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Exeter Times, 1909-04-22, Page 3CURE ateY it . an the troubles Ind - tent 1., a t 1.10,;a &Ls:e of the ay.te,u. ruck Y Diutne.a, t/19 A, DrJwalne.tl. Dtstre.e aft..r ...ting. raga In the Fi to, 1 . While their meet recaarkable r.rrt. c.,1.:, b, • n situ en In curies SICK Aeadseltee yet Carter's Little Liver rills are &rosily val uable in Cont! ;sawn. curing u: d pre- venting Ibis anaoylogcomplalut.white they a.so correct alI.hturdersof tbestana••h.stlmulcte the liveerand re-,ul.r.etl.eL,c 'i!. L'rrnirtbeyou, Aahethey would be gim,.at priceless to tbcsewhe taRar front tL:Wletreasth,i complaint; but furls. atate:y thttrgn«inesadtme hot end hereon,' those whoouce try theta will and these little pill. vela - able In •o want' w.ve that they will not be wil- ling ludo without U. in. B;rt ar:er all sick Dead ACHE .the hamnetsoninny lli;a tl:rt hernlswhen! wemaLoour great boaat. t. IfI,llac:,roitwhile othrra de hot. Carb•t•a utile:Liver rills aro very •m.11 and very easy to tate. Uro or two }.!iieins ciadose. They aro strictly vegetable aid do not rope or encu' but by their gentle actiou vices° all who lose them. tt<YiZt Yz'JZ.11lZ C10..11EW TOIL hail Pit Seam frail Priest LANDING A (I:1rT PIKE. 45 .Inches .in .Length — Largest Caught 'n British Isles. A giant pike, which is for Eng- lish and Scotch streams the record catch, was caught recently on the Hampshire Stour by the orthodox method of rod and line. This fish was weighed and turn- ed the beat° at 37 1-4 pounds. Its length is 45 inches and girth 24 inches. When first taken out of the water it was weighed with a spring balance and reached the fig- ure of 0 pounds, but in the inter- vening time it has shrunk to its present size. Said the captor of this noble prize: "I caught her on Sunday morn- ing on Lord W'imborne's estate. The stream was in flood and I was fishing with a snap tackle in a very fast stream. I had an hour before caught and given away a 14 pound pike, which is probably the male $ah. I dropped my bait into the run and it was carried by the swirl round the corner into a backwater which shelved gradually tor toward the bank from the point of the is- land. The pike t.•ok mo fairly cei;etty. for she was old and sluggish aad not for soma time did I reali te the( was fast to one of the bitr;;cst pike that has ever been caught tri the British Isles. She fought ma for nearly half an hour, and at last 1 managed to get her toward the shelving bank. My keeper, wild with excitement, plunged into the water and we got her out somehow. 'The whole thing was a fluke probably, but anyhow we drank her health several times, and felt con- siderably pleased with ourselves. "She looked level PROOFS OF IMMORTALITyChristian trial., aed temptations? Is ours . }�WeesN g,` Spirit, fellowship broad) Are we prartieally helpful to others 'i first to be called Christians. the church whose members were the this is invulved in the picture oof Aro we bold to confess C'hribt, and able, in the btren men of the to ChristI All h Horn t We Enter the Future Very Much as We Have Left the Present Life. NR. MACBL1NK ON BOOKS. Who I abolished death and wisdom, spiritually, s,,inpathy, ten- h ems iu All, 'though Oftcu With a bath brought life and immortality derness, charm, and moral beauty, Good Deal of Betting. tc. light. --11. Tim. i. 10. so that it is true of such "at even - Tho two greatest facts that con- ingtime. there shall be light.'' "It is some satisfaction to me to g „ tlit front man ars life and death. In Such lovely personalities only seem '' ►k, raid Mr. Baclllink, 'that into vinegar and scour the vessel with it. Depend on regular brushing of the hair rather than on tonics. Ten minutes stiff brushing twice a day will do wonders for thinning hair. Unpainted wire netting not only makes a good rest for flatirons when several thicknesses arc used, but is most effectual to clean theta SOME llAIA'CY U1SIIES. uiPotatoes should not be eaten by Milk Tuast.