HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1904-10-13, Page 3rF1F1TV
.
Cenuine
9
arter s
Little Liver Pills.
roust Bear 'Signature or
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See Fee-Sle Wrapper Eelow.
Vorx small and as o
to take co sugar.
FOR IfEARACIIE•
FOR WZZIJES
FOR etuausimit.,
FOR TORPID LIVER.
CONSTIPATIORe
FOR Oilil.LOY, $K111.
FOR TRECOMPLEXION
• 1,41M17 WPC.
le tame.
mew
CARTES
nLE
IVER
PILLS.
CUR -4 SICK HitaDacieg,
eassomesenesextostrurraemeonsingenoseice
fl
• IIREAD-STARTER,
tWo metliturt sized potatoes,
raitslt fine, add twe rounding tab
spoonfuls of flour, a large SPoontul
of salt mid one halt ceip Pt Weer :
-etir ell togetiler, to Prevent lumps
In the flow. Now scald with. tho
potato water: ,add About three
quarts a water (have it just nicely
warm), break in 23, freSli yeest %eta
A1 d leave till morniug. when it aUl
be en fearny on toin
NOW Save out a pint to start with
noNt time. Stir in ilour euoughto
mould nt,& largo loat knmd for
one-baif hour stud let else, kuettd.
down again, let riee and mould into
loaveo.
About tbo third belting the brew
will he jut fine. Save out the start -
every time 4tna do not use an
yeast, as the sterter tallies its place.
Keep the stexter la a. cool place,
DONT
WIT
thero is anything I bete it
whining woroass." said a. Physician
who is cheeeiness itself. The males-
ity of people are of his opinion; no-
body lik:es ono ate goes groaicing
through life. Women who would
scorn being beggars for money or for
fowl go from placo to place—beggars
for sYmPathY. They pore as mar-
teTs, and feel aggrieved if they on
not receive the sympathetic attention
which they fancy is Weir duo.
If you cannot be happy make up
ceir mind at least to he Cheerfully
unhappy. Whatever your dream.
stanees or your condition, dona.'t be .
baby. Don't 'whine.
IIGN Of Tit
A Call to Arms to MI Who Are
Eager for Spiritual Conquest.
(Entered aceordieg to At of the
bootees of ()wawa, in the year Ooe
Thcidlsand Nine Hundred eon Feint
by Woe Bally, of Toronto, at the
ISepartment of Agriculture, ottrawa,.)
A despatch from Los Angeles, Cal.,
seys:-- Bev, Frank De Witt Talmage
preached from the following text:
Revelation ill., 8, "1 have set before
l'INEIWES FROM WITHIN,
I find, the church, ot the Lord Jesus
splendidly equipped materially and
temporarily for this winter's cam-
paign against sin. Bot, snore tlion
that, I find that there never was a
timo when the great evangelical
cintrelles were so thoroughly in ee-
cord oa thaefuudamental doctrines of
thee an open door, and no luau cen Christianitf. In the pulpit mid in
shut it the pew those doctrines are held
Months before an invnding
moves for the subjugation of a caoriTnYt liorbinrilsyt„ ain5tegiogesnatIvyiotilltrid:fejettuetlywoofield
h
as the whole souled II eg mace of
try trained military minds study its
natural features and intuitivoly Fan-
tle the strategie points widela it is
essential to capture and to hold and
the course which the various corr.s
must, take, to co-operate ire the goo-
eral ecaerne.
Th as coasting campaigns or the m
ary linos of summer operations are
planned for the most part by pe dif-
ferent commanders of Invading
ratio while their arinias are en,
camped in winter quarters, Therefore
tho question tvhich at this Season. nae
urally forces itself upon my mind is
this: "Whats tho gospel campaign
head a the Christian church for the
vowing ten months? 1 am a captain
in the army of Christ. How ant I
to lead my people? Where am I to
go?" In the loeginning of this win-
ter's work 1 am exactly in tte sante
POSition ae the military leader a an
uvadiug army who is oho% to breals
up winter cparters. Summer Is real-
ly the time for winter quarters in a
city church. When July comes many
hr
of the Cistan isoldrs iein a largo
rly pastorate hie tbemselvea awoy
te aea. beach or to ielountein etream
for rest, They are very tired from
their wintexda labor. Diet bY the
time tho middle of Ser eptembis hero
the selioole aro all opened and the
suembera of the gay congregation
are back to their winter Conies and
are filling their churdh pers. Whea
they arrive and start out for gos
pel Work the Christial eoldlers of cox
church. „naturelly expect to know tho
kind of a gospel campaign which "
ahead.
