Exeter Times, 1907-05-30, Page 7IOSOLUTE
SECURITYII
Cenuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
Must Sear Signature of
else Fac -Simile wrapper Below.
Very Isamu suet as ease
letake as
• FON NEAOACNr
CARTERS roll DIZZINESS.
FON BILIOUSNESS.
von TORPID urn.
fol CONSTIPATION.
�,y�
' roll SALLOW STUN.
FOR TIIECOMPLEXION
eGttttifx I11rf...us. rasa ensue
jut,
CURL SICK HEADACHE'.
MILBURN'S
Heart and Nerve Pills.
are a specific for all diseases and dis-
orders arising from • run-down condi-
tion of the heart or nerve system. snoh
aa Palpitation of the Heart, Nervous
Prostration, Nervousness, Sleepless-
ne s, Faint and Dizzy 8pclls. Brain Ing.
etc. They are especially beneficial to
women troubled with irregular men•
atttratton.
Price 1) cents per box, or for 111..2&
All dealers, or
Tuts T. M0..nen", Co., Lanese.
Toronto, Ont.
NEW LINEN FiBiIE FROM BRAZIL.
The Brazilian linen plant is expected
lc exert an inipxortanl influence upon
the textile world in the near future. It
is a common weed which reaches a
bright of eighteen feet in twelve months.
when carefully cultivated it matures
within three months, and can yield three
crops in a year. The fibre has all the
qualities fleceesary for high class use
--strength, fineness, flexibility, and
adaptability for blenching. dyeing. etc.
Every part of the plant can he irsed 'or
some induelrial purpose. more especi-
ally for Ili.' ►IIa1ltlfacttIrifie of writing
p>;per. The cultivation wee commenc-
e 1 by the Stale Government. and now
is said to have emerged from the ex-
perimental state successfully.
Purchaser -"You fold me that pare)'
!lough' of you was the most intelligent
bird In your collection. while the fact
tc he doesn't talk al alp." Dealer --
"That's what 1 meant when 1 spoke of
lits intelligence."
"\What," asked the sweet girt. en,as
the happnst nuetnent of your life'" "The
hep:piest moment of nay life," answered
Ihr old bachelor. "was when the jewel,
kr tooksback an engagement -ring and
eeve me sleeve -links in exchange."
IF WOMEN
ONLY KNEW
Thou ands of women snli'e•r untold miser•
Ili+ ct.-ry clay with a. hiig hacks that really
have no L:eenese to sche. A woman's back
wasn't mule to ache. Under ordinary
conditions it might to be strong aril ready
to help her bear the burdens of life.
It is hard to do housework with an ash-
Ingk. Hot
lyse urs ofmisery .
rete
_ry at leisure or
at work. If women only knew the cause.
Backache comes from sick kidneys, and
what a lot of trouble sick ki Inept cause in
the world.
nut they can't help it. If more week is
put on them than they can stand it's not
to be wandered that they get out of order.
Backacho is simply their cry for help.
DOAN'S
KIDNEY
PILLS
will help vou. They're hrlpine sick, ovw►
worked ltielneys-all over the worid-
mskeig. !hent strong, healthy and vit,'+e.-qua,
Moe P Ryan, Douglas, writes: "For
over co -torahs I was troubled with tents
lack ; was unable to move without
help. . tried all kinds of pleetere and
lanire• , • !ea they were no use. At last I
lanai • f ll.rtn'e Kt.lnry Pills and
after 1 1 ,ace thmail •arters of the bee
my 1•t, k sets as strong and well as ever.••
Pr; a '. ` :.ents per bee nr three h ,xee ter
11.2: , ail item -se or TLe Doan Kidney Pill
Co., Toren' e. gent.
CURRENT TOPIC::.
In the sweet IT and I.y we ,hall have
litter roads. I'r•,bahly no substance 'o
adapted to a greater variety of uses
titan rubber. but its applicetiens are re-
slricted by the limited supply and high
cast. A rubber pavement laid at u
I.o.ndon railway station in 1881 was in
oat worn down to five eighths of an
Melt at the thinnest place. Notwith-
standing the a,earcity of the material
the cost was less Then 'three limes as
great as that of wood. and its life has
I -ren more than twenty years instead
of tho three years w•hieJt the wood er as-
phalt would have endured. Why do
rubber tires raise duel?? Willi cars at
t'r•sl tires are comply -eel vertically by
the vehicle's wei1eh', when stress is
applied by staling, the tires are
strained, the 'libber in front of the
wheel being compressed and That be
hind, where it leaves the ground, Le
ing stretched in both direction: pare: -
lel to the brim. As the car moves ! u
\yard the particles of the lire in front.
as they conte forward under the wheel.
are brought into a slate of compression.
