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Exeter Times, 1905-04-27, Page 7OIUTE SECURITY, Cenuine arter's tie Liver Pills. Must Beer Signature of dee Fac-S:db Wrapper Below. snail aura as eaay 10 take as sugar. RS FOR NEABACNEa FOR DIZZINESS. FOA 6ILIOUSNE$t. FOR TORPID LiMEII. FOR CONSTIPATION. FON SALLOW SKIN. F811 THE COMPLEXION 0ingli ZWU MVur Purely YegetatIevent1 to CURE SICK ti7:-nACliE. 111111M111.1111114811I eTe- Only a Trifling Cold s been the Lullaby song of Marlys Ictlm to their Last Long Sleep. cough ahould be loosened as dily as possible, and all irrita- allayed before it settles in the gs. Once settled there Bron- Isand Consumption may follow. DR. WOOD'S OIiWAY PINE SYRUP st the remedy you require. e virtues of the Norway Pine Wild Cherry Bark, with r standard pectoral Herbs and ms, are skilfully combined roduce a reliable, safe and teal remedy for all forms of hs and Colds. r. N. D. Macdonald, Whycoco- h, N.S., writes :-" I think it uty to let people know what t good Dr. Weiod's Norway Syrup did for rhe. I had a cold, which settled in my and I could get nothing to it till 1 tried Dr. Wood's Nor - Pine Syrup. The first bottle me wonderfully, and the one cured me. 'ce 25 cents per bottle. LBURN'S rt and Nerve Pills. specific for all heart and es. Here are some of the syurp- ---- An one of them should be a Lesson V. Jesus Washing ming for you to attend to it int- Disciples' Feet. Golden lately. Don't delay. Serious break- Text, Gal. v. 13. of the system may follow, if you 'ervousness, Sleeplessness, Dizzi- T11t' LESSON STATEMENT. al{ Pitation of the Heart, Shortness L cath Rushof The Blood to the Head,Relation of Our Lord to hering and Sinking Spells, Faint His Father and to His Brethren eak Spells Spasm or Pain through (verses 1-8). eart; Cola, Clammy Hands and The dramatic vicissitudes of life There may y be many minor amp- ;ore of interest to all; but often the of heart and nerve trouble, but abiding forces which cause these vic- are the chief ones. issiludes remain hidden and unguess- bura's Heart and Nerve Pills will ed. In the gospel narrative we watch ail these symptoms from the the unsuspecting disciples preparing m. ie 50 cents per box, or 8 for $1.25. lie SPELLS CURED. Ire. L. Dorey, Remford, N.S., writes LS follows :-"I was troubled with Ines., weak spells and fluttering of heart. I procure,' a box of Milburn's rt and Nerve Pills, and they did me tach good that I got two more boxes, afterfinishing them I was completely :d. I must say that 1 cermet recone id them too highly. nerve A WORD TO YOUNG MEN same supper as a [Passover meal fo which due and tapes -lel prepsrstio had been made at the request o Jesus (comp. ]lett. xxvl., 17-30 Mark xiv., 12-26; Luke xxii., 7-30) Perhaps the key to a correct under of these Dishonesty in Daily Life Is a Foe geant(sthatements is to' be found it tthe r n t• to Success. A despatch from Brooklyn, N. Y., says: -Rey. Ur. Newell Dwight Millis preached from the following text:- '"I'huua shalt not steal." Over in Orth Africa, in a nook Sheltered under the mountains and surrounded by rich grates of oranges and palms, is a large hotel; all fie inmates are exiles from home and na- tive lend. lieacuse that little town exempts them from arrest these guests have found therein a place of refuge. Who are these American exiles? They are bookkeepers, cash- iers, confidential clerks, directors, who have been guilty of dishonesty and with their booty have fled from justice. Sitting in the garden ur lin- gering beside the fountains they aro seeking to forget the past; but lo! there are no netters of Lethe la Africa. In Mexico also there Is ono street given up to these exiles from home, and in a Canadian city there is an- other colony of restless and heart- broken fugitives. The path upon which they entered scented to be Paved with gold, but the end of that path was fiery ashes. And more and more society suffers through similar dishonesty. Every morning the paper gives at least ono story of a youth who has disappeared from office, or store, or bank. Companies have been organized to insure the firm against. THE : FLIO H'1' OF THE CLERK. Tho time has come fully for writ- ers and parents to warn young mon and women against the peril of (lis - honesty that always ends in disaster, shame and heartbreak. Among the causes of dishonesty: 1. Extravogance. Tho brilliant shop windows tempt the youth to dress and show. The rich clothes of other young men stir the sense of vanity and pride. The assembly in the theater or the ballroom floor publish the pleasures of dress. Everything tends to develop the love of beautiful things. Young men come to feel that they must like beyond their income. 