Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1908-03-19, Page 7RT(IS _ 'THE PLACE OF THE CHURCH ITT(LE IVER PILLS. CURE t&ok Heads,eh. and relieve all tho trouble/ tnei- oant to a Ltaou,s state of flu, system. such as Dizziness, Nauata, 1>rowefuees, Distress after eating. Paha In the sleIa, &c. While their most Ora table suct•e.rs has been ehuwu la chlebus SICK 8esa9ache. yet Carter's Idttro Liver Pills are *finally raluabloIn Constlpat ,n,ai.ungandpre- venting thisauuoyin cornplalnt,whtte they also correct all.lis.mlerauftl.ost.)ulschAtimutate the liver and regulate the b wcle. Even 1[ they ouIy HEADottrPd Rohe they would be almost pr(releaa In those who Suffer [runt tLisdistressing complaint, but tort u• Jietelythelrgou1ur.sd,,es tiotend here,and those %rho once try them will and theeo little pills val.'. able in so runny ways that they will not bo w4( - 11n4 t4.) du without them. But after altetck bead ACHE the bane of so many lives that here 1. where ire make our great boast. Our pills cure it while Others do not. C. -trier'. Little Liver Pills are vet, mall and very easy to take. Ono or two p1118 makea dose. They aro strictly vegetable and do not gripe of purge. but by their gentle action please all wha lien thew. C`3TZB Y!DICINZ CO.. NIiW TOIL �maD Fel Shall Doi Eunice, WANT NHNDOO EMIGRANTS 1. kl1011 i 5 tit.1RC1: %LONG T111: UP- PER NILE. 'There :ere 7'lous:itul, of allies of Fer- tile Lands With ltul Few 1iihahitaut s. S dney Lou, the travelling (Mollie c:erresg►:►ndent of the London S'anderd, sees a pose b!e solution of the present 111tdrt em g:allon problem in the set- tknienl of 111! Sudan. "For her crops and tillage grounds the Sudan I;as 104) few bands," ho writes. "Labor is scarce and clear; for \vh:al arc two ln:fliorls of people in a 141rri1o0' more titan hall as large as India? And, albeit the Arab is earn- estly devoted to matrimony. and the Sudnnese are prol.li '. it wit ho long before the ;lepopulatian of m.ent de- -cedes c -an be mato good. The Sudan, in fact, wants then badly. and it does not at present soe where they are to •conic float. MEN ARE WANIED. "There is talk of incroaaed migra- tion front Egvpt; but the i.gyptiati. ex- cept as a trader or ofite•ial, as not fend •ef the southern territory. The fellah would prefer to till land nearer his (AYH 1)0711c, rind there %vitt bo plenty of ie'po for hint there when Ilio in- maseel water supply re Main, fresh section, of desert in the Delta and on the middle Nile. But it not the Egyp• t:an, who then? Possibly s0rlto negro tribe',, from the into or rat .africa may move northward. but not much deuend- enre can bee i►laced on them. ".S.•oner or )Ater, 1 cannot but think that our fellow -subjects in Pritiah In - era will come in to fill the pap. From her t4'. -sling boson) Indira could spare few lnillr.►n cultivators, and never rnlso Them. inelee!, they are straining 1e) get away and moving towards all recrls of places where' they are not wanted or will do net go.)J. CONDiTIONS ARE SUITABLE. "In the Sudan they would find a cli- rrtate to suit them; a (virtually) British ( eve rnnwat 14) protect thein. and no white Brash &lentils lo object to their i.re.se'nce; and a fair opening for their industry and their skill es husband - men. Frani Indian Mehomt lan.3 the country scents ,,pic.ally suit ible', and 1t might he w)rth \\•till' for the Inellan rind Sudan Governments to censide'r wheth •r concerted rrteasu: es might not h" devised to promote a rri ; l rate mi- gration ilium a rogion where eg;ricul- lurnl humanity is rather t00 Had( on the girt -bund I.n e•ne where It •;a too 8: -arse and scattered." Tllr BE.\SON. "1 t►restrme' you carry a memento) .:f seine sort In that locket of yours" "1're,easelyi it is a lock of my hua- t intl's hair." "Rut your husband la still alive." hes, but hit hair Ls all gone." SUFFERING WOMEN who find life a burden• ran hsve keen;:h and strength restored by the use of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pill. �Tte ► present generation of women and girls m.•re than their share of misery. With snore it i. nervousness on 1 palpitation, with others weak. diesy and fainting :poll.. while with others there i• a general e•e11ar,e of the system. ktlilburn's Heart and Nerve ('ills tone up the acrvee, eetrenithen the heart and make it heat strong ar.tt regular. create r.ew red blood cor- puscles. and impart that sense of buoyancy to tho •nulls that 1• the result of renewed mental anei physical vigor. Mr.. D. 0. hon:-Rhtte, Or;uia. Ont., writes: 1'nr over a year 1 was troubled with nervous- ness and heart troubele. 