Exeter Times, 1906-04-12, Page 3•
r.�
ABSOLU1��
SECURITY.
Genuine
-)Carter9s
?ttp Liver Pills.
(Aust Sear Signature of
See Fac-Stml:a Wre per Below.
IN. r small and as easy
to tape ate sugar.
CARTERS
FOR READJCHE.
FOR DIZZINESS.
FOR DILi;;USRESS.
FOR 'FORM LIVER.
FOR CONSTIPATION.
FOR
SXII4.
ALl.fitY
s
rflS
THE. CRR:PLEXIOR
Nib! Purely Tegezasta./zc�or'ti3...G
errierre-
CURL. SICK HEADACHE.
Tho Bad Cold of To -Day
MAY BE PNEUMONIA
TO -MORROW.
The sore throat or tickling cough that, to the
clawless, seems but a trivial annoyance, may
develop into Pneumonia, Bronchitis, or some
Throat or Lung trouble.
DR. WOODS
NORWAY
PINE SYRUP
eiontalne ,11 the lung -healing virturea of the pine
Tree• and is a wre cure for Coughs, Colds and
.11 Throat or Lung trouble,. Mrs. E. Ilutcliin-
eon. 188 Argyln Street. Toronto, writes: " I have
;Ironic Bronchitis for
DON'T WORRY OYER DOGIR1NES
Find That Which Is Good, That Which
Is Worth Holding Fast.
Prove all things; hold fast that whish
is good. -1. Theis. v., :r1.
lie who doe, not doubt is damned. In•
tellechtally and moistly molhing is leis -
sussed until it is put to the proof. If
you do not test things for yourself they
will be tested for you by adversity and
necessity. There is no virtue in taking
things for granted. 'There is u greater
treason for putting the things of religion
t0 the test since it is to take tete supreme
t lace In the life.
Doubt is not disbelief; it is not rejeec•
hon w ilhoul examination. Neither
should it be the habitual dwelling in d
tug of uncertainly. It is inquiry and .x-
emination; it is the mental process
through witch till things roust pass; it
i a road that lends to faith. It is the
altitude of mind thot says: "1 have been
endowed with reasoning powers: it ever)
an irreligious act to refuse to use theta
on all things.'
The man who is too indolent to in-
%estigate, lou impoverished of intellect
l.• examine doe trines and philosophies,
tri appreciate truth and eradicate error -
that roan finds it easy and convenient
re exercise his credulity and call it
faith. To hint it is a reprehensible
Wing to unsettle established beliefs, for
it means that Ihey must be carefully :e-
construe:t, d and this involves
UNNECESSARY LABOR.
If he wants peace a man would better
steal n kingdoin than breathe one word
against the petrified formulas of the fa-
thers. No offense cnn be greater than
that of disturbing them and causing
Iliein to do their thinking all over again.
Tc them their creed is a key to unlock
the gate of heaven; to change its shape
In the minutest degree would be to de-
stroy its usefulness, and even to inquire
whether there might not he another key
is to manifest the depravity of one who
would enter in ns n hurglor.
All discoverers have been doubters.
They have refused to accept Ilse lest'
word of the slay -at -homes as to what
might be abroad. Their doubt led to
faith. a faith so strong and sublime that
it compelled them to leave ease and face
hardship, to forsake friends and face
46
years and bare found Dr. Wood's Norway Pine 1 _�
Syrup far better than any of the hundreds of
remedies I have used. Our whole family u -sea THE
It in casco of Coughs or Colds. We would not
be without it."
Don't he humbugged icto taking something
_}eft as gond." ask for I)r. w'.;o•l's and insist
on getting it. Put up in yellow wrapper, three
pine trues L the trade mark and price 25 cents.
THREE Trying Times in
A WOMAN'S LIFE
WHEN
MILBURN'S HEART
AND NERVE PILLS
are almost an absolute necessity towards hes
future health.
The first when gibe is just budding from girl-
hood into the full bloom of womanhood.
The amend period that oonstitutes a special
drain on the system is during pregnancy.
The third end the one most liable to leave
heart and nerve troubles isduring "change of life.'•
in all three periods Milton's Heart and
Nerve Pills will prove of wonder(ul value to tide
o r the time. Mrs. James King, Cornwall,
Out., writers: "1 was troubled very touch with
heart trouble -the cause bring to a great extent
due to "change of lifn. " i have been taking your
Heart and Nene Pills for some time. and tnean
to Continue doing ,o, as 1 ct.n truthfuily say
they aro the best remedy I have e'er us. d for
building np the system. You are at liberty to
use this statement for the bent fit of other
@Line ere."
Price 5Ocents POT box cr three Loans for t 1.28.
AC dealers or The T. Milburn Cu,.Limited.
Toronto. Oat.
