Exeter Times, 1909-08-19, Page 3ABSOLUTE
SECURITY,
Cenulno
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
Must Sear ClLnature of
Se. Pae-3isatio Wr$ppsr Bow.
Tans .mart Gist .a.aq
N take as .s:faz.
FOB MORSE..
FOR DI?ZINESS.
FCR BILIOUSNESS.
TORTORPID LIVER.
TOR CONRTIPATION.
TOR CALLOW SKIN.
edit es.r I t 4 ry
TOR T1tR E
E COMPLUION
esGear,►
CARTERS
.
CURE t31CK HEADACHE.
THIEF AS POLICEMAN.
Rud Been Active on London Force
For Over a Year.
The fact that a convicted thief
Las been acting as a policeman in
London since April last was reveal-
ed at the London sessions.
After John Fuller, who joined
the force on April 26, went to live
at the Kentish Town section house
t;umerous small thefts occurred in
the house. Suspicion did not fall
si. Fuller, but on other policemen.
In one case a. vest was removed
'rom one locker to another, appar-
sut.ly with the object of casting
suspicion on another policeman.
Eventually Fuller was caught
stealing a bank book belonging to
a detective. His finger -prints were
taken, and it was discovered that
in 1905 he was bound over for steal-
ing a bicycle, and that in 1906 he
underwent three months' impris-
onment.
It was stated that tho referenc-
es he produced when he joined the
force were satisfactory. and that
he had left the army with a good
character.
A detective who had been pres-
ent when Fuller was previously con-
victed corroborated the finger -print
evi.lence, and sentence of twelve
.,oaths' imprisonment was passed.
Fuller, who had strongly protest-
ed his innocence, left the dock smil-
ing.
It is understood that in conse-
quence of the case the finger -prints
of all future applicants for admis-
sion to the force will be taken.
--f
CLOCK MADE OF BICYCLES.
Frenchman iias Manufactured a
Remarkable Timekeeper.
A clever Frenchman named Al-
ehonse Duhamel has constructed a
timepiece 12 feet high composed en-
tirely of bicycles, or their compon-
ent parts.
The framework is a huge bicycle
wheel, round which are arranged .0
ordinary sized wheels, all fitted
with pneumatic tires. A rim with-
in the large wheel bears the figures
for the hours, the figures themselves
being constructed of crank rods.
UNIVERSAL AND ETERNAL
The Law of Reciprocity Is One of God's
Great Truths.
It is more blessed to give than to Giving is tie philosopher's stone,
receive. --Acts xx. 3b. wlech, instead of turning every -
This text is the embodiment of thing into gold, turns gold into
one of the greatest of truths --the everything--iuto halls of learning,
law of reciprocity. Similar pas- libraries of information, missions
sages in the scriptures aro: "What- for millions. houses for the hon►e-
soever a Ivan soweth, that shall he less, Christ for the Christless, and
also reap" ; "(the, and it shall be life, eternal life, fur the dying.
given unto you" ; "Bear ye one an-
other's burdens, and so fulfill the
law of Christ."
Giving is like an endless circle.
It is casting bread upon the waters,
which returns in multiplied abund- in its glory and blessedness. It is
Once after many days. It is the
seed in the toil, bursting into the THE CROWN OF CHARACTER
golden harvest. It is the banker,
giving out to the borrower till the
it.terest exceeds the principal. It is
the philanthropist, receiving the
gratitude of mankind. It is
THE MARTYR MISSIONARY,
losing his life to find it. It is the
discoverer and inventor, like Hen-
drik Hudson and Robert Fulton,
giving their genius for the welfare
of the people and receiving, gener-
ations afterwa''d, the plaudits and
thanksgiving of the world, because
of the glory of their achievements.
Men who give get bills of ex-
change on God's banking -house, the
interest of which is paid as we need
it along the journey of life, while
the principal awaits your arrival in
the eternal city.
The returning compensation for
all noble deeds cones in that which
n, better tbau an equivalent ; in
love and gratitude unpurchasable,
as it is unfuding and unspeakable
on the brow of the individual or na-
tion, resplendent, immortal.
Even though your gift is unappre-
ciated or misapplied, it is irrever-
sibly recorded in your being. Chil-
dren may be undutiful, but the par-
ents are blessed on account of their
expressions of kindness and care.
