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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1908-04-09, Page 3Ft. Rill afford relief from headsehcs no mailer whether .ick, nervvu., s:'asmr,te. periodical or 1 ' •u.. it cures by removing the enure. !:, Panteel J. Itibbard. Belleville. e Ile Ont., w,.... • last opting 1 was very'orl •. P• ) my sty ewe failed one. I felt weak and nervous, had a,ck headache!• ws• tired all the tine sr..' not arils to work. 1 raw Burdock Blood llittera recommended for lust such a rase as mine and I got two I-ettlea of it, end found it to be so •srelleat b:opd .aadieine. You may use my name as 1 :Mak that orbs:• agouti know of the weadsr(al saerite a levees* Beset Dinars." SQiUT,' r Ceti ulna Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Maar elgnoturo of ge7-7-0-212? 'Jive Pao-armlte fie reeler nelow. •!y .sail die es eve to talcs as riles. RES14 N4 iia u ��' n >: riot E S0E S0. PftT©QLivia . r00 P.AVOIL 0 u 4JE 1 ° ;gill. N �'Aali`l le CURF Are•1' elc•anaCHE. �--- - SENTENCE SERMONS. inspiration is half of education. Manliness is the best kind of god! Ready misfits. Smartness is never a match for ten - It's not the misery but the motive makes the martyr. The worn out religion Is the one that Js never used. There can be no right manners with- out right motives. Wo are seldom sorry far the sting- ing words we have left unsaid. Yeti can never wholly satisfy heart hunger through the ears alone. A roan emeses the blessing In a diffi- culty %%hen he crawls around it. Nothing pleas.s one kind of sinner better than pounding the other kind. The people who are not afraid to die are the one; the world wants fo live, Advertising the stns of our friends Is not the same thing as confessing our own. Thechurch nis sure to be left in the dark when the preacher Ls only a gas fixture. Light hearted people are almost sure bit be found carrying somebody elses bserden. Everyday expasperntions are windows through which we see the real man svith- in. Tu shut your heart In the needs nn:d prefs of others is to shut out the world's tide of joy. You cannot quicken the appetite of nten for righteousness by preaching on rel lenness, The only sympathy some folks cul- tivate is a kern feeling of being sorry ....tee; themselves. 11's a waste of brenlh to point the way fo heaven with your lips while your ilk Ls headed the other way 1 - made opinions are always ---4 SHOCK FOR TEETOTALERS. Anelysks /glossed as Mucft as Eight Per (tent. Alcohol in Soft Drinks. Trrtrelaters have been roughly shock- ed by the publication of the British Govern/nail's analyses of so-called tem- perance drinks, which show an nston- Ishing perccninge of alcohol in certain fnyorite Irelolul Leverages. The Lquor taws n k r• sit o b halotoe ' n1n1n I ngg inure than 2 h•1' (Ant of ataihol Mythic es into*(- 1 cants, but of 4,147 ,sanpk•s of temper.' erica drinks tested In the last tour years ! t)e' fewer mon 3.0914 exceeded thelimit. I In n rnnjorily of eases the excess was shoo, tint in several of the sninples : n, much as 8 per cent. of alcohol was 1 Sound w tide in a few 0 and 10 per cent. 1 was re't•eakel. One sample of a ntysteri- ass decoction celled dandelion stout eon- Coined 12.3 per cent. e chief offending drinks were gin - err firer fuel herb Lour. Many samples oaf these were found to le as intoxicate trip; as claret or hock. w hole others con- ts,ined n, much alcohol as 1'eer. The temperance alcavi1PS oerr slanted to earn That ti . h Id drinking a pint of e.cnl(' of the t.ck'tal hevernges consumes ned In half 'KIT 1 1 iii 01 rehanal ngnc. 11 lis admitted flint the high percentage Is Accidental, aril pkat it IS d11e to fermentation in tx,ltling. Our Daily Bread Takes Zi inn a Good Breakfast to Equip a Man for the Day's Busincsse "Give us this day our daily bread." - Matt. el., 11. There is something strikingly pathe- tic in the Thought that the most famil- iar petition in the prayer most corn - moldy used arnong all prayers is Ilio one In which ve cry, "Give us this day r•ur daily bread.' it is the cry of the child looking up to tae Father of all and tt•eiting for focal for the present. None has cnught the spirit of this prayer seta has Thought that such a petition made daily toil unnecessary; who has thought of ils bringing about that condition of i,fr Ideal to a i m ny, n which the 1 needed meals e could fall from the heavens as the suitable seasons Le - 1w•. ren sleep p and the pursuit of pleasure. The spirit of the prayer puts a higher significance into thea° temple words. Each day conies tv!th its deep needs, Its heavy cares, its high possibi'Jtie.s, its trying duties, Its splendid joys, and we ase; not for three meals or five, but for all That tho day miry have we may find sufficient strength and sustenance. It takes Inoro than a good breakfast te equip o man for tho day's business. 