Exter Times, 1910-03-03, Page 7CARTERS
v.* IVE
R
PILLS.
CURE
t He.ids. he tan„ ;.'here all the trouldM 1sot.
east t;, • bili,,,:, r!:!•,.,t at:. ey,tern. such as
Dersza N, Minora. t,lry,waldra.. Melissa attar
wiling. Pain in the hide, kr. 11 :lila t !..lr most
NLarl•ble ourcaa ban been she r.0 u cu,ir.
SICK
ffiaa4taehs. yet feaster'. Little Uver rills are
equally tataaLle l u Counpatl ua. a nn UQ and pie
venting thisaaasyiu,t rus1Plaint,while they also
correct all dis.,rteew urtb.atoeaa.-h,st, n uelate the
Itvcr and ratolato the Lowes. Liven 11 0,1 i out,
cured
HEAD
Lcbethey would Te almost peic.tecs to tbosswho
suffer from t6u.lietra,stug cow! :slut: but form -
stately the! rg,,cdnesa does net end hera.and those
whouara try them will god lhe.o little pule veto.
Able lu ea wally ways that they will n.:: hs wtl•
ling Ludo without then,. But after all sick heal
ACHE
Is the Dans cta,n;allylives th tb rOelatwheel
el
etu•:eer,r r,rcat twat. Our p
others do not.
Carter's Little Ltrit Pala ars very shalt ant
very easy to take. vuu or two pills wakes arse.
They are r. rl.; fly ro4•• table and do nut grow ..0
purge, but by the?r 1;.ut!eactlou please all who
ma thew.
CAIT1YIIC1::113tee utter Tne.
Bea bill htliEn.
Hints for Busy Housekeepers.
Recipes aed Other Valuable leforinetlest
e1 Particular !stereo, to Weasels Folks.
DISHES M.\I)17.OF 151ENS. with some kind of a vegetable and
dessert, will make a dinner for the
third day. People who are trying
to live on a small eatery will tinct
this hint ou ventionly a help. 'Try it.
Eggless ('ake. - A nice filling for
mike, when meas are high: Juice
and grated rind tf one orange,
stirred stiff enough to tiptoed on
layers, with pulverized sugar. Egg-
Iess fruit cake: One cupful brown
sugar, r
onecupful shortening,
1
e
cupful In!tte'rn►ilk. our etipfut rai-
sins, one cupful English 'titrants,
dtssotte scant tt•neptien :cell: retus in
the buttermilk. Cinnamon and nut-
meg and salt, two cupful.; flour.
Winter Pie. An excellent winter
1'ie. Blake first a rich crust and
bake. Allow to cool. }foil until
-syrupy'' nntt cup of dried eurrants
with one cupful of granulated su-
gar, with suffcicnt water to cover.
Allow this to cool, then place in
she 11. Rent stiff the whites of two
ergs• Add two tablespoonfuls of
granulated 'ugar. Spread over pie
and brown in oven. To be eaten
cull.
Egglets Cake.-- In these day of
high priced eggs, the following re-
ceipt for apple sauce cake. with-
out eggs, will be appreciates{. as
it has bet n tested and found to be
excellent : One cupful of sugar, c.ne-
half cupful of butter, one cupful
e f unsweetened apple sauce, with
ane scant teaspoonful of soda ste-
tted into it ; one and one-half cup-
fuls last of fluor, one-half teaspoonful
lift the pork to the surface and let of `al=. one -halt teaspoonful of
IS crisp. Beans should he baked clove•', our teaspoonful of clima-
te least eight hours in a moderate mon, one cupful of raisins, chopped
oven. Use more salt and one-third and mixed with the flour. Bake as
of a cupful of butter if you dislike a loaf cake and ice.
pork, or use half a pound of fat
and lean eornbeef. The mustard
gives the beans a delicious flavor
and also renders them more whole-
some. Yellow eyed and lima beans
are also good when baked this way.
}lean Soup. --Boil a small soup
bone in two quarts of water until
meat falls from the bone. Take out
the bone. add a cupful of white
brans which have beta soaked over
night, and boil for two hours. Add
three potatoes. half a turnip, and
a carrot all cut. fine. Boil for half
an hour longer. Seaaou with salt
and pepper.
