_.. .Awu 1 gt 5. sf‘xY, ’. has Hamill chem SAYS “YCdgwï¬ asamm (bklï¬%kï¬ &%%dén (wwwe. [ï¬gwn LDwMg. I%4wwa Am! Found ï¬aï¬hï¬@%l .ï¬kflac I1%mï¬ï¬‚y iflammwwmi 1%4wwm†MISS CELIA HARRINGTON. ISS CELIA HARRINGTON, 303 “I began taking Peruna and found Second Ave, Detroit, Mich, writes: “Weakness has filled many months of my life with suffering. 1 “Through carelessness I caught a severe cold two ycans ago which set- tled in calarrh and seriously interfered body and made me nervous and irritable. V‘ with the regular functions of the i my blood and invigorated the whole system. "I have no pains now, and am always. well. “I heartily recommend Peruna as a reliable medicine.†Health and Strength Restored. Mrs. A..E. Stouffer, Capioma, Kansas, -g writes: “Peruna has given me health and gstrenglh; it is the best medicine that lwas ever made for women. My friends say they never saw such a change in a woman. I talk to every one about Peruna. Icannot say too much for it.†Pe-ru-na in Tablet Forumâ€"For two years Dr. Hartman and his assistants have incessantly labored to create Pe- runa in tablet form. and their strenu- lous labors have just been crowned ,with success. People who object to lliquid medicines can new secure Pe- zruna Tablets, which represent the me- ’dicinal ingredients of Parana. Each ltablet is equivalent to one average dose of Peruna. WM For Years an Invalid. Mrs. Charles Gros Louis. Lorelle, Quebec, Canada, writes: “For years i suffer-ed from a disease that the doctors did not understand. “One day I read in the paper about your excellent remedy, Peruna. I pro- cured a bottle of it and took it accord- ing to directions. It was not long un- til I observed a change for the better. “i can say that Peruna has. cured me. i could not take any nourishment ex- cept. milk. “1 will at all times say a good word for Pcruna. I hold it in the highest esteem." Calm-uh of Head and Thmpt. Mrs. William H. Hinchliffe, 20 Myrtle SL, Beverly, Mass, Writes the! Peruna has done her a great deal of good for catarrh of head and throat. stmtlmmmva vii-ea The Home "WM":pr TESTED RECIPES. Delicious Chocolate Carmnels.~To 3 lbs of brown sugar take )5 lb unsweet- ened chocolate, )4 lb butter, 1 pt cream or milk. Just before taking from the the add a little vanilla according to taste. Salmon Cr0quettes.â€"\fix thoroughly together % cup of cleaned and shred- ded salmon and 1 cup flour sifted with it teaspoon baking powder, add 1 well- bcaten egg and 1 cup milk. Beat all to- ' gether, shape into croquettes, crumb and twin deep fat. . ish _ llolls.-Mix 2 lbs chop cooked halibut, 2 tablespoons blanched. chopped almonds, the slightly-beaten whites of 2 eggs, salt and pepper to taste and 1 tablespoon chopped parsley. Add 1 pt stiff whipped cream. Mould into rolls 3 inches long, dip in egg and bread crumbs and fry in deep fat. Serve with sauce made from one chopped cucumber mixed with mayonnaise. How to Feel Squashâ€"Now is the sea- son of the Hubbard squash, which is so hard to peel. This suggestion will save time and blistered and discolored hands. Cut up the squash with a hatchet in large pieces. put in a colander over a kettle of hot. water, and cover with either a pan or towel, and steam until tender; it can then be scraped from rind easily, and when seasoned is much superior in flavor to that cooked in water, and with half the time and trouble and with great- savi'ng. ' Oysters a la Francesca..â€"Scald twenty- f'fafe oysters in their own liquor until plump, then drain and strain the. juiCe, melt two tablespoonfuls of butter in a pod, un- saucepan, and rub on four tablespoon- ‘ [ills of flour. When smooth add the oyster juice, that add a cunful of milk or cream. and season to taste with salt, flapper and a pinch of paprika. Remove x cm the tire and stir In the beaten yolks of three eggs. and again place over the ‘r-.