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Exeter Times, 1903-4-23, Page 7Cersk-line a. rte Little Liver Pills. Must Blear Signtaturo df /, See lane-Slmilo Wrapper Below. Wiry email estd tie easy to take res sugar. g� 9(� Ftli� fdEtlIEAL�N��. SART R� FOR OIZZINESSi, i°9" LIE FOR F31LlOtUStIES-S. 1 VER FOR Tt€FlPill Liven. Pi LIZ. FOR 'CONSTIPATION. Fail SBLiL!W SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION 25 lee tel its QirFSSQ•L1YE2 MUST INY& NATURL. rarely VegetahiO., +b�G CURS SICK HEADACHE, Norway Pine Syru Cures Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Hoarseness, Croup, Asthma, Pain or Tightness In the Chest, Etc. -► It stops that tickling in the throat, is pleasant to take and soothing and heal- ing to the Iungs, Mr. E. Bishop. Brand, the well-known Galt gardener, writes: -- I had a very severe attack of sore throat and tightness in the chest. Some times when I wantedto cough and could not I would almost choke to death. My. wife got mo a bottle of DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP, and to my sur- prise I found seedy relief. I would not be without it if it cost $LOO a bot- tle; and I can recommend it to everyone bothered with a. cough or cold. Price 25 Cents, BRE CHE A MANN LADY TELLS OF REI. EXPERIENCE WITS DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS The Great and Well -Known Kidney Spcific for the Cure of all Sidney and Bladder Troubles. Mrs. P. Bertrand, Breehe A Manon, Que., writes:—I think it nothing but right for me to let you know what K ,. DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS have done for 1 one. For five months I was badly troubled with a sore back, and such severe pains In my kidneys that I could scarcely walk at times. I got a box of DOAN'S KID- NEY PILLS, and before I had them half taken I was greatly relieved, and with another box I was completely cured,. I cannot help but give them all the praise I can, and will never 'fail to recommend them to all kidney sufferers. DOAN'S KIDNEY TILLS. . ire 50e. box, or 3 for $1.25; all dealers or. tyke Doan Kidney Pill Coe Toronto, Ont Turns Bad Blood into Rich Red Blood. This g you ou will need. something to take away' that tired, listless feeling brought on by the system being clogged with impurities which have accumulated during the winter. Burdock Blood Bitters is the remedy you require. It has no equal as a spring...- �l medicine.. It has been used by thousands for a quarter of a century q with unequalled ualled success. I-ER8F AS PROOF. Mrs. J. T. Slone of Shi-"awatte,e, Q u,. � t ices : "I have used Burdock Brood liters asmedicine he p a spring median for t! petit four years tied don't think there is its equal. When I fee(' drowsy, tired and have no desire leeeat I get a bottle or 8,13,13. It purifies• the blood and bulide''up tiie con. Witution better than any other remedy." THE FOOLISH VI G!NS. They Were Forced to Endure the Period of Tribulation. taw (Entered according to Act of the Par. Uament of 4anatia, in the year ,one Thousand Nine Hundred and Three, by Win. Bally, of Toronto, at the Department of Agriculture, Ottawa.) A despatch from Chicago says Rev. Frank De Witt 'Talmage preach- ed from the following text "And at midnight there was a ez-y made." Mutt 25, 6. Some of the most tragic and most momentous events in profane and sacred history have transpired dur- ing the quiet hush of the midnight hour. lefani has frequently chosen that period to plot and to plan, to work and to execute, and God has: often found it a convenient season in which to move among men and carry out his eternal purposes. The words of our text aro taken from the parable of the ten virgins, and mark the advent of the Bridegroom as Ile . comes to claim His bride and go into the marriage supper. But it must not be supposed that they fix c'efinitely the hour • of the second coming of Christ, for Christ Him. self_ declared that "of that day and hour knoweth no man, • rio. not the angels which are in Heaven, neither the Son, but the Father." The waiting church, Christ's bride, represented by the ten virgins, hea't's the cry and trims the lamps in read- iness to receive its coming Lord. The live wise virgins, with the oil of the Holy Spirit filling their hearts and keeping the flame of their faith burn- ing brightly, pass quickly on to meet their coming Lord and go with Ilim into the marriage supper. The five foolish virgins, whose heads have re- ceived the truth in regard - to the Christ, but whose. hearts have • not opened up to receive the Holy Spirit find that the lack quenches the fiance of their faith in the crucial time of the coming, and while they go in