standable unless you go beneath the
surface and discover this law. It is
the law behind the outward We
which gives color and character to
everything a roan does.
Now, what was the dominating
impulse, the ruling principle of
Christ's life, inauifosting itself
through everything He said and did?
Add incident to incident, examine in-
to
nto each, and what is apparent ? It
is that Jesus felt I-Iimeelf standing
underneath the hardens of the world
into which I:ie had conte. As Mo
went His way, meeting people of all
sorts and conditions, Iris quick sym-
pathy transferred all their sorrows
and cares and infirmities to Hire-
self.
inaself.
In. Peter's house, in the 'house of
Jairus, in the home at Bethany. He
made the burdens of the household
His own. By .Jacob's well Ire finds
a woman who seems to us at first
flippant and careless. But our Lord
recognizes that the light laugh dis-
guises a deep concern about her spir-
itual condition and He makes that
concern His concern, Every yoke
that galled humanity chafed His
shoulders. It was as e. burden
bearer that Israel's great prophet
thought of Him when He said : "The
Lord bath laid on Him the iniquity
of us all," It was as a burden
bearer that John tee Baptist spoke
of Him, "Behold the Lamb of God,
who beareth array the sins of the
world." The law of Christ was to
bear others' -burdens. He carie to
do the will of God by bearing.
THE BURDENS OF MEN.
When we speak of Christ as the
son of man wo mean that Ire is the
representative man. When St. John
speaks of Him as the word of God,
He means that He is the expression
of God's intention for each of •us.
The will of God for Him, then, must
be the will of God for us. The law
of His life must be the true law of
every life. Your life is fitted, in
God's providence, to grow and and
flower and hear fruit only under this
law of Christ. Deny that law,
evade it, and you must suffer the
.penalty which ch
cornea from broken
law—a crippled and limited exis-
tence. Bring your life into corres-
pondence with it and your life. must
take on something of the beauty and
dignity and power which you find
in the life of Christ.
When things are uncongenial, when
you cannot get along with people,
when they irritate you—before you
find. fault with, your environment,
look within yourself. Ask yourself
whether you are fulfilling Christ's
law for your life. Aro you hearing
the burdens of these people?
"In a sense, 1 am," you say.
"They make life a burden for me."
But that is not the question. There
is no more virtue in bearing burdens
you cannot help than in paying tax-
es or catching measles. Are you ful-
filling this law in the sense which
Christ fulfilled it, voluntarily and
sympathetically? Penetrate those
lives, got at their unknown burdens,
get underneath then" and the chances
are you will find that God has evi-
dently put you whore you are that
you might fulfa the law of your
life.
1'Giiat gives character to your life
is the law that lies behind it. How
does your life centre? If it centres
in self it is not obeying the law of
its nature, and your life must be
dwarfed and stunted. Your business
is dragged down into a
MEAN AND SORDID THING,:
You cannot climb to any high honor
that 'this law of selfishness will not
make that honor contemptible. But
if your life centres in others, if it.
obeys the law of Christ, there is no
business so poor and little that that
law will not glorify it. If your life
is bound to the bench or to the
wheel for the good of others, if you
aro a slave that they may be free, if
you aro struggling under burdens
that their burdens may be lightened,
then your dull and uninteresting
business is transfigured into a holy
sacrament. There is nothing ro-
mantic about the blundering, half
starved bookkeeper who works for
Scrooge in Dickens' "Christmas
Tale." But when you are introduced
to the little cripple in his home and
see how it is for Tiny Tim that old
Bob Cratchett is starving and freez-
ing and bearing patiently and cheer-
fully the hard service of his miserly
employer, this poor little man is
transformed into a hero. He is bro-
ther to the knight Who set his lance
in rest to make the cause of the
weak his own.
The bearing of others' burdens is
the secret by which we find our own
lives. 'Mere are people so engross-
ed with their own burdens that they
have no oyes for others more heav-
ily burdened then they. It is a
pity, for to help them bear their
burdens would be to lighten their
own. This is Christ's law, "Take
My yoke upon you"—the burdens of
others, their infirmities and sorrows
and sins—"and ye. shall find rest."
. E So S. LESSONI
:INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
DEC. 13.
Text of the Lesson, • I. Kings viii,
1-11, 62, 63. Golden Text,
Ps. cxxii., 1.
