Exeter Times, 1905-10-19, Page 3•
turns Bad Bloods into
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internally, restores the Stomach,
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..
ABSOLUTE ONE GREAT TESTIMONY
4
SECURITY1 Religion
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t Women at the change of life, who are
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Ever the
Men May
The word of the Lord eu lureth for-
ever. -Peter i. 25.
Perhaps the words of the Irish
he Din writer voices the deepest reli-
gluus feelings of to -day:
Change and decay in all around 1
bee;
0, 'Thou who changest not, abide
with nue.
There has Leen a change in mental
attitude toward all things that per-
tain to religion. The doctrine of
evolution has unveiled a new world.
And yet it is the same old world; we
have simply revised our opinions
about it. The universe did not
break up into chaos with the down-
fall of the Ptolemaic system of as•
tt•onomy. We simply awoke one day
to find that in reality the earth
instead of sitting on a throne, roceiv-
ing tho adoration of the cion and
,stars, itself paid homage, and in ro-
tation and revolution besought the
son's light and heat and was content
with the worship of one little burnt -
up cinder. Similarly, though Chayes
Darwin ha.s changed nun's views •ii
science and history and of all human
speculation, the facts of life rennin
the same. It in only the opinions of
those facts which change and differ.
Now some lament that their reli-
gion is being taken away; that the
Bible is being destroyed as God's
word to man and its position of
authority undermined; thal the
church, the sacraments, the creeds,
the ministry, no longer hold the at-
tention and reverence of men and
that all authority for faith itself is
shattered. They :.sok back with long-
ing eyes to the days when there was
NO HIGHER CRITICISM,
when there was no questioning of tho
dogmas of religion, when men be-
lieved their theologies as they did the
multiplication tables.
It would be simple truth to ob-
serve that those days never existed;
they aro part of an ideal imagina-
tion. 'There has always been skepti-
cism; there have always been ques-
tionings. "All is vanity
and vexa-
tion
tion of spirit." is only one ancient
testimony. The difference to -day is
the.! skepticism and questionings a'a
more apparent.
Then what must be the attitude of
the religious mind to -day? Simp'y
to assert more vigorously the old
doctrine of inspiration, to proclaim
with more definiteness the old forams
laries? If there is nothing better,
nothing surer, the voice must grow
fainter and weaker, until filially It
Same, Though
Differ.
shall die away entirely. Von even
the supeesod days of simple faith
and the unquestioning mind can never
return. You have some time, possi-
bly to -day, engaged to wor-hip, iu
praise and prayer, and now you aro
reading this. Why? Because of steno. -
thing alien to your nature that has
been imposed upon you by some book,
saws church, some creed? No. but
because of some ununistnkablo fact of
your inmost being, some part of your
own nature, that. finds no sattsfy'ug
;affinity with any of the transito"y
things of earth, and from its depths
cries out, "0, Thou who c'hnagest
;not, abide with the"; some hunger of
the soul that discovers no sustenance
for it except in communion with God.
Tills is the foundation of your reli-
gion, your deepest faith. No science,
!no criticism, no philosophy can sh ttce
it. Without it no religion woulu be
possible, no Bible, no church, no
worship. Because it is there all
!forms of expression aro possible, erne
'inevitable. As one of these forms
consider briel!y the Bible.
THE MAIN TRUTH
is that the Ilible did not precede this
foundation faith we have just men -
!Gomel, but blossomed from it. In the
wards of ono New Testament writer,
".len (peke from good, being movoi
by the holy spirit." As their nature,
their generation, their habits of
thought permitted them to he moved,
so they were moved. And what they
spako is of value to us, not as an
infallible rule of faith and practice,
but as an actual religious experience
• of men of flesh and blood like our
:own. Much we can appropriate and
I make our own because our own relig-
ious nutue•es respond to it. Much we
can enjoy and feed on because it a-
tually does nourish. It goes straight
to the heart without the aid of any
theory of inspiration
i The method of compilation has
nothing to do with the Bible's power
to nourish the religious life. 'That
integral part of our being hails the
Bible as one grtat testimony to rei-
gion. It shows that in our highest
aspirations rte are in tune with the
best life and thought of the ages. We
!do not say "Take away the Bible
'and faith remains." We say the faith
that is in man made the Bible possi-
ble. Faith is encouraged by its
frank witness to growth from lowsr
to higher spiritual planes. Faith
feeds and grows on all the enduring
divine truth it contains. to this
word of the Lord ondureth forever.
