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Exeter Times, 1903-11-19, Page 78 CUE cenuino a01 r s m Little Liver Pensee Must Dear Signature of Seo Pas-Sleeto Wrapper Below. Vi r•r eaa:4l and ac easy to trice 169 sager. FOR SF.ADACti"lo FOR DLEIINESSi FOR eluou NEtt., FOR TORPID LIVER. FDR Gi fNSTIPATtpli. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR TI3ECOMPLEXION CARTERS LE Lam. 4612.3141.7,1!1ATI su.r rUva fa nAwne. -- 17, I Parsee wegats ee; eg s..oi .�.bd. --*--aineseessetretreseereen CURk SICK HEADACHE. vo Wood's Norway Ping Syrup Cures Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis.. lirHoarseness, Croup, Asthma, i Pain or Tightness In the Chest, Eto. Tt stops that tickling in the throat, iA $zrleaaant to take and soothing and heal tag to the lungs. 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 wanted to Dough 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 speedy relief. I would riot be without it if it cost $L00 a bot- tle, and I can recommend it to everyone eeothereu d with a cough or cold. •-11111----- de Price 26 Geeta. • Troubled with Kidney Trouble for Six Months. - )'Lally Mon and Women Are Troubled With Kidney Trouble, Some For Less Time, Some For Longer—No Need To lee Troubled For Any Length Of Time, If They Only Knew Of The Cures Being Made By �+ DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS. $ackache Is The First Sign Of Kidney. Trouble—Then Colne Complications Of A More Serious Nature. f OA 1'S KIDNEY PILLS TAKEN . THE FIRST SIGN OP BACKACHE WILL SAVE YOU YEARS 13F MISERY. Mrs. William H. Banks, Torbrook Mines, N.S., tells the 'pub - Kiabout the great qualities of Doan's dney Pills in the following words:—I was troubled with kidney trouble for six months, and had such terrible pains across my Icidneys all the time that I could hardly get around. After taking .sine box of Doan's Kidney Pills I began to feel better, and by the time I had taken three boxes I was completely cured. Price 50e. per box, or 3 boxes for $1.25; trill dealers or The Doan Kidney Pill Co.* Toronto, Ont. Deranged Nerves A fI B y , Weak Spans. Mr. &1.6.1. Sampson's,Sydney, N.S.p Advice to all Sufferers from Nerve Trouble is "GET A BOX OF HEART AND NERVE PILLS." He says: "I have been ailing for about a year from deranged nerves, and very Often weak spells would come over me and • be so bad that I sometimes thought 1 would be unable to survive them. l have Iiii- been treated by doctors and have taken Aumerous preparations but none of them helpped me ut the least, I finally got a box 'ref Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. Before taking them I did not feel able to do any work, but now 1 can work as well as ever, Planks to ono box of your .pills. They me,and iny man of have mad new ski d 1 y d "troubled ed as 1 was,is vice to anperson o !advice to+et f 'lburn's Heart and Nerve A a box o Mz Pills." Price so cts. per box, or 3 for $1.25, all Sealers, or ME T. MILBU13N CO. Limited e 0 t,,,;:;,,... !OrL I4TO, O. CONSOLATION OF1,t • The Encouragement It Affords in the Distressing Lot of Widowhood ((Entered according to Act of the Par• llament of Canada, in the year Que Thousand Nino hundred and Three, by Wm. Daily, of Toronto, at the iu epartment of Agriculture, Ottawa.ls A despatch from Chicago says: Rev. Frank De Witt Talmage proaell- ed from the following text: Luke. vii., 12, "And she was a widow." The rich widow! Who ever hoard of such a title for a sermon on this text? Better call ' her "the poor widow," "the friendless widow," "the hopeless widow," "the dying widow"—anything but "the rich widow." This •funeral procession winding its way out of the Syrian city is one of the most pathetic spectacles of the gospel history. flow much heartbreak is contained in those three phrases, "A dead man, the only son of his mother, and she was a widow!" And now a, wife without her husband and a mother With only a child body for her son is slowly wending her way to the cemetery. She was a wife and a mother only of the grave. "The rich. widow?" Nonsense! Change the title, Call it "the poor widow of Starvation peak." A FITTING TITLE. No, my brother, I want to keep the title I have chosen. I want to show how even a woman so desolate as tho one in the text may .flrid con- solation in life and in the perform- ance of her duty and in the sympa- thy of humanity, and, more than all, in the resources Of divine pow- er her life may become rich for her- self and for others. I have seen too many adjectives hitched to this he- roic and conquering nominative. I believe thousands and tens of thou- sands of mothers who have been be- reft of the companion who once stood with them at the marriage a1 - tar have attained true and abiding