The Lord having given Solomon
rest on every side, neither adversary
nor evil being occurrent, he began in
the fourth year of his reign to build
the house of the Lord and was
seven years in building it (1. Kings
v, 4; vi, 1, 38). Tile ark of Noah,
the tabernacle cf Moses and . the
temple of Solomon were unique typi-
cal buildings, God Hiinelf being the
sole architect of each, the one thing
requited of the builders being obe-
dience, as the Lord repeatedly said
to Moses, "See that thou make all
things according to the -pattern skew-
ed to thee in the mount" (Hab. viii,
5; Ex. xxv, 40; xxvi, 30). The ark
of Noah was to preserve ail in it
from the waters of judgment, and it
became a safe vessel be being pitch-
ed within and without with pitch
(Gen. Ti, 14), the word "kohphar"
being only here translated "pitch"
and elsewhere ransom, satisfaction,
atonement.
The Lord Jesus Christ Himself is
the only ark of safety and the true
tabernacle and teanp]o (Heb. viii, 1,
2; John ii, 19-21), and the building
now growing unto a holy temple in
the Lord is built upon Him and His
great ate/lenient (Eph. ii, 10-22). Be-
lievers
o-lievers are living stones (1. Pet. ii,
5 R. V.), this world is the quarry,
and God is by the events of, our
daily life preparing . Iris redeemed
ones for our respective places in
His temple. Every stone was per-
fectly fitted for its place before it
was brought to the building, so that
there was neither hammer nor ax nor
any tool of iron beard in the house
while it was in building '(I. Kings
vi, 7). .
All things being ready, the elders
of Israel and the heads of the tribes
assembled andbrought up to. the
temple the ark of the Lord and the
tabernacle of the congregation and
ali the hold' vessels that were in the
tabernacle, and. the ark ¶vas set . in
its place in the holy of holies, or
oracle, ender the wings of the great
alive wood, gold covered cherubim
(chapter vi,. 28-28), there being path..
leg in It but the two tables of `stone
which Moses put there at Horeb
(verse 1-0),• What had become of
the golden pot of manna and Aaron's
rod that budded (iTob ix. 4) is not
rernrded, and therefore' we do '.sot•
need to know. While all the holy
vessels of the tabernacle were super-
seded in the temple by larger vessels
and more of thein, theme was no now
ark of the rot•e.na0t, but tee shine
that had already served. for 500
years, with its itiercy seat atter cher-
ubim. There can never be 11 new
Christ or way of righteousness, but
there is always a larger unfolding of
His great redemption. To me one
Of the greatest truths of the ark of
the covenant, with its mercy seat,
and the law within it is that Christ
is the end of the law for righteous-
ness to every one that believeth
(Rom. x, 4).
When the priests had set the ark
in its place and were coarse out the
glory of the Lord filled the house so
that the priests could not stand to
minister (verses 10, 11). It was al-
so thus when the tabernacle was ded-
icated (Ex. xi., 34, 35). It is our
privilege as the temples of the Holy
Spirit, to be so filled with the Spir-
it, that the self life shall not be
manifest, but only the life of Jesus
made manifest in our mortal bodies
(I. Cor. vi., 19, 20; Eph. v,, 18;
Gal. ii., 20; 1I. Cor. iv., 11). Al-
though we have only the beginning
and the end of this remarkable chap- I
ter assigned as our lesson, we should f
notice that the temple is called "an i
house for the name of the Lord God
of Israel, that His name might lie
there, that all people of the earth
might know T-Iis name" (verses 16,
17, 18, 19, 20, 29, 48). Notice the
eight times repeated "Hoar. thou
in heaven" (verses 30, 32, 84, 86,
89, 43, 45, 49) and the four times
"Heaven thy dwelling place" (verses
30, 39, 43, 49); also the sevenfold
nature of the prayer for the trespass-
er, the defeated, the drought smitten,
the plague smitten, the stranger,
those going to war and those in cap-
tivity (verses 31, 88, 85, 87, 41, 44,
46). He bad been praying before
the altar of the Lord, kneeling on
his knees, with his hands spread up
to heaven (verse 54).