Chriet is our great cennuander, and
On a captain muter him I would hero
and now point oat to you the mighty
'opportunities which, ere before us. I
would sketch the lino of campaign
wo as a church aro about to enter.
And, furthermore, I not only went
to show you lioev we are to fight,
where We aro to light, but also to try
to eneouriage you by reminding yote
of the great agencies or our time
which aro going to help us in this
orning year struggle.
Tito glorious tWellttetli century is
opening wide its doors to lot tho
eliurcli a the Lord Jefilla Christ pass
forth Into God's conflIct, aided by
scientific and social facilities that no
other ago possessed, whereby • each
Inez can double and treble and quad-
ruple the enema of work which his
grandfathId
er or s great-grandfather
was able to do. It is saying to us:
"Mari, if the length 0 your life is
to be estimated by the amount of
work you shall be able to accom-
plish I will let you live longer than
did Jacob, who died f old ago at
ono hundred and forty-seven, or
'Isaac, who lived one hundred and
eighty years, or Abraham, who lived
to be one hundred and seventy-five
years, or Neal, wlio lived to bo elite
hundred and fifty years, or Methu-
selah, who only lacked thintyeene
years of being one thousand years
old. I will let you live so long that
what your ancestors accomplished in
the course of their lives will seem to
be as nothing to what you, shall be
able to accomplish." The twentieth
century speaks thus not to one man,
but to all.
ST
AINVENTIVE AGH.
Slic—"George, dear, you, remember
that lovely sideboard that I told
you I ehould Mei to buy because ie.
tvas so cheap/ Well, I've discovered
plau to 2nalte roam for it."
dIfow, my dear?" Slie—"By talcing
a larger house."
Counsel --"Do you drink?" Witness
eahWell, that depends What you cat.
driniseCounsel—"I call drink
'drink; what else do you expect?"
Witnoss—"WO1l in nitat case 1 do
drink." Counsel—"Do you drink
heavily?" Witness—"Well, that
again is a question as to what you
call beavily. Counsel—"Do you ev-
er take more than is good for you?"
.Witness—"I drink until I am satis-
fied." Counsel—"Does that take
-long?" Witness—"No." Counsel—
'Bo you over take too much?" Wit-
ness—"No; unless you consider one
CUP of tea in the morning and an-
other in the afternoon too much."
Counsel ---"Come, tome, I am speak-
ing of intoxicating liquors," Witness
—"Oli, I am a teetotaler!'
Make Weak Hearts Strong.
Make Shaky Nerves Firm.
They are a Sure Cure for
Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Loss
of Energy, Brain Fag, After Ef-
fects of La Grippe, Palpitation of
the Heart, Am-ernia, General De-
bility and all troubles arising from
a run down system.
They regulate the heart's actiori
and invigorate the nerves.
-4"\ This is what they have clone for
others ! They will do the same
for you.
GREAT RELIEF.
I have taken Milburn's Heart and
Nerve Pills for palpitation of -the heart
end shattered nerves, and for both troubles
have foundgreatrolief.--Mrs. W. Ackert,
Ingersoll, Ont.
FEELS SPLENDID VOW.
Before taking Milburn's Heart and
Nerve Pills I was ell run down could not
sleep at night and was terribly .troubled
with my heart. Since faking them 1 fee)
splendid. I sleep well at night and me
beast does not trouble tne at all. They
,have done mo a World of good.—Jas,
1101..00d, Hartsville,
This inventive age has literally
doubled and quadrupled and almost
infinitely multiplied the material pro-
ducing power of man. Thinkof the
facilities of communication! Suppos-
ing I wish to plead the cause of
Moist with some friend clear across
the American continent. 1 sit down
and pen my appeal. In a few min-
utes it is in the postmari's hands. A
little later it is in the mail wagon
on its way to the deport. Soon it
is in the mail car going at lightning
speed over the mountains and across
the alkali deserts and across the riv-
ers until it is dropped in the eastern
liotne. It has taken only a few days
for that message to reach its destin-
ation in the east, and 111 a few days
longer an answer comes back to me
that my appeal has been read, and
under God's blessing it has been
made effectual to the salvation of -a
soul. Think how many times such
an effort might be multiplied and
how largely the facilities of com-
munication might betutilizeci for the
spread of the gospel! I can to-k1a3r
send a letter from California to Now
York, 3,000 miles away, quicker
than in the beginning of the last
century my New Jersey ancestor
could pend a letter to Ms tnissionary
son living among the Georgia pines.