—Toast some squares those who are disposed to get stout, of bread, trip, off the crust, prick and those who suffer from liver all over with a fork, and seasuu trouble should give them up en - with butter and salt. Boil borne tirely. nature they appear as an alternate to die. The husk and shell fall ,f e'er 1 should be cast away on a rich new milk, and pour over the 1)o not turn irritable when the Ione desert isle::d I could get slung toast sufficient to make it thorough rakes or biscuits burn. 1Va�t until series. Tito lite and beauty of from. them, but we feel that their vcrvicumfertably if I had any books le. moist. Serve very hot. they turn cold, then gently grate and death of winter. nut this white the grave, beyond the worlds. spring are succeeded by the fading spirits cannot but live on beyond Treacle Pies. --Line ,:orae small away the burnt part with an or - sepulchre only pruves a fostering Strong corroborations as are these "I bay any books, with the eat- saucers with pastry, pet in surae dinary cheese grater. cl (S a Ito inwhichWe phasis onthe warn -out nature is they are nut decisive. ..veva p any advisably, be- treacle and cover w to a fleck Layer To clean a fishy flying pan, fill resuscitated into all the charm anti for absolute assurance upon a tuat- cause 1 have never yet seen any of very flue breadcrumbs, with a with cold water and place on the vigor of new life, and in this alter- ter of such vital mornent. And it book that did not have at least little ginger mixed in them. Orna- fire to boil. When boiling put a nate series the process goea on for- can coma only from one source— something in it worth reading for n/ent toe top with bars of pastry red hot cinder in, then wash in the ever. Nature, then, does nut die, revelation. Should not God speak the pleasure conveyed ituita net error and bake in a sharp oven. usual way. tut is invested with immortality. to those to wham He has given thisknowledgePotatoes Fried Whole.—Peel and If when making children's dress - Man's death, contrariwise, is irrepressible longing and settle it dullest of us havo puppy thoughts parboil potatoes in salted water, es a double piece is placed under shrouded in mystery. No mortal %vith a word of certainty '1 And so Shat pease ourselves, and sotnr- take from the fire and drain dry. men can follow the spirit's track- the Scripture assures us that ate tones we have fancies bright Brush each over with beaten egg, lees path. has dune. "Jesus Christ. bath enough to please others; and we roll in breadcrumbs, drop into Are there, then, any means by abolished death and brought life may be able out of our experience boiling fat, and fry a golden color. which we can get light on this and immortality to light." He de- to put into a bushel of chaff a grain Drain on paper by the fire and great question of immortality 1 Ara Glared the great truth that "all live of tnformatiun that will be of real serve alone, or with chops. there reasonable grounds for the unto God." value. !scrambled Eggs trust that we shall survive death t '1 havo never yet tallied w ---•and Ham.— Philosophy is not against it, for OUR EYES SEE DEATH, anybody from whomI did slot )earn Beat up three eggs and half a the greatest philosophers have be- something; and I have never vet teacupful of finely chopped it ed or lieved in it. Science brings affirma- tive testimony to it. TI1E MODE but God knows only life and sees read a book however dull or st boiled tram. Put a dessertspoonful death but to be a phase of life. parently hopeless, from which Ida of butter into a saucepan, and Death is, then, but.a stage of de- not gain some pleasure or matt. when hot pour into the mixture; stir carefully until the consistency of custard. Pour on to hot butter- ed toast or into scallop shells, and serve at once. Portable Lemonade.—Take half i cies with a flattened orange stick, an ounce of citric acid, four ounces or ivory nail cleaner, to avoid of finely crushed or easter sugar, fscratching furrows on the under and ten drops of essence of lemon. I surface. ntv f.n W velcp:ncnt. We will progress in Lately 1 have read a lung slur} of the conservation of force shows knowledgo in holiness, in happi- no loss or destruction of force or ness or in the evil courses and ten - matter. Energy changes, but does dencies of our earthly lives, and, nut die. Evolution points to a con- in view of this fact, how important start unfolding and progress to becomes the state in which wo en- taincd a wise suggestion for our higher forms of being. The over- ter life—prepared or unprepared, guidance, something really worth mastering desire tor imnes,rrality is. sensual or spiritual, the servants knowing and I fe't that 1 t that was all talk