Husba.ids may be drunken or bru-
tal, but the wife who struggles pati-
ently on has her reward in her own
soul, and it may be the final re-
demption of her lost one. The Di-
vine Christ, who gave himself upon
the cross as a Saviour as an ex-
ample of infinite self-sacrifice, pos-
sesses a name above every name
and a throne universal and eternal.
REV. E. W. CASWELL.
TIIE S. S. LESSON
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
AUGUST 2.'3.
Lesson H11. Paul's Third Mission.
sionary Journey. Golden Text,
2 Cor. 12: 9.
I. Business Interests versus the
Gospel.—vs. 21-28. For at least two
years and three months Paul had
been working in Ephesus and was
about reedy to go on extending
Christianity even to Rome (see
Rom. 1:13 ; 15: 23) and on to Spain
(Rom. 15: 24), after visiting and
strengthening the churches in
Macedonia and Greece, and bearing
tho gifts of Philippi, Thessalonica,
Berea, Corinth, and other Gentile
churches (Itom. 15: 26) to the poor
Christians in Jerusalem.
In Corinth he expected to re-
ceive contributions for the poor in
Jerusalem (1 Cor. 16: 1-4).
He sent two of his helpers,
Timothy and Erastus (2 Tim. 4: 20),
through Macedonia to Corinth (1
('or. 4 : 17-19) to prepare that church
for his approaching visit.
Paul succeeded in all these plans,
but, some of them were accomplish-
ed in a very different manner,
though in a far better one than the
way he had planned.
Paul stayed in Asia for a season
(v. 22). Apparently for several
weeks or months. From the fact
that Asia is mentioned rather than
Ephesus, its capital, it has been in-
ferred that he did not remain in
the city all the time, but labored
in the outlying districts.
A Contrast. In our last lesson
we saw how Christians voluntarily
The hands ase made of steel tub- gave up a bad business, at great
ing which is used for tho frame- cost to themselves, for Christ's
work of bicycles. The minute sake. Now we find some men who
strokes on the dial are small nickel- tried to destroy the gospel, be -
plated pieces. Tho top of the clock cause it was injuring their business.
III an arrangement of 12 handle- That is the business of the gospel
bars to destroy all business that injures
The clock strikes the hours and men.
the quarters, bicycle bells, of Ii. The Mob in the Colosseum. --
course. making the chimes. The Vs. 29-41. 29. The whole city was
pendulum is made of various parts filled with (the) confusion. The
of a bicycle frame. it is said that (1reck idea is of the mingling of
the clock, besides being a curiosity, crowds together like waters in a
is an excellent timepiece. cascade or flood. Think of Southey s
poem, How does the water come
clown at Lodre "recoiling, tur-
moiling, toiling. and boiling, turn-
ing and twisting around and
she held him at hat's width." around, with endless rebound, con-
founding, astounding, dizzying and
—t
$tells : "1)id she keep him at
arm's length 1" Idella : "Worse;
Could Not Sleep in the Dark
deafening the ear with its sounds.
30. Paul would have entered.
Paul was not an athlete. and, at
NEART AND NERVES WERE RESPON- least. according to his enemies,
81/LE, 80 THE DOCTOR SAID.
his bodily presence was weak"
(2 ('or. 10: 10). But this did not
-- : deter him from going to meet the
fliI. many a Iran and women mob. He suffered also extreme
to,ght after melt 'noon: a sleepless spiritual depression (2 Cor. 1 : '+).
fest. 111 this enhances the greatness ..f
Some constitutional d sturbance, worry ,
or disease has so debiLt sled and irritated I aril's courage at this titne.
the ner.oua system that it cannot be We get from Paul's actions n
quieted. true itlea of what real courage is.
Mra. Calvin Stark, Roremore, Ont., Moral Courage. not indifference
writes -"About two years ago I began
t ' danger, is the highest form of
to 1'r troubled with a smothering stn -g
'.tion at night, when 1 would lie courage. Two soldiers were chat g•
down. I got so had I could not slop ii:g up a hill with their regiment.
in the dart, ani would have to sit up in a desperate attempt to capture
and rub my limbs, !bey wotdd become to battery. when hall way up. one
'o nienh. My doctor acid my heart ..fthem turned 11) t he ot her and
ane nerves were re.pon'ihle. 1 saw
Milburn's Heart and Nerve fill, advrr- : said, "\1 h'•, you are as pale as s
timed and got a boa to try then:. I took sheet. You look like a ghost. 1 be -
three t.oxee aml can now lie down and Bete you are afraid.' "Yes, i
sleep without the light t,urtens and can am; wa, the answer; . and. if you
rr•t «ell. 1 can nro•nmend them highly nere hall as much afraid as 1 ars.
to :t11 nervous and run down women.
you'd hays run !tong ago.