'Tempted, they forget that he who dallies is lost. 2. Dishonesty begins with many a young husband through (t sincere desire to picnso his wife. In her father's home she had much, where he could give little. She sees other girls in her set buying expensive gowns and returns home to describe their rich flnery. The youth is irri- tated by his !Poverty. Weak, he is unable to deny pleasure to ono be loves. R. Low wages is a fruitful cause of dlshor.esty. Many young men and women are trying to support them- selves on $5 or 810 a week. The typewriter and bookkeeper works for 860 a month. When he makes up the year's reports ho discovers that his employer has cleared 860,000 during the year. 110 has put in two hours to his employer's one. The tempter whispers that all this repre- sents injustice. Some of the firm's treasure belongs to him. They have kept back THE WAGES Oh THE 1'OOi1, The youth forgets that tho little that the righteous hath Is better than the abundance of dishonesty. But once words of .Iesys as record. d by Luke "1 have desired to eat this passoye with you before 1 sutler: for 1 sa un:,, you, I shall not eat it until i bo fullille'd itt the kingd of God' (Luke xxii., 15, 166 -the regula the clerk has taken the first wrong Passover being thus anticipated b step, the descent into the abyss and one day, since Jesus knew that o the jell where fear and torment dwell the tuerrow he 1110.9! suffer and .lie. Is almost inevitable. 4. His garments --The loose onto r y t Many corpses were lying about, the wounded were neglected, and the fields were Strewn for a dozen miles with previsions, rides, cartridges and dead horses. The leader of this force said that he had born farther north. but that the Japanese had driven hint hack. Everybody was dispirited, for the soldiers knew they were surrounded. In the evening I went rust with the intention of snaking a nide de - tear to avoid the Japanese. Wound- r'ed men were strewn thick on th y ground, wailing, -Brothel-it, do no n abortion us." I gave my horse to r as t b' Y 4. The example of the firm educates mantle together with the girdle, butt in dishonest courses in 50100 in- of which would be in the way in per stant•es. 1f the firm weaves cotton forming an act of service such followed. S. Ii ison-A basin. Began to wash the disciples' feet Thu,, performing for them the hu the advertisement, if the youth die- m;liating service of a slave. .1 us .overs that his employers' weights before this the disciples ancon are periodically short, little by lit- then,selvet had had n controvers lie the youth Suffers In his own over the question "which of then should be accounted the greatest" (Luke xxii., 24). 6. So ho cometh to Sinton Peter In regular order, having Begun doubtless, with the disciple nearest hits. Dost thou wash my feet -With em- phasis upon •the pronouns "thou" and "my." Peter would say: "Lord, art thou to perform for me thy pupil the function of a bond ser- vant? Never!" 7. •Thou shalt understand hereafter tho significance of this act and the the ratan who confessed found the example of self-abnegation involved. reason of his temptation in debt. Ho ['.ter as well as others of the dis- was extravagant, borrowed money cliies needed this lesson in humility. and cooled not pay. One of the men H. If I wash then not -Note the on the fluor with him was in debt slight play on the word "wash," through the long illness and death tt'hieh hero has a twofold meaning, of hie child. In a despondent hour its deepen significance of a spiritual the two were talking over their trou- purifying predominating. bees. Unfortunately an evil suggestion fl. Hands . . . heart -Peter is quick dropped by the one fell like a spark to see both the play on words and of tinder in the nand of the other. By working together they carried off each week A LITTLE STORE OF GOODS. threads in and