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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1926-3-11, Page 7Two Serious Operatlens Shattered Her Nerves Made Her Heart Bad ,J liro, Homy Carter, Westchester, N. writee:—"I am writing to tell you, as well 5,5 others, what Millauh's Ileart and Nerve Pills have dime for me• , ' Fourteen yeare ago had a Auxt* stroae which workea on the nerves of ma head, end left lee with aervous ,heaclacees, and every nerve iu my head -Nye( would just seem to "oreop and erawl' •Ilan 04 UMW I thought I surely could not live. Then, two years ego, I went 'through • t •serious o eratiens evidelt come pletcly shattered. my nerves aud I be- came nothing but a nervous wreck, and my heart became also in a bad state, so I decided to call ia our tamely -physiciau and he told mo that I had nothing seriously wroug with my heert, but that my nerves were so bad they were pressing mi my heart and causing all the trouble, a.nd advised me to use eome gooa tweet and. nerve tonic. Not long after that my husband was at the store and brought me home a box of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, ana duce that time I have, token serene boxes, as it seems to me that they are the only"thing lean take that • works on my nervous treuble, and 1 would sot, for any money, be without them in the house. cannot melee them too highly, Lima would advise any one suffering froze, any form of nerve trouble to give them a far trial, as I know by my personal experience that tbe results can be nitk Ing aut satisfaetmg." itad N. Pills aro put up only by The T. Milburn Co., Lixaited, Termite, Lost in ea saes lizzard Near thr.L., Equator BY CAPTAIN HENRY MANSFIELD. that it's only the numb warmth begre "Now you, get up or I'll shoot pie"! Gainio seethed toward Idal hiP- "Theta: enough," I said, "I'll taise your gun" and I e•eached down and lifted it iron its holster. It was enlY the warmth that: had sensed my body from the extra effort a dregging Gamie which made it xsossible for nee to hold the weapons or use my fingers at all. "Oh, I • say," stammered Gamio. "Quit your kidding, van you? I don't feel like fooling." "I'm not kiddine 1 &meet yelled, "and if you don't get up out of there I'll pick a nice little round hole in you. Don't yeu know, you plagued fool, 1 b. k ur freezing that you fee- • Actuated by a desire to see the rior were eve ever able to gale outour ngers y world and an innate love of an thing% what was their purpose. Had it been : hands from the wrist joints, trying "Oh, rot!" said Gamic). -savoring of pr•ehietoric times, I en- our friends from the inn a e p tir listed, shortly atter graduation frem to rob us, they might better have wait- ' Columbia College, as assistant to Prof. ed for us to appi-oach aad assured eur to revive the esuggesh. Circulation. The "I will count ten," I told him,' "One, meal was very sparse, for we did not two, three—ft He thought I meant it and stagger Marehall Saville, head of the George , defeat by meettag us uncle' a g We were both thoroughly fug ene , ed groaning to his feet. Feebly he eare to be left with; nothing to eat. Eczema or Salt Rheum *news NO nest Eloy or Night Eczema, or salt rheum tut it is mop mealy ealled,.4 one of tae most agoulx- tag of all Sign diaemeo. • The lateuse leveeing, itelaug and, =eating, es ally at rught, or when the parts ere expootal to ifeet, ie al- most uribearable ead relief le greelle weleoreed. The most ' reliable an effective remedy we anew a is E Heye exploration expedition to of friendliness, • though I do not think that even then tottered before me, looking back from This preparation has beea on the af aur Ecuador. The purpose of th:e expedis The course of the path we were cm , we fully realizedthe gravity tion w • as to etudy the archaeology of seemed to trend upward and we fell situation. ' d f 1 ved it for 9, matter of two miles be- All the while it was getting darker, time to time with an ugly gleam in, his market for the past 47 years, and will eyes.• do all we claim for it. Your siesrest the nea p A man in his senses WOUld as,ve druggist or dealer se11 u p • d d • to -sleep Any of the near or Whether the clouds were pill known that tbe. chances of my hitting only by The T. Milburn Co., Lhaiteds anything with my hand trernbling so Toronto, Ont. ization Eeuador and Peru. fore we dismounted, staked the horses! and I do not know whether night was The -first part o our lay g was Prosaic and tineventful enough. We etreas, we had been told, led to sbep-; ing up thicker arid thicker over the left New York in May, 1910, arriving herds' huts near the secret • line, and sun, probebly the latter, for darkness at Guayaquil, Peru; some weeks later. we had reckoned on leaving the horses:follows very quickly after light in the There we were joined by IVIanuel at one of these stations. 