Loading...
Exeter Times, 1903-11-12, Page 7atio.smaKal Cent41,,ne... ar er Little Liver Pills,. it Boar Sistetteterha faceffinzile Wrapper Below. Vary es.nr.11 meta ee ogler az take as eepr.. CARTERS MTV ILLS, FOR 110.11Aelito FON DMINESCe OILIONUIESts PDX TORPID LIVE& FON comaTIPATION. FOR NALLOVI MN, • FOO TIM COMPLEXION kr, resernexisge WM MAIM j,y3NATOR4 VS Cob Merrar WeettagO.,,,4-'4041.1.70=4 CURE SICK liE.AGAOhlt, • Are a True Heart Tonic, • a. • Nerve Food end Bleed Enricher. They build ap and renew ati the wore out and wast,d tissues of tin:body, and restore perfect health and Vigor to the entire system. Nervousness, Sleepiest:less, NerVOU. Pros- • trefoil, Brain Fag. Lack el Vitality, Aber • Effects of Laffirippe, Anaemia, Week end Dizzy Spell“oss of flemory, Palpitation of • the Heart, Loss of Energy, Shortness of Breath, etc., canal! be cured by using Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. Price 50e. a box or 3 for $1.25. All dealers eir Tux T. lelaaranue Co., LIUTTED, Toronto, Ont. • CURES Dyspepsia, Boils, Pimples, Headaches, Constipation, Loss of Appetite, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Scrofula, and all troubles arising from the Stomach, Liver, Bowels or Blood. Mrs. .A. Lethangue. of Ballydulf, Ont.• , writes: "I believe I would have been in my gravo long ago had it not been for Burdock Blood Bit- ten., I was run down to such an extent that .1 could scarce- ly 1320V6 about the house. I was subject to severe headaches, backaches and disza nese; my appetite was one and wee unable to do Inn. housework. After using two bottles of B. 11.11 T found my health fully restored. I warmlyrecomrnend It to all tired and worn out women." A Kidney Sufferer FOR fourteen Years. TERRIBLE PAINS ACROSS THE BACK. Could not Sit or Stand with Ease. Consulted Five Different Doctors. •••••••••••••••••• Doan's idney Pills FINALLY MADE A COMPLETE CURE. Mr. Jacob Jamieson, Jamieson Brea, e The well-known Contractors and Builders, a Welland, Ont., tells of how he was cured: 0 'For fourteen years 1 was afflicted with y, kidney trouble which increased in severity lhe last five years. itly most serious attack e" Was four years ago, wheik I was completely 111E A 1JSE OF THE The Physical Body of Man Is a Tem= ple in Both Senses of the Word (EllitieLendellitachootrdoi:ng,ut, AinettitX Eciaaree oh, the awful deeln awaiting thef lyer )'houeatal New Bandrect and Three,' Opiritual desecration of the temPle 0 by Wm. Daily, of Toronto, at the the Holy mow Bepartmout oi eericulture, Ottawa.) -.......—. A CONSUMING FIRE. A despatch from Chicago says:— Have You ever seen a sanctuary of Rev. Prank De Witt TalMage Preach- brick mad tone watch has been de- ed from the following txt 1. Oor- dicatecl to Gad destroyed by earth- intaieee vi,, 19, 'Know ye tot that quake or by fire? Well I have. On your body is the temple of the Holy a dark, stormy night 1 was awaken- ed. in my Brooklynahome by the More than Westminster abbey le to rumbling of the fire. engines. I heard London or Notre Deeefe to Paris or a quick rap at my door, as my sie, the vatic= to Rome or. the mosque ter eallea; , Waite up! The Taber - of St. Sophia to Oonitantinopla aa,cle is in flames!" I hurriedly mere. than Diana's temple •Was to dressed and ascended to the cupola Ephesus or the shrine of Athene to of our house, which evarlooked the Athens, King Solomonai, temple was city. There the whole family were to the Hebrew heart. Jt Was the gathered. The air seemed charged , one spot about which national ,pride and surcharged with electricity. oft „Lusk religious fervor ewetred; it was in the distanCe the public buildings the elle place abovo. all others which of the city leolted like the great the leraelite wanted teepee, as • the white mansions of a celestial city, Mussulman clevotee, says, "Let me, 1 making by contrast the scene more • pray thee, worsbip „one.° at Mecca dramatic. The church did not burn before a die!, In it was the shoal_ as other buildings seemed to burn, inah, tbe holy oe holles,, the reP0sh- entirety was a xal)uatssitost7i.v0itngi'no•iotasls. at looked like tory of the coveruintal ark. It was God's footstool. It was like a fr gm.