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Exeter Times, 1905-12-14, Page 7SECURITY. Cenu:ne Carter's tle Liver Pills. St Boar Signature M See Fac -Simile le'ra,r••cr Le1ow. mall and es ems -7 to take an eggaz. t1, Leta F:'n DIMNESS. rrTi,E FOR I3ILiODUSNE3S, WEIR FOR TORFif! Lynn. PILLFOR CONSTIPATiON. FOR LL 1W vac TIIECOMPLEXION hta Purely Vetretietee./• --•nom CURE SICK HEADACHE. ILBURN'S XA-LIVER ILLS b mild, surd and safo, and aro a perfect 'plater of the eystenn. They gently unlock the secretions, clear all effete nod waste matter from the and give tone and vitality to the teetinal tract, curing Constipa- Headache, Biliousness, Dyrpop- Tongue, Foul Broatb, Jauns burr,, and Water Brash. Mn. en Woodstock, N.B., writes( rd and myself have used Mil- xa-Liver Pills for a number of o think we cannot do without ey are tho only pills we ever cents or five bottles for $1.00, or direct on receipt of price. filburn (Se, Limited, Toronto, OMAN'S BACK IS MAINSPRING OF R PHYSICAL M The Slightest Back- i's• ache, if Neglected. is le to Cause Years of Terrible Suffering. o woman can bo strong and healthy ho kidneys are well, mid regular in tion. When the kidney's aro ill, silo body is ill, for the prisons which ;dnoys ought to have filteriel out, of Nblood aro loft in the n)atem. gni, and Malachi, were the most co: No female constitution is naturally ti sir uuus. Indeed, their labors we ( re eubjookidney to kidney disease than a ,Flt important and valuable that ice n's; and what ie more, a womonb work might. with teem' propriety speak of laver done -her wh"lu life is ono con - these illustrious reforu.ers and legis- uwta strain.int ors ne the assistants of the profit - Sow meny women have yin hoard Rey: v, how my hack etchca:" 1)o you know '•t s. With regard to Dlulnchi, the t beckae leo is ono of thn beet miens of date of whose activity can only be Slay trouble? It is, and should be at- I inferred from the contents of af:a lei to immediately. Other symptoms • prophecy. opinion is still divide!. It regnant thirst, scanty, thick, cloudy is not certain whether hie propheti- hly colored urine, burning sensation cal activity preceded and prepared urinating, frequent urination, puff- rho way for the later legislative nets der the eyes, swelling of the feet and of Ezra rued Nehemiah, or whet'(. r , floating specks bolero the eye;(, eto. Ito followed these noel enforced the symptoms if not taken in time and work they had to gin. In the former once, wme ill cayearsef terrible ,•(ase the date of the prophecy of \Iae- ffering. All these symptoms, and 1 acid I, enrncs B.C. •1ritt or earlier; In use dieeaaos niav let Cured 1t) the 1 11141 latter it becoiiii•s about Il.('. 432, when Nehentiah's second eisit. to Jer• 'S KIDNEY Pills 1 u'nlent took place, or Inter. Nothieg is known about Dfutachi apart from directly nn the kidneys, and the prophecies recorded in the book N hearing his natty. The name itself strong and healthy. ry Galley, Auburn, N Se, writes: soellIS to he an ibbrevtat ion of "Mal- fourmonths Iwastrouble.lwit h nchiah.•' Mee fling M.'s';eager of de- ck and was unable to turn in bed ; 'torah. .\s much. the prophet. attacks i. Nea to t t() judgtuent-'1 t Is elp. I wasindueerl by a friend to the same abuses and advocates tiro is lite y a r 1.) Iornthe chaueit;e of Ihi 'e Kidney Pills. After using two- sante reforms ")rich nr•r mentioned in leo tle, "\there is thn Cn.l of of a box my bank was as well ae ever.' the )rooks of Ezra and Nehetmtnll ►ueM'. , A nu• iS t kid - ' r shall be sent, ce 50 cents per box or three heirs rut The argument of the book may be whirrupon the lord himself will sad• at all dealers, or sunt direct on re• gathered lip in the words in whit. dealt npiii t ' 1 his hi nsel( Ito per ,t of price. The I)oau kidney Pi11 Coy Amos more than hyo centuries earlier intent' nrronti. 