Our Lord Jesus is both altar and
sacrifice; wo can come to God only
in His name and by virtue of His
merits. After prayer he stood and
blessed all the congregation, remind-
ing them that not one ward of all
God's promises had failed and ex-
horting there to walk in the statutes
of the. Lord with a perfect heart
(55-61) Compare Josh. xxiii., 14;
xxiv., 14. He relies upon the Lord
to maintain the cause of His • people
at all times, as the matter shall re-
quire (verse 59); margin, "The thing
of a clay in his day;" R. V., "As
every day shall require;" Jer. iii.,
81, "Every day a portion reminding
us that we aro to live by the clay
and bless the Lord who daily bear -
all our burden (Nut. xxxiii., 25;
Ps, lxviii., 19, R, V.). The lives
of believers should so'' magnify the
Lord that all others may knotd that
all others may know that the Lord
is God.
After' tiro prayer and the blessing
too icing and all Israel offered a
great sacrifice to the Lord and so
dedicated the, house of the Lord'
(verses 62, 68). When the Stterifiee'
was ready lire came doNo, from hea-
wen and consumed it, the Lord thus
accepting it. See also Lev. 12t., 24:;
Jud vi,, 21; I. Kings xviii, '88,
and no doubt in the sumo way the.
Lord accepted Abel's offering, In
verse 66 we have the sequel to the
dedication in a grateful people going
back to their tents joyful and glad
of heart because of the Lord's good-
ness. Let any believer fully dedicate
himself to the Lord, . and he will
know what it is to be joyful and
glad of heart.
111ARQUI WAS EASY NARK
LAWYERS SAVE HIM FROM A
$60,000 SWINDLE.
Confidence Man is Convicted and
Sent to Prison for Eight-
een Months.
. The proceedings of the London law
courts aro marked periodically by the
appearance of young noblemen 111• the
irksome role of men of business. A
trial which ended the other day in.
the sentence to eighteen months at
hard labor of Arthur Sebright for
Swindling the Marquis of Downshire
out of $60,000 in a single transac-
tion, establishes a new record in
knownethingism.
The i4Saequis of Downshire is 32
years old and owns 120,000 acres.
He has held the title since his in-
fancy. Sebright, who. is influential-
ly related, was an honorary equerry
in Prince Christian's household twen-
ty years ago and since then has oc-
cupied chiefly the law courts with
varying degrees of discredit. He
has been four times a bankrupt,
thrice with assets nil, and is now
an undischarged bankrupt. A sister
of ex -Countess Russell obtained a
decree of nullity of marriage against
him on the ground of his fraudulent
concealment of facts. He has been
mixed up at other times in litigation
over bills of exchange which he was
fond of planting upon the gilded
youths whoso society he affected.
It was a case of this kind in
which the Marquis of Donnshire was
the victim that caused his downfall.
Downshire was dining with a woman
in a restaurant when Sebright, who
knew her, but not him, came up and
starter' a conversation. The rest of
the story followed the regular rule.
It is best told in
THE MARQUIS'S OWN WORDS.
Sebright, he said, got from horses
to companies, Ho said he was
bringing out a big ono of $5,000,000
capital called the Credit Foncier of
England. About a week later Seb-
right visited Downshire and told him
be had sold some shares in his name
aa: d that he had won $5,000. The
Marquis was rather pleased and
when told that he should sign two
FOR THE
0
(fit
ie
I; ecl�ses for the Kitchen.
tlygtene and Other Nota
(p for U o f1W:lsehheper,
o
DOMESTIC RECIPES.
Salmon Toast.—A delicious break-
fast tray be made 1 y heating a eup-
ful of thin cream to which has been
added one spoonful butter and a lit-
tle salt. Stir into this one can
salmon picked up fine, pour over
toasted bread and oat while very
hot.
Stewed Oysters. --Put a quart of
oysters on the fire in their own
liquor. The moment they begin to
boil; skim them out, and add to the
liquor a half pint of hot cream, salt,
and cayenne pepper to taste. Skim
it well, take it oft the fire, add to
the oysters an ounce and a half of
butter broken into small pieces.
Serve immediately.
Cottage Pudding.—Cream one-
fourth cup. of butter with half a cup
of sugar; add one well -beaten egg
and, alternately, half a cup of milk
and a cup and a half of flour sifted
with two and a half teaspoonfuls of
baking powder. Bake. Serve with
a grape -juice sauce made as follows:
Boil a cup and a half of grape juice
and a, cup of sugar five minutes, stir
a teaspoonful of cornstarch or arrow
root into water enough to pour, and
add.. to the grape juice; cook six or
eight minutes, then add the juice of
half a lemon and a teaspoonful of
butter.