GAY \\•.\1'.
"Ari: fou a weather prophet?"
"No," nnswered the umhrelln snles-
ntan, jocosely and cnnfldenlialty, "I ant
the than who collects the weather
proal."
EASY TO START SOMETHING.
Wii'g--It takes two to make a quar-
rel.
\W,tl;g-Yes; but a quarrelsome mean
ran always find the other one.
1/0/110. .tatl..ew"p
Many Women Suffer
UNTOLD AGONY FROM
KiDNEY TROUBLE.
Very often they think it i. from .otalld
"Fantle Disease." There i.le, s trma:e trouble
Ihnn they think. Women suffer frorn backache.
aleeeleseueesa, nervousness, irritability, aril •
dragging -down feeling in t'.e loins so .k, min,
and they do ant have "female trouble
then. blame all your trouh,ie 10 Female iyi'es-e
With healthy kidneys few women will ever
hnve "female dienrh'r ." The kidneys are so
slo."! ' e'.mneate.t with all the interi.al organs.
that wham' the kidneys go wrong, everytEirg
cies wrong. Much distress would be saved 11
women would only take
DOAN'S
KIDNEY
PILLS
at eta'ed intennls.
Pr see 50 Mn to per hot er th roe 1.. s es for I I . iS,
ail dealers or sent d; r1 un TN•:.t.. "if price
1 . boas 1L1dsy► Pill Ce., Totueto, Ont.
loneliness and hatred. Often the brav-
est of all tueu is he who confronts too
tient opinion withthe sword of um inler-
togulio n.
Tile only doubts we need to dread are
(hose of the prufessionul doubler, the
etas who seeks darkness rather than
erect -
mg
delights in
,� to who
I. ht o• the man
m„ intellectual stumbling blocks that lie
unity show stow easily he vuutts them.
sometimes it would seem its (hough the
religious world were divided into two
parties -those who hope for salvation by
blindly belteveiig everything and those
who seek fume by blutantly denying ell
things.
But between the two there is the course
of the sane roan who uses the reasoning
power he has, who doubts all things
fatly that he may prove them, that good
inay be thrashed
I
Lt:�
.._S.
FItOJ1 BAD AND \\'ORTi
Tc. hint doubt is a path and not a ter-
minus, a method and not a product;
i Ie. comes at last, through the testing ut
doubt, to certainly, to faith founded cn
facts.
The wise man leaves many perplexing
problems to themselves. There are dif-
1 fannies not worth the solving, mere
matter., of idle speculation, becoming
diminutive beside real duties. There are
difficulties which, when laid away, like
a tangled skein, seem to unravel them-
selves. Problems of history and of
speculation come to have little weight
as compared with the proving of the
euily questions of present duty.
The great thing is to find that which
is good. that which is worth inkling
fast; and that is found not by specula-
tive inquiry, but by plain doing of the
1 est we know. Don't worry over doe -
trines. Do the deeds of the best lite. rf
(here are things you cannot believe. for-
get them; go right on with the business
of building the life on the things thnt
ore good, on the lines laid down by the
life that ever has been the light of men.
The practice of his precepts lends to the
r.osseseion of his principles. \Vith these
at base life comes out of the shifting un-
certainty arid fakee on for;'). order, and
meaning, and finds endullirg frniys
HENRY F. COPE.
S. S. LESSON
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
.\1'1111. 15.
Lesson III. Jesus's Power Over Disease
and Death. Golden Text:
John 11. 23.
LESSON WORD STUDIES.
Note. -These Word Studies are based
on the text of the Revised Version.
A Shnieer Account of the Sermon on
the Mount. -In verses 20-49 of the pre-
ceding chapter Luke gives n briefer ac-
count of the Sermon on the Mount.
The stain differences between the ac-
count of Matthew and this briefer one
in Luke are explained by the different
objects and intended circle of readers of
these gospels: but in both the Sermon
is given as the Inaugural discourse of
the kingdom of heaven. Matthew, writ-
ing for the Jews, records much thnt has
special hearing on the Levine law (5.
17.38). while Luke, writing for Gentiles,
omits much of this. Luke, however, re-
cords some of the omitted parts of the
sermon in another connection later on
in his gospel narrative.
Verse 1. All hes sayings -Those spoken
in the Sermon on the Mount.
Into Cnpernaum--Near which city the
sermon just ended had been delivered.
2. Centurion -An officer of the Roman
army conunnnding a company of one
hundred men. ns the nnme implies.
Servant -Literally bond servant, or
slave.
Dear unto him -Or, as in the mnrgin-
nl rendering of the Revised Versinn,
precious to him. or honnrable with him.