1t takes a bracing of the will, some up. lie of the heart; it takes some inner im- pulse and power that helps us to see the glory of a new .fay, to feel the thrill of Its rossibilittes, to face it with de- light, and to find in It every good and every noble thing it may have for us. There are hours every day when the inner light burns dim, when tho heart seems to fail and almost faint, when despair creeps over us and THE SPIRIT OF PESSIMISM Comes up like a bewildering mist, when cynicism's oold fingers lay themselves icily on our warm faith in our fellows. Such periods of depression and doubt becorne habitual with some; they serve to block every high endeavor. These hours simply mean that the in- ner life needs its daily bread; that for the high business of living, for the squl. service in the world, we need the food of oho spiritual life. The advice to read a good and noble thought every day, se some poem, and to .see some good 1 ° or t picture o hear an elevating strain of music every day is as simple and practical as the advice to take your meals regularly. The, physical plays n large part In !lie. but it does not piny the largest. Or, if it does, then there are reaches el this physical that are not to be cx- pk.reed by material observation nor sat- isfied with material supplies. You call afford to neglect no need of your nature, no aspect of your life. A heartache Ls just as real as an ache in the empty s toriiach, The tragedy of ail our lives is (lint ve seek to satisfy them with the bread that perishes; divine as they ire, we Seek to lie them down to the dust. We shut out heaven and cry aloud In de- spair that earth is so dark and its tasks s', irksorne. Life becomes hopeless, as it scents to be empty of things to sin - is higher sat- isfy the iter Lt . tl 1 ) 1, Yet this daily bread is not some man- na to fall from the skies, is not some peculiar privilege belonging to a few clalce souls. 11 IS TO BE HAD FOR THE TAKING. Our great heritage of cheering thoughts, cf neble ideals, of visions that elevate artd inspire, is at the seine time oho cheapest and the richest thing obtain- able. btain- able. To those who look for beauty every emanon bush is tsoon afan:o with God; Ic those who look for love, how won- derfully rich is our poor humanity In gentle kindliness, in tender ervice, In deep, thrilling sacrifices! They who -walk the common ways of life. mingling wllh men and doing this world's ma- terial Leeks, find rfthe but have the open mind, that which gives them faith and strength for their daily living and for higher endeavor. \Vhat though the hands be tied to toilsome task, may not the heart go cut in memory of the best thoughts That ham ever come to the race, in imagination of heroic scenes, in aspir- ation after the best? May not the will re.spond to every stimulus and aspira- tion to greater life? May not our hearts feed on those things that have made men brave and Godlike in the pnsl? Is not This our deep need? is not this the bread we ought daily to desire? For what is life to any of us it it be no more Than the feeding of this outer shell, and what may it not become if ii bo the nurturing of the whole being by those ideals, and passions, and serv- ice that have most mightily moved our race in days gone by? THE SUNDAY SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSON, APRIL 12. Lesson 11, , The Raising of Lazarus. Gulden Text, John 11. 