sells theist for silk, it the druggist teaches the clerk to adulterate the medicines, if tho mer- chant teaches the clerk to tell lies in character and gradually' becomes him- self an adept in stealing and deceiv- ing as a fine art. Debt also leads to dishonesty. Re- cently a very large mercantile house discovered a shortage in the stock. Detectives were put at work. Finally they discovered that there was a chain of thieves organized among the employes of tho house, beginning with a clerk on the top floor and ending with a packer in tho base- ment, aso-ment, and of the teamsters in tho street. In a single year they stole neatly $100,000 worth of goods. tho deeper import of the Master's answer, and replies after the same manner in words of a double and a deeper meaning. At lust, as they found another clerk 1. IIe that is bathed nerd,eth not in another department whom they save to wash his feet -Jesus now could trust, they organized their speaks in figurative language. Tho thievery. They had a chain that 8011se of his words seems to be: "He wns •inenling. including every do- that is already fully surrendered to pertinent in the store, from the re- the as thou art needs but to guard ct'iving clerk to the shipper. against contamination and tempta- 'I'hen come the discovery and expose tion from without, that he may re - that was inevitable from the first main as he is, clean every whit. moment. Now all are disgraced. All And ye are cleanr-A remarkable have blackened names. Each youth and generous tribute to the heart - loyalty of the disciples. 11. Know hint that should betray hint-Thut is, knew what kind of a man at heart ,Judas, the unclean one, who later betrayed him, was. .Jesus doubtless also knew all about the impending treachery and betray- al (comp. verse 27), but that Is not what the evangelist says in this verse. 14. Ought to wash one another's feet -Words the deeper meaning of little time at the other end of the which Is that disciples of the Christ day, than a clerk him to clip off a are in all humility and in utter self - little silk fror►t the bolt of rich abnegation to seek to serve one an - goods. Avoid debt. Deny yourself the theater unless you can afford it. Deny luxuries even to wife end child unless you have earned their luxury and pleasure. Earn the good things you have. 'fake nothing 'as a free gift. Stand on your own feet. The Tho overt act of dishonesty begin:r in a far-off thought of pleasure or show. Learn the joy of frugality -of saving n little and investing it. Re- member that honesty is the founda- tion of prosperity. Is branded with infamy. Across his forehead la written the word "Thief." And back of the shameful story stands a word, that awful word Debt, mother of crines and infamy. If stealing is a fine art, honesty also comes through practice. Young man. at'rdy how to be hunt'st. Don't steal your employer's time. You have no more right to be five min- utes lute in the morning and clip off these golden drops, or to clip off a THE S. S. LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON, APRIL 30. th • a's's+(a iisi.iirl41s ssss111/ suffered ForA Number of Years From Dyspepsia. That is what Mrs. Mary Park., x)per, Ont., says, and there are OLuanda of others who can say entitle thing. BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS red her, and will cure any - e and ever one troubled with rspepsia, Mrs, Parks writes u lows: - i Buffered for • member of(v» m Dyspepsia, sail trial many tame• s• Dat without •a Mead, 1 elterted to uqs rennet of a rdn ek Blood Bitters. after using bottle 1J was pleased to and that I relieved of rte dreadful pains 1 'Tff1 veallpraWMBAA.tor 55111 1 have ri elv, and 1 hope so oed re» trate nyspeysia will tri 1 wonderful remee. if they do I ears Thal the will have the same ere eeee that 1 have had" T. MrLetnlr Co., trump, ?brortto, Oct. o eat the pnssovcr supper with their Lord, while .Judas makes his nefarious bargain with the chief priests; and events hurry forward to their tragic climax. ilei John, now about to record a very unusual in- cident, pauses in his narrative to reveal the secret conditions and forces which pulsated beneath these events and which caused theta. 