3. Sent unto titin elders of the Jews -
Note both the mnrlecte and the proprie-
ty of This nctien on the part of the (tn-
man soldier. Ile knew Jesus M be n
Jewish rebid. and his respect for the
Jewish religion nrompled him ns n
Gentile not to go himself directly to
Jenna. hal In npprnae), hien through lite
mediation of recognized representnllves
of the Jewish people.
4. Ile is worthy -The respect with
which the centurion seems to have
tinbilinlly trolled the Jewish people, es
exemplified In itis action referred to in
the preceding verse. won for hien In re-
turn the respect of the Jews` it was in.
deed n high tribute for n Jew to give a
Rntunn to soy !het )w wns worthy of
nII•mlion and fnvor at (heir hands.
5. Ile lo•eth our nation -All thnt we
learn concerning tine centurion Ind(entes
that his religious ennviclinns inclined
him toward the Jewish faith.
Our synngojnie--This reference to one
synogngtc doe!! not Imply thet there.
was but one synagogue in Capt rnflum.
lent Simply thnt the One to which these
I nrlir alar Jews Is!Innited erne referred
tn.
, Nnt for frnm the bode,' -Thr nerrn-
Ih-e of I.ue.r el Ile r, int le more d0-
teit.'d min f)I;htlievv (comp.
tl lt• s • Iter.
1 1 here dolts not
1, , s. 1v ri n, 111011 ':Sir.' its
« ., n-.' A•.,• fled i1 used in John 4.
It.. 12. 21; Ark Ie. :b); and other nes-
tut soy the word --Or. ?peak with
n went.
Sonnnl--III. In this rnee, boy.
A. Go and ' enethe The ct'fhlrinn'i
pretlel. 11 seems t.e I i' Ile.= : ns he him-
. '1 c',.ntnlnnd' and i• e'd:.'vtd by the•s•'
r whorn 11e leis ntilhn,Ity. 'o ho na-
et the! Jeeps. who nppnrenlly has
e'er ever unc"cn forces. and over the
• •Mitt. can commend oral heal at
a dist' CO.
9. Ile marveled-\Ve have here one et
the many little indications found in the
gospel na•rnlives of the true humanity
of sestet. Mt was nel unlly astonished at
the faith of the centurion.
No, not In 'srael-\Vhere more than
anywhere else, such faith was to be ex-
pected.
11. Soon afterwards -Or, ns many
ancient authorities read, on the next
day.
Nain-A town on the northwest slope
of Little Ikermnn near the ancient En -
dor. \Vithin the territory of the tribe
of issachnr. 'I'hc name itself means
lovely. and was given to the town on
account of Its charming location. it
was about twenty-five miles from Ca-
pernaum.
12. To the gate of the city -All towns
of importance in the ancient Orient
were surrounded by walls for the sake of
nrolectlon. Nein itself is approached
from tete road leading up from Caper-
nann by n narrow rocky pelt► on which
doubtless the two companies niel.
14. Touched the bier -Thereby sub-
jecting himself to ceremonial unclean-
ness. But here, as In the cnse of the
leper (Luke 5. 12), Jesus sncrillees mere
Levitical ceremonialism, with its rules
about uncleanness, to a higher low of
love.
Arise -A single word of authority.
(Comp. Luke 8. 54; John 11. 43; Acts
9. 40.)
16. Fear look held on all -in the pre-
sence of this me nifesle'd authority over
death. it was natural that men should
fear.
Glorified God -To men of simple un-
prejudiced modes of thinking, the words
and works of Jesus lnvnrlably revealed
the power of God.
17. in the whale of Jeden-From this
statement some have inferred flint Luke
was under the wrong impression that
this miracle was performed in Judet,
but such nn inference is not tit nil tene-
t -tinted. Whet Is intended I.y the intense
is it statement of the fact that the news
of the inlracle sprentl even ns far ns
Into Judet. some utiles to the south. as
well as in all the region round about.
SUICIDE ON WEDDING MORN.
Scepticism Drives Last of n Noble Fam-
ily to Gra•.e.
A terrible wedding Iragetl'y took place
at Naples. Italy, recently. The young
Prince \'htcenza Pignatelli, only 20 years
of age, wns to have been married at 4
o'clock in the afternoon to the Countess
Anna Saluzzo.
itn the early hours of the morning the
Prince, rang for his servant. The littler
at once made his way to his master's
room, but before he could reach 11
heard n shot. The i'rinee was found
lying wounded on the floor near the
bed. Ile tried to speak. but fell hack
dead.
On a table by the bel lay n volume i!
poem.. Op, 0 at the lines: "Could i for-
ever rest my weary howl! Gone is the
baa delusion which 1 cherished."