- an altar, a huge altar upon which • went of heaven's manifested gietee's. was being traeriiiced the Whole life's ministry of the noble father who A SACRED TEMPlesa "•stood by my side. Suddenly it Not alone in gold and precious swayed and shivered, like untp stonehvas the tenaple of Solomon dazed and dying man. "Thera it unique. It was, great in its spiritu- goes!" said mother. • Yes, there , it al associations. Its very site had %vent. With one lurch it was gone. a sanctity of its 'own: It was • so while we stood huddled together in sacred in •the eyes of king and peo-. the darkness, My father • and I put pie that whea the temple was erect- on our greatcoats and started out ed measures were taken to avoid in the sterna. As we pushed through even the ordinary sounds of tools. the crowds outside the guarding In the book of Kings we read, "And ropes we found the congregation the house, when it was building, was there assernbled, not by the church built of stone made ready before it bell, but by the firenian's call. Some was brought thither, so that there of the people were weeping and sob - was neither hammer nor 'axe nor any bing as though their hearts would tool of iron heard in the house break. Some of theie. had been bap - while it was in building.." As the tized as children in that church. sthel bridge to -day is sent from the Some of them had found God there. foundries with each girder and tres- Some of them had neouraled beside tie and beam marked beforehand for their dead within those walls. Ah, their positions, so the temple's, it is a sad sight to see a cathedral stones and beanie were cut and fit- or a, city church or a little village ted together miles away from their meeting housci destroyed by fire. But ultimate destination. When the it will be infinitely sadder to see a temple's walls were reared they rose human being, whose body might be amid the impressive sacredness of si- a temple of the lloly Ghost, con - lance. So sacred was the place that slimed by the fires of hideous pas - on the ,day of the temple's dedica- laions and appetites. Beware, 0 tion, on the day when the ark of man, that you never desecrate that the covenant was placed within the jtemple of your body or sacrifice on holy of holies, "the glory of the 1 the altar of your heart which should Lord filled the house of the Lord." be consecrated to God offer/nes to It filled all the house with a bright jthe deroons of perdition. cloudat filled the house With the THE TE)11PLE OF CH:RIST. 'same majestic symbol as that which , The temple of the holy Spirit led the Israelites through the des- should have a beautiful body—beau- as that which the prophet saw around the throne of God and as WU in, reference to the glance or its eye, beautiful in the one of its that which overshadowed our Lord voice; beautiful as far as possible in when he talked with Moses and Elias reference to its apparel; beautiful as on the mount of Transfiguration. • Sarah was beautiful, whose husband THE PHYSICAL BODY. gave to aer one of the sweetest and yet courtliest of complimetts wiaen hp turned and in the quaint language of the east mid, "Thou art a fair woman to look upon." /f God Al- mighty 'demanded Oat the children of Israel should give of their gold and silver and precious stones to beautify his Jerusalem sanctuary surely then we ought to try to beau- tify his teneple of the Holy Ghost. "But," says some 211321, "Low can I beautify my physical body? I grant that I need not be slovenly or unkempt in apparel, aut 1 do not grant that I can clialige my looks. I cannot, in tbe language of Nico- demus, for the second tirne be born of the flesh." Oh, ,yes, my brotOer, you can. You can start to -day to obtain from God that grace wbicb will make you physically a new be- ing. It is a physiological law that every seven years the body, goes through a complete change. Seven years from now there will not be any part of a bone, finger or atom of flesh in your physical existence which is part of you to -day. Like the old Constitution,. more 'commonly called Old Ironsides, once the pride of the American navy, whose hull was made over so many times that there have been many