'rhe roughness of the road and the dri r-
ing power of the engine prevent the-•
particles from springing back until leve
forward movement of the car raises
them from the ground. Tlien they sud-
denly change their stale of compression
to one of tension ---that is, they move
rapidly backward along the rim to re-
gain their original position. The lire
set -apes or sweeps the road surface and
carries up the lighter dust. The differ-
ence of the speed of alternate compres-
sion and tension is the speed at which
the lire sweeps the dust to the rear.
Small stones tire overturned and all
fine particles are projected backward
and upward.
WHAT IS TAE GOOD HGIIT?
It Is the Conflict of the Higher
Against the Lower,
"Fight the gond fight of faith ; lay
holo on eternal life." --1. 'Tint., wt., Ia.
Alan is apparently naturally belliger-
ent. There always ie n ready response
le the call to light. The chief pleasure
many people get out .,f their religion
rta( their church life is in rho opportun-
ities afforded to buckle on (heir armor
and go forth to the fray. 11 does not
matter much who the foe may be 54) long
es there is a prospect. of tight.
It is only naturist Mut whece religion
has been made to con,ist in creeds and
opinions the lines of battle should be
- drawn according to the schools of
• thought. 1t is marvellous how warlike
ill? moll mild mannered can become
when an opportunity appears to belabor
some thinker w•Ito Inas had the temerity
to strike out for himself. The warriors
who fight against :o -called' heretics
scarcely should go to heaven ; they get
so much happiness out of their ctuu-
p0igns here.
line not the day conte when men can
forget their differences ? No matter how
important their opinions may seem to
be. no matter what traditions ere behind
them. how insignificant all these things
must appear when wee turn UM face the
great light that is
WORTH THE FIGHTING,
what is, the difference between a but-
terfly and a balloon? Not so much as
we might think. Prof. G. 11. Bryan e.f
the University college of North \\'ales
says they are about equal in efficiency.
They both can slake headway in the
still air. If it were not for the wind
we (night have aerial regatta :with
boats suspended from balloons using
wings instead of oars. A pigeon des-
cending shows the great work of the
wings in resisting the downward and
forward movement of the body, and this
is difficult to imitate in a machine
Bight. Gulls are about the hest nerint
gymnasts known. They utilize the lit -
Ile eddies of wind thrown up by the
crest, and troughs of the waves, and
know exactly where to go to get a lift
from the wind. All so-called sailing
birds secure nli the assistance they can
front the nir curr,•uts. They have to
ref to where the wind lakes then' 14) n
certain extent. and tnust rely upon the
ere• of their wings it going in a parti-
cular direction. Birds possess much
greater horse -power in proportion to
their weight than ninn or animals. One
winged ratan has been more successful
than Darius Green. M. Antoine Filippi,
n Freneh engineer, has combined a pair
of rotative wings with an aeroplane,
and is reported to have had good re-
sults.
The country beautiful is Venzuela. In
i1- perpetual summer he only is half
a man who does not for a moment for-
get the needs of civilization in the in•
loxieation of primitive nature. In the
little resort called Et Il/rtcanto nature
[seems to have gone uind in her effort
to outdo her previous Work. Itul pass-
ing westward, where the valley broad-
ens to hold the lake of \blencia, the
traveller must -cry, "Europe, 1 can slant
no more." 1h're, the Chivalry. kindli-
ness, ho-pilalit-e traditions, and c.es-
fumes of old Spain not yet hnve worn
awn
t. Toe
attend the opera
cod is to be transplanted to Maly of the
early fifties. The opera Ls n fetival,
deliriously old fashioned with eourlli-
nas of manner, grandiloquence (1
seer r
h. 7h. people are 1'
fOr101111 ',`
P PC dl•
P )
e.thetic, de'corale their huts and villas
v•ith roses or orchids. and sometimes
completely smother (heir railway sta.
tions with Wesson's.
t
USED NO SOU).
Our :\nrcslir. Were n
Itirly Lit 01
People.
R -r -ring gay- Ihr Ain rm clock at slot."
half -poet t -ew(
h in the
morning, Ig• and
.with a drowsy grunt th:.t yon would
like to turn over and enjoy another
quarter of an hours done, you gel up
and iesrform your maintain' ntlulMe :
.
Perhaps it will be news to you neat the!,
tunelton was by no neons SO popular
with your Ancestors in the gond old
days. for soap is really quite a new fac-
tor in the world's lite. \lust of our an-
Ceelors were very dirty. and di.-.embled
the fact by the nir of stifling perfumes.
washing noels hands. which w as (nhv
dune by the were best people. meant
dipping the fingers in msew•oler and dry -
mg them nn n napkin. Eton the Re-
name of the lime of the "decline." who
were probably the cleanest as n cone
munity, simply tNOlh.NI in water and
rehhel the eelwes with ell. 11 sounds
nasty lo tis. but men eo does, for ex-
Chineee music, which millions of
°denials think delightful.
as
eeN nner•sl ,r, wore all rnldie't's,
1;1utg*et.'