wealth. They have been rich in all that makes life truly happy, great and good; rich in their opportuni- ties to do a double service in life. To their children they have become father as well as mother; rich in i their inspiring examples of duties well done; rich in the faith with which their trials led theta to test the goodness and greatness of God; rich in the heights and depths and lengths and breadths of their love, and, above all, rich in eternal as well as temporal rewards. It is in order to gather a few "bluebells" from oft the graves of the dead hus- lbands and fathers that I preach this sermon. I would ring these floral trophies in a great paean of praise that the widows, the numberless widows of the present day, who are facing their strength and go on win- ning victory after victory for them- selves, their little oncs;•,dnd for Christ. MATERNAL OPPORTUNITIES. Oh, tho paternal as well as the ma- ternal opportunities which are offer- od to the consecrated Christian wi- dowhood of tho present century! Some time ago a beautiful faced lady was going through one of the great department stores in Cetera - bus, O. She saw there a largo -eyed, wistful -looking cash boy, who was watching her and her son. "My child," said she, "would you like to go home and be my little boy? There you can have money and play- things and horses and carriages- to make your life happy, as my little boy's lite is happy?" "I do not know, murex, whether I would like • those things or not," he answered. • "Elas your little boy a papa? If I go with you, will his papa be my papa? I' want a papa. Because, mum, before my papa died I had all those things, and now that my papa is dead I have nothing." Ah, yes, there was pathos, unfathomable pa- thos, in the answer of the little cash boy. But that answer is not true in reference to all fatherless children. When their fathers died -they did not all lose everything. Their mothers not only remained their mothers, but they became their fathers also. O woman who art a widow, I sym- pathize with you in your sorrow and your hard lot, but let nee congratu- late you, too, on the opportunity God has placed within your reach of honorably and heroically performing a double duty. In a paternal as well as in a. maternal sense you are accomplishing much for the tempor- al and the eternal lives of your chil- dren. THE WORLD IS KIND. It is amazing how many kindness- es there are in this world if only one stops to catalogue them. You can see those kindnesses manifested everywhere. A few years ago a man was caught in the crowd that surg- ed into the cars of the Brooklyn bridge. Ile was jammed this way and that. His hat was battered and crushed. The more he vehemently denounced the people as savages the more he was hustled and pushed along. When he was at last seated and was still complaining a gentle- men next to hien turned and said: "My friend, I ate afraid that you have got into the condition of only looking upon the bad side of human nature. Now, I have schooled• my- self to look upon the good side, and to help ins in my task of looking upon the bright side every clay. . I carry a notebook and jot down ev- ery good thing I see people do to other people. For instance, to -day on my way to the bridge my hat blow off. I chased i.t, but before I could get it three other men whom I had never sten before 'ran after that hat. One of them caught it and brought it back to zee. Now, that action was certainly unselfish on hispart, and yet you can see the some. unselfish act performed Oh any windy day.'' TIES WIT)OTr'S RICHES. The sermon which tho Christian. gentleman preaohed in the cable car of the Brooklyn bridge is certainly true. lOverywhcre one can see many kindnesses manifested toward those who aro in distress, if those people in distress aro worthy of human kindness, And so, widow, though you may have had your bumps and knocks, as that indignant passenger had who was trying to get into the train, though you may have had injustices practised upon you—for thieves and murderers from time im- memorial have always felt that Wi- dows and orphans were their legiti- mate prey --you have also had many kindnesses shown you and yours. In old English folklore there was sup- posed to be in Alderley Fidge a great cavern. And in this cavern was concealed, said the legend. nine hundred and ninety and nine horse- men, equipped and ready to come forth and fight for any leader who would blow for them the right bugle call. No sooner did your hus- band die and the cemetery bell had tolled the knell when his body was carried to its last resting plata than that bell seemed to call forth hun- dreds of helpers to your side from recesses as dark as the caverns of Alderley 'Edge. Every