Constitutions instead af one, so you, my brother, have had many 'different physical bodies. You are always putting off an old body; you are always putting on a new. Galen was converted from atheism by studying the won- derful construction of a human skel- eton. • But the movement of a Joint in a skeleton is not nearly so won- derful to me as the fact that the skeleton of a man who died when he was seventy years of age represents at least ten distinct skeletons, vvhith at different periods of his existence walked around under the same man's personality. • A WONDERFUL STRUCTURE,' The physical body, in the, first place should be a strong temple. Its chest -should be broad and deep, its limits stipple and sinewy, ita nerves steady and like cords of steel, its heart beating with the regularity of a pumping automation; it shoeld be niade as strong as poSsible because all temporal and spiritual happiness depends to a great extent upon the physical body being ha . a healthy con di tion. When the soul laughs tbe body laughs; when the body weeps the soul is very apt to weep. Thomas Jefferson, the sage of Monticello taught this when he wrote this very suggestive letter to his young kins- man, T. M. Randolph, Jr.' "With- out health there is no happiness. Our attention • to health, then, should take precedence of every other object. The time necessary to secure this by active exercise should be devoted to it in preference to every other pursuit. I know the difficulty with which a busy man tears himself away from his work at any given moment of the day, but his happiness and that of his family depend upon it. The most uninforna ed mind, with a healthy body, is happier than the wisest valetudinar- ian.," Good advice for Thomas Jef- ferson to give 100 years ago; just as good advice to give to the young people of the present day.' . MORAL CLEANLINESS, . The temple of the Holy Spirit, in the next place, should be a clean body. There are some men whose bodies are given over to moral filthi- ness. They aro like some of the ancient heathen temples which were avowedly dedicated to the deities of lust, drunkenness and debauchery, the existence of which was a nation- al dishonor, The worship -performed in those temples was so vile that you could not describe it in public without bringing a blush of shame to every modest cheek and a de- mand for silenee from every ar.odest hp. The pictures found on the walls of the exhumed city of Pompeii show that those temples were veritable harnel houses, where bats and oWls lid carrion birds gorged theniselves n the decaying CCM)SCS of truth, laity and love, aLetathe eeniple of 'aur body be . an, ashOhrist 'want - '1.,...., d the jerus, leen 'temple to ha„selean when he dr ere the traders out that templeaarying, "Is it not writ- ten my hoeae shall be called of all nations thdi house of pra,yer, but ye lave Made it a den of thieves?" 1117 Incapacitated. 'I had terrible pains across Fey back, floating specks before my eyes end was in almost constant torment. I could not sit or stand with ease and was a wreck in health, having no appetite and I lost greatiiily flesh. I had taken medicine From five different doctors and also numerous other preparations to no pur- pose. 1 finally began to take Doan'e Kidney Pills and before I had taken five boxes the trouble left me and I now feel hotter than I have for twenty years, Those Who knew me know how I was afflicted and say it i.8 almost impossible to believe !eat I have. den cured, yet they krint ait ii Is so. i». i , a pairsed the meridian or life but I feel t I have taken on tho rosy hue of' boyhood," Price 5o ets per boo, ot 3 for Saes, all dealers or THE DOAN' kiiiiNinV PILL,' CO. , e° n ilf01014TO. omer, , ° b , The physical body is continually beingechanged. This fact being then granted,. if you will only let the Holy Ghost jiweil within the tem,ple which ought to be his, then he will make you physically over anew. Your voice will become softer in tone, he- el:LUSO then it will only speak the language of love. Your face will change in looks, for then your gen- tler spirit will mold. it, Your hand will cbange its conformation,, for then,. instead of being the knotted