THE S. S. LESSON
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
OCT. 22.
Lesson IV. Rebuilding the
Temple. Golden Text,
1 Cor. 3. 17.
LESSON WOTU1 STUDIES.
Note. -These Word Studies for this
lesson are bused on the text of the
Revised Version.
Intervening Events -Chapter 2 is
devoted largely to an enumeration
of the principal men and heads of
tribes and families, priests, Lovites,
and others, who accompanied the
caravan of returning exiles from
llal tonin to Jerusalem. In Ezra 2.
64-66 the n•unbe• of Israelites re-
turning is stated as 42,860 plus 7,-
337 servants and mnids, making a
total of 49,697 persons. Of this
number there were 200 "singing men
and women." that is, professional
singes. This cnn'uany took with
thein 8,136 bensts of burden, of
which 0,720 were asses, 730 horses,
435 camels, and 245 turtles. The
first thing necessary after the arriv-
al of the caravan at .Jerusalem was
the choosing and establishing of
homes by the returning exiles'. 'Phis
occupied 601510 tronths. At last in
the seventh month the people reas-
eembled in Jerusalem and at once
reinstituted "all the set feasts of
Jehovah that were consecrated."
'hhe beginning pf the actual work of
the rebuilding of the temple was not
cn simple a matter. Cedars of Leb-
anon and prepared stones were neces-
sary. and it was two years and two
months longer before the actual
work of the building could he begun.
Our lesson story begins with the
events nccnmpanying the laying of
the foundation of the temple.
Verse 10. They set-'l'hnt is, those
in charge of the building set the
priests. Some ancient manuscript.
read, 'rho priests stood.•'
Their apparel -'The dress of the
Priest! consisted of short breeches
(Semi. 2s. 12) mode of line linen; n
1 ung chat with sleeves also made .'f
tae linen: n girdle, w..-., f .,..
-:one colors that were in t:i.e veil be-
ie.re the Holy Place; n cap of linen.
s their feet they wore within..
,p. Excel. 3. 5; 39. 27-29; ,Josh.
1:.).
'.•ns of Asnph with rvnthnls--IFor
the nssignut.mt of instrumental
auric to the i.ovites by 1favid and
,1 the r}r.thaJA specially to the sons
of Asap)). compare 1 Citron. 25. 1
with 1 ('broil. 16. 4. 5 and 25. 6.
11. They sang one to another -
Probably, ns has been the tradition-
al interpretation. this refers to an-
tiphonal singing in which two choirs
.mcg alternate phresee in response to
ench other. Such psalms us 186;
21. 7-10: 106; 107; 111 were suited
especintly to such rendering. Our
limited knowledge. however, con-
•rning early Jewish .music makes it
'n►peseihle In !peek authoritatively
with retrnrd to what melte was used
end how it was render..!.
"Per he is good, for his loving -
kindness endureth forever toward
Israel" -These words are probably
not n quotation from the psalms,
but rather a liturgical response
used at sacred festivals, upon which
the well-known psalm, Psn. 136, was
Itself tensed. This terse is a marked
fulfillment of the prophecy. .tor. 83.
10. 11, which compare.
12. Old men that had seen tho
first house -The "first house" re-
fers to Solomon's temple, which had
been destroyed in 586 R. C., fifty-
one years before. Even sixteen years
later the prophet Haggai (2. 3)
could still appeal to some who had
sten the former temple.
Wept with n loud voice -In their
extreme sorrow because of the com-
parative insignificance of the house
being erected to the former temple
in its glory.
13. Could not discern the noise of
the shout of joy from the noise of
the weeping of the people -A most
narked difference of effect which the
inauguration of the building had
upon the younger (-aople, on the one
hand, and the older people, on the
other.
Verse 1. The ndt'ersnries of Judah
and Benjamin -The Samaritans liv-
ing just to the north, called adver-
saries by anticipation.