1 decided to gt.e L,t. burn', Heart and Nerve Pe1ls a trial. and after uhug fire boxes 1 found i was completely cured. i always recommend them to my Mende." Price So cents per boa or three hoses for a1.23• Ill desires or The T. Milburn Cb„ Limited Toronto, Oat1 +� Not a Day Passes But That We Realize That Men Cannot Live By Bread Alone. 'beim was life; and the life waa the tight of men' (I. 1). The saint summation appears in a text near the end of the Quarter: "1 ant the Tight of the world: he that tolloweth me shalt not walk in darkness, but shall Ranee the light I lifer (R. 121. As 111e stat In the sky brings fight to the earth, and its Tight glwos life. so Jesus Christ brings light and life to the Moral w•.,rld. "flow beautiful upon the mountains in tho abundance of things 1 O essod, 11111, I RI)1.t1.11 SI'F.NL►� are the feet of hint that b►ingeth good that sets not its heart on sitter or gold, 1N t:daigs.'-Isaiah, iii., 7.'1 sho has learned the Love of b)!4' sue The Czar is the Most Liberal Ruler in '1'170 church stands in the eonrm.l- prerne over all passions. the love not This Respect. Wily as the special organi.:ati. i and of her own life alone, but of the full- Keng E l-ar.1'., objections to llg,hi:hg agency of religion. \\'hut has a man ness of life for all men, she w:11 not or.. well !,town, and quit' a numb. r a right to expect from the church? 1t need to ask for any other authe,rlty or of sic et\ hosts and lioslesse know- ing lnlce its place amort;{ theworld's in- potencya►nnng; toma ing the Kind's views, have reused i1c- slttute0ns. every 080 of which must pia- The world waits for inspirr►t.:on, for flees to be placed in tho bedrooms re- ( fy it, exist,enoe and its demand for the passion of great faiths, for vieens questing that no tips be given to ser - support by showing tho contribution (lint stir men to nob:e endeavor. Even reat (:ap,. i' Ifs we to the world's good. our most practical concerns tall fan enough, it is practically im- •e are thinking of the ChristianQlld l:arren unless they ares animated 1:41ssibl.' for King Edwartf to Ureal: churches then They eland in the coin- b) some great Hope or dream. Relig- down the custom Lit his own house- nihhn•:ty avowedly to do the work of ton is the passion that /nukes life worth hili. particularly when fore gn Royu'- thoir founder. They are to bo the corn -while, Ila( rm•cnls its inner values ties :bre his guests. Front lisle mo :tinnily s spiritual !enders. This is thethat enables every man to hear his nl,r.al it h11.4 loon the habit of ltoya: first thing we have a right to expect cross and do his part for the sake of tesitors to show their appreciation of of a Christian church, indeed of any the life of all. services rendered by the be stowel cit church, that it shall speak to our inner Often we criticize the church Meuse gifts upon the members of a household, selve.i and lead us into eternal truth. she does not go into reforms. because from the highest to almost the: Iowesk Kut ieaderahip Is a larger matter than she seems to do itr the case of the former. the gifts usu- teaching or doctrine. Spiritual truth rtlty lake the form of jewe'lltry. a lump has to de, with our own selves, with SO i.1'1T1.1: I'R.1('1'IC:Ai. WORK. muni being handed over to the house - cur natures and developing or dwarf- She does not need to go into such things keeper to divide among t!11 minor sex- ing lives. Our need Is for guidance. as if no outer could do them; sho must vents according to their dege e. rend inspiration, for one who gots be- 1•c tho force pushing the men out into TMS amount varies somewhat, and fore and illumines the path for our hall- tho:r own Forv:ce, the power that c ;111- r. Royal ser 'nage who stayed at ing, doubting steins. tells us to do tiro work we ought to Winds or one night, for instance, might 'lido great need that drives us to de for tho worlds salvation. give anything between $100 and $250. church, and unsatisfied (here. may turn Rut what is a church after all but ea hem King Alfonso carne a -\wooing' r:, from ils doors forever Ls this need the s)cialized expression of the relig- princess I:na, however, he scattered of the inner life. if all the churches