eagerness, apparently, to sup- ply that deficiency, the door is shut and the wail of disappointment and anguish bursts from their lips. THE MIDNIGHT HOUR. It was at midnight that the Bridegroom came. Darkness, grim darkness, sat on her throne, the conqueror of the day. Strange hour for the Bridegroom to come ! It is not so with roan. The king of day is at the zenith of his glory when the bridegroom of the fashionable church wedding comes to claim his bride at the altar, But, Christ, the Bridegroom., is coming at the black hour of midnight to take to Him- self His bride, the church. It • is significant. It is declared of Jesus upon His first. advent into the world that He came as Light into darkness but "the darkness comprehended it not." It was dark at Jesus' first com- ing. It will be the blackness of midnight which will wrap the world in its folds when He conies again. The morning light may be just breaking in the east, awaking the world to another day, but if it marks the advent of the returning Lord, it will. be the midnight of the world's sin. The sun may have sailed majestically up the blue of the heavens and he riding gloriously in its midday splendor, but if the Lord, coming in the chariot of the clouds and heralded by the "voice of the archangel and the trump of God." shall then come, it will be the mid- night of Satan's greatest triumphs over • men. The birds may have caroled their last good -night to the mighty king of the clay as gore geously robed in scarlet and gold he withdraws into his palace behind the western hills; but if the. hand on the dial of God's eternal purposes has moved to the hour set by God for the return of Christ,, the Christ will' conn, winging upon the fullness of God's time toearth, and His advezit will find the world wrapt in the midnight of its own thoughts and plans and purposes. "At midnight there was a cry made : Behold, the bridegroom cometh." WE CANNOT KNOW TIIE DAY on the calendar of time which will echo with , the Heavenly shout and mark the flight • of the triumphant church from the earth to meet its Lord in the upper air. We may not discover the wonderful secret by searching ever so long and diligent- ly in God's Word, for it isnot there, but is locked in the innermost re- cesses of the heart of God. We may not even 'dare to guess the hour, for when God says no man knoweth the day nor the HOUR, neither the angels, and not .even the Son, but the Father only, it places the ques- tion absolutely outside the pale of human reason or the- right to deal with it in an effort to fathozrl its mystery. It is worse than folly to attempt to figure out a problem. that the mighty envie of Heaven are not able to solve, and of which oven the Son on the throne is kept in ignorance, and which Isle has no desire to know, as He abides in the will of the Father. It is enough to. know that God knows, and that in the fullness of His time the joy and hope of the Christian heart will be realized. It is enough to know that this same Jesus is Coining again, and that when He conies the dead in Christ Jesus will rise from their graves, and with the living saints will be caught up into the air to meet their Lord. It is enough for us to know this and to "comfort one another with these words," But let us heed Christ's warning' Word ; "WATCH," and in faithful service be patient unto His coming,' .For, James goes on to say, "be- hold, the husbandinan waiteth for the precious fruit if the earth, and hath long patience for it; until he receive the. early. •and the latter rain, hearts ; for the coining, of the Lord darweth nigh," But although we niay not know the day nor the hour, God in His Word has set certain sign posts. which will indicate to the believing heart that the day is approaching. But, Paul declares, "that day shall not come, except there come a failing away first, and that man of sin be revealed, the son of perdi- tion ; who opposeth and exaltoth himself above all that is called God, or that is worshipped; so that he, as God, sitteth in the temple of God, showing himself that like God." The disciples desired to knew the ,sign of the coming of the Lord, and Jesus in the twenty-fourth chapter of Matthew outlined to there some of the conditions which would pre- vail in the world previous to His second coming, and closing with the declaration that "this Gospel of the Kingdom shall be preached in all the workf for It. witness 'unto ' all'nee tions; and then shall the end cone." And these w:or-de 'of Jesus open up. to us' two certainties in connection with the second coming of Christ which help us to more clearly under- stand the signifieaneeof the mid- night hour as marking the