'14 1 J. ‘vete they. ma'am'"
:les; do yell knew whet it to to rnme
nem a Ili htirtg farnal. Bridget?"
"Sure I d.•. rename TIt,Ps wiry f lett
my last place, nia'smr
when we at last hear the clear call to
strand shoulder to shoulder and take up
the stupendous task that Christianity
gives to the church.
What is the good fight, the warfare
really worth the waging? \Whit and
where is the battlefield where all these
great regiments, some with names
adorned by the centuries, sonic perhaps
with no name at all, may stand to-
gether in common a tttse, with one
mighty spirit sweeping through all and
nerving all to splendid, united endea-
vor?
There is a common cause, a common
purpose, that which will serve as a
common denominator for all. It is the
cause of life, the light for character, the
conflict of the higher against the lower.
The great Master said that he carte That
men might have life; his followers have
n• other or better gift for the world than
this, ti give amen the power of a new
and eudlees life.
The call is for lhn.,e who will fight
against the foes of life, the forcers that
sell the life, the spirit, the worthy and
enduring in Hurn. for. the base and ig-
noble. Let the church light against the
greed. the lust That tabs babes of their
lives for a larger margin of profit, that
sleets from wnxtd the flower rt
and
glory of his being, that debauches the
iuteths•t and undermine., the will -all
for a few dollars of gain.
\\'e need to fight against the tendency
of every age to settle down to grossness,
to make eating, or pleasure, or passes-
sion of things the end of living, that
scoffs at ideals and bids men made for
things divine be satisfied with the dust,
that blinds itself to spiritual realities and
knows only things tangible and of the
fleet'. Let tats gross content with things
bust) settle upon urs and
DEATH 13 OUB PORTION.
Only as we put down the temptation
within ourselves, the sloth and lust and
cowardice, can we begin to fund life;
only as we are willing to pay the price.
le lose the lesser, can we attain the
higher. The evolution of man as a
spirit comes only through struggle ; be-
ing and becoming involve n magnificent
battlefield; we win our way up with
pain and labor.
Only as we are willing to be good
soldiers. enduring hardships, shriking
valiant blows, bearing wounds. can this
world be lel into the larger life for
which it was created. The better day
wails for the hosts willing to tight in
high faith that truth and right. the high
and wm thy, roust win, that Inch day re-
veals n nobler destiny for morn.
Here is something worth lighting for,
not the worsting of heretics, but the
bringing of all men to their full heritage
of life, the opening sup of every door
long sealed by selfishness and siti, the
letting in of heavens light to every dark
place, the making of life to be life in-
deed, with the breath of heaven and the
beauty of the divine, springing up with
the freshness of the morning and borne
el by the n►usic of the spheres.
HENRY F. (:OPE.
THE S. S. LESSON
INTERN.\TION.\I. LESSON,
Jl:NE 2.
Lesson IX. Moses Called to Deliver
Israel. (:olden Text: Exod. 3. 12.
TIIE LESSON WORD STUDIES.
Based on the Text of the Revised Ver-
sion.
'i'he Angel of Jehovah, -The angel -of
Jehovah, mentioned in various narra-
tives of the earlier portions of the Old
Testament, is to be regarded as a then -
plenty, or self -manifestation of God, To
Moses at Sinai the manifestation was
given in a (lame of fire. In Gen. 18 Je-
hovah appears to Abraham in human
forth, and in (ren. 31. I1-13. the "r a gel of
God" appears to Jacob in a dream. In
every instance God ccnununes with the
person to whose the manifestation is
given. Everywhere also the angel iden-
tifies himself with ('sod and claims to
exercise the power end the prerogatives
of God. Those also to whom the angel
appeared identify hint with Jehovah
(eonlpnre Gen. 16. 13 ; Judg. 13. 22;
Gen. 18. 15. 16). 11 Is to be noted also
that the Angel of Jehovah reveals hint -
self chiefly in what Inny be culled the
redemptive history of the Old Testament,
for which reason the older theologinns
regarded this manifestation as ri pre-
monition or anliiype of the incarnation
i( the second I'eesnn of the Trinity. Rut
it can hardly be said that the Old
Testament writers themselves uuJet.
stood these manifestations which they
recorded in any sense which involved
such distinctions in the Godhead. The
only clear distinction brought out by
(hese writers is that between Jehuveh
and Jehovah in inanitrsiation, The An-
gel of Jehovah so fully r•epre-ented and
expressed Jehovah himself that both
those to whom he appeared Itl1lre
1iit nr a1nn
i
,i
•torrent writers thi recorded
fesbations had the assurnnce that when
h . Oenred sl,nkr among ntw
Jehovppah himseorlf who was pre-c0n ut(11 and
speaking.