true and faithful widow always gathers around her true and faithful friends. Tho consecrated widow is Nell in the heights and depths and intensi- ties of the love she. bears toward those who aro dependent upon her. It is one of the inevitable laws of this world that we generally value an article just in proportion to what it is worth to us. If it costs nothing, we care for it but little. If it costs much, we value it much. 1 enter your home. You show me the results of your travels. You say: "This is a rug I bought in Damas- cus. Here is a beautiful piece of ivory I found in India. More is a boomerang of Australia. Yonder is a trinket 1 picked up in Pompeii. But this picture is any treasure. It was painted by a Spanish master and was placed upon the walls of a Mexican cathedral. Ono night that picture was cut out of its frame and carried away. That picture must be worth at least $20,000. I myself paid $10,000 for it. Yes, I value that picture above all my other pos- sessions. It cost mo so much mon- ey." Iwas the only son of his smother, and. Ano`I1;EAVI1~"L• Y+ Itl.nrAT3DS, SELF SACRIFICE. But though the value of some ar- ticles ratty be judged by the criterion of silver and gold others are some- times judged by the higher standard of flesh and blood. If in order to save your child, who had been grip- ped with the poisonous bite of a dangerous serpent, you had placed your mouth against the bleeding lips of the wound and sucked that poison into your own system, would you not love that child more for whom you were willing to imperil your life than if you had given to her a mere offering of silver and gold ? Yes, yes ! Of course you would. The law is universal. Tile greater the sacri- fice we make for our loved ones the greater becomes our love for them. This premise is granted. .Where, then, can you find richer, deeper, truer sacrifices and therefore richer love than that exhibited by a wid- owed mother toward hoe helpless children ? Tenderly as you and. I love our children, does our love glow with such fervent heat as does that of the widowed mother who has toil- ed and contrived and denied herself for %heir welfare ? In order to raise then she has to pay for their education and food, with the price of blood. Does not that y ouug girl's graduation day address nzcan more to her mother, who perhaps lead to scrub for It as well as sew together the white dress in which it was delivered ? So, 0 widow, by your very sacrifices I see with what intensity you love your children be- cause of the self denial and the toil you have given thein. By the very sacrifices which you have made for their physical, intellectual and spiri- tual development I congratulate you upon the heights and depths and in- tensities of your maternal affections. It is one joy to plant a garden with- in a stone wall inclosure for •your own eyes to see. It is a greater and a holier happiness to plant a flower garden that others may enjoy also. CERTAINTY OF GOD'S PROMISES The consecrated widow is rich be- cause she has been able by personal. experience to prove the certainty and faithfulness of God's promises. A lifeboat is sometimes used as a pleas- ure craft along the shores of Mas- sachusetts and Long Island. You can see the fishermen take and rig in it a small sail end go spinning over the waters, while they laugh and joke as they draw • in the blue- fish or the shad. So people some- times:Use the gospel life -boat merely for• a ploastti•c craft. When the sky is clear and the sea smooth they set sail for a frolic. But. oh, nay friends, the lifeboat •is a far different craft thea on a stormy night the life saving men launch it into the Surf to light their way out to the ship aground in the offing, where it. is being shattered to pieces by the ceaseless bombardments of the mighty seas. And the promises of God, .out of which the gospel lifeboat is made, mean for more to a widow- ed mariner sailing the seas of life alone than they do to the young daughter who has• always been shield- ed from every storm. • And yet, znother,I would ask you• a pertinent question, which I know you will an- swer well, Though you may • have buried your husband marry years ago, was there ever a time when if you trusted in God his love and protect tion and caro • failed you ? Was there ever a time when (Christ .was not willing to stand by the cradle of your living Child, as in olden times he once stood by the bier of ono who But though in a, divine st:li~ftf the consecrated widow is rich, yet she shall bo far richer in the next world. Woman, whom have you loved of all human beings the best on earth ? "Well" you say, "that is a ' hard question to answer. I loved my mother and hither le one way and ray, children in