Exeter Times, 1909-05-13, Page 7ABS1UT MOTIO FOR THE PEOPLE
SECU1TYI
Ccnu!no
Garter's
i Little Liver Piles.
fF1' st Roar SIGrietore of
Set Fx-S'rrao wrerp;r Pelow.
11.'7 am:.Il xma oa eddy
to take A_ sugar.
,a l „ FOR HEtAC}lfs
ITT( F. FOX SIlto.:al;I 3.
FOR TORPID !PIER.!PIER.lrtf ; I:cS CUCTIFA ION.
-` �•
FOR SALLtTY•! MC
'_'r FOR YIICC(i:`'.PLEXltlil'
cent; Yurc;T Fjob
CURT:, SICK HEADACHE.
FOUNDER OF BOY SCOUTS.
Baden-Powell Great Be -
hitter in English Boys.
Th. -re is no greater believer in
the p.• : ibilitirs of trio boys of
Gr.—t, Britain than Lieutenant-
(:en'•ra! Baden-Powell. the founder
of the troops of boy scouts through-
out the country. And there is 110
More picturesque personality in
military annals to -day than the
man who has shown boys that
while "playing at soldiers" they
eau train great knowledge, and de-
sel:,p their budies while developing
their minds. Not only is the cle-
feeder of Maf,king a brilliant sol-
dier, but he is a very fine artist, as
well as actor. Once, when quar-
tered at Aldershot, a man, anxious
to draw the General's attention to
some gun, always waylaid him on
his afteehoon walk. This hap-
pened so often that the General
one day disguised hirnsalf as a
navvy previous to going out for his
usual walk On his way back he
encountered the man. Slouching
his shoulders and assuming a fero-
cioes expression. tie strolled up to
him. "Are you the chap wot's
looking for Baden-Powell 7." he
apt. "For if you are, he has
•nt the out to keep the road dear
'int." He was never again di -
rhed 'n his afternoon walk. The
Ila•:[ Lieutenant -General, by the
way, has two favorite mottoes.
One is, "Don't flurry : patience
wins the day," and the other. "A
smile and a stick will carry a man
through almost any difficulty."
ALEXANDRA'S BOUDOIR.
The Queen's boudoir at Sandring-
ham is said to be the favorite room
er Alexandra, and she passes n
great deal of time there with her
Friend and confidante, Charlotte
It:nollys. The room is in apple
green and white with some price
less brie -a -brae, and the furniture
iu of the Marie Antoinette style.
Queen Alexandra likes to retire to
this roust in the afternon and rare
i) takes the 5 o'clock tea with the
ladies Of her house party, Prin-
cess Victoria or Queen Maud of
Norway acting for her.
Jew—
HIS OWN TEETH.
"Well, did he pay you 1" asked
• the wife of a dentist who had been
to collect a bill for a full set of
•
false. teeth that he had made for n
man s'tnost a year before.
► .
"Pay me!" growled the dentist.
"Not only did he refuse to pay me,
but he actually had the effrontery
to gnash at me—with my teeth!"
IN DOUBT.
"Was there ever any insanity in
your f
amity 1
"I don't know. You sec none of
us has ever been tried for murder."
r
p
COLU tJT iiU TU ¥IEIII
BACK WAS SO WEAN.
is the primary rause of k:•ir.,•v
t'hen the back action or becomes
earning that the kidneys are
.nine aft- t•••l.
•.I ! t.- wartJn, i cheek the Backache
plirt
n 1 •i:•;••.•a ut at., • hai.cos of further
rt..t..
11 you don't, aerioatl complications are
cty apt to its-. and the tint thing you
now you will Lea. Dropsy, Diabetes nr
right's !urease, the three most deadly
-arms of Kidney 'r:onble,
Mr. ,Tarn -s Bryant. Ari:hat, N.S., was
troubled with his bi.,k and used Doane
Kidney Pills, hn writes —" I cannot say
too much about the benerit 1 received after
using three !sixes of Ihetn'e Kidney 1'.11.
I was gr.•►tly troubled w'th an aching pain
acr.os+ the small of my tack. I could net
go to work and my kt•-k was so weak i
would have to sit down it would go away •
for a f'w lave hut .to,d•I always raisin.