The i'rinee left two letter.:. the fleet
addressee) to his tether and the second
to his betrothed. To his father he sum-
mnrized his objections to mnrringe, anti
ended with the words: "1 return to the
void vt in'nee 1 come."
in Ilint nddressetl to iris bride 't0 be-
sought her pardon, and said that scep-
ticism alone compelled him to .suicide.
'i'he Prince and bit father were the Intl
Iwo representatives of n noble house.
"Well, dex'lor. hew d o yonfind me Ibis
morning?" "You're doing nicely. Yam
h, s are still a bit swollen. but Ihs1
doesn't tremble n10.1 "1 underslnn,L &•,c.
tor. If your leg. vers swollen 1l woolen 1
trouble mo either."
THE BANKS OF CANADA
HAVE AGENCIES IN EVERT TOWN IN
THE DoMINION.
%% hat nn American Iles to Say About
the Banking by Meat of This
Country.
The chartered banks have thrown their
net over the British -Northwest and tire
cstubltsluug brunches at its every mu-
nicipal knot. There are more than a
score of theme doing business in Winni-
peg, half us many are to be found tit
Edmonton and Calgary, and they stave
(heir agencies its nearly every new town
el the wheat belt. One of the first
buildings 1 saw in the wilds of the (:o -
Lull mining reb
• ' u vasa pine
shack,
regions v
with the words "Imperial Bank" painted
t-pon its walls, and near by the Can -
adieu Batik of Commerce was doing
business in a tent, writes Frank G.
Carpenter from Winnipeg to the Chi-
cago Record-Ilerald.
I'Ite Bnnk of Montreal has just put tip
a new building at Edmonton, and alto-
gether (here are hundreds of substantial
1 anking institutions in this new part .1
the world. As far as I can learn th •y
are all making looney. Six of the large
1 finks, whose branches are spread most
widely over this territory,earned
more
than 14% per cent on their pnid-ilp cap-
ital in 1903, mid upon their capital and
surplus combined almost 9'% per cent.
This covered the whole of Canada. and
u great part of the profits carne from the
West.
During my travels here I have met the
leading financiers, and have learned
something about tete banking system. it
is different front ours. Canada's finan-
cial matters are managed by big fedi•
Iulinns won big cnpitnl; which have
branches scattered throughout the coun-
try. There are no small banks wllh
X50,000, 8100.000 or 8200,000 capital. 1t
is not possible to siert a bank of that
kind. The money business of the whole
country is done by chartered banks,
which have altogether n paid-up capital
of more than 880,000,000 and a surplus
;it more than 854,000,000.
NETWORK OF BRANCII BANKS.
There are now thirty-five main bunks
in Canada. with more than one thousand
Lrnnches spread all over the country. Of
these branches 401 are In the Province
el Ontario, 133 in Quebec, 98 in Nova
Scolia. 45 in Newfrunswick, 87 in Mani-
toba, 50 in British Columbia and almost
100 in this Canadian Northwest.
The Bank of ltlontreal, which has is
end office In Montreal, has almost a
hundred -branches. it has three banks
in the United Sfales and Some It Great
Britain. The Canadian Bank of COM-
n,erce, the Union Bank, the hnperial
Bank, the Bank of British North Ameri-
ca, as well as some thirty others, have
tal' a large number of brancses.
These banks are all making money.
They hive altogether assets of more
than 86(0.000,000. They have deposits
approximating half a billion dollars, and
1 ant told that the deposits of the Bank
el Montreal alone are more than 8100;
LC4) 000.' A significant evidence of the
prosperity of Canada is that the assets
ofathese banks have increased shout 50
per cent. within the past five years and
tite stock of each of, thein sells far shove
par. That of the flank of Montreal at
this writing is 255. and that on a cnpl-
Inl of over $14,000,000, with a surplus cf
810,000,000.
The chartered banks are lnrgely un -
tier government control and their capitol
and dividends are limited by law. Ev-
ery bunk has to pay a certain propor-
tion of Its mosey in government notes,
and not less than 10 per cent. of its cash
reserve must be pnid in such notes. The
Links have a right to issue notes to the
amount of their unimpaired paid-up cap-
iial, but each roust also deposit with the
government an amount equal to 5 per
cent. of it.a note circulation. This 5 per
cent. on all the note circulation of the
country issued by the bunks forms a
common fund for the security of the
note -holders, who ae further secured [,y
it provision requiring that the notes et
n suspended bank shall bear interest at
6 per cent. until the public Is notified
that they cnn be redeemed.
NOT LIKE AMi:RICAN SYSTEM.
During my stay In Montreal 1 mot the
manger of the Bank of Montreal, E.