111 ed, 110 shall pro- o',to, Oute addressed the people of his time tre(1 to I tJg th'. p oph nsit THE IIUNGER OF AGE No Wonder Christ Used the Figure of Hunger and Thirst. ••ltlessed are they which do hunger some form; it shows mean seeking to and thirst after righteousness, f.•r i find more perfect, more nearly right they shall be tilled. -Mutt., v.; 6. relations with the things about hint This in the central beautitude; in a .As the things ubuut hint come to tneasatre it embraces all the others, include God and heaven and things for every virtue they inculcate is in. unseen so will his search for right - eluded It rightt•uusness. lilt it. is ness become wider and deeper and often rejected as impracticable ho- more spiritual. Every fume of spit -- cause fanciful teachers who substi- itual aspiration. every religion, no tote subtle definitions for simple t:'t- matter holy uncouth and strange, is ties have twisted Its plain words un- still the soul of moot seeking right tit righteousness is made soniethirg so uureasonublu as to be repulsive ' .t a right tuind. As a twitter of fact, it means 00 more than rightness: the hunger and thirst for righteuusneie 's but the earnest, supreme desire and endeavor to be right and to do right alt all timers. the appetite for the right. 'J'heo1obr ..,d righte:nusttesa tnav //tango imputed quality n like a cloak to cover tiun or billof health t mean se - laid on his ser !three sides 'll►ough built for the especial purpose of funaishing a storehouse for accumulated lithe of- ferings, these apartments had been perverted trout this intended nee. Windows Of he0ven--Cotnp. Gen 7. 1 ); 8 2 Kings 7. 2. 11). KNOW IVORY'S VALUE. African Natives' Knowledge En- hances Its Price. 1t is a curious fact that. notwith- stttnding the marked advance in the price of ivory in recent yours the volutin of sales has not diminished. but has actually increased. 'Tusks have Teen selling in the markets of London and Antwerp at an advance of au per cent. over the pre (:3 charged a few years ago. 'Ilio causes which have led to the. advance in price are interesting. it relations to the iulinito' is not dun to any artificial' muni',u- 1\hat tt glorious Citing is this pas- lotion of the market in the great siou for the right; what visions it centers, nor is it due to incrcu•:• d Inns seen, what atengtt. it has given demand or scarcity of elephants. For to thrix reel ovIn . It is the great tiro cause the inquirer must look to tido that, moving restless and re- sistless in our bosoms, has curried the heart of Africa, where a spir t ms on tow'm'd Cod. We cannot but ' of genuine commercialism is multi - believe it is born of hint. 1t does not originate in man, for it distort e his peace, it stirs him from sloth, it Splint his to new mid often unw•el- ( come endeavors. 1t ever holds ho - given a sic!( man. But nen who ford hint the shitting possibility of a live. , to real things care nothing perfect being in one y or the other for theoretical A PERFECT WORLD. right ,css; they want the real article. And a right roan will not bo satisfi' i Literal appetites have been the ma - to have even the Most High think of tives back of the world's struggle for hint its belnrg perfectly right when l•) physical rightness; yet these el:,v• knows he falls fru• slime of it ito figs have not been more general or would rather Ile the faltering pursuer more forceful than those of the soul. of actual rightness than the posse•+- But for hanger and thirst plan would sor of a hypothetical, ascribed per- have lived In perfect content with. Lection. the form and facts of life as l•e 3'I1h GREAT 'FEACI-IFIt found them; progress, all that we cull civilization, would not have cares nothing about Imaginary r vir• been. b o f ng a y lues; he praises those who ardently Man is happy in proportion as no - seek Uro real ones. tle knows that cessity compels hint to heed these in the market, of character cas;t cravings. So is it in the moral r. 11r sal - draw Icha S been O e alums is currency; h'you cannot rt. the etre e here n t world;b6 draw checks 011 some other person's vation. To cease to strive fur right. - deposits. To hila it is better by far ncss is to cease to live. Individually to die facing the right than to live and nationally they are happy who in smug content with borrowed (nee- accept the rigorous climate of lofts its. 