acus life of a group of )Teeple. We our- tips in a particularly Invistl planner, can do 1_3 14;) give lectures on literature selves determine what such an express- and $500 a day scarce!) covered his and art, to render concerts, and pro- skin shall be. If the church fails Ls it prodigality in this clfreclion. v dd0 entertainment we would rather not because we have failed to put our The Kaiser, 100, is a very generous look for those things to thoso lives int-) her service? It is folly to "Iiprar,•' 8841 when ho visited EnglanJ \\'110 CAN DO THEM BETTER, sit down and 18113 of her stns; we are at 1891 lett 52,500 to tho scrvantc al only condemning our own sloth. Windsor and Buckingham Palace. in Man wants to 10.)k above himself; ho To say, too, that we have no conaern addition to a large quantity of jew'e'l - would see beyor 1 the clay; he woutei with the church simply Is lo say that ler'v for the more important members catch visions of (hose high ideals that we have no part in the social religious of the household:'. when ho visited have moved the race in days of old, life- of the community; wo extradite Windsor recently he gave away over have turned peasants into heroes, have ourselves from He! higher, the spiritual 5;10,000 in tips. \\'hen Louis Napoloon made the weak strong, the. cowardly communal life. \Ve have a right to t•Lsited Windsor l:e left 57.500 to be dis- valiant in fight, the meek to bo the expect help and inspiration from the iributed in tips, although he 'stayed glowing martyrs and ma.ster.s of mien- church only as we Drake it a means there only three nights. kind. ile wants clear answers to the of help and inspiration to others. As lwflls the richest monarch in the deep questions that rise in his own Every man has in him some rrlessage\1;�rld, the Czar has earned quite n r•e 111 pursuance of the work of 1 re erva- heart and conec'enc'e• far ail ether men, each of u; ha.1 hispu!atir,n on account of the lilLeralih tion. furtherrepairs are being carried In the glut of ntnterial things thc'r•e sliaro to give of the world's illilnlina-of his tips, and on one cccasi'►n, after cut on the ancient royal Palace of Lin - 1a felt deep and keen the hunger for lion and inspiration. It it not our bust -slaying a couple of days at Windsor, lithg►w•. love and truth, for treasures that nodi ness to pool our spiritual possessions. I1e I:•f1. a panne of diamotlds worth A crowded meetings of Langholm rate - and rust cannot oorrupt and thieves 1:•. bring together every high ihnight S -n( for The` houst'kceper. $10,('(10 for payers protested aguinst the g)rv+posetl cannot steal from u -s. 'There never will and rich hope and through I110 *18040- the 'rvants, and 815.d�0 for cl►arltIec extensive tied expensive sewe•rnglo bo any question as to the place of the elation and gathering c'ef men for mutual seherne. e net to mention goal snuff-hoxee stud - church that meets theso deep reeds and inspiration and help make the best (led «ilk (1tenAl1ds. ringte, watches, iil l:nation has been received that the len. :;the of men. good of each to become tho common headquarter.; of the 3rd King's Own If, Ike her master, she has learned good of all? and brooches for oiler members of itis Scottish Borderers are to be removed the secret, of the Tito that consists nottzehold• HENRYf iENRY F. COPE. from I)umfriet le Berwick.King Leopold of E3e'Igium, ‘0,0 do- The Trades hall. Stirling, which has lights to visit Parte ineegnito, often betrays himself by his generosity In lip - THE S. S. LESSON t ping. ile frequently slips a $50 note into the hand of 11►e cele( of a restau- rant af'er a dinner wteeh has particu- larly pleased him. in addition a) ! •nv- ing; ten dollars for each of the waiters. On the other hand. the Tamperer Jo- seph of An lrin lips on a more tned- eal scale, and In hit )no..t generous nlooi the largest 11e bestow; on a ser- vant ;n public co'dom exeecds flvo dol- lars. \Whon vtetting a foreign Court, toe), the Emperor generally confines his gifts to the moro importnnt rnenll•ers c f the Household where Ito may hap- pen to 1 e staying. FROM BONNIE SCOTLAND NO i Es of I: r .111-:.;T FRO'! 11111 BANKS AM) IJlt t1:'3. 11 hat is Game On in (li' Ilidhlands and Lott land, of told Scolia. WHERE MULAI GOT GOLD 101t1.',%IIl1:11 I1l:ti):'e 1.Ik1: t11%Illt5 NIGH I s. Itimiu Inil►le .toy of iiiaden a rc:nei ' iu u Lucked Chamber in a 111111 n). The epidemic of lltcas!es in Dundee The great c.nundi urn of the situat:•,n 1• 110W abating. in Morocco for months past has 1-.