1 tropics. Gamio a Mexico City, who made the Early in. the morning we continued! At last, with oven less warning than fourth member of the party, a young iiigher and about noon arrived at a , th • me The darkness were negligible. At last we had mounted the spur and started once more downward. I had lest hope and it iveuld be our last descent iinless, indeed, we both drop - 4 arch 14. Last Worele of Jesus . leis Disciples, John, ohs. 1447. Gelden Text -el ens the way, the truth and the lifeeadehn 6. AN ALYS IS: See 'Maas 0 MB HEAVENLY HOME, 1-4. 11. 7114 guava* OP THOMAS, 0 -7 - III. VIE REQUEST OP PHIVAP, /V. PU4THER CONSOLATIONS, 12e24, INTEODUOTION—Tbeae fel-1r ehaptera Oilntain akkEimeSt teaching.on re- ligion and have been the inspiration and comfort of countlees Christians. They tell et the continual presence of Christ with the believers and they give encouragement to all his euffer- ing followers that a future of irktinite glory awaits them. The fourteenth chapter gives answers te three ques- tions put by Thomas, Phiaip and Judas. I. JEST'S TELLS OP 'THE HEAVENLY HOME, 1-4.. V. I. Let not your heart be troubled. The little, group is overwhelmed with confusion and sorrow especially by the statement a Jesus that he is to leave sent from one country to the other, them immediately, while as addition though to what purpose I could never there is the prophecy that their most understand. distinguished member will fail in the No need to dwell on the inconven- hour of trial, cll. 13:38, These condi,. Ped and died at the bottom. iences we suffered. •We at least had tione appeal to the compassionate loge of Jesus, and "the sad silence is at ; fellow called Willie•Buskey h.aving small cabin croudhed ationgthe`rocks.t• of night added to our difficulties, and! Suddenly a fresh horror began, to good food and a warm 1 p ace * 5 Oep, last broken by these words which for accompanied us from New 'York. We were near the snow line and: what with the natural gloom and the oreep into my. brain. The frightful though we were bolted into a little' the first time open heaven to •faith." wrest:ing swirl of anew we warmth which bast already seized neon room about fifteen feet square. Reason anxious t st rt the ascent as our blinding, . . . After a few cleys in e n .y Guayaquil district we struck Off into time was getting. short. The horses could, actuallsr speaking, scarce see a. Gamio was treacherously stealing as we could with our captor we could , the forests a Riobamba, where we for were left in the care of the shepherd, '; hand before our fans. upon mes The very worst had come, not show him the folly of suspecting ' . provisions for three meal& And an this. within a few miles of and I believe I prayed. I still had two men in that desolate, forsaken the earth's equator! Somewhere in the sense enough, to know what it meant region of being spies. We could tell neve in God. and in Christ is the ' earthing many relics of prehistoric apiece in ease of emergency, we began feeling was real. I struggled against anchor that will hold in every storm. 1 military and domestic life. We, of our climb. At first, we followed an al -e same latitude sunharned and heat- and not to. think, like Gamio, that the "El Gobernader," he said. course, employed the usual cavalcade MOSt hidden trail, which was soon lost! tired people wee seeking the cool of After a day and'a half of captivity V. 2. In my Father's house. Jesus Believe in God, believe . — me. Faith is the only possible attitude in which the Christian can successfully meet confuse:in and sorrow. To be - a time. made our hea guar els, un- unci witn • had spoken of the temple in these th ow The peak the lazes and' the cales as the wel- ___, -- guides, and the work in Riobamba was we wished to ascend was directly be-, come relief of flight came to thern. Make liotaed Do Double more in the nature of aneouting, We fore us and so long as we lsept climb- r Gamic, had begun to weaken pereep- it, but it grew even stronger as we staggered down the mountain. Time and menacing us with scone land a temple was only a copy of the heaven - did not exist for me, and I do not pistol of ancient origin, but daunting ly home. The emphasis is to be laid know- how long we had descended when in size, told us that we were to be on "Father." Heaven depends, not on I began to dream of hot coffee, bound and taken to the city. A. woman, From time to time Garnio looked hard looking and masetiline, brought Skirting • northward, we visited ered some after the sun became ob-; other. Etch time I lifted my shoe it back over his shoulder and cursed me. some coils of rope, and while she cov- scured behind a heavy blanket oil was as heavy es theem,h the weight of Then he