25. THE LESSON WORD STUDIES. (Rased on the text of the Rev Version.) A Greater Sign. -As the great tragici of his own life approached Jesus I a special purpose in revealing to to mrd to his disciples In particular, Never over life and death. This p Bose Was to establish !heir faith in divine and superhuman character end power so firmly that even In the do common name, trot less than sir of whore are mentioned in the Nev',' Testa- ment. The anointing referred to had mol yet taken place, but occurred later al the feast in the house of n certain Simon in Bethany, in honor of Jesus, and recorded in the next chapter , 3. The sisters therefore sent unto hien -Unto Jesus, who at This time was In Pence "beyond Jordan" with Ills dis- ciples. • 1(o whom thou lovest-Tho members of the little timely group at Bethany were among the few very intimate friends of Jesus outside the apostolic ised circle. This waren human attachment of Jesus for his friend Lazarus Throws nn important side tight on the char- y older of Jesus in its human aspect. sod 8. Seeking to stone thee -Tho severe his persecution with which he had Decently ur- met in Judmn was in purl at least Meiris reason for his retirement into Pertra (compare John 10. 30, 40), ,-k 9. Are there not twelve hours in the hours of grief and disappointment which he knew awaited them, when all their hopes and expectations would He buried with him in Joseph's tomb, they world still etterieh the memory of his words and deeds. and be prepared for the glorious mcssnge of his resurree. Con. The story of the rnising of Enz. urns is thus a filling climax in the etnngelist's record of signs wrought by Jesus, ns the miracle Itself may be re- garderl as the culmination of his min. lslry. The next miracle recorded by k.hn is the resurrection of Jesus hien• Fdi. At the lime of the call of the first disciples, even before the first miracle al Cans in Galilee had been wrought. Nathnnucl had marveled nt the mire. culous power implied in the Master's words: "Before Philip called thee, when thou tenet under the lig free, i sew thee." At thnt lime Jesus had said to the ast: reehe.l believer, "Ttt,u shall sees rrealer things Ihnn there," and now fhe irlfillnienl of that promise rind pro- phecy had trached its climax in the reselolien of the Master's power over life and death. Ie had mune to con - tier depth and io grin}; life. 1t is in - ended that lo -day's lesson shall be lade the basis of whatever special eon. iricralion Ls given to this pxnwcr of esus over death in connection with the observance of Ensler in the Sunday a hocl next Sunday CApr1I 19). DOES YOUR HEAD Feel As Though it Was Being ifammered? Aa Though It Would ('rack Open? As Though a Million Sparlce Were Flying (lel of Your leers? !hornets SIeknr's of Your Stomach? Then You 11:ive Stec Headactic 1 BURDOCK BLOOD SITTERS s s - Verse I. Lnznru-fl,e Greek form of the Hebrew 1•:lenzar, meaning "Owl is my hello.' '1' lie brother of Mary and mamba, and probably the youngest of the family group. ticker when the sup - eel was given to Jesus nt Bethany Lnz- nrus was present, and ninny people gathered Lecnusc of a desire In see Ileo roan who had leen raised from the dead. S•, convincing an evidence of the 1otcr ef Jesus could nol he! ► rid.<insfc tut to tate chief priests. but he sts. who "tole: counsel that they might put leo cus nl.co to denlh" !12.10). This they erebably did not do. but sa1isflevJ .1hern- V 'us1 in Cir lou 2. That Mary who anointed the Lord - Mire designated to distinguish her fie in other Women bearing this very yrs tooth the death of Jesus, rlhnn>_.\1 present r t l called r1.. i .\znr'- 1 1. after I. \r•nt•ic nnntc kr "Lazar. e,. i i'. silunic,l nee., as 11:• ' . • • ! ' ; et, on site Fouthenst. t ..' of re el, 1, about two entice he .i, riisnle►n. day? -In figurative language Jesus points out the incl that he had not yet reached the end of his divinely intend- ed ministry (his working day), and that heneo there ons no immediate danger that the plotting of his enelnles against him would tie successful, 11. Our friend -In Christ friendships survive death. Fallen asleep -A common metaphor kir death, both in the New Testament rota in the classical literature of all peoples. The Greek word here used is the sante thorn which we get our Eng- lish word "cemetery'," meaning, liter- 1.!Iy, "steeping pence." 14. Lnznrus Ls dead -A tentement int - plying the -uperhunian know ledge of Jesus. since no messenger hud as yet announced the sad event, 16. Thomas Didymus -The Ree. end name means "twin." Sines in three formal lists of the apostles preserved lo its in the Gospels the Hanle of this disciple is coupl.'tl with ihat of Mat- thew, 11 has leen interred that tate leo seen were twin brothers, 17. In the tomb four days already --- The journey of Ihirly or more miles from northern Pcrlea, made by slow singes, would occupy about that length of time. 18. Fifteen furlongbe-•k (rife less than la.