That is one astounding fact. But,
though more money is in circulation
to -day than ever before and a pen-
ny in olden times meant more than
it does now, I can send my letter
clear across the continent for two
pennies, while, my great-grandfather
had to pay twenty -ave cents to send
Inc letter of one sheet of paper only
a few lianclreci miles. It used to take
our ancestors sometimes hours to
ride to the nearest church. Now the
church of our Lord Jesus Christ is
at almost, every street corner, and
the religious papers are scattering
their prints everywhere. Man to -day
hasquadrupled his opportunities of
life because he can accomplish four
times the amount of work ivhich his
ancestors were able to do in the
same thne.
his Peelde, Before 4 general goes
forth to invade an enemy's country
it is very important for him to lcnow
that his own soldiere aro loyal to
his cpuntry's standards and are af
one heart, ono mind and one pur-
pose. When a Christian church goes
forth into a winter's eampelgo
against. Sin it is Jost as important
for its pastor to know that, his peer,
pie are of ono thought rout one mind
In reference to the great cerdinal
doctrines of the chureh, A thousand
eneraics outside of a general's velem
are not so dengeroue a =neva OS
one traitor inside o the guarding
sentinelds liees. A thousand blataat
infidels attaching the elturch of Jews
Christ in lOfalel convention hell or
by ealosen counter are not BO fors
rnidable as the sci called fi.e.ethinking
liberal Who is attacking the church
of God 4.5 A member of that church
tie an ordained minister of thet
ebureb
Now, for tho moat part, the church
qf the Lord Jesus Christ has beoa
Med of thoso members who do not
believe in tho greet cardinel doctrines
of the bible. It haa been bold enough
to soy to emit membQrs, "If you do
not believe in Jetn18 ehriSt as the
Solt of (40d, if you do not believe in
tho effieacy ot his saerifive, then yoa
had better transfer -your allegiance to
onto c-dher church with whose creed
u are in sympathy, for In this
urch the doctrines which you rem-
diatti are regarded as tbe essence
"ristiaeity.". The greater part
tbe heretical teacherhove accept
le advice, and, like tho ormY
Gideon, the men who remain are few-
er in timelier, but are of ono heart
and one mind. The church of Christ
throughotft the land enters upon the
winter's campaign with unbroken
front, all the stronger for tiluS elimin-
ation of its holt hearted members.
BEST 'YEAR FOR A NEW
START.
ut I take a stop further in this
mighty subject. NVe have a wonder-
ful time in which we aro to enter tlie
coming campaign for Christ. il'his is
the youngest of the centurieS, but In-
to it aro gathered the ripe fruits
the past. The thought and exper-
ience of ail the cebturies that are
gone havo in these years come to
fruition. It is the mighty move-
ments and trials and struggles of
past generations which have male
the present time possible. From tbo
triumphs and failures of tho past,
from the wisdom and the mistakes
of our forefathers, we have learned
lessens which should make us mas-
ters in the art of soul winning and
successful leaders in the assault on
the intrenehmeats of cin. This is
the -very best year of all years to
start in a gospel caxapaign for
Christ.
But take another step, further in
this momentous subject. We have
another campaigil blessing in addi-
tion to these two of which we have
spoken. We have a church with all
DUNLOP COMPOIZT
LULJ3EJT IIhELS
Make walking more of e comfort
than those who are used to walking
on hard heels hue, any idea of. Take
all that far off tho spine and renurie
the eatiie of many a weary headeche„
0
Welcher
Liteited
the Dunlop Tire Ca,*
Toronto. Oataio
CS by shoe
ere in Ca
aierti
THE S. S0 LESSoli4
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
OCT, 16.
Text of the Lesson, 11. Kings
iv., 25-37. Golden Text,
It QM. vi., 23.
:ahe m
At least Ia
asti2ti,sehna,tinit:sTlig
in xichialp.,teitr
wo have tnae "own of God" ap-
piis used at least fourteen times 1
reference to one whose name wo }mow
not. It is applied to Moses end to
others and to lay mind is a title
!inuels to he coveted, or, rather, a
thins' much so be desirea—to be
;wholly for God, in communion with
aRlitIllasiwg:rYsilZtplealssairrsta tiorera rillnIgill sl'eIllid'
voice only and doing ills will, 111e
meesonger with His massage.