Chocolate Blanc Mange.—Dissolve
an ounce of chocolate aver hat water
Acid one-third of a cup of sugar, and,
gradually, one-third of a cup of
boiling water, and stir and cook un-
til smooth. Soften half a two -
ounce package of gelatine in half a
cup of cold water, and dissolve in a
cup of hot cream or rich milk. Add
the chocolate mixture, a second third
of a cup of sugar, a teaspoonful of
vanilla extract, a few grains of salt,
and one cup and a fourth of cream.
Stir occasionally until the mixture
begins to thicken.
Custard Pie.—Beat four eggs until
a spoonful can be taken up. Add
half a teaspoonful of salt and two-
thirds of a cup of sugar and beat
again. Beat in, gradually, two and
a half cups of rich milk. Before
turning into the paste -lined tin,
brush the crust over with beaten
white of egg to prevent soaking. Do
not have the oven hot enough so
that the custard will boil.
A Dainty Sandwich.—Chop fine
English walnut meats and seeded
raisins, mix. with a little sugar and
the white of an egg to a thick paste.
Add a little vanilla and spread be-
tween saltines. Put the sandwiches
papers before receiving his winnings in the oven for a few minutes to
he signed' them without a word. 'brown. Use about equal parts of
They turned out to be bills of ex- (nut meats and raisins. The white
change for 830,000 each. The Mar- of one egg will wet enough paste for
quis met and paid one of them be- about 18 or 20 moderately thick
fore his lawyers learned the story sandwiches.
or his friends could stop him, Crumb Ple.—Poi' a quick pie, quick
His cross-examination dieted ad- in baking as well as in making, this
missions that he drew hundreds of is a prize. It is also well liked
checks in a year, but did not know among our children. Line a pie tin
the difference between a check and a with good crust, fill half full (a good
bill of exchange. He thought the big pint! of nice bread, cracker or
two documents signed for Sebright calve crumbs, grate nutmeg over, then
fill with sweetened cream. It is
good hot or cold, fresh or old, When
cake crumbs are used, ,the cream
need not be sweetened.
Farley—The white of ore egg beat-
en to a stiff froth, one cup sugar,
and one cup fruit, either fresh o1
canned. Something a little tart is
more pleasing,' but any kind will air
among flash financiers in London. It saver. If they should be pears or
recalls the story of the alleged un- Mel'. s they should first be mashed
willingness of members el royalty with• a fork. This can be used as a
that dessert alone, or used as a frosting
. WIIITAEER WRIGHT for puddings. The rule says, "Beat
be prosecuted: The circumstances it
for an hour," but less time will
then were that he, when at the sou Utilizing Waste Celery.—Cut into
ith of his lame and success, with the inch pieces, the green celery stalks,
Marquis of Dufferin, Lord Pelham- and any others that are unfit for
Clinton and Lord Loch among the the table, then boil in salted water
directors of his company, secured an 20 minutes or more. Your o5 the
introduction to the Duke of Con- water and add a little milk; stir in
naught, who visited him on his a teaspoon of flour and butter rubb-
yacht at Cowes. In a brief' talk he ed together, adcl a dash of pepper
referred in complimentary terms to and when it has boiled up, you have
Wright's financial genius. A fort- a palatable side dish for dinner.
night afterward the Duke of Con- Dough Nuts.—Make a dough with
two. pounds flour, one pound two
ounces water or milk, one egg, one-
quarter pound, butter, one-quarter
pound sugar, and two ounces cf
or of meeting hire. The !Duke Wished Iyeast; rub the "natter into the
to return the check, but the story flour, and make the whole into soft
goes that Wright wrote in the tones dough. Let it ferment for two or
three hours, then weigh into two
ounce pieces, roll round, press thumb
into middle, put into hole one-half
teaspoonful of preserve, close it
over by pinching tightly the dough
up over and around it. Let it
prove for about one-quarter hour,
then have ready some good boiling
fat, and drop the buns into it, and
cook until light brown; take out,
drain, and roll in castor sugar. To
test if the fat is hot'enough, splash
into it a sprinkle of water—if hot
enough it will putter and make a
noise. It nnist be boiling, or the
goods will absorb the fat and taste
billious.
