HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1908-05-21, Page 74114
ABSLUTE
SECURITYI
Cenulno
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
Muet Door Stonnturo of
See Pac-Slmlto Wrapper Below.
Very small end as eas7
to take as sugar.
CARTER'S
!!'TYLE
i
PI
FOR HEADACHE.
FOR b1lIINESt.
FOR O1UOUSNES$.
FOA TORPID LIVER.
fOR CD1STIPATION.
Ftl1 SAW:1W SHIN.
FOR THECOMPLEXION
Oltia 'xrrig u1r ■ rewa
th ele I Pur.ZT opt ;,, -.-
rAt� •
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
Ring Game
t Z i'fti very little trouble you may
Wconstruct this game from
strong cardboard. Upon the
top of the four cardboard posts should
be fastened hooks, each being of
such is height that when the ring is per-
mitted to awing forward upon the
length of its cord, It mar be possible
to encircle the hook with the ring.
The players swing the ring In turn.
The gblect of the game 1s to encircle
the four posts, which, by the way,
should be numbered 1, 2. 3, 4. First,
No. 1 Doat must be encircled. then Noe.
2, 3 and 4. In order. Th.' player gains
another turn every time he swings the
READY TO I'I.AY
ring over a poet; but if by chanc
ring should encircle the wrong pas
must begin over again with No, a
Ile who first places the ring over
four posts in proper order wli•g
game.
FORCED TO WEAR
Shameful Treatment o- f British Su
int BelUiuni.
The Eng tis colony in Belgium is
h.dignaul because of the continu
tension in prison at Antwerp of the
young electrical engineers. Messrs. Bur -
len, Cowan, Ilogarlh and Robinson.
The cause is a peculiarly grievous one,
tract the plight of the prisoners is pill -
Mile in the extreme. Although merely
awaiting examination on the trivial
charge of stealing pencils, paper, and
indiorubber erasers from the Bell Tele-
phone Company, they are treated Itke
convicted criminals.
All of them are forced lo weer hide-
ous cotton hoods, wheel completely en.
%clop their faces so that only Mehl
eyes oan be seen. They are given the
scanty prison diet. and undergo the
same harsh regime as burglars, fine-
derers ani ether felons.
No one who 1Lst•ned to their story
could have denied that the charge.J
aganst them are frivolous and vexa-
tious in the extreme. There 15 not the
slightest foundation for their imprison-
ment.
Sir Cecil Ilertset, the British Consul -
General. Ions been unremilling in this
efforts to secure their release, but this;
Ls shit impossible, ns only 8200 of the
itentl hail drenan<kd for all four can
the found. Tho securities must be re-
sidents cf Belgium, and properly -
owners.
MASKS
4
1101'EF1'L.
Neighl'nr-"And what did the doctor
say?"
Old Man --"ire soul, 'No more meJ)-
c.ne, but if ,•c take a little walk of a
ntnrnin' on the common and get the
fur. melee you'll live to b: u o\yge-
nnrian.' "
TIIOUG ITFUL.
iI. ' :.l her that she was n bets',
\u.! Sale. a wise young thing,
It. peel ,he'd nlw•ny-s thought
A lc!I :heuld have a ring.
Turns Bad Blood into
Rich Red Blood.
No other remedy possesses such
perfect cleansing, healing and ruri.
lying properties.
Externally, heals Sores, Ulcers,
Abscesses, and all Eruptions.
internally, restores the Stomach,
Liver, Bowels and Blood to healthy
action. If your appetite is poor,
your energy gyne, your ambition
h'•t,
13.13.B. will restore you to the
full enjoyment of happy vigorous
life. <
TILE RICHES WITHOUT COST
Amusement Is for Sale, But Joy Comes Without
Price and Without Bargaining.
"Conte buy wine and milk without
i ...lacy and %vilhnu! price." ---Is. Iv., 1.
Did you ever stop to Think that all
the best things in life come without
cost to ourseltes? They are given free-
ly The things that in their value are
.t money and beyond price are
a1 Iho ntelhud of (hear acquisition
\•. ttc)ul stoney and without price. Every
t• is rich in the measures that it has
e overed and possesses these tree -
sures.
A man may pay many thousands of
dollars for the painting of a sunrise,
and yet it never will bo nearly so beau-
tiful, so inspiring, so valuable as the
stair:se itself, a spectacle which the
poorest may enjoy without the expen-
dittll a of so much as n cent. :1n our
works of art, costly as they into Le,
ere but imitations of the originals whicii
while fur exceeding them in Leauly,
may be ours for the t ik ng.
The real pleasures of Lfe• are not 10 lee
bought. 'There are no figures set upon
happiness; it springs up in the palhwtiy
Like a flower the seed of which has bren
walled from some other world. The
quiet, deep joys of life. benison like,
fel' from heaven upon our hearts. None
can command thein, none can c.'rner
there.