As F:lisha, passed to and fre
throe" 1Simpenn a Wernan, of wealth
suggested to bee husband that they
should prepare a room in their bou.ee
for Vila holy man of God, who con-
,tinually parsed by them, that he
1 'might feel at liberty to tura la Oi-
tber as often 48 he chose. This 'they
I
did and lurnished it, With a bed, a
teble, a seat an4 a eandieestiela and
the man of God wee worit to rest
t himself there. 'Wheat a eoptrast even
thtta to our mind, hut -able room .
nte- turnitiwe to the stable svilere
our Lerd svas born or to the fact
hat Ite often hod not whero te lay
t, the eoasatousness that
oe has made q.trnost unlimited prow
Os brie mode the tharch strongnd
confident.
But whero is the gospel eanariaign
iis head.
Elisha would fain revompeese her
her kind care of him aud asked i
lier whet. he should do for ber, but I
1
her reply- Was to the effert that she
oded nothing. Gehazi having called
eisha's attention to the fart that ,
she bad no child, Elishe aseurod her
that in dee thee god wO414 give 'tort'
f WV church during tlit., comiae a Sern and so it came Vs papa It
• Titer to be fought? We have tea- It was supernatural, soneebieg
lILn
ed about the time. We have epohen
about the oneness of purpora anl
the divine strength in which we are
to enter the conflict. We now welt
about tho geographical region in
tho giving of Isaac to Sandi and
Abrehano a real gift from God.
010110 in a natural way. They had
brightened ElLeha,'s life by this rest
chanter, And now ClOd 13110U:110
which we ore to fight. W "1St their lives mid home With this dear
find °Ur claireli's Plain, Esdraelon ebild, whom Ire spared to them till
and ite Marathon pass. diverica Is ic,. was.old encregdi to oo ith Ids
I"' the gec'gr4'Phk"al PL"n 6°**itallter to the field mit 1 euddene
pel maneuveringa for tle. Ateterzenn
Church. It is the forearel nation
in the world to -day, and its power
and influence are rapidly growing. in
rgye in wealth, in enterprise, it
es the lead among the natione ol
world. If it botelly taless
ti for Christ and derierestl
principles of Christ are ite
and thee he is ita supreme ruler
effeet on tho world suit he over-
whelming. An commune; etep will
then have been taken toward the
conquest of the whole world for hint.
Oh, my friends, with euch asior-
loos outlook tor our corning gospel
campaign, should not the church ef
Christ as a whole and our own in-
dividual diuretics go forth into this
winter's campaign strong in God.
strong in faith, strong is holy zeal?
For the most part 1 bete been tale-
ing about how God is going to blesa
the great American cburcli as a
whole, •Will be bless our own 'indi-
vidual chime/lea to which we have
given our allegiance as he will !Aces
other churches? Yes, is we go
into this gospel conflict as we ought
to go. Are you and 1 willing by
our own eonsecrated lives to let our
dear individual church, with As glor-
ious past, take the position in the
church army on the front line of bat-
tle where she ought to stand? Re-
member, the open door whteh (Ted
opened for the Philippian church was
not a, doorway off in the distance,
but near at hand. And so the c port
door of gospel. opportunity of our
church is right at hand. As con-
secrated, Holy Spirit inspired, earn-
est Chrittion church members will
you and 1 joie to -day in the fot-
ward march for Christ?
I would enlist you ono and all in
this glorious es -ax. Your trials may
be severe, river labor arduous, but
rn the end victory is certain. It ma.y
be yours to sharo in the triumph,
but if you perish ia the struggle you
win yet bo able' to Say: "I have
righteousnessftohuergehti salatla.4).; fficFriltnie 4.11ere°11;ceurQrt0b1
of its great leaders as seen as thou-
sands of members moved to holy
enthusiasm by knowledge of the
strength of 'the Satanic enemies we
are about to raeet in combat. We
know that as the church of Christ ie
strong . the Satanic enemies aro
strong also, so strong that -unless we
go forth to this battle with a full
endowment of the Holy Spirit to
light as we ought to - fight for Christ
we shall fail ignominiously, as we
deserve to fail.