‘ and stir until creamy and SillOUl-ll, fen turn out on a heated dish with a ' glicrd'erof triangular pieces of tC‘lasl. Do not allow to stand after adding the ("d‘l'h’llll and egg. . . 1 (“case llclisli.â€"â€"l,ilt-lc frills of rich «m- -_m (3.110058. seasoned lightly with 1 prich and with English walnut meals [o't’éï¬tld int-1) the sides, making a tasty .;._,.__uu-.f’.'hnc:n-=f" «ma-v' ‘ v~ ~‘v v ' of the balls may be nested in oil and vinegar. and attractive garnish far most veg-e- tahles and fruit salads. Three or four lettuce leaves, a watercress, and be dressed with Mixed olives or nuts are sometimes. mixed with the cheese for the balls, or the balls are rolled same- times in minced nuts or in minced pars- lc-y. They are also tasty mixed with green peppers. Green peppers and cream cheese, by the way, make a de- licious sandwich filling. Making Bologna Sausageâ€"Take 20 lbs beef, 2 lbs pork and chop fine. Put it. through a meat-grinder twice, using the fine plate. Add about % pt fine salt, 1 lb sugar, 3 his black pepper, 1 table- spoon sallpetre dissolved in water, 1 tea- spoon cinnamon, % teaspoon cloves, 3; teaspoon alISpicc. Pepper should be added to suit taste. If much pepper is desired, add % teaspoon, red pepper. Stuff in large beef casings or muslin sacks; make as tight. as the casing will allow. Tie each one as it is filled and hang up so that they will not settle. Smoke the some as for hams in a smoke- housc. Do not let them freeze before or after smoking; it is liable to make them hollow and oily. It is advisable to put the seasoning in the material after it passes through the grinder the first time,» and when it goes through the grinder the second time it is thoroughly mixed. lf cone in it“s way it does not require much chopping or mixing. Frosted ‘Cingalco Plantingâ€"Ingredi- ems: Three bananas, flu-cc eggs, lhrce ounces of Currants, thin bread and but- ter, sugar and nutmeg in taste. Me- thod: Line a buttered piedish with bread- andâ€"butter, place over this a layer of sliced banana,- sprinkle with currents, and add seasoning. Then put another layer of bremLand-buttcr and more banana, currunts, sugar, and nuln'lcg, and continue this Ill..ll the dish is nearly full. Beat the y“lks of eggs in the cream, and pour the mixture otter the contents of the dish. Bake very gently for half an hour." Remove from the oven, and. cover with a meringue made from the whites of eggs, sweetened and flavored. Replace in oven, and let remainItill the meringue is delicately ilavOrch Sit-cw with sifted sugar, and’serve with cream. , Granville ’l‘arLlelsrélngredients: ’l‘wo ounces butter, two ounces currents, one ounce ground rice, 1va whites of egg, one ounce candied peel, three ounces spongecake crumbs, three ounces sugar, tl'irec-qtnu'ters pound puff paste, a little water icing, one teaspoonfui dessicatcd cocoanut, six drops h-nion essence, one talivl‘cspoonfnl cream. Method: (ti-cam the butter and sugar until perfectly smooth, add the grim-nil rice and cake- crumbs, chop the peel ï¬nely, and add it, __._.â€" t tin. peace of men. in it a faithful helper, as it enriched; The Perfect Peace '\\.,I “Whaso Hearkcncth Unto Me Shall Dwell Safety and Shall Be Quiet From Fear of Evil.†“Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on Thee."â€"â€"lsaiah xxxvi., 3. What is the boon? “Perfect peace." What is the condition of the boon? A “mind stayed on God.