Cream of Baked Bean Soup. —
Melt one-quarter of a cupful of but.
ter and add one-fourth of a cupful
llv bleed -
of flour. When thoroughly ,
e 1 add two cupfuls of cold milk
and cook until thick. Add two ctlp•
fills of cold ballet{ beans. If too
thick dilute with milk or stock to
Baked Corn and Beane. -- `Puke
equal quantities of shelled brans
and dried sweet corn. Piece in been
tact in layers., sprinkling salt and
For
layer. h
pepper between each a,
one pint cnc•It of cern and bean•
take one-half petted salt pork, score
the rind and place on top of bean -
put, letting the rind cane up even
with the cern and beans. (.'.,ver
i bake slowly
( 1k
, wt r b
Leith bed ug t t
sorsa or eight hours, adding more
water as it cooks awn\•.
Baked Pork and Be tns,--Soak
one quart of brans in colt! water
titer night. In the morning put
them in fresh cold water, and sim-
mer until soft enough to pierce with
a pie. bring careful not to let theta
boil enough to break. If desired,
boil one onion with thou. When
soft turn into colander and pour
ec,ld water through them.. Place
tltent with the onion in a bean pot.
Pour boiling water over a quarter
of a pound of sa}t. pork, part fat
and part. lean: serape the rind un-
til white. Crit the rind in half inch
RLI''I.RI.X('1:S 1N EAST .11'RI(1 stripe. Bury the pork in the beans,
leaving only the rind exposed. Mix
the Servant Problem one teaspoonful of salty --more if
Same e' in America. the pork is not fatty ---and add one.
teaspoonful of mustard with one-
quarter of a cupful of molasses.
Fill the cup with hot water and
when well mixed pour over the
beans. Add enough more water to
cover thent. Keep thein covered
with %eater until the last hour; then
A Phase of
Muck the
The servant p-obiem is bad
enough in this country, and the ex-
periences mistresses have to relate
are many and varied, but an in-
fieitely wider range of possibilities
is opened up, says the Wide World
Magazine, when mere man --and a
bachelor man at that—tackles the
servant and other household prob-
lems in an East African bungalow.
Anything can and does happen
then.
Native house servants of a sort
are plentiful enough around the
chief towns of British East Africa,
Nairobi and Mombasa, and the
slightest rumor that tate murttngu
..4e. man) roquirei a "boy" or
cr. p:'zt (cook) fills one's compound
with cooks, "getict'als" and raw
negroes representing every tribe
tinder Africa's sun.
The atcrage bachelor contents
himself with four servants—a head
"boy," a cook, a 'tt.to (youth) to
assist thein. and a m'shenei (raw,
untrained native) for edit jabs,
gardening. etc.
It is no easy task to make a se -
i et'o•t from the host of eager,
vo
l
-
able anplicauts, Dirty. carefully
stuck together ''barbas" (testirnotl-
Ws) are examined and the owners
„ d, but it is unwise to put
much faii}i in these document;:. fur
it. is no 1`nusttat occurrence for a
"boy" -on the principle of "the
more the merrier"-- to proudly
present volt with three testimoni-
als. every one bearing a different
name from the one under which he
of wearing apparel if you will but
take a glance in it.
If it is hared that eggs have been
bailed rather too long, on remov-
ing theta from the water break the
toe of the shell at once with a
spoon. This frees some of the heat
and stops the hardening prea:este
Flannel should nut be used int
1 0(1le bucks fur stit-king needle in
t.', as flannel is often prepared with
sulphur, which trill rust the
tit cdlec. .1 piece of fine linea ur
chamois leather is much better.
In trashing dishes be careful than
hand painted china and china with
gilt. ernameutatiou be nut left to
stance lung in hot water, as much
treatment is certain to ruin the
eiceoratious sooner or later.
Travelling bags after the holiday
often look very travel worn. Brush
those of black leather with a good
'
►f w hags
bout polish. The brown h t,
should be first wished with soap
and water, and then polished with
brown besot polish.
If room plants are to keep heal-
thy greet 'rare must be taken to
remove dust from the leaves. To
keep the latter glossy it is u good
pian to add a few drops of paraffin
t:, tepid water and sponge the
leaves with the mixture.
Be careful where you place your
dressing tables and mirrors. Sun-
li►.ht, will destroy the finest bevel
French plate. and it is impossible
to restore the hacking without, con-
siderable expense. Dampness wilt
destroy it int the sarue manner.
To stone raisins easily you re-
quire to pour bulling water on and
let them remain over night, when
it: will be tumid in the morning that
they are 'tot only easier to stone,
tett stoning does not tear the fruit.
Dry in usual way, only they will
require a little longer.
Have a small bottle of benzine at
band, and when a spot of grease
gas on to clean tablecloth put a
WORTH KNOWING.
A corn may be eased by the ap-
plication of a little oil of pepper-
mint.
To improve tough meat and make
it lender rub it well with a ct►t le-
mon.