•: n Last month I,O($ books were lent out the question whore !ltulai Hatld, the trout aloritr.,se library urclench�r, or Sultan of t110 South, a; Motor traffic is greatly destiny'ng the Ife is caked, trot the money to Ittlhu; ICC mads in Morayshire. 11 rev.�U against lin brother, Abdul Hatt i� k British Women's Temperat.ce Aziz. S-.eiely has now 569 members, The mystery appears to b:) solved by The [baling industry of the north is a stry inch 111. \'::filer -Pellet, all of n•,\v almost entirely' centre t in Wick. tette Freeea nut al officer, has tar eight There was an increase of 166.000 'ons cut from Marakech, and which reads ire the coal extorts from Fife last year. like a talo out of the "Arsrbian Nights. The retort power of Fellc rk gee- Acootekng to the narrative, Mulai ll�r[lti works is to le increased fifty per cent, f..tind, or rather had revealed, to hint On several farms in Dunbar district a hidden tneesure amounting to 20 d)) - Iher'e has been a tvholesulea destruction ('00 francs, about $1,000,4X)0, just u.3 the of real:. she k, prociaiine1 (tint Sultan a►id ele-- Last year the deeosi!s In Car'uk•' Say- Greed the doposaion of his brother. Ings Ratak. Lanarkshire, decrees+ed by "There V9, n rcom 111 the old palace over £1,l►74). in Mar•ake •h, which had remained bolt - The master painters of Dumfries pro -leo l and barred since tho death in 1891 pose to re.11lct wage; from 73.d. per of Mu1ai Hassan, the fathor of the pre - hour to 7d. sent rivals for the throne. 11 was a rending the repair 4:f the telegraphic remote, unfrequented corner of the cable lo Shetland, it •nsng.es are sent rumbaing structulo rind a sort of super- b/ wireless telegratphy, atitious awe had grown up regarding it. Owing lo frosty tveat.11cr, building week in North Bene ck at:d district has been relmost at a stundstill, NI.ss Jennieferiae, Leslie, hanros- tiP,li- , has not Haase.' n Sabbath school intendancy for ten years. Mr. James Milroy, Cree Mli!ls, has beat the Earl of Gall ewny in the (:aunty Council conle,t ay 151 le 93. Itecen:l)• thole were den.° shoals of her ing,► alt Nitride and Sande islands. '1'h•' Lanarkshire diners' Un..�n :, to semi one student each year to Oxford i1) cunuCCLIOIt with the Ruskin e1:o1ar- sh i;►. \Ir -a. Eliznbeth Buchanan. who had c.hnrpletel her 100111 year, died in the house in which she was born at Bal - teen. Selkirk folic have about C1(00,000 sunk in properties and oiler investments. The Deputation is returned at 8.000. t"1'ION.%I. LESSON, /lith(:11 it. Lesson XII. first Quarterly Retina. (:olden 'Text, John 1. 4. Jesus the Centre. It is by no means difficult to determine the centre of the 'may of this Quarter's lessons. Every one distinctly ant pointedly sets forth Jesus Christ. There Ls no better re- view scheme than one that places his name in the centre of a circle, with rays leading to the eleven names which constitute the various revelations that the_se lessons make of the tncarnateSon of Cod. Lesson 1. shows u:' Jeans as the Word, that Is, the Reveater of God 1. v his truth. The contact between hea- ven and earth was accompanied by love, and the' point of oontact Wits the Intel- ligence of the living soul that God had trade. Tho divine address was made to this soul by the truth. and the ales - Banger was "The \Wore -1." the key -text cf thin less•'in is verot 11 (of chapter one): "And the Word becamo flush. and dwelt among us (and we beheld his glory, glory nit of the only begotten from the Father), full of graco and truth." i.esson II. mnkes Jesus prominent as the Lamb of Clod, which suggests the doctrine of the atonement. John the Baptist had been preaching much of son, and warning his hearers, without respect of dlgnit:e's, In flee from the wrnth to come'. itis beat doctrine', however, was "Ilenont.' He had no message of salvation except a.4 he should prepare the Wot' for the herald of the now kingdom. This he dell faithfully, Entity, earnestly; and as 504411 as he ,Qaw• 11►«) (1)11110 Preacher of the new gospel coming toward him he cried out ;verse 20): "Behold the Lamb of God, that takeeth away the sin of the world►" Lesson 111. introduces the Evangelist of the kingdom, and shows us holy he begins has work by bringing the grace of God down to the level of men, and Illustrating it in the sweetest of per - sena! intercourse. Jesus appears hers its the model Soul -Winner. gracio i3 hospitable'. versatile, and tactful. The key -verse of 111e lesson is verse 3;t, ' e ,nue, and ye shall see.' 1 ••::nn IV. shows Jesus in the strik- :ng rote of a r'riest. The temple, which to 0/114 has Father's house, is .li,hnn- e lei. and with blazing zeal ter it ro- te -ration to the condition of holiness and sanctity that belonged to it he fel; upeit the desecrators with a scourge enol drove them away. saying: "Take these things Bence; make reit my Fa- ther's house a house of merchandise" (t' 16). 