Verse 1. Moses was keeping; the fleck
-The habitual oc('upalkin of Moses in
\tidbit, The flecks referred to consisted,
fr. all probability, of sheep and gouts.
Jethro. his tether -Called also liene'1
(Excel. 18).
The priest of Vidian --The Midiniites
over' kindred people to the Hebrews. and
therefore doublItss uko worshipers s of
Jehrnah.
thoughAl
gh iret
their siluetien
and relations to other surrounding
people's sl is probable That their Jehovah-
worohip was early corrupted and at last
t
aupoerselel almost entirely 1 } idolatry.
r,.
To the Lark of the wilderness--iteyond
!he desert wands, on the foothill Stopes
of the tnnunlnine.
The mountain of ('rod ... Ilnreb-The
names "Sinai" and "Iloreb are used
prarticnlly interchangeably in the 01(1
Testament. As in our present pnm=age.
sn in 1 King's 19. 8, the name "Iloreli'
is used filluwlng the designation "the
mountain of (god." In this and suhse.
quem lessons we shell a'sutne Rod
Mount Slnni is somewhere near the
southern point of the peninsula telween
the Gulf of Suez and the Gulf of AkaI'ah,
end not far from the northern end of
the Red itself. 11 hiss leen suggested
IT some modern seholnrs that the
mountain, the cxec1 t•catinn of which
has never been determined, should
rather le' located farther to the np,rth-
enol in the hill country of Seir. north of
the Gull of Akabott. The bunhen nt
proof. however. lies with thus' eh,'
gueastkon the traditional site which atilt
has the support of a majority of lite best
Old Testauletjtt scholars.
2. The bush -One of the shrubs on the
mountainside.
Burned with firti-IIad the appearance
of being on lire, the divine revelation
taking the form of this construing and
purifying element.
3. 1 will turn aside now and see -The
natural curiosity of a 011111 not super-
stitiously afraid of even a very unusual
told awe-inspiring, as well as inexplic-
able, sight.
4. Moses. Moses -The repetition of the
call implies urgency. Thus Jehovah
speaks to tie Fifty Samuel, calling him
twee by name {1 Sam. 3. 10).
5. Draw not nigh hither -\loses is re-
minded Of the natural unfitness of man
to abide in the immediate presence of
Jehovah. This Irullt (;cod patiently
sought to tench his people by such cint-
ruande as the one given to \loses later in
the presence of the people near Ili,
51411E Incitinhitt : "And thou shell set
hounds unto the people round about,
saying, Take herd to yourselves, That ye
go not up into the nluunt, or touch the
herder of it" Exod. 19. 12). The un-
tltured mind and heart easily falls into
an attitude of irreverence.
Thy shoes ---Sandals.
The place . . is holy ground -Sacred
--hallowed by the manifest presence of
God. Compare the similar command
given to Joshua : "I'ult off thy shoe from
oft thy foot ; for the place whereon thou
siitndest is holy" (Josh. 5. 15).
G. I'nther-Artrestor.
'1 -he God of Abraham . , . tsoae, and
Jacob --Who had revealed himself
especially to (hese cheosen men. Jesus
i•t an argument with the Pharisees con-
cerning the resurrecli-m of the dead, nr
rather the fntntrorinlity of 11,e soul,
quotes this verse (comp. \lett. 22. 32).
Hid his face -,An inelinc1ive netion in-
dicating reverence. So Elijah 4411 the
seine site '1 Kings 19. 13) find 111,' angels
thentselses before the theme ha, 6. 2.).
7. 1 have surely seen . . heard ..
know -An accumulation of anthropo-
morphic expre„ Inns. which furnish the
only nent.(
t a
nhn
gII words intelli-
gible
gible to men the attributes of God. espe-
cially his love and lenderneee.
Tnakmn.sler, - `subordinate overseers
or h oases.
8. A gond land end a large ... flow--
ing with milk and honey --The teal of
Palestine in many pierce is exceedingly
deli and productive. noel its ntelnilnin-
Rtdes and numerous places, especially
ensIward of the Jordan. in fernier limes
were w•oodel with fine trees. lis valleys
nlaouidod in lu\ut innt herbage. Grains
t. ver •'
•1 4 pew ue eu liven
. n I 1 ledl In abnnJnnce,
and countless 'lecke and herd, may
still lee cern thawing sknvly hither and
thither over IIs long -neglected fields.
Palestine proper
was
very ..mall core -
palet with nanunw
which we are famslat'siliara.d In its 111051trie, prosith.
perms time the 1•nite,1 Kingdom em.
braced an area of Porn fifty to sixty
!houseful squnre mile.. ur ulnen the
size of the $talc of New Ilamp-hfre.