You may purchase assistance and in-
terest, but affection and love conte un-
sought, unsolicited, unbought. What
wealth have you greater, mx:re worth
to you. than the tender kindness. the
sympathy, the spirit of self-gviing that
gees out to you from other lives? ihOso
assets are not on our office ledgers,
tel on the great le,lgers of life from
which our final balances are struck
TIIEY ABE WRIT LARGE.
When we Drake up the inventory of
Dur lives, if our hearts have any ap-
preciation of true walrus, if we have
learned to distinguish between life's
1'.ols and its product, we find That !hose
things wee could least afford to lose are
those that have conte upon us without
cur labor, perhaps without our deserv-
ing, always beyond our powers of pur-
chase.
Ilow foolish Then are we, who have
the greatest, the enduring treasures by
our
iffier
ile.
Lesson Vitt. lesii Broth arid Burial.
Golden 'text, 1. Cr. 15. 3.
TIIE LESSON \\'ORD STUDIE.S.
(Based on the text of the Revised
M'ersioll.)
Sequence of Events. -The betrayal
and arrest of Jesus look place in the
garden some time leIween midnight
and dawn !\gill, 26. 47-56. and parralel
passngee). Then followed the Trial be -
fere the Jewish authorities, Annas, Cni-
phns, and the Sanhedrin :John 18. 12-
Y7. eIatl. 26. 57-27. 10, and parrallel
passages), with the accompanying loci
dents of Peter's denial and the tepenl
arse and schedule of Judas. 1t was still
early morning when the chief pi:e-ls
and the elders and scribes %%ilk the
whole council "Lound Jesus, and car-
ried hint sway. and (klivered hint up
1•. Pilate" (Mark 15. U, John floes not
record the fact that Pilate before de-
livering Jesus to be crucilicd sent him
n prisoner lo Herod Anlipns, whose jur-
isdiction extended over Galilee find
I'era'n, where Jesus had spent• the
greater part of his life. Herod was In
Ju'usa{cut tit This time, and was glad
u' the elieorlunily of seeing Jesus, el
whom he had heard much. Ile was
disappointed. however, since Jews fib•
s..lutel' refused to converse with hint.
milt the result that both Herod and his
sulelydinatee mocked and ill [rented hint
14 fore sending him hark to Pilate (Luke
tot 5-16). Another incident omitted from
"elms uarrallvo is the warning of I'i.
lutes wife to her husband to hate "114r,
thing to do with tont righteous Inue''
Malt. 27. 19). Roth of Illcsc (%cnls pre-
cede 'elates final prraentnlien to the
Jetts. nn.l also Uie cruel mockery and
se•ourging 111 the !iambi cf the braid (.f
Comnn sold ers irls'do the prn•lurinl
(John 19. 1-4: Mall. 27. 1.30; \Inrk 15.
16.19). John. however. adds some vain-
ahle details touching the closing scene
of our Lord's Ir:al More Pilate John
19. 7-15). including the mention cf the
fear that came over Pilate upon his
hen ring of the claim of Jesus lo be the
Son of God. and el-- the threat of Ibe
J• \t s to pr',clnim i' ;10 enemy .1
('o. -al- if he Fttoui. t• • ,t -e Jesus.
\.
se
17. They look Jesus the rt `fro .. ire-
,
Meilen soldiers delegated to exe-
le the sentence of tenth. followed, a3
1 \; ':s na, b,' a pr•4'nnec•uous ntul-
t . • I se. :3. 27),
., :n:; '' . ee t"1.• synoptic norta-
1' • - we s that fele Simon of Cy-
r, fie was (einpel?ed to entry llls' ere,ss
for Jesus jail of Its.` t\ ay to Golgotha.
Ii is 114s1 <'• ! . h• •'• frnm n cvnn-
1.:•1 • n • f !!,• \i.t:. 11 1.. ,knives whe.
II:e ltrsl or the Inst port
eenpare elatl. 27; \lark 15:
L• uke eel.
The pin •e of n shill- Se rano' henna
the ownl shnrr of the hill.
Gul}(nlha-Ilchn w, lie,?gr,l.'I h, m. an-
ing• "a !hull": Lat'n. (.til%i,l'ia• alienee
our name "t:alvary•- The r\acl site of
1 nl•.u'y .s still a ?miller of dispute.
••i 1h. \••w• Te -Jansen! narrative we J
k..• v g+ . ' 'eft .enlY Its:hl 'he pin,e was
• vle• Ir. 1\ gale 11.1-. I:1. 1.). year
t' '• t,•• I!'. ;to. and ;Ivor 0 pith. e
1 . ',.. y \hill. Y7. 3;t). and neer to
cc whatever you may n:. st desire, the
other is to keep the life ewer open to
all the joy and love and enriching that
i, ubout it.
This world is full of beauty. We
alone, with the engincry of our greed.
!hike it ugly. But we cannot altoselhcr
succ. 'I in hiding all its 'tenuity, and
the open eye and appe'eialive heart
going i r
enol{, w:ih',tl D „ for afield, may catch
glimpses and often 1A hold Ile• full glory
of field and flower and slurry heaven.