'I'ltis world Will never be con- ethical ideals, who are not content tent with n gospel that offers only to lake life as they find it, but who vicarious virtues; nt its heart it seek to cultivate flowers and fruits knows too well its need of the gen- of paradise on the sterile, rocky soil eine usable ones; it hits at least the of the human heart. This is the life dormant faculties for an appetite of that .Jesus shows, the life that Heek:f rightness. nod finds the truth. that with pas - And all this world story is but a sionato ardor seeks right relations record of tate struggle for rightness. both with his fellows and with his All human progress is but its fruit- Father. Out of the fullness of ex - age. In every age there have hen perience, in the midst of his own gglorious souls who have made this struggle Ise encourages all who passion a thing that glowed in their lives and became a light. to their day. in every man the divine dis- content that divides hint from the animal is the sign of this desire in strive; they shall be sutiseed. No ideal, no noble passion, no glorious sacrifice, no honest endeavor for the right. tuns ever in vain; the soul finds itself in seeking tl:e supremo good. THE S. S. LESSON sinful laity. "Where is the Cod of judgement?" is the presutupl eons and profane challenge of a degenerate people. To this challenge Jehovah INTERNATIONAL LESSON, himself answers in the words of our DEC. 17. lesson text. Verso 1. Behold, T sold -Jehovah Lee-. XII. Preparation for the Nies- hintsel( is speaking.' 1 My messenger -In Matt. 11. 1') Jesus quotes this verse from Malachi Mal. 31. and explains it as referring to .101 .a LESSON WOIID S'1'Gi IES. the Baptist: "This is h(•. of whom it they were and cannot caln'y so much Note -'Ilio Word Studies for th's is written, Behold. I semi my (nes- rum, or they are wiser than they lesson are baste' on the Revised Ver- sc►tg''r before thy face, who shall pre were and do not Rant so lt, or cion pure thy way before thee." they are pourer and cannot buy so Th.. Prophet itnil His Iles%age.-_ Shall prepare the way -In what touch. At any rate, they drink less The illustrious lenders. Faro and Nle this preparation consisted is indicate of most things. 'There is an incretts- heu(1ah, were not left without human ed in )lett. 8. 1-12. ing demand for port wine of a mod - as well as divine assistance in curry- Anil the messenger -'The Authorized ern Hot•t, considerately lighter than ing out their reform measures. (;o,I Version rear's. "oven the messenger," the port that in the lust century culled amen to aid (heat in counsel 1hos identifying the messenger with gave most solvent Englishmen the and action. Among these, the proph_ the Lord hiinetef. 'I'hie, rather than gout, and. among spirits, brandy i3 its of this period, Zechariah, ling- 1110 Revised rendering, is to be pro• as much drunk. is ever. In that ferret'. there seems to ale. evidence of a di•(- Besire-delight in. position to substitute grape pr.. - 2. Refiner's tire -Gold and silver ducts fm• grain products, which iy were in olden liners, as is still the a gain to sentiment incl very likely case to -lite, fri'e'd from intpuri�les iw to health.-Ilerper's Weekly. being subjected t0 great heat. Silver mixed with lend is put into a crucl- ble made Of cloy and placed in re- AFRAID TO LIGHT GAS. vorhernt.i y furnace. Ender theflume-0 of of the intense !teat an oxide Timidity of London Public When of lend fora!:; and is blown on by It Was Introduced. billowy. Tuwad the end of the pro- In the early tines of the Inst. (m- cees the covering of 011111e grows f ury, when illelmiteat itlg gas wa> thinner and tinnily disitipenr1; nett first used in London, timorous pro - pe bright surface of tht' silver op. pie talked of the dangers of suffoca- tion (comp. .fee. 6. 