†What is meant by staying the mind on God? First. of all, what is the signiï¬cance of the term “mind†as used in the setting of our text? A little analysis may help to sharpen our thought. There are at least threcmdistinct elements in its composi- tion'. There is imagination, the element of vision and dream. There is purpose, the element. of plan and design. And there is desire, the emotional element of yearning and hope. Butamid all the dis- tinctions there is one dominant charac- teristic. Imagination'looks forward! Purpose looks forward! Desire looks forward: it is that forward clement which we must seize and emphasize. It may be only the things of the coming nrontidc, or the things of the coming night, or the things of to-morrow, or the things of a day more remote. It mat- ters not whether they be the things of a quarter of an hour hence, or the things of a century hence; they both lie forward in the midst. Now, the word “mind†in m text. denotes the thought which deals with the forward, misty thingsâ€"the things which have not yet taken definite shape. it is thought which concerns itself with “What next?†and "next?" and "next?" with the successions which lie beyond THE IMMEDIATE DAY. it. is this thought of “What next?†which works such dire destruction with The things which hide there in the misty marrowâ€"those are the things which trouble us, and ï¬ll the life with unrest. “Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.†Yet still the timid. wondering heart will ask “What next, and next 7" And back to the anxo ions tremblings there comes the soft, Ind-{an gentle counsel of my text: “Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose mind"â€"â€" whose thought about “What next?â€â€"“is stayed on Thee.†The “mind,†then, is the forward-look- ing thought, and I am counselled to let it be stayed on God. Now, all forward- looking must rely upon something. It must stay itself somewhere, and there lean and depend. Every thought which cnshrines a place and a purpose has some basis of dependence, implied or fully expressed. Here is my life to-day. This life will have a next day. Upon what am I depending as to what the nature of the next day shall be? Upon what is my mind stayed? Upon what am I de- pending for my life’s successes? Upon luck? upon some happy chance? upon some favorable turn of fortune? Luck is playing a large and influential part in the life concerns of many in our modern times. i am not sure that even the pro- fessed believers in Christ altogether exile this pernicious influence from their thought and speech. The very words “luck†and “lucky†occupy much too sovereign a place in the speech of common life, and from any man’s favorite words you may infer the sub- stance and trend of his thought. I l We can stay our minds upo “IIe calleth his sheep by name.†No one WHAT DO WE MEAN BY LUCK? We mean something casual, some- thing happening without a desire. Events do not happen as the consequence of honesty or dishonesty, of falsehood or rectitude. They come and they go, in- dependent of moral qualities, a whirl of morally lawless occasions, blessing and cursing by sheercst chance. We are lucky when the whirl drops into our laps a boon; we are unlucky when disap- pointment is hurled into our lot. And some men stay their mind upon luck. Life to them is a lottery; it is also a fever! There is a fearful watchfulness in the life that is staying on luck. There in a bloodshot eagerness in the eyes that wait the arrival of chance. Yes, luck turns into feverishness and fills the days with a tossing unrest. He shall be kept in perfect unrest whose mind is stayed on luck. But now let us turn to the man of my text, “whose mind is stayed on God." not found in his own uncertain self, or in the caprice of chance, or in any cold tendency, but in a living and abiding personality. It is our privilege to give to the Old Testament word the New Tes- tament context. “God†to us means “Jesus,†and the counsel of the Almighty is expressed in the evangcl of grace. n God, for is lost in the indiscriminate crowd. It is one of the inspiring characteristics of the life of the Saviour that he was al- ways making individual calls, and speaking to people by name, “ZACCIIEUS, COME DOWN 1" “Simon, Satan hath desired to have thee l†“Thomas, reach hither thy ï¬n- ger!" “Mary 1" Our Lord is familiar with the individual lot. He does not generalize providencesi they are suited to the personal needs. God's attention can anticipate the marrow confidently. When the soul looks out, with its for- ward-reaching thought, and asks “What next ‘1†Faith answers, “The Father of Jesus.