How deeply must we pity the lite to
which the beauty of the world brings
no enriching, he who does not lake a
deep breath and fel u thrill of pleasure
at sight of mountain, prairie, or sea.
And all the prodigal beauty of this
world is but a message to us of the
greeter loveOf the life that
upholds IdS 1
t
all, of the riches of him that inhabt-
t•Ih eternity.
And fairer yet than field or flower,
Iteusures greater and more enduring
arc ours for the taking. the npprecinl-
ing, in friendships, human love. ono
eompun:onships. The peace that broods
from
A MOTHERS PACE,
the strength of a fathers lite. the light
lit our chCdren's eyes, the joys of donde
end ht arlhsides-tire not these the b(sl
riches of life?
\Vhat would we think of a man who
maintained an orchard for Ilke sake of
the soil, or the grass or the firewood
in the trees? Yet aie we not even more
foolish who serol to live only for the
means of life; for its agencies and not
for its ends. We prize the soil, vo
Leasure the trees; we toil for leaves
and (wigs nn' slight the fruits of life,
human`.ly, character, love. friendships.
Sometimes we say life is getting more
complex; its demands are becoming
greater. No man can be rich without
immense metered resources. !tow fool -
Isla it all is. [Life's essential demands
are still few and simple; life's real rich-
es are within the real reach cif all. We
have but to lift up our eyes, to open
cur hearts.
The darkest fate that mold come to
any is to be so limner e(1 in Iflc struggle
for things, so absorbed in the means
of making a living that we are blind
altogether to tate meaning of life itself
and so lose altogether the enduring
r ches, the lasting, sustaining joys, the
fair fu:tago of lite.
iIENIBY F. COPE.
sepulchers and gardens 'John 19. 38).
18. Willi hint two others -Condemned
criminals, us the synoptic narratives
explain.
19. Wrote a title -In the sense of
"caused to be w-rilten."
Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the
Jews -According to Matthew (27. 17):
"Phis is Jesus, the King of the Jews • ;
according to Mark (15. 26): "The King
of the Jews"; nccording to Luke (23.
38): "This is the King of the Jews.' John
having been an eyewitness, pI'obably
has preserved to us the exact wording
of the title, the other evangelists give
lug only its substance.
20. In Ilebrew, find in Isatin. and 'n
Greek -Hebrew was the langunge of the
Ictnple, and the sacred ceremonial of
the Jewish religion. Latin was the
longue of the Roman conquerors. at
this time in possession of Palestine,
while Greek was the language of the
classic Gentile literature of the period.
Meanwhile the common speech of the
street and of cornmerre was none of
those In lts purity. but the so-called
Aronlaic,whiclaj suns a modification or
corruption of clnssieal Greek.
23. Took his gnrmenl.s And (hose
aloe) of the Iwo men crucified with him.
This was the recognized right of the
soldiers ent•tisted with an execution.
Coal -Or, "tunic," en under garment
reaching from the neck to Ile knees,
er, peeslbly, as sornetintcs, to the
ankles.
21. Scripture Curnpnre I'sa. 22. iR:
"'They pnrl my garments among Them,
AnJ upon illy vesture do they cast
lots."
25. Ills mother, and lois Mother's
lei. \Ivry the wife of Clepns. and \lacy
\Ingdoene-Lit., "his ttrdll(1' end his
neither's sister \Ivry the 'wife) of t:lo-
pas end \Tory lite ehigda'cne. • We
rete. hist. flint the word "wife," ?s the
italics In the text and the pnrenlbeses
in our literal rendering (.f 1tic pnssige
indicate, is 111 the Greek left to ►r stip-
plied; and That in the original rendering
!Isere are no marks of punctuation. \Ve
bole also that no conjunction occurs
1clwecn the phrase. "his mother's see
ter' and the foowing n .n. "\Inc,,
w•hirh tvotlld wenllt to Indic•unle Ihnl Ire"
hwo t,• re lo be identified. Ihic making
the seeder tit the women mentioned
the. • ither urn
n tour. as.•.
mnc _ 1nt-
moil. .;ere think. 11 is also possible
that roe otter w ort, n: "daughter,'
• •-Int•,' n 'it i , • teen inIt-n l-
sf -incan,
been
•stir, , • • 1, - ' , •. •I lingn•
i.t:.: wage. I`• I..! . te. • ! `xord,
tem r\• r. Int- 1. e u •:,' pl eel. %lies' it •.
Inv' srnne in all of its.• e; rliest. Irons.
lalj••ns, elep04 here menii•,ncd, must
11.1 I, e'onfoun.3•.1 \\ ith (:b epti5, men•
ti,.n.-4 in Luke :I. le. From Malt. 10.
3. find Luke 21. lo. v. e int r Intal (:M-
pns is Io It• : 1 r,' ti, l tt.!h .\!plrrut.
fnlher of the I ..-.!,:i.:,re also
Mark 3. IR; Lute, s. I•.: \• 1- I. l:1). AI.
learns Icing 1', • r,:.. :net • el. the
ilebrew or Hyl:. e I a!1 fes It„• -:fine
111 I OiI, Fol' 1e1c14 rex 144 4 :h. r \t.'Men
tall., erre :,I -o Mesenl fit 11.• 'r•„ss
clamour Mee. 27. 56; Mark 15. 4u, and
Luke 23. 19.