1. John points to our Lord's relation to Clod (1) Ile is "the only begot- _ ten Son," in whom the Father is well ()lensed; (2) receiving front God "all things" -alike the power of working naiades and the task of Ibent•ing pain, nlfke death, and tri- !unlph over dent h: (S) "routing from (burl" 1wh, tier we view• a t Word who in the beginning }Iiraw as withhe • !God and who was (hd. or ns the *II angel -heralded Itebe of Bethlehem); ( I) "going to God" -"departing out ! of this world to the F'ather." 1. t• !.John defies our Lord's relations to �' "his own." 11) They are "his own" not because Ihcy first loved him, but because he first loved them; (2) leaving lov',d them at the first he loved them to the end. :t. John tens us of what our 1.ord was fully conscious ns he approached his pas- sion. iie knew 11) That in n unique sense (Tod wan his t'nther. 12) That God his father had given hie) all power in earth 1111(1 in heaven; (:i) That the time of his departure from this world was rat hand; (4) That to the (Tod from whoa) he had corse he woe to return. ii. Our Lord's Symbolic Act (verses 1-11). Aa their hA1t. according to orien- tal custom, our Lord suplifed venter for the disciples' feet. As their ser - vent he bathed their feet and wiped lb. ," with a towel (verse+ 4, 5). The ip,l. a wooderatl. Peter cLarac- s teristicnlly put his wonder into words of protest (verses 6-8), Our Lord replied in effect: 1. That, whit the full symbolism of his act cool( not just then be explained, it should become perfectly clear later (verse 7); 2. 'That meanwhile refection o the washing would be a pratctical re- jection of the Master's teachings and spirit (verse 8); 3. That what the bath had done for their limiies our Lor'f air.adv had done for their so l u s-hy grace they were clean (with the exception of one who had per- sisted in sinning against grace) (verses 10, 11); 1. But though spiritually clean in the eye•, of God their contact with n sinful world dee- rnandtKl the attentions of love; 5. Our Lord was patient with the mis- directed enthusiasm of l'eter (verse 9), end carefully set him right 0 i11. What Our Lord's Symbolic Act Means for Us (verses, 12-11), When he had washed the feet of the twelve Jesus robed himself again as a guest (verse 12), and. sitting down, proceeded to explain: "Do you understand uty action? You call the Master and Lord. 1 occupy that relation to you. Now 1, your itnbbi and Chief, have myself washed your feet. 'fake me ns your example in humility and in charity." Verse 1. Now before the feast of the pnssoyor-'That is, before the regularly, appointed day of the feast. The words give at date to the whole !narrative which follows, Jesus knowing -,rove or because ho knew. Hie hoar was conte -Until which time all plots against his life on the part of even his most formidable enemies were necessarily futile:. Ills own -Those who had become such by choice through faith in hinr. The expression must he token to- gether with the phrase, that were in the world. Being In the world they were nevertheless no longer "of the world." but members now of '•1he kingdom of heaven.'• of which he their Master erns the King. Unto the end -Even unto death, or possibly, as in the mnrainnl render - ng, unto the uttermost, 'lice bought. douhtlene, is that his love or them went to extreme lengths, rat being Influenced by the soft(•; ing ntI dent for there which it invelvevl. 2. louring supper--i•'rom John xiii , ft end )(tail., 28 it preemie evident hat the fourth evangelist wishes peeir,cally to dietingulsh this sup- e front the :egulsr [Passover feast bleb on the tiny of crucifixion wee till to be eaten. All threeof the ynoptiets, however, speak of this other. Nor the disciples in their tirno and under the social conditions under which they lived, the exhorta- tion could properly have a more lit- eral interpretation also, hardly so, however, for disciples to -day. THE RUSSIAN RETREAT DRUNKEN ORGIES AS MUKDEN FALLS. Description of Riot and Panic - There Was Vodka Enough For AIL e t a wounded dean, echo had lost his own in the c(Atfusion of the retreat. I helped place tit her wounded soldiers on gun carriages until there tt'as 110 room for more. Some of the men fell clown asleep. Many intoxicated men Iny on the road. Some wero tortured to death by' Chinese bandits, and l saw many corpses that had been stripped