Canaanite, 1littile, :\marine. 1'erizzlle,
Ilene. and Jebusite--Thr inhnhilanly of
Palestine. Usually. as In Gen. 15. len
peoples, or nations, nre enumerated, of
which only Ove rife hen' given. 'fhe 111.
wines nn' not menliunel in the other
Ii.Hs,
11. Who nun I -Onto Moses had been
a prince in Egypt. Now ter forty years
he had been n lively 'hephed of the
nes.s, -
Thatwtklerishould go unto 1%ernnh--The
years of desert s cIti'Ion had oriel/nit
Muses n radical ehatige of chnrneter.
rind had hoeught with there the spirit of
trete humility. quite different from the
intpulstveneee reel ardor ti high he had
eels bileit in earlier -years.
13. \\ hat ie thy name ' - '1'I; • Ore-..
earl, use's the went "e: "l gents • ally.
hating] a spo.ial name for each parl;cu-
lar deity, such a.s Ammon. Its, Menti,
Osiris. With this fact Moses was cer-
tainly acquainted, and he :seems to an-
ticipate that when he brings to the He-
brews a nus -age from the (.od of their
fathers They may conclude that the too
had a proper name, and may wish to
Lwow what that name is.
14. 1 ail that 1 amt-- \targin, "1 and be-
cause 1 ani," nr "I ant way) am." or "1
will 1,e that I will lee." The idea ex -
',re -sed by all these renderings of the
I lebrew original is shut of perfect, un-
conditioned, Independent, existence.
An
MIGHT LIPS ion ♦ FR\N(:.
.tdyenlure \\'illi a Moshi m Fanatic
it) .thderia.
Near Ilse western end of Ila city, in a
lailely street (for meet of the men were
sleeping fron► 12 to 3 during the heat of
the day), 1 met a tall, stalwart "Bali"
from the mountains, \v►•ites the Itev. W.
G Pope, who was u missionary in Al-
geria. in describing in the Liverpool
Daily Post and 'Mercury an adventure in
Oujda, whirl he visited for the purpose
of circulating copies of the Scriptures.
Accosting hint with the usual Arabic
salutation, 1 asked hint if he could read.
Iles answered "\o."
"Where do you live?" "In the moun-
tain twenty niil.s west."
"Have you a Sheik who can read?"
"'Then will you pleasi' take hint this
I-,ok will' my greetings anti ask him to
rend it to you all t"
"\\'hal is it, a Koran?" "No. The
stc.ry c,f the life of the \h'ssialt."
He then turned and asked if I was a
follower of the Messiah, to which 1 an-
swered "Yes." Then arose his Moslem
fanaticism, for he was an "Aissaua"-a
terribly fanatical section of the Mos-
lems in Morocco.
Drawing his knife and holding it over
nee Ire uttered one word. "Studied r (wit-
ness). meaning that I was to say, with
my forefinger raised, "There is no God
but Allah, and Mahonuned is the pro-
phet of Allah."
1 felt white, but tried to look courag-
eous and unconcerned. I remonstrated
with hien for so -acting with his Ansel's
guest, but all to no purpose. ile reiter-
ated his one word, "Shalted !"
His knife was nn ugly weapon. It
looked like a piece of sharpened barrel -
hoop with two pieces of goats horn fas-
tened together to stake a handle. Know-
ing the ,\rales love of an English knife,
1 asked him it his knife was an English
one. Iie answered that he had made it
himself. Remembering that in one
pocket 1 had a franc in silver and cop-
pers, and in the other a French Louis, I
determined to buy the knife if possible.
faking out my $mall change 1 de.
tided to try that first. 1 referred to the
fact that the English were very proud
of their knives and 1 would much like to
take back to my cotmlry a Moroccan
knife to show what others could do, rutd
offered to purchase it. The sight of the
French copper., and a glistening piece of
silver was too much even for his fana-
tici,nt. Ile undid his leather sheath,
restored tee knife to its place. looked
once up and down the ,beet to sec no
one wits looking, then, with apparent
joy, exchanged the knife for the money
anal the hook wnoff h:qq,y.
\\'titch of thande twoefellt the happier 1
cannot tell, but 1 never forgot that my
life in Oujda was purchased back for a
paltry tonic.
(:It()\\ I\I: I'(1(rltl•:R.
Conclusions lased on Official iteturns
of the Succession Duties.