pleaded, groaning, protesting ered us with the deadly weapon, the gray. By the middle of the afternmen; a whole drift was attached to it. 1 in maudlin, childlike ientences against man bound us. my hands were so numaed that his steady Re might; be and forced him We were loaded alto something Jesus had freely told them of the we were as high as we cared to go, tried to support xny emnpanion but my cruelty, but I held the, pistol as scantling in a zigzag, senseless course, and while the Woman mounted guard which a decrepit mule was attached, he is any less sincere in speaking of I" suppose was a cart and to darker side, and can. they imagine that and, after eating sparingly, started would not take us more than twos , staggered about like ore drunk. Wild- • FinallY, while we were de- which this brighter hope? His departure is to descend. eThis, we had calculated, I arm slipped from my grasp and he onward, thirds the time of the ascent; but we ly plunging and picking ourselves UP he turned with a particularly vicious not final; he is going to prepare a . • behind, the man led and drove the place where all their best hopes will mule over some of the rockiest, worst . ce realized. "The language is bor- rowed from the practice of sending a messenger in front to secure propel' quarters." V. 3. "I will come again, His de- parture is the condition of his return. our hest entered early in the morning, tem 2 16) b t the earthlY Ont. • of peek mules, horses, m•ozos and two after we enterede sn . p a c • ; , Duty. A farm without a garden and hot - :thee is like a family without a mother, and really, the totbed is the mother of the .garden. It germinates the seeds of tender plants and protects them in their early and delicate stages of growth. But efter the hotbed has functioned in this way, what more can be. done with it?' We answered this quAtioe. in a partial way:some years ago a by cleaning it out, ready for spring use, and then dumping into it such roots and vegetables as were wanted for araid-winter or spring use, covering them up with straw or leaves to keep out frost. Last fall, however, we hit upon a better way of doing much the same thing and making the contents much more accessible. BY nailing strips on ciamosite sides of the frame, about ten inches below the top, we laid a mov- able floor of boards, which was then covered with sawdust about four inch- es deep, except for a place in the centre about fifteen itches wide. This latter is fitted with a board, or door, that can readily be removed andeveheas, in place, andethe weather has become e cold, will be covered with straw or -m---othor easily removable mulch. In place of the sash, boards and battens are placed on top 'loosely, and the contents of the hotbed, which had previously been removed, is banked around the frame. Down below this false door, with its sawdust covering, is a moist, frost -proof cellar about taro feet deep, in which can be stored crates of pota- toes and apples, roots of all kinds and, If it be taken up with ample roots, a • good supply of delicious celery for the farnily table.—A. M. B. • a411/6 - Downing Street Carpet. • No. 19 Downing Steeet possesses a new meet, or, what is even more de- sirable:. a carpet which has pareed in- to the antique category without hav- • ing been through the intermediate stage of being old. It *happened like this, so Mrs. Baldwin told an enter- Priseng newspaper man recently: Mrs. ,Baldwin did not like the look of the chewing -room carpet at No. 10, so she asked the office of Works whether it would provide a new one. The Office or Werke, howevese-being in really commendable awe of Winston Church- • ill and his economy compaign. de- murred, -whereupon Aire. Baldwin said (in effect), "Ieet. the thing be waahed." slept long and comfortably, the alti- tude at whiele we lived making it cool, andeendared few hardshies. Quito, the city on the equator, and were entertained royally by President Alvarez of Ecuador. As this was the last stage of our journey' before plung- ing into the real wilderness, where we were to almost fight for our living, I remember the banquet telideied us by the President very distinctly, and later had cause, to remember it even more vividly and more gratefully. Leaving Quito, we followed the highways to Saline Salinas, a town in the northennost part of the province of Bolivar. Then began the real work of tlie expedition. We set oat through the Chimborageo Mountains to cross the protince from north to south, with Chiblanes at our goal: Two or three days' journey from our starting point Gamic. and I ob- tained permission from Professor Ste: ville to explore and climb ,Cotapaxi, probably the largest volcano in the ing we were all right for a Wile. Itibly. I do not knoev whether I stag - The wind was bitter