Mn 'urns Heart and Nerve Pills a l .\ locomotive engineer .nit nn
fee. ser Lox. or 3 t•n t. for $I._'''. ro
de Ores c.r mailed dant on re4eipt of eastern railroad, •sho was nlw-Ay‘
rpm. spy .•ha T. iUJ.,t:ra Cu., Limited, u cele:•te•) for his nerve . , . and
Tensaw. Vat. 1 idose courage, repeatedly display-
ed in appalling accidents, was pro-
verbial, was afraid in the quiet of
his own home to go upstairs alone
in the dark."
33. The Jews were always especi-
ally exposed to persecution, and
as the mob would be likely to snake
no distinction between Jews and
Christians, particularly as Paul was
a Jew, they put forward a promin-
ent .few named Alexander to de-
fend them. l'ossihly he was Alex-
ander, the coppersmith, of 2 Tim.
.1: 14, who "did Paul much evil.''
But Alexander only excited the
mob still more. Gra;Qaer King A+conso formally35. Tho townclerk at length in- asked the hand of frincess Beatrice
terfered and argued with the ex- for his cousin, and when Beatrice
cited people. on that occasion lamed the
1. The worship of Diana was so
settled in Ephesus that no company
of Jews could overthrow it. You
have no real cause for violence.
The image (of Diana) which fell
down from Jupiter their chief
god, as meteoric stones occasional-
ly fall from the sky.
2. Paul had not committed the
wrong with which he was charged.
His converts had been very careful
not to blaspheme the goddess. His
method of overcoming idolatry is
quite noticeable. He preached the
gospel, ho set Jesus Christ before
the people. The contrast between
them and the teachings and char-
acter of the idol gods was the argu-
ment.
3. There was a better way of re-
dress, if there were nerd, through
the law courts.
4. There was danger that the
Roman government might interfere
and deprive a turbulent city of its
greatly prized liberties.
Thus peace and quiet were re-
stored.
The signs of these times meant
that it was best, for Paul to leave
immediately for another field of
labor, while Ephesus was settling
down into quiet peace, and the
church continued to grow in char-
acter and numbers. Therefore
Paul bade the beloved church
bood-by and departed for to go in-
to Macedonia (Acts 20: 1).
A ROMANCE OF ROYALTY
STORY 61' MARRIAGE OF KING
ALFONSO'S COUSIN.
King Aided Prince of Bourbon.
Orleans to Wed Princess
Beatrice of Saxe•l'obaurg.
The details surrounding the ro-
mantic marriage of Prince Alfouro
of Bourbon -Orleans to Princess
Beatrice of Saxe-Cobourg which
cost kiln his position as a Prince of
the Royal house of Spain and his
career in the Spanish army, have
become known.
They reveal the fact that King
Alfonso. instead of refusing his
consent to the marriage, as was
reported by Madrid despatches to
have been the case, favored and
actually advised the I'rince to
marry her secretly, gave hits a
leave of absence for that purpose,
and personally intervened by tele-
graph with the Bamberg ecclesi-
astical authorities, in whose diocese
the marriage took place, to procure
a dispensation for it.
STORY OF THE COURTSHIP.
This story was obtained from the
Prince's own lips oy his friends a
few days ago in Munich, where the
couple aro spending their honey-
moon.
Prince Alfonso and Princess Bea-
trice first met on the occasion of
King Alfonso's marriage to Princess
Ena of Battenberg in 1906. The
Prince fell desperately in love with
the Princess, and proposed marri-
age, but Beatrice recused him.
Both the Queen and the Queen -
mother, knowing of the Prince's in-
fatuation espoused his cause and
sought to induce Beatrice to relent.
The Princess, however, declared
that she never would change her re-
ligion, but finally when she said she
had no objection to rearing her chil-
dren as Catholics the Queen -mother
replied: "Then tnere is not the
slightest diffculty to the union. 1
always said that if I had had a sec-
ond son he should have married a
Protestant."
Site added that she herself had
Protestant ancestors. Later at La
TIIE TOILERS.