I w.t' c-.lvi el to try : •en's kidney fill.
and 1 mud sly they ••••inI.!ately antra me." '
IPri•-o :.•) conte p-•• i -.s ora F.•'Se. for
$1.23 nt all deal"r. ,.• evol...; du• -.t ".'
tecttipt of prs o 1n I r.s Doan Kid.. y 1' ;:
Co., '1' a urate, OM.
PLEAFOR CANADIAN NAVYmnarryearly
and areivenin dwhen
marriage,
they are bound to be affected by new
surroundings and ideas. A young
1•NDER DIRECTION OE TIIE nation, like a young utas, should be
« Fear Not ; For They That Be With Us Are More BRITISH ADMIRALTY.something were than a chip off the
old block.
In Canada there is a remarkable
Than The; That Be With Them'' inter -marrying of people and of
Y U. U. Mann, Esq., Vice -President ideas, which is a revelation to many
— Canadian Northern R. It., in older fashioned Canadians; aril is
Test: "And Elisha prayed, and I of 'Tarsus looks up to gaze upon the l Magazine. lluu
\uuadoubly a revelation to those who
Bair : Lord, 1 pray thee, open his Cross of Calvary, and sees the suf uxiue. come to us with the ideas and some -
eyes that he may see. And the Tering Jesus upon it, crying "Saul, Thule who anticipate a Canadian lintel with the prejudices of the
Lord opened the eyes of the young Saul, why persocutest thou ate 1" navy' as pre-eminently an engine of British Islands The immigration
span ; tied he saw ; and, behold, the The natural eye sees an aged dis- Canadian patriotism may have a returns of this century show that in
mountain was full of horses and elide upon a lonely isle, banished, different point of view from many Canada, and chiefly in Western of fire." 11 Kings, VI, 17. dying, but John's anointed eye perial city, Canada, there is a new population
'i a will not stop to contemplate looks through Glory's open door a Id all the time think of the of those who, in the ImEmpi
periale first as varied in speech and racial char -
the remainder of the narrative, how ares the ..sags that [Gust shortly and its component parts secondar- acteristies as was and can be found
the same !laud that led the heavenly come to pass. ily. There is no necessary incom- in the most cosmopolitan city of the
reinforcement smote the Syrian host The natural eye sees history as patabilitybetween the two points Old World. The Bihlo Society
with blindness, how Elisha led the accidental clash of the strife of of view. The problem of Imperial Publishes the Script in eighty
them into Samaria,
and disperst.d men through the ages, but the eye o: statesmanship is to converge diver- lifferent languages for use in the
them, giving them rations, and faith sees God, —within the shies of approach into confederated Dominion.
bidding them go to their homes in shadows, keeping watch above His action. I wish to indicate the lines The immigrants from Continental
peace. own." upon which, it seems to toe, the Europe, when they know anything
It is about blind eyes and how The natural eye sees a body with creation of a Canadian navy might about England, know of it as a for -
God opens them that 1 wish you to the last hr•.•ath leaving it, a bit oft oat ibute to this end. eign country, and many of them
think to -day. clay, waiting to be returned to In the Unite States one occasion -
new
no friendly ideas about their
The natural eye ser, a poor youth mother earth, but the divine touch ally finds persons who believe that new' connection with it. During
asleep in the desert with a rock for ed eye sees a released soul sweep -Canada pays money tribute to King the last ten years nearly half n 'int-
impillow, but the anointed eye,of ing through the gates, washed in :.11.1
Jacob sees a ladder. reaching to blood of the Lanib
Heaven's gate, with angels ascendTlll? NATJH:\L lil'I'.
ing and descending bet %Veen hint and
the Great Throne ,.t God. sees a planet in a mist of sin, going
The natural eye sees only a poor on in giddy aimlessness, but. th,
Hebrew among fierce lions about to anointed eye sees a Christ, taking
tear hint limb from limb, but the the earth in His arms and carrying
God -protected Daniel sees the angel it back to the Great Father to join
of the Lord walking through the den a thousand and other worlds,
closing the mouths of the Feasts and "forever singing as they shine.
bringing God's hero out of the or- "The Hand that made us is divine.' " lishmen amongst us has not proceed -
deal in triumph. Opi n eyes in what we need. Faith
The natural eye sees two lonely is having open eyes. "Now faith is ed as far as, knowing the views of
women on their way to a tomb at the substance of things hoped for, the leaders of o ui-sel in England,
break of day, mur,nering "who shall and the evidence of things not we have taught ourselves to expect.
seen." They are not seen by the We are sometimes said to be pro
eye of the body; they are seen by
the eye of the soul.