and ruffles, no- thing to it, but having started I travelled on, °eel in the middle of it I came upon five lines that ct one of the strongest grounds for the of God or of the evil one. future life. Just as the lens of the Lastly, in the light of this great eye points to a world to be seen, truth of immortality, what gran - or the wintt of a bird indicates an deur attaches to life! How incal- aerial medium for flight, so con- icuiably it is increased in value clusively does the desire for con- when we see it under the aspect of far more than repaid. tau area "This is not a method of reading that you can, as you Wright say, apply backward. For instance, I remember reading once two lines et poetry that impressed me great- ence prophesy its rea-' eternity 1 What care one should lY, and I thought to myself that lity. Nature is not a lie. She, have to his acts when they are seeds the plan who could write poetry dos not taunt us with false prom- i reaching out into undying ages. like that must be a noble poet; ices. The vitality of the spirit in !: How different become our aims and and so I bought his complete advanced years is another arpu- !plans when they are not to be works, in two volumes, but with tient. "The soul does not age with . broken by death but to he carried some few exceptions I found his poems pretty dry reading. "So it may be that in many books we shall find but a very small gem and a good deal of setting; and I would not counsel reading poor books for the sake of what we may find in them; we shall do better than that if we can get good books. but Ido say that if I were cast posse 10 away on some lone desert island I to their unaided efforts. Here were could get along very comfortably a little group of refugees, poor, it I had any books at alt; for I have despised, puraued. Hero was one never yet seen any book that did of the world's proadest, mightiest, not contain something." richest, wickedest cities. And the handful of refugees so moved upon '•'' the body," wrote Emerson. A !forward on larger scale hereafer ! normal man or woman grows in Junius B. Rernensnyder. I'�IE S. S. LESSON given in the text. The hand of tlto HIE j� JJ</l� Lord was with them. "The hand" is the symbol of power and of work. willing Christians are Cod's hands. Through them God can easily ac - INTERNATIONAL LESSON, conlplish what would be im •b APRIL 25. Lesson iV. What is a Christian? 1. The Tribulations of Christians the city that three centuries later MARVELLOUS FEAT. —V. 19. What befell the disciples its greatest son, Chrvostotn the after Stephen's martyrdom 1 The golden -mouthed preacher, said Surgeon F;xtraeted Tumor Froin disciples were scattered abroad. th at half its population were The Greek verb is based upon the Christian. Woman's Brain. thought of seed -sowing, and indeed IV. The Christian's Source of • Considerable interest has been otery disciple was a seed of truth. Strength.—Vs. 22-21. What did the aroused in the surgical world by an May all Christians be such when Jerusalem Christians do when they operation performed at the Kaiser - they go abroad, traveling either heard of the Gentile Christians at in Augusta Hospital, Berlin, Ger- for business or pleasure. Antioch t They sent forth Barna- many, by the surgeon -in -chief, Prof. II. The Broad Sympathy of Chris -t bits, that. he might (1) learn the ex- Fedor Gra"' The operation was tians.—V. 20. Why does this verso act state of affairs, since rumors,the extirpation of a tumor which begin with "but" (It. V.) rather untrustworthy even in these dayhad grown from the hypophysis of than and l To show the contrast c,f the telegraph, were doubly the brain. doubtful then; (2) encourage the This gland is situated in the new disciples; (3) warn them against error, and (4) prevent dis- cord between the Jewish and (lea tile converts, of which the sequel showed the real danger (Acts 15: 1-25). They might have sent a tet ter, but face-to-face methods are al- ways best. V. The C'hristian's Open Allegi- f between the exiled disciples who out of the water. The shading o to the Jews alone, and her body was exquisite and the pink the men of Cyprus and Cyrene (the spots which have since grown blur- chief city of Libya, the modern red and faded showed up splendid- Ti ipoli, in North Africa, about half- ly. My chief reason, however, for way between Carthage