another way and my sistersand brothers in another way. But, taking it all in all, I loved my husband boat, truly best. We were one in thought, one in life and one in everything. My one ambition in life was to please hive." Yes, I think ,your answer is correct. The relations between a husband and a wife are so close that you were one, and your one desire was to live for hint and to please hila. ' Now, my sister, bereft of her husband, when you reach heaven rand meet the long separated father of your babies, do you not feel ho will be pleased to know how you have worked and slated for flesh and blood ? When you reach heaven, will you not be rich in the knowledge that he appre- ciates all you have done far your children and his ? When one of nay aunts—a widow—was dying, she looked up at those gathered about her bedside and said, "Now, I hope your father, Steven, will bo satisfied with what I have done for his child- ren." Yes, yes, woman, your hus- band will , truly ' be satisfied. You have done your task well. It has been a hard journey to travel alone, but at the end of the journey you will be rich in his blessing as well as that of your Saviour, the dear Christ. Thus, widows of Nain and widows of Europe and America and widows wherever you may be, I call you rich.• Go ahead bravely and truly, fighting the battles that are before you. Christ shall be your protector in this world. Your rewards for duties well done await you in the next. The truest way for you to be true to your dead husband is for you to be true and noble tasks God has given to you to do here. Remember that Christ knows all pout a wid- ow's troubles. l: Io sympathized with the sorrowing widow of Nain. In his great heart there is sympathy for all who struggle and suffer, and the dtt ine help and consolation aro nev- er more generously bestowed than upon those who bear that heaviest of human bereavement—widowhood. This love and all blessings it brings will make you rich indeed. ---Y THE S. S. LESSON, INTERNATIONAL LESSON, NOV. 22. Text of the Lesson, Prov. xx., xxiii., 20-21. Golden Text, Prov. xx., 1. Inasmuch asp drunkards .are among those who cannot inherit the king- dom. of God, we cannot bo too ear- nest in our efforts to present the Lord Jesus Christ to there as the Ono who loves even them and is able and ready to save them and the only One Who can do it, but we must not forget that thieves, the covetous revilers, extortioners and all unbelievers are listed with drunk- ards and murderers as all on their way to the lake which burneth with Bre and brimstone, which is the sec- ond death (i, Cor. vi., 9, 10; I.ov. xxi., 8), but since some such sinners have been washed, sanctified and jus- tified in the name of the Lord Jesus (1 Cor. vi., 11) others xray, and it. is for those who know the gospel to give it quickly and earnestly to all who have not yet received it. As I write these notes (April 22, 1908), I have before nxc S. H. Had- ley's invitation to attend his twen- ty-first anniversary at the old Mc- Auley mission, 316 Water street, New York, in which he says: "I have proved beyond a doubt that the Lord Jesus Christ, and. Me alone, can by His own almighty power, without the aid of drugs or nostrums of any kind, in a moment and for- ever kill and cast out from the brain, tete blood, the stomach, and, above all else, the imagination, the hell -horn appetite for whisky or al- cohol in any shape whatsoever, and by faith in His atoning blood a soul can be kept free as a little child from its dreadful power." The devil is the great deceiver, mocker, de- stroyer, ever going about as a roar- ing lion seeking whom he may de- vour (.1 Pet. v., 8), but the Lamb of Clod is able to save to the uttermost all who come unto God by Him (Heb. vii., 26). Our golden •text (xx., 1) and xxiii., 20, 21 are simple, clear, strong statements and words of warning which seem to need no comment. The facts are before our eyes always and everywhere, both in the daily • papers and in actual • life. The fools are without number who seem deliber- ately to choose the poverty and rags, the woe and sorrow and con- tention for the sake of a passing gratification of their carnal appetite. Sante of the sad stories of drunken- ness recorded in Scripture are to be found in Gen. ix., 20-25; I. Sam. xxv., 36. 88; IT. Sam. xi., 13; I. Iiing•s xvi., 8-10, proving that every mean at his best estate is altogether vanity (Ps. xxxix., 5),• which doubt- less means apart from the grace of God. .Mee also Ise. v., 11, 12. 