26. \Venue, The (;reek (quitalenl is
n 1,1'v til i.•tpt-.l.
Ilis • 5511 bens•- 11 i. tint nrresafre
• Mee 4,t a Ie•use ns turtle owned l.y
1111, The meimingt is :•imply that
lr un Ihnl tenure \Inry Warne •arne a 114411•••
el • f the Noi•ct/Jd til 11* Iu'M.wesl des•
t'. \ .ncgor - A sour w hne made from
papery from which Ilse first julc
nlrcady Iwen extracaed. It was,
fere. a less exeeneite and infcrio
erngo need by the continuo peep)
furnished 1 o the soldiers.
Upon hyssop-I::Veer, us forte
e leen ow iced, o1'. tis others sug
1:,tel,u, the purpose of the hyss
either ease being simply to Cleve
-j.onge eufliciently to ad►uinisle
alleviating draught. Still other
n;enlulors. however. suggest tht
hyssop was a kind of spice ad
the wine lo make it mere ptutgc
30. Gave up his spirit -Clearly
weary act on the part of Jesus.
31. A high day,--'fhe sabhalh
i'ussover. and, therefore, a day o
than ordinary sanctity.
Broken -In accordance with a
non custom by which death was
cited in such causes,
38. Joseph si
s g I► of :\rimnlhrra -las.•
referred to as "a rich man" Matt. 27.
57,, "a councilor," of honorable cslntc.
\rho also himself was !coking 1„r the
"kingdom of God" (Mark 15. 43); .r peel
nlitfl and a righteous' (Luke 23.:ol).:\r-
nitilhmu is usually idcnliti(rl \\ 111 n
srnull town near Lydda. southwest fit
Juppn.
39. Nicotkmus--Like Joseph, u mcrn-
,c
L'cr of the Sanhedrin.
Myrrh and aloes-4:cclly spices,
un l
h d'
A ed pounds -Twelve hundred
0Iinres,
40. As the custom of the Jews is to
hurt' -An explanatory clause added for
neseJewish readers who might be more
lonelier with eonie other methods ol,
preparing holies for burial.
42. The Jews Preparation -The pre-
par•alien for the Passover, which was
to Le eaten on the evening of the sante
day.
-- I. --
MERCHANT AND BURGLAR
DOUBLE CHARACTER OF TUIEF CAP-
TUREL AT LEICI:STEIt, ENGLAND.
John Spencer, Sunday S:hool Teacher
and Robber - An Exemplary
Citizen.
The solution of the mystery of the
theft in December last of :$25.000 worth
of diamonds from the bedroom o[ the
wife of Capt. David Wally of Brocksly
Hall is promised with the arrest of
John Frederick Spencer, a remarkable
J. kyll and Hyde -Sunday school teach-
er lied burglar.
The arrest of Spencer was the culmin-
ation of a seises of the most skillfully
executed burglaries in the fashionable
Milton Mowbray and Leicester districts
ever perpetrated in hngh.nJ. Scotland
Yard itself all but admitted defeat in
unravelling the mystery. Time after
time detectives made an arrest, only to
b. comeel'ed 10 release the prisoner for
lark of evidence.
A MODEL CITIZEN.
Suspicion never ince fell on Spencer,
who was regarded as a model business
man of Leicester, running a good dry
goods store there on week days and
teaching n largo Sunday school class
of boys and girls on Sunday. Ile at-
tended meetings of charity organiza-
tions, gave liberally to the poor, and
was personally acquainted with many
of the be=t reople of Leicester. In fact,
s.• exemplary was his life that ho won
the IoCal prize known ns "'rhe '('own
Hundred." This consists of 100 petmOs
sterling, or $500. which is advanced for
Iwclte years without interest to espe-
cially worthy young men to enable
Ihern to start in bushiest. \Vhen sev-
eral burglaries in the neighborhood of
hie• own house took place Spencer calt-
ed a public meeting, which he address-
ed himself, and protested eloquently
against Iles irw'tilciency of the polies
protecllon of property,
MISSING AT NIGHT.
At night he was always mysteriously
missing; and it now develops Dint,
armed with a set of hurglnr s tools,
and with (grimes and poisons with
which he quieted sleepers and killed
Ilt)u1,Is.ime dogs, he was robbing many
.t the persons whose ncqunintnnce he
trade in business and in church. Ile
was finally captured by the merest ac-
cident, Iho policeman into whose arms
he ran all but refusing to believe his
cies when he lore the mask from
Spencers face..
f
TRUE GREATNESS.
"Father," snit little Iloilo, `what is
o gnat nine?'
".1 grent mall, my is 0110 who
menages to gather nt.nnt flint n chole
1. 1 o1 assistants who sv 11 inks the Llntne
t• r his inistnkcs while he gels the ere.