†And what next? And again comes the reply, “The Father of Jesus.†Always and everywhere the next and certain thing to come is the presence and goodness of God. And this is the stay that brings “peaceâ€. It brings peace of mind, free- dom from panic, the absence of fear. “Whose hearkeneth unto Me shall dwell safely, and shall be quiet from fear of evil.†And it brings peace of heart. The life is no longer disturbed by dis- quieting ambition. Violent ambition is like a vulture in a doveoot. Violent am- bition destroys the sweet and dovelike dispositions of lifeâ€"sympathy, gentle- ness and goodwill. But when a life is quietly committed unto the Lord, and the mind stays on Him for the next and the next, destructive ambitions enâ€" tirely cease" And, thirdly, it; will bring peace of conscience. The conscience will no longer be a threatening bell, full of alarm. It will be to us like the vesper hell, that sweetly calls to evenin prayer. “He shall be kept; in perfec peace whose mind is stayed on Thee.†REV. J. A. JOW’ETT, MA. WM together ,with the currents, cream, and To Renovate Velvet.-â€"Dip a velvet flavoring essence. Beat up the whites of brush in damp sand and see the velvet eggs, and amalgamate with the mixture. come forth as fresh as though it were Roll out the paste,‘ cut it into rounds, new. It is a cleaning process, too, for line some tartlet moulds with the rounds the slight moisture removes dust, and of paste, put in each a spoonful of the mixture. Bake the turtlets in a moder- ately heated oven. Glaze over the tops with a layer of transparent. or water icing, then sprinkle over each a. little deselected cocoanut. USEFUL HINTS. Make Chair Seat Good as New.â€" Sunkcn cane seats in chairs will be as gcod as new if washed in soap-suds and left in the open air to dry. 'l‘rirn Hat with Duster.~â€"'l‘hc tops of two vari-colored feather dusters .athlo cents each make a pretty pompon forga- hat. Leather Cleanserâ€"To clean leather, such as purses, handbags, suitcases,, un- dressed leather, and colored skins, use‘a reliable wall paper cleaner. Mix as directed and apply in the usual manner, rubbing one'way only.‘ - ' Remove Shoe Polish Stainsâ€"To- rc- move shoe polish from wash goods; soak spots in sweet milk before wetting in water. If spots are dry soak longer; This is safe and sure. To Mend Hem-stitching. -,Cover the E space of the worn hemstltching with in: sci-lion and stitch both edges on totra’y cloth, and- it‘ willthen be as good as new, and ever prettier. . _ Save. Bathroom Liglit.â€"â€"As the bath- room-'11s generally small, half :the gas for lighting can be saved by ï¬lling the gas lip half full ofccment or some hard sulstnnoc and still have gas enough to light the room. . Prolong Life of SliOD§xâ€"-A coat of gum of copal varnish applied to the soles of boots and shoes, and repeated as it dries until the pores are ï¬lled and the surface shines like polished mahogany, ivill make. the SHIPS waterproof and make them last three times as long. Repairing Torn Musicâ€"When the Covers to sheet music become detached hind lhcm' together with white pass-e partout paper. This paper, being of a tough texture, makes a firm and durable binding. and if applied to new music wil' prevent much mutilation. the hush action of the sandy friction gives new life to the “nap†which has. been worn down. Care of Coal Collars.â€"â€"An application of alcohol and salt will take out grease and dirt. Homemade Snow Shovel.-â€"Makc of a board four feet long and one foot high, with a rake handle attached. It can be used to advantage, in the fall when the leaves come down in such quantities. Instead of raking them every week, push them into a pile with the snow plow. It can be done in about a third of the time it takes to rake them. baby? -.