advent of the Bridegroom, in the parable before ne. First, the unbelief of the world will be full, and second, the church, the body of Christ, will be complete,' The preaching of the Gospel of Jesus Christ always does one of two things:, It either brings salvation to the soul, or it hardens the soul to the point of at last fin- ally rejecting the Christ. THE WORLD'S MIDNIGHT. It willbe narked by two great circumstances or conditions, as fel- lows: The withdrawal of the Spirit of God, in fulfillment of the early declaration of God in Genesis 6:8, "My Spirit shall not always strive with man." Arid the unrestrained power of Satan which will lead him to "sit in the temple of God, and Show himself that he is God." What this will nnean is hinted at in the Scriptures, and is referred to as the time of the tribulation. The ex- pression "hell on earth". will then certainly have it full realization. Human wisdom, human virtue, hum- anitarianism, sociology, fraternal- ism, philanthrophy and all the other lauded bulwarks of civilization will have their boasted strength tested. The deceitfulness • of the- human heart will be laid bare in the pres- ence of the unrestrained power of the arch deceiver, for there will be nothing then to hold him in. check. The human arm will be shown to be too short and. too weak to wrestle with the arts and 'devices and skill of the devil. Man is not yet ready to give up the task of overcoming and controling the evil in the• world. He still thinks lie can succeed and will ultimately triumph, but if ono will be honest with himself and read the newspapers he will have to ad- mit that there are no present indi- cations that success i5 any nearer than when the Babelites sought to build to Heaven an,d link the two in lasting union. But in the time of the tribulation the power of Satan will be manifested and realized, and man will see the utter folly of hop- ing to forge the chains which will bind him. Christ forged the chains during His forty days in the wilder- ness which alone are strong enough to bind Satan, and when He returns at the end of the tribulation period to rule with His saints over the world the chains will he put into full use and Satan will be bound. .John in prophetic vision saw this when he wrote: "And I saw an an- gel .come down from Heaven, having the key of the bottoinless'pit and a great chain in his ]hand.' And he laird hold on the dragon, that old serpent, which is the nevi], and Sa- tan, and bound hint a thousand years, and cast him into the bot- tomless pit, arid shut him up, and set a seal upon hint, that be should deceive the nations no more, till the thousand years should be fulfilled." That will mark the dawning of a new day for the world. ]3ut the midnight must yet• conte bringing in the woes of tribulation before the millennial age can conte. THE CHRISTIAN'S MIDNIGHT. It is bright with hope. It is filled with joy, for its stillness will be broken by the shout of triumph of the descending Lord; it will ring with the heavenly voice of the arch- angel, it will thrill with. the awak- ening t'tump of God. The bride longs for the return of the bride- groom and rejoices exceedingly when she .hears, his hurried tread and feels his love clasp about her. The church, made up of the true believ- ers, by whatever name or donoznina- tion hailed, is the bride of Josue Christ. She is expectant of her coining. Lord. Her joy will be com- plete when he does come and takes her to be forever with Him. The delicately adjusted receiving instrument of the wireless telegraph will readily respond to the vibra- tions of the sending instrument across the ocean which is tuned to the same pitch, but all the inetru- nents which are not so turned would be as insensible to the ether waves flashing over the ocean as a dead body 15 insensible to pain, The C hristian heart which is tuned to t e expectant hope of a returning.. Lord need not fear that the thrill of lie midnight cry will not be fait, The shout of the coming Christ will et the chords of the true Believer's' hearts to vibrating, and they will mount an the wings of faith to join Heir yokes with the voice 'of the archangel while the trump of Goff lls the 1Teavetts with Sae triumph - tea MIMIC, Ah, at midnight,. whet ope to Make - • the `dark hours of h t s fl no ye' also patient ; establish your h wafting bright! Ah, what need of watchfulness, that the heart niay be turned to hoar the cry! Ah, what sad appointment .to bo among the ave foolish virgins who are shut out of the marriage supper! Ob, Olzris- tien, WATCH YE! You may Ire ready to go in with your Lord when He comes if you will. TWO To ELEPIDA.NTS. The average terra