Paint on window panes may be
r(•rnnvell by washing it with vine-
gar.
When hnvinst fish remember it
should be Miff and the flesh farm to
the touch.
Blankets while drying should be
well beaten with n cane carpet
beater to make them fluffy.
To boil a cracked egg wrap it in
a piece of new•p.iper, and this will
prevent the white from boiling nut.
A thin strip of orange peel placed
in the bottom of a tee caddy iin-
the proper consistency. Season parts a deliciou` aroma and flavor
with salt, pepper and minced par,- to the tea.
ley. 1f the little nnes are obliged to
Puree of Beans and Rice. -Put a wear glasses. ace that they are tat: -
quart of beans which have been en ,1{f ten or three times a day and
sneaked in water over night in a polished.
introduces himself ! saucepan atilt a pinch of ea t. a
'these gentry are always greatly small onion. a slice of carrot, a washed in two lathers. There is a
butter. a sprig of certain amount of dress to get out Nips up Lbs flute wid tet wid inc
offended when you kick them off tablespoonful of butte
the verandah and tell them they parsley, and boiling water to cover. 'wrote the dirt will mute. bands tied behind me•"
have bought or stolen the docs- Cook tint ,t beans are sett, rub Do reit bang doors and clump "Are ye sure cf that i" asked the
menus from ether Motive.(. Upon through a flue curve and adds �► about nci5i{ if 1 o tailor.
New flannels must. always be
THE S. S. LESSON
IN I E:RN tl'IO\.1I. LESSON,
M.111('II ti.
I,t•sson N. Jesus the Healer. Matt.
N. :-17. holden Text.
Mall. S. 17.
Verse .1 leper ---Leprosy is sup-
posed to be due to improper loud
and unclean surroundings. It is
contagious
net hereditary, and isi;
(lily from close personal contact.
1t reduces the victim to terrible
emaciation. The Jews treated lep-
ers as outcasts and pronounced
over then the burial service. The
able
incur
dtseasr, is considered
though much may be dont to alle-
viate it.
Came to hi►n--Viulating legal
restrictions, he entered the city
where Jesus wan.
►s
• e c paid
e --- cvt r uc
, liar Il
\1'ursh►, ed 1
tt kings. The fame of Jesus had
at.read far anti wide.
lord --A eourte'uti form of ad-
dress to one considered of superior
authority ; implying here, perhaps,
a belief in the Messiaship of Jesus.
If thou wilt—He had no doubt
of the power of Jesus, but hesitated
t.0 believe he 'multi condrsce-u1 to
do anything for an unclean outcast.
Thou canst make me clean --Lep-
rcay is spoke,' ..f in the Gospels
not. as being ''healed" but
"cleansed." This was partly he•
cause the decaying flesh was made
sweet again and the skin white,
partly because it meant restoration
t f ceremonial cleanness and return
to the worship of God.
a. Touched hien r iedeniporary
rebbis wont(! have driven him out
case it was an authority derived
from a supreme suuree, and also
absolute. He is net contrasting
It'.K ease with that of Jesus, but
declaring that their cases are sine -
lar 11heu they say Gu an't Come,
,
they do NU Mull r the limitations
imposed epee them by a higher ate
thority.
10. He marveled-- Partly because
this great display of faith was on
the part of a Gentile, and even in
Israel lie had found nothing like
it. His sense of unworthiness, his
ce nfidence in the mere word of
Jesus, his belief in Jesus's control
,.i unseen power;, a1) were remark -
•s in
,• Ili
1,
able. Ilia they had para
1st act. 'flits great thing was the
centurinn'5 recognition of the con-
ditions under which Jei;us labored.
He came "to de the will of hint
that sent" him. His (word, there-
• supreme
Cul
e
}tt
fore, is the word Of t i
Spiritual Authority. When we
obey it we are like the soldiers win,
looked beyond the word of tit••
centurion to the will of the em-
peror.
rn-
pe ro r.
west—
Gentiles.
the c
il. From the east an
(;centiles. Jesus here makes use of
the favorite image of the Messianic
age being ushered in by n great
feast. The rabbi, taught that all
Israelites were to recline (sit down)
at the table together. Patriarchs,
prophets, heroes would all he in-
cluded, and the Centiles shut out.
Jesus startlingly reverses the or-
der, promising that men like the
centurion from evert nation shall
enjoy the Mes,ianie feat, and the
rens of the kingdom 1li). who have
bold their spiritual birthright. shall
experience the terrible realities (of
disappointment and auger) ex-
pressed in the lurid figurative tan-
guage ;.° outer darkness, weeping,
and gnashing tit , •eth.