Either Prance has been gruw•ing Mearl-
il,: poorer during the last decade or her
capital is being incrensedty placed
°Ines!. Titer alternatives have been
reached by the disbingui.hed statistician,
Jte(onsille, a member of lice Institute,
who inclines toward the refuter. His
conclusions are are based on the official
returns of the succession duty. the sums
given as diwrie . being also 1dken into
aeruunl, The figures giving the amount
ea which duty was paid are available
since Isere when the average for the bil-
lowing five yetlrs shows n steady iu-
crease. t:\.•ti the Prussian \e -an. caused
110. diminution iu 1he average, that of
1866.76 being jets 10100, as agaeinst 81,680,-
7,T
1,680,•
(*10 fn,nl 1*71 l0 18i:r.
This Increase continn0d unlit Ili.' aver-
age was enriched in the period from 1891
pt) 1395 of 81,3$6.(MMt, As wealth :‘..eats
Ilan increasing in all cnuntrys and
there was no reax,n to fear Ihot lis de-
we•Inpment would be checked in Prance,
it was expecte(' That the average would
reach 81.600,000 for the next five mire,
whereas the p' -t i.,d from Ia1G to PAX)
4
\ 'I RI)0
yielded only . I,1., . 111:
� -Id at this in-
crease
111-
crease ryas not nterel- te:nit.,rafy is
shown by the latest 11ve year:. for which
figures are available. 19/1141:,, \then the
average reached only f.41.321.1'0.
4
'fhe nver•nge poet newer sinss of the
jays of working until he 1!•'?, It••y• t:•I the
slogr wtr're he hoe 10 Werk.
MILBURN'S
LAXA-LIVER
PILLS
are mild, sure Anel safe, and ee e a perfect
regulator of the sy stent.
They gently ttnlo-k tho sore:! ions, clear
away all effete and waste matter from the
system, and give tone and vitality to the
whole intostinal tract, curing Constipa-
tion, Birk Hegel eche, Ililionemee, ilyr pep•
sia, Co-o.'rl Tongue, Foul Breath, Jaun-
dice, Ileertbura, and \\'iter Brash, Mrs.
R. S. Ogden, 1\'oxlstock, N.11., writes:
"\(v hesitate' anri mt•anlf have uw-el \pit•
burn's I exn•J.iver Pills for a number of
\\'e think wa cannot do without
They are the only pills ea ever
years.
harm.
take,'
Price 2.5 cents or flys bottle• for 51.00,
at all desl•rs or direct en r.se•p�t of price,
The T. Milburn Cu., Limited. Toronto.
Ont.
1144•1064114.444
The Horne
TESTED RECIPES.
To Keep Cake Moiet.-An apple cut
In halves and .nut in the cake box will
keep a coke moist indefinitely.
IJoil.d folates .-.\\'hen the Io.)latcleaoe's
ere toile\! and dl'tiinexl place a n
dish towel on top. It a few minutes
the towel wahsohe moture,
having thest
Ix,illIatoesrh dryalt andtmealyis,
Notu'isteng I)rittk. - Juice of one
orange, juice one-half leucon, while of
one egg, svtuippevl: half glass water,
sugar to lisle; mix by pouring back and
forth in two glasses; serve with cracker
or wafer.
Preserved Strawberries. -One pint
strawberries, one pint sugar. 1A4 the
sugar stand on berries a little while to
feral juice; then toil ten minutes, can
tightly and set in stun three days.
Prune Pie. -One pint of stewed prunes
sweetened and stoned. one-half spoon
ful of cinnamon; have an under crust
baked, fill with the prunes, put merin-
gue on top, and lightly brown; serve
cold.
Preserving Fruit. -\take a stiff syrup
of sugar and sealer. Stand the preserv-
ing lollles in hot water, fill with the
buil, then pour the boiling syrup over
and seal. '1.1tis is good for grapes eves
well as berries. Small quantities can
be utilized this way.
\\'filo doughnuts are frying, have n
pan of toiling water on the stove, and
ae you lift then' hops the fat, dip theta
quickly in the boiling :water, men place
!heel on your papered dapping pen.
l'uu will be surprised how it softens
them and takes off the extra grease.
Soft Boiled Eggs. -four a pint of boil-
ing water over the egg. Set it aside
upon the kitchen table, or nnywhere
away from Ilse heat of the fire. Let !t
stand five minutes with water. \\ hen
the shell is opened, the inside should
drop out having the appearance of a
ball of jelly.
Spiced Cherries. -Seed cherries and
cover with vinegar. Let them stand
over night. In the morning pour off the
tinegar and use equal pacts cherries
and sugar. 'Then let this stand for
three days. Stir once in a while. Seal
air tight. After putting in the can
drop in a few cloves or cinnamon.