of an elephant's life -- although there is no precise information on the point -- is 70 or 80 years. The elephant ,is not in fell vigor and strength till thirty- five. The most ready way of form- ing an approximate idea of the age is by the am.ouiit of turnover of the Lipper edge of the ear. In young an- imals, sometimes up to the age 'of eight or nine years, the edge is quite straight. It, however, then begins to turn. over, and by the time the animal ,is thirty, the edges lap over to the extent of an inch, and between this age and sixty this increases to two limbos, or slightly more. Ex- travagant ideas are held as to the height of len elephant, Such a thing as an elephant measuring ten feet at the shoulder rarely exists in India or J3urtnah. Saunderson, who is ad- mitted to be the best authority on the subject, says the largest male he ever met with measured 9 feet 10 inches, and the tallest. female 8 fent 5 inches. Tho majority of elephants, however, are below 8 feet, and an animal rarely reaches nine feet, the female being slightly shorter than the, male. The carcass of an ele- phant 7 feet 4 inches ' -tall; iveiglied in portions gave a total weight of 3,000 pounds; so an elephant weigh- ing two tons .should be common en- ough. The skin was about three- fourths of an inch thick. a THE S. S LESSON. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, APRIL 26. Text of Lesson, Acts xxi., 3-12. Golden Text, Acts xxi., 14. 3, 4. And, finding disciples, we tarried there seven days; who said to Paul through . the Spirit that he should not go up to Jerusalem. I cannot but wonder if it was through the Spirit that the lesson committee selected the portions as- signed in this and the following two or three lessons, as they seem to have chosen the least helpful por- tions and omitted the best; but we must make the best of the portions chosen. Paul and his party, having landed at Tyre on their way to Jer- usalem, find disciples, with whom they spend, a week, and, knowing Paul's enstoni, we cannot but rejoice in the special Bible studies which they naust have hail in the blessing which must have come to • them. Knowing that Paul's desire was to hasten to Jerusalem for Pentecost (chapter xx, 16), we see him in the school of patience as he journeys. It is a. great victory when we learn to practice I Sam. x, 7—"Do as occa- sion serve thee, for Gold is with thee" — and not to fret because the occasion does not happen to be to our liking. 5, 6. We kneeled down on the shore and prayed, and when we had taken our leave one of another we took ship, and they returned home again. The men, women and children with Paul's party, all kneeling on the shore praying, must have been a tes- titnony to all who witnessed them not soon forgotten. Tile faithful- ness and fearlessness of those who under no circumstances omit their 'devotions are always to the glory of God and owned of Him. Even the heathen condemn us by their faithfulness to their imaginary gods. The faithfulness of a Hindoo on the deck of a pilotboat as we sailed up the river to Calcutta and of a Chi- naman on the wharf at Singapore made a great impression on me, not easily forgotten. 7, 8. We came to Ptolemais and saluted the brethren and abode with them one day, and the next day we s' * * came unto Caesarea; and we entered into the house of Philip the evangelist, who was one of the sev- en, anil abode with him. It is very refreshing to meet the redeemed of the Lord here and there as one journeys from place to place. There is no bond that can be com- pared to it. Those who think that the bond of free Masonry an:d Odd Fellowship and such orders is the best bond of travelers either are not Christians or if they are they do not know Him as `they might. 1 as a professing Christian tried the first named order faithfully, and, while I have nothing to say against it for those who have nothit,g bettor, I ani glad I have found something better and have proved it for more than thirteen years and. around the globe an'd in many lands. It is that bond of oneness with Christ which so bound together Paul and his party and the believers at Tyre and. Ptole- mais and Caesarea and makes true believers one everywhere to -day. . 