• miles, the furlong being approxi- malely eine eighth of a mile. 20. Martha met him - - Martha seems to have leen the older, as she was the more cnergelie rind active, 2f. Whatsoever thou ,bait risk of (e -,(J, j God will give thrr--'s ot'ds resettling a prsill'e fnilh in Jesus tine his efr•sinh. ship. n faith expressed in verses 27 in even more positive and explicit terms, 2e. 'the 'fenchcr-A tille indicating reverent regard for the person thus s;,nken of. angry with the false or pretended syn frothy of the Jess, but there is nethir in the tangling.. of the narrative to us runt this assumption, sine° the wok translated "weeping," velite it signifi "wailing.' is th.' seine in beth cases Lcttg a-r<I el Mary as well as of t! Jews. Hence those aro probably mei nearly correct who think in this out molten of our Lord's profound ants onisnt to death and all that It unpile is the fruit of sin. As \l C.ly'nant su Bests: "ikeply moved by the sight of s much suffering, It costs him a strugg to brace his spirit for the dread encout ter watt the Prince of Darkness." 35. Jesus wept --'!'taut is, shed tears. ,Iu.rt but most significant slatemcyil if may incidentally Le noticed Iia this is the thorlest verso in He Bible 38. Cave --in the limestone hills o Palestine are to he found ninny natur et eaves. Such, as well as many art( Ilelal excavation; of the same kind were used as tombs for the Bund, The edntre.ance in mast cases being from the si Against-Or, "upon," tho Greek pre- position permitting of either transla- tion. 3. i • fie stone--Tombs in the hillside were closed by placing round flat stones to fore the opening. This svi s done principally lo keep dr hs and wild teasl.s from entering. Ile With been dead four dnys--The Greek expression is idiomatic, and leaves something to be supplied in Ili/night, which in English it is necessary to ex- press in words. It would to equally .rrect to translate, "Ike has been lour avis in the tomb," or, "It is four days ince he vas buried.' 42. The multitude -The mLccellaneous rowel which had gathered, 85 distingu- 'hed from "the Jews" previously men - toned, and among whorl were doubt- ers many sincere, simple -hearted poo. !e. 45. Relieved on him -Believed hien to .e the eles_siah. 49. Caluphus-elefcere whom later Jesus 'as brought t t to be tiled. d 51. Being high priest Due 'year, he rophesied-Wo note the exalted con- ception of tate high priestly once field by John, as indicated in this explana- tion. 52. Not for the nation only-Prontptetl possibly by the thought of non-Jewish readers of his narrative. John lapses in- to this theological refte^_lton, which is In he regarded es his comment on his own narrative, of which it really forms no intrinsic pnrt, 53. From that day forth --Prompt and radical action was clearly necessary If the influence of Jesus over the common people was to be stayed. The only ndequofe remedy from the standpoint of tho Jewish authorities rites vt•as to put him to death. 55. To purity themselves -Froin the many conlaminntions necessarily inci- dent to the long overland journeys from outlying provinces to the capital city. t. ttoltoln of the ease, and qu remelt- . rem - Ig cJ seine 53.140 worth of booty. This r- :ran was never caught. d hew ideas aro valuable in every pm. es lession, and al leas) as much so in that of burglary as in any other. A ie few months ago a lady living in Streal- •0 haat, England, went out ter the after- s. noon. and soon after her departure a kr. van drove up, and the man in charge J to 1.1 the servant that he had brought bre an ottoman. The maid saki she thought e there nwsl be serve inistake, but the vanman replied with a grin that it was e. u present, Intended as a pier -sant sur- prise, so the article was carried up to a !tic best bed -room. rIt SOME CLEVER BURGLARS BILL SIKES 1145 BY NO ME % NS GONE OUT OF BISI\ES, Ile leas Mashed With the Times, and is Far More Cunning Than Ever. The coolness and Ingenuity of the modern burglar Is, Indeed, as wonder- ful as anything in fiction. Some little erne ago a thief broke into a house in Wimbledon, England, in broad daylight. But a maid Heard hire, and found him busy pocketing the contents of filo plate- basket. 