2. Since the days of Ever-ha(llon,
king of Assyria-Essar-ha(Idon was
the son and successor of Sennache-
rib. eln the year 677 B. C. Sidon
hnd revolted front the authority of
Babylonia, but was promptly cap-
tured and destroyed, and another
city, called "The City of Asar-had-
llon," was built in its place. This
new city, together with the sur-
rounding country, was colonized
with cnpt ices from Elam and Ilaby-
Ionia, and of these captives many I
settled as far south as the region
which we know as aarnnr'in. The
descendants of these colonists. svho
had intermarried with the r•'nnant
of Jews still dwelling in the country,
were n mixed rare, adhering partly
to the religion of the .Jews and pert -
Iv
I
Iv to that. of the Intel from which
the colonists hnd come. itecnuse of
the fnct that they were not Jews of
purr descent the returned wiles
would have nothing to do with
t hewn.
1. Wenl.onecl 1h,' hnnds of the peo-
ple .,f .Iudah-Piot ohstneles in their
,writ. hindered them in their enter-
prise in every manner possible.
5. iHir.'tl counselors agninet them
to frustrate their purpose -lien who,
for pay. ninths tante representntinnn
before the king concerning the pure
poses and work of the .Sews at .ler-
neaten].
ieriu. kine of T'ersin-Not to he
confused with "Darius the Median"
of !inn. 5. 8t. The king here re-
ferred to tens the third rider after
Corns and the reorganizer of (a'c-
ond) Mender of the Persi.)n empire.
Ilo reigned from 522 to 548 11. C.
"i'm sure you would be cool in the
presence (.f danger, Billy." "Well, i
don't want to bons?, Agnes. but you
should have seen the way 1 kept my
nerve when I called on your father."
come out of curl so."
A FORESTRY CONVENTION
WILL BE HELI: IN OTTAWA IN
JANUARY NEXT.
A Great Deal of Practical Good
May be Expected I'rotu the
Deliberations.
'l'he announcement of a Canaliian
forestry Convention hat nig the su(a-
port of the Donuilion and Provincial
Goteremeuts to be held in Ottawa
on the loth, 11th and 12th .Janu-
ary, 1906, is an important ane for
the itoutinion, for the forests aro one
of her best assets and anything that
will preserve thrum and increase their
value is deserving of every consider-
ation. Finding the trees growing in
maturity on the forest lands little
attention was given to the fact that
they aro li':ing entities and grow
according to laws which may be as-
certained and by the control of
which their development may be
regulated. Forests have been class-
ed with minerals. The more that
was taken away, the less, it was
considered, would or could be left.
The fact that whore trees grew and
flourished they could grow again
was not thought of. As a result the
forests were cut or burntfrom
good and poor land alike and there
aro throughout Canada large tracts
of land producing nothing which
►niglyhave been producing valuable
forests, and which nnay still be. if
only proper means aro taken to that
end. Tho value of forest products
for 1901, according to the last cen-
sus, was $51,000,000 and provincial
governments which control their own
lands derive largo revenues from
their forests. Strike out the item
of forest revenues from the provin-
cial budgets and the largo amounts
thus raised must bo provided by di-
rect taxation in some other form.
THE PUBLIC INTERIST.
in the question of forest preserva-
tion is therefore great.
It. may bo interesting to sketch
the history of the forestry move-
ment which is thus reaching such
an itnportant stage in its develop-
ment. The question was agitated
for many years by Sir Ilenri Joly
de Lotbinicre, Mr. William Little
and others, and in 1882 a Forest
Congress was convened in Montreal
representing the United States and
Canada to consider the subject and
devise means of dealing with th i
L.
There was a largo attendance of
leading men from rho United States
and Canada and during the two or
three days' deliberations a number
of valuable papers were read and in
the discussions a great deal of in-
teresting and useful information was
brought out. The results were
somewhat ephemeral, however, ns,
although the proceedings were well
reported in the newspapers and con-
siderable public interest was aroused
the pressure of necessity was not felt
in the same way as itis at tho
present time and no sustained effort The trade goon died out again for
was made to keep the matter before Bogie reason, and not until 1650 was
the public. At this convention, it rex 'vett by a foreign workman,
however, the American forest Con- who conduct. I his operations on so
gross was organized which body stet largo a scale that there was no
t ions. They are among the most
important that are before the public
for solution tc.-day. !Forestry ex-
perts in Europe are
LOOKING '1'o CANADA
as one of the world's great standbys
for the lumber supply of the future;
the United States is feeling the pinch
of decreasing supplies and is already
drawing largely on Cana(la to Drake
up the deficit; the lumbermen realize
the increasing value of their hold-
ings; the gott•r•n►aents appreciate rho
significance of the large forest bud-
get in their revenues; the agricultur-
ists see more clearly the protective
and direct talue of forests and
woodlots; and the railways and
other industries Gel the increasing
difficulty of obtaining the supplies
they require.