1;eson V. leaches us Hint the Wo -.l ei the Son of Got. and that he 08171e into the world by his Father's behest, rot to judge the world, but to save O. (',od's loving purpose for his creatures i eternal ilfe. tie' \voul.l share his only Son that the world might not be ruined, tf any soul should be ruined, it would tx because It does not accept the salve - tion offered by God through the .mon. To commit one's soul to the saving Son ie 10 eseape the judgment, "For ('ad to. !eyed the we)rld, Viet hey give hi.• cnly begotten Son. That wlloseever t►a• 1:evelh on hila should not perish, but have eternal ills' (3. 16). Lesson VI. dere we have the %wonder- ful interview of Jesus with the woman e f Silninta, in which be elms to her dark mind the spacious truths of God n; a universal Father, ani the world- wide privilege of worship. Ile announc- e.: himself to her as the Messiah in plain fermi. and allow; her, and all the .Semarilnns, and everybody eLse, to worship the Father wherever they may be. if they Worship him aright. "Go I is a Spirit: and they that %v-ot•- ship hint Inuit worship in spirit and truth" (1. 21). i ocson VII. Ls the first of the three that give us Jesus as a Healer of the ills of meet's 1107114.;. His g►oWer is made prominent in the healing of the noble- man's boy who lay at the point of death, beyond human aid. Aryl the power was exerted at a distance) from the sick roost. "Jesus snuff unto hint, Go thy way; thy son livelh'' (1. 50). i.esson VIii. gives us the healing of the impatent elan at 1lelhesdn, in which the compassion of the Christ is n striking feature. it .iees riot appear That the poor man asked the Saviour f•. nnv help. Hut \viten Jesus snw hurt lain,/ there in his misery he opened the interview himself, and revealed his ten- der pity for hien, and healed hire per- fectly. Key -verse: "Arise, take up thy bed. and walk" ,3. 8). 1.0.330,1 IX. presents another view of the. gre•nt Revea!er. Ile is now on the cast side of the Sea of Galilee, follow- ers heedlessly by a great multitude of men, women and children. They arc far from he)n1e and have nothing to eat. Ile takes the initiative, rcoognizes the :;offering of the people, ani l ceomes a revelation of (:ed tho Provider to them. Ile is now ministering le health rather (lean to disease, and he (0nche.; the les - u n of the goodness of ('stead in pr•oritling for our daily needs: "Josue therefore took the lonve,; and having given thanks, he distributed to them That was set down; likewise also of the fishes as much as they would'. (6. 11). Lesom X. fellows this with the Spiri- tual interpretation of the miracle. Our daily bread Is the token of Jesus. who 1; the bread of life, bestowed by the sante father. who made its and provides for us. We receive him ly faith, which ag'prehcnds the unseen. The bread that perishes is visible: not so "the food which abideth unto eternal life." But lhss latter is the True object of our high- est and . hardest labor. All who %%amid do the work of Gni, must nceepl this bread of heaven. "This is the work of God. that ye believe on him whom he hath sent' (6. 29). Lessen X1. furnishes us with a strik- ing proof of the divinity of the great Heller. No hurnnn power could open the eyes of The noon torn blind. Jesus (elle 114 that the work that is made manifest in him Is the work (et God. it was sal taken by the man and by the Pharisees. There was no other expin- nation of it possible. There can be ren: clearer lest of divinity than that one shoulel hold to his hand the power cnf Clod, and use it upon oecnalen. "Jesus answered. Neither did this man s n. neer his parents; but that the Works (ef God shout.! he matte manifest In him" (9. 