Bread Pudding, Plain: --ingredients:
Twelve ounces of bread crumbs, six
Ounces of sugar, two ounces of but*
tor, a pint of milk, the rind of a
lemon rribbcd on a piece of sugar,
six yolks of eggs, and two whites
whipped, and a little salt. Put the
bread crumbs into a basin with the
sugar, butter, lemon -sugar, and
salt; then pour in the 'Milt: boiling,
cover up the whole and leave It to
steep for about ten minutes; the eggs
May then be added, and after the
whole has been well Infixed together,
pour the preparation into a mould,
or pudding'basin, previously, spread
with butter. Steam the pudding for
about an hour, and• when done, dish
it em with some arrow -root sauce
made` as follows : 3iFix a dessert
spoonful of arrow -root with twice
that quantity of sugar, half the
juice of a lemon, a little nutmeg, and
a' gill of water, and stir this • over
the fire until it boils.
were checks, not acceptances: His
performance on the witness stand
was so genuine that the jury had no
difficulty in finding that the case
was a barefaced swindle.
Sebright's method of capturing his
man is a form of confidence trick,
which is becoming rather familiar
naught received a check for 8100,000
ram Wright with a note saying that
t was his profits on the investment
mentioned when Wright had the bon-
of
on
of injured dignity that, of course, if
the investment had turned out badly
he would have expected the Duke
to in tet his loss. The Duke is so
ignorant of company business that
11e does not know until this day whe-
ther he went into the deal.
THEY RAVE NO LANGUAGE.
Among the peoples of the ' world
the, Swiss are alone in having no
language they can call their own.
According to a recent visitor to the
little country, about three-fourths of
the people of Switzerland speak Ger-
man, while the. remainder divide four
other languages among theme—mainly
French and :Italian—the languages
varying, as a rule, according to the
proximity of the people to each
country whose tongue they speak.
Public documents and notices are
printed in both French and German.
In the Swiss National Parliament
the members make their speeches
either in French or German, for
nearly all the members understand
both languages. Tho orders of the
President are translated by an offi-
cial interpreter, cold furnished to the
newspapers in both languages.
If you would be wealthy, think of
saving as well of getting.
A secret can be lut out., but it can-
not he drawn back.
Borrowed trouble col utiands the
highest rate of interest.
Contagious eye:disease increased
among the children in tiro schools of
New 'work City until the number af-
fected Was estimated at .50,000.
Then a strict quarantine was placed
on all the schools', The disease now
has been almost staanped out, '
USEFUL ITiNTS,
Now that the cold Weather is
creeping on towards us it behaovee
us to look to our stock of clothing
for the Winter months. Waist of stet
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11-',ll:0"pop AC 0011"641,1 G
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RNRI N Th 8[OODft. IP sl :
THS Ci)NSTiTu710N
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.ondcut. ,1Montreal.CCfl
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''r+�PRiCE=n.
R�/» AM
ail DruggBRITAINists a ChefERICAri,� r
----.--..-161r41
Price In Canada : SUR);
;
Six bottles for $5.00 a
Women and men who stiffer froz»
weak back or paid in the lumbar
region should take $'i\ ,1AMr$ WA-
p13I2S, ~;vhicll possess remarkable cora-
tive influence o11 functional derange-
ments
eram a--
1ne is '
Ii of the kidneys,
� fr3r5, atad exert
special tonic action on the whole
urinary system.
ST. JAM1$ WAIi`RIuS cure bladder
troubles and ..pains of micturition,
lielping the flow of urine and Clear-
ing it from any sediment.
lesr-
ingitfromanysediment. Sr. J MZ,$
WAFERS are also, a potent .semual
strengthener.