1Io ran, and cutting acres s some open gds und, came to the Ale England tennis and croquet ground. He slipped through the hedge. and Said to (lase Taken 11500,000 01 Depose walked straight into the clubhouse, when: lie node for the dressing -room, kers' Nosily -A Police Abuse and begin to wash his hand; as if no- thing bad )tappen-d. Ili.. coolness was so superb thatthe attendant. taking him for a me,nbers fr end, sp;peeted nothing. (laving com- plei+le:1 his toilet, the burglar coolly strolled out by the front dour, walked to the gate, and departed. I'IIOFITABLF- FUBNrrI'RE. An Lour later the van returned, and 111.• driver told the maid that the otto- men wits intended for another house, So Il. was taken down again. It was net until the mistress returned that The discovery was made that ail tato jewel- lery and valuable silver in the I:ou (' had accompen:ol it. The burglar had, of course, packer) his Looly inside the eltoman. Another burglars' ruse was prartLsed with ..tic^cis in Sheffield not long age. r6 Receiving an urgent kieph:ane message late cin a Snturdey night, Ilse 'hefleid c rare -engine oras de. nuc r, n i , k a P large lunber-yard in the suburbs. The alarm prevail to be false, and, after inquiry. Was sfaan to hive (01110 from a sil- ver w alehouse Hoar the fire slit on. This the tolice promptly visited, and found the place ranseck••d. Some of the goofs Still lay abnut in seeks, which the Moves had net )el had time to remove. Evidently the burglars had reckoned en getting away with their plunder dur- ing the excitement enured by the turn- oul of the brigade, SPECIAi. PRECAUTIONS, A ging of burglars who broke into ItM etir,p of a firm of w•hoelesnle jewel- lers In Hlolbern, and got away with over $5.000 worth of loot, took the most extraordinary precautions to avoid leaving any traces or being disturbed while at work. The le Y a n by break- ing Into a lady's drascing-room and stealing several pairs of ghvcs, which they wore while at work in order lo leave no finger -prints. They then muf- fled the telephone -receiver with sliver paper. after which they tonic(' the show -cases into the hock premises, and there went through them leisurely, be- ing careful to take only gold and silver, and to reject all plated articles. They then made n meal of feed found on the premises, t tit ea•rfu!ly washed the 'flosses to avoid the danger of being traced by finger -prints, In Vienna n year ago :in artist in crime committed an audacious theft. A handsome gale and piling of hammer- ed iron and copper had just Leen erect- es' rrct-es' round the garden of n new villi in the Thirteenth District, when, late In the evening. a cart w'th severol work• men drove up, roused the w•ntchmnn, and gruubingly informed him that they Ind been' sent to 1nkA away the gale and paling. They insisted en his help- ing them with the job. and. under the eyes of n policeman, spent three hours getting Ih fence up and loading it in the cart. About midnight they drove away. in the morning. when the real workmen arrived. they were simply , paralyzed well astonishment. and the disgust of the roliccmon may be imag• ined when he found Hint he had been snIehing Three thieves curry awry their tbooty under his very nose. -London Answer,. week had teen of such en eccentric charactccr that his superioris lest no time in rcbeving hlrn of duty. Then they proceeded t•, undo suite of the re. 1 :s z a to work had )iIy•d out of Common Cold b's zeal to ferret cut tho nq's4riPs of 1'ankcr F'riellergs px'tulaliuns, Their first act was to release from jail four peree,ns whorl Muller had arrested wleIly ONLY A WITHOUT LEGAL GIIOUNDS- the lank. r's lawyer, the financee of the bank ca -h er and the young woman's mother, and the cashier himself. They also released a quantity of jewelry which the Strenuous commissary had seized (tem several of the banker's wo- man (r.ends, on the ground that the Beans represented prreperty paid (cr with dc}wseere' money. \lullcr, who is 37 years old and was formerly a military (fliser at Bremen, is known among his comrades as the "} oat cornmasa: y',' as he has dabbled in literntue and w•rilkn fo:sr or live look: and plays. One of his plays, called locomotive Engineer Klassrn. 's sheet's. to be pr' duce) at a Berlin Ros- alie. Ile has tern an earnest and suc- cessful police official, his superio:'s say, and ti -s cceenlr:citie's in the Friedberg l'US o are n_crt _ •' bJ Nny o rrw•rought nerv- ous coed lion 4.rought on by his exces- sive zeal wind sleepless tubers. 