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Exeter Times, 1902-7-17, Page 6F0i1 DIARRHOEA, DYSENTERY, COLIC, CHAMPS, PAIN IN THE STOMACH, AND ALL SUMMER COMPLAINTS. !TS EFFECTS ARE MARVELLOUS. !IT ACTS LIKE A CHARM. RELIEF ALMOST: griSTANTAMEOUS. Phasaut, Rapid, Rehablel Effectual. EVER? HOUSE SHOULD HAVE IT. 0.13R YOUR ORUGGINT FOR IT. TAKC NO °THEN. 0 PRICE, 35G. H youAVE been smok- ing a good deal lately and feel an occasional twinge of pain roundyourheart? Are you short of breath, nerves unhinged, sensa- tion of pins and needles going through your arms and fingers? Better take a box or two of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills and get cured before things become too serious. As a specific for all heart and nerve troubles theycan. not be excelled. A true heart tonic, blood enricher and nerve re- newer, they cure nervousness sleepless- ness, nervous prostration, smol:er's heart, palpitation of the heart, after effects of la grippe, etc. Price soc. per box or 3 boxes for $1.25 at all druggists, or will be sent on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto. On. TWO SHOTS A SECOND. New Automatic Pistol Being Pro- duced in Englan-e .A. new automatic pistol is being manufactured in England by the Mars Automatic Fire Arms Syndi- cate. It is made of three different sizes, 0.335, 0.36 and 0.45 inch. The magazine is contained in the handle of the pistol, different models carry- ing from eight to eleven cartridges. The weight of the pistol is 2 pounds 10 ounces,. The mechanism is pe- culiar in that the breech remains closed .until the bullet has left the barrel, so that there is no chance of the cartridge burs -ting by its being withdrawn while there is still pres- sure in the bore, consequently this pistol can flee a very heavy bullet with a large charge. The weight of the Mars bullet is 220 grains, the charge 14 grains of cordite, the muzzle velocity 1,250 foot seconds (nearly double that of the Colt re- volver) and the muzzle energy 760 foot pounds (nearly three times that of the service revolver). An expert can fire twenty-four shots in. ten seconds, and in accur- acy it is stated that when fired from a rest at 1,000 yards range it will keep all its shots on a four -foot square target, wbile its penetration is 16 inches of pine, against the Mauser pistol's ten, and the Colt's eight. Snakes have no eyelids at all and birds no true eyelids. The latter are, however, providedwith a mem- brane which can be let down over the eye. Dyspepsla a d Heart Tro Mr. George Webber, St. George Street, Chatham, Ont., states :—" 1 was very ter- vons, troubled some with my heart and suffered agreat deal from nervous dyspepsia and indigestion. Dr. Chase's Nerve Food has proven a thorough oure it my case. After having used it for some time I am pleased. to say. that I am entirely restored to health. The indigestion does not trouble me, my nerves are strong and vigorous and the action of my heart is regidar." Dyspepsia and heart treuble frequently g� hand in hand. When the blood is thin and watery Mid the nerves are weak and exhausted, every organ in thebody is liable to get slow and uncertain in action. Dr, Chase's Nerve Food is the most pow- erful blood -builder and nerve restorative that medical science has ever devised. It cures thoroughly and permanently by restoring the whole systole to health and vigor. 54 eents a box, at all dealers, or Edmatzsen, Takes & Co., Toronto, Dr. Chase's Nerve Food The Nation is Blessed That is True to Those Who Are Weak. 12Vera4 achordlec to Aht a the Parliament of ""4". tbe inus One Thousand Mae ltua. drat sad Tire, by et Toronto, at, the DI:pertinentQt Asrleulture, Ottawa.) A despatch from Chicago says: Rev- Vraak De Witt Talmage preach- ed from the followinet'teat: Mat- thew xiii, 38, '"flie field is the world." Every eountry has an annual holi- day. It has a birthday celebration Lor banquets, firework, oratorical pyre teciiiiica. and for the aroesement of patriotic' enthusiasm: But there is an unwise ae well as a, \vie() way of celebratieg the inodern holiday. The first, way is to glorify the past. 