2*) and Matt. tion and of xplosions, to which tt.e 8. 1''')' gas. which was still imperfectly pur- ified, exposed the. cit.i/eny, and the first gasometers erected in London, by Samuel Clegg, so 1errilird trio popple. 1bat no workman would ven- ture to light the gas jets which hail been placed 011 West.minslrt• ]fridge. lint. Clegg soots overcame that (11111 - fully by lighting n torch and "milt- ing 41 to the burners with his own room• bunds. On another occasion, before 'I'o preserve 1blue.,.-.\fler rearing n commit fee of the Royal Society and smoking hams, they may be of London. hr bred n boli in th kept n long 11100 parked in dry °ate gas holder ;and put a lighted cnnc'le int n wooden chest. to It. to the greet nlartn of the spe w-1 A dirty coRcr pot trill 4pp11 thi tutors, but aith0111 causing the' strongest infusion, so ttiish the cot - slightest ncrid.•iit. l:rudnally the fee -put t.hproug(hly unit ch•y it eve.' eyes oven of the mm,st prejudiced ore the stole daily. High. Golden 'fell. 11-1-14444444.6444414 11i4 Home I44eHel+I+I TESTED RECIPES. An excellent plain pudding is mud.: by mixing four ounces of suet with eix ounces of self-raising flour; add u pinch of salt and two beaten e'gg:r Work these thoroughly together•, add thretequurlc►•s of a pint of milk. Pour into u buttered pie -dish told bake ono hour and it quarter. To cook a ham properly of twe1:o or thirteen puueds takes four hour,, and n larger tt ill take from five to six hours. Put the haat on in co e! water, nod when it conies to the boil udd half an ounce of course lit -own sugar, a little vinegar, uud 801.10 w'tiul0 spit•cs. l'ook very slowly, re• 11101'0 the pot from the fire. and let the ham stay in its liquor 1i11 it is cold. resting itself among the natives. • Croquettes -Two cupfuls of warty 'Their wealth is in ivory, and they have learned to value it as such, in- deed, the wealth of leading then among tho natives was once com- monly counted in tusks. 'They %vuu•.1 say of a Bushy capitalist of this kind that he was worth so ninny tusks, just as one in this country woo.:! say that a man is worth so many dollars. Of course that. was n natural phase in the development of a primitive people. The red mean estimate -1 his riches In wampum, and the Lapland- er in furs, They often would part with their possessions for a few beads or trinkets. 'They did not know the value of a dollar. Certain- ly longer b • is oft it n n t. I h. I can said y b natives of Africa that they do not know the value of money. 'I'hr•y have learned. 'Thus it comes the;. "heathen in his blindness" is nu the ttt so blind as has been supposed. Increased transportation facilities and telegraphic communication have brought Africa into closer touch wilt the rest of the world. It is said that a native slay be working 1,O(*0 miles in the interior, and yet he can quote you the cash value of tusks in the Antwerp or London market. DRINKING IN ENGLAND. Decreased Consumption of Wines, Spirits and Beer. It is well known thnt the climate of the British Isles is more favorable to the consumption of alcoholic stim- ulants than our climate. We expect the British to drink more per gullet than we do, and they have always lived hundsomeiy' up to our expecta- tions. \►'e have liked the statistics of British drinking because they make us seer, temperate by contrast.. They aro falling off it little in this parti- cular. This year's report, like that of several years irninodiately preced- ing it, tells of decreased consump- tion of wines, spirits, and beer. Either our cousins nro feebler than 8. Sons of Levi -These were in charge of the sanctuary, al w•1+i••h the process of purification of the na- tion should Iwgin. •Tot' the time is conte for judgment to begin at the house of Coil: nriil if it begin first with u4, ti hat shall be the end of them 1hit* obr;y not the gospel of God?" (1 Pel. 4. 