When a young man's eyes are
open to the great fact of Gad.
he sees all essential spiritual
truth. "Oh, it is so hard to be-
lieve," said a youth. But it is far
harder not to believe. "In the be-
ginning, God," is the most rational
declaration we can make. Designs
come from minds; the earth is a
great design ; therefore the earth is
the produce of mind.
Your eye's should be open to
the good in yourself. We have
been preaching total depravity
too long. "As a mon thinketh in
his hea.t, so is he." if we tell [nen
that there is nothing good in them,
they have a ready apology for their
sin. The seed of the divine is in us.
There is the germ of goodness in
us. All we need is to have the Sun
of Righteousness t:► shine o
Edward ; and it is always an emus -
ado!
Americans have come to ('an
ing experience to undeceive thein. ado, with something of the prejudice
There is a certain amount of belief against British institutions that.
in Canada, that the Englishman re -
Fourth
from the public reading on
gards this Dominion rather as a every Fourth of July of the Uecla
subordinate than as a partner in the ration of Independence, with its in -
Empire. What is sometimes alleged terminable criticism of George the
to be the unpopularity of the Third. Then, there aro two mil -
Englishman in Canada most likely lion French-Canadians, to whom
arises from tae fact that the educe -
who,
English is a foreign language, and
tion in Imperialism of some Eng who, though they are more than
loyal to the form of government
that has achieved so much success
in Canada, are not dominated by
British ideas in the same way that
the naive -born Britisher is. In the
vincial. There is troth in the critic- descendants of the United Empire
isni. Wo sometimes think that the Loyalists, trio devotion to British
Londoner is the most provincial of ideals of justice and methods of
all men, because he has the least goverement has not produced that
appreciation of the great place which quality in the relation to the
communities outside London occupy Mother Country which makes the
in Britain itself and in Australian and South African of the
second and third generation speak
THE EMPIRE. GENERALLY. and write of
It is easier for the Englishman to
ENGLAND AS "HOME."
think of the Empire as n whole Now, Canada presents herself to
that[ it is for the native born Cana the incoming American and Galician
dian. The place of England in the —to take two extreme types—in an
world was achieved long ago. Eng- exceedingly favorable light. Each
land is also the centre of the Em conies to better his material con -
provincialism
If anything could destroy ditioti ; and unless he is incompet-
provincialistn of mind in a than it ens, or worse, he succeeds. Fin -
should be his residence in the capi- apicisl prosperity will go a long
tal of such a country. Sometimes way to reconcile a mon to the in -
we wonder that the great advant- stititiuns of an alien country. But
ages of such a position do not lead the Galician and the American find
to more Imperial thinking. We something more than better fiman-
intagine also that if the average via! prospects. The Galician be-
I:nglishman could realize a little comes a new man. The bugbear of
n us. more than he seems to have done, military service does not rise up
--- — —^' when he first comes to Canada, behind him, or before his children.
THE S S. , I ESSON le somebody in order to have an that the Empire has become what He is in a world of unexpected in-
enemy. One must be n force before it is because those who preceded dependence. Be knows nothing
1 ho can be resisted by .another him conquerel wild parts of the about the Empire, and he cares less.
1\ force." (earth, far removed from the Brit -But he :toes learn something about
How did Paul's enemies succeed? ish Islands; and that what has been Canada, and contentment with, and
INTERNATIONAL LESSON, persuaded the people. Per- clone in the Briton's beyond the devotion to ,the land of his adop-
MAY 16. haps, as the stoning of Stephen seas within living memory is of a tion are as much as can reasonably
must have moved Paul toward' part with the achievements of men be expected from hill: for some time.
Christianity. the stoning of Paul and women whose remoteness from A British imperial instinct cannot
Lesson VII. Paul's First Mission- ;vas the turning point in the life of to -day gave thein a heroic aspect, be created in him in a moment.
Timothy. The young man may have the modern Empire would be even The American is verydifferent
dry Journey. Golden Text, been among the disciples who stood •
greater in his e; es than it is. from the Galician. He thinks he has HOW '1'V USE DRY liltt✓All.