Outside of his own intrinsic
strength nothing brings out the hid-
den pewer of a general more than the
realization that his exiemy is strong
and wily—an adversary whose power
it would be folly to underestimate,
against whom he must marshal his
forces with all his skill and develop
their fighting qualities to the highest
efficiency. When Goliath saw the
puny form of David, who NVOS to give
him battle, the Pnillistine oiant
laughed hire to scorn. He sneering-
ly cried, "Am I a dog that thou
comest to me with stones." That
contempt lost him the battle. Not
so with David. His weapons were
those with which he was familiar,
and he employed the skill developed
by long experience in might and cruel
anthl relentless, and he nerved his
strength for the unequal struggle.
The church of Christ is made reso-
lute by the lsn.owleclge that it is to
meet a strong armed foe. We know
we must nght hard to win. And we
also know that unless like David,
the shepherd boy, ire go forth in an -
faltering faith in the divine re -en-
forcement we shall fail in the battle.
A stalwart foe always brings out
the best that 15 in a worthy oppon-
ent.
MUST 13E ALWAYS ON GUARD.
I -Tad the church of Christ. only
craven hearted foes to fight it would
" I,. merciless.
become as ladiEerent, to them
Wait toward that sneaking coyote,
whose worst depredations are found
in. the barnyard among the dead
chickens. -Unless starving and in
numbers, he never attacks a strong
foe. But to -day the chureh of God
has no cowardly enemy. Like a
hunter stalking the man eating mon-
sters of India or Afticao the, church
is and must be continually on its
guard. As it goes forth into the
corning winter's campaign to do the
best it can and with the help of the
ly God tools Nara.
His another laid hie httte bo tsr On
the bed of the man of God. 1.duit
door am/ hurried tie fast as she
could to Mount Carmel to Ellsba.
The prophet. viten lie sew Ler com-
ing, sent (Multi tozotvt. her and to
uiro if it was w.-11 with 1
her husband and the eland.Rer
*epJy WaS, "It ie yell." Yet she
presse4 on to Eii.,ha and held him
by tite feet, and when Gebazi would
have thrust her away Elisha forbade
him, saying, "Let, hor alone, for her
soul is eeXed within lier, and the
Lord hath not told me." Tilea she
poured out her emit in thee? words:
"Did I desire a eoc of my Lerde thU
not saY. 'Do not deceive '
Misfire seeing that the ehild was
dead, sent Gehazi with his (Media's)
staff to Tay it on tho face of the
child, but tie., mother said to Itian oS
to had slid to Elijah, "As the Lord
• TO, and as thy soul liveth
not leave lise." ('.in. 80).
As in the eese of the poor widow,
hero is a real heartfelt need
Iutter helplessness, Oh, for more of
and desire with the consciousness Of
it, and of this desperate clinging
with n persisteuto that takes no de-
nial, the persietenee of Jacob, ol
Ruth, of Mai, of Elislut aral of this
womaa1 See also our Lord's own
encotiragement to he persistent in
Luke :Kt, 8, tl; Isa. lxii, 6, 7.
Elisha heeds the. heart cry of dis-
tress and hastens to the ehrunber
where he had often been refreshed,
and he went in and shut the door
upon them twain mad prayed unto
the Lord (verse 33). See amain the
shut door, the secret of His pres-
ence, alone with God. Oh, the pow-
er and the blessedness of it! And It
is the privilege of every believer.
Now see the intense personal desire
of Edislia. Lilco Elijah he stretched
himself upon the child (verse 34;
Kings sesli, 21). Ifis mouth and
hands and eyes are upon those or
tho child, suggesting, as Ma, Spur-
geon used to say, that to bring life
to a. child dead in sin, or to any
one, we must come into the closest
Possible personal contact, seeing as
they see and speaking of things as
they would, so that from what they
already see and know we may lead
on to what, they as yet neither see
or know. Elisha stretched himself up-
on the child, and God seat the spirit
back to the little body, and soon
Ile was again in his mother's arms,
and sbo was once more a happy wo-
man.
She knew Him as the giver of life,
but now she knows Min as one who
can give life from the dead, as one
to whom nothing is impossible. Al-
though Paul knew Him so well 'his
prayer was that I may know 1.41m,
and the power of His resurrection
and the fellowship of His sufferings'
(Phil. iii, 10), and Peter ends his
second epistle 's ith. these words :
"Grow in grace and in the knowledge
of our Lord and Saviour Jesus
Christ." Our Lord Himself tells us
that to know God is life eternal
(John xvii, 3). Our church and
:Bible class motto is, "To know Him
and to make Him known," and we
greatly rejoice in the fellowship of
all who earnestly, desire to be whole
hearted for Him.