'The other way is to take a national retrospect for the purpose of rousing our ambitions to go ahead and win the further victories that must be won in melee to fulfill the missions and if any minister tries the latter way he cannot take in the full sweep of our future influence and work un- less he discusses them from a, world- wide standpoint. He must attune his sermon to a world's theme, as Phillips Brooks, the most beloved man of New Engleed in his day, keyed his ministry to. an interna- tional tone when from a European city he sent to a friend at home a letter whicl . read something like this''Dear liarry—I wish you might do as I do every year. I wish you would annually spend two months abroad in travel. Such a vacation teaches you the immensity at Cad's providencee and how small are the circumscriptions of' our own individual lives and how email even the Episcopalian church appears to be \then it is focused from across the seas." Emphatically the most important of all 'future missions is the spread- ing* of the gospel until it shall "be preached in all the world for a wit- ness unto all nations." The Bible does not state that the millemaiel day SHALL COME GRADUALLY, as tbe sunrise first tips the eastern hills with light, making it appear as though the underbrush upon the tops of the mountains had been set afire by some careless campers. It does not state that the millennial day shall come as when the dawn in the beginning shoots its long, slender bars of yellow gold across the hea- vens. It does not state that the glory of the Lord shall cover the earth as the waters 'cover the sea, as the flood tide gradually creeps up the beach. But the Bible does teach that when the gospel of Jesus Christ shall be proclaimed in every town, village and city of every na- tion; when it Owll be proclaimed in the mountain log hut and in the ship's cabin; when it shall be pro- claimed under the shadow of every legislative hall and by the ciunp fire of every heathen tribe; when it shall be procIftimed in all the world for a witness unto all metione, then shall the end come." 'Then the mil- lennial day shall be flooded with light, even as a darkened hall is instantly illuminated when the many different electric lights flash out at the touch of a single but- ton. Then the millennial day shall be full of brilliancy, as the black- ness of midnight was changed into the brightness of midnoon when God spake at the morning of creation the four simple words, "Let there be light," and there was light. The millennial day Fhall come as sud- denly as the tongues of fire leap- ed out of the heavens when the Holy Spirit hovered over the heads of the praying, pleading, exultant, Pente- costal worshipers. How the different religious. denom- inations are able to work side by side in America for the scattering of the gospel seed may be illustrated by an incident in the life of George Whitefield, One day the great evan- gelist stopped dramatically in his sermon and, looking up as though addressing the throne of the Al- mighty, cried out in interrogation, "0, Lord, are there any Presbyteri- ans in heaven?" "No," came back the' answer. "0, Lord, are there any Episcopalians in heaven?" "No," again came the answer. "0, Lord, are there any Methodists in heaven?" "No," "Who then, are the denizens of the skies?" "Chris- tians one, Christians all." So in. the scattering of the gospel seed by the nation there are NO RELIGIOUS SECTS. In the sight of the Government there are only Christiana. The Cal- vinists and the Armenians, the close communicants and the Congrega- tionalists, the Protestants and the Catholics, can work side by side because these different religious de- nominations believe in the atone- ment. They can and should scatter the gospel seed unto all nations. The second mission is emphaticale ly the establishment of an interna- tional court of arbitration so that bloody wars in the future shall be an impossibility. That a great in- ternational court of arbitration can be established by the united action of ten. or twelve ,principal nations of the world is undeniable, and that sueb a court will be ultimately es- tabiiehed . is also unquestionable. When such a. court is established the United States, England, France, Spain, Austria:. Gerinany, :Russia, Japan and China will each have representatives upon