Psalm 96: 5. round about him, to give what aid Canada is a new country. Such observed England through the as-
ifhcould, and caro for his body prestige as she has in the Empire soctions of the Declaration of In- Fried Bread and Apples.—Cut
if he were really dead. and in the world is almost entire -
What had been glined by this dependence, and through the canon- bread in slices and brown with
In -
first missionary journey! 1. Tho ly of modern making; and even eta achieved by various Heiresses butter inn skillet. fare and slice
great enterprise ofjourney
foreign missions though our views on Imperial ques- whom he knows by repute. He was apples; put them over the bread,
washad
startod . i The missionary tions may not bo quite as broad brought up in the tradition that sprinkle with cinnamon and one and
leaders had reccised their first ex- and lisinterested as those of states- Canada never did and never could one-half cupfuls of sugar and pour
perienco, had learned much, and men who have grown up in the most amount to much; and, when he be- over nue cupful of water. Cover
had furnished a glorious example fortunate school in the world, we , came convinced that the country and cook slowly until apples soften.
to others. 3. Tho borders of the know, because we live here, that we hal fertile lands, good markets and Turn out with apples on top.
church had been greatly enlarged, are engaged i•i a constructive work excellent dividends to offer for his used as tracker Crumbs.—Save
brim; extended to Cyprus and Ga- for the Empire, which, by cumparl- enterprise, he moved in, still think- all scraps of bread. When you have
lana. 4. Tho borders of Christian son, is not second to that which ;ing of the United States as the first, enough put them in a pan ani toast.
fellowship had been enlarged to a is being accomplished by those who, second and third country of all the When cool roll them with rolling pin
still greater degree by the tree ad 1 do their eapitnl• world• and keep in box. They are always
rnissiou of the Gentiles. 5. This 1f we did not approach Imperial But in 11'estern Canada lie finds ready for use for veal loaf, frying,
outreach of activity and thought questions fr,.m the standpoint of himself in an atmosphere more and the like. Use same as cracker
broadened the horizon of the bunco "Canada First." .,•e should be very -agreeable than he expected. If he crumbs.
church, and greatly stimulated its inferior Imperialists. Under any. has any acquaintance with new set- Heal Economy. --!:very housekeep-
energies and depened its piety. circumstances, our geographical 1 tlements in the Western and North- er is confronted with the problem of
Max Muller says that only mission- and climatic distinction plus our, western States 1►e is delighted to how to dispose of stale bread. One
ary religions are living religions; ;tnearness to an extraordinary re- find that law and order, in the shape, way of utilizing this ever-accumulat-
all others arc dying. 6. All t hese public of eighty millions of people, "f the Royal Northwest Mennted ing by product of the larder is to
gains had tome nor without (Meld_ I would determine our development Police, preceded the settler. In new! put the ...oroughly dried pieces of
ty, but through cunfeeration, self- I on somewhat different lines from towns he finds churches more num.! bread through the universal food
sacrifice, courage, and conftdetrt those which mark the progress of erous than saloons. On the illimit-1 grinder and use the "meal" thus
trust.. There were obstacles at the Old and.of aheble prairie, where he finds that in 1 p►ociced in any batter compound,
m illry be step everyi Christians path THi: BEST ('HiLDREN. i in [extent }itenip liirty-six ensquare
reside, the suchdaan d biscuit sponge, ile cakes, hind ieig n
Cut we can ov me
t rm them as well are nut nlwnys the most exact re- � parents can successfully demand n cookers in the proportion of about,
as the first missionaries, for we productions of their parents, even i school, for the maintenance of equal parts of bread crumbs and
have the sante omnipotent Lea<I'r----,__ _. ___-_ ; which one -eighteenth of all the land flour. This method has the advent -
and Friend.
was set aside when the country was age over others where expensive
advent -
HAD GIVEN UP (first surveyed. new material must be idled to make
,I, ALL HOPE O!'' 'To be continued). a palatable dish.
LIVING. — 46.--
roll tis away the stone?" but the
eye of faith secs a mighty angel
overturning the obstacle and open-
ing the sepulchre for the rising of
THE LORE) OF GLORY.
The natural eye sees men raging.
like demons about the prostrate
form of a poor evangelist, but the
('twist -touched eye of Stephen les
"Heaven opened, and the Son of
God standing at the right hand of
God."
The natural eye sees a poor
apostle bound with chains, sleeping
between two sentinels, doors locked
and bolted, and four quaterians of
soldiers without, but the anointed
eye sees the angel of the Lord open-
ing the doors, removing the check -
les, leafing the captive through tl:e
corridors, out thr••ugh the opening
gates to freedom.