9, And the same man had four daughters, virgins, which did pro- phesy. The Iast we heard of Philip was that after he baptized the treasurer of Queen Candace he was found at Azotus and that he preached in all the cities till he came to Caesarea, We are now glad to find him still witnessing and keeping open house for Christians and that his "daugh- tors are 50 one with him. It must have been a happy home, a. very de- lightful place, to sojourn, and we do not wonder that Patti was able to overcome his haste to be_ at Jerusalem in order to tarry thele many days. As to women pro- phesying, being the Lord's messen- gers, see Joel li, 2S; Ps, lxvi.li, 11, 1.t.4.; Phil. iv, 13, and think of Deborah, ITuldah earl others and see further indorsement in I Cor, xi, - 5, 10, 11. Thus saitlh the Holy Ghost So shall the Jews at Jerusalem bind the man that ohvneth this girdle tie cf. .shal1 deliver him into the,. hands of the, gentiles. �Thus- testified Agabus,. a prophet fr.om Judaea, and this .added to the voice .of the Spirit at Tyre (verse 4) Makes me andrned to 'believe that Paul was not jourri.oying to Jer- usalem by command " of the Spirit and that the years of imprisonment and same other thinga„znight have been avoided had lee been more obedient to . .the .Spirit. There is only one perfect man, fully controlled by the Spirit, set before us in Scripture -the man Christ Jesus, Ile never failed. All ethers have, We do not pretend to say that Paul was in the wrong in Acts xv, 39, but we do know that the time came when he was glad to have Mark (II Tien. iv, 11). We do not know why Paul wanted to go into Asia and 13ithynia when the Spirit did not want him to (Acts xvi, 6, 7), and the twice repeated message from. the Spirit in our lesson makes us somewhat perplexed as to why Paul insisted on going to Jerusalem. 12. And when we heard these things both we and they of that place besought him not to go up. to Jerusalem. So in spite of the warnings of the Spirit and the entreaties of Luke, and others of his own party and of Philip and his daughters and the other disciples Paul determines to go on, expressing Itis readiness to be bound and to die at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord Jesus. The others could therefore only pray the Lord to accomplish His will and commit all to Him. So in clue time they, arrived at Jei;usalem, and the brethren., received' 'them. gladly (verses 18-17).. . I know of nothing more. necessary - for a child of God than to be filled with and controlled by the Holy Spirit, but that certainly means obedience to the Spirit in all things. It means a great deal to humble ourselves to walk with God (Mic. vi, 8) and. have no will of our own. PAINTING THE WORLD. Indian Legend the Way Spring Came Into Existence, Once, long before there were men in the world, all the earth was cov- ered with snow. and ice. White and frozen ' lay the rivers and the seas; white and frozen lay the plains. The mountains stood tall and dead, like ghosts in white gowns. There was no color except white in all ,the. world except in the sky, and it was almost black. At night the stars looked through it like angry eyes. Then God sent the spring down in- to the world — the spring with red lips and curling yellow hair. .e In his armee he bore sprays of ap- ple blossoms and the first flowers crocus, anemones, and violets, red, pink, blue, purple, violet and .yel- low. The first animal. to greet the spring was the White rabbit. The spring dropped a red crocus on his head, and ever since then all the white rabbits have red eyes. Then the spring dropped a blue violet on a white bird, the first bird to greet the spring, and that is the way the bluebird was made. Ever since then it is the first bird to arrive when the spring comes down from heaven. • So the spring went through the world. lVherever he tossed the leaves from his fragrant burden, the earth became green. He tossed the blossoms on the frozen seas and the ice melted and the fish became paint- ed with all. the tint of his flowers. That is the way the trout and the minnows an'd salmon became .ga}ldy. Only the high mountains would not bow to the spring. So their sum- mits remain white and dead, for they would let the spring paint only their sides. The snow owls and the white geese and the polar bears fled from the spring, so they, too, remain white to this day. A CLEAN TOWN. - The town of Brock, in the Neuter - lands, holds the distinction of being one of the neatest towns in the world, and no municipal expense is spared to uphold 'that honor. The 2,700 inhabitants are so strongly bound by municipal rule that to throw a piece of paper or waste of any kind in the public street entails a shilling fine, and it is only recent- ly that horses have been allowed in the streets. Once a year every house is visited by the town clean- ers, leaners, who scrub from top to bottom, inside and out, without any expense to the tenants. "ORDER ORDER!" They had been trying to conduct the business of the junior debating. society in a strictly orderly fashion; but the proceedings, which com- menced with noise, gradually became uproariou s. At last one of the disputants, los- ing all control over his emotions, exclaimed to his opponent: "Look here, you are, I think, the biggest ass that .l' ever had the mis- fortune to set eyes upon." "Or'derl order!" said the chair- man, a pompous little chap with an affected lisp. "You seem to for- get that I ant in the roam," KILLING PAIN. A Buseian doctor, chief of one of the military hospitals of St. Peters- burg, Inas made a discovery which he claims will eliminate natty of the risks incident to the use of chloro- form itt surgical operations. 