that tri- bunal. Then when international difficulties arise the difficulties will be peacefully settled, as the Ala- bama, claims were amicably settled before the Geneva, tribunal which as- sembled in 1871, composed of the five representatives which were fur- nished by the United States, Great Britain, Italy, Switzerland and Bra- zil; as the Venezuela claims were settled before a tribunal which met in Paris in 1900; and as the war claithe against the Chinese Govern- ment by the different allied foveae eve lane being amicably eettlech Recognizing the i‘..et that many people ere looking forward to the time when war shall forever be abolished, an lautp,inatiVe Wri. ter once deseribed how the blessed con- dilion was to be accomplished. Ho declared that the time would come when all Europe would be convulsed by a great INTERNATIONAL STRUOGLE, Ho pictured that event in the dim future, He arrayed every European nation upon one or the <name side Of the combat. But the night before the great battle was to open an angel in human shape would be go- ing through the camps of the two armies.. This visitor would stop long enough to pin upon ee ery sol- dier's breast a sign. And when the two vast armies would next day pre- pare for battle and the command would be givea to the troops to fire, not a rifle wotild 'flash, not a sword would be unsheathed, not 4 cannon would speak, because the sign pineal upon eveey soldier's heart would be the sign of the cross. The picture drawn. by that imagina- tive writer may be accepted as a truthful one exceptin two or three fonts. He describes that day as if in the dim future. I believe the day is now almost at hand. Again, • the writer describes the peacemaker who will attach the emblem of the cross to the breast of the comanoa soldier as a man. I believe that peacemak- er will not be a man; but a nation We shall pin re sign of universal peace upon every European nation by the means of a supreme court of international arbitration, This sign shall decree that war, bloody, fiend- ish, demoniacal war, shall be no longer : that war shall forever be as dead as the multitudes of dead tole dices. whose bodies are now decom- posing in the grave trenebes all ROUND THE WORLD. But perhaps the greatest mission next to scattering the gospel of Jesus Christ is to prove that a people can be true to God in its days of pros- perity as well as in its days of ad- versity. When a people are poor, weak and helpless, when a troebled and bleediag and suffering people are struggling for liberty and for their very existence, when a collection of ex -slaves are following their leader through the weary journey of a forty year tramp through the wilder-. nesse it is not so difficult for them to pray and worship God, but it is difficult for a people to be tree to God unless when riches dome and prosperity comes and unlimited in- fluence comes, they have an especial aerie° given to them. It is difficult to be true to God when the mighty fortresses have been builded at the mouth of every harbor to keep out the foreign foe and when the rattle of the factory and the whistle of the steam engine, and the blow of the hammer and the rasp of the saw are all playing an accompaniment to the tune of a national financial suc- cess. It is difficult for a people to pray to a supernatural being, "0, God, give us this day our daily bread," when the granaries are full of wheat and corn and the bank vaults are a -choke with solid gold and the seven years of plenty have crowded out of the public mind the fact that there ever could come seven years of abject and unrelieved want. I selected this text, "The field is the world," for two rea.sons—first, because the five words spoken by Jesus Christ to his disciples exactly convey the idea of the worldwide sweep of our future influence in the evangelization of the two hemis- pheres. A Christian nation has no more right to close its doors and live for itself aud let the rest of the people of the world suffer and die than an individual has the right to lock and barthe doors of his own home and let his neighbors be mur- dered in cold blood or allow his neighbors to maltreat their own children. As Cain was his brother's keeper, so is every Christian