cetd, and, de-, gered or not, but it seemed that I spite the efforts of climbing, we shiv-1 could not pet one foot before the its buildings, but on. him who dwells there. God is all its life and glory. Many mansions. This house will be spacious. "There will be room for every worthy human activity, thought • or •affection." I would have told you. . chose to keep the greater part of our as best we conid when we fell, whic Provisions for a remote case of emer- was often we slid and careened ever gency. The tracks we had made in ascend- ing were easily followed for a time, but soon after we had started back it began to snow, very gently at first, but developing rapidly into a swirling; raging blizzard. The tracke fast be- came obscure, and it was with great difficulty that we made them out. The curse and said: "Look here, Jack, I'm ribt going a roads which I think exist At a small downward, only to finil ourselves at step further, Go on now, shoot if you last in a hollow or ehaem, where it like?' army post at the foot of the moun- tains we were turned over to the mill - was necessary to climb weary heights "1 will," I whispered hoarsely. "Just tary, and, the commander beige deaf . more. . I'll shoot you if you don't turn round were conducted on horseback to Guar - to argument, we 'gave our parole and This coming of Jesus is many-sided. again before we could descend once as sure as there is a God in heaven lotg into the smiler. it felt welcomely The one idea to keep him moving anda, the capital of Bolivar Province. g There, the Governor, Leon de Herrera, e, At his resurrection he will come, also in the advent of the Holy Spirit,in the When we stumbled and fell head- and walk." face until at last they became so ness, and I think I really believed enough it was. He was se'vellen with tahetfil.neal gleirioouseraeeturnattheaelind Of at events off the Christian church, warm On wrists and hands and even had sole possession of ray coascious- had us cast into prison and foul ' h believer d in wind. hurled the stinging cold flakes numb that we felt absolutely nothing. what I said. I knew that I was login into our eyes, so that at times we Gamio groaned monotonously for min- my grasp on my sanity. I had thrown g his own importance and would not let the world. us telegraph. He had never heard of V. 4. The way ye know. The ells - were not alarmed, thinking that we doubt I did the same, hut I did not to carry it. The one I held I steadied. said, the George E. He -ead•tinn he ciples might not be able to see the - distant scene, but they had been with could scarcely hold them open, but we utes at ' a. time, then was silent. No one pistol away, it was such an effort ye e:`,. 1 , Could find our way from memory: realize it at the thee. jesus long enough to learn his ideals, Even when the snow enveloped us They say it is eomfortable to freeze by grasping my wrist with my free world. We expected to take two or like a blanket and made it impossible to and so 1 believe it is at the "You have ten seconds," 1 teld hire, ceived .and .entertained by the Presi- and to recognize. the direction of his hand. Gamio laughed horribly. Ourlerotest that- we had been re- . three days for the feat, and besides , ges, eee • ee ' he ei .1y thoughts and actions in theimmediate geaeargageekees wg.a.aeregeleaaparleioneate, see a rod in any direeteen we re- last. but the pain atetirst is alnsost tape 'began to enuni• "nr.p.) t-vm. bresaaerantaeat4' 1-_-• dent -of' Ecuador, „be considered mere present, that if theywould only follow • to last us that length of time. The garded the experience more in the unendurable. We were tolling and three—." • • dragging ourselves up an especially Gamio was staring me in the eyes. first night we came to a little adobe light of a frolic. hut called bYecourtesy an inn, at Lata- To Protect ourselves as much as steep and wicked spur when Gamio "Four, five, six, seven—" cuiga, under the very foot of the possible from the bitter weather, and began to lag behind. I helped him as Without causing a sensation in my was. little, hand, the pistol dropped from it and mountains While we were eating sup- because we continually became sep- bait I could, which I fear per two or three ill-appearing fellows arated from each other, we began to and he seemed unable or else. unwill- tumbled into the snow. Gamio laughed entered the room and ordered drinks. walk leek -step fashion. First Gamic, beg to make any effort on his own ac- Garnio, being a Mexican, spoke Per- would take the lead and I -would pace count. My patience was short and it fect Spanish, and I have always been behind him, both hands on his shoul- irritated me to have him lag so. as'familiar with the language as I am ders, my face hidden behind his back, "What is the matter with you?" I with my