118 has arrived at tie conclusion that blue light I.tosSesses the properties of killing pain, His first experiment was made quite recently. Ilurieg the operation he, so to speak, steeped his patient in a flood of blue electric light. The operation lasted fully twenty minutes, and the patient, who had not been put to sleep by any artificial means, i\ and it.almost paielessa �t a.feesae.-RENGTHTOl e alit H WEAKHEARI r 11E' et l'UNCTi3HALY(ROftGs RifH THE BLOOD &STRfPI Mt CONSTITUTIQN ti 4Cnd°Rf Monti' Bosi ` '+IT BRITAIN 4,. AMERICA all Druggists &.Cheml Price in Canada : $1.00'; Six bottles for $5.00 . to , 4 f A remedy which acts through the fonctions or nutrition by the building up of new and healthy assizes is not to be expected to manifest its action in a few days. When the disease is of recent ori- gin, this early and immediate action will often be met with. Otherwise, when it has already lasted some time, the action of the remedy mustbe chronic like the disease itself. This is why the length of the use of ST. , 'AMRS WAF,'RRS wilt vary with every individual ease ; but It is a fact which no one will now deny that in the treatment of general debility ST. Jiu'r> s WArzRs produce remarkable,. and insome cases, immediate effects.. $x. JAlvl]S WAFERS help, stomach, digest food and seed the nutriment through the blood, and this is the honest way to get health, and strength,' the kind that lasts, develops and breeds the energy which accomplishes much. "In diseases of theatonxach St. James Wefera are almost if not quite a specific. 1 have great fi.ith its them,,+ Dr. Edward A..'Itobinson, • Cork, ; •eland. St. Jamesir/ajersare not a secret, remedy:' to the numerous doctors re tom+nendtng.tkem to tach patients we mai;, 144;for15jatq j qpn. requerA Where dealers are not selling the wafers. they aremailed upon re- ceipt of price at the Canadian branch : St. James Wafers Co., 1728 St. Catherine St., Montreal. 670 FOR Thy 0 0 a s c Recipes for the Kitchen. e Hygiene and Other Notes for the Housekeeper. ese eseofgefgeGioSceenitgoglienSoSei DOMESTIC RECIPES. Cabbage—Equal to Cauliflower.— Remove the outer leaves from a solid, small -sized head of cabbage and cut the remainder fine as for slaw. Rave on the fire a spider or deep skillet, and when it is hot put in the cabbage and pour over 'it in- stantly a pint of boiling water. Cover closely and allow it to cook rapidly for ten minutes. Draw off the water and add half a pint of new milk or milk and cream. When it boils stir in a tablespoonful of flour that; has been wet with a little cold milk, season with salt and pepper, and serve as soon as it comes to a boil. Oabjoage is very delicate cook- ed in this way, and is made so di- gestible that it may be eaten with impunity. Fried Carrots.—Wash and partly boil the carrots 'whole, cut them into thin slices, dip in egg and then in finely grated bread crumbs, and fry ten minutes in hot lard or but- ter. Cold boiled carrots may be warmed up in this way, and be made more palatable than in their first estate. ' Onions a la Creme—Peel four Span- ish onions, boil in salted water till done. Drain on a sieve, put into a stew -pan with three ounces of but- ter rubbed smooth with a. table- spoonful of flour, and a little salt and white pepper•. Shake the pan constantly and stir in by degrees a half pint of cream or new milk. The onions may be served on toast with the sauce poured over, and the or- dinary onions cooked in this fashion are as nice as the Spanish,, Walnut Souffle—This is made by soaking a sponge cake of medium size m } pt boiling milk. Break up and mix with them a small piece of •butter, 1 dessertspoon of sugar, a few drops of any flavoring desired, 4 oz ground walnuts, the yolks of 3 eggs well beaten, and the whites of 4 thoroughly whisked. Place in a plain mold and steam for 3 an hour. Turn out and serve with cream. Pancakes without Eggs—For family of five, use 11 qts buttermilk, or sour milk will answer, 2 heaping tea- spoons soda dissolved in 41 cup cold water, 2 cups graham flour and 2 cups white flour, salt. Use the kind you get