1 -le work - ret day Y and night at the bank premises. arab hing time kr meals and sleep at various odd hours, and never getting cut of his clothes, he says, FOR ELEVEN DAYS AND NIGiffs, Prolonged rest, he thinks, will make him as sound as ever, physically and 'mentally, but he says a policeman's lot •Ls not a happy one end flint he will hereafter devote himself exclusively' to the more congenial pu`tinio of book and play -writing. His case •has a serious and disquiet- ing side -that of the easo with which police officers in Pruss;a may nteke ar- rests and throw people into prison. No sort of ndvance inquiry is necessary, and the whim of a commissary like !Hiller may result in landing the most innocent of persons in a cell for an in- ! t!eflnita nurnter of days or even weeks before chance is given to establish one s innocence. This aspect of the Fried- berg case is attracting wide attention in Germany, and if it results In reme- dial action which will n little snore guarantee liherly and the pursuit of happiness in the Kaiser's domain, the broken-hearted commissary who would eliminate olatene tolice methods and simply- invite criminals to go to jail, will have made himself imperishably famous. --- Is FROM ERIN'S GREEN ISLE NEWS BY MAIL FRO\I 111LLAND's Sl101tl:S. ilappeviines in the Emerald Isle of Interest to ti wen. THIEF -TAKER IS INSANE INVITED ABSCONDING BANKER TO GI1 E IIIMSELF 11'. A CONNOISe Uft IN CRI\fE. To steal jewelkry from the front of a brilliantly -Ht shop -window which crowds of people are passing constantly is en Idea which would only occur to a con. ioisseur in crime. \'et this Is what actually happene.1 at Ere, New York, ono autumn afternoon a couple of years ago. A watch repairer et work w•ille In a yard of the shoe -case suddenly noticed that halt the contents of 1he case had mysteriously disappeared. He gave the alarm, ant investigation show. ell that the thief had gained access to Use cellar under 'the shop, and then, lnoiuutfng n pik of boxes, had drilled n hole in the cellar roof, cut out the ....................... • 'CONSTIPATION, • Although generally described a, • a disease• can never exist unless • • some of the organs are deranged. • • which is generally found to be the• •la I ;,lion to Caine to ju 1 Gotnmir�tnrr • liver. It consists of an inability to • 1 i • regularly evacuate the 1,ovrels, ;.rd • \later • as a regular action of the bowels ie • '1'F;Ni)EItr1) 111,4 ill •4lr,\ \Tt11N Exposed. Were r 1(. it r e c ft ' 1 t r it paltulic s.idr, the cos case et \Vnldentar \lullcr, ccemrnissnre el criminal police In Berlin, (ierinenv, 1,1 w'ee'd deserve to rank side by side with ce. Ih(. innnertol e'capndcs of the cnptnin Ih of Kopeniek ns the funniest story of the 1 age, Herr \fuller, However, is in re- ha hirment at a eanitarlu►n in So xony tea for nervous derangement, and smiles fn aro suppressed in ronimiscrnlion for his sad condition, writes n Berlin over- (:Ir respondent, Be!ore his true state was sci realized Germany did indulge in n than. ha der+nus real* (it merriment, t•,r this zone 1 Rous police oll(dnl of the Ka ser retort. the ell to the novel method of enjoining app S eginund Friedberg, a Beriin bunker I'o who is nit's ng along with Borne $M%i - A O00 of his del.osifors tenets, by issuing th er. open tekgrnn asking the fugilise r to vane h 1114' and give himself up, Nor The peke.. Commissary revealed to '1' the Danker on per•m►al groun,ls, ns. +4111 siring him that unless his arrest s'rta ply s,'ecrlily accomplished Itte' coninursary The ons in grave danger of ners,�uc pries. 'r trahon. Fricelb. rg was supposed lo t 1 1111 in h'ding In Londe:), s0 Muller enusrd end Me open telegram to be printed in the ,t3( Daily Mail, hoping Thus to catch the '11 fugitive's eye. After 48 hours had poss. c f s ri nub Friedberg hail had they Dupe. fast i. ,s to deeline his pursuers case Whaling stations ren the const e( Donegal are proving baneful to tie her- ring fisheries. A tarm of five acres in Shereock, Ccunty Monaghan, was recently sold Ly autton for $1.290. Great distress exists among the poor (1 1•'ortadown, on account of depres- s•on in the linen trade. The tenants en the estate of Col. Lies?! Reid signed agreements for the purchase of their holdings. "rw'o compositors, both labor men, hive leen epJio`.ntc•d mngistr•atcs at t:eth and Limerick