The English language is full of
subtle meanings and unexpected
turns. Not long ago a. man asked
an acquaintance a number of ques-
tions about his business.
"How tnany people work in your
office 1" he inquired.
"Oh," said the other, carelessly.
"about two-thirds of them."
FOR
PIMPLES
A N 1)
BAD
BLOOD
UDR
B. B. B.
i'imples are intariably due to had or
irnpoveri+hel blood an.% while not at-
tended with fatal re,•ult& are ueserthele
peculiarly distressing to the a+ersge
person.
Miss F. T.. Ten.;. Esterhasy. Sask..
wain: "Jly fare and neck were covered
with {pimple. 1 tried all kinds of reme-
dies, but they di l me no .cowl. 1 went
10 many (lectors but they could not curt
me. 1 then tried Burdock Blood !titters
and 1 must say it is a wonderful remedy
for the core of pimples. -
For sale at all deal• r.. vlsnufactured
nn'v I.v 'the T. Milburn Co.. Limited.
Toronto, Oat.
QUESTION OF RELIGION
his Majesty said: -1 give you my
word of honor there will not, be the
slightest difficulty."
Tho Prince then again proposed,
and was accepted.
Premier Maura said the marriage
of an Infante of Spain to a Protest-
nnt could not take place on account wiches into any preferred shape,
of the difficulty it would cause the garnish with parsley, and serve.
Government. Molded Farina.—Cook farina the
Princess Beatrice, because of her preceding day and mold in pound
friendship for Queen Victoria, said
she would give up the Prince, who
asserted that he intended to marry
the Princess regardless of conse-
quences.
King Alfonso declared that even
if the constitution prevented hint
giving official consent to the marri-
age without the approval of his
Ministers, ho, as Alfunso of Bour-
bon, would do everything in his
power for the couple.
[804.46.44haihmadhae4440.1
i'he Home
pickles, also chopped, and half a
teaspoonful of mustard, walnut cat- Suffered for Thirty Years
' sup and vinegar. Season highly
with salt, pepper, and a little cay-
enne and spread thin on slices of
' tread cut in finger lengths.
Pecan and Honey—Split cold so-
y da biscuits which have been made
i extra small in halves, butter and
rl'read with a mixture made of four
PANNING AND PREeERVING. tablespoonfuls of thick honey mixed Mr. John Raitt, 71 Couzsol St., Mont-
Canning
tablespoonfuls of chopped teal, Que.. has used Milburn's Laza-Liver
Canning Help.—Line the fruit pecan wmeats. I Pills and recommends then: to ail hla
capboard and •,wrap the caused fruit Orange and Date Sandwiches — friends. Ile wntee. --" 1 take pleasure
In newspaper, and the thermometer Tc cue half cu j rul finely chopped in writing you concerning the welt value
may go to zero and the fruit not dates add two tablespoonfuls of
fieCze. orange juice and mix well. Spread
Don't Skim -Jellies.--Skim fruit l.etween buttered slices of whole
cover—Just fill jelly glasses or glass },cat bread•
jars with fruit and scrape off the Chocolate Sandwiches—Carefully
skim with a silver knife before seal- melt sweetened chocolate over hot
ing. It is much easier and quicker water and stir into it half a cupful
than skimming while cooking. of chopped almonds. Pour on to
Cherries. --When preparing cher- ei isp unsweetened wafers and set
ries for canning you will find it a another wafer above the chocolate
much quicker way and cherries will before it hardens.
look much nicer in '.ass if you take
a penholder, putting a pen in point
down in holder, and use the other
end for stoning. You will find re-
sults good.
Cucumber Pickles.—Five medium
sized cucumber pickles, sliced fine
and round, and four good sized on-
ions. Slice and salt alternate in
stone jar. Let stand over night.