nation morally responsible for the educa- tion of • EVERY OTTIVIR NATION. But the second reason why I sel- ected this text is because it always has had an intense personal interest to me. .This *as the first text Which my father as a theological student ever preached upon. :When my father was a young man at New Brunswick seminary, 11 went to vis- it my uncle, who was then a pastor in Easthampton, N.Y. He went to visit in. the same old parsonage where the great Lyman Beecher, the father of Henry Ward Beecher, used to live, and where many of the fam- ous brothers and sisters of Henry Ward Beecher were born. And while my father was visiting his brother- in-law the Rev. Stephen Mershon, the village minister, asked him to preach. So he preached in the Schoolhouse there in the village of Easthampton his first sermon. The schoolhouse is now used as a barber shop. It is not larger than the or- dinary sized parlor of an average city house. In that little School- house the unknown theologital stu- dent took for his text, "The field is the world." Ile little realized then that there ever would come a time when _his gospel field would literally be the world. ITo little realized that before he died his printed sermons would appear every week before eat least 20,000,000 read- ers. He little realized how God Would some day bless his pea and Ilia He could not foresee his future world- wide power any more than some of us can foresee the worldwide influ- ence that will result from our lives if we will only help fa the days of nationalprosperity to dedicate the nation to the service of al-od. • The only aniinal besides man found ;ell over the world is -the dog., THES„ S. LESSON. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, JULY 20, Text of the Lesson, Ex. xx., 17. Goidst3. Text, A:att. xix., 19. 12- 12, lIonor thy father and thy mother that thy days may be long amoo)onAte ilvietlhandihelhiche Lord thy ev.the The Tea Coniniandments, or tea Hear, 0 Israel; the Lord Wmearrdks, nLothr.deseouwrocrldosd xnoi:ey29;1,sometimes called, are summed up by our Lord in Ss one Lord, and thou shalt love the Lord thy Ood with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength. This is the first commandment, and the second is like—namely this: Thoci shalt love thy neighbor as thy- self. There is none other command ment gueater than these." He thus luoted from Dean vi, 4, 5, and Lev. nix, 18, for He honored the whole of tho law, the prophets and the psalms (Luke xxiv, 27, 4.4), never in any way discounting the least portion. How very malice Ulm in this respect aro some wiso neeP10 or our day wbo profess to be His fol- lowers! See in connection with this fifth commandment Prov. i, 8, and note that in Erna vi, 2, it is called the fleet commandment with prom- ise. The promise had doubtless a special reference to Israel. 13. Thou shalt not kill- • In our Lord's commentary on this in Matt. v, 21, 22, He teaches that auger lies at the root of murder, and in 1 John iii, 15, it is writ- ten, "Whosoever hateth his brother is a. murderer," referring back to the. story of Cain and Abel In the sanae connection it is written that was of the wicked one, and in John Vili, 44, our Lord said that he was a murderer from the beginning, a liar and the father of it. Not only are we forbidden to hate any one, but we are forbidden to speak evil of any one (Jas. iv, 11; Eph. 31; I Pet. ii, 1). In Zech. vii, 10; viii, 17, we are forbidden even to imagine evil in our hearts against a brother or a neighbor. 14. Thou shalt not commit adul- tery. That this sin may be committed by a look as well as by an act our Lord taught in Matt. v, 27-32, where He also gives further instruc- tion' eoncerning it. That love will conquer it is seen in Roni. xiii, 10— "Love worketh no ill to his heigh- bor, therefore love is the fulfilling of the law." God counted Israel guil- ty of this sin when they worsaip- ed idols, the works of men's hands "(Jen iii; 9), and by the Spirit through James He tells us that if we are in friendship with the world we are iii. His sight guilty of this sin (Jas. iv, 4). It seems to some moral, people impossible that any- thing. so vile as this sin could ever touch or come near them, but let them see it as. God does and hon- estly ask as in His sight, Am I in any Way conformed to this present evil world, am 1 in love with the world which is lying in the wicked one? (Rom. xii, 1, 2; I John 11, 15-17; v, 19, • R. V.).. 