Ginger Snaps. ---One cup of sugar. one
cup of molasses, one cup of shortening.
three eggs, one teaspoon of ground
ginger, one teaspoon baking soda. four
cups flour. Mix together. then roll on
n board arid cut in regular sire and
1 oke in a moderate oven for fifteen to
twenty minutes.
illack Bean Soup. -One quart of bledk
beans to three quail, of water, add
more water if necessary, itch thole
oughly; tnaslt through a colander, add
s teuspo000 of butler, pepper. and snit
lee taste. Just Itefore serving nd(' a
half glass of sherry wine; also three
Lard bolted eggs chopped flue, and a
let nun sliced thin.
Nut Marmalade. -Four pounds rine
earb. :ix Ixeinds while sugar. one pound
almond:. four leptons. Chop nlntoitds
and tenpins One and put all together.
De not peel rhubarb or lentonc nr blanch
almonds. Add one cup water and boil
ene and one-quarter hours. Put in jel-
ly glasses mill carver with paraffin.
Fried Rut:tbages.-Take one that will
weigh about three pound°. cut in round
pieces ane -half inch thick; phut in Mil -
Ing water. enough to cover. with a lit -
11.• adder) salt: lel bail till you ran
pierce with a straw. Then (I'a'n, hnve
frying prat ready- \t lilt plenty of hot
Willer or lard. drop the pieces in, and
fry fill a rich brown.
Excellent. Cookies. -Bent three eggs.
add one cup of granulated sugar. one
cup of brown sugar. half cup butter,
half eup; )nre stirred to a light cream,
level teaspoonful stela dissolved' in hot
water. Pour otic into ane cup (hick
star crrnrn, and nit' one teaspoonful
vanilla. a little nutmeg, n pinch cf
salt. sift in a little stere Hum pinch cf
flour, one leasp•onnful baking powder.
neve dough soft, just shift enough to
roll.
glutted Cabbage -Take a nice solid
head of cahb:tg,•: le•llow out front the
not end it round hole; Then have rr'nrly
ane found of remit steak rind halt
pound of pork steak ground Ingelher.
Fut this in a bowl and stir it well with
one
a c \
rale half cup milk, 1 gg.litttlel tile-
nd
s►,nonfulc rd flour, and saultI,ea
pi pper. Now fill the cabbage with chi.,
end enver the opening with a couple ret
vee ref Ili(' enbbn e, Tier
N' lea h
ul ids g
red
r nt
be n Hire clean cloth a(' )10)0
snel pill into a kettle nt lolliroundn111g s1aber:I
Jeul a little salt in the water and let 11
toil for two hours. Serve hot with
melted butler. into which put some
clopped parsley.
DOMEWFIC. I IIN rs.
'11) keep milk front scorching( rinse
the saucepan in cold water before pour-
ing in Ihr• milk.
,\ ,,,x .d b eefstenk. ti-awever will cork-
eel. will not be al its lost 11111085 ser'eil
(;110c•Ily 11 Is COOki'(1.
'lilies lines and pegs will keep at
e mile!' longer , hu 1 Mr r t
1 c�(endlt n n R I they are
1-
I. e•1 fur len minutes before using.
1!..reeradl h should Ire scraped for lite
lee only just before it is wanted;
seise it becomes discolored and in-
t
-Bank 1.ee -a of mutton. en litfb'
in gen• 11 well sonk(sb. add
• t„• :ravies and soup::
all will gfo iwf e • far if well dreel.
1 si nuld be rut hut•, smnil blocks, and
.11 arran.z I in lie -us with spores be-
e 1, , ,I 4.. •. .•� Ihetn li spry.
Ii
on carpet. lay thick blot-
eme-iee . a ,n: r the apo) and press n
Pot nat. a un ft. Repeal this several
Flue.. iiemg clean paper each lithe,
'f . uNof s< raps kntr,ns. lint ing(
ne•nei117ate }•4'11,1 rind (111(1 Iltr Juiee
f t flavoring, the pulp ,should be (11 t'
1, i into sell and !Neil for cleaning
e„peer pans.
'fry wet k'a•:enter as a mean.: of de.
cltaytngr c• ckr0ances. Just s(Juecze the
1'rtve' with the lintel' end lav on sheets
eat pol,e't neer the !earth. when slnrt-
lens,' nu for the night. The cr-ckre,echry
g:, to the leaves. ntwl lire laMee kills them.
&lake polalo"s Meek while and floury
DOCTORS USING'
PATENT MEDICIN
The Honest Physklan f
• to Cure and Uses the Best
Available Remedies.
The proposed legislation throng%
the Dominion Parliament for the reg-
ulation of tho mannfaoture and sale
of patent or proprietary medicines is
of the utmost importance, and it is
receiving • great deal of attention,
not only by the proprietary medicine
manufacturers, but also by the leading
doctors and druggists. Every manu-
facturer of reliable and high class
remedies welcomoa the bill as a step
in the light direction. The discussion'
has brought out the fact that the best
physicians in Canada and on the con-
tinent approve of and prescribe Pay -
chine in cases of the most difficult
character. In a recent instance cit
very serious throat and lung trouble
the patient had been using Psychine.