native tongue. We had soon then we would reverse the order and demanded. . been induced into a conversation with he would take a, few moments' cone- • "Nothing," said Gamio, and he aceu- ., parative rest. ally smiled. So we must have trudged. and drag- I feared he was going mad. His pose I had tugged him not more than. ged ourselves through the ever deep- eyes were brighter than they had been, forty feet when my arms refused to ening blanket of snow for about an but he ;seemed weaker. hold. My hands were useless. hour, when suddenly, while I was lead- "Can't you get along a little fast- I staggered a few paces off -to rest. er?" I asked. Then my knees began to wabble and "What's the use," he said. "Thune clatter together. The mountainside der, but it feels good, doesn't it?" reeled and I did not know whether I • "What feels good?" said I "This is was stag eeing upward or downward tion of the range made it possible to no time to joke and if you'd buck up take either of two courses in skirting and make a little more effort to do a line of cliffs which we could not your own walking I'd be- better pleas - have hoped to scale and which I re- ed," 1 added rather brutally, for the membered we had tot descended di- complacency of the man maddened me. may. I had just turned tethe east "Why, Jack," he added, "Don't you tial for the morrow. That night we bribed a gold -loving -guard to telegraph to President Al- varez in our names, and also to Prof. Saville, whom we thought might be insanely, sank to the ground. It was searching for us in and near Late - useless to try to pick the weapon up; enle a. I could not control my fingers. With A.bout midnight, the Governor him - the last of the feeble strength that self opened the door to our cell and them. and they seemed to be not at all had companyee Before our acquaintance had ad- vanced very far they had told us of a hidden treasure, gold and jewels of the Inca,, 'Which was buried not far from the town, about two miles up the moents.in. This story is one which the traveler ineets in almost every town of the vast territory which once •comprised the Peru known to Pizzeria. As usual, in this case there was a ghost which guarded the treasure, and with all the II, THE QUEsTtoN OP THOMAS, 5-7. 'mated. V. 5. How can we know the way? Thomas was by nature a doubter and is honest enough to confees his diffi- culty. The future is all wrapped in mystery. He has no clear understand- hig of the place to which Jesus is go- ing, and how, therefore, can he know was in me I tried to drag Ganeio tothe way? Until we are aware of our his feet; r could not do it, so I started with profuse apologies inviteds destination we cannot select our road, to haul him through the snow. I sup- a banquet and offered us the hospital- V. 6. I am the visa, the truth, and ity of his palace. We refused and told the life- Jesus replies that he himself him some of the things which we had is the weY. Thomas should have bowed and apologized, but we went to heard that the controlling desire of the inn and remained there for the Jesus was to return to the Father, to night. It appears that the President, found all his joy in doing the Father's see the divine face and glory. lesue, remembering us, had telegraphed for will, and in this Jesus was really re - particulars and a full description of vealing the way. Thomas must liaise us. This had convinced him of our recognized that the presence of SOMA_ had been the one great illuminating and directing influence in his own life. Had he only paused to think it out he could have known that the Father was the real goal of Jesus. Jesus a; the oaly true, living way by which WO cosne to the assurance of the Fatherly love of God. III. THE REQUEST OP PHILIP, 8-11. V 8. Sh.ew us the Father. Philip was the great friend of Thomas and he finds his difficulty in another direr - tion. Where is God? He is so mys- terious! He hides himself! If he would only reveal himself as he infil done in olden times (Exod. 24:9; Isa. cls. 6), then they would be satisfied. hem Gamio brought us to a halt with a tug at my shoulders. We had just plunged and slid to the bottom of a gulch, and the forma- . g . Probably it was in a circle, for when I finelly plunged into the snow I was only a few feet from Gamic). For a second. my mind and sight c)eared, and known from what he had seen and been saying about him. Even then he identity and he had ordered our im- mediate release, reprimanding the offieious Governor. Prof. Saville, when we did not re - 1 saw him clirray through the driving 1 tuna he.d sought us -in Latateiga and cupidity of the natives they had never white, on his feet, leaning over and had found the hut where we left our made any very determined effort to when Gan -do brought me to the sud- 1 begin to