15. Thou shalt not steal. • Many who would scorn to take what does not belong to them, as between man and man, might have to plead guilty \Oen searched by the question, "Will a man rob God?" Yet God had to say to Is- rael, "Ye have robbed Me in tithes and offerings" (Mal iii, 8). Inas- much as our relation to God is the first question and the matter of the utmost importance, /et the believer ask himself, Am 1 robbing Godof any portion Of my being or 'my time or mynnoney? He claims our body as His propeety (Rome xii, 1, 2: I Con vi, 10, 20), and at least a sev- enth of our time ana a tenth of our income. 10. Thou shalt not bear false wit- ness against thy neighbor. There are tongues that devise mis- chiefs, that love evil more than good and lying rather than righteausness, but such do not belong in the holy city (Ps. 111, 2, 8 ; -Rev. xxii 15). "Pie that worketh deceit shall not dwell within My house ; he that telleth nes shall not tart y in My sight" (Ps. ci, 7). False witnesses were among the grievous things which our Lord suffered for our sakes, even as it is written, "Pelee witnesses are risea up against Me and such as brea he o t cruelty," and again, "False witnesses did rise up; they laid to My charge things that 1 knew not," (Ps. xxvii, 12 ; xxxv, 11). 17. Thou shalt not covet. We might infer from Rom. vii, 7, in connection .with Phil. iii 6, that Paul fancied that he had kept the law pretty thoroughly' except oa this one point, but he learned as James also did that lei keep the whole law and offend in only one point makes ono guilty of all, and In our flesh dwelleth no good thing (Jas. ii, 10; tom. vii, 18)r "Guilty is the word for everyone (Rom. iii, 19, 20). Some one has well said "To do what the law requires I must have life, and to be what the law requires I moat have rigliteoee-. ness but by natiere I have beither and am therefore mused. When. receive Christ He becomes my life end- righteousness and will fulfill the law in me." The 'People found that they could net keep this noly and perfect law. for in a few days they found themselves calling on. Attain to make them an idol and dancing around a golden calf. Tben Moses before their eyes broke the two tables which God had &Yea him, thus powerfully testifying to what they were actually doing. Then the Lord told His servant Moses to make tato tables like the first and bring them Ian to I-Xim in the Mount and Ho would write the same words on them, but Moses Was also com- manded to make an (irk and .put the tables of stone in it and cover there .and let them, bo there (Tieet, ix, and x). j. The secretary bird of India kills 01 1111 average of two ariakes a day. 000 0 0 0 FO 6)060 $ 0600000 THE ,it .$ 40 0 Recipes for the Kitchen, e) tlygiene and Other Notes 4'6 for the Housekeeper. 0 *Q0(90660eQszaoes(tieee What Makes a *route. A house is built of bricks and. stones, of Mils and posts and piers; But a home is built of loving deeds that stand A thousand years. A house, though but an humble cot, within its walls may held A home of priceless beauty, rich in Love's eternal gold. The mon of earth build houses—halls and chambers, roofs and domes— But the women of the earth—God. 1:1= -7 -the women build the Eve could not stray from Paradise, for oh, no matter where Her gracious presence lit the way, lel Paradise was there. A. Displaced Garment. It is interesting to note that shawls as articles of adornment and habitual costume hare eoinpletely passed out of vogue: Shawls of a white, feathery Va. riety are used semi -occasionally yet, it is true, but only away. from the fashion centres. Shawls have entirely lost their place in the temple of faehion. The reason for the passing of this very esseatial garment of grandmother's day is that it is a piece of dry goods which is not good for trade. The style originators in Paris, the great dressmak- ers of the. world, tabooed the shawl be- cause it is ready for use as soon as it leaves the loom. So far as London,. Paris and New York are concerned, the