muscles of a human brute Or the close fist of a, miser, looking in itS vindictiveness like the graming gat- 'goyles of Notre Dame, ready to epring upon their prey below, it Will he the opened palm of stlecOt rad clean as David wanted his physioal have Ill° warn gra8P of a sYmpa.th- ale totich. Yes, my brother, you altar t be elean when he uttered the can artistically and cseethcstically as 1-18°ffiv'i 8 prayer, • "Wash- me tliore well as spiritually beautify your phy- u °Ugh', from. tuy iniquity and eleaese skid boan by. You c' surrender it, me frtom. my sin," Or that other in the name of Jesus Christ, to be • Plead g beeeechment, "Cleanse thole knade over ettirely anew to his eerY- Mo frOlel secret faults," or eleall aS ice •' 'Paul 1-b?ealit us to be clonal whoa hi A strong temple 1 A. clean temple 1 this ercire letter to the Coeinthian A beautiful temple 1 We haVe beet ' ells -teal.", Ike wrote thee° werniag describing them all. • But, after ali, • werdsy'qf any man defile the temple what is n, temple'? A temple is a, • el Gloderi him shell Cod deetroY, ter buildieg dedleated 'to the worship of ttheel:i'4r,Ple of God is holy, which e ileity, Its few walls irtclose a temple / ye are." Oh, the terrible holy piece in Which that deity is ondenaliation whiela is to be ViSited supposecl to dwell. Vaal temple let Son ?eleoge WhOse bodieg are 'defiled eupposed to be the perSonei property y aim rndulgenee f degrading vicel "of an iedivcchial iiiVileiter. it the earner sense48 a rnan'e liouee belongs to Otra when the title 'deed is eet only put ia the family sale, but also re. coreital among the couptly records, If this he 'true what is the next, step ? eaeb temple ehould, have a nay ,when it is publiely de- illeated to the Deity for whom it is built, lihren the Solornorkie temple was to be a,t last :dedicated. the Icing metle the service one of eational eze. pert, Ho assembled in caw place all the officers and men" of state, mad on that occasion he eacrifiCeil 120,- 000 sheep and 22,000 oxen, The rivers of blood v.Iucle flowed freM that altar signify to us how great an occasion that dedication must lia,ve been., THE DEDICATION, Now, itis brothea, it is right and proper that every temple shquId be publicly. 'dedicated. When are yen going to publicly dedicate your tem- ple, your physical body, to the ser- vice of Jesus Christ ? This body is a priceless treasure which we shouhl offer him. How precious it is but few can fully Appreciate unless they lose part of 'their physical anatomy.. I never wish to hear a inan make a sligekting remark about is physical body. Never say, as 'do eo many, "Oa, I do not care what becomes of my body after I am 'dead !" • You should care, my brether. You should care, in the first place, because that body has been a good friend to you, and, secondly, because that body, if it be Christ's now, is to be "sown in corruption maid raised in incorrup- tion," a glorified, immortal spiritual body,. rit for the coMpanionship of the angels the redeemed, Speak no ill about your body. Remember • also,. lay- brother, yot 'dhoulel not compel your loved ones to 'do with your body erbat they do not want to do, "I shall be ere- matecle" .1 heard a man and some time ago. I turned to him and said "Fried, you have not any right to *demand that your loved ones shall cremate your body. If they wish to do it all right. But if they 'do not wish to do it then let, them -have the sweet yet sad eanefort of going out of your grave te plant a few forgetmenots where sleeps the mortal part of ate whom they have dearly loved." The body is more than flesh, though it crunable into 'dust. At the end of an earthly life it sball be raised., a new and heavenly body for the life eternal. Trifle not witli It 1 Abuse it not 1 Despise it pot ! It is the temple of the Holy G host 1 THE S. S. LESSON. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, NOV. 15. Text of the I,eston, Ps.. xxiii. Golden Text, Ps. XXiii., 1. The title of this lesson, "David's trust in God," tells only in part, the subject matter of this raost familiar portion of Scripture. It certainly does tell of David's trust, but it tells first of Him of vilaoin the twenty- second imd Twenty-fourth Psalms' tell so fully, Him who was forsaken because of our sins, who was made sin for us, whom all the kin.dreds of the nations shall yet worship, the King of Glory, the Lord of Ilosts (xxii., 1, 27;, xxiv.,e7-10), for it is true that in these psalms and per- haps in every psalm, the spirit by David's spoke of Christ (11. Saari. xxiii., 2; Acts ii., 80, 31). Christi- ans in his "Christ of the Psalzns" says:. "The spirit through David spoke of the mystery of the incarna- tion of the Son of God, of ,His suf- ierings, His death, His resurrection, His ascension into heaven, His in- termediate work from the time of His rau'rrection until His return irk power and great glory to set up the kingdom which shall never be de- stroyed (Dan. ii., 48). He foresaw and foretold the redemption of the world from the bondage of corrup- tion at the glotious manifestation of the son of God" (Rom. viii., 19, 21). On this psalm which Is our lesson to -day he says, "We here recognize Jesus as the Lamb in relation to His Father as His Shepherd, to whew° care and protection He ever committed Himself." He delighted in- every word of God, living upon it as, the sheep on the pasture of the tender herb, refusing the traditionS of men as • sheep turn away from coarse, rank grass. As sheep aP- preach not a cataract, but love the quiet stream, so Ho delightad in the peaceable inflowings of God's spirit. He fulfilled all righteousness and glorified His Father's name. The Father Was ever His support and comfort in life and death, and in tho hour of His temptation, both ia the wilderness and in Gethsemeine, the angels ministered unto Him • as unto Elijah. A table is for supply and communion. • The Holy Spirit ever filled Him, and that without measure. He was anointed with the Holy Ghost and with power. All the days of His sojourn upon earth He lived in the conseiousneSs of His Father's goodness and mercy, saying, "The rather sent Mand I live by the Father; I do always those thing@ that please (John vi., 57; viii., 29). Even when on earth He dwelt en Heaven and spoke of gim- self ite "the Son of Man who is,in heaven" (John fin, 13). Having seen something of the refer- ence of the psalm to Christ, the be- liever can the better apply it to himself, for by faii,h in Him we be- come identified with Him in lIis eufferings and His glory, "Her shall feed Hie flock like a shepherd," and. Ile says, "Ye, any flock, the flock of my pasture, are men, and I am your God" (Isa. xi. 11; Ezek. xxxiv„ 14, 81). Ile is the Good Shepherd Who ignite His life for the sheep; the Great Shepherd, rieen from the dead mid • in 'everlasting covenant with the Fa- ther eeteerning the sheep, and the thief Shepherd whO will reveard the faithful at ITU appearrug (John x,, 1,1; Xeb, Xiii, 20, 21; 1 Pet. v, 4 On the authority of Itom, viii, 3 and Phil. iv, 19, the redeemed of the Lord eau rieVer lack anything that they eally need, bnt }le is 1,99 wus to give us ell we want or AlSic for because we often ash unwisely (Jas. iv, 8). ' Best, and peace lIe gives to all who .gairvee.fey'i(et,,, sp,1 rtlf.;keywi4lilypo ethltnef. irate you," are His own words (Nett. xi, 28-30; John xiv. 27), and even though outwardly 'tribulation may be our portion, yet in Pine we can always have peace (John xvi, 33). When sheep lie dewn in green pastures they have evidently eaten enough; they are satisfied, for He fill- eth anci satisfietb as when He fed, ,h1;lezxx5v,i0.8.). 13,000 and tte 4,900 (Ps. hhii, While Ilis sheep can never perish (John x, 28, 29), they may wander away from His kied care and veed to he sought oue and reetored SxtxoNriel(tn n trio 2 m) oth vo opfra'll'leya " salBeen-- tion" (Ps, ii, 12). Them can be no fellowship with Him except it the Way of righteousness, that whicb is right in His sight, hut in sloth ways Elle delights to Toad ;His willing ones. 1-1e is ever with us all the days, night and day. caring for tie every moment, • the Father of mereies and the God of all comfort, comforting us that we may comfort °there, and while our whole sojourn on earth in the mortal body may truly be said to be• in the valley of the shadow of death, all the journey is macre light by His presence, and if decith itself should touch US and take 1.4S out of the market]. body I -Te would not fail us, and we should find it but a step into 311,5 immediate presence, absent from the body, presert with. the Lord (Cone =lin 15; Matt. xxvirl, ,20; Ism. xxvii,, 3; II Cor. I, 3; v, 8). 