22; ITitb. ii., 15, concerning the roes of the drunkard. The only remedy and deliverance is to 'be found in Elim who for our sakes became a Man of Sorrows and acgxtainted .with grief, was made sin for us and bore our sins in His own body of the cross, took our place under wrath that we might take T'Tis place in glory. IIis love is better than wine S. of SI. 1, 2, 4), n nd when we have known and believed the , Love that he hath -to us Ho takes up His abode in us,� Then all is well (T, John iv., 16), lien instead o. , beholding vecit;y, whether in the form of strange women or in are, other form, we behold flim and beholding the glory of the Lord,. are changed into Ms imago, from glory to glory, by the spirit of t t • o t (II Ocr o 'c. sperately wiched is the heart of zzzan by nature that it refuses to re- ceivecorrection, t b tt gives Itself up to its own way regardless of the fact that there is always but a step be- tween us and .death and heedless of the warning "Ide that being often reproved hardoneth, Itis neck shall suddenly be destroyed, and that with- out reinedy" (Jer, xvii, 9; v, 3; Ica. 12; I Sant, xx, 3; Prov. xzl , 1). But there is an end, an "at the last" when "he that sowetli to the flesh shall of the flesh reap corrup- tion" as truly as "he that sow- eth to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting" (Gal. vi, 8). How foolish indeed are those who re- fuse to consider the inevitable reali- ties of the future and give themselves up to a present, transient enjoyment, Hite Eeau, who for a mess of pottage despised his birthright, or like those who say, "Let us eat and drink, for to -morrow we die !" (Ireb. xii, 16, 17; I Cor. xv, 32.) They are worse than foolish; they are blinded by the god of this world, or it may be that, having refused the truth, they are given over to believe a lie (II Cor. iv, 4; II Thoss. 11, 10-12). There may come a time when Prov, ?Fl- 1 l h experience 1, 3 shall be the o pet onto of many, when because they, would not listen to God they shall call, but Ho will not answer, and finally they shall have to hoar Him say, "Depart from Me, ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels !" (Matt. xxv. 41.) The God in whose hand our breath is and whose are all our ways (Dan. v, 23) is very gracious. He is slow to an- ger and nee willing that any should perish (II Pot. iii, 9), and inasmuch as life in these mortal bodies is so uncertain, how blinded the sinner must be to coutiuue in sin when God 1s beseeching Mm to receive freely the redemption provided in Christ Jesus ! (Iia. i, 18; Rom. iii, 24.) The heart is the .great center from which good or evil proceeds (Matt. xv, 19); hence to live out verses 17 and 19 of our lesson chapter we must first obey verso 26. Although Ezek. xxxtd., 26, 27, has a reference to Israel and a future fulfillment at their restoration, we may apply much of it to ourselves, and where there is the new heart, the peace of God ruling, tho spirit of God control- ling, all will be well and God glori- fied when Christ takes possession. DI MERRY OLD ENaLA D NEWS BY MAIL ABOUT SOHN BULL AND HIS PEOPLE., Occurrences in the Land That Reigns Supreme in the Com- mercial World. A London firm is selling a tenth of a grain of radium for £6. Birmingham licensing magistrates have refused to renew the permits of 'several grocers and chemists. Silk hat manufacturers sued over 40 persons belonging to the west end of London at Westminster County Court in one day. Ann Wells, who has died at Roch- ester at the age of 90, was at one time servant to the Duchess of Kent, mother of the late Queen Vic- toria. The King has decided that his co- ronation robes and the magnificent ! train worn by Queen Alexandria shall be placed in the Tower of London. For stealing an apple, the value of which is estimated at one penny, a laborer named Win. Daniels was at illofield fined -5s. and 148. costs. A Thames trench has been caught at Windsor- by a local angler. The species is very rare, and it is said only three have been caught during the last 20 years. During the examination of a deb- tor at the London Bankruptcy Court it was stated that he had lost £400 by betting since August .last, winning nine times and losing 103 times. • Mr. Jesse Collings stater that the gauges for making the • new service rile will be ready by the end of No- vember, when its manufacture will begin at the Itlnfreld and Birming- ham factories. Mr. Alfred Lyttleton, Secretary of State for Vie Colonies, has promised to preside at a dinner to be given on December 1st by Anglo-Austraii- ans, to Lord Northcote, Governor- General -elect of Australia. The following ambiguous advert tiseurent appears in an English weekly paper:— Rev. John I3. Bar- raclough wants a place as Under - Nursemaid for a respectable girl, aged 14, just leaving school." Mrs. $. Lewis has given to the Royal Berkshire Regiment, in mem- ory of her late husband, a sunt of £8,000 for the site, erection, and