and Alex - congratulation is that she must andria). These men preached also have been one of the worst thieves to the Greeks. in our duck decoy. There is no What were the reasons for this close season for pike on the Stour, broader spirit in them 1 They spoke otherwise she might long have sur- Greek themselves and vivcd as the terror of the wild ducklings which we rear there every Fummer and have missed in large quantities." BRONCIIITIS Bronchi tis is generally the result of a ould cause,! by exposure to wet and inclement •weather, arid is a very dangerous iutlam watery affection of the bronchial tubs.. The Symptoms are tightness across the chest, sharp pains and a difficulty in breathing, and a secretion of thick phlegm, at first white, but Liter of a greenish or yellowish color. Neglected Bronchitis is one of the most general causes of Consumption. ('ure It at once by the use of Dr. Wood's Ilkrgo. P. I). Miller, Atlan.lale, Ont., i!r.: " My husband got a bottle of Dr. p.l's Norway fine Syrup for my littleI wh r hat 11rot,rhitie i'he wheezed so ly you could hear her from one rdx,m to the other, but it was tint lOnii tint it we Multi see the effe.,t your medicine had on her. That was 1.%st winter when us lived in Tonin t o. "She had a bad cold this winter, but in- stead of getting another bottle of Dr. tt'o..l s Norway rine Symp. 1 tried a home made lecefpt which i got from a neighbor but found that her colt lasted about twice as l,ng. ley husband highly praise• 'Dr. 11'.,.3.,• and says he w !leen that a bottle of it ie always kept 1n the house." SYRUP Norway Pine The price of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Ferepi•'L5eernta per h.ttl,. It is put np on a y.11.iw wrapper, thr--, pine trees the trade mark. So, be sure .•r.1 arcept metre of 1i,. rosily S , ititlttes of the original '' Nor. way l'ti.e elbows and under arms a lot of trouble will be saved when the dress begins to wear. Remote grease stains by saturat- ing the spots with alcuhol rather than benzine. Alcohol does nut leave a ring around the spot after- ward. Wash with cold water. Keep patent mustard leaves where you eon get them quickly in the night. Many a naso' of pneumonia has started from "mother's" making a mustard plaster in a cold kitchen. Never use a sharp instrument under the nails. Remove all parti- Mix all thoroughly and pass twice through a clean wire sieve. Two teaspoonfuls of this powder will slake a splendid glass of lemonade at a small cost. Black butter to serve with fish, must b: prepared as follows: Put ounce of butter in a saucepan, and leave it on the stove till the butter 'becomes a dark color, but not burnt. Add a tablespoonful of chopped parsley, a little tarragon vinegar, some ketchup, salt, and cayenne pepper. Serve at once in a small sauceboat or jug. Water Melon Jam.—To every pound and a half of enelon add one pound of sugar, the juice of one lemon and its grated rind. Add one-third of a pint of water to every three pounds of lemon, remove t`..e seeds, and pare thickly so as to re- move all hard parts. Cut the melon up. finely, put all ingredients in a pan together. and when it comes to the boil cook fast for an hour, stirr- ing all the time. Tiles is a delicious jam and one that keeps well. Mutton in a Brown Pot.—Line a greased brown cooking -jar (that has a cover) with a wall of cooked rice. Free some cooked mutton from fat and gristle and chop it finely. Season to taste. Add a little onion juice, and moisten all thoroughly with gravy. Cover with a layer of rice, place the lid on the pot, and bake in a moderate oven for half an hour. Then take the lid off the pot and return to the oven until nicely browned. Send very midst of the skull. The tumor, to table 'n the pot. which was larger than it hen's egg, was reached by forming a very USEFUL. HINTS.large skin bone flap on the right forehead, and temporal region. A stiff paint brush is much better Notwithstanding the depth of the fur cleating down stairs than a turnor, which was buried more than whisk broom. W 3 inches deep in the substance of When cooking flail allow ten so could the brain, the whole of it was sue- minutes to the pound and when converse freely with the Greeks, once. ---Vs. 25, 20. Why did Bats cessfu)ly extirpated by lifting the thick ten minutes over. and intimate knowledge always nabas need helps Because of his anterior part of the brain, and the hang away in their proper places tends to break down prejudice. Tho success. (•;very true worker huilds patient, a woman of about 35, is before you sleep garmcnta you bate up a task greater than he is alone, doing well. , worn in the evening. A great many bternishes may be hope of this was in the mind of Dr. 