ST. JAMBS WAVERS help stomaeh,i
digest food and send the nutriment
through the blood, and, this is the
honest way to get health atld strength,
the kind that lasts, develops and
breeds the energy which accom-
plishes
plishes anucli:
"Thevaltte of St. reales Waren
cannotbe overestimated. Ia the
most obstinated cage fief ki dtirya
and urinary troubles they have
tendered meremarkabl;. eueees
sett :,
n:. Charles H. Pcwe11,
Pit:rg?rak1, $cotlana,
Se. fumes Ilrafersa,cnnlasecret
remedy : t.,the uu erousdoctc:sre,
to.nreicrultrig deem to thea, tat It'll',
0,C mat the f`:aiu I,: :von 7<!,'rr3t,
Where dealers are not act ehag tl:e
'wafers, they arc malte11 1 ,):ni re-
ceipt of ',rice at the Ce,,edian
branch : St. Je ra Wafcrs co.,' 172a
St, Catherine ht„ !bailee!.
ficiently warm underclothing is a fre-
quent cause of indigestion,
Warm stockings and stout boots
are a preventive of dyspepsia, in win-
ter..
Warm clothing does not necessarily
mean heavy clothing. People who
wear very heavy clothes, heavy flan-
nels, heavy coats and skirts, are
often as much tired by their weight
as by the exercise they have taken.
One of the recrets of sweeping a
carpet' is to hold the broom almost
perpendicular and take short strokes
Do not lift the broom more than two
inches from the floor.
If the carpet is very dusty . tear
paper into small bits and soak it in
water and sprinkle the paper over
the carpet. The damp paper will
absorb he dust. •
It improves a carpet to wipe it
after sweeping with a cloth whish
has been wrung out of ammonia
water—one tablespoon of household
n rn, onia to a quart of water.
An attack of typhoid fever, of
pneumonia, er of erysipelas, that
would be mild in a sober man, twill
quickly kill otie addicted to alcoholic
drink.
Handkerchiefs which have been
used when cold and influenza are
prevalent should be sprinkled with
boracic acid powder, or, better stili,
should be steeped in a strong solu-
tion of it and water, before being
sent to the wash.
It is stated that the banana as a
form of nourishment can claim first
place among vegetable products that
are food for mankind, for it is 25
times as nutritious as the ordinary-
white
rdinarywhite bread eaten, and 43 times as
nutritious as the potato.
A sure and simple method' of test-
ing all tinned foods is to prea's the
bottom of the tin with the thumb.
If it masses a noise like a machine
nil can when it is pressed the tin
is not airtight, and the contents,
therefore, unfit for use.
When boiling vegetables be sure
the water is at boiling point before
putting in the vegetables to be cook-
ed. If it is cold or lukewarm the
freshness and flavor will soak out
into the water. Place the saucepan
over the hottest part of the stove,
so that it; will boil as quickly as pos-
sible, and be careful that the boiling
does not cease until the cantents are
thoroughly cooked and ready to be
dished.
11 IL EU 11.
area corat•io :tion of the actlre r loirlra, ci
the most vL.tiabia t'c,totobic 1'1'13!. i : rt.r 0 4•
-
cases a1uidisardcrsof the and
Bowels.
Sisk 'oa.daoh , va enc:°ae, , flea rr-
lbus n, Oatnr 1�h o#: tbc' Steins.cn, t.tr t-
nass, Blotches and Pimpleit.
Dgspopsla, taus' Stomach, motor
Brash, Llvon Co1Ftphant, ..l.i: ^.1 a:r
Muddy Complexion.
ta
Sweeten the breath end clear away all wa "s-
and poi; onowi nautt -r from the system.
Price 2 +e. a bottle or 5 for MAI. A11 dealers
er MID T. Mit.eoax CO., Limited, Tacoma
Out
Seta dish of vinegar on the o
while cabbage is cookit,g to cuauler-
act the odor.
Mastication is the real pleasure of
eating and' dyspeptics do not masti-
cate their food.
Warm dishes for tl a table by im-
mersing thelia in hot water, tnot by
standing them on a hot €tovc.
Now tins should be set over the
fire with boiling water in them for
several hours before food is put into
them.
If you are hoarse, lemon juice
squcced on to soft sugar till it is
like a Syrup, and a few drops of
glycerine added, relieves the hoarse-
ness at once.
The average gill believes the pro-
per time to marry is the hest time
she's asked.
"What do you put on your face
after shaving ?" asked the man who
smelled of bay rum. "Court -plaster
usually," replied the nervous chap,
gloomily -
"You are accused of running the end of an uinbrtl11a in this Itln'
eye. �+NoAre t you guilty or not guilty?'Is,
guilty, Your Muer; the umbrella doesn't •belon.t e,*t t i,