17). "\'on only hove I knuw'n trf all the e r .,• " if of the earth: therefore 1 (tilt •;ttrjoeu•ner-.\n alien resident. opemd fu the truth. Never put. entrees from hones in- visit, upon you all your iib uitie%" 6. in cer:e4 6-1't. the people are to soup. Scrape out end use as .very dour Delayed 1 1 ♦ suet This it tee. dot en in flavor, (Amos .t. .', '1"hc *ability ( ntmr durrlly addressed. \1'•ut' '1'1(i: \11ti1:K• and makes the paste It f t mashed potutoe3, ono -quarter cups d f of ilk until o !r milk, beaten together nt light. Adel one tablespoonful of felted but ter, one-half teaspoonful of salt. a pinch of mence.or nutmeg. and enough beaten egg, to handle easily-. Shape, dip into beaten egg, and roll in rifted cracker crumbs. Fry in hot lard emit nicely brown' id. rown- id. Garnish with parsley. Fried rabbit is a pleasant change from the ordinary ways of cooking it. Wash the rabbit and dry in a cloth. Cut into neat pieces, chopp- ing off any superfluous bone, and stew gently in a savory gravy till almost cooked. When cold, wipe dry. dip each piece into beaten egg and then in breadcrumbs, and fry in deep fit. Serve with slices of lemon and chupoed parsley. Apple jelly nettle ns follows will he clear and a beautiful bright coke. (rut up seven pounds of apples (do not peel or core thele). place in rt pan with flee pints of eold water, the rind of two lemons, and half an inch of cinnamon. Cover with u flour and water paste and bake fat• six hours. Stain the pulp through a cloth. Place tlto Juice in rt cleat preserving pun and allow one poue'1 of sugar to every pint of juice. Bring to the boil fust for twenty ntinut,4. Put the jell into pots and cover with skin or egged paper. Roast tenderloin. To roast pork tenderloins, take Iwo tenderloins and split therm lengthwise, but. do not ni- tride them entirely. Place the two together and fill with a well -season- ed breed stilling. Wind n string around them. season on the outside with pepper and salt and cover with slices of bacon held in place wit't wooden toothpicks. Bake aboui, three-quarters of an hour, basting frequently hilt hot water and but- ter. Servo milli a garnish of fried 1")(1111.1 ow• nipples. (11111(1(1 Attends.-(Irtlimi almonds among the fou bons at dessert will be a nice change. Blanch and dry a cupful of shelled almonds. Boil a cupful of sugar and one-fourth of a cupful of water to the thread. thnt in, until the syrup will spin a thread front the spoon. Drop in the e.l- moncts and let them cook for five minutes in the syrup, stirring very cau•efully once or twice. When Cie almonds are faintly tinged Wilt brown t•emo •eltfront the lire and stir until the syrup turns to sugar, some of which will cling to the nuts. Good Uses for Stale Bread. -Take one egg and it little milk and sugar, well beaten together. hale n frying - pun nice and Iiot and well greased 11 butter. Take the pieces of bread and dip then( into the mixture, then brotvii nicely nn hath sides in the frying-pne. Von wits find them very nice for breakfast or tea Ilroken pieces and crusts of bread shon'd be put inn pun in a cool oven to dry (heti. When quite dry crush then) with a roller uu n br(1ud board, then sift then, through a coarse sieve, and put them in a box or jar where they will be reale for cot lets or oysters. HINTS holt THE 11OM1:. Prevention of Burnt Food. -Keep n hualn of water always in the ovt•n, changing it daily. Ottomans and sofas and upholster- ed chairs aunt be cleaned by being rubbed with dry bran and flannel. For wet boots pour hot sand nod press it in firmly to preserve the shape, standing meanwhile in a wan.( IN CURING A COLD IS DANGEROUS. • 111111111e. anti famine have Leon t0 theta urq t q n.