14. Peter's house- .This he ai.;t his
wife shared .title her mother and
g f d t er hills►t their faces. It was con- leis brother Andrew. Jesus seems
a clean eloth feet o a eper, o touch one whi}(, in ('apwrnaum.
clean pap('' Mader the sent an we steered uusa[e to come within six tc slate made it an abiding place
} } 1h with the benzine and f 1 'f t i wa1�
rub the grease into the paper un ; to betaine. pollutcd before the law. 1 Fever -The malarial variety
tcrneath and your tablecloth w;11 The
supremacy of Jesus is seen in 1 eonnnnn on the shore of the sea.
In as clean as ever. Keep the bot the fact that not only did he not 13 Ministered -Her attending to
tle away from the fire. become defiled, but he was able file table, and so on, was evidence
instantly to pronounce the h 1•c: that the fever had left her and no
'1`-
cleansed. weakness remained.
STRONG ON DISC'RF'Ttt7N. 4. See thou tell no tnan—Appal'- 10. Possessed with demons.- It
tufty the miracle was performed was believed that all sorts of ills
Discretion is a beautiful thing, within doors (Mark 1. 43). Secrecy were traeeable to the work of evil
and here is a story about an frisk was possible if the matt could bm spirits. The worst fortis of pole
tailor who had a heap of it. kept still. It ells desirable, be- session were those of insanity and
One morning Mrs. Murphy, a cur- e,euse (1) Jews had usurped the epilepsy. "With gracious ennde-
touu+r. came into the shop and priest's right to declare a leper rcenrun" Jesus ace aim• dated him -
found him busy with pelted and clean, O self. to the prevalent
paper. She asked hint what he was
doing.
'•Oi'm makin' a Iisht av the nein
in titi+ town who Oi kin 1i••k.'"
"Hey vet gut Murree "s name
down " asked elle.
''Mlurpht• bends 1110 lits,." tcliete Jesus of susp1e1ois of inter-
}fome stew furs. Murphy, and
f"ring with the sparse o[ law -
broke the news to her 'nate lie I The gift that Moses commanded --
was its the tailor's shot in .1 l.fty• Two inelamb' without htetnish. and
"Ms woman tells me that }e'rc one ewe -larch of the first year with -
after making a iuemorial tablet uv! out eternise,
the spin that yet cin lick, and tnat{ A testimony unto them --A pr,•ui
ye' yr got me at the brad of it. la that the cure was genuine. After
that true'"' I due examination the priests :retail
"Slutre and it's true. That of Decent Isis gift. thus noknowletlg-
it °•' said t he tailor. tog, the euro. Of course Jesus did
''i'c good -for nothinlittle grass -tit,( ei,nt.emplate the enclosure t'e
hopper. I could cotntnit suicide on the priests of the manner of the c�♦♦1♦♦♦••••••o••••
-, u•ith me little finger. I could cure. The fact that the leper lis-; I'R()i'i1'.181.1: TYPE OF STF T it.
t)l'cyed his injunction helps to se-
er•nnt for the .'pposition Jesus had .1 feature of unusual interest in
re meet later (Matt. 0. 3. 34). 1 connection with the slaughter test
,•i_ He was catered into Caper -t at the O.A.C. Stockjudcing !'lass,
metre -Event• fellow•ing the leper's i last month, was a eompar:son of the
careas-es of twee steers, feet judged
alive. Otte of these wee n goon)
tin oath, wit ti' beast, _'1 months old.
Anode... of the tame age. was ra-
ther t ! sin, low it the bn,•k, and sterilizers. Nearly all ntierobea
twat 1 n the shoulders. There were cue be killed by a sufficiently lone
three -were killed in all, but the application of re temperature of
Was Troubled
With Dyspepsia.
For Years Could Oct Po Relief
Until She Tried
Burdock Blood Bitters.
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ M ra. Berman
4- ♦ Dickenson, Beaton
♦ Can Eat ♦ N.B., writes:
♦ Auythiog + have used Burdock
♦ Now. + Blood !littera and
♦ ♦ find that few lee-
♦ 4 + 4- +++++ dicing* can give
such relief in dy-
tpeps:i:t and stomach truublea. 1 was
with
troubled fur u► number of years
dyepep$ia and could get no relief until 1
tricot Iturdook Blood Bitters. 1 took
Ow,- bottle., and because cured and 1 can
now eat anything without it hurting me.
1 will highly recommend it to all who are
troubled ,with stomach trouble."