shawl looms of India Might as well stand idle. • . This same garment, ' however, has an interesting history. In .,bygone days Lyons, Paisley and .Norwich makers beeght large stooks of Kashmir shaais for the solepurpose of imitating their dainty fabric and delicate patterns, which they did so skilfully that the imi- tations became eery popular. .A good black Cane from Prance, or a crimson Paisley was something which any lady might wear, and although not the real thing, served the purpose, for , it wae decorative, compliantand adjustable to all needs. A shawl proper, whether worn by man or women, was even in the East an are tide of distinction, something to • be ranked with the robe of honor bestowed by the Indian nabobs, or the yellow jackets of Chinese Mandarins. It -steed .upon its own dignity; and whether it sheltered the head and shoulders of a beauty, or was nobly girded about the waist of a 'courtier, or merchant, a shawl was something by which . you could judge the wearer. l‘c..upper gar- ment better suited a comely countenance and well -shaped neck and bust, nor was . any • . girdle of leather or silk or quilted work as comfortable and convenient es the twisted Kashmir efaawl, whose- soft- ness caressed the body While it protect - edit. - 'Where Pasting Aids Health. "The practice of fasting," said a medi- cal man who adopts it, "is, when wise- ly followed, most beneficial. I am convinced that many people never feel the sensatien of na- tural hunger. All they have is a mor- bid craving for food, which comes of habit rather than from any actual need felt by the stomach. Natural hunger stimulates the palate, and is felt in the mouth as well as in the internal organs. It makes the plainest food eeem de. licious, and, when being satisfied, is a source of such enjoyment as the ay. erage well-fed man has no conception of. Some suffer, it is true, from Mena ficient food, but not so many as those whose ills arise from over -nutrition. their digestions being continually over- strained. A habit of judicious fasting would do wonders for them. The sys- tent would recover its lost tone, and an the case of mental workers), the brain would work with an ease and lightness that would. surprise them, for from the practice of over -eating. De of Good Cheer. The cheerful live longest in years, and afterwards in our ec,gards.--Buvee. "If all ea -not live on the piazza, every one may feel the sun," says an Italian proverb. Life is full of sunshine for all who wish to absorb it, and full of gloom for those who take a morbid pleasure in dwelling in the shadows. Difficulties and troubles, if bravely met, make strong men and women, but anticipat- ing and worrying about them make petty, weak ones. • 'Why can you not take your ease and be merry now. If you wait until you conquer all your difficulties, the time ler ease and merriment will never come. Laugh, and be glad new, and the troubles which loom so threateningly in the distanee will vanish, as you ap- proach them, like soap bubbles. Our Girls. The compiler of "English as She is Taught" introduces the following lum- inous essay on girls, done apparently by a lad of .wide observation:— "Girls are very stickup and dignefied in their manner and beheveyour. They think more of dress than anything and like to play with dowls and rags. They cry if they see 5, cow in afar distance end are afraid of guns. They stay at home all the time and go to Church every Sunday. They are al -ways sick. Their are hi ways funy and making fun of boys hands and they say how dirty. They can't play marbles, I pity them, poor things. They make fun of boys end then turn round and love them. 3 don't beleave they ever kiled a cat or anything. They look out every into and say oh ant the moon lovely. Thir is one thing I have not told and that is they al -ways now their lessons bettern the boys now thirre" • eitenie be Sponged. You should never, in home dressmak- ing, cut any kind of woollen goods until it has been' sponged, as cheap material Is often not dampened before it is sold. To do this properly at home get an honing -board or table the width of the goods and cover with tightly -stretched calico, Spread your cloth wrong side up, cover with a linen °Toth