• a lieht. . God's love toward 0*w whom he 1 K- Instead of coil -liver oil those pru- purifies hat dui" 1101 wholly cork- tnettts of •lehuvelt for withholding{ A small church was sadly in want 1,10 who cannot digest. 11 will lied 11 same, is the cent ra I truth of the freta Itito his dors. Ito( they wi'1 of genet -al repairs, and it meeting was gill of raw cre:alu token at night vire whole prophetical message expresee•i again bring, unto Itin1 the whole till)• teeing held to raise (uuds for that beneficial. -. --• ' by Malachi in the tcortls, "trot' 1 lin will erreiinly restore to them the purpose• nhurdnnce the 111110 Inckryl, ( The minister !ening said that tet Prevent milk from Curdling by mid av ntron IrearA g+e.• ti say: "Its any •irhulah, chnngt;e not: I hcr•.•ion•0 t r , y , inK n good pinch of cnrhunato of a trilling( eon,th." bus mvn) a hie hiat•try 11 suu� of .1111'.1..1.1:11. urn 1c1(.1.1111;01.- "um,,,t 1•'"r i, Jehovah. change trot -Cum. do the work t,in0 would be required. )lel. :l l', this tu,lr t'nn introdur(oi'y unto on .,The very "coldly -and equally rtiino, .- nodi to each quart of milk, before read diRere++ if, oil rbc ere spn•eranM )'putting if. nn to boil. the preceding ,.rtione of the h,••.'. 1'repitct. and II1s Message." member "( the congregation rose and M. "111 a ratan rob Ceti? -Is it not said he would ,ive one dollar. •fns', the end rut, for it has it round piece 'ILI* had been remedied »;eh 1 K I e n pure tneingT sirloin of beef ',void ' lend u1►, and trout 1* all that four•.:•., n4 he Ont down it lump of plaster fell WOODS NOR- Is d.•vrlop•tl. The view of the lulr o prcanulplion fur him I0 ntlentpt such fr..ln the rellili and hit him 1111011 of hone "its' the upper si'1', I, ,i'ioi, e which ltFttlachi presents is that of ,i n Ihtng' .1ehotnh is, s, i,peslking. Kthe 111.•at cuarv•r Ihnn the eller rho head. tit hereupon he rove hastily, Y PINE SYRUP be •t re once uwf a NMI gtf th••nt . Ve rah- it r bieg w that is, even rats. e be desired: atvfnl, because of flu• ...we now. 'rheic robbing wits n cnnllmrol and caller) woof, that h.• had made tt rhe ()lett for bread should only Ise Diary judgment wh;clr i» to c••ot0 the proithe mistake -he would give fifty dullats. alightly Itrntetl and Krnchtnlly 11 1ou•- is a pteur+•nr, vee 'ma eae:ru•I rernerll. on Israel; il'•sirnhl.•. heatusr of the Pith" -Thr (curd "title" conte% 'flet' w•os 1"a "Inch for an euthusi"gt el to get hotter. Bread baked in 1114Y I4'1111 nil) "11'1 "I"'" ua.p•eifie ...mints Id tete I.(•rd hi►ttw•If to hi' from elle Anglo-4nx.n "tendha," p1,sefit, who'. futg(.•1(111 of everylhilt' . (Itis tiny is sure to be light and will sighs ar.,* G,Id...f ..1 ktad.. Hr'ar,onen, tempi(' t0 nu' .' hi. ,r•u it.• and porn1; called "all f.•nvenlly, "11 Nord, het rise to ittt nntnniwhin • degree pat lu on 1t. hem esich an Inhundrruce (0 litt'aI "tnihu ,tIh th't of0an hen(, him 048111!" b Ir raw. t "tlrtoat. Pains in (-sac. A.ehuu. Hr.,nrhieM, P literally. the tenth part of nnythinlg; T" mnkn coke richer nlwrrys hen up. Wbo. p;ng '1+„wh. V•u•sy. ar,.l all anew blessing t hat all nations shall call but more retie -hilly in rn"unu'n usage,`� the eggs. trotter•, and sugar together, •s of the 1ln,wr clad tunas. thrnt hle4aed. rhe tench port of rhe 1t rrrasr result - -- and then add the their, etc. (rare (n 8teghee E. Alr,.na. He,rra N lir. in thn 1„,...0111„,...01114,port 30118 "( hist ing from the profits of land and should be taken to sift rho linking ii•• -1 ha*. ne(5I ler. w....1•. `newsy Nisi ! t K )IALI. F,\\'0i{. I un II If ►ins barn re et t A tick. For the law of Moses refer,- powder or nada into the dry flow we for .(.thma...,•i h,ve (,,,rod i' •o t.•s 1 Itrtecr. and people and pointing 0111 ing to the tithe cotnpar.• Lev. 2", "Where are yez golf'', Mnike?" ask- before adding the test of the ingtrea- u,t"reieene stet.?•grt;oequkk 101101, 1Ii 1() than the dire punisbetent which :10. 32, Nuts. 114. 