naked. COIRI'SES STREW 'f1it•: (.ROUND. I walked all night aver rifles and cartridges, tormented y thirst. Fre- queetly 1 fell over corpses left on the ground. In brief intervals tlio Japs' searchlights swept the horizon toward the north. The Russians al- ways tried to hide from this search- light and all the men shivered when- ever they saw it fixed on therm like the gaze of a gigantic eye. Several villages were blazing afar off. Some Japanese scouts fired a few shots at .luso range towartj midnight.' Dawn found me In the hilly coun- try near 'I'alienpu, 12 miles north of Mukden. The enemy was invisible and we thought we wero saved, but when we were entering a side valley the firing began from the south. Wo rushed wildly northward like frightened sheep, but were soon stop- ped by a sharp fusilade from an un- seen enemy in the north. Wo wero also fired upon from the east and shelled at close range from (ho heights to the westward, the shrap- nel bursting among the soldiers, who rushed to and fro in panic. They seemed to imagine they were being fared upon by their own men, and raised loud crie.s of "Vol!" "Vol!" ann uttered in loud, inarticulate wails the most dreadful sounds, I ever heard. BUGLES SOUND SURRENDER. The officers finally succeeded In getting the men lined up in two shallow furrows, but, being abso- lutely powerless against the enemy's fire, the men threw away their rifles and waved white handkerchiefs, while the buglers sounded "Cease fire." It seemed hours, however, before the Japanese ceased firing. Meanwhile the Russian commander was killed and Inany officers and men wounded. Tho Russians became convinced that Hie Japanese intended to give no quarter. The soldiers hitherto had suspected mc, but now a depu- tation of them, weeping hysterically, asked ate, being a British subject, to go and beg the duranese to spare them. 1 replied that it was 1111 - possible. Suddenly the firing ceased, anti from the right and left two detach- ments of Japanese infantry seemed to rise out of the ground. They ad- vanced rapidly, and when they were clo I sate they wore the uniform of the Itnperial Guards. They met the Ru. sinnn like long -divided brothers. J PS FEAR RUSSIAN KISSES. '1 Iluasiams heartily shook hands witj the Japanese and tried to kiss theft'. The Japanese, however, ob- jected to the kisses, fearing the Rus- sia/is wanted to bite them. We reached Liao -Yang tato at night. The city was quiet, but the Government. offices were still open. This is the story of the orgy and 1 the panic of the Russian evacua' foe t r.n,l retreat from Idurdeu. ;iouie features of it are nlmost incredible 1.f of belief, but i have photographs and t signed statements to prove thorn, writes a correspondent. The Itusslatia were demoralized at the outset by the destruction of their stores tyres \ r. fa ch ii, when a largo amount of supplies were burned around the MIturani headquarters of the army, on the extreme right. Vodka k 1 n c asks were ort.. opened 01 m 1 with swords and hatchets, and the Wren knelt down to drink the muddy liquor, which wee flowing ankle deepI rat on the ground. Some used as gob- lets the cases of exploded Japanese shells which fell around theta. Some- times firearms were discharged nccl- (Icnlaldy, sometimes the revert that the Japanese were but hall a mile away caused n commotion, but the soldiers soon resumed their orgy, ail disobeying their officers. 'Thousands of soldiers were le ing around in drunken stupor, and oven wounded officers were so intoxicated that they were only able to crawl around. ALCOifold C 11•;MON:-t, hp scene afforded a greet contrast o Liao -Yang under Russian rule. !'}p1 .Japanes) were living in the cum - ()liable Russian houses at the sta- ion. Thousands of dirty, lagged Messi- na were penned inside a fenced en - 'metre near the station, sleeping on the baro ground, without covering, without h t prdecentivacy, ant under the contemptuous gaze of crowds of Japanese and Chineeo who peered through' the bars as if tit a niett- na'rleJapaneseMany of the held their noses on account, they said, of the evil odor emanating from the ussinnn. Words cannot convey an dequate idea of the tree wn('ous hu- miliation the white race thus suffer- ed in the eyes of the Chinese. a c The storm enveloped the scene, giv- ing the frenzied crowd the nppenr- nnce of alcoholic demons battling in a hell of smoke. The soldiers de- veloped Anitlophobist sentiments that were dangerous for tae, but 1(1knchetT, the itnssinn newspaper correspondent, helped nue to escape. A similar scene occurred rat F'ush:ui which the !Watkins cell (lunnshan, and afterwards at Mukdrn Itself. len Starch 1 J returned to \hikden, where I found n remarkable asscaribly of armed and wounded Hitnh1itee in the Messina service. 