The nature! eye sees a flash, the
physical ear hears a voice but Sail
•&S+.44,44441
11J Home
SPICING VEGETABLES.
Fried Eggplant.—One medium Of The
size eggplant. Pare and slice, then
boil till tender, wash good, then THROAT and LUNGS.
add two eggs, salt, and pepper to
taste, and crack crumbs enough to Coughs and Colds do not call foe
snake a batter of mixture, and trop a minute recital of symptoms as they sr•
spoonfuls in deep fat and fry till trice known to everyone, but their dangers aro
brown and serve hot. not understood so well. All the most
Grandmother's Dandelions.—'Take serious afoctions of the throat, the lungs
about three pounds choice salt pork and the bronchial tutee, see, in the Logits
wash, put in kett, and cover with ring, but coughs and colds.
boiling water. \1'hleeu ked Too much stress cannot be laid upon the
add a peck tender laudalmosteliouscoothat admouition to all persons affected by the
have been thoroughly washed in insidious earlier stages of throat and lung
several waters. Cook about three disease, as failure to take Fuld at onto will
fourths of an hour. cause many years of suffering, and in the
Creamed String I3eans—Melt a
lump of butter, size of an egg, in a end that terrible scourge of "Consume}
large saucer pan. Add two quarts t1on
of string beans, after they have Ur. ;Food's Norway Pine Syrup Is
been washed and thoroughly dried. not Sold as a Cure for Consumption
Stir to prevent burning, cooking ten
minutes. Then cover well with boil -but for affections tributary to, and that
result in, that disease. It combines all the
ing water and cook until tender,
adding small teaspoonful of salt a lung healing virtues of the Norway pine
few minutes before the water is trco with other absorbent, expectorant and
boiled down, aiming to have but soothing medicines of recognized worth,
and is absolutely harmless, prompt and
little to pour off. Dress with cup of
cream or rich mile. safe. So great has been the success of this
Baked Spinach.—Pick over care- wonderful remedy, is enatural that
ro
nuoroua persons have trifedd to imitate it.
fully and wash free from sand one Don't bo humbugged into taking anything
peck of spinach. Cook in a granite but "Dr. Woods." I'ut up in a yellow
kettle until dune, which will be wrapper; three pine trees the trade mark;
about twenty minutes if it is ten E"ice 25 cents.
der. Pour into a strainer to dram, ---
then empty into a chopping bowl. come ott with it, leaving trust
Chop it tine ani nod rive hard beautifully clean and ready to slice.
boiled eggs chopped- fine, plenty of _._
butter, salt, and pepper to taste. CHEESECLOTH HELPS.
Put into a well buttered baking l egetable Bags.—Small cheese -
dish and set in the oven for about cloth or salt bags dipped in cold
a quarter of an hour. When taken water are fine to keep lettuce, cel -
from the oven garnish with a few ery, radishes, and the like on the ice.
yolks and add to same one-third They are touch less trouble than a
hard boiled eggs. Dash a little pep dish and the contents keep longer
per and salt over thein and send than any other way.
to the table. Serve with vinegar. For the Refrigerator.—To keep the
Spinach in Eggs.—Cook spinach and inside of refrigerator clean
until thoroughly done in salted
pipe g
water as for ordinary use. While make a cheesecloth bag to fit the
inside of the ice chamber and put
this is boiling, hard boil one dozen the ice in it. The bag can easily
eggs; remove the shells and cut in be taken out and washed and all
halves, removing a small slice fro' sediment from the ice soill be found
the end of each egg and standing lin it instead of in trap and pipe.
them upon a platter. Remove the Especially nice for those using
DR. WOOD'S
NORWAY
PINE SYRUP
Is A Remedy Without An
Equal For COUGHS,
COLDS, And All Affection
youlks and odd to same one-third
teaspoonful of ground mustard, one
large tablespoonful of butter, one-
third teaspoonful of sugar, and a
pinch of salt. Beat this mixture
thoroughly together, then add
enough vinegar to make it about
the consistency of soft mashed
potatoes. Thoroughly drain the
spinach, seasoning with butter ; fill
the egg cups previously arranged on
platter, taking care to heap up in
utile green mounds, waving the
whites of the eggs Like white cups.