Burdock Blood Bitters has an establish-
ed reputation, extending over 34 years,
as a spe;iee for Dyspepsia in all its (onus,
and all disex>co ar•smg from tbis cause.
For 811E by all dealers.
alanufactttrrd only by The T. Mitbura
Co., Limited, 'Toronto, Out.
and L because he depre ideas nn this
caned the gathering of a crowd such st:bect, butt he die} not -herr them.
as that whish had impelled him to 17. Horace Bushnell made this
Irate ('apernaum shortly before. terse the root idea tae his eontep•
show thyself to the priest --- In tion of the redeeming work of our
that way the leper would be show -
.(lard By taking aur burdens up
ii', respect to authority, and woud on his feelings, in sympathy, he
bears the for u•
-
front a dant that has earned her own
keep at the pail, is the most eco-
nomical beat from the farmer's
standpoint. Such stock is calculat-
ed to supply our tables with good
roasts and steeks pruduced at a
reasonable cost.—Farmer's Advo-
cate.
H NOTES.
Two t•.r'ls that are almost indis-
pensable around a faun are a gond
ladder and a good lantern. Not
many persons will find use for
either a ladder or a lantern every
dry in the year, but they are pret-
ty sure to he needed at some time.
In the dairy busin'•ss cleanliness
ti ,:est to godliness. (.lean bed-
ding, amp., absorbents in the gut-
ters. and for this perpose gypsttu
ter land plaster is among the best.
Two pounds per day put in the drop,
behind each cow will do away with
most of the offensive smell of the
feeble and absorb most it the liquid
droppings.
There are renters who make
money in renting, and there are
those who do not. Where a good
fanner and a poor renter are com-
bined in the same personage. it
would pay a landlord, provided he
is a good business man, to hire the
man instead of letting him the
farm. The business part of the
farming ran he run on a paying
basis, the farm improvements kept
up. the soil's fertility maintained
and the farm built. up instead of de-
generated as the seasons go hy.
she hared man wi'l not get rich,
pe 'haps. hut- he will live iu a bet -
m
,IIou.ee. neat better clothes and
lire beth anti his family will be
♦4,1.1.4♦i♦4♦M hr, ter '•atetrlov than when knock -
The Frni
it, about from pillar to pest on
1 rented farms.
4 --
)on a ('i- noisily. you r o notte-
en,'
..
en,' occasion a would-be cook ent stock to snake the desired mime specs- the nerves of the family. con •'St►lira' Cm shirr about it."
brought. the writer a "bents iffy of setup. i g 11r then:. signed by a well knot. n settler and
w orded :
To whom it may enncern. The
bearer of this ''batter" is an infer-
nal rogue and t)is{. Please kick
Lint out.
13v the time the white man had
stepped laughing the negro had ar. be•ans it is well to remember these
rite,! at the eonclu',ion that some- ferto
thing was wrung and was cluing re Keene should b•• soaked over -
cord time Hoven the pith.ersieni¢1't
--Caught Cold The•:. should not lee cooked int. the
wet:•r in which they are soaked,
They slued(' b.• cooked fur at Iea•t
•
Season to to ie. at
two tablespuonful4 of butter and
one cupful of c•,Id boiled rice. Re-
heat and serve.
=icier hinges and floors.
Stains nn mirrors and window
gift+- mut be removed by rubbing
with spirits of camphor. which
leave, a brilliant polish.
WI en slaking ptstty add the juke
of a lemon to the water for mix-
ing. It will make the paste. lighter
and dispel the flat or of lar.!.
To keep kitcl.en table. white --
Serub them well with cold water,
soap and a little silver sand. Do
not use lint water on tables, as it
tt rns them yellow.
Old tablecloths should cot he dire
'elidedfor rage. Cut out the best
parts, hem and Ilse for face tow-
els -they are delightfully soft for
the purpose.
If the tops of young tort :ps are
thoroughly flatted they can be used
with the diced turnips and he
bailed the same en enbbage. They
r.►ake a very good di•It.
Stewed fsg• or prunes eat be
frond rnur•h richer if the fruit is
soeketl for several !votes before
Stewing. They should be -towed in
the Sa1)Ie water in which -1 akrd.
When making a boiled apple pud-
ding, try tk' atlditi'•n of half n tea-
spoon of powdered Fringe), 1w"
tablespoons of smear, and the juice
nt'd grated rind of half a lcme'n t('
the apple.
Food and fruit art' the best. ('titre
ter t•ostivcness. (Jond medium oat-
t.•cal made into porridge for break -
fest, but thick nue substantial.
welt tatted, and not tr'o lone;
in ih d.