__._.. ‘ . <~ .. Be easily taken up a I; needed. ,eeeaoeeaeeeeeeeeeee helped by its use. "a . . .w-«u y . . .caused by uric acid in the blood, which lifs support, upon which he depends, h kidneys mm 10 mm. out Any one, It’s .a. heavy strain on mothers? Her System is called upon to supp?) ‘tnourisihment for two. ‘ some form of nourishment that will Scoft’o‘ E'maIJt'On contains the greatest possible amount of nourishe- merit in easily digested form. , Mother and baby are wonderfully ALL DRUGGISTS: 50c. AND 81.00 ‘ï¬Ã©Ã©ï¬ï¬ï¬ï¬ï¬@®@&@@@é@@¢%ï¬Â¢ DRINK PLENTY WATER TELLS HO“! TO CURE RIIEUMATISI‘J AND THE KIBNEYS. Gives Readers Adviceâ€"Also Tells of a Simple Prescription to Make a Home- Made Mixture. Now is the time when the doctor gets busy, and the patent. medicine manu- facturers reap the harvest, unless great care is taken to dress warmly and keep the feet dry. This is the advice of an old eminent authority, who says that Rheumatism and Kidney trouble wea- ther is here, and also tells what to do in case of an attack. Get from any good prescription plum», macy one-half ounce Fluid Extract Dandelion, one ounce Compound Kar-' gon, three ounces Compound Syr ; Sarsaparilla. Mix by shaking in a ho tle and take a leaspoonful after meals and at bedtime. Also drink plenty of: Water. You can’t drink too much of it.“ Just try this simple home made mi»: ture, and don’t forget the water-,5 at the first sign of Rheumatist or if your back aches or you feel that. the kidneys are not acting just. right. This is said to bea splendid kidney regulator, and almost certain remedy: for all forms of Rheumatism, which is can easily prepare this at home and at snitch cost. Almost any druggist in the smaller ‘tonms can supply the ingredients named, as they are commonly used in the ' prescription department. -â€"â€"â€"â€"---'3' BRITISH COLUMBIA FURS. Beaver Plentiful Along a Tributary of the Fraser River. The impression that the beaver is almost extinct in this country is a mis-" take, says George H. flower, of Van-t couver, B. C. On the Elk River, a tri-E, butary of the Fraser, in British Colum-I bia, there are this season thousands or these little animals, whose fur is'si valuable, building their winter quarters. The Elk River has always been a fav- orite spot for the beaver, but this year. the influx has been so marked that even the most experienced trapper can-, not tell whence they came. There are now a large number of trappers on the river engaged in catch-I ing them as fast as possible. Most of», the skins are shipped to San Francis-' co, while some go to Montreal and,l Toronto. From these cities they will go to others in all parts of this counâ€" try and Europe. ..__.___,x¢__-___ I‘IO\V TO BE HAPPY. in the Land of Little Care Gossips have no tongues at all; Not a spirit lingers there That is either mean or Small. Greed was banished long ago From that fair and favored land, And the only inn they know They have called The Helping Hand.» ll. the Land of Little Care Envy never rears its head; Worth is never from the fair Highways into darkness led. Long ago they buried spite. Long ago they raised a stone That is tall and slim and white Where Revenge’s grave is shown. In the Land of Little Care Each is left to do his best: This is their one statute thereâ€" “Bring no evil on the rest.†No man scorns another’s creed, And the women all are fair, For no bruised hearts ever bleed In the Land of Little Care. - *, HUBBY GETS SUSPICIOUS. “John, do you love me 7â€. “ch." “Do you adore metâ€. "I sipose.†“Will you always love me 7†“Yes-look here, woman, what have you been and gone and ordered sent home now ‘l" - -..._. M _._4.-.____._.._...__. wâ€. ~xeeeeeaeeaeeeeaeeeeg by, mother’s system‘ , _ ï¬ï¬Ã©Ã©ï¬dï¬Ã©Ã©Ã© oaaeaoaeooae n. ~> . . ‘ . 7., ..