3). All in One. T1:c Quarter's lessons may be summed up in this: "Jesus Christ. the lite• rinot file light Of mein.' Ito (;olden Text teaches us this: "In It1U"I'(►N� ARE (:Tubs aro Found Whenever EnUli8hnlcn P1'zwtrate. of all the race., 01 sten in the world l:r:tois are the ni:ost gregarious. In (treat Britain and Ireland there are 2,085. while there ore 1,095 in for- eign countries and British Colonies. Golf. appal sully, is 11th chief excuse for the formation id clubs. Of the above total no fewer than 1.111 are golf clubs. London's list of clubs . te)wa no signs cf decreasing. At present they num- ber 282, of 1111 c11 thirty at lea,► aro ex- c:uaive•ly Ind 4.s' institutions, indeei, one' of the most astonishing features of ;lub life is the increaee througll•eut the eoun'ry in r•'e•ent years c•f cit:dos d• voted exclusively t) the fair are at p:e-cut 322 of llv cr. \\'het•ewer 1wo ear 711014' Britisher steel together in any part of (he world their first remark %voila] appear lo be: "1,01 us form u club" Adc�t'tlulg!,, even in" far Fiji, for in- stanelt,. there is more than one club. The ()real' Club, in Levuka, he8 fifty member-. eh le the Fiji Caul, an older Ilrstitul) :n in '111v8, has sixty-five irenl- bers. The social deelighls of St. Jnm03 s are els") simulated in (:hefoo rind Foe- hien oo- in ChinKuching, in Bornd� h, .Sit•alisa: &'tlk+rnents: ileira, i):n Ale►z:lml gue; and Nagasaki, in Jepnn. They are all Britt{1r in origin as well ae organization. India is n land of many chubs, whore white. mere inert end try to forget the exigencies of the chmnte, The Merlotti with 1,110, the Quotla with 3,(X%). and Tho (iyinkhana (Poona) with 1,000 rllc►nbers being amongst the biggest Insfitutiens. At Renin, 'onlewhore in the Nigger Coma( Pr)tectorale. there is an enthu- siasltr: bend of golfers -twenty all told --who cheerfully pay 55. per 1tlnutrl for the delights of clubinn•.), and a Hecaptain e' scry, Bnllishngtkok strikesi; ihTher) not0crctaof cosmo- polit:enism. I's United Club has a trlettl- t►ership of 270, but they err, of various nationalities. Of rnurse, it has 1'8 gel club. loo, which boasts a membership mf eighty. .-milftramilli-.r TIiF: BEST iIE COULD SAy, Mrs Stnrvem-"i1•)w e1i) you ince the chit ken soup, Mr. N'e•w'bn'.''' \Ir. Nnwb)r 1-"O'- cr-isr,tThi3 chick- en setup?'' Mrs. Slarvem-"Certainly. flow de )(el1 like ?" \1r. `ew•tlbord-"Viell,--er--it's certain- ly very tender." 1.1411 Taken down leo make sway for the nPw Eelenlentui-y 1ig't Scho •l. was 1111111 ley the Seven Incur p waled Trades in 17:x1. Thu vaealher was persistently bad cover !ha Hebrides durine 1907. The cod and Erie fishing. w hiek was al one time the most inlport:+nt iters of 'stand produce. was almost non-productive. One of the best known men in San- qu!1er•. \Ir. \Wm_ \\'ilsr►n. died rsc••nily. h rr ..ver half n century he contributed regh►larly to the focal press. and his tat`te'rs on antiquarian subjects were w`dely lead. M. David \ic(;ee. elireotnr and ship- yard nlannwn• of John Morena, i.irnited, shiphui der-. (:lydebank, died at hi:, re- sidence. l)lltmuir. near (i'nsgow•. He surer'n'en4fed the construction of the (:nnerder i,usitanaa. -� TO 111.0\1' 1'1' 11 1TT L1:.5111P. British Nato Wail 1arrifire Another its • a 'lost. The old British battleship ('o'oss!rs Is tho vessel which has been dcomed Io the fate of the hero in a series of tests of niagaz ne conditions in modern wurshipi. This is a result of the terrible acci- dent in the French battleship kneel at Teuton early last year, caused by Tho explo3ien of gowaer in the magazines. A committee was aplolntel by the Ad- miralty after the disaster to examine the system (if storing explosil es in Brit- ish warship:. One °uk•eme 4,f lhia committee's work has been the Titling f a coaling apparatus Iti the ship's lnagazin -s. bol the committee is not )est : atlslied that absolute safety has been en•urcd. In dander to assist it in Its tesenrchcs, the Admiralty Inas placed the Colossus a' its disposal. The Colossus is to be titled with magazines similar to those Irl modern battle ships, and these are !o 1 4: 8(43red with cordite. lsdi1 , and rattler explosives used in Ike navy. A series of temperature iests will then be made, and after as rilue'h in- turtnntion as possible has been gained on this htvt4l tho charges w111 tie ex- ploded to find out what would be the (110(1 of an accident on n British hat- 1!