Then put the yolks, prepared as
above, in ricer and squeeze over the
entire platter. This is an attractive
looking dish and most delicious.
Introduction. — The greater the
work a man endeavors to do, the
greater the obstacles that he will
meet, and the more numerous they
,will bo. It is a principle of phy-
sics that resistance increases as
the square of the velocity. Paul's
.work, like that of all true Chris -
titins, was very great, and therefore
.1 encountered formidable ob-
stacles. But these hindrances were
overcome, in Christ's strength ; and
the process of overcoming them
strengthened Paul, as it will
strengthen us.
I. The Obstacle of Disobedience.
—Vs. 1-7. Whither did the mission-
aries Iles when driven from Anti-
och 1 To Ieunium, about seventy-
iive miles southeast. For most of
the way they traveled along the
great human road connecting Anti-
och with I.ystra, turning from it to
the left before reaching 1.ystra.
!conium was an important com-
mercial city, situated aiming luxur-
iant orchards. The Seljuk Turks
made it the capital of their em-
pire. The modern town, still called
Konia, is greatly shrunken. It is
the terminus of a railway to the
Bosphorus.
11. The Obstacle of Temptation
to Pride.—Vs. 8-18. To what, new
surroundings did Paul and Ilar-
nabas go 1 To a region of Lycno-
nia, region being a technical term,
a part of the country "consisting
of two cities and a stretch of city -
less territory (i.e., territory organ-
ized on the native pre -Greek vil-
lage system).'' Lystra was the ca-
pital of Lycaonia, Wolf -land, the
name being supposed to be derived
from Lycaon, who was transformed
into a wolf --a name well befitting
BOY BU•itNED DOWN STUMPS.
Iowa Farmer llnd to Pay More
Than Ile Expected.
An Iowa farmer had a [hundred
or more stumps he wanted to get
rid of, and as he had no time to
dig them out himself ho offered a
neighbor's boy 50 cents each to
the inhabitants. The missionaries; clear them away. Ile figured that
went theither "as sheep In the, the lad [night grub out two a week.
m (lst of wolves" (Matt. 10: 16). It lint he wasn't up to date. The boy
was a wild region, cut off by tho teak an augur and bored a deep
Taurus from the Here cultivated bolo in the top of every stump and
('ilicia and l'isidia. it Has a dreary then poured in kerosene. Each
plain, destitute of trees and fresh stumped soaked up about a gallon,
water. with only salt lakes. and at the end of n week was thor-
n!. The Obstacles of Hatred and eughlyrfpermeat burned like ti When
Persecution — Vs 19-48. Whaton set
•h ••t. the intensity of the opposi- and in the course of a fortnight
t.••,i Pastl had nrou'cd in .Antioch 1 every sturnp was simply a pile of
Tat hi= e•i"reties had followed him ashes. A month had clone the
up. t!'••• ;•!u ;t was n:are than one whole business. Seeing how ease
be: •I i •'• 1• . h+ read. "Wee nnto t}•e j••h had been the farmer
: r • '.w -'t'.) all men
.
' :i ee moat
f;'• Irl to pay, but n laws,';. 1.r.
itand also mc.de him n +
Heart Trouble Cured by
MILBURN'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS
Mrs. Andrew Savoy, Grattan's. N.It..
writes: in 1110 year of ISM i was taken
sick and did not think i could live any
length of time. My trouble was with m
heart and people told mo that nothing co.i1d
he done for a ea+e like mine. I consulted
the very bc,;t doctors but they could do me
no good. For enven weeks 1 could hardly
rro.. the floor. i hail no pain. hot was so
weak nobo'iy in the world can believe how
i felt. i hal given lip all hopes of living
and had given my little girt to my sestet -in•
lrw.
ine day a friend came to see me, and call -
cg we by name. said, ' home, If 1 were you
would try a dose of Milburn's Heart and
Nerve l'iUs as they are Roel for heart
trouble.' My husband got me a hos. but
for two days 1 was not feeling any htttrr,
hat on the fourth day my he.:haa,1 said. ' 1
b,licvn those pills are doing you good.' 1
WWI able to ray ' lies, 1 feel a gond deal
better this morning ile raid. • N'ell,1 will
get inn another bot right away.' 1 took
two boxes and three doses not of the third
one. and 1 was perfectly west and have not
been Yl' -k .inee then.