11. Clouston. and had n chat with him
abort Canadian bunking methods. The
Flank of Montreal is one of the chief bin-
r,ncial inelitulions of the world. It
was founded by Montreal merchant= in
1817. when James Monroe was beginning
his first term ns President of the Unit.
reStales, and its original capital was
8133.(k)0. It pnid n dividend of 8 per
rent the first year, and lies pnid divi-
dends ever since. Its capital has been
increased to 814.100,000. and it has novo
a surplus twenty times as large as the
mmounl originally invested. Iis presi-
dent is Lord Stralhconn. the richest men
in Canada and the representative of the
Dominion in Lonndon.
The Bank of Mnntrenl leeks more like
one of our government depnrl,nenls then
any flnnncinl institution of Wall street.
it has Corinthian .pillars tit the front,
rind its root• n hundred feet above the
floor. is upheld by columns of block
);rnnile front Vermont. each ns big
evened ns n flour han-el and es
Fright ns p llshcd jr t. Everything about
the bighting is stalely. and the servants
nee ns imposing ns these of the Rank et
England. A sleek. black -haired Jeremi-
ah Criincher-like butler. le a blue suit
trimmed with red and n bright red Vest
with limes buttons. took In my reed In
11h•. ClnusIon. and 1 wns conducted fele
n church -like reception -room and asked
to wail.
in speaking of Canadian banking Mr.
Clonslon and:
"1 think our system IA teller limn the
American. It hal more Cheeks upon
honk officials end 1:; more preventive . l
Inhlished here a system tit cartels which
branches in every part of Canada we tel
every day the pulse of
TIIE WIIOI.E COUNTRY.
We keep (rack of the ftnancinl con.11-
tions and financial movements. and w e
cnn prevent panics and similar dist..
lers."
"How about your interest rates?"
asked. "Dees not your system of char.
tere'el tanks tend to equalize them
throughout the Dominion?"
"I think so." stated Mr. Clouston. "The
rale is now about 5)4 or 6 per cent. al.
MOO everywhere, with an Increase where
the risk of loss is greater. We get high-
er rates in the far West and in the min-
ing regions."
But is not your banking system u
monopoly or trust? Does it not tend to
Crowd nut the small fry?"
"It prevents the eslabbishment of smell
l•tmking institutions, but that is for the
good of the public. It is not a trust, al-
though tete chartered banks might Le
called combinations of capital. which to
a certain extent work together. 1 Pe-
li+'t•e that They tender our financial con.
dilion •safer, and that they aro for the
general good of the country."
"What is the condition of Canada to.
clay?"
"It is prosperous, and it has been so
for some years."
"Will this condition continue?"
"I see no reason why it sh00111 not.
Canada is al the beginning of its growth.
and it is developing tepidly. Immigrants
ere settling our great West. factories are
being established by capital from the
United Stales, and all sorts of sound en.
Iut•prises are being undertaken. I see
tic reason wily our country should not
go right ahead and steadily increase in
population and wealth. I believe that
we are doing better here on the whole
than you are in the United dates. \\'e
have one of the best railways in the
country. and we are building hen others,
which will he equally greet. When the
('anndinn Pacific wns started the people
Irughed at the idea that it would be n
financial success. It is now one of the
most profitable of the world's railways,
and its stock is high. We have also es-
tablished mere n systi'w of canals which
15 Hiding in opening up our cnuntry.
We oro raising wheat by lite mtlligns of
bushels and building stills to grind jt.
indeed, 1 do not see hew Canada could
1:. better off than she is now."
FINANCE IN FAIT WEST.
It was in lite city of Calgary, in the
range country not far from lite foothills
or Iho Rockies, that I talked with C. W.
Bewley, the manager of the Canadian
Brunk of Commerce at that point. The
Canadian Bank of Commerce is one of
the most enterprising in the dominion.
P. has 104 branches, covering the entire
northern part of the continent from
Cape Breton on the Atlantic to Van-
couver on the Pacific, and from San
Francisco to Dawson. It has n capital
of 810,000,000 and u surplus of 83,000,-
000.
3,000;000. 1t keeps right in front of the new
development in the British northwest
and it has branches established at al-
most every settlement. Mr. Bowley is
one of its leading bankers in the West
and he knows till about the financial sit-
uation. Ile said:
"Our banks are making money in this
part of the world. There are eight of
the chartered institutions represented in
Calgary, and that notwithstanding the
population is only 12.000. We have,
however. a greet wholesale business
here and we control the (rade of the
country about."
"What are your interest rotes?"
"They -an: -heeds the same as those in
western paras of ai,e. United States. \Ve
are now getting 7 and t; ;..:.
There are mum' loan nssc.e Hns
here. A great deal of real estate selling
and loaning is dnne. and some of the
big land conpnnies are making large
profits. The secretary of such a com-
pany here, one of the biggest in Cana.
eda, which Is handling some millions
of Its own and railroad lands, tells me
hi.. has made 870 for every one he has
put in the company. Another company
started with a grant which cost'Ihern a
dollar or so an acre on inslnllments.