^ship similar lo Thal w hick 0'. rtook 1110 lens, The C,.oloscus was built at I'' risinoulh in 1836 at a cost of £618.786. She is much larger than the Pero, having a displace'rnent of 9330 teens, against the other ship's -6.21)0. '.- FROM A 1.1'RiC OF SORROW. One night I hell her hand while she hell my hand. And gently speaking to her 1 diel say, "if you will be tray 1.3(41 vve w111 1,e in"rried," 1n41-reeaking back to me she nn- - ..1, "Nay; \(y lath• t lost his job down al the gashouge, And mother's working hard t•) pay the rent; We couldn't lake another mouth to feed at present." And eedl)' parting then away i \vent. 1L BY. Mr. Rich --''1 )')U find baby brightd•ns up the house?" air. Ileneelie t --"fees; 11e burn 1 twice the gas we used to.' that a 11e.'811/ BLUEBEARD C11:\\IBER. IL was in the harem, so it wee ► of 100111all'- l:reteetea front masculine en- terprise. \\'hen /quiet Hassan died Abdul Az r was but 16, foolLsh and sensual. The grim old Grand Vizier Be -Mimed made. him Sultan. and ruled for hire for some years. The boy Sultan had access to the harem, but he never sterns to have troubled his head about the sulphur chamber. 1S WEAK RULER. But Abdul Aziz spent hardly any trate in Marakech after his► accession. lie look up his quarters for good in 1902 in Fez, where it was much easier to get pianos, music boxes, bicycles ani other expensive European toys. The palace at Marakech fell into the hands of /twat tial) 1, wh lm Abdul Aziz first Wed to make prisoner and then appointed governor of t11.1 south- ern part of the country. MOROCCAN P01.1Tliae. Now Mu'.ai had for a long tune Leen slated for the sultanate. Ile was only the second son, but his elder brother, the lame Mutat alohatn ted, had In- curred the anger of their father and the undying hostility of the Arab tr:hes- me'n. At the age, of 20 or thereabouts le was Intrusted with several expedi- tions against w•ar:ike trigs, which he carried out with success. Al one limo th. ulrnost seemed to shore the ru'er- ship wall fes fatheer, but the ole mans fa.vorito wife, the mother of Abdul Aziz, extracted from hint a promise that herr son should reign. \\":1N1 E1) TO lIK A S(:IIOI..\R. To every one's surprise, Mutat iIa(ld accepted the situalti0n without a mur- mur. Ilo was Tho first to ktss his bro- ther's hand and .swenr allegiance. Un- til recently he kept I1:o onth rigidly. In Piet. despite his capacity for wear ane business he is by preference a scholar and a dretuner. At the pr'e'sent minute ho was on the goint of publishing a volume of verses in Arah:c and an Arabic grammar of e trick he is the author 13 on the piens in Ca.r.. It will be his thirteenth pub- li=hed work. Ile didn't want to be sultan. OLD WOMAN TO RESCUE.. Ono evening as ile entered It's harem filler a discotu•aging session of his councillors atulal was intercepted by nii aged woman. She had been ont cf tho favorites of his father and she now occupied the high position of ari- ., !a, or grand misle s.S e of the harem. SI:o excitedly d_eclare.1 that the day and the dour had title. Anyway, she was old and sewn ging 1.a die, She could Jccep a great secr•ut of stale no longer. She led the wondering \!:lint 1•) the barred door of tiro sulphur chantt•'r and told him to go 1 of Ily in, nssurieig taint that tie \voted fines more than sul- phur for the holy war, sulphur bong only 011 Oriental metaphor for the real fighting tnalerinl. FOUND CHESTS OF GOLD, \iulai opened the door and went in. Th4►re were thirty irentound chests ar- rangel along the walla, all covered with the dust rand rust of twenty years. Ill' (Towel the first; it was full of gold ce•ins. Ito opened the second and it was the same. They were all full of gold coins - Slvanish doubloons of twelve different minting', ranging in date from Charles IIi. in 1777 down to Ferdinand Vit. in Is20. The contents of the chests varied) from fur to five lh ti'nnd rloubk>r,ns. \+•orth about 510 apiece. The l:,irtl c t e culat441 at about 20.000.000 francs, ser 8 1.000,090. At the lisle when Multi► Illflti was revelling in this grent wealth, Abdul Aziz was trying to pawn his jewels 'n Pars end gelling no higher offer than .110.0(U) en theme. The first testi Multi Ilali•I mail° (ef 1r Q tlto'.3?y was to equip 10.000 men in highly oaoreel uniforms with vivid refits. green= and blue im taI11 n of the \I. kh•4?ii or gnarl, f 11i= breather. F1 I Tf:11 ter 1R\IY. i1, ells) bought cloth to rllrike lents rill \.431 sttrpl'4►s of anlmltnil`0f ►or the e•xe'elleit Martin-11e'nry ritk'9. €et which ht' diae•o\' reed 5''.eral thousand rrgcdlcn in the urmtory nt Mnrnkeelt. ile• also had put int ► serviomlel • order ver n! batierie: of ('reeus< t gun; and ( rte Cnnet gtm-, whl h lee !Tether bought same tents ago. find r b oracle ne (1 to neglect. net le sloes!; of .o tt -ez.