that has been wrung out • in water, and then peen with a hot bon the leirathwise of the goods arid do not iron. .Nriver lettlia item be still, and the goods Mug fall evenly on the floor on to a clean cloth as pressed. Steamed Prune running, The folio. wing is a. California recipe, Beat the yolks of two eggs with It half cupful of sugar until light, add a table- spoonful of softened butter and a gill of . Sift together one euerful of flour with one tablespeenful of baking pow- der, and stir 11 11110 the mixture, Add nett the Well -beaten whitespi the eggs and one eupful of prunes that have been soaked .over night,' drained and the stones removed.' Olien thorn with spoon. Steam themixture for two hours. Prult ranch. • To one cup each of water and straw- berry juice, the jnice of two oranges and Lem lemons and one eup of grated pine- apple, add, one cup of sugar and let it stand for half an hour; -then add one pint of Apoilinaris water, half a. pup ef brandied cherries, and a few sprigs of glseianstasfe nocilltkeserveefrdnicie.ea punch bowl into Chicken Pie. . • 'gat a little butter in a deep baking dish ; seater Over it cracker crumbs, add a layer of chiekee, picked fine, thee O liver of oysters, salt and pepper and bits of butter, then a layeis of cracker' crumbs ; alternate with the chicken and oysters until the dish is fell, adding sea, - • With eaell layer. . Pour over'. the whole the oyster liquor, to which add a Bwaelle-baeantebeoueig.g and a teacupful of milk. • Oatmeal Drink. This oatmeal drink is a most refresh - nig beverage for thirsty children, .and has the advantage of being very inex- pensive. Into an earthenware saucepan put two ounces of fresh oatmeal, two ounces of loaf sugar and a thinly -sliced lemon, Mix this with just enough cold Water to dissolve the ingredients, and while stirring add halt a gallon. of -boil- ing water, stirring at intervals till nearly gold. Squeeze in the juke of. an orange and strain for use. • Pineapple Lemonade. - • Boil together for ten minutes one cup of sugar and a pint of water. To this add the- juice of four lemons and one freshly -grated pineapple. Let this cool; then strain carefully and add about a quart of ice water. Layer Cake Without Butter. Beat two eggs, add two cupfuls of powdered sugar and beat hard for fifteen minutes . add one cupful of milk and two cupful- of flour, alternating a little of each and beating well. Lastly, add one teaspoonfulof flavoring and three level teaspoonfuls of baking powder, beat and bake in jelly tins. Vienna Rolls. Sift two -or three times one quart of Roar, two teaspoonfuls of baking pow- der, ancl one-half teaspoonful of salt. Work in one tablespoonful of butter, add 000pintof milk, stirring into a dough of the usual consistency. Roll to the thickness df half an inch. Cut into cir- cular forms, and fold over once ,moist- ening a little between the folds if neces- sary to make them stick. Butter the baking pans well, and do not let the rolls touch each other. When placed thereon, moisten the tops of the rap with a little milk, or butter melted in milk, and bake in a hot oven. Put one-half a pint of -water and two ounces of butter into a saucepan over the fire. When boiling, add four ounces of pastry flour; beat until smooth. Take from the flee, and when cool add one egg.' beat until mixed; add another and amithee, Until you have added four at least; beat thoroughly again. Drop the mixture by spoonfuls in a greased pan; bake in a,moderate oven for forty minutes. When'done split them on one side; fill with cold soft custard made by adding a tablespoonful of cornstarch, moistened with cold milk, to half a pint of hot Milk; cook for a moment; add the yolks of 'three eggs, beaten with threetablespoonfuls of sugar; take from the fire; add a teaspoonful of vanilla, and set aside to cool. Spanish Proverbs. Never quit certainty for hope. e Losers are always in the wrong. The.book of Maybes is very broad, Who robs a scholar robs the public. He who has but one coat cannot lend it. • A good ' companion makes good coin. pany. Better go about than fall into the a flying enemy make a silver Plough or not plough, you must pay yoTuli;erdeniste.ase a man dreads, that he dies of. • Many go out for wool and -come home shorn. He who sows brambles must not go b a friend asketh, there is 31,0 to- nlaoirh rVerfooelovnt.. on anstasenardsam "About a year ago my hair was corning out very fast, so I bought , a bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor. It stopped the falling and made my hair grow very rapidly, until now it is 45 inches in length."