They paid the first installment and the
sales from the lands then began to come
in These were used for the future pay-
ments,
ayments, so that only 82,500 was actually
invested by the originnl incorporators.
One of the men who went into that deal
le said to have made 8700,000 and an.
other to have netted almost 81.000.000.
Nearly nil the chartered hanks have
snvings departments. and there are in
addition postoffice savings banks. which
are to be frond at every country cross
toads. ns well ns in the towns and eft-
les. The private savings banks here
something like 820,000.010 in depocfis,
end the poslofflee savings hanks have
811.000,000 and 200,000 depositors. in
the postofitce banks 3 per cent. interest
i•: pnid. but no one may deposit more,
than 81,000 In one year or have morn
Ihnn $3,000 standing to his credit at nne
time.
I.ONI) N'A t;Rb T Tit UTI('.
Facts Dispels rd in Recent Blue
Bonk s.
Two blue books of singular interest
are volumes V. end VI. of the Report of
the itoyal Commission on London
'I'rnffie.
Among the astonishing facts obtain-
able from Them a maps and dia,tratns are
the following: -
One-fourth of the population of Eng -
lend and Wales live within 20 tniles
radius of Charing Cross.
From the Strand neo cnn get to 23
points of London; front Whitehall to 22,
and from i'tccadilly to 18.
The omnibuses of London carry in
one year the whole popii nlinn of the
United Kingdom seven limes o er.
A passenger in Oxford Slree'1 has rt
choice el 29 different omnibus routes
through that street to different parts of
London.
Tire Inlet number of pnsscngcrs nn
1 utdon's trnnttvays, rnilways and mmni-
huses In nne year is equnl to three.
qunrters of the populnlinn of London.
The route mileage of rnilwnys within
the nren now rnn.slihulinc the adminis-
trative Comfy id London wns only 29X
in 181:1; In 18(10 11 WAS 095,; in IMO It
hint incrensed to 215X; and in 1900 to
'248%.
Al the busy time of the des 012 nm-
nihuses pass by the Bank in en hour. n
preceeslon of 2% miles long; 400 thrnugh
Oxford street and Piccadilly. n proces-
sion of l% miles in Icnelh.
Mr,Inr omnibtlerts hold 34 persons. as
(lunins! n horse nrrinibee Ined of 211. so
Ihnl it horse onnihuses in Lnndon were
repineed by motor omnibuses the streets
would be relieved tit nne-fourth of their
existing omnibus traffic.
1115 KNOWLEDGE.
"flint's young Van Gilder who just
pnesiel," remarked the native.
"Yoe seem exceedingly well posted,"
said the visitor. "1 suppose yell) know
more than half the swell young fellows
of the town?"
"Huh! If I didn't know more than all
of them put together 1'd go to school
again "
444444444144+144.1+44
1i1 Home
)44444+1444.4444444
SELECTED IIELti'ES.
Apple Meringue. - Chop four mildly
i.cid apples line. Souk three-qucu teas
of a cup of bread crumbs in two cups
01 milk, add two cups ntuji a of milk, the
t aa e, ane cup of •,
Ottel
lttablofespoonfufourgl gs
()f
ttwlled butlersugarand
the apple. 'Turn Itto a buticre;l baking
dish and bake. Cover with a tucringuo
made (totu limo whitey of four edgy beti1-
en stiff, with one-quarter 001) id
powd.•ted sugar, and color in the wean.
Fruit Juices. - Boil twocu s of
sugar
with two cups of water until it thick-
ens, which will take from ten to fifteen
minute:s. \\'ar ail water
ore put togetherhen the, stirsuguntil dissolved,
skim just before the boiling point is
reached; then lake out the spoon and
do not stir again, Add Iwo cups t t
strawberry grape, currant or any other
juice unit simmer three-quarters of an
11hou111 r Seal hot. A tablespoonful of this
syrup in a glass of water makes a pleas -
Duchess Polntoes, - Parc some pota-
toes, cook them in boiling salted water.
cratn and mush them. To n pint of the
mashed potato, mid a rounding table-
spoon of butler, n tablespoonful of milk,
Pepper and salt as required. Bent with
n fork until very light, add the whipped
yolks of two eggs. beat again, then stir
in the whites of two eggs, beaten stiff,
rind press the mixture into buttered
muffin tins or little moulds. Turn these
cul carefully on to a buttered pen,
brush them over with benlen egg, turd
set Ihent in the oven to brown.