feel warmer? I'm getting apparently holding his bands as for horses. He lied concluded we were .t1 it den halt. about as comfortable as they make warmth over a fire. Then blackness, lost in the storm, but waited for a • r ' 1 t If le ness of the night, settled over me and sending men to search the mountains. "That's the wrong way," he said, a • 'em. But it was bitthr while it. lasted." tenfold heavier than even the dark- few days in the itt e own, meanw uneae We, of course, took no stock in the Sure enough, 1. thought, he was story of the tre------------------., osty 1.httle irritably. ourselves With strong. After some talk quite positive we came from this di -1 "It's snowing harder than ever," I 1. "I am ' crazed by the sufferieg, to see one of these dreaded spots for "Are You sure?" said I said. we decided to ride out to the place - after supper, and as the inn Was' likely I was st .1 poeitive that 1 was right, He looked around lam, peering into was when. I lost consciousness. le , knew no more. He had received our telegram and do not notified the American Consul at Quito, How 3.ong we jay there kpow, for I had no idea what hour it i who in tune took the wetter up with UJ Altogether we had So it was taken up -and washed—for to be possessed of all the things which but if there were any landmarks in the white -like darkeess. I returned to myself to realize that. been realeagea' • the :first time in forty rears. But when make life miserable in those coun- tbe way of rocks or etch they were. "Yes, I know it is, .Tek. You think every fibre in my body was throbbihg come off with more than we had ex- V. 9. He that hath seen me, bath accomula,ted Undernea.th, le and be- stone and blankets With Us to Sleep tclab:-0 to see them through the driving fully aware that we're lost. I know of a habitation I knew, for T was gaz- i that we did not make any trouble. The pected arid were so glad to be alive awn the Father. Had not Jesus been Did they not lealize that when with they came to remove the dnet that hail, tries, we planned to carry our prova either covered by the snow or we were I'm crazy, hey? Wela.I'm not. I'm and aching. That I was in some kind like a divine pr:sence in their lives? 1 :Shoal tbere lay a magnificent. Persian an the open. This- we arranged in etorne . 1 its's black as the Styx and that it's ieig straight up at heavy, rough,, "tY man I really hold a grudge - . t trust e friends too fer. - way of thinking and we continued en . warmer, I'm almost comfortable." in. If my limbs had been nuirib and sum all was well? They had really been Jesus, and they should rest content. EMglish, being not 'altogether willing I at last aiguec Gamic, Mout o my - •• a b t 1 tell. , 'lee tt' " wooden eeame an a a y, ci s v cci- againet is ehaf "FA Gobernadar," seeing the Father as they looked oe This wae ; With all the frenzied power of ray feeling:egs the night before they were; — thee in Jesus they had the proof of The description of the treasure spot our way at I had started.' , . , Us by otir friends of the inn well enough for e time, but 1 -found will I had to force my -cowardly body almost numb with ein now T tried' carpet: • Check That Coughlead led us to believe we 'would find myself wondering riow at every point , to do its duty. Grabbing Gamio under to move them, but could not. They At Once gl You Don't as excellent claiming ground, and weI wise the right or not, and the hoeldrs dr agged him ieeh hY were still powerless. I thought, but in • whether se the more I thought of it the moretcore , inch up the mountain, When was a momeet discovered that I was bound: were in a beirry in sleep. Nearing plaee where the gold and jewels fth1'ed 1 became' able to T made him take a few steps hand and foot. The cords seemed to ' Yee; May Be Sorry• were supposed to he bidden, we saw When It next became Gamio'rn s tui' ' of his own aceord, but it was next to be drawn tight, but they did not pain 1 Too much stress cannot be plaited 05 tarn men apparently digging, and (e..- to lead he seemed very downcast. 1 useless. The tra effort sent the me—in facts 1 could not feel them. 1 the fact that on the Arse sign oe a there were two tnore sitting on the. "lire no use," he said. "You may , bleed tingling for a while through my Heavy blankets and dirty begs were. a • id it should:h , al! immediately, as failtiee to do so may cause yeass of suffering from 3019.1 SeriOUS lung trouble. 7:ou may be Bony if you don't tele) aur advice and get rid oe your cough or oldby fain " Dr. Viiood's t Norway , - ,.. ,.. Pine - Syrup ..,,V.. ..),..