endowment of three cottage homes for..disabled men of the regiment, with their families. • The proposed Orchid League is never likely to be a popular body. "Orchids are blooming now," said a Covent Garden florist the- other. clay, "hut 1 question whether you could lay out £20 in orchids in London to -day if you wished to." At Dover the custoles officials seized a valuable clachshound be- longing to the Duchess of Took, Which had neon brought across the channel - by the Idon. 1:'. Curzon. Under the Importation (Dogs) Or- der, • the animal will be kept for some weeks i0 quarantine. At a meeting in • Newcastle -en - Tyne ii: was decided to raise a fund of £100,000- fox' church extension, Subscriptions - • amontting i.o about •1:25,000 have boon promised, incittd- leg an anonym -mu; donation of .1115,- 000, the Duke of Northembct•,and .•5,000, a thottscnd guineas by the 'Bishop of Newcastle; anti a similar sunt by Lord Armstrong. When the worst eotnes to the, worst it is uptito us to nta,ke the best of tt, EFWOUS 'nen sea air is ordered to a nervous person, she usually' rtishes down to the seashore, spends all her time on the beach, frets more or less over the .expense, and returns after two or three weep to make up by extra work for the brief holiday. The result is an exp aggeration of nervous troubles. The> time given to the cure was too short, . ,'�Y:���t3i' .4� see s_ STV SERE) rftyo CI'RE WNCTlanA( N'�'t,'4irNRfCtfi irELO49b.5IR:,-, ?HE CONSTITUTION'�:i...41, 7 U i/ Mpndon,f,ry YeatC to bio dos �. T1?RITAlN�j' A<tLRIGt+ ` all Druggists & hemi ,. R �a,"x Price in Canada : $1.00; Six bottles for $5.00 S. JAI11Es WAr',InS are as goon for the nerves as the sea breeeze ; brit in case of nervous weakness, like the sea breeze, they require time. Sr. TAMES WAVERS are a tisane builder and a reconstructive, not is stimulant. Quick temporary results' are not to be expected ► but perma- nent improvetneut will follow their patient use. ST, JAMES WAVERS 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. "Frgtn persotea1 experience II am able to appreciate the, great Value or the tit. fames Wafers," Dr, Charles D. Camp, Dublin, xreland. St. James Wafers are net a secret remedy :lo the rumerourdocl ors t e - commending them to their patients we mail the formula upon request. Where dealers are not sell; ngthe Wafers, they are wailed upon re- ceipt of price at the Canadian branch; St. Jame Wafers Co., 1721 St. Catharine St., Montreal. eeeii0St655te®Qieaneeetitiede eeeatt ei FOR SHE l 4 0 0 0 Recipes for the Kitchen. Hygiene and Other Notes 0 for tho Housekeeper., to fa easzposseaoseeepopocie APPLES MADE THE MOST OF. The apple is an invaluable re- source for the cook who knows how to .use it. When properly prepared. if may be made attractive to every palate. Here are a number of ex- cellent recipes for cooking apples: Iced Apple Pudding—Beat together the yolks of 2 eggs, t lb. sugar and the juice of 1 lemon until well mix- ed. Add the whites of the eggs and boat again for five minutes over a hot stove. Continuo beating while you sift In s Ib. flour. Cover a baking pan with a sheet of butter- ed uttered. paper and pour the paste over it; spread out half an inch thick, bake for 15 minutes and when cold cut into dice -shaped pieces. Mix the pieces with 8 grated apples, butter and sugar 7 small pudding molds, fill them equally with the cake and grated apple, then pour over them very gently a custard composed of 2 eggs, 1 pt. milk, a few drops of essence of lemon and a little sugar. Place the molds in a flat pan con- taining boiling water and put them into a hot oven for 30 minutes ' to steam. Allow them to get quite cold before placing them in the ice box, Run a sharp knife around each mold when turning them out. The same should consist of 1 pt. well whipped cream, flavored with 1. gal. brandy and left for a few moments in the ice box. Apple Fritters—Pare and core 4 medium sized sound apples. Cut them into round slices, sprinkle' with su- gar and and pour over them a gill of Burgundy. Leave them in the wine while you prepare the batt;ei'. Put into an enameled saucepan 1 oz. fresh butter and e pt. lukewarm Water. When the water es on the point of boiling, removethe butter with as much or as little. of the hot water as you requite to make t it,. flour into a thick batter. Add to this a pinch of salt and the beat- en whites of 2 eggs. In the middle of each apple slice put a saltspoon- ful of raspberry jam. Then dip the slice of apple into tate batter and fry immediately. Drain well and sprinkle with powdered sugar. Ap- ples. may also be sliced, soaked • in wino, covered with flour and fried in plenty of butter. Pudding—Boil 2 oz. butter in e, pt. milk. Take it from the fire