'1'o mule, lied: resicr to write on
when marking, dip the piece you
I) i en " said the tailor. ' if
publication i'' of his stns} were ns
ve're there of it I'll al -retch ve off sits had (e,trotl. The gaping met-
tles !edit." finales crowded around hint, fore -
trig him into the desert places. arid
even there ire wens unnble to e<.cage.
OP'fIMISM. fdi' tune of (.miler therefotc tante
Every eight is dark, t ' an abrupt cl' ,•: , and he teturned
Ituttre• i1) t t.•r•sting votnper:eon lay be- 15° degrees I•ahrenhett, but ate
Every winter's creld- 1,'. • ti the Lao mentioned. ('on perature of via degrees I'ahrenheit
But every }mar i• now. my clear, (,, tilted( ( 1 Roman officer, in tr:1'y t.a expo:eat tet the plain lent- i` required to kill certain 'Terrell
S., why should we grow old charge t,f our hundred men uta lock dressed out the teeter carcass, o• bacteria and to produce abs ipa probably under Ilene! N t uii1y was he 1t t1 • falter and lately c(Intidete sterilization.
-------'t•"" slant tan. .111 the centurions (tithe It has been roved by ex eri:•:ent
thicker. go ing 1► pr's! , 11,:ige of 65,p P
Do you pay your sctvanti by New Te tas.ent seem to hoer been es cemented whit tl.- , t't •r's ea per that it iv possible lu tli*infect the week or by the. month," vurtbv n„ n
Tie, nee had vegan ccl►t., het hr r•I 1 „tier qua-
.
ua t1 ing tory sntiafactarily b� honing.
fur the Jr"ti h faith an:} rti-tarns 1
siert.‘. lluw lung du ytu think .11 r n�h that Lae ray. h, Lad 1 ty of lean focal, beautifully (•tothinit which Las born went by
tbi}tires affected by veriotts een-
T}HE BAN ON 11F.AXS.
1►•.r',nos of the recent ban on
By Working
In Water.
eight hours in a moderate oven.
In bran soups the soup should be
strained to remove husks. which
c•( stain no nutriment and are in-
dige=t ills.
.1 teasp',onft,l of soda nth! •d to
♦ Diatt:seeing. Tickling* Sefton- the water in which the hese, are
thin In The Throat. h' iled will destroy the add it: the
=kin of the beans.
Sir .Albert JlsePhee, 1'hignecto Mines, The exeeilene of baked beans
depends upon the pot in which the
beans are baked. 1t sl'runhl be
eerthee. with a narrow mouth and
h' igine sitter,.
Penns afford a nutritious, cheap
f. od, hut on account of being so
hard to digest. are better fond for
Aur doctor Save me b.edieine but it slid those who lead an active outdoor
the no goat so 1 got a bottle tit Dr. W trod'• life.
'Norway 1"ie Syrup sad by the tine 1 Beane sho"!d not be on the regu-
taLt !reed two hottles i wet entirely lit bill of fare of the sedentary
oiliest. i .un Meese tecunnnc11ding it to worker.
(, ltodel."
Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Symp com-
bicira the potegt healing virtues of the
Norway pipe tree with other eb.orkent,
1t.S., writes " 1i flet,. It)('g, i caught
cylyi ey corking in water and had a
very bad cough and tladt divireseing,
tickling sensation in my throat so 1
court not etee at eight. ani me twig*
were so !cry tore 1 hsd to site up work.
1:('ON()M 1f 'Ale i)i:ttl l -:s.
'tin re Dinners from 1=e Cents of
A1(•at. (let n hitt piece of meat t"
expectorant slid soothing n elliciocs of buil end hi'." c •rsr butcher give
reeotttized worth, and is dee! :ly harm. y'e't :1 piece of suet with it. I''nr
I'Ise. prompt nod sate for the rue of the first day boil the moat, then
Cove,. Colne Bronchitis, ('roup Sore take out some of the broth to make
TI►roat , Palo or Tiebtneres in the Chest,
acid all Throat and Lung Ietrildea.
Beware of imitatiun' of Or. R'oodet
Norway Pine Syrup; %et for it end elle second day snake either noodles
insist on -getting wbst you a•k for.' it w er dantpliugc nut. of the remaining
put tip ID a yellow stripper, three pile broth. This, with scalloped !tote -
trees Use trade meth, and the prier .51 ., e,• nett (lesser'. will make your
exult,!. 1 veer for another clay. The third
Mettiactrreti only by The 'I. 1tJi•urt, , . take the remaining 'neat and
soup, adding vegetables. The soup,
Leith a few small !deuce of the meat
its it. together wit h some kind of
/lessett, cotistilutes the first meal.
wish to 'na rk in cold eta re)), rub
over with hitt iron and you will be
able to w rile w ithout the pen
scratching.