Then add two ounces of mustard
seed, one red pepper, one-half
tablespoonful of eelory seed, one Pancakes. Dip rosette iron into
quarter pint of olive oil, and three bot lard to heat before dipping it
pints of cider vinegar. Be sure and into the batter, not letting the bat -
put olive oil on first, as then the ter come over the top of the iron.
vinegar cuts it. Return it to the hot lard, thorough -
Seedless Jam.--S:mall seeds may ly covering the iron with same for
be removed from fruit by crushing at least twenty seconds and not
the fresh berries through a sieve. ever thirty-five seconds. These waf-
To do this by hand is tedious. A ers will keep for months and can be
rotary flour sifter will perform the served cold or heated in oven and
work quickly, effect'vely, and with served hot.
e ut staining the hands. The sifter Shredded lettuce leaves in bird
costa 35 cents. nest shape filled with sliced hard
Canned Cherries. — Cherries boiled eggs, sliced radishes, chop- and that bees can see for a great
canned this may keep perfectly and ped celery, raisins and sweet may- oatstae and can also note objects
preserve their delicious flavor unim- cnnaise dressing served on lettuceOtho the way so as to find their path.
paired: Stone the cherries and to leaf with sweet pickles and olives. the bees, with ll guideddent, suppose that
two pounds of the fruit allow a Shredded cabbage, pimentos cut the are by the sense
pound of sugar. Put one layer of in fine cubes, mayonnaise dressing, of smell and that they can smell
cherries, then sugar, and so on, and walnuts. dowers at one and a half miles.
gave sugar on top Dyer. Let stand Tomato shells filled with cube The author makes experiments
ever night and you will be surpris- shaped pineapple, red raspberries to prove that bees can return to
cd at amount of juice Put in stove and whipped cream. the hive without using either sight
and let come to a boil and can.Grape fruit, pineapple and or odor. As to sight, he takes bees
of sages pressed through potato to a distance of one or two miles
ricer, put back in grape fruit shells the hive in a closed box. They
MIDSUMMER DAINTIES. and sweeten to taste. always fly back to the hive whey
released. Tho same is true when
CLEANING.their eyes are covered, so that
sigis not essential. As regards
To Wash Black Goods.—To make odor,ht experiments seem to prove
black silk, alpaca, serge, and lawn that bees perceive odors at only
dresses look like new : For the un- short distances. When a neddle
to ice hi salt an dertaking get 10 cents' worth of dipped in ether is brought near the
Serve with whipped cream. soap bark and boil it in one quart !cad of the bee, it shows signs of
Unique Sandwich.—Pound yolks of hot water. Let it steep a while 'perceiving the odor, but not so
of three hard boiled eggs with one i and then strain into a basin for %.-hen the needle is placed back of
ounce butter, season with salt, a' use. Now take the whole dress him or near other organs.
dash of cayenne, and grated cheese. i apart and rip off trimming, brush Besides, when the organs of smell
Spread on brown or white bread c,fi all loose dust first. and then . (antenae) are removed entirely the
which has been buttered, trim sand- with a sponge dipped in the soap bees will return to the hive. M.
bark decoction wipe over each piece ,Bonnier snakes the following ex -
thoroughly, folding up as you pro- ! I'erirnent. At 600 feet from the
cced. Now have your irons hot and ; hire he places a supply of syrup,
smooth each piece on the wrong -and the bees soon find it, proceed -
side, even the silk trimmings, and ing to and fro to the hive. Such
when put together you will be sur- bees he marks with green colored
prised to see the results. Instead .powder. He then places a second
supply of syrup at tho .stns dis-
tance from the hive, but spaced at
twenty feet from the former. Other
With Catarrh of
The Stomach.
SOME SUMMER DISHES.
One and one-half tablespoonfuls
of sweet cream with one square of
cream cheese. cat or chop pimen-
tos and spread between lettuce leaf
cu bread for sandwiches.
Creamed chicken with mushrooms
wafers: One egg, one teaspoonful
c f sugar, one pint of milk and flour
to make batter as thin as batter for
1 have recetceti in ::,:rig M•'t,uru's Laza-
Liver Pills for Catarrh of the Stomach,
with which I have been a sufferer for
thirty years. I used five Iattlee and the)
made me all right. 1 also had a Net-,
severe attack of La Grippe, and a few
doses acted so quickly that it was un-
necessary to call in a doctor to cure tee.
For the small sun: of 25 centa we have
our own doctor when we have M;l'ourn's
l.axa-Liver Pills."
Price 2S cents per vial, or b for $1.00,
at all dealers, or mailed direct on re.
oeipt of price by The T. Milburn Co.,
Limited, Tomato, Oat.
HOW BEES FIND HIVE.
Special Sense of Direetlo■ — Net
Guided by Sight or Odor.
The directive sense which is poe-
seased by bees is the object of re-
searches made by M. Gaston Bon-
nier, of Paris, and he seems to
prove that bees possess a special
sense like that of carrier pigeons.