Peanut Mush. - Put over the fire two
quarts water to which has been added
one teaspoon salt. Mix together these
cups Scotch oatmeal and one and one-
hnit cups finely ground peanuts; add the
mixed meal to the water, stirring all the
time. Let tate mush cook slowly for hal
n. hour or over. stirring often. 1f it
becomes too stiff to stir well before it is
cooked enough, add n 11111e boiling water
When done, turn out into a bowl, anel
lel stand over night. Cut into slices and'
fry in either oil or butter, spritnkling
tern sides slightly with salt, it oil is t
used. Serve Itot with syrup or sauce.'
Corot meal or whole wheat flour may be
used in the sane manner.
Chicken Roll - Chicken conked in this
way is in fine shape to serve either et
the home table or for picnics. It as nice
as pressed chicken and is less trou-
ble to prepare. Take two pounds raw
chicken and one-half pound fat Lacon
end put them through a food chopper.
Then add one-third of a cup bread
crumbs, a little salt and pepper, celery
if liked, two eggs, and moisten with one -
hut( cup of stock ft'oin any kind of meat.
Sprinkle the molding board with flour
^1 cracker dust and turn the mixture on
ii, ,, rking it With the hinds till it is
in the forst of. n roll. Buller a piece of
cloth of suitable-Si/e!• In_11old it, then
wrap the roll closely, and sew )he, cloth
firmly at the ends and along the sieve:.
[toil it steadily for two hours, and do
not remove the cloth until the meat Is
perfectly cold. when it will be found in
nice shape for slicing.
Delicious Veal Cake. - Take abnut t
potmd of cold roast vent, remove all foe
end brown, cul it into thin slices or dice
and with it two hard-boiled eggs.Grease
a plain mould and put into it layers of
veal. egg. and sliced hmm, with chopped
parsley, and pepper between each Inye.r
until the rnould is nearly full. 'Next)
procure some good stock• and flavor it
well with lemon, tarragon vinegar. a
little mace, and peper; pour this over the
ether ingredients in the mould until it is
ae full. heli ahWh
bitenilmored isBake cold,for burn it outn our. and sert-een.
It is cheap, yet delicious.
Watercress tinted. - Allow the wnt.'r.
cress to stand half an hour in cold
water so Ihnt it will become crisp. Then
free it from moisture by swinging It in
;t wire basket. Lay the sprays of water -
(TOSS in salad howl, and stand lite
l -.owl on ice, shell n cupful of pecan nuts
removing the kernels as nearly whole
as possible. A few minutes before time
for the sated to be served, sprinkle the
watercress Thoroughly with a dressing
made by mixing one-half teaspoonful of
sell. one-qunrler tenspoonfll of mus-
tard, n dnsh of block pepper, or paprikn,
with three tablespoonfuls of Italian saincl
nil. To Ilia also cnn be added one -halt
tenspoonful of sudor. Drop into the ell
grndunlly one tablespnnnfnl nt elneger,
which is not ton sharp. 11tis mny not
he sufficient ddre.esing to mnrinate the
cross. bol the qudnttly cnn he incrcns,'il
r•ccnrding In the above proporlinns, rare
carefully nn apple whieh is a little Incl,
and cut it in very thin slices. and spread
over the cress. with a Inver of nils
above. Sprinkle with dressing and
serve at once.
MISTAKES WITIi FLOUR.
The translation of weights into mea -
cures is comparatively easy when the
food materials are considered, end an
accurate syslem of measuring has Leen
worked out as a stendnrd by the teach-
rrs of cookery, writes a cookery expert.
In measuring butler and sugar for in-
stance, Iwo one -heli pint cupful's equal
one ptnn0t. following the old familiar
role that n pint's n pound the world
round." The huller nnrsl be pocked sob
idly by pressing with n spoon. When
1'o:r is measured II must be sifted be.
fore measuring. and freshly sifted, too,
for if It stnnds two or three dn)'s after
selling it I'ccones more nr less dense
email. After making careful expert.
n
ents and with different samples of
flour, 1 find Bind when _lite measuring
cup la thrust into the solidly peeked
flora' in the bnrret two level cupfuls re
me pint will weigh nne pound. nut
That Is not the way flour is used. Sift
it twice and measure, and It lakes just
(nor cupfuls to weigh n Iynund. New,
flodnuhles Ila hulk by twice sitting
1!It is 0ur aas' In see whi're groat mislnkes
ertne In conking. To the enrolees, nr
norant. it cupful of flour as celled for in
ra veep.' mny mean a greatly varying
quantity. I have seen such a rnr,k .)'u
into the barrel for a little mere flour for
her coke or biscuit, thinking that she
etas adding but a spoonful, when, If
sifted. the flour would equal one -hell
ene.helf cupful at least. On the other
fiend, flour should not bo sifted too
ninny times before meeeuMn and twice
its sufticlent. Fill the cup with a spoon,
not by pushing It tato the pan end
CURED nes WIFE
of LA GRIPPE
Quebec Man tens how the Great Con-
sumptive
oo-sumptive Preventative was
an an-roand Benefit
" My wife took La Grippe when she was
in Ottawa," says R. N. Daloe of Northfield
Farm, Que., in an interview. "She got a
bottle: of Psychine and after using it for a
few days she was quite well. 1 took a cold
and am using it and ant getting all right.