respectively. Detective Rowland was elnbbcd in the L•a••k at Belfast by n nun) named Blackwood, whom he had arieesle'1. The Banbridge anhrt 1 c Burn *'t � 1 ( n i g nt l � plan - ng to erect 23 rx'th,ges at an awero'ge t of about $1.txii per voltage. Mr. Juba Kerr, tele, %as Mayor of merick lost year, has Peen npp(int- le the commission ut the peace for at city. lichen' Cody, of Kylnnnn Tipperary). s died at ire age of 100 years. Ile ccs a trite aged 86 end seven in mil)', Jahn Cneeldy, el Cienderi: w, (*entity ur. while Ir.nit fishing re.ently. was badly bitten by an otter that his nd }iiia to Le+ amputated, 1 is olTicially notified that General Hon. Sir Nev,tle Ly Mellon will ho ir'inled (i'mntander-in-1:hief of the rocs in Ireland from April Zit. subterranean passage. r,neisling of rcr chambi:e rumsing Icngthw•iee was ecenl:y unearRi•d along the Great neon 11, H.. in County Louth, he contractor has commenced the king e•f a new reservoir for the' sup. 01 water to the I, en of Longford, contract mos Inken at $15.0(0. hr debt en ItnrTirlyelnll'h llospftal, crick. which stor41 III £I.it'5 at the of Tho year, hn.s teen rrduccd to 10 as the result of three egaries. Ir.r deaths and eight fresh cases Anted lever have ocetirrr.l re ilel- . and there are now twenty -rine in the infectious Diseases 1Ios- 30.---Jesus docs not hurry abruptly In - 1., the house of mourning, but gives the l ereave,1 sisters time to realize the significance of his nearness behre Ire. arrives on the actual scene of the sor- rels,. • 32. .( \ , � Lr I o hern h d not o did - C mit) h the sisters shared the some profound faith in Jesus, 33. Groaned in the !Tirol --Or. "was reeve.' will► indignation in the spirit.' The reference is probably teraomr strong cmoti in, irriply(ng cendernnalion of sr,rnetting Ihnl has already occurred. 11 has been suggested that JestaA aal absolutely essential to general • rc a poll 0 efTieor and pulel.ched the health, the Iee.st irregatarkty should • • stew: be neglected. • • •MILBURN'S • • •• LAXA-LIVER PILLS • • have no equal for rclicv:n,! nail •• curing RLonsti Constipation, 1ilies ne< s • Water Brash, Heartburn, and e11 Liver Troubles, Mr. A. B. Bettis, Vancouver. B.C., writes :-For sonic years past I was troubled with chronic constipation and bilious headaches. I tried nearly everything,!ut onlygot temporary rclicf. Afriendinduccd me to try LaxA-Liver rills, and they cured tele completely. Price 25 cents per box, or 5 boxes for 11.01, all deniers, or trailed direct on receipt of price. t • 'Ng T. Mier:reN CO., I,tktITrn • • • Toronto, Ont. • ••••••••••••••••••••••o••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 I owing weir.' conuminicatten in the ,,rapers: 'i • reasons for my resignal r,n lie ue It:.• in<ttpernblc cenlliet raging in S!ir 1 . any her:, -1 1'. tweet' discipline and the dictates nn,t f ,Ive�� f . a . nit •r s I I i .r. t n•. t• �biiit • h1et, (ilial (here. A serines rutbrcak el h•pin,i,l ha: Inken pin'e in the neigh, (carni\ I..t 1 rime pr.rl.e,it et linllvshannon I u;ou, ' '11,, nre iiI present eight cases in the • 1 •er 34'81 s 1 hate I1•'evl to effect a cont- • ler, mise between three dulls.. I have • t ueht en I freight. flirt 1n feed• r not to • un. k (lenity the best r1 my 1„eeers 'n Ihc Ii- 1,•ss stugglr n voice sllhin • r 4 Treys yourself frier th• cue nrrbe',r- • .t l, 1. nes!' -, r. 111 tv fats nil eights• • 1'1 skit. sligol rig -Pie Friedberg cn'e have • in Ile wry wakened my physical and • • r;ient:11 powers. 1 fe •1 unite/rally Imp- • (.c no 1 btr,se'd s ilh Itis joy ''1 w•.rk. • wheeler tti'r FI•ieet ,'i g'. arrest takes place 1••-riny or trent now nrt►•I r. ,,• •1.' info flier ) a'kgronn I when the sl n i, .• , f I fie • German iintsntt fs nencern'-,l," Mull. r'a conduct during 111.' i Peel ng 1 I,)' fou' young iter t leen np.perm..sl un 11,•, en (:lura and I.hnet 42'e1 That lin il< •ecru; nils ^ 1 rir'.I. 1' I1I115t• t, r • t, i I .1:'• ,, nN•nIL It, i.• I h, 111 15 tire. •: inn :le. 'Jiteeene 1 ', Illel'ais nptw.,m' , d 1r . 1• veryr Y 4` cit. ,urngringly' rc.,l>ccliugf IL• I yroHe: cont Ik'leLs, There nre IS.000,0uu kris o1 (ere in this el:slriet, 111 spit.! of weld sl:.lemenl. ns Ic nn- nrehy ttn.l eris',r,ler in 110 3j1 1. Fnnhs and in l%nys tore in ; and the export rutile , .