1 will news he althrntt then ttr my heeiu,
t,r (led knows If It had not h"e.s for Mil-
h•.n.'s rieart and Nerve Pi'I.. 1 welled not
have been alive now."
Price Stt•e .drper hos.
t b"se• for Sl •'S.
►',- T tt:;••nrn rn.,
1.'ri:•r•e 'r.•.'•nto. (b.f.
s
FIRST USE OF "MAJESTY."
The title "majesty" was first
used of the Emperors of Germany.
The first King to receive it was
Louis Xl. of France, about 1403. It
was first used of an English sover-
eign in 1520 on the Field of Cloth
of Gold when Francis I. so ad-
dressed Henry VIIi. James I.
adopted the present English style
if Sacred or Most Excellent Ma-
jesty. Henry ViII. was commonly
addressed its Dread Sovereign.
KITCHEN TIME SAVERS.
Kitchen Table. -1f housekeepers
who have natural wood kitchen
tables would cut n Icmon in two
and rub over the surface, rinsing
well with clean warm water, the
result would be a snowy- white board
without the rough top made by con-
tinue.] scrubbing with a brush.
Hint for Whip Cream. ---Whip
cream in the upper part of a double
boiler having fine ice or cold water
in lower part. The greater depth
prevents the spattering from the
egg beater winch 1s So annoying
LOGICALREASON.when a bowl ii used.
When Using Nuls.—in spring
Jinks—''Have yon selected a trade when nuts are tasteless and dry
or profession for your boy 1" soak them in lake warm water. This
Winks—"1 shall make a plumber causes them to become plump and
c•f him." , imnroves the flavor.
.links ---"Has he n hent that way'" Peel Oranges.—Pour scalding
\\'inks ---"He's born for it. Tell water over orange and let stand
►im to do a thing immediately. and tive minutes. The thick white
!he won't think of it aga.n for a inner skin, esu:nlly so hard to get
week." off, will adhere le the peel and
1 • !
natural ice.
SENTENCE SERMONS.
Occupations arm the heart.
The larger the soul, tho simpler
the life.
Gold is tried by fire and man
often by gold.
The faith that does not revise
you needs revising.
You cannot conquer any weakness
by coddling it.
The only pleasures enjoyed are
those that are earned.
Love is eternal because it never
worries about dying.
They are most harmed by flattery
who are most hungry for it.
Measure the appreciation you be-
stow by that which you desire.
Taking a by-path to avoid duty
we are sure to meet our deserts.
The mark of a free man is that
he hinds himself to some high duty.
No man comes to himself until
he knows that he belongs to his
world.
It is better to be wrecked through
cverzeal than to rut from ower -
caution.
The power to comfort others does
not come from consoling yourself.
The leaden heart easily learns
bow to praise the golden rule in
silvery tones.
Ily tut'risy is simply failure to
credit other people with ordinary
discernment.
Citizenship in heaven will not ex-
empt you from either taxes or ser-
vice here.
You may know how heaven re-
gards money when you see the peo-
ple who have it.
You never know how much gond
there is in men until some dark day
falls On us all.
Some seem to think tho best evi-
dence of being the salt of the earth
ability tosnake folks smart.
is a y art.
LIVER COMPLAINT
The chief ofli•w of the liver is the secre.
tion of bile, which is the natural regulator
of trio bowels.
Whenever the liver becomes d••rang•d,
and the bile ducts clogged, liver complaint
is produced, and is manifested by the l,re-
senoe of o,natipation, pain under the right
ah'uldor, sallow eomplexinn, yellow eye.,
slimy -coated tongue and heartache, he, te art-
burn,Suri deco, arlr et• nia•:h, water bra+h,
catarrh of the stomach, etc.
Liver Complaint may bo mired by
avoiding thea`.rre mentioned cantles, keep•
in; thelr,w•,I, iron, and arousing the abig•
gist liver with that grand liver regulator,
LIVIR COMPLAINT.
\fr. (leo. Fawcett, Hamilton, Ont.,wri)ear
"Having suffered with liver complaint for
years awl ttie.l all sorts of reme,liea, 1 was
advised to try Uilburia'e Laza-Liver Fills.
I utast ssn, t'..at after taking two vials of
them, i f,-.4 (lotto a new roan. awl ran
strongly r".-om•tien•l the "
11'ric•t 11 manta r
all dealer or m T.
Milburn Ce, f t.