'Mille the psalm refers primarily to Christ, its secondary reference is pro- bably. to Israel in millennial days, and yet each- believer' may find a portion. .9.11,the enemies of Christ stroll yet See how His Father will honor Him. He shall startle the nations, and kings shall be dumb be- fore J-Iira, and all nations shall see ami be glad to share the glory of Israel which ae will give unto - her (Isa. ilie 15; lx. 1-3, 1,2). Even now the believer has only to commit his cause to God, and in due time his enemies shall see that a supernatural power has cared for him and deliv- ered him. The Spirit will fill him and reveal Christ in him; and the overflow of blessing will reach and bless others .(Gen. xii, 2; Jere =sill, 4 AN OLD SCOTS LAW." Was Ohre of the First Fruits of th.e Ref ormati 021. An illustration of the dependence er modern law in Englislaspeaking countries on ancient law, ancl also an example of the quaint old legal phrasing, appears in a case reeently before an English court. The case hung on the question, 'amusing to a layman bitt very grave to the law- yers, whether with reference to a certain money right a man was "le- gally dead." - The Court of Session in Scotland had decided that the man was le- gally living, and the case was ap- pealed to a higher court in London. During the pregress of the case an old Spots law was cited. It was enacted in 1578, and was one 'of the, first fruits of the Reformation . in Scotland. This is the way the law begins in sixteenth century Scotch: • "It is fundit and declarit be our Souerane Lord, my Lord Regentis Grace, the three Estatis and haill (whole) bodie of this present Parlia- ment, that in all times bypast sen (since) the trew and Christian° re- ligioun was publictlie preicht, awe - wit, • and establischit within this realme, eamelle, sen the moneth of August the yeir of God ane thousand flue hudreth threscoir yeiris, it hes berm, is ad in all tyme cuming salbe lauchful (lawful), That quat- sumeser (whatsoever) persoun or persoonis joynit • in lauchful matri- monia; husband or wife, diuertis ("diverts" or departs) fre, otheris companie without ane ressonabill caus alledgit or deducit before ane judge,- and e reenainis in their mali- cious obstitaere for the space of four yeiris"—such obstinate person may be stied "befolrethe judge or - dinar for adherence." Truly a, strongawarnirig to marri- ed folk to "adhere" and n'ot to "die vert.'t USEFUL HINTS. When frying oysters add a little leaking powder to the cracker dust or cornmeal in tvhich they are soiled. It improves both texture and flavor. An eminent authority ou nerves re- commends for insomnia a cup of hot -milk,. to be taken after getting into bed. • A well known stateeman,- among others,, is said to have, taken tlos cure with complete success. Cranberries are said to be a pow- erful tonic. Eaten freely after ty- phoid fever, they clear the system and seine dyspeptics carry them in 'their pockets and eat them raw. Vaseline and cocoanut butter, mix- ed in equal' proportions, are recent - mended for stimulating the growth of the eyebrows. The preparation should be ,rubbed in carefully, but thoroughly, every night. Care is es- sential in doing arkything with the. eyebrows because the hairs are not as a role very ntimerous, and thck unnecessary Toss of one is a matter Of impertance; especially whee one is doing her best to eultivate them This ointment • is very Bee for softenieg ihe linger nails 1 One °tine° of petrolatune, siety graies Of pow- dered white castile soap,. five drops of oil of bergamot.. It, shoul4 be ape 1)1Aicdeottiteeteniegallit.