At. the Forest Congress held in
Washington in January last it was
made clear that. the United States
consider the situation a grave one
in so far as their country is con-
cerned. President Roosevelt, who
addressed the Congress, made the
following statement: --
"If the present rate of forest de-
struction is allowed to continuo,
with nothing to offset it, a timber
famine in the future is inevitable.
Fire wasteful and destructive forms
of lumbering, an.d the logithnato use.
taken together, are destroying our
forest resources far more rapidly
than they are being replaced. It is
only as the producing and commer-
cial interests of the country comp
to realize that they need to have
trees growing up in the forest no
less than they need the product of
the trees cut down, that we may
hope to see the permanent prosper-
ity of both safely secured.:'
Forestry is, therefore, a subject
that should be given careful consid-
eration in the Dominion in order
that we may if possible hold our
commanding position. Tho Forestry
Convention Is therefore a timely
mote, and that it is so appreciated
is shown by the fact that it has the
support of Itis Excellency the Gov-
ernor General and that not only the
Premier of the Dominion, but Mr. 11.
L. Borden, the Lender of the Op-
position, are taking an active inter-
est in its success.
♦---
NEEDLE MAKING III ENGLAND
Trade has Been Started and Lost
Several Titres.
Th historymakingdes i
The of needles n
England is a curious one, for the art
has been several times lost to Eng-
lish workmen since the reign of Queen
Alary.
Needles were first made in Eng-
land at that time by a negro from
Spain, who tot up u shop and for a
time prospered at his trade. At his
death it was found that he had
taught the tre.de to no one, and the
-+-
1144+144444.644+11444
TIi Home
M`I44-I-i4+H x+1+$4 444
til'.L1:C1•L:U ltl•:(,I! F.ti.
Sell -frosting Lemon Pie -Lind a
deep pie plate with rich crust and
put dots of butter in crust. Now
make your tilling as follows: Grated
rind and juice of 1 letnon, one cup
sugar, yolks of two eggs, two heap-
ing teaspoons flour, one cup milk.
Now beat whites of two eggs very
stiff and mix into yuur filling very
slowly. Put (lour and sugar to-
gvther as this prevents emaping, then
add the milk and stir thoroughly.
Add yolks of eggs and stir again.
Add letnon rind and yolks the last
thing before your whites, As soon
as whites are thoroughly mixed in
put in oven immediately. 1)0 not
op..1 oven floor for twenty minutes.
Be careful not to have oven too hot.
Rake ono hour. When done the
frosting should bo very tine grained
and very light.
Grandmother's Lemon Pie. -Ono
lemon. chopped half cup sugar, half
cup molasses, half cup ivator, 1 egg,
one common cracker finely pounded,
squeozo lemon before chopping. Mix
and bake with two crusts.
Peanut Cake. -Cream together four
tablespoons of butter and one cup
of sugar, then beat in the whipped
yolk of ono egg, then add little by
little alternately 14 cups flour, sifted
with 1 i teaspoons of baking powder
and I cupful milk. Lastly fold in a
cup of finely chopped peanuts and
the stiffly beaten white of the egg.
!lake in a loaf or in s►nall tins.
Boston Fruit Wafers. -Three-quar-
ters cup sugar, one-third cup of but-
ter, two eggs, ono tablespoon of
water, hall teaspoon soda, ono tea-
spoon creast tartar, little nutmeg,
half teaspoon cinnamon, ono and a
halt cups flour, quarter cup of rais-
ins, quarter cup currants, three-
quarters cup walnuts. Drop from
teaspoon into pan. Bake twenty
minutes in moderate oven, or bake in
one sheet, spreading it over the pan
about one inch in thickness. Use
a coffee cup in treasuring. and a
good, round measure of the sugar
ar A g
And butter. Use the seeded raisins.
uns.
Cut thein once with a knife. I often
use them instead of currants. Use
the little whole raisins. The wal-
nuts should not be cut very fine.