(lit fur their good ideals."
SUFFERING WOMEN
who fond life a burden. tan have health and
strength Tutored by the use of
Mllburn's
Heart and Nerve
Pills.
The prevent ge[.rration of women and girl►
have muco than their *hare of misery. With
✓ eme 11 is nervo l-ne" and pn)pifalion. with
others weak, ditty suit tainting spells, while with
others there is a genera) collapse of the system.
M.lblen'e Heart and Nerve Pills tone up the
net%es. etre..g,hen the heart aa•I make it teat
strong and regulrr, create new red stood cot.
pu.rle. and impart that genre of buoyancy 10
the spirit• that is the result of renewed mental
and physical %igot.
Mr.. D. O. Donoghue, Orillis. Ont., writes:
}, r 04er s tear 1 rsas troubled with res,ous-
• r• ani heart tmel• e 1 •Itenled to g.v %LI -
burn s Itrart and Nerve 1' :!. a 111:J. and after
tons five boxer 1 hound I a;.. completely rum!.
1 always recommend ,loin (0my fri-ndr."
Prier SO eerie per 4. x rt three 1•ntte for 11 2.4
all dea:ers or The 7. Milburn Co.. Limited
loroato, cat.
NG
to
4011
tis•
•►s
op-
lis -
the
nt-
g ho fact that stern' of
the ler
}( t shippers hI,'J,crs fir.' installing 0n-
(•(t1f'ut:ag p'ant., thereby cutting J .wn
:wit:ruler big shipment, by the 'ad-
, says a (abut( correspondent uJ the
Some e:,nfltsi011 5.- 11!'- 1 , neC144 be -
155,11 tee d,ff('remt ,i,-'! - :11 Lower
Lee -eine. the new 11e11 I: so many.
C:11111- Eine leen r4iJ,•el. fh4•-sc Iwo
(1 -feels ere solver Centre and Sixty
si.\. S.:t, r Berne(' is pract:catt• one
nee .. l.:14 • f the roulhcrll boundary of
1.•.rruine k.wn.hip. and Sixty-six Legins
at it point &about two miles south of the
Lorraine township boundary. Pros -
1 odors aro still doing some sinking.
and with the snow and ice gone, some
good discoveries will likely be mule
which will bring this new distriet into
pnoIn fiend',
SOUND OF TIIE STEA\J WHISTLE.
1n the Montreal it:ver section the
Moose Horn mine in James to'.vnship,
neoyt a mite cast of Elk Lake city. !s
Ilse- first rn,ltrrIy Li the l:ew distr:el to
1 • equipped with mnchinery. The
`ouftd of the :tenni whistle Ls a joyful
note to lho visitor in the camp. The
Moose It rn property embraces four
claims of f ,:•ty acres each in the north
half of ka tour, concession five, James
township. i.It of which are passed and
i'.o palcufed. Bcskbes having the dis-
tinction of ion\:ng the first innchtnery,
cola o1 1114 e teems has the first certifi-
cate of rcc••rd.
111•:e I:lvl•:r A BIG SUM.
Among the best c:aims in James
township. or al least hnving the best
showing 1.e date. 's the Bruce claim,
the norlhenst iisseee of the south
half lot 1, col, •;!t 1, Janies. On
This claim a tent four inches wide
shows cobalt bloom, smnitite and nn -
live silver. At n depth of four feet
the vein shoves six inches of decom-
posed calcite, nicol bloom and native
silver. About 300 feet of stripping tins
been done on this vein and it is re-
iweeetl that the owners have received
810.000. Messrs. Bogert Bruce, Albeit
elacDonnld mut McVey are the owners
of Ih s property, along with several
nlheis ncnrby, all of which have good
4! overics. The Blcfcu•d and elcieny
clams in the southeast corner of
Junius have also some fine showings,
all of them having pnsced inspection.
In this section the greater number of
1L4 veins are aptite on the surface. but
gradually cone into calcite as depth is
tit's first. On M. it. 253 n vein has been
traced 75 feet with n pit sunk 14 feel,
showing n nice ctleite vein coming in
at a depth of 10 feet and in the calcite
smnitite and bloom are leo be fount.
This same vein has been traced ower
406 feet in claim M. B. 380 and Three
pits have been sunk, showing the vein
having widened from Iwo to six inches,
and etch 4 f these pits discloses three
stringers, dipping inwards the main
vein. Resides the work already desert!).
41, lot 380 has two pits sunk on a vein
front three to six Inches in width of
calcite, cobalt bloom, mantle and na-
tive silver.
A \IACGREGOR TIIE PIONEER.
James chic lregor is the pi:aicer pro-
spector of the Elk t.nke se:lion. having
sI-len(Iid camps at MncGregor's I.nrkl-
ing. and. owing to the number of Macs
who have camps adjoining eh.. Mac-
Gregor's, the place will be known in
lulutr as elncsville. eessrs. Leonard
and Fred Bickford, John and Robert
MacKay are nvoDundas, On-
tarto, while Mr.
atiJnntcses f MacGregor Is
Scotch by birth, but makes his resi-
dence in Winnipeg, Manitoba. \Ir.