„. This preparittioe has heen on the emeket for tho pest 87 yearn, and is aeknowledged, by all those who ham) wet a, to be the best medicine they can promo for the relief oe their coueses and eolds. • You doe 't experiment when you buy it, hut he ale) you get ilie gonnino that is put up by Tia T. Ilitburis Co, Lianitea, Tormito, Opas • • e• have come right, but I cannot be eure body and limbered me a little, but 1 ever nee and they felt warm. A smell! ido i . , , , . bailing distanee Gamic, asked them Of myself for a eingle step. I haven't was fast nearing exhaustion and at , what they were doing. The diggers the !vest, idea where We are!. , last from sheer tiredness I let Gamio i eaopped ' their spades, and nolo.% When I thought it over I had ,not 1 drop, aed he settled, wriggling cam- : inemed to their ,feet and a number of much idea as to Der location mif' .for l shots ,were fired. and meanwhile the cold was 1.)5ileine,.Itiwyttisetiolntalr)lese:. tothag him further, 1 . The fusillade came as a shock end fnto us with pruel teeth. We were almost unable to stand myself. 1 we were nearly unseated hy the rear- hungry end thought that a bite to eat • "GO up, man!" I groaned, ss arm us, but I was almeete Gamic) „only settled sleeper into the ; ing of our horsee, which, frightene(1, might of brandy permeated Ole room, and in ; a monient a man entered and I turned my head enough to eee him, He had! a glass of hot Ngater and liquar, which 1 he offered me and I drank. It sente the blood tingling, and asked him! why Was tied. He was indisposed; frightened at the numbness of my white blanket which covered -sae earth, to anewer at first, so repeated the! fingees when I tried to unbuckle the and snid that lie was comfOrtable. agneedstwiohieereneN.ik,lisignii; ehoempw:Iniit:2..id. money! strap which bound my knapsack. I urged and pleaded., but it was use- The man shrugged his shoulders! Gamio tried it, but his fingers had no lees. I tried to lift him to his feet, and turned to (lama), forcing some of strength. Tagether we tugged and but I might as well have tagged at the hot •toddy between his lips. It was; pulled at it, but it was of , n0 use. tho mountain itself. 1Then an :idea effective and my .friend soon opened Finally T took it in my teeth, while struck me. Gando mighe be able to his eyes. He was better informed 041 South American affairs and inaniedi- at1y realized that we were taken for Peruvian spies, Boundavy disputescay_i perpetual het -Omen Ecuador and ombia on the north and Peru on thsg south, and spies are continually being' Iwheeled and ran, taking to a pal] which nt ail angle off from the kne we had come on. This, I most ad - 1 mit saved us t1ie. trouble of changing 153 horsee eurselvee, :for we certainly , would not hen lingered in that local. Gamio's pistol had,' cnught in his , holster, but I had managed to dis- ; charg3 my automatic in the direction ef the Men who had attacked 1 us. Whethee it was effective I do not • hnow, .1 hope not, for we DOVCC heard tug 11 open. af thoee who had 'assaulted as again, While eve at We opened and closed Gamin helchthe sack between his stiffs walk if he only would and if he had ono,' fists and We nianegedto start the properenental etimulus. the buckle enough to insert two ache After it deal of fumbling I wan- ing fingers in thelimp of the strap and aged to knee my pistol Irani its case. Levelling it at my friend with an un- steady hand, 1 aid coolly and evenly; Many People Make a Mistake tbinkbag that the oray office of a pill is to move the bowele, but & prop- erly premixed pill should act benelica ally epee the liver and tho entire glanauler Ana secretory system, 111116 is Just What !WILBURN'S Do it Their Action They are small anti easy to Ws°, ana svork gortly end effielently without a gripe or a pain. They ean be used 1 pill as a laxa- tive;8 pills as a eathre tie; 8 pills as a purgative. All drug•giats end ficsioli; am them; put up wily by Tho '41.111,w1e Co., Limited, Sot -onto, Oat. ; the Divine Presence. Thus these two answers furnieh isa with Christ's solution of the greet mysterious life, and they show unmis- takably that Christ is the heart and . centre of all out religious life, IV, FtetTilEli CONSOLATION, 12-24, Sesus row comforts them by asser- t ing them that the work which he has ;begun will be continhed and increased, I Thee° "greater works" will depend • epon hie intercestory presence hith the Father and upon their. eerrieet prayvng. He also tells them of the ' approach of the Iloly Spirit wine Will guido them into truth, while he crowns everything with the 1aroiniee • thet will haneelf 10011111 ."1 , come unto eotea , I 1 Watch That Point. rye diecovered ehat one does net need. to :follow aireetione to the :tease,. in mixing hen mash The beg eoine 'Le 1 keep in mind is that 20 per cent. .fia• t1 the mash needs to bepretein. tree the !grain that is cheapest and eaeiest ta get. ---E. 11. 1 Sheep could be purchiteed for fonr- penee .Elighend in the:twelfth cen- eery. i a d! l a