• ing in prier/ and a;Iume. Appe stien has been made !o Int• • n•1 ettentt,t- • I• BUT IT BECOMES A SERIOUS MATTER IF NEGLECTED. PNEUMONIA. BRONCHITIS. ASTHMA. CATARRII or CON.. GUMPTION IS TILE RESULT. Get rid of it at onto by taking Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup Obstinate c•,ugha yield to iia grateful soothing n nun, and in the ear king, per- siewut cough, ott.- i present in Consumptive wises, it gives prompt and euro relief, In A4thrmt and Bronchitis it is a suconeeful rend v . ren dc[l n gLre nthin g easy and natural, enabling the sufercr to enjoy ra. fre,hirtg sleep, and often effecting a per• IIIanr• ., cure. t u e. %%'u do not claim that it will cure Con- sumption ill the advanced stags., but if taken in time it will prevent it reaching gthat stage, and will give the greataat to tho peer cullurer from this terrible malady. Be careful v hen purcLasing to see that to c u get the genuine i gne l r. Wood's Norway l'Ine Syrup, rut up in a yellow wrapper, three pine trees the trade mark. Mr. Wen. 0. Jenkins, Spring hake, Alta., writes: "I had • very had cold settled on my lunge. 1 bought two bottles el Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup but it only required ons W cure me. I have, Rover met with fay other medicine v good.! Frice 25 eta.. at all dealers. Waterford sessions for leave to exhume the body of .\farlin Brien, a Balaclava veteran, who %Vail burled in the pauper's burial ground without notice having been given to his relatives. \\'hilt Hugh Cochrane, farmer, of Bushmills, County Antritis, was work- ing recently on hie holding nt Lough- linch, he unearthed the remains of an ancient Irish bort, cut front solid oak, 18 feet long and 40 inches wide. Horses attached to nn ambulance car- rying an injured man. ren away in a Belfast street, colliding with it lamp- post, and throwing the driver fiem his seal. The invalid was taken In a van to the hospital, but died almost 1rn- ir:ediately. Marin Higgins. a Kilmcadim, counts eeeter'ord, laborer, has Leen commit. ted for trial on a charge of manslaugh- ter While engaged in a drunken brawl with another laborer named Murray. he inflicted wounds which ul- timately preyed fatal. A farmer narked John O'Hare, Bally- Imigh, obtained in the Newry market the sun of £"2 for 8(I stones of flax, which was raised from eve bushels of seed that cost ,£I. ills working ex- penses cost hits .£11, leaving hien a net gain of £20. Tho Derry fort and Harbor Com• rnisstoners have passed a resolution asking the Government to give n tree gi-nnt of 8350.000 towards building a graving .Io^.k nI Derry, the cnmmis- sioners lo nth! 8150.(100 --making a to- tal of $500,000 for the project. The father of a large lousily having died of consumption in n !verse near Newry. the collage became Infected with the germs. Five children died in rapid succession. and two more are sick of the same disease. The faintly is too poor to moue hon) the house. Drummer MI•-hne1 ilegate of the 51h Battalion 1, nnawght Rangers Wein, was di-chnl ged tender the provisions r.; the new array order, rifler complet- ing a service of toric' -one versa and 1(l(' days. Ther.' was never the slight- est record against h!In. On the 1st inst.. a large grass farm be ong ng tet Al churl Flynn. of Carn-ny- rr ngh. igallinasloe. enmity Roseornntnn, was cleared of cattle an.l stock. which included n large number of sheep. They were being driven on the public road when the police arrival en the scene, end the raiders made off. Kate Wilson. a nurse. WAS rharg,•r(l to the Dublin Police Court with Infan- tieele, It being clnim.vl that she had wilfully neglected Louise Cinnoll, nn eight-,nenths baby. so as to entree her death. Eliznheth Sinnoll, a do•rnest•c. the ntnther of the child. had place,l ;t :n the w•omnn \\',lsens cars, paying fele a week for it. -4 LPBS APT TO RRr.1K. 'There's many n slip 'twixt the cup and the lip.' quoted the moralizer, "Iles," rejutned the derneralleer. "11'n safer to drink out of a tln bucket." MILBURN'S Heart and Nerve Pills. rrA , r a swine for el (1014./1/1).1 arid d:+- urd. is arlrlr.g from .-s run down eore'ti tion n( the heart or nerve.'ystom, such a Palpitation nt the Heart, Nervous l'ro' w 1 r trifler. Nerrnu,n., Sleepless - :IC ',Faint and D.zsy reella• Drain Fag .•tri They ere espeeia,l beneficial to K onion troubled with irregular men. aturatlon, 1<rlce 5) cotta per lees, ora for 11.11. A.t Ace11.74%.,, as, rt Tea T. ]1Tr,.nry Co , 1.naerraoronsto, e)a(,