Two other miracles are recoriled ii
tlais chapter which Cod agought
throtigh this mac of God—the healing
of the poisoned pottage and the
multiplying of the twenty loaves. To
give life, or restore life, or sustain
life is equally easy to Him, and He
alone can do it. in Him We live
and move and have our being. Oh,
to know and to trust Ilim so as to
be used by Him to the utmost! The
Lord grant us power with Himself
such as Elisha had for His glory,
that we may make ITiin known—men
and women'. of God kept *wholly for
Himself that He may be glorified.
A TERRIBLE PTIEDICAMENT.
He was in doubt. He didn't kaow
whether he should be angry or pleas=
ed, and a great deal depended upon
it.
They were sitting on the sofa to-
gether, and once, when the conversa-
tion seemed to drag a little, he had
suggested:
"Don't you think it rather close
to -night?"
'It raiglit be closer,'' she replied.
I1 was a terrible predicament in
which to place a man who was anxi-
ous to make the best of his oppor-
tunities. Should he take advantage
of what seemed to be an invitation
to get a little nearer to her, or
-Should he be angry at being termed
an "it"?
THOUGHT HE WAS SAFE.
A smart youngster tttrned up at
school the other :naming with his
face bound up, and all tho evidence of
a bad attack of toothache.
Perhaps the teacher knew Ills boy,
for he wasted no time in expression
of sympathy.
"Where were you yesterday, John-
ny?" he 'demanded.
John mutely pointed to his band -.
d face but the questioner was
"Did you hear me? Where
bjeoi',nt
you yesterclay?'! he repeated.
Hicimeteidn,g„,'' ebiallciroecr
blurted teacher.
Johnny
in
“So you played truant in order to
go hunting, and so contracted tooth -
ac*
y was silent for a moment,
and then, perhaps under the impres-
sion that he couldn't very well make
matters worse, he candidly replied:
"I contracted nothin', sir. But I
thought if I tied up my head yo'd be
Holy Spirit to do all it can for aaing no questions. ,
were
Elarroless. Reliable, Rapid anti
Effectual Curo for
Diarrhoea., Dysentery, Colic.
Cramps, Pahl in the Stomach,.
Choiera., Cholera. Infet.ntum,
Cholera, Morbus, Sea Sielcnesso
Summer Complaint, and eat:4
Fluxes of the Bowels in Children
or Adults.
Met, experiment wi h new and untried
remedies when yon can get Dr. Fowler's. It
bas been used iti thousands of homes in Canada
for nearly sixty years and b.a,s always given
atisfaoton
Evaq home sbotdd jiitvi
be ready in as of emergea
4
T,
t
. h
.A4
d put a,
powder, the gine
s, alt rctund to 0, pasto.
cook in the batter for
stirring' It constantly. No;
meat, cut in epeell pieces
r ten or fifteen minutee,
suMeleat cold water to
d let all Simmer on nnteeily
so eat is quite teader, the
and is rich looking..
rung saatter tho sliced cu on
top and hand a disk a boiled
he curry.
The neighbors of an amateurcor-
net player have no Use for the horn
of plenty,
In a le
r three
tn clear catd %s
Pounds of aueumabers al
of vinegar and three pound 41
and one ounce each of cinna uil
spire and celery Geed. Add a, small
piece of alumneat the eleegrir
and turn over the cucumbers.l'o
tide three UMW and they aro ready
tor use.
Tomato llincemeat.—One peek o
green tematoe,s cluspiled fine. tw
poundsed;twOpoundsof r"
imf‘'os'etibro w4aut
n" Sainguaqlt;
Juice and, grated riuil of two lemons,
two tiabiespoonfubs of cinnamon and
two-thirde of a tablespoonful euelt 4.1
cloves and allspice, a tabiespoonial
ot salt and one pint of vinegar.
the tomatoes, einegar and sugar tar
three holies, then add fruit and :oge-
es, cook twenty minutes and can.
Makes delicious ales ii winter.
Crab- .*11e Jelle.--lioil the frill
with water euough eo it will slim
just through the fruit. When soft
pour in. a jelly bag. Measure the
juice, boil twenty minutes, add equal
measure of sugar, boil 5 minutes,
skim and pour into glasses. ltub
the resitlue in the jelly bag through
a sieve, add two-thirds as much su-
gar tie tnere is pulp and cinnamon to
taste. Cook ten minutes, stirring
conseautly and you have a very fair
quality of apple hinter.