'Larnenhof, the inventor of the in- ternational n- ternatinna1 language, Esperanto, who lived in the many-languaged city of Warsaw. Moreover, they had been brought up outside of Palestine, the stronghold of Jew- ish prejudices. Besides, they had probably come under the influence of the liberal -minded Paul. k II. The Converting Power of church in us alt Christians.—V. 21. 11 hat was the Antioch for instruction. g tains from nearly d f thet g Y result of this preaching in Anti -!H would must admit tl t 1 and not duplicate him. A large the bottom of three-fourths of all Where the colors are not "fast," of the passer►gera. ,ch 1 A great number believed, part of any worker's success con- litigation." On a longer voyage- -say, to In - and turned unto the Lord. The tea -lists in the wise choice of assist -"And," added the dnetr.r, "a,„f watere a pwhcful u f o each gallon die or Australia—the tips mention - ens for this %sere many: ants and co-workers. He found great deal of eickneas le due to the; washing garments. eel Moonlit be doubled; but more 1. The Christians svho established' Saul in Tarsus, which seems to effluvia from the ++ 1 A barn is greatly improved if he Antioch church had been ground. after t,Fing boiled it is wrapped in Borne should not be given, however, long hair been his headquarters since 1 PI •ty ei�g t'en h l !,y perseeutionsr j his escape from the Jerusalem plot i buttered paper and baked for and benefits the world by creating This is described as one of the work for others. most extraordinary operations of Why did he seek Sault Because its kind that have occurred in the of his acquaintance with hint. Be- history of surgery. cause of Saul's wonderful experi- ence. Be'ause Saul was precisely adapted to the need of Antioch. Because he was different frotn Bar- nabas, more logical probably, a letter teacher, and the1 was readyi . He won supplement Barnahas -a---- — UF TO THE GROUND. "'Cho soil.” remarked the poli- tical economist, "is what supports I'utato water is excellent for want to make some acknow•ledg. old, and don't remember having "Yeti," rejoined the lawyer, "1 cleaner mud a ment of the many little thins the told a lie." ,a rea estate is at any kind of cloth or garment ° or comfort and amusement "That's ton bad." the young man replied. "C'an't you have t•olne- thing done for your memory." It takes a woman to have faith in a roan when she hasn't. When making coffee acid a pinch of salt to it before pouring on the water. A spoonful of kerosene in boiled starch keeps it from sticking, but do not use enough to make it smell. When ironing a starched gar- ment and part of it becomes dry do not dampen with water, but with a cloth wet with a little cold starch. This will keep all parts of the garment of equal stiffness. If one wishes a little stiffness in the veil which is being washed add a tiny bit of sugar to the rinsing water. Then stretch the flinty sub- stance in a doorway. where it will havo a free current of air as it dries. After washing lace curtains lay a curtain en the floor in some empty room, spread the curtains on the blanket, stretching them carefully, and they will keep their place with- out any fastenings until dried. .y WHERE TIPS ARE INEViTABLE What is Expected of You on Ocean Liners. Every passenger who travels on an ocean liner, even in the third class, is expected to tip the stewards, and the expectation is seldom disappointed. Few people save old travelers, however, know how much they ought to give. In the first and second class on Atlantic liners $2.50 to the table steward, and the same to your state -room steward is the proper I+ fee. If you gine more, you will not benefit the man materially; for as a rule, all tips are pooled, and The old lady with the pale blue shared round among the stewards. umbrella had been standing at the The bath -room steward should have stationery counter for ten minutes. 