• batli is helpful both for hands and 'cortepleXion, when they get rough and harsh looking, Wash first in warm, sda,py water, made with an olive 011 pomp, 'then dry with a soft towel and •rub in cornmeal. Let it remain on all eight, wearing gloves on the hands, 111 °tater to keep the meal from rub- bing oft, A few be.ths of this sort will generally whiten and soften the Akin appreciably., ALP C).11.01,J.C..........P.P.i.N..Htca Several European and American governments have made cotnparative tests of alcoholic anti non:alcoholic beverages, for soldiers on forced march, These tests have invariably =Suited in the withdrawal of alcoholic drinks during all strenuous work, chocolate and other sweet beverages being given instead, The result of these scientific re- searches is applicable to the army of feeble and overworked people seek- ing strength. Liquid medicines are necessarily alcoholic; they merely stimulate and their effect is only ° tem.porary, Weak people should take ST. TAMES *WAVERS, Which are a recon- structive and a tissue builder; their effects are lasting, and a permanent improvement will always follow their steady use. S. j'AeOS WArnis help stomach, digest food and send 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 accom- plishes much. „Nit, orc 4 cuRE FiC,Poicrtemtvi „EAtiogt., eheEY eNeteeteiGIONAL MOMS we -1h', es'e-eae --eriCIITTAI:lidittjetaral°11 411Drucl4isf5--ettreicilcA ittLy.---.41°aPR Qs tiontli.ca,14 • gglf consider St.3'atneel Wnfers a most ereelleut preparation for the nerves and tettalltecommetail them generally.* Dr. Thos. Brooke, braneltester, Bag. 54Jan:es Wafers are not a secret remedy The n unterous dot tors re- commending. Mem to their patients we mail the formula upon request. W iere eaten:ins e not selling the Wafers, they ar.,: mailed unon re- ceipt of price at the Canadian Price in Canada: $ .O1'; branch St. Jamas Wafers Co.. 1728 St. 4therine $t., Montreal. SIX bottles for$5.00 4 ghee e fp ese) ata o Oieee TT:1 ROME Recipes for the Kitchen, * • Hygiene arid Other !Notes ; ' for the Housekeeper. a 0 ea dishiNteetNeteetesereesfeenehoeeeMOSea WAYS . OP COOKING- EGG S. It may sound somewhat old to speak of the "seasoo" of eggs, since they are it evidence all tee year round, but assuredly they leave their season in common with all ether animal and vegetable products.' When eggs are cheapest and most plentiful,. they are also most, whole- some. A housewife is wise to seek for as many ways of tieing them as she possibly can. '• Most people take an egg. for breakfast, hut a new way of poaching one for an invalid's tray is to butter the inside of a cup, separate the white from the yolk of a new laid egg, whisk tife former to a stiff froth and put this into a cup, making a cavity in the middle where- in to slip carefully the yolk. Squeeze a drop or two of lemon juice on the top, then sea the cup in .& small saucepan, of boiling water, and let it poach thus until the white is set firm. In the cooking the froth will rise so as nearly to fill the cup and atiamonoceu.t the egg sprinhle a Pinch. 131 chopped parsley on the top; serve t Another equally delicate mode of making a sweet dish for dessert is 16 poach the whipped whites in • sweetened milk by droppiug small spoonfuls in when it is near the boil- ing point. When all the whites have been poached and lifted 'Mit, the beaten yolks are added to the milk and stirred over the fire until a thickened custard is obtained; this can be flavored according to taste. Pour the esestard into a compote dish and set the poached whites on the tOp. Boil till hard three or four eggs; throw inernediately into cold water to prevent, discoloration, then strip off tied shells. Divide the eggs in halves, and cut oft the points so. that they will stand firmly on a dish; remove the yolks from each half, and to them add a spoonful of white breadcrumbs soaked in milk, the same amount of soft butter, sonie chives and sweet herbs minced, also salt and pepper, or, instead of pepper, a few drops of tobacco or tomato chutney will be an improve- ment. Mix these ingredients and then refill the eggs. Butter a fire- proof china dish, sprinkle the • bot- tom with fine herbs and crtunbs, set the eggs thereupon and heat in a quick oven for just five minutes. A puree is cooked separately by stewing well washed and picked sor- rel in a little butter until it is so reduced that it can be beaten with a spoon, Season this with salt and pepper, and beat in a couple of spoonfuls of thick cream,. The eggs are in the Ineanthne baked in but- tered cups, and when Just set, they are turned out o11 the puree„. sprinkling of finely minced fresh opion on the top lor each. This dish, should also be servetl hot as soon as cooked. 