Bees can fly for two miles from
the hive and are then able t ore -
turn after gathering their supply
of honey. Langstroth and others
suppose that vision Domes into play
Chilled Peaches.—Pare ripe yel-
low peaches, remove stones, and
cut the fruit in quarters, dusting
it generously with powdered sugar
Pack in a tightly covered mold and
buryand forhour.
ANCIENT SITE OF MADRID.
Arld Now, it Once Abounded to
Forests and Garden.
Travellers find it bard to believe
that Madrid ever atounded with
water. The modern town stands on
se bleak &eel arid an eminence, its
surroundings, save in early spring,
aro so parched and dusty and the
rater peddler's cry of "Ague!
Ague!" is so insistent and ubiquit-
ous one fancies Madrid must have
been thirsty from the beginning.
Yet its ancient coat of arms was
a large flint half immersed in water,
with steel hatches striking it on
either side, the ascending sparks
forming a sort of canopy around
it. Appended was the motto:
I was built on water.
My walls aro of fire.
Such is my emblazonment.
This device was emblematic only
of the city in its early days before
Charles V. had started it on its
Iendlong career of greatness mere-
ly because he credited its climate
with having cured him of a fever.
Ile it was who first conceived the
project of elevating it to the rank
of capital. it was left, however,
ts his son, Philip II., to promul-
gate the decree declaring the town
to be unica Corte.
At that time Madrid was a small
town embowered in gardens and
woods and meadow s and with
strings and wells lavishly supplied
by nature. Tho Manzanares, now
a melancholy, meagre strerurt, was
of a measurable depth. But with
tho apportioning of her territory
into palaces and ledging houses for
the royal hangers-on and the cut-
ting down of the trees to swell the
royal treasury the inevitahle fol-
lowed. The sun of well nigh 100
'owners has burned and rehurned
the site of the old town and its be -
stripped suburbs and dried up the
natural moisture. .1t present the
climate of Madrid is nearly the
most tr}ing in all Europe.
taking powder tins When ready
tc serve for breakfast, unmold, cut
in thick slices. With a spoon re-
move enough of each slice to leave
a sort of cup. Fill with bananas
cut fine, chopped dates, stewed figs,
peaches, or berries. Cover with
cream. Serve ice cold.
Lemon Cream.—Beat yolks of
four eggs light, add four table-
spoonfuls of sugar. juice and grat-
ed rind of a lemon, and two table-
spoonfuls of hot water. Cook in
double boiler till it thickens. Re-
move from fire and fold in whites
or eggs beaten stiff and sweetened.
Serve cold with sponge cake.
Plum Snowballs.—Take largo
blue plums, remove pits carefully,
refill with finely chopped nuts and
pulverized sugar ; dip each one into
the well beaten white of an egg and
roll into freshly grated cocoanut.
SANDWICHES.
Emergency Sandwich—Chop fine
with a knife or put through the
food chopper one pound of dried
beef. Remove the stems and seeds
from two large green peppers and
chop with the beef. Spread thin
Letween buttered slices either of
white or graham bread and your
guests will wonder where you got
the idea for those delicious "Mexi-
can" sandwiches.
Nut and Cheese Sandwiches —
('hop English walnut ;:eats fine and
mix with cream cheese and a little
chopped eatereress, seasoning with
salt and a little mayonnaise if de-
sired. Spread on thin slices of
bread or on thin toast and serve
with a garnish of sprigs of water-
cress.
Crystallised Fruit Sandwiches.—
Butter lightly thin slices of crust -
less white bread. Chop crystal-
lized fruit fine and spread a thin
layer of it on the bread and coyer
with a layer of thick cream. Lay
another slice of bread on top and
Ness together.
Cream Cheese and Olive Sand-
wiches. --Stone a (been large olives
and chop fine. Mash a Canadian
cream cheese into a paste with a
large silver spoon and work into
it the minced olives. Spread on
rounds of steamed brown bread.
Japanese St,ndwiches.-- ('hop cold
boiled chicken fine and season high•
ly with black pepper and salt. Add
a one-third part of chopped g'-ev'n
Tepper and a little mayonnaise.
Spread on thin slices of unbuttcred
1 read and servo.
Tartare q„ndwiches--To half a
cup of boiled hath add three boned
and skinred sardines and chop all
together. Add throe small sour
of your old dress you will have one
that looks liko new.