Lenton Sauce. -One cup sugar, half
cup of butter, one egg beaten light,
one lemon (juice and grated rind)
half cup of boiling water. I'ut in
basin and steam.
English had to go abroad for their Lemon Cream Sauce. -Ono pint
needles until 1565, when a German milk, when it boils add one tea -
artisan taught n few mechanics the spoon flour, four ounces of sugar,
manner of their making. three well beaten yolks of eggs. Re-
move from fire and add grated rind
and juice of one lemon. Stir well
and serve in sauce tureeen.
Delicious Pudding Sauce. -To four
large spoons of fine, white sugar
put two of butter, ono of flour and
stir together, add the beaten white
of an egg. Then pour into the howl
a gill of boiling water and stir very
fast. flavor and servo.
.Jelly Cake.-Threo eggs, one-half
cup sugar, one cup of flour, butter
-size of egg, one oven teaspoon bak-
ing powder. Bake in jelly tin. When
cold spread with fruit jelly. This
is also nice for strawberry cake.
later in the city of Quebec in 1892.
The most far-reaching result of
this convention was the adoption of
the lire rangi:g system, which has ,method of making them was not
done so much to preserve the forests !shrouded in secrecy, and soon the
of Canada and which was undoubt-:manufacttu•e of needles became an
edly a direct result of the stimulus ',important industry, the • Whitechapel
given to the interest in the subject. !needles becoming famous the world
This system was first adopted in over.
Ontario in 1885 and the other pro- There aro now several centres. in
vinces have been one after another addition to the London quarter,
following this example. The con- where the needle industry flourishes.
vention was therefore far from fruit- Birminghamalone 'traducing as many
less and if the saving of timber from needles in a tiny as the orginal work -
fire which the fire rangers have ac- ratan made in his lifetime.
complished can be credited in any
longer any danger of the secret of
their manufacture being lost.
This was the first time that the
way to that contention it certainly
has more than justified to the peo-
ple of Canada the calling of :t to-
gether.
The different governments continu-
ed to work out their forest adminis-
tration on individual lines, but in
only one province, Ontario. was
(hero
A SPECIAL OFFICER
appointed to make the investlga-
tions of this question his particular
sphere of work. This Branch has
done splendid work under the charge
of Mr. Southworth. In 1891) a
Superintendent of !Forestry for the
Dominion was appointed. and short-
ly afterwards Mr. Stewart. the Sup-
erintendent. called n meeting at. Ot-
tawa to consider the organization of
a Canadian Forestry Association'.
This Associati:)n has held meetings
each year and hns published a great
many valuable reports and papers.
13 has been steadily keeping the
guest ion of the forests before the
public and that it has done so in a ;
wise and practical way is evidenced
by the fact that it has the support!
of those whose interest in the forest
is personal as well ns of a large
number who are intere:4t ed front the
public stnn(Ipoint. Aman:; its sup-
porters nre such lending lumbermen
ns .1. R. Rooth, Iron. W. ('. Ed-
wards, Ili ram Robinson. 11. M.
Price; leading business men like 1).
McNicoll, General Manager of the ,
('nnndinn Pacific Railway; 11. E.
Walker, General Manager of the
Batik of Commerce, and ninny
others; leading educators like the
Principal of the University of To-
ronto and of Queen's University.
The persevering work of lite As-
sociation hns brought the sut.Ject to
the point where the federal govern-
ment have thought it a wise policy
to call together n Dominion Con-
vention to consider the subject.
Representatives will be called from
the Provincial Governments, rho
Lombe] men's Association, Bon rds
of 'Trade, Universities and Agrieul-
tural Coltegts, Farmers' institutes
and other orgnni7atione.
The tonin divisions in which the
subject will he consider.d will in-
clude the National itnterest in the
Forest, the Relations of the Forest
and the Lumber, Pulp and other in-
dustries of the Cotmtry. Fnrettry in
Relation to Agriculture. the influ-
ence of the Forests nn Water Powers
and irrigation. Reproduction of 1hi
Forest. All these are vital qu.es-
GOVERNOR OF GIBRALTAR.
General Forestier -Walker, who
Succeeded Sir George White.
Gen. Sir l'retlerick Forestier -Walk
er, who has just been appointed 1.
the Governorship of Gibraltar, is n
man not only of great wealth, hut.
likewise of much force of character.