Two leading United States specialists
were consulted, in addition to two
eminent Canadian physicians. Upon
learning what the patient was using
a sample of Psychine wens taken and
analyzed, with the result that the
physicians advised its continuance.
They proscribed no other medicine but
Psychino, with the result that the pa-
tient baa fully recovered and is •
splendid walking and talking adver-
tisement for the wonderful curatir.
power of a remedy that will "stand
up" before the keenest professional
criticism and analysis. As a builder
up of the system and restorer of alt
wasted conditions, Psychine has no
equal, and the best and most earnest
physicians recognise this fact.
" At the age of 25 my lungs were In a terrlbla
state. I heti lit grippe the year before; It settled
on my lunge and 1 kept steadily growing worse
till I got down so low I weal in bead for all weeks.
I had a cumnnitattun of do bore• and they said the?
Could do nothing more for me. 'Then 1 started re
use Psychine. I took the medicine for more t
a year. It certainly did wonders tor me. 1
now as strong as I was before my sickness."
YRS. H. HOPE,
Yorpeth, Out
Psychine, pronounced Si -keen, le t
greatest of tonics, building up the sys.
tem, increasing the appetite, purify'
ing the blood, aids digestion, and ac
directly upon the throat and lun
giving tone and vigor to the esti
system. a At all druggists, 50o. and $1
or Dr. T. A. Slocum, Limited, 1
King Strew West, Toronto.
by boiling in as little water as possible
strain and take at ortce to an open door.
Give the potatoes a vigorous shake 1
the saucepan, and let it remain uncor.
ered at the side of the tire for five tnlrt
Utes before serving.
Before grating leptons It is well to
wash them in a basin of lukewarm
water. fur on esatnination it, will .
(team b that the outside of it lepton is
anything but clean, find if Pitt under
o microscope will I' seen to have tin,
binck specks on it, which should ate
rays be removed.
Renember when buying fish that i
should be firms to the touch; if presse,
by the finger the flesh should rise again
instantly -there should be no impres,
sign left. 1f fish is frr'tt the eyes o
bright. the gills red. and the scales no
easily rubbed off. in choosing lobster
by the by, lake the tail and .pull it levity.
from the body. It it is elastic and sprint
back. the lobster is fresh.
Milk and eggs nre the basis of most
"light and nourishing" foods, beeau..
in themselves they eenlnin everything
necessary to build up the bodily tissues,
1'e make pleat, and give energy. They
should. therefore, (nein Ill • :staple of the
diet. Canis -and -whey and junkets are
tar loo little used in the feeding of in-
valids. They are both Invaluable. for
they present milk in a digestible poet
apetizing form, and therefore often tempt
people to lake it when they have grown
weary of it in pudiliigs.
For tired feel. a hot foot -bath every
night. with the addition of a 111Ile sail
and a lable.t eo►uful of bay rune or a
few drops of ammonia. will often give
ease; but Ili.' magic preparation is sntd
to be n mixture of eetrlr.lic acid, cam'
phew, and ammonia -four ounces of car-
bolic arid to one each of the, antnonia
and camphor. Stir into lice foot -bath
til the proportion of rete large spoonful
cf chi. liqui•l to etery Iwo quarts e 1
tot w•a'er. It will give the greatest res-
Ih't.
For chilblains and itching and
horning of the feet apply equal parts
of turpentine and kerosene.
Cleaning Otos-es.--i lie usual method
employed. lo olean with benzine. tins the
dlsndvantege flint the look of the glees
tells about the cleaning. A better way
is staled 10 be as hollows: Spread the
gtnves smoothly on n folded towel, and
rub threat well with is piece of •flaimet
dipped into pure milk and then rulolied
en a piece of eastile soap. The gloves
are elenned when the while ones Irak
yell w nes long as they are wet, and the
calmed ones look blaek. On drying, (he
original colors reappear.
Dr. Wood's
Norway Pine
Syrup
Cures Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis,
Hoarseness, Croup, Asthma,
Pain or Tightness In the
Chest, Eto.
It stops that tickling in the throat, d
pleasant to take and soothing sod heal.
ag to the lungs. Mr. E. Bishop Brand,
lite well-known Galt gardener, writes: -
i had a vrry revere attack of *ors
throat and tightness in the chest. Some
times when 1 t,. stop.' 1 , cough and could
not I tvuuld almost nooks to death. M
wife got me a bottle of DR. WOOD
NORWAY PINE SYRUP, and to my sur-
prise i /mini speedy relief. I would
not be without it if it cost 81.00 • bot'
11'-. and I can recomnsend It to origami
botisred with a cough or roll
Pills Si Crs-'4