MacGregor has charge of the properly
f the (Salt syndicate, <•wning six pass -
..1 •;11 mss in i•t' 1 and 2. con ess'on 1,
J „• tonwship. \1r. MacGregor also
I. ,• charge of the '1'(Ironto syndicate
e nhs, kits 1 and 2. James. on all of
\t ; h titrrd discoveries hove been trade.
rifle work outside of the as-
s•--nienl work tins been done to date
4 + 1:nv of there claims. On the Lucky
+.• • !i. r. claims corer °Ike' by Cobalt
;eel 4;Haw•n lrnrlics. a comparatively
small moult of deveinpmcnt work has
b.en done to date. but sJine fine show-
ing. helve 'e'er triad.'.
A good discovery was male on the
Lurks Godfrey claims lost November,
sts wing nicolte, stnnllite and native
silver. It is proposed to work a force
of about en sten on these properties
during the coming summer. After go.
ding over a ntnnlmr of propenes in Bee
part:clear district your cerr<'sponAenl
%ab nl,*r• enl.Iy Furprired. tiscot•er17g
'h t an oven 41 from three to 1. ur codes
,: re hit . ps ncl•cnlly all passed claims
end idler l;'ving into nearly nil the open
cuts and pits. finds That the calcite
„ee-ins 1•, be canting in came
1• rept.: <' t':e n.plae, and as the cn:eile
• in I Inv' bat �i:acr•INarieveryng
N1.11 111111'.1" .11 the district, this fact
:(ctut'st encouraging.
1'u•.s the setts find cast of this dis-
It ct 'ewe:al very promising proper -
;ire ',s'ater% mmongst ethers are
tie \\ • st claire in W111(11. the \Iacdon-
..nd fir tvn claUns in Tlklh ope, the
(keen & Kenieely claim tit TIklhope,
0'• of which are highly spoken of. The
Holden properly. tieing in control of
Philadelphia cnpitalisls. has a strong
creating •empnny. in Smythe 1•:err
ship on Its' Cragg claims the innin
shrift has leen .sunk In a depth of fifty
1 et. wh-rc 140 reit 4•f cr.ss-ctitt ng has
(fie •inter.el \c %ens. all of tshirh
h•..t e•.• 41 sThe shell was Funk
. 14 :. f ' ,e • aka.• and sntnllile
tt , 11 iia: %, r. and hos I raven beet -
ter with (I'y t 'flys pn•priy is e•en-
tn•i (' I t y 4 inc nnnli cnpilelisls, repre•
o -e n!e 1 by `;hltiey II. Cragg,
'ii,\at 1. \hI:5 G(y)f) SHOWINGS.
The In'i cI aljz•d area of the Silver
Lake (1 strict has extended to such great
prrrgxnions Bait d would lake u eon:wt.
t.
. mole :Taco to give the hull desertµ
la,ii *1 even a few of ttie properi;es
Luke has some wonderful show•
i g. from u c(•ml•aratifc y mail amount
1.1..<pl.'ting. One of the lost Mese-
e. .1, Die reelect is Sant Otis. •
c ainh • 11 the %veast sate of the lake, where
tic tied his teenier spent less than a
week in pros e(•l:ng last fall on lire out-
crop, and keat•d nearly n dozen silver
veins, tho lib st of which have leen cot -
crtd with 1110W acid ice. The writer
had the pleasure of seeing one of these
%cine, nearly solid silver, four inches
in tv.dlh.
.1m.•ngst other claims in this district
11i:it are spoken of as being very profit.
ng arc Into Clinton and Davis, Col -
1 r+s, `:,11111(•1 Tongue and assocalles.
Pr. Ilcieseeiel.1 John 'Tongue and others
having a great nuniter of claims Li
this e. t:on passed on silver discover -
:es. Larry Dow no' Is oleo the owner
et .'0%,ial very wnluable properties in
Janus township and in the unsulveyed
senior. \Ir. Downey has associatca
w•:Ih him \Ir. Leslie Shane of Pende•
len. Ontario. They have undertaken
development work .•n tee different tiro
'cries in a manner that comments ,t.
M. 1f. having sunk roe shaft to a depth
o'
50 feet, and another r t o a d e p l h of
31- feel, the results of w'hirh have been
eery -enrournging. The writer was
unable to 'M the Downey claim, which
until recently was in litigation, but was
iufrirm(d .m reliable authr,rily that on
Iles cirri .1 they have Irv.' best stowing
iu
the \:;r I•' district; that In this vein
they have -slid nnliwe silver' over bun
incl►as in width right 011 the surface
iilt:(I AS JAMES TOWNSHIP.