When he was formerly at the ('ape
of Good hope years ago as military
secretnry to Sir itartle Frere, the
Governor-Cle.nernl of South Africa: hr.
tendered his resignation on two se-
parate occasions rather than take
any part in the policy that seemed
like yielding to the Itoe►'s, and was
only with diiliculty persuaded to ro
main. His wife, too, prior to her
marriage was a Miss Ross, one of the:
great beauties of the London season,
possesses as much nerve as her gal-
lant husband, and when the latter
commended the troops in Egypt she
set not only all Cairo and Alexnn
(Iris, but even the people in 1 ondua.
by the cors a Yen her light for freee
donee with the late Lady Grenfell.
whose heehaw] was then $irdnr oe
General -in -Chief of the 1'aypttan
army. The disp'tto tuns 01113' sotte.i
1)y the mediation and arbitration of
tho late Duke of Cambridge.
WORLD'S ('LI)1•:S"I' itl?1'1'l1I,iC.
Switzerinnd is celebrating the nnni-
versary of its inauguration under. a
iFederal (1ovu•nteent, which stamps
the co'tntry as the oldest Republic in
the world. 'Jibe Swiss 3'unie'er a(lon
hnd itt• origin in a league composel
far p
oses of defence by the men
of The e cantons of Uri, Schwye,
and Unt -Alden so far hack as 1''2111.
As }ears went on other cantons join-
ed the Confederation, some of the
latest being the cantons of Geneva,
'Valais, and Neuchatel.
MOSLEM (+IMAYE•:S.
A Moslem grave In Turkey, when
once it has been filled in is never
reopened on any account. With a
view to remove the faintest chance of
it being thus defiled the Moslems
plant n cypress tree on every grave
immediately after tho burial, thus
making their cemeteries resemble for-
ests.
-4 •
Grocer-"Whnt nre you grumbling
about? 1)'ve want the earth?'' Cus-
tomer -"No, not in the sugar."
llrend and .Iant Fritters. -For
bread and jant fritters, first the bat-
ter must 1)e made. Put four ounces
of flour and a quarter of a teaspoon-
ful of salt into a basin. Break the
egg into the middle of it, and with
a wooden spoon work in the flour
gradually; then add half a gill of
milk, stirring it well in; next beat
the batter well till the surface is
covered with bubbles, and lastly add
enough milk to make up the quan-
tity of one gill. Cut the bread and
butter into neat pieces and spread
them over with jam (any kind with-
out. stones). Have ready a pan of
frying fat. When a bluish stroke
arises from it (lip some of the bread
and jam into the hnttor, then drop
them into the frying fat and fry
thele n pretty golden brown. 'Then
drain theta well on kitchen paper.
dust them over with powdered sugar•.
Serve then) heaped upon a lace
paper.
HOUSEIIOI.) IIiN'iS.
Shortening made of half lard and
half rendered beef dripping is su-
perior as well as cheaper than when
all of ono kind. Odds and ends of
fat may be rendered out in a little
seater, strained through a piece of
cheese -cloth, of which' n liberal sup-
ply should always be kept on hand.
and when cold the tett removed tr. e.
the water. This as well as the et •
mentioned is good for pie crust ane
cno'i.•s. rind even for delicnee en k.
11 .•.I with half butter.
1, in 1'i. --(!n;l *,
i
Consumption
- There is only one cure for
It. " Pst'uglI.ft " is the greatest
remedy in the world for all forms of
pulmonary trouble. Scores of pito-
plc in Canada attest this fact.
" PbvCl1IsE" stands without a rival
as a permanent and absolute cure
for Consumption and lung diseases.
It reach.e the sore spots, heals the
decayed tissue, destroys the tuber-
cle germs, creats rich blood, tones
up the whole system, and cleanses
from all impurities.
OREATEST OR ALL TONICS
CIIINE
(PRONOUNCED 311_•KEEN)
A11. OR1000ISTS-OM NOUAll-FLEE TiISL
DR. T. A. SLOCUM, Limited
t7e King St. W. Toronto. Sand&
stake excellent filling for pies. Stew
the apples, and press through a col-
ander to remove the skin,. The ale
pies should be covered before they
are stewed. Sweeten the apples and
oake in two crusts, or with ono
crust. and frost, or instead of frost-
ing sprinkle the top thickly with
sugar after tho pie is baked. It
baked with two crusts, nutmeg can
be used to flavor the pie, if liked.