—Airs. A. Boydston, Atchison, Kans. MatMLILLSL.141.12311,01 There's another hunger than that of the stomach. Hair hunger, for instance. Hungry hair needs food, needs hair vigor--Ayer's. This is why we say that Ayer's Hair Vigor always restores color, and makes the hair grow long and heavy. Infte=71012=04./..SELD San a bottle. All drasts. If your druggist cannot supply you, fiend us ono dollar and we win express you a bottle. re sure and give the name oe your nearest express office. Address, c..s.Ynit co., Lowell, Mass. Ieregreentrainve -itegangemoreassewszamilraatiem THE "'UNION JACK." The natioeal flag, the flag of the kingdom, and the Empire, is—to give it its popular name—the 'Union Jack, There aro various flags of which it, forms only a part, and which are used for special purposes. It is a common mistake to take these for the national flag. Among these are, fleet, the 'White Ensign, with the Union in its top comer neer the flagstaff ur halyard, and thee great red cross on a white ground—tho cross that markecl the flag of England in crusading days and in the wars of the middle ages. This red cross is still the central de- vice of the Unioa flag. The White Ensign is the flag of our navy. In the same way the Red Ensign. is the flag of our merchant marine. To fly the White or Red Ensign on a house ie rather uhmeanieg. What' one ought to fly is. the Union Jack, more Correctly called the Union flag. nnaetecieeremeeenereeeeeeeieeeee,,,......e....,...,4, THAT'S *HE SP Right In the small of the back. Do you ever get a pain there? If so. do you know what It means 7 It is el. Backache. A sure sign of Kidney Trouble. Don't neglect it. Stop it in time. If yeu don't, serious Kidney Troubles are sure to follow. DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS cure Backache, Lame Back, Diabetes, Dropsy and all Kidney and Bladder Troubles. Price 50c. a box or 5 for $1.25. all dealme. DOAN KIDNEY PILL CO.. Toronto, Ont. WHERE RUNNING IS A CRIME. In the city of Hot Springs, Ark., running is a misdemeanour. Any person going faster than a walk is arrested and fined. This law is in the interest of invalids, who throng the streets and suffer re- lapses from the excitement caused by the undue haste of a. stranger. One who rues is supposed to be e thief, murderer, or =aped lunatic. tg E::=3 =_D rr E S ,rionmo.kommos Is a purely vegetable System Renovator, Blood Purifier and Tonic. A medicine that acts directly at the same time on the Stomach, Liver, Bowels and Blood. It cures, Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Constipation, Pimples, Boils, Head- ache, Salt Rheum, Running Sores, Indigestion, Erysipelas, Cancer, Shingles, Ringworm or any disease arising from an impoverished or impure condition of the blood. Far, SEle by ell Etruggista. EneeireFIL.NOS: (ad, DR. CHASE'S IRIENIIEDIEki Dr. Chase's Kinoey.Liooe Pills, ono pill a dose, 115 cents a box, five boxes for $1,00. Dr. OhasoYs fiervo Pood, 50 cants a box, Dr. Ohlesaba Gluirnonty 0) rents a box. Dr. Oinftetee Catarrh enre cents a box, D . Obese° 11..1vOr' no'GtilltS It bottle. Cor..Ohaacee ElyrUp 01 Lineood and Turpentine. 25 Waal ft bade. feterrelt and oisnatorecf Dr. A. W, mato r.it cvery box of the gamine, ,..kt all dealers or Ittbriens0A Oats& G elnpany, Toronto. TRADE hflanas DESIGNS ' COPYRI6HT0 atn. Anyone sending a sketch and cleahription mat quickly ascertain our opinion free whether ea invention Is probably patentable. Cotrunonica. tiona strictly oOnfltionttOl. ittmethookoo. Pittetil.0 sent free. Oldest Oriouoy Xor socarmg moms. rgtonts taken throutth ItImm & CO. 1430010-0 Bpeetta notice, Without charge, lathe $dtittlfle fitgerleall. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest ctn, halation of anY solontiOlo :lemma) Terms, $il g art f r Montlic, ;11. Sold bYal newsdealer& ititilleh 0 6:5 P r.F.316:1, qo 36 I Sroadeay, fled nr(