A useful pie—Take rill pieces ot
meat left froinx any cold Joints—tho
greater variety the better--thop fine-
ly season with pepper, salt and a
few bits of butter. •Dredge the
whole lightly with flour, lino a dish with with short crust, fill it with
minced meat, pour aver some sscioe
gravy, cover with a paste crust arid
bake for half an hour.
'o toil fish well.—To each two
quarts of water add a tablespootuul
of salt and when the -water is warm
put in the fish. The reason for us-
ing, warm water is that boiling ,wa-
ter cracks the skin and spoils the
appearaoce of white fish. Salmon,
on the eontrary, needs boiling water
to set the color. Boil fish very :;ea -
tier, allow from. eight to ten minutes
for a solo, according to its thickness.
When quite done, tako it up, draia
all the water off, slip carefully on to
a hot dish, and go.rnish with parsley
andlenini
Jugged loofstdak is a useful dish,
and. in hot weather may he served
cold, with a garnish of aspic jelly
and salad. Out a piece of beefsteak
into nice square pieces, roll these ;a
seasoned flour which has herbs raised
in it, add a little onion, a glass of 1
red wine, pepper and salt to taste, a
few peppercorns but no water. Put
in a. jar, cover down tightly and sst
it in a pan of boiling water to stew
till tender. When done, color to a.
good brown, place the meat on a
dish, add fried seasoning balls, and
serve with red currant jelly whea
hot.
Good plum cako can be made quitc
inexpensively at this time of year.
Cream, half a pound of butter with
six ounces of caster segar, and 0,1d
yolks of four eggs. Dent the whites
to a stiff froth., Sift one pound of
dried pastry flour, in which a, telx-
spoonful of baking -powder has been
mixed into the butter, etc., thea half
a pound of, picked and clennees
rants, ditto sultanas, and a courser
of a pound of chopped candied peel,
Flavor all with a little ground 111
ger and semi cinnamon, Lastly ;tad
the beaten Whites of eggs. Line a
cake -tin with greased paper, put in
the cake mixture, and bake four
hours mn a moderate oven.'
Necessary ingredients for an
clian curry recipe—One pound of loci
or mutton, one tiallespoonial of Mild
ounces ol
tC:a:rsirt:en.sP7Ftidwres: mt11:51l t chillics alt etra'(:
ond ounce of green ginger, two sraall
deep enamel pan, put in a fetv
of onion, whoa nice and brosvn take
I mnrke min be tnkmi
to strong sunlight
ne. the hcoreli has roe -
rated to the wrong side, it may cf.
n be re loved by onion juice tip-
ied in this manner : Slice au
ueeze the juice of two °Motel, mix
ith half an ounce a shavell wh.ito
oap, two ounces of fullers' eattb,
nd a half pint of vinegar. Boit
this and .preed it over the scorched
place. Leave till the stain is re-
moved, then wash out.
A. delicious vegetable soup is made
by cooking Iima beans with the tin-
iest eprays of ounion, adding thit,
milk and a bit of butter. passing
through a eieve and thickening with
very little flour
NVIierecis the prettiest Ana most, etp.
propriate dress Tor a bed is un-
doubtedly white, there are occasione
on which it is desirable to teee some-
thing that does not soil so easily.
Nothing is better for the purpoeo
than a pretty cretonne. The spread
may be sirophy henuned and largo
-enough to just escape the floor, uu-
less a flounce is us.ed, in which ease
it should come just a little below tho
top of that. If a flounce is used it
may be gathered or pleated and
should be sewed to a piece of cheap
unbleached muslin covering the
spring. The flounce is divided at
the corners and put behind the posts.
Shams are out of fashion, and in-
stead the bed is dreSsed for day use
with the hard, long, round boInter
which has coma down to us :Mitt
Louie Irs time, and which Ls covered
to match the spread.
Willie—"Timmie Small's rather
raakes him go to school every day."
Mn.mina— 'Why do you say
she makes him go?" Willie--" 'Cause
he goes!"
ile„,.,,......11C141.117,14.1”,,,.4,114..
Needed in Every Home
Altoays
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DICTIONARY 0
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latest census returns. .
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persOnkt, with nationality, occupation, elate
of reigns, date of birth, death, etc.
Edited by W. T. ElAllit I S , LL.D.
'United States Commissioner of Education,
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