Another delicacy is made from
crabs by removing the cores from the
large red variety. Fill the core c.w-
ities with seeded raisins, add a little
water and make soft. It desired
cover with the whites of two eggs
beaten stiffly. I have discovered
that many men despise this "soap-
sud" topping to tSssserts.
To make a novel meat -ball stew,
season a pound of hamburg steak to
taste and roll into tiny .halls about
the o size t
t f a walnut. B l
Boil slowly I an
hour, and then add a third of a
cup of rice. Tho meat balls keep
their shape, and make a delicious
stew.
SENTENCE SERMONS.
Half-hearted service is always
heavy.
IFear vice most when sho wears the
veil.
You may know a man by the
friends he drops.
Sunny souls are not troubled with
doubt-dnmps.
There's a tack somewhere for every
pneumatic saint.
No creed that is worth publishing
can be put into type.
Without the sense of stewardship
culture becomes a curse.
No -man is going to buy Your
piety if your peanuts are ancient.
The slumber of one saint is no ex-
cuse for the sloth of another.
The best way to bear your cross is
to share another's cares.
The only things that are estnb-
lishel aro those that never stand
stili.
When a man has religion in
heart he will not need it on his
band.
The lightweight man always t
that his buoyancy is duo to
wings.
Is nature's spscIlIe tot
DIARRHGIA, DYSENTERY,
CRAMPS, PAiN IN THE STOM-
ACH, COLiC, CHOLERA MOR.
BUS, CHOLERA INFANTUM,
SRA SiCKNRSS, and all SUN.
MAR COMPLAiNTS is Cbildres
or Adults.
Its effects ars raarvelleur.
Pleasant and Harmless to take.
Rapid, Reliable and Effectual In Its
action.
IT HAS BEEN A I4OUF,EHCLD
REMEDY FOR NRAP.LY SiXTY
Y°AHS.
PRICE 38 CENTS.
•
Ftmst ?":,r.- r -t Tntras naaaTl,Ta.
IrlirTI,M101111.6RMINFINIMMINNelkaealeaVIIIIMMICOMMEM.1111• 4.11111
RS.1 LW& KRGAN
Sretln!I :. fa the Tr.,tmrr.t of \era•.::;, ttinOJ. Private and Sexual Diseases of
flea and Vt. n•r. 25 Year? In Detroit.
87•Nn Nimes used wlt:r, rt w'rittcn Co.:scat. Crises O teed.
Tk
,,'437A3 ',I ). c117" .,r..t ri , i e.arred rrrn are snr:aal'y swept
t a crrmature grate 16202 66 early abuse or later eacees.s. Chas.
A r,ir t. 't WIS 0.!) <.1 tits victims, but was rescued iw time. 11e
,rye: "1 learned an evil habit. A change .'on came over me.
1 . ,old feel 0; my friends noticed It. 1 became newel -one, desp.m. �.
.:rat, gb,er..y, had no an►tition, easily tired, evil for,bo,finv•.
poorc•.e:ulation, imptesoa face, bark weak, dreams and drains •
at night, tired and weak mornings, burning. sentatton. ''n make •
matter worse, 1 becalm re-kiess anal contracted a Isle. d dis.a.e.
1 tried many doctors and nrcdi•tal furnte-ail failed till Pre l:en•
nedy h Krrras tiok my clic. in one week i felt better, ■n.1 In a
few week, was entirely cured. They a:o the only tel;abls and
hnn..t Rpeclal°eta in the cnuntry."
READ1!R-W a guarantee to care tar r r ro pay. You r,s nn
risk. We hare a reputation and i.n.;:,,•.t at AWL,. N..t,. r'•f
frauds and rmprvor•. We will ray $1,c5) for a.y c r.• u.: take fast ocr NEW
METHOi) TH ATMr.NT vitt n•,t rues.
We treat and Lure Nervous Debility. Yarlcncele, Stricture, Vitae Psis. Kidney
and Bladder DIseusee. coneul'at,on free. Beaks free. t all . r wr:'e 1 r Queet.0.
Lea for Some Treatment.
DNS. KENNEDY & KERGAN Cor• f f ire! apt"Mrc herb) St