11 ellen wing leronf for flats'rilgt
too need only half n one put the
..Ilse half on a plate and cot er with
n Klass tumbler. This (•xriud('+ the
air and prevent, if (sunt drying up
(t getting tn(rld%
A mirror pia, oil iu► the their
:teeing' n wall and left there in
your dle:.sing retro ntII ret;ti:cd yeti
W., l.ir,;ited Toronto. Opt. . ,ase meat cakes or hash. This, of uneven skirts awl other faults
1101 IRON KILLS t;F:fl 1M.
Cluthina May he Setiefectorily 1)14-
info. tett by Ironing.
Ironing linen has a great :'r alert
than is e.,tutnonly' believed. .1i the
temperature of the ir.,n may great,
I, oxcecd Stili degrees Fahreeh►it it
has be'n suggested that the process
of ironing may suffice to sterilize
surgical dress ngs and hence be of
vrtluable sr Evicts. pipet -jail:- in tern!
diet riots aid el'en here. in the ab -
settee of di:inferting r„ens and
tl►ev stay' with us .' 1Pe have U, i,nitt, out of 1 've for the mitten,
en' them be tl c hour." a Jen i•h cy n tgogtte.
Ho (rhnflsndicalIy)--"i sense e.• u; my ,er%ant- int this ease a
et'. thing that is grand, r xgni' ice, t( rut t,f afire% thin, throe my light
super -eminent. 1 lnvc Ill" Peer's., upon the kindliness of the renlur-
'narhled.
While it w•'.tel•l Ns rens( unwise to tagiotte d'scates and which con -
draw hwccpin)t c•otielu"lons from twitted bacteria er pus, diphtheria
the results of a •incl,' tart of this and the like, itn• sprinkled and
kind, since the (:vie was probably ironed.
excepti(rra1, will such instances are It was then rubbed on plates of
urw
the rierrne• the perfeet in lift •” her, and indicating his hig1i regent
She (btu=ling coyly) --"Oh. George. fol the •tritke't slave. cnlcninted t,r resins the que:tem l c'•l,li t prmpal
whether tiedoe emphasis 1111, net i heetel't'►, lett net a single eol0•ly
how run 1 refuse v"lt when you put Ti,,' Pnlst hnnwll flew tie peva 1 placed 11 ,ill what might 1"• ":(- 11
•.••itpl,l.
it beast
pease, tine in ler( type. The plain steer ile this! His Friend Said
ed for the cult
hien
iflllty
_— ii sis, a w'ast•tl
Heart Trouble Cured ei nervous center,.
p ' 1
a ee mu` nL•tr motor
exiled the line p••ints of perfect -- - -
lite,l,e of the {,ruin hitt . • •
1hrongh one enter or another a tinge
majority of I:te peoyle are rroutdnt with
some tone of heart trouble.
The systent becomes rite de.rn, the
heart potpie:try. 1.041 have wr.LM and
dlrr.y %petit, a smothering tect.n,t, telt)
clammy hatt•t' and feet, ehortnese of
brestl', senestion of pun stat needles,
r•Ish of ',toed to site head etc.
Wherever titers ere sir�cly people witb
week hearts tltlburtl's 1{ tt see Nerve
Dille will use found an elf teal medicine.
*******1 An4e1:,U ' writ,a.
Heart Trouble
e•►tefplelse siten
d
and Srr.e 1 dl.. 1..L► y
Ifi
heart tremble, wetaltte,►a and smothering
veils 1 used a 'tett deal of donlnr
medicines but received ern betoefit. A
irisal advises!1pe to bur • has tit year
pills. aAlal' I did, and 'non is -sine great
retie'. ( tele�ttly r••seanmead there pitta
rt
to sayne eateries Own bort tr/nhbe."
Pekes 50 (mute per hoc, of 1 hews' a for
11.26, tit •II hens.., a• entailed d1r*ct oaa
receipt et price by 1Rt- 1' Milton* Co.,
Limited, '1'v.an, . 0:''
to
4, yen ahhee tee tem.-
-
♦4
++14♦ 4te Y} rte • lrA
re
it� fr7tm
ease, L.hile appatenth• rather
oriet•ously tormented .1 fealu!e ,n the b:' 1,. sht,ted no lige,, of that.! .• If They iDot'tt *Kelp or
i the ca`t! rent/""," ('111t )'-`" teel •e . elite: his t,t'c.tss was llu•:t!