Cleaning Woodwork.—For natur-
al finish woodwork that has become bees are now engaged in the to
scratched or dented there is no- ± lnn<t fro movement to this point,
thing better than a coat or two of ' but these are not the same indi-
shellac. It is prepared at home by I viduals as the green marked hoes,
who are still working on the first
supply, and he marks these in
red.
We thus have two distinct sets
or bees, and we see that the y can
distinguish two directions which
form a very acute angle. We seem
Straw Hats.—Make a warm suds to have here a special directive
with any white. soap and a little sense which does not reside in the
ammonia; lay hat on table, and antennae hut probably in the cere-
using a small rug brush, scrub hat rbroid ganglia. Other facts may
with suds; rinse well, then put a be cited in evidence of the directive
cord through top with knot on out- .sense of bees.
side, hang in a barrel or box, so
it can swing freely. Have ready
pieces of sulphur cloth, which may
he done by dissolving sulphur in
old tin and laying strips of cloth
in it until covered. Lay these on
an old pie tin and place under the
barrel and light with a match. and
when hats become dry they will look
like new.
adding the dry yellow flakes to
about 95 per cent. alcohol. It shak-
ers occasionally it will dissolve in a
few hours. Shellac is a convenient
form of varnish to have in a house,
as it readily covers any mark on
furniture.
The Dangers
of Summer.
Many deneserse and distressing dis-
♦ eases prevail ,n smnmcr and fall. and .a
they occur suddenly, often terminate
fatally before aid can be had.
BRITISH MUSEUM. (oinplainte. such is Diarrhoea, Dy-
sentery, Colic, Cramps, Cholera, Morbus,
Big Inereare in Number of Visitors Cholera Intention, Summer Coml.lainte,
etc., are quickly cured.
—Some Recent Bcgllevla. Thi; wonderfol
♦+♦♦♦+♦♦ bowel coe.t-lsint
DR. FOWLER'9 + remedy hag been
EXT. OF WILD ♦°''the market for
STRAWBERRY + 61 years sad it
hail been n.ed in
44+4♦4.4 homes
sande t
owe tarthroughoutut
the country during this time.
You do not ecperiment when von: buy
an old and tried remedy like this. Ask
Last year no fewer than 734,413
visits were paid by the public to
the British Museum, and of these
74.324 were on Sundays. These fig-
ures show n big increase in the two
T'revions years. The number of
visitors to the reading roori gives
a daily average of 761. The annual
report just issued, mentions that your druggist for Dr. Fowler's. and insist
two important bequests were re- on getting what you ask for. i)o not
ceived during the year— the origin- take some substitute which the unprin-
al autographs of Beethoven's son- eipled druggist says is "just as good.”
ata for violin and pianoforte in G, These cheap imitations are dar:gc•,.ru to
end the late Miss Harriet Plowden, your health.
Mrs. Jeff Flaherty. Belfountain, Ont.,
and four MSS. from the late Sir writes• --"In the month of frep'^inter,
Thomas ldreeke, of Ifuddertietd. teat, my vo•rngeet child took rurnmer
The moat talila ble M 5 i. a La• Complaint mei the doctor had !cry little
tin psalter containing a portrait hop a fa i.•' klv neighbor told•me to
het ih Fowler's extract of Wilt Straw-
ber n•. so that night 1 rent my (Wight's
to get it, and when she came home 1
pee the baby one .lose, and in half an
boar there was a change for the tetter,
and after the thiel doee she was enne•
pletelvy eure.T We feel it 14 far and be -
till the French Revolution. The Load any other remedy for S uniner
other three MSS. are monastic , ('omplalnt and L• -sides it saver paying a
doctor. 1 advise erer)'Ooe to nae ►e,
chart ill a ries. aiz.. of ('..ckersaud pont acrent a r:bstitute for i)r. Fo*ler'..
Abbey, Lancashire. 1,4t3s: F^un- -I he ori nal and o a Vowlcr'a l ctrwet
tains Abbey, 'York. 15th dry; "f !Wild Strawberry is u,antilactured only
and Selby Abbey. York. 1.v The T. Milburn en . Lim,tcd 'Toronto,
tory. nt., Price 3.5 fen's.
el, -the Emperor Lothaire (910 53)
acid two other miniaturee with ex-
planatory verses. As early as the
10th century the psalter belonged
to the Abbey of St. Hubert in the
Ardennes, and it remained there