11 goes without saying that eggs baked in this way might be served On any other kind of puree, or surrounded with stesved fresh peas or a savory bro\vre sauce might be substituted for the vegetable. " Anothea 'favorite dish of baked eggs is also easily prepared. But- ter• the bottone of a shallew °lacuna - ed dish or a pie dish; sprinkle in a few breadek.umbs; break into thie as many eggs as the dish will reason- ably haler without their running in- to nee 'another, cover these thickly with grated cheese, a eprinkling of salt and pepper, ycier in the greater part of a small jugful of Cream and add Otie'or two bits of scat • hutter. Set this dish in a moderate oven to brown the surface elightly ad cook the eggs; then serve his once, TESTED' ISH011'ES, einiassee Coke.—'Bat One egg light add one-half cup of browe, en-, gar and 'coatinue beatingi add Mee lief cup of Shbftenang softened in one-half eup. of hot water ,(Using half lard and half butter), then add one of molasses, ote teaspoon of soda, one teaspoon of ginger, one teaspoon of salt, one tablespoon of lemon one-balf teaspoon of grated nutmeg and -about five cups of flour or enougn to drop' it from the spoon In small CAROS, -S01210 distance a. past,. on a greased pan. Bake quickly. Bice and Blackberry Cream. --Pick over and wash one cup of rim; cook in three pints of boiling water until it is very soft and the water all all. sorbed. Stir into it one teaspoon of salt, one cup of sugar and the juice anti a little of the grated rind of one lemon. When the sugar is dis- solved fold . in one-half of cream whipped stiff and one cup of stewed ancl -sifted blackberries. • Put into moulds and when cold turn, out and garnish with some of the largest of the berries. Date or Prune Ples.—A. delicious pie canbe made from dates or prunes To make a date pie -remove the stones from a laege cupful of dates and stew in a little water until soft enough to beat to a pulp. There should be n cup and a half of pulp. Add a beaten. egg, and a half cup of milk and a dust of cinnamon or mix- ed spice and bake with an under - crust only. If prunes are used they must be stewed soft before attempt- ing to remove the stones, then pro- ceed lathe same way. Cereals, as a rule, make a. good breakfastdish. tho Medical- Journal sayer but it *warns people against plating any belief whatever in the contention that they are in any special way brain foods. Good die ,gestion, says this. Journal, such di- gestion as the ordinary man posses- ses, is quite equal to the task of providing the system with' all the nutritive elements that any portion of it may require from the miscel- laneous diet that most of us sub- sist on, e The idea that. a perfectly healthy person fnay be made heal- thier by n particular diet seems to have taken a strong hold -upon many members of the community, but med- ical men recogoize the absurdity of atd omit no occasion. to combat it, though it must bel admitted that ie is hardly likely to do harm. Not only are the cereals not brain foods, Ole the technical sense, but there le reason to suppose that some of the highly landed and widely advertised preparations are actually harmful in 'their action, 4 LQNG COURTSHIPS. ' Bohemia is the country of long courtships. La no other part of the world arc they so abnormally drawn out. Engagements quite commonly last from fifteen to twenty years. An old man died recently at the age of ninety-nite who had been eourting for seventy-five years. LBUILN'S Are a combination of the active principle% Of the most valuable vegetable remedies for die. eases and diserders Of the Liver, eternaelt and Bowels. Siete Headache, Jaundice,ek 1e intheatoinach*Elibizi- newt, Bit:41311es 344 • 1703retpellsin, SOUP Stbrnatela, latztor, Wash, X*Vaieti CoMpittItito hlow 01 conioget10/3. Sweetert the breath and tfiear away 1 allpre'rc.°A,n6bapilalir.., 60r8A:tokoglori, WAS * 'MAU let 141,9**