60 cents, the smoking -room steward "I want to be waited on," she 60 cents or $1.25, according to the snapped impatiently. demand made on his services. "Certainly, madam," hastened if the stewards have provided an the tall floorwalker. "1)o you wish orchestra for the passengers, as a stationery clerk?" they often do, a collection is usual- "Stationary clerk! Gracious ! ly made at the end of the voyage. They all seem stationary. They It is not don't want to move." Afflicted for rears with a Diseased liver. Mr, L. R. Dzeitt, Berlin, Ont., better known, perhaps, as "awallpuz IL,,," has aged MILBURN'S LAX A—L ICER PILLS Ile .s h also used e 1 th m for his petiole. a'. t , n 4 when nursing thew, and it is a well known Piet that amain -pax sufferers must, keel, the b.ovels well regulated. Read what he says ;—" 1 have been afflicted for year+ with a di.e.eetl liver. and have tried all kiuda of ntedieine, but of no avail until ab.iut four years ago 1 tried your Laza-Liver P)11a, a, rl �rot iu, trent rt lit f. bunco then I have nursed tlr0i•rent patients afflicted with small -pox, and in each ruse I have usol your valuable pille. "My wishes aro that all persons suffering with stomach or liver troubh s e ill try Mil. burn's Iaxa-Liver Pills. 1 will advertise then whenever and wherever I have an opportunity and I hope that if at any time 1 cannot get the pills, I will be•'urtunate enough to get the formula." Milburn'. Laxa•Liver Pills are °5 cents par vial or 6 vials for $1.0tt, at a!1 or will be mantel direct by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Out. STEEPLEJACK'S BIGGEST JOU. Decorating the Nelson Monument With Forty 'Cons of Laurel. "The biggest job 1 have under- taken," declares one English steeplejack, "has been the decorat- ing and repairing of the Nelson column in Trafalgar Square, Lon- don. Nearly forty tons of laurel were used and the greater portion of this had to be carried aloft and fixed to the column at varying heights up to the top. " I thought out many plans," he said in the Wide World Magazine, "but eventually decided to lash ladders to the structure by, means of ropes passed 'round and 'round it. It was a ticklish, trying job, but it was accomplished without hitch or mishap of any kind. "Two sets of ladders were used, placed opposite to one another. This was necessary, as the column measured forty feet in circum- ference—too far to pass a rope around with ease. The most diffi- cult part of the as,;ent to negotiate was the cornice at the top of the column. This is the heaviest projec- tion for throwback work in Eng- land and I had to climb up and over it with my back to the ground, for all the world like a fly on a ceil- ing. "I am not ashamed to confess that I breathed more freely when I had rounded the obstruction and was able cautiously to slide myself onto the platform which supporta the statue. From below this ap- pears flat. but it is really bevelled with a sharp slope outward. "1 found it, too, covered with an in.•h thick )Ryer of greasy soot, so that to walk about on it was ex- ceedingly risky. However, onto I got the lifeline secured to the sta- tue all was plain sailing. dircovered a crack in the hero's arm, which i repaired. When 1 tell people this they not infre- quently ask on the spur of the mo- ment, 'Which arm 1' Of course the figure has only one." LIKE STATUES. removed with a rubber on a lead usualto give less than pencil. 81.23. A little borax boiled in the coffee Do not tip any of the sailors pot twice a week, fifteen minutes, aboard. Most of them dislike it; sweetens and purifies it. they would telt Combs soon warp and break if you they are not washed in water. A good stiff nail flunkeys. But they war, if you brush cleans them well. appreciate a good cigar, ,sou i FORGETFUL. "Young man," began the aged gentleman, "I ant seventy years which they a< met with unfln►ch- � hour. en very exceptional demands' have ing bravery and fidelity. !labored f): 30), and the splendid pair YOUR DANGER BE-' Table linen in order to bring out been made upon the stewards. 2. The eery %ices of antioeh ! l tbored together in Antioch fur a ! showed the need of a purifting °hale year and taught much the bright glues that makes it at govpcl, and doubtless many were Irrupt... disgusted wit h them and eager to What is the most important fact ,*,sled in regard to this Antioch turn from them. The strongest church ' That the disciples were Christians often grow up ammidid conor II d ( I BACK ACHES tractive should be dampened eon- ; siderably. Before mixing canned tomatoes • with any dish tri putting in a ruptiun. "it takes lite fish to c iris tans first in Antioch. pinch of soda. 11'ilt prevent many t„ i .1 name, stint a elan or a body of 11 Is the First and the Sure Sign of a failure. swim up stream." Witness the 'nice i, called, is alu.