The Hubert and Bloom dislree to to
the nerlh and west of Silver led,.• rr-
spsc•tivcly, are highly spok.i) Of. 1.1hr
Silver Lake, the inning inspectors W. If
busy and tee nt:fitter of passed claims.
pnrtic•ulerly on native silver snowing,
sneaks in the highest terms of great
promise for the new district. In the
seuteenst corner of James there is :041
le b..' a whole square nide, embracing
lots 3 and 4. concession 2, where all
claims aro passed and from the show-
ings as given on the trap it would ap-
pear thirst Bloom and Silver Lakes dis-
tricts will Lo equally as rich as Jaynes
township in the parts referred to.
a>F
SOtr 1'11 AFRICAN DESERT.
Suffering of a Party That Attempted a
Crossing ee'illiout Water Supply.
Two Vryburg men. Sydney Smith. a
well known local farmer, and 1. N.
firymer. have hnd a e rribte expericnct
In leo Kalahari desert, tvhcre they were
three days wader n brazing sun with
nether food nor water and hardly came
Through alive, says the London Tele-
graph.
They left home together in a Cape
cert drawn by six oxen to visit George
Lennox of Kingstown. a form some dis-
tance Into the desert. The travellers
were manly rets ing for Ihe:r water sup•
ply on the !minims, it ropeeies of will
melon w•li-:ch grows abundantly on the
sand dunes and a nservcs its water for
months. but they found to their dismny
that these Riad all been consumed by
the flocks and herds of the nomadic no-
Li%es of the Kalahari. The meagre stock
of water they' had brnlght with them
soon gave out and after trekking for
two drys without n drink the oxen col-
lapsed. The travellers were still about
fifty miles from thou destination.
Abandoning the cart and oxen they
deter'rn`ned to make the Inst of the jour-
ney on foot. Eight miles Irnmp Through
the heavy sand reduced Mr. Ilrymer to
n state of <'xhnuslion. and leaving him
behind Mr. Sinilh toiled on with his na-
tive servant in the keth of a scorching
wind to nlempt to make the nearest
water. Mr. Lennox's farm, which was
has only i.ore. In six hours he hnd be-
come quite deaf, one eye was almost
blind, his Icnguc hnd shrivelled up and
his palate and lips were conl<d with a
thki< :kin, Ile' 110(1 lett Bryrner al 9.30
al n`gitt. At dawn next morning his
Kaffir boy threw up Rio spmlge. and
sad at heart Sin Ih had I•t push 'en with
fits collie dog ns his only companion.
Art houe or two later he w, s overtnkcn
by two young • Trnnsvaal(rs, \kssrs.
(s rix r and Leftoux, on horseback. They
hnd lost a horse and a mule from thirst,
not fur from the point where \h•. Itry-
nter had I ren left lying on the wc1JI,
They hnd 1 and Brynner still alive, but
having n) water themselves were un-
nele to help, and had pushed en for Be
farm. Le Itoux was in n state of e•
lapse from thirst. hnving to be h. .l
r. ; his 1►r rose by Gelber. The Iwe, moun'-
cd nxn went on ahead. promising to
sent back help to Snaith and the others,
When still n long (islnn(e front Mr.
Lennox's farm Mr. Smith mel seine fin -
Mara W0rnen (refuges from (:errnnn
Southwest Africa), cr.rryint, water in
Don't Neglect
a Cough «Cold
IT ('AN HAVE BUT ONE
I: ESULT. IT LEAVES
THE THROAT or i•UNGS,
OR iiO1'll, AFFECTED.
DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE
SYRUP IS THE MEDICINE
YOU NEED.
It is witi.,ut an equal as a remedy for
Coughs, ('„hle, Bronchitis, Sore Throat,
Pain in the Chest, Asthma, Whooping
Cough, Quinsy and all affections of the
Throat and bung..
A single du.•w of Dr. Wood's Norway
Pato Syrup will etup the cough, soothe the
throat, and if the cough or coli has be-
come settled on the lungs, the healing
properties of tho Norway Pine Tree will
proclaim its at b
real virtue by promptly
tt
y
eradicating tho bail effects, and a persist-
ent use of Ilio romody cannot fail to bring
about a complete cure.
Do not be humbugged into buying so-
called Norway Pine Syrups, )rot Le sure
and insist on having Dr. \\'oat's. 11 Is
put up in a yellow wrapper, threo pine
trees tho trado mark, and price 25 eta.
Mrs. Henry Seabrook, Iiepworth, Ont.,
writes : "I have used Dr. Wood's Norway
fine Syrup in our family for the past three
years and I consider it the beet remedy
known for the euro of colds. It has cured
all my children and myself." t"
Pitt tit 4.1 AN 1111 D1 4 l'.
:I1terpri-in11 itnrglars Mee elorphis
Into Bedroom.
A novel method of burglary is bo
l:cvcd to have ix'en employed by thieve)
who broke into the Southeastern Hetet,
Itrdhill, England. recently, and stole 0
gold vltteh and chain, valutsJ at £25,
and more than £30 in gold, belonging
to Mr. Charles Chapman, the proprio.
tor.