•n 1lolchk!ks milratllensees \\ ldrh Geo \18ekin 1ronght from 111glnr:et, 8tneetr his discovery oI V.:e inoney Don't Neglect S CotighorCold IT CAN HAVE HUT ONE RESULT. I'r LEAVES T111F: TIl RO.tT or LUNGS. OR IH)"rlt, AFFECTED. DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PiNE SYRUP IS THE MEDICINE YOU NEED. it is without an equal as a remedy for Coabh... Colds, 111emch►ti', Sore Throat, Pain in the Chest, Asthma, Whooping Cough, Quincy and all adsrtions of the The At and Lungs. A single dense of Dr. 1\ oe►el'e Norway Tina Syrup will stop the cough, soothe the throat, and if the cough or cold has be - Dome aottled on the lungs, the healing properties of the Norway Pine Tree will proolaitu itt great virtue by pro'aptly eradicating tho bad effects, and a persist• ant use of tho remedy cannot fail to bring about a oon►plote euro. Do not be hunlbugg;ed into buying 80 - called Norway Pine Syrups, but he sure and insist on having Dr. Wood's. It is put up in a fellow wrapper, throe pine trees the trade mark, and price 25 eta. Mrs. Henry Seabrook, Ifopworth, Ont., writes : "1 havo used Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup in our family for the past three years and 1 consider it tlio best remedy L• gown for the euro of colts. It has oared all my children and myself." everything has prospered with atulat Ualld. Mr. \'atller-Pollet propheoiei that he will gather the whole country under his rule, first defeating Abdul Aziz and then llalsuli, the Rognt and Bon -Anima, all of whorl tire DOW g,raci.cally exercising indopendent rule In 111.•ir (astriet3 ELEPHANT W1:4 1't.RY, Accompanied by Two Zebras It Step- pC41 11110 Orcheslra, An eleehrinl fell into the orchestra .it the 'Theatre de \'alieties at Beziers, near Paris, recently. Tho conductor held out a carrot to 1ti111 just as he was slaking his bow frolrl the stage, and in stepping fe,r- w.ard rnthar loo hastily to get it, this elephant brought down the front of the eitagc, and, accompanied by two zebras which were performing with hint, crashed into the orchestra below. Two violinists were hurt. and the big churn will never be heard again. The animal, whose name is Tiny, was very much annoyed. Ile caught the conductor round the waist with his trunk, and after waving hilt in the air for a moment or two, threw hila out al11011 the audience. The -re was a momentary penlc, but 7'rny's black keeper persuaded his charge to clamber up 811 inlprovjsr•e1 gangway to th0 stage again, and got )lint back to itis sheat without fur(heer incident. ENGLISH FOREIGNiZi:D, 1 ports of tourists w•ho were com- e 1(014 established in a hotel in Ger- many disc overed a new contribution In "English as sho is spoke," only this time they found It in the written word. The building had been recently wired e1e'ctr:city and under the bulks in each " DOOM dlrec'i ►n; were posted in French, German and English. The French was irieproaehable, the German nearly so. The English rend as follows: "To open and shut the t'ghteening electrical on. to requested to turn to the right haul. On going to bed it mast be closet. Otherwise the lightening niust be paid." 4. DEGREES' OF \\'R:17'11. • . "Do you think the dog that bit you was mad?" "I don t know that he was mad, but he certainly was a little peevish." SPECIAL. DEl.tVERY. Irate \\'!fe (to bibulous hush -and) - "Whoro kava you boon 1111(11 this hour?' H. 11.-"13e•on out shopping. in ele'ar.• irate Wife -"Then why didn't yoer have our purchases seem home instead of trying to carry such a load yourself!' It's better to w•nrk for nothing than to play a losing game. It's hard for one woman to fcrgive another for having dono her a favor. Turns Bad Blood into Rich Red Blood. No other remedy p.)sscsses such horfte;,t cleansing, healing and puri. fying properties. Externally, he•tls Sores, t'Icers, Abscesses, and .til Eruptions. Internally, restores tate Stomach, Liver, Bowels and Blood to healthy action. if your appetite is poor, your energy gene, your ambition lost, MILD. will restore you to the full enjoyment of happy vigorous life.