21, 21. Nehemiah Mre. O'Swiggs, as her husband pre• lents. lid sol t.• 'richest s softie of it in .he1 is sure to come upon thane unI••ss, repeatedly emrphnsieed the same le +v pared to go nett after supper 1'0 Remove Herd Water Statnt. "' they r••peetnt in chapter 1 it west anti rebuked the people for disobey- "(li'm either gain' 1' )icNutt 4 'fake to pert of salt to two parts k. Woo t. Norway [+,n• 'ivory Is tea ale is • ' more s'pccially Jsrnel's ingratitude i l"il 11. (romp. Nett. 10, :04 10. 32-89; wake," refilled O'Swigas. of vinegar, and n little soda. Pou: ow wrapt'•r. Thr.. lite. Meke rguAi ;and profane impiety. In chapter ^..,-. K 1(1-14). "Well. it's wen shmnll favor Oi tit this mistral:. Into the %fettled dreaa- •► an* the prise 21 o.ni. at at] ,1 -.tan. I !thane reproof is arituitrrs+.Teel to !t. The corse -Specially mentioned aakin' av yet," cnntineed Mrs. tern, let it %t earl n little. shake it es* .0 •t(telia hsseas1 ler. M•vrl'e and 1 ,stienithful prle•ethnntl end again upon in Neb. 2 2, whirl compare•. O'Swiggs. "nn*het. tie he t ' Kit, round till the stays disappear. theft tnight eruugh le come home 1,y tin rinse 1lu.• bottle wc11. 'Ills niixturc o'clock." can be used several times it kept It the ,.rudt.•rour mei 1re,tchero',• and 10. The storehuiue-'flue chambers 11. 140 outer -•Locusts. `or roosts surrounding the temple on Meanwhile in a bottle tightly corked. When storing goods it 13 a tory good plea to have, in tho cover of every trunk, or on the dour of every cupboard, 11 list of what is contain- ed therein. Write duan each thing as you put it In, for you will thee know that 1110 list trill be heudel with all the things that Ile at flee bottoms. In this way 00 garment or, indeed, anything should be lost In u house. To roast in it put when you do not wish to heat rho oven is quite slut- ple. 'Take an iron saucepan (out en- amelled) and for a small joint putin a tablespuon(ul of dripping. When this is quite hot, brown the meat on all sides in this. so as to harden the outside and keep in the juices. '171'•n draw the pot. to the side .rt the tiro and let the meat cook slowly 5ith the lid 00, busting it frequently. !lone made Vinegar. -Take three gallons of water, buil it in six lbs. of coarsest sugar, skint well. Pour into a common pan and, 1111011 at blood heat. put three pints into it basin and unix well into it a half- pennyworth of good fresh yeast Set near the fire to work, covered with n cloth. When this is done, add tete small quainte to the larger, which should still be lukewarm(. Stir all together and cover the pan with a cloth. Al the end of twelve hours all will he found in full work. Let it stand exactly a took, careful'y skint ort the bar•nt, then pour Otto a cask. Cork it well and stand in a warns place for about four months, then bottle for also, In summer the barrel should stand In the sun, TWO CONVENIENT LISTS. 1. Ono heaping teaspoonful of bak- ing powder to two caps of flour, 2. Ono teaspoonful of cretin of tat' - tar nn(1 it half teaspoonful of HoCIa 10 tw•o cups of flour. 8. Onolevel teaspoonful 0 u ► t n tf e o0 1 c T sod [ a to two cups of molasses. 4. Four heaping teaspoonfuls 1 cornstarch to one quart of milk. 4. A 1ittlo over nn ounce ofgela- tin r el . tis to quart of liquid. Now as to measures: - 1, Sixty drops equal one teaspoon- ful. 2. Three teaspoonfuls equal tablespoonful. 1i. Four tablespoonfuls cyan( qunrter of a cup. or half a gill. 4. Eight rounded tablespoonfuls dry material equal ono cupful. L. Sixteen tablespoonfuls of liqu'd equal one cupful. 6. One cupful of liquid equals two gills, or half n pint. 7. One heaping tablespoonful of Hagar equals one ounce. 8. One heaping tablespoonful butter equals two ounces. 9. One cup of better equals one-half pound. 