when you take wheat to the mill. These pancakes eaten with butter and a syrup made by boiling coffee C sugar dissolved in water, until it syrups, are the best we have ever had, Orange Cream—Take +; pt good cream whipped to a froth, the juice of 3 oranges, 3 tablespoons white sugar and the juice of 1 lemon. Rub the rind of 1 orange smooth in the sugar, then scrape off with a knife. Mix all together and add 3 table- spoons gelatine, boiled in , pt wa- ter, Stir all together and set away in a mold. ',Wren wanted, turn out as for jelly. Eat with or without cream. Bread Cake—Half a cup butter creamed with 1 cup sugar, into which add 2 well beaten eggs ; beat, and add 1 cup bread sponge (bat- ter). Stir in 1 cup flour, with which has been sifted a teaspoon soda, e teaspoon cinnamon, 4 tea- spoon cloves, a teaspoon nutmeg lastly add 1 cup raisins well chop- ped, over which were sprinkled 2 even tablespoons flour. Bake 45 min- utes in a slow oven. Molasses Cake—Take 1 cup mo- lasses, 1 cup sugar, 2 tablespoons lard, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, } tea- spoon cloves, 1 cup buttermilk, 1 teaspoon ginger, 1 teaspoon soda, 1 cup raisins, flour to make a stiff batter. ASPARAGUS IN AMBUSH. Cut a slice of bread an inchthick from a square loaf. Trim off ' the crusts and. then scrape small pieces out of the center, Brush the little cases thus formed lightly with but- ter and toast them in the oven until a golden brown. Cut a bundle of asparagus into half-inch lengths, soak with boiling water, add 1 teaspoon salt and simmer gently for three-quarters of an hour. Dra.in the asparagus. Save } pt of the water in which it was cooked: Bring this to the boiling point again, and pour it while hot onto the yolks of 4 eggs well beaten. Stir over hot water until thick and jelly- like. Take from the fire and add care- fully 2 tablespoons butter that has been cut into bits, one bit at a time. Add ?s teaspoon salt, a dash of pep- per and then slowly 1 tablespoon tarragon vinegar. Add to this the cooked asparagus. Fill into the bread boxes and serve at once. This will prove a delicate entree for a luncheon. MILBUIIN'S HEART AND NEK.VE PILLS Make Weak Hearts Strong. Make Shaky Nerves Firm. THEY CURT~ Itervonsness —Sleeplessness— Palpitation of the Heart—Norvous Prostration—Faint and Dizzy Spells — Brain Fag —After Effects of La Grippe—Anemia—And all Troubles Arising from a Run-down Sys- tem. Read what T. L. Foster, Minetsing, Ont., has to say about them:.—I was greatly troubled with palpitation of the heart, a sudden blindness would come over me, and floating specks before my eyes caused me great inconvenience. Often I would have to gasp for breath; and my nerves were in a terrible condi- tion. I took MILBURN'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS, and they have proved a blessing to me. I cheerfully "recom- mend them to all sufferers from heart and nerve trouble. Price SOc, per box, or 3 for $1,25; all dealers or The T. Milburn Co„ Limited, Toronto, Ont. I•> n ;n The Beading Specie iris of America. 25 Years in Detroit. Bank Security. Nino out of every ten men have been guilty' of transgression against nature in their youth. Nature never excuses, no matter how young, thoughtless or ignorant he may be. The punishment and suffering corresponds with tilts crime, The only cseaoe from its ruinous results ie proper scientific treatment to counteract its effects: The DRAMS, either by nightly losses, or secretly through the urine, must be stopped—the Nb,`It V F,S must be built up and invigorated, the blood must be purified, the S'pX(JAD ORGANS must be vitalized and developed, the BRAIN must be nourished, Our New Method Treatment provides all these .requirements. 'trader its influence the brain becomes active; the blood purified so that all pimples, blotches and ulcers disappear; the flerVes'become strong assteel, so thatnervous- ness, bashfulness and despondency disappear; the eyes become bright, the face full and clear, energy returns to the body, and the mord, physical aad sexual st s- tents are invigorated; all drains cease—no Fiore vital waste from the system. The The v�arloua organs become natural and manly. We invite all the afflicted to call end C ou ns oft us confidentially and 3ree of charge, - Cures Guaranteed ar. no Pay,. We treat and cure: Varicoccit, 8liattd Diacdales, Strictures Giect. Ettalseioas, Urinary Drains, eiSe5acaatoririati®a,. Unnatu- ral Diacharq;es, Kidney and i;i*dder llllsiorineta. CO!'JSULTA.TEOZ, Fans. s®Kis � 1F i LiJal, if unable to tall, write for a IgIRStlTON Bi,A'NIC for°Ifome Teea)ttueta, DRS. KENNEDY & KERGAN d S SIIitL l " 8S7i'., rarruOYT, "iT chi. ts. {