and drop in a Ib. flour. Beat briskly until the mixture is entirely free from lumps, add yolks of 8 eggs. 3 oz. powdered sugar and 1 gill cold unilk. Beat the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth and add them gra- dually. Butter a mold and put in a layer of the batter, then 2 oze of stewed apples. Continue with the apples and the batter tatil the mold is full, taking care that the batter is et the top. Steam for an hour and a half. Servo with a sauce made with 1 pt. cold water, elb. brown sugar, 1 oz. of corn flour, boiled together for three minutes, and 1 gill brandy added at. the last. The sauce may also be made by bolt- ing the parings and cores of the ap- ples in water, and straining off tho juice, to whish the cern flour, sugar and brandy .are added. Apple Porcupine --Pare and core 10 large apples, and place on the stove to simmer in 1; pts. cold water, ma.do into a syrup with 1 cup sugar•. When they aro cooked through, re- move them whole from the syrup and put into it 6 apples which have been steamed and mashed. Add the juice and r r1 1. and ate rind of a omen d g simmer until a smooth Marmalade d6 is formed. When the apples are quite cool, heap them in a mound, plac- ing a little apple jelly between each layer, and stick blanched and halved almonds firmly all over it. rill up tete spacee with apple marmalade. Beat the whites of 4 eggs to a stiff froth and add 1 teacup vanilla flav- ored icing sugar. Cover the apples lightly with the icing. Cream Ice:—Steam 2 lbs. apples un- til quite soft, then press' through a sieve with ; lb. sugar or leas, ac- cording as the variety of apple is sweet or sharp. 'Stir in yolks of 4 eggs, heating until the mixture is stiff, then add the beaten whites of the eggs and 4, teaspoons brandy. Freeze until stiff. If too much sue gar is. added, the mixture will not freeze readily. Apple Ginger—Make a syrup with 4a, s. sugar and 4 cups water. Chop an equal quantity of apples into cubt. s the size of dice, and when the syrup is boiling fast, drop them in, with the grated rind of 2 lemons and 2 ozs. white or green ginger root. Boil until the apples are clear, but not broken. Apple Soup—The Germans make an excellent soup with apples. Eight or 10 apples are pared, cored and boiled for an hour in 3 pts. wale.:, with a slice of bread, a stick of cin- namon and the peel of a lemon. The soup is then rubbed through a sieve and three gl•essos of white wine ad- ded. It may be sweetened if neces- sary. USEFUL HINTS. A druggist says that to remove a glass stopper from a bottle tip it to side and hold a lighted match under. the neck of the bottle till the bottle, but not the stopper, is hot. This expands the bottle so that the stop- per may be removed. Or give the stopper a sharp tap with a knife. holding the finger on the opposite side to modify the jar. "The proper way to dry woolens," says a large manufacturer of wool- en goods, "is to hang the garments on the lino dripping wet without wringing out at all. If dried in this way the shrinkage will be so slight as to be almost unnoticeable." Camphor, as is well known, is use- ful in keeping away, moths, but it should never be placed near sealskin, as it Causes the fur to change color, producing streaks of gray ancl yel- low. ITam soaked in milk over night will be found exceedingly tender and sweet when used for breakfast the next morning. If the water is blued when clean- ing windows, they will retain their Brilliancy longer and polish much more quiclal_r. A nice method of filling a rose jar is to dry rose leaves, lay in salt with spices` such as cloves, cinnamon and cassia, and turn over the filled sand .10 0020103 oalot;o onuos eve alcohol. The spices may be left out. . and other sweet-smelling flowers sub- stituted. Eating scam Dread, IDOW MANY PEOPLE ARE ALMO` AFRAID TO SIT DOWN TO - THEIR MEALS ? YOU nY RE ONE OF THEM.' IF YOU ARE, THERE IS A CURE FOR YOU. BURDOCK BLOOE BITTERS CURES INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA:i BILIOUSNESS, SOUR, "WEAK AND , ALL STOMACH TROUBLES. "r NIT. J. G. Clunis, Barney's River,. N.S., tells of what this wonderful rem- edy has done for lnitnt•—It is 'with grati- tude that I can testify to the wonderful curative powers of B.B.B. I was so badly troubled with indigestion that whatever I ate caused me so much torture that eating became a dread to ane. I tried numerous physicians, but their medicines seemed to matte me worse. I thought would try B.B,)3., so got a bottle, and after taking a few doses felt a lot better, By the. time I had taken the last of two bottles I tints as well as ever, and have had no return of the trouble since. lF recommend your medicine to the highest d Teo, B.B.B. iN for sakk at all dealers,- .