1 think Psyc•hinc is one of tbo best tonics
on the market to -day. -
There you have the whole matter in a
nutshell. ht Grippe and colds are among
the forerunners of consumption.
This man had one, his wife had the other.
Psychine not only cured both but it built
them up so that their bodies aro strong
enough to resist disease. All seeds of
cont.,uunption are killed by
PSYCHINE
(i'runoun.ed Si -keen)
50c. Per Bottle
Larger sizes $i and C2 -aft druggists
OR. T. A. SLOCUM, limited, Toronto.
ben half solid, then stroke off with a
knife. After This, 10 help make the
dough light, sift the (lour twice Inure,
t.fler adding the baking powder, and
it will be further aerated. The second
sifting can be Mede, even when the bak-
ing powder is added id the lust, and
after the dough is otherwise entirely
ready for the oven. If baking powder
used Is the kind that acts quickly it is
wiser to odd it last, that none of its
leavening power be lost.
"DONTS" FIIOM A STOVE REPAIRER
A few don'ts furnished by a stove dea-
ler, who Is frequently called upon for
repairs, may assist the novice.
Don't hent a stove rapidly the first
(Inc.
Don't pile the coal above the top et
the firebox, nor allow the top of tete
stove to get red hot. It warps and
cracks the covers.
Don't let your grate get clogged. Shake
often and keep free from cinders and
ashes. -
Don't let ashes remain in the nshpan.
They absorb the heat, cool the oven,
and check the drought.
Don't id clinkers remain fastened in
the firebox. If the box is brick -lined,
drop an oyster shell in the fire occas•
tenuity, when burning briskly, and the
shell will clean off the brick.
Dont "rush" the range with the oven
draught open. You use too much fuel
and born out the ;angit ton-JasL..
Don't let the smoke draught 'stand
(-pen, except when fresh coal is pal 311.
I[eat that goes up the chimney is so
much good money burned.
Don't burn the wet garbngo in the
stove. Dry it first. Otherwise slenm
is generated, and the moisture will in-
jure the firebox.
Don't set leaky vessels or spill cold
water on the range. The cold coming
in contact with the heated ntelnl will
crack it. To got spots when there Iran
t een a bad "spill over," cool the lids by
changing them; or putting on coal.
Clean with paper and finish with •e
sera
Dopop.n't let the reservnir covers steed
rpen ns it rusts the iron and steins the
L ingcs.
Don't let soot ncrurnnlate in flue.
Scrnpe off rill soot that hangs to the
oven bottom. full all sont lot•nrd you
rind be careful not to push it back Into
the [Inc.
POSSIBLE.
"Do you know," remarked the mother
of the neer baby, thoughtfully, "1 be.,
litwe he has This fralhcr's hair."
"I wouldn't be surprised," replied the
candid friend: "his father cet'lainly
hitsn't got, it nowt"
BLOOD
HUMORS
PIMPLES Many an otherwise
beautiful and attrec-
BLOTCHES tive face is sadly
ERUPTIONS Btuarred by unseemly
lntehee, Pimples,
FLESHWORMSrleshworros
and Humors, and v
HUMORS one other blood dis-
eases.
Their presence is a source of einierra ts•
moat to those afflicted, as well as pa;u and
regret to their friends.
lfany a cheek and brow -cast in the
mould of grace and beim! y -have berm sadly
defaced, their attra•aiveaevs lost, and their
possessor rendered unlusppy for years.
Why, then, consent to rest under this
cloud of embarrassment t
There is an effectual remedy for all thens
defects, it is,
BURDOCK i
BLOOD BITTERS
This remedy will drive out all tho impnri-
ties from the blood and leave the com-
pletion hell th,+ and clear.
Mise Annie robin, Madoe, Ont., writes t
" I take great pleasure in rn.'r:mm.-nding
your Burdock Blood Bitters to any one who
rosy hay troubled with pimples on the face.
1 paid out money to doctore, but could nob
get cured, and was almost discouraged, anti
despaired of ever getting rid of them. 1
thought 1 would give B.11.11. a trial, so get:
two b)tths, and before 1 had tater then
was completely cured and havo had no
aims of_pl.ples a.ace."
Burdock Blood Bitten has been mane•
1stt,red b The T. Milburn Co., Limited,
for over /0 yeses, wad keg eared thousands
Is that tis& Do sot &seep a substitute
whack a eeorepalons demurs eas le "Just her
gni." •1 Ib sea'b be.•