"\lye wife woke me at nbout 5.30,"
Mr Chapman said, "anti conhplained
that her eyes and face smarted. I also
felt n peculiar sensation about my eyes,
as if some kind tit an itching dust ha.�
been thrown in nhy face. 1 ant a very
light sleeper, and so is \Irs. Chapman.
From whet I have heard I believe conte
kind of dust was brown into the beds
room by someone bef.rre he entered.'
The police. to when) n number of
ai'IkI es left In the lroom have been;
handed, believe That morphia dust was
used to dull the senses of the sleepers.
\1r. Chapman:s clothes. which wero
taken from Ilio Itcdroom by the burg-
lars, as well fie his watch and stoney,
were found. with all the pockets turned
inside out. in a corner of the yard.
-----•i
CAN'r hl1•:1' or -r 01'1(11.
tustralia s:,, ,itieinl) .060,000 a Year in
the Attempt.
The Australian prohibition of the im.
prrtation of opium is a farce. Official.
dont now frankly admits that it Le bat -
Wel by en ingenielio unscrupulous and
desperate syndicate o1 European anti
Chinese smugglers. who defy every pre.
caution, outwit every detective. i.nd art
now slaking fortunes out et the 10.006
Chinese and Mt European victims of
the opium habit who live in the Cam -
Oh.
The Customs Department oflletalt
have. of course, 'uncle seizures since
Januay 1, 1906. when the import:Own
of opium wens forbidden; they hnv4
eeize,1 thou -nils of Ions, prosecuted
nearly 200 'Inugg'.'rs, and inflicted Iden.
relies totalling ever .Herne. But their
work, good a, t! 1s, tins failed to check
the imp'rioln n to acv material extent,
and cense 1 su cr:J !111'4sg every pas.
senger Ir: rn e.ver'sea--for opium comet
(torn Arneri 0 end Europe as well al
front China- is personally .searched be.
lure landing at a cost to the Iaxpayel
which no 1; •\eminent will face.
The report et I)r. \\'ollast.,n, Comp
troller -Gin, rel (d ('ui tents, to the Fee].
erol Minister, Mr. Chapman. shotty
That Australia. in its zea) for righteous.
ices. has ssct:fir•d .C60.000 a ye•nr 11
revenue and ridded a :ns:dcrnbly to its
cyst of its Government service without
bani-hinge (intim from its sheres.
.}
TIIE \WORM TURNS.
She buys a gown,
The best in town,
gts urJs on Ulcer head. Incredible as t I Exrw'nd- thr(r. hundred do:lars,
may meet, these Inhuntun people obso-
letely
While hub, the worm,
refit-e.l to gave Mr. Smith either Can only squirm
s'nkr or assistance. Eventually he And turns his cuffs and collars.
ninnnged to obinln a Fannin cupful by
force, but he w•aS 101 exhausted to
struggle for more. At This point his find
\t n a succum-
bed• Int' down fid ftcrward su cum•
bed 10 thirst.
Slightly invigorated by his meagre r•c-
f estunent, Mr. Sinilh toiled on. The
elm wits new high overhead end the
heel int. nse. Ile was billowing the
course of an old river bed and fortu-
nately was able to obtain some Flight
shelter Iron a few trees along the
colirye. Ills melhod was le dash for-
ward for n txetiple •,t hundred yard.;
1.• the nearest iree and Then lie down
l•• recuperate Inc the next effort. '`o
to held lo his bask unt I at length \Ir.
Lennox s farm carte in sight. Here
kine) hnnds took him in chnrgc (Intl
tended him sr, well that niter n few
hours he was able to talk rationally and
wntk phnit•
Mr. llcnn of the Camel Corps 01 the
rape Mounted Police. who hnprcned to
M re the farm with This camel. irnm.d,
111.1'. saddled up awl set oil with Its••
rL cominl'ndnble dil•gence to s•nrch
. the leer fellows wh•) had been forc-
ed 10 rennin in the deeert. Thanks to
Mr. Iletufs prorn(.t (hide and en• rgy the
;Ise% of \Ir, 11,'1 . r end 1110 nnliwea
were s(Iced. nllb •nglh they w rrr in I1.•
teal steppe of exhaustion ane presentee
n meet dcp)orable sight when they vert
brought In.
MILBURN'S
LAXA-LIVER
PILLS
are mild, eu: n and safe, and ere a perfect
regulator of the es stern.
They gently untie It the secretions, clear
away all effete arid waste matter from the
system, and give tone and vitality to the
whole intes'inal tract, curir•g Constipa-
tion, Sick Headache, Biliousneve, 1), pep-
sin, Coated Tongue, Po1,) Breath, Jima.
dice, Heartburn, and Water Brash. Mrs.
R. S. Ogden, Woodstock, N.B., writer
"My husband and myself bare nand Mil -
burn's I,axa-Liver }'ills for a n..inber of
yeare. We thunk we cannot do without
them. they are the only pills we ever
take.' 1
Price 2.3 cants or five b ottlee for 111.0 0,
at all dealer* fir direct on receipt of pries.
IIho T. Milburn Co., Limited, 'tomato.
11.1.