Yi.ttthew, and. perhtlp•, wit mg • til'. Te„,,, II,. (,• the matte, , j; Carts Test W221 Stead
no ntedicsl significance. "• h ,nldr1- nv \1 r. lin.{it►):, of ban ! The Pries."
think it refers to the t•.•.-. .•'t' ,a, (it, n':'ir•'::l ••til, Ili• Ihu•k. i
s ,nslns and difficult brenthis :r rt,,t.;, .,,.,11'1(4 r,.„' • t'' t'1 + 41+1♦♦4♦ Hr J 23. husk,
eatnPnnyinpt p)-Ig1Y`••iir 11,a1 40 ., ;;}, „, ,,•:,suet,', t.ircr 1 Orsngewille. (int.,
t•. 1 ltrn not trorthy I.uk,• .,•,•'. . c hc; • , , • anise • 1 Complaint ♦ pntea' • 1 hail beer
1,•I,tlio : • ;•I ! a r'•,nota ♦ trnubled with i)yn
cents the cr tlurion as + Cures=. ♦ p•eplet and !.Iver
eta of the .Icw`, trbn ,eek the Its r ;!, ,,:•,•
Of Pim r.••♦♦♦♦,*=i �♦ l'nn:i'I:►intsrdtritd
of the til".yt Ideates on the )it ""1 1. u, not be 1. MMAAS tiifiearat te-
en,
t,0 t• worthy, .1 •stand (•1u- '1 • n :•h :r.1 :uf, r' s.•'', f'? u' i tnwiv' but o'otaene,l little or no benefit A
en, -v intercept. Jesus en the roar} p,,.,.,, ••It u'.11 that many fine i friend sdv►sc.l►n•.t.o o•yeetrLees-lever
n ( 'Cot • ihut 1 e , t )iIurh.'til 1, :,• •i, , , :_ •l, ri' d, tl'lnlily bolts & ' Title a (tial. 1,rt f t••IJ h:in 1 ha.l nese so
es herr, fet1- His entire +tw(•1tili- !,ill vii the t••, t.,ott ofttif4eiei .I nilin+luau.paiy rt(:Ole nt)rit.IWAG ttesip efii%
I,1 N•. Ice rrt11Mr111e1'!' ti Ihnt he tw8S hltcol.
rumen std ,' • �t t pr elt'ii: n: l fie ail 11 thnv don" help, Qr Cttt! yn.l,
a Gentile, n,•1! flint f + 1 = ro the maul. t. ir'itt •pts the price' eoseringhis faith
torus under 1.s- root e.. •t - 1, , ,:!=, j•' (� j __.t. ' ,- ...0 1. •. •. I1. eL- ' • • -. tip,end1 Ren
i f � T �,•�. c A (►
it, he defiled I. hell, lv• t'.^1.Onlv say 111, .nLHs: IH•,. t. 1 teat :r- ',. 1 i1, y., ;iv r.
the
. -„ alone. ft,e'r Rove enols( which has hsd e
�y ltcll, and to oxnnl!n” Lillie•.•.
in folluwin the iio l i.le:Ll ,.i ar
Der "1.1174 . tlect floe. Loy reedirinee
K e .1 lin I }lief f% 1 l'"'e •Iver ,,hard, x7J tie }e.attly ahon6
1 1't' t 1 t 4k
,teener of the Hutu', great frith iu
.11.us. 'fhis di,tingui•he. the case
.•t the centurion Eton, lhnl ,•t the
nehle•ntat► in .Ithti 1. id. mi),, in-
siste,l dint Jests, go to 111•' bong.
!•. 1 also :1 111 n titan nndl•r 1athor-
it; lie eont7ar,'Y the :,ntl".fity of
Jesus to that given to hila. in emit
a `moot ►, tel:', 1 ,0)',t. M Ile: ate 'tn41 enc <•'Y n .
brecd"rs of beef "(II' .11:1;. nt't I %'eller! 414* to be the heat ntedieine.
haw a 'n•'ritit'et) fee dem totalities, I to- It vM 'f :*ohne thee la t• As fottn,l."
,•;shoot seeurin8 n propeetI,Ain t a 1 1._• 1.', ••nra,1 t1(11 rsr' to; 11.00, as
�!! .tetter.. .. wilt i' etwt direct by mail
,ollanlapl;e in the totality 7n 1 1.,,r
on 1A',•tert n• t, •te r
t 'it( ige of coral. The suhst»nli t•1p TN.. ili{bters Cr., Limited, Toronto,
good stc.'r. nit!) nipple beef, bred Ont.
i
',aro 4