10. Two cups of flour equal one- half pound. one a of of (11' attga: (IOOD SUPPER diSHHT:S, Con "P remedy in pulmonary 1.1e in Cat " PSYCIIINE" as aItermane for Consumpt It reaches the decayed tisst ole germs, Cr up the whole from all impu tti4EATEST (PRONOUl AU. DRUcCiSTS- DR.T.A. 171 King At. 1111l VERS(] Notes of Interei et Lord Rosettes t ion clud Icon sooty -err one we ti 0not King Oscar the most gate At his St ockh magnificent mi of his own cult Tho Sultan LE l well -organized ing of 20,000 time 80,0110 it ed -entirely to lean. As chi forces, the sale is it Scotsman, LI Y1.11 1'. President Il twice the nue gret•s over gin 'l'w•o doctors upon hint thi arts was co five years a'` t ion he x11 mato eight He is the the latter- The atter 'Phe new lin, Mr. Th into office Government' to have ri<. was born i A ulce ppdish mhutndu nn(1 "rats b wllh n duzsueuer cold, hoI)tsl0y potr atoe, cnlltng as Mash and rub through n mete.; add apprentice 301110 intent cream, yolks of two years. Im egg ti ell Irentou, ,tall find pepper to South Aust taste, Beat all together and brown trade ht quickly in it het 01 en, An nppetieleg (11511 for a winter Supper 151 starlet thus: 'Iti at Cup of cooked cold tomatoes add a pinch of soba and put In it malleepaut with u tablespoon of butler, tnkl not to b, 1►'u Irolllug huuKt, n(llcare three 5110!0urnegg-htand HLIr gently; re- move from thn fire before the mix- ture hollt, anti season with - n small teaspoon of salt and a pinch of pep- per, Nerve on buttered toast, If you nro nt it loss to list• the fat front pierces of cold bulled hn1►1 try this recipe; 1'111 two tablespoons of butter into a enur:pen on the cloy, add it cup of chopped loon and half cup of H•t•'t•t milk, Sanson tvllh 111pper nsalt, and short hot l- Inl()10 fronsod the 11080 11114 rr fir In quickly three well -beaten eggs, four the mixture over thin slices of toast and nerve at nnre. Slice cold 11(110.1 pot ranee. rat sumNclent butter in a skillet to well Neilsen the potatoes and heat it very hot. lilt half tho potatoes in the skillet end season with stilt, pepper and sprinkle with 11 little flour; add the remainder of 11n potatoes (vitt. Halt, pepper and flour. Pour on enough milk to cover the p011) 1,18, net on the stove and cook f;ft•t11 minutes nr until done, Stir nrJ chop them occar:ionnlly. 4- ELI•:JFKNi:S. "Professor," nsked the lupdsltl'e student, "earn the three elements, Iles water and wind, pelitIca! elements'?-' "No," reigned the professor, "(rut the political elements aro somewhat. sint- ilnr,'' "►►'hut are they?" queried the student. "hire -crater nu.l wind " replied 1he conn of wisdom, wink leg the other eye. .1(1 111:\li:\1111:8 HIM. Ile --1 was un intimate friend of your Ink htfsh:rnd, 1:011'1 you give naw seine• thing to remember hien by? She r'ltyly)- Hee 11•.11111 1 do? enough, u he was en metal Iluu i'reutier. It is 110 that Kin; for Purest special tv at the c- at Nttm'y Germany ledge in furnished the mitt all recoy chased f. ago. An tent ion Windsor the Pri soma -wit SU who find strength He The pr have tan some it others w othersth Milhurn'a ttervea. at drone an pal eles, the rpirite and phy. - Mrs. D. •' Yes meet a news and he bete', ifeart wane five 1* 1 always t 1'6.4 .50 all cleat Toronto, r` t K("(K K& K K&K K&K SINFUL HABITS IN MAKE NERVOUS, WEAK, Did THE REPULT of Igsoraeresad folly Is 'testis, e • Induced by lest tad •spr»sn ars and ?stets Sloppiness of tkousasds of promising y at dourly age, at the blossom of manhood, while 03 weary, frsesesee m•lanchol ss aeon blit el sac ed we sot comfort is all Maltose of 11fe-the farm atpIt, tkelrades sad the protege *skewate guaranteed cured by ay. Testes iso risk 13 years I1 CON, WWI iia Itut Mtge. M ' I am 17 years et nee asel life. Bath Indiscretions i became weak sad air feared Bright's Disease. • dr • , sty home unhappy. 1 t tstatruest item Pre. Lea built as sp atestally, Irks a man is every respect. T i treat* willful and reepos•Ibls nnascla11T, N whir Can be tots/ by reliable doctors,' -W. A. MU I MMFOiII M IIT. ONs i m F Drs. Kennedy K rpt S K Rr K K