►ys significant. Kidney Disease. Embroideries and colored gar - ed Theshould be amid the barbarities of the 1•'i tr_, ,Cala.. V• ji Islands, of Madagascar. and of { s Kidney Pills arae. g * taker. ('ganga. 11'hnt app To re'litee neuralgia, light 3. The people of Antioch were lid their ('hristianity carne to the' pir'ee of brown paper, blow out the I + t :Antioch church 1 A great dearth ! cure the aching back by curing the re hing flame. and inhale the smoke energetic, vigorous. in the habit of throughout all the world . . , inki.tneys heneat 1 _fes it ie really the kid- through the nostrils. I ('(+fiE:Ttti. doing things. The aggressive char- 'the days of Claudius, the Roman area aching and not the back. \Thep,) gibing babies a bath if Vanity bear+. Cowers, but no frust. atter of Christianity appealed to 'emperor who reigned A. D. 41-54.� They set directlly on the ki,lness and mothers would place a towel in the 11'isdom follows experience. If them. and when they' acteptett the The faurne probably occurred in' nese them c'ttrrwdf to heals , ehnty t,'.ttorn of the hath it would pre• is would only hatch up' new religion, they can sed into it Judea 1. 1) 44-40 Josephus tells' j B scut baht' from afi . „n Try to the same activity hat had brought• a that the Syrian queen Melena the whore system.t t g get rich in a year and you success in the w•orell% enterprises; When boiling .alt meat or pork will go broke in ret months. I u( Adiabene. n Jewish prosehle Aire. Frank Pix,,,, R„cxiaide, N B., allow' twenty minutes to each !"oath and folly think that 810 al Antioch. In his collet; , u{tgiutts who a as then in Jcruralc,n, ern_ writes: - " 1 was a great sufferer witb ' t, work, P'rVfessor Drum -e a1N'ays barkaohe for over a rear, altd oonld got'poand. Salt meat should always and twenty years will last f,•ret'er. sought to win for (!,; . argon I ported cora and figs from Egypt nothing to relieve me until 1 took two c put on in told water. g, anti l'e pros, which she distributed bolted of th,an's Kidney Tilt: and now 1 dol To cool an oven while bakingY-;~ at Met ie. popular young 11e11. the l anlnng the pcupin to leave thein from not feel any pant whatever, and ran sat and itaser.. no matter hew wild theyistartation.Weyer trate the door open, but cool Boarder —"What's for breai.fa•t1 were ; and his tagat•ity always ' .tree well; something 1 could not do before. ! it by the gratis, or removing one proved itself. } Vi I. Are You a Christian r This f 4. but the chief reason „ i account of the Antioch church is t tf fin- the mirror in which we may view our - growth of - rho Antioch euure.i is teller. Are we true tv ('hriet amid • • s. 'le 3U; Il: 25. 1 opportunity to .how the fruit; DOan GOOD TIME:. In an Trish daily paper there re- cently appeared this advertise- ment ; "Wanted --A gentleman to undertake the sale of a patent me- dicine; the advertiser guarantees it will be pro6tahle to the under - HEADACHE. What Medlcat "klfl Conld Not Ito f'ae Accomplished with Burdock Blood Bitters. If you are troubled with 11r.e14(lie do rr t hesitate to i:s.. R 11.lt. It is n•, new, r -.- duct, of unknown value. but has an trio!). light(' reputation. COULD NOT %OON. MI.. Marin! Wright. Hosts... ' n..'Hies: '• 1 was vies .,.d run dewu, wonid harm H•a4 Hope ll'1t not setts,. • tetter t.ta'a In any ',tenth. Rooney I)nsn s Kidney l',lls are tr) genu her box of the pintr. over the erten. aP t hent and eggs i iyeets belt,' n,r eros and p.,•,• to a,y tact. or 1 taxes for 11.25 st all dealers er mailed , Vinegar will reine1c the dib ham and Beggsnttl,isVcmornin not due•° es ilm.lr,rt 1. wt wy ea ting 0alla'nd direct on recef t of prig.. by The boon Kid. ' reutJ nut ai•e , wt nl ht 9evenl Aoetnra agreeati1 o<tnr , f paraffin from suns no n& p. my fill C.c, Toronto, Ont. Ilunrdrr -"Than): fe sale, ry • What and n,. the aditr. rr a irlei.d 1 rot t)Iree earthen and fin ware Dip a rag it 1& i S 1,•4tle...t 11 -,'net, 11,004 kitte:s •ud they tr%ant !lam. 0O cut tn. .i,,.:. a e,, to