'Fh,w n11 were young men. gorgeously dressed, and fierce ns tigers. They draw their swords on the spectators on tho slightest prot•ocntlon, and the ter- ror-stricken citizens of Muk(ien Razed nt then) front afar. I do not know why these men were assvmbherf, or what became of them. MUKDi:N iN FLAMES. t a 9 A (in Friday morning, . fai ch 10, i ound that Mukden hail been evacu- tetl during the night. The Russian ettlement was burning and drunken oldlers were throwing handfuls of artridge.•t into the flarrle'e. I rode northwards along the railway aov- eral miles to the north i found 5,00') rnen, the debris of seven regiments. lying behind the railway embank- ment. under heavy fire from the east • LONDON RIO I)0E. The work of widening and improv- ing London bridge is now nearing Completion. The old bridge will be considerably beautified by the altera- tion. Practically Sir .John Rennie's bridge, built over seventy- years ego rat a Cost of $10,111)0,010, still stands, for the in iniprove0meats aro the widening of the rendw"ny and footpaths, and the substitution for the solid parapet of en artistically designed open ballustrnde parapet, worked in Dartmoor granite. The need for greater traffic facilities across cite bridges is emphasized by the fact that the high-level footways of the 'Power bridge are now practi- cally useless. They have lust their charm of novelty. The hydraulic lifts stand idle, passengers realizing that little time is gained by using the high level while the low-level bridge is raised for shipping traffic. The city corporation has applied to parliament for power to close the high footwnys. COBWEBS ELECTftr('iTY, The operation of telegraph lines In tho Argentine Republic' is greatly haine'red by the fact that myriads of snail spiders weave their reel's on the wires until they hang down in regular festoons. These masses of cobweb, when damped by rain or clew, establish 'leaks," and by draw- ing off the current the capacity of the lines 19 sometimes reduced to only a tenth of the normal. Tbc Siberian niter 01, and its tr1- butrtries drain an arty almost equal to that of Western Europe -1,250,- 000 square miles. DOMESTIC ItI•:C11'ES. Savory Tomato Soup -Finely cho two medium -sited unions end p0 then) in u saucepan with two owl. of butter and a tablespoonful o mhu(td parsley; 11(1(1a little salt an pepper, uud three new boiled pots toes, and a cup of string beaus chopp('d tine; also half a cup of cook ed or cauuicd green peas. Sinune about ten u)inutes; then add tt cu of very ripe tomatoes. • Add a table spoonful of sugar, a pinch of groan cloves, more salt if required and little cayenne. Cook gently for hal an hour, then rub through a lin sieve. Return to the oven and thick en with a teaspoonful of butter rub bed to a paste with a teaspoonful o cornstarch. Sere very hot with tiny tappets of fried or toasted bread. Broiled Eggs -Cut slices of bread toast them lightly, trim the edges and lay them on a dish before th fire, with some bits of butter place: on top. When this molls, break ant spread carefully six or eight eggs of the toast. Have ready a salamander or hot shovel, to brown the top and, where the eggs are sufficiently done, squeeze nn orange and grate some nutmeg over them. Eggs a la Creme.-Ilard buil twelve eggs; slice then) thin in rings. in the butt„tn of a large baking dish place a layer of grated bread crumbs, then one of the eggs; cover with bits of butter and sprinkle with pepper and salt. Continue thus to blend these ingredients until the dish i< full, be sure, though, that the crumbs (.over the eggs upon top. Over the whole pour a large teacupful of sweet cream, and brown nicely in a moder- ately heated oven. Eggs a I'Italicnne.-Break seven or eight eggs into a sauce pan, with n bit of butter in it. Arid the juice of a lemon, a tablespoonful of water, enough pounded sugar to nia'0 then! decidedly sweet, a pinch of salt, and any, approved flavoring. as orange flower water or curac'o . Then pro- ceed exactly as with scrambled eges. When they aro set without being hard, pilo them on a hot (fish, dust them well with sugar, and candy it a little either under a salamander or with a red hot fire shovel. Eggs a la Mart in -leave ready a dish that should bo like a deep, or- dinary soup plate, without the wile rim. It is eany enough to find such at any store. Have it heated. but not too hot. Put into a small sauce - Pan a teaspoonful of butter. Lot it tnelto but be careful that it does not brown. 'Then add a teaspoonful of flour, or more, if it is preferra:l thicker, and then very slowly, after the flour is well mingled, a cup of milk or cream. 'Then add four table- spoonfuls of grated chceke. Stir well, and when thoroughly heated. pour into the dish you have ready, • and with great care, so as to keep the shape. drop into the mixture four eggs. The ordinary dish will hold about. four eggs. and look well, but it may be possible to find larger ones. l'ut at once into the oven, and when the eggs are set, serve at once. A few bits of parsley make the dish look more inviting. Egg Timbales -Butter small tin tnolds, and dust them with powdered' %Parsley; then an egg is dropped in each, and they are put in a pan of hot water and cooked in the oven for about ten minutes, when they may be turned out on a round plat- • ter, and n sauce made of n cup of thickened cream with chopped mesh - rooms in it, or a tomato sauce with the mushrooms may be poured around them. '!'hese timbales 'nay be altered by lining the molds with I finely minced heat instead of the: parsley, but it mist be uudstene'(I with crenae or egg to make it adhere to the tin. Tho egg is put in and the sauce used as before. Egg Vol -act -Vents -Mince two truf- fles and put them into a slewpatn with two tablespoonfuls of thick cream, add tone eggs that have boil - u went!- minutes; 1111(1 chop them small ea80n with snit, pepper and nutmeg. late ready some paste cases, anti s when the mixture has tzimmorod nye! t minutes, til) then) and servo hot. I Sufficient for six cases. h ► IllN'l'S FOR THE )HOME:. ch r When mashing pot utoes beat well ! ee with a fork, adding a little hot milk, butter, pepper. and sa1t. For Cracked lips-Iloney and gly- cerine in e(inal quantities 1s an ex- cellent remedy for cracked lips. Ap- ply this at night regulat ic. Moiled carrots if passed through n potato masher ora sieve and season- ed n ith pepper and salt, make an ex- cellent vegetnl.le course, '1'0 )pardon W'hitewnsh-'lo hall a pail of common whitewash add huff a pint of flour. Pour on boiling ea- ter in a sufficient quantity to thick- en it. 'Then add six gallons of the lime anti water, and stir well. 311111 ing will last for years if it I, given a thin cont of varnish whf•n first put down, anti twain after each alx months. The varnish c,rtainl% preserves the substance and gives it a handsome appearance. p t e'8 (1 r n ti a 1' e 0 1 A WARNING NOTE PIODI THE BACK. Psoftle often say," Now are eve to know wheat the kidneys are out of order t" The location of We kidneys, close to the emelt of the back, renders the detection of kidney trouble a simple matter. The note of warning 0011105 from the back, in the shape of backache. Don't neglect to cure it imme- diately. Serious kidney trouble will follow if you do. A few doses of DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS, taken in time, often save years of suffering. Mr. Horatio Till, Geary, N.R., writes :--" I suffered for about two years with kidney dis- ease. Ilad paints in my back, hips and legs; could not sleep well, and had no appetite. I took one box of Doan's Kidney Pills, anti they cured me. The pains have all left, and I now sleep well. Price 50 cents per bo::, or 3 for $1.25. All dealers, or Tug DOAN KIDN$y PILL Co., Toronto, Out. t''tp4'Avt�erMr� To Clens looking Glas•es-Spoego the surface with (:pial purls t:f gin and water, then dost over ,•itit 'este- dered blue. Polish tntlt an ul,l silk hrindkerclilef, 1h cases of 'rheumatism the ; .:f -a may be greatly e,,: (r 1. b .t nut c.m:.•.1, by the [olb,w ing ,iso' br,,l 1'ct tic:, 011000 of -carbonate of s d, era r,.:her more than en,• lint. of Loi :u ear; bathe the ase tel pati nae 1 e.,eiel wrung out in tee inti• n , I;est as possible. Apply- this ea•e. i'.: tial redo•, ed. 1'o not Hash !map , .loin cir:y, but Leld that o.er aha of a) kettle and thea I:• ', .. • ;, a 014t1. 11, -Alter 11 a ., t • the chinint'y with a tient sl'get l,' moistened with par,1ffb) a,:tl tit n lar iislt with a clow c; .t':. If yc ti t.i..h to keep h11np china) ys very 1 ri-,ht, reser w'n'h there, t Really ponrl tea rr coffee ern !loser be expected 1.010 a tea 1 e•: tie 1 e t brilin: on t� a st r: e. '1 he co't! . for shnuld le p'lt into iso ! ; til earl (lirect'y it b. its 11 r: I et 0 0't•. t is also ween i :1 th;.t the Izet 'e eh.).;l,l Is; freque :t ly ekun: l (u;t t• it a brush. \Sete ten has I re:! a! ! eon spoilt bernaaso tie water hag till it trn'es flat. ('LPANI,Nu L.ICI? ('i'!; I' ;!�• !, In cleaning Lee cert.( ne then! free of (it.st. '1') to :iu:11-1 ;;m.� tern Limos or pat "h c'ref )ly by darning over a r.:,. e .1 :o '•• which bus been bis•. • : 1 P:.. -t the tear. Pieces of old c,- .:P S el) trill he saved for just stet, a r..r 1, ::;•, but if necessary new 1•t: '. i : t t' '); 1 ,. purchased by the yarl. it :14'1 ;P • curtains in nnrin sed . , , . ,,, t laying between the 1.n• ;! . t P,..• rubbing on v nenhe n,•tl '. 'I may he 1:)110:1 rinw'', hies.!, v.hd.• 51:11 wet, alt 1 • I s 11,:.c ly as 1 o ri•,'e. 1' i;' 11:,• ! ''r-1 cult .. ire: lir 1, for three a ill 1':' out (he sl,uc and ill o it a e consistency for the of he=x. If cern cut tains Me ch 111 anti i,q they can be rostered t•y dept' ii ill a bath of strong cotic0 o hi. h 1t :s ',Net Whited a 111 water. This in'' t be don•, of courn.•, before they aro starched, and no 1,1 ing. Ilo cnref.d in affixing sell •ps to stretchers that each of e is caught. nith it pin or Il you skip moon of thein do so at regular intervals. It is also best to attach them 1.1 pc Irs; then the scallops of two tent ante aro pinned together, a tech simplifies hanging them evenly aft elevate'. Ileal lace drase.les 1111151. L0 Itau'.l- ed carefully. Flint me.hes 8.211)01i,ite:t tear if pulled ont�, stretchers, and such curtains 1111(1 betTt a be st1')tchcd upon a s^eet. spread 01) the Iloot'. When pinned go over the curtain with i h . • f SO a t damp ' an) cloth, h, t. 1 ) remove etl t0 traces of stench. This will give the (Iralreries the appearance of being quite neW. .• 1 have a question for you," Anid the bashful young man. "'Turn it oos0," replied the fair one, as she hilted her ehecolate from one cheek o tho other. "If " said the i1.Y.M., 'you thought of another fellow what -ou think If me. would you !marry irn?" "When the other fellow asks 110," answered the fair clenedato- ewer, "I'11 let you know by post - aril." A bunted saucepan should be fille ! with cull water, to which a rather liberal nlloennce of nein. is added i.ct this stand for a couple Of hours, then hent slowly and simmer for ten minutes, and all stains of the burr- ing will bo eradicated. Treat your damp well as fellows: Make a varnish of one part of sled lac to two ports of nnptha, ami cover the damp part thoroughly with R. Wait t111 the tarnish is dry, thee paper it with ordinary brown -paper under the proper eellpnper. To Stiffen Strew riata-I'ut two cents worth of gum arabic into a little boiling water, and when dis- solved brush it thoroughly Into the straw. Let this dry very slowly; and the hat will look like new. In the ease of blot* straw, add a little ink . to the SUM. . o i 25,000 NEW WORDS are added in tho last edition of Web- ster's International Dictionary. The Gazetteer of the World, and the Bio- graphical Dictionary have been com- pletely revised. The International is kept always abreast of the times. It takes constant work, expensive work and worry, but it is the only way to keep the dictionary tho STANDARD AUTHORITY of the English-speaking world. Other dictionaries follow. Webster leads, It is the favorite with Judges, Scholars, Educators, Printers, etc., in this and foreign countries